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•

12 - The Daily SentineJ, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aug. 22,1974

2,000 see first drawing'·
PARMA, Ohio (UPI)- The
first drawing of the Ohio Lottery was held here today in this
aeveiand suburb before a
crowd of about 2,000 whlcll in.
eluded five $20 winners. Rep.
Ronald Mottl, D-Panna, the
"father of the lottery" called it
"a tremendous display for
Ohio." ·

Parma said, " I didn't tbink I
had a chance In Ute world."
The five $20 winners will be
among thousands of other $20
winners who wiU remain eligi·
ble for the first $1 million
drawing to be held six to 12
weeks from now.
''I'm feaUy excited about
Utls," said Charles Hudio, 4~.

The single winning nwnber

Parma, an employe of the

was 178 (one-seven-eight) and Cleveland
Electric
the double winner was 264-002 llluminating Co. "It's a great
(two-six-four - zero-zero-two) . thing. I didn't think 1 would win
Jean Gordon: Parma, a
housewife and one of the $20
wirmers said " it's a great
experience," while another $20
wlnner, Terry Pinta , 21,

lxlt I did,"
The drawing culminated
years of effort for MotU, who
first intr&lt;&gt;jluced the lottery
legislation.
•'This is a tremendous
display fQr Ohio," said MotU,
"and for three and a half years
of
Ieglslative
effort.
I
congratulatf' everyone who
helped get the lottery bill
passed. Our hopes aU came
true today and the lottery bill
paased .

•.

"This is the day we have long
been waiUng for," said David
Leahy, "tryInc to put together
the best lottery in t~ world.
"I thank the governor for his
effOfto on behalf of this lottery
and to Ron MotU !Of his great
persistence In getting the issue
through the Legislature.
" I believe In the long run lhe
lottery will serve the human
needs of the people and that is
the main objective," said
r
Leahy.

.

II

!"'lsses and Juniors sizes
In Bas ic and Fall

Slump
Continued from page 1
a $150.4 billion annual rate.
This was off from the $16 billion
first quarter rise .
The profit picture in both
quarters has been distorted by
inflation. Virtually all of the
profit gains have been due to
increases in inventory profits,
which are the gains generated
by the rise in inventories
between the time of purchase
and eventual resale.
The GNP report came a day
after the Labor Department
reported the consumer price
index for July went up 0.8 per
cent, bringing the overall increase to almost 12 per cent
during the last year. The Labor
Department's inflation index,

Funds stand at $206,889

now running at a seasonally

The balance in all Pomeroy
Village
was 5206,888.85 at
adjusted rate of about 11.7 per the end funds
of July according to a
cent, is .based on the narrower report submi.t ted to Pomeroy
measurement of retail price Council Monday1 nigh' by Jane
Walton, clerk.
changes.
Active funds, r~elpts, ex- ·
pendjtures and balances
respectively were: general,

Fire

$6,477.40 ; $9,460.13, 55,629.04 ;
water

Continued from page 1 "

stock. Mrs. Kloes said last
night that she believed her
insurance would cover losses of
merchandise to a great extent.
She will have to hold a "lire
sale" but did not know about
her future plans.
All of the winter · mer·
chandise is damaged and
cannot be, replaced sinc.e It
must be ordered months In
advance. She and her husband,
Manning, however, expressed
relief that no one had been
Injured in the blaze.
During the time of the lire
the Pomeroy Fire Dept. stood
ready · to assist if needed.
Fisher expressed his thanks to
the Pomeroy group.
Ingels said that )le has insurance on the structure but
doubted it would cover repairs
. that will be needed on the
building. The Kiddie Shoppe
has been in the location for only
a lew months.

well

improvement,

WED. nlRU FRI.
Roar once again
with the original
movie casL

lngo Pr eminger Produc tion

ALSO

ca.on 0'1 DE LUI{("

MEIGS THEATRE

Coolville ·hoy

street, no receipts, $2,048.63,
S-488 .92 ; water operating,

$9,011.40, $8,463.45, ($3,117.18) ;

guaranty meter, S325, $225,
$5,.499 .96; water improvement,
no receipts, $10.31. no balance;
parking meter, $2,.405, no ex -

struck by car

$286,177.94, $161,232.56.

listed in satisfactory condition
at Veterans Memorial Hospi!&lt;ll
where he was admitted after
being struck by car on SR 681

$3.264.41. $169.49, S41 ,442.0l ;
no expenditures, $4,234.26;
total In all tunds, receipts,
expenditures and balances
respe~tively were, $336,105.25,
$286,247.43, $206,888.85.

Receipts, expenditures and
balances i ii lna.c tlve funds
bond
retirement,
Alan Wilson, 14, Coolville, is . were,

· near Darwin.

a

sewer bond improvement,.S6SO,

Wilson was rushed to the
hospital by the Pomeroy ~~
ambulance of SEOEMS.
GRID PRACTICE
The Gallia-Meigs Post State
Junior High school football
Highway Patrol said Ute youth practice in the Meigs Local
walked into the path of a School District will get
vehicle operated by Sarah E.
underway immediately alter
CaldweU. 53, of Pomeroy, at scllool
Tuesday,
.BOys
~ : 40 p.m. Wednesday . No
coming out for the team
charge was filed.
should bring gym shorts and
tennis oboes for the practice
CHURCH PICNIC
session in Middleport.
The Heath United MethOdist
Church picnic will be held
Sunday. Aug: 2:\, at Ft. M;eigs.
Those wbo plan to attend are to
meet at the church at 5:30p.m.
1n case of rain the event will be
cancelled.

Golf tryouts

RATE HIKE
Effective August 15, the rate
of interest for loans granted to
purchasers of VA-owned
properties changed from 9
percent to 9'h percent, the
Veterans Administration
announced today.

WASHINGTON (UP!) .,.&lt;
·Treasury Secretary William E.
Simon today joined Feder&amp;
Rese.Ve Chainnan Arthur F.
Burns In pushing for a $10
billion cut in the federal
budget.

F_reddie Moore , M i n i b ike;

8·2'2-Jt c

l PG)

Re.,lE s"t;t efo~-;;;----

206 ACRE farm with 33 acres of
corn

and

farm

equipment .

Contact James Connor , 1855
Silver Rldge Road , or phone

Show Starts 1 p.m.

992 -272 0.

.

Ronald Logan, Meigs High
School golf coach, asks all
persons interested in going out
for the Meigs golf team to be at
the Pomeroy Golf Course
Friday at 1 p.m. ln case of bad'
weather they will meet at the
high school.

Simon hacking
$10 billion cut

diShes , and clothing. Set.· and
Sun day, 9 till 6.

· Goldie Hawn

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

. ··:-·.·~·.-,...,........... -..... ... . .
'• "'·'-............
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..:·:·.~!•':·:;.·!-:·:~.;~-:-:-:-:-w
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• • • • ' ' •. , • ••..-..._.,.,.,.,
......... •......o~··-·:o:o ··.-,..,.,
.
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,•.-:,o.:,~.-:.:.:•:o:·:·.·~

::~
~::

N

;*::::

'·'•
:·:-

···•

~~
.·:-

Testifying before the new
Senate Budget Committee
Wednesday, Burns argued for
the slash as a psychological
signal to business and unions
that the government is inient
on reducing inflation.
Simon, wbo was Interviewed
on the CBS MQrning News, said
a $10 billion cut favOfed by the ·
new administration is possible.
. "I think excessive federal
spending qestroys the confidence' of the American people
and our ablllty to get control
over the economy arxl over
inflation," Sirilon sald. "We
have to restore that oonfldence." ~
Burns said the Immediate
effect of a $10 billion cut In the
$305 billion budget would be to
spur the stock market, bring
down short-term Interest rates
lind thus release forces in the
economy "that wOWCt make for
m&lt;l'e jobe, not fewer."
·

__.____

\

th;

i::::

Admitted -

LOCAL TEMPS

.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
•:w-~·ci&gt;-·--&lt;~
......... .,...~:~::!».~:::::::-:-:.:-:::·=~·~:-:-:·;·:·;·:·:·:·:·:·:·:
.... .............. ..,·:·:·,··:·:·:·:·:
...... ..
\

·~

Pomeroy;

Irene

Vetera• MemorlaUfooplt.l

skies.

Baker Furniture

Plea&amp;aDt Valley Hospital
DISCHARGES - Letha _
Kelly, New Haven; Famous
Hart, Point Pleasant; Loretta
Devault, Leon; Mrs. John I
Bush, Mason; Mrs. John Lyon
and son, Point Pleasant; Roy
Bitting, Gallipolis; Connie
Berkeley, Point Pleasant ;
Charles Riffle, Jr., Point
Pleasant; Lorain Crump,
Leon; Mary Bird, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Olin Snyder,
Point Plea8ant; Harold
Whittington, Leon; Mrs.
Sal1luel Bennett, Clifton; Mrs.
Herber! W!Utilngton, Grimms
Landing; William Bonecutter,
Point Pieasant; Mrs. William
Lambert, Ashton; Mary
Dalton, Point ·Pleasant;
Barbara LawhOrn, Bidwell;
Oscar Heaberlin@, Ironton;
David SuiUvan, Leon; Richard
Kiser, Sandyville; Walter
King, Harrisonville; Fay
Honaker, Palm Springs, Fla.;
Delores McGra"', GallipoUa
Ferry; Brice DunC811, .\Jiple
Grove.

TemperatQre In downtown
Pomeroy Thlllllday at 11 a.m.
was 79 degrees under SWUlY

MAi!Jt.JAGE UCENSE
Ly~n Lee Mallory, 27,
Racine, and Deett Rebecca
8alser, 21, Racine.

:

1

this sale.

I

PRICE

!

Two Day Sale

Allee Mullilw;

Cheshire; Ruth Ann Mulford.
Pomeroy; Janice Wright,
Midtllep&lt;rt;, Evelyn Linder~,
Pomeroy; Jlck Landen,
Pomeroy; Allen Wilson,
Coolville.
1DI!chargod - Ralph Devil,
Edith McCoy, Thomall_ Cook,
Judith Steinmejt,, carolyn
Casto, Shirley . Landaker '
Michael Hill, Jr., William
Buchanan," John HlllllleU.

MIAMI BEACH (UP!) The American Legion, the
country 's largest veterans
organization, closed its 56th
annual convention Thursday
with · reaffirmation of its opposition to general amnesty for
Vietnam · conflict draft

. Sale! Boys $1 .39

w~~!~r~~s~ s~l~i~l~llo:ANR~:S69c. Iln. !.~~~ 10~~

Sizes 4 to 8.

I

SALE _PRICES

!

Accessones,

1

.

2 for $100

Sale

Fits
lo
Full cushloo tube _socks.·
well known make . Whtte with

1

!

j

I
1
J

color top.

evaders.

884
r-~~~-------~~~::~~:~~~~~~:-1-------~
I
1
1
Second

.

·

Sale Prices!

I

··

·

Two Day Sale!

!

1 BOYS FASHION JEANS . .
·1 AND DOUBLE KNIT SLACKS

l1

Slim sizes 8 to 12. Student sizes up to 31 I
waist and you select correct length. I

Boys 8.95 &amp; 8.50 Slacks-- .. Sale 6.68
Boys 7.98 Slacks . . . _ . _ Sale 5.88
Boys 7,49 &amp; 7.50· Sl ac ks-- .. Sale 5.68
Boys 6 98 Slacks

·

1 Boys

--· - - ·

I
1
1

S I 5 38

ae ·

S. 95 Slacks - - · - · · Sale 4.68

.
Mens_ and Young Mens 5)2.95 Wrangler :
Sizes 34 to46, .................... Sale $10.29 '
Mens_ and Young Mens $12.95 Mr. Leggs
S1zesS, M, Land XL ............. Sale$10.29 ·
Mens an d y oung Me ns Le e s 14.4 9 J ackets
Sl'zes34 to so
Sal $12 29
Boys $6.95 Wra;~j;;·:i~~k~;;···.... e
· ·
. Sizes8to18 ........................ SaleSS.29 ;I
L1tt1e . Boys $5.95 Wrangler Jackets
5tzes4thru7•••••••••••••. ~- ••••••••SaleS4.29
Boys Lee $10.98 Western Jackets
Sizes 4 to 18 ....................... ,Sale $9.29 '

I

~~k~~ length

!

l

I

Bl CYCLES

!

jackets and longer car coat

I ~~~~~ thi~el:a~:~he

SALE PRICES

~-

AND ALL AJ SALE - PRICES

Nylons · corduroys· wools · cotton polyester~ 10 speed bikes · five speeds . three speeds.
blends.
·
'
1 Standard 26 inch bikes . . 20 inch Beginner
This two day sale includes our entire stock . I ~icy~les. A fine sele~llon.

I

bicycle you want and save

j

~

r-~~~~~r=~-1

I

I
·I

I

T

1 Waist length jackets and longer car -~
· ·
·
·
I co~t length. Corduroy . wool plaids . .
WESTERN JEANS
qu1lted nylons · aU nylons . Polyester 1
I
l4oz . indlgoLee~lderdenlm.
! a n· d co tt'?n bl en d s. 1nc 1ude our entire I · Zipper
fly · slightly .flared · cut 1
I stock .. S1zes . 36 to 50 • .All excellent I slim through hips and thighs . ..1..
selection.
.
i
I
. SALE PRICES
.
$9.88

ube Socks
. '.

c

Filssizes10to15.Fullcusnlon
socks. 78 percent cotton. 22
percent stretch nylon with
color top.

884

.

.

.. ·

I

--;;;n:sA'Lr-t-----;~·o-a:~;;-----L--;;;::-c;;hartt··

!
II

I

on Famous Quality Glidden
inlerior and exterior paints.
Custom

mixed Or shelf stoc
' k.

Ii
I

On sate· at the Mechanic Street

Warehouse..

·

WOODENWARE .

1
1·

Save 20 Percent this. weekend

Bro~!l Duck

.

l

WORK a.ontES

Handcrafted monkey pod salad sets, i
Lazy Susans, Leaf Servers, Fruit ·1
B I Do bl S
The complete line now ready
Troawyss..
u . e_ hell Tr.ays, Square
for you to buy. Coveralls .
SALE PRICES . ·

.!

Housewares, First

Floor

overalls · jackefs . hoods .

dungarees.
All selection
sizes displayed
for your easy
.

1·

· _

Buy what you need now . .

~------~---~------~~~----~~.
---------~~
Two Day Sale!
I
Two Day Sale
TABLE AND SWAG LAMPS .
WORK
Special sale prices on a brand new shipment.

·~

.

UNIFORMS

REG. s29!1i LAMPS ............ SALE

Pants In sizes 29 to 44 waist- and you select your correct
length. Shirts in s izes 141h to 17'12 netk . sleeve lengths 32, ·
33 or 34 Inches.
Very well made · perfect fitt ing -· long wearing Lee work ~
is a
press 50 percent
50
percent co-tton fabric .

!

I f~~~T~iil

I

p~rmanent

polyesf~r,

! •

REG $2400 LAMPS

t'AI J:

••••••••••••~

I ;!l~ncolors .- charcoal, novy, tan. forest green and olive i REG. S18 95 LAMPS

I

I

szr

•

$18 99

SALE $12 99

••• ,,,,,,,,

I

9.98 PA,NTS • • · · · • · . • SALE 8.59
r.

•!

BATH
ENSEMBLES
1. •
•

All FIRST QUALITY

Be sure to see this line line of mens shirts by Van Heusen

, wl'llle sl'lopplng tl'lls weekend.
·
·
You'll like their line looks . correct styling . the new

patterns and colors and most

of

all you'll like the way a

;, Van Heusen 5hlrt fits, looks. washes and wears.

MoM DeJNrtment, First Floor

:

Extra heavy Jacquards in gold, green. pink, blue.

Reg .
Reg .
Reg.

3.00 Bath Towels • . • • • • • Sale 1.69

2 •00 Han d Towes
1 • • • • . . ·• Sale 1.09

80c Wash Cloths • • • · · • • Sale 59c · '

~~~-----~--------JL~---~~~!~~!~----~~
.
.
~

RECORDS

Day
Salal ·

..........

A

N

TAPES
D - .

---·-·-----------........
.

~~

,

~

Our entire st&lt;?Ck of Stereo
LP Albums ~nd .•• Track
Tapes.
' '

SALE .
'

PRICES

----·--·... ·----·--..;. .-. ...
.

....

.

MAIN STORE AND MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE

OPEN

.

BOTH

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

9:30

TO

8 PM
'

......_...E
;

.

,,
•

-

RICHARD HARRIS
Richard . H.
Harris,
Republican candidate for
Ohi o Treasurer, was in
Pomeroy and Middleport
Thursday In ~Is " walking"
campaign to win the office.
Wearing a business suit and
asking him to sign legislation heavy walking boots, Harris
raising Gl bill of rights Is walking around the state
educational benefits for VIet· - he's promised 1,000· mJJes
~ campalgolng. His walk
nam veterans,
- and voted down a began on June 15 and be
California resolution asking reports that he has walked
that wx exemption be revoked . 450 miles since that lime.
for the U.S.. Servicemen's Harris walks five or six ·
hours each day, depending
11'und, which sponsors antiwar
on th e weather. He comr~d shows and antiwar coffee
houses near military inM mented Thursday that he has
stailations. Actress Jane met many " nice people" and
Fonda has been active in thinks the country in southUSSF .
eastern Ohio is " beBuUful".
services in Gallipolis this
spring.

JAMES WAGONSF.LLER

A Legion spokesman said the
organization considered its
stand on amnesty similar to
that outlined by President Ford
in
. . a-speech thls·'week to the
.-

Veterans of Foreign Wars in

Otlcago.
The Legion resolution, approved unanimously, said.
"We reaffirm our oppositlon tO
general amnesty for draft
evaders and military deserters
and urge that each case be
tried on an individual basis and
eacll deserter be dealt with as
described by codes of military
justice."
·
When it was pointed out that
the Pres_ident had not men-

tioned trials in his call for
conditional amnesty, the
spokesman reiterated that the
Legion considered Its position
similar to that of the President
"as we understand it."
The
3,000
delegates
representing

nearly· thre e

million legionnaires also:
-elected James M. Wagonseller, 54, Lancaster, Ohio, a
World War U air gunner, as its
new national commander ;

-sent a telegram to Ford

en tine

.

t--------~5ale!-----~---t----A".;n;;;8i;shiP-;;nT·---·-...,

Jw!!!,~,~!~l!,~.!.~~~""

.. This Is not a time for cyni.. enviable position of making up commander of the Depa~tment
of Ohio in !954-55 and has filled
many committe~ appoinlments
on the national level. He was
spea~er at the Memorial Day

clsm, disillusionment and de· ror lost time ,'' he said.
spair. The knowledge that Our
"l am cor_•ccrncd specifically
system Is, wor~ng _ 1s n'}w rea- with the maantcnance of Amcri son to have faith m that sys- can military strength In the
tern and hope for the future ," race of demands for reduction
Wagonseller said.
of military spending and with

!

!
I
II

·

ments In the perspective or hi•· vclopment of mlli!&lt;lry needs. many years. He was comtory," he said.
.
"We find ourselves in the un- mander of District a then

Economy
•
In slows
1 unt.- 1·1 '76

;

WEST;RNndJ;CSKETS

1· true western styling .

I Boy s. 11 .95 Sf ac ks - - - - - . · Sa Ie 8.88
I Boys 9.95 Slacks - - - - - - Sale 7.48

lI

·

1 Heavy 14 oz . blue d~nim . unlined . slim fitting

I Includes our entire stock . Regular and

As a result of the "expendi· the rejuvenation of the" Ameri·
can spirit which seems to be
near an alt.tlme low ebb ...
Commander Wagon5tller a
realtor and insurance man has
been active in legion ci;cles

Legion reaffirms no amnesty stand

~---------·---.-..--------

!~~d~~~~i~~u~:J~~
!

all colorsorsty~slnall sizes) .

lr ---------------.
~i;e
---···--

SALE PRICES

" possibly the most important

elemenl or national survival is lures for day·lo-day necessities
the need to restore the national of cQmbat in &amp;::lutheasl Asia,"
1
• Wagonseller.sald there .are pres.spirit.
1
' 1 believe it Is essential thnt
surcs for reductions in military
we put present day developM spending and re!learch and de-

SPORTSWEAR
Misses and womens sizes (nor

\

!

Two · Day Sale

~-

:·:.
,::::
.•.

Tht Longer You Own 11 ·
the Mor• You' ll Lik•
N•me.

'
'.

Mens "Lee" Tech Twill

Grueser,

w..•.
..•.

!0::

J

no

expenditures, $18,159.91. Total
receipts , expehditures and
balances In all active funds
respectively were, S332, 190.84,

Notice
4 F~MILY ya~d sele , Rt . 1 3
miles sou th of Midd le port

FRI., SAT., SUN.
AUG. 23-24-25
"THE SUGAR LAND
EXPRESS"

'

cemetery, ·

receipts, $1, 119.32, (508.43) ;

$300,275,$249,911.24, $50.363.76; penditures, $28,34.1.30; utility,
revenue s·haring , ss , 161-, $2, 176.28, $1, 174.29, $21,209.31;
$10,466. S21.701 ; sewer , fire house; no receipts, no

TONIGHT, AUGUST22
NOT OPEN

..J

$6,367 .62..;

slated Friday

MASON DRIIN

ALSO ·
CARTOONS

$5,271.62, $2,262:14, $7,155.35;
fire dept .. 11 ,088.14, $1 ,037.43,

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

j

Our ent ire stock of misses Fall shirts
and blouses is included in this sale.
\

I

Fash1on colors .

SALE PRICES
DEAR DR. LAMB - I read
about the little girl who refused
to have a bowel movement. My
. little grandson had the same
problem.
·
He would tie belly down on
the floor with both hands
pressing the groin to prevent
having a bowel movement or to
pass urine. We went through all
the begging , teasing and
coaxing routine. When he was •
4'h he complained of ab·
domina! pains. Well, at last the
doctors found out he had a very
small opening of the urinary
b-act. He had had it since infancy. He wasn ' t able to
urinate properly. Instead he
held it.
The bladder began to expand, and It was so large it
caused him trouble in moving
his bowels. He also had bladder
infections because of all tbe
urine he retained.
The tittle opening was simply
enlarged, and my grandson's
problems began to be solved.
Whenever I see a potbellied tot
now I wonder if he's having
bowel or bladder trouble .
Perhaps if you ivrote a column
. on the importance of a normal
opening at the tip of the penlx It
would help save a lot of parents
from a similar problem. In·
cidentally my grandson ls fine
now and has no problem at all,
thanks to a simple operation
Incidentally, could this. have
been caused by his cir·
cumclsion?
DEAR READER .- Thank
you for a kind and thoughtful
letter. There are many reasons
for bowel problems and failure
to eliminate urine. The first
step in finding out the cause Is
a
good.
examination.
Sometimes a serious problem
has a simple solution, as you
have explained.
It Is possible to have a
stricture of the outlet of the
penis from a reaction to circumcision, but a very small
opening can be something that
a child is born with. Its only
real impQrtance Is the obstruction to normal urination.
Any obstruction that does this
will often cause bladder
distention and infections in
either young or old.
In many ways your little
grandson had the same
problem men have with obstruction from a large prostate
gland. .The only . difference
being the obstruction to otitfiow
was at the tip of the penis and
not Inside at the outlet' of the
bladder. Fortunately the
problem was ,more easily
solved.

MIAMI BEACH, Fla .'( UPl)Jameo M. WaRonseUer, a former advertising director or the
Lancaster, Ohio, Eagle Gazette,
'Jbursday was elected the new
national commander of the
American l..egion .
Wagonseiler, 54, succeed•
Robert E. L. Eaton of Maryland
as head of theJwo-miiilon mem.
ber veterans organization. He
became the fourth Ohio legion.
nalre to be elected to the po,t.
The highly decorated former
Army Air Olrps gunner sold

'

Doctors can't han products.
Some anti Mpers piran ts have
been banned for different
reasons .
Your body has a lot of
redundant capacity. You have
two kidneys and can get by
with one good one. You can get
by with one lung, and so on.
The reason suppressing per·
spiration under the arms Is not
harmful is that the skin in oUter
locations does the sweating f&lt;lr
you. The localized suppression
then is not enough to prevent
the body from benefiting from
the
normal
sweating
mecluinism · that occurs all
over the body for cooling and
elimination of water.

.·

STOREWIDE
TWO DAY SALE

DR. LAMB
. By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR . LAMB
Something has been bothering
me for some time, and I would
like your answer to it. I am not
a medical man, but it is my
understanding that suppression of a natural glandular
function of the body Is Injurious
to health. If this is correct why
don •t the doctors !&lt;Ike action to
get anti-perspirants banned
from the market?
DEAR READER - Banning
products is not a function of the
doctors. Product safety is a
responsibility of the Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) of
yo ~r federal government.

Wagonseller commu...1ds legion

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
~

.

POMEROY·

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

NO. 93

, POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1974

PHONE 992-2156

p.!!i.!!1.""·. ""-t'l.-"-"=:&gt;.:::.•w::::::m:::::::•:::;:w.~~~~::::::~::::.»'#:::'-::::::-;::1

ews•• in Briefsi

'I

By United ~ess International
CHICAGO :.... POUCE AND FEDERAL agents seized heroin
and cocaine valued at nearly $9 million and arrested nine persons
early today in a series of raids which authoriljes said crushed a
major drug..smuggling ring in the Chicago area.
"These raids broke up a ring supplying a major portion of the
heroin - found in the metropolitan area," one ..narcotics inM
vestigator said. Twenty.five law enforcement officers from the
city police, the Illinois Bureau of Investigation and the federal
Drug Enforcement Administration s!&lt;lged simultaneous raids In
the city and several sulxlrban areas.

\

/0

watched on the sidelines since
Turkey invaded the island July
20, called for a major internationa! conference to solve. the
Cyprus crisis and arrange for
removal of all foreign troops.
UP! Correspondent John
Lawton reported from Nicosia
today that the cease-fire on the
island was holding. The only
incident reported was the
wounding of a 13-year-oid
Turkish Cypriot boy in the
capital.
Lawton said U.N. troops kept
watch over the eastern port of
Famagusta, despite a Turkish
order to abandon the town. The
Turks cut off U.N. supplies of
food and water in .an effort to
force the peacekeeping solders
out.
"They should relocate be.
tween Greek and Turkish lines

instead of sitting here in the
sun," a Turkish Cypriot
·spokesman said.
The TUrks turned over 40
Greek Cypriot prisoners
Thursday to the International
Red Cross and tbe Greek
Cypiots responded by releasing
nine Turkish journalists
captured during last week's
heavy fighting .
U.N. officials said Secretary
General Kurt Waidheim
planned to fly to Cyprus
SUnday for talks with Clerides
and Denktash about the
island's severe problems In the
wake of a shattering month of
warfare.
1n Athens, government offi·
cials said Premier Olnstanline
Caramanlis studied peace
proposals by both the United
States and Britain in advance

Miller warns ·of
national strike

Currently unemployment is
rumiing at about 5.3 per cent of pensions.
the civilian work force. And
- Assistant
Agriculture
Adams foresaw a 1974 inflation Secretary Clayton Yeutter,
rate averaging out at about 10 after meeting with a Japeneoe
per cent.
government team, predicted
His gloomy forecast came Japan voluntarily would cut ito
TEN CENTS againsi a gloomy background purcllases of livestock feed
of economic developments :
grains from the United States
- The Commerce Depart· bY nearly 10 per cent. He said
ment reported the gross this would make legal export
national product drop.ped controls unnecessary despite
during the second quarter of the sharp drop In the U.S. crop
this year by 0.8 per cent. This · brought on by drought. .
was far less severe than tbe 7
- The Agriculture Departper cent drop of the first ment said the worldwide
quarter, cauaed partially by drought _was relieved by
the energy shortage, Two August rains, particularly in ·
straight quarterly GNP ' hard-bit mid-America and also
declines is the classical In wide areas of China and
definition of a recession.
India. The rains arrested the
:...The Dow Jones Industrial declines In prospective ou\put,
Average continued ito descent, but came too late "to assure
closing Thursday at 704.79, good yields in some )ley
down 6.80 points. It feU below producing areas," .the expert&amp;
of hls meeting with Clerides.
the 700 level for the first time tn said.
There has been no public more than four years.
The Commerce Deparbnent
reaction to the American and
-The White House said the reP&lt;Jii on the ec&lt;inomy durlnt!
British plans, but Greece has Ford administration had under the April.June quarter said the
said it would not negotiate until llludy ~\along with lllliny·ml811y country's inflation rate "'aa 9.8
Turkey agreed to withdraw other things" a 10-cent-a.g8Uon per cent for that period. The
from land captured during last increase in federal gasoline first quarter rate wu stiU
week's offensive.
taxes with the revenue _ higher -1~.3 per cent. Theoe
The 40,000-man Turkish perhaps $10 billion -used to were the highest rates of Ininvasion anny gained control offset a cut in personal income Dation to viait the United States
of 40 per cent of Cyprus in 8 taxes for the poor.- "It's just since early 1951.
massive offensive last week one of many proposaia in the
after failing to win any mill," said Jerald ter!iprst,
territory at the collapsed Ford's press secretary.,
.
Geneva peace talks.
- Kuwait and Venezuela an__ _
Denktash, who went to nounced they were cuttirig
Ankara earlier this week for back oil production because
peace consultations with the . they said oversupply was
Turkish government, an- pushing prices down. Kuwait,
nounced Thursday he was currently producin@ 2.55
ready to discuss the problems million barrels a day, already
of getting Cyprus back on. its has cut back but will lower
feet but not a long-tenn set- production even more to keep
tlement.
·
prices high, the Arab country's
"I cannot talk peace wit!lout oil minister said.
"
A series ol eight regional
Tutkey by my side," Denktash
--Congreos completed action mee!ings to b-ain the b-ainers
said.
and sent to Ford a bill designed of polling place official$ will be
1n Moscow, tbe Soviet Union to make sure that pensions will cimducted throughout Ohio by
called for an international be waiting for workers whose Secrelary of State Ted w.
conference ·to guarantee the employers have pension plans. Brown.
"independence, sovereignty But the bill does nothing to
The regional meeUng for
and territorial integrity" of increase pension payments or trainers of polling place of.
Cyprus.
to require employers to pay
ficlals In Gallla and Melga
The government statement
Counties will be held Sept. 26,
said the Cyprus situation
at 10 a.m. at the Fairgrounds
"cannot be solved either with
County Extension Office, West
the aid of military force or by
· Union St., Athens,
way of p&lt;JIItical dictate."
Training of polling place
· It called for participation by
officials was mandated. by
Greece, Turkey and all mem·
recent legislation (H.)3. 662)
bers of the U.N. Security
and requires that each county
board of electllfts must
Council.
establish within 60 days of an
election
a
program
'rhree Meigs County senior "prescribed by the Secretary
citizens will be honored at ·the of State for lnsb-uction In the
Ohio State Fair today ill rules, regulations, procedureS,
special programs being held. and law relating to (tile)
Receiving awards will be election. In each program, the
Mrs. VIlma Pikkoja, who will board shall use training
receive the prominent senior materials prepared by the
citizen award; Mrs. Gertrude Sectetary of State, and' may
Mitchell of
. Pomeroy who will use a dd1tiona 1 materia 1s
Almost 10 •000 tickets for the. receive the
senior volunteer
first lottery drawing held ·. award, and Charles E. Blakes· pborearpard.'ed' by or on behalf fo the
yesterday were purchased lee, Pomeroy, who will receive
·
.
The new legislation also
from the 17 lottery age· nts 1·n the "Mr . Senior Citizen
" reqwres
· all jud@es and cJe r ka
Meigs County.
award.
.

mwers who have died or been
maimed in the nathn 's coal

mines.
A parade and rally in this
rugged southeastern Kentucky
mountain town drew an esti·
mated 2,500 miners, their supporters and top UMW officials.
Although the town was
braced for 72 busloada of
miners from five states; oniy
about 30 buses showed.
The national shutdown by
UMW coal miners is seen as a
warning that the union is willing to stage a national strike if
their demands are not met by
the Nov. 12 a:piration of lta

Tral·ners'
• •

tra1nmg
day set

Three to he

.

HARLAN, Ky . (UPI) United
Mine
Workers
President Arnold Miller said
here Thursday that America
had best prepare itself for a
possible national coai miners
HEAVY RAINS, ACCOMPANIED BY HIGH WINDS and strike.
hail, soaked \he upper Plains today. Storms mounted over the
The gravel-voiced former
plains Thursday night. Hailstones more than an inch in diameter coal miner told a . cheering
peltea R.apid City, S.D., and more than four inches of rain feU in crowd he had put "responsible
Oelrlclls, s. D.
people in government on notice
Wind gusts of up to 70 miles per hour swept Chadron, Neb., that something better be done
and hail oovered the ground. Some flooding was reported In Big before Nov. 12 or they will have
Bend National Park in Texas and the Rio Grande in portions of a lot more ·than five days to
Texas was reaching its banks. Lubbock, Tex., got two inclles of worry· about.''
rain In a six.!Jour period, the heaviest rainfall in the city in two ·
The union today entered its
years. Amarillo, Tex., got nearly two inches of rain,
final day of a week-long memorial walkout to call attention to
BUCHAREST - POPULATION CONTROL or economic
development? Have and have-not countries have turned the
World Population Conference into a debate over which method Is
beat for raising living standards.
The United States ill leading the industrialized nations of the
West In calling for a @lohal target to limit long-term population
growth. Argentina and India are heading the developing cllllllb-les of Africa, Asia and LaUn America in calling lor a new world
ecooomic order to combat poverty. The third world counlrles
make up a majority at the 149-nalion, U ,N.-&lt;~ponsored conference
and aeem likely. to block or water down the U. S. call for
populaUon limit... .

SAIGON - 'OOMMUNIST FORCES FIRED a barrage of
rockets at the sprawUng Bien Hoa air base today arxl overran an
outpost guarding strategic Tay Ninh in twin attacks north of
Saigon. the Saigon command sald.JO Sovlet.made rockets ripped
into the Bien Hoa region early today, hilling the alr base and a
nearby mental hospital. Eight persons were reported kllled and
17 wounded.
Communist gunners have stepped up attacks durlnj! the peat
two weob atr)llnst Bien Hoa, It mUa northeast of Saigon, in a
drive to hamper operatloos of the major fiOvtnunent air base
tterendtng the capital. Field reporw laid ~~ Infantrymen atonned the Lam Buu !..a 'II outpost eight mUet west of
Tay Nlnh Thursday, capturing the 100-man bale tn 10 minutes of '
fterce fi@htlnfl. ~
·
· ·
·
.
·

· WASHINGTON (UP!)- A respected economist
says the United States is in for at least another year
and a half of recession, inflation and unemployment
- no matter what the government tries to do about
it.
Testifying before the ·new Senate Budget
Committee Thursday, F, Gerald Adams of the
University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of
Finance and Commerce foresaw a no-growth U.S.
economy whether or not Congress took President
Ford's advice and cut federal spending by $10
billion.
The spending cut might reduce the projected
974 inflation rate from 8.2 per cent to 7.7 per cent,
Adams said. But it also would produce an unem- .
ployment rate of 6.7 per ~ent instead of 6.3 per cent.

Cyprus peace talks

By United Press International
Greek and Turkish Cypriot
NEW YORK - THE INtERNATIONAL Longshoremen's
leaders
made preparations
Association "( ILA ) and local shippers have reached final
agreement on a new three-year contract, Ute first time since the today to hold the first peace
end of World War II a pact has been ratified without a strike. The ' talks on cyprus since the
'
'
Turkish army split the island in
agreement
·sets the")&gt;attern
for dock worker contracts on the
two during a crushing offensive
AtlanUc and Gulf Coasts.
a
week ago.
The New York ShipPing Association, which represents about
Cypriot President Glafkos
12:\ companies in the metropolitan area, Thursday unanimously
Clerides,
leader of Ule island's
accepted the contract after members of the metropolitan are11.
ILA locals overwhelrillngly ratified it Wednesday. James J. Greek community, planned to
Dickman, president of the management group, said the new fly to Athens this morning for
talks with Greece's new
conb-act provides increases in wages and fringe benefits for
civilian
government about an
some 14,000 longshoremen, checkers and other dock workers in
eventual peace settlement.
the Port of New York.
Both Clerides and Turkish
Cypriot
leader Raul Denktash
A FEDERAL APPEALS COURT HAS OVERTURNED a
lower court ruling that schools in predominantly white s~burbs of agreed Thursday to hold
negotiations, but Denktash inIndianapolis must accept black students as part of a
sisted they would discuss only
·
metropolitan desegregation plan.
humanitarian issues. He said
The decision by the Circuit Court of Appeals in Oticago was
TUrkey must take part in any
based in part on a recent Supreme Court ruling in a Detroit case
full«ale
peace talks.
that suburban areas could not be forced to help a city
The Soviet Union, which has
desegregate if the suburbs themselves were not guilty of
segregation.
PI'ITSBURGH - THE WEEK-LONG UNITED MINE
Workers memorial period ls cutUng into coal stockpiles, but
spokesmen for 3 of the nation's largest steel companies say
UJere shouldn't be any plant layoffs even if another five-day
shutdown is callell.
A spokesman for Jones &amp; Laughlin Steel Corp., said a
threatened extension of the memorial perind "would tighten our
position but we don't anticipate any layoffs." Similar statements
were made by spokesmen for U. S. Steel Corp., the nation's
largest, and Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel Olrp. EarUer this week,
UMW Vice President Mike Trbovich threatened another five-&lt;lay
memorial period, in addition to the present one whicll began
·Monday. The. shutdown was called to memoriali~ the thOusands
of coal miners kjUed in the pits,_and those afflicted with miningrelated diseases.
·

Government can't help,
says Wharton economist

contract.
the.
For the last two months,
.
situation has been tense in
Harlan County, with stepped
up action by the union to
organize mines owned by the
Eastover Mining Co., a su~
sidiary of Duke Power Co., of
Charlotte, N.C.
Miller, when elected in 1972,
said one of his main objectives
as head of the UMW would be .
the organization of non--union
mines in eastern Kentucky.
The mi)lers. parade and rally
took place almost without incident. Two men distribuling
ConUnued on page 12

honored
at state fair

Lottery sales

near 10,000 in
Meigs County

Receiptsf or the first -sale-·

of elections to be qualified
Special hosts for the day electors who have completed
were turned In at the Farmers were Dr. and Mrs. David the program o1 instruction.
Bank and Savings Co. serving Sweet, dltector, -deparlment of
In a recent directive to the
as the agency In Meigs County economic and commu~ity boards, Secretary of Slate
and disb-tbuto~s. picked lijl development; Slate Auditor Brown urged that nperlenced
tickets for next week's andl\lrs. JosephFerguson,and polling place officlala and .
· drawing. The receipts to!&lt;lled .Dennis Shaul, director of the · opeclally lrainod volunloeta be
just less than$5,000 Indicating department of commerce.
used to supplement the elf«ta
that almost 10,000 tickets were
or board peraon~~el to canduct
sold.
the. training seuiona at the
The disb-lbutors of tickets
local level, and in votlnl
Include Kroger's, Meigs Inn, .
VW OWNER? ·
machine counliea, ' votln1
Waid Cross Sons, Tony 'S
The Mel@s County Sheriff's machine mechaniCI be 111111 to
Carry.Qut, Middleport Lunch Department Is trying to famillariat thll warbra willl
Room, Codner's Ashland, detennlne the 9Wnership of a the machinel.
Eber's Gulf Station, ·l!lue red Vollcawa@en, I)OIISibly a
-.Accordinl to Tid Brown,
Tartan, Inc., Re@atta Inn, 1963 mOdel, found on the 'Me· "The lllu.n.ta PIII'JIWI. of 1111
Mark V Store, WhitehOuse Cumber Hill strip mine area tralninl PI'Oiramlla to beller
C8fe, Gloeckner's Cafe, H. and . · stripped and bUI11ed,
preplre poWnl p11ee Glllciiiii
R. Firestone, Shammy's Drive· day. The car apparently had 1o that they
~
In, Headqqllrters Tavern, A. been soaked with gaaollne . handli election 11111 .cblnl
and P. Store, and erow•s Steak inside and out and set on lire which havo "'c011141 I•
House .
after It had been stripped.
. crulllWY comple3."

n.urS:

DeeP ditches ate appearing along Mulberry Ave. In I;'Cttneroy as work progresm In the
laying ollines for the town's new water system. The lines are being laid by tbe Boone-Coleman
Co. of Port..mouth. One way traffic Is belnfl maintained on the street during the project.
·
•

•

1

~

ma,

- ~

�I

•

Perennial Loser

Property
Transfers

RAY CROMLEY '
.

Capitol's sores need legislative salve
By 1\Jay Cromley
WASHINGTON - (NEA ) - With ail tbe subUety of a
typhoon, Watergate has demoostraled the dangerous concentration of power in Washington.
Ironically, th is disaster proved Mr. Nixon right in insisting
on the return of more authority tosta tes, counties and dtil-:s.
The revelations of the impeachment inquiry prove the need
lor regular rigorous checks by Congress on the agencies of
government - especially those with huge amounts of cash to
spend, those with power to monitor U.S. citizens and t~ ose with
authorit y to regulate and set price supports or otherwise affect
lhc incomes or borrowing power or companies, unions, farmers
and indi\'idual citizens.
TI1is may require multiplying the size, and drastically increasirog the investigating power, of the Government Accounting
Office . Also to be considered should be the creation of a new
supervisory agency directly responsible to Congress or a hefty
increase in what is caJled the oversight fun ction of Congressional
commillees. It would also be desirable to increase the research
fu nctions of the Library of Congress. These proposals would
involve a sig nifica nt increase in the workload or senators,
·congressmen and their staffs .
There has been much talk of the need for tighter watchdog
supervision over the Internal Revenue Service, the Central Intelligence Agency and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. But
even more important is the need for a close watch over the anti.
trust division of the Justice Department, the procurement activities of Defense, the loans and grants of the Deparbnent of
Health , Education and Welfare, and ac tions of, those agencies

monitor ing securities, price supporls, broadcast licensing,
fre ight rates and tariffs.
Some way must be found to more clearly sta te on the ree&lt;Jrd
the significance of the d ay-t~ay govcrrunent actions in .these
areas. Who ordered the ac tions? What relationshi ps exist (acciden tal or intentional) between tl'i ():jC ordering the actions a nd
those groups or individuals profiling from the orders?
All requ ests for Internal Reveune Service d.ocuments, i n~
el uding income tax returns. by the White House or other agencies
should be put into a record available to Congress and the press.
The same should hold lrue lor requests for FBI reports, including
" routine" requests for derogatory informatjon made as a
prelude to securing clearances for men in line for government
posts. White House requests for IRS or FBI action on any individual or group should be available to Senate and House wa tc hdog committees.
We need laws to define precisely how FBI and IRS files mlty
be used and precisely who can have access to th qse files and
under what circumstances. We need a clear cut statement of
what internal surveillance is a llowable in the name of national
security and a precise definition of what national security involves in this context.
The Senate and House are no less subject to abuse of power .
Needed are strong checks on Congressional actions. It is
therefore equally necessary that on each major vote mCongress
appreciably benefitting any company , association, union, farm
group or person, the fi nancial, political and personal connections
of each senator and representative be disclosed. Any correlation
with major campaign contributions should be on the record .

3- The Daily Senllnel ,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Aul! . 23, 1974

·spliuor

Green Hill Homes, Inc. to
~: rede r irk
E.
Werry,
Rosemary Werry, Lots 16-17,
llarti ngc r Sub., Chester.
Kenne th E. Riggs, Judlth .\.
Ri ggs to Fred B. Goegleln, Lot
9. Orange - Riggscrest.
Fred B. Goeglein, Barbara
A. Goeglein to RoY. F. Riffle,
Frona K. Ri!fle, I Acr e,
t:lrange.
Blaine Carter, Jr., Martha
Mae Carter to James Drehel,
Phyllis Drehel , Frank Drehel,
Jr., 48.54 Acres, Rutland.
Blaine Carter, Sr., Ruby
Carter to James Drehel,
Phyllis Drehel, Frank Drehel,
Jr., 150 Acres, Rutland.
Charles L. Butcher, Alpha G.
Butcher to Noel D. Young,
Leona Youn g, 15 Acres,'.Scipio.
Ruth B. Sansbury, dec. to
Roy Sansbury, Keith Riggs,
Loraine Neff, Cert. of trans.,
Middleport.
Keith Riggs, Barbara Riggs,
Lorraine Neff, Jack Neff to
Roy Sansbury, Lot · 172,
Pomeroy.
Orville L. Wetherholt,
Teresa Wetherholt; Stanley J .
Bugansky, Jr., Barbara J .
Bugansky to Carla Diane Frye,
Rutland.

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sporto Writ.,
Paul SpUttorff has his own
cryptic description of what it's
like to pitch in Cleveland's
Municipal Stadiwn.

By Tom Tiede
During the '72 campaign , he
WASHINGTON - (NE;A ) altered his views on issues with
What with impeachment and the weather. One day, you'll
resignation fever in the land , it recall, he thought it would be a
passed almost with out notice good idea to give 1,000 governthe other day when George ment dollars annually to every
McGovern rose on the fl oor of man, woman and child in the
tlle Senate 'to insert a news- nation; the next day, with the
paper article in to the snickers and guffaws of a
Congressional Reeord. Note is bemused public ringing his
now taken, however, that the ears , he decided the idea
gesture constituted one of the wasn't so hot after all .
trul y raw ironies of the events
And before that, even on the
which have .s tunned and issue that pr opelled the
sickened Ute nation in the last . Sena tor into Presidential
two years .
politics
Vietnam
McGoVern 's inserti on was an McGovern was inconsistent. In
article of confession written by t963, he was the first man in the
a res pected Washington ·Senate to speak against the
reporter . The confession was war. But a year later he voted
·that ihe repor ter, a life-long for the Tonkin Gulf Resolution
liberal, had deCided to modify which gave authority to widen
and moderate his .political the conflict. Then be · began
postW"e. The man , in short, had ·saying that Vietnam was a civil
become a judicious con-=- war and so sboul~ be left to the
servati ve, and he re .r was na tives to wage but a few
George McGovern com- months later he was quoted as
mending the piece before his adlhitling it was too late lor the
colleagues with the indication United States to withdraw.
that the article reflected his "We have· a commitment and
own political maturation.
It boggles the· brain . George
Mc;Govern . going m&lt;X_Jer8te?
Maybe ,even conservative? It's .

we must stay un til the dispute
is resolved," he said then.
He has now assuredly been
dead, and continually, against
'Nam fpr many years - but
who's to say, really, what his
thought on it will be tomorrow ?
It is, of course, true that
flexibility among leaders_ is
good lor the nati on. Intransigence of thought. can be
evil. It is also obvious that
Darwin's laws rule politics as
nature, thus, .sW'vival goes to
th ose who are most· adaptable.
Concerning
the
Ia Iter ,
McGovern is currently fa cing
stiff opposition for re-election
in his home state and admits
his recent conversion to ·riscal
-responsibility in government
and hawkish attitudes towards
veteran 's benefits is intended
to 11 demonstt~ te I am co0cerned abotlt the' values and
views held by the people of
South Dakota."
Yet given .these realities,
there is such a !bing as going
too far. Particularly now.

Surely the times demand
higher poli tical priorities
tha n lnerely se1f-sur vivai. It should be hoped
the constituency has had
enough clap tr ap fr om its
electeds ("! shall not be a
candidate for the Presidency in
1976:" Gerald Ford, January,
1974). Peo ple may for give
blindness, even incompetency,
but never baseness.- The cry
must be for candor.
Unfor-tunately, the evidence
is that candOr is, even now, just
another political promise . ·
Since Richard Nixon's retreat
there has been much talk of it
in Washington and elsewhere,
but only scant cornmitme;nt.
Actually, many seem to feel
the Nixon resignation was
enough, that it satisfied the
public an ger and that now
authorities can return to
monkey business .as usual.
Enter George McGovern. Mr.
Warner. Sigh. The man is 52
ye~r s old - when is he going to
make up his mind?

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sportt Editor

true. McGovern himself
waffles on the matter, which is
·his character, but' oile of his
chief ass istants says with
caution :
"! think he is more conservatiVe. He's indicated as
much to me anyway."
The irony in all this should be
clear . First, Richard Nixon
deserted the 45 million
.\mericans who voted for him
in 1972, and now G'eor ge
McGovern deserts the 28
millio~ who voted for his
radical-lib ideas. It's sad but
true thijl' the only people left
who were not lied to or misled
during 1972 are those who
wouldn' t ·. vote for either candidate. ·
The McGove rn change,
which he says is " not really
substan tial,'' Is ·surprising but
hardly unprecedented for the
Senator · from South Dakota.

·N eed _p.rove· d £o· r· re£orm
·
WASHINGTO N (UP! ) AF L-C IO
Pre si d e nt
George
Mean y
believes that Watergate, besides vindicating his longheld disdain for Rich&amp;rd M.
Nixon , has proved the need lor
drastic reform of U.S. political
campaign financing .
He also is convinced that
unions eventually will support
his view --already embraced
by the steelworkers - that
strikes are prohibitively costly
for worker and employer , and
should be foregone voluntarily
in favor of binding, third-p'!fty
arbitration of unsettled contract issues.
These views ernerged during
a lengthy interview in which
Meany :rriused about a career
he began as a plumber's helper

Berrys World

1·

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I

..........

.....

••..-...-vr·

,._.,"u.,

.,,,.....,.,.:
........
_..,..
__ ,__,.,

"Will !here by a 'Midwestern White House ' in
Michigan ?"

·- Clot-··., . . •'
p .........

. .. . . ;

...... •*·
..... ,, ....
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'

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~:~~~u!x~n:~::':!:

providing greater detail and
more oupport for the actions
taken.
" President Nixon's course of
conduct
following
.t he
Watergate
break-In, as
described in Article One,
caused actioo not only by his
subordinates, but by the
agencies of the United States,
including the Department of
Justice, the FBI8lld the CIA,"
the report condudeil at the end
of its justification for the first
article.
"It
required perjury,
ln·l9101nhis native Harlem. He would he "great," or would Md. ) because I think be's a destruction of evidence, obstruellon of jaotlee, all crimes.
has known six presidenls since support something akin to the good coogressman."
he came to Washington in 1940, 'British system . in · which a Witbin the labor movement, But, most · tmportant, It
and has lavish praise for ail but central party agency collects Meany professes pride that requlred deliberate, contrived
Nixon.
and spends aU money in behalf "perhaps one of the greatest and conUnufng deceplloo-of lbe
·
He nods over his shoulder in of a candidate within strict advances .. .is that unions are American people."
It 'acknowledged _receipt of
the direction of the White limits .
now pretty much accepted by
the
three transc-ripts of taped
House, shimml!ring in summer
In an election year in which the big industries'' that once
conversations
released _by
heat a few hundred feet across the AFL-CIO and its affiliates vowed to destroy !bern.
Lafayette Park from AFUIO _had amassed $1 million by
As evidence, he recalls that Nixon on Aug. 5. That releaie
headquarters.
midyear to spend on favored the United Auto Workers ran proving Nixoo's involvement in
"It's hard to think that we congressional candidates (not out of money three weeks after the cover-up or the Watergate
have a man of this character in including furth er expected their strike against General break-in as early as siJ: days
the White House," Meany said, contributions plus nearly $5 Motors began in 1970, aod that alter the June 17, 1972 event,
shrugging, shaking his head million in ca sh reserves), the GM board of directors led to unanimous committee
and torching his cigar. " But Meany said : "I'd like to see an extended a $25 million Joan to support for the first arUde. It
tbere he is. We'll have to suffer answer where we can gel out of the striking union to make sure had voted, 27-ll,for that article
the business of raising employe insurance premiiUlis on July 27.
until he ge ts out.
" But I think we 'll come out of money."
were paid.
The tape release atao led .to
it better off somewhere down
"Our friends on Capitol Hili
That incident, he said, also . overwhelming House and
the line," he said, especially if can't get"it from Exxon or Gulf proves "YOIJ can't win a strike Senate' sentiment for Nixon's
the pernicious influence of Oil or GM or ITT ," he said. by setting up a gre~t big strike resignation or removal from
money is removed from presi- "They gotta get it from tis, and fund, unless you set up one big o(llce. He resigned four days
dential politics.
we gotta collect it, and I'd enough to pay lull Income for tater, ending the bnpeachment
"I see the other day Chuck much rather get out of it."
your workers for six months. )ll'ocess. The House voted, U~
Percy (Sen. Charles H. Percy,
Not that the AFUIO is This would run into billions." on Tuesday to receive tbe
R-Ill .), a businessman , is aboutto abandonilssupport of Thus, Meany said, "from the panel's rtnal report and to
budgeting $11 million to run for friends . Mean y boasted that point of view of the employer coinmeod ltfor its 10 monlha of
president ... my God, this is, "We've got a better . political · and the worker both, the strike work.
te rr ible. Now, I ha ve no machine in the large industrial. no longer makes any sense.
The first 278 pages of the
"You· can hurt an employer report contain the conclusiOIIS
grievance against him. In fa ct, slates than either the
I kind alike him personally, but' Republicans or the Democrats just as much now by shutting and the panel's ' evidence
I thin~ we're getting more. and hve," with compu\erized voter him down as you hurt him . gathered and compiled under
rhoreto the point where money lis ts, pamphlet mailings, before, but you hurt yourself the _dlrecUon of Speeial CoUILiel
is the major requirement precinct volun teers, telephone much· more ... because yoU've John M. Ooar. The rest Ineludes " supplemental, adcharacter , integrity, issues and banks, habysitters, car pools got so much more to lose.
even what you believe In is not · and s treet canvassers.
"Back when you got 75 cents dltional, separate, ~ntlng,
near as important as money.''
One · labor reporter has an hour, you shut the employer minor! ty , lndi vidual and
Mea•y says he thinks a estimated the unions spent $60 down completely and the concurring views" by most of
public, tax.pald campai~n fund million on the 1968 election, 'worker lost 75 cents an hour, the p~~nel members.
One was a report written by
F ~.-'- _ _ _ -·qq~'C"""~
including not only "voluntary" but with a little relief yoo got
,.
The Oily Sentinel
cash contributions from mem- him 40 cents an hour and he Chief GOP Counsel Sam
I he rs but dues-financed goods could 'stlll live. Now, what do Garrison for the 10 committee
DI:YO.IDT0111E
and services, such as printing, you do· with a $12,000-a-year
transportation and volunteer man who's got insurance
CHDTDL TANNIIIILL.
workers.
payments, paying off a car,
'
.
Meany
rejects
charges
that
trying
to make mortgage
JIOaatTJIOD'I...I(JI,.
01)...
;.
I _ _ ..,...-.,.,,.. , the labor federation is wedded payments, klda in college and
deal lor
·one y..ir' " he conto the Democratic party.
so forth ?"
&lt;ll6o VIDIJ p.Nf+!. ~. Ill
.
cedes,
·
but " They gain
' Cout • .• ,....., , Oblo, . .. . . . .
" We're closer to Democrats,
Meany's solution : ·jvou
I Offtct Piloal-.aiM. Edller1aJ ,._ but not to the Democratic don 't give away .the right to from the continuity or
' nJ7,
~....J.
party, bec8use it's ln the very strlke , you can't ever do production." The United
I - - - ....
nature of things. Where we that. .. but you say that when Steel Workera of .America,
H•Uoul •41,.vt'-t.,
hs ve a concentration of Indus- your agreement expires, come sensing a "Community of
........... •n.r-,lltc.;Ur..Oid.at,
Nftr Y.-.• Na Yoft.
''
tria l work ers, traditionally what may, we are not going [I) Interest" With IIIUIIIIIIMIIt
~Democrats·,
we
have strike for aoolber ~ear, lhltall ewer the Urut of~ llell
..... lloolo _ _ _ ...
Democrsts In ~ongress. Ninety unresolved laues tre 101n11 to COillpltltlon, Uld IIIII ICI'IIIIIa
per cent plus of the people we final and b&amp;ldlng third-party ltiCCtlllully to a'IVId llle uu1
- ;;I W'. Va., Oot Yw, Ill: •
support are Democrats, but I determination. What can you poat-seltlement layoff•
T!lret - - · ...
!llt•..+tiL.,_.; .-a.ttUD;
support my
Republican lose?
resulting !rom. 114CIIpl.liftl ol
~
J . congressman right out In my
The union might "get 8 bad supplies In anticipation · or. a
~
district
(Rep.
Gilbert
Gude,
R·
strtlte,' he Nld.
•
•
, I

George Meany: JJ7hat bothers him

~~~v~~~~~~~n~~ss:;p~~~nn~l~

W.\SHINGTON (UP!) - The
House released Thursday the
historical final report of the
Judiciary Committee on imp~achment, changing some
language but still maintaining
that former President Nixon
lied, violated laws and subverted the Constitution.
Conclusions supporting each
of the three articles of impeachment voted against
Nixon were Included in ·a draft
of the report circulated to the ·
38 committee members last
week .
They already were strongly

•

••

Republicans who voted agalnat
each of tbe proposed articles
during the conunitlee's late
July debate, but who changed
their minds on Article One
alter Nixon's Aug. 5 revelation.
Garrison's report was only
slightly altered In the final
version. It still stated that Ulltil
Aug . 5 there was no
justification for impeachment,
but that Nixon was not

I

"hoWJded from office."
Perhaps some persons would
continue to say that Nixon was
hounded
from
office,
Garrison's statement said.
"We feel constrained t6 point
out, however, that it was
Richard Nixon who impeded
the FBI's Investigation of the
.Watergateaffairbywrongfully
attempting to implicate the
Central Intelligence Agency. "

~181!!l;:&lt;c';;:~·~~W'X~~~.m-L~';9?§.
~
. ..
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.....

Mason County

N

.

eWS

Nt
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M
.,,

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By Ahna Marshall

'f.l

NEW HAVEN- The 26th annual Wolfe iamily reunion was
held SIU!day, Aug. llalthe New Haven Park. Prayer was given
by James Lewis before the picnic. Following · the dinner a
business meeting was conducted by Harry F ." Love.
Minutes lor the 1973 meeting were read by Elsie Roach and
the treasurer's
was by Mary Ord. A lew moments were
observed in memory of Mrs. Henry Roush and Mr. Oris wolfe.
Officers reelected were, president, Harry F. Love; vice
)ll'esldent, Kathleen Love; secretary, Elsie Roach, and
treasurer, Mary Ord.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry G. Love received gills for being the
oldest present. Mrs. John (Eula) Wolfe had the most In a family
present. Mlcbeal Snodgrasa, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Snograss,
was the youngest. Traveling the farthest was Jolumy WoHe, of
Riclunond, Ind. and Mrs. Doris Tkach, Vanessa and Javina,
from Glendale,.W. Va. Prizes were also won by .\my Wolle and
Bill Ralston.
,
Next year the reiUlion will be at Krodel Park i.iJ Point
Pleasant.
Mr. and Mrs. Oshel Wolfe, Millwood, were present,
representing the Holly Wolle family.
.
Mter the business meeting Rev. James Lewis presented
devotions.
Rev. Lewis closed with prayer and the group sang, "Blest Be
the Tie."
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Harry Love and Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Lewi.sand Connie, Pt. Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs. Austin Wolle,
Jerry and Aimee and Carroll Norris, Syracuse, Ohio; Bill
Ralston,St.CialrsvUle,Ohio; JackRottgen,Mr.andMrs. Robert
Roach, Larry and Roger, Mason; Eula and Aaron Wolfe, Lell!rt
Falla, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. JolmOrdand Johnny, Mr. and Mrs. C.
M. Wolfe, Letart, W.Va.; Ken and Debbie Theiss, Columbus,
Olllo; Doria Tkach, Vanessa and Javina; Mr. and Mrs .. Oshel
Wolle, Millwood; Mr. and Mrs. William Snodgrass and Michael,
New Haven, and Johnnie A. Wolle, Richmond, Ind.

report

· PERSON.\I. MENTION - Holly Boyer is a patient at
Columbua University Hospital. He Is to have heart surgery some
time lhll week. His room munber is 621.
l.awrence R. Wolfe and Timmy visited Tuesday with Mr. and
Mrs. J . Robert &amp;.;ch and 110111.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Shoaf, Teresa, David andSherrl from
PataUne,nt were visiting Mrs. Shoaf's parents, Mr. and Mrs. T.
R. Davia and her brother, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Davis of Mason.
·
Elsie Roach was surpriSed on her birthday with two birthday
cilkes from her son, Ltirry, and her sister, Al.lce Randolph ·and
daUilhters, stella and Pauletta Klng.
Mr. and Mrs. T. R. I&gt;avls IIP'!nt the .weekend with their .
diUilhter and family, Mr. and Mrs. GleiUI Johnson and Kenny of
Westervllle, Ohio.
'
Mrs. Ethel McDermitt of Pompano Beach, Fla., aod Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd McDennltt and children of Georgia are visiting her
illalerandflmlly, Mr.andMrs. LoydWilllamsofCIIfton.
Mrs. t..ureneLewtsla visiting her slster,Mrs. Ann Erwenat
Beech HID, W. Va. .
·
MASON - The O!rlatlan Brethren !l!urch here had a picnic
&amp;utdly efternoon at the Racine Locka. Earl Stewart led prayer.
At~ were Mn. Catherine Stewart, Raymond and
Nancy Stewart; Robert and Barbara Mc:Cartney, Roberta,,' ·
Ronnie, Delxnh and Rabeeea McCartney, Rolfe Lee, Ricky .
McKJcrtn, Dlivld ~. Qlrfa Lee and Mary Johason; Carroll
llld IJU!an Elllott, WWlam, Sr. and Velma Zuapu, William, Jr.
111d Uncia Zlupan, Todd and Rebocca ZllfiPIII, John, Kathy and
Johnny Zulpln; NIJICY, y.,.. and Tammy JohiUIOil; Mrs. Bar.... ZUipan, Georse, Jr. and Stacey and Catherine Zuapan;
Plttr Beleber, Patty Burton, Vlclde and Pam Burton, W111da
HW, 'l'alnmy, ~. Pemlr, and Holly HW, Gonna
.~. "*!'t 1!111 Ellie Jlolch, Larry and Racer Roach,
KatiiJIIId Kim w~. Robin and Kip Pauley,
IAift7 IIIII Cln tlllll1'amn17 l.ewla, IC8rlllld Deloria Stewart,
TrvJ and Rella . .wilt, J~telland Ruth Riley, Kaoin Edwal'\11,
Ct~~ IIIII Pltdlltl Wlnlton, Jlllle Smtih, BIMrry Yount,
Aaile T-t, .._, Grtn...'l, Barbara Mol•,.Jack Rottcen,

-Twnat.

.

CGnnlt~and the

a.v. Mdlln. J-IAwla.

~

•

wzns zn ''the matchbox''
Is only 385 feet distant from the
plate In the right and left fi eld
power wnea. It thus ranks with
Boston's Fenway Park and
Ollcago's Wrigley F ield as a
''hitler's paradise.''

pit ch ln~ in a City Hoyals to a 3-1 victory
he suys. "The over the Indians which moved
ba ll• Oy out or here like them to within 4'k games or the
li rst.plae&lt;-d Oakland A'sln the
rockets."
The 27-ycar-&lt;Jid left:h ander Amer ican J.eague's Western
had just pitched the Kansas Division .

" Jt ' !I like

m~ tc hbox /'

Splittorff, who raised his
rec"rd to 13-12, carried a 3-0
lead into the bottom of the
ninth inning before losing his
shul&lt;Jul on Joe Us' th ird homer
of the seas&lt;&gt;n. Amos Otis hit a

two-run homer In the fourth giving up a run," ·lauahed
inning and Hal McRa e · Spliltorff. " It seems I always
homered in the lop of the ninth give up homers her e. You've
to provide the Royals witb all got to be conscious of thooe
their runs.
runners iln the bases when you
"It wouldn't be right if I pitch in a small park like
didn't leave Cleveland without Ulis one."
The Texas Rangers rOuted
Jim Pabner , the AL's Cy
Young Award winner In 1973,
and beat the Baltimore Orioles,
6-2, in the only other maJ&lt;&gt;i'
league game played Thursday.
Miami at Los Angeles, Phila- No National League games
delphia at Oakland, New were scheduled.
•
England at San Diego, Dallas
Toby Ha rra h's three-run
at New Orlea!lll and the New homer was the big blow or a
York Gianls at Pittsburgh.
li ve-run fo urth-inning exBuffalo is at Minnesota on plosion which lagged Palmer
Sunday , while on Monday with his ninth defeat agai/!st
night, Chicago is at Baltimore, four wins.
Detr oit at Cincinnati and
Ferguson Jenkins, suspected
Atlanta at Houston .
. of having lost much of his
speed alter a 14-16 record with
the Chicago Cubs last season,
allowed six hits in seven innings.aod raised his mark to 18-

Namath starts against Cards

Sport Parade

Impeachment report
part of ·House history

Carla Nell Crisp, a senior
at Meigs High School, has
learned she is to be In tbe
E;Ighth AD!Iual E;dttion of .
Who' s , Who
Among
American High School ·
students; . 1973-74. The
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Jack w. Crisp, Route 1,
Langsville, she Is a member
of the · National Honor
Society and belongs Jo tbe
Ohio Ofllce Education
AssocJatJo~ worldng as an
office assistant. Carla Is a
member of Bethel 62, International Order of· Job's
Daughters. She attends the
Church of Christ.

Cleveland's Mlllliclpal Stadiwn has a seating capacity of
76,997 but the distance along
both foul lines to the fences Is a
modest 320 feet. An Inner fence
which runs across the ouitield

Today's

TOM TIEDE

A liberal leopard changing iiS spots?

•

NEWYORK ( UPI ) - Less than two months ago, the base bail
fans of America, those laithfulloiiowers who check the standings
e~en before they brush their teeth in the morning, studied this
one photo In the paper, winced at the stark anguish they saw in it
and generally came to the same conclusion.
The Boston Red Sox were ail through.
There was no way they could win anymore. Not with Carlton
Fisk out lor the rest of the year . Without Carlton Fisk doing the
catching, the hilling; the cheerleadlng, the Red Sox were an
ordinary learn. That was the predominant feeling among most of
the baseball fans of .\merica.
.
They were mor e sure than ever alter looking at !bat photo in
the paper. It showed F'isk off to one side of the plate, his eyes
tightly shut and mouth wide open in a mute but graphic tableau
of pain. Leron Lee of Cleveland had slid Into the Boston catcher
tearing ligaments in his left knee .
That happened June 28, and the Red Sox led by 2'h games at
the time.
Now look at them!
They went six full games up when Roger Morel threw a onehitter at the White Sox Wednesday night and picked up another
half-game when Cleveland lost Thursday night.
Several players have pitched in to keep the Red Sox on top.
Luis Tiant has been nothing less than tremendous, winning nine
out of 11 since Fisk was hurt ...Bili Lee and Moret each have won
six games in that Interval and Juan Marichal has done his bit
.
lately also...
Rookie Rick Burleson looks as if he's going to be at shortstop
for at le_a slthe nextlO year~ and you can't possibly say enough
about Tim Blackwell, the k1d catcher up from Pawtucket who
seems to be having less troub,le with ·pitchers in the .\merlcan
League than he did with those in the Eastern League ...
But if you were to poll the Red Sox players themselves and ask
them which one individual among them has been primarily
responsible lor saving the day, taking over as their leader and
keeping them up there, I'm reasonably sure they'd ail single out
the same man -Carl Yastrzemski.
The fact he has been the most consistent performer on the bail
club, and his .316 batting average is topped by only two other
players in tbe league is only half the story. The other half, tbe
much more important hall, has to do with how much Yastrzemski contributes to the other members of the Red Sox merely
with his ·presence. ·
_His personal reaction when Fisk was hurt was the same as
every other Boston player's , First and foremost, he fell sorry for
Fisk. He did not try to minimize what the injury would mean, but
neither did he think the dub would necessarily go into a tailspin
because of it.
When I spoke with Yastrzemski sometime later about the Red
Sox being regarded as an "ordinary team" without Fisk, he had
an answer lor that.
"If that's the case," Yastrzemski said, "then an ordinary team
is gonna win the pennant. Of course we suffer from his loss. No
dou)lt about it, you 10se a top ballplayer like him and you feel it.
The big thing we've lost besides Fisk himself is his knowledge of
the competition.
"But we've got some good talent. Blackwell throws wei! and
picks up thmgs fast .. .. (Bob) Montgomery does a good job when
he's in there .... The reason I feel we're gonna win is because
we've had a Iotta Injuries this year and we stayed in first place In
spite ofthem .. .. The big thing Is we're still in first place."
When you talk to Yaz about his being the team leader, he gives
you one of those "who me ?11 looks.
"I don't really go too much on that stuff," he says, "You're a
professional, and you go out there and do your work. Pride
motivates me. If pride isn 't enough to motivate you - what
will?"

"Money _maybe ?" ceme a suggestion.
"Not really," Yastrzemski said. "Certainly you want to get
paid lor what you do, but In the long run the thing that motivates
you most, basically, is pride."

By United Press International don't want to get him in there up his leg in a water skiing
Charley Winner is going back too much right away and I accident in Feburary and is said . "But I want to play. I
to St . Louis L&lt;Jnlght and he's don't want him hur ting him- just getting back into shape. wanted to play last week, too,
bu t they wouldn't Let me ."
worried.
self."
" I'm goi ng back at about half
The Jets are 1-2, while Sl.
Winner Isn 't too disturbed
Namath won 'l be going into or three-fift hs speed becau,&lt;e Louis is 3-1 in pre....,.son play ..
about going back to the site or the game 100 per cent. He tore off UJe accident," Na malh
The New York -St. Louis
his last head coaching assign.
game is the only one scheduled
ment. He's more concerned
lor
tonight while on Saturday,
with the New York Jels' pass
Washington
is at Cleveland,
protection since J oe Narn;~l h
Denver at Green Bay , San
will make his first start at
Francisco at Kansas City,
quarterback tonight against
the St. Louis Cardinals.
Ma jor League .Sta ndings
Starter Ai Woodall was
Br i les 3-5)
at M ilwaukee
By
United Press lnte rnationa I !Champ ion 8-2 and Slaton 9·14),
dropped four times and pressNa1iona I Leag ue
2, 7 p .m .
ured on C&lt;Juntless other occa.
East
Oa kland ( Bl ue 14· 111 a t
sions la.St week as the Jels lost
w. I. pet. g.b. Bos ton (Tia n l l9-8), 7: 30 p .m .
. Lou i s
65 60 .520
·M innesota (Goltz 6·6) at
21-13 lo the New York Giants. St
Phllatlelphi a 63 6 1 .508 ll/~ Balti m ore (M c Na ll y 11 -9 J. 7: 30
HffiAM, Ohio (UP! ) - It
The pass protection offered to Pittsburgh
63 61 .508 Jlh p.m .
was
jusi a matter of time
subs John Jones and Bill M on trea l
58 63 .479 5
Te xas ~ H a rgan 9,8) at Detr oit
New
York
53
67
.442
9'h
before
Coach Nick Skorich C!Jt
Demory wasn' t much better
(Coleman 10· 11 ), 8 p.m .
Chi cago
so
71
.41
3
13
Californ
ia
(
Lockwood
2-4)
at
either.
back the number of quarWest
New York !May 5-2), 8 p.m .
ter
backs in the Cleveland
Unlike last week, Winner,
w. I. pet g . b .
Cleveland (Peter son a·~ al at
Los
Ang
eles
78
46
.629
Browns training camp to three.
who takes over this year from
Ch icago {Kaat 13· 10, 9 p.m .
Cinci nnati
75
50 .600 3 1h
Saturday's
Games
Veteran quarterback Don
Weeb Ewbank, will be going Atl anta
67 56 .545 10'12 Ca l iforn ia at New York
· Horn was th e one to go. HE! was ·
with a veteran line this time Hou ston
63 60 .512 l.oW 2 Texas at Detroi t
released to the San Diego
and he hopes the group which San Fran cisco 56 69 .455 22lf2 Cleveland at Ch icag o
1h
San
Diego
49
76
.392
29
Kansa
s
City
at
Milwaukee
Chargers on waivers Thurshas protected Namatb over the
Thursday 's Res ults
Minn a t Ba lt imor e. nigh t
day.
The 29-year-old Hor n
past few years Is ready alter
{ No games sc hedu led )
Oa kland at ~ as t on . night
Today 's Probable Pitch er s
came to the Browns In 1973
only two weeks in camp.
(All Times EDT&gt;
after twa seasons with Denver .
"Joe wants to play," Willll ~r
New York ( Par ke r 4-11 and
His absence Leaves: veteran
said. "He's absorbed OW' new Ma11ack lJ. l O) at At lan t a ( Reed
WFL Standings
system quite well and l think 8· 7 and Leon 2-4 or Kr ausse '1· By Un ited Press International starter Mike Phipps, 26, who
E t
will be backed up by B~n
he 'll be able to go at least a 4). 2, 6,05 p.m.
Ci ncinnat i ( Billingham 15-8)
as
t
f pa
Sipe, 25. The No. 3 spot goes to
quarter and maybe a half. I
a t Mon1rea l• (Wa lke r 2·3L 8: 05 Florida ~· 11. o' ' . ts~ · ~~ 85
Will Cureton, 23, who quarterp. ~hHadelphia ( Ruth ven 6.9) at New York 5 2 0 .71-4 167 11 1 ba cked the team while the
Hou;:; ton (Dierke r 7-8), 8: 35 Phlla
3 4 0 .429 176 12 1
p.m.
.
·
. Jaxnvl
2 5 0 .286 133 139
Major League Leaders
Pittsburg h (Reuss 13-9). at
Cenlr,at 1 I
DRAFT SATURDAY
By United Press lnternationa I San Diego IGrei f 6-!4], 10, 30
Th.e Midget Football League
Brm nghmw. !. • pc · P pa
leading Batters
National League
P-~:· Louis !McGlothen 13_81 at
7 o o 1.000 204 123 draft will be held Saturday at l
g. ab r. h. pet. Los Angeles I Rau 12-6). 10' 30 Chicago ~ 1 o .85/ 212
p.m . on the north bleachers of
Garr, Atl
122 520 73 187.360 p.m.
2 0 .7 14 220
Memphi
s
Memorial Field, it was ailZi sk, Pit
113 41 2 60 135 .328
Ch icFago
IReusclhB
Sm ith, StL 107 378 58 123 .325 san
ranc1
sco eiarr11-91)0 -6all, Detro•"t o 7 o .000 115 209 noun ced today by director
Gross, Hou 118 440 64 142 .323
w. 'f."',,_ pet. pt pa DaAlvildboLyonsh.o
Brock, Stl 117 484 SO 154 .31 8 10,30 ps.m
a,.urday ' s Games
ys w hav e signed up
S. Ca!if. · 4 3 0 .571 139 132
t
Garvey, LA 119 495· 73 157 .317 C. I 1.1 !M I I
nna
a
on
rea
Houston
2
4
1
.333
53
111
to
play
should
be
presen
•
Oliver, Pit 109 452 70 142 .31 4 PhInc
iladelph ia at Houston
235
Buckn r, LA 108 428 57 134 .313 Ch icago at San Francisco
Hawall ns l 6 0 .143 125 167
Montnz, Ph! 109 385 41 120 .312 New York at Atlanta, night
Portland 0 6 1 .000 83
Thursday's Result
Schmdl, Phi 124 431 91 134 .31 1 St . Louis at Los Ang, night
Chicago 35 Detroit 23
American League
(On ly g am es sc heduled)
(On ly gam e schedul ed )
g. ab r. h. pet.
Amhari c, widely spoken in
Sunday's Game
Carew, Min 119 471 68 172 .365
E;
thiopia,
has a 1,700-year·old
Jacksonvllle at Hawaii
American league
Hrgrve, Tex 100 320 47 110 .344
a
lphabet
of 247 characters,
(Onl y gam e scheduled)
East
Yaz , Bos
116 405 76 128 .316
each
representing
a syilabie.
Wednesday's Games
w. I. pet 9.b.
Jacksn, Oak 115 395 71 124 .314
Portland at S. Cal if.
Mc Rae, KC' 109 394 55 123 .312 Bos ton ·
69 54 .56 1
61 59 .508 61h Detroit at Ph iladelphia
Allen, Chi 116 423 81 131-.310 Cleveland
Memphi s at Fl or ida .
62 61 .504 7
Randie,"Tex 118 400 53 '124 .310 New York
62 61 .504 7
New York at Houston
Drta, Chi
105 387 '62 120 .310 Balti more
Thursday's Ga111e
60 64 .484 9 112
Maddo x, NY 99 318 53 98 .308 M il wa ukee
Scott, Mil 123 464 62 140 .302 Detr oit
58 66 .468 11 '12 Birm ingham at Ch icago
(Onl y game schedule(! )
West
Pinieta.NY 107 397 53 120 .302
• w. I. pel. g. b. .
Home Runs
7 1 54 .568
National league : Schmidt. Oakland
Phil 32; Wynn, LA 28; Bench, Kansas City " 65 57 .533 4 112 HAIRSTON RECALLED · .
64 62 · .508 7112
Cin 25; Ced eno, Hou 22;. Perez, Texas
CHICAGO (UP!) - The
Chi cago
60 64 .484 ·10112
Cin 21.
Minnesota
.
·60
65 .480 1l
American League : Allen, Chi
Chicago. White Sox recalled
50 75 .400 21
32 ; Burroughs, Tex 25 i Jack- California
outfielder Jerry Hairston from
Thursday's Re sults
son , Oak 24 ; Tenace, Oak 21;
the Iowa Oaks of the American
Melton, Clii and Darwin, Minn Kan sa s City 3 Cleveland 1
Texas 6 Baltimore 2
Association Thursday to
20 .
(Only games schedul ed) .
Runs Batted In
replace -Buddy Bradford, now
Today 's Probable Pitchers
National League : Schmidt,
on
the disabled list because of a
!All Times EDTl
Phil 98 ; Bench, Ci n 94; Wynn,
Kansas City (Bu sby 18-9 and pulled hamstring.
LA 88 ;. Garvey, LA 87 i ' Ced eno,
Hou 85.

Horn released

m

International League Roundup
By United Press International
Tidewater has had a disappointing season this year but
Hank Webb has been one of the
few bright spots.
Webb continued to perfonn
well as he pitched a six-hitler
Thursday night that paced the
Tides to a 7-3 International
League triumph over the
Memphis Blues.
The Tides, mired in last
place in the Northern Division,
25 games out of first, batted. out
10 hits In support of Webb's
Joib win In 18 decisions.
in other IL games, Richmond downed Charleston 4-2,
Syracuse trimmed ·Pawtucket
4-2 in 10 Innings and Rochester
beat Toledo 6-2.
Mark Rein bach hit hls fourth
homer as the Red Wings beat
Toledo.
.
Syracuse pushed across two
runs In the top of the lOth and

WORLD RECORD SET
VIENNA (UP!) - Karoline
Ender &lt;&gt;I East Germany set a
world record In 200 meters
freestyle .Thursday winning the
European swimming cham- ·
plonships In 2:03.22 .
The previous world mark
. wu held by Shtlne Gould o!
Australia In 2:03.116.
Renate vo.el ol East Ger~y set a world record In a
100 meiAtnl breutatroke heat
wlth 1, 12.ill, betiAtrlng the _old
rn8rk of Cathy C.... of .the
Unl~ SIAtiAtl ol1 :13.!16.

1nternatlona l

North

Roches te r

Sy ra cuse ·.

78 ; Henderson, Chi 77 .
Stolen Bases

Nallonol League : Brock,' SI.L
86 ; Morgan , Cin 51 ; Lopes, LA
48.
American League : North,

Toledo

Pawtuc k et

Memphis

R ic hmond

Ch &amp;rl esl on

.6 19

71 SO
68 51
55 n

.606

Oak .45 ; Rivers, Cal. Lowen-

stein, Ciev, Patek, KC and

CALL (304)773-5791

· Certificates
5.75 per cent per year
paid on 90 day Cer;
tiflcates of Deposit.

Spiiflorff (13-12} and Healy ;

J . Perry (13-9) and Duncan .

HRs - Otis I 12th ). McRae
(13fh ). Lis (3rd).

Texas

010 500

Sl ,000.00

Interest
. Quarterly.

ooo- 6 1l 0

Ball
000 000 2oo- 2 9 0
Jenki mo Foucault (B ) and
SundbeTg ; Palmer, Alexaru:ler
!4) and Hendricks . WPJenkins I 18-11 I , LP- Po!mer 14·
91. HR- Harrah (16th] .
(Only games scheduled )

Minimum.
Payable

Meigs Co. ar.h ·

National Le.gue

.@

"Good Neighbor"

The Atlaons Coun!y
SI.Yings &amp; lo•n Co.

(No games scheduled) ,

296 Second St. ·

Pomeroy, Ohio

....

Steve Snowden

~'

Ph. 992-7155

~ !Alf

I APM

IN

II~

AN ( I

~
''\..,·-,.,.. ··y
•' ·
.

({
l CI"'PA ... I f',

..

'

446..3491
RT. 7. AT NEW 35 JUNCTION
.
1 BLOCK FROM HOLIDAY INN
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Men's, Women's, mixed, Bantam and Jr.
Leagues . ·

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Syra cuse 4 Pawtu c ket 2

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'll65

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PH.

Plus
Tax

The Best Buy In A Road Bike This Year

10:00 TIL 2:00

"

Major League Results
By United Pres, International
American League
Kan City
000 200 001- 3 8 0
Cleve
000 000 001- 1 8 1

REGULAR
•675

,Tidewat er
51 .1-4 .408 25
Thursday's Re1ults

M!~dlepor.

on 9CJ.Oay

HONCHO

TO JOIN

Messersmith, LA 14-5;
Gullett, Cin and Carlton, Ph il
14-8; P. Niekro, All 14-10;
LonborQ. Phil 14-11 .'
Amencan league : Tlant, Bas
19-8; Busby, KC 18· 10 ; Jenkin s,
Tex 18·11 ; Hunter, Oak 18·10;
Bibby, Te• 18-14; Wood , Chi 18·

.4JJ 22

aonung l.ompant'

·5.75%

Mason, W.Va .

WILL BEGIN THE WEEK OF SEPT. 2 and 8

Nalional League: Billingham ,

68 58 .540 10
57 70 .449 2 1112
so 75 .400 27 1!~
South
w. 1. pet. g .b.
.S-44

Our Interest Is ·
Greater For You

TS 100

League

48

Besides the departure of
Horn, the Browns also dropped
a draft choice and a free agent,
cutting the roster to 64.
Cornerback Ted Seels, who
left a career In baseball to play
with the Browns, and defensive
end Ron McNeil, a 12th round
draft choice, were cut.

·BOWLING .LEAGUES AT
MASON BOWLING CENTER

w. L pet. g .b.

78

veterans were on strike.

SPECIAL OF 'THE WE,EK

Am e r i c:: a n League : Bur -

roughs, Te• 103; Alien. Chi 85 ;
Sando, Oak 82 ; Darwin, Minn

Cln 15-8;

Stan Evenhus hurled a scoreless bottom frame to pick up
his fifth win against one loss.
Chuck Bair hurled . a twohitler and was backed up by an
eight-hit attack as Charleston
beat the Braves.

Brooks Robinson drove In
both Baltimore rups with a
double in the seventh Inning.

UZUK I OF GALLI POLIS.

Carew. Minn 30.
Pitching

Charlies dropped

11.

POMEROY

.

'

NO TRADE-INS AT THESE LOW PRICII

......

~

~~~~~~~~

�I

•

Perennial Loser

Property
Transfers

RAY CROMLEY '
.

Capitol's sores need legislative salve
By 1\Jay Cromley
WASHINGTON - (NEA ) - With ail tbe subUety of a
typhoon, Watergate has demoostraled the dangerous concentration of power in Washington.
Ironically, th is disaster proved Mr. Nixon right in insisting
on the return of more authority tosta tes, counties and dtil-:s.
The revelations of the impeachment inquiry prove the need
lor regular rigorous checks by Congress on the agencies of
government - especially those with huge amounts of cash to
spend, those with power to monitor U.S. citizens and t~ ose with
authorit y to regulate and set price supports or otherwise affect
lhc incomes or borrowing power or companies, unions, farmers
and indi\'idual citizens.
TI1is may require multiplying the size, and drastically increasirog the investigating power, of the Government Accounting
Office . Also to be considered should be the creation of a new
supervisory agency directly responsible to Congress or a hefty
increase in what is caJled the oversight fun ction of Congressional
commillees. It would also be desirable to increase the research
fu nctions of the Library of Congress. These proposals would
involve a sig nifica nt increase in the workload or senators,
·congressmen and their staffs .
There has been much talk of the need for tighter watchdog
supervision over the Internal Revenue Service, the Central Intelligence Agency and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. But
even more important is the need for a close watch over the anti.
trust division of the Justice Department, the procurement activities of Defense, the loans and grants of the Deparbnent of
Health , Education and Welfare, and ac tions of, those agencies

monitor ing securities, price supporls, broadcast licensing,
fre ight rates and tariffs.
Some way must be found to more clearly sta te on the ree&lt;Jrd
the significance of the d ay-t~ay govcrrunent actions in .these
areas. Who ordered the ac tions? What relationshi ps exist (acciden tal or intentional) between tl'i ():jC ordering the actions a nd
those groups or individuals profiling from the orders?
All requ ests for Internal Reveune Service d.ocuments, i n~
el uding income tax returns. by the White House or other agencies
should be put into a record available to Congress and the press.
The same should hold lrue lor requests for FBI reports, including
" routine" requests for derogatory informatjon made as a
prelude to securing clearances for men in line for government
posts. White House requests for IRS or FBI action on any individual or group should be available to Senate and House wa tc hdog committees.
We need laws to define precisely how FBI and IRS files mlty
be used and precisely who can have access to th qse files and
under what circumstances. We need a clear cut statement of
what internal surveillance is a llowable in the name of national
security and a precise definition of what national security involves in this context.
The Senate and House are no less subject to abuse of power .
Needed are strong checks on Congressional actions. It is
therefore equally necessary that on each major vote mCongress
appreciably benefitting any company , association, union, farm
group or person, the fi nancial, political and personal connections
of each senator and representative be disclosed. Any correlation
with major campaign contributions should be on the record .

3- The Daily Senllnel ,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Aul! . 23, 1974

·spliuor

Green Hill Homes, Inc. to
~: rede r irk
E.
Werry,
Rosemary Werry, Lots 16-17,
llarti ngc r Sub., Chester.
Kenne th E. Riggs, Judlth .\.
Ri ggs to Fred B. Goegleln, Lot
9. Orange - Riggscrest.
Fred B. Goeglein, Barbara
A. Goeglein to RoY. F. Riffle,
Frona K. Ri!fle, I Acr e,
t:lrange.
Blaine Carter, Jr., Martha
Mae Carter to James Drehel,
Phyllis Drehel , Frank Drehel,
Jr., 48.54 Acres, Rutland.
Blaine Carter, Sr., Ruby
Carter to James Drehel,
Phyllis Drehel, Frank Drehel,
Jr., 150 Acres, Rutland.
Charles L. Butcher, Alpha G.
Butcher to Noel D. Young,
Leona Youn g, 15 Acres,'.Scipio.
Ruth B. Sansbury, dec. to
Roy Sansbury, Keith Riggs,
Loraine Neff, Cert. of trans.,
Middleport.
Keith Riggs, Barbara Riggs,
Lorraine Neff, Jack Neff to
Roy Sansbury, Lot · 172,
Pomeroy.
Orville L. Wetherholt,
Teresa Wetherholt; Stanley J .
Bugansky, Jr., Barbara J .
Bugansky to Carla Diane Frye,
Rutland.

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sporto Writ.,
Paul SpUttorff has his own
cryptic description of what it's
like to pitch in Cleveland's
Municipal Stadiwn.

By Tom Tiede
During the '72 campaign , he
WASHINGTON - (NE;A ) altered his views on issues with
What with impeachment and the weather. One day, you'll
resignation fever in the land , it recall, he thought it would be a
passed almost with out notice good idea to give 1,000 governthe other day when George ment dollars annually to every
McGovern rose on the fl oor of man, woman and child in the
tlle Senate 'to insert a news- nation; the next day, with the
paper article in to the snickers and guffaws of a
Congressional Reeord. Note is bemused public ringing his
now taken, however, that the ears , he decided the idea
gesture constituted one of the wasn't so hot after all .
trul y raw ironies of the events
And before that, even on the
which have .s tunned and issue that pr opelled the
sickened Ute nation in the last . Sena tor into Presidential
two years .
politics
Vietnam
McGoVern 's inserti on was an McGovern was inconsistent. In
article of confession written by t963, he was the first man in the
a res pected Washington ·Senate to speak against the
reporter . The confession was war. But a year later he voted
·that ihe repor ter, a life-long for the Tonkin Gulf Resolution
liberal, had deCided to modify which gave authority to widen
and moderate his .political the conflict. Then be · began
postW"e. The man , in short, had ·saying that Vietnam was a civil
become a judicious con-=- war and so sboul~ be left to the
servati ve, and he re .r was na tives to wage but a few
George McGovern com- months later he was quoted as
mending the piece before his adlhitling it was too late lor the
colleagues with the indication United States to withdraw.
that the article reflected his "We have· a commitment and
own political maturation.
It boggles the· brain . George
Mc;Govern . going m&lt;X_Jer8te?
Maybe ,even conservative? It's .

we must stay un til the dispute
is resolved," he said then.
He has now assuredly been
dead, and continually, against
'Nam fpr many years - but
who's to say, really, what his
thought on it will be tomorrow ?
It is, of course, true that
flexibility among leaders_ is
good lor the nati on. Intransigence of thought. can be
evil. It is also obvious that
Darwin's laws rule politics as
nature, thus, .sW'vival goes to
th ose who are most· adaptable.
Concerning
the
Ia Iter ,
McGovern is currently fa cing
stiff opposition for re-election
in his home state and admits
his recent conversion to ·riscal
-responsibility in government
and hawkish attitudes towards
veteran 's benefits is intended
to 11 demonstt~ te I am co0cerned abotlt the' values and
views held by the people of
South Dakota."
Yet given .these realities,
there is such a !bing as going
too far. Particularly now.

Surely the times demand
higher poli tical priorities
tha n lnerely se1f-sur vivai. It should be hoped
the constituency has had
enough clap tr ap fr om its
electeds ("! shall not be a
candidate for the Presidency in
1976:" Gerald Ford, January,
1974). Peo ple may for give
blindness, even incompetency,
but never baseness.- The cry
must be for candor.
Unfor-tunately, the evidence
is that candOr is, even now, just
another political promise . ·
Since Richard Nixon's retreat
there has been much talk of it
in Washington and elsewhere,
but only scant cornmitme;nt.
Actually, many seem to feel
the Nixon resignation was
enough, that it satisfied the
public an ger and that now
authorities can return to
monkey business .as usual.
Enter George McGovern. Mr.
Warner. Sigh. The man is 52
ye~r s old - when is he going to
make up his mind?

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sportt Editor

true. McGovern himself
waffles on the matter, which is
·his character, but' oile of his
chief ass istants says with
caution :
"! think he is more conservatiVe. He's indicated as
much to me anyway."
The irony in all this should be
clear . First, Richard Nixon
deserted the 45 million
.\mericans who voted for him
in 1972, and now G'eor ge
McGovern deserts the 28
millio~ who voted for his
radical-lib ideas. It's sad but
true thijl' the only people left
who were not lied to or misled
during 1972 are those who
wouldn' t ·. vote for either candidate. ·
The McGove rn change,
which he says is " not really
substan tial,'' Is ·surprising but
hardly unprecedented for the
Senator · from South Dakota.

·N eed _p.rove· d £o· r· re£orm
·
WASHINGTO N (UP! ) AF L-C IO
Pre si d e nt
George
Mean y
believes that Watergate, besides vindicating his longheld disdain for Rich&amp;rd M.
Nixon , has proved the need lor
drastic reform of U.S. political
campaign financing .
He also is convinced that
unions eventually will support
his view --already embraced
by the steelworkers - that
strikes are prohibitively costly
for worker and employer , and
should be foregone voluntarily
in favor of binding, third-p'!fty
arbitration of unsettled contract issues.
These views ernerged during
a lengthy interview in which
Meany :rriused about a career
he began as a plumber's helper

Berrys World

1·

-=~

I

..........

.....

••..-...-vr·

,._.,"u.,

.,,,.....,.,.:
........
_..,..
__ ,__,.,

"Will !here by a 'Midwestern White House ' in
Michigan ?"

·- Clot-··., . . •'
p .........

. .. . . ;

...... •*·
..... ,, ....
.....,,...,,.""'.

'

•

~:~~~u!x~n:~::':!:

providing greater detail and
more oupport for the actions
taken.
" President Nixon's course of
conduct
following
.t he
Watergate
break-In, as
described in Article One,
caused actioo not only by his
subordinates, but by the
agencies of the United States,
including the Department of
Justice, the FBI8lld the CIA,"
the report condudeil at the end
of its justification for the first
article.
"It
required perjury,
ln·l9101nhis native Harlem. He would he "great," or would Md. ) because I think be's a destruction of evidence, obstruellon of jaotlee, all crimes.
has known six presidenls since support something akin to the good coogressman."
he came to Washington in 1940, 'British system . in · which a Witbin the labor movement, But, most · tmportant, It
and has lavish praise for ail but central party agency collects Meany professes pride that requlred deliberate, contrived
Nixon.
and spends aU money in behalf "perhaps one of the greatest and conUnufng deceplloo-of lbe
·
He nods over his shoulder in of a candidate within strict advances .. .is that unions are American people."
It 'acknowledged _receipt of
the direction of the White limits .
now pretty much accepted by
the
three transc-ripts of taped
House, shimml!ring in summer
In an election year in which the big industries'' that once
conversations
released _by
heat a few hundred feet across the AFL-CIO and its affiliates vowed to destroy !bern.
Lafayette Park from AFUIO _had amassed $1 million by
As evidence, he recalls that Nixon on Aug. 5. That releaie
headquarters.
midyear to spend on favored the United Auto Workers ran proving Nixoo's involvement in
"It's hard to think that we congressional candidates (not out of money three weeks after the cover-up or the Watergate
have a man of this character in including furth er expected their strike against General break-in as early as siJ: days
the White House," Meany said, contributions plus nearly $5 Motors began in 1970, aod that alter the June 17, 1972 event,
shrugging, shaking his head million in ca sh reserves), the GM board of directors led to unanimous committee
and torching his cigar. " But Meany said : "I'd like to see an extended a $25 million Joan to support for the first arUde. It
tbere he is. We'll have to suffer answer where we can gel out of the striking union to make sure had voted, 27-ll,for that article
the business of raising employe insurance premiiUlis on July 27.
until he ge ts out.
" But I think we 'll come out of money."
were paid.
The tape release atao led .to
it better off somewhere down
"Our friends on Capitol Hili
That incident, he said, also . overwhelming House and
the line," he said, especially if can't get"it from Exxon or Gulf proves "YOIJ can't win a strike Senate' sentiment for Nixon's
the pernicious influence of Oil or GM or ITT ," he said. by setting up a gre~t big strike resignation or removal from
money is removed from presi- "They gotta get it from tis, and fund, unless you set up one big o(llce. He resigned four days
dential politics.
we gotta collect it, and I'd enough to pay lull Income for tater, ending the bnpeachment
"I see the other day Chuck much rather get out of it."
your workers for six months. )ll'ocess. The House voted, U~
Percy (Sen. Charles H. Percy,
Not that the AFUIO is This would run into billions." on Tuesday to receive tbe
R-Ill .), a businessman , is aboutto abandonilssupport of Thus, Meany said, "from the panel's rtnal report and to
budgeting $11 million to run for friends . Mean y boasted that point of view of the employer coinmeod ltfor its 10 monlha of
president ... my God, this is, "We've got a better . political · and the worker both, the strike work.
te rr ible. Now, I ha ve no machine in the large industrial. no longer makes any sense.
The first 278 pages of the
"You· can hurt an employer report contain the conclusiOIIS
grievance against him. In fa ct, slates than either the
I kind alike him personally, but' Republicans or the Democrats just as much now by shutting and the panel's ' evidence
I thin~ we're getting more. and hve," with compu\erized voter him down as you hurt him . gathered and compiled under
rhoreto the point where money lis ts, pamphlet mailings, before, but you hurt yourself the _dlrecUon of Speeial CoUILiel
is the major requirement precinct volun teers, telephone much· more ... because yoU've John M. Ooar. The rest Ineludes " supplemental, adcharacter , integrity, issues and banks, habysitters, car pools got so much more to lose.
even what you believe In is not · and s treet canvassers.
"Back when you got 75 cents dltional, separate, ~ntlng,
near as important as money.''
One · labor reporter has an hour, you shut the employer minor! ty , lndi vidual and
Mea•y says he thinks a estimated the unions spent $60 down completely and the concurring views" by most of
public, tax.pald campai~n fund million on the 1968 election, 'worker lost 75 cents an hour, the p~~nel members.
One was a report written by
F ~.-'- _ _ _ -·qq~'C"""~
including not only "voluntary" but with a little relief yoo got
,.
The Oily Sentinel
cash contributions from mem- him 40 cents an hour and he Chief GOP Counsel Sam
I he rs but dues-financed goods could 'stlll live. Now, what do Garrison for the 10 committee
DI:YO.IDT0111E
and services, such as printing, you do· with a $12,000-a-year
transportation and volunteer man who's got insurance
CHDTDL TANNIIIILL.
workers.
payments, paying off a car,
'
.
Meany
rejects
charges
that
trying
to make mortgage
JIOaatTJIOD'I...I(JI,.
01)...
;.
I _ _ ..,...-.,.,,.. , the labor federation is wedded payments, klda in college and
deal lor
·one y..ir' " he conto the Democratic party.
so forth ?"
&lt;ll6o VIDIJ p.Nf+!. ~. Ill
.
cedes,
·
but " They gain
' Cout • .• ,....., , Oblo, . .. . . . .
" We're closer to Democrats,
Meany's solution : ·jvou
I Offtct Piloal-.aiM. Edller1aJ ,._ but not to the Democratic don 't give away .the right to from the continuity or
' nJ7,
~....J.
party, bec8use it's ln the very strlke , you can't ever do production." The United
I - - - ....
nature of things. Where we that. .. but you say that when Steel Workera of .America,
H•Uoul •41,.vt'-t.,
hs ve a concentration of Indus- your agreement expires, come sensing a "Community of
........... •n.r-,lltc.;Ur..Oid.at,
Nftr Y.-.• Na Yoft.
''
tria l work ers, traditionally what may, we are not going [I) Interest" With IIIUIIIIIIMIIt
~Democrats·,
we
have strike for aoolber ~ear, lhltall ewer the Urut of~ llell
..... lloolo _ _ _ ...
Democrsts In ~ongress. Ninety unresolved laues tre 101n11 to COillpltltlon, Uld IIIII ICI'IIIIIa
per cent plus of the people we final and b&amp;ldlng third-party ltiCCtlllully to a'IVId llle uu1
- ;;I W'. Va., Oot Yw, Ill: •
support are Democrats, but I determination. What can you poat-seltlement layoff•
T!lret - - · ...
!llt•..+tiL.,_.; .-a.ttUD;
support my
Republican lose?
resulting !rom. 114CIIpl.liftl ol
~
J . congressman right out In my
The union might "get 8 bad supplies In anticipation · or. a
~
district
(Rep.
Gilbert
Gude,
R·
strtlte,' he Nld.
•
•
, I

George Meany: JJ7hat bothers him

~~~v~~~~~~~n~~ss:;p~~~nn~l~

W.\SHINGTON (UP!) - The
House released Thursday the
historical final report of the
Judiciary Committee on imp~achment, changing some
language but still maintaining
that former President Nixon
lied, violated laws and subverted the Constitution.
Conclusions supporting each
of the three articles of impeachment voted against
Nixon were Included in ·a draft
of the report circulated to the ·
38 committee members last
week .
They already were strongly

•

••

Republicans who voted agalnat
each of tbe proposed articles
during the conunitlee's late
July debate, but who changed
their minds on Article One
alter Nixon's Aug. 5 revelation.
Garrison's report was only
slightly altered In the final
version. It still stated that Ulltil
Aug . 5 there was no
justification for impeachment,
but that Nixon was not

I

"hoWJded from office."
Perhaps some persons would
continue to say that Nixon was
hounded
from
office,
Garrison's statement said.
"We feel constrained t6 point
out, however, that it was
Richard Nixon who impeded
the FBI's Investigation of the
.Watergateaffairbywrongfully
attempting to implicate the
Central Intelligence Agency. "

~181!!l;:&lt;c';;:~·~~W'X~~~.m-L~';9?§.
~
. ..
.
.....

Mason County

N

.

eWS

Nt
Q

M
.,,

~;

eS ~~

By Ahna Marshall

'f.l

NEW HAVEN- The 26th annual Wolfe iamily reunion was
held SIU!day, Aug. llalthe New Haven Park. Prayer was given
by James Lewis before the picnic. Following · the dinner a
business meeting was conducted by Harry F ." Love.
Minutes lor the 1973 meeting were read by Elsie Roach and
the treasurer's
was by Mary Ord. A lew moments were
observed in memory of Mrs. Henry Roush and Mr. Oris wolfe.
Officers reelected were, president, Harry F. Love; vice
)ll'esldent, Kathleen Love; secretary, Elsie Roach, and
treasurer, Mary Ord.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry G. Love received gills for being the
oldest present. Mrs. John (Eula) Wolfe had the most In a family
present. Mlcbeal Snodgrasa, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Snograss,
was the youngest. Traveling the farthest was Jolumy WoHe, of
Riclunond, Ind. and Mrs. Doris Tkach, Vanessa and Javina,
from Glendale,.W. Va. Prizes were also won by .\my Wolle and
Bill Ralston.
,
Next year the reiUlion will be at Krodel Park i.iJ Point
Pleasant.
Mr. and Mrs. Oshel Wolfe, Millwood, were present,
representing the Holly Wolle family.
.
Mter the business meeting Rev. James Lewis presented
devotions.
Rev. Lewis closed with prayer and the group sang, "Blest Be
the Tie."
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Harry Love and Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Lewi.sand Connie, Pt. Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs. Austin Wolle,
Jerry and Aimee and Carroll Norris, Syracuse, Ohio; Bill
Ralston,St.CialrsvUle,Ohio; JackRottgen,Mr.andMrs. Robert
Roach, Larry and Roger, Mason; Eula and Aaron Wolfe, Lell!rt
Falla, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. JolmOrdand Johnny, Mr. and Mrs. C.
M. Wolfe, Letart, W.Va.; Ken and Debbie Theiss, Columbus,
Olllo; Doria Tkach, Vanessa and Javina; Mr. and Mrs .. Oshel
Wolle, Millwood; Mr. and Mrs. William Snodgrass and Michael,
New Haven, and Johnnie A. Wolle, Richmond, Ind.

report

· PERSON.\I. MENTION - Holly Boyer is a patient at
Columbua University Hospital. He Is to have heart surgery some
time lhll week. His room munber is 621.
l.awrence R. Wolfe and Timmy visited Tuesday with Mr. and
Mrs. J . Robert &amp;.;ch and 110111.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Shoaf, Teresa, David andSherrl from
PataUne,nt were visiting Mrs. Shoaf's parents, Mr. and Mrs. T.
R. Davia and her brother, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Davis of Mason.
·
Elsie Roach was surpriSed on her birthday with two birthday
cilkes from her son, Ltirry, and her sister, Al.lce Randolph ·and
daUilhters, stella and Pauletta Klng.
Mr. and Mrs. T. R. I&gt;avls IIP'!nt the .weekend with their .
diUilhter and family, Mr. and Mrs. GleiUI Johnson and Kenny of
Westervllle, Ohio.
'
Mrs. Ethel McDermitt of Pompano Beach, Fla., aod Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd McDennltt and children of Georgia are visiting her
illalerandflmlly, Mr.andMrs. LoydWilllamsofCIIfton.
Mrs. t..ureneLewtsla visiting her slster,Mrs. Ann Erwenat
Beech HID, W. Va. .
·
MASON - The O!rlatlan Brethren !l!urch here had a picnic
&amp;utdly efternoon at the Racine Locka. Earl Stewart led prayer.
At~ were Mn. Catherine Stewart, Raymond and
Nancy Stewart; Robert and Barbara Mc:Cartney, Roberta,,' ·
Ronnie, Delxnh and Rabeeea McCartney, Rolfe Lee, Ricky .
McKJcrtn, Dlivld ~. Qlrfa Lee and Mary Johason; Carroll
llld IJU!an Elllott, WWlam, Sr. and Velma Zuapu, William, Jr.
111d Uncia Zlupan, Todd and Rebocca ZllfiPIII, John, Kathy and
Johnny Zulpln; NIJICY, y.,.. and Tammy JohiUIOil; Mrs. Bar.... ZUipan, Georse, Jr. and Stacey and Catherine Zuapan;
Plttr Beleber, Patty Burton, Vlclde and Pam Burton, W111da
HW, 'l'alnmy, ~. Pemlr, and Holly HW, Gonna
.~. "*!'t 1!111 Ellie Jlolch, Larry and Racer Roach,
KatiiJIIId Kim w~. Robin and Kip Pauley,
IAift7 IIIII Cln tlllll1'amn17 l.ewla, IC8rlllld Deloria Stewart,
TrvJ and Rella . .wilt, J~telland Ruth Riley, Kaoin Edwal'\11,
Ct~~ IIIII Pltdlltl Wlnlton, Jlllle Smtih, BIMrry Yount,
Aaile T-t, .._, Grtn...'l, Barbara Mol•,.Jack Rottcen,

-Twnat.

.

CGnnlt~and the

a.v. Mdlln. J-IAwla.

~

•

wzns zn ''the matchbox''
Is only 385 feet distant from the
plate In the right and left fi eld
power wnea. It thus ranks with
Boston's Fenway Park and
Ollcago's Wrigley F ield as a
''hitler's paradise.''

pit ch ln~ in a City Hoyals to a 3-1 victory
he suys. "The over the Indians which moved
ba ll• Oy out or here like them to within 4'k games or the
li rst.plae&lt;-d Oakland A'sln the
rockets."
The 27-ycar-&lt;Jid left:h ander Amer ican J.eague's Western
had just pitched the Kansas Division .

" Jt ' !I like

m~ tc hbox /'

Splittorff, who raised his
rec"rd to 13-12, carried a 3-0
lead into the bottom of the
ninth inning before losing his
shul&lt;Jul on Joe Us' th ird homer
of the seas&lt;&gt;n. Amos Otis hit a

two-run homer In the fourth giving up a run," ·lauahed
inning and Hal McRa e · Spliltorff. " It seems I always
homered in the lop of the ninth give up homers her e. You've
to provide the Royals witb all got to be conscious of thooe
their runs.
runners iln the bases when you
"It wouldn't be right if I pitch in a small park like
didn't leave Cleveland without Ulis one."
The Texas Rangers rOuted
Jim Pabner , the AL's Cy
Young Award winner In 1973,
and beat the Baltimore Orioles,
6-2, in the only other maJ&lt;&gt;i'
league game played Thursday.
Miami at Los Angeles, Phila- No National League games
delphia at Oakland, New were scheduled.
•
England at San Diego, Dallas
Toby Ha rra h's three-run
at New Orlea!lll and the New homer was the big blow or a
York Gianls at Pittsburgh.
li ve-run fo urth-inning exBuffalo is at Minnesota on plosion which lagged Palmer
Sunday , while on Monday with his ninth defeat agai/!st
night, Chicago is at Baltimore, four wins.
Detr oit at Cincinnati and
Ferguson Jenkins, suspected
Atlanta at Houston .
. of having lost much of his
speed alter a 14-16 record with
the Chicago Cubs last season,
allowed six hits in seven innings.aod raised his mark to 18-

Namath starts against Cards

Sport Parade

Impeachment report
part of ·House history

Carla Nell Crisp, a senior
at Meigs High School, has
learned she is to be In tbe
E;Ighth AD!Iual E;dttion of .
Who' s , Who
Among
American High School ·
students; . 1973-74. The
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Jack w. Crisp, Route 1,
Langsville, she Is a member
of the · National Honor
Society and belongs Jo tbe
Ohio Ofllce Education
AssocJatJo~ worldng as an
office assistant. Carla Is a
member of Bethel 62, International Order of· Job's
Daughters. She attends the
Church of Christ.

Cleveland's Mlllliclpal Stadiwn has a seating capacity of
76,997 but the distance along
both foul lines to the fences Is a
modest 320 feet. An Inner fence
which runs across the ouitield

Today's

TOM TIEDE

A liberal leopard changing iiS spots?

•

NEWYORK ( UPI ) - Less than two months ago, the base bail
fans of America, those laithfulloiiowers who check the standings
e~en before they brush their teeth in the morning, studied this
one photo In the paper, winced at the stark anguish they saw in it
and generally came to the same conclusion.
The Boston Red Sox were ail through.
There was no way they could win anymore. Not with Carlton
Fisk out lor the rest of the year . Without Carlton Fisk doing the
catching, the hilling; the cheerleadlng, the Red Sox were an
ordinary learn. That was the predominant feeling among most of
the baseball fans of .\merica.
.
They were mor e sure than ever alter looking at !bat photo in
the paper. It showed F'isk off to one side of the plate, his eyes
tightly shut and mouth wide open in a mute but graphic tableau
of pain. Leron Lee of Cleveland had slid Into the Boston catcher
tearing ligaments in his left knee .
That happened June 28, and the Red Sox led by 2'h games at
the time.
Now look at them!
They went six full games up when Roger Morel threw a onehitter at the White Sox Wednesday night and picked up another
half-game when Cleveland lost Thursday night.
Several players have pitched in to keep the Red Sox on top.
Luis Tiant has been nothing less than tremendous, winning nine
out of 11 since Fisk was hurt ...Bili Lee and Moret each have won
six games in that Interval and Juan Marichal has done his bit
.
lately also...
Rookie Rick Burleson looks as if he's going to be at shortstop
for at le_a slthe nextlO year~ and you can't possibly say enough
about Tim Blackwell, the k1d catcher up from Pawtucket who
seems to be having less troub,le with ·pitchers in the .\merlcan
League than he did with those in the Eastern League ...
But if you were to poll the Red Sox players themselves and ask
them which one individual among them has been primarily
responsible lor saving the day, taking over as their leader and
keeping them up there, I'm reasonably sure they'd ail single out
the same man -Carl Yastrzemski.
The fact he has been the most consistent performer on the bail
club, and his .316 batting average is topped by only two other
players in tbe league is only half the story. The other half, tbe
much more important hall, has to do with how much Yastrzemski contributes to the other members of the Red Sox merely
with his ·presence. ·
_His personal reaction when Fisk was hurt was the same as
every other Boston player's , First and foremost, he fell sorry for
Fisk. He did not try to minimize what the injury would mean, but
neither did he think the dub would necessarily go into a tailspin
because of it.
When I spoke with Yastrzemski sometime later about the Red
Sox being regarded as an "ordinary team" without Fisk, he had
an answer lor that.
"If that's the case," Yastrzemski said, "then an ordinary team
is gonna win the pennant. Of course we suffer from his loss. No
dou)lt about it, you 10se a top ballplayer like him and you feel it.
The big thing we've lost besides Fisk himself is his knowledge of
the competition.
"But we've got some good talent. Blackwell throws wei! and
picks up thmgs fast .. .. (Bob) Montgomery does a good job when
he's in there .... The reason I feel we're gonna win is because
we've had a Iotta Injuries this year and we stayed in first place In
spite ofthem .. .. The big thing Is we're still in first place."
When you talk to Yaz about his being the team leader, he gives
you one of those "who me ?11 looks.
"I don't really go too much on that stuff," he says, "You're a
professional, and you go out there and do your work. Pride
motivates me. If pride isn 't enough to motivate you - what
will?"

"Money _maybe ?" ceme a suggestion.
"Not really," Yastrzemski said. "Certainly you want to get
paid lor what you do, but In the long run the thing that motivates
you most, basically, is pride."

By United Press International don't want to get him in there up his leg in a water skiing
Charley Winner is going back too much right away and I accident in Feburary and is said . "But I want to play. I
to St . Louis L&lt;Jnlght and he's don't want him hur ting him- just getting back into shape. wanted to play last week, too,
bu t they wouldn't Let me ."
worried.
self."
" I'm goi ng back at about half
The Jets are 1-2, while Sl.
Winner Isn 't too disturbed
Namath won 'l be going into or three-fift hs speed becau,&lt;e Louis is 3-1 in pre....,.son play ..
about going back to the site or the game 100 per cent. He tore off UJe accident," Na malh
The New York -St. Louis
his last head coaching assign.
game is the only one scheduled
ment. He's more concerned
lor
tonight while on Saturday,
with the New York Jels' pass
Washington
is at Cleveland,
protection since J oe Narn;~l h
Denver at Green Bay , San
will make his first start at
Francisco at Kansas City,
quarterback tonight against
the St. Louis Cardinals.
Ma jor League .Sta ndings
Starter Ai Woodall was
Br i les 3-5)
at M ilwaukee
By
United Press lnte rnationa I !Champ ion 8-2 and Slaton 9·14),
dropped four times and pressNa1iona I Leag ue
2, 7 p .m .
ured on C&lt;Juntless other occa.
East
Oa kland ( Bl ue 14· 111 a t
sions la.St week as the Jels lost
w. I. pet. g.b. Bos ton (Tia n l l9-8), 7: 30 p .m .
. Lou i s
65 60 .520
·M innesota (Goltz 6·6) at
21-13 lo the New York Giants. St
Phllatlelphi a 63 6 1 .508 ll/~ Balti m ore (M c Na ll y 11 -9 J. 7: 30
HffiAM, Ohio (UP! ) - It
The pass protection offered to Pittsburgh
63 61 .508 Jlh p.m .
was
jusi a matter of time
subs John Jones and Bill M on trea l
58 63 .479 5
Te xas ~ H a rgan 9,8) at Detr oit
New
York
53
67
.442
9'h
before
Coach Nick Skorich C!Jt
Demory wasn' t much better
(Coleman 10· 11 ), 8 p.m .
Chi cago
so
71
.41
3
13
Californ
ia
(
Lockwood
2-4)
at
either.
back the number of quarWest
New York !May 5-2), 8 p.m .
ter
backs in the Cleveland
Unlike last week, Winner,
w. I. pet g . b .
Cleveland (Peter son a·~ al at
Los
Ang
eles
78
46
.629
Browns training camp to three.
who takes over this year from
Ch icago {Kaat 13· 10, 9 p.m .
Cinci nnati
75
50 .600 3 1h
Saturday's
Games
Veteran quarterback Don
Weeb Ewbank, will be going Atl anta
67 56 .545 10'12 Ca l iforn ia at New York
· Horn was th e one to go. HE! was ·
with a veteran line this time Hou ston
63 60 .512 l.oW 2 Texas at Detroi t
released to the San Diego
and he hopes the group which San Fran cisco 56 69 .455 22lf2 Cleveland at Ch icag o
1h
San
Diego
49
76
.392
29
Kansa
s
City
at
Milwaukee
Chargers on waivers Thurshas protected Namatb over the
Thursday 's Res ults
Minn a t Ba lt imor e. nigh t
day.
The 29-year-old Hor n
past few years Is ready alter
{ No games sc hedu led )
Oa kland at ~ as t on . night
Today 's Probable Pitch er s
came to the Browns In 1973
only two weeks in camp.
(All Times EDT&gt;
after twa seasons with Denver .
"Joe wants to play," Willll ~r
New York ( Par ke r 4-11 and
His absence Leaves: veteran
said. "He's absorbed OW' new Ma11ack lJ. l O) at At lan t a ( Reed
WFL Standings
system quite well and l think 8· 7 and Leon 2-4 or Kr ausse '1· By Un ited Press International starter Mike Phipps, 26, who
E t
will be backed up by B~n
he 'll be able to go at least a 4). 2, 6,05 p.m.
Ci ncinnat i ( Billingham 15-8)
as
t
f pa
Sipe, 25. The No. 3 spot goes to
quarter and maybe a half. I
a t Mon1rea l• (Wa lke r 2·3L 8: 05 Florida ~· 11. o' ' . ts~ · ~~ 85
Will Cureton, 23, who quarterp. ~hHadelphia ( Ruth ven 6.9) at New York 5 2 0 .71-4 167 11 1 ba cked the team while the
Hou;:; ton (Dierke r 7-8), 8: 35 Phlla
3 4 0 .429 176 12 1
p.m.
.
·
. Jaxnvl
2 5 0 .286 133 139
Major League Leaders
Pittsburg h (Reuss 13-9). at
Cenlr,at 1 I
DRAFT SATURDAY
By United Press lnternationa I San Diego IGrei f 6-!4], 10, 30
Th.e Midget Football League
Brm nghmw. !. • pc · P pa
leading Batters
National League
P-~:· Louis !McGlothen 13_81 at
7 o o 1.000 204 123 draft will be held Saturday at l
g. ab r. h. pet. Los Angeles I Rau 12-6). 10' 30 Chicago ~ 1 o .85/ 212
p.m . on the north bleachers of
Garr, Atl
122 520 73 187.360 p.m.
2 0 .7 14 220
Memphi
s
Memorial Field, it was ailZi sk, Pit
113 41 2 60 135 .328
Ch icFago
IReusclhB
Sm ith, StL 107 378 58 123 .325 san
ranc1
sco eiarr11-91)0 -6all, Detro•"t o 7 o .000 115 209 noun ced today by director
Gross, Hou 118 440 64 142 .323
w. 'f."',,_ pet. pt pa DaAlvildboLyonsh.o
Brock, Stl 117 484 SO 154 .31 8 10,30 ps.m
a,.urday ' s Games
ys w hav e signed up
S. Ca!if. · 4 3 0 .571 139 132
t
Garvey, LA 119 495· 73 157 .317 C. I 1.1 !M I I
nna
a
on
rea
Houston
2
4
1
.333
53
111
to
play
should
be
presen
•
Oliver, Pit 109 452 70 142 .31 4 PhInc
iladelph ia at Houston
235
Buckn r, LA 108 428 57 134 .313 Ch icago at San Francisco
Hawall ns l 6 0 .143 125 167
Montnz, Ph! 109 385 41 120 .312 New York at Atlanta, night
Portland 0 6 1 .000 83
Thursday's Result
Schmdl, Phi 124 431 91 134 .31 1 St . Louis at Los Ang, night
Chicago 35 Detroit 23
American League
(On ly g am es sc heduled)
(On ly gam e schedul ed )
g. ab r. h. pet.
Amhari c, widely spoken in
Sunday's Game
Carew, Min 119 471 68 172 .365
E;
thiopia,
has a 1,700-year·old
Jacksonvllle at Hawaii
American league
Hrgrve, Tex 100 320 47 110 .344
a
lphabet
of 247 characters,
(Onl y gam e scheduled)
East
Yaz , Bos
116 405 76 128 .316
each
representing
a syilabie.
Wednesday's Games
w. I. pet 9.b.
Jacksn, Oak 115 395 71 124 .314
Portland at S. Cal if.
Mc Rae, KC' 109 394 55 123 .312 Bos ton ·
69 54 .56 1
61 59 .508 61h Detroit at Ph iladelphia
Allen, Chi 116 423 81 131-.310 Cleveland
Memphi s at Fl or ida .
62 61 .504 7
Randie,"Tex 118 400 53 '124 .310 New York
62 61 .504 7
New York at Houston
Drta, Chi
105 387 '62 120 .310 Balti more
Thursday's Ga111e
60 64 .484 9 112
Maddo x, NY 99 318 53 98 .308 M il wa ukee
Scott, Mil 123 464 62 140 .302 Detr oit
58 66 .468 11 '12 Birm ingham at Ch icago
(Onl y game schedule(! )
West
Pinieta.NY 107 397 53 120 .302
• w. I. pel. g. b. .
Home Runs
7 1 54 .568
National league : Schmidt. Oakland
Phil 32; Wynn, LA 28; Bench, Kansas City " 65 57 .533 4 112 HAIRSTON RECALLED · .
64 62 · .508 7112
Cin 25; Ced eno, Hou 22;. Perez, Texas
CHICAGO (UP!) - The
Chi cago
60 64 .484 ·10112
Cin 21.
Minnesota
.
·60
65 .480 1l
American League : Allen, Chi
Chicago. White Sox recalled
50 75 .400 21
32 ; Burroughs, Tex 25 i Jack- California
outfielder Jerry Hairston from
Thursday's Re sults
son , Oak 24 ; Tenace, Oak 21;
the Iowa Oaks of the American
Melton, Clii and Darwin, Minn Kan sa s City 3 Cleveland 1
Texas 6 Baltimore 2
Association Thursday to
20 .
(Only games schedul ed) .
Runs Batted In
replace -Buddy Bradford, now
Today 's Probable Pitchers
National League : Schmidt,
on
the disabled list because of a
!All Times EDTl
Phil 98 ; Bench, Ci n 94; Wynn,
Kansas City (Bu sby 18-9 and pulled hamstring.
LA 88 ;. Garvey, LA 87 i ' Ced eno,
Hou 85.

Horn released

m

International League Roundup
By United Press International
Tidewater has had a disappointing season this year but
Hank Webb has been one of the
few bright spots.
Webb continued to perfonn
well as he pitched a six-hitler
Thursday night that paced the
Tides to a 7-3 International
League triumph over the
Memphis Blues.
The Tides, mired in last
place in the Northern Division,
25 games out of first, batted. out
10 hits In support of Webb's
Joib win In 18 decisions.
in other IL games, Richmond downed Charleston 4-2,
Syracuse trimmed ·Pawtucket
4-2 in 10 Innings and Rochester
beat Toledo 6-2.
Mark Rein bach hit hls fourth
homer as the Red Wings beat
Toledo.
.
Syracuse pushed across two
runs In the top of the lOth and

WORLD RECORD SET
VIENNA (UP!) - Karoline
Ender &lt;&gt;I East Germany set a
world record In 200 meters
freestyle .Thursday winning the
European swimming cham- ·
plonships In 2:03.22 .
The previous world mark
. wu held by Shtlne Gould o!
Australia In 2:03.116.
Renate vo.el ol East Ger~y set a world record In a
100 meiAtnl breutatroke heat
wlth 1, 12.ill, betiAtrlng the _old
rn8rk of Cathy C.... of .the
Unl~ SIAtiAtl ol1 :13.!16.

1nternatlona l

North

Roches te r

Sy ra cuse ·.

78 ; Henderson, Chi 77 .
Stolen Bases

Nallonol League : Brock,' SI.L
86 ; Morgan , Cin 51 ; Lopes, LA
48.
American League : North,

Toledo

Pawtuc k et

Memphis

R ic hmond

Ch &amp;rl esl on

.6 19

71 SO
68 51
55 n

.606

Oak .45 ; Rivers, Cal. Lowen-

stein, Ciev, Patek, KC and

CALL (304)773-5791

· Certificates
5.75 per cent per year
paid on 90 day Cer;
tiflcates of Deposit.

Spiiflorff (13-12} and Healy ;

J . Perry (13-9) and Duncan .

HRs - Otis I 12th ). McRae
(13fh ). Lis (3rd).

Texas

010 500

Sl ,000.00

Interest
. Quarterly.

ooo- 6 1l 0

Ball
000 000 2oo- 2 9 0
Jenki mo Foucault (B ) and
SundbeTg ; Palmer, Alexaru:ler
!4) and Hendricks . WPJenkins I 18-11 I , LP- Po!mer 14·
91. HR- Harrah (16th] .
(Only games scheduled )

Minimum.
Payable

Meigs Co. ar.h ·

National Le.gue

.@

"Good Neighbor"

The Atlaons Coun!y
SI.Yings &amp; lo•n Co.

(No games scheduled) ,

296 Second St. ·

Pomeroy, Ohio

....

Steve Snowden

~'

Ph. 992-7155

~ !Alf

I APM

IN

II~

AN ( I

~
''\..,·-,.,.. ··y
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.

({
l CI"'PA ... I f',

..

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RT. 7. AT NEW 35 JUNCTION
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1 BLOCK FROM HOLIDAY INN
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Men's, Women's, mixed, Bantam and Jr.
Leagues . ·

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"

Major League Results
By United Pres, International
American League
Kan City
000 200 001- 3 8 0
Cleve
000 000 001- 1 8 1

REGULAR
•675

,Tidewat er
51 .1-4 .408 25
Thursday's Re1ults

M!~dlepor.

on 9CJ.Oay

HONCHO

TO JOIN

Messersmith, LA 14-5;
Gullett, Cin and Carlton, Ph il
14-8; P. Niekro, All 14-10;
LonborQ. Phil 14-11 .'
Amencan league : Tlant, Bas
19-8; Busby, KC 18· 10 ; Jenkin s,
Tex 18·11 ; Hunter, Oak 18·10;
Bibby, Te• 18-14; Wood , Chi 18·

.4JJ 22

aonung l.ompant'

·5.75%

Mason, W.Va .

WILL BEGIN THE WEEK OF SEPT. 2 and 8

Nalional League: Billingham ,

68 58 .540 10
57 70 .449 2 1112
so 75 .400 27 1!~
South
w. 1. pet. g .b.
.S-44

Our Interest Is ·
Greater For You

TS 100

League

48

Besides the departure of
Horn, the Browns also dropped
a draft choice and a free agent,
cutting the roster to 64.
Cornerback Ted Seels, who
left a career In baseball to play
with the Browns, and defensive
end Ron McNeil, a 12th round
draft choice, were cut.

·BOWLING .LEAGUES AT
MASON BOWLING CENTER

w. L pet. g .b.

78

veterans were on strike.

SPECIAL OF 'THE WE,EK

Am e r i c:: a n League : Bur -

roughs, Te• 103; Alien. Chi 85 ;
Sando, Oak 82 ; Darwin, Minn

Cln 15-8;

Stan Evenhus hurled a scoreless bottom frame to pick up
his fifth win against one loss.
Chuck Bair hurled . a twohitler and was backed up by an
eight-hit attack as Charleston
beat the Braves.

Brooks Robinson drove In
both Baltimore rups with a
double in the seventh Inning.

UZUK I OF GALLI POLIS.

Carew. Minn 30.
Pitching

Charlies dropped

11.

POMEROY

.

'

NO TRADE-INS AT THESE LOW PRICII

......

~

~~~~~~~~

�~ - The Dally Sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., ~'rldllv. Au~ . 2.1. 197~

assistants Thursday night at
tile Buckeyes' aMual football
pre\1ew.
Hayes, who suffered a heart
attack June 6, left the sizeup to
his assistanl.s .
Hayes will be starting his
24th year as head football
coach at osu.
Lack of depth. may hurt on
the offensive tine especially at
tight end. Doug France, 6-foot.

6 and 256 pounds, was moved

Q.lilrterback Coach George
from offensive tackle to tight Chaump was enthuastic in his
end to shore up that p&lt;J6ilion. praise of Greene and said he is
The offensive backfield is " looking for great impretty well set with All Ameri- provement" In his passing .
can Archie Griffin returning at
"In my opinion, and in the
halfback Cllamp Henson , the opinion of many, many people,
nation's leading scorer in 1972 Co~ny is the best quarterback
and Sophomore Pete Johnson in the Big 10 and· maybe one of
at fullback, Cornelius Green at the hest in the country," said
quarterback and Brian Basch· Chaump.
nagel at wingback.
"He has the ability to pass

and I don't know any quarter· slulpe" lllis fall .
back who can tun like Corny,"
The defensive line will be
he said. "And he has thai in- anchored by Pete Cusick, a 6-2,
tangible, that ability, to come 250 pound senior, described by
up with the big play when we the coacheo as "one of the
need it."
finest defensive linemen in the
Mickey Jackson, OSU's new country_"
offensive backfield coach, said
Defensiv.e coordinator
Henson, who suffered a leg in- George Hill said he wollld have
jury and missed almost all of a "pretty veteran group"
last season, "bad a fine spring returning .
and is going to be in pretty good

"We fully Intend to be as fine was InJured, wUI be back as a
a defensive team as we were., linebacker this f•ll.
last year," he said.
"He IB an excellent football
The main problem facing player and can be one of the
Hill, will be to replace the three real fine linebacker• In the
starting tlnebackers including coontry," said Hill.
a 11 : Am eric an R a n d y
The other linebackers will be
Gradisher .
Arnie Jones, who was a lineBruce Elia, who was swit- backer as a sophomore wt
ched from linebacker to played defensive tackle IIIli!
fullback last year when Henson year and Ken Kuhn, a two year
letterman who backed up all
three linebackers last fall .
Defensive backfield coach
Dick Walker said the Buckeye
secondary should be one of the
11
best and most experienced"
OSU has had in years.
Heading up the defensive
backfield will be Nell Colzle
who led the nation in punt
was !:HI at this time last year the batt up to McRae.''
returns last season with 679
enroute to a 2().11 season,
Fritz Peterson, who lost his yards on 40 returns.
struck out live, walked two and last two starts by 1.0 scores,
Also reiJirning will be Tim
was tagged for eight hils in will launch the Indians on their Fox, Steve Luke and Rich
posting his 13th victory against long road trip when he goes Parsons.
12losses.
against Jim Kaat in the opener
"Our goal this year is no
Perry, now · 13-9, lett he of a three-game series in touchdown passes," said Walk"made two bad pitches and Clllcago tonight.
er.
they cost ine llle ball game. I
didn't think the Otis' ball would
clear the fence and I just got

Indian teepee ,shaky after home stand
CLEVELAND (UP! ) Cleveland Manager Ken A:l·
promonte takes his wounded
band westward today in a
cruciall4-game road trip !bat
could tell the 1974 finish of the
Indians.

uz am not a believer or the
old tale that it is tough to win on
the road. It's just another
ballgame and you have· to go
out there and win, whether it is
at home or away·," said

A:lpromonle.
were the villains. with Otis
A:lpromonte, who has kept drilling a two run homer in the
his young team close to the top fourlll off loser Jim Perry and
of the Eastern Division of the McRae hitting his l3lll in the
American League aU season. ninth.
watched the home run ball beat
"I sure hope that we will be
his pitchers lor the seventh at full strength soon," said
time in the current II game Aspromonte, who has watched
home stand as the Indians his players go on and off the
dropped a 3-1 decision to the injured list, with Jack
Kansas City Royals Thwsday Brohamer being the latest
night.
casualty.
Amos Otis and Hal McRae
Brohamer, who has been

hampered with a pulled hamstring muscle, jolns Buddy Bell
on the disabled list with Angel
Hermoso, who suffered torn
ligaments in a collision with

Don Baylor . of Baltimore on
May II, returning to the active
roster.

The Indians, who finished 4-7
on the current home stand,
were out homered 11-3 and
were shut out three times.
" Pitchjn)( in this park is like

Tommy Aaron finds the top,
but he's been ·slumping since
HARRISON, N.Y. (UP! ) Tommy Aaron waited a long
time to win his first major golf
championship --and then he
found out things weren't the
way he thought they would be.
Aaron's trip has been all
downhill since that Monday in
April a year ago when he
walked off the 18th green at
Aagusta as winner of the
Masters.
He hasn 'I won another
tournament since then.
In fact, Aaron finished 1973 in
one of his worst slumps --and
. he's doing·even more poorly in
1974.
"I had a real, bad letdown
.after · I won the Masters,"
Aaron said Thursday after a
'!.·:~er-par In put him in a
four-way tie for the first round
lead of the Westchester
Classic.
"It was something I had
always dreamed -about doing
and then when I did it, I
thought about relaxing and
enjoying it. I figured I had

REMEMBER HER ·
ON YOUR
ANNIVERSARY
WITH

FLOWERS
She'll love a fresh
flower bouquet or
decorative
green
loliC!ge plant.

Dudley's Florist
59 N. Second St.
Middleport, 0.

pitching In-a match-box," said
Kansas City left-bander Paul
Splittorf, who lost a shuto()ut In
the ninth when Joe Us hit his
third homer. "It wouldn't be
right if I left Cleveland without
giving up a homer. ! .gave up
three the last time we were in
town and I gave one up in my
last appearance last year.''
The 27·yearo()ld pitcher, who

Seeds don't mean

Sports
Desk

WERNER RADIO &amp; TV

~~l"'~r\1'\L

ACTUAL USE REPORT

*

*

PAsroR

Announcing to the public and to my patronsI will be open 5 days a week starting Monday,
Aug . 26 .

Closed Wednesdays

Call for Appointment
992-7056 or 992,~94

LaMAR
BEAUTY SHOP
.
W. Second St .• Pomeroy
.
C_t_&lt;lja McMaster, Operator

By Joanne Schreiber
If you're thinking about
entering next year'~ America's
Junior Miss competition, you'd
better polish up your skills.
It's not enough to be tall,
slender, blond·' · beautiful. and
brilliant. Karen Morris, 18, of
Cheyenne, Wyo., is all of that,

much at Longwood

or so --and feU over to bring
By RICHARD GAINES
BROOKUNE, Mass. (UP!) the game back to deuce .
•
The crowd of Solomon
-For the second day In a row,
breathed
il sigh of relief.
an
unheralded
foreigner
has
worked at it pretty hard all time~onsuming 1 twO-year tour Bruce Crampton also had 68s emerged from the pack 1o
"! thought I was beaten,"
these years and now I could on the Tournament Players along with Bob Murphy • the strike down a top-seeded
said
Holecek . . "My heart
relax.
policy board wrecked his runner-up here last year and player In the $IOO,OOO U.S. dropped, but something Inside
"But competition being what practice schedule, and hockey Dan Sikes, who has . been Professional Tennis Chamtold me to go on;'' which was
it is, that was dangerous buff Larry Ziegler.
second twice and third twice In pionships at the Longwood fortunate since the thoroughly
thinking. A:l a result, I began to
Tbey 're followed by an even· seven previous Westchesters . Cricket Club.
unnerved Solomon doubleplay badly."
dozen group ·a t four-underiJat The others in the group were
The story Wednesdlly was faulted and then lost the match
Aaron finished last year in 68 headed by Arnold Palmer, John U..ter, Jim Wiechers, the upset of first&lt;!eeded Stan
with a cross-wurt forehand
44th place on the pro golf tour's who found his putting touch Rod Funseth, Larry Hinson,
.
·
by Jun Kamiwazumi of that leU wide.
moneywiMing list, his worst long enough to birdie six of his J erry Mc Gee an d Mason Smtih
Japan a 5-foot-6 former
Otherwise , Okker ousted
showing In more than 10 years. final ten holes on Thursday, Rudolph.
·
'
Swede
Ove Bengtson, 6-3, 1-6, 6J h
Mill
d del d'
- baseball player, and Thursdlly
And this year he has had only and Jack Nicklaus, hoping to
o nny
er an .
en mg a
towering
self-exiled 2; Borg whipped Mexico's
one finish in the top 10 in 25 salvage the season with a champton Bobby Ntchols were Czechoslovakian, Milan
Marcelo Lara, 6-2, 6-0; Riessen
starts --a sixth-place tie at couple of late-year victories.
at 69, Tom WeiSkopf and U.S. Holecek knocked off l21h- beat
Permanently Etched Circuits. Custom -Malic
Jell
Californian
Milwaukee --and stands 80th
Tom Watson , the young Open champ Hale Irwin at 70 · seed.., Harold Solomon of Ft Borowiak, 6-3, 6-2; Kodes beat
Pre-Set VHF Tuner. Solid State UHF Tuner.
with only $23,3mi.
Western Open winner, and and G~ry Player at 71.
Lauderdale, Fla., a high!; Australian Bob Rheinberger, 7·
Dipole VHF An't enna : Detachable UHF An·
·three other journeymen
6
(In
a
tie
breaker,
7-3
In
regarded
clay
cotirt
pertenna.
Sound .O ut- Front . Pop- Up Car.ry
were tied with Aaron at 67 form:er, 4-6, 6-3, 7-5, in a second points), 6-0, and Dibbs beat
Handle. High impact plastic cabinet in Walnut
Miller Barber, struggling since
U.S.
Pro
champion
Bob
former
round
match.
grain
finish. 16'12" H, 22'12" W, l3'h" D.
winning the World Open's
Lutz,
6-4,
7..'i
.
The other seeded players
$100,000 jackp\ll last aulvmn;
In other matches it was
scheduled
Tltursdlly - DutchDale Douglass, who bas been
Chile~n
Belus ·Prajoux over
man Tom Okker (2), Swede
on a Slide to oblivion since a
Bjorn Borg (4), Marty Riessen coun!Cyman Pat Cornejo, 6-4,
of Amelia Island, Fla. (8), 7..'i, and Aussie Barry PhillipsCzech Jan Kodes (9), alld Moore over his· countryman,
,MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Eddie Dibbs of Miami. Beach, Paul Kronk, 6-2, 6-3.
SUIT NAMES MCGINNIS
Fla., (10) --had little trouble
INDIANAPOUS, Ind. (UP!)
advancing
into the third round.
By Denny
- The Indlana Pacers of the
Holecek, 31, took everything REVENUE
American Basketball A:lsocia· · :
that Solomon could throw at SHARING
Fobes
· tlon named their star forward,
· him Thursday, pressured the
George McGinnis, as a co-de·
fiery Washington, .P.C., Jlative
fendllnt Thursday in a suit
iillo a double fault at deuce in
against teams from the NationTHE
the final game, then literally
CATEGORIE S lA)
al Basketball Association.
RUTLAND
TOWNSHIP
Returning lettermen are something new for Spike Berk· jumped for joy when Solomon's
has rB(eived GeMral Revenue Shlflog pavments t11t.1ing
_ McGinnis, who was not himer.
desperation cross-court fore- I I'UILIC SAFm
S$,642
named in the action originally,
1 Eftl'o'IRQNMENlAl
The young coach of the Eastern Eagles began his first hand missed the sideline.
PROl£Cl'IOH
during
!he
period
lrom
jul
~ 1. 1973. 1h1u June.JO. 1974.
waa brought into the case by campaign at the small SVAC school last season with just 7
Solomon, the 13th leading I ~lliLIC
the Pacers alter the New York returning letter winners from 1972, and just 3 seniors.
VAccouNT No. 36 3 053 008
liiANSPOATATION
money wirmer on the pro tour,
Knicks sought to remove the
Berkhimer molded that inexperienced crew into a four game beat Holecek, 6-4, In the first t H!A.LTH
proceedings from a county wiMer (out of nine) and the birds captured third place in the set, but Holecek rallied in the
RUTLAND TOWNSHIP
court here to a federal court. seven team conference, ·behind only Sou them and league second set, charging the net S RECREATION
TWP. CLERK
The Pacers contend McGin· champion Kyger Creek.
MEIGS COUNTY
and zooming ground strokes
!lis, although he has played
RUTLAND. OHIO 4S775
This year things are a bit different at the Otltset, and so far past the lunging Solomon to
three seasons of a three-year Berkhimer is pleased, for the most part, with what he sees as the even the match, 6-3.
contract, still · has an option Eagles go through pre-6ehool two-a-day workouts in preparation
The two traded four service
year left for them. The Indlana for Sept. 6th's season operier against Hannan Trace.
breaks early in the deciding set
club said McGinnis' contract
Fourteen lettermen return from the 1973 flock and Berk· and when Solomon finallr won
allowed him a 9&lt;klay period to hlmer reflects the belief that Eastern could be a contender when his serve, the set waa even at ~
bargain with other teams and he $tated, "We feel we .can be in the running."
t(Dl TRUST fUND I'I EPOAl
3. Both players held service II
then report any offers so the
~ ~we're in pretty decent shape/' he continued. "We've had
unW Holecek led 6-S and then .
11 1 Bal•nc•" o• J,.,. 30. 1973 . , , ..... , • S·-..:"c:'·:::36:...._
Pacers could attempt to match some pleasant surprises and practices have gone real well."
the big Czech thought he saw "
them. The Pacers said McGin12, Rtvll"'-'1 Sh 1ring Fundi: ~KifNed "'om
The birds bave been stressing offense this season, and Berk- the match _roll away from him.
Jld'f t. U7l ttua"U~ Jun1 JO, 1971 , ,$ 5 ,642,00
nis made no such report this hlmer admits that in so doing the Eagle defense may be suffering
Having already lost one
0 __
Ill lnllfrnl ~•ned ••• • ,,,,,, , .. .• . , , .. S.._,._c_
year.
somewbat. Almost always, however, when something is stressed ·match point, Holecek had
14) Ta!IIF\li'IIIA~III II)IIf •• , • ., ,,, , . ... , ,$ 6, 115.16
something else is neglected more than it should be. But the Solomon at an!llher and waa at 1.1 TOTALS
. 15) 'Total AI!IOUIII bl)lndld, , , , , , , , ••• • •$ 5,136.]1
Eagles.will have to generate m6re offense this year if they are to the baseline hammering away
IIJl BIII1'1CifK OI Ju""'l0. 1i? . .... .,, .. , $
. l1f ,05
be the contenders that Berkhimer thinks they can be.
with groundslrokes when SoloConcerning the rest of the league Berkhimer stated, "There mon hit a relt!rn that slapped
11'1 Tile n1w1 m1dl1 h11111 bHn lllhiled thM 1 compllfll c~ of lhlil
are five. teams that will be pretty decent," adding that Kyger Into the tape then, due -to
,.POri hM ~"" l)l.lblllhld in 1 loc .. newsp.., o1 aiM!..
Creek, Southern, and North Gallia should aU be strong with topspin, climbed to the top of
~~~~ulftion . I hl~l f-11· doo:~mlnllnQ lheo COIIIIfltll al!hil; lfiiOit
Southwestern vastly improved from last year.
the net, rolled along for a foot
Clerk
and IIIey .,, oplll lor Pllblk: ICIIIII"Y 11 =----Office of Clerk
"Injuries could be the key to who wins this year," Berkhimer
said. The Eagles themselves have suffered only one serious
Injury so far, with junior Max Lung suffering a broken hand In a
defensive drill. He'll be out for approximately 3 or 4weeks.
Thirty-two gridders showed up for drills this summer, but ·
only 4 ate ' freslunen a number that puzzles Berkhimer. "!
thought we had lots of good talent in the junior high prOgram last
year,'' he said. "I can't figUrelt oui; they just didn't turn out."
One disadvantage facmg Berkhimer this fall will be the
assistance of just one coach, Archie Rose. In hla first season,
* Whit is 1 Cl11 idiill halne7
Berkhimer had two assistants, but Bill Phillips, who doubles as
head basketball coach in the winter, decided to hang up hts cleats
How can I 11M 1 Christian home?
this fall .
'
"Tbe loss of Bill will surely hurt us," Berkhimer stated.
*Whit
thinp
chanlctnl1
Rill
0.1iifiM
honle7 .
.
"With just two coaches, we won't be able to give as much indivlduaUzecl attention to the team, a factor which could really
Do we ileed Chlistian hallie ID lllil 'America fnlm delruclian7
make. a difference, especially considering that we have II lettermen back thill fall."
ALL lHESE QUESTIONS MD MORE&gt; ANSWERED IN
KEN aii.EMM'S SERI£5 Of
Tonight is "Meet the Team" night at the high school field,
. beglnnln8 at 6:30 p.m.
SUNDAY EVENING .MESSAGES QN
Following that, the Eagles will travel tD Chillicothe Satw-dlly·
night for ascrimmage with Zane Trace, before returning home
"'HE QIRISTWI HOML"
Wednesdlly evening for a scrimmage with Frontier'.

Seeds ~ Oyster SheTIS and
Grit · Fertilizers - Lime - Cement &amp;
Morter· Stock Salt - Water Softener .
· Remedies · Salt - LiHers . Vaccine .
Roofing • Peints- Red Brand Fencing .
.Baler end Binder Twine . Sprays .
Gates.

Karen Morris

QUASAR

'

THE CHRISTIAN ~HOME

. Seeds •

Veterans Memorial Hospital

LOCAL TEMPS
•
The temperJture in dOII'IIlown
ADMITTED
Kevin
Mowery , Pomeroy ; Karen Pomeroy at II 1.m. !Wiy wu
Tillis, Long Bottom; Wallace 77 degrees under ounny lliH,
Hill , Racine ; Mary Still,
Middleport ; David Reed,
Pomeroy ; Timothy Lawrence,
MiddlepOrt; Millard Swartz,
Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED lnzy I
Newell, Mwt Ours, Clarence
McDaniel, Robert Staats, Amy
Eynon .
"T· Shirts" Polyester
Cotton, 60" wide

junior Miss is· a beauty plus

4- Tho Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Aug. 23, 1974

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - With
311 lettermen returning, in·
eluding 16 starters, Ohio State
University appears ready to
field one of the nation's lop .
college football teams again
thla fall but a problem llle
Buckeyes may face is a lack of
depth at some positions.
That was . the outlook
presented by OSU head coach
Woody Hayes . and his nine

•

• SUIDI' sadl....... e~~
lO:GO AI
110111118 SEIIICE..... e.~ ....... e •• li:IO All
••••••••••

WHY NOT VISIT US
THIS WEEKI

noiltll suvil.~~ ....·...........:

.

'

plus a superb horsewoman and
aU·round sports enthusiast, an
enter tainer and even a
. decoupage expert: To win her
tiUe o~ America's Junior Miss
for 1974, she competed with
60,000 entrants from all over
the country, and was judged on
scholastic achievement,
physical fitness, cr~ative and

·How we battle the
inflation nightmare ·.
By Gaynor Maddox
The steadily rising cost of
food is forcing most Americans
to alter their eating habits. As
meals in most homes are adjusted to the increased costs.
resentment grows or indifference sets in . But the
changes go on whether we like
-it or not. In the family budget
there is usually only the same
arnoun t of money (actually less
because of dottar devaluation)
for much costiie.r familiar food
1 items . .Problems' Yes, the
nation's . nwnber one night..
mare is inflation.
11
Wh0 can you trust today?"
asks Christine Pines, a
business executive and mother
with a husband, a son, 17, and a
college-age daughter to feed .
She lives in Port Washing to~.
N. Y:, and the says she puts the
blame for higher prices half on
supermarkets and half on food
growers.
.. ' 'Actually, Wider pressure,
we are finding we actually
don 't need as much meat as we
thought. For example, we use
more eggs, more chicken,
more bean dishes. We have just
beglll) to use soybeans and
rather l*e them."
"HOrrible." That's the way
Ruth Lundgren .looks at the
situation. slie runs her own
business and has two sons, one
in college and the other just
entering (both are now at
home), and a housekeeper to
buy food for . But she refuses to

give up meat regardless of
rising cost. She cuts down on
other things. She does admit
that she an&lt;! her friends en·
tertain less and also much less
eleganUy. She had cut out all
luxuries in daily menus such as
bakery cakes •and desserts,
many carbonated drinks and
out-of-season vegetables. But
meat she and the boys want.
And they get it - "meat one
night, the next night cllicken."
"I don 't Uke to be taken."
That's the way Anita Fial of
Roslyn , N. Y., feels about
supermarket prices. She has
an executive job in Manhattan
and goes home nightly to feed
low hungry people - a son,
daughter, husband and herself.
11
I never saw so many yards
of chopped steak in my life. But
we do have chicken fairly of.
ten. Flank steak- 'the lean flat
type, particularly large pieces,
two pounds or more, saves
money and tastes good. And
the large size leaves sorhe for
next day. That's important for
lunch. Another way I also save
is by cutting up my own
chickens rather than buying
them cut up. This saves six
cents a pound, on a three-pound
chicken that is 18 centS."
Here are views of two women
who live alone: Marjorie
Woodard of Virginia is a
retired widow on · a fixed income and Beverly Sperry, a
secretary, 24, lives in New
Yo~k . Miss Sperry feeds

performing urta, pot.. and
appearance .
Karen 1\'0n $12,000 in college
ochl&gt;larshlps during the
national finals In Mobile, Ala.,
and hopes to study speech
pathology at the University of
Wyoming . Another of h~r
prizes Is a pastel portrait by
Ralph William Wlltiilms, which
will be used in.' adverti~lng by
the Breck Company, sponsor of
the Junior Miss Pageant.
Although Karen doesn't
enjoy sewing, she qoes have a
flair for decoupage and has
done a number of plaques for
her room. The technique Is
simple, she reports. Simply cut
a wood plaque to the desired
size and shape, sand it smooth
and paint it to harmonize with
the basic colors of the room
where II will hang. Then cut out
the appropriate picture from a
magazine, a greeting card or a
book. Paste it to the wood and
varnish over all. Elements
from different pictures may be
used to create an original
composition .
Karen is a member of a
singing group called Hoover
and the Vacuums (the three
Vacuums are girls, Chris
Hoover is a hoy). Karen plays
guitar and sings folk and
western songs. The group has
played all over the state, and
has" beeri'f!named top singing
group in / Kiwani.s·sponsored
compeition .
The daughter of a rancher;
she rides, shows and .performs
with a precision riding team
and has a roomful of blue
ribbons attesting her skill. And
to prove she ca.n make it. in a
man's world, she even works
as cowpuncher with h~r dad's
150 head of cattle.
Dw-lng her year as the "First
Lady of Youth," . Karen is
working hard at television
appearances,: giving in·
terviews and st;trring in civic
. parades all over the country.
Her biggest problem as she
travels? Her hair - "it just
won't stay curled," she sighs.
"I have to keep setting it on big
rollers !''
·

1-M~ NEW
I"BACit' satOOL"
VAWES FOR
! SEWING:

w

~

l

•1.69 yd.

thrown to the arena floor .
Ca lieD Pnnts in
She
wears
a
down
face
("the.
I
Matc
h-Mates, 45"
completion date still scheduled. All masonry work in the Vocational Building is completed
fans love il") bul the tradition- I
•1,98 yd.
and the pouring of the floors in that building should he completed this week. The masonry
work on the Common's Building should be completed by next week, with the pouring of llle
al baggy pants are used, like a I Cotton Rib bed Knit
matador's cape, to distract a I
fl"l)rs to start soon after. All the footers for the Trade &amp; Industrial Building arc completed
bull who will weigh anywhere 1
•1.69 yd .
and the ma,.,nry work will be started immediately. Plans are to have all buildings under
roof by Thanksgiving. The contractors for the project are : General, Don. Kin~ Construction
from 1,800 to 2,000 pounds.
1 Wool-like Polyester
Miss Prudom, who is five feet I
60" wide
Co., Jackson; Mechanical, A.J . Stockmeister Inc., Jackson ; Electrical, West End Electric
Co., Portsmouth; Kitchen, Great Lakes Hotel Supply Co., Detroit, Michigan . Architecls are
eight and weighs 130 pounds, I
,4 •98 yd.
Dittmar &amp; Stubbs, zanesville, Ohio.
said she had been tossed by
broncs and once was gored by I
a bull, but has had no serious I
injuries .
"I have to stay around 13~....
Beginners Sewing
she said. " If I got down to skin I Advanced Sewing
The Buckeye Hills Career
There are 19 programs cupalions, Drafting, lndustrial and bone I might break I Basic Knit
Center this fall will be helping planr).Od : Agricultwe Business , Maintenance and Welding.
something.' '
5ewing Classes
local schools assist students Agriculture Mechanics. Forest
She has modeled and ridden I
An y sophomore student
To
make a wise career choice, if
Industry, High Skill desirin g more information since her teens. Her riding I
Start In s.epte_rn~!r
they are interested in attending Stenography, Office Data about one or more of the hegan while she dated a high 1
the Joint Vocational &amp;hool. Accounting, Office Machines programs should £irst contact schf)Oi youth whose parents
Staff recruitment will begin Duplicating, Distribution &amp; their IO(•al counselor or call the owned a couple of horses.
dwing the early part of 197~ . Marketing , Merchandi se Gallia . Jackson • Vinton Joint
Eventually, she said, "Some- I
The expected fully capacity Accounting &amp; Warehousing, Vocational &amp;hool Office, 614· one dared me to come out of
of the Center when all Food Service, Home ·&amp; Com - 245-5336.
th.e chute on a bronc. "I don't I
programs are full will be 856 munity Service, Air ConAny group desiring to learn think bronc busting is cruel at I
day students. Also expected ditioning &amp; Heating, Auto more •bout the Buckeye Hills all," she said. "The owners
MIODI.IPORT
are night programs for adult Body, Auto Mechanics, Career Center should contact want their horses in the best I
. OH O
students wanting to upgrade or Building Trades, Cosmetology, the school office for a speaker. shape. Those animals get the
I
retrain for their occupation . Diversified Heal th
Oc·
best care in the world."
'--------The Buckeye Hilla Career Center building project is progressing, with June 30, 197~

l

BHCC nearing completion

ENROLL NOW
fOR

l

1

New horizons open for women

By GAY PAULEY
York to talk up the Girls Rodeo handle the heavy barrels
UPI Women's Editor
Associatiorf world champion- . (standard arena equipment) to
NEW YORK (UPI) - Benjie ships Oct. :Hi at Spring Creek, divert a charging bull who's
· Prudom, 21, is a beautil.ul Nev.
tossed a rider.
blonde who rides bucking They witt be held in an indoor
Here's where Miss Prudom's
broncs, fi ghts bulls, models and horse palace, part of . a other specialty, clowning, lies.
is studying to become a law community planned resort built She rushes in to divert a bull's
officer .
. by McCulloch Enterpri ses. ·attention when a rider IS
The Dallas girl tried to McCulloch has put up $25,000 in r--""!"...~""!"..~-..
explatn why she had taken to prize money .
START BACK TO
rodeos . "I've talked to a lot of Miss Prudom hopes to move
people around rodeos," the from No.2 rank in bronc r-iding
SCHOOL IN A
national title holder said. " I've to No. I, the position now held
PAIR OF CONVERSE
never found a good answer to by Sue Pir\oe, of Stonewall,
TENNIS
herself, watching a par· why. Maybe it's the challenge. Olda . ·.
licularly strict diet, and feeds a Certainly it's exciting.
She said that from 300 to 400
.
"I don't think more women in women would be ln the world
cat"Pand. a dog. t 'f . , competition bas anything to do finals .
.
.
AL L c·oLORS
· nces are err1 ytng,
.
. WOOdard. with the liberation movement, Men have their own competi.
exc 1atms
Marjone
0U5e
''1 ate steak last night for the although I enjoy feeling that lions, which Miss Prudom said
.
Your Thorn MeAn Store .
first time in two months. I live I'm doing something for my. was just as well.
almost exclusively on chicken. self."
Strength Is a factor and men, •--·M-idOidiiilelipoiiirilt'lioii._ __.
Miss Prudom sounded more for instance, more easily
I can buy one for $1,28 and get like a feminist When she said
four meals from it...
She comments on women in ~t Ulere was nothing unusual •
supermarkets who pick up about her long.tenn goal of.
meat packages, look at the poUce work.
price, then put the packages
"I don'tsee why women can't
back. Then she watches them do the same work here as
buy macaroni or spaghetti, men/' she said. "Yes, I'll ·tote
dried beans or creamed soups. a gun . But I've been shooting
since I was 10. Dad started me
The result is they are putting with an air rifle. I was born a
on weight. It comes down to the
problem of eating more car- tomboy 1 guess."
bohydrates or starving for
No doubt, her family insome, despite the calories.
fluenced her decision to take a
" Awful simply awful" is the degree in criininal justice from
way
Beverly
Sperry Sam Houston State University '
characterizes the cost of food. at Huntsville, Tex., where she
is a sophomore.
"I must live on protein- little
Her father, Uoyd, works for
or no carbohydrates since I
have hypoglycemia. So 1 go out a correctional institution ·and
to Chi.nese restaurants for her brother, Thomas, is . a
dinner once in a while and it secw-ity officer at Southern
costs around $~. 1 carry lunch Methodist University in Dallas.
to the office in a tin lunchbox. I
A:l for rodeos, more women
used to buy lunch for around $3. are riding. broncs, roping and
But no more. I .like to have a tying calves, bull riding and
dinner at home that takes less barrel racing.
"Last year," stre·said, '~there
than a minute to prepare and
fits into my diet. That means were about I~ to 20 girl rodeos
. on the circul t. This year, there
'&gt;are between 30 and 40. It's no
longer a rlnkydink thing."
Miss Prudom was in New

The name that stands
for Quality ·
and Dependability.
REFRIGERATORS
RANGES
DISHWASHERS
COLOR TV
STEREOS

SHOES

C"'*":&gt;

MARK OF QUALITY.

BAK

heritage h

I

·Don't put off ·
till tomorrow what
you should do

· .· • · today• .

Dead pigeon working

.
in protecting species
.

.

By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI(UPI)-Animal
lovers here are trying to proteet endangered speCies via the
memory of, believe it or not, a
dead pigeon.
And, they say, the proJect
seems to be working .
- ·
Earlier this summer a "Pas·
senger Pigeon Memorial Fund"
was started at the Cincinnati
Zoo. .
For ·the occasion, the Smith·
sonlan Institution In Washington carefully crated the stuffed
body of the last passenger
pigeon, Insured it and flew it
un4er guard for a special dis·
play here.
·
.
Since then, $10,000 and quite
a bit of sentimental response
has come into. the memorial
fun d .
Wildlife artist John Ruthven,
sometimes called the ."20th Ccntury.~AudubOn," has been the
sj)arkplug ·of the project.
"This is a way to bring at·
tentlon to the fact that so
many animals todoy lace !he
lllllle pUght of the passenger
pigeon," ilays Ruthven. "Ani·
mala like the C.lifornla Condor,
. the Baid Eagle, the Canvasback
DuQ)i: and Ivory-billed Wood·
peeker are ' nf!ar e~CUncUon. "

•

,

Ruthven often repeats the
story of the demise of the pas·
senger pigeon to make his
point.
.
In the 1800s there were bil·
lions of ·pailsenger pigeons. But
they began disappearing, some· ·
Urnes at the rate of 3 'billion a
year, when man packed ran:
road cars full of them ~s gow ·met food and sold them at 25
cents a dozen to trapshooters
as "live targets."
By 1914 there was only one

passenger pigeon alive, and on
Sept. l of that year - nearly
60 years ago today - It died
at -the Cincinnati Zoo.
The fund ·gets most Or its
money through Ruthven's work.
In two months .IOO hthographs
of Ruthven's watercolor porir•il of the passenger pigeon
have been sold at $100 each with all proceeds going to .the
fund .
The sale of the remaining 400

cold sausage, eggs, tuna fish,
maybe a tiny piece of steak.
Oh, yes, once a week I buy
myself a few shrimp. I love
them."

of the limited edition set should
bring in another $40,000 and
Ruthven expects $10,000 in one
shot when his _original watercolor is auctioned off. His paintSUCCESS STORIES
ing of a duck once went for
$11,000 at an auction.
"They Overcame
The project also has jogged
Hearing Loss''
tlie memories of several persons.
Mrs . Marien Johnston of Ar·
Fre e Booklet especially
lington, Va. came up with two prepared
to en cou r age
centw-y-old pillows stuffed with Americans of all ages who
pa.ssenger pigeon feathers and· sulfer from uncorrected or
Henry Muell~r of Chicago found untrea1ed hearing loss to
two 00-year old paintings of the seek help.
birds to give to the lund.
·
Well·known celebri t ies from
Ruthyen this week completed all wa lk s of lif e tell the ir
a mailing to 50,000 wildlife club pe r sonal stori es .of trium ph
In their fields because they
members around ·the country overcame
th eir h€-ar, ng
and hopes for much more Inter· Impairment.
·
est in the project.
"The fund Ia not. to promote
sympathy for the passenger
pigeon," he say,&amp;, '~but to gen..
C~me in . .. Write ... or Phon e
tor your FREE COPY
erate concern for living, but
WilliamS. Diles
endarigered, animals."
..
Diles Hearing Aid Center
·
Riverside Professional Bldg.
~ON
444 Union St.. Athens

N. W. COMP ,. ' 0. D.
OPTOMETRIST

'75 car prices are going up.
So now is the time to
buy... especially at our
year-end prices. ·

12
•

•

Hey! Evei'yone knows that it co s1s us mor e lo keep 'em

than to sell 'em . An d thai 's why we're offering such 'super
year-end deals. And when you consider that '75 prices are
gonna go up, there could ~ever be a better time lo buy
lhan right NOW. Our mid-size Plymouth Salellite can
be yours for a lol less than yo.u may have thought. You gel a
car thai's big enough lor comfo rt, but small enough lor
economy. c ·mon in. See Satellite for yoursell.

PAA

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..
•

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!

TOM RUE MOTORS,
.
.

•

h

•

399 South lrd Ave., Middleport, 0•,

�~ - The Dally Sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., ~'rldllv. Au~ . 2.1. 197~

assistants Thursday night at
tile Buckeyes' aMual football
pre\1ew.
Hayes, who suffered a heart
attack June 6, left the sizeup to
his assistanl.s .
Hayes will be starting his
24th year as head football
coach at osu.
Lack of depth. may hurt on
the offensive tine especially at
tight end. Doug France, 6-foot.

6 and 256 pounds, was moved

Q.lilrterback Coach George
from offensive tackle to tight Chaump was enthuastic in his
end to shore up that p&lt;J6ilion. praise of Greene and said he is
The offensive backfield is " looking for great impretty well set with All Ameri- provement" In his passing .
can Archie Griffin returning at
"In my opinion, and in the
halfback Cllamp Henson , the opinion of many, many people,
nation's leading scorer in 1972 Co~ny is the best quarterback
and Sophomore Pete Johnson in the Big 10 and· maybe one of
at fullback, Cornelius Green at the hest in the country," said
quarterback and Brian Basch· Chaump.
nagel at wingback.
"He has the ability to pass

and I don't know any quarter· slulpe" lllis fall .
back who can tun like Corny,"
The defensive line will be
he said. "And he has thai in- anchored by Pete Cusick, a 6-2,
tangible, that ability, to come 250 pound senior, described by
up with the big play when we the coacheo as "one of the
need it."
finest defensive linemen in the
Mickey Jackson, OSU's new country_"
offensive backfield coach, said
Defensiv.e coordinator
Henson, who suffered a leg in- George Hill said he wollld have
jury and missed almost all of a "pretty veteran group"
last season, "bad a fine spring returning .
and is going to be in pretty good

"We fully Intend to be as fine was InJured, wUI be back as a
a defensive team as we were., linebacker this f•ll.
last year," he said.
"He IB an excellent football
The main problem facing player and can be one of the
Hill, will be to replace the three real fine linebacker• In the
starting tlnebackers including coontry," said Hill.
a 11 : Am eric an R a n d y
The other linebackers will be
Gradisher .
Arnie Jones, who was a lineBruce Elia, who was swit- backer as a sophomore wt
ched from linebacker to played defensive tackle IIIli!
fullback last year when Henson year and Ken Kuhn, a two year
letterman who backed up all
three linebackers last fall .
Defensive backfield coach
Dick Walker said the Buckeye
secondary should be one of the
11
best and most experienced"
OSU has had in years.
Heading up the defensive
backfield will be Nell Colzle
who led the nation in punt
was !:HI at this time last year the batt up to McRae.''
returns last season with 679
enroute to a 2().11 season,
Fritz Peterson, who lost his yards on 40 returns.
struck out live, walked two and last two starts by 1.0 scores,
Also reiJirning will be Tim
was tagged for eight hils in will launch the Indians on their Fox, Steve Luke and Rich
posting his 13th victory against long road trip when he goes Parsons.
12losses.
against Jim Kaat in the opener
"Our goal this year is no
Perry, now · 13-9, lett he of a three-game series in touchdown passes," said Walk"made two bad pitches and Clllcago tonight.
er.
they cost ine llle ball game. I
didn't think the Otis' ball would
clear the fence and I just got

Indian teepee ,shaky after home stand
CLEVELAND (UP! ) Cleveland Manager Ken A:l·
promonte takes his wounded
band westward today in a
cruciall4-game road trip !bat
could tell the 1974 finish of the
Indians.

uz am not a believer or the
old tale that it is tough to win on
the road. It's just another
ballgame and you have· to go
out there and win, whether it is
at home or away·," said

A:lpromonle.
were the villains. with Otis
A:lpromonte, who has kept drilling a two run homer in the
his young team close to the top fourlll off loser Jim Perry and
of the Eastern Division of the McRae hitting his l3lll in the
American League aU season. ninth.
watched the home run ball beat
"I sure hope that we will be
his pitchers lor the seventh at full strength soon," said
time in the current II game Aspromonte, who has watched
home stand as the Indians his players go on and off the
dropped a 3-1 decision to the injured list, with Jack
Kansas City Royals Thwsday Brohamer being the latest
night.
casualty.
Amos Otis and Hal McRae
Brohamer, who has been

hampered with a pulled hamstring muscle, jolns Buddy Bell
on the disabled list with Angel
Hermoso, who suffered torn
ligaments in a collision with

Don Baylor . of Baltimore on
May II, returning to the active
roster.

The Indians, who finished 4-7
on the current home stand,
were out homered 11-3 and
were shut out three times.
" Pitchjn)( in this park is like

Tommy Aaron finds the top,
but he's been ·slumping since
HARRISON, N.Y. (UP! ) Tommy Aaron waited a long
time to win his first major golf
championship --and then he
found out things weren't the
way he thought they would be.
Aaron's trip has been all
downhill since that Monday in
April a year ago when he
walked off the 18th green at
Aagusta as winner of the
Masters.
He hasn 'I won another
tournament since then.
In fact, Aaron finished 1973 in
one of his worst slumps --and
. he's doing·even more poorly in
1974.
"I had a real, bad letdown
.after · I won the Masters,"
Aaron said Thursday after a
'!.·:~er-par In put him in a
four-way tie for the first round
lead of the Westchester
Classic.
"It was something I had
always dreamed -about doing
and then when I did it, I
thought about relaxing and
enjoying it. I figured I had

REMEMBER HER ·
ON YOUR
ANNIVERSARY
WITH

FLOWERS
She'll love a fresh
flower bouquet or
decorative
green
loliC!ge plant.

Dudley's Florist
59 N. Second St.
Middleport, 0.

pitching In-a match-box," said
Kansas City left-bander Paul
Splittorf, who lost a shuto()ut In
the ninth when Joe Us hit his
third homer. "It wouldn't be
right if I left Cleveland without
giving up a homer. ! .gave up
three the last time we were in
town and I gave one up in my
last appearance last year.''
The 27·yearo()ld pitcher, who

Seeds don't mean

Sports
Desk

WERNER RADIO &amp; TV

~~l"'~r\1'\L

ACTUAL USE REPORT

*

*

PAsroR

Announcing to the public and to my patronsI will be open 5 days a week starting Monday,
Aug . 26 .

Closed Wednesdays

Call for Appointment
992-7056 or 992,~94

LaMAR
BEAUTY SHOP
.
W. Second St .• Pomeroy
.
C_t_&lt;lja McMaster, Operator

By Joanne Schreiber
If you're thinking about
entering next year'~ America's
Junior Miss competition, you'd
better polish up your skills.
It's not enough to be tall,
slender, blond·' · beautiful. and
brilliant. Karen Morris, 18, of
Cheyenne, Wyo., is all of that,

much at Longwood

or so --and feU over to bring
By RICHARD GAINES
BROOKUNE, Mass. (UP!) the game back to deuce .
•
The crowd of Solomon
-For the second day In a row,
breathed
il sigh of relief.
an
unheralded
foreigner
has
worked at it pretty hard all time~onsuming 1 twO-year tour Bruce Crampton also had 68s emerged from the pack 1o
"! thought I was beaten,"
these years and now I could on the Tournament Players along with Bob Murphy • the strike down a top-seeded
said
Holecek . . "My heart
relax.
policy board wrecked his runner-up here last year and player In the $IOO,OOO U.S. dropped, but something Inside
"But competition being what practice schedule, and hockey Dan Sikes, who has . been Professional Tennis Chamtold me to go on;'' which was
it is, that was dangerous buff Larry Ziegler.
second twice and third twice In pionships at the Longwood fortunate since the thoroughly
thinking. A:l a result, I began to
Tbey 're followed by an even· seven previous Westchesters . Cricket Club.
unnerved Solomon doubleplay badly."
dozen group ·a t four-underiJat The others in the group were
The story Wednesdlly was faulted and then lost the match
Aaron finished last year in 68 headed by Arnold Palmer, John U..ter, Jim Wiechers, the upset of first&lt;!eeded Stan
with a cross-wurt forehand
44th place on the pro golf tour's who found his putting touch Rod Funseth, Larry Hinson,
.
·
by Jun Kamiwazumi of that leU wide.
moneywiMing list, his worst long enough to birdie six of his J erry Mc Gee an d Mason Smtih
Japan a 5-foot-6 former
Otherwise , Okker ousted
showing In more than 10 years. final ten holes on Thursday, Rudolph.
·
'
Swede
Ove Bengtson, 6-3, 1-6, 6J h
Mill
d del d'
- baseball player, and Thursdlly
And this year he has had only and Jack Nicklaus, hoping to
o nny
er an .
en mg a
towering
self-exiled 2; Borg whipped Mexico's
one finish in the top 10 in 25 salvage the season with a champton Bobby Ntchols were Czechoslovakian, Milan
Marcelo Lara, 6-2, 6-0; Riessen
starts --a sixth-place tie at couple of late-year victories.
at 69, Tom WeiSkopf and U.S. Holecek knocked off l21h- beat
Permanently Etched Circuits. Custom -Malic
Jell
Californian
Milwaukee --and stands 80th
Tom Watson , the young Open champ Hale Irwin at 70 · seed.., Harold Solomon of Ft Borowiak, 6-3, 6-2; Kodes beat
Pre-Set VHF Tuner. Solid State UHF Tuner.
with only $23,3mi.
Western Open winner, and and G~ry Player at 71.
Lauderdale, Fla., a high!; Australian Bob Rheinberger, 7·
Dipole VHF An't enna : Detachable UHF An·
·three other journeymen
6
(In
a
tie
breaker,
7-3
In
regarded
clay
cotirt
pertenna.
Sound .O ut- Front . Pop- Up Car.ry
were tied with Aaron at 67 form:er, 4-6, 6-3, 7-5, in a second points), 6-0, and Dibbs beat
Handle. High impact plastic cabinet in Walnut
Miller Barber, struggling since
U.S.
Pro
champion
Bob
former
round
match.
grain
finish. 16'12" H, 22'12" W, l3'h" D.
winning the World Open's
Lutz,
6-4,
7..'i
.
The other seeded players
$100,000 jackp\ll last aulvmn;
In other matches it was
scheduled
Tltursdlly - DutchDale Douglass, who bas been
Chile~n
Belus ·Prajoux over
man Tom Okker (2), Swede
on a Slide to oblivion since a
Bjorn Borg (4), Marty Riessen coun!Cyman Pat Cornejo, 6-4,
of Amelia Island, Fla. (8), 7..'i, and Aussie Barry PhillipsCzech Jan Kodes (9), alld Moore over his· countryman,
,MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Eddie Dibbs of Miami. Beach, Paul Kronk, 6-2, 6-3.
SUIT NAMES MCGINNIS
Fla., (10) --had little trouble
INDIANAPOUS, Ind. (UP!)
advancing
into the third round.
By Denny
- The Indlana Pacers of the
Holecek, 31, took everything REVENUE
American Basketball A:lsocia· · :
that Solomon could throw at SHARING
Fobes
· tlon named their star forward,
· him Thursday, pressured the
George McGinnis, as a co-de·
fiery Washington, .P.C., Jlative
fendllnt Thursday in a suit
iillo a double fault at deuce in
against teams from the NationTHE
the final game, then literally
CATEGORIE S lA)
al Basketball Association.
RUTLAND
TOWNSHIP
Returning lettermen are something new for Spike Berk· jumped for joy when Solomon's
has rB(eived GeMral Revenue Shlflog pavments t11t.1ing
_ McGinnis, who was not himer.
desperation cross-court fore- I I'UILIC SAFm
S$,642
named in the action originally,
1 Eftl'o'IRQNMENlAl
The young coach of the Eastern Eagles began his first hand missed the sideline.
PROl£Cl'IOH
during
!he
period
lrom
jul
~ 1. 1973. 1h1u June.JO. 1974.
waa brought into the case by campaign at the small SVAC school last season with just 7
Solomon, the 13th leading I ~lliLIC
the Pacers alter the New York returning letter winners from 1972, and just 3 seniors.
VAccouNT No. 36 3 053 008
liiANSPOATATION
money wirmer on the pro tour,
Knicks sought to remove the
Berkhimer molded that inexperienced crew into a four game beat Holecek, 6-4, In the first t H!A.LTH
proceedings from a county wiMer (out of nine) and the birds captured third place in the set, but Holecek rallied in the
RUTLAND TOWNSHIP
court here to a federal court. seven team conference, ·behind only Sou them and league second set, charging the net S RECREATION
TWP. CLERK
The Pacers contend McGin· champion Kyger Creek.
MEIGS COUNTY
and zooming ground strokes
!lis, although he has played
RUTLAND. OHIO 4S775
This year things are a bit different at the Otltset, and so far past the lunging Solomon to
three seasons of a three-year Berkhimer is pleased, for the most part, with what he sees as the even the match, 6-3.
contract, still · has an option Eagles go through pre-6ehool two-a-day workouts in preparation
The two traded four service
year left for them. The Indlana for Sept. 6th's season operier against Hannan Trace.
breaks early in the deciding set
club said McGinnis' contract
Fourteen lettermen return from the 1973 flock and Berk· and when Solomon finallr won
allowed him a 9&lt;klay period to hlmer reflects the belief that Eastern could be a contender when his serve, the set waa even at ~
bargain with other teams and he $tated, "We feel we .can be in the running."
t(Dl TRUST fUND I'I EPOAl
3. Both players held service II
then report any offers so the
~ ~we're in pretty decent shape/' he continued. "We've had
unW Holecek led 6-S and then .
11 1 Bal•nc•" o• J,.,. 30. 1973 . , , ..... , • S·-..:"c:'·:::36:...._
Pacers could attempt to match some pleasant surprises and practices have gone real well."
the big Czech thought he saw "
them. The Pacers said McGin12, Rtvll"'-'1 Sh 1ring Fundi: ~KifNed "'om
The birds bave been stressing offense this season, and Berk- the match _roll away from him.
Jld'f t. U7l ttua"U~ Jun1 JO, 1971 , ,$ 5 ,642,00
nis made no such report this hlmer admits that in so doing the Eagle defense may be suffering
Having already lost one
0 __
Ill lnllfrnl ~•ned ••• • ,,,,,, , .. .• . , , .. S.._,._c_
year.
somewbat. Almost always, however, when something is stressed ·match point, Holecek had
14) Ta!IIF\li'IIIA~III II)IIf •• , • ., ,,, , . ... , ,$ 6, 115.16
something else is neglected more than it should be. But the Solomon at an!llher and waa at 1.1 TOTALS
. 15) 'Total AI!IOUIII bl)lndld, , , , , , , , ••• • •$ 5,136.]1
Eagles.will have to generate m6re offense this year if they are to the baseline hammering away
IIJl BIII1'1CifK OI Ju""'l0. 1i? . .... .,, .. , $
. l1f ,05
be the contenders that Berkhimer thinks they can be.
with groundslrokes when SoloConcerning the rest of the league Berkhimer stated, "There mon hit a relt!rn that slapped
11'1 Tile n1w1 m1dl1 h11111 bHn lllhiled thM 1 compllfll c~ of lhlil
are five. teams that will be pretty decent," adding that Kyger Into the tape then, due -to
,.POri hM ~"" l)l.lblllhld in 1 loc .. newsp.., o1 aiM!..
Creek, Southern, and North Gallia should aU be strong with topspin, climbed to the top of
~~~~ulftion . I hl~l f-11· doo:~mlnllnQ lheo COIIIIfltll al!hil; lfiiOit
Southwestern vastly improved from last year.
the net, rolled along for a foot
Clerk
and IIIey .,, oplll lor Pllblk: ICIIIII"Y 11 =----Office of Clerk
"Injuries could be the key to who wins this year," Berkhimer
said. The Eagles themselves have suffered only one serious
Injury so far, with junior Max Lung suffering a broken hand In a
defensive drill. He'll be out for approximately 3 or 4weeks.
Thirty-two gridders showed up for drills this summer, but ·
only 4 ate ' freslunen a number that puzzles Berkhimer. "!
thought we had lots of good talent in the junior high prOgram last
year,'' he said. "I can't figUrelt oui; they just didn't turn out."
One disadvantage facmg Berkhimer this fall will be the
assistance of just one coach, Archie Rose. In hla first season,
* Whit is 1 Cl11 idiill halne7
Berkhimer had two assistants, but Bill Phillips, who doubles as
head basketball coach in the winter, decided to hang up hts cleats
How can I 11M 1 Christian home?
this fall .
'
"Tbe loss of Bill will surely hurt us," Berkhimer stated.
*Whit
thinp
chanlctnl1
Rill
0.1iifiM
honle7 .
.
"With just two coaches, we won't be able to give as much indivlduaUzecl attention to the team, a factor which could really
Do we ileed Chlistian hallie ID lllil 'America fnlm delruclian7
make. a difference, especially considering that we have II lettermen back thill fall."
ALL lHESE QUESTIONS MD MORE&gt; ANSWERED IN
KEN aii.EMM'S SERI£5 Of
Tonight is "Meet the Team" night at the high school field,
. beglnnln8 at 6:30 p.m.
SUNDAY EVENING .MESSAGES QN
Following that, the Eagles will travel tD Chillicothe Satw-dlly·
night for ascrimmage with Zane Trace, before returning home
"'HE QIRISTWI HOML"
Wednesdlly evening for a scrimmage with Frontier'.

Seeds ~ Oyster SheTIS and
Grit · Fertilizers - Lime - Cement &amp;
Morter· Stock Salt - Water Softener .
· Remedies · Salt - LiHers . Vaccine .
Roofing • Peints- Red Brand Fencing .
.Baler end Binder Twine . Sprays .
Gates.

Karen Morris

QUASAR

'

THE CHRISTIAN ~HOME

. Seeds •

Veterans Memorial Hospital

LOCAL TEMPS
•
The temperJture in dOII'IIlown
ADMITTED
Kevin
Mowery , Pomeroy ; Karen Pomeroy at II 1.m. !Wiy wu
Tillis, Long Bottom; Wallace 77 degrees under ounny lliH,
Hill , Racine ; Mary Still,
Middleport ; David Reed,
Pomeroy ; Timothy Lawrence,
MiddlepOrt; Millard Swartz,
Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED lnzy I
Newell, Mwt Ours, Clarence
McDaniel, Robert Staats, Amy
Eynon .
"T· Shirts" Polyester
Cotton, 60" wide

junior Miss is· a beauty plus

4- Tho Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Aug. 23, 1974

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - With
311 lettermen returning, in·
eluding 16 starters, Ohio State
University appears ready to
field one of the nation's lop .
college football teams again
thla fall but a problem llle
Buckeyes may face is a lack of
depth at some positions.
That was . the outlook
presented by OSU head coach
Woody Hayes . and his nine

•

• SUIDI' sadl....... e~~
lO:GO AI
110111118 SEIIICE..... e.~ ....... e •• li:IO All
••••••••••

WHY NOT VISIT US
THIS WEEKI

noiltll suvil.~~ ....·...........:

.

'

plus a superb horsewoman and
aU·round sports enthusiast, an
enter tainer and even a
. decoupage expert: To win her
tiUe o~ America's Junior Miss
for 1974, she competed with
60,000 entrants from all over
the country, and was judged on
scholastic achievement,
physical fitness, cr~ative and

·How we battle the
inflation nightmare ·.
By Gaynor Maddox
The steadily rising cost of
food is forcing most Americans
to alter their eating habits. As
meals in most homes are adjusted to the increased costs.
resentment grows or indifference sets in . But the
changes go on whether we like
-it or not. In the family budget
there is usually only the same
arnoun t of money (actually less
because of dottar devaluation)
for much costiie.r familiar food
1 items . .Problems' Yes, the
nation's . nwnber one night..
mare is inflation.
11
Wh0 can you trust today?"
asks Christine Pines, a
business executive and mother
with a husband, a son, 17, and a
college-age daughter to feed .
She lives in Port Washing to~.
N. Y:, and the says she puts the
blame for higher prices half on
supermarkets and half on food
growers.
.. ' 'Actually, Wider pressure,
we are finding we actually
don 't need as much meat as we
thought. For example, we use
more eggs, more chicken,
more bean dishes. We have just
beglll) to use soybeans and
rather l*e them."
"HOrrible." That's the way
Ruth Lundgren .looks at the
situation. slie runs her own
business and has two sons, one
in college and the other just
entering (both are now at
home), and a housekeeper to
buy food for . But she refuses to

give up meat regardless of
rising cost. She cuts down on
other things. She does admit
that she an&lt;! her friends en·
tertain less and also much less
eleganUy. She had cut out all
luxuries in daily menus such as
bakery cakes •and desserts,
many carbonated drinks and
out-of-season vegetables. But
meat she and the boys want.
And they get it - "meat one
night, the next night cllicken."
"I don 't Uke to be taken."
That's the way Anita Fial of
Roslyn , N. Y., feels about
supermarket prices. She has
an executive job in Manhattan
and goes home nightly to feed
low hungry people - a son,
daughter, husband and herself.
11
I never saw so many yards
of chopped steak in my life. But
we do have chicken fairly of.
ten. Flank steak- 'the lean flat
type, particularly large pieces,
two pounds or more, saves
money and tastes good. And
the large size leaves sorhe for
next day. That's important for
lunch. Another way I also save
is by cutting up my own
chickens rather than buying
them cut up. This saves six
cents a pound, on a three-pound
chicken that is 18 centS."
Here are views of two women
who live alone: Marjorie
Woodard of Virginia is a
retired widow on · a fixed income and Beverly Sperry, a
secretary, 24, lives in New
Yo~k . Miss Sperry feeds

performing urta, pot.. and
appearance .
Karen 1\'0n $12,000 in college
ochl&gt;larshlps during the
national finals In Mobile, Ala.,
and hopes to study speech
pathology at the University of
Wyoming . Another of h~r
prizes Is a pastel portrait by
Ralph William Wlltiilms, which
will be used in.' adverti~lng by
the Breck Company, sponsor of
the Junior Miss Pageant.
Although Karen doesn't
enjoy sewing, she qoes have a
flair for decoupage and has
done a number of plaques for
her room. The technique Is
simple, she reports. Simply cut
a wood plaque to the desired
size and shape, sand it smooth
and paint it to harmonize with
the basic colors of the room
where II will hang. Then cut out
the appropriate picture from a
magazine, a greeting card or a
book. Paste it to the wood and
varnish over all. Elements
from different pictures may be
used to create an original
composition .
Karen is a member of a
singing group called Hoover
and the Vacuums (the three
Vacuums are girls, Chris
Hoover is a hoy). Karen plays
guitar and sings folk and
western songs. The group has
played all over the state, and
has" beeri'f!named top singing
group in / Kiwani.s·sponsored
compeition .
The daughter of a rancher;
she rides, shows and .performs
with a precision riding team
and has a roomful of blue
ribbons attesting her skill. And
to prove she ca.n make it. in a
man's world, she even works
as cowpuncher with h~r dad's
150 head of cattle.
Dw-lng her year as the "First
Lady of Youth," . Karen is
working hard at television
appearances,: giving in·
terviews and st;trring in civic
. parades all over the country.
Her biggest problem as she
travels? Her hair - "it just
won't stay curled," she sighs.
"I have to keep setting it on big
rollers !''
·

1-M~ NEW
I"BACit' satOOL"
VAWES FOR
! SEWING:

w

~

l

•1.69 yd.

thrown to the arena floor .
Ca lieD Pnnts in
She
wears
a
down
face
("the.
I
Matc
h-Mates, 45"
completion date still scheduled. All masonry work in the Vocational Building is completed
fans love il") bul the tradition- I
•1,98 yd.
and the pouring of the floors in that building should he completed this week. The masonry
work on the Common's Building should be completed by next week, with the pouring of llle
al baggy pants are used, like a I Cotton Rib bed Knit
matador's cape, to distract a I
fl"l)rs to start soon after. All the footers for the Trade &amp; Industrial Building arc completed
bull who will weigh anywhere 1
•1.69 yd .
and the ma,.,nry work will be started immediately. Plans are to have all buildings under
roof by Thanksgiving. The contractors for the project are : General, Don. Kin~ Construction
from 1,800 to 2,000 pounds.
1 Wool-like Polyester
Miss Prudom, who is five feet I
60" wide
Co., Jackson; Mechanical, A.J . Stockmeister Inc., Jackson ; Electrical, West End Electric
Co., Portsmouth; Kitchen, Great Lakes Hotel Supply Co., Detroit, Michigan . Architecls are
eight and weighs 130 pounds, I
,4 •98 yd.
Dittmar &amp; Stubbs, zanesville, Ohio.
said she had been tossed by
broncs and once was gored by I
a bull, but has had no serious I
injuries .
"I have to stay around 13~....
Beginners Sewing
she said. " If I got down to skin I Advanced Sewing
The Buckeye Hills Career
There are 19 programs cupalions, Drafting, lndustrial and bone I might break I Basic Knit
Center this fall will be helping planr).Od : Agricultwe Business , Maintenance and Welding.
something.' '
5ewing Classes
local schools assist students Agriculture Mechanics. Forest
She has modeled and ridden I
An y sophomore student
To
make a wise career choice, if
Industry, High Skill desirin g more information since her teens. Her riding I
Start In s.epte_rn~!r
they are interested in attending Stenography, Office Data about one or more of the hegan while she dated a high 1
the Joint Vocational &amp;hool. Accounting, Office Machines programs should £irst contact schf)Oi youth whose parents
Staff recruitment will begin Duplicating, Distribution &amp; their IO(•al counselor or call the owned a couple of horses.
dwing the early part of 197~ . Marketing , Merchandi se Gallia . Jackson • Vinton Joint
Eventually, she said, "Some- I
The expected fully capacity Accounting &amp; Warehousing, Vocational &amp;hool Office, 614· one dared me to come out of
of the Center when all Food Service, Home ·&amp; Com - 245-5336.
th.e chute on a bronc. "I don't I
programs are full will be 856 munity Service, Air ConAny group desiring to learn think bronc busting is cruel at I
day students. Also expected ditioning &amp; Heating, Auto more •bout the Buckeye Hills all," she said. "The owners
MIODI.IPORT
are night programs for adult Body, Auto Mechanics, Career Center should contact want their horses in the best I
. OH O
students wanting to upgrade or Building Trades, Cosmetology, the school office for a speaker. shape. Those animals get the
I
retrain for their occupation . Diversified Heal th
Oc·
best care in the world."
'--------The Buckeye Hilla Career Center building project is progressing, with June 30, 197~

l

BHCC nearing completion

ENROLL NOW
fOR

l

1

New horizons open for women

By GAY PAULEY
York to talk up the Girls Rodeo handle the heavy barrels
UPI Women's Editor
Associatiorf world champion- . (standard arena equipment) to
NEW YORK (UPI) - Benjie ships Oct. :Hi at Spring Creek, divert a charging bull who's
· Prudom, 21, is a beautil.ul Nev.
tossed a rider.
blonde who rides bucking They witt be held in an indoor
Here's where Miss Prudom's
broncs, fi ghts bulls, models and horse palace, part of . a other specialty, clowning, lies.
is studying to become a law community planned resort built She rushes in to divert a bull's
officer .
. by McCulloch Enterpri ses. ·attention when a rider IS
The Dallas girl tried to McCulloch has put up $25,000 in r--""!"...~""!"..~-..
explatn why she had taken to prize money .
START BACK TO
rodeos . "I've talked to a lot of Miss Prudom hopes to move
people around rodeos," the from No.2 rank in bronc r-iding
SCHOOL IN A
national title holder said. " I've to No. I, the position now held
PAIR OF CONVERSE
never found a good answer to by Sue Pir\oe, of Stonewall,
TENNIS
herself, watching a par· why. Maybe it's the challenge. Olda . ·.
licularly strict diet, and feeds a Certainly it's exciting.
She said that from 300 to 400
.
"I don't think more women in women would be ln the world
cat"Pand. a dog. t 'f . , competition bas anything to do finals .
.
.
AL L c·oLORS
· nces are err1 ytng,
.
. WOOdard. with the liberation movement, Men have their own competi.
exc 1atms
Marjone
0U5e
''1 ate steak last night for the although I enjoy feeling that lions, which Miss Prudom said
.
Your Thorn MeAn Store .
first time in two months. I live I'm doing something for my. was just as well.
almost exclusively on chicken. self."
Strength Is a factor and men, •--·M-idOidiiilelipoiiirilt'lioii._ __.
Miss Prudom sounded more for instance, more easily
I can buy one for $1,28 and get like a feminist When she said
four meals from it...
She comments on women in ~t Ulere was nothing unusual •
supermarkets who pick up about her long.tenn goal of.
meat packages, look at the poUce work.
price, then put the packages
"I don'tsee why women can't
back. Then she watches them do the same work here as
buy macaroni or spaghetti, men/' she said. "Yes, I'll ·tote
dried beans or creamed soups. a gun . But I've been shooting
since I was 10. Dad started me
The result is they are putting with an air rifle. I was born a
on weight. It comes down to the
problem of eating more car- tomboy 1 guess."
bohydrates or starving for
No doubt, her family insome, despite the calories.
fluenced her decision to take a
" Awful simply awful" is the degree in criininal justice from
way
Beverly
Sperry Sam Houston State University '
characterizes the cost of food. at Huntsville, Tex., where she
is a sophomore.
"I must live on protein- little
Her father, Uoyd, works for
or no carbohydrates since I
have hypoglycemia. So 1 go out a correctional institution ·and
to Chi.nese restaurants for her brother, Thomas, is . a
dinner once in a while and it secw-ity officer at Southern
costs around $~. 1 carry lunch Methodist University in Dallas.
to the office in a tin lunchbox. I
A:l for rodeos, more women
used to buy lunch for around $3. are riding. broncs, roping and
But no more. I .like to have a tying calves, bull riding and
dinner at home that takes less barrel racing.
"Last year," stre·said, '~there
than a minute to prepare and
fits into my diet. That means were about I~ to 20 girl rodeos
. on the circul t. This year, there
'&gt;are between 30 and 40. It's no
longer a rlnkydink thing."
Miss Prudom was in New

The name that stands
for Quality ·
and Dependability.
REFRIGERATORS
RANGES
DISHWASHERS
COLOR TV
STEREOS

SHOES

C"'*":&gt;

MARK OF QUALITY.

BAK

heritage h

I

·Don't put off ·
till tomorrow what
you should do

· .· • · today• .

Dead pigeon working

.
in protecting species
.

.

By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI(UPI)-Animal
lovers here are trying to proteet endangered speCies via the
memory of, believe it or not, a
dead pigeon.
And, they say, the proJect
seems to be working .
- ·
Earlier this summer a "Pas·
senger Pigeon Memorial Fund"
was started at the Cincinnati
Zoo. .
For ·the occasion, the Smith·
sonlan Institution In Washington carefully crated the stuffed
body of the last passenger
pigeon, Insured it and flew it
un4er guard for a special dis·
play here.
·
.
Since then, $10,000 and quite
a bit of sentimental response
has come into. the memorial
fun d .
Wildlife artist John Ruthven,
sometimes called the ."20th Ccntury.~AudubOn," has been the
sj)arkplug ·of the project.
"This is a way to bring at·
tentlon to the fact that so
many animals todoy lace !he
lllllle pUght of the passenger
pigeon," ilays Ruthven. "Ani·
mala like the C.lifornla Condor,
. the Baid Eagle, the Canvasback
DuQ)i: and Ivory-billed Wood·
peeker are ' nf!ar e~CUncUon. "

•

,

Ruthven often repeats the
story of the demise of the pas·
senger pigeon to make his
point.
.
In the 1800s there were bil·
lions of ·pailsenger pigeons. But
they began disappearing, some· ·
Urnes at the rate of 3 'billion a
year, when man packed ran:
road cars full of them ~s gow ·met food and sold them at 25
cents a dozen to trapshooters
as "live targets."
By 1914 there was only one

passenger pigeon alive, and on
Sept. l of that year - nearly
60 years ago today - It died
at -the Cincinnati Zoo.
The fund ·gets most Or its
money through Ruthven's work.
In two months .IOO hthographs
of Ruthven's watercolor porir•il of the passenger pigeon
have been sold at $100 each with all proceeds going to .the
fund .
The sale of the remaining 400

cold sausage, eggs, tuna fish,
maybe a tiny piece of steak.
Oh, yes, once a week I buy
myself a few shrimp. I love
them."

of the limited edition set should
bring in another $40,000 and
Ruthven expects $10,000 in one
shot when his _original watercolor is auctioned off. His paintSUCCESS STORIES
ing of a duck once went for
$11,000 at an auction.
"They Overcame
The project also has jogged
Hearing Loss''
tlie memories of several persons.
Mrs . Marien Johnston of Ar·
Fre e Booklet especially
lington, Va. came up with two prepared
to en cou r age
centw-y-old pillows stuffed with Americans of all ages who
pa.ssenger pigeon feathers and· sulfer from uncorrected or
Henry Muell~r of Chicago found untrea1ed hearing loss to
two 00-year old paintings of the seek help.
birds to give to the lund.
·
Well·known celebri t ies from
Ruthyen this week completed all wa lk s of lif e tell the ir
a mailing to 50,000 wildlife club pe r sonal stori es .of trium ph
In their fields because they
members around ·the country overcame
th eir h€-ar, ng
and hopes for much more Inter· Impairment.
·
est in the project.
"The fund Ia not. to promote
sympathy for the passenger
pigeon," he say,&amp;, '~but to gen..
C~me in . .. Write ... or Phon e
tor your FREE COPY
erate concern for living, but
WilliamS. Diles
endarigered, animals."
..
Diles Hearing Aid Center
·
Riverside Professional Bldg.
~ON
444 Union St.. Athens

N. W. COMP ,. ' 0. D.
OPTOMETRIST

'75 car prices are going up.
So now is the time to
buy... especially at our
year-end prices. ·

12
•

•

Hey! Evei'yone knows that it co s1s us mor e lo keep 'em

than to sell 'em . An d thai 's why we're offering such 'super
year-end deals. And when you consider that '75 prices are
gonna go up, there could ~ever be a better time lo buy
lhan right NOW. Our mid-size Plymouth Salellite can
be yours for a lol less than yo.u may have thought. You gel a
car thai's big enough lor comfo rt, but small enough lor
economy. c ·mon in. See Satellite for yoursell.

PAA

'74 Plymouth Satell 1te

.t·Ooor Se-dlin

w.

PHONE:

O,:;;F:::,:F:ili:CE~HOtioU•R•S•9•:3•0•T•O•t2•,•2•TO_S_lC•L•O•SE....t ·.L.__.OJe.~2· '"V11.238
..
•

• AT NOON .ON THURS.) :- £AST COURT ST.,
.. POMEROY.

!

TOM RUE MOTORS,
.
.

•

h

•

399 South lrd Ave., Middleport, 0•,

�••
" 7 ~ The Dally Sentlflllt

i

6- The uaily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday. Au• . 23. l!rl•

schools' need
Robert Tenenbum, "the state
would be bankrupt." Rhodes also said the Ohio
Gen..:al Aasembly llhould be
called back Into ses.olon to de~
with the money cr/.111 lacing
Ohio's schools. The former
governor said he would
propose hla own revision of tile
school foundation formula
before the November election.
Rhodes again hinted at
charges he said he eventually
pLans to level qalnst tile
"plumbers" of the GWlgan
administration. Rhodes would
ooly say he considered deposed
Ohio AFLCJO chieftain Frank
King one of the Democrats'
..victims."
"I'll give you a definition of
what I consider a plumber,"
was the only tidbit Rhodes
June.
"I ·want to remind you, .. would throw out at the press
Rhodes said when asked about conference. 11 1t's when you use
spending uncollected tax slate funds to Investigate any
money, "That they ap- individual you have a dlsUke
proprated $45 million for the for and you try to hann that
lottery !Wld before they sold individual and take his living
even one ticket. The money away.
"A name? Frank King/' was
($108 million) is in the treasury
all Rhodes added.
In anticipated receipls."
He .reststed pressure to su.,
· Rhodes• $30 sum would be
over and above the ellra $20 stantiate or expand the charge
per pupil aid included in the that King 1••s railroaded out of
legiBiature's recently i&gt;alled his union post by the GUUgan
supplemental appropriations administration.
"You're trying to run my
budget bill.
campaign,"
her rel&lt;lrted to
"If we tried to keep up with
that kind of wlld spending," questioning. "There's plenty of
said Gilligan'S press secretary, time before Novembet."

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Jamea
A. Rhodes said Thursday an
extra 169 million dollars should
be immediately appropriated
to Ohio's financially ti'iiUbled
schools-$30 per pupil, acrossthe-bo&lt;lrd In a lump sum.
The money, Rhodes said,
would forestall unpopular tal
levies and ward off teacher
strikes. He predicted as many
as 75 teacher walkouts in Sep.
temher when .Ohio opens its
schools, compared l&lt;l the 27
work stoppages last year.
Rhodes, campaigning lor reelection against Gov. John J.
Gilligan, said the $69 million
could be handed out in a matter
of weeks based on the $108
million surplus anticipated by
the end of the liBcal year next

The harvest starts rolling · . ' .
'

•• •

'· '

.

• rlt!lf
•

1

£rffti

and with fuel at a premlwn and a drought ravaging thls
year's Midwest crop, agriculture eq&gt;erts can*! take any
chances on jeopardizing the barvest any further. The
Federal Energy Administration WEA) has organlzed a
mobUe communications prGgram that scouts trops ready for
harvesting, then radios back information to threshing crews
~top, left) on the move. "Custom wheat cutters,'' a11 they are
called, such as 16-year-old Sandy Slominksi of North Dakota
(lop, right) rely on the FEA mobile vans to ma!Qtain a steady .
oupply of fuel lor tbresher-ctomblnes. CUstom cutten follow a ,
circular route that can r;.tart ln Kansas and proceed north ,
through Nebraska, South Dali:ota, North Dali:ota and back ,
again. Vital to tbe barvest Is fuel, evldent at this wheat fleld •
in Kansas (bottom, right) where an oil derrick shares lhe .
vast acres of ripened wheat. Continuiox the harvest without I
. hiterruptlon Js the task of this FEA communications van, '
' • (bottom, left). The van runs some 40 miles befOre cutters •
r gauging fuel requirements then transmitting data back to :
supplv crews.

. ·. .

·. ,~e

..,,_
.Joe .
,,_·

.

Rocky's confirmation

President helping where he can

posing some problems
· By CLAY F. RICHARDS .
tax returns, to the two terms of the critical problems
WASHINGTON (UP!)- Nel' congressional committees han- of ,today, and it was not a
son A. Rockefeller met almosl dling confimiation.
political decision for lhe fu··
no opposition in his first day of
Rockefeller said he assured ture."
campaigning in Congress for President Ford before he was Rockefeller bristled when a
con1irrnation as vice president, nominated that there were · no reporter asked him if be
but his aides say there may be skele.tons irt his closet.
regretted not campaigning for
. ,problems ahead.
"D~n · t you think that's the Goldwater for president in 1964.
Rockefeller met with more kind . of . thing that should be "I did support him, I did
than a score· of senators and s~ttled before a man is campaign for him," Rockefeller
representatives Thursday and named?" Rockefeller asked.
said. "He just doesn't think I
was told their probe, which
He predicted that · some did. That's a question of a
may take as· long as two people 1\'0uld be "disappointed" value judgm~nt."
months, would ·lnvestigale biB when the true extent of his
Goldwater refused to make
backgrOWld thoroughly, particu· wealth is revealed, adding : any stateinent on What was
11
larJy hjs finances .
You've seen some pretty said in the meeting . ·
After his tour he went to a exciting stories and I don't
White House dinner and then know if I'll be able to live up to
0
0
new to his Seal Harbor, Maine, then'l.''
·
compound where be plans to
Friends and business associISC.O flSID ·
stay until after Labor Day.
ales have said Rockefeller's
A Rockefeller aide said that personal fortune might , be as
for the most part the congress' much as $500 milliion, but
men "were friendly and in- conceded. the figure was merely
dicated the conlirrilation should . an estimate. ·
0
.
go lbrough with little problem."
Rockefeller received a warm
He said, however, the former reception at every office he IS
New York governor expected entered, and in most cases he
some opposition from.conserya- posed with his arm around a . VANDAUA, Ohio (UP!) live lawinakers and added that member of Congress as a herd Arland Uen, 35, a high school
Rockefeller would be ques· of news photographers took principal from Elmwood, Wis.,
shot a 98 Thursday during the
tioned on his hsndling of the pictures.
bloody Attica prison riot.
The one exception was when Grand American Trapshooting
Rockefeller is "not at all Rockefeller met . with Sen. Tournament here to win the
worried" about scrutiny of his Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., ail Preliminary Handicap.
Lien ran "the first SO birds
personal finances, the aide old political foe, who suggested
the former governor should not Thursday, dropped two during
said.
The governor said he was seek a full term with Ford in the next 25 and then ran the
· "keeping his fingers crossed" 1976, but step aside for a re~inder. He will '!loot in loon the confirmation question. younger Republican.
. day s Grand Amertqm HanHe said his staff shortly would
Photographers were not al· dicap and in Saturday's evenls.
turn over a CQIIlQlete record of lowed in to record the brief
Uen today and Saturday w1U
his finances, including income meeting and Rockefeller said he shooting at a little greater
with a shrug · of the shoulders : distance ~han from which he
"I never force anyone to have shot Thursday- Under ~a~ur
his picture taken. "
·
Trapshooting
Assoctabon
· · "We went over the situation rules, a two and one-half yard
as it now exists " Rockefeller handicap 'is assigned to the
said after the 15-~i~ute session . high . scorer in any event
"I got snme very helpful drawmg 1,500 or more
advice .
··
shooters. Lien will shoot from
"I told him that confirmation 23 yards l&lt;lday :
of a .vice president was a . A rocord 3:098 shooters P";·
question to be .c&lt;&gt;nsidered in llclp.at~d tn _Thursday s
·
Prehmtnary ·HandiCap, 355
more than shot during last
year's Preliminary.

w

principal
top gun

Hoarders

will get
•

surprise

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) ....: ·
Hoarders of pennies hoping to
make a financial kill lor the
copper might as well forget it.
The Federal Reserve Bank of
San Francisco ~d Thursday
that the hoarders were in for a
"letdown'' because the freemarket prtce of copper has
plunged from a record $1.52 per
pound in April to a present low
of 82 cents.
~ ·Hoarders anticipated the
prlce of copper would rille
above $1.51 a pound," bank
economjat Yvoone Levy said,
''making the metal value of the
coin greater than Ita lace
value.
"Otheu believed the Lincoln
copper would .become a prized
llllllllmaUc ltem lio .vlew of the
TrN~Ury'a fii'OPOIIIllor chang.
~ llle metallic compoeitlon of
the eotn."
The economtat said they
...-. wronc on both counts •
llaCint lhi U.8. Mlht _; ·
cuatlnuiiiJI to produce coi!per

JMIIIIiel.

'

'

..

.

ADMONISHING the
ileparfment of Defense that
the U. S. Navy hils · lost
control of the seas to the
Russian Navy, Admiral
Ebpo Zumwalt urged naval
ouJiooritles to expand and
uP&lt;fate Us ships or iace a
Soviet confronlallon from a
weaker posl!lon.

'

LT. JACA HUSSEY

Officer wins
commendation
ALBANY - First Lt. Jaca A.
Hussey was presented the
Army Commendation Medal
by Maj. Gen. DeWitt C. Smith
Jr.,
Commandant,
in
ceremonies at the US Army
War
College,
Carlisle
Barracks, Pa. She was cited
for her work aS administrative
assistant to the director of
publications and to the editor of
Parameters: The Journal of .
the US Army ~ar College..
A grad\18te of Albany Htgh
School, , she earned a
Bachel~r s
Degree
in
Ed.ucat~on
from
Ohto
Umversoty, and taught school
for. the Alexander Local School
District.
.
Lt. Hussey IS the daughter or.
Mr. and Mrs. William M.
Goodwi? of Rt. 3, . Albany. She
1s marned to Darnel Hus~ey of
Rochester • N.H., who IS attend1ng _graduate school at _the
U~verstty of New Hampshll'e;

President made
first call to
Woody Hayes

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
Ohio State University football
ANGELS GET TWO
coach WoOdy Hayes, who
ANAHEIM, CAlif. (UP!) - suffered a heart atlack June 6,
Billy Mullett has been hired as reve~led Thursday night he had
the new pitching "coach and · received a. telephone ·. call
outfielder Morrill Nettles has · recenUy (rom a former Univerbeen called up from Salt Lake sity of Michigan center inquirCioty oi the Pacific Coast ing about his health.
League, the california Angels
Hayes said President Gerald
announced. Friday.
Ford called him the day after
Mullett, a ronner coach with · he was inaugurated:
St. Louil; and a minor league , 1'The President said I was the
pitchiug instructor the last four first in my profession he called
years, has been hired to take and he said he would have
the place of Tom Morgan, who called sooner but he had been
resigned .Wednesday after running around so much," said
being told his contract would Hayes. "He's been blocking for
not be renewed .
a lot of peQple all his life. I told
Nettles was called up to him I would support him in any
replace Mickey Rivers wllll' way possible.
suffered a broken bone In his
"He asked how 1 was ana I
right hand. Rivers will be told him 1 was alright. l was in
operated on next w~k and was the office worklng.at the time."
expected to remain sidelined
for the rest of the year.

. BOOSTERS MEET
RACINE - Southern Band
Boosters will meet Tuesday,
Aug. 27, at 7:30p.m . at the high
school.

RIDERS CONVENE
· The Meigs County Riding
Club wlll meet Tuesday, Aug.
21, at 7 p.m. at the home of BOb
Daniels, Middleport. A wiener ·
roast
will tobeattend.
held. Everyone Is
welcome

WASHINGTON (UP!)
President Ford iB unable to
campaign personally for
Republican candidates, but he ·
Is trying to give them aU the
help he can.
Before Congress began ah
extended Labor Day recess
Thursday, Ford took time to
pose for separate phot~graphs
with 135 GOP· congressmen
who will be on the campaign
!•ail during lhe next few
weeks-. Two days ago, Ford
poased with several senators
who are up for re-election.
Ford seems to think the way
to get help from his friends in
0 ngress next year is to help

lhein win elections in the fall.
Before he became President,
Ford barnstormed across Ule
country -visiting 40 states helping GOP candidates and
trying l&lt;l prevent a ·~to-proof
Congress with two-thirds
DemocratS~

Although Ford's press secretary, Jerald F. terHorst, did
not rule out campaign appearances close to election day, he
told reporters ''the_President is
not running for anything right
now and he feels the best
politics is right here in the
White House running the af·
fairs of goverrunent.,

..

r,..

Traditional fair
•

m good· health-

Ford, according to terHorst,
expecls his vice presidentdesignate, Nelson A. Rockefel·
ler, to campaign widely,
especially if be iB confirmed
before the November elections.
TerHorst has said Ford
would like to run for a full term
thiB time and Democrats, like
Senate majority leader Mike
Mansfield, think he will be a
difficult man to beat. "He is, by
far, the best man they have,"
Mansfield said Thursday.
Mansfield will lead . off a
series of presidential appoint·
ments today in what has
become typical in the Ford
White House. Others will in·
elude Sy~ian Foreign Minister .
Abd al-Halim Khaddam, the
Fann Family of the Year and
representatives of senior citi··
zens' organizations among
many others.
While Congress is away,
Ford was expected to b&lt;gin
restructuring
his
administration.
Interior Secretary Rogers
C. B. Morton has said that Ford
has agreed to curtail the
authority of the Office of
Management and Budget over
the policies of federal depart·
• ments and agenc~es -a Nixon
innovation -as ~ of his
transfonned operallon . .

By JERRY MURSENER
youngsters
are
raisi.ng
DES MOINES, Iowa (UP!) livestock thiB year than in the
- Once, Iowa State Fair Secre- past because of the spiraUng
tary Kenneth Fulk thought the costs. However, fair officials
tr3·d't'
f ·
'th 't
•· anticipate just as many entries
1 ton a1
· atr wJ 1 s roo"" as in the past because, Fulk
deep in the rural society was
becoming a thing of the past. said "They want to be part of
Now, he believes fairs of all the fair."
shapes and sizes will survive • "To me the expression part
forever.
of the fair is the heavy part of
Fulk who has made the Iowa the fair/'' Fulk said. " With
fair on~ of th~ co1lll:try's best, today's society the way it is,
concedes that droughts, infla. with specialists where people
tion, the energy crisis and the get no recognition, people want
emergence of an urban society to be noticed and recognized.
all have posed threals to the The fair gives them a place to
I
do this. This is the real reason
annual extravaganza .
He said the reason fairs still why fairs will always be·here. 11
were going strong was the
emergence of a "classless,
faceless society" which has
deprived most Americans of a
sense of recognition and expression.
BARBECUE PLANNED
"At one time," Fulk said
CHESTER
- The Chester
while preparing for this week's
opening dsy, "I thought fairs Volunteer Fire Dept. made
had done their things. But the plans for its annual Labor Day
reason that fairs will go on barbecue Wednesday night
forever is that it gives in- during a special meeting.
dividuals a chance to express Plans for the day include a .
parade, tractor pull and the
themselves.''
Fulk noted the number of selling of barbecued chicken,
exhibitors at the Iowa fair has homemade ice c;:ream, pte and
doubled in the past decade. He cake. Donation of pies and
believes th~ desire for a sense cakes wiQ be appreciated.
of accomplishment penetrates
all the entrants - from the r-"!!!~!"'!!""'1111!"~--·
livestock divisior.s to the arls
and crafts show.
"Even the wonnan with a jar ·
of pickles wants a chance to
show people she did someSnarl Proof
thing," Fulk said. "In recent. .
Reg. $4.69
years, with the classless,
ONLY
faceless society, there has been
a big increase in the desir~ for
expression. People do things to
get expression and hope to be
recognized."
~
For example, he said,· fewer 98S.•fi"OI
Chestn, Q.

'BOOSTER
CABLE

•3o86
BAlJM'S TRUE.
vALU·ESlORr,. ,

He aiso apparenUy intends
to go along with tbe suggestion
of his transition that advisers
on national security, budget, ·
domestic policy, the economy,
personnel and his l~gai counsel
have equal status and access to ·
the President.
Ford also iB expected to
reduce the White House staff
substantially.
Ford had a ~usy day Thursday, starting with a §.minute
medical checkup In . the mor·
ning. His personal physician,
WUUam Lukash, concluded he
was "in excellent health and
fully capable of meeting aU
physical demanda and mental
stresses of the presidency." · ·
His only advice to Ford was
to lose six pounds ....get down to
195 -by football season.
Authorized dealer 'for Zenith i
. G;bson • Hardwick . Kit- i ·
&lt;hen
Aid
·
Litton .
(Microwave Oven). Also '
Ooxol Propa!"'e Service.
.

Ridenour's
'·--- -

l

l

T.V.

&amp; Appliance

Gas Server
Pllone 985·3307

~ester.Ohio

Massey-Ferguson lawn/gal'den ·tractor

Last chance to buy brand new
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WITH NO TRADE-IN

MF 5 HP RIDING TRACTOR WITH 26" MOWER
Sale Price

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MF 8 HP RIDING TRACTOR WITH 34" MOWER
Recoil StartReg. Price $836.00

..

S I p I ,
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MF 8 HP RIDING TRACTOR WITH 34" MOWER
Electric. Start,
Sale Price ,785 .00
Reg. Pnce $940.00

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MF 8 HP RIDING TRACTOR WITH 34;, MOWER
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Reg . Price $1045.00

Sale

Price ' 864.00

MF 14 HP RIDING TRACTOR WIIH 42" MOWER

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•

MODERN SUPPLY·
lffWESTMAINSTREET ff2·21M POMIROY,OHIO
THE STORE WITH "ALL KINOS OF ITUI'I'"
. FOR F'ErS
STABLES - LARGE AND SMALL
ANIMALS
.
LAWNS- GARDENS

..

'.

"' Beautification of the u;lart arrangement&amp; for one of the flowers are to be use.l at the
• Falla Cemetery, which U11t homes Included on the tour of outside , with heavier and
ye.r won first place iq Re~ion hlttorlcal homea being pLanned deeper colors at the base and
11, Ohio Aaaoclatlon or Carden for September by the Ohio Eta lns,lde. She aald that more than
Clubs, In the Sears Community Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Pili one shape 1$ preferable. and
" Improvement Pr"llrarn for the Sorority.
that mass arrangements
Bend 0' the River Garden Club
Mrs, RObert Kuhn, therapy should Include round, flat1riU be continued another year. chairwoman, asked lor assist- faced flowers , sprays and
, Plans for continuing the once and contrlbutiof\a of spikes, deUcate flowers and
lontlng
project
were coo!Ues, plants and conlalners greenery . When using a
illlculled during a meeUng of lor a therapy program this figurine or accessory, she said
' lhe club at the home of Mrs. month at the GaUipolla State . it should be two-fifths l&lt;l three·
·• James Diehl. Mrs. Bert Grim Institute.
fifths the height or size or
"llld Mrs. Wilson Carpenter
Mrs. Joe Bolin, past regional weight of the arrangement.
attended the OAGC convention direcl&lt;lr, was guest speaker at
Mrs. Andrew Cross gave
in Cincinnati where award the meeting. She demon9trated devotions using the theme
'recipients were announced.
the making of a mass ~"'Each Day is a New Account. "
. Club members agreed during arrangement where light She said that there are 86,400
the meeting to provide three
·
seconds in a day atld after each
'
day .the account is closed .
· Mrs.1 Diehl served refresh·

Women's rights: 54 years old
li!iiliiiii'8Jiiiiiii~J%·..::@1.:mq.
:@

By GAY PAULEY
UPI Women's Editor

Polly 's Pointers ~·
ri~~.w q~~:K n~:l)why
~~¢~.
By Pnlly Cramer

w. American women
X. August 26?

I

~~~

celebrate

Uque", and then In 1968
formation of the National
Organization roo Wonnen.
There are many other groups
pushing for women•s rights,
including passage of the Equal
Righi.s Amendment forbidding
jOb discrimination because of
sex.
But it is NOW that keeps the
liberation movement fueled the
most vocally. It really caught
fire with observances , demonstrations, and marches in 1970
l&lt;l mark the S(Jth anniversary of
suffrage.
TOday, NOW numbers more
than 700 chapters and counts
more than ~o;ooo members in
the United States. They come
from all age gtoups and all

chapter idenWied them u .
RhOda B. Jenltins, an ar~hltec­
tural engineer from Greenwich,
Conn., great-granddaUShler ci
1\'rs. Slanton, and Doriot A.
Dwyer, first woman lllutlat
with the Bosl&lt;ln Symphony,
great-grandniece of Susan B.
Anthony.
There'll be "FBI" poelen lor
the 10 most wa11ted men. FBI
slands lor Feminine Bureau of
Investigation" and Ms. De
Sarma said local chapters
would docide on the moot
wanted "public enemies who
have committed mass crimes in
violation or federal and stale
civil rights laws. and are still at

Answer : It marks the day
• when 54 years ago the 19th
:
t giving women the
~ rig t to vote s proclaimed
par of the Consti
That was one
ation
By Polly Cramer
milestone . But actually, the
DEAR POLLY - Is there a reliable paint that could be used women's Ub movement In
on a brown imitation leather (naugahyde ) settee and chair that I America began formally 126
would fi~e to paint white ? Unfortunately I bought, by mistake; a years ago when Lucretia Molt
paint that gives a leather-look to furniture. - PATRICIA.
and Elizabeth Cady Slanton,
fighting for the rights of women
mentS.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with the GREAT number as weU as against slavery,
of things on many store shelves, counters and racks that have no called a women's rights conven·
large."
prices on them . Many of us have limited shopping time and none lion in Seneca Falls, N.Y.
Chapters are making flags to
to spare while an Wlknown price is looked up. - GEN.
draw
attention to the fact live
The movement went through stations in life, urban and
DEAR POLLY - 1amanswcringT.V.B. who has a daughter its trials and tribulations down rural.
states still are needed for
in Germany. She wan Is to know how her friends over there can through the years culminating
The organization has cranked ratification of ERA. The Rag In
Taking on a western theme, vlce."
make liquid vanilla so they can make their own lee cream. The in suffrage in 1920. But that up a number of projects among this case will have 33 stars and
answer iB l&lt;l do as the Germans do and use vanilla sugar that can was not the final chapter by its chapters l&lt;l make August 26 wiU go on diBplay on public
the United Pentecostal Church
Before the
four-week
be bought in most any German grocery store. - MR. R.G.C.
' of Middleport Is participaUng program is concluded, plans
a day for all to note. It leaves buildings "by whatever devious
any means.
DEAR POLLY - I am answering T.V.B. who wanted to
ill a world-wide Sunday School call lor the church to have a
RUTLAND -· Michael May,
Along came Betty Friedan Observance plans up to in· means we can find to get them
. : erlort l&lt;l round . up Sunday newly acquired bus in son of Mr . and Mrs. Samuel know how to make vanilla flavoring with vanilla beans. On a with her celebrated llherationist dividual chapters.
there," said Ms. De Sarma.
School goers in this area.
operation, transporting aU Bruce May, Rutland, will begin recent trip to Tahiti our guide said his native wife kept a jar of book, ' 'The Feminine Mys· · But carole De Saram, a vice She's not sure there'D be a
·· SWlday, Aug. 25, has been th0$e who would attend. The his studies SW&gt;day at Marietta sugar with a couple of vanilLa beans in it. When she needed both
president of the New York repeat of the Los Angeles
designated as roWld-up day for congregation continues to College. He plans to major in . sugar and vanilla in recipe this was used. - lJBBY.
chapter and national coordina· chapter's huge cookout last
DEAR GIRLS - If the vanilla beans are cut, more of the
IIIO$e who are famiUar with the make improvements to the petroleum englneerlng.
tor for the anniversary, out- August 26. Its members roasted
flavor
will
be
absorbed
by
the
sugar.
A
bit
of
experimenting
message of Pentecost and are church building located on
Michael will be attending
)ined some of the things a "male chauviniBt pig." A real
~ riot regular attenders. South Third Ave., Middleport. Marietta on an honor might be necessary to get as much flavor as desired. More beans
porker, it was.
scheduled.
can
be
added
to
make
it
stronger.
POLLY.
Howeverthepublicislnvlted to
It is requested that during scholarship. He graduated in
Maybe there'll he no marches
DEAR POLLY - Our young son wanted to learn how to fiBh
all services.
the four weeks, surprises and seventh place scholastically
down Fifth· Avenue, as in 1970,
According to church Of· ·prizes are being planned In· with the 1974 Meigs High with a rod and reel. We had an old-but failry good rOd but it was
Sunday School attendance on but "we're still just as
•• ficial$, teachers in western eluding pony rides, all, of School class. This summer he minus a couple of eyelets. Not wanting l&lt;l spend the money for a
activist/' said Ms. De Saram .
garb will emphasize the course, intended to . provide has been employed at Doctor's new rnd we relrived a few rings thai came off of soda pop cans Aug. 18 was 40, the offering was , "We're taken seriously now, not
and my husband lashed them to the rOd with fishing line . We did $17.30. Worship services were ridiculed."
·significance of the effort in the occasion and intrOduction to Hospital West in Columbus.
'"'church where attendance is a the Christian way of life.
A member of the Church of buy an inexpensive beginner's reel and then he was ·an ready to held at II o'clock with the Rev.
NOW's new national presi' · "down home, old-time Bible- . Ronald Dougan is Sunday Christ, Michael attained a lish.lf I win a Polly Dollar for thiB it will join the one I won many Meece present and Thelma dent, Karen DeCrow, a 36.-yearDiU, lay speaker from
' ""believing; jayous experience, School superintendent of the nine-year perfect attendance years ago that I have in al•ame. - AUDREY.
old Syracuse lawyer, author
DEAR POLLY - A few years ago while we were away on Syracuse, 0., speaking. At- and lecturer, is preparing to hit
where every service Is an congregation pastored .by Rev. record in school. He was
' original and unique in· William Knittel.
recently advised that. his vacation someone pulled the plug l&lt;l our deep freeze and all the tendance 3t this service was 30. the speaking circuit again, said
"'troduction l&lt;l ChriStian serbiography will be published in contents were spoiled. The odor was terrible. After trying Offering was $25 and pledges NOW's New York chapter.
.-, "·
the eighth annual edition of everythiug I could think of I thought we would have to buy a new $23.
AI Seneca Falls, where it
Mr. and Mrs. William Carr
" Who's Who Among American one until a friend told melo get some pieces of.cedar at a lumber
·really all started, the chapter
High School Students, 1973-74." yard and put them loiside the freezer. The cedar was left there·a went to Cleveland, 0. on Thurs- plims a dinner at which the
.
week or so. After that I was able to start filling it again. I still day to see her doctor at Rev. Merrill Bittner, of Webkeep a piece or two of cedar there since it absorbs any Odors. Cleveland Clinic and returned ster, N.Y., is a scheduled
.
age.
In
the
past
organizations
.home the same evening.
• · The deP.Ieted supply of toys
Hope this helps someone who may be having the same trouble. speaker, The deacon is one of
•·lOr lots confined to Veterans have contributed to the project,
Mrs. Bessie Kapple is a 11 wo~en ordained as Episc~
MRS. H.P.
.
patient in Veterans Memorial
• Memorial Hospital was an area and again the auxiliary asks
.
pal
priests
recently
ln
Phlladel
for
gifts
of
toys.
1
Hospital, Pomeroy.
of concern discussed by the
phla, an act condemned by
The
first
nomination
of
of.
•
Several local families atWomen's AuXiliary of Veterans
theit bishop as a dellance of
"What Is Life?" was the
tended the Meigs County fair church law and tradition:
' Memorial at a business fleers for the 1974-75 year was
given with the list to be read at program topic, presented by
last week.
•meeting Tuesday evening.
Another group, the Women' s
the
September
meeting
before
The Swartz family reunion
' Mrs. Freda Mossman
Mrs. Lawrence Stewart at a
The 31st annual Grate family and dijughter, zanesville; Mr.
Hall 9( Fam~. ·planned ind~c.
presided at · the meeting and an election is held. ·It was meeting of Friendly Circle, reW&gt;ion was held at Royal Oak and Mrs. Bill Jones and sons, will be held in the Woode grove lion of two descendants . Of
noted that lays are needed (or reported that a gift will be sent Trinity Church, Tues~ay Park, Aug. 11, with 79 in at- Marion; Mr. and Mrs. John here on Sunday, Aug. 25. famous suffragettes. Alin e
:.youngsters up to 12 years of to Debbie Fitch who graduated evening.
tendance.
Hersman, Castilla; Mr. and Everyone welcome.
MIDDLE~ORT
Rossi of the Seneca Falls NOW
recently from a school of
.
Sue WoOde of Circleville, 0.,
Readings, "The Secret of a
Following the dinner at I Mrs. David Grate and son,
. . . . ;O;:n··;·;
.. "· .....-.:-~ nursing. She was the recipient Happy Life" and "Rules for p.m. a business meeting was Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Bill visited rel~Uves here last
of a scholarship from the Living" were given by the held ·with Bill Grate being Grate, Charleston, W.Va.; Mr. Tuesday and Wednesday:
·
auxiliary,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
leader· Mrs. David Russell elected president, and. his wife, and ·Mrs. Keever Grate and
It was reported that Mrs. read selected scriptures on life Ruth, being named secretary • daughter, Mansfield.
WoOde went to Parkeroblirg
Kathy Roush Smith is a and there was group singing of treasurer.
Glfts
were
Three gues~ att.endi.{lg were Friday morning to consult his
surgical patient at MI. Carmel "Take My Life and Let It Be." · presented to the oldest Don Hysell, Jeannie Harflsozi physician there and returned
Hospital, Columbus. Mrs . Mrs. Stewart gave the of· member present, the youngest, and Gary Hysell.
home Friday evening.
Smith is the daughter of Mr. fertory prayer.
the first great-grandchild, the
FOR
and Mrs. Albert Roush. A
10
A contribution was made
one who traveled the farthest
FRIDAY ·
thank you card was read from the Anita Levacy fWld with and the one with the most
'•
' " MEET The Team night 6:30 Mrs.·Lucille Leifheit for cards Mrs. Stewart, president, in. members of their family
"1'·m: at Eastern High School . and flowers during her recent charge. Acknowledged was a · present.
See our great selection of gift watches. We have the
··&amp;udttormm. Parenlji.• teachers hospitalization.
.
donation for serving the
Attending were Mr. and Mrs .
newest styles, the latest features. Caravella by
and interested restdents .in·
Get-well cards and flowers
Gilmore·Avey wedding Herman Grate and daughter,
Bulova. Expensive watches at inexpensive prices.
, ylted; staged by Eastern Band were sent to Mrs. Leona Karr, reception. An order of New Vickie, Rutland; Eugene and '
J!oosters, Duane Longenette, Mrs. Freda Henderson and · England baskets. has been Jean Cherry and family ,
"'P,l"'sident.
.
Mrs . Jestie Molden, all received and delivered, and Tommy and NorrQa Sprouse,
. PASTMatro~s of Evangehne patients·at Veterans Memorial members were reminded of 8 Linda Lambert and family I
POINT PLEASANT, W. Va. clothes.
. Chapter picm~, 6 p.m., at Hospital.
The Point Pleasant
All interested people are
rummage sale Oct. 3 and 4 at and Leda Lambert, all of Union
The inallunctfoning of the
Anthony Cabon on Cher~y
the church.
Furnace; Beaverly Grate, Bicentennial drama casting urged to attend the auditions
Ridge. Those onterested on vending machines in the
Miss Mary E. Chapman and Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Robert committee tOday extended an Tuesday or Wednesday as
attending are to meet at the hospital lobby was discussed. Mrs. Pearl E. Mora were Gra~e . and family, Marion; lnvitation to anyone in the rehearsals will begin In early
·&lt; temple at 5:30p.m. Coffee and
The meeting followed a welcomed after several Roberta Oiler and family, region interested in taking part September.
.
• tea will be furnished.
picnic at the US 33 Roadside months' absence.
11
For additional information
Harrisburg, Pa.; Wendell in the heritage drama Rivers
, '" UNITED MethOdist Men's Park. For grace the members
of
Destiny."
contact
the Point Pleasant
A salad Course Was·served by Grate and family' Rutiand;
organization will hold a-wiener gave the Lord'S ·Prayer in Mrs. Carl Bilikan and Miss Mr. and Mrs .. John Grate,
· The drama will be presented JIJ!liOr Woman's Club, VIrginia .
' roast 7:30p.m. at Edson Roush unison.
for
six nights, October 8 Shaw, chairwoman, Phone 675Erma Smith to 14 members Letart, W. Va.; Marion Grate
, Farm.
and . guests. A yellow and an d 1ann1·1y, All an ta , Ga.; Mr. through 13 at the reconstructed 4295.
SAWROAY
orange centerpiece !1 anked by and Mrs. · William "Cun· Fort Randolph. The prOduction
ICE Cream Social, 7 p.m.,
yellow tapers centered the ningham, and family, Logan; will be the feature attraction of
Racine Fire Slation. Sponsored
. 17 lewels.
refreshment table. ·
the bicentennial week, and will
171eweiS.
Black m~rkers
Automatic.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thomp- have a cast of &amp;0 to 80 people .
Grtlen dial ,
by Racine ER squad. En·
on Jilt dial.
son and family, Wellston .
. tertalnmertt will be fe~tured.
Auditions. will be Tuesday,
J
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Frank
Cherry,
For All Occasions
SUNDAY
.
Aug. 27 and Wednesday, Aug.
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
Harry
at 6:30p.m. in the basement
'"', NORTHEAST Cluster of
.We Wire Flowers·
'J
. McGlothUn, Union Furnace; of28, the
"• hUnited Methodist Churches
Presbyterian Church in
Everywhere
Mr. and Mrs. George Grate, Point Pleasant.
• picnic at Forked Run Slate
Several money • making
Georgene Grate, Ronnie Grate,
•..• Park, I p.m.
.
Being sought are people who
projectswerediscussedduring
Mr. and Mrs. Mlchae: Grate, ·can dance, sing and do
nr .. HEATH UNITED MethOdist.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Grate," drannatic parts. Singers should
Church picnic, Ft. Meigs. Meet a recent meeting of. the Ladies
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Car- Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Grate, all bring their own music to sing a
". at church at 5:30p.m. In case Auxiliary of the Middleport
Pomeroy Flower Shop
United
Pentecostal
Church
at
penter
have
returned
from
of
Rutland;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
• of rain will be cancalled.
one minute sOlo, an acMrs. Millitrd Van Meter
the home of Mrs. Alice Priddy, Cincinnati where they went for Edward Tewksbary, Wellston; companist wili be provided.
;,
MONDAY
Ph.
992·203• .
Ph. 992-5721
the first birthday observance Mr, and Mrs. Tom Tewksbary Dancers should wear rehearsal
;, ••REVIVAL at Ash Street Rutland.
Members discusSed selling of their "grandson, Christopher .
Freewill Baptist Church
beginning, 7:30 p.m . liev , knives and calendars and .. .Matthew Carroll, son of Mr.
Alfred
Walter Paterson, Mason, will made preparations for a and Mrs. Dennis Carroll.
The evening of Friday, Aug .
Visiting here fair week with
be guest speaker . Everyone chicken noodle dinner. The
30
at 7:30 will be Alfred's night
secretary's report was given the Carpenters were Mr.s. John
welconne.
by Mrs. Joyce Sauters. The YoW&gt;g and children, Robin, of the round-robin evangelistic
REVIVAL, 7:30p.m. Ash St., meeting was · preceded by a P hi1ip and Lisa, Lancaster. services with Rev. Bwngarner
Freewill Baptist Church,_ 1~nc h eon WI"th ·Mrs , Li n da Wilson Carpenter, son, Jim, of Middleport, the spe~ker. · ·
· Middleport. Evangelist Walter Kn"ttel · 1
The annual homecoming of
1 giV ng prayer.
and grandsons, Jay Carpenter
Mary Mason won the pr1ze
·
·Patterson. Singers welcome.
and Philip . Young went to the Alfred church will be held
Pastor Noel Herman invites for brong
· i ng 1n the mos t money Cincinnati to atte"tld a bali on Sunday, Sept. 15 with an all
•
day service. More details will
the public.
for calendars. The next ganne .
be announced later.
roESDAY
meeting will be at the honne of
. RACINE American Legion ·Betty Wickline, Pomeroy.
Auxiliary, 6 p.m., at the M):l"tle Others attending were Tim,
Walker home. Mrs. Walker will ' Sherry and Joy Sa~ters, Velsa
/
furnish the barbecued chicken · Keller, Dora · Holly , Linda
with members to take a Acree and Manda Bastaa:n . A
DOVER - This is the final keep the warring armies apart
covered dish and their own card was signed by the
week
of the 1974 season of has been cited by historians as
table service . . Dues are members to be sent to Bernice
ployable.
Vanaan, a patient at the Holzer Ohio's official Bicentennial a very Important factor in the
Play, "Trumpet in the Land." outcome of the Revolution.
Medical Center.
The outdoor historical play by · This is a story for the enUre
Pulitzer Prize-winner Paul family. Young and old alike
Green closes out its fifth season learn the importance of Ohio;;
ACCEPTED
Sunday, Sept. I.
first settlement, Schoenbrunn.
ledl
Doughnut's Origin
. Jayce Ann Davis, va C•
Although the United States
Located in Ohio's most richly Thert;! ls also music, laughter
l&lt;lrlan or thel974 class at Meigs leads the world in doughnut endowed historic
area. and intrigue that rivals
111ChSchool, has been accepted con~umption, with the aver· •iTrurnpet in the Land" brings anything on ·the television
'_F&lt;"
- al Rio Grande College for a age American eating more to life the story or the · screen.
· tecrotarial science couroe than 80 a year, the pastry is courageous band of Moravian
Tickets lor "Trumpet in the
p(eparatory to becoming a not American in origin. the Missionaries who stood firmly
Land" may be Obtained by
medical secretary. She will Bible describes a forerunner
between
the
British
and
Hours: Monday thru Thursdey 10-S
CBiling
12161 364·5~9&amp; or
Meet Our Captain • Debbie
in her tralnlnS there thlt of the doughnut in Leviticus.
Americans
during
the
.
Friday and Saturd1y 10-1:30
hie of dlrectin~ that "cakes
wrl ling: "Trumpet In the
At The JEAN SHOP
tal . Joyce lt the dau&amp; r . mingled with oil .. : of fine Revolutionary War . Their Land, Box 275, Dover, Ohio
116 Main Street ·
Pomeroy
.Mr. and Mn. Max Davis, Rt.l, flour, fried," be used in determination to remain 44622. Performances are
Middleport.
sacrifices.
neutral in the conflict, and to nighUy except Monday at 8:45.
••

·Pentecostals seeking
Sunday school students

Imitation leather
creates a real job

\m

Will enter
Marietta

a

Alfred
Social Notes

INGELS
NEW STORE
HOURS
MONDAY
THRU
THURSDAY

:··Hospital group meets·;

9-5

Church circle ·
has meeting

FRIDAY
9-7 ..

Grate reunion held

SATUlii)AY
H

INGELS FURNITURE

····--~

Social ·1
Calendarl

avelle®

Bulov

BACK·

·Cast call out for
'Rivers of Destiny'

Auxiliary
has mee t
Btr• thua1J
b
d
0 . serve

FALL CLEAN-UP
·SALE!

Reg. Price S420.oo

Bill signed Aug. 26

Cemetery project to continue

Rhodes cites
.,,

1Jeport-Pomeroy; o.. Friday, Aug. 23, 1974

FLOWERS

29.95

32.95

31.95

992-2039 ·

Join The JEAN TEAM

AT

~ ..;i}l~) .

'Trumpet' ·ending season

-

MEN'S SIZES 27-42
BOYS' SIZES 8-18
WOMEN'S SIZES 3-16

. -.J-.

- - '"
~

•

'.

•

.

...

�••
" 7 ~ The Dally Sentlflllt

i

6- The uaily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday. Au• . 23. l!rl•

schools' need
Robert Tenenbum, "the state
would be bankrupt." Rhodes also said the Ohio
Gen..:al Aasembly llhould be
called back Into ses.olon to de~
with the money cr/.111 lacing
Ohio's schools. The former
governor said he would
propose hla own revision of tile
school foundation formula
before the November election.
Rhodes again hinted at
charges he said he eventually
pLans to level qalnst tile
"plumbers" of the GWlgan
administration. Rhodes would
ooly say he considered deposed
Ohio AFLCJO chieftain Frank
King one of the Democrats'
..victims."
"I'll give you a definition of
what I consider a plumber,"
was the only tidbit Rhodes
June.
"I ·want to remind you, .. would throw out at the press
Rhodes said when asked about conference. 11 1t's when you use
spending uncollected tax slate funds to Investigate any
money, "That they ap- individual you have a dlsUke
proprated $45 million for the for and you try to hann that
lottery !Wld before they sold individual and take his living
even one ticket. The money away.
"A name? Frank King/' was
($108 million) is in the treasury
all Rhodes added.
In anticipated receipls."
He .reststed pressure to su.,
· Rhodes• $30 sum would be
over and above the ellra $20 stantiate or expand the charge
per pupil aid included in the that King 1••s railroaded out of
legiBiature's recently i&gt;alled his union post by the GUUgan
supplemental appropriations administration.
"You're trying to run my
budget bill.
campaign,"
her rel&lt;lrted to
"If we tried to keep up with
that kind of wlld spending," questioning. "There's plenty of
said Gilligan'S press secretary, time before Novembet."

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Jamea
A. Rhodes said Thursday an
extra 169 million dollars should
be immediately appropriated
to Ohio's financially ti'iiUbled
schools-$30 per pupil, acrossthe-bo&lt;lrd In a lump sum.
The money, Rhodes said,
would forestall unpopular tal
levies and ward off teacher
strikes. He predicted as many
as 75 teacher walkouts in Sep.
temher when .Ohio opens its
schools, compared l&lt;l the 27
work stoppages last year.
Rhodes, campaigning lor reelection against Gov. John J.
Gilligan, said the $69 million
could be handed out in a matter
of weeks based on the $108
million surplus anticipated by
the end of the liBcal year next

The harvest starts rolling · . ' .
'

•• •

'· '

.

• rlt!lf
•

1

£rffti

and with fuel at a premlwn and a drought ravaging thls
year's Midwest crop, agriculture eq&gt;erts can*! take any
chances on jeopardizing the barvest any further. The
Federal Energy Administration WEA) has organlzed a
mobUe communications prGgram that scouts trops ready for
harvesting, then radios back information to threshing crews
~top, left) on the move. "Custom wheat cutters,'' a11 they are
called, such as 16-year-old Sandy Slominksi of North Dakota
(lop, right) rely on the FEA mobile vans to ma!Qtain a steady .
oupply of fuel lor tbresher-ctomblnes. CUstom cutten follow a ,
circular route that can r;.tart ln Kansas and proceed north ,
through Nebraska, South Dali:ota, North Dali:ota and back ,
again. Vital to tbe barvest Is fuel, evldent at this wheat fleld •
in Kansas (bottom, right) where an oil derrick shares lhe .
vast acres of ripened wheat. Continuiox the harvest without I
. hiterruptlon Js the task of this FEA communications van, '
' • (bottom, left). The van runs some 40 miles befOre cutters •
r gauging fuel requirements then transmitting data back to :
supplv crews.

. ·. .

·. ,~e

..,,_
.Joe .
,,_·

.

Rocky's confirmation

President helping where he can

posing some problems
· By CLAY F. RICHARDS .
tax returns, to the two terms of the critical problems
WASHINGTON (UP!)- Nel' congressional committees han- of ,today, and it was not a
son A. Rockefeller met almosl dling confimiation.
political decision for lhe fu··
no opposition in his first day of
Rockefeller said he assured ture."
campaigning in Congress for President Ford before he was Rockefeller bristled when a
con1irrnation as vice president, nominated that there were · no reporter asked him if be
but his aides say there may be skele.tons irt his closet.
regretted not campaigning for
. ,problems ahead.
"D~n · t you think that's the Goldwater for president in 1964.
Rockefeller met with more kind . of . thing that should be "I did support him, I did
than a score· of senators and s~ttled before a man is campaign for him," Rockefeller
representatives Thursday and named?" Rockefeller asked.
said. "He just doesn't think I
was told their probe, which
He predicted that · some did. That's a question of a
may take as· long as two people 1\'0uld be "disappointed" value judgm~nt."
months, would ·lnvestigale biB when the true extent of his
Goldwater refused to make
backgrOWld thoroughly, particu· wealth is revealed, adding : any stateinent on What was
11
larJy hjs finances .
You've seen some pretty said in the meeting . ·
After his tour he went to a exciting stories and I don't
White House dinner and then know if I'll be able to live up to
0
0
new to his Seal Harbor, Maine, then'l.''
·
compound where be plans to
Friends and business associISC.O flSID ·
stay until after Labor Day.
ales have said Rockefeller's
A Rockefeller aide said that personal fortune might , be as
for the most part the congress' much as $500 milliion, but
men "were friendly and in- conceded. the figure was merely
dicated the conlirrilation should . an estimate. ·
0
.
go lbrough with little problem."
Rockefeller received a warm
He said, however, the former reception at every office he IS
New York governor expected entered, and in most cases he
some opposition from.conserya- posed with his arm around a . VANDAUA, Ohio (UP!) live lawinakers and added that member of Congress as a herd Arland Uen, 35, a high school
Rockefeller would be ques· of news photographers took principal from Elmwood, Wis.,
shot a 98 Thursday during the
tioned on his hsndling of the pictures.
bloody Attica prison riot.
The one exception was when Grand American Trapshooting
Rockefeller is "not at all Rockefeller met . with Sen. Tournament here to win the
worried" about scrutiny of his Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., ail Preliminary Handicap.
Lien ran "the first SO birds
personal finances, the aide old political foe, who suggested
the former governor should not Thursday, dropped two during
said.
The governor said he was seek a full term with Ford in the next 25 and then ran the
· "keeping his fingers crossed" 1976, but step aside for a re~inder. He will '!loot in loon the confirmation question. younger Republican.
. day s Grand Amertqm HanHe said his staff shortly would
Photographers were not al· dicap and in Saturday's evenls.
turn over a CQIIlQlete record of lowed in to record the brief
Uen today and Saturday w1U
his finances, including income meeting and Rockefeller said he shooting at a little greater
with a shrug · of the shoulders : distance ~han from which he
"I never force anyone to have shot Thursday- Under ~a~ur
his picture taken. "
·
Trapshooting
Assoctabon
· · "We went over the situation rules, a two and one-half yard
as it now exists " Rockefeller handicap 'is assigned to the
said after the 15-~i~ute session . high . scorer in any event
"I got snme very helpful drawmg 1,500 or more
advice .
··
shooters. Lien will shoot from
"I told him that confirmation 23 yards l&lt;lday :
of a .vice president was a . A rocord 3:098 shooters P";·
question to be .c&lt;&gt;nsidered in llclp.at~d tn _Thursday s
·
Prehmtnary ·HandiCap, 355
more than shot during last
year's Preliminary.

w

principal
top gun

Hoarders

will get
•

surprise

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) ....: ·
Hoarders of pennies hoping to
make a financial kill lor the
copper might as well forget it.
The Federal Reserve Bank of
San Francisco ~d Thursday
that the hoarders were in for a
"letdown'' because the freemarket prtce of copper has
plunged from a record $1.52 per
pound in April to a present low
of 82 cents.
~ ·Hoarders anticipated the
prlce of copper would rille
above $1.51 a pound," bank
economjat Yvoone Levy said,
''making the metal value of the
coin greater than Ita lace
value.
"Otheu believed the Lincoln
copper would .become a prized
llllllllmaUc ltem lio .vlew of the
TrN~Ury'a fii'OPOIIIllor chang.
~ llle metallic compoeitlon of
the eotn."
The economtat said they
...-. wronc on both counts •
llaCint lhi U.8. Mlht _; ·
cuatlnuiiiJI to produce coi!per

JMIIIIiel.

'

'

..

.

ADMONISHING the
ileparfment of Defense that
the U. S. Navy hils · lost
control of the seas to the
Russian Navy, Admiral
Ebpo Zumwalt urged naval
ouJiooritles to expand and
uP&lt;fate Us ships or iace a
Soviet confronlallon from a
weaker posl!lon.

'

LT. JACA HUSSEY

Officer wins
commendation
ALBANY - First Lt. Jaca A.
Hussey was presented the
Army Commendation Medal
by Maj. Gen. DeWitt C. Smith
Jr.,
Commandant,
in
ceremonies at the US Army
War
College,
Carlisle
Barracks, Pa. She was cited
for her work aS administrative
assistant to the director of
publications and to the editor of
Parameters: The Journal of .
the US Army ~ar College..
A grad\18te of Albany Htgh
School, , she earned a
Bachel~r s
Degree
in
Ed.ucat~on
from
Ohto
Umversoty, and taught school
for. the Alexander Local School
District.
.
Lt. Hussey IS the daughter or.
Mr. and Mrs. William M.
Goodwi? of Rt. 3, . Albany. She
1s marned to Darnel Hus~ey of
Rochester • N.H., who IS attend1ng _graduate school at _the
U~verstty of New Hampshll'e;

President made
first call to
Woody Hayes

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
Ohio State University football
ANGELS GET TWO
coach WoOdy Hayes, who
ANAHEIM, CAlif. (UP!) - suffered a heart atlack June 6,
Billy Mullett has been hired as reve~led Thursday night he had
the new pitching "coach and · received a. telephone ·. call
outfielder Morrill Nettles has · recenUy (rom a former Univerbeen called up from Salt Lake sity of Michigan center inquirCioty oi the Pacific Coast ing about his health.
League, the california Angels
Hayes said President Gerald
announced. Friday.
Ford called him the day after
Mullett, a ronner coach with · he was inaugurated:
St. Louil; and a minor league , 1'The President said I was the
pitchiug instructor the last four first in my profession he called
years, has been hired to take and he said he would have
the place of Tom Morgan, who called sooner but he had been
resigned .Wednesday after running around so much," said
being told his contract would Hayes. "He's been blocking for
not be renewed .
a lot of peQple all his life. I told
Nettles was called up to him I would support him in any
replace Mickey Rivers wllll' way possible.
suffered a broken bone In his
"He asked how 1 was ana I
right hand. Rivers will be told him 1 was alright. l was in
operated on next w~k and was the office worklng.at the time."
expected to remain sidelined
for the rest of the year.

. BOOSTERS MEET
RACINE - Southern Band
Boosters will meet Tuesday,
Aug. 27, at 7:30p.m . at the high
school.

RIDERS CONVENE
· The Meigs County Riding
Club wlll meet Tuesday, Aug.
21, at 7 p.m. at the home of BOb
Daniels, Middleport. A wiener ·
roast
will tobeattend.
held. Everyone Is
welcome

WASHINGTON (UP!)
President Ford iB unable to
campaign personally for
Republican candidates, but he ·
Is trying to give them aU the
help he can.
Before Congress began ah
extended Labor Day recess
Thursday, Ford took time to
pose for separate phot~graphs
with 135 GOP· congressmen
who will be on the campaign
!•ail during lhe next few
weeks-. Two days ago, Ford
poased with several senators
who are up for re-election.
Ford seems to think the way
to get help from his friends in
0 ngress next year is to help

lhein win elections in the fall.
Before he became President,
Ford barnstormed across Ule
country -visiting 40 states helping GOP candidates and
trying l&lt;l prevent a ·~to-proof
Congress with two-thirds
DemocratS~

Although Ford's press secretary, Jerald F. terHorst, did
not rule out campaign appearances close to election day, he
told reporters ''the_President is
not running for anything right
now and he feels the best
politics is right here in the
White House running the af·
fairs of goverrunent.,

..

r,..

Traditional fair
•

m good· health-

Ford, according to terHorst,
expecls his vice presidentdesignate, Nelson A. Rockefel·
ler, to campaign widely,
especially if be iB confirmed
before the November elections.
TerHorst has said Ford
would like to run for a full term
thiB time and Democrats, like
Senate majority leader Mike
Mansfield, think he will be a
difficult man to beat. "He is, by
far, the best man they have,"
Mansfield said Thursday.
Mansfield will lead . off a
series of presidential appoint·
ments today in what has
become typical in the Ford
White House. Others will in·
elude Sy~ian Foreign Minister .
Abd al-Halim Khaddam, the
Fann Family of the Year and
representatives of senior citi··
zens' organizations among
many others.
While Congress is away,
Ford was expected to b&lt;gin
restructuring
his
administration.
Interior Secretary Rogers
C. B. Morton has said that Ford
has agreed to curtail the
authority of the Office of
Management and Budget over
the policies of federal depart·
• ments and agenc~es -a Nixon
innovation -as ~ of his
transfonned operallon . .

By JERRY MURSENER
youngsters
are
raisi.ng
DES MOINES, Iowa (UP!) livestock thiB year than in the
- Once, Iowa State Fair Secre- past because of the spiraUng
tary Kenneth Fulk thought the costs. However, fair officials
tr3·d't'
f ·
'th 't
•· anticipate just as many entries
1 ton a1
· atr wJ 1 s roo"" as in the past because, Fulk
deep in the rural society was
becoming a thing of the past. said "They want to be part of
Now, he believes fairs of all the fair."
shapes and sizes will survive • "To me the expression part
forever.
of the fair is the heavy part of
Fulk who has made the Iowa the fair/'' Fulk said. " With
fair on~ of th~ co1lll:try's best, today's society the way it is,
concedes that droughts, infla. with specialists where people
tion, the energy crisis and the get no recognition, people want
emergence of an urban society to be noticed and recognized.
all have posed threals to the The fair gives them a place to
I
do this. This is the real reason
annual extravaganza .
He said the reason fairs still why fairs will always be·here. 11
were going strong was the
emergence of a "classless,
faceless society" which has
deprived most Americans of a
sense of recognition and expression.
BARBECUE PLANNED
"At one time," Fulk said
CHESTER
- The Chester
while preparing for this week's
opening dsy, "I thought fairs Volunteer Fire Dept. made
had done their things. But the plans for its annual Labor Day
reason that fairs will go on barbecue Wednesday night
forever is that it gives in- during a special meeting.
dividuals a chance to express Plans for the day include a .
parade, tractor pull and the
themselves.''
Fulk noted the number of selling of barbecued chicken,
exhibitors at the Iowa fair has homemade ice c;:ream, pte and
doubled in the past decade. He cake. Donation of pies and
believes th~ desire for a sense cakes wiQ be appreciated.
of accomplishment penetrates
all the entrants - from the r-"!!!~!"'!!""'1111!"~--·
livestock divisior.s to the arls
and crafts show.
"Even the wonnan with a jar ·
of pickles wants a chance to
show people she did someSnarl Proof
thing," Fulk said. "In recent. .
Reg. $4.69
years, with the classless,
ONLY
faceless society, there has been
a big increase in the desir~ for
expression. People do things to
get expression and hope to be
recognized."
~
For example, he said,· fewer 98S.•fi"OI
Chestn, Q.

'BOOSTER
CABLE

•3o86
BAlJM'S TRUE.
vALU·ESlORr,. ,

He aiso apparenUy intends
to go along with tbe suggestion
of his transition that advisers
on national security, budget, ·
domestic policy, the economy,
personnel and his l~gai counsel
have equal status and access to ·
the President.
Ford also iB expected to
reduce the White House staff
substantially.
Ford had a ~usy day Thursday, starting with a §.minute
medical checkup In . the mor·
ning. His personal physician,
WUUam Lukash, concluded he
was "in excellent health and
fully capable of meeting aU
physical demanda and mental
stresses of the presidency." · ·
His only advice to Ford was
to lose six pounds ....get down to
195 -by football season.
Authorized dealer 'for Zenith i
. G;bson • Hardwick . Kit- i ·
&lt;hen
Aid
·
Litton .
(Microwave Oven). Also '
Ooxol Propa!"'e Service.
.

Ridenour's
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l

l

T.V.

&amp; Appliance

Gas Server
Pllone 985·3307

~ester.Ohio

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•

MODERN SUPPLY·
lffWESTMAINSTREET ff2·21M POMIROY,OHIO
THE STORE WITH "ALL KINOS OF ITUI'I'"
. FOR F'ErS
STABLES - LARGE AND SMALL
ANIMALS
.
LAWNS- GARDENS

..

'.

"' Beautification of the u;lart arrangement&amp; for one of the flowers are to be use.l at the
• Falla Cemetery, which U11t homes Included on the tour of outside , with heavier and
ye.r won first place iq Re~ion hlttorlcal homea being pLanned deeper colors at the base and
11, Ohio Aaaoclatlon or Carden for September by the Ohio Eta lns,lde. She aald that more than
Clubs, In the Sears Community Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Pili one shape 1$ preferable. and
" Improvement Pr"llrarn for the Sorority.
that mass arrangements
Bend 0' the River Garden Club
Mrs, RObert Kuhn, therapy should Include round, flat1riU be continued another year. chairwoman, asked lor assist- faced flowers , sprays and
, Plans for continuing the once and contrlbutiof\a of spikes, deUcate flowers and
lontlng
project
were coo!Ues, plants and conlalners greenery . When using a
illlculled during a meeUng of lor a therapy program this figurine or accessory, she said
' lhe club at the home of Mrs. month at the GaUipolla State . it should be two-fifths l&lt;l three·
·• James Diehl. Mrs. Bert Grim Institute.
fifths the height or size or
"llld Mrs. Wilson Carpenter
Mrs. Joe Bolin, past regional weight of the arrangement.
attended the OAGC convention direcl&lt;lr, was guest speaker at
Mrs. Andrew Cross gave
in Cincinnati where award the meeting. She demon9trated devotions using the theme
'recipients were announced.
the making of a mass ~"'Each Day is a New Account. "
. Club members agreed during arrangement where light She said that there are 86,400
the meeting to provide three
·
seconds in a day atld after each
'
day .the account is closed .
· Mrs.1 Diehl served refresh·

Women's rights: 54 years old
li!iiliiiii'8Jiiiiiii~J%·..::@1.:mq.
:@

By GAY PAULEY
UPI Women's Editor

Polly 's Pointers ~·
ri~~.w q~~:K n~:l)why
~~¢~.
By Pnlly Cramer

w. American women
X. August 26?

I

~~~

celebrate

Uque", and then In 1968
formation of the National
Organization roo Wonnen.
There are many other groups
pushing for women•s rights,
including passage of the Equal
Righi.s Amendment forbidding
jOb discrimination because of
sex.
But it is NOW that keeps the
liberation movement fueled the
most vocally. It really caught
fire with observances , demonstrations, and marches in 1970
l&lt;l mark the S(Jth anniversary of
suffrage.
TOday, NOW numbers more
than 700 chapters and counts
more than ~o;ooo members in
the United States. They come
from all age gtoups and all

chapter idenWied them u .
RhOda B. Jenltins, an ar~hltec­
tural engineer from Greenwich,
Conn., great-granddaUShler ci
1\'rs. Slanton, and Doriot A.
Dwyer, first woman lllutlat
with the Bosl&lt;ln Symphony,
great-grandniece of Susan B.
Anthony.
There'll be "FBI" poelen lor
the 10 most wa11ted men. FBI
slands lor Feminine Bureau of
Investigation" and Ms. De
Sarma said local chapters
would docide on the moot
wanted "public enemies who
have committed mass crimes in
violation or federal and stale
civil rights laws. and are still at

Answer : It marks the day
• when 54 years ago the 19th
:
t giving women the
~ rig t to vote s proclaimed
par of the Consti
That was one
ation
By Polly Cramer
milestone . But actually, the
DEAR POLLY - Is there a reliable paint that could be used women's Ub movement In
on a brown imitation leather (naugahyde ) settee and chair that I America began formally 126
would fi~e to paint white ? Unfortunately I bought, by mistake; a years ago when Lucretia Molt
paint that gives a leather-look to furniture. - PATRICIA.
and Elizabeth Cady Slanton,
fighting for the rights of women
mentS.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with the GREAT number as weU as against slavery,
of things on many store shelves, counters and racks that have no called a women's rights conven·
large."
prices on them . Many of us have limited shopping time and none lion in Seneca Falls, N.Y.
Chapters are making flags to
to spare while an Wlknown price is looked up. - GEN.
draw
attention to the fact live
The movement went through stations in life, urban and
DEAR POLLY - 1amanswcringT.V.B. who has a daughter its trials and tribulations down rural.
states still are needed for
in Germany. She wan Is to know how her friends over there can through the years culminating
The organization has cranked ratification of ERA. The Rag In
Taking on a western theme, vlce."
make liquid vanilla so they can make their own lee cream. The in suffrage in 1920. But that up a number of projects among this case will have 33 stars and
answer iB l&lt;l do as the Germans do and use vanilla sugar that can was not the final chapter by its chapters l&lt;l make August 26 wiU go on diBplay on public
the United Pentecostal Church
Before the
four-week
be bought in most any German grocery store. - MR. R.G.C.
' of Middleport Is participaUng program is concluded, plans
a day for all to note. It leaves buildings "by whatever devious
any means.
DEAR POLLY - I am answering T.V.B. who wanted to
ill a world-wide Sunday School call lor the church to have a
RUTLAND -· Michael May,
Along came Betty Friedan Observance plans up to in· means we can find to get them
. : erlort l&lt;l round . up Sunday newly acquired bus in son of Mr . and Mrs. Samuel know how to make vanilla flavoring with vanilla beans. On a with her celebrated llherationist dividual chapters.
there," said Ms. De Sarma.
School goers in this area.
operation, transporting aU Bruce May, Rutland, will begin recent trip to Tahiti our guide said his native wife kept a jar of book, ' 'The Feminine Mys· · But carole De Saram, a vice She's not sure there'D be a
·· SWlday, Aug. 25, has been th0$e who would attend. The his studies SW&gt;day at Marietta sugar with a couple of vanilLa beans in it. When she needed both
president of the New York repeat of the Los Angeles
designated as roWld-up day for congregation continues to College. He plans to major in . sugar and vanilla in recipe this was used. - lJBBY.
chapter and national coordina· chapter's huge cookout last
DEAR GIRLS - If the vanilla beans are cut, more of the
IIIO$e who are famiUar with the make improvements to the petroleum englneerlng.
tor for the anniversary, out- August 26. Its members roasted
flavor
will
be
absorbed
by
the
sugar.
A
bit
of
experimenting
message of Pentecost and are church building located on
Michael will be attending
)ined some of the things a "male chauviniBt pig." A real
~ riot regular attenders. South Third Ave., Middleport. Marietta on an honor might be necessary to get as much flavor as desired. More beans
porker, it was.
scheduled.
can
be
added
to
make
it
stronger.
POLLY.
Howeverthepublicislnvlted to
It is requested that during scholarship. He graduated in
Maybe there'll he no marches
DEAR POLLY - Our young son wanted to learn how to fiBh
all services.
the four weeks, surprises and seventh place scholastically
down Fifth· Avenue, as in 1970,
According to church Of· ·prizes are being planned In· with the 1974 Meigs High with a rod and reel. We had an old-but failry good rOd but it was
Sunday School attendance on but "we're still just as
•• ficial$, teachers in western eluding pony rides, all, of School class. This summer he minus a couple of eyelets. Not wanting l&lt;l spend the money for a
activist/' said Ms. De Saram .
garb will emphasize the course, intended to . provide has been employed at Doctor's new rnd we relrived a few rings thai came off of soda pop cans Aug. 18 was 40, the offering was , "We're taken seriously now, not
and my husband lashed them to the rOd with fishing line . We did $17.30. Worship services were ridiculed."
·significance of the effort in the occasion and intrOduction to Hospital West in Columbus.
'"'church where attendance is a the Christian way of life.
A member of the Church of buy an inexpensive beginner's reel and then he was ·an ready to held at II o'clock with the Rev.
NOW's new national presi' · "down home, old-time Bible- . Ronald Dougan is Sunday Christ, Michael attained a lish.lf I win a Polly Dollar for thiB it will join the one I won many Meece present and Thelma dent, Karen DeCrow, a 36.-yearDiU, lay speaker from
' ""believing; jayous experience, School superintendent of the nine-year perfect attendance years ago that I have in al•ame. - AUDREY.
old Syracuse lawyer, author
DEAR POLLY - A few years ago while we were away on Syracuse, 0., speaking. At- and lecturer, is preparing to hit
where every service Is an congregation pastored .by Rev. record in school. He was
' original and unique in· William Knittel.
recently advised that. his vacation someone pulled the plug l&lt;l our deep freeze and all the tendance 3t this service was 30. the speaking circuit again, said
"'troduction l&lt;l ChriStian serbiography will be published in contents were spoiled. The odor was terrible. After trying Offering was $25 and pledges NOW's New York chapter.
.-, "·
the eighth annual edition of everythiug I could think of I thought we would have to buy a new $23.
AI Seneca Falls, where it
Mr. and Mrs. William Carr
" Who's Who Among American one until a friend told melo get some pieces of.cedar at a lumber
·really all started, the chapter
High School Students, 1973-74." yard and put them loiside the freezer. The cedar was left there·a went to Cleveland, 0. on Thurs- plims a dinner at which the
.
week or so. After that I was able to start filling it again. I still day to see her doctor at Rev. Merrill Bittner, of Webkeep a piece or two of cedar there since it absorbs any Odors. Cleveland Clinic and returned ster, N.Y., is a scheduled
.
age.
In
the
past
organizations
.home the same evening.
• · The deP.Ieted supply of toys
Hope this helps someone who may be having the same trouble. speaker, The deacon is one of
•·lOr lots confined to Veterans have contributed to the project,
Mrs. Bessie Kapple is a 11 wo~en ordained as Episc~
MRS. H.P.
.
patient in Veterans Memorial
• Memorial Hospital was an area and again the auxiliary asks
.
pal
priests
recently
ln
Phlladel
for
gifts
of
toys.
1
Hospital, Pomeroy.
of concern discussed by the
phla, an act condemned by
The
first
nomination
of
of.
•
Several local families atWomen's AuXiliary of Veterans
theit bishop as a dellance of
"What Is Life?" was the
tended the Meigs County fair church law and tradition:
' Memorial at a business fleers for the 1974-75 year was
given with the list to be read at program topic, presented by
last week.
•meeting Tuesday evening.
Another group, the Women' s
the
September
meeting
before
The Swartz family reunion
' Mrs. Freda Mossman
Mrs. Lawrence Stewart at a
The 31st annual Grate family and dijughter, zanesville; Mr.
Hall 9( Fam~. ·planned ind~c.
presided at · the meeting and an election is held. ·It was meeting of Friendly Circle, reW&gt;ion was held at Royal Oak and Mrs. Bill Jones and sons, will be held in the Woode grove lion of two descendants . Of
noted that lays are needed (or reported that a gift will be sent Trinity Church, Tues~ay Park, Aug. 11, with 79 in at- Marion; Mr. and Mrs. John here on Sunday, Aug. 25. famous suffragettes. Alin e
:.youngsters up to 12 years of to Debbie Fitch who graduated evening.
tendance.
Hersman, Castilla; Mr. and Everyone welcome.
MIDDLE~ORT
Rossi of the Seneca Falls NOW
recently from a school of
.
Sue WoOde of Circleville, 0.,
Readings, "The Secret of a
Following the dinner at I Mrs. David Grate and son,
. . . . ;O;:n··;·;
.. "· .....-.:-~ nursing. She was the recipient Happy Life" and "Rules for p.m. a business meeting was Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Bill visited rel~Uves here last
of a scholarship from the Living" were given by the held ·with Bill Grate being Grate, Charleston, W.Va.; Mr. Tuesday and Wednesday:
·
auxiliary,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
leader· Mrs. David Russell elected president, and. his wife, and ·Mrs. Keever Grate and
It was reported that Mrs. read selected scriptures on life Ruth, being named secretary • daughter, Mansfield.
WoOde went to Parkeroblirg
Kathy Roush Smith is a and there was group singing of treasurer.
Glfts
were
Three gues~ att.endi.{lg were Friday morning to consult his
surgical patient at MI. Carmel "Take My Life and Let It Be." · presented to the oldest Don Hysell, Jeannie Harflsozi physician there and returned
Hospital, Columbus. Mrs . Mrs. Stewart gave the of· member present, the youngest, and Gary Hysell.
home Friday evening.
Smith is the daughter of Mr. fertory prayer.
the first great-grandchild, the
FOR
and Mrs. Albert Roush. A
10
A contribution was made
one who traveled the farthest
FRIDAY ·
thank you card was read from the Anita Levacy fWld with and the one with the most
'•
' " MEET The Team night 6:30 Mrs.·Lucille Leifheit for cards Mrs. Stewart, president, in. members of their family
"1'·m: at Eastern High School . and flowers during her recent charge. Acknowledged was a · present.
See our great selection of gift watches. We have the
··&amp;udttormm. Parenlji.• teachers hospitalization.
.
donation for serving the
Attending were Mr. and Mrs .
newest styles, the latest features. Caravella by
and interested restdents .in·
Get-well cards and flowers
Gilmore·Avey wedding Herman Grate and daughter,
Bulova. Expensive watches at inexpensive prices.
, ylted; staged by Eastern Band were sent to Mrs. Leona Karr, reception. An order of New Vickie, Rutland; Eugene and '
J!oosters, Duane Longenette, Mrs. Freda Henderson and · England baskets. has been Jean Cherry and family ,
"'P,l"'sident.
.
Mrs . Jestie Molden, all received and delivered, and Tommy and NorrQa Sprouse,
. PASTMatro~s of Evangehne patients·at Veterans Memorial members were reminded of 8 Linda Lambert and family I
POINT PLEASANT, W. Va. clothes.
. Chapter picm~, 6 p.m., at Hospital.
The Point Pleasant
All interested people are
rummage sale Oct. 3 and 4 at and Leda Lambert, all of Union
The inallunctfoning of the
Anthony Cabon on Cher~y
the church.
Furnace; Beaverly Grate, Bicentennial drama casting urged to attend the auditions
Ridge. Those onterested on vending machines in the
Miss Mary E. Chapman and Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Robert committee tOday extended an Tuesday or Wednesday as
attending are to meet at the hospital lobby was discussed. Mrs. Pearl E. Mora were Gra~e . and family, Marion; lnvitation to anyone in the rehearsals will begin In early
·&lt; temple at 5:30p.m. Coffee and
The meeting followed a welcomed after several Roberta Oiler and family, region interested in taking part September.
.
• tea will be furnished.
picnic at the US 33 Roadside months' absence.
11
For additional information
Harrisburg, Pa.; Wendell in the heritage drama Rivers
, '" UNITED MethOdist Men's Park. For grace the members
of
Destiny."
contact
the Point Pleasant
A salad Course Was·served by Grate and family' Rutiand;
organization will hold a-wiener gave the Lord'S ·Prayer in Mrs. Carl Bilikan and Miss Mr. and Mrs .. John Grate,
· The drama will be presented JIJ!liOr Woman's Club, VIrginia .
' roast 7:30p.m. at Edson Roush unison.
for
six nights, October 8 Shaw, chairwoman, Phone 675Erma Smith to 14 members Letart, W. Va.; Marion Grate
, Farm.
and . guests. A yellow and an d 1ann1·1y, All an ta , Ga.; Mr. through 13 at the reconstructed 4295.
SAWROAY
orange centerpiece !1 anked by and Mrs. · William "Cun· Fort Randolph. The prOduction
ICE Cream Social, 7 p.m.,
yellow tapers centered the ningham, and family, Logan; will be the feature attraction of
Racine Fire Slation. Sponsored
. 17 lewels.
refreshment table. ·
the bicentennial week, and will
171eweiS.
Black m~rkers
Automatic.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thomp- have a cast of &amp;0 to 80 people .
Grtlen dial ,
by Racine ER squad. En·
on Jilt dial.
son and family, Wellston .
. tertalnmertt will be fe~tured.
Auditions. will be Tuesday,
J
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Frank
Cherry,
For All Occasions
SUNDAY
.
Aug. 27 and Wednesday, Aug.
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
Harry
at 6:30p.m. in the basement
'"', NORTHEAST Cluster of
.We Wire Flowers·
'J
. McGlothUn, Union Furnace; of28, the
"• hUnited Methodist Churches
Presbyterian Church in
Everywhere
Mr. and Mrs. George Grate, Point Pleasant.
• picnic at Forked Run Slate
Several money • making
Georgene Grate, Ronnie Grate,
•..• Park, I p.m.
.
Being sought are people who
projectswerediscussedduring
Mr. and Mrs. Mlchae: Grate, ·can dance, sing and do
nr .. HEATH UNITED MethOdist.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Grate," drannatic parts. Singers should
Church picnic, Ft. Meigs. Meet a recent meeting of. the Ladies
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Car- Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Grate, all bring their own music to sing a
". at church at 5:30p.m. In case Auxiliary of the Middleport
Pomeroy Flower Shop
United
Pentecostal
Church
at
penter
have
returned
from
of
Rutland;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
• of rain will be cancalled.
one minute sOlo, an acMrs. Millitrd Van Meter
the home of Mrs. Alice Priddy, Cincinnati where they went for Edward Tewksbary, Wellston; companist wili be provided.
;,
MONDAY
Ph.
992·203• .
Ph. 992-5721
the first birthday observance Mr, and Mrs. Tom Tewksbary Dancers should wear rehearsal
;, ••REVIVAL at Ash Street Rutland.
Members discusSed selling of their "grandson, Christopher .
Freewill Baptist Church
beginning, 7:30 p.m . liev , knives and calendars and .. .Matthew Carroll, son of Mr.
Alfred
Walter Paterson, Mason, will made preparations for a and Mrs. Dennis Carroll.
The evening of Friday, Aug .
Visiting here fair week with
be guest speaker . Everyone chicken noodle dinner. The
30
at 7:30 will be Alfred's night
secretary's report was given the Carpenters were Mr.s. John
welconne.
by Mrs. Joyce Sauters. The YoW&gt;g and children, Robin, of the round-robin evangelistic
REVIVAL, 7:30p.m. Ash St., meeting was · preceded by a P hi1ip and Lisa, Lancaster. services with Rev. Bwngarner
Freewill Baptist Church,_ 1~nc h eon WI"th ·Mrs , Li n da Wilson Carpenter, son, Jim, of Middleport, the spe~ker. · ·
· Middleport. Evangelist Walter Kn"ttel · 1
The annual homecoming of
1 giV ng prayer.
and grandsons, Jay Carpenter
Mary Mason won the pr1ze
·
·Patterson. Singers welcome.
and Philip . Young went to the Alfred church will be held
Pastor Noel Herman invites for brong
· i ng 1n the mos t money Cincinnati to atte"tld a bali on Sunday, Sept. 15 with an all
•
day service. More details will
the public.
for calendars. The next ganne .
be announced later.
roESDAY
meeting will be at the honne of
. RACINE American Legion ·Betty Wickline, Pomeroy.
Auxiliary, 6 p.m., at the M):l"tle Others attending were Tim,
Walker home. Mrs. Walker will ' Sherry and Joy Sa~ters, Velsa
/
furnish the barbecued chicken · Keller, Dora · Holly , Linda
with members to take a Acree and Manda Bastaa:n . A
DOVER - This is the final keep the warring armies apart
covered dish and their own card was signed by the
week
of the 1974 season of has been cited by historians as
table service . . Dues are members to be sent to Bernice
ployable.
Vanaan, a patient at the Holzer Ohio's official Bicentennial a very Important factor in the
Play, "Trumpet in the Land." outcome of the Revolution.
Medical Center.
The outdoor historical play by · This is a story for the enUre
Pulitzer Prize-winner Paul family. Young and old alike
Green closes out its fifth season learn the importance of Ohio;;
ACCEPTED
Sunday, Sept. I.
first settlement, Schoenbrunn.
ledl
Doughnut's Origin
. Jayce Ann Davis, va C•
Although the United States
Located in Ohio's most richly Thert;! ls also music, laughter
l&lt;lrlan or thel974 class at Meigs leads the world in doughnut endowed historic
area. and intrigue that rivals
111ChSchool, has been accepted con~umption, with the aver· •iTrurnpet in the Land" brings anything on ·the television
'_F&lt;"
- al Rio Grande College for a age American eating more to life the story or the · screen.
· tecrotarial science couroe than 80 a year, the pastry is courageous band of Moravian
Tickets lor "Trumpet in the
p(eparatory to becoming a not American in origin. the Missionaries who stood firmly
Land" may be Obtained by
medical secretary. She will Bible describes a forerunner
between
the
British
and
Hours: Monday thru Thursdey 10-S
CBiling
12161 364·5~9&amp; or
Meet Our Captain • Debbie
in her tralnlnS there thlt of the doughnut in Leviticus.
Americans
during
the
.
Friday and Saturd1y 10-1:30
hie of dlrectin~ that "cakes
wrl ling: "Trumpet In the
At The JEAN SHOP
tal . Joyce lt the dau&amp; r . mingled with oil .. : of fine Revolutionary War . Their Land, Box 275, Dover, Ohio
116 Main Street ·
Pomeroy
.Mr. and Mn. Max Davis, Rt.l, flour, fried," be used in determination to remain 44622. Performances are
Middleport.
sacrifices.
neutral in the conflict, and to nighUy except Monday at 8:45.
••

·Pentecostals seeking
Sunday school students

Imitation leather
creates a real job

\m

Will enter
Marietta

a

Alfred
Social Notes

INGELS
NEW STORE
HOURS
MONDAY
THRU
THURSDAY

:··Hospital group meets·;

9-5

Church circle ·
has meeting

FRIDAY
9-7 ..

Grate reunion held

SATUlii)AY
H

INGELS FURNITURE

····--~

Social ·1
Calendarl

avelle®

Bulov

BACK·

·Cast call out for
'Rivers of Destiny'

Auxiliary
has mee t
Btr• thua1J
b
d
0 . serve

FALL CLEAN-UP
·SALE!

Reg. Price S420.oo

Bill signed Aug. 26

Cemetery project to continue

Rhodes cites
.,,

1Jeport-Pomeroy; o.. Friday, Aug. 23, 1974

FLOWERS

29.95

32.95

31.95

992-2039 ·

Join The JEAN TEAM

AT

~ ..;i}l~) .

'Trumpet' ·ending season

-

MEN'S SIZES 27-42
BOYS' SIZES 8-18
WOMEN'S SIZES 3-16

. -.J-.

- - '"
~

•

'.

•

.

...

�a_ The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Aug . 23, 1974

ncsdav .

1 lO

p m •

U M W ,

m
UNION BAPTIST
He1ohts
Pomeroy
Pl)stor
Rev . Ct;cll Colt . pnlor. Sunday
Girard St&gt;ton Sabblltil sc hool
Sc hool sup r • Joe Sayre
How emb•rr•ulng to recognize • petiOli'S IKe
every Saturday at 2 p m at\d
Sunday schooL 9 •S am ..
wor ship ~ervice follow i ng &lt;'II
Sunday evenlnv worsh ip, 7: 30
but be 11n•ble to N{:all hla name! 11 hlrppenl to rnotl
J 15
p m
Open
Bi ble
W!:!dnesday prayer and 8 1 bl~
dlscvntoo . 7 JO p m . at the
s tudy, 7:30pm
ol Ill OCCIIIOnllly.
chur c-h each Thvnday
TUPPERS
PLAINS
C
HR
IST
tAN
CHURCH
SACRED ~EAAT - Re\1 ,
GRAHAM
UNITED
POMEROY
God •lw•p knoWI ua. Hl1 tre It •lw-r• open to
Eugene Underwood , pastor ;
Father
John
Nlldlarn METHOOIST Prea c: h 1ng
POMEROY TRINITY
Howard Cald w•l t.. Jr , Sunday
pastor
PhOne
99'2
'28lS
.
9·
lO
am
.
f1rst
and
second
Rev w H Perrin . pastor Roy
- ut. Hll " ' 11 IIWIJI open 10 heir ua. We can
School Supt , Sunday School,
Saturday evenlnQ Mass . 7 ~g Sund avs Of each month , th ird
Mayer , Sunday school sup!
9
30
am
,
Morning
Sermon
,
p m Sunday Man. 8 and
fnd fourth Sunders each
enjoy Hl1 1cqullnt1nce delly,
Church schooL 9 15 am ,
10 JO a m . Sunday evenln9
am Confessions Satu l'dAv. 1
month , worship serv•ce 11t 7 30
worshtp serv1ce. 10 24 a m
s~ rv lc e . 7 p m
7 30 p m
~ m Wednesday even•ngs at
Youth chotr reheanal , Mon
We cen enjoy the Pre11nce of God In • apecl•t
LETART FALl.$ UNITED •
day . J 30 p m under d trectton
P01',;1EROY FIRST SAP ·
JQ, Prayer and Bible Study
BRETHREN
A
ll""
Freeland.
of Mary Sktnner . sen tor chOi r TIST - Robert Kuh n , pcuror .
way when we aLtend church. When we tum our allen·
FIRST SOUTHeRN BAP Norna , pastor , Floyd Norr is ,
reh earsal. 7 30 p m Thursday W II II am Wittson , Su nday school
TtST _ 782 Mulbe r ry Ave ,
su p! Sunday schOOl. 9 30 am ,
lion tully 11pon Him, when we eleY.Ite our thinking to
w1th
Mrs
Pa ul
Nt&gt;ase . $Upt Sunday schOol. 9 30 am •
mornlngr sermon . 10 ' 30 am .,
Pomeroy , a tt 11ated w 1th
d•rec- tor
Prayer ser"vice. Wednesday ,
BYF , 6 P m , Bible study ,
s B C , the Rev1 Fred HilL
tholl maller1 which hold eternal value, God apeak•
._,. POMEROY CHURCH OF Wedne:sday , 7 P m • cho r
1 30 p m
pastor Trov Zw11tmg Sunda
0
THE NAZAREN E - Corner ~ pract 1ce. Wednesday , 8 30 P m
school ' sup t Sunday' s.c hoo r
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF
In
the
warmeot
or
tones.
POMEROY WESLEYAN
0
'
Un ion and Mulberry Rev
GOD OF PROPHECY - G p
H 0 ll N E s 5
cHuRcH _
9 J :1 am . mornln9 worsh ip
•m
Clyde V Hen derso n, pastor
Sm ith, pastor. Sundav Sc hool ,
Yea, God knows us. He calls uo by name. He
Harr iso nville Rev O 'De ll
10 0 . Su nday hlll nget rs !JC
PORTLAND - Won.n lp 1 30 10 a m , Arthur Henson , Su pt ,
SundJy school , 9 30 a m , Glen
~e.:~:~~ · w~J~es~amy 7 roaycr p m : Ch ur ch SchOol 9 30 a m Morning Worsh ip, 11 a m ,
McClung , supt , morntnO Mantey , Pasto~ , Henry Eblin.
never forgets.
•
P m
SUTTON ~ Worship lla m'
worSh ip, 10 30 a m , even1ng Sunday Sc hool Supt Sunday
Young People ' s service , 7
2nd
and
4tl"t
Sundays
,
Church
Sc
hool
9
JO
am
,
Evenmg
MIDDLEPORT
serv ice , 7 30 m id week ser
p m , Evenmg serv ice, 1 30
SC hOOl 10 a m
vice . Wednesday , 7 30 p m
worShiP 1 30 P m Prayer and
MT. MORIAH 8APfiST p m Wednesday M id Week
GRACE EPISCOPAL - The Pra,se serv1ce , Thursday , 7 30 Corner Fo urth and Ma in ,
Prayer Se rv ice 7 30 p m ,
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev Haro ld Deeth , rector
Youth meeting , 6 30 p m ,
A: e._. . Robert Meece
P m
Midd leport Rev Henry Key ,
Ch urch serv1ces , 10 30 a m •
Eventng worsh1p , 7 30 p m
s v R Ac u s E
F I R5 r
Jr pastor . Sunday Sc hool. 9 30
Rev. Stanley Bretndum
Holy communion f trst Sunday
~ HURCH OF GOD
Rev
11m ., Mrs Ervin Baumgard
_JOPPA - WorSh iP 10 om ,
CHESTER CHURCH OF
of month . church sc hoo l, 10 30 George O•l er , p.:~s t or Su nd;)y ner , supt , Mornmg worsh ip,
Rev
Chur ch School 9 a m , flrayer THE NAZARENE school , 9 45 am
morn 1ng 10 ~s 11 m
a m for nurser y throuoh 12
Herbert Grate, pastor Wor
Meeting , Wednesday , 8 p m
11
am •
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES POMEROY CHURCH OF preachtng ,
LONG BOTTOM - Church Ship service , II a m and 7 30
CHRIST - Ferrell Gronmger , evangel•slic se rv1 ce, 7 30 P m
Larry Carnahan . pres ld m g
se rv ic es, 9 a m . Su nday p m Sunday Su nday Sc hoo l,
Prnyer r1u:-et1nQ Thursday
mlntster Sunday, Bible lee
Rt chard Ba rton ,
putor B1ble school , 9 30 " m ,
Sc hool 9, A5 am Bible St udy 9 30 am
wors hip 10 30 am , adult
supt P rayer meetmg , Wed
7 30 P rP
lure , 9 JO am , Wat chtow er .every Thursday , 7 30 p m
n esday , 7 30 p m
worsh 'P serv rce and young
NORTH 3ETHEL - Wor
study, 10 30 am , Tuesday ,
.POMEROY
WESTSIDE
peop le's meet1ng , 7 30 p m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
Sh
•P
11
a
m
,
Ch
urch
Sc
hool
10
study
,
7
30
p
m
,
Thurs.
Bible
OF CHRIST , 200 W
CHRIST Clifford Sm1 th ,
Combmed Btblt&gt; study and CHURCH
day , mtntslry s c hool. 7 30 am
Ma1n
St
~ Loren T Stephens,
prayer meeting , Wednesday ,
m•n1s.ter Sunday Sc hoo! 9 30
ALFRED
Sunday
schoo
L
P
m
,
service
meet
ing
a
30
evangelist , phone 992 7 856
'f30pm
pm
each Su nda y , a m . morn1ng chur ch 10 30
9 415 am
C onservattve ,
non
THE SALVATION ARMY preach 1ng at 11 a m ea ch am . Sunday even .ng serv tc e ,
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of
1nstrumen
ta1
Sunday
worsh
,p
,
Envoy Ray w W1n1ng , off• cer
Sunday Prayer meetmg , 7 45 7 30 p m Wednesday serv 1ce, 8
Christ in Chnst•an Un•on m charge Sunday . 10 am , 10 am , Btble study , 11 am , Lawren c e Mantey , pastor .
pm
p m Wednesday , WSCS , 8 p m
Holt ness m eett ng , 10 30 a m , worsh 1p. 6 p m Wednesday Mrs Russell Young , Sunda y
on th 1rd Tuesday each month
LAUREL CLIFF . FREE
Bib le s tudy , 7 p m
Syn da y Sc hoo l Young Peopl e's
REEDSVILLE - Sunday METHODIST - Rev Robert
Sc
hoo
l
Supt
Sunday
School
MIDWAY
COMMUNITY 9 30 am Evening worsh ip,
Leg1on. 7 p m , Thursda y, 1 to J
sc hool , 9 30 . prea ch mg , 7 30 E Bu c kley , pa s tor , Lloyd
( non
p m , Lad.es Hom e League , 7 CHURCH
p m Sunday , prayer meeting , Wrtgh t, Sunday sc hool sup t
7 30
Wednesday
praye r
denom
1nat
1
onai
J,
Langsville
p m . Prep c laSses
- -.
7 30 p m Tuesday ; WSCS , 7 30 Su nday sc hoo l. 9 30 am ,
meet
ing
,
7
30
p
m
Dexter Road , the Rev Worley
ST PAUL LUTHERAN fir
s t Thursday each month
MT
MORIAH
CHURCH
OF
mornmg wor shrp , 10 30 am
Haley , pastor Sund ay school .
Corner Second and Sycamore
SILVER RIDGE - Worsh ip evenm g wor sh1p , 7 30 p m
GOD - Ra cine Route 2, the
10"
m
,
even
mg
worsh
tp
,
7
30
Sts , Pomeroy . the Rev
10 a m , Ch urc h Sc hool , 9 a m
Wednesday Chnsttan Youth
Rev Jame,....M Mun cl , pastor
p m
Pr8y er
mee t.ng , Sunday
W1!11am M1ddleworth , pastor
TUPPERS
PLAINS
school.
9
5
am
,
Crusade
, 6 30 p .m
Cho1r
Sunday Sc hooL 9 30 a m , Tuesday , 7 30 p m • youth morn ing worshtp , 11 am
Worship 9 a m . Church pract 1ce Thursday, 7 p m
group
.
Fnday
,
7
30
p
m
c hur ch services 10 30 a m
School , 10 a m
even 1ng worsh tp , 7 30 p m
KENO
CHURCH
OF
Prayer meeting , Tuesday , 7 30
DEXTER CHURCH OF
CHRIST - George Freder•ck , CHRIST - Charles Ru ssell ,
p.m , Young people 's meet ing,
supt Service weekly , 9 30 am
7 JO om Thursday
Sr , min1 s ter . Norm .!Inc Will
on Sunday Preach ing first and supt , Su nday scho ol. 9 30
third Sundays of month by am , worsh1p serv1ce , 10 30
MIDDLEPORT
FIRST
Cl1fford Smith, 9 30 am
BAPTIST - Corn er Stxth and
am , Bible s ludy , Tuesday ,
Palmer . the Rev
Steve
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN 7 30 p m
UN I ON - Darrell
Dodd rill.
Sk.aggs ,
pastor ,
Danny
pastor Sunday SchOol, 9 30
Thompson , Sunday school supt
REORGANIZED CHURCH
L.APY P11117T-PIUIIBi'S··· 60t.f' IS /NCIPE"NTAL--·
WMPO rad to program . 7 45
a m , Leonard Gi lmore , ftrsl OF JESUS CHRIST OF
elder . evenmg service , 7 30 LATTER DAY SAINTS " m Sunday school. 9 15 a m ,
W~A1'S
p m
Wednesday
prayer Portland
morn 1ng worsh !p , 10 15 a m
Racme Road
meet ing , 7 30 p m
fl0l.OIN6
Youth act•v•ttes and fellowsh ip
W1ll 1am Roush , pastor Denny
Sunday
School
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF Evans ,
tor 1un1or and sen1or h1gh
IN
I
TH t;,\.1 OJ'"
GOD - Racme Route 2 The D1rector Sunday School, 9 30
St\.!,dents . 6 p m Bib le s t udy,
JOiNT' WITH HIS
am , Morn ing worsh ip, 10 JO
Rev Charles . Hand , pastor
7 30 p m M1d week pray er
Su nday school : 9 45 a m , am , Sunday evenmg servtee 7
5W:{eTAIZY AND···
serv1ce, Wednesday 1 30 p m
Wednesday even1ng
p m
morn10g worshtp , 11 am
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST.
Evening serv1ces , Tuesday and pr.!l 't_e! se~vlc~s , 7 Jf! p m
Middleport. 5th and Ma 1n
Friday , 7 30
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST George
Gli!lze , m 1n1ster ,
BEARWALLOW
RIDGE
,lames Sheets, superintendent
CHURCH OF CHRIST - Bible Rev .Earl Shu le r , pastor
B1ble school , 9 . 30 am
Study. 9 30 am , morn ing Worsh•P service, 9 30 am
morn1ng worsh1p , 10 30 am , worship, 10 30 a.m ; even 1ng Sunday Sunday school , 10 30
even1ng worship , 7.30 p m , worship, 6 30 p m Wednpsday am Bible study and prayer
serv 1ce , 7 30 p m Thursday
Saturday
prayer servtce , 7 p m Wed
B1ble Study , 7 30 p,m
nesdav
11 Connthtans
MT. OLIVE CHURCH K1ngsbury Road
s-unday
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
Long Bottom, Sun day School , School. 9 30 am , Ralph Carl ,
8 7· 15
OF THE NAZARENE - Rev
10 am W1th Willard Ptgott , supt WorSh iP serv1c~. 10 30
Don Cole , pastor , Floyd
supt EvangeiiSi tc message am and 7 30 p m alternately
Carson , Sunday Scl'1ool sup t
each Sunday evening , 7 30 p m
Prayer meeting , Wednesday ,
Sunday schoo l, 9 30 am .
by Elder Russe ll Cltne
7
30 p m Rev J ay Stiles, ...
morning worsh1p , 10 30 a m ,
minister of the Apostolic Fa1th
pastor
Sunday evangeltst tc meetmg .
Btble Study , Wednesday , 7 30
With the hope it will, in some measure, foster and help sustain that
OLD
DEXTER
CON
7 30 p m , J;~rayer meetm g
Pm
GRf=GATIONAL
CHURCH
Wednesday , 7:30pm
which is good in family and community life, this leature is sponsored by
STIVERSVILLE
COM· Mrs Wor ley Franc1s , Sunday
GRACE BAPTIST - 305 N
MUNITY CHURCH - Sunday school
su
pt
,
Sunday
school
10
the
business firms and organizations whose names appear below.
Second Ave, Mtddleport
s chool serv 1ce , 10 am , Prayer
'
Les ley G Holt. pastor Sunday meeting , Thursday , 1 p m , am
-rJ,a..,t t.school , 10 a m , worship ser
"
LONG
BOTTOM
Sunday evenmg serv ice. 7 p.m
v ic e, 11 am , worshiP service .
~. w. i!O'/l,~
Mr Robert
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST CHRISTIAN .
7.30 p m sunday Wednesday
14~~f 5.!Y&lt;Hf.,
Pomeroy . Harrrsonv!lle Wyatt , pastor , Sunday School
night
prayer
serv
tce
7
30
supt
,
Ronald
Osborne
,
Btble
Road.
Rtek
Morr,son
,
pastor
SYI.MA~. CAI.I~.
Sunday school supt , Steven School. 9 30 am , preaching
700 E Matn
THE
UNITED
PRES - Stan leY Sunday Schoo! . 9 30 10 45 am , Evenmg servtces ,
Doal 992-2101
Bakers of Good Bread
~
'
BYTERIAN
MINISTRY
Pomeroy
am , mornmg worsh ip and 7 30 p m
Huntmgton, W Va.
OF MEIGS COUNTY , Dw1ght
comm un1on .
10 30 a m ,
b "1. !. -o.:..- ...
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
•
L Z8V1IZ, Pastor' D1rector
,,1 11 111,
~Ou"Q
Sunday
evenmg
youth
CHURCH HARRISONVILLE
Chrtst 1an Endeavor , 6 30 p m , METHODIST
'
Rev Paul Neville , pasto r
Sunday Church Schoo!, 9 30
worshtp serv 1ce, Sunday , 7 JO Sunday
'~' .
School
9
30
a
m
,
.11 m , Mrs Homer Lee , s...,pt ,
P m , Wednesday evening Morn 1ng serv• ce, 10 30 am ,
Morning WorShtp, 10 30 i!l m
prayer meet1ng and B1ble youth serv 1ce , 6 45 p m ,
MIDDLEPORT Sunday
study. 7 30 p m
Minor Repairs &amp; Tune-up
EvangeltStlc service 7 30 p m
Church School , 9 JO .11m , John
The Store with A H~rt
ST JOHN LUTHERAN Prayer
meeting
,
Thursday
,
Middleport
F
Fultz, Su~t , Morning
Beech
&amp;
locust
Phone 949-3342
P10e Grove the Rev Arthur 7 30 p m
Rac1ne
Worship, 10 ' 30 am
'
Ph. 992-2366
Combs
.
pastor
Sunday
schoo
l,
SYRACUSE Morning
'.
9
30
a
m
,
church
services
,
CARNIVAL
Worshtp, 9 am , Sunday 10 30 a m
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
by Dick Turner
'
Church School , 10 a m , Mrs
'
- Bald Knobs , Rev
BRADBURY CHURCH OF MISSION
Sampson Hall , Supt
L
R
Gluesencamp
,
pastor
'
•
CHRIST B1ble School , 9.30
Roger Wilfred . Sr . Sunday
m , morntng worsh ip, 10 30
''
RUTLAND CHURCH OF aa m
School
Supt
Sunday
Schoo
l
Sunday even1ng Worshtp 9 30 a m , Sunday evenmg
GOD - Phillip Wh1t!ey, pastor
Dial 992-3284
'
Middleport
Serv
tce
7 30 p m , cho1r
Sunday school, 10 a m , practice , Sunday
'
worsh1p 7 30 Prayer meetmg,
and
Wed
.
'
Middleport. Ohio
worship serv1ce , 7 p m , nesday, 1 p m , prayer meetmg
Tuesday , 7 30 p m
Ernest
Prayer meet1ng , Wednesday
Deeter,
class
l&amp;ader
Youth
''
7JOpm
' and Bible Stu dy Wednesday , meeting, Wednesday , 7 30
7 JO p m
'
p m , Ernest Deeter , leader
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST '
MT.
HERMON
CHURCH
OF
Rev Free land ~orr~s . pastor
'
THE UNITED BRETHREN IN
Sunday Schoo l 10 a m , Church
HAZEL
COMMUNITY
CHRIST Robert Shook ,
' Butck Pont1ac Opel G M C Dealer
•'
CHURCH - Near Long Bot ' service , 1 p m We(1nesda y pastor
Sunday school, 9 30
Ph 992 2174
Bible Study , 7 p m
500 E Main Sl
I'
tom Estll Hart , pastor , Roy
am. , Russell Spencer, supt ,
337 N 2nd
RACINE FIRST CHURCH
Middleport
Brown , ass 1stant pastor
Ph.
992-2550
'
worship serv1ce, 10 4S .11m ,
OF THE NAZARENE
Sunday school. lOam, Church
'
.
.
worsh1p alternat ing
7 30 p m
nch
sunday Sunday School. 9.30 a m , evening
'
th C E at 7 30 p m on
evenmg , prayer m eetmg, 7 · 30 Morn ing Worship, 10 30 am , W1
Sunday
Prayer
meettng
,
7
JO
:'
Even1ng Worshrp, 7 30 p m ,
p m. Thursday
p m Wednesday Alfred Wolfe ,
MIDDLEPORT
PEN· Wednesday Mld·Week Service
''
leader
TECOSTAL - Th!rd Ave , the Sunday School Super~ntendent, layWHITE'S
CHAPEL
Gerald
Wells.
Pastor,
Rev
Rev William Knrttel. po~~stor
Bakers of Gay 90's Bread
Cool....,llle RO . Rev Roy Deeter ,
Racine
Morris M Wolfe
Ph 949-9591
Roneld Dugan , Sunday School
pastor Sunday schOol. 9 30
Middleport
Ph . 992 3030 :
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST Supt Classes for all ' ages.
am
,
worship
service
,
10
30
Walter
P
B
l
kacso~~n,
pastor
,
evening serv ice, 7 30 p m ,
'
Ronnie Salser , S S Supt , a m Bible study and preyer
Bible study, Wednesday , 7 30
"
service
,
Wedne~day, 7 30 p m
P m , youth services, Fr iday . Sunday Sch oo l, 9 30 a m ,
RUTLAND
7 30 p m
'
Mornmg Won.h !p 10 45 am ,
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
'
Sunday e . . . enlng worsp lp, 7 30
FREEWILL BAPTIST •
CHRIST- Rod Kasler , pastor ,
p m Wednesday even ing Bible
•
Corner Ash and Plum , Mtd
V H Braley , Sunqay school
dleport.
Noel
Herrman , Study, 8 p m
Louis W Osborne
supt Sunday school 9 30 a1m ,
DANVILLE WESLEYAN pastor
Saturday e . . . enrng
H
Middleport, Ohio
worship serv1ce and com
220 E Main
Pomeroy
Ph 992 2178
Rev Lelon Glesure, pastor
service, 7 p m Sunday school
munion , 10 30 am , youth
Sunday School, 9 30 a m ,
10 a m , Sunday even 1ng
worSh ip! 7 p m
youth and Jun1or youth service , meet~ng , 6 p m , Sunday
6 45 p m , evening worship , even~ng serv1ce. 7, regular
7 30 p m , prayer and pra 1se , board meet •ng , third Saturday,
MEIGS
7 p m
_Wednesday, 7 30 o,m
COOPERATIVE
.~
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY
SILVER
R:UN - ' FREE
PARISH
CHURCH
Sunday
School.
THE UNITED
BAPTIST - Rev Ralph Dean ,
Chester , Ohio
We Fill All Doctors' Prescriptions
pastor Sunday School, 10 a m , 9 30 a m , Worsh lp serv Ice , 11
METHODIST CHURCH
".,'
Robert T . Bum garner
Leon Mil ler , supt Evening am , Wednesday prayer
992·2955
Porneroy
. 7 30 p m Sunday
serv1ce , 7 30 p m , Prayer meetlnQ
Director
night worShip , 7 30 p m
meeting , Thursday , 7 30 p m
POMEROY CLUSTER
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
Rev. C•rl E. Hicks
f!"RESTER tHURCH OF THE
NAZA'RE"NE Rev
Meigs County Branch
Rev. D. Wm . Sydenstrlcker
GOO Rev
James Sat . Lloyd 0 Grimm , Jr , pastor
"tJli"M
CHESTER
Worship
9 1S
terf
leld,
pastor
.
Sun
day
School
,
••
"Whoever made Lhat old crack about 'women's work rs never
Su
nday
School.
9
30
am
,
am , Church School 10 am
9 30 a m , worsh lp servIce, 11
done' didn't know Mom, did he?"
ENTERPRISE - Worship, 4 8 m , ev~nlng service, 7 , Morning worsh ip, 10 30 am ,
Young people's service, 6 ~5
TWO LOCATIONS
a m ; G:hurch School , 10 a m
Pr&amp;yer service and youth p m , EvangeiiSitc service.
"
FLATWOODS - Worship . 11 servi ce. Wednesday , 7 D m.
59
N.
Second
St
Middleport 0 "
'!
.
30
p
m
.
Wednesday
evenmg
296
W.
Second
Pomeroy
Ph
.
992·3863
a m ; Church Sch ool 10 a m
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN serv ice, 7•JO p m.
46 Court St.
Gallipolis:
POMEROY
Worsh ip ,
CHURCH - Robert E Musser ,
MASON
CDU
NTY
10 30 am , Church Schoot 9.15
..
Pll!ltor Svndey School, 9 30
"
THE HILAIIID CHAPEL.
• •
am ; UMYF 6 30 p m ,
a m , Roy S1gman, supt , George
pastor Sunday
ROCK SPRINGS - Worsh ip
morning worship,
10 30 , School. 9Casto.
JO.t. _evenlng worsh ip,
10 a m , Church School 9 e.m ,
Sunday evening service, 7. 30 ,
CARNIVAL
7
30
Thursday
even 1ng prayer'
UMYF 6. 30 p m
by Dick Tumer
Mid week serv ic e , Wednesday ,
Netlonwlde Insurance Co. of Columbus, 0 .
Ph 992-5271
808W. Main
serv ic e 7 30 p m
MIDDLIOPORT CLUSTIOR
7 30 P m
307
Spring Ave.
Pomeroy '
MASON
FIRST
BAPTIST
Pomeroy
Rev . Robert Bumgarner
SYRACUSE CHURCH- OF Second and Pomeroy Sts , Stan
D
•al
992-2318
HEATH WorshiP 10 30 THE NAZARENE .
Rev
•
Crl!i lg, putor Sunday school,
am ; Church School9 ' 30 am •
,,
Howard C Bla c k, pastor Bob 9 AS D m , worship service , 11
·~·
UMYF7pm,
Moore , Sunday Schoo l Supt 1 am , traln!ng un ion, 6 30
"
RUTLAND - WorShip 9, 15 Sunday Sch ool , cl asses tor all
••
a . m , Church School 10 a m , ages , 9 30 am , morning p m 1 evening worsh ip ser'vlce,
1 30 p m
Mid week prayer
UMVF 7 p m
worsh ip, 10 ' H , NYPS Sunday , service, Wednesday, 7 30 p m
SALEM CENTER - Wor
6 30 p m , evangelistic service ,
"'.
Groceries &amp; General Merchandise
MASON
CHUROI
OF
" The Friendly Folks"
ship 9 am . Church Schoo l 10 Sunday , 1 30 p m Mid week
CHRIST,
P
0
Box
487,
Miller
Racine
Ph 949-5772
am , UMYF Thursday , 7 p m
Pomeroy, Ohro
pranr ' meeting, Wednesday , St . Mason , W Va . Sunday
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
"
7 lOp m , Miss ionary meeting , Bible Study 10 11 m ; Worsh!p
Rev. Rlchlrd E . Jarvis
second Wednesday , 7 30 p m
.
11
e
m
and
7
p
.m
Bible
Study
ASIURY Worship 11
UNITE D - i=' AITH
NON : Wednesday 7 p rn , Vocal
a m .. Church School·9 so a m ,
music
I
DENOMINATIONAL
Rev
w s cs, 1st Tuesday
rl
FIRST SOUTHERN SAP·
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 Robert Smith, pastor Sunday
a m , Church School 10 a m , school , 9 JOe m ,, clnsleadtr, TIST - Corner of Second and
HilL worsh1p serv ice
Anderson. Mason
Pastor .
wscs , 3rd Wednesday, 7 30 Leo
.
lO ·JO am , chur.ch, 7 30 p m ' Welter Cloud Sun day school ,
pm
Devoted fo Meigs .Mason Area
The Finest In Mobile Homes
EDEN UNrTED iRETif: 9 ~s a m , wo"hlp serv ice, 11
MINERSVILLE - Worsh iP
Pomeroy , 0
"•
1100 E Main
101 m ; Church School 9 a m , REN IN CHRtST- Elden R a m and 7 30 p m Weekly
Pomeroy
Ph . 992-7034
Bible
study
,
Wednesday
,
7
30
Blake, pastor Sunday Schoo l
wscs , 3rd Monday , 7 :lo p m
"
SYRACUSE
Church 10 a . m , Howard McCoy , pm
MASON
ASSEMBLY
OF
supt
,
Morning
sermon
,
11
a
School. 9 . 30 a m ; worship
GOD - Sec ond St, Mason, w
m , Sunday nJght aervlces
serv l ~, 7 30 p m
'
Va Chester Tennant, pastor
Christian Endeaver, 7 30 p
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Sunday
school,
10
e
.
m
•
m
;
Song
service.
8
p
m
,'
Rev Steven Wilson
"
Kee~sake Ol.,mond Rings
morning worship, 11 am . ,
Preaching 8 30 p m , M id
Rev . Larry Poling
•vangellstlc aer . . . lce. 7:30pm
,' 212 E. Main t
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-3785
~
week Prayer meet ing, Wed
Rev . Howard Sh•veley
Middleport. Ohio
nesday, 1 p m , Roy Ado~~ms , Sible study and prayer aervlce,
BETHANY I DorcUJ
WednesdaY, 7· lo p m Phone
worship , 9 30 am . , Church lay leader ,
773 5133.
School 10 30 a m .
- CHURCH
OF
JESUS
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
CARMEL Worship , 1I C H R 1ST - Located at R utla1"11
CHRIST
In Christian Union '
am , 1St and Jrd Sundays , on New Lima Road, next to
The Rev . William Campbell ,
Church S'"c:hool 10 a m .
Forest Acre Park. Rev. Ray pastor Sunday School, 9 30
ouse , pastor . Robert Musser,
Hughes. supt. ;
Paint, Plumbing &amp; Electrical Supplies
APPLE GROVE - SUnday Sunday School supt Sunday eveningJames
Bullalng Supplies &amp; Cu•tom Millwork
servlu, 1:30 p .m
"
school. 9:30 am , worship ,
E-hool . 10 : 30 am , worship Wednnday evening prayer
Tuppers Plains
Ph . 667-3963
•
Ph
.
992-3978
first and th!rd Sunday , 7· 30 7·lO p m Bible study, Wed . m ltlfng . '! 30 p m Youth
p m , prayer meertno , Wed nesday, 7 30 p m Saturday prayer service each Tuesday .
nesday, 7 · 30 p m Fellowship n1ght pr1vttr service , 7 30 p rn
•
FAIRVIIW
IIBLI
.
suppe-r , first Saturday. 6 p m
HEMLOCK
GROVE
CHURCH,
Lt,lrf.
W.
Va,
Rt.
U M W second Tues(l'ay , 1 30 CHRISTIA"' - Roger Watson,
1 Rev
G eorge Hoschar,
pm
plstor , R•y Whaley, 'lupt ..
pastor Sunday School 9: 30
'
•
Morning worship, 9· 30 om .,
e . m , Preyer and Bible study
EAST l ~ TART - Sunday church school, 10 30 a m ,
• Jim Holcomb, Owne ..
1· 30 p m
Cottage
Preytr
School , 9 30 a m ; worship , young people'$ meeting , 6' 30 Service Tuesday , 10 a , m
"~low can you be so heartless? All day he slaved makrng ~
St Rt . 124
'Rutland
Salem St.
Ph . 742-395~ •
second and fourth Sunday , 7 30 p m 1 even ing worship, 7 30
Worship Service. Thursday ,
Ph . 7•2·5293
booby·triiP lor when you come home . . and you avord rt!"
Rutland
P m., prayji!r rnee11ng , Wed · P m Bible study, Wednesday,
7 30 p . m.
•
-

SEVE N T H
VENTIST

hu

DA Y
AD
Mulberr-y

W('(tnesdey . 7 JO p m
WESLEYAN tR.tc1ne•
Su ndav school , to p m ,
worship , 11 ~ m , Bible study ,
Thursday . 7 p m • ( ho lr
ptacHce, Thursday , 8 p ,m .
fl:'llowshtp
supoer ,
f trsl
Wedne:~od~'l 6 30p m .: U M W
fourlh Moncrav~ 1 p m
•
GREAT BEND - WOrshtp II
am , 2nd and 41th Sunellys,
Church Scbool . 10 am
LETART FALLS - Worsh ip .
10 a m , Church School . 9 a m , •
Bible study: 1 30 p m every
Tuesday
MORNING STAR, - Worship
9 30 am,; Church School 10 JO
am , Mid Week Ser._.ice ,
Wednesday , B p m
MORSE CHAPEL - War
Sh•P 11 a m , 1St and Jr d
Sundays , Church School. 10
f1tst

7 JO p
MT ,

9-

.

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

RACINE FOOD MARKET

GOEGUIN READY MIX

.

HEINERS BAKERY

INGLES ASHLAND SERVICE

.M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER
IGA FOODLINER

.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

ROSEBERRY'S SERVICE STATION

All WEATHER ROOFING
AND CONSTRUCTION CO.

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

"

SEARS CATALOGUE MERCHANT

MARK V STORE

.

GAUL'S MARKET

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

'

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

..

· ~~

a·

GENE'S BODY SHOP

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

.

..

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

..

POWELL'S SUPER VALU

.

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC..

K&amp;C JEWELERS

TUPPERS PlAINS HARDWARE

'm ..

J&amp;B AUTO BODY

r

;

•

•

·.,

.

THE DAILY SENTINEL

.

,.

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE

RACINE PLANING MILL

CARPENTER'S MARKET

•

.

.

Television Log

•

·

and tec1 you uee w•th ou t ~
Si dflra, ever&gt;-1hlng will be
oeecetul at honwt If not -

H_e len Help

News 3, B, 10. 13, IS , Sesame St 70 · News .o1 6 · Great
merlcan Ore.am Mach ine 33
'
' ·
... 6 ~e;lt~h~~ ~ewa l. 4, lS , CBS New s 8. 10.· Room 2'22 13 ;
6 : 00A -

7 . 00 - TruthorC~seq J; New s 10 ; What's My Linea : Aviation

We,ther 33 ; Wild l&lt; lngdorn 13. I Spy l.S : Electric Company
20 • Bowling ror Dollars 6; Great Da&gt;' Atthe Fair 4
1. 30 - Porter Wagoner J , Hollywood Squar~s 4 New Treasure
'"
Hunt 10; To Telf t~ Tr"ulh 6, Concentrat ion
Beat the Clock
~~
13 ; You O.Ve It To Yourself 20; Boar"dlng Hou se 33.
1 . 00 - Washington Rev iew 20. 33. Sanford clnd Son 3 15 Your
..
HltParadeB ; BradvBunch6, 1 3 ; SaleotChamplon~.t ' ·
8. 30 - Br ian Kellh 3, 15 , Wall Street Week 20. J3 , Good Times
10, 8. Six M illion Dollar Man 6 13
9 :00 - Masterpiece Theatre 33, 20, h\ovle " Flight from As hlya "
3, 4, I,S. -Movie " The r ime of M iss Jean Brodie" 8. " Because
•
They rre Young " 10
9 · 30 - Odd Couple 6, 13
10 ·00 - News 20 ; Video VIsionaries 33, Tom a 6, 13.
10 30 - Ohio· This Week 20 , Day AI Nl9hl 33
11 . 00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15 , Av la fton Weather 20 , Janakl 33
11 :30 - Johnny Carson J r Mission · lmposstble 6, Come to the
Fair~ . 15 , Untouchables 13 . Mov1es "Sc ream and Scream
Aglllln " a. " The Eye Creatures" 10
11 45 - Johnny Carson 4, 15.
12 30 - Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 6 . Wide World SpecrallJ
1 00 - Midn ight Spec ial 3, 4, Take Five for Life- Mov 1e " Horror
Hotel " 10
'
2 00 - News 13
1 . 30 - Movie " My Favorite Spy" 4
4· 00 - Movie ''Love In a Goldfish Bowl" 4
S. 20 - Movie " Mambo" A

Us.

a:

SATURDAY, AUGUST24,1974

6· DO-Summer Semester 10.

6 36-Ky Afield 13, Christopher Closeup 10 , TV Classroom 8
7 oo-Funfor Everyone6 , Treehouse Ciuba , In Touch 13; Fatth
for Today 10
7, Jo-Sesame St. 20 ; Saturday' s Report 3. Osmonds 13 . Farm
Front 4, Speedracer 6 , Speed Buggy 8 , Treehouse Clvb 10
8 DO-Jake' s Place 6, Lidsvllle 3, 4, 15, Bugs Bunny 13 . Ha1r
Bear Bunch 8 , Popeye 10.
8. 3G-Yogl's Gang 13; Mister Rogers 20. Addams Fam1ly J , 4,
Sabrina 8; Edward Saunders 6.
9 . 06-Emergency Plvs 3, 4, 15, Super Friend s 6, 13 , Mov•e 8, 10,
Sesame St. 20.
9 3~/nch H1gh Private Eye 3, 4, 15
~...lO : OG-Eiec. Co . 20 , Lassie' s Rescue Rangers 6, 13 , My Fa von te
~ &gt;'1
Martian 8, 10 ; Sigmund and The Sea Monsters 3, 4, 15
__.,10· 3G-Goober and The Ghost Chasers 6, 13 , Ptnk Panther s 3, 4,
::::::;:
_1_5i.]oom 20 . Jeannoe 8, 10
11 . 1H&gt;41lrady Kids 6, 13 ; Abbott &amp; Costello 8. Sesame St 20 .
,.
Speed Buggy 10 , Star Trek 3, 4, 15
.pr.t,.' J 1· 3G-Josle&amp; The Pussycats in Outer Space 8, 10; Butch Cass1dy
~·
3, 4, 15; Mission Magic 6, 13
~ 12 : DO-E lee . Co 20. Jetsons 3, 4, 15 , Pebbles and Bamm Bamm
8, 10 , Movie "The Red Baron" 6, 13
12: 3~Fat Albert 8, 10 , Go 3. 4. 15
1:06-Ctilldren's Film Festival 8, 10 , Man from UN CL E .4 ,
Perry Mason 3; Act ton '746, 13 , Washtngton Debates 15.
2:0G-Soul Train 6 ; Vtewpom18 ; Baseball Pre Game Show IS ,
NBC News Close Up 3, Dugout Dope .4 , At the Fa1r w1th
Chuck White 10. Aoythlng You Can Do 13
2: !~Baseball 3, 4.
2. 15--Baseball 15
2: 3~Arthur Smith 8; Beauty Pageant 13
3: oo-Movle "Alva rez Kelly", " The Man Called Flintstone" 8,
1974 Summernahonals 10
· ·~·
4: QO-Man Builds. Man Destroys 33, American Life Style 13.
Winchester Golf Classic 10, World of Survival 13
4: 45--TBA 3, Scoreboard 4
S. oo-westchester Golf ClassiC 3, 15, Wide World of Sports 6, 13 ,
·"'"
Great Day at the Fair 4, Wrestling 8, A Bit w•th Kn1t 33
~:_......~ S· JG-Saleof the Century 4, Let' s Grow a Garden 33.
6· oo-Ltlias, Yoga and You 33 ; News 8, News 3, 4, In the Know
10. A Look at the Book 15
6. 3G-News 3. 4, IS ; Zoom 33, Beverly Hillbillies 8, News 6,
Reasoner Report 13 , Beverly Hillbillies a
7·GO--Hee Haw 6, 8; catch 33 . Lawrence Welk 4, 13, 15 ,
Thnllseekers 3
.
7· Jo-Bobby Goldsboro 3; Course of Ovr T•mes 33
;-:-- · 8:GO--Ail In the Family 8, 10; Partridge Family 6, 13 ,
Emergen&lt;y! 3, 4, 15 . Book Beat 33
•.
8: 30-MASH 8, 10. Great Amen can Dream Machine 33; Movte
o1
"Planet Earth" 6. 13.
"
9: oo--M\ary Tyler Moore 8, 10; NFL Football 3, 4, 15.
:
9: 3G-~b Newhart a~ 10 ; Parole 33.
•
10: oo--Barnaby Jones B. 10. Owen Marshall 6, 13.
~
10: J~Nyshkln 33.

=

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i

Holmes lets cards help him

w

+AKQJ1054 985+ 32.74
What do you bod'

w

•
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NORTH

••

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••
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••

East
19

••

p..,
29
Pass
Pass
4+
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Opemng lead -K 9

••
••
•
••

•
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North

West

••

l

WHEN DREAMS COME TRUE

to handle 11 yourself

Dear Helen ·

TAURUS (April 20·Moy 20)

When I was younger, • ~Y dreams were bigger, my ambitions
moghty . They changed wotll tile seasons and with the books 1
read .
I was a famous d octor, curing the w orld 's llls; healing the
sick ; mendong the broken ; bringing happiness to !he unhappy ,
I was a judge, mighty, just, honest and merciful ; brlngmg

fairness to an unfaar world.
I was a great psychiatrist, healing men's minds, and, with
my amazing lntelhgence, showmg them how to thlnk clearly.
peace with my wisdOm
l was a diplomat, changing war
and knowledge .

w

l was an adventurer, d1scovermg new horizons
I was a teacher, ltiSpinng young mmds to greater awareness.
I was beloved, admored, respected and wealthy - a person
especia lly sought out for ~'Omlor!, advice and company.
Now I am older. My asporatwns 8eem too large.
I am a hOusewofe and a mother . Yet, my dreams are still
living and in a way , I have achieved tllem all :
I HEAL my children 's hurts woth love and kisses and a
bandage or two .
[ JUDGE their trials and gove my adVIce .
I try l&lt;&gt; keep a step ahead
them so that my advice Will be
roght - and that takes much PSYCHOLOGY.
I am the arbitrator in their battles and , m the way
a
DIPLOMAT, I steer them toward peace.
When we go ADVENTURING , I help them doscover what's
under rocks or m the woods .
!TEACH them b1tsofwhatl know to help them get along tn a
strange world.
... And I am REWARDED with aU the riches and admiration
r need when, unasked, one comes to me with a hug and a,

or

or

"Thanks, Mom 1" or "I love you, Morruny!"
KATHY BERN-

Some thmg you 're gotng to be
offered by another haa a lot of
stnnos attached Be watchful
and look lor underlying mo ~
t l'tBS

Q~MINI (Moy 21·Juno 20)
Your soc tal ac tivities lhls eve-

nino will tum out a real bust
unless you and your mate are
1n accord on where you want to
go
CANCER (Juno 21 ·July 22)
You'll be very resentful when
you are commanded to do
something rather than betno
a8ked nicely The task will
su ffer because of thiS
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22)
You re m another one of those
extravagant cycles where
money IS apt to leak from your
purse like 1t s a steve , unless
youglug up the holes

your outslcte act•vltlea, Be pre ~
pared to spend more than you
ptamed on
SAQtTTARLUS (NoY . 23 ·
Dec. 21) Stay away from one
wtlo doeS{l t Ilk~ the same h'Pe
ot th•ngs you do Th1s person
Will drag you into &amp;omethtng
thai'S 10UIISVIIIe

CAPRICORN Cllec. 22 - Jon.
1 ~~ If you permll It, ou laide

pressures w11i squeeze you
tnto a knot don't fee l you have
to c arry the we1ghl Q! the world
on your shoulders
AQUARIUS CJon. 20- Fob
1 Sf) Proceed cauttously with
oew contacts you make at th 1s
tnne or you mtght find yourself
deeply tnvolved wtth one who

isn I all you think
PISCES CFeb. 20·Morch 201

Your hfe'e a bit c omplicate~
th1s weekend w1th overlapp1ng
Interests It wtll be difficull tor
you to se r¥"e them au sat tsfac~
tonly

VtR 0 CAug. 23· Sopt. 22111

YOu use the same drplomacy

and weekly baths, dreaming of the tome when the girls w1U
marry and take theor arumals with them .
So the girls marry. Bur ... their apartments are the " no pets
allowed" types. Besides, they say, " With both of us working,
they'd be so lonely."
And poor Mom is stuck with two dogs and a cat, whoch she

Dear Helen:
What's a mother to do?
She swears there will be no more pets, after Old Faithful
F1do succwnbs to 17years of good hvmg. But her daughters win
- and somehow she ends up with two dogs and a cat - their pets,
but HER responsibility.
She muddles through the chewmg stage, the barking stage,
the clawed furniture, the holes dug in lawns, the daily clean-up

DOWN
I Dry, as

talk
f Univ. in

some
win..

Georgia

2 Maginot or

11 Chain of
hllb

Siegfried

3 Icelandic

1% Hindu

clas8ic

princess

4 Queatlon

13 Pinched
( 2 wdo.)
15 Product

appU,.tlon
5 To the
point
~ Capricious
7 Place

or Ceylon

17 ReUgious

body

II Fam1Uari2e

8ll

Perry

Mason does
(2 wdo.)

Dear O.R..
Some parents are tough and lnsost the kods find homes for
the1r peis. Others, like you, keep dreaming of the day the
married children woU have back yards their own. But don't be
surprised if they then prefer younger ammals .
My advice : Get tough! - H .

33 Spanish

,

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Jl&amp;MIDJ.b~®IJ.J

- J ,_.

Unscramble the-se four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

I BOZIM

minded
43 Enchantress
who loved
Jason
44 Popular
suiting
material

. -·::,''· '·'·'~,; :·····

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
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A WLTU~E Prul!ED IN A"TREE
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(Ant..,..en tomorro.,..)

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how to work

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFI!LLDW

One letter olmply otand.o for another. In thil oomple A 1o
used for the three L'a, X for the two O'a, etc. SIJI&amp;le lettero,
apoatroph01, the leneth and formation of the wordo are aU
hints. Each day lhe eode totten ..., dllforenl.

1&gt;5 &gt;tU ARRIVS
THGRS - THE'Y

'J

39 Performed

our breathing 40 Street
apPIU"atus
sign

42 Happening

ALLEY OOP

ber.
All he had needed was a 2-1 I
: trump break; both spade hon• ora in the East hand and a il
: break in that key suit. Not •
• much to expect, but Holmes
;._t,ad taken care to allow for It
; and had been paid off.
INEWSPAPI:!:R ENTERPRISE ASSN I

27 Part of

41 Feeble-

•

• ace of spa es, entered dum·
".• my once more w1th the four of
trumps, discarded hos small
;~ club on the spade that had set
up and scored game and rub·

suffix

( 4 wds.)

: event he was there.

HEAD£:0 1

38 Chemlatry

lawsuit
34 Old
note
:1 Brought
suit

We are not sure whether
Watson's four-doamond call
or Holmes' b1d "f fove diamonds was the overbod that
got the great detectove to a
bad contract. But on any

WE ..,;12E

lllJina

Snow on a

or

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

!

andwlch

l'i""i'i'"""Tr--r.--,y-

28 Squeal
29 Part
V.H .F .

Fatr 4

OH, r!M 5URE A MI\N LIKE
GREGORY~ COULD
FIND OUT EA~LY ENOl.Gtt1

J7 Popl!]ar

glacier

17 City in
Maine

Chip
in

sigilli
2$

10 Still

matter

31

Peter
23 Umpire's

9 Matter
( law)

or printed

of dance
31Swiss
river

11 OD--ABC News 6, 13, News 8, 10
11 15-Movle ' ' The Mad Doctor of Market Street" 6; News 13
11 3D-Movte "Gypsy" B, "The Pnme of Miss Jean Brodie" 10 ,
"Dr Goldfoot and the B1k1n1 Machine" 13 1 Javakt 33.
12 OG-News 3, 4, Midn1ght SpeCial 15
12 3D-Movte "The L1st of Adrian Messenger" 3, Come to the

'IOU eEE J:
DIDN'T TELL
HIM WHERE

rod

of-"

24 Amount

34 Pitcher
3S Unendlnc

%2~1

Majority

cry

South
Dble
3+
5+

In such sotuations, the first
~hong tp do is to give the cards
; a chance to help you and ~=~WIN=K~LE~..
' Holmes did exactly that.
1
'
He carefull~ ruffed the
MR.
third heart w1th the 10 of ®~~~~INK
).(
WILL (!)E
• trumps. Then he led the ace FOU.OWINO' '&gt;OU
• of trumps and continued by TO CRETE?
:.-.leading the queen and over: taking w1th dummy's kong.
Trumps had broken 2·1 and
•
: the cards were domg their
• stuff for him.
;
His next play was a spade
; He double finessed wrth ho•
:. 10, re-entered dummy by
• overtakmg his fove of trumps
• woth the six, finessed his

business

8 11 A

sible
Zl Fencing

tree

extract
2G Moist
21 Barbecue

of

JJ Reprehen-

26 Do

Yt~lenlay'o AuWer
18 Bundle
3! Functiono
of cotton
:a Tllnllrillt
It Seaweed
all

on an

16 Shoo!

("But Mom, they're part of the family !!")
What do other parents do on thi8 situation 1- OVER RUN

fENSOL

12 45---Movte "September Affatr" .4 •
I oo-Speak~y 6, Movte "Creature from the Black Lagoon"
13.
2 3D-Movie "A Ptstol for Ringo" 4,
4 15---Movte "OSS 117-Miss~an for a Killer " A.
6. 00-Peyton Place 4

,

ACROSS
1 Sheep

doesn't want, but can't giVe away even if someone wanted them. 30 Kind

or

NOTE TO READERS :
Hopefully, another dream w1ll come true l&lt;&gt;day for our
daughter and son-on-law, Kathy and Phil Bernhardt. Their new
baby is due thi8 week and we're aurung for a joint publicationproduction dllte.
... Just sign me, - EXTRA-PROUD MOTHER AND
GRANDMOTHER' - H.

.by THOMAS JOSEPH

Both vulnerable

w

;
:

on w111 not be sufficient 10 ewe
With the prob lem Be prepared

SCORPIO (Oci.-24-No•. 22)
Thus IS hkely to be a rather ex·
J)8t'l$ive weekend , owing to

.AS

••

••

you we•e depending

and .,,..... 10

IT\IIture Howe•. If you lUCk
llllngo out. the ....,.. 1/l&lt;oly fO ~ llrQe

~._,..,

LITTLI: OR.BAif Alflflll:-I'RIDA1', I'IIB

.1085
+ K643
.Q7
EAST !D)
WEST
•
KJ6
• 852
•
AJ942
• KQ6
+a
• 97
.KJ94
.108632
SOUTH
• AQ10
'73
'
+AQJ1052

;•

• •

Th&lt;l help

tl'nng Important
Will weigh heavily on your
mind, spoiling wt\81 could have
beert e pleasant day

JTTLE ORPHAN ANN!I!.

• 9743

••

••

2S

forS•turda , Au . 2-4, ti74

~ ...

qolt lltuatoono ~lor• Illy Mty

&amp;eme ~
u~ . nus

AlliES CM tch 21 - April lei

fi"!! you.... dll rM4·

I - thiO

vou·ra going to leave

By Helen Hottel

Then all my dreams have come true . NARDT

Allf. 24, 1174

YO&lt;I will

watch out!
LIBRA CSopt. 23· 0ct. 23)

6

I

They'll Do It Every Time

The Daily Sentinel, Middleport.POMneroy, 0 .. F'rlday . Aug . 23. 1914

~....._ _ __.._

__, L,---

�a_ The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Aug . 23, 1974

ncsdav .

1 lO

p m •

U M W ,

m
UNION BAPTIST
He1ohts
Pomeroy
Pl)stor
Rev . Ct;cll Colt . pnlor. Sunday
Girard St&gt;ton Sabblltil sc hool
Sc hool sup r • Joe Sayre
How emb•rr•ulng to recognize • petiOli'S IKe
every Saturday at 2 p m at\d
Sunday schooL 9 •S am ..
wor ship ~ervice follow i ng &lt;'II
Sunday evenlnv worsh ip, 7: 30
but be 11n•ble to N{:all hla name! 11 hlrppenl to rnotl
J 15
p m
Open
Bi ble
W!:!dnesday prayer and 8 1 bl~
dlscvntoo . 7 JO p m . at the
s tudy, 7:30pm
ol Ill OCCIIIOnllly.
chur c-h each Thvnday
TUPPERS
PLAINS
C
HR
IST
tAN
CHURCH
SACRED ~EAAT - Re\1 ,
GRAHAM
UNITED
POMEROY
God •lw•p knoWI ua. Hl1 tre It •lw-r• open to
Eugene Underwood , pastor ;
Father
John
Nlldlarn METHOOIST Prea c: h 1ng
POMEROY TRINITY
Howard Cald w•l t.. Jr , Sunday
pastor
PhOne
99'2
'28lS
.
9·
lO
am
.
f1rst
and
second
Rev w H Perrin . pastor Roy
- ut. Hll " ' 11 IIWIJI open 10 heir ua. We can
School Supt , Sunday School,
Saturday evenlnQ Mass . 7 ~g Sund avs Of each month , th ird
Mayer , Sunday school sup!
9
30
am
,
Morning
Sermon
,
p m Sunday Man. 8 and
fnd fourth Sunders each
enjoy Hl1 1cqullnt1nce delly,
Church schooL 9 15 am ,
10 JO a m . Sunday evenln9
am Confessions Satu l'dAv. 1
month , worship serv•ce 11t 7 30
worshtp serv1ce. 10 24 a m
s~ rv lc e . 7 p m
7 30 p m
~ m Wednesday even•ngs at
Youth chotr reheanal , Mon
We cen enjoy the Pre11nce of God In • apecl•t
LETART FALl.$ UNITED •
day . J 30 p m under d trectton
P01',;1EROY FIRST SAP ·
JQ, Prayer and Bible Study
BRETHREN
A
ll""
Freeland.
of Mary Sktnner . sen tor chOi r TIST - Robert Kuh n , pcuror .
way when we aLtend church. When we tum our allen·
FIRST SOUTHeRN BAP Norna , pastor , Floyd Norr is ,
reh earsal. 7 30 p m Thursday W II II am Wittson , Su nday school
TtST _ 782 Mulbe r ry Ave ,
su p! Sunday schOOl. 9 30 am ,
lion tully 11pon Him, when we eleY.Ite our thinking to
w1th
Mrs
Pa ul
Nt&gt;ase . $Upt Sunday schOol. 9 30 am •
mornlngr sermon . 10 ' 30 am .,
Pomeroy , a tt 11ated w 1th
d•rec- tor
Prayer ser"vice. Wednesday ,
BYF , 6 P m , Bible study ,
s B C , the Rev1 Fred HilL
tholl maller1 which hold eternal value, God apeak•
._,. POMEROY CHURCH OF Wedne:sday , 7 P m • cho r
1 30 p m
pastor Trov Zw11tmg Sunda
0
THE NAZAREN E - Corner ~ pract 1ce. Wednesday , 8 30 P m
school ' sup t Sunday' s.c hoo r
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF
In
the
warmeot
or
tones.
POMEROY WESLEYAN
0
'
Un ion and Mulberry Rev
GOD OF PROPHECY - G p
H 0 ll N E s 5
cHuRcH _
9 J :1 am . mornln9 worsh ip
•m
Clyde V Hen derso n, pastor
Sm ith, pastor. Sundav Sc hool ,
Yea, God knows us. He calls uo by name. He
Harr iso nville Rev O 'De ll
10 0 . Su nday hlll nget rs !JC
PORTLAND - Won.n lp 1 30 10 a m , Arthur Henson , Su pt ,
SundJy school , 9 30 a m , Glen
~e.:~:~~ · w~J~es~amy 7 roaycr p m : Ch ur ch SchOol 9 30 a m Morning Worsh ip, 11 a m ,
McClung , supt , morntnO Mantey , Pasto~ , Henry Eblin.
never forgets.
•
P m
SUTTON ~ Worship lla m'
worSh ip, 10 30 a m , even1ng Sunday Sc hool Supt Sunday
Young People ' s service , 7
2nd
and
4tl"t
Sundays
,
Church
Sc
hool
9
JO
am
,
Evenmg
MIDDLEPORT
serv ice , 7 30 m id week ser
p m , Evenmg serv ice, 1 30
SC hOOl 10 a m
vice . Wednesday , 7 30 p m
worShiP 1 30 P m Prayer and
MT. MORIAH 8APfiST p m Wednesday M id Week
GRACE EPISCOPAL - The Pra,se serv1ce , Thursday , 7 30 Corner Fo urth and Ma in ,
Prayer Se rv ice 7 30 p m ,
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev Haro ld Deeth , rector
Youth meeting , 6 30 p m ,
A: e._. . Robert Meece
P m
Midd leport Rev Henry Key ,
Ch urch serv1ces , 10 30 a m •
Eventng worsh1p , 7 30 p m
s v R Ac u s E
F I R5 r
Jr pastor . Sunday Sc hool. 9 30
Rev. Stanley Bretndum
Holy communion f trst Sunday
~ HURCH OF GOD
Rev
11m ., Mrs Ervin Baumgard
_JOPPA - WorSh iP 10 om ,
CHESTER CHURCH OF
of month . church sc hoo l, 10 30 George O•l er , p.:~s t or Su nd;)y ner , supt , Mornmg worsh ip,
Rev
Chur ch School 9 a m , flrayer THE NAZARENE school , 9 45 am
morn 1ng 10 ~s 11 m
a m for nurser y throuoh 12
Herbert Grate, pastor Wor
Meeting , Wednesday , 8 p m
11
am •
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES POMEROY CHURCH OF preachtng ,
LONG BOTTOM - Church Ship service , II a m and 7 30
CHRIST - Ferrell Gronmger , evangel•slic se rv1 ce, 7 30 P m
Larry Carnahan . pres ld m g
se rv ic es, 9 a m . Su nday p m Sunday Su nday Sc hoo l,
Prnyer r1u:-et1nQ Thursday
mlntster Sunday, Bible lee
Rt chard Ba rton ,
putor B1ble school , 9 30 " m ,
Sc hool 9, A5 am Bible St udy 9 30 am
wors hip 10 30 am , adult
supt P rayer meetmg , Wed
7 30 P rP
lure , 9 JO am , Wat chtow er .every Thursday , 7 30 p m
n esday , 7 30 p m
worsh 'P serv rce and young
NORTH 3ETHEL - Wor
study, 10 30 am , Tuesday ,
.POMEROY
WESTSIDE
peop le's meet1ng , 7 30 p m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
Sh
•P
11
a
m
,
Ch
urch
Sc
hool
10
study
,
7
30
p
m
,
Thurs.
Bible
OF CHRIST , 200 W
CHRIST Clifford Sm1 th ,
Combmed Btblt&gt; study and CHURCH
day , mtntslry s c hool. 7 30 am
Ma1n
St
~ Loren T Stephens,
prayer meeting , Wednesday ,
m•n1s.ter Sunday Sc hoo! 9 30
ALFRED
Sunday
schoo
L
P
m
,
service
meet
ing
a
30
evangelist , phone 992 7 856
'f30pm
pm
each Su nda y , a m . morn1ng chur ch 10 30
9 415 am
C onservattve ,
non
THE SALVATION ARMY preach 1ng at 11 a m ea ch am . Sunday even .ng serv tc e ,
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of
1nstrumen
ta1
Sunday
worsh
,p
,
Envoy Ray w W1n1ng , off• cer
Sunday Prayer meetmg , 7 45 7 30 p m Wednesday serv 1ce, 8
Christ in Chnst•an Un•on m charge Sunday . 10 am , 10 am , Btble study , 11 am , Lawren c e Mantey , pastor .
pm
p m Wednesday , WSCS , 8 p m
Holt ness m eett ng , 10 30 a m , worsh 1p. 6 p m Wednesday Mrs Russell Young , Sunda y
on th 1rd Tuesday each month
LAUREL CLIFF . FREE
Bib le s tudy , 7 p m
Syn da y Sc hoo l Young Peopl e's
REEDSVILLE - Sunday METHODIST - Rev Robert
Sc
hoo
l
Supt
Sunday
School
MIDWAY
COMMUNITY 9 30 am Evening worsh ip,
Leg1on. 7 p m , Thursda y, 1 to J
sc hool , 9 30 . prea ch mg , 7 30 E Bu c kley , pa s tor , Lloyd
( non
p m , Lad.es Hom e League , 7 CHURCH
p m Sunday , prayer meeting , Wrtgh t, Sunday sc hool sup t
7 30
Wednesday
praye r
denom
1nat
1
onai
J,
Langsville
p m . Prep c laSses
- -.
7 30 p m Tuesday ; WSCS , 7 30 Su nday sc hoo l. 9 30 am ,
meet
ing
,
7
30
p
m
Dexter Road , the Rev Worley
ST PAUL LUTHERAN fir
s t Thursday each month
MT
MORIAH
CHURCH
OF
mornmg wor shrp , 10 30 am
Haley , pastor Sund ay school .
Corner Second and Sycamore
SILVER RIDGE - Worsh ip evenm g wor sh1p , 7 30 p m
GOD - Ra cine Route 2, the
10"
m
,
even
mg
worsh
tp
,
7
30
Sts , Pomeroy . the Rev
10 a m , Ch urc h Sc hool , 9 a m
Wednesday Chnsttan Youth
Rev Jame,....M Mun cl , pastor
p m
Pr8y er
mee t.ng , Sunday
W1!11am M1ddleworth , pastor
TUPPERS
PLAINS
school.
9
5
am
,
Crusade
, 6 30 p .m
Cho1r
Sunday Sc hooL 9 30 a m , Tuesday , 7 30 p m • youth morn ing worshtp , 11 am
Worship 9 a m . Church pract 1ce Thursday, 7 p m
group
.
Fnday
,
7
30
p
m
c hur ch services 10 30 a m
School , 10 a m
even 1ng worsh tp , 7 30 p m
KENO
CHURCH
OF
Prayer meeting , Tuesday , 7 30
DEXTER CHURCH OF
CHRIST - George Freder•ck , CHRIST - Charles Ru ssell ,
p.m , Young people 's meet ing,
supt Service weekly , 9 30 am
7 JO om Thursday
Sr , min1 s ter . Norm .!Inc Will
on Sunday Preach ing first and supt , Su nday scho ol. 9 30
third Sundays of month by am , worsh1p serv1ce , 10 30
MIDDLEPORT
FIRST
Cl1fford Smith, 9 30 am
BAPTIST - Corn er Stxth and
am , Bible s ludy , Tuesday ,
Palmer . the Rev
Steve
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN 7 30 p m
UN I ON - Darrell
Dodd rill.
Sk.aggs ,
pastor ,
Danny
pastor Sunday SchOol, 9 30
Thompson , Sunday school supt
REORGANIZED CHURCH
L.APY P11117T-PIUIIBi'S··· 60t.f' IS /NCIPE"NTAL--·
WMPO rad to program . 7 45
a m , Leonard Gi lmore , ftrsl OF JESUS CHRIST OF
elder . evenmg service , 7 30 LATTER DAY SAINTS " m Sunday school. 9 15 a m ,
W~A1'S
p m
Wednesday
prayer Portland
morn 1ng worsh !p , 10 15 a m
Racme Road
meet ing , 7 30 p m
fl0l.OIN6
Youth act•v•ttes and fellowsh ip
W1ll 1am Roush , pastor Denny
Sunday
School
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF Evans ,
tor 1un1or and sen1or h1gh
IN
I
TH t;,\.1 OJ'"
GOD - Racme Route 2 The D1rector Sunday School, 9 30
St\.!,dents . 6 p m Bib le s t udy,
JOiNT' WITH HIS
am , Morn ing worsh ip, 10 JO
Rev Charles . Hand , pastor
7 30 p m M1d week pray er
Su nday school : 9 45 a m , am , Sunday evenmg servtee 7
5W:{eTAIZY AND···
serv1ce, Wednesday 1 30 p m
Wednesday even1ng
p m
morn10g worshtp , 11 am
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST.
Evening serv1ces , Tuesday and pr.!l 't_e! se~vlc~s , 7 Jf! p m
Middleport. 5th and Ma 1n
Friday , 7 30
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST George
Gli!lze , m 1n1ster ,
BEARWALLOW
RIDGE
,lames Sheets, superintendent
CHURCH OF CHRIST - Bible Rev .Earl Shu le r , pastor
B1ble school , 9 . 30 am
Study. 9 30 am , morn ing Worsh•P service, 9 30 am
morn1ng worsh1p , 10 30 am , worship, 10 30 a.m ; even 1ng Sunday Sunday school , 10 30
even1ng worship , 7.30 p m , worship, 6 30 p m Wednpsday am Bible study and prayer
serv 1ce , 7 30 p m Thursday
Saturday
prayer servtce , 7 p m Wed
B1ble Study , 7 30 p,m
nesdav
11 Connthtans
MT. OLIVE CHURCH K1ngsbury Road
s-unday
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
Long Bottom, Sun day School , School. 9 30 am , Ralph Carl ,
8 7· 15
OF THE NAZARENE - Rev
10 am W1th Willard Ptgott , supt WorSh iP serv1c~. 10 30
Don Cole , pastor , Floyd
supt EvangeiiSi tc message am and 7 30 p m alternately
Carson , Sunday Scl'1ool sup t
each Sunday evening , 7 30 p m
Prayer meeting , Wednesday ,
Sunday schoo l, 9 30 am .
by Elder Russe ll Cltne
7
30 p m Rev J ay Stiles, ...
morning worsh1p , 10 30 a m ,
minister of the Apostolic Fa1th
pastor
Sunday evangeltst tc meetmg .
Btble Study , Wednesday , 7 30
With the hope it will, in some measure, foster and help sustain that
OLD
DEXTER
CON
7 30 p m , J;~rayer meetm g
Pm
GRf=GATIONAL
CHURCH
Wednesday , 7:30pm
which is good in family and community life, this leature is sponsored by
STIVERSVILLE
COM· Mrs Wor ley Franc1s , Sunday
GRACE BAPTIST - 305 N
MUNITY CHURCH - Sunday school
su
pt
,
Sunday
school
10
the
business firms and organizations whose names appear below.
Second Ave, Mtddleport
s chool serv 1ce , 10 am , Prayer
'
Les ley G Holt. pastor Sunday meeting , Thursday , 1 p m , am
-rJ,a..,t t.school , 10 a m , worship ser
"
LONG
BOTTOM
Sunday evenmg serv ice. 7 p.m
v ic e, 11 am , worshiP service .
~. w. i!O'/l,~
Mr Robert
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST CHRISTIAN .
7.30 p m sunday Wednesday
14~~f 5.!Y&lt;Hf.,
Pomeroy . Harrrsonv!lle Wyatt , pastor , Sunday School
night
prayer
serv
tce
7
30
supt
,
Ronald
Osborne
,
Btble
Road.
Rtek
Morr,son
,
pastor
SYI.MA~. CAI.I~.
Sunday school supt , Steven School. 9 30 am , preaching
700 E Matn
THE
UNITED
PRES - Stan leY Sunday Schoo! . 9 30 10 45 am , Evenmg servtces ,
Doal 992-2101
Bakers of Good Bread
~
'
BYTERIAN
MINISTRY
Pomeroy
am , mornmg worsh ip and 7 30 p m
Huntmgton, W Va.
OF MEIGS COUNTY , Dw1ght
comm un1on .
10 30 a m ,
b "1. !. -o.:..- ...
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
•
L Z8V1IZ, Pastor' D1rector
,,1 11 111,
~Ou"Q
Sunday
evenmg
youth
CHURCH HARRISONVILLE
Chrtst 1an Endeavor , 6 30 p m , METHODIST
'
Rev Paul Neville , pasto r
Sunday Church Schoo!, 9 30
worshtp serv 1ce, Sunday , 7 JO Sunday
'~' .
School
9
30
a
m
,
.11 m , Mrs Homer Lee , s...,pt ,
P m , Wednesday evening Morn 1ng serv• ce, 10 30 am ,
Morning WorShtp, 10 30 i!l m
prayer meet1ng and B1ble youth serv 1ce , 6 45 p m ,
MIDDLEPORT Sunday
study. 7 30 p m
Minor Repairs &amp; Tune-up
EvangeltStlc service 7 30 p m
Church School , 9 JO .11m , John
The Store with A H~rt
ST JOHN LUTHERAN Prayer
meeting
,
Thursday
,
Middleport
F
Fultz, Su~t , Morning
Beech
&amp;
locust
Phone 949-3342
P10e Grove the Rev Arthur 7 30 p m
Rac1ne
Worship, 10 ' 30 am
'
Ph. 992-2366
Combs
.
pastor
Sunday
schoo
l,
SYRACUSE Morning
'.
9
30
a
m
,
church
services
,
CARNIVAL
Worshtp, 9 am , Sunday 10 30 a m
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
by Dick Turner
'
Church School , 10 a m , Mrs
'
- Bald Knobs , Rev
BRADBURY CHURCH OF MISSION
Sampson Hall , Supt
L
R
Gluesencamp
,
pastor
'
•
CHRIST B1ble School , 9.30
Roger Wilfred . Sr . Sunday
m , morntng worsh ip, 10 30
''
RUTLAND CHURCH OF aa m
School
Supt
Sunday
Schoo
l
Sunday even1ng Worshtp 9 30 a m , Sunday evenmg
GOD - Phillip Wh1t!ey, pastor
Dial 992-3284
'
Middleport
Serv
tce
7 30 p m , cho1r
Sunday school, 10 a m , practice , Sunday
'
worsh1p 7 30 Prayer meetmg,
and
Wed
.
'
Middleport. Ohio
worship serv1ce , 7 p m , nesday, 1 p m , prayer meetmg
Tuesday , 7 30 p m
Ernest
Prayer meet1ng , Wednesday
Deeter,
class
l&amp;ader
Youth
''
7JOpm
' and Bible Stu dy Wednesday , meeting, Wednesday , 7 30
7 JO p m
'
p m , Ernest Deeter , leader
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST '
MT.
HERMON
CHURCH
OF
Rev Free land ~orr~s . pastor
'
THE UNITED BRETHREN IN
Sunday Schoo l 10 a m , Church
HAZEL
COMMUNITY
CHRIST Robert Shook ,
' Butck Pont1ac Opel G M C Dealer
•'
CHURCH - Near Long Bot ' service , 1 p m We(1nesda y pastor
Sunday school, 9 30
Ph 992 2174
Bible Study , 7 p m
500 E Main Sl
I'
tom Estll Hart , pastor , Roy
am. , Russell Spencer, supt ,
337 N 2nd
RACINE FIRST CHURCH
Middleport
Brown , ass 1stant pastor
Ph.
992-2550
'
worship serv1ce, 10 4S .11m ,
OF THE NAZARENE
Sunday school. lOam, Church
'
.
.
worsh1p alternat ing
7 30 p m
nch
sunday Sunday School. 9.30 a m , evening
'
th C E at 7 30 p m on
evenmg , prayer m eetmg, 7 · 30 Morn ing Worship, 10 30 am , W1
Sunday
Prayer
meettng
,
7
JO
:'
Even1ng Worshrp, 7 30 p m ,
p m. Thursday
p m Wednesday Alfred Wolfe ,
MIDDLEPORT
PEN· Wednesday Mld·Week Service
''
leader
TECOSTAL - Th!rd Ave , the Sunday School Super~ntendent, layWHITE'S
CHAPEL
Gerald
Wells.
Pastor,
Rev
Rev William Knrttel. po~~stor
Bakers of Gay 90's Bread
Cool....,llle RO . Rev Roy Deeter ,
Racine
Morris M Wolfe
Ph 949-9591
Roneld Dugan , Sunday School
pastor Sunday schOol. 9 30
Middleport
Ph . 992 3030 :
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST Supt Classes for all ' ages.
am
,
worship
service
,
10
30
Walter
P
B
l
kacso~~n,
pastor
,
evening serv ice, 7 30 p m ,
'
Ronnie Salser , S S Supt , a m Bible study and preyer
Bible study, Wednesday , 7 30
"
service
,
Wedne~day, 7 30 p m
P m , youth services, Fr iday . Sunday Sch oo l, 9 30 a m ,
RUTLAND
7 30 p m
'
Mornmg Won.h !p 10 45 am ,
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
'
Sunday e . . . enlng worsp lp, 7 30
FREEWILL BAPTIST •
CHRIST- Rod Kasler , pastor ,
p m Wednesday even ing Bible
•
Corner Ash and Plum , Mtd
V H Braley , Sunqay school
dleport.
Noel
Herrman , Study, 8 p m
Louis W Osborne
supt Sunday school 9 30 a1m ,
DANVILLE WESLEYAN pastor
Saturday e . . . enrng
H
Middleport, Ohio
worship serv1ce and com
220 E Main
Pomeroy
Ph 992 2178
Rev Lelon Glesure, pastor
service, 7 p m Sunday school
munion , 10 30 am , youth
Sunday School, 9 30 a m ,
10 a m , Sunday even 1ng
worSh ip! 7 p m
youth and Jun1or youth service , meet~ng , 6 p m , Sunday
6 45 p m , evening worship , even~ng serv1ce. 7, regular
7 30 p m , prayer and pra 1se , board meet •ng , third Saturday,
MEIGS
7 p m
_Wednesday, 7 30 o,m
COOPERATIVE
.~
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY
SILVER
R:UN - ' FREE
PARISH
CHURCH
Sunday
School.
THE UNITED
BAPTIST - Rev Ralph Dean ,
Chester , Ohio
We Fill All Doctors' Prescriptions
pastor Sunday School, 10 a m , 9 30 a m , Worsh lp serv Ice , 11
METHODIST CHURCH
".,'
Robert T . Bum garner
Leon Mil ler , supt Evening am , Wednesday prayer
992·2955
Porneroy
. 7 30 p m Sunday
serv1ce , 7 30 p m , Prayer meetlnQ
Director
night worShip , 7 30 p m
meeting , Thursday , 7 30 p m
POMEROY CLUSTER
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
Rev. C•rl E. Hicks
f!"RESTER tHURCH OF THE
NAZA'RE"NE Rev
Meigs County Branch
Rev. D. Wm . Sydenstrlcker
GOO Rev
James Sat . Lloyd 0 Grimm , Jr , pastor
"tJli"M
CHESTER
Worship
9 1S
terf
leld,
pastor
.
Sun
day
School
,
••
"Whoever made Lhat old crack about 'women's work rs never
Su
nday
School.
9
30
am
,
am , Church School 10 am
9 30 a m , worsh lp servIce, 11
done' didn't know Mom, did he?"
ENTERPRISE - Worship, 4 8 m , ev~nlng service, 7 , Morning worsh ip, 10 30 am ,
Young people's service, 6 ~5
TWO LOCATIONS
a m ; G:hurch School , 10 a m
Pr&amp;yer service and youth p m , EvangeiiSitc service.
"
FLATWOODS - Worship . 11 servi ce. Wednesday , 7 D m.
59
N.
Second
St
Middleport 0 "
'!
.
30
p
m
.
Wednesday
evenmg
296
W.
Second
Pomeroy
Ph
.
992·3863
a m ; Church Sch ool 10 a m
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN serv ice, 7•JO p m.
46 Court St.
Gallipolis:
POMEROY
Worsh ip ,
CHURCH - Robert E Musser ,
MASON
CDU
NTY
10 30 am , Church Schoot 9.15
..
Pll!ltor Svndey School, 9 30
"
THE HILAIIID CHAPEL.
• •
am ; UMYF 6 30 p m ,
a m , Roy S1gman, supt , George
pastor Sunday
ROCK SPRINGS - Worsh ip
morning worship,
10 30 , School. 9Casto.
JO.t. _evenlng worsh ip,
10 a m , Church School 9 e.m ,
Sunday evening service, 7. 30 ,
CARNIVAL
7
30
Thursday
even 1ng prayer'
UMYF 6. 30 p m
by Dick Tumer
Mid week serv ic e , Wednesday ,
Netlonwlde Insurance Co. of Columbus, 0 .
Ph 992-5271
808W. Main
serv ic e 7 30 p m
MIDDLIOPORT CLUSTIOR
7 30 P m
307
Spring Ave.
Pomeroy '
MASON
FIRST
BAPTIST
Pomeroy
Rev . Robert Bumgarner
SYRACUSE CHURCH- OF Second and Pomeroy Sts , Stan
D
•al
992-2318
HEATH WorshiP 10 30 THE NAZARENE .
Rev
•
Crl!i lg, putor Sunday school,
am ; Church School9 ' 30 am •
,,
Howard C Bla c k, pastor Bob 9 AS D m , worship service , 11
·~·
UMYF7pm,
Moore , Sunday Schoo l Supt 1 am , traln!ng un ion, 6 30
"
RUTLAND - WorShip 9, 15 Sunday Sch ool , cl asses tor all
••
a . m , Church School 10 a m , ages , 9 30 am , morning p m 1 evening worsh ip ser'vlce,
1 30 p m
Mid week prayer
UMVF 7 p m
worsh ip, 10 ' H , NYPS Sunday , service, Wednesday, 7 30 p m
SALEM CENTER - Wor
6 30 p m , evangelistic service ,
"'.
Groceries &amp; General Merchandise
MASON
CHUROI
OF
" The Friendly Folks"
ship 9 am . Church Schoo l 10 Sunday , 1 30 p m Mid week
CHRIST,
P
0
Box
487,
Miller
Racine
Ph 949-5772
am , UMYF Thursday , 7 p m
Pomeroy, Ohro
pranr ' meeting, Wednesday , St . Mason , W Va . Sunday
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
"
7 lOp m , Miss ionary meeting , Bible Study 10 11 m ; Worsh!p
Rev. Rlchlrd E . Jarvis
second Wednesday , 7 30 p m
.
11
e
m
and
7
p
.m
Bible
Study
ASIURY Worship 11
UNITE D - i=' AITH
NON : Wednesday 7 p rn , Vocal
a m .. Church School·9 so a m ,
music
I
DENOMINATIONAL
Rev
w s cs, 1st Tuesday
rl
FIRST SOUTHERN SAP·
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 Robert Smith, pastor Sunday
a m , Church School 10 a m , school , 9 JOe m ,, clnsleadtr, TIST - Corner of Second and
HilL worsh1p serv ice
Anderson. Mason
Pastor .
wscs , 3rd Wednesday, 7 30 Leo
.
lO ·JO am , chur.ch, 7 30 p m ' Welter Cloud Sun day school ,
pm
Devoted fo Meigs .Mason Area
The Finest In Mobile Homes
EDEN UNrTED iRETif: 9 ~s a m , wo"hlp serv ice, 11
MINERSVILLE - Worsh iP
Pomeroy , 0
"•
1100 E Main
101 m ; Church School 9 a m , REN IN CHRtST- Elden R a m and 7 30 p m Weekly
Pomeroy
Ph . 992-7034
Bible
study
,
Wednesday
,
7
30
Blake, pastor Sunday Schoo l
wscs , 3rd Monday , 7 :lo p m
"
SYRACUSE
Church 10 a . m , Howard McCoy , pm
MASON
ASSEMBLY
OF
supt
,
Morning
sermon
,
11
a
School. 9 . 30 a m ; worship
GOD - Sec ond St, Mason, w
m , Sunday nJght aervlces
serv l ~, 7 30 p m
'
Va Chester Tennant, pastor
Christian Endeaver, 7 30 p
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Sunday
school,
10
e
.
m
•
m
;
Song
service.
8
p
m
,'
Rev Steven Wilson
"
Kee~sake Ol.,mond Rings
morning worship, 11 am . ,
Preaching 8 30 p m , M id
Rev . Larry Poling
•vangellstlc aer . . . lce. 7:30pm
,' 212 E. Main t
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-3785
~
week Prayer meet ing, Wed
Rev . Howard Sh•veley
Middleport. Ohio
nesday, 1 p m , Roy Ado~~ms , Sible study and prayer aervlce,
BETHANY I DorcUJ
WednesdaY, 7· lo p m Phone
worship , 9 30 am . , Church lay leader ,
773 5133.
School 10 30 a m .
- CHURCH
OF
JESUS
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
CARMEL Worship , 1I C H R 1ST - Located at R utla1"11
CHRIST
In Christian Union '
am , 1St and Jrd Sundays , on New Lima Road, next to
The Rev . William Campbell ,
Church S'"c:hool 10 a m .
Forest Acre Park. Rev. Ray pastor Sunday School, 9 30
ouse , pastor . Robert Musser,
Hughes. supt. ;
Paint, Plumbing &amp; Electrical Supplies
APPLE GROVE - SUnday Sunday School supt Sunday eveningJames
Bullalng Supplies &amp; Cu•tom Millwork
servlu, 1:30 p .m
"
school. 9:30 am , worship ,
E-hool . 10 : 30 am , worship Wednnday evening prayer
Tuppers Plains
Ph . 667-3963
•
Ph
.
992-3978
first and th!rd Sunday , 7· 30 7·lO p m Bible study, Wed . m ltlfng . '! 30 p m Youth
p m , prayer meertno , Wed nesday, 7 30 p m Saturday prayer service each Tuesday .
nesday, 7 · 30 p m Fellowship n1ght pr1vttr service , 7 30 p rn
•
FAIRVIIW
IIBLI
.
suppe-r , first Saturday. 6 p m
HEMLOCK
GROVE
CHURCH,
Lt,lrf.
W.
Va,
Rt.
U M W second Tues(l'ay , 1 30 CHRISTIA"' - Roger Watson,
1 Rev
G eorge Hoschar,
pm
plstor , R•y Whaley, 'lupt ..
pastor Sunday School 9: 30
'
•
Morning worship, 9· 30 om .,
e . m , Preyer and Bible study
EAST l ~ TART - Sunday church school, 10 30 a m ,
• Jim Holcomb, Owne ..
1· 30 p m
Cottage
Preytr
School , 9 30 a m ; worship , young people'$ meeting , 6' 30 Service Tuesday , 10 a , m
"~low can you be so heartless? All day he slaved makrng ~
St Rt . 124
'Rutland
Salem St.
Ph . 742-395~ •
second and fourth Sunday , 7 30 p m 1 even ing worship, 7 30
Worship Service. Thursday ,
Ph . 7•2·5293
booby·triiP lor when you come home . . and you avord rt!"
Rutland
P m., prayji!r rnee11ng , Wed · P m Bible study, Wednesday,
7 30 p . m.
•
-

SEVE N T H
VENTIST

hu

DA Y
AD
Mulberr-y

W('(tnesdey . 7 JO p m
WESLEYAN tR.tc1ne•
Su ndav school , to p m ,
worship , 11 ~ m , Bible study ,
Thursday . 7 p m • ( ho lr
ptacHce, Thursday , 8 p ,m .
fl:'llowshtp
supoer ,
f trsl
Wedne:~od~'l 6 30p m .: U M W
fourlh Moncrav~ 1 p m
•
GREAT BEND - WOrshtp II
am , 2nd and 41th Sunellys,
Church Scbool . 10 am
LETART FALLS - Worsh ip .
10 a m , Church School . 9 a m , •
Bible study: 1 30 p m every
Tuesday
MORNING STAR, - Worship
9 30 am,; Church School 10 JO
am , Mid Week Ser._.ice ,
Wednesday , B p m
MORSE CHAPEL - War
Sh•P 11 a m , 1St and Jr d
Sundays , Church School. 10
f1tst

7 JO p
MT ,

9-

.

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

RACINE FOOD MARKET

GOEGUIN READY MIX

.

HEINERS BAKERY

INGLES ASHLAND SERVICE

.M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER
IGA FOODLINER

.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

ROSEBERRY'S SERVICE STATION

All WEATHER ROOFING
AND CONSTRUCTION CO.

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

"

SEARS CATALOGUE MERCHANT

MARK V STORE

.

GAUL'S MARKET

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

'

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

..

· ~~

a·

GENE'S BODY SHOP

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

.

..

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

..

POWELL'S SUPER VALU

.

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC..

K&amp;C JEWELERS

TUPPERS PlAINS HARDWARE

'm ..

J&amp;B AUTO BODY

r

;

•

•

·.,

.

THE DAILY SENTINEL

.

,.

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE

RACINE PLANING MILL

CARPENTER'S MARKET

•

.

.

Television Log

•

·

and tec1 you uee w•th ou t ~
Si dflra, ever&gt;-1hlng will be
oeecetul at honwt If not -

H_e len Help

News 3, B, 10. 13, IS , Sesame St 70 · News .o1 6 · Great
merlcan Ore.am Mach ine 33
'
' ·
... 6 ~e;lt~h~~ ~ewa l. 4, lS , CBS New s 8. 10.· Room 2'22 13 ;
6 : 00A -

7 . 00 - TruthorC~seq J; New s 10 ; What's My Linea : Aviation

We,ther 33 ; Wild l&lt; lngdorn 13. I Spy l.S : Electric Company
20 • Bowling ror Dollars 6; Great Da&gt;' Atthe Fair 4
1. 30 - Porter Wagoner J , Hollywood Squar~s 4 New Treasure
'"
Hunt 10; To Telf t~ Tr"ulh 6, Concentrat ion
Beat the Clock
~~
13 ; You O.Ve It To Yourself 20; Boar"dlng Hou se 33.
1 . 00 - Washington Rev iew 20. 33. Sanford clnd Son 3 15 Your
..
HltParadeB ; BradvBunch6, 1 3 ; SaleotChamplon~.t ' ·
8. 30 - Br ian Kellh 3, 15 , Wall Street Week 20. J3 , Good Times
10, 8. Six M illion Dollar Man 6 13
9 :00 - Masterpiece Theatre 33, 20, h\ovle " Flight from As hlya "
3, 4, I,S. -Movie " The r ime of M iss Jean Brodie" 8. " Because
•
They rre Young " 10
9 · 30 - Odd Couple 6, 13
10 ·00 - News 20 ; Video VIsionaries 33, Tom a 6, 13.
10 30 - Ohio· This Week 20 , Day AI Nl9hl 33
11 . 00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15 , Av la fton Weather 20 , Janakl 33
11 :30 - Johnny Carson J r Mission · lmposstble 6, Come to the
Fair~ . 15 , Untouchables 13 . Mov1es "Sc ream and Scream
Aglllln " a. " The Eye Creatures" 10
11 45 - Johnny Carson 4, 15.
12 30 - Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 6 . Wide World SpecrallJ
1 00 - Midn ight Spec ial 3, 4, Take Five for Life- Mov 1e " Horror
Hotel " 10
'
2 00 - News 13
1 . 30 - Movie " My Favorite Spy" 4
4· 00 - Movie ''Love In a Goldfish Bowl" 4
S. 20 - Movie " Mambo" A

Us.

a:

SATURDAY, AUGUST24,1974

6· DO-Summer Semester 10.

6 36-Ky Afield 13, Christopher Closeup 10 , TV Classroom 8
7 oo-Funfor Everyone6 , Treehouse Ciuba , In Touch 13; Fatth
for Today 10
7, Jo-Sesame St. 20 ; Saturday' s Report 3. Osmonds 13 . Farm
Front 4, Speedracer 6 , Speed Buggy 8 , Treehouse Clvb 10
8 DO-Jake' s Place 6, Lidsvllle 3, 4, 15, Bugs Bunny 13 . Ha1r
Bear Bunch 8 , Popeye 10.
8. 3G-Yogl's Gang 13; Mister Rogers 20. Addams Fam1ly J , 4,
Sabrina 8; Edward Saunders 6.
9 . 06-Emergency Plvs 3, 4, 15, Super Friend s 6, 13 , Mov•e 8, 10,
Sesame St. 20.
9 3~/nch H1gh Private Eye 3, 4, 15
~...lO : OG-Eiec. Co . 20 , Lassie' s Rescue Rangers 6, 13 , My Fa von te
~ &gt;'1
Martian 8, 10 ; Sigmund and The Sea Monsters 3, 4, 15
__.,10· 3G-Goober and The Ghost Chasers 6, 13 , Ptnk Panther s 3, 4,
::::::;:
_1_5i.]oom 20 . Jeannoe 8, 10
11 . 1H&gt;41lrady Kids 6, 13 ; Abbott &amp; Costello 8. Sesame St 20 .
,.
Speed Buggy 10 , Star Trek 3, 4, 15
.pr.t,.' J 1· 3G-Josle&amp; The Pussycats in Outer Space 8, 10; Butch Cass1dy
~·
3, 4, 15; Mission Magic 6, 13
~ 12 : DO-E lee . Co 20. Jetsons 3, 4, 15 , Pebbles and Bamm Bamm
8, 10 , Movie "The Red Baron" 6, 13
12: 3~Fat Albert 8, 10 , Go 3. 4. 15
1:06-Ctilldren's Film Festival 8, 10 , Man from UN CL E .4 ,
Perry Mason 3; Act ton '746, 13 , Washtngton Debates 15.
2:0G-Soul Train 6 ; Vtewpom18 ; Baseball Pre Game Show IS ,
NBC News Close Up 3, Dugout Dope .4 , At the Fa1r w1th
Chuck White 10. Aoythlng You Can Do 13
2: !~Baseball 3, 4.
2. 15--Baseball 15
2: 3~Arthur Smith 8; Beauty Pageant 13
3: oo-Movle "Alva rez Kelly", " The Man Called Flintstone" 8,
1974 Summernahonals 10
· ·~·
4: QO-Man Builds. Man Destroys 33, American Life Style 13.
Winchester Golf Classic 10, World of Survival 13
4: 45--TBA 3, Scoreboard 4
S. oo-westchester Golf ClassiC 3, 15, Wide World of Sports 6, 13 ,
·"'"
Great Day at the Fair 4, Wrestling 8, A Bit w•th Kn1t 33
~:_......~ S· JG-Saleof the Century 4, Let' s Grow a Garden 33.
6· oo-Ltlias, Yoga and You 33 ; News 8, News 3, 4, In the Know
10. A Look at the Book 15
6. 3G-News 3. 4, IS ; Zoom 33, Beverly Hillbillies 8, News 6,
Reasoner Report 13 , Beverly Hillbillies a
7·GO--Hee Haw 6, 8; catch 33 . Lawrence Welk 4, 13, 15 ,
Thnllseekers 3
.
7· Jo-Bobby Goldsboro 3; Course of Ovr T•mes 33
;-:-- · 8:GO--Ail In the Family 8, 10; Partridge Family 6, 13 ,
Emergen&lt;y! 3, 4, 15 . Book Beat 33
•.
8: 30-MASH 8, 10. Great Amen can Dream Machine 33; Movte
o1
"Planet Earth" 6. 13.
"
9: oo--M\ary Tyler Moore 8, 10; NFL Football 3, 4, 15.
:
9: 3G-~b Newhart a~ 10 ; Parole 33.
•
10: oo--Barnaby Jones B. 10. Owen Marshall 6, 13.
~
10: J~Nyshkln 33.

=

r-·~w=-=1N:-:--:A:-::T:::-=B:-::R~I;;D;::::G=E

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Holmes lets cards help him

w

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What do you bod'

w

•
~

NORTH

••

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••
•••

•'
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2.._.

••

East
19

••

p..,
29
Pass
Pass
4+
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Pass
Pass
Opemng lead -K 9

••
••
•
••

•
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North

West

••

l

WHEN DREAMS COME TRUE

to handle 11 yourself

Dear Helen ·

TAURUS (April 20·Moy 20)

When I was younger, • ~Y dreams were bigger, my ambitions
moghty . They changed wotll tile seasons and with the books 1
read .
I was a famous d octor, curing the w orld 's llls; healing the
sick ; mendong the broken ; bringing happiness to !he unhappy ,
I was a judge, mighty, just, honest and merciful ; brlngmg

fairness to an unfaar world.
I was a great psychiatrist, healing men's minds, and, with
my amazing lntelhgence, showmg them how to thlnk clearly.
peace with my wisdOm
l was a diplomat, changing war
and knowledge .

w

l was an adventurer, d1scovermg new horizons
I was a teacher, ltiSpinng young mmds to greater awareness.
I was beloved, admored, respected and wealthy - a person
especia lly sought out for ~'Omlor!, advice and company.
Now I am older. My asporatwns 8eem too large.
I am a hOusewofe and a mother . Yet, my dreams are still
living and in a way , I have achieved tllem all :
I HEAL my children 's hurts woth love and kisses and a
bandage or two .
[ JUDGE their trials and gove my adVIce .
I try l&lt;&gt; keep a step ahead
them so that my advice Will be
roght - and that takes much PSYCHOLOGY.
I am the arbitrator in their battles and , m the way
a
DIPLOMAT, I steer them toward peace.
When we go ADVENTURING , I help them doscover what's
under rocks or m the woods .
!TEACH them b1tsofwhatl know to help them get along tn a
strange world.
... And I am REWARDED with aU the riches and admiration
r need when, unasked, one comes to me with a hug and a,

or

or

"Thanks, Mom 1" or "I love you, Morruny!"
KATHY BERN-

Some thmg you 're gotng to be
offered by another haa a lot of
stnnos attached Be watchful
and look lor underlying mo ~
t l'tBS

Q~MINI (Moy 21·Juno 20)
Your soc tal ac tivities lhls eve-

nino will tum out a real bust
unless you and your mate are
1n accord on where you want to
go
CANCER (Juno 21 ·July 22)
You'll be very resentful when
you are commanded to do
something rather than betno
a8ked nicely The task will
su ffer because of thiS
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22)
You re m another one of those
extravagant cycles where
money IS apt to leak from your
purse like 1t s a steve , unless
youglug up the holes

your outslcte act•vltlea, Be pre ~
pared to spend more than you
ptamed on
SAQtTTARLUS (NoY . 23 ·
Dec. 21) Stay away from one
wtlo doeS{l t Ilk~ the same h'Pe
ot th•ngs you do Th1s person
Will drag you into &amp;omethtng
thai'S 10UIISVIIIe

CAPRICORN Cllec. 22 - Jon.
1 ~~ If you permll It, ou laide

pressures w11i squeeze you
tnto a knot don't fee l you have
to c arry the we1ghl Q! the world
on your shoulders
AQUARIUS CJon. 20- Fob
1 Sf) Proceed cauttously with
oew contacts you make at th 1s
tnne or you mtght find yourself
deeply tnvolved wtth one who

isn I all you think
PISCES CFeb. 20·Morch 201

Your hfe'e a bit c omplicate~
th1s weekend w1th overlapp1ng
Interests It wtll be difficull tor
you to se r¥"e them au sat tsfac~
tonly

VtR 0 CAug. 23· Sopt. 22111

YOu use the same drplomacy

and weekly baths, dreaming of the tome when the girls w1U
marry and take theor arumals with them .
So the girls marry. Bur ... their apartments are the " no pets
allowed" types. Besides, they say, " With both of us working,
they'd be so lonely."
And poor Mom is stuck with two dogs and a cat, whoch she

Dear Helen:
What's a mother to do?
She swears there will be no more pets, after Old Faithful
F1do succwnbs to 17years of good hvmg. But her daughters win
- and somehow she ends up with two dogs and a cat - their pets,
but HER responsibility.
She muddles through the chewmg stage, the barking stage,
the clawed furniture, the holes dug in lawns, the daily clean-up

DOWN
I Dry, as

talk
f Univ. in

some
win..

Georgia

2 Maginot or

11 Chain of
hllb

Siegfried

3 Icelandic

1% Hindu

clas8ic

princess

4 Queatlon

13 Pinched
( 2 wdo.)
15 Product

appU,.tlon
5 To the
point
~ Capricious
7 Place

or Ceylon

17 ReUgious

body

II Fam1Uari2e

8ll

Perry

Mason does
(2 wdo.)

Dear O.R..
Some parents are tough and lnsost the kods find homes for
the1r peis. Others, like you, keep dreaming of the day the
married children woU have back yards their own. But don't be
surprised if they then prefer younger ammals .
My advice : Get tough! - H .

33 Spanish

,

_,t.J

Jl&amp;MIDJ.b~®IJ.J

- J ,_.

Unscramble the-se four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

I BOZIM

minded
43 Enchantress
who loved
Jason
44 Popular
suiting
material

. -·::,''· '·'·'~,; :·····

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
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A NON- FATAL WOUNP

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-At-JD YOU M I&lt;SHT E55
THE !SETTE/1: FO~ IT.1

CBYPTOQUOTES
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WELSH

An•wrrr /11

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IF HE WANTED.' Jflll'!""'!

WILL 8E LE:AVItJC,;
FOR A TRIP

H/:RS -

~~~~:~:;~~~~~~:~~
'IEP, BESSIE LOU -THIS 15 MV LEETLE

THERE 15 NOTHING

•
:

i\IO~E

1fK~IF'f1N6 -a;AN 1HE -'161-!T

r:E

A WLTU~E Prul!ED IN A"TREE
WAITIN~ FO~ A VICTIM •.

You, South, hold .
•AQU4,AQ854+AK.2
"
Whit do 1ou do now'

A-Bid"''" ...... Thert II
1 ......

Chlnft 1111 1r1nd 11om

~ wiU be II)' dewl. AI worolll wlll ~~~~~!::

;=,..,... •• •n-.
QUEITIDN
TODA\"'8

Alain your portner opena
l olub.lll'hla
time you hOld '

L.

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, V. W.

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Yeaterday's Cryptoq\IOie: PEOPLE THEMSELVES ALTER SO
MUCH THAT THERE IS SOMETHING NEW TO BE OBSERVED IN THEM FOREVER. -JANE AUSTEN
'il!llt141lln•

(Ant..,..en tomorro.,..)

)I

I

QJDE

DCFHFKPFQQ,

v ... ,..,d ... '.

how to work

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFI!LLDW

One letter olmply otand.o for another. In thil oomple A 1o
used for the three L'a, X for the two O'a, etc. SIJI&amp;le lettero,
apoatroph01, the leneth and formation of the wordo are aU
hints. Each day lhe eode totten ..., dllforenl.

1&gt;5 &gt;tU ARRIVS
THGRS - THE'Y

'J

39 Performed

our breathing 40 Street
apPIU"atus
sign

42 Happening

ALLEY OOP

ber.
All he had needed was a 2-1 I
: trump break; both spade hon• ora in the East hand and a il
: break in that key suit. Not •
• much to expect, but Holmes
;._t,ad taken care to allow for It
; and had been paid off.
INEWSPAPI:!:R ENTERPRISE ASSN I

27 Part of

41 Feeble-

•

• ace of spa es, entered dum·
".• my once more w1th the four of
trumps, discarded hos small
;~ club on the spade that had set
up and scored game and rub·

suffix

( 4 wds.)

: event he was there.

HEAD£:0 1

38 Chemlatry

lawsuit
34 Old
note
:1 Brought
suit

We are not sure whether
Watson's four-doamond call
or Holmes' b1d "f fove diamonds was the overbod that
got the great detectove to a
bad contract. But on any

WE ..,;12E

lllJina

Snow on a

or

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

!

andwlch

l'i""i'i'"""Tr--r.--,y-

28 Squeal
29 Part
V.H .F .

Fatr 4

OH, r!M 5URE A MI\N LIKE
GREGORY~ COULD
FIND OUT EA~LY ENOl.Gtt1

J7 Popl!]ar

glacier

17 City in
Maine

Chip
in

sigilli
2$

10 Still

matter

31

Peter
23 Umpire's

9 Matter
( law)

or printed

of dance
31Swiss
river

11 OD--ABC News 6, 13, News 8, 10
11 15-Movle ' ' The Mad Doctor of Market Street" 6; News 13
11 3D-Movte "Gypsy" B, "The Pnme of Miss Jean Brodie" 10 ,
"Dr Goldfoot and the B1k1n1 Machine" 13 1 Javakt 33.
12 OG-News 3, 4, Midn1ght SpeCial 15
12 3D-Movte "The L1st of Adrian Messenger" 3, Come to the

'IOU eEE J:
DIDN'T TELL
HIM WHERE

rod

of-"

24 Amount

34 Pitcher
3S Unendlnc

%2~1

Majority

cry

South
Dble
3+
5+

In such sotuations, the first
~hong tp do is to give the cards
; a chance to help you and ~=~WIN=K~LE~..
' Holmes did exactly that.
1
'
He carefull~ ruffed the
MR.
third heart w1th the 10 of ®~~~~INK
).(
WILL (!)E
• trumps. Then he led the ace FOU.OWINO' '&gt;OU
• of trumps and continued by TO CRETE?
:.-.leading the queen and over: taking w1th dummy's kong.
Trumps had broken 2·1 and
•
: the cards were domg their
• stuff for him.
;
His next play was a spade
; He double finessed wrth ho•
:. 10, re-entered dummy by
• overtakmg his fove of trumps
• woth the six, finessed his

business

8 11 A

sible
Zl Fencing

tree

extract
2G Moist
21 Barbecue

of

JJ Reprehen-

26 Do

Yt~lenlay'o AuWer
18 Bundle
3! Functiono
of cotton
:a Tllnllrillt
It Seaweed
all

on an

16 Shoo!

("But Mom, they're part of the family !!")
What do other parents do on thi8 situation 1- OVER RUN

fENSOL

12 45---Movte "September Affatr" .4 •
I oo-Speak~y 6, Movte "Creature from the Black Lagoon"
13.
2 3D-Movie "A Ptstol for Ringo" 4,
4 15---Movte "OSS 117-Miss~an for a Killer " A.
6. 00-Peyton Place 4

,

ACROSS
1 Sheep

doesn't want, but can't giVe away even if someone wanted them. 30 Kind

or

NOTE TO READERS :
Hopefully, another dream w1ll come true l&lt;&gt;day for our
daughter and son-on-law, Kathy and Phil Bernhardt. Their new
baby is due thi8 week and we're aurung for a joint publicationproduction dllte.
... Just sign me, - EXTRA-PROUD MOTHER AND
GRANDMOTHER' - H.

.by THOMAS JOSEPH

Both vulnerable

w

;
:

on w111 not be sufficient 10 ewe
With the prob lem Be prepared

SCORPIO (Oci.-24-No•. 22)
Thus IS hkely to be a rather ex·
J)8t'l$ive weekend , owing to

.AS

••

••

you we•e depending

and .,,..... 10

IT\IIture Howe•. If you lUCk
llllngo out. the ....,.. 1/l&lt;oly fO ~ llrQe

~._,..,

LITTLI: OR.BAif Alflflll:-I'RIDA1', I'IIB

.1085
+ K643
.Q7
EAST !D)
WEST
•
KJ6
• 852
•
AJ942
• KQ6
+a
• 97
.KJ94
.108632
SOUTH
• AQ10
'73
'
+AQJ1052

;•

• •

Th&lt;l help

tl'nng Important
Will weigh heavily on your
mind, spoiling wt\81 could have
beert e pleasant day

JTTLE ORPHAN ANN!I!.

• 9743

••

••

2S

forS•turda , Au . 2-4, ti74

~ ...

qolt lltuatoono ~lor• Illy Mty

&amp;eme ~
u~ . nus

AlliES CM tch 21 - April lei

fi"!! you.... dll rM4·

I - thiO

vou·ra going to leave

By Helen Hottel

Then all my dreams have come true . NARDT

Allf. 24, 1174

YO&lt;I will

watch out!
LIBRA CSopt. 23· 0ct. 23)

6

I

They'll Do It Every Time

The Daily Sentinel, Middleport.POMneroy, 0 .. F'rlday . Aug . 23. 1914

~....._ _ __.._

__, L,---

�10- Tile Daily SentUiel Mlddleport Pomeroy 0 Fnday Aug 23 1914

Real Estate For S.ile

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
In Memory
LOVING memorv of our

IN

fattur

lost

NotiCe

and

tchoo tpec al al
$2oft bow cuts
S4 50 Opera ors - J&amp;anett'
Radford
Jack e N bert
Ruth s Beilluly Shop Maton
W Va phone 713 5686
8 13 tc

BA CK.

grandfa her

C lfford Jeonk nson who paned

away one year ago August 24
1973

He wore a crown of pal ence As

he struggled on and on
And the hands that rest fo ever
are the hands that were so
st ong
n tears we uw h m s nk no
We watched h m fade away
Our htarts Were all 50 b oken
He fought so hard to stay

THERE WI be i!1 you!"! ray
7 30p m Fr day Aug 23rd at
1t1e o d Pomeroy H gh School
now Senior C t zens. bu d ng
at Pomeroy Oh o Fea tured
s nger$ w
be Homeward
Bound from Hunt ng on w
va and Gospe Tones
Speake w
be fr om Teen
Chal enge C eveland Oh o
Everyone we come
8 8 6 c

But when we sew h m s eep ng
Peace ful y free from pa n
We could not w ish h m back
To suffer that aga n
We often s t and h nk of h m
And speak of how he died
To th nk he could not s.av good

CANNING peaches now n
season Two truck oads each
week Pr ce starting a S6 98
per bushe P ease br ng you
own c; onta ners Bobs Market
near Pomeroy Mason Br dge
Ma son
w va
Home of
qua ty fru t 11nd vege ab es
Open seven day s I 10 p m
8 12 tfc

bye

Before he closed h s eyes
For a of us he d d his best
Max ne and Robert Russe I
Bette and Ned Gran
8 23 c

-----·---Wanted To Buy

IN MEMORY of Mary Ebl n
who departed th s I fe wo
yeBrs ago today

Down a road ha s. ca lm and
pea ce fu
Gu ded by Gods ov ng hand
She has gone upon a lou ney
Toad stant br ghter and
She w shed no one a
est
ferewe or even sa d goodbye
Shewn gone before we knew
And only God knows why
Sa d ~
m ssed
by
he
Fal'fl y
8 23 1 c
IN LOVING memory of Mary
Eb n who passed away two
years ago today

o

perm~nents

JU N ~

Au os comp e e and
de vered to our y~rd We p ck
up auto bod es and buy a 1
k nds of sc ap me a s and
ron R der s Salvage State
Rt 124 R:t 4 Pomeroy Oh o
P hone 992 5468
7 J 26tp

CASH pad fo a makes and
modes of mob e homes
Phone a ea code 614 423 953
4 3 fc
OLD FURN lURE oak abies
c ocks ce bo)(es brass beds
d shes desk s or com ple e
households Wr te M
D
M I e R t 4 Po m e oy Oh o
cell 992 7760
5 3 fc

F&lt;EWARO offered fo a tma
red F est m• e dog wear n9 a
c ol ar
Ch ldren t pet
an
swers o hl' name of Red
ca 247 3691
&amp; 2? 3tc

""Mobile Homes For Sale
1972 3 BEDROOM W ndso
Mob le Home on 1 acre of
around
For
more
n
form at on ca I 992 ''38
7 30 tfc

-- ---

N ew green
ee l ner
Phone 992 251
POTATOE S

Ph one

MIDDLEPORT

• so

B 4 fc

843 1495
8 14 11 c

ALL S Chalmers round ba er
Phone Paul Karr Ches e
BEATEN down car pet pathS go
Oh o 985 3538
when 81ue Lustre a r vE!S
8 22 3 c
Rent e ect c sh•mpooer S1
Baker Furn ture company
d shwashe
8 23 3tp KENMORE
Phone 992 3388
8 22 3 c
SPINET Console
p ano
Wanted Rt"spons ble p,e~rty o REGULAT ON poo table cues
purchue sp net p ano on ow
ra ck and ba s Phone 949
mon hly payments Can be
2224 good cond 1 on
seen loca IY
Wr te Sa es
a 22 3 P
Manager
P
0
Bo)l 276
Shelb~v I e lnd ana 46176
Mode n
ste eo
8 23 :lip WALNUT
rad o am fm 8 tra c k ape
c omb nat on ~speaker sound
9.53 FERGUSON 20
w th
sys tem
Ba an ce $ 0 76 or
mowef" new eng ne In goofj
budget erms Ca
992 3965
cord tlon and pri ced at S 050
8 u tfc
Phone 985 3594
8 23 3tp
1972 CL 00 HONDA eKce lent
1953
cond lion See at
1 Pea St
30-;;'tres
M ddleport o ca
992 52 3
new pa nt w th mower new
8 22 3 ,
notor s 500 Phone 985 3594 ___ --·-·--· - ·-~
P

FE'RGusoN

____ .!_ 2j 3tp . - - - - - - - - - -

and
Cobbler
John Pape 949
8 23 6tc

SPEC IAL the Cyc e Shop 731
Eastern Ave
Gal po s
Bu taco 2SO A p na
$975
Bultaco 350 Alp na S 165
a 13 ate

J&amp;B AUTO
BODY

STER EO RADIO
am fm
8
t ack tape comb nat on
4
sputr:er
sound
system
Balance s 06 1a or easy
te ms C~ll 991 3965
a 14 fc

For Sale

KE NNEBEC
potatoes Ca
3015

Business Services

For Sale

-···--------- ---

MOWERS

New

Add t on l fiQOr plan abou t 3
yrs old level lot J B R:
(la rge doub le close ts) n ce
kitchen modern bath utll ty
R carpe ted some paneling
s torage room $19 500 00
CLOSE IN - 27 acres large
barn
and
s lo
other
bu ld ngs I 2 story frame
hom e 3 B R bath N gas
F A heat d n ng room TV
R some paneling &amp; t e
Ask ng SJl SOO 00
POMEROY - I story frame
3 8 R bath full basement
ga s heat large lot Ask ng
SlO 500 00 Make an offer

POMEROY - Ranch Type
- 2 B R balh large L R
w th f replace

k l chen has
ot s o f cab nets range &amp;
oven
carpe t ed
garage
porch ftJ I basement w th
ut I t y
R
Sma ll
ot
SIS 000 00

WANT TO SELL' - WE
HAVE THE BUYERS YOU
HAVE THE PROPERTY
LETS GET TOGETHER
CALL AT ONCE
992 2259 or 992 2568

Push type rotary mower
w th 20 cut 3 H P Br ggs

eng ne 14 ga steel deck s de

Moved to Rutland J,4 mile
Inside c ty limit on right
cor ner Blrck St and Rt ll~
Free Etfimates
Now Open tor Bur.loess

742-5293

REDECORATING?
Don 1 forget the roof of your
home Have a beautiful new
roof nstalled by All Weather

Roofing Co

All that IS needed for a free
estimate s a phone call
Please Phone

Al.L-WEAniER
337 N 2, Middleport
9922550

Known &amp;
R elwble Servwe

d scharge fu I baffle 7 poly

wheels and plated Tee
Today brings sad memor es
handle
Of a Mom we a d o rest
GOOD se mo corne w th case
She w II never be forgotten
Phone 985 3353 Only used 2
By the ones who oved her bes
-------;years
$40
Though her sm le
s gone MALE Beagle 6 months to 1
8 23 Jtp
year
old
W
R
Manley
R
R
forever
POMEROY LANOMARK
BoK
01
Reedsv
1
e
Ohio
And her sweet face we cannot
1973 HONDA CB 350
ke new
Phone 667 3226
EW LISTING Br ck
ouch
'1'. _Jack W Carsey Mgr
with a I extras S750 See Gary
8 23 3 p
Veneer 3 bedroom home w th
We sha
neve
lose those
~
Phone 992 2181
Hyse I or Ford Ga age n
memor es
M dd eport Or phone 992 5092 L-.,--------- --' fu I basement 2 baths Modern
WE NEED 200 tons of shee
Of a Mom we loved so much
after 5 p m
k tchen w th bu It n cook and
cast new or o d alum num
Her
Mothers
ove
was
8 23 2lc
bake
un ts Garage and 1 acre
Keep
cans
separate
The
someth ng
Rosenberg Co Athens Oh o
5 ACRES n country on black op n Port eroy SJO 900 00
That no one cou d exp a n
B 5 tfc ALMOST new Sears 10 speed
road 5 m les eas of Rae ne BUNGALOW
Cozy
2
If was made of deep devol on
b eye e w th carr er rack for
And of sacrlf ce and pa n
dea plar:e for country home bedroom
bath
hardwood
car and ch~ n ock 2 Genera
Phone 843 2712
CASH
FOR
JUNK
CARS
It was endless and unse f sh
sh ngle roof
ful
snow tread t res mounted
8 23 6tc floors
complete Frye s Tr-u ck e~nd
And enduring come what may
____
___
basement
and
new
gas
fur
S20
Phone
9"9
5924
or
949
Auto Parts Rut lind Oh o 24
For noth ng cou d destroy t
2261
206 ACRE farm 33 acres of corn nace A I th s for $8 000 00
HOUR WRECKER SER
Or teke that love away
8 21 3tc
and farm equ pmen
Contact LARGE NEW HOME 5
v 1c E Phone 742 6094
so to those that have the r
Mother
_.
1 26 26tc
James Connor
1855 S lver bedroom a I e ectr c b ev~l
CANNING tomatoes
br ng
Treat her with lov ng care
R dge Rd or phone 992 2720 home 1 bath
Ga rage an d
8 21 6tc
2
s
conta ner Ge a d ne C eland
For rou do not know her va ue S5 for Junk automobiles We w
Rae ne Oh o
- - - - -- --large ot Balcony overlooking
Untl you see her vacant cha r
p ck up
R vers de Auto
a 16 fc H 0 USE for sa e ocated n woods Large fam y room n
Sadly m ssed by husband
Wreck ng Phone (304 773
5890
Syracuse 3 bedroom
floor full basement
Steve chi dren Ed th Artie
Madel ne and grandch ldren
plan s 7 000 Phone 992 3860 LARGE FINE HOME
2
7 5 tfc
TREE r pened peaches wh te
8 11 3tc
B 23 ltp ---~
and yellow at Mason peach - - -------..-- ___
Jam
ly
house
in
a
qu
et
ne
gh
orchard
Mason
West
borhood 2 k tchens 2 baths
V rg nia
bu d ng
50x60
and
4 bedrooms Fu I basement
a 13 ttc BUSINESS
cement dr ve R t 124 near
and large garage Reduced to
N CE
6
room
house
at
Ru and Phone 742 5052
t WOULD like to thank the staff reasonable rent We are n MELONS sweet co n green
8 2 ttc $18 000 00
of veterans Memor a Hosp tal terested n someone who w II
peppers cucumbers for sale
CATTLE FARM - 157 acres
for the r tender care Dr le le help sell monuments on our
Gera d ne Cleland
Rae ne
NEW
2
bedroom
al
electr
c
and
4 bedroom farm house w th
Oh o
and
Dr
P ckens
the f ne memoria lot Th s Is a
home
c~rpet
ng
tul
bath
80 acres of tractor land
gooc:l
opportun
ty
for
the
right
Emergency squad American
8 1 uc
basement
carpo t
c ty T mber 2 farm ponds and
Logan Monument
Legion Post Rev Card blood person
Wi!fer
ocated on Rt
143 large barn
Company
Inc
Leo
L
donors Ew ng Funeral Home
and al those who helped In any Vaughan Phone 992 2588
Phone 742 6621
8 2 6tc MIDDLEPORT acre
8 23 tfc
way dur ng the llness and
----surrm,mds
a
large
4
bedroom
death of my be oved nephew
LOTS for sale ra e or house home w th front and back
George Batey Thanks for he APPLICAT ON$ are be ng
All ut it es Phone 742 36 5 porches Pus ncome property
beaut fu flowers
also H s
accepted at he off ce of the
Pomeroy
Mill"
aunt Mrs Cel a Hlte
~ut and Oh o Pr ce S2 500 Good ne ghbo hood
Only
c erk for water m a ntenance
man n Rae ne Reply boJC. 33
a 23 ltc
7 6 ftc $17 500 00
- -~ ·-::------- -8
Otc
COUNTRY ACRE PLUS - 2
There must be a -7 - - - - -- ACR
E
farm
6
room
house
bedroom
Colon al house w th
5
LAOYt;-;e- n
a
0
reason why so many
arn
other outbu d ngs
week to do partt me baby
$19 500 Phone 741 5845
garage and outbu ld ng Fruit
WE HAVE all your upholstery
people shop here
sltt ng for 9 year old Schoo
a
16 26tp trees Well water All levelland
needs
Bu lap
den m
g rl wh e mother wo ks
THANKS
-- ---for just $8 500 00
cambric foam glue z ppers
Phone 992 2881 after 5 30 p m
tacking strip spr ngs and
HOUSE
630
M
1
St
M
d
NEW
LISTING
N ce
Elite&amp; Guy
8 22 3 c
clips
ch pboard
button
d eport 6 ooms 1 , baths enovated 7 room house w th
tw ne sewing thread legs
CAREER OPPORTUNIT¥ for
full basement
part ally entral a r and heat Double
upholstery books dacron
Men or Women - Nat onw de
carpeted k tchen compete larage
2 ut 1ty bu id ngs
Our
a
1m
1s
to
please
webb ng spring tw ne tacks
nsurance offers eern ngs up
washer and dryer etc Could:&gt; 1 t
welt cord cotton sw vel
our customers
be 3 bedrooms gas furnace r va e cave and 4 70 acres
to S15 000 (th s sa salary not
bases and foam foam foam
flrep ace stor"m doors and ~UY AND
OR INVEST
a draw ) to se I compete n
Pomeroy Recovery 622 E
surance protect Oh
fe
w ndows curta ns and drapes
DO B
ER
Ma n St
Pomeroy
Ohio
health
auto
f re
com
nc uded For Inform at on cal
NEW 974 ZIG ZAG SEWING
Phone 992 7554
E den Walburn 992 2805
mercia! auto f nance and
n p,, 'i•i
MACHINES
In
or g na
7 24 26tc
mutua funds No pr or eJC.
a
13 tfc
factory certon
g Zag
o
;
!·,
,',I • '(; : I
---- --- ---,~,_~·=
per ence s necessary s nee
'
make buttonholes sew on
'
2 FAM LY Yard Sale at 488
2
BEDROOM
house
Rut
i!!nd
we have one of the most
buttons monograms and
South Fourth St M ddleport
Phone 992 5858
complete tra n ng programs
:,I • ,.• I JC ~~ H J I :, f ( ) :,:
make fancy des gns w th lust
Aug 23 and 24 th s Friday
n the Industry If you are
the
tw
st
of
as
ngle
d
a
Left
'. '
and Saturday start ng at 9
nterested in a career op
n lay a way and never been
li\l
am
portun ty n a rew.srd ng
used W I se I for only S47 NEW l bedroom home Hut
bus ness
call
Stanley
B 22 3tc
cash
or te ms ava able
ch nson
sub d v slon
Ferguson at (614) 446 4707
Phone 992 2653
Rut
and
Pr
ce
S19 900 Phone
THR FT Shop Me gs C01.1nty
Collect
Monday th ough
B 20 ttc
742 3615 or see M lo Hut
Humane Soc ety SALE Back
Friday a a m to 4 30 p m An
~
ch nson Rut and
tO school c othes Women s
Equal Oppo tun fy Emp oyer
ELECTROLUX
vacuum
a 16 12tc READY MIX
and g rl s leans
Men s
8 21 3tc
cleaner A 1 cond tlon uses
CONCRETE
c othes work pants ant que
paper
bags
has
cordwlnder
del
vered
r
ght
o you
hat p ns tewelry
and many attachments A so 206 ACRE farm w th 33 acres of
pro ect Fas and easy Free
B 22 2tc
corn and farm equ pm en
shampooer attachment n
est mates Phone 992 3284
Contact James Connor 1855
eluded
&lt;Only
4 ava abe) at
Goegle n Ready M x Co
YARD Sale
SatUrday and
S lver R dge Road or phone
$37 10
cash
or
terms
M ddleport Oh o
Sunday 12 noon unt
dark
992 2720
ava lable Phone 992' 2653
6 30 tfc
Rt 7 below Eastern High
8 22 6tc
8
10
tfc
School
c BRADFORD Aur:t oneer
8 22 2tc
Complete Serv ce
KOSCOT
KOSMET CS
&amp; HOUSE n town SSOO down and
Phone
949 3a21 or 949 3161
S80
per
mon
h
T
a
ler
and
0 J s t5alt Shop Reedsv e
WIGS (The M nk Oil Base
Rae ne Oh o
Ohio
ot 2 bedroom s 0 500 Phone
Cosm etlcs
Phone
Cr tf Bradford
BROWN S 992 5 13
992 3975
a 22 5tc
S 1 tfc
8 14 tfc
8 20 tfc
YARD Sa e on Sa em St End of
corporat on I m ts
Clothes
HOT POINT range Amana 22 n J BEDROOM hOuse ocated on FOR FREE est ma es on
a urn num
rep acement
dishes
baby
furniture
s de by side refr gerator
1662 L ncoln He ghts
For
w ndows s d ng s:to m doors
s lverwa e m sc terns
freezer Norge washer and
appt pease ca
(30&lt;&amp; ) 768
and w ndows Ra I ng Phone
8 22 2tc
dryer set of walnut d ning
4041
Char es lisle Syracuse Oh o
room tables w th cha rs and
8 20 6tp
Carl
Jacob
Sa es
SHOOTING
Match
Corn
pad approximately 4 years
Representet
ve
V
V
Ho low Gun Club turn first
old oood o d bed and chest of
Johnson
and
Son
Inc
right after Miles Cemetery
drawers Phone 991 7066
J LOTS each SOx 00 loc ated n
4 30 tfc
Rutland
Factory choked
Monkey
Run
Pomeroy
8 20 ttc
.,.,....guns only Sunday Aug 2.5
.......
pr ced reoasonab y Phone 992
pm
CREMEANS
CONCRETE
7311
TS 2.5 Suzuk
74
mode
969
VAN
8
cy
nder
Phone
772
del
vered
Monday
through
a 22 3tc
22
5tc
8
Phone 992 3640
5651
Saturday
and
even ngs
.-------8 8 7tr:
PhOne 4.46 1142
8 6 tfc
4 FAMILY yard sale Rt 7 3
6 13 fc
miles south of M ddleport
1970
TON ,. whee drive Ford
Fredd e Moore M n lbl ke
p ckup b g 6 cyl
4 speed
BEAUTIFUL - all ele&lt;trlc AUTOMOBILE nsuran c e been
d shes and cloth ng Sat and
Haro d Brewe Long Bo tom
older home 3 bedrooms
Sunday 9 t II 6
cancelled?
Lost
your
Oh o 985 3554
carpeted 1st story finished
operators
ce nse Ca ll 992
8 22 3tc 1974 PLYMOUTH Satell te
8 18 tc
7-428
basement and 3rd story
Sebr ng 2 dr hardtop p s
6 15 tfc
AUCTION every Thursday 7
p b vinyl top ra
wheels
GROCERY bus ness for sa e
p m Horton St
n Mason
51
ACRES
w
th
ots
of
12 -450 m es excellent con
Bu ld ng fpr sa e or lease
Consignments we come from
d on S3 100 Phone 992 3410
potential house timber TP
Phone 773 5618 'rom 8 JO p m
11 a m to 5 p m or cafl 773
8 21 6tc
Chester water
5 .. 71
to 10 p m fo appo ntment
3 20 1fc
8 21 fc '1969 CHEVY Townsman stat on
5 12 tfc
NEW ALL ELEC HOME- J
wagon $ 95 good cond I on WE ARE p cklng up a p ano n
PORCH sate gong on now thru
bedrooms
carpet
air
SEPTIC
TANKS
AROB C
Phone 992 7620
your area and would I ke
Saturday 10 a m to 5 p m 618
conc:lltioning
washer &amp;
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
5 ~• tf c
some
respons
ble
pl!lrty
to
S 3rd Ave M dd eport
,....._
dryer
CLEANED
REPAIRED
take over payments
Cal~
8 2 3tp
MILLER
SANITAT ON
Credit
Manager
(614)
772
f972 bO DC: E ~o t 37 800 m es
STEWART OH 0 PH 662
HOUSE nsulat ng bowen for
5669 or write 260 East Ma n
NEW ALL ELEC tlOME-3
rad el t res good cond ton
3035
better results cuts fuel b s
Street Chi I ~othe Ohio 45601
Phone 992 7066
bedrooms
10 4 fc
dOwn Free est mates Call ,......
4 1 tfc
8 23 tfc
742 4.428
LARGE BRICK HOME- 1 SEPTIC TANKS c tilned
8 20 12tc 1963 vw Part al y Chopped R DING horse for sale 2 years
Modern Sen lilt on 992 395,. or
acre
of ground 4 bedr-ooms
old
green
broke
Gentle
Call
New y pa nted S400 Fthone
992 73.49
992 .5510
1 DffiN T KNOW THAT MGM
773 5865 after 5 p m
0 23 ttc
Flu Market Specials S5
a
1
tfc
8 20 Stp
Inside S3 outside Spr ng
......
STROUT
REALTY
EXCELSIOR Salt Works E
Avt
Pomeroy
Oh o
Main Sf Pomeroy All k nds
307 Sprtng Avenue
Collectors
dea ers
etc
of 11 f water ptlltts water
Every Sat and Sunday
992 2298
nugget• bock Slit end own Pomeroy
8 1 tc WAlft""£0 work to do in the
Oh
o
R
vt!!r
Salt
Phone
992
home fnqu re at 2'6 Ral road
A
tute
3891
CONTACT
st M dd ~port or write Box o
IPPI ances tnd m Jsc Rt 33
6 5 ffc
Middleport
and
g
ve
phone
t
Lola Pauley Branch
Hartford W Va
wll cal Mrs William F nk
~nagtr
7 26 tfc
_,_

- -------

BOWERS

'71.95

-

REPAIR
All Small Appliances
Next to H1ghwa y
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

_______

Card of Thanks

Shuler's Market

w

s
flvedays

- -------

--

.,

z

''

r,.., ·,() ( '

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

Busmess Semces

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

CARRIERS
WANTED

---------

------

- --

IN

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

SYRACUSE
AND

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

MASON

----

PHONE 992 2156
POMEROY, 0.
Auto SaleS

- ----

------ -----

--------

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

------

v

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

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

-

--------

------

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

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

--------

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

___ ---- -____ _ ------ --------------

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

Call Evemngs

- ---

tiding Will not dent chip
creek
chalk

pHI

rot

rust

or

FREE HOME ESTIMATES
su,..~,o~

VINYL poiiODUCTI

Call Colllct I.Jf2 SJ44
""""' Olllo

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

3t~

For Rent
2

BEDROOM
apartmeht
RuHand Phone 9U 58sa
8 13 tfc

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

FURN ISHEO 1 bedroom mob le
home on Spring Avenult
Phont 992 3,.29

8 20 7tp

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

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Wll I do
Dozer &amp;
Backhoe Work Install
Sept1c Tanks Haul
Dtrt
Gravel
Limestone or Rent One
of
Our
Trucks
Backhoe or Dozers

0

EXPERIENCED
MECHANIC ON DUTY
8 JOAM toSPM
Work

e General Overhaul
e Tune Up-S5 00 up

771 Pearl Sl

• Carburetor Adjustment

Midcl teport Ohto

K&amp;H ROOFING

WARNER'S
REFRIGERATION
SERVICE
992 7204

James

Pomeroy 0

Refrtgerators
Freezers
Home &amp;
Auto Atr Conditioners
and
Commercial
Umts

ca II "2 2836 For
Eshmates of Any

---- ---

$7 95

Price

5q Yd
•
and up
ncludes nstallation

have hundreds of
carpet va ues Your job can
be completed In 1 to 2 weeks
No long waiilng period

SPECIAL!
Candy Stripe Carpet with
rubber back

Reg S6 99 sq yd

~

Pnced to Sell

3 Bedroom Su1tes

New Vmyl Recliners

$49 95

dens

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
RutlAnd 0

12-1 and 2 pc L1vmg Room Su1tes
$35 OOand up
Portable Color TV

$199 95

SPECIAL
3 CLOTH RECLINERS
WERE $119 95

Moytot

Autometlr:a
'1. lpttd oreratlon
c:lf'lolce o
wettr
Auto water
lev.l control Lint
Fmer or Power F n
Ag tttor
Ptrma Pr11•
Maytae
Hela of H.. t
Dryers
Surround
ctothll
With Dtnflt ever
httt ~o hot spots
no overdrylno F lnt
Mt- L nt Fltrtr
Wtlpecfatlrt In

''m"'

llltd Cerpet
Servlct

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Arnold Grate

-Rutland

P B

v nyl oof

1974 Mercury Monterey 4 Dr
F a r PS

4 Or H T

P B

v ny

oat

...... $1695

•

$1495

1970 Chev Monte Carlo 2 Dr ....... .
HT

PS

$1995

1970 Ford Ga laxJe

soo 4 Dr

$895

•

1969 Ford L TD2 Dr H T
1972 Vega GT Hatch Back

S695
••••• $1495

••

•

1972 AM Hornet 2 Dr 6 cyl auto.

• $1695

·-----TRUCKS----~•
1973 Ford F100 302
V 8 auto

P S

8 Sets Coffee and End Tables
S29 95 and up
•
20 30 36 40 tnch Gas &amp; E lectr1c Rnges
Startmg S39 95

5-4 chatr Breakfast Sets

Sta rtmg $35 00
S2S 00 and up

Gold Refrtgerator and Malchtng Gas Range
$449 00
54 ' K1tchen Stnk complete w11h ftxtures $29 95
2 Old Fashioned
Shape

Wooden

Cabtnets

Good

Good Selection of Used Gas and Vtt Heaters
6athroom S1nk
no oo
3 wringer type Washers

•

1971
vw ...
Factory a r fape player

1970 Olds Cutlass "S" 2 DR
P 5

P B

ar

cond

$2695

•

w th topper

1972 Ford l/4 Ton • , • ,
•
Long w de bed V 8 stand
1970 Ford '12 Ton..
Long Steps de Bed

1965 Ford '¥• Ton
Flat bed new t res

•

$1995

•

•

• $1395

...... $495

• ••

Never Again

2195

1

•
•

Wtll Your Dollar Buy So Much Cart
DURING OUR MODEL END

1595

1

••cLEARANCE"

AM F M

USED WAGONS &amp; TRUCKS
1972 Chevy Kmgswood Estate • 13195
9 Pass AM &amp; FM rad

o

PS P B

a

r

v nyl roof

PB

1969
Ohls Vista Crurser ..
PS PB ar

1

1969 Ford "Country Sedan". .
1968 liz Ton P1ckup 6 Cyl.

1

1695
1095

•

Of all 74s and used cars and trucks

PINTOS BASE PRICE
MUSTANG II BASE PRICE
MAVERICK BASE PRICE

1959 Ford 800 Sertes
,$1500
•
•
Good t res runs good w th I ke new 6ft Bush Hog
1949 AI Its Chalmers ,
•
• $450

..

W th front end ~oader

Good Selection Cheaper Cars
See Ray R1ggs or Roger Riebel

RIGGS USED CARS
985 4100
Located on St Rt 7

Chester 0

Free at
the fair

NOTICE

.

LARRY'S MOBILE HOMES SALES, INC.

auarte ot the sou heasl Quarter

'

3134.

1

•2742 ..

1972 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR

..

•

12195

Hardtop low m leage by one ca refu sa t sf ed Ford owner
E; 1dra n ce

1295

1

1972 BUICK V8 SKYLARK 2 DR

ON ANY Of 'RiESE FINE BUYS

Hardtop fu ly equ pped w th power steer ng auto trans
2 377 easy m les By one local owner

Sl!e Ceward Calvert, Sm1hn' Art
or B1tl Nelson

1972 CHEVROLET NOVA 6 CYL

•..!,2195

••••

4 dr Sedan one careful loca l owner Sharp

AND FOR AGREAT BUY ON A

1971 FORD 4 DR CUSTOM 500.

NEW BUICK, PONTIAC, OPEL

11695

Auto t ran s

power stee ng new Ford trade from or g na

owne

1973 FORD GRAN TORINO

• •

12995

4 D Seda n One sat sf ed loca l owner Power steer ng auto
trans

1970 FORD 6 CYL 2 DR SEDAN

•

1295

1

W orth much more

POMEROY, 0
992 2174

Of
he, Oh 0
Co mpany
Pur c hase
and
be ng a 20 acre lot bo un ded by
proper y
nes as to lows On
the nOrth by ands of Dav d
Row and and J J Chu e on he
East by the East ne of Sec t on
No 24 on the south by ands of
W J Heney and on the west
by lands of W
J
He ney
Reference Deed Vo
43 Page
62
Deed Reco ds
Me gs
County Oh o
PARCEL No 2 A so the
fo ow ng rea es1ate s uated n
01 ve Townsh p
Coun y of
Me gs and Sta e of Oh o and n
sec t on No 2J Beg nn ng 40 12
ods Eas1 of the no thwest
corner of Sec1 on No 23 thence
Eas 59 rods and 4
nks
hence south 39 2 rods
hence
wes 59 rods and 4 2
nks
then ce north 39
rods o the
place of beg nn ng conta n ng
14 55 acres more or less Ex
cep ng
howeverfrom
he
above ract of and a certain
port on
hereof
bounded as
fo ows
Beg nn ng 40
ods
eas of the nor hwest co ner of
above sect on thence eas 59
rod s and 4
nks to county
road
then ce sourh 15 feet
thence wes 59 rods and 4 12
I nks hence north 6 fee to he
p a c e ot beg inn ng conta n ng
36 100 acres mo e o -ess The
amount of land c onveyed n
above tract be no 14 19 ac es
more or
ess
and above
descr bed tracts be ng the same
prem ses conveyed by Frank
Founds and w fe to former
grantors by wa ranty deed of
da e of Ap I 23
936 and
ecorded May 6 1936 n Vol
U2 Page 54 Deed Reco ds of
Me gs County Oh o Reference
Deed Volume 143 Page 62
Me gs Coun y Deed Reco ds
0
and gas nteres s
as
follows
PARCEL No 3
The un
d v ded one half nte es n the
o and gas ogether w th the
m n ng r ghts a tached hereto
n and under he follow ng rea
estate descr bed as Pa ce No
3 n he Townsh p of 0 ve n
the County of Me gs and State of
Ohio The Sou heast qua ter of
he nor heas quarter of Sec t on
No
7 Town 4 and Range No
of the Oh o Company s
Pur chase
con1a n ng 42
acres more o ess Reference
Deed Vo ume 136 Page 522
Deed Re co ds Me gs Coun y

•

1971 FORD V8 TORINO 4 DR SEDAN •

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.
500 E MAIN St

•

4 Or Sedan Shows t s tender care 35 V 8 eng ne power
steer ng power brakes auto tran s a r cond ton ng

OR GMC TRUCK, lfS:

FARM TRACTORS

'2482.

• Plus fre1ght and accessortes

runs good

..

NOW '69.95

Several Refngerators
Ill Cti)Ufty

PS

PB arcond

9 pa ss

r.

$15 ooand up

Now$4 99 Sq Yd
Nice for bedrooms
k1tchens etc

Fac1ory a

•

PS

Grandstand 12 00 noon
Sunday Sept 1
- Circus Circus Tent 1 00
- Circus Circus Tent 11 00
pm and5 30pm
am lOOpm and530pm
- Harness racmg Oh10 State
- Appaloose and quarter
Trot Grandstand 2 00 p m horse races Grandstand 12 00
- Seals and Crofts Grand noon
You II L1ke Our QuaiJty Way
stand 4 30 pm and 8 30 pm
- Mac DaVIS Grarxlstand
of Domg Busmess
Tuesday Aug 27
4 30pm and8 30pm
992 5342
GMC FINANCING
POMEROY.
- Paul Dll&lt;on Show Grand
- AU.Qhlo State Fa1r Youth
Open Evenmgs Unt1l6 oo-Ttl Sp m Sat
stand 9 00 am
Symphony
Grandstand
- Bob Braun s 51).50 Club
6 30 p m
Grandstand
7 Up
In
- MISS Ohio State Fa1r pag
ternahonal Balloon Race eant Grandstand 7 3Q p m
Grandstand 12 00 noon
Monday Sept 2
- Circus Circus Tent I 00
Super Joe motorcycle
pm and 5 30pm
Jump Grandstand I 00 p m
- Harness racmg Buckeye
- Circus Crrcus Tent I 00
State Pace Grandstand 2 00 pm and 5 30pm
p.m
- A Day of Solid Gold lea
- Charlie Rich and OllVla turmg the Four Seasons Shir
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Here Newton John Grandstand elles Gary (US ) Bonds Bo
IS a hst of the free en 4 30 p m and 8 30 p m
Duldley and Chubby Checker
tertamment at the Ohio State
- All-Ohio State Fa1r Dw&lt;&gt;- Grandstand 3 00 p m
Fair Aug 23 through Sept 2 land Band
Grandstand
Frlday Aug 23
700pm
JUST ARRIVED
- C1rcus Circus Tent 1 00
Wednesday Aug 28
F1rst Derby
AL PURCHASE
pm
and
5
30pm
The f rst Kentucky Dm by
- Paul Dll&lt;on Show Grand
LON 2 pc LIVING
- Amateur Boxmg Tourna stand 9 00 am
was run on a Monday May
(;;ii5oM suITES c ho ce of
d go d or: p a d
ment East Grandstand All
- Bob Braun s :;o.so Club 17 1875 and attcacled 10 000
5175 oo
eople to the 100 acres of land
Ohio State Frur Youth Chmr Grandstand 12 00 noon
:r~~~~';J~ofE Rred
BONANZA
by Henry and John
eased
Grandstand 7 00 p m
l LVET pador
- Circus Circus Tent 1 00 Churchill That area and
- The Roy Clark Show pm arxl5 30pm
track has smce been named
ULON
oxb ood
Grandstand
8 30 p.m
V N YL
- Harness racing D~rector Churchill Downs
$49 95
Saturday Aug 24
of Agriculture Pace Grand
Garden
tractor pull East stand 2 00 p m
EAVV &amp; BEAUT FUL
For sale
SPAN SH co ffe e &amp;
Grandstand 9 00 a.m
- Liza Mmnelli Grand BOAT tra ler- and moor for
tab e se ts n DARK
- Circus Circus Tent 11 00 stand 430pm and830pm
sa e
97
6 ft
Tr h u I
K I n Sh
BoW
der
973
55
H
P
Ch ys
a m I 00 p.m and 5 30 p m
S89 95 the ser
- AU-Ohio State Fa1r Youth ler must se Ask:lng S1 850
- Circus C1rcus Tent 11 00 Cholr Grandstand 7 00 p m
many extras Phone 992 2392 Oh o
PARCEL No 4
The un
8 23 3tp
am IOOpm and530pm
Thursday Aug 29
d v ded one half nterest n 1he
- Johnny Gash Grarxlstand
o and gas ogether w ll the
- Paul Dixon Show Grand
m n ng r ghts a ached hereto
IN THE COURT OF
4 30pm and 8 30pm
stand 9 00 am
n and under the fo low ng r ea
COMMON
PLEAS
- Amateur Boxmg Cham
esta e descr bed as Par cel No 4
- Bob Braun s 50-50 Club
MEIGS COUNTY OH10
s tuated n lhe Township of
PROBATE DIVISION
piOnships East Grandstand Grandstand 12 00 noon
0 ve n the County of Me gs
7 00 pm
and S ate of Oh o The north ha f
- Circus Circus Tent I 00 GROVER WHITE Jr
Admin strator de bon s non of of the nor heast qua fer of
Sunday Aug 25
pm and 5 30pm
Estate of Pear V Tanthorey Sect on No 17 Town 4 Range 1
- Pony pull East Grand
of the Oh o Companys Pur
- Harness racmg Gover deceased
c
hase c onta n ng 84 12 acres
Pia nt ff
stand 9 00 am
nor s Cup Trot Grandstand
more o les s There s exce pted
- Circus Circus Tent 11 00 200pm
however from Par ce No 4 the
THELMA EDDY eta
fol owing trac of land conveyed
Defendants
am and 5 30pm
- The Beach Boys Grand
No 19 ~12 by Jl:lmes R Lowther to H'u da
- Horse pull EBB! Grand stand 430pm and830pm
L Matheny by deed dated Jan
23 1933 and r eco rded n Vol
NOTICE FOR SERVICE
stand Tent I 00 p m
- Avco Hour of Stars
139 a Page 71 thereof and
BY PUBLICATION
- Red Skelton and the Mlke Grandstand 7 00 p m
descr bed as fo ows Beg nn ng
I
To The unknown he r s and a a stone 12 rods north of the
Curb Congregation Grand
Frld&amp;y Aug 30
dev sees of Pea V Tanthorey southwest corner of the north
stand 4 30 pm and 8 30 pm
half of the northeast quarter of
- Paul Dimn Show Grand deceased
7
hence
To The unknown hers and se d Sec tion No
- All-Ohio State Fair Boys stand 9 00 am
devisees of James Robert north 563• degrees east ~7 ods
Band Grandstand 7 00 p m
Ohio State Fa1r tractor Lowther dece11sed and
and 9 I nks to a stone
hen ce
Monday Aug 26
To
da Lowther
whose north 77 2 degrees east 26 r-ods
puU East Grandstand 10 00
hence no th 64
address s unknown and cannot to a stone
- Paul Dixon Show Grand am
w th re~son.!lble diligence be degrees eut 7 ads and 5 1 nks
to a stone then ce north 87 ,
stand 9 00 am
- Bob Braun s :;o.so Club a see ta ned
You
are
hereby
nollf
ed thM degrees east 17 rod a and 6 nks
- Bob Braun s 50-00 Club Grandstand 12 00 noon
o a ttone thence no th 62 :1
you hllve been named defen
east 37 rods and S nks
- Circus C~rcus Tent 1 00 dants n e eoa act on ent ted degrees
o a stone on the south s de of
Grove
Wh te
Jr
Ad
p.m and 5 30 pm
hence north 35
min strator de bon s non of he lnd an Run
west 9 rods and 15
- Dan Fleenor Auto Thrill Estate of Pearl V Tanthorey degrees
nks to the no th I ne of Sect on
P a n Iff vs The ma
!ilow Grandstand I 30 p m decei!Jsed
7 thence weM a ong the
Eddy et al
Oefendttnfs Th s No
I ne of Sec t on 11 10 rods
- BIU Cosby and the Stylls a(t on hes been ass oned case north
end 13 Inks to lands now or
No
19
512
n
the
Cour
of
: commg Soon 24x52 Sectional House,
tlcs Grandstand 4 30 p m and Common
P e11s
Probate former y owned by the e1 lite of
: shmgle roof house s1dmg &amp; wmdows
8 30pm
D vis on Me gs County Oh o J W Johnson hence soulh 68
The address of sa d Court s c u r.ods and 19 I nks to the pace of
- Dan Fleenor Auto Thrill Me
:.: wtth b1g savmgs on f1rst f1ve homes
gs Coun y Court House beg nning conta n ng 30 acres
more or less EJC. ce pt a road 30
!ilow
East
Grandstand
6
00
Pomeroy Oh o 4S769
::;. Watch for our format Open House
feet wide from the 10 acre lot
The
object
of
the
Comp
ant
s
pm
to Sell the rel!l estate of the known as the Jacob Ra don lot
"" Showmg 1 ! 1
Saturday Aug 31
decedent to pay th~ debts and o 1he tract of land owned by J
Jackson the road to be
of edm n ster ng her M
- Ohlo m.\'l Fair tractor costs
estate which rea
estate s oca le.d on the best locat on and
grade
pull East Grandstand 10 00 desc bed as fol ows
Furthe more except ng from
PARCEL
No
The
following
am
real estete s tuated
n the Perce No .A the follow ng 1ract
- CircUB Clrcus Tent II 00 Coun ly of Meigs n he $te1te of of 111nd Beg nnlng at the north
600 WEST MAIN ST.
and In 1he Township of east corner of Sect on No 17
a rn 1 00 p m and 5 30 p m OhiO
01 ve
and
bounded
and hence South 34 ods and 4 nks
- 0 Jays Grandstand 4 30 desc bed as fol ows f!lelng the o the fT1 ddle of lnd an Run
Pomeroy Ohto Ph 992 7777
hen ee a ong the m ddle
n~rth one hlllf of the southeast Road
p m arxl 8 30 p m
Of sa d ro!td as to ows North 48

-.

carpet

- We

53995

Karr &amp; VanZandt

and free padding Talk to
Wendell
Grate
consultant

1971 Bu1ck La Sabre Custom 4 Dr

Olds 98 HT Sedan.
• • ••••• .. 1195
Mustang 6 cyl 3 speed.. • •• .. ....... 1595
65 Chev 4 Doors, your cho1ce.. • .... , 1395

Odd Cha1rs

CARPETING
501 NYLON

52595

auto

(Rays Personal Car Factory Warranty)

68 Chev Mal Wagon, V-8 auto , PS
11295
68 Cadillac Sedan DeV1IIe, power, a1r ,
67 Cadillac HT Sedan full power, a1r •• '995
67 Olds Cutlass 4 Door V8, auto............'695
66 Pont1ac Cat 4 Dr V8 auto P S • • 1595

eak ng?
Compare ou prices 10 any
others We
g ve you ~
professional roof for less

6 cyl

1974 Mercurv MonleQo MX Brouqham
4 Or Sedan fa ctory a r P S .. ~Bd"v nyl roof

69 Pont1ac Bonn 2 Dr HT vroof a1r

52 TWin and Full Saze Beds
Complete
Starting at $29 95

-

2 0

69 Pont1ac Cat 4 Dr , 2 tone, fact a1r.
'995
69 Olds Cut HT Sedan auto PS
• 11495
69 Ford LTD HT Cpe V roof, a1r
11195
11195
69 Chev Mal 4 Dr V-8 auto p s
69 Ford LTD Wagon V-8 auto p s ........1.995

992 5l67

$3995

•

P B v nyl oo

AT THESE GREAT USED CAR BUYS
1973 VW "Formula Vee".' o 12495
1972
Bu1ck
LeSabre
....... 12695
•
40r P S PB
12295
1972 Ford Tonno 2 DR...
r~r

1974 Amertcan Motor Gremlin

71 Ford P1nto 2 door auto
71 Ford Gal 500 4 dr Vroof, a1r.
71 Volkswagen 411 4 Door, aulo
.. '2195
71 Pont Tempest HT Cpe, V-8, auto, PS12095
71 Pontiac Cat 4 Door v-roof &amp; arr
11795
70 Chi}Sier Newport 4 Dr pow &amp; a1r 11995
70 Olds 98 Hoi Sed , power a1r
11895
70 Ford Gal 500 2 Dr, V8, 3 speed •• 11295

992 9949

e Brake

B&amp;K EXCAVATING

Factory air P S

11795
11995

BOB'S ASHLAND
Pomerov

1974 Chev Impala Custom.

72 Ford Cus 500 4 dr Sed pow aft ... 11495
72 Pontiac Cat HT Cpe 110wer, a1r
, 12895
72 Olds 88 Royale HT Cpe , Vroof a1r
12995

PHONE 992-5476

190 Mu berry

USED CARS

72 Chev Imp Cpe V-8 auto , PS

ALSO SHAMPOO
CARPETS
AND CLEAN
UPHOLSTERY

FOR your rem ode ng roof ng
paint ng repa r ng concrete
and m"son y work
ca 1
Ronne Hubbard 992 35 1 or
992 7302 Work by hour or
1 contract
8 7 26tc

MAY TAG

742 42

INTERIOR AND
EXTERIOR

Good Select1on fo Chests and Dressers
$20 and up
12 N1ght Stands
$19 95 and up

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

BOX 101,

Home
BuJidtng
&amp;
Add1t1ons
Afummum
&amp; Vtnyl Sidtng Floor
Sandmg &amp; Fm1shmg

$AVE

73 Dodge Pol 4 Dr HT vroof, a1r. •• 13495
72 Malibu HT Coupe VRoof A1r Stereo
13695
72 Olds Toronado Cpe , V-roof, P"W a1r
72 Olds 98 HT Cpe PS, auto • •

DEOORATING

Chester Oh1o
985 4102

A USED CAR OR TRUCK
1

HOME

BISSELl B~THERS
OONST. 00.

USED CARS

-------------------------73 BUick Elec HT Sed , power a1r, sharp 4895

La wn So
rer:umseh
Koh e
• W tcOr'IS n
A other
makes

-------NG dozer
oader

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

40112 acrts with cottage
WILDWOOD ESTATES, located on Flatwoods
Road with all utilities available now being
sold by acre or as much land as needed by
owner If Interested contact George S Hob
stetter or calf 985-4186 after 4 00 P M.
GEORGE 5 HOBSTETTER

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeifers
Day 992 7089
Ntght 992 3525
or 992 5211

EXCAVAT
and backhoe work
septic
tanks nstalled dump trucks
and lo boys for hire w II hau
f 11 dirt top so
limestone &amp;
gravel ca
Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
n ght phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc

8 23 3tc

8 23

J•talled

oDELL A nemen
located
tleh nd Rutland Grade School
complete front end serv ce
brakes and tuneups whee s
balanced e ectron cal y Open
8 to 8 da y Ca 1 742 3232 on
Sunday for appt
1 6 tfc

--------------_
__________
_
------------PrOduced frtro a specia
vJnyl compound m1de by 8
F GOOdrich and Mon11nto 5
times trtlcker then metal

or contract Also dozer
work 11 nd septlt t.1nks in

DOZER work land clearing by
the ac e hourly or Contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator w th over
20 years experience Pvl ns
EJC.cavat ng Pomerpy Ohio
Phone 992 2.47a
2 19 tfc

TOZ MART vsedtuNi

WILL do babys tt ng
n m~
home 5 days week irom e to S
Inquire at 26 Railroad St
Middleport Oh o or write eox
43 M ddltport Ohio and give
phone number and I will call
Mrt WI I am F nk

fool

SEW NG MACHINES Repa r
serv ce a 1 makes 992 2284
The Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
Autho zed s nger Sa es and
Serv ce We sharpen Sc sso s
3 29 tfc

Employment Wanted

SOLID
VINYL SIDING

YOU'LL BUY A

smell Eng nt Rtpt i r

357-7255

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

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

WJite r lines and Power
llnM All work done by 1M

1092
:an w M•ln
Pom~roy 0
LOCitt'd .1 Modtrft Supply

985-3545 or

--·--·-------

DiE DAILY SENnNEI

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

INDUSTRIAL OR HOMES

-------

-----------

NotiCe

FURNACE cLEANING

tn

ntTQIING SERVI.CE

Pia
it

COME DRIVE

Wilkinson Small Engine

Lawn Mowers

Real Estate For Sale

----- Help Wanted

COME SEE

See Fred Blaettnar Darrnell Dodrill or Danny Thompson

ods
2
a
on
the North s de of road and the
North
ne of Sec on No 17
thence Eas along the Sect on
1
nks ton the
p ne
ace52ofrods
begand
nn ng7 conta
ng ....• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
5 a ac es
more or less
Reference Deed Vo ume 138 .,.t,,..-----'--'---='-'---.----...,------;:-"-;j&lt;
Page 522 Deed Records Me os
County Oh o
PARCEL NO 5 The coal o
and gas
ogether w Jh the
m n ng r gh s a tached hereto
n and under
he fo ow ng
descr bed rea estate s uated
n the County of Me gs n the
State of Oh o
and
n the
Townsh p of 0 ve bounded and
197• w.-~L MANTA
S2"5
descr bed as fo lows s tuated
2 Door orange fin sh b k vinyl fnter or bucket seats ess
n Sect on No 7 Town No 4
than 5 000 miles &amp; 3 mo old Rad o deluxe bumpers
and Range No
of the Oh o~
Company s Purchase bounded
1970CHEY MONTE CARLO
S2095
and descr bed as fol ows
350
V
a
automat
c
P
steering
&amp;
brakes
dark
blue
fin
sh
Beg nn ng a
the Northeast[
blue nter or blue v nyl roof factory air cond toned like
co ner of Sect on No l7 thence
new w w t res rad o Many other extras
south 34 rods and 41 nks to the
m ddle of nd an Run road
thence a ong m dd e of sa d
1973 CHEVROLET SUBURBAN
S459S
oad as follows
North 48
3 Seat Red and wh te saddle custom v nyl tr m tnt
degrees west 18 rods and 10
glass dua a r cond t on ng h duty shocks 350 V 8 eng ne
nks Nor h 64 h degrees west
turbo hydra mat c power steer ng and brakes radio
and 23 nks North 52 • degrees
chrome
gr lie L78 15 w w t res Cheyenne Super equ p
west 16 rods and 16 I nks North
ment never titled A sharp un f that w II do the tow ob for
70 degrees west 4 rods and 21
yo
Ret a I St eke $6 078 75
nks o as one on the nor h side
of sa d road and the No th ne
of Sect on 7 thence East a ong
Sect on 1 ne 51 rods and 17 nks
o the p ace of beg nn ng
conta n ng S 18 acres more or
OPEN EVES 8 00 PM.
ess Rete ence Deed Vo ume
38 Page 551 Deed Records
POMEROY OHlO
Meigs County Oh o
PARCEL No 6 The coa o 1
and gas toge1her wl1h the
m n ng r gh s attached thereto
n and under the fo low ng Par ce ls
2 3 4 and S s subject
descr bed rea es1ate s tuated n o an o and gas lease granted
he Townsh p of 0 ve n the to W B and B B 0 I and Gas
2 BEDROOM mob le home 10
County of Me gs and State of Company
m nutes from Pome roy or
Oh o n Sect on No 11 Town
You a e requ red to answer
M ddleport Phone 99 2 7649
No 4 Range No 1 of the Oh o the Compla nt w thin 28 days
8 22 6tc
Company s Purchase bounded after the ast publ ca t on of th s
and desc bed as fo ows
notice wh ch w II be pub shed
Beg nn ng at the No thwes once each week for s x sue
TWO 4 room and ba h apfs in
corner of Section No
thence cess ve weeks
M dd eport For nformaf on
The
ast
East 19 rods and 1 nks to a publ cat on w II be made on
cal 992 2550 or 742 6551
s one at the Northeast corner of August 23 1974 and the 28 days
7 3 tfc
a 10 acre trac deeded by J B for answer w II commence on
------·-,--Torren c e o James A Lowthe
TRAILER Browns Tra ler
hat da e
thence south a ong the east ne
Court Pomeroy Pholle 992
n case of your fa lu e to
of sa d trac 30 rods and 12 Unks a~swer oro he w se respond as
3324
to an iron p n n the m ddle of required by he Oh o Rules of _ ______,J.. ____ _1 e uc
nd an Run Road thence along C v I Procedures udgmen by
the m dd e of sad road as default w I be rendered aga nst BUSINE SS room 22JC.80 234 E
fo ows
South 493
degrees you for re et demanded n th s
Ma n St
Pomeroy
Oh o
Wes 7 rods and 1 I nks North Com pia ng
Phone 992 5786 or 992 3975
83 degrees west 11 rods and 7
6 12 tfc
nks thence north 4a degrees
Jan et E M ar s
west 2 rods and 4 nks to the
FURN SHED
apartment
Deputy C e k
west line of Sect on 1 thence
adu ts on y n M dd eport
Cou tof Co mmon Pea s
north 34 rods and 4 I nks to the
Phone 992 3874
Pro ba e Dlv son
p ace of beg nn ng c onta n ng
5 12 1fc
Me gs County Oh o
4 21 acres
more or
ess
4 ROOM furn Shed apl!lrtmen1
Reference Deed Vo ume 1J8
Page 551 Deed Reco ds Me g s
c ose o..: Powel s Super Va u
Phone Y92 36Sa
County Oh o
PARCEL No 7
The un
a 7 tf c
d v ded one ha f n eres n th e
o and gas together w h the
3 AND 4 ROOM furni shed and
unfurn shed
apartmenfS
m nlng right s attached thereto
Phone 992 5434
n and under the tol ow ng
descr bed rea es ate s tuated n
4 12 tf c
the Townsh p of 01 ve n the
PR VAlE meet ng room for
County of Me gs and Sa e of
any organ zat on phone 992
Oh o in Section No 11 Town .4
3975
and Range No
1 of the Oh lo
Company s Purchase
and
,_ 3 11 tfc
bounded and descr bed as
fo ows A lot of land bounded
BEDROOM
avart
Great Pyrenees Pups
on the west by Sec t on No 7 on
ment a r cond oned fur
the North by lards former y
n shed
R easo nabl e rent
Reasonably Pnced
All
owned by Thoma s Parker on
Located
2 m es from
the East by lands former y
Wh1te
and
Bla1reau
Pome oy Phone l04 773 5 18
owned by Jos ah Cowdery and
Whelped July 11
8 u tc
D F F e ds and on the South
HOUSE OF SEVEN
by lands formerly owned by
(OUNTRY Mob e Home Pa7k
Jos ah Cowdery conta n ng 10
Rt 33 ten m les north of
GOEBELSFARM
acres more o ess
Pom eroy
La ge o s w fh
There
s e)(cepted from
cone ete pe1 o! s dewe ks
Parcel No 7 the follow ng
runners
and
off
S1ree1
descr bed real estate Beg n
park ng
A so
spa ces for
n no at the northwest corner of
sma 1 1ra lers Phone 992 7479
sa d Se~tlbn No 11 thence east
7 21 tfc
19 rods and 11 nks to a stone at
fhe northeast corner of a 10 llcre
tract deeded by J B Tor ence 3 ROOM foro shed apt for ent
Phone 992 3333
Md w fe to James R Lowther
a 23 3 c
thence south along he eas I ne
of s11 d trac 30 rods and 12 I nk s
2 bedroom home
o an Iron pin n the m dd e of HOU SE
elec tr c hear
h bathS cherry
lnd en ~un Road thence a ong
panel ng adu ts on y Facu
the m ddle of sa d
o"d as
Oh o rver must see to ap
tol ows
south 49J..• degrees
prec ate Phone 1 1304 882
west 7 rods and 1 nks North
323S Hertford w Va com
Bl degrees west
rods and 17
p c1c y carpeted
t nks thence north 48 degrees
8 23 tfc
west 2 rods and 14 inks o the
west I ne of sad Sect on No 11
thence north 34 rods and 14 I nks N CE 3 bedroom apt end bath
al
e ectr c In Pomeroy
to the p ace of beg nn ng
Tabletop range wa I oven
conta nlnQ 4 2 ecre:s more or
n ces t ap t around
Phone
e!.s Reference Deed VolUme
Gl!lll PO S
.... 6 1699
or
\38 Page S22 Deed Records
even ngs 446 9SJ9
Mkld~ ........
Meig s Counly Oh o
The nterest of the gran lee n - - - - - . - - - - __ 8 23 ttc :/ol----~

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

POMEROY MOTOR CO
For Rent

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

--·----------

·------------

__ _

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

For Rent

-

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

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

--------------GRE 'f
COUNTRY

S'IIRIO
92.1

WMPO.fM
-..,•.,... .

•

'

�10- Tile Daily SentUiel Mlddleport Pomeroy 0 Fnday Aug 23 1914

Real Estate For S.ile

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
In Memory
LOVING memorv of our

IN

fattur

lost

NotiCe

and

tchoo tpec al al
$2oft bow cuts
S4 50 Opera ors - J&amp;anett'
Radford
Jack e N bert
Ruth s Beilluly Shop Maton
W Va phone 713 5686
8 13 tc

BA CK.

grandfa her

C lfford Jeonk nson who paned

away one year ago August 24
1973

He wore a crown of pal ence As

he struggled on and on
And the hands that rest fo ever
are the hands that were so
st ong
n tears we uw h m s nk no
We watched h m fade away
Our htarts Were all 50 b oken
He fought so hard to stay

THERE WI be i!1 you!"! ray
7 30p m Fr day Aug 23rd at
1t1e o d Pomeroy H gh School
now Senior C t zens. bu d ng
at Pomeroy Oh o Fea tured
s nger$ w
be Homeward
Bound from Hunt ng on w
va and Gospe Tones
Speake w
be fr om Teen
Chal enge C eveland Oh o
Everyone we come
8 8 6 c

But when we sew h m s eep ng
Peace ful y free from pa n
We could not w ish h m back
To suffer that aga n
We often s t and h nk of h m
And speak of how he died
To th nk he could not s.av good

CANNING peaches now n
season Two truck oads each
week Pr ce starting a S6 98
per bushe P ease br ng you
own c; onta ners Bobs Market
near Pomeroy Mason Br dge
Ma son
w va
Home of
qua ty fru t 11nd vege ab es
Open seven day s I 10 p m
8 12 tfc

bye

Before he closed h s eyes
For a of us he d d his best
Max ne and Robert Russe I
Bette and Ned Gran
8 23 c

-----·---Wanted To Buy

IN MEMORY of Mary Ebl n
who departed th s I fe wo
yeBrs ago today

Down a road ha s. ca lm and
pea ce fu
Gu ded by Gods ov ng hand
She has gone upon a lou ney
Toad stant br ghter and
She w shed no one a
est
ferewe or even sa d goodbye
Shewn gone before we knew
And only God knows why
Sa d ~
m ssed
by
he
Fal'fl y
8 23 1 c
IN LOVING memory of Mary
Eb n who passed away two
years ago today

o

perm~nents

JU N ~

Au os comp e e and
de vered to our y~rd We p ck
up auto bod es and buy a 1
k nds of sc ap me a s and
ron R der s Salvage State
Rt 124 R:t 4 Pomeroy Oh o
P hone 992 5468
7 J 26tp

CASH pad fo a makes and
modes of mob e homes
Phone a ea code 614 423 953
4 3 fc
OLD FURN lURE oak abies
c ocks ce bo)(es brass beds
d shes desk s or com ple e
households Wr te M
D
M I e R t 4 Po m e oy Oh o
cell 992 7760
5 3 fc

F&lt;EWARO offered fo a tma
red F est m• e dog wear n9 a
c ol ar
Ch ldren t pet
an
swers o hl' name of Red
ca 247 3691
&amp; 2? 3tc

""Mobile Homes For Sale
1972 3 BEDROOM W ndso
Mob le Home on 1 acre of
around
For
more
n
form at on ca I 992 ''38
7 30 tfc

-- ---

N ew green
ee l ner
Phone 992 251
POTATOE S

Ph one

MIDDLEPORT

• so

B 4 fc

843 1495
8 14 11 c

ALL S Chalmers round ba er
Phone Paul Karr Ches e
BEATEN down car pet pathS go
Oh o 985 3538
when 81ue Lustre a r vE!S
8 22 3 c
Rent e ect c sh•mpooer S1
Baker Furn ture company
d shwashe
8 23 3tp KENMORE
Phone 992 3388
8 22 3 c
SPINET Console
p ano
Wanted Rt"spons ble p,e~rty o REGULAT ON poo table cues
purchue sp net p ano on ow
ra ck and ba s Phone 949
mon hly payments Can be
2224 good cond 1 on
seen loca IY
Wr te Sa es
a 22 3 P
Manager
P
0
Bo)l 276
Shelb~v I e lnd ana 46176
Mode n
ste eo
8 23 :lip WALNUT
rad o am fm 8 tra c k ape
c omb nat on ~speaker sound
9.53 FERGUSON 20
w th
sys tem
Ba an ce $ 0 76 or
mowef" new eng ne In goofj
budget erms Ca
992 3965
cord tlon and pri ced at S 050
8 u tfc
Phone 985 3594
8 23 3tp
1972 CL 00 HONDA eKce lent
1953
cond lion See at
1 Pea St
30-;;'tres
M ddleport o ca
992 52 3
new pa nt w th mower new
8 22 3 ,
notor s 500 Phone 985 3594 ___ --·-·--· - ·-~
P

FE'RGusoN

____ .!_ 2j 3tp . - - - - - - - - - -

and
Cobbler
John Pape 949
8 23 6tc

SPEC IAL the Cyc e Shop 731
Eastern Ave
Gal po s
Bu taco 2SO A p na
$975
Bultaco 350 Alp na S 165
a 13 ate

J&amp;B AUTO
BODY

STER EO RADIO
am fm
8
t ack tape comb nat on
4
sputr:er
sound
system
Balance s 06 1a or easy
te ms C~ll 991 3965
a 14 fc

For Sale

KE NNEBEC
potatoes Ca
3015

Business Services

For Sale

-···--------- ---

MOWERS

New

Add t on l fiQOr plan abou t 3
yrs old level lot J B R:
(la rge doub le close ts) n ce
kitchen modern bath utll ty
R carpe ted some paneling
s torage room $19 500 00
CLOSE IN - 27 acres large
barn
and
s lo
other
bu ld ngs I 2 story frame
hom e 3 B R bath N gas
F A heat d n ng room TV
R some paneling &amp; t e
Ask ng SJl SOO 00
POMEROY - I story frame
3 8 R bath full basement
ga s heat large lot Ask ng
SlO 500 00 Make an offer

POMEROY - Ranch Type
- 2 B R balh large L R
w th f replace

k l chen has
ot s o f cab nets range &amp;
oven
carpe t ed
garage
porch ftJ I basement w th
ut I t y
R
Sma ll
ot
SIS 000 00

WANT TO SELL' - WE
HAVE THE BUYERS YOU
HAVE THE PROPERTY
LETS GET TOGETHER
CALL AT ONCE
992 2259 or 992 2568

Push type rotary mower
w th 20 cut 3 H P Br ggs

eng ne 14 ga steel deck s de

Moved to Rutland J,4 mile
Inside c ty limit on right
cor ner Blrck St and Rt ll~
Free Etfimates
Now Open tor Bur.loess

742-5293

REDECORATING?
Don 1 forget the roof of your
home Have a beautiful new
roof nstalled by All Weather

Roofing Co

All that IS needed for a free
estimate s a phone call
Please Phone

Al.L-WEAniER
337 N 2, Middleport
9922550

Known &amp;
R elwble Servwe

d scharge fu I baffle 7 poly

wheels and plated Tee
Today brings sad memor es
handle
Of a Mom we a d o rest
GOOD se mo corne w th case
She w II never be forgotten
Phone 985 3353 Only used 2
By the ones who oved her bes
-------;years
$40
Though her sm le
s gone MALE Beagle 6 months to 1
8 23 Jtp
year
old
W
R
Manley
R
R
forever
POMEROY LANOMARK
BoK
01
Reedsv
1
e
Ohio
And her sweet face we cannot
1973 HONDA CB 350
ke new
Phone 667 3226
EW LISTING Br ck
ouch
'1'. _Jack W Carsey Mgr
with a I extras S750 See Gary
8 23 3 p
Veneer 3 bedroom home w th
We sha
neve
lose those
~
Phone 992 2181
Hyse I or Ford Ga age n
memor es
M dd eport Or phone 992 5092 L-.,--------- --' fu I basement 2 baths Modern
WE NEED 200 tons of shee
Of a Mom we loved so much
after 5 p m
k tchen w th bu It n cook and
cast new or o d alum num
Her
Mothers
ove
was
8 23 2lc
bake
un ts Garage and 1 acre
Keep
cans
separate
The
someth ng
Rosenberg Co Athens Oh o
5 ACRES n country on black op n Port eroy SJO 900 00
That no one cou d exp a n
B 5 tfc ALMOST new Sears 10 speed
road 5 m les eas of Rae ne BUNGALOW
Cozy
2
If was made of deep devol on
b eye e w th carr er rack for
And of sacrlf ce and pa n
dea plar:e for country home bedroom
bath
hardwood
car and ch~ n ock 2 Genera
Phone 843 2712
CASH
FOR
JUNK
CARS
It was endless and unse f sh
sh ngle roof
ful
snow tread t res mounted
8 23 6tc floors
complete Frye s Tr-u ck e~nd
And enduring come what may
____
___
basement
and
new
gas
fur
S20
Phone
9"9
5924
or
949
Auto Parts Rut lind Oh o 24
For noth ng cou d destroy t
2261
206 ACRE farm 33 acres of corn nace A I th s for $8 000 00
HOUR WRECKER SER
Or teke that love away
8 21 3tc
and farm equ pmen
Contact LARGE NEW HOME 5
v 1c E Phone 742 6094
so to those that have the r
Mother
_.
1 26 26tc
James Connor
1855 S lver bedroom a I e ectr c b ev~l
CANNING tomatoes
br ng
Treat her with lov ng care
R dge Rd or phone 992 2720 home 1 bath
Ga rage an d
8 21 6tc
2
s
conta ner Ge a d ne C eland
For rou do not know her va ue S5 for Junk automobiles We w
Rae ne Oh o
- - - - -- --large ot Balcony overlooking
Untl you see her vacant cha r
p ck up
R vers de Auto
a 16 fc H 0 USE for sa e ocated n woods Large fam y room n
Sadly m ssed by husband
Wreck ng Phone (304 773
5890
Syracuse 3 bedroom
floor full basement
Steve chi dren Ed th Artie
Madel ne and grandch ldren
plan s 7 000 Phone 992 3860 LARGE FINE HOME
2
7 5 tfc
TREE r pened peaches wh te
8 11 3tc
B 23 ltp ---~
and yellow at Mason peach - - -------..-- ___
Jam
ly
house
in
a
qu
et
ne
gh
orchard
Mason
West
borhood 2 k tchens 2 baths
V rg nia
bu d ng
50x60
and
4 bedrooms Fu I basement
a 13 ttc BUSINESS
cement dr ve R t 124 near
and large garage Reduced to
N CE
6
room
house
at
Ru and Phone 742 5052
t WOULD like to thank the staff reasonable rent We are n MELONS sweet co n green
8 2 ttc $18 000 00
of veterans Memor a Hosp tal terested n someone who w II
peppers cucumbers for sale
CATTLE FARM - 157 acres
for the r tender care Dr le le help sell monuments on our
Gera d ne Cleland
Rae ne
NEW
2
bedroom
al
electr
c
and
4 bedroom farm house w th
Oh o
and
Dr
P ckens
the f ne memoria lot Th s Is a
home
c~rpet
ng
tul
bath
80 acres of tractor land
gooc:l
opportun
ty
for
the
right
Emergency squad American
8 1 uc
basement
carpo t
c ty T mber 2 farm ponds and
Logan Monument
Legion Post Rev Card blood person
Wi!fer
ocated on Rt
143 large barn
Company
Inc
Leo
L
donors Ew ng Funeral Home
and al those who helped In any Vaughan Phone 992 2588
Phone 742 6621
8 2 6tc MIDDLEPORT acre
8 23 tfc
way dur ng the llness and
----surrm,mds
a
large
4
bedroom
death of my be oved nephew
LOTS for sale ra e or house home w th front and back
George Batey Thanks for he APPLICAT ON$ are be ng
All ut it es Phone 742 36 5 porches Pus ncome property
beaut fu flowers
also H s
accepted at he off ce of the
Pomeroy
Mill"
aunt Mrs Cel a Hlte
~ut and Oh o Pr ce S2 500 Good ne ghbo hood
Only
c erk for water m a ntenance
man n Rae ne Reply boJC. 33
a 23 ltc
7 6 ftc $17 500 00
- -~ ·-::------- -8
Otc
COUNTRY ACRE PLUS - 2
There must be a -7 - - - - -- ACR
E
farm
6
room
house
bedroom
Colon al house w th
5
LAOYt;-;e- n
a
0
reason why so many
arn
other outbu d ngs
week to do partt me baby
$19 500 Phone 741 5845
garage and outbu ld ng Fruit
WE HAVE all your upholstery
people shop here
sltt ng for 9 year old Schoo
a
16 26tp trees Well water All levelland
needs
Bu lap
den m
g rl wh e mother wo ks
THANKS
-- ---for just $8 500 00
cambric foam glue z ppers
Phone 992 2881 after 5 30 p m
tacking strip spr ngs and
HOUSE
630
M
1
St
M
d
NEW
LISTING
N ce
Elite&amp; Guy
8 22 3 c
clips
ch pboard
button
d eport 6 ooms 1 , baths enovated 7 room house w th
tw ne sewing thread legs
CAREER OPPORTUNIT¥ for
full basement
part ally entral a r and heat Double
upholstery books dacron
Men or Women - Nat onw de
carpeted k tchen compete larage
2 ut 1ty bu id ngs
Our
a
1m
1s
to
please
webb ng spring tw ne tacks
nsurance offers eern ngs up
washer and dryer etc Could:&gt; 1 t
welt cord cotton sw vel
our customers
be 3 bedrooms gas furnace r va e cave and 4 70 acres
to S15 000 (th s sa salary not
bases and foam foam foam
flrep ace stor"m doors and ~UY AND
OR INVEST
a draw ) to se I compete n
Pomeroy Recovery 622 E
surance protect Oh
fe
w ndows curta ns and drapes
DO B
ER
Ma n St
Pomeroy
Ohio
health
auto
f re
com
nc uded For Inform at on cal
NEW 974 ZIG ZAG SEWING
Phone 992 7554
E den Walburn 992 2805
mercia! auto f nance and
n p,, 'i•i
MACHINES
In
or g na
7 24 26tc
mutua funds No pr or eJC.
a
13 tfc
factory certon
g Zag
o
;
!·,
,',I • '(; : I
---- --- ---,~,_~·=
per ence s necessary s nee
'
make buttonholes sew on
'
2 FAM LY Yard Sale at 488
2
BEDROOM
house
Rut
i!!nd
we have one of the most
buttons monograms and
South Fourth St M ddleport
Phone 992 5858
complete tra n ng programs
:,I • ,.• I JC ~~ H J I :, f ( ) :,:
make fancy des gns w th lust
Aug 23 and 24 th s Friday
n the Industry If you are
the
tw
st
of
as
ngle
d
a
Left
'. '
and Saturday start ng at 9
nterested in a career op
n lay a way and never been
li\l
am
portun ty n a rew.srd ng
used W I se I for only S47 NEW l bedroom home Hut
bus ness
call
Stanley
B 22 3tc
cash
or te ms ava able
ch nson
sub d v slon
Ferguson at (614) 446 4707
Phone 992 2653
Rut
and
Pr
ce
S19 900 Phone
THR FT Shop Me gs C01.1nty
Collect
Monday th ough
B 20 ttc
742 3615 or see M lo Hut
Humane Soc ety SALE Back
Friday a a m to 4 30 p m An
~
ch nson Rut and
tO school c othes Women s
Equal Oppo tun fy Emp oyer
ELECTROLUX
vacuum
a 16 12tc READY MIX
and g rl s leans
Men s
8 21 3tc
cleaner A 1 cond tlon uses
CONCRETE
c othes work pants ant que
paper
bags
has
cordwlnder
del
vered
r
ght
o you
hat p ns tewelry
and many attachments A so 206 ACRE farm w th 33 acres of
pro ect Fas and easy Free
B 22 2tc
corn and farm equ pm en
shampooer attachment n
est mates Phone 992 3284
Contact James Connor 1855
eluded
&lt;Only
4 ava abe) at
Goegle n Ready M x Co
YARD Sale
SatUrday and
S lver R dge Road or phone
$37 10
cash
or
terms
M ddleport Oh o
Sunday 12 noon unt
dark
992 2720
ava lable Phone 992' 2653
6 30 tfc
Rt 7 below Eastern High
8 22 6tc
8
10
tfc
School
c BRADFORD Aur:t oneer
8 22 2tc
Complete Serv ce
KOSCOT
KOSMET CS
&amp; HOUSE n town SSOO down and
Phone
949 3a21 or 949 3161
S80
per
mon
h
T
a
ler
and
0 J s t5alt Shop Reedsv e
WIGS (The M nk Oil Base
Rae ne Oh o
Ohio
ot 2 bedroom s 0 500 Phone
Cosm etlcs
Phone
Cr tf Bradford
BROWN S 992 5 13
992 3975
a 22 5tc
S 1 tfc
8 14 tfc
8 20 tfc
YARD Sa e on Sa em St End of
corporat on I m ts
Clothes
HOT POINT range Amana 22 n J BEDROOM hOuse ocated on FOR FREE est ma es on
a urn num
rep acement
dishes
baby
furniture
s de by side refr gerator
1662 L ncoln He ghts
For
w ndows s d ng s:to m doors
s lverwa e m sc terns
freezer Norge washer and
appt pease ca
(30&lt;&amp; ) 768
and w ndows Ra I ng Phone
8 22 2tc
dryer set of walnut d ning
4041
Char es lisle Syracuse Oh o
room tables w th cha rs and
8 20 6tp
Carl
Jacob
Sa es
SHOOTING
Match
Corn
pad approximately 4 years
Representet
ve
V
V
Ho low Gun Club turn first
old oood o d bed and chest of
Johnson
and
Son
Inc
right after Miles Cemetery
drawers Phone 991 7066
J LOTS each SOx 00 loc ated n
4 30 tfc
Rutland
Factory choked
Monkey
Run
Pomeroy
8 20 ttc
.,.,....guns only Sunday Aug 2.5
.......
pr ced reoasonab y Phone 992
pm
CREMEANS
CONCRETE
7311
TS 2.5 Suzuk
74
mode
969
VAN
8
cy
nder
Phone
772
del
vered
Monday
through
a 22 3tc
22
5tc
8
Phone 992 3640
5651
Saturday
and
even ngs
.-------8 8 7tr:
PhOne 4.46 1142
8 6 tfc
4 FAMILY yard sale Rt 7 3
6 13 fc
miles south of M ddleport
1970
TON ,. whee drive Ford
Fredd e Moore M n lbl ke
p ckup b g 6 cyl
4 speed
BEAUTIFUL - all ele&lt;trlc AUTOMOBILE nsuran c e been
d shes and cloth ng Sat and
Haro d Brewe Long Bo tom
older home 3 bedrooms
Sunday 9 t II 6
cancelled?
Lost
your
Oh o 985 3554
carpeted 1st story finished
operators
ce nse Ca ll 992
8 22 3tc 1974 PLYMOUTH Satell te
8 18 tc
7-428
basement and 3rd story
Sebr ng 2 dr hardtop p s
6 15 tfc
AUCTION every Thursday 7
p b vinyl top ra
wheels
GROCERY bus ness for sa e
p m Horton St
n Mason
51
ACRES
w
th
ots
of
12 -450 m es excellent con
Bu ld ng fpr sa e or lease
Consignments we come from
d on S3 100 Phone 992 3410
potential house timber TP
Phone 773 5618 'rom 8 JO p m
11 a m to 5 p m or cafl 773
8 21 6tc
Chester water
5 .. 71
to 10 p m fo appo ntment
3 20 1fc
8 21 fc '1969 CHEVY Townsman stat on
5 12 tfc
NEW ALL ELEC HOME- J
wagon $ 95 good cond I on WE ARE p cklng up a p ano n
PORCH sate gong on now thru
bedrooms
carpet
air
SEPTIC
TANKS
AROB C
Phone 992 7620
your area and would I ke
Saturday 10 a m to 5 p m 618
conc:lltioning
washer &amp;
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
5 ~• tf c
some
respons
ble
pl!lrty
to
S 3rd Ave M dd eport
,....._
dryer
CLEANED
REPAIRED
take over payments
Cal~
8 2 3tp
MILLER
SANITAT ON
Credit
Manager
(614)
772
f972 bO DC: E ~o t 37 800 m es
STEWART OH 0 PH 662
HOUSE nsulat ng bowen for
5669 or write 260 East Ma n
NEW ALL ELEC tlOME-3
rad el t res good cond ton
3035
better results cuts fuel b s
Street Chi I ~othe Ohio 45601
Phone 992 7066
bedrooms
10 4 fc
dOwn Free est mates Call ,......
4 1 tfc
8 23 tfc
742 4.428
LARGE BRICK HOME- 1 SEPTIC TANKS c tilned
8 20 12tc 1963 vw Part al y Chopped R DING horse for sale 2 years
Modern Sen lilt on 992 395,. or
acre
of ground 4 bedr-ooms
old
green
broke
Gentle
Call
New y pa nted S400 Fthone
992 73.49
992 .5510
1 DffiN T KNOW THAT MGM
773 5865 after 5 p m
0 23 ttc
Flu Market Specials S5
a
1
tfc
8 20 Stp
Inside S3 outside Spr ng
......
STROUT
REALTY
EXCELSIOR Salt Works E
Avt
Pomeroy
Oh o
Main Sf Pomeroy All k nds
307 Sprtng Avenue
Collectors
dea ers
etc
of 11 f water ptlltts water
Every Sat and Sunday
992 2298
nugget• bock Slit end own Pomeroy
8 1 tc WAlft""£0 work to do in the
Oh
o
R
vt!!r
Salt
Phone
992
home fnqu re at 2'6 Ral road
A
tute
3891
CONTACT
st M dd ~port or write Box o
IPPI ances tnd m Jsc Rt 33
6 5 ffc
Middleport
and
g
ve
phone
t
Lola Pauley Branch
Hartford W Va
wll cal Mrs William F nk
~nagtr
7 26 tfc
_,_

- -------

BOWERS

'71.95

-

REPAIR
All Small Appliances
Next to H1ghwa y
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

_______

Card of Thanks

Shuler's Market

w

s
flvedays

- -------

--

.,

z

''

r,.., ·,() ( '

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

Busmess Semces

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

CARRIERS
WANTED

---------

------

- --

IN

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

SYRACUSE
AND

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

MASON

----

PHONE 992 2156
POMEROY, 0.
Auto SaleS

- ----

------ -----

--------

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

------

v

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

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

-

--------

------

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

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

--------

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

___ ---- -____ _ ------ --------------

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

Call Evemngs

- ---

tiding Will not dent chip
creek
chalk

pHI

rot

rust

or

FREE HOME ESTIMATES
su,..~,o~

VINYL poiiODUCTI

Call Colllct I.Jf2 SJ44
""""' Olllo

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

3t~

For Rent
2

BEDROOM
apartmeht
RuHand Phone 9U 58sa
8 13 tfc

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

FURN ISHEO 1 bedroom mob le
home on Spring Avenult
Phont 992 3,.29

8 20 7tp

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

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Wll I do
Dozer &amp;
Backhoe Work Install
Sept1c Tanks Haul
Dtrt
Gravel
Limestone or Rent One
of
Our
Trucks
Backhoe or Dozers

0

EXPERIENCED
MECHANIC ON DUTY
8 JOAM toSPM
Work

e General Overhaul
e Tune Up-S5 00 up

771 Pearl Sl

• Carburetor Adjustment

Midcl teport Ohto

K&amp;H ROOFING

WARNER'S
REFRIGERATION
SERVICE
992 7204

James

Pomeroy 0

Refrtgerators
Freezers
Home &amp;
Auto Atr Conditioners
and
Commercial
Umts

ca II "2 2836 For
Eshmates of Any

---- ---

$7 95

Price

5q Yd
•
and up
ncludes nstallation

have hundreds of
carpet va ues Your job can
be completed In 1 to 2 weeks
No long waiilng period

SPECIAL!
Candy Stripe Carpet with
rubber back

Reg S6 99 sq yd

~

Pnced to Sell

3 Bedroom Su1tes

New Vmyl Recliners

$49 95

dens

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
RutlAnd 0

12-1 and 2 pc L1vmg Room Su1tes
$35 OOand up
Portable Color TV

$199 95

SPECIAL
3 CLOTH RECLINERS
WERE $119 95

Moytot

Autometlr:a
'1. lpttd oreratlon
c:lf'lolce o
wettr
Auto water
lev.l control Lint
Fmer or Power F n
Ag tttor
Ptrma Pr11•
Maytae
Hela of H.. t
Dryers
Surround
ctothll
With Dtnflt ever
httt ~o hot spots
no overdrylno F lnt
Mt- L nt Fltrtr
Wtlpecfatlrt In

''m"'

llltd Cerpet
Servlct

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Arnold Grate

-Rutland

P B

v nyl oof

1974 Mercury Monterey 4 Dr
F a r PS

4 Or H T

P B

v ny

oat

...... $1695

•

$1495

1970 Chev Monte Carlo 2 Dr ....... .
HT

PS

$1995

1970 Ford Ga laxJe

soo 4 Dr

$895

•

1969 Ford L TD2 Dr H T
1972 Vega GT Hatch Back

S695
••••• $1495

••

•

1972 AM Hornet 2 Dr 6 cyl auto.

• $1695

·-----TRUCKS----~•
1973 Ford F100 302
V 8 auto

P S

8 Sets Coffee and End Tables
S29 95 and up
•
20 30 36 40 tnch Gas &amp; E lectr1c Rnges
Startmg S39 95

5-4 chatr Breakfast Sets

Sta rtmg $35 00
S2S 00 and up

Gold Refrtgerator and Malchtng Gas Range
$449 00
54 ' K1tchen Stnk complete w11h ftxtures $29 95
2 Old Fashioned
Shape

Wooden

Cabtnets

Good

Good Selection of Used Gas and Vtt Heaters
6athroom S1nk
no oo
3 wringer type Washers

•

1971
vw ...
Factory a r fape player

1970 Olds Cutlass "S" 2 DR
P 5

P B

ar

cond

$2695

•

w th topper

1972 Ford l/4 Ton • , • ,
•
Long w de bed V 8 stand
1970 Ford '12 Ton..
Long Steps de Bed

1965 Ford '¥• Ton
Flat bed new t res

•

$1995

•

•

• $1395

...... $495

• ••

Never Again

2195

1

•
•

Wtll Your Dollar Buy So Much Cart
DURING OUR MODEL END

1595

1

••cLEARANCE"

AM F M

USED WAGONS &amp; TRUCKS
1972 Chevy Kmgswood Estate • 13195
9 Pass AM &amp; FM rad

o

PS P B

a

r

v nyl roof

PB

1969
Ohls Vista Crurser ..
PS PB ar

1

1969 Ford "Country Sedan". .
1968 liz Ton P1ckup 6 Cyl.

1

1695
1095

•

Of all 74s and used cars and trucks

PINTOS BASE PRICE
MUSTANG II BASE PRICE
MAVERICK BASE PRICE

1959 Ford 800 Sertes
,$1500
•
•
Good t res runs good w th I ke new 6ft Bush Hog
1949 AI Its Chalmers ,
•
• $450

..

W th front end ~oader

Good Selection Cheaper Cars
See Ray R1ggs or Roger Riebel

RIGGS USED CARS
985 4100
Located on St Rt 7

Chester 0

Free at
the fair

NOTICE

.

LARRY'S MOBILE HOMES SALES, INC.

auarte ot the sou heasl Quarter

'

3134.

1

•2742 ..

1972 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR

..

•

12195

Hardtop low m leage by one ca refu sa t sf ed Ford owner
E; 1dra n ce

1295

1

1972 BUICK V8 SKYLARK 2 DR

ON ANY Of 'RiESE FINE BUYS

Hardtop fu ly equ pped w th power steer ng auto trans
2 377 easy m les By one local owner

Sl!e Ceward Calvert, Sm1hn' Art
or B1tl Nelson

1972 CHEVROLET NOVA 6 CYL

•..!,2195

••••

4 dr Sedan one careful loca l owner Sharp

AND FOR AGREAT BUY ON A

1971 FORD 4 DR CUSTOM 500.

NEW BUICK, PONTIAC, OPEL

11695

Auto t ran s

power stee ng new Ford trade from or g na

owne

1973 FORD GRAN TORINO

• •

12995

4 D Seda n One sat sf ed loca l owner Power steer ng auto
trans

1970 FORD 6 CYL 2 DR SEDAN

•

1295

1

W orth much more

POMEROY, 0
992 2174

Of
he, Oh 0
Co mpany
Pur c hase
and
be ng a 20 acre lot bo un ded by
proper y
nes as to lows On
the nOrth by ands of Dav d
Row and and J J Chu e on he
East by the East ne of Sec t on
No 24 on the south by ands of
W J Heney and on the west
by lands of W
J
He ney
Reference Deed Vo
43 Page
62
Deed Reco ds
Me gs
County Oh o
PARCEL No 2 A so the
fo ow ng rea es1ate s uated n
01 ve Townsh p
Coun y of
Me gs and Sta e of Oh o and n
sec t on No 2J Beg nn ng 40 12
ods Eas1 of the no thwest
corner of Sec1 on No 23 thence
Eas 59 rods and 4
nks
hence south 39 2 rods
hence
wes 59 rods and 4 2
nks
then ce north 39
rods o the
place of beg nn ng conta n ng
14 55 acres more or less Ex
cep ng
howeverfrom
he
above ract of and a certain
port on
hereof
bounded as
fo ows
Beg nn ng 40
ods
eas of the nor hwest co ner of
above sect on thence eas 59
rod s and 4
nks to county
road
then ce sourh 15 feet
thence wes 59 rods and 4 12
I nks hence north 6 fee to he
p a c e ot beg inn ng conta n ng
36 100 acres mo e o -ess The
amount of land c onveyed n
above tract be no 14 19 ac es
more or
ess
and above
descr bed tracts be ng the same
prem ses conveyed by Frank
Founds and w fe to former
grantors by wa ranty deed of
da e of Ap I 23
936 and
ecorded May 6 1936 n Vol
U2 Page 54 Deed Reco ds of
Me gs County Oh o Reference
Deed Volume 143 Page 62
Me gs Coun y Deed Reco ds
0
and gas nteres s
as
follows
PARCEL No 3
The un
d v ded one half nte es n the
o and gas ogether w th the
m n ng r ghts a tached hereto
n and under he follow ng rea
estate descr bed as Pa ce No
3 n he Townsh p of 0 ve n
the County of Me gs and State of
Ohio The Sou heast qua ter of
he nor heas quarter of Sec t on
No
7 Town 4 and Range No
of the Oh o Company s
Pur chase
con1a n ng 42
acres more o ess Reference
Deed Vo ume 136 Page 522
Deed Re co ds Me gs Coun y

•

1971 FORD V8 TORINO 4 DR SEDAN •

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.
500 E MAIN St

•

4 Or Sedan Shows t s tender care 35 V 8 eng ne power
steer ng power brakes auto tran s a r cond ton ng

OR GMC TRUCK, lfS:

FARM TRACTORS

'2482.

• Plus fre1ght and accessortes

runs good

..

NOW '69.95

Several Refngerators
Ill Cti)Ufty

PS

PB arcond

9 pa ss

r.

$15 ooand up

Now$4 99 Sq Yd
Nice for bedrooms
k1tchens etc

Fac1ory a

•

PS

Grandstand 12 00 noon
Sunday Sept 1
- Circus Circus Tent 1 00
- Circus Circus Tent 11 00
pm and5 30pm
am lOOpm and530pm
- Harness racmg Oh10 State
- Appaloose and quarter
Trot Grandstand 2 00 p m horse races Grandstand 12 00
- Seals and Crofts Grand noon
You II L1ke Our QuaiJty Way
stand 4 30 pm and 8 30 pm
- Mac DaVIS Grarxlstand
of Domg Busmess
Tuesday Aug 27
4 30pm and8 30pm
992 5342
GMC FINANCING
POMEROY.
- Paul Dll&lt;on Show Grand
- AU.Qhlo State Fa1r Youth
Open Evenmgs Unt1l6 oo-Ttl Sp m Sat
stand 9 00 am
Symphony
Grandstand
- Bob Braun s 51).50 Club
6 30 p m
Grandstand
7 Up
In
- MISS Ohio State Fa1r pag
ternahonal Balloon Race eant Grandstand 7 3Q p m
Grandstand 12 00 noon
Monday Sept 2
- Circus Circus Tent I 00
Super Joe motorcycle
pm and 5 30pm
Jump Grandstand I 00 p m
- Harness racmg Buckeye
- Circus Crrcus Tent I 00
State Pace Grandstand 2 00 pm and 5 30pm
p.m
- A Day of Solid Gold lea
- Charlie Rich and OllVla turmg the Four Seasons Shir
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Here Newton John Grandstand elles Gary (US ) Bonds Bo
IS a hst of the free en 4 30 p m and 8 30 p m
Duldley and Chubby Checker
tertamment at the Ohio State
- All-Ohio State Fa1r Dw&lt;&gt;- Grandstand 3 00 p m
Fair Aug 23 through Sept 2 land Band
Grandstand
Frlday Aug 23
700pm
JUST ARRIVED
- C1rcus Circus Tent 1 00
Wednesday Aug 28
F1rst Derby
AL PURCHASE
pm
and
5
30pm
The f rst Kentucky Dm by
- Paul Dll&lt;on Show Grand
LON 2 pc LIVING
- Amateur Boxmg Tourna stand 9 00 am
was run on a Monday May
(;;ii5oM suITES c ho ce of
d go d or: p a d
ment East Grandstand All
- Bob Braun s :;o.so Club 17 1875 and attcacled 10 000
5175 oo
eople to the 100 acres of land
Ohio State Frur Youth Chmr Grandstand 12 00 noon
:r~~~~';J~ofE Rred
BONANZA
by Henry and John
eased
Grandstand 7 00 p m
l LVET pador
- Circus Circus Tent 1 00 Churchill That area and
- The Roy Clark Show pm arxl5 30pm
track has smce been named
ULON
oxb ood
Grandstand
8 30 p.m
V N YL
- Harness racing D~rector Churchill Downs
$49 95
Saturday Aug 24
of Agriculture Pace Grand
Garden
tractor pull East stand 2 00 p m
EAVV &amp; BEAUT FUL
For sale
SPAN SH co ffe e &amp;
Grandstand 9 00 a.m
- Liza Mmnelli Grand BOAT tra ler- and moor for
tab e se ts n DARK
- Circus Circus Tent 11 00 stand 430pm and830pm
sa e
97
6 ft
Tr h u I
K I n Sh
BoW
der
973
55
H
P
Ch ys
a m I 00 p.m and 5 30 p m
S89 95 the ser
- AU-Ohio State Fa1r Youth ler must se Ask:lng S1 850
- Circus C1rcus Tent 11 00 Cholr Grandstand 7 00 p m
many extras Phone 992 2392 Oh o
PARCEL No 4
The un
8 23 3tp
am IOOpm and530pm
Thursday Aug 29
d v ded one half nterest n 1he
- Johnny Gash Grarxlstand
o and gas ogether w ll the
- Paul Dixon Show Grand
m n ng r ghts a ached hereto
IN THE COURT OF
4 30pm and 8 30pm
stand 9 00 am
n and under the fo low ng r ea
COMMON
PLEAS
- Amateur Boxmg Cham
esta e descr bed as Par cel No 4
- Bob Braun s 50-50 Club
MEIGS COUNTY OH10
s tuated n lhe Township of
PROBATE DIVISION
piOnships East Grandstand Grandstand 12 00 noon
0 ve n the County of Me gs
7 00 pm
and S ate of Oh o The north ha f
- Circus Circus Tent I 00 GROVER WHITE Jr
Admin strator de bon s non of of the nor heast qua fer of
Sunday Aug 25
pm and 5 30pm
Estate of Pear V Tanthorey Sect on No 17 Town 4 Range 1
- Pony pull East Grand
of the Oh o Companys Pur
- Harness racmg Gover deceased
c
hase c onta n ng 84 12 acres
Pia nt ff
stand 9 00 am
nor s Cup Trot Grandstand
more o les s There s exce pted
- Circus Circus Tent 11 00 200pm
however from Par ce No 4 the
THELMA EDDY eta
fol owing trac of land conveyed
Defendants
am and 5 30pm
- The Beach Boys Grand
No 19 ~12 by Jl:lmes R Lowther to H'u da
- Horse pull EBB! Grand stand 430pm and830pm
L Matheny by deed dated Jan
23 1933 and r eco rded n Vol
NOTICE FOR SERVICE
stand Tent I 00 p m
- Avco Hour of Stars
139 a Page 71 thereof and
BY PUBLICATION
- Red Skelton and the Mlke Grandstand 7 00 p m
descr bed as fo ows Beg nn ng
I
To The unknown he r s and a a stone 12 rods north of the
Curb Congregation Grand
Frld&amp;y Aug 30
dev sees of Pea V Tanthorey southwest corner of the north
stand 4 30 pm and 8 30 pm
half of the northeast quarter of
- Paul Dimn Show Grand deceased
7
hence
To The unknown hers and se d Sec tion No
- All-Ohio State Fair Boys stand 9 00 am
devisees of James Robert north 563• degrees east ~7 ods
Band Grandstand 7 00 p m
Ohio State Fa1r tractor Lowther dece11sed and
and 9 I nks to a stone
hen ce
Monday Aug 26
To
da Lowther
whose north 77 2 degrees east 26 r-ods
puU East Grandstand 10 00
hence no th 64
address s unknown and cannot to a stone
- Paul Dixon Show Grand am
w th re~son.!lble diligence be degrees eut 7 ads and 5 1 nks
to a stone then ce north 87 ,
stand 9 00 am
- Bob Braun s :;o.so Club a see ta ned
You
are
hereby
nollf
ed thM degrees east 17 rod a and 6 nks
- Bob Braun s 50-00 Club Grandstand 12 00 noon
o a ttone thence no th 62 :1
you hllve been named defen
east 37 rods and S nks
- Circus C~rcus Tent 1 00 dants n e eoa act on ent ted degrees
o a stone on the south s de of
Grove
Wh te
Jr
Ad
p.m and 5 30 pm
hence north 35
min strator de bon s non of he lnd an Run
west 9 rods and 15
- Dan Fleenor Auto Thrill Estate of Pearl V Tanthorey degrees
nks to the no th I ne of Sect on
P a n Iff vs The ma
!ilow Grandstand I 30 p m decei!Jsed
7 thence weM a ong the
Eddy et al
Oefendttnfs Th s No
I ne of Sec t on 11 10 rods
- BIU Cosby and the Stylls a(t on hes been ass oned case north
end 13 Inks to lands now or
No
19
512
n
the
Cour
of
: commg Soon 24x52 Sectional House,
tlcs Grandstand 4 30 p m and Common
P e11s
Probate former y owned by the e1 lite of
: shmgle roof house s1dmg &amp; wmdows
8 30pm
D vis on Me gs County Oh o J W Johnson hence soulh 68
The address of sa d Court s c u r.ods and 19 I nks to the pace of
- Dan Fleenor Auto Thrill Me
:.: wtth b1g savmgs on f1rst f1ve homes
gs Coun y Court House beg nning conta n ng 30 acres
more or less EJC. ce pt a road 30
!ilow
East
Grandstand
6
00
Pomeroy Oh o 4S769
::;. Watch for our format Open House
feet wide from the 10 acre lot
The
object
of
the
Comp
ant
s
pm
to Sell the rel!l estate of the known as the Jacob Ra don lot
"" Showmg 1 ! 1
Saturday Aug 31
decedent to pay th~ debts and o 1he tract of land owned by J
Jackson the road to be
of edm n ster ng her M
- Ohlo m.\'l Fair tractor costs
estate which rea
estate s oca le.d on the best locat on and
grade
pull East Grandstand 10 00 desc bed as fol ows
Furthe more except ng from
PARCEL
No
The
following
am
real estete s tuated
n the Perce No .A the follow ng 1ract
- CircUB Clrcus Tent II 00 Coun ly of Meigs n he $te1te of of 111nd Beg nnlng at the north
600 WEST MAIN ST.
and In 1he Township of east corner of Sect on No 17
a rn 1 00 p m and 5 30 p m OhiO
01 ve
and
bounded
and hence South 34 ods and 4 nks
- 0 Jays Grandstand 4 30 desc bed as fol ows f!lelng the o the fT1 ddle of lnd an Run
Pomeroy Ohto Ph 992 7777
hen ee a ong the m ddle
n~rth one hlllf of the southeast Road
p m arxl 8 30 p m
Of sa d ro!td as to ows North 48

-.

carpet

- We

53995

Karr &amp; VanZandt

and free padding Talk to
Wendell
Grate
consultant

1971 Bu1ck La Sabre Custom 4 Dr

Olds 98 HT Sedan.
• • ••••• .. 1195
Mustang 6 cyl 3 speed.. • •• .. ....... 1595
65 Chev 4 Doors, your cho1ce.. • .... , 1395

Odd Cha1rs

CARPETING
501 NYLON

52595

auto

(Rays Personal Car Factory Warranty)

68 Chev Mal Wagon, V-8 auto , PS
11295
68 Cadillac Sedan DeV1IIe, power, a1r ,
67 Cadillac HT Sedan full power, a1r •• '995
67 Olds Cutlass 4 Door V8, auto............'695
66 Pont1ac Cat 4 Dr V8 auto P S • • 1595

eak ng?
Compare ou prices 10 any
others We
g ve you ~
professional roof for less

6 cyl

1974 Mercurv MonleQo MX Brouqham
4 Or Sedan fa ctory a r P S .. ~Bd"v nyl roof

69 Pont1ac Bonn 2 Dr HT vroof a1r

52 TWin and Full Saze Beds
Complete
Starting at $29 95

-

2 0

69 Pont1ac Cat 4 Dr , 2 tone, fact a1r.
'995
69 Olds Cut HT Sedan auto PS
• 11495
69 Ford LTD HT Cpe V roof, a1r
11195
11195
69 Chev Mal 4 Dr V-8 auto p s
69 Ford LTD Wagon V-8 auto p s ........1.995

992 5l67

$3995

•

P B v nyl oo

AT THESE GREAT USED CAR BUYS
1973 VW "Formula Vee".' o 12495
1972
Bu1ck
LeSabre
....... 12695
•
40r P S PB
12295
1972 Ford Tonno 2 DR...
r~r

1974 Amertcan Motor Gremlin

71 Ford P1nto 2 door auto
71 Ford Gal 500 4 dr Vroof, a1r.
71 Volkswagen 411 4 Door, aulo
.. '2195
71 Pont Tempest HT Cpe, V-8, auto, PS12095
71 Pontiac Cat 4 Door v-roof &amp; arr
11795
70 Chi}Sier Newport 4 Dr pow &amp; a1r 11995
70 Olds 98 Hoi Sed , power a1r
11895
70 Ford Gal 500 2 Dr, V8, 3 speed •• 11295

992 9949

e Brake

B&amp;K EXCAVATING

Factory air P S

11795
11995

BOB'S ASHLAND
Pomerov

1974 Chev Impala Custom.

72 Ford Cus 500 4 dr Sed pow aft ... 11495
72 Pontiac Cat HT Cpe 110wer, a1r
, 12895
72 Olds 88 Royale HT Cpe , Vroof a1r
12995

PHONE 992-5476

190 Mu berry

USED CARS

72 Chev Imp Cpe V-8 auto , PS

ALSO SHAMPOO
CARPETS
AND CLEAN
UPHOLSTERY

FOR your rem ode ng roof ng
paint ng repa r ng concrete
and m"son y work
ca 1
Ronne Hubbard 992 35 1 or
992 7302 Work by hour or
1 contract
8 7 26tc

MAY TAG

742 42

INTERIOR AND
EXTERIOR

Good Select1on fo Chests and Dressers
$20 and up
12 N1ght Stands
$19 95 and up

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

BOX 101,

Home
BuJidtng
&amp;
Add1t1ons
Afummum
&amp; Vtnyl Sidtng Floor
Sandmg &amp; Fm1shmg

$AVE

73 Dodge Pol 4 Dr HT vroof, a1r. •• 13495
72 Malibu HT Coupe VRoof A1r Stereo
13695
72 Olds Toronado Cpe , V-roof, P"W a1r
72 Olds 98 HT Cpe PS, auto • •

DEOORATING

Chester Oh1o
985 4102

A USED CAR OR TRUCK
1

HOME

BISSELl B~THERS
OONST. 00.

USED CARS

-------------------------73 BUick Elec HT Sed , power a1r, sharp 4895

La wn So
rer:umseh
Koh e
• W tcOr'IS n
A other
makes

-------NG dozer
oader

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

40112 acrts with cottage
WILDWOOD ESTATES, located on Flatwoods
Road with all utilities available now being
sold by acre or as much land as needed by
owner If Interested contact George S Hob
stetter or calf 985-4186 after 4 00 P M.
GEORGE 5 HOBSTETTER

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeifers
Day 992 7089
Ntght 992 3525
or 992 5211

EXCAVAT
and backhoe work
septic
tanks nstalled dump trucks
and lo boys for hire w II hau
f 11 dirt top so
limestone &amp;
gravel ca
Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
n ght phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc

8 23 3tc

8 23

J•talled

oDELL A nemen
located
tleh nd Rutland Grade School
complete front end serv ce
brakes and tuneups whee s
balanced e ectron cal y Open
8 to 8 da y Ca 1 742 3232 on
Sunday for appt
1 6 tfc

--------------_
__________
_
------------PrOduced frtro a specia
vJnyl compound m1de by 8
F GOOdrich and Mon11nto 5
times trtlcker then metal

or contract Also dozer
work 11 nd septlt t.1nks in

DOZER work land clearing by
the ac e hourly or Contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator w th over
20 years experience Pvl ns
EJC.cavat ng Pomerpy Ohio
Phone 992 2.47a
2 19 tfc

TOZ MART vsedtuNi

WILL do babys tt ng
n m~
home 5 days week irom e to S
Inquire at 26 Railroad St
Middleport Oh o or write eox
43 M ddltport Ohio and give
phone number and I will call
Mrt WI I am F nk

fool

SEW NG MACHINES Repa r
serv ce a 1 makes 992 2284
The Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
Autho zed s nger Sa es and
Serv ce We sharpen Sc sso s
3 29 tfc

Employment Wanted

SOLID
VINYL SIDING

YOU'LL BUY A

smell Eng nt Rtpt i r

357-7255

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

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

WJite r lines and Power
llnM All work done by 1M

1092
:an w M•ln
Pom~roy 0
LOCitt'd .1 Modtrft Supply

985-3545 or

--·--·-------

DiE DAILY SENnNEI

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

INDUSTRIAL OR HOMES

-------

-----------

NotiCe

FURNACE cLEANING

tn

ntTQIING SERVI.CE

Pia
it

COME DRIVE

Wilkinson Small Engine

Lawn Mowers

Real Estate For Sale

----- Help Wanted

COME SEE

See Fred Blaettnar Darrnell Dodrill or Danny Thompson

ods
2
a
on
the North s de of road and the
North
ne of Sec on No 17
thence Eas along the Sect on
1
nks ton the
p ne
ace52ofrods
begand
nn ng7 conta
ng ....• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
5 a ac es
more or less
Reference Deed Vo ume 138 .,.t,,..-----'--'---='-'---.----...,------;:-"-;j&lt;
Page 522 Deed Records Me os
County Oh o
PARCEL NO 5 The coal o
and gas
ogether w Jh the
m n ng r gh s a tached hereto
n and under
he fo ow ng
descr bed rea estate s uated
n the County of Me gs n the
State of Oh o
and
n the
Townsh p of 0 ve bounded and
197• w.-~L MANTA
S2"5
descr bed as fo lows s tuated
2 Door orange fin sh b k vinyl fnter or bucket seats ess
n Sect on No 7 Town No 4
than 5 000 miles &amp; 3 mo old Rad o deluxe bumpers
and Range No
of the Oh o~
Company s Purchase bounded
1970CHEY MONTE CARLO
S2095
and descr bed as fol ows
350
V
a
automat
c
P
steering
&amp;
brakes
dark
blue
fin
sh
Beg nn ng a
the Northeast[
blue nter or blue v nyl roof factory air cond toned like
co ner of Sect on No l7 thence
new w w t res rad o Many other extras
south 34 rods and 41 nks to the
m ddle of nd an Run road
thence a ong m dd e of sa d
1973 CHEVROLET SUBURBAN
S459S
oad as follows
North 48
3 Seat Red and wh te saddle custom v nyl tr m tnt
degrees west 18 rods and 10
glass dua a r cond t on ng h duty shocks 350 V 8 eng ne
nks Nor h 64 h degrees west
turbo hydra mat c power steer ng and brakes radio
and 23 nks North 52 • degrees
chrome
gr lie L78 15 w w t res Cheyenne Super equ p
west 16 rods and 16 I nks North
ment never titled A sharp un f that w II do the tow ob for
70 degrees west 4 rods and 21
yo
Ret a I St eke $6 078 75
nks o as one on the nor h side
of sa d road and the No th ne
of Sect on 7 thence East a ong
Sect on 1 ne 51 rods and 17 nks
o the p ace of beg nn ng
conta n ng S 18 acres more or
OPEN EVES 8 00 PM.
ess Rete ence Deed Vo ume
38 Page 551 Deed Records
POMEROY OHlO
Meigs County Oh o
PARCEL No 6 The coa o 1
and gas toge1her wl1h the
m n ng r gh s attached thereto
n and under the fo low ng Par ce ls
2 3 4 and S s subject
descr bed rea es1ate s tuated n o an o and gas lease granted
he Townsh p of 0 ve n the to W B and B B 0 I and Gas
2 BEDROOM mob le home 10
County of Me gs and State of Company
m nutes from Pome roy or
Oh o n Sect on No 11 Town
You a e requ red to answer
M ddleport Phone 99 2 7649
No 4 Range No 1 of the Oh o the Compla nt w thin 28 days
8 22 6tc
Company s Purchase bounded after the ast publ ca t on of th s
and desc bed as fo ows
notice wh ch w II be pub shed
Beg nn ng at the No thwes once each week for s x sue
TWO 4 room and ba h apfs in
corner of Section No
thence cess ve weeks
M dd eport For nformaf on
The
ast
East 19 rods and 1 nks to a publ cat on w II be made on
cal 992 2550 or 742 6551
s one at the Northeast corner of August 23 1974 and the 28 days
7 3 tfc
a 10 acre trac deeded by J B for answer w II commence on
------·-,--Torren c e o James A Lowthe
TRAILER Browns Tra ler
hat da e
thence south a ong the east ne
Court Pomeroy Pholle 992
n case of your fa lu e to
of sa d trac 30 rods and 12 Unks a~swer oro he w se respond as
3324
to an iron p n n the m ddle of required by he Oh o Rules of _ ______,J.. ____ _1 e uc
nd an Run Road thence along C v I Procedures udgmen by
the m dd e of sad road as default w I be rendered aga nst BUSINE SS room 22JC.80 234 E
fo ows
South 493
degrees you for re et demanded n th s
Ma n St
Pomeroy
Oh o
Wes 7 rods and 1 I nks North Com pia ng
Phone 992 5786 or 992 3975
83 degrees west 11 rods and 7
6 12 tfc
nks thence north 4a degrees
Jan et E M ar s
west 2 rods and 4 nks to the
FURN SHED
apartment
Deputy C e k
west line of Sect on 1 thence
adu ts on y n M dd eport
Cou tof Co mmon Pea s
north 34 rods and 4 I nks to the
Phone 992 3874
Pro ba e Dlv son
p ace of beg nn ng c onta n ng
5 12 1fc
Me gs County Oh o
4 21 acres
more or
ess
4 ROOM furn Shed apl!lrtmen1
Reference Deed Vo ume 1J8
Page 551 Deed Reco ds Me g s
c ose o..: Powel s Super Va u
Phone Y92 36Sa
County Oh o
PARCEL No 7
The un
a 7 tf c
d v ded one ha f n eres n th e
o and gas together w h the
3 AND 4 ROOM furni shed and
unfurn shed
apartmenfS
m nlng right s attached thereto
Phone 992 5434
n and under the tol ow ng
descr bed rea es ate s tuated n
4 12 tf c
the Townsh p of 01 ve n the
PR VAlE meet ng room for
County of Me gs and Sa e of
any organ zat on phone 992
Oh o in Section No 11 Town .4
3975
and Range No
1 of the Oh lo
Company s Purchase
and
,_ 3 11 tfc
bounded and descr bed as
fo ows A lot of land bounded
BEDROOM
avart
Great Pyrenees Pups
on the west by Sec t on No 7 on
ment a r cond oned fur
the North by lards former y
n shed
R easo nabl e rent
Reasonably Pnced
All
owned by Thoma s Parker on
Located
2 m es from
the East by lands former y
Wh1te
and
Bla1reau
Pome oy Phone l04 773 5 18
owned by Jos ah Cowdery and
Whelped July 11
8 u tc
D F F e ds and on the South
HOUSE OF SEVEN
by lands formerly owned by
(OUNTRY Mob e Home Pa7k
Jos ah Cowdery conta n ng 10
Rt 33 ten m les north of
GOEBELSFARM
acres more o ess
Pom eroy
La ge o s w fh
There
s e)(cepted from
cone ete pe1 o! s dewe ks
Parcel No 7 the follow ng
runners
and
off
S1ree1
descr bed real estate Beg n
park ng
A so
spa ces for
n no at the northwest corner of
sma 1 1ra lers Phone 992 7479
sa d Se~tlbn No 11 thence east
7 21 tfc
19 rods and 11 nks to a stone at
fhe northeast corner of a 10 llcre
tract deeded by J B Tor ence 3 ROOM foro shed apt for ent
Phone 992 3333
Md w fe to James R Lowther
a 23 3 c
thence south along he eas I ne
of s11 d trac 30 rods and 12 I nk s
2 bedroom home
o an Iron pin n the m dd e of HOU SE
elec tr c hear
h bathS cherry
lnd en ~un Road thence a ong
panel ng adu ts on y Facu
the m ddle of sa d
o"d as
Oh o rver must see to ap
tol ows
south 49J..• degrees
prec ate Phone 1 1304 882
west 7 rods and 1 nks North
323S Hertford w Va com
Bl degrees west
rods and 17
p c1c y carpeted
t nks thence north 48 degrees
8 23 tfc
west 2 rods and 14 inks o the
west I ne of sad Sect on No 11
thence north 34 rods and 14 I nks N CE 3 bedroom apt end bath
al
e ectr c In Pomeroy
to the p ace of beg nn ng
Tabletop range wa I oven
conta nlnQ 4 2 ecre:s more or
n ces t ap t around
Phone
e!.s Reference Deed VolUme
Gl!lll PO S
.... 6 1699
or
\38 Page S22 Deed Records
even ngs 446 9SJ9
Mkld~ ........
Meig s Counly Oh o
The nterest of the gran lee n - - - - - . - - - - __ 8 23 ttc :/ol----~

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

POMEROY MOTOR CO
For Rent

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

--·----------

·------------

__ _

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

For Rent

-

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

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

--------------GRE 'f
COUNTRY

S'IIRIO
92.1

WMPO.fM
-..,•.,... .

•

'

�•
12-The Daily sentinel, Middleport-P&lt;meroy, 0 ., Friday, Aug . 23, 1974

u.Mn

DR.

Heart problems
'
rheumatic fever
By Lawreace E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR OR. LAMB - My
fathei- died at age 47 from
rheumatic heart disease. He
had rheumatic fever as a child.
When I was 7 I went to the
doctor with him for four
months and took some
medicine. After his death I
didn't go to the doctor any
more. My mother said I had
rhewnatic fever, but I have
never been restricted in ac~
tiv[ty ond have led a healthy
and active life. I've never had
any .symptoms. I'm concerned
because I've heard of people
dying from had hearts because
the heart was damaged by
rheumatic fever in childhood.
· I

have

had

routine

examinations and two chest X
rays where I work. If my heart
was scarred or damaged in any
way by rhewnatic fever would
this show on the Xray? Is there
any test I could take now to
show definitely that i had
rheumatic fever as a child or

not and how much damage it
has done? I'm 20 years old.
Should I have any symptoms
now or what symptoms should
I have had as a child?
DEAR READER - About
the only way to tell if you had
rheumatic fever as a child now
is if it left any heart damage.
Rheumatic fever may not
cause any heart damage. The
heart disease is a com~
plication.
The
sequence
goes
something like this. A strep- '
tococal infectiori ( "sti'ep
throat") may be followed by
rhewnatic fever - or it may
not. If you have rheumatic
fever as a compUcatlon of the
strep throat then you may get
the complication of heart involvement or you may not. If
the heart is involved it may
have residual damage that can

MASON. DRI IN FRI.

progress to cause changes ln
the heart later _- or the heart
may recover completely.
Your father's illness began
as a child, with a streptococcal
infection. Such a strep infection ls contagious . The

rheumatic heart disease he had
afterward is not contagious.
Apparently he was about 40
when you were born, so he

would not likely have had
anything that was contagious
for you.
You can have rheumatic
fever with few, if any, symptoms. The diagnosis sometimes
has to be made upon an
examination of the heart and
certain blood tests_ In other
instances it causes fever, red
hot swollen joints generalized
evidence of an infectious
disease, and, if the heart is
acutely involved, a variety of
heart problems , including
heart failure.
If the heart is involved, even
with an Wtrecognized case of
rheumatic fever, in later life

the valves in the heart may be
damaged. Incidentally a lot
more can be done for theSe

problems today than was
possible even 15 years ago . In
mild cases it takes more than
an X ray to see the problem.

The X ray -may be entirely
normal, but the doctor can

hear a munnur or abnormal
sound from your heart beat.
The electroc~rdiogra'm can
also be helpfuL In cases with
severe heart damage or
seriously affected valves then
the size and shape of the heart
may be changed so -Utat it is
apparent on X ray.
Obviously, if you have no
valve damage or significant
damage to your heart it is
unlikely that you would have
any symptoms. Certainly if you
have no symptoms and have
never had any health problems
you should not limit your activities in any way. Knowing
that your father did not have a
contagiouS disease when you
were child, that you were a
child In the age when
rheumatic fever was ,being
prevented by antibiotics, and
your lack of problems, I too
doubt you ever ·had rheumatic

a

Roar once again
with the original
movie cast...

fever.
send your questions to Dr.
Lamb, In care of 'this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New York,
N.Y. 10019. For a copy of Dr.
Lamb's booklet on losing
weight, send 50 cenla to the
same address and ask for the
"Losing Weight" booklet.

Preminger Production

ALSO

.

Chemist Seyler big in antiques

Sale of champion beef set
COLUMBUS (UP!)
The
In Cta!S·AA, superior ratings
1974 beef Sale of Champions. were awarded Wintersville, Lexthe Roy Clark Show and the - Jngton and Grove City high
Junior Fair Barrow Show and schools. ExcoUent ratings were
St!le highlight acUvlties today received by New Philadelphia,
during the second day of the Claymont and Athens high
Ohio State Fair here.
schools.
Entertainment today includes
Robin Rager, 18,' Amanda.
circus performances at 1 p.m .,
and 5:30p.m., amateur boxing ,.......•,•.•,• ·.· . ····:···:·:···· ····:·: ·-··:- ...... ·:-:....·:·· :-.·:
and the All-Ohio Staie Fair
Youth Choir at 7p.m. The Clark
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
show begins at 8:30 p_m_
Sunday lilrougb Tuesday:
Attendance during ThursFair Sunday aad Monday
day's opening day Of· the fair will! a cbanoe of obowe.._ on
totaled 180,549, compared with Tuesday. HIBb temperatures
last year's first day figure of an from tbe upper 70. 1o lower
estimated 165,759 persons. This I!Gs Ob Sunday warmlog to
year's opening day attendance tbe mid to upper 80s
set an all-time high record Tuesday. Low temperatures
despite a brief thunderstorm l!lOStly lb upper 50s early
late in the afternoon.
Suaday tben upper 50s to
Randy Shane, 12, Fostoria, lower ti4Js through Tuesday.
showed the grand champion in
the JWI1or Division Ste~r Show ~
Thursday, the second year in a
row he won the honor.
Shane, this year' showed a
1,255-pound Chianina Angus
Crossbreed which will be en-.
tered in the Sale of Champions
· today. Last year the youth won
top honors with a 1,08()-pound
COLUMBUS (UPI) _ An inSimmenlal Angus Crossbreed,
which was sold for $10,850.
vestigation has been started by
the state Health Department
Reserve Grand Champion into reports of significantly
steer In the event this year was higher birth defects in the
shown by Bob Clark of Coving- northeastern Ohio cities of

Birth defects

probe opened
in NE Ohio

Ohio, was crowned Misa Ohio
Future Farmers Of America
Queen in a Thursday contest.
Site, along with other beauty
contest winners during the lair,
will compete In the Miss Ohio
State Fair pageant, scheduled
for sept, I.

ByllobHoenlck
It ali just didn 't happen overnight, but
POMEROY - I saw but I didn't on th8 other hand , Seyler Isn't what one
believe it!
would call a liretime coUecwr. He really
I returned, $BW again , and stili didn't got Into It only about 12 years ago.
believe it.
How(!'Ver, In those few short years he has .
And - you wouldn't believe either the _assembled an unbelievable wide-ranged
assemblage of antiques and collectibles collection.
which Richard (Dick) seyler has gathered
· Just name it, lllld he's got it
al his Modem Qtemlcals business location somewhere ln Ute buge, old structure
M Pomeroy's Kerr St.
which was formerly the dye company

Brown g~ts
static from
democrats
COLUMBUS (UPI) -secretary of State Ted Brown Thursday proposed a series of regulations to govern campaign ·
financial reporting and lm- .
mediately drew criticism on
several points from his
Democratic opponent in the
November election.
The regu!Btlons, presented at
a hearing here, described the
mechanical proce&lt;lures for
candidates to file financial
reports under a myriad of
circumstances.

BYApeoC.HW
TUPPERS PLAINS - This village, laid out in 1840 by James Martin, was originally ?Ill~
Martinville. It Is located in the northeast part of Orange twp., on Section Nos. 5 and 6 and tn tl)e
northwest part of Olive Twp. Section Nos. 35 and 36. This area was part of Troy Twp. in Athens
County until 1819.
.
_
The first settlers recmled being in'the area were Truman HecOJ: and his family who moved thetr
household goods through Tuppero Plalns·in 1802, using an ox team consisting of an OJ: sled and two
yoke of oxen. Among the other earliest settlers known were Silas BUzzard, before 1810; Bennett
Oakley and a ''Mr. Doane," 1812; Ashley Gibbs and his son, Sylvester, exact year unknown: Phill!p
Dodderer and his sons, Matthew and Andrew, in 1817, James Sllields in 1816, and Thomas Barrett in
1817.
'
In 1807 a mill moved by a treadwheel was built there. It had one run Of stone burrs for corn only.
Bennett Oakley started a gristmill and sawmill combined "before 1817" on East Four-Mile Creek
near here. Phillip Dodderer and Andrew were farmers. Matthew Dodderer was a farmer, justice of
peace, assessor, and stone mason (many old tombstones are still standing in the area cemeteries
that he carved from local sandstone.) James Shields was a farmer and large landowner. Thomas
Barrett was a storekeeper.
Bethea and Colonel Edward Tupl!"r hsd drawn Ohio Company Purhcase lots for land in
this area. Many old deeds can be tr'aced bsckto their ownership. The first postoffice in Orange Twp.
was located here. An 1883 map of Meigs County llsla the village as Martinville but the postoffice as
·
Tuppers Pisins. By 1883, tbe village had two stores, two shoe shopa, one hotel, three blacksmith shops, one grist
and sawmill combined, an academy, 'one common school, three churches (Presbyterian, Methodist,
and Christian), and one "amateur" printing Office that isaued a paper called the "Comet." The
earliest record found of a church bere .was the Baptist, "early in 1818" which conducted services
until1833 when it was moved to a nearby community in Athens County.
Today there are three churches In the village. The newest is "Our Lody of Loretto" Catholic
Church, and two Protestant, the "St. Paul" Methodist Church, and the "Chrlatian" Church.
The first roads were mere paths, winding hither and yan, which the first settlers cut over the
most direct or easiest-to-make route. Iiut - .for the past 170 years -the main street of Tuppers .
Plains has been what is known today as State Route 7. Until the turn of the centary it too was only a
muddy path in wet we athe!:&lt; or a dusty trail in summer. Thereafter, gravel or stone began to appear
in the worst mudholes so that by 1930 the highway was covered with a stollj! surface. The road was
modernised by 195~with a concrete topping, sUll following the original route through the center Qf
the town.
During the middle 1960s the town begen to spread outward from the highway on both sides. Now
. there are several blacktop streets though none are named "officially." The town's commerci~l
istabli;.hmeni has i!J on ila roster. They are Boggs Equip., owner, Mr. and Mrs. Bert Bog:g_s;
· mcKory Hills Camping, M~igs Trailer Sales, Robert Dixon; Ohio Valley Lumber Co., H. A. Cole;
Antiques, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Barnhart; Ashland Service Station, Jim Batley; Tuppers Plains
Laundriunat and Carwash, W'tlliam Connolly; Tuppers Plains Hardware, Blaine Taylor; Millhone's
Sohio service Station, Larry Millhone; Helen's B &amp; A Beauty Shop, Helen Dorst; Twin Pines Shake
Shop, Georgia Barnett; Kuhl's Bargain Center, -Mr. and Mrs. Bill Kuhl; Young's Store, Kenneth
Young; The Novelty Shop, Agnes Hill; Village Fabrics, Ralpb and Donna Brooks; Lodwick's
Grocery, Richard Lodwick; Vis~!~ No. 2 Service Station, Virgil Lewb; Kim's T.V. Repair, Charles
Kim and G. &amp;G. Auto Sales, Fred Goebel and Ber!Griffin.
Mirna Walker is postmistress, Iva Upton, assistant postmistri!IIS of Tuppers Plains. There is an
active Volunteer Fire Dept
Gordon caldwell, native of Orange township, wa.s until recently Meigs County Auditor, a notary
public, and a resident here.
-~
The Pomeroy National Bank has purchased property here and a branch bank will be located lri
the town_ Plans for a housing development·a re neiirlng completion.
'
Urttilafter World War II, farming was the main ""'l{l!e of inoome. Now moot of the resources of
the village are obtained from factory employment_
·
.
•
.
The village is ideally located on a good highway, centrally distant from Pomeroy (14 miles)
Athens, 26 miles; ParkersbUrg, W. Va., 24 miles, and Marietta, Ohio, 32 miles. The schools are
cellent and tax rates average, coinpared with the area. The approximate popUlation 550.

"The J»"Oposed rules are only
a vehicle for hearings," Brown
said, anticipating amend·
ments . "These have been
composed after many rough
ton, Ohio.
Avon Lake, Painesville and
drafts and cooperation from
Bet'lle Union, Versailles and Ashtabula .
many people. n
Wellington high schools capOfficials said suggestions
sen, Tony Hall, 0-Dayton,
lured superior ratings in Class- have been made to link the
running for Brown's position on
A of the High &amp;hool Marching higher birth defect rate with
Band festival Thursday . Ex- polyvinyl chloride a chemical the Democratic slate, took
cellent ratings In the same used by several m;.,.ufacturing issue with several sections
which Brown claimed would
class were awarded Minster, plants located in the cities.
guarantee against the launNewton and ottawa-Glandor
Or. Peter F. Infante, an epidering of funds to obscure
hJgh 'i,hoois.
demiologist with the depart- original contributors.
ment, said, uAt this time we
Hall complained about a prosimply do not know what fac- vision stating that contors may be associated with tributions made by a candidate
this apparently greater rate of or the campaign committee
birth malformations in these would not apply against the
cities .
candidate's spending limit, but
would be considered an-. ex. pense ,
Major Loopboleo
POINT PLEASANT
"This
could cause major
Cassandra Nicole Redman,
FOUR FINED
Four defendants were fined loopholes;" Hall told Brown.
infant daughter and first child
of Richard and Judith Goheen Thursday night in the court of "A candidate could raise more
Redman, Mason, was dead on Pinneroy Mayor Dale Smith. money than he could legally
delivery Thursday at the Holzer They are Robert Riffle, spend ... and give it to another
Medical Center .
_Pomeroy, open flask, $10 and candidate with no trace of orGraveside rites will be costs, Keith Petrie, Pomeroy, iginal contributors.''
Saturday at 10 a.m. at the running stop sign, $5 and cosla, · Hall also charged Brown
Graham Cemetery. Rev - Robert Moodlspaugh, Mid· with' shirking his enforcement
Clarence McCloud will preside. dleport, squealing tires, '$10 authority by using unclear
The body Is at the Foglesong and costs, and Richard language regarding acFtmeral Honie, Mason, and Connolly. Mason, $5 arid costs, countability of expendiiures
Ulere will be no visitation.
assured clear distance.
·. for campaign advertisements
connected with a fund-raising
The infant is survived, In
·
event.
bddition to her parents, by her
RECEIPI'S IN
"A television ·~t or ·radio
paternal grandmother, Mrs.
Mel~s County Court receipts
spot
or newspaper ad touting
Clara Redman,
Mason; for the month of July totaled ·
maternal.. grandmother, Mrs. $4,413.99 according to Betty the candidate and mentioning
Sheila Goheen, Gallipolis, and Hobstetter, clerk, Receipts the fund-caiser could enable
grandfather, Donald Goheen, were dispursed as follows; candidates to greatly exceed
New Haven, and maternal fines to state, $1,246.35, fees to the spending limit," Hall
great-grandparents, Mr. and sheriff, $161.55, fines and costs testified.
''In sweePing legislation
Mrs. Ralph Jones, Jackson.
to county, general fund, such as the new Ohio campaign
$1,&amp;'!8.79, law library fund, !lancing . Jaw, loopholes are
$777.94, auto license and gas bound to exist," Hall added.
fund, $389.36.
"You have the opportunity to
Korena Kay Hoyt and Mary
plug
up these loopholes by
Jane Jenkinson; two greatmeans of these rules. I urge
grandchildren, James Hoyt,
CORRECTION MADE
you to plug them up, rather ·
Jr., and Sandy Hoyt; a sisterEric Chambers, Middleport, than erect road signs pointing
ln-law, Mary Laubner, was hired as workshop in· Marion; · a niece, Joan House, struclor in the community them out to those who would
circumvent the intent of the
Orlando, Fla.; a nephew, classes Monday night by the ·
Curtis E. Laubner, Naples, Meigs County Board of Mental legislature and the spirit of the
times."
Fla., and several cousins.
Retardation, not the Meigs
Richard Pfeiffer, testifying
Funeral services will be held County Board of Mental Health
at 2 p_m_Sunday at the Ewing and Mental Retardation, as on behalf of House Speaker
A.G. Lancione, D-B~llaire,
Funeral Home with Mr . was reported.
questioned
regulations to make
George Glaze officiating.
the new campaign finance
Burial will be In the Chester
reporting
procedure
Cemetery. Friends may call at
retroactive and to allow a
the funeral home at any time.
TWORQNSMADE
candidate to charge an expense
RACINE - The Racine ER to the primary budget although
squad-made two runs Tuesday, the purchase was intended for
the first at 4 a.m. for Clifford use in tbe general election.
Continued from page 1
Icenhower, Letart, who had a
Proposal Esplallled
what
UMW
secretary- back injury. He was taken to
-- Brown proposed that the new
treasurer Harry Patrick called
Veterans Memorial Hospital. procedures and limitations on
11
Communist literature" were
At 10:30 p.m. Wally Hill, campaign expenditures apply
attacked by miners, but
Racine, was also taken to to all committees In existence
escaped serious injury .
Veterans Memorial Hospital. at the time the bill pas8ed the
Miller, addressing a rally
Ohio legislature, which would
which was forced from a high
affect
any
committee
school football field into the
representing a candidate
school gymnasium by rairi,
elected In the May 7 primary.
said, "I want to tell those who
WEAVERS
RESIGN
Pfeiffer said the period beobject to our way of doing
Thomas Weaver reported tween May 7 and tbe time theae
things that tolerance Is gone .
"Things have changed and today that he and his wife new regulations go Into effect
resigned as superintendent and should be accountable under
the change in the mining Indus-.
try is going to be for the bet- matron at the Meigs County · the prior Oltto elections law.
Children's Home Aug. 6, ef·
He also arglied that allowing
. ter," he said.
fecUve
sept.
L The home Is candidates to list expenses acMiller said the UMW had being closed and seven Of ila ·
crued duHng theJrlmary camtaken the flve-&lt;lay memorial
present
nine
children
being
paign; even though the uae
leave U&gt; ''put the government
moved
to
Gallia
County
would
be fore the general elec·
on notice that coal will be
Chlljlren's
home.
a loophole ·fOI'
tioo,
created
· mined
or It will not be
candidates to circumvent the
spending llmlla.
Brown planned to submit a
final venlon of the propooed
regulations by early next week.

Infant is dead

·upon delivery

· Mrs. Jenkinson died Thursday ·
Mrs.
Meda
Laubner
Jenkinson, If/, 118~ Vine St.,
Middleport, died Thursday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs.
Jenkinson
was
preceded in death by her
parents, ·Andrew and Dora
Radford
Laubner;
her
husband, Grover Jenkiilson, in
1962, and a brother, Curtis
Laubner, in 1969. ·
-Surviving are two sons, Allen
E. Jenkinson and Curtis L.
Jenkinson, Middleport; two
daughters-in-law, Luella G.
Jenkinson and Dorotha · s.
Jenkinson; two grandchildren,

COLOI'\ 0'1" ~ LU&gt;:E"

·MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight, sat., sun;
AUG. 23-24-25
"THE SUGARLAND
EXPRESS"
Goldie Hawn

CPGJ

ALSO
CARTOONS

'

Show Starts 1 p.m.

Just the car you
wanted. Make it
yours with a
low-cost Auto Loan.
Quick. Easy.
Come in today.
And dream on ...

po....,ov pomeroy
rutlood

natlon.:al
bank

the bank or
th• c:;entur¥
"stoblisned

ten

&amp;!01 h&amp;s:

FIMC

•

A hometown friend.
..

.

-

RATHER PROMOTED
MARRIAGE LICENSES
NEW YORK (UPI) - Dan · Steve Aslandes, 45, Phoenix,
Rather,
White
House ·Ariz., ani! Ruth Ann Davis, 31,
correspondent for CBS News, Phoenix, Ariz.
has been named anchorman of
James Robert Priddy, 'll,
"CBS Reports'.' docwnentary and Unda Lucille Priddy, 26,

se;ries.

Mason.

International Uniform
Lesson Series
Sept. 1974 to Aug. 1975

•3.95
MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
Mill St.

Mlddlepo,rt,

o.

BUSTO RUN
Robert Ord, Superintendent
of Southern Local S&lt;:hool
· DIJtrlct, announced today that·
the spedal education bul wU1
make Ita regular · run when
tchoolstarta Tuesday, Aug. 27,
the same as the regular buaea.
. IIQUAD CALLED
The Middleport Eme'l!ency .
Squ.od wat called at 1:21 p.m.
Thursday to the Homer
llradabaw residence at 6 Cole
St. An Infant wu taken to the
Holzer Medical Center.

••

VOL. 9 NO. 30

GALLIPOLIS- Gallia County's Local
Board of Education Saturday, following an
executive session, approved salary adjustmen Ia for ila five elementary principals.
Last January, following consolidation,
the ~oard granted each ·elementary
prlncip!'i a $1,000 increase in pay except
Max Haffelt, principal at Cheshire-Kyger
and Addaville Elementary, Schools.
Haffelt was maklng $14,350.
Thl!' ·old ele!nent~ry principals '
salaries ranged from $11,583.04 to $14,350.
In order to equalize the salary
schedule 'the following proposal was
adopted: Starting salary of $12,693.24 with
no experience 'with increases up to '
$14,204.34 after 10 years.
All elementary principals will earn
over $14,000 a year .
Principals with two buildings, namely,
Haffelt and Paige Sheela of CadmusCenterville, ,will get $450 extra .
AnoUler negotiating session between

Clear iiinlght, -mostly sunny
Saturday. Not quite so warm;
Lows tonight in the upper 50s to
lower 60s. Saturday's high lri
the mid 70s to lower 80s.
'

STOREWIDE SALE

GALLIPOLIS - City commissioners
here · Friday approved an emergency
ordinance providing for the .issuance of
$215,000 in notes to acquire real estate
property for constcuction of off-street
parking facilities .
Under current plants, the city will
authorize the $215,000 in bonds be paid
primarily from surplus revenues of the
city, including revenues derived from
parking both on street and off-street.

-

• Women's Coommate _Sportswear
•Women's Shirts and Blouses
• Women's Pants

•Handbags

The bonds were approved for. a five

year period with a maximum maturity of
Zl years.

Upon approval, the commission
agreed to issue general obligation bonds in
that amount which will bear interest
totaling 6.5pct. per annum. The bonds will
be provided from the three banks In the

the members of the board's negotiating
team and the Gallia County Teachers'
Association was held prior to Saturday's
board meeting, but nothing was released
on progress of negotiations.
The teachers have submitted 16
proposals. Salary increases, paid
hospitalization insurance, severance pay,
si~k leave and supplemental salaries are
among the major demands being
negotiated.
The hoard agreed that .certificated and
non-certificated personnel be paid 26 times
per year ' and that head cooks be
designated and given travel expenses to
bring lunchroom reports and lunch money
each Friday to the central office in
Gallipolis.
Teachers employed were Lorene
Johnston, of Wellston, a graduate-of Mianni
Universlty, as comprehensive sociB.l
studies instcuctor at North Gallia; Nancy
Nickell, Rt. 2, Beaver, a graduate of Ohio

1-

OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 8 PM ·
SHOP SATURDAY 9:30 TO 8 PM
'

ELBERFELDS .IN POMEROY
.

.1

Reaching More
Than 12,000
Families

maintenance man .

Middleport-Pomeroy .

In other matters, temporary approval
was given on the adoption of student hand·
books at the four county high schools_
A Wliform dress code waS also temporarily approved.
·
Cecil Rice of Cadmus was given a
contract to provide food supplies for the
Hannan Trace area. Markin-Blanton was
given a similar contcact last week but will

-

L'

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"

IT.a&gt;ULDN'T HAPPEN TO A NICER GUY - Kenny Wiggins ~as honored
ThUI'Iday following the Glrla' Softball tourney held at Racine. Wiggins for many
yeara hu ~pplled the trophies for the tournaments and sponsored the Hlt.s-NM~ team. To show their ap..-eciaUon, the teams taking part in the tourney
pre11811ted him a portable stereo and a gift of money. The senior divlaloo members
111ao contributed fDward the gifts. Shown with Wiggins are Lori seth, left, and Susie
Gniuor. See Page 10, picture of champkm_
·
(

I ,

''

be tmable to provide the services.
hired but took other jobs.
During the county board meeting,
Bus drivers approved for certification
Kathy Lynn Taylor of Bedford, Ohio, an were .fohn Thomas Pope, Rt. I, Patriot,
Ohio University graduate, was employed and David Carter, Rt. I, Northi!P, subas speech and hearing therapist. She stitutes; and regular drivers, Bart W.
taught in .the Brecksville City &amp;hoot Miller, Rt. I, Patriot; Leonard Newberry,
System last faiL
Rt. I, Patriot; William Marks, Rt. . 1, .
Miss Taylor Ia the sinh ther-apist to be Thurman, and Mrs. Eloise Thompson, Rt. ·
·
'
~
employed this ~ummer. Five others were . I, Northup.

By Jan Countryman
Pictures by Steve Wilson
GALLIPOLIS - When the .
bandsmen and majorettes of
Gallia Academy High &amp;hool ·
take the field this fall, they
may be playing "There'll be
Some Changes Made."
Because, in the last two years Wlder the ambitious
direction of Rodney Tolliver,
there have indeed been some
changes and it looks like
there'll be more to come.
Band members completed
two weeks of intensive camp
training Friday afternoon and
the word around Gallipolis is
that they 're about to field the
best Blue Devil Band ever.
Tolliver came to Gallipolis
shortly after his graduation
from Ohio State University in
June 1973. With.in a few weeks
of his appearance, local
residerits: were commenting on
the new so\Dlds and the new
look of the Devil band. By the
beginning of football season
SOUSAPHONES pass in review during practice sessions of the Gallia Academy High
there was a growing feeling
&amp;hool
Band. The band has new uniforins and 18new instruments.
that there might he something
to this music thing after all and
now, with the community win a "I" in state com. experienced than we were la st line contest at the county falr
solidly behind them, Ute Devils petition," Toiliver said, and he year."
this yea!-, are 123 musicians
are on their way,
Behind
those
eight who will be attired in all new'
thinks he has the power to do it
.. Where are they going•
behind his eight-gal majorette majorettes, who won the Gallia uniforms. It's a band, Tolliver
"Our biggest goal now is to corps. "We are quite a bit more County Junior Fair majorette · (Continued On page ZJ

Saturday big day for
attendance at Ohio fair

GALLIPOLLS - Kail Burleson, Route
2, Bidwell has been appointed to the Board
of Directors of Jackson Production Credit
ASsociation ,f!ectlve June I completing
the term of the late Frank Herrell, Pedro,
who died May 10.
Kail and his wife, Phyllls, reside on
their 20Ntcre dairy farm with their four ·
children, Bill, a freshman at Cedarville
College; Vickle, a junior at Gallla
Academy; Connie, sophomore at Gallla
academy, and David, who attends
Washington Elementary.
The Burlesons; one of Gallla County'a
outstanding dairy families, have been
acUve in many local farm related
.organizations.
··
Kall has served on the Gallia County
Junior Fair Board the past nine years and
its president the last two; he holds a FF A
State Farmers Degree, is a member of the
Gall!• County Farm Bureau, the National
Farmm' Organlutlon (NFO), of ·the
KAIL BURLESON
.
.
Gallia COUnty Dairy Service Unit; and of
'
the Soli Conaervatlon ~rvlce Committee. Jackson PCA. He represents uallia, Meigs
The Burleson family belongs u. the Faith ll!ld Lawrence Counties. The association
Baptist Church.
·
.serves Over 3,000 ·farm lamiUe! in 11
Burleson Is one of five directors of the south~astem Ohio counties.
'
,~.

.1!

I

PRICE 20 CENTS

Blue.Devil hand -h as new look

·Burleson . on
credit board

'

.

University as a Title I remedial reading
teacher at Cheshire"Kyger and Addavilie
and Vickle Lynn Norris of Moundsville, W_
Va . as individualized instruction - at
Hannan Trace.
ADC personnel employed in the Kyger
Creek area were Nancy Preston and Carol
Buck. Candy Fisher, Rt. I, Gallipolis, was
hired ·as a Title I aide .
Substitute cooks hired were Mildred
George, Emma Reynolds, Anita Fife and
Lucille Mtilford. Substitute bus drivers
employed were Paul Sargent and Leanna
Hale.
Danny Ray Palmer, Rt. 1, Cheshire,
was hired as a fulltlme janitor at Kyger
Creek High &amp;hool replacing Ed Spears
who was named a district fulltlme

Raymond C. Adkins of Rt. I, Vinton,
was given a one year contract as afulltime
mechanic at the North Gallia bus garage.
Adklns will work with Harold. Russell on
the North Gallia and Kyger Creek bus
routes.
The Kyger Creek fleet will be transferred for repair work from ila former
garage to the North Gallia area.
·
The board gave transportation
director Frank Cremeans permission to
sell an old Southwestern bus body to Bart
Miller and to advertise for bids to sell a
following manner, First National Bank, 1964 Ford bus.
$72,000; Commercial and Savings Bank,
$72,000 and Ohio Valley Bank, $71,000.
The Gallipolis Retail Merchants will
SECOND AT FAIR
furnish $70,000 for Ute pro.ject and $40,000
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tony
will be prov\ded through federal funds .
Kennedy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Junior
The project calls for off-street parklng Kennedy represented Meigs County.· at
on Ute 3110blocko1Third Ave. where the old the annual Ohio State Falr t-H Horse
Kroger building now stands.
.
Show lb Columbus, Wednesday and
Approximately 132 parklng spaces can Thursday. Tony, 10; won second place
be made available.
lb both horsemanship and showman·
The city will now exercise its option ship classes.
and purchase the property from Ben
. InvolVed lb 4-H club wo"k three
years, Tony haa been the grand
Ewing of Pomeroy.
City Manager Paul Willer sai.d work champion showman at tbe Meigs ·
can begin 10 days after the purchase is caunty Fatr eacb consecutive year and
completed. It is hoped the lot will he ready a stat~ fair reprentatlve lb 197%. Tony Is
presently lhe secretary of the Meigs
for shoppers prior to Thanksgiving.
Saddles(tters HI Club.

'

'

Your Invited Guest

SUNDAY, AUGUST 25, 1974

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

~m.::o:::;:;,..;x;::::::::::::::::~

·-

SHINE, ANYONE• Pomeroy's Dick Seyler sits in a restored shoe shine stand
used many years in the barbershop of the late Clair Karr of Pomeroy. AU apart,
seyler reassembled and restored the stand until it is like new. At Seyler's right is a
desk which once belonged to the late Rart Stansbury who was president of the
Pomeroy National Bank. A valuable Tiffany lannp in the picture (upper left) once
hung ina Pomeroy home . On top of the desk are other collectibles: two of them are
Planters peanuts jars, one of which is valued at $150, the other $70.

tmts

'

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dealer and so feels that he can pay a bit
higher price than a dea_ier sinoe he doesn't
have to worry about marklng up the
merchandise for profit.
• A chemist in the Big Bend area for a
number of years, Seyler loves to talk about
and show off his collection. It seems that
there'~:~ a s tory or interest in most every
item.
seyler particularly likes articles which
belonged to someone he knew or someone
he has heard about through his residency
in the community.
For example, among his local prizes
are a beautifully restored desk which once
was in the home of the late Hart Stanbery;
the shoe shine stand which was in the
barbershop of the late Qair Karr, and
incidentally , the stand has been restored to
the point that it looks brand new; a loyely
Tiffany lamp which once hung in a
Pomeroy home; th~ cash register from the
barbershop of the late Harry "Hock"
Canterbury who operated his shop in
Pomeroy for over M years.
A part of the collecting that Seyler
really loves is tmusual early advertising
pieces. He has five framed heavy
lithographs done many years ago by Lon
Megagree for the Arizona Brewing Co .
Megagree was presented an award from a
national brewers organization for his
subtle manner of advertising the A-I brand
beer of lhe Arizona Co., which he placed
within a cloud ill the sky or in some other
(Continued on page 2)

•

Parking lot bond
plan approved

ELBERFELDS .IN POMEROY

'

roya1 Vienna glassware, a wide range of
pottery jars, jugs and crocks, oil lamps,
Iron banks, leaded gl•ss, glass containers
in various shapes which have become
· collector items, phonographs, one of which
plays one-hall Inch thick records; old, old
prints In beautiful antique frames, a large
collection of early advertising prints, slot
machines, and a Civil War period casket.
This list could go on and on.
Many of the beautiful Items are
displayed in various types or glass front
anlique pieces, certainly quite valuable.
One might think that Seyler has
gathered the hundreds upon hundreds of
Items with the foresight of eventually
opening an antique shop. Not so, howeVer.
Seyler says tha.t would come about
only if he were placed in the position that
such a shop was an economic necessity .
Meantime, the collection keeps growing by
leaps and bounds.
He is frequently contacted by friends
who know of antiques and collectibles
which are for sale. He visits the source and
frequently a deal is made. seyler is not a

Fair today with highs in the
mid 70s to lower 80s north and
in the 80s south. Monday
continued fair and warm .
Highs in the 80s.

Weather

•Brief- and
Bikini Panties
- - •Boys Tube ~cks
•Men's and Bovs' Denim Jackets
•Boys Fashion Jeans
•Boys' Double Knit Slacks
•Bicycles
•Boys' Winter Coats "
eMen's Coats and Jackets
•Men's Denim -Western
. ...•
·-Jeans
• W ooden_ware
.Gift Items
\
eGlidden l'aint
· •Men's Work Unifonns
•Table and Swag Lamps
•Bath Towels
•
.
.stereo Records and Tapes

depression , carnival ware, Helsley and

·weather

ex:,

Miller

HIGLEY
SUNDAY SQIOOl
LESSON- ••
.
COMMENTMY

At left, Dick seyler plays an Edison phonograph which requires one-hall inch
recordings. Seyler has some )50 of the old records_ several phonographs, aU in
working condition, are in his collection. At right Seyler holds a valuable pitcher,
part of several authentic pitcher and basin sets in his collect[on. Old oil lamps, a ll
m excellent condition, are in the background. This section of the Modern
Chemicals Co. building has numerous wooden bins in which antiques and collectibles are kept

building in Pomeroy.
Seyler looks upon gathering collectibles l!lld antiques as his "lhlng" and
apparently he does hl.s "thing" well. He
loVes to personally "strip" an antique and
restore it to Its original beauty.
The seyler colleclion just doesn't
consist of furnishings. No, Sir !
There are gor8e0us pieces of

COLUMBUS (UPI) :___ Johnny Cash, Suffolk was purchased by Renzetti's !GA ,--cmosUy sunny skies and no rain combined Supermarket of Columbus for $3,180.
Saturday to bring out a record nwnber of
Reserve grand champion lamb was
people during the thitd day of the Ohio purchased from Mary Wjl.son,. MllledgeState.Fair - the world 's largest state fair. ville, Ohio;for $1,308 by the Ohio State Falr
An estimated 154,751 persons visited Youth Choir . The lamb was a 1119-pound
the state fairgrounds on the city's north Hampshire.
side Friday, just·helow the )54,844 persons
Bob Evans Farnu bouBbl the graad
attending the second day of the 1973 fatr. champion barrow owned by Rusty Coo ol
Also scheduled fOr today was a tractor · Jeffersonville. The :!ZG-pouod Ch.. ter
pulling contest, amateur boxing Cham· · W~lte sold lor $5,7%0.
piohships, the Ohio Folk Festival, the
The reserve grand champion barrOw,
aelootion of the Ohio Homemaker of the · a 2tJ6.pound crossbreed, was purchi!BO&lt;I by
Year and numerous swine, poultry and Renzetti's IGA for $1,640 from Deanne
other animal exhibitions and judging.
Smalley of Leesburg, Ohio.
Randy Shane, Fostoria, eshiblted the
The prices paid for the grand chamgrand champion steer in the Junior Fair pion lamb, reserve grand champion lamb
Sale of Champions Friday and collected and the reserve grand champion steer let
$12,210 from McDonald's Restaurants for new records in those categorlea.
hl.s 1,110-pound Angus-Citianina crossAll purchasers In the Sale of Otttm·
breed.
.pions agreed to donate their anlma!J U&gt; the
Reserve grand champion steer was Ohio 4-H Foundation tt~~d the Fulll'e
shown by Bob Clark, Covington, who got $5 Formers of America for r-le .
a pound for his 1,15Q.pound Aogua- '
Debbie Lawaon, 17, Roubll'a,
Simmental-crossbreed from McDonald's. al Ansonia High &amp;hool, wu crowned Mill
The grand champion IIU!Ib of the sale Ohio Ofttce Education Aa«tatlon. llle .
was shown by Jill S&lt;:hllchter, Washington will cOnlpete for the Mlaa Ohio Stilt Fllr
Co\lft Ho~ . Her IIJ9.po11rtd. purebred . title ~pt. 1.
•
•i

I""*

l

&lt;

'

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