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&gt;
•

8- The Daily

ntinel, Middleport·POIIll'tOY. 0 .. Monday, Aug . W, t!li4

HOSt•tTAt NE WS

Orville Reed 'died on SlUlday
Orville Reed, 68, of the
Coolville area, died Sunday
morning at his home. A painter
by trade, Mr . Reed was
preceded In death by his
mother. Mrs. Mattie Reed; his
wile, VIrginia ; a daughter, and
t.ro grandchildren.
Survjving are four sons,
Orville Reed, Jr., Dearborn,
Mich.: Ra)'Dlond, of Topeda,
Ind.; Fronk, of Cleveland, and
Ralph, of Reedsville : two
daughters,
Mrs .
Mike
(F1orence) Marlo, Lancaster,
and Mrs. Paul (Mabel ) McDaniel, Guysville; two step·
oons, Clayton Johnson of
Reedsville, and John Johnson
of Santee, Calif.; a step-

daughter, Mrs . Richard
(Virginia) Hayman, Reedsville, and 14 grll!ldchildren.
fUneral services will be at 2
p.m. Tuesday at the While
F'Wieral Home with the Rev .
Eldon Blake officiating. Burial
will be in Eden Cemetery near
Reedsville. Friends may call at
the funeral home at any time .

Border

•

Continued from page 1
fiscal year 8,000 were arrested
on charges or smuggling In
over 80,000 Mexicans. They
face heavy- fines or prison
terms, but federal courts are
too jammed to be effective,
Chapman says.
None.
The INS and its Border
Patrol part of the Justice
Holzer Medical Center
Department, which 1s seekmg
CDlsc)larges Aug. 16)
MON- TUE to add 500 new employes, most K•therine Ahlers, Deborah
of them for the patrol.
Bailey, Shirley Brown, Charles
Burt, Michael Davis, Daniel
Dobbins, Naomi Drummood,
PICNIC SET
Louise
Fraley,
Thomas
The Ladies Auxiliary of
Caspers,
Pamela
Gibbs,
Terrv
Veterans Memorial Hospital
lifllll'd AMIIJI
will hold a picnic at 6:30p.m. Hickm an. Helen Johnson,
T .. l
Tuesday at the roadside park Judy Kraulter, Michele Kuhn,
on Route 33, left side, going Karen McCa rle y, Mildred
Nichols, Ina Pratt , Carol
north.
ALSO
Rogers, Cynthia Siders,
Evelyn Smith, Wayne Stafford,
Rocky Sturgill, Wanda Taylor,
Tonight, Aug . 19 thru
Lan Terry, . Sandra Tillis,
Thursday Aug. 2:2
Bryan Tucker, Stacy Walker,
NOT OPEN
Mathew Wells, Angela Wright.
CDischarges Aug.17)
FRI .. SAT., SUN.
Sandra Blazer , Mayme
AUG. 23-24-ll
Boster
, Petchlia t, Buckley,
"THE SUGAR , lo'IO
Charla Caldwell, Wanda Cash,
EXPRESS"
Goldie Hawn
Richard Cremeans, Margaret
( PG )
Eads, Frances Goodnight,
ALSO
Dudley Green, Delores Groves,
CARTOONS
Jane Hall, Julie Hardesty,
Show Starts 7 p.m.
Lydia Hysell, Rose Kurnat,
Leslie
Lemley,
James
-Pemberton,
Deborah
Reed,
YOUR FULL SERVICE BANK
Bonnie Scoll, Nora Seitz, Sella
Snazeley, Linda Stanley ,

eonunued"from page I
greatest ripoff o( the American public In 8Jl'!l"ll history ."
But when the time came to jwnp &amp;mday, Gill, 24, of
Petersburg, Fla., canceled the attempt, saying recent rains
made the landing area too muddy. PoUcesald thousandao!
fans, Wlllble to obblln refunds immediately, stormed an
ripped up a speciaUy built ramp and tore down telephone
Sheriff's deputies und state troopers were called to the like
restore order. No arrests were made and oo injwiea
reported.
A F'!VE-DAY, NATION WIDE WORK STOPPAGE BE(}INi
today by 80.000 soft coal miners to commemorate the more
100,000workerskilled by the mines in this century. Unl~
Workers President Arnold Miller said the walkout - ~::
Wider the UMW's 1971 contract - is the first such n
since the 1969 commemoratioo of the late UMW president John
LeWis. It is in protest of "the terrible alaughler that day alter
turns miners' wives into widows." The strike will close llll ma1ny
as 1,200 mines.

I

RALPH CALVERT, JR ., OF POMEROY, driving " Johnny H" which he co~s with
Lester Stewart of Mason, took third place in the seventh race at the Meigs Fair Saturday.

.II

MEIGS THEATRE

-

Barbara White, Teresa Wood,

our
by noting how many
wise people say

-"that's my bank"

Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGES
Mrs.
Elmer Martin, Point Pleasant;

(when they're
~king about us)

David

And we measure our success

and progress by the number
and kind of folks who fee 1 at
home with us.
'

The Farmers ·Babk
and Savings

co·.

POMEROY, OHIO

20,000 Maximum Insurance
for Each Depositor

1

~ r M Bf 11

f fD( RAl

Lila Zerkle, Burneda Zeigler,
Dessie Zinn.
CDischarges Aug.lB)
Vicki Adams, Donnie Bailes,
Lonnie Bailes, Molly Baisden,
Ja ckie Bennett, Gail Paul
Buck, Caroline Cox, Sharon
Landrum, Edith Juhasz ,
Elizabeth Lee, Frank Miller,
Linda~
Parsons,
Marvin
Robinson, Shirley Ross, Pam
Schuler, Ruth Speakman, Lori
Swain, Judith Weaver, Ernest
Yinger.
CBirths Aug.16)
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Lee
Wood, Middleport, son; Mr .
and Mrs. Daniel Polcyn,
son, Rio Grande; Mr. and Mrs.
William
Mullins ,
son ,
Gallipolis: Mr. and Mrs.
Delmar
Bloomer,
son,
Gallipolis.
(Births Aug. 17)
Mr . and Mrs. William
Lambert, son, Blacklork: Mr .
and Mrs. Don Spires, son,
Gallipolis.

DEPOSIT
INSU RANCI CoRPOAATroN
-·-- ---~~----

Thomas,

Point

Pleasant; Vickie Slack ,
Middleport: Donald Thompson, Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
Bobby Kinniard, South Side ;
Mary
Libertore,
Point
Pleasant; Mrs . Burl Birch·
field, son, Crown City ; Freda
Turley, Hartford ; Lindsey
Ferguson, New Haven; Mrs.
Bernard Wallace, Pomeroy ;
Terra Bacon, Middleport; Mrs.
Joseph Gleen, Milton: Sandra
Bonecutter, Point Pleasant;
and Mrs. Ronald Trimble,
Bidwell .
UNIT CAI.LED
.
The Middleport emergency
Wlit was called to Rutla11d at
11 : 4~ p.m. Saturday for ·Cioyd
Brookover , who was ilL He was.
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he was admitted .
PICNIC PLANNED
Past Matrons of Evangeline
Chapter will hold a picnic at
the Anthony Cabin on Cherry
Ridge, Friday, Aug . 23, at 6
p.m. Those interested in atlending are to' meet at the
Temple at 5:30p.m. Coffee and
lea will be furnished.

CHARLESTON, S. C. (UP! )
- The Air Force said early
today that a C-141 cargo plane
carrying a crew of seven was
nussing on a flight from the
Charleston Air Force Base to
La Paz, Bolivia.
The plane, carrymg a
general cargo of 16 tons, was
due in La Paz at noon EDT
Sunday, the Air Froce said.
The plane , wllich left
Charleston Saturday, refueled
in the Canal Zone and then lost
radio contact with La Paz after
taking off.
The Air Force said the
plane's fuel would have been
exhausted shortly after noon
Sunday. A search was Jaun~
ched at that time.
The crew of the plane, all
listed as from Charleston since
no home towns were available,

Ford family
(Continued fr om page I
F'ord had heen invited to address the VFW while he was
vice president.
He brought with him three
senators and five representatives, inc1udmg the chairmen
of the Senate and House
Veterans Affairs committee,
Sen. Vance Hartke, !).Ind., and
Rep. William Jennings Bryan
Oorn, o-s.c.
Also making the trip were :
Sens. Strom Thurmond, R-s.c.
and Clifford Hansen, R-Wyo.:
and Reps. Leslie Arends, R-Dl,
Dan Daniel, D-Va., Rep. Olin
Teague, D-Tex . and John
Hammerschmidt, R-Ark.
The President spent four
hours

Sunday

afternoon

playing golf, and no doubt
discussing vice presidential
candidates, with political

cronies.
After the game at Burning
Tree CoWitry Club in nearby
Maryland, Ford told reporters
"we 're getting close'' to the
decision on a vice president.
His golfing partners were
Arends, former Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird and Rep.
George Mahon, a conservative
Texas Democrat who is chairman of tbe House Appropnations Collunittee.
Ford went from the golf
course to the White House,
where he stayed half an hour
studying White House staff
reports. He also telephoned
Dave Stockton in Connecticut
to congratulate him on winning
the Greater Hartford Open
Golf Tournament. F'ord said he
played once with Stockton.
The President began Sunday,
as usual , by swimming in his
back yard pont before driving
to, church. After church, F'ord
and his wile, Betty, met with
about 20 neighbors who said
goodby.
The Fords- spent Saturday
night dining privately with the
family of daughter Susan's
boyfriend m Fairfax, Va.

was identified as:
Capt. James R. Tan!, pilot;
1st Lt. Charles T. Moorefield,
first copilot; 2nd lt. Dale W.
Lake, second copilot; Capt.
Paul N. Burroughs, navigator ;
T. Sgt. Carl H. Church: T. Sgt.
Thomas H. Kuechman; and M.
Sgt. Joseph M. Gorin .

Racing
Continued from page I
Doc" owned by Mabel WiUis of
Jackson went into the fence
along the mside of the track.
The driver, W. Salmons, in
trying to keep the horse under
control, fell from the sulky
which
was
extensively
damaged . Whirlwind Doc
co ntinued driverless until
caught on the track near the

EXTENDED OUTWOK
Warm and a chance of

horse barns. Salmons had no
apparent injuries .

s howers Wednesday and

Thursday. Lows In the mid to
upper 60s and highs in the
mid and upper 80s. Friday
generally fair and not as

warm. Lows in the low to
mid 60s and highs in the low
to mid 80s.

Market Report
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
August 17, 1974
SALES REPORT OF
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
STOCKER CATTLE
STEERS- 250 to 300 lbs . 32.50
to 38.50; 300 to 400 lbs. 27 to
33. 75 ; 400 to 500 lbs. 30 to 32; 500
to 600 ibs. 24to 35; 600 to 700 ibs.
251o 34.50; 700 lbs. and Over 27
to 37.
HEIFER CALVES - 250 to
300 lbs. 28.50 to 36.75; 300 to 400
lbs . 29 to 34.50; 400 to 500 lbS.
28.25 to 33.50: 500 to 600 lbs. 30
to 33.25; 600 to 700 ibs. :!8 to 31:
700 lbs . and Over 25.50 to 34.25.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS (By
The Head ) -Stock Cows 165 to
240 : Stock Cows and Calves 200
to 375: Stoek Bulls 185 to 250;
Baby Calves 25 to 55; (By the
P01md) - Canners &amp; Cutters
Cows 16 to 23.25 ; Holstein Cows
20 to 25 ; Commercial Bulls
(1,000 lbs. and Over ) 28 to 33.
VE"-L CALVES - Tops 220
lbs. to 250 48 to ~2 ; Medium 200
lbs. to 30032.50lo38.75 ; Culls 30
Down.
LAMBS- Tops 90 lbs . to 110
37 to 39. 10; Seconds 75 ibs. to 80
30 to 32: Lights 40 lbs. to 65 25 to
30: Stock Ewes By the Head
8.50 to 16.
SHOATS - 4 to 12.50.
WOMAN KILLED
COLUMBUS (UP I)
Barbara Florey, 19, Columbus,
was killed early today when the
car in which sfte was a
passenger rail off U. S. 33 here
and slammed into a utility
pole. The driver of the car,
David E. Myers, 20, also of
Colwnbus, was listed in critical
condition at Grant Hospital.
Miss F'lorey was dead on
arrival at Grarit.

LOS ANGELES - A WAVE OF TELEPHONED -~~~~
threats rippled throughout the city SUnday, one day alter p
ruled out the possibility that the "alphabet bomber" caused
devssblting chemical explosion In an Industrial district. Police
evacuated the Delta, Pacific Southwest Airlines and Hughes Air
West passenger lermlnals at the Los Angeles lnlernatiooal
Airport Sunday alter receiving telephone calls of plan~ bombs.
The evacuation was a precautionary measure, spurred by a
bumb explosion at tbe Pan American passenger terminal at the
airport Aug. 6 that killed three persons and wounded 3:i others.
The Greyhound bus terminal, where a police bomb squad found a
planted bomb In a locker Friday night, was also evacuated
during the day alter police received a call that another bomb had
been planted there.
.
No bombs were found at the airport or the bus station. PoUce
said hamburger stands, newspaper offices, sporting arenas and
theaters were also ta•gets of bomb hoaxes.

SQUAD AIDS
The Racine E·R Squad made
two runs over the weekend.
Saturday at 9:30a.m. it trans·
ported Frances Larkins, Lvng
Bottom, to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and Mary Grady,
Racine, Sunday at 10 p.m., to

George E. Batey, 51,
Pomeroy, Rt. 3, died Saturday
at
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital.
Mr . Batey was preceded in
death by his parents, James W.
and Helen Batey.
He is survived by his wile,
Veterans Memorial Hospital .
Violet Batey: two sons, James
W. of Gallipjjlis, Rt. 3, and
George
E'l Jr., at home; two
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in d0\111· daughters, Linda Siders,
town Pomeroy at 11 a.m . today Cincinnati, and Shirley Boyer,
was 72 degrees under sunny
skies.
INF'ANT TREATED
The Pomeroy emergency
squad was called to 1525 Nye
Ave., at 3:25 a.m. SWiday for
one-year-old Richard White .
He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was treated for an Illness and
released.
F'IVE KILLED
VAN WERT, Ohio (UP! )F'ive persons were killed in a
car-train collision near Van
Wert, Ohio Sunday, the Van
Wert CoWity sheriff's office
reported. A car driven by
Marcile Dechsle, Wren , Ohio,
slowed when it approached a
railroad crossing but failed to
stop and an oncoming ErieLackawanna train slammed
into it . Also in the automobile
were Scott Dechsle, 14, Kelly
Ruskaup , 14, Jeffrey Sheets,
II , and Richard Bowen, II, all
.of Wren.

Reynoldaburg; two brothers,
Andy, of Chester, and Bono of
Jackson: seven grandchildren,
and several nieces and
nephews.
Mr. Batey was a veteran of
World War II.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 10 a.m. at Ewing
FW!eral Home with the Rev. 0 .
H. Cart officiating. Burial will
be in Meigs Memory Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home at any time.

Fred M. Roush of Letart dies
LETART, W. Va. - Funeral
services lor Fred M. Roush,
Sand Hill Road, Letart, who
died Saturday at his residence,
will be conducted Tuesday at
2:30 p.m. from the Foglesong
FW!eral Home in Mason. The
Rev. George Weirick will of·
ficiate and burial will follow lrl
the Graham Cemetery near
New Haven. Frienda will be
received at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.
today. Mr. Roush, a Iarmer
and Mason County school
teacher, was retired.
He was horn Aug. 23, 1682 at
Graham ·Sbltlon, a son of the
late Adam Roush and Sarah
School Roush. He was a
member of the Mason CoWity
Retired Teachers Assn.
Survivors Include his wile,

Fannie; two brothers, Grover,
of Mason, and Artie, of Letart,

and four sisters, Mrs. Clara
Smith, Mrs. Lola Jeffers, both
of Mason and Mrs. Sadie
· !lloore, Huntington, and Mrs.
Arm Cochran.

PAYDAYSET
Summer Neighborho&lt;!d
Youth Corps members will he
paid Wednesday at the
&lt;;,P,.P.
office
in
the
Meigs County Courthouse from
9 a.m. to noon. The cultur8l
enrichment trip to ·the OhtO
State Fair lor these young
people will be Thursday. The
Meigs County buses will leave
the senior citizens parking lot
on East Main St., at 8:30 all).

Elberfelds In PomeroY
Shop Tuesday 9:30 to 5 pm . . .·::· .
., .. ... ··.··.
.:::: ·: .. : .
•

'•,

'•

•,

..

..

~

SUNDAY'S AD FOR

fT'S II CHAIR •. • IT'S A BED

$139

HECK'S DISCOUNT
SHOULD HAVE READ
SUNBEAM
HI DOME

FRY PAN
MIIIOI.£l'Oil

•

'

'

'

.

r. .•

Is Included In This .sate.
JUNIOR • MISSES
WOMEN'S SIZES
Big selection of Denims and
Polyesters In Basic and Fall
Fashion Colors.

SPORTSWEAR,

'

$}499

BAKER FURNITURE
• 0. .

HECK'S REG. 116.90
l

_VO_L_.X_X_VI_ NO_._90_ _ _P_OM_E_R_OY_-M
_I_
DD_LE_P_O_
RT_,O
_H_IO_ _ _T_U_
ES_DA_Y.:___,A
_U_GU_S_T_20_.._1_
97_4_ __

.
ants
out
£or
:
;
arr
3 Greek ass,a ssins

Elberfelds In

SECOND FLOOR

Rockefeller vows to work
with Ford to overcome
q_
present nard realities '

:~

:~\:i.

•

:;::

~;
;:.:
j

By United Preao International
The Cypriot government has
issued warrants lor the arrest
of three Greek Cypriots In
connection with the fatal
shooting Monday of U.S.
Ambassador Rodger P.
Davies,
a , government
.

'.IY.:.l:~

f

spokesma11 said.
Diplomatic sources said Osvies was the victim of a
deliberate assasslnattion attempt.
The goverrunent spokesman
declined w name the three
wanted men or to say whether

'•...&gt;:O:o"o'o'o"l. ' 'o"o"o'o' •A•A•,-.o..•AYA..V..'.'·'..V.'

• o •-: o o o :-! o ,_,

• • o • • o o •,•,•,

e;;;;·:-:··rii--Ii~i';·~~~-

'.

~~

•,•

By United Press International
CLEVELAND- EITHER STOP CRIME ON DOWNTOWN
streets within two and one-baH weeks or face a pay cut In
November, Cleveland City council President George Forbes said
Monday In an ultimatum to-the police department. Forbes called
a special meeting of conununity and business leaders today to
discuss his demand.
,
"Crime cal!'t survive downtown without the passive
agreement of the polie&lt;! department," he said Monday.
"Everybody has known about It for years but has tolerated it."
The council president was angered over a particularly bloody
weekend here. There were· live homicides, the last being the
shooting death of Donald Reams, 41, a lather of live who was
gunned down while vending ice cream, a second job he held
during summers.
·

WASHINGTON - SINCE IT WAS PRESIDENT Ford
asking, it took only one week aner he made the request lor the
House and Senate to approve his Cost of Living task force. Only
minor differences divide the two bills, which passed Monday, and
final congressional approval of the new agency is expected
before Congress leaves next week lor its Labor Day recess. In
an Aug. 12 address, Ford asked Congress wpass the measure
before the recess.
Although almost no one expressed confidence that the new
task force would hold back the current double-digit inflation,
many congressmen urged passage simply becauae the new
President wan~ it. The new agency would be powerless except
for the power of persuasion. It would have no power to control
wages and prices, no power to delay price Increases, no power 1'1
subpoena records or individuals. It is intended to be mainly a
monitoring and ''jawboning'' agency.

they were military or civilian.
On the military front, the
situation was cabn. Greek
Cypriot Radio Nicosia said
today there have heen no
violati~s of the cease-fire
between Turkish soldiers and
Greek Cypriot troops since
Monday night.
In a broadcast monitored In
Israel, Nicosia radio described
the situation on the Island
during the day as quiet and
calm.
The charges of atrocities
continued. In Ankara, Turkish
Information Minister Orhan
Birgit said Turkish troops on
Cyprus have uncovered the
bodies of 57 Turkish Cypriot
victims of a Greek massacre in
a small village near Famagusbl.
"F'ilty&lt;~even o! the 60 Turks
living In the village of Atlilar
near Famagusta have heen
massacred by tbe Greeks,"
Birgit said. "Only an old and
blind couple and a middle-aged
man escaped the mass
killing.''
Birgit said the Turkish
reconnaisance planes spotted
fresh mounds of earth around
the village and troops dug out

bodies.
''Foreign correspondents
will be able to visit the village
and see and hear for themselves what bappened there,"
Birgit said. "This was the
latest in a series of murders
commit~ In the name of that
classical Hellenic civilization.''
Diplomatic sources In Nico-

all of the 40 or more shots fired
at the building were aimed
either at Davies's office or his
apartment.
The sources said that at least
two gWiffien were involved and
that they used military weapons. They said they believed
the arms may have heen
Soviet-made AK47 automatic
rifles. These are the weapons
issued to the Greek Cypriot
national guardsmen.
A Uni~ Nations spokesman
confirmed that all was quiet on
the military front of the wartorn island.
On the diplomatic front ,
Secretary of State Henry A
Kissinger told a news conference Monday he has given the
go-ahead lor a new peace
initiative to defuse the Cyprus
crisis.

Court will
sit to hear

3 appeals

Judge Earl E. Stephenson,
Portsmouth, Presiding Judge
of the Fourth District Court of
Appeals said today tho Court
will convene Sept. ll at 9:30
a .m. to hear three cases.
These are Millard Clouse vs
Maude C. Holcomb and Roger
Deem vs V1cki Deem, both
originating in Meigs CoWIIy,
and -Security 1\ewage Equip·
MR. WILDERMUTH
ment Co., el al vs Ohio. Valley
Electric Co., et al, Gallla
CoWIIy.
The Fourth District Court of
Appeals serves 15 counties in
southern Ohio . They are
Adams, Athens, Brown, Gallia,
Highland, Hockin g, Jackson,
SECRETARY OF STATE HENRY A. KISSINGER HAS
Lawrence, Meigs, Pickaway,
given the go-ahead lor a new peace initiative to defuse the
Pike, Ross, Scioto, Vinton and
Cyprus crisis, despite fresh Turldah advances and the slaying of
Washington
.
America's admbassador to the war-torn island. Turkey, Greece
Also sitting on the court are
and the Cypriot government took time out from their dispute
Judge
Gordon B. Gray of
over the future of the embatiled island to join In expressing shock
Gerald
Wildermuth
was
Athens and Judge Homer E.
and regret atthe murder of U. S. Ambassador Rober D. Davies In
honored Monday night with a Abele of McArthur .
Nicosia.
dinner at the Meigs Inn by
The Court of Appeals direcUy
British troops on Cyprus went on lull alert and embassies
fellow
co-workers
upon
his
reviews
all cases heard or tried
stepped up security following the kllllng of Davies, who was
up
coming
reUrement
Sept.
I.
in lower courts in which a
gunned down Monday while lltandlng In an embass~ hallway
Mr
.
Wildermuth
has
worked
is being appealed.
decision
during an anti-American demonstration. Turkish troops,
for
the
A&amp;P
Company
4Z
years,
These cases may have been
alter slicing Cyprus in two in a crushing offensive last
its
local
manager
29
years
or
as
tried in Co mmon Pleas,
week, came Within three miles MQIIday of severing the road from
the
42.
Probate or Juvenile, Municipal
Nicosia south to Llmaasol, the last bastion of Greek Cypriot
His
co-workers
stressed
that
or
County Courts, and may be
power oo the Llland.
Wildermuth will be missed by either civil or criminal cases.
. SEOUL - SOUTH KOREA'S CABINET AND other higJl:- the many customers he has
served over the years, always
ranklng ol!lciaia offered their rellpaUona today, taking
being congenial and mild in
responsibility for the 8818aalnallon of President Park
manner.
Chunghee'swlfe. Park a~cwted only two of the realgnati~ _
Wildermuth and his wife,
Ve~rana Memorial Hosplbll
Horne Mlnlater Hong Song..,hul and security chief Park ChongF'aye,resldeon
Mulberry
Ave.,
~OMITTED - Amy Eynon,
kyu. He named Park Kyung-won to the Home mlnlltry, but left
1n Pomeroy. They have one Syracuse: Robert Johnson,
the oecurlty p!lll vacant temporarlly.
daughter,
Donna Neibert, a Racine : Opal Priddy, Point
A total of 40 top ol!iciaia OrlgiJWly olfe~ to quit today, a
doy after Mn. Park'• burllll. Sbe was kWed lut Tbunday by an nurse at Holzer Medical Center Pleasant; Shirley Landaker,
who Is head of the clinic at Pomeray ; Michsel Hill, Jr.,
1111 utn's bullet munl for her hlllblnd. The offlclala Included
Holzer. Wildermuth plans to Racine ; lnzy Newell, Chester.
alllle~~btnet minllt.,.. ond 15 memberl ot the Pl'tllldentiollllalf.
lcie
Othert induded diplomatic 1nd municipal oltldala. The resl "lor a while," then DISCHARGED
perhaps do some other kind of Tucker, Harriet Hyatt, Paula
prelldent lulled • opecialllatement today tbanking the naUon
work to keep busy
. Van Cooney, Edna Wiggins." 0
f« ill mournintl ond1ympo.thy for hlulainwlle.

Wildermuth
honored on

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WASHINGTON (UPI) - PresldentFordtodaynominated
former New York Gov, Nelson A. Rockefeller w be vice

pres~enti.
·
d d 11 da
ec 01ceen
e
ys of speculati on on a c19101y gua rder1
secret. Rockefeller, one of the richest men In the world who wu
governor of New York lor 15 years, had failed In three attempt.t
to gain the Republican nomination lor president.
The chnice was vital, since two of the paat four vice
presidents inherited the job upon the death or resignation of the
Incumbent. Ford said his fmal decision "was a tough call for a

WASIDNGTON [UP!) - Vice President designate
§~ Nelson A. Rockefeller today pledged to work with
~ President Ford to "overcome the hard realities of our

ij

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time.''

~
~

r:~•.f:

"d · ill b
1h
t
nd
governor sa• "Jt w e my grea onor o serve you a
:&lt;l congressional leaders, caUed
to serve
the American people ."
~-~", Rockefeller "a person whose
'Th ese are very senous
· tim es, " Rockerell er sat"d · "Th"ts ~" long record of accomplishment
'
is a lime when we need the closest cooperation betweeen ~.. in the government and outside
Co ngress and th e Prest"dent and for the dedicat"ton of ·•~:..: is well known ."
'
every American to our common nat"ton aJ ·mterests."
-:-~
He said Rockefeller ·came
Rockefeller praised Ford, saying his administration ~; from a family well known lor
had "already reawakened faith and hope" in America. W 1ts contributions to "the build·
He said the new administration had the capability "to
1ng of a better America."
overcome the hard realities of our times," and pledged to ~
Ford said he made his
work toward that goal.
•.&lt; d . .
f1
;::· ecJSJon "a er a great deal of
Rockefeller's appointment had been a closely guarded
soul...,archlng" and alter consecret by Ford, though there were hints he would name « ult"
"th both De
ts
the former governor when Rockefeller arrived at the ~ s mg WI
mocra
:&gt;.; and Republicans in the ConWhite Houae shortly before the announcement.
~: gress and elsewhere. He aaid it
Rockefeller's appointment must he confirmed by hoth « was "a difficult decision." '
the House and the Senate before he takes office. Before ~
Ford kept his nominee secret
confirmation his ap;iointment will undergo thorough ;:s until the last minute.
ho
'-'
scrutiny by the judiciary committees of th Houses.
«
Before his televised announRockefeller said later that he was first contacted by ~ cement, he told a bipartisan'
Ford about being vice president last Saturday and that it ~ group of congressional leaders
was "firmed up" Monday night.
~ and later the Cabinet of his
He said he woUld he "delighted" to campaign
for
choice. But he asked that they
f 11
Republican congressional candidates this a ·
remain in rooms far from the
Asked what he thought his new job would entail,
White ljouse news corps so that
Rockefeller responded : "Thd,oie of the vice presiddent
the nominee's name would not
h"
«
totally depends on the Presi nt. H he wants to use liD, :B leak out ahead of time.
wonderful, if he doesn't want to lLSe him, fine.''
f~·: ''H 1 am conf1"rmed 1"t w1']) be
Rockefeller said he had accepted the No. 2 pj)St in the ;:;: my great honor to serve you
F'ord administration because of "the situation now in our ~ and through you all the people
1
country and the word."
,., of this great country," Rock"There are very difficult problems that have to be ~.~ efeller
said
to
the
s
faced ," he said.
io congressional
and
ad"I have heen privileged to serve my state and I'm in a ~~ ministration leaders present at
" h i?
position now of relaxed desire to serve my country, e j~ the nationally' televised and
said.
·
-~ broadcast ceremony In the
Rockefeller was questioned sharply about whe ther he is Oval Office of the White House.
would disclose his personal wealth, and he said "that's :,i.~.·: U confirmed by a majority
f'
something to be taken up before the committees o :&gt;: vote of the House and the
Congress," during his confirmation hearings.
Senate, Rockefeller, 66, will
He said he "assumed" he would put his holdings in trust ;:;: become the second vice presiwhile he is vice president, but said he "hadn't thought !~ dent chosen under the 25th
about the matter much and I'll have to consult my jf:; Amendment which provides
lawyers. "
~~: for filling vacancies In that

Speaking briefly after F'ord a!Uiounced his vice

j

tough job."

Ford, In a brief announce-

~1. presidential selection, the 6&amp;-year-&lt;Jld former New York ~~ men! before the Cabinet and office.

.•',',··

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sia, contending Davies was ~;j
deliberately assassinated, said ~-:
:$,

retirement

of Famous Makers Jeans

treasurer.

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason A ren

WASIDNGTON - U. S. DISTRICT JUDGE John J. Sirica
has rejected defense pleas to delay the stsrt of the Watergate
coverup and conspiracy trial. He ordered it to begin as scheduled
Sept. 9. After listening to defense argwnents to delay the trial at
a 50-minute hearing Monday, Sirica told lawyers for the defelldants, "There's no better time to hear and try this case than right
now. Thirl case will be called for trial at 9:30a.m. September 9."
Attorneys for lour of the six deltmdants- including former
attorney general John N. Mitchell and ex-White House aides H.
R. Haldeman and John D. Enrlichman- said they would appeal
the ruling. They Insisted that President Nixon's Auguat 9
resignation had hurt chances for their clients to get a fair trial
and said they had not had enough time to review the tapes the
Supreme Court ordered Nixon to tum over to federal
prosecutors.
Sirica disagreed. "The publicity already has die? down," he
aaid. " You can pick up the Washington Post and hardly find a
Watergate story-"

Our Entire Stock

Investment Corp. signed by John Musoer, Mgr., In whldl bl'
e1lended his "sincere thanks" w the fire department for lbl
speed and professional way it handled a recent fire at the Molp
inn.
Bernard Fultz met with council in regard to a West Malll St.
buSiness In regard to trucks damaging curb&amp;.
Souncit authorized the Southern High School Band to hold Tac
Day Sept. 28, but denied Chester PTA'• bid 1'1 solicit the llat .-It
In August and the first week In September.
Henry Werry asked council to consider purchallinl: rodar
equipment. Council made no decision last night bul remuu
appeared to favor the request.
'
Council will meet Sept. ~. instead of the lirrlt Monday 111
September, which is Labor Day.
Council went Into e1ecutive session following the opon
meeting. Attending were Mayor Dale Smith, Ralph Werry,
Osborne, Snouffer, Davis, Phil Globakar, and John Manley,
councilmen, Jane Walton, clerk, and Phyli!s Hennelll)',

Ford picks
en tin e
Rockefeller·
P_H_~,:-.,:-,;.:-:~-,: .-&lt;:~-~:-,,~.-·;;~-':'~-,~-w;.-;?:--:.:,r--r.;:-~r&lt;.mo-.-,..&amp;.-.~-=-,_,.:.T. .::. .-.w.:~~. .~
.::· f 0 r back up
.::

George Batey died Saturday

LEG FRACTURED
· Bill Cole of Tuppers PJains
was taken to the Holzer
Medical Center SWiday when
he received a fractured leg
while riding at a horse show
held at the Bob Evans Farm.·
The horse Cole was riding fell
and Cole's leg was pmned
under the animal

CORRECTION .

!be

A controvl!flly In
Pomeroy Fire Dept., was olred ot great
he felt wao "staged", when the truck In question, which is housed
Henry Werry, Pomeroy policeman, said residents of second
length by Pomeroy Council Monday night. When U was over,
In the second ward lire ~ation, was used.
ward have fought for what they have, and ills on old minutes,
counCil palled It back to the flremenl&lt;)aettle by themselveo.
Legar stated that when a check of the truck was made he years ago, to keep the truck in the second ward lire station.
found mildew on the equipment. The truck Itself Is depreciating
Torn Werry, volunteer fireman,, said the building w~s not the
Hennon Werry, a volunteer fireman lor Ml years, preoented
a petition to council to keep a fire truck In the second ward lire
because of the conditions of the bullcllng, he aatd: l.eg,ar observed cause of the condition of the truck.
station.
that since he was responsible for the equipment, it would be In
Lvu Osborne, councilman, stated that he Wok the job as a
the best interest of the fire department lor the truck to stay in the council member to help the people. 1£ the building needs fixing,
Werry stated that the truck should sbly In the building as
long as the building Ia owned by the village. The second ward fire
new station. He said he has not clean the truck up, concluding Osborne lelt It should be fixed.
station Ia located on Condor st. Werry contended that It is needed
that councilmen would like to see tis condition.
WUilam Snouffer, councilman, felt the matter should lielefl
there In case of a fire In the area.
up to the discretion of the chief, saying that he was appointed
Legar said :
· Werry further stated he had met with the firemen and they
"The action I took was not meant to hurt anyone . Mr. Werry chief to make such decisions.
fell the truck should stay at the new lire station, and not be
Is one of the best firemen the department has ever had and the
Council agrt'ed on a motion by Davis that Chief Legar go
returned to the&gt;aecond ward. He aaid at this point he turned In his
last thing I would ever want to do is to hurt him."
back and meet with firemen and discuss the situation and then
keys and resigned aa a voi\Uiteer fireman .
Legar also commented that council is talking about $Z4,000 return to council with their decision . Council felt that the matter
ROllo Lind, a resident of Condor st., said the ftre truck should " worth of truck and equipment.
was really the fire department's problem, and should be solved
Harry Davis, councilman, aaid that the fire department Is - by it.
be kept at the second ward station as they have gasoline tanks In
the area and Condor St. is "nothing but a lire trap."
doing a wonderful job and be would like to see the truck rerrl"iiln
There is a plan to advertise the sale of the second ward fire
at ward two. However, if the truck was being damaged, "this station .
.
At this point Charles Legar, Pomeroy Fire Chief and exmayor, mentioned a recent lire In the area of Condor St., which
A letter was read from the bOard of directors of the Meigs
changes the sl_tuation considerably," he said.
•

The Bituminous Coal Operators Assn . criUclzed the• ~:~~~~
saying it was being used by the union to improve Its b
position when UMW talks begin with the son coal Industry
about two weeks. The current contract expi"'l! Nov. 12.

MASON DR.

C-141, crew is miss:iilg

ControverSy aired over location of fire truck

..

•

News • • • zn

\leteruns Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
Ralph Davis, Point
Pleasant; f'rances Larkins,
LonR Bottom; Paul Van Meter,
Jr., Middleport; Paula Ar·
thurs, I.ong Bottom .
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Edith Boegli, Mary Archer,
Vellna Amburgey, Roy Sears,
Charles Ohlinger, Elwyn Yost,
Hatti e Nesselroad, William
Welch, Edna Baker, Carl
Gagnon,
Harold Fetty,
Margaret Roush, !..eo Light,
William Morris.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Cloyd Brookover, Rutland ;
Bessie Rudisill, Pomeroy;
Charles Carroll, l.ong aottom:
Mary Grady, Raclrle.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES

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~::::::=!:::::~;:::,::::::::::'-:=:::::::::::::;:;::::x:-.::::;::::.-:.:;:::m::;:=:~:!:=:::::::.-:::::::.::::::;:::::::::::::::::::~::=::::::::

Ford, chosen to sncceed
Spiro T. Agnew when he
resigned in October after
pleading no contest 00 tu
evasion charges, Wllll the first
vice president so cboeen.
Rockefeller • In an allusion to

~~ ~::~~ba";';~:~

surrender the preoldency and
bad elevated Ford, pralaed his
new chief's "dedication and
openness" which he aald ·had
"already reawakened lalth and
hope" in the nation.
Rockefeller, upon hia entry
' into politica, waa IIMOCialed
with the Uberal wing ol ihe
GOP, but moved toward lhe
right In hirl last ,lew yean 11
governor.' He rellglied lui year to head a self-cnated
Commission on Critical
Choices, widely viewed In
Washington as a vehicle for
promoting yet another attempt
to win the party's presidential
nomination . .
Rockefeller and GOP chairman George Bush had been
considered the favorilel for lhe
nomination.
Aller his brief speech, Rock·
efeller made the rounc111 of
those present In the Oval Of.
flee, shaking banda and
akin
roona11 With
h
spe
g pe
Y
eac
pellghrson. dThlae .~~fiberllede wuth
tan
..,...ter
e

room.

Rockefeller stopped to speak
with First Lady Betty Ford
before going to meet the
Cabinet.
Rockefeller was so uunpopular with the conservative
elements of the GOP In 11164
that when he stood before the
national coovention in San
Francisco he was jeered by the
delegates who viewed him u
the embodiment of the Eaatem
Internationalist wing of the
party.
.
Barry Goldwater wllll the
delegates' favorite that year,
a11d he was one of thooe
lyre, Beulah Strauss, Emma promoted by conservatives aa
K. Clatworthy, Mace I Barton, vice president when Ford illJane Wagner Verrion Nease, vited nomination&amp; from all
Jean Sayre, Freda Durham, segments o( the party and from
Nell Werner, Edith William- Democrats as well.
When former President
son, Mary Shuler, Virginia
Nixon
announced- that Ford
Gulley, Alma Newton and Dick
was going w be the vi~
Karr.
Donations were by Quality president upon the resiptlon
Print Shop, Mei~s Local of Spiro T. Agnew, It took two
School, WMPO Radio, Dally months for Ford to be COilContinued on page 8
Sentinel, Athens Messenger,
Pomeroy Emergency Squad,
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
'
Senior Citizens.
Donors were :

69 pints of blood
received Monday
Sixty-nine pints of blood were

London, Mattie Beegle, Lela
Weatherby, . and Behnda
donors Monday at the August Steele, all LPNS.
bloodmobile visit to Pomeroy
Doctors in charge were L. D.
Elementary School. Twenty- Telle, M.D.; Aaron Boonsue,
seven pmts were given as M.D.; John Ridgway, D.O.,
replacement blood . There were and Raymond Boice, M.D.
nine first time donors .
The Canteen was served by
Gallon donors were Robert the United Methodist Sunday
Pocklington and Jud1th School.
Pockhngton: a three gallon
Loading and unloading was
donor was Betty B. Sayre: a done by Volunteer Senior ·
lour gallon donor, Mace! Ci tizens !llld Boy Scout Troop
Barton: a six gallon donor, No. 249.
David Kobientz, and a 13 gallon
Clerical work was performed
donor was Richard Barton.
by Mary Nease, Jean Nease,
Nurses serving were Naomi Juanita Sayre, Clara Mclnr evie wed from 79 possib1e

Shed burns down
A shed and its contents lost to was called to the Dave Lan·
fire Monday at the Robert Fox daker home on Naylor's Run
Farm In the Snowville area lor Shirley Landaker who had a
were valued at $1,200, Pomeroy laceration of her forehead . She
Fire Chief Charles Legar said was taken to Veterans
today.
Memorial Hospital where she
The Pomeroy Fire Dept. was admitted. At 11 : 19a.m. the
a11swered a call to the first at squad went to the Ben Buck
2:09 p.m. Monday . A tractor home at Rock Springs. Mrs.
backfired, causing the building Buck who had a lacerated leg
to catch lire, Chief Legar said. was taken to Veterans
There was insurance coverage. Memorial Hospital.
A nearby barn was threatened
At 4:49 a.m. Tuesday, the
but firemen kept the stracture squad was called to Willis Hill
wet down w prevent the fire for Franklin Lauderinilt who
spreading.
was taken to Veterans
At 10:31 a.m. Monday the Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy Emergency Squad

1

Buses going on

Pomeroy ......... Char le s M
Sa lser. Mi c hael Hubbard,

Larry E. May, Virgil Windon,
Thelma I. Giles. Roger C.

Gaul, Kathleen Wills, David
Koblentz, Davld D. Cllmpbelll
Leo Vaughan. Evelyn Clark,
Effie Pickens , Isabelle Couc h,

Continued on page 8
TWO FINED
RUTLAND - Two defendan Is were lined SIO and COl!ls
each on charges of speedl"g in
Rutland Mayor Eugene
Thompson's court Monday
night.
Fined were Kenneth F .
Mitchell, Langsville, and Terry
L. Metheney, Ewing ton. They
were arrested by Rutland
police Q!ficer, James Quillen,
Vascar was used to catch the
speeding vehlclp .
I

same routes in
Southern area
RACINE - BU&amp;el ol the
Southem Local School Dlllrlct
will travel the IIBJIIe routea lhit
year as last tcbool year, Supt.
Bob Ord Nld today,
Ord has asked fomllle~
having children enlerlns
schOQl the first time, or wbo
havd moved Into the dlairlet
since the clooe of ~elloal 1ut
spring, to contact lhelr nelcbo
bora for lnfonnatton on wbeN
ond what time "to cateh the bal
lhey WIU need.
The flrtt full day ol llchalll '
Will be 'l'ueldly, AJII. 27. Lilt
year'• IChedult will lit
followed

�•

(

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport..Pomeroy,O., TUOIIday, Au~, 26,1974

Reds welcome
Phil pitcher

He'"s making mark
in music world
By BOB HOEFLICH
Making a name for himself,
at an early age in the world of
music ~ Tommy Van Ru,o;sell,
son of Thomas 0 . and Aldine
Winebrenner Russell, rormer
Meigs COWl ty residents.
A 1 97~ graduate of Westland
Hlgh School at Grove City,
Tommy has enrolled at Capitol
Uni vers it y where he wiiJ

•

continue music studies next
month.

I.

l

The

ta lented

young

musician. the grandson of Mrs.

Mabel Winebrenner and the

late
Charles
Robert
Winebrenner of Middleport,
was a warded $1700 in

•

scholarships for his musical

ac hievements over the past
four years in and out of school.
TOMMY VAN RUSSElL
Playing the trumpet seven·
ye ars, Tommy also plays participated in the Buckeye AU
French horn and the Flugel Star Band this year . He
horn , and sings.
received an invitation from
During his high school years, Chrisjto Yanculeff, senior state
Russell was a valua ble representative of the Ohio All
member of the stage and American Youth Honor
symphonic bands. He par- Organization, to tour Russia
ticiapted in the brass choir, the and visit Moscow and
symphoni c choir and was Leningrad.
presented the top outstanding
While in school, ·young
vocal soloist award from Ziggy Russell was vice president of
Coyles 15th annual stage band the symphonic band and
festival. A $150 gift certificate president of the stage band. He
from Coyles and a plaque for plays professionally in several
his school a ccompanied the groups including the Lincoln
recognition. He received a Village Big Band, John Horstanding ovation from the ner 's Big Band ·and the Jim
cr owd .
Johnson Band.
At the high school, Tommy
In addition, he has his own
received the John Phillip Sousa group, ca11ed "Brass", which
award, the highes t given for performed Aug . 10 at the new
high school senior b~nd amphitheater on the Scioto
members.
River in Columbus. cin Aug . 24,
Tommy is a member of the the group will entertain in the
All American Ohio Boys Band, Lausche Building at the Ohio
playing firs t trumpet. He State Fair.

VISITING TEAM - John Reardon, center, deputy director of the Emergency Medical
Service Office of HEW's Health Services Administration headed a team of visiting officials
Monday to evaluate the SEOEMS project. With Reardon is D. Kenneth Morgan, SEOEMS
director,left, and Jack Farrington, contract officer ofSEOEMS, Ohio Valley Health Services
Foundation.

Nation-'s EMS ,hrass check
SEOEMS, find it working
'

•

••

•
'
•

Southeast Ohio Emergency
Medical Service (SEOEMS)
headquarters in Gallipolis was
visited Monday by representatives from the national
emergen cy medical service

office of the Health Services
Administration federal
department
of
Health ,
Education and Welfare.
John Reardon, recently the
acting director, headed the
executive team representing
Dr. David Boyd who was appointed National Director on
August 18. Frederick West,
Federal Region V Director of
EMS of Chicago and Pete Van
Ness, of the EMS federal office
accompanied Reardon.
Purpose of the visit was to
evaluate progress to date of the
seven
county
national
demonstra lion project and

explore sources for sustaining an example a£ what can be
funds following termination of done in rural America. Now
the present federal contract in that the growing pains are
1975.
mostly behind us on these
Staff members of the Ohio .. demonstration programs, we
Valley Health Services must dedicate ourselves to a
Foundation and SEOEMS successful conversion to ondetailed accomplishments of going operating systems."
EMS operations over the last
Jack Farrington, contract
two years and discuSsed plans of(icer for SEOEMS through
and proposals for maintenance Ohio Valley Health Services
of the project when the federal Foundation, and Ken Morgan,
Project Director for the EMS
contract ends.
Reardon stressed the need system led the working
for strong local supportfor this discussions which were
continued operation and followed by site-visits to the
pointed out the benefits which Gallia SEOEMS station, the
have been gained by adhering communication center at
to the design for providing Central Headquarters and the
EMS to southeast Ohio on a emergency department at
regional basis.
Holzer Medical Center.
Reardon said, 11 EMS is
National Director Boyd was
working in southeast Ohio. Our to visit the SEOEMS project
office has used this system as later in the day.

DR. LAMB
•••

.

CONTRIBUTE- Representatives from the two firms contributing to the pediatrics-TV
fund are,! tor, Martha Neal, of Galllpolis Motor Co,, Carrol Wa~gh, Gtllingham Drugs, and
Earl Neff, representing the medical center.
·
·

Pediatrics gets more TV
The fund to provide
television for the young
patients in Holzer Medical
Center 's pediatric nursing unit
is completing its second year
with the recent contributions
by two more firms, Gillingham
Drug Store and the Gallipolis
Motor Company, each donating
$106 for two months' television
service within the children's
rooms at Holzer.

This free service for the
hospitalized youngsters began
in October, 1972, and it has
been continuous since that time
through the generosity of
many, many civic and social
organizations, as well as 18
businesses who have donated
to the TV fund .
Earl Neff, a member of the
Holzer
Medical
Center
Volunteer Service League's

Community Steenng Committee has been solely
responsible for raising all of
the funds for the entire perind
since the free television senr;ce
began in October, 1972.
Any individuals, businesses
or organizations who wish to
donate to this most worthy fund
may do so by contacting Earl
Neff,
Teodora
Avenue,
Gallipolis.

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
appreciate any information to
DEAR DR. LAMB - I read help guide the child.
your column advising against
DEAR READER - An
Yoga exercises. that involved albino simply doesn't have the
prolonged breath holding . normal pigment in the skin. It
Fifteen years ago my strong 21}- is a variation that is present
year.old son wanted to see how from birth. Sometimes the
far he could swim underwater. pigment isn't totally absent. A
He thought the best way to person from a dark ra~e may
prepare for holding his breath be much lighter than usual and
a long time was to precede the have blonde hair. The loss of
·swimming by taking a number pigment can affect only part of
of long deep breaths. One fatal the body or all of it, including
day he took several such deep the skin, hair and even the
breaths, dived in and then he eyes.
fainted. His much smaller girl
Pigment doesn't make much
cousin was the only one with difference except in how it
him at the time and was unable affects the appearance . Ol
to pull him from the water or to course she won't have as much
call for help in time, so he
drowned. Since most people do
not seem to know abOut this
danger, I hope you will tall
'!, em about it.
DEAR READER - You just
ld them. And every word of
what you .said is true. Deep
breathing blows Qff too much
carbon dioxide and upsets the By United Press lnternatual
Some 120,000 coal miners
bOdy chemistry. The normal
respiratory
reflect have joined the ranks of
mechanisms that would force a strikers across the nation as
person to breathe again when labor walkouis crippled the
he ne.eds to don't work, and the coal, automotive and transporperson can become un- tation industries.
Some 1,200 soft coal mines
consciou.S.
from
Maryland to Washington
Another way it happens Is
that breath holding sets off state were closed in a five-day
powerful reflex actions , that walkout to dramatize the need
can actually stop the heart. for safer working conditions in
This is one mechanism in the nation's coal mines.
Some mining industry officausing a simple faint.
cials
charged that the United
The habit of deep, rapid
breaths and then holding your Mine Workers intended to use
breath
for
Underwater the walkout to deplete coal
swimming is dangerous and : supplies and •strengthen the
should not be done. There have union's bargaining position in
·
been several deaths reported contract talks this fall .
The
contract
between
the
from this habit, It is better to
simply blow out once and then UMW and the Bitwninous Coal
take in a maximum breath Operators Association expires
before going under water. Then Nov. 12 and union President
instead of holding the breath it Arnold Miller has predicted the
coal industry will face a long
is better to let the excess air
winter strike.
out slowly while swimming .
rUMW Vice President Mike
This way you don't have the
Trbovich,
ln an emotional
lungs filled to the bursting
speech at Farmington, w. Va.,
pqint ~.the whole 'time. The
said
another work stoppage
.prolonged overinflatton of the
lungs from breath holding is might be necessary to dramatize the need for safer working
also a factor in causing fainconditions.
The UMW is
ting.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I allowed !Q days for such work
stoppages under their present
wonder if you could give me
oome Information regarding
my niece. She Is an albino and
OTHER CAR BACKED
ls 12 years old. She lives In
In a Sunday accident
France, and her mother asked reported by the Pomeroy
me to help find out what can be Police it was stated that a car
the fut~re of such a child. She Is driven by Marvin Friend,
very bright and shows a strong Pomeroy, backed into a car
character. She would like to driven by Roy Arms, Minersitudy to become a doctor or to' ville. Friend states that the
work with children. She report was in error and the
P!JSieSBeS a great compaaston · Arms vehicle backed Jn to the
for sl!fferlnl! peOple. I would Friend car:

protection from the sun, just as
blonde races are less protected
than dark races.
The only important aspect of
being albino really is to be
certain that her eyes are all
right. Some albinos do have
associated eye problems,
many of which are minor but
need correction. Any good eye
doctor can examine her for
this. ~\Side from this, it is
probably wise not to make too
much of it or cause her to feel
she is different. She could
become a beautiful blonde
lady, so I can't see why she
shouldn't lead a perfectly
normal life.

•

120,000 mmers
become strikers

f

I'

contract.
More than 16,000 auto workers were idle today at six GM
truck plants and one auto plant
as the company postponed the
startup of production of 1975
models at those plants because
of strikes against two parts
suppliers.
Another 13,500 GM employes
were off their joba In continuing strikes against GM's
Lordstown, Ohio, and St. Louis,
Mo., assembly plants.
A tentative contract agreement has been reached between A.O. Smith and one local
union, but that pact must he
ratified and the questl6n
remains al! to whether those
union members would crqss
the picket lines of other
workers wbo have not yet
reached agreement with the
firm .

Negotiations have resumed
in an effort to end a strike by
bus drivers against the Rapid
Transit District whlch serves
Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside and San Bernadino
counties in California. The
strike affects · 40,000 persons.
PAYDAY PLACE
Pay day for Meigs Countians
working in the summer NeighbOrhood Youth Corps will be
Wednesday from 9 a.m. to 12
noon at the Community AcUon
Program office in the Meigs
COWl ty Courthouse . On Thursday the youths will travel to the
Ohio State Fair, a cultural
enrichment !rip. The buses for
Meigs County.youths will leave
the Senior Citizens Center
parking lot at 6:30 a.m.
&lt;

•.

UIRACLeS
_.....
DO
-·
.H~ ..
trrnOOREfllll

-

The Pentagon, home of

Ford would heal
amnesty wounds

FF As win .9 trophies

The combined FFA chapters exhlbiling steers were Ken Mike Milhone, a lamb.
of Meigs Local, Eastern Local Rose, Rick Findley , Mark
The FFA members and their
and Southern Local School Richmond, Dave Roush, Mark advisors, Aaron Sayre, Everett
said this included . 29,000 Districts won nine trophies at Pierce, Mike Salser, Dave Holcomb and Bob Spurlock
CHICAGO
( UP!)
Watson, Tim Wickersham, . txtend thanks to the donors of
President Ford found another military deserters, ~.~oo the Meigs County Fair.
fugitives
most
of
them
in
Trophy winners were Ken Harold Eagle, Ron Ables, Greg trophies, Meigs County
emotional wound that the
nation must heal when he Canada- 7,900 persons in jail Smith, grand ·champion Davis, Barry Smith, Ray Mills, Agricultural Society and those
suggested that the young men for violating the Selective breeding gilt, Meigs FFA; Rodney Allen, Fred Honaker, who purchased animals at the
who left their country rather Service Act, and 8,200 persons Rick Macomber, grand Tony Hutton, Stan Davis, and Junior Uvestock sale.
than fight in Vietnam be wbo are being investigated or champion pair of two market
hogs, Meigs FFA; Dave Kiser,
allowed to work their way back prosecuted.
Grand
The
statement
on
amnesty
Champion FF A market
home.
Ford made the proposal was a departure from . a hog and grand champion
Monday before an audience traditional speech in which market hog of entire fair,
that could not be considered Ford appointed Richard Racine FF A; Steve ·Boso,
receptive -the annual conven- Roudebush, deputy ad- c)larnpion cross . breed clasa
tion of the Veterans of Foreign ministrator of veterans affairs, steer and grand champion FF A
Wars. The VFW is on the to bead the huge Veterans steer class, Rsclne FFA; Don
record opposing any form of Administration. The President Shaffer, second place cross'
amnesty -conditional or told reporters later that the breed steer class, Racine FF A;
decision was made after he Jeff Knighting, champion
unconditional.
arrived
in Chicago, in a hotel Angus steer class, Racine
Early reaction from the men
who left indicated that they room an hour before the ad- FF A; Joe Brown, second plaee
Angus steer class, Rscine,
would be unwilling to accept dress.
'•The right audience," Ford FFA.
FOrd's proposal, which would
told
reporters as Air Force One
Other members of FFA
mean leaving their new homes
and performing some type of flew back to Washington, chapters slowing projects at
"would be an audience that the fair in the Swine departalternative service.
The speech came as a sur- would be difficult. Rather than ment was· Ken Rose with
prise to the VFW which had go and speak to a hand-picked reserve champion milrket bog
given Ford a warm reception. audience, I picked one that I of entire fair; Lester Parker,
He described his audience as hoped would have some under- David Watson, sheep; John
Young, reserve champion
"understanding." Some of standing.
ANTIQUE CARS showed .up to help launch the . Ap"It would have been a little market lamb.
them said they were "stunpalachia Old Car Club Sunday in Jackson.
cowardly if we had picked
ned."
FHA
members
Other
"In my judgment, these some audience that would have
young Americans should have been ectastic."
Ford had discussed the
a second chance to contribute
with three of his four
proposal
their fair share to the'
rebuilding of peace among . children. He said they apOwners of antique cars met Coupe from Jackson; J . P.
ourselves and with all proved.HJsoidestsonMichael,
i~ becoming a charter member
a seminary student, has al- at the Jackson Square Shop- Rogers, 30 Model A Ford Coupe
nations/' Ford said.
should contact any of the
"So I'm throwing the weight ready spoken publicly in favor ping Center on Sunday, August from Wellston ; Bob Rose, 41
Sedan
from members listed above. before
of my presidency into the of amnesty. White · House 18 at noon to have lunch and Chevrolet
the meeting on August 29.
scales of justice on the side of sources said that Melvin Laird, organize tlie Appalachia Old Wellston ; Carl Sorrell, 30
leniency . I foresee their earned a former secretary of defense, Car Club.
Pontiac Sedan from Harnden ·
talked
with
the
President
Their
cars
were
on
display
·
Carl
Wasmer, 26 Chevrolet 2
re..,ntry ~rned re..,ntry into a new atmosphere of hope, ''within the last few days," while the owners ate lunch. At door Sedan from Oak Hill, and
urging him to "look at the 1:30 p.m. the cars moved out David Yates, a 55 Chevrolet
hard work and mutual trust.
for a tour of the city of Jackson Sedan, from Wellston.
"! will act promptly, fairly problem."
MARKET REPORT
and very firmly in the same
Another man Ford spoke escorted by the Jackson Police
Several other members were
Point
Plea san~ W.Va.
spirit that guided Abraham . with was Sen. Robert Taft, R- Department. Car owners were present, but due to bad weather
August17,1974
Uncoln and Harry Truman," Ohio, who introduced a bill last James E. Arrowood, 46 Ford and restoration work in
SLAUGHTER
STEERS
Ford concluded. "As I reject year to set up a board that S¢an from Oak Hlll; John P. progress they were not able to
Standard 800-1000 lbs. 26.7:&gt;-30.
amnesty, sol reject revenge." could grant immunity to an Boyd, 36 Ford Pick-up from bring their cars.
SLAUGHTER HEIFERS Ford ordered that 49,500 individua1 after he served a Oak Hill; James Denny, 30
The Appalachia Old Car Club
cases be reviewed. An aide certain amount of time In a Ford Replica from Jackson; Is making plans for !ali events. Standard 700-1000 lbs. 24-25.50.
SLAUGHTER COWS ·
public service job, such as the William Hartley, 31 Model A The club charter meeting will
Canner
&amp; Cutter ]g..2Q.IO.
Peace Corps. Taft, according Ford Tudor from Wellston; be held in Wellston at Millard
VEAL - Choice &amp; Prime 190to a spokesman, was Richard H. Jones, 48 Clievrolet Logan's Garage on August 29
"delighted that the President Sedan from AllensvlUe; Robert at 7 p.m. Everyone interested 225 lbs. 35.50, 226-265 lbs. 39.50.
HOGS - U.S. 1-3 190-240 lbs.
has more or less endorsed our . Jones, 28 Model A Ford Sport
36.10, 39.10, U.S.l-3, 241}-260 lbs.
conCept."
Coupe from Wellston; Millard
John Blake, president of the
37-38.25, Sows, U.S. 1-3, 300-500
At the least, Ford has Logan, 34 Packard Sedan from
Southern . Valley Athletic provoked a debate. Echoing Wellston ; Dwight J. Miller, 26
lbs. 22. ~26 :90, Boars 300-600
TO CHOSE QUEEN
Conference has announced that the feelings of a number of Ford T Coupe from Oak HiU ;
lbs.
17-19.45, Pigs (by head) 21}The Ohio Valley Horse Show
the annual fall meeting will be Americans, C.P . Harris, com- George Nutt, 28 !lulck Opera Assn. will hold a fall roundup 40 lbs. 7-23.
held at 7:30p.m. Wednesday In mander of the VFW McGrail
YEARLING STEERS next month at which time an
the office of C. Comer Brad- Coyne Post in PlttsiJUrgh, said:
association queen will be Good &amp; Choice 500-Goo lbs. 24bury , Gallia County School "They chose to leave this
~rowned . Saturday the six 30.
Superintendent.
country when we needed them.
queen candidates, active with · - STEER CALVES - Good &amp;
All
coaches, athletic Now let them fend for themthe association, will' be in- Choice Under 300 lbs. 117.50directors and league officials selves."
terviewed by Mrs. Michael 120, 401}-600 lbs. 29-31.50.
are invited to attend . .
There is a question how
HEIFER CALVES - Good &amp;
Family Day was observed Shaw, Point Pleasant, Mrs.
Officials of the Southeastern many would return under the Sunday at the Laurel Cliff Free Oakley Collins, Ironton, and Choice Under 300 lbs. 82-140,
Ohio Athletic League will meet conditions Ford , suggests. Methodist Church with attend- Mrs. Ralph Welker, Pomeroy, 4()0.,'j50 lbs. 28.50-31.75, Cows &amp;
at 7 p.m . Wednesday at William D.Galvinofthe United ance reacl)lng 133 during the A dinner will be held in con- Calvea (by head) 235-275, Cows
Jackson High School.
Presbyterian Church e~­ Sunday school and 101 for the junction with the Interviews. (by head ) 16g..269.
The session Is held for plained saying "anything that morning worship. Families
BABY CAJ"VES (By ltead)
athletic directors , principals deals with earned immunity Is were recogniud. ·
- Beef 17.50, Holstein &amp; Brown
MEET THE TEAM
and head coaches.
hot amnesty. It stlU implies
Special millie waa presented
EASTERN - The Eastern Swl1111 22.50-42.50,
guilt."
by Rev. Floyd Shook, Mr _and LoCal Athletic B~ters wlil
· REUNION SLATED
A 27-year-&lt;&gt;ld draft resister' Mra. Jooepll Higginbotham, stage "meet the team nl&amp;ht" a8
SOCIAL IS AT 7 -~'
The descendants Of the late , who edits Arne~. a magazine
and Mr. and Mrs. T. J. well as meet the new principal
RACINE - The lee cream
John W. and Sarah Jane Rose for American exiles In Canada,
Whitaker. At tl&gt;e Sunday night at 6:30p.m. Friday ln the social to he held Saturday at
family will hold a reunion Gerry Condon, said "a general
evenln&amp; aervice, Robert high a&lt;:hool auditoriwn. All
beginning at 12 noon Sunday at )lllcondltlonal amnesty iB the Barton, assistant past.o r, parent$, teachers and any the Racine Fire Station wlll be
at 7 p.m., sponsored by the
the Sutton M. E. Church.
only thing accepllible."
preached.
· ·
· · Interested persons' are Invited. Racine ER squad.
,

holding can cause h arm

•

By S1U CAMEN
Reds, who won 15-2. The
UPI Sporto Writer
triumph en a~ Cincinnati w
Welcome to the major lea- rerna in 2 \; games behind first
gues, Tom Underwood.
place Los Angeles In the
The Philadelphia Phils' high- National League West.
ly wuted pitcher made his
In other National League ·
major league debut against the games, las Angeles edged
Cincinnati Reds Monda y nigh t Chicago 8-7 in 12 innings, San
and nobody could blame the 21}- Francisco beat Pittsburgh :&gt;-3,
year.old lefty if he wishes to Atlanta walloped St. Louis II~ .
forget the experience.
Houston shaded New York 2-1
•• Not too many pitchers in lllnnings and Montreal beat
make their major league debut San Diego 7-4.
on national televis ion like
In the only American League
that. " said the na ti ve of games, Minnesota beat New
Kokomo, Ind., who came on in York 6-2, Boston downed
relief and lasted one-third of an Chicago 6-1, California edged
inning, facing seven batters Detroit 1-{J and Milwaukee
· and allpwing six runs, in- ~aded Oa)dand HI.
cluding a grand slam homer by Dedgen 8, Cubs 7
Joe Morgan.
Relief specialist Mike Mar"I was too numb to feel . shall, who hurled six scoreless
anything," said Underwood. "! innings, ra ced home from
can't even tell you whether my second on an infield out to give
feet were on the ground ."
Los Angeles its win over
Morgan's homer was his Chicago and snap the Dodgers'
second of the game and 17th of six-game losing streak. Marthe year and highlighted a shall, winning his 12th game
ninerun third inning for the against eight losses, was on
second with one out in the 12th
when Rick Auerbach topped a
slow roller down the first base
line .. Catoher Steve Swisher
picked up the ball and threw
_,
out Auerbach but when MilTshall discovered that neither
'
'"
Cub pitcher Oscar Zamora nor
third baseman Bill Madlock
was covering home, he scored
unmolested. Steve Garvey's
17th homer, a two-run shot in
••
the seventh, sent the game Into
'.
extra innings.
Giants 5, Pirates 3
Dave Kingman doubled
home the go-ahead run in the
ninth, then scored an insurance
the U.S. Military System , is
the world's largest building
with
17'h
miles
of

corridors. 28,000 miles of

.,

telephone wires, and 5.2
acres of _glass in its win·
dows. Its employees are
said to make ol'lo'er 123,000

"
"

'

telephone ca lls daily and
to 30,000 cups of
coffee per' day .
You will be calling neigh·
bor , friend and relative to
tell them about your new
Miracle water refiner , You
· will be proud to tel l them
about your c lean, fresh
smelling coffee , coffee that
tastes like coffee bec~u se
your water has had all the
b~d
odor and
taste
pollutants removed from it
before , yo·u made yo~r
dCIIclous coffee . You will
be proud to sing the praises
of refihed water in other
parts of your home too. You
will be telling them how
easy it is to whisk through
your housecleaning c hores,
and what a beautiful white
wash you have w ith refined
water . You will tell them
how much you save on
cost ly cleaning agents, too.
Call now
for home
demonstration.
882·2525.

drink up

SAYRE
HARDWARE
882·2525
New Haven, W. Va .

run to lead San Francisco over
Pittsburgh as Ron Bryan t won
his firsl game since May 31.
Bryant, who won 24 games last
year, recorded only his third
win th ~ year in 15 decisions by
scattering seven hits in eight
innings in his first start since
July 7.
Braves II, Cardinals 6
Henry Aaron, findi ng his
fa vorite victim in the return of
Claude Osteen, smacked a tworun hom'er and a sacrifice fly
and Marty Perez drove in four
runs with two doubles to lead
Atlanta over St. Louis. Osteen,
now S..lO, made his first ap..
pearance for the Cardinals
after coming over (rom Houston earlier this month and gave
up Aaron's 730th career homer.
It was the 14th homer Aaron
has hit off Osteen, h~ leading
victim among active majOr
league pitchers.
Aaron 's blast was his 17th
and Darrell Evans hit hi.s 14th
for Atlanta . Lou Brock stole
two bases, giving him 84 and
putting him fifth on the list of
all-time single season base
stealers with almost a fourth of
the season left to play.
Astros 2, Mets 1
Milt May, who tied the game
with a sacrifice fly in the ninth,
singled home the winning run
with two out in the lith to give
Houston its win over New
York. Greg Gross led off the
lith with a single, moved to
second a sacrifice and scored
easily as May singled. Reliever
Ken Forsch picked up the
victory, his fifth against five
losses, while Tom Seaver, who
went all the way for the Mets,
suffered his eighth loss in 15
decisions.
Expos 7, Padres 4
National Football League
Barry Foote doubled home a
Season run in the second inning and
American Conference
E a,st
snapped a 3-3 tie with a seventh
w 1 t pet. pf pa
inning home run to lead
M iam i
2 1 0 .667 79 4B
Montreal past San Diego.
New Englnd 2 1 o .667 3
•
•
0
7 7 73 Foote's homer, .hi..s eighth,
0
~~t:~~ ore
~ ~ j~~ 36 . 9 cam~ off southpaw Randy
New Yrk Jts 1 2 o .333 68 60 Jones,. who absorbed his 18th
central
· t ·
w 1 1 pet. pt Pa loss agalnst seven VIC ortes.
c rnci'nnat i J o o 1.000 6? 41 Wlllie McCovey slugged his
Pi ttsburgh 2 o o 1.coo 7 6 28 18th homer, a three-run shot,
Houston
2 1 o .667 97 29 for the Padres.

i ·

.C leveland

Oakland

West
w 1 t pet . pf pa
3 0 0 1.000 96 33

MIAMI (UPl ) _ It wasn't

National conference
w
pet. pt pa
St . Loui s
1
750 79
3
O ·
"

E~s'.

Dallas
2 1 o .667
Nw Yrk Gnts2 1 0 .667 39
washington 0 3 o .000
Ph iladelphl 0 3 0 .000 58
Central
w t t pet. pf
Green Bay 3 0 0 1.000 49

the same as Super Bowl VIII
bu f
th. M d
&gt;'ght
t or
e
on ay n
television football watcher, it
was close - in . the first half,
Major League Leaders
ay United Press International
Leading Batters

"

i: ll

Z1~rno~!ota ri ~ g :6~5 5~
Ch ic ago

91

pa
23

::.

O 3 0 .000 38 80
west

w 1 1 pet. pf pa
LosAn"geles 2 1 o .667 89 50

Atlanta

1 2 0 .333 46 48

San Fran esc 0 J 0 .000 29 51
New Orlens 0 3 0 ..000 30 78

Monday's Result

Miam i 21 Minnesota 9

'

National League Garr,Atl ,20 as~o ~2 1~3 P3's'9
Zisk. Pitf 111 403 60 132 .328
Gross 1 Ho 116 431 63 139 . 323
Smith , St .L
119
22
Grvy , LA 10s
117 370
485 55
70 155 .3
.320

Brck , St . L 11 5 474

79

149 .314

Montanez, Phil

107 378 41 118
crdn l , Ch 106 411 59 128
Ol ivr , ptt 107 443 68 137
Bcknr , LA 106 417 54 129
American League

.3 12
.311
.309
.309

McRa . KC106
Yastrzemsk i ,
114
Jcksn , Okl l J
Rand I, Tx 115
orta , Chi 103
Al len , Ch i 1 u
Mdd,, NY 97
Pin ill, NY 105

382
Bos

•oo

54

121

.3 17

75

126
121
121
118
129·
97

.3 15
.312
.310

J88 69
390 SO
381 61
417 81
314 52

.3 1!&gt;
.309
.309

390 53 119 .305
Home Runs
National League; . Sc hmidt,
PtW 30 ; Wynn , LA 27 ; Ben ch,
Cln 24 ; Cedeno, Hou 22 ; Perez ,

Cl~~~rican League : Allen , Chi
32 · Burroughs , Tex 24 ; Ja ck son , Oa Jc: 23; Melton, Ch i and
Darw in , M lnn 20 .

Market Repon

Nation~r"L:aa~~~~

'."s chm idt ,

Phil 95 ; Ben c h . Ci n 91 ; Wynn ,
LA 86 ; Cedeno. · Hou
Garvey , LA 83 . ~

a•:

American League : Bur .
roughs , _Tex 100 ; Al len , Chi 84 ;.
Bando , Oak 81 ; Henderson , Ch t
and Darw i n , M inn 77 .

Cooper Cares and We Care

Stolen

Base-s

National League : Broc k, SI.L
Bll ; Morgan . Cln 51 ; Lopes . LA

COOPER
POLY-MARK IV

" .American

.

League : . N'o rth ,
Oak H ; Rivers , c al and Car ew,

. Mlnn 30 .
·pifchlng
National LeagUe:
·s JHln gham .
Cin

15 -B; Gullett , Cln and
carlton , Phil 14 .8 ; John , LA lJ .

3;
Messersmith , LA
1J .5 ;
McGlothen , St.L lJ .a ; Reuss,
Pitt 13.9 ; P. Niekro. All 13 · 10 '

Single WhHe
Sidewall

Lonborg . Pl'lll 13 -11 .
American League : T ien t, Bas
l9 -8 ; Busby . KC 18· 10 ; Wood ,
Chi 18 -14 ; Hunter . Oak 17 · 10 :
Jenkins. tell. 17 . 11 ; e ibby ' T ex
17 -14 . '

F78xl4
4 PLY POLYESTER CORD Fed. Tax, 2·"41
OTHER SLZES PRICED ACCORDINGLY

•

out w~

POMERQY

I

Red So.o: I, While Sox 1
Bill Lee aod Diego Segul
combined on a llve-bitta- 14
lead the Red Sox over the
White Sox. Lee wont the !trot 7
1-3 innings to gain his 14th win
against llloues. Sill dllferont
players drove in rurut for the
Red So~ aa they tagged Jtm
]Caat with his eighth !&lt;iss in 21
· decisions.
liil A GD/Jd NlfhbDr,
Sllll f1110

1J Tb1ro .

For en your

••nu•u,

p

7301

"Can I afford
,an independent
insurance expert
to figure out
what's best for me?"
Sure.
An independent~.....-::::-........._
' agent makes
no extra
charge for
his services.

rth

NFL PLAYERS AWARD
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) A1 Oliver and Richie Zisk of the
, Pittsburgh Pirates were
named co-winners of the
National League Player of the
Week Award Monday.
NL President Charles .
Feeney said it was the first
time Since the · award's inception that two players from
the same team were selected
for the honor.

t

anyway.
scored Ln e ou quar er on
Just as they did in their 24-7 an eight-yard run by rookie Nat
Super Bowl win over Min- Moore.
Minnesota's Dave Osborne
nesota in January, the Miami scored from one-yard out on
Dolphins played grind-it-&lt;&gt;ut the end of an 80-yard drive in
football Monday night to down the fourth quarter. Fred Cox
the Vikings 21·9·
h d ki k d 27
d f' ld a1
The Dolphins used most of a
C e a -yar le go
their regulars in the ftrst half, for the Vikings in the third
with quarterba&lt;;k Bob Griese period.
calling his usual artful game
d
Csonk
d J'
an
Larry
a an
un
•
Klick pushing for steady hunks
of yardage. By intermission, it
'was 14-0 and the Dolphins
needed only to hang on to win.
"I thought the yeterans,
offensively and defensively,
_pJ..ayed exceptionally well inh
the first half/' Miami Coac
The Shade Rlber Coon
Don Shula said. ••sob Griese Hunters Assn: will hold a wild
called an exceptional ball coon hunt and bench show
gameandhe,CsonkaandKiick Saturday at the Rock Springs
.
played well for the short tli11e Fairgrounds, one mile northQf
they've been in carnp, 11
th Ki k d Pomeroy .
Csonka, who wi
ic an
The bench show will begin at
wide receiver Paul Warfield 4 p.m. with a $3 entry fee and a
are bound for the World full set of trophies. Entry fee
FootbaJI Leagu~ .Memphis for the night hunt is $5 'for
Southmen· in 1975, scored grade dogs and · $6 for
touchdownsfromoneandthree registered dogs with the enyards OUt. Csonka gained 61 tries closing at 9 p.m. In the
yards on 16 carries in the first night hunt there . will · be 10
half.
trophies for registered animals
Warfield did not play but the and five for grade dogs. There
1
crowd showed . what Shu a will be a trophy for the night
called "mixed emotions" fdr champion and for the grand
Klick and Csonka when they
·night champion plus six breed
were introduced.
trophies.
Many observers had given
The treeing contest will
the Dolphins the edge because
follow
the bench show and
db
mostofthelrveteransha een entry fee for the event is $3.
in camp longer thaQ the Anyone wishing any further
.
Wh en t he NFL
Vi~in~s .
information on the events may
Players Association c~lled a contact William E. Smith, 992coolm
' g off period l.B.!it Wed·
5206 , or Oscar T. Smith, 992nesday, there were 34 Dolphins
5594.
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six Vikings were in camp.
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Ina ltlon
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By FRED McMANE
Brewen 1, A'• o
George Scott's second inning
UPI Sparta Writer
it's funny wh at the thought of homer and the combined !!lxbeing sent ba~ to the minors hit pitching ol Billy Champion
wUI do to a player.
and· Tom Murphy enabled the
Take Frank Tanana, for Brewers to wln their sixth
example.
gsme in their last seven starts
The 21-year.old le(t-liander and hand the A's their fourth
of the California Angels felt he loss in their last five games.
was very close w receiving a Scott's horner was one of only
one-way ticket back to the four hits the Brewers collected
Pacific Coast-League early last off southpaw Vida Blue, who
month alter failing miserably suffered his lith loss in 25
as bolh a starting pitcher and a decisions.
reliever .
Twins '• Yaakees 2
Bobby Darw in drilled a
It wasn't that he didn't have
the talent. It's just that he threerun first inning homer
wasn't working hard enough. and Joe Decker tossed a sixHe wa s taking life in. the big hitter to spark the Twins' over
the Yankees. The Twins
leagues too easy.
But the sudden realization collected five hits and five runs
that he might be throwing off starter Sam McDowell in
away a career before it even only 11-3 innings while sending
began set Tanana straight. the left-liander to his sixth loss
Now he appears to have a in seven decisions . Graig
Nettles homered for the
bright future once more .
The talented rookie turned in Yankees.
his second consecutive shutout
•
Monday night when he b)apked
the Detroit Tigers 1-0 on sill
hits whUe striking out a career
high of nine.
In the only other American
League action, Milwaukee
edged Oakland 1-0, Minnesota
beat New York· 6-2 and Boston
topped Chicago 6-1.
Cincinnati walloped Philadelphia 1~2. Los Angeles edged
Chicago ll-7 in 12 innings, San
Francisco beat Pittsburgh 5-3;
Houston nipped New York 2-1
in 11 inPings, Montreal
defeated San Diego 7-4 and
Atlanta topped St. Louis II~ in
National League games.
The Angels, who managed
only six hits off 22-year-old
Fred Holdsworth, . won the
game for Tanana in the bottom
of the ninth when pinch-hitter
Winston I.Jenas scored ll.inchrunner Mickey Rivers with a
.
sacrifice .fly.
"Th~ was by far my beat :
outipg," said Tanana, who ~ :
now won five of his last S1X
decisions. "When I was in the
bullpen after pitching so poorly
earlier this year, I said to
myself, 'hey, what am I doing ·
here? Tni a better pitcher than
that.' When I had a 4-13 record, .
I thought I was one step away ,
. from Salt Lake City."

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NEW YORK (U PiJ - Maybe you've noticed where the
California Angels are having a spot of trouble.
They're in the celliar in the American League West. They're not
only down, they're way down, and it could ta~e the combined
~entus of Harry Dalton and Dick William•, plus all .the klng's
men to get them back headed in the right dlrecUon agam ..
At that, the Angels look a bit better now than they d1d a few
weeks ago when they lost 15 in a row at borne.
That stri ng of defeats threatened the all,time record of 20
straight setbac~s at home set by the now-gone 81, Louli! Browns
in 19:'&gt;3, an&lt;h long with everything el.se, it also produced a rush of
personal memories of how tha t season turned into a summer long
nightmare for Mar ty Marion, the n manager of the Browns.
Marion baseball 's " Mister ShortBtop" for II years with the St.
Louis C.;dinals, now runs the stadium club fo r them at Busch
Stadium. He's 56, but won't forget the St. Louis Browns, not the
'53 Browns, a,nywa y, If he lives to be 106.
••Jt was a very strange ball club," he says. "The players were a
bunch of misfi ts. Most of 'em weren' t even playing their natural
positions. They we re just doing the best they could, and that
wasn't very good a t all, was it?"
Hardly . .
The Browns lost 100 games that year . They somehow managed
to win 54.
Marion, accustomed to being with a winner like the Cardinals,
tried everything he could think of, used every pitcher he had ,
Virgil Trucks ...Don Larsen... Harry Brecheen ... Duane Pi~et.­
te ... Bobo Holloman ... Dick Littlefi eld ... Bob Cain . .. Mtke
Blyzka ...Satchel Paige .. .lt didn't matter. The result generally
was the same. Another loss.
From June 3 through June 14 ,of 1953, the Browns .lost 14 in •
row in their own backyard at Sportsman's Park. Then they left
for New York and a three game series with the powerful leagueleading Yankees.
·
Fortune smiled on the embattled Brownies on June 15. They
didn't lose. They couldn't possibly. It was an off day .
On June 16, the Browns had a night game scheduled with the
Yankees, winners of their last 18 straight.
Some of the Browns' players killed time before the game by
going to the movies. Esther Williams and Fernando Lamas were
playing in "Dangerous When Wet" at Radio City . For 75 cents
you could catch the early show, including the dancing Rockettes.
Jack Dempsey's Restaurant nearby was offering ~ top quality
sirloin steak for $3 .65 that day, and for the same pnce, a spec1al
salad and baked Idaho potato.
At the ballpark, Marty Marion, the manager, put on his
uniform and looked at the lineup card on his desk.
"What's the difference how I make it out, these guys never
hit," he said, Wea~ily .
Then he turned to me.
UHere, you make it out," he sa~d. uwe can't possibly do any
worse."
.
He was kidding. At least I thought he was, so I declined the
offer with thanks.
Later Marion wrote in the names.
Johnny Groth, CF ,leading off. Then he put down his own name,
· and had himself playing third base. Jim Dyck, LF, came next,
with Vic Wertz, RF , hitting cleanup. Roy Sievers, IB, hit fifth,
followed by Les Moss, C, Billy Hunter, SS, Bobby Young; 2B, and
.
Pillette pitching.
Casey Stengel, looking to equal the American League record of
]9 straight victories, started Whitey Fm:d for the Yankees and
the lefthander had trouble with his control. In the second mnmg
he walked Moss and Pillette, after which Groth singled for a run.

~:~m~~ty ll ~ mH1 ~!, Dolphins grin

Vacation Tire Buy

laurel Cliff
has family day

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporta Edllor

-

Yn

SVAC meeting
on Wednesday

Sport Parade

1 2 0 .333 45 77

Crw , Mnn
a4~5 ~7 1~8 ~3~1
Hargrv, Tx 98 3 16 45 lOB .342

Old car owners to organize

"

1

Thought of minors
spurs on Tanana

·

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See your local
Ford Dealer

FORD

-··

'
(

'·

�•

(

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport..Pomeroy,O., TUOIIday, Au~, 26,1974

Reds welcome
Phil pitcher

He'"s making mark
in music world
By BOB HOEFLICH
Making a name for himself,
at an early age in the world of
music ~ Tommy Van Ru,o;sell,
son of Thomas 0 . and Aldine
Winebrenner Russell, rormer
Meigs COWl ty residents.
A 1 97~ graduate of Westland
Hlgh School at Grove City,
Tommy has enrolled at Capitol
Uni vers it y where he wiiJ

•

continue music studies next
month.

I.

l

The

ta lented

young

musician. the grandson of Mrs.

Mabel Winebrenner and the

late
Charles
Robert
Winebrenner of Middleport,
was a warded $1700 in

•

scholarships for his musical

ac hievements over the past
four years in and out of school.
TOMMY VAN RUSSElL
Playing the trumpet seven·
ye ars, Tommy also plays participated in the Buckeye AU
French horn and the Flugel Star Band this year . He
horn , and sings.
received an invitation from
During his high school years, Chrisjto Yanculeff, senior state
Russell was a valua ble representative of the Ohio All
member of the stage and American Youth Honor
symphonic bands. He par- Organization, to tour Russia
ticiapted in the brass choir, the and visit Moscow and
symphoni c choir and was Leningrad.
presented the top outstanding
While in school, ·young
vocal soloist award from Ziggy Russell was vice president of
Coyles 15th annual stage band the symphonic band and
festival. A $150 gift certificate president of the stage band. He
from Coyles and a plaque for plays professionally in several
his school a ccompanied the groups including the Lincoln
recognition. He received a Village Big Band, John Horstanding ovation from the ner 's Big Band ·and the Jim
cr owd .
Johnson Band.
At the high school, Tommy
In addition, he has his own
received the John Phillip Sousa group, ca11ed "Brass", which
award, the highes t given for performed Aug . 10 at the new
high school senior b~nd amphitheater on the Scioto
members.
River in Columbus. cin Aug . 24,
Tommy is a member of the the group will entertain in the
All American Ohio Boys Band, Lausche Building at the Ohio
playing firs t trumpet. He State Fair.

VISITING TEAM - John Reardon, center, deputy director of the Emergency Medical
Service Office of HEW's Health Services Administration headed a team of visiting officials
Monday to evaluate the SEOEMS project. With Reardon is D. Kenneth Morgan, SEOEMS
director,left, and Jack Farrington, contract officer ofSEOEMS, Ohio Valley Health Services
Foundation.

Nation-'s EMS ,hrass check
SEOEMS, find it working
'

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••

•
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•

Southeast Ohio Emergency
Medical Service (SEOEMS)
headquarters in Gallipolis was
visited Monday by representatives from the national
emergen cy medical service

office of the Health Services
Administration federal
department
of
Health ,
Education and Welfare.
John Reardon, recently the
acting director, headed the
executive team representing
Dr. David Boyd who was appointed National Director on
August 18. Frederick West,
Federal Region V Director of
EMS of Chicago and Pete Van
Ness, of the EMS federal office
accompanied Reardon.
Purpose of the visit was to
evaluate progress to date of the
seven
county
national
demonstra lion project and

explore sources for sustaining an example a£ what can be
funds following termination of done in rural America. Now
the present federal contract in that the growing pains are
1975.
mostly behind us on these
Staff members of the Ohio .. demonstration programs, we
Valley Health Services must dedicate ourselves to a
Foundation and SEOEMS successful conversion to ondetailed accomplishments of going operating systems."
EMS operations over the last
Jack Farrington, contract
two years and discuSsed plans of(icer for SEOEMS through
and proposals for maintenance Ohio Valley Health Services
of the project when the federal Foundation, and Ken Morgan,
Project Director for the EMS
contract ends.
Reardon stressed the need system led the working
for strong local supportfor this discussions which were
continued operation and followed by site-visits to the
pointed out the benefits which Gallia SEOEMS station, the
have been gained by adhering communication center at
to the design for providing Central Headquarters and the
EMS to southeast Ohio on a emergency department at
regional basis.
Holzer Medical Center.
Reardon said, 11 EMS is
National Director Boyd was
working in southeast Ohio. Our to visit the SEOEMS project
office has used this system as later in the day.

DR. LAMB
•••

.

CONTRIBUTE- Representatives from the two firms contributing to the pediatrics-TV
fund are,! tor, Martha Neal, of Galllpolis Motor Co,, Carrol Wa~gh, Gtllingham Drugs, and
Earl Neff, representing the medical center.
·
·

Pediatrics gets more TV
The fund to provide
television for the young
patients in Holzer Medical
Center 's pediatric nursing unit
is completing its second year
with the recent contributions
by two more firms, Gillingham
Drug Store and the Gallipolis
Motor Company, each donating
$106 for two months' television
service within the children's
rooms at Holzer.

This free service for the
hospitalized youngsters began
in October, 1972, and it has
been continuous since that time
through the generosity of
many, many civic and social
organizations, as well as 18
businesses who have donated
to the TV fund .
Earl Neff, a member of the
Holzer
Medical
Center
Volunteer Service League's

Community Steenng Committee has been solely
responsible for raising all of
the funds for the entire perind
since the free television senr;ce
began in October, 1972.
Any individuals, businesses
or organizations who wish to
donate to this most worthy fund
may do so by contacting Earl
Neff,
Teodora
Avenue,
Gallipolis.

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
appreciate any information to
DEAR DR. LAMB - I read help guide the child.
your column advising against
DEAR READER - An
Yoga exercises. that involved albino simply doesn't have the
prolonged breath holding . normal pigment in the skin. It
Fifteen years ago my strong 21}- is a variation that is present
year.old son wanted to see how from birth. Sometimes the
far he could swim underwater. pigment isn't totally absent. A
He thought the best way to person from a dark ra~e may
prepare for holding his breath be much lighter than usual and
a long time was to precede the have blonde hair. The loss of
·swimming by taking a number pigment can affect only part of
of long deep breaths. One fatal the body or all of it, including
day he took several such deep the skin, hair and even the
breaths, dived in and then he eyes.
fainted. His much smaller girl
Pigment doesn't make much
cousin was the only one with difference except in how it
him at the time and was unable affects the appearance . Ol
to pull him from the water or to course she won't have as much
call for help in time, so he
drowned. Since most people do
not seem to know abOut this
danger, I hope you will tall
'!, em about it.
DEAR READER - You just
ld them. And every word of
what you .said is true. Deep
breathing blows Qff too much
carbon dioxide and upsets the By United Press lnternatual
Some 120,000 coal miners
bOdy chemistry. The normal
respiratory
reflect have joined the ranks of
mechanisms that would force a strikers across the nation as
person to breathe again when labor walkouis crippled the
he ne.eds to don't work, and the coal, automotive and transporperson can become un- tation industries.
Some 1,200 soft coal mines
consciou.S.
from
Maryland to Washington
Another way it happens Is
that breath holding sets off state were closed in a five-day
powerful reflex actions , that walkout to dramatize the need
can actually stop the heart. for safer working conditions in
This is one mechanism in the nation's coal mines.
Some mining industry officausing a simple faint.
cials
charged that the United
The habit of deep, rapid
breaths and then holding your Mine Workers intended to use
breath
for
Underwater the walkout to deplete coal
swimming is dangerous and : supplies and •strengthen the
should not be done. There have union's bargaining position in
·
been several deaths reported contract talks this fall .
The
contract
between
the
from this habit, It is better to
simply blow out once and then UMW and the Bitwninous Coal
take in a maximum breath Operators Association expires
before going under water. Then Nov. 12 and union President
instead of holding the breath it Arnold Miller has predicted the
coal industry will face a long
is better to let the excess air
winter strike.
out slowly while swimming .
rUMW Vice President Mike
This way you don't have the
Trbovich,
ln an emotional
lungs filled to the bursting
speech at Farmington, w. Va.,
pqint ~.the whole 'time. The
said
another work stoppage
.prolonged overinflatton of the
lungs from breath holding is might be necessary to dramatize the need for safer working
also a factor in causing fainconditions.
The UMW is
ting.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I allowed !Q days for such work
stoppages under their present
wonder if you could give me
oome Information regarding
my niece. She Is an albino and
OTHER CAR BACKED
ls 12 years old. She lives In
In a Sunday accident
France, and her mother asked reported by the Pomeroy
me to help find out what can be Police it was stated that a car
the fut~re of such a child. She Is driven by Marvin Friend,
very bright and shows a strong Pomeroy, backed into a car
character. She would like to driven by Roy Arms, Minersitudy to become a doctor or to' ville. Friend states that the
work with children. She report was in error and the
P!JSieSBeS a great compaaston · Arms vehicle backed Jn to the
for sl!fferlnl! peOple. I would Friend car:

protection from the sun, just as
blonde races are less protected
than dark races.
The only important aspect of
being albino really is to be
certain that her eyes are all
right. Some albinos do have
associated eye problems,
many of which are minor but
need correction. Any good eye
doctor can examine her for
this. ~\Side from this, it is
probably wise not to make too
much of it or cause her to feel
she is different. She could
become a beautiful blonde
lady, so I can't see why she
shouldn't lead a perfectly
normal life.

•

120,000 mmers
become strikers

f

I'

contract.
More than 16,000 auto workers were idle today at six GM
truck plants and one auto plant
as the company postponed the
startup of production of 1975
models at those plants because
of strikes against two parts
suppliers.
Another 13,500 GM employes
were off their joba In continuing strikes against GM's
Lordstown, Ohio, and St. Louis,
Mo., assembly plants.
A tentative contract agreement has been reached between A.O. Smith and one local
union, but that pact must he
ratified and the questl6n
remains al! to whether those
union members would crqss
the picket lines of other
workers wbo have not yet
reached agreement with the
firm .

Negotiations have resumed
in an effort to end a strike by
bus drivers against the Rapid
Transit District whlch serves
Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside and San Bernadino
counties in California. The
strike affects · 40,000 persons.
PAYDAY PLACE
Pay day for Meigs Countians
working in the summer NeighbOrhood Youth Corps will be
Wednesday from 9 a.m. to 12
noon at the Community AcUon
Program office in the Meigs
COWl ty Courthouse . On Thursday the youths will travel to the
Ohio State Fair, a cultural
enrichment !rip. The buses for
Meigs County.youths will leave
the Senior Citizens Center
parking lot at 6:30 a.m.
&lt;

•.

UIRACLeS
_.....
DO
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.H~ ..
trrnOOREfllll

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The Pentagon, home of

Ford would heal
amnesty wounds

FF As win .9 trophies

The combined FFA chapters exhlbiling steers were Ken Mike Milhone, a lamb.
of Meigs Local, Eastern Local Rose, Rick Findley , Mark
The FFA members and their
and Southern Local School Richmond, Dave Roush, Mark advisors, Aaron Sayre, Everett
said this included . 29,000 Districts won nine trophies at Pierce, Mike Salser, Dave Holcomb and Bob Spurlock
CHICAGO
( UP!)
Watson, Tim Wickersham, . txtend thanks to the donors of
President Ford found another military deserters, ~.~oo the Meigs County Fair.
fugitives
most
of
them
in
Trophy winners were Ken Harold Eagle, Ron Ables, Greg trophies, Meigs County
emotional wound that the
nation must heal when he Canada- 7,900 persons in jail Smith, grand ·champion Davis, Barry Smith, Ray Mills, Agricultural Society and those
suggested that the young men for violating the Selective breeding gilt, Meigs FFA; Rodney Allen, Fred Honaker, who purchased animals at the
who left their country rather Service Act, and 8,200 persons Rick Macomber, grand Tony Hutton, Stan Davis, and Junior Uvestock sale.
than fight in Vietnam be wbo are being investigated or champion pair of two market
hogs, Meigs FFA; Dave Kiser,
allowed to work their way back prosecuted.
Grand
The
statement
on
amnesty
Champion FF A market
home.
Ford made the proposal was a departure from . a hog and grand champion
Monday before an audience traditional speech in which market hog of entire fair,
that could not be considered Ford appointed Richard Racine FF A; Steve ·Boso,
receptive -the annual conven- Roudebush, deputy ad- c)larnpion cross . breed clasa
tion of the Veterans of Foreign ministrator of veterans affairs, steer and grand champion FF A
Wars. The VFW is on the to bead the huge Veterans steer class, Rsclne FFA; Don
record opposing any form of Administration. The President Shaffer, second place cross'
amnesty -conditional or told reporters later that the breed steer class, Racine FF A;
decision was made after he Jeff Knighting, champion
unconditional.
arrived
in Chicago, in a hotel Angus steer class, Racine
Early reaction from the men
who left indicated that they room an hour before the ad- FF A; Joe Brown, second plaee
Angus steer class, Rscine,
would be unwilling to accept dress.
'•The right audience," Ford FFA.
FOrd's proposal, which would
told
reporters as Air Force One
Other members of FFA
mean leaving their new homes
and performing some type of flew back to Washington, chapters slowing projects at
"would be an audience that the fair in the Swine departalternative service.
The speech came as a sur- would be difficult. Rather than ment was· Ken Rose with
prise to the VFW which had go and speak to a hand-picked reserve champion milrket bog
given Ford a warm reception. audience, I picked one that I of entire fair; Lester Parker,
He described his audience as hoped would have some under- David Watson, sheep; John
Young, reserve champion
"understanding." Some of standing.
ANTIQUE CARS showed .up to help launch the . Ap"It would have been a little market lamb.
them said they were "stunpalachia Old Car Club Sunday in Jackson.
cowardly if we had picked
ned."
FHA
members
Other
"In my judgment, these some audience that would have
young Americans should have been ectastic."
Ford had discussed the
a second chance to contribute
with three of his four
proposal
their fair share to the'
rebuilding of peace among . children. He said they apOwners of antique cars met Coupe from Jackson; J . P.
ourselves and with all proved.HJsoidestsonMichael,
i~ becoming a charter member
a seminary student, has al- at the Jackson Square Shop- Rogers, 30 Model A Ford Coupe
nations/' Ford said.
should contact any of the
"So I'm throwing the weight ready spoken publicly in favor ping Center on Sunday, August from Wellston ; Bob Rose, 41
Sedan
from members listed above. before
of my presidency into the of amnesty. White · House 18 at noon to have lunch and Chevrolet
the meeting on August 29.
scales of justice on the side of sources said that Melvin Laird, organize tlie Appalachia Old Wellston ; Carl Sorrell, 30
leniency . I foresee their earned a former secretary of defense, Car Club.
Pontiac Sedan from Harnden ·
talked
with
the
President
Their
cars
were
on
display
·
Carl
Wasmer, 26 Chevrolet 2
re..,ntry ~rned re..,ntry into a new atmosphere of hope, ''within the last few days," while the owners ate lunch. At door Sedan from Oak Hill, and
urging him to "look at the 1:30 p.m. the cars moved out David Yates, a 55 Chevrolet
hard work and mutual trust.
for a tour of the city of Jackson Sedan, from Wellston.
"! will act promptly, fairly problem."
MARKET REPORT
and very firmly in the same
Another man Ford spoke escorted by the Jackson Police
Several other members were
Point
Plea san~ W.Va.
spirit that guided Abraham . with was Sen. Robert Taft, R- Department. Car owners were present, but due to bad weather
August17,1974
Uncoln and Harry Truman," Ohio, who introduced a bill last James E. Arrowood, 46 Ford and restoration work in
SLAUGHTER
STEERS
Ford concluded. "As I reject year to set up a board that S¢an from Oak Hlll; John P. progress they were not able to
Standard 800-1000 lbs. 26.7:&gt;-30.
amnesty, sol reject revenge." could grant immunity to an Boyd, 36 Ford Pick-up from bring their cars.
SLAUGHTER HEIFERS Ford ordered that 49,500 individua1 after he served a Oak Hill; James Denny, 30
The Appalachia Old Car Club
cases be reviewed. An aide certain amount of time In a Ford Replica from Jackson; Is making plans for !ali events. Standard 700-1000 lbs. 24-25.50.
SLAUGHTER COWS ·
public service job, such as the William Hartley, 31 Model A The club charter meeting will
Canner
&amp; Cutter ]g..2Q.IO.
Peace Corps. Taft, according Ford Tudor from Wellston; be held in Wellston at Millard
VEAL - Choice &amp; Prime 190to a spokesman, was Richard H. Jones, 48 Clievrolet Logan's Garage on August 29
"delighted that the President Sedan from AllensvlUe; Robert at 7 p.m. Everyone interested 225 lbs. 35.50, 226-265 lbs. 39.50.
HOGS - U.S. 1-3 190-240 lbs.
has more or less endorsed our . Jones, 28 Model A Ford Sport
36.10, 39.10, U.S.l-3, 241}-260 lbs.
conCept."
Coupe from Wellston; Millard
John Blake, president of the
37-38.25, Sows, U.S. 1-3, 300-500
At the least, Ford has Logan, 34 Packard Sedan from
Southern . Valley Athletic provoked a debate. Echoing Wellston ; Dwight J. Miller, 26
lbs. 22. ~26 :90, Boars 300-600
TO CHOSE QUEEN
Conference has announced that the feelings of a number of Ford T Coupe from Oak HiU ;
lbs.
17-19.45, Pigs (by head) 21}The Ohio Valley Horse Show
the annual fall meeting will be Americans, C.P . Harris, com- George Nutt, 28 !lulck Opera Assn. will hold a fall roundup 40 lbs. 7-23.
held at 7:30p.m. Wednesday In mander of the VFW McGrail
YEARLING STEERS next month at which time an
the office of C. Comer Brad- Coyne Post in PlttsiJUrgh, said:
association queen will be Good &amp; Choice 500-Goo lbs. 24bury , Gallia County School "They chose to leave this
~rowned . Saturday the six 30.
Superintendent.
country when we needed them.
queen candidates, active with · - STEER CALVES - Good &amp;
All
coaches, athletic Now let them fend for themthe association, will' be in- Choice Under 300 lbs. 117.50directors and league officials selves."
terviewed by Mrs. Michael 120, 401}-600 lbs. 29-31.50.
are invited to attend . .
There is a question how
HEIFER CALVES - Good &amp;
Family Day was observed Shaw, Point Pleasant, Mrs.
Officials of the Southeastern many would return under the Sunday at the Laurel Cliff Free Oakley Collins, Ironton, and Choice Under 300 lbs. 82-140,
Ohio Athletic League will meet conditions Ford , suggests. Methodist Church with attend- Mrs. Ralph Welker, Pomeroy, 4()0.,'j50 lbs. 28.50-31.75, Cows &amp;
at 7 p.m . Wednesday at William D.Galvinofthe United ance reacl)lng 133 during the A dinner will be held in con- Calvea (by head) 235-275, Cows
Jackson High School.
Presbyterian Church e~­ Sunday school and 101 for the junction with the Interviews. (by head ) 16g..269.
The session Is held for plained saying "anything that morning worship. Families
BABY CAJ"VES (By ltead)
athletic directors , principals deals with earned immunity Is were recogniud. ·
- Beef 17.50, Holstein &amp; Brown
MEET THE TEAM
and head coaches.
hot amnesty. It stlU implies
Special millie waa presented
EASTERN - The Eastern Swl1111 22.50-42.50,
guilt."
by Rev. Floyd Shook, Mr _and LoCal Athletic B~ters wlil
· REUNION SLATED
A 27-year-&lt;&gt;ld draft resister' Mra. Jooepll Higginbotham, stage "meet the team nl&amp;ht" a8
SOCIAL IS AT 7 -~'
The descendants Of the late , who edits Arne~. a magazine
and Mr. and Mrs. T. J. well as meet the new principal
RACINE - The lee cream
John W. and Sarah Jane Rose for American exiles In Canada,
Whitaker. At tl&gt;e Sunday night at 6:30p.m. Friday ln the social to he held Saturday at
family will hold a reunion Gerry Condon, said "a general
evenln&amp; aervice, Robert high a&lt;:hool auditoriwn. All
beginning at 12 noon Sunday at )lllcondltlonal amnesty iB the Barton, assistant past.o r, parent$, teachers and any the Racine Fire Station wlll be
at 7 p.m., sponsored by the
the Sutton M. E. Church.
only thing accepllible."
preached.
· ·
· · Interested persons' are Invited. Racine ER squad.
,

holding can cause h arm

•

By S1U CAMEN
Reds, who won 15-2. The
UPI Sporto Writer
triumph en a~ Cincinnati w
Welcome to the major lea- rerna in 2 \; games behind first
gues, Tom Underwood.
place Los Angeles In the
The Philadelphia Phils' high- National League West.
ly wuted pitcher made his
In other National League ·
major league debut against the games, las Angeles edged
Cincinnati Reds Monda y nigh t Chicago 8-7 in 12 innings, San
and nobody could blame the 21}- Francisco beat Pittsburgh :&gt;-3,
year.old lefty if he wishes to Atlanta walloped St. Louis II~ .
forget the experience.
Houston shaded New York 2-1
•• Not too many pitchers in lllnnings and Montreal beat
make their major league debut San Diego 7-4.
on national televis ion like
In the only American League
that. " said the na ti ve of games, Minnesota beat New
Kokomo, Ind., who came on in York 6-2, Boston downed
relief and lasted one-third of an Chicago 6-1, California edged
inning, facing seven batters Detroit 1-{J and Milwaukee
· and allpwing six runs, in- ~aded Oa)dand HI.
cluding a grand slam homer by Dedgen 8, Cubs 7
Joe Morgan.
Relief specialist Mike Mar"I was too numb to feel . shall, who hurled six scoreless
anything," said Underwood. "! innings, ra ced home from
can't even tell you whether my second on an infield out to give
feet were on the ground ."
Los Angeles its win over
Morgan's homer was his Chicago and snap the Dodgers'
second of the game and 17th of six-game losing streak. Marthe year and highlighted a shall, winning his 12th game
ninerun third inning for the against eight losses, was on
second with one out in the 12th
when Rick Auerbach topped a
slow roller down the first base
line .. Catoher Steve Swisher
picked up the ball and threw
_,
out Auerbach but when MilTshall discovered that neither
'
'"
Cub pitcher Oscar Zamora nor
third baseman Bill Madlock
was covering home, he scored
unmolested. Steve Garvey's
17th homer, a two-run shot in
••
the seventh, sent the game Into
'.
extra innings.
Giants 5, Pirates 3
Dave Kingman doubled
home the go-ahead run in the
ninth, then scored an insurance
the U.S. Military System , is
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with
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run to lead San Francisco over
Pittsburgh as Ron Bryan t won
his firsl game since May 31.
Bryant, who won 24 games last
year, recorded only his third
win th ~ year in 15 decisions by
scattering seven hits in eight
innings in his first start since
July 7.
Braves II, Cardinals 6
Henry Aaron, findi ng his
fa vorite victim in the return of
Claude Osteen, smacked a tworun hom'er and a sacrifice fly
and Marty Perez drove in four
runs with two doubles to lead
Atlanta over St. Louis. Osteen,
now S..lO, made his first ap..
pearance for the Cardinals
after coming over (rom Houston earlier this month and gave
up Aaron's 730th career homer.
It was the 14th homer Aaron
has hit off Osteen, h~ leading
victim among active majOr
league pitchers.
Aaron 's blast was his 17th
and Darrell Evans hit hi.s 14th
for Atlanta . Lou Brock stole
two bases, giving him 84 and
putting him fifth on the list of
all-time single season base
stealers with almost a fourth of
the season left to play.
Astros 2, Mets 1
Milt May, who tied the game
with a sacrifice fly in the ninth,
singled home the winning run
with two out in the lith to give
Houston its win over New
York. Greg Gross led off the
lith with a single, moved to
second a sacrifice and scored
easily as May singled. Reliever
Ken Forsch picked up the
victory, his fifth against five
losses, while Tom Seaver, who
went all the way for the Mets,
suffered his eighth loss in 15
decisions.
Expos 7, Padres 4
National Football League
Barry Foote doubled home a
Season run in the second inning and
American Conference
E a,st
snapped a 3-3 tie with a seventh
w 1 t pet. pf pa
inning home run to lead
M iam i
2 1 0 .667 79 4B
Montreal past San Diego.
New Englnd 2 1 o .667 3
•
•
0
7 7 73 Foote's homer, .hi..s eighth,
0
~~t:~~ ore
~ ~ j~~ 36 . 9 cam~ off southpaw Randy
New Yrk Jts 1 2 o .333 68 60 Jones,. who absorbed his 18th
central
· t ·
w 1 1 pet. pt Pa loss agalnst seven VIC ortes.
c rnci'nnat i J o o 1.000 6? 41 Wlllie McCovey slugged his
Pi ttsburgh 2 o o 1.coo 7 6 28 18th homer, a three-run shot,
Houston
2 1 o .667 97 29 for the Padres.

i ·

.C leveland

Oakland

West
w 1 t pet . pf pa
3 0 0 1.000 96 33

MIAMI (UPl ) _ It wasn't

National conference
w
pet. pt pa
St . Loui s
1
750 79
3
O ·
"

E~s'.

Dallas
2 1 o .667
Nw Yrk Gnts2 1 0 .667 39
washington 0 3 o .000
Ph iladelphl 0 3 0 .000 58
Central
w t t pet. pf
Green Bay 3 0 0 1.000 49

the same as Super Bowl VIII
bu f
th. M d
&gt;'ght
t or
e
on ay n
television football watcher, it
was close - in . the first half,
Major League Leaders
ay United Press International
Leading Batters

"

i: ll

Z1~rno~!ota ri ~ g :6~5 5~
Ch ic ago

91

pa
23

::.

O 3 0 .000 38 80
west

w 1 1 pet. pf pa
LosAn"geles 2 1 o .667 89 50

Atlanta

1 2 0 .333 46 48

San Fran esc 0 J 0 .000 29 51
New Orlens 0 3 0 ..000 30 78

Monday's Result

Miam i 21 Minnesota 9

'

National League Garr,Atl ,20 as~o ~2 1~3 P3's'9
Zisk. Pitf 111 403 60 132 .328
Gross 1 Ho 116 431 63 139 . 323
Smith , St .L
119
22
Grvy , LA 10s
117 370
485 55
70 155 .3
.320

Brck , St . L 11 5 474

79

149 .314

Montanez, Phil

107 378 41 118
crdn l , Ch 106 411 59 128
Ol ivr , ptt 107 443 68 137
Bcknr , LA 106 417 54 129
American League

.3 12
.311
.309
.309

McRa . KC106
Yastrzemsk i ,
114
Jcksn , Okl l J
Rand I, Tx 115
orta , Chi 103
Al len , Ch i 1 u
Mdd,, NY 97
Pin ill, NY 105

382
Bos

•oo

54

121

.3 17

75

126
121
121
118
129·
97

.3 15
.312
.310

J88 69
390 SO
381 61
417 81
314 52

.3 1!&gt;
.309
.309

390 53 119 .305
Home Runs
National League; . Sc hmidt,
PtW 30 ; Wynn , LA 27 ; Ben ch,
Cln 24 ; Cedeno, Hou 22 ; Perez ,

Cl~~~rican League : Allen , Chi
32 · Burroughs , Tex 24 ; Ja ck son , Oa Jc: 23; Melton, Ch i and
Darw in , M lnn 20 .

Market Repon

Nation~r"L:aa~~~~

'."s chm idt ,

Phil 95 ; Ben c h . Ci n 91 ; Wynn ,
LA 86 ; Cedeno. · Hou
Garvey , LA 83 . ~

a•:

American League : Bur .
roughs , _Tex 100 ; Al len , Chi 84 ;.
Bando , Oak 81 ; Henderson , Ch t
and Darw i n , M inn 77 .

Cooper Cares and We Care

Stolen

Base-s

National League : Broc k, SI.L
Bll ; Morgan . Cln 51 ; Lopes . LA

COOPER
POLY-MARK IV

" .American

.

League : . N'o rth ,
Oak H ; Rivers , c al and Car ew,

. Mlnn 30 .
·pifchlng
National LeagUe:
·s JHln gham .
Cin

15 -B; Gullett , Cln and
carlton , Phil 14 .8 ; John , LA lJ .

3;
Messersmith , LA
1J .5 ;
McGlothen , St.L lJ .a ; Reuss,
Pitt 13.9 ; P. Niekro. All 13 · 10 '

Single WhHe
Sidewall

Lonborg . Pl'lll 13 -11 .
American League : T ien t, Bas
l9 -8 ; Busby . KC 18· 10 ; Wood ,
Chi 18 -14 ; Hunter . Oak 17 · 10 :
Jenkins. tell. 17 . 11 ; e ibby ' T ex
17 -14 . '

F78xl4
4 PLY POLYESTER CORD Fed. Tax, 2·"41
OTHER SLZES PRICED ACCORDINGLY

•

out w~

POMERQY

I

Red So.o: I, While Sox 1
Bill Lee aod Diego Segul
combined on a llve-bitta- 14
lead the Red Sox over the
White Sox. Lee wont the !trot 7
1-3 innings to gain his 14th win
against llloues. Sill dllferont
players drove in rurut for the
Red So~ aa they tagged Jtm
]Caat with his eighth !&lt;iss in 21
· decisions.
liil A GD/Jd NlfhbDr,
Sllll f1110

1J Tb1ro .

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••nu•u,

p

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rth

NFL PLAYERS AWARD
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) A1 Oliver and Richie Zisk of the
, Pittsburgh Pirates were
named co-winners of the
National League Player of the
Week Award Monday.
NL President Charles .
Feeney said it was the first
time Since the · award's inception that two players from
the same team were selected
for the honor.

t

anyway.
scored Ln e ou quar er on
Just as they did in their 24-7 an eight-yard run by rookie Nat
Super Bowl win over Min- Moore.
Minnesota's Dave Osborne
nesota in January, the Miami scored from one-yard out on
Dolphins played grind-it-&lt;&gt;ut the end of an 80-yard drive in
football Monday night to down the fourth quarter. Fred Cox
the Vikings 21·9·
h d ki k d 27
d f' ld a1
The Dolphins used most of a
C e a -yar le go
their regulars in the ftrst half, for the Vikings in the third
with quarterba&lt;;k Bob Griese period.
calling his usual artful game
d
Csonk
d J'
an
Larry
a an
un
•
Klick pushing for steady hunks
of yardage. By intermission, it
'was 14-0 and the Dolphins
needed only to hang on to win.
"I thought the yeterans,
offensively and defensively,
_pJ..ayed exceptionally well inh
the first half/' Miami Coac
The Shade Rlber Coon
Don Shula said. ••sob Griese Hunters Assn: will hold a wild
called an exceptional ball coon hunt and bench show
gameandhe,CsonkaandKiick Saturday at the Rock Springs
.
played well for the short tli11e Fairgrounds, one mile northQf
they've been in carnp, 11
th Ki k d Pomeroy .
Csonka, who wi
ic an
The bench show will begin at
wide receiver Paul Warfield 4 p.m. with a $3 entry fee and a
are bound for the World full set of trophies. Entry fee
FootbaJI Leagu~ .Memphis for the night hunt is $5 'for
Southmen· in 1975, scored grade dogs and · $6 for
touchdownsfromoneandthree registered dogs with the enyards OUt. Csonka gained 61 tries closing at 9 p.m. In the
yards on 16 carries in the first night hunt there . will · be 10
half.
trophies for registered animals
Warfield did not play but the and five for grade dogs. There
1
crowd showed . what Shu a will be a trophy for the night
called "mixed emotions" fdr champion and for the grand
Klick and Csonka when they
·night champion plus six breed
were introduced.
trophies.
Many observers had given
The treeing contest will
the Dolphins the edge because
follow
the bench show and
db
mostofthelrveteransha een entry fee for the event is $3.
in camp longer thaQ the Anyone wishing any further
.
Wh en t he NFL
Vi~in~s .
information on the events may
Players Association c~lled a contact William E. Smith, 992coolm
' g off period l.B.!it Wed·
5206 , or Oscar T. Smith, 992nesday, there were 34 Dolphins
5594.
alreadyworkingoutwhiieonly
six Vikings were in camp.
·n.; ·~ -w
dd' · to"-- k • t
Ina ltlon
~n as wo
first half touchdowns, Miami
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•

NOw. Your Ford Dealer's
llm!·l4f4! Show presents
. .

Coon hunt

Saturday

War.t a ·etwat .muall ear

at elarcanee pricesf
Fcwd is now produef.., '!'ON .muall ears
than etlfh' befOre.

·

·

Th~ means 'fJetfer seleetfon and priees
that ma, J.le&amp;lel' IJe this low qafn. .

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By FRED McMANE
Brewen 1, A'• o
George Scott's second inning
UPI Sparta Writer
it's funny wh at the thought of homer and the combined !!lxbeing sent ba~ to the minors hit pitching ol Billy Champion
wUI do to a player.
and· Tom Murphy enabled the
Take Frank Tanana, for Brewers to wln their sixth
example.
gsme in their last seven starts
The 21-year.old le(t-liander and hand the A's their fourth
of the California Angels felt he loss in their last five games.
was very close w receiving a Scott's horner was one of only
one-way ticket back to the four hits the Brewers collected
Pacific Coast-League early last off southpaw Vida Blue, who
month alter failing miserably suffered his lith loss in 25
as bolh a starting pitcher and a decisions.
reliever .
Twins '• Yaakees 2
Bobby Darw in drilled a
It wasn't that he didn't have
the talent. It's just that he threerun first inning homer
wasn't working hard enough. and Joe Decker tossed a sixHe wa s taking life in. the big hitter to spark the Twins' over
the Yankees. The Twins
leagues too easy.
But the sudden realization collected five hits and five runs
that he might be throwing off starter Sam McDowell in
away a career before it even only 11-3 innings while sending
began set Tanana straight. the left-liander to his sixth loss
Now he appears to have a in seven decisions . Graig
Nettles homered for the
bright future once more .
The talented rookie turned in Yankees.
his second consecutive shutout
•
Monday night when he b)apked
the Detroit Tigers 1-0 on sill
hits whUe striking out a career
high of nine.
In the only other American
League action, Milwaukee
edged Oakland 1-0, Minnesota
beat New York· 6-2 and Boston
topped Chicago 6-1.
Cincinnati walloped Philadelphia 1~2. Los Angeles edged
Chicago ll-7 in 12 innings, San
Francisco beat Pittsburgh 5-3;
Houston nipped New York 2-1
in 11 inPings, Montreal
defeated San Diego 7-4 and
Atlanta topped St. Louis II~ in
National League games.
The Angels, who managed
only six hits off 22-year-old
Fred Holdsworth, . won the
game for Tanana in the bottom
of the ninth when pinch-hitter
Winston I.Jenas scored ll.inchrunner Mickey Rivers with a
.
sacrifice .fly.
"Th~ was by far my beat :
outipg," said Tanana, who ~ :
now won five of his last S1X
decisions. "When I was in the
bullpen after pitching so poorly
earlier this year, I said to
myself, 'hey, what am I doing ·
here? Tni a better pitcher than
that.' When I had a 4-13 record, .
I thought I was one step away ,
. from Salt Lake City."

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MEIQ8.MA80N ABitA

3129 .

124 W. MAIN .

NEW YORK (U PiJ - Maybe you've noticed where the
California Angels are having a spot of trouble.
They're in the celliar in the American League West. They're not
only down, they're way down, and it could ta~e the combined
~entus of Harry Dalton and Dick William•, plus all .the klng's
men to get them back headed in the right dlrecUon agam ..
At that, the Angels look a bit better now than they d1d a few
weeks ago when they lost 15 in a row at borne.
That stri ng of defeats threatened the all,time record of 20
straight setbac~s at home set by the now-gone 81, Louli! Browns
in 19:'&gt;3, an&lt;h long with everything el.se, it also produced a rush of
personal memories of how tha t season turned into a summer long
nightmare for Mar ty Marion, the n manager of the Browns.
Marion baseball 's " Mister ShortBtop" for II years with the St.
Louis C.;dinals, now runs the stadium club fo r them at Busch
Stadium. He's 56, but won't forget the St. Louis Browns, not the
'53 Browns, a,nywa y, If he lives to be 106.
••Jt was a very strange ball club," he says. "The players were a
bunch of misfi ts. Most of 'em weren' t even playing their natural
positions. They we re just doing the best they could, and that
wasn't very good a t all, was it?"
Hardly . .
The Browns lost 100 games that year . They somehow managed
to win 54.
Marion, accustomed to being with a winner like the Cardinals,
tried everything he could think of, used every pitcher he had ,
Virgil Trucks ...Don Larsen... Harry Brecheen ... Duane Pi~et.­
te ... Bobo Holloman ... Dick Littlefi eld ... Bob Cain . .. Mtke
Blyzka ...Satchel Paige .. .lt didn't matter. The result generally
was the same. Another loss.
From June 3 through June 14 ,of 1953, the Browns .lost 14 in •
row in their own backyard at Sportsman's Park. Then they left
for New York and a three game series with the powerful leagueleading Yankees.
·
Fortune smiled on the embattled Brownies on June 15. They
didn't lose. They couldn't possibly. It was an off day .
On June 16, the Browns had a night game scheduled with the
Yankees, winners of their last 18 straight.
Some of the Browns' players killed time before the game by
going to the movies. Esther Williams and Fernando Lamas were
playing in "Dangerous When Wet" at Radio City . For 75 cents
you could catch the early show, including the dancing Rockettes.
Jack Dempsey's Restaurant nearby was offering ~ top quality
sirloin steak for $3 .65 that day, and for the same pnce, a spec1al
salad and baked Idaho potato.
At the ballpark, Marty Marion, the manager, put on his
uniform and looked at the lineup card on his desk.
"What's the difference how I make it out, these guys never
hit," he said, Wea~ily .
Then he turned to me.
UHere, you make it out," he sa~d. uwe can't possibly do any
worse."
.
He was kidding. At least I thought he was, so I declined the
offer with thanks.
Later Marion wrote in the names.
Johnny Groth, CF ,leading off. Then he put down his own name,
· and had himself playing third base. Jim Dyck, LF, came next,
with Vic Wertz, RF , hitting cleanup. Roy Sievers, IB, hit fifth,
followed by Les Moss, C, Billy Hunter, SS, Bobby Young; 2B, and
.
Pillette pitching.
Casey Stengel, looking to equal the American League record of
]9 straight victories, started Whitey Fm:d for the Yankees and
the lefthander had trouble with his control. In the second mnmg
he walked Moss and Pillette, after which Groth singled for a run.

~:~m~~ty ll ~ mH1 ~!, Dolphins grin

Vacation Tire Buy

laurel Cliff
has family day

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporta Edllor

-

Yn

SVAC meeting
on Wednesday

Sport Parade

1 2 0 .333 45 77

Crw , Mnn
a4~5 ~7 1~8 ~3~1
Hargrv, Tx 98 3 16 45 lOB .342

Old car owners to organize

"

1

Thought of minors
spurs on Tanana

·

,_,i

"""'
.........
... ""'.
,...,,....,..,.,,'
ftrtlu.Oin!""l.

See your local
Ford Dealer

FORD

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�4 _The O.Uy 5enllnel, Middleport•PometOy, 0., Tuesday, Aug. 20. 1974

94th Blazer reunton held 1Fun With Food

•
Polly's Pointers
By Polly Cramer

Who drives young
from the church

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POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I hope some mothercantellmehow to
remove sticky bubble gum from a child'sskin. - MISS K. C.
[lEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve concerns those people who
are always finding fault with tbe young people attending church.
Too many people are looking at the boys' too long hair and the
gir'ls' too short skirts. Then there are those like the lady ~ho
complained about those who took babies into church rather than
leaving them in the crying room. My comm.ent to people like this,
"Have you read up on the rate of decline in church attendance,
especially among young people?" They should remember church
is for ALL people and should he thankful t_hese you~ people are
coming to church rather Ulan always findmg fault with them. s. w.DEAR POLLY - and Edith, the gal who hast he stems.t uck
In h"er electric percolator - Fill percolator with water. Let II go
through the entire perking cycle. When this Is completed the
stem should come out. The perking evidenUy causes the welllll
which the stem fits to expand so it can be ·easily removed. I
learned this by exJierience and after breaking a stem when I
tried to remove It when the percolator became cold. - MRS. L.

•

IIIMIIMIIIMIIIIM·-----Iil!IIJJilll

~'f~-M::':I.

•

L. ·DEAR POLLy- If Edith will plug her percoo 1ator m
' for JUS
' t

a FEW SECONDS (until she starts to hear it heat ) and un~lu g it,
· she will find the stem will come loose immediately, especJSlly If
the pot is empty. I usually "work" the stem as soon as I plug the
pot in and it comes loose more quickly.- V.L.T.
. DEAR ·POLLy - My Pointer is for knitters who may be
making things where pieces are to be joined togeUler such as for
a Granny afghan. Use the ~ 'ball stitch" that is ~a~ed afte~ th~
method used for sewing baseballs together. I calliI shoe lacmg
because that is how the needle is used. Such joining makes. it
perfect and smooth with no lumps or bumps or problems With
matching patterns. I hope this helps those who have trouble
smoothly joining knitted pieces. - CHARWTTE.
'
POLLY·- My husband bought several plastic gar·
• .. bageDEAR
cans when they were on sale for one dollar each to use for
storage. One holds my yarns and felt pieces and ?ther items for
'
aewingandhandwork. One holds outdated magazmes we ~a~t to
keep for various reasons and bulky current catalogs. One Ill filled
with out-of...eason clothes that will not go in cedar chests and
dust bl!gs. They are all neatly covered and in the basement. N~xt
year we may invest in more cans on sale - to hold the farruiy
· treasure. - !LA.

..

The !Hth Blazer reunion ,was
held In the Community Hall,
Jlio Grande College, Sunday,
Aug . II, with 80 people at·
t..ndlng. · The morning was
spenlsoclalizing.
.
Lunch was served at the noon
hour after grace was presented
by Oretha (Blazer) Barcus,
Huntington, w. Va.
Paul G. Blazer, president,
Ashland, Ky ., called the
meeting to order after lunch
was served; and gave a short
talk on the history of the
Blazers, being one of the oldest
families in the county and the
State of Ohio.
They came to this country
from Baden, Germany in 1787
and setUed in Pennsylvania
and Virginia and later settled
in Green Twp. where many are
buried now .

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£

Famzly reunion held
The annual Radford reunion
was held Sunday at"the Rock
Springs Grange hall. Rev.
Waid Radford gave the table
grace preceding the dinner and
games during the afternoon
were led by Rich8rd Radford.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Radford and John,
Piketon; Mr. :p~d )llrs. Paul
Rich, Caldwell; Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Black and Shawna,
Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs. :rom
Radford, Carroll; Mr. and Mrs.
James Radford, Chillicothe;
Rev. and Mrs. Waid Radford,
Beaver; Mr. · and Mrs. Paul
Radford and Paul Davis,

Eastern district
lunch policy

MOST ALL MODELS
.NOW IN STOCK

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Mrs. Donald Pulllna and
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1randchlldren, Amy
Colwnbua and Jeffrey, Cln·
clnnali, opent the paat week
hore vlalUng Mr. and Mrs.
Wllliam Radford and family.
Donald Pullina joined them
here for the weekend . Other
guest.. were Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Glazer, Sandra itnd
Robert, COlumbus. Their aon,
Mlchsel, who has been here
visiting the Radfords retur~
to Columbus with the family,
and RObert remained for. a
week's visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Lochsry,
Patty and Chris, Glen Ridge,
N. J ., are here vis!Ung hls
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Patrick
Lochary. The Charles Lochsry
family hsve now returned to
their home near Chicago.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Ohlinger
and family, Philo, were
weekend guests of their
parenl'!. Mr. and Mrs, Bud
Wilson and Mr. and- Mrs.
Herman Ohlinger.

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 - Sun. 10 to 10
W4? Accept Federal Fvvd
PHONE: 992·3480

USDA CHOICE
·1b.
BOILING BEEF•••••••••••••••••••••

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•••

Gospel M_e eting

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••••
•I

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HAM SALAD .............. ~~:. 79· .

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·-•.•·.

7;30 P.M •

'8~

Ckwtek ttb CIW6t

---GOESSLER'S E

Auxiliary has cookout ·
Mrs . Harry Hotidashelt ,
assisted by her daughter ,
Freddie, entertained Wed·
uesday night with a cookout for
members of the Past
President.'l of the American
Legion Auxiliary, Drew
Webster Post 39.
Guests are Rev. and Mrs.
Ronald Plaee and son, Groton,
N. Y., son-in-law and ·d~ughter
of Mrs. Houdashelt, and Mrs.
Don Erwin and Amy, Mid·
dleport. Rev. Place gave grace
preceding the poUuck dinner.
Mrs. Harry Davis presided
at the business meeting with
the Lord's Prayer being given
in unison. Devotions by Mrs.
Carrie Neutzling were taken
from "The Secret Place" with
the meditation tieing "Best
Things in Life Are Free."
Reports were given by Mrs .
Iva Powell, secretary, and
Mrs. Faye Wildermuth ,

Pickens with Mrs. Rhoda
Hackett to be the . hostess.
Others attending the meeting
were Mrs. Edith Sauer_. Mrs.
Grace Pratt, Mrs. Jed Web·
ster, Sr ., Mrs. Ellen Couch and
Mrs. fear! Knapp.

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RINGS ENLARGED TO SHOW DETAil!•

·--&gt;

LVS.
FOR

~-

St~

Court

Pomeroy

-~

· CHOC. QUIK

YOU ARE CORDIAl.L Y INVITED TO ATI'END EIGHT
NIGHTS OF LESSONS FROM TH£. BIUI,E PijESENTED
BY A MAN THAT IS CAPAULE !1'0 MAKF: YOUR NEXT
DAY A BRIGHTER ANIJ A UE'i'TER
iJNF. TO LIVE IN.
.
.

Ub.

CAN

box

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107 Sycamore

99? ·5130

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Pllmeroy

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CHICKEN
.,.,
lb.
2 box

32 oz.

9 ·$
.
SCOT LAD 5 boles
FRENCH FRIES
Oi.

POWER

l

WINQiESTER

giant

unLE CIGARS

box

·•e

CANS
FOR
•

POTTED MEAT

Act Now!
Once These Are Gone,
That$ It!

Cheez-its

oz.
SCHOOL
Schcxi
Supplies SUPPLIES

ARMOUR'S TREET

stwlnt ••chine

i

$7995

H," thc·cxcluslvc ~8£!' front drop-in hobbln, 3 needle positions,

Chlly

qUick-change -snap-on prosser feet, mJny other convcnl onccs.

Ot, rylng n11

"

or c•b• ni1 ••trl '

'

Everyday Price -a· Pak •

THl''FAilic"'sHOP

MEL

115 W. Second
992-2214 ·
"""'" " .." """'
.McCall, &amp; Simplicity Pattern•

Pomeroy
·

2 LB.

~29

Regular Pop &amp; Sugar free

YEU.OW POPCORN
KRISP

gal.

FAYGO

.,
·

9~

RC COLA

DISCOUNT PRICES

CAN

case or
cabinet extra

~

BROUGHTON

~

lb.
box

Rtgular Price

Carrying

.

lARGE SUPPLY

12 oz.

OFF

·

HOMO MILK •••••••••••••• 6
SHERBET.~!~•••••••••~.59c
EGGS.•••••••~~.~!"~~~-~49C

s
CARTON

CANS

TOUCH&amp;SEW*

.

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Armour

3

.....cA
.......,...,...

8!NQUET WHOLE FRIED

bottle

NESllE
2 LB.

We have a Credit Plin dUIJnH 10 fll your budpt .

REUTER-8ROGAN INSURANQ

DETERGENT

JERZEE MILK

.
Clltck With U• Iefort You Ivy •.•

HI·HO

CRACKERS

BY

treasW'er.
Plans were made fo1
September meeting · at IP•'
home of Dr. and Mrs. R. H.

$

DAIRY FROZEN FOODS

LIQUID

~.,.

JEWELRY STORE
:
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FASHIOI MATE . ZIG·IAG stwlnt•achlne Mod•' m
Best Rates In Town

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Favorite· Bread

$37 .5~;
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BRING IN YOUR OLD MACHINE .FOR A GENEROUS TRADE•IN ALLOWANCE!

BOB KESSINGER, Speaker

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• Bu ilt-in buttonholer
•14 6u ilt-in stitches
· including stretCh,
speed bastin g

AUGUST 21 t:hru 28,· 1974

~

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HOME MADE

ente,Ytaz'ns

heritage house

$ 09

FRESH LEAN

POLISH SAUSAGE .... !~:; 79

Mix -all ingredients. except the cirtnamon, and pour mto a
nine inch unbaked pie shell. Top with the cinnamon. Bake a~ 425
···· degreeslor 10 minutes. Reduce heat to 325 degrees and contmue
:·:·: baking 4:i-50 minutes.

SHQES

•.

GROUND BEEF......... !~:.89~

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SUPERIORS

~::

POMER Y.·
HOME &amp;
AUTO

59~

FRESH LEAN

M f.'C' oun:gthe

BAR AND QfAIN OIL
AND 2 CYQ.E OIL

Parting
After 5 p.m.

GROUND CHUCK...... ~~:.. I
FRESH LEAN
lb. $llg
GROUND ROUND..........

Socl· aI it
·$
~l~ Ca Iend ar.r

$\

BLADE CUT

USDA CHOICE
lb. · 99~
ENGLISH ROAST• ••••••••••••••••••
USDA CHOICE
, lb. 89~
ROAST
ARM
• ••••••••••••••••••••••••

10K Gold
Wedding Ring&amp;

OLD TIME SUGAR PIE
~=-··~&gt;.·.··-·······-~
.1 c. sugar; 3 tbsp. flour; 1&gt; tsp. salt ; 11&gt; c. of half milk, hslf
cream; 1 tsp. vanilla; 1 tsp. cinnamon·.
:

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Free On-Street

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Priscilla ·
Smartly Styled
Exceptional Values

MIDDLEPORT, 0'

'to Umil

RnerveThe ·

~~x"~'~''·''""'·'"'"''"

:~;:
application is confidential and ,., •
will be used only for the pur·:-:
pose of det..rminlng eligibility. :;::
~::
Applications may be submitted
at any time during the year.
TUESDAY
In certain cases foster
LADIES Auxiliary, Veterans
children are atso eligible for Memoria!Hospital,picnic,6:30
these benefit.'l. If a family has p.m. tonight at the Roadside
foster children living . with Park, US 33,. left hand side,
them and wishes to apply for . going North.
such meals and mllk for them,
WINDING Trail Garden Club
it should contact the school.
workshop for flower show at
Iu the operation of child home of Alice Thompson. Mrs.
feeding programs, no child will Richard Collins and- Mrs. Bob
be discriminated against Thompson will be ·the co.
be cause of race, sex, color or cha1'rwomen of the show . The
national origin.
schedule theme and com-

CHAIN -SAWS

•

Personal Notes

The first reunton was held m president; Claude Blazer, v•c&lt;
Hy Charlene Hoeflich
president, and Mrs . Jack '
Blazer.
Campbell, Sr.. secretary,
As a switch from the sweet treats we've been writing abollt
Traveling the farthest were treasurer, for the year. The
Sally and Jan Swanson , reunion will be held in the same for the pastaeveral weeks, today we bring you a rodpe which:.
understand was a sma.sh at the annual family picnic at
granddaught..rs of Mrs . Betty pia&lt;... next year.
Swanson, Marlbroulo, Md., and
Those attending were Mr . Middleport Business and Professional Women last month.
It's for German Cabbage Salad and it was made for the
Donald Blazer, Pittsburgh, Pa . and Mrs. Jack Campbell, Sr.,
The oldest was 0 . B. Blazer, Galli polls; Carol Swindler, picnic by Eloise Wilson. She graciously shared her recipe with
Uma and Ernest Blazer from Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd the club members.
Rio Grande. Both are 84 years Dempsey, Reynoldsburg; Tom
GERMAN CABBAGE SALAD
old.
.
Dempsey, Reynoldsburg; Mr.
4 1bs. cut cabbage; )large onion (chopped fine); I c. sugar.
Younges~ was f hriStople and Mrs. Howard Blazer, Mix this and set aside while heating together, % c, oll, 1 c.
Walker, daughter of John Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. R~negar, 1 tsp. dry mustard, 2 tbsp. sugar.
Walker, Columbus, II&gt; years Mooney, Mr. snd Mrs. Joe
Pour the vinegar-oil mbr:ture over "the cabbage, onion and
old. Birthday noted was Codi~y Blazer, Rio Grande; Dan A. sugar. Serve hot. May also be served cold.
Davis, son 'of Judy and Bill Blazer, Bidwell; Mr. and Mrs.
Davis, he was three years old. 'Jim Williams. -Huntington, W.
If you happen to be looking for something different but
Six deaths were reeorded for Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Estel Lewis,
1974 .
Eleanor, W. Va. ; Mr. and Mrs. delicious in the dessert line, you might try Lena Hamm's re&lt;;ipe
Collections were taken and Alva Parsons, Eleanor, W. for an orange chiffon pie, or perhaps her brown sugar pie recipe.
bills were paid. The officers Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Russell We pass both along retained are Paul G. Blazer, Williams, Huntington; Mr. and
ORANGE CHIFFON PIE
Mrs. John E. Blazer, Cedar1 and one-third c. vanills wafer crumbs (about 35 cookies), y,
ville; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd c. butter, melted. Make a crust of the crumbs and butter and
Blazer,Gallipolis; Mrs. Emma press the mixture firmly and evenly against the bottom and sides
Russell, Grove City; Ralph of a nine inch pie pan building a rim around Ule edge. Chill.
.
Deitz, Circleville; Miss Winnie
2 tbsp. unflavored gelatin, 1&gt; c. sugar; 1 c. water; 2 c. plam
Wetherholt, Gallipolis; Mr . or pineapple yogurt; 1 can (six ounces) frozen orange juice,
and Mrs . Bill Williams,
Hamilton; Mrs . Sandra Huntington; Mr. and Mrs. Paul concentrated, thswed.
COmbine gelatine and 1&gt; c. sugar in saucepan, add water.
Hughlett, Robert Glaze and G. Blazer, Ashland, Ky.; Mr.
Mrs. Erie Gilbert, COlumbus. and Mrs. Claude Blazer, Heat, stirring now and then, until gelatin dissolves. Cool to room
Mr. and Mrs. George Sisson, Cheshire ; Mr. and Mrs. John temperature. In a bowl slowly add _the orange jui"': to the yogurt,
Brent and Krista!, Rick Gaul, Nibert, Gallipolis; Jeffery blending well. Stir in the gelatin mixture. Chill until partially set.
Beat 2egg whites with a dash of salt until foamy . Add 2 tbsp .
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip .Radford Blazer, Cheshire; Mrs. James
sugar.
Beat until stiff peaks are formed. Fold mto the gelatm
and Stephanie, Wyatt Radford, G. Haines and Laura Haines,
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Radford, Huntington ; Mrs. Oretha mixture. Chill until mixture is set, then turn into the crumb crust,
Mr. and Mrs. William Radford (Blazer ) Bacon, Huntington ; Trim with toasted coconut, and chill again.
· and Mary, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. Blazer.
BROWN SUGAR PIE
Rolline Radford, COnnie, Judy St. Clairvilie ; Mr. and Mrs.
Cream one-third c. butter and 2 c. of firmly packed light
and Sally, Roger Gilmore, Charles McCoy, Wheeling; Mr.
brown
sugar. Add 2 eggs and beat well. Add 'I• c. mllk, I&gt; tsp.
Barry Marshall, Doug UtUe, and Mrs. Ernest Blazer, Rio
.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Goegiein, Grande; Rev. and Mrs. Luther vanilla and a pinch of sali.
Polir
the
custard
into
an
unbaked
pie
shell. Bake for 10
Mr. and Mrs. Fred B. Goeglein, TI'acy, Rio Grande; Miss Sally
Pau1, Don, Shawn, and Amy, Swanson and Jan, Marlborgh, minutes at 400 .degrees. Reduce hestand bake for 30 to 35 minutes
at 350 degrees. Chill before serving.
all of Pomeroy .
Md .; Mrs. E. c. Beale,
Baltimore, Md.; Donald G.
Among the many sugar.pie recipes which have been sent ~ is
Blazer, Pittsburgh, Pa.; H. D. one from Mrs. Myrtle Walker, Racine. She calls II an old time
Deuing, Pittsburgh, Pa .
sugar pie recipe and said thst she found lt among the recipes of
her late mother, Mrs. Maggie Shain.
1378 at the home of Joseph

Eastern Local Board today
announced its pollcy for free·
You wUI receive a dollar H Polly uses your favorite borne· meals and free milk and for
maktng Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution to a reduced price meals for
problem. Write Polly in care of this newspaper.
children unable to pay the full
price of meals and milk served
under the National School
Lunch , . and Special . Milk
homecoming Sunday, Aug. 25, Programs . ·
HOMECOMING SJ;:T
.
.
LONG BOTTOM - The .with a basket dinner at noon . . Local school ·officials have
Hazel Corrununily Church, off Featured singers will be the adopted .the following family
SR 124 between Long Bottom Gospel . Tones from Cheste~ . size and income criteria ·for
and Portl8nd, will hold a Everyone is welcome to attend. determining eligibility: .
Family-size income scale for
free meals and free milk and
reduced price meals, effective
July I, 1974 (In order: family
size required income for free
Under the provisions of the mittees will be announced
•
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'lk
·
d
in
policy
John . D. Riebel, Sr ., later ·
1
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mea s and rru , reqwre
. come . for reduced · price Local Superintendent, wi 11
FRIENDLY Circle of the
review
applications
and
Trinity
Church 7:30 p.m. at
1
mea
s)t
$
OBO
determine
eligibility.
If
a
c
hurch.
Mrs . Lawrence
2 910
1
parent is dissatisfied with the Sl!!wart program leader.
• •
60 ·
ruling of the official, he may ·
2 - $3,1130, S, ·
3 - $4, 740• $S,S40.
make a reques.teither orally or
~~IG~ •tTOP~ hth Clunb
4 - $5,S40, $7•900•
in writing to Robert Bowen, ce e ra s 1 s eJg
a •
5 - $6,480, $9,070.
Box S84, Pomeroy • Ohio, phone niversary·, at the Middleport
f . h
American . Legion Hall. All
6 - $7 ,3iO, $10,240.
99••
....,883, or a ear 1ng 1o ap·
be
d t
tte d 7
7 - $8,1l6o, $11 •290 ·
peal the decision. The policy mem rs urge 0 a n •
8 - $8,810, $12 •240 ·
contains an outline of the p.m.
9 - $9,510, $13,320.
h 1
. d
•
PARENTS of kindergarten
ear
ng
proce
ure.
tud
10 - $10,190, $14,270.
Each sehool and the board of s en 1.'3 ·m th e Southern Local
11 - $10,860, $15,210.
educ.ation . administrative .of. School Dis!., meet at the high
12- $11,530, $16,160.
s~nooi, 7:30 p.m: to set bus
· STIHL hal more than 40 valuable years of
Each Additional Family lice has a copy of the complete schedules.
experience in the design and production of
· b
policywhiChmaybereviewed
POMEROY
Women 's
power ctl;ain saws. guide ba:ra and saw chain.
Member, $670• $~•
nv. ,
· te ted
t
All of STIHL'e saw• have the same degree of .
• 1wns
Y any m res
par y. •
Bowi'1ng Ass n ., 7: 3.0 p .m .
Eligibility determJna
excellence and of uniformity In deSign and
Tuesday at the Pomeroy
are made on a family basis,
m1nufac1ure. In conjunction wilh these, STit-iL's
that
is
all
the
children
in
the
Bowling Lanes. All league
own bart and chain Operate so efficiently and
same iamliy attending schools
secretaries or a representative
well th•t they have earned world-wide
recognition for outstanding performance with
from each !~ague is asked to
under the juriadictlon of the
minimal maintenance.
same school food authority are
~
attend and pick up supphes Ior
to receive the same benefits,
new winterlea~ues .
Free
Meals
and
Free
Milk
or
J
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WEDNESDAY
ALSO
Reduced Price Meals.
.
POMEROY. Lodge 164,
Children from families
special meeting, . 7:30 p.m.
whose income is at or below the
Entered Apprentice Degree.
levels shown are eligible for .
All master masons IOVIt..d.
(free meals and free milk or
I '
REVIVAL at the United
for reduced,prlce meals) . .In
Faith Church, ~n the Pomeroy
addition families not meeting
bypass, begmning today
through Aug. 25, 7:SO,p.m. Rev.
these cMteria but with other
unusual expenses due to . Mrs . Thomas Young en- C:ec•l Wise evangelist. Hymn
unusually high medicil ex- t..rtained Sunday at the Young smg Aug . 25, 2 p.m. Singers
pe nses, shelter costs in excess home, West Main St., welcome.
Pomeroy, with a dinner party
of 30 percent of inco~e. special honoring her husband, a
education expenses due to the granddaughter, Janet Rogers,
START BACK
mental or physical condition of Lebanon, 8 grandson, Larry
a child, and disaster or AItmayer, . Le VI'!town , N. y .,
TO SCHOOL
casualty ' losses. are urged to and a son-in-law, Edgar All·
IN A PAIR OF
apply·
mayer, also of Levittown, on
Your Complete
Applications forms are being Uleir birthday anniversaries.
CONVERSE TENNIS
Tire Center
aerii
to
all
homes
in
a
letter
to
Also
present
were
Mrs.
992-20'14
·parents. Additional copies are Edgar Altmayer, Levittown,
60.6 E. Main
available at the principal's N. Y. i Stewart All mayer,
Pom..-oy. o.
ALL COLORS
office In each school. The in- Buffalo, N. Y;; Mr. and Mrs •
formation provided on the Robert Rogers, Nelsonville;
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wella,
YourThom MeAn Store
Cutler, Mrs. Lydia Davis,
Mldd leport, 0 .
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Pomeroy.

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Pomeroy ...

16 OL
STATE LOnERY-'f'ICKETS
ON SALE HEtiE
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DAD'S ROOT BEER.

OR NEW DIET RnE au

PAl.

tdtles

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FtiE£)

16 CIL
bas.

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�4 _The O.Uy 5enllnel, Middleport•PometOy, 0., Tuesday, Aug. 20. 1974

94th Blazer reunton held 1Fun With Food

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Polly's Pointers
By Polly Cramer

Who drives young
from the church

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POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I hope some mothercantellmehow to
remove sticky bubble gum from a child'sskin. - MISS K. C.
[lEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve concerns those people who
are always finding fault with tbe young people attending church.
Too many people are looking at the boys' too long hair and the
gir'ls' too short skirts. Then there are those like the lady ~ho
complained about those who took babies into church rather than
leaving them in the crying room. My comm.ent to people like this,
"Have you read up on the rate of decline in church attendance,
especially among young people?" They should remember church
is for ALL people and should he thankful t_hese you~ people are
coming to church rather Ulan always findmg fault with them. s. w.DEAR POLLY - and Edith, the gal who hast he stems.t uck
In h"er electric percolator - Fill percolator with water. Let II go
through the entire perking cycle. When this Is completed the
stem should come out. The perking evidenUy causes the welllll
which the stem fits to expand so it can be ·easily removed. I
learned this by exJierience and after breaking a stem when I
tried to remove It when the percolator became cold. - MRS. L.

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IIIMIIMIIIMIIIIM·-----Iil!IIJJilll

~'f~-M::':I.

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L. ·DEAR POLLy- If Edith will plug her percoo 1ator m
' for JUS
' t

a FEW SECONDS (until she starts to hear it heat ) and un~lu g it,
· she will find the stem will come loose immediately, especJSlly If
the pot is empty. I usually "work" the stem as soon as I plug the
pot in and it comes loose more quickly.- V.L.T.
. DEAR ·POLLy - My Pointer is for knitters who may be
making things where pieces are to be joined togeUler such as for
a Granny afghan. Use the ~ 'ball stitch" that is ~a~ed afte~ th~
method used for sewing baseballs together. I calliI shoe lacmg
because that is how the needle is used. Such joining makes. it
perfect and smooth with no lumps or bumps or problems With
matching patterns. I hope this helps those who have trouble
smoothly joining knitted pieces. - CHARWTTE.
'
POLLY·- My husband bought several plastic gar·
• .. bageDEAR
cans when they were on sale for one dollar each to use for
storage. One holds my yarns and felt pieces and ?ther items for
'
aewingandhandwork. One holds outdated magazmes we ~a~t to
keep for various reasons and bulky current catalogs. One Ill filled
with out-of...eason clothes that will not go in cedar chests and
dust bl!gs. They are all neatly covered and in the basement. N~xt
year we may invest in more cans on sale - to hold the farruiy
· treasure. - !LA.

..

The !Hth Blazer reunion ,was
held In the Community Hall,
Jlio Grande College, Sunday,
Aug . II, with 80 people at·
t..ndlng. · The morning was
spenlsoclalizing.
.
Lunch was served at the noon
hour after grace was presented
by Oretha (Blazer) Barcus,
Huntington, w. Va.
Paul G. Blazer, president,
Ashland, Ky ., called the
meeting to order after lunch
was served; and gave a short
talk on the history of the
Blazers, being one of the oldest
families in the county and the
State of Ohio.
They came to this country
from Baden, Germany in 1787
and setUed in Pennsylvania
and Virginia and later settled
in Green Twp. where many are
buried now .

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£

Famzly reunion held
The annual Radford reunion
was held Sunday at"the Rock
Springs Grange hall. Rev.
Waid Radford gave the table
grace preceding the dinner and
games during the afternoon
were led by Rich8rd Radford.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Radford and John,
Piketon; Mr. :p~d )llrs. Paul
Rich, Caldwell; Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Black and Shawna,
Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs. :rom
Radford, Carroll; Mr. and Mrs.
James Radford, Chillicothe;
Rev. and Mrs. Waid Radford,
Beaver; Mr. · and Mrs. Paul
Radford and Paul Davis,

Eastern district
lunch policy

MOST ALL MODELS
.NOW IN STOCK

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Mrs. Donald Pulllna and
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1randchlldren, Amy
Colwnbua and Jeffrey, Cln·
clnnali, opent the paat week
hore vlalUng Mr. and Mrs.
Wllliam Radford and family.
Donald Pullina joined them
here for the weekend . Other
guest.. were Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Glazer, Sandra itnd
Robert, COlumbus. Their aon,
Mlchsel, who has been here
visiting the Radfords retur~
to Columbus with the family,
and RObert remained for. a
week's visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Lochsry,
Patty and Chris, Glen Ridge,
N. J ., are here vis!Ung hls
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Patrick
Lochary. The Charles Lochsry
family hsve now returned to
their home near Chicago.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Ohlinger
and family, Philo, were
weekend guests of their
parenl'!. Mr. and Mrs, Bud
Wilson and Mr. and- Mrs.
Herman Ohlinger.

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 - Sun. 10 to 10
W4? Accept Federal Fvvd
PHONE: 992·3480

USDA CHOICE
·1b.
BOILING BEEF•••••••••••••••••••••

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Gospel M_e eting

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HAM SALAD .............. ~~:. 79· .

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·-•.•·.

7;30 P.M •

'8~

Ckwtek ttb CIW6t

---GOESSLER'S E

Auxiliary has cookout ·
Mrs . Harry Hotidashelt ,
assisted by her daughter ,
Freddie, entertained Wed·
uesday night with a cookout for
members of the Past
President.'l of the American
Legion Auxiliary, Drew
Webster Post 39.
Guests are Rev. and Mrs.
Ronald Plaee and son, Groton,
N. Y., son-in-law and ·d~ughter
of Mrs. Houdashelt, and Mrs.
Don Erwin and Amy, Mid·
dleport. Rev. Place gave grace
preceding the poUuck dinner.
Mrs. Harry Davis presided
at the business meeting with
the Lord's Prayer being given
in unison. Devotions by Mrs.
Carrie Neutzling were taken
from "The Secret Place" with
the meditation tieing "Best
Things in Life Are Free."
Reports were given by Mrs .
Iva Powell, secretary, and
Mrs. Faye Wildermuth ,

Pickens with Mrs. Rhoda
Hackett to be the . hostess.
Others attending the meeting
were Mrs. Edith Sauer_. Mrs.
Grace Pratt, Mrs. Jed Web·
ster, Sr ., Mrs. Ellen Couch and
Mrs. fear! Knapp.

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RINGS ENLARGED TO SHOW DETAil!•

·--&gt;

LVS.
FOR

~-

St~

Court

Pomeroy

-~

· CHOC. QUIK

YOU ARE CORDIAl.L Y INVITED TO ATI'END EIGHT
NIGHTS OF LESSONS FROM TH£. BIUI,E PijESENTED
BY A MAN THAT IS CAPAULE !1'0 MAKF: YOUR NEXT
DAY A BRIGHTER ANIJ A UE'i'TER
iJNF. TO LIVE IN.
.
.

Ub.

CAN

box

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107 Sycamore

99? ·5130

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Pllmeroy

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CHICKEN
.,.,
lb.
2 box

32 oz.

9 ·$
.
SCOT LAD 5 boles
FRENCH FRIES
Oi.

POWER

l

WINQiESTER

giant

unLE CIGARS

box

·•e

CANS
FOR
•

POTTED MEAT

Act Now!
Once These Are Gone,
That$ It!

Cheez-its

oz.
SCHOOL
Schcxi
Supplies SUPPLIES

ARMOUR'S TREET

stwlnt ••chine

i

$7995

H," thc·cxcluslvc ~8£!' front drop-in hobbln, 3 needle positions,

Chlly

qUick-change -snap-on prosser feet, mJny other convcnl onccs.

Ot, rylng n11

"

or c•b• ni1 ••trl '

'

Everyday Price -a· Pak •

THl''FAilic"'sHOP

MEL

115 W. Second
992-2214 ·
"""'" " .." """'
.McCall, &amp; Simplicity Pattern•

Pomeroy
·

2 LB.

~29

Regular Pop &amp; Sugar free

YEU.OW POPCORN
KRISP

gal.

FAYGO

.,
·

9~

RC COLA

DISCOUNT PRICES

CAN

case or
cabinet extra

~

BROUGHTON

~

lb.
box

Rtgular Price

Carrying

.

lARGE SUPPLY

12 oz.

OFF

·

HOMO MILK •••••••••••••• 6
SHERBET.~!~•••••••••~.59c
EGGS.•••••••~~.~!"~~~-~49C

s
CARTON

CANS

TOUCH&amp;SEW*

.

.

Armour

3

.....cA
.......,...,...

8!NQUET WHOLE FRIED

bottle

NESllE
2 LB.

We have a Credit Plin dUIJnH 10 fll your budpt .

REUTER-8ROGAN INSURANQ

DETERGENT

JERZEE MILK

.
Clltck With U• Iefort You Ivy •.•

HI·HO

CRACKERS

BY

treasW'er.
Plans were made fo1
September meeting · at IP•'
home of Dr. and Mrs. R. H.

$

DAIRY FROZEN FOODS

LIQUID

~.,.

JEWELRY STORE
:
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FASHIOI MATE . ZIG·IAG stwlnt•achlne Mod•' m
Best Rates In Town

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Favorite· Bread

$37 .5~;
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BRING IN YOUR OLD MACHINE .FOR A GENEROUS TRADE•IN ALLOWANCE!

BOB KESSINGER, Speaker

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• Bu ilt-in buttonholer
•14 6u ilt-in stitches
· including stretCh,
speed bastin g

AUGUST 21 t:hru 28,· 1974

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HOME MADE

ente,Ytaz'ns

heritage house

$ 09

FRESH LEAN

POLISH SAUSAGE .... !~:; 79

Mix -all ingredients. except the cirtnamon, and pour mto a
nine inch unbaked pie shell. Top with the cinnamon. Bake a~ 425
···· degreeslor 10 minutes. Reduce heat to 325 degrees and contmue
:·:·: baking 4:i-50 minutes.

SHQES

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GROUND BEEF......... !~:.89~

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SUPERIORS

~::

POMER Y.·
HOME &amp;
AUTO

59~

FRESH LEAN

M f.'C' oun:gthe

BAR AND QfAIN OIL
AND 2 CYQ.E OIL

Parting
After 5 p.m.

GROUND CHUCK...... ~~:.. I
FRESH LEAN
lb. $llg
GROUND ROUND..........

Socl· aI it
·$
~l~ Ca Iend ar.r

$\

BLADE CUT

USDA CHOICE
lb. · 99~
ENGLISH ROAST• ••••••••••••••••••
USDA CHOICE
, lb. 89~
ROAST
ARM
• ••••••••••••••••••••••••

10K Gold
Wedding Ring&amp;

OLD TIME SUGAR PIE
~=-··~&gt;.·.··-·······-~
.1 c. sugar; 3 tbsp. flour; 1&gt; tsp. salt ; 11&gt; c. of half milk, hslf
cream; 1 tsp. vanilla; 1 tsp. cinnamon·.
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Free On-Street

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Priscilla ·
Smartly Styled
Exceptional Values

MIDDLEPORT, 0'

'to Umil

RnerveThe ·

~~x"~'~''·''""'·'"'"''"

:~;:
application is confidential and ,., •
will be used only for the pur·:-:
pose of det..rminlng eligibility. :;::
~::
Applications may be submitted
at any time during the year.
TUESDAY
In certain cases foster
LADIES Auxiliary, Veterans
children are atso eligible for Memoria!Hospital,picnic,6:30
these benefit.'l. If a family has p.m. tonight at the Roadside
foster children living . with Park, US 33,. left hand side,
them and wishes to apply for . going North.
such meals and mllk for them,
WINDING Trail Garden Club
it should contact the school.
workshop for flower show at
Iu the operation of child home of Alice Thompson. Mrs.
feeding programs, no child will Richard Collins and- Mrs. Bob
be discriminated against Thompson will be ·the co.
be cause of race, sex, color or cha1'rwomen of the show . The
national origin.
schedule theme and com-

CHAIN -SAWS

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Personal Notes

The first reunton was held m president; Claude Blazer, v•c&lt;
Hy Charlene Hoeflich
president, and Mrs . Jack '
Blazer.
Campbell, Sr.. secretary,
As a switch from the sweet treats we've been writing abollt
Traveling the farthest were treasurer, for the year. The
Sally and Jan Swanson , reunion will be held in the same for the pastaeveral weeks, today we bring you a rodpe which:.
understand was a sma.sh at the annual family picnic at
granddaught..rs of Mrs . Betty pia&lt;... next year.
Swanson, Marlbroulo, Md., and
Those attending were Mr . Middleport Business and Professional Women last month.
It's for German Cabbage Salad and it was made for the
Donald Blazer, Pittsburgh, Pa . and Mrs. Jack Campbell, Sr.,
The oldest was 0 . B. Blazer, Galli polls; Carol Swindler, picnic by Eloise Wilson. She graciously shared her recipe with
Uma and Ernest Blazer from Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd the club members.
Rio Grande. Both are 84 years Dempsey, Reynoldsburg; Tom
GERMAN CABBAGE SALAD
old.
.
Dempsey, Reynoldsburg; Mr.
4 1bs. cut cabbage; )large onion (chopped fine); I c. sugar.
Younges~ was f hriStople and Mrs. Howard Blazer, Mix this and set aside while heating together, % c, oll, 1 c.
Walker, daughter of John Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. R~negar, 1 tsp. dry mustard, 2 tbsp. sugar.
Walker, Columbus, II&gt; years Mooney, Mr. snd Mrs. Joe
Pour the vinegar-oil mbr:ture over "the cabbage, onion and
old. Birthday noted was Codi~y Blazer, Rio Grande; Dan A. sugar. Serve hot. May also be served cold.
Davis, son 'of Judy and Bill Blazer, Bidwell; Mr. and Mrs.
Davis, he was three years old. 'Jim Williams. -Huntington, W.
If you happen to be looking for something different but
Six deaths were reeorded for Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Estel Lewis,
1974 .
Eleanor, W. Va. ; Mr. and Mrs. delicious in the dessert line, you might try Lena Hamm's re&lt;;ipe
Collections were taken and Alva Parsons, Eleanor, W. for an orange chiffon pie, or perhaps her brown sugar pie recipe.
bills were paid. The officers Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Russell We pass both along retained are Paul G. Blazer, Williams, Huntington; Mr. and
ORANGE CHIFFON PIE
Mrs. John E. Blazer, Cedar1 and one-third c. vanills wafer crumbs (about 35 cookies), y,
ville; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd c. butter, melted. Make a crust of the crumbs and butter and
Blazer,Gallipolis; Mrs. Emma press the mixture firmly and evenly against the bottom and sides
Russell, Grove City; Ralph of a nine inch pie pan building a rim around Ule edge. Chill.
.
Deitz, Circleville; Miss Winnie
2 tbsp. unflavored gelatin, 1&gt; c. sugar; 1 c. water; 2 c. plam
Wetherholt, Gallipolis; Mr . or pineapple yogurt; 1 can (six ounces) frozen orange juice,
and Mrs . Bill Williams,
Hamilton; Mrs . Sandra Huntington; Mr. and Mrs. Paul concentrated, thswed.
COmbine gelatine and 1&gt; c. sugar in saucepan, add water.
Hughlett, Robert Glaze and G. Blazer, Ashland, Ky.; Mr.
Mrs. Erie Gilbert, COlumbus. and Mrs. Claude Blazer, Heat, stirring now and then, until gelatin dissolves. Cool to room
Mr. and Mrs. George Sisson, Cheshire ; Mr. and Mrs. John temperature. In a bowl slowly add _the orange jui"': to the yogurt,
Brent and Krista!, Rick Gaul, Nibert, Gallipolis; Jeffery blending well. Stir in the gelatin mixture. Chill until partially set.
Beat 2egg whites with a dash of salt until foamy . Add 2 tbsp .
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip .Radford Blazer, Cheshire; Mrs. James
sugar.
Beat until stiff peaks are formed. Fold mto the gelatm
and Stephanie, Wyatt Radford, G. Haines and Laura Haines,
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Radford, Huntington ; Mrs. Oretha mixture. Chill until mixture is set, then turn into the crumb crust,
Mr. and Mrs. William Radford (Blazer ) Bacon, Huntington ; Trim with toasted coconut, and chill again.
· and Mary, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. Blazer.
BROWN SUGAR PIE
Rolline Radford, COnnie, Judy St. Clairvilie ; Mr. and Mrs.
Cream one-third c. butter and 2 c. of firmly packed light
and Sally, Roger Gilmore, Charles McCoy, Wheeling; Mr.
brown
sugar. Add 2 eggs and beat well. Add 'I• c. mllk, I&gt; tsp.
Barry Marshall, Doug UtUe, and Mrs. Ernest Blazer, Rio
.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Goegiein, Grande; Rev. and Mrs. Luther vanilla and a pinch of sali.
Polir
the
custard
into
an
unbaked
pie
shell. Bake for 10
Mr. and Mrs. Fred B. Goeglein, TI'acy, Rio Grande; Miss Sally
Pau1, Don, Shawn, and Amy, Swanson and Jan, Marlborgh, minutes at 400 .degrees. Reduce hestand bake for 30 to 35 minutes
at 350 degrees. Chill before serving.
all of Pomeroy .
Md .; Mrs. E. c. Beale,
Baltimore, Md.; Donald G.
Among the many sugar.pie recipes which have been sent ~ is
Blazer, Pittsburgh, Pa.; H. D. one from Mrs. Myrtle Walker, Racine. She calls II an old time
Deuing, Pittsburgh, Pa .
sugar pie recipe and said thst she found lt among the recipes of
her late mother, Mrs. Maggie Shain.
1378 at the home of Joseph

Eastern Local Board today
announced its pollcy for free·
You wUI receive a dollar H Polly uses your favorite borne· meals and free milk and for
maktng Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution to a reduced price meals for
problem. Write Polly in care of this newspaper.
children unable to pay the full
price of meals and milk served
under the National School
Lunch , . and Special . Milk
homecoming Sunday, Aug. 25, Programs . ·
HOMECOMING SJ;:T
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LONG BOTTOM - The .with a basket dinner at noon . . Local school ·officials have
Hazel Corrununily Church, off Featured singers will be the adopted .the following family
SR 124 between Long Bottom Gospel . Tones from Cheste~ . size and income criteria ·for
and Portl8nd, will hold a Everyone is welcome to attend. determining eligibility: .
Family-size income scale for
free meals and free milk and
reduced price meals, effective
July I, 1974 (In order: family
size required income for free
Under the provisions of the mittees will be announced
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'lk
·
d
in
policy
John . D. Riebel, Sr ., later ·
1
··
mea s and rru , reqwre
. come . for reduced · price Local Superintendent, wi 11
FRIENDLY Circle of the
review
applications
and
Trinity
Church 7:30 p.m. at
1
mea
s)t
$
OBO
determine
eligibility.
If
a
c
hurch.
Mrs . Lawrence
2 910
1
parent is dissatisfied with the Sl!!wart program leader.
• •
60 ·
ruling of the official, he may ·
2 - $3,1130, S, ·
3 - $4, 740• $S,S40.
make a reques.teither orally or
~~IG~ •tTOP~ hth Clunb
4 - $5,S40, $7•900•
in writing to Robert Bowen, ce e ra s 1 s eJg
a •
5 - $6,480, $9,070.
Box S84, Pomeroy • Ohio, phone niversary·, at the Middleport
f . h
American . Legion Hall. All
6 - $7 ,3iO, $10,240.
99••
....,883, or a ear 1ng 1o ap·
be
d t
tte d 7
7 - $8,1l6o, $11 •290 ·
peal the decision. The policy mem rs urge 0 a n •
8 - $8,810, $12 •240 ·
contains an outline of the p.m.
9 - $9,510, $13,320.
h 1
. d
•
PARENTS of kindergarten
ear
ng
proce
ure.
tud
10 - $10,190, $14,270.
Each sehool and the board of s en 1.'3 ·m th e Southern Local
11 - $10,860, $15,210.
educ.ation . administrative .of. School Dis!., meet at the high
12- $11,530, $16,160.
s~nooi, 7:30 p.m: to set bus
· STIHL hal more than 40 valuable years of
Each Additional Family lice has a copy of the complete schedules.
experience in the design and production of
· b
policywhiChmaybereviewed
POMEROY
Women 's
power ctl;ain saws. guide ba:ra and saw chain.
Member, $670• $~•
nv. ,
· te ted
t
All of STIHL'e saw• have the same degree of .
• 1wns
Y any m res
par y. •
Bowi'1ng Ass n ., 7: 3.0 p .m .
Eligibility determJna
excellence and of uniformity In deSign and
Tuesday at the Pomeroy
are made on a family basis,
m1nufac1ure. In conjunction wilh these, STit-iL's
that
is
all
the
children
in
the
Bowling Lanes. All league
own bart and chain Operate so efficiently and
same iamliy attending schools
secretaries or a representative
well th•t they have earned world-wide
recognition for outstanding performance with
from each !~ague is asked to
under the juriadictlon of the
minimal maintenance.
same school food authority are
~
attend and pick up supphes Ior
to receive the same benefits,
new winterlea~ues .
Free
Meals
and
Free
Milk
or
J
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WEDNESDAY
ALSO
Reduced Price Meals.
.
POMEROY. Lodge 164,
Children from families
special meeting, . 7:30 p.m.
whose income is at or below the
Entered Apprentice Degree.
levels shown are eligible for .
All master masons IOVIt..d.
(free meals and free milk or
I '
REVIVAL at the United
for reduced,prlce meals) . .In
Faith Church, ~n the Pomeroy
addition families not meeting
bypass, begmning today
through Aug. 25, 7:SO,p.m. Rev.
these cMteria but with other
unusual expenses due to . Mrs . Thomas Young en- C:ec•l Wise evangelist. Hymn
unusually high medicil ex- t..rtained Sunday at the Young smg Aug . 25, 2 p.m. Singers
pe nses, shelter costs in excess home, West Main St., welcome.
Pomeroy, with a dinner party
of 30 percent of inco~e. special honoring her husband, a
education expenses due to the granddaughter, Janet Rogers,
START BACK
mental or physical condition of Lebanon, 8 grandson, Larry
a child, and disaster or AItmayer, . Le VI'!town , N. y .,
TO SCHOOL
casualty ' losses. are urged to and a son-in-law, Edgar All·
IN A PAIR OF
apply·
mayer, also of Levittown, on
Your Complete
Applications forms are being Uleir birthday anniversaries.
CONVERSE TENNIS
Tire Center
aerii
to
all
homes
in
a
letter
to
Also
present
were
Mrs.
992-20'14
·parents. Additional copies are Edgar Altmayer, Levittown,
60.6 E. Main
available at the principal's N. Y. i Stewart All mayer,
Pom..-oy. o.
ALL COLORS
office In each school. The in- Buffalo, N. Y;; Mr. and Mrs •
formation provided on the Robert Rogers, Nelsonville;
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wella,
YourThom MeAn Store
Cutler, Mrs. Lydia Davis,
Mldd leport, 0 .
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Pomeroy.

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Pomeroy ...

16 OL
STATE LOnERY-'f'ICKETS
ON SALE HEtiE
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DAD'S ROOT BEER.

OR NEW DIET RnE au

PAl.

tdtles

8

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FtiE£)

16 CIL
bas.

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· Real Estate For Sale

s - ThoDallvSenl.iMI Middloport-Pomeroy,O, Tue:Jday,Aug 20,1974

·S entinel Classifieds Get R esultst ·.~?r~'f:.·~~.-:;·,.~·,1~·~;:::
COURT OP
COIYIMO N PLEAS

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MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

PoIIIIFOJ
0,
M
otor Co.
..
Lan
Qu
~2 .MVR~

FAYE: I COWDERY
ltud,vUit, Otuo
Plalntl lt
Yl

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OA#oi.-E CECIL COWDER:Y,
AdCfrus Unknown,

Def•ndint

No

A

15 60

1969 FORD TORINOCPE
Local car bvc)(ef seat vl nyl •nter lor
JJ 8 radio good fires Real ntce

- NOTICE IY
PUBLICATION -

••'
••
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Pla intiff

has

brought

'I

v1N:~\ 1g1NG

~speed

trans

Produud

I"m••

....

trqm

a

s.p~&gt;clll

siding Will not dtnt chip
crack
. p•el , rot rust or

ME-LONS sweet corn , "ree-n
•

•• ,'".. '"'" m""

351

w7l.Lkee~eide;,-voeopl:~n ::
Help Wanted

Busmess Opportunities

-•

•
'

~

'

~

CAN YOU WORK
WITHOUT
SUPERVISION?

e
--------------- ----------------

CARRIERS
WANTED
IN

~

SYRACUSE

'

•

~

AND

-.. Apple Grove
'

.

,

THE DEPENDABLE
MASON
CONTRACTING CO. THE DAILY SENTINEl

News, Events

PHONE 992-2156
POMEROY, 0.
For Rent

Special Mobile Home

Roofs Painted Before
Fall and Winter Sets ln.

..•
•

Gerlldlne Cleland

Evangeheal Theological
Semmary on the campus of
Northwestern University m
Evanston, m. smce July 14
This school IS attended annually by approxunately 100
rrurusters from 13 states of the
Midwest Rev Shively has
attended the school for the past
three years and will attend his
final year m July-August 1975
During hiS stay this year he
was honored by being elected
vtce president of the Student

Laurel Cliff
News Notes
BYBERTHAPARKER
Sabbath School attendanee
Aug 18 at the Free Methodist
Church was 130 Attendance at
preaehmg serv1ce was 159
Offenng for all serv1ces was
$213 00
Mr and Mrs Joe H•ggmbothan and Mr and Mrs T J.

Council for '75 school year.
Mr Dorsey Sayre of Akron,
Ohlo, Mrs Hazel Herdman,
Mrs B, 8 Miller were dinner Whitaker, Newark, VISited
guests of Mr. llayre's aister, over the weekend With Rev
Mrs. Ruth Parsons at the home and Mrs Floyd Shook
of her son, Preston Parsons,
Mr and Mrs Eugene
and Mrs Edna Parsons and Russell, Flortda, attended
son, Mark, at Antiquity
mornmg serv1ee at the local
Mr and Mrs Jim Freeman ehurch Aug 18
and baby or Erwm, Pa , Miss
Mrs W M Davis and Mrs
Donna Smith of Millvale, Pa Betty Jacobs, Columbus,
VISited a few days wlth Mr and VIsited SatW"day With !herr
Mrs Robert Smith, 5r Donna parents, Mr and Mrs Pearl
remamed for a longer vwt
Jecobs
Mrs Sandy Dorst and
Mrs Carlene Zahrndt of
Otarleston, w va , Mr and children, Milan, visited With
Mrs Rowan Hunt and two her parents, Mr and Mrs
children of Nitro, w va James Gibnore and attended
visited Saturday wlth Mr and mornmg service at the local
chW"ch
Mrs Bert Hunt
Mr and Mrs Wllllam
Mr and Mrs Lennie Lyons
Wickline and son, Scottie, Mrs and baby, Rock Sprmgs, Mr
Kathryn Hunt returned home Ph111p Radford, Rock Spnngs,
Tue:Jday after a vacation With and Mr Edward Dailey v1slted
Mr. and Mrs Charles Burri at recently With Mr and Mrs
Bolivar Dam, and Mr and Harmon Fox
Mrs Pete Bearha at Norfolk,
Mr and Mrs Glenna Faulk,
Va They also vlslted other Middleport, visited Sunday
places of mterest
With Mr and Mrs CUff Klem
Dr and Mrs. Earl Grunm
Mrs Harold Talley, tamara
and sons, Mrs Gladys Me- Lee and Mark, Mrs Scott
Clam, Bobby Janice, and Talley and Chaleah, Ml""'"-'!1,
David of Cutler, Ohio, Mr and spent several days Wlth•tlli'•
Mrs Harold Roush, Mrs. Inez Talley's mother, Mrs Bertha
Hill, Racine, Mr. and Mrs Parker
Harold Grlnun of ColwnbUB
Miss
Barbara
Klem,
visited Mr. and Mrs Don Bell daughter of Mr and Mrs Cliff
and Lorna.
Klein, left recently for Ken·
Mrs Maggie Roush entered lucky to attend Grayson
Veterans Mmorial Hospital Christian College
Sunday for observation and
Mr and Mrs Guy Russell,
treatment
Warren, visited recently with
Mr and Mrs Ralph Durst h1s SISler, Mrs Georgia Diehl
purchased the Millle Ripley and Charles Anthony Diehl
residence and have moved
Mrs Leona Karr remams a
!here from Sprlllg!leld, 0
patient Ill Veterans Memortal
Mr. and Mrs Lawrenee Hospital
Baller of Tuppers Plains spent
Mr and Mrs Ted Mathew,
Sunday with Mrs Allee Baller Huron, visited over the
and Mr. and Mil. Jack Ables weekend wlth Mrs Mathew's
Mr 111111 Mrs Herbert Roualt, father, Charles Karr and her
Mr. 111111 Mrs Roser Roush, ' mother, Mrs Charles Kar'r
Mill Judy Michael were who l.t a patient In Veterans
1hopplng In Parkersburg Memorial Hospital
Selurday.
After Ohlo Valley Grange
meeting 'l'burlday evening the
IDIIDben went to the home or
Mn. Erma Willon and heard
former prelldent Nixon'• and Mrs Herbert Roush, Mrs
Erma Willon. Mr Roush was
m•••~t on TV. Ice cre11111,
presented
a cake "Happy
edt, coCree were Nmd 1n
.,._.._ of u. birthday of Blrthday Dad" by hl.t 11011 and
S.bert Roulb. Atlelldlni were daughter-Ill-law, Mr and Mrs
kiT Rllulb, Alice S.loer, Mr Roger Roualt

-------------TRAILER Browns Trailer

12' Wide-$27.00
14' W1de-$JO.oo

Court
3324

--------------BUSINESS room 22x80 234 E

5 FAMILY yard se~le startmg
A ug 20 810 S Second St
Middleport

-------------CARPORT sale 918 So 3rd
pm

Aug

20 21

Phone 992

7 18 tfc

OFFER END$
sEPTEMBER 30.1974

Middleport

Pomeroy

10 5

8 18 3t c

-------------PIANO tunmg Charles Scott
992 3718

8 18 5tp

-------------THERE wtll be a youth rally
7 30 p m Friday Aug 2Jrd at
the old Pomeroy H1gh S~hool
now Se nror Crtlzens bu ilding
at Pomeroy Oh io Featured
srngers wrll be Homeward
Bound from Huntrngton W
Va
and Gospel Tones
Speaker will be from Teen
Challenge Cleveland Ohro
Everyone wetcome
8 18 61c

Marn St
Pomeroy
Ohio
Phone 992 S786 or 992 3975
6 12 tfc

--------------FURNISHED
apartment
adults only m
Phone 992 3874

M !ddlepor:t

Raclnt.

Ohio

T REE ripened peach•s while
end Y•llow Itt Muon p•a ch
Orchard
Mason ,
WUf
V Irg inia
..,..
...,..
8 13 tfc

__ ___

_______

LO 1 ~ - 1 a cre c1 1y water on
St Rt
1~3
4 m lln from
Pom~roy
Phone 992 36•0
after 5 p m
,
8 14 7tc

~

close to Powells Super Valu
Phone 992 3658
e 7 tfc

--------------3 AN 0
ROOM furnished and
~

unfurntshed
apartments
Phone 992 5434
~ 12 tfc

STEREO RADIO , am fm
8
track tape com b ination / 4
speaker
sound
system
Balance "06 78 or easy
terms ca.u 992 3965
8 U tfc
NEW green recliner
Phone 992 2571

8 u tfc

-------------POTATOES
Phone

-,-------------

Mobile Homes For Sale

Wanted To Buy

--------...-------

______

__ __ _

--------------

--------------JUNK A.utos c omplete and

delivered to our yard We pick
up auto bodies and buy all
k rnds of scrap metals and
Iron Riders Salvage State
Rt 124 Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohio
Phone 992 5~68
7 31 26tp

-------------CASH paid for all makes end
mode ls of mobile homes.
Phone area code 6U _.23 9531
4 13 tfc

--------------

OL.O FURNITURE oak tables.
clocks •ce boxes brass beds.
dishes desks or complete
households Write M
0
Mil l er Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohio
call 992 7760
5 13 tfc

--------------CASH
F OR- Tu N K CARS
compl~te

Frye s Truck and
Auto Perfs Rutland Oh lo 2~

HOUR

WRECKER

SER

VICE Phont 7_.2 609~
t -26 26tc

---------------

15 for lunk automobll.a we will
pfck up
R:lver ,lde Auto
Wreck ing Phone C30~) 773
5890
t S ffc

----------------Auto Sales

1969 VAN 8cyllnder ~ Phone 772
5651
8 16 tfc
W7~- PlY MOUTH- Si t&amp;"ll l te
Se br tng 2 dr hardtop p s ,
p b vinyl top ratty wheels
12 ~SO miles, excellent con
dillon S3 100 Phone 992_...3~10
8 1~ 6tc

_____________

"

8 do-Maude 8 lO s Man Builds Man Oestroy5 33 Adam 17 3 "'
IS Crime &amp; Puni5hmen l 10 Happy Days 6 13

Free Estimates

Refr1gerators,
Freezers, Home &amp;
Auto A~r Conditioners
and
Commercial
Units.

t ng 1
Compare our prices
any
others
We 11 give you t1
profen lonal roof for less
C. II ttl 2136 For
Estlmat11 of Any

Now Open

tor

•

IMTDIING SERVLCE

. , 3092

Pomeroy, 0
399 w Maln p
Loc•ted •t Modern Supply
Small Engine Repair

Water lines and Power
L1nes All work done by the
foot or contract Also doter
work ilnd sephc tanks In

SECLUDED new four bectracm
two bath total electr ic home
934 acres n ice kitchen full
carpet Call 742 4173
8 15 6tp

.....

Don t

tor get the

roof of your
home Have a beautiful ne-w
roof Installed by All Weather

Home
Bu1ldmg
&amp;
Acld1t1ons, Alum1num
&amp; Vmyl S1d1ng, Floor
Sanding &amp; F1n1shing.

ALL-WEATHER
337 N. 2, Middleport

HOME
DECORATING

PHONE 992·5476

22
rifle Never ftred SSO Phone
992 3081
&amp;

.

All Small Applian~
Lawn Mowers
Next to H1ghway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3
SE PTIC
TANKS
cleaned
reasonable rates
Ph
446
~ 782 Gallipolis John Russell
owner and operator
512tfc
SEPTIC

TANKS

S EWAGE

AROBIC

SYSTEMS

CLEANED
REPAIRED
MILLER
SANITATION
STEWART OHIO PH 662

3035

10 4 tfc

WIGS (The Mink 011 Base
Comest.cs)
Phone
BROWN'S 992 .5113
8 20 tfc

9 18 Stp

1970 112 TON 4 wheel dr ive Ford
ptckup big 6 c yl
4 speed
Harold Brewer Long Bottom
Oh to 985 355~
8 18 tfc

------------1973 HARLEY 350 Sprint SS

wrndshleld and extras Only
1 500 mlle5 Top condlf lon
S800 f i rm 992 2063
a 18 3tc
1966 EASY TRAVEL Trailer
sle eps 6 stove 1ce box and
water under pressure 1963
Ford !fat bed ¥. ton and 1967
Buick Wildcat convertible
Call 7~2 3821
8 15 6tc
CAMPER 8f1 wrde 20ft long
sleeps six self conta i ned
large awning
cerpetlng
throughout See at 630 Plum
St , Middleport
8 15 6tp
1 ACRE LOT suitable for house
or trailer Water tap Is rn
stalled
1 mile south of
Rutland on County Rt J
Phone 742 3654
8156tc

mower

with 20 cut, 3 H P Briggs
engine. 14 ga steel deck, side

discharge full bailie, 7" poly
wheels
handle

and

pl~ted

Tee

'71.95
POMEROY LANDMARK
9 • _J&amp;ck C.r10y, Mlr

_...

New

Add1tron , 1 floor plan about 3

yrs old, level lof, 3 B R
(large double closets)

nice

kitchen, modern bath, utility

R 1 carpeted some paneling ,
storage room $19,500 00

CLOSE IN - 27 acres. large
barn
and
silo
other
butldlngs, 1112 story frame

home, 3 B R , bath N gas
F A heat dining room, TV
R , some paneling &amp;

hie

Asking $31 500 00
POMEROY- 1 story frame
3 B R , bath, full basement,
gas- heat, large lot Asking
510,500 00 Make an offer

POMEROY - Ranch Type
- 2 B R , bath large L R
w1th ftreplace, k1tchen has
lots of cabtnets, range &amp;
oven, carpeted, garage,
porch, full basement with

utility R
Small lot
$15 000 00
WANT TO SELL• - WE
HAVE THE BUYERS YOU
HAVE THE PROPERTY,
LETS GET TOGETHER
CALL AT ONCE
992 2259 or 992 2568
75 ACRE farm 6 room house
barn
other outbulldlngs
$19 500 Phone 742 5845
8 16 26tp

-------------LOTS tor sale trailer or house

A It utll lttes Phone 742 361.5
Rutland Ohio Pr rce $2 500
7 16 He

-------------HOU SE
630 Ml11 Sf
M1d

w
Phont ttl 2111

1f69 FORD PlCII.up , new btd and
paint Job Phone 992 3640 af
ter5pm
8l•7tc
--------------WE ARE! picking up 1 plano In
1965 CLASSIC Rambler good
your area and would like
condition Runs gooo asking
tome responslblt party to
S300 Phone 378 6219
teke over payments
Call
8 20 ltc
Credit Manager f61~1 772
- -- - - - - -- - - - -5669 or wrUe 260 East Main
1957 CI1EVROLET 2 dr 283
Street Chllllcofhe Oh iO 4.5601
engine, Robert J
V~Jrian
~ 7 tfc
svracuse Phone 992 5183
RiOiNot;;;;e-;;-;;;-2;-,;rt
------------.!.~ 3tp old, green broke Gentle Call
992 5510
1963 vw Partially Chopped
Newly painted, 1...00 Phone -----------~1...!.-c
773 .5165 afttt 5 P m
EXCELSIOR Slit Wort., E
--- - - -- ____ .!._ 20 Stp Main St 1 Pomeroy All kinds
,...
of lift water' pelleta water
1969 CHEVY Townsman s.tetlon
nuoottl block salt and own
wagon 11 1t.5 good condition
Ohio Rlvtt Salt Phone 992
Phone 997 7620..
31t1
s 24 tfc
6 .5 tfc

Bnc;:k
home with
Modern
kitchen with bul 1 cook and
bake un1ts Garage and 1 acre
in Pomeroy $30 900 00

BUNGALOW

Cozy

2

bedroom, bath
hardwood
floors, sh1ngle ,roof
full
basement and new gas fur
nace All th1S for 58,000 00

LARGE NEW HOME -

5

bedroom all electric bt Ieveli
home P/2 baths Garage and
large lot 6alcony overlooking
woods Large fam lly room m
full basement

LARGE FINE HOME -

2

family house In a qu1et neigh

borhood 2 kitchens, 2 baths,
and 4 bedrooms Full basement
and large garage Reduced to

$18,000 00
•
CATTLE FARM -

157 acres

and 4 bedroom farm house with
bath 80 acres of tractor land
Timber 2 farm ponds and
large barn

MIDDLEPORT -

I acre

surrounds a large 4 bedroom
home with front and back
porches Plus income property
Good neighborhood
Only

500 00
COUNTRY ACRE PLUS -

$17

2

bedroom Colonial house with
garage and outbuilding Fruit
trees Well water All level land

•••rort 6 room s l'h bath s for just $8 500 00
LISTING
Nice
ful
basement
partially NEW
carpeted kitchen complete, renovated 7 room house with
washer and dryer etc Could central air and heat Double
be 3 bedrooms gas furna ce
2 utility buildings
flrtpiBce storm doors and
cave
and 4 70 acres
w i ndow~ 'C Urtains and drapes
Included For tnformatlon call
-;;:;~Qi:,'TT~o 0R INVEST
Elden Walburn 992 2805
8 13 tfc

------------2 BEDROOM house Rutland
Phone 992 5858

THE DEPENDABLE
CONTRACTING CO.

""

PH. 992-7454 or
992-7129

WIN AT BRIDGE

Free Est1mates, Mlddlepo!'lt, 0

Holmes' deduction

CONCRETE

NORTH

FOR /ifR EE estimates ori
alumrnum
replacement
wmdows siding storm doors
and windows Ralltng Phone
Cherles Lisle Syracuse Ohio
Carl
Jacob ,
Sales
Representat i ve
v
v
Johnson and Son , Inc
4 30 tfc
SEWING MACHINES Repa rr
service , all makes ,
2284
The Fabnc Shop, Pomeroy
Authonzed Srnger Sales and
Service We sharpen Sc•ssors
3 29 tfc

+7

WEST

0 DELL Al1nement , located
behind Rutland Grade School
complete front end servtce,
brakes end tvneups, wheels
balanced electronically Open
8 to 8 datly Call 742 3232 on
sunday for appt
7 16 tfc
EXCAVATING dozer, loader
and backhoe work
septic
tanks Installed dump. trucks
and lo boys for hrre will haul
fill dlrt1 top soli limestone &amp;
grave1 1 Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 70a9
night phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2lltfc

--------------GRE T·

YOY w 111 run across en rlem that
you It reeogntze as a bargain

~

even thOugh another doe!JI' 1
Follow your o wn iudOtnent

By Helen and 'Sue Uottcl

iii
f4

~~'

Dear PMILBFG
Why feel guilty over a human reactiOn 1 ' Honor thy fath er
and mother" doesn 't mean succumb to dictatorship " HELEN

+++
Dear P ECI'
Why not turn the tales' Tell your folks you II accept them as
gra ndparents' only if" and don't nunce the "ifs 1 ' - SUE

+++
Rap
Agroup of us girls, ages 21 to 24, got together to d1scuss your
recent Survey of Unmamed Teenagers You repor ted some 60
per cent of kl&lt;ls, aged 13 to 19, were sbll v1rgm We question that
Our own private survey Indicated not one of us had been
VIrgm smce age 17 Of the 21 we questioned, none has had
chlldren, 15 are on the pill and the other SIX use some other
method of birth eontrol We are all respected people from good
homes and have good JObs We don't ''sleep around'' and several
are engaged, but we all thmk sex IS natural , 1f you care about
each other
Are you sure you didn't concentrate on the under-16 group m
your questwnnarre' - JOAN from Trenton, N J
,

Wttdnetdt~ , Aug

21,

ARIES (M•rch 21 .-Aprll 19)
Someone whom you haven t
seen 1or awhrle w rit suddenly
POP back H""ttO your ltfe Thts
person wont be hangrng
around as long as you Q hke

SCORPIO (Oct 24 No• 22t

Because ot a very unusual
happenlnlil a cond111on that had
the seeds ol be ing a real problem wt11 suddenly tum out to b~
a benefit

TAURUS (Aplil 20 -Moy 20)

SAGITTARIUS (No• 23 ·

Chock the ads tor the sale of
somelhmg umque but use 1u ~
tor lhe hOme you ve been
look•ng lor You rnrght lmd 11

Dee 21 , Don 1 be too surprtsed If you unu;w;pectedly
hear from one you re lond of
who now lives qu11e a "•stance
trom you

now
GEMINI (Moy 21 -June 201
You te apt to be lucky today rn

CAPRICORN (D.. 22 · Jan

1 ~~ If you use standard old
tashtoned methods now you re
not hkety lo be as successlyl
as you would De rl you 1m
prov•sed or tmova ted

~tlua t Jon where some c hance
ts tnvolved Thts doesn t mean
you should lake sttly gambles

a

CANCER (June 21 · July 22)

A quiCk dcctsron w1ll be catted

AQUARIUS (Jon 20-Feb IV)

1or rna busmass matler It wrll
.;~ fl ee t somelhtng you ve al
ready had ample t1me to lhtnk

ll you re presently ln ~olved'" a
PtOJeC1 of tmportance don I ally
yourself wtlh weak tndtv•duals
Chose one who can otter
what s needed

oul
LEO (July 23 -AuQ 22) Now
15 the trme to move on your
rdeas wh•le you re 1n the mood
to acl O therw 15e you 11 keep
putt1ng thrngs olf 1111 rt s too
la te

PISCES (Feb 20·March 20)

A task thai would have been
very drftteult lor you to perlorm

on your own w111 be handled by
a frrendly expert

they m1ght be m a gathermg of !herr peers, where popularity
means 'chased ," not chaste ,
You '11 remember that only about one-lourth condemned
premar1tal mtercourse as "always wrong/' and the majority
okayed ' sex with real earmg, whether you planned marriage or
not " But the encouragrng thing to us elders was that so many
teens agreed with the girl who wrote, 'Now that I'm not ha.ssled
w1th the guilt thmg anymore, I can lake my time deciding - I'll
know 1t's ME makmg the cho1ce, not a guy who tells me I'm a
prude, or soc1ety which tells me I shouldn't (so, of co\ls:s.e, I want
to) Of course I don't brag about my virginity, but the guy I giVe
1! to must be pretty spec1al 1"
Honest, now Isn 't that the way most of you Trenton grrls fell
about 1t, too' - HELEN

EAST

LITILE ORPHAN ANNIJi&lt;.
.LITTLE

.76 5
.98 52

tJ2

tKI 0973

bJ THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 Ubertine
. 5 Faulty
10 Toward
shelter
11 Turld.sh
Inn
12 Countenance
13 Withdraw
l4 VIgor
15 Chinese
dynasty
11 Spoil
17 Shot from
ambiiSh
lt Order to
a l:roker
2G Thameo
estuary
Zl Parisian's
lady
friend
Z% Type of
beer
24 Moroccan
city
Z5 Somewhat

DOWN
I Gangplanka
Z Of foreign

ortgln
3 Taking
cogmzance
( 3 wds )
4 Poet's
night!~

5 Word

Yesterday's o\uwer

aftor
grace
&amp; Name

11 Sultan's

decree

for somone

......,.,......,......,.._,.....,

( 2 wds )

Zl Unique
Z7 Beach
sights
28 Man of

the cloth
31 Slippery 3Z Tenn
for
Joey
33 Flat
(mus)

Dear Joan
Our survey of urunamed teenagers mcluded some 22 per
cent m the 18-19 group, 24 per cent under age-15, and the rest (54
per cent ) m the nuddle-teen years We'll adm1t we too were
som~what surp115ed at the h1gh rate of vrrg1ruty (though 1t
dropped to under 49 per cent m the over·l7 section), but we feel
these anonymous young people were perhaps more honest than

b V

t:n scramhle th" H' ff.MJ r Jumbles,
one letter tu eac h squ ar e to
form four ordmary word s

I V/1/L'O .,....., ..

t-tt:NHI

ARNOlD . ond 0 0 0 LI'E

He Qlw o ys loo b for lhe br ght ooe-1

•

I

3i Window

section
37 Record
of events
38 Bowlin
38 Shell
41 TV personality

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

8 30 - Chase 3 15 Hudson Brothers 8 10 Consumer Game 20
Unto the Hills 33 M ovte Wonder Woman 6 13 Oh to 5
Greatest Show 4
8 30 - Great Amencan Dream Machine 20 33
9 00 - Cannon 8 10 Mov ie Some Kmd of a Nut 3 4 15
9 30 - Boardmg Hovse20 33 Movie M en of the Dragon 6 13
10 00 - Ko1ak 8 10 News 20 Festt va1 Fr l m s 33

Ia

One letter a1mply atanda for another In thls samp1e A la
used for the three L's, X for the two O's etc Single letlen,
apo1trophe1, the length and formatlon of the words are all
h1nts Each day the &lt;ode l•tlers are dlfl:er•nt

10 30 - Day at Night 33

11 00 - NewsJ 4 6 810 13 15 ABCNews 33
11 30 - Johnny Carson J Mlss•on l mposstble 6 Un t ou ch ables
13 Come to the Fa1r 4 lS Mo v1es Flight to Ta ngr e r 8
A
Summer Place 10 Janakt 33
11 45 - Johnny Carson 4 15
12 30- Wild Wdd West 6 W1de World Spec1at 13
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4 Take F 1ve for L1fe6
2 00 - News 4 13
Country &amp; West ern U S A (C )
Blue R•dge
Quartet
K1tty Wells Show
8 30 p m - Family Favorites Ens1gn 0 Tool e starnng Dean
Jones ' Tome Ewell Show
9 30 p m - Superstar Theatre
lloyd Bndges Show
June
Ally son Show
-

ORPBAM AIIMIE-BEARD

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

CllYPTOQUOTES
HAVK

TJSMEY

N()w arranre the ctrcled letters
to form the surprise answer, u

:::::::==========='--':"~·~•:e•:t:ed by the above cartoon

L__~Pri~nl-=
lbe~SU~RPII=iS!c::::ANS'ti=ERhe!e
~___.J1

ax I I J
(~au,..,.

Jurnhl PII CLOUT
An.,wf' r

MIDGE

RATHER

tomorro.,..)

NEEDLE

lt. hal th( 11 lreok nil he 11feel factoru
RUN OF THE MILL

CNZIG
AKQKZ

JDQK

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UDADBK

GH

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Wit
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COUNTRY

$1'ERIO
92.1
,

West

North

East

South

••
Pass

4f
Pass

Pass

••

a

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The pattern of hands In
'Sherlock Holmes·Bndge De·
tectlve' shows Holmes mak
111g eontracts by bnlllant
play and the opponents bemg
set at contracts they could
and really should make
The unfortunate declarer
IS then told by Holmes how he
could have made h1s con
tract lnvanably, 1t IS good
bndge but somehow or other
we don't see the great de·
tect1ve w1nn1n g any
popularity eon tests
Holmes led the ace o! clubs
and contmued w1th the 10
South ruffed m dummy East
overruffed and led back a
trump Poor S outh cash e d h IS
ace of hearts led h1s last club
and watched East overruff
agam East had to lead back
a diamond South !messed hiS
queen but st1ll had to go down
one tnck
Holmes pomted out that
South could have made h1s
contract by lettmg Holmes
wm three club tncks while
d1scardmg two diamonds
from dummy H owe ver,
Holmes wasn t quite as pon·
tiflcal as he might have been
He fa•led to pmnt out that
South had a second chance at
tnck four He could have d1s·
card ed a d1amond from dum·
mY. r1ght then and there and
still made the game

CAPTA!N

EASY
HMM HOTEL
C.LAIZEMOr.Jf;
EHf EXCU5E

50 'fOUR. C0M"'AN'Y 5
AL. L READY TO BUY THE

DE'W85RJC:Y GOLO CLAIM
P RAPS YOJ.J LL. SOTH
SE MY GUESTS.

ME JU5r A
MOMENT 1

fiLL THE:N 11

INNIE WINKLE

cw~~;,:~::;::::;::::;::~l!ll!Jmflif

(
®IVAI DYOUR DINNER
I W11H 6REGOI(Y

HE. 1DI..DME A
LITTL€ AI30UT

HIMSELF

KONTOS
WINNE?60

5

~

;~~
ALLE Y OOP
ENTI'[LIN' ME TO

A FREE PITCII&amp;R

FI!L.l.A1S ARMED

1~

0 AMERICA'S

RIGI~T .'' - AHL L

GREATEST

UN QOLI IT !N

HERO-

•• GAI&gt;FJilV I 'TMAT

YO HAINT
EARNED

1t)jH I ~ I

PRIVATE''

ZENITI1 '
COLOR TV
'

3160

-------------

8 2 Uc

••

HCJv:,t:: •n 1own, :.;:.uu aown and
seo per rnonth ; Trailer and
lot 2 bedroom $10,500 Phone

e

BLACK
WHITE lV'

992 391.5

-------------________.....___I 20_61p
8 1.4 tfc

3 BEDROOM house located on
l662 Lincoln Heights
F=ot
•PPI plene call 1 C30A) 768

•

••
•

20

: .. W~1t

North

East

So uth

•
:

Pass

14
44

Puss
Pass

2•
4 NT

•

Pass

5•

Pass

5N

Pass

7•

Poss

••
•

~Q41

•

For Sale
G"OCEAY butlnell for salt ._

c•sy Term1:
Free Delivery I

r

•
You South, hold
: • • AQ6 54 'AQ6 5 4+A K •2
•

MASON FURNmJRE
HillMAN OIIATI
77J ,.,
MASON, W. VA

1'

:
•

What do you do now !
A. - Bid IM!ven notrump Your
partner: 1 club1 will run at

:

notrump Nothing cen bt rufred

:

In nolrump SOmething could be

»

ruffed at a club conlract

•
.._

•

'IOU AN 'lORE
I BURIEO FOUR BURNT
DAD8URN
HOME
HEN FEATHERS UNDER TH
REM EDIES
CHINABERR'I TREE, BUT
IT v iDNT
SORETHRDAT

~)OAV"S QU£8TJON

In•tead of bidding lour clubs
your partner has bid two nutrump 1-~-

•

~ERE

AND 50

GASOLINE ALLEY

""

EL-

WlL.LWE

,,
"

OEG GHA

Wlf.ILE STROLLIIIG

Openmg lead-A•

«

FHE 'SS

(C) 11'14 Kine Peall'lns SJn4ic:aW,Inc)

Both v ul nerable

,

GJK

BHKGJK
Yesterday's Cryploquote NEVER TRUST THE ADVICE OF A
MAN IN DIFFICULTIES - AESOP

"'9 52

Pass

UNIIKP
JHSK

t AQ5

~

2&amp; Large

amount
29 Anelent
consort
Greek
18 The Browncolony
Ings
19 Gennan
30 Umpld
river
32 Soccer
22 Football
great
pass
35 Tarry
Z3 Mollusk
3ll Tasteless
delicacy
food

you don't
know
7 Van Druten
play
t 3wda )
8 Clty 111
MIBSOW'l
9 Small
sturgeon

• AKQJ108

•

24 Register

15 Frau ,s

.A

0

be

~'IH'i

SOUTH IDl

' '

w ill

new ac~arnt1nc11 You 11 be·
come tnvol~ed .n •cttvU ••
you ve never lfle(l tatore

Cf:OII -

.9
.74

outlook

broe()ened considefably 1tw1
yur thlaugh an tnter••HnQ

34 Vexed

7 30 p m

your two spades You btd
three hearts and he JUmps to four
spades What do you do now?

Fot

_ _ __,1V74

Breaks eooJn'lue to come lrom
SitUations, wtler$ 1here IS a
group or al teagt several people who 'Share a common
ca use

Aut 21, tt7•

"(ou f

LIBRA (8"!'1 23-0ct 23)

The1e Paren t&amp; Haven 't Eimed Hooun

Deor Rap
I love my parent.o, but I could never please Ihem When I Kot
B's In school. they bawled me out for not earning A's I was
elected oenloc senator and they were upset because I didn't run
for stuoont body presloonl, but then U1ey added, 'Oh well , you
wouldn't have won anyway '"
NQt matter how hard 1 worked, J was never as good as the
ne1ghb&lt;/r's kuls And when I fell m Jove w1th l'ony , who c• a grc.1t
guy with a lot of amb1Uon and a good job already, lhey h1t the
roof because he wasn t of our reUgion
We got marned m Tony's church and my folks wouldn t
attend We're gomg to have a baby and they say If he or she 1sn t
brought up m therr rehgwn (which Isn't mme anymore - It s too
rig1d and condemmng ), they wont he grandparents
The Bible sayd, Honor thy father and thy mother ,"but
when they never honored me, Is 1t wrong to feel a htlle reheved
that our child won't have to lake their put.&lt;lowns as I did '
PREFER MY IN-LAWS, BUT FE F-LING GUll TV

•

VIRGO t•ut 23 · Set&gt;t 22)

+AKQJI0643 +a

m

DOZER work land clearing by
the acre hourly or contract
f~rm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator wrth over
20 years experience Puitlns
Ex cavatmg Pomeroy Ohio
Phone 992 2478
12 19 ttc

20

• 4 32
.KQJI063
• 864

r~ i i~I!&lt;IU.i!&lt;l'l&lt;.iljlololflCGiflC~rol~ ;~ln
¥':~1 1!~e~
1!&lt;1;;;;:;/aR;;-u1

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE

a bit foggy

over

delivered fight to your
pro/ect Fast and easy Free
est mates Phone 992 3284
Goegleln Ready Mix Co
Middleport Ohlo
6 30 tfc

:;-

HOUSE for sale In Syracv:t'C' ,
rooms euid garage located
n11r the Sc hool Phone 992

I

•w

:.

--------------

--------------- -------------- --------------- --------------

'

Middloporf.Pomoroy

ch l n .son
sub d i vision ,
Rutland Pr ice S19 900 Phont
7~2 3615 or see Milo Hut
c hlnson Rutland
a 16 12tc

3 !0 " '

•

Interior, Exterior
--Decorating a!1d
--- Remodeling

Pn ce Is

3 30- One L tfe to Ltve 13 Phd Donahue 4 Match Game 8 10
How to Surv1ve a Marrrag e 3 15 Carrasco iendas 33 La sste
6
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesa me St 33 T attleta les
8 Gilligan s I sland 6 Mov1e Bet ween M1dntght and Dawn
10 $10 000 Pyramid 13
4 30 - Green Acres 3 Ja ckpot 4 Vlrg tnt an 8 Dan1el Boone 13
Mod Squad 6 Bonanza 15
5 00 - Mr Rogers 20 33 Bon anza3 MervGrltfln4
5 30 - Elec Co 33 Hodg epodge Lodg e 20 Hogans Heroes 13
News 6 Trail s West 15
6 00- News 3 4 8 10 15 Sesame St 20 Ca tc h 33 33 ABC
News 6 13
6 30 - News 3 4 8 10 15 Room 222 13 Journey to Japn 33
Bewitched 6
7 00 - News 10 What s My Ltne 8 Truth or Cons 3 Beat th e
Clock 4 Elec Co 20 J•mmy Dean 13 I Spy 15 Zoom 33
Bowlrng for Dollars 6
7 30 - Pollee Surgeon 3 On The Money 4 Eptsode Act10n 33
To Tell the Truth 6 Sale of the Century 8 The Judge 10 Beat
the Clock 13 Ant1oues 20

-·

Wf;APQ.FM

a 1~
------------NEW 3 bedroom home P"1Ul

&amp;ulld!no for stlt or l•att
Phone 773 56•t from a 30 p m
to 10 p m for appointment

•

, , .367

READY MIX

Another World 3 4 I S Gener al Hosp 1ta l 6 13

Right 8 10

C BRADFORD Auctroneer
Complete Servrce
Phone949 3821 or949 3161
Ractne Oh•o
Crltt Bradford
5 1 tfc

1

MOWERs
Push type rotary

MIDDLEPORT

Open Mind 33

771 PearlS!
Mltldleport, Ohio

SEPTIC
TANKS
cle aned
Modern San 1tat ron 992 3954 or
992 7349
10 2J tfc

8 20 31p

1 00 - News 3 All My Chtldr en 6 13 Not For Wom en Only l S
Hazel 8 What s My Li ne 10 Cook tn Cat un 33
30 - As the World Turns 8 10 Jeopardy 3 4 15 Journey to
Japan 33 Lets Mak e A Dea l 6 13
2 00 - Doctor s 3 4 15 Glrl•n My L1fe 6 13 Edge of N1ght 8 10

B&amp;K EXCAVATING

BOWERS
REPAIR

-------------ELECTROLUX
vacuum

Real Estate For Sale

••
"' " 12 55 - NBC News 3 15
ov

Wi II do Dozer &amp;
Backhoe Work, Install
Septic Tanks, Haul
D~rt,
Gravel,
Limestone or Rent One
of
Our
Trucks,
Backhoe or Dozers.

3 00 -

8 7 26tc

_____________

Reliable Service

ALSO SHAMPOO
CARPETS
AND CLEAN
UPHOLSTERY

,~.contract

JOBS contracted PhOne 742
cleaner A 1 condition uses
3014 or wrtte Box 23 Li!!ngs
paper bags has cordw rnder
vrl1e Oh io
and many attachments Also
7 23 26tc
shampooer attachment In
eluded . (Only 41 available) at AUTOMOBILE msurance been
$37 70
cash
or
terms
cancelled"'
Lost
your
a variable Phone 992 2653
operator s license Ca 11 992
........
8 20 lfc
7428
6 15 tfc
1973 HONDA 70 motorcycle
Good cond 1tton Phone 593
7390 Athens Ohro
8 20 3tc

Known &amp;

INTERIOR AND
EXTERIOR

FOR your remode ling roofing
painting repa l rmg concrete
and masonry work
call
Ronn ie Hubbard 992 3511 or
992 7302 Work by hour or

MACHINES
In
orlgln.al CREMEANS
CONCRETE
factory certon
Z•g Zag to
del1vered Monday through
make buttonholes sew on
Saturday
and
evenings
buttons monograms and
Phone 446 1142
make fancy destgns with just
6 13 tfc
the twist of a smgle dial left
m lay a way and never been WILL trim or cut trees and
used W1ll sell for only U7
shrubbery Also clean out
cash or terms available
basements attrcs etc Phone
Phone 992 2653
949 3221 or 742 4441
8 20 ffc
7 14 26tc

Side by side refrigerator
freezer Norge washer and
dryer set of walnut dining
room tables W1th chairs and
pad approximately ~ years
old, good old bed and chest of
drawers Phone 992 7066
8 20 tfc

.•-"

Please Phone

Chester, Ohio
985-4102

-------------NEW 1974 ZIG ZAG SE WING

-------------KOSCOT
K0SME11CS

6 00 - Slunrlse Seminar 4 Summer Semester 10
6 2:» - Farm Report 13
6 30 - Five Minu tes to Live By 4 News 6 Btble Answers 8 The
Story 13 Sacred Heart 10
6 35 - Columbus Today 4
6 45 - Farmtlme 10 M o rnmg Report J
7 00 - Today3 4 IS C BS News 8 10 D1ck Van Dyke 13 H R
Pufnstul 6
7 30 - New Zoo Revuc6 Tuxedo Te nn essee 13
8 00 - New Zoo Revue lJ 1 Ses ame St 33 Capt Kangaroo a
Jeff s Coll te 6; Urban League 10
8 25 - Jack LaLanne 13
8 30 - Brady Bunc h 6 Green Acres 10
8 55 - Chuck Wh it e Report s 10 News 13
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 AM 3 Abbott Costello 8 Phil Donahue 15
W ild Wild Wes t 6 Cap t ain Kangaroo 10 M ister Rogers 33
M ovte You Came Along IJ
9 30 - To Tell the Truth 3 I love Lu cy 8 Electrr c Co 33
10 00 - Jokers Wild 8 10 Company 6 Ltl 1as Yoga &amp; You 33
Name That Tune 3 15
10 30 - Gambit B 10 Wmnlng Streak 3 4 15 Turntng Points 33
11 00 ~ Pa ssword 13 Now You See It a 10 t;11gh Rol lers 3 4 15
Love of Life 8 10 Brady Bunch 13 Lucy Show 6
11 55 - CBSNews8 Dan l mel s Wor ld lO
12 00 - Password 6 Bob Braun s 50 50 Cl ub 4 News 8 10 13
Jack pot 3 15 Mr Rogers JJ
12 30 - Search for Tom orrow 8 10 Spil t Second 6 Celebrr ty
Sweepst akes 3 15 Afternoon wtth DJ 13 Elec tn c Co 33

All that IS needed for 11 frife'
eshmate IS 11 phone call

BISSELl BROTHERS
CONST. CO.

UPHOLSTERY fabrics by the
yard 54 mches wide as low as
S2 49 per yard Velvets as low
as ss 25 Imported v•lvets
S9 60 we also have nylon
herculon
cotton
pr1nts
vinyls and remn,nts by the
yard or by the ptece Pomeroy
Reco v ery 622 E Main St
Pomeroy Phone 992 755~
7 2.4 26tc

------------WINCHESTER automatrc

WEDN ESDAY, AUG 21 1914

Roofing Co

------------- --

CANNING tomatoes
brmg
conta iner Geraldme Cleland
Racrne Ohio
8 16 tfc

11 OO - New54 6 810 13 IS AB C News3J
11 30 - Johnny Carson .4 3 IS M IS51on lmposr.rble 6 Un
touchables 13 Janak! 33 Mov ies
The Man Who D1ed
Twice 8
Circle of Deception 10

992-2550

FOAM io fill your old couch and
chatr cushions as tow as
SlO 95 upholstery okks only
SOc 4 tnch covered foe m
mattresses for standard stze
bed
S29 95
Pomero y
Recovery 622 E Matn St ,
Pomeroy Oh io Phone 992
7554
7 2~ 26tc

Day •I Nigh I 33

tO 30 -

REDECORATING?

Wilkinson Small Engine

8 JO - HawaliFive08 10 Eye l oEye33 SnoopS•sters3 4 IS
Movie Scream Pretty Peggy 13 , Tl)e Monk 6
9 00 - Fir ing Line 70 Jeanne Woll with 33
9 30 - Performan ce 33 Sha ll 10 M ovie Bon lour Trlstesse 8
10 00 - News 20 Marcus W elby M 0 6 13 Mounta in Scene 33
Poll ee Story 3 4 15

"

Business

742-5293

oo10

Bowling for Collars 6 . WAshlnlilton Debates 15
7 30 - To Tell the frvlh 6 New Pr ice Is Right 8 TO RFO 70
Hollywood Squares 3 Beatlhe Clock 13 Hollywood Squares

•

cOfner Blrck St and Rt l:l.t

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992·7089
N1ght 992·3525
or 992·5232

843 2~95
8 14 12tc

99;.~

----- ---------

Moved lo Rutland. "" mile
Inside city limit on right

l•la lied

$150

--------------6 000
-------------PRIVATE meetmg room for 1974 500 KAWASAKI
m•les S1 200 Phone 992 S891
any organlzaf/on phone 992
8 20 3tp
3975
-------------3 11 ffc
--------------TS 25 Suzuki
14 model
Phone 992 3640
BEDROOM
apartment
8 18 7tc
' R uttand Phone 992 SB588 13 ttc
TAKING orders fot;, tomato fteld
-------------boxes Phone
3980
BEDROOM
apart

CANNING peaches now tn
ment a.r conditioned fur
season Two truck toads each
nrshed
Reasonable rent
week Prtce starting at 56 98
Located 12 m lies from
per bushel Please brrng your
Pomeroy Phone 30• 773 5118
own containers Bobs Market
8 1~ tfc
near Pomeroy Mason Brrdge
Mason
W
Va
Home of COUNTRY Mobtle Home Park
quality fru 1t and vegetables
R t 33 ten m lies north of
Open seven days ttll 10 p m
Pomeroy
Large lots w i th
8 12 tfc
concrete patios, stdewalks
runners and off street
DIDN T KNOW fHAT' M GM
parking
Also, spaces for
Flea Market Specrats 55
small trailers Phone 992 7479
rns 1de 53 outstde Spri ng
7 21 ttc
Ave
Pomeroy
Oh i o
Collectors
dealers
etc
Every Sat and Sunday
a 7 ttc
1972 3 BEDROOM Windsor
Mobile Home on 1 acre of
ground
For
more
In
formatiOn call 992 7638
PR: IV ATE party want s to buy a
1 30 tfc
vw Call 992 30a1
8 20 3tp
READ THIS! Before \IOU buy
any new 14 w tde Mobile
F ARM 200 acres more or less
Home be sure to s~ the olll
$5 000 down rest In payments
steel bonded Detrolt'~r Mobrle
to owner Write R Breunto
Homes
The steel bond
2916 Blueberry La
Bow ie
Detrolter
Is
virtually
Md 20715 or call (301) 262
fireproof and has m•n'f
2057
features that no other Mob i le
8 20 He
..._
___,
Home on the market can
m~lfch we al so have one of
3 BEDROOM home I floor
the largest selections of good
plan Either •n M iddleport
used and repossessed Mob ile
Pomeroy
Syracuse
or
Homes of any dealer In the
~ acme Phone 992 3122
area Oon t waJ.t - shop todav
8 18 31p at Berry Miller Mobile
Homes Sales , 705 Far.son
Street 8elpre Oh lo Phone
WE NEED 200 tons of :lheet
..423 9531
cast new or old alum lnum
8 8 12tc
Keep ca ns separate The
Rosenberg Co Athens Ohio
8 15 tfc

BODY

0.

Pomeroy,

TUESDAY AUG 20 1974
me Sl
10 News 3 • Llll•s Vog• &amp; Yov 331 New• ••
ISse...
ABC
NewH
13

6 30
News 8 10 , NBC News3 • IS Room 122 13 French Chef
33-1 Bewllched
6
1 00 - Whet S My Line 8 Ou&amp;ly' s Trail 13 Elec Co 10 Truth
Of Cons"' 3 Beat the Clock 4 Paul Nuch•ms 33 New$ 10

1'------------,

--------------------------ROOM furnlsl"!ed apartment, HOTPOINT range Amana 22ft
5 12 tfc

992·7204

8 11 tfc

SUPERIOR
VINYL PRODUCTS

- -------------

~

pepperi , cucumbers for sale

•

J&amp;l AUTO

K&amp;H ROOFING

WARNER'S
REFRIGERATION
SERVICE

For . -

FREE HOME ESTIMATE$

Notice

Tt-rrler pups

~ .. t..

chalk

@)
~

~couv

6

I

nllntl, M ddle1&gt;ori·Pomeruy, 0 • Tuesday, Aug 20, 1974

Television Log

-

Phone 593 1390 A then$ Ohio
e 20 ltc
-..-------------

ployment Wanted

Notice

~

A.KC REG

act ion n.em lng \IOU as c:lefendant
1970 NOVA CPE
Call Collect 1-592 5544
In the above- named cou rt bv
11495
Local
1 owner good tires. 6 cvl with automat1c trans
f iling her Comptamt on the 6th
Athens. , Oh10
day of July 197~
radlo blue fini sh spotless c lean blue In terior
The oblect of the Complaint
and the demand for relief are to
~m
1968 FORO TORINO
$99'
obtllln a dtvorce e~nd for other
VILL do bab\IS i tt lnQ n ightS or
proper relie f
H top FT. V 8 engme automati c trans P steering &amp;
dayt ime R~uonable rate~
You e~re required to answer
brakes blk vinyl tnterlor blue finish , a1r cond1t1onl ng
Phon• 992 7474 or 742 4902
tne Camplatn.t w ithi n twenty
radio
aft~r 4 p m
etght da ys after the las t
8 u 6tc
pub Hcatton of th is nattce wh lc l"
Will ~e pvQitshed once eacl"
wee-k far StX co nsecuti ve weeks
WILL pa i nt roots and houses
and the last publi c at ron will bf
fr ee eU tma t•s Call 99 2' 5•82'
made on the 20th day of August
1
197.4 Your answer date w ill bl
on Septe mber 18 1974
OPEN EVES.8:00 P. M
•
In the case of you r fa il ure t
POMEROY, OHIO
home Phooe '" 1460 8' 121c
answer or otherw i se respond a
perm itt ed by the Ohio Rule5 o -.!::
I ,' -----'----,---...:.........:..::..._;___.).) - - - - - - - - - -- - - C•vll Proced ure wrthm the t ime
stated tudgmen t by default writ
be rendere d agamst you fQr the
re lief demanded rn th e Com
WE HAVE all yo1,.1r uphols.tery PART T IME babysitter from I
plarnt
2 FA MILY yard sale Aug 22
needs
Burlap
denim
4pm 2 3deysBweek Phone
23 Rt 7 TOppers Pl ains
773 5857
LARRY E SPENCER
cam
bnc
foam
glue
zippers
tc
Dtshes old furnit ure guns l
8 14 6
Clerk of
tackrng str•p
spn ng s and - - - -- - - - - - - -- automatiC and one pump
Comm on Pl eas Court
cli ps
c h rpboard
button
depress i on glass
w 1nter
APPLICATIONS are being
Mel g s County Ohro
twme sew 1ng thread legs
coats 4 ptece dining set other
accepted at the office of the
upholstery books dacron
Court House
Items D ealers wel come
cl erk for water ma•ntenance
webb
1
ng
sprtng
twine
tacks
Pomeroy , Oh ro
8 20 3tp
(7 ) 9 16 23 30 /8) 6 13 20 7tc
man In Ri!lclne Reply box 33
welt cord co tton SWJ..,e l
bases and foam foam foam
B l5 l Otc
HOUSE msulat lng !)Iowen for
Pomeroy Recovery 622 E ______ ......,___ ______ _
better r esults cuts fue l bi lls
Marn St
Pomeroy
Oh io CO MPANION f or elderly lad y
down Free est•mates Call
NOTICE OF
742 4428
Phone 992 7554
light hovsekeep 1ng .. 1n n ice
APPOINTMENT
8 20 12tc
7 24 26tc home w•th liberal salary
Case No 21 , 284
- -- - - - - - - -- - - cl ose to chur ches and stores
Estate
of Mae
Damron ---~- --------A TO Z MART used furnitur e
Write to Box 729 s co The
Deceased
applrancn and mtsc R:t 33
Dally se-ntinel
Pomeroy
NotiC e 1s hereby given that
Hartford W Va
Ohro
Bob Damron of Eastbank
7 26 tfc
18 3t c
West Vrrgln la has been duly
appointed Executor of the
1 WILL do roof rng hea ti ng HOUSEKEEPER to trv e In
E state of Mae Damron
r epai r plumb ing and elec
must drive c ar Apply at 790
deceased
late of Me i gs
trlcal work Phone Charles
Maple St Mtddleport Ohio
County Ohto
Slncla1r 985 4121
Phone 992 2936
Credttors are requrred to frle
8 7 12tc
8 20 Jtc
the rr c la1ms w rth satd flduetary
Wtth ln four months
Dat edth ts 16th day of August
BA CK to SChOOl specia l all
1974
•
permanents 52 off blow cuts
54 50 Operators Jea nette
We
need
man
or
woman
to
MANNING 0 WEB ST ER
Radford
Jackie N i bert
sell full line of Advertlsmg
..ludge
Ruth s Beauty Shop M ason
Court of Common Plea s
Spec1alhes, Calendars and
W Va phone 773 5686
Probate D lvl sron
8 13 tfc
G1ffs 'in the Pomeroy (8) 20 27 (9 ) J 3fc
Middleport Area Must be
able to plan own hme and
work wdh a mm1mum of
superviSion
All accounts are protected .
Repeat orders are protected.
H1gh Commtsstons payab~~,
when orders are passed for
Ph 992 7454 or 992 7129
cred1t
The Adverflsmg Specialty
L1ne IS the most extens1ve tn
the mdustry calendars are
By Mn. Herbert Ronsb
manufactured at our Red
FURNISHED2bedroom mobile
Rev
Howard Sh1vely
Oak plant
home on Sp ring Avenue
wnte Sob McKenzie Sales
Phone 992 342 9
returned home Fnday after
B 20 7tp
Manager,
The
Thos
D.
havmg attended the North
Murphy Company, 110 So
Prlees
do
not
Include
paint.
TWO ~ room and bath apt! In
Central Jurisdictional SUmmer
Second Street, Red Oak,
Middleport For Information
School for Uruted Methodist
8'
W1de-S22.00
Iowa 51566
call 992 2550 or 742 6551
7 3 tfc
at
Garrett
ministers
10' Wlde-$25.00

I

•
••

~ets For Safe

'

vinyl compound mad~ by B
F Goodrll; tl .lnd MOI'IU11IO .5

thl$

POMEROY MOTOR CO

••

-~------------

1

I

1 - The Dally

'IE SHOULOA BURIED
THEM UNDER TH '
CHINABERR'I TREE

DAD ~A~5 I HAVEN T
SEEN EATING' ~OPE~L'I'
M~

l-IE gAIO ~E 5 6:JIN6 10

51GN ME VP ffi{ A NEW
COURSE~:,,..J--~

�•

'

· Real Estate For Sale

s - ThoDallvSenl.iMI Middloport-Pomeroy,O, Tue:Jday,Aug 20,1974

·S entinel Classifieds Get R esultst ·.~?r~'f:.·~~.-:;·,.~·,1~·~;:::
COURT OP
COIYIMO N PLEAS

-

•

MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

PoIIIIFOJ
0,
M
otor Co.
..
Lan
Qu
~2 .MVR~

FAYE: I COWDERY
ltud,vUit, Otuo
Plalntl lt
Yl

•

•

OA#oi.-E CECIL COWDER:Y,
AdCfrus Unknown,

Def•ndint

No

A

15 60

1969 FORD TORINOCPE
Local car bvc)(ef seat vl nyl •nter lor
JJ 8 radio good fires Real ntce

- NOTICE IY
PUBLICATION -

••'
••
•

Pla intiff

has

brought

'I

v1N:~\ 1g1NG

~speed

trans

Produud

I"m••

....

trqm

a

s.p~&gt;clll

siding Will not dtnt chip
crack
. p•el , rot rust or

ME-LONS sweet corn , "ree-n
•

•• ,'".. '"'" m""

351

w7l.Lkee~eide;,-voeopl:~n ::
Help Wanted

Busmess Opportunities

-•

•
'

~

'

~

CAN YOU WORK
WITHOUT
SUPERVISION?

e
--------------- ----------------

CARRIERS
WANTED
IN

~

SYRACUSE

'

•

~

AND

-.. Apple Grove
'

.

,

THE DEPENDABLE
MASON
CONTRACTING CO. THE DAILY SENTINEl

News, Events

PHONE 992-2156
POMEROY, 0.
For Rent

Special Mobile Home

Roofs Painted Before
Fall and Winter Sets ln.

..•
•

Gerlldlne Cleland

Evangeheal Theological
Semmary on the campus of
Northwestern University m
Evanston, m. smce July 14
This school IS attended annually by approxunately 100
rrurusters from 13 states of the
Midwest Rev Shively has
attended the school for the past
three years and will attend his
final year m July-August 1975
During hiS stay this year he
was honored by being elected
vtce president of the Student

Laurel Cliff
News Notes
BYBERTHAPARKER
Sabbath School attendanee
Aug 18 at the Free Methodist
Church was 130 Attendance at
preaehmg serv1ce was 159
Offenng for all serv1ces was
$213 00
Mr and Mrs Joe H•ggmbothan and Mr and Mrs T J.

Council for '75 school year.
Mr Dorsey Sayre of Akron,
Ohlo, Mrs Hazel Herdman,
Mrs B, 8 Miller were dinner Whitaker, Newark, VISited
guests of Mr. llayre's aister, over the weekend With Rev
Mrs. Ruth Parsons at the home and Mrs Floyd Shook
of her son, Preston Parsons,
Mr and Mrs Eugene
and Mrs Edna Parsons and Russell, Flortda, attended
son, Mark, at Antiquity
mornmg serv1ee at the local
Mr and Mrs Jim Freeman ehurch Aug 18
and baby or Erwm, Pa , Miss
Mrs W M Davis and Mrs
Donna Smith of Millvale, Pa Betty Jacobs, Columbus,
VISited a few days wlth Mr and VIsited SatW"day With !herr
Mrs Robert Smith, 5r Donna parents, Mr and Mrs Pearl
remamed for a longer vwt
Jecobs
Mrs Sandy Dorst and
Mrs Carlene Zahrndt of
Otarleston, w va , Mr and children, Milan, visited With
Mrs Rowan Hunt and two her parents, Mr and Mrs
children of Nitro, w va James Gibnore and attended
visited Saturday wlth Mr and mornmg service at the local
chW"ch
Mrs Bert Hunt
Mr and Mrs Wllllam
Mr and Mrs Lennie Lyons
Wickline and son, Scottie, Mrs and baby, Rock Sprmgs, Mr
Kathryn Hunt returned home Ph111p Radford, Rock Spnngs,
Tue:Jday after a vacation With and Mr Edward Dailey v1slted
Mr. and Mrs Charles Burri at recently With Mr and Mrs
Bolivar Dam, and Mr and Harmon Fox
Mrs Pete Bearha at Norfolk,
Mr and Mrs Glenna Faulk,
Va They also vlslted other Middleport, visited Sunday
places of mterest
With Mr and Mrs CUff Klem
Dr and Mrs. Earl Grunm
Mrs Harold Talley, tamara
and sons, Mrs Gladys Me- Lee and Mark, Mrs Scott
Clam, Bobby Janice, and Talley and Chaleah, Ml""'"-'!1,
David of Cutler, Ohio, Mr and spent several days Wlth•tlli'•
Mrs Harold Roush, Mrs. Inez Talley's mother, Mrs Bertha
Hill, Racine, Mr. and Mrs Parker
Harold Grlnun of ColwnbUB
Miss
Barbara
Klem,
visited Mr. and Mrs Don Bell daughter of Mr and Mrs Cliff
and Lorna.
Klein, left recently for Ken·
Mrs Maggie Roush entered lucky to attend Grayson
Veterans Mmorial Hospital Christian College
Sunday for observation and
Mr and Mrs Guy Russell,
treatment
Warren, visited recently with
Mr and Mrs Ralph Durst h1s SISler, Mrs Georgia Diehl
purchased the Millle Ripley and Charles Anthony Diehl
residence and have moved
Mrs Leona Karr remams a
!here from Sprlllg!leld, 0
patient Ill Veterans Memortal
Mr. and Mrs Lawrenee Hospital
Baller of Tuppers Plains spent
Mr and Mrs Ted Mathew,
Sunday with Mrs Allee Baller Huron, visited over the
and Mr. and Mil. Jack Ables weekend wlth Mrs Mathew's
Mr 111111 Mrs Herbert Roualt, father, Charles Karr and her
Mr. 111111 Mrs Roser Roush, ' mother, Mrs Charles Kar'r
Mill Judy Michael were who l.t a patient In Veterans
1hopplng In Parkersburg Memorial Hospital
Selurday.
After Ohlo Valley Grange
meeting 'l'burlday evening the
IDIIDben went to the home or
Mn. Erma Willon and heard
former prelldent Nixon'• and Mrs Herbert Roush, Mrs
Erma Willon. Mr Roush was
m•••~t on TV. Ice cre11111,
presented
a cake "Happy
edt, coCree were Nmd 1n
.,._.._ of u. birthday of Blrthday Dad" by hl.t 11011 and
S.bert Roulb. Atlelldlni were daughter-Ill-law, Mr and Mrs
kiT Rllulb, Alice S.loer, Mr Roger Roualt

-------------TRAILER Browns Trailer

12' Wide-$27.00
14' W1de-$JO.oo

Court
3324

--------------BUSINESS room 22x80 234 E

5 FAMILY yard se~le startmg
A ug 20 810 S Second St
Middleport

-------------CARPORT sale 918 So 3rd
pm

Aug

20 21

Phone 992

7 18 tfc

OFFER END$
sEPTEMBER 30.1974

Middleport

Pomeroy

10 5

8 18 3t c

-------------PIANO tunmg Charles Scott
992 3718

8 18 5tp

-------------THERE wtll be a youth rally
7 30 p m Friday Aug 2Jrd at
the old Pomeroy H1gh S~hool
now Se nror Crtlzens bu ilding
at Pomeroy Oh io Featured
srngers wrll be Homeward
Bound from Huntrngton W
Va
and Gospel Tones
Speaker will be from Teen
Challenge Cleveland Ohro
Everyone wetcome
8 18 61c

Marn St
Pomeroy
Ohio
Phone 992 S786 or 992 3975
6 12 tfc

--------------FURNISHED
apartment
adults only m
Phone 992 3874

M !ddlepor:t

Raclnt.

Ohio

T REE ripened peach•s while
end Y•llow Itt Muon p•a ch
Orchard
Mason ,
WUf
V Irg inia
..,..
...,..
8 13 tfc

__ ___

_______

LO 1 ~ - 1 a cre c1 1y water on
St Rt
1~3
4 m lln from
Pom~roy
Phone 992 36•0
after 5 p m
,
8 14 7tc

~

close to Powells Super Valu
Phone 992 3658
e 7 tfc

--------------3 AN 0
ROOM furnished and
~

unfurntshed
apartments
Phone 992 5434
~ 12 tfc

STEREO RADIO , am fm
8
track tape com b ination / 4
speaker
sound
system
Balance "06 78 or easy
terms ca.u 992 3965
8 U tfc
NEW green recliner
Phone 992 2571

8 u tfc

-------------POTATOES
Phone

-,-------------

Mobile Homes For Sale

Wanted To Buy

--------...-------

______

__ __ _

--------------

--------------JUNK A.utos c omplete and

delivered to our yard We pick
up auto bodies and buy all
k rnds of scrap metals and
Iron Riders Salvage State
Rt 124 Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohio
Phone 992 5~68
7 31 26tp

-------------CASH paid for all makes end
mode ls of mobile homes.
Phone area code 6U _.23 9531
4 13 tfc

--------------

OL.O FURNITURE oak tables.
clocks •ce boxes brass beds.
dishes desks or complete
households Write M
0
Mil l er Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohio
call 992 7760
5 13 tfc

--------------CASH
F OR- Tu N K CARS
compl~te

Frye s Truck and
Auto Perfs Rutland Oh lo 2~

HOUR

WRECKER

SER

VICE Phont 7_.2 609~
t -26 26tc

---------------

15 for lunk automobll.a we will
pfck up
R:lver ,lde Auto
Wreck ing Phone C30~) 773
5890
t S ffc

----------------Auto Sales

1969 VAN 8cyllnder ~ Phone 772
5651
8 16 tfc
W7~- PlY MOUTH- Si t&amp;"ll l te
Se br tng 2 dr hardtop p s ,
p b vinyl top ratty wheels
12 ~SO miles, excellent con
dillon S3 100 Phone 992_...3~10
8 1~ 6tc

_____________

"

8 do-Maude 8 lO s Man Builds Man Oestroy5 33 Adam 17 3 "'
IS Crime &amp; Puni5hmen l 10 Happy Days 6 13

Free Estimates

Refr1gerators,
Freezers, Home &amp;
Auto A~r Conditioners
and
Commercial
Units.

t ng 1
Compare our prices
any
others
We 11 give you t1
profen lonal roof for less
C. II ttl 2136 For
Estlmat11 of Any

Now Open

tor

•

IMTDIING SERVLCE

. , 3092

Pomeroy, 0
399 w Maln p
Loc•ted •t Modern Supply
Small Engine Repair

Water lines and Power
L1nes All work done by the
foot or contract Also doter
work ilnd sephc tanks In

SECLUDED new four bectracm
two bath total electr ic home
934 acres n ice kitchen full
carpet Call 742 4173
8 15 6tp

.....

Don t

tor get the

roof of your
home Have a beautiful ne-w
roof Installed by All Weather

Home
Bu1ldmg
&amp;
Acld1t1ons, Alum1num
&amp; Vmyl S1d1ng, Floor
Sanding &amp; F1n1shing.

ALL-WEATHER
337 N. 2, Middleport

HOME
DECORATING

PHONE 992·5476

22
rifle Never ftred SSO Phone
992 3081
&amp;

.

All Small Applian~
Lawn Mowers
Next to H1ghway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3
SE PTIC
TANKS
cleaned
reasonable rates
Ph
446
~ 782 Gallipolis John Russell
owner and operator
512tfc
SEPTIC

TANKS

S EWAGE

AROBIC

SYSTEMS

CLEANED
REPAIRED
MILLER
SANITATION
STEWART OHIO PH 662

3035

10 4 tfc

WIGS (The Mink 011 Base
Comest.cs)
Phone
BROWN'S 992 .5113
8 20 tfc

9 18 Stp

1970 112 TON 4 wheel dr ive Ford
ptckup big 6 c yl
4 speed
Harold Brewer Long Bottom
Oh to 985 355~
8 18 tfc

------------1973 HARLEY 350 Sprint SS

wrndshleld and extras Only
1 500 mlle5 Top condlf lon
S800 f i rm 992 2063
a 18 3tc
1966 EASY TRAVEL Trailer
sle eps 6 stove 1ce box and
water under pressure 1963
Ford !fat bed ¥. ton and 1967
Buick Wildcat convertible
Call 7~2 3821
8 15 6tc
CAMPER 8f1 wrde 20ft long
sleeps six self conta i ned
large awning
cerpetlng
throughout See at 630 Plum
St , Middleport
8 15 6tp
1 ACRE LOT suitable for house
or trailer Water tap Is rn
stalled
1 mile south of
Rutland on County Rt J
Phone 742 3654
8156tc

mower

with 20 cut, 3 H P Briggs
engine. 14 ga steel deck, side

discharge full bailie, 7" poly
wheels
handle

and

pl~ted

Tee

'71.95
POMEROY LANDMARK
9 • _J&amp;ck C.r10y, Mlr

_...

New

Add1tron , 1 floor plan about 3

yrs old, level lof, 3 B R
(large double closets)

nice

kitchen, modern bath, utility

R 1 carpeted some paneling ,
storage room $19,500 00

CLOSE IN - 27 acres. large
barn
and
silo
other
butldlngs, 1112 story frame

home, 3 B R , bath N gas
F A heat dining room, TV
R , some paneling &amp;

hie

Asking $31 500 00
POMEROY- 1 story frame
3 B R , bath, full basement,
gas- heat, large lot Asking
510,500 00 Make an offer

POMEROY - Ranch Type
- 2 B R , bath large L R
w1th ftreplace, k1tchen has
lots of cabtnets, range &amp;
oven, carpeted, garage,
porch, full basement with

utility R
Small lot
$15 000 00
WANT TO SELL• - WE
HAVE THE BUYERS YOU
HAVE THE PROPERTY,
LETS GET TOGETHER
CALL AT ONCE
992 2259 or 992 2568
75 ACRE farm 6 room house
barn
other outbulldlngs
$19 500 Phone 742 5845
8 16 26tp

-------------LOTS tor sale trailer or house

A It utll lttes Phone 742 361.5
Rutland Ohio Pr rce $2 500
7 16 He

-------------HOU SE
630 Ml11 Sf
M1d

w
Phont ttl 2111

1f69 FORD PlCII.up , new btd and
paint Job Phone 992 3640 af
ter5pm
8l•7tc
--------------WE ARE! picking up 1 plano In
1965 CLASSIC Rambler good
your area and would like
condition Runs gooo asking
tome responslblt party to
S300 Phone 378 6219
teke over payments
Call
8 20 ltc
Credit Manager f61~1 772
- -- - - - - -- - - - -5669 or wrUe 260 East Main
1957 CI1EVROLET 2 dr 283
Street Chllllcofhe Oh iO 4.5601
engine, Robert J
V~Jrian
~ 7 tfc
svracuse Phone 992 5183
RiOiNot;;;;e-;;-;;;-2;-,;rt
------------.!.~ 3tp old, green broke Gentle Call
992 5510
1963 vw Partially Chopped
Newly painted, 1...00 Phone -----------~1...!.-c
773 .5165 afttt 5 P m
EXCELSIOR Slit Wort., E
--- - - -- ____ .!._ 20 Stp Main St 1 Pomeroy All kinds
,...
of lift water' pelleta water
1969 CHEVY Townsman s.tetlon
nuoottl block salt and own
wagon 11 1t.5 good condition
Ohio Rlvtt Salt Phone 992
Phone 997 7620..
31t1
s 24 tfc
6 .5 tfc

Bnc;:k
home with
Modern
kitchen with bul 1 cook and
bake un1ts Garage and 1 acre
in Pomeroy $30 900 00

BUNGALOW

Cozy

2

bedroom, bath
hardwood
floors, sh1ngle ,roof
full
basement and new gas fur
nace All th1S for 58,000 00

LARGE NEW HOME -

5

bedroom all electric bt Ieveli
home P/2 baths Garage and
large lot 6alcony overlooking
woods Large fam lly room m
full basement

LARGE FINE HOME -

2

family house In a qu1et neigh

borhood 2 kitchens, 2 baths,
and 4 bedrooms Full basement
and large garage Reduced to

$18,000 00
•
CATTLE FARM -

157 acres

and 4 bedroom farm house with
bath 80 acres of tractor land
Timber 2 farm ponds and
large barn

MIDDLEPORT -

I acre

surrounds a large 4 bedroom
home with front and back
porches Plus income property
Good neighborhood
Only

500 00
COUNTRY ACRE PLUS -

$17

2

bedroom Colonial house with
garage and outbuilding Fruit
trees Well water All level land

•••rort 6 room s l'h bath s for just $8 500 00
LISTING
Nice
ful
basement
partially NEW
carpeted kitchen complete, renovated 7 room house with
washer and dryer etc Could central air and heat Double
be 3 bedrooms gas furna ce
2 utility buildings
flrtpiBce storm doors and
cave
and 4 70 acres
w i ndow~ 'C Urtains and drapes
Included For tnformatlon call
-;;:;~Qi:,'TT~o 0R INVEST
Elden Walburn 992 2805
8 13 tfc

------------2 BEDROOM house Rutland
Phone 992 5858

THE DEPENDABLE
CONTRACTING CO.

""

PH. 992-7454 or
992-7129

WIN AT BRIDGE

Free Est1mates, Mlddlepo!'lt, 0

Holmes' deduction

CONCRETE

NORTH

FOR /ifR EE estimates ori
alumrnum
replacement
wmdows siding storm doors
and windows Ralltng Phone
Cherles Lisle Syracuse Ohio
Carl
Jacob ,
Sales
Representat i ve
v
v
Johnson and Son , Inc
4 30 tfc
SEWING MACHINES Repa rr
service , all makes ,
2284
The Fabnc Shop, Pomeroy
Authonzed Srnger Sales and
Service We sharpen Sc•ssors
3 29 tfc

+7

WEST

0 DELL Al1nement , located
behind Rutland Grade School
complete front end servtce,
brakes end tvneups, wheels
balanced electronically Open
8 to 8 datly Call 742 3232 on
sunday for appt
7 16 tfc
EXCAVATING dozer, loader
and backhoe work
septic
tanks Installed dump. trucks
and lo boys for hrre will haul
fill dlrt1 top soli limestone &amp;
grave1 1 Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 70a9
night phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2lltfc

--------------GRE T·

YOY w 111 run across en rlem that
you It reeogntze as a bargain

~

even thOugh another doe!JI' 1
Follow your o wn iudOtnent

By Helen and 'Sue Uottcl

iii
f4

~~'

Dear PMILBFG
Why feel guilty over a human reactiOn 1 ' Honor thy fath er
and mother" doesn 't mean succumb to dictatorship " HELEN

+++
Dear P ECI'
Why not turn the tales' Tell your folks you II accept them as
gra ndparents' only if" and don't nunce the "ifs 1 ' - SUE

+++
Rap
Agroup of us girls, ages 21 to 24, got together to d1scuss your
recent Survey of Unmamed Teenagers You repor ted some 60
per cent of kl&lt;ls, aged 13 to 19, were sbll v1rgm We question that
Our own private survey Indicated not one of us had been
VIrgm smce age 17 Of the 21 we questioned, none has had
chlldren, 15 are on the pill and the other SIX use some other
method of birth eontrol We are all respected people from good
homes and have good JObs We don't ''sleep around'' and several
are engaged, but we all thmk sex IS natural , 1f you care about
each other
Are you sure you didn't concentrate on the under-16 group m
your questwnnarre' - JOAN from Trenton, N J
,

Wttdnetdt~ , Aug

21,

ARIES (M•rch 21 .-Aprll 19)
Someone whom you haven t
seen 1or awhrle w rit suddenly
POP back H""ttO your ltfe Thts
person wont be hangrng
around as long as you Q hke

SCORPIO (Oct 24 No• 22t

Because ot a very unusual
happenlnlil a cond111on that had
the seeds ol be ing a real problem wt11 suddenly tum out to b~
a benefit

TAURUS (Aplil 20 -Moy 20)

SAGITTARIUS (No• 23 ·

Chock the ads tor the sale of
somelhmg umque but use 1u ~
tor lhe hOme you ve been
look•ng lor You rnrght lmd 11

Dee 21 , Don 1 be too surprtsed If you unu;w;pectedly
hear from one you re lond of
who now lives qu11e a "•stance
trom you

now
GEMINI (Moy 21 -June 201
You te apt to be lucky today rn

CAPRICORN (D.. 22 · Jan

1 ~~ If you use standard old
tashtoned methods now you re
not hkety lo be as successlyl
as you would De rl you 1m
prov•sed or tmova ted

~tlua t Jon where some c hance
ts tnvolved Thts doesn t mean
you should lake sttly gambles

a

CANCER (June 21 · July 22)

A quiCk dcctsron w1ll be catted

AQUARIUS (Jon 20-Feb IV)

1or rna busmass matler It wrll
.;~ fl ee t somelhtng you ve al
ready had ample t1me to lhtnk

ll you re presently ln ~olved'" a
PtOJeC1 of tmportance don I ally
yourself wtlh weak tndtv•duals
Chose one who can otter
what s needed

oul
LEO (July 23 -AuQ 22) Now
15 the trme to move on your
rdeas wh•le you re 1n the mood
to acl O therw 15e you 11 keep
putt1ng thrngs olf 1111 rt s too
la te

PISCES (Feb 20·March 20)

A task thai would have been
very drftteult lor you to perlorm

on your own w111 be handled by
a frrendly expert

they m1ght be m a gathermg of !herr peers, where popularity
means 'chased ," not chaste ,
You '11 remember that only about one-lourth condemned
premar1tal mtercourse as "always wrong/' and the majority
okayed ' sex with real earmg, whether you planned marriage or
not " But the encouragrng thing to us elders was that so many
teens agreed with the girl who wrote, 'Now that I'm not ha.ssled
w1th the guilt thmg anymore, I can lake my time deciding - I'll
know 1t's ME makmg the cho1ce, not a guy who tells me I'm a
prude, or soc1ety which tells me I shouldn't (so, of co\ls:s.e, I want
to) Of course I don't brag about my virginity, but the guy I giVe
1! to must be pretty spec1al 1"
Honest, now Isn 't that the way most of you Trenton grrls fell
about 1t, too' - HELEN

EAST

LITILE ORPHAN ANNIJi&lt;.
.LITTLE

.76 5
.98 52

tJ2

tKI 0973

bJ THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 Ubertine
. 5 Faulty
10 Toward
shelter
11 Turld.sh
Inn
12 Countenance
13 Withdraw
l4 VIgor
15 Chinese
dynasty
11 Spoil
17 Shot from
ambiiSh
lt Order to
a l:roker
2G Thameo
estuary
Zl Parisian's
lady
friend
Z% Type of
beer
24 Moroccan
city
Z5 Somewhat

DOWN
I Gangplanka
Z Of foreign

ortgln
3 Taking
cogmzance
( 3 wds )
4 Poet's
night!~

5 Word

Yesterday's o\uwer

aftor
grace
&amp; Name

11 Sultan's

decree

for somone

......,.,......,......,.._,.....,

( 2 wds )

Zl Unique
Z7 Beach
sights
28 Man of

the cloth
31 Slippery 3Z Tenn
for
Joey
33 Flat
(mus)

Dear Joan
Our survey of urunamed teenagers mcluded some 22 per
cent m the 18-19 group, 24 per cent under age-15, and the rest (54
per cent ) m the nuddle-teen years We'll adm1t we too were
som~what surp115ed at the h1gh rate of vrrg1ruty (though 1t
dropped to under 49 per cent m the over·l7 section), but we feel
these anonymous young people were perhaps more honest than

b V

t:n scramhle th" H' ff.MJ r Jumbles,
one letter tu eac h squ ar e to
form four ordmary word s

I V/1/L'O .,....., ..

t-tt:NHI

ARNOlD . ond 0 0 0 LI'E

He Qlw o ys loo b for lhe br ght ooe-1

•

I

3i Window

section
37 Record
of events
38 Bowlin
38 Shell
41 TV personality

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

8 30 - Chase 3 15 Hudson Brothers 8 10 Consumer Game 20
Unto the Hills 33 M ovte Wonder Woman 6 13 Oh to 5
Greatest Show 4
8 30 - Great Amencan Dream Machine 20 33
9 00 - Cannon 8 10 Mov ie Some Kmd of a Nut 3 4 15
9 30 - Boardmg Hovse20 33 Movie M en of the Dragon 6 13
10 00 - Ko1ak 8 10 News 20 Festt va1 Fr l m s 33

Ia

One letter a1mply atanda for another In thls samp1e A la
used for the three L's, X for the two O's etc Single letlen,
apo1trophe1, the length and formatlon of the words are all
h1nts Each day the &lt;ode l•tlers are dlfl:er•nt

10 30 - Day at Night 33

11 00 - NewsJ 4 6 810 13 15 ABCNews 33
11 30 - Johnny Carson J Mlss•on l mposstble 6 Un t ou ch ables
13 Come to the Fa1r 4 lS Mo v1es Flight to Ta ngr e r 8
A
Summer Place 10 Janakt 33
11 45 - Johnny Carson 4 15
12 30- Wild Wdd West 6 W1de World Spec1at 13
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4 Take F 1ve for L1fe6
2 00 - News 4 13
Country &amp; West ern U S A (C )
Blue R•dge
Quartet
K1tty Wells Show
8 30 p m - Family Favorites Ens1gn 0 Tool e starnng Dean
Jones ' Tome Ewell Show
9 30 p m - Superstar Theatre
lloyd Bndges Show
June
Ally son Show
-

ORPBAM AIIMIE-BEARD

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

CllYPTOQUOTES
HAVK

TJSMEY

N()w arranre the ctrcled letters
to form the surprise answer, u

:::::::==========='--':"~·~•:e•:t:ed by the above cartoon

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Jurnhl PII CLOUT
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MIDGE

RATHER

tomorro.,..)

NEEDLE

lt. hal th( 11 lreok nil he 11feel factoru
RUN OF THE MILL

CNZIG
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COUNTRY

$1'ERIO
92.1
,

West

North

East

South

••
Pass

4f
Pass

Pass

••

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By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The pattern of hands In
'Sherlock Holmes·Bndge De·
tectlve' shows Holmes mak
111g eontracts by bnlllant
play and the opponents bemg
set at contracts they could
and really should make
The unfortunate declarer
IS then told by Holmes how he
could have made h1s con
tract lnvanably, 1t IS good
bndge but somehow or other
we don't see the great de·
tect1ve w1nn1n g any
popularity eon tests
Holmes led the ace o! clubs
and contmued w1th the 10
South ruffed m dummy East
overruffed and led back a
trump Poor S outh cash e d h IS
ace of hearts led h1s last club
and watched East overruff
agam East had to lead back
a diamond South !messed hiS
queen but st1ll had to go down
one tnck
Holmes pomted out that
South could have made h1s
contract by lettmg Holmes
wm three club tncks while
d1scardmg two diamonds
from dummy H owe ver,
Holmes wasn t quite as pon·
tiflcal as he might have been
He fa•led to pmnt out that
South had a second chance at
tnck four He could have d1s·
card ed a d1amond from dum·
mY. r1ght then and there and
still made the game

CAPTA!N

EASY
HMM HOTEL
C.LAIZEMOr.Jf;
EHf EXCU5E

50 'fOUR. C0M"'AN'Y 5
AL. L READY TO BUY THE

DE'W85RJC:Y GOLO CLAIM
P RAPS YOJ.J LL. SOTH
SE MY GUESTS.

ME JU5r A
MOMENT 1

fiLL THE:N 11

INNIE WINKLE

cw~~;,:~::;::::;::::;::~l!ll!Jmflif

(
®IVAI DYOUR DINNER
I W11H 6REGOI(Y

HE. 1DI..DME A
LITTL€ AI30UT

HIMSELF

KONTOS
WINNE?60

5

~

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ALLE Y OOP
ENTI'[LIN' ME TO

A FREE PITCII&amp;R

FI!L.l.A1S ARMED

1~

0 AMERICA'S

RIGI~T .'' - AHL L

GREATEST

UN QOLI IT !N

HERO-

•• GAI&gt;FJilV I 'TMAT

YO HAINT
EARNED

1t)jH I ~ I

PRIVATE''

ZENITI1 '
COLOR TV
'

3160

-------------

8 2 Uc

••

HCJv:,t:: •n 1own, :.;:.uu aown and
seo per rnonth ; Trailer and
lot 2 bedroom $10,500 Phone

e

BLACK
WHITE lV'

992 391.5

-------------________.....___I 20_61p
8 1.4 tfc

3 BEDROOM house located on
l662 Lincoln Heights
F=ot
•PPI plene call 1 C30A) 768

•

••
•

20

: .. W~1t

North

East

So uth

•
:

Pass

14
44

Puss
Pass

2•
4 NT

•

Pass

5•

Pass

5N

Pass

7•

Poss

••
•

~Q41

•

For Sale
G"OCEAY butlnell for salt ._

c•sy Term1:
Free Delivery I

r

•
You South, hold
: • • AQ6 54 'AQ6 5 4+A K •2
•

MASON FURNmJRE
HillMAN OIIATI
77J ,.,
MASON, W. VA

1'

:
•

What do you do now !
A. - Bid IM!ven notrump Your
partner: 1 club1 will run at

:

notrump Nothing cen bt rufred

:

In nolrump SOmething could be

»

ruffed at a club conlract

•
.._

•

'IOU AN 'lORE
I BURIEO FOUR BURNT
DAD8URN
HOME
HEN FEATHERS UNDER TH
REM EDIES
CHINABERR'I TREE, BUT
IT v iDNT
SORETHRDAT

~)OAV"S QU£8TJON

In•tead of bidding lour clubs
your partner has bid two nutrump 1-~-

•

~ERE

AND 50

GASOLINE ALLEY

""

EL-

WlL.LWE

,,
"

OEG GHA

Wlf.ILE STROLLIIIG

Openmg lead-A•

«

FHE 'SS

(C) 11'14 Kine Peall'lns SJn4ic:aW,Inc)

Both v ul nerable

,

GJK

BHKGJK
Yesterday's Cryploquote NEVER TRUST THE ADVICE OF A
MAN IN DIFFICULTIES - AESOP

"'9 52

Pass

UNIIKP
JHSK

t AQ5

~

2&amp; Large

amount
29 Anelent
consort
Greek
18 The Browncolony
Ings
19 Gennan
30 Umpld
river
32 Soccer
22 Football
great
pass
35 Tarry
Z3 Mollusk
3ll Tasteless
delicacy
food

you don't
know
7 Van Druten
play
t 3wda )
8 Clty 111
MIBSOW'l
9 Small
sturgeon

• AKQJ108

•

24 Register

15 Frau ,s

.A

0

be

~'IH'i

SOUTH IDl

' '

w ill

new ac~arnt1nc11 You 11 be·
come tnvol~ed .n •cttvU ••
you ve never lfle(l tatore

Cf:OII -

.9
.74

outlook

broe()ened considefably 1tw1
yur thlaugh an tnter••HnQ

34 Vexed

7 30 p m

your two spades You btd
three hearts and he JUmps to four
spades What do you do now?

Fot

_ _ __,1V74

Breaks eooJn'lue to come lrom
SitUations, wtler$ 1here IS a
group or al teagt several people who 'Share a common
ca use

Aut 21, tt7•

"(ou f

LIBRA (8"!'1 23-0ct 23)

The1e Paren t&amp; Haven 't Eimed Hooun

Deor Rap
I love my parent.o, but I could never please Ihem When I Kot
B's In school. they bawled me out for not earning A's I was
elected oenloc senator and they were upset because I didn't run
for stuoont body presloonl, but then U1ey added, 'Oh well , you
wouldn't have won anyway '"
NQt matter how hard 1 worked, J was never as good as the
ne1ghb&lt;/r's kuls And when I fell m Jove w1th l'ony , who c• a grc.1t
guy with a lot of amb1Uon and a good job already, lhey h1t the
roof because he wasn t of our reUgion
We got marned m Tony's church and my folks wouldn t
attend We're gomg to have a baby and they say If he or she 1sn t
brought up m therr rehgwn (which Isn't mme anymore - It s too
rig1d and condemmng ), they wont he grandparents
The Bible sayd, Honor thy father and thy mother ,"but
when they never honored me, Is 1t wrong to feel a htlle reheved
that our child won't have to lake their put.&lt;lowns as I did '
PREFER MY IN-LAWS, BUT FE F-LING GUll TV

•

VIRGO t•ut 23 · Set&gt;t 22)

+AKQJI0643 +a

m

DOZER work land clearing by
the acre hourly or contract
f~rm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator wrth over
20 years experience Puitlns
Ex cavatmg Pomeroy Ohio
Phone 992 2478
12 19 ttc

20

• 4 32
.KQJI063
• 864

r~ i i~I!&lt;IU.i!&lt;l'l&lt;.iljlololflCGiflC~rol~ ;~ln
¥':~1 1!~e~
1!&lt;1;;;;:;/aR;;-u1

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE

a bit foggy

over

delivered fight to your
pro/ect Fast and easy Free
est mates Phone 992 3284
Goegleln Ready Mix Co
Middleport Ohlo
6 30 tfc

:;-

HOUSE for sale In Syracv:t'C' ,
rooms euid garage located
n11r the Sc hool Phone 992

I

•w

:.

--------------

--------------- -------------- --------------- --------------

'

Middloporf.Pomoroy

ch l n .son
sub d i vision ,
Rutland Pr ice S19 900 Phont
7~2 3615 or see Milo Hut
c hlnson Rutland
a 16 12tc

3 !0 " '

•

Interior, Exterior
--Decorating a!1d
--- Remodeling

Pn ce Is

3 30- One L tfe to Ltve 13 Phd Donahue 4 Match Game 8 10
How to Surv1ve a Marrrag e 3 15 Carrasco iendas 33 La sste
6
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesa me St 33 T attleta les
8 Gilligan s I sland 6 Mov1e Bet ween M1dntght and Dawn
10 $10 000 Pyramid 13
4 30 - Green Acres 3 Ja ckpot 4 Vlrg tnt an 8 Dan1el Boone 13
Mod Squad 6 Bonanza 15
5 00 - Mr Rogers 20 33 Bon anza3 MervGrltfln4
5 30 - Elec Co 33 Hodg epodge Lodg e 20 Hogans Heroes 13
News 6 Trail s West 15
6 00- News 3 4 8 10 15 Sesame St 20 Ca tc h 33 33 ABC
News 6 13
6 30 - News 3 4 8 10 15 Room 222 13 Journey to Japn 33
Bewitched 6
7 00 - News 10 What s My Ltne 8 Truth or Cons 3 Beat th e
Clock 4 Elec Co 20 J•mmy Dean 13 I Spy 15 Zoom 33
Bowlrng for Dollars 6
7 30 - Pollee Surgeon 3 On The Money 4 Eptsode Act10n 33
To Tell the Truth 6 Sale of the Century 8 The Judge 10 Beat
the Clock 13 Ant1oues 20

-·

Wf;APQ.FM

a 1~
------------NEW 3 bedroom home P"1Ul

&amp;ulld!no for stlt or l•att
Phone 773 56•t from a 30 p m
to 10 p m for appointment

•

, , .367

READY MIX

Another World 3 4 I S Gener al Hosp 1ta l 6 13

Right 8 10

C BRADFORD Auctroneer
Complete Servrce
Phone949 3821 or949 3161
Ractne Oh•o
Crltt Bradford
5 1 tfc

1

MOWERs
Push type rotary

MIDDLEPORT

Open Mind 33

771 PearlS!
Mltldleport, Ohio

SEPTIC
TANKS
cle aned
Modern San 1tat ron 992 3954 or
992 7349
10 2J tfc

8 20 31p

1 00 - News 3 All My Chtldr en 6 13 Not For Wom en Only l S
Hazel 8 What s My Li ne 10 Cook tn Cat un 33
30 - As the World Turns 8 10 Jeopardy 3 4 15 Journey to
Japan 33 Lets Mak e A Dea l 6 13
2 00 - Doctor s 3 4 15 Glrl•n My L1fe 6 13 Edge of N1ght 8 10

B&amp;K EXCAVATING

BOWERS
REPAIR

-------------ELECTROLUX
vacuum

Real Estate For Sale

••
"' " 12 55 - NBC News 3 15
ov

Wi II do Dozer &amp;
Backhoe Work, Install
Septic Tanks, Haul
D~rt,
Gravel,
Limestone or Rent One
of
Our
Trucks,
Backhoe or Dozers.

3 00 -

8 7 26tc

_____________

Reliable Service

ALSO SHAMPOO
CARPETS
AND CLEAN
UPHOLSTERY

,~.contract

JOBS contracted PhOne 742
cleaner A 1 condition uses
3014 or wrtte Box 23 Li!!ngs
paper bags has cordw rnder
vrl1e Oh io
and many attachments Also
7 23 26tc
shampooer attachment In
eluded . (Only 41 available) at AUTOMOBILE msurance been
$37 70
cash
or
terms
cancelled"'
Lost
your
a variable Phone 992 2653
operator s license Ca 11 992
........
8 20 lfc
7428
6 15 tfc
1973 HONDA 70 motorcycle
Good cond 1tton Phone 593
7390 Athens Ohro
8 20 3tc

Known &amp;

INTERIOR AND
EXTERIOR

FOR your remode ling roofing
painting repa l rmg concrete
and masonry work
call
Ronn ie Hubbard 992 3511 or
992 7302 Work by hour or

MACHINES
In
orlgln.al CREMEANS
CONCRETE
factory certon
Z•g Zag to
del1vered Monday through
make buttonholes sew on
Saturday
and
evenings
buttons monograms and
Phone 446 1142
make fancy destgns with just
6 13 tfc
the twist of a smgle dial left
m lay a way and never been WILL trim or cut trees and
used W1ll sell for only U7
shrubbery Also clean out
cash or terms available
basements attrcs etc Phone
Phone 992 2653
949 3221 or 742 4441
8 20 ffc
7 14 26tc

Side by side refrigerator
freezer Norge washer and
dryer set of walnut dining
room tables W1th chairs and
pad approximately ~ years
old, good old bed and chest of
drawers Phone 992 7066
8 20 tfc

.•-"

Please Phone

Chester, Ohio
985-4102

-------------NEW 1974 ZIG ZAG SE WING

-------------KOSCOT
K0SME11CS

6 00 - Slunrlse Seminar 4 Summer Semester 10
6 2:» - Farm Report 13
6 30 - Five Minu tes to Live By 4 News 6 Btble Answers 8 The
Story 13 Sacred Heart 10
6 35 - Columbus Today 4
6 45 - Farmtlme 10 M o rnmg Report J
7 00 - Today3 4 IS C BS News 8 10 D1ck Van Dyke 13 H R
Pufnstul 6
7 30 - New Zoo Revuc6 Tuxedo Te nn essee 13
8 00 - New Zoo Revue lJ 1 Ses ame St 33 Capt Kangaroo a
Jeff s Coll te 6; Urban League 10
8 25 - Jack LaLanne 13
8 30 - Brady Bunc h 6 Green Acres 10
8 55 - Chuck Wh it e Report s 10 News 13
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 AM 3 Abbott Costello 8 Phil Donahue 15
W ild Wild Wes t 6 Cap t ain Kangaroo 10 M ister Rogers 33
M ovte You Came Along IJ
9 30 - To Tell the Truth 3 I love Lu cy 8 Electrr c Co 33
10 00 - Jokers Wild 8 10 Company 6 Ltl 1as Yoga &amp; You 33
Name That Tune 3 15
10 30 - Gambit B 10 Wmnlng Streak 3 4 15 Turntng Points 33
11 00 ~ Pa ssword 13 Now You See It a 10 t;11gh Rol lers 3 4 15
Love of Life 8 10 Brady Bunch 13 Lucy Show 6
11 55 - CBSNews8 Dan l mel s Wor ld lO
12 00 - Password 6 Bob Braun s 50 50 Cl ub 4 News 8 10 13
Jack pot 3 15 Mr Rogers JJ
12 30 - Search for Tom orrow 8 10 Spil t Second 6 Celebrr ty
Sweepst akes 3 15 Afternoon wtth DJ 13 Elec tn c Co 33

All that IS needed for 11 frife'
eshmate IS 11 phone call

BISSELl BROTHERS
CONST. CO.

UPHOLSTERY fabrics by the
yard 54 mches wide as low as
S2 49 per yard Velvets as low
as ss 25 Imported v•lvets
S9 60 we also have nylon
herculon
cotton
pr1nts
vinyls and remn,nts by the
yard or by the ptece Pomeroy
Reco v ery 622 E Main St
Pomeroy Phone 992 755~
7 2.4 26tc

------------WINCHESTER automatrc

WEDN ESDAY, AUG 21 1914

Roofing Co

------------- --

CANNING tomatoes
brmg
conta iner Geraldme Cleland
Racrne Ohio
8 16 tfc

11 OO - New54 6 810 13 IS AB C News3J
11 30 - Johnny Carson .4 3 IS M IS51on lmposr.rble 6 Un
touchables 13 Janak! 33 Mov ies
The Man Who D1ed
Twice 8
Circle of Deception 10

992-2550

FOAM io fill your old couch and
chatr cushions as tow as
SlO 95 upholstery okks only
SOc 4 tnch covered foe m
mattresses for standard stze
bed
S29 95
Pomero y
Recovery 622 E Matn St ,
Pomeroy Oh io Phone 992
7554
7 2~ 26tc

Day •I Nigh I 33

tO 30 -

REDECORATING?

Wilkinson Small Engine

8 JO - HawaliFive08 10 Eye l oEye33 SnoopS•sters3 4 IS
Movie Scream Pretty Peggy 13 , Tl)e Monk 6
9 00 - Fir ing Line 70 Jeanne Woll with 33
9 30 - Performan ce 33 Sha ll 10 M ovie Bon lour Trlstesse 8
10 00 - News 20 Marcus W elby M 0 6 13 Mounta in Scene 33
Poll ee Story 3 4 15

"

Business

742-5293

oo10

Bowling for Collars 6 . WAshlnlilton Debates 15
7 30 - To Tell the frvlh 6 New Pr ice Is Right 8 TO RFO 70
Hollywood Squares 3 Beatlhe Clock 13 Hollywood Squares

•

cOfner Blrck St and Rt l:l.t

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992·7089
N1ght 992·3525
or 992·5232

843 2~95
8 14 12tc

99;.~

----- ---------

Moved lo Rutland. "" mile
Inside city limit on right

l•la lied

$150

--------------6 000
-------------PRIVATE meetmg room for 1974 500 KAWASAKI
m•les S1 200 Phone 992 S891
any organlzaf/on phone 992
8 20 3tp
3975
-------------3 11 ffc
--------------TS 25 Suzuki
14 model
Phone 992 3640
BEDROOM
apartment
8 18 7tc
' R uttand Phone 992 SB588 13 ttc
TAKING orders fot;, tomato fteld
-------------boxes Phone
3980
BEDROOM
apart

CANNING peaches now tn
ment a.r conditioned fur
season Two truck toads each
nrshed
Reasonable rent
week Prtce starting at 56 98
Located 12 m lies from
per bushel Please brrng your
Pomeroy Phone 30• 773 5118
own containers Bobs Market
8 1~ tfc
near Pomeroy Mason Brrdge
Mason
W
Va
Home of COUNTRY Mobtle Home Park
quality fru 1t and vegetables
R t 33 ten m lies north of
Open seven days ttll 10 p m
Pomeroy
Large lots w i th
8 12 tfc
concrete patios, stdewalks
runners and off street
DIDN T KNOW fHAT' M GM
parking
Also, spaces for
Flea Market Specrats 55
small trailers Phone 992 7479
rns 1de 53 outstde Spri ng
7 21 ttc
Ave
Pomeroy
Oh i o
Collectors
dealers
etc
Every Sat and Sunday
a 7 ttc
1972 3 BEDROOM Windsor
Mobile Home on 1 acre of
ground
For
more
In
formatiOn call 992 7638
PR: IV ATE party want s to buy a
1 30 tfc
vw Call 992 30a1
8 20 3tp
READ THIS! Before \IOU buy
any new 14 w tde Mobile
F ARM 200 acres more or less
Home be sure to s~ the olll
$5 000 down rest In payments
steel bonded Detrolt'~r Mobrle
to owner Write R Breunto
Homes
The steel bond
2916 Blueberry La
Bow ie
Detrolter
Is
virtually
Md 20715 or call (301) 262
fireproof and has m•n'f
2057
features that no other Mob i le
8 20 He
..._
___,
Home on the market can
m~lfch we al so have one of
3 BEDROOM home I floor
the largest selections of good
plan Either •n M iddleport
used and repossessed Mob ile
Pomeroy
Syracuse
or
Homes of any dealer In the
~ acme Phone 992 3122
area Oon t waJ.t - shop todav
8 18 31p at Berry Miller Mobile
Homes Sales , 705 Far.son
Street 8elpre Oh lo Phone
WE NEED 200 tons of :lheet
..423 9531
cast new or old alum lnum
8 8 12tc
Keep ca ns separate The
Rosenberg Co Athens Ohio
8 15 tfc

BODY

0.

Pomeroy,

TUESDAY AUG 20 1974
me Sl
10 News 3 • Llll•s Vog• &amp; Yov 331 New• ••
ISse...
ABC
NewH
13

6 30
News 8 10 , NBC News3 • IS Room 122 13 French Chef
33-1 Bewllched
6
1 00 - Whet S My Line 8 Ou&amp;ly' s Trail 13 Elec Co 10 Truth
Of Cons"' 3 Beat the Clock 4 Paul Nuch•ms 33 New$ 10

1'------------,

--------------------------ROOM furnlsl"!ed apartment, HOTPOINT range Amana 22ft
5 12 tfc

992·7204

8 11 tfc

SUPERIOR
VINYL PRODUCTS

- -------------

~

pepperi , cucumbers for sale

•

J&amp;l AUTO

K&amp;H ROOFING

WARNER'S
REFRIGERATION
SERVICE

For . -

FREE HOME ESTIMATE$

Notice

Tt-rrler pups

~ .. t..

chalk

@)
~

~couv

6

I

nllntl, M ddle1&gt;ori·Pomeruy, 0 • Tuesday, Aug 20, 1974

Television Log

-

Phone 593 1390 A then$ Ohio
e 20 ltc
-..-------------

ployment Wanted

Notice

~

A.KC REG

act ion n.em lng \IOU as c:lefendant
1970 NOVA CPE
Call Collect 1-592 5544
In the above- named cou rt bv
11495
Local
1 owner good tires. 6 cvl with automat1c trans
f iling her Comptamt on the 6th
Athens. , Oh10
day of July 197~
radlo blue fini sh spotless c lean blue In terior
The oblect of the Complaint
and the demand for relief are to
~m
1968 FORO TORINO
$99'
obtllln a dtvorce e~nd for other
VILL do bab\IS i tt lnQ n ightS or
proper relie f
H top FT. V 8 engme automati c trans P steering &amp;
dayt ime R~uonable rate~
You e~re required to answer
brakes blk vinyl tnterlor blue finish , a1r cond1t1onl ng
Phon• 992 7474 or 742 4902
tne Camplatn.t w ithi n twenty
radio
aft~r 4 p m
etght da ys after the las t
8 u 6tc
pub Hcatton of th is nattce wh lc l"
Will ~e pvQitshed once eacl"
wee-k far StX co nsecuti ve weeks
WILL pa i nt roots and houses
and the last publi c at ron will bf
fr ee eU tma t•s Call 99 2' 5•82'
made on the 20th day of August
1
197.4 Your answer date w ill bl
on Septe mber 18 1974
OPEN EVES.8:00 P. M
•
In the case of you r fa il ure t
POMEROY, OHIO
home Phooe '" 1460 8' 121c
answer or otherw i se respond a
perm itt ed by the Ohio Rule5 o -.!::
I ,' -----'----,---...:.........:..::..._;___.).) - - - - - - - - - -- - - C•vll Proced ure wrthm the t ime
stated tudgmen t by default writ
be rendere d agamst you fQr the
re lief demanded rn th e Com
WE HAVE all yo1,.1r uphols.tery PART T IME babysitter from I
plarnt
2 FA MILY yard sale Aug 22
needs
Burlap
denim
4pm 2 3deysBweek Phone
23 Rt 7 TOppers Pl ains
773 5857
LARRY E SPENCER
cam
bnc
foam
glue
zippers
tc
Dtshes old furnit ure guns l
8 14 6
Clerk of
tackrng str•p
spn ng s and - - - -- - - - - - - -- automatiC and one pump
Comm on Pl eas Court
cli ps
c h rpboard
button
depress i on glass
w 1nter
APPLICATIONS are being
Mel g s County Ohro
twme sew 1ng thread legs
coats 4 ptece dining set other
accepted at the office of the
upholstery books dacron
Court House
Items D ealers wel come
cl erk for water ma•ntenance
webb
1
ng
sprtng
twine
tacks
Pomeroy , Oh ro
8 20 3tp
(7 ) 9 16 23 30 /8) 6 13 20 7tc
man In Ri!lclne Reply box 33
welt cord co tton SWJ..,e l
bases and foam foam foam
B l5 l Otc
HOUSE msulat lng !)Iowen for
Pomeroy Recovery 622 E ______ ......,___ ______ _
better r esults cuts fue l bi lls
Marn St
Pomeroy
Oh io CO MPANION f or elderly lad y
down Free est•mates Call
NOTICE OF
742 4428
Phone 992 7554
light hovsekeep 1ng .. 1n n ice
APPOINTMENT
8 20 12tc
7 24 26tc home w•th liberal salary
Case No 21 , 284
- -- - - - - - - -- - - cl ose to chur ches and stores
Estate
of Mae
Damron ---~- --------A TO Z MART used furnitur e
Write to Box 729 s co The
Deceased
applrancn and mtsc R:t 33
Dally se-ntinel
Pomeroy
NotiC e 1s hereby given that
Hartford W Va
Ohro
Bob Damron of Eastbank
7 26 tfc
18 3t c
West Vrrgln la has been duly
appointed Executor of the
1 WILL do roof rng hea ti ng HOUSEKEEPER to trv e In
E state of Mae Damron
r epai r plumb ing and elec
must drive c ar Apply at 790
deceased
late of Me i gs
trlcal work Phone Charles
Maple St Mtddleport Ohio
County Ohto
Slncla1r 985 4121
Phone 992 2936
Credttors are requrred to frle
8 7 12tc
8 20 Jtc
the rr c la1ms w rth satd flduetary
Wtth ln four months
Dat edth ts 16th day of August
BA CK to SChOOl specia l all
1974
•
permanents 52 off blow cuts
54 50 Operators Jea nette
We
need
man
or
woman
to
MANNING 0 WEB ST ER
Radford
Jackie N i bert
sell full line of Advertlsmg
..ludge
Ruth s Beauty Shop M ason
Court of Common Plea s
Spec1alhes, Calendars and
W Va phone 773 5686
Probate D lvl sron
8 13 tfc
G1ffs 'in the Pomeroy (8) 20 27 (9 ) J 3fc
Middleport Area Must be
able to plan own hme and
work wdh a mm1mum of
superviSion
All accounts are protected .
Repeat orders are protected.
H1gh Commtsstons payab~~,
when orders are passed for
Ph 992 7454 or 992 7129
cred1t
The Adverflsmg Specialty
L1ne IS the most extens1ve tn
the mdustry calendars are
By Mn. Herbert Ronsb
manufactured at our Red
FURNISHED2bedroom mobile
Rev
Howard Sh1vely
Oak plant
home on Sp ring Avenue
wnte Sob McKenzie Sales
Phone 992 342 9
returned home Fnday after
B 20 7tp
Manager,
The
Thos
D.
havmg attended the North
Murphy Company, 110 So
Prlees
do
not
Include
paint.
TWO ~ room and bath apt! In
Central Jurisdictional SUmmer
Second Street, Red Oak,
Middleport For Information
School for Uruted Methodist
8'
W1de-S22.00
Iowa 51566
call 992 2550 or 742 6551
7 3 tfc
at
Garrett
ministers
10' Wlde-$25.00

I

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~ets For Safe

'

vinyl compound mad~ by B
F Goodrll; tl .lnd MOI'IU11IO .5

thl$

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1

I

1 - The Dally

'IE SHOULOA BURIED
THEM UNDER TH '
CHINABERR'I TREE

DAD ~A~5 I HAVEN T
SEEN EATING' ~OPE~L'I'
M~

l-IE gAIO ~E 5 6:JIN6 10

51GN ME VP ffi{ A NEW
COURSE~:,,..J--~

�J /
1- Thf DIIUy Sentlnol, Mlddleport·Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Aug. 21).1974

Rocky unique in _American government
-

Nr.::~~~~~ .
15 8
'1
1 ~A e i
un que m:n n mer ~·
t th
I
0
• v ce
r ngs 0
!lftii!,IIC)' ng! only 1 ~ ;:ars
~ ""u ~overnor ooe

ao:nv:r -

~~ =~1 ~~rg::
0
e
'
•
as 1 :r~~:;:Y..~ ~~

Y
·-...;;p
, _...,,t
Jtgs In evez t &gt;rner of the
wor '
,
,_
Roclcefeller • public life as
gove';'"r\1 is we~ known. He
ron
on to ~tingstate hous~
8
Avere
• upae
our
;::'

•:.e

~n ~::·and
;t'"'~g
8

eDtcere- beec\ ~
vt reel an
clol
es.
Last
r •resigned to heo~ , them natiolJ-

, wide Commission on Critical
Choices for America of which

Gerald Ford was a member.
Nl governor his creative
financing schemes built a
major state university system
ooe of the best road systems U:
the nation modem though not
always a~saful drug treat·
ment
~ntal hygiene
programs ~. a huge state
office corrl~ex'ln Albany. But
there 1s the .major blot on the
R!lckefeUer record - Atticathebloodiestprlsonriot In u.s.
history
·
Few ;,en in America have as
much foreign policy ••·
perlence as Rockefeller. A
former assistant secretary of
state under several presidents,

"'If

he was a silent "hawk" on
Vietzuun who otrongly support.
ed the Johnoon administration
Southeast Asia poUcy.
For years Henry, Kissinger
was Rockefeller's personal fo.
reign policy adviser, and when
· Ki.ssinger joined \he Nixon
adminlstratloo, It was a running joke In New York that he
was . " only on loan fr om
Rockefeller."
The two have remained close
frlends .lt was Rockefeller who
announced Kissinger's marrlage to a Rockef~ller aide and
Rockefeller who hosted the
wedding party at his Pocantico
Hills estate on the Hudson
River.
K"1ss1nger
·
·IS on1y one of the

Rockefeller ·•people" in the
administration . Peter Brennan, who came to Waslnngton
toting a gun to become
secreta ry of labor. was the key
to Rockefeller's winning the
political endorsement of New
York's 1.8 million member
AF U !O. The two are good
friends.
The Rockefeller fa mily has
holdings In more than a score
of countries around the world
and throughout his yea:s ~
governo.rhercmamed ac tive m
family linan.cial affairs. As
governor, Nelson Rockefeller
was more or less the head of
the family, though he often
shared that role with his
brother, Da VI"d, the head of

Chase Manhattan Bank.
~pica! ol the famlly 's vast
holdin~s are those In South
Amer1ca , which Is Nelson
Rockefeller 's particular lleld
of expertise.
Rockefeller , who speaks
Spanish fluently, is a frequent
vlsilor to the huge family cattle
ranches scattered tl)roughout
South America. The ranches
were the main getaway for .the
New York Governor , who i.s an
avid horse~an .
The family also owns South
America 's largest chain of
supermarkets.
MRS. FREE!.AND ILL
Mrs. George Freeland Is
confined at her home in
Syracuse due to l"llness .

Ex-cop leads·· inmates in jail ·takeover
AMARILLO, Tex. (U~JJ __: hostages.
"We consider this a very
Five buna\es ted by a former
policeman and armed wilb serious situation. Those .,en
knives overpowered two jailers could die at any time." '
Fields, spealil!6 from: the
and took over the Potter
County jail shortly alter aheriff's office,; '!ii the lower
midnight today. They IIBked (or section of the Pot,ter County
freedom and lht..tened to kilt~ courthouae, said the "jnmates in
the deputies if authorltteli tried .. the seventh and elgb\h floors
to retake the Jail.
- : -; "'had apparently not determlnod
. Both jaUer• suffered'lnjurles how they would try to leave the
but were not &amp;eriousfi hurt.
·jail. They broke off talks with
"'lltey have made no spet;l!lc officials at about 7:4!' a.m. and
demands reaDy, oth'ei-\,th'an said they would come back
thal they want out," said Cajlt. with specific demands soon.
Arthur Fields. ''They bave
Fields identified the1eader of
made no .!Iemonds other than if the Inmates as Darvin Meharg,
we tried to take \he JaU back 39, a_ former police officer at
they would klll the two Wichita Falls, Tex., and an excon. The others included a
woman, Barbara 'lbiel, 40,
charged along with Meharg in
a robbery; Kenneth Arnold Oil·
ver, '1:1, charged with murder;
TUE
James AI Petty, 26, sentenced

MASON DR.

to eight years in prison for a
hoidup, and James Quinn, an
escapee from a federal priSOn.
Fields said the hostages,
night relief jaUer Don Sidwell
and dispatcher Stan Snitker,
were sllgbtly injured but the
priSOners allowed a doctor to
enter the seventh floor and
treat their wounds.
He said he did not know how
the inmates overpowered the
guards but once they did, they
· were limited to the upper floors
by barred doors. The·sheriff's
office is downstairs in the
building and no guns are
aUowed in the jail area.
, "After they toolt control,
overpowered the jaUers, they
got irito the kitchen area and
got some knives and some
materials,"
inflammable
Fields said. "We have talked
by telephone !l!)d we have also
talked to them in the stairway
which is blocked by bars.
Fields said one attorney had
been aUowed into the stairway
to talk to \he prisoners. He said
Meharg appeared \o be the
leader of the group though its
spokesman changed from time
to time.
Earlier reports indicated
\hat Inmates had threatened to
burn the jaU with firebombs If
\hey were not' allowed their

ALSO

MEIGS
lHEATRE
Tonight, Aug. 20 thru
Thuncloly Aug. -22
NOT OPEN

FRI., SAT .. SUN.
AUG. 23-24-25
· "THE SUGARLAND
EXPRESS"

Goldie Hown

!PGl

ALSO
CARTOONS

Show St•rts 7 p.m.
•

freedom . . Authorities said at
least one inmate had the
knowledge to put together such
explosives.
The inmates made their
move just after midnight,
about an hour after the night

R 0 a d s Ahead
·

, ,

jailers came on duty. Deputies
downstairs became aware or
the situation soon after it OC·
curred and in a short time the
jail was surrounded.
The courthouse parking area
was cleared in case of fire.

.

More than 100 officers surrounded the courthouse. The
building has been ordered
closed and jurors scheduled for
duty were informed by radio
and television not to report.

r Oh1•0 ,

£J.•
0

highway meeting topic
Karl L. Rothermund, Jr.,
Executive Vice-President of
the 900 member Ohio Contractor Association, has chosen
"Roads Ahead for Ohio" as his
topic to be presented at an Aug.
29luncheon at the Holiday Inn.

HOSPITAL. NEWS
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Aug. 19)
Evelyn Bare, Joh!mie Board ,
Glen Chambers, Kenneth Cox,
Charity Dickerson, Ricllard
Fick·, Melva Halley, Kimberly
Hammond, Mary Hoffman ,
Joanne Jennings, Thomas
Layne, Patricia Lucas,
Geraldine Mitchell , Penny
Mullen, Cynthia Pearson, Mrs.
Danny Polcyn and son, Martha
Shaffer, Christina Staten.
.
(Births)
Mr. and Mrs. Roger D.
Taylor, a son, Jackson; Mr. ·
and Mrs. ~y Zacharia, a son,
Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Larry·
Taylor, a daughter, App 1e
Grove, W.Va.
Pleasant VaUey Hospital
Discharges - Mrs. Eugene
McDermitt, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Bruce Sisk and son;
Letart; Mrs. DeWitt Browning,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Willis
Saunders and son, J:'oint
Pleasant; Virgie Stewart,
Point Pleasant; Priscilla
Wolfe, Bloomington; Mrs.
Ronnie Neal, West Columbia;
Mrs. Frank Martin and
daughter, Crown City.
Births- Aug. 18, a son to Mr.
and Mrs. James Duncan, Apple
Grove; a son to Mr. and Mrs.
John Lyons, Point Pleasant;
. Aug. 19, a daughter to Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Roush, New
Haven.

Sponsored by the Gallipolis
Area Chamber of Commerce,
this will be the second meeting
of the Southeastern Ohio Highway Users Conference G.
Kenner Bush of Athens will
preside.
Luncheon tickets are $4.25
each and reservations should
be made prior to Aug. 28 by
contacting Mrs. Thelma Elliott
at the Gallipolis Area Chamber
of Commerce phone 446-0596 .
Mr . Rothermund is a
registered professional civil
engineer who has headed the
Ohio (:on tractors for 15 years.

Bl. 00·d ·

During his reign, Rothermund
has helped mold the Ohio
Conference Into one of the
state 's
most important
professional
business
associations.
An expert in Ohio road
financing and slate highway
growth. needs, Ro\hermund
will- center his remarks on
roads and other economic
needs for Southeastern Ohio.
Major interest win be given
to Rt. 35, Rt. 33 and the Appalachian Highway.
All collliTiunity and civic
leaders are .urged to attend.

Two accidents

Continued from page 1
Robert Coucn . Me lisa ·Rizer,
William L. Buckley, Gerald
Rought, Nan White, Howard
Logan. Homer Smith, Wallace
The Meigs County Sheriff's
P. Hattleld, Margaret Eskew,
depariment
investigated two
Louise Myers, Ann ie Williams ,
Raymond Myers, Judith B. accidents Monday, in which no
Werry , Barbara L. Fields, Bi ll personal
injuries
were
Pine, George Hicks, Frank
reported.
Rizer .
Minersville · Clara
At 2 p.m. on the Everett
Mcintyre , James Anderson, Horner property, a three-year
John R. Berkey.
Harrisonville - Robert M . old child was in a parked car
owned by Joan Greathouse, Rt.
Alkire.
Middleport
Emmett 1, Portland, when the car
Rawson . Barbara McMahon,.
Robert D. Pocklington, Judith drifted forward and struck a
"Pocklington, Robert.. V. King , refrigerator and camper
Lynne A. Latham Miller , belonging to Horner who lives
Freda Durham, Peia G. Chase,
Thomas E. Weaver. Linda in Lebanon Township .
There was very slight
Haley, Ed Durst, Sarah J .
Fowler. Freda Gilmore, Clara property damage.
J . France, Milton Hood, Ida
At 3:30 p.m. in Rutland
Mae Martin, Mar·tha J .
Hackett, James R. Dailey, Township on · County Road 16,
Wayne·e . Davis, Eric Pearch, ·Beech Crave Road, autos
Roger Pearch .
driven by Donnie R. LouderRutland - Donna Dav idson,
Charles C. King, Osella Birch- milt, 28, Pomeroy, and John
field .
Jacobs, 33, Rutland, met in a
Rac ine - Dorothy Badgley, . curve and collided.
Ralph Badgley, Robert Smith,
There was medium damage
Rhonda Dailey , Emma Adams ,
Belly Sayre.
to the Jacobs car and severe
long Bottom - Richard damage to the Laudermilt car.
Barton, Macel Barton, Henry
No citations were issued.
Bahr.
Syracuse Arletta Cross,
Laurance S. Ebersbach .

investigated
,.

Cheshire -

Joseph White.
Larry Gilland.
Portland - Grace Allen .
Tuppers Pla ins Mirna
Walker .
Chester - Albert Marti n.
Langsville - M ike Barr.
Mason - Jon P. Karschn ik.
Ernest L,
Reedsv i lle Miller, John Damewood.

This Week's Spec• a·

New Haven -

OFFICERS NAMED
PT. PLEASANT - The
Mason County Republican
executive committee at a
meeting Monday evening
reelected John C. Musgrave,
USED CARS
Chairman , three co-chainnen,
Orville (Buck) Sturgeon, R. G.
Greene, and Ernest Hesson ;
Margie Rlckatd, secretary,
TWO RUNS MADE
and
Wanda Potts, treasurer.
RACINE - The Racine E-R
Squad made two runs Monday . Other co-chairmen will be
At 10 a.m. they transported named later.
Michael Hill, Jr., 11 months, to
Full power, factory air, V:
Veterans Memorial Hospital
roof. only 22,000 miles .
and at 10:45 they took Joyce
Grady, 18, to Veterans
PALUBINSKASON WAIVERS
Memorial Hospital.
NEW ORLEANS (UP!) · The New Orleans Jazz placed
· rookie guard Eddie Palublnskas on waivers Monday,
WIENER ROAST
" You•"ttlil&lt;e Our Quality
th.e · National
Way of Oolng Business.
The United Methodist Men's reducing
GMI\C FINANCING
organization will hold a wiener Basketball Association's
.992 -5342
Pomeroy
roast and games at the Edson newest entry to the 20-player
Open £veilings 'Til 6:00
Roush Farm Friday, Aug. 23, limit. .
TitS P.M. S••·
.
Palubinskas, picked fourth
a\ 7:30p.m.
by Atlanta from Loulstana
State in this year'.s spring
~:::=:.:::~::;::::::::::::::::::::;;::~:~~:::::;::::::::-;:::o:•:i!!:O):~:::::::::~::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::~:::::::.~:::::::::::::::::::~ ladrsat:n': ~~:~!~~eIr~~

lqansofalltypes!
' ·'

'73 DODGE

POLARA CUSTOM ·
DR. H.T.

Meigs

Rebozo's affairs
..
undet gr~d
jury probes

......

... -).

If you're In need of caah lor any purpou, IH
ua first. You'll like our friendly aervlce and
the nay monthly ~ymenta at low blink
'
lm.n~st
ret... · Our financial expert• can
tailor • loan to Itt ·your needa and bud1et
nquln~menta. Drop In today.

~;

-;:.

•

0

~

Walk- Up Window and
· Auto Teller Window
.
Open Fri. Evenings 5 Tor P:M.•

::~

•

Hungry K1d1?
Don'l Arg 11e

:~

.

wr glorious menu .

.....

llllllllftte

•

Adolph's Dairy Valley
Corparalion

W. MAIN

&lt;- ,....................

t·:

:~*
~

S..ncloly-10 " ·"'· lq 11 P.M.

Mon. thru Thurs.-t A.M. to 11 P.M.
Fri. &amp; Sal--f A.M. lq I A.M.

~::

.•.•
~:
,,.
.;.•

NOW OPEN

' '

·IIIDilEPORT. OHIO

*

Fast family Snacks Here .
It's friendly l!lnd economical ; quick
and diversified - enough tO satisfy
everybody's mood and ·appetlte. See

tiona I

::: -choice. He was LSU's leading.
j~ scorer last season and was a
';:;. member of the Australian 1972
Olympic basketball team.

~
~~

::::

BEAUTIFUL

VASE
ARRANGEMENTS
From

Property

I Transfers
Lowell K. Smallwood, by
atty. In fact, Janice J . Smallwood, atty. in fact, Janice J .
Samllwood, to Janice J . Smallwood, 2.72 Acres, Rutland.
M. M. Thurman. Marguerite
Thurman to Ohio Power Co.,
103 Acres Coal. Salem.
Winfield R. · Perdue, Lena
Perdue to Sherman Ra y
Marcwn , Donna Kay Marcwn ,
82.25 Acres, Salem.
Romie C. Fox, Doris E . Fox
to James Isaac Morgan ,
Thelma Morgan, 55 Acres,
Scipio.
Alfred J . Foster, deed. to
Genevra Foster, Emily Tur ner, E. Pauline Foster, Zelia
Weyand, Cert. of Trans .,
Columbia.
Merlin Teets, Ida Teets \o
Robert Stout, Danford Stout,'
· Parcel, Columbia.
Ruby M. Halliday to Pauline
H. Atkins, Parcels, Rutland •
Scipio.
D. Layton Sayre, Doris Sayre
to Rodney R. Grove, Lola M.
Grove, Parcels, Salisbury.
"Two Easements Leading ·
Creek.
·
Fred B. Goeglein, Barbara
A. Goeglein to Dorothy A.
Gooding, Lot No. 8, Riggscrest
Manor, Orange.
John W. Arbaugh, Ethel
Arbaugh to Thomas Autherson,.
Marie Au\herson, Parcels, Sec.
6, Orange.
Nine Easements Columbus &amp;
Southern Ohio Electric Co.

'

•

Watergate
scandal
something Nixon has sttadfastly denied.
Acwrdlng to papers ftled
Monday in U.S. District Coll;rt,
the prosecutors believe lhe
mooey came from a $100,000
campaign contributioo t.om
billionaire Howard Hughes •nd
a $50,000 dooation from !ood
chain owner A.D. Davis. •
Paul R. Michel, an assialant
to prosecutor Leon Jaworlld,
revealed the grand jury investigatioo in papers op~g
a Rehow attempt to suppress a
subpoena.
continued from page I
The lengthy affadavlt aald
firmed.
· there ·was evidence at ltast
During those two months seven different bank acco1111ts
Congress oonducted a thorough had been used "to conceal the
scrutiny of aU Ford's fi~anclal sou~ce of payments mad"! at
records and his political Mr. Rehozo's instructions and
career.
to launder pollitical campaign
R!lckefeUer was expected to contributions."
"'
undergo another thorough . The evidence, he said, was
investigation, delaying the that during a on..year period
swearing In for some time. Rebozo spent more than $36,000
House Republican Leader John for improvements on homes
J. Rhodes said Mooday in occupied by himself and NQ:on
Chicago he thinks Democrats In the Key Biscayne, Fla.
might stan confirmation unW
compound.
"'
after the November elections.
"During this period, Mr.
RockefeUer said he first
Rebozo apparently did .no\
learned Saturday that he was
have sufficient cash avall.l\llle
in serious consideration, and
to ·make these deposits irom
that he had been informed of
any known source other than
his choice Monday night.
the political campaign conAsk~d
if he thought ·trtbutions ... from represenRockef~ller would be contatives of Howard R. Hughes
firmed by Congress, Ford
and froln A.D. Davis,"
replied, "! wouldn't have
Michel's affadivi\ said. ; .
picked a man who wouldn't
The prosecutor said that on
HIRT SIGNS LEASE
be."
June 28, 1972, RebOzo transNEW ORLEANS (UP!)
While talking with the conferred
$4,562.38 remaining in
Trumpeter AI Hirt signed a gressional leaders, Ford re- ·
lease for a new cafe in a · marked that the nomination the 1968 "Florida for N'ixqn"
renovated section of the was "a well kept secret" and treasury into one of the seven
•I
French Market Monday. While " ! think he's the right man." ' hank accounts.
On
the
same
day,
he
WithHirt said his French Quarter
Ford,
introducing
nightclub will remain open, he Rilckefeller to the news media drew from the account $5,000,
planned to spend as much time after the announcement, said which was sent to New York
as possible in the new he wo\))d be "a good le.am jeweler Harry Winston to buy a
set ·of platinum and diamond
restaurant. It will be named player."
earrings which Nixon gave his
the Cafe St. Cecile after the
The President said he picked
patron saint of music, he said. Rockefeller only after looking wife Patricia on her 60th birthday,
at aU the choices and that the
"Therefore," Michel Said,
nominee was his choice uthe
''funds originally"'derived ap;.
APPEAL DENIED
one in good judgment under aU
paren\ly
from campaign
WASHINGTON (UP! )
the circumstances."
contributions (were) deposited
With the single word,
Rockefeller again praised
at
Mr. Rehow's bank and W\ll'e
'"'denied," Supreme Court Ford. "His own dedication and
ultimately
used to purchase
Justice Lewis F. Powell has openness had reopened hope
diamond
ruled that Lt. William L. Calley and faith," RockefeUer said. platinum and
earrings
for Mrs. Nixon." .
Jr. must stay in prison while · He added, "I'D look forward
He
said
· the grand jury is
his attorneys appeal his with privilege . and honor to
investigating
"the receipt and
murder conviction arising serving the President of the
expenditure for person8J purfrom the killings at My Lai.
United States and through him
poses ot" political campaign
the American people."
contributions," and at least 12
different criminal violations
could be involved.
LOCAL TEMPS
The subpoena was for
The temperature in downrecords held by one of Rebozo's
FAMILY NIGHT
town Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Family Night will be ob- law firms which handled funds
Tuesday was 77 degrees under
sunny skies .
·
served and a potluck dinner spent on the Nixon homes. All
will be served when the Meigs three senior partners in the
County Women's Fellowship firm were named - Thomas H.
meets- Thursday, Aug. 22, at Wakefield, Robert Hewitt, and
HOME UNDAMAGED
Garth A. Webster.
There was no damage to the 6:30p.m. at Forest Acres Park.
The lawyers sought to sup.
mobile home of the Mitchell
press the evidence on the basis
PICNIC SLATED
Family, 8:i0 Bosworth St., at
of
attomey-dlent privilege, but
Past pfficers of Racine
11 !33 a.m. Monday. The
prosecutors argued that there
Middleport Fire Dept. was Chapter 134 O.E.S. will hold can be no privilege where
called to the scene when a fire their annual family picnic "evidence of possibly criminal·
was tl)reatened by a defective Thursday, at 6:30 p.m. at the or fraudulent wrongdoing ~·
Masonic Temple.
toaster.
ists."
WASHINGTON !UP!) - A
Watergate grand jury l.s lnves\lgatlng charges that
Charles G. " Bebe 11 ~bozo
illegaUy spent at least $41,000
in campaign funds on homes
owned by Richard Nixon and to
buy a set of diamood earring!
for the former president's wife.
It was' one of the few charges
that the President himself
personaUy profited from the

Ford picks

li

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I

l

t
t

:_.r.;_'
!.

;.;::::*:m.:~$*'.::.:m;::::o;:::.::--::::::::::::::::::!-:=!- :=:=::::::::::~::::::-:::~~;:;::;:;::;:::~::~-:r.«.X::

59 N. Second St .
Middleport, o.

.._ . . . ._.__. . . . . . .

Ford .gets In
bid for 76

1

uv~;;::~:::'i~'~::::n;i;/~t
By United Press lnlernalional
LOS ANGElES - POLICE TUESDAY CAPTURED the
aUeged "Alphabet Bomber" who claimed responsibility for the
deadliest civil airport bombing in U. S. history and had
threatened a wave of terror.
Assistant Police Chief Daryl Gates identified the suspect as
Muharebn Kuregovic, 31, a Yugoslav who entered the Uhited
States in 1967. Gates and William Morrison, assistant FBI·
director in charge ofthe Los Angeles office, said Kuregovic was
allegedly the "Isaac Rasim" who had left at least.two bombs.
They said he would be charged with murder in the explosion at
Los Angeles International Airport which killed three persons and
injured 35 on Aug. 6.

•

Our entire stock ·

-

one day sale.
eMISSES, 6 TO 20
•JUNIORS, 3 TO 15
I .

eHALf SIZES to 24Vz

Elberfelds 'n Pomeroy

1

JON P!ERCE, left, and Benjle O'Donnell give the final coat of paste wax to these century
old church pews before being returned to Gallipolis Grace United Methodist Church.

en tine
Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area
·VOL. XXVI

NO. 91

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21 , 1974

•

ev

IDI

•

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CtNTS

on

The Meigs County Commissioners Tuesday voted to place a
2.75 mill levy on the November ballot for the operation of the
school for the mentally retarded and approved the old Carleton
College campus as the location for the new school. Both acti~ns
were recommended by the Meigs County Board of Mental
Retardation..
A new school was approved by Meigs County voters last
November.
The final decision as to whether the school will be located on
the Carleton College property rests with the 21-member board of
trustees of Carleton College, long ago defljllcl as a going in- .

Carleton.
In 1873 the hoard of trustees of Carleton College leased the 5.5
acres to Isaac Carleton, Jr., for a period of 99 years in return for
remuneration offered by him to help complete the college,
through donations by his father and otlier Syracuse residents.
The hoard of trustees of . Carleton College ·once again
received control ollhe land Jan. 1, 1972, upon the expiration of
the lease.
President of the Carleton College Board of Trustees Is Orville .
Crooks, a longtime res.ident of Syracuse.
The Col1.Pge of Trustees normally meet ·onecannuaH.y / I'h&lt;lughsHtution. ·
!he matter of donating the land for the school fqr ,the mentally
The trustees are expected to make their decision following retarded was discussed at a meeting earlier this year, it was
receipt of the attorney general's decision of how the land can be · agreed no action would be taken pending the attorney general's
disposed of. Meigs County's prosecuting attorney, Bernard Fultz ruling .
.
asked for a formal ruling at the request of the trustees.
It is now expected that the hoard will meet a second time in
The carleton College property was originally donated in the
1974 should the attorney general rule that the land can be legally
1860s by the late Isaac Carleton for educational purposes. The 5.5 disposed of by the hoard.
acres proposed for the school for the mentally retarded is the
IN OTHER BUSINESS, the food handlers met with comremaining portion of a 10 acre tract originally donated by

missioners to discuss the state health department rules and
regulations and the effect it has on them.
It was the feeling of the food handlers . that the commissioners controlled 1/h~ther ·inspection of restaurants was
made by the local health department. The state health depart·
men\ has recimtly taken over the inspection. They were advised
that the commissioners had no control over the situation.
Three members of ·a citizens committee alSO met with the
commissioners to discuss conditions at the Meigs County
Children's Ho111e and the treatm~nt of the children. Thomas
Well.vef ·and-hi§. wife, superintendent and rtlatron, have jUi&gt;mitted.their resignations but, as yet the commissfonez:s haVe
taken no action .
During a special meeting of the Meigs Cow1ty Board of
Mental Health and Mental Retardation Monday night the hoard
approved the hiring of Eric Chambers, Middlei&gt;ort, as the Work·
shop instructor in the community classes. Attending Tuesday'~
meeting were Robert Clark, Warden Ours and Henry Wells,
commissioners and Martha Chambers, clerk.

'

Board schedules Meigs Loc al ·buildi.ng checks
Plans for the annual building
inspections in preparation for
the opening of school Tuesday
and several appointments of
non-teaching and teaching
personnel were made by the
Meigs Local School District
Board of Education in special
session Tuesday night.
Thursday and Friday the
building inspections will be
made with the following
assigned to conduct - them :
Carol Pierce at Salem Center,

Cyclist hurt
in collision

One person was hospitalized
and· another treated later for
injuries in· a car ~motor cycle
DETROIT - DESPITE PRESIDENT FORD'S CALL for a accident Tuesday at 5: 15 p.m.
hold-the-line stand on prices, Ford Motor Co., says it will follow in Sutton Twp. on CR 30 at
the lead of General Motors in implementing pri~ hikes Forest Run .
- ·- --· -·-··-·
averaging $500 for its 1975 model cars. Noting that tiefore-tax
The Meigs County Sheriff's
profits per car now stand at less than $100 while cost rise at the Dept. said Robert Harden, Rt.
rate of $50 per month per car, Ford President Lee A. lacocca said l , MinersviUe, was traveling
Tuesday that. the corppany had no alternative but raise prices. northwest on CR :iO on a
'How can we not take a big price increase?" he asked, citing motorcycle when he struck a
cost increases: The No.2 autoffillker indicated ih late July that its car driven by Carolyn Salser,
prices would be up about 8 per cent - or $418 - when the new Rt. I, Minersville, as she pulled
models debut In September. But, Ford claims, costs have risen from TR 117 onto CR 30.
faster than anticipated and the increase should be in llne with the
Harden sustained a fra cGM price hikes whic~ brought sharp crltlclsrn from the White tured jaw and other facial
'
'
House.
injuries. Mrs. Salser was injured but not immediately
MIAMI BEACH - DECLARING'·. THA T "we csilnot be the treated.
world's policeman," Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger said
The Pomeroy E-R Squad
Tuesday night the United States will not be pressured Into any transported Harden to Holzer
military intervention .in Cyprus. "We_ will not yield to pres~ure Modica! Center. There were no
but we will always listen to reason," Kissinger lpld the AmeriCan citl!tions. There was med!wn
Legion convention .
·
·
.
damage to the Salser car and
. "We wiU act on foreign policy as trustees of the future, severe damage to Hardeil's
consclo.us !bat we will be judged ort how well we built an enduring cycle.
peace and no\.how often we bowed_to the emotional demands ~
A second accident was in·
the moment. "Our attitude wUl he that we cannot be the world s vesllgated Tuesday at 11 :45
policeman. '1
a.m. in. the VIllage of Racine at
Applauded 14 times during' his speech, and given a brief the Intersection of Vine and
standing ovation at the end, Kissinger told the legionnaires that Sixth sts.
America must remain a military power "second to none .•"
.
Francis Morris, 81, Rl. 1,
Racine, was traveling north on
A.MARIU..O, TEX. - SHER!FFT. L. BAKER has agreed to Sixth St. when he apparently
oome of tlle demands of five inmates who held a hostage at ran a stop sign and struck a car
knifepoint for more than 24 hours in the county jail, a spokesman traveling wes~ on Vine St.
said today. The spokesman would· not divulge what concessions driven by Heory Dale Roush,
were made only to say they Involved the Individual '.llses of each 82, RaCine. '
, o1 the priSOners.
· ·
. There: were no Injuries or
At no. time , the spokesman said, has the sheriff agreed to arrests. There was slight to
(Continued on page lG!
medium property damage.

'

of fall dresses
is included in this

pews fr om its balcony for the
resWrBtion project. Th us, the
Pomeroy firm has b&lt;.'en able to
replace all inll'icCJtc decorative
pi e ~es at the ends of the pews.
In some cases, plywood
replacement pieces had been
added at the ends of some of
the pews, but with the extra
pews, original ends have
rt! pl ac:: ed the temporary
plywood pieces.
Some sccUims of the church
seating had cracks in the wood
whi ch Seyler has also
corrected .
Taking on the restoration
/Project in volved inge ni ous
retoolin ~ . The firm is equipped
wi th a large lank in which
fu rniture is submerged
preparatory to its being
stripped of il' original finish.
However, the pews were too
large to fit into the tank.
SeyJcr conceived the idea of
building an elevated platform
(Continued on page 16 )

•

Joe Sayre at Harrisonville,
Robert Snowden and Pierce at
Rutland, Snowden at Bradbury, Virgil King at Salisbury,
WendeU HoOver in Pomeroy,
George Hargraves and L. W.
McComas, Middleport, Joe ·
Sayre, Hoover and McComas
at the high school and
Hargraves and McComas at
the junior high school.
The hoard appointed Ronald
Logan as golf coach and Jean
Shaver, Cheshire, as an
English teacher, and Maudie
Lynn Burnette, Lakin, as a
special education teacher .
Mary Lou Hawkins was aP:c.
pointed full time custodian and
John I". Raub a substitute
custodian .
John Manley and Lou
Osborne. members of Pomeroy ·
Council, discussed conversion
of the former senior high
school building into a new city
hall for Pomeroy village .
Village officials have discussed
the possibilities of securing the
unused building for a consideration of $1. Osborne and
Manley
said
extensive

1

Perfect for any OC·
&gt;&lt; casion.
.•:•

992· 2556 POMEROY, 0 . .

By Bob Hoeltlcb
A Pomeruy firm has an
lrnporwnt role In the $200,1.100
restori!tion program of Grace
U n i~A&gt;J Methodis t Church in
Gallipolis.
The 45 an tique pews of the
church - estiJrujtl!d to be from
99 to 104 years old - have been
delivered to Modern Chemicals
here for restoration.
The firm Is In the process of
restoring the pews, 29 uf which
sea t 16 persons and 16 which
seat eight. The pews, which
have unc1crgone extensive
processing at the Pomeroy
plant of Dick Seyler , were
originally custom built fr om
white oak and walnut .
They have square nails, an
indication of their age. Some
already fin ished are restored
to their natural original beauty
and refl ect the excellent workmanship which went into them.
Fortunately , the church was
able to provide some "extra "

'

WASHINGTON (UP!) - President Ford has every intention of
running in 1976 - an ill omen for Democrats and those
Republicans who nurture presidential ambitions of their own.
Ford revealed his plans to Nelson A, Rockefeller when he
offered the former New York governor the vice pre"sidency. 0 He
has every intention of it," said Rockefeller when asked if Ford
told him he would run in 1976. "That was my impression, and
that's what l urged."
The decision, generaUy anticipated by politicians in both
parties, adds a burden for the Democrats that would not have
existed if President Nixon had survived his second term running against an incumbent President.
·
The last time voters ousted a
president was Herbert Hoover ticket in 1976. ''What he wants
· in 1002 and that was in the to do in regards to a running
middle of the depression.
mate is up to him," Rockefeller
There are also a number of said. Ford " talked about
Republicans who had em- himself but not about me."
bryonic missions to test their
So far, the only Republican of
chances of winning the 1976 any prominence to suggest that
Ford might drop Rockefeller
- roomlnati01r" In this group were California after two years is Sen. Barry
Gov. Ronald Reagan and Sen. M. Goldwater, dean of the
Charles H. Percy of illinois. conservative wing.
Others who had been menMost other conservatives,
tioned
were
Tennessee most of whom called
. senators William Brock and Rockefeller a . good choice,
Howard H. Baker, former shied away frorn soeculatin~
attorney general · Elliot about a vice-presidential
Richardson, and, before Nixon candidate in 1976.
resigned, both Ford and
By keeping Rockefeller in
Rockefeller.
1976, Ford could.have peace in
With Ford running, all those the party by not giving anyone
plans will have to be put, in the a head start for 1980. By then,
words uf Percy, on the " back Rockefeller, 72, would be too
burner" and in the ' deep old.
freeze."
Choosing a younger man,
Rockefeller also revealed however, would also have
that he has no commitment of advantages for Ford. He could,
any kind from Ford that the in effect, groom a possible
fanner governor will be on the successor.

DRESS
SALE

'6.00

Dudley's Florist

RICK SEYLER, SON OF THE OWNER, works on a church pew from Grace United
Methodist Church in Gallipolis being restored by Modern Chemicals of Pomeroy. The pew is on
an elevated platform built especially so that the firm could accept the project because its
stripping solution tank would no\ accommodate. the pews.

•

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

;:~

:?

Beauty rene~ed
•
•
rn ancrent pews

•

••

•3495
·Karr &amp; Van Zandt

'

Pomeroy firm project

Evelyn Oark
heading local
h
Smit campaign

.

remodeling and redecoration
in the amount of from $15,000 to
$2&lt;1,000 would be carried out to
convert the school structure
into a functional villag~ hall.
The hoard will investigate the
mattl!l' and the village officials
will return to a Sept. 3 meeting
for the decision .
The Rev. W. H. Perrin.
director of the Meigs County
Program· on Alcoholism and
Drug Abuse, explained the
program since the district is
one of Meigs C~unty 's biggest
employers . The board was
receptive to the program which
educates referral personnel
and also would offer an
educational program for
students.
Perrin announced a meeting
will be held on Oct. 22 at the
Trinity Church in Pomeroy to
provide training for referral
personnel of firms and
businesses which have in ~
dlcated interest in the
program . The board felt that

Weather
Clear and warm tonight with
lows in the mid to upper 60s.
Partly cloudy and warm again
Thursday . Highs Thursday in
the mid BOs to lower 90s.

the program might be adaptable to the in-service program
for the teaching staff of the
district and will confer with the
faculty In-service committee
on the matter. The board did
not act on j~ining the program,
but asked Perrin to return to a
later meeting for a decision .
The hoard set the price of
milk In the schools at five cents
rather than six cents this fall
and accepted Charles Johnson
of Vinton County as a tuition

'

· chases of gas had to be made
direct .,,from service stations.
Submitting bids on tires were
the Pomeroy Home and Auto
Co. and the Meigs Tire Center.
It was agreed to study the bids
further . John Beaver, district
transportation supervisor,··
reviewed supplies and any
other problems with the board.
It was agreed to proceed with
the construction of a grease pit
to be used in serving buses, and
!Continued on page 16)

$10 million expansion
.

'

.

.

announced by Goodyear
· POINT PLEASANT - The
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.
is spending more than $10
miUion in a significant e x~
pansion of its polyester resin
production at its plant new'
here.
The project is planned over
the next two years, according
to Robert E. Workman ,
Goodyear's vice-president for
general products.
·
"As one of the nalion 's
leading producers and users of

·

polye s ter resin and fiber, maintaining Goodyear 's share
Goodyear is expanding to help of these markets in \he future,"
meet the anticipated need of Workman added.
more than four billion pound . This polyester resin exper year polyester market by pansion follows on the heels of
1980for tire cord, textile fibers , Goodyear 1s recent con ..
monofilament and other uses," struction In Scatt,shoro, Ala ., of
the world's first textile mill to
Worlanan said.
,.' G oo dy e ar pr ese ntl y process resin into finished tire
produces one-third of the fabric under one roof,
Workman estimated that by
nation 's industrial yarn resin
and I 0 pet. of the textile .1976 annual u. s. polyestl!r
filament polymer . This ex- consumption for tire cord will
pa nsion pl a n is ai me d at reach 315,000 lbs., tex tile
lilame nt wit! total 1.3 billion
lbs., and all other uses will
climb to 1.9 billion lbs. - a
total market of 3.5 billion
pounds.
Kyger Creek L.S.D., has the
This makes polyester the
lowest; 19.10 mills. The nation 's lea~ln g man-made
average mills .on a state-wide fiber, far surpassing nylon.
basis is •8.56.
Original constructl.on of U1e
FJfty-two counties out of the Point Pleasant polyester plant
88 have an average of 45 mills in 1959 was Intended for ap·
or more and eight of these pay pare! fiber resin.
more than 50 mills.
However, when Goodyear
Meigs County's average 1973 developed polyester with
ta xra t e, accor d'mg toRous h ' ls strengths
than steel,greater
It wentper
on pound
to In·
38.6o mills with Lebanon and
Sutton Towns~ips - Southern traduce the first polyester cord
L.s.D. hav1ng th e 1eao t' 34. .20 tires
Slnc.Ine 1962.
then, U. S. maJIUIIC·
mills, and Rutland Vlllage the turers have produced an
highest, 46.60 mills. Seventy- estimated
miDlon JIOiyester
605
five percent of the tax rat.e goes . cord auto tlrf)J, and thi' ..~
for ·schools, I percent to three of every fOil!' auto
,operate the county, 5 percent to built ~re reln!orctd wltll
municipalities alid 4 percent to
townships.
· polyesl.e~.

Millage WI.l come down

Geolge C. Smith, Republican
·
.
candidate for Ohio Attorney
.
The average millage against end confusion and misleading
General, announced today that
Evelyn Clark, of 106 Pleasant . real property in Meigs County · statements th
have been
Ridge, Pomeroy, will serve as will decreas e, though not . rpade about the ecent reapchairwoman of Smith 's necessarily dollars actually praisal.
campaign in Meigs County.
paid in· taxes, once the recent
Roush also rele sed perSmith, 39, Prosecuting . At- reappraisal is figured and· tlneilt facts in a recent
torney for Franklin County taken off present millage statistical analysis of
es by
won
the
Republican according to County Auditor the Real Estate Equali ation
nomination for Ohio Attorney James E. Roush.
Section of the Sillte Boa of
The
auditor
predicted
.
l
l
th
M
Genera n e ay pnmary.
.
even Tax Appeals.
He-· is presently serving his further reductions in millage
It shows that out of e 88
fourth year as Prosecuting after the subdivision budgets counties in the state of Ohio,
Attorney for Fran kll n C.oun ty. ar e re viewed and ap proved . Geailga county - South
His experience includes 15 Roush,ln a move to Improve Russell VIllage, has \he highest
of local tax mills in the state, 81.70
years in state, local , and unders\!'ndlng
COlin ty public law practice.
government and taxes, said mllls. Of this, 9.79 percent goes
Mrs. Clark is Republican three public meetings Will be for c9unty operation , 75.03
tolln ty chairwoman . She and held to Inform the public of the • percent for schools and 15.18
her husband, ·c. E .. have two, lax structure, how It works,
percent lot munlclpall\les .
sons, David and Steven .
how it affects taxpayers, and to
Gallia County -,Addlson _TIVf·•
.

student. The bid · of the
Downing-Childs Insurance Co.
Was accepted on insurance of
buses and other vehicles. The
Downing • Childs bid at
$4,059.47 was the only . bid
submitted.
There were rio bids submitted on gasoline, oil, antifreeze and grease but it was
informally agreed to continue
purchasing supplies from the
Texaco Co. Last year during
the gasoline shottage pur-

'

U;...,

l

•

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