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                  <text>8- Tht Daily Senli,..,t, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., '1\Jeod&lt;l)•, Au~ . 27, 1974

Hester Rayburn died on Sunday ~i1f~fiiif~

Cornered convicts captured
STEPHENVILLE, Tu . stakeout or lour police officers
t UP!) - Police orricers alerted heard the baying of two dogs.
by the loud barking or
"When the dogs started
frightened dogscornered three barking we jumped out of the
desperate Convicts in the '"'J patrol car," patrolman La~ry
spotlighted side yard of a rural Trail said. "We hit them wtlll
home Monday night, killing the spotlight and commanded
one. The other two meekly them to slop. We commanded
surrendered ending a three- them to halt.
state spree oi revenge, murder
"The did not hall. We opened
and rape .
fire ."
the
Colorado
prison
Richard Magnum, 22.
escapees, virtually surrounded Denver , stumbled dead on the
In the dry, rolling mesquite muddy yard, shot in the head.
hills by 300 law officers, bolted Jerry Ulmer, 22, Garland.
from behlnd an unoccupied Tex., sprained an ankle and
Richard Williams. 29. ~nyrl~r .

[arm home north of Stephen-

Tex., was unhurt. They had
ducked behind a short hedge
but dropped their rincs and
walked toward the patrol car
with their hands up."
The officers fired 15 shots In
the space of five seconds,

ending the four-day , threestale revengeful spree. The
men were charged with killing
a widowed rancher and a farm·
er's wife whose trial testimony

helped send th~m to prison.
Two women were abducted
and raped and five persons
were shot at random.

ville. On a n.earby rural road, a

News.

MEIGS THEATRE

• •

in Briefs

Continued from page I
purchased in Cleveland, Dayton, Akron and Glouster.

Tonight tt"lru Thur sday
Aug. 27 ·29
. NOT OPEN

COLUMBUS - A TRAPEZE ARTIST, described as one o(
the best, lost her grip during a circus tent performance at the
Ohio State Fair here Monday and fell 40feet to the ground before
a capacity crowd of 3,500 children and adults~Fair officia~.said
Jnge Bisbini, 33, Sarasota, Fla ., was prepanng to do a heel
hang" from a high trapeze bar in a circus tent along the fair 's
.
.
midway when she apparently lost her grip.
She was listed today in fair condition at Ohio Stale Umverstty
Hospital with kidney and pelvis injuries. Fair oCficials satd

FRI.. SAT .• SUN.
Aug . 30-3\, Sept. 1
John Wavne

" McQ 11
I PGJ

CARTOONS
Show Starts 7 p.m .

I several doctors attending the performance administered first aid

.,

; MASON DR IN I

to the trapezist.

I

SON BORN
Mr . and Mrs . Fred ·Lewis,
Middleport, are announcing
the birth or a son, Matthew
Brian, July 30 at the Holzer
Medical Center . The baby
weighed Sibs., 14 ozs. Mr.' and
Mrs. Lewis have a daughter,

TONIGHT
ONLy

i-'-----------,

A STORY FOR EVERY

OlE WHO THINKS
THEY CAN lEVER
FALL II LOVE AGAIN.

Valerie, 14, and

ALSO

' Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admissions - Sherry! Little,
Pomeroy ; . Yvonne Sellers,
Racine ; Norman Russell ,.

Pomeroy; Velva Amburgey,

COLO ABY

DE LUXE•

grandchildren.
Funeral services will be
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at Ute
Christia n Brethren Chu&lt;eh,

CWmiNG OFFERED
Free clothing day will be
held at The Salvation Army,
115 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy,.
Thursday, Aug, 29, from 10
a.m. until noon. There is a
large amount of clothing
available. Residents are

UNIT CALLED
RACINE - The Racine E-R
squad was called Monday at 9
a .m. for Yvonne Sellers,
Racine, who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospttal.

the

birth of their first child, a
daughter, Jacinda Dawn, 7
lbs., 7 oz., at Holzer Medical
Center Aug. 14. Grandparents
Price , Bloomington, Ind. , and

Mason, wtth Rev, James H.
Lewis, olflclatlng. Burial will
be in the IOOF Cemetery.
Friends may call at the

Thur1d1y

tbrou1b

S.tunbty: F1irolldeool wltb

bl.hlla tbe 70L Lowo lo !be
50a.

~~~::::~..'2::;::-·······,.:::::::;..

Foglesong Funeral Home after
PROBATIONO,RDERED
3 p.m. today , and on WedJohn Bunce, 19, Mlddlep&lt;rt,
nesday at the church from 10 charged with trespassing on
a.m. unUl Ume ol services.
Feb. 18, 1914 at King Builders
Supply, Middleport, with the
purpose to commit a felony,
has pleaded g!lllty in Meigs
County Comm'on Pleas Court
and placed on two year

Firemen co'u ld
find no fire

The Middlep&lt;rl E-R Squad
made two runs Monday and the
Fire Department was called
but could find no ,fire .
The first call was at 1:51 p.m.
to Leading Creek Rd. ,'for Rick
Blevins, 13, Middleport, who
was injured in a motorcycle
accident. The youth was in a
semi-conscious condition. He
was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was admitted.
At 2:41 p.m. the department
received a call that a house
was on fire on Poplar Church
Rd., however the fire department was unable to locate any

probation.

LEGION TO MEET
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, and It;
awdllary will meet at 7: 3() p.m.
Wednesday at the haiL
Delegates to Buckeye Boys
State and Buckeye Girls State
will be guests. A 6:30 p.m.
dinner will precede the
meeting.
HOST GUESTS
Mrs. SteUa Adkins, Uck
Sklllet, was the Sunday
evening dinner guests of Mrs.
Freda Miller and Miss Lenora

BARR REUNION SET
The annual reunion of the
descendants of Abraham and
Mary Will Bahr wiU be held
Sunday at the Archery
Building at Royal Oak Park.
Descend an bt or Moses and
Susan Will are also inylted to
attend. A basket dinner will be
aerved at 12:30 p.m.

DIVORCE ASKED
Helen Lou Hemsley, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy,
has filed for a
Betzing, Pomeroy.
divorce In Meigs County
fire .
Al 7:47p.m., the squad was
, Common Pleas Court against .
MISS PRICE VISITS
called to Rutland Cor Mark
Miss Effle Price, St. Albans, Ralston D. Hemsley, also Of Rl.
Ti!Us, a medical patient, who W. Va., spent Sunday visiting 2, Pomeroy, charging gross
was taken to Veterans here with Mr. and Mrs. Cliff91"d neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty.
Memorial Hospital.
Hayes, Middleport.

Meigs schools
get ·$191,182

Road grant

Melga County'a ~hue local
ochool dlstrlclls received o total
of flll ,IIIU2 as their share of
the August slate achool
foundation subsidy paymenla,
~cording to State Audilpr
Joseph T. Ferguson.
Eastern District received
$40,1169.86 after deductions lor

is accepted
. The Meigs County Commissioners Tuesday accep~A&lt;d

employes' retirement and

allotment to the county board;
Meiss
Local
received
$111,478.83 after the same
deductions and Ute Southern
· Local District received
$38,83.1.63 following deductiona.
The county board of education
received $10,192.11 including
allocations from the local
boards and a $5,394.53 direct
allotment.
•

VISIT MICHIGAN
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Curtis
and daughter, Gay, have
returned home after several
days' visit with Mrs. Cuills'
sister and brother-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Dennis Smith and
chlldren, Ralph and Denean
Renee, Lincoln Park, Mlch.
They went to the Bob-lo Island
Amusement Park at Bob-lo,
Canada, during their visit.

the Economlc O~velopment

Administration grant or
t48a,OOO for the road syslolm
whlch will provide access and
egress to the Meigs Mines
Complex

NEW PRINCIPAL - Marvin McKelvey, a resident of
Syracuse in Meigs County, is the new building principal at
Green Elementary School. McKelvey graduated from Southern High School and Ohlo University. He is a former teacher
at Meigs High School.

in

Hospital
Disctuirges "-- Bessie Edsall,
Point , Pleasant ; Charles
Powell, Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
Robert Anthony,
Point
Pleasant; Staci Crawford,
Evans.
Birth - A son to Mr. and

WE'D LIKE TO TAKE
'
YOU FOR A RIDE ...

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Wells, commissioners, and
Martha Chambers., clerk.

en tine
VOL. XXVI

NO. 96

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28. 1974

\_\ .

~~

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International
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or the people. Three
readings are needed.
The discussion disclosed that
Pomeroy Council has approved
th~ increase but that it has .
b&lt;en turned down in Mason and

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ELBERFELDS
WAREHOUSE
MECHANIC ST. .
~

l

goVernorshi~ .in 1969. to ~~me
former President ~txon s fLrst
secretary of the interior only to
be fired the next year, was
running second in a three--way
primary fight for his old seal. .

ning
the
R epublica n
nomination for another term

and will face the winner of a
runoff between Democrats Ed
Edmonson
a
former
congressm'an, and Charles

ABOUT THE SAME
EASTERN - Enrollment
In the Eastern Local School
District- on Tuesday's
opening day ran about the
same as last year, Supt. John

Riebel reports .
Tuesday's enrollment was

1,040 which included 129 at
Riverview, 169 at Tuppers
Plains, plus 66 In kindergarten, 213 at Chester
and 463 In the high school
building · which Includes
junior and senior hlgb
school.

Woman injured
in auto mishap
on E. Main St.
The Pomeroy Police Dept.
. acelden t
repor ted a tra ff tc
.Tuesday at 9,45 p.m. on

In the Oklahoma gobernawrial race Boren a politicaJ
sCience professor 'and state

legislator, pledged to "sweep
out the old guard."
With almost 90 per cent of the

HOUSTON (UP! ) - Ber" conservation for conserva- vote tabulated, McSpadden, nadino Sierra, 25, his long,
shiny, black hair combed back
the pre primary favorite had 37
and a serpent tattooed on his
per cen~ . Boren 35 per cent and
chest, glanced jauntily at the
television lights and smiled.

Four give up
bond to court

"They can only burn me

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday through Sunday: A
warming trend and a chance
of showers. Highs In the 70s
Friday warming to the 80s by
Sunday, Lows In t he 50 s
Friday warming to the 60s by
Sunday.

One defendant was fined .and

four others forfeited bonds in
Middleport Mayor John
Zerkle's ·court Tuesday night,
Carl Buckley, Middleport, was
fined $20 and costs, disorderly
manner.

Forfeiting bOnds were Paul
Justice, Jr., Middleport, $30
bond, disorderly

manner ;

Donald E. Goheen, 48, New
HaVen , $30, assured clear

.

Nesbitt.

Killers ·
have no
remorse

distance; Char;les E. Meadows,
New Haven', and Mark Barton ,

New Haven, $150 each, damage
to the jail.

Weather ·
Showers and thundershowers

once," he said, the grin quickly
leaving his face .
·
"Money. I had to do it. Living
don 't come easy out there. We
. just went to robbing, that's
all ."
Sierra talked '1\Jesday night
as he was chained to three
other men silting at a plain
desk in the police homicide
division .
rie't ectives said they were

part of a robbery-murder ring
south and east today, con. known as the "Brady Bunch"
tinuing tonight and Thursday . -a leaderless gang responLow tonight in the upper 50s sible for the deaths of at least
north to the upper .60s south . six person s. They were
High Thursday in the 70s and charged with capital murder.
low 80s.
Assistant District Attorney
George Karam said they called
themselves the Brady Bumch
because one of Ute men they
murdered lived on Brady
and Bitrbara Masters, half Street.
time at Riverview i two kin "I Can't think o£ a more
dergarten bus drivers, Robert deservin g bunch for the
Shook and Helen Blake.
electric chair," Karam said.
There is currently a position
" They we r e pre tty cold .
as custodian open at the junior Pretty callous. They showed no

Massar takes hoard seat

EASTERN
Starling
WASHINGTON - THE ARMY IS QUIETLY HOUSING both
f f
Massar, Reedsville Route t,
·
men and women in some oflts barrackswithout.the same an are Pomeroy's West Main St. in ha s been appointed as a
that greeted other military concessions to modern mores..
which a woman was injured. member of the Eastern, Local
Male and female soldiers are not allowed to live .m mtxed
Ruth Dow\er, ·Middleport, School District . Board of
rooms or even adjoining ones, but many barracks now have a traveling west, struck a parked Education.
separate female floor above a noor of msles, an Army spokes- car owned by Sharon K.
Massar re~laces Roger
high school - the new addition remorse whatsoever,'' Karam
man said today In ~esponse to questions from \.!Pl. The two sexes Groninger, Flora, Ind. The Epple who restgned recently. to the high school building said. "They would rob them
share the same day room with television, games and otber en- Groninger car in turn struck a ~. Epple was ser vtng as president which was opened when school and kill them if they got the
ierUtinment diverSions.
power pole There was medium of the board when he restgned. began Tuesday . Applicants ' urge. Most of the time they
Meeting Monday night, the may conll!ct Supt. John Riebel, killed their .victims w hide
properly d;,age
DETROIT - ~ PROPOSED 10-CENT per gallon.gasoline tax
Mrs. Dowler ~as taken 10 . board hired two cooks, Mildred 985-4292 . .
Continued on page 10
increase .could cnpple new car sales JUSI reboundtng fr~ the Veterans Memorial Hospital Bussell. full time at Chester,
worst first half in 11 years and hamper efforts to control nsmg by the Pomeroy E-R squad
where she was treated and
car prices, a Ford M~tor ex~tive hBti w•
"One thing the nation certainly d,oes no1
~t thll Uq:te Is released She was charged for .
re!iaant on autO!ljO~ -~·." IOfi~- ,'
lving ~hUe Intoxicated .
another artificial
Naughton, Ford vi , resident for markeilri·~~ld ~~me I
Whlte House last
k llald the likenl • puon
the '
excise tax WBti o of ntalll' propooall bejng cO!Widmld to
CLOTIIING Nfi: ED
The Junior Judging Team
Three Meigs County girls the Meigs Pleas.ure .Riders 4•H
nd cut fuel tonltllllptl011.
·
•
Good used boys'
d girls' particiJllltlng !oday in the 1-H Clu b· Part lc Ipa tmg '"· 4•H wor k which Includes Marcia and
hoOI clothing Is urgently Saddle Horse Judging (Senior . four years, Faye, 16, ts serving Melonle Dillard, daughters of
WASHING
-" THE TRJ!:AlluRY Dti'AWfiV'N'l' II needed by . the G a-Meigs Division) at the Ohio Sll!te a the secretary of the Mr. and ·Mrs. Roger Dillard,
Inviting consr
en to come ondllllfor tltet:JI114!1!• ~ 387,$00 Community Actio Agency University H'orse Barn Arena
Pomeroy; Robln Ritchie ,
easure R'd
I ers, an d susan,
bars of gold
are still in Ft. Kn1111, ''Never!ur,.,. gold II (CAP) . This cloth! may be are Pam Nottingham, daUgh·
id
l
• pres e~ o,' the sam' c1ub ' da1111hter of Nit,!· Jean Ritchie,
left. at the Gtlllla-Melgs ter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl
there "Mary BI'Oollll, director of, Ute lllilt,'lltd
s been mvolved wl 4-H Tuppers Plains ;. and Tony
Community Center In Cheshire Nottlng'·m, Rt. 3 P. omerov;
· "it's been JO or 15 yean lllnct 10mt ol ~ ftaltll wer
lghl years.
'Kennedy, son of Mr . and Mrs.
opened. I think it's time we did·~ ludlt,':!l!' 1t'bUlp ftl. Crane, &lt;r .phone 446-17 In GaUia
''"
'
Al
H
t
d
~te
of
Junior Kenned y, Tuppers
Faye Reibel, daUghter of Mr. ,
mee us on, a
r
R-m., tn July uked tre.lllllj ~retary WWIIIII E,,sun~ubout County or_ i19WB In M0tgs Md
". Mrs. Donley R.eibel, 204 &lt;Mr. and Mrs .. Paul uston_, Plains, wlllalsobepresenlfor
rumors tha1111111e of the 147lilllUGit ounce1 ol COJd.til l't. Knox County. ·
Rock St., Pomeroy, and Susan Syracuse, i' 0 bse . .S lh 18 instructive observation and
had myat~iollaly di.sappMretl.
Yoot, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ~ven t as we U as par ctpa tl ng , participation.
Slm:tnd non- and lllld CDJII..-ned
LOCAL MPS
Gene Yost, Route 1; Racine. man Illustrative tallc ursday
Rachael Downie, (club
Iook_fort . . lves - ondllal~wilh .CIIl
The temper ure In downat the Ohio State air. Her advisor), Mrs. Dillard, and
town Pomero at 11 •.m.
Pam, 16, hits beeallwolved in topic
will
be ,
"Five Suzie ; ; •d, 0 . U. workSAl
.
Wednesday w • 78 degrees 4-H work •II&lt; yllos and is Qualiticalions of a ood Horse stl.\dy •
I, will accom~any
undf extrem.ly cloudy akles. CllfrenUy the ~~tows reporter of Judge.~
· li)e
f ·
.W

=

Three -in horse judging

btcre• "'

.

__ _. .lL..:,

'J\1....,,- ..

ALWAYS PLENTY .OF FREE PARKING

I

,
....
1!)1 United Press International
·
WASHINGTON - IF CURRENT CONDITIONS prevail into
next week, gasoline stations around the country wiU be able to
supply Labor Day weekend motorists with enough fuel, the
American Automobile Association said '1\Jesday,
The AAA said it has checked 4,881 gas stations in every state
except Alaska and found thittless than one station in 100 was out
of fuel.

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FAST CLAIM SERVICE

MIDDlEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit lnsurante Corporation

nell

Tt•• BOLDIN I
Model vn.iiJO

.· ~w~::f:'''i)i~~*B;:l;t;,m;l

investigation almost since the

that he could never get to see day he took office in connection
the President
with alleged kickbacks in the
Incumbe~t Democrat
awarding of state contracts.
William Egan was expected tp .He has been investigated by
win renomination. He lost to a federal grand jury, grand
Hickel in 1966 but beat Miller in juries in Oklahoma County and
1970.
Oklahoma City, the Internal
Sen, Mike Gravel, D-Aiaska, Revenue Service and a legislawho in 1971 ca]lsed a stir in
tive impeachment inquiry .
Washington by delivering .a Two former aides have been
public reading of the then- indicted.
classified Pentagon Papers,
All incumbent Oklahoma
faced three opponents in his bid co n.grcss men, inc1uding
for renominallon.
Speaker of the House Carl
Six Republicans fought for Albert", won terlomination.
the right to seek Gravel's seal. Albert has no GOP opposition.
Oklahoma Sen. Henry
Bellmon had no trouble win-

IN NAVY TOGETHER Route 1, Pomeroy, enilsted in the U. s. Navy 280 day delay program. This program provides
enlistment now and up to 280 days delay in reporting for active d4ly. Bonnie will go on active
duty on Sept. 20 reporting to Orlando, Fla . After recrult·training, Bonnie Will receive further
In early returns, he was
training in Advanced Electronics. Richard will report for active duty on Dec. 9, 1974. He also
will report to Orlando: Upon his completion of recruit'training, Richard will report to Memphis, · be~jnd former state senate
president Jay Hammond and
Tenn, for further training inAdvanced Aviation Electronics. Mr. and Mrs. Agan have b~en ·
ahead
of K~ith Miller, who
•active in the Meigs County Humane Society during their residency in Meigs County. Richard
succeeded Htckelas govern.or.
has been employed on the Gavin project, a merriber of the Asbestos.Workers ' union. Bonnie has
, ~ Hickel, who as tnlertor
Involved herself ih drawing.
,
secretary once condemned

WASHINGTON- PRESIDENT FORD has rejected lengthy
preparations and even the makeup that might keep his bald spot
from shining on television today in the first news conference of
hls administration. "Maybe they can stand the makeup out in
California but we don't think it would be acceptable in Grand
Rapids," ,;.id one Ford intimate, adding that the President _has a
small bald spot whlch may shine m the bright televiSion lights.
Ford planned to make a formal statement, then respond to a
barrage of questions. Unlike former President Richard Nixon,
who spe!ll at least three days ~ briclings and . solitary
preparation for his infrequent meetmgs wtth the medta, .Ford
only scbeduled Tuesday afternoon and a morning session today
to gel ready.
'
·

tlle

latter two ac~ons took place
without the representatives of
the compariy appearing before
either group.
The discUssion also disclosed
that the company has 686
subscribers in Middleport with
175 of these , being senior
citizens and 25 ~Jeing disabled.
Newell said that l'ointvlew Is
probably the only company in
the country whlch gives a
reduced rate to senior citizens
and disabled persons.
A letter was read from Troy,
Ohlo, seeking , the support of
Middleport in the city's battle .
against proposed rate Increases of the General
Telephone Co. of Ohlo. Clerktreasurer Gene Grate also read
a letter frornjthe Housing and
Urban . Development Commission announcing the fiood
Insurance' Is now available in
the community. It was agreed
that Mayor Zerkle will ask the
county to improve guarding
railings at Hobson and on
Middleport Hill, COIIIlty roads
corning into the vUiage. Other
mln&lt;r matters pertaining to
tighls, the park and related
affairs were discuaaed briefly
at the close or the session.

.
.
Richard and Bonnie Agan, who reside at the Royal Oak Park,
.

~lflSl8f:M

reac~on

However,

elections after com plaining

Se~re tary Walter Hic kel
b'atl~ m hLs comeback at.
tempt for governor of Alaska.
In the O~lahorna primary
Tuesday, Hall was swamped
by congressman Clem Rogers
McSpadden, a grand nephew of
humonst Will Rogers, a~d 33year-old reform candtdate
David L. Boren.
McSpadden and !loren wiU
vie in a Sept. 17 runoff for the
nght to f~ce GOP norrunfe Jun ,
Inhofe. .
Hickel, who left the Alaska

,

money on the operation. The

James Brewer, Marvin Kelly ·
and Fred Hoffman voted
. against approvaJ of the first
reading of an increase and
William Walters, Allen Lee
King and David Jenkins voted
in favor of it. With the tie vote, ·
Mayor Zerkle broke the
· stalemate by casting an affirmative vote.
The mayor said he Celt the
increase should be approved

lion's sake," left the Nixon Hall .27 per cent.
cabinet following the 1970
Hall, 43, has been under

the state's first two -term
governor, and former Interior

ne&lt;JI'ssary. Newell said the
finn had lost $67,1100 last year
and could not continue to lose

TEN CENTS

swamped

By United Press

now . owned by the Midwest
Corp., said that Increased costs
for materials and labor had

representatives asked that the
ordinance modifications be
approved and placed with
subscribers who could either
continue 0 the service at the
Increased cost or could
discontinue it. If the rate in- .
crease is not granted, Newell
said the service might be
discontinued ln the community
or perhaps local services would
have to be curtailed.

PHONE 992-2156

-~ Hall

modified to increase the rates .
Officials of the firm, whlch is ·

On, lhe question, councilmen

.•. IN A NEW CAR!

a balance of $45,000 the county
will spend.
I"' addition to those named
others attending were, Robert
Clark, Warden Ours and Henry

county auditor. and RPrn:trd

Streets
Continued from page 1

NeW Haven.

is

manager for Ute Ohio Power

Company, James E. Roush,

WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STREET

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Tuesday at 11 a.m.
was 83 degrees under sunny
skies .

once,

which

pany's amount; this will leave

made the rate increase request

MR!i. GRIM MOVES
Mrs. Victor Grim has moved
from her home on Soul~ Second
Ave., Middleport, ln with her
daughter, Mrs. Russell Mills,
Fourth Ave.

county's shpre,

$120,000. With the coal com.

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Ma.wm Area

grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.

Pleasa~t Valley

northwestern

Fultz, prosecutor .
Roads to be improved are
existing CR I, 1-A, 6 and 27 , all
located in Columbia Twp.
Southern Ohio Coal Co. is
going to pay '75,000 of the

Meigs County.
Meeting with the commissioners were Randolph
Oras, project manager of EDA,
Wesley Buehl, Meigs County
engineer, Joe Ramsey, land

Mr . and Mrs. Don E. Mullen,
Middleport.
Great-

Aug . 26.

Tuppers Plains ; Chester
Mundry, Reedsville ; Willi'\fil
Stanley, Albany; Thomas
Williams, Pl. Pleasant;
Richitrd , Blevins, Middleport; ·
Joan Y/ells, Rutland; Clara D.
Snilth, Middleport.
Discharges
Charles
Carroll, Mary Still.

great-

Harrisonville, announ ce

Mrs. Howard Jordan, Leon,

Syracuse; Augustine F9llrod,
Pomeroy ; Beverly Collins,

Severa)

welcome.

Brian was moved to Children's George Hackett, Sr., MidHospital, Columbus,- where he dleport, and Mrs . Helene
remains in intensive care. It is Mullen, Pomeroy.
expected that he will be con-

fined there several more weeks
fqr treatment.

and

FIRST CHIW BORN
HARRISONVILLE - Mr.
and Mrs . Patr-ick Mullen ,

a son, David, are Mr. and Mrs. George

two. Grandparents are Mrs.
Helen Lewis, Middleport, and
Mrs. Blanche Moore, Point
'Pleasant. ,.. Aug. I, Matthew

MAl&gt;ON - Hester Amella
Rayburn , 69, Mason, died
Sunday at the Monterey
Nursing Inn, Grove City.
She was born Sept, 22, 1904,
in Mason, a daughter or the late
Edwin S. Wallace and Freda
Katlrina Bletner Wallace
Shank.
She is survived by one
daughter, Mrs. Ellene Handy,
Columbus; live sons, SUrling
Rayburn , Syracuse; Marlon
Rayburn, Mason ; Howard R.
Rayburn. South Amboy, N. J .;
Charles
E.
Rayburn,
Baltimore, Md., and Lonnie
Edwin Rayburn, Columbus,
Ga . ; one brother, Charles
Wallace. McEvans, Tenn.; two
sisters, Louise and Norma,
California ; 12 grandchlldren

CHIUI BORN
Mr. and Mra. Earle Wood,
Mlddlep&lt;ri, are announcing
the blrlh or a 100, Steven
Matthew, Aug . 18 at the Holzer
Medical Center. Tht Infant
weighed 8 1~ .• a ou. Grand·
parents are Mr. and Mrs,
Bur&lt;fell McKinney, Mlddlep&lt;rt ; Mr, and Mrs. Ernest
' Wood, Rt. 4, Pomeroy; Mrs ..
William Dittmar, ZanesviUe
and Mr. and Mrs. Weber Wood,
Rl. 4, Pomeroy, are greatsrandparepbt, and Mrs. Jennie
Hansher, Middleport, Is a
maternal great • great •
grandmother.

' t

' f~P.

, I

'

ar .

'

-

NEW OFFICERS - The Meigs Marauder Athletic
Boosters met Tuesday evening at the high school, their first
meeting under the new l~dership of President Charlie
Hamilton, second from lcll. Other new officers are, from lclt,
Don Thomas, vice-president; Hamilton, Marjorie Walburn,
secretary, and Arizona Stewart, treasurer. Dean Lutz arxi
Bob Cooper , who do the play-by;&gt;lay of Marauder football
and baskethall games for WMPO, presented. a 2(kninute
discussion of their preparation and format Cor Meigs games.
It was also announced that "Meet the team Night" will be
Thursday, Sept. 5, beginning at 7 p.m. in Marauder Stadium.
Other topics discussed were ad sales for the football
programs, purchase of a videotape machine for basketball
use, and the report by Head Football Coach and Athletic
Director Charley Chancey that the new athletic complex at
the high school is near completion. Chancey said drain tile
and seeding of the football practice Cie\d is the only work
remaining on the gridiron, while the hitseball diamond and
track, hopefully, will be ready for the 1975spring season.

2 wounded
Two persons were wounded,

Taylor's brother, in~rvened ..

neither seriously, in a shooting
Wbile ,caldwell and Mr •
incident resulting from a Taylor were arguing, Mrs. .
domestic quarrel Tuesday taylor obtained a .410 gauge
night on Neighborhood Rd. in shotgun.
Gallia County .
Mrs. Caldwell then atSheriff's deputies said tempted to wrestle the gun ·
Harley Taylqr , 29, Rl. 3, from Mrs. Taylor.
During the siruggle, Ute gun
Gallipolis, was taken to the
Holzer Medical Center by the discharged with the blast
Gallia County Volunteer striking Mrs. Caldwell in the
Emergency Squad at 8:50p.m. lower lclt leg.
Mr. Caldwell then proceeded
after being shot by his wife.
Investigating officer,s said .. to l!!kll his wile to~the -hospilal
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Caldwell after throwing the gun into Ute '
were visiting at the home of her

yard .

parents which is located next
door to the residence of Mr.
and Mrs. Harley Taylor on
Neighborhood Rd.
Mr . and Mrs. Taylor were in
a heated domestic quarrel
when Mr. Caldwell, Mrs.

Mrs. Taylor retrieved the
gun, reloaded it and shot her
husband in lower part or both
legs,
· '
Sheriff's deputies ill'e stili
investigating the incident.
·

Negotiations .to
resum~

tonight

Negotiations will .resume at Van Ludy; Maury Lindquist, of
Ohio
Education
7, 30 p.m. this evening in the .the
Association;
Gene
Brundige
two day strike called by the 160
member, Gailia County Local and Mary Abel .of Ute Ohlo
Education Assoclallon's
Te3chers' Association.
The teachers reaffirmed Executive Committee and Don ,
their stand Tuesday , everilng Anderson, Presidenl-&lt;llect of
Southeastern
Ohio
during an informal meeting at the
the Gallla County Junior Education Association.
Telegrams were also read
Fairgrounds.
President William Bahr and from the Athens and Gallipolis
field representatives of the Teachers' Associations .
Ohio Education Assoc iation · , On behalf of the Gallia
spoke during the one and one- County Chapter, Ohio Public
School EmpJoyees Association,
half hour session.
(OAPSE) Wayne Palmer,
Bahr
introduced Leonard Newberry, Phyllls
representatives of
each Mulholand and Garrett Wataon ·
building, who gave brief pledged conllnued suppo~t
reports on how the first da)' of from the non-certificate~
the str ike went at . their employes.
.
· buildings .
No classes were ·held
Bahr ur ged the teachers to '1\Jesday in the county's four
continue their show of strength high school and seven
an~ also urged the football
elementary buildings because
coaches to stand pal and stay of, the teacher walkout.
,
with the teachers and not begin
Ail members of OA PSE
their prac tices despite a refused to cross picket linea
resolution of the board to do so. thus all buses, cafeteria
Also speaking were Wes workers and custodians dld not
Simm s, . Robert Holts berry, work Tuesday and today.

Marvin W. Dawson·dies
Marvin White Dawson. 58,
830 Main ·st., Pomeroy , forrnerly of Point Pleasant, died
Tuesday morning at 7,15 lo
Holzer Medical Center of an
apparent heart attack.
Mr. Dawson was a well
known businessman in both
Point Pleasant and . the
Pomeroy area. At the time of
his death he was the owner and
operator of the D&amp;D Meat Co.,
Pomeroy.
·
Mr. Dawson and his familY,
who,, came to Point PleaS.nt !!0
years ago_ from Co lumbus
~
made their horne on En lah
~•.,. Pl. Pleasant where
y
""
lived until two years ag· . At
that time he and Mrs. DIJI!'IOO
· moved to their new homt hear
Pomeroy .
Dawson first came .lo the
area as a sales'f'n II" The

Davis and Davis Meat Co., and
later operated a bicycle shop.
He was a member of several
Masonic Orders and tho
Hidden Valley Country Club. ,
A member of the Unltec!
Methodist Church, Colwnbuli,
Dawson was also a member
p of
1
the Masonic the
Bodes,1 Kedo1nt
Pleasant, and
Ben
em
Shrine, Charleston, He wae a
veteran of Wor!HVar
t 6 II.
't Rk:"·
Born May ""•heI 1 , a
or
..
monda 1e, Oh 1o .,. 11011"'
the late Benson IIIII Nlllcy
White Dawson
,
inc"'•
h'· .........
. $urvlvors
"'"' ,. .....
Betty bWilliam
.._ •· Dawaon1
•... nancy"""
one dalll Ill',"''"'
Bias, Miami, .... ; •
Mil,
n K.
Dlnr1G8,

••

�1

•

3- The Dally Senlmel Mtddl•port P.. neroy 0 WL'In•sday Aug 28 1974

Billinghalll records 16th win, 3-0

2- The Dally

That wild plant you ate may be deadly

'

By B J (,IU.E \'
INDIANI\POIIS lnd (UPIJ
more and more
Arnencans Forag'lnl-{ for edtble
wtld l&gt;lan t.s a PW'due Univers1
ty research team ts checkmg
nn Lhe Wlsuspected dangers of
W1t h

a wild harvest
The team un&lt;Wr a national
sctence
(oundatlon
un
dergradwttc resea rch program
grant IS exammmg 60 to 80

types of wtld plants and some

Science today
house plants for pOisonous
agents
' f don t Wdnt to buck the
trend
sa 1d Dr
Jerry
McLaughlin the professor of
pharmacy who heads the
proJeCt But there are many
pOisonous plants that may look
edtble lo the untramed ga
therer
There are also tho$e where
pmsonous agents are removed
by proper cooking plants that
have certam parts edible and
others p otsonous some that
should be eaten only m cf!rla m
tunes of the year and some tha t
are pmsonous tf consumed in
sufftc1ent quantities
McLaughlm who has been
called m often as a consultant
to hosp1ta ls treatmg patJCnts
for plant po1sontng sa id

DON OAKLEY

U. S. Mint pleads
Jor common 'cents'
By Don Oakley
In the past 15 years, the U S Bureau of the Mmt has stamped
out some 62 billion Lincoln cents 1t 1s currently producmg 35
mtlhon eachday,almost twtceas many as last year
Fully half this tremendous output, however - somethmg
over 30 billion corns, the Mmt estunates - 1s not m actual c1r
culalwn Thus the penny shortage which ts a severe problem or
mconveruence all over the country
Where are all these penmes hidmg' According to Mmt
director Mary Brooks , billions of them are m dresser drawers,
shoe boxes ptckle Jars - almost any place you can thmk of An
unknown number of others are believed to be m the hands of
speculators
The reason for the latter ts that m December 1973 the
Treasury announced that 11 would request legislation changmg
the penny from 95 per cent copper and 5 per cent zmc lo an
alummum alloy It was apparent that the steadtly nsmg pnce of
copper would eventually make the amount of metalm the penny
worth more than the face value of tbe com
Although there are stiff penalttes for meltmg down penn1es,
they began v:amshmg by the tens of mJlhons, JUSt as sJlyer coms
vamshed m the m1ddle 1960s even though the number of penntes
that would have to be consltmed to make any copper convers10n
operations worthwhtle IS staggermg
For example the market prtce of copper would have to go
over $150 a pcund (It ts sttll well below that) to exceed the face
value of a penny At $1 50 a pound, 250,000 penmes, weighing 1,714
pounds and With a face value of $2 iiOO, would be worth $2,571 as
raw copper The $71 proftl would hardly pay for the energy
needed to melt them down
But whatever the explanation, the penny shortage contmues
and the Treasury Department ts appealing for the help of
patrwttc Amertcans
It pomts out that JUSt one btlhon penntes returned to ctr
culat10n would save lllxpayers $10 !Dillion If 15 btlllon penntes
were returned, the Mmt would not have to make any more for
almost two years and would save $150 !Dillion
To stimulate cihzen participation the Treasury ts awardmg
Cerltftcates of Special Citation to anyone who depos1l!i or cashes
$2.\ worth of penrues at a commerctal bank Banks should for
1
ward the names of persons or groups qualifYing for the ctlalton
lo Mrs Mary Brooks, Dtrector of the Mmt, 55 Mmt Street, San
Franc1sco CA 94175

The memory wallows on
II may all we water over the gate to most weary Americans

but htStonans, and certamly future Amertcans, are gomg to be
wallowmg ' 10 the subJect for generations to come The way
thmgs are gomg, they wtll have wbole libranes devoted to 1t
The first tssue of Booklelter, a new revtew publtshed by
Harper s Magazme Co ltsts a parbal Watergate btbhography of
46 biles Those swellmg the W 'card catalogue file mclude
' Watergate hv the Numbers, Watergate Chronology of a
Cr1s1s ' Watergate and the Whtte House,' Watergate Crune
m the Smtes " Watergate Hearmgs," ' Watergate Portraits,
Watergate, the vtew from the Left, ' Watergate and tbe Myth
of Amertcan Democracy " and sunply Watergate '
Interested researchers wtll also fmd such lntrtgumg tlUes as
Ftres1de Watergate ' Watergate Cookbook, ' "Watergate
Follies' and somethmg called Watergate Girls "
That s JUst the Ws Other tttles mclude b1ographtes of
Richard Ntxon, Sen Sam ErVIn and other Watergate per
sonalit1es, exammabons of the unpeachment process and the
doctrme of execubve prtvilege the Agnew scandal and the
consbtutwnal and htsloncal unplicatwns of Watergate tn
general
Thts ts not even to mention all the memotrs that are expected
to come nor tbe thousands upon thousands of pages of govern
ment documents such as the While House tape transcrtpl!i and
Jud1ctary Commtllce hearmgs

RAY CROMLEY

Is Rocky too strong
to stay number two?
By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON - (NEA) - Norman Mailer saw tl a decade
ago, wntmg of Nelson Rockefeller at the 1964 Repubhcan
Natlonill Convention
'He had a strong decent lace and something tough as the
rubber ln a handball to his makeup, but hts eyes had been pun
ched out a long time ago - they had the dtslantlunar glow of the
small sad ey~s you see ln a caged chunpanzee or a gorll~ Even
"hen hearty he gave an unpresBlon the pnvate man was remote
as an astronaut on a lost orbit "
That same look which dtVJdes off the IIUter Nelson
RodtefeUer from the Pllblie polltlctan was evtdent wben
!fllldent Ford announc_.t his nomination as vtce prealdent
Unleu Mr Ford can penetrate this mask and come to some
llCcalmnodallon with the Rockefeller m11de, the Ford adllljlllltratlon 8JI4the Ford eandldacy lor prtlldent 111 1976 may
!

there tsn t too much known
about the chemistry of plants '
When yo u constder the
"mount of testing and recvolua tton thai goes on before
a nc" drug IS tr~ ed on human
bt!m~s, much less put on the
market, 1t ts ~maung that
plants are not treated wtth all
thts cauuon he sa1d
Mfer tsolallng the chemtcal
zO gp tthe substances are then
led to nure to see what effects
they have on them
We gtve lbe m1ce a pretty
htgh dose equal to a gram of
the substance to a thousand
grams of the mouse's wetght,
Mel .aughhn saut
Our re.

search is just sort of a starling
point because t! somethmg
happens more tests Will be
Deeded
Also there can be mistakes
tn trymg to overettend the data
of lab tests For example, our
tests wtlh skunk cabbage
showed It dtdn'l kill mtce, but
that doesn I mean tl could not
harm humans '
McLaughlin sa1d another
reasort for cbeckmg all types of
chemicals Ul plants was that
some of them are now bemg
used differently than m the
past For example, lor years
people have made a ' herb tea"

TOM TIEDE

Skimpy payments, cheats, hurt jobless

By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - (NEA) There is a woman m New York
who weekly shows up m her
tenms dress to collect unem
ployment compensation She
tells one and all that her
husband 1s a ra1lroad executive
but a skinflml that m order to
redecorate her kitchen she
;:1::;:~:::;:::;:;:::;:::::;:;:::::,;;:,,,,,,,,,::,,,;:::;:,;:;:;~''::;:::::;,,,,,~:;::::::;::,;: : : : : :::,,;.:;.:;:,::;:,:,:, :,:,:,: :;::::::::;::;:: : ::,:::=~;&lt; ha d to ea r n he r own money
'' '
, ..~ She found a part tune job but
was latd off after a year She
makes 1t loudly clear she
' doesn t need unemployment
compensatiOn but well,
-I
dahlmg I ve got 1t commg to
by Chet TaiUlehill
executi ve ed1tor
me, don t J?
It went thts way
Unfortulately she does ,
CARACAS AGOSTO 24 (UP I) - El promedw de produccwn legally anyway And so do
petrolera Venezonlana se s1tuo hasta el 21 de este mes en uncounted others who are at
3 066,683 barr1les dtartos, lo que representa una d1smunucwn en least
morally
abusmg
relacwn con la producCion obtemda para el mtsmo penodo en unemployment compensation
1973, segun W1 mformedel mimsteno de mmas E Htdrocarburos
laws Nobody knows preciSely
THAT WAS WHAT THE Umted Press Internaltonal wtre was how many people collect unsaymg Saturday afternoon for about 10 mmutes before the needed compensallon but the
gentlemen m charge of such things m Columbus htccuped and Labor Department estimates
tapped out the message disregard above The warmng was about20 per cent of the natton s
unnecessary here everyone m the edttonal room of the Sunday rec1p1ents 'are not m dtre
Times.Sentmel bemg a total stranger to the Spantsh lauguage
stra1ts If so, thts works out to
Once agam the Computer Age had got 1ts wtres crossed about 1 2 mtlhon people an
(literally ) News mtended for UP! s South American chents nually colleclmg $1 btlllon on
madvertently came onto the Ohio wtre
the dole No doubt some lake
It s enough to put one mto a mammoth flap to cons1der how
the money for thmgs other than
utterly fouled up our hves Some future day may become when a kitchen redecorahon but many
wrong button IS pushed madvertently
others lake 11 only because
Wtth the coffee hot the toast ready open a box of wheaties they've got tt commg "
for breakfast and pour out delec~ble, crunchy cheese crackers
The sad sttuatwn ts as old as
Cash Bahr or Kermit Walton antiCipating a mce autumn
busmess m the new styles gents ready to wear open the first
carton Guess what, seat covers lor the latest four wheeled
models out of DetrOit
Or the family gathered 1n front of the tube to trtumph w1th
Kojac m h1s weekly vtctory over the bad guys the screen comes
alive wtth a mmor league rugby match from VIenna Austna
As suggested heretofore, the Sparush news story may be a
portent of surprises to come

compensahon relief 1lself almost 40 years But tt ts
espectally contemptible at a
ttme when mtlllons of
genwnely needy unemployed
are trymg to stretch compensahon dollars over an mflattonary economy If 20 per
cent
of
compensahon
recaptents are not m dll'e
stratts, 80 per cent al'e, some 5
ffilllton people or more wtll
collect thts year not In tennts
dresses but m workclothes and
not for kicks but for real
Personally, ' says another
New York receiver, I'm
ashamed' to be here but we got
to eat "
Eatmg, actually, ts about all
the needy rec1p1ents can expect
from the dole The comsystem
was
pensation
ortglnally destgned to allow
unemployed working men and
women to meet thetr baste,
non-deferable livmg expenses
but that goal has long smce
been eclipsed by reahty
Compensation vanes from
state to state but the average
state payment today IS $75
weekly, enough for food for a
fam1ly of four or ftve but not
enough for anythmg elSe So, if
a man 1s out of work long these
days and has no supplemental

MOST EVERYONE I SUPPOSE has qumled before B1g
Brothensm Now m Mtddleport ts a perfect case m pomt
namely, the unpostlton of the costly National Flood Insurance
Program
There are few quarrels With the program tf apphed to towns
or netghborhoods that perSistently are subjected to damagmg
floods say for example such as lowlands along the Mtss1ss1pp1
Rtver Or even along the Ohto Rtver where recent records show
high water damage has occurred wtth any sort of regulartly
Indeed a goverrunent"\SubsHiized msurance program for flood
areas IS regarded as long overdue
But the question has to be asked, why dtd Btg Brother use
flood maps prepared before 1900' This ts 1974, a shade more than
26 years smce water has been on the T m Middleport or mto the
homes even of the southerly part of town - whtch IS lower domg apprectable damage
Big Brother's own nght arm the U S Corps of Engmeers
brags Ul pubhc the system of dams m the mam stream and
tnbulanes of the Ohio, had tt been m existence m 1948, would
have taken 10 feet off that years crest
Although all I know about the nattonal flood msurance
program ts what I read m the papers, 1t seems clear that ex
ceplmg Gravel Hill 11 will be necessary that people buy flood
msurance m order to use any form of Federal or Federal-related
fmanctal asststance for bmldmg or remodelmg purposes
Furthermore, users of such fmanc1al asststance apparently wtll
be strictly controlled as to location and type of bwldmg or
remodelmg Without sa1d flood msurance there could be httle or
no fmanetal help
Mtddleport counctl has authonzed entry mto the program from necesstty - and has set about to persuade B1g Brother thai
little or none of Middleport should be classes m lhe ' danger
zones • Councttmen will have a btg and notsy cheermg sectiOn
for this miSSIOn

professor of Mayo Graduate
School of Medtcme Is an
authortty on nutnllon and ts
quoted as saymgt 'Any
phys1c1an or dtetitian Will fmd
the hook larded With mac
curacies mtsquotahon and
unsubstantiated statements
James Trager, a well·known
Wrtter about foed, quotes Dr
Leo Lutwak, M D and Ph D ,
professor of climcal nutntion
at Cornell as saymg she
1
mtsuses science '' 'Adelle
Davts takes mcomplete
evidence and Immediately
extrapolates tt to what are
ndiculous conclusiOns from a
clinical pomt of vtew "
On the Dmah Shore program
she stated that ' rtce " a good
source of protem" as a substitute for htgh prtced meat
It's not Less than ten per cent
of tts calortes are protein ac-

the ckJy after .

•

from catnip -containing water
soluble extracts - but 1n the
past lew years some persons
have slllrted smoking It
He also c1ted cases where
pero••" have been poisoned
because they ate the wrong
part of a plant Perhaps the
most common example of this
'" rhubarb leaves, wh ich
conlllm deadly oxalic actd
although the sllllk 1s edible
But Mel aughlln said, the
kernel m lbe p1ts of peaches,
aprtcots, plums and apple
seeds all oontatn prussic ac•d
- cya ntde
The dangers to children from
eating a harmful substance are

much greater than lor an adult
because potson Is more toxic
the greater Its strertgth tslo the
weight of the person
McLaughlin recalled once he
had been asked to belp lind out
what was wrong wlth a UtUe
g1rl who bad become til and
later died
She sa1d she had eaten
some spmach, bul when we
traced her path back to where
she had picked lbe plants, we
found lt was wild hemlock the same stuff that Socrates
drank and lhe same stuff the
Greeks used to give their
crunmals to execute them " he
satd

.

mcom~ ,

he stands the r1sk of
losmg hts home , car and
anything else patd for at
regular credit mtervals
The system, moreover has
more faults than the SJze of tts
checks It ts a federal-state
program, which means tl lacks
mmunum standards and ts
fraught with Inconsistencies
Each slate runs tls own plan,
the Federal government
merely, and qwetly, oversees
Thus, a workless person can
gel amost $100 a week m New
York but only $60 m Misstsstppt
and he can get 36 weeks
coverage m Utah but only 20 m
Puerto Rico At best, many of
the unemployed get chicken
feed Many people when em
ployed these days earn m
excess of $200 a week but last
year, accordmg to one study
the average unemployment
compensation was $58 50 a
week - ' hardly enough, ' says
a Labor Department man, not
hardly '
Some months ago there was
talk of reform m Washmgton
The Ntxon ad!mmstratton
wanted to force slates to
overhaul exiSting programs to
meet national gwdellnes, m
cludmg bloated beneftts It also
wanted to mcrease the number

of people ehgtble lor such
compensa tton ( 11 mtlllon
workers, mostly farm and
pubhc employes, are not
currentl y protected ) In terestingly Gerald Ford m
lroduced the proposal tn
Congress
Alas, nothmg
happened And reform ts not
now hkely Soc1al spendmg
tdeas have been forced by
mflatwn mto full retreat
Still the optimist must hope
The prtonttes of mflatwn can
not m good consc1ence neglect
the cttlzens most affected by
mflatiOn At a mmtmum ,
beneftts should be extended to
all needy unemployed and
compensatton should be m
creased to two thirds a man's
salary Bestdes this, each
rectptent should be entitled to
at least 26 weeks of help
Reform
would
cost,
naturally But perhaps the
mcreases could be lessened by
a new public attttude toward
unemployment compensatton
II ts not somethmg lo be
Siphoned by all, only those 'who
need tt to live Tenms dresses,
get out of the !me Leave the
money there for the men and
women for whom 1t ts
necessanly and JUS!tflabl9
mtended

DR. LAMB

Adelle Davis: not recommended

well come a cropper
For Mr Rockefeller wtth all h1s success as governor has
been notonously unsuccessful as a number two three or four m
commg to terms With the men he works for or through
He qml the Etsenhower ad!mmstratton m strong
disagreement over pohcy and proceeded to blast the Etsenhower
approach m a sertes of documented pubhc statements He
refused Ike s help m his gubernatorial campatgn
His ftrsl period of high off1ce m the Department of Stale
ended when Secretary Jinuny Byrnes told Ptestdent Truman
etther Rockefeller must g&lt;&gt; or Byrnes would
In hts maneuvermg al the San Franctsco Umted Nations
charter sessions, h~ was so uncooperatiVe with other members of
the delegation he made an enemy of John Foster Dulles, who
feared Rockefeller would wreck the UN abormng In suceesston
he feuded wtth Cordell Hull, Herbert Hoover Jr and Averell
Harr1man
For Nelson Rockefeller IS not only high prmctpled but
astoundmgly stuboorn Smgle handedly he forced tbe adoption of
his CIVIl rtghts and strong military defense beliefs on the 1960
Republican Nattonal Convention And Without nottceable stress
(some say wtth considerable enJoyment ) he perSISted on the
platform of the 1964 Republican National Convention when the
vitriolic anger and vtolent heckling from the balconies tn thai
converttlon would have driVen most men from the slllge
1f President Ford can wtn the Inner Rockefeller and bring
him mto hand as a complete team player, the Rockefeller asset
\Ytll be great mdeed
He Is a lop-flight admtrustrator (where Mr Ford has little
experience ), a ftrst-rate attracter of able men (a Ford
weakness), a provert performer on domestic problems (where
someg1ve Mr Ford low marks) and has close lies wtlh labor and
ctvtl rights leaders (whose susptelons-of the President are well
known)
R;dereller dehghts m complex problems, m negollatimts
I
\ _

By Lawrence E Lamb, M D
DEAR DR LAMB - In
Adelle Davts book Let's Eat
R1ght to Keep Ftl' she states
thai the foods doctors tell their
pat1ents to avmd m order to
lower cholesterol 1 e eggs
hver butter whole mtlk etc
actually supply the nutrtenl
needed to help
lower
cholesterol, that nutnent hemg
lectthm Please gtve me your
opm10n"
DEAR READER - Did you
know that three of Adelle
Davts books are on the " not
recommended hst of the
Chicago Nutrttwn Assn ? The
AsSOCiatiOn ts composed of top
notch
well
mformed
nutrtlwmsts I suspect such
slatemenls thai you quoted are
one reason for thts Dr Edward H Rynearson formerly

Adventist conference officer to
speak at Pomeroy services
Dr and Mrs B E Seton,
London, Eng , will be present
for Sabbath semces at the
Pomeroy Seventh-day Adventist Church, Mulberry Hgts
Rd
Saturday afternoon,
August 31 Dr Seton wtll be
guest speaker at the 3 IS p m
worship servtce
Dr Seton recetved hts Ph D
from the Universtly of Cape
Town South Afnca, and is
presently AsSistant Secretary
of lhe General Conference Of
Seventh-&lt;Jay Adventists
Dr and Mrs Seton, who
spent many years as
nussionartes In Angola, South
Afrtca and Swttzerland, has
served m several areas of
denomlnallonal work They are
the parents of Gerard Seton,
present pas lor of the Pomeroy
SevenJth-&lt;lay Advendst Church
Sabbath school will begin at 2
P m Services are open to the
public

.............

cordmg lo U S Department of
Agrtculture data And I heard
her tell D1ck Cavett that you
had to drink whole lllllk rather
than skim mtlk because you
needed the fat to absorb the
vltamm A ThiS 1sn't true
e1ther
In evalualtng /\delle Davts
concepts about nutrition you
need to put her m to proper
time perspective She was a
dedicated pmneer and ac
complished a lot of good m her
time But her tune was before
World War II when undernutntion was a national
problem She was a warm
grandmotherly person m her
her later years Her educatiOn
was lumted to a bachelor s
degree m 1927 and a master's
degree m btochenustry m 1937
She came on the nutn\ton
scene about the time vttamms
were begmnmg to be tsolated
and understood Thls may
explain her overenthuSJasljc
fatth m vtlamms as a cure-all
You must reahze that she
was an Indiana farm g1rl m a
time when farm k1ds
IIOilletlmes wal~ed two mtles to

a rural one room school often
afterdomgfarm chores There
were no hot lunches 1\ good
breakfast before gomg to
school was more Important
Her lrammg preceded the time
heart d1sease became an
Important na honal medtcal
problem Between her two
degrees Dr Paul Dudley Whtte
was reporting theftrst senes of
heart attacks In medtcal
JOurnals as a new problem
Adelle Davts had II!Dited
lrammg m medical problems
After all she never went to
med1cal school or pracbced
medicme So she represented
advtce from another era She
had some very good pomts and
deserves a Jot of cred1t for
encouragmg mterest m
nulrthon Her advtce was
better swted m many mstances, to what we knew and
were before World War II but
thmgs have changes We now
have blliimg hot lunches, and
telev1ston W1th It we have heart
disease Its tune to Eat
Right for 1974, wh1ch 1s dtl
ferent from down on the farm
In 1937

Berrys World

CHARLES WRFMAN
RACINE -Navy s..man
Reontlt Clulrlea N Curfman,
aon of Mr ud Mra Cbarleo
Curfman of Route I, Rltelne,
has gnduated lr&lt;~m recruit
tralolol at the Naval
Tralolo&amp; Center, Great
Latea, DI

wlth ditflcult men and groupo (he believes thif Is his strong
pomt), and has a trackre&lt;:ord In practical finance, bullneu and
economic management, plua enormous prlvale lnlluence (aided
by 8 family resources estlmated at between f3 and f8 billion)
His liberal" reputation In edliCatlon, pollution abatement
and aid for the poor will be a majqr 81111et when he and President
Ford slalh lederaldOillellic apendJnl, take hard looltl1t the way
this naUoo's weUare and domestic llllllltance JII'OIP'IIIII •re run
and concurrer1tiy plllh for strong national defepaea, matters o~
whtch 'he &lt;WP are In clooe •IP'eement

@ @

' You ~ been around the President for a long
lime - wllat does that mean?

L-~------------------~----~
~ ~

Sports
Desk

l'tiii.ADEIPHTA t UP I) P!uladelplua s Dtck Ruthven
unliClpates u shutout every
lime he pttchcs One problem
11 s uswllly thrown by the
OJlp!ISIIIOO
The 22 yca r-&lt;&gt;ld rtghl-hander

By Denny
Fobes ,

was VICtimized by lack of
hilton~

support agmn l'uesday

mght .as Cmc annah s J ack
Btlltngham 16-ll, blanked the

We're still two years away from a good sohd program
BtU Jewell, head coach of the Southern Tornados made that
observation ln descrtbmg lhe Tornados' ctwnces th1s season on
the gndtron
Jewell who lost st&lt; semors from the 1973 squad that fm1shcd
behind only Kyger Creek 1n the !mal SVAC standmgs, has JUSt
sevPn seruors and 5 JUniors back this year
In all, however, the honzon looks br1ght, as 39 OOys are out
for the team, Tl of them sophomores pnd freshmen Gone from
last years squad are quarterback Vern Ord, and hnemen Mtke
Codner, Jtm Wtlhams, Dcnnts Hawk and Randy Forbes
For the past two years wtth few seruors m the yearly turn
over rate, the 1ornados have managed to llrush 12m lhe SVAC,
talung tbe league champwnshtp m tbe 1972 season
Southern which opens the 1974 season Sept 6 agamsl
Fairland, has a good young bunch according to Jewell lhe
Tornados however have yet to see any scnmmage action
Lucasvtlle havmg cancelled out on a scheduled duel last week
and the Purple and Gold will most likely gel only one pre season
scrunma ge under thetr belts before that clash wtth Fatrland
Jewell expects the league to be 'pretty well balanced this
season echomg the thoughts of most SV 1\C coacbes Tbe Tor
nados should be rtght m there aga m, wtth probably one of the
best backfteld combmaltons m the league leadmg the way m
semor halfback Mtlch Nease and JUnior fullba ck Greg Dunmng
Last season Nease was one of the top rushers In the state,
churmng out 1775 yards and scormg 22 touchdowns Dunnmg was
a bulldozmg fullback, domg well unltl bemg InJUred early m the
season m the annual clash With arch nval Eastern
The fate of the Tornados this season could well depend on
how well Jewell, and his asststants John Dudding and James
Lawrence can rebuild that line that was decunated vta
graduation But With a f&gt;-1 record from last year and Jlliil those 5
semors gone, there wtll be plenty of talent m Purple and Gold this
fall and the Tornados should be m the thick of what appears to be
a real horse race this season

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Edttor
FOREST HILLS N Y (UP! ) - Beyond any questiOn, Jtmmte
Connors and Chrissie Evert are Amenca s most celebrated
sweethearts smce Wallace Beery and Marle Dressler
Okay, so make t! Mickey Rooney and Ann. Rutherford
They also play a much better game of tennts
When Connors and Chrts competed at Wunbledon seven weeks
ago, London bookmakers , always qmck wtth a pnce or a phi"ase
coupled them as the Lovebtrd Double and offered 36 to 1 edds
agamst both wmrung
Both won
In the process they d1d somethmg to help combat mflalton
The U S Open tenniS champiOnships gel underway here today
and you can forget all about those aslronomtcal London odds
Jumme Connors ts the 3 to 1 favortte to take the men's tttle and
his brtde-to-be, wmner of 52 stratght matches and 10 stratght
tournaments, ts the even money chotce to wmd up with the
women s crown
R1ght now, the world ts nothmg but a ruce round tenms ball for
both The rrrepress1ble uninhtbtted Connors parllcularly, has
everythmg gomg for hun
He won't be 22 unttl Sunday but this year already he has won
the Australian and Wunbleton champlonshtps as well as the hand
of lovely, talented 19 year-&lt;&gt;ld Chnsste, "hom he mames Nov 8
The difference m Connors smce he won at Wunbledon has been
a marked one With much of tl bemg reflected m the tremendollii
conftdence he exudes now
Shortly after Wimbledon Btll Riordan Connors advtsor and
c1ose friend for the past 14 years, sat down w1th him for one of
those heart-to-heart talks
' You've arrtv.ed ' Rwrdan said You re among the real
champtons now, and you have to understand that The four-letter
words have to go The gestures, too Okay ?
' Okay ' replied Connors
•
The other day he button-holed Riordan and reported
uNo more four-letter words '
(!What aOOut the gestures?' Rwrdan wanted to know
' 'Pretty good," Connors beollmed 'I ve got em all down to the
pmky now '
Junmy Connors has been labeled a lot of thmgs thmgs like
munature ' • abrasive
poor sport,' court Jester' and
sometunes worse
&amp;&gt;marna s !he Nastase one of hts best frtends attended a
luncheon at whtch Connors was awarded the Dewar s Cop
Tuesday, as was ChrLSste Evert, for the general contrtbubon they
have made to lennts !hts year Nastase can t see all those ad
)eciJVes apphed to his frtend
' I don 't think he s any of these things ' satd hts doubles
partner I thmk he's very fnendly He s like a k1d He never
rubbed me the wrong way Maybe one of the reasons some of the
other players call hun these thmgs ts because be beats them so
much "
Someone asked Connors If It upsets hlm to hear people call him
"independent, and he satd the people who call hun that never
bother him
Maybe th&lt;)y'd hke lo be mdependent hkc me he satd
Oms Evert and Jmuny Connors sat next to each other at a
huge round table answering questiOns before recetvmg thetr
awards TQesday
They did what all sweethearts do They held hands
Ortgmally when they f1rst met two years ago m London Chrts
Evert was attracted to Connors because they were complete
oppostles
I was 17, shy and wasn t out.going at all ' she sald It was
my first tune m Europe and I was m kind or awe of everything
The £act he says what he feels, that he tsn t always quiet, doesn t
bother me He tsn'l meant to be qutet Sometimes I don't hke 11,
and he knows thai I don 't thtnk he should change, though That 's
his way, and It's a wmrung way "
When someone asked her a qucstton about the klnd of dress she
will wear for the wedding, Chrts Evert satd that the wedding
Itself was a personal matter she d1dn't parttcularly care lo
dilcuss at thls time
Outwardly, Connors docsn t seem nervous about his getting
married
"Alllgotta do Is wear a tuxedo and be there, ' he said
Does discussing any ooe phase of U1e 1namage disturb h1m a
newsman asked Connors
''No,'' he saJd ''As long as you don't get too personal ''
"What would you consider 'too personal• "persisted tbe samo
reporter
' What we're gonna do on our honeymoon, ' laughed Junrruc
Connors
'

\

Ph•ls 3-0
lt was the s1xth hme this
year Ruthven has been on the
losmg end of a shutout

lbe

Ph1ls, who have been blanked
m four of the1r lp st f1ve ~ames

ra,Jicd to !:K!ore .t run In Huth
vrln !I l~tsl thrt.'tl defeats
n1at s what makes it so

hard on you menially
en satd

1

Rulhv

fhcre i:lre so many

lhon~s 1n

(ash winch set up the double

TI1e Reds who really dtdn'l
need tl, added an Jnsuranc'e run

by Pcrt..'Z

' Ruthven 1.ltdn t make tl
easy
swd Ht.'tis' Mmlager
Spo.u ky And er$01\
lit: ' ~ a
WC&lt;tt young p1tcher and those

baseball over which
you have no control J made toug:h IOS."iCS even thmuselves
one mistake lontghl (a ptlc h out
Tony Pere-l htt lor a double)
Bllhnghon n who g:~ve up JUSt
and he t BtlhnghamJ got by on sev~n hits to becowe the
a lot more than one '
National League s ftrst 16Ruthven, 6-11 p•tchc'&lt;l seven garue wlnner said he ts just
tnnmgs and g~:~ve up no earned thankful to he with the power
runs but left the game wtth the laden Reds
Phtls trathng 2-&lt;1 lor a pmch
1 ve g,ot16 w1ns because I m
I htttcr because of a stxth mnmg p1tctung for the Btg Red
error by 'second baseman Dove Maclune, he said

m the mnt.h
Gene
was

mrun~

G~rber
st~Fe

off reliever

Pcre2. walked,

atlemptmg to steal

second when Cash dropped the
ball and scored on a smgle by
Dave ConcepciOn

Ptuls Manager Danny
Ozark tn desperate need of
some hiltmg punch satd he wtll
start outhelder Greg Luzmski
m tontghl s game wtth the
Reds I uzmsk1, who underwent
an operatton for torn ligaments
m early June, was Just taken
off the dtsabled list Monday

Pirates, Dodgers keep rolling;
St. Louis continues tailspin
By STU CAMEN
UPI Sports Writer
Both Dock Eilts and Jack
Btllmgham have stmple explanations £or their pLtchtng
success
1f r keep the ball m the
park I II wm
satd Eilts
'l)lesday mghl after 1hz Pittsburgh Pirates routed the San
Franctsco Gtants 13-2 for Eilts'
etghlh straight trtumph and his
11th Wln lll 19 deCISIOnS
The b1g difference between
the way Eilts IS pttchmg now
and the way he pttched when he
lost etght of II games 1s that he
gave up 10 homers m hts ftrst II
dec1s1ons but has permitted
only one home run during his
etght game wtnnlng streak
Thmgs always even out m
baseball, ' added Ellts " !
wasn't worned when I was
losmg early m the season I
wasn t concerned about the
team losmg etther, because
everythmg evens out
Btllmgham became the National League s f1rst Hi-game
winner when he hurled the
Ctncmnatt Reds lo a 3-0
lr1umph over Philadelphia,
blanking the Ph1Js on seven
hits
Ellis, who scattered 10 htl!i
and helped his own cause wtth
two RB!s, got all the support he
needed from AI Oliver who
drove m fiVe runs, four of them
wtth a double and single, to
highlight a mne-run thtrd mnlng The htls ~!so extended
Oliver s batting streak to 20
games and he has now hit
safely m 56 of h1s last 60 games
The VICtory combmed w1th
St Loms loss to San Diego,
mcreased tbe Ptrates' lead lo 1
¥. games over the second place
Cardinals m the National
League East
Tony Perez doubled m two
runs for Cmctnnati and Dave
Concepcton smgled home
another as the Reds remamed
three games behmd pace
settmg Los Angeles m the
West Dtck Ruthven, 6-11, took
the loss and tt was the stxth
time this year the Phtls have
been shut out w1th Ruthven
ptlchmg
In other Naltonal League
games Los Angeles routed

Cage ace
Malone in

9 •

,.,
•• .,•• "'
"' •
m •
'"
60 ••
•• "'
w

New Vorl&lt;
Balt i more
Cleveland
M il waukee
D e tro t

63
63

64

62

10 1 '1
12

west

I pel g b
56 ' 69
60 535
.t 1 ~
63 515
7
6S 496
9 1
63 67 485 ll
C a lt for n!~
5' 79 J91 '23
Tu esdays R uulls
C leve land 12 Kanus C t v 8
lSI
Kan sas C ty 13 Clevelan d '2

Oak l and
K ansa s C1t't'
T e:w.a $
Ch lcago
Mmnesota

74
69
67
6.t

'""

C a l lforn a 7 Detroit 6 13 m n
Oakland 3 M i lwaukee 2
New York 4 Mln!'les ota 2
Boston 6 Ch Jcago 1
Texa s 1Ba Jtlmore 1
Today s Pr obab le P•t cher\
fAll T1mes ED T)
Cal fornta ( Tanana 915 ) et
D etro•t ( Lo l l ch 1' 15) 8 p m
New York ( Dobson 12 14 ) at
M innesota Wecker 13 lO l 8 30
pm
Oak land (Hunter 19 10 ) a t
M !waukee
I Rodr tguez 6 4)

8 30 p m
Cleveland ( G Perr y l6 9 ) at
Kansas C tv lF tzmorr s 10 3)
a JO p m
Boston (Tian t 20 8 ) a1 Ch c a
go lB Johnson 52) 9 p m
Baltimo r e (Mc Nall y 12 9 1 a t
Texas { H argan 10 8 or J Brown
9 10) 9 p m
Thursda y s Gam es
Kansas City at Cleveland
n ghl
Texas at Ball more night
(onl y games scheduled i

St LOU IS (McGlothen 14 8) at
San D ieg o (G r e f 6 15) \0 30
p m
Thursday s Gam es
Atlanta at Montr ea l tw l!ght
Chtcago at Los Angeles night
St Lou i s at Sa n D ego n gh t
H ouston at New York
P ttsburgh a t San Franc 1sco
(on ly game s scheduled l

Linescores
N•ttonal League
C1nclnnatl 000 002 001 J 8o
Phtladelpht ooo ooo ooo- o 1 1
Billingham ( 16 8) and Ben ch
Ruthven R chert (81 G ar ber
(9 ) and Boone L P Ruthven (6
11)

New Yark 000 000 40Cl--"- 4 10 1
Mmn eso ta 000 020 ooo-:-- 2 9 2
T drow ( 1 I 10) and Munsoh
Hands Burgm e1er (7) Camp
bell !1l and R,oof Bor gmann
L P Hand S ( 4 5)
Boston
DOD 200 31 G- 6 13 0
Ch,c:ago
100 ooo ooo-- 1 1 2
Cleve land ( 9 1'2 ) and Mont
gomery Kaat Gossag e (1) and
Herrmann LP Kaat (14 12)

Atlantil
000 100 DO~ 1 7 1
Montreal
001 201 Oh:6 1 1
Reed J N ekro (5) Leon (7)
and Correll Torre z { 10 8) and
Stmson LP Reed 18 8 ) HRS
Evans ( 18th )
Ba lley (17th)
F atrly (12th )

RETREADS

Houston
ODD 010 lOG- 2 7 1
New York 030 ooo Oh4 70
G r fttn D e Los San tos (7)
and
M May
Johnson
(7)
McGraw
Parker
(7)
and
Hodges LP Grffn ( 127) HR s
Ayala ( 1st) M May { 4th )

Most
All Stzes

Sf LOUIS
000 001 DOG- 1 9 0
San Otego 010 100 lOX.3 41
G1bson (7 12) and S mmons
Sp liner (6 8 ) and Kend~ll HRs
McCovey !20th} W t n f 1 e I d
1171h )

no
mountmg

P1t1sburgh 009 000 103- 13 12 2
200 ooo oo~ '2 10 2
Eilts (11 Bl and Sang ulllen
D Aqu s_to Hal ckt (3) Morr s
t3 ) Moffitt (8) and Rader LF
D Aqu1sto (9 12)

San Frncsc

READY FOR 1975 SEASON - Balterymates Marc Salser left and Dale Teaford Jr ,
members of the Syracuse Pee Wee baseball team this summer v.ere practlcmg on the1r own
one day recently at Syracuse Park preparmg (already' ) for the 197• season They JUSt mtghl be
ta lking over the strategy that had Salser pltchmg four wmners for hts team wtlh Teaford
usually h1s catcher They are llvmg evidence that Syracuse, hometown of the late star maJor
league catcher Ralston (RoUte) Hemsley sllll produces baseball players
Chtcago 12-5, San Otego trtpped
St Lows 3-1, New York beat
Houston 4-2 and Montreal
defeated Atlanta 6 1
In the Amencan League
Cahforma mpped Detr01t Him
13 mnmgs, Oakland shaded
Milwaukee 3 2 New \'ork
topped Mmnesota 4-2, Boston
beat Chteago 6-1, Texas edged
Baltunore 2-1 and Cleveland
split a doubleheader wtth
Kansas C1ty wmmng, the
opener 12-,'l and losmgl the
mghtcap 13-2
Dodgers 12, Cubs 5
JIITllTiy Wynn drove m two
runs with hts 29th homer and
solo shots by Btll Buckner and
Joe Ferguson powered Los

New York

l

Am eriun L•agvt
Eu1
w I pel
Bos ton
71 56 S59

n m

Ma1or League Leaders
By Un1ted Press Internation a l
Lcadtng Batter s
Nattonal Leagu e
r
h
pet
PETERSBURG Va (UP! ) Garr All g128 ab
5-&lt;16 76 197 361
- Moses M~lone , the 19-year Z Sic. P II 117 42 9 62 143 333
vr Ptt 11 3 472 75 153 324
old boy wonder of basketball 01
Sm t h St L
l\1 393 59 126 321
was scheduled to fly to New
LA 123 511 75 163 319
\'ork early Ieday to s1gn a Grvy
G ross H Q 123 &lt;~57 66 146 319
mulltmtll1on dollar contract B c knr LA 11 I 442 61 140 317
Br c k St L 121 499 80 157 315
w1th the Utah Stars of the Crdn
t Ch 110 420 62 130 310
Am e rtcan Basketball Grnm en 118 362 56 11 2 309
Am e r~ ca n L ea gu e
Assocmatwn
g
ab r
h
pc1
Malone, a June h1gh school Crw Mnn \ 24 487 71 178 366
grv T)( 103 332 49 I 15 346
graduate agreed to the terms Hr
M cRa KC 116 424 61 135 318
of the contract Tuesday but Yastnemsk. Bo s
418 77 132 316
held off Stgnmg until the 1\B/\ Or t a Ch i 119
110 408 66 128 314
could arrange a spectal 2 p m Rand ! Tx 122 415 55 129 311
NY 104 337 56 104 309
news conference m New York, Mdd:W.
Allen C.h 119 435 82 133 306
accordmg to a league spokes- J c ksn Ok 120 412 13 125 303
sco t1 M i l 127 aao 65 lAS 302
man
Hom e Run s
Nat1onal League
Sc hm dl
The 6-foot 10 twO"Itme htgh
Phil 32 Wynn LA '29 Bench
school All Amenca was lo c lh 76 Perez C n and Cedeno
begin cia~ today at the Hou 22
L e agu e Allen Chi
Untv e r ~ tt y
of Maryland, J2 Amencan
Burrough s T ex 25 Ja c k
wtnner m lhe-eollege recrmtlng :son Oak 24 Tena c e Oak 21
M elton C.hl Ma yberry KC and
battle for Malone last June
Oarw In M nn 20
But the Stars, who selected
Runs- Batted Jn
Malone tn the third round of the end
Na11onal Leagu e Bench Cln
S&lt;::hmidt Phil 9a Wynn
ABA draft, began actively--~ 93 Garv ey LA 90 Cedeno
Hou 87
pursumg hlfll as soon as pur
A m e r 1 c a n Leagu e Bur
chase of the team by James roughs Tex 105 Allen Ch 85
Colherwas finollzedtwoweeks Bando Oa k 84 Rud1 Oak SJ
Darw in M lnn 81
Sto l en Bases
ago
National Lugue Srock St L
Delal1s of the Stars' contract 89 LOpes LA 54 Morgan Cln
were not dtsclosed by team
offtctals but sources close lo
Malone said 11 called for
$1~,000 a year for fou• years
$25 000 for signing, $25 000 lor
reporting to camp, $60,000 lor
completing college and a home
and $500 a month for his
mother, Mary A league
spokesman satd all details had
not been worked out yet

M•1or L..eague Sf~ nd lngt.
By un.ted Press Int ernational
N•honat L..ugue
East
w I pc:t g b
P i ttsb urg.._
6 7 61 513 1112
St L ou iS
66 63 512
3'1?
Ph tladelph a 64 65 A96
Mon !real
59 67 468 7
56 70 444 10
New Y ork
Ch i ca g o
5'2 73 4 16 13 1?
W es. t
w 1 pet g b
LQS Angele s
81 47 633
Ci nc innatt
79 51 608 3
All&amp;nta
71 58 550 10 '1
Houston
66 62 5 16 15
San Fran c sc o 57 11 44 2 2&amp;1 1
San D i ego
50 79 3 88 3\'h
Tu esday s Re su lt s
Ci nc lnnalt 3 Phlladelph a 0
Montreat 6 Atlanta 1
New York .t H ouston 2
Los Angeles 12 Ch cago 5
San Diego 3 St Lou s l
P1Hsburgh \ 3 San F ran c sea 2
Today s probable Ptt chers
I All Ttmes EDT )
Houston (D erker 8 8 ) at New
York ( Matlack 11 10) 2 15 p m
P i ttsburgh (Reuss 1&amp; 9 ) al
San Franc1sco (Barr 10 7) 3 l S
p m
Ci n c lnnatt ( Gul lett 15 8 ) at
Phtlad elph a
(Carlton
lot 91
n g ht
Atlanta
!Mo rton 13 1l
at
M ont rea { W alker 2 4 ) n ght
Ch cago (Hooton 4 10 I at Los
Angeles {Sutton 12 9 l
10 30

5)

Amerh;an
League
Norfh
Oak 46 Pat ek. KC 31 Rivers
Cal
lowen$ t eln
Clev
and
Care w M ln n JO
P1tchlno
N.1f1onal Lea9ue Bllllnghtun
Cin 16 8 Messersm 1h LA I S 5
Gul l e tt Cl n 15 8 McGlotnen
St L.. 14 6 Car t ton
P hil and
Reu ss P i tt 14 9 P N le kro All
ahd Lon borg Ph II 1-4 11
American Lea9ue Tl&amp;nt Bos
20 B H unter OaK 19 10 Busby
KC &amp;nd Jenkins Te~o.: 19 ll
Wood Chi 19 IS

Angeles over Chtca go The
Cubs used twO"run homers by
Jose Cardenal and Jerr y
Morales to take a 5-4 lead alter
2 % lllllmgs but the Dodgers
went ahead for good m the
bottom of the third when Wtllte
Crawford smgled home one run
and B1ll RusseU smglcd m two
more Charhe Hough worked
the last 6 2-3 tiUlmgs allowmg
JUSt one hit to earn hts seventh
VIctor~ m 10 deCISions
Padres 3, Cardmals I
Wtlhe McCovey and Dave
Wmfteld tagged Bob Gtbson for
solo homers to help San Otego
defeat Sl Lows Dan Sptllner,
a 22-year old nght hander who
had dropped h1s last ftve
dectstons outdueled Gtbson as
he shackled the Cards on etght
hits Lou B• ock stole hiS 89th
base to move 24 games ahead
of Maury Wtlls record break
mg pace of 1962 when he stole
104
Mets 4, Astros 2
Benny Ayala homered in his
ftrst major league at bat to
touch off a three run second
mmng and Tug McGraw,
makmg h1s first start m over a
tnt ernatwnalleagu e
Standmgs
B y Untted Pr€!ss lntcrna t1onal
N orth
w 1 pcf 9 b
Roche ster
ac so 615
Syracuse
69 61
53 1 11
62 70
470 19
Toledo
Pawt uc ket
51 79
392 29
So uth
w t pet g b
MemphiS
SO 52
606
R lc hmond
71 59
546 B
Charl eston
58 74
439 22
T dewaler
51 78
400 27
T oday s R esu lts
Toledo 5 Pawt uc kef 2
Char leston 4 Richmond 3 1st 8
inns
R chmond 4 Charleston 1 2nd 7
tnns
Rochester a t Syra&lt;::use
ppd
ra i n
Memph iS 6 T dewater 1
W ednesda ys Games
Toledo at Pawtucket
Charl es ton at Richmond
Syracr.tse at Roches ter
Memph s at T dewater

)ear allowed only one run m
SIX mnmgs lo lead New York
over Houston Ayala, a 23yearold outftelder who was
recalled from Ttdewater of the
InternatiOnal League earlier m
the day became the 40th
player m htstory and tbe ftrst
Natwnal Leaguer m 13 years to
homer m hts mttial at bat
FeliX Millan s Single drove m
New York s other two runs m
the second mnmg
Expos 6, Braves 1
Bob Batley and Ron Fatrly
homered and Jun Northrup
and Mike Jorge nsen each
drove m two runs to pace
Montreal past Atlanta Darrell
Evans 18th homer accounted
for the Braves only run off
wtnnmg pit cher Mtke Torrez
IIJ.ll
Fr?""""

,

211?
Secood clul pofii.Rft paid at Pome"oL
Ohio
~
National adverl1aln1 repnsent•llve
BoUinelli-G•llagtler lnc '12 Eait Ond st
Nt!w- York New York
Subs:rjpUon r•tes Delivmld by canier
wlii!re avallable 60 ctnta per week By
Molor Route where carrier service not
•vallable One month $2 SO By mall in
Otllo And W V• One Year SUI ib
month• $9 SO Three month• fl
Elletrhere n2 00 yu.r sU months $11 5oO

WPP ina till

( 1 7thl ~ Brown

H llte r

(IS 9)

LP

"Better Service
Is Our Business"

992-7161

(2nd ~a me}
Cleveland 000 000 OlD- '2 5 l
Kansas City 700 130 02x- 13 13 0
Wilcox Beene ( l) Ellmgsen
( 5) and Eil tS Br les (4 5) and
Healy LP W lcox (2 2) HRs
L s (6th) Mayberry (20th )

Middleport, 0.

(RIB TRE.;Dl
Plus

Exctse Tax
27c to 87c

Witl,
FREE MOUNTING

•

Recappable Casing

700 E M•ln St
POMEROY OHIO
992 2101 t)rt92 2102

JOHN FULTZ,
OWNER

•

ANNUAL SUMMER OUTING"

1

OF
GOODYEAR ATOMIC CORP.
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 PM

CAMDEN PARK

Callt
176 12
tO 12
Defrof 002
200 004
010 000
003 ooo
000 oL o c k w o o d F lguero&amp; (51

tu.s1 101

Plus CasUlg

SATURDAY - AUGUST 31ST
FOR

mn J

19) Qu nlana 191 P na

FOR

CAMDEN PARK RESERVED

Oakland
000 100 02o- J 11 o
Mllwautce e 000 DOD ::t OG- 2 8 2
B l ue F ngers (7) and Fosse
Tenace (1 1 Haney 17 1 Sla l on
Murphy ( 8 1 and Moore WP
F ngers (8 31 LP Murphy ( 6 5)

(9) and Rodriguez Coleman
H il l er t6l and Lamont WoCjken

2 $23

11 50 Sll.bllaiption Jnce

Major League R esults

Sa nders

PASSENGER TIRES

Include&amp; &amp;mda.y 1'Une11-&amp;ntlnel

By United Preu lnte rnattonal

{ll

Amencan League
(lst gamel
Clevelud 0'23 100 024- 12 19 2
Kansas C1tyJ10 300 001 813 0
Peterson
H lgendorf
f4l
Buskey (81 and Duncan Eilts
(8 ) Busby McDah et (8) and
Healy
WP H lgendorf
{4 21
LP Busby (19 11 ) HRs Lis
(5th I McRae !14th )

I

DEVOTEDTOmE
J
INTERESJ' OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHF.SI'ER L. TANNF.HD.fo
Eu&lt;E4
ROBERT HOEruat
CCty FAilor
Publiahed dally eacept Sat1Jr4ay by The
Ohio VaUey PubliJhinM Cornl.r11 111
Court St Pomeroy Ohio 567811 8uslne8a
ornce Phone tH-2158 Editorial Pbone 992-

th~ moolhl

Ch•caao
2ol ooo ooo- s a 2
Los Angeles 403 210 02x 12 13 1
Reuschel LaRoche (.:I ) De l
tore (7) and Swrsher
Rau
Hough (3) and Ferguson WP
Hough (7 JJ LP Reuschel (12
10) H Rs Moral es (13th) Wynn
( '29th ) Ferguson (13th) Carde
nat Cllthl Buckner (4th)

.,.____,_..._._ _,.

The Da1~ Sentinel

charge

US 60 WEST- HUNTINGTON

----•llil•••···············

(3r d )
HRs Robbln,on · · - - - - - - -. .

OpenWtekendsOnlyAfftrlabor

�1

•

3- The Dally Senlmel Mtddl•port P.. neroy 0 WL'In•sday Aug 28 1974

Billinghalll records 16th win, 3-0

2- The Dally

That wild plant you ate may be deadly

'

By B J (,IU.E \'
INDIANI\POIIS lnd (UPIJ
more and more
Arnencans Forag'lnl-{ for edtble
wtld l&gt;lan t.s a PW'due Univers1
ty research team ts checkmg
nn Lhe Wlsuspected dangers of
W1t h

a wild harvest
The team un&lt;Wr a national
sctence
(oundatlon
un
dergradwttc resea rch program
grant IS exammmg 60 to 80

types of wtld plants and some

Science today
house plants for pOisonous
agents
' f don t Wdnt to buck the
trend
sa 1d Dr
Jerry
McLaughlin the professor of
pharmacy who heads the
proJeCt But there are many
pOisonous plants that may look
edtble lo the untramed ga
therer
There are also tho$e where
pmsonous agents are removed
by proper cooking plants that
have certam parts edible and
others p otsonous some that
should be eaten only m cf!rla m
tunes of the year and some tha t
are pmsonous tf consumed in
sufftc1ent quantities
McLaughlm who has been
called m often as a consultant
to hosp1ta ls treatmg patJCnts
for plant po1sontng sa id

DON OAKLEY

U. S. Mint pleads
Jor common 'cents'
By Don Oakley
In the past 15 years, the U S Bureau of the Mmt has stamped
out some 62 billion Lincoln cents 1t 1s currently producmg 35
mtlhon eachday,almost twtceas many as last year
Fully half this tremendous output, however - somethmg
over 30 billion corns, the Mmt estunates - 1s not m actual c1r
culalwn Thus the penny shortage which ts a severe problem or
mconveruence all over the country
Where are all these penmes hidmg' According to Mmt
director Mary Brooks , billions of them are m dresser drawers,
shoe boxes ptckle Jars - almost any place you can thmk of An
unknown number of others are believed to be m the hands of
speculators
The reason for the latter ts that m December 1973 the
Treasury announced that 11 would request legislation changmg
the penny from 95 per cent copper and 5 per cent zmc lo an
alummum alloy It was apparent that the steadtly nsmg pnce of
copper would eventually make the amount of metalm the penny
worth more than the face value of tbe com
Although there are stiff penalttes for meltmg down penn1es,
they began v:amshmg by the tens of mJlhons, JUSt as sJlyer coms
vamshed m the m1ddle 1960s even though the number of penntes
that would have to be consltmed to make any copper convers10n
operations worthwhtle IS staggermg
For example the market prtce of copper would have to go
over $150 a pcund (It ts sttll well below that) to exceed the face
value of a penny At $1 50 a pound, 250,000 penmes, weighing 1,714
pounds and With a face value of $2 iiOO, would be worth $2,571 as
raw copper The $71 proftl would hardly pay for the energy
needed to melt them down
But whatever the explanation, the penny shortage contmues
and the Treasury Department ts appealing for the help of
patrwttc Amertcans
It pomts out that JUSt one btlhon penntes returned to ctr
culat10n would save lllxpayers $10 !Dillion If 15 btlllon penntes
were returned, the Mmt would not have to make any more for
almost two years and would save $150 !Dillion
To stimulate cihzen participation the Treasury ts awardmg
Cerltftcates of Special Citation to anyone who depos1l!i or cashes
$2.\ worth of penrues at a commerctal bank Banks should for
1
ward the names of persons or groups qualifYing for the ctlalton
lo Mrs Mary Brooks, Dtrector of the Mmt, 55 Mmt Street, San
Franc1sco CA 94175

The memory wallows on
II may all we water over the gate to most weary Americans

but htStonans, and certamly future Amertcans, are gomg to be
wallowmg ' 10 the subJect for generations to come The way
thmgs are gomg, they wtll have wbole libranes devoted to 1t
The first tssue of Booklelter, a new revtew publtshed by
Harper s Magazme Co ltsts a parbal Watergate btbhography of
46 biles Those swellmg the W 'card catalogue file mclude
' Watergate hv the Numbers, Watergate Chronology of a
Cr1s1s ' Watergate and the Whtte House,' Watergate Crune
m the Smtes " Watergate Hearmgs," ' Watergate Portraits,
Watergate, the vtew from the Left, ' Watergate and tbe Myth
of Amertcan Democracy " and sunply Watergate '
Interested researchers wtll also fmd such lntrtgumg tlUes as
Ftres1de Watergate ' Watergate Cookbook, ' "Watergate
Follies' and somethmg called Watergate Girls "
That s JUst the Ws Other tttles mclude b1ographtes of
Richard Ntxon, Sen Sam ErVIn and other Watergate per
sonalit1es, exammabons of the unpeachment process and the
doctrme of execubve prtvilege the Agnew scandal and the
consbtutwnal and htsloncal unplicatwns of Watergate tn
general
Thts ts not even to mention all the memotrs that are expected
to come nor tbe thousands upon thousands of pages of govern
ment documents such as the While House tape transcrtpl!i and
Jud1ctary Commtllce hearmgs

RAY CROMLEY

Is Rocky too strong
to stay number two?
By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON - (NEA) - Norman Mailer saw tl a decade
ago, wntmg of Nelson Rockefeller at the 1964 Repubhcan
Natlonill Convention
'He had a strong decent lace and something tough as the
rubber ln a handball to his makeup, but hts eyes had been pun
ched out a long time ago - they had the dtslantlunar glow of the
small sad ey~s you see ln a caged chunpanzee or a gorll~ Even
"hen hearty he gave an unpresBlon the pnvate man was remote
as an astronaut on a lost orbit "
That same look which dtVJdes off the IIUter Nelson
RodtefeUer from the Pllblie polltlctan was evtdent wben
!fllldent Ford announc_.t his nomination as vtce prealdent
Unleu Mr Ford can penetrate this mask and come to some
llCcalmnodallon with the Rockefeller m11de, the Ford adllljlllltratlon 8JI4the Ford eandldacy lor prtlldent 111 1976 may
!

there tsn t too much known
about the chemistry of plants '
When yo u constder the
"mount of testing and recvolua tton thai goes on before
a nc" drug IS tr~ ed on human
bt!m~s, much less put on the
market, 1t ts ~maung that
plants are not treated wtth all
thts cauuon he sa1d
Mfer tsolallng the chemtcal
zO gp tthe substances are then
led to nure to see what effects
they have on them
We gtve lbe m1ce a pretty
htgh dose equal to a gram of
the substance to a thousand
grams of the mouse's wetght,
Mel .aughhn saut
Our re.

search is just sort of a starling
point because t! somethmg
happens more tests Will be
Deeded
Also there can be mistakes
tn trymg to overettend the data
of lab tests For example, our
tests wtlh skunk cabbage
showed It dtdn'l kill mtce, but
that doesn I mean tl could not
harm humans '
McLaughlin sa1d another
reasort for cbeckmg all types of
chemicals Ul plants was that
some of them are now bemg
used differently than m the
past For example, lor years
people have made a ' herb tea"

TOM TIEDE

Skimpy payments, cheats, hurt jobless

By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - (NEA) There is a woman m New York
who weekly shows up m her
tenms dress to collect unem
ployment compensation She
tells one and all that her
husband 1s a ra1lroad executive
but a skinflml that m order to
redecorate her kitchen she
;:1::;:~:::;:::;:;:::;:::::;:;:::::,;;:,,,,,,,,,::,,,;:::;:,;:;:;~''::;:::::;,,,,,~:;::::::;::,;: : : : : :::,,;.:;.:;:,::;:,:,:, :,:,:,: :;::::::::;::;:: : ::,:::=~;&lt; ha d to ea r n he r own money
'' '
, ..~ She found a part tune job but
was latd off after a year She
makes 1t loudly clear she
' doesn t need unemployment
compensatiOn but well,
-I
dahlmg I ve got 1t commg to
by Chet TaiUlehill
executi ve ed1tor
me, don t J?
It went thts way
Unfortulately she does ,
CARACAS AGOSTO 24 (UP I) - El promedw de produccwn legally anyway And so do
petrolera Venezonlana se s1tuo hasta el 21 de este mes en uncounted others who are at
3 066,683 barr1les dtartos, lo que representa una d1smunucwn en least
morally
abusmg
relacwn con la producCion obtemda para el mtsmo penodo en unemployment compensation
1973, segun W1 mformedel mimsteno de mmas E Htdrocarburos
laws Nobody knows preciSely
THAT WAS WHAT THE Umted Press Internaltonal wtre was how many people collect unsaymg Saturday afternoon for about 10 mmutes before the needed compensallon but the
gentlemen m charge of such things m Columbus htccuped and Labor Department estimates
tapped out the message disregard above The warmng was about20 per cent of the natton s
unnecessary here everyone m the edttonal room of the Sunday rec1p1ents 'are not m dtre
Times.Sentmel bemg a total stranger to the Spantsh lauguage
stra1ts If so, thts works out to
Once agam the Computer Age had got 1ts wtres crossed about 1 2 mtlhon people an
(literally ) News mtended for UP! s South American chents nually colleclmg $1 btlllon on
madvertently came onto the Ohio wtre
the dole No doubt some lake
It s enough to put one mto a mammoth flap to cons1der how
the money for thmgs other than
utterly fouled up our hves Some future day may become when a kitchen redecorahon but many
wrong button IS pushed madvertently
others lake 11 only because
Wtth the coffee hot the toast ready open a box of wheaties they've got tt commg "
for breakfast and pour out delec~ble, crunchy cheese crackers
The sad sttuatwn ts as old as
Cash Bahr or Kermit Walton antiCipating a mce autumn
busmess m the new styles gents ready to wear open the first
carton Guess what, seat covers lor the latest four wheeled
models out of DetrOit
Or the family gathered 1n front of the tube to trtumph w1th
Kojac m h1s weekly vtctory over the bad guys the screen comes
alive wtth a mmor league rugby match from VIenna Austna
As suggested heretofore, the Sparush news story may be a
portent of surprises to come

compensahon relief 1lself almost 40 years But tt ts
espectally contemptible at a
ttme when mtlllons of
genwnely needy unemployed
are trymg to stretch compensahon dollars over an mflattonary economy If 20 per
cent
of
compensahon
recaptents are not m dll'e
stratts, 80 per cent al'e, some 5
ffilllton people or more wtll
collect thts year not In tennts
dresses but m workclothes and
not for kicks but for real
Personally, ' says another
New York receiver, I'm
ashamed' to be here but we got
to eat "
Eatmg, actually, ts about all
the needy rec1p1ents can expect
from the dole The comsystem
was
pensation
ortglnally destgned to allow
unemployed working men and
women to meet thetr baste,
non-deferable livmg expenses
but that goal has long smce
been eclipsed by reahty
Compensation vanes from
state to state but the average
state payment today IS $75
weekly, enough for food for a
fam1ly of four or ftve but not
enough for anythmg elSe So, if
a man 1s out of work long these
days and has no supplemental

MOST EVERYONE I SUPPOSE has qumled before B1g
Brothensm Now m Mtddleport ts a perfect case m pomt
namely, the unpostlton of the costly National Flood Insurance
Program
There are few quarrels With the program tf apphed to towns
or netghborhoods that perSistently are subjected to damagmg
floods say for example such as lowlands along the Mtss1ss1pp1
Rtver Or even along the Ohto Rtver where recent records show
high water damage has occurred wtth any sort of regulartly
Indeed a goverrunent"\SubsHiized msurance program for flood
areas IS regarded as long overdue
But the question has to be asked, why dtd Btg Brother use
flood maps prepared before 1900' This ts 1974, a shade more than
26 years smce water has been on the T m Middleport or mto the
homes even of the southerly part of town - whtch IS lower domg apprectable damage
Big Brother's own nght arm the U S Corps of Engmeers
brags Ul pubhc the system of dams m the mam stream and
tnbulanes of the Ohio, had tt been m existence m 1948, would
have taken 10 feet off that years crest
Although all I know about the nattonal flood msurance
program ts what I read m the papers, 1t seems clear that ex
ceplmg Gravel Hill 11 will be necessary that people buy flood
msurance m order to use any form of Federal or Federal-related
fmanctal asststance for bmldmg or remodelmg purposes
Furthermore, users of such fmanc1al asststance apparently wtll
be strictly controlled as to location and type of bwldmg or
remodelmg Without sa1d flood msurance there could be httle or
no fmanetal help
Mtddleport counctl has authonzed entry mto the program from necesstty - and has set about to persuade B1g Brother thai
little or none of Middleport should be classes m lhe ' danger
zones • Councttmen will have a btg and notsy cheermg sectiOn
for this miSSIOn

professor of Mayo Graduate
School of Medtcme Is an
authortty on nutnllon and ts
quoted as saymgt 'Any
phys1c1an or dtetitian Will fmd
the hook larded With mac
curacies mtsquotahon and
unsubstantiated statements
James Trager, a well·known
Wrtter about foed, quotes Dr
Leo Lutwak, M D and Ph D ,
professor of climcal nutntion
at Cornell as saymg she
1
mtsuses science '' 'Adelle
Davts takes mcomplete
evidence and Immediately
extrapolates tt to what are
ndiculous conclusiOns from a
clinical pomt of vtew "
On the Dmah Shore program
she stated that ' rtce " a good
source of protem" as a substitute for htgh prtced meat
It's not Less than ten per cent
of tts calortes are protein ac-

the ckJy after .

•

from catnip -containing water
soluble extracts - but 1n the
past lew years some persons
have slllrted smoking It
He also c1ted cases where
pero••" have been poisoned
because they ate the wrong
part of a plant Perhaps the
most common example of this
'" rhubarb leaves, wh ich
conlllm deadly oxalic actd
although the sllllk 1s edible
But Mel aughlln said, the
kernel m lbe p1ts of peaches,
aprtcots, plums and apple
seeds all oontatn prussic ac•d
- cya ntde
The dangers to children from
eating a harmful substance are

much greater than lor an adult
because potson Is more toxic
the greater Its strertgth tslo the
weight of the person
McLaughlin recalled once he
had been asked to belp lind out
what was wrong wlth a UtUe
g1rl who bad become til and
later died
She sa1d she had eaten
some spmach, bul when we
traced her path back to where
she had picked lbe plants, we
found lt was wild hemlock the same stuff that Socrates
drank and lhe same stuff the
Greeks used to give their
crunmals to execute them " he
satd

.

mcom~ ,

he stands the r1sk of
losmg hts home , car and
anything else patd for at
regular credit mtervals
The system, moreover has
more faults than the SJze of tts
checks It ts a federal-state
program, which means tl lacks
mmunum standards and ts
fraught with Inconsistencies
Each slate runs tls own plan,
the Federal government
merely, and qwetly, oversees
Thus, a workless person can
gel amost $100 a week m New
York but only $60 m Misstsstppt
and he can get 36 weeks
coverage m Utah but only 20 m
Puerto Rico At best, many of
the unemployed get chicken
feed Many people when em
ployed these days earn m
excess of $200 a week but last
year, accordmg to one study
the average unemployment
compensation was $58 50 a
week - ' hardly enough, ' says
a Labor Department man, not
hardly '
Some months ago there was
talk of reform m Washmgton
The Ntxon ad!mmstratton
wanted to force slates to
overhaul exiSting programs to
meet national gwdellnes, m
cludmg bloated beneftts It also
wanted to mcrease the number

of people ehgtble lor such
compensa tton ( 11 mtlllon
workers, mostly farm and
pubhc employes, are not
currentl y protected ) In terestingly Gerald Ford m
lroduced the proposal tn
Congress
Alas, nothmg
happened And reform ts not
now hkely Soc1al spendmg
tdeas have been forced by
mflatwn mto full retreat
Still the optimist must hope
The prtonttes of mflatwn can
not m good consc1ence neglect
the cttlzens most affected by
mflatiOn At a mmtmum ,
beneftts should be extended to
all needy unemployed and
compensatton should be m
creased to two thirds a man's
salary Bestdes this, each
rectptent should be entitled to
at least 26 weeks of help
Reform
would
cost,
naturally But perhaps the
mcreases could be lessened by
a new public attttude toward
unemployment compensatton
II ts not somethmg lo be
Siphoned by all, only those 'who
need tt to live Tenms dresses,
get out of the !me Leave the
money there for the men and
women for whom 1t ts
necessanly and JUS!tflabl9
mtended

DR. LAMB

Adelle Davis: not recommended

well come a cropper
For Mr Rockefeller wtth all h1s success as governor has
been notonously unsuccessful as a number two three or four m
commg to terms With the men he works for or through
He qml the Etsenhower ad!mmstratton m strong
disagreement over pohcy and proceeded to blast the Etsenhower
approach m a sertes of documented pubhc statements He
refused Ike s help m his gubernatorial campatgn
His ftrsl period of high off1ce m the Department of Stale
ended when Secretary Jinuny Byrnes told Ptestdent Truman
etther Rockefeller must g&lt;&gt; or Byrnes would
In hts maneuvermg al the San Franctsco Umted Nations
charter sessions, h~ was so uncooperatiVe with other members of
the delegation he made an enemy of John Foster Dulles, who
feared Rockefeller would wreck the UN abormng In suceesston
he feuded wtth Cordell Hull, Herbert Hoover Jr and Averell
Harr1man
For Nelson Rockefeller IS not only high prmctpled but
astoundmgly stuboorn Smgle handedly he forced tbe adoption of
his CIVIl rtghts and strong military defense beliefs on the 1960
Republican Nattonal Convention And Without nottceable stress
(some say wtth considerable enJoyment ) he perSISted on the
platform of the 1964 Republican National Convention when the
vitriolic anger and vtolent heckling from the balconies tn thai
converttlon would have driVen most men from the slllge
1f President Ford can wtn the Inner Rockefeller and bring
him mto hand as a complete team player, the Rockefeller asset
\Ytll be great mdeed
He Is a lop-flight admtrustrator (where Mr Ford has little
experience ), a ftrst-rate attracter of able men (a Ford
weakness), a provert performer on domestic problems (where
someg1ve Mr Ford low marks) and has close lies wtlh labor and
ctvtl rights leaders (whose susptelons-of the President are well
known)
R;dereller dehghts m complex problems, m negollatimts
I
\ _

By Lawrence E Lamb, M D
DEAR DR LAMB - In
Adelle Davts book Let's Eat
R1ght to Keep Ftl' she states
thai the foods doctors tell their
pat1ents to avmd m order to
lower cholesterol 1 e eggs
hver butter whole mtlk etc
actually supply the nutrtenl
needed to help
lower
cholesterol, that nutnent hemg
lectthm Please gtve me your
opm10n"
DEAR READER - Did you
know that three of Adelle
Davts books are on the " not
recommended hst of the
Chicago Nutrttwn Assn ? The
AsSOCiatiOn ts composed of top
notch
well
mformed
nutrtlwmsts I suspect such
slatemenls thai you quoted are
one reason for thts Dr Edward H Rynearson formerly

Adventist conference officer to
speak at Pomeroy services
Dr and Mrs B E Seton,
London, Eng , will be present
for Sabbath semces at the
Pomeroy Seventh-day Adventist Church, Mulberry Hgts
Rd
Saturday afternoon,
August 31 Dr Seton wtll be
guest speaker at the 3 IS p m
worship servtce
Dr Seton recetved hts Ph D
from the Universtly of Cape
Town South Afnca, and is
presently AsSistant Secretary
of lhe General Conference Of
Seventh-&lt;Jay Adventists
Dr and Mrs Seton, who
spent many years as
nussionartes In Angola, South
Afrtca and Swttzerland, has
served m several areas of
denomlnallonal work They are
the parents of Gerard Seton,
present pas lor of the Pomeroy
SevenJth-&lt;lay Advendst Church
Sabbath school will begin at 2
P m Services are open to the
public

.............

cordmg lo U S Department of
Agrtculture data And I heard
her tell D1ck Cavett that you
had to drink whole lllllk rather
than skim mtlk because you
needed the fat to absorb the
vltamm A ThiS 1sn't true
e1ther
In evalualtng /\delle Davts
concepts about nutrition you
need to put her m to proper
time perspective She was a
dedicated pmneer and ac
complished a lot of good m her
time But her tune was before
World War II when undernutntion was a national
problem She was a warm
grandmotherly person m her
her later years Her educatiOn
was lumted to a bachelor s
degree m 1927 and a master's
degree m btochenustry m 1937
She came on the nutn\ton
scene about the time vttamms
were begmnmg to be tsolated
and understood Thls may
explain her overenthuSJasljc
fatth m vtlamms as a cure-all
You must reahze that she
was an Indiana farm g1rl m a
time when farm k1ds
IIOilletlmes wal~ed two mtles to

a rural one room school often
afterdomgfarm chores There
were no hot lunches 1\ good
breakfast before gomg to
school was more Important
Her lrammg preceded the time
heart d1sease became an
Important na honal medtcal
problem Between her two
degrees Dr Paul Dudley Whtte
was reporting theftrst senes of
heart attacks In medtcal
JOurnals as a new problem
Adelle Davts had II!Dited
lrammg m medical problems
After all she never went to
med1cal school or pracbced
medicme So she represented
advtce from another era She
had some very good pomts and
deserves a Jot of cred1t for
encouragmg mterest m
nulrthon Her advtce was
better swted m many mstances, to what we knew and
were before World War II but
thmgs have changes We now
have blliimg hot lunches, and
telev1ston W1th It we have heart
disease Its tune to Eat
Right for 1974, wh1ch 1s dtl
ferent from down on the farm
In 1937

Berrys World

CHARLES WRFMAN
RACINE -Navy s..man
Reontlt Clulrlea N Curfman,
aon of Mr ud Mra Cbarleo
Curfman of Route I, Rltelne,
has gnduated lr&lt;~m recruit
tralolol at the Naval
Tralolo&amp; Center, Great
Latea, DI

wlth ditflcult men and groupo (he believes thif Is his strong
pomt), and has a trackre&lt;:ord In practical finance, bullneu and
economic management, plua enormous prlvale lnlluence (aided
by 8 family resources estlmated at between f3 and f8 billion)
His liberal" reputation In edliCatlon, pollution abatement
and aid for the poor will be a majqr 81111et when he and President
Ford slalh lederaldOillellic apendJnl, take hard looltl1t the way
this naUoo's weUare and domestic llllllltance JII'OIP'IIIII •re run
and concurrer1tiy plllh for strong national defepaea, matters o~
whtch 'he &lt;WP are In clooe •IP'eement

@ @

' You ~ been around the President for a long
lime - wllat does that mean?

L-~------------------~----~
~ ~

Sports
Desk

l'tiii.ADEIPHTA t UP I) P!uladelplua s Dtck Ruthven
unliClpates u shutout every
lime he pttchcs One problem
11 s uswllly thrown by the
OJlp!ISIIIOO
The 22 yca r-&lt;&gt;ld rtghl-hander

By Denny
Fobes ,

was VICtimized by lack of
hilton~

support agmn l'uesday

mght .as Cmc annah s J ack
Btlltngham 16-ll, blanked the

We're still two years away from a good sohd program
BtU Jewell, head coach of the Southern Tornados made that
observation ln descrtbmg lhe Tornados' ctwnces th1s season on
the gndtron
Jewell who lost st&lt; semors from the 1973 squad that fm1shcd
behind only Kyger Creek 1n the !mal SVAC standmgs, has JUSt
sevPn seruors and 5 JUniors back this year
In all, however, the honzon looks br1ght, as 39 OOys are out
for the team, Tl of them sophomores pnd freshmen Gone from
last years squad are quarterback Vern Ord, and hnemen Mtke
Codner, Jtm Wtlhams, Dcnnts Hawk and Randy Forbes
For the past two years wtth few seruors m the yearly turn
over rate, the 1ornados have managed to llrush 12m lhe SVAC,
talung tbe league champwnshtp m tbe 1972 season
Southern which opens the 1974 season Sept 6 agamsl
Fairland, has a good young bunch according to Jewell lhe
Tornados however have yet to see any scnmmage action
Lucasvtlle havmg cancelled out on a scheduled duel last week
and the Purple and Gold will most likely gel only one pre season
scrunma ge under thetr belts before that clash wtth Fatrland
Jewell expects the league to be 'pretty well balanced this
season echomg the thoughts of most SV 1\C coacbes Tbe Tor
nados should be rtght m there aga m, wtth probably one of the
best backfteld combmaltons m the league leadmg the way m
semor halfback Mtlch Nease and JUnior fullba ck Greg Dunmng
Last season Nease was one of the top rushers In the state,
churmng out 1775 yards and scormg 22 touchdowns Dunnmg was
a bulldozmg fullback, domg well unltl bemg InJUred early m the
season m the annual clash With arch nval Eastern
The fate of the Tornados this season could well depend on
how well Jewell, and his asststants John Dudding and James
Lawrence can rebuild that line that was decunated vta
graduation But With a f&gt;-1 record from last year and Jlliil those 5
semors gone, there wtll be plenty of talent m Purple and Gold this
fall and the Tornados should be m the thick of what appears to be
a real horse race this season

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Edttor
FOREST HILLS N Y (UP! ) - Beyond any questiOn, Jtmmte
Connors and Chrissie Evert are Amenca s most celebrated
sweethearts smce Wallace Beery and Marle Dressler
Okay, so make t! Mickey Rooney and Ann. Rutherford
They also play a much better game of tennts
When Connors and Chrts competed at Wunbledon seven weeks
ago, London bookmakers , always qmck wtth a pnce or a phi"ase
coupled them as the Lovebtrd Double and offered 36 to 1 edds
agamst both wmrung
Both won
In the process they d1d somethmg to help combat mflalton
The U S Open tenniS champiOnships gel underway here today
and you can forget all about those aslronomtcal London odds
Jumme Connors ts the 3 to 1 favortte to take the men's tttle and
his brtde-to-be, wmner of 52 stratght matches and 10 stratght
tournaments, ts the even money chotce to wmd up with the
women s crown
R1ght now, the world ts nothmg but a ruce round tenms ball for
both The rrrepress1ble uninhtbtted Connors parllcularly, has
everythmg gomg for hun
He won't be 22 unttl Sunday but this year already he has won
the Australian and Wunbleton champlonshtps as well as the hand
of lovely, talented 19 year-&lt;&gt;ld Chnsste, "hom he mames Nov 8
The difference m Connors smce he won at Wunbledon has been
a marked one With much of tl bemg reflected m the tremendollii
conftdence he exudes now
Shortly after Wimbledon Btll Riordan Connors advtsor and
c1ose friend for the past 14 years, sat down w1th him for one of
those heart-to-heart talks
' You've arrtv.ed ' Rwrdan said You re among the real
champtons now, and you have to understand that The four-letter
words have to go The gestures, too Okay ?
' Okay ' replied Connors
•
The other day he button-holed Riordan and reported
uNo more four-letter words '
(!What aOOut the gestures?' Rwrdan wanted to know
' 'Pretty good," Connors beollmed 'I ve got em all down to the
pmky now '
Junmy Connors has been labeled a lot of thmgs thmgs like
munature ' • abrasive
poor sport,' court Jester' and
sometunes worse
&amp;&gt;marna s !he Nastase one of hts best frtends attended a
luncheon at whtch Connors was awarded the Dewar s Cop
Tuesday, as was ChrLSste Evert, for the general contrtbubon they
have made to lennts !hts year Nastase can t see all those ad
)eciJVes apphed to his frtend
' I don 't think he s any of these things ' satd hts doubles
partner I thmk he's very fnendly He s like a k1d He never
rubbed me the wrong way Maybe one of the reasons some of the
other players call hun these thmgs ts because be beats them so
much "
Someone asked Connors If It upsets hlm to hear people call him
"independent, and he satd the people who call hun that never
bother him
Maybe th&lt;)y'd hke lo be mdependent hkc me he satd
Oms Evert and Jmuny Connors sat next to each other at a
huge round table answering questiOns before recetvmg thetr
awards TQesday
They did what all sweethearts do They held hands
Ortgmally when they f1rst met two years ago m London Chrts
Evert was attracted to Connors because they were complete
oppostles
I was 17, shy and wasn t out.going at all ' she sald It was
my first tune m Europe and I was m kind or awe of everything
The £act he says what he feels, that he tsn t always quiet, doesn t
bother me He tsn'l meant to be qutet Sometimes I don't hke 11,
and he knows thai I don 't thtnk he should change, though That 's
his way, and It's a wmrung way "
When someone asked her a qucstton about the klnd of dress she
will wear for the wedding, Chrts Evert satd that the wedding
Itself was a personal matter she d1dn't parttcularly care lo
dilcuss at thls time
Outwardly, Connors docsn t seem nervous about his getting
married
"Alllgotta do Is wear a tuxedo and be there, ' he said
Does discussing any ooe phase of U1e 1namage disturb h1m a
newsman asked Connors
''No,'' he saJd ''As long as you don't get too personal ''
"What would you consider 'too personal• "persisted tbe samo
reporter
' What we're gonna do on our honeymoon, ' laughed Junrruc
Connors
'

\

Ph•ls 3-0
lt was the s1xth hme this
year Ruthven has been on the
losmg end of a shutout

lbe

Ph1ls, who have been blanked
m four of the1r lp st f1ve ~ames

ra,Jicd to !:K!ore .t run In Huth
vrln !I l~tsl thrt.'tl defeats
n1at s what makes it so

hard on you menially
en satd

1

Rulhv

fhcre i:lre so many

lhon~s 1n

(ash winch set up the double

TI1e Reds who really dtdn'l
need tl, added an Jnsuranc'e run

by Pcrt..'Z

' Ruthven 1.ltdn t make tl
easy
swd Ht.'tis' Mmlager
Spo.u ky And er$01\
lit: ' ~ a
WC&lt;tt young p1tcher and those

baseball over which
you have no control J made toug:h IOS."iCS even thmuselves
one mistake lontghl (a ptlc h out
Tony Pere-l htt lor a double)
Bllhnghon n who g:~ve up JUSt
and he t BtlhnghamJ got by on sev~n hits to becowe the
a lot more than one '
National League s ftrst 16Ruthven, 6-11 p•tchc'&lt;l seven garue wlnner said he ts just
tnnmgs and g~:~ve up no earned thankful to he with the power
runs but left the game wtth the laden Reds
Phtls trathng 2-&lt;1 lor a pmch
1 ve g,ot16 w1ns because I m
I htttcr because of a stxth mnmg p1tctung for the Btg Red
error by 'second baseman Dove Maclune, he said

m the mnt.h
Gene
was

mrun~

G~rber
st~Fe

off reliever

Pcre2. walked,

atlemptmg to steal

second when Cash dropped the
ball and scored on a smgle by
Dave ConcepciOn

Ptuls Manager Danny
Ozark tn desperate need of
some hiltmg punch satd he wtll
start outhelder Greg Luzmski
m tontghl s game wtth the
Reds I uzmsk1, who underwent
an operatton for torn ligaments
m early June, was Just taken
off the dtsabled list Monday

Pirates, Dodgers keep rolling;
St. Louis continues tailspin
By STU CAMEN
UPI Sports Writer
Both Dock Eilts and Jack
Btllmgham have stmple explanations £or their pLtchtng
success
1f r keep the ball m the
park I II wm
satd Eilts
'l)lesday mghl after 1hz Pittsburgh Pirates routed the San
Franctsco Gtants 13-2 for Eilts'
etghlh straight trtumph and his
11th Wln lll 19 deCISIOnS
The b1g difference between
the way Eilts IS pttchmg now
and the way he pttched when he
lost etght of II games 1s that he
gave up 10 homers m hts ftrst II
dec1s1ons but has permitted
only one home run during his
etght game wtnnlng streak
Thmgs always even out m
baseball, ' added Ellts " !
wasn't worned when I was
losmg early m the season I
wasn t concerned about the
team losmg etther, because
everythmg evens out
Btllmgham became the National League s f1rst Hi-game
winner when he hurled the
Ctncmnatt Reds lo a 3-0
lr1umph over Philadelphia,
blanking the Ph1Js on seven
hits
Ellis, who scattered 10 htl!i
and helped his own cause wtth
two RB!s, got all the support he
needed from AI Oliver who
drove m fiVe runs, four of them
wtth a double and single, to
highlight a mne-run thtrd mnlng The htls ~!so extended
Oliver s batting streak to 20
games and he has now hit
safely m 56 of h1s last 60 games
The VICtory combmed w1th
St Loms loss to San Diego,
mcreased tbe Ptrates' lead lo 1
¥. games over the second place
Cardinals m the National
League East
Tony Perez doubled m two
runs for Cmctnnati and Dave
Concepcton smgled home
another as the Reds remamed
three games behmd pace
settmg Los Angeles m the
West Dtck Ruthven, 6-11, took
the loss and tt was the stxth
time this year the Phtls have
been shut out w1th Ruthven
ptlchmg
In other Naltonal League
games Los Angeles routed

Cage ace
Malone in

9 •

,.,
•• .,•• "'
"' •
m •
'"
60 ••
•• "'
w

New Vorl&lt;
Balt i more
Cleveland
M il waukee
D e tro t

63
63

64

62

10 1 '1
12

west

I pel g b
56 ' 69
60 535
.t 1 ~
63 515
7
6S 496
9 1
63 67 485 ll
C a lt for n!~
5' 79 J91 '23
Tu esdays R uulls
C leve land 12 Kanus C t v 8
lSI
Kan sas C ty 13 Clevelan d '2

Oak l and
K ansa s C1t't'
T e:w.a $
Ch lcago
Mmnesota

74
69
67
6.t

'""

C a l lforn a 7 Detroit 6 13 m n
Oakland 3 M i lwaukee 2
New York 4 Mln!'les ota 2
Boston 6 Ch Jcago 1
Texa s 1Ba Jtlmore 1
Today s Pr obab le P•t cher\
fAll T1mes ED T)
Cal fornta ( Tanana 915 ) et
D etro•t ( Lo l l ch 1' 15) 8 p m
New York ( Dobson 12 14 ) at
M innesota Wecker 13 lO l 8 30
pm
Oak land (Hunter 19 10 ) a t
M !waukee
I Rodr tguez 6 4)

8 30 p m
Cleveland ( G Perr y l6 9 ) at
Kansas C tv lF tzmorr s 10 3)
a JO p m
Boston (Tian t 20 8 ) a1 Ch c a
go lB Johnson 52) 9 p m
Baltimo r e (Mc Nall y 12 9 1 a t
Texas { H argan 10 8 or J Brown
9 10) 9 p m
Thursda y s Gam es
Kansas City at Cleveland
n ghl
Texas at Ball more night
(onl y games scheduled i

St LOU IS (McGlothen 14 8) at
San D ieg o (G r e f 6 15) \0 30
p m
Thursday s Gam es
Atlanta at Montr ea l tw l!ght
Chtcago at Los Angeles night
St Lou i s at Sa n D ego n gh t
H ouston at New York
P ttsburgh a t San Franc 1sco
(on ly game s scheduled l

Linescores
N•ttonal League
C1nclnnatl 000 002 001 J 8o
Phtladelpht ooo ooo ooo- o 1 1
Billingham ( 16 8) and Ben ch
Ruthven R chert (81 G ar ber
(9 ) and Boone L P Ruthven (6
11)

New Yark 000 000 40Cl--"- 4 10 1
Mmn eso ta 000 020 ooo-:-- 2 9 2
T drow ( 1 I 10) and Munsoh
Hands Burgm e1er (7) Camp
bell !1l and R,oof Bor gmann
L P Hand S ( 4 5)
Boston
DOD 200 31 G- 6 13 0
Ch,c:ago
100 ooo ooo-- 1 1 2
Cleve land ( 9 1'2 ) and Mont
gomery Kaat Gossag e (1) and
Herrmann LP Kaat (14 12)

Atlantil
000 100 DO~ 1 7 1
Montreal
001 201 Oh:6 1 1
Reed J N ekro (5) Leon (7)
and Correll Torre z { 10 8) and
Stmson LP Reed 18 8 ) HRS
Evans ( 18th )
Ba lley (17th)
F atrly (12th )

RETREADS

Houston
ODD 010 lOG- 2 7 1
New York 030 ooo Oh4 70
G r fttn D e Los San tos (7)
and
M May
Johnson
(7)
McGraw
Parker
(7)
and
Hodges LP Grffn ( 127) HR s
Ayala ( 1st) M May { 4th )

Most
All Stzes

Sf LOUIS
000 001 DOG- 1 9 0
San Otego 010 100 lOX.3 41
G1bson (7 12) and S mmons
Sp liner (6 8 ) and Kend~ll HRs
McCovey !20th} W t n f 1 e I d
1171h )

no
mountmg

P1t1sburgh 009 000 103- 13 12 2
200 ooo oo~ '2 10 2
Eilts (11 Bl and Sang ulllen
D Aqu s_to Hal ckt (3) Morr s
t3 ) Moffitt (8) and Rader LF
D Aqu1sto (9 12)

San Frncsc

READY FOR 1975 SEASON - Balterymates Marc Salser left and Dale Teaford Jr ,
members of the Syracuse Pee Wee baseball team this summer v.ere practlcmg on the1r own
one day recently at Syracuse Park preparmg (already' ) for the 197• season They JUSt mtghl be
ta lking over the strategy that had Salser pltchmg four wmners for hts team wtlh Teaford
usually h1s catcher They are llvmg evidence that Syracuse, hometown of the late star maJor
league catcher Ralston (RoUte) Hemsley sllll produces baseball players
Chtcago 12-5, San Otego trtpped
St Lows 3-1, New York beat
Houston 4-2 and Montreal
defeated Atlanta 6 1
In the Amencan League
Cahforma mpped Detr01t Him
13 mnmgs, Oakland shaded
Milwaukee 3 2 New \'ork
topped Mmnesota 4-2, Boston
beat Chteago 6-1, Texas edged
Baltunore 2-1 and Cleveland
split a doubleheader wtth
Kansas C1ty wmmng, the
opener 12-,'l and losmgl the
mghtcap 13-2
Dodgers 12, Cubs 5
JIITllTiy Wynn drove m two
runs with hts 29th homer and
solo shots by Btll Buckner and
Joe Ferguson powered Los

New York

l

Am eriun L•agvt
Eu1
w I pel
Bos ton
71 56 S59

n m

Ma1or League Leaders
By Un1ted Press Internation a l
Lcadtng Batter s
Nattonal Leagu e
r
h
pet
PETERSBURG Va (UP! ) Garr All g128 ab
5-&lt;16 76 197 361
- Moses M~lone , the 19-year Z Sic. P II 117 42 9 62 143 333
vr Ptt 11 3 472 75 153 324
old boy wonder of basketball 01
Sm t h St L
l\1 393 59 126 321
was scheduled to fly to New
LA 123 511 75 163 319
\'ork early Ieday to s1gn a Grvy
G ross H Q 123 &lt;~57 66 146 319
mulltmtll1on dollar contract B c knr LA 11 I 442 61 140 317
Br c k St L 121 499 80 157 315
w1th the Utah Stars of the Crdn
t Ch 110 420 62 130 310
Am e rtcan Basketball Grnm en 118 362 56 11 2 309
Am e r~ ca n L ea gu e
Assocmatwn
g
ab r
h
pc1
Malone, a June h1gh school Crw Mnn \ 24 487 71 178 366
grv T)( 103 332 49 I 15 346
graduate agreed to the terms Hr
M cRa KC 116 424 61 135 318
of the contract Tuesday but Yastnemsk. Bo s
418 77 132 316
held off Stgnmg until the 1\B/\ Or t a Ch i 119
110 408 66 128 314
could arrange a spectal 2 p m Rand ! Tx 122 415 55 129 311
NY 104 337 56 104 309
news conference m New York, Mdd:W.
Allen C.h 119 435 82 133 306
accordmg to a league spokes- J c ksn Ok 120 412 13 125 303
sco t1 M i l 127 aao 65 lAS 302
man
Hom e Run s
Nat1onal League
Sc hm dl
The 6-foot 10 twO"Itme htgh
Phil 32 Wynn LA '29 Bench
school All Amenca was lo c lh 76 Perez C n and Cedeno
begin cia~ today at the Hou 22
L e agu e Allen Chi
Untv e r ~ tt y
of Maryland, J2 Amencan
Burrough s T ex 25 Ja c k
wtnner m lhe-eollege recrmtlng :son Oak 24 Tena c e Oak 21
M elton C.hl Ma yberry KC and
battle for Malone last June
Oarw In M nn 20
But the Stars, who selected
Runs- Batted Jn
Malone tn the third round of the end
Na11onal Leagu e Bench Cln
S&lt;::hmidt Phil 9a Wynn
ABA draft, began actively--~ 93 Garv ey LA 90 Cedeno
Hou 87
pursumg hlfll as soon as pur
A m e r 1 c a n Leagu e Bur
chase of the team by James roughs Tex 105 Allen Ch 85
Colherwas finollzedtwoweeks Bando Oa k 84 Rud1 Oak SJ
Darw in M lnn 81
Sto l en Bases
ago
National Lugue Srock St L
Delal1s of the Stars' contract 89 LOpes LA 54 Morgan Cln
were not dtsclosed by team
offtctals but sources close lo
Malone said 11 called for
$1~,000 a year for fou• years
$25 000 for signing, $25 000 lor
reporting to camp, $60,000 lor
completing college and a home
and $500 a month for his
mother, Mary A league
spokesman satd all details had
not been worked out yet

M•1or L..eague Sf~ nd lngt.
By un.ted Press Int ernational
N•honat L..ugue
East
w I pc:t g b
P i ttsb urg.._
6 7 61 513 1112
St L ou iS
66 63 512
3'1?
Ph tladelph a 64 65 A96
Mon !real
59 67 468 7
56 70 444 10
New Y ork
Ch i ca g o
5'2 73 4 16 13 1?
W es. t
w 1 pet g b
LQS Angele s
81 47 633
Ci nc innatt
79 51 608 3
All&amp;nta
71 58 550 10 '1
Houston
66 62 5 16 15
San Fran c sc o 57 11 44 2 2&amp;1 1
San D i ego
50 79 3 88 3\'h
Tu esday s Re su lt s
Ci nc lnnalt 3 Phlladelph a 0
Montreat 6 Atlanta 1
New York .t H ouston 2
Los Angeles 12 Ch cago 5
San Diego 3 St Lou s l
P1Hsburgh \ 3 San F ran c sea 2
Today s probable Ptt chers
I All Ttmes EDT )
Houston (D erker 8 8 ) at New
York ( Matlack 11 10) 2 15 p m
P i ttsburgh (Reuss 1&amp; 9 ) al
San Franc1sco (Barr 10 7) 3 l S
p m
Ci n c lnnatt ( Gul lett 15 8 ) at
Phtlad elph a
(Carlton
lot 91
n g ht
Atlanta
!Mo rton 13 1l
at
M ont rea { W alker 2 4 ) n ght
Ch cago (Hooton 4 10 I at Los
Angeles {Sutton 12 9 l
10 30

5)

Amerh;an
League
Norfh
Oak 46 Pat ek. KC 31 Rivers
Cal
lowen$ t eln
Clev
and
Care w M ln n JO
P1tchlno
N.1f1onal Lea9ue Bllllnghtun
Cin 16 8 Messersm 1h LA I S 5
Gul l e tt Cl n 15 8 McGlotnen
St L.. 14 6 Car t ton
P hil and
Reu ss P i tt 14 9 P N le kro All
ahd Lon borg Ph II 1-4 11
American Lea9ue Tl&amp;nt Bos
20 B H unter OaK 19 10 Busby
KC &amp;nd Jenkins Te~o.: 19 ll
Wood Chi 19 IS

Angeles over Chtca go The
Cubs used twO"run homers by
Jose Cardenal and Jerr y
Morales to take a 5-4 lead alter
2 % lllllmgs but the Dodgers
went ahead for good m the
bottom of the third when Wtllte
Crawford smgled home one run
and B1ll RusseU smglcd m two
more Charhe Hough worked
the last 6 2-3 tiUlmgs allowmg
JUSt one hit to earn hts seventh
VIctor~ m 10 deCISions
Padres 3, Cardmals I
Wtlhe McCovey and Dave
Wmfteld tagged Bob Gtbson for
solo homers to help San Otego
defeat Sl Lows Dan Sptllner,
a 22-year old nght hander who
had dropped h1s last ftve
dectstons outdueled Gtbson as
he shackled the Cards on etght
hits Lou B• ock stole hiS 89th
base to move 24 games ahead
of Maury Wtlls record break
mg pace of 1962 when he stole
104
Mets 4, Astros 2
Benny Ayala homered in his
ftrst major league at bat to
touch off a three run second
mmng and Tug McGraw,
makmg h1s first start m over a
tnt ernatwnalleagu e
Standmgs
B y Untted Pr€!ss lntcrna t1onal
N orth
w 1 pcf 9 b
Roche ster
ac so 615
Syracuse
69 61
53 1 11
62 70
470 19
Toledo
Pawt uc ket
51 79
392 29
So uth
w t pet g b
MemphiS
SO 52
606
R lc hmond
71 59
546 B
Charl eston
58 74
439 22
T dewaler
51 78
400 27
T oday s R esu lts
Toledo 5 Pawt uc kef 2
Char leston 4 Richmond 3 1st 8
inns
R chmond 4 Charleston 1 2nd 7
tnns
Rochester a t Syra&lt;::use
ppd
ra i n
Memph iS 6 T dewater 1
W ednesda ys Games
Toledo at Pawtucket
Charl es ton at Richmond
Syracr.tse at Roches ter
Memph s at T dewater

)ear allowed only one run m
SIX mnmgs lo lead New York
over Houston Ayala, a 23yearold outftelder who was
recalled from Ttdewater of the
InternatiOnal League earlier m
the day became the 40th
player m htstory and tbe ftrst
Natwnal Leaguer m 13 years to
homer m hts mttial at bat
FeliX Millan s Single drove m
New York s other two runs m
the second mnmg
Expos 6, Braves 1
Bob Batley and Ron Fatrly
homered and Jun Northrup
and Mike Jorge nsen each
drove m two runs to pace
Montreal past Atlanta Darrell
Evans 18th homer accounted
for the Braves only run off
wtnnmg pit cher Mtke Torrez
IIJ.ll
Fr?""""

,

211?
Secood clul pofii.Rft paid at Pome"oL
Ohio
~
National adverl1aln1 repnsent•llve
BoUinelli-G•llagtler lnc '12 Eait Ond st
Nt!w- York New York
Subs:rjpUon r•tes Delivmld by canier
wlii!re avallable 60 ctnta per week By
Molor Route where carrier service not
•vallable One month $2 SO By mall in
Otllo And W V• One Year SUI ib
month• $9 SO Three month• fl
Elletrhere n2 00 yu.r sU months $11 5oO

WPP ina till

( 1 7thl ~ Brown

H llte r

(IS 9)

LP

"Better Service
Is Our Business"

992-7161

(2nd ~a me}
Cleveland 000 000 OlD- '2 5 l
Kansas City 700 130 02x- 13 13 0
Wilcox Beene ( l) Ellmgsen
( 5) and Eil tS Br les (4 5) and
Healy LP W lcox (2 2) HRs
L s (6th) Mayberry (20th )

Middleport, 0.

(RIB TRE.;Dl
Plus

Exctse Tax
27c to 87c

Witl,
FREE MOUNTING

•

Recappable Casing

700 E M•ln St
POMEROY OHIO
992 2101 t)rt92 2102

JOHN FULTZ,
OWNER

•

ANNUAL SUMMER OUTING"

1

OF
GOODYEAR ATOMIC CORP.
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 PM

CAMDEN PARK

Callt
176 12
tO 12
Defrof 002
200 004
010 000
003 ooo
000 oL o c k w o o d F lguero&amp; (51

tu.s1 101

Plus CasUlg

SATURDAY - AUGUST 31ST
FOR

mn J

19) Qu nlana 191 P na

FOR

CAMDEN PARK RESERVED

Oakland
000 100 02o- J 11 o
Mllwautce e 000 DOD ::t OG- 2 8 2
B l ue F ngers (7) and Fosse
Tenace (1 1 Haney 17 1 Sla l on
Murphy ( 8 1 and Moore WP
F ngers (8 31 LP Murphy ( 6 5)

(9) and Rodriguez Coleman
H il l er t6l and Lamont WoCjken

2 $23

11 50 Sll.bllaiption Jnce

Major League R esults

Sa nders

PASSENGER TIRES

Include&amp; &amp;mda.y 1'Une11-&amp;ntlnel

By United Preu lnte rnattonal

{ll

Amencan League
(lst gamel
Clevelud 0'23 100 024- 12 19 2
Kansas C1tyJ10 300 001 813 0
Peterson
H lgendorf
f4l
Buskey (81 and Duncan Eilts
(8 ) Busby McDah et (8) and
Healy
WP H lgendorf
{4 21
LP Busby (19 11 ) HRs Lis
(5th I McRae !14th )

I

DEVOTEDTOmE
J
INTERESJ' OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHF.SI'ER L. TANNF.HD.fo
Eu&lt;E4
ROBERT HOEruat
CCty FAilor
Publiahed dally eacept Sat1Jr4ay by The
Ohio VaUey PubliJhinM Cornl.r11 111
Court St Pomeroy Ohio 567811 8uslne8a
ornce Phone tH-2158 Editorial Pbone 992-

th~ moolhl

Ch•caao
2ol ooo ooo- s a 2
Los Angeles 403 210 02x 12 13 1
Reuschel LaRoche (.:I ) De l
tore (7) and Swrsher
Rau
Hough (3) and Ferguson WP
Hough (7 JJ LP Reuschel (12
10) H Rs Moral es (13th) Wynn
( '29th ) Ferguson (13th) Carde
nat Cllthl Buckner (4th)

.,.____,_..._._ _,.

The Da1~ Sentinel

charge

US 60 WEST- HUNTINGTON

----•llil•••···············

(3r d )
HRs Robbln,on · · - - - - - - -. .

OpenWtekendsOnlyAfftrlabor

�•

Gridders
QIICAGO ( UPI J - Slriklnt!
N.ttiorW FootbaU Loa guo play·
.,... will CGIIlJIOie in all regular
gamos, even l!lough
lbeir dllpute wllh club ownen
... not ~ ~titled.

Playe-r representatives
'l'llf&gt;Jday night rejected a new
offer
from · the
NFL
Management C&lt;&gt;Wlcil by a ~~
vote. But they abo voted to
keep players in training campo
wilhoot a con!Tact and to play

•

play 1espite dis:llute

llle reglllar ,.,.,.,., ·while at· · preventing BgRfttltnt was the to paructpate Ill~ n~le­
tempting to negoli.ate a new IWLeiJe Rule, Wlder which the chang&lt; d.iscossions. All were
agreement.
league commissioner deter· pomts cooered by original
''At some point , the fans mires compensation for all&gt; player demands .
deaerve some "kind of break," letes who play out theiT option
The reje(1Jon of the contact
Players Association E1eeutive and then sign willt anot~Jer proposal by tile playon ended
Director Ed Garwy said. "and ~m. The NFL proposal which two days of discussim by
llle player reps feel it's good was reje&lt;Ud by .. the ,players management and the players
for the game to go in and play called for modification ol the under Ill• auspices of chief
llle season and we'U come back RozeUe Rule, increased pen- Federal Medi.awr W.J. Usery.
to light willl them ahout a sion and insura""" payments, US&lt;'IJ' said he
"di.oappoin-

contract."
·The major stumbling block

•

Dapper Baron big winner

•·as

liberalized working conditions ' ted " by the failw-e to reach an
and lhe opportl!llily for players ag.r&lt;tmem and that he would

n both

....., inlo r,_ed
negotoations at ""'"" pomt in
the near fllwre .
Both Gan..,y and
FlPA
Presidenl BiD Curry said lbe
14-&lt;lay coohng olf period under

0:0

which players enllnd training
camp two w&lt;tks ago had been
a failure.

" We look a .garnble in going
back to camp,'' Garvey said,
··and it didn't work."

Garvey sa1d the players'
decision to remain in camp and
play in the regular ""ason
.games "takeo away a lot of the
~esswt'' on management to
rea!'!&gt; a contract settlement.
But he added :
"We're not going 1o beg and
apparently they're not going to
bargain, but someday they're
g.oing 1o have to bargain and
we're still not gorng to beg."

By VITO Sl'ELLINO
UPI Sporto Writer
Roy White would like to leave
the New York. Yankees a
present when he departs ne~t
sealfClll-lhe American League
penna nt .
White who's made it per·
fectly cl~r that he wants to be
traded nell year because be's
~ platooned by Manager
BiD Virdon, is help;,(g to keep
the Yanb in the race this year.
He's doing this even though
he wants to go to a team that
wiD play him everyday.

Named co-player &lt;i lbe week
· in the American League last
week when he had four hits in
one game, White hit a tw&lt;H'IIll
single in the four"'Wl seventh
inning 'l'llesday night to pace
lbe Yanks to a 1-2 victory over
the Minnesota Twins. It kept
New York $ 12 games behind
Boston in the 1\L East.
But Virdon and White agree
oo one point- they hoth think
the Yanks can catch the Red
· Sox. They think lbe team's
final five games with Boston
will be crucial-especially
since the team has had

Wheels are
out of cash
By United Preis Intematlooal
C&lt;&gt;acbeo are always looking
for guys who love the game so
much they'd play for nothing.
The World Football League
Detroit Wh&lt;tls wiD have a
wltole team of them-at least
for a while .
The Wheels have 33 owners
but none willlng to fork over
enough money to make lbe first
year operation solvent. And so,
the Wheels are broke.
General Manger Sonny
Grandelius told his players
'l'llf&gt;lday that Ute club is out of
money and he could not
guarantee them a payday. But
the Wheels have decided to
play
tonight
against
Philadelphia anywwy ."
'.'We decided unanimously to
play," said player representa·
UveJon H~nderson. '''We didn't

even need to take a vote. We
wanted lD try to help this lbing
make it, if possible."
The Wheels, 0.7, hope to have

quarterback Bubba Wyche off
lite injured list to face King
Corcoran and the Bell in .
Philadelphia. Corcoran leads
the league in passing, completing hetter lban 55·per cent for
1,409 yard,s and 15 TDs, tying
Chicago's ViT.gil Carter ior the
league high in that ' depart·
ment.
In other action tonight, lb e .
Memphis Southmen are at llle
Florida Blazers, the New York
Stars at the Houston Texans
and the Portland Storm at lbe
Southern California Sun. The
unbeaten Binningham Amerlcans are in Chicago Thursday
nlghttoface the Fire, 6-1, in lhe · ·.
national teleivsion game·

grounder by Sal Bando. Joe
problems will! lbe Red Sox the Angeles downed Chicago 12.5. Rudi then singled In the will! hls ninth defeat. The
Tigers rallied for three runs in
Red So• f , Whi te Sox l
past tW'o yUrs.
·
deciding nm.
the ninth lo send tile game into
Reggie
Cleveland,
a
replace·
In the other games, Boston
Rangers
!,
Orioles
1
extra
_innil),gs.
downed Chicago 6-1, Texas rnent for ailing Juan Marichal,
Ferguson Jenkins pitched a
Indians u.z, Royals S-13
nipped Baltimore Z.l, Oakland pitched a seven-hitter to lift
live-hitter
for
his
19th
victory
Frank Duffy and John Ellis
edged
Milwaukee
3-2, Boston past Chicago. Rookie
ro
lead
Texas
past
Baltimore.
each knocked in lllr&lt;t runs to
California lopped Detroit H in Jim Rice drove in three runs on
The
game
drew
a
crowd
of
lead a 19-hit attack as
three
singles
to
back
13 innings and Cleveland
29,699
fans
to
piiSh
lbe
Rang.ers
Cleveland
downed Kansas .city
downed Kansas .city 12-3 bul Cleveland. Jim ~~ suffered · over a million mark for the
in the first game of the
the loss.
lost lbe second game 13-2.
ftrst
time
in
lbeiT
three-year
doubleheader.
Steve Busby lost
In the National League, A's 3. Brewers 2
history.
in bis bid to win his 20th game.
Qakland raUied for two runs
Cincinnati
blanked
Angels
7,
Tigen
S
In the second game, Hal
Philadelphia 3-0, Montreal beat in the eighth to down Mil·
Bob
Oliver's
sacrifice
fly
off
McRae, who drove in six runs
Atlanta 6-1, New York topped waukee. The first nm scored
John
HiDer
with
none
out
in
the
in
lbe first game loss, dou bled
Houston + 2, San Diego edged when first bitseman Mike
13th,h
is
third
RBI
of
the
game,
twice to finish with live doubles
St. Louis 3-1, Pittsburgh routed !Jegan dropped a throw from
gave California lbe victory and seven RB!s in the two
third
baseman
Don
Money
on
a
San Francisco 13-2 and Los
over Detroit. Hiller, shooting g.allle5, George Brett drove in
for his 16th win, was saddled lllree runs in llle second g.ame.

'final workouts

COLlfMBUS (UP! ) O.Opp« fl,aron owept in front at
the UvtM~uarter mile pole a~d
romped to a 1m length Will
over Otris Pick in the ra«10ff
of the featured !luckeye State
Pace for two-year-&lt;&gt;lds at tbe
Ohio State Fair 'fuesday. Doctor Alan was lbird .
Dapper &amp;roo, driven by
Mu Lunch and owned by J.S.
Michael of Bucyi'IIS, covered
the mile in the llletime mark of
2:02 2-5, in winning for lbe
sev&lt;nth time in 15 starts this

••'
•
•

I

&lt;:X'I.UMBUS ( UP!) - The
Oluo Envlronmen~al . Proteo.
uon Agency ended till atr alert
for the O.Oyton area 'l'llesday
afternoon when the poUuuon
level dropped to 145, to . he
~der. llle 200 level for the ftrSt
ume Ill a week.

I

I

HOMECOMING SET
The annual homecoming of
Langsville Christian Church
will be Sunday, Sept. I with a
basket dinner at 12:30. p.m.
Afternoon services· will be at
2:30 fea tw-ing apeclal singing
by the Uhrig Brothers,
Chillicothe, and The Good .

•

0

z:

News Trio .

•
V)

NOW YOUKNOW
No fWlgus has chlorophyl. , •

0

::c

3:

'

By ED SI\INSBURY
UP! Sports Writer
CHICAGO ( UP!)_ It sh olf!d
be "wrut 'tiU next year'' agam
for most of the major midwest
college football teams.
Once again Ohio State,
Michigan anjl ' Notre Dame
shoilld be dominant.
The Buckeyes have almost
everybody back from last
year's jl).().lteani, including an
awesome offensive back(ield of
quarterback Cornelius Gr&lt;tne,
running hack Archie Griffin,
a nd two fullbacks , Champ
Henson and Pete Johnson, and
eight defensive s tarters,
lacking only the linebackers,
and boasting halfback Neal
Colzle, a breakaway punt
return specialist also.
Michigan, aillo !().().!, has
more gaps to fill, but ciJach Bo
Schembechler . has Dennis
Franklin back at quarterback
and lbree speedsters to play
with him, Chuck Heater, Gil Chapman and Gordon Bell. All .
four can do the 100 under 10
seconds. The Wolverines alS!l
have their crackerjack defen-

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0
....

...

Ill
~

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ROUND
STEAK

$ 33

GROUND
'BEEF

·
· ·.
---------------------------

79¢

LB.

Pork

Sausage lb.

ICEBERG

LIQUID

HEAD LETTUCE

JOY

•,

29~

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-

'

REMOVE FROM PAPER AND USE AS A SHOPPING GUIDE
PLEASEFOLOH.E·RE----------------------------. -------------~-. --------·

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D\ll P\CllES

.. FROZEN FOOD BUYS

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BEEF STEAKS

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BUTTER
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TICKETS ON SALE

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PRICES
EFFECTIVE
THRU SAT., AUGUST3J
.
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vve Reserve Ki&amp;hl 10 Umit Quantity.
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MEDIU.M SIZE

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Alert sounded

It's wait until
1975 for most
midwest colleges

bridge nearer

•

•

LLI

. Replacement

•

•

,500::

in the $36,050 feature whlchwas raced in two divisl~.
Peg.g.y Ann Wick, driven by
Dale Ross and owned by E.
Catchpole and the &amp;teen Slables, vienna, led aU the way in
winning the first heal in 2:03 J.
5. Chris Pick and Doctor Alan
trailed.
Rascal Rich, driven by Sam
Noble UI and owned by Sun
Rich Stables Inc ., pushed
ahead in the stretch and won by ·
a head over Dapper Baroo in
the second heat, timed at 2:04
+5. O.Ole Butler was third.
The two winners tiTed In the
raceoff. Peggy Ann Wick
fmished filth after being , the
frontrunner the fiTst lbree·
quarter miles and Rascal Rich
ended up in seventh place.
The raceoff in the $8,225 twoyear-old Filly Pace was won by

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Midwest football· sizeup

sive backfield in,tact, and n.eed
only some rebuilding in the line
ro he on a par will! last year.
Notre Dame, II.() a year ago,
has more problelll$. A discipli·
nary decision by lbe university
removed tough defensive end
Ross Browner, star defensive
halfback Luther Bradley, and a
potential star running hack, J\1
Hunter, from lbe squad, and
Halfback Er ic Penick still is
recovering from torn ankle
ligaments.
But Ara Parseghian has
quarterback Tom Clements,
fullback Wayne Bullock,
speedster running back Art
Best, five returning. offensive
linemen, · and · siX defensive
fegulars as a nucle~,J.S . And the
Irish· never seem to lack suf.
ficient depth to make
necessary replacements.
The rest of the Big Ten may
draw closer to the top two, but
not yet lD !he same level.
That's a year, perhaps more,
away. Minnesota , third a year
ago, WisconSin, l'llrdue and
mayhe lliinois coilld be .the
strongest cha llengers.
WILMINGTON,
Ohio some hard knocks against lbe
Minnesota's ~jor problem
lew days visit will! her sis~r . will be in the offensive line, and
The . .CinCinnati Lions.
.(UPI )Mrs. Lyle Moriarity is a quarterback Tony Dungy, a
Bengals, about to end their
Tommy Casaoova, playing
seven .week training camp his first game, suffered ali- medical patient in Holzer sophomore, will have to .come
here, began work today for , .bruised back running hack a Medical Center .
through , but coach Cal StoU
Rev. John Bryant and has confidence he will. Then
tlielr next·to-last preseason punt early ih the first QWirler
daughters and Rev . Jerry Neal there's Rick Upchurch to carry
game again!t the Cleveland and never returned.
Broll'll8 &amp;tnday afternoon in
" It's a helluva way to start and son spent several days lbe ball and an experienced
C&lt;&gt;lumbtlll.
the
season ,"
frowned Ibis week at Wilmore, Ky. and defense with thr&lt;t returning
at~nded Asbury Theological
In departing for Ute game, Casanova .
backs who can stOp the homb.
School.
the Bengals also. wiD he
Running .. back
Essex
Wisconsin aillo has plenty of
Howard CaldweU and Cristy experience returning and could
Ung down Ute Wllmlngton C&lt;&gt;J· Johnson , another veteran who
lege camp. Spinney field in has ~ very lillie playing . Donahue were united in display a potent offense with
.cincinnati will become time so far, aillo was hurt early marriage Thursday evening at quarterback Gregg Bohlig and
headquarters for the·rest of the in the game and apenl Ute rest lbe Vinton United Melbodisl · running back BiD Marek im~tason.
of llle night of the bench. In his Church with Rev. Joyn Bryant proved' and always d~ng.erous.
.Cincinnati carries a ~ pre· lone carry of lbe evening, officiating.
The fJadgers last year lost lowMr. and Mrs. Richard Dyer games by a total of 10 points,
~tason record Into Ute Browns John.On lost eight yards.
game. But head coach PaW
Brown also disclosed that and daughter, J ohnstown , and it would lake littie im·
Brown was not pleased with the place kicker Horst Muhlmann spent Saturday . with hi s provemeritto turn this around.
performance of some of his has a charley horse in biB kick· parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
Purdue needs a quarterback
veterans in Monday night's '1:1- tng leg and said punter · Dyer.
but has fine ruMers in Scott
Mrs.
J oe
Mallhews, Dierking, Mike Northington
14 win over Detroit.
OaveiGreen probably wlU do
COlumbus,
visited
her
mother, and Pete Gross and a great
"llwBB not an easy game by some place-kicking while
Mrs . Desla Swick from receiver in Larry Burton.
any means," he said. ' 'They MuhlmaM 's leg heals.
Running back Charles saturday until 'l'llesday.
have a good football ~ and
Deplb and the outSide line
Mr. and Mrs. ·J ohri Flowers positions coilld he a problem.
, they outplayed 'US .the first "Boobie" Clark was hit hard
half."
la.te in the game and came out and family, Raleigh, N. C. .
DlinoiB will have consistent
Severalplayers received suffering "back spasms. "
apent two weeks with her nmning from Steve Grren and
• Brown complained that sev· mother, Mrs. Lucy Harr.,ook Lonnie Perrin , but Jim Kopatz
eral veterans are stiU rusty, and other relatives.
has to come through at
Margaret
Edmlsron
visited
includlnghquarterba ck Ken
quarterback. The defensive
Anderson , who played the her sister , Mrs . Kathryn backfield, led by Mike Gow,
Alexander recenUy.
entire game.
again should be excellent, but
uKenny needs work •" said
Mrs. Elizabeth .cloud ¥.s the strength of the 'line may
Brown . " He 's not really returned home after vlsiliri!J depend upon how well some
·Mr. and Mts. Harley Cloud, key men recover from injuries.
sharp."
Washington, D. C. and acNorthwestern shoilld be lm· .
companying them on • trip 1o proved too . with Milch An·
CHARLESTON , W.Va .
Cape Cod , MaSB.
derson one of the league's top
(UP!) - Another step In
BYMARIEALEXANDER
Mrs . · Dorothy
Shaw.. quarterbacks and Greg Boy kin
Mr. and Mrs . Glenn Houck, Gallipolis, and Mrs. Martin one o[ lbe leading runners. The
replacement of. the Hiram
Carpenter Bridge on the Ohio Colw-nbus, spent the w&lt;tkend Allen and son, .challanooga, Wildcats have some exoert
RtVft at St. Marys was taken here will! hill mother, Mrs. Tenn . were recent dinner receivers too, but may have to
'l'uOiday.
. Virgie Houck.
· guest.! &lt;i EltzabeUt Cloud.
gel some quick development.
The 'L. R. Sltelton Co. of CoMr. and Mrs. WUIIam Baker, · Mr. 1111d Mrs. Charlie Barnett from freshmen and sophomore
Mra. Clata JOJtPh and Mr . and went to Charleston Thursday lD linemen to reach full potential.
Mrs. Ella Craig open! Sunday consult Mr. Barnett's doctor a.t
Michigan State will · be
.OOtmentand pier won '"' the wlUt Mrs. Birdie Slsck and a hoopllal there . They also generally lne~perienced and
IPII\ bet,_ St. Mal')lll ana Mt1 • Mar!• Moriarity . They · viii ted relatives at Hometown, hoth iowa and Indiana need
Newport,
W. Va.
The lll'ltOlio.
.... ot
are aII cOUSi ns.
personnel almost everywhere
,.-ae construe·
Mrs. Verla Knight is
j ennie Juslus, Lancaster , Is to try to climb out . n! the
lkln uw two river piers con. recuperating at her home here ~~ptndlng UU. week with her cellar.
remain to be after 8PendlnC MVeral daya In grandmother, Mrs. Eliza bell!
The Mid American .cha..,
Holzer Medical Center fo r Cloud.
ratesas a coin tosa proposition.
lecmlheprojectofrepllclnga ·· oblervalion lllld ll'ta,tment. .. Mr . and Mrs , Homer Defending champim MJaml,
IIPP Gl II)'Mar cmlll'udlon
o•---LBid
..,._.
to lhe Pilated lllver
Mro.
- - n,
• Thomas, Nlll'o, vfllted Mr. and willl new coach Dtck .crum,
• .._ wbldlllllllato the Ohlo ,...u, and Glldyt Frederick of Mn. Charlie Barnett Saturday. may be llle beot again after an
_.
Eno 'Diurldly dinner
Bruce Grant attended 11· 0 season , but Bowling
111M' Ill
Dln••nt Dec. lllelfl 111 Jl'lorence Quickie. O.pUt t Cllmp ot Wilmington Grren, Ohio U., and Kent State
II, IN7,1dDinc 4all0l'lottl,
Mn. Olalllliarn rnnolned for a 11111 wr k.
could rile up to challe~e.

Bengals begin

Hill, driven by
Baldwin and OWJ'td by
Mampletl, O&gt;lumbul. The
Baron... wu .econd and
Verchu wa' third. TIW&gt; willlllll
time wu 2:07 l&lt;i.
Hudlining toclsy's ~~
program II the ~
of Agriculture Pace for
year-olds. The 19 entries
elude seven Utile Brown
eligibles .

~~jd of 24 horses competed

Yanks edge Twins; · Indians split with Royals

.

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Gridders
QIICAGO ( UPI J - Slriklnt!
N.ttiorW FootbaU Loa guo play·
.,... will CGIIlJIOie in all regular
gamos, even l!lough
lbeir dllpute wllh club ownen
... not ~ ~titled.

Playe-r representatives
'l'llf&gt;Jday night rejected a new
offer
from · the
NFL
Management C&lt;&gt;Wlcil by a ~~
vote. But they abo voted to
keep players in training campo
wilhoot a con!Tact and to play

•

play 1espite dis:llute

llle reglllar ,.,.,.,., ·while at· · preventing BgRfttltnt was the to paructpate Ill~ n~le­
tempting to negoli.ate a new IWLeiJe Rule, Wlder which the chang&lt; d.iscossions. All were
agreement.
league commissioner deter· pomts cooered by original
''At some point , the fans mires compensation for all&gt; player demands .
deaerve some "kind of break," letes who play out theiT option
The reje(1Jon of the contact
Players Association E1eeutive and then sign willt anot~Jer proposal by tile playon ended
Director Ed Garwy said. "and ~m. The NFL proposal which two days of discussim by
llle player reps feel it's good was reje&lt;Ud by .. the ,players management and the players
for the game to go in and play called for modification ol the under Ill• auspices of chief
llle season and we'U come back RozeUe Rule, increased pen- Federal Medi.awr W.J. Usery.
to light willl them ahout a sion and insura""" payments, US&lt;'IJ' said he
"di.oappoin-

contract."
·The major stumbling block

•

Dapper Baron big winner

•·as

liberalized working conditions ' ted " by the failw-e to reach an
and lhe opportl!llily for players ag.r&lt;tmem and that he would

n both

....., inlo r,_ed
negotoations at ""'"" pomt in
the near fllwre .
Both Gan..,y and
FlPA
Presidenl BiD Curry said lbe
14-&lt;lay coohng olf period under

0:0

which players enllnd training
camp two w&lt;tks ago had been
a failure.

" We look a .garnble in going
back to camp,'' Garvey said,
··and it didn't work."

Garvey sa1d the players'
decision to remain in camp and
play in the regular ""ason
.games "takeo away a lot of the
~esswt'' on management to
rea!'!&gt; a contract settlement.
But he added :
"We're not going 1o beg and
apparently they're not going to
bargain, but someday they're
g.oing 1o have to bargain and
we're still not gorng to beg."

By VITO Sl'ELLINO
UPI Sporto Writer
Roy White would like to leave
the New York. Yankees a
present when he departs ne~t
sealfClll-lhe American League
penna nt .
White who's made it per·
fectly cl~r that he wants to be
traded nell year because be's
~ platooned by Manager
BiD Virdon, is help;,(g to keep
the Yanb in the race this year.
He's doing this even though
he wants to go to a team that
wiD play him everyday.

Named co-player &lt;i lbe week
· in the American League last
week when he had four hits in
one game, White hit a tw&lt;H'IIll
single in the four"'Wl seventh
inning 'l'llesday night to pace
lbe Yanks to a 1-2 victory over
the Minnesota Twins. It kept
New York $ 12 games behind
Boston in the 1\L East.
But Virdon and White agree
oo one point- they hoth think
the Yanks can catch the Red
· Sox. They think lbe team's
final five games with Boston
will be crucial-especially
since the team has had

Wheels are
out of cash
By United Preis Intematlooal
C&lt;&gt;acbeo are always looking
for guys who love the game so
much they'd play for nothing.
The World Football League
Detroit Wh&lt;tls wiD have a
wltole team of them-at least
for a while .
The Wheels have 33 owners
but none willlng to fork over
enough money to make lbe first
year operation solvent. And so,
the Wheels are broke.
General Manger Sonny
Grandelius told his players
'l'llf&gt;lday that Ute club is out of
money and he could not
guarantee them a payday. But
the Wheels have decided to
play
tonight
against
Philadelphia anywwy ."
'.'We decided unanimously to
play," said player representa·
UveJon H~nderson. '''We didn't

even need to take a vote. We
wanted lD try to help this lbing
make it, if possible."
The Wheels, 0.7, hope to have

quarterback Bubba Wyche off
lite injured list to face King
Corcoran and the Bell in .
Philadelphia. Corcoran leads
the league in passing, completing hetter lban 55·per cent for
1,409 yard,s and 15 TDs, tying
Chicago's ViT.gil Carter ior the
league high in that ' depart·
ment.
In other action tonight, lb e .
Memphis Southmen are at llle
Florida Blazers, the New York
Stars at the Houston Texans
and the Portland Storm at lbe
Southern California Sun. The
unbeaten Binningham Amerlcans are in Chicago Thursday
nlghttoface the Fire, 6-1, in lhe · ·.
national teleivsion game·

grounder by Sal Bando. Joe
problems will! lbe Red Sox the Angeles downed Chicago 12.5. Rudi then singled In the will! hls ninth defeat. The
Tigers rallied for three runs in
Red So• f , Whi te Sox l
past tW'o yUrs.
·
deciding nm.
the ninth lo send tile game into
Reggie
Cleveland,
a
replace·
In the other games, Boston
Rangers
!,
Orioles
1
extra
_innil),gs.
downed Chicago 6-1, Texas rnent for ailing Juan Marichal,
Ferguson Jenkins pitched a
Indians u.z, Royals S-13
nipped Baltimore Z.l, Oakland pitched a seven-hitter to lift
live-hitter
for
his
19th
victory
Frank Duffy and John Ellis
edged
Milwaukee
3-2, Boston past Chicago. Rookie
ro
lead
Texas
past
Baltimore.
each knocked in lllr&lt;t runs to
California lopped Detroit H in Jim Rice drove in three runs on
The
game
drew
a
crowd
of
lead a 19-hit attack as
three
singles
to
back
13 innings and Cleveland
29,699
fans
to
piiSh
lbe
Rang.ers
Cleveland
downed Kansas .city
downed Kansas .city 12-3 bul Cleveland. Jim ~~ suffered · over a million mark for the
in the first game of the
the loss.
lost lbe second game 13-2.
ftrst
time
in
lbeiT
three-year
doubleheader.
Steve Busby lost
In the National League, A's 3. Brewers 2
history.
in bis bid to win his 20th game.
Qakland raUied for two runs
Cincinnati
blanked
Angels
7,
Tigen
S
In the second game, Hal
Philadelphia 3-0, Montreal beat in the eighth to down Mil·
Bob
Oliver's
sacrifice
fly
off
McRae, who drove in six runs
Atlanta 6-1, New York topped waukee. The first nm scored
John
HiDer
with
none
out
in
the
in
lbe first game loss, dou bled
Houston + 2, San Diego edged when first bitseman Mike
13th,h
is
third
RBI
of
the
game,
twice to finish with live doubles
St. Louis 3-1, Pittsburgh routed !Jegan dropped a throw from
gave California lbe victory and seven RB!s in the two
third
baseman
Don
Money
on
a
San Francisco 13-2 and Los
over Detroit. Hiller, shooting g.allle5, George Brett drove in
for his 16th win, was saddled lllree runs in llle second g.ame.

'final workouts

COLlfMBUS (UP! ) O.Opp« fl,aron owept in front at
the UvtM~uarter mile pole a~d
romped to a 1m length Will
over Otris Pick in the ra«10ff
of the featured !luckeye State
Pace for two-year-&lt;&gt;lds at tbe
Ohio State Fair 'fuesday. Doctor Alan was lbird .
Dapper &amp;roo, driven by
Mu Lunch and owned by J.S.
Michael of Bucyi'IIS, covered
the mile in the llletime mark of
2:02 2-5, in winning for lbe
sev&lt;nth time in 15 starts this

••'
•
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I

&lt;:X'I.UMBUS ( UP!) - The
Oluo Envlronmen~al . Proteo.
uon Agency ended till atr alert
for the O.Oyton area 'l'llesday
afternoon when the poUuuon
level dropped to 145, to . he
~der. llle 200 level for the ftrSt
ume Ill a week.

I

I

HOMECOMING SET
The annual homecoming of
Langsville Christian Church
will be Sunday, Sept. I with a
basket dinner at 12:30. p.m.
Afternoon services· will be at
2:30 fea tw-ing apeclal singing
by the Uhrig Brothers,
Chillicothe, and The Good .

•

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News Trio .

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NOW YOUKNOW
No fWlgus has chlorophyl. , •

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By ED SI\INSBURY
UP! Sports Writer
CHICAGO ( UP!)_ It sh olf!d
be "wrut 'tiU next year'' agam
for most of the major midwest
college football teams.
Once again Ohio State,
Michigan anjl ' Notre Dame
shoilld be dominant.
The Buckeyes have almost
everybody back from last
year's jl).().lteani, including an
awesome offensive back(ield of
quarterback Cornelius Gr&lt;tne,
running hack Archie Griffin,
a nd two fullbacks , Champ
Henson and Pete Johnson, and
eight defensive s tarters,
lacking only the linebackers,
and boasting halfback Neal
Colzle, a breakaway punt
return specialist also.
Michigan, aillo !().().!, has
more gaps to fill, but ciJach Bo
Schembechler . has Dennis
Franklin back at quarterback
and lbree speedsters to play
with him, Chuck Heater, Gil Chapman and Gordon Bell. All .
four can do the 100 under 10
seconds. The Wolverines alS!l
have their crackerjack defen-

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ROUND
STEAK

$ 33

GROUND
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79¢

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Pork

Sausage lb.

ICEBERG

LIQUID

HEAD LETTUCE

JOY

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PLEASEFOLOH.E·RE----------------------------. -------------~-. --------·

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BEEF STEAKS

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BUTTER
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TICKETS ON SALE

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PRICES
EFFECTIVE
THRU SAT., AUGUST3J
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It's wait until
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bridge nearer

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LLI

. Replacement

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,500::

in the $36,050 feature whlchwas raced in two divisl~.
Peg.g.y Ann Wick, driven by
Dale Ross and owned by E.
Catchpole and the &amp;teen Slables, vienna, led aU the way in
winning the first heal in 2:03 J.
5. Chris Pick and Doctor Alan
trailed.
Rascal Rich, driven by Sam
Noble UI and owned by Sun
Rich Stables Inc ., pushed
ahead in the stretch and won by ·
a head over Dapper Baroo in
the second heat, timed at 2:04
+5. O.Ole Butler was third.
The two winners tiTed In the
raceoff. Peggy Ann Wick
fmished filth after being , the
frontrunner the fiTst lbree·
quarter miles and Rascal Rich
ended up in seventh place.
The raceoff in the $8,225 twoyear-old Filly Pace was won by

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•

Midwest football· sizeup

sive backfield in,tact, and n.eed
only some rebuilding in the line
ro he on a par will! last year.
Notre Dame, II.() a year ago,
has more problelll$. A discipli·
nary decision by lbe university
removed tough defensive end
Ross Browner, star defensive
halfback Luther Bradley, and a
potential star running hack, J\1
Hunter, from lbe squad, and
Halfback Er ic Penick still is
recovering from torn ankle
ligaments.
But Ara Parseghian has
quarterback Tom Clements,
fullback Wayne Bullock,
speedster running back Art
Best, five returning. offensive
linemen, · and · siX defensive
fegulars as a nucle~,J.S . And the
Irish· never seem to lack suf.
ficient depth to make
necessary replacements.
The rest of the Big Ten may
draw closer to the top two, but
not yet lD !he same level.
That's a year, perhaps more,
away. Minnesota , third a year
ago, WisconSin, l'llrdue and
mayhe lliinois coilld be .the
strongest cha llengers.
WILMINGTON,
Ohio some hard knocks against lbe
Minnesota's ~jor problem
lew days visit will! her sis~r . will be in the offensive line, and
The . .CinCinnati Lions.
.(UPI )Mrs. Lyle Moriarity is a quarterback Tony Dungy, a
Bengals, about to end their
Tommy Casaoova, playing
seven .week training camp his first game, suffered ali- medical patient in Holzer sophomore, will have to .come
here, began work today for , .bruised back running hack a Medical Center .
through , but coach Cal StoU
Rev. John Bryant and has confidence he will. Then
tlielr next·to-last preseason punt early ih the first QWirler
daughters and Rev . Jerry Neal there's Rick Upchurch to carry
game again!t the Cleveland and never returned.
Broll'll8 &amp;tnday afternoon in
" It's a helluva way to start and son spent several days lbe ball and an experienced
C&lt;&gt;lumbtlll.
the
season ,"
frowned Ibis week at Wilmore, Ky. and defense with thr&lt;t returning
at~nded Asbury Theological
In departing for Ute game, Casanova .
backs who can stOp the homb.
School.
the Bengals also. wiD he
Running .. back
Essex
Wisconsin aillo has plenty of
Howard CaldweU and Cristy experience returning and could
Ung down Ute Wllmlngton C&lt;&gt;J· Johnson , another veteran who
lege camp. Spinney field in has ~ very lillie playing . Donahue were united in display a potent offense with
.cincinnati will become time so far, aillo was hurt early marriage Thursday evening at quarterback Gregg Bohlig and
headquarters for the·rest of the in the game and apenl Ute rest lbe Vinton United Melbodisl · running back BiD Marek im~tason.
of llle night of the bench. In his Church with Rev. Joyn Bryant proved' and always d~ng.erous.
.Cincinnati carries a ~ pre· lone carry of lbe evening, officiating.
The fJadgers last year lost lowMr. and Mrs. Richard Dyer games by a total of 10 points,
~tason record Into Ute Browns John.On lost eight yards.
game. But head coach PaW
Brown also disclosed that and daughter, J ohnstown , and it would lake littie im·
Brown was not pleased with the place kicker Horst Muhlmann spent Saturday . with hi s provemeritto turn this around.
performance of some of his has a charley horse in biB kick· parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
Purdue needs a quarterback
veterans in Monday night's '1:1- tng leg and said punter · Dyer.
but has fine ruMers in Scott
Mrs.
J oe
Mallhews, Dierking, Mike Northington
14 win over Detroit.
OaveiGreen probably wlU do
COlumbus,
visited
her
mother, and Pete Gross and a great
"llwBB not an easy game by some place-kicking while
Mrs . Desla Swick from receiver in Larry Burton.
any means," he said. ' 'They MuhlmaM 's leg heals.
Running back Charles saturday until 'l'llesday.
have a good football ~ and
Deplb and the outSide line
Mr. and Mrs. ·J ohri Flowers positions coilld he a problem.
, they outplayed 'US .the first "Boobie" Clark was hit hard
half."
la.te in the game and came out and family, Raleigh, N. C. .
DlinoiB will have consistent
Severalplayers received suffering "back spasms. "
apent two weeks with her nmning from Steve Grren and
• Brown complained that sev· mother, Mrs. Lucy Harr.,ook Lonnie Perrin , but Jim Kopatz
eral veterans are stiU rusty, and other relatives.
has to come through at
Margaret
Edmlsron
visited
includlnghquarterba ck Ken
quarterback. The defensive
Anderson , who played the her sister , Mrs . Kathryn backfield, led by Mike Gow,
Alexander recenUy.
entire game.
again should be excellent, but
uKenny needs work •" said
Mrs. Elizabeth .cloud ¥.s the strength of the 'line may
Brown . " He 's not really returned home after vlsiliri!J depend upon how well some
·Mr. and Mts. Harley Cloud, key men recover from injuries.
sharp."
Washington, D. C. and acNorthwestern shoilld be lm· .
companying them on • trip 1o proved too . with Milch An·
CHARLESTON , W.Va .
Cape Cod , MaSB.
derson one of the league's top
(UP!) - Another step In
BYMARIEALEXANDER
Mrs . · Dorothy
Shaw.. quarterbacks and Greg Boy kin
Mr. and Mrs . Glenn Houck, Gallipolis, and Mrs. Martin one o[ lbe leading runners. The
replacement of. the Hiram
Carpenter Bridge on the Ohio Colw-nbus, spent the w&lt;tkend Allen and son, .challanooga, Wildcats have some exoert
RtVft at St. Marys was taken here will! hill mother, Mrs. Tenn . were recent dinner receivers too, but may have to
'l'uOiday.
. Virgie Houck.
· guest.! &lt;i EltzabeUt Cloud.
gel some quick development.
The 'L. R. Sltelton Co. of CoMr. and Mrs. WUIIam Baker, · Mr. 1111d Mrs. Charlie Barnett from freshmen and sophomore
Mra. Clata JOJtPh and Mr . and went to Charleston Thursday lD linemen to reach full potential.
Mrs. Ella Craig open! Sunday consult Mr. Barnett's doctor a.t
Michigan State will · be
.OOtmentand pier won '"' the wlUt Mrs. Birdie Slsck and a hoopllal there . They also generally lne~perienced and
IPII\ bet,_ St. Mal')lll ana Mt1 • Mar!• Moriarity . They · viii ted relatives at Hometown, hoth iowa and Indiana need
Newport,
W. Va.
The lll'ltOlio.
.... ot
are aII cOUSi ns.
personnel almost everywhere
,.-ae construe·
Mrs. Verla Knight is
j ennie Juslus, Lancaster , Is to try to climb out . n! the
lkln uw two river piers con. recuperating at her home here ~~ptndlng UU. week with her cellar.
remain to be after 8PendlnC MVeral daya In grandmother, Mrs. Eliza bell!
The Mid American .cha..,
Holzer Medical Center fo r Cloud.
ratesas a coin tosa proposition.
lecmlheprojectofrepllclnga ·· oblervalion lllld ll'ta,tment. .. Mr . and Mrs , Homer Defending champim MJaml,
IIPP Gl II)'Mar cmlll'udlon
o•---LBid
..,._.
to lhe Pilated lllver
Mro.
- - n,
• Thomas, Nlll'o, vfllted Mr. and willl new coach Dtck .crum,
• .._ wbldlllllllato the Ohlo ,...u, and Glldyt Frederick of Mn. Charlie Barnett Saturday. may be llle beot again after an
_.
Eno 'Diurldly dinner
Bruce Grant attended 11· 0 season , but Bowling
111M' Ill
Dln••nt Dec. lllelfl 111 Jl'lorence Quickie. O.pUt t Cllmp ot Wilmington Grren, Ohio U., and Kent State
II, IN7,1dDinc 4all0l'lottl,
Mn. Olalllliarn rnnolned for a 11111 wr k.
could rile up to challe~e.

Bengals begin

Hill, driven by
Baldwin and OWJ'td by
Mampletl, O&gt;lumbul. The
Baron... wu .econd and
Verchu wa' third. TIW&gt; willlllll
time wu 2:07 l&lt;i.
Hudlining toclsy's ~~
program II the ~
of Agriculture Pace for
year-olds. The 19 entries
elude seven Utile Brown
eligibles .

~~jd of 24 horses competed

Yanks edge Twins; · Indians split with Royals

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Betty, Happy: well dressed, but easy

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remarked that it is the
privilege of women to wear
hemlines where they wish."
TI•c new First J.ady , "very •
supportive of American de:iigners," buys in the rei ail $40 lo
$140 price range, said Mrs.
Welch. Some of the labels in
her closets are Kasper of Joan
Leslie , Jim Baldwln, Justin
McCarty , Ciao Knits and
Mollie Parnis Booutique ,
The fact she 's a former

new First l.ady. Nor will there
be a change In her preference
for basically Bimple clothes,
even as her lifestyle must
change.
Frankie Welch, who's been
selling "off the rack" to Mrs.
· Ford for the last 12 yearo,
quotes her as saying that she
model and dancer has inwill wear dresstl!i for . white nuenced Mrs. Ford's clothing
House occasions. She does style. She also displays clothes
have pantsuits, however, for better now that she has dieted
such times as when the Fords off 25 pounds and gooe from a
get away to Camp David or to size 10 or t2 (depending on
Vall, Colo .,where they ski
style ) to a size six.
Neither will Betty Ford, a
Mrs. Nelson A. Rockefeller,
five.foot...,ven brunette with wife of the vice presidential
hazel eyes, go on one big nominee, projects much the
shopping spree now that she same image as Betty Ford.
is thrust into a new national
"Casual, simmple, well cut,
spotlight.
well made, good lean lines,"
She told Mrs. Welch,"! can't said Norman Johnson,head
throw everything out" but tlie buy.,.. for the designer dress
woman who nms the fashiona .. department at Saks Fifth
ble Alexandria,Va., shop, said Avenue
stores..
' 'Mrs.
Mrs. Ford will be adding Rockefeller knows her figure."
"more as needed."
He said Happy used to come
On·the day Gerald Ford was into the store but now a
sworn as president, Mrs. Ford secretary usually calls and the
selected a favorite blue knit salon sends out a "potpourri"
that Mrs. Welch had hastily from which she selects.
cleaned the night before and
Mrs . Rockefeller," as a
delivered to the Ford residence woman of great wealth, can
in Alexandria, Va ., the next afford originals. She used to
morning.
show up in New York Seventh
For the ·President's first Avenue showrooms of such
speech to the Congress, she designers as Norman Norell
wore a yellow linen dress with (known since Norell's death as
the same lines. And for the first the House of Norell), Bill
state dinner she and her Blass, Oscar de Ia Renta or
husb1nd hosted, for King Pauline Trn-javno, get an
Hussem of Jordan and his wife, advance look at collections
she wore a long white crepe before ordermg through stores.
also "off the rack.n
She also wears Paris couture.
Mrs. Welch, in a telephooe
Designer Blass said Mrs.
interview from her shop near Rockefeller is a "spOrty type.
the capital, called Mrs .. Ford's She doesn't make a big thing
image "one of casual elegance. about dress ... not ostentatious
She tends to lean lines, but in any way. " Since her
selects things that will go up husband's nomination, shejs
and down stairs gracefully, been photographed in pants
and·will sit and travel well. She and shirts at . the family
wants her hemlines just cover· summer home in Seal Harbor,
ing the knees and has Me.

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By GAY PAULEY
UP! Women's Editor
NEW YORK ( UPI) - There
will be no pantsuits at While

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AJC!JW IIl.lriiJ shop opened a bout
12 yttn rs &lt;JJ.(O and others arc

plunrwd for

Bi rrn i.n~a m ,

Orl eans, iJ nd Macon. Her Vt'lerans .cidministrC:~tion and
husband , William, is director they ha ve two gr own
New or ('ongressiooaJ liaison for lhe du ughters.

ltEF.SE
Mr. and Mrs. John H. Reese
hos ted the Reese fa mily
reunion Sunday on For
tification Hill .
Present for the annual event
4

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners Club, 8 p.m., at the
home of Mrs. Eddie Burkett.
WlLLDWOOD Garden Club,
8 p.m. at the home of Mrs .
Kelly Grueser ·
AMERICAN
LEGION,
Feeney • Bennett Post 128, and
the Auxiliary, 7:30p.m. at the
hall. Dinner at 6:30 to precede
meeting. Delegates to Buckeye
Boys State and Buckeye Girls
Stale and their parents to be
guests.
POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club meeting and lun·
cheon, 12 noon, Meigs Inn.
THURSDAY
DUNCAN Family, Tampa ,
Fla., at Chester Church of God,
7:30 p.m. Public invited.
FREE clothing day at the
Salvation Army, Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy, ffoin 10 a.m. to
noon . Large amount of
clothing.· Residents are
welcome .
SATURDAY
GOSPEL Sing . at Gallia
Academy High School, 7:30
p.m. featuring The. l.eFevres.
The Gospelaires and The
Heavenly Highwa y Trio .
Freewill offering.

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· Fun With Food
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Storys visit Bend area

Mr. and Mrs. Noel Story, the
former Annie Thoma, Webster
City, Iowa , have been here
visiting for the past week with
were Mr . and Mrs. Alfred W. Va.; Mr . and Mrs. Lester relatives and fri ends of the
Oher, Jim Reese, Middletown ; Met&lt;:alf, Marietta ; Mr. and 'Bend area. They were brought
Mr . and Mrs. Hobart Mrs . Tom Metcalf and Mark, here for the visit by their son,
McGinness, Bob and John, and Vinton ; Mr. and Mrs. Kail George Story, LaVerne, Iowa,
Sunday, at the home of Mrs.
fr iend, Loretta Bah or, Mr. and Bw-lesoo, Bill, Vickie, Connie
Georgia
Thoma, Chester, a
Mrs. Walter Moore, St. Albans, and David, Bidwell ; Mr. and
Mrs. David Elias, Rt. 2, Vinton. family gathering took place.
Others attending were Mr. and
Mrs . l.eo Kin g and Tina,
EASTON
Columbus
; Mr. and Mrs. Guy
The annual Easton family
Thoma
,
Terri and Kevin ,
reunion was held Sunday, Aug .
25, at Clark Chapel Acres near Rutland ; Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Newell and Mrs. Maxey. At the Porter. Prior to the noon meal, Thoma , Suzan and Kelly
COnclusion of the meeting, Ballard Easton led the group in
salad, sandwiches and soft a prayer of thankfulness,

Reese, Easton far,nilies meet

CHESTER - The birthday of
Mrs . Hattie Frederick was
observed at the Tuesday night
meeting of Chester Council 323,
. Daughters of Al)lerica, at the
haiL Mrs . Frederick was
escorted by the flagbearers to
the altar where Mrs . Ada
Morris presented her with a
gift and Mrs. Erma Cleland
read a poem in tribute.
Members sang "Happy Birth •
day."
During the meeting it was
. reported that Mrs. Beulah
Maxey is a patient at the
Holzer Medical Center, Mrs.
Inzy Newell is at ·Veterans
Memorial Hospital, and Mrs.
Mary Hayes is ill at home.
Cards were signed for Mrs.

SON BORN
CIRCLEVILLE - Mr. and
Mrs. Asa Bradbury, Rt. 4,
Circleville, are announqlng the
birth of a son Monday at the
Ross County Medical Center,
Chillicothe. The 7 lbs., 8 ozs.
infant has been named Jeffrey
Powell. Mr. and Mrs. Brad·
bury have a daughter, Nicole
Lynn, two. Grandparents are
Mr . and Mrs. Charles A.
Bradbury, Middleport, and Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Wright, Cir·
cleville. Great-grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs: Harry Wright
and Mrs. Julia Evans, Cir·
cleville, Mrs. Robert Reibel,
Morristown, and Mr. ·and Mrs.
Cecil P. Bradbury, Middleport. ·
Mrs. Laura Bradbury, ·Mid·
dl eport; is a great-greatgrandmother.

SUNDAY
BURRIS, Lanier, Nibert and
Community Homecoming,
MillstOne Church, Mason Co.,
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.
W. Va . Service begins II a.m.
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Basket dinner. Duncan
Family, special singer s.
Everyone inVited.
.
. ~ ANNUAL homecoming at
· ByCharlene Hoeflich
'm Langsville Christian Church.
Basket dinner 12 :30 p.m. Af.
From Frances Alkire ·or out Harrisonville way comes this ternoon program ·at 2:30
recipe for slaw which she describes as a dandy picnic dish or one featuring special -singing
groups, the Uhrig Brothers of
you can make ahead for the day when eompany's comin'.
Chillicothe and the Good News
SLAW·
Trio.
I medium head cabbage, shredded; 1 pepper (mango),
REUNION of Abraham and
diced; I onion grated; I small jar pimentos. Mix and set aside.
Mix I c. sugar, I c. vinegar, one-third cooking oil, and Mary Will Bahr descendants,
Archery Building, Royal Oak
teaspoon salt. Heat until bubbly and then pour over the slaw.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Conro'y
Park, with dinner at 12:30 p,m.
Descendants of · Mos.es and · of Miami, Fla., visited a week
HAD a note recently from Ann Boso, Portland, who several
with his mother, Mrs. Alice 1
months ago requested through this column some diabetic Susan Will also invited .·
Dodson and brother, Erroll.
recipes. She advised tha.t she didn't receive a single one, but that
Mr. and Mrs. William Rose
meanwhlle she has managed to get some together. So for those of
of. Columbus attended the
you who are diabetic, Ann shares her recipes. Most of these
Milhoan reunion at Milhoan
recipes call for Sugartwin, which is an artificial sweetener.
The French Art Colony Ridge on Sunday. They spent
CALICO COLE SLAW
Mrs.
Arthur the night in Ravenswood and
2 tbsp, Sugartwin; 3 tbsp, vinegar; I tbsp. salad oil; I tsp. welcomes
(Corinne) l.und to its staff for on Monday visited with her
salt; 3 c. shredded cabbage; I c. shredded carrot.
mother, Mrs. Glenna Milhoan
.. Ccmbine the Sugartwin, vinegar, oil and salt. Just before the fall semester, Mrs. Lund and Bernard .
serving, blend with chilled vegetables. (32 calories per serving, .and her husband and two year
Mr. and Mrs. George Conroy
old daughter reside on Sanders
makes eight servings) .
and
daughter, Kimberly of
Hill, Gallipolis. They came .
· here recently from Minnesota Akron were Sunday visitor-s of
SKINNY BEAN SALAD
I can cut green beans; I can cut wax beans; I c. dark kidney where they both graduated his parents, Mr. and Mrs . .
beans; y, c. finely chopped onion; 'h c. finely chopped green from Concordia College in Errol! Conroy and grand·
pepper; 'h c. low-calorie Italian dressing;·Y4 c. cider vinegar; Y. Mo•ehead, Minn. She has a mother, Mrs. Alice Dodson:.
Mr. and Mrs. Art Kasper
Bachelor of Arts Degree and
c. Sugartwin .
were
Saturday dinner guests of
experience
in
Drain beans. Toss beans, onion and green pepper. Combine previous
'her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
the Italian dressing, cider vinegar and Sugartwin, an~ pour over teaching art.
Her classes will include Silk Maynard Bahr and then ai·
the bean mixture. Toss. Chill overnight. (Makes 10 to 12 servings,
42 calories per sening).
Screen for Adults beginning tended the fair.
Mrs . Glenda Hunter has been
Tuesday evening, Sept 10 from
with her father, Glen
staying
7-9 and children from five
HARVARD BEETS
Deeter, while her mother has
1 can diced or crinkle cut beets; I'• c. Sugartwin; I tbsp. through eight years Wed· been i~ the hospital.
nesday afternoon, ,S.pt. iJ
cornstarch; 2 tbsp. cider vinegar; 'h c. beet liquid.
Mr. and Mrs. John Brewer
Drain beets, reserving 'h c. liquid. In saucepan ble11d from 3:30 to 5:30p .m.
Sugartwin and cornstarch. Stir in cider v[riegar and beet liquid.
The following classes are and Mrs. Hazel CUrtis attended
cOOk over low heat stirring constantly until thickened arid clear. also planned for the fall the Curtis reunion at East
Liverpool . over the weekend.
Add beets and heat. (Makes 4 servings of 52 calories per ser· semester :
ving).
.,
Wednesday morning, Sept. They returned hpme on
·
11, from 10 to 12, Beginning Monday.
Several from the Ridge at·
Painting instructed by Joy
GARDENVEGFJ'ABLEMOLD
tended
the Meigs County Fair.
1 can (!2 ounee) vegetable juice cocktail; I&gt; c. water; 2 Prendergast.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Tuesday evening, Sept. 10,
envelopes (2 tbsp. ) unflavored gelatin; "'c. lemon juice; 2 tbsp.
Milhoan
and Rhett called on
Sugartwin; I tsp. grated onion; I c. shredded cabbage; I c. from 7 to 9, Advanced Painting,
Mrs . Milhoan and Bernard on
Sally Moshier. ' .
.
shredded carrot; Y• c. salt.
.
Sunday.
Thw-sday evening, Sept .. 12,
Add water to vegetable juice. Sprinkle gelalin over I c.liquid
Blaine Milhoan went to ·the
in saucepan. Place over low heat and stir untjl gelatin is from 7 to 9, Ceramics, Sally
funeral
home to see Mr . James
dissolved. Remove from heat. Add lemon juice, Sugartwin, onion Moshier.
Classes · for children eight Hayes before he was taken to
and salt. Chill until partially thickened. Fold In cabbage and
carrots. Turn into mold and chill until firm . Urunold on crisp years old through 12 will begin West Virginia for burial. lie
Saturday, Oct. a, under the will be sineerely missed.
greens. (Makes 8 servings, 26 calories per serving).
-Mrs. Glenna Milhoan
instruction of Pam White .
F or fw-ther information or
registration please call446-1903
or .446-0953.
•
BY BERTHA PARKER
Plans lor homecoming at the Callum, Mrs. Emma Hines,
Sabbath School attendance
Minersville United Methodist Mrs. Sadie Brown,. Mrs . .June
FAMILY
TRAVELS
Aug. 25 at the Free Methodist
Church were discussed at a Sayre, Mrs. Ruby Grueser and
~rs. Connie Hoffman and
Church-was
92. Choir members
reeent meeting of the United Mrs. Doris Grueser. Other
~ghters, Debbie, Patty and
present was 20. Worship ser·
Methodist Women at the readings were by Mrs. Stella '
.
1nces,
were
in
Sweet
had an attendance ill 118.
vices
chiJrch.
Grueser, "The Ten Command·
ings, W. Va., recently to . Offering lor all services was
Members signed a round · ments Qf Happiness"; M:rs.
t her father, B. W. Walkup, $170.72. Visitors are always
robin card lot Allen Pugh, . DorJs Grueser, 11 What's ·
.ndrew S. Rowan Memorial weJcome.
Confined lo the Holzer Medical Wrorig" and "II. Friend"; and
ne. They also visited
Mrs. Jeraldyne Ferguson, .
Center, and a thank you note Mrs. Ullle Starcher, " Mama's
1k's Nest, Chimney · Cor· son James, Columbus, Mr. and
from the Clara Grueser family Talldng ," Prayer was by Mrs.
~. Lewisburg, W. Va .,
Mrs. Hermon Kasper, Dayton,
was read. The UMW meeting Brown and Mrs . Ruby Grueser
re they attended the West visited · Sunday w!th Mrs .
tollotred a day of quilting and read Psalm 34.
lnia State Fair, and Clifton Bertha Parker.
uck lunch.
Others attending were Mrs.
' te, and then drove to
Bertha Parker and Georgia
In the abaence or Mrs . Mary Leonard, Westwood, N.
ngton, Va., for some sight. Diehl went with the Senior
Bradrord Malljl, Mrs. SitU. J. vlalting here with her
1g, While on the trip, the Citizens and attended the Ohio
Grueser
preaen ted
the mother, Mrs. McCallwn, Mrs. !
I
ly also visited Mr. and State Fair Friday.
PfGIIram tiling "This Is My Mary RW!IIt!ll, Mrs. Galdys I
Garland Walkup, Rupert,
Mr . and Mrs . Robert
Father'• World" a~ her topic. Taylor, Mrs. Gertrude Mitchell
'a ., and Mr. and Mrs. Swisher, (Donna Wellman) are
Readtnas on the theme were and Mrs. Fannie Phillips.
I
"Walkup at Alderson, W. announcing the birth of a •on
aiven by Mrs. Hazel Me·
\
Aug , 9.
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"Mrs. Rockefeller has that
Good F'a ru i l y~ lv.y l..eaJ.,tue
lonk," Nurt&gt;JI sa id once, I;~~~
wiU always loo k right, n'!vt•r
gussied..up, never silly."
Mrs. Welch, a native of
Home, Ga .. studied design at
F urw;m Univers ity, the
University of Georgia, and
Ulliv('rsity o£ Wisconsin. Her

~;:~::h:::~ c::~~::Ceby

Thoma,
Pomeroy;
Roy
Thoma, Diane, Danny and

Carman, Racine, R.D. i Mn.
Wilhemlnia Thoma, Mr. and
Mrs. Glenn Thoma, Chester;
Mrs. George Zeigler, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy. Ice cream and cake
were served.
RELATIVES VISIT
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Jamea
(Alice Eynon) former Melia
County residents vislttd
relativ"' in the Pomeroy Bend,
BOb Duckworth, Middleport,
and Mr. and Mrs. George Freeland, Syracuse, recenUy,

an~h~~/~nr~~g c~%~ ~:d

the
Attending beSides those, Teresa, Mr. and Mrs. Gary
named were Mrs, Ada BISsell, L Reynolds, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs . . Goldie Wolfe, Mrs . Mrs. Jlallard Easton, Tampa,
Marcia Keller, Mrs. Leona Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
Hensley, Mrs. Mary Jo Pooler, Easton and Michelle, Wooster;
Mrs. Gold1e FrederiCk, Mrs. Bill Easton Illinois- Tammy
Mabel Van Meter, Mrs. Letha and Danny Easton, a'nd Donna
Wood, Mrs. Dorothy. Myers, DeWitt, Gallia County; Mrs.
Mrs. Ethel Orr, Mrs. Ada Van Margaret Calhoun , Mrs. Patty
Meter, Mrs . Zelda Weber, Mrs. Kaiser and Rhonda and Pam
Opal Hollon, Mrs. Ad~ Neutz. Adams, Kathleen Easton, Mrs.
hng, Mrs. Thelma Wh1te, Mrs. Josephine McGranahan ,
Ada Morns, Mrs. Mary Kay Ashland, Ky.; Mrs. Opal Hall
Holter, Mrs. Jean Swnmerf1eld and Tom Delaware· Truman
and Mrs. Betty Roush.
Hall and ' Randy, Mlddleport;
Mr. and Mrs. Vaughn Roush,
Vinton; Mrs. Celcus Reynolds,
Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Ward,
The Almanac
Jeff and Carl, Mrs. Lexie
By United Press International Easton, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Today is Wednesday, Aug . 28, Swis her and J oyce, Leo
the 240th day of 1974 with 125 to Swisher and. Tony Elkins,
follow.
. Bidwell ; Clarence Easton,
The moon is approaching its Renee and Candy, Fairborn;
full phase .
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Reynolds,
The morning stars are Venus, Kim and Karen, and Chery In,
Jupiter and Saturn.
Connie and Randy McFarland,
The evening stars are Mer· Vinton.
cury
and born
Mars.on this date are • - - - - - - - - - . ,
Those
BOYS'
under the sign of Virgo.
French actor Charles Boyer
was born Aug, 28, 1899.
On this day in history :
In 1922, a New York City
realty company paid $100 to Brown &amp; black leather,
sponsor the first radio commer- also in blue denim.
cial-on Station WEAF.
In 1963, 1more than 200,000
demonstrators'staged an orderly civil rights march in
Your Thom MeAn Store
Washington, D.C.
Middleport, 0.

DINGO

me
Loves me not

When you know ifs for
· keeps, choose a Keepsake
diamond ring to symbolize ·

yo ur love forever. A per·
feet, fine white diamond
precisely cut, with pertna
nent registration and loss
protection. There is no
finer diamond ring.
4

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VISTA
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Minersville UMW meets

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new art director

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CLIP THESE COUPONS AND SAVE

--------------------Super Shet

2/$1.25
'

open flames . served on a
toas ted bun . wiih lenuce .
iomato. and sweet Bermuda
onion.

Coupon good until Sept. 15
at BURGER CHEF,
1503 Eastern Avenue. Gallipolis

Stacked Ham

2/99¢

2/$1.00

Save38¢

with this coupon
Our Banquet on a Bun! Two
open-flame broiled beefburgers topped wittt melted
Kraft ChE!ese, our special
sauce anCI chopped lettuce.

Coupon good until Sept. 15 ·
at BURGER CHEF,
1503 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis

Cheeseburger

4/99¢

Save31¢

Save41¢

with th is co upon
A hot: ·heap l n; helpln ' o f .
country flav o red ham . all
melted over with savory
Swiss ·chcese, ~nd our spe·
ci al sPuce on a toasted bun.

with this coupon
100 % fresh ground beef,
broil ed o11er open·flamea,
topped with melted Kraft
cheese. on a toasted bun.

Coupon good until Sept. 15
at BURGER CHEF,
1503
A~enue, Gallipolis

2/99¢

Fish Sandwich

· Save31¢
with th is .coupon

Two full -size patties ot openflame broiled ground beet,
and a tOpping of meltt~d
Kraft cheeSe on a toasted

bun.·

Coupon good until Sept. 15
at BURGER CHEF,
. .
1503 Eastern A•enu~ . Gatl•polis

•

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Save45¢

with thi s coupon
Th is is the BIG one! A fu ll
\ 4 · Pound patty o f c h o ice
ground beel. broiled ove r

.BigShet®·

.

with this coupon
A tuty flsh fillet topped
w it~ me/led Kraft chtlll,

chopped lettuce end OYP

special

11r11r Nuct.

Couport good until Sept. 15
at BURGER CHEF,
1503 EasMm Avenue. G•llipotls

�.

7- The Dally S.ntlnel, Mid&lt;llei&gt;Ort.Ponlt'!'oy, 0 ., Wednesday, AUJ:. 211, W74

Betty, Happy: well dressed, but easy

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remarked that it is the
privilege of women to wear
hemlines where they wish."
TI•c new First J.ady , "very •
supportive of American de:iigners," buys in the rei ail $40 lo
$140 price range, said Mrs.
Welch. Some of the labels in
her closets are Kasper of Joan
Leslie , Jim Baldwln, Justin
McCarty , Ciao Knits and
Mollie Parnis Booutique ,
The fact she 's a former

new First l.ady. Nor will there
be a change In her preference
for basically Bimple clothes,
even as her lifestyle must
change.
Frankie Welch, who's been
selling "off the rack" to Mrs.
· Ford for the last 12 yearo,
quotes her as saying that she
model and dancer has inwill wear dresstl!i for . white nuenced Mrs. Ford's clothing
House occasions. She does style. She also displays clothes
have pantsuits, however, for better now that she has dieted
such times as when the Fords off 25 pounds and gooe from a
get away to Camp David or to size 10 or t2 (depending on
Vall, Colo .,where they ski
style ) to a size six.
Neither will Betty Ford, a
Mrs. Nelson A. Rockefeller,
five.foot...,ven brunette with wife of the vice presidential
hazel eyes, go on one big nominee, projects much the
shopping spree now that she same image as Betty Ford.
is thrust into a new national
"Casual, simmple, well cut,
spotlight.
well made, good lean lines,"
She told Mrs. Welch,"! can't said Norman Johnson,head
throw everything out" but tlie buy.,.. for the designer dress
woman who nms the fashiona .. department at Saks Fifth
ble Alexandria,Va., shop, said Avenue
stores..
' 'Mrs.
Mrs. Ford will be adding Rockefeller knows her figure."
"more as needed."
He said Happy used to come
On·the day Gerald Ford was into the store but now a
sworn as president, Mrs. Ford secretary usually calls and the
selected a favorite blue knit salon sends out a "potpourri"
that Mrs. Welch had hastily from which she selects.
cleaned the night before and
Mrs . Rockefeller," as a
delivered to the Ford residence woman of great wealth, can
in Alexandria, Va ., the next afford originals. She used to
morning.
show up in New York Seventh
For the ·President's first Avenue showrooms of such
speech to the Congress, she designers as Norman Norell
wore a yellow linen dress with (known since Norell's death as
the same lines. And for the first the House of Norell), Bill
state dinner she and her Blass, Oscar de Ia Renta or
husb1nd hosted, for King Pauline Trn-javno, get an
Hussem of Jordan and his wife, advance look at collections
she wore a long white crepe before ordermg through stores.
also "off the rack.n
She also wears Paris couture.
Mrs. Welch, in a telephooe
Designer Blass said Mrs.
interview from her shop near Rockefeller is a "spOrty type.
the capital, called Mrs .. Ford's She doesn't make a big thing
image "one of casual elegance. about dress ... not ostentatious
She tends to lean lines, but in any way. " Since her
selects things that will go up husband's nomination, shejs
and down stairs gracefully, been photographed in pants
and·will sit and travel well. She and shirts at . the family
wants her hemlines just cover· summer home in Seal Harbor,
ing the knees and has Me.

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By GAY PAULEY
UP! Women's Editor
NEW YORK ( UPI) - There
will be no pantsuits at While

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AJC!JW IIl.lriiJ shop opened a bout
12 yttn rs &lt;JJ.(O and others arc

plunrwd for

Bi rrn i.n~a m ,

Orl eans, iJ nd Macon. Her Vt'lerans .cidministrC:~tion and
husband , William, is director they ha ve two gr own
New or ('ongressiooaJ liaison for lhe du ughters.

ltEF.SE
Mr. and Mrs. John H. Reese
hos ted the Reese fa mily
reunion Sunday on For
tification Hill .
Present for the annual event
4

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners Club, 8 p.m., at the
home of Mrs. Eddie Burkett.
WlLLDWOOD Garden Club,
8 p.m. at the home of Mrs .
Kelly Grueser ·
AMERICAN
LEGION,
Feeney • Bennett Post 128, and
the Auxiliary, 7:30p.m. at the
hall. Dinner at 6:30 to precede
meeting. Delegates to Buckeye
Boys State and Buckeye Girls
Stale and their parents to be
guests.
POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club meeting and lun·
cheon, 12 noon, Meigs Inn.
THURSDAY
DUNCAN Family, Tampa ,
Fla., at Chester Church of God,
7:30 p.m. Public invited.
FREE clothing day at the
Salvation Army, Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy, ffoin 10 a.m. to
noon . Large amount of
clothing.· Residents are
welcome .
SATURDAY
GOSPEL Sing . at Gallia
Academy High School, 7:30
p.m. featuring The. l.eFevres.
The Gospelaires and The
Heavenly Highwa y Trio .
Freewill offering.

'

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'

· Fun With Food
'

~

Storys visit Bend area

Mr. and Mrs. Noel Story, the
former Annie Thoma, Webster
City, Iowa , have been here
visiting for the past week with
were Mr . and Mrs. Alfred W. Va.; Mr . and Mrs. Lester relatives and fri ends of the
Oher, Jim Reese, Middletown ; Met&lt;:alf, Marietta ; Mr. and 'Bend area. They were brought
Mr . and Mrs. Hobart Mrs . Tom Metcalf and Mark, here for the visit by their son,
McGinness, Bob and John, and Vinton ; Mr. and Mrs. Kail George Story, LaVerne, Iowa,
Sunday, at the home of Mrs.
fr iend, Loretta Bah or, Mr. and Bw-lesoo, Bill, Vickie, Connie
Georgia
Thoma, Chester, a
Mrs. Walter Moore, St. Albans, and David, Bidwell ; Mr. and
Mrs. David Elias, Rt. 2, Vinton. family gathering took place.
Others attending were Mr. and
Mrs . l.eo Kin g and Tina,
EASTON
Columbus
; Mr. and Mrs. Guy
The annual Easton family
Thoma
,
Terri and Kevin ,
reunion was held Sunday, Aug .
25, at Clark Chapel Acres near Rutland ; Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Newell and Mrs. Maxey. At the Porter. Prior to the noon meal, Thoma , Suzan and Kelly
COnclusion of the meeting, Ballard Easton led the group in
salad, sandwiches and soft a prayer of thankfulness,

Reese, Easton far,nilies meet

CHESTER - The birthday of
Mrs . Hattie Frederick was
observed at the Tuesday night
meeting of Chester Council 323,
. Daughters of Al)lerica, at the
haiL Mrs . Frederick was
escorted by the flagbearers to
the altar where Mrs . Ada
Morris presented her with a
gift and Mrs. Erma Cleland
read a poem in tribute.
Members sang "Happy Birth •
day."
During the meeting it was
. reported that Mrs. Beulah
Maxey is a patient at the
Holzer Medical Center, Mrs.
Inzy Newell is at ·Veterans
Memorial Hospital, and Mrs.
Mary Hayes is ill at home.
Cards were signed for Mrs.

SON BORN
CIRCLEVILLE - Mr. and
Mrs. Asa Bradbury, Rt. 4,
Circleville, are announqlng the
birth of a son Monday at the
Ross County Medical Center,
Chillicothe. The 7 lbs., 8 ozs.
infant has been named Jeffrey
Powell. Mr. and Mrs. Brad·
bury have a daughter, Nicole
Lynn, two. Grandparents are
Mr . and Mrs. Charles A.
Bradbury, Middleport, and Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Wright, Cir·
cleville. Great-grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs: Harry Wright
and Mrs. Julia Evans, Cir·
cleville, Mrs. Robert Reibel,
Morristown, and Mr. ·and Mrs.
Cecil P. Bradbury, Middleport. ·
Mrs. Laura Bradbury, ·Mid·
dl eport; is a great-greatgrandmother.

SUNDAY
BURRIS, Lanier, Nibert and
Community Homecoming,
MillstOne Church, Mason Co.,
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.
W. Va . Service begins II a.m.
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.
Basket dinner. Duncan
Family, special singer s.
Everyone inVited.
.
. ~ ANNUAL homecoming at
· ByCharlene Hoeflich
'm Langsville Christian Church.
Basket dinner 12 :30 p.m. Af.
From Frances Alkire ·or out Harrisonville way comes this ternoon program ·at 2:30
recipe for slaw which she describes as a dandy picnic dish or one featuring special -singing
groups, the Uhrig Brothers of
you can make ahead for the day when eompany's comin'.
Chillicothe and the Good News
SLAW·
Trio.
I medium head cabbage, shredded; 1 pepper (mango),
REUNION of Abraham and
diced; I onion grated; I small jar pimentos. Mix and set aside.
Mix I c. sugar, I c. vinegar, one-third cooking oil, and Mary Will Bahr descendants,
Archery Building, Royal Oak
teaspoon salt. Heat until bubbly and then pour over the slaw.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Conro'y
Park, with dinner at 12:30 p,m.
Descendants of · Mos.es and · of Miami, Fla., visited a week
HAD a note recently from Ann Boso, Portland, who several
with his mother, Mrs. Alice 1
months ago requested through this column some diabetic Susan Will also invited .·
Dodson and brother, Erroll.
recipes. She advised tha.t she didn't receive a single one, but that
Mr. and Mrs. William Rose
meanwhlle she has managed to get some together. So for those of
of. Columbus attended the
you who are diabetic, Ann shares her recipes. Most of these
Milhoan reunion at Milhoan
recipes call for Sugartwin, which is an artificial sweetener.
The French Art Colony Ridge on Sunday. They spent
CALICO COLE SLAW
Mrs.
Arthur the night in Ravenswood and
2 tbsp, Sugartwin; 3 tbsp, vinegar; I tbsp. salad oil; I tsp. welcomes
(Corinne) l.und to its staff for on Monday visited with her
salt; 3 c. shredded cabbage; I c. shredded carrot.
mother, Mrs. Glenna Milhoan
.. Ccmbine the Sugartwin, vinegar, oil and salt. Just before the fall semester, Mrs. Lund and Bernard .
serving, blend with chilled vegetables. (32 calories per serving, .and her husband and two year
Mr. and Mrs. George Conroy
old daughter reside on Sanders
makes eight servings) .
and
daughter, Kimberly of
Hill, Gallipolis. They came .
· here recently from Minnesota Akron were Sunday visitor-s of
SKINNY BEAN SALAD
I can cut green beans; I can cut wax beans; I c. dark kidney where they both graduated his parents, Mr. and Mrs . .
beans; y, c. finely chopped onion; 'h c. finely chopped green from Concordia College in Errol! Conroy and grand·
pepper; 'h c. low-calorie Italian dressing;·Y4 c. cider vinegar; Y. Mo•ehead, Minn. She has a mother, Mrs. Alice Dodson:.
Mr. and Mrs. Art Kasper
Bachelor of Arts Degree and
c. Sugartwin .
were
Saturday dinner guests of
experience
in
Drain beans. Toss beans, onion and green pepper. Combine previous
'her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
the Italian dressing, cider vinegar and Sugartwin, an~ pour over teaching art.
Her classes will include Silk Maynard Bahr and then ai·
the bean mixture. Toss. Chill overnight. (Makes 10 to 12 servings,
42 calories per sening).
Screen for Adults beginning tended the fair.
Mrs . Glenda Hunter has been
Tuesday evening, Sept 10 from
with her father, Glen
staying
7-9 and children from five
HARVARD BEETS
Deeter, while her mother has
1 can diced or crinkle cut beets; I'• c. Sugartwin; I tbsp. through eight years Wed· been i~ the hospital.
nesday afternoon, ,S.pt. iJ
cornstarch; 2 tbsp. cider vinegar; 'h c. beet liquid.
Mr. and Mrs. John Brewer
Drain beets, reserving 'h c. liquid. In saucepan ble11d from 3:30 to 5:30p .m.
Sugartwin and cornstarch. Stir in cider v[riegar and beet liquid.
The following classes are and Mrs. Hazel CUrtis attended
cOOk over low heat stirring constantly until thickened arid clear. also planned for the fall the Curtis reunion at East
Liverpool . over the weekend.
Add beets and heat. (Makes 4 servings of 52 calories per ser· semester :
ving).
.,
Wednesday morning, Sept. They returned hpme on
·
11, from 10 to 12, Beginning Monday.
Several from the Ridge at·
Painting instructed by Joy
GARDENVEGFJ'ABLEMOLD
tended
the Meigs County Fair.
1 can (!2 ounee) vegetable juice cocktail; I&gt; c. water; 2 Prendergast.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Tuesday evening, Sept. 10,
envelopes (2 tbsp. ) unflavored gelatin; "'c. lemon juice; 2 tbsp.
Milhoan
and Rhett called on
Sugartwin; I tsp. grated onion; I c. shredded cabbage; I c. from 7 to 9, Advanced Painting,
Mrs . Milhoan and Bernard on
Sally Moshier. ' .
.
shredded carrot; Y• c. salt.
.
Sunday.
Thw-sday evening, Sept .. 12,
Add water to vegetable juice. Sprinkle gelalin over I c.liquid
Blaine Milhoan went to ·the
in saucepan. Place over low heat and stir untjl gelatin is from 7 to 9, Ceramics, Sally
funeral
home to see Mr . James
dissolved. Remove from heat. Add lemon juice, Sugartwin, onion Moshier.
Classes · for children eight Hayes before he was taken to
and salt. Chill until partially thickened. Fold In cabbage and
carrots. Turn into mold and chill until firm . Urunold on crisp years old through 12 will begin West Virginia for burial. lie
Saturday, Oct. a, under the will be sineerely missed.
greens. (Makes 8 servings, 26 calories per serving).
-Mrs. Glenna Milhoan
instruction of Pam White .
F or fw-ther information or
registration please call446-1903
or .446-0953.
•
BY BERTHA PARKER
Plans lor homecoming at the Callum, Mrs. Emma Hines,
Sabbath School attendance
Minersville United Methodist Mrs. Sadie Brown,. Mrs . .June
FAMILY
TRAVELS
Aug. 25 at the Free Methodist
Church were discussed at a Sayre, Mrs. Ruby Grueser and
~rs. Connie Hoffman and
Church-was
92. Choir members
reeent meeting of the United Mrs. Doris Grueser. Other
~ghters, Debbie, Patty and
present was 20. Worship ser·
Methodist Women at the readings were by Mrs. Stella '
.
1nces,
were
in
Sweet
had an attendance ill 118.
vices
chiJrch.
Grueser, "The Ten Command·
ings, W. Va., recently to . Offering lor all services was
Members signed a round · ments Qf Happiness"; M:rs.
t her father, B. W. Walkup, $170.72. Visitors are always
robin card lot Allen Pugh, . DorJs Grueser, 11 What's ·
.ndrew S. Rowan Memorial weJcome.
Confined lo the Holzer Medical Wrorig" and "II. Friend"; and
ne. They also visited
Mrs. Jeraldyne Ferguson, .
Center, and a thank you note Mrs. Ullle Starcher, " Mama's
1k's Nest, Chimney · Cor· son James, Columbus, Mr. and
from the Clara Grueser family Talldng ," Prayer was by Mrs.
~. Lewisburg, W. Va .,
Mrs. Hermon Kasper, Dayton,
was read. The UMW meeting Brown and Mrs . Ruby Grueser
re they attended the West visited · Sunday w!th Mrs .
tollotred a day of quilting and read Psalm 34.
lnia State Fair, and Clifton Bertha Parker.
uck lunch.
Others attending were Mrs.
' te, and then drove to
Bertha Parker and Georgia
In the abaence or Mrs . Mary Leonard, Westwood, N.
ngton, Va., for some sight. Diehl went with the Senior
Bradrord Malljl, Mrs. SitU. J. vlalting here with her
1g, While on the trip, the Citizens and attended the Ohio
Grueser
preaen ted
the mother, Mrs. McCallwn, Mrs. !
I
ly also visited Mr. and State Fair Friday.
PfGIIram tiling "This Is My Mary RW!IIt!ll, Mrs. Galdys I
Garland Walkup, Rupert,
Mr . and Mrs . Robert
Father'• World" a~ her topic. Taylor, Mrs. Gertrude Mitchell
'a ., and Mr. and Mrs. Swisher, (Donna Wellman) are
Readtnas on the theme were and Mrs. Fannie Phillips.
I
"Walkup at Alderson, W. announcing the birth of a •on
aiven by Mrs. Hazel Me·
\
Aug , 9.
'

..

"Mrs. Rockefeller has that
Good F'a ru i l y~ lv.y l..eaJ.,tue
lonk," Nurt&gt;JI sa id once, I;~~~
wiU always loo k right, n'!vt•r
gussied..up, never silly."
Mrs. Welch, a native of
Home, Ga .. studied design at
F urw;m Univers ity, the
University of Georgia, and
Ulliv('rsity o£ Wisconsin. Her

~;:~::h:::~ c::~~::Ceby

Thoma,
Pomeroy;
Roy
Thoma, Diane, Danny and

Carman, Racine, R.D. i Mn.
Wilhemlnia Thoma, Mr. and
Mrs. Glenn Thoma, Chester;
Mrs. George Zeigler, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy. Ice cream and cake
were served.
RELATIVES VISIT
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Jamea
(Alice Eynon) former Melia
County residents vislttd
relativ"' in the Pomeroy Bend,
BOb Duckworth, Middleport,
and Mr. and Mrs. George Freeland, Syracuse, recenUy,

an~h~~/~nr~~g c~%~ ~:d

the
Attending beSides those, Teresa, Mr. and Mrs. Gary
named were Mrs, Ada BISsell, L Reynolds, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs . . Goldie Wolfe, Mrs . Mrs. Jlallard Easton, Tampa,
Marcia Keller, Mrs. Leona Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
Hensley, Mrs. Mary Jo Pooler, Easton and Michelle, Wooster;
Mrs. Gold1e FrederiCk, Mrs. Bill Easton Illinois- Tammy
Mabel Van Meter, Mrs. Letha and Danny Easton, a'nd Donna
Wood, Mrs. Dorothy. Myers, DeWitt, Gallia County; Mrs.
Mrs. Ethel Orr, Mrs. Ada Van Margaret Calhoun , Mrs. Patty
Meter, Mrs . Zelda Weber, Mrs. Kaiser and Rhonda and Pam
Opal Hollon, Mrs. Ad~ Neutz. Adams, Kathleen Easton, Mrs.
hng, Mrs. Thelma Wh1te, Mrs. Josephine McGranahan ,
Ada Morns, Mrs. Mary Kay Ashland, Ky.; Mrs. Opal Hall
Holter, Mrs. Jean Swnmerf1eld and Tom Delaware· Truman
and Mrs. Betty Roush.
Hall and ' Randy, Mlddleport;
Mr. and Mrs. Vaughn Roush,
Vinton; Mrs. Celcus Reynolds,
Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Ward,
The Almanac
Jeff and Carl, Mrs. Lexie
By United Press International Easton, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Today is Wednesday, Aug . 28, Swis her and J oyce, Leo
the 240th day of 1974 with 125 to Swisher and. Tony Elkins,
follow.
. Bidwell ; Clarence Easton,
The moon is approaching its Renee and Candy, Fairborn;
full phase .
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Reynolds,
The morning stars are Venus, Kim and Karen, and Chery In,
Jupiter and Saturn.
Connie and Randy McFarland,
The evening stars are Mer· Vinton.
cury
and born
Mars.on this date are • - - - - - - - - - . ,
Those
BOYS'
under the sign of Virgo.
French actor Charles Boyer
was born Aug, 28, 1899.
On this day in history :
In 1922, a New York City
realty company paid $100 to Brown &amp; black leather,
sponsor the first radio commer- also in blue denim.
cial-on Station WEAF.
In 1963, 1more than 200,000
demonstrators'staged an orderly civil rights march in
Your Thom MeAn Store
Washington, D.C.
Middleport, 0.

DINGO

me
Loves me not

When you know ifs for
· keeps, choose a Keepsake
diamond ring to symbolize ·

yo ur love forever. A per·
feet, fine white diamond
precisely cut, with pertna
nent registration and loss
protection. There is no
finer diamond ring.
4

~Ot&lt;IATA

W !&lt; D . fil i NG

VISTA
W ED . RING

VERONA

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heritage house

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Minersville UMW meets

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FACto have
new art director

'

CLIP THESE COUPONS AND SAVE

--------------------Super Shet

2/$1.25
'

open flames . served on a
toas ted bun . wiih lenuce .
iomato. and sweet Bermuda
onion.

Coupon good until Sept. 15
at BURGER CHEF,
1503 Eastern Avenue. Gallipolis

Stacked Ham

2/99¢

2/$1.00

Save38¢

with this coupon
Our Banquet on a Bun! Two
open-flame broiled beefburgers topped wittt melted
Kraft ChE!ese, our special
sauce anCI chopped lettuce.

Coupon good until Sept. 15 ·
at BURGER CHEF,
1503 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis

Cheeseburger

4/99¢

Save31¢

Save41¢

with th is co upon
A hot: ·heap l n; helpln ' o f .
country flav o red ham . all
melted over with savory
Swiss ·chcese, ~nd our spe·
ci al sPuce on a toasted bun.

with this coupon
100 % fresh ground beef,
broil ed o11er open·flamea,
topped with melted Kraft
cheese. on a toasted bun.

Coupon good until Sept. 15
at BURGER CHEF,
1503
A~enue, Gallipolis

2/99¢

Fish Sandwich

· Save31¢
with th is .coupon

Two full -size patties ot openflame broiled ground beet,
and a tOpping of meltt~d
Kraft cheeSe on a toasted

bun.·

Coupon good until Sept. 15
at BURGER CHEF,
. .
1503 Eastern A•enu~ . Gatl•polis

•

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- - ------ ----·":'""-·

Save45¢

with thi s coupon
Th is is the BIG one! A fu ll
\ 4 · Pound patty o f c h o ice
ground beel. broiled ove r

.BigShet®·

.

with this coupon
A tuty flsh fillet topped
w it~ me/led Kraft chtlll,

chopped lettuce end OYP

special

11r11r Nuct.

Couport good until Sept. 15
at BURGER CHEF,
1503 EasMm Avenue. G•llipotls

�v-

1- The Dolly Senlinol, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wedne~y, Aug. 28. 1974

~--~"l'l!

Pomeroy ..
Personal Notes

_Polly 's Pointers
By Polly Cnmer

Always a catch
to a cleaning job
By Polly Cnmer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I wonder if 30me reader knows of a
wasb 1 could use for cleaning the wood !rame of an oldfuhioned chair I want to reupholster. I want to remove
the old polish and dirt first but without removing the stain .
My Pointer is that while knitting I badly needed 30mething to
mark off Counted stitches(! think bone rings leave spaces). r hit
on the idea of sticking two ring paper enforcements together.
They cost UtUe, are very light and can be left on if needed and
snipped off when desired. - MRS. A.M.F.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with repairmen and-&lt;Jr
others who pr001ise to come at a certain time or on a specified
day and then do not show up or may come two~ or three hours late.
A homemaker also has things to do and business to see to but
C8IU101 do them because she has to stay at h001e waiting . MILDRED
DEAR POLLY - Mrs. R.C.A. wanted to know how to get rid
of spiders and their webs that are between her windows and
storm windows. We place a few moth halls between such windows and never have any spiders. - MRS. J . S.
DEAR POLLY - I suggest that Mrs. R.C.A. put some leftover pieces of hand soap between her regular and storm windows
and she will no longer be bothered with spiders. This, of course,
lakes for granted there is room. H there Is not room the larger
pieces might be shaved and work just as well. I put small leftover
pieces of 30ap under the beds or anywhere I have had spiders and
it helps. - VERA.
.
.

Mr. and Mrs. William King,
Newark, were recent guests of
Mrs. Welby Whaley.
Spending Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Patrick Quinn and
children of Columbus at their
campsite on the Muskingum
River near McConnelsville
were Mr . and Mrs. Karl
Grueser and Larry. Minersville.
Mrs. Darla Kay Custer and
Jackie, Columbus, have
returned to their home In
Columbus after spending a
vacation here with her grandmother, Mrs. Goldie Hawk,
Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs . Don Matlack
and Donna, La~ Worth, Fla .•
were recent overnight gues\S of
Mr. and Mrs. VIrgil Roush, Rt.
3, Pomeroy. Joining them for a
dinner were Mr. and Mrs.

William Matlack,

Rt.

3,

Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Don

Roush and Jeff, Pomeroy; and
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Pooler,

Teacher strike in second day

The Gallia Count)&gt; Local later hour was suggested, then
Teachers' Associstion strike It was finally agreed that
ente1'1!&lt;1 Its second day this negotiations be resumed at
morning despite a board 7:30p.m. today.
resolution Tuesday that classes
The
board 0( education
begin.
Tuesday approved three
According to William Bahr. resolutions perlaining to the
association president, the opening of classes for the 1974strike continues following a 75 school~ general mee~ng of teachers · The board, upon the motion
Tuesday evening In the Show of Bruce Stout, agreed that
Arena at the Gallla County classes should start today as
Junior Fairgrounds.
scheduled.
Teachers In attendance
Stout and Superintendent C.
reaffirmed .their stand of Comer Bradbury reported that
continuing the strike .
their legal counsel, Gene
The first step toward a Wetherholl, and the Ohio
settlement wlU be taken at 7:30 School Board Association, had
p.m. this evening when the advised them to keep the
board's
and
teachers' school open and thaI the
negotiating teams resume teachers had violated their
negotialions at the Gallia contracts.
County Courthouse. An earlier
The board said classes would
attempt to negotiate failed be held where the teachers
Tuesday afternoon.
wanted to teach. Wetherholt
Following an emergency stated, "Schools are for the
school board meeting, Bruce S. benefit of the children. The
Stout, GranvlUe Burnette and teachers have valid contracts
David C. Campbell, the board's which they are violating, We
negotiators, agreed to meet should try and keep the schools
immediately with the teachers' open".
negotiating team . It was
Bradbury said the Ohio
agreed to set the session for 3 School Board Association had
p.m. but the teachers' did not advised that all building
show. Later, the teachers of. principals should keep a record
fered to meet at 5 p.m., but the of certificated · and non ~
board was unable to meet. A certifica ted personnel wh o

report to work.
Then came the board 's
second moUon which staled
that teaching and non-teaching
persoonel not reporting to work
would not be paid.
The board also agreed that if
approval is given by the
teachers and building principals, football coaches may
conduct at least one practice a
day during the strike but that
no games will be played until
the strike Is se1Ue1.
Supt. Bradbury made an UJ&gt;io-&lt;late report on the status of
the teachers' request that. the
board borrow money to meet
their five demands . The
teachers are seeking a package

Granville Burne!te who
chaired the meeUng In the
absence ol President Fred
Greenlee, said, HJ am not
against raises if we can get
them, we're for them. The
board Is willing to give the
money if it's available. I feel
the teachers violated their
negotiating contract."
Board member Stout slated,
"I feel they have not shown
good faith by breaking their
negotiating agreement.''

Board member J . E. (Dick}
Cremeens said, "I don't think
they have treated the board
right, but we have ·enough
principle
to
start
(negotiations) where we left

deal involvjng severance pay,

increased

salaries,

,;eellng was devoted to
charges a.nd counter charges
that both aides were willing to
negotiate to resolve the Issue
but that nothing had been done.
Teachers in the school
sys~m , having some 3,000
. puplls, voted Monday to strike.
School bus drivers, ca!etetla
workers and janitors, who are
members of the . Ohio
Associallon of Public School
Employes, did not cross the
picket lines Tuesday.

Bradbury said two separate
incidents were reported where
principals were slightly
harassed. The board went on
record authorizing Bradbury to
hire deputies to be placed at
each school if such incidents
increase. The board agreed
that if the situation reaches a
point where harassment "gets
out of hand,'' measures will be
taken to obtain an injunction.
The board also expressed its
disappointment that .. the
teachers had asked the noncertlfica ted employees
(OAPSE) to join In their strike.
It was als.Q suggested that the
teachers used the article which
appeared in the Sunday TimesSentinel concerning the

plemental contracts for extra
duties, hospitalization insurance and personal leave

days.
According to Bradbury,
"The board does not object to
the package, but it does not
have the funds and cannot see
its way clear for the finances .
Under Ohio Law, it is illegal to
spend money you don't have".
Bradbury said that Bob
Milliser who has charge of
school finances lor the State
Auditor's Office, had been
contacted but no word has b&lt;:en
received on what extra funds
could be available or what
action the board could lake. "I
will do everything that is
possible to get the schools in
operation as long as it is done
legally," the superintendent
emphasized .

Lordstown crews
return to jobs

.
·
89

WARREN, Ohio (UP!)
Three of four additional scllool
levies voted upon at special
elections in Trumbull County
Tuesday went down to defeat.
Voters in LaBrae Local
School District, where officials
had said they would haye to
close Nov. 1, if the levy was
defeated, approved a 6.5 mlU
proposed by an 817-69S margin.
Residents in the Warren City
district rejected a 6.8 mill levy,
3,943-4,457; Niles City district a
9.5 mill levy, 1300-1962 ; and
Liberty district a 3.5 mill levy,
896-1402.
Officials in the Warren City
district, who faced closing
schools Dec. 13, said they may
resubmit the levy on the November ballot. The other lwo
losing school districts will not
run out of morley until next
year.

BANQUET

FROZEN CHICKEN

¢

'2'·

10 PC.

79~

24 oz.
Crtn.

QIEESE .
KOSHER

DILL PICKLES
y

HOLSOM
l1-la11lb·Urj3er or Hot Dog

69'
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8 .Pak

POTATO
32 oz? 59~ QIIPS
CARNATION
10 01.49~
Jars
· OOFFEE-MATE

2
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22 oz.Jar

09

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12 oz.

cans

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flOUR

lb.

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$ 19 FOIL
•-t WRAP

69.,_,.

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danc~rs

Vacation Bible .School was Janet Lambert, Paula Meheld recenUy at the MI. Union .Wh~rier, Jo Ann McWhorter,
Missionary Baptist . Church Jell Lambert, Brad Largent
with an average daily attend- and Jeff Workman, junior
· ance of 83 for the one-week class, ages 10 through 12; and
school: ·
Patty Peyton, Sue Kennedy,
A picnic was held on the final Dave Allen, Ri cky Barnhart,
day of the school and a Nick Joeeph, Tim Workman,
program on Sunday evening Judy Sargent, Sheila Sargent,
concluded the ~vent.
Karen Rlgga, Unda Donahue
Receiving perfect ·attend- and Joyce l.anJberl, teenagero.
ance awards were Bridget
Teachers and aaslstants
Largent, Jackie Rathburn, were Mrs. Florence Barrett,
Rayma Sue Booth, Andy White, Mra. Sheila Rach, Miss Sharon
Kevin
Hatfield,_ Kenda Riggs, Mrs. Gay Harvey, Mti.
Donahue, Walter Robb Ul, A.nn Barrett, Mra . Jean
Darla Hatfield, Danny Ken- . Kennedy, Mrs. Either Scragg,
nedy
and
Beth
,\nn Mra. Wanda Swearingen, Mrs.
Swearingen, of the begin"'" Helena Rlgga, Mra. Bonnie
clau, ages one through five; Cheadle, Miss Kathy Cheadle,
and Jennifer Allen, Brenda Mrs. Melva Turner, Wayne
'Largent, Lorena Donahue, Turner, Lee Wood, Mrs.
Katrina Donahue,
Rosalie Sayre, Mrs. Gracie
Rlgp, Mike Ha!Oeld. Chris Wilson, Mrs. Nellie Hai.
Workman, ~tty Ann Lo!tia.- field, Joe Sayre, Mrs. Mabel
Jill Allen, Jason . Riggs and Pauley, Mrs. Rose Cox, Mn.
Otorgle Stout, primary clau, Teresa Wood, Mrs. Diane
qeo Ill lllrot~~h nine.
Young, Jerry Rach and Roser
Alto receiving perfect at- Rtgss.
ienc!Mce awards were BarDirector of, the school •••
blta Ptyton, MQneb Robb, Mrs. Nllllcy White. Ptstor iJ
Robin Barrett, Teresa Barsett, · Rev. (;eel! cox.

Ch~lstlne

8 AM-10 PM
MON.~SAT.,... .
10 A.M.-10 P.M. SUNDAY

KRAFT

FRENCH CITY

~·

BBQ .SAUCE

HOT DOGS

18

oz.

39e

'" "

12

oz.

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WITH THESE BARGAINS

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HOT DOG BUNS••••••••••••••••••·•3 1

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PICKLES •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

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Por·k and Beans ......... :!.0~ ••••

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y

KEEBLER RED TAG
COOKIES

•

SEMI. BONELESS HAMS ·••····••··•••···
'h •r Wll•l• lb. 95'
'

GROUND BEEF. .....~?~~-~~!~........... !~·. 85'
ROUND STEAK ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
.
lb. s139

Sides Beef

gae-LB.

Hinds
$Jll

'

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85'
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LB:
Prices " include

cutting, wrapping
&amp; freezing. · Beef
sold at h1nging

(513)

Your Orclerl'

.M2-3502

-•

(514)

••~·
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$

CHUCK ROAST
BULj&lt; WIENERS
GROUND BEEF "'
SLICED PORK SHOULDER
SPARE RIBS
Jib. ASSORTED LUNCH MEAT
2 lb. IIELVETA CHEESE

$

accept Federal Food Sta

GAL

2

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FRESH

NUTRO

PEACHES

EVAPORATED MILK

lbs.

4 lb.
2 lb.
lib.
l lb.
3 lb.

3 lb. SIRLOIN STEAKS
3 lb. T-BONE STEAKS
2-FRESH CHICKENS
J lb. CENTER CUT PORK CHOPS
2 lb. GROUND CHUCK .

~

PKGS.
FOR

•

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16-8 lb. average}
2 lb. GROUND BEEF
l lb. PORK CHOPS
2 lb. CUBE STEAK
2 lb. SIRLOIN STEAK

weight.
• _.;;_ _ _ _ _ _.,i•"13ib. RIB STEAKS

· Phone Us

$

GROUND BEEF
BULK SAUSAGE
CHUCK ROAST
ROUND STEAK
CHOPPED SIRLOIN
HAM SALAD

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Fronts

2 lb.
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4 lb.
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DINNER BELL

HAM SLICES•••••••••••• .I~;.!.1 39

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Meat Distributor

CHUNK BOLOGNA ••• .'~:
BONELESS HAMS •••••• ~~:.~.1

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Middle of Upper Block
POMEROY, OHIO

ARMOUR

c

•

·Hartley 's Shoes

en.

tertained. With Wilbur Logan
and Gertrude Mitchell in the
lead roles, they prese~ted a
skit entitled "Strolling Down
Memory Lane." Piersall gave
a reading.

Bible school concluded

BROUGHTON
.

Approximately . 750 persons
registered during the Meigs
fair at the Senior Citizens tent.
On Senior Citizens . Day, entertainment was provided by
the Senior Citizens Chorus,
Francis Andrews, Mrs. Mary
Whipple, Bill Thurston; Frank
Hudson, Carol and Carrell
Taylor, and LeroyPiersall.
About 175 senior citizens
from here went to the Ohio
Stale Fair where the ch~

STORE HOURS

•••

head

DAIRY SPECIAL

OOTTAGE
-

Fair craft sales make $600
Appro1Qmalely $600 was
made, by Meigs County senior
citizens at the crall sales at the
Meigs County Fair and the
Ohio State Fair, Mrs. Eleanor
Thomas, director for the Meigs
County Council On Aging,
reports. '
Mrs. Thomas reported that
$500 of the amount was ·made
. on uie sales at the Meigs fair.
All bui a small percentage of
the receipts goes to the senior
citizen making the craft item.

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
NO SALES TO DEALERS

at the polls

Shower fetes
Miss Sauer

80th birthday observed·

PRICES IN THIS AD GOOD
THRU AUG. 31st

levies lose

off."

sup-

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

Three of four

Jimmy and Susie, Middleport.
Don Matlack is the brother of
Mrs. Roush and William
Matlack.
Mrs. Joan Sellers, Racine,
Don Coleman, Point Pleasant,
and Mrs. Connie Hoffman and
DEAR POLLY- Use an old clean toothbrush to style children, Ron, Debbie, Patty
your wig. It ls just the right size. Polly's Pointers are the first and Frances , Middleport,
.
thing !look Min the paper.- DORA.
recently spent a Sunday at .
Thanb lor thooe alee wotdo. -POlLY.
King 's Island.
.
DEAR POLLY - Your econ001y-minded readers need never
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lewis and
• buy another washcloth. A bath towel that ls beginning to fray daughter, Carol, and John
along the edges will make eight washclothes. Measure with a Thomas, spent Thursday at the
favorite to get the right size' after cutting off the selvage and Ohio State Fair. Carol
board's action in increasing
!ringe. Tear or cut into squares and pull loose threads to make a exhibited her 4-H refinishing
salaries of its five elementary
short fringe that will grow longer as they are used.
principals as a stepping stone
project at the fair. 1
, Also save money on hot water· and detergent by washing
to walk out.
WRDSTOWN, Ohio (UP!}
~·Many union members were
Board
vice... president ,
towela and washcloths separately from the Other clothes. They
The final portion of the
- Nearly 8,000 United Auto not really satisifed by the conare not "" heavily soiled and can be washed in cold water with
Workers Union members tract but they had to obey the
half the usual amount of detergent. Agitate just three or four
Yes, Gwendolyn , you returned to work today at the wishes of the majority and reminUtes: Almoat all the wear and tear on towels COOles from might say a joking salesper- giant General Motors Corp.,
!sundering and washing. This shorter cycle should make them son i.n the woolen dress assembly plant here, ending a turn to work,'' Guthridge said.
Local President Marlin Ford
department Is a knit w.it.
last longer. - NANCY.
six '1.! week strike that halted said ''seniority issues were
production of all ·Chevrolet satisfactorily settled," adding,
Vegas and vans at the com- "we are basically satisfied
plex.
with the contract."
'GM officials said the
The contract called for GM to
A shuwer honoring Miss Lois
walkout, which started July 12, add 66 workers to the proClint Birch, Rt. I, Portland, children and four grea !had cost employes about $16.3 duction staff, and pay $300,000 Ann Sauer, bride-elect of Don
Ada Van Meter, Alicia Evans, million in wages and prevented to w,orkers disciplined during Owens, was held Thursday
Observed his 80th birthday grandchildren.
night at the home of Mrs. Edith
Portland; Mrs. Leatha Clonch,
anniversary Aug. 18 with a
Attending the observance Lori, Chris~e and Johnny, the assembly of 52,400 Vegas the strike. Ford said that was Sauer. Guests were neighbors
celebration at his home.
and 16,360 vans. II also caused the only money issue in the new
were Mr. and Mrs. joe Lipps,
of the Sauer family.
· the furloughing of workers at agreement.
.Born Aug. 20, 1897, In Meigs Gale and Terry, Vincent; Mr. Rutland.
Mrs. Kathryn Miller assisted
County, Birch is a veteran of
GM parts plants across the
The
union
struck
after
and Mrs. Thomas Birch ·and
Mrs. Sauer in serving cake,
ABBOIT CLAIMED
·World War I. He and hls late
nation.
months of negotiations bogged punch and mints. Gifts were
Randy, Waterford; .Mr. and
Jack
Abbott,
a
resident
of
736
. wile, Suale, were the parents of Mrs. Loyd Ups, Chuck and
Employes were told to report
Second Ave., Gallipolis, and for work today, starting with down , with some 10,000 placed on a table centered with
six children, Mrs . .Jcie (Ellen)
grievances still on the table.
Toni, Uttle Hocking; Misa
Lips, Vincent; Thomas Birch, Leota Birch, Portland; Mr. and former Meigs County resident, the first shift. GM officials said The strike immediately cur- a white satin and lace umbrella
Waterford; Mrs. Loyd (Dora) Mrs, Frank Wallace, Elza died at 5 a.m. today in full production was expected tailed work at the nearby with flowers attached, beneath
Lipps, Ul;tle Hocking; Miss Birch, Ernest Clark, Racine; Veterans Hospital, Huntington, within a few days.the plant was Fisher Body plsnt and even- which stood ceramic figurines,
a bride and groom and attend- .
following an extended illness.
Leota Birch, al home, and Guy
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Brewer, Funeral services and ad- not expected to make many tually · caused employes at ants.
Birch and Mary Birch, both Rt. I, Racine; Mr. and Mrs.
more 1974 models, because the parts-&lt;~upplying firms across
Games were played . with
ditional information will be switch to 1975 models was near.
deceased. He bas nine grandthe nation to be furloughted for prizes going to Mrs. Cora
Roscoe
Chester; Mrs. announced.
Members of UAW Locallll2 the duration.
Pullen, Mrs. Clyda Allensvoted by ;, two-thirds majority
The walkout also halted pro- . worth, Mrs. Carolyn SatTuesday night to accept the duction of all Vegas. The comcontract, running through SeP- pact was assembled only at the terfield and Mrs. Kate Wilson,
join
the
Style
who also won the door prize . .
tember, 1976, after spending Lordstown plant.
Leaders in Jarman
The guest llst included those
nearly 10 hours discussing the
Brogue's.
A Fisher Body spokesman named and Mrs. Gemma
provisions.
·
complete line of
A
said employes Idled because of
Robert Guthridge, a union the assembly plsnt strike were Casci, Mrs. Margaret Kincaid,
Fall Fashions.
trustee, said 62 per cent of ordered to return to their jobs, Mrs. Alice Koenig , Mrs.
Priced From
some 2,800 voting production starting with tonight's third Martha Burns, Mrs. Frieda
Mitch,
Mrs.
Freda
Hood,
Mrs.
workers favored accepting the shift. Others idled because of
contract, while 67 per cent of the impending model change Beulah Hayes, Mrs. Ella
some 500 skilled trades will continue to be furloughed Reuter, Mrs. Ernaline Pratt,
'Miss Jerry Pullen, !\Irs. Dora
workers ratified it.
until notified.
Roush, Amy Satterfield and
Mrs. Helen Sauer. ·

SUPERIORS
,.
~
WIENERS ...................~~·.•.
. ......... tM~~
Home
79~
HAM SALAD
..... ..

.1 ne U8U)' otnt)Jlet, MlOQltpOrt..t'orneruy, v ., wewM:tiiWIIy .Aug. 21. 1174 ...

4

Sl.

FOR
13 oz.

-

VALLJAAl f

SAVE 30'

95

PRINGLES

3 PK.

WITH THIS COUPON REDEEM
AT POWELL'S
•
VOID AFTER 8·31·74

C OUPON

I I

09

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FINAL tOUCH
WITH THIS COUPON

64

oz. ·

$} 19

REDEEM AT POWELL'S

VOID AFTE~ 8-31-74.

er

�v-

1- The Dolly Senlinol, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wedne~y, Aug. 28. 1974

~--~"l'l!

Pomeroy ..
Personal Notes

_Polly 's Pointers
By Polly Cnmer

Always a catch
to a cleaning job
By Polly Cnmer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I wonder if 30me reader knows of a
wasb 1 could use for cleaning the wood !rame of an oldfuhioned chair I want to reupholster. I want to remove
the old polish and dirt first but without removing the stain .
My Pointer is that while knitting I badly needed 30mething to
mark off Counted stitches(! think bone rings leave spaces). r hit
on the idea of sticking two ring paper enforcements together.
They cost UtUe, are very light and can be left on if needed and
snipped off when desired. - MRS. A.M.F.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with repairmen and-&lt;Jr
others who pr001ise to come at a certain time or on a specified
day and then do not show up or may come two~ or three hours late.
A homemaker also has things to do and business to see to but
C8IU101 do them because she has to stay at h001e waiting . MILDRED
DEAR POLLY - Mrs. R.C.A. wanted to know how to get rid
of spiders and their webs that are between her windows and
storm windows. We place a few moth halls between such windows and never have any spiders. - MRS. J . S.
DEAR POLLY - I suggest that Mrs. R.C.A. put some leftover pieces of hand soap between her regular and storm windows
and she will no longer be bothered with spiders. This, of course,
lakes for granted there is room. H there Is not room the larger
pieces might be shaved and work just as well. I put small leftover
pieces of 30ap under the beds or anywhere I have had spiders and
it helps. - VERA.
.
.

Mr. and Mrs. William King,
Newark, were recent guests of
Mrs. Welby Whaley.
Spending Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Patrick Quinn and
children of Columbus at their
campsite on the Muskingum
River near McConnelsville
were Mr . and Mrs. Karl
Grueser and Larry. Minersville.
Mrs. Darla Kay Custer and
Jackie, Columbus, have
returned to their home In
Columbus after spending a
vacation here with her grandmother, Mrs. Goldie Hawk,
Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs . Don Matlack
and Donna, La~ Worth, Fla .•
were recent overnight gues\S of
Mr. and Mrs. VIrgil Roush, Rt.
3, Pomeroy. Joining them for a
dinner were Mr. and Mrs.

William Matlack,

Rt.

3,

Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Don

Roush and Jeff, Pomeroy; and
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Pooler,

Teacher strike in second day

The Gallia Count)&gt; Local later hour was suggested, then
Teachers' Associstion strike It was finally agreed that
ente1'1!&lt;1 Its second day this negotiations be resumed at
morning despite a board 7:30p.m. today.
resolution Tuesday that classes
The
board 0( education
begin.
Tuesday approved three
According to William Bahr. resolutions perlaining to the
association president, the opening of classes for the 1974strike continues following a 75 school~ general mee~ng of teachers · The board, upon the motion
Tuesday evening In the Show of Bruce Stout, agreed that
Arena at the Gallla County classes should start today as
Junior Fairgrounds.
scheduled.
Teachers In attendance
Stout and Superintendent C.
reaffirmed .their stand of Comer Bradbury reported that
continuing the strike .
their legal counsel, Gene
The first step toward a Wetherholl, and the Ohio
settlement wlU be taken at 7:30 School Board Association, had
p.m. this evening when the advised them to keep the
board's
and
teachers' school open and thaI the
negotiating teams resume teachers had violated their
negotialions at the Gallia contracts.
County Courthouse. An earlier
The board said classes would
attempt to negotiate failed be held where the teachers
Tuesday afternoon.
wanted to teach. Wetherholt
Following an emergency stated, "Schools are for the
school board meeting, Bruce S. benefit of the children. The
Stout, GranvlUe Burnette and teachers have valid contracts
David C. Campbell, the board's which they are violating, We
negotiators, agreed to meet should try and keep the schools
immediately with the teachers' open".
negotiating team . It was
Bradbury said the Ohio
agreed to set the session for 3 School Board Association had
p.m. but the teachers' did not advised that all building
show. Later, the teachers of. principals should keep a record
fered to meet at 5 p.m., but the of certificated · and non ~
board was unable to meet. A certifica ted personnel wh o

report to work.
Then came the board 's
second moUon which staled
that teaching and non-teaching
persoonel not reporting to work
would not be paid.
The board also agreed that if
approval is given by the
teachers and building principals, football coaches may
conduct at least one practice a
day during the strike but that
no games will be played until
the strike Is se1Ue1.
Supt. Bradbury made an UJ&gt;io-&lt;late report on the status of
the teachers' request that. the
board borrow money to meet
their five demands . The
teachers are seeking a package

Granville Burne!te who
chaired the meeUng In the
absence ol President Fred
Greenlee, said, HJ am not
against raises if we can get
them, we're for them. The
board Is willing to give the
money if it's available. I feel
the teachers violated their
negotiating contract."
Board member Stout slated,
"I feel they have not shown
good faith by breaking their
negotiating agreement.''

Board member J . E. (Dick}
Cremeens said, "I don't think
they have treated the board
right, but we have ·enough
principle
to
start
(negotiations) where we left

deal involvjng severance pay,

increased

salaries,

,;eellng was devoted to
charges a.nd counter charges
that both aides were willing to
negotiate to resolve the Issue
but that nothing had been done.
Teachers in the school
sys~m , having some 3,000
. puplls, voted Monday to strike.
School bus drivers, ca!etetla
workers and janitors, who are
members of the . Ohio
Associallon of Public School
Employes, did not cross the
picket lines Tuesday.

Bradbury said two separate
incidents were reported where
principals were slightly
harassed. The board went on
record authorizing Bradbury to
hire deputies to be placed at
each school if such incidents
increase. The board agreed
that if the situation reaches a
point where harassment "gets
out of hand,'' measures will be
taken to obtain an injunction.
The board also expressed its
disappointment that .. the
teachers had asked the noncertlfica ted employees
(OAPSE) to join In their strike.
It was als.Q suggested that the
teachers used the article which
appeared in the Sunday TimesSentinel concerning the

plemental contracts for extra
duties, hospitalization insurance and personal leave

days.
According to Bradbury,
"The board does not object to
the package, but it does not
have the funds and cannot see
its way clear for the finances .
Under Ohio Law, it is illegal to
spend money you don't have".
Bradbury said that Bob
Milliser who has charge of
school finances lor the State
Auditor's Office, had been
contacted but no word has b&lt;:en
received on what extra funds
could be available or what
action the board could lake. "I
will do everything that is
possible to get the schools in
operation as long as it is done
legally," the superintendent
emphasized .

Lordstown crews
return to jobs

.
·
89

WARREN, Ohio (UP!)
Three of four additional scllool
levies voted upon at special
elections in Trumbull County
Tuesday went down to defeat.
Voters in LaBrae Local
School District, where officials
had said they would haye to
close Nov. 1, if the levy was
defeated, approved a 6.5 mlU
proposed by an 817-69S margin.
Residents in the Warren City
district rejected a 6.8 mill levy,
3,943-4,457; Niles City district a
9.5 mill levy, 1300-1962 ; and
Liberty district a 3.5 mill levy,
896-1402.
Officials in the Warren City
district, who faced closing
schools Dec. 13, said they may
resubmit the levy on the November ballot. The other lwo
losing school districts will not
run out of morley until next
year.

BANQUET

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Vacation Bible .School was Janet Lambert, Paula Meheld recenUy at the MI. Union .Wh~rier, Jo Ann McWhorter,
Missionary Baptist . Church Jell Lambert, Brad Largent
with an average daily attend- and Jeff Workman, junior
· ance of 83 for the one-week class, ages 10 through 12; and
school: ·
Patty Peyton, Sue Kennedy,
A picnic was held on the final Dave Allen, Ri cky Barnhart,
day of the school and a Nick Joeeph, Tim Workman,
program on Sunday evening Judy Sargent, Sheila Sargent,
concluded the ~vent.
Karen Rlgga, Unda Donahue
Receiving perfect ·attend- and Joyce l.anJberl, teenagero.
ance awards were Bridget
Teachers and aaslstants
Largent, Jackie Rathburn, were Mrs. Florence Barrett,
Rayma Sue Booth, Andy White, Mra. Sheila Rach, Miss Sharon
Kevin
Hatfield,_ Kenda Riggs, Mrs. Gay Harvey, Mti.
Donahue, Walter Robb Ul, A.nn Barrett, Mra . Jean
Darla Hatfield, Danny Ken- . Kennedy, Mrs. Either Scragg,
nedy
and
Beth
,\nn Mra. Wanda Swearingen, Mrs.
Swearingen, of the begin"'" Helena Rlgga, Mra. Bonnie
clau, ages one through five; Cheadle, Miss Kathy Cheadle,
and Jennifer Allen, Brenda Mrs. Melva Turner, Wayne
'Largent, Lorena Donahue, Turner, Lee Wood, Mrs.
Katrina Donahue,
Rosalie Sayre, Mrs. Gracie
Rlgp, Mike Ha!Oeld. Chris Wilson, Mrs. Nellie Hai.
Workman, ~tty Ann Lo!tia.- field, Joe Sayre, Mrs. Mabel
Jill Allen, Jason . Riggs and Pauley, Mrs. Rose Cox, Mn.
Otorgle Stout, primary clau, Teresa Wood, Mrs. Diane
qeo Ill lllrot~~h nine.
Young, Jerry Rach and Roser
Alto receiving perfect at- Rtgss.
ienc!Mce awards were BarDirector of, the school •••
blta Ptyton, MQneb Robb, Mrs. Nllllcy White. Ptstor iJ
Robin Barrett, Teresa Barsett, · Rev. (;eel! cox.

Ch~lstlne

8 AM-10 PM
MON.~SAT.,... .
10 A.M.-10 P.M. SUNDAY

KRAFT

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sold at h1nging

(513)

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SPARE RIBS
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3 lb. T-BONE STEAKS
2-FRESH CHICKENS
J lb. CENTER CUT PORK CHOPS
2 lb. GROUND CHUCK .

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16-8 lb. average}
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weight.
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DINNER BELL

HAM SLICES•••••••••••• .I~;.!.1 39

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Meat Distributor

CHUNK BOLOGNA ••• .'~:
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Middle of Upper Block
POMEROY, OHIO

ARMOUR

c

•

·Hartley 's Shoes

en.

tertained. With Wilbur Logan
and Gertrude Mitchell in the
lead roles, they prese~ted a
skit entitled "Strolling Down
Memory Lane." Piersall gave
a reading.

Bible school concluded

BROUGHTON
.

Approximately . 750 persons
registered during the Meigs
fair at the Senior Citizens tent.
On Senior Citizens . Day, entertainment was provided by
the Senior Citizens Chorus,
Francis Andrews, Mrs. Mary
Whipple, Bill Thurston; Frank
Hudson, Carol and Carrell
Taylor, and LeroyPiersall.
About 175 senior citizens
from here went to the Ohio
Stale Fair where the ch~

STORE HOURS

•••

head

DAIRY SPECIAL

OOTTAGE
-

Fair craft sales make $600
Appro1Qmalely $600 was
made, by Meigs County senior
citizens at the crall sales at the
Meigs County Fair and the
Ohio State Fair, Mrs. Eleanor
Thomas, director for the Meigs
County Council On Aging,
reports. '
Mrs. Thomas reported that
$500 of the amount was ·made
. on uie sales at the Meigs fair.
All bui a small percentage of
the receipts goes to the senior
citizen making the craft item.

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
NO SALES TO DEALERS

at the polls

Shower fetes
Miss Sauer

80th birthday observed·

PRICES IN THIS AD GOOD
THRU AUG. 31st

levies lose

off."

sup-

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

Three of four

Jimmy and Susie, Middleport.
Don Matlack is the brother of
Mrs. Roush and William
Matlack.
Mrs. Joan Sellers, Racine,
Don Coleman, Point Pleasant,
and Mrs. Connie Hoffman and
DEAR POLLY- Use an old clean toothbrush to style children, Ron, Debbie, Patty
your wig. It ls just the right size. Polly's Pointers are the first and Frances , Middleport,
.
thing !look Min the paper.- DORA.
recently spent a Sunday at .
Thanb lor thooe alee wotdo. -POlLY.
King 's Island.
.
DEAR POLLY - Your econ001y-minded readers need never
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lewis and
• buy another washcloth. A bath towel that ls beginning to fray daughter, Carol, and John
along the edges will make eight washclothes. Measure with a Thomas, spent Thursday at the
favorite to get the right size' after cutting off the selvage and Ohio State Fair. Carol
board's action in increasing
!ringe. Tear or cut into squares and pull loose threads to make a exhibited her 4-H refinishing
salaries of its five elementary
short fringe that will grow longer as they are used.
principals as a stepping stone
project at the fair. 1
, Also save money on hot water· and detergent by washing
to walk out.
WRDSTOWN, Ohio (UP!}
~·Many union members were
Board
vice... president ,
towela and washcloths separately from the Other clothes. They
The final portion of the
- Nearly 8,000 United Auto not really satisifed by the conare not "" heavily soiled and can be washed in cold water with
Workers Union members tract but they had to obey the
half the usual amount of detergent. Agitate just three or four
Yes, Gwendolyn , you returned to work today at the wishes of the majority and reminUtes: Almoat all the wear and tear on towels COOles from might say a joking salesper- giant General Motors Corp.,
!sundering and washing. This shorter cycle should make them son i.n the woolen dress assembly plant here, ending a turn to work,'' Guthridge said.
Local President Marlin Ford
department Is a knit w.it.
last longer. - NANCY.
six '1.! week strike that halted said ''seniority issues were
production of all ·Chevrolet satisfactorily settled," adding,
Vegas and vans at the com- "we are basically satisfied
plex.
with the contract."
'GM officials said the
The contract called for GM to
A shuwer honoring Miss Lois
walkout, which started July 12, add 66 workers to the proClint Birch, Rt. I, Portland, children and four grea !had cost employes about $16.3 duction staff, and pay $300,000 Ann Sauer, bride-elect of Don
Ada Van Meter, Alicia Evans, million in wages and prevented to w,orkers disciplined during Owens, was held Thursday
Observed his 80th birthday grandchildren.
night at the home of Mrs. Edith
Portland; Mrs. Leatha Clonch,
anniversary Aug. 18 with a
Attending the observance Lori, Chris~e and Johnny, the assembly of 52,400 Vegas the strike. Ford said that was Sauer. Guests were neighbors
celebration at his home.
and 16,360 vans. II also caused the only money issue in the new
were Mr. and Mrs. joe Lipps,
of the Sauer family.
· the furloughing of workers at agreement.
.Born Aug. 20, 1897, In Meigs Gale and Terry, Vincent; Mr. Rutland.
Mrs. Kathryn Miller assisted
County, Birch is a veteran of
GM parts plants across the
The
union
struck
after
and Mrs. Thomas Birch ·and
Mrs. Sauer in serving cake,
ABBOIT CLAIMED
·World War I. He and hls late
nation.
months of negotiations bogged punch and mints. Gifts were
Randy, Waterford; .Mr. and
Jack
Abbott,
a
resident
of
736
. wile, Suale, were the parents of Mrs. Loyd Ups, Chuck and
Employes were told to report
Second Ave., Gallipolis, and for work today, starting with down , with some 10,000 placed on a table centered with
six children, Mrs . .Jcie (Ellen)
grievances still on the table.
Toni, Uttle Hocking; Misa
Lips, Vincent; Thomas Birch, Leota Birch, Portland; Mr. and former Meigs County resident, the first shift. GM officials said The strike immediately cur- a white satin and lace umbrella
Waterford; Mrs. Loyd (Dora) Mrs, Frank Wallace, Elza died at 5 a.m. today in full production was expected tailed work at the nearby with flowers attached, beneath
Lipps, Ul;tle Hocking; Miss Birch, Ernest Clark, Racine; Veterans Hospital, Huntington, within a few days.the plant was Fisher Body plsnt and even- which stood ceramic figurines,
a bride and groom and attend- .
following an extended illness.
Leota Birch, al home, and Guy
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Brewer, Funeral services and ad- not expected to make many tually · caused employes at ants.
Birch and Mary Birch, both Rt. I, Racine; Mr. and Mrs.
more 1974 models, because the parts-&lt;~upplying firms across
Games were played . with
ditional information will be switch to 1975 models was near.
deceased. He bas nine grandthe nation to be furloughted for prizes going to Mrs. Cora
Roscoe
Chester; Mrs. announced.
Members of UAW Locallll2 the duration.
Pullen, Mrs. Clyda Allensvoted by ;, two-thirds majority
The walkout also halted pro- . worth, Mrs. Carolyn SatTuesday night to accept the duction of all Vegas. The comcontract, running through SeP- pact was assembled only at the terfield and Mrs. Kate Wilson,
join
the
Style
who also won the door prize . .
tember, 1976, after spending Lordstown plant.
Leaders in Jarman
The guest llst included those
nearly 10 hours discussing the
Brogue's.
A Fisher Body spokesman named and Mrs. Gemma
provisions.
·
complete line of
A
said employes Idled because of
Robert Guthridge, a union the assembly plsnt strike were Casci, Mrs. Margaret Kincaid,
Fall Fashions.
trustee, said 62 per cent of ordered to return to their jobs, Mrs. Alice Koenig , Mrs.
Priced From
some 2,800 voting production starting with tonight's third Martha Burns, Mrs. Frieda
Mitch,
Mrs.
Freda
Hood,
Mrs.
workers favored accepting the shift. Others idled because of
contract, while 67 per cent of the impending model change Beulah Hayes, Mrs. Ella
some 500 skilled trades will continue to be furloughed Reuter, Mrs. Ernaline Pratt,
'Miss Jerry Pullen, !\Irs. Dora
workers ratified it.
until notified.
Roush, Amy Satterfield and
Mrs. Helen Sauer. ·

SUPERIORS
,.
~
WIENERS ...................~~·.•.
. ......... tM~~
Home
79~
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.1 ne U8U)' otnt)Jlet, MlOQltpOrt..t'orneruy, v ., wewM:tiiWIIy .Aug. 21. 1174 ...

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•
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er

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!0 - TM Dally Senlinel, Middleprn-t-Pomcroy, 0 ., Wrdr&gt;'"'b') . Au~ . :!11, 19; ,

Tents w-ill house
refuges fro111 war

Six injured in auto
fo~our

·persons were taken

to

'tbo Holzer Medical Center for
treatment of injuries following
a head-&lt;&gt;n collision at 7:40p .m.
Tuesday at the underpass &lt;ln
!.it lie Kyger Rd., north of Rt. 7.
The Gallia-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol said cars
driven by Stanley Shaver, 55,
Rt. I. Cheshire, ond Bernard L.
By Ualled Pret• lotontatloaal ground war against Turkish panding the Cyprus peace talks Caruthers, l9, Racine. coiUded.
Workmen began clearing troopS occupying northern Cy- and called instead on Greece to The re W&lt;.i S heavy damBge to
groWKi on C:)/pi'!IS tod;ly lor a prus, and the camps were return ' 'without delay' 1 to the hath cars.
giant tl!llt complex to house expected to bec-ome recru iting negotiati()f)s in Ceneva. .
Injured were both dri vers
tena of tb(lusands of refugees groWJds for commandos.
The day before , Greeee and a passenger in each car ,
forced from their homes durin g
Turkey and Greece insisted accepted the Kremlin 's call for Mary J o Shaver, 49, Rt. 1,
a mmth and a hall of turmoil oo sharply opposing positions expanding the Greek-Turkish- Cheshire, and Paul Stewart, 21,
on the war-torn island.
toward peace talks, spurring British talks in Geneva to in- of Middleport. They were taken
P:-tstdent Glafkos Clerides guerriUa recruitment and cast· clude the 15 U.N. Security to the hospital by the SEOEMS
· ordered eight tent d Ues built ing a shadow over attempts to Council members.
ambulance.
nea• the southeastern port of move th e crisis from the
In Nicosia . a new guerrilla
Caruth ers was cited to
Larnaca to shelter tbo first of battlefield to the conference group catting itself the Cyprus
Municipal Court lor fi ctitious
an estimated 200,000 Greek ta ble.
Liberation Army said Tuesday registration.
(:yprlots left homeless by the
In Ankara, Turkey an. 300 Greek Cypriots have
Phyllis Stidham, 39, Rt. 1,
conflict.
nounced its rejec tion Tuesday started training for commando Gallipolis, was treated and
Guerrillas have begun seek· of a Soviet proposal for ex. raids against the Turkish inreleased at the Holzer Medical
ing refugees lor an . under·
vasion force.
Center for•back and neck in-

juries following a rear end
cotlisioo on Rt. 7, three miles
nor th of tbo jWlclioo of Rt. 7
and 35.
Officer. said the Stidham car
was struck in the rear by 811
auto operated by Mark E.
Dillard , 18, of Pomeroy .
Dillard wa s charged with
fa ilin g to stop within the
assured d ear disQmce.
A 16-year old juvenile was
cited to Juvenile CPUrt for

ros.

distance

Asins!• car mishap occurred

a.m. Tuesday 011 Rt. 7, one
tenth of a mile south Ill the
Raccooo Bridge.
According to the patrol, tbo
youth's car struck the re~~r of
an auto operLted by Stanley K.
Miller, 20; of Crown City.
The impact knocked Miller's
car into tbo rear of 811 auto
driven by Ralph C. Whilrnore,
67, Ill Lower River Rd .

Morreiville Rd. during a heavy

assured

elepr

rain.
Olflcers Jl ld Lucille B.
Lemmon. M1 Galllpolis, I~
control of ber car which ran oCJ
the road slriklng a n 0111bankment. .·

'i1lli accident ocrurred lfl a
he.o!')' Uno of traffic in a tblck

foUowin~ an &amp;ccident at 8:151 at 6 p.m. on tbo Bladen-

News . . • in Briefs
Continued from page 1
·
mooks gunned down the securi ty chief of a smaU hamlet and
opened lire on government military coovoys traveling a key
h1ghway just south of Saigon, the military command said today.
Viet Cong troops dressed in the white priest robes of the Hoa·
Hao Buddhist sect kiUed the commander of Phuoc Thanh hamlet,
45 miles southeast of Saigon. A company of about 150 militiamen
were sent to fight the Communists after they penetrated into the
ha mlet shortly after noon Tuesdsy, command spokesman Li,
Col. Le Trung Hien told newsmen .
Two villagers wete wounded during the fight , Hien said. No
other casualties were reported. The hamlet has a population of

CKOUR

1,600.

Dawson

BOYS' FLANNEL

Con tinued from page 1
one siste r. Mrs . Doris
Daughtery, Baltimore, Md.,
and three grandchildren.
Funeral services will be at 10
a .m. Thuisday in the Cr owHuss1ell Funer al Home with _

Rev. Tally Hanna officiating.
Burial will follow in Columbus
at The Sunset Cemetery where
graveside ri tes will be at 2:30
p.m.
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 5 p.m.
today.

LADIES

NOTICE
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with big savings on first five homes.
Watch for our formal Open House
Showing!!!

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WET HEAD IS DEAD as far as Ibis San Francisco de liveryman is concerned. Avoiding an
unexpected summer shower, Ibis industrious gentleman fashioned temporary headgear from a
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importpnt features. S nap~off Cy~o loc case.

ClOTHIHC
DEPT.

Flguremate 707 .Adcll•g
Ma~hlne Solns It Fast.l

POLYESTER
PANTS

~3'
9
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~
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CUIIEITI

E... er y man needs a pojr

kn it dre ss · sl ac kS to
co mplete h is Word·r oP e. S t yle d wi th
Bon- Rql Woist Bond
in sol id co lors . Siz e s
32·4 2.

Adds, svbrro"ds with electric speed and pre ~
cis1o n. Has 7. column

'
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easy.change

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LADIES
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ClOTHING DEPT.

s1oaa

One si ze fit s a ll. Thre"e
colors.

As s or1ed $fyle
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~·

o r tw o of these double

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a ll the la te st sfyles and colo rs. Doub le
kn it puiiOn wa ist with stitch cre o w . So l·
ids and pa tterns in si zes 8·18 &amp; 32·38 .

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4 Days Onlyl AUO. 28•29•30•31

Killers

Service moved
to old hospital

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REG.
$38.88

SPORTS SHIRTS

Space docking aborted

Personnel
approved by board

988

MEN'S
LONG SLEEVE ·

dry.

MOSCOW (UPI) - Two · The 2().ton Salyut 3 space . come down .
Soviet . cosmonauts suddenly station, boarded for 16 days
The announcement surprised
ended their mlssioo In space last montb by the So~uz 14 some Western space experts
today and prepared to return to cosmonauts, was contimitng Its who expected S;lrafanov, tbe
earth, .apparently falllng to own flight "in the automatic flight commander, ~nd Demin,
· dock with Russia's orbiUng phase," TaSJi said.
the first grandfather to fly in
1
Ji!bwltof; despite repeated Tass gave no indication when spare, to link up with the lab.
app....ches.
tbe tw? cosmolljluts would
The Soviets hinted strongly
The offldal Tass news
about.a rendezvous themselves
&amp;gel)cy IJIIVe no lndicatloo of
when they said the Soyuz 15
trouble aboard the Soyuz 15
spacecraft's objectives were to
craft, carrying two space
further the studies begun by Its ..
predecessor.
rookies, Col. Lev Demin, 48, .
ancl Lt.. Col. Gennady ·
The Western · experts had
Sarafanov, 32.
.
said they expected the latest The Taaa report, however,
cosmonauts to stay aloft a
week to 10 days.
did not Include the standard
phrase that all night systems
Tass said tbe two men, who
were proceeding normally.
blasted off Monday night ,
spent Tuesday "perfecting the
"The crew is drawing the
filght to a close and Is getUng
technology of piloting the ship
the apaceslllp prepared for
in various phases of f!ight for
return to earth," Tass said.
the purpose of maneuvering."
The news agency said the
ship "repeatedly came near
Salyut 3" while being manually
controlled by the cosmonauts.
Never has a Soviet space
Continued from page 1
. station housed more than one
. thett ldentiUes,"
team or cosmonauts.
Detectlves and undercover
tgl!lllll worked oo the case lor
several months. Tbey said the
, killings occurred over a twomonth period with no pattern.
"Their motive had mystery.
They dldn 't plan," Karam said.
''On the spur of the moment
tbey d~ided to do It and
EX-DRUG ADDICT Rev .
sometime they would kill.
Bill Beagle wiU speak at the
There waS no remorse·:•
Bell Chapel Church, ThursOlarged with murder were
Personnel for · the p~actical
day, Aug. 29, at 7:30p.m. He
Richard Vargas, 23, his sister,
nursing
course offered by the
Is also a student at Rio
Emlly Vargas Saenz, 20, Joe
Grande College and the Buckeye Hills Career Center
Louis, 24, Angel Fuentes, 21, · pastor ontve churches In the were approved Tuesday night
Ernest Moya, 34, and Sierra,
by the Gallia-Jackson-Vinton
Galiipolis area. He lives in
Vargas, Louis, Fuentes and
Vocational
Boa r·d
of
Cheshire wltb his wile, Stella
Sierra, dresaed 'In baggy white
and their two children. Education.
jaU unltorma, asked to talk
Employed were Mrs. Helen
Special singing will be by the
with newsnnen . Detectives
Shields, coordinator ; Mrs.
· Taylor Quartet. The public is
obliged.
Evelyn Knight and Mrs. Janice
Invited .
ul don't have much to say,"
Oiler, instructors and Miss
Vargas said. "Only that It
· Dnlene Harbour , secretary.
didn't botber me at all. I shot
Classes will begin 8ept, 2 at
ooe In the head. I stabbed
the
Grace United Methodist
them. I didn't think of running
Ch~rc h .
over tbem or I would have run
The board also adopted a
over them, too."
In response to increasing refund policy lor enrollees who
Louis and Fuentes said little.
Detectives aald they had requests lor services, the dropout of .the class.
Mrs. Katherine Williams was
li8ned confesalons from aU tbe Gallia - Jackson ·• Meigs
named
as a delegate to the
Communlly Mental Health
IU.pecis,
Center has vastly expanded Its Ohio School Board Association
.facilities and services In Meigs meeting in Columbus and
ENROU.MENT FIGURES
county , Formerly operullng its travel expenses were approved
Approximately 1,350 Meigs Clinic fr om small for Supt. Clarence Thompson
aludenllattended opening day quarters donated by Veterans and director Ponney Cisco.
of IChool at Galllll Academy Memorial Hosplial , the center The hoard . approved two
junior ind aenlor high schools • has now acquired a spucious, change orders In roofing and
Tuelday. Figures for the renovated suite on the first piping for the new vocational
dlatrlct'a four elementary noor of the Old Meigs General school and gave final color
~~:boola were not available at Hospital ln. Pomeroy . A .. schemes for the flooring, walls
pnullme. today.
rec~ptlooist is present at the and carpeting.
Morning Equipment Comnew Offices from 8:30 to ,4:30
daily, with the main clinic day pany or Jackson was gran led a
Pocket Sobdlalo
being ~eldon Wednesdays. The cootract to furnish' lour file
Ill the Middle Ages wllen mental health program has cabinet.! and chairs and Mrs.
11111dllll were the principal
Margaret Kelly, board clerk
w~ of telllnc time, clever aeen 2,125 patients In il.! three
dei!IJ*I not only produced clinics In PQtneroy, Gallipolis was authorized to advertise lor
J!OOUt 111ndlllt but aet aun- and Jackson In tbe last six bids on loose equipment.
Bill Stubbs, building · ar.
lllall In llalned 111.. , win· months. For information
dowa 10 th.y could be read pertaining · to the Pomeroy chi tee!, gave a progress report
1nc1oo.... .
on the school's consllouction'.
Clinic, ctjl 992-2192.

SPORT COAT

TheK" sport coa ts or.e styled with deep ce ~
ter ven t and flop poc ke ts. Sol id~ ond for.cies in all Fall's newest shad e s. Sizes 36 -46
in reg . and l ong~ .

$

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MEN'S

B".g l&gt;l bold ~•do to &lt;h01 ~P )'l)m word&lt;ot.o. ~ ~~~ •
4 1 &amp; 11 1e

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To$14:9·9

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ClDhiiN&amp; DEPT.

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'

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ClDTH'N' DEPT.

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T-SHIRTS &amp; BRIEFS

MEN'S
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De rby brand sanfo rized" fo r
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fo r easy core, Size s S·M·lXl. Fits 8 -18. 3 Pe r pack-

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BRIEFS &amp; T..SHIITS

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30·42 Sanforized and machin' wo shoble
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$2~!...
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�'
•

•
COlliSJODS

!0 - TM Dally Senlinel, Middleprn-t-Pomcroy, 0 ., Wrdr&gt;'"'b') . Au~ . :!11, 19; ,

Tents w-ill house
refuges fro111 war

Six injured in auto
fo~our

·persons were taken

to

'tbo Holzer Medical Center for
treatment of injuries following
a head-&lt;&gt;n collision at 7:40p .m.
Tuesday at the underpass &lt;ln
!.it lie Kyger Rd., north of Rt. 7.
The Gallia-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol said cars
driven by Stanley Shaver, 55,
Rt. I. Cheshire, ond Bernard L.
By Ualled Pret• lotontatloaal ground war against Turkish panding the Cyprus peace talks Caruthers, l9, Racine. coiUded.
Workmen began clearing troopS occupying northern Cy- and called instead on Greece to The re W&lt;.i S heavy damBge to
groWKi on C:)/pi'!IS tod;ly lor a prus, and the camps were return ' 'without delay' 1 to the hath cars.
giant tl!llt complex to house expected to bec-ome recru iting negotiati()f)s in Ceneva. .
Injured were both dri vers
tena of tb(lusands of refugees groWJds for commandos.
The day before , Greeee and a passenger in each car ,
forced from their homes durin g
Turkey and Greece insisted accepted the Kremlin 's call for Mary J o Shaver, 49, Rt. 1,
a mmth and a hall of turmoil oo sharply opposing positions expanding the Greek-Turkish- Cheshire, and Paul Stewart, 21,
on the war-torn island.
toward peace talks, spurring British talks in Geneva to in- of Middleport. They were taken
P:-tstdent Glafkos Clerides guerriUa recruitment and cast· clude the 15 U.N. Security to the hospital by the SEOEMS
· ordered eight tent d Ues built ing a shadow over attempts to Council members.
ambulance.
nea• the southeastern port of move th e crisis from the
In Nicosia . a new guerrilla
Caruth ers was cited to
Larnaca to shelter tbo first of battlefield to the conference group catting itself the Cyprus
Municipal Court lor fi ctitious
an estimated 200,000 Greek ta ble.
Liberation Army said Tuesday registration.
(:yprlots left homeless by the
In Ankara, Turkey an. 300 Greek Cypriots have
Phyllis Stidham, 39, Rt. 1,
conflict.
nounced its rejec tion Tuesday started training for commando Gallipolis, was treated and
Guerrillas have begun seek· of a Soviet proposal for ex. raids against the Turkish inreleased at the Holzer Medical
ing refugees lor an . under·
vasion force.
Center for•back and neck in-

juries following a rear end
cotlisioo on Rt. 7, three miles
nor th of tbo jWlclioo of Rt. 7
and 35.
Officer. said the Stidham car
was struck in the rear by 811
auto operated by Mark E.
Dillard , 18, of Pomeroy .
Dillard wa s charged with
fa ilin g to stop within the
assured d ear disQmce.
A 16-year old juvenile was
cited to Juvenile CPUrt for

ros.

distance

Asins!• car mishap occurred

a.m. Tuesday 011 Rt. 7, one
tenth of a mile south Ill the
Raccooo Bridge.
According to the patrol, tbo
youth's car struck the re~~r of
an auto operLted by Stanley K.
Miller, 20; of Crown City.
The impact knocked Miller's
car into tbo rear of 811 auto
driven by Ralph C. Whilrnore,
67, Ill Lower River Rd .

Morreiville Rd. during a heavy

assured

elepr

rain.
Olflcers Jl ld Lucille B.
Lemmon. M1 Galllpolis, I~
control of ber car which ran oCJ
the road slriklng a n 0111bankment. .·

'i1lli accident ocrurred lfl a
he.o!')' Uno of traffic in a tblck

foUowin~ an &amp;ccident at 8:151 at 6 p.m. on tbo Bladen-

News . . • in Briefs
Continued from page 1
·
mooks gunned down the securi ty chief of a smaU hamlet and
opened lire on government military coovoys traveling a key
h1ghway just south of Saigon, the military command said today.
Viet Cong troops dressed in the white priest robes of the Hoa·
Hao Buddhist sect kiUed the commander of Phuoc Thanh hamlet,
45 miles southeast of Saigon. A company of about 150 militiamen
were sent to fight the Communists after they penetrated into the
ha mlet shortly after noon Tuesdsy, command spokesman Li,
Col. Le Trung Hien told newsmen .
Two villagers wete wounded during the fight , Hien said. No
other casualties were reported. The hamlet has a population of

CKOUR

1,600.

Dawson

BOYS' FLANNEL

Con tinued from page 1
one siste r. Mrs . Doris
Daughtery, Baltimore, Md.,
and three grandchildren.
Funeral services will be at 10
a .m. Thuisday in the Cr owHuss1ell Funer al Home with _

Rev. Tally Hanna officiating.
Burial will follow in Columbus
at The Sunset Cemetery where
graveside ri tes will be at 2:30
p.m.
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 5 p.m.
today.

LADIES

NOTICE
Coming Soon 24x52 Sectiona I House,
shingle roof, house siding &amp; windows
with big savings on first five homes.
Watch for our formal Open House
Showing!!!

SPORT SHIRT

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Th• BALBOA
Grained Rosewood cot or
wi th Black. Aut omatic Flne•luning Control.
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INGELS FURNITURE

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HECK'S
REG.
$4.88

~

Pomeroy, Qhio Ph. 992-7777 ·

Middleport

Get Your Stationery
Supplies Now &amp; Savel

WET HEAD IS DEAD as far as Ibis San Francisco de liveryman is concerned. Avoiding an
unexpected summer shower, Ibis industrious gentleman fashioned temporary headgear from a
cardboard box complete witb eyes and grinning mouth. Not much to look at but it does keep you

SMITH · CORONA

. rm

...

ClOTHINC
DEPT.

PERMANENT PRESS

POLYESTER PANT SETS
lo~e ly pont suits for the woman whq wo nts
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From Lltronl•
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REI. '41.14
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Adds, sub trac ts, mul tipl ies,
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AA penlight ba tt eries or
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$988

Portable Typewriter.

39!!EIT!

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The "Corsai r" has office size keyboard, page
ga uge, ha lf spcici ng, qu ick set marg in s, other
importpnt features. S nap~off Cy~o loc case.

ClOTHIHC
DEPT.

Flguremate 707 .Adcll•g
Ma~hlne Solns It Fast.l

POLYESTER
PANTS

~3'
9
94
~
.

CUIIEITI

E... er y man needs a pojr

kn it dre ss · sl ac kS to
co mplete h is Word·r oP e. S t yle d wi th
Bon- Rql Woist Bond
in sol id co lors . Siz e s
32·4 2.

Adds, svbrro"ds with electric speed and pre ~
cis1o n. Has 7. column

'
\,

easy.change

ribbon, paper. Only 8

·

$499

LADIES
NYLON
KNEE-HI

HECK'S
REG.
$6.88

HOSE
One ~i ze lih oil in
cc lo rs o f brown ,
ci n n am on , and
beige .

ClOTHIIIC
DEPT.

..)..,

REG• • • C PKG.

99•

..

10

Choose hea vy tip for fi ne an d
bold li nes, f ine tip for f ino
lines . 10 co lors. Vinyl case .

S~~C~AL

*588

CHARGE ITI

Sharpe ns s tondurd penci ls. Uses
3 "D'' bo!le ri es {not ·incl .). 3
penci ls, 2 sharpene r units. incl.

PRICI

77

C

Num beyr 2 lea d p e n cils wit h
erasers. To ke odvonloge of
o ur sole
. p rice. - stock up I

Blc
Point
PIN SPICIAL
_,~~:
.,c_•- 3rc·~~.
3

311(
Flnellne M•rkers
~~:
PRICI . . . PKG.

.,

NEW FAll

TUBE SOCKS

BLOUSES

5tr ipe tube socks in many

2

HECK"S REG.
68'

••c

You get :2 r egulor-pol nt pef'"~
a nd I e 11etro fin e lin e "a ccou 11 ~
. ta'nt" pe n. Blue or b!ock ink.

ClOTHING DEPT.

s1oaa

One si ze fit s a ll. Thre"e
colors.

As s or1ed $fyle
blouseS. wi1h long
sleeves and point·
· ed collar.

5 99

..

''-f

GIRLS'

4-6X

Jum•o Pkg. of 20
School Pencils

~·

o r tw o of these double

- Beauti ful se lection oi polyester p ont ~ in
a ll the la te st sfyles and colo rs. Doub le
kn it puiiOn wa ist with stitch cre o w . So l·
ids and pa tterns in si zes 8·18 &amp; 32·38 .

PKG.

Snoopy Automatic
Pencil Sharpener

DRESS
SLACKS

LADIES

VAlUE

Liquid Crayon
Felt Tip Pens

MEN'S
POLYESTER
DOUBLE KNIT

HECK'S REG. $4.99

HECK'S
REG.
$12.88

CLOTH,NC DEPT,

29.(~~9

·Easy cor e shirt ~ fo r gvy ~
wh o ore o n the go. Never
Need s Ir oning . Se le c t fro m
solid s, prints and s1ripes in
size s S · M ~ L~ Xl .

LADIES'

4 Days Onlyl AUO. 28•29•30•31

Killers

Service moved
to old hospital

HECK'S
REG.
$38.88

SPORTS SHIRTS

Space docking aborted

Personnel
approved by board

988

MEN'S
LONG SLEEVE ·

dry.

MOSCOW (UPI) - Two · The 2().ton Salyut 3 space . come down .
Soviet . cosmonauts suddenly station, boarded for 16 days
The announcement surprised
ended their mlssioo In space last montb by the So~uz 14 some Western space experts
today and prepared to return to cosmonauts, was contimitng Its who expected S;lrafanov, tbe
earth, .apparently falllng to own flight "in the automatic flight commander, ~nd Demin,
· dock with Russia's orbiUng phase," TaSJi said.
the first grandfather to fly in
1
Ji!bwltof; despite repeated Tass gave no indication when spare, to link up with the lab.
app....ches.
tbe tw? cosmolljluts would
The Soviets hinted strongly
The offldal Tass news
about.a rendezvous themselves
&amp;gel)cy IJIIVe no lndicatloo of
when they said the Soyuz 15
trouble aboard the Soyuz 15
spacecraft's objectives were to
craft, carrying two space
further the studies begun by Its ..
predecessor.
rookies, Col. Lev Demin, 48, .
ancl Lt.. Col. Gennady ·
The Western · experts had
Sarafanov, 32.
.
said they expected the latest The Taaa report, however,
cosmonauts to stay aloft a
week to 10 days.
did not Include the standard
phrase that all night systems
Tass said tbe two men, who
were proceeding normally.
blasted off Monday night ,
spent Tuesday "perfecting the
"The crew is drawing the
filght to a close and Is getUng
technology of piloting the ship
the apaceslllp prepared for
in various phases of f!ight for
return to earth," Tass said.
the purpose of maneuvering."
The news agency said the
ship "repeatedly came near
Salyut 3" while being manually
controlled by the cosmonauts.
Never has a Soviet space
Continued from page 1
. station housed more than one
. thett ldentiUes,"
team or cosmonauts.
Detectlves and undercover
tgl!lllll worked oo the case lor
several months. Tbey said the
, killings occurred over a twomonth period with no pattern.
"Their motive had mystery.
They dldn 't plan," Karam said.
''On the spur of the moment
tbey d~ided to do It and
EX-DRUG ADDICT Rev .
sometime they would kill.
Bill Beagle wiU speak at the
There waS no remorse·:•
Bell Chapel Church, ThursOlarged with murder were
Personnel for · the p~actical
day, Aug. 29, at 7:30p.m. He
Richard Vargas, 23, his sister,
nursing
course offered by the
Is also a student at Rio
Emlly Vargas Saenz, 20, Joe
Grande College and the Buckeye Hills Career Center
Louis, 24, Angel Fuentes, 21, · pastor ontve churches In the were approved Tuesday night
Ernest Moya, 34, and Sierra,
by the Gallia-Jackson-Vinton
Galiipolis area. He lives in
Vargas, Louis, Fuentes and
Vocational
Boa r·d
of
Cheshire wltb his wile, Stella
Sierra, dresaed 'In baggy white
and their two children. Education.
jaU unltorma, asked to talk
Employed were Mrs. Helen
Special singing will be by the
with newsnnen . Detectives
Shields, coordinator ; Mrs.
· Taylor Quartet. The public is
obliged.
Evelyn Knight and Mrs. Janice
Invited .
ul don't have much to say,"
Oiler, instructors and Miss
Vargas said. "Only that It
· Dnlene Harbour , secretary.
didn't botber me at all. I shot
Classes will begin 8ept, 2 at
ooe In the head. I stabbed
the
Grace United Methodist
them. I didn't think of running
Ch~rc h .
over tbem or I would have run
The board also adopted a
over them, too."
In response to increasing refund policy lor enrollees who
Louis and Fuentes said little.
Detectives aald they had requests lor services, the dropout of .the class.
Mrs. Katherine Williams was
li8ned confesalons from aU tbe Gallia - Jackson ·• Meigs
named
as a delegate to the
Communlly Mental Health
IU.pecis,
Center has vastly expanded Its Ohio School Board Association
.facilities and services In Meigs meeting in Columbus and
ENROU.MENT FIGURES
county , Formerly operullng its travel expenses were approved
Approximately 1,350 Meigs Clinic fr om small for Supt. Clarence Thompson
aludenllattended opening day quarters donated by Veterans and director Ponney Cisco.
of IChool at Galllll Academy Memorial Hosplial , the center The hoard . approved two
junior ind aenlor high schools • has now acquired a spucious, change orders In roofing and
Tuelday. Figures for the renovated suite on the first piping for the new vocational
dlatrlct'a four elementary noor of the Old Meigs General school and gave final color
~~:boola were not available at Hospital ln. Pomeroy . A .. schemes for the flooring, walls
pnullme. today.
rec~ptlooist is present at the and carpeting.
Morning Equipment Comnew Offices from 8:30 to ,4:30
daily, with the main clinic day pany or Jackson was gran led a
Pocket Sobdlalo
being ~eldon Wednesdays. The cootract to furnish' lour file
Ill the Middle Ages wllen mental health program has cabinet.! and chairs and Mrs.
11111dllll were the principal
Margaret Kelly, board clerk
w~ of telllnc time, clever aeen 2,125 patients In il.! three
dei!IJ*I not only produced clinics In PQtneroy, Gallipolis was authorized to advertise lor
J!OOUt 111ndlllt but aet aun- and Jackson In tbe last six bids on loose equipment.
Bill Stubbs, building · ar.
lllall In llalned 111.. , win· months. For information
dowa 10 th.y could be read pertaining · to the Pomeroy chi tee!, gave a progress report
1nc1oo.... .
on the school's consllouction'.
Clinic, ctjl 992-2192.

SPORT COAT

TheK" sport coa ts or.e styled with deep ce ~
ter ven t and flop poc ke ts. Sol id~ ond for.cies in all Fall's newest shad e s. Sizes 36 -46
in reg . and l ong~ .

$

ClOTHINC
DEPT.
IANKAMIRICAID

POLYESTER
DOUBLE KNIT

Great to ppe r$ l o r p o nl :; o r ski rl s.

"' llrtlll•r~l Chromac:olor PICIII,..

LARRrS MOBILE HOMES SALES, INC.

or MASTIR CHAIGI

MEN'S

B".g l&gt;l bold ~•do to &lt;h01 ~P )'l)m word&lt;ot.o. ~ ~~~ •
4 1 &amp; 11 1e

HECK'S
REG.
$1.19

88(

HECK'S REG.
To$14:9·9

ClOTHINC
DEPT.

7-14

AND

344

5

HECK'S REG. TO $4.99

ClDhiiN&amp; DEPT.

· Smooth -wriTing porous points
fo r class notes, sketching,
doodling . Red, black; blue.

'

GIRLS'

DENIM .

Reg. 'I
Desk Package of 10 School Pak of 10
.ACCIISORIIS Ball Point Pens Ball Point Pens

97C
30'

SAVE

EACH

Oraw o r d ivide rs, sto ckobl e Jet- .
fe r 1roys, a r gon i r i er~ ir"! h eo'&gt;~ y ·
w e igl-t t plostic. M odern co l o r ~.

src

67c

GIRLS'·
SWEATERS
• Cordig o n style in a wide selectio n

o f colors. Sizes 4-6X &amp; 7-14.

S]44

.........

Save13-Subject
SchHINeteheks
·
.
YOUR
CHOICE

99•

Trio tf

57cea.

Murp~!p

s

fiOlt

wlr•boundt, wide ruled .
witl'l mtrglna. 3 &gt;-&lt;colors. 1
Tol•l ol 70 lhHio,

y

•eg•lar
Bl•derc. .llo
IAVI.97

30•

Binder has 3

ell"tro ~copoc l!y

rlng J, 60 sheet spiral theme
book. Eye -catching coven.

CO. • 'I'H

. .,.. .,......,.
L.... l.tjfll•••r
....
I"

, Splr•l l•te•••k
OUI
PIICI .

I AVI

69'

40•

Spirol bound wide ruled, S
hole notebooks have romanrlc .
"magazine" c:overa.

.....

clip. Vlnylo, loolhor lookL

NDLY
-

'2.17

lnc:ludes wide ruled 36-thHI
pod, 3 "pocker' 1 pogn1 merol

rr

T

•

NYLON

STRETCH PAIT SETS
Adorable little ou1fits for
a d o rable pe o ple. De si ~ ne d ·
for boys girl s in size s 3-6

or

S]·44

HECK'S REG; $4.99

HECK'S
REG.- $4,99
.

ClDTHINC DEPT.

ClDTHINC DEPT.

\ I

\I

'SLACKS
Poly co tton denim slacks
with
, ·
' pock·
ets in sit es 8-14.

.•699
HECK'S REG • .

•8.99

ClDTH'N' DEPT.

BOYS'
T-SHIRTS &amp; BRIEFS

MEN'S
DERBYIRAND

De rby brand sanfo rized" fo r
comf6r1 mach in e wa shable
fo r easy core, Size s S·M·lXl. Fits 8 -18. 3 Pe r pack-

UNDERWEAR

age.

S1?!...
HE(K'S REG. $2.49 PKG,

BRIEFS &amp; T..SHIITS

Derby brond underwear In sizes S· M-l·Xl
30·42 Sanforized and machin' wo shoble
wi th 3 in pkg .

$2~!...
"'ftECK'S REG. 3.39 PKG.

�13 - The OaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport.Pomeroy, 0 ., Wedneoday,Aug. 21,1974

....,...,

OPEl DAILY

PUNTY
Of

10 TO 9

10 TO 9

FREE

PRICES

EFFECT THROUGH

y I SEPT. 1 WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

117

LOCKI

12 OZ. NET

CD-2
OIL
ADDITIVE

GAS CAPS

PERCOLATOR

HAVOLINE
10W40

fOR MOST AMERICAN MADE CARS

1971 TO
1974
MODELS

UPTO
1070
MODELS

MOTOR OIL .

59(

MILEAGE
CHOICE

12'COPPER

TURTLE
WAX

. BOOSTER·
CABLES

C.R.C.
MECHANICS
HELPER

CAR WAX

00

$

TANGLEPROOF

$133

$]66 · · .
HECK'S REG.
$1.39

HECK'S REG. $5.48

BLECHE-WITE

WHITEWALL
CLEANER

DELUXE

TRAISMISSIOI

FOLDING .
COLOR CAMERA
G. E.
·~PORTABLE
5

HECK'S REG.
99•

HECK'S REG.
$1.49

•

AUTO DEPT.

AUTO DEPT.

·

G. E.
WAFFLE

BAKER-GRILL

$21

$4499

in flmh .

)E:,~:.r

HECI('S REG.

' ;, ..

· G. E.

HAT BOX HAIR D"YER

99

3 heat ~election' plu~ "cooL" Convenient " reaeh·in'1
t o p . Draw 1otrings allow bonnet odjvstment to a ny
heOd size~ehild or adu lt . Color styles in willow green

HECK' S REG. $26.S6

and white.

JEWElRY
DEPT.

'14.96

AUTO DEPT.

AUTO DEPT.

420

HD-22

bakes wa ffl es..

lor ... Automatic electric eye f!IIPO~u1e
~~~o;;r;;~;;;LJ control . Sharp three elemen t lens . Built-

fingertip control for operating
ease: "Easy-Grip " handle far a mare
. comfortable feel.

HECK'S REG.
$1.66 '

HECI&lt;'S REG.
$1.58

sp~ed

JEWElRY DEPT.

TEFLON COATED . II g rills
cheese and tornoto sondwk hes, fries baco n and eggs, and

Keep your vaca tion memo ries l ore~er
wit h th is comero . Instant pictures lor
the same price os prinh you woit do y~

MIXER

HECI&lt;'S REG. $19.88

AIM

PO:ARrm-==&lt;~Jj~~

$100

$1799

OUR

M·22

ePrevents Rust
eSoundproots
• Water Proofs
eSeals Cracks

FILLER

HECK'S REG.
1.99

AUTODEPT. ·

AUTODIPT.

LARGE
RUBBER
MALLET

120Z.NET

I&lt;M.q,, ,

lHATS

JfWElRY DEPT.

HUE
SPRAY-ON
UNDER·
COATING

WESTLEY'S PINT

"f•''"",......

I

HECK'S REG. $1 3.96

AUTO
DEPT.

The IItil IOd) 1'4of•l'o Tt&lt;ple t.todlf l 5o"'* tlo• W;." ~O c• .m• ri •
lnf&gt;lt·t-&lt;oc:lr•l ~!h o
toll(hl Clll~~t. (Ornlonot!lt, or.cl
to&amp;! &amp;ho .. &amp;-·S..per Ml. rO{J'&lt;U&gt;¥r flo DimQ fw &lt;&gt;do• .,JI.JivJ•J)f"'"''l
'~' " 'Y blode,1, on/ott ' "' it( h, &lt;o~ (D rd Et.goru ro plll pur!'ll 0 no;j

$'15''

JEWElRY
DEPT.

HECK'S
REG. .
$9.99

SHAVER

''l'"'lliJIIO(""""'' · b&lt;:ldy .,..,..... b&lt;w1h 9ccr.l&lt;lr ; .

JEWElRY
DER.

Tp fit m_ost American model tr ucks .

AUTODEI'T.

J

HECK'S REG.
$19.96

)'01•1 IOCil .

TRUCK MIRRORS
HECK' S REG.
$1.39

'_:'. lyl ~" lut goo n II• !l&lt;uomonv

HECK'S REG.
$13.88

liafldiO""' 'l)'linQ 0&lt;1 l ~ol I OO:UI ~,r .,,11 ~O ")I:J•"'&lt;'"' Qfl)' I. o l~t.o ~
do &lt;at. l~n •P f'Viv• • d ool alto .., ~0~ 10 ...t. rt rti.! ~llri.MI\ o l

ROBERK

TRIPLE HEAD

~ oirllo ., ood 700 wO"Iiflf fo~ , lhr,&gt;n&gt;"gh d•~· ~ll Oel• ••"·"''" ' ltw:ln )0 (~bot
~el . &lt;1f &lt;~&lt;• pu "'"'"'~ t ... o '"fl Y i» ... r ~orrt o o! . Q,y~ l e~&lt; la•1 ,.,.,.,•llryi~g

TOASTER

QT.

LADY NORELCO

DRYER-STYLER

G. E.

JEWElRY
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
$15.96

JEWELRY
DEPT.

1250
IMI

, '" · '

(

A. 30 Qt. Barrel
Waste Basket
. B. 30 Qt. Waste Bin
.. C. 20 Qt. Hamper . , ·
0. 1112 Bushel Laundry
Basket
·

-= "''

PLASTIC

··· sHOE
BOXES

CHOICE

FOR

HECK'S REG.
88 ' Each

Each

1000Watt

'

. PLASTIC

STORAGE
BOXES .
to $199

2 $.100
· ·· $188

$144

JET $ET

G. E,

MAKE-UP MIRROR
e

.

4 se parate lig ht settings-- Doy-Home-Eve·
, ning-O ffice·e Dual Swivel Mirror---regular or
magnified
In off-white with gold color occent.

-~

e

-

'·' ..:.._.

. . ., .

THERMOWARE
HI-DOME

FRY PAN

.'1 ~1 ti·Puopo"' I 2 i ~ch Holkrm~ e vf l ~! Skrlie!··· Hi oo hlt l'oli,"ed

.;.··~.

), l ~o ri ~ ~n l

"•nte d Cc.or o mi

P• o~r

Con to o l (Otnf&gt;leldy
lm ....et l •ble·' 1,.1 . ( • .1\ ppro.e o;j · lno;j . Pdd.eU One to o Mo 1l••r
( odtlh .
1

'

•'

BULLDOG
PENCIL
SHARPENER

88&lt;

,.

HECK'S REG. $1.28

NOr/SEWARE DEPT.

------·.

-··~....

'~
·~~

', ,,

For 1hot just right timillg ond great ~tyl i ng , we
!;I ring to you o ~e l ec t io n of wrist wa tches. The~
o re priced low enoug h th a t you con a fford
~evcrol to com ple men t yovr Ward robe . . .
sty ling is va ried wi.th O$~Or t ed dials and bonds,
b ut a ll hove lucile co~ing.

SHADEs · ~
·· ~

$133
37'l•"x6'

A. See'N Take Cake Pan
B. See'N Take Pie Pan ·
C. 4 Qt. Covered Sauce Pot
D. 3 Qt, Covered Sauce Pan
E. 3 Pc. Sauce Pan Set
. F. 10 Qt. Dish Pan
G. 3 pc. Range Set

Choice

$122
Each

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

1.79

. .........":'

$12''

JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

.~ .

:·\ '. \C) ..

:·~

REGULAR &amp;UNSCENTED

'

HECK'S
REG.
$1.34 .

~~~~

COSMETIC
DEPT.

7

Heel R~t guards against acf1 '
39
1 f
1 llfiC
pptng · · ven S or ~C en

. bu f

HECK'S

R:;.·
COSMETIC

HE~~~,REG.

HECK'S REG. $3.99

'

....

0-CEDAR
BROOM

From

6.9 oz.

0-CEDAR

DRANO

WET MOP

TWO PACKET
Tough On (logo

.$166
To

$244
HICK'S REG. To
$3.29

NllfiSIWAII
IIIR.

$ 89

1

Won'! Hurl Pip••

BEHOLD
FURNITURE
POLISH

DUST MOP

$166

HECK'S REG.
2.49

HECK'S REG.
TO $2.41 .

HOI/SEWAII

NOIISIWA/11
IllPT.

DUT.

·. 12 oz.

HECK'S REG.
87'

NOIISIWA/11
DEI'T.

HECK'S REG.
$1.15 .

NOUSIWARE
DEPT. •

70Z.

RENUZIT
AEROSOL
AIR FRESHENER

12 oz.
SOLID
AUTOMATIC

VANISH

7C
HICK'SREG.
55'

· NDUSIWAII
DIPT.

HECK'S
. -R.EG. 97•

C0111bination

140Z.

LYSOL
. SPRAY
DISINFECTANT

ISOZ.

JIWEI.IIY DEPT.

AEROSOL

BISSELL

HECK'S REG.
2.87 .

HICK'UIG. .

· $1.ttl
IIOiiiiWA/11
DEPT. ·

HICK'S. RIG.

67•

,

.

NtJIIUWA•
'

FLOOR

- -KODAK

SWEEPER

. POCKET CAMERA

79(

Rotary whisk· action brush. 2 la~ge dust pam.
Sweeps on forward 0 11d bock str(lkes . .

KIT

Shl"ll · :1 ,.1,.,.,.,, t,Y.; I~ ' "'; p~t·wtlm pio hut '\
lwm :, 1,•;•1 to ihlt!nty . ~!I u th-i 'l"'''d' ul 1/ Il K)

.,,,,1 1/rll) ·_,., with ll~t.J, , ,.,.,,. ·•1 ; '" 10
lt•l'l . N" w ll·, ,\ 1' !' ''l &lt;11111 l tU.I ~ l ut~•l .

W(

23"

5

,.,

MtMISIWAIE

SLIDE VIEWER

$177

JIWEI.IIY DEPT•

COLORCRAFT

PROCESS MAILERS
FOR

SLIDES OR MOVIES
For

~tide!

and movies.;..::.Kodo ch rome,

Ekto chrome, Fujichrome.

·

. SUNSET

S-TRACK

HECK'S RIG. $2.19

JtWil,Y DI,T.

HEAD CLEANER

CAMERA CASE

FOR SX70 POLAROID CAMERA

$:499 .
,

HECK'SRIG. $6,96

JnfiiiY DEPT.

$677
HECK'S REG. $9.96

HECK'S REG. $26.99

DIAMOND

AIR~QUIPT

HECK'S REG. $9.96

JEWElRY DEPT.

MEDIUM OR

WINDEX

99C 4.7C

$799

HECK'S REG. •15.96

69C

PEPSODENT PEPSODENT
'""·"''' TOOTHBRUSH TOOTHBRUSH
FOR
FOR
ADULTS
CHILDREN
HARD

MOP
AliD
BROOM

hou!ing is gr_eoSe, scratch, and odor re!i~tont , · .

$12 88

.....u....... .

0-CEDAR
SQUEEZE
MOP

•from faiJin{l into food. e ' OurobJe leXOO front·

. Water level Qauge.

·

COSMETIC DEPT.

EACH

... ,I;...

iOn Of Steam . 0 Ve r
Permanent PresS

~~~~:II a~~

e
hierce leveronembly. • Opensmostjtandard
ou,ehold size cans. e Mognel holds most.lid1

COLGATE
FAMILY TOOTHPASTE

10's
COLD CAPSULES

IE,.IJlll
louqutt

I

u~e

e

'"Hands Free" operation for
conveni·
. ence .
"Eaiy dean" remo'.'Oble ciJtter and

oz. . .

CONTAC

·· -

STEAM IRON

2424

DEPT.

$299
JEWElRY DEPT.

CAN OPENER

GENERAL ELECTRIC

1~•f•tv

.

.

Gr•n.t lillie pot for those unexpected get 10·
gelhers . Makes your favorite teo or coffee.

•

600
""he"
woo
~«ot! . r"h "' "'"''" ' i'otlr u&gt;wci'ted. h lro lo ""' co r., : AC 1?OV
O()Hr. G uor o ~tMd oo&lt;~i~OI dele cl! i~ wookmo~oh ir&gt; aild mc te• icl .

HECK'S REG. $17.96

HOT POT

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

Po -rlul. P'".""'"""I 100Q Well dryir lor odvltl. T~il illhf d •y••
pr., le"ro l'l&lt;lk d.oo.e lor \1.1 per loll o;jr~ ing oll(l ~ ~~ l il)g . E&lt;Hy lo ~•• .
,.tJ.cllf bolonced. Unique .elo{lor owrl&lt; ~ DIOw• "'"r to oel~ct-400
"'olt, "'"""or
OOth o •e octi•o-;.t~d ro generlile a powertrJI

ULTRA BAN
sooo ·

6 CUP CERAMIC
''

DRYER

HEC'SREG. $12.88

8 oz.

WIN···

~
~-

LUCITE WATCH

$899

'

G. E.

PRO-PISTOL-GRIP

LADIES'

HECK'SREG.
TO $2.99

HECK'S REG. Ta $3.13

.

EC3 2

, .

I.

FESCO PLASTIC
ASSORTMENT

.• ••'

.~

~:--

ZOOM 'N GROOM

HECK'S REG. 74' QT.

18 oz.

. . ..

G. I . .

LIMIT 5 QTS.

HIGH OR LOW

....

.PD·1

G. E.

HECK'S REG.

33'·

HECK'S REG.
54'

HECI&lt;'S REG.
$1.19

·9c

HECK'S REG.

MWEI.II'i
DEPT. .

$1.59

�13 - The OaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport.Pomeroy, 0 ., Wedneoday,Aug. 21,1974

....,...,

OPEl DAILY

PUNTY
Of

10 TO 9

10 TO 9

FREE

PRICES

EFFECT THROUGH

y I SEPT. 1 WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

117

LOCKI

12 OZ. NET

CD-2
OIL
ADDITIVE

GAS CAPS

PERCOLATOR

HAVOLINE
10W40

fOR MOST AMERICAN MADE CARS

1971 TO
1974
MODELS

UPTO
1070
MODELS

MOTOR OIL .

59(

MILEAGE
CHOICE

12'COPPER

TURTLE
WAX

. BOOSTER·
CABLES

C.R.C.
MECHANICS
HELPER

CAR WAX

00

$

TANGLEPROOF

$133

$]66 · · .
HECK'S REG.
$1.39

HECK'S REG. $5.48

BLECHE-WITE

WHITEWALL
CLEANER

DELUXE

TRAISMISSIOI

FOLDING .
COLOR CAMERA
G. E.
·~PORTABLE
5

HECK'S REG.
99•

HECK'S REG.
$1.49

•

AUTO DEPT.

AUTO DEPT.

·

G. E.
WAFFLE

BAKER-GRILL

$21

$4499

in flmh .

)E:,~:.r

HECI('S REG.

' ;, ..

· G. E.

HAT BOX HAIR D"YER

99

3 heat ~election' plu~ "cooL" Convenient " reaeh·in'1
t o p . Draw 1otrings allow bonnet odjvstment to a ny
heOd size~ehild or adu lt . Color styles in willow green

HECK' S REG. $26.S6

and white.

JEWElRY
DEPT.

'14.96

AUTO DEPT.

AUTO DEPT.

420

HD-22

bakes wa ffl es..

lor ... Automatic electric eye f!IIPO~u1e
~~~o;;r;;~;;;LJ control . Sharp three elemen t lens . Built-

fingertip control for operating
ease: "Easy-Grip " handle far a mare
. comfortable feel.

HECK'S REG.
$1.66 '

HECI&lt;'S REG.
$1.58

sp~ed

JEWElRY DEPT.

TEFLON COATED . II g rills
cheese and tornoto sondwk hes, fries baco n and eggs, and

Keep your vaca tion memo ries l ore~er
wit h th is comero . Instant pictures lor
the same price os prinh you woit do y~

MIXER

HECI&lt;'S REG. $19.88

AIM

PO:ARrm-==&lt;~Jj~~

$100

$1799

OUR

M·22

ePrevents Rust
eSoundproots
• Water Proofs
eSeals Cracks

FILLER

HECK'S REG.
1.99

AUTODEPT. ·

AUTODIPT.

LARGE
RUBBER
MALLET

120Z.NET

I&lt;M.q,, ,

lHATS

JfWElRY DEPT.

HUE
SPRAY-ON
UNDER·
COATING

WESTLEY'S PINT

"f•''"",......

I

HECK'S REG. $1 3.96

AUTO
DEPT.

The IItil IOd) 1'4of•l'o Tt&lt;ple t.todlf l 5o"'* tlo• W;." ~O c• .m• ri •
lnf&gt;lt·t-&lt;oc:lr•l ~!h o
toll(hl Clll~~t. (Ornlonot!lt, or.cl
to&amp;! &amp;ho .. &amp;-·S..per Ml. rO{J'&lt;U&gt;¥r flo DimQ fw &lt;&gt;do• .,JI.JivJ•J)f"'"''l
'~' " 'Y blode,1, on/ott ' "' it( h, &lt;o~ (D rd Et.goru ro plll pur!'ll 0 no;j

$'15''

JEWElRY
DEPT.

HECK'S
REG. .
$9.99

SHAVER

''l'"'lliJIIO(""""'' · b&lt;:ldy .,..,..... b&lt;w1h 9ccr.l&lt;lr ; .

JEWElRY
DER.

Tp fit m_ost American model tr ucks .

AUTODEI'T.

J

HECK'S REG.
$19.96

)'01•1 IOCil .

TRUCK MIRRORS
HECK' S REG.
$1.39

'_:'. lyl ~" lut goo n II• !l&lt;uomonv

HECK'S REG.
$13.88

liafldiO""' 'l)'linQ 0&lt;1 l ~ol I OO:UI ~,r .,,11 ~O ")I:J•"'&lt;'"' Qfl)' I. o l~t.o ~
do &lt;at. l~n •P f'Viv• • d ool alto .., ~0~ 10 ...t. rt rti.! ~llri.MI\ o l

ROBERK

TRIPLE HEAD

~ oirllo ., ood 700 wO"Iiflf fo~ , lhr,&gt;n&gt;"gh d•~· ~ll Oel• ••"·"''" ' ltw:ln )0 (~bot
~el . &lt;1f &lt;~&lt;• pu "'"'"'~ t ... o '"fl Y i» ... r ~orrt o o! . Q,y~ l e~&lt; la•1 ,.,.,.,•llryi~g

TOASTER

QT.

LADY NORELCO

DRYER-STYLER

G. E.

JEWElRY
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
$15.96

JEWELRY
DEPT.

1250
IMI

, '" · '

(

A. 30 Qt. Barrel
Waste Basket
. B. 30 Qt. Waste Bin
.. C. 20 Qt. Hamper . , ·
0. 1112 Bushel Laundry
Basket
·

-= "''

PLASTIC

··· sHOE
BOXES

CHOICE

FOR

HECK'S REG.
88 ' Each

Each

1000Watt

'

. PLASTIC

STORAGE
BOXES .
to $199

2 $.100
· ·· $188

$144

JET $ET

G. E,

MAKE-UP MIRROR
e

.

4 se parate lig ht settings-- Doy-Home-Eve·
, ning-O ffice·e Dual Swivel Mirror---regular or
magnified
In off-white with gold color occent.

-~

e

-

'·' ..:.._.

. . ., .

THERMOWARE
HI-DOME

FRY PAN

.'1 ~1 ti·Puopo"' I 2 i ~ch Holkrm~ e vf l ~! Skrlie!··· Hi oo hlt l'oli,"ed

.;.··~.

), l ~o ri ~ ~n l

"•nte d Cc.or o mi

P• o~r

Con to o l (Otnf&gt;leldy
lm ....et l •ble·' 1,.1 . ( • .1\ ppro.e o;j · lno;j . Pdd.eU One to o Mo 1l••r
( odtlh .
1

'

•'

BULLDOG
PENCIL
SHARPENER

88&lt;

,.

HECK'S REG. $1.28

NOr/SEWARE DEPT.

------·.

-··~....

'~
·~~

', ,,

For 1hot just right timillg ond great ~tyl i ng , we
!;I ring to you o ~e l ec t io n of wrist wa tches. The~
o re priced low enoug h th a t you con a fford
~evcrol to com ple men t yovr Ward robe . . .
sty ling is va ried wi.th O$~Or t ed dials and bonds,
b ut a ll hove lucile co~ing.

SHADEs · ~
·· ~

$133
37'l•"x6'

A. See'N Take Cake Pan
B. See'N Take Pie Pan ·
C. 4 Qt. Covered Sauce Pot
D. 3 Qt, Covered Sauce Pan
E. 3 Pc. Sauce Pan Set
. F. 10 Qt. Dish Pan
G. 3 pc. Range Set

Choice

$122
Each

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

1.79

. .........":'

$12''

JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

.~ .

:·\ '. \C) ..

:·~

REGULAR &amp;UNSCENTED

'

HECK'S
REG.
$1.34 .

~~~~

COSMETIC
DEPT.

7

Heel R~t guards against acf1 '
39
1 f
1 llfiC
pptng · · ven S or ~C en

. bu f

HECK'S

R:;.·
COSMETIC

HE~~~,REG.

HECK'S REG. $3.99

'

....

0-CEDAR
BROOM

From

6.9 oz.

0-CEDAR

DRANO

WET MOP

TWO PACKET
Tough On (logo

.$166
To

$244
HICK'S REG. To
$3.29

NllfiSIWAII
IIIR.

$ 89

1

Won'! Hurl Pip••

BEHOLD
FURNITURE
POLISH

DUST MOP

$166

HECK'S REG.
2.49

HECK'S REG.
TO $2.41 .

HOI/SEWAII

NOIISIWA/11
IllPT.

DUT.

·. 12 oz.

HECK'S REG.
87'

NOIISIWA/11
DEI'T.

HECK'S REG.
$1.15 .

NOUSIWARE
DEPT. •

70Z.

RENUZIT
AEROSOL
AIR FRESHENER

12 oz.
SOLID
AUTOMATIC

VANISH

7C
HICK'SREG.
55'

· NDUSIWAII
DIPT.

HECK'S
. -R.EG. 97•

C0111bination

140Z.

LYSOL
. SPRAY
DISINFECTANT

ISOZ.

JIWEI.IIY DEPT.

AEROSOL

BISSELL

HECK'S REG.
2.87 .

HICK'UIG. .

· $1.ttl
IIOiiiiWA/11
DEPT. ·

HICK'S. RIG.

67•

,

.

NtJIIUWA•
'

FLOOR

- -KODAK

SWEEPER

. POCKET CAMERA

79(

Rotary whisk· action brush. 2 la~ge dust pam.
Sweeps on forward 0 11d bock str(lkes . .

KIT

Shl"ll · :1 ,.1,.,.,.,, t,Y.; I~ ' "'; p~t·wtlm pio hut '\
lwm :, 1,•;•1 to ihlt!nty . ~!I u th-i 'l"'''d' ul 1/ Il K)

.,,,,1 1/rll) ·_,., with ll~t.J, , ,.,.,,. ·•1 ; '" 10
lt•l'l . N" w ll·, ,\ 1' !' ''l &lt;11111 l tU.I ~ l ut~•l .

W(

23"

5

,.,

MtMISIWAIE

SLIDE VIEWER

$177

JIWEI.IIY DEPT•

COLORCRAFT

PROCESS MAILERS
FOR

SLIDES OR MOVIES
For

~tide!

and movies.;..::.Kodo ch rome,

Ekto chrome, Fujichrome.

·

. SUNSET

S-TRACK

HECK'S RIG. $2.19

JtWil,Y DI,T.

HEAD CLEANER

CAMERA CASE

FOR SX70 POLAROID CAMERA

$:499 .
,

HECK'SRIG. $6,96

JnfiiiY DEPT.

$677
HECK'S REG. $9.96

HECK'S REG. $26.99

DIAMOND

AIR~QUIPT

HECK'S REG. $9.96

JEWElRY DEPT.

MEDIUM OR

WINDEX

99C 4.7C

$799

HECK'S REG. •15.96

69C

PEPSODENT PEPSODENT
'""·"''' TOOTHBRUSH TOOTHBRUSH
FOR
FOR
ADULTS
CHILDREN
HARD

MOP
AliD
BROOM

hou!ing is gr_eoSe, scratch, and odor re!i~tont , · .

$12 88

.....u....... .

0-CEDAR
SQUEEZE
MOP

•from faiJin{l into food. e ' OurobJe leXOO front·

. Water level Qauge.

·

COSMETIC DEPT.

EACH

... ,I;...

iOn Of Steam . 0 Ve r
Permanent PresS

~~~~:II a~~

e
hierce leveronembly. • Opensmostjtandard
ou,ehold size cans. e Mognel holds most.lid1

COLGATE
FAMILY TOOTHPASTE

10's
COLD CAPSULES

IE,.IJlll
louqutt

I

u~e

e

'"Hands Free" operation for
conveni·
. ence .
"Eaiy dean" remo'.'Oble ciJtter and

oz. . .

CONTAC

·· -

STEAM IRON

2424

DEPT.

$299
JEWElRY DEPT.

CAN OPENER

GENERAL ELECTRIC

1~•f•tv

.

.

Gr•n.t lillie pot for those unexpected get 10·
gelhers . Makes your favorite teo or coffee.

•

600
""he"
woo
~«ot! . r"h "' "'"''" ' i'otlr u&gt;wci'ted. h lro lo ""' co r., : AC 1?OV
O()Hr. G uor o ~tMd oo&lt;~i~OI dele cl! i~ wookmo~oh ir&gt; aild mc te• icl .

HECK'S REG. $17.96

HOT POT

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

Po -rlul. P'".""'"""I 100Q Well dryir lor odvltl. T~il illhf d •y••
pr., le"ro l'l&lt;lk d.oo.e lor \1.1 per loll o;jr~ ing oll(l ~ ~~ l il)g . E&lt;Hy lo ~•• .
,.tJ.cllf bolonced. Unique .elo{lor owrl&lt; ~ DIOw• "'"r to oel~ct-400
"'olt, "'"""or
OOth o •e octi•o-;.t~d ro generlile a powertrJI

ULTRA BAN
sooo ·

6 CUP CERAMIC
''

DRYER

HEC'SREG. $12.88

8 oz.

WIN···

~
~-

LUCITE WATCH

$899

'

G. E.

PRO-PISTOL-GRIP

LADIES'

HECK'SREG.
TO $2.99

HECK'S REG. Ta $3.13

.

EC3 2

, .

I.

FESCO PLASTIC
ASSORTMENT

.• ••'

.~

~:--

ZOOM 'N GROOM

HECK'S REG. 74' QT.

18 oz.

. . ..

G. I . .

LIMIT 5 QTS.

HIGH OR LOW

....

.PD·1

G. E.

HECK'S REG.

33'·

HECK'S REG.
54'

HECI&lt;'S REG.
$1.19

·9c

HECK'S REG.

MWEI.II'i
DEPT. .

$1.59

�•

OPIUAILY

••

PUNTY
Of
fREE

10 TO 9

PLENTY
Of

'

flEE

••
•

Y, SEPT. 1,

EFFECT THROUGH

PRICES

•

--------~S~OL~-----­

••
• ••

•

ALL

DAQON

•

INSULATED

••
•
•
•

UNDERWEAR

A. many feotured .S

01: . Dacron wit with ieoture\
sv&lt;h os breosi pod.et. kidney flop, 70 de:nie,
nylon 1ihelt Ouolity ol popuk:u price. Co_lon:

•
•
•

$1.

FISHING TACKLE

B&lt;own. W inter 8tue, Red. Ton •

HE~~~~::G:

.

.

. Sl'tJRTS

•
••

99

&lt;

ALL SPORT

••

SAFETY
HELMETS

l• •

:'•

•!
•

''

,.,..., ""'"'"'" o•t- o -

''"ff&lt;i'

'*"' - · ,,,.

o ~ ...,.l.tr Mlto•' ~ ' ''' .. , 1 !&gt;'ld .,...., !"" .. &lt;lwoll;or!Gtt, """' ~""l !ltol. ~- ond

•I• ••

Sl

HECK'S
REG.
$18.99

''
••

•
••
' .'

t...., ,,,..,

~

k~

HECK'S REG . 14.99

&lt;

.HUNTING
COAT ·

.r } .
't:. ~
! /&gt;

2 ply·l 1.53 oz. Army Duck- 2 Both Water
Repellent finish - Double Ioyer shoulder, 5
pockets, Nylon Rubberized game pockets
with zipper. Shell loops in eoch bottom
pock.el.

1-

..~

HECK's REG.
AUTOMOTIVE

••

99
$11

0 OFF;.·f.: .

~.!:or - r ~·" ....,...,.....a o.• o..

.,...d 10 ptOlt&lt;:r ,......._~wo&lt;~ ht~m...,.o&lt;l . !/-tiM~ ~·
.... lt&lt;ql -,.... ...- .... t.t, h.l:oliO"tl ~ '-~•

.•
••
.,.

•

flOp ~gn, Vpflli!r lly

1 ~lfi/_

Except Rods &amp; Reels

~

••
•

ThHe COft!lortob&amp;e cowol ond 10\.IQ'h trOUY~ atr
of ~ht Jvrroy Duel .n Ma.rwrd. They't•
f\.1)1 wotet rtptleiY rrto~td oro.d leo!Ut• fvll-r.vbbrJ rl'mkNc rd 111 both n-rM and 11111101. Belt kJopl.
rwo front 'lkl~ podtti rwo f!"OI pockeh, on ...,lftl

/• •

Cb

2007

MFG. LIST PRI CES $6.98

99

TAPES
$599

HECK'S REG. $'18.99

Sl'tJIITS
DE/IT.

--

PRICE

DEPT.

$14

·RECORDS
$499

ELTON JOHN
· COODIUY YELLOW IRICK ROAD

REC:ORDS

sa''

COL
--011 STACl
FROM SAil FRAiiCISC:O * IIEW
YORK * BOS TON LOCCIIIS AJIO
MESSINA RECORDS

'5"
MFG. LIST PRICES $7.98

MFG. LIST PRICES $11,. 98

TAPES

TAPES

51099

MFG. LIST PRICES $ 1 2. 88

ElT(IIIJO .. C:AIIIOU

REc:ORDS

$499
MFG. LIST PRICE $6.98

TAPES
ss99

'Ollll EAII11Mi MOOITU

REc:ORDS

5499

$499

MFG. LIST PRICE $6 .98

M FG LIST PRICE $6.91

TAPES
s

TAPES
$

MFG. LIST PRICE $7.98

'• •
•

•

l'xiO'
· Adlwlloblor 0111~ wop~ntlon !,,.,..1 l &gt;PP&lt;t l do ..n tenltt
ol &lt;k&gt;ori 1W11 ''"" k!•Qt' d&lt;lgan poty.1ttr w ..r.e-d ..,,~ .
.t..w1: ountltl-1 ,.low roal, IHIIQfl V'"" wp ll ~ orwf
flol.o1 111100.

ol 11om.""'''""' lreuted lobr ic .

$59'

•''

.
•.

FOOTBALL

.

MODEL 1400 SHOTGUN

Modcll400Mcrk II Fie ld Gun with Plein Barrel. One of the be~t· ~hocting ~emi-outomafin with ell the feoture~of
the Ventilated Rib version induding rotoflng ~let-1 bolt thot locks into steel barreL In 12 ~ouge 28" bonel.

HECK'S REG.
HECK'S REG.

St64.,S

$6.99

SI'0/11'$ DI'-T.

SI'0/11'$ DEPT.

HELMET &amp; JERSEY
SET

JONES STYLE

HUNTING HAT
$}88

$499
HECK'S REG. $6.99

SPORTS DEPT.

COLEMAN

2 PIECE
VINYL

"•
••

OIEGALLOI

STORM
SUIT
$297

•

'

•'
••'·
,i.
•~

•''
r

5

HECK'S REG. $87.95
.· S/10111'$111/iT.

'

WIICHESTEI

GUN RACK
. $466

TENT
.
I

3 On~

3 PLACE
WOOD

.

JUG
3 LB. POLY

#228

$699

SLEEPING
· BAG
Mole '"" '"~"Ill&gt; plet&gt;o.uft ond ol )'OliO a•e rnl9ht o\llony&gt;
Mth o Three pound 1y111NI ~~ liDt•IUied rle•flln~ b&lt;oljl.Top
mQ!tflol it a dl.lf&lt;JI:ilt •P""' ....itt. ,.,non lm·lr~ Plid·

HECK'S

CAZZIE RUSSELL
AUTOGRAPH

(On :O.n .. nl ,; ~per d l "'(' •

HiCK'S
REG.

'

"

HECK'S REG. $14.99
SI'OIITSIIIP1. ·

$4.29

S/IOVS IIIPT.

•

'•
•

HECK'S REG. $14.99

GROU D SHEET

I
'

The eco nomy and
portability mokes
this stove popu lar
for 1he ligl-lt·lroveling camper, 2 · ~:,

$249

'

'

DELUXE 2-MAIT~/

HECK'S REG.
$3.99

LANTERN
ho"" , ..

$18''

I'!Oty

"'""'~ ··

HECk'S
REG.

$19.&amp;8

$15''
•

"""

_ ....,,.

THRESHOLD

Cut to fit a ny d oor. Featu ring

vinyl inse rt,

WITH

FOAM
IY·THE-FOOT

77

'

STAPLE
GUN
- KIT

HECK' S REG. 3 2'

'"'·

$

1saa.

MODEll6l8

J6 inch olllomctic. thrfle heoi push button (Ontrol~ ond pi lot .llght .
Convtnfent lour f)O\ illon push button Jwitch With ofl position.
. lhflrmo1tot ond l~;~n give ovtomotic com loll cOn_trol. Chrome ~gfety gdll. U. l. li~ted . .
·

$ 2· 188

HECK'S REG.

....

ALL

HICk' SRIG . 4 I'

HECK'S REG.
$15.88

.HAIDWARE
DI/IT. ·

Ba• ot

.

HAil~J"IfDEPT.

!lt i'X 18" . .. , ..... .

1"X18" ... .. , , . ...

HARDWARE

NA/IIIWA/11
llllir.

N~ , I~' AJ I,,IJtjl&lt;lloll $tu,..l~

e ao~ o t 12So !J/16 ' ~~~~~~~~ •
11 , (l( ( IUI L~ $tof"oJ • • S to~ l• llw •

$2.54 .

$22.18

""" latbt •
Wlrloo A!lod\IM111 • S{ottroiPiiiiiYNdo JI.TIOtll·
•

"'""

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG.

NAIDWARE
DEIT.

'

.Ceme

30 inch au tomatic fo n forced instant heot Chrome

safety grilL U. l. listed.

RAID INSECTICIDES

200Jo .OFF
HECK'S RIG. PRICE

.

WATERPROOFING

BASEBOARD
HEATERS
MODEL 1014
DO-IT -YOURSELF

251b.

.

2·RICORD SETS
19 VOLUMES· .
TO CHOOSE FROM
ALL YOUil
'FAVORITES
FROM THE
50'5&amp; 60'$ .

•

SURE-DRY

SUPERIOR

.

SUPER
OlDIES

HECK'S
REG. 1358
.

HECk' S REG . $23 .8 8

.

TAPES

BLAST FROM THE PAST '

.il'tJRTS DEPT.

A

~,

ilfl

pint fue l copoci ty.

5
MFG. LIST

5 99

·CHOICE

Pkg.

• t .. o Cr&gt;lllmon $ i lk -Ii i~ mQI1 1ieo prod~{• twicr
U,.ligr.l, lol! up to "lo,. lin,el&lt;ll K!IIQPIG•do•
.

MFG. LIST PRICE $6.91

IllPT.

Wcrlr:Jr mo1 t pop.ko r lpnTton •• , ho:.ld• ''"'o
ponh oiiUf'l . _ . •fiO"'Ih lo1 10 lo 11

2 ONLY

$4''RKODS

WILSON X28 PLUS

'

DELUXE 2-IUUEI

STOVE

S/IOITS DEPT.

COLEMAN

#4 U
COLEMAN

'X7' VINYL \

••

BASKETBALL
. HECK'S
REG.
$1.99
$599 .
SI'0/11'$

sass

'

•!'

R. W. B.

BASKETBALL

$8.99

2 GAL.

OLD ANCHOR
LATEX
VIIIYL ACRYLIC

2"X30'
ALUMINitED
CLOTH

DUCT
TAPE

FAVORITES LIKE, TEARS ON MY PIL·
LOW BY tiTTlE ANTHONY 8. iMPERI·
ALS, ONE SUMMER NIGHT BY DAN·
LEERS, DONNA BY RICHIE VAtENS
KANSAS CITY BY w ·ILBERT HARRI:
SON, GOOD GOI.lY M ISS MOLLY BY
LITTLE RICHARD, DUKE Of EARL BY
· GENE (: HANDLER, RUNAWAY BY DEl
SHANNON, RA INDROPS BY DEE

PAINT
~IBi!LY
l;~ lil/ fl

Sur• · Dry is o

ma te ria l
which protects
beoLflifi•i ce·
ment, stucco, concrete, cin der
bloclt, slone or brido; ... inside or
ouhide.

NAIDWARE
DUT.

TAPES .

THE
ORIG INAL
SONGS
RECORDED BY THE
ORIGINAL
ARTISTS
WHO
MADE THfM
, HITS

MFG. ,LIST PRICE $6.91

BIG SELECTION OF STEREO ALBUMS
HUNDREDS TO CHOOSE FROM
FEATURING ARTISTS ROD
STEWART, JERRY . LEE LEWIS ,
PERRY COMO, FRANK SINATRA,
ISLEY BROS ., BEACH BOYS . .

$344
$4.97

$ 3. 99

,
CLARK . HOlD ON I'M COM IN' B'(
SAM &amp; DAVE , RAINDROPS KEEP FAlLING ON MY HEAD BY B. J. THOMAS, . MFG LIST $S.9 &amp;
CRIMSON &amp;CLOVER BY TOMMY
JAMES AND SHONDELL S PSYCHOTIC REACTION BY COUN(FIYE
99

$4

PAINT

HECK'S REG.

J)AS

I 1,.- i!,

...

REC:ORD$

HECK'S REG.

$1.47

HECK'S REG.
$2.99

. HAIDWARI
DIPT.

NAHWAIE
DUT.

---

YOUR CHOIG

�•

OPIUAILY

••

PUNTY
Of
fREE

10 TO 9

PLENTY
Of

'

flEE

••
•

Y, SEPT. 1,

EFFECT THROUGH

PRICES

•

--------~S~OL~-----­

••
• ••

•

ALL

DAQON

•

INSULATED

••
•
•
•

UNDERWEAR

A. many feotured .S

01: . Dacron wit with ieoture\
sv&lt;h os breosi pod.et. kidney flop, 70 de:nie,
nylon 1ihelt Ouolity ol popuk:u price. Co_lon:

•
•
•

$1.

FISHING TACKLE

B&lt;own. W inter 8tue, Red. Ton •

HE~~~~::G:

.

.

. Sl'tJRTS

•
••

99

&lt;

ALL SPORT

••

SAFETY
HELMETS

l• •

:'•

•!
•

''

,.,..., ""'"'"'" o•t- o -

''"ff&lt;i'

'*"' - · ,,,.

o ~ ...,.l.tr Mlto•' ~ ' ''' .. , 1 !&gt;'ld .,...., !"" .. &lt;lwoll;or!Gtt, """' ~""l !ltol. ~- ond

•I• ••

Sl

HECK'S
REG.
$18.99

''
••

•
••
' .'

t...., ,,,..,

~

k~

HECK'S REG . 14.99

&lt;

.HUNTING
COAT ·

.r } .
't:. ~
! /&gt;

2 ply·l 1.53 oz. Army Duck- 2 Both Water
Repellent finish - Double Ioyer shoulder, 5
pockets, Nylon Rubberized game pockets
with zipper. Shell loops in eoch bottom
pock.el.

1-

..~

HECK's REG.
AUTOMOTIVE

••

99
$11

0 OFF;.·f.: .

~.!:or - r ~·" ....,...,.....a o.• o..

.,...d 10 ptOlt&lt;:r ,......._~wo&lt;~ ht~m...,.o&lt;l . !/-tiM~ ~·
.... lt&lt;ql -,.... ...- .... t.t, h.l:oliO"tl ~ '-~•

.•
••
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•

flOp ~gn, Vpflli!r lly

1 ~lfi/_

Except Rods &amp; Reels

~

••
•

ThHe COft!lortob&amp;e cowol ond 10\.IQ'h trOUY~ atr
of ~ht Jvrroy Duel .n Ma.rwrd. They't•
f\.1)1 wotet rtptleiY rrto~td oro.d leo!Ut• fvll-r.vbbrJ rl'mkNc rd 111 both n-rM and 11111101. Belt kJopl.
rwo front 'lkl~ podtti rwo f!"OI pockeh, on ...,lftl

/• •

Cb

2007

MFG. LIST PRI CES $6.98

99

TAPES
$599

HECK'S REG. $'18.99

Sl'tJIITS
DE/IT.

--

PRICE

DEPT.

$14

·RECORDS
$499

ELTON JOHN
· COODIUY YELLOW IRICK ROAD

REC:ORDS

sa''

COL
--011 STACl
FROM SAil FRAiiCISC:O * IIEW
YORK * BOS TON LOCCIIIS AJIO
MESSINA RECORDS

'5"
MFG. LIST PRICES $7.98

MFG. LIST PRICES $11,. 98

TAPES

TAPES

51099

MFG. LIST PRICES $ 1 2. 88

ElT(IIIJO .. C:AIIIOU

REc:ORDS

$499
MFG. LIST PRICE $6.98

TAPES
ss99

'Ollll EAII11Mi MOOITU

REc:ORDS

5499

$499

MFG. LIST PRICE $6 .98

M FG LIST PRICE $6.91

TAPES
s

TAPES
$

MFG. LIST PRICE $7.98

'• •
•

•

l'xiO'
· Adlwlloblor 0111~ wop~ntlon !,,.,..1 l &gt;PP&lt;t l do ..n tenltt
ol &lt;k&gt;ori 1W11 ''"" k!•Qt' d&lt;lgan poty.1ttr w ..r.e-d ..,,~ .
.t..w1: ountltl-1 ,.low roal, IHIIQfl V'"" wp ll ~ orwf
flol.o1 111100.

ol 11om.""'''""' lreuted lobr ic .

$59'

•''

.
•.

FOOTBALL

.

MODEL 1400 SHOTGUN

Modcll400Mcrk II Fie ld Gun with Plein Barrel. One of the be~t· ~hocting ~emi-outomafin with ell the feoture~of
the Ventilated Rib version induding rotoflng ~let-1 bolt thot locks into steel barreL In 12 ~ouge 28" bonel.

HECK'S REG.
HECK'S REG.

St64.,S

$6.99

SI'0/11'$ DI'-T.

SI'0/11'$ DEPT.

HELMET &amp; JERSEY
SET

JONES STYLE

HUNTING HAT
$}88

$499
HECK'S REG. $6.99

SPORTS DEPT.

COLEMAN

2 PIECE
VINYL

"•
••

OIEGALLOI

STORM
SUIT
$297

•

'

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,i.
•~

•''
r

5

HECK'S REG. $87.95
.· S/10111'$111/iT.

'

WIICHESTEI

GUN RACK
. $466

TENT
.
I

3 On~

3 PLACE
WOOD

.

JUG
3 LB. POLY

#228

$699

SLEEPING
· BAG
Mole '"" '"~"Ill&gt; plet&gt;o.uft ond ol )'OliO a•e rnl9ht o\llony&gt;
Mth o Three pound 1y111NI ~~ liDt•IUied rle•flln~ b&lt;oljl.Top
mQ!tflol it a dl.lf&lt;JI:ilt •P""' ....itt. ,.,non lm·lr~ Plid·

HECK'S

CAZZIE RUSSELL
AUTOGRAPH

(On :O.n .. nl ,; ~per d l "'(' •

HiCK'S
REG.

'

"

HECK'S REG. $14.99
SI'OIITSIIIP1. ·

$4.29

S/IOVS IIIPT.

•

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•

HECK'S REG. $14.99

GROU D SHEET

I
'

The eco nomy and
portability mokes
this stove popu lar
for 1he ligl-lt·lroveling camper, 2 · ~:,

$249

'

'

DELUXE 2-MAIT~/

HECK'S REG.
$3.99

LANTERN
ho"" , ..

$18''

I'!Oty

"'""'~ ··

HECk'S
REG.

$19.&amp;8

$15''
•

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THRESHOLD

Cut to fit a ny d oor. Featu ring

vinyl inse rt,

WITH

FOAM
IY·THE-FOOT

77

'

STAPLE
GUN
- KIT

HECK' S REG. 3 2'

'"'·

$

1saa.

MODEll6l8

J6 inch olllomctic. thrfle heoi push button (Ontrol~ ond pi lot .llght .
Convtnfent lour f)O\ illon push button Jwitch With ofl position.
. lhflrmo1tot ond l~;~n give ovtomotic com loll cOn_trol. Chrome ~gfety gdll. U. l. li~ted . .
·

$ 2· 188

HECK'S REG.

....

ALL

HICk' SRIG . 4 I'

HECK'S REG.
$15.88

.HAIDWARE
DI/IT. ·

Ba• ot

.

HAil~J"IfDEPT.

!lt i'X 18" . .. , ..... .

1"X18" ... .. , , . ...

HARDWARE

NA/IIIWA/11
llllir.

N~ , I~' AJ I,,IJtjl&lt;lloll $tu,..l~

e ao~ o t 12So !J/16 ' ~~~~~~~~ •
11 , (l( ( IUI L~ $tof"oJ • • S to~ l• llw •

$2.54 .

$22.18

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REG.

HECK'S REG.

NAIDWARE
DEIT.

'

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30 inch au tomatic fo n forced instant heot Chrome

safety grilL U. l. listed.

RAID INSECTICIDES

200Jo .OFF
HECK'S RIG. PRICE

.

WATERPROOFING

BASEBOARD
HEATERS
MODEL 1014
DO-IT -YOURSELF

251b.

.

2·RICORD SETS
19 VOLUMES· .
TO CHOOSE FROM
ALL YOUil
'FAVORITES
FROM THE
50'5&amp; 60'$ .

•

SURE-DRY

SUPERIOR

.

SUPER
OlDIES

HECK'S
REG. 1358
.

HECk' S REG . $23 .8 8

.

TAPES

BLAST FROM THE PAST '

.il'tJRTS DEPT.

A

~,

ilfl

pint fue l copoci ty.

5
MFG. LIST

5 99

·CHOICE

Pkg.

• t .. o Cr&gt;lllmon $ i lk -Ii i~ mQI1 1ieo prod~{• twicr
U,.ligr.l, lol! up to "lo,. lin,el&lt;ll K!IIQPIG•do•
.

MFG. LIST PRICE $6.91

IllPT.

Wcrlr:Jr mo1 t pop.ko r lpnTton •• , ho:.ld• ''"'o
ponh oiiUf'l . _ . •fiO"'Ih lo1 10 lo 11

2 ONLY

$4''RKODS

WILSON X28 PLUS

'

DELUXE 2-IUUEI

STOVE

S/IOITS DEPT.

COLEMAN

#4 U
COLEMAN

'X7' VINYL \

••

BASKETBALL
. HECK'S
REG.
$1.99
$599 .
SI'0/11'$

sass

'

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R. W. B.

BASKETBALL

$8.99

2 GAL.

OLD ANCHOR
LATEX
VIIIYL ACRYLIC

2"X30'
ALUMINitED
CLOTH

DUCT
TAPE

FAVORITES LIKE, TEARS ON MY PIL·
LOW BY tiTTlE ANTHONY 8. iMPERI·
ALS, ONE SUMMER NIGHT BY DAN·
LEERS, DONNA BY RICHIE VAtENS
KANSAS CITY BY w ·ILBERT HARRI:
SON, GOOD GOI.lY M ISS MOLLY BY
LITTLE RICHARD, DUKE Of EARL BY
· GENE (: HANDLER, RUNAWAY BY DEl
SHANNON, RA INDROPS BY DEE

PAINT
~IBi!LY
l;~ lil/ fl

Sur• · Dry is o

ma te ria l
which protects
beoLflifi•i ce·
ment, stucco, concrete, cin der
bloclt, slone or brido; ... inside or
ouhide.

NAIDWARE
DUT.

TAPES .

THE
ORIG INAL
SONGS
RECORDED BY THE
ORIGINAL
ARTISTS
WHO
MADE THfM
, HITS

MFG. ,LIST PRICE $6.91

BIG SELECTION OF STEREO ALBUMS
HUNDREDS TO CHOOSE FROM
FEATURING ARTISTS ROD
STEWART, JERRY . LEE LEWIS ,
PERRY COMO, FRANK SINATRA,
ISLEY BROS ., BEACH BOYS . .

$344
$4.97

$ 3. 99

,
CLARK . HOlD ON I'M COM IN' B'(
SAM &amp; DAVE , RAINDROPS KEEP FAlLING ON MY HEAD BY B. J. THOMAS, . MFG LIST $S.9 &amp;
CRIMSON &amp;CLOVER BY TOMMY
JAMES AND SHONDELL S PSYCHOTIC REACTION BY COUN(FIYE
99

$4

PAINT

HECK'S REG.

J)AS

I 1,.- i!,

...

REC:ORD$

HECK'S REG.

$1.47

HECK'S REG.
$2.99

. HAIDWARI
DIPT.

NAHWAIE
DUT.

---

YOUR CHOIG

�It- Tbe Daily S.ntinrl, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., We&lt;lnesda)•, 111111. 28, 1974

Priority placed on fuel
tremendous impact, and we age, the EEC Is empowere&lt;lto
want to find out how to satisfy establish priorities and . make
thedemandiflbereisnocoal," allocatioos lor up to 30 days.
Sweet continued . " With After that, the legislature
natural gas curtailment, a cold would have to ratify any
winter could cause us ffi()il"e emergency actions.
trouble than last year."
The General Assembly set up
Miners' Strike Poulbie
the EEC earlier this year after
Sen. Micllael J. Malooey , R- a winter-long debate in
Cincinnati. a commission response to the. ''energy crisis''
member, agree&lt;! lh.at a coal of nine months ago.
Aside from Sweet, Maloney
miners' strike would cause "a
great deal of personal hardship and Carney, the n&gt;embe1'8 are
Francis Wright, a represent•·
and dislocation."
"A coal strike/' said Rep. tive of the natural gas industry
Thomas J. Carney~ ,D-Youngs- from Cleveland, and June M.
town, "would have an immedl- . Brown, the public member
ate economic impact on the . .from Toledo.
state and nation, especially
Commissioners agreed to
since coal is a saving energy deal £irs! with the most 1msource."
mediate problems on the
Sweet said he hopes tbe com- horizon and to set up an inmi•sion can hear from elQlOI'ts formation system on supply
on the coal situation at subse- and demand of fuels in Ohio.
quent meetings. He said the
No Bureaucracy
commission wlll be in close
They also agreed with Sweet
contact with the U.S. Bureau of that the EEC should concern
Mines and the Federal Energy itself with policy development
Office to fmd out their plans for and not day.t&lt;Hiay operations.
dealing with a strike situation. " We shouldn 't have any
In the event of a fuel short- operating programs," Sweet

COLUMBUS \ UPI) - Olllo's
fie&lt;lgling Energy Emergency
C&lt;lmmission ( EEC 1 held its
organizational
meeting
Tuesday and agreed to give top
priority to surveying fuel
.sOurces and r,'"eDarine for
the possibility , ~ a nationwide
coal miners' $trike in
November .
The five-member panel, ap-

.X&gt;intcd earlier this month, also
sche&lt;luled a pair of September
meetings to select stair members and hear frOm its 18-member advisory council.
Dr. David C. Sweet, director
of the Department of Economic
and Community Development
and commission chairman,

said the coal situation and
possible curtailment of natural
gas must be dealt with in
contingency plans before cold
weather sets ln.
"There is the possibility of a
nationwide strike by the United
Mine Workers when their contract expires Nov. 12," Sweet
said. "Surveys of reserves
have shown that electrical
utilities may have up to 90
days' worth of coaf, and the
steel _Industry It may be as
little as 13 days.
· "There is the possibility of a

TWO GRAND for a comic
book! That's what Houston
attorney Burrel Rowe paid
for a to-year-old first edition
of a 'jSuperman" comiebook

at an aucUon. Rowe, a
1erious collector of such
trivia, said he buys, sells,
trades and avidly reads his
valuable collection.

·:s::::-:.

~:::::::: :.::!:!~:~::::::~:. =·: -

··~

7 hot air balloonists

}Town challengingl]

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The champion ram and ewe In the
seven entries in the annual hot- Columbia breed, while Walter
air balloon races were ex- Johnson of Alliance took both
peeled to try again today to get trophies in the Oxford breed
off the ground at the Ohio State judging at the Junior Fair.
M
Stale Fair officials reported
Fair, if the weather is more
favorable than Tuesday .
that 180,528 persons patd· their
M
Sept. 19.
The Seven-UP Balloon Race way through the gates .
Cincinnati Bell officials also ·had to be postponed because of Tuesday, despite the threat of
.wlll be at the hearing before inclement weather, Including showers forecast lor the rest of
PUCO commissioners, the gusty Winds and the threat of the week. The fair, which
group that originally approved thunderstorms late Tuesday. started last Thursday, is to end
the ·comapny's plan.
The field includes Navy Lt. on Labor Day alter more than
Phone companies around the JudyNeufferofWooster,oneof two million customers will
nation have been making re- the first two female aviators in have toure&lt;l the grounds.
quests to initiate similar the United Staies ·military
There were 22,445 more fair
charges.
services.
customers Tuesday than the
Shortly after the charge was
Liza Minelli will provide the same day a year earlier. The
started here, Cincinnati Bell headline entertairunent at the . attendance swelled the 1974
officials reported that_ direc- grandstand, giving afternoon lair total to 1,201,638 - 54,262
tory assistance calls had and evening programs. ton- persons ahead of last year's
droppe&lt;l from 90,1100 to 60,000 a certs also will be. given by the total at the same time.
daY.
·. .
AIIOhlo State Falf Boys Band
One of tbe niore notable fair
Before the ~barge, some 370 ' and Youth Choir; .
goers Tuesday was John
telephone operators here did
G~v. John Gilligan and state Glenn, the former astronaut
nothing but handle the 2.25 mil· Agncultur~ Director Gtne who is the Dem9CL'atlc nominee
lion in!ormalioll requests per Abercromb1e are lo be the lor the U. S. Senate.
month .
honor guests at the Ohio
Hewasmos(inlerestedin the
"I'm not arguing about my Poultry ABJ;ociation's brunch. farm attractions and produce
A junior achievement queen and recalled that going to the
having to pay 20 cents or 40
cents," said Wilt. "It's the is to be crowned today. Other state fair had been a big event
princip.le of the.thing - and 1 altracti~ns around the Oh.lo in his childhood.
feel the principle involved is ~xposlllon Center here will · Smail Far..,el'8 Attracted .
discrimination. ·
mclude the 4-H tractor
Glenn said he was glad to see
"I don't know if I'll win or operatol'8contest at the Cooper the Ohio State Fair stlll atnot but at least I'm making Arena, the. judging in the tracted the small, family.&amp;ze
poi~!. Some people were afraid · .Shropshire and Ramboullet farmer who "is in a business
to get involved with me l!e- sheep breeds, .open dass, and that must be retaine&lt;l in Ohio."
cause they figured the · phone the Poland China swme show, In visits to fairs In other states
company would raise their open class.
and Canada, Glenn noted-that
rates. Some are afraid to tanSteve
Brown
of agribusinessmen had
gle ll(ilh a big company or utili- Fredericktown won first place · monopolized them.
ty."
m !be juruor sheep shearmg
Glenn visited with manv of
Witt said !Le has put "a lot of contest, getting a score of 96.86 the farmers and dairymen af
time and a little money" into out of a possible 100. Winner of the lair. He said the high cost or
his campaign. He blushes the senior division ":as David food and increasing energy
slightly when aske&lt;lto explain Scott of Sycamore, With a 96.77 prices were major contributing
how the money was spent.
score.
iactors to inflation. He said he
"Well, I had to make quite a
Breed Jndglng
opposed a total ban on exportfew 1011g distance phone calls to
In the breeding sheep judg- · . ing foodstuffs, because surthe Utllity Commission in ing, Scott Brinker of Gibson· pluses in some parts of this
ColumbU.," he said.
· burg showed the winning countrycouldbeusedtoaidthe

I* Rare Bell policy I

starving abroad.
When a Iarmer said the solution would be to allow unlimit·
ed exports and prohibit imports, Glenn replied, " the
grocerybuying housewife
would not be too happy with
that solution."
The former New Concord
resident said keeping of
adequate food supplies In this
country while allowing exports
"requires a delicate balancing
act." Glenn urge&lt;! tllat any
food stockpiling be done
privately, even if the federal
government has to provide a
subsidy.

Farm Bureau
in discussion of
changing role
COLUMBUS (UP!) - More
than 300 Ohio Farm Bureau
Federation leaders from 86
Ohio counties gather here
Thursday to discuss new
programs and the group's
changing role in a world increasingly dependent on this
country for much of its food.
Representatives of the Ohio
and American Farm Bureau
federations and OhiQ State's
College of Agriculture wlll
speak to the delegates. The
twoday conference will be
highlighted by a lour of the
OSU research farm.
Mars Tour
A round trip to Mars could
be made with a powerful
rocket in 400 days, including
40 days spent in .exploring the
planet.

l

PHEBE SAYS IT'S TIME TO BUY FAIR BEEF
ANGUS -

.

.

Contributors to

S.veral niore contributors
have been listed in the public
lund drive for Anila Levacy,
!our-year-Qld daughter ·of Mr.
and Mrs. William Levacy of
Dexter.
Anita recently underwent
her second open heart
operation at a Louisville, Ky. ,
hospital and has now been
returned to her home where
she is reported in satisfactory
condition. Treatment lor other
maladies will begin alter she
has recuperated from the
second heart operation .
Latest contributors to the
lund are Patricia Shain ,
Racine; Mrs. Art Sylvester,
SyracuSe; Friendly Circle of
Trinity Church, Pomeroy ; the
Union Boilermakers; Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Legar, Mrs . C. H.
Wise, Waverly; Mr. and Mrs.
David Slater, and the International Order of Job's ·
Daughters.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Walton
are heading the fund drive with
Mrs. Walton as chairperson.
Contributions may be left at
the New York Clothing House
or nnaile&lt;l to P. 0 . Box 68S in
Pomeroy. Checks should ·be
made payable to the Anita
Levacy fund .

TALKS DELAYED
WASHINGTON (UPI]-A·
conllnulng dispute In llle
coaUlelds of eastern Kentucky will delay the start of
contract negotiations be·
tween the United Mine
Workers of America (UMWI
and the Bituminous Coal
Operators Association untfi
next week.
A spokesD)an for UMW
President Arnold MU!er said
Tuesday.· talks on a new
thre.,.year contract would be
delayed from Friday until
next week because of the
sltuallon at the Brookside
Mine near Harl8n, Ky.

MR. HOSCHAR DIES
MASON, W. Va . - John
Hoschar , Mason , died this
morning at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Funeral
arrangements will be · announced by the Foglesong
FWieral Home.

WIENER ROAST SET
The ·Syracuse-Minersville
Sports Boosters will hold a
wiener roast at the Kyger
Creek Picnic Area Thursday
evening, for all boys and girls
who took part in the baseball
and softball program this
swnmer. Those who plan to
attend are asked to meet at the
Syracuse Ball Park at 5:30 for
DIVORCE GRANTED
transportation, In case of rain
Bonnie LeeNeville, 102 Park the event Will be postponed
St., Mi(Jdleport; from .Sterlln~ until a later date.
Gorden Neville, 30 Chillicothe
Rd., Gallipolis, on the grounds
of mental cruelty.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admissions
Jennie
Newmyer, Wilkesville ; Betty
Triplett, Racine; Shirley ·
Hazelton, Salineville, Ohio ;·
Clifford Icenhower, Pomeroy ;
Louise Myers, Pomeroy;
Roger Smith, Pomeroy; Terri
Rou~h, Pomer.
Discharges
Kevin
Mowery, James King, Sherly
I.Jttle, Zellah Lawson, Karen
Tillis, Kathryn Lares, Richard
Blevins, Mary. Nichols.

ART AVAILABLE
All persons entering the frog
art contest during the Big Bend
Regatta who wish their
paintings bac~, are requested
to pick them up at the Pomeroy
Chamber · of Comnierce office
on Second St., ground floor of
the C&lt;JIIl'thouse, no later than
. Sept. 6,

ASK TOWED
Paul Lynn Rowe, 18., Racine,
and. Arlene Kay. Sellers, 16,

ONCE A YEAR IT'S AVAILABLE SO TAKE ADVANTAGE

EVANGELIST · 0. G. McKINNEY

'

MAPLEWOOD LAKE
..

ABOVE SYRACUSE 0.

~~~~~~---········-~--~~~. . .99

4

DIXIE 9"

PAPER
. · 1oo
PLATES................~~~~........
·&amp;
·

ROUND STEAK

9¢

~·

-

Right Reserved to· limit Quantit1es
r~

We' Glad~ Accept Fed. Food S~mps

29 :sept 4

GROUND

Monday Thru Friday
9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9
.CLOSED SUNDAYS

CHUCK

•129
LB.

ICE .CREAM .............~.~~.~; ....~.~~~ ...79$ PEARS........................................~~....10$
· 24 Olt

VAUEY IW1

.'
,.
"'

ALL STEAKS AVAILABLE ORDER SOME SPECIALLY QJT.
CAll BOB POOLER 949-3342

a..;·CO;:.:Tl:.:.:AG~E.::CH=E=ES=.E..::
....·:::
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'

'

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A cooperative agreement aimed at speeding development or technology !or converting coal !rom thin, eastern
seams to gas without inlning has been completed by the
Interior Department's Bureau
or Mines, the . Consolidation
Coal Co. (Consol), and (;onsol's
parent, the Continental Oil Co.,
the Department announced
today.
The process to be tested is
· referred to as "In situ" coal
gasification. The goal is
technology that changes
abundant easiern
coal "
resources into a gas to be used
in gener~ting electricity . .Such
technology wlll help the nation
reach its goal of energy selfsufficiency. Moreover, success
In underground gasification .
will allow utilization of coal in
thin seams, which usually are
more difficult and hazardous to
mine.

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
"Tht! Store With A Heart
You, WE LIKE"

Au~

l

New Medicaid rules to be protested .~
be.:

COLUMBUS (UP!)
trustees have been inundated · their rate of payment will
William L. Dunn, M;irion, with phone calls from nursing Rates are being changed with- :
president of the Ohio Nursing homes throughout Ohio that out notice or explanation.
Home Association, said today are on the verge of bankruptcy
" We have calle&lt;l this emerhundreds of Ohio nursing home because
of
inadequate gency meeting to proviile what ·
administrators and owners payment for patient care and limited information we have to
would meet here Thursday the uncertainty of the Medicaid all the 1,100 nursing homes In
afternoon to protest new state program as it is administered the state, to seek Information
Medicaid reg ulations and in Ohio," Dunn said.
from them on the seriousneas
rates.
"Nursing homes do not know of the crisis and develop a
"Our offi ce and board of from month to month what course of .acUon."

3-Leg Oh w/ Bteks

l-Brea•t Qtrs.
w/ Btch
3-Pkgt.

I

-

\h.

Sll' .
.

. ........~199
V~Steak ........ ~298

BONELESS ... NO WASTE ·

- ~. Steak ..
BONELESS BEEF STRIP OR

LEAN, MEATY

_F~UMkSp~ ...

.3~:~99~

SUPERIOR

AefKtecdF~.

FRESH, CRISP.

G'WeK Cabhtlge . . .. J2e
yemnu 0Him0 3.::,69e

•••••

.. ~ .. 2::.
YOUR GRILL!

U.S. ,::I ALL PURPOSE

natural
travel
through
openings in the coal seam to
other holes through which it
wlll rise to the surface, where It
will be collected.
According to the Bureau, the
experiementisexpected to cost
$10 million over the approximately five years of the
project. However, it added; no
money will be exchanged in the
performance of the agreement.
Each party to the agreement
will be responsible lor specific
lasl\s and will asswne the costs
of accomplishing them. The
project will be conducted in
five phases, with the .firsl three
devoted to preparation, the
fourth to the actual gasification
experiment, and the fifth to
technical, environmental; and
social evaluation.
Experiments in underground
gasification of coal have been
carried ·on at various tirttes
during the past 100 years.
While these efforts have shown
the concept to be technically
feasible, questions remain
concerning techniques· for
controlting· the burning zone,
environmental safety,'·and the
point where in situ gasification
will be ec911omicall)r viable,
the Bureau said.

Site of the gasification tests
will be the Grants District of
Wetzel County, West Virginia,
where Consol holda rights to a
portion of the Pittsburgh coal
seam. This is the second
. agreement (or underground
gasification experiments
entered into by the Bureau
recently. Under an agreement
with the Rocky Mountain
Energy Co. and Union Pacific
Corp,, the Bureau has been World Football League Stand·
lngs·
conducting experiments In By United Pren International
E•Jt
gasifying a thick seam of
pet. pt
pa
western coal at Hanna, Flor ida 6w l I 0t .857
137 85
NewYrk 5 '2 0 . 71~
167 111
Wyoming, since· late 1972.
Phila
3 A 0 ,429
176 121
The new project is designed J~~:nvl
3 5 0 .375
157 147
Central
to asseos the potential value of
·
w· t t · pet .. pf pi
coal, gasification In thin, Brmnghm
"
1 0 0 1.000 204 123
eastern coalbeds, the Bureau
Chi cago 6 1 o .857 212 171
osld. It Involves \he drilling of Meniph ls 5 2 0 .71.4 2'20 157
parallel holes from the surface
0 .000 115 2Q9
Into llle coalbed. Once the coal · Detroit 0 1W•st
W I t pet . pt
pi
Is encountered, directional
S Calif
Jl 3 o .511 139 132
drilling, a technique developed Hou s10f\ 2 A 1 .JJJ 53 111
for drilling oil wells, wUl be Hawallns I 7 0 .125 133 249
Portland 0 6 1 .000 83 167
tiled to "bend" the hole until it
Sundey•s Ruulh
Jacksonville u Hawaiians a
travels diagonally through the
(Ontvgeme scheduled)
bod. Heat tor converUng the
WednesdiY 'S Games
Flortlend at Southern Call ooal to gao will come from
Ia
;ll'nlng some of the coal. torn
Oetrol1 If PhliiOtJphla
MemphiS at Florida
::mtbWIUon wlll be sustained
New York at HOu$ton
'rf adding air under poaltive
(Only games schedUled)
Thursday'• Otmt
lhlllll'e through some or the
Birmingham at Ch ic ago
IOiea. The gas produced will
(Onlv geme actieduled)

or Gibleh

3-Wings
].Neeh

'D~A~ ·

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CALIFORNIA VINE RIPE

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WESTERN 'PtrtniD 'PIJ••••• •
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carton

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of the National Weather Ser- situatloo•. The new oyot.em,
vice. ''1lle longer we have the would be expected w .rotluceo
warning out in advance the warning delays.
more chance there is for people
The system also is expected'
to hear it." ,
to help in other typeo or rut:
He cite&lt;! the devastating breaking emergencies I1ICh u
tornado outbreak of April 3and fiash floods. During tropical
4 when 90 twisters raged storm Agnes, when up to 19
through 13 states, killing more inches of rain inundated 1111:
than 300 people . Ordinary eight.,.tate region in two daYJI,;
communications channels Communications bottlenecks•
often become clogged in such often delaye&lt;l warnings, once:
[or more than an hour.
:

has

Agreement made
to develop coal

RaCine ~

PRINGLE

CHAROLAIS AND

One of the adOpte&lt;l rules requires that contributions made
bY a candidate to his own campaign must be reported by his
campaign committee as
contributions received. Contributions made by his camCHARLESTON, W. Va .
paign committee to a political (UP[) - Another suit
been
party, conunittee or another flied against the Pittston Co. of
committee should be reported New York, owner of a sl~g dam
as expenditures on the ":hich burst, fioode4 a valley,
provided form.
killed 125 persons and left 4,000
Brown said · he lacked homeless two years ago.
authority to change provisions
The $200,000 suit, filed on bepermitting committee to half of a 2G-year-o1d woman for
contribute to other com- . physical and mental injuries
.mittees, as advocate&lt;! at the suffered in the disaster, says
bearing.
Pittston's ability to pay must
"Until the law is amended, be considered.
such contributions are permitThe company last month
ted because the new law speci- paid a $13.5 million settlement
fically includes 'tramfer of to more than 600 survivors of
funds' in the definition of the disaster . Other suits
contribution and requires pending against Pittston inevery committee which 'made clude two filed by the State of
or received a contribution or West Virginia .
made an expenditure' to
The latest suit, file&lt;! Monday
report," ·Brown sa.d.
in U. S. District Court, says.
"II further requires that the "To effectively punish and de·
report must include a ter Pittston the effect on Pittsstatement of expenditures and ton · m.ust be material in
a ststement of contributions relation to its consolidated
made or received. For the fmancial position.''
secretary of state to attempt to
Pitiston owns the Buffalo
repeal the provisions that Mining Co. which operate&lt;! the
permit committees to make dam in Logan County.

NEW CROP RED

AUGUST 26 TtiRU SEPT. 2

RT. 124

approachmg tornado. Often,
the twister will come and go
bofore a warning job is com.
plctL'&lt;l .
With the hew system the
. time from the rirst obser;ation
orthe danger to the issuance of
the warning will be cut to two
or three minutes.
" Minutes matter. and even
seconds maLter," .said Dr .
George F . Cressman, director

Another suit
filed in case
of dam hurst

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged, Aug. 27)
William Andrews, Charles
Bailey, Margaret Been, Helen
Bwnp, Catherine Clevinger,
Margaret Downard , · Paul
Edleman, Richard Freeman,
Ingrid Fugate, Alice Harris,
Elmon H~tchin so n, Mark ..
Kouns, Estel Lavender, Loren
Layne, Ada Leech, George
Leeds, Grace McCoy, Bessie
Merritt, Judy Moore, Buddy
Mullins, Jerry Neal, Barbara
Nelson, Barbara Neutzling,
Victor Niday, Kathy Osborne,
Donald Potts, David Shaffer,
I.Jnda Shotts, Sherry Tatman,
Johnatllari Tucker, Margaret
Turley, Betty Waison.
· (Births)
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Burgess,
a son, Henderson, W. Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Andrew Holzapfel, a
daughter, Wellston ; Mr. and
Mrs. Rankin McDaniels, a
daughter, Hartford, W. Va.

AT

telf'vision sc.:n•en.os thougi1 you ('O Uid remember
ror ·furl"' .itslt•rs lo study . The lOO times as muCh as you do
c:ompulers wlll be program- now. think 10 1im(.'N as fast and
lll(•d 10 seleet from data t arry un separate r on·
now i n~ ;i&lt;·rus.'i the nalion only vcrsa t ions with a whole
l he mforrnaLion required by a roumruli
of
peo ple
p&lt;Jrticu!ar station .
simultaneously...
·nw system is called Ali'OS
For the general public, . the
fur Automation of Field Opera- system is expected Lo enable
tluns.und Servit'CS . 'l'w~ e.xperi .. we;.~thermen to iss ue better
mental wtlts are being tested forc('t~ sts sooner because t.hey
&lt;H
weather
service will be free of a lot of paperheadquarters here and in- wurk and will have nmre time
stallation will be~in nexl year lQ devote to the weather. The
" t fore cast ortices in t l)lnputer also wiU constantly
Ph itadelphia , Pillsburgh, monitor in coming weather
Charleston, W.Va ., Min - observations and alert a
net.Jpoli s, Minn ., and Fort forecast with a beeping alarm
Worth, Tex. The whole system and flashing light if the new
is c•pectcd to be completed by reports disagree with the
1900.
current forecast.
" AFOS will do for the
The- most dramatic imWec.:tther Service what a mar- provements, however, will
velous new central nervous t'Ome with tornado and nash
system might do for a human flood warnings. It now takes at
being," said Ri chard E. Hall- least five to 10 mlirutes and
gren, deputy director or the often longer for a weather
Weather Servjce. "It will be as station to issue a warning of an
st't 'nn&lt;ls un

ne~ry . "

OLD FASHION CAMP MEETING

.

Prices Effective

Uy AI. ROSSITER JR.
UP! Scleure Editor
WASHING'l'ON t UP I) - Tho
National Weather S.rvice hus
started testing H computerized
weather information system
expected lo SPl't.-d storm w::.rn ~
ings nnd give for(..ocasters more
time to ev~tiuatc changJn J;
condilions.
When
completed·,
the
autol'nated,$40 million network
will link T/5 weather offkes
across the nation and elimin~te
the maze of teleprinter
messages and facsimile maps
that
often
bog
down
weathermen when they are
trying to update forecasts .
TI1e system is built around a
console of five televis ion
screens and a small computer
that will bC installed in each
for ecast office . Weather maps,
satellite photos and reports
from field stations will be
displayed in a matter of

COLUMBUS (UP!) - S.cre- contributions to other comtary of Slate Ted W. Brown mittees by transferring funds
announced Tuesday the adop- would be usurpallon of
tion or 22 rules governing cam- legislative function and would
paign expense reporting, in- grossly exceed the ruie'ITIBking
cluding several revised since authority of the secretary of
Thursday's public hearing on state,"
the proposals.
Brown's rules also :
Brown said "some of tbe pro- - Require that candidates
posetl amendments to the draft report expenditures to pay
rules discussed durin~ the pub- debts or repay loans from prelic hearing could not be adop- vious campaigns.
ted.' ' because they exceeded his , - Permit expenditures of $25
rulemaking authority under or less without consent of the
Ohio law.
candidate, without counting
" Early in the !lOth General them against his spending
Assembly, we submitte&lt;l draft limit.
legislatioo lor a strong cam- Require accounting or expaign expense reporting law," · penditures during _last May's
Brown said.
primary campaign even
"By the time the final ver- though the new law was not
sion was passed , several effective until July.
changes had been incorporated
- Require spearate identtliwhich necessitated this rule cation of contributions !rom
making. Had our proposed bill employes in any government
become law , these sup· agency under the candidate's
plementary rules would not be direct supervision and control.

HOSPITAL NEWS

·AND EAT PRIME BEEF

, .

Sc"leure Tudi:ly

campalgners

COURT ROOM DECORUM may be upset by these waitresses' outlits but a Philadelphia
magistrate wanted the girls to testify in cootwne in a sex.&lt;Jiscriminatlon suit. Harry Katz, a
Philadelphia nightclub owner (at left) advertised lor "beautiful girls only" to serve as
waitre$5es but tbe Hwnan Relations Committee protested against his advertisement. He was
fine&lt;! $300 and ordered to advertise !or " beauttlul women and men.!'

•

197~

Computers will assist in weather prediction

•

Levacy fund

will t~y again .today

::~

By RICK VAN SANT
FAIRFIELD, Ohio (UP!) 'Bring on Ma Bell."
Feeling like a lighter who
l8s just been given a crack at
he champion, a resident of this
mall souiliwestern Ohio com·
nunity has been given the le·
fal right to challenge a unique
10licy of the Cincinnati Bell
felephone Co.
·
James Howard Witt, a
·eporter !or the. town's twice- .
, •eekly newspaper - but
a king , action as a private
~tizen Is disputing Cin'innati .Bell's policy Of
!barging lor directory asslsance calls.
·
·
A half-year alter gathering ·
i16 signatures on a petition and
Wng a request for a public
iearing before the Public Utijtles Commission of Ohio
:PUCOJ Witt today has word
lle hearing Is scheduled for
;. ot. 19 in Columbos. ·
Last March, Cincinnati Bell
lOcame the first" phone com·
:18ny·in the nation to charge for
Jrector asSistance - "in:ol'Jll8tion" - calls.
Customrers are allowed
;hree free calls a month, bot
hen are charge&lt;! 20 cents for
1ddilional information
requests within the large
touUlwestern Ohio 11 513" area
::ode.
However, customers of other
phone companies inthe area
!X)de are not charged for such
requests. Witt alleges this is
discrimination and says it will ·
be the b&amp;sis of his .testimony

Newest rules
adopted for

are announced

~--:::x:::::::::~~::::::::::::=:w.~~~-::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::;;;.

,,

said. "We doo 'I want to buUd
another bureaucracy."
To oversee operations, the
commission agree&lt;! to hire an
executive secretary at $25,1100
to J32,1100 a year. Sweet volunteered the services of a deputy
of his department, Dr.
Seymour Goldatone, who also
is chairman of the govern()[''S
energy task force-:-But other commissioners
wanted to hear from more
applicants at \he next meeting
S.pt . 9. Also expected to be
hired al the next meeting are
chiefs of planning, information, legal matters and
liaison with other government
agencies at up to $30,000 a year.
At Maloney's suggestion, the
EEC wiU hear at its next meeting from the Public Utilities
Commission , the energy task
force and other agencies about
what they are doing in the field
of energy .
The Energy Advisory
Council is to report to the
commission at a Sept. Tl
meeting.

•

17 - The Daily S.nllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy
0 w~ ·"·
·
• ., lt'\lrleMilly , Au~ . 23.

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�It- Tbe Daily S.ntinrl, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., We&lt;lnesda)•, 111111. 28, 1974

Priority placed on fuel
tremendous impact, and we age, the EEC Is empowere&lt;lto
want to find out how to satisfy establish priorities and . make
thedemandiflbereisnocoal," allocatioos lor up to 30 days.
Sweet continued . " With After that, the legislature
natural gas curtailment, a cold would have to ratify any
winter could cause us ffi()il"e emergency actions.
trouble than last year."
The General Assembly set up
Miners' Strike Poulbie
the EEC earlier this year after
Sen. Micllael J. Malooey , R- a winter-long debate in
Cincinnati. a commission response to the. ''energy crisis''
member, agree&lt;! lh.at a coal of nine months ago.
Aside from Sweet, Maloney
miners' strike would cause "a
great deal of personal hardship and Carney, the n&gt;embe1'8 are
Francis Wright, a represent•·
and dislocation."
"A coal strike/' said Rep. tive of the natural gas industry
Thomas J. Carney~ ,D-Youngs- from Cleveland, and June M.
town, "would have an immedl- . Brown, the public member
ate economic impact on the . .from Toledo.
state and nation, especially
Commissioners agreed to
since coal is a saving energy deal £irs! with the most 1msource."
mediate problems on the
Sweet said he hopes tbe com- horizon and to set up an inmi•sion can hear from elQlOI'ts formation system on supply
on the coal situation at subse- and demand of fuels in Ohio.
quent meetings. He said the
No Bureaucracy
commission wlll be in close
They also agreed with Sweet
contact with the U.S. Bureau of that the EEC should concern
Mines and the Federal Energy itself with policy development
Office to fmd out their plans for and not day.t&lt;Hiay operations.
dealing with a strike situation. " We shouldn 't have any
In the event of a fuel short- operating programs," Sweet

COLUMBUS \ UPI) - Olllo's
fie&lt;lgling Energy Emergency
C&lt;lmmission ( EEC 1 held its
organizational
meeting
Tuesday and agreed to give top
priority to surveying fuel
.sOurces and r,'"eDarine for
the possibility , ~ a nationwide
coal miners' $trike in
November .
The five-member panel, ap-

.X&gt;intcd earlier this month, also
sche&lt;luled a pair of September
meetings to select stair members and hear frOm its 18-member advisory council.
Dr. David C. Sweet, director
of the Department of Economic
and Community Development
and commission chairman,

said the coal situation and
possible curtailment of natural
gas must be dealt with in
contingency plans before cold
weather sets ln.
"There is the possibility of a
nationwide strike by the United
Mine Workers when their contract expires Nov. 12," Sweet
said. "Surveys of reserves
have shown that electrical
utilities may have up to 90
days' worth of coaf, and the
steel _Industry It may be as
little as 13 days.
· "There is the possibility of a

TWO GRAND for a comic
book! That's what Houston
attorney Burrel Rowe paid
for a to-year-old first edition
of a 'jSuperman" comiebook

at an aucUon. Rowe, a
1erious collector of such
trivia, said he buys, sells,
trades and avidly reads his
valuable collection.

·:s::::-:.

~:::::::: :.::!:!~:~::::::~:. =·: -

··~

7 hot air balloonists

}Town challengingl]

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The champion ram and ewe In the
seven entries in the annual hot- Columbia breed, while Walter
air balloon races were ex- Johnson of Alliance took both
peeled to try again today to get trophies in the Oxford breed
off the ground at the Ohio State judging at the Junior Fair.
M
Stale Fair officials reported
Fair, if the weather is more
favorable than Tuesday .
that 180,528 persons patd· their
M
Sept. 19.
The Seven-UP Balloon Race way through the gates .
Cincinnati Bell officials also ·had to be postponed because of Tuesday, despite the threat of
.wlll be at the hearing before inclement weather, Including showers forecast lor the rest of
PUCO commissioners, the gusty Winds and the threat of the week. The fair, which
group that originally approved thunderstorms late Tuesday. started last Thursday, is to end
the ·comapny's plan.
The field includes Navy Lt. on Labor Day alter more than
Phone companies around the JudyNeufferofWooster,oneof two million customers will
nation have been making re- the first two female aviators in have toure&lt;l the grounds.
quests to initiate similar the United Staies ·military
There were 22,445 more fair
charges.
services.
customers Tuesday than the
Shortly after the charge was
Liza Minelli will provide the same day a year earlier. The
started here, Cincinnati Bell headline entertairunent at the . attendance swelled the 1974
officials reported that_ direc- grandstand, giving afternoon lair total to 1,201,638 - 54,262
tory assistance calls had and evening programs. ton- persons ahead of last year's
droppe&lt;l from 90,1100 to 60,000 a certs also will be. given by the total at the same time.
daY.
·. .
AIIOhlo State Falf Boys Band
One of tbe niore notable fair
Before the ~barge, some 370 ' and Youth Choir; .
goers Tuesday was John
telephone operators here did
G~v. John Gilligan and state Glenn, the former astronaut
nothing but handle the 2.25 mil· Agncultur~ Director Gtne who is the Dem9CL'atlc nominee
lion in!ormalioll requests per Abercromb1e are lo be the lor the U. S. Senate.
month .
honor guests at the Ohio
Hewasmos(inlerestedin the
"I'm not arguing about my Poultry ABJ;ociation's brunch. farm attractions and produce
A junior achievement queen and recalled that going to the
having to pay 20 cents or 40
cents," said Wilt. "It's the is to be crowned today. Other state fair had been a big event
princip.le of the.thing - and 1 altracti~ns around the Oh.lo in his childhood.
feel the principle involved is ~xposlllon Center here will · Smail Far..,el'8 Attracted .
discrimination. ·
mclude the 4-H tractor
Glenn said he was glad to see
"I don't know if I'll win or operatol'8contest at the Cooper the Ohio State Fair stlll atnot but at least I'm making Arena, the. judging in the tracted the small, family.&amp;ze
poi~!. Some people were afraid · .Shropshire and Ramboullet farmer who "is in a business
to get involved with me l!e- sheep breeds, .open dass, and that must be retaine&lt;l in Ohio."
cause they figured the · phone the Poland China swme show, In visits to fairs In other states
company would raise their open class.
and Canada, Glenn noted-that
rates. Some are afraid to tanSteve
Brown
of agribusinessmen had
gle ll(ilh a big company or utili- Fredericktown won first place · monopolized them.
ty."
m !be juruor sheep shearmg
Glenn visited with manv of
Witt said !Le has put "a lot of contest, getting a score of 96.86 the farmers and dairymen af
time and a little money" into out of a possible 100. Winner of the lair. He said the high cost or
his campaign. He blushes the senior division ":as David food and increasing energy
slightly when aske&lt;lto explain Scott of Sycamore, With a 96.77 prices were major contributing
how the money was spent.
score.
iactors to inflation. He said he
"Well, I had to make quite a
Breed Jndglng
opposed a total ban on exportfew 1011g distance phone calls to
In the breeding sheep judg- · . ing foodstuffs, because surthe Utllity Commission in ing, Scott Brinker of Gibson· pluses in some parts of this
ColumbU.," he said.
· burg showed the winning countrycouldbeusedtoaidthe

I* Rare Bell policy I

starving abroad.
When a Iarmer said the solution would be to allow unlimit·
ed exports and prohibit imports, Glenn replied, " the
grocerybuying housewife
would not be too happy with
that solution."
The former New Concord
resident said keeping of
adequate food supplies In this
country while allowing exports
"requires a delicate balancing
act." Glenn urge&lt;! tllat any
food stockpiling be done
privately, even if the federal
government has to provide a
subsidy.

Farm Bureau
in discussion of
changing role
COLUMBUS (UP!) - More
than 300 Ohio Farm Bureau
Federation leaders from 86
Ohio counties gather here
Thursday to discuss new
programs and the group's
changing role in a world increasingly dependent on this
country for much of its food.
Representatives of the Ohio
and American Farm Bureau
federations and OhiQ State's
College of Agriculture wlll
speak to the delegates. The
twoday conference will be
highlighted by a lour of the
OSU research farm.
Mars Tour
A round trip to Mars could
be made with a powerful
rocket in 400 days, including
40 days spent in .exploring the
planet.

l

PHEBE SAYS IT'S TIME TO BUY FAIR BEEF
ANGUS -

.

.

Contributors to

S.veral niore contributors
have been listed in the public
lund drive for Anila Levacy,
!our-year-Qld daughter ·of Mr.
and Mrs. William Levacy of
Dexter.
Anita recently underwent
her second open heart
operation at a Louisville, Ky. ,
hospital and has now been
returned to her home where
she is reported in satisfactory
condition. Treatment lor other
maladies will begin alter she
has recuperated from the
second heart operation .
Latest contributors to the
lund are Patricia Shain ,
Racine; Mrs. Art Sylvester,
SyracuSe; Friendly Circle of
Trinity Church, Pomeroy ; the
Union Boilermakers; Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Legar, Mrs . C. H.
Wise, Waverly; Mr. and Mrs.
David Slater, and the International Order of Job's ·
Daughters.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Walton
are heading the fund drive with
Mrs. Walton as chairperson.
Contributions may be left at
the New York Clothing House
or nnaile&lt;l to P. 0 . Box 68S in
Pomeroy. Checks should ·be
made payable to the Anita
Levacy fund .

TALKS DELAYED
WASHINGTON (UPI]-A·
conllnulng dispute In llle
coaUlelds of eastern Kentucky will delay the start of
contract negotiations be·
tween the United Mine
Workers of America (UMWI
and the Bituminous Coal
Operators Association untfi
next week.
A spokesD)an for UMW
President Arnold MU!er said
Tuesday.· talks on a new
thre.,.year contract would be
delayed from Friday until
next week because of the
sltuallon at the Brookside
Mine near Harl8n, Ky.

MR. HOSCHAR DIES
MASON, W. Va . - John
Hoschar , Mason , died this
morning at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Funeral
arrangements will be · announced by the Foglesong
FWieral Home.

WIENER ROAST SET
The ·Syracuse-Minersville
Sports Boosters will hold a
wiener roast at the Kyger
Creek Picnic Area Thursday
evening, for all boys and girls
who took part in the baseball
and softball program this
swnmer. Those who plan to
attend are asked to meet at the
Syracuse Ball Park at 5:30 for
DIVORCE GRANTED
transportation, In case of rain
Bonnie LeeNeville, 102 Park the event Will be postponed
St., Mi(Jdleport; from .Sterlln~ until a later date.
Gorden Neville, 30 Chillicothe
Rd., Gallipolis, on the grounds
of mental cruelty.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admissions
Jennie
Newmyer, Wilkesville ; Betty
Triplett, Racine; Shirley ·
Hazelton, Salineville, Ohio ;·
Clifford Icenhower, Pomeroy ;
Louise Myers, Pomeroy;
Roger Smith, Pomeroy; Terri
Rou~h, Pomer.
Discharges
Kevin
Mowery, James King, Sherly
I.Jttle, Zellah Lawson, Karen
Tillis, Kathryn Lares, Richard
Blevins, Mary. Nichols.

ART AVAILABLE
All persons entering the frog
art contest during the Big Bend
Regatta who wish their
paintings bac~, are requested
to pick them up at the Pomeroy
Chamber · of Comnierce office
on Second St., ground floor of
the C&lt;JIIl'thouse, no later than
. Sept. 6,

ASK TOWED
Paul Lynn Rowe, 18., Racine,
and. Arlene Kay. Sellers, 16,

ONCE A YEAR IT'S AVAILABLE SO TAKE ADVANTAGE

EVANGELIST · 0. G. McKINNEY

'

MAPLEWOOD LAKE
..

ABOVE SYRACUSE 0.

~~~~~~---········-~--~~~. . .99

4

DIXIE 9"

PAPER
. · 1oo
PLATES................~~~~........
·&amp;
·

ROUND STEAK

9¢

~·

-

Right Reserved to· limit Quantit1es
r~

We' Glad~ Accept Fed. Food S~mps

29 :sept 4

GROUND

Monday Thru Friday
9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9
.CLOSED SUNDAYS

CHUCK

•129
LB.

ICE .CREAM .............~.~~.~; ....~.~~~ ...79$ PEARS........................................~~....10$
· 24 Olt

VAUEY IW1

.'
,.
"'

ALL STEAKS AVAILABLE ORDER SOME SPECIALLY QJT.
CAll BOB POOLER 949-3342

a..;·CO;:.:Tl:.:.:AG~E.::CH=E=ES=.E..::
....·:::
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A cooperative agreement aimed at speeding development or technology !or converting coal !rom thin, eastern
seams to gas without inlning has been completed by the
Interior Department's Bureau
or Mines, the . Consolidation
Coal Co. (Consol), and (;onsol's
parent, the Continental Oil Co.,
the Department announced
today.
The process to be tested is
· referred to as "In situ" coal
gasification. The goal is
technology that changes
abundant easiern
coal "
resources into a gas to be used
in gener~ting electricity . .Such
technology wlll help the nation
reach its goal of energy selfsufficiency. Moreover, success
In underground gasification .
will allow utilization of coal in
thin seams, which usually are
more difficult and hazardous to
mine.

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
"Tht! Store With A Heart
You, WE LIKE"

Au~

l

New Medicaid rules to be protested .~
be.:

COLUMBUS (UP!)
trustees have been inundated · their rate of payment will
William L. Dunn, M;irion, with phone calls from nursing Rates are being changed with- :
president of the Ohio Nursing homes throughout Ohio that out notice or explanation.
Home Association, said today are on the verge of bankruptcy
" We have calle&lt;l this emerhundreds of Ohio nursing home because
of
inadequate gency meeting to proviile what ·
administrators and owners payment for patient care and limited information we have to
would meet here Thursday the uncertainty of the Medicaid all the 1,100 nursing homes In
afternoon to protest new state program as it is administered the state, to seek Information
Medicaid reg ulations and in Ohio," Dunn said.
from them on the seriousneas
rates.
"Nursing homes do not know of the crisis and develop a
"Our offi ce and board of from month to month what course of .acUon."

3-Leg Oh w/ Bteks

l-Brea•t Qtrs.
w/ Btch
3-Pkgt.

I

-

\h.

Sll' .
.

. ........~199
V~Steak ........ ~298

BONELESS ... NO WASTE ·

- ~. Steak ..
BONELESS BEEF STRIP OR

LEAN, MEATY

_F~UMkSp~ ...

.3~:~99~

SUPERIOR

AefKtecdF~.

FRESH, CRISP.

G'WeK Cabhtlge . . .. J2e
yemnu 0Him0 3.::,69e

•••••

.. ~ .. 2::.
YOUR GRILL!

U.S. ,::I ALL PURPOSE

natural
travel
through
openings in the coal seam to
other holes through which it
wlll rise to the surface, where It
will be collected.
According to the Bureau, the
experiementisexpected to cost
$10 million over the approximately five years of the
project. However, it added; no
money will be exchanged in the
performance of the agreement.
Each party to the agreement
will be responsible lor specific
lasl\s and will asswne the costs
of accomplishing them. The
project will be conducted in
five phases, with the .firsl three
devoted to preparation, the
fourth to the actual gasification
experiment, and the fifth to
technical, environmental; and
social evaluation.
Experiments in underground
gasification of coal have been
carried ·on at various tirttes
during the past 100 years.
While these efforts have shown
the concept to be technically
feasible, questions remain
concerning techniques· for
controlting· the burning zone,
environmental safety,'·and the
point where in situ gasification
will be ec911omicall)r viable,
the Bureau said.

Site of the gasification tests
will be the Grants District of
Wetzel County, West Virginia,
where Consol holda rights to a
portion of the Pittsburgh coal
seam. This is the second
. agreement (or underground
gasification experiments
entered into by the Bureau
recently. Under an agreement
with the Rocky Mountain
Energy Co. and Union Pacific
Corp,, the Bureau has been World Football League Stand·
lngs·
conducting experiments In By United Pren International
E•Jt
gasifying a thick seam of
pet. pt
pa
western coal at Hanna, Flor ida 6w l I 0t .857
137 85
NewYrk 5 '2 0 . 71~
167 111
Wyoming, since· late 1972.
Phila
3 A 0 ,429
176 121
The new project is designed J~~:nvl
3 5 0 .375
157 147
Central
to asseos the potential value of
·
w· t t · pet .. pf pi
coal, gasification In thin, Brmnghm
"
1 0 0 1.000 204 123
eastern coalbeds, the Bureau
Chi cago 6 1 o .857 212 171
osld. It Involves \he drilling of Meniph ls 5 2 0 .71.4 2'20 157
parallel holes from the surface
0 .000 115 2Q9
Into llle coalbed. Once the coal · Detroit 0 1W•st
W I t pet . pt
pi
Is encountered, directional
S Calif
Jl 3 o .511 139 132
drilling, a technique developed Hou s10f\ 2 A 1 .JJJ 53 111
for drilling oil wells, wUl be Hawallns I 7 0 .125 133 249
Portland 0 6 1 .000 83 167
tiled to "bend" the hole until it
Sundey•s Ruulh
Jacksonville u Hawaiians a
travels diagonally through the
(Ontvgeme scheduled)
bod. Heat tor converUng the
WednesdiY 'S Games
Flortlend at Southern Call ooal to gao will come from
Ia
;ll'nlng some of the coal. torn
Oetrol1 If PhliiOtJphla
MemphiS at Florida
::mtbWIUon wlll be sustained
New York at HOu$ton
'rf adding air under poaltive
(Only games schedUled)
Thursday'• Otmt
lhlllll'e through some or the
Birmingham at Ch ic ago
IOiea. The gas produced will
(Onlv geme actieduled)

or Gibleh

3-Wings
].Neeh

'D~A~ ·

7-UP &amp; DIET POP

8 16 OL BOffiES
'1 09 PER CARTON

CALIFORNIA VINE RIPE

Htufe!j- ... '':·.~~·99e
F~&amp;uce 'P~

PLUS

WESTERN 'PtrtniD 'PIJ••••• •
PURPLE

UQtW

'""""'

'Balllleft 'P elm
3lbs.

$100

\ '01 U,\ 11 I

l'iu• n.l. ; ....,1 llolol, .. ,. , •r l"'

· A&amp;P HOMOGENIZED FRESH 20fo

25

gallon
carton

I
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$113

I

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Eight O'Clock Coffee
\~',~

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'''

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'-Gpod t~ru S. t., Aug . l ht At A&amp;P WEO. ~
~---~- LIM1T ONI COU,ON • • • ,t..:.f:

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1Eight O'Clock Coffee

Touch

Final
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\Good thru Sat., Au9. Jht At AlP WEO . •
-. • • • LIMIT ONI COUttON. • .,L.!.J
. . . . • LIMIT ONI COU,ON • • • ,[D'

.

Tide Detergent

99'

'"' 3 " $?99

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WIT~ THIS
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THIS
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TH IS
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WITH THIS
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COUPON
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COUPON
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COU PON
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~w•• LIMIT ONE COUPON • • • ,.._• ·

...........

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~Good !hru S11t., Auq. l lsi At A&amp;P WEQ.

~·"'.

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-. • • • LIMIT ONI COUPON•••• ~ fi

\.
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•
•••

of the National Weather Ser- situatloo•. The new oyot.em,
vice. ''1lle longer we have the would be expected w .rotluceo
warning out in advance the warning delays.
more chance there is for people
The system also is expected'
to hear it." ,
to help in other typeo or rut:
He cite&lt;! the devastating breaking emergencies I1ICh u
tornado outbreak of April 3and fiash floods. During tropical
4 when 90 twisters raged storm Agnes, when up to 19
through 13 states, killing more inches of rain inundated 1111:
than 300 people . Ordinary eight.,.tate region in two daYJI,;
communications channels Communications bottlenecks•
often become clogged in such often delaye&lt;l warnings, once:
[or more than an hour.
:

has

Agreement made
to develop coal

RaCine ~

PRINGLE

CHAROLAIS AND

One of the adOpte&lt;l rules requires that contributions made
bY a candidate to his own campaign must be reported by his
campaign committee as
contributions received. Contributions made by his camCHARLESTON, W. Va .
paign committee to a political (UP[) - Another suit
been
party, conunittee or another flied against the Pittston Co. of
committee should be reported New York, owner of a sl~g dam
as expenditures on the ":hich burst, fioode4 a valley,
provided form.
killed 125 persons and left 4,000
Brown said · he lacked homeless two years ago.
authority to change provisions
The $200,000 suit, filed on bepermitting committee to half of a 2G-year-o1d woman for
contribute to other com- . physical and mental injuries
.mittees, as advocate&lt;! at the suffered in the disaster, says
bearing.
Pittston's ability to pay must
"Until the law is amended, be considered.
such contributions are permitThe company last month
ted because the new law speci- paid a $13.5 million settlement
fically includes 'tramfer of to more than 600 survivors of
funds' in the definition of the disaster . Other suits
contribution and requires pending against Pittston inevery committee which 'made clude two filed by the State of
or received a contribution or West Virginia .
made an expenditure' to
The latest suit, file&lt;! Monday
report," ·Brown sa.d.
in U. S. District Court, says.
"II further requires that the "To effectively punish and de·
report must include a ter Pittston the effect on Pittsstatement of expenditures and ton · m.ust be material in
a ststement of contributions relation to its consolidated
made or received. For the fmancial position.''
secretary of state to attempt to
Pitiston owns the Buffalo
repeal the provisions that Mining Co. which operate&lt;! the
permit committees to make dam in Logan County.

NEW CROP RED

AUGUST 26 TtiRU SEPT. 2

RT. 124

approachmg tornado. Often,
the twister will come and go
bofore a warning job is com.
plctL'&lt;l .
With the hew system the
. time from the rirst obser;ation
orthe danger to the issuance of
the warning will be cut to two
or three minutes.
" Minutes matter. and even
seconds maLter," .said Dr .
George F . Cressman, director

Another suit
filed in case
of dam hurst

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged, Aug. 27)
William Andrews, Charles
Bailey, Margaret Been, Helen
Bwnp, Catherine Clevinger,
Margaret Downard , · Paul
Edleman, Richard Freeman,
Ingrid Fugate, Alice Harris,
Elmon H~tchin so n, Mark ..
Kouns, Estel Lavender, Loren
Layne, Ada Leech, George
Leeds, Grace McCoy, Bessie
Merritt, Judy Moore, Buddy
Mullins, Jerry Neal, Barbara
Nelson, Barbara Neutzling,
Victor Niday, Kathy Osborne,
Donald Potts, David Shaffer,
I.Jnda Shotts, Sherry Tatman,
Johnatllari Tucker, Margaret
Turley, Betty Waison.
· (Births)
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Burgess,
a son, Henderson, W. Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Andrew Holzapfel, a
daughter, Wellston ; Mr. and
Mrs. Rankin McDaniels, a
daughter, Hartford, W. Va.

AT

telf'vision sc.:n•en.os thougi1 you ('O Uid remember
ror ·furl"' .itslt•rs lo study . The lOO times as muCh as you do
c:ompulers wlll be program- now. think 10 1im(.'N as fast and
lll(•d 10 seleet from data t arry un separate r on·
now i n~ ;i&lt;·rus.'i the nalion only vcrsa t ions with a whole
l he mforrnaLion required by a roumruli
of
peo ple
p&lt;Jrticu!ar station .
simultaneously...
·nw system is called Ali'OS
For the general public, . the
fur Automation of Field Opera- system is expected Lo enable
tluns.und Servit'CS . 'l'w~ e.xperi .. we;.~thermen to iss ue better
mental wtlts are being tested forc('t~ sts sooner because t.hey
&lt;H
weather
service will be free of a lot of paperheadquarters here and in- wurk and will have nmre time
stallation will be~in nexl year lQ devote to the weather. The
" t fore cast ortices in t l)lnputer also wiU constantly
Ph itadelphia , Pillsburgh, monitor in coming weather
Charleston, W.Va ., Min - observations and alert a
net.Jpoli s, Minn ., and Fort forecast with a beeping alarm
Worth, Tex. The whole system and flashing light if the new
is c•pectcd to be completed by reports disagree with the
1900.
current forecast.
" AFOS will do for the
The- most dramatic imWec.:tther Service what a mar- provements, however, will
velous new central nervous t'Ome with tornado and nash
system might do for a human flood warnings. It now takes at
being," said Ri chard E. Hall- least five to 10 mlirutes and
gren, deputy director or the often longer for a weather
Weather Servjce. "It will be as station to issue a warning of an
st't 'nn&lt;ls un

ne~ry . "

OLD FASHION CAMP MEETING

.

Prices Effective

Uy AI. ROSSITER JR.
UP! Scleure Editor
WASHING'l'ON t UP I) - Tho
National Weather S.rvice hus
started testing H computerized
weather information system
expected lo SPl't.-d storm w::.rn ~
ings nnd give for(..ocasters more
time to ev~tiuatc changJn J;
condilions.
When
completed·,
the
autol'nated,$40 million network
will link T/5 weather offkes
across the nation and elimin~te
the maze of teleprinter
messages and facsimile maps
that
often
bog
down
weathermen when they are
trying to update forecasts .
TI1e system is built around a
console of five televis ion
screens and a small computer
that will bC installed in each
for ecast office . Weather maps,
satellite photos and reports
from field stations will be
displayed in a matter of

COLUMBUS (UP!) - S.cre- contributions to other comtary of Slate Ted W. Brown mittees by transferring funds
announced Tuesday the adop- would be usurpallon of
tion or 22 rules governing cam- legislative function and would
paign expense reporting, in- grossly exceed the ruie'ITIBking
cluding several revised since authority of the secretary of
Thursday's public hearing on state,"
the proposals.
Brown's rules also :
Brown said "some of tbe pro- - Require that candidates
posetl amendments to the draft report expenditures to pay
rules discussed durin~ the pub- debts or repay loans from prelic hearing could not be adop- vious campaigns.
ted.' ' because they exceeded his , - Permit expenditures of $25
rulemaking authority under or less without consent of the
Ohio law.
candidate, without counting
" Early in the !lOth General them against his spending
Assembly, we submitte&lt;l draft limit.
legislatioo lor a strong cam- Require accounting or expaign expense reporting law," · penditures during _last May's
Brown said.
primary campaign even
"By the time the final ver- though the new law was not
sion was passed , several effective until July.
changes had been incorporated
- Require spearate identtliwhich necessitated this rule cation of contributions !rom
making. Had our proposed bill employes in any government
become law , these sup· agency under the candidate's
plementary rules would not be direct supervision and control.

HOSPITAL NEWS

·AND EAT PRIME BEEF

, .

Sc"leure Tudi:ly

campalgners

COURT ROOM DECORUM may be upset by these waitresses' outlits but a Philadelphia
magistrate wanted the girls to testify in cootwne in a sex.&lt;Jiscriminatlon suit. Harry Katz, a
Philadelphia nightclub owner (at left) advertised lor "beautiful girls only" to serve as
waitre$5es but tbe Hwnan Relations Committee protested against his advertisement. He was
fine&lt;! $300 and ordered to advertise !or " beauttlul women and men.!'

•

197~

Computers will assist in weather prediction

•

Levacy fund

will t~y again .today

::~

By RICK VAN SANT
FAIRFIELD, Ohio (UP!) 'Bring on Ma Bell."
Feeling like a lighter who
l8s just been given a crack at
he champion, a resident of this
mall souiliwestern Ohio com·
nunity has been given the le·
fal right to challenge a unique
10licy of the Cincinnati Bell
felephone Co.
·
James Howard Witt, a
·eporter !or the. town's twice- .
, •eekly newspaper - but
a king , action as a private
~tizen Is disputing Cin'innati .Bell's policy Of
!barging lor directory asslsance calls.
·
·
A half-year alter gathering ·
i16 signatures on a petition and
Wng a request for a public
iearing before the Public Utijtles Commission of Ohio
:PUCOJ Witt today has word
lle hearing Is scheduled for
;. ot. 19 in Columbos. ·
Last March, Cincinnati Bell
lOcame the first" phone com·
:18ny·in the nation to charge for
Jrector asSistance - "in:ol'Jll8tion" - calls.
Customrers are allowed
;hree free calls a month, bot
hen are charge&lt;! 20 cents for
1ddilional information
requests within the large
touUlwestern Ohio 11 513" area
::ode.
However, customers of other
phone companies inthe area
!X)de are not charged for such
requests. Witt alleges this is
discrimination and says it will ·
be the b&amp;sis of his .testimony

Newest rules
adopted for

are announced

~--:::x:::::::::~~::::::::::::=:w.~~~-::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::;;;.

,,

said. "We doo 'I want to buUd
another bureaucracy."
To oversee operations, the
commission agree&lt;! to hire an
executive secretary at $25,1100
to J32,1100 a year. Sweet volunteered the services of a deputy
of his department, Dr.
Seymour Goldatone, who also
is chairman of the govern()[''S
energy task force-:-But other commissioners
wanted to hear from more
applicants at \he next meeting
S.pt . 9. Also expected to be
hired al the next meeting are
chiefs of planning, information, legal matters and
liaison with other government
agencies at up to $30,000 a year.
At Maloney's suggestion, the
EEC wiU hear at its next meeting from the Public Utilities
Commission , the energy task
force and other agencies about
what they are doing in the field
of energy .
The Energy Advisory
Council is to report to the
commission at a Sept. Tl
meeting.

•

17 - The Daily S.nllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy
0 w~ ·"·
·
• ., lt'\lrleMilly , Au~ . 23.

'

,:

II

I
.
I
I
\Goocl t~ru Sal., A_ug. l l 1t AI A&amp;P WEO.
-. • • • LI ... IT !ONE COU'ON• • .,11 1

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•

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ALig . 1 hl At AIJI WEO . r· 1
-.. • • l \MIT ONI COUPON. • ••I 9
thru

1

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·,, ,... 69'

i,I.IIH

•t

�11 - 1'11!! O.Uy Sentinel, Middlei!OI'I-I'.....,.oy, 0., Wednowy, Aug. 28, 1974

Sentinel Clat~sifieds Get Results!
LOSt
• YEAR; OLD mate Norweg ian
Elk Houn d dog . bllcll. anc
ljlrl!ly . Lo1t In the v•cinlty o
Ch.ster end Tuppers Pla ins

Of
QUALITY

_________ __
Phon• 985 "198

_...._ 8 27 6h

Notice
v A.A. 0 Sale. Avo 29, 30. 31 at 708

South Th•rd Ave M tddleport ,

Oh io

·
' 8 28-l t c-

------------..,...Jus t itrouncl
WINTER

corner !

B~

thf

sure to check a1

hoses ~nd anrl freeze Cal
Rogef' Hvse ll's Garage , 997
5682
8 28 31

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

........

SWEEPER RepB ir. Parts , ant
SuppUes . Dav is Vacvurr

Cleaner h mile up

George ·~

.

Sl49&gt;
Local 1 owner, Qood tires. 6 cyl with automahc t rans,
r ad io, blue fl"ish, spotless clean blue intenor .

1913 CK 10 PICKUP

S3491

4 Whee-l Dr ive. locking frt. hubs, V-8 engine, 4 sp~
trans , power steer ing &amp; brakes, rad1o , chr frf &amp; re-M
bumpers

1971 CHEVROLET '~'• TON

S2l95

8' Fleetslde, light green finish , like new 15" Commercia'
tires . H, du1v springs, lSO V - 8eng fn~ . 4 speed trans

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

C HE STe ;- v;;-;;nt'ee ;.-- F ire
Dept. Is hold i ng a Labor Day
Celebration Sept 2, 1974
Chicken Bar -BQ , homemade
tee cream , garden tractor
pul l , parade, any donat ions of
pte and cake will be ap
prec tated
a 26.6tc

--

--~

SOLID
VINYL SIDING
Produced frQm a special
vinyl compound made b y B ~

F . Goodrich and Monsanto 5
times thicker than metal
Siding

Writ not dent , chip,
crack , peel , rot , rust or
ctlalk

FREE HOME ESTIMATES
SUPERIOR
VINYL PRODUCTS

. Call Collect 1-S9l·SS44
Athens, Ohio

-------------SPE CIA L , th e Cycle Shop , 1731

.

Help Wanted

Auto Sales

CONSTRUCTION and Utili t ies
Worker Age 18 34 , no exp
req , Free rm
and brd ,
Med icaL Dental , 30 days pd
vec, Cell (colle ct) Army
Opportun ittes , 61A 593 3022. In
Athens , or sto p by 221
Columbus Rd
8 26 3tc
CARPENTERS Age 18 J4, no
exp req. , Free rm and brd .,
55601xon , Med ical , pental , JO
days of vac , Cell {collect)
Army Opportunities 614 593
3022 , In Athens , or stop by at
721 Columbus Rd
8,26-3tc

------------CLERK Typist - Age 18 34 , 2-3
yrs exp , Sal. bsd . on e)(p
trng , Free rm
&amp; brd ,
Medical. Dental. 30 days pd
vac ., Call (coll«c t ) 550 Dixon
Army Opportunities · 614 593
3022 , In Athens , or stop by at
221 Co tum bUS Rd
8-26 3tc

HOUSE for rent Phone 8822984, New Haven, W Va
8 28 6fp

IDIDN'lKNoWTHAT ! MGM
Flea Market Specials . S5
inside sJ outside Sprlf!g
Ave
Pomeroy ,
Ol'\10 ,
Colle'ctors , dea ers , etc
Every Sa1. and Sunday.
f
8-7 t c
------- -----~~--

ATo

Z- MART, used furniture,

NICEJ-;-;;- apt-a nd bath .
all etectr1c 1n Pomero Y
Tabletop range , wall oven ,
ni ces t apt around Phone
Gallipolis,
446 7699
or
evenings , 446-9.539
a 23 tfc

TRAILER , Brown 's Tra i ler
Court. Pomeroy Phone 992
of sheet ,
3324
cast, new or old aluminum
7 18 tfc
Keep cans separate . The
Rosenberg Co , Athens , Ohio. BUSINESS room , 22x80, 234 E
B 15 tfc
Main St, Pomeroy , Oh1o
Phone 992 -5786 or 992 -3975
JUNK Autos complete and
6 12 tfc
delivered to our yard We pick
up auto bodies and buy all FURNISHED
apartment.
klndt of scrap metals and
adults only In Middleport
Iron . Rldtr's Salvage , State
Phone 992-3874
Rt. 124, Rt. A, Pomeroy , Ohio
5 12 tfc
Phone 992-5468 .
1 J1 -26tP 4 ROOM furnished apartment ,
close to Powell 's Super Vatu
CASH paid for all makes and
Phone 992 3658
8 7 ttc
'models of mobile homes
Phone area code 614 423-9531
....._
4-13 tfc 3 AND 4 ROOM furn i shed and
unfurnished
epartments
OL..D I='VRNITURE , oak tables,
Phone 992 5434
clocks, Ice boxes , brass beds ,
4 12 tfc
dishes, desks , or complete
households
Wr.te M . D . PRIVATE meeting room for
any organ izat ion . phone 992
Miller , Rt . 4, Pomeroy , Ohio,
call 992-7760.
3975.
.5 13-ttc
3 11 ttc

----------,...----

_________ _____

Pets For Sale

DOVER:MAN pups , 4 months
old , AKC Registered All
shots,
~e~rs.
cropped ,
~ reasonably priced Phone 992
2832 ,
8-28 -ltc

Help Wanted
CAREER OPPORTUNITY for
Mtn or Women - Nationwide
Insurance offers earnings up
to 115,000 (this. IS a salary, not
a drew) to sell complete in ·
surance protection , life ,
heam-. , auto, finance. and
mutual funds No prior ex .
perltnce is necessary since
we have one of the most
complete training progral"ls
In the Industry If you are
Interested In a career op portunity In a rewarding
business ,
Cell.
stanley
Ferguson at 614 -446 -4707
Collect, Monctay thru Friday 8
a .m to 4,30 . p .m An Equal
Opportunity Employer
8-28 -Jtc

CARRIERS
WANTED _
IN

1•

SYRACUSE
AND
MASON

4,000 BTU

--------------COUNTRY MObile Home P~ark~
Rt 33, ten miles north of
Pomeroy . Large lots with
concr~te pat ios , sidewalks ,
runners and off street
parking
Also, Spaces for
smell trailers Phone 992-7479 .
7 21 tf c

1•109.95

1970 VALl ANT 6Sx 12, 3 b edroom
ful l y carpeted , LP gas heal
Phone 992 775 1
8 25 tf c

These sizes also available ·

s.ooo, 6,000, 8,000, 10,000 and
12,000 BTU.
POMEROY LANDMARK
9.
1 · Jack W. Carsey , Mgr.
~
Phone 992 -2 181

LOCAL N1ght Club domg st rong
6 figure bus.ness PriCed
r ig ht Small down payment.
can fman ce ba lan ce
Ea sy
tease of real est~te ;wadable
Phone 992 9972 for deta ils
8 28 tfc

BOAT, motor and trailer 1971
16' Tnhull BowR1der , l973 5.5
h p Chrys ler, must se ll
Asking S1 ,800 Many extras
Phone 992 2392
8 27 -3tp
1970 18FT SCOT TIE Ca mper .
sleeps 6 Good condll 1on
PhOne 992 -7126
8 -27 tfc

.
-------------CANNING ja r s with glass tops

Also, free manure for the
hauling Joh n HoudeshelL
M inersville , Oh10
8-27 3t p

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

colltcl

15G ,

"''UI"'"'"'

Army

Op

'14-.593-3022, In
AtiiiM, 1r lfop by at 221

COJIImloill '"'·

8 26 -Jtc

:....----,---=-----

·£;•ott•
.
"t•ct

8 27 12tc

-------------WILL care for child ren '" my
home up 1o school age
Rel iable
s1tter
w 1t h
references
Call Kathryn
Russell, anytime at 992.5771
8-27 6tc

.-------------Auto Sales

1969-,;ooc.e "W mdowed super
van, automatic trensmiSS lon
Runsoood, looks good $1 ,295
George Hall , 992 -.5949
8 2B -3tp

ELECTROL U X
vacuum
cleaner , A 1 condit ion , uses
paper bags , has cordwmder
and many attachments Also,
shampooer attachment 10
eluded . {O nly 4 ~tva liable l at
$37 ,70
Ci!IS h
or
terms
available Phon e 992 2653
8· 20 tfc
---- ----- - ~~-~--

KOSCOT
KOSMETICS
&amp;
WIG S ( The Mink Oil Base
Cosmetics t
Ph one
BROWN'S , 99'2 .5113
8 20 tfc

r-------------HO T POINT range , Amana 22ft
-------------196S CHEVROLET 2-dr 5250
Si de by
refr ige rator
1~7 5

Lincoln

!o~de

freezer , Norge washer and
dryer, set of walnut dtn lng
room tt~bles Wllh choi r s and
pad, opproxlmate ly 4 years
oltL good old bed and chest of
drawers . Phone 992 7066.
8· 20 lfc

Houdnhtlf .

IIMnVII)t• Ollfo.

'

T

• 27-llp

.

H ACRE fa rm . 6 room house,
barn , other outbuildings ,
51 9,500 Phon e 742 .5845
a 16 26tp

1968 BUICK Electr• 225, 4 dr
s.edan, f) s .. p .b , factory fl l r.
good body and lnter1or
Perfect runn lng cond1t1on
saoo Phone 992 -2280 .
8-27 -6tp

-- ----------lm-NILLY ~s Jeep, 4 .. whet!!
drive, 4 cylinder motor with
e.•b, a 1 cond ition . See at lOS
Un ion Ave , Pomeroy Or call

992·3293

-------------GREAT
COUNTRl

dleport , 6 rooms , Ph baths,
tull basement. part ta lly
carpeted. kitchen comp lete,
wa sher and dryer , etc Could
be 3 bedrooms , gas furnace,
f1reptace , storm doors and
windows , curtains and drapes
mcluded F or Informat ion ca ll
Elden Wa lbur n , 992-2805
8-13tfc

____ _

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

________ ____

8-23 -tf(

SliREO·
92.1
WMPO.fM
'

Midd)•porf. Pom~roy

•

MIDDlE PORT -

Lovely

old br ick close to shopping . 5
B. R , 2 baths , ne~ modern
k i tchen, every1hlng built In,
elmost new H.W . gas heating
system , basement, large lot
&amp; ~rk1ng area ASKING

JUST S22,SOO.OO.
POMEROY - 1 floor plan. 2
B.R.• bath, H.W. floors. gas
basement

lot

12 MILES OUT-

with

Only
2 story

frame1 4bedroom, 1112 ba-ths,
dining room. 2 garages .

storage building , lots of
ground ,

finance
p~yrnent to right

down
par-ty ,

$10.000.
GOOD OLDER HOME - IVi
storv. frame, 3 B .R., ba-th;
basement, almost new F . A .
gc.a furnace. double level lot.
You must see th is at just

$6.500 00.

8·2Htc

191'01!2 TON , 4 wneel dnve, Ford
p1ckup , big 6 cyt , 4 speed
Harolt;f Brewer , Lon; Bottom ,
Oh Ia 985 -JS.S4
8-18-tfc

Phone 992 -7066.
• -.........

1970 KARMANGHIE VW , 1969
vw , 196.5 Dodge 4 dr stat ion
wagon , slant 6 automatic, 8
Wheelhorse
rid ing
h p
mower , l ike new Reg istered
~ Arab1an mare , rldlno
horse , Wright power saw
Phone 992-7889
8-25 -Stc

I

il
•

Fami l y room, utility, bath, and
carport One floor plan for only

$9.500.00.
GOOD - Older home, w1th 3
bedroom s, bath, mode rn kitc hen , din1ng, den and full
basement on good street In
Pomeroy. Si9,500.00

OLDER HOME -

Nice Inside

1r.m, laro ~m s. bath, large
wrap arOu, •• (tJh , 2 garages,
garden and levt: . •t. All for only

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

WANT TO SELL? ALL OF
OUR FILES AND EXPERIENCE ARE AT YOUR
DISPOSAL WITH JUST A
CALL FROM YOU . WE
SELL YOUR ~ROPERTY
OR
YOU
PAY
US
NOTHING
99Ml59or ffl -2561

Sports •

ll : OO - Ne wsl , 4, 6. 8, 10, 13, 15 , ABCNews33.
U:30 - Johnny Carson 3. M tsslon · imposs tble 6 . Untou chables
13·, Janak! 33 , Come to the Fa1r 4, 15 , Mov1e s " The
Desperados " 8, " Operation Atlantis ' ' tO
11 : 45 - Johnn y Carson 4, IS
17: 30 - Wild , W1ld West 6 ; W ide Wor ld Speciall3
1: 00 - Tomorrow3 . 4, Takefiveforltfe
2:00 - News 4 , 13

Call Evenings

Pomeroy, O.

190 Mulberry

This

may be your only chance to buy
a riverview home. 8 rooms ,
ba1h, den , dtntng, 2 porche s,
n1 ce basement, fm e shop, a 2
car ca rport . Just $23.500.00
LIKE NEW - 3bedroom home ,
large ba1h and utility, 7 closets
with lots of storage , ltving Is
1S 'x 30 ', carpeting,
copper
plumbing , 2 nice concrete
porches, a large concrete block
shop and garage, on 3/11 acres of
land Can you beat this for only

REAL ESTATE PEOPLE
BELOW THEY KNOW WHAT
TO SAY AND WHEN. THEIR
SERVICE WILL MAKE YOU

'

• Dn'CHING SERVLCE
Water Ltnes and Power
Lmes . All work done by the
fool or contrac1. Also dozer
work and sept1c tanks in·

l ~telled .

. .See or Call
Bob or Roger Jetfers
Day 992-7089

• Brake Work... w
General Overhaul
e Tune Up-S5 00 up
e Carburetor Ad tustment

e

K&amp;H ROOFING
James

o.

New Zoo Revue 6 , Tennessee Tuxedo 13 , Jeff's Coll•e 6
Jack laLanne 13
8 30 - Brady Bunch 6
8 55 - News 13.
9 00 - Paul D1x.on 4; AM 3; Ph 1l Donahue lS. Abbott &amp; Cost ello
8 ; Wild , Wild West 6 , M ov1e " About Mrs. Les t 1e" 13 , At the
Fa1r with Chuck Wh1te 10
9 30 - To Tell the Tru th 3, Lucy Show 8
10 00 - Joker 's W il d 8, 10 , Company 6, Nam e That Tune 3, 15.
10: 30 - GambttS, 10 , Wmnlng Streak 3, 4, 15 ; Phll Donahue-4
11 : 00 - Password 13, Now You See It 8, 10 ; H1gh Rollers 3, 15 ,

Refrigerators,
Freezers, ' Home &amp;
Auto Air Conditioners
and
Commercial
Units.

11 · 30 - Brady Bun~h 13 ; Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15; Love of L tfe
8, 10 ; lucy Show 6
11 :55 - CBS News 8; Dan I mel 's Wor ld 10
12 . 00 - Jackpot 3, 15. Password 6 , Bob Brun's 50-50 Club 4,
News 81 10, 13 , M 1ster Rogers JJ
12 30 - Split Second 6, Search for Tom o rrow
10 ; Ceiebnty
Sweepstakes 3, 15 , Afternoon wtth·DJ 13 E iec Co 33

8· 25 -

WARNER'S
REFRIGERATION
SERVICE
992-7204

Pomeroy,

J&amp;B AUTO
BODY
Moved to Rutland, J4 mde
ms ide c1ty l i mit on right
corner B1rck St . and Rt. 124.

C. II 'tl-7836 For

W1lktnson Small Engine
992. 3092
- 399 w. Ma1n
Pomeroy, 0
Located at Modern Supply
small Engine Repailr

--

r:oo -

•
•
•
•

Lawn Bo\Tecum se h
Kohler
W1scons1n
• All othe r
makes __

D&amp;D
CONTRUCTION
PHONE
949-3832 or 843-2667

FO R your remodelmg , roofmg ,
painting , repa 1rm g. concrete
and masonry work , &lt;::a ll
Ronnte Hubbard, 992 -35 11 or
AUTOMOBILE 1nsurance been
992 7302 work by hour or
Painting, siding , roofing,
cancelled.,
Lost
your 1• .contra cl
paper hangtng , kitchen
operator's ltcense Cal l 997
8 7 26tc
cabmets, etc:.
7 428
6 IS tfc SEWIN G MACHINES. Repa ir
serv1ce , all makes , 992 2284 .
CREMEA N S
CONCRETE
The Fabrtc Shop , Pomeroy .
delivered M onday thr ough
Au thonz ed s,n ger Sales and
Sat urday
and
eve n tngs
Service We sharpen Sc1 ssors 1 ...
Phone 4461142
3 29-tfc
6 13 tfc
work, land c learmg by
- DOZER
the acre hourly or contra c t ,
SEPTIC
TANKS
clea ned ,
farm pond s, r oads, et c Large
reasonable rates
Ph 446
dozer and operator w 1th over
4782, Ga ll ,polis John Ru sse ll,
20 years expenence Pull Ins
owner and operator.
Excavating , Pomeroy, Oh io
5 12-tfC
Phone 992 2478
12 19-tfc
SEPTIC TANK S,
AROBIC
SE WAGE
SYSTEMS
O ' DELL Almernent, located
CLEA NED ,
REPAIRED
beh ind Rutland Grad e School.
MILLER
SANITATION ,
complete front end servtce,
STEWART , OHIO . PH 662
brakes and tun eu ps, wheels
3035
balanced electronically , Open
10 4-tf c
8 to 8 dally Call 742 -3232 on
Sunda y for appt
SEPTIC
TANKS
c leaned .
7-16-tfc
Modern San ttatton , 992 3954 or
992 7349
1023tfc EXCAVATING , dozer , loader
and backhoe work . sept1c
~~- ~~-- ------~~
tanks Installed , dump tru.cks
REAOY , MIX
CONCRETE
and lo -boy s for hire , will haul
delivered rig ht to your
f tli dirt, top sod, limestone &amp;
projec t Fast and easy Free
gravel , Call Bob or Roger
estimates Phone 992 3284 .
Jeffers , day phone 992 7089.
Goegletn R eady M ix Co .,
night phone 997 -3525 or 992
M1ddleport, Oh io .
.742-4211
Arnold
.5232
6 30 tfc

Business Setvices

t oo -

We will be seeing vo~·
our customers,
our regular hours.

Club opening makes it easy

TUESDAY
SEPTEMBER2

,,

+

iHg CapaCity
Maytag
Automatics.
1 1 speed operat ion
.Choice of watt •
lemps . Avto . wate1
'level control Lln '
Filter or Power Fir
T

Nlc:e for

-~

kitchens, etc.

dens.

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
702 -4211

•

Rulltnd, 0 .

I am a widower and have a wonderful rr1end, whu is a widow

Wehavekoowneachuthcrformany.many years
we h~ve been gotng out and having wonderful

stn cc
1 1 ltmcs
1
h
my wife passed away , But when 1t comes to a Itt e OVI~. s e
holds b•ck. You see, she has a grown daughter, who seems to be
most

of the time and evidently Qoesn't want any hanky·

panky .

What do you s uggest ' - LOVABLE MI\N
Dear Lovable :
'
A marrtagc license, perhaps? And if that sounds too, Loo
1
preachy, well, you might inVIte her on a weekend trip. At east
you'll find out this way Lf 1t's opportunity - or desire - that 's
H

·
ffilSStng . -

If you have to 111 m-up plans

Int.eusjum: Honorqble, Slr1 where luends are Involved
you 11 ha&gt;Je more tuck d you do

Dear Helen -

around
•

ARIES (March 2-..,-_-Apr~ll~19-.)

·

+++

Dear Helen :
"Devout B1ble Student" should have read h1s Bible a ltttle
closer. The streaker he referred to (Mark 14 :51.:;2) was a late
com~ r . Please read Isaiah 20:2, who str eaked 700 years pnor to
the Mark happening .
However, 300 years before that, some,of King David's men
were embarrassed by King Hanon the Ammomte, who cut off
hall iheir beards and half thetr robes, exposmg thetr buttocks. (2
Samuel 10 :4).
Of these three events, only Isaiah streaked volunta rily, 1.e.,
upon theorder ofGod .- Mr. W. W. H
Dear Mr H. :
You might say King Oav1d's men were the first to ''moon 1t.''
Thanks to my correspondents, I'm becommg a veritable font of
fascinating trivia ... But Pll bet you don 't know the answer to this

next question ·

Dear Helen :

+++

A TV nature program w1th, "How many feathers m a male
peacock's tatl fan ?' ' got us curious. The speaker was supposed to
g1ve the number at the end of the show, but I was called to the
phone and didn 't hear 1! and it's been bugging me ever smce.
I buzzed the station and no one there could remember, either.
Since you,re the woman with the answers, lay one on me. BETCHA CAN'T
Dear Betcha :
Betcha I can I A male peacock ~an boast slightly more than
2(1(1 feathers in his tail {an ... Not that lie cares a squawk one way
or the other. - H.

11 now rather than WR 111ng unltl
1a1er
TAURUS ( Aprll 20· Mar 20
Even though lhe goa l 15 per ·
sonal to you you H be sur·
pr1sed how much Si.Jpport from
others you 11 get to help you
reach 11

GEMINI (May 21 -Juno 20)
.;:a Omethtng mteresttng and
pleasant you d1dn 1 ltgure on
w111 come tram a soc1at en·
counler Accept any ~rwnat 1 ons
you. get at present

CANCER (Jvne 21 -Jvly 22)

Take a more active role m a
S1 tuat1on where you share an
tnlerest w1th one close to you
Your guu;lance w1ll get thmgs
on c ourse ·
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Con
d1t 1ons are generally favorable
lor any ba rgam1ng o r deals you
!lave lo make now Later , 1n4

Football a

9 30 -

the

15.

11 00 - News 3. 4. 6. 13, 15 , ABC News33
11 15 - N ews 10
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3,· Mission impossible 6. Untouchab l es
13 , Come to the Fa1r 4, 15.
11· 45 - Johnny Carson 4, 15 , Movie '' The Harder They Fall ' ' 10
12 00 - News 13
12 . 30- W1ld, Wild West 6; Wide World Special 13; Movie " The
Great Missoun Band " 8.
1 00 - Tomorrow 3, 4; Take Five for Life 15
2:00 - News 13, 4.

SAGITARR IUS (Nov

23 ·

Dec 21) You have a naturallv
mmd Oon 'l be hesttant
about ask1ng ln·deplh Ques
hans regard1ng something new
you ·(e underlakmQ but don I
fully understand
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 - Jan.
1 9) There are two prom•s•ng
areas at present that could
me an somethmg to you hnan c•ally One 1s at work The
other IS con fldent, aJ
cur~ous

AOUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fel&gt;
19) Th•s w tll be the ktnd o f day
YOJJ II l•~e You c an do thmgs
your own wav Jl you don't,
you ve only \IOUrse ll to blame

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)

Don I be •mpa\lent al present

()wt:r'OOJ

.."..

~

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

39 MoWiblln

I Sblre
5 Author

crelll
40 Wolfish look

Francoise
10 Tamarisk

DOWN

·

1 Cahadian

salt
tree
11 Continent
12 Head for

resort
%Tarawa,
for eumple
3 Wu fair
(3 wds.)
4 Bardlc
'"always"
5 Nappy
leather
6 Circle

the clouds
13 Women's

page
ol!erlng
14 - one's
trade
15 Pater
18 Become

Yesterday's Auwer

15 Art move.
ment
~ctlon
18 Do one's
7 Confer
civic
drowsy
( 4 wds.)
duty
17 Ralse
8 Assign
21 Outdo
19 Sesame
9 Darillng
ZZ Buck20 Antiquated
and knitting
thom
person
11 Love
23 World
21 Tibia or
poetry's
Series

carpus

muse

time

%2 Terra Z4 Tempi

24 Pedestal·
28 Tbrong
28 Pet 29 Poker
tenn
30 Sign

on a

door
35 'nppler
38 Fish
for smoklns

25 Fatigue
symptom
2tl Culinary

POtpourri

street.

I worry about those old people. What can be done? - IN·
VOLVED 1\ND F IRED
Dear I. and F .:
II you can prove that old people are neglected in the nursing
home, then make a complaint to the authont1es and ask for an
mvestiga tion.
Why not start w1th a claun for your nghtful pay and go on
from there? (But prepare for a fight !) - H

J]!JJJ~!1~® /kJ -...u.J .-1 ,_.
h y H E NRI AAN OLO . t n tl H UB LEE

L' n ~c ramble thesl.' four Jumble!\

one l etter to each square, to
form fnur ord 1nury ""ords.

:n SaultMarie

28 Chann
school
topic
31 Gear
tooth
32 "Able was
I - 1
saw .. "
33 From - to
Beersheba
34 Demeaned

b-+--+k,-4-+-

36 Handle
copy
3'1 Extract
38 "Whatis new?"

I
D_ I I I
I II

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Hen's how to work

[ !NYI'P

r
I I J I I

KEBDE~

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

II

ITHYFOR

Performance 20

10· 00 - Streets of San Francisco 6, 13, News 20 1 NBC News 3, 4,

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24 -Nov. 221
i,..e l your natu ral sense of 11m·
1ng come mto play 11 you re
domg any det1cate negolla!lng
Press lor ~our po1nts when
your mtuttton d1re c ts

room and board as part payment.
I love elderly people and think they are somethmg more than
just lumps to lie in lied and walt! or death
Wh1le 1was there, I had the patients wallong and talking and
laughing. They came to life with a little help, I found, and it was a
JOY, seemg the miracle. But, of course, they became btgger
problems for the staff.
The upshot was that the owners fired me and wouldn 't even
give me my back pay They just put me and my belongings out on

Dear Helen :
I was hired to work in a nursmg home, where r would receive
Ozzie' s G1rls 8 , TBA 15 , Festival FUms 33
8 00 - Waltons 8; Temperatures R1smg 6, Even1ng at Pops 20,
33 , Mac David 3, 4, 15 , Dora ·s World 6, Movie " Mutmy on the
Bounty" 10
8 30 - Just For Laughs 6, 13.
9 00 - Kung Fu 6, 13 ; Ironsid e 3, 15, Internati ona l Performance
33 ; State Fa.r Horse Show 4; Jeanne Wolf With ., 20 , WFL

r ~ke a chance on your o wn
•deas before you oo on lhOOO
of an-other Your lhOuohts Wi ll
prove 1o be the wtser

TH ie&gt; 1'5 NEVeR
CONTI':ACiE:D.

One letter &amp;Imply otanda ror another. In thla umplo A II
used for the three L'a, X for the two O's, elc. Slnale lotlora,
apootropheo, the leneth and formation of the wordl ""' all
biDts. Each day the cod•Jettero are dllerent.
CRYPTOQUOTES

WF WH
Now aJTanre the circled lellera
to form the aurprite answer, u

I;:~·=::!:·:::=::=-===~·==·~·~u~rll~•~sted by above cartoon.
_:.:.:
l'rilll::..:iiii::..:SMISI=:.::AHSWII==•= ---_jl "ITJ - aJ"

WH

POZ

WF

QAWTVXKFNA~

WH

HX

WAFC.

the

,_I

(A111wer• tomorrow)
IRATE CLOVEN FRIEZE
Vr.•lrrda}''•
- / An•wn: U'hali/OU might wror in a altou:er- A RAINCOAT

Juruloln VOCAL

FDNF

YXTVUCFCUZ

K C H F W A 0. - N 0 N F D N
Y D K W H F WC
Yeoterday'a Cryptoquole: SPYING IS A FINE THING: YOU
GET THE ENJOYMENTS OF A THIEF AND STILL 1lEMAJN
AN HONEST MAN.-JOHANN NESTROY

(0 IH41tlnc Pula,. 87&gt;1dleale,I•.J

Perm a-Press
Maytag
Halo of Hut
Dryers
Surround
clothe~
with gentle , even
1heat No hot spots
no overdrylng F lnE
Me- Lint Filter
we Specialize In
MAY TAG
Red Carpet
Service

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

~utland -

Grate

BUICK OPEL MANTA

North-South vulnerable-

West

Ag1tator ~

..''

"
1..

I
'

Pass

Pass
Pass

North

East

1•

Pass
Pass

3'1

Pa ss
Pass

2•
Pass

31••

South

CAP!'AIN EASY
IF- ){]U'RE 1901NG TO KEEP
US H~&lt;~&lt;e AU. NIGHT- AT
l.EA~T YOU CA~r 06JECi
TO US l16ii!'""I~S
'TO THS WIRELSS.S!

4'1

• Opemng lead - K+

'

... AN!&gt; OF A'-1- OUR FfATHe~~ FfZJEiNOl!J

":f"~ll

JloJ THI-7 "6C6PTEREP lSLE-:' WtfiCH ~
MORE eELOVI!D OF &amp;IRDWAT'CfoffRS
THAN OUit &amp;M91.1SH ~ARk ... "f

-T;

INI&gt;&amp;I&gt;, HM

N&lt;IT U!'AP'T AT Ttte SI6HJ 0~ 'AN
f!lt.ALTATION Or' LARK.,_ Jt~tl.kt
INTO TH5-

•

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

·Yesterday we sa1d that yo u
not open one
sea de With four Ca rd s each in
spades and clubs Our gener·
al rule for other han ds w1th
d~finitel y should

..' '
I

1

tj

"

'"

two four·card

su1ts 1s

when

yq u hold four diamonds and
four clubs to open one club;
with four hear ts a nd four diamonds to open a diamond,
uri:Jess your hea r ts are, very
g'l'ld, with clubs and either
mS.jor to open one club and
with spades and hea rts to

ARE YCU M401'NO
ONE

IN

HE/'1/'IIGHT
MIND v..oJLD /'IE·

71JRN
LIKE

'

open one hea rt.

WINNie/

WHERE AI'IE
YCU OOINCI?

IF MI'I.KONlO&amp; CAN INVESTICIA"TE ME_4 GUEB&amp;
I CAN DO A LITTLE

SlVP 6011HEPJNCP\

M~ i.UfliLE:

~eARCH oN

HIM I

r!M lllDRK-

It-ltP OIJ THt;

In additiOn we also open
three-card club s u1ts with
hands hke today's. We do
hold four ca rd s each tn
spades and" hea rts but have

no interest in e1ther suit
unless our partner ca n pro·

duce four cards there.
It is fairly easy to ar n ve at
four hearts after the club

opening. It

I S e ven eas1er

to

IlLLEY OOP

get there after a. one-heart
op,!!ning by North, but any

four-card maJorite would

4 CYUNDER OHC 75 HP ENGINE - STIIItiMHD
RECLINING FRONT BUCKET SEATS - STANDARD
4 SPEED FUUY SYNCHRONIZED
TRANSMISSION - STANDARD
- .
RACK AND PINION STEERING - STANDARD
POWER ASSISTED FRONT DISC BRAKES - ·STANDARD
ENERGY ABSORBING BUMPERS &amp; STEERING COWMN - STANDARD
TRADITIONAUY GR'EAT GAS MILEAGE - STANDARD
SMITH NELSON'S LOW PRICE - STANDARD

diamonds and one
fNt:WSI'A !'"Ell

PHONE 992-2174

....

The

'wu1
.

heart

lti ' HI SE ASSN I

..

.

,.

bi~d lng

has

Norlh

b&lt;.'en

East
Pa!IS

south

"

••
2•
PlJ.S.'i
You, Soulh, hold.
• AK Q J 10 54 ' 8 5 + 3 2 .. 7 4

Pa,.

"

LOOKV

'IONDER,
MAW!!

DOC MUSTA PUT
HIGH TEST 1111

TH'Ot GAL

· AG'fi\J

I I~ II
(t ,, f l

'

What du you do now'!

A-Bid 11 .. opod ••· Your

f

panner has shown a very good

hted, bul there might woll be
twD qulek dl1mond laM!flll.

POMEROY, 0.

•

"

f~NTt

FEATHERS!/

u:an:l,!M!3tl

Smith Nelson Motors Inc.
500 E. MAIN ST.

HIM AFRAID
OF

open the North ha nd w 1th one
spade. The heart su1t /,·~st
might be missed as the td·
d1~g went forward
Not that th e heart suit
s!Utuld be m1ssed Any two
bidders should r e~c h that
heart game on anY- system
ar{d would wmd up losmg two

5q, Yd.

bedrooms.

..,. ·

197~

+ 9 64

\

Now $4.99 Sq. Yd.

~=

for T"hunday, Aug 29,

f, n~U''CiaHy

.. Q843

8 25 -Stp
-------------CARPETING
501 NYLON

ROiJ . SUhq. yd.

Oltt•

1

also provfJ to tM: a tavQrai'Jitt

"Year for you

+ AB753
410 7

KQJO
.. J952
SQUTH
• A2
'AQJ 5

Phone 992 3718

Conely Stripe Cor.,..t wllh
rubber .,.ck.

•

8

'

'
EAST
• J93
'10 7 4

, WEST

• 10 8 6 4
'K9

--------------PIAN O tun ing, Char les Scott .

S~ECIALI

Y

L[ J
I e t•n

LIBRA (Sept, 23-0cl. 231

Au~ . 29, 11H•
AU~ances w1ll be made thiS
YfJ~r wllere
'/OUt wo rk 01
t. ar~e1 t"J coocemed lh,., w1ll

• J2

RUTLAND FURNITURE

- We have hundreds of
ca rpet values. Your job ca n
be completed in 1 to 2 weeks.
No lona Waltlna oer lod .

The re ilre spec 1al prem,ums a1 ·
lat:hQd to ant work or serv1ce
you do al thO present Con cenHate where you c.an do the
grea 1 e~ 1 personal ljlood

even though vou tee1 you rt;
blocked 1rom what vov 'd hlce
to do So rpnstng lh1ng5 ara
t'lappemr.g b&amp;tunt:J the scone'!'i

"

'86 3 2
4AK6

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

•
and up!
Price Includes ' lnstallalion
and free padding . Talk. to ·
Wendell
Grate ,
carpet
consultan1.

NORTH IDI
• KQ 75

I:

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

SJ 95

e.

WIN AT BRIDGE

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

--------------C . BRADFORD , Auctioneer

ss- NBC News 3, 15

1 00 - All My Childre n 6. 13; New s 3, Not For Women Only 15 ,
Ha ze l 8; Green Acres 10
1. 25 - Chuck Wh1te Reports 10
1·30 - As the World Turn s 8, 10. Let' s Make A Dea l 6. 13 .
• Jeopardy 3, 4, 15
2· 00 - Guiding L ight 8. 10 , New lywed Game 6, 13; Days of Our
Lives 3, 4, 15
2 30 - Edge of Night 8, 10, G irl in My L tfe 6, 13 , Doctors 3, 4, 15
3·00 - General Hosp ital 6, 13; Pnce IS Right 8, 10; Another
~ World 3, 4, 15
3:30 - One Life to L ive 13, How to Survive a Marnage 3, 15, 4 ;
; Match Game 8, 10, Huck and Yog1 6
Sesame St 33, Mr Cartoon &amp; the Banana Sp li ts 3;
"' Tattletales 8; Somerse t 15; Bonanza 4 ; Gll l 1gan' s Island 6,
:'. Mov1e " The Iron Glove " 10
4: 30 - Green Acres 3, Bonanza 15, Vtrgm1an 8, Mod Squad 6,
*"' Gilligan's Island 13
5':- 00 - Mister Rogers 20, 33 , Bonanza 3; Merv Griffin 4 ,
.. Anythtng You Can Do 13.
t30 - Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Elec Co 33. Hogan 's Heroes 13,
.,. News 6. Trail s West 15.
6. 00 - News 8, 10, Sesame St 20 · NPw" ~ 4 l1 15, 6 , Diagnostic
~ &amp; Perspective Teaching of Reading 33.
6:30 - News 3, 4, 15, CBS N ews 8, 10, ~oom - 22213 , Flower Show
"' 33: Bew1tches 6
What's My Lm e
News 10 , Eiec Co. 20 , Truth or Cons
3; Let's Ma ke A Deal 13 ; Sports Desk 15 ; Man Builds, Man
'"' Destroys 33 , Great Day at the Fa1r 4, Bowt1ng for Dollars 6
7: 30 - Hollywood Squares 3: W1ld K1ngdom 10 : To Tell the
' Truth 6: Bea1 the Clock 13,· Zoom 20 , Dealer's Choice 4;

Estimates of Any Type

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING
From a shelf 1o a house.

on
alum i num
replacement
windows , Siding , storm doors
and w i ndows , Ra i ling Phon&amp;
Charles Lisle, Syracuse , Ohio .
Ca rt
Ja cob ,
Sa les
Representat i ve ,
V
V.
Johnson and Son. tnc
4 30 tf c

a.

k 1ng.,
Com pare our priCes to any
others We'll g 1ve you ei
professional roof for less

'\

•

SIO,OOO Pyramid 6

Nighl992-3525
or 992-5232

742-5293

------------FOR FREE estimates

197&lt;

Wis h 6

12

Now Open for Busi ness

Comp lete Service
Phone 949 3821 or 949·3161
Rac ine , Oh io
Crltt Bre dford
' 5 1-tfc

29 ,

$unrlse Seminar 4.
Sacred Hear t 10.
Farm Report 13
6: 30 - Bible Ansv·~rs 8 . Patterns for Ltvmg 13 , N ews 6 . F1 ve
M inutes to Live By 4, Summer Semester 10
6 : 35 -- Columbus Today 4
6. 45 - Morn i ng Report 3
7 DO - Today 3 , 4, 15 . News 8, 10, D1ck Van Dyke 13 ; Make A

8 : 30A.M. to .5 P.M.

171 Pearl Sf.
Middleport, Ohio
"l·S367

Free Estimates

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

WEDNESDAY, AUG

6 00 6· 15 6 25 -

367-7255

EXPERIENCED
MECHANIC ON DUTY

B&amp;K EXCAVATING
&lt;0:'----~-----.

$12,500.00
WELL CARED FOR -

--------------- ----------....----HOU SE , 630 Mil l St, Mid

uf lilt y, Iorge
SIO,OOO

e·

7 30 -

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

furnace,

Hudson Brothers 8. 10, Movie " The
President ' s Plane Is Miss ing " 6, 13 ; crn,se 15 ; Vtdeo
VIsionaries 20
30
- Greal American Dream Mac;hlne 20, 33
9•00 - Cannon a, 10 , Mov1e ' ' Red Sky at Mornmg' ' 15 .
g 30 - Boarding HoU$e 20. 33.
10 00 - Fest ival J=:tlms 33 , Ko!ak 8, 10 , News 10 , TBA 4, Pol1ce
Surgeon 3. Marcus Welb y, M 0 6, 13
10: 30 - Day at N ight 33 ; New O;;~lmg Game 3 , Fun,y World o t

INDUSTRIAL OR.HOMES

985-3545 or

~-- Unto the Hilts 33.-

8

FURNACE CWNING

992-9949

e

6 , Big Red Machine 4.

LEVEL LOT - 3 bedroom" -

We have a cltent who has asked
NEW 3 bedroom home , HL•t
ch1nson..
sub d 1V 1S10n , us for a 200 acre farm w1th
Rutland , Pr 1ce 119,900 Phone modern house, good bulldlngs
742 3615 or see Milo Hut and 100 acres In c ultivation .
c hmson , Ru11and
- 8 161 2tc SEE THE PROFESSIONAL

33 ACRES , 6 rm house , ell
electric , J bedroom, small
barn , 530 ,000 Phone 992 3792
8-26 6tc

BOB'S ASHlAND

PHONE 992-5476

$23,500 00

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

DODGE Colt 37.100 m lito,
Ji "}tint • roof. f'f1'1
redial t ires, good condition ,

JeltJI

Real Estate For 5ale

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

Employment Wanted

1961 FOR 0 Falcon , 6 cyli nder -4
tlr ., good gas m lleage S3SO
Phone 98.5-3958
8-27 Stp

operltor, lit 11-34, 2 3 year1
~· Ul. Nlld on exp. trng ,,
frH rm. end brd ., medical.
dentll# JO cfiYI pet. vac , ca ll

A 1974 3 BEDROOM Ge tty sbu r g
By Cas tle , ( NEW l , fr on t
kitchen , total e1ectr1c untt,
S11f1119 on a concrete pad w ith
patto and conc rete parkmg
area , Grass ism , tand scapmg
1S done for you $6,695 and we
hand you the keys Home can
be seen at Cou ntr y Moblle
Home Park , Darw 1n, Oh io
For tnformat1on , c all 992 7034
8 25 SI C

______

1961 FORD G~taxle, runs good .
priced at 1.50 Phone 992 7647
8 - ~7 6tc
1

t, ..-;·, "'o~;:-;-, on

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

________

-------------. THE DAILY SENTINEl
-------------PHONE 992-2156 . --------------

MriTOR-

Mob il e hom e Take over
payments Phone 742 4428
8 27 5tc

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

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

8 2B -3tp

NIC::E' 6---;:Qom
house
at
reesonabte rent We ere tn terttttd In tom~e who w ill
http tttl monuments on our
fine mtmorlel tot. This Is a
good opportunity for the rlgnt
penon . Log en Monument
Company,
Inc .
~eo
L.
v•uohan, Phone 992 -2518
t -23-tfc.

-------------1972 12x60 2 BEDROOM H aven

STARCRAFTGIGANTIC SALE
on folddown s, all models
Free heater plus h tg h est 206 ACRE farm w 1th 33 acres of
corn and farm equipment
diSCOUnt 1n lrt -State CAMP
Contact James Connor , 1855
CONLEY
STAR CRAFT
Silver R1dge Road, or phone
SALE S, Rt 62 north of Point
992 2720
Pleasant behmd Red Carpet
8 22 6t c
Inn
8 -28 31c
HOU SE '" town , 5.500 down and
SEARS' upr 1ght deep freeze.
sao per m onth . Trailer an'!
S125 Good workmg condtflon
tot. 2 bedroom $10,500 PhOne
Phone 992-7060
992 3975
8-28 4tc
8 14-lfc
45,000 WAXED cabbage &lt;; rates,
S6c a p1e&lt;:e Ca l l 843 -245 1
B-28 -6tc

ALSO SHAMPOO
CARPETS
AND CLEAN
UPHOLSTERY

Here
1972 3 BEDR OO M W1ndsor TRAVEL TRAILER Mob1le Home on 1 acre of you are, a dandy J usf the thing
ground
For
more
ln that you have been look1ng for.
format•on . c all 992 7638
7 30 tfc Travel In l uxury .

1971 HONDA 350 Sc rambler ,
good cond 1tton 1971 Vega 3
speed ltd., transm iSS ion , SlOO BU SINE SS bulldtng , 50x60
cement dnv e, Rt 124, near
Very good condlt1on . Also .
R uttand Phone 742 5052
dnve shaft , trans brace , and
8 21 lfc
......,
bell housmg FtiS 1971 and
1972 Vega See at Ill Pea rt
St , M iddleport , or call 992 LOTS for sate, trailer or house
-TwCfBEORooM mobile home.
5213
All utilities Phone 742 3615 ,
New carpetmg . Pbone 992
3509
-.
Rutland. Ohio Pn ce $2 ,500
8 27 6tp
7 16 tfc
8 25 7tc
1972
KAWASAK I,
H2 750
Luggage racks, padded sissy 5 ACRES ln cOuntryOn blac ktop
2 BEDROOM house , electric
bar, 2 helmets , exce llent road, s miles east of Racine ,
heat , I V~ baths, cherry
cond1t io n Phqne 985 -4131
pene11ng, dlnln9 and liv ing
Ideal place for country home
8 27 6tp
room , kitchen and utility
Phone 843 2712
8 23 6tc
room , view of Ohio River
Must see to apprecia te. Phone NEW1 974- zl G Z A GSewtNG
MACHINE S
In
orig tnal 206 ACRE farm , 33 acres of corn
1 (304) 882 -3235, Hartford , w.
factory carton Ztg Zag to
Va. Completely carpeted
and farm equtpment Contact
make buttonholes , sew on
James Connor , 1855 Stiver
.,..
8 2.5 -tfc
buttons , monograms . and
R1dge Rd or phone 992 2720
make fan cy des tgns w i th just
'
8· 22 6t c
the twtst of a smgle d ial Left
1n la y a way and never been
WILL do babysitting •n my
used W ill sell for only $47
home n ights
Reasonable
cash, or terms availab le.
weekly or n1ghtly rates
Phone 992 26.53
Phone 992 7474 or 742 -4902
B 20 -tf c
after4pm

Ca.n be seen at
Hots

POMEROY. 0.

Mobile Homes For Sale

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

d 1nlng room , kitchen and
bath 422 W Main St . Phon e
992 -3432 o r 992 2780
8 27 ttc

Wanted To Buy
·we NEE-D 200 tOns

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

HOTPOINT
AIR CONDITIONERS

2 CRAGAR mag wheels Wtth
t.res , 15 1nch tor Chevy , sso
plus 2 Chevy Chrom e whee]s ,
14 m ch . $10 PhOn e 992 7881
8 28 21p

Rt

CASH
FOR JUNK CARS
complete Frye's Truck and
Auto Parts, Rutland, Ohio 2,.
HOUR WRECKER SER VICE Pl'!one 742 6094
7 26 26tc

For Sale

24 ' PONTOON boat Wtlh cab1n
on same Can sleep 4 40 h p
motor included Call 992-3435
or 992 3101
Pontoon ti l led
w1th starfoam
8-28 lt c

33, fWOTrOo-;;:.- and bath- apis In
Middleport. For Information ,
call 992 2550 or 742 6551
7· 26-tfc
1 3-tfc

appliances and m lsc
Hartford, w. va

WALNUT, Modern , s tereo
1969 VAN , a cylin der Phone- 772
rad1o , am t m 8 JracJ.; tape
565 1
combi nat1on . 4 sp eak er sound
8 16 lt c
system Balan ce Sl10.76. or
budget terms Ca ll 99 2 3965
]969 CHEVY Townsman st a110n
8 22 tfc
wagon S1 , 195 goo d co nd1t 10I'l
Phone 992 7620
5 24 ffc MELONS . sweet corn , green
peppers , cucumbers for sale
Gerald1ne Cl eland , Racine ,
Oh10
8 11 ttc

5 ROOM , 2 bedroom furn ished
apt , wall to walt carpetfng ,
modern k ttchen, wash-er and
dryer Phone 992 2676
B-27 -3tc

------------HOUSE insut&amp;flng, blowen for
better results , cuts fuel bills ------------3 BEDROOM home , living ,
down Free estimates Call
742-4428
8 20 -12tc

Eastern Ave , Galltpolls .
Bulta co 250 Alpma , $975
Bultaco 350 Alpma , $1 , 165
8-23 8tc

..,,Li...:...___________

tor Kent

AUCTION every Thursday 7
p m Horton St . In Mason
Consignments welcome from
11 a m to 5 p .m or call 7735471
8-21 lfc

INTERIOR
EXTERIOR

Known &amp;
Reliable Service

8

News 10 , What's My Line 8; Truth 0( Cons. 3; Jimmy
Dean 13 ; Zoon)33 ; I Spy IS, Elec. Co . 70 , Bowling lor OQIIars

7. 30- To Telf the Truth 6 . Sale of the Century 8, Beat lhe Clock
13 , Mtlques '0 . Eptsode A ction 33 , Base ball 3, 4; The Judge

VtMD (Aug 23-Seol 221

~

!'00 -

All-WEAlHER

HOME
DECORATING

Helen Help i~
us

Diagnost ic and Pres,crip11ve Teaching ot Read i ng ll
6· 30 - New5 3, 4, 8, 10, 15 : Room 211 t3 . News. 6 ; Journey lo
Japan 33 ; Bew ilched a

lnt•rlof. bterlor
De'!ratlnt •MI
Remodellnfl

lluencus. anr!ess lnendly

,.,,,,.&gt;?/..ml&lt;:&gt;'-.-W-i&gt;'#XX:Y.mmx,,,-.u__

Now•' ·

tHE DEPENDMI E

CONTRACONG 00.

337 N. 2, Middleport
992-2550

8 28 •1tc

Cheshire, Oh 10 locat ed In the
ol d M&amp;G Market Build ing
Now ope-n for bus iness
8-27 61P

BISSEll BROTHERS
CONST. CO.

EXcELSiORS;i;-

Creek. Road off St ate Route 7
Phone 446 0294
RUMMAGE sale at the Fry
building , Middleport Starting
Tuesday , Aug 27 till Aug 31
Good school clothes
s 26 Jtc
LAsSiE ·SC arr ;-O~-:-Rt 1,

-----------

REDECORATING?

l

- Tile O~lly Sentinel, Mlddleport-r,.neroy, 0 .• WL't,ICI(•sday, Aug. 211. 197~

Television Log
,,oo-News]~~~~o~~f~~t~!~~i.':;.~~~.suo,

1'"..""'- ·

For Sale

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

1970 NOVA CPE.

-B
- u. sm·es s Servt·ces ____

,~~c~~,'e, ~~.~~•.

uiltul
•reu , rolling
meadow5. ,
elec
Saldeadt-nU
em Town 5tnp
.....1
R d tncl1
No v,62S,
ir'I IO I'-----~~~~~:::~~~~~:!.:=:.;~:.=::::.::....:_.::.:::__::::_::::_
ma in ~ntrv
IDEAL FOR
CHURCH ,
OR
SCOUT
CAMPS NICE HOME SITE S
We ARt: PICkn"\Q up a p lano In
Township Ro•d No 16 Listed
your aru .!!lnd would llke
at UOO per .acre Make offer .
sum~
respons i bl~
party to
Walter '! IH·altv, Box 31~.
take over pa.,.meniS . Call
worthington , OhiO ~308.5 .
Don ' t rorget the roof of your
Crectl' M•n~toer , (6,.t) 772
Piione l6HI 888 1892 or phone
home H~11e a beautiful new
.5669 or wr l fe 260 East Ma in
(614} 888 2803 .
Street , Chillicothe . Ohio ,.5601
roof Installed by All Wea1her
B-28 4tc
A 7 lfC
Rooting Co.
Chesler. Ohio
NOW
ready
to
mov~
ln
rustle
RIDING horse for sete . 2 vears
tr l lt11el. l bedroom!i , 2 bathS ,
985-4 102
old . oreen bfoke. Gen t le. Call
All fhJt is neede-d for a free
ellitra 1i!lrge f iJm l ly room , 2 c.a r
992 5510
~.garage ,
air conditioned.
es1ima ht is • INtOne c.all.
8 l .tfc
sunken pat io. home on c1 ty Home
Building &amp;
Please Phone :
weter af'ld sewer , close to
VINYL SIDING .
wo,:;;:-- e
Additions.
Aluminum
·
school and shopping , priced
Mll•n St , Pomerov . All kinds
PH.
992·7•54 or
f1Qhl Call now 992 S974
&amp; Vinyl Siding. Floor
of salt water pellets , water \
8
18
uc
992·7129
nuogets, block salt a,nd own
Sanding &amp; Finishing,
Oh io River Salt Phone 99~
FrH E1tlm•te1, Mlllll..,..., 0 '
25 ~CRES of level land , Ideal L------------'
3891
tor new homes All utilities
6 !I He
avall,bte . on hard su rfa ce
road . 6 miles t rom Pomeroy,
CA NNIN G tomatoes , br i ng
Oh to Pn ced at 525,000 15 11"l!
con la lner . Geraldine Cleland.
acres with cottage woods. and
Racine , Ohio
spr ing t ed creek , iom1ng the
•
8 16 ti c
described land, pr iced at
S20 ;000. If tn lere st ed , cttll cr
KENNEBEC
and
Cob~ter
see George S Hobst etter, Bo)(
potatoes Call Jo hn Pape , 949
101. Pom eroy, Ohio or call
AND
302.5
98S 4186 after .ot p m
3·13 6tc
8 28 Jtc

Pomeroy
•tor Co.

2

•

•IWI

J!

TODAV'SQlJESTtON

You'\ partner continues to s i~
netrump, What Ho you do now?

I.

'

.

-~

�11 - 1'11!! O.Uy Sentinel, Middlei!OI'I-I'.....,.oy, 0., Wednowy, Aug. 28, 1974

Sentinel Clat~sifieds Get Results!
LOSt
• YEAR; OLD mate Norweg ian
Elk Houn d dog . bllcll. anc
ljlrl!ly . Lo1t In the v•cinlty o
Ch.ster end Tuppers Pla ins

Of
QUALITY

_________ __
Phon• 985 "198

_...._ 8 27 6h

Notice
v A.A. 0 Sale. Avo 29, 30. 31 at 708

South Th•rd Ave M tddleport ,

Oh io

·
' 8 28-l t c-

------------..,...Jus t itrouncl
WINTER

corner !

B~

thf

sure to check a1

hoses ~nd anrl freeze Cal
Rogef' Hvse ll's Garage , 997
5682
8 28 31

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

........

SWEEPER RepB ir. Parts , ant
SuppUes . Dav is Vacvurr

Cleaner h mile up

George ·~

.

Sl49&gt;
Local 1 owner, Qood tires. 6 cyl with automahc t rans,
r ad io, blue fl"ish, spotless clean blue intenor .

1913 CK 10 PICKUP

S3491

4 Whee-l Dr ive. locking frt. hubs, V-8 engine, 4 sp~
trans , power steer ing &amp; brakes, rad1o , chr frf &amp; re-M
bumpers

1971 CHEVROLET '~'• TON

S2l95

8' Fleetslde, light green finish , like new 15" Commercia'
tires . H, du1v springs, lSO V - 8eng fn~ . 4 speed trans

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

C HE STe ;- v;;-;;nt'ee ;.-- F ire
Dept. Is hold i ng a Labor Day
Celebration Sept 2, 1974
Chicken Bar -BQ , homemade
tee cream , garden tractor
pul l , parade, any donat ions of
pte and cake will be ap
prec tated
a 26.6tc

--

--~

SOLID
VINYL SIDING
Produced frQm a special
vinyl compound made b y B ~

F . Goodrich and Monsanto 5
times thicker than metal
Siding

Writ not dent , chip,
crack , peel , rot , rust or
ctlalk

FREE HOME ESTIMATES
SUPERIOR
VINYL PRODUCTS

. Call Collect 1-S9l·SS44
Athens, Ohio

-------------SPE CIA L , th e Cycle Shop , 1731

.

Help Wanted

Auto Sales

CONSTRUCTION and Utili t ies
Worker Age 18 34 , no exp
req , Free rm
and brd ,
Med icaL Dental , 30 days pd
vec, Cell (colle ct) Army
Opportun ittes , 61A 593 3022. In
Athens , or sto p by 221
Columbus Rd
8 26 3tc
CARPENTERS Age 18 J4, no
exp req. , Free rm and brd .,
55601xon , Med ical , pental , JO
days of vac , Cell {collect)
Army Opportunities 614 593
3022 , In Athens , or stop by at
721 Columbus Rd
8,26-3tc

------------CLERK Typist - Age 18 34 , 2-3
yrs exp , Sal. bsd . on e)(p
trng , Free rm
&amp; brd ,
Medical. Dental. 30 days pd
vac ., Call (coll«c t ) 550 Dixon
Army Opportunities · 614 593
3022 , In Athens , or stop by at
221 Co tum bUS Rd
8-26 3tc

HOUSE for rent Phone 8822984, New Haven, W Va
8 28 6fp

IDIDN'lKNoWTHAT ! MGM
Flea Market Specials . S5
inside sJ outside Sprlf!g
Ave
Pomeroy ,
Ol'\10 ,
Colle'ctors , dea ers , etc
Every Sa1. and Sunday.
f
8-7 t c
------- -----~~--

ATo

Z- MART, used furniture,

NICEJ-;-;;- apt-a nd bath .
all etectr1c 1n Pomero Y
Tabletop range , wall oven ,
ni ces t apt around Phone
Gallipolis,
446 7699
or
evenings , 446-9.539
a 23 tfc

TRAILER , Brown 's Tra i ler
Court. Pomeroy Phone 992
of sheet ,
3324
cast, new or old aluminum
7 18 tfc
Keep cans separate . The
Rosenberg Co , Athens , Ohio. BUSINESS room , 22x80, 234 E
B 15 tfc
Main St, Pomeroy , Oh1o
Phone 992 -5786 or 992 -3975
JUNK Autos complete and
6 12 tfc
delivered to our yard We pick
up auto bodies and buy all FURNISHED
apartment.
klndt of scrap metals and
adults only In Middleport
Iron . Rldtr's Salvage , State
Phone 992-3874
Rt. 124, Rt. A, Pomeroy , Ohio
5 12 tfc
Phone 992-5468 .
1 J1 -26tP 4 ROOM furnished apartment ,
close to Powell 's Super Vatu
CASH paid for all makes and
Phone 992 3658
8 7 ttc
'models of mobile homes
Phone area code 614 423-9531
....._
4-13 tfc 3 AND 4 ROOM furn i shed and
unfurnished
epartments
OL..D I='VRNITURE , oak tables,
Phone 992 5434
clocks, Ice boxes , brass beds ,
4 12 tfc
dishes, desks , or complete
households
Wr.te M . D . PRIVATE meeting room for
any organ izat ion . phone 992
Miller , Rt . 4, Pomeroy , Ohio,
call 992-7760.
3975.
.5 13-ttc
3 11 ttc

----------,...----

_________ _____

Pets For Sale

DOVER:MAN pups , 4 months
old , AKC Registered All
shots,
~e~rs.
cropped ,
~ reasonably priced Phone 992
2832 ,
8-28 -ltc

Help Wanted
CAREER OPPORTUNITY for
Mtn or Women - Nationwide
Insurance offers earnings up
to 115,000 (this. IS a salary, not
a drew) to sell complete in ·
surance protection , life ,
heam-. , auto, finance. and
mutual funds No prior ex .
perltnce is necessary since
we have one of the most
complete training progral"ls
In the Industry If you are
Interested In a career op portunity In a rewarding
business ,
Cell.
stanley
Ferguson at 614 -446 -4707
Collect, Monctay thru Friday 8
a .m to 4,30 . p .m An Equal
Opportunity Employer
8-28 -Jtc

CARRIERS
WANTED _
IN

1•

SYRACUSE
AND
MASON

4,000 BTU

--------------COUNTRY MObile Home P~ark~
Rt 33, ten miles north of
Pomeroy . Large lots with
concr~te pat ios , sidewalks ,
runners and off street
parking
Also, Spaces for
smell trailers Phone 992-7479 .
7 21 tf c

1•109.95

1970 VALl ANT 6Sx 12, 3 b edroom
ful l y carpeted , LP gas heal
Phone 992 775 1
8 25 tf c

These sizes also available ·

s.ooo, 6,000, 8,000, 10,000 and
12,000 BTU.
POMEROY LANDMARK
9.
1 · Jack W. Carsey , Mgr.
~
Phone 992 -2 181

LOCAL N1ght Club domg st rong
6 figure bus.ness PriCed
r ig ht Small down payment.
can fman ce ba lan ce
Ea sy
tease of real est~te ;wadable
Phone 992 9972 for deta ils
8 28 tfc

BOAT, motor and trailer 1971
16' Tnhull BowR1der , l973 5.5
h p Chrys ler, must se ll
Asking S1 ,800 Many extras
Phone 992 2392
8 27 -3tp
1970 18FT SCOT TIE Ca mper .
sleeps 6 Good condll 1on
PhOne 992 -7126
8 -27 tfc

.
-------------CANNING ja r s with glass tops

Also, free manure for the
hauling Joh n HoudeshelL
M inersville , Oh10
8-27 3t p

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

colltcl

15G ,

"''UI"'"'"'

Army

Op

'14-.593-3022, In
AtiiiM, 1r lfop by at 221

COJIImloill '"'·

8 26 -Jtc

:....----,---=-----

·£;•ott•
.
"t•ct

8 27 12tc

-------------WILL care for child ren '" my
home up 1o school age
Rel iable
s1tter
w 1t h
references
Call Kathryn
Russell, anytime at 992.5771
8-27 6tc

.-------------Auto Sales

1969-,;ooc.e "W mdowed super
van, automatic trensmiSS lon
Runsoood, looks good $1 ,295
George Hall , 992 -.5949
8 2B -3tp

ELECTROL U X
vacuum
cleaner , A 1 condit ion , uses
paper bags , has cordwmder
and many attachments Also,
shampooer attachment 10
eluded . {O nly 4 ~tva liable l at
$37 ,70
Ci!IS h
or
terms
available Phon e 992 2653
8· 20 tfc
---- ----- - ~~-~--

KOSCOT
KOSMETICS
&amp;
WIG S ( The Mink Oil Base
Cosmetics t
Ph one
BROWN'S , 99'2 .5113
8 20 tfc

r-------------HO T POINT range , Amana 22ft
-------------196S CHEVROLET 2-dr 5250
Si de by
refr ige rator
1~7 5

Lincoln

!o~de

freezer , Norge washer and
dryer, set of walnut dtn lng
room tt~bles Wllh choi r s and
pad, opproxlmate ly 4 years
oltL good old bed and chest of
drawers . Phone 992 7066.
8· 20 lfc

Houdnhtlf .

IIMnVII)t• Ollfo.

'

T

• 27-llp

.

H ACRE fa rm . 6 room house,
barn , other outbuildings ,
51 9,500 Phon e 742 .5845
a 16 26tp

1968 BUICK Electr• 225, 4 dr
s.edan, f) s .. p .b , factory fl l r.
good body and lnter1or
Perfect runn lng cond1t1on
saoo Phone 992 -2280 .
8-27 -6tp

-- ----------lm-NILLY ~s Jeep, 4 .. whet!!
drive, 4 cylinder motor with
e.•b, a 1 cond ition . See at lOS
Un ion Ave , Pomeroy Or call

992·3293

-------------GREAT
COUNTRl

dleport , 6 rooms , Ph baths,
tull basement. part ta lly
carpeted. kitchen comp lete,
wa sher and dryer , etc Could
be 3 bedrooms , gas furnace,
f1reptace , storm doors and
windows , curtains and drapes
mcluded F or Informat ion ca ll
Elden Wa lbur n , 992-2805
8-13tfc

____ _

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

________ ____

8-23 -tf(

SliREO·
92.1
WMPO.fM
'

Midd)•porf. Pom~roy

•

MIDDlE PORT -

Lovely

old br ick close to shopping . 5
B. R , 2 baths , ne~ modern
k i tchen, every1hlng built In,
elmost new H.W . gas heating
system , basement, large lot
&amp; ~rk1ng area ASKING

JUST S22,SOO.OO.
POMEROY - 1 floor plan. 2
B.R.• bath, H.W. floors. gas
basement

lot

12 MILES OUT-

with

Only
2 story

frame1 4bedroom, 1112 ba-ths,
dining room. 2 garages .

storage building , lots of
ground ,

finance
p~yrnent to right

down
par-ty ,

$10.000.
GOOD OLDER HOME - IVi
storv. frame, 3 B .R., ba-th;
basement, almost new F . A .
gc.a furnace. double level lot.
You must see th is at just

$6.500 00.

8·2Htc

191'01!2 TON , 4 wneel dnve, Ford
p1ckup , big 6 cyt , 4 speed
Harolt;f Brewer , Lon; Bottom ,
Oh Ia 985 -JS.S4
8-18-tfc

Phone 992 -7066.
• -.........

1970 KARMANGHIE VW , 1969
vw , 196.5 Dodge 4 dr stat ion
wagon , slant 6 automatic, 8
Wheelhorse
rid ing
h p
mower , l ike new Reg istered
~ Arab1an mare , rldlno
horse , Wright power saw
Phone 992-7889
8-25 -Stc

I

il
•

Fami l y room, utility, bath, and
carport One floor plan for only

$9.500.00.
GOOD - Older home, w1th 3
bedroom s, bath, mode rn kitc hen , din1ng, den and full
basement on good street In
Pomeroy. Si9,500.00

OLDER HOME -

Nice Inside

1r.m, laro ~m s. bath, large
wrap arOu, •• (tJh , 2 garages,
garden and levt: . •t. All for only

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

WANT TO SELL? ALL OF
OUR FILES AND EXPERIENCE ARE AT YOUR
DISPOSAL WITH JUST A
CALL FROM YOU . WE
SELL YOUR ~ROPERTY
OR
YOU
PAY
US
NOTHING
99Ml59or ffl -2561

Sports •

ll : OO - Ne wsl , 4, 6. 8, 10, 13, 15 , ABCNews33.
U:30 - Johnny Carson 3. M tsslon · imposs tble 6 . Untou chables
13·, Janak! 33 , Come to the Fa1r 4, 15 , Mov1e s " The
Desperados " 8, " Operation Atlantis ' ' tO
11 : 45 - Johnn y Carson 4, IS
17: 30 - Wild , W1ld West 6 ; W ide Wor ld Speciall3
1: 00 - Tomorrow3 . 4, Takefiveforltfe
2:00 - News 4 , 13

Call Evenings

Pomeroy, O.

190 Mulberry

This

may be your only chance to buy
a riverview home. 8 rooms ,
ba1h, den , dtntng, 2 porche s,
n1 ce basement, fm e shop, a 2
car ca rport . Just $23.500.00
LIKE NEW - 3bedroom home ,
large ba1h and utility, 7 closets
with lots of storage , ltving Is
1S 'x 30 ', carpeting,
copper
plumbing , 2 nice concrete
porches, a large concrete block
shop and garage, on 3/11 acres of
land Can you beat this for only

REAL ESTATE PEOPLE
BELOW THEY KNOW WHAT
TO SAY AND WHEN. THEIR
SERVICE WILL MAKE YOU

'

• Dn'CHING SERVLCE
Water Ltnes and Power
Lmes . All work done by the
fool or contrac1. Also dozer
work and sept1c tanks in·

l ~telled .

. .See or Call
Bob or Roger Jetfers
Day 992-7089

• Brake Work... w
General Overhaul
e Tune Up-S5 00 up
e Carburetor Ad tustment

e

K&amp;H ROOFING
James

o.

New Zoo Revue 6 , Tennessee Tuxedo 13 , Jeff's Coll•e 6
Jack laLanne 13
8 30 - Brady Bunch 6
8 55 - News 13.
9 00 - Paul D1x.on 4; AM 3; Ph 1l Donahue lS. Abbott &amp; Cost ello
8 ; Wild , Wild West 6 , M ov1e " About Mrs. Les t 1e" 13 , At the
Fa1r with Chuck Wh1te 10
9 30 - To Tell the Tru th 3, Lucy Show 8
10 00 - Joker 's W il d 8, 10 , Company 6, Nam e That Tune 3, 15.
10: 30 - GambttS, 10 , Wmnlng Streak 3, 4, 15 ; Phll Donahue-4
11 : 00 - Password 13, Now You See It 8, 10 ; H1gh Rollers 3, 15 ,

Refrigerators,
Freezers, ' Home &amp;
Auto Air Conditioners
and
Commercial
Units.

11 · 30 - Brady Bun~h 13 ; Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15; Love of L tfe
8, 10 ; lucy Show 6
11 :55 - CBS News 8; Dan I mel 's Wor ld 10
12 . 00 - Jackpot 3, 15. Password 6 , Bob Brun's 50-50 Club 4,
News 81 10, 13 , M 1ster Rogers JJ
12 30 - Split Second 6, Search for Tom o rrow
10 ; Ceiebnty
Sweepstakes 3, 15 , Afternoon wtth·DJ 13 E iec Co 33

8· 25 -

WARNER'S
REFRIGERATION
SERVICE
992-7204

Pomeroy,

J&amp;B AUTO
BODY
Moved to Rutland, J4 mde
ms ide c1ty l i mit on right
corner B1rck St . and Rt. 124.

C. II 'tl-7836 For

W1lktnson Small Engine
992. 3092
- 399 w. Ma1n
Pomeroy, 0
Located at Modern Supply
small Engine Repailr

--

r:oo -

•
•
•
•

Lawn Bo\Tecum se h
Kohler
W1scons1n
• All othe r
makes __

D&amp;D
CONTRUCTION
PHONE
949-3832 or 843-2667

FO R your remodelmg , roofmg ,
painting , repa 1rm g. concrete
and masonry work , &lt;::a ll
Ronnte Hubbard, 992 -35 11 or
AUTOMOBILE 1nsurance been
992 7302 work by hour or
Painting, siding , roofing,
cancelled.,
Lost
your 1• .contra cl
paper hangtng , kitchen
operator's ltcense Cal l 997
8 7 26tc
cabmets, etc:.
7 428
6 IS tfc SEWIN G MACHINES. Repa ir
serv1ce , all makes , 992 2284 .
CREMEA N S
CONCRETE
The Fabrtc Shop , Pomeroy .
delivered M onday thr ough
Au thonz ed s,n ger Sales and
Sat urday
and
eve n tngs
Service We sharpen Sc1 ssors 1 ...
Phone 4461142
3 29-tfc
6 13 tfc
work, land c learmg by
- DOZER
the acre hourly or contra c t ,
SEPTIC
TANKS
clea ned ,
farm pond s, r oads, et c Large
reasonable rates
Ph 446
dozer and operator w 1th over
4782, Ga ll ,polis John Ru sse ll,
20 years expenence Pull Ins
owner and operator.
Excavating , Pomeroy, Oh io
5 12-tfC
Phone 992 2478
12 19-tfc
SEPTIC TANK S,
AROBIC
SE WAGE
SYSTEMS
O ' DELL Almernent, located
CLEA NED ,
REPAIRED
beh ind Rutland Grad e School.
MILLER
SANITATION ,
complete front end servtce,
STEWART , OHIO . PH 662
brakes and tun eu ps, wheels
3035
balanced electronically , Open
10 4-tf c
8 to 8 dally Call 742 -3232 on
Sunda y for appt
SEPTIC
TANKS
c leaned .
7-16-tfc
Modern San ttatton , 992 3954 or
992 7349
1023tfc EXCAVATING , dozer , loader
and backhoe work . sept1c
~~- ~~-- ------~~
tanks Installed , dump tru.cks
REAOY , MIX
CONCRETE
and lo -boy s for hire , will haul
delivered rig ht to your
f tli dirt, top sod, limestone &amp;
projec t Fast and easy Free
gravel , Call Bob or Roger
estimates Phone 992 3284 .
Jeffers , day phone 992 7089.
Goegletn R eady M ix Co .,
night phone 997 -3525 or 992
M1ddleport, Oh io .
.742-4211
Arnold
.5232
6 30 tfc

Business Setvices

t oo -

We will be seeing vo~·
our customers,
our regular hours.

Club opening makes it easy

TUESDAY
SEPTEMBER2

,,

+

iHg CapaCity
Maytag
Automatics.
1 1 speed operat ion
.Choice of watt •
lemps . Avto . wate1
'level control Lln '
Filter or Power Fir
T

Nlc:e for

-~

kitchens, etc.

dens.

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
702 -4211

•

Rulltnd, 0 .

I am a widower and have a wonderful rr1end, whu is a widow

Wehavekoowneachuthcrformany.many years
we h~ve been gotng out and having wonderful

stn cc
1 1 ltmcs
1
h
my wife passed away , But when 1t comes to a Itt e OVI~. s e
holds b•ck. You see, she has a grown daughter, who seems to be
most

of the time and evidently Qoesn't want any hanky·

panky .

What do you s uggest ' - LOVABLE MI\N
Dear Lovable :
'
A marrtagc license, perhaps? And if that sounds too, Loo
1
preachy, well, you might inVIte her on a weekend trip. At east
you'll find out this way Lf 1t's opportunity - or desire - that 's
H

·
ffilSStng . -

If you have to 111 m-up plans

Int.eusjum: Honorqble, Slr1 where luends are Involved
you 11 ha&gt;Je more tuck d you do

Dear Helen -

around
•

ARIES (March 2-..,-_-Apr~ll~19-.)

·

+++

Dear Helen :
"Devout B1ble Student" should have read h1s Bible a ltttle
closer. The streaker he referred to (Mark 14 :51.:;2) was a late
com~ r . Please read Isaiah 20:2, who str eaked 700 years pnor to
the Mark happening .
However, 300 years before that, some,of King David's men
were embarrassed by King Hanon the Ammomte, who cut off
hall iheir beards and half thetr robes, exposmg thetr buttocks. (2
Samuel 10 :4).
Of these three events, only Isaiah streaked volunta rily, 1.e.,
upon theorder ofGod .- Mr. W. W. H
Dear Mr H. :
You might say King Oav1d's men were the first to ''moon 1t.''
Thanks to my correspondents, I'm becommg a veritable font of
fascinating trivia ... But Pll bet you don 't know the answer to this

next question ·

Dear Helen :

+++

A TV nature program w1th, "How many feathers m a male
peacock's tatl fan ?' ' got us curious. The speaker was supposed to
g1ve the number at the end of the show, but I was called to the
phone and didn 't hear 1! and it's been bugging me ever smce.
I buzzed the station and no one there could remember, either.
Since you,re the woman with the answers, lay one on me. BETCHA CAN'T
Dear Betcha :
Betcha I can I A male peacock ~an boast slightly more than
2(1(1 feathers in his tail {an ... Not that lie cares a squawk one way
or the other. - H.

11 now rather than WR 111ng unltl
1a1er
TAURUS ( Aprll 20· Mar 20
Even though lhe goa l 15 per ·
sonal to you you H be sur·
pr1sed how much Si.Jpport from
others you 11 get to help you
reach 11

GEMINI (May 21 -Juno 20)
.;:a Omethtng mteresttng and
pleasant you d1dn 1 ltgure on
w111 come tram a soc1at en·
counler Accept any ~rwnat 1 ons
you. get at present

CANCER (Jvne 21 -Jvly 22)

Take a more active role m a
S1 tuat1on where you share an
tnlerest w1th one close to you
Your guu;lance w1ll get thmgs
on c ourse ·
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Con
d1t 1ons are generally favorable
lor any ba rgam1ng o r deals you
!lave lo make now Later , 1n4

Football a

9 30 -

the

15.

11 00 - News 3. 4. 6. 13, 15 , ABC News33
11 15 - N ews 10
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3,· Mission impossible 6. Untouchab l es
13 , Come to the Fa1r 4, 15.
11· 45 - Johnny Carson 4, 15 , Movie '' The Harder They Fall ' ' 10
12 00 - News 13
12 . 30- W1ld, Wild West 6; Wide World Special 13; Movie " The
Great Missoun Band " 8.
1 00 - Tomorrow 3, 4; Take Five for Life 15
2:00 - News 13, 4.

SAGITARR IUS (Nov

23 ·

Dec 21) You have a naturallv
mmd Oon 'l be hesttant
about ask1ng ln·deplh Ques
hans regard1ng something new
you ·(e underlakmQ but don I
fully understand
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 - Jan.
1 9) There are two prom•s•ng
areas at present that could
me an somethmg to you hnan c•ally One 1s at work The
other IS con fldent, aJ
cur~ous

AOUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fel&gt;
19) Th•s w tll be the ktnd o f day
YOJJ II l•~e You c an do thmgs
your own wav Jl you don't,
you ve only \IOUrse ll to blame

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)

Don I be •mpa\lent al present

()wt:r'OOJ

.."..

~

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

39 MoWiblln

I Sblre
5 Author

crelll
40 Wolfish look

Francoise
10 Tamarisk

DOWN

·

1 Cahadian

salt
tree
11 Continent
12 Head for

resort
%Tarawa,
for eumple
3 Wu fair
(3 wds.)
4 Bardlc
'"always"
5 Nappy
leather
6 Circle

the clouds
13 Women's

page
ol!erlng
14 - one's
trade
15 Pater
18 Become

Yesterday's Auwer

15 Art move.
ment
~ctlon
18 Do one's
7 Confer
civic
drowsy
( 4 wds.)
duty
17 Ralse
8 Assign
21 Outdo
19 Sesame
9 Darillng
ZZ Buck20 Antiquated
and knitting
thom
person
11 Love
23 World
21 Tibia or
poetry's
Series

carpus

muse

time

%2 Terra Z4 Tempi

24 Pedestal·
28 Tbrong
28 Pet 29 Poker
tenn
30 Sign

on a

door
35 'nppler
38 Fish
for smoklns

25 Fatigue
symptom
2tl Culinary

POtpourri

street.

I worry about those old people. What can be done? - IN·
VOLVED 1\ND F IRED
Dear I. and F .:
II you can prove that old people are neglected in the nursing
home, then make a complaint to the authont1es and ask for an
mvestiga tion.
Why not start w1th a claun for your nghtful pay and go on
from there? (But prepare for a fight !) - H

J]!JJJ~!1~® /kJ -...u.J .-1 ,_.
h y H E NRI AAN OLO . t n tl H UB LEE

L' n ~c ramble thesl.' four Jumble!\

one l etter to each square, to
form fnur ord 1nury ""ords.

:n SaultMarie

28 Chann
school
topic
31 Gear
tooth
32 "Able was
I - 1
saw .. "
33 From - to
Beersheba
34 Demeaned

b-+--+k,-4-+-

36 Handle
copy
3'1 Extract
38 "Whatis new?"

I
D_ I I I
I II

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Hen's how to work

[ !NYI'P

r
I I J I I

KEBDE~

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

II

ITHYFOR

Performance 20

10· 00 - Streets of San Francisco 6, 13, News 20 1 NBC News 3, 4,

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24 -Nov. 221
i,..e l your natu ral sense of 11m·
1ng come mto play 11 you re
domg any det1cate negolla!lng
Press lor ~our po1nts when
your mtuttton d1re c ts

room and board as part payment.
I love elderly people and think they are somethmg more than
just lumps to lie in lied and walt! or death
Wh1le 1was there, I had the patients wallong and talking and
laughing. They came to life with a little help, I found, and it was a
JOY, seemg the miracle. But, of course, they became btgger
problems for the staff.
The upshot was that the owners fired me and wouldn 't even
give me my back pay They just put me and my belongings out on

Dear Helen :
I was hired to work in a nursmg home, where r would receive
Ozzie' s G1rls 8 , TBA 15 , Festival FUms 33
8 00 - Waltons 8; Temperatures R1smg 6, Even1ng at Pops 20,
33 , Mac David 3, 4, 15 , Dora ·s World 6, Movie " Mutmy on the
Bounty" 10
8 30 - Just For Laughs 6, 13.
9 00 - Kung Fu 6, 13 ; Ironsid e 3, 15, Internati ona l Performance
33 ; State Fa.r Horse Show 4; Jeanne Wolf With ., 20 , WFL

r ~ke a chance on your o wn
•deas before you oo on lhOOO
of an-other Your lhOuohts Wi ll
prove 1o be the wtser

TH ie&gt; 1'5 NEVeR
CONTI':ACiE:D.

One letter &amp;Imply otanda ror another. In thla umplo A II
used for the three L'a, X for the two O's, elc. Slnale lotlora,
apootropheo, the leneth and formation of the wordl ""' all
biDts. Each day the cod•Jettero are dllerent.
CRYPTOQUOTES

WF WH
Now aJTanre the circled lellera
to form the aurprite answer, u

I;:~·=::!:·:::=::=-===~·==·~·~u~rll~•~sted by above cartoon.
_:.:.:
l'rilll::..:iiii::..:SMISI=:.::AHSWII==•= ---_jl "ITJ - aJ"

WH

POZ

WF

QAWTVXKFNA~

WH

HX

WAFC.

the

,_I

(A111wer• tomorrow)
IRATE CLOVEN FRIEZE
Vr.•lrrda}''•
- / An•wn: U'hali/OU might wror in a altou:er- A RAINCOAT

Juruloln VOCAL

FDNF

YXTVUCFCUZ

K C H F W A 0. - N 0 N F D N
Y D K W H F WC
Yeoterday'a Cryptoquole: SPYING IS A FINE THING: YOU
GET THE ENJOYMENTS OF A THIEF AND STILL 1lEMAJN
AN HONEST MAN.-JOHANN NESTROY

(0 IH41tlnc Pula,. 87&gt;1dleale,I•.J

Perm a-Press
Maytag
Halo of Hut
Dryers
Surround
clothe~
with gentle , even
1heat No hot spots
no overdrylng F lnE
Me- Lint Filter
we Specialize In
MAY TAG
Red Carpet
Service

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

~utland -

Grate

BUICK OPEL MANTA

North-South vulnerable-

West

Ag1tator ~

..''

"
1..

I
'

Pass

Pass
Pass

North

East

1•

Pass
Pass

3'1

Pa ss
Pass

2•
Pass

31••

South

CAP!'AIN EASY
IF- ){]U'RE 1901NG TO KEEP
US H~&lt;~&lt;e AU. NIGHT- AT
l.EA~T YOU CA~r 06JECi
TO US l16ii!'""I~S
'TO THS WIRELSS.S!

4'1

• Opemng lead - K+

'

... AN!&gt; OF A'-1- OUR FfATHe~~ FfZJEiNOl!J

":f"~ll

JloJ THI-7 "6C6PTEREP lSLE-:' WtfiCH ~
MORE eELOVI!D OF &amp;IRDWAT'CfoffRS
THAN OUit &amp;M91.1SH ~ARk ... "f

-T;

INI&gt;&amp;I&gt;, HM

N&lt;IT U!'AP'T AT Ttte SI6HJ 0~ 'AN
f!lt.ALTATION Or' LARK.,_ Jt~tl.kt
INTO TH5-

•

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

·Yesterday we sa1d that yo u
not open one
sea de With four Ca rd s each in
spades and clubs Our gener·
al rule for other han ds w1th
d~finitel y should

..' '
I

1

tj

"

'"

two four·card

su1ts 1s

when

yq u hold four diamonds and
four clubs to open one club;
with four hear ts a nd four diamonds to open a diamond,
uri:Jess your hea r ts are, very
g'l'ld, with clubs and either
mS.jor to open one club and
with spades and hea rts to

ARE YCU M401'NO
ONE

IN

HE/'1/'IIGHT
MIND v..oJLD /'IE·

71JRN
LIKE

'

open one hea rt.

WINNie/

WHERE AI'IE
YCU OOINCI?

IF MI'I.KONlO&amp; CAN INVESTICIA"TE ME_4 GUEB&amp;
I CAN DO A LITTLE

SlVP 6011HEPJNCP\

M~ i.UfliLE:

~eARCH oN

HIM I

r!M lllDRK-

It-ltP OIJ THt;

In additiOn we also open
three-card club s u1ts with
hands hke today's. We do
hold four ca rd s each tn
spades and" hea rts but have

no interest in e1ther suit
unless our partner ca n pro·

duce four cards there.
It is fairly easy to ar n ve at
four hearts after the club

opening. It

I S e ven eas1er

to

IlLLEY OOP

get there after a. one-heart
op,!!ning by North, but any

four-card maJorite would

4 CYUNDER OHC 75 HP ENGINE - STIIItiMHD
RECLINING FRONT BUCKET SEATS - STANDARD
4 SPEED FUUY SYNCHRONIZED
TRANSMISSION - STANDARD
- .
RACK AND PINION STEERING - STANDARD
POWER ASSISTED FRONT DISC BRAKES - ·STANDARD
ENERGY ABSORBING BUMPERS &amp; STEERING COWMN - STANDARD
TRADITIONAUY GR'EAT GAS MILEAGE - STANDARD
SMITH NELSON'S LOW PRICE - STANDARD

diamonds and one
fNt:WSI'A !'"Ell

PHONE 992-2174

....

The

'wu1
.

heart

lti ' HI SE ASSN I

..

.

,.

bi~d lng

has

Norlh

b&lt;.'en

East
Pa!IS

south

"

••
2•
PlJ.S.'i
You, Soulh, hold.
• AK Q J 10 54 ' 8 5 + 3 2 .. 7 4

Pa,.

"

LOOKV

'IONDER,
MAW!!

DOC MUSTA PUT
HIGH TEST 1111

TH'Ot GAL

· AG'fi\J

I I~ II
(t ,, f l

'

What du you do now'!

A-Bid 11 .. opod ••· Your

f

panner has shown a very good

hted, bul there might woll be
twD qulek dl1mond laM!flll.

POMEROY, 0.

•

"

f~NTt

FEATHERS!/

u:an:l,!M!3tl

Smith Nelson Motors Inc.
500 E. MAIN ST.

HIM AFRAID
OF

open the North ha nd w 1th one
spade. The heart su1t /,·~st
might be missed as the td·
d1~g went forward
Not that th e heart suit
s!Utuld be m1ssed Any two
bidders should r e~c h that
heart game on anY- system
ar{d would wmd up losmg two

5q, Yd.

bedrooms.

..,. ·

197~

+ 9 64

\

Now $4.99 Sq. Yd.

~=

for T"hunday, Aug 29,

f, n~U''CiaHy

.. Q843

8 25 -Stp
-------------CARPETING
501 NYLON

ROiJ . SUhq. yd.

Oltt•

1

also provfJ to tM: a tavQrai'Jitt

"Year for you

+ AB753
410 7

KQJO
.. J952
SQUTH
• A2
'AQJ 5

Phone 992 3718

Conely Stripe Cor.,..t wllh
rubber .,.ck.

•

8

'

'
EAST
• J93
'10 7 4

, WEST

• 10 8 6 4
'K9

--------------PIAN O tun ing, Char les Scott .

S~ECIALI

Y

L[ J
I e t•n

LIBRA (Sept, 23-0cl. 231

Au~ . 29, 11H•
AU~ances w1ll be made thiS
YfJ~r wllere
'/OUt wo rk 01
t. ar~e1 t"J coocemed lh,., w1ll

• J2

RUTLAND FURNITURE

- We have hundreds of
ca rpet values. Your job ca n
be completed in 1 to 2 weeks.
No lona Waltlna oer lod .

The re ilre spec 1al prem,ums a1 ·
lat:hQd to ant work or serv1ce
you do al thO present Con cenHate where you c.an do the
grea 1 e~ 1 personal ljlood

even though vou tee1 you rt;
blocked 1rom what vov 'd hlce
to do So rpnstng lh1ng5 ara
t'lappemr.g b&amp;tunt:J the scone'!'i

"

'86 3 2
4AK6

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

•
and up!
Price Includes ' lnstallalion
and free padding . Talk. to ·
Wendell
Grate ,
carpet
consultan1.

NORTH IDI
• KQ 75

I:

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

SJ 95

e.

WIN AT BRIDGE

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

--------------C . BRADFORD , Auctioneer

ss- NBC News 3, 15

1 00 - All My Childre n 6. 13; New s 3, Not For Women Only 15 ,
Ha ze l 8; Green Acres 10
1. 25 - Chuck Wh1te Reports 10
1·30 - As the World Turn s 8, 10. Let' s Make A Dea l 6. 13 .
• Jeopardy 3, 4, 15
2· 00 - Guiding L ight 8. 10 , New lywed Game 6, 13; Days of Our
Lives 3, 4, 15
2 30 - Edge of Night 8, 10, G irl in My L tfe 6, 13 , Doctors 3, 4, 15
3·00 - General Hosp ital 6, 13; Pnce IS Right 8, 10; Another
~ World 3, 4, 15
3:30 - One Life to L ive 13, How to Survive a Marnage 3, 15, 4 ;
; Match Game 8, 10, Huck and Yog1 6
Sesame St 33, Mr Cartoon &amp; the Banana Sp li ts 3;
"' Tattletales 8; Somerse t 15; Bonanza 4 ; Gll l 1gan' s Island 6,
:'. Mov1e " The Iron Glove " 10
4: 30 - Green Acres 3, Bonanza 15, Vtrgm1an 8, Mod Squad 6,
*"' Gilligan's Island 13
5':- 00 - Mister Rogers 20, 33 , Bonanza 3; Merv Griffin 4 ,
.. Anythtng You Can Do 13.
t30 - Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Elec Co 33. Hogan 's Heroes 13,
.,. News 6. Trail s West 15.
6. 00 - News 8, 10, Sesame St 20 · NPw" ~ 4 l1 15, 6 , Diagnostic
~ &amp; Perspective Teaching of Reading 33.
6:30 - News 3, 4, 15, CBS N ews 8, 10, ~oom - 22213 , Flower Show
"' 33: Bew1tches 6
What's My Lm e
News 10 , Eiec Co. 20 , Truth or Cons
3; Let's Ma ke A Deal 13 ; Sports Desk 15 ; Man Builds, Man
'"' Destroys 33 , Great Day at the Fa1r 4, Bowt1ng for Dollars 6
7: 30 - Hollywood Squares 3: W1ld K1ngdom 10 : To Tell the
' Truth 6: Bea1 the Clock 13,· Zoom 20 , Dealer's Choice 4;

Estimates of Any Type

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING
From a shelf 1o a house.

on
alum i num
replacement
windows , Siding , storm doors
and w i ndows , Ra i ling Phon&amp;
Charles Lisle, Syracuse , Ohio .
Ca rt
Ja cob ,
Sa les
Representat i ve ,
V
V.
Johnson and Son. tnc
4 30 tf c

a.

k 1ng.,
Com pare our priCes to any
others We'll g 1ve you ei
professional roof for less

'\

•

SIO,OOO Pyramid 6

Nighl992-3525
or 992-5232

742-5293

------------FOR FREE estimates

197&lt;

Wis h 6

12

Now Open for Busi ness

Comp lete Service
Phone 949 3821 or 949·3161
Rac ine , Oh io
Crltt Bre dford
' 5 1-tfc

29 ,

$unrlse Seminar 4.
Sacred Hear t 10.
Farm Report 13
6: 30 - Bible Ansv·~rs 8 . Patterns for Ltvmg 13 , N ews 6 . F1 ve
M inutes to Live By 4, Summer Semester 10
6 : 35 -- Columbus Today 4
6. 45 - Morn i ng Report 3
7 DO - Today 3 , 4, 15 . News 8, 10, D1ck Van Dyke 13 ; Make A

8 : 30A.M. to .5 P.M.

171 Pearl Sf.
Middleport, Ohio
"l·S367

Free Estimates

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

WEDNESDAY, AUG

6 00 6· 15 6 25 -

367-7255

EXPERIENCED
MECHANIC ON DUTY

B&amp;K EXCAVATING
&lt;0:'----~-----.

$12,500.00
WELL CARED FOR -

--------------- ----------....----HOU SE , 630 Mil l St, Mid

uf lilt y, Iorge
SIO,OOO

e·

7 30 -

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

furnace,

Hudson Brothers 8. 10, Movie " The
President ' s Plane Is Miss ing " 6, 13 ; crn,se 15 ; Vtdeo
VIsionaries 20
30
- Greal American Dream Mac;hlne 20, 33
9•00 - Cannon a, 10 , Mov1e ' ' Red Sky at Mornmg' ' 15 .
g 30 - Boarding HoU$e 20. 33.
10 00 - Fest ival J=:tlms 33 , Ko!ak 8, 10 , News 10 , TBA 4, Pol1ce
Surgeon 3. Marcus Welb y, M 0 6, 13
10: 30 - Day at N ight 33 ; New O;;~lmg Game 3 , Fun,y World o t

INDUSTRIAL OR.HOMES

985-3545 or

~-- Unto the Hilts 33.-

8

FURNACE CWNING

992-9949

e

6 , Big Red Machine 4.

LEVEL LOT - 3 bedroom" -

We have a cltent who has asked
NEW 3 bedroom home , HL•t
ch1nson..
sub d 1V 1S10n , us for a 200 acre farm w1th
Rutland , Pr 1ce 119,900 Phone modern house, good bulldlngs
742 3615 or see Milo Hut and 100 acres In c ultivation .
c hmson , Ru11and
- 8 161 2tc SEE THE PROFESSIONAL

33 ACRES , 6 rm house , ell
electric , J bedroom, small
barn , 530 ,000 Phone 992 3792
8-26 6tc

BOB'S ASHlAND

PHONE 992-5476

$23,500 00

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

DODGE Colt 37.100 m lito,
Ji "}tint • roof. f'f1'1
redial t ires, good condition ,

JeltJI

Real Estate For 5ale

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

Employment Wanted

1961 FOR 0 Falcon , 6 cyli nder -4
tlr ., good gas m lleage S3SO
Phone 98.5-3958
8-27 Stp

operltor, lit 11-34, 2 3 year1
~· Ul. Nlld on exp. trng ,,
frH rm. end brd ., medical.
dentll# JO cfiYI pet. vac , ca ll

A 1974 3 BEDROOM Ge tty sbu r g
By Cas tle , ( NEW l , fr on t
kitchen , total e1ectr1c untt,
S11f1119 on a concrete pad w ith
patto and conc rete parkmg
area , Grass ism , tand scapmg
1S done for you $6,695 and we
hand you the keys Home can
be seen at Cou ntr y Moblle
Home Park , Darw 1n, Oh io
For tnformat1on , c all 992 7034
8 25 SI C

______

1961 FORD G~taxle, runs good .
priced at 1.50 Phone 992 7647
8 - ~7 6tc
1

t, ..-;·, "'o~;:-;-, on

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

________

-------------. THE DAILY SENTINEl
-------------PHONE 992-2156 . --------------

MriTOR-

Mob il e hom e Take over
payments Phone 742 4428
8 27 5tc

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

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

8 2B -3tp

NIC::E' 6---;:Qom
house
at
reesonabte rent We ere tn terttttd In tom~e who w ill
http tttl monuments on our
fine mtmorlel tot. This Is a
good opportunity for the rlgnt
penon . Log en Monument
Company,
Inc .
~eo
L.
v•uohan, Phone 992 -2518
t -23-tfc.

-------------1972 12x60 2 BEDROOM H aven

STARCRAFTGIGANTIC SALE
on folddown s, all models
Free heater plus h tg h est 206 ACRE farm w 1th 33 acres of
corn and farm equipment
diSCOUnt 1n lrt -State CAMP
Contact James Connor , 1855
CONLEY
STAR CRAFT
Silver R1dge Road, or phone
SALE S, Rt 62 north of Point
992 2720
Pleasant behmd Red Carpet
8 22 6t c
Inn
8 -28 31c
HOU SE '" town , 5.500 down and
SEARS' upr 1ght deep freeze.
sao per m onth . Trailer an'!
S125 Good workmg condtflon
tot. 2 bedroom $10,500 PhOne
Phone 992-7060
992 3975
8-28 4tc
8 14-lfc
45,000 WAXED cabbage &lt;; rates,
S6c a p1e&lt;:e Ca l l 843 -245 1
B-28 -6tc

ALSO SHAMPOO
CARPETS
AND CLEAN
UPHOLSTERY

Here
1972 3 BEDR OO M W1ndsor TRAVEL TRAILER Mob1le Home on 1 acre of you are, a dandy J usf the thing
ground
For
more
ln that you have been look1ng for.
format•on . c all 992 7638
7 30 tfc Travel In l uxury .

1971 HONDA 350 Sc rambler ,
good cond 1tton 1971 Vega 3
speed ltd., transm iSS ion , SlOO BU SINE SS bulldtng , 50x60
cement dnv e, Rt 124, near
Very good condlt1on . Also .
R uttand Phone 742 5052
dnve shaft , trans brace , and
8 21 lfc
......,
bell housmg FtiS 1971 and
1972 Vega See at Ill Pea rt
St , M iddleport , or call 992 LOTS for sate, trailer or house
-TwCfBEORooM mobile home.
5213
All utilities Phone 742 3615 ,
New carpetmg . Pbone 992
3509
-.
Rutland. Ohio Pn ce $2 ,500
8 27 6tp
7 16 tfc
8 25 7tc
1972
KAWASAK I,
H2 750
Luggage racks, padded sissy 5 ACRES ln cOuntryOn blac ktop
2 BEDROOM house , electric
bar, 2 helmets , exce llent road, s miles east of Racine ,
heat , I V~ baths, cherry
cond1t io n Phqne 985 -4131
pene11ng, dlnln9 and liv ing
Ideal place for country home
8 27 6tp
room , kitchen and utility
Phone 843 2712
8 23 6tc
room , view of Ohio River
Must see to apprecia te. Phone NEW1 974- zl G Z A GSewtNG
MACHINE S
In
orig tnal 206 ACRE farm , 33 acres of corn
1 (304) 882 -3235, Hartford , w.
factory carton Ztg Zag to
Va. Completely carpeted
and farm equtpment Contact
make buttonholes , sew on
James Connor , 1855 Stiver
.,..
8 2.5 -tfc
buttons , monograms . and
R1dge Rd or phone 992 2720
make fan cy des tgns w i th just
'
8· 22 6t c
the twtst of a smgle d ial Left
1n la y a way and never been
WILL do babysitting •n my
used W ill sell for only $47
home n ights
Reasonable
cash, or terms availab le.
weekly or n1ghtly rates
Phone 992 26.53
Phone 992 7474 or 742 -4902
B 20 -tf c
after4pm

Ca.n be seen at
Hots

POMEROY. 0.

Mobile Homes For Sale

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

d 1nlng room , kitchen and
bath 422 W Main St . Phon e
992 -3432 o r 992 2780
8 27 ttc

Wanted To Buy
·we NEE-D 200 tOns

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

HOTPOINT
AIR CONDITIONERS

2 CRAGAR mag wheels Wtth
t.res , 15 1nch tor Chevy , sso
plus 2 Chevy Chrom e whee]s ,
14 m ch . $10 PhOn e 992 7881
8 28 21p

Rt

CASH
FOR JUNK CARS
complete Frye's Truck and
Auto Parts, Rutland, Ohio 2,.
HOUR WRECKER SER VICE Pl'!one 742 6094
7 26 26tc

For Sale

24 ' PONTOON boat Wtlh cab1n
on same Can sleep 4 40 h p
motor included Call 992-3435
or 992 3101
Pontoon ti l led
w1th starfoam
8-28 lt c

33, fWOTrOo-;;:.- and bath- apis In
Middleport. For Information ,
call 992 2550 or 742 6551
7· 26-tfc
1 3-tfc

appliances and m lsc
Hartford, w. va

WALNUT, Modern , s tereo
1969 VAN , a cylin der Phone- 772
rad1o , am t m 8 JracJ.; tape
565 1
combi nat1on . 4 sp eak er sound
8 16 lt c
system Balan ce Sl10.76. or
budget terms Ca ll 99 2 3965
]969 CHEVY Townsman st a110n
8 22 tfc
wagon S1 , 195 goo d co nd1t 10I'l
Phone 992 7620
5 24 ffc MELONS . sweet corn , green
peppers , cucumbers for sale
Gerald1ne Cl eland , Racine ,
Oh10
8 11 ttc

5 ROOM , 2 bedroom furn ished
apt , wall to walt carpetfng ,
modern k ttchen, wash-er and
dryer Phone 992 2676
B-27 -3tc

------------HOUSE insut&amp;flng, blowen for
better results , cuts fuel bills ------------3 BEDROOM home , living ,
down Free estimates Call
742-4428
8 20 -12tc

Eastern Ave , Galltpolls .
Bulta co 250 Alpma , $975
Bultaco 350 Alpma , $1 , 165
8-23 8tc

..,,Li...:...___________

tor Kent

AUCTION every Thursday 7
p m Horton St . In Mason
Consignments welcome from
11 a m to 5 p .m or call 7735471
8-21 lfc

INTERIOR
EXTERIOR

Known &amp;
Reliable Service

8

News 10 , What's My Line 8; Truth 0( Cons. 3; Jimmy
Dean 13 ; Zoon)33 ; I Spy IS, Elec. Co . 70 , Bowling lor OQIIars

7. 30- To Telf the Truth 6 . Sale of the Century 8, Beat lhe Clock
13 , Mtlques '0 . Eptsode A ction 33 , Base ball 3, 4; The Judge

VtMD (Aug 23-Seol 221

~

!'00 -

All-WEAlHER

HOME
DECORATING

Helen Help i~
us

Diagnost ic and Pres,crip11ve Teaching ot Read i ng ll
6· 30 - New5 3, 4, 8, 10, 15 : Room 211 t3 . News. 6 ; Journey lo
Japan 33 ; Bew ilched a

lnt•rlof. bterlor
De'!ratlnt •MI
Remodellnfl

lluencus. anr!ess lnendly

,.,,,,.&gt;?/..ml&lt;:&gt;'-.-W-i&gt;'#XX:Y.mmx,,,-.u__

Now•' ·

tHE DEPENDMI E

CONTRACONG 00.

337 N. 2, Middleport
992-2550

8 28 •1tc

Cheshire, Oh 10 locat ed In the
ol d M&amp;G Market Build ing
Now ope-n for bus iness
8-27 61P

BISSEll BROTHERS
CONST. CO.

EXcELSiORS;i;-

Creek. Road off St ate Route 7
Phone 446 0294
RUMMAGE sale at the Fry
building , Middleport Starting
Tuesday , Aug 27 till Aug 31
Good school clothes
s 26 Jtc
LAsSiE ·SC arr ;-O~-:-Rt 1,

-----------

REDECORATING?

l

- Tile O~lly Sentinel, Mlddleport-r,.neroy, 0 .• WL't,ICI(•sday, Aug. 211. 197~

Television Log
,,oo-News]~~~~o~~f~~t~!~~i.':;.~~~.suo,

1'"..""'- ·

For Sale

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

1970 NOVA CPE.

-B
- u. sm·es s Servt·ces ____

,~~c~~,'e, ~~.~~•.

uiltul
•reu , rolling
meadow5. ,
elec
Saldeadt-nU
em Town 5tnp
.....1
R d tncl1
No v,62S,
ir'I IO I'-----~~~~~:::~~~~~:!.:=:.;~:.=::::.::....:_.::.:::__::::_::::_
ma in ~ntrv
IDEAL FOR
CHURCH ,
OR
SCOUT
CAMPS NICE HOME SITE S
We ARt: PICkn"\Q up a p lano In
Township Ro•d No 16 Listed
your aru .!!lnd would llke
at UOO per .acre Make offer .
sum~
respons i bl~
party to
Walter '! IH·altv, Box 31~.
take over pa.,.meniS . Call
worthington , OhiO ~308.5 .
Don ' t rorget the roof of your
Crectl' M•n~toer , (6,.t) 772
Piione l6HI 888 1892 or phone
home H~11e a beautiful new
.5669 or wr l fe 260 East Ma in
(614} 888 2803 .
Street , Chillicothe . Ohio ,.5601
roof Installed by All Wea1her
B-28 4tc
A 7 lfC
Rooting Co.
Chesler. Ohio
NOW
ready
to
mov~
ln
rustle
RIDING horse for sete . 2 vears
tr l lt11el. l bedroom!i , 2 bathS ,
985-4 102
old . oreen bfoke. Gen t le. Call
All fhJt is neede-d for a free
ellitra 1i!lrge f iJm l ly room , 2 c.a r
992 5510
~.garage ,
air conditioned.
es1ima ht is • INtOne c.all.
8 l .tfc
sunken pat io. home on c1 ty Home
Building &amp;
Please Phone :
weter af'ld sewer , close to
VINYL SIDING .
wo,:;;:-- e
Additions.
Aluminum
·
school and shopping , priced
Mll•n St , Pomerov . All kinds
PH.
992·7•54 or
f1Qhl Call now 992 S974
&amp; Vinyl Siding. Floor
of salt water pellets , water \
8
18
uc
992·7129
nuogets, block salt a,nd own
Sanding &amp; Finishing,
Oh io River Salt Phone 99~
FrH E1tlm•te1, Mlllll..,..., 0 '
25 ~CRES of level land , Ideal L------------'
3891
tor new homes All utilities
6 !I He
avall,bte . on hard su rfa ce
road . 6 miles t rom Pomeroy,
CA NNIN G tomatoes , br i ng
Oh to Pn ced at 525,000 15 11"l!
con la lner . Geraldine Cleland.
acres with cottage woods. and
Racine , Ohio
spr ing t ed creek , iom1ng the
•
8 16 ti c
described land, pr iced at
S20 ;000. If tn lere st ed , cttll cr
KENNEBEC
and
Cob~ter
see George S Hobst etter, Bo)(
potatoes Call Jo hn Pape , 949
101. Pom eroy, Ohio or call
AND
302.5
98S 4186 after .ot p m
3·13 6tc
8 28 Jtc

Pomeroy
•tor Co.

2

•

•IWI

J!

TODAV'SQlJESTtON

You'\ partner continues to s i~
netrump, What Ho you do now?

I.

'

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-~

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..
211- The Oaily Sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Wednesday, Aug. 28, 1974

Ctime ·trend _must b-e reversed
CHICAGO ( UPI) - Attorney
General Willlam B. Saxbe
Tuesday warned that the
nation wlll need a national
pollee force to keep it from
"falling apart" unless another
means is foWld to reverse a
skyrocketing crime trend.
With the crime rate soaring
from a 6 per cent increase in
1973 to a 15 per cent increase in
thi! year's rirst quarter, Saxbe
said, the nation is in "deep
troub1e.''
" If we go on as we are. Utere
;. every posslbllity that crime
will inundate us." he said In a
speech prepared for a conference of Jaw enforcement
administrators from the
nation's major cities.
"The nation would then be
faced with the prospect of
falling apart or devising a
national police force in ohe
final effort to restore domestic
order," Saxbe said.

MARKET REPORT
Point Pleasan~ W. Va.
Au~st24 , 1974
SL'l\UGHTER COWS
Commercial 24.60, utility 22.25
• 26.90, Canner &amp; Cutler 19.7522, Bulls over 1000 lbs. 31-31.50.
VEAL - 226 • 265 lbs. 55.
· HOGS - Sows, U.S. 1-3 300SOO.lbs. 26-~, Boars 300-600 lbs.
20, Pigs (by head) 20-40 lbs. 816, 60 Jbs. plus 18-33.
STEER CALVES - Good &amp;
Choice under 300 lbs. 66-94, 300400 lbs. 32-34.25, 400-500 lbs. 3132, lbs. 30.75-32.
BULL CALVES - 4~00
lbs. ~1-34.75, 500-600 Jbs. 31).7532.
HEIFER CALVES - Good &amp;
Choice under 300 lbs. 89, 3()!).4()()
lbs. 30.51).35, 400-550-lbs. 33-36,
·cows &amp; Calves (by head ) 241).
320, Cows (by head) 171).222.50.
BABY CALVES (By Head)
- Beef 51, Holstein &amp; Brown
Swiss 27-49.

MEIGS THEATRE
TOflight &amp; Thursday

Aug. 28-29
NOT OPEN
F!!l., SAT, SUN.

Aug. 30-.11, Sept, I
John Wayne
"McQ"
(PG)

CA!!TOONS

Show Start. 7 p.m.

•

1 Be.at • • •

~-;;:::------------;;:::-l transported to Cincinnati with the Stephens' belongings. Printed
In ()errnan, it deals with Catharina Durst and could be a birth
• certificate. The date goes bOck to Jan. 6, 1863.

Of t .h e Befl d '-,;- • ' '

MANY YEARS AGO, a "Korn Karnlval" was staged In
" II is partly the job of every
Rutland. Seth Nlchol!on. a hL,lory buff' supplied the follOMnl .
citizen, of every institution, of
jnamesofthose who ranked high in the "karnlval" events of Nov.
every business, .. Sax be said.
~
4, 1916. It reads :
"Because if they Eail, then our
/~r Rol&gt; 1/oejlirh
•
.:;,. • '
Best decorated vehicle in parade - J. C. Anderson, first; D.
system or criminal just.ice
.
., C. Folden, second; Columbia High School, third.
simply will be unable to hold
• Af~er " long journey which included weeks of sightseeing.
Most unique feature tn parade'- Hysell Run School, first;
back the tide."
Mr.and Mrs. Richard Rupe and daughtet'$, Lori and Unda, have Thomas Johnson, second .
arrived at U1eir new home In South Africa where Dick will be
Oldest geoUeman in parade - Austin .Barton.
a.•sociated with Foote Mineral.
Driver of wagon carrying most people - AI Nelson, first1
Linda has returned to Pomeroy and ill preparing to resume Marion Phelps, second; B. M. Taylor, third; John Werner,
her studies at Ohio University. She helped ber folks get their new fourth; Parker School, fifth ; Austin Barton, si1th.
apartment furnished and arranged before coming back.
Running race, boys under 10, Donald Mohney.
The Rupes already are an•ious to hear from home folk! .
Running race, boys under U, Ebert Werner.
TI1eir address is Larochelle Flats No. 15, Rabe St.; Pletersburg,
Running race, boys, any age, .Warren Reid.
•
between central city jobS and
- Developing of space now Transvaal, South Africa 0700.
Running race, girls under 10, Anna Romine.
•
the central work force did not vacant for people and jobRunning race, girls under U, Beulah Rupe,
•
decline.''
producing enterprises .
Running race, girls age age, Helen Radlord.
ESKEY HILL CELEBRATED his 78th birthday recently by
1
Harrison s conclusion is that Harrison estimates that could
Stilt race, Sidney Ashworth.
riding his. 23-year-&lt;&gt;ld Palomino borse about his farm located
after all the data is looked at, possibly be a fifth of all inner along the Flat woods Road . Eskey has been raising horses and
Three-legged race, Oakley Wiseman and Eli Dennison.
the central city still has con- city land .
Hound pull, Oscar Turben, first ; Oakley Wiseman, second.
ponies for years. However, he hadn't climbed aboard one of his
-Reorganize
metropolitan animals for some eight years until his birthday.
siderable economic vitality
Potato race, Throne Cottrill.
and he suggests that with area government under a
· Gentleman teachers running race, Neil Berridge,
careful and intelligent plan- multilevel system which plans
Throw the ball, Frank CUrry; Fathers' running race, Roy
WREN T. STEPHENS, who had resided in the Robert and
ning th~ city still can .provide a for the economic health of the Mildred Arnold property in Naylors Run before moving to Cin- Seyfried; Elephant race, Kearney Ogdin and Garnet Morris.
better life for its presently whole area.
cinnati, forwarded a paper which was apnarently erronously
Best 10 ears of yellow corn, John Werner, first; C. E.
._ Bring LU'ban land under
disadvantaged than they are
Atkinson, second; Best lOearsofwhite com , W. J. Thomas, ftrst ;
public control to permit effecapt to find elsewhere.
C. E. Holt, second; Best peck of wheat, Philip Nichol, first; J. E.
Planning, of course, is the tive planning of land use.
Sisson, second.
The problem, then, for
key to Harrison's optimism
Highest stalk of corn, Jesse Bache, first ; Harvey Gardener,
and he suggests that govern- Harrison, is not the vitality of
second: Ear of corn havingJ,be.most grains, E. E. Hull.
ment policy .toward both the the cities or even their
Best display .of grasses, R. B. Ca[son, first; C. F. Holt,
city and its role in the economic viability but whether
second.
metropolitan area· in. which it or not the political institutions
Best pound of huller, Mrs. Ed Taylor, first; Mrs. C. F. Holt,
exists needs to be re~ought . . can design new instruments to
second; Best loaf of bread,.Lella Gardner, first ; Mrs. Grace
His suggestions include:
meet the challenges.
NEW HAVEN - A reception honoring Mr. and Mrs. CJJfford White, second; Best display of canned fruit, Mrs. J. C. Harrison,
Roush on their 50th wedding anniversary was held Sunday, July 7 first; Mrs. Elizabeth Near, second.
at their home at 119 Fifth St., here. Hosts were their children,
Best display of jellies, Mrs . .Tom Davidson. Best display of
Mrs. Faye Marie Montgomery of Greeley, Colo . and Charles fancy work, Mrs. R. L. Bingham, first; Mrs. Bessie Tuckerman,
Roush of New Haven.
second ; Best cake , Reva Ralph, first; Bertha Kincaid, second;
Afloral centerpiece of white and gold daisies was a gift from Best corn bread, Mrs. W. F. Parmalee; Best map of Rutland
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McFarland and Charley .
Township, Martha Saxton; Best display of diagramming, Leland
·
Guests were regisiered .by Joey Roush, their only grandsOn. Chase.
Becky Roush, Michelle and Melinda Montgomery, the couple's
Best display of writing, age considered, Carrie Edwards,
granddaughter, assisted with the serving. Mrs. Cecil Duncan first; Georgia Sapp, second; Best display of map drawin~1
presided at the punch bowl, and Mrs. Anna McFarland served Marga ret Hogue , first ; Effie Wi!Uamson, second.
the cake.
Best letter to the Democrat, Alice Nicholson ; Best letter to
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Bob Montgomery, Miss the Leader, Thelma Wick, and Best letter to Dally News, Don
Melissa Blockovick, all of Steubenville, 0 ., Fred Kelling, Mrs. Spires.
Elzanna Driscoll, Jl&lt;liss Mary Kelling, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
Best display or mathematical solutions, Alice Williams,
Hagan, Mrs. Bessie Mitchell, all of Columbus, Ohio; Mr. and first ; Edith Clark, second.
Mrs . Bill Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Grinstead and Mr. and Mrs.
Best display of baking by a school girl, Bernice Taylor, first;
Paul Grinstead, Lori, Paula, and Amy Jo, all of Belpre, Ohio; Edna Holt, second; Best display of sewing by a school girl,
Mr. and Mrs. Blythe Theiss, Racine ; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Rice, Evelyn Lee ; Best display of fancy work, Catherine Steele, first;
·
·
Jim, Jackie and Jon, Rock Spring, Wyo.; Mr. and Mrs. Barry Edna Holt, second.
· Montgomery and Michelle, and Melinda, Greeley, Colo.; Mr. and
Best display of manual work, Esther Skinner; Best plate of
Mrs. Bill McFarland, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Duncan, Mr. and Mrs. · potatoes, Will Clark; Best plate of sweet potatoes, Lelia Gard-·
Lee Weaver and Keith Allen, Mrs. Jack Hesson, Donald (Doc) ner ; Best head of cabbage, C . F. Holt, first; James Chase,
BIG CATCH- Jerry Coleman,left, and Bill Chaney, had
Ohlinger,
Mrs. Frances Brown, Mrs. Dorothy James, Miss second.
these specimens after a day's deep sea rishing on the charJennie James, and Mrs. Jennie Stone, all of Hartford ; Edgar
Ugliest pumpkin, Mrs. Emira Holt ; Largest squash, Elza
tered boat, ~·The Witt'' out of Murrell's Inlet at Myrtle Beach,
Leyne,
Mrs.
George
Jewell,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Harry
Miller,
Mr.
and
Haley,
and best di!play of home grown nuts, E. E. Hull.
S. ~- . this month. The fish are King Mackerel weighing from
Mrs. John Fry, Mrs. Thelma Capehart, Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Lots of names here to stir memories!
20to 30pounds each. The fishing party included Mr. and Mrs.
Burris,
Pete
Burris,
Mrs.
Margie
Hoffman,
Mrs.
Ruth
Batey,
Gene Coleman and daughter, Janie.
Mrs. Raze! Capehart, Mrs. Mary Aumiiler, Mrs. Frances
Stewart, Mrs. Vannie Roush, Mrs. Edna Roush, Mrs. 11nna Belle
Hudnell, Mrs. Ada Rickard, Mrs. Pansy Fry, Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Always room for
Weaver, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Grinun, Mr . and Mrs. Harry Layne,
the moonshiner
Mr . and Mrs. Donald T. Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Lyons,
Mason.
~
ATLANTA (UP I) - Soaring
Also, Rev. and Mrs. John Campbell, Mr. ·and Mrs. Mike
sugar prices are squeezing...
Burris,
Angie and Jamie; Mr. and Mrs. James Roush, Mr. and
rnoonshiners out of business,
Tom
Grinstead, Mr. and Mrs. Bud Lieving, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs.
but one old-timer is swe there
will be stills as long as there Bernard Ueving, Mrs. Mary Hoffman, Charles McFarland, Mrs.
are Southerners who prefer a M~e Reitmire, Mrs. Freda Hart, Mrs. Fred Poffieroy, Mr . and
Fred B. Goegleirt, Barbara jolt of white lightning to a Mrs. Charles Roush, Becky and Joey, Mrs. Katy Root and
A. Goeglein to Roy F. Riffle, genteel sip of a gentlemen's · Leonard Fields.
Sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs. Jinuny Layne, Mr. and Mrs . .
·Frona . K. Riffle , 0.500 A., blend.
•
Leland
Kirby, Mrs. Mildred Anderson, Mrs. Daisy Weaver, Mrs.
Orange.
"It'll always be here, like
Aloysuis A. Grueser, Ann Sue gold digging," said Hubert Ruby Schar, Mrs. Lois Bumgarner, Mr. '!"d Mrs. Frank HoffGrueser to Thomas R. An- Howell, 76, who ended a two- man, Homer Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Jay Houston, Mr. and Mrs.
dersoni Marilyn R. Swan,
Lots decade moonshining career in Willard Durst, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Fields, Mrs. Jess Roush,
.
Middleport.
1941 to join the Army. "Once a Mrs. Rosemary Hopkins, Mrs. Alma Hesson. The couple also
received many cards and telephone calls.
Theodore T. Reed Jr., Nancy
B. Reed to Clero M. Baker,
MASON - THE MASON EXTENSION Homemakers held a
BID NOTICE
Anna R. Baker, Lot, MidSea led bids will be received
picnic at Racine Park, Letart, W.Va . Tuesday at 6 p.m.
family
dleport.
by the Boar·d of Public A ffa ir !. of '
Following
the picnic the meeting was called to ordef by the
Josephine Smith, Paul Stnith the Vi llag e of Sy racu se, Ohio,
for
a
1975
mod
e
l
half
-ton
pick
-up
to Josephin e Smith, Paul tr uck until noon , September :L president, Mrs. Landon Smith, and Mrs. Elmer VanMeter
presented the devotionals.
1"; 74.
Smith, Parcels, Lebanon ,
Specifications
are
as
fol
lo
ws
:
The club presented a check for $100 on the Bi-Centennial one
Marcia J. Capehart to Paul (ll Co lor , while. deluxe tr im . ·
'
room
school project. This was given at the International Tea
121 Eight (8) ft . Bonus bed .
E. Will, Dottie L. Will, 2:17 A.,
13) Power steer ing.
which was attended by six of the Mason Club members.
Salisbury.
I 4) Power Brak es .
The group discussed preparing a float for the parade on Oct.
Wehpa M. Tillis, Jonathan
(5) Six (61 ply tires w ith
winter
tread
on
rear
.
10. No decision was made. Mrs. Matilda Noble and Mrs. Smith
Tillis to Debra A. Fitch,
I 61 Ca m p er top .
attended
a recent Bi-Centennial kick-&lt;&gt;11 meeting.
(7)
Rear
suspe n sion ,
Tammy E. Fit&lt;;h, Parcels,
mi
n
imum
1,
600
pounds
.
Altendir)g were Mr. and Mrs. Landon Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Pete
Lebanon .
(8)
F ro nt
suspension ,
Karcshnik and son, Matilda Noble, Mrs,{;ecil Stnith, Mrs. Elmer
Anthony Corsi, Helen. Corsi mi n imum 3,200 pounds.
(91 Three .speed trans·m ission
VanMeter, Mrs. Uoyd WiJilams, Mrs. Laura Johnson, Mrs.
to Edward LeMaster, Bonnie { automati
c) .
·
George
Carson, Mrs. Cecilia Harris, Mrs. Beverly Gregort and
( 10) V -B engine , m inimum 300
F. LeMaster, 4 A., Bedford.
.c ub ic Inches .
daughter arid Ethel McDermitt, of Florida .
·
L. C. Swearingen to William
( 111 Twel ve ~ 12 ) volt baf1ery,
minimum
50
AMP
hr
.
J . . Stuewe, .Bernice Stuewe,
&lt;m seventv 170l AMP
MASON ~ MR. AND MRS. NORMAN REYNOLDS were
Parcels, Olive.
Alter na tor .
·
{lJJ Rear step bumper .
' honored recenUy at a reception given by his m~ther, Mrs.
I 14) Dual Junior West coast Landon &amp;nith, at her home here. Mrs. Reynolds was the former
mirrors .
The Board of Public Affa i r s of Judy Combs, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Hudson of Rutland.
said vi l lage reserves the right to Mr . Reynolds is the son of Mrs. Landon Smith and Mr. Frank
reject any and all bids .
·
A certified check for bond of Reynolds of Mason.
10 per cent must accompany all
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Hudson, Rutland ·, Mr.
bids .
and Mrs. Kenneth Reynolds and family ; Mr. and Mrs. Nelson
Max i ne Var ian Reynolds and family and Mr . and Mrs. Smith. The honored
Clerk, Board of
Pub I ic Aff airs couple reside in Mason.

Bul he said this would be a Saxbe said .
great danger because a
Rejecting police stale "efnational police force could fic-iency'' as a solution. Saxbe
become "'an instrument of said the answer lies in
national represslon."
restoring the "inner strength"
"A police state c:an control of the peO{lle and their incrime. but that is not our way.'' stitutions.

l...

WASHINGTON WINDOW

Inner cities can survive
.

By DAVID E. ANDERli()N
WASHINGTON ( UP! )- The
current wisdom holds that
since World War II, increased
suburbanizalion of both people
and jobs have left the center
city's abiHty to survive
doubtful .
While there is no question
that the Jure of the suburbs has
shaken the economic viability
of the central city, Bennett
Harrison, an associate professor of economic and urban
studies at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has taken
issue with the conventional
wisdom and argues that the
economic difficulties besettirtg
cities can be surmounted.
Harrison's flndings have
been published by the Urban
Institute in a new book, " Urban
Economic Deve lopment:
Suburbanization, Minority
Opportunity and the Condition
of the Central City."
Harrison challenges the
traditional interpretation tha t
inc.reased suburbanization
necessarily means that jobs
follow workers into the
suburbs. Rather, he reads the
data to say that "the central
city labor market may be more
sensitive than the suburban
labor market to a decline in the
national economy. ''
In addition, he said, in the
past, when the thesiS of ce.ntral
city stagna tion was foi-~ulated, researchers were not
paying close attention to
government · employment or
the public sector of jobs,
''Government employment,''
to · Harrison,
according
" ... tends to be centrally
located ; it therefore tends to
improve the Glimate for work
in the central city by helping to
offset job losses resulting from
the suburbanization of private
industry and commerce."
Harrison also critiCizes the
"mismatch " theory - the idea
unskilled and semi-skilled jobs
for which the ghetto poor would
be most qualified are the jobs
that have migrated to . the
suburbs.
" Moreover, " he said,
"during the 1960s the ratio

Meigs

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Property

Men's Department 1st Aoor

Transfers

SALE LEE BLUE DENIM

WESTERN .SHIRTS
Regular Price $11.98

SPECIAL SALE PRICE .

-

'9'5

Styled As Pictured

"Exciting Furniture Showrooms

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

(8) 14, 21 , 28 , Jt c

Tills Ia Home Improvement Time.· aild you'll fln4 lust ·
allout everything to bvlkl anytlling h.,... Cllectc prices •. Free dollvitry Hrvtce.

•••

FREE
"Gracious

Olt

Uving"
BOOK

~

Free lor the asking at
our ollice.

..niiiS

ESTIMATES U~ ltiQUiiS1

......... - · " ' " l'rt. ~- _

........,,

Helpful hints on home
decorating and home
improvement ideas.

Meip Co. Branch

•

MASON, W. VA.

.
•

. fth
\IIU&amp;

_.@

-

Tilt AllloM Coonly

Slvinp ... Loan co~

"~
'- ·.

lfU..:ond St.
Pomeroy. Ohio

gold-digger, alw~ys a golddigger, am;l once a moonshiner,
always a moonshiner."
The price of a 100-pound bag
of sugar a year ago '\Vas $12.
This week, it is expected to top
$40.
Investment Chatter
'NEW YORK (UP! ) - Rosenkranlz, Ehrenkrantz, Lyon&amp;.
Ross says investors should be
anUcipating what will be in the
news months from noW, such
possible developments ·as a
sudden Short-tenn interest rate
· drop. an easlng In oil prices, or
a short..tenn dlminutiori in the
·or Sa. le

F

GROCERY buslneu t or sl!t te
Bu ilding for sale or Ieese~
Phone 173-56 I 8 f rorn .8.: 30 p.m.
to ·10 p .m . tor appo in tment .
l · 20· tfc

--...-..-..---------CORN ,ort81i"n1 ng . freeze(. or
general uu . Reasonably
priced . Dav id Yost, Portland
Ohio . Phone &amp;•3.2242 .
'

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

8 -25 ·61(:

STEREO · RA ~O~ am .fm , 8
track tape combination, -4
s peaker
soun d
system ,
Balance U06.71 or ·easv
lernn. Call 992-3965.

a. U-tfc

; ew;;;;;-;;,71;;;:--; •so.

•

(

•

(

•

P hOI'\~

991 1511 ,

. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . - - ---~~---- ~~· ·HC

rate of infiatlon. But the
analyst adds that "by the Ume
any of these potential developments do occur, it will probably
be too late to buy."

~rg:ee~:~~ 1

and

~~t~~~e~t$

1;nued K:~r~on ::'

the
King,
Ohio. So ll sbu r y
Township, No . 21257 ,
·
You are hereby notified 111a1
Marvin
Pomerov .

the

o·el b ert

Inventory

and

Ap ·

Pl'alsement of the estate of the

aforementioned , cle cee.ud , l ate
of said Coun ty, wu fil ed In tttls
court. Sai d Inventory e nd
Agpralsement will be tor
hearing befo r e th is Cour-t on the
lOth day at September . 197•, at
10 :00 o'clock A.M .
Any p·erson desiring to f ile
exceptions thereto must Hie
them at lent flvl! days pr iO r to
the- ttate set for hear ing ,
Given und er mv h and and
sui of nld Court , lhtt 26th day
of August 1974 ,

M•nt11ng 0 . Wtbs1er

Judo•

8v cOnn a . Wats.on '
OeJ)u1 .v Clerk

(8) 28 (9) .t , 2tc

Sazbe said. "Thooe who want
to take their medicine, and
that's the word they dpn't like,
have had the [reedom to come
bsck and present themselves to
court. ••

.

he Real ProsWea

ILeelWestern ·Shirts
Westerners all across the country are now
wearing 'Lee Western Work shirts. Styled In
the authentic Western tradition of Lee Riders.
Lee makes 'em In sizes 14 to 20, sleeve lengths
32 to 35. to Ill any casual oc'ca.s lon . An extra·
long shirt tali , too, Is another big plus . Oloose
a rugged, Navy -Denim as shown. Sanforized
for perfect. lasting fit .

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

release of war prisoners

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday through Mooday: A warming trend and a
~ha.nce of showers. Highs
Saturday in the 70s aud in the
80s Sunday and Monday.
Lows In the 50s Saturday and
io the BOo Sunda y aud
Monday .

NOW YOU KNOW
The okapi is the only
noncxtinct relative of the
giraffe.

•

enttne
'

Devoted To The Interests of The Meitls·Tnason A rea ·
BIG TURTLE - Blg cat&lt;;hes lire a thing for Jerry
Harper, Uncoln Heights, Pomeroy, who landed !hi! St).pound
turtle Wednesday at Keno Lalie, Belpre. A couple of weeks
ago Harper caught a St).pound catfish on a trout line in the
Muskingum River.

VOL XXVI

NO. 97

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'•
::::

ews .. in Briefsl··. :~:~ a.auanooga blast levels two
);;

·By Uolted Press International
SAJGON - ASUBSIDIARVOFTHEU.S.SHELLOiiCo.has
discovered "vefy, very good" oil in its first strike off the Vietnam coast, it was announced Wednesday, but officials warned it
was likely to be years before it could be pumped out.
The announcement that oil had been found 4,500 feet below
the South China Sea bed touched off joy throughout Saigon. "The
oil is of a very, very good quality, alight brown oil," said trade
and industry minister Nguyen Due Cuong in announclng the
strike at a news conference.

,·:·

lounges; church hums

I·

t

Alaskans lD
ntean ntood

' J.~Qr,ema' n gur•ltless
Mrne

Firemen will parade Monday Bo~~~u:;~~'?:;e;ag~e~~:ces,
The parade will move down
Main St. to Butternut; out
Butternut to Fourth and from
Fourth St to the village
parking lot where it will be
disbanded. Persons and groups
interested in taking part Ln the
annual event or those lmVjl!g..

WASHINGTON (UPI ) A White House pfflcial said
President Ford feels Richard Ford was leaning toward a
Nixon has suffered enough · ,pardon for Nixon if his case
from the Watergate scandal, should reach the President's
and he thinks the country · desk.
agrees. While making no
Ford faced another busy
commitment, Ford said he is schedule today, with meetings
reserving his right to pardon with top women presidential .
his predecessor should Nixon appointees, United Autos
be prosecuted.
Workers President Leonard
Ford also told his first White Woodcock and Saudi Arabian
House news conference · Foreign .Minister · Omar
Wednesday that Special Saqqaf.
Prosecutor Leon Jaworski
Ford, outwardly calm and
"has an obligation" to take confident throughout the
whatever legal action he nationally televised news
deems warranted against conference in the East Room of
Nixon or anyone else involved the White House, also said he
in Watergate.
totally bas rejected wage and

Buy one, one free
COLUMBUS (UPI)-A
major eastern fores.t products
company will provide landowners in 12 southeastern
Ohio counties one free tree for
every tree purchased in conjunction with the 197ii
reforestation program of the
state Department of Natural
Resources.
Westvaco, Inc., will Ray half
the cost of trees ordered by
landowners
in
Athens ,
Belmont, Gallia, Hocking,
Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs,
Monroe, Morgan, Noble.
Vinton
and
Washington
counties,
·a
departrrlent
spokesman said today.
Natural Resources Department division of forests and
preserves said that although
the counties are in the fringe
timber-buying area of Westvaco!s Maryland plant, the free

'

a communique on the abduction.
Guadalajara, 380 miles west
of Mexico City, has been torn
by a string of terrorist kidnapings in the past two years.
Kidnaped Mexican indus· .
trialiast Fernando Aranguren
was slain last October when the
government refused to meet
guerrilla demands.
Guerrlllas In the Paclfic
Coast state of' Guerrero k[d..
naped the government candidate for governor last May.
The victim, 74-year old Sen.
Ruben Figueroa, has yet to be
found despite an intense army
search.
John Patter!Oil, the U.S. vice
consul in the northern Mexico
city of HermosLllo, was kidnaped · mysteriously last
March. Hia skeleton was found
in the Sooora Desert July 7.

price controls to solve · appeared at ease.
He sai~ he had asked for
economic problems.
" Wage arid prices controia "prayers and guldarice oo thia
are out "'-Pf!"iod.," he said. But -v ery important point" · of
officials said voluntary wag&amp;' posaible inununity for Nixon,
price guidelines were under who selected Ford for vice
consideration.
president and then turned the
Ford reiterated that the White House over to him.
nation's number one problem
Ri.spooding to one question,
was inflstion. He promised ·Ford said he agree&lt;! with
budget cu.ts to hold federal Rockefeller that Nixon had,
spending below $300 billion In figuratively speaking, been
the fiscal _year ending next hanged and that the" tone and
June 30. He spoke of . a $5.5 mood of the country w&amp;B
billion reductlon in spending against having the f~
and said that· 'lwill convince pre.aident drawn a~ quarpeople who might have 8ome
(ConUnued on page 10)
doubts that we mean
"· ..
business."
On other matters, Ford:
- Repeated that be "probably" will be a candidate in 1976
and.sald he and vice preslden-

MEETING SET
There will be a meeting for
the subscribers of the Leading
Creek Water Conservancy
District Friday, Aug . 30, at 7:30
p. m. at the Grange Hall in
Harrisonvllle.

nominee

Nelson

Rockefeller would milke a
"good team." ·But Ford added
that the ultimate decision .
would be left to the Republican
National Conv~tion.
-'Hinted that U.S policy of
sanctions again! CUba could
change "if Cuba changes its
policy toward us and its Latin
neighbors ... " But he sald the
United States "would certainly
act in concert with other
members of the Organi2Btion
of American States." Several
Latin American countries have
broken the economic embargo
on Cuba a.nd resumed ·
diplomatic relations with the
· Caslro government.

suggests

•
'•

.•..

opponent -~.

tell all

1

MANSFIELD, Ohlo (UPI) ~
Gov. John J. GiJilgsn has asked
James A. Rhodes, his Novem·
her opponent, to identify. hia
campaign contributors, and to ..
reveal hill personal earnings •..
and sources.
"He has refused time and
again to provide the people of
In a friendly atmosphere, . Ohio with the names of aU his
contrasting to the hostillty campaign contributors" arid
evident in Nixon's last few "relused to tell the people or
Ohio how much money he
news conferences, Ford fielded
earn:r
and who is paying him
27 questions in a half hour and
that money," GiJilgan told a
Richland County. Democratic
dinner Wednesday night.
"Don't the people, alter all
they've been put through, have
a right to know?" Gilligan asked.
The governor said since 1970
he had msde public all hia income tax returns and financial
holdings, and hi! campaign
committee regularly publishes
a complete record of ·"every
dime and every dollar" .lt receives and spends.
Gilligan also questioned
Rhodes' corporate funlk'aislng ·
~ctivities. He said Rhodes had
asked "the chief exec'utive of.
fleers o[ msjor corporations
across the country'' to give him
a personal check for $1,000 "for
each lnstal18tion. operated by
the firm in Ohio.''
·
"Are the people of Ohio to I»
lleve thai corporate necutives
across the country would
donate $1,000 of tholr own money for each inatallatlon In Ohio
aimed by the company thlt
employes them?" Gllllgan
asked.
"And even Ll thooe
necuUves are convinced Mr.
Rhodes would do much to
fatten the proflta of their
buaineases and tho me or their

own

CHOWDS DRAWN TO FIRE SALE - The. scene Wednesday at the Kiddie Shoppe Ill'
Middleport - a week following a fire ~t ))eavily damaged merchandise, was like thi! all day
as buyers waited their tum to get inaide.
~

•

Gilligan

. tial

tree program invoLves no
requirement to sell themature
timber to the company.
"We lire .once again happy to
cooperate with Westvaco·in the
reforestation of rural lands in
southeastern Ohio," said
Ernest J . Gebhart, chief of the
division of forests and
preserves.
"The cooperative effort will
improve woodland produc·
tivity and develop better
wildlife habitat, watershed
protection, recreation op·
portunitles and aesthetic appeal," Gebhart added. ·

·FIREMEN TO MEET
questions may contact Goins or
The Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
active Pomeroy fireman, Joe Department will meet in
Struble.
. special session at 8 Friday
Firenlen will also stage a evening at the But~rnut Ave.,
chicken barbecue on the upper headquarters, John Manley,
parking lot with 'serving to president, announced . A
begin at lla .m: and continuing .variety of matters will be taken
up at the business session.
until the supply is depleted.

forced his car off the road.
poLitical prisoners to- win
Authorities
said
the Leonhardy's release.• but since
assailants heat up the elderlx then has adamantly refused to
statesman, dumped him into negotiate with guerrillas.
their auto and then sped off.
The kidnaping seemed aimed
A Mexico City radio station at milrring Echeverrl8's comsaid the guerrlllas were de- ing state of the nation addr...,,
manding a $1.6 mllllon ransom A spokesman said Sunday's
and the release of 100 political speech .· would go on as
prisoners for Zuno Hernandez' scheduled. "The kidnaping is a
life.
·
terrible tragedy but the
Echeverria's wife, Marla nation'' wOrk must go on," he
Esther,liew to Guadalajara as sald.
soon as she learned of her
Zuno Hernando•, a political
father's abduction. Security kingmaker and former Jallsco
agents shielded her from governor, helped engineer
newsmen and she went to the Echeverria 's presidential
home of a brother.
·nomiN!tion ; in 1970. He also
.The Revolutionary' Armed founded the University of
Front of the People, a Jeft.wlng Guadalajara and teaches part.guerrilla groop responsible for . Ume at t,he college.
the 1973 abduction of U.S.
First reports of the kidConsul Terrence · Leonhardy, naping came when the
claimed credit for Zuno's Revolutionary Armed Front
kidnaping, pollee said .
telephoned two newspaper
The goverrunent freed 30 rep&lt;rlers to glve the locaUOil
of
•r ..

..'

..

Ford
leans
toward
r
pardoning ex-boss

JUNEAU, Alaska (UP!) -' ·and · South Dakota," said
Residents of thi! city, which Marjorie John, 19. "Why not a
owes its livelihood to stale Southeast Alaslai and let the
.employment and tourism, are rest of the state go its way?"
The m:ain argument for
reeling at the blow Alaska's
voters dealt them In this moving the capital was that
Juneau, accessable only by air
week's primary election.
Twice
befoi'e,
slnce ·or water transportation, was
statehood came in 1959, Juneau too far from most of the state's
Carpenter was [oreman ~t and its friends in the state's population. Proponents of the .
North American's Quarto No.4 southeastern panhandle move also noted that Juneau
mine Aug. 6,1973, when a large mustered counterattacks to often is fogbound for days.
"We'll just have to drive
piece of rock fell and crushed defeat proposals to relocate the
harder with more . pressure to
Fisher. The divfsion had capital. IM not thi! time.
get
that pulp mill arid its 1,100
charged Carpenter with failing
More than half the state's
jobs,
"
Mayor
William
to ensure the belt irePch area voters turned out to approve
of the mine in which the acci-· overwhelmingly building a new Macomber said.
He relerred to a proposed
dent occurred was properly seat of state government
supported.
. nearer Anchorage . and Fair- pulp mill to be located about 40
A hearing examiner, a neu· banks, the state's two largest miles north of here. The
proposal has been tied up in the
tral attorney who sat in on six cities.
courts
by lawsuits over endays of hearings before the
The reaction from residents
division, found thatitwascom- ranged from denunciations of virorunental questions.
State government offices
pany policy not to use props or "selfish Anchorage" to questimbers as temporary supports tions that the panhandle form a employ about 2,700 persons.
The city has a population of
in mine belt trenches.
new state of South Alaslai.
about
17,000.
·
,
"After aU, there i! a North .
A sta(e.financed study by

.

T~N CENTS

......::::.::::~

:r·:·:

•

GUADALAJARA, · Mexico
(UPI) - Soldiers sealed . off
Mexico's second largest city
today Ln a desperate search for
President Lui! Echeverria's
83-year .old father-in-Jaw,
kidnaped by guerrilla gunmen
on a Guadalajara street.
Troops ringed the city with
roadblocks while local pollee
and federal officers waged a
systematic search of cars and ·
houses for kidnaped J. Guadalupe Zuno Hernandez, a poilUcal power In Mexico for a halfcentury.
"At Ute .morrtent we have no
certain clues," a spokesman
for the Jallsco state attorney
general'l office said Ln
Guadalajara.
Pollee aald ZUni&gt; Heniandez
waa riding In hiS chauffered
llmousine through a poor
dlatrlct of Guadalajara
Wednesday when four gunrnen

____

,\ \

i:'

. . The Pomeroy Fire Department will stage its annual
Labor Day parade Monday • .
Dwight Goins, Meigs High
School band director, is serving as marshall of the parade
which will form before 10 a.m.
at the rear of the junior high
school building in Pomeroy.

PHONE 992.-2-156

~~:..::.::..:.:..:..:___

''
::::

CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (UPI)- A thunderous el·
:;:; ploslon leveled 8 bulldlag hOWling two lounges on Chat• :;::
,_-~:.·; tanooga's strip of nightclubs early today and set flre to all ;,,-~:.·
b husin
nd h
;:;; adjaceot church and several near y
esses a
ouses. :;:;
:;:;
Police said at Least 13 peT801lB were injured, but ~\:
::~ "wwhave no reports of fatalides."
::::
The explosioo ripped through a one-ttory bulldlag .;~~i
;:;: housing the HStardust Lounge" and tbe "Cactus Club" at ::~
{ 3:05a.m., sending flames shootiog 200feet into the air and ~i
- ~; hurllng debris more thao a block away. ·
i~
WASHINGTON - SEN. JENNINGS RANDOLPH,D-W. Va., :;:;:
Investigators had no immediate comment on the cause :;:
scored President Ford Wednesday for ruling out wage,Price ~} of the blast, w)llcb Left a smoldering slx·[oot-deep crater ::;:
controls and for failing to mention coal as a part of achieving :;;; where the clubs had been.
energy self..ulficiency. Randolph said he was "gratified" to ::~
::::
hear the President reiterate his determination to cut budget . .::::::::::::::::::_:::::::::::;~::::::::::::::::::::::::;:?.;:;:~:~::::::::-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:~:~=:~::~:i:i:0.:~::~:
spending and to obtain views on how to control inflation prior to
·the economic surrunit conference next month.
"But, in fiatly ruling out the possibility of imposing any form
of 'o\CBgf1Jrice controls, even standby legislation, the President
has indica tOO he already has rejected an approach which may be
necessary," Randolph said in a statement following the
President's first general news conference.

COLUMBUS (UPI )- Derail
Carpenter, the foreman at a
North American Coal Corp.,
mine in Monroe County when a
man working under him was
accidentally killed last year,
has heen exonerated by the
Division of Mines within the
Ohio Department of Industrial
Relations.
Division Director Norman
Gatti said Wednesday Carpenter had been found innocent of
violating state mining Jaw in
connection with the death of
Thomas C. Fisher and his first.. bass mine foreman certificate
would not be revoked.

__

.:;::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;=;:;:;::::::;;:;:;:;:;;:~~==::;::::::~:~:~:::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·

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:,:5)"$:"9.
• " X ·.- -.;.:.· • ' ' " · v.· • • :O:l". • ••&gt;:-:·:

'
SHELTON, WASH, - STATE
MOTOR VEIDCLE Licensing .
Examiner John Perry gave Homer Painter, 82, a driving test. It
turned out to be ales! of Perry's nerves .
Police said Painter narro\VIY missed a parked car at the
start of the test. Then, officers said, the candidate ran over a
sidewalk divider and hit anotber parked auto. Perry suffered a
couple of bruises. Painter came out without a scratch.
·
The state Department of Motor Vehicles declined to say
whether Painter flunked the test.

_

THURSDAY, AUGU S_....:.
T 29, 1974

----'---~---------...,.......:_

City sealed off for kidnapers

NOTICE ON FILING
Of INVENTORY
. AND APPRAtSEMENT
The Stare ot OhiO, Meigs County
Court of Common Pleas,
Probate Division
. To the Executrhc ot the estate ,
to s uct"! or the. follow i ng as are
residents of the State of Oh io.
viz : - the sun/t\ling spouse, the
ne)Ct of ·. k Jn., th e beneficiar i es

~~~;~.,.'he- w~~;

" It ha!ll't been severe,"·

Weather

..

.

CHAIRBED

..... -

WAStUNGTON (UPI) - At. sons that either evaded the firm reeommendalions by
torney General William B. draft or deserted scheduled a S.pt . I oo what to do about tile
Saxbe today indicated that news conference at the Justice thousands of men who ned the
draft evaders who return to the Department today lo urlite country rather Ulan serve In
United States to "take their "unlversal•' amnesty .
tlle military during the Viet·
medicine·" wUl not be sent to
Saxbe and Defense Secretary nam War.
prison.
James R. Schlesinger have
Ford said before the
Saxbe said that men whQ been diroc!OO by President Veterans of Foreign Wars last
have been indicted for evading Ford to study the problem of week that he was opposed to
the draft and voluntarily come draft evaders and military blanket amnesty but that they
bl!ck to this country would go deserters and to come up with should be given a chance to
before the court and probably
work their way back into
be put on probation and
soci~ty.
directed "to get a job In public
Saxbe, who was intclViewed
service, in a h9spital or some
on the NBC Today Show, said
other publlc service area ."
that curr.ently there Is a
He said this policy "is not
Flash fiood watch central "steady trickle" on evaders
firmed up," bu.t ''this i.5 the and south . Showers and returning home, mostly from
worst It could be and the least it thundershowers continuing Canada. He said they are going
could be would be to just be a south into Friday, High today before a judge who " usually
good citizen for twp years."
and Friday upper 70s south. gives them a short prison
A group of families who have Low tonight in the 60s south. sentence or none at all."

I*'ICIIUII

yMr4ld

bon111011, are the JllllPie at Ohio
npected to lltlnd ·by 1114 have
thle election boqhllodt, lilllek
and barrel by the cor·
poratlonl?"

y

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