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                  <text>10 - The Da1ly Sentmel, Maddlepor~ -P omer oy, 0 , May 22, 1973

Sidewalk sales

hints ,at plot

tContmued from page ))
Pleasant Radge Road and Wolfe Dnve one-way streets Hunnel
expressed concern due to the number of accidents m the area
The matter was r eferred to the street committee.
Meetmg

With

council was Tom Cassell, manager

or the

Columb1a Gas Company, who IS 1eavmg the area Cassell ex·
pressed hts thanks tocounctJ for 1ts many cor.Jarlerations whtle he
was here He mtroduced John Koebel, GaU1pohs, who w11i
assume the dut1es of tile Middleport offi ce.
Counctl also discussed the ma jor a nd mmor street repatrs
needed m the valla ge Mayor Collms suggested that the street
corrumttee study the Situation and make Its recommendatlon at
the next meetang
Council agam dtscussed sendmg Ronme Anderson , Pomeroy
policeman, to meter repair school Luc1en Poulin suggested that
anstead of sending Anderson to school they contact Carl Hysell
and ask hun tf he wtll give lJlStruchon on repaJ.rS of the meters
and what he would charge for h1s servtces
Mayor Collans asked Ch1ef Webster to contact Hysell and
report h1s fmdangs .
Council lS accepting applicatiOns for the posttlon or street
supermtendent CalVIn Lane submitted hts resignatiOn at the last
meetmg of COWlCil effective June 1. ApplicatiOns may be sent to
Pomeroy Vallage Clerk , Jane Walton, C1ty Hall, Pomeroy
The parkmg sttuation at Monkey Run agam was atrcd by
Pouhn who had a map of the area Counc1i has dascussed this
satuatLon many tunes Chief Webster stated that some famalles
there have as many as three cars Mayor Collins directed that
the street cmrumttee study the sttuatLon and come up with a
recommendatiOn
Jam Mees reported that two street hghts have been placed on
Unwn Terrace and that no add1honal street hghts w1ll be erected
The mayor's report for Apnl showmg receipts m the amount
of $1,513 75 was approved Attending were Mayor Collms, Poulan,
Ralph Werry, Wilham Snouffer, Ehna Russell, Mees, and Harry
Dav1s, counctl members, Mrs Walton, clerk, and Chief Webster

MEIGS THEATRE
Tomght, Mar 22

POCKET MONEY
&lt;Techm co lor )
Paul Newman
Lee Marvm

Colorcartoons
Show Starts 1 p m

(GP J

Wednesday &amp; Thursday
May 23 24

NOT OPEN

Tonight, May

22

Program
" THE NAKED
COUNTESS"
She would do anyth1ng to
please the count. no matter
how b1zzare or mac:rabrel
I Rated RJ
Double Feature

- Pius"C INOY and DONNA"
A story of two s1sters C.ndy

so anx 1ous to grow up, Donna
who grew vp too fast 1
Adults Only
Wed , Thur , Fn
May 23 24 25

Double Feature Program
Alfred H1tchcock's
FRENZY
(Color I
Jon Fmch
Alec McCowen
( RI
-Plus-

YOU'LL LIKE MY
MOTHER
(Color I
Patty Duke
R1chard Thomas
( PGI

Final VIM
•
meetmg set
The !mal sesswn of VIM w•ll
be he ld at 2 p m Fnday, May
25, at the former Junior H1gh
bmld1ng 1n Pomeroy w1th
emphaSIS on rnedtcare , SOCial
secunty , and commumty
res ources ava ilable - par~
t1 cularly . " InformatiOn and
1 eferral" and " home nursmg "
serv1ces
These VIgor m Maturity
programs have been concerned
w1th mamtatnmg good health,
of knowmg what to do to stay
healthy
Unfort un a le ly,
knowmg what to do and bemg
able to do 1t are two diffe rent
tlnn gs Under what Circumstances can a patient who
has JUst been dtscharged from
a hosp1 tal qu alify under
medicare for physical therapy
Ln Ius horne? Are home nursmg
facilities avatlable
under
Medtcare') These are among
questwns to be cleared up
Fnday
A [teld representative fr om
the dtstnct soctal secunty
office m Manetta wiU-explam
rned1care and answer other
questwn s related to socia l
security benefits
Local personnel will outline
resources available f01 older
C i ti zen~ m Me1gs County
Meanwhile, 1t was d1sclose&lt;l
the semor Cl ttzens desperately
ne ed a p1ano Anyone havmg
one to donate 1s asked to
contact Eleanor Thomas at 9927886

OUR LOANS
HELP TURN
ON A "HAPPY F.ACE"

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Watergate conspirator James
W. McCord !Did Senate mvesUgators today he wax com•tnced

Thursday set
in Meigs for
•
• •
senzor
crtzzens
President N tx on ha vmg
proclaimed May as Senior
Cat1zens Mpnth , the theme of
tht s year 's observance ts
' 'Older Americans m Actton."
The followang mayors, Donald
Colhns, Pomeroy ; John Zerkle,
Middleport ; Charles Pyles,
Racme ; Eugene Thompson,
Rutland, and Herman London,
Syra cuse, have desagnated
May 24 as Semor C1t1zens Day
In observance of th1s day
there w1ll be a county-wade
potluck an the audatorium of the
former Pomeroy Jun1or Htgh
Bmldmg All semor citizens in
the county are lUVtted The
t1me Will be 3 to 7 p m wath
dinner at 5 30 Everyone as to
brang !able service. Coffee wtll
be furmshed, Entertamment
wLII be by Tracy Whaley,
Denver
R1ce,
Durward
Cummmgs and Bernard
Connally
If anyone needs trans·
portatwn, call the Semor
Citizens Center, 992-7886 or 9927884

Regatta
(Continued from page l )
chamber advanced $20 to the
pr oJect
and
wd1vidual
dunatwns were made as well
Mrs Judy R•ggs, also
meetwg w1th the chamber m
regard to the NatiOnal Baton
Contest wh1ch w1ll be held
Sunday at Me1gs Jumor High m
Middleport begmmng at ·12 30
p m , asked the chamber to
supp ly her with brochures on
the Re gatta so that she may
dJstflb11 te them when she attend s the Moonshme Festival
at New Stra1tsvalle
Kerm1t Walton reported that
the upper parkmg lot 1s ex:~
peeled to be failed w1th
exhibLtors There will also be a
booth from the OhiO Attorney
General's off1ce on drugs
Jack Carsey announced that
the boat races on Sunday wtll
begm at 12 30 p m. In the nane
races tHere w1ll be a first,
.second and th1rd place Cash
pnzes to be a\\arded m the
first , se t ond and thtrd places
a• e $50, $30 and $20 respectn. ely Trophies wtll also be
awarded
Race classes are, famtly, E
G J F, spor t, G J; unrestncted,
R S, and unhm1ted
A flea market wall be held
dunng the three&lt;lay event.
K1dd1e ndes w1ll be by Nolan
Amusement The ndes wtll be
located on the field behand th e
Pomeroy Jumor Htgh Schoo]
Tom Cassell, local manager
nf th e Columbaa Gas Company,
who IS leavmg the area , m~
trad uced
John
Koebel,
Gallipolis manager , who Will
,1lso serve the Metgs al'ea
Attending \\ere
Kerr,
Walton, Carsey, Cassell ,
Koebel, Mr and Mrs Robert
Buck , Richard Chambers, Bill
G1ueser, Fred Morrow, Mrs
Collins, Ralph Graves, Dale
Warner, Bob Jacobs, Wendell
Hoover, John Weeks, Fred
C1ow, Ea rl In ge ls, C. E
Blake slee, Halferty, N W
Compton, Mrs Riggs, Thereon
Johnson, VIrgil Teaford,
Beulah Jones and Kahe Crow

.

If it's a worthwhile loan 'co you
- it's worth seeing us first. We'll
scare processing your loan without
delay. Your bankmg business is
taken seriously, here.
Give Us a Call

Auto Teller Window and Walk-Up Wtndow
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 P.M.

WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE
PITTSBURGH

L:itilel'\s /iaUona'
-'C.CIIKINNATI

f'-

1\k

MIDDLEPoRT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

•

•

"My fur coat
stolen!"
11 R1sk" In su rance to
furs
jewelry ,
l camera s, etc aga•nsf theft ,
1dental damag e 1s
the

that the White House fared
Richard Hehns as darector of
the CIA to " lay the foundation "
for blamang the buggang plot on
the secret agency ,
• McCord, reading from a
memo as teleVlsed heanngs
resumed anto the 'burglary of
De moc r a t 1c p a r t y
headquarters last sprang, sa1d
he had been told that James R
Schlesmger, who replaced
Hehns as CIA i:liaef , "would go
along" with the White House
plot
McCord, a former CIA agent,
saad he felt "this smacked of
"the satuation which Hatler's antelligence ch1efs found themselves an" an the 1930s and
1940s, "when they were put m
the posataon of havang to tell
him what they thought he
wanted to hear" mstead of
what they really believed.
Angered at thas "ruthless attempt" and attemptang to head
1t off, McCord saad, he wrote a
letter to an old fnend, ex-Wh1te
House aade John J . Caulfield m
late December
" It was couched m strong
language because at seemed to
me at the time that was the
only language the White House
understood," he saad
" It said m substance . 'Dear
Jack, I am sorry to have to

wrate you thas letter, but if
Hehns goes and the Watergate
operation as laad at the CIA's
feet where at doesn't belong,
every tree m the forest w1U fall
" It wa:I be a scorched desert
The whole matter as at the
precipace raght now Pass the
message that if they want at to
go there, they are on exactly
the raght course "'
Reports of McCord's letter to
Caull1eld farst surfaced last
weekend an a sworn pretraal
deposatwn of a Whale House

R eseroations
still oven to

WILLIAM BARRETT
LANGSVILLE - Wilham M
Barrett, 76, Langsville Route 1,
dted Monday at Veterans
Memonal Hosp ita l
Mr
Barrett was preceded m death
by h1s w1fe , Bertha W1lhams
Barrett, four brothers, and
three s1sters
Surv1vmg are three sons,
Robert Langsville; Bruce of
Georgetown, and Wesley of
Bidwell , a daughter, Mrs Carl
!Mae) Nelson of Maddleport; a
stepda ughter, Mrs Helen
Metheney, Lake Ctty, Tenn ,
and several grandch1Jdren and
grea t-grandchtldren
Funera l services wtll be held
at 1 p m Thursday at tile
Ewmg Funeral Home w1th the
Rev Lawrence Sullivan offtcwtmg Burial w1Ll be m the
Danville Cemetery Friends
may ca ll at the funkral home
anytime
MRS. KLINGENSMITH
LETART, W Va - Funeral
serv ices for Mrs . Anna
KhngensmLth, 72, Letart, W
Va , Rd, who d1ed Sunday
evemng at Pleasant Valley
Hosp•tal, Will be held at I 30
p m Wednesday at the GUldmg
Star Advent Chrastaan Church
Born m Pennsylvan1.a. on Dec
6, 1900, Mrs KlLngensmLth IS
survtved by two sons, Davtd of
McKeesrock, Pa , and Harry,
Letart , four grandchaldren and
seven great-grandch•ldren
Offtciatmg at servtces w11l be
the Rev Robert , Goldsberry
and the Rev Malton J . Bartram Fn ends may call at the
Foglesong Funeral Home after
4 p m today Bunal wall be m
-Everg reen Cemetery . The
body wall he m state at the
. church one hour prmr to ser~
Vlces

Noftce
CHICKEN Barbecue and spare
r 1bs and homemade 1ce
cream at the Ches1er F1re
Hou se May 28 ( Memonal Day
5 22 Sic

table at the Senate hearmgs,
perhaps later today .
McCord testifaed he was
subjected to mtense pressures
to go along With th• p;an Ill
blame Watergate on the CIA,
partLCularly at two lateDecember meetmgs last year
With hiS then-attorney, Gerald
Alch. But McCord, a 19-year
CIA veteran , sa1d he refused to
go along out of loyalty to the
~i ct"i! t orgamzation.
" By this time, I was ...
convm~ed that the Whate House
had fared Hehns m order Ill put

Meags Hagh Sehool Prmcapal
James D1ehl anstalled new
officers of the Meags Band
Boosters Monday mght at the
school They were Frank
StSSOn , president ; Mrs. VIvian
Pierce, farst vace presadent,
Mrs. Carolyn Thomas, second
v1ce president; Mrs Joan
Wilhams, secretary, and Mrs
Donna Ohlinger, treasurer.
Members voted to furnash
workers and food for a booth at
the Meags Junwr Hagh School
m Maddleport every thard
Saturday startang June 2 for a
Jamboree to be held there.
The boosters began plans for

alumni event

but as well to lay the foundation for claiming that the
Watergate operation was a CIA
operation , and now to be able to
claim tilat 'Jielms had been
fared for lt,' " McCord read
from hJs memo.

a booth at the regatta next
month to sell Jellaes and bazaar
ttems Mrs Joan Weyersrniller
and Mrs. Ernestme Werry will
be an charge. The boosters
booth at the Pomeroy Stadmm
wall be open &lt;In JLme 16 to serve
food and soft drinks from 2
p.m. until the frog Jumpmg
contest is completed Mrs
Werry, Mrs Rose ann Sebo and

Mrs. Vivtan Pterce will be m
charge.
Bells from the band banquet
for awards and for bu.s dravers
to Wheebng were presented
and approved for payment.
The group voted to make a
down payment for 155 band
members to attend band camp
at Rao Grande College in
August. Cop1es of revised bylaws were dastrabuted and
changes were explained by
Band Darector Dwight Goins,
An auditang committee com,
posed of Mrs. Joan Wilbams,
Mrs lms Burt and Mrs. Addalou Lewas was appomted.•
Goans announced that new
band shirts have arrived and
are available at has off1ce.

News.

SUPPER PLANNED
RACINE
A famaly
fellowshap supper will be held
Wednesday ~t the Ra cane
Uruted MethodiSt Church at 6
p m Those attending are to
bnng a covered dish and table
servl&lt;;e.

• •

in Briefs

Arneraca's farst space stataon crew The 21&gt;-day countdown was
to start at 8.30 p m. EDT, aunang for a launch at 9 a .m. Fraday.
NASA offacaals sa1d they felt confadent Iiiey could fanish
developang tools and techruques to fax the crappled Skylab m time
to meet the schedule.
Skylab - the world's largest spaceship - limped mto 1ts
Bth day m an orbit 172 males above Earth. Flight directors 111
Houston struggled to keep temperatures aboard the unmanned,
power-short Craft under control by COnstantly readJUsting Its
angle to the sun.
.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
Shop Weekdays 9:30 to 5 p.m.

Open Both Friday and Saturday 9:30 to 9 pm

Lingerie Sale
Special Purchase Of Our Best Selling
Styles In Womens Sleepwear Famous

\

Makes. All First Quality.

Help Wanted
MA INTENANCE man tor
vi llage of Syracuse water
s yslem

Send resume

to

Max me Van em, clerk of board
of publ1c affa1rs, Box 323,
Syracyse

Middleport

'

'

--- -

They are learmng about the
East f1 um flVe chtldren o( tw o
fanllhes'fr om the FHr Ea st who
are attendmg the elementary
school, one fr om Ind1a , Ute
other. from PakiStan Both
fanuhes came to J Oin the
children's f.l lhers who are
\l.i orkmg 10 th1s area
The Safl fam1ly came last
Septembe r and Z1a, 11 , Rooh1 ,
10, and Lubna , 8, en ter~
classes a t the elementa r y

Reg. 19.00 and 110.00 Gowns

Sale

I

, I

Reg. 6.00 and 7.00 Gowns
1

Sale

$399

£1

lingerie Department, First Floor

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY·

~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .

S228tc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

'

Thetr pm·enl&lt;.; ar&lt;' Mr
.md Mrs Abdu ~ Saf1, \\ho
res tde on Eas t Mam St ,
P ullll'l oy .Mr Safl ha s ~c n
hen• Sln{'C May, 197 1, and IS
employed as an off tee engmeer
wtth Harza Assoc of Ohto at
1.angs\ 1lle. a fn m engaged 1n
the Govm proJect
Houh1. short Cor Hooh1sm.
says Pomeroy ts a btg town
compaf'Cd to Drabella, West
Pe~ k1 stan, where they c;,une
f10111 Z1a, who 1s m Mr Don
ShveJs f1fth grddc class, w~s
the only one m the frmu ly to
spe&lt;Jk Enghsh at the ttme they
entereel school d ~ he hac!

SliH.KJI

BHAVANA AND SHILPA GORADIA enJ OY themselveson the playground at their new school

ll'm nt.•d 11

P.tklstnn
c:ol.tth.l and h&lt;: l two d;,mghter s
Ills t\\0 SISll'rs t uuld not .!Ill\ Pd tn At n CI'tCa to JOin
speak &lt;:10) I· ughsh un1 1l lhts Shdnt d a l (~u r . uh ,J In their
\car Huotu s..nd th,ll she h.JS lloHit.' on Sp nng Ave He has
lc,u netl 1t mostly from the !)(('!l lw1 c ftvc yrars and is an
dHid • ('n m s&lt;.'iwol She 1s m ('!l~1nec 1 at the Phtlhp Sporn
l\11 ~
Nnflt:,i1 Hoberts' Umd pl.wt
The n t\~ o g1rls ,
j,.\ 1dde dt~s..&lt;; Hlld l ubn,t 1s m
Bh.J\.111~1 . 9, .1t1d SIHlpa, 7, are
M1 s Jean Kuhn's fu st g1ade
sttllng m ' on cla sses,
dtss
Bl t.t\clna 111 Mr s lna Meadows'
l ~n 1 ol1 1ng
m school 1n fom th grc~dc, and Shtlpa m
Am ent~• was ,\ b1g event fen
1\.ll':-i ldd Dtehl's second ~-: r~t de,
dil bul t'spcc lall v fm Lub nd
fut 1h(' lf' lll,1Uide1 uf the year
Th1s \\ as hc l' fu.st yet~ I to go to
Pm t H.'I O)' 1s dll tiMllhey have
sc hool tle1 h:.1 chcr po1nls out st.'L'Il of th(' U S smce they
thA;,he h c~s done ven · \\ cll .m&lt;J ch.ulged pl.111es 111 New York,
IS JUS! tops'' m rea tlmg
l.UHIL'f.l 111 ('ulumbus at mg ht ,
A fu st fot Z1.1 \\CJ S piL1ymg
md d1m I' to POI.liCI uy m the
b.~ ~ k e tb ,il l ~ II c had pl avcd
dd t k They\\ til fmmdlly em o\1
bdsc ba ll ;H hvmc 111 Pahsta' n, dl the bcgm mng of next yea r
lml not basketball
Bh.tV.IJl,l c~ n d ~h1lpa spoke '
l lu f'l! wee ks .1gu Ru pa
1t1

LUBNA, ZIA, AND ROOm SAFI pmnt to thw former
home m Paktstan on a g1obe Lubna and Rooh1 are wearing
beauttful blue and gold outftts nattve to Paktsta n

-·

en tine
D.' voted To The lntPrest.• Of The Meigs-Mtuon Aren

VOL XXV NO 28
~:=:::.:;-.:........

. . . . .;... '• ...

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Caulfield thought
Mr. Nixon knew

LONDON - THE DOLLAR INCHED AHEAD today and the
prace of gold held steady But money dealers__saad the U. S.
currency was sbll under suspicion Opemng tradmg on the
London foreagh currency exchange put the prace of one Brahsh
pound at $2.56 to $2 562 The average prace was slightly lower
than Tuesday's closmg quotation of $2 5615, mearung the dollar
gamed fractionally m value.
Gold opened ahnost unchanged from 1ts closan ~ pnce of
$110 75, wh1ch was$: 25 below Monday's all-t1me h1gh The metal
was offered for sale today at $112 an ounce, but buyers were only
offenng $110. Bulhon and currency dealers saad both markets
had quieted considerably smce the great rush recently that sent
gold to new h1ghs and the dollar to new lows

PHNOM PENH - GOVERNMENT TROOPS cleared
Cornmumst forces from a sax-mile stretch of H1ghway 4 today
and declared the vatal road link between the cap1tal and the
seaport of Kompong Som open to trafftc, military sources said
Government troops also recaptured two vtllages south of
Phnom Penh on Tuesday and pushed down nearby Highway 3 ro
an encircled government garr1sonnat Tram Khnar, 32 miles
from the cap1tal, the sources sa1d In Honolulu, the U S Pac•flc
Command sa 1d U S arplanes attacked Commurust positions m
Cambodia for the 77th consecutave day Tuesday
NEWARK, OHIO - THE PRESIDENT OF the Arner.can
Mechcal AssociatLOn saJd here Tuesday rught sex educatLOn ts one
way to combat venereal dtsease which as reached "epidemic''
proportions.
"Sex education should be taught m schools as early as the
sixth grade," Dr Charles Hoffman sa1d at a news conference
here pnor to a speakmg engagement. Hoffman sa1d the mcreased use of oral contraceptives IS onP. reason for the "VD
eptdemic ''
YELLOW SPRINGS, OHIO - ANTIOCH College offlccals
attempted to break month-old campus stnke 10day by expellmg
30 student-'l and threatemng to fire actiVIst faculty members The
expulswn notices went out after Dean of the College Ewell
Reagan and other admm!Strators trLed unsuccessfully Tuesday to
reopen school bmldings that have been closed smce Apnl20
About 200 stnkers hnked arms around tile buildings and
turndd away the offacaals by throwang eggs. The egg throwers
mcluded several teachers who "wilf be ftred, 11 accordmg to
Marge Freed, the school's public mformahon director who acted
as a spokesman £or Reagm and President James D1xon
PARIS - PRESIDENTIAL ADVISER Henry A K1ssmger
began a new sess10n of talks on ways of endmg VIetnam ceasef1re
vaolatwns today and sa1d at may be the last
"It may be the fmal session today," he sa1d before enoenn g an
Amencan-owned villa m suburban Samt Nom-La-Breteche for
his sLXth meetmg wath Le Due Tho, h1s Hanoa counterpart Asked
if he expected to end the talks today , KLssmger replied
"Probably "
' OffLCials at Orly Aarport smd a specaal U S plane was
scheduled to depart at 6 p m (a p m EDT ).

WASHINGTON - HOUSE MEMBERS appeared reluctant
today to JOlfi the Senate m overr1dmg President NIXon's veto of a
measure that would subJect the admamstratwn 's two top budget
makers to Senate conftrrnatwn
The Hou:re leadership was undecaded whether to bnng the
velD to the floor for a vote today or delay 11 until fhursday, or
possibly even waLt until after the bnef Memoraal Day recess The
Senate voted, 62-22, Tuesday to oven1de the veto of a ball which
would require the current director and deputy director of the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB ) to rece1ve Senate
conformation.
support for the overrtde grew out of conr resswnal anger
over the refusals of OMB Darector Roy Ash and Deputy Fredenc
Malek and theLT predecessors )0 spend funds for programs
appropnated by Congress
'
CAPE KENNEDY - THE'COUNTDOWN resumed today
for
tConbnued on page 10)

TEN CENTS

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

INewu~:i:d!TJ.te!l!iefs·l,

LONDON - UlRD LAMBTON, A government mamster who
rcs1gned Tuesday mght m a new British government sex and
secunty scandal, sa1d today he had a " casual acquamtance"
wLiil a call gar I and a couple of her fnends but demed there bad
been a securaty nsk or blackmail.
Lord Lambton, 50, qwt abruptly Tuesday mght " for personal
and health reasons" as Parliament undersecretary for the Royal
Air Force. Government sources sa1d Prlme Mtruster ·Edward
Heath ordered an exhaustiVe probe and no Watergate-style
coverup or whitewash

PHONE 992 2156

WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 1973

:···:::·.: :-· (.•:•:::·:·:··-:.--::·: :·:.:·:·::-:·:·:···: . ~-: :::-···: :· ·:.

SAIGON (UPI )-THE SAIGON command reported a new
low m Commw11st ceaseftre vwlabons toclay, 58 over the past 24
hours, but saad it was too early to call the drop sagruficant. A
conunand spokesman satd 1t was too early to assess the
signiftcance of the new Jow
It was the lowest number of Communist attacks alleged by
Satgon many 24-hour period smce the Jan 2a cease~f 1re . Desptte
the rdcord tow, however, a command spokesman sa1d f1ghtmg as
close as e1ght miles of downto\\n Sa1gon late Tuesday left l2
Commumst troops and one government mihliaman dead The
Intnerational CommisSion of Control and Superv1s10n (ICCS)
meanwhale began looking mto V1et Cong complamts of alleged U
S. bombmg m South V1etnam

SHORT GOWNS-LONG GOWNS
, In A Big Selection of Colors

at
Pomeroy
Children
Element.':lry have been exposed
to n on ~ Western culture first
hand m recent davs tn the1r
l:h.i :;$l'S

CALL CANCELLED
A JUry called for Wednesday
an the Meags County Common
Pleas Court wall not have to
report as earher requested.

- ------- - -

DOWNING·
CHILDS
AGENCY, INC.

' '

1ts owr. man in control at CIA,

STRIKE BEGINS
Approxamately 11 men at
Rachards and Son Sand and
Gravel Co sate at Letart Falls
went out on strike th1s mornmg Dale Taylor, superm~
t.endent, satd he dtd not know
why the men were on str1ke as
BARBECUE SET
CHESTER - A cbacken there has been no com~
barbecue, sparenbs and mumcatton between the work·
LOCAL TEMPS
homemade Ice cream wlll be men and plant management
The
temperature
m down.
The
men
are
members
of
the
served at the Chester farehouse
Monday, Memonal Day, wath Operatmg Engmeers Umon A town Pomeroy at 11 a m.
servmg to start at 11 30 a.m. packet hne was established thas Tuesday was 70 degrees under
partially cloudy skaes.
and contanue until the supply 1s mormng, Taylor said
gone. There wall be a parade at
1 p m and a ga rden tractor
pollmg contest at 2 Proceeds
from the day's activLtaes wall go
for the purchase of a new
(Contmued from page 1)
truck. The present vehicle "strange" smce bemg wounded a year af o An acquamtance
must be replaced wLthin a called the JObless Sanders "mean and cr•zy,"
year
''I'd see him hangmg aroWid the corner liquor store," satd
Brown McKay. " He'd take wine away from old people coming
out of the store " Sanders took the 31J..06 rille from his parents'
frame house 10 a predornmantly black section of south Memphis
SALE DAYS SET
Monday afternoon and walked down Kansas Street, farmg mCHESHIRE - Kyger Creek discrammately at anyone he saw. "He'd shoot and then he 'd
maJorettes will hold a rum- dance around and laugh while he cocked has rifle," saad McKay
mage sale Ftaday and
Saturday, May 25 and~ from
CAPE KENNEDY - WITH ASSEMBLY of an emergency
9-5 each day on North Second Skylab repaar kat nearmg completion, launch teams start
Ave., m Maddleport.
counting down today toward the twace-postponed blastoff of

SCIPIO EVENT SET
HARRISONVILLE
Reservat-Ions for the aruma!
Se1p10 Alumna Assn banquet
and dance may be made by
phonmg 742-4783 or 992-3854
The affaar wall begm at 7 p m
Saturday at the HarrasonvLlle
Sehool.

1

--

BY JO ELLEN DIEHL

Booster officers installed

ReservatiOns are still bemg
accepted for the 75th Annual
Chesh~re -Kyger Creek Alumna
banquet slated Saturday , May
26 at 6 30 p m. m tile Kyger
Creek cafeteria
Tickets may be purchased
from M1ss Kathy Shaver by
callang 3~7 -7707 or at Richard
Russell 's M1z Martha 's
Restaurant m Cheshire
Classes wh1ch Will receive
special recog mtwn are the 50
year class of 1923, 25 year class
of 1948 and 10 year class of 1963
The steak dmner wall be
served by the Cheshire Chapter
PLEASANT VALLEY
of the Eastern Star Spec1al
DISCHARGES. Mattae
mustc w11l be pl-ov1ded af~
Huffman, Pomt Pleasant; Joe
lerward by " The Kn1 ght
i\'il.ers, GaUtpolis, Mrs Wtllts
Hawks "
W1lhams , Roberts burg ,
Rodney Osborne, New Haven ,
OFFICE TOCLOSE
Mrs John Bumgardner, West
The
Me1gs County Dept of
Columbua; Kathy Woods,
Poant Pleasant; Scott FLelder, Health w11l be closed at noon
Pomt Pleasant and Lms From, Wednesday for the remamder
of the day due to funeral ser~
Pomt Pleasant
BIRTHS· A daughter to Mr. v1ces for V1rgtl Atkms Mr
and Mrs. Terry Gray of Letart Atkms was a member of the
board of health and was Lts vace
presadent at the tune of his
death
CLUB TO MEET
TUPPERS PLAINS - A
specaal meetang of the Tuppers
DEER KILLED
Plams Cornmuruty Club w11l be
A doe was k1lled Monday at
held at the home of Mrs. NLta 2 30 p m on SR 124 at
Ratchae at 7·30 p.m Wed- Bow mans Run, Shenff Robert
nesday Plans will be made for C
Hartenbach 's
Dept
an upcommg horse show and reported The deer was killed
an tee cream social. Plans for when 1t ran mto the path of an
servm g the Ohve~Orange auto dnven by Eldon Kaeuter,
Alumna banquet wall be Racme.
completed

Area deaths

lawyer, Fred-1'\Fielding, who
saad Caulfaeld had called h1m
on Dec 31 to say he had gotten
such a " trees an the forest wall
fall '' oommumcation anony·
mously an the mad.
McCord test1f1ed Fraday that
Caulfaeld began relaymg offers
of executive clemency to him,
" from the highest levels of the
White House" if he would plead
gualty and keep qwet, durmg
McCord's Watergate traal that
began Jan B
Caulfield was expected w
folluw McCord to the witness

Children of Far East like living in Pomeroy area

DR SAMUEL GOLDMAN and Class of '73 President Andy Vaughan chat pnor to com mencement exerctses Tuesday everung at Meigs Htgh School V:mg h~m mtt odu ced Dr
Goldman who was commencement speaker

Meigs High graduates
advised to choose well
" How a person makes
chmces, aqd the choices he
makes, stand as eviden ce
throughout his whole hfe," sa1d
Dr Samuel Goldman, dean of
the College of EducatiOn at
OhiO Uruvers1ty m h1s address
to the graduatmg semors of the
class of 1973 at the f1fth annual
commencement exercises of
Meigs H1gh School Tuesday
rught
Dr Goldman pomted out that

there arc three types of people
m Amencan society toda y.
- The ones who run away
when they find somethw g
wrong w1th society are the
"cowards of soctety "
- Indifferent people, who do
not want to get mvolved, t~re
the ''mnocents of society "
- Ones who want to set
thmgs n ght and shov.. stgns of
matunty are the "heroes of
S(JC ICty """'

He stm! " Eo~ ch of you hds
th e ch m ~e of whi ch gtoup to be
a part of as you enter a new
pha se of y o~r (1fe "
He co ncl ud ed w1th the
wm mn g, " We mu st overcome
a ny th1n ~ and everytlnu g lhdt
l11cs to de humamze socJety 11
rh ~ 205 semors marched mto
the aud1tonum wh1l e the band
pl&lt;J yed " Pomp &lt;1 ntJ Cn unde1
the
cum stdn !:c "
/ Con t mu cd un P•W,C 10)

fly MIKE FEINSIJ.BER
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - An
ex-While House staffer
test1f1 ed toda y he felt he was
" d o m ~ some tiHng fol' th e
Prestde nt" when he relayed
offers of CXL&gt;&lt;: Uttvc clemency to
Watc1gate conspu ator .J ames
W McCm d .Ir , and that he
believed Flr cs1dcnt Nt.xon knew
he wu:; makmg such offer ~
.John J Caulfield , testafyang
fot tt second day at the
te lc vtsed Sen;J te Watel'gatc
hc.n mgs, smtl he knew .h1 s
.tcllOIIS WCIC WI Ong but that lUS
' loyally to the Pres1dent of the
U111ted States ovearode these
constd erat10ns "
Ca ulfield emphasized that he
Sl' JUNG f'LIN(, SET
'I here wliJ he ar1 Ac loJJt &lt;J
( luld Today ''Sprm g Fhng:, "
I rub y , Snlurd.Jy .111d
Sunday at Ormp Francis
Asbury ncm Hw (~rand c
lnlcrc:;tcd people from all
over OhiO will be ~;um pm g
J\ tciCVI SIOII tape \\ IJI be
m,uh.: •1f nc tiVIllcs and otht·r
lll' \\ S
mt•t!I,J \\ill tin mhi VIC\\- S , Mrs J\.brk 1unnt lull , Huck SprmgN , '14111
n IIII' St'lll ACT mcd1:1
,.•

had

no direct knowledge"
Nixon was aware he
rc!,Jyed orfer :; of clemency to
McCord at Uu ee mcctmgs la st
Janllal y wlulc McCord was on
tnal for the bug gin g of
D ~ mo c r a tl c Na tiona l Comrrnttee headqual'ters last .June
Under que :; twnm~ by Sen
Lowell P Wc1ckcr Jr , RConn , C:mlheld strcssL&gt;d that
he felt he " was dom g
somethmg fm the President of
the Umted Stales "
Ntxon satd agam Tuesday
that he never made any
clemency offers or authonzed

thc~ t

an yon e else to make them m
his beha lf to Watergate defendants
Caulfield sa td he had been
dskcd to rel&lt;J y the clemency
promtsc::; to hts old fnend
McCo• d by then-Whll" lfouse
Counsel .John W Dean llf, who
he sa1d toJ, h1m to tell McCord
th e offers wer e smcere and
cam e ftom " the t-1 ghest
levels" of the Wh1tC House
Caulfield smd he believed
Dean was actmg wtlh proper
authonty - whtch could only
come rrom Ntxon h1mself
1Cuntmued on page 10 )

Heacock to speak
C

W1l11.c~m

Hc&lt;.~ coc k ,

OJ!umbus, fm me1 commande1
ot thr. Der.u trnent of Oh1 o,
AlllCIJ C.IIl I.CJ-: Um , wtll spcCjk at
the ,mnu ~:~l Memonal Dtly
sc1VIl e s Monday at Beech
C:1 ovc Cemctct y sponsored by
D1 cw WciJ slcl Post 39,
Alllcr! ca n l..cgwn
A p.Jrdd P Yt!ll form on the
uppc1 pi.H kmg lot Monday at !J
,, m c1nd move down Mum St
&lt;It Ill lL w11l tUin out Butternut
.u1d move up Second St ror a

s.du tc a l th e cou r thouse
munumcnt befm e con t1nutng
on to Beech Gr ovc The post IS
dSktng all groups to take part
m the p1;1 1.Jde Those w1shmg to
do so c1 1 e to conta ct Kenneth
Han 1s or Paul Ce~ se 1
A fireworks di splay Will be
set off at Ute Pome1oy levee by
GUidO Gu ulaw1 bcfor e the
pcu ade Th e fu CYt Ur ks ;u e
p::~r tJ cul ai ly des1gned to be
effe&lt;.:tJ ve du 11ng dayl1 ght
huurs

SEC linked to shattering financial scandals
By MATTHEW T KENNY
SAN JOSE, Costa R•ca
(UP! ) - A busmess associate
of fmancter Robert Vesco sa1d
today that disclosure of all
deta1ls an a case that led to the
restgnatJOn of G Bradford
Cook as chairman of the
Securtty and Exchange
Comm ISS!On (SEC ) " w 11!
startle the world" and destroy
mvestor confidence m U S
seeur1ties around the world
Cook res1 gned last Wednesday followan g allegations that
he deleted all references to a
secret $200,000 contnbutaon to
President N1xon 's reelection
campa 1gn from an SEC complamt against Vesco
Norman P LeBlanc, a
canadian Citizen once Identified by the SEC as an off1cer
m several subsidiaries o£ the
huge Investors Overseas
Servaces, Ltd, (lOS ) mutual
fund complex founded by
B~ rnard
Cornfeld , al so
referred m his statement today
to an SEC smt f1led last Nov 27

against htmself. Vesco ami 39
other persons and compames
"The full dtsclosure of the
ClrcumsWnces that forced the
res1gnat10n of G Bl'(ldfol'd
Cook Will start 1e the world tn
what Will be known as the
b•ggest scandal that ever
rock ed a U S government
agency and w1ll destroy m ~
vestor confidence m U S
secur1t1es throughout the
world ,'' LeBlanc sa1d
LeBlanc's statement named
l' ece ntly
dt s m1 sse d
pl'esidentJal counsel John Dean
Ill , W11l1arn Casey, and several
members of the SEC mciudang
Cook, lrvmg Pollack, Stan1ey
Sporkm and " perhaps other
officials of the SEC unkn own to
me "
Casey preceded Cook as
chairman of tile SEC Pollack
has been a member of the SEC
smce 1946 but Sporkm was not
1mmediately Identified
" It 1s relevant to note tha t
Cook, Sporkin and oth ers
apparently have Withh old

• IDVI
• "te d
B1•ds on mappmg
Th e Me1gs Co unty co m ~
missiOners Tuesday agreed to
accept b1ds on a proposa l to
pre par e curl'ent pr opert}
ownel':shtp maps for Me1gs
Coun ty
The plan IS to upgrade the
pial ma ps f1led m the Me1gs
Cou nty record er 's offi ce.
Co p1 es of the plan s and
specifications for the rnappm g
me~y be obtamad m person
from Martha Chambers. clerk ,
or by wn tang to the ljoard of
Commi ss iOne rs, Pomer oy

B1ds must be submi tted by
.June 11
In other bu:siness, an amma l
cla1m was pmd to Roy Sm1 th,
Pomeroy, Rt. 3, w the amount
of $200 for the_._.,
loss Of two
calves Penmsston was g1ven
to 1 a1ry Spencer, clerk of
courts, tu il t\.end a conv ~ nt10n
neal Cleveland , June 20, 21 t1nd
22
1\ Ltend tn g we re Rober t
Cla rk, Warden Ours cmd Henry
Well s, colll !lll SSIOners, i.ln d
M,n tha Chambers. cle1k

extenstve doc umenta tiOn th" t AlnCIICdn sec un ttes
p1 ove these facl" f1om the U S
It wa s the b1ggest such case
&amp;.:nute, the Ne w Yol'k gm nd m hi story
JUry and the fedma l cou1 l
In another· development, il
heann g the tSEC J case
:-;pukcsman for Vesco, Raul
" In v1ew of th ese fa ct.s," EspmoSil, smd the onetime
LeBlanc s~u d, "one could more New .Jersey executi ve would
properly come to the con~
elus iO n that Mr Vesco's
political contn but10 n w.-s not
made to obstru d JUStiCe, but
was tantamount to extortiOn "
He did not elabo rate
Th e SEC su1t f1led last
Novem ber accused Vesco and
40 other tnd iVJdua ls &lt;J nd
c.; ornpamcs assot::Jalc d wtth htm
The cost of each ballot cast m
of dl'auung more th an $224 the May pl'lmary election m
million m assets from four Metgs County was $2 74 , the
mu tu al
funds
holdin g coun t) boa rd of clectwns sa1d
l'uesday
Tot&lt;J I cost of the electiOn
mode necessary m practically
all of Me1gs County by th e
seve n state Issues wh iCh fa ce d
vo te! s was $6,326 10 Th1s mcludcs la bor , poll books,
ballots, rent, etc There were
2,303
persons votmg brmgmg
Youths a nd adul L" m Me1gs,
Athens, and Gallw Coun ties the cost of each vote to $2 74
The state legiS lature will
are bemg offered a bOdt tnp on
rent1burse
the county for costs
the Ohio R1 ver Fn day , J une 1
by the Me1gs County 4-H Cl ubs mvolved m prccmcts - all bu t
The boat, " Chaperone," Will e1ght were so affected - whi ch
leave [rom Middleport levee at had to be open for state Issues
1 p m and retut n at 4 p m only Me1gs County w11i pay the
Clubs ma y arrange ptcru cs m ex pense of poll boo ks, some
local parks or may carry sac k $260 'I he Eastern I .ocai School
lunches on the boat Soft dnnks Dtstn ct where a bond Issue
and snacks Wlll be available on was voted upon will ha ve to pay
$1 ,1U7for operation o[ the eaght
the boat
Cost for each person 1s $1 25 prccmcts on electwrt day even
Ti ckets may be sec ured though vote rs there would hav e
through any local 4-H cl ubs or ha d to go to the polis on the
1
by calling the County Ex- ... t.Jle !ssw·:; tirl) Wd) The total
cost pCl o.,;cJtl'I m F:.1st(•1non the
tensiOn Office Youn g people Hnd adults mterested m them bond ISSUe W(JS $1 3J, con~
~ are mviled and wi ll be a c~ S!derably l011er than the $2 74
ccpted up to capacit y of the Hverage per vote fo r the enttre
count) a 1c.1
boat, 1eported to be 600

Rullots cost

$2. 74. each in
May primury

Boat trip

is offered

1cturn to New York to stand
lnul on another related case
onl y 1f ass ul'ed of a fatr trw]
'I hat case mvolvcs two
fm Mer Ntxon c&lt;.~lnnet officers
Former Attorney General
Jo hn N Mitchell, form er
Commerce Secretal'y Mauri Ce
Stans, Vesco and another man
were mdicted m New York last

week on charges slemnung
from the ~ e cret $200,000 contrabution Vesco made towards the
Nocon campaign
Prestdent Jose Figuel'es told
natwnw1dc radto and teleVIsiOn
aud1ences late Tuesday that he
wa s
mnocent
of
any
wrongdomg 1n hLs r elataonship
wtth Vesco

Newest industry
to be welcomed
The Southea stern {)hto
Reg10nal Counctl w11l welcome
offJcials of th e regwn's newest
mdu sl1 y, Banquet F'uods, when
th e development orgaruzab011
meets at th e Fa1rgr eens
Counlry Club on May '11.
10" E pav1s , SEORC
prestdent , satd represenl.iltlves
of Banquet Foods fr om St
Louts wou ld be honored guests
of the counctl as well as the
plant manager of the Wellston
fa cll1ty
Other plant managers new to
southeastern OhiO will also be
mtroduced and welcomed at
the open membership meetmg,
Dav1S Said
Carl Dahlberg , SEORC
secretary, stated that State
Senator Wtlham H Mussey, of
the 14th D1stnct, would speak
to the group as part of the
busmess me etmg Senator
Mussey \\Ill dire ct h1s remarks
to the lack of progress concernmg the Appalachian High-

and Cmcmnatl to urge
movement toward completwn
as antended by the Appalachian
legtslatHm
Ac cordmg to Senator Mossey
no secttons of the Appalach18n
Highway System m Ohio are
scheduled for constructiOn m
the b1enruum begmnmg July 1,
1973
The SEORC has membership
m 12 southeastern Oh10
counties and the meetmgs are
open Ti ckets for the May 31
meetmg at Fatr greens 1n
,Jackson Coun ty may be purchased locally from Bernard
Fultz, Middleport - Pomeroy,
or Roger Barron and the
secretary of the Galhpohs
Ch ambel' of Commerce,
Galhpohs

OPEN FULL-TIME
The Pomdroy Public L1brary
ts operatmg on a regula1 fullli me schedule from 12 noon to 5
p m Monday through Frtday
The ltbrm y ha s been on a pa rt~
way
hme basts smce Feb 15 due to
Dahl be rg 1nd1 cated the 1 O&lt;:k removal \\ Ork whu:;h has
counc1l wa s orgamzmg an been under way on the h!lls1de
effort m cooperation wtth other beh nd the post offi ce and
~ ~ oups betwce ll PArkersburg hbrarv

�2- The OallySenhnel Middleport Pomeroy 0 May 23 1913

3- TheDa b Sent nel

EDITORIALS

Helen Help
Us. • •

Kowtowing Is Out
Of Style, Peking!

BERRr'S WORLD

lh t-ltlt•n Built I

I t~ Ch

Dear Helen
I was marn ed at 17 to a sweet boy of 19 He soon "as tra p~d
by an older woma n ( 24) Her ndependencC' ncorne
sophlstJCahon etc made a httle teenage bnde look I ke a dope I
went home to Mothe r and after the d1vorce he marr ed th s
hus band stea ler

r stayed smgle for three years and then met a ruce man J
thought I loved We have two wonderful children now a mee
home everyt hing a nyone would want or dream of except there s
one problem

I sti ll love my fLrst husband though I haven l seen h n s nee
the divorce ten years ago I hear he IS rree and 1 dream of hi m
an the time You see I m the mature older \\. oman now and I
could hold him
Should I stay w1th my present ma rr age and be miserable or
out of fa rness to my husband a nd' myse lf tf) to ge t back what I
once had - STILI IN LOV E
P S M} ex has moved back 1n town - I II surely run nto him

soon

+++

Dear Helen
Could a formerly very v r le man lose the urge at age 40
My husband s suddenly d1s nterested I ve begged h m to seo
a doctor but he say s he JUSt doesn t care for sex any more f:fe
seems very t red n ost of the t me
He says there s no oth er woma but h1s work reqwres htm to
stay out many rughts and how do I know exactly v. here he IS
I ve had no reason to mistrust hun m the past and I sttlllove h m
very much I m onl) 35 and not read y for h s
Should I watt and hope be extra -seduct ve and ge t pusl ed
away ) or chezchez la femme? - C K K

W II e•eryone k ndly get a hold of h mse/1' Th s s a
d recto s meet ng not on e ncounter group

WIN AT BRIDGE

Both Sides Eager to Lose
NOHIH
"' K Q9
• J 65
• J Jl

... A82
\HSI (D)
. A42
¥J l0
+ 1091 2
olo Q 753
SOUTII

E\Sf
4

08:.&gt;~

¥ AK4 3
+ Q

o!oK 19

. J6
¥ Q 9 82
+ A K 8S
... 064
Bo
ul

Dear C
Try the first two laced w1th great amounts of un let standmg
and a f rm but gentle push toward the medical check up )O ur
husband no doubt needs
Even f the third IS md cated I beral appl cat ons of the
others may VANQUISH the femme - H
Dear Helen
Please tell Fotu1d Wantmg that she IS not alone m he n
orgasm marnage Stat st cs say about one thtrd of v.omen
e1ther have ery low response or none And many don t really
seem to m1ss 1t nor could we be cons de red fr gtd
[have only exper enced the feat once or tw c m 25 years
of marnage yet my husband says I am a fantasti c lover and I m
very happily marr1ed I m JUSt one of ti'ose low le\ el persons
wl o doesn t have a osvchol g1cal hang up but knows that for
me - the half-hour effort I d expend sn t worth the se ~
seconds of plea~ure
My husband IS aware of my failmg 1f you can ca ll It that
though he doesn t Be ng close to hun knov., mg we love each
other know ng I make htm happy - that s enough Were women
completely truthful I think many "ould agree - SCORE! ESS

3

' ,,.

Po"'

2.

S uth

I+

p ,

Bv Oswald &amp; James Jacoh\

sa I West 1 h loso
I o ess th e on )
e &lt;.~ s o
I I ad fo n )

\V eil

1 h ca l y

good
ack of I ea t s e ad ~ a s t at
t was
gt t tl c n
y
Ia d
\lt e1 t1 at ste I r ~ sta
East and \Vest had t Ule
t o blc ett ng South
ke
I s wo d a mond co tt ac t
E st ~.:&lt;.~ s h e d h s ace an I
k ng
hea t s &lt;:1 d gave h
1 a tn e
Vh s

a.

uti

etu ned t e tl

e of

lu s A lo
o1 d n
w 1 t he k
) Ea sl

ng A club et n
wo d have left
So 11 o
t k sho t h t
1u t e I t
la st hea t
We st
f e I and dum 1 )
e u 1 I e d So tl dt ew
t umps knock ed out the ace
f SJ ades anJ later d1s
ca ded a cl b o one of
d mmy s spades
South {:Ouldn t es st the
1\ga nst
pul se to gloat
de fend ers I ke yo I ca af
o I to make lousy over
ails was s co nment
1h s annoyed Wes t lie 1e
~I ed
1\ga nst b dder s I ke
you I ca n afford to delend
badly If yo had 1 JSt ke t t
o t of the b ld ng we would
a ost s ure!)' J ave been set
at so ne cont act o othe
Yo st ored pi s 90 f yo r
t vo d amo ds [t won t be
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wa n a d po nt d p cate
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gv t ze o fo daY. o e he only
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If
BY JACK 0 BRIAN
CHARLI E CHAPLIN AND
THE GOLD RUSH
NEW YORK ( KFS) - Chari e Chap! n s son
Sydney told us years ago h1s pop had $15 000 000
m gold bulhon stashed m Swiss vaults w th the
y, ld gold leaps 1t s now worth more tl an
$60 000 000
Jan M ner s w1 ld ly com c
clowmn g n The Women y, II elevate her to
star b 11 ng any rn nute Jan s also Madge the
Man cun st n the TV comrnersh lis Kathleen
Adams ex.e ut ve swePt e at Holt R neharl
Y.eds Paul Becker soon
rl e 5th 0 me swn s
tr p to enter a n Iron Curtam countr es had no
emergenc es unless you cons der Rwnama
barnng them from smgmg Jesus Chr1st
Superstar trawnatic
I '1. Ren&lt;.~y actress str pper authoress
grandmother
M1cke) Cohen SY. eet e s
• unloadmg her 6th hubby West Coast cash
.. nasi ) Tom Freeman The ch c new a lment
:. Bicycle Knee more m than skt fr actures
: Watergate even nudged Jer se) C ty s Ocean
.., Breeze restaurant lost pnrne steak custome
:'Bob Vesco nd cted m r ch absent a
Vesco s
: Bahamas nat ve reta ners r en a n musella ly
: loyal to the shady mone) bags thev lake s ats
:at U s photogs and rv nosyp&lt;.~rkers
:
It really vas Sally I ene nnd Ma ) at
: st) I sh Quo Vad1s - Sally Held Irene Selzn ck
:Mary Rudge s At 21 Burgess Mered I of
: Batman and TV a p tches ,sance -c red B 11
:Gargan s1ng ng th ough n s \ o celess tl roat
C: nbbmg h n se lf w tt lv Jenn fer 0 Ne II the
:second most beaut ful gal on the p ermses
: Trwnan Capote sptff ly dressed but for h s
: omn present S\\cate
Arl ene Franc s who
:wears long pants better than men I v ng I az a
: s1 hng at the ve y sane table f OJ wl I he
:launched a I gl ball gla.ss onto 0 to ~ em nger s
.... sk nch a rev. feuds &lt;.~go
and nol even
: remember ng the rna tel
• The Gas! ght Club s entry mto the Age of
:Vulgar t} tJ e upcom ng no doubt I tcrary tease
:: for Deep Tl oats shabb; sl allow sea let
:' dtandeho 1ess for her Inside I nda Lo\ elace
::' book wh c1 v II be d rty and publ sh d O)
: Pmnacle Books wh1ch there b) sc apes botto
::,
At least Ix I ovelace doesn t blush
: t~noran ce of I er fl1ck sp ec all; __.._ she va
~ scovc1 ng perform ng at vov. pa t cs
Wa ncr 13 os celeb ales ts iJOth f l1
n
1vcr sctn I h f scCLl nostalg a th e pare f 1
grossed $510 000 000 last year w th a $50 000 000
prof
B t Bacharach bought I s ]{otl
1 an s Inn n East Norw d
L 0 JUSt a &lt;:oupl e

-

•
•

of years ago but t s 241 )Ca s old Or g nal
be ms &lt;.~nd sorr e tables still funct1on for the
Ra ndrops fall ng composer
All Amer ~.:a 1
gr d Hall of Farner Johnny I UJack tell s pals h1s
fe Pat w II be a grandmother for the first
me an) ed1t on v &lt;.~ daughter Ma y (Mrs
Pete Puhln ann
Sm ah Chm d ll sports a rn m Bnt1sh
Amen can flags p non he1 br efcase After all
I m half Arnen c:an she Yankee-cheertos
Betsy von Furstenbe g def n tely IS a hmous ne
pe actress but there the an stocrat c Betsy n
navy slacks and polocoat was rnak ng her grand
entrance toward Edwy on a 4th St crosstown
bu s AI ce Faye fmally snooted the No No
N nette tou g troupe offer AI ce heads for
Go I an to al k over a ne\\ Bdwy 1 us1cal off r
Marvelous Anna Moffa s abras1ve throat
cost he b1g sun mer theatre money
Sebasttan Cabot of the TV ser als IS I avmg hts
n ser es Sonny &amp; Cher hale the Rolling Stone
mag p ece wh ch quotes enem es m all sorts of
nast es One accuses Sonny of rewrttmg other
f lks h ts Thetr ex n anager Charles Greene
ea II tees off
The H wood TV H ters str ke doesn t rk
SJOnsot s vho ve wanted later-autumn starts for
e rv sea srmsho\\ S Nat on a! a td ences get out of
e house unt I the eal fall beg ns The net
o ks t:~ren t mourn ng e th er the) don t I aye
sc hedule any new sl ov. s for the summer they
i:l leasl had to make gestures p ev ously about
us ng the off ratmg season to experiment With
new programs
George Foreman hasn t put
e expected heavy\\e gl t Em tune together yet
but he s bought the customary $"1 000 Rolls
Ru) ce already
WI y survc; s of gal smokers
Ci o t vhen tl e e s sn oke tl e1e s pr of ts t1 e
a e r&lt;.~ ge fen ale ga ns 17 lb s after she QUits
I
na eg o
0 na h Sho e s rv show has a blurb sp1eled
) I ex Geo rge Monlgorner) -and anothe1
fea ut n ~ Jud) Carne 0 nah s beau Bu t
Re) nolds ex
Cesar Romero s lunch date at
On ll! s t vo day s s tt ng wa s A da Dc sc art~ s
u ' I at n n fty structu ed I ke Haque! \1 elch
J3 g e Bardo has ant c pated n ore
e e en ts I a Ha y Laud er and Smatra
ge I er No " sl e says sl ell QUi t at 40 t\\o
s hence
J m Faliey s 85 May 30
c &lt;-~ Neu l s 1 ess 15 deb 1 s v th n o
Mt
s Da
f lr
11 c C:a sts de
elo beefe c \ II en a ge ts prole n loyal
1 ses bJ 100
Ph I S1lvers st1ll acl1vs
scr1n usl I c ccn r t c &lt;.~l paea ns

u 1 rtnc

v"
IW l
I
1-:a
lODAY S (!UESIIO'

y

0

ucs

do yo

0

d

l' S.l'

ecent survey by the Op mon Research Corp of

t onv, de 1 obab I ty sample fav ors a law that would re
ql e a secret ballot before workers go out on str ke
Among un on members howevei the f gure was 86
1e cent n favor of such a law
I he s rv ey was c onducted for The Busmess Round
table a o gan za o n of bus ness executives wh c h seeks
amon g other th ngs to m1 rove labor management rela
t on s
Un on men bers were also JUSt sl ghtly behmd the total
US publ c- 81 1 e1 cent compared w1th 83 per cent- m
fa vo ng a law equ r ng a secret ballot to fmd out If
wo ke s "'ant to sta y out n a str ke tl at has not been
setlled a fter 60 da ys
By 74 pet ce [} t a d 66 per cent respectively un on mem
be s a d publ c favor a Jaw requ r ng a secret ballot by
e nployes to leterm ne f tl ey want a un on to repre sent
hen

Soviet Modernizes

By RAY CROMLEY
W1\SHINGTON NEA
1 hE n aJo So et threat to Amencan sec tr ty n t he
ext decade s not the g ow ng numbers of balhst c m1s
s s n 1clea s bmar nes and tl e mammoth s ze of the
K em\ n s g o I arm 1es
Th eaten ng as hese may be a greater danger 1 es m
ece nt extt=ns ve b t scarcely not ced sh fts n the Sov et
~ gh co1 mand
Vete an ank ng Sov et marshals and generals lack ng
ed c at o a nd tech 10\ogy have been replaced by men
sk I cd n adva ced sc ent f c and eng nee ng f elds
1 o em app ec able degree the newcomers emphas ize
uffens1ve wa1 fa 1e Tl e older marsha ls and gent!rals were
over\\- helm ngl) con n tted to Russ as trad honal defeli
s e doc tr ne
A t lie v and a noted offJCers-w th thetr strong pref
erence fo the massive p od1 ct on of large s mpl e weap
no onge control the hi gh command The new
ons
nen hom other servlces pres Jmably have a pred lectwn
lor se lect ve procurement of more sophtst cated weapons
F rovocat1ve stud es n th1s ar ea of Sov et staff and field
changes ha ve ecently been completed by Alexander 0
Gl ebha dt a &lt;1 W II am Schnc der J r cons ultants to the
H dso lnst Lute n New York Schneider s also a US
Senate staff mem be
Two exa nples taken a random from the r detmled
v.o k w II g1ve the flavor
• Adm S M Lobov chtef Sovtet expert on nuclear
sub na1 nes has beer appo nted assistant chief of the
Gene a ! Staff t1 e f st t me a non army off cer has f1lted
th s h gh post
• Recent Sov e e xpenments With a stellar merttal
g da 1ce package for the r 4 000 naut cal m1le ran ge
SSNB s bma ne launched bathshc m ss le SLBM and
rna e v~rable reentry veh cles suggest the new l ~acler
sh p s nterest m t r nmg technolog cal advances to of
fe ns ve adva ta ges 1n thelr force str ucture
Ghe bha1dt and Schne der conclude that I the new
Sov 1 ~t ma shals and generals sho ld take best ad
va n ta g~ of the 1eso urces 1 ICBMs w th the formidable
hro\\ we1ght (n ss le s1ze advantage the r pnor pro
curen e t I ol c es have produced a maJOr sh ft m the
sttateg balance could occ 1r
I h s wo 1id be t 1e of course onl y 1f the Umted States
does not take full adva ntage of ts own research and
de elopme t capab I t1es

Suga c ne fa c s n Ha
sav a ton of Water
c ed t 1 I e a p nd
f sug

Ch ckcns &lt;~lv..av s get up at
a v becduse they re equ p
ped v.. tl I m duck s

The

Da1~

Sentinel

Cahforn a 2 Mmneso ta 8
Kansas C I) 7 and Oakla nd 4
Texas 1
Bonds who sco red the
G ants f rst run n the f rst
rruung and their last w1th a
homer m the mnth tn ggered
the game wmmn g fo ur run
third mmng outburst w th a
double T to Fuentes smgle a
double by Gary Ma tthe" s a nd
a two-run smgle by Chns
Spe er completed the mn ng
Jua n Man chal allowed rune
hits but went the d stance for
h1s f fth wm while Pat Dobson
suffer ed h s se \ enth loss
agamst t~ o vic ton es for
Atlant.&lt;J
Greg Luz nsk drove m three
runs wtth a dot ble and a smgle
as the Phill es Wayne TWitch
ell won hls second game W1ll e
Montanez homered for the
Phllhes while Da ve Cash had
three hits over the Prates
Dock Ell s t.&lt;J gged for four
tuns n six nn ngs was ta gged
w1th h s f fth defeat
Dave ConcepciOn drove n
three runs \Hth a two run
double and a s1ngle and Pete
Rose had three h ts for the
Reds who ta gged Da ve
Roberts w th h s second loss

Misrepresentation
charged by USAC

RAY CROMLEY

1 he 1\.lmanac
By Un ted Press lnternat onal
1oday 1s Wednesday May 2~
I e 14! d da) ofl913 w1th 222 to
[ llu"
1 c n oon IS approach ng ts
la s quarter
The morn ng sta s a c Ma s
and Jup er
The even ng stars are Mer
cu y Venu s and Saturn
I hose bar on th s date arc
ur der the ~ gn of Gem mt
A nb use Bu ns de a Umon
ge ne al n the Ctv I War was
bo n Ma y 23 1624
On th1s da) n htsto y
In 1701 Capta n Wilt am Kidd
vas I anged n I ondon on
cha ges of p1racy and 1 u1 der
In 1939 the U S Na \ y
submar ne
Sq alus
we nt
down off Ne v Hampsh re m 240
feet of \ ater Th rty three of
I e 59 men aboard v.ere
rescued' Ith ad v ng bell
In 1960 Israel agents cap
u ed Adolf E cl n ann
n
Argent na and sp1r ted hun
BARBS
back to Tel Av v He was
conv cled of bemg a mass killer
Bv PHIL PASTORET
of J e\\s du ng World War II
So 1e rellows look well
ctnd vas hanged
v th a beard Others look
I 1965 the 0 gan zat10n of
st
Y.el\
\ e can St.a es set p a
Joke ~ v tl
peace kcepmg force m tl e
Dot 1 n can Rep bl c to stand
between ebel and loyalist
un ts
A tl ollgh for the day
NOt ve1g an poet Hem k Ibsen
a d I I ole! that 11an s n t1 e
gl vho s nore close!) m
leag e v tl I e f l e

By FRED DOWN
UP! Sports Wnter
Hank Aaron d dn t dlsappo nt the hometown fan s
Tuesda) mght because he h t
his 12th homer of the seas~n
and the 685th of hiS career for
the Braves Aaron s now 29
homers short of Babe Ruth s
all tlffie career total of 714
But 11 "as Bobby Bonds a
doubtful starter because of a
swollen left arm who stole the
show and led the San Francisco
Giants to a 7 3 v ctory with an
all ar ound performanc e
typ1cal of his pia) th s season
He hit h1s lOth homer and a
double stole home and two
other bases and scored four
runs as the G ants regamed
first place fr om the Houston
Astros n the NatiOnal League s
Western DIVISIOn
Cmc nnatJ defeated Houston
64 Ph1ladelph a beat P1tts
burgh 74 Montreal shaded
Chicago 4 3 St Lou s topped
New York 53 ann Los Angeles
whipped San D1ego 5 I m
other NL games
Amencan League scores
were M1lwaukee 4 Boston 2
Cleveland 5 Baltimore 3 New
York 7 Detroit 2 Ch1cago 6

F nee to n N J d sclosed the not so surpns ng fact that
H3 pe cent of the ge1eral public a s nd cated by a na

Offensive Tactics
Put at a Premium

said Joe Morgan That means
he II have to hit ar ound 330 to
340 over tha t stretch Pete s
swmgmg the bat super no\\
better tha n I l(e seen hm s nee
1 e been With the club Balls
are JUmpmg off his bat
'Sl' rtl'S Fmale
Of course he added me
hittmg around 330 helps Pete
Pete knows he s supposed
to lead tlus club m hittmg
Don t ge t me wrong He s not
n d because 1 n h tt ng what 1
am lie would love to see n e h1t
330 for the season Only e

would "' ant to h1t 340
It s hke n e and stolen
bases Morga n added I m
supposed to lead the club If
someon 1s ahead of me I m
gomg to bust my ta1l and catch
up and top the m Pete feels the
same way when someone IS
ahead of hin n hittmg
The Astr os who played
wtthout reg ul a rs To 1 rr y
Helms and Cesar Cedeno
Tuesda y nt ght send Don
\1 !son
agalns t
J ac k
Billmgham m the sen es r nate
tomght

Aaron29homersshort of Babe

Public, Umon Members 'Aye'
A

Reds heat Roberts 6-4
CINCINNATI tUP l - As other leg covertng hrst base on and su:gled todr ve home th ree
Clay Carroll put 1! I got t~&lt;o a John En~&lt; ards ground ball to Cmcmna tl rWls as the Reds
flat tires and I d1dn t ha\e a Ton) Perez leadmg off the t.&lt;Jgged Dave Roberts 1\lth his
spare
fifth
second loss m Six deciSions
Pulled muscles m each of his
Ed Sprague took over m the
F ve more RBis a nd I break
legs forced Carroll from the s1xth but needed help fr om my season record of 29 sa1d
mo und aft er hve mn mgs Pedro Borbon after Jtmm} Concepcton I alread} set a
Tuesday mght m a game the W~11n doubled and Bob ,Watson nev. record for stealing bases
Cmcmnati Reds went on to w1n smgted to lead off the mnth The only record 1 don t " ant to
6-4 over Houston m the opener mmng Borbon ma kmg his break ls errors I made 19 m
of a two game senes
2.3rd appearance prcked up his one season
Carroll makmg h1s second s xt h save when he struck out
Pete Rose had three hits to
start of the season pulled a the last t\\ Obatters m then nth put h m w1thm 28 of the 2 000
muscle m one leg p tcbmg to after the Astros p1cl&lt;ed up their career. fllt mark
Lee May n the fo urth mnmg last two runs
I figure 1t U t.&lt;Jke Pete 20
and then pulled a muscle m the
Dave Conc epciOn doub led ga 1 es to get Ius 2 OOOth h t

gove1nment has J rotestcd stron gly and
fc rn all)
reports the New Yorl&lt; T1mcs agamst that
1 ~I~ s IL Cef lance of pohttcal advertisements from antJ
I ck n~ Ch nese and from the Ch1ang K w shek govern
n ent ,. J u wan
Chou N nn counselo of the Pekmg m1ss on to the Umted
Nat ons nform ed the T1mc s manag ng editor A M
Hvsen th a that the prmt ng of ed1tona l advertisements
f om
eaN ona y Chmcse was an unfnendl y act
tha t worked agamst lhe Improvement "of understand ng
b(; tween ll c Ch nese and Amencan peoples as well a s
aga nst the exchan ge of newsmen be tween the two coun
tne s
L t~ ra l tra slat10n of the last phrase Unless the T1mes
got
I ne ts app l cat1on to open a bureau m Pek ng
wo ld ot be granted
Tt e newspaper of course refused to change 1ts long
sland ng pol cy of keep ng ts advert smg colu mns open
to all come1s re ga l dless of whethe r 1t agreed or d1s
ag ed w tl the r pol t cs or philosophy a nd refu smg
ads or ly on the gr ounds of frat d or d ~cept on obscen ty
r mc1te nent to rae al or religiOus hatred or law breakmg
I he l imes cxp la ned Mr Rosenthal beheves free
don 01 t1 e press to be esse nt al to Amer can society and
regai ds 1 ol t ca advert smg as an mtegral elem ent m
a f ee J ess
\t least two othe r newspapers have prmted the same
o s m tar adve rt sements but pass bly because of ts
prest gc
pass bly as a test c ase ? - U e New York
f mes s the only one the Ch nese have complamed to
Now that t has been expla ned to th em JUSt how the
A mer ca n press operates one hopes that n th e mterest
of promot ng un de rstand ng between the Am en can pea
tie a nd the n selves th ey w II drop the matter
If ol then othe r news paper s especially th ose who
have al so made ap pllcal on to open bureaus m Pek ng
as well as WI e scr v es and synd cates should make t
clea to th e Ch nese that f one Amencan news paper s
JO Urn al sts are barred beea se of a fallu.re to ta1Ior ed
to1 al pol c1es to s 1 t Pek ng then alt w11t conSider them
selves barred
-\fte1 all t&lt; O ~ to w ng was supposed to have gone out
w th the em peror s

Memory Pamts a Rosy P1cture

DearS I L
Your 1mttals m ght be short for s lly
It IS silly you know blolt ng out a good present " th the
dream of a romance that d ed lO years ago
Your 29-year-old ex husbnd sn t th e S\\ eet boy yo u
marrted (lf m fact that boy was ever rea lly S\o\ eet You might
not recogn ze h m phys cally and I doubt you d know him
mentally But you may have to prove Uris for yourself
Once you see your ex perhaps you ll realize how lu cky ) OU
are that the older womar got hllTI - and you COULD d1scover
somethmg about yourself cast.-offs cl ng to the past more out of
hurt pnde than Undymg I ove - H

&amp; THINGS

~1Jddleoort Pomero1 0 Ma' 2.1 1 ~ ~

Television Log
WEDNESDAY MAY23 r•73
6 00 - Truth o Co nseq 6 News 3 4 8 0 5 Se same St 20
Ar ou nd the Bend 33
6 30 - NewsJ 4 6 8 0 5 IDreamofJeanne13 Zoom33
7 00
News 6 0 What s My L ne 8 Truth or Conseq 3 Beat
th e Cock 4 Anyth ng You Can Do 3 Know You Schoo s 33
Elec Co 20 Sa nt 5
7 30
To Tel th e T uth 6 The Judge 0 Po ce Surgeon 3 4
Beat the Cock 3 Andy Gr ff th 5 Ep sode Act on 33
Econom c Educa t oli 20
7 35
Baseba
5
Adam 2 3 4 5 Amer ca 73 :.w 33 Mov e Death of a
8 00
Gunf ghter 4 Pau L ynde 6 3 Sonny &amp; Cher Comedy Hour
8 0
8 30
McM lan &amp; W fe 3 4 5
9 00 - Understand ng Afr ca 20 Move The Sp a Sta rcase
6 3 Da n August)3 0 June Wayne 33
9 30 - Turn ng Po nt s 20 33
0 00
Soul 33 News 20 ONen Ma sha I 6 3 Sea ch 3 4 5
Cannon 8 0
00
News 3 4 6 8 10 3 5
30
Johnny Carson 3 4 15 N ght Tra n to Te or 6 3
Days of W ne &amp;
M ov es The Poppy Is A so a F ower B
Roses
0
00 - Perry Ma son 4 News 3
2 00
N ew s 4

THURSDAY MAY24 1•13
00
Sun se Sem nar 4 Sac ed Hea 1 10
5 - Farmt me 10
20
Farm Report 3
25
Pau l Harvey 3
30
Co umbus Today 4 8 be Answers 8 Amer cas
Prob ems 0 Patterns to l v ng 13
6 45 - Co nc ob Repo t 3
Take F ve for L fe 15
6 55
7 00
Today 3 4 5 CBS News 8 0 News 6 Jeffs Coli e 3
7 30 - Romper Roo m 6 Rocky &amp; Bu w nk e 3 Popeye 10
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10 Sesame St 33 New Zoo Revue 3
Lass e 6
8 30 - Jack Lalanne 3 New Zoo Revue 6 Romper Room 8
9 00 - Concentra t on 6 Paul D xon 4 Ph I Donahue 15 Capt
Kangaroo 3 Fr en dl y Junct on 0 AM 3 Ben Casey 3
Jeopa dy 6 ToTe the Truth 3 Ho ywood Ta k ng 0
9 30
0 ck Va n Dyke 13 D nah Shore 3 5 Columbus S x
0 00
Ca ng 6 Joker s W ld 8 0
Sp tSec ond 3 Baffe 3 4 5 $ 0000Pyramd8 0
0 30
00 - Sa e of he Cen tury 3 5 Gamb t 8 0 Love Amer can
Sty e 6 Passwo d 13 E ec Co 20
30
Sew t ched 3 Ho ywood Square s 3 4 5 Search for
Tomo ow 8 0 Sesame Sf 20
55 - CB S News 8 Donlmel s Word 0
2 00 - Passwo d 3 News 0 Jeopa dy 3 5 Jack e Obi nger
8
2 30 - JW s J 5 Spl tSecond6 Search fa TomorrowS 10
2 55 - NBC News 3 5
00
AI My Ch ldren 6 3 News 3 G een Ac es 10 Watch
You Ch d 20 33 Secret Storm 8 Not For Women On y 15
30
JOn A Match 3 4 5 Let s Make A Dea 3 Bow ng 6
As the Ward Turns 8 10
2 00 - Days of Ou L ves 3 4 5 New ywed Game 3 M ke
Douo ass 6 Gu dna L aht 8 10
2 30 DoctorsJ 4 5 DatngGamelJ Edgeof Ngh t8 10
3 00 - Anothe Ward 3 4 5 Gene a l Hasp tal 6 3 Love
Splendored Th ng 8 10 Beh nd the L nes 20
3 30
Return of Peyton Pace 3 4 5 One L fe to L ve 6 13
Secret Storm 0 Ho ywood Ta k ng 8 Tu n ng Po nts 20
Ph I Donahue 4
4 00
M st er Ca r toon 3 Me v Gr tf n 4 Love Amer can Sty le
Somerset 5 Sesame St 20 33 Huck, eberry Hound &amp;
Yog Bea r 6 Move The Fam y Jewe s 10
4 30 - Pett ~oat Junct on 3 I Love Lucy 6 Dane Boone 3
W ld W d West 3 Abbott &amp; Coste I o 8 Merv G ff n 4
5 00 - Bonanza&gt;3 4 M Rogers20 33 AndY'Gr ff th 15 Haze
8 B g Va ey 6
5 30 - E ec Co 33 Game Pyle USMC 3 Beverly H li b Illes
8 Hodgepodge l odge 20 Dea th Val ey Days 5
6 00 - News 3 4 8 15 News 6 8 0 Truth o Con seq 6
6 30
NB C News 3 4 15 ABC News 6 I Dream of Jeanne 13
Des gn ng Women 33 CBS News 8 10
7 00
What s My L ne 8 B g Red Jub ee 5 News 6 10 Beat
the Clock 4 Elec Co 20 Cou r se of Our T mes 33 Truth or
Conseq 3 Let s Make A Dea 3
I II See You n Court 4 Hollywood Squares 3 To Tel the
7 30
Truth 6 WJ d K ngdom 0 Lass e B Beat the Cock 13 Zoom
20 Help Wanted 33
B 00 - Fl p WI son 3 4 15 Mod Squad 6 3 The Wa tons 8 0
M ove The Rseof LousX V 20 33
9 00
I ons de 3 4 5 Kung Fu 6 13 Mev es Rock a Bye
Baby a
B ow Up
0
Dean Mart n 3 4 5 Streets of San F anc sea 6 3
0 00
nd anapo s T meT as 4 World Press 33 News 20
11 30
Johnny Carson 3 4 5 The House and the Bra n 6 13
Move A Night n C&lt;"sab anca 8 The New In terns 0
00
Perry M ason 4 News 3
2 00
News 4
6
6
6
6
6

IND IANAPOLIS 1nd UP! )
II. car qual f1ed b) Sam
Pose) and vte bumped to
sta dby status fo r next Mo
da) s Ind anapohs 500 was
kicked out of the race ruesday
b) the Umted St.&lt;Jtes \uto Club
on tl e graunds of m srepresen
ta tton
I add t on USII.C s d 1e tor
of competttw
D ck K ng
an no need a $1 000 f1 e aga nst
tl e Champ Carr ac ng tea n of
San Juan Cap str ano Cahf
and a $250 fmc and one ) ear
probat on for ch ef n ec ht~n c
Jack MLCorm ack
USAC acted on tJ e t eco n
T endatton of Harlan Fengler
ch1ef ste v&lt;.~rd a t the Ind anapa..
I s Motor Speed\\ y \\ ho also
f ned the team $100
K ng sa d the r;'enal t es v. er e
assessed for a tempt ng to
misrepresent Car No 34 as Ca
No :n by traosferrm g ser al

E:v le e s conclusive tl at
I c lean a en ptcd to pass off
Ca J4 v ch already ha I been
qu al f ed I y San Posey as Ca r
No 31- a purported ne v car
K ng ' " d
Champ Carr personne l h d
hrce da) s to appeal I e USAC
ulm g
USAC sa i t e ac1 g lean
would I ave o post ~ $5 000
bond v. h ch would I e returned
a I c nd of tl c cl an p onsh p
sea son p ov d ng no other
v ulat ons occu
1 e rut n ~ d d not ffect
Cham, c~ r s No 35 racer
wh h J m McEir aU vI I dr ve
n Monday s m II on..&lt;follar
c ase

1 n B1gelo\'. s C&lt;.~
was
elev cd to the f rst stan dby
posJl on an I J n Hurtub se s
race
s no
Lhe seeor.d
allcrnale

Clay carroll went ftve Iruungs
for the wm "lth Pedro Borhon
flmshmg up and earnm~ his
s1xth sa ve Bob Gallagher
homered for the Astros

Vikings explode
for 12-1 victory
S) r mes Valle) an upse t
ul d gtve tl e Tornadoes a
1 Monday evemng at
sl e of the title A loss " o II
Soutl ern exploded Tuesday pus! Soutl e11 nto a seto I
n gil on ts han e d1an ond n place e w tl K; ~e Creek
bias ng U e Easte1n Eagles 12
lene M) ers slapped
t o
I n an SV \ C o t st
Sl g)e
t c f st n
g to
Coach
Oa\ e
Dunfee s sl&lt; rt t1 e Lawrence Count)A : :;
V k ngs ren ned m f rst plate o I c w&lt;.~y Ph l Hob nson
"' ll a 9 1 loop n ark fh e
da t" o r n s glc m the f fll
V k ngs v II battle Soutl e n Dave Dunfee le I tl c I tt g
F r da\ afte noon n a gan e to a tack v t1 two doubles
dec le t1 e 191! SVli.C baseball
1\ k
Co
sen o
hamps
r gl U a de Jlelded onl y o c
Sou he rn s 8 2 aga nst I I Ilia Duval v. as saddled
leag ue cum petttl on \ " n w tl I e loss
v cl

Ma or League Results
By Un ted Pre ss lnternat ana
Nahona league
1 nnngs)

C evetan d
000 300 002 5 8 0
Ba mo e
000 030 000- 3 a 0
T d ow H 1ge ndorf (5 ) John
son 9) and Dun c an M c Na y
Ch
000 020 00 00- 3 10 3 Pena (9 and Hcndr c k s WP
Mt
000 00 0 0
4 12 0 H gendo f
0) LP- M c Na ly
Jenk ns Ake
9
LaR oche 3 6 HR - Sp kes (81h)
and Hundl ey
Ren k o
8 and Boccabe a r.;. w
M a shal
000 000 004 ......... 4 5 0
WP Ma sha I 3 3 L P Ak er Bas on
000 000 002- 2 8 0
3)
HRs S ng1e on
4 h)
Co bo n
L nzy
9)
and
M onday
9h
Ba ey
3rd ) Rod gue1. Curts Bo n 9)
Jo gens en 2nd
a d F sk WP Co born 4
L P Cu s ( 5)
San F an
04 00 001- 7 4 0
A an a
ooo
ooo-:-- 3 9
Texas
5 4 an d Rade
M a cha
O&lt;J k and
3 Pan her
Dobson Sc hu e e
6 F sel a 8 and Oa es L P
- Dobso n 2 7) HR s Aa on
12 h Bonds ( 0 h)
S Lou s
000 000 soo 5 B 0
New Yo k
000000 02 3 6
W se Segu
9) and S m
mon s Koos m an Henn ga n 7
M oo e 9 and D yer WP W se
5 2) L P Koosman 52)
P sbgh
00 00 002 4
3
Ph a
200 020 2x- 7 f/ 0
E s Rook.et" (7) Johnson (7
and M ay Tw che l
2
and
Boohe L P- E s (3 5
HR
M an anez. 3 d
Hou s on
00 000 0 2 4 8 0
C nc
0 2 0 0 x- 6 5
Robe s F a set&gt; 5 G add ng
8
and Ed wa d s
Carro
Sp ague (6
Bo bon 9 and
Ben ch WP Ca ot 1 3 L p.._.
Robe s 4 2
HR Ga aghe
Is
San D ego
00 000 000
6
0 0 I 0 20x 5 0 0
Los Ang
G e r Ramo 7
Troed son
8 and Ken dal
Su i on {53
and Fe guson L P- G e f 3 4
HR Cawe d 2nd
A mer can League
Kan C ty
20 000 130- 7 2 0
M nn
03 220 OOx 8 2 2
S m pson Ja ck son {3 ) Garbe
4
W gh
7 and Hea y
Sa nder s (8
and
Wood son
M e wa d WP- Woodson 3
2) LP S mpson (3 3 HR sMa ybe ry 2 12 h &amp; 3th)
Ca t o n a
0 000 000- 2 3 3
Ch cago
03 1 00 0 X 6 9 a
R M ay 4 4) and Torbo g
Kusr\ye 7 Bahnse n 6 3 and
B nkm an H Rs - Hen de son
D A en
2nd } B nkm an s
9th

DELTA
DURASTEE
RADIAL
• The outstand ng
decade

020 000 50()- 7 2 2
Oeo
0000000 - 25
S o e m y e 6 4) and M un
son
~ y m an
Sche ma n 7
an d S ms L P- F yman (2 4)
HR - Ha I ( 3 d)

pe formance t re of the

• 2 Dynacor ® carcass pi es protected by
two belts of h gh tens le strength steel
overla d w th a nylon cord cap

Full 4 Ply
Polyes ter Cord
Tubeless Safe ly Custom
WHITE WALL

• 12% better tract on

wmnmg p1tcher Mike Marshall
walked Marshall allowed four
hits and a run u: the last four
nnmgs to square h1s re cord at
3 3 M kc Jorgensen had three
h1ts for the Expos
R1ck W se hit a two...J un
double dunng a five run sev
cnth mmng outburst and wot
his fifth game for the Cardmals
w1th the rei cf help of D ego
Segl.ll Jerr; Koo~man was
cl arged w1tl h1s second con
sec ItJ ve Joss
Dave I opes mcreased h s
league le dmg average to 376
w th two run -scormg slng1es
and W1lhe C awford drove 1n
two runs w1th a homer and
smgle as Don Sutton won hts
f fth game for the Dodgers
Mator League leaders
ted Press Internal onat
Lead ng Batters
N at onal League
g ab r h pet
l opes L A 30 93
35 376
Wa son Ho 43 50 33 53 353
M addox SF 33 22 5 43 352
'llo a LA
26 91
32 352
Cash P 1
26
2 20 39 348
Fa y M I 3
89 3 3
348
Rbnsn Ph 28 87 3 30 345
1 5 38 342
M a hws S 37
San o Ch
37 34 20 45 336
Mo gan Ho 38 25 24 42 336
Amer ca n League
g ab r h pet
B mb ·g NY 26 76 2 28 368
Ha NY
22 76
28 368
Ke y Ch
24 89 9 32 360
Ho on De l 9 73
25 3-12
K kp k KC 32 20 25 40 333
0 A en Ch 35 126 24 4 325
F sk Bos
34 23 7 40 325
M unsn NY 38 38 20 44 J 9
29 93 0 29 3 2
Hot M n
Cmp s Ok 35 50 20 46 307
J nsn Oak 9 75
23 307
Hom e Run s
Nat onal l e gue Aa on A
P
2 Eva ns
and S a ge
A
Renc h C
Wynn Hou
an d Bonds SF 0
Am er can League Maybe y
KC 3 May M
0 D A en
Ch an d D uncun Cl ev 9
ve
p a yer s I ed w h 8
By

Un

JOHNSfON TO I EAFS
BOSfON (UP! ) - Veteran
goal e Ed Johnston of the
Runs Batfed In
Nat
onal
League Be nch C n
Boston Brums was sent to lhe
35 Fe guson L A 33 Spc c
Toronto Maple I eafs fuesday SF 30 Wa son Hou and Bonds
to conclude the pre pia) off deal S F 29
can League Me1 ~ be 'y
that put veteran netm ndcr KCAmer
42
M e on
Ch
and
Ja&lt;.oques Plante n a Boston J ck son Oak JO Rob nson
un for n for httlc more than a Ca Sp k es C ev and M u ce
NY 5
month
P t ch ng
Jot n ~ton however declmed
Nat onal League 8 n gham
to state whether or not he C n 7 B yan SF 6 3 Reuss
Hou and Dow n ng LA 5
would report to the Leafs
C n Koosma n NY and
Gu e
I I FESAVER WINN ERS
NEW YOBK (UP!) - Walt
F raz er star guard of the
Na t1onal B as k e tball
Assoc at on champiOn New
York Kmck e rbock er s and
Frank Mahovhch h1gh scor ng
forward of the Nat on&lt;.~ l Hockey
1 ee:t guc champ on Montrea l
Canad 1ens luesday were
selected I 1fesaver of the
Month w nners for April and
March respectively

W se St L 5 2 Hoo ton Ch
Su on L A and Se av~ NY 5 3
M a cha l SF 5 4
Amer can League Wood Ch
03
Hoi z. m an
Oak
92
Co ema n De B 2 S nge Ca 7
Sp o If KC72

TANNER TO FARM
CHICAGO (UP!
Mark
Tanner son of Chicago Wh1 te
So:t Manager C1luck Ta nner
Tuesday was s1gned by the
Wlnte Sox for tl e Appleton
W1s farm dub n the same
league after be ng re leased by
the crosstown Ch1cago Cubs a
day earher
R(IT A SIGNED
1anner hac] p1tcl ed only 14
CHICAGO (UP!) - The
nmngs for the Cubs Qu ncy
Ch1cago Black Hawks of the
farm team w1th 11 walks and
Nat onal Hockey League Tues
nme str keouts
day s gned Darcy Rota the r
No I draft cho1ce to a mutt
year contract for an undis
dosed sun
Rota 20 scored 73 goals and
56 assiSts w1th the Edmonton
Od K ngs last season

GENERAL TIRE SALES
992 7161

Middleport 0

Today's

Sport Parade

i

or

pm

P tsbu gh
M oose 3 3) at
Ph a de ph a ( Bre I 2 ) 7 30

Pm

Hous ton ( W so
44)
a
C nc nna
B nghan 7 ) 8
pm
San 0 eg o Co k ns 3 4) at
Los An ge es I M essen.m f h 4 3)
p 1'1
San F anc sea (Mc Dowe I
a AI an a Reed 2 4) 8 p m
Thursday s Games
New York a t Los Ang n ght
Sa Fr an al A lan a n ghl
On l y games schedu edl

Amer

can league

East
De l o
New Y o k
M waukee
Sa moe
C eve and
Bos on

w I pel gb
20 9 513
•
8

0
9

487
486

17 • 472
18 23 m

IS 20
West

m

3
3

w I pet g b
22 13 629

Ch cage

Ca t o n a
2 IS 583
Ka sa sC y
23 18 56
2
Oilk and
22 19 537 3
M nneso
9 17 528 3
Te xas
2 24 344 0
Tuesday s Results
M ncso a B Kansa s C y 7
Ch cag e 6 Ca f o n a 2
New York 7 Detro 2
Cl eve and 5 Ba mo e 3
M lwaukee ~ Bos1on 2
Oa k and 4 Texa s 1
Today s Probable P tchers
(A ll T mes EDTI
Texa s
B oberg
0 4)
a
Oak and Blue 3 2)
pm
K a~ sa s

C y 1Bu&gt;by 3 5) at

M nncso la Kaa 5 2} 9 p m
Ca fo n a ( S ng e
7 l)
Ch cage F she 4 3) 9 p m
New Yo k ( K l nc 3 4)
Co em an 8 2 8 p m
De o
C evelan d ( W !cox 3 0
Ba l mor e (C ue la r
5) 7
p 1'1
M !waukee (Be
44
Bos1on Pa ln 2 7) 7 30pm
Thursday s Games
M wa u l~ e e al Bos ton
Ca t o n a a Ch cago
Kan C y a M nnesota n ght
N ew YorJ.: at Oe1 o n ght
C eve a Ba mo e n gh t
On y gam es scheduled}

a
a
at
30
at

Interna l ona League
Stand ng s
By Un ted P ess Internal onal
A mer ca n D v1s on

w lpctgb
Roc! es e
23 12 657
Sy acu se
6 7 485 6
Paw uck et
4 6 467 6
To edo
4 24 368 0
Na t onal D v so n
wlpctgb
Chil es on
24 J 649
Pe n nsu a
21 6 56a 3
T dewate
9 18 5 4 5
R chmond
0 25 286 3
Tuesday s Res ults
Cl a esf on 5 T dewa er 4
P w uck e 4 R chmond 3
Rochesf e 3 Pen nsu a 2
Sy acu sc a ! To edo ppd a n

AGREEMENT REACHED
MILWAUKEE (UI?l) - Wal
Jones
beleagured
ex
I ackcourtman
of
the
Milwaukee Bucks has reached
an agreeme nt w th the
Natwnal Basketball As
soL atwn club stemmmg from
a dispute that occurred ear ly n
the season Jones who earns a
reported $90 000 on a no-cut
contract was released by the
Bucks without a sat sfa cto y
explanation

Fa rbanks smiled
And watch out you don t get shot

threw m the same

newsman
There Had to be a Reason
Chuck Fairbanks has been w1th the Patnots less than four full
months and already he knows they take football sermusly here
He also Is aware the Patnots "'on loss figures last season were 311 and there had to be a reason for that
I don t thmk the players were playmg w1th the emotion tiltensity and second effort they are capable of I think they were
domg less than their best
Fairbanks says tbat m low key hecause that s the type of md.ivldual he Is He IS not a screamer m the sense Vmce Lombardi
was and he s not the walkmg ad for gnm determination Don
Shula seems to be but he st II has h1s own way of getting the job
done He has no plans to pattern hlffisetf after anybody else
I m g01ng to try and be myself he says If I tried bein8
someone else I m sure I d wear thm n a short t1me I respect
nany coac h ~s m th1s league All of them m fact but I have to do
th ngs my own way There are a lot of ways toskm a cat
Both Were F orthrlght
Nonetheless Fa1rbanks did speak w1th Dan Devme and
Tommy Prothro before takmg the JOb with the PatriOts De11111e
came out of the Umverslty of MJSsour not that long ago and bad
a good year w1th the Green Bay Packers last season Prothro left
UCLA to go w1th the Los Angeles Rams d1dn t do so well and was
let out
Both were forthright m the1r comments to me says Fall'
banks Ne therwas wllhng to say to me You ought to do this or
do that though They left t to me to evaluate
At a local banquet the other mght Fairbanks found hllllSetf
SJttmg next to George Allen Wash ngton s head coach and
general manager Allen was very helpful He told Fairbanks a
number of thmgs ahout hand! ng both job
Eve y day s a cn s1s he sa td
Fa rbanks knows about that because he has been workJng long
hours s nee he took his new JOb One or two of the hnes 1n his
forehead already have grown a btt deeper
He ns1sts he senJoymgthe work You ask hlffi hiS pnmary aim
wttll the Patnots this year and he says Improvement
Not A Coach s Dream
No one has to tell h1m the Patr ots haven t li:XacUy been a
coach s dream the past four years dunng which -tirJw they ve
made some changes at the top One man Penn States Joe
Paterno turned down the JOb before Fa rbanks Why then did he
ta ke 1t?
I can t do anyth ng about what s happened m th e past he
says
I wasn t lookmg for a JOb and money was not the overridmg
factor m my accep tmg tlus one What reaiJy clinched thts one for
me was the attitude of the people here mvolved w1th the club I
was Impressed by their enthusiasm I was convmced they were
wtlhng to allow a man- me- to run the orgamzatton I felt they
were g vtng me enough authority so that I could l. successful
Jun Plunkett the PatriOts 1mprov ng new quarterback IS
another reason Fairbank s sa1d yes to the multl year contract he
was offered
I think he s a fmc person a grea t young player and hell
Improve says the former Oklahoma mentor Without a
quarterback you have nothmg He s the starting pomt He cant
wm by himself but you can t wm without him The thmg !like so
much ahout Plunkett IS h s desire
Leaves Brmlant Record
Fairbanks leaves a bnlhant record behmd at Oklahoma where
he took over as head coach m 1967 after J1m MacKenzie died of a
heart attack In S IX years he gu1ded the Sooners to three B g
E1ght titles two Sugar Bowl VJctones one Orange Bowl triumph
and an overall 52--15-1 record
All th s however accoun ts for nothmg with those New
England fan') who hve and dte w1th the PatriOts each Sunday
dur ng the fall and wmter
Says one Boston cab driver a cnbc hke most everyone else
Those Patnots g1ve me a pam Plunkett s got the potential but
he doesn t get the protectmn
they had Garrett he was a
crybaby they had Nanee he couldn t get a runrung start he
hadda run fla !footed
I don t th1nk God can wm w1th that
team
Fa1rbanl&lt;s IS gomg to try

II JUY w hu t: hases U e
{.;trl
t d buys hzs ~ u ts at
b gw outlets lS a wolf

m cheap clothmg

USED CARS
WEAffiER
WARMER. ••

$}995

Ex Tax
from $2 53 to $2 75
FREE
UNTING

VALUES
FROST FREE 15 CU. n.
2 DOOR-152 LB. FREEZER

HOTIER!

Tiffany ure of the De ta L ne

ASSURED QUALITY

;m % &lt;W~..a:;=--~~W~IMMI"'(

•

EXTRA SPECIAL
FOR MEMORIAL DAY

• Cooler runnmg
The

n

ON

7 75x14
8 25xl4
8 55xl4
815xl5
+ Fed

l.

»~~~f.:·:'f.~'~'f.f&lt;»',f.

M a ror League Standmg s
~
By Un l ed Press tnternat anal
Nat ona I l eague
Ea st
w I pet g b
Ch cago
17 &gt;75
'''
New Yo k
9 17 528 2
~
P sbu gh
16 18 47
4
By M1h n Rtctunan
M on l ea l
16 18 47
4
-:
Ph ade ph a 15 ?4 385 7 2
UPr Spor t.'i Ei:litor
S Lou s
3 14 35
8 2
W esl
FOXBORO Ma.s i ll PI )- Chuck 1'a1rbanks was getting that
'Wipctgb
S.:, Fro:1n c sco 28 7 622
first b1g hello the n ce warm one
Hous on
76 7 605 I
The New England Patr ots had swrunoned the media for the
C nc nna l
24 6 000 I '
Los Ange es
24 7 585 2
purpose of m!roducmg thel!' new head coach and general
A an a
6 23 4 0
manager this rme clean..cut young man who IS gotng to lead
Sa n D ego
5 27 :157
lh
them
Qut of thf' wilderness
Tuesday s Re sults
M on rea 4 Ch cago 3
nns
The day th e Patrwts trotted out their taU 39-year old new
Sl Lo1.1 s 5 New York 3
coach
who had been at Oklahoma Uruverstty seven years one
P ade ph a 7 P flsbur gh 4
Boston newspaperman hstened to Fairbanks a native and
Sa F an c sco 7 AI an ta 3
C c n at 6 Hous ton 4
resident of Michigan answer a few questions and then hit him
Los Ange es 5 San 0 ~~ o 1
w1th
one
his own
Today s Probable P tchers
( All T mes EDT)
Where d1d you get that Oklahoma accent he was cunous
S
Lou s
Fos te
2 3 or
It rubbed off I guess sa1d Fairbanks
Sp nk s 0 4) al New Yo k
Well don t worry In a year 1t II be gone and n 1ts place will
Seaver 53) 2 p m
Ch cag o ( Hoo on S 3) at be a New England accent You II be t.&lt;JIIung just like one of the
M an eal (M cA na y 2 I )
8 Kennedys

FROM MTC
ANY SIZE LISTED

• 75% more hazard protect on than conven
t ona l 4 ply b1as tires
• 20% better handlmg than oonvent onal 4 ply
btas tues

Ron Fmrl) s ngled home the
Expos wmm g run off Dave
LaRoche 1n the lith ummg
1fter Ron Hu nt started the
de CiS ve rally w1th a s nglc and

8tu11dings

'359.00

KEITH GOBLE FORD

USED CAR LOT

3rd Ao~e

Middleport
~

~-

H&amp;R FIRESTONE

�2- The OallySenhnel Middleport Pomeroy 0 May 23 1913

3- TheDa b Sent nel

EDITORIALS

Helen Help
Us. • •

Kowtowing Is Out
Of Style, Peking!

BERRr'S WORLD

lh t-ltlt•n Built I

I t~ Ch

Dear Helen
I was marn ed at 17 to a sweet boy of 19 He soon "as tra p~d
by an older woma n ( 24) Her ndependencC' ncorne
sophlstJCahon etc made a httle teenage bnde look I ke a dope I
went home to Mothe r and after the d1vorce he marr ed th s
hus band stea ler

r stayed smgle for three years and then met a ruce man J
thought I loved We have two wonderful children now a mee
home everyt hing a nyone would want or dream of except there s
one problem

I sti ll love my fLrst husband though I haven l seen h n s nee
the divorce ten years ago I hear he IS rree and 1 dream of hi m
an the time You see I m the mature older \\. oman now and I
could hold him
Should I stay w1th my present ma rr age and be miserable or
out of fa rness to my husband a nd' myse lf tf) to ge t back what I
once had - STILI IN LOV E
P S M} ex has moved back 1n town - I II surely run nto him

soon

+++

Dear Helen
Could a formerly very v r le man lose the urge at age 40
My husband s suddenly d1s nterested I ve begged h m to seo
a doctor but he say s he JUSt doesn t care for sex any more f:fe
seems very t red n ost of the t me
He says there s no oth er woma but h1s work reqwres htm to
stay out many rughts and how do I know exactly v. here he IS
I ve had no reason to mistrust hun m the past and I sttlllove h m
very much I m onl) 35 and not read y for h s
Should I watt and hope be extra -seduct ve and ge t pusl ed
away ) or chezchez la femme? - C K K

W II e•eryone k ndly get a hold of h mse/1' Th s s a
d recto s meet ng not on e ncounter group

WIN AT BRIDGE

Both Sides Eager to Lose
NOHIH
"' K Q9
• J 65
• J Jl

... A82
\HSI (D)
. A42
¥J l0
+ 1091 2
olo Q 753
SOUTII

E\Sf
4

08:.&gt;~

¥ AK4 3
+ Q

o!oK 19

. J6
¥ Q 9 82
+ A K 8S
... 064
Bo
ul

Dear C
Try the first two laced w1th great amounts of un let standmg
and a f rm but gentle push toward the medical check up )O ur
husband no doubt needs
Even f the third IS md cated I beral appl cat ons of the
others may VANQUISH the femme - H
Dear Helen
Please tell Fotu1d Wantmg that she IS not alone m he n
orgasm marnage Stat st cs say about one thtrd of v.omen
e1ther have ery low response or none And many don t really
seem to m1ss 1t nor could we be cons de red fr gtd
[have only exper enced the feat once or tw c m 25 years
of marnage yet my husband says I am a fantasti c lover and I m
very happily marr1ed I m JUSt one of ti'ose low le\ el persons
wl o doesn t have a osvchol g1cal hang up but knows that for
me - the half-hour effort I d expend sn t worth the se ~
seconds of plea~ure
My husband IS aware of my failmg 1f you can ca ll It that
though he doesn t Be ng close to hun knov., mg we love each
other know ng I make htm happy - that s enough Were women
completely truthful I think many "ould agree - SCORE! ESS

3

' ,,.

Po"'

2.

S uth

I+

p ,

Bv Oswald &amp; James Jacoh\

sa I West 1 h loso
I o ess th e on )
e &lt;.~ s o
I I ad fo n )

\V eil

1 h ca l y

good
ack of I ea t s e ad ~ a s t at
t was
gt t tl c n
y
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\lt e1 t1 at ste I r ~ sta
East and \Vest had t Ule
t o blc ett ng South
ke
I s wo d a mond co tt ac t
E st ~.:&lt;.~ s h e d h s ace an I
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So 11 o
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la st hea t
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f e I and dum 1 )
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t umps knock ed out the ace
f SJ ades anJ later d1s
ca ded a cl b o one of
d mmy s spades
South {:Ouldn t es st the
1\ga nst
pul se to gloat
de fend ers I ke yo I ca af
o I to make lousy over
ails was s co nment
1h s annoyed Wes t lie 1e
~I ed
1\ga nst b dder s I ke
you I ca n afford to delend
badly If yo had 1 JSt ke t t
o t of the b ld ng we would
a ost s ure!)' J ave been set
at so ne cont act o othe
Yo st ored pi s 90 f yo r
t vo d amo ds [t won t be
m ch of a co e f o yo u
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ght to th e 1 o nt II e ga n e
wa n a d po nt d p cate
a n I wt c Su th wo IJ have
gv t ze o fo daY. o e he only
got two 1o nts o t of 12
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If
BY JACK 0 BRIAN
CHARLI E CHAPLIN AND
THE GOLD RUSH
NEW YORK ( KFS) - Chari e Chap! n s son
Sydney told us years ago h1s pop had $15 000 000
m gold bulhon stashed m Swiss vaults w th the
y, ld gold leaps 1t s now worth more tl an
$60 000 000
Jan M ner s w1 ld ly com c
clowmn g n The Women y, II elevate her to
star b 11 ng any rn nute Jan s also Madge the
Man cun st n the TV comrnersh lis Kathleen
Adams ex.e ut ve swePt e at Holt R neharl
Y.eds Paul Becker soon
rl e 5th 0 me swn s
tr p to enter a n Iron Curtam countr es had no
emergenc es unless you cons der Rwnama
barnng them from smgmg Jesus Chr1st
Superstar trawnatic
I '1. Ren&lt;.~y actress str pper authoress
grandmother
M1cke) Cohen SY. eet e s
• unloadmg her 6th hubby West Coast cash
.. nasi ) Tom Freeman The ch c new a lment
:. Bicycle Knee more m than skt fr actures
: Watergate even nudged Jer se) C ty s Ocean
.., Breeze restaurant lost pnrne steak custome
:'Bob Vesco nd cted m r ch absent a
Vesco s
: Bahamas nat ve reta ners r en a n musella ly
: loyal to the shady mone) bags thev lake s ats
:at U s photogs and rv nosyp&lt;.~rkers
:
It really vas Sally I ene nnd Ma ) at
: st) I sh Quo Vad1s - Sally Held Irene Selzn ck
:Mary Rudge s At 21 Burgess Mered I of
: Batman and TV a p tches ,sance -c red B 11
:Gargan s1ng ng th ough n s \ o celess tl roat
C: nbbmg h n se lf w tt lv Jenn fer 0 Ne II the
:second most beaut ful gal on the p ermses
: Trwnan Capote sptff ly dressed but for h s
: omn present S\\cate
Arl ene Franc s who
:wears long pants better than men I v ng I az a
: s1 hng at the ve y sane table f OJ wl I he
:launched a I gl ball gla.ss onto 0 to ~ em nger s
.... sk nch a rev. feuds &lt;.~go
and nol even
: remember ng the rna tel
• The Gas! ght Club s entry mto the Age of
:Vulgar t} tJ e upcom ng no doubt I tcrary tease
:: for Deep Tl oats shabb; sl allow sea let
:' dtandeho 1ess for her Inside I nda Lo\ elace
::' book wh c1 v II be d rty and publ sh d O)
: Pmnacle Books wh1ch there b) sc apes botto
::,
At least Ix I ovelace doesn t blush
: t~noran ce of I er fl1ck sp ec all; __.._ she va
~ scovc1 ng perform ng at vov. pa t cs
Wa ncr 13 os celeb ales ts iJOth f l1
n
1vcr sctn I h f scCLl nostalg a th e pare f 1
grossed $510 000 000 last year w th a $50 000 000
prof
B t Bacharach bought I s ]{otl
1 an s Inn n East Norw d
L 0 JUSt a &lt;:oupl e

-

•
•

of years ago but t s 241 )Ca s old Or g nal
be ms &lt;.~nd sorr e tables still funct1on for the
Ra ndrops fall ng composer
All Amer ~.:a 1
gr d Hall of Farner Johnny I UJack tell s pals h1s
fe Pat w II be a grandmother for the first
me an) ed1t on v &lt;.~ daughter Ma y (Mrs
Pete Puhln ann
Sm ah Chm d ll sports a rn m Bnt1sh
Amen can flags p non he1 br efcase After all
I m half Arnen c:an she Yankee-cheertos
Betsy von Furstenbe g def n tely IS a hmous ne
pe actress but there the an stocrat c Betsy n
navy slacks and polocoat was rnak ng her grand
entrance toward Edwy on a 4th St crosstown
bu s AI ce Faye fmally snooted the No No
N nette tou g troupe offer AI ce heads for
Go I an to al k over a ne\\ Bdwy 1 us1cal off r
Marvelous Anna Moffa s abras1ve throat
cost he b1g sun mer theatre money
Sebasttan Cabot of the TV ser als IS I avmg hts
n ser es Sonny &amp; Cher hale the Rolling Stone
mag p ece wh ch quotes enem es m all sorts of
nast es One accuses Sonny of rewrttmg other
f lks h ts Thetr ex n anager Charles Greene
ea II tees off
The H wood TV H ters str ke doesn t rk
SJOnsot s vho ve wanted later-autumn starts for
e rv sea srmsho\\ S Nat on a! a td ences get out of
e house unt I the eal fall beg ns The net
o ks t:~ren t mourn ng e th er the) don t I aye
sc hedule any new sl ov. s for the summer they
i:l leasl had to make gestures p ev ously about
us ng the off ratmg season to experiment With
new programs
George Foreman hasn t put
e expected heavy\\e gl t Em tune together yet
but he s bought the customary $"1 000 Rolls
Ru) ce already
WI y survc; s of gal smokers
Ci o t vhen tl e e s sn oke tl e1e s pr of ts t1 e
a e r&lt;.~ ge fen ale ga ns 17 lb s after she QUits
I
na eg o
0 na h Sho e s rv show has a blurb sp1eled
) I ex Geo rge Monlgorner) -and anothe1
fea ut n ~ Jud) Carne 0 nah s beau Bu t
Re) nolds ex
Cesar Romero s lunch date at
On ll! s t vo day s s tt ng wa s A da Dc sc art~ s
u ' I at n n fty structu ed I ke Haque! \1 elch
J3 g e Bardo has ant c pated n ore
e e en ts I a Ha y Laud er and Smatra
ge I er No " sl e says sl ell QUi t at 40 t\\o
s hence
J m Faliey s 85 May 30
c &lt;-~ Neu l s 1 ess 15 deb 1 s v th n o
Mt
s Da
f lr
11 c C:a sts de
elo beefe c \ II en a ge ts prole n loyal
1 ses bJ 100
Ph I S1lvers st1ll acl1vs
scr1n usl I c ccn r t c &lt;.~l paea ns

u 1 rtnc

v"
IW l
I
1-:a
lODAY S (!UESIIO'

y

0

ucs

do yo

0

d

l' S.l'

ecent survey by the Op mon Research Corp of

t onv, de 1 obab I ty sample fav ors a law that would re
ql e a secret ballot before workers go out on str ke
Among un on members howevei the f gure was 86
1e cent n favor of such a law
I he s rv ey was c onducted for The Busmess Round
table a o gan za o n of bus ness executives wh c h seeks
amon g other th ngs to m1 rove labor management rela
t on s
Un on men bers were also JUSt sl ghtly behmd the total
US publ c- 81 1 e1 cent compared w1th 83 per cent- m
fa vo ng a law equ r ng a secret ballot to fmd out If
wo ke s "'ant to sta y out n a str ke tl at has not been
setlled a fter 60 da ys
By 74 pet ce [} t a d 66 per cent respectively un on mem
be s a d publ c favor a Jaw requ r ng a secret ballot by
e nployes to leterm ne f tl ey want a un on to repre sent
hen

Soviet Modernizes

By RAY CROMLEY
W1\SHINGTON NEA
1 hE n aJo So et threat to Amencan sec tr ty n t he
ext decade s not the g ow ng numbers of balhst c m1s
s s n 1clea s bmar nes and tl e mammoth s ze of the
K em\ n s g o I arm 1es
Th eaten ng as hese may be a greater danger 1 es m
ece nt extt=ns ve b t scarcely not ced sh fts n the Sov et
~ gh co1 mand
Vete an ank ng Sov et marshals and generals lack ng
ed c at o a nd tech 10\ogy have been replaced by men
sk I cd n adva ced sc ent f c and eng nee ng f elds
1 o em app ec able degree the newcomers emphas ize
uffens1ve wa1 fa 1e Tl e older marsha ls and gent!rals were
over\\- helm ngl) con n tted to Russ as trad honal defeli
s e doc tr ne
A t lie v and a noted offJCers-w th thetr strong pref
erence fo the massive p od1 ct on of large s mpl e weap
no onge control the hi gh command The new
ons
nen hom other servlces pres Jmably have a pred lectwn
lor se lect ve procurement of more sophtst cated weapons
F rovocat1ve stud es n th1s ar ea of Sov et staff and field
changes ha ve ecently been completed by Alexander 0
Gl ebha dt a &lt;1 W II am Schnc der J r cons ultants to the
H dso lnst Lute n New York Schneider s also a US
Senate staff mem be
Two exa nples taken a random from the r detmled
v.o k w II g1ve the flavor
• Adm S M Lobov chtef Sovtet expert on nuclear
sub na1 nes has beer appo nted assistant chief of the
Gene a ! Staff t1 e f st t me a non army off cer has f1lted
th s h gh post
• Recent Sov e e xpenments With a stellar merttal
g da 1ce package for the r 4 000 naut cal m1le ran ge
SSNB s bma ne launched bathshc m ss le SLBM and
rna e v~rable reentry veh cles suggest the new l ~acler
sh p s nterest m t r nmg technolog cal advances to of
fe ns ve adva ta ges 1n thelr force str ucture
Ghe bha1dt and Schne der conclude that I the new
Sov 1 ~t ma shals and generals sho ld take best ad
va n ta g~ of the 1eso urces 1 ICBMs w th the formidable
hro\\ we1ght (n ss le s1ze advantage the r pnor pro
curen e t I ol c es have produced a maJOr sh ft m the
sttateg balance could occ 1r
I h s wo 1id be t 1e of course onl y 1f the Umted States
does not take full adva ntage of ts own research and
de elopme t capab I t1es

Suga c ne fa c s n Ha
sav a ton of Water
c ed t 1 I e a p nd
f sug

Ch ckcns &lt;~lv..av s get up at
a v becduse they re equ p
ped v.. tl I m duck s

The

Da1~

Sentinel

Cahforn a 2 Mmneso ta 8
Kansas C I) 7 and Oakla nd 4
Texas 1
Bonds who sco red the
G ants f rst run n the f rst
rruung and their last w1th a
homer m the mnth tn ggered
the game wmmn g fo ur run
third mmng outburst w th a
double T to Fuentes smgle a
double by Gary Ma tthe" s a nd
a two-run smgle by Chns
Spe er completed the mn ng
Jua n Man chal allowed rune
hits but went the d stance for
h1s f fth wm while Pat Dobson
suffer ed h s se \ enth loss
agamst t~ o vic ton es for
Atlant.&lt;J
Greg Luz nsk drove m three
runs wtth a dot ble and a smgle
as the Phill es Wayne TWitch
ell won hls second game W1ll e
Montanez homered for the
Phllhes while Da ve Cash had
three hits over the Prates
Dock Ell s t.&lt;J gged for four
tuns n six nn ngs was ta gged
w1th h s f fth defeat
Dave ConcepciOn drove n
three runs \Hth a two run
double and a s1ngle and Pete
Rose had three h ts for the
Reds who ta gged Da ve
Roberts w th h s second loss

Misrepresentation
charged by USAC

RAY CROMLEY

1 he 1\.lmanac
By Un ted Press lnternat onal
1oday 1s Wednesday May 2~
I e 14! d da) ofl913 w1th 222 to
[ llu"
1 c n oon IS approach ng ts
la s quarter
The morn ng sta s a c Ma s
and Jup er
The even ng stars are Mer
cu y Venu s and Saturn
I hose bar on th s date arc
ur der the ~ gn of Gem mt
A nb use Bu ns de a Umon
ge ne al n the Ctv I War was
bo n Ma y 23 1624
On th1s da) n htsto y
In 1701 Capta n Wilt am Kidd
vas I anged n I ondon on
cha ges of p1racy and 1 u1 der
In 1939 the U S Na \ y
submar ne
Sq alus
we nt
down off Ne v Hampsh re m 240
feet of \ ater Th rty three of
I e 59 men aboard v.ere
rescued' Ith ad v ng bell
In 1960 Israel agents cap
u ed Adolf E cl n ann
n
Argent na and sp1r ted hun
BARBS
back to Tel Av v He was
conv cled of bemg a mass killer
Bv PHIL PASTORET
of J e\\s du ng World War II
So 1e rellows look well
ctnd vas hanged
v th a beard Others look
I 1965 the 0 gan zat10n of
st
Y.el\
\ e can St.a es set p a
Joke ~ v tl
peace kcepmg force m tl e
Dot 1 n can Rep bl c to stand
between ebel and loyalist
un ts
A tl ollgh for the day
NOt ve1g an poet Hem k Ibsen
a d I I ole! that 11an s n t1 e
gl vho s nore close!) m
leag e v tl I e f l e

By FRED DOWN
UP! Sports Wnter
Hank Aaron d dn t dlsappo nt the hometown fan s
Tuesda) mght because he h t
his 12th homer of the seas~n
and the 685th of hiS career for
the Braves Aaron s now 29
homers short of Babe Ruth s
all tlffie career total of 714
But 11 "as Bobby Bonds a
doubtful starter because of a
swollen left arm who stole the
show and led the San Francisco
Giants to a 7 3 v ctory with an
all ar ound performanc e
typ1cal of his pia) th s season
He hit h1s lOth homer and a
double stole home and two
other bases and scored four
runs as the G ants regamed
first place fr om the Houston
Astros n the NatiOnal League s
Western DIVISIOn
Cmc nnatJ defeated Houston
64 Ph1ladelph a beat P1tts
burgh 74 Montreal shaded
Chicago 4 3 St Lou s topped
New York 53 ann Los Angeles
whipped San D1ego 5 I m
other NL games
Amencan League scores
were M1lwaukee 4 Boston 2
Cleveland 5 Baltimore 3 New
York 7 Detroit 2 Ch1cago 6

F nee to n N J d sclosed the not so surpns ng fact that
H3 pe cent of the ge1eral public a s nd cated by a na

Offensive Tactics
Put at a Premium

said Joe Morgan That means
he II have to hit ar ound 330 to
340 over tha t stretch Pete s
swmgmg the bat super no\\
better tha n I l(e seen hm s nee
1 e been With the club Balls
are JUmpmg off his bat
'Sl' rtl'S Fmale
Of course he added me
hittmg around 330 helps Pete
Pete knows he s supposed
to lead tlus club m hittmg
Don t ge t me wrong He s not
n d because 1 n h tt ng what 1
am lie would love to see n e h1t
330 for the season Only e

would "' ant to h1t 340
It s hke n e and stolen
bases Morga n added I m
supposed to lead the club If
someon 1s ahead of me I m
gomg to bust my ta1l and catch
up and top the m Pete feels the
same way when someone IS
ahead of hin n hittmg
The Astr os who played
wtthout reg ul a rs To 1 rr y
Helms and Cesar Cedeno
Tuesda y nt ght send Don
\1 !son
agalns t
J ac k
Billmgham m the sen es r nate
tomght

Aaron29homersshort of Babe

Public, Umon Members 'Aye'
A

Reds heat Roberts 6-4
CINCINNATI tUP l - As other leg covertng hrst base on and su:gled todr ve home th ree
Clay Carroll put 1! I got t~&lt;o a John En~&lt; ards ground ball to Cmcmna tl rWls as the Reds
flat tires and I d1dn t ha\e a Ton) Perez leadmg off the t.&lt;Jgged Dave Roberts 1\lth his
spare
fifth
second loss m Six deciSions
Pulled muscles m each of his
Ed Sprague took over m the
F ve more RBis a nd I break
legs forced Carroll from the s1xth but needed help fr om my season record of 29 sa1d
mo und aft er hve mn mgs Pedro Borbon after Jtmm} Concepcton I alread} set a
Tuesday mght m a game the W~11n doubled and Bob ,Watson nev. record for stealing bases
Cmcmnati Reds went on to w1n smgted to lead off the mnth The only record 1 don t " ant to
6-4 over Houston m the opener mmng Borbon ma kmg his break ls errors I made 19 m
of a two game senes
2.3rd appearance prcked up his one season
Carroll makmg h1s second s xt h save when he struck out
Pete Rose had three hits to
start of the season pulled a the last t\\ Obatters m then nth put h m w1thm 28 of the 2 000
muscle m one leg p tcbmg to after the Astros p1cl&lt;ed up their career. fllt mark
Lee May n the fo urth mnmg last two runs
I figure 1t U t.&lt;Jke Pete 20
and then pulled a muscle m the
Dave Conc epciOn doub led ga 1 es to get Ius 2 OOOth h t

gove1nment has J rotestcd stron gly and
fc rn all)
reports the New Yorl&lt; T1mcs agamst that
1 ~I~ s IL Cef lance of pohttcal advertisements from antJ
I ck n~ Ch nese and from the Ch1ang K w shek govern
n ent ,. J u wan
Chou N nn counselo of the Pekmg m1ss on to the Umted
Nat ons nform ed the T1mc s manag ng editor A M
Hvsen th a that the prmt ng of ed1tona l advertisements
f om
eaN ona y Chmcse was an unfnendl y act
tha t worked agamst lhe Improvement "of understand ng
b(; tween ll c Ch nese and Amencan peoples as well a s
aga nst the exchan ge of newsmen be tween the two coun
tne s
L t~ ra l tra slat10n of the last phrase Unless the T1mes
got
I ne ts app l cat1on to open a bureau m Pek ng
wo ld ot be granted
Tt e newspaper of course refused to change 1ts long
sland ng pol cy of keep ng ts advert smg colu mns open
to all come1s re ga l dless of whethe r 1t agreed or d1s
ag ed w tl the r pol t cs or philosophy a nd refu smg
ads or ly on the gr ounds of frat d or d ~cept on obscen ty
r mc1te nent to rae al or religiOus hatred or law breakmg
I he l imes cxp la ned Mr Rosenthal beheves free
don 01 t1 e press to be esse nt al to Amer can society and
regai ds 1 ol t ca advert smg as an mtegral elem ent m
a f ee J ess
\t least two othe r newspapers have prmted the same
o s m tar adve rt sements but pass bly because of ts
prest gc
pass bly as a test c ase ? - U e New York
f mes s the only one the Ch nese have complamed to
Now that t has been expla ned to th em JUSt how the
A mer ca n press operates one hopes that n th e mterest
of promot ng un de rstand ng between the Am en can pea
tie a nd the n selves th ey w II drop the matter
If ol then othe r news paper s especially th ose who
have al so made ap pllcal on to open bureaus m Pek ng
as well as WI e scr v es and synd cates should make t
clea to th e Ch nese that f one Amencan news paper s
JO Urn al sts are barred beea se of a fallu.re to ta1Ior ed
to1 al pol c1es to s 1 t Pek ng then alt w11t conSider them
selves barred
-\fte1 all t&lt; O ~ to w ng was supposed to have gone out
w th the em peror s

Memory Pamts a Rosy P1cture

DearS I L
Your 1mttals m ght be short for s lly
It IS silly you know blolt ng out a good present " th the
dream of a romance that d ed lO years ago
Your 29-year-old ex husbnd sn t th e S\\ eet boy yo u
marrted (lf m fact that boy was ever rea lly S\o\ eet You might
not recogn ze h m phys cally and I doubt you d know him
mentally But you may have to prove Uris for yourself
Once you see your ex perhaps you ll realize how lu cky ) OU
are that the older womar got hllTI - and you COULD d1scover
somethmg about yourself cast.-offs cl ng to the past more out of
hurt pnde than Undymg I ove - H

&amp; THINGS

~1Jddleoort Pomero1 0 Ma' 2.1 1 ~ ~

Television Log
WEDNESDAY MAY23 r•73
6 00 - Truth o Co nseq 6 News 3 4 8 0 5 Se same St 20
Ar ou nd the Bend 33
6 30 - NewsJ 4 6 8 0 5 IDreamofJeanne13 Zoom33
7 00
News 6 0 What s My L ne 8 Truth or Conseq 3 Beat
th e Cock 4 Anyth ng You Can Do 3 Know You Schoo s 33
Elec Co 20 Sa nt 5
7 30
To Tel th e T uth 6 The Judge 0 Po ce Surgeon 3 4
Beat the Cock 3 Andy Gr ff th 5 Ep sode Act on 33
Econom c Educa t oli 20
7 35
Baseba
5
Adam 2 3 4 5 Amer ca 73 :.w 33 Mov e Death of a
8 00
Gunf ghter 4 Pau L ynde 6 3 Sonny &amp; Cher Comedy Hour
8 0
8 30
McM lan &amp; W fe 3 4 5
9 00 - Understand ng Afr ca 20 Move The Sp a Sta rcase
6 3 Da n August)3 0 June Wayne 33
9 30 - Turn ng Po nt s 20 33
0 00
Soul 33 News 20 ONen Ma sha I 6 3 Sea ch 3 4 5
Cannon 8 0
00
News 3 4 6 8 10 3 5
30
Johnny Carson 3 4 15 N ght Tra n to Te or 6 3
Days of W ne &amp;
M ov es The Poppy Is A so a F ower B
Roses
0
00 - Perry Ma son 4 News 3
2 00
N ew s 4

THURSDAY MAY24 1•13
00
Sun se Sem nar 4 Sac ed Hea 1 10
5 - Farmt me 10
20
Farm Report 3
25
Pau l Harvey 3
30
Co umbus Today 4 8 be Answers 8 Amer cas
Prob ems 0 Patterns to l v ng 13
6 45 - Co nc ob Repo t 3
Take F ve for L fe 15
6 55
7 00
Today 3 4 5 CBS News 8 0 News 6 Jeffs Coli e 3
7 30 - Romper Roo m 6 Rocky &amp; Bu w nk e 3 Popeye 10
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10 Sesame St 33 New Zoo Revue 3
Lass e 6
8 30 - Jack Lalanne 3 New Zoo Revue 6 Romper Room 8
9 00 - Concentra t on 6 Paul D xon 4 Ph I Donahue 15 Capt
Kangaroo 3 Fr en dl y Junct on 0 AM 3 Ben Casey 3
Jeopa dy 6 ToTe the Truth 3 Ho ywood Ta k ng 0
9 30
0 ck Va n Dyke 13 D nah Shore 3 5 Columbus S x
0 00
Ca ng 6 Joker s W ld 8 0
Sp tSec ond 3 Baffe 3 4 5 $ 0000Pyramd8 0
0 30
00 - Sa e of he Cen tury 3 5 Gamb t 8 0 Love Amer can
Sty e 6 Passwo d 13 E ec Co 20
30
Sew t ched 3 Ho ywood Square s 3 4 5 Search for
Tomo ow 8 0 Sesame Sf 20
55 - CB S News 8 Donlmel s Word 0
2 00 - Passwo d 3 News 0 Jeopa dy 3 5 Jack e Obi nger
8
2 30 - JW s J 5 Spl tSecond6 Search fa TomorrowS 10
2 55 - NBC News 3 5
00
AI My Ch ldren 6 3 News 3 G een Ac es 10 Watch
You Ch d 20 33 Secret Storm 8 Not For Women On y 15
30
JOn A Match 3 4 5 Let s Make A Dea 3 Bow ng 6
As the Ward Turns 8 10
2 00 - Days of Ou L ves 3 4 5 New ywed Game 3 M ke
Douo ass 6 Gu dna L aht 8 10
2 30 DoctorsJ 4 5 DatngGamelJ Edgeof Ngh t8 10
3 00 - Anothe Ward 3 4 5 Gene a l Hasp tal 6 3 Love
Splendored Th ng 8 10 Beh nd the L nes 20
3 30
Return of Peyton Pace 3 4 5 One L fe to L ve 6 13
Secret Storm 0 Ho ywood Ta k ng 8 Tu n ng Po nts 20
Ph I Donahue 4
4 00
M st er Ca r toon 3 Me v Gr tf n 4 Love Amer can Sty le
Somerset 5 Sesame St 20 33 Huck, eberry Hound &amp;
Yog Bea r 6 Move The Fam y Jewe s 10
4 30 - Pett ~oat Junct on 3 I Love Lucy 6 Dane Boone 3
W ld W d West 3 Abbott &amp; Coste I o 8 Merv G ff n 4
5 00 - Bonanza&gt;3 4 M Rogers20 33 AndY'Gr ff th 15 Haze
8 B g Va ey 6
5 30 - E ec Co 33 Game Pyle USMC 3 Beverly H li b Illes
8 Hodgepodge l odge 20 Dea th Val ey Days 5
6 00 - News 3 4 8 15 News 6 8 0 Truth o Con seq 6
6 30
NB C News 3 4 15 ABC News 6 I Dream of Jeanne 13
Des gn ng Women 33 CBS News 8 10
7 00
What s My L ne 8 B g Red Jub ee 5 News 6 10 Beat
the Clock 4 Elec Co 20 Cou r se of Our T mes 33 Truth or
Conseq 3 Let s Make A Dea 3
I II See You n Court 4 Hollywood Squares 3 To Tel the
7 30
Truth 6 WJ d K ngdom 0 Lass e B Beat the Cock 13 Zoom
20 Help Wanted 33
B 00 - Fl p WI son 3 4 15 Mod Squad 6 3 The Wa tons 8 0
M ove The Rseof LousX V 20 33
9 00
I ons de 3 4 5 Kung Fu 6 13 Mev es Rock a Bye
Baby a
B ow Up
0
Dean Mart n 3 4 5 Streets of San F anc sea 6 3
0 00
nd anapo s T meT as 4 World Press 33 News 20
11 30
Johnny Carson 3 4 5 The House and the Bra n 6 13
Move A Night n C&lt;"sab anca 8 The New In terns 0
00
Perry M ason 4 News 3
2 00
News 4
6
6
6
6
6

IND IANAPOLIS 1nd UP! )
II. car qual f1ed b) Sam
Pose) and vte bumped to
sta dby status fo r next Mo
da) s Ind anapohs 500 was
kicked out of the race ruesday
b) the Umted St.&lt;Jtes \uto Club
on tl e graunds of m srepresen
ta tton
I add t on USII.C s d 1e tor
of competttw
D ck K ng
an no need a $1 000 f1 e aga nst
tl e Champ Carr ac ng tea n of
San Juan Cap str ano Cahf
and a $250 fmc and one ) ear
probat on for ch ef n ec ht~n c
Jack MLCorm ack
USAC acted on tJ e t eco n
T endatton of Harlan Fengler
ch1ef ste v&lt;.~rd a t the Ind anapa..
I s Motor Speed\\ y \\ ho also
f ned the team $100
K ng sa d the r;'enal t es v. er e
assessed for a tempt ng to
misrepresent Car No 34 as Ca
No :n by traosferrm g ser al

E:v le e s conclusive tl at
I c lean a en ptcd to pass off
Ca J4 v ch already ha I been
qu al f ed I y San Posey as Ca r
No 31- a purported ne v car
K ng ' " d
Champ Carr personne l h d
hrce da) s to appeal I e USAC
ulm g
USAC sa i t e ac1 g lean
would I ave o post ~ $5 000
bond v. h ch would I e returned
a I c nd of tl c cl an p onsh p
sea son p ov d ng no other
v ulat ons occu
1 e rut n ~ d d not ffect
Cham, c~ r s No 35 racer
wh h J m McEir aU vI I dr ve
n Monday s m II on..&lt;follar
c ase

1 n B1gelo\'. s C&lt;.~
was
elev cd to the f rst stan dby
posJl on an I J n Hurtub se s
race
s no
Lhe seeor.d
allcrnale

Clay carroll went ftve Iruungs
for the wm "lth Pedro Borhon
flmshmg up and earnm~ his
s1xth sa ve Bob Gallagher
homered for the Astros

Vikings explode
for 12-1 victory
S) r mes Valle) an upse t
ul d gtve tl e Tornadoes a
1 Monday evemng at
sl e of the title A loss " o II
Soutl ern exploded Tuesday pus! Soutl e11 nto a seto I
n gil on ts han e d1an ond n place e w tl K; ~e Creek
bias ng U e Easte1n Eagles 12
lene M) ers slapped
t o
I n an SV \ C o t st
Sl g)e
t c f st n
g to
Coach
Oa\ e
Dunfee s sl&lt; rt t1 e Lawrence Count)A : :;
V k ngs ren ned m f rst plate o I c w&lt;.~y Ph l Hob nson
"' ll a 9 1 loop n ark fh e
da t" o r n s glc m the f fll
V k ngs v II battle Soutl e n Dave Dunfee le I tl c I tt g
F r da\ afte noon n a gan e to a tack v t1 two doubles
dec le t1 e 191! SVli.C baseball
1\ k
Co
sen o
hamps
r gl U a de Jlelded onl y o c
Sou he rn s 8 2 aga nst I I Ilia Duval v. as saddled
leag ue cum petttl on \ " n w tl I e loss
v cl

Ma or League Results
By Un ted Pre ss lnternat ana
Nahona league
1 nnngs)

C evetan d
000 300 002 5 8 0
Ba mo e
000 030 000- 3 a 0
T d ow H 1ge ndorf (5 ) John
son 9) and Dun c an M c Na y
Ch
000 020 00 00- 3 10 3 Pena (9 and Hcndr c k s WP
Mt
000 00 0 0
4 12 0 H gendo f
0) LP- M c Na ly
Jenk ns Ake
9
LaR oche 3 6 HR - Sp kes (81h)
and Hundl ey
Ren k o
8 and Boccabe a r.;. w
M a shal
000 000 004 ......... 4 5 0
WP Ma sha I 3 3 L P Ak er Bas on
000 000 002- 2 8 0
3)
HRs S ng1e on
4 h)
Co bo n
L nzy
9)
and
M onday
9h
Ba ey
3rd ) Rod gue1. Curts Bo n 9)
Jo gens en 2nd
a d F sk WP Co born 4
L P Cu s ( 5)
San F an
04 00 001- 7 4 0
A an a
ooo
ooo-:-- 3 9
Texas
5 4 an d Rade
M a cha
O&lt;J k and
3 Pan her
Dobson Sc hu e e
6 F sel a 8 and Oa es L P
- Dobso n 2 7) HR s Aa on
12 h Bonds ( 0 h)
S Lou s
000 000 soo 5 B 0
New Yo k
000000 02 3 6
W se Segu
9) and S m
mon s Koos m an Henn ga n 7
M oo e 9 and D yer WP W se
5 2) L P Koosman 52)
P sbgh
00 00 002 4
3
Ph a
200 020 2x- 7 f/ 0
E s Rook.et" (7) Johnson (7
and M ay Tw che l
2
and
Boohe L P- E s (3 5
HR
M an anez. 3 d
Hou s on
00 000 0 2 4 8 0
C nc
0 2 0 0 x- 6 5
Robe s F a set&gt; 5 G add ng
8
and Ed wa d s
Carro
Sp ague (6
Bo bon 9 and
Ben ch WP Ca ot 1 3 L p.._.
Robe s 4 2
HR Ga aghe
Is
San D ego
00 000 000
6
0 0 I 0 20x 5 0 0
Los Ang
G e r Ramo 7
Troed son
8 and Ken dal
Su i on {53
and Fe guson L P- G e f 3 4
HR Cawe d 2nd
A mer can League
Kan C ty
20 000 130- 7 2 0
M nn
03 220 OOx 8 2 2
S m pson Ja ck son {3 ) Garbe
4
W gh
7 and Hea y
Sa nder s (8
and
Wood son
M e wa d WP- Woodson 3
2) LP S mpson (3 3 HR sMa ybe ry 2 12 h &amp; 3th)
Ca t o n a
0 000 000- 2 3 3
Ch cago
03 1 00 0 X 6 9 a
R M ay 4 4) and Torbo g
Kusr\ye 7 Bahnse n 6 3 and
B nkm an H Rs - Hen de son
D A en
2nd } B nkm an s
9th

DELTA
DURASTEE
RADIAL
• The outstand ng
decade

020 000 50()- 7 2 2
Oeo
0000000 - 25
S o e m y e 6 4) and M un
son
~ y m an
Sche ma n 7
an d S ms L P- F yman (2 4)
HR - Ha I ( 3 d)

pe formance t re of the

• 2 Dynacor ® carcass pi es protected by
two belts of h gh tens le strength steel
overla d w th a nylon cord cap

Full 4 Ply
Polyes ter Cord
Tubeless Safe ly Custom
WHITE WALL

• 12% better tract on

wmnmg p1tcher Mike Marshall
walked Marshall allowed four
hits and a run u: the last four
nnmgs to square h1s re cord at
3 3 M kc Jorgensen had three
h1ts for the Expos
R1ck W se hit a two...J un
double dunng a five run sev
cnth mmng outburst and wot
his fifth game for the Cardmals
w1th the rei cf help of D ego
Segl.ll Jerr; Koo~man was
cl arged w1tl h1s second con
sec ItJ ve Joss
Dave I opes mcreased h s
league le dmg average to 376
w th two run -scormg slng1es
and W1lhe C awford drove 1n
two runs w1th a homer and
smgle as Don Sutton won hts
f fth game for the Dodgers
Mator League leaders
ted Press Internal onat
Lead ng Batters
N at onal League
g ab r h pet
l opes L A 30 93
35 376
Wa son Ho 43 50 33 53 353
M addox SF 33 22 5 43 352
'llo a LA
26 91
32 352
Cash P 1
26
2 20 39 348
Fa y M I 3
89 3 3
348
Rbnsn Ph 28 87 3 30 345
1 5 38 342
M a hws S 37
San o Ch
37 34 20 45 336
Mo gan Ho 38 25 24 42 336
Amer ca n League
g ab r h pet
B mb ·g NY 26 76 2 28 368
Ha NY
22 76
28 368
Ke y Ch
24 89 9 32 360
Ho on De l 9 73
25 3-12
K kp k KC 32 20 25 40 333
0 A en Ch 35 126 24 4 325
F sk Bos
34 23 7 40 325
M unsn NY 38 38 20 44 J 9
29 93 0 29 3 2
Hot M n
Cmp s Ok 35 50 20 46 307
J nsn Oak 9 75
23 307
Hom e Run s
Nat onal l e gue Aa on A
P
2 Eva ns
and S a ge
A
Renc h C
Wynn Hou
an d Bonds SF 0
Am er can League Maybe y
KC 3 May M
0 D A en
Ch an d D uncun Cl ev 9
ve
p a yer s I ed w h 8
By

Un

JOHNSfON TO I EAFS
BOSfON (UP! ) - Veteran
goal e Ed Johnston of the
Runs Batfed In
Nat
onal
League Be nch C n
Boston Brums was sent to lhe
35 Fe guson L A 33 Spc c
Toronto Maple I eafs fuesday SF 30 Wa son Hou and Bonds
to conclude the pre pia) off deal S F 29
can League Me1 ~ be 'y
that put veteran netm ndcr KCAmer
42
M e on
Ch
and
Ja&lt;.oques Plante n a Boston J ck son Oak JO Rob nson
un for n for httlc more than a Ca Sp k es C ev and M u ce
NY 5
month
P t ch ng
Jot n ~ton however declmed
Nat onal League 8 n gham
to state whether or not he C n 7 B yan SF 6 3 Reuss
Hou and Dow n ng LA 5
would report to the Leafs
C n Koosma n NY and
Gu e
I I FESAVER WINN ERS
NEW YOBK (UP!) - Walt
F raz er star guard of the
Na t1onal B as k e tball
Assoc at on champiOn New
York Kmck e rbock er s and
Frank Mahovhch h1gh scor ng
forward of the Nat on&lt;.~ l Hockey
1 ee:t guc champ on Montrea l
Canad 1ens luesday were
selected I 1fesaver of the
Month w nners for April and
March respectively

W se St L 5 2 Hoo ton Ch
Su on L A and Se av~ NY 5 3
M a cha l SF 5 4
Amer can League Wood Ch
03
Hoi z. m an
Oak
92
Co ema n De B 2 S nge Ca 7
Sp o If KC72

TANNER TO FARM
CHICAGO (UP!
Mark
Tanner son of Chicago Wh1 te
So:t Manager C1luck Ta nner
Tuesday was s1gned by the
Wlnte Sox for tl e Appleton
W1s farm dub n the same
league after be ng re leased by
the crosstown Ch1cago Cubs a
day earher
R(IT A SIGNED
1anner hac] p1tcl ed only 14
CHICAGO (UP!) - The
nmngs for the Cubs Qu ncy
Ch1cago Black Hawks of the
farm team w1th 11 walks and
Nat onal Hockey League Tues
nme str keouts
day s gned Darcy Rota the r
No I draft cho1ce to a mutt
year contract for an undis
dosed sun
Rota 20 scored 73 goals and
56 assiSts w1th the Edmonton
Od K ngs last season

GENERAL TIRE SALES
992 7161

Middleport 0

Today's

Sport Parade

i

or

pm

P tsbu gh
M oose 3 3) at
Ph a de ph a ( Bre I 2 ) 7 30

Pm

Hous ton ( W so
44)
a
C nc nna
B nghan 7 ) 8
pm
San 0 eg o Co k ns 3 4) at
Los An ge es I M essen.m f h 4 3)
p 1'1
San F anc sea (Mc Dowe I
a AI an a Reed 2 4) 8 p m
Thursday s Games
New York a t Los Ang n ght
Sa Fr an al A lan a n ghl
On l y games schedu edl

Amer

can league

East
De l o
New Y o k
M waukee
Sa moe
C eve and
Bos on

w I pel gb
20 9 513
•
8

0
9

487
486

17 • 472
18 23 m

IS 20
West

m

3
3

w I pet g b
22 13 629

Ch cage

Ca t o n a
2 IS 583
Ka sa sC y
23 18 56
2
Oilk and
22 19 537 3
M nneso
9 17 528 3
Te xas
2 24 344 0
Tuesday s Results
M ncso a B Kansa s C y 7
Ch cag e 6 Ca f o n a 2
New York 7 Detro 2
Cl eve and 5 Ba mo e 3
M lwaukee ~ Bos1on 2
Oa k and 4 Texa s 1
Today s Probable P tchers
(A ll T mes EDTI
Texa s
B oberg
0 4)
a
Oak and Blue 3 2)
pm
K a~ sa s

C y 1Bu&gt;by 3 5) at

M nncso la Kaa 5 2} 9 p m
Ca fo n a ( S ng e
7 l)
Ch cage F she 4 3) 9 p m
New Yo k ( K l nc 3 4)
Co em an 8 2 8 p m
De o
C evelan d ( W !cox 3 0
Ba l mor e (C ue la r
5) 7
p 1'1
M !waukee (Be
44
Bos1on Pa ln 2 7) 7 30pm
Thursday s Games
M wa u l~ e e al Bos ton
Ca t o n a a Ch cago
Kan C y a M nnesota n ght
N ew YorJ.: at Oe1 o n ght
C eve a Ba mo e n gh t
On y gam es scheduled}

a
a
at
30
at

Interna l ona League
Stand ng s
By Un ted P ess Internal onal
A mer ca n D v1s on

w lpctgb
Roc! es e
23 12 657
Sy acu se
6 7 485 6
Paw uck et
4 6 467 6
To edo
4 24 368 0
Na t onal D v so n
wlpctgb
Chil es on
24 J 649
Pe n nsu a
21 6 56a 3
T dewate
9 18 5 4 5
R chmond
0 25 286 3
Tuesday s Res ults
Cl a esf on 5 T dewa er 4
P w uck e 4 R chmond 3
Rochesf e 3 Pen nsu a 2
Sy acu sc a ! To edo ppd a n

AGREEMENT REACHED
MILWAUKEE (UI?l) - Wal
Jones
beleagured
ex
I ackcourtman
of
the
Milwaukee Bucks has reached
an agreeme nt w th the
Natwnal Basketball As
soL atwn club stemmmg from
a dispute that occurred ear ly n
the season Jones who earns a
reported $90 000 on a no-cut
contract was released by the
Bucks without a sat sfa cto y
explanation

Fa rbanks smiled
And watch out you don t get shot

threw m the same

newsman
There Had to be a Reason
Chuck Fairbanks has been w1th the Patnots less than four full
months and already he knows they take football sermusly here
He also Is aware the Patnots "'on loss figures last season were 311 and there had to be a reason for that
I don t thmk the players were playmg w1th the emotion tiltensity and second effort they are capable of I think they were
domg less than their best
Fairbanks says tbat m low key hecause that s the type of md.ivldual he Is He IS not a screamer m the sense Vmce Lombardi
was and he s not the walkmg ad for gnm determination Don
Shula seems to be but he st II has h1s own way of getting the job
done He has no plans to pattern hlffisetf after anybody else
I m g01ng to try and be myself he says If I tried bein8
someone else I m sure I d wear thm n a short t1me I respect
nany coac h ~s m th1s league All of them m fact but I have to do
th ngs my own way There are a lot of ways toskm a cat
Both Were F orthrlght
Nonetheless Fa1rbanks did speak w1th Dan Devme and
Tommy Prothro before takmg the JOb with the PatriOts De11111e
came out of the Umverslty of MJSsour not that long ago and bad
a good year w1th the Green Bay Packers last season Prothro left
UCLA to go w1th the Los Angeles Rams d1dn t do so well and was
let out
Both were forthright m the1r comments to me says Fall'
banks Ne therwas wllhng to say to me You ought to do this or
do that though They left t to me to evaluate
At a local banquet the other mght Fairbanks found hllllSetf
SJttmg next to George Allen Wash ngton s head coach and
general manager Allen was very helpful He told Fairbanks a
number of thmgs ahout hand! ng both job
Eve y day s a cn s1s he sa td
Fa rbanks knows about that because he has been workJng long
hours s nee he took his new JOb One or two of the hnes 1n his
forehead already have grown a btt deeper
He ns1sts he senJoymgthe work You ask hlffi hiS pnmary aim
wttll the Patnots this year and he says Improvement
Not A Coach s Dream
No one has to tell h1m the Patr ots haven t li:XacUy been a
coach s dream the past four years dunng which -tirJw they ve
made some changes at the top One man Penn States Joe
Paterno turned down the JOb before Fa rbanks Why then did he
ta ke 1t?
I can t do anyth ng about what s happened m th e past he
says
I wasn t lookmg for a JOb and money was not the overridmg
factor m my accep tmg tlus one What reaiJy clinched thts one for
me was the attitude of the people here mvolved w1th the club I
was Impressed by their enthusiasm I was convmced they were
wtlhng to allow a man- me- to run the orgamzatton I felt they
were g vtng me enough authority so that I could l. successful
Jun Plunkett the PatriOts 1mprov ng new quarterback IS
another reason Fairbank s sa1d yes to the multl year contract he
was offered
I think he s a fmc person a grea t young player and hell
Improve says the former Oklahoma mentor Without a
quarterback you have nothmg He s the starting pomt He cant
wm by himself but you can t wm without him The thmg !like so
much ahout Plunkett IS h s desire
Leaves Brmlant Record
Fairbanks leaves a bnlhant record behmd at Oklahoma where
he took over as head coach m 1967 after J1m MacKenzie died of a
heart attack In S IX years he gu1ded the Sooners to three B g
E1ght titles two Sugar Bowl VJctones one Orange Bowl triumph
and an overall 52--15-1 record
All th s however accoun ts for nothmg with those New
England fan') who hve and dte w1th the PatriOts each Sunday
dur ng the fall and wmter
Says one Boston cab driver a cnbc hke most everyone else
Those Patnots g1ve me a pam Plunkett s got the potential but
he doesn t get the protectmn
they had Garrett he was a
crybaby they had Nanee he couldn t get a runrung start he
hadda run fla !footed
I don t th1nk God can wm w1th that
team
Fa1rbanl&lt;s IS gomg to try

II JUY w hu t: hases U e
{.;trl
t d buys hzs ~ u ts at
b gw outlets lS a wolf

m cheap clothmg

USED CARS
WEAffiER
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from $2 53 to $2 75
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;m % &lt;W~..a:;=--~~W~IMMI"'(

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FOR MEMORIAL DAY

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The

n

ON

7 75x14
8 25xl4
8 55xl4
815xl5
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»~~~f.:·:'f.~'~'f.f&lt;»',f.

M a ror League Standmg s
~
By Un l ed Press tnternat anal
Nat ona I l eague
Ea st
w I pet g b
Ch cago
17 &gt;75
'''
New Yo k
9 17 528 2
~
P sbu gh
16 18 47
4
By M1h n Rtctunan
M on l ea l
16 18 47
4
-:
Ph ade ph a 15 ?4 385 7 2
UPr Spor t.'i Ei:litor
S Lou s
3 14 35
8 2
W esl
FOXBORO Ma.s i ll PI )- Chuck 1'a1rbanks was getting that
'Wipctgb
S.:, Fro:1n c sco 28 7 622
first b1g hello the n ce warm one
Hous on
76 7 605 I
The New England Patr ots had swrunoned the media for the
C nc nna l
24 6 000 I '
Los Ange es
24 7 585 2
purpose of m!roducmg thel!' new head coach and general
A an a
6 23 4 0
manager this rme clean..cut young man who IS gotng to lead
Sa n D ego
5 27 :157
lh
them
Qut of thf' wilderness
Tuesday s Re sults
M on rea 4 Ch cago 3
nns
The day th e Patrwts trotted out their taU 39-year old new
Sl Lo1.1 s 5 New York 3
coach
who had been at Oklahoma Uruverstty seven years one
P ade ph a 7 P flsbur gh 4
Boston newspaperman hstened to Fairbanks a native and
Sa F an c sco 7 AI an ta 3
C c n at 6 Hous ton 4
resident of Michigan answer a few questions and then hit him
Los Ange es 5 San 0 ~~ o 1
w1th
one
his own
Today s Probable P tchers
( All T mes EDT)
Where d1d you get that Oklahoma accent he was cunous
S
Lou s
Fos te
2 3 or
It rubbed off I guess sa1d Fairbanks
Sp nk s 0 4) al New Yo k
Well don t worry In a year 1t II be gone and n 1ts place will
Seaver 53) 2 p m
Ch cag o ( Hoo on S 3) at be a New England accent You II be t.&lt;JIIung just like one of the
M an eal (M cA na y 2 I )
8 Kennedys

FROM MTC
ANY SIZE LISTED

• 75% more hazard protect on than conven
t ona l 4 ply b1as tires
• 20% better handlmg than oonvent onal 4 ply
btas tues

Ron Fmrl) s ngled home the
Expos wmm g run off Dave
LaRoche 1n the lith ummg
1fter Ron Hu nt started the
de CiS ve rally w1th a s nglc and

8tu11dings

'359.00

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Middleport
~

~-

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�I

I'

•
•

• - rne uauy sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., May 23, 1973

~ - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., May :0, 1973

"

Holtzman-posts ninth win, 4-l
Br I' ITO STELLINO
Milwaukee edged Boston. 4-2,
' PI Sports 1\'riler
and Minnesota outh.1sted KanEver since he posted a 9-0 sas City, 8-7.
record in 1967 before being
In the National League,
ealled into Army , Ken Holtz- ~l ontreal nipped Ch icago, 4-3,
man has been hailed as a m 11 innings, St. Louis beat
pitcher with a brilliant future . )l'cw York, 5-3, Philadelphia
He was supposed to be the new top ped Piltsbur~h. 7-l, San
S&lt;lndy Koufax.
Francisco beat Atlana. 7-3.
He didn 't quite live 'up to the Cincmnati topped Houston, 6-4,

Petitions carrying 1,000 names ineffective in Mason County

Blumberg for the league battmg
le.ad...-.368-with four hits, lnduding a three-run homer , to
pace the Y anks past DetroiL

sltlg iP 1n the third inmng 4!nd

Homers by Ken HendersQn ,
Chuc k Brinkmc.m and DiCk
Allen ca rried the Whi te Sox
o\"er the Angels. Stan Bahnsen
reputation when he won 11 and Los Angeles edged Sar pitched a three-hitter for his
ga mes in 1968 and then 17 the Diego, 5-1.
sixth victory .
next two seasons.
.
Designated hitter Jim Ray
Harmon Killebrew drove in
But now he ha s rappor t with Hart tied teammate Ron tw o run s with a tie-breaking

druvc in four runs for the
losers.
Milwaukee 's Jim Colborn and
John Curtis pitched scoreless
b:tll for eight innings until
Milwaukee exploded for four
runs in the ninth inni ng to beat,
Boston. Corman Thomas singled in the first one and pinchhiller Joe I.ahoud singled in
twu more to offset a twO-rtJ!l

Oakland A 's Manager Dick
Williams and he 's reeling off
the wins at a fas t clip.
Literally. lt took him only One

hour and 39 minutes Tuesday
nig ht to pol ish off the Rangers,
4-1, with a seven-hitter to boost

his record to 9-2.
" I like ro pitch fast because

the fifth wi th the bases loaded. fuel to farmers so food and
Rich McKinney gave him all fiber crops can be planted,' '
the help he needed as he drove the organization said in a state-

in three runs with a bases ment.
State Farm Bureau Execuloaded double in the fourth .
In the other games, Chicago tive Vice President ·c. W.
downed Califqrnia, 6~2, Detroit Swank said at least a 25 per
downed New York, 7-2, Cleve- cent increase in fuel supplies
beat

Baltimore,

PUBLIC NOTICE
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TR('N.SPORTATION

ninth.
Cleveland scoretl h\'{) runs in
the ninth to snap a 3-3 tie and
beat Baltimore. Walt Willia ms
singled. stole s_econd and scored
on lwo wi ld pitches b.Y Dave

5-3, was needed.
Swank said . the problem

"stemmed from fuel alloca~
.. tions made for this year, when

Organizatio n

officials

pointed out the Ohio ~ corn crop
" is only half in and soybean
planting has barely begun."
Swan k added that "even if the

pre:sent fuel crisis eases, there
wi1l be an even greater one at
harvest time."
The Farm Bureau said it also
se nt

t eleg rams

to

Ohio

representatives and senators
in Washington, urging them to
"take whatever action possible
to increase the allocation of

fuel for immediate distribution

to

f&lt;~rmer s."

Swank said the proble m

"stemmed from fuel allocations made for this year,_when

almost no fall plowing was
almost no fall plowing was · done , on the hasis of last year's
rime •.on the basis of last year's demands, when fall plowing
demands, when fall powing was completed on a near

NOTICE
OF
SALE OF was completed on a near
PASSENGER
CARS ,
~
TON normal schedule ."
CARRYALLS ,
PICKUPS , DUMP TRUCKS
&lt;MOST
W-PLOWS
AND
SPREADERS). TRACTORS WMOWER
ATTACHMENTS ,
TAR DISTRIBUTOR, TAR
KETTLES ,
AIR
COM ·
PRESSORS , CHAIN SAWS,
HAND MOWERS, AND OTHER
M.ISCELLANEOUS ITEMS .
CONTRAtTSALESLEGAL
COPY NO. 73 · 377
COLUMBUS, OH 10,
APR1l24, 19]3.

normal schedule."

McK•Ily

before

Buddy

and Mr _ Brandenberr and
pro&lt;imately 1,000 signa tures . . Robert Keesee, PPHS.~1.ill
At the same meeting, cipal. be reconsidered
hearing d:ates were set; asked for reasons for the cansdiscrepancies were shown in (ers of the teachers and
some of t}le t;ounty's hot lunch dismissal of Keesee. H e
prog rams, complaints were commented, "We can 't ~
made regardin g grievance where!ls this wou1d improve
procedures, and the board 's our system ... ''
present lega l coun sel will with-

FIRST PLACE WINNERS of the Wednesday Late Mixed

!

League, at the Pomeroy Bowling Lanes was the team of Fultz
and Bentley . Front row, 1-r, are, Joy Bentley a nd Betty
Fultz ; back r ow, John Bentl ey and Bernard Fultz .

Bell

singled in an insurance run .
NEll' MACIIINE
COLUMBUS (UP I ) - Litton

Automated Business Systems
ha s invented a new voting
machine which will be inspected by state offi cials, Secretary of State Ted W. Brown

Ohio Valley Electric Cor-

Ohio

Electric

.

'1

95

-$

·HAM SALAD

$

CHEESE

SPREAD

992-3502

Withers, " We'd like to plead

IS 20 1 25 1

$

87¢

All MEAT

WIENERS

·--

EMADE

HAM

.·

Lb-79¢

SALAD......... .. . · .

MIX
OR
MATCH
•
Betsy Ross"
WIENER

3

20 oz.
Bottles

49¢

4 oz.
Can

OR

Saigon briefed
on .peace talks PARIS (UPI) -

HAMBURGER

BUNS

.
9¢
2 5
8 PAK

Pkgs .

PARKAY

Saigon Tuesday to brief officials on the latest round of
talks on Vietnam-this time,
an effort to make sure the

ceasefire there does not break
down completely .
Acting after a 61'•-hour
meeting with Hanoi negotiator
Le Due Tho, the longest so far
by the two men, Kissinger sent
William H. Sullivan, a deputy
assistant secretary of state and
the U.S. amhassador-&lt;lesignate
to the Philippines, to the South
Vietnamese capital aboard a
special U.S. Air Force jet.

3

l lb.

Pkgs .

MUSTARD

WAFFLE CREAMS
10 07. pkg. 47'

23¢

16 oz.
Jar

2 ~~~~~s 89~
With Coupon ·
Good AI:
Rutland Dept. Store

!
!I
11

II

11

L--·-----·--·----5--26..:?~----J

a "very quick' ~ visit.
In the South Vietnamese

Bag

49~

$}49

Just flil ovt ttt. coupon below 4IIKI moll. Our
Js limited 10 mail
...... _IWWI -

---COUPON------·

I
59¢ !

·,.,..,ay

Peanut Butler

Wilh Coupon
Good At Rutland
Dept. Store

1
I
I

L':' ______ :.~!~:..=~:::_.;.._j

Caruth is represe ntin g three
The boC~rd in orficial &lt;J Ction
Han nan teac hers who ara set G p.m. on June 8 as the
Lawrcn ce Car tmill, Mr . hea ring d::~ ~e for eight tea chers

LHk es. rivers ;.1nd rese rvo irS cover less than 1 per
cent

GOSPEL MEETING

in runnal disl·ussjon set up.'' scheduled .
A ssis t&lt;:~nt Supt. Charl es
Maxine
L&lt;ttht&gt;y,
J."'ood
Bearwallow
objected .
Ch~trnbcrs explained that when Ana lyist. appe.&lt;tred 'herore the
Church of Chri s !
She also submitted a com- some teachers appeared at :1 · board approximately one hour
plaint un Awards Day which hoard meeting ear lier he se nt reviewing se veral of the
Bob Ke ss inger, spea ker
was held at the school Tuesday nwre lh;.ur 200 for111s with l'ounty's hot lunch programs
tram Harold, Ky .
saying that it was only for lhcm, " th at have bee n and dti ng wh.at she termed
~t lh l rtcs and chcerlccaders and
I mtle North of Route 68 1 be dis tributed wholl!salc .. ,
'' 111 i ~ man :.1 g c men t
0 r
tween Darwi n &amp; Alfred.
accused McCausland of not
Adkins asserted ,' '' r've never programs . " Board member
giving th e other awar~ s been convinced these people Adkius said , '•We need to tak e
May '8 lhru June 3
beca use "some students were need a griev;:tnce procedure. a lung hard look ut it. We can't
8 p .n{ each Evening
g "'~ing- l o get them that he didn 't Those people c.·arne he re with a
like and didn 't want to get pt'ub lcm. I think Mr. Damron
them" .
righf ovc1· there ( nodding his
Supl. Wi•.hers assured the head ) Sf'ar cd tllt)sc people
young delegation lllctt "awards Oll l . "
will be given out" adding " I've
Chmnbcrssaid " I do~'l know
disc ussed this with Mr. Me. (ltty thin g .about tha l. If we have
Causland '' .
erred , I'd like to be notified of
Miss Presto n d.i sc lu!ied it. Why th ey were up here 1 do
STORY
"There was an uproar in IJ1e nul kn ow, Why Danmm was
For Now Thru Summer
school. The students were very here I do 11ot know .··
Cool baring . These a ll
upset ove r it.11
Adkins was finn a11d lo ud
lea lh er sandals. Lifting to
.J;mlt's Caruth of the West when lie said, " We :llilt don·t
s unny Summer spirits w ith
Virginia Educatiun Association krww why tho:::;c people were
n ew · heel he ight s. p la t wa s prese nt and complained here . This uld stuff of passing
forms.
tha t he couldn ' t ge t a grievance lire buck is nu goOd . l lhink Mr.
step sc heduled noting · ·J've run Withers should bring this to llw

notices to 30 s tudents takin g
pa1·t in a strike that has closed
down the campus since April

of Nebra ska's 77,227

sq uare miles. But Neb raska
has a bigger und ergro und
wate r supply than any oth er
state in the un ion .

"NOTICE"
TO LOT OWNERS IN LETART AND PLANTS

.CEMETERIES

l

Bone Ki d

r Wh ile

NOW IS THE TIME TO PAY FOR LOT MOWING.
'5.00 PER LOT PER YEAR

l

Kid

N&amp;M
Width:;

MARGUERITE'S
SHOES

LETART TOWNSHIP TRUSTEES
RD. 2, RACINE, OHIO 45771

102 E . Main

Belly Ohlinger

Pqmeroy

MIDDLEPORT and POMEROY

·,

fine points in the (Jan . 271

treaty."
Referring to a rece-nt state-.
ment by Thieu that there could
be no cooperation with the
Communists, Thach said :
"This man again is doi11g
everything to put a monkey

wrench in the works. He has

-.~,1/!11'••· ~

- •

iW?.J '

';/)

'

•"t 'i ' . ~" ::z,
.if' .

·1 ~ ·"

.....

\"-

...

. ..... i,

'

.,
.·

.i~.,....~
~ '~ ,.. .~
J .·
l~t.lili','"'
'

.~~\:
'\?,.- ) . ~,·~-J
r. ·t

~

.

~

COUPON

. I

TODAY

...,.. - ,,.. of Cha... a Tolo........ Amplifier

:·

:HAMI ..........................................•..... .•
I ADOttiSS ······· · ·· ··· ··· ··· ·· ··-·····-· ············· I
I City •••••••••••.......... ,, ... . .. State_. ... ···· .·····~ I
1

I '
I

.

---

. TELEPHONE AMPLIFIER
U6SOUTIIH-ST.

i

.

I

I

____c!'-!~!'.:.~~2.!'-------J

..

REMNANTS

Be here C{lrly Thw·sduy . morn ing: for the big
Trade Ex:~a,Q s ion Sa le Va~ue - :1-piecc. mixing
bowl set m ,,~ rttdUatcd s 1zcs. Made from unbreakabl e polyet.helenc plastic. Limit : one set..

', to 1 yard pieces of high quality fabric s of all
kinds. New assortment. Big choi ce of colors ami
p3ttf,!rris. A big bargain buy for home sewers.

· Shop a nd save now during Stiffler's Big Trade

c

Expansion Sule .

1 YARD
LENGTH
FABRIC
REMNANTS

-TRADE EXPANSION SALE-

- TRADE EXPANSION SALE-

LADIES WASH ABLE COTTON
TERRY HOUSE

SLIPPERS

~i~

EXTRA SPECIAL SALE GROUP
7" TO 24" ASSORTED
Big assortment of 7 to 24 in('h famuus brand nylon
zippers. Heg ular values lo fi9c. Come one! Come all !
To Stiffler 1s Big Trade E1epansion Sa le ! Doors open
Thur:;day morning at 9 a. m. sharp.

. . . on·"·

c

ASSORTED
·coLORS

PAIR
-TRADE EXPANSION

EACH

CARDS TRASH .BAGS

•
••••••

Big size vinyl plastic garhage

· bags. Saves time and keeps your
trash can c:leilr't. 35 to a package.
Com~s complete with ties.

asso rted fancy subjects on
the ha ck.

ITALIAN STYLE

SANDALS
Daringly bare : .. our spring-iOta-

summer sandals. For day and
play and ca refre ~ . stepping .
Imported Italian style sandals.

00

that will keep your shoes in excellent condition. Clear bottom
~&gt;ith

colored covers .. Begular 79

HOME OR OFFICE ELECTRIC
POLISHED ALUMINUM

HOT POTS
For-home or office [our cup
&lt;:iluminwn hot potsJor soup
or coffe e. Electric cord in-cluded.

PMG.

DECK

LADIES-INFANTS~MISSES

1\ clei:lr plustic see thru shoe box

c

c
N SION SALE-

SHOE BOXES,

.... ... ..,E EXPANSION. SALE-

COMPLETE WITH TWIST TIES
PACKAGE OF 35 PLASTIC

Plastic coated bridge or
poker · playing ca rds with

SPECIAL GROUP GOTHAM
CLEAR PLASTIC
.

ASSORT£D
SIZES

- TRADE EXPANSION SALE -

ASSORTED PLASTIC COATED
BRIDGE OR POKER

PLA

- T~ADE EXPANSION SALE-

NYLON ZIPPERS

Comfortable crepe sole terry house
slippers in assorted plain colors and
fancy patterns. Sizes S·M-L-XL.

c

V210

OF $2.00
OR MORE
SET
-THURSDAY MORNING ONLY-LIMIT 1 SET TO A CUSTOMER

•

--- TRADE EX

..

BIG NEW ASSORTMENT
Y2 TO 1 YARD FABRIC

MIXING BOWL SE

"We are going over all the

.:-,.,...::)
' _. i .
·- ... , ·,, .
L
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - , '-.!----.. - -7· . ":"..'l ~j .
I
SEND THIS
.
" .
II

I
I
I -

WITH A PURCHASE OF $2.ll0 OR MORE
3 PIECE UNBREAKABL.E PLASTIC

WITU A
PURCHASE

-TRADE

PANSION

LE-

SPECIAL NEW ASSORTMENT
3"X18" QUALITY BROADLOvm•

RUG BLOCKS
13 x 18 inch assorted rug
blocks mi:lde from
heavy

quality

broadloom carpeti ng:
Big selection . Trade

i

_____..._.._.,..___.._.._...._,_..,.-_..,___..~.-~

·WEEK ·END SPECIALS

Thach said. " It is his responsibility.

_· }

TO THE HARD OF
HEARING - .• 1\
TElEPHONE
AMPLIFIER
1111• oH.r Is Umlftld to

Instant Coffee -

~!r OL

"That is Mr. Kissinger's
assessment, but not Qurs," _

~~·-.....~~ ,

FREE

NESCAFE

10 oz.
Jar

the talks.

capital, a government spokes- ·been doing it all the time. "
man said Sullivan would brief

theHard-of.tMarlngonly.

.----~----COUPON------~

. JHRILLLIQUID .

5 lb.

news conference when he was
ment Monday that " some
progress" hade been made at

Sullivan said at the airport, for

CHARCOAL

99¢

TEEN QUEEN
NABISCO ·

39¢

North Vietnamese official at
the t&lt;Jiks, Deputy Foreign
Minister Nguyen Co Thach.
Thach apparently made the
disclosure in a slip of the
tongue . He also laughed at a

was their fifth since· last
Thursday and be said another
meeting was planned today .

again :tomorrow."
Sullivan, an expert on Asian
affairs, · ac·companied
Kissinger at each session of the
talks with Tho and led the
American side at two long
meetings by technical experts.
"I am going to S8igon,"

PAPER PLATES

First word. of Sullivan's trip
came from the second-ranking

asked about Kissinger 's state-

Kissinger said after the Tuesday session. "We will meet

Size

officials on the progress of the
talks.
.The Saigon spokesman said
that he did not know if Sullivan
would see President Nguyen
Van Thieu, but It was considered uolikely Sullivan would
make the trip to meet only lowlevel officials.

Kissinger's meeting with Tho

"I have nothing to say,"

2'1,

KINGSFORD

MARGARINE

Henry A.

Kissing!;!r sent a top . aide ' to

By Piece ... -.~~J!r
Sliced·-... ...1 ~:. 81

40 Count ·

a ttenti on of the board ."

bailing the program

-STIFFLER'S ANNUAL TRADE EXPANSION SALE-

BACON

9"

intu quite a bi t of diffi culty."

•tfm lmuc
(JUl."

Williams has been harbering for .22 years.

-DIXIE

BLACK PEPPER

Harbour and Mr. Sowards_ lie who hn ve made requests for
smd \\ lie11 one teacher tried lo this. The names were not
f1l c it g,rieva ncc he was release-d last night, when the
;'having truubl e ~e tting an specia l
meeting
WiJ /&gt;i

hair pieces for men, blow waving, and layer and shag cuts.
H3ir pieces for men may be purchased from Williams.

PORK &amp;BEANS

FRANK'S

20. The action followed 0:111 eggthrowin g episode against
admin_istt·ators Tuesda y.

l'lub is prese nhn~ Bibles to
St• r1inrs and they wanted their
sponsor to llliJke this presentati (•n for gr:ututltiun, since it
was his idea lo presen t the
Bibles, but sa id the princiJUtl

COMPLETES ADVANCED TRAINING - Mickey
Willil!ms, owner and operator . of Karr's Barber Shop,
Pomeroy, recently took advanced training in hair styling at
Coluinbus. The instructor was Joe Carlow, of Miami, Fla ., ·a
U. S. hair stylist.lnstruction was given in razor sculpturing,

SLAB .

89¢ 2

Ambrshine returned $4.40

paid $7 .60 and $4.40 and third
place Miracle Beam paid $3.
In the ni ghtly double, A. c.:s
Thor (7) and Byrd Paradise ( 4)
returned $9.20.
The a ttendance was 4,863and
.the handle was $234,017.

TEEN QUEEN

CATSUP

cia ls today sen t expulsion

Second place Davis Direct

NEW CABBAGE ..................~~:l5'
TEEN QUEEN .

'&gt;TUDENTS EXl'ELLED
YELLOW SPRINGS, Ohio
( UP1 ) - Anti oc h College offi-

wire by one-half length Tu esday night to win the eighth
race, a $1 ,400 claiming pace, at
Scioto Downs .
$3.20 a nd $2.60.

SUPERIORS

lb.

accuse d Supt. Withe rs of
denying them 1/w ri ~ht to
appear on the agenda or La st
nigl!t's meeting,
In defense, Supt. Withers
read a1oud a letter to Josephine
Chtipman in which he noted
" the Bo:..rd of Education has
spent mu('h time listening to
rou .. .'' He also cited that
ot hers wanted to apJ&gt;ear·and in
O!'der lo afford the right to
them he wa ~ makin g this
Side rs explained to Handley decision .
that the board couldn 't do
Miss Preston was quick to
anything on Kee-see without the state, "We have two new
s uperintendent's re co m- problems at Hcmn;m that the
mendation.
board doesn' t know ab.out."
Brady commended young
Siders polled the I&gt;Onrd when
Handley stating " for speaking Bradv made a motion to hear
in a gen tlemen1y way ... We the Han na ri group, adding, " I
may not agree, but 1 commend think il's ri gh tfull y our job."
you ror speaking your piece."
Charles H. Damron, attorney
A Hannan Hi gh Schoo l representing Mr . _McCa usland,
delegation
wa s
also {'O ilHllented
and
Siders
recug nized. Approximately 96 declared Damron "out of ornames were on a petition der•·. The vole was 4-1 wi th Bill
submitted by stud ents asking Withers dissenting and Siders.
for the transfer or dismissal or Adkins , Brady &lt;.Hld Hay Fields
Bright McCausland , princi pal. voting in favor .
A stud~nt , Terry Preston
Miss Pr·cston sHid the Bible

shine beat Davis Direct to the

Reeves
NOODLES

SUPERI()RS

Charles Clwmbt•rs wh o
remarked that he had con~
li1c ll'd smne " who did not sign
this and somt:; names appe.ared
more than once ... Handley said
ere were more than 300
name~ on the list, remarking
"considerin g that so me
teachers threatened the kids
... would have- been at leas t
200 more If teachers hadn' t
threatened kids .. ...
Board president Harry

SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Amor-

NicklauS! will tune for Open in IVB play

WI

Phone Us
Your Orderl (

~ rl(t(lt (,G;

Mi chael F:rwin, son of Mr.
Mrs. Ches ter Erwin,
The ballot in the new machine may be marked with an Middleport, graduated Sunday
ord inary lead pencil and can be from the University of West
read by a n optica l reader in- Virgjnia ma gnua cum laude.
Erwin received a bachelor of
terfaced with a computer .
scie nce dc~rce in forestry. He
ls a member of Xj Sigma Pi,
AWARD GIVEN
WASHING TON (UP! ) - Dr . national forestry honorary
Harr y F . Golds t ei n , c hief fraternity : Ga mm a Sig ma
veterinarian for Ohio and also Delta, agricu ltural scie nce
th e state 's chief of meat in- nati onal hon orar y society, and
spection was presented the t11e A_meri can Society of
U.S. Agriculture Depal'tment's Forestry.
Begi nning Jun e 1, Erwin will
highest servi ce award Tuesday
- the Distinguished Service A- beg ih work in fores try
ward.
rrocurement al Waiter Boro, S.
C. He and his wife, Judy, and
TAKING TOP INDIVIDUAL HONORS in the Wednesday Late Mixed League at the
their.children, Scott, 10; Kevin,
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes were, front row , 1-r, [letty Fultz, most improved; Virginia Hoyt, high
eight, and Mcli~s a . four, plan
average a nd hi gh series; Pat Holter, high game; back row , Dan Meadows, high average; Dick
to move there next week.
Rosenbaum, high series and high ga,me, and Jotm Bentley, most improved.
A g raduate of . Middleport
High School, Erwin ~etve d
three years in the U. S. Navy,
&lt;:~t1d was emp loyed eight years
at Dupon t. He attend ed
PHILADELPHIA (UP! ) _: suburban Whitemars h Valley between Oakmont and WhiteMarietta College {or a year
not less than •.n 1974.
The !VB Golf Classic an- Country Club June 7-10.
marsh will be to his advantage
before en roll in g al the
16) The bond levy fo r new
nounced Monday that Jack
Since he became a touring at the Open, where he will be
Unive rsily of \V es t Virgi nia . school building construction
Nicklaus will break one of his pro in 1962, Nicklaus never has defending the title he 'fOn last
would be placed on the ballot
long-standing traditions and entered a tournament the week year,
earlier
than
1975
and
would
be
T\\'0
STEXL
GEMS
co'mpete
in its tournament here prior to. the U.S. Open,
.
.
.
Others scheduled to play in
pa yable firs t in !97_6, or in the
one week before the U.S. Open. · The Open will be held at the the tournament included Lee
SAN FRANCISCO (UP! )
Y,C&lt;Jr in which Laxes are firs t Two men in ·coverai1s robbed a
Nelson G. Harris, president Oakmont Country Club near Trevino, who reached the $1
,
pajd by Ga vin Plant's Un it No. downtown jewelry store of an of the $150,000 tournament, PittSburgh.
million mark in earnings .last
1.
estimated $400,000 in gems said Nicklaus confirmed his
Harris said Nicklaus, a .two- week at Memphis, and former
BASED UPO N prese nt and Tuesday.
ap pearance in the 72-hole time winner of th e tournament Masters
champion
Gay
Gunther Zimmerman, 47, tourney to be held ·at the here, felt the similarities Brewer.
estimated rates of spending:,
the co unty boa rd 's best said the men were waiting
esti mate is th at the con- when he showed up to open the
solidated tax rate to be paid in store . T hey produced pistols,
1975 by a new distri ct would be made him turn off the burglar
FROZEN
no more thafl 16 mills per $1 ,000. alarm and open the safe, he
SPECIAL
-of assessed valuati on for all said .
Zimmerman sail;) a prevous
opera ling and bond redemption
levies, in cluding vocational robbery attempt was stopped
by a s pecially trained police
·
sc hool expe nd itures.
Suc h rate compares to the dog who , bit the iiltruder.
tota l school ta x rate pa yable in However , he disco ntinued use
12 oz. Pkg.

CH-ICKENS ....... -.............. .

AND

'

and

..

p/anhng ..1-ne

,.-1_lru.r• o._,

petition with appr.o&lt;imately
700 names saying to Supt.

When young Handley staled,
" I guess you can · Say rm
pullin g ~ my head on the
chopping bl ock," the board
was quick to discount this-.
In discussing the petition
submitted by PPHS students ,
Brady asked for this and drew
comment from assistant Supt.

announced Tuesday .

Robinson's Cleaners

report after

Hope Moore and Mary Morrow; back, Fred

·I , .c-,-

SHIRT
FINISHING

F.armer.'S can

ar~.

row, 1-r

heard. · Mrs. Charles Yeage r ,

spokesman for a parents group
in the bend area, submitted a

Morrow and Russ Moore. Tbe two teams will hold their
banquet dinner this evening at the Mountoineer Dinner
Theatre at Hurricane, II'. Va.
·

Erwin wms
high

co nsolidation of lhe fOur loca l
school
dis tricts effective Jan.,
premises located at the Distr ict
Company,
the
State
Board
of
No . Ten . WHhlngton County
3, 1974 , ins tead of July 1, 1973,
Garage - Stale Route No . 26 . in Education and the Gallia as ini tia)ly planned.
Washington County, on the 26th
day of May , 1973 at 10 :00 A.M. County Board of Education
(:1 ) The tax rates to be paid in
Eastern Dayl'i ghl Saving T i me ·have entered into agreement
1974 would be computed and
th e
following
des cribed
Passenger Cars. Carryalls, 11:~ that , will consOlidate, Gallia paid. on the individual assessed
Ton P i cKup s, Dump Tru c ks
fmosf
with
Plows and County's four school districts val~ation in each dis tri ct . in
Spr·e ade r ), Tractors wi·fh effective Jan . 3, 1974.
1973, rather than on a conMower Attachmen ts, Tar
In ail ·exc hange of letlers solidated basis. Except- for
Distributor , Ta r Ket tl es , Air
Comp ressors , Cha ln Sa ws , made public today by Gallia administrative purposes, this
Hand . Mowers, and Ofher
County School Superintendent would have the same effect as
Misce llaneous Item s :
PASSENGER CARS Clarence E . Thompson and '
if .consOlidation was not ef~
5 - 1967 Fo rd!&gt;
23 - 1968 Chevrolet.s ·
John Ray Si.mms, Assistan t fective u"lil 1975.
1 ~ 1968 Plymouth ·
Secretary and Tax Consultant
I 41 The school i&lt;lx !"ate to be
8 - I969 Chevrol ets
1 - 1970 Ford
for OVEC, Simms •tated that paid in 1975, based on the 1974
CARRYALLS
~a l though taxes to be paid by the
1 - 196-5 Chevrol et
co n so l ida ~ed
assessed
1 - 1966 Chevrolet
company
under
the
proposed
va
lu
&lt;Jtion,
would
be
computed
3 - 1969 Chevrolets
plan will be s ubstantially· in- e~nd paid on a cons.olidated
PICKUP TRUCKS - lh TON
'2 - 1965 Ford s
creased in 1975, OVEC wilL not basis; but would be structured
15 - 1966 Ford s
1 - 1967 Chevrolet
oppose consolidation under the by usin g the appropriate
DUMP TRUCKS- 3 CUBIC
present plan . .
district's ''outside " millage,
YARDS
(Most With Plows &amp; Spreadl:!rs l
OVEC had previously
together With the appropr-iate 1973 in the Kyge r Creek School of the dog when it bit a
3 - 1964 Fo rds
opposed a consolidation this
1 t 965 Dodge
' 'inside" millage so as to ·resu lt Oislricl of 13.2 mills, and the customer.
12 - 1966 Dodges
to
be
year
because
taxes
in a consolidated rate that on ly new :Spending planned and
12 - 1966 Fords
TRUCK
paid by the company would
would levy on local taxpayers estimated for 1975 is about
1 - 1960 Dodge Cab -Cha ssis
be
significantly
increased
in
an
amount no more than the $100,000 to conform to certiFied
2500 to 3SOO G.v .w.
TAR DISTRIBUTOR
the two-~·ear period p'rior to aggregate of the tax levy paid and n on~ce rti f i ca ted sala r ~·
I ·- 1956 Fo rd With Littleford
the time · taxes were to be in 1974 by the four separate sched ules to the Prese nt Kyger
Distributor - 800 Ga llon
MISCELLANEOU S
paid by the new gener3ting dis tri c ts , plus an a moun t Creek School Distri ct sc hedu le.
1 - 1947 Crane JO Boot Boom
facilities of the James M.
SAME DAY
- Wayne Crowe
neCessa ry. to- inc rease the
Remarried
1-- 19SO Belt Loader SO Foot (ia'lo·in Plant.
SERVICE.
salary sche-d ules to the level oE
Only two widow s o[ U.S.
~ Pef. -Mul.
Th
.
l
d
1 - 1955 sem i-Trailer ompson, m « etter date
In At 9- 0ut At 5
the Kyger Creek Sc hool presidents have remarriedUse Our Free .Parking :...at
Presiden t Cleveland's widow ,
Fr,~e~alu9f63 Ch.ain Saws 18 Inch . May 10 , s ubmitted the Dis trict.
Frances
Folsom
Cleveland.
Po ulan ·
following six point plan for
15) The newly consolidated
wed Thomas J. Preston Jr. ,
22 11-;;-,.~966 Hand Mower - Bolen consolidation:
di s trict would continue to in . 1913 and President Ken · 2 - 1969 Hand Mowers fl ) The state would revoke receive state aid in 1975, 1976,_
nedy's widow, Jacqueline
Vu lcan 22 Inch
216 E. '2nd, Pomeroy
1 - 1946 Tar Kettle
Li l- the charters of North Gallia, and 1977, in annual amounts Bouvier Kenn edy, marrjed
llefo rd 165 Gallon
Southwestern and Hannan .
Aristotl e Onass is in 1968.
Li l1 -., 19S2 Tar Kett le
lleford 165 Gallon
Trace School Districts ef4 - Air Compressors
fective Jan . 1, 1974, instead of
3 - Elect ric Wafer Pump s ~
Trupar Dne -Th ird H.P., 60 Cyc., July 1, 1S7:J, as ·initially planliS Volt
d
2 - Elect ric Water Pumps - ne ·
Wh ite House 115 Volt , 3450
{ 2 ) The county
would
R .P .M .
b
1 - Sign Wash er - Wald propose, Y resolution, the
Model sc 200
2 - Gas Heat ers - Moores
WHOLE FRYl~G
20.000 B.T.U.
28 - Railroad Warning LightS
and Wire (I ncomplete )
j
TRACTORS
,
( Witti .Mower AttaGhm en h)
ALL MEAT
2 ~ 1969 lnternatio{lal 340
lnspeclion may !&gt; tart at 8:00
2 lb . Pkg .
A.M., Saturday. May 26. 197:).
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
TER MS: The Ohio Dir eclorol
Transportation reserves the
2 lb. GROUND BEEF
right to ac cept or rejecl cny or
SLICED BACON
a1 1 bids. He atso reserves the
(269) 2I lb.
righ t to remove any items of
C..t
f.W
lb. HAM SALAD
equipmenl from sa le list pr ior
,, SE·MI BONELESS". ~AM
to or dur ing au cfion .
F ·
h
· th 1973
(6-7 lb. avg.)
Each successful bidder shall
anners w o are m e
HOMEMADE
be req ui red to deposit at least20 F eed Grain and Whea t
percent of his tota l bid at time of
sa te. Deposil must be made bY Program can · report their
CER TIFIED CHECK or cash
to : Treasurer of State, c-o Ohio planting at the Meigs ASCS
Department of Transportat ion ·Office any time they have their
3 lb . SLICED PORK SHOULDER
and payment made in full crops planted .
3 lb. GROUND BEEF
before any equipm·ent ' i ~
(270)
3 lb . ASSORTED LUNCH MEAT
re mo ved . All equipmen t mu st
All participants must certify
· 2 lb . ROUND STEAK
be remove d within 5 work ing
J lb. HULK SAUSAGE
da ys from dale of sale or by July 1, 1973, to be eligible to
equ ipment rev .:! rt s back to the receive pa yment or to pt·escrve·
Departmenl of Transportat ion
un less other arr angeme nt s are their feed grain base or wheat
J lb. SIRLOIN ST.EI\K._
made with the District all otment.
' 2 lb. GROUND BEEF
Equ ipment Super intendent ,
2 lb. STEW MEAT .
It payment is made Oy
Farmers should have all
CERTIFIED CHECK , check their crops planted prior to
1) 2 lb. SLICED BACON
may exceed total purchases
4 lb . CHUCK ROAST
reQu ir ing cash refund .
certification. T~ose who do not
,,, SEMI BONELESS HAM
Bids may NOT be withdrawn
( 6· 7
after acceptance. All bids are intend to plant any crops may
FINAL and BINDING . Al l certify at any time. The Meigs
J lb.
NO STEAK
equ ipment to be accepted in its
ASCS Office is open frcm 7:45
".AS ~s :~ cond ilion .
S lb . CHUCK ROAST
PO R DETAIL S CO NTACT :
BULK sAusAGE
M R. Farle.'f , D.D.D. or E. S. a .m. to 4:30p.m . Monday thru
272 ) 33 lb.
lb. SPARE RIBS
Cull ums , D.E.S . - Disrric f No. Friday . For the convenience of
J lb. STEW MEAT
Ten , Mar ie tta , Ohio . Phone : those who cannot come into the
J lb. PORK CHOPS
Afea Code 614 Jlj -.02 12'.
office during regular hours, the
3 lb . ASSORTED LUNCH MEAT
.J . PHILLIP RICHLEY
ASCS
Office
will
be
open
until
. OEPIRECTO R OF
TRAN SPO RT AT 101\ noon saturday. June 16, a nd
WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD
Saturday , .Tunc :JO.
May 16, 23
poration,

draw in that lcapacity:
Several delegations were

SECOND PLACE WINNERS of the Wednesday Late
Mixed League, wa s the team of Moore and Morrow. Front

•

Agreement reached in
school -c onsolidations

Pursua n t fo th e prQv is ions of
Section 55 13.0.4 of the Revised
Code of Oh i o , l will offer for sa le
at pub I i c auction on the

for toe return of Mr . Seaman
t Robert) and for the dismissal
of Mr. Lovejoy t Jack ) . , ."
adding , " We ' re submitting
these in good fait~ ."
Todd Handl ey , a Point
Pleasant High Sehool stud ,
asked tllat three teac ers,
William Blaine , William ebb

were accepted bearing ap-

Boston rally in the last of the

to out of gas

UO as he ree led off his sixth Bureau said Tuesday.
"Diesel fuel shortages hav.e
straight win. The only run was
unearned beca use of his own reached the c ritical st&lt;J gc and
error when he bobbled Dave the Farm Bureau has urged
Nelson's smash to the mound 10 prompt {ederal action to get

land

past Kansas City . J ohn Ma yberMel Stottlemyre pitched a five- ry. \\ ho has driven in 4:2 runs
\~lth 42 hits, hit h\'O homers and
hitter for. his sixth victory.

Tractors close

once I get into a groove, r don ' t
wanL to lose it," Holtzman said.
CO LUMBUS (UP! ) - Ohio
··1 like to throw the ball b•ck
farm
ers could be without tracas soon as I ge t it from the
tor fuel by the end of the week,
catche r.''
Holtzman lowered his ERA to officials of the Ohio Farm

PT. PLEASANT - A Mason
County Board of Education
meeting lasting five hours,
which began Tuesday evening
and ended early today , failed to
produce any change in
recommendations for high
school administrative posts,
despite the fact that petitions

added a double an the t~O-run
fjfth inninp, to lead Minnesota

EACH
-TRADE EX PANS ION SALE-

SPECIAL SALE GROUP
LADIES VINYL BUBBLE

U BRELLAS~~'(
·
J1lst in time ror thoSe rainy

days. Ladies dome style vinyl
umbrellas. A very low Trade

Expansion Sale Price. Save

�I

I'

•
•

• - rne uauy sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., May 23, 1973

~ - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., May :0, 1973

"

Holtzman-posts ninth win, 4-l
Br I' ITO STELLINO
Milwaukee edged Boston. 4-2,
' PI Sports 1\'riler
and Minnesota outh.1sted KanEver since he posted a 9-0 sas City, 8-7.
record in 1967 before being
In the National League,
ealled into Army , Ken Holtz- ~l ontreal nipped Ch icago, 4-3,
man has been hailed as a m 11 innings, St. Louis beat
pitcher with a brilliant future . )l'cw York, 5-3, Philadelphia
He was supposed to be the new top ped Piltsbur~h. 7-l, San
S&lt;lndy Koufax.
Francisco beat Atlana. 7-3.
He didn 't quite live 'up to the Cincmnati topped Houston, 6-4,

Petitions carrying 1,000 names ineffective in Mason County

Blumberg for the league battmg
le.ad...-.368-with four hits, lnduding a three-run homer , to
pace the Y anks past DetroiL

sltlg iP 1n the third inmng 4!nd

Homers by Ken HendersQn ,
Chuc k Brinkmc.m and DiCk
Allen ca rried the Whi te Sox
o\"er the Angels. Stan Bahnsen
reputation when he won 11 and Los Angeles edged Sar pitched a three-hitter for his
ga mes in 1968 and then 17 the Diego, 5-1.
sixth victory .
next two seasons.
.
Designated hitter Jim Ray
Harmon Killebrew drove in
But now he ha s rappor t with Hart tied teammate Ron tw o run s with a tie-breaking

druvc in four runs for the
losers.
Milwaukee 's Jim Colborn and
John Curtis pitched scoreless
b:tll for eight innings until
Milwaukee exploded for four
runs in the ninth inni ng to beat,
Boston. Corman Thomas singled in the first one and pinchhiller Joe I.ahoud singled in
twu more to offset a twO-rtJ!l

Oakland A 's Manager Dick
Williams and he 's reeling off
the wins at a fas t clip.
Literally. lt took him only One

hour and 39 minutes Tuesday
nig ht to pol ish off the Rangers,
4-1, with a seven-hitter to boost

his record to 9-2.
" I like ro pitch fast because

the fifth wi th the bases loaded. fuel to farmers so food and
Rich McKinney gave him all fiber crops can be planted,' '
the help he needed as he drove the organization said in a state-

in three runs with a bases ment.
State Farm Bureau Execuloaded double in the fourth .
In the other games, Chicago tive Vice President ·c. W.
downed Califqrnia, 6~2, Detroit Swank said at least a 25 per
downed New York, 7-2, Cleve- cent increase in fuel supplies
beat

Baltimore,

PUBLIC NOTICE
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TR('N.SPORTATION

ninth.
Cleveland scoretl h\'{) runs in
the ninth to snap a 3-3 tie and
beat Baltimore. Walt Willia ms
singled. stole s_econd and scored
on lwo wi ld pitches b.Y Dave

5-3, was needed.
Swank said . the problem

"stemmed from fuel alloca~
.. tions made for this year, when

Organizatio n

officials

pointed out the Ohio ~ corn crop
" is only half in and soybean
planting has barely begun."
Swan k added that "even if the

pre:sent fuel crisis eases, there
wi1l be an even greater one at
harvest time."
The Farm Bureau said it also
se nt

t eleg rams

to

Ohio

representatives and senators
in Washington, urging them to
"take whatever action possible
to increase the allocation of

fuel for immediate distribution

to

f&lt;~rmer s."

Swank said the proble m

"stemmed from fuel allocations made for this year,_when

almost no fall plowing was
almost no fall plowing was · done , on the hasis of last year's
rime •.on the basis of last year's demands, when fall plowing
demands, when fall powing was completed on a near

NOTICE
OF
SALE OF was completed on a near
PASSENGER
CARS ,
~
TON normal schedule ."
CARRYALLS ,
PICKUPS , DUMP TRUCKS
&lt;MOST
W-PLOWS
AND
SPREADERS). TRACTORS WMOWER
ATTACHMENTS ,
TAR DISTRIBUTOR, TAR
KETTLES ,
AIR
COM ·
PRESSORS , CHAIN SAWS,
HAND MOWERS, AND OTHER
M.ISCELLANEOUS ITEMS .
CONTRAtTSALESLEGAL
COPY NO. 73 · 377
COLUMBUS, OH 10,
APR1l24, 19]3.

normal schedule."

McK•Ily

before

Buddy

and Mr _ Brandenberr and
pro&lt;imately 1,000 signa tures . . Robert Keesee, PPHS.~1.ill
At the same meeting, cipal. be reconsidered
hearing d:ates were set; asked for reasons for the cansdiscrepancies were shown in (ers of the teachers and
some of t}le t;ounty's hot lunch dismissal of Keesee. H e
prog rams, complaints were commented, "We can 't ~
made regardin g grievance where!ls this wou1d improve
procedures, and the board 's our system ... ''
present lega l coun sel will with-

FIRST PLACE WINNERS of the Wednesday Late Mixed

!

League, at the Pomeroy Bowling Lanes was the team of Fultz
and Bentley . Front row, 1-r, are, Joy Bentley a nd Betty
Fultz ; back r ow, John Bentl ey and Bernard Fultz .

Bell

singled in an insurance run .
NEll' MACIIINE
COLUMBUS (UP I ) - Litton

Automated Business Systems
ha s invented a new voting
machine which will be inspected by state offi cials, Secretary of State Ted W. Brown

Ohio Valley Electric Cor-

Ohio

Electric

.

'1

95

-$

·HAM SALAD

$

CHEESE

SPREAD

992-3502

Withers, " We'd like to plead

IS 20 1 25 1

$

87¢

All MEAT

WIENERS

·--

EMADE

HAM

.·

Lb-79¢

SALAD......... .. . · .

MIX
OR
MATCH
•
Betsy Ross"
WIENER

3

20 oz.
Bottles

49¢

4 oz.
Can

OR

Saigon briefed
on .peace talks PARIS (UPI) -

HAMBURGER

BUNS

.
9¢
2 5
8 PAK

Pkgs .

PARKAY

Saigon Tuesday to brief officials on the latest round of
talks on Vietnam-this time,
an effort to make sure the

ceasefire there does not break
down completely .
Acting after a 61'•-hour
meeting with Hanoi negotiator
Le Due Tho, the longest so far
by the two men, Kissinger sent
William H. Sullivan, a deputy
assistant secretary of state and
the U.S. amhassador-&lt;lesignate
to the Philippines, to the South
Vietnamese capital aboard a
special U.S. Air Force jet.

3

l lb.

Pkgs .

MUSTARD

WAFFLE CREAMS
10 07. pkg. 47'

23¢

16 oz.
Jar

2 ~~~~~s 89~
With Coupon ·
Good AI:
Rutland Dept. Store

!
!I
11

II

11

L--·-----·--·----5--26..:?~----J

a "very quick' ~ visit.
In the South Vietnamese

Bag

49~

$}49

Just flil ovt ttt. coupon below 4IIKI moll. Our
Js limited 10 mail
...... _IWWI -

---COUPON------·

I
59¢ !

·,.,..,ay

Peanut Butler

Wilh Coupon
Good At Rutland
Dept. Store

1
I
I

L':' ______ :.~!~:..=~:::_.;.._j

Caruth is represe ntin g three
The boC~rd in orficial &lt;J Ction
Han nan teac hers who ara set G p.m. on June 8 as the
Lawrcn ce Car tmill, Mr . hea ring d::~ ~e for eight tea chers

LHk es. rivers ;.1nd rese rvo irS cover less than 1 per
cent

GOSPEL MEETING

in runnal disl·ussjon set up.'' scheduled .
A ssis t&lt;:~nt Supt. Charl es
Maxine
L&lt;ttht&gt;y,
J."'ood
Bearwallow
objected .
Ch~trnbcrs explained that when Ana lyist. appe.&lt;tred 'herore the
Church of Chri s !
She also submitted a com- some teachers appeared at :1 · board approximately one hour
plaint un Awards Day which hoard meeting ear lier he se nt reviewing se veral of the
Bob Ke ss inger, spea ker
was held at the school Tuesday nwre lh;.ur 200 for111s with l'ounty's hot lunch programs
tram Harold, Ky .
saying that it was only for lhcm, " th at have bee n and dti ng wh.at she termed
~t lh l rtcs and chcerlccaders and
I mtle North of Route 68 1 be dis tributed wholl!salc .. ,
'' 111 i ~ man :.1 g c men t
0 r
tween Darwi n &amp; Alfred.
accused McCausland of not
Adkins asserted ,' '' r've never programs . " Board member
giving th e other awar~ s been convinced these people Adkius said , '•We need to tak e
May '8 lhru June 3
beca use "some students were need a griev;:tnce procedure. a lung hard look ut it. We can't
8 p .n{ each Evening
g "'~ing- l o get them that he didn 't Those people c.·arne he re with a
like and didn 't want to get pt'ub lcm. I think Mr. Damron
them" .
righf ovc1· there ( nodding his
Supl. Wi•.hers assured the head ) Sf'ar cd tllt)sc people
young delegation lllctt "awards Oll l . "
will be given out" adding " I've
Chmnbcrssaid " I do~'l know
disc ussed this with Mr. Me. (ltty thin g .about tha l. If we have
Causland '' .
erred , I'd like to be notified of
Miss Presto n d.i sc lu!ied it. Why th ey were up here 1 do
STORY
"There was an uproar in IJ1e nul kn ow, Why Danmm was
For Now Thru Summer
school. The students were very here I do 11ot know .··
Cool baring . These a ll
upset ove r it.11
Adkins was finn a11d lo ud
lea lh er sandals. Lifting to
.J;mlt's Caruth of the West when lie said, " We :llilt don·t
s unny Summer spirits w ith
Virginia Educatiun Association krww why tho:::;c people were
n ew · heel he ight s. p la t wa s prese nt and complained here . This uld stuff of passing
forms.
tha t he couldn ' t ge t a grievance lire buck is nu goOd . l lhink Mr.
step sc heduled noting · ·J've run Withers should bring this to llw

notices to 30 s tudents takin g
pa1·t in a strike that has closed
down the campus since April

of Nebra ska's 77,227

sq uare miles. But Neb raska
has a bigger und ergro und
wate r supply than any oth er
state in the un ion .

"NOTICE"
TO LOT OWNERS IN LETART AND PLANTS

.CEMETERIES

l

Bone Ki d

r Wh ile

NOW IS THE TIME TO PAY FOR LOT MOWING.
'5.00 PER LOT PER YEAR

l

Kid

N&amp;M
Width:;

MARGUERITE'S
SHOES

LETART TOWNSHIP TRUSTEES
RD. 2, RACINE, OHIO 45771

102 E . Main

Belly Ohlinger

Pqmeroy

MIDDLEPORT and POMEROY

·,

fine points in the (Jan . 271

treaty."
Referring to a rece-nt state-.
ment by Thieu that there could
be no cooperation with the
Communists, Thach said :
"This man again is doi11g
everything to put a monkey

wrench in the works. He has

-.~,1/!11'••· ~

- •

iW?.J '

';/)

'

•"t 'i ' . ~" ::z,
.if' .

·1 ~ ·"

.....

\"-

...

. ..... i,

'

.,
.·

.i~.,....~
~ '~ ,.. .~
J .·
l~t.lili','"'
'

.~~\:
'\?,.- ) . ~,·~-J
r. ·t

~

.

~

COUPON

. I

TODAY

...,.. - ,,.. of Cha... a Tolo........ Amplifier

:·

:HAMI ..........................................•..... .•
I ADOttiSS ······· · ·· ··· ··· ··· ·· ··-·····-· ············· I
I City •••••••••••.......... ,, ... . .. State_. ... ···· .·····~ I
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---

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U6SOUTIIH-ST.

i

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____c!'-!~!'.:.~~2.!'-------J

..

REMNANTS

Be here C{lrly Thw·sduy . morn ing: for the big
Trade Ex:~a,Q s ion Sa le Va~ue - :1-piecc. mixing
bowl set m ,,~ rttdUatcd s 1zcs. Made from unbreakabl e polyet.helenc plastic. Limit : one set..

', to 1 yard pieces of high quality fabric s of all
kinds. New assortment. Big choi ce of colors ami
p3ttf,!rris. A big bargain buy for home sewers.

· Shop a nd save now during Stiffler's Big Trade

c

Expansion Sule .

1 YARD
LENGTH
FABRIC
REMNANTS

-TRADE EXPANSION SALE-

- TRADE EXPANSION SALE-

LADIES WASH ABLE COTTON
TERRY HOUSE

SLIPPERS

~i~

EXTRA SPECIAL SALE GROUP
7" TO 24" ASSORTED
Big assortment of 7 to 24 in('h famuus brand nylon
zippers. Heg ular values lo fi9c. Come one! Come all !
To Stiffler 1s Big Trade E1epansion Sa le ! Doors open
Thur:;day morning at 9 a. m. sharp.

. . . on·"·

c

ASSORTED
·coLORS

PAIR
-TRADE EXPANSION

EACH

CARDS TRASH .BAGS

•
••••••

Big size vinyl plastic garhage

· bags. Saves time and keeps your
trash can c:leilr't. 35 to a package.
Com~s complete with ties.

asso rted fancy subjects on
the ha ck.

ITALIAN STYLE

SANDALS
Daringly bare : .. our spring-iOta-

summer sandals. For day and
play and ca refre ~ . stepping .
Imported Italian style sandals.

00

that will keep your shoes in excellent condition. Clear bottom
~&gt;ith

colored covers .. Begular 79

HOME OR OFFICE ELECTRIC
POLISHED ALUMINUM

HOT POTS
For-home or office [our cup
&lt;:iluminwn hot potsJor soup
or coffe e. Electric cord in-cluded.

PMG.

DECK

LADIES-INFANTS~MISSES

1\ clei:lr plustic see thru shoe box

c

c
N SION SALE-

SHOE BOXES,

.... ... ..,E EXPANSION. SALE-

COMPLETE WITH TWIST TIES
PACKAGE OF 35 PLASTIC

Plastic coated bridge or
poker · playing ca rds with

SPECIAL GROUP GOTHAM
CLEAR PLASTIC
.

ASSORT£D
SIZES

- TRADE EXPANSION SALE -

ASSORTED PLASTIC COATED
BRIDGE OR POKER

PLA

- T~ADE EXPANSION SALE-

NYLON ZIPPERS

Comfortable crepe sole terry house
slippers in assorted plain colors and
fancy patterns. Sizes S·M-L-XL.

c

V210

OF $2.00
OR MORE
SET
-THURSDAY MORNING ONLY-LIMIT 1 SET TO A CUSTOMER

•

--- TRADE EX

..

BIG NEW ASSORTMENT
Y2 TO 1 YARD FABRIC

MIXING BOWL SE

"We are going over all the

.:-,.,...::)
' _. i .
·- ... , ·,, .
L
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - , '-.!----.. - -7· . ":"..'l ~j .
I
SEND THIS
.
" .
II

I
I
I -

WITH A PURCHASE OF $2.ll0 OR MORE
3 PIECE UNBREAKABL.E PLASTIC

WITU A
PURCHASE

-TRADE

PANSION

LE-

SPECIAL NEW ASSORTMENT
3"X18" QUALITY BROADLOvm•

RUG BLOCKS
13 x 18 inch assorted rug
blocks mi:lde from
heavy

quality

broadloom carpeti ng:
Big selection . Trade

i

_____..._.._.,..___.._.._...._,_..,.-_..,___..~.-~

·WEEK ·END SPECIALS

Thach said. " It is his responsibility.

_· }

TO THE HARD OF
HEARING - .• 1\
TElEPHONE
AMPLIFIER
1111• oH.r Is Umlftld to

Instant Coffee -

~!r OL

"That is Mr. Kissinger's
assessment, but not Qurs," _

~~·-.....~~ ,

FREE

NESCAFE

10 oz.
Jar

the talks.

capital, a government spokes- ·been doing it all the time. "
man said Sullivan would brief

theHard-of.tMarlngonly.

.----~----COUPON------~

. JHRILLLIQUID .

5 lb.

news conference when he was
ment Monday that " some
progress" hade been made at

Sullivan said at the airport, for

CHARCOAL

99¢

TEEN QUEEN
NABISCO ·

39¢

North Vietnamese official at
the t&lt;Jiks, Deputy Foreign
Minister Nguyen Co Thach.
Thach apparently made the
disclosure in a slip of the
tongue . He also laughed at a

was their fifth since· last
Thursday and be said another
meeting was planned today .

again :tomorrow."
Sullivan, an expert on Asian
affairs, · ac·companied
Kissinger at each session of the
talks with Tho and led the
American side at two long
meetings by technical experts.
"I am going to S8igon,"

PAPER PLATES

First word. of Sullivan's trip
came from the second-ranking

asked about Kissinger 's state-

Kissinger said after the Tuesday session. "We will meet

Size

officials on the progress of the
talks.
.The Saigon spokesman said
that he did not know if Sullivan
would see President Nguyen
Van Thieu, but It was considered uolikely Sullivan would
make the trip to meet only lowlevel officials.

Kissinger's meeting with Tho

"I have nothing to say,"

2'1,

KINGSFORD

MARGARINE

Henry A.

Kissing!;!r sent a top . aide ' to

By Piece ... -.~~J!r
Sliced·-... ...1 ~:. 81

40 Count ·

a ttenti on of the board ."

bailing the program

-STIFFLER'S ANNUAL TRADE EXPANSION SALE-

BACON

9"

intu quite a bi t of diffi culty."

•tfm lmuc
(JUl."

Williams has been harbering for .22 years.

-DIXIE

BLACK PEPPER

Harbour and Mr. Sowards_ lie who hn ve made requests for
smd \\ lie11 one teacher tried lo this. The names were not
f1l c it g,rieva ncc he was release-d last night, when the
;'having truubl e ~e tting an specia l
meeting
WiJ /&gt;i

hair pieces for men, blow waving, and layer and shag cuts.
H3ir pieces for men may be purchased from Williams.

PORK &amp;BEANS

FRANK'S

20. The action followed 0:111 eggthrowin g episode against
admin_istt·ators Tuesda y.

l'lub is prese nhn~ Bibles to
St• r1inrs and they wanted their
sponsor to llliJke this presentati (•n for gr:ututltiun, since it
was his idea lo presen t the
Bibles, but sa id the princiJUtl

COMPLETES ADVANCED TRAINING - Mickey
Willil!ms, owner and operator . of Karr's Barber Shop,
Pomeroy, recently took advanced training in hair styling at
Coluinbus. The instructor was Joe Carlow, of Miami, Fla ., ·a
U. S. hair stylist.lnstruction was given in razor sculpturing,

SLAB .

89¢ 2

Ambrshine returned $4.40

paid $7 .60 and $4.40 and third
place Miracle Beam paid $3.
In the ni ghtly double, A. c.:s
Thor (7) and Byrd Paradise ( 4)
returned $9.20.
The a ttendance was 4,863and
.the handle was $234,017.

TEEN QUEEN

CATSUP

cia ls today sen t expulsion

Second place Davis Direct

NEW CABBAGE ..................~~:l5'
TEEN QUEEN .

'&gt;TUDENTS EXl'ELLED
YELLOW SPRINGS, Ohio
( UP1 ) - Anti oc h College offi-

wire by one-half length Tu esday night to win the eighth
race, a $1 ,400 claiming pace, at
Scioto Downs .
$3.20 a nd $2.60.

SUPERIORS

lb.

accuse d Supt. Withe rs of
denying them 1/w ri ~ht to
appear on the agenda or La st
nigl!t's meeting,
In defense, Supt. Withers
read a1oud a letter to Josephine
Chtipman in which he noted
" the Bo:..rd of Education has
spent mu('h time listening to
rou .. .'' He also cited that
ot hers wanted to apJ&gt;ear·and in
O!'der lo afford the right to
them he wa ~ makin g this
Side rs explained to Handley decision .
that the board couldn 't do
Miss Preston was quick to
anything on Kee-see without the state, "We have two new
s uperintendent's re co m- problems at Hcmn;m that the
mendation.
board doesn' t know ab.out."
Brady commended young
Siders polled the I&gt;Onrd when
Handley stating " for speaking Bradv made a motion to hear
in a gen tlemen1y way ... We the Han na ri group, adding, " I
may not agree, but 1 commend think il's ri gh tfull y our job."
you ror speaking your piece."
Charles H. Damron, attorney
A Hannan Hi gh Schoo l representing Mr . _McCa usland,
delegation
wa s
also {'O ilHllented
and
Siders
recug nized. Approximately 96 declared Damron "out of ornames were on a petition der•·. The vole was 4-1 wi th Bill
submitted by stud ents asking Withers dissenting and Siders.
for the transfer or dismissal or Adkins , Brady &lt;.Hld Hay Fields
Bright McCausland , princi pal. voting in favor .
A stud~nt , Terry Preston
Miss Pr·cston sHid the Bible

shine beat Davis Direct to the

Reeves
NOODLES

SUPERI()RS

Charles Clwmbt•rs wh o
remarked that he had con~
li1c ll'd smne " who did not sign
this and somt:; names appe.ared
more than once ... Handley said
ere were more than 300
name~ on the list, remarking
"considerin g that so me
teachers threatened the kids
... would have- been at leas t
200 more If teachers hadn' t
threatened kids .. ...
Board president Harry

SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Amor-

NicklauS! will tune for Open in IVB play

WI

Phone Us
Your Orderl (

~ rl(t(lt (,G;

Mi chael F:rwin, son of Mr.
Mrs. Ches ter Erwin,
The ballot in the new machine may be marked with an Middleport, graduated Sunday
ord inary lead pencil and can be from the University of West
read by a n optica l reader in- Virgjnia ma gnua cum laude.
Erwin received a bachelor of
terfaced with a computer .
scie nce dc~rce in forestry. He
ls a member of Xj Sigma Pi,
AWARD GIVEN
WASHING TON (UP! ) - Dr . national forestry honorary
Harr y F . Golds t ei n , c hief fraternity : Ga mm a Sig ma
veterinarian for Ohio and also Delta, agricu ltural scie nce
th e state 's chief of meat in- nati onal hon orar y society, and
spection was presented the t11e A_meri can Society of
U.S. Agriculture Depal'tment's Forestry.
Begi nning Jun e 1, Erwin will
highest servi ce award Tuesday
- the Distinguished Service A- beg ih work in fores try
ward.
rrocurement al Waiter Boro, S.
C. He and his wife, Judy, and
TAKING TOP INDIVIDUAL HONORS in the Wednesday Late Mixed League at the
their.children, Scott, 10; Kevin,
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes were, front row , 1-r, [letty Fultz, most improved; Virginia Hoyt, high
eight, and Mcli~s a . four, plan
average a nd hi gh series; Pat Holter, high game; back row , Dan Meadows, high average; Dick
to move there next week.
Rosenbaum, high series and high ga,me, and Jotm Bentley, most improved.
A g raduate of . Middleport
High School, Erwin ~etve d
three years in the U. S. Navy,
&lt;:~t1d was emp loyed eight years
at Dupon t. He attend ed
PHILADELPHIA (UP! ) _: suburban Whitemars h Valley between Oakmont and WhiteMarietta College {or a year
not less than •.n 1974.
The !VB Golf Classic an- Country Club June 7-10.
marsh will be to his advantage
before en roll in g al the
16) The bond levy fo r new
nounced Monday that Jack
Since he became a touring at the Open, where he will be
Unive rsily of \V es t Virgi nia . school building construction
Nicklaus will break one of his pro in 1962, Nicklaus never has defending the title he 'fOn last
would be placed on the ballot
long-standing traditions and entered a tournament the week year,
earlier
than
1975
and
would
be
T\\'0
STEXL
GEMS
co'mpete
in its tournament here prior to. the U.S. Open,
.
.
.
Others scheduled to play in
pa yable firs t in !97_6, or in the
one week before the U.S. Open. · The Open will be held at the the tournament included Lee
SAN FRANCISCO (UP! )
Y,C&lt;Jr in which Laxes are firs t Two men in ·coverai1s robbed a
Nelson G. Harris, president Oakmont Country Club near Trevino, who reached the $1
,
pajd by Ga vin Plant's Un it No. downtown jewelry store of an of the $150,000 tournament, PittSburgh.
million mark in earnings .last
1.
estimated $400,000 in gems said Nicklaus confirmed his
Harris said Nicklaus, a .two- week at Memphis, and former
BASED UPO N prese nt and Tuesday.
ap pearance in the 72-hole time winner of th e tournament Masters
champion
Gay
Gunther Zimmerman, 47, tourney to be held ·at the here, felt the similarities Brewer.
estimated rates of spending:,
the co unty boa rd 's best said the men were waiting
esti mate is th at the con- when he showed up to open the
solidated tax rate to be paid in store . T hey produced pistols,
1975 by a new distri ct would be made him turn off the burglar
FROZEN
no more thafl 16 mills per $1 ,000. alarm and open the safe, he
SPECIAL
-of assessed valuati on for all said .
Zimmerman sail;) a prevous
opera ling and bond redemption
levies, in cluding vocational robbery attempt was stopped
by a s pecially trained police
·
sc hool expe nd itures.
Suc h rate compares to the dog who , bit the iiltruder.
tota l school ta x rate pa yable in However , he disco ntinued use
12 oz. Pkg.

CH-ICKENS ....... -.............. .

AND

'

and

..

p/anhng ..1-ne

,.-1_lru.r• o._,

petition with appr.o&lt;imately
700 names saying to Supt.

When young Handley staled,
" I guess you can · Say rm
pullin g ~ my head on the
chopping bl ock," the board
was quick to discount this-.
In discussing the petition
submitted by PPHS students ,
Brady asked for this and drew
comment from assistant Supt.

announced Tuesday .

Robinson's Cleaners

report after

Hope Moore and Mary Morrow; back, Fred

·I , .c-,-

SHIRT
FINISHING

F.armer.'S can

ar~.

row, 1-r

heard. · Mrs. Charles Yeage r ,

spokesman for a parents group
in the bend area, submitted a

Morrow and Russ Moore. Tbe two teams will hold their
banquet dinner this evening at the Mountoineer Dinner
Theatre at Hurricane, II'. Va.
·

Erwin wms
high

co nsolidation of lhe fOur loca l
school
dis tricts effective Jan.,
premises located at the Distr ict
Company,
the
State
Board
of
No . Ten . WHhlngton County
3, 1974 , ins tead of July 1, 1973,
Garage - Stale Route No . 26 . in Education and the Gallia as ini tia)ly planned.
Washington County, on the 26th
day of May , 1973 at 10 :00 A.M. County Board of Education
(:1 ) The tax rates to be paid in
Eastern Dayl'i ghl Saving T i me ·have entered into agreement
1974 would be computed and
th e
following
des cribed
Passenger Cars. Carryalls, 11:~ that , will consOlidate, Gallia paid. on the individual assessed
Ton P i cKup s, Dump Tru c ks
fmosf
with
Plows and County's four school districts val~ation in each dis tri ct . in
Spr·e ade r ), Tractors wi·fh effective Jan . 3, 1974.
1973, rather than on a conMower Attachmen ts, Tar
In ail ·exc hange of letlers solidated basis. Except- for
Distributor , Ta r Ket tl es , Air
Comp ressors , Cha ln Sa ws , made public today by Gallia administrative purposes, this
Hand . Mowers, and Ofher
County School Superintendent would have the same effect as
Misce llaneous Item s :
PASSENGER CARS Clarence E . Thompson and '
if .consOlidation was not ef~
5 - 1967 Fo rd!&gt;
23 - 1968 Chevrolet.s ·
John Ray Si.mms, Assistan t fective u"lil 1975.
1 ~ 1968 Plymouth ·
Secretary and Tax Consultant
I 41 The school i&lt;lx !"ate to be
8 - I969 Chevrol ets
1 - 1970 Ford
for OVEC, Simms •tated that paid in 1975, based on the 1974
CARRYALLS
~a l though taxes to be paid by the
1 - 196-5 Chevrol et
co n so l ida ~ed
assessed
1 - 1966 Chevrolet
company
under
the
proposed
va
lu
&lt;Jtion,
would
be
computed
3 - 1969 Chevrolets
plan will be s ubstantially· in- e~nd paid on a cons.olidated
PICKUP TRUCKS - lh TON
'2 - 1965 Ford s
creased in 1975, OVEC wilL not basis; but would be structured
15 - 1966 Ford s
1 - 1967 Chevrolet
oppose consolidation under the by usin g the appropriate
DUMP TRUCKS- 3 CUBIC
present plan . .
district's ''outside " millage,
YARDS
(Most With Plows &amp; Spreadl:!rs l
OVEC had previously
together With the appropr-iate 1973 in the Kyge r Creek School of the dog when it bit a
3 - 1964 Fo rds
opposed a consolidation this
1 t 965 Dodge
' 'inside" millage so as to ·resu lt Oislricl of 13.2 mills, and the customer.
12 - 1966 Dodges
to
be
year
because
taxes
in a consolidated rate that on ly new :Spending planned and
12 - 1966 Fords
TRUCK
paid by the company would
would levy on local taxpayers estimated for 1975 is about
1 - 1960 Dodge Cab -Cha ssis
be
significantly
increased
in
an
amount no more than the $100,000 to conform to certiFied
2500 to 3SOO G.v .w.
TAR DISTRIBUTOR
the two-~·ear period p'rior to aggregate of the tax levy paid and n on~ce rti f i ca ted sala r ~·
I ·- 1956 Fo rd With Littleford
the time · taxes were to be in 1974 by the four separate sched ules to the Prese nt Kyger
Distributor - 800 Ga llon
MISCELLANEOU S
paid by the new gener3ting dis tri c ts , plus an a moun t Creek School Distri ct sc hedu le.
1 - 1947 Crane JO Boot Boom
facilities of the James M.
SAME DAY
- Wayne Crowe
neCessa ry. to- inc rease the
Remarried
1-- 19SO Belt Loader SO Foot (ia'lo·in Plant.
SERVICE.
salary sche-d ules to the level oE
Only two widow s o[ U.S.
~ Pef. -Mul.
Th
.
l
d
1 - 1955 sem i-Trailer ompson, m « etter date
In At 9- 0ut At 5
the Kyger Creek Sc hool presidents have remarriedUse Our Free .Parking :...at
Presiden t Cleveland's widow ,
Fr,~e~alu9f63 Ch.ain Saws 18 Inch . May 10 , s ubmitted the Dis trict.
Frances
Folsom
Cleveland.
Po ulan ·
following six point plan for
15) The newly consolidated
wed Thomas J. Preston Jr. ,
22 11-;;-,.~966 Hand Mower - Bolen consolidation:
di s trict would continue to in . 1913 and President Ken · 2 - 1969 Hand Mowers fl ) The state would revoke receive state aid in 1975, 1976,_
nedy's widow, Jacqueline
Vu lcan 22 Inch
216 E. '2nd, Pomeroy
1 - 1946 Tar Kettle
Li l- the charters of North Gallia, and 1977, in annual amounts Bouvier Kenn edy, marrjed
llefo rd 165 Gallon
Southwestern and Hannan .
Aristotl e Onass is in 1968.
Li l1 -., 19S2 Tar Kett le
lleford 165 Gallon
Trace School Districts ef4 - Air Compressors
fective Jan . 1, 1974, instead of
3 - Elect ric Wafer Pump s ~
Trupar Dne -Th ird H.P., 60 Cyc., July 1, 1S7:J, as ·initially planliS Volt
d
2 - Elect ric Water Pumps - ne ·
Wh ite House 115 Volt , 3450
{ 2 ) The county
would
R .P .M .
b
1 - Sign Wash er - Wald propose, Y resolution, the
Model sc 200
2 - Gas Heat ers - Moores
WHOLE FRYl~G
20.000 B.T.U.
28 - Railroad Warning LightS
and Wire (I ncomplete )
j
TRACTORS
,
( Witti .Mower AttaGhm en h)
ALL MEAT
2 ~ 1969 lnternatio{lal 340
lnspeclion may !&gt; tart at 8:00
2 lb . Pkg .
A.M., Saturday. May 26. 197:).
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
TER MS: The Ohio Dir eclorol
Transportation reserves the
2 lb. GROUND BEEF
right to ac cept or rejecl cny or
SLICED BACON
a1 1 bids. He atso reserves the
(269) 2I lb.
righ t to remove any items of
C..t
f.W
lb. HAM SALAD
equipmenl from sa le list pr ior
,, SE·MI BONELESS". ~AM
to or dur ing au cfion .
F ·
h
· th 1973
(6-7 lb. avg.)
Each successful bidder shall
anners w o are m e
HOMEMADE
be req ui red to deposit at least20 F eed Grain and Whea t
percent of his tota l bid at time of
sa te. Deposil must be made bY Program can · report their
CER TIFIED CHECK or cash
to : Treasurer of State, c-o Ohio planting at the Meigs ASCS
Department of Transportat ion ·Office any time they have their
3 lb . SLICED PORK SHOULDER
and payment made in full crops planted .
3 lb. GROUND BEEF
before any equipm·ent ' i ~
(270)
3 lb . ASSORTED LUNCH MEAT
re mo ved . All equipmen t mu st
All participants must certify
· 2 lb . ROUND STEAK
be remove d within 5 work ing
J lb. HULK SAUSAGE
da ys from dale of sale or by July 1, 1973, to be eligible to
equ ipment rev .:! rt s back to the receive pa yment or to pt·escrve·
Departmenl of Transportat ion
un less other arr angeme nt s are their feed grain base or wheat
J lb. SIRLOIN ST.EI\K._
made with the District all otment.
' 2 lb. GROUND BEEF
Equ ipment Super intendent ,
2 lb. STEW MEAT .
It payment is made Oy
Farmers should have all
CERTIFIED CHECK , check their crops planted prior to
1) 2 lb. SLICED BACON
may exceed total purchases
4 lb . CHUCK ROAST
reQu ir ing cash refund .
certification. T~ose who do not
,,, SEMI BONELESS HAM
Bids may NOT be withdrawn
( 6· 7
after acceptance. All bids are intend to plant any crops may
FINAL and BINDING . Al l certify at any time. The Meigs
J lb.
NO STEAK
equ ipment to be accepted in its
ASCS Office is open frcm 7:45
".AS ~s :~ cond ilion .
S lb . CHUCK ROAST
PO R DETAIL S CO NTACT :
BULK sAusAGE
M R. Farle.'f , D.D.D. or E. S. a .m. to 4:30p.m . Monday thru
272 ) 33 lb.
lb. SPARE RIBS
Cull ums , D.E.S . - Disrric f No. Friday . For the convenience of
J lb. STEW MEAT
Ten , Mar ie tta , Ohio . Phone : those who cannot come into the
J lb. PORK CHOPS
Afea Code 614 Jlj -.02 12'.
office during regular hours, the
3 lb . ASSORTED LUNCH MEAT
.J . PHILLIP RICHLEY
ASCS
Office
will
be
open
until
. OEPIRECTO R OF
TRAN SPO RT AT 101\ noon saturday. June 16, a nd
WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD
Saturday , .Tunc :JO.
May 16, 23
poration,

draw in that lcapacity:
Several delegations were

SECOND PLACE WINNERS of the Wednesday Late
Mixed League, wa s the team of Moore and Morrow. Front

•

Agreement reached in
school -c onsolidations

Pursua n t fo th e prQv is ions of
Section 55 13.0.4 of the Revised
Code of Oh i o , l will offer for sa le
at pub I i c auction on the

for toe return of Mr . Seaman
t Robert) and for the dismissal
of Mr. Lovejoy t Jack ) . , ."
adding , " We ' re submitting
these in good fait~ ."
Todd Handl ey , a Point
Pleasant High Sehool stud ,
asked tllat three teac ers,
William Blaine , William ebb

were accepted bearing ap-

Boston rally in the last of the

to out of gas

UO as he ree led off his sixth Bureau said Tuesday.
"Diesel fuel shortages hav.e
straight win. The only run was
unearned beca use of his own reached the c ritical st&lt;J gc and
error when he bobbled Dave the Farm Bureau has urged
Nelson's smash to the mound 10 prompt {ederal action to get

land

past Kansas City . J ohn Ma yberMel Stottlemyre pitched a five- ry. \\ ho has driven in 4:2 runs
\~lth 42 hits, hit h\'O homers and
hitter for. his sixth victory.

Tractors close

once I get into a groove, r don ' t
wanL to lose it," Holtzman said.
CO LUMBUS (UP! ) - Ohio
··1 like to throw the ball b•ck
farm
ers could be without tracas soon as I ge t it from the
tor fuel by the end of the week,
catche r.''
Holtzman lowered his ERA to officials of the Ohio Farm

PT. PLEASANT - A Mason
County Board of Education
meeting lasting five hours,
which began Tuesday evening
and ended early today , failed to
produce any change in
recommendations for high
school administrative posts,
despite the fact that petitions

added a double an the t~O-run
fjfth inninp, to lead Minnesota

EACH
-TRADE EX PANS ION SALE-

SPECIAL SALE GROUP
LADIES VINYL BUBBLE

U BRELLAS~~'(
·
J1lst in time ror thoSe rainy

days. Ladies dome style vinyl
umbrellas. A very low Trade

Expansion Sale Price. Save

�7- The Daily Senltnel Middleport Pomeroy, 0 , May 23, 1973

•

•
ti -

Highest level
WASHINGTON 1 UP!I
Fonner policeman John J
Caulf1eld sa) s President
Ntxon's law)e.r asked hm1 to
transmit an offt?'r of executl\e
clemency
to
connc ted
Watergate conspirator James
W McCord from the \ery
highest le\els of the Wh1 te

cle~nency

House
The
President
categoncallv demcs he made
an) such offer
The Senate Watergate com
nuttet&gt; tCJ day resumes 1ts
111qmr\ tn hopes of hndmg the
truth about any such offerwhether one was made and 1f

for the f1rst t1mc that he had

so b) \\hom

ordered h1s t"otop atdes H R

At no tnne did I author1zc
..tnl ofrer of ex.ecut1ve
clemency for the Watergate
defcnd&lt;~nts, nor d1d l kno" of
any such offer "N1xon sa1d m a

statement Tuesday
The Pres1dent also diSclosed

H.tldema n

&lt;:~nd

John

offer is verified
0

Fhrlictun.m, to hmtt the tn
\ est1gat10n of Watergate so 11
" ould not expose national
secunty oper.,1tmns
lL was certamly not my
mtent, nor In} w1sh ," he sa1d
that the mvest1gation of the
Water ga te break m or of

related acts be unpected tn any
way
N1xon Concedes Try

NLXon conceded, however,
that others m h1s admmtstra.
tton did try to Impede !he
Watergate mvest1gat1on
ln another development,
what had been expected to be

President found nation's security
key to limiting Watergate investigations

•

lliSIIEH
ur derullw:. 1\H• tup 11des ll R
He s~ud he dtd It to protect Wh1le House and not to 1mpede smce the June 17 break m of
1UPI 1
H,tld li Mn md ,.J uhn D F rhch lnghl) sens1t1ve
nattona l hnngtng: wrongdoers to JUSltcc the NatiOna l Democratic head
Pres1dcn1 N1xon dtscloscd for uldll t1 1 at the Watcrg t.~te sc&lt;.: unty operati Ons betng con
But he conceded that some of qua1 ters and he promised
the f1rst ttnw fucsda\ he 'h Jd ln\f&gt;Sl i)..! II lUll
du e ted b) the CIA and the hts a1des probabl~ went beyond addrtwnal responses when fur
h1s directives und attempted to tl1e1 queshons are ra1sed
htde 11lega l acltvJtres whrch
He made these pomts
they and others had undertaken
- The truth about the Water
m h1s bchall
gate affair s hould be brought
N1xon also revealed tha t he out man orderly fashiOn and he
Wds so conce1ned about leaks "a s hfttng executive pr1v1lege
of se nsltrve government secrets to allow h1s aides to testrfy
md dumcstrL' vwlcm:e m 1970 free!.} m the case
}' d Nutl (,corgc t\znutt
H,l!hHt \ s ltatks at Hobson
fhcse 1uns operated every 20 that he approved a plan
- He was so concerned about
l\lulrllt'port \\ Oilf}rst plate m
Fr om th1 s r oml to Hacme the mwutcs and a nde cost f1ve ullo\-\lrng federal agenl'i to th&lt;! lea k ~ of natwnal secunty
the alllmll Mc1gs Lount\hn e took on the iippcar once of d cents 1he third type operated break and enter prem1ses but mformat10n In the Pentagon
hn;ton ( Ontcst
essay
1 eg-111 H 1 !lh om! tn roCi dbcd
late dl mgh t and was known as v.rth&lt;lrev. the pla n because of Papers that he set up a spec1al
and track COO!;! tructJOn fhe m ov.l C&lt;J I 1 be~e Cal s ran ObJec twns from then FBI Whttc House umt headed by
di VISIIIn
lOndu ctcd thi S
hnc llso offered f1 e1gh t servtce between downtown Mrddleport du cc lm J Edgar Hoover
spr111g b) thl J\.lctgs Col'nty
Eg1l Krogh and directed 1l to
Pwncr r and lll stonc£~1
f1 um hc1 e to Raone wt lh tv. o 1nli Hobson m&lt;::~m ly for crews
I he d1sdosures carne m an R f1nd out a ll 1t could about
SOCICtJ f nil on mg Is th(' t(' Xt
t.:lect!I C fre 1gl1t loco moti\es nf Jc~te mght trains and page sta tement m whtch Ntxon Dante! Ellsberg s mot1ves and
or his ln stur) of th e strf'ctcur
"h1ch we1e 1cferred to as 1ng htlnnc ben patrons
adm1tted- als0 for the f1rst assoc1ales
in l\l~1 gs ( uunty
dummtcs lhese un rts were
I he company had problems lime- that olhm unethical as
- Although he d1d not know
used to In ul coa l fl om the both fm,mctal and operaltng
\o\oCll JS 11lc~al a&lt;.:l l\Llles were ttu s umt wou ld break 1nto the
F 01 est Hun Mme Dell k Hollov.
On tile Jotil of October \900
lhc opc1atrng problems were L'o mnlltted by h1s supporters office of Ellsberg s psych1atns!
the fnsl strcet&lt;.:dl left M1d
Mile
Number the most appal ent On one dmm g the 1972 campa 1gn
l o carr) out hts orders he had
dlcp1r l bound fo r Ractnc The
Sixtee1 1Syrd&lt;.:use ) and other ou. .: asiOn 1 crowded late mght
No Personal Wrungdomg
so emphasized the natiOnal
tra cks were ltned )Hth spec
f1 eigh t to "nd from Racme and c 11 pa ss tn g t111 ough the
He firmly demed c~ny person securrty aspecls rnvolved that
La tor s as fl ayes Roush of other on hne locdhons
Co tlpm t sect1on of Pome1 oy al wrongdomg be; and a failure he could
understand how
J he tJ ack contrnucd to the ezup ted mto fl ghhng fhe to be more vtgJlant
Mme1s\ 1llc piloted the car
tn h1 ghly motivated mdivtduals
east end of Pome1oy across moto rman and &lt;.:on dud or p1cvcnt1ng them
ftlled ~~1 th offlcJ(IIs of M1cl
could have felt JUSltfted '"
fr OIJI he pr esent Bookmob1le literally headed for th e htlls
dlcp u1l Pomcr oy and Racmc
None of th e~e took place eng:&lt;:~gmg rn speCific achvilles
headquarters where the Ozller v.as eventm!lly restored
and John Blair McMaffec
vuth my specific approval or thut I "'ould have drsapproved
p1e:&lt;mlcnt of the Pomeroy and mcu nhne cu1 ved toward and the tnp completed
kn owledge he smd fo the or hdd they been brought to my
Mrdclleporl H.atl\\ av and Po\\- el Hacme and the F01 est Run Ime
A niOJ e seriOus acc](Jen t extent that I may rn any way ottentwn
branched off !he Fmest Run occ urred when one or the motor have co nlnbuted to the climate
Company
Reports Demed
line crossed SUite Route 124 men dtsobeyed v. h&lt;J t rt11lroads 1n &gt;~lil c h they took place 1 d1d
Wtlhm a few ye[ll s the lim
- He demed published reports
md cut t:tlong the base of the men kn ow as Rule G That IS nottntend to
had been extended to Hobson
that he had attempted to
and the n lmc changed to th e h1ll lo JUSt casl of Route 7 dnnkmg or repottmg for duty
He sa1d he had no pnor conceal the fact of the burglary
\\ he1 c the Om k Hollow splll while mJoxJcdted On a tnp knu~&lt;ledge of the Watergate !1 om the JUry trymg Ells berg
Oh10 Rn rt Elect!l~ Hn1h\ a~
and Po~\er Company The lme b1 cwched off and crossed from Hobson he took the turn bteak m drd not part1c1pate m Th1s mformatwn subsequently
begdn at the Kanawh a and Houle 7 end1ng at the D.ll k fr om Ash Street to Beech dnd was not aware of the led to dismissa l of the charges
Mic htgan Ra tlwa) passenget Hollow M111e rbout 1 mile St1 eel tn M1ddlep01l at a !ugh cover up 1ltempt and did not agt~ m st E llsberg a nd co
statwn at Hobson follov.ed the bevond the cr oss tng fhe speed and f11pped the car on 1ts authm1zc executive clemenc) defendant Anthony J Russo
baste route now used by State I m est Run line dlso contmued ~mlc
or pdyments Lo any of the
- He had no mtentlon of
M) g1 mdfather Glen Ar
Rout+" Seven to 1\sh St1eet m for c~bout a mile cmhn ~ at lhc
Wc~tergat e burglars to hus h 1estgnmg from offtce as some
Mtddlepurt whet e the track Forest Run Mmc
nott worked as ;,t motm m m lhcm up
have s uggested
r v.11l not
I he m unl111e to Rac ut c f01 .:-eHm yea rs f1 om 1918 to
went onto G1 ave! Hill followed
1 cunstdered It my respons1 abandon my responstbthtles I
Ash St1 eet to 1lc:; mtersed10n contmued pdt all ot to Houle 124 1925 fut 41 cents an hour On blilt) to see that the Watergate w11l co ntmue to do the JOb I
wtth Beech St ran up Beech cmd alon g the rt\ CI tht uugh nne crowded nrght 1una thief In case chd not 1mpmge ad\ersely was elected to do '
Mmer svrllc At Bunc Hollow
and turned east on Locust St
the crowd whrch was pressmg upon the natrona! secuntv
- He revea led tha t the
nm
th
of
Mmet
s\llle
the
hne
At the mtersechon of Locust
CigaJnst hull
completely ot e 1 he sa1d
f&lt;unous documents which John
and Second St1eets the tracks cr ossed tq the 11est Side of the deaned out hts com changer
W1th hmdSight 1t 1s appa l W Dean II I his former
tu r ned up11ver follO\\Jn g road fh e li acks ran throut; h
The ftnan ctal troubles of the cnt that I shou ld haH g1vcn counsel removed ft om the
Second St from th1s pomt to lowe1 Syt acuse on the west OhiO R1v e1 Electnc Ratlway more heed to the wa rmng Wb1te House and gave to
where 1t en tel ed Pomeroy and side of Route 124 then JUSt and Powe1 Company became slg11ol s 1 received along the Drstr 1ct Cour t con tamed details
became Matn Sl fhere v. ere south of the Sk1te Roadside apparent on Febzuar y 25 l !l l !) WclV abuut a Watergate coverup of the abandoned 1970 plan
Rest 1elurned to thE.! cast Side
when the cornpull} went mto 111d less to the reassurances
two passmg stdmgs m Mid
.1uthonzmg agents to break mto
rece1vcrshrp Later the line
dlepm t the !trsl JUSt south of The 1 oadbcd IS now an un
Early Warnmg
p1em1ses m nat10nul secunty
the mtersect10n of Mam St1eet nam ed sll eet wh tch cuts ofr was purchased b} a comm1ttee
He confirmed m perhaps one mvesligahons
and Second Street and the fi om the highway JUSt north of of bondholders who sold 1t to uf h1s most darnagmg adm1s
the southern corpozat10 n the Oh10 Power Company
The plan he sa1d mcluded
second bet ween the
s1ons tha l one early warmng
authonzatJon for surreptwus
mterscctwns of Second imd lumts After L'ross tn g the h1 gh
wh1ch was mamly mterested m
had curne from L Patnck G1 ay
entry- breakrng and entermg
Wa lnut
St
and
the wav the tJ ack ran through the e lectncal d1strrb utwn
m then actmg directm of the m effect--on spectfJed categomtersecllon of Second and what IS now the Roads1de Rest system the company owned
FB I G1 ay he sa"! had told
nes of targets m spec-1fted
Rutland St llle com pany (t he s helters and other 1 he Ohw Power Company
I 1111 as early as l&lt;Jst July 6sttuatwns related to national
had an off1ce m the bU!Idmg s t1 uctut es sr t on the rarsed acquired the hne on July 5
tlu ec \H.:eks after the break m
secun ty ' He satd thts was
that now honses the Ftrestone 1oadbed [or dramage l then 1g24 and shortened the name
md fuur months before the
approved as an option ' The
Store 1n l\Jrddlepm t Mtmy c1ossed a small ct eek and to the Oh10 River R.ulway and
clcctJOn - thal some rankmg
pc.~ssed
th
1
ough
~d
at
IS
now
the
White
House later satd !he
passe n~ers boarded the str eel
Power Company
Nixon a1c.:es ma} have been
approval was by Ntxon But
ca1 s thc1c appa l cntlv the IO\.\n pdrk
In ea1ly 1929 the company
mvol\ t-d In the covel up
Ntxon sa1d the plan was canreasr n fm the s1dmg berng
reques ted perrmsswn from tHe
'I he old roadbed IS VISible
1 told htm to press ahead
celed
after Hoover opposed tt
nea 1 b~
he ze butpaltofil\\asrecently
Pubhc Utlht1es Comrnrsswn of
\\llh hrs wvestigaliOn Ntxon
Ntxon dealt only wtth the
The tt ,Jcks en lei ed Porner o~ bulldozed a"ay The It acks ran
Oh ro to term mate all passenger
S&lt;lld but d1d not explam why he Watergate and Ellsberg rases
wh ~.;r~.; Muldlepoi t s Second
tlu ough nm th Sy1 acuse closely
se1 vice and remove the track
apparently tgnored th1s wa1 mng m his statement and made onl)
Street be comes P ome ro) s para\lellmg the htglmay but fr om Hobson to where the
\\hen he told newsmen s1x passmg referenc e to the
West M.11n St1eel rhe t1acks remammg at the base of the
hack left the s treet m
weeks later- on Aug 27- tha t numerous charge!-; and offtctal
ran ~tl o n g the Pome1 oy Mason hlllstde to &lt;'!VOid the small
Pome1oy PermiSSIOn was
nobody then on h1s Wh1te House mvesttga tlons of tllegal fund
und erpass 1oad an area that at rn c..:l tnes th e bighw£Jy en
gran ted m late June and on
the tune co1tamed the round counlct s Jlle Ime then ran Jul) fn s t Hm es Roush who staff WdS rnvo lved
ra1smg, mfluence-peddlmg and
The
sta
temenL
was
the
most
house and 0 ! gme term mal f01 ' wht olong the road to a creek
pohtteal '"bolage dtrected
had pil oted the ftrst run of the
compr ehens1ve pi esentat10n yet aga1nst the Democratic rivals
the Ho( km g Valley Ralh\a\ JU St soulh of the presen t Racme
!me operated the last one The
of how the President personally
yar ds
I he tr 1cks t hen Plc1nmg Mtll \\here 1t .agam
hne contmued to carry coal
HIS Own Theory
became
uwa1
e
of
the
scope
of
Whtle condemmng these
t etm nell to Moin Sheet whet e ~.: r ossed lo the wes t side of the
Ull ti l ]936
Water ga t~ It came as m01 e
oppmu te ltu; Hockmg Vcdley I OEJ d
acts,
he offered hts own theory
I he !me s f1ve st1eet cars
delm
ls
were
unfoldmg
daily
In of why atdes to whom he had
Rai h~ d} ( nu\\ Chess1e S) stem )
At the tune \1me Number when passenge1 se1v1ce was
frer ght st.atum \\as luca led S1xteen was located whet e the d1scontmued we1 e sold to a the tclev1sed Senate mvest1ga entrusted enormous author1ty
twns mto the matter
misused It
anothe1 pa s ~mg Sidtng lhe Mtll 1s now and a Sldmg was Buffalo N Y concern The
N1xon
said
he
was
1
ssumg
It
Each wtth hiS own perspec
hnc &lt;:UJ tmued up Mam Sl Un u the I e fOt the loadrn g of hop pet
t1 ack not abandoned m 1929
to
d1
aw
a
d1stmct10n
between
the bus1ness dtstnct whet e the cars 1il e tracks returned to was 1emoved m 1936 w1th two
tlve and hts own respon&lt;rompctn\ s office was located lhe e 1st Side u[ the 1o ~d JUSt exceptiOns A sectwn m Tlurd th~ W&lt;~terg&lt;t te a ffair and other. . s tblhhes saw the same
m the bmldmg now occupied bv not th of thr1 e 1rfd 1 em.u ned St of Racme remams ap· lcgl ln nale natwnal secunty s1tuatton wtth dtfferent eyes
F1 a nels 11m 1S t
Uw re t igh t along the 1oud to parently because teanng up opet atwns and to counter and heard the same words wtth
some of the mm e sensatronal different ears
Unlike the M1ddlepor t off1 cc HI Cine
th e sll eet and then repan mg 1t
which w IS onl} equipped fot
Just ;,oy.th of Lhc Racme
What one saw m terms of
\\ould llave cost more than the - and maccurate - of the
chm
ges
that
have
f1lled
the
the pd} ment d elcctJ u; btlls t'IIIIJ Ol d(IOil hr!lltS the l l dCk S scr.tp v.ould have been "orth
publtc responstbtUty another
recent
days
'
~ ~
headlines
m
and t he s.de of sl1eelcar left the 1oads1de and cut a&lt;.:ro.:.s
saw
- m terms o f political op1 he other section IS fr om
Prom1ses
Responses
token s th1 s off1ce had a d ld t ge f1eld The tJ dCks en
porturuty and mtxed through tt
whe1e the t1 acks left the street
He
sa1d
1t
\\as
based
on
h1s
all, I am sure, was a concern on
v.aillng ruom flus ~attm g te 1ed Th1rd St1eet m f1 ant of
m Pomm oy to Forest Run Thrs
room was p1ov1ded be&lt;.:ause the lat ge gas s tatlun on the east line was acqmred by the uwn recollections of what he !he part of many that the
IContmued on page 10)
H oc ki n~
Va lle) Ra1l~ay s1de of the 1oad The tracks [an
Hockmg Vallev Ra 'way wh1ch d1d and sa1d dunng the months
pa ssenger t1 ams backed to thts tlu ough Rae1ne on 1hu d St
wa s
merged
wto the
pOin t ft om the fre1ght }ard so and nhm e 1t ends by the Chesa peake and Oh1 o Ra1lway
passengers could transfer to pr escnt Hd( 111e F 1t e Sta tiOn
m 1lJ30 The hne now ends Just
the stt ce t (c~ r s 1he tJcH.: ks the t1 acks also ended
east of Route 7 a small sectiOn
Du 1111g the 29 }ears that the
contmued w the st1ect unlil
of the mamlme remams as a
across th e street from sl! cet c 1rs 1&lt;J!l over these
Prov1co Feed s1dmg act oss
POmeroy Cement Bloc k t1 d ~ k s oper atrons changed
!1om
the
Bookmobtle
Company s ptesent locatwn Al hllle fhcre \\as no passenger
Headquarters and 1s s till used
by the Chessle System
thiS po1nt the tracks left tJ.e SC I VICC on the FOI est HUrt
st re ~t tur rung toward th e b1 anch The lme had three
I he bmlders of th1s line had a
bas1
c
lype.s
of
1
uns
The
fu
st
baSicall} sound Idea m the
nver Also the Hocktng Valley
Rallw&lt;~y ended here
the was the Hobson to Racme run
construction of the Oh io R1ve1
str cetca1 hne was hke an whrch operated eve1y hour and
Elect11c Rallwa) and Powc1
20
nnnutes
The
pnce
was
extens ron of 1t
Company I ast)ear the county
1 h1 s was the OhiO R1\Cr Ollgtndll) }4 &lt;;Cnl&lt;; fhe SCc-Ond
h&lt;Jd a plan for the grO\\ th and
Raii \HIY s on I}
ph ysical was I Ire sTw1t itne 1un '~ htch development of the county
Thts plan states that r rfnllme
conn ('Cti OJ1 to the regular ldn bllween Hobson and the
992-9981
ra1lr oi.l d g) !\ tern s mce lhe PomCI oy Sail Assn plant (now
~ hould b~ built from Pome1 0}
ll il( k \\ ri S llUt connected tO the the Pomer dy Junk Com pan}
to Rc1 C1ne to encourage m
538 W. MAIN
PON.EROY, 0.
Ku n.Hv h,1 ;md M1Ch1 ga n s&lt;:J .1pyurd ) at Muwrsv11le
dustJJ(:JI devclopmenl
II) f" L(, E:NF. I
W ASH! ~ GTON

Rise and fall of streetcar

industry in Meigs recalled

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LOWEST PRICE

qu1ck
Senate
Ju_d1c1ary
Committee approval of N1xon's
chotee for attorney ~enerai­
Elhot Richardson- was sud
denly delayed and the committee proceeded to question
Rtchardson further about talks
he has had wtth Egrl Krogh Jr
the White House olftc1al who
headed a task force to check on
secunty leaks
There also were reports of a
posstble dLSpute begmmng between Archtbald Cox , Richardson's ch01ce for special
prosecutor, and the several
federal prosecutors now han
dlmg the Watergate crumnal
mveshgatton The Washmgton
Post satd that as a result of this
dispute, prosecution of the case
was delayed and no more
Witnesses currently are scheduled to appear before the
Watergate grand Jury
fhe Post satd the question
was whether the regular
prosecutors, Earl S1lbert Jr
SeymoUl' Ganzer and Donald
Campbell, would contmue thetr
work They were meetmg wtth
Cox today
Caulfield Teshf1es
Caulfteld, 44, a former New
York Ctly policeman and self.
descrtbed secunty expert who
went to work for the Whtte
House, testified Tuesday that
John W Dean [[[, then
presidential counsel
m
structed hun to transm1t the
clemency offer to McCord who
was later convicted m the
Watergate buggmg

•'

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•••

The committee called for
testimony from Anthony T
Ulasewtcz 54 another retired
New York detective who ts
satd to have made telephone
cal ls for Caulfield to set
up meetmgs w1!h McCord
McCord testified Fr~day that
Caulfteld mvoked Ntxon s
name tn extendmg the offer of
a pres1dent1al pardon m return
for cool*·atton m htdtng the
extent of the Watergate plot
Caulfteld demed tt
Speakmg m an unemotional
VOICe , McCord teS tified
Frtday
Caulfield stated that he was
carryrng the message of execu
live clemency to me from the
very highest .evels of the Whtte
House 1

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"Rtdes \
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BEST

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Sat &amp; Sun Afternoons
5 Rtdes-SJ 00

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PLAZA

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~~ ••
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:
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VALUES
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Ga lhpohs Oh1o
FREE - DISCount Rrde
T1ckets From All
Plaza M erc hant s

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~~[;:

SEARS

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Catalog Merchant

22 0 E Mam

I

Pomeroy

PH 992 2178

PTA plans health fair
j

: -'Ma¥-ztTo-iiin&amp;l--~

•e

•e

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l ............. .

Open Mon Thurs 9 a m to 7 p
d~ys 9 am to B 30 p m

m -

Pomeroy

m to 8 p m - Satur

Frtdays 9 a

FOR MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND

Steak to Barbecu
USDA

CHOICE

16 oz. bottle

79¢

8
PAK

T·BONE
SIRLOIN

Wtth

RIB EYE

Good At Stmon's
Expires 5-26·73

KANSAS CITY
BROUGHTON'S

Cottage Ch

75¢~~~~~~~~
32 oz. bot.

BUY 2 1.8.

89¢

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FREE

WITH THIS

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hptres_ 5 26 73

BROUGHTON-$

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2% MILK

SIMONS MARKET -

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Redee mab e only at SIMONS MARKET _ _
bpres 6 30 73

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FOR

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22 oz bot

49¢

lvs.

KING

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$1.00
CIGARETTES

5

REGULAR
or KING SIZE

~~-iLii

BREAD

WITH THIS
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\OO's

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L MIT 1 COVPON PER CUSTO MER

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'Fmal 7buch.
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only a t _ S1 mon s Market
Exp1res_ 6 30 13

Reported JJ1 were Mrs
Ulhan Triplett, Mrs Gertrude
Mtller and Leslie Erwm
Kelly had the opentng
prayer, and Mrs Allensworth
read a poem • Kneeling tn the
Garden·
There was a
Memorial Day Prayer ''
medttabon by Mrs Memhart
who also read an arhcle
Golden Prayer" by Norman
Vmcent Peale
Mrs- Martha Haggerty
served refreshments Mrs
Thelma Wr!ey was a conI! 1buhng hostess FollD~&gt;mg
the meetmg a stlent auction
was held wtlh $13 12 bemg
made on the proJect for the
class treasury

•
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Na shville Tenn e
The Carol Jones Show
I
• W1th Tony The Trger &amp; Leo I

I

THE

Stage Show
From

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To See For • • •

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MAGIC MIOWAY•Game s I

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A yard sale was planned for
July 12 and 13 at the home of
Mrs Clyda Allensworth at
Monday mght's meettng of the
Loyal Bereans Class at the
Middleport Church of ChriSt
Named to handle communton
ror June were Mrs George
Memhart and Mrs Cathenne
Erwm Mr and Mrs Memhart
wtl\ be tbe greeters for the
month
Marvm Kelly on behalf of
the church trustees, thanked
the class for a dona t10n on the
roof work He reported that the
proJect 1s nearmg completion
and that the total cost was over
$2,000

••

I

1 Here's the Man

•

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

115 W. Mam

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#4............~. . - · .

~

Plans for
Me1gs County
Health Fatr to be staged some
time this summer were
dtscussed when the Mtddleport
PTA met Monday mght at the
Mtddlep ort
Elementary
School
A commumcatwn regardmg
the health fatr was read and
members were mvtted to attend a planmng sessiOn to be
held on Thursday May 31 at
7 30 p m at the Mtddleport
Ftrst Umted Presbytenan
Church
Corsages were presented by
Mrs Edward Crooks on behalf

Shower fetes
Miss Bostic

IN TOWN

•
•

Loyal Bereans
plan yard sale

1ne fill :sent mel M1dd.lepm t Pom~O\ 0 Ma\ 23 19'i'J

SYRACUSE - The table was
decorated Wtth a pmk and
wh1te umbrella Wllh ptnk and
wh1te streamers for the bndal
shower for Debbte Johnson
Bosltc brtde.elecl of Kenneth
R1zer, at the Racme American
Leg1on Hall Monday mght,
May 14
Hostesses for the shower
were Rorname Frederick
Mary Plckens, Linda Parsons
Lizzie Wood and Marie R1zer
Games were played and
those wmnmg pnzes were
Vtcky SmtU1, Jean Lipscomb,
Mary Janice Lavender and
Mtldred Pterce The door pnze
went to E1leen Clark
After the gtfts were opened,
refreshments of cake Ice
cream punch, mmts nuts and
coffee were served by the
hostesses to Vtcky Smtih , and
Charlie Mary Ctrcle, Clara
Lavender , Mabel Ptckens,
Chnstena Holley, Mr and Mrs
Mtlfred Fredert ck,
Sr ,
Elizabeth Rtce, Ed1th Cogar
Zelma Hawley Suzan Rtce
Sharon Cogar VIcki Rtzer
Eleanor J Douglas, Barbara
Douglas, Nancy Aetker,
Georgana Lipscomb, Jo Ann
WtUford, Juamta Davtd, and
Tony Fredertcl&lt; , Mtldred
P1erce and Tma Thelma
Grueser and Teresa, VIvmn
Johnson, Martha Wolfe, Carol
Wolfe, Barbara Hunt, Gladys
Robson Edt th Hood Etleen
Clark, Mtnme Rtzer, Kathy
• R1zer, Margaret R1zer, Inez
W1ckhne, Mar~e Pursley, Betty
Moore, Lora RusseU, Edna
Gnmm and T1ma , Ra chel
Sm1th Addte Mae Bush
Tammy Bush, Paultne Bosltck
Donna Johnson, Mrs Edtson
Johnson , Margaret Cottrill
Sharon Col!rtll Mr and Mrs
Ralph
Lavender,
Eber
Pickens Jr , R1cky, Bnan Lee
and David Wayne Parsons
Sendtng gtfts were Myla
Hudson, Ada Slack Garrell
and Anme Nease, Sandra
Booth, Franc1se and Lester
McKenzie
Jtm
Ables
•
Clarence, Hazel and Debora
W1ckhne , Mrs Dons Hawley
and family , Pam Larkms
Debbte and Earl Ptckens
Dorothy Noms Dorothy
Bentz Mrs Alma Johnson and
famtly Lucy Taylor Frances
Foster Mr and Mrs Hoger
Manual and Ang1e, Mr and
Mrs Paul Sm1th Mrs Bermce
LaValley Mrs Laura Ctrcle
Mrs Jane Teaford and Mrs
Norman Rizer
PLAN REVIVAL
HARTFORD, W Va - There
wtll be a revtval at the Hartford Church of Chnst 1n
Chnsltan UniOn 7 30 p m
mghtly from May 23 to June 3
by Evangelist Raymond Rice,
Byesvtlle Ohw There wtll be
specral smgmg each evenmg
Pastor Wtlham Ca mpbell
mv1tes everyone

of the PTA to the teachers and
cooks The attendance award
was won by the third grade
Mrs J enntfer Butcher's
second grade led m the pledge
to open the meeting and the
Rev Wtlltam Kmttel gave
devotwns
The program was presented
by the th~rd grade class of Mrs
McComas Mothers from the
class served as hostesses and
greeters for the meetmg

Mother's Day
program given
at Portland
BY GOLDIE CLENDENIN
The
PORTLAND
ReorganiZed Church of Jesus
Chns! of Latter Day-Satnts
Church on Ractne - Portland
Rd had a Mother s Day
program tnstead of Sunday
School Sunday mormng There
were special songs by chmr
dtrected by Mercedes Condon
wrth Linda Evans at the organ
and Nancy Adams at the plano .
and a spectal song by Eula
Proffitt
Jane Johnson and Earlene
Stobart donated potted plants
for chrldren to present to
mothers and grandmothers
The Cleland Flower Shop to
Racme provtded
potted
geramums for the oldest
mother attendmg that mornmg
(yours truly ) and youngest
went to Sharon Russell
Mrs Norma Goodwm sent
altar flowers agam as she has
m the past
On Saturday Golda Gtlhlan
Lucy Taylor, !lah Roush, Beula
Roush and this reporter at·
tended Church Women 's Insbtute ttl Jackson, OhiO There
were five workshops m groups
for Semor C1hzens officers,
Women s leader etc, grand
mothers, youth leaders and
pubhc1ty programs
The most rec ent guest
speaker was Elder Jtm
Cummwgs from Kentucky
also a welcome guest Howard
Proffttt Columbus
The Ctrcle met at the home of
Edgar and Lucy Taylor on
McKenzie Ridge Thursday
evemng m charge of Golda
Gllhlan , leader
The worship theme was
Love thy ne1ghbor ' by
program chatrman Lucy
Taylor, the hostess After the
secretary's report and pledge
collectiOn, a ftsh pond sale and
exchange of potted plants were
held
Stster Lucy gave each one a
cuttmg from her collection of
begomas, geramW1!s, etc and
refreshments were served to
ones menttoned and Pearl
Pro,ff1tt J oan Prolf1tt and
dau ghte r Evelyn Foreman
and daughter, Anna Lance,
Me rcedes Condon, Jane
Johnson, th1s reporter and a
guest and n~1ghbor of Jane
Johnson , Linda ~ter and
Patty Roush
L
PERSONAL ITEMS
Edgar Taylor remams
conftned to hts home, but
servtces small apphances
whtch keeps htm occupted on
hiS good days , also Myrtle
Proffitt doesn t get out much
but uses a walker rns1de lla
Roush v1s1ted w1th her one
evenmg last week wh1le
Brother Clarence attended
church
The Lebanon Golden Agers
Sr Citizens Club mel at the
Racme Portland Rd Church
for 1ts second meetmg They
mv1te all rolk round about and
from other clubs to attend on
the second WedneSday of the
m nnlh

Theodorus council to Syracuse·group
host inspection
lns~twn

was announced
for June 18 at Monday mght s
meehng of Theodorus Counctl
17, Daughters of Amertca, held
at the IOOF hall, Pomeroy
A pract1ce for the InspectiOn
was set for the June 4 meetmg
at wh1ch hme the charter wtll
be draped for Mrs Jessie Thle
\\ ho died frtday at the Arcadta
NwsmgHome tn Coolvtile The
counctl sent flCIWers and also
conducled ~erv1ce at the Ew.ng Funeral Home Sunday
evemng Representing the
counc rl at the funeral serv1ces
at the Rock Sprmgs Umted
MethodiSt Church Monday
were Mrs Edna Re1bel Mrs
Ethel Smtih and Mts Kate
Goodwtn
The Illness of Mrs Edna
SL1Ies , shU a patient at
Veterans Memonal Hosp1tal,
and Mrs Etta W11l were
reported It was also noted that
M1ldred
Spencer
ts
recuperatmg from a broken

ankle at home followmg
treatment at the Holzer
Med1cal Center A card was
Signed for her
Mrs
Nettle
Hayes
d1stnbuted Letters for the
r.1embers to s1gn and mat! to
Na11ona1 Aeroriauttcs and
Space Adnumstratlon as part
of the national Daughters of
Amcrrca campaign to show
support of B1ble readmg tn
space 1 he Daughters are
actl\ely worktng to brmg
prayer 1 back mto the class
room It was reporterl
A commumcat10n was read
requestmg the council to drape
the charter Without ceremony
for a past nattonaJ councilor
Mrs Mabel Vaux, who died
Apnl 13 tn Washmgton, D C
Mrs Hayes reported that
Mrs Retbel diSlrtct deputy
had tnspected Belle Pra1nc 269
CoWlcil on May 14 G1fts were
presented to Mrs Reibel and to
Mrs Hayes who accompamed
her to Belpre

Local DeMolays named
to state officerships
Jon Bunce, Middleport and
W1lltam Qu1c kl e, Cheshire,
members of Me1gs Chapter
Order of DeMolay were m
stalled as State Pnory offtc ers
m ceremomes Fr1day mght at
the 1973 spnng workshop and
meeltng o[ D1stnct 11 held at
Sidney
Over 8011 DeMolay members
and advtsors from OhiO were
present for the workshop
l"rtday Saturday and Sunday
The boys stayed at the Holiday
lmpenal Motel
The Me~ gs Chapter was the
rectptent of the Joe Shirley
membership
sweeps takes
award and recelVed $45 m
cash Each of the boys attended a workshop and par
licipated m a vanety of sports
dunng the three day mee!mg
J W Null a state DeMolay
offi cial was gues t speaker at
one of the sess ions An·
nouncement was made o£ a
conclave for all DeMolay
members to be held at the
Akron Umverstl)&lt; Aug 9 12
Reservahons are to be made
before June 30
Meeting m Stdney at the
same ttme were the DeMolay
Mothers Clubs of Ollto
Gotog from here to Stdney
for the weekend were Tlm
Kmg master councilor, Don
Vaughan JUni or co un ctlor ,
Dav1d Edward, JUniOr coun
ctlor elect George Stewart,
Bert Moshier Don Gabntsch

Mrs. Hart hosts
garden club
Mrs Judy McDonald and
Mrs Flossie Story were
welcomed mto the membership
of the Walk In Garden Club
durtng a meetmg held recently
at the home o[ Mrs MaXIne
Hart '
Officers were elected and
plans were discussed for an
open rneetmg m June For roll
call members named their
rav orrte May flower DevotJons
were gtven by Mrs Golda
Story The hiStory of Luther
Burbank, plant sctenliSt was
presented by Mrs Edna Lee
Ribbons were awarded to
Mrs Lee for red orchid cactus
and red barberry , and to Mrs
Belva
Wtllard
for
an
arrangement of JrlS fohage and
pmk gernalUms

J1[ Gabntscli 1om Can oll
Van Wmdsor Robert Kmg
chapter Mrs Robert Kmg
president of the local Mothers
Club Mrs Delmer Qutckle
11th D1stncL state represen
ldtrve Mrs Don Gabntsch
Sr Mrs Sally Moshier and
Gov and Mrs Ben Roberson
Drstn d 11

'

~

enjoys banquet

SYRACUSE - A mother
daughter hanquet was held
recently rn the annex of the
l"tril Umted Presbytertan
Church Followmg dmner the
brroup adJourned to the church
whe~e shdes of the Holy Land
were shown by Mr and Mrs
Sherman Cund1rr P1eces of
pottery were on display Mr
Cundiff gave an ImpressiVe
taP&lt;. as he showed the pictures
Attendmg were Mrs Lilhan
Duffy and daughter , Mrs
Beatnce Blake and her
daughter and granddaughter
Charlotte Nease and Dtana
(four generations) Ada Slack
daughter, Kathryn Johnson
and daughters, Tammy and
Cheryl Myla Hudson, Mrs
Florence Potts daughter Mrs
Mary Lisle, and daughter
Rose Ann Jenkins, Mrs Esther
Harden and daugl ter, Debbie
Mrs L1nda Hubbard and
ddughter Donna
Jamce

Social

;j

Lawson Mrs Jean Hall, Mrs
Mtldred Pierce and daughter,
Ttna) Mrs Datsy Roush and
daughter Mrs Genevieve
Sehne1der, and her daughter
Mrs Eleanor McKelvey 1 Mrs
Esther Sylvester daughter,
Mrs
Pam Thetss and
daughter Tammy Pauline
Moranty Helen Harns Mrs
Helen D1ddle and daughter,
Donna
Handley t
Mrs
Coltnll
and
Margaret
daughter Sharon Margaret
Wmebrenner, daughter.m law
Mrs PatriCia Wmebrenner
and her daughters Kim and
Krystall Rachel M c Br~de
Frankie Mumaw Juha Hysell
Thelma Grueser and grand·
daughter, 1 cressa ffrueser
Mrs Glenna Davis Mrs
Thomas Kelly Mtddleport
Mr and Mrs Sherman Cundiff
Rev and Mrs Dw1ghl Zavtlz
Rtchard Duckworth JOtned the
group for the program

Shower honors
Mrs. Tillis
II layette• s hower was held Davidson W1lma Davidson,
1 e(en tly hononng Mrs Jerry M1s Betty Wme, Lon Wme,

1illis al the home of Mrs C C
Howa td wtth Mrs Leona
Hysell .1s the ass1stmg hostess
Games were played w1th
p11zes gomg to Mrs Pauhne
t liils and Mrs Jerry Neal
Y.Ith Mrs Cra1g Howa rd
wrnnmg the door prtze
IS PATl ENT
Sandv.J&lt;.: hes potato chips,
Mrs Harry Houdashelt
M1ddleport und erwent eye cook1es coffee punch and
surgery at Umvers1ty Hosp1tal rnml" \\. ere served Attendmg
Monday She 1s con rm ed to the s ho wer bes rdcs th ose
Nease Hall Room 241 She was ll&lt;lmcd wer~e Mrs Susie
Mrs
Barbara
taken to Columbus Saturday by Hob1nson
Wlu
tttngto
n
Mrs
Sandra
her daughter Fu~ddtc v. ho
1emamed until
Monday IIII lS M1 s Elwood Howard
e\ emng Mrs Houdashelt J1 Missy Howard Mrs Mary
expects to be discharged from
the hospJlal the l atte~ part of
the week

M1 s Nora Hartman Mrs
Kathleen f1lhs Mrs Tc1es,J
Wood and daughter Heather,
M1 s Jud y McDonald .tnd
daugh ter M111dy, Mrs Kathy
Weaver Mrs Brenda Hysell
Mrs Phyllis Chne Shdron
Wtsc Joyce Wise, Ann Burson
Ailee Dav1s Janet l1llis Cathy
Simmons Wendy l1lhs Mrs
Ronald Riffle and 1 ma Rtffle
Others p1 cscntmg gifts were
Mrs Nelhe Borgan Mrs Clara
Howa1d Mz s Frances Alkrre
Mr:; Chn stm a Howard and
Mrs Lola Clark

Mothers were honored at the
Middleport Um!ed Pentecosta l
Church, South Thtrd Ave
Mtddleport on Mother s Day
]ll
trrbute to mothers
present the congrega tion sang
If I Could Hear My Mother
Pray Aga m led by Nathan
Vanaman 1am1 Kmttel sang
Wha t A Fr~end We Have In
Mother and Teresa Eastman
read a poem ent1t1ed
Mother
The pr1mary JUniOr girls
class and young rncn s class,
whose teachers are J oyce
Sauters Chnstme Sauters and
LaW! ence Rupe each made a
Mother s Day g1ft dunn g
Sunda y school classes to take
home The Rev Wilham
Kmttel spoke on the top1c

Hum1hty Exalted
Welcomed to the serv1ce
were Mr and Mrs James
V,rnaman and son Vmce, now
stal!oncd m 1 exas, wtth the U
S Air Force and Jumor
Engle home on leave from the
U S Army before deparltng
for a tour of duty m Germany
Engle IS a relal!vc or Frank
and Judy Lauderm11t
1 he JUniOr girls class
presented each mother at
tending w1th a red rose
provided through the church
flow er fund s up ervt sed by
Charles Fr1ley

Calendar ~

WEDNESDAY
WOMEN S
Chrtsl1an
Temperance Umon, 2 p m at
!he Pomeroy Un1ted MethodiSt
Church
AMERICAN LEGION
Auxrltary Feeney.Bennett
Post 128 potluck at 6 30 p m
w1th legwnnatres to be guests
Awuhary members to take a
covered dtsh Meeting at 7 30
pm
MISS EILEEN RICKMAN
The
Metgs
Chnshan
Women's Fellowship w11l be
havmg a mother-&lt;laughter tea
at the Pomeroy Church of
Chnst on Thursday at 1 30 p m
A special program ho~s beea
planned In addttlon to the
regula~ meetmg Miss Erleen
Rtckman Portsmouth, wdl be
the guest speaker M1ss Rtck
man ts a former M1ss1ons
Serv1ce worker out of Johet,
lJI ~md a former JUvemle
paz ule officer m Portsmouth
She IS a 1969 graduate of
Kentucky Chnsttan College '"
Grdysun Ky and IS presently
employed as a JUVCnJie
cascworke1 1n Portsmouth

HAS SURGERY
M" Hugh (li:sther) Damels
former Pomeroy resident, now
of M~am1 , Fla 1s confmed to
the H1aleah Hospital followmg
maJor SUI gery Ber address rs
H1,1\eah Hospital 651 East 25th
St H1orleah Fla Room 255A

OHIO
VALLEY
Com
mandry Kmghts Templar
stated conclave, 7 30 p m at
the Pomeroy Masomc Temple
All str kmghts are urged to
attend
FAMILY FELLOWSHIP
supper 6 p m at Racme Umted
Methodts t Church Bnng
covered dish and table servtce
SPEC IA L MEETING,
ruppers Platns Commumty
Club 7 30p m at home of Mrs
N1ta R1tCh1e Plans for horse
show 1ce cream soc1al and
sen1mg Ohve-Orange Alumni
Banquet
FRIDAY
VIGOR lN Matunty 2 p m
former Pomeroy Jr Hrgh
fmal scssaon emphasrs on
medicare social sccunty , and
commun1ty resources

VISIT HERE
Mr and Mrs Dwtght Brown
St Albans W Va were
Monday guests of Mr and Mrs
Chester Erwtn Mtddleport

Church honors mothers

HOST GUESifS
Mrs J acob Johnson and Mrs
J ess1e Reeves spent Mother s
Da.} at Pataskala vJsihng Mr
and Mrs Paul Hammond and
chtldren Ray fra cy Beverly
and Barba1 a fhcy also VlsJted
Mr and Mrs Frank C1esech
Weekend guests of the Johnson
f.amily Mrs Reeves and other
relatives here were Mr and
Mrs George Allen Mrs
Lanella !"ox and son Rllndy
Bucyrus
IN HOSPITAL
Mrs Fred W1lcoxen R3 of
near Racme 1s a patient at the
Pleasant Valley Ho spital
Pmnt Pleasant Mrs Wrlcoxen
fra ctured her h1p tn a fall at her
home las t We€k

Meigs 4-H Club 1Vews
CHES1 ER - The Chester
Farm Boys 4 H Club met May 7
at the home of Gary Nelson
With 13 memhers and the ad
v1sor, Charles F reeker,
prese nt A spectal health
report on Joggmg was given by
Freddy Young
Rodney Keller led the club m
a basketball game Refreshments were served by Mrs
Nelson Th e next meetmg wtll
be May 31 at the home of Mark
Hall Special plans for th1s
meetmg mclude a frshmg tr1p
- Ke1 th Krautter
CARPENTER - The MIXed
Up Hotshots mel May 15 at the
Research Center at Carpenter

Adv1sors attendmg were Mr
and Mrs Robert Ltch There
were 10 members present
Busmess disc ussed mcluded
111v1tmg parents to one of the
meetmgs, a boat tr1p down the
Ohw R1ver and selling flower
bulbs [.ester J effers reported
on b1cycle safety and Bryan
Jord an gave a report on health
1 he members all JOtned m
playing softball and tag
Refreshmcnl"i were served by
Marco and Lester Jeffers The
ned meetmg wtll be at the
Research Center Spectal plans
mclude a report by V1rgmaa
Jordan - Ralph J ordan

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TO MEET
fh e annual meetmg of the
Pomeroy Women s Bowling
Assoctallon wtll be held May 30
at 7 10 p m at !he Pom~roy
Bowhng Lanes There will be
an election of ofrlcers

1973 ZENITH SOLID-STATE

'

,~

I

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MIDDLEPORT. 0.

�7- The Daily Senltnel Middleport Pomeroy, 0 , May 23, 1973

•

•
ti -

Highest level
WASHINGTON 1 UP!I
Fonner policeman John J
Caulf1eld sa) s President
Ntxon's law)e.r asked hm1 to
transmit an offt?'r of executl\e
clemency
to
connc ted
Watergate conspirator James
W McCord from the \ery
highest le\els of the Wh1 te

cle~nency

House
The
President
categoncallv demcs he made
an) such offer
The Senate Watergate com
nuttet&gt; tCJ day resumes 1ts
111qmr\ tn hopes of hndmg the
truth about any such offerwhether one was made and 1f

for the f1rst t1mc that he had

so b) \\hom

ordered h1s t"otop atdes H R

At no tnne did I author1zc
..tnl ofrer of ex.ecut1ve
clemency for the Watergate
defcnd&lt;~nts, nor d1d l kno" of
any such offer "N1xon sa1d m a

statement Tuesday
The Pres1dent also diSclosed

H.tldema n

&lt;:~nd

John

offer is verified
0

Fhrlictun.m, to hmtt the tn
\ est1gat10n of Watergate so 11
" ould not expose national
secunty oper.,1tmns
lL was certamly not my
mtent, nor In} w1sh ," he sa1d
that the mvest1gation of the
Water ga te break m or of

related acts be unpected tn any
way
N1xon Concedes Try

NLXon conceded, however,
that others m h1s admmtstra.
tton did try to Impede !he
Watergate mvest1gat1on
ln another development,
what had been expected to be

President found nation's security
key to limiting Watergate investigations

•

lliSIIEH
ur derullw:. 1\H• tup 11des ll R
He s~ud he dtd It to protect Wh1le House and not to 1mpede smce the June 17 break m of
1UPI 1
H,tld li Mn md ,.J uhn D F rhch lnghl) sens1t1ve
nattona l hnngtng: wrongdoers to JUSltcc the NatiOna l Democratic head
Pres1dcn1 N1xon dtscloscd for uldll t1 1 at the Watcrg t.~te sc&lt;.: unty operati Ons betng con
But he conceded that some of qua1 ters and he promised
the f1rst ttnw fucsda\ he 'h Jd ln\f&gt;Sl i)..! II lUll
du e ted b) the CIA and the hts a1des probabl~ went beyond addrtwnal responses when fur
h1s directives und attempted to tl1e1 queshons are ra1sed
htde 11lega l acltvJtres whrch
He made these pomts
they and others had undertaken
- The truth about the Water
m h1s bchall
gate affair s hould be brought
N1xon also revealed tha t he out man orderly fashiOn and he
Wds so conce1ned about leaks "a s hfttng executive pr1v1lege
of se nsltrve government secrets to allow h1s aides to testrfy
md dumcstrL' vwlcm:e m 1970 free!.} m the case
}' d Nutl (,corgc t\znutt
H,l!hHt \ s ltatks at Hobson
fhcse 1uns operated every 20 that he approved a plan
- He was so concerned about
l\lulrllt'port \\ Oilf}rst plate m
Fr om th1 s r oml to Hacme the mwutcs and a nde cost f1ve ullo\-\lrng federal agenl'i to th&lt;! lea k ~ of natwnal secunty
the alllmll Mc1gs Lount\hn e took on the iippcar once of d cents 1he third type operated break and enter prem1ses but mformat10n In the Pentagon
hn;ton ( Ontcst
essay
1 eg-111 H 1 !lh om! tn roCi dbcd
late dl mgh t and was known as v.rth&lt;lrev. the pla n because of Papers that he set up a spec1al
and track COO!;! tructJOn fhe m ov.l C&lt;J I 1 be~e Cal s ran ObJec twns from then FBI Whttc House umt headed by
di VISIIIn
lOndu ctcd thi S
hnc llso offered f1 e1gh t servtce between downtown Mrddleport du cc lm J Edgar Hoover
spr111g b) thl J\.lctgs Col'nty
Eg1l Krogh and directed 1l to
Pwncr r and lll stonc£~1
f1 um hc1 e to Raone wt lh tv. o 1nli Hobson m&lt;::~m ly for crews
I he d1sdosures carne m an R f1nd out a ll 1t could about
SOCICtJ f nil on mg Is th(' t(' Xt
t.:lect!I C fre 1gl1t loco moti\es nf Jc~te mght trains and page sta tement m whtch Ntxon Dante! Ellsberg s mot1ves and
or his ln stur) of th e strf'ctcur
"h1ch we1e 1cferred to as 1ng htlnnc ben patrons
adm1tted- als0 for the f1rst assoc1ales
in l\l~1 gs ( uunty
dummtcs lhese un rts were
I he company had problems lime- that olhm unethical as
- Although he d1d not know
used to In ul coa l fl om the both fm,mctal and operaltng
\o\oCll JS 11lc~al a&lt;.:l l\Llles were ttu s umt wou ld break 1nto the
F 01 est Hun Mme Dell k Hollov.
On tile Jotil of October \900
lhc opc1atrng problems were L'o mnlltted by h1s supporters office of Ellsberg s psych1atns!
the fnsl strcet&lt;.:dl left M1d
Mile
Number the most appal ent On one dmm g the 1972 campa 1gn
l o carr) out hts orders he had
dlcp1r l bound fo r Ractnc The
Sixtee1 1Syrd&lt;.:use ) and other ou. .: asiOn 1 crowded late mght
No Personal Wrungdomg
so emphasized the natiOnal
tra cks were ltned )Hth spec
f1 eigh t to "nd from Racme and c 11 pa ss tn g t111 ough the
He firmly demed c~ny person securrty aspecls rnvolved that
La tor s as fl ayes Roush of other on hne locdhons
Co tlpm t sect1on of Pome1 oy al wrongdomg be; and a failure he could
understand how
J he tJ ack contrnucd to the ezup ted mto fl ghhng fhe to be more vtgJlant
Mme1s\ 1llc piloted the car
tn h1 ghly motivated mdivtduals
east end of Pome1oy across moto rman and &lt;.:on dud or p1cvcnt1ng them
ftlled ~~1 th offlcJ(IIs of M1cl
could have felt JUSltfted '"
fr OIJI he pr esent Bookmob1le literally headed for th e htlls
dlcp u1l Pomcr oy and Racmc
None of th e~e took place eng:&lt;:~gmg rn speCific achvilles
headquarters where the Ozller v.as eventm!lly restored
and John Blair McMaffec
vuth my specific approval or thut I "'ould have drsapproved
p1e:&lt;mlcnt of the Pomeroy and mcu nhne cu1 ved toward and the tnp completed
kn owledge he smd fo the or hdd they been brought to my
Mrdclleporl H.atl\\ av and Po\\- el Hacme and the F01 est Run Ime
A niOJ e seriOus acc](Jen t extent that I may rn any way ottentwn
branched off !he Fmest Run occ urred when one or the motor have co nlnbuted to the climate
Company
Reports Demed
line crossed SUite Route 124 men dtsobeyed v. h&lt;J t rt11lroads 1n &gt;~lil c h they took place 1 d1d
Wtlhm a few ye[ll s the lim
- He demed published reports
md cut t:tlong the base of the men kn ow as Rule G That IS nottntend to
had been extended to Hobson
that he had attempted to
and the n lmc changed to th e h1ll lo JUSt casl of Route 7 dnnkmg or repottmg for duty
He sa1d he had no pnor conceal the fact of the burglary
\\ he1 c the Om k Hollow splll while mJoxJcdted On a tnp knu~&lt;ledge of the Watergate !1 om the JUry trymg Ells berg
Oh10 Rn rt Elect!l~ Hn1h\ a~
and Po~\er Company The lme b1 cwched off and crossed from Hobson he took the turn bteak m drd not part1c1pate m Th1s mformatwn subsequently
begdn at the Kanawh a and Houle 7 end1ng at the D.ll k fr om Ash Street to Beech dnd was not aware of the led to dismissa l of the charges
Mic htgan Ra tlwa) passenget Hollow M111e rbout 1 mile St1 eel tn M1ddlep01l at a !ugh cover up 1ltempt and did not agt~ m st E llsberg a nd co
statwn at Hobson follov.ed the bevond the cr oss tng fhe speed and f11pped the car on 1ts authm1zc executive clemenc) defendant Anthony J Russo
baste route now used by State I m est Run line dlso contmued ~mlc
or pdyments Lo any of the
- He had no mtentlon of
M) g1 mdfather Glen Ar
Rout+" Seven to 1\sh St1eet m for c~bout a mile cmhn ~ at lhc
Wc~tergat e burglars to hus h 1estgnmg from offtce as some
Mtddlepurt whet e the track Forest Run Mmc
nott worked as ;,t motm m m lhcm up
have s uggested
r v.11l not
I he m unl111e to Rac ut c f01 .:-eHm yea rs f1 om 1918 to
went onto G1 ave! Hill followed
1 cunstdered It my respons1 abandon my responstbthtles I
Ash St1 eet to 1lc:; mtersed10n contmued pdt all ot to Houle 124 1925 fut 41 cents an hour On blilt) to see that the Watergate w11l co ntmue to do the JOb I
wtth Beech St ran up Beech cmd alon g the rt\ CI tht uugh nne crowded nrght 1una thief In case chd not 1mpmge ad\ersely was elected to do '
Mmer svrllc At Bunc Hollow
and turned east on Locust St
the crowd whrch was pressmg upon the natrona! secuntv
- He revea led tha t the
nm
th
of
Mmet
s\llle
the
hne
At the mtersechon of Locust
CigaJnst hull
completely ot e 1 he sa1d
f&lt;unous documents which John
and Second St1eets the tracks cr ossed tq the 11est Side of the deaned out hts com changer
W1th hmdSight 1t 1s appa l W Dean II I his former
tu r ned up11ver follO\\Jn g road fh e li acks ran throut; h
The ftnan ctal troubles of the cnt that I shou ld haH g1vcn counsel removed ft om the
Second St from th1s pomt to lowe1 Syt acuse on the west OhiO R1v e1 Electnc Ratlway more heed to the wa rmng Wb1te House and gave to
where 1t en tel ed Pomeroy and side of Route 124 then JUSt and Powe1 Company became slg11ol s 1 received along the Drstr 1ct Cour t con tamed details
became Matn Sl fhere v. ere south of the Sk1te Roadside apparent on Febzuar y 25 l !l l !) WclV abuut a Watergate coverup of the abandoned 1970 plan
Rest 1elurned to thE.! cast Side
when the cornpull} went mto 111d less to the reassurances
two passmg stdmgs m Mid
.1uthonzmg agents to break mto
rece1vcrshrp Later the line
dlepm t the !trsl JUSt south of The 1 oadbcd IS now an un
Early Warnmg
p1em1ses m nat10nul secunty
the mtersect10n of Mam St1eet nam ed sll eet wh tch cuts ofr was purchased b} a comm1ttee
He confirmed m perhaps one mvesligahons
and Second Street and the fi om the highway JUSt north of of bondholders who sold 1t to uf h1s most darnagmg adm1s
the southern corpozat10 n the Oh10 Power Company
The plan he sa1d mcluded
second bet ween the
s1ons tha l one early warmng
authonzatJon for surreptwus
mterscctwns of Second imd lumts After L'ross tn g the h1 gh
wh1ch was mamly mterested m
had curne from L Patnck G1 ay
entry- breakrng and entermg
Wa lnut
St
and
the wav the tJ ack ran through the e lectncal d1strrb utwn
m then actmg directm of the m effect--on spectfJed categomtersecllon of Second and what IS now the Roads1de Rest system the company owned
FB I G1 ay he sa"! had told
nes of targets m spec-1fted
Rutland St llle com pany (t he s helters and other 1 he Ohw Power Company
I 1111 as early as l&lt;Jst July 6sttuatwns related to national
had an off1ce m the bU!Idmg s t1 uctut es sr t on the rarsed acquired the hne on July 5
tlu ec \H.:eks after the break m
secun ty ' He satd thts was
that now honses the Ftrestone 1oadbed [or dramage l then 1g24 and shortened the name
md fuur months before the
approved as an option ' The
Store 1n l\Jrddlepm t Mtmy c1ossed a small ct eek and to the Oh10 River R.ulway and
clcctJOn - thal some rankmg
pc.~ssed
th
1
ough
~d
at
IS
now
the
White
House later satd !he
passe n~ers boarded the str eel
Power Company
Nixon a1c.:es ma} have been
approval was by Ntxon But
ca1 s thc1c appa l cntlv the IO\.\n pdrk
In ea1ly 1929 the company
mvol\ t-d In the covel up
Ntxon sa1d the plan was canreasr n fm the s1dmg berng
reques ted perrmsswn from tHe
'I he old roadbed IS VISible
1 told htm to press ahead
celed
after Hoover opposed tt
nea 1 b~
he ze butpaltofil\\asrecently
Pubhc Utlht1es Comrnrsswn of
\\llh hrs wvestigaliOn Ntxon
Ntxon dealt only wtth the
The tt ,Jcks en lei ed Porner o~ bulldozed a"ay The It acks ran
Oh ro to term mate all passenger
S&lt;lld but d1d not explam why he Watergate and Ellsberg rases
wh ~.;r~.; Muldlepoi t s Second
tlu ough nm th Sy1 acuse closely
se1 vice and remove the track
apparently tgnored th1s wa1 mng m his statement and made onl)
Street be comes P ome ro) s para\lellmg the htglmay but fr om Hobson to where the
\\hen he told newsmen s1x passmg referenc e to the
West M.11n St1eel rhe t1acks remammg at the base of the
hack left the s treet m
weeks later- on Aug 27- tha t numerous charge!-; and offtctal
ran ~tl o n g the Pome1 oy Mason hlllstde to &lt;'!VOid the small
Pome1oy PermiSSIOn was
nobody then on h1s Wh1te House mvesttga tlons of tllegal fund
und erpass 1oad an area that at rn c..:l tnes th e bighw£Jy en
gran ted m late June and on
the tune co1tamed the round counlct s Jlle Ime then ran Jul) fn s t Hm es Roush who staff WdS rnvo lved
ra1smg, mfluence-peddlmg and
The
sta
temenL
was
the
most
house and 0 ! gme term mal f01 ' wht olong the road to a creek
pohtteal '"bolage dtrected
had pil oted the ftrst run of the
compr ehens1ve pi esentat10n yet aga1nst the Democratic rivals
the Ho( km g Valley Ralh\a\ JU St soulh of the presen t Racme
!me operated the last one The
of how the President personally
yar ds
I he tr 1cks t hen Plc1nmg Mtll \\here 1t .agam
hne contmued to carry coal
HIS Own Theory
became
uwa1
e
of
the
scope
of
Whtle condemmng these
t etm nell to Moin Sheet whet e ~.: r ossed lo the wes t side of the
Ull ti l ]936
Water ga t~ It came as m01 e
oppmu te ltu; Hockmg Vcdley I OEJ d
acts,
he offered hts own theory
I he !me s f1ve st1eet cars
delm
ls
were
unfoldmg
daily
In of why atdes to whom he had
Rai h~ d} ( nu\\ Chess1e S) stem )
At the tune \1me Number when passenge1 se1v1ce was
frer ght st.atum \\as luca led S1xteen was located whet e the d1scontmued we1 e sold to a the tclev1sed Senate mvest1ga entrusted enormous author1ty
twns mto the matter
misused It
anothe1 pa s ~mg Sidtng lhe Mtll 1s now and a Sldmg was Buffalo N Y concern The
N1xon
said
he
was
1
ssumg
It
Each wtth hiS own perspec
hnc &lt;:UJ tmued up Mam Sl Un u the I e fOt the loadrn g of hop pet
t1 ack not abandoned m 1929
to
d1
aw
a
d1stmct10n
between
the bus1ness dtstnct whet e the cars 1il e tracks returned to was 1emoved m 1936 w1th two
tlve and hts own respon&lt;rompctn\ s office was located lhe e 1st Side u[ the 1o ~d JUSt exceptiOns A sectwn m Tlurd th~ W&lt;~terg&lt;t te a ffair and other. . s tblhhes saw the same
m the bmldmg now occupied bv not th of thr1 e 1rfd 1 em.u ned St of Racme remams ap· lcgl ln nale natwnal secunty s1tuatton wtth dtfferent eyes
F1 a nels 11m 1S t
Uw re t igh t along the 1oud to parently because teanng up opet atwns and to counter and heard the same words wtth
some of the mm e sensatronal different ears
Unlike the M1ddlepor t off1 cc HI Cine
th e sll eet and then repan mg 1t
which w IS onl} equipped fot
Just ;,oy.th of Lhc Racme
What one saw m terms of
\\ould llave cost more than the - and maccurate - of the
chm
ges
that
have
f1lled
the
the pd} ment d elcctJ u; btlls t'IIIIJ Ol d(IOil hr!lltS the l l dCk S scr.tp v.ould have been "orth
publtc responstbtUty another
recent
days
'
~ ~
headlines
m
and t he s.de of sl1eelcar left the 1oads1de and cut a&lt;.:ro.:.s
saw
- m terms o f political op1 he other section IS fr om
Prom1ses
Responses
token s th1 s off1ce had a d ld t ge f1eld The tJ dCks en
porturuty and mtxed through tt
whe1e the t1 acks left the street
He
sa1d
1t
\\as
based
on
h1s
all, I am sure, was a concern on
v.aillng ruom flus ~attm g te 1ed Th1rd St1eet m f1 ant of
m Pomm oy to Forest Run Thrs
room was p1ov1ded be&lt;.:ause the lat ge gas s tatlun on the east line was acqmred by the uwn recollections of what he !he part of many that the
IContmued on page 10)
H oc ki n~
Va lle) Ra1l~ay s1de of the 1oad The tracks [an
Hockmg Vallev Ra 'way wh1ch d1d and sa1d dunng the months
pa ssenger t1 ams backed to thts tlu ough Rae1ne on 1hu d St
wa s
merged
wto the
pOin t ft om the fre1ght }ard so and nhm e 1t ends by the Chesa peake and Oh1 o Ra1lway
passengers could transfer to pr escnt Hd( 111e F 1t e Sta tiOn
m 1lJ30 The hne now ends Just
the stt ce t (c~ r s 1he tJcH.: ks the t1 acks also ended
east of Route 7 a small sectiOn
Du 1111g the 29 }ears that the
contmued w the st1ect unlil
of the mamlme remams as a
across th e street from sl! cet c 1rs 1&lt;J!l over these
Prov1co Feed s1dmg act oss
POmeroy Cement Bloc k t1 d ~ k s oper atrons changed
!1om
the
Bookmobtle
Company s ptesent locatwn Al hllle fhcre \\as no passenger
Headquarters and 1s s till used
by the Chessle System
thiS po1nt the tracks left tJ.e SC I VICC on the FOI est HUrt
st re ~t tur rung toward th e b1 anch The lme had three
I he bmlders of th1s line had a
bas1
c
lype.s
of
1
uns
The
fu
st
baSicall} sound Idea m the
nver Also the Hocktng Valley
Rallw&lt;~y ended here
the was the Hobson to Racme run
construction of the Oh io R1ve1
str cetca1 hne was hke an whrch operated eve1y hour and
Elect11c Rallwa) and Powc1
20
nnnutes
The
pnce
was
extens ron of 1t
Company I ast)ear the county
1 h1 s was the OhiO R1\Cr Ollgtndll) }4 &lt;;Cnl&lt;; fhe SCc-Ond
h&lt;Jd a plan for the grO\\ th and
Raii \HIY s on I}
ph ysical was I Ire sTw1t itne 1un '~ htch development of the county
Thts plan states that r rfnllme
conn ('Cti OJ1 to the regular ldn bllween Hobson and the
992-9981
ra1lr oi.l d g) !\ tern s mce lhe PomCI oy Sail Assn plant (now
~ hould b~ built from Pome1 0}
ll il( k \\ ri S llUt connected tO the the Pomer dy Junk Com pan}
to Rc1 C1ne to encourage m
538 W. MAIN
PON.EROY, 0.
Ku n.Hv h,1 ;md M1Ch1 ga n s&lt;:J .1pyurd ) at Muwrsv11le
dustJJ(:JI devclopmenl
II) f" L(, E:NF. I
W ASH! ~ GTON

Rise and fall of streetcar

industry in Meigs recalled

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LOWEST PRICE

qu1ck
Senate
Ju_d1c1ary
Committee approval of N1xon's
chotee for attorney ~enerai­
Elhot Richardson- was sud
denly delayed and the committee proceeded to question
Rtchardson further about talks
he has had wtth Egrl Krogh Jr
the White House olftc1al who
headed a task force to check on
secunty leaks
There also were reports of a
posstble dLSpute begmmng between Archtbald Cox , Richardson's ch01ce for special
prosecutor, and the several
federal prosecutors now han
dlmg the Watergate crumnal
mveshgatton The Washmgton
Post satd that as a result of this
dispute, prosecution of the case
was delayed and no more
Witnesses currently are scheduled to appear before the
Watergate grand Jury
fhe Post satd the question
was whether the regular
prosecutors, Earl S1lbert Jr
SeymoUl' Ganzer and Donald
Campbell, would contmue thetr
work They were meetmg wtth
Cox today
Caulfield Teshf1es
Caulfteld, 44, a former New
York Ctly policeman and self.
descrtbed secunty expert who
went to work for the Whtte
House, testified Tuesday that
John W Dean [[[, then
presidential counsel
m
structed hun to transm1t the
clemency offer to McCord who
was later convicted m the
Watergate buggmg

•'

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•••

The committee called for
testimony from Anthony T
Ulasewtcz 54 another retired
New York detective who ts
satd to have made telephone
cal ls for Caulfield to set
up meetmgs w1!h McCord
McCord testified Fr~day that
Caulfteld mvoked Ntxon s
name tn extendmg the offer of
a pres1dent1al pardon m return
for cool*·atton m htdtng the
extent of the Watergate plot
Caulfteld demed tt
Speakmg m an unemotional
VOICe , McCord teS tified
Frtday
Caulfield stated that he was
carryrng the message of execu
live clemency to me from the
very highest .evels of the Whtte
House 1

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"Rtdes \
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BEST

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Sat &amp; Sun Afternoons
5 Rtdes-SJ 00

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PLAZA

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~~ ••
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:
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VALUES
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Ga lhpohs Oh1o
FREE - DISCount Rrde
T1ckets From All
Plaza M erc hant s

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SEARS

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Catalog Merchant

22 0 E Mam

I

Pomeroy

PH 992 2178

PTA plans health fair
j

: -'Ma¥-ztTo-iiin&amp;l--~

•e

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•

•••

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l ............. .

Open Mon Thurs 9 a m to 7 p
d~ys 9 am to B 30 p m

m -

Pomeroy

m to 8 p m - Satur

Frtdays 9 a

FOR MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND

Steak to Barbecu
USDA

CHOICE

16 oz. bottle

79¢

8
PAK

T·BONE
SIRLOIN

Wtth

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Good At Stmon's
Expires 5-26·73

KANSAS CITY
BROUGHTON'S

Cottage Ch

75¢~~~~~~~~
32 oz. bot.

BUY 2 1.8.

89¢

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FREE

WITH THIS

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BROUGHTON-$

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SIMONS MARKET -

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Redee mab e only at SIMONS MARKET _ _
bpres 6 30 73

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FOR

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22 oz bot

49¢

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KING

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$1.00
CIGARETTES

5

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or KING SIZE

~~-iLii

BREAD

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L MIT 1 COVPON PER CUSTO MER

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only a t _ S1 mon s Market
Exp1res_ 6 30 13

Reported JJ1 were Mrs
Ulhan Triplett, Mrs Gertrude
Mtller and Leslie Erwm
Kelly had the opentng
prayer, and Mrs Allensworth
read a poem • Kneeling tn the
Garden·
There was a
Memorial Day Prayer ''
medttabon by Mrs Memhart
who also read an arhcle
Golden Prayer" by Norman
Vmcent Peale
Mrs- Martha Haggerty
served refreshments Mrs
Thelma Wr!ey was a conI! 1buhng hostess FollD~&gt;mg
the meetmg a stlent auction
was held wtlh $13 12 bemg
made on the proJect for the
class treasury

•
•

Na shville Tenn e
The Carol Jones Show
I
• W1th Tony The Trger &amp; Leo I

I

THE

Stage Show
From

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To See For • • •

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MAGIC MIOWAY•Game s I

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A yard sale was planned for
July 12 and 13 at the home of
Mrs Clyda Allensworth at
Monday mght's meettng of the
Loyal Bereans Class at the
Middleport Church of ChriSt
Named to handle communton
ror June were Mrs George
Memhart and Mrs Cathenne
Erwm Mr and Mrs Memhart
wtl\ be tbe greeters for the
month
Marvm Kelly on behalf of
the church trustees, thanked
the class for a dona t10n on the
roof work He reported that the
proJect 1s nearmg completion
and that the total cost was over
$2,000

••

I

1 Here's the Man

•

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

115 W. Mam

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#4............~. . - · .

~

Plans for
Me1gs County
Health Fatr to be staged some
time this summer were
dtscussed when the Mtddleport
PTA met Monday mght at the
Mtddlep ort
Elementary
School
A commumcatwn regardmg
the health fatr was read and
members were mvtted to attend a planmng sessiOn to be
held on Thursday May 31 at
7 30 p m at the Mtddleport
Ftrst Umted Presbytenan
Church
Corsages were presented by
Mrs Edward Crooks on behalf

Shower fetes
Miss Bostic

IN TOWN

•
•

Loyal Bereans
plan yard sale

1ne fill :sent mel M1dd.lepm t Pom~O\ 0 Ma\ 23 19'i'J

SYRACUSE - The table was
decorated Wtth a pmk and
wh1te umbrella Wllh ptnk and
wh1te streamers for the bndal
shower for Debbte Johnson
Bosltc brtde.elecl of Kenneth
R1zer, at the Racme American
Leg1on Hall Monday mght,
May 14
Hostesses for the shower
were Rorname Frederick
Mary Plckens, Linda Parsons
Lizzie Wood and Marie R1zer
Games were played and
those wmnmg pnzes were
Vtcky SmtU1, Jean Lipscomb,
Mary Janice Lavender and
Mtldred Pterce The door pnze
went to E1leen Clark
After the gtfts were opened,
refreshments of cake Ice
cream punch, mmts nuts and
coffee were served by the
hostesses to Vtcky Smtih , and
Charlie Mary Ctrcle, Clara
Lavender , Mabel Ptckens,
Chnstena Holley, Mr and Mrs
Mtlfred Fredert ck,
Sr ,
Elizabeth Rtce, Ed1th Cogar
Zelma Hawley Suzan Rtce
Sharon Cogar VIcki Rtzer
Eleanor J Douglas, Barbara
Douglas, Nancy Aetker,
Georgana Lipscomb, Jo Ann
WtUford, Juamta Davtd, and
Tony Fredertcl&lt; , Mtldred
P1erce and Tma Thelma
Grueser and Teresa, VIvmn
Johnson, Martha Wolfe, Carol
Wolfe, Barbara Hunt, Gladys
Robson Edt th Hood Etleen
Clark, Mtnme Rtzer, Kathy
• R1zer, Margaret R1zer, Inez
W1ckhne, Mar~e Pursley, Betty
Moore, Lora RusseU, Edna
Gnmm and T1ma , Ra chel
Sm1th Addte Mae Bush
Tammy Bush, Paultne Bosltck
Donna Johnson, Mrs Edtson
Johnson , Margaret Cottrill
Sharon Col!rtll Mr and Mrs
Ralph
Lavender,
Eber
Pickens Jr , R1cky, Bnan Lee
and David Wayne Parsons
Sendtng gtfts were Myla
Hudson, Ada Slack Garrell
and Anme Nease, Sandra
Booth, Franc1se and Lester
McKenzie
Jtm
Ables
•
Clarence, Hazel and Debora
W1ckhne , Mrs Dons Hawley
and family , Pam Larkms
Debbte and Earl Ptckens
Dorothy Noms Dorothy
Bentz Mrs Alma Johnson and
famtly Lucy Taylor Frances
Foster Mr and Mrs Hoger
Manual and Ang1e, Mr and
Mrs Paul Sm1th Mrs Bermce
LaValley Mrs Laura Ctrcle
Mrs Jane Teaford and Mrs
Norman Rizer
PLAN REVIVAL
HARTFORD, W Va - There
wtll be a revtval at the Hartford Church of Chnst 1n
Chnsltan UniOn 7 30 p m
mghtly from May 23 to June 3
by Evangelist Raymond Rice,
Byesvtlle Ohw There wtll be
specral smgmg each evenmg
Pastor Wtlham Ca mpbell
mv1tes everyone

of the PTA to the teachers and
cooks The attendance award
was won by the third grade
Mrs J enntfer Butcher's
second grade led m the pledge
to open the meeting and the
Rev Wtlltam Kmttel gave
devotwns
The program was presented
by the th~rd grade class of Mrs
McComas Mothers from the
class served as hostesses and
greeters for the meetmg

Mother's Day
program given
at Portland
BY GOLDIE CLENDENIN
The
PORTLAND
ReorganiZed Church of Jesus
Chns! of Latter Day-Satnts
Church on Ractne - Portland
Rd had a Mother s Day
program tnstead of Sunday
School Sunday mormng There
were special songs by chmr
dtrected by Mercedes Condon
wrth Linda Evans at the organ
and Nancy Adams at the plano .
and a spectal song by Eula
Proffitt
Jane Johnson and Earlene
Stobart donated potted plants
for chrldren to present to
mothers and grandmothers
The Cleland Flower Shop to
Racme provtded
potted
geramums for the oldest
mother attendmg that mornmg
(yours truly ) and youngest
went to Sharon Russell
Mrs Norma Goodwm sent
altar flowers agam as she has
m the past
On Saturday Golda Gtlhlan
Lucy Taylor, !lah Roush, Beula
Roush and this reporter at·
tended Church Women 's Insbtute ttl Jackson, OhiO There
were five workshops m groups
for Semor C1hzens officers,
Women s leader etc, grand
mothers, youth leaders and
pubhc1ty programs
The most rec ent guest
speaker was Elder Jtm
Cummwgs from Kentucky
also a welcome guest Howard
Proffttt Columbus
The Ctrcle met at the home of
Edgar and Lucy Taylor on
McKenzie Ridge Thursday
evemng m charge of Golda
Gllhlan , leader
The worship theme was
Love thy ne1ghbor ' by
program chatrman Lucy
Taylor, the hostess After the
secretary's report and pledge
collectiOn, a ftsh pond sale and
exchange of potted plants were
held
Stster Lucy gave each one a
cuttmg from her collection of
begomas, geramW1!s, etc and
refreshments were served to
ones menttoned and Pearl
Pro,ff1tt J oan Prolf1tt and
dau ghte r Evelyn Foreman
and daughter, Anna Lance,
Me rcedes Condon, Jane
Johnson, th1s reporter and a
guest and n~1ghbor of Jane
Johnson , Linda ~ter and
Patty Roush
L
PERSONAL ITEMS
Edgar Taylor remams
conftned to hts home, but
servtces small apphances
whtch keeps htm occupted on
hiS good days , also Myrtle
Proffitt doesn t get out much
but uses a walker rns1de lla
Roush v1s1ted w1th her one
evenmg last week wh1le
Brother Clarence attended
church
The Lebanon Golden Agers
Sr Citizens Club mel at the
Racme Portland Rd Church
for 1ts second meetmg They
mv1te all rolk round about and
from other clubs to attend on
the second WedneSday of the
m nnlh

Theodorus council to Syracuse·group
host inspection
lns~twn

was announced
for June 18 at Monday mght s
meehng of Theodorus Counctl
17, Daughters of Amertca, held
at the IOOF hall, Pomeroy
A pract1ce for the InspectiOn
was set for the June 4 meetmg
at wh1ch hme the charter wtll
be draped for Mrs Jessie Thle
\\ ho died frtday at the Arcadta
NwsmgHome tn Coolvtile The
counctl sent flCIWers and also
conducled ~erv1ce at the Ew.ng Funeral Home Sunday
evemng Representing the
counc rl at the funeral serv1ces
at the Rock Sprmgs Umted
MethodiSt Church Monday
were Mrs Edna Re1bel Mrs
Ethel Smtih and Mts Kate
Goodwtn
The Illness of Mrs Edna
SL1Ies , shU a patient at
Veterans Memonal Hosp1tal,
and Mrs Etta W11l were
reported It was also noted that
M1ldred
Spencer
ts
recuperatmg from a broken

ankle at home followmg
treatment at the Holzer
Med1cal Center A card was
Signed for her
Mrs
Nettle
Hayes
d1stnbuted Letters for the
r.1embers to s1gn and mat! to
Na11ona1 Aeroriauttcs and
Space Adnumstratlon as part
of the national Daughters of
Amcrrca campaign to show
support of B1ble readmg tn
space 1 he Daughters are
actl\ely worktng to brmg
prayer 1 back mto the class
room It was reporterl
A commumcat10n was read
requestmg the council to drape
the charter Without ceremony
for a past nattonaJ councilor
Mrs Mabel Vaux, who died
Apnl 13 tn Washmgton, D C
Mrs Hayes reported that
Mrs Retbel diSlrtct deputy
had tnspected Belle Pra1nc 269
CoWlcil on May 14 G1fts were
presented to Mrs Reibel and to
Mrs Hayes who accompamed
her to Belpre

Local DeMolays named
to state officerships
Jon Bunce, Middleport and
W1lltam Qu1c kl e, Cheshire,
members of Me1gs Chapter
Order of DeMolay were m
stalled as State Pnory offtc ers
m ceremomes Fr1day mght at
the 1973 spnng workshop and
meeltng o[ D1stnct 11 held at
Sidney
Over 8011 DeMolay members
and advtsors from OhiO were
present for the workshop
l"rtday Saturday and Sunday
The boys stayed at the Holiday
lmpenal Motel
The Me~ gs Chapter was the
rectptent of the Joe Shirley
membership
sweeps takes
award and recelVed $45 m
cash Each of the boys attended a workshop and par
licipated m a vanety of sports
dunng the three day mee!mg
J W Null a state DeMolay
offi cial was gues t speaker at
one of the sess ions An·
nouncement was made o£ a
conclave for all DeMolay
members to be held at the
Akron Umverstl)&lt; Aug 9 12
Reservahons are to be made
before June 30
Meeting m Stdney at the
same ttme were the DeMolay
Mothers Clubs of Ollto
Gotog from here to Stdney
for the weekend were Tlm
Kmg master councilor, Don
Vaughan JUni or co un ctlor ,
Dav1d Edward, JUniOr coun
ctlor elect George Stewart,
Bert Moshier Don Gabntsch

Mrs. Hart hosts
garden club
Mrs Judy McDonald and
Mrs Flossie Story were
welcomed mto the membership
of the Walk In Garden Club
durtng a meetmg held recently
at the home o[ Mrs MaXIne
Hart '
Officers were elected and
plans were discussed for an
open rneetmg m June For roll
call members named their
rav orrte May flower DevotJons
were gtven by Mrs Golda
Story The hiStory of Luther
Burbank, plant sctenliSt was
presented by Mrs Edna Lee
Ribbons were awarded to
Mrs Lee for red orchid cactus
and red barberry , and to Mrs
Belva
Wtllard
for
an
arrangement of JrlS fohage and
pmk gernalUms

J1[ Gabntscli 1om Can oll
Van Wmdsor Robert Kmg
chapter Mrs Robert Kmg
president of the local Mothers
Club Mrs Delmer Qutckle
11th D1stncL state represen
ldtrve Mrs Don Gabntsch
Sr Mrs Sally Moshier and
Gov and Mrs Ben Roberson
Drstn d 11

'

~

enjoys banquet

SYRACUSE - A mother
daughter hanquet was held
recently rn the annex of the
l"tril Umted Presbytertan
Church Followmg dmner the
brroup adJourned to the church
whe~e shdes of the Holy Land
were shown by Mr and Mrs
Sherman Cund1rr P1eces of
pottery were on display Mr
Cundiff gave an ImpressiVe
taP&lt;. as he showed the pictures
Attendmg were Mrs Lilhan
Duffy and daughter , Mrs
Beatnce Blake and her
daughter and granddaughter
Charlotte Nease and Dtana
(four generations) Ada Slack
daughter, Kathryn Johnson
and daughters, Tammy and
Cheryl Myla Hudson, Mrs
Florence Potts daughter Mrs
Mary Lisle, and daughter
Rose Ann Jenkins, Mrs Esther
Harden and daugl ter, Debbie
Mrs L1nda Hubbard and
ddughter Donna
Jamce

Social

;j

Lawson Mrs Jean Hall, Mrs
Mtldred Pierce and daughter,
Ttna) Mrs Datsy Roush and
daughter Mrs Genevieve
Sehne1der, and her daughter
Mrs Eleanor McKelvey 1 Mrs
Esther Sylvester daughter,
Mrs
Pam Thetss and
daughter Tammy Pauline
Moranty Helen Harns Mrs
Helen D1ddle and daughter,
Donna
Handley t
Mrs
Coltnll
and
Margaret
daughter Sharon Margaret
Wmebrenner, daughter.m law
Mrs PatriCia Wmebrenner
and her daughters Kim and
Krystall Rachel M c Br~de
Frankie Mumaw Juha Hysell
Thelma Grueser and grand·
daughter, 1 cressa ffrueser
Mrs Glenna Davis Mrs
Thomas Kelly Mtddleport
Mr and Mrs Sherman Cundiff
Rev and Mrs Dw1ghl Zavtlz
Rtchard Duckworth JOtned the
group for the program

Shower honors
Mrs. Tillis
II layette• s hower was held Davidson W1lma Davidson,
1 e(en tly hononng Mrs Jerry M1s Betty Wme, Lon Wme,

1illis al the home of Mrs C C
Howa td wtth Mrs Leona
Hysell .1s the ass1stmg hostess
Games were played w1th
p11zes gomg to Mrs Pauhne
t liils and Mrs Jerry Neal
Y.Ith Mrs Cra1g Howa rd
wrnnmg the door prtze
IS PATl ENT
Sandv.J&lt;.: hes potato chips,
Mrs Harry Houdashelt
M1ddleport und erwent eye cook1es coffee punch and
surgery at Umvers1ty Hosp1tal rnml" \\. ere served Attendmg
Monday She 1s con rm ed to the s ho wer bes rdcs th ose
Nease Hall Room 241 She was ll&lt;lmcd wer~e Mrs Susie
Mrs
Barbara
taken to Columbus Saturday by Hob1nson
Wlu
tttngto
n
Mrs
Sandra
her daughter Fu~ddtc v. ho
1emamed until
Monday IIII lS M1 s Elwood Howard
e\ emng Mrs Houdashelt J1 Missy Howard Mrs Mary
expects to be discharged from
the hospJlal the l atte~ part of
the week

M1 s Nora Hartman Mrs
Kathleen f1lhs Mrs Tc1es,J
Wood and daughter Heather,
M1 s Jud y McDonald .tnd
daugh ter M111dy, Mrs Kathy
Weaver Mrs Brenda Hysell
Mrs Phyllis Chne Shdron
Wtsc Joyce Wise, Ann Burson
Ailee Dav1s Janet l1llis Cathy
Simmons Wendy l1lhs Mrs
Ronald Riffle and 1 ma Rtffle
Others p1 cscntmg gifts were
Mrs Nelhe Borgan Mrs Clara
Howa1d Mz s Frances Alkrre
Mr:; Chn stm a Howard and
Mrs Lola Clark

Mothers were honored at the
Middleport Um!ed Pentecosta l
Church, South Thtrd Ave
Mtddleport on Mother s Day
]ll
trrbute to mothers
present the congrega tion sang
If I Could Hear My Mother
Pray Aga m led by Nathan
Vanaman 1am1 Kmttel sang
Wha t A Fr~end We Have In
Mother and Teresa Eastman
read a poem ent1t1ed
Mother
The pr1mary JUniOr girls
class and young rncn s class,
whose teachers are J oyce
Sauters Chnstme Sauters and
LaW! ence Rupe each made a
Mother s Day g1ft dunn g
Sunda y school classes to take
home The Rev Wilham
Kmttel spoke on the top1c

Hum1hty Exalted
Welcomed to the serv1ce
were Mr and Mrs James
V,rnaman and son Vmce, now
stal!oncd m 1 exas, wtth the U
S Air Force and Jumor
Engle home on leave from the
U S Army before deparltng
for a tour of duty m Germany
Engle IS a relal!vc or Frank
and Judy Lauderm11t
1 he JUniOr girls class
presented each mother at
tending w1th a red rose
provided through the church
flow er fund s up ervt sed by
Charles Fr1ley

Calendar ~

WEDNESDAY
WOMEN S
Chrtsl1an
Temperance Umon, 2 p m at
!he Pomeroy Un1ted MethodiSt
Church
AMERICAN LEGION
Auxrltary Feeney.Bennett
Post 128 potluck at 6 30 p m
w1th legwnnatres to be guests
Awuhary members to take a
covered dtsh Meeting at 7 30
pm
MISS EILEEN RICKMAN
The
Metgs
Chnshan
Women's Fellowship w11l be
havmg a mother-&lt;laughter tea
at the Pomeroy Church of
Chnst on Thursday at 1 30 p m
A special program ho~s beea
planned In addttlon to the
regula~ meetmg Miss Erleen
Rtckman Portsmouth, wdl be
the guest speaker M1ss Rtck
man ts a former M1ss1ons
Serv1ce worker out of Johet,
lJI ~md a former JUvemle
paz ule officer m Portsmouth
She IS a 1969 graduate of
Kentucky Chnsttan College '"
Grdysun Ky and IS presently
employed as a JUVCnJie
cascworke1 1n Portsmouth

HAS SURGERY
M" Hugh (li:sther) Damels
former Pomeroy resident, now
of M~am1 , Fla 1s confmed to
the H1aleah Hospital followmg
maJor SUI gery Ber address rs
H1,1\eah Hospital 651 East 25th
St H1orleah Fla Room 255A

OHIO
VALLEY
Com
mandry Kmghts Templar
stated conclave, 7 30 p m at
the Pomeroy Masomc Temple
All str kmghts are urged to
attend
FAMILY FELLOWSHIP
supper 6 p m at Racme Umted
Methodts t Church Bnng
covered dish and table servtce
SPEC IA L MEETING,
ruppers Platns Commumty
Club 7 30p m at home of Mrs
N1ta R1tCh1e Plans for horse
show 1ce cream soc1al and
sen1mg Ohve-Orange Alumni
Banquet
FRIDAY
VIGOR lN Matunty 2 p m
former Pomeroy Jr Hrgh
fmal scssaon emphasrs on
medicare social sccunty , and
commun1ty resources

VISIT HERE
Mr and Mrs Dwtght Brown
St Albans W Va were
Monday guests of Mr and Mrs
Chester Erwtn Mtddleport

Church honors mothers

HOST GUESifS
Mrs J acob Johnson and Mrs
J ess1e Reeves spent Mother s
Da.} at Pataskala vJsihng Mr
and Mrs Paul Hammond and
chtldren Ray fra cy Beverly
and Barba1 a fhcy also VlsJted
Mr and Mrs Frank C1esech
Weekend guests of the Johnson
f.amily Mrs Reeves and other
relatives here were Mr and
Mrs George Allen Mrs
Lanella !"ox and son Rllndy
Bucyrus
IN HOSPITAL
Mrs Fred W1lcoxen R3 of
near Racme 1s a patient at the
Pleasant Valley Ho spital
Pmnt Pleasant Mrs Wrlcoxen
fra ctured her h1p tn a fall at her
home las t We€k

Meigs 4-H Club 1Vews
CHES1 ER - The Chester
Farm Boys 4 H Club met May 7
at the home of Gary Nelson
With 13 memhers and the ad
v1sor, Charles F reeker,
prese nt A spectal health
report on Joggmg was given by
Freddy Young
Rodney Keller led the club m
a basketball game Refreshments were served by Mrs
Nelson Th e next meetmg wtll
be May 31 at the home of Mark
Hall Special plans for th1s
meetmg mclude a frshmg tr1p
- Ke1 th Krautter
CARPENTER - The MIXed
Up Hotshots mel May 15 at the
Research Center at Carpenter

Adv1sors attendmg were Mr
and Mrs Robert Ltch There
were 10 members present
Busmess disc ussed mcluded
111v1tmg parents to one of the
meetmgs, a boat tr1p down the
Ohw R1ver and selling flower
bulbs [.ester J effers reported
on b1cycle safety and Bryan
Jord an gave a report on health
1 he members all JOtned m
playing softball and tag
Refreshmcnl"i were served by
Marco and Lester Jeffers The
ned meetmg wtll be at the
Research Center Spectal plans
mclude a report by V1rgmaa
Jordan - Ralph J ordan

CARAVELLE"
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AUTOMATICS
by BULOVA
Please h1m all the t1me w1th all the t1me one of these new
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cally' Never needs wmdmg Ma n SIZed watches rugged water
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Bulova A greal g1ft at a pleasant pnce
$59 95

TO MEET
fh e annual meetmg of the
Pomeroy Women s Bowling
Assoctallon wtll be held May 30
at 7 10 p m at !he Pom~roy
Bowhng Lanes There will be
an election of ofrlcers

1973 ZENITH SOLID-STATE

'

,~

I

NEW HAVEN DISCOUNT TIRE

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• Micro Touch" 2G ToM Arm

• Solid Stlte{ M/AM 1 Siereo FM Radio
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MIDDLEPORT. 0.

�•
1- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May 23. 1973

Lake Snowden Rec Area
to be opened .on Ma·y 26
A new $1.1

the state slar.d as evidence of

vruject a success. Local Soil

mi!Jion watershed lake and

the dedicated efforts of local
people
working
to
do
something to reduce flooding,
increase recreation, provide
water supplies, and improve

and

COLUMBUS -

'

:·

·.
·..
::

recreation complex will of.
licially open to ttie public on
May 26, according to Robert E.
Quilliam , state conser\lationist
in Ohio for the U. S. Soil Conservation Service (SCS ).
Cong . Clartnce E. Miller of
Ohio's lOth District
be on
hand to open the Lake Snowden

environment of their area . ·•
" Lake Snowden, one of six in

'
the watershed project, will be a
constiln l source of pleasure
and an economic boon to the ·t
entire section of the state," he
sa id .
Two win degrees
The lake, cons tructed with
cost sharing and technical
Miss Rebecca D&lt;Jbney,
supervision of the SCS, is Ash ton, received her AB in
designed to provide water Early Childhood Education
based recreation, muniCipal from Marshall University On
water supp ly, and fl ood Sunday, May 13. She plans to
protection.
teach in Mason County in the
The Margaret Creek Con- ,•fall. Miss Dabney is the
serVancy District, one of the daughter uf Mr. and Mrs.
project sponsors, cost shared James Dabney . Miss Jackie
on the projcd and will manage Aldridge, Mason, the same day
the recreational facilily and received her AB . in Home
pfovide maintenance for the. Economics fr om Marshall . She
development.
plans to leach in Mason County
Many local, state, and this fall. Miss Aldridge is the
federal agencies have worked dcmghtcr of Mr.. and Mrs.
with the SCS to mak e this Charles W. Aldridge.

Area. The 130 acre

lake, a part of Public Law 566
Margaret Creek Watershed
Project near Athens, JeatureS

swimmming, bOating, and
fishing .

" The area

Conser\' a Lion

Natural Resources, F'armers
Home Administration 1U~DA)
&lt;md the OHice of Appalachia
have made essential contributions to the project.

I he

""II

Recr~tion

Water

Dtstricl(), Ohio Department of

provides 75

wooded Campsites to attract
the real outdoorsman, along
with grassed picnic and play
areas," Quilliam noted . All

modern conveniences and
-facilities have been included to
attract
campers
from
throughout the state and area .

''Watersheds provide many
public benefits," said Quilliam .
and
flood
" Watershed
protection dams throughout

Window to Washington
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Senate Appropriations com[)oxing the most severe crisis mittee followed earlier House
of his two and a half decades of action by voting 24.0 to rut off
public life, President Nixon has money for U.S. bombing in
been
uncharacteristica lly Cambodia.
silent.
A White House protest
,While his White House staff against this weakening of the
has ·crumbled amid tales of President's bargaining
political .i ntrigue, while two of . positiol) while negotiations are
his former cabinet officers underw.oy -an appeal that
have beCn irx:licted for criminal always worked in the past offenses and while attempts to was hardly audible above the
corrupt the courts, the elec- din of Watergate.
toral process, the CIA, the FBI
The upcoming visit of Soviet
and the SEC have been un- party Leader Leonid I. Brezh.
folding over the past several nev holds the potential for
weeks, Nixon has simply producing some of the major
hunkered down to ride out the foreign policy successes of the
storm.
Nixon JYesidency. But even his
Inflation is soaring at its friends are now wondering if
highest rate in a generation. the President's prestige has
The stock ma.rket has taken its been eroded so severely that he
sharpest drop in more than two will have to grant too many
y:ear$. And th e peace in concessionS in the bargaining.
Since the broader dimen·
Southeast Asia that took so
many lives and dollars to sions of tbc Watergate scandal
achieve a ppears to be disinte- broke, Nixon has made two
grating before his eyes.
carefully worded statements.
Congress now appears to be On Aprill7, he announced that
ready for the fir"st _time in the as a result of "serious
decade of American military charges" whicl) came to his
involvement in Southeast Asi8 attention on March 21 he had
to cut off funds for prosecuting launched ·a new .investigation.
11
the war.
Real progress'' had been
made in ,finding the truth, he
Brezhnev Visit Vital
While the President's chief said.
envoy, Henry A. Kissinger, Dramatic Move Foreseen
was leaving for Paris to ·
On April 30 after three of his
negotiate with Hanoi's Le Due top aides and Atty. Gen.
Tho on ways to save the Richard · G. Kleindi enst had
crumbling peace last week, the r esigned, he appeared on

television and promised there
would be no whitewash at the
White House. He said he was
movin: Elliot L. Richardson
from the Pentagon to the
Justice Department to take
charge of the investigation and
told the American people in the
clearest terms yet that he
personally had no part iri the
wrongdoing.
Speculative art icles have
appeared recently suggesting
the President is planning some
swee ping , dramatic move
aimed at instantly reversing
thedeterforation of his political stature and allowing him to
seize the initiative from his
opponents.
.
BUt White House ad~isers
willing to talk do not see this in
the books. They believe the
President plans to ride out the
turbulence , let the judicial
slowly grind away and the
fa cts oe exposed and bank on
the belief that the major thrust
or his domestic and foreign
policies still find a favorable
response ~mong most Amerlcans.
They see the process of
pickin g u1- the pieces of his
shattered Administration as a
slow and painful exe rcise and
do not dispute the judgment
that tile White House will never
again be as powerftd as it was
under Nixon during . the first
three months of 1973.

f:XTF.NOF:Il OUTLOOK
A ehancc or showers
Friday ur Saturday t learlng
Sunday. Daily high tern·
peratures av~raging in the
60s north to 70s in lbe south.
Lows at night In 40s north
and 50s south.

Collins backs
consumer laws
COLUMBUS
State
Repre se ntative Oaklt)y C.
Collins 1R - ~. oo~o r. 1 has voted
for legislation to protect the
consumer in the purchase of
automobiles and mobile
homes. The bill would assume
Lhat these purc hases are
·cove red by the Retail In·
stallmen t Sales Act. The act
provides specific provisions,
according to Rep. Collins, t~
assure ''an open, fre e" and
honest market place."
Some of the protections a! the
retail installment credit act
are : Allowing a consumer who
defaults on his payments to
regain possession of the car or
mobile horne under certain
requirin g
ci r c umstances;
public sale of auto or mobile
home under commercially
reasonable circumstances, and
not hurting business, will
simply assure Lhat business is
continually conduc ted on the
most equitable basis for all
affected, according to ColliTls.

Horse farms will
be toured Sunday
A tour

of the horse far·ms in

Deadline given lottery accord
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - House
Republican and Democratic
leaders have been given a week
to come up wiUl an agreement
allowing inuned.iate establiSh·
ment of a commission to S(&gt;t up
the mechanics of a state lot·
tery.
A House~Senate cOnference
committee on the lottery met
Tuesday and determined the
lone hangup on giving the
lottery legislation
"emergen cy" .status is a
demand by House Republicans
that priority be given to their
bill requiring that lottery
proceeds go for property tax
relief.
The six ~rna n conference
committee instructed the three
House conferees to work on the
problem and report back next
Tuesday.
Failure to reach an agreement would delay the estal&gt;lishment of a State Lottery
Planning Commission for 90
days.
~~There's a hatchet over our
head.'' said Rep. Barney Quilter, D·Toledo, one of the House
conferees. " It's as simple as
that."
Quilter, wbo is House major·

Degree conferred
Miss Sandra C. Porter of
Pomeroy, wi::ls C~mong the 1~ 429
persons to r eceive degrees
fr om lhe University of North
Carolina at Greensboro during
recent co mmencement
ce n~monies . Miss Porter, the
•

Fayette County will follow the daughter of Frank Porter Jr.,
next meeting of SCOPS, the 21:1 Union Ave., received a
South Centra l Ohio Preser· bachelor of science degree in
vation Society, Inc., at 2 p.m. physical education.
Sunday, May 27.
Member·s and friends will uf the farms.
meet in the co_urt house, in
The busi ness meeting will
Washing ton Court House, the in clude a report by Mrs.
home of the famous Archibald Joseph VanMeter, SCOPS
Willard Murals. It is a lso the coordinator , on the "Scioto
home of Mrs. Richard Rankin , River Project", and on.e by
SCOPS presiden t, who is a Vice President Franklin
breeder of horses with her own Conaway on " Re storat ion
stables . She will lead the tour ProjeCl'l'·'.

ity leader. said he would dis·
cuss the situation with House
Speaker A. G. Llincione, [).
Bellaire.
·
WliereToGo
" I think the answer is we'll
probably tell them were to go
unless they throw in. some
other thinga," Quilter said.
If no agreement cari be
reached, Sen. Ronald M. Mottl,
D-Parma, is expected to propose legislation to implement
the lottery without waiting for
a special commission to be
started in three months and
then make recommendations.
Mottl, chief sponsor of the
lottery and a member of the
co nference committee, said
lack of "emergency" status for
the lottery commission bill
would probably mean the first
lotiery ticket would not be sold
in Ohio until June I, 1974.
He said this would cost the
state up to $50 million in lost
revenues because of the delay.
Mottl, Quilter and three
other conferees - Sen. Robert
J. Carts, R Elyria, committee
chairma n i Sen. William H.
Mussey, R-Batavia, and Rep.
Thomas Fries, DDayton- said
they fayored "eme rgen c y ~'
priority.
But the ace card was held by
the sixth conferee, Rep. Joseph
:.P. Tulley, R-Mentor who said
the 41-rnember House GOP
delegation would not go along
with the emergency unless
floor action was proffiised for
Tulley 's bill earmarking lot·
tery proceeds for property tax
relief.
To General Fund
Under the voter-approved
lottery proposal, proceeds are
to go into the general fund.
Democrats are
House
hoping to take thi s money
out of,the general fund and use
it to finance a proposed Viet·
nam War veterans' bonus,
which is sponsored by Hol,ISe
Speaker Pro Tempore Vernal
G. Riffe Jr., D-New Boston.
The bonus bill other~&gt;ise
would require a new 0.6-mill
s tatewide · property tax, to

Council presidents in those
cities now have two.year
terms. Mottl, a fonner council
president in !'Onna, said hls
bill is designed to make the
terms of council presidents coincide with those of mayors.
Sen . David [,. Headley, [).
akron, one of the six opponents,
said council presidents should
run for eJection every two
years " because it keeps them
more responsive to the public."
" If they want four year
terms," agreed Sen. Paul R .
Matia, R-Westlake , " let them
adopt a charter."
In other legislative develo~
ments :
- The Senate unanimously
passed and sent to the House a
bill requiring that mothers be
checked for gonorrhea, just as
they are for syphillis, during
pregnancy or after delivery.
- The House returned to
committee without floor 'votes
a pair of bills forbidding retail
liquor establishments to pur·
chase their supplies from state
stores and making wholesale
revisions in the state's wildlife .
management la\7.
Both chambers reconvene at
1:30 p .m . today.

which Republicans object.
· Mottl bad better success in
Senate Door action Tuesday .
His probate reform bill
allowing distribution without
court administration of all
estates under $10,000 "'"' a~
proved, :!U. and sent to the

House.
Currently, only estates of
$!j,000or less can be distributed
without administration .
Eliminate Costs
Mottl said his bill would
eliminate court costs and at~
torneys ' fees for survivor$ of
persons with small estates,
adding it would cut the normal
probate period of six or seven
months to six weeks.
Six attorneys opposed the
bill, claiming sufficient liberal·
izations have been made in
prohate law during the lost de·
cade.
.
MotU also secured 23-1i pass·
age of another bill, giving fouryear terms to council presi-.
dents in non-charter cities with
more than 5,000 residents.
That bill, already adopted by
the House, would affect about
90 non-charger cities, the largest of which are Canton , Lorain

and Panna.

..,,

U.S. GOY'T INSPECTED

'"BD'XI oft

Fresh Fryer Legs

whole .. "

80NELESS HALVES

A&amp;P Buffet Ham lh. $189
SLICED

Smoked Picnic .

lh.

69•

l'rlceo Good Thru Sot., May 26th, 1973

Middleport, Ohio
CLOSED
MEMORIAL DAY

ALL ON,E PRICE! NONE HIGHER!

~ s~sf.etdt.

1:.141

"SU PER-RIGHT" QUALITY

~:.1 51

Oscar Mayer Franks~~~::: .~~:$1°' T-liiMU!I
fl:::r::rr:~~--:---~--.....lKingsford Steaks ~=~rs • pkg~1!'
Salad --f,.,~ERN
~~;p~ 39c:
'
Turkey Leg Quarters
Macaroni Salad_. ~SlYL'1E:!lE~~
I

I

-·

COUNTRY STYLE RIBS or

I

plcc,

14b.Mc:

I

l'l• · l b . $ , 5 9 :

pkg.
U.S. GOV'T .INSPECTED FROZEN

~He.tta~

•••elb.99¢

· w~

$,19

"SUPER-RIGHT" FRESH

•

... 2

"SUPER-RIGHT" ALL MEAT

-CUT TO YOUR ORDER FOR: ·
strip Stttks. '1'·8one
Steaks, SirtDio Sta•kJ,
Or Portertloun Steaks.

•

'

canne d

SELF-SEAL .·
ROOF SHINGLES

54

OF PlASTICS DIVISION
ALLIED CHEMICAL CORP.

95

BEEF

Right reserved to limit quantities

O

..

large&amp;
80

·•

We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Starn ps

Meadowgold

Prices Effective May 23-30

"Holland"

Monday Thru ~ri~~~-~

ICE CREAM
tf2 gal.
crtn.

9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9

69¢

......
Gk•.39C:

¢

Several Flavors

CLOSED SUNDAYS

PRODUCE BUYS!
New Solid

Cabbage
2
lb.

Yellow

Onions

j tT

I

•

•

• • •

&amp;~~;\'k Iars

lb.
pkg.
or more.._____________

New Red

Potatoes

Salad Dressing
With '10.00 or More .Order

•
1-lb .

RG~R\NE
STICK &gt;1&gt;1- WitH couPON

boWl

I

•

Cb\tion &amp;ELO"'
p\LLS&amp;k
URY 'B\scui\S
• •
f\a ~

jor

~

8RAN_
D

Holsum Hot Dog or
Hamburger

(8 pak)

Yes! We Slice Luncheon Meats to Your Order!

79¢
51 •1ce. d Baeon • •••••••••• •••• •. •·•lb.. 89¢

Wishbone
· Dressing ·

Ajax
For Dishes

P0ft K&amp; BEANS ••• •• 6 :a~~ $1

2 89C

49

3

pkgs.

for

lb.

Ni ce and Meaty. Good
.
For Barbecuing o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Ohio Valley
.

1

1

25¢
HOT DOG RELISH·······la~. . · ·
¢
TOWELS ••••••• ~ •••••••• fk~.• 39
Gala Paper

. ·

'

. 2 pak

I

ei~nt

Regular 1.59

TIDE .••••••••••••••••••••s~e..
Kraft

1&amp;-oz.
b~

w·,.
Th;,
Coupon

$ood Tllru S.tt. ·lti41Y 2"11
At All AI, Wf:O 'S, Col. Dlw.

12-o:r..
btl.

C

~

"Bia...ot

tt~· li¢

;...,$100

11
pkp.

•

?epf.o.
.

Coypo~

,

Good Th ru S.t. M.t¥ Uth
At All A" WEO 'S, Col. Dlv.

.

.

.

.

$}19
.·

10¢

6 oz.
• • • • •• • • • • • ... • Ja~ • •

MUSTARD
.
St. Regis
.
·
100 ct.49
·¢
PAPER PLATES ••••••••••P!~

·

Family
Napkins

Orange
Plus

160

u-.49c

w11•
Th il

pkJ.
· Coupon
Good Thru S•t. W•r 26th
At All A., WEO'S, Col. Dl-w.

5

lb.
baJ;"

Gtx~d

Tilt~

sse
•

2 79
9-oz.

Coupon

Cou pon

At All AI.!' WEO'S, Col. Dlv.

CoYPC&gt;r'l

Good Th1u Stt. M1y :26th
At All AlP WEO 'S, Col. Di¥,

LIMIT ONE COUPON

LIMIT ONE COUPON

A&amp;PWEO

A&amp;P WEO COIJP()N,
L.o~bel

59

C

Frying "'"···'"
Magic

W'IO
Th is

Coypon
Good Th ru Stt. Mar Wh
At All AlP WEO 'S, Co l. Oiv.

S•t· Mtt Uth

wao
Thi 1

Good Thrw , bt . May 2t.lh
At All AlP WEO 'S, Col. DIY.

S.lb.
1-oz.
box

w ;t h
Thi1

LIMIT ONE COUPON

14·0·· .
pies '

1

.,,c:
.J

SiNGLE

211-01:.
pkg.

(j

29C '1~!~-

Coypoil

.

Good Thru · Stl. Mar 16th
AI All AlP WEO'$, Col. 0 1¥,

0~ LIMIT

ONE COUPON

v'R' n'Es

•
CONIIITIONER

tl6Mf.o.

1JafaaeR,

E.aaySe£

11-tn.gg¢

btl. $119

Save $1°0
Canned Ham
Goad Thr u Sat . May Uth
At All AlP WEO 'S, Col. Olv.

~! LIMIT

ONE COUPON

.

8-oz.

btl.

· 9 .;. Lwea. Call
Scrambled Egg &amp; Beef, Tuna,
Supper Supper, Chicken &amp;
livt!r l&lt;.ittyburgers, Chicken

&amp; .Kidney Kittyburgers, Tuna &amp;
'' Egg, Chicken Kittyburget'1i.

61/l• OI

can

9
1

Lux

Ragu Spaghetti Sauce
Pine Sol Cleaner • • •
Borden's Creamora . •
Minute Maid Limeade
Soft Fleischmann • • •
Jti. 3
Pinto Beans ·w
.,.,.... 29
•

3 ~~!.= 39c ·~~~~

hars
Coupon
Good Thru Sat, Mtty 16th
At All AlP WED '$, Col. 01..-.

LIMIT ONE COUPON

100·p~~-"s9c
~ood ·

1llru S•t. M•r 26th
At All AI:P W£0 'S, Col. Di•.

Towels

3J~:u~o$] ooc"'""

pkg.

. Good Thru S•t, Mtr 26th
Col. DIY,

~~ All AAI' WE0 ' 5,

11 ;

CoupM

l -Ib.

can

89

C

W llh

Thi1
Co;~up o r.

Good Th ru Stt . t&lt;o!ar 26111
At Al l AlP WEO ' S, Col. Ol1,

Good Thru Sa t. · ~~~y Uth
AI All AlP WEO"S, Col. Oiv.

LIMIT ONE COUPON

LIMIT ONE COUPON

Jar

ALL PURPOSE

.

MARG ARINE

EVER YOA Y LOW PRICES

I

49c "f~l~

. . . . 7gc

OLD WORLD STYLE

FROZEN

Stolt Vivt

22·0Z.

{/lit

,..

COFFEE CREAMER

'

Dixie

I

All 'I arietic!)

With This Coupon 01!
'
&amp;·lb. "Super-Right"

C

canM

Fab o~~~g:~T

LIMIT ONE COUPON

-

"'!MAl

89( ";';!~

IOc OH

Dog Chow

"C' &lt;;a••

Bird1 Eve Froten

pkg&lt;. ol

Thii

.,,9.:
.J

A&amp;P WEO COUPON

Scott

3

WI!O

10 oz.

.

.

tll-0•·
pkl·

D• ks
Borden's nn
'
PI LLSBURY 'lk 'BtSCUl\s
Buttermt

l

I

ltkn.

. A&amp;P .

Vlasic

I

FOR COFfEE. TEA ...

• •

•

lee "''
p~R~ER PIE
o~tcb lpp\e

?aabuea.

Miracle Whip

"9C:
.J

pili· of
\0

I

3 lb.

IALS

.

I

AlP WEO COUPON

Da.iry Special!

43c:·

ti~\Eo:&amp; cbm .
Slices wRAP •
Cheese
·
Kot Cups • '

IIH

12 ounce package

Spare R"b
I S

t&gt;l&lt;K· of
12

. f\.Of.IO~

CHOICE

MEMORIAL DAY

·s\oo

Val.eMeia,O~U~MQea,

GROUND
5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
"The Store With A Heart,
You, WE Ll KE"

..

I

J(;,~pfudge

WIENERS
Our Good Fresh

roll

&amp;ears49¢

w.

7

•

French City
USDA

$,.49 ~'

lb.

•

0 &amp;IT
o&lt;EO· •

Special Cookout Buys

s.••.

cuvs

•

l=~Sweel.tCo'IMI

PER
. SQ.

MATERIALS CO.

Close At Noon

1b,$179

pkl ·

I

, lb_s.&amp;9¢

SHEET

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

OPEN UNTIL 5 PM FOR REGULAR
BUSINESS OPERATION

.. !

H·••·59C:

3
•

Beverages

YellowO~

PER

240 lb. per squ,are.
Black, Wh ite , Pas tel
Green. Reg . 11.76

Closed Monday, Memorial Day

I

I

FRIDAY, MAY 25

79~i

pkg,

2

•••

Regular 23.95

4'x7'

lb.

.

· Whofe

95

WINDOW UNITS

89~.

I

43~.
Fresh Fryer Breasts . . . "'·79•

WHERE·ECONO~Y ORIGINATES

THURSDAY &amp; FRIDAY NIGHTS
5 TO 8 PM .ONLY

24" x 24" WOOD

SetttL- "B~

J

3-Win g,, l · Nt! ch
l -leg Qtrs, ._ / bAci.
l -Bre ul Qlrs . 10'/ bad
l -Pkgt. of Gibleh

'

SPECIALS

WHOLE OR BONE-IN QUARTER

Clti.eke.w

•

Shank
.Portion

o PIW·' .'·~

Reg. 1.82 sh.eet

(FAMILY NIGHT)

'

16-Ib. A•d Up Smoked Ham

..

PARK RESERVED

AfTER 5 P.M.

GUUAN!EIS

'

PLASTER BOARD

mill

"

9 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O., May tl, 1973

l-Ib.
bowl

39

C WTh;,' Jh

Co;~upo rt

Good Thru Sal. May 26th
At All AU WEO 'S, Col.

Oi~.

, LIMIT ONE COUPON

•

2
pkg .

Van Camp Beanee eenee . . . . . . ,.. · c
Pillsbury Gravy Mixes ..... . ~-:~· lOc
Pillsbury Cinnamon Rolls "i:-,:·
9·Lives Tuna Cat Food ·:~-::· 33'

,

�•
1- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May 23. 1973

Lake Snowden Rec Area
to be opened .on Ma·y 26
A new $1.1

the state slar.d as evidence of

vruject a success. Local Soil

mi!Jion watershed lake and

the dedicated efforts of local
people
working
to
do
something to reduce flooding,
increase recreation, provide
water supplies, and improve

and

COLUMBUS -

'

:·

·.
·..
::

recreation complex will of.
licially open to ttie public on
May 26, according to Robert E.
Quilliam , state conser\lationist
in Ohio for the U. S. Soil Conservation Service (SCS ).
Cong . Clartnce E. Miller of
Ohio's lOth District
be on
hand to open the Lake Snowden

environment of their area . ·•
" Lake Snowden, one of six in

'
the watershed project, will be a
constiln l source of pleasure
and an economic boon to the ·t
entire section of the state," he
sa id .
Two win degrees
The lake, cons tructed with
cost sharing and technical
Miss Rebecca D&lt;Jbney,
supervision of the SCS, is Ash ton, received her AB in
designed to provide water Early Childhood Education
based recreation, muniCipal from Marshall University On
water supp ly, and fl ood Sunday, May 13. She plans to
protection.
teach in Mason County in the
The Margaret Creek Con- ,•fall. Miss Dabney is the
serVancy District, one of the daughter uf Mr. and Mrs.
project sponsors, cost shared James Dabney . Miss Jackie
on the projcd and will manage Aldridge, Mason, the same day
the recreational facilily and received her AB . in Home
pfovide maintenance for the. Economics fr om Marshall . She
development.
plans to leach in Mason County
Many local, state, and this fall. Miss Aldridge is the
federal agencies have worked dcmghtcr of Mr.. and Mrs.
with the SCS to mak e this Charles W. Aldridge.

Area. The 130 acre

lake, a part of Public Law 566
Margaret Creek Watershed
Project near Athens, JeatureS

swimmming, bOating, and
fishing .

" The area

Conser\' a Lion

Natural Resources, F'armers
Home Administration 1U~DA)
&lt;md the OHice of Appalachia
have made essential contributions to the project.

I he

""II

Recr~tion

Water

Dtstricl(), Ohio Department of

provides 75

wooded Campsites to attract
the real outdoorsman, along
with grassed picnic and play
areas," Quilliam noted . All

modern conveniences and
-facilities have been included to
attract
campers
from
throughout the state and area .

''Watersheds provide many
public benefits," said Quilliam .
and
flood
" Watershed
protection dams throughout

Window to Washington
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Senate Appropriations com[)oxing the most severe crisis mittee followed earlier House
of his two and a half decades of action by voting 24.0 to rut off
public life, President Nixon has money for U.S. bombing in
been
uncharacteristica lly Cambodia.
silent.
A White House protest
,While his White House staff against this weakening of the
has ·crumbled amid tales of President's bargaining
political .i ntrigue, while two of . positiol) while negotiations are
his former cabinet officers underw.oy -an appeal that
have beCn irx:licted for criminal always worked in the past offenses and while attempts to was hardly audible above the
corrupt the courts, the elec- din of Watergate.
toral process, the CIA, the FBI
The upcoming visit of Soviet
and the SEC have been un- party Leader Leonid I. Brezh.
folding over the past several nev holds the potential for
weeks, Nixon has simply producing some of the major
hunkered down to ride out the foreign policy successes of the
storm.
Nixon JYesidency. But even his
Inflation is soaring at its friends are now wondering if
highest rate in a generation. the President's prestige has
The stock ma.rket has taken its been eroded so severely that he
sharpest drop in more than two will have to grant too many
y:ear$. And th e peace in concessionS in the bargaining.
Since the broader dimen·
Southeast Asia that took so
many lives and dollars to sions of tbc Watergate scandal
achieve a ppears to be disinte- broke, Nixon has made two
grating before his eyes.
carefully worded statements.
Congress now appears to be On Aprill7, he announced that
ready for the fir"st _time in the as a result of "serious
decade of American military charges" whicl) came to his
involvement in Southeast Asi8 attention on March 21 he had
to cut off funds for prosecuting launched ·a new .investigation.
11
the war.
Real progress'' had been
made in ,finding the truth, he
Brezhnev Visit Vital
While the President's chief said.
envoy, Henry A. Kissinger, Dramatic Move Foreseen
was leaving for Paris to ·
On April 30 after three of his
negotiate with Hanoi's Le Due top aides and Atty. Gen.
Tho on ways to save the Richard · G. Kleindi enst had
crumbling peace last week, the r esigned, he appeared on

television and promised there
would be no whitewash at the
White House. He said he was
movin: Elliot L. Richardson
from the Pentagon to the
Justice Department to take
charge of the investigation and
told the American people in the
clearest terms yet that he
personally had no part iri the
wrongdoing.
Speculative art icles have
appeared recently suggesting
the President is planning some
swee ping , dramatic move
aimed at instantly reversing
thedeterforation of his political stature and allowing him to
seize the initiative from his
opponents.
.
BUt White House ad~isers
willing to talk do not see this in
the books. They believe the
President plans to ride out the
turbulence , let the judicial
slowly grind away and the
fa cts oe exposed and bank on
the belief that the major thrust
or his domestic and foreign
policies still find a favorable
response ~mong most Amerlcans.
They see the process of
pickin g u1- the pieces of his
shattered Administration as a
slow and painful exe rcise and
do not dispute the judgment
that tile White House will never
again be as powerftd as it was
under Nixon during . the first
three months of 1973.

f:XTF.NOF:Il OUTLOOK
A ehancc or showers
Friday ur Saturday t learlng
Sunday. Daily high tern·
peratures av~raging in the
60s north to 70s in lbe south.
Lows at night In 40s north
and 50s south.

Collins backs
consumer laws
COLUMBUS
State
Repre se ntative Oaklt)y C.
Collins 1R - ~. oo~o r. 1 has voted
for legislation to protect the
consumer in the purchase of
automobiles and mobile
homes. The bill would assume
Lhat these purc hases are
·cove red by the Retail In·
stallmen t Sales Act. The act
provides specific provisions,
according to Rep. Collins, t~
assure ''an open, fre e" and
honest market place."
Some of the protections a! the
retail installment credit act
are : Allowing a consumer who
defaults on his payments to
regain possession of the car or
mobile horne under certain
requirin g
ci r c umstances;
public sale of auto or mobile
home under commercially
reasonable circumstances, and
not hurting business, will
simply assure Lhat business is
continually conduc ted on the
most equitable basis for all
affected, according to ColliTls.

Horse farms will
be toured Sunday
A tour

of the horse far·ms in

Deadline given lottery accord
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - House
Republican and Democratic
leaders have been given a week
to come up wiUl an agreement
allowing inuned.iate establiSh·
ment of a commission to S(&gt;t up
the mechanics of a state lot·
tery.
A House~Senate cOnference
committee on the lottery met
Tuesday and determined the
lone hangup on giving the
lottery legislation
"emergen cy" .status is a
demand by House Republicans
that priority be given to their
bill requiring that lottery
proceeds go for property tax
relief.
The six ~rna n conference
committee instructed the three
House conferees to work on the
problem and report back next
Tuesday.
Failure to reach an agreement would delay the estal&gt;lishment of a State Lottery
Planning Commission for 90
days.
~~There's a hatchet over our
head.'' said Rep. Barney Quilter, D·Toledo, one of the House
conferees. " It's as simple as
that."
Quilter, wbo is House major·

Degree conferred
Miss Sandra C. Porter of
Pomeroy, wi::ls C~mong the 1~ 429
persons to r eceive degrees
fr om lhe University of North
Carolina at Greensboro during
recent co mmencement
ce n~monies . Miss Porter, the
•

Fayette County will follow the daughter of Frank Porter Jr.,
next meeting of SCOPS, the 21:1 Union Ave., received a
South Centra l Ohio Preser· bachelor of science degree in
vation Society, Inc., at 2 p.m. physical education.
Sunday, May 27.
Member·s and friends will uf the farms.
meet in the co_urt house, in
The busi ness meeting will
Washing ton Court House, the in clude a report by Mrs.
home of the famous Archibald Joseph VanMeter, SCOPS
Willard Murals. It is a lso the coordinator , on the "Scioto
home of Mrs. Richard Rankin , River Project", and on.e by
SCOPS presiden t, who is a Vice President Franklin
breeder of horses with her own Conaway on " Re storat ion
stables . She will lead the tour ProjeCl'l'·'.

ity leader. said he would dis·
cuss the situation with House
Speaker A. G. Llincione, [).
Bellaire.
·
WliereToGo
" I think the answer is we'll
probably tell them were to go
unless they throw in. some
other thinga," Quilter said.
If no agreement cari be
reached, Sen. Ronald M. Mottl,
D-Parma, is expected to propose legislation to implement
the lottery without waiting for
a special commission to be
started in three months and
then make recommendations.
Mottl, chief sponsor of the
lottery and a member of the
co nference committee, said
lack of "emergency" status for
the lottery commission bill
would probably mean the first
lotiery ticket would not be sold
in Ohio until June I, 1974.
He said this would cost the
state up to $50 million in lost
revenues because of the delay.
Mottl, Quilter and three
other conferees - Sen. Robert
J. Carts, R Elyria, committee
chairma n i Sen. William H.
Mussey, R-Batavia, and Rep.
Thomas Fries, DDayton- said
they fayored "eme rgen c y ~'
priority.
But the ace card was held by
the sixth conferee, Rep. Joseph
:.P. Tulley, R-Mentor who said
the 41-rnember House GOP
delegation would not go along
with the emergency unless
floor action was proffiised for
Tulley 's bill earmarking lot·
tery proceeds for property tax
relief.
To General Fund
Under the voter-approved
lottery proposal, proceeds are
to go into the general fund.
Democrats are
House
hoping to take thi s money
out of,the general fund and use
it to finance a proposed Viet·
nam War veterans' bonus,
which is sponsored by Hol,ISe
Speaker Pro Tempore Vernal
G. Riffe Jr., D-New Boston.
The bonus bill other~&gt;ise
would require a new 0.6-mill
s tatewide · property tax, to

Council presidents in those
cities now have two.year
terms. Mottl, a fonner council
president in !'Onna, said hls
bill is designed to make the
terms of council presidents coincide with those of mayors.
Sen . David [,. Headley, [).
akron, one of the six opponents,
said council presidents should
run for eJection every two
years " because it keeps them
more responsive to the public."
" If they want four year
terms," agreed Sen. Paul R .
Matia, R-Westlake , " let them
adopt a charter."
In other legislative develo~
ments :
- The Senate unanimously
passed and sent to the House a
bill requiring that mothers be
checked for gonorrhea, just as
they are for syphillis, during
pregnancy or after delivery.
- The House returned to
committee without floor 'votes
a pair of bills forbidding retail
liquor establishments to pur·
chase their supplies from state
stores and making wholesale
revisions in the state's wildlife .
management la\7.
Both chambers reconvene at
1:30 p .m . today.

which Republicans object.
· Mottl bad better success in
Senate Door action Tuesday .
His probate reform bill
allowing distribution without
court administration of all
estates under $10,000 "'"' a~
proved, :!U. and sent to the

House.
Currently, only estates of
$!j,000or less can be distributed
without administration .
Eliminate Costs
Mottl said his bill would
eliminate court costs and at~
torneys ' fees for survivor$ of
persons with small estates,
adding it would cut the normal
probate period of six or seven
months to six weeks.
Six attorneys opposed the
bill, claiming sufficient liberal·
izations have been made in
prohate law during the lost de·
cade.
.
MotU also secured 23-1i pass·
age of another bill, giving fouryear terms to council presi-.
dents in non-charter cities with
more than 5,000 residents.
That bill, already adopted by
the House, would affect about
90 non-charger cities, the largest of which are Canton , Lorain

and Panna.

..,,

U.S. GOY'T INSPECTED

'"BD'XI oft

Fresh Fryer Legs

whole .. "

80NELESS HALVES

A&amp;P Buffet Ham lh. $189
SLICED

Smoked Picnic .

lh.

69•

l'rlceo Good Thru Sot., May 26th, 1973

Middleport, Ohio
CLOSED
MEMORIAL DAY

ALL ON,E PRICE! NONE HIGHER!

~ s~sf.etdt.

1:.141

"SU PER-RIGHT" QUALITY

~:.1 51

Oscar Mayer Franks~~~::: .~~:$1°' T-liiMU!I
fl:::r::rr:~~--:---~--.....lKingsford Steaks ~=~rs • pkg~1!'
Salad --f,.,~ERN
~~;p~ 39c:
'
Turkey Leg Quarters
Macaroni Salad_. ~SlYL'1E:!lE~~
I

I

-·

COUNTRY STYLE RIBS or

I

plcc,

14b.Mc:

I

l'l• · l b . $ , 5 9 :

pkg.
U.S. GOV'T .INSPECTED FROZEN

~He.tta~

•••elb.99¢

· w~

$,19

"SUPER-RIGHT" FRESH

•

... 2

"SUPER-RIGHT" ALL MEAT

-CUT TO YOUR ORDER FOR: ·
strip Stttks. '1'·8one
Steaks, SirtDio Sta•kJ,
Or Portertloun Steaks.

•

'

canne d

SELF-SEAL .·
ROOF SHINGLES

54

OF PlASTICS DIVISION
ALLIED CHEMICAL CORP.

95

BEEF

Right reserved to limit quantities

O

..

large&amp;
80

·•

We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Starn ps

Meadowgold

Prices Effective May 23-30

"Holland"

Monday Thru ~ri~~~-~

ICE CREAM
tf2 gal.
crtn.

9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9

69¢

......
Gk•.39C:

¢

Several Flavors

CLOSED SUNDAYS

PRODUCE BUYS!
New Solid

Cabbage
2
lb.

Yellow

Onions

j tT

I

•

•

• • •

&amp;~~;\'k Iars

lb.
pkg.
or more.._____________

New Red

Potatoes

Salad Dressing
With '10.00 or More .Order

•
1-lb .

RG~R\NE
STICK &gt;1&gt;1- WitH couPON

boWl

I

•

Cb\tion &amp;ELO"'
p\LLS&amp;k
URY 'B\scui\S
• •
f\a ~

jor

~

8RAN_
D

Holsum Hot Dog or
Hamburger

(8 pak)

Yes! We Slice Luncheon Meats to Your Order!

79¢
51 •1ce. d Baeon • •••••••••• •••• •. •·•lb.. 89¢

Wishbone
· Dressing ·

Ajax
For Dishes

P0ft K&amp; BEANS ••• •• 6 :a~~ $1

2 89C

49

3

pkgs.

for

lb.

Ni ce and Meaty. Good
.
For Barbecuing o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Ohio Valley
.

1

1

25¢
HOT DOG RELISH·······la~. . · ·
¢
TOWELS ••••••• ~ •••••••• fk~.• 39
Gala Paper

. ·

'

. 2 pak

I

ei~nt

Regular 1.59

TIDE .••••••••••••••••••••s~e..
Kraft

1&amp;-oz.
b~

w·,.
Th;,
Coupon

$ood Tllru S.tt. ·lti41Y 2"11
At All AI, Wf:O 'S, Col. Dlw.

12-o:r..
btl.

C

~

"Bia...ot

tt~· li¢

;...,$100

11
pkp.

•

?epf.o.
.

Coypo~

,

Good Th ru S.t. M.t¥ Uth
At All A" WEO 'S, Col. Dlv.

.

.

.

.

$}19
.·

10¢

6 oz.
• • • • •• • • • • • ... • Ja~ • •

MUSTARD
.
St. Regis
.
·
100 ct.49
·¢
PAPER PLATES ••••••••••P!~

·

Family
Napkins

Orange
Plus

160

u-.49c

w11•
Th il

pkJ.
· Coupon
Good Thru S•t. W•r 26th
At All A., WEO'S, Col. Dl-w.

5

lb.
baJ;"

Gtx~d

Tilt~

sse
•

2 79
9-oz.

Coupon

Cou pon

At All AI.!' WEO'S, Col. Dlv.

CoYPC&gt;r'l

Good Th1u Stt. M1y :26th
At All AlP WEO 'S, Col. Di¥,

LIMIT ONE COUPON

LIMIT ONE COUPON

A&amp;PWEO

A&amp;P WEO COIJP()N,
L.o~bel

59

C

Frying "'"···'"
Magic

W'IO
Th is

Coypon
Good Th ru Stt. Mar Wh
At All AlP WEO 'S, Co l. Oiv.

S•t· Mtt Uth

wao
Thi 1

Good Thrw , bt . May 2t.lh
At All AlP WEO 'S, Col. DIY.

S.lb.
1-oz.
box

w ;t h
Thi1

LIMIT ONE COUPON

14·0·· .
pies '

1

.,,c:
.J

SiNGLE

211-01:.
pkg.

(j

29C '1~!~-

Coypoil

.

Good Thru · Stl. Mar 16th
AI All AlP WEO'$, Col. 0 1¥,

0~ LIMIT

ONE COUPON

v'R' n'Es

•
CONIIITIONER

tl6Mf.o.

1JafaaeR,

E.aaySe£

11-tn.gg¢

btl. $119

Save $1°0
Canned Ham
Goad Thr u Sat . May Uth
At All AlP WEO 'S, Col. Olv.

~! LIMIT

ONE COUPON

.

8-oz.

btl.

· 9 .;. Lwea. Call
Scrambled Egg &amp; Beef, Tuna,
Supper Supper, Chicken &amp;
livt!r l&lt;.ittyburgers, Chicken

&amp; .Kidney Kittyburgers, Tuna &amp;
'' Egg, Chicken Kittyburget'1i.

61/l• OI

can

9
1

Lux

Ragu Spaghetti Sauce
Pine Sol Cleaner • • •
Borden's Creamora . •
Minute Maid Limeade
Soft Fleischmann • • •
Jti. 3
Pinto Beans ·w
.,.,.... 29
•

3 ~~!.= 39c ·~~~~

hars
Coupon
Good Thru Sat, Mtty 16th
At All AlP WED '$, Col. 01..-.

LIMIT ONE COUPON

100·p~~-"s9c
~ood ·

1llru S•t. M•r 26th
At All AI:P W£0 'S, Col. Di•.

Towels

3J~:u~o$] ooc"'""

pkg.

. Good Thru S•t, Mtr 26th
Col. DIY,

~~ All AAI' WE0 ' 5,

11 ;

CoupM

l -Ib.

can

89

C

W llh

Thi1
Co;~up o r.

Good Th ru Stt . t&lt;o!ar 26111
At Al l AlP WEO ' S, Col. Ol1,

Good Thru Sa t. · ~~~y Uth
AI All AlP WEO"S, Col. Oiv.

LIMIT ONE COUPON

LIMIT ONE COUPON

Jar

ALL PURPOSE

.

MARG ARINE

EVER YOA Y LOW PRICES

I

49c "f~l~

. . . . 7gc

OLD WORLD STYLE

FROZEN

Stolt Vivt

22·0Z.

{/lit

,..

COFFEE CREAMER

'

Dixie

I

All 'I arietic!)

With This Coupon 01!
'
&amp;·lb. "Super-Right"

C

canM

Fab o~~~g:~T

LIMIT ONE COUPON

-

"'!MAl

89( ";';!~

IOc OH

Dog Chow

"C' &lt;;a••

Bird1 Eve Froten

pkg&lt;. ol

Thii

.,,9.:
.J

A&amp;P WEO COUPON

Scott

3

WI!O

10 oz.

.

.

tll-0•·
pkl·

D• ks
Borden's nn
'
PI LLSBURY 'lk 'BtSCUl\s
Buttermt

l

I

ltkn.

. A&amp;P .

Vlasic

I

FOR COFfEE. TEA ...

• •

•

lee "''
p~R~ER PIE
o~tcb lpp\e

?aabuea.

Miracle Whip

"9C:
.J

pili· of
\0

I

3 lb.

IALS

.

I

AlP WEO COUPON

Da.iry Special!

43c:·

ti~\Eo:&amp; cbm .
Slices wRAP •
Cheese
·
Kot Cups • '

IIH

12 ounce package

Spare R"b
I S

t&gt;l&lt;K· of
12

. f\.Of.IO~

CHOICE

MEMORIAL DAY

·s\oo

Val.eMeia,O~U~MQea,

GROUND
5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
"The Store With A Heart,
You, WE Ll KE"

..

I

J(;,~pfudge

WIENERS
Our Good Fresh

roll

&amp;ears49¢

w.

7

•

French City
USDA

$,.49 ~'

lb.

•

0 &amp;IT
o&lt;EO· •

Special Cookout Buys

s.••.

cuvs

•

l=~Sweel.tCo'IMI

PER
. SQ.

MATERIALS CO.

Close At Noon

1b,$179

pkl ·

I

, lb_s.&amp;9¢

SHEET

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

OPEN UNTIL 5 PM FOR REGULAR
BUSINESS OPERATION

.. !

H·••·59C:

3
•

Beverages

YellowO~

PER

240 lb. per squ,are.
Black, Wh ite , Pas tel
Green. Reg . 11.76

Closed Monday, Memorial Day

I

I

FRIDAY, MAY 25

79~i

pkg,

2

•••

Regular 23.95

4'x7'

lb.

.

· Whofe

95

WINDOW UNITS

89~.

I

43~.
Fresh Fryer Breasts . . . "'·79•

WHERE·ECONO~Y ORIGINATES

THURSDAY &amp; FRIDAY NIGHTS
5 TO 8 PM .ONLY

24" x 24" WOOD

SetttL- "B~

J

3-Win g,, l · Nt! ch
l -leg Qtrs, ._ / bAci.
l -Bre ul Qlrs . 10'/ bad
l -Pkgt. of Gibleh

'

SPECIALS

WHOLE OR BONE-IN QUARTER

Clti.eke.w

•

Shank
.Portion

o PIW·' .'·~

Reg. 1.82 sh.eet

(FAMILY NIGHT)

'

16-Ib. A•d Up Smoked Ham

..

PARK RESERVED

AfTER 5 P.M.

GUUAN!EIS

'

PLASTER BOARD

mill

"

9 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O., May tl, 1973

l-Ib.
bowl

39

C WTh;,' Jh

Co;~upo rt

Good Thru Sal. May 26th
At All AU WEO 'S, Col.

Oi~.

, LIMIT ONE COUPON

•

2
pkg .

Van Camp Beanee eenee . . . . . . ,.. · c
Pillsbury Gravy Mixes ..... . ~-:~· lOc
Pillsbury Cinnamon Rolls "i:-,:·
9·Lives Tuna Cat Food ·:~-::· 33'

,

�•

I
IU-'1'11! Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May 23,1973

President
(Continued from page 6)
Watergale I!Candal should not
be lillowed IAI get in the way of
what the Administration
lOIIght IAI achieve."
Nixon said his first reaction
to the Watergate burglary was
one of "complete surpise" hut
that within a few days he was

Meigs High Caulfield
(Continued from page I)

It - The Daily Sentinel, Mid&lt;lleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., May 23,1973

. .

lCOntinued from page 1)

direction .of H. Dwight Goins.

The former White House aide
The
invocation
and said Dean's request plunged
benediction were given by Hoyt him into a deep personal
Allen, Jr., minister of the conflict between loyalty to the
Pomeroy ChUTCh of Christ.
White House and having to do
Andy
Vaughan,
class
what he knew was wrong -&lt;1
president, introduced Dr. criminal act to obstruct
Goldman and the band played
advised "there was a several selections including justice.
"I know when wrongdoing is
possibility of CIA involvement " Maroon and Gold," the high
occurring. I knew that (using )
in S0tne WI)' } 1
school abna mater.
executive clemency in this
He did not say who told him
James A. Diehl, Jr., printhil and two of his aides who cipal, p~ented the class to matter was wrong, " he _said.
But, he added, "loyalty to the
lriefed newsmen on the staU!- George Hargraves, superinof the United States
President
ment, Leonard Gannent and tendent,
who
presented
overrode
those
conFred Buzhardt, declined to diplomas to the following:
siderations."
say.
Edgar
Abbott ,
Diana
Caulfield, a fonner White
But when it was disclosed Aleshire, Shirley Alkire, Sheila
employe,
was
that Howard Hunt and other AnderS:on, Barbara Archer , House
George
Arnott,
Linda questioned by Samuel Dash,
fllrmer CIA employes were Atkinson, Richard Bailey,
majority counsel for the Senate
Involved, Nixon said it seemeil ~amqnd
Baker. "' Debra
Watergate committee.
,1 possible to him that investlga- Barnhart , Karla Beal, Jyl
Beaver, Janet Biggs, JamesQ
Q. Although you state that
. • tion iniAl the Incident "could Birchfield, Ellzabelh Blaett.
you
made no mention of the
lead to uncovering of covert nar. James Boggs, Michael
CIA
operations
totally Bolin. Sarah Boyles. Francis President to Mr. McCord
Broderick, linda Brogan, Jon during your meeting (concernunrelated to the Watergate Bunce,
Phil
Burbridge,
break-in" and he instructed his Floranell Burney, Jan Burns, ing an offer of executive
Nan cy
Buskirk,
Randall
clemency), you do know, do
aides not to let this happen.
Terry
Cadle, you not, that the President is
Butcher,
uwuted J•tice Dooe... ,
Debra Call, Judy Carsey ,
"I wanted justice done with Debra Carson, Richard Carter, the only person in the country
Rita Cascl. Thomas Cassell,
regard IAI Watergate but In the Walla ce Chafin. William who can grant executive
I!Cale of national priorities with Chaney , Martin Chasteen, clemency in a federal criminal
Roger Cll!lrk , Vicki Clark, Jodi · matter?
which I had to·deal-;,nd not &lt;I Cllcken.ger,
Sharon Cogar,
A. Yes , sir, I do.
that Ume having any idea of Jerry Colema n , Michael
Q.
Did you understand when
the enent of political abuse Corder, He len Cotterill, Steven
CotterilL Victor Counts, Paul
you were speaking with Mr.
which Watergate reflected-! Cunningham,
Sue
Cun·
also had to be deeply con- nlngham , Jeffrey Darst, Gene Dean, that Mr. Dean wanted
you to transmit the message to
cerned with ensuring that Davis, Jon Dillard.
·Pamela Dodson , Brenda Mr. McCord that the offer of
neither the covert operations of Donohue, Gerald Donohue.
the CIA or the activities of the Roberta Duckworth , Charles executive clemency was made
Eastman, Bonnie Ebersbach, -with proper authority'
White House Investigation unit Merri
Ebersbach , Greg Eblin,
A. Yes, sir.
should not be compromised," Kathy Elias, Donald Ellis,
Q. Was it your intention
Gary Erlewine, Charles Faulk,
he ezplalned.
Jr
.,
Jenny.
Ferguson.
Jeffrey
during
your meeting with Mr.
"Therefore, I instructed Mr. Fields, Lots Fife, Leta Floyd
1
Haldeman and Mr. Ehrlich- Donna Francis, Brian French, McCord to leave him with the
man to ensure that the i.n- Marvin Friend, Elizabeth clear understanding that the
Fulh, Debra
Gallagher,
vesttgatioo of the break-In not Wanda Gardner , T ~ rry lee persons with the authority to
expose either an unrelated · Garten , Philip Ga6L Terry make such a representation as
operation of the CIA or the George, John Gerard, Oebor:ah executive clemency were · in
Gill iam. Kaaron Gilmore,
activities of the White House Dennis Glaze, Patricia Glaze, fact extending this offer to
him?
Karer1 Hale, Amy Hamm ,
investigations unit ...
Hanson,
Kenneth
A. Yes, sir, but of course, I
"It was certainly not my David
Harris,
John
Harrison,
had
no and did not at that time
intent, nor my wish, !bat the Sheila
Hawk,
Edward
investigation of the Watergate Hayes, John Hayes, Randy have any direct knowledge that
Haynes , Marlyn Hendricks,
the President had made such
break-in or of related acts be Connie Herdman . Melissa
an
offer, endorsed such an
bnpeded In any way."
Hooper, Rickey Hoover; Julia
Hutchison , Kathryn Hutton,
offer or was in any way inNixon aought to draw a
Charles Hysell, Ronald Hysell,
volved in such an offer.
distinction between the Water- Stephen Jewell. Deborah
As he did in testimony
gate burglary and these legal, Jewett, Mona Johnson, John
Kauff .
'1\iesdsy, Caulfield said he
clandeatlne operations of the
Janet Kennedy , William
assumed the clemency proposCIA which he deacribed as
~ennedy,
Timothy · King ,
being essential to the conduct Barbara Klein , Tim Krautter , als emanated rrom John D.
Janelle Kuhn. Cheryl Lambert.
Ehrlichman, Dean's predeces·of foreign policy. He claimed Gregory
Lane, Lawrence Lips·
SOI;' as White House coUJ"ISel and
that In the welter of charges comb, Cheryl long , Barbara
later chief domestic policy
and countercharges the two Lowe, Rosalie Malone, Toney
Mantey, Michael 1 . Marcum,
adviser .to Nixon until he
had become obscured and
Krlsty
Matson, · Richard
denied that he had misused the Mayer , Steven McGuffin , · resigned April 30.
Ragena
McGuire,
Llea
Caulfield, a former New
•ecret
i -ntelligence McK~;~nzie,
Samuel McKinney,
York city police detective,
organization whose activities Jr ., lewis McKinney, Sheila
worked at the White House first
• McKnight, Charles Mclain,
are largely unsupervised;
Charles McMillin , Nadine
for Ehrlichman and later for
·· McMurray,
Edith Mees ,
Dean. He left last year to take a
R,ichca rd Mer:JdenhaiL Terry
DRIVER CHARGED
Metheney, Donna Michael.
high Treasury Depariment job,
Leland R. Halley, 60, Rt. 1, Sherry Miller, Heidi Milhoan,
from which he is now on
Mldaleport, was charged with Debi Miller, Martha Miller,
~·administrative leave ."
Gregory Miller, Johnny Miller,
failure to yield the righklf-way Phil Miller, Paul Mitchell,
Caulfield testified Tuesday
following im accident on Rt. Philip Moon , John Moore
that
Dean told him last
124-Rt. 7 in Meigs County Paula Morris, Kimberley
january to tell McCord, one of
Mowery , James Neece, John
Tuesday. The Gallia-Meigs Nelson , R~er Pearch, Iris
the seven men then on trial for
Post Slate Highway Patrol said Peyton, Des~ree Pike, Be·ulah
the bugging of Democratic
Priddy, F . Dean Pullins, Paul
Halley's car colllded with an Pullins, Catherine Rayburn,
party headquarters last June,
auto driven by Charles E. TheodOre T. Reed · I II . Warren . that the clemency offers came
Hoback, 57, Syracuse. No in- Reeves .
from "way at. the top."
Sharon Reeves, Christine
juries were reported.
Robinson, .linda Rupe, Avd
"What did you conceive 'Way
Sayre, Michael Sayre, James
at the top' to be'" Sen: ;oseph
Schmoll, Connie Schultz,
MUSEUM OPEN
M. Montoya, D-N .M., a memKenneth See, Rebecca Seelig,
The Meigs County Museum Dorolhy Selh, Jeffrey Shank,
ber of the Senate committee,
Vicki Sinclair, ·John Slaven,
on Butter.nut Ave., Pomeroy, Constance
asked Caulfield.
Smith , Rebecca
will be open to the public over Smith, Paul Smith, Penny
"In my mind, I believed he
Smith,
Randy
Snider,
the holiday weekend. There are
was taiking about the PresiCharlotte
Snyder,
Dixie .
some pieces on display but the Snyder, James Snyder Judith
dent," Caulfield replied.
primary reason for the special Sopher, Christ•
Stanley,
hours is to provide a location Delores Stanley, William
Stanley, Gregory Stewart,
for "people to visit". The Paul· Stewart. Mark Still;
REVIVAL SET
building wiU be open from 4 to 6 Darryl Swartz, Brenda Taylor,
A
weekend
revival will be
Thomas,
Johnny
p.m. Saturday, from 2 to 4 p.m. Jane
held at the Pomeroy Wesleyan
Thompson, · Deborah Triplett,
Sunday, and from 10:30 a.m. to Scott Vranken, Charles Varian . . Hotkless Church, Rt . 143,
Jr ., Andrew Vaughan, Richard
2:30p.m. Monday.
beginning Thursday through
Vaughan, Scott Walton, ,Er.
nestlne Ward, Gary Warner,
Sunday . The Rev . Owens,
Gordon Warner, Dallas Weber,
district superintendent, will be
P8tti Well, BoMnie Welch,
PLEASANT VAlLEY
guest speaker Th"roday and
Mark Werry, James Wiles,
DISCHARGES:
Hallie Sharon Wilson,
Thomas
Friday. There will be special
Jordan, Mt. Alto; Mrs. Chris Wilson, Kevin Wolfe, Diana
singing
each
evening.
Young , Marlnda Young.
Durst, Point Pleasant; James
The public is invited. The Rev .
Napier, Ashton ; Mr. and Mrs.
O'DeU
Manley is pastor.
Quick to speak .
Lewis ' Cappellari,
Point
Pleasant; Roy Hili, Leon ;
for graduation
Louella Casey, Apple Grove;
No games, No gim.micks
Ray McCoy, Leon; Jeffery and
Thomas J . Quick, assistant
"John Huber, Point Pleasant," s~ate S\lperintendent of
and David · Connolly, Point . schools, will be guest speaker
Pleasant.
at the Racine Junior High
BIRTH: May 22, a daughter ·· School graduation Thursday at
to Mr. and Mrs. James Smith, 7:30 p.m. at the junior high
Point Pleasant.
building. Mr. Quick, a native of
Syracuse, is the brother of Mrs.
Margaret Cottrill, of Syracuse.
. SERVICES SET
Graduation exer~ises for the
RACINE - The Racine kindergarten classes wiU be
01)1 PASSBOOK
American Legion Post 602 will held promptly at 7 p.m. the
SAVINGS
hold Memorial Day services on same evening. Parking will be
S per cent per year paid on
Regular Passbook SaVings.
Sunday. Cooperating with the available on the ball diamond.
No Minimum . Interest
servicea wiD lie the S&lt;luthem There will be a short infrom date of deposit to date
High School Band : The ser- . termission to enable those not
of withdrawal. . Interest
c.:ompounded qu~rterly.
vices will be at the Letart wishing to .a ttend both
Cemetery at 10 a.m. and at ceremonies to arrive or leave.
Greenwood Cemetery in
Racine at II a .m.

Electrocution was accident . All funds
llobart Ray Eskew, 51, Rt. 2.
Gallipolis ( Neighborhond Rd.)
was a ccidenlally electrocuted
Tue sday afrernoon 'tllhiJe
repairing a waterline un·

standing

Eskew over . He was lying fa &lt;:e
down .
The eledricity was then
turned of£. The victim was
pronounced dead al-lhe scene .
Or. Warehime said Mr. Eskew

Children
! Continued rrom page 1)
En~lish when they came for
they attended an English spea king school in Bombay,
India, where · they lived.
Bhavana spe.aks the four
languages of India, including
their ,. mother· language,
Gujurati , and English. Both
she and Shilpa say that they
like the lessons best of
anything at school and they are
particularly fond of English
lessons.
Being of the Hindu religion
they are now allowed to eat
eggs or meat, so everything is
made from vegetables. Instead
· of the common peanut butter
and jelly sandwich in their
lunch box, the Goradia sisters
bring such lunches as a dish
called " pullow" which is made
of -rice, potatoes, and onions.
" I like it !" is the remark of
all · the Goradia children in
regard to whether they like .
living in Amt::rica. · Apparently
the first pangs of homesickness
were quick to disappear ·
· because they all say that want
to stay here in their new Meigs
County home.

funeral services will be held
1 p.m. Saturday at the Waughllotley-Wond Funeral • Home
with Rev . Rodney Beaver
officiating. Burial will be in
·derneath his home .
Clay Chapel Cemetery .
·According to Dr. Donald R. l1&lt;1d been dead appro•imately
Pomeroy Village funds as of
Friends · may call at the
.
Warehime, Gallia County two hour :;.
funeral home 3:30 to 5 p.m. and April 30 tolaled $115,957.36
Mr
.
Eskew
was
.employed
at
·
Coroner , Mr . Eskew wa s
7·9 p.m . Friday.· Graveside according to the report or Clerk
working in a trench undernea~h the Gallipolis Slate Institute military rites will be conducted , Jane Walt on submitted to
his house when he apparently the p.ast 20 years. He was born by VFW Post No. 4464 .
Pomeroy Council Monday
came in contact with a 110-volt Oct. 111, 1921, at Buftalo, W.
night . Receipts, disburelectric extension cord he had Va ., son of the late Roy Eskew,
sements, and clerk 's balance,
hooked up to a floor furnace. and Beulah Atkinson Eskew,
respectively in the active fund
•
Dr. Warehi.rne said the .soil was who survives and resides on
were :
damp where Mr. Eskew was Rt. 1, Gailipolis.
General , $14 ,440 . 32,
working .
He is also s urvived by his
$12,701.83, $10,974 .9ti; revenue
When Mrs. Eskew called for wife , Nova Wolfe Eskew,
shari ng, $5,~61.00, no e•her hu sband around 3:15 p.m. whom he married Feb. 23, 1945,
penditures, $9,461.110; federal
Veterans Memorial Hospital
water improvement,
nO
he didn't answer. She then in Gallipolis, these children,
Admissions - Clara Rad· receipts, no expenditures,
called the Southeastern Ohio Richard , of fairborn, Ohio;
ford,
Emergency Medical Service. Joe, Gallipolis; Mrs. Ronald n- . Racine; Denise Rifne, $1,650.00; sewer, $4,809.99 ;
The SEOEMS squad of Darrell f Donna ) White , Thurman; J,~ c•ne; Tracy Riffle • Racine·• $10,991.63, $7,515.14; fire
ames Ogdin, Pomeroy; Ida department, $2,771.76, $266.42,
l'linkle, Ray Bush, Neil Mc- Roger, at home; rour grand·
Shoemaker,
Middleport;
Mahon and Bob Shaw arrived children, and a sister, Mrs.
cemetery, $1,1100.110,
0 rvL-11e Jones, Elyria, Ohio; $4,782.12;
$5 43 .69,
on the scene shortly after. being Beatrice Terry, Columbus.
$418.06;
street,
George Conde, Pomeroy; $
·
summoned at 3:26 p .m .
One brother preceded him in D .
· 1,803.75, $2,283.69, $4,488.77 ;
atsy
Ankrom,
Racine- sla te highway improvement,
Not knowing what had death ,
happened, one squadsmen ' Mr. Eskew attended Mina Joanne Edwards, Mason and $146.25, no e•penditures,
received an electrical shock Chapel Church. He was a Crystal Manley, Middleport. $3, 464 _13 ; water operating,
Discharges
Karen
when he went to turn Mr. World War II veteran .
Tl
$8,172.52, $13,782.44, $2,997.31;
1omas, Ronnie Thomas, guaranty meter, $250 .00,
Vicky Campbell, Joseph $200.00, $581.72; water imGt;orge Werling
SEVEN FINED
Halfhill , Bernard GiJkey, provement, no receipts, no
Ronald Bostic and Cynthia Van e•penditures, $l5.6l; parking
Seven persons were fined
died
WednesdayMeter.
and two forfe"ited bonds in
meter, $1,583.00, $1,000.00,
Middleport Mayor John
$13,211 .80; utilities, $5,543.53,
RACINE - George David
Holzer Med•"cal Center
Zerkle's court Tuesday. Fined Werling, 88, Racine Route 2,
$1,180.02, $19,031.80. Total
were Eldon Wa lburn , 56, died Wednesday morning at
I Discharged May 21)
receipts, disbursements and
Pomeroy , $100 and costs. 3 the Riverview Nur sing Home
Melinda
Buck.,· Joseph the balance in the active fund
days in jail, OWl ; Janice in Lucasville. Preceding Mr. Taylor, Earl Leienderger, respectively were, $46,182.12,
Smith , Middl•port, $5 and Werling in death were his Edward Williams , Frana $42,939.72, $83,092.50.
cbsts, assault and battery ; parent.s, Phillip and Nancy Orendler, Clarence Martin,
Receipt.s, disbursement.s and
John Taylor, Middleport, $25 Rose Werling; his wife, Martha Sr., Daisy Kent, James Beers, clerk's balance respectively in
and costS, intoxication and Newell, Werling , and 16 Jr., Harold Wilson, Billy. Joe the inactive fund include, bond
fi ghting; Bruce Adams, 18, . brothers and sisters.
Walker' Mona Wilson, Betty retirement, $8,315.29, $214.85, .
New Haven, $5 a nd costs,
Surv iving are a son , William White, Goldie Waugh, Dewey $28,310.51; sewer bond , no
following too close; Marvin E., East Liverpool, and severa l . Swisher' Phillip Sheridan, re ce ipts, no expenditures,
Craig, Middleport, $25 and nieces and nephews. Funeral Ernest·Saunders, Virgie May, $2,934 .26; special street repair
costs, intox ication a nd fighting services will be at 2 p.m. J esse May • Albert Matney • Jr ., fund, $1,663.06, $42.97; $1,620.09.
in public; llarold Little, 37, Friday at the Ewing Funeral Kevin Grueser, Susanna Receipt.s, disbursement.s and ·
Middleport, intoxication, $15 !lome with the Rev. Edward Filzgerald, Charles Cook, Jr., balances in all funds respecand costs and William Griffith officiating . Burial will Mary Bradbury, Mrs. Bill tively totaled $56, $160 .47 ,
McHaffie, 47, Middleport, $10 be in the Letart Falls Boren and daughter, Mrs . $43,197.54, $115,957 .36.
and costs, intoxication; For- Cemetery. Friends may call at J oseph Bevan and son and
presented
feitin g bonds were Phyllis ihe funeral home after 7 this Rom a Baker· ·
Mullen, 58, Middleport, red eveni ng.
{Birth)
Bibles wer"e presented to
Mrs . Biihe 'fhress, a
light, $25, a nd Wliliam A.
seve n se niors at worship
daughter, Jackson.
KerwoOd , 34, Pt. Pleasant, ·
services Sunday morning by
PICNIC SET
I Discharges May 22)
intoxication, $30.
Rev. Howard Shiveley.
The Preceptor Chapter of
Valerie Watson, Campbell
Seniors receiving the Bibles
Bela Sigma Phi Sorority will Stevens, Dallas Fair, Leslie
E-RCALLED
were Lorna Bell, Lelart Falls
hold a picnic at 6:30 p.m. Neal, Kevin Higg e nbottom,
The Pomeroy E-R squad was
Thursday at the Route 33 road .Leslea Cole, Barbara Balch, United MethOdist Church, and
called at 1:12 a.m. today to the
Beverly Erwin, Janie Rees, ·
home of Lewis Fox, Laurel si de park on the rig ht going Jennifer Showman, . Marlerie Jay Hill, Jerr Hill, ROdney
north. Members are to. take a Me r ce r, Darlene Lamb e rt ,
Cliff. Mrs. Fox wa s taken to
covered dish and their ow n !laze! J enkins, Thelma Dill- Neigler, and Kevin Wolfe at
Veterans Memorial Hos pital.
RaCine Wesleyan Church .
se rvice.
man, Anna Fulks, Joseph
Kevin Wolfe graduated from
Wolfe, Betty WoOd, Harold
Meigs High School Tuesday
Rice , Davis Myers; Frank night and the rest were all
. Matkins, Mrs . Robert Manley
graduated from Southern High ·
. (Continued from page I )
·
and son, James Lane, Jr. ,
School.
the launch of three astronauts Friday in an effort to repair the
Henry Layne, Fredric Layne,
hot, power~•tarved Sky lab space station and turn it into a livable
Emma J ohnson. Curtis Fulks,
home fo.r nine men this year. The. emergency sun shades and
Virginia
Fis her,, Harley
debris clearing tools the pilots will carry Into space were due
Eustler, Elaine Dyer, Myla
here this afternoon to be stowed in the cabin of their Apollo ferry
Pretty and Feminine
Conner, Howard Call, Virginia
ship-turned-repair truck.
Collection tor "
Buchanan, _Tara Burdette and
Charles "Pete" Conrad, joseph P. Kerwin and Paul J. Weilz
Roy Baisden, Jr . 1
will inspect the new equipmdnt after their complete final,
(Births)
morninglong pre-launch mediCal examinations. The countdown
Mrs ; Jerry Wiley , a son,
toward the 9,a.m . EDT lift off time Friday started at 6:30 a'.m. It
was halted eight hours after the unmanned launch of Sky lab May Jack~on, Mrs. Robert Hite, a
14, when it was clear the eight--room space house could nQt be daughter , Ja ckson, Mrs. David
Clarke, a daughter, Jackson
occup!ed without eXtr.a ordinary ·repairs in orbit.
and Mrs. Joseph Schuler, Jr., a
Main at Sycamore
POMEROY,
OHIO
son, Cheshire.
(Con linued from p~ge 1)

at $115,957

HOSPITAL

"NEWS

Bibles

lOLA'S

DAY

I

,, ( ·" '"'

.

• ,

{

Tonight, Thur., Fri.
May 23.:24-25
Double Feature t'rogram
Alfred Hitchcock;s
FRENZY
(Color)
Jon F.inch
Alec McCowen

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

NOT OPEN -

HECK'S
REG. U BAR

SEATING LUXURY
AND ELEGANT BEAUTY,
.
SPECIALLY PRICED---

KELLiR- -·- "

FOSTER GRANT

30 Ql FOAM COOLER

SUNGLASSES

s249 10s399

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
~at 11 a.m. Wednesday
was II$ degrees under cloudy

-aides.

For The Entire
Family

The Athens Co"nty
Sawin~s &amp; LeNin Co .

296 Second Si.

Infants, Childrens, Misses;
Womens, Boys ilnd Mens.

heritage
house
Your Thom MeAn Store
MIDDLEPORT

Po~roy , Ohio

All Accounts Insured To
by FSLIC.

$20.000

.

¥ ''''""
.......
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:fWIM;

\ .....:::-:.
, ,_.,.,.,:·

$119

HECK'S
REG. 11.77

HECK'S REG. $1-69 .

SPORTS DEPT

HECK '5 REG. '5.1 0

5

¢

VACUUM BOnLE

--BAR

$2.52

_
t;
99

HOUSEWAREDEPT.

TRASH BAGS

FLOOR SHINE
as~
REG. '1.19

PORTABLE RADIO
NO. 2208

WET ONES

REG. $11 88

20GAL.

HECK'S

DETERGENT
4 FOR

H~CK'S

HECK'S REG.

AIR MATTRESS WITH PILLOW

99'

$100

REG. ·

$1.88

TOWELETTES
70 SHEETS

HECK'S REG.
44' EACH

HOUSEWARE
DEPl

69~

LARGE PRINT BEACH TOWELS
NICE lARGE BEACH TOWElS
WITH YOUR FAVORITE EX·

MR. BUBBLE
HECK'S REG. 49t

PRESSION.

33 ~·

$188

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.
TO $2.88

$7.99

SPORTS DEPT.

ClOTH/N' DEPT.

COMET

CROQUET SET

3" compressed hard maple bolls, epo)(y fin is h.
~lett hordwood lothe·lurned mollets with 6"
heodli. Treot11d hondlei. Red enameled ro~k
with liil¥er t1.1bula r liteel upr ighls ond corryin;
handle, Outdoor ipor varnish finish .

$499

For the drcmclic look of Spain choose this loose pillow-back sofa end pair of button
lulled chairs in smart -tu-tone fabric C.2J]lbination with brass finish finials and upholstered bases.
-

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

$14

H!lCK'S REG. $18.99

S/IORTS DEPT.

Stunning one ond
two piece ~ui h in a
~tyl i\h

15

oz.
MISS BRECK
HAIR SPRAY .
13

I

¢

Reg. HTOH , Super,
Unscented &amp; Scented

•

HECK'S REG. s1.37

SWIM TRUNKS

SWIM
SUITS

·12%"X9"Xlf2"

99

MEN'S

'
LADIES'

ROASTING
PAN
6-PLAYER

QT.

20COUNT

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HECK'S

88''.

HECK'S
REG.

22 OZ..FOR,MICA

REALTONE AM-FM

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$ 99

QT. VANGUARD

GLORY
RUG CLEANER
SPRAY FOAM

'

5%

NOW YOU KNOW
. . Rats cause an estimated $200
mililon damage each year in
-the United Slates.

HECK'S
REG. $1488

.·1 ·------------------i.;

·-- --

Asst. Styles
Fri., Sat., Sun.
May 25-26-27
. jiUTTERFL!ES ARE .
FREE
(Technicolor)
Goldie Hawn .
Ei teen Heckart
{PG)
DOPEY D_ICKS.
3 STOOGES
Adults 11.50
Children 7lc
Show Starts 7 p.m.

I

JERGEN'S' SOAP

( PGJ

Tonight &amp; Thursday
MaY23·24

ASSORTED STYLES
..

7·7¢

HOUSEWARE DIP T.

(Color!
Patty Duke .
Richard Thomas

MEIGS THEATRE

OLD ENGLISH
FURNITURE POLISH
HECK-S
REG. 95'

2CJc

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18"x25'

24 PIECES

( RI

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SMOKING
STAN.D

ALUMINUM FOIL

KNIVES &amp; FORKS

$1 os 10 $15ss.

'~.,I ,t

Just Highest
Interest Rates
In The Area

Sandals

~~·''"

Choose
from
a
larg e
assortmenl of the se beautiful
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WREATHS

MASON l.i -&lt;1 ~t-IN

'

MEMORIAL DAY
MONDAY MAY 28

HEAVY DUTY

.

OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9
SUNDAY 1 TO 7

OPEN
10 TO 7

88th BIRTHOA Y NEAR
Mrs. ·. 'Walter
(Nancy)
Walker; Pomeroy Route 4, will
observe her 88th birthday
anniversary at her residence
tomorrow, Thursday. Mrs.
Walker, in goOd health, resides
with her husband and a son,
Frank Dill.. near the old
Cheste r Golf C~urse.

SEE OUR

SPRING AND .
SUMMER

SUNDAY, MAY27,WHILE QUANTITIES LAS

MEMORIAL

..

News . . . in Briefs

PRICES IN EFFECT

oz.

VASELINE .
INTENSIVE
CARE
LOTION

49~

79~

lfECK'S REG. 69'

HECK'S REG. $1.38

COSMETIC DEPT.

COSMETIC DEPT.

ouortment

of colon.

Site~,

10

to l8ond28 1 o~6 .

Poly nylon stretch
swifT\ trunk s in box~ r
s ty ling .
la s t ex
material .
Co lor
se lec ti on
from
fan cies and · solids .
Si zes: S-M· L. Xl that
fit s sizes 30 to 142 .

HECK'S UG.
TO $9-88

HllCK'S
REG.

•2.66

�•

I
IU-'1'11! Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May 23,1973

President
(Continued from page 6)
Watergale I!Candal should not
be lillowed IAI get in the way of
what the Administration
lOIIght IAI achieve."
Nixon said his first reaction
to the Watergate burglary was
one of "complete surpise" hut
that within a few days he was

Meigs High Caulfield
(Continued from page I)

It - The Daily Sentinel, Mid&lt;lleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., May 23,1973

. .

lCOntinued from page 1)

direction .of H. Dwight Goins.

The former White House aide
The
invocation
and said Dean's request plunged
benediction were given by Hoyt him into a deep personal
Allen, Jr., minister of the conflict between loyalty to the
Pomeroy ChUTCh of Christ.
White House and having to do
Andy
Vaughan,
class
what he knew was wrong -&lt;1
president, introduced Dr. criminal act to obstruct
Goldman and the band played
advised "there was a several selections including justice.
"I know when wrongdoing is
possibility of CIA involvement " Maroon and Gold," the high
occurring. I knew that (using )
in S0tne WI)' } 1
school abna mater.
executive clemency in this
He did not say who told him
James A. Diehl, Jr., printhil and two of his aides who cipal, p~ented the class to matter was wrong, " he _said.
But, he added, "loyalty to the
lriefed newsmen on the staU!- George Hargraves, superinof the United States
President
ment, Leonard Gannent and tendent,
who
presented
overrode
those
conFred Buzhardt, declined to diplomas to the following:
siderations."
say.
Edgar
Abbott ,
Diana
Caulfield, a fonner White
But when it was disclosed Aleshire, Shirley Alkire, Sheila
employe,
was
that Howard Hunt and other AnderS:on, Barbara Archer , House
George
Arnott,
Linda questioned by Samuel Dash,
fllrmer CIA employes were Atkinson, Richard Bailey,
majority counsel for the Senate
Involved, Nixon said it seemeil ~amqnd
Baker. "' Debra
Watergate committee.
,1 possible to him that investlga- Barnhart , Karla Beal, Jyl
Beaver, Janet Biggs, JamesQ
Q. Although you state that
. • tion iniAl the Incident "could Birchfield, Ellzabelh Blaett.
you
made no mention of the
lead to uncovering of covert nar. James Boggs, Michael
CIA
operations
totally Bolin. Sarah Boyles. Francis President to Mr. McCord
Broderick, linda Brogan, Jon during your meeting (concernunrelated to the Watergate Bunce,
Phil
Burbridge,
break-in" and he instructed his Floranell Burney, Jan Burns, ing an offer of executive
Nan cy
Buskirk,
Randall
clemency), you do know, do
aides not to let this happen.
Terry
Cadle, you not, that the President is
Butcher,
uwuted J•tice Dooe... ,
Debra Call, Judy Carsey ,
"I wanted justice done with Debra Carson, Richard Carter, the only person in the country
Rita Cascl. Thomas Cassell,
regard IAI Watergate but In the Walla ce Chafin. William who can grant executive
I!Cale of national priorities with Chaney , Martin Chasteen, clemency in a federal criminal
Roger Cll!lrk , Vicki Clark, Jodi · matter?
which I had to·deal-;,nd not &lt;I Cllcken.ger,
Sharon Cogar,
A. Yes , sir, I do.
that Ume having any idea of Jerry Colema n , Michael
Q.
Did you understand when
the enent of political abuse Corder, He len Cotterill, Steven
CotterilL Victor Counts, Paul
you were speaking with Mr.
which Watergate reflected-! Cunningham,
Sue
Cun·
also had to be deeply con- nlngham , Jeffrey Darst, Gene Dean, that Mr. Dean wanted
you to transmit the message to
cerned with ensuring that Davis, Jon Dillard.
·Pamela Dodson , Brenda Mr. McCord that the offer of
neither the covert operations of Donohue, Gerald Donohue.
the CIA or the activities of the Roberta Duckworth , Charles executive clemency was made
Eastman, Bonnie Ebersbach, -with proper authority'
White House Investigation unit Merri
Ebersbach , Greg Eblin,
A. Yes, sir.
should not be compromised," Kathy Elias, Donald Ellis,
Q. Was it your intention
Gary Erlewine, Charles Faulk,
he ezplalned.
Jr
.,
Jenny.
Ferguson.
Jeffrey
during
your meeting with Mr.
"Therefore, I instructed Mr. Fields, Lots Fife, Leta Floyd
1
Haldeman and Mr. Ehrlich- Donna Francis, Brian French, McCord to leave him with the
man to ensure that the i.n- Marvin Friend, Elizabeth clear understanding that the
Fulh, Debra
Gallagher,
vesttgatioo of the break-In not Wanda Gardner , T ~ rry lee persons with the authority to
expose either an unrelated · Garten , Philip Ga6L Terry make such a representation as
operation of the CIA or the George, John Gerard, Oebor:ah executive clemency were · in
Gill iam. Kaaron Gilmore,
activities of the White House Dennis Glaze, Patricia Glaze, fact extending this offer to
him?
Karer1 Hale, Amy Hamm ,
investigations unit ...
Hanson,
Kenneth
A. Yes, sir, but of course, I
"It was certainly not my David
Harris,
John
Harrison,
had
no and did not at that time
intent, nor my wish, !bat the Sheila
Hawk,
Edward
investigation of the Watergate Hayes, John Hayes, Randy have any direct knowledge that
Haynes , Marlyn Hendricks,
the President had made such
break-in or of related acts be Connie Herdman . Melissa
an
offer, endorsed such an
bnpeded In any way."
Hooper, Rickey Hoover; Julia
Hutchison , Kathryn Hutton,
offer or was in any way inNixon aought to draw a
Charles Hysell, Ronald Hysell,
volved in such an offer.
distinction between the Water- Stephen Jewell. Deborah
As he did in testimony
gate burglary and these legal, Jewett, Mona Johnson, John
Kauff .
'1\iesdsy, Caulfield said he
clandeatlne operations of the
Janet Kennedy , William
assumed the clemency proposCIA which he deacribed as
~ennedy,
Timothy · King ,
being essential to the conduct Barbara Klein , Tim Krautter , als emanated rrom John D.
Janelle Kuhn. Cheryl Lambert.
Ehrlichman, Dean's predeces·of foreign policy. He claimed Gregory
Lane, Lawrence Lips·
SOI;' as White House coUJ"ISel and
that In the welter of charges comb, Cheryl long , Barbara
later chief domestic policy
and countercharges the two Lowe, Rosalie Malone, Toney
Mantey, Michael 1 . Marcum,
adviser .to Nixon until he
had become obscured and
Krlsty
Matson, · Richard
denied that he had misused the Mayer , Steven McGuffin , · resigned April 30.
Ragena
McGuire,
Llea
Caulfield, a former New
•ecret
i -ntelligence McK~;~nzie,
Samuel McKinney,
York city police detective,
organization whose activities Jr ., lewis McKinney, Sheila
worked at the White House first
• McKnight, Charles Mclain,
are largely unsupervised;
Charles McMillin , Nadine
for Ehrlichman and later for
·· McMurray,
Edith Mees ,
Dean. He left last year to take a
R,ichca rd Mer:JdenhaiL Terry
DRIVER CHARGED
Metheney, Donna Michael.
high Treasury Depariment job,
Leland R. Halley, 60, Rt. 1, Sherry Miller, Heidi Milhoan,
from which he is now on
Mldaleport, was charged with Debi Miller, Martha Miller,
~·administrative leave ."
Gregory Miller, Johnny Miller,
failure to yield the righklf-way Phil Miller, Paul Mitchell,
Caulfield testified Tuesday
following im accident on Rt. Philip Moon , John Moore
that
Dean told him last
124-Rt. 7 in Meigs County Paula Morris, Kimberley
january to tell McCord, one of
Mowery , James Neece, John
Tuesday. The Gallia-Meigs Nelson , R~er Pearch, Iris
the seven men then on trial for
Post Slate Highway Patrol said Peyton, Des~ree Pike, Be·ulah
the bugging of Democratic
Priddy, F . Dean Pullins, Paul
Halley's car colllded with an Pullins, Catherine Rayburn,
party headquarters last June,
auto driven by Charles E. TheodOre T. Reed · I II . Warren . that the clemency offers came
Hoback, 57, Syracuse. No in- Reeves .
from "way at. the top."
Sharon Reeves, Christine
juries were reported.
Robinson, .linda Rupe, Avd
"What did you conceive 'Way
Sayre, Michael Sayre, James
at the top' to be'" Sen: ;oseph
Schmoll, Connie Schultz,
MUSEUM OPEN
M. Montoya, D-N .M., a memKenneth See, Rebecca Seelig,
The Meigs County Museum Dorolhy Selh, Jeffrey Shank,
ber of the Senate committee,
Vicki Sinclair, ·John Slaven,
on Butter.nut Ave., Pomeroy, Constance
asked Caulfield.
Smith , Rebecca
will be open to the public over Smith, Paul Smith, Penny
"In my mind, I believed he
Smith,
Randy
Snider,
the holiday weekend. There are
was taiking about the PresiCharlotte
Snyder,
Dixie .
some pieces on display but the Snyder, James Snyder Judith
dent," Caulfield replied.
primary reason for the special Sopher, Christ•
Stanley,
hours is to provide a location Delores Stanley, William
Stanley, Gregory Stewart,
for "people to visit". The Paul· Stewart. Mark Still;
REVIVAL SET
building wiU be open from 4 to 6 Darryl Swartz, Brenda Taylor,
A
weekend
revival will be
Thomas,
Johnny
p.m. Saturday, from 2 to 4 p.m. Jane
held at the Pomeroy Wesleyan
Thompson, · Deborah Triplett,
Sunday, and from 10:30 a.m. to Scott Vranken, Charles Varian . . Hotkless Church, Rt . 143,
Jr ., Andrew Vaughan, Richard
2:30p.m. Monday.
beginning Thursday through
Vaughan, Scott Walton, ,Er.
nestlne Ward, Gary Warner,
Sunday . The Rev . Owens,
Gordon Warner, Dallas Weber,
district superintendent, will be
P8tti Well, BoMnie Welch,
PLEASANT VAlLEY
guest speaker Th"roday and
Mark Werry, James Wiles,
DISCHARGES:
Hallie Sharon Wilson,
Thomas
Friday. There will be special
Jordan, Mt. Alto; Mrs. Chris Wilson, Kevin Wolfe, Diana
singing
each
evening.
Young , Marlnda Young.
Durst, Point Pleasant; James
The public is invited. The Rev .
Napier, Ashton ; Mr. and Mrs.
O'DeU
Manley is pastor.
Quick to speak .
Lewis ' Cappellari,
Point
Pleasant; Roy Hili, Leon ;
for graduation
Louella Casey, Apple Grove;
No games, No gim.micks
Ray McCoy, Leon; Jeffery and
Thomas J . Quick, assistant
"John Huber, Point Pleasant," s~ate S\lperintendent of
and David · Connolly, Point . schools, will be guest speaker
Pleasant.
at the Racine Junior High
BIRTH: May 22, a daughter ·· School graduation Thursday at
to Mr. and Mrs. James Smith, 7:30 p.m. at the junior high
Point Pleasant.
building. Mr. Quick, a native of
Syracuse, is the brother of Mrs.
Margaret Cottrill, of Syracuse.
. SERVICES SET
Graduation exer~ises for the
RACINE - The Racine kindergarten classes wiU be
01)1 PASSBOOK
American Legion Post 602 will held promptly at 7 p.m. the
SAVINGS
hold Memorial Day services on same evening. Parking will be
S per cent per year paid on
Regular Passbook SaVings.
Sunday. Cooperating with the available on the ball diamond.
No Minimum . Interest
servicea wiD lie the S&lt;luthem There will be a short infrom date of deposit to date
High School Band : The ser- . termission to enable those not
of withdrawal. . Interest
c.:ompounded qu~rterly.
vices will be at the Letart wishing to .a ttend both
Cemetery at 10 a.m. and at ceremonies to arrive or leave.
Greenwood Cemetery in
Racine at II a .m.

Electrocution was accident . All funds
llobart Ray Eskew, 51, Rt. 2.
Gallipolis ( Neighborhond Rd.)
was a ccidenlally electrocuted
Tue sday afrernoon 'tllhiJe
repairing a waterline un·

standing

Eskew over . He was lying fa &lt;:e
down .
The eledricity was then
turned of£. The victim was
pronounced dead al-lhe scene .
Or. Warehime said Mr. Eskew

Children
! Continued rrom page 1)
En~lish when they came for
they attended an English spea king school in Bombay,
India, where · they lived.
Bhavana spe.aks the four
languages of India, including
their ,. mother· language,
Gujurati , and English. Both
she and Shilpa say that they
like the lessons best of
anything at school and they are
particularly fond of English
lessons.
Being of the Hindu religion
they are now allowed to eat
eggs or meat, so everything is
made from vegetables. Instead
· of the common peanut butter
and jelly sandwich in their
lunch box, the Goradia sisters
bring such lunches as a dish
called " pullow" which is made
of -rice, potatoes, and onions.
" I like it !" is the remark of
all · the Goradia children in
regard to whether they like .
living in Amt::rica. · Apparently
the first pangs of homesickness
were quick to disappear ·
· because they all say that want
to stay here in their new Meigs
County home.

funeral services will be held
1 p.m. Saturday at the Waughllotley-Wond Funeral • Home
with Rev . Rodney Beaver
officiating. Burial will be in
·derneath his home .
Clay Chapel Cemetery .
·According to Dr. Donald R. l1&lt;1d been dead appro•imately
Pomeroy Village funds as of
Friends · may call at the
.
Warehime, Gallia County two hour :;.
funeral home 3:30 to 5 p.m. and April 30 tolaled $115,957.36
Mr
.
Eskew
was
.employed
at
·
Coroner , Mr . Eskew wa s
7·9 p.m . Friday.· Graveside according to the report or Clerk
working in a trench undernea~h the Gallipolis Slate Institute military rites will be conducted , Jane Walt on submitted to
his house when he apparently the p.ast 20 years. He was born by VFW Post No. 4464 .
Pomeroy Council Monday
came in contact with a 110-volt Oct. 111, 1921, at Buftalo, W.
night . Receipts, disburelectric extension cord he had Va ., son of the late Roy Eskew,
sements, and clerk 's balance,
hooked up to a floor furnace. and Beulah Atkinson Eskew,
respectively in the active fund
•
Dr. Warehi.rne said the .soil was who survives and resides on
were :
damp where Mr. Eskew was Rt. 1, Gailipolis.
General , $14 ,440 . 32,
working .
He is also s urvived by his
$12,701.83, $10,974 .9ti; revenue
When Mrs. Eskew called for wife , Nova Wolfe Eskew,
shari ng, $5,~61.00, no e•her hu sband around 3:15 p.m. whom he married Feb. 23, 1945,
penditures, $9,461.110; federal
Veterans Memorial Hospital
water improvement,
nO
he didn't answer. She then in Gallipolis, these children,
Admissions - Clara Rad· receipts, no expenditures,
called the Southeastern Ohio Richard , of fairborn, Ohio;
ford,
Emergency Medical Service. Joe, Gallipolis; Mrs. Ronald n- . Racine; Denise Rifne, $1,650.00; sewer, $4,809.99 ;
The SEOEMS squad of Darrell f Donna ) White , Thurman; J,~ c•ne; Tracy Riffle • Racine·• $10,991.63, $7,515.14; fire
ames Ogdin, Pomeroy; Ida department, $2,771.76, $266.42,
l'linkle, Ray Bush, Neil Mc- Roger, at home; rour grand·
Shoemaker,
Middleport;
Mahon and Bob Shaw arrived children, and a sister, Mrs.
cemetery, $1,1100.110,
0 rvL-11e Jones, Elyria, Ohio; $4,782.12;
$5 43 .69,
on the scene shortly after. being Beatrice Terry, Columbus.
$418.06;
street,
George Conde, Pomeroy; $
·
summoned at 3:26 p .m .
One brother preceded him in D .
· 1,803.75, $2,283.69, $4,488.77 ;
atsy
Ankrom,
Racine- sla te highway improvement,
Not knowing what had death ,
happened, one squadsmen ' Mr. Eskew attended Mina Joanne Edwards, Mason and $146.25, no e•penditures,
received an electrical shock Chapel Church. He was a Crystal Manley, Middleport. $3, 464 _13 ; water operating,
Discharges
Karen
when he went to turn Mr. World War II veteran .
Tl
$8,172.52, $13,782.44, $2,997.31;
1omas, Ronnie Thomas, guaranty meter, $250 .00,
Vicky Campbell, Joseph $200.00, $581.72; water imGt;orge Werling
SEVEN FINED
Halfhill , Bernard GiJkey, provement, no receipts, no
Ronald Bostic and Cynthia Van e•penditures, $l5.6l; parking
Seven persons were fined
died
WednesdayMeter.
and two forfe"ited bonds in
meter, $1,583.00, $1,000.00,
Middleport Mayor John
$13,211 .80; utilities, $5,543.53,
RACINE - George David
Holzer Med•"cal Center
Zerkle's court Tuesday. Fined Werling, 88, Racine Route 2,
$1,180.02, $19,031.80. Total
were Eldon Wa lburn , 56, died Wednesday morning at
I Discharged May 21)
receipts, disbursements and
Pomeroy , $100 and costs. 3 the Riverview Nur sing Home
Melinda
Buck.,· Joseph the balance in the active fund
days in jail, OWl ; Janice in Lucasville. Preceding Mr. Taylor, Earl Leienderger, respectively were, $46,182.12,
Smith , Middl•port, $5 and Werling in death were his Edward Williams , Frana $42,939.72, $83,092.50.
cbsts, assault and battery ; parent.s, Phillip and Nancy Orendler, Clarence Martin,
Receipt.s, disbursement.s and
John Taylor, Middleport, $25 Rose Werling; his wife, Martha Sr., Daisy Kent, James Beers, clerk's balance respectively in
and costS, intoxication and Newell, Werling , and 16 Jr., Harold Wilson, Billy. Joe the inactive fund include, bond
fi ghting; Bruce Adams, 18, . brothers and sisters.
Walker' Mona Wilson, Betty retirement, $8,315.29, $214.85, .
New Haven, $5 a nd costs,
Surv iving are a son , William White, Goldie Waugh, Dewey $28,310.51; sewer bond , no
following too close; Marvin E., East Liverpool, and severa l . Swisher' Phillip Sheridan, re ce ipts, no expenditures,
Craig, Middleport, $25 and nieces and nephews. Funeral Ernest·Saunders, Virgie May, $2,934 .26; special street repair
costs, intox ication a nd fighting services will be at 2 p.m. J esse May • Albert Matney • Jr ., fund, $1,663.06, $42.97; $1,620.09.
in public; llarold Little, 37, Friday at the Ewing Funeral Kevin Grueser, Susanna Receipt.s, disbursement.s and ·
Middleport, intoxication, $15 !lome with the Rev. Edward Filzgerald, Charles Cook, Jr., balances in all funds respecand costs and William Griffith officiating . Burial will Mary Bradbury, Mrs. Bill tively totaled $56, $160 .47 ,
McHaffie, 47, Middleport, $10 be in the Letart Falls Boren and daughter, Mrs . $43,197.54, $115,957 .36.
and costs, intoxication; For- Cemetery. Friends may call at J oseph Bevan and son and
presented
feitin g bonds were Phyllis ihe funeral home after 7 this Rom a Baker· ·
Mullen, 58, Middleport, red eveni ng.
{Birth)
Bibles wer"e presented to
Mrs . Biihe 'fhress, a
light, $25, a nd Wliliam A.
seve n se niors at worship
daughter, Jackson.
KerwoOd , 34, Pt. Pleasant, ·
services Sunday morning by
PICNIC SET
I Discharges May 22)
intoxication, $30.
Rev. Howard Shiveley.
The Preceptor Chapter of
Valerie Watson, Campbell
Seniors receiving the Bibles
Bela Sigma Phi Sorority will Stevens, Dallas Fair, Leslie
E-RCALLED
were Lorna Bell, Lelart Falls
hold a picnic at 6:30 p.m. Neal, Kevin Higg e nbottom,
The Pomeroy E-R squad was
Thursday at the Route 33 road .Leslea Cole, Barbara Balch, United MethOdist Church, and
called at 1:12 a.m. today to the
Beverly Erwin, Janie Rees, ·
home of Lewis Fox, Laurel si de park on the rig ht going Jennifer Showman, . Marlerie Jay Hill, Jerr Hill, ROdney
north. Members are to. take a Me r ce r, Darlene Lamb e rt ,
Cliff. Mrs. Fox wa s taken to
covered dish and their ow n !laze! J enkins, Thelma Dill- Neigler, and Kevin Wolfe at
Veterans Memorial Hos pital.
RaCine Wesleyan Church .
se rvice.
man, Anna Fulks, Joseph
Kevin Wolfe graduated from
Wolfe, Betty WoOd, Harold
Meigs High School Tuesday
Rice , Davis Myers; Frank night and the rest were all
. Matkins, Mrs . Robert Manley
graduated from Southern High ·
. (Continued from page I )
·
and son, James Lane, Jr. ,
School.
the launch of three astronauts Friday in an effort to repair the
Henry Layne, Fredric Layne,
hot, power~•tarved Sky lab space station and turn it into a livable
Emma J ohnson. Curtis Fulks,
home fo.r nine men this year. The. emergency sun shades and
Virginia
Fis her,, Harley
debris clearing tools the pilots will carry Into space were due
Eustler, Elaine Dyer, Myla
here this afternoon to be stowed in the cabin of their Apollo ferry
Pretty and Feminine
Conner, Howard Call, Virginia
ship-turned-repair truck.
Collection tor "
Buchanan, _Tara Burdette and
Charles "Pete" Conrad, joseph P. Kerwin and Paul J. Weilz
Roy Baisden, Jr . 1
will inspect the new equipmdnt after their complete final,
(Births)
morninglong pre-launch mediCal examinations. The countdown
Mrs ; Jerry Wiley , a son,
toward the 9,a.m . EDT lift off time Friday started at 6:30 a'.m. It
was halted eight hours after the unmanned launch of Sky lab May Jack~on, Mrs. Robert Hite, a
14, when it was clear the eight--room space house could nQt be daughter , Ja ckson, Mrs. David
Clarke, a daughter, Jackson
occup!ed without eXtr.a ordinary ·repairs in orbit.
and Mrs. Joseph Schuler, Jr., a
Main at Sycamore
POMEROY,
OHIO
son, Cheshire.
(Con linued from p~ge 1)

at $115,957

HOSPITAL

"NEWS

Bibles

lOLA'S

DAY

I

,, ( ·" '"'

.

• ,

{

Tonight, Thur., Fri.
May 23.:24-25
Double Feature t'rogram
Alfred Hitchcock;s
FRENZY
(Color)
Jon F.inch
Alec McCowen

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

NOT OPEN -

HECK'S
REG. U BAR

SEATING LUXURY
AND ELEGANT BEAUTY,
.
SPECIALLY PRICED---

KELLiR- -·- "

FOSTER GRANT

30 Ql FOAM COOLER

SUNGLASSES

s249 10s399

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
~at 11 a.m. Wednesday
was II$ degrees under cloudy

-aides.

For The Entire
Family

The Athens Co"nty
Sawin~s &amp; LeNin Co .

296 Second Si.

Infants, Childrens, Misses;
Womens, Boys ilnd Mens.

heritage
house
Your Thom MeAn Store
MIDDLEPORT

Po~roy , Ohio

All Accounts Insured To
by FSLIC.

$20.000

.

¥ ''''""
.......
:".,'.',. .....

.!;

:fWIM;

\ .....:::-:.
, ,_.,.,.,:·

$119

HECK'S
REG. 11.77

HECK'S REG. $1-69 .

SPORTS DEPT

HECK '5 REG. '5.1 0

5

¢

VACUUM BOnLE

--BAR

$2.52

_
t;
99

HOUSEWAREDEPT.

TRASH BAGS

FLOOR SHINE
as~
REG. '1.19

PORTABLE RADIO
NO. 2208

WET ONES

REG. $11 88

20GAL.

HECK'S

DETERGENT
4 FOR

H~CK'S

HECK'S REG.

AIR MATTRESS WITH PILLOW

99'

$100

REG. ·

$1.88

TOWELETTES
70 SHEETS

HECK'S REG.
44' EACH

HOUSEWARE
DEPl

69~

LARGE PRINT BEACH TOWELS
NICE lARGE BEACH TOWElS
WITH YOUR FAVORITE EX·

MR. BUBBLE
HECK'S REG. 49t

PRESSION.

33 ~·

$188

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.
TO $2.88

$7.99

SPORTS DEPT.

ClOTH/N' DEPT.

COMET

CROQUET SET

3" compressed hard maple bolls, epo)(y fin is h.
~lett hordwood lothe·lurned mollets with 6"
heodli. Treot11d hondlei. Red enameled ro~k
with liil¥er t1.1bula r liteel upr ighls ond corryin;
handle, Outdoor ipor varnish finish .

$499

For the drcmclic look of Spain choose this loose pillow-back sofa end pair of button
lulled chairs in smart -tu-tone fabric C.2J]lbination with brass finish finials and upholstered bases.
-

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

$14

H!lCK'S REG. $18.99

S/IORTS DEPT.

Stunning one ond
two piece ~ui h in a
~tyl i\h

15

oz.
MISS BRECK
HAIR SPRAY .
13

I

¢

Reg. HTOH , Super,
Unscented &amp; Scented

•

HECK'S REG. s1.37

SWIM TRUNKS

SWIM
SUITS

·12%"X9"Xlf2"

99

MEN'S

'
LADIES'

ROASTING
PAN
6-PLAYER

QT.

20COUNT

----:----------------·-·-·-.--...

HECK'S

88''.

HECK'S
REG.

22 OZ..FOR,MICA

REALTONE AM-FM

ssss

.Sofa and 2 Chairs, only

$ 99

QT. VANGUARD

GLORY
RUG CLEANER
SPRAY FOAM

'

5%

NOW YOU KNOW
. . Rats cause an estimated $200
mililon damage each year in
-the United Slates.

HECK'S
REG. $1488

.·1 ·------------------i.;

·-- --

Asst. Styles
Fri., Sat., Sun.
May 25-26-27
. jiUTTERFL!ES ARE .
FREE
(Technicolor)
Goldie Hawn .
Ei teen Heckart
{PG)
DOPEY D_ICKS.
3 STOOGES
Adults 11.50
Children 7lc
Show Starts 7 p.m.

I

JERGEN'S' SOAP

( PGJ

Tonight &amp; Thursday
MaY23·24

ASSORTED STYLES
..

7·7¢

HOUSEWARE DIP T.

(Color!
Patty Duke .
Richard Thomas

MEIGS THEATRE

OLD ENGLISH
FURNITURE POLISH
HECK-S
REG. 95'

2CJc

YOU' LL LIKE MY
MOTHER

"

- - ·-

18"x25'

24 PIECES

( RI

- PIUS..:...

SMOKING
STAN.D

ALUMINUM FOIL

KNIVES &amp; FORKS

$1 os 10 $15ss.

'~.,I ,t

Just Highest
Interest Rates
In The Area

Sandals

~~·''"

Choose
from
a
larg e
assortmenl of the se beautiful
wreaths.

I

·-

.

WREATHS

MASON l.i -&lt;1 ~t-IN

'

MEMORIAL DAY
MONDAY MAY 28

HEAVY DUTY

.

OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9
SUNDAY 1 TO 7

OPEN
10 TO 7

88th BIRTHOA Y NEAR
Mrs. ·. 'Walter
(Nancy)
Walker; Pomeroy Route 4, will
observe her 88th birthday
anniversary at her residence
tomorrow, Thursday. Mrs.
Walker, in goOd health, resides
with her husband and a son,
Frank Dill.. near the old
Cheste r Golf C~urse.

SEE OUR

SPRING AND .
SUMMER

SUNDAY, MAY27,WHILE QUANTITIES LAS

MEMORIAL

..

News . . . in Briefs

PRICES IN EFFECT

oz.

VASELINE .
INTENSIVE
CARE
LOTION

49~

79~

lfECK'S REG. 69'

HECK'S REG. $1.38

COSMETIC DEPT.

COSMETIC DEPT.

ouortment

of colon.

Site~,

10

to l8ond28 1 o~6 .

Poly nylon stretch
swifT\ trunk s in box~ r
s ty ling .
la s t ex
material .
Co lor
se lec ti on
from
fan cies and · solids .
Si zes: S-M· L. Xl that
fit s sizes 30 to 142 .

HECK'S UG.
TO $9-88

HllCK'S
REG.

•2.66

�.

)

••

13 -

Til&lt;! Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o ., May 23, 1973

OPEUAILY
10 TO 9

OPEl DAILY
10 TO 9

'

OPIII DAILY

OPEII DAILY

10 TO 9

10 TO 9

BAR BEQUE
GRILL
LADIES

PANTY
LADIES

.HOSE

con oN

IES

BODY
SUIT

E.a sy·weor dvs ten with bu tton, li p, or
snap fr onh . In lOii d~ a nd pnnh wi th

LADIES
Me &lt; ~

ler bo dy ~u i h , wh ic h co me ~ in a ~ari et y
of p a ttern ~ . Th i1 suit i~ ma de af polynylo n ~tre lth a nd ~::ames in 1izes S·M·V.
·

$499

· HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG .
ssao

CLOTHING DfPT.

LADIES KNIT
LADIES

TANK Tops

· JAMAICA SHORTS

loC:!i! ond embroide red tr im . S1zes S, M,
L

TOs3'"

$1'1

CLOTHING DEPT.

CLOTHING DEPT.

' 11 !ofll W ~l ~~ l~' i "9 Jo"''i &lt;OO. f t OJliti• g II I IC ~
u oaoe, pull " " "'"'"· a~d 1~ roll F'O H"'~ ' +~tlitlt 10
c ha&lt;:+ ~ ho"' '"~'' " · """'~' · ood , j&gt;on il, Of yollow colo• 1.
Av,a•la blo.' n p&lt;&gt;l ~"' ''-' or ")'ion&gt; on oli n ! 0 to l 8 ono' J2
lo J8 "'f'l tli'IO iy ,

Cotton kni t tonk tops in novelties or so lids. Sizes S-M-l in
navy, re d, blue, and white.

a.

$299
CLOTHING DEPT.

s
.

GIRLS'

,

' ...~ .........._

$299 $J44

$299

green, and b rown . Sill!lS B to 18.

$599

HECK'S REG .
$3 .99
'

HAIIDWAIIE DEPT.

$711

LAWNMOWER

CLOTHING DEPT. .

(·
,._ ."'

&amp;
\ t
checks· ---------~1-....l.....i.....:..·....
·

·THROTTLE
CONTROL

TENNIS DRESSES
1
~

100% CODON

';':, !.....\!

\.~·-/~

'\. . . ,t
·i

. MEN'S

, ,
·

er has ela stic in

woi~l

S ho rt sleeve pe rmo p ress
sport shi rh in siz'es S·M· lXL. Co mes in stripes, prints
or solids.

,&gt;".:---

YOUTH PRINT
Pr int t·shirts

wi th you r

CLOTHING DEPT. ·

' ..

· HECK'S
REG.

DERBY BRAND
UNDERWEAR

PRESTONE

Eosy fit , one sizefits ollin 12
different colors.

66~

CLOTHING DEPT.

S5 .99 NOW $3 .99

ClOTHING DEPT. ·

SWEAT
S, M, l, XL.

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S.
REG.

78•

.

15

oz.

BRECK
SHAMPOO
Normal. Oily
Dry
&amp;

$1 ~9

HECK'S REG. 5 1 4 '

COSMETIC DEPT.

74~
HECK'S REG.

.

89i
COSMETIC DEPT.

7

oz. .

SILKEN LEGS
53~
HECK'S REG.

88i .

HECK'S REG.

' 88

1

COSMETIC DEPT.

REG.
$198

$1 . 8 8

HABWARE DEPT.
IB

15 oz . Net WI .

CARBURETOR
CHOKE CLEANER

DUPONT

oz.

·BABY MAGIC
67~
. HECK'S REG. •1 ••

CDSMERCDEPT.

AUTDMOniiE
. DEPT.

AND
DEGREASER

DUPONT

2 FOR

$1.29

100 _.

lNG OR
POLISHING,.
COMPOUND

oz.

$109
HECK'S REG. s1••

COSMBitDEPl .

HECK' S
REG.

69'

~~

DUPONT

. CHOICE
2FOR

15 oz.

VITAL IS

II T• T

AUTDMDniiE
/JIIIT.

. .....
-...

•,

' h~· ~ ·· j ~ .

""-•

~,

$100
· AUTOMOTIIIE DEPT.

12 oz .

· PRESTONE
HIGH.;.
TEMP

··BRAKE

HECK'REG . 97'each

94(
HECK'S REG.

$1.24

CHOICE

,_

RALLY
Vinyl

WAX

TIRE BLACK

HECK'S
REG.

GRASS
SEED
. .4 LBS.

oz.

PRE-SOFTENED

Pint

88C

12 0.1: . Net Wt .

DUPONT
CHROME
POLISH
12

9

TIRE
BLACK

CLEANER

~t·.· i.li~ a....~

TURTLE WAX
LIQUID

•

HECK 'S
REG .

PROTEIN 29

58(

HECK ' S R .EG .

' 5.7.6

lUG.
$1.58

'2"

oz. .

HAIR GROOM

HECK'S

HECK 'S REG • .

HECK'S

$2
. 44

'

EXCEDRIN
60's

\

ggc

A real winner for leisure living. Assorted colors. Sizes

$1.48

3

SJOO

RESIII STRIP

GALLON

100FT.

5 OZ. NET WEIGHT
DUPONT

ME

TUBE SOCKS

Also: Heck 's Reg:

CLOTHES LINE

&amp;

· MEN'~ ORLON

$J99

77'

HAIDWAIIE DEPT.

PKG. OF

3FOR .

'

FOR-GONE

88'

savmgs.

....

$ 44

HECK'S REG .

and briefs in size s S-M-l - X L. ,
30-42. Toke advanta ge of this
pre-Father's Day ·

legs.

.,-

DE CON

BAN
BUG

PLASTIC

$2.99

Men 1 s tee shirts

and

,

HECK'S .
REG.

T0$2 . 18

·. BUG
SPRAY

.

-~

'2 ..

KNIT
TOPS

sp•

. i
'· ·.
f ___'l

HECK'S REG.

••
'.
••
••
~·

.

HfCK'S REG • .

MEN'S

and

_e.

ROOF COATING

';· i:

j

GIRLS'

Si zes
l5"xJ7"

HECK'S REGULAR '6.97 GALLON

.

!

favor ite e xpressions.

HECK'S REG. TO '2.29

WINDOW SQPit;tl

GALLON

RUTH LAND
MOBILE HOME

-

In white or gray. Sizes: S, M, L, XL.

CLOTHING DEPT.

ADJUSTABLE

$579

HECK'S REG. ' 7.97 GALLON

'

$144

E)( citing ronge of colors to match o r accent LUCITE Wall
Point. Goe$ on fas t and easy, dries even faster to satiny
g lo )s. Fo r woodwork , cobinets, furni ture, ki tchen and bo th ·
room walls . Wa shes easi ly, wears wonderfully. Soap an d •
water dean-up .

GALLON

.• 1

UP TO '2,48

'

WALL PAINT

$657

HECK' S REG . $2 .48

POINT
.SHOVEL

I-SHIRT

HECK'S REG • .

.

HOUSEPAINT

1B"x37"

SPORT SHIRTS

Spring sho rt s leeve
mo d els i':' assor t ed
styles on_d colors. Sizes: 7 to 14.

HECK'S REG.
'2.48

INTERIOR

PERMANENT PRESS

.

HECK'S
REG.

EXTERIOR

;

.

Te nr\ i~ Drm
bodice molching bloomer color. Contrasting col or in
pleo!ed Skid a nd lopstitche-d
b inding. Pip ing ·a_t top of
Ski rt . N o..-elty embroidery
ili tching down front. Bloorn·
ho~

LUCilE

REPLACEMENT
KIT

.!..
'
- - - - -

GIRLS'

LUCITE

LU CITE ha s been shown to last longer than other lead ing
house po ints in a na tionwide test on hundred s of homes . It
drie s to a protective shee t that seals ou t the weathe r. l ets
moi sture out , won 't let weather in . Bu ilt in primer , dries in an
hour, soap cod water deon ·up .

HECK'S REG.

.I

FLY AWAY SMOCK TOP \ V/
EOsy core permanent pres s
matedo l. Fea_t"'ing b "tt o n
back, n c·ro c tr1m , and novelty

97

your~. Heck's ha s it in~

HECK'S REG. $1766

In clu de s b lade and
adopters . .

or two inch elastk waist . In colorl of navy,

CLOTHING DEPT.

A gre~l selection o f
prints, che cks, and
solids in si le~ 2 to 4. ·

12 TO 24 MONTHS

If the co1uollook is

LAWNMOWER BLADE KIT

theW! poly pants . Cuffed and flared with one

HECK'S REG. 5 3 41

TODDLERS .
2-PIECE
SHORT SETS ·
"" f1

POLy PANTS

$266 .

HECK'S REG. 5 3 96

."lfh

77e

HECK 'S REG. ' 1.48

Pr i nc e s~ Sue h lr a Wide Pan ty Hose
Choose fro m C o l or ~ of Pacif ic, Ci~~no
mon, Srow11 . Co ll!e , 0 11, Block, o ne
Navy in Si te~ IX , 2X , 3X , .. x .

DUSTERS

Be cOol and comfy in one of these hol-

CHOICE

$100
AI/TOMOT/111
IEPT.

SPONGES
TURTLE SHAPE
AND

.TOP
DRESSING
With Applicator
$100
HECK'S REG.

$1.39,

. PRESTONE

RADIATOR
FLUSH

Form ulated for Orum
and Disc Brakes .

2 FOR .
$100

EACH

AUTOMOniiE DEPT.

. HECK'S Rl$i.
74' EACH

�.

)

••

13 -

Til&lt;! Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o ., May 23, 1973

OPEUAILY
10 TO 9

OPEl DAILY
10 TO 9

'

OPIII DAILY

OPEII DAILY

10 TO 9

10 TO 9

BAR BEQUE
GRILL
LADIES

PANTY
LADIES

.HOSE

con oN

IES

BODY
SUIT

E.a sy·weor dvs ten with bu tton, li p, or
snap fr onh . In lOii d~ a nd pnnh wi th

LADIES
Me &lt; ~

ler bo dy ~u i h , wh ic h co me ~ in a ~ari et y
of p a ttern ~ . Th i1 suit i~ ma de af polynylo n ~tre lth a nd ~::ames in 1izes S·M·V.
·

$499

· HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG .
ssao

CLOTHING DfPT.

LADIES KNIT
LADIES

TANK Tops

· JAMAICA SHORTS

loC:!i! ond embroide red tr im . S1zes S, M,
L

TOs3'"

$1'1

CLOTHING DEPT.

CLOTHING DEPT.

' 11 !ofll W ~l ~~ l~' i "9 Jo"''i &lt;OO. f t OJliti• g II I IC ~
u oaoe, pull " " "'"'"· a~d 1~ roll F'O H"'~ ' +~tlitlt 10
c ha&lt;:+ ~ ho"' '"~'' " · """'~' · ood , j&gt;on il, Of yollow colo• 1.
Av,a•la blo.' n p&lt;&gt;l ~"' ''-' or ")'ion&gt; on oli n ! 0 to l 8 ono' J2
lo J8 "'f'l tli'IO iy ,

Cotton kni t tonk tops in novelties or so lids. Sizes S-M-l in
navy, re d, blue, and white.

a.

$299
CLOTHING DEPT.

s
.

GIRLS'

,

' ...~ .........._

$299 $J44

$299

green, and b rown . Sill!lS B to 18.

$599

HECK'S REG .
$3 .99
'

HAIIDWAIIE DEPT.

$711

LAWNMOWER

CLOTHING DEPT. .

(·
,._ ."'

&amp;
\ t
checks· ---------~1-....l.....i.....:..·....
·

·THROTTLE
CONTROL

TENNIS DRESSES
1
~

100% CODON

';':, !.....\!

\.~·-/~

'\. . . ,t
·i

. MEN'S

, ,
·

er has ela stic in

woi~l

S ho rt sleeve pe rmo p ress
sport shi rh in siz'es S·M· lXL. Co mes in stripes, prints
or solids.

,&gt;".:---

YOUTH PRINT
Pr int t·shirts

wi th you r

CLOTHING DEPT. ·

' ..

· HECK'S
REG.

DERBY BRAND
UNDERWEAR

PRESTONE

Eosy fit , one sizefits ollin 12
different colors.

66~

CLOTHING DEPT.

S5 .99 NOW $3 .99

ClOTHING DEPT. ·

SWEAT
S, M, l, XL.

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S.
REG.

78•

.

15

oz.

BRECK
SHAMPOO
Normal. Oily
Dry
&amp;

$1 ~9

HECK'S REG. 5 1 4 '

COSMETIC DEPT.

74~
HECK'S REG.

.

89i
COSMETIC DEPT.

7

oz. .

SILKEN LEGS
53~
HECK'S REG.

88i .

HECK'S REG.

' 88

1

COSMETIC DEPT.

REG.
$198

$1 . 8 8

HABWARE DEPT.
IB

15 oz . Net WI .

CARBURETOR
CHOKE CLEANER

DUPONT

oz.

·BABY MAGIC
67~
. HECK'S REG. •1 ••

CDSMERCDEPT.

AUTDMOniiE
. DEPT.

AND
DEGREASER

DUPONT

2 FOR

$1.29

100 _.

lNG OR
POLISHING,.
COMPOUND

oz.

$109
HECK'S REG. s1••

COSMBitDEPl .

HECK' S
REG.

69'

~~

DUPONT

. CHOICE
2FOR

15 oz.

VITAL IS

II T• T

AUTDMDniiE
/JIIIT.

. .....
-...

•,

' h~· ~ ·· j ~ .

""-•

~,

$100
· AUTOMOTIIIE DEPT.

12 oz .

· PRESTONE
HIGH.;.
TEMP

··BRAKE

HECK'REG . 97'each

94(
HECK'S REG.

$1.24

CHOICE

,_

RALLY
Vinyl

WAX

TIRE BLACK

HECK'S
REG.

GRASS
SEED
. .4 LBS.

oz.

PRE-SOFTENED

Pint

88C

12 0.1: . Net Wt .

DUPONT
CHROME
POLISH
12

9

TIRE
BLACK

CLEANER

~t·.· i.li~ a....~

TURTLE WAX
LIQUID

•

HECK 'S
REG .

PROTEIN 29

58(

HECK ' S R .EG .

' 5.7.6

lUG.
$1.58

'2"

oz. .

HAIR GROOM

HECK'S

HECK 'S REG • .

HECK'S

$2
. 44

'

EXCEDRIN
60's

\

ggc

A real winner for leisure living. Assorted colors. Sizes

$1.48

3

SJOO

RESIII STRIP

GALLON

100FT.

5 OZ. NET WEIGHT
DUPONT

ME

TUBE SOCKS

Also: Heck 's Reg:

CLOTHES LINE

&amp;

· MEN'~ ORLON

$J99

77'

HAIDWAIIE DEPT.

PKG. OF

3FOR .

'

FOR-GONE

88'

savmgs.

....

$ 44

HECK'S REG .

and briefs in size s S-M-l - X L. ,
30-42. Toke advanta ge of this
pre-Father's Day ·

legs.

.,-

DE CON

BAN
BUG

PLASTIC

$2.99

Men 1 s tee shirts

and

,

HECK'S .
REG.

T0$2 . 18

·. BUG
SPRAY

.

-~

'2 ..

KNIT
TOPS

sp•

. i
'· ·.
f ___'l

HECK'S REG.

••
'.
••
••
~·

.

HfCK'S REG • .

MEN'S

and

_e.

ROOF COATING

';· i:

j

GIRLS'

Si zes
l5"xJ7"

HECK'S REGULAR '6.97 GALLON

.

!

favor ite e xpressions.

HECK'S REG. TO '2.29

WINDOW SQPit;tl

GALLON

RUTH LAND
MOBILE HOME

-

In white or gray. Sizes: S, M, L, XL.

CLOTHING DEPT.

ADJUSTABLE

$579

HECK'S REG. ' 7.97 GALLON

'

$144

E)( citing ronge of colors to match o r accent LUCITE Wall
Point. Goe$ on fas t and easy, dries even faster to satiny
g lo )s. Fo r woodwork , cobinets, furni ture, ki tchen and bo th ·
room walls . Wa shes easi ly, wears wonderfully. Soap an d •
water dean-up .

GALLON

.• 1

UP TO '2,48

'

WALL PAINT

$657

HECK' S REG . $2 .48

POINT
.SHOVEL

I-SHIRT

HECK'S REG • .

.

HOUSEPAINT

1B"x37"

SPORT SHIRTS

Spring sho rt s leeve
mo d els i':' assor t ed
styles on_d colors. Sizes: 7 to 14.

HECK'S REG.
'2.48

INTERIOR

PERMANENT PRESS

.

HECK'S
REG.

EXTERIOR

;

.

Te nr\ i~ Drm
bodice molching bloomer color. Contrasting col or in
pleo!ed Skid a nd lopstitche-d
b inding. Pip ing ·a_t top of
Ski rt . N o..-elty embroidery
ili tching down front. Bloorn·
ho~

LUCilE

REPLACEMENT
KIT

.!..
'
- - - - -

GIRLS'

LUCITE

LU CITE ha s been shown to last longer than other lead ing
house po ints in a na tionwide test on hundred s of homes . It
drie s to a protective shee t that seals ou t the weathe r. l ets
moi sture out , won 't let weather in . Bu ilt in primer , dries in an
hour, soap cod water deon ·up .

HECK'S REG.

.I

FLY AWAY SMOCK TOP \ V/
EOsy core permanent pres s
matedo l. Fea_t"'ing b "tt o n
back, n c·ro c tr1m , and novelty

97

your~. Heck's ha s it in~

HECK'S REG. $1766

In clu de s b lade and
adopters . .

or two inch elastk waist . In colorl of navy,

CLOTHING DEPT.

A gre~l selection o f
prints, che cks, and
solids in si le~ 2 to 4. ·

12 TO 24 MONTHS

If the co1uollook is

LAWNMOWER BLADE KIT

theW! poly pants . Cuffed and flared with one

HECK'S REG. 5 3 41

TODDLERS .
2-PIECE
SHORT SETS ·
"" f1

POLy PANTS

$266 .

HECK'S REG. 5 3 96

."lfh

77e

HECK 'S REG. ' 1.48

Pr i nc e s~ Sue h lr a Wide Pan ty Hose
Choose fro m C o l or ~ of Pacif ic, Ci~~no
mon, Srow11 . Co ll!e , 0 11, Block, o ne
Navy in Si te~ IX , 2X , 3X , .. x .

DUSTERS

Be cOol and comfy in one of these hol-

CHOICE

$100
AI/TOMOT/111
IEPT.

SPONGES
TURTLE SHAPE
AND

.TOP
DRESSING
With Applicator
$100
HECK'S REG.

$1.39,

. PRESTONE

RADIATOR
FLUSH

Form ulated for Orum
and Disc Brakes .

2 FOR .
$100

EACH

AUTOMOniiE DEPT.

. HECK'S Rl$i.
74' EACH

�,.

-

:

•

~~-The Daily Sentinel, Mi&lt;klieport-Porneroy, 0., May 23, 1973

OPEII DAILY

OPEl DAILY

OPIIIAILY

10 TO 9

10 TO 9

ARE SET
8:

lnclu d!!l:

p )o~tic CUfH,

d mner pl~j!lt!'~.

a

OPEII DAILY

10 TO 9

10 TO 9

37 1h"X6'

thermo

8 IOUCtn , 8 IOUp , Ctrtal

bo,.h B bread a nd butler platu, I
&gt;&lt;g••• blo"bowl, I &lt;o oom.,, I '"9 "'
.,..,,h bd o11d l1t1Y1ng plotter .

wINDOW

NATIONAL 9'x12'

IRONING
BOARD

COTTAGE TENT

HOI/SEWAII
DEI'T,

T-leg design . Non·d•p rubb e rl•pped feet . ~ingle Spr1ng Stop

••-

BLINDS .

HECK'S REG.
$1 8.8 8

'

\

'

FOLDING
DOORS

HECK'S REG.

HOIISEW~IE DEPT.

STAINLESS STEEL

JUMBO

• Full · l~ng t h st~el pa nel core e Sell
lubri cation p oly~ thylene comers •
Baked enamel \ !eel track • frict•on
type latch • Smart de1ign e Auo rted
colors .

3 PC. MIXING
BOWL SO
SJ44

4&lt;

-

DAYS-EASE
AIR
FRESHENER

TABLE MATE
SET

9QT.

Cj-Jc

HECK'S REG. $1.29
HOUSEWAIIE DEPT.

HECK 'S REG. 69'

HOUSEWARE 011' T.

HOI/SEW ARE OEI'T.

0 """"

SKILLET
__.--·

Complete with nylon rope•, steel
stake• , 6' eave•, adjustable center
pole to 8 feel. Water and rat proof.

$1788

Choose from 3 colors

.I

SJ66

HECK ' S REG .
$2.99

it the happy tlat~ of ~:~llo in when you c~:~n 141e1
loll more done woth loh len ~lfort . And no oth~r kind of
cOQking '"the gteol outdoo~S con moiCh the. ef ficiency of
the legendory Coleman camp ~•a~e line . It ', eoly, it's
lmt , •t odds the prC'I~:s1ional touch to cam p coo king . It's
the fo•orite of generatioru of outdoonmen, and comp·
ing fom iliet .

ZEBCO

oz.

LYSOL28 OZ.

· KETCHUP

SET

CLEANER
77~

909

88

¢

33(

HECK'S REG. 93'

REEL

HECK'S REG. 44'

MUSTARD AND

HECK'S REG.

_u

$2599 .

$89.88
SPORTS DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $31.99

PITCHER
DECANTER

HECK'S REG.

$

3-BURNER STOVE

Eflici~~cy

•21.99

6.9

HECK'S REG. 89'

NGCANOPY

COLEMAN
DELUXE

HECK'S REG .

7 oz.

93'

12'~12' Dl

lO" TEFLON

LYSOL
SPRAY

55~

FESCO PLASTIC

88(

HECK'S REG.
$8.99

'

HECK'S REG. $4.99

PITCHER
DECANTER

$599

Adjustable ouhide !.uspension from~ ; zipper down center of door; two extra
large docron polyester screened windows; sunflower yellow roof 6 .73 oz. drill '
. which reflects heot- 6. 15 oz. drill , ocean green walls and floor: made of flame
resistant treated fabric.

..

_
-=-··. .~.

OCitvOiti tOnlr ol pOit iiOFI.

NECK'$ REG. 49'

HECK'S
REG. s1899

2 CELL
EVEREADY
MAGNETIC

4 PLAYER

7

BADMINTON SET _
~~~•• ~

8ad,..~ .

Pk&gt;yor

"" ~ !.of

Con ·
too no ~ "~•l "oOOh oochh
., , ,~ "'"lto ·colo ood ••bb.o
II' if&gt;&lt;. '" on y ,. , ,~ hoaodtd

long 10

n;lon II" ' • uHo

FLASHLIGHT

h not . O&gt;ho ~oovy duly

po l.. . ropo and olalu
ond •olo bcol

oz.

INSECT
REPELLENT
"6·12 Plus" iMe&lt;:.t repel len t.lhe " plus" it our fortified .
formula mode with two , , . not ani! ... ol tne mo~t
elfedivl! personal iMI!CI repellenh ~ver developed .
Mode tpe c•o lly to protect ,.or people . Man over mosquito . " 6-12 Plo,a"

ONE TRAY

METAL
TACKLE BOX

WITH BATTERIES

$129

.

HECK'S
REq.
'10.99

HECK'S
REG. s1 29

HECK'S
REG.

$19'

$1.19

SPORTS
DEPT.

HECK'S.REG.

SPORTS DEPT.

'2.49

Cole co

COMBO
"!'"'"' "'

$199

'"'" in.,,.. Ploy 8&lt;1• ;, d .... ~n•d lor
oo nd
One p&lt;e&lt;e rn&lt;&gt;ld•d pol~•'hfl ono, •1g•d well i""'"'
CO"'tl in ytllow wol h de&lt;c b"ghl ma•lne de••gn
feu&lt; ""'dt "''"'· non·&gt;k•d 11om, ooomy inle&lt;io. .
~""''"" rtliltno• .
32..
•

s;,. n···

SLIDE &amp; SPLASH POOL

HECK'S
REG. $2.88

Cole CO l~n '" rke "' " bowlleo?urtt o me~&lt;:~.l lodder
._ ,, d h~O""f duty plo&gt;lit 11ep1 kido ha ... o boll ,.,
&lt;o.,p lere &gt;oleoy in th oo no leal. , o&lt;&gt;t pioce bo,.;l
molded of weo1 "n teo• roli.,on T p'lou :c Slo&lt;l~ n&gt;o &gt;ld
td

•n•c p.ool .

.

. FILL AND SWIM POOL

$833

"''ogni fi&lt;on llyl"ll color prinr.d ..,;lhMod Buherll ie t ,
Smo leoond Da&lt;I'OI w i t h ""''~"" o&gt;eN •II g lo ny t 1nooh .
No ou.,..,bly . Jull opo~ . fi ll nnd """" P~ &lt; ked in
&lt;lu•dy &lt;Ctre&gt;VO!od ' " " r·ou! bo• wo! h lull &lt;clo1 lorhoII'"P~d Iobei. ~opoir lo ot endooed.

HECK'S REG.
$11.77

66"X60"x12"

. TOYDII'T.

s;ze

$ 699

HECK'S REG
$9.77 .

•

BERKLEY

2-TRAY

BAT

TACKLE BOX

AND

3 BALLS

MINI
WHEELS ·•·

VINYL

MATTRESS

72"X27"

4 STYLES

94c
HECK'SREG.$1.33

TOY DEPT.

•

79(

EA. .·

HIPSTER

..

HECK'S REG.

item in the Ma rx World of Mini to
Big Whe"' l~. ages 11'1 to J, oil blo
molded plo~tic 2-4" l. 151'.!" w

13 ~" k.

72(

$566

TOY DEPT.

CHOICE

HECK'S REG. 96'

HECK'S REG. $1 .04

TDYDEI'T.

Hip , h;p , ho&lt;:noy !.,, ~~~~,v ··, ne"' H1p"er aogo!Wili"'lical
~ur"' o.ntl &lt;&lt;&gt;o•d•noted ~It ore"'"'" low on ! l&gt;o hipo lilt@
o ho l&gt;!o• , ldoo l.fo&lt; l&lt;o"n' c&lt;&gt;inl, mil&gt;ia l~ -. '&lt;&gt;YI. tic. lnroc
d""ll"' to'"""'" hom, U.S .A. A.l l THE WAY io """"d
o...! ''"P"d '"red , wk'" ond blvt ; t?ON"T &amp;UG Mf" lu&gt;h
with lodyb~g• ~n b"IJhr)'o l ~,.. , inyl ; STOP AND GO io a
&lt;olo&lt;f ul '" "'11&lt;&gt;1•11 of lomilior uolli&lt; •ill"' · AU ~,;'iiM oro
o•lk ·l«o@nod en 12-gaugt .nn~l.

BUBBLE MAKER

.

'

92'

BAGS

SKY-HI
A 1torter

SAND SETS
CHOICE

TRILENE liNE

METAL

PLASTIC

TOY DEPT.

TOY DEPT,

66(

$300
HECK'S REG.
$3.99

BERKLEY SPIN CAST
OR SPINNING ROD

12 ·CUP FAMilY SIZE . S!yled 10
,.,.... ~o~ bto..,ilully. ai; lcmify··oize
bo&lt;o"'' ~ to 11 cup&lt;. Sn e n11th •olo.r•
tor . l"'itr-L&lt;&gt;&lt;Io Sofe11Top. Li11hi •ig·
nol&lt;whon ooady To~... . Koepo &lt;o&gt;l·
'IU ~0 1 ~u!OI!UIIicB II , . Pop up
~0&gt;~11. Stay ·&lt;o&lt;&gt;l bo.e, handle

11'1 BMC

SUNBEAM
2 SLICE TOASTER
HECK'S

DOLLAR BUYS

R~G.

$1 S.96

JEWELRY
DEPT.

'.

.

'1066
HECK'S REG. $13

FRY PAN

.

HECK'S
REG.
$18.88

. $1]99
96

HECK'S REG. $16.96

JEWEliY DEPT.

. . . _. ,._ 12

JEWELRY
DEPT.

;I·~
\..J

. 4 BOXES .
EAGLE CLAW
HOOKS

ROOSTER TAIL
LURES

_,___..,____. -ASHlN
SPOONS

'

thru 10

Test

$~0

2

$]00

SPOOLS ,&amp; AND

SPOOLS

SPORTS DEPT.

AMAZING
MINNOW

$100

NIGHT
-CRAWLER
"
HARNESS
PKGS.

$

•

10 RED
AND WHITE

Att ractiVe buffet "styling . Removable heat control
for easy cleaning. Cloverleaf design heating ele·
men1. High dome vented cover. large size. 1250 .

l'l \h .

2 .

REBEL
LURES

SIZES NO.

ON FISH
TACKLE

ASST.
\

POPPERS

SUNBEAM

wo1ts, 120 volts .

HECK'S REG. $7.99

GREAT ·

HECK'S REG. 84'

SLOW COOKER

8, 10,

NoI

EA.

WORTH ITS WAIT IN FLAVOR! A " must" for working people, busy homemakers; gourmets.

6 LBS.
TEST

SPORTS DEPT.

CROCK POT
TlOOS

$499
CHOICE
EACH

. Choose from Berkley SP 106 spin cost rod or Berkley
SPJ06 sp inning rod. Both are excellent medium ·
weight rods, jus! right for the big ones.

RIVAL

12-CUP PERfOLATOR

Choose from a variety of test weight• to .
suit yolK needs. BY BERKLEY

, I~ · ·.

~ · ~ . ~1

~/C~'!'

$ 00 · \..J

24

Assorted
Sizes

Assorted ·
Sizes

�,.

-

:

•

~~-The Daily Sentinel, Mi&lt;klieport-Porneroy, 0., May 23, 1973

OPEII DAILY

OPEl DAILY

OPIIIAILY

10 TO 9

10 TO 9

ARE SET
8:

lnclu d!!l:

p )o~tic CUfH,

d mner pl~j!lt!'~.

a

OPEII DAILY

10 TO 9

10 TO 9

37 1h"X6'

thermo

8 IOUCtn , 8 IOUp , Ctrtal

bo,.h B bread a nd butler platu, I
&gt;&lt;g••• blo"bowl, I &lt;o oom.,, I '"9 "'
.,..,,h bd o11d l1t1Y1ng plotter .

wINDOW

NATIONAL 9'x12'

IRONING
BOARD

COTTAGE TENT

HOI/SEWAII
DEI'T,

T-leg design . Non·d•p rubb e rl•pped feet . ~ingle Spr1ng Stop

••-

BLINDS .

HECK'S REG.
$1 8.8 8

'

\

'

FOLDING
DOORS

HECK'S REG.

HOIISEW~IE DEPT.

STAINLESS STEEL

JUMBO

• Full · l~ng t h st~el pa nel core e Sell
lubri cation p oly~ thylene comers •
Baked enamel \ !eel track • frict•on
type latch • Smart de1ign e Auo rted
colors .

3 PC. MIXING
BOWL SO
SJ44

4&lt;

-

DAYS-EASE
AIR
FRESHENER

TABLE MATE
SET

9QT.

Cj-Jc

HECK'S REG. $1.29
HOUSEWAIIE DEPT.

HECK 'S REG. 69'

HOUSEWARE 011' T.

HOI/SEW ARE OEI'T.

0 """"

SKILLET
__.--·

Complete with nylon rope•, steel
stake• , 6' eave•, adjustable center
pole to 8 feel. Water and rat proof.

$1788

Choose from 3 colors

.I

SJ66

HECK ' S REG .
$2.99

it the happy tlat~ of ~:~llo in when you c~:~n 141e1
loll more done woth loh len ~lfort . And no oth~r kind of
cOQking '"the gteol outdoo~S con moiCh the. ef ficiency of
the legendory Coleman camp ~•a~e line . It ', eoly, it's
lmt , •t odds the prC'I~:s1ional touch to cam p coo king . It's
the fo•orite of generatioru of outdoonmen, and comp·
ing fom iliet .

ZEBCO

oz.

LYSOL28 OZ.

· KETCHUP

SET

CLEANER
77~

909

88

¢

33(

HECK'S REG. 93'

REEL

HECK'S REG. 44'

MUSTARD AND

HECK'S REG.

_u

$2599 .

$89.88
SPORTS DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $31.99

PITCHER
DECANTER

HECK'S REG.

$

3-BURNER STOVE

Eflici~~cy

•21.99

6.9

HECK'S REG. 89'

NGCANOPY

COLEMAN
DELUXE

HECK'S REG .

7 oz.

93'

12'~12' Dl

lO" TEFLON

LYSOL
SPRAY

55~

FESCO PLASTIC

88(

HECK'S REG.
$8.99

'

HECK'S REG. $4.99

PITCHER
DECANTER

$599

Adjustable ouhide !.uspension from~ ; zipper down center of door; two extra
large docron polyester screened windows; sunflower yellow roof 6 .73 oz. drill '
. which reflects heot- 6. 15 oz. drill , ocean green walls and floor: made of flame
resistant treated fabric.

..

_
-=-··. .~.

OCitvOiti tOnlr ol pOit iiOFI.

NECK'$ REG. 49'

HECK'S
REG. s1899

2 CELL
EVEREADY
MAGNETIC

4 PLAYER

7

BADMINTON SET _
~~~•• ~

8ad,..~ .

Pk&gt;yor

"" ~ !.of

Con ·
too no ~ "~•l "oOOh oochh
., , ,~ "'"lto ·colo ood ••bb.o
II' if&gt;&lt;. '" on y ,. , ,~ hoaodtd

long 10

n;lon II" ' • uHo

FLASHLIGHT

h not . O&gt;ho ~oovy duly

po l.. . ropo and olalu
ond •olo bcol

oz.

INSECT
REPELLENT
"6·12 Plus" iMe&lt;:.t repel len t.lhe " plus" it our fortified .
formula mode with two , , . not ani! ... ol tne mo~t
elfedivl! personal iMI!CI repellenh ~ver developed .
Mode tpe c•o lly to protect ,.or people . Man over mosquito . " 6-12 Plo,a"

ONE TRAY

METAL
TACKLE BOX

WITH BATTERIES

$129

.

HECK'S
REq.
'10.99

HECK'S
REG. s1 29

HECK'S
REG.

$19'

$1.19

SPORTS
DEPT.

HECK'S.REG.

SPORTS DEPT.

'2.49

Cole co

COMBO
"!'"'"' "'

$199

'"'" in.,,.. Ploy 8&lt;1• ;, d .... ~n•d lor
oo nd
One p&lt;e&lt;e rn&lt;&gt;ld•d pol~•'hfl ono, •1g•d well i""'"'
CO"'tl in ytllow wol h de&lt;c b"ghl ma•lne de••gn
feu&lt; ""'dt "''"'· non·&gt;k•d 11om, ooomy inle&lt;io. .
~""''"" rtliltno• .
32..
•

s;,. n···

SLIDE &amp; SPLASH POOL

HECK'S
REG. $2.88

Cole CO l~n '" rke "' " bowlleo?urtt o me~&lt;:~.l lodder
._ ,, d h~O""f duty plo&gt;lit 11ep1 kido ha ... o boll ,.,
&lt;o.,p lere &gt;oleoy in th oo no leal. , o&lt;&gt;t pioce bo,.;l
molded of weo1 "n teo• roli.,on T p'lou :c Slo&lt;l~ n&gt;o &gt;ld
td

•n•c p.ool .

.

. FILL AND SWIM POOL

$833

"''ogni fi&lt;on llyl"ll color prinr.d ..,;lhMod Buherll ie t ,
Smo leoond Da&lt;I'OI w i t h ""''~"" o&gt;eN •II g lo ny t 1nooh .
No ou.,..,bly . Jull opo~ . fi ll nnd """" P~ &lt; ked in
&lt;lu•dy &lt;Ctre&gt;VO!od ' " " r·ou! bo• wo! h lull &lt;clo1 lorhoII'"P~d Iobei. ~opoir lo ot endooed.

HECK'S REG.
$11.77

66"X60"x12"

. TOYDII'T.

s;ze

$ 699

HECK'S REG
$9.77 .

•

BERKLEY

2-TRAY

BAT

TACKLE BOX

AND

3 BALLS

MINI
WHEELS ·•·

VINYL

MATTRESS

72"X27"

4 STYLES

94c
HECK'SREG.$1.33

TOY DEPT.

•

79(

EA. .·

HIPSTER

..

HECK'S REG.

item in the Ma rx World of Mini to
Big Whe"' l~. ages 11'1 to J, oil blo
molded plo~tic 2-4" l. 151'.!" w

13 ~" k.

72(

$566

TOY DEPT.

CHOICE

HECK'S REG. 96'

HECK'S REG. $1 .04

TDYDEI'T.

Hip , h;p , ho&lt;:noy !.,, ~~~~,v ··, ne"' H1p"er aogo!Wili"'lical
~ur"' o.ntl &lt;&lt;&gt;o•d•noted ~It ore"'"'" low on ! l&gt;o hipo lilt@
o ho l&gt;!o• , ldoo l.fo&lt; l&lt;o"n' c&lt;&gt;inl, mil&gt;ia l~ -. '&lt;&gt;YI. tic. lnroc
d""ll"' to'"""'" hom, U.S .A. A.l l THE WAY io """"d
o...! ''"P"d '"red , wk'" ond blvt ; t?ON"T &amp;UG Mf" lu&gt;h
with lodyb~g• ~n b"IJhr)'o l ~,.. , inyl ; STOP AND GO io a
&lt;olo&lt;f ul '" "'11&lt;&gt;1•11 of lomilior uolli&lt; •ill"' · AU ~,;'iiM oro
o•lk ·l«o@nod en 12-gaugt .nn~l.

BUBBLE MAKER

.

'

92'

BAGS

SKY-HI
A 1torter

SAND SETS
CHOICE

TRILENE liNE

METAL

PLASTIC

TOY DEPT.

TOY DEPT,

66(

$300
HECK'S REG.
$3.99

BERKLEY SPIN CAST
OR SPINNING ROD

12 ·CUP FAMilY SIZE . S!yled 10
,.,.... ~o~ bto..,ilully. ai; lcmify··oize
bo&lt;o"'' ~ to 11 cup&lt;. Sn e n11th •olo.r•
tor . l"'itr-L&lt;&gt;&lt;Io Sofe11Top. Li11hi •ig·
nol&lt;whon ooady To~... . Koepo &lt;o&gt;l·
'IU ~0 1 ~u!OI!UIIicB II , . Pop up
~0&gt;~11. Stay ·&lt;o&lt;&gt;l bo.e, handle

11'1 BMC

SUNBEAM
2 SLICE TOASTER
HECK'S

DOLLAR BUYS

R~G.

$1 S.96

JEWELRY
DEPT.

'.

.

'1066
HECK'S REG. $13

FRY PAN

.

HECK'S
REG.
$18.88

. $1]99
96

HECK'S REG. $16.96

JEWEliY DEPT.

. . . _. ,._ 12

JEWELRY
DEPT.

;I·~
\..J

. 4 BOXES .
EAGLE CLAW
HOOKS

ROOSTER TAIL
LURES

_,___..,____. -ASHlN
SPOONS

'

thru 10

Test

$~0

2

$]00

SPOOLS ,&amp; AND

SPOOLS

SPORTS DEPT.

AMAZING
MINNOW

$100

NIGHT
-CRAWLER
"
HARNESS
PKGS.

$

•

10 RED
AND WHITE

Att ractiVe buffet "styling . Removable heat control
for easy cleaning. Cloverleaf design heating ele·
men1. High dome vented cover. large size. 1250 .

l'l \h .

2 .

REBEL
LURES

SIZES NO.

ON FISH
TACKLE

ASST.
\

POPPERS

SUNBEAM

wo1ts, 120 volts .

HECK'S REG. $7.99

GREAT ·

HECK'S REG. 84'

SLOW COOKER

8, 10,

NoI

EA.

WORTH ITS WAIT IN FLAVOR! A " must" for working people, busy homemakers; gourmets.

6 LBS.
TEST

SPORTS DEPT.

CROCK POT
TlOOS

$499
CHOICE
EACH

. Choose from Berkley SP 106 spin cost rod or Berkley
SPJ06 sp inning rod. Both are excellent medium ·
weight rods, jus! right for the big ones.

RIVAL

12-CUP PERfOLATOR

Choose from a variety of test weight• to .
suit yolK needs. BY BERKLEY

, I~ · ·.

~ · ~ . ~1

~/C~'!'

$ 00 · \..J

24

Assorted
Sizes

Assorted ·
Sizes

�..

.'

•

17- The Daily Sen•· I M'
,me • tddleport.Pomeroy,O., May 23,1973

•

•'

•·
OPEN DAllY
10 TO 9

OPEN DAILY
10 TO 9

WEDGE
AUTO SPEAKERS

M- 1415 '

'

PAIR
G. E. CASSETTE

PANASONIC

TAPE RECORDER

8TRACK RECORDER DECK

$

.... S o lod state" desog r1 • Butll-m two -w ay Power e Bu ilt -in
A utomQh{ level Co ntro l (A LCI • Deep te-tured t obine t •
Dou b le octoon (CI~ I ~ IIe e1ect l1rst po1otion opens door, sec
or1 d pos olto r. e JeCt s co sse ll e e Mo u o phone ond line cord star
oge
\l ode o moto c T-bor fun clton c:ontrol

PANASONIC

STEREO 8 TRACK PLAYER
'•' """"'"""'' .,.

$]299

HECK'S REG. $696

..... ,, ",,,, "". "" '

•••roo fDPtl o~d FMJA.M / f M •••••a boo a ft
&lt;all&gt; n, lull bod-.d \O u~d a ~d boau1 1lul wood

''""htd cob. oil 111&lt;1ko rl o II'""' &lt;&gt;nd o !lw &lt;l••e
~olor101 e' Joel • o&lt;o pro&gt;td o d fo1 to po:, p lum&lt;&gt; ,

on&lt;!

h..od~l&gt;o~e • .

14 W olh PMf&gt;

HECK ' S REG. $37 .96

HECK 'S REG. 139.96

JEWEl/IY DEPT.

SUNB~'AM

ADJUSTABLE SHAVER

WAHL
CUCKOO

TRAVEL
ALARM CLOCKS

PORTABLE
HAIR DRYER

N, nf ~hQ v Cri•O on..: w1th o dl v~ID ble t.cod1 lor c l o~er&gt;es~ a nd ( om fo rt
Oo re to ma tch 1ho ve1 woth o b lo de 1 Floo tmg hr-o ds w ol f-. sel f sr.or p en ·
ong ro to• y b l ade ~ tmpro ve.-i p op ~.r p trommer h ond ; ome mi! tOi trovel
wa lle t on o ft ~ w • t ch 11 0, 120 voltage ond cool co rd

HD·l4

HEAT MASSAGER
Re la x ji.Ching musdu With Of withou l he at . A
gentle soo thing mo i!Qge QC !i on re l a;u·~ ·
th igh~. legs. h1 p~ . si des, bock, should ers, neck ,
or lee! Comp le te w ith ~ colp otlachmen l ,
large and small facial o llothment, body o l·
tochme nt , and he,o t appl•cotor!

HECK'S REG .

$18.88

..

HECK'S
REG. 112.44

$977

•

;r::;,·; ::: ·~;-•. _ ...._-:...

.

'· I • ' •

""

$4 .44

JEWEl/IY DEPT.

MIST

PURR UNTANCiLER
99,

G ~ nt l u . U O I M~I~ I ho'

$12

on &lt;•&lt;ond&lt; .,., ot "'Y

Nl lnou l cr• m ~ ""~ •" tho~ l bo e&lt;J l •n y '"' ' ·
""' ' hOu l opl otM II t nd&lt;'

sproy

work~

ELECTRIC SLICING KNIFE
HECK'S
$896
REG. $10.96

with lhe beovt,fy•ng m :st 10 de li ver full

bodied turl~·thot lo1 t and lo11

$1599 .

HECK ' S REG . $17.96

JEWl!RY DEPT.

pre~e lti ng

HECK'S REG .

'1 .8 . 88

HAND HELD HAl~ DRYER

SUNBEAM STEAM &amp; DRY

. IRON

&lt;J IIo&lt;h"'•• LI &lt;p o t ''''"&lt;! o nd
comb&lt; o~d o •l ~hnq b•~&gt;h
ho nd 10mo delu or " "II t m,. l &lt;o&gt;e ol&gt;d •
tho cmO&lt;IH r. ro lly &lt; UMn&gt;ll~ 9 to p•e •enl o•

;.;.;,,;,"; I

... ~ "'" "'9

\ ~0'1 . ~

IEWEl/IY DEPT.

HECK 'S REG.
18.96

WARING 14 SPEED

$8.99

/EWEl/IY DIP T.

G.E. FM/AM

RADIO

nltl\e~ . rreom~ pte m i~ el, l old~ .

· NO. T2215

~lin Auto matiC beoter releo'le .
f inge_r-t ip control Twin power ·
lu i chrome beo1e rs.

$899

. HECK'S
REG. 118.88

HECK 'S REG.

.WAHL

PET CLIPPER KIT

ELECTRIC BROOM
VACUUM

LIGHTED MIRROR

••

fll";-r-·.:;

D•"l"l" ~d "' P ~O d ll; lor W~o!\ M., lh gf"""' f,. ,, f ~, r~ l l i or o1l '"'~ "" ' " ...,he OjO • •"O &lt;O•ef"l
ob u"l l l o~ • n• "'" ~•op '"'" • &lt;"l•o~ fhe "'"""'ff"'!l "''"~ ' '"•'"' l im&lt;~ 1\ rong~r tha n on

''' " "' "'"' "" " ' " mon o " H• o1e - &lt;'m&lt;!n t hct """"' ~ '""~ ' &lt;l nn I ~u .o IQ ..!,.lo cpply•ng lo&lt; h&amp;&lt;
I'&lt; OOJoO~ o&gt; o ' " " l""g O)Obtn'- ' 1•"\ 0,0IO t" lor pu lhn&lt;J tn conl o&lt;t I~M~ I . D~ o l
. mngnofwd ond r ~gu lar Re(n &gt;•d logh rrq q •hml n w fo ~e &lt;• e o· ~ tn~ .. le ullr ~ht &lt;&lt;&gt;~d •"O nl fo r a
~eo l e&lt; r mo \. o •u p ·~\'&lt;On . Adf~" ~bl e 11011 d IQr fUll the r 9M OOIJ \e 5"10 t! ~ a ~l ~ n\e /c., ~a•y
'&lt;&gt;' •"9 ~ r po&lt;l.r ng

~-

"'"'&lt;&gt;!&lt;

$499

BATTERY CHARGER
Rec harge all popular size household batteries ... ca rbo n-zinc, alka lin e an d nickel ca dmiu m in D, C, AA and 9
vol t sizes. One to fou r at a ti me i n any combina tion.

-"

HECK'S REG.

foundations of that structure ... let's preserve the rights our founding

~ ~

fathers gave us.
..

HEAD CLEANER

MINI PURSES

TRI-FOLD WALL'ETS

$699

sse

$J77

$277

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

$9 .99

$1.19

$4.7::"

HECK'S
REG.

JEWELRY DEPT.

IEWEl/IY
DEPT.

IEWEl/IY
IJEPT.

JEWElRY
DEPT.

to make America a citadel of democracy. Let's not tamper with the very

JEWElRY DEPT.

6144

MEN'S

HECK'S REG.

.

$19.88

LADIES'

JEWEL BOX

the press has exercised since the earliest days of this nation have helped

~1499

CASSETTE
MUSICAL CHALET

among its citizens, no democracy can survive for long. The freedom that

Thi~ hand ~o me replu:o of the lo mav~ Ro l l ~ Royre Phantom It is a
collecto r's 1lem svre to be adm~red by eve ryone . Built-m solid ~late
rodto ope ro les an it'~ own bo11ery (m clvded)

HECK'S
REG.

JEWEl/IY DIP T.

as part of our Bill of Rights. Without that free exchange of information

RADIO

$4.96
12

that's why it is ir'!cluded in' the very first amendment to our Constitution,

GOLD ROLLS ROYCE

'S]99

ELECTRIC SCISSORS

·ouR NATION'S FOUNDERS KNEW
THAT FREEDOM OF THE PRESS
IS VITAL TO A DEMOCRACY ...

HECK'S REG. 127.88

JEWEli!Y DEPT.
JET SET

99 '

$

.

'

..

REGINA 84516

HECK'S REG. $31.96

$12.96

·

.,.

'2599

HECK'S REG.

\

JEWEl/IY DEPT.

G.E. FM!AM
AUTOMATIC PHONOGRAPH

$999

$1677

$11.96

VW - 57

WHITE ONLY

HECK'S
REG. 129.96

HECK'S REG.

10 Speed~ . Icing , beah egg~
d1merh, wh ip~ , blending , ca~e

HECK'S
REG. 115.96

A well regula red Miii ria, be: ii1n:g~;ne~c~es;sa~ry~to~rh;e~se~c L~1r:ir~y~o~f~a~f:te=e~S:r:at~e,~r~h:,.:
e ~""'"""
people to keep and bear ar:s, shall nor be infri

$599

PORTABLE MIXER.

.G. E. V6-38

Th1$ very .::ompl ete home pet groom1ng ~ ~~ lea tvre1 a ~pedal ~U iet
runn1 ng multi -cu t d ippe-r . A Ilip o lt he thu mb (hang e~ the bl!lde length .
Other item ~ indv de blade gvord , Pe t-Sage, (OOrl e dog Nmb ond
~ hean , '2 o lu m1num o tlochment ( Q n1b!, oil, and d og tr,mming boo~let.

BLENDER
NO. 94

1377

Perfect timekeeping 24 hours a day. A prec ision eng ineered
ti mep iece . Large numbers illuminated for quic k and easy ·
read ing day or night. Leaf-type mechani sm. Beautif ul wrap around window gives smartness to the de sign and fits into
any decor ... home. office and work room. Features : A.M. &amp;
P.M . indicators ; pulsator. Long power cord . Operates on
115V 50-60. Cofors: Soft white. charcoal. harvest gold , and
poppy.

VANWYCK

(

$1588
PD-600

$

DIGITAL CLOCK

VANWYCK

·HAIR SETTER
" los lm g Curls"

JET SET

r

'

HECK'S REG. 111.96

VW-44

SCHICK

#'"

GILLETTE

AR TIQE THE FIRST. . . Congress shall make no law re.rpecting an estahltJhmr."fll' of religion,
or prohibiting the free exercise thereof or abndging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to
assemble,
and
to petition
the Government for a redress of grieJ;ances.
'
.
'

HECK'S REG.

JEWEl/IY DEPT.

\. .

America. proposed by Congress, and Rarified by the Legislaru res
ro rhe Fifrh Article of rhe Onginal Cons1iru rion

NO. 4500

•

40 YIP

$1 2gss

Tko ~ S 8030 ;, o compac t ho"'• ""'"' 'I""'"'""'

rento&lt; w "~ llt&lt;.O. 8 -toocl; &lt;Or lmf~ ploy•' 0
~~~~ on fM/ Il&lt;.M/ 1,., 11e.,•o rodoo. or&gt;d 1 n..nu l•·

$3.49

450MT

'••

Devoted To 'l:M Inter~~! Of The Meig5-Mason Area

..

�..

.'

•

17- The Daily Sen•· I M'
,me • tddleport.Pomeroy,O., May 23,1973

•

•'

•·
OPEN DAllY
10 TO 9

OPEN DAILY
10 TO 9

WEDGE
AUTO SPEAKERS

M- 1415 '

'

PAIR
G. E. CASSETTE

PANASONIC

TAPE RECORDER

8TRACK RECORDER DECK

$

.... S o lod state" desog r1 • Butll-m two -w ay Power e Bu ilt -in
A utomQh{ level Co ntro l (A LCI • Deep te-tured t obine t •
Dou b le octoon (CI~ I ~ IIe e1ect l1rst po1otion opens door, sec
or1 d pos olto r. e JeCt s co sse ll e e Mo u o phone ond line cord star
oge
\l ode o moto c T-bor fun clton c:ontrol

PANASONIC

STEREO 8 TRACK PLAYER
'•' """"'"""'' .,.

$]299

HECK'S REG. $696

..... ,, ",,,, "". "" '

•••roo fDPtl o~d FMJA.M / f M •••••a boo a ft
&lt;all&gt; n, lull bod-.d \O u~d a ~d boau1 1lul wood

''""htd cob. oil 111&lt;1ko rl o II'""' &lt;&gt;nd o !lw &lt;l••e
~olor101 e' Joel • o&lt;o pro&gt;td o d fo1 to po:, p lum&lt;&gt; ,

on&lt;!

h..od~l&gt;o~e • .

14 W olh PMf&gt;

HECK ' S REG. $37 .96

HECK 'S REG. 139.96

JEWEl/IY DEPT.

SUNB~'AM

ADJUSTABLE SHAVER

WAHL
CUCKOO

TRAVEL
ALARM CLOCKS

PORTABLE
HAIR DRYER

N, nf ~hQ v Cri•O on..: w1th o dl v~ID ble t.cod1 lor c l o~er&gt;es~ a nd ( om fo rt
Oo re to ma tch 1ho ve1 woth o b lo de 1 Floo tmg hr-o ds w ol f-. sel f sr.or p en ·
ong ro to• y b l ade ~ tmpro ve.-i p op ~.r p trommer h ond ; ome mi! tOi trovel
wa lle t on o ft ~ w • t ch 11 0, 120 voltage ond cool co rd

HD·l4

HEAT MASSAGER
Re la x ji.Ching musdu With Of withou l he at . A
gentle soo thing mo i!Qge QC !i on re l a;u·~ ·
th igh~. legs. h1 p~ . si des, bock, should ers, neck ,
or lee! Comp le te w ith ~ colp otlachmen l ,
large and small facial o llothment, body o l·
tochme nt , and he,o t appl•cotor!

HECK'S REG .

$18.88

..

HECK'S
REG. 112.44

$977

•

;r::;,·; ::: ·~;-•. _ ...._-:...

.

'· I • ' •

""

$4 .44

JEWEl/IY DEPT.

MIST

PURR UNTANCiLER
99,

G ~ nt l u . U O I M~I~ I ho'

$12

on &lt;•&lt;ond&lt; .,., ot "'Y

Nl lnou l cr• m ~ ""~ •" tho~ l bo e&lt;J l •n y '"' ' ·
""' ' hOu l opl otM II t nd&lt;'

sproy

work~

ELECTRIC SLICING KNIFE
HECK'S
$896
REG. $10.96

with lhe beovt,fy•ng m :st 10 de li ver full

bodied turl~·thot lo1 t and lo11

$1599 .

HECK ' S REG . $17.96

JEWl!RY DEPT.

pre~e lti ng

HECK'S REG .

'1 .8 . 88

HAND HELD HAl~ DRYER

SUNBEAM STEAM &amp; DRY

. IRON

&lt;J IIo&lt;h"'•• LI &lt;p o t ''''"&lt;! o nd
comb&lt; o~d o •l ~hnq b•~&gt;h
ho nd 10mo delu or " "II t m,. l &lt;o&gt;e ol&gt;d •
tho cmO&lt;IH r. ro lly &lt; UMn&gt;ll~ 9 to p•e •enl o•

;.;.;,,;,"; I

... ~ "'" "'9

\ ~0'1 . ~

IEWEl/IY DEPT.

HECK 'S REG.
18.96

WARING 14 SPEED

$8.99

/EWEl/IY DIP T.

G.E. FM/AM

RADIO

nltl\e~ . rreom~ pte m i~ el, l old~ .

· NO. T2215

~lin Auto matiC beoter releo'le .
f inge_r-t ip control Twin power ·
lu i chrome beo1e rs.

$899

. HECK'S
REG. 118.88

HECK 'S REG.

.WAHL

PET CLIPPER KIT

ELECTRIC BROOM
VACUUM

LIGHTED MIRROR

••

fll";-r-·.:;

D•"l"l" ~d "' P ~O d ll; lor W~o!\ M., lh gf"""' f,. ,, f ~, r~ l l i or o1l '"'~ "" ' " ...,he OjO • •"O &lt;O•ef"l
ob u"l l l o~ • n• "'" ~•op '"'" • &lt;"l•o~ fhe "'"""'ff"'!l "''"~ ' '"•'"' l im&lt;~ 1\ rong~r tha n on

''' " "' "'"' "" " ' " mon o " H• o1e - &lt;'m&lt;!n t hct """"' ~ '""~ ' &lt;l nn I ~u .o IQ ..!,.lo cpply•ng lo&lt; h&amp;&lt;
I'&lt; OOJoO~ o&gt; o ' " " l""g O)Obtn'- ' 1•"\ 0,0IO t" lor pu lhn&lt;J tn conl o&lt;t I~M~ I . D~ o l
. mngnofwd ond r ~gu lar Re(n &gt;•d logh rrq q •hml n w fo ~e &lt;• e o· ~ tn~ .. le ullr ~ht &lt;&lt;&gt;~d •"O nl fo r a
~eo l e&lt; r mo \. o •u p ·~\'&lt;On . Adf~" ~bl e 11011 d IQr fUll the r 9M OOIJ \e 5"10 t! ~ a ~l ~ n\e /c., ~a•y
'&lt;&gt;' •"9 ~ r po&lt;l.r ng

~-

"'"'&lt;&gt;!&lt;

$499

BATTERY CHARGER
Rec harge all popular size household batteries ... ca rbo n-zinc, alka lin e an d nickel ca dmiu m in D, C, AA and 9
vol t sizes. One to fou r at a ti me i n any combina tion.

-"

HECK'S REG.

foundations of that structure ... let's preserve the rights our founding

~ ~

fathers gave us.
..

HEAD CLEANER

MINI PURSES

TRI-FOLD WALL'ETS

$699

sse

$J77

$277

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

$9 .99

$1.19

$4.7::"

HECK'S
REG.

JEWELRY DEPT.

IEWEl/IY
DEPT.

IEWEl/IY
IJEPT.

JEWElRY
DEPT.

to make America a citadel of democracy. Let's not tamper with the very

JEWElRY DEPT.

6144

MEN'S

HECK'S REG.

.

$19.88

LADIES'

JEWEL BOX

the press has exercised since the earliest days of this nation have helped

~1499

CASSETTE
MUSICAL CHALET

among its citizens, no democracy can survive for long. The freedom that

Thi~ hand ~o me replu:o of the lo mav~ Ro l l ~ Royre Phantom It is a
collecto r's 1lem svre to be adm~red by eve ryone . Built-m solid ~late
rodto ope ro les an it'~ own bo11ery (m clvded)

HECK'S
REG.

JEWEl/IY DIP T.

as part of our Bill of Rights. Without that free exchange of information

RADIO

$4.96
12

that's why it is ir'!cluded in' the very first amendment to our Constitution,

GOLD ROLLS ROYCE

'S]99

ELECTRIC SCISSORS

·ouR NATION'S FOUNDERS KNEW
THAT FREEDOM OF THE PRESS
IS VITAL TO A DEMOCRACY ...

HECK'S REG. 127.88

JEWEli!Y DEPT.
JET SET

99 '

$

.

'

..

REGINA 84516

HECK'S REG. $31.96

$12.96

·

.,.

'2599

HECK'S REG.

\

JEWEl/IY DEPT.

G.E. FM!AM
AUTOMATIC PHONOGRAPH

$999

$1677

$11.96

VW - 57

WHITE ONLY

HECK'S
REG. 129.96

HECK'S REG.

10 Speed~ . Icing , beah egg~
d1merh, wh ip~ , blending , ca~e

HECK'S
REG. 115.96

A well regula red Miii ria, be: ii1n:g~;ne~c~es;sa~ry~to~rh;e~se~c L~1r:ir~y~o~f~a~f:te=e~S:r:at~e,~r~h:,.:
e ~""'"""
people to keep and bear ar:s, shall nor be infri

$599

PORTABLE MIXER.

.G. E. V6-38

Th1$ very .::ompl ete home pet groom1ng ~ ~~ lea tvre1 a ~pedal ~U iet
runn1 ng multi -cu t d ippe-r . A Ilip o lt he thu mb (hang e~ the bl!lde length .
Other item ~ indv de blade gvord , Pe t-Sage, (OOrl e dog Nmb ond
~ hean , '2 o lu m1num o tlochment ( Q n1b!, oil, and d og tr,mming boo~let.

BLENDER
NO. 94

1377

Perfect timekeeping 24 hours a day. A prec ision eng ineered
ti mep iece . Large numbers illuminated for quic k and easy ·
read ing day or night. Leaf-type mechani sm. Beautif ul wrap around window gives smartness to the de sign and fits into
any decor ... home. office and work room. Features : A.M. &amp;
P.M . indicators ; pulsator. Long power cord . Operates on
115V 50-60. Cofors: Soft white. charcoal. harvest gold , and
poppy.

VANWYCK

(

$1588
PD-600

$

DIGITAL CLOCK

VANWYCK

·HAIR SETTER
" los lm g Curls"

JET SET

r

'

HECK'S REG. 111.96

VW-44

SCHICK

#'"

GILLETTE

AR TIQE THE FIRST. . . Congress shall make no law re.rpecting an estahltJhmr."fll' of religion,
or prohibiting the free exercise thereof or abndging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to
assemble,
and
to petition
the Government for a redress of grieJ;ances.
'
.
'

HECK'S REG.

JEWEl/IY DEPT.

\. .

America. proposed by Congress, and Rarified by the Legislaru res
ro rhe Fifrh Article of rhe Onginal Cons1iru rion

NO. 4500

•

40 YIP

$1 2gss

Tko ~ S 8030 ;, o compac t ho"'• ""'"' 'I""'"'""'

rento&lt; w "~ llt&lt;.O. 8 -toocl; &lt;Or lmf~ ploy•' 0
~~~~ on fM/ Il&lt;.M/ 1,., 11e.,•o rodoo. or&gt;d 1 n..nu l•·

$3.49

450MT

'••

Devoted To 'l:M Inter~~! Of The Meig5-Mason Area

..

�•

__)

IS - The Daily Sentifll&gt;l Middleport·P9meroy, 0 .• May 23, l97J

Senlinel .Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
WANT ADS

INFORMATION

2 SIGNS

DEADLINES
5 P .M . Day Before Publicat ion.
Monday De11dl ine 9 a . m .

Of

Cancellation Corrections
Will be accepted until 9 a .m . tor
Day of P ublica t ion
REGULATIONS

QUALifY

Tt1e Publ isher reserves the
r i ght to edit or reject any ads
deemed
object i onal
The
publisher w ill not he re!&gt;ponsible

191'2 NOVA

Door , l_ocal 1 owner with less than 6.400 m iles, 307 V a,
autom,lli_IC tra~ s .• power st eering. wh i te wall tires·. light
bh.. e fm1 sh, wllh spotless in ter ior, radio . See the sharp
popul1;1r model.

RATES
For Want Ad Sendee

.12 cents per word three
consecutive insert ions .
18 cents per word six con ·
secutive i nsert ions .
25 Per Cent D iscoun t on paid
ads and ads paid w i thin 10 days .
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

OFFIC E HOURS

1911 CHEVROLET
S2995
Blazer 4 wh . dr ive , avx . top locking frt ., hvos. v 8,
au_tomati c trans ., power steeri ng &amp; brakes, l ocal tow
mileage, 1 owner , radio, spare never used.

,

1970 BUICK
•
1269l
El_ectra '1.'15 4-door, locall owner car w it h less than 3:?,000
mdes ,_ C_
l 1mate ControL air cond ., 40-60 power sea t, radio,
go l d f1n 1sh, loaded with many extra s.

Pomeroy Motor Co.,

OPEN EVES . 8:00P.M.
•
POMEROY . OHIO

\

Employment Wanted ·

Card of Thanks
WISH to express my appreciati on and thanks t.o all
for the cards, gifts. fl oWers.
visits and prayers receiv!'!'d
while I was in the hosp i tal.
Also thanks to the doctors and
staff at Holzer M edical Center
and those who brought in food
during my i llness . Yo ur
thoughtfulnes s wil l long be
remembered . Betty ShiVeley .
5·23 -ltC

I WILL do house cleaning in the
Chester
Pomeroy - Mid·
d leport area and vic ini ty .
Ph one 992 -7202 or Chester 9854146 .
5.22-Jic
WAN TED , - lawns to m ow in
Rutland . Phone 7.12-6363 .
. 5-22 31c

· Wanted To Buy
1967 OR UP VW Van . Only body .
843 2451.
5-16- 12tc

Notice

GUN Shoot. Friday, 7:30p .m ,;
Factory choked guns only. OLD Furnitu're, oak tables ,
Wooden ice boxes , brass beds,
Ass orted meat s. Refr esh di shes
or
comp l ete
ments served . Racin~ Gun
househo l ds; Write M . D .
Club.
5-23 -3t.c . M i ller , Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio,
call 992-6?71 .
5 13 -tfc

DANCE
At

NO. .1 Copper . :SOc ; r adia t ors,
28c brass, 18c; batteries, 85c
each ; clean dry . roots , Gin ·
c;eng. $60 ; yellow r oot, $4 ;
mayapple. 45c per lb . ;. M . A.
Hall , Reed svil le, Ohio, 378 6249 .
5·6-lfc

The

Whispering
·. Pines
Night Club

DRIVE R needed, sober and
d epen dab le,
m i ddle -aged
pr efe rr~d. Apply in per son at
Cour t Street Cab, Pomeroy.
S·22.31 p

from 10p.m . til2a .m .
Musi c by Red Stewart, Dave
Dunn and Th e Amba ssa dors.

QUA LIFIE D .life guar d for'
Maple'wood l,.ake. Phone 94.94074 .
5·20-4lc

REDUCE excess flu ids with
Fluidex. . · Lose weight w i th
Dex -A - Diet
ca p su l es
at
Nelson Drugs.
man
for
s.n.3tp MAINTENANCE
vi llage of SyraC use water
s'ys t em. Send r es ume to
YARD sale, Wednesday and
Maxine
Varian , c lerk of board
Thur sday , May 23 and 24. 414
of public affairs , Box 323,
Li ncoln Hill. 9 a .m . to 5 p.m.
Sy r acuse.
s-2ntc
5-22 -St c
FOUR family yard sale . New
and used clothing , ch ild ren 's COOK, waitress and ca rh op;
apply in per son, Craw's Stea k
tr i cy cle , t ables, di shes, etc .
Hause .
Turn le1t off Sl. Rt .. 124, 1 mile
. 5-lO -tf c
fram Ra c.ine on !-;log Hollow
R oad . Watch for si g ns,
Wednesda y and Thur sday thi s
week .
POODLE puppi es, Toy A.K .C..
5-22-3t c
Chocola te -- Show qua li ty ,
Phone 992 -5443.
CHICKEN Bilrbecue and spare
5-23- tfc
ribs , and .hom emade ice

Pets For Sale

.

Cream at the Chester Fire
Hquse May 28. Mem orial Qay .
5-22-5tc

-

.

"HEit"

POODLES, AKC Puppi es , small
min iature , black ;,r wh i te,
wormed. permanent shot s,
S75; Phone Cool vi ll e 667-6214 .
5-20-12t c

Wanted To Rent
4 OR 5 r oom hou se in Pom ero~
or Mid dl~port , South end .
Ren t not o ver $60 per mo nth .
Phone 992 -3409 , Pomerqy.
5-21-6tc

Furnace Controts
HI!MI Dl Fl ERS
11ot Water Heater;
~lumbing

Electrical )Nork

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

I

'

~---------WANTED
pastu re to r en t for 50
to 100 calves . Mu st ha ve
pl en ty of wa ter and good
fences . Ca ll 992-7077 or write
Box. -14, Minersvil le, Ohio,
45763. Ca l l after 5 p .m .
5 20.61p

Auto Sales

992 ·2448

..

~------

AKC Toy Pood le puppies, $75
and sas. Al so Si am ese kitten s,
'$10 . Ph one 1-256 -6247, K~nne ls
of Calhoun .
5-20-30tc

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Pomeroy, o.

For Rent .

GRAY MANOR
APARTMENTS
MIDDLEPORT
Furnished Apt. with new
furn iture , with or wlthou·t
utilities, 2· bedrooms, on
ground floor w i th wall ·lowall c arpet . Also have
private en tran ces and yard
for child r en, in nice neigh borhood.
Phone 992 -3863 til 3 p. m . or
992-5844 a'fter 6:00 .
PRIVATE meeting room tor
any organization ; phone 992 3975.
3- 11 -Hc
TWO trail er lot s in M iddlepor t ;
1 '} duplex in Bradbury, phone
before 6 p .m . 992-5693 .
~~
5-20·5t c
MOBI LE
Syracu~e;

h0me spa ce i n
phone 992 -6329 .
5·2-lf c

Help Wanted

and
Saturday Nights
Friday

-

MEMORIAL Day celebrati on at
.
Racine Fire Station May 25
thru May 28. Kiddie -rides all4
days , Fireworks di sp la y
M onday, May 28 and an
evening show at the Ra cin e
Junior Hi gh at 7:30 p.m.
M ond ay feat uring " Larry 's
Sw i ng in g Count r ymen ." A
chic ken barbecue Sun day ,
May 27 . Serving beg ins at 11
a .m .

~:=--::-:=-:--:---'_:_S_:·
18·81 c
THE MEIGS County Fish &amp;
Game A ssn. wi ll meet
Wednesday evening , May 23,
at 7: 30p.m . at th e Sy ra cuse
Club House, Syracuse.
5-20·4tc
~~:c-:-c:---:-:-­

McDAN IE L S Custom . Sla ughter
Hou se and_ M eat Cutting ;
State and Government in spected; phone 7'73 -5208.
5-20 ·12tc
KNAPP SHOES Comfort,
Quality ,
Lo ng
Wear,
Rea sonable pri ces. Call 9925324 .
_
5·3·tfc

r--'-----;
SPRING SPECIALS

SABRE TILLER
3'h HP 1129.95
Set

Ia Carton ·
Uo , 134.95

TURF TRIM MOWERS
3 HP
'4~.95
In CiJrton

5 cents per Word one insertion
M in imu m Charge 7Sc

8 :30a . m . to 5 .00 p .m . Daily ,
8:30 a . m . lo 12 :00 Noon
Saturday .

U69S

II

tor more than one incorrect
insert ion .

'51 SO for SO word minimum .
Each addit iona l word 2c
BLIND ADS
Addit ional 25c Charge per
Advertisement .

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

For S;lle

1966 CHEVELLE 4 doo' V·B,
automatic,
$300 .
1966
Chevro let , Bellai r e, 4door . V8 automati c, Power steer ing,
$600 . Ca ll Robert H. Roush,
247-2195 .
5-22·3tc
1972 CAMARO Z-28, like new.
$2,900. Cal l 992-3453.

Mobile Homes For Sale
Air Conditioners
Awnings
Underpinning
Co mp le t e m obile home
service -- plu s gigantic
di splay of mobi le homeS
al ways ava il ab le a t ..

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES
1220 Wa shington Blvd.
423 -151 1
BELPRE , 0 .

CASH pa i d l or all makes and
m ode ls of m obi l e homes .
Phone ar ea code 61 4-423-9531.
ROOF lNG and Heat ing Repair ;
4-13-tf c
·· all types ; Spec ial -'- Cleaning
and oiling of bl ower , compl ete 1971 HOLLY Pa rk , 12 x 60, like
new, carpeted , house f ur check on furn aces ; phone 84 32341 .
ni t ure. air - con dit io ned ,
washe r and dryer , w i th 8 x. 32
S·l.JOic
por ch and awni ng ; phone 1KOSCOT SPEC IALS fo' May
304-773 -5474.
are Hai r Kair Products in 5-9-10k
clu d ing other items . If you
have ever pur chased Kosc ot
Kosmeti cs and .are not being 1973 MOBILE HOME w;th l a,ge
serviced, phone Helen Jane
pa tio. Albert Hill. Racine,
Brown, evenings also, 992Ohio, Phone 949-2261.
5113 .
5-17-6tc
5· 13·tfc
"R"u"M""'"M"A"G
;:-E
;o--s-a71e-,-M
:c-a-y-,2"3-,
t o 26 2 BEPF?OOM mobil e home : air
co nditi one d , Racine area .
open 10 a.m . Grea t Bend
Phone 992 -6329 .
Grange ·Hall. Two 21 in. TV.
5-23 -Hc
365 ft . No. ·12 ·2 elec tric wir'e .
7
~-=o:-c
, -:R
=-oo
= M:-:1u- ,-n-c;s-"h-e-:d and
Three - flu o r esce nt lig ht s. 3 A·N
Man y other item s, Phone 843,
unfurnis'he d
apartments .
2826.
Phone 992-5434 .
5-21 -3fc
4-12-tfc

For Rent

PUBLIC NOTICES
Your Right to Know
and b e in formed of the fun c.
tions of ~·ou r governme nt a n~
embo di ed in pub l ic noti ces . In
that SPi f ~ove rnm e n t charges
all ci tizens t o be inform ed ;
th is newspaper urges every
ci!iz en to r.€ad and stvd y the se
not ices. We strongly advise
those c iti'z'e ns, see· ~ i ng fu rt her
informat ion , to exerc ise- th ei r
right of access to pub lic
·recor d s and public meet in gs .

For Sale

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55
On Most American Cars

Se t up, $54 .95
9 .. _

6ll!

POMEROY
Jack W. Carsev. Mgr .
Phon e 992-2181

1973 STEREO 8 track . A small
balance of $88 .64 or pay $6 .50
pe( month . Phone 992-533 1.
4-20-tfc

-

3 - VACUUM clean ers new 1973

Phone 992-2094

model. Complete with all
cleaning i tools . Small paint
damage in shippin g . W ill take
S27 cash or budget plan
available .
Elect r o - Hygiene
Co .. Phone 992-7755 .
5-22-6tc

Porn eroy Home .&amp; Auto
Open,&amp; Til S
Monday thru Saturday
606 E . ~ain, Pomeroy , 0 .

SMALL fC~bric business . Ent i re
MUST se ll 1973 deluxe Zig -lag
stock for sale . Antiquest ,
s ewing
ma chi ne .
This
furnitu r e. Knits and Sti tches,
machine darns, embroider s,
Coolville , Ohio.
makes
buttonholes.
all
5-22-ltc
without attachments. Just
-c::
Pcc
H-:
0-cL-:S::Tc::Ec:R:cY
:-c-_..,.
Mc-o- t:-;e-, ;a I s •
dial and sew . Pay balance of U
$38 .50 or pay $5 per month .
regularly $3 .95 only $1 .95.
Ph one 992-5331.
Als o remnants . Po meroy
4-20-tfc
Recovery, 622 E. Ma in St.,
phone 992-7554 .
5·3·241 p
' HOME Gr own Tomato plants
l or garden use : large s turdy NEW FOAM to fill you r old
cushions, standard size suite,
plants : Improved M ex i can,
$9.95.
Pomeroy
on ly
Hei n z: 1350 and Supersonic ;
Recovery, 622 E, Ma in St...
al so hof peppers , mangoes
phone 992 7554.
and cabbage plants. On Rl.
5-3-?4tp
124, 500 fl. above the Staff!
Park in Syracuse, 0 ., Thomas
Hayman .

PUBLIC NOTI CE
Not ice to a !I car cl ea l er s 'in--t he
ar qa to submi l· b ids on a new
Poli ce Cru iser for th e Town of
New Haven. We.st Virgin ia, on
the following equ ipment:
Base l ul l size four door seda n
With ,
I. automat ic tran smi ssion
BLACK rlJing mare., $200 .
2 . -pow er st eeri ng
heav y duty Case baler , $300.
3 . pow r r disc brakes
Ca rl M orris, Rutland , Ph one
·1. appro.xi ma l ely 350 cu. in. v ,
742 469 1.
8 engine
5 . pos i t ive tr act ion dil
fer en l ia l
0. tint ed g la SS ·all w indo ws
4 NEW G -78- 14 U ni -royal glass7. r ea r w indbw d e fro s t e r ~
be l led t ire s for $100 . Ca ll 992forced air 3453
8. acc essory li ghtin g (t runk. ,
.
5-23 ·5tc
hood , etc .)
9. under co.:Hi ng
&gt;
.
10 . police pa ckag e for body and TOMA TOES, pepper s, potted
chass is
fl ower s, by pot or by the
11. I elf hand spot ligh t
doze·n , SOc. $2 fl at on all
12 . l eft hand outsi de mirrorpansi es.
· Hubbard' s
remot e control
Greenhouse
,
300
yards above
All bids ar e to be r eturped by
bal lpark ·in Syracuse, Ohio.
J.un e 1, 1973 ,. incl uding item ized
lis t of reQu ested equipment and
5-15·tfc
op t io n s. The Town of New
Haven r ese rv es the r j ght to 4 --:- 8 PT. 75 x 16 .5, 8 ply tru ck
reject any or a ll bid s.
tires and two mobile home
axles
and 4 ti res . Phone 742 -)
John Thorne
5387
.
M tJyor
5-20·3tc
Jan e Russ ell
-c--,-:c-c:--:---~Recorder
19'7 1 HONDA SL 125. Phone 9926160.
(5) 22, 23. 24, 3t
5·2 0-Jtc

CLELAND

5-~3·31c ~---....~~!
&gt;08
E. MAl N

REALTY

POMEROY
THE HOME SELLING
SEASON IS HERE NOW
LET US SELL
YOUR HOME
DON 'T WAIT,
LIST WiTH US TODAY

BY OWNER - se ll ing under
appr aisal va lue, newly bu ilt 4
furn ished apartments built -in
ca binets, panelled walls, now
r en ted monthly incom e .$340 .
All electri c, ci ty water in
co untry between pomeroy
Athens . Pb one Ma son. W . Va .,
773-55 80. Wil l c onsider trade .
ldea l ,f or home and income for
re tired coupl e.
S·20 · 121p
6 ROOM S and bath , panelling,
car peting , aluminum siding ,
stor m . door s and w i nd.ows,
natural gas , drill ed well ,
ga rage , l mil'e Sou th. of
Middleport. Phone 992-6902 .
5 · 20 ~ 101p
40 AC RES 8 rooms and bath ,
house, ba rn and several
building s also . $18,000. 7426161.
S-20.6fp
N EW home nea r Rutland , 3
bedrooms and bath comple te
·wi th kitchen·, wa sher and
dryer. 742-6161.
S·20·61p

r,

r

Virgil ;B;,

Teaford} Sr.
,
"

: '• .

Broker
t-'1'. ~'

~. !

110 Mechanic Street

Pomeroy, Ohiti
NEW LISTING
POME ROY - 4 rooms, bath ,
full basement with shower . .
Wall to wall .carpeting . Gas
f urnace and half acre of land.
Only $7 ,500.00.
NEW LISTING
4 BEDROOMS - N ;ce k i tchen .
ful l bas e ment which has
garage and 2 family rooms .
N ice front · porches . As~ipg
$18 ,900.00 .
I!UILDING LOT
PpMEROY - 50x160 on Route
7 1oop and 33. A mere $1500.00 .
FAR"'
42 ACRES - 6 room house , ·
m odern bath , and kitchen .
Bahk barn , some fruit , in
Ora nge Township. Want only
$19, _
500.00.
POMEROY
2 BEDROOMS - Good older
· home on quiet s treet. N ice
kitchen, ga s furnace: Wrought
ir on
por ch.
Would
li ke
$1 5, 000 .00 .
IOOACRES PLUS
LEBANON TOWNSHIP - Ha s
gas well. and all min eral s.
Several older bu ilding s, and 6
r oom fram e hou se. Farm pond .
Re mote se tt ing for a loner.
Only $19,500 .

S ACRE&gt;
RUT L AND, OHIO 7
r ooms, 3 bedroom s, co uld be
.:1 . Bath, nice kitchen with
ca binet s, range . and ref. ,
hardwood floors, cellar, gas
F. A. heat, storm door s &amp;
windows, ou ·t bu ild ings ,
utility room , other features .
JU ST $18,500.00 .
4 GRAVE l ot in Meig s Memoria l
2 YEARS OLD
Gardens. Cheap . Ca ll 9&lt;19- . Just a baby in age, bu t grown
4962 .
up in quality . 3 larg e B. R.
5-20-tfc
UPHOLSTERY
Mat e ria ls.
withdoubleclosets. B ~aut iful
.ny lon prints, co tton prints,
bath
&amp; shower. Kitchen has
HANG
IN
G
baske
ts
;
white
,
p
ink
viny ls. velve ts of all k i nds.
almost everything incl uding
and r e d geraniu ms, mum s
Pom eroy Recovery , 6:22 E.
doub le oven, rang e and Ref.
and -begonia s; In stant color
Ma in St .. phone 992 -7554.
for yOur garden - pansies,
Util ity room . Large L. R.
5-3-·24tp
pe tunias , marig ol ds, Phlox,
wi th fireplace . Base m e nt .
Coleus . Salv i a,
Zinnia s,
STE REO . RAOIO , tope com ·
Large lot 100xl20 . (leve l ).
Di anthu s, Ally ss um , Snap.
NOW IS THE TIME WHEN
bination, am -t m radio, &lt;l
$23,000 .00 .
dra go n s, Ageratium and
WE
HAVE THE BUYERS
Spea ker sound syste m , l ike
CHEAP! E
Porlul acca. Vegetable j:Jtants
new. Ba l ance $111.27 or use
LOOKING
FOR A NICE
1
1 h story frame. Near A&amp;P
Cabba g e,
broccoli,
ou r budge t term s. Call 992.
PLACE
.
COME
IN AND LIST
store . 2 bedrooms , ~ould be
caul ifl_ower , le ftuce , eggplant,
3965.
WITH
US
FOR
A QUICK
3. Di ni ng room . Bath. Storm
mangoes , hot peppers and 14
5- 18-6tc
SALE
.
WHEN
YOU
AO ·
kind s of tomato plants .
doors &amp; windows . La rg e lot.
VERTISE
YOUR
PROpF.RTY
Cle
l
and
Farm
and
Out ol all floods . MAKE AN
1967 OPEL $200. Fair cond ition .
YOU OPEN YOUR DOOR TO
Gree nhou se, E . Main, Racine .
OFFER . $5. 000 .00 .
843-2451 .
Geral
dine
Clela
nd
.
,
ALL
STRANGER S. BE SAFE
10 ACRES
5- 16-12tc
5-18-lfc
AND
PUT YOUR PROPERTY
6 l eve l . Good
ar ea . 2
IN
OU
R EXPERIEN C ED
bedroom home. Electric
FLOWERS f or M emorial Day, B LACK 7/a · Tennessee Wa lker
HA
ND
S.
THE SMALL FEE
heat . Bath . Abou t 1T years
pots, bask et s and spr ays 99c
c ol t. 11. ~ years ol d ~ phone 992WILL
.
CERTAINLY
PAY
.;~nd up. Al so loose flowers ,
old . THI S YOU WILL HAVE
36.10 .
'
YOU
,
TO
DO
'SO,
NOW.
Sm alley 's, Ch es t er, Ohio.
TO SE E . $15.000.00 .
5-13 -12tc
Ph one 985-3537.
OTHER PROPERTIES TO
5-16-71c ALL T HE pr operty formedy
CHOOS E FROM. CO ME IN
HELEN l. 'f:EAFORO
owned by Pitt sburgh Coal
TODAY AND SEE WHAT
LEGHORN hens for sa l e. SOc
m·Ji25
Compa ny and now carried on
WE HAVE TO OFFER.
each . Call 843-2145.
the County tax. re&lt;!ords of
GORDON B. TEAFORD
5-22-10tc
HENRY E: CLELAND
Meig s County , Oh i o, In the
992-3415
BROKER
name of Consolidation Coa l
k
ASSOCIATES
Com p any , l oca t ed i n th e
992 ·2259
- NOSUNOAYS PLEASE .
Excel si or·
COAL, Limes tone
f ollowi ng taxing d is trict s:
II no answer 992-2568 _
Salt Works, E. Ma -in 51.,
Ches t e r Twp. Eastern
Pomeroy . Ph one 992 -3891.
L .S.D.; Salisbury Twp .
4· n tt c
P-omeroy Vi l lage; ·Sa lisbury
REAL ESTATE AUCTION
Twp . - M eigs L.S. D.; Sutton
HOOD'S AQUARIUMS , t;sh
Saturday; May 26, 1973 at2:00 P.M .
Twp. ·- Sou t hern L.S . D .
al'ld su ppl i es, new locatioh,
87 South Second Avenue , Middleport, Ohio
Sealed bid s for the pur chase
Ash St r eet, Midd leport, near
Apprai sa l 'l"'" $15 ,000.00
of all these propert ies (wh ich
park ; Phone 99~ - 5&lt;1&lt;13 .
448
South
Second
Avenue , Middleport, Ohio
'1-7-tfc
shoul d be grouped togeth er
Appraisal
- S12 ,000.00
------===-=~~-- ~n d con sid.er.ed as a -si ngl e bid
380 South Third Avenue, Middleport, OhiO
-1tem ) will be r ece i ved at the
Appraisal - $5 ,000 .00
address lis ted below unt il 12
o'c l oc k noon. June 1, 1973
Furt_her i n forma ti on maY
Pla ce of sale: 87 S. Second Ave. , M iddleport, Ot·lio. Open
obta 1n ~d by contacting the
House 1: 00 P.M. - 2: 00 P. M . May 26 , 1973 on all properties.
un.ders tgnep .
Consolidation
Proper ties sold individually. Nomi nimum bids, but se llers
AUCTION-NOTICE
Coat Company reserves the
r eserve the right to reject bids.
Wash in gton
Sal e · of
ri g ht to rej ect any and all
Term s of sale : Ca sh.
Passenger Cars , Ca rry alls 1•1
bid~ . E . H . Doughty, Con Ton Pi ckups, D um p TrJcks
sol idat ion Coal Co ., Codlz:,
Inquiries on properly may be made to Hamlin C. King ,
I Most w ·Piow s &amp; Spre ad ers),
Oh!o 43907.
Tr ac tor s '
w -Mower
At .
Attorn ey -at-La w. i\' Loc .ust Stre et, Gallipol is, Ohio,
tachments , Tai- Dis tributor , Tar
5-1J. 1Qtc
Phon e: 61~ 446 ·0855 .
Ke lt les , A ir
Com pres so r s
~--FranCiS Biron &amp; Michael Fry ,
Cha in S ~w s, and Mow ers , and GROCERY b . ·
Co·Ex.ecutors.
of the Estate o{
Build ing fo~ s~~~ss for sale.
Other M, scell aneous Item s.
Harrie Mttrie Smith, deceased. ·
"See Contract Sal es Lega l
Phone 77 3 _56 : 8 fr e or lease.
NOT R ~ SPONSIBLE FOR PERSONAL PROPERTY OR
Co py No . 73 -377 unde·r leg al
to IO p .m 1
om 8.: JOp .m . .
sec t1on tor deta il s of auct io n
· .or appomfment
ACCIDENT&gt;.
sa le by th e StatP. of Ohio.' ·
'
1

For Sale

Notice

From the laro'est
Sulldoze.r Rad ;e-tor to the
~mat •esf Heater c...orc
Nathan Bigg !&gt;
Radiator Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Pii :992 -2174

Pom eroy

Specialist
Wheel
Alignment
It Must
Be Right
or we will
Make it Right ,

Oualify Today, Call

[EJ]

.

A.IIC-Hf
j.li~'• lf\

•

r'

IN

BELOW

~

10

M'l NEW
BIKINI .

S~Q ULD NEVER

SUll-

.

1\lE &amp;EACH

A STUDENT
GET
A'C'...
;

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

.-.
&gt;

--

-•

992 ~ 2094

606 E. Main

~

10

W~AT'S WIT~
T~ I S 'F,'

Choos·e your own ho me from
your AREA DEALER .

NO. 'tl

1111 SHAPE
I&gt;FfEJ·~ MUGGERS ?

Gt:JTING

CAMPUS CLA TIER

304-485-3809

Pom eroy

1

''

OFFICE SUPPLIES

5~ 2

and
8-4: 30 Daily, 8- 12 Sal .
In the R. H. Rawling !&gt; Scms
Building .
992-1101
Middleport, 0 .

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Di s ~lay .

DOZER and back hoe w or k ,
ponds and septic tanks, ditch ing serv i ce ; top soi L fil l dirt,
limes tone; B&amp;K Exca vating .
Phone 992-7121 or 992-5682.
9-1-tfc

5 · 3 ~ 30 1 c

.t:;N' SHE'S LIKE ALL OTHER WIMMEI.I II
SHE HAIN' T GOT BRAINS ' NUFF TO 00 ..
NUTH IN' 'CEPT E'IE. MAH W IFE - AN ' THAT
DON'T TAKE NO £&gt;P.AINSAT ALL ! ! _ _...

WITH HINt
DEAR. HE'S

LI KE. ALL
OTHC:R
M EN -

24 Hour

- -- - - - -

NOW OPEN ~ Roger Hysell's
Garage, near Cross r oa ds on
St. Rt. 124; a ll mechanic work
includ ing automatic trans m i ssions .
Monday
lhru
Saturday, 8: 30 a . m . to 5 p. m.
Phone 992·7121 or 992-6392 .

DON1TAAGUE

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED
Daily Service

t ltll •• "'"· ... .

MODERN
SANITATION
~

John Tucker, Rt. 4
Pomeroy , o.
Ph . 992.3954

EXCAVATING . Dozer s, la rge
and small; Bac khoes and
loader s .o n trac k and tires;
D,ump truck s Lo · boy · O'DELL WHEEL Alignment
se r v i ce. Sep t ic t anks i n located at Crossroads, Rt . 124,
slalled. Georg e {Bil l ) Pulli ns,
c omplete front end se rv ice,
phone 992 -2478 or 992-7402.
tunc up and brake service .
2-9-lfc
Wh ee l s
balanced
e l ec 7 -::-::-::-::c_..,.-::._--- I r-o n i c a I I y . A I I ·w o r k
HARRISON ' S TV se rv ice and
guarant ee d .
Reasonable
ser vice ca lls . Phone 992 -2522.
rates. Ph one 992 ·3213 or 742.2-9·1fc
3232 .
2· 18-tlc
EXCAVATI NG, do zer , loader
and backhoe work; se pti c REA DY . I\IX
CO NC RETE
tank s instal led ; dump tr uck s
deliver f.· d right to your
and lo-boy s for hire; w ill haul
pro ject . Fa st and easy. Free
fill d irt, t op soil , limestone
est im ates . Phone 992 -3284 .
and grave l ; Caii .Bob or .Roger
Goeglein Ready -M ix Co .,
Jeffers , day ph one 99'2-7089 ;
Middleport, Ohio.
night phone 992-3525 or 9926~ 30 · 1fC
5232.
2- 11 -tfc.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONAB LE rates. Ph . 446SEE US FOR : Awn inQs, storm . .1782, Gall ipolis, John Ru sse ll ,
d oor s an d windows, carport s,
Owner and Operato r.
marq uees, aluminum sid ing
5-12 -H c
and ra i ling. A. Jacob, sales
repre se ntativ e. Far fre e
e~fimates, ph one , Ch a r le s
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
L1 sle;
Sy ra cuse ,
V.
V.
Complete Seiv ice
Johnson and Son, Inc.
/Phone 949-3821
· 3-2-tfc
Racine, Ohlo
Crill Brqdford
SEPTIC
TANKS
AROBIC
5-J.tfc
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANEO.
REPAIRED . ELNA and White Sewing
MILLER
SANITATION ,
Ma chin es- ... Se rvi ce on all
STEWART. OHIO. PH . 662·
mak es . Reaso nab le rate s.
3035.
The Sewing Cen t er , M i d d leport , Oh io.
10· 4·tfc
11 -16- l ,tc
SEW IN G MACHINES. Repai '
serv ice, all makes . 992-2284.
The Fa br i c Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sa les and
Servi ce. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-ttc
AUTOMOBILE insura-nce been
ca n ce lled ?
Los t
your
oper ator's li ce nse? Call 9922966.
6- 15-tfc

MY eoss 1s
G!VItr-JG THIS

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

CO~IUME

~

PA Rl'Y . . , I.
WANT HIM\0
NOTICE ME!

WlNNIE WINKLE
®WINNIE, I'VE GOT
A 500GE5TION TO. ·
MAKE CONCERNING'
YOUR VACATION .

WKY NOT 5URPRI5E HAL.
IMRTIN5 OUT ON 111E
WEST COAST WHERE
HE '&amp; TAKING' THAT
TAA ININ0
'\_L\ooool,. PR00AAM?

WT I DECIDED AGAINST IT. I

HMM ... I GUESS
V';OULDN 1T WANT HAL TO THINK. YOtfRE RIGHT AT
I WAS CHASING HIM. BETHAT, DEAR. OH 1
5 1DES; MY BEIN0 mERe
WELL,IT WAS ONLY
MI0HT DiSTRACT HIM
AN IDEA!
FROM HIS WORK.

COMti
THINO
NOTHING

GASOUNE ALLEY

I am not
a man without
compassion, Slim,

matter
~our

I

space

---~trailer

m~ bo~ !

mw
park!

'

-"
/

/

~CHECK

NONE:-, I FEAR •., THE

WITH USFIRST

OCEAM IS ONE YAST
EXPANSE OF tAI'lDLES5

WATER ··--

FOR

by THOMAS JOSEPH

MOBILE
HOMES

PIAN O tuning , Lane Dan ie ls,
259 Br oadway , Midd leport.
Ph one 992-2082.
S ~ 1?.61 p

HOUSE and roof Paint ing ;
i,nteri or and exterior , free
estimates ; c a ll992-7008or 992 2460 .

storm

Real Estate For Sale
HOUSE ·for Sale in Long Bottom, Oh lo. Call 985-4191 any
ti me. 1'1:2 miles from F orked
Run Lake or see Mary Pierce .
5-23-Stc
8 ACRES on State Route 143, 1
mile South of Harri sonvi lle ;
several home si tes; water tap
paid ; cal l 992-3640.
S-13-1 2fc

- l,;asy Living
- l':asy Paym ents

crat
(2 wds. J
·1. Jndia1J
I'Yfll h&lt;J! S
5. Profe ss ion
li. l':l c val c
in &lt;1 wuy

tw~l "

refuge
J6, " Ahou -

MODELING SURE 15

Adhem"
17. " I n Mood"
HI. Ce lerity
20. Sma l l .

Uown Pa y ment
- 12 Year Financing
- (d . Loans Availabl e
- :\'o .Jacked-up Prices
-SwiH Cred it Ap proval

J'OR•N~ I C

II'IOO.I.IN(;

~·

You Talk , We list en, the
Bu ck Stops Here.

2 7. llomhay

Zomastrian '

29. Mcdit.
i ~:;1 an t1

22. Mol lusk

33. Augurr
31 . Ncn pl1 yl c
36. Ind ian
mulbcrr)'
:n . :;er uglio
ch um her

delicacy

sonilic d
(2 wds.J
1I. H eighten
IZ. Shabb ier
16. Sugar
sou rcc

I I

1

&lt;J .T.
pcuple

2 1. l'olltllall
pass

ism pcr-

Tonsori al
need
Ccy lon c::;c
hoa t
J\'1 ore

ART IST' •

1 ~) .

7. Di sburden
10. Puritan -

ch ild
POI.LC£

Yesterday 's A nswer

23 . Surrc&lt;tli £l
paintn
25. Copen hagen

citiw n

II

I
u I l III
/N.'iOOI' L
. D UJ I

-.l!!nmJ

1

WHAT 'THE QUAI&lt;:~LIN6
MUSICIAN&amp;

Now arran1e the circled.lelten

to form

the aurprise aruwer. u
.urcested by the above cartoon.

. (A.w111rw. 'o...Orrew)

Lpt 100xJOO ~ith 9, room
house, garage apt., e~tra
building·
space.
Pri ce
reduced .

Phone 992· 7747
or 985 ~ 3805

·LARRY'S.

tell a

'

AMANDA PANDA

600 W. Main St.,
Next t o the' Jones Boys
Pom eroy , Ohio
Phone 992 -1777
Larr.y Evan s
Frank Gheen
OPen Sun. 1·6 p.m .
Dai ly 9-6

Big Capacity

A. 13ox

.

TuRTL.£

CAN PRoTIOCT Ht"1SELF

V£R'{ WELL .

.

27. Gf}lfin:l!
name 1
28. Lodge

HE CAN S HUT HtM SELF
Uf' I N I-11S
SHELL I

INLIT

HICCUP

LIQUOR

·
·
An1wer1 lr'• 'fllilc (I joPJ - let fh r.rl! P,e no
·
lume~ ubotd il! - FILLETING

1HE CHARI T'{ ?
STOMACH·ACHES!

:;;ymbol

29. Craw
30. Kin g
( Fr. J
3 J. Cumm on
verb
32. Kindergontiler
35. Chm n -

-· -·l-

icles
37 . I 'm ,
·S hocke d ~

(2

wd ~.

J

38. Emissary
•ln ,, ••U ,.,

39. numinant

DAILY .CRYPTOQUOTE is

?TATlJ~TTe

Halo of H eat
Or yen
Surroun d clot hes
wilh gentle, even
heat . No hot spots ,
no overdry i ng .
Fine · Mesh Lin t
Filter,
We Speciali1.e in
MAY TAG

~ere's

how to work it :

AXYDLBAAXR

THAT

Maytag

ON MVDASHR
l'r.~,r'IB OA R D!

LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands f or an other. In this sample A is
used 1or the three L's. X for the two O's, etc. Single l etters,
· apostrophe s, the length and ! ormation or the words 'arc all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

CRYPTC}QUOTES

•

FURNITURE· ~~:=.~~~"
Rutland

I

Juml.let~ &amp;EFOG

. '

Maytag
Automatics
2 speed operation .
Cho ice of wat er
Au l o .
t em ps .
Waler
level
con lr ol .
L i nt
Fil l ~r
or Pow er
Fin Ag i tator .
Per"rn a. P. res s

Arnold Grate.

l'e•lerd•y'•

or

* MOBILE HOMES

5eTTLE:P.

(JJ'

&lt;

25 . To ran -

IN MIDDLEPORT

741-4211

BOW:\'

I. Fad s
2. ( 'un s unwr
:1. Ari s111-

;mew
15. " Twu hy

DICK TRACY

- Low. Li•w

l' i\11'1'

le ss

PROPERTY

RUTLAND

&lt;1 L lt.rili:Jn

X. GltntiH· r
suhjc:l't
!J. Sumntit s
3. Comtmnli ·
calc:
14. Fas hi m11•tl

,_.

Unsr:ramble these four Jumbles.,
one letter to ea~:;h square, to
rorm four ordinary wordso

tow n

5. 1\lnn g n ·l

5 · 21 ~ 30ip

~t!llMID!1rn®lki-UJ .-~

40. Sew
(;IIi 111'&lt;1

,\CJtOHS
I .Ki nrl of

PARKWOOD
KIRKWOOD
ACADEMY

be

-~---~---:'_3·:.':
="0· He

~_..,.

IBAlNK

For Your Mobile HomeLando-No Down Paymeni

Buift to Your ' Specs
Delivered to Job Site

Real Estate For Sale

AI\IGEL !!

Years · 10.75 A. P. R.
for Your

12

WOOD TRUSSES

MATERIALS CO.
7nSSS4
Ma son , W. Va ,

PIGGY

G\JODER' N
ARV

BANK FINANCING

PRE. FABRICATED

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

NATJONAL

••

'IO'RE:

VETERANS

ASK US ABOUT

Real Estate For S.iile

NEW 3 bedr oo m home in
Mason , brick froni, hardwood
2 A IR con diti oner s. 1-8500
fl oors. gas hea t , large lot.
B. T .U ., 1-500 B .T .U. $200 for
Phone 773-555&lt;'1.
both . Call aff er 6. 992 2827 .
5-22 -6tc
S·20·31p
" PHONE " L. Parker for Cattle
1971 BSA 650. Less than 2,000
A . l. Sire Service, Po m eroy
actual mi les. Paisley paint,
992 2264.
mat chi ng helmet, ex tra part s.
5- 13- 12tc
Excell en t ·condi ti on. $895 992 .
7210 .
.
HOUSE in Long Bo ttom . Phone
5-2 -3tp
985-3529 .
~::.-::=--c-c­
6· 11 -tfc
UPHOLSTER your ow·n fur niture . Foam t ushions, any
size . Cotton, burlap , sw i vel 3 BEDROOM rancY style in
Pomeroy ; w -tocw ca r pe ting, 2
bases, zi pper , dacron , web· .
ca r garage attached . air bing ,
well .
Pomer oy · cond itioned ; pl1one 992-5593 .
Recover y, 622 E , Ma in St .,
5-20-6tc
phone 992 7554 .
5-3·241p
2 BEDROOM h ouse on SO ft . lot
on river . $9000 for house. With
NEW 2 pc. Ear ly Am erican
furn i ture $10 ,000 . Ph one 992l iving room suite wi th wood
5532 an.y lim e. Ca n be seen
trim and r eversi bl e zippered
after 4 p . m .
cus h ion~. This week qn ly
5- 17-6tc
$ 1&lt;1 9 .95 . Cash ahd carry .
~------Pomeroy Recove ry , 622 E. N E W Hpm es on your lot or ours.
Ma in 51., Pomeroy . Phone
NO MON EY
DOWN t ar
992-7554 .
qualified buye·r s using F .H.
A9m . loan. (Cl osing costs
on l y .) A var ie t y of Hoar pl ans
.GO LF CARTS and 3-whee l
various
fi nan ci ng
w i th
tracks ters. gas and electric,
p
rograms
avai
l
able
. We
for .
fa rm ,
ho m e
and
specia li ze in wor king w ith
warehou se uses . $75 and up .
AE P Co. employees although
Phone 1-875-2362 .
we are ava ilable to all. M ei gs
5- 17·6fc
Deve l opm en l Co ., 150 N .
Second
Ave..• Middl epo r t,
BEAUTIFUL
se l ectio n
of
Oh
i
o.
Phone
992 ·5976 f or in flower s, wreath s and ba skets ·
.f orma t ion .
for M emorial Day . Ctitl 's
5-6-30tc
Sf'loe Rep.;.ir , Midd le p ort.
Open evenin.gs until 8 p .m .
5-'2 3-4tc 6 ROOM house with bath and
furnitur e. Inqu ire 992~ 5373 .
5- 1B-l6tp
N E W Bla ck infant ca r seat with
all safet y regulations .
5-23 -3fc

GUARANTEED-

WELCOME MAT

.
FIR'ST

PAW!!

I F 'lORE BROTHER
BUBBA IS COM IN ' FER
A V ISIT, MAW··I BETTER
THROW OUT TH ' OL'

Business 'Services

2 - Pa int damage - 197J Zi9
Zag sewi ng machines . Still Jn
origin al' cartons. No at .
tachments needed as ou r
con trols ar-e bvill -tn . Sews
with 1 or 2 needles , makes
buttonl1oles . sew on buHons,
monograms, and bl ind hem
stitch . Full cash pr ice $38 .50
or budget pl an a0J11ilable .
Etectro -Hyg iene Co . P11one
992 7755.

'

'

BARNEY

i

OWWB

QEYD

HYKRTPKW
ATW

GKI

NGXW
QEY

AE

XGKKEA

HTGIE C.- TWSWK

AT W
HWW

OWSSWD

• Ye•terday's Cryptoquolo : LIFE CANNOT SUBSIST I N SO.

.

L.:.......----__:.:_:=-~~~

'~

'· .

..

&lt;;JETY BUr BY RECJPJ\O CA L CC)Nf'P.SSJONS.-SA MU!l L
JOHNSON
•
(@19!3

Kint! l&lt;~cntllH:}:

!-iXmlicalc, l'nt-,1

�•

__)

IS - The Daily Sentifll&gt;l Middleport·P9meroy, 0 .• May 23, l97J

Senlinel .Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
WANT ADS

INFORMATION

2 SIGNS

DEADLINES
5 P .M . Day Before Publicat ion.
Monday De11dl ine 9 a . m .

Of

Cancellation Corrections
Will be accepted until 9 a .m . tor
Day of P ublica t ion
REGULATIONS

QUALifY

Tt1e Publ isher reserves the
r i ght to edit or reject any ads
deemed
object i onal
The
publisher w ill not he re!&gt;ponsible

191'2 NOVA

Door , l_ocal 1 owner with less than 6.400 m iles, 307 V a,
autom,lli_IC tra~ s .• power st eering. wh i te wall tires·. light
bh.. e fm1 sh, wllh spotless in ter ior, radio . See the sharp
popul1;1r model.

RATES
For Want Ad Sendee

.12 cents per word three
consecutive insert ions .
18 cents per word six con ·
secutive i nsert ions .
25 Per Cent D iscoun t on paid
ads and ads paid w i thin 10 days .
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

OFFIC E HOURS

1911 CHEVROLET
S2995
Blazer 4 wh . dr ive , avx . top locking frt ., hvos. v 8,
au_tomati c trans ., power steeri ng &amp; brakes, l ocal tow
mileage, 1 owner , radio, spare never used.

,

1970 BUICK
•
1269l
El_ectra '1.'15 4-door, locall owner car w it h less than 3:?,000
mdes ,_ C_
l 1mate ControL air cond ., 40-60 power sea t, radio,
go l d f1n 1sh, loaded with many extra s.

Pomeroy Motor Co.,

OPEN EVES . 8:00P.M.
•
POMEROY . OHIO

\

Employment Wanted ·

Card of Thanks
WISH to express my appreciati on and thanks t.o all
for the cards, gifts. fl oWers.
visits and prayers receiv!'!'d
while I was in the hosp i tal.
Also thanks to the doctors and
staff at Holzer M edical Center
and those who brought in food
during my i llness . Yo ur
thoughtfulnes s wil l long be
remembered . Betty ShiVeley .
5·23 -ltC

I WILL do house cleaning in the
Chester
Pomeroy - Mid·
d leport area and vic ini ty .
Ph one 992 -7202 or Chester 9854146 .
5.22-Jic
WAN TED , - lawns to m ow in
Rutland . Phone 7.12-6363 .
. 5-22 31c

· Wanted To Buy
1967 OR UP VW Van . Only body .
843 2451.
5-16- 12tc

Notice

GUN Shoot. Friday, 7:30p .m ,;
Factory choked guns only. OLD Furnitu're, oak tables ,
Wooden ice boxes , brass beds,
Ass orted meat s. Refr esh di shes
or
comp l ete
ments served . Racin~ Gun
househo l ds; Write M . D .
Club.
5-23 -3t.c . M i ller , Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio,
call 992-6?71 .
5 13 -tfc

DANCE
At

NO. .1 Copper . :SOc ; r adia t ors,
28c brass, 18c; batteries, 85c
each ; clean dry . roots , Gin ·
c;eng. $60 ; yellow r oot, $4 ;
mayapple. 45c per lb . ;. M . A.
Hall , Reed svil le, Ohio, 378 6249 .
5·6-lfc

The

Whispering
·. Pines
Night Club

DRIVE R needed, sober and
d epen dab le,
m i ddle -aged
pr efe rr~d. Apply in per son at
Cour t Street Cab, Pomeroy.
S·22.31 p

from 10p.m . til2a .m .
Musi c by Red Stewart, Dave
Dunn and Th e Amba ssa dors.

QUA LIFIE D .life guar d for'
Maple'wood l,.ake. Phone 94.94074 .
5·20-4lc

REDUCE excess flu ids with
Fluidex. . · Lose weight w i th
Dex -A - Diet
ca p su l es
at
Nelson Drugs.
man
for
s.n.3tp MAINTENANCE
vi llage of SyraC use water
s'ys t em. Send r es ume to
YARD sale, Wednesday and
Maxine
Varian , c lerk of board
Thur sday , May 23 and 24. 414
of public affairs , Box 323,
Li ncoln Hill. 9 a .m . to 5 p.m.
Sy r acuse.
s-2ntc
5-22 -St c
FOUR family yard sale . New
and used clothing , ch ild ren 's COOK, waitress and ca rh op;
apply in per son, Craw's Stea k
tr i cy cle , t ables, di shes, etc .
Hause .
Turn le1t off Sl. Rt .. 124, 1 mile
. 5-lO -tf c
fram Ra c.ine on !-;log Hollow
R oad . Watch for si g ns,
Wednesda y and Thur sday thi s
week .
POODLE puppi es, Toy A.K .C..
5-22-3t c
Chocola te -- Show qua li ty ,
Phone 992 -5443.
CHICKEN Bilrbecue and spare
5-23- tfc
ribs , and .hom emade ice

Pets For Sale

.

Cream at the Chester Fire
Hquse May 28. Mem orial Qay .
5-22-5tc

-

.

"HEit"

POODLES, AKC Puppi es , small
min iature , black ;,r wh i te,
wormed. permanent shot s,
S75; Phone Cool vi ll e 667-6214 .
5-20-12t c

Wanted To Rent
4 OR 5 r oom hou se in Pom ero~
or Mid dl~port , South end .
Ren t not o ver $60 per mo nth .
Phone 992 -3409 , Pomerqy.
5-21-6tc

Furnace Controts
HI!MI Dl Fl ERS
11ot Water Heater;
~lumbing

Electrical )Nork

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

I

'

~---------WANTED
pastu re to r en t for 50
to 100 calves . Mu st ha ve
pl en ty of wa ter and good
fences . Ca ll 992-7077 or write
Box. -14, Minersvil le, Ohio,
45763. Ca l l after 5 p .m .
5 20.61p

Auto Sales

992 ·2448

..

~------

AKC Toy Pood le puppies, $75
and sas. Al so Si am ese kitten s,
'$10 . Ph one 1-256 -6247, K~nne ls
of Calhoun .
5-20-30tc

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Pomeroy, o.

For Rent .

GRAY MANOR
APARTMENTS
MIDDLEPORT
Furnished Apt. with new
furn iture , with or wlthou·t
utilities, 2· bedrooms, on
ground floor w i th wall ·lowall c arpet . Also have
private en tran ces and yard
for child r en, in nice neigh borhood.
Phone 992 -3863 til 3 p. m . or
992-5844 a'fter 6:00 .
PRIVATE meeting room tor
any organization ; phone 992 3975.
3- 11 -Hc
TWO trail er lot s in M iddlepor t ;
1 '} duplex in Bradbury, phone
before 6 p .m . 992-5693 .
~~
5-20·5t c
MOBI LE
Syracu~e;

h0me spa ce i n
phone 992 -6329 .
5·2-lf c

Help Wanted

and
Saturday Nights
Friday

-

MEMORIAL Day celebrati on at
.
Racine Fire Station May 25
thru May 28. Kiddie -rides all4
days , Fireworks di sp la y
M onday, May 28 and an
evening show at the Ra cin e
Junior Hi gh at 7:30 p.m.
M ond ay feat uring " Larry 's
Sw i ng in g Count r ymen ." A
chic ken barbecue Sun day ,
May 27 . Serving beg ins at 11
a .m .

~:=--::-:=-:--:---'_:_S_:·
18·81 c
THE MEIGS County Fish &amp;
Game A ssn. wi ll meet
Wednesday evening , May 23,
at 7: 30p.m . at th e Sy ra cuse
Club House, Syracuse.
5-20·4tc
~~:c-:-c:---:-:-­

McDAN IE L S Custom . Sla ughter
Hou se and_ M eat Cutting ;
State and Government in spected; phone 7'73 -5208.
5-20 ·12tc
KNAPP SHOES Comfort,
Quality ,
Lo ng
Wear,
Rea sonable pri ces. Call 9925324 .
_
5·3·tfc

r--'-----;
SPRING SPECIALS

SABRE TILLER
3'h HP 1129.95
Set

Ia Carton ·
Uo , 134.95

TURF TRIM MOWERS
3 HP
'4~.95
In CiJrton

5 cents per Word one insertion
M in imu m Charge 7Sc

8 :30a . m . to 5 .00 p .m . Daily ,
8:30 a . m . lo 12 :00 Noon
Saturday .

U69S

II

tor more than one incorrect
insert ion .

'51 SO for SO word minimum .
Each addit iona l word 2c
BLIND ADS
Addit ional 25c Charge per
Advertisement .

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

For S;lle

1966 CHEVELLE 4 doo' V·B,
automatic,
$300 .
1966
Chevro let , Bellai r e, 4door . V8 automati c, Power steer ing,
$600 . Ca ll Robert H. Roush,
247-2195 .
5-22·3tc
1972 CAMARO Z-28, like new.
$2,900. Cal l 992-3453.

Mobile Homes For Sale
Air Conditioners
Awnings
Underpinning
Co mp le t e m obile home
service -- plu s gigantic
di splay of mobi le homeS
al ways ava il ab le a t ..

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES
1220 Wa shington Blvd.
423 -151 1
BELPRE , 0 .

CASH pa i d l or all makes and
m ode ls of m obi l e homes .
Phone ar ea code 61 4-423-9531.
ROOF lNG and Heat ing Repair ;
4-13-tf c
·· all types ; Spec ial -'- Cleaning
and oiling of bl ower , compl ete 1971 HOLLY Pa rk , 12 x 60, like
new, carpeted , house f ur check on furn aces ; phone 84 32341 .
ni t ure. air - con dit io ned ,
washe r and dryer , w i th 8 x. 32
S·l.JOic
por ch and awni ng ; phone 1KOSCOT SPEC IALS fo' May
304-773 -5474.
are Hai r Kair Products in 5-9-10k
clu d ing other items . If you
have ever pur chased Kosc ot
Kosmeti cs and .are not being 1973 MOBILE HOME w;th l a,ge
serviced, phone Helen Jane
pa tio. Albert Hill. Racine,
Brown, evenings also, 992Ohio, Phone 949-2261.
5113 .
5-17-6tc
5· 13·tfc
"R"u"M""'"M"A"G
;:-E
;o--s-a71e-,-M
:c-a-y-,2"3-,
t o 26 2 BEPF?OOM mobil e home : air
co nditi one d , Racine area .
open 10 a.m . Grea t Bend
Phone 992 -6329 .
Grange ·Hall. Two 21 in. TV.
5-23 -Hc
365 ft . No. ·12 ·2 elec tric wir'e .
7
~-=o:-c
, -:R
=-oo
= M:-:1u- ,-n-c;s-"h-e-:d and
Three - flu o r esce nt lig ht s. 3 A·N
Man y other item s, Phone 843,
unfurnis'he d
apartments .
2826.
Phone 992-5434 .
5-21 -3fc
4-12-tfc

For Rent

PUBLIC NOTICES
Your Right to Know
and b e in formed of the fun c.
tions of ~·ou r governme nt a n~
embo di ed in pub l ic noti ces . In
that SPi f ~ove rnm e n t charges
all ci tizens t o be inform ed ;
th is newspaper urges every
ci!iz en to r.€ad and stvd y the se
not ices. We strongly advise
those c iti'z'e ns, see· ~ i ng fu rt her
informat ion , to exerc ise- th ei r
right of access to pub lic
·recor d s and public meet in gs .

For Sale

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55
On Most American Cars

Se t up, $54 .95
9 .. _

6ll!

POMEROY
Jack W. Carsev. Mgr .
Phon e 992-2181

1973 STEREO 8 track . A small
balance of $88 .64 or pay $6 .50
pe( month . Phone 992-533 1.
4-20-tfc

-

3 - VACUUM clean ers new 1973

Phone 992-2094

model. Complete with all
cleaning i tools . Small paint
damage in shippin g . W ill take
S27 cash or budget plan
available .
Elect r o - Hygiene
Co .. Phone 992-7755 .
5-22-6tc

Porn eroy Home .&amp; Auto
Open,&amp; Til S
Monday thru Saturday
606 E . ~ain, Pomeroy , 0 .

SMALL fC~bric business . Ent i re
MUST se ll 1973 deluxe Zig -lag
stock for sale . Antiquest ,
s ewing
ma chi ne .
This
furnitu r e. Knits and Sti tches,
machine darns, embroider s,
Coolville , Ohio.
makes
buttonholes.
all
5-22-ltc
without attachments. Just
-c::
Pcc
H-:
0-cL-:S::Tc::Ec:R:cY
:-c-_..,.
Mc-o- t:-;e-, ;a I s •
dial and sew . Pay balance of U
$38 .50 or pay $5 per month .
regularly $3 .95 only $1 .95.
Ph one 992-5331.
Als o remnants . Po meroy
4-20-tfc
Recovery, 622 E. Ma in St.,
phone 992-7554 .
5·3·241 p
' HOME Gr own Tomato plants
l or garden use : large s turdy NEW FOAM to fill you r old
cushions, standard size suite,
plants : Improved M ex i can,
$9.95.
Pomeroy
on ly
Hei n z: 1350 and Supersonic ;
Recovery, 622 E, Ma in St...
al so hof peppers , mangoes
phone 992 7554.
and cabbage plants. On Rl.
5-3-?4tp
124, 500 fl. above the Staff!
Park in Syracuse, 0 ., Thomas
Hayman .

PUBLIC NOTI CE
Not ice to a !I car cl ea l er s 'in--t he
ar qa to submi l· b ids on a new
Poli ce Cru iser for th e Town of
New Haven. We.st Virgin ia, on
the following equ ipment:
Base l ul l size four door seda n
With ,
I. automat ic tran smi ssion
BLACK rlJing mare., $200 .
2 . -pow er st eeri ng
heav y duty Case baler , $300.
3 . pow r r disc brakes
Ca rl M orris, Rutland , Ph one
·1. appro.xi ma l ely 350 cu. in. v ,
742 469 1.
8 engine
5 . pos i t ive tr act ion dil
fer en l ia l
0. tint ed g la SS ·all w indo ws
4 NEW G -78- 14 U ni -royal glass7. r ea r w indbw d e fro s t e r ~
be l led t ire s for $100 . Ca ll 992forced air 3453
8. acc essory li ghtin g (t runk. ,
.
5-23 ·5tc
hood , etc .)
9. under co.:Hi ng
&gt;
.
10 . police pa ckag e for body and TOMA TOES, pepper s, potted
chass is
fl ower s, by pot or by the
11. I elf hand spot ligh t
doze·n , SOc. $2 fl at on all
12 . l eft hand outsi de mirrorpansi es.
· Hubbard' s
remot e control
Greenhouse
,
300
yards above
All bids ar e to be r eturped by
bal lpark ·in Syracuse, Ohio.
J.un e 1, 1973 ,. incl uding item ized
lis t of reQu ested equipment and
5-15·tfc
op t io n s. The Town of New
Haven r ese rv es the r j ght to 4 --:- 8 PT. 75 x 16 .5, 8 ply tru ck
reject any or a ll bid s.
tires and two mobile home
axles
and 4 ti res . Phone 742 -)
John Thorne
5387
.
M tJyor
5-20·3tc
Jan e Russ ell
-c--,-:c-c:--:---~Recorder
19'7 1 HONDA SL 125. Phone 9926160.
(5) 22, 23. 24, 3t
5·2 0-Jtc

CLELAND

5-~3·31c ~---....~~!
&gt;08
E. MAl N

REALTY

POMEROY
THE HOME SELLING
SEASON IS HERE NOW
LET US SELL
YOUR HOME
DON 'T WAIT,
LIST WiTH US TODAY

BY OWNER - se ll ing under
appr aisal va lue, newly bu ilt 4
furn ished apartments built -in
ca binets, panelled walls, now
r en ted monthly incom e .$340 .
All electri c, ci ty water in
co untry between pomeroy
Athens . Pb one Ma son. W . Va .,
773-55 80. Wil l c onsider trade .
ldea l ,f or home and income for
re tired coupl e.
S·20 · 121p
6 ROOM S and bath , panelling,
car peting , aluminum siding ,
stor m . door s and w i nd.ows,
natural gas , drill ed well ,
ga rage , l mil'e Sou th. of
Middleport. Phone 992-6902 .
5 · 20 ~ 101p
40 AC RES 8 rooms and bath ,
house, ba rn and several
building s also . $18,000. 7426161.
S-20.6fp
N EW home nea r Rutland , 3
bedrooms and bath comple te
·wi th kitchen·, wa sher and
dryer. 742-6161.
S·20·61p

r,

r

Virgil ;B;,

Teaford} Sr.
,
"

: '• .

Broker
t-'1'. ~'

~. !

110 Mechanic Street

Pomeroy, Ohiti
NEW LISTING
POME ROY - 4 rooms, bath ,
full basement with shower . .
Wall to wall .carpeting . Gas
f urnace and half acre of land.
Only $7 ,500.00.
NEW LISTING
4 BEDROOMS - N ;ce k i tchen .
ful l bas e ment which has
garage and 2 family rooms .
N ice front · porches . As~ipg
$18 ,900.00 .
I!UILDING LOT
PpMEROY - 50x160 on Route
7 1oop and 33. A mere $1500.00 .
FAR"'
42 ACRES - 6 room house , ·
m odern bath , and kitchen .
Bahk barn , some fruit , in
Ora nge Township. Want only
$19, _
500.00.
POMEROY
2 BEDROOMS - Good older
· home on quiet s treet. N ice
kitchen, ga s furnace: Wrought
ir on
por ch.
Would
li ke
$1 5, 000 .00 .
IOOACRES PLUS
LEBANON TOWNSHIP - Ha s
gas well. and all min eral s.
Several older bu ilding s, and 6
r oom fram e hou se. Farm pond .
Re mote se tt ing for a loner.
Only $19,500 .

S ACRE&gt;
RUT L AND, OHIO 7
r ooms, 3 bedroom s, co uld be
.:1 . Bath, nice kitchen with
ca binet s, range . and ref. ,
hardwood floors, cellar, gas
F. A. heat, storm door s &amp;
windows, ou ·t bu ild ings ,
utility room , other features .
JU ST $18,500.00 .
4 GRAVE l ot in Meig s Memoria l
2 YEARS OLD
Gardens. Cheap . Ca ll 9&lt;19- . Just a baby in age, bu t grown
4962 .
up in quality . 3 larg e B. R.
5-20-tfc
UPHOLSTERY
Mat e ria ls.
withdoubleclosets. B ~aut iful
.ny lon prints, co tton prints,
bath
&amp; shower. Kitchen has
HANG
IN
G
baske
ts
;
white
,
p
ink
viny ls. velve ts of all k i nds.
almost everything incl uding
and r e d geraniu ms, mum s
Pom eroy Recovery , 6:22 E.
doub le oven, rang e and Ref.
and -begonia s; In stant color
Ma in St .. phone 992 -7554.
for yOur garden - pansies,
Util ity room . Large L. R.
5-3-·24tp
pe tunias , marig ol ds, Phlox,
wi th fireplace . Base m e nt .
Coleus . Salv i a,
Zinnia s,
STE REO . RAOIO , tope com ·
Large lot 100xl20 . (leve l ).
Di anthu s, Ally ss um , Snap.
NOW IS THE TIME WHEN
bination, am -t m radio, &lt;l
$23,000 .00 .
dra go n s, Ageratium and
WE
HAVE THE BUYERS
Spea ker sound syste m , l ike
CHEAP! E
Porlul acca. Vegetable j:Jtants
new. Ba l ance $111.27 or use
LOOKING
FOR A NICE
1
1 h story frame. Near A&amp;P
Cabba g e,
broccoli,
ou r budge t term s. Call 992.
PLACE
.
COME
IN AND LIST
store . 2 bedrooms , ~ould be
caul ifl_ower , le ftuce , eggplant,
3965.
WITH
US
FOR
A QUICK
3. Di ni ng room . Bath. Storm
mangoes , hot peppers and 14
5- 18-6tc
SALE
.
WHEN
YOU
AO ·
kind s of tomato plants .
doors &amp; windows . La rg e lot.
VERTISE
YOUR
PROpF.RTY
Cle
l
and
Farm
and
Out ol all floods . MAKE AN
1967 OPEL $200. Fair cond ition .
YOU OPEN YOUR DOOR TO
Gree nhou se, E . Main, Racine .
OFFER . $5. 000 .00 .
843-2451 .
Geral
dine
Clela
nd
.
,
ALL
STRANGER S. BE SAFE
10 ACRES
5- 16-12tc
5-18-lfc
AND
PUT YOUR PROPERTY
6 l eve l . Good
ar ea . 2
IN
OU
R EXPERIEN C ED
bedroom home. Electric
FLOWERS f or M emorial Day, B LACK 7/a · Tennessee Wa lker
HA
ND
S.
THE SMALL FEE
heat . Bath . Abou t 1T years
pots, bask et s and spr ays 99c
c ol t. 11. ~ years ol d ~ phone 992WILL
.
CERTAINLY
PAY
.;~nd up. Al so loose flowers ,
old . THI S YOU WILL HAVE
36.10 .
'
YOU
,
TO
DO
'SO,
NOW.
Sm alley 's, Ch es t er, Ohio.
TO SE E . $15.000.00 .
5-13 -12tc
Ph one 985-3537.
OTHER PROPERTIES TO
5-16-71c ALL T HE pr operty formedy
CHOOS E FROM. CO ME IN
HELEN l. 'f:EAFORO
owned by Pitt sburgh Coal
TODAY AND SEE WHAT
LEGHORN hens for sa l e. SOc
m·Ji25
Compa ny and now carried on
WE HAVE TO OFFER.
each . Call 843-2145.
the County tax. re&lt;!ords of
GORDON B. TEAFORD
5-22-10tc
HENRY E: CLELAND
Meig s County , Oh i o, In the
992-3415
BROKER
name of Consolidation Coa l
k
ASSOCIATES
Com p any , l oca t ed i n th e
992 ·2259
- NOSUNOAYS PLEASE .
Excel si or·
COAL, Limes tone
f ollowi ng taxing d is trict s:
II no answer 992-2568 _
Salt Works, E. Ma -in 51.,
Ches t e r Twp. Eastern
Pomeroy . Ph one 992 -3891.
L .S.D.; Salisbury Twp .
4· n tt c
P-omeroy Vi l lage; ·Sa lisbury
REAL ESTATE AUCTION
Twp . - M eigs L.S. D.; Sutton
HOOD'S AQUARIUMS , t;sh
Saturday; May 26, 1973 at2:00 P.M .
Twp. ·- Sou t hern L.S . D .
al'ld su ppl i es, new locatioh,
87 South Second Avenue , Middleport, Ohio
Sealed bid s for the pur chase
Ash St r eet, Midd leport, near
Apprai sa l 'l"'" $15 ,000.00
of all these propert ies (wh ich
park ; Phone 99~ - 5&lt;1&lt;13 .
448
South
Second
Avenue , Middleport, Ohio
'1-7-tfc
shoul d be grouped togeth er
Appraisal
- S12 ,000.00
------===-=~~-- ~n d con sid.er.ed as a -si ngl e bid
380 South Third Avenue, Middleport, OhiO
-1tem ) will be r ece i ved at the
Appraisal - $5 ,000 .00
address lis ted below unt il 12
o'c l oc k noon. June 1, 1973
Furt_her i n forma ti on maY
Pla ce of sale: 87 S. Second Ave. , M iddleport, Ot·lio. Open
obta 1n ~d by contacting the
House 1: 00 P.M. - 2: 00 P. M . May 26 , 1973 on all properties.
un.ders tgnep .
Consolidation
Proper ties sold individually. Nomi nimum bids, but se llers
AUCTION-NOTICE
Coat Company reserves the
r eserve the right to reject bids.
Wash in gton
Sal e · of
ri g ht to rej ect any and all
Term s of sale : Ca sh.
Passenger Cars , Ca rry alls 1•1
bid~ . E . H . Doughty, Con Ton Pi ckups, D um p TrJcks
sol idat ion Coal Co ., Codlz:,
Inquiries on properly may be made to Hamlin C. King ,
I Most w ·Piow s &amp; Spre ad ers),
Oh!o 43907.
Tr ac tor s '
w -Mower
At .
Attorn ey -at-La w. i\' Loc .ust Stre et, Gallipol is, Ohio,
tachments , Tai- Dis tributor , Tar
5-1J. 1Qtc
Phon e: 61~ 446 ·0855 .
Ke lt les , A ir
Com pres so r s
~--FranCiS Biron &amp; Michael Fry ,
Cha in S ~w s, and Mow ers , and GROCERY b . ·
Co·Ex.ecutors.
of the Estate o{
Build ing fo~ s~~~ss for sale.
Other M, scell aneous Item s.
Harrie Mttrie Smith, deceased. ·
"See Contract Sal es Lega l
Phone 77 3 _56 : 8 fr e or lease.
NOT R ~ SPONSIBLE FOR PERSONAL PROPERTY OR
Co py No . 73 -377 unde·r leg al
to IO p .m 1
om 8.: JOp .m . .
sec t1on tor deta il s of auct io n
· .or appomfment
ACCIDENT&gt;.
sa le by th e StatP. of Ohio.' ·
'
1

For Sale

Notice

From the laro'est
Sulldoze.r Rad ;e-tor to the
~mat •esf Heater c...orc
Nathan Bigg !&gt;
Radiator Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Pii :992 -2174

Pom eroy

Specialist
Wheel
Alignment
It Must
Be Right
or we will
Make it Right ,

Oualify Today, Call

[EJ]

.

A.IIC-Hf
j.li~'• lf\

•

r'

IN

BELOW

~

10

M'l NEW
BIKINI .

S~Q ULD NEVER

SUll-

.

1\lE &amp;EACH

A STUDENT
GET
A'C'...
;

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

.-.
&gt;

--

-•

992 ~ 2094

606 E. Main

~

10

W~AT'S WIT~
T~ I S 'F,'

Choos·e your own ho me from
your AREA DEALER .

NO. 'tl

1111 SHAPE
I&gt;FfEJ·~ MUGGERS ?

Gt:JTING

CAMPUS CLA TIER

304-485-3809

Pom eroy

1

''

OFFICE SUPPLIES

5~ 2

and
8-4: 30 Daily, 8- 12 Sal .
In the R. H. Rawling !&gt; Scms
Building .
992-1101
Middleport, 0 .

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Di s ~lay .

DOZER and back hoe w or k ,
ponds and septic tanks, ditch ing serv i ce ; top soi L fil l dirt,
limes tone; B&amp;K Exca vating .
Phone 992-7121 or 992-5682.
9-1-tfc

5 · 3 ~ 30 1 c

.t:;N' SHE'S LIKE ALL OTHER WIMMEI.I II
SHE HAIN' T GOT BRAINS ' NUFF TO 00 ..
NUTH IN' 'CEPT E'IE. MAH W IFE - AN ' THAT
DON'T TAKE NO £&gt;P.AINSAT ALL ! ! _ _...

WITH HINt
DEAR. HE'S

LI KE. ALL
OTHC:R
M EN -

24 Hour

- -- - - - -

NOW OPEN ~ Roger Hysell's
Garage, near Cross r oa ds on
St. Rt. 124; a ll mechanic work
includ ing automatic trans m i ssions .
Monday
lhru
Saturday, 8: 30 a . m . to 5 p. m.
Phone 992·7121 or 992-6392 .

DON1TAAGUE

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED
Daily Service

t ltll •• "'"· ... .

MODERN
SANITATION
~

John Tucker, Rt. 4
Pomeroy , o.
Ph . 992.3954

EXCAVATING . Dozer s, la rge
and small; Bac khoes and
loader s .o n trac k and tires;
D,ump truck s Lo · boy · O'DELL WHEEL Alignment
se r v i ce. Sep t ic t anks i n located at Crossroads, Rt . 124,
slalled. Georg e {Bil l ) Pulli ns,
c omplete front end se rv ice,
phone 992 -2478 or 992-7402.
tunc up and brake service .
2-9-lfc
Wh ee l s
balanced
e l ec 7 -::-::-::-::c_..,.-::._--- I r-o n i c a I I y . A I I ·w o r k
HARRISON ' S TV se rv ice and
guarant ee d .
Reasonable
ser vice ca lls . Phone 992 -2522.
rates. Ph one 992 ·3213 or 742.2-9·1fc
3232 .
2· 18-tlc
EXCAVATI NG, do zer , loader
and backhoe work; se pti c REA DY . I\IX
CO NC RETE
tank s instal led ; dump tr uck s
deliver f.· d right to your
and lo-boy s for hire; w ill haul
pro ject . Fa st and easy. Free
fill d irt, t op soil , limestone
est im ates . Phone 992 -3284 .
and grave l ; Caii .Bob or .Roger
Goeglein Ready -M ix Co .,
Jeffers , day ph one 99'2-7089 ;
Middleport, Ohio.
night phone 992-3525 or 9926~ 30 · 1fC
5232.
2- 11 -tfc.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONAB LE rates. Ph . 446SEE US FOR : Awn inQs, storm . .1782, Gall ipolis, John Ru sse ll ,
d oor s an d windows, carport s,
Owner and Operato r.
marq uees, aluminum sid ing
5-12 -H c
and ra i ling. A. Jacob, sales
repre se ntativ e. Far fre e
e~fimates, ph one , Ch a r le s
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
L1 sle;
Sy ra cuse ,
V.
V.
Complete Seiv ice
Johnson and Son, Inc.
/Phone 949-3821
· 3-2-tfc
Racine, Ohlo
Crill Brqdford
SEPTIC
TANKS
AROBIC
5-J.tfc
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANEO.
REPAIRED . ELNA and White Sewing
MILLER
SANITATION ,
Ma chin es- ... Se rvi ce on all
STEWART. OHIO. PH . 662·
mak es . Reaso nab le rate s.
3035.
The Sewing Cen t er , M i d d leport , Oh io.
10· 4·tfc
11 -16- l ,tc
SEW IN G MACHINES. Repai '
serv ice, all makes . 992-2284.
The Fa br i c Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sa les and
Servi ce. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-ttc
AUTOMOBILE insura-nce been
ca n ce lled ?
Los t
your
oper ator's li ce nse? Call 9922966.
6- 15-tfc

MY eoss 1s
G!VItr-JG THIS

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

CO~IUME

~

PA Rl'Y . . , I.
WANT HIM\0
NOTICE ME!

WlNNIE WINKLE
®WINNIE, I'VE GOT
A 500GE5TION TO. ·
MAKE CONCERNING'
YOUR VACATION .

WKY NOT 5URPRI5E HAL.
IMRTIN5 OUT ON 111E
WEST COAST WHERE
HE '&amp; TAKING' THAT
TAA ININ0
'\_L\ooool,. PR00AAM?

WT I DECIDED AGAINST IT. I

HMM ... I GUESS
V';OULDN 1T WANT HAL TO THINK. YOtfRE RIGHT AT
I WAS CHASING HIM. BETHAT, DEAR. OH 1
5 1DES; MY BEIN0 mERe
WELL,IT WAS ONLY
MI0HT DiSTRACT HIM
AN IDEA!
FROM HIS WORK.

COMti
THINO
NOTHING

GASOUNE ALLEY

I am not
a man without
compassion, Slim,

matter
~our

I

space

---~trailer

m~ bo~ !

mw
park!

'

-"
/

/

~CHECK

NONE:-, I FEAR •., THE

WITH USFIRST

OCEAM IS ONE YAST
EXPANSE OF tAI'lDLES5

WATER ··--

FOR

by THOMAS JOSEPH

MOBILE
HOMES

PIAN O tuning , Lane Dan ie ls,
259 Br oadway , Midd leport.
Ph one 992-2082.
S ~ 1?.61 p

HOUSE and roof Paint ing ;
i,nteri or and exterior , free
estimates ; c a ll992-7008or 992 2460 .

storm

Real Estate For Sale
HOUSE ·for Sale in Long Bottom, Oh lo. Call 985-4191 any
ti me. 1'1:2 miles from F orked
Run Lake or see Mary Pierce .
5-23-Stc
8 ACRES on State Route 143, 1
mile South of Harri sonvi lle ;
several home si tes; water tap
paid ; cal l 992-3640.
S-13-1 2fc

- l,;asy Living
- l':asy Paym ents

crat
(2 wds. J
·1. Jndia1J
I'Yfll h&lt;J! S
5. Profe ss ion
li. l':l c val c
in &lt;1 wuy

tw~l "

refuge
J6, " Ahou -

MODELING SURE 15

Adhem"
17. " I n Mood"
HI. Ce lerity
20. Sma l l .

Uown Pa y ment
- 12 Year Financing
- (d . Loans Availabl e
- :\'o .Jacked-up Prices
-SwiH Cred it Ap proval

J'OR•N~ I C

II'IOO.I.IN(;

~·

You Talk , We list en, the
Bu ck Stops Here.

2 7. llomhay

Zomastrian '

29. Mcdit.
i ~:;1 an t1

22. Mol lusk

33. Augurr
31 . Ncn pl1 yl c
36. Ind ian
mulbcrr)'
:n . :;er uglio
ch um her

delicacy

sonilic d
(2 wds.J
1I. H eighten
IZ. Shabb ier
16. Sugar
sou rcc

I I

1

&lt;J .T.
pcuple

2 1. l'olltllall
pass

ism pcr-

Tonsori al
need
Ccy lon c::;c
hoa t
J\'1 ore

ART IST' •

1 ~) .

7. Di sburden
10. Puritan -

ch ild
POI.LC£

Yesterday 's A nswer

23 . Surrc&lt;tli £l
paintn
25. Copen hagen

citiw n

II

I
u I l III
/N.'iOOI' L
. D UJ I

-.l!!nmJ

1

WHAT 'THE QUAI&lt;:~LIN6
MUSICIAN&amp;

Now arran1e the circled.lelten

to form

the aurprise aruwer. u
.urcested by the above cartoon.

. (A.w111rw. 'o...Orrew)

Lpt 100xJOO ~ith 9, room
house, garage apt., e~tra
building·
space.
Pri ce
reduced .

Phone 992· 7747
or 985 ~ 3805

·LARRY'S.

tell a

'

AMANDA PANDA

600 W. Main St.,
Next t o the' Jones Boys
Pom eroy , Ohio
Phone 992 -1777
Larr.y Evan s
Frank Gheen
OPen Sun. 1·6 p.m .
Dai ly 9-6

Big Capacity

A. 13ox

.

TuRTL.£

CAN PRoTIOCT Ht"1SELF

V£R'{ WELL .

.

27. Gf}lfin:l!
name 1
28. Lodge

HE CAN S HUT HtM SELF
Uf' I N I-11S
SHELL I

INLIT

HICCUP

LIQUOR

·
·
An1wer1 lr'• 'fllilc (I joPJ - let fh r.rl! P,e no
·
lume~ ubotd il! - FILLETING

1HE CHARI T'{ ?
STOMACH·ACHES!

:;;ymbol

29. Craw
30. Kin g
( Fr. J
3 J. Cumm on
verb
32. Kindergontiler
35. Chm n -

-· -·l-

icles
37 . I 'm ,
·S hocke d ~

(2

wd ~.

J

38. Emissary
•ln ,, ••U ,.,

39. numinant

DAILY .CRYPTOQUOTE is

?TATlJ~TTe

Halo of H eat
Or yen
Surroun d clot hes
wilh gentle, even
heat . No hot spots ,
no overdry i ng .
Fine · Mesh Lin t
Filter,
We Speciali1.e in
MAY TAG

~ere's

how to work it :

AXYDLBAAXR

THAT

Maytag

ON MVDASHR
l'r.~,r'IB OA R D!

LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands f or an other. In this sample A is
used 1or the three L's. X for the two O's, etc. Single l etters,
· apostrophe s, the length and ! ormation or the words 'arc all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

CRYPTC}QUOTES

•

FURNITURE· ~~:=.~~~"
Rutland

I

Juml.let~ &amp;EFOG

. '

Maytag
Automatics
2 speed operation .
Cho ice of wat er
Au l o .
t em ps .
Waler
level
con lr ol .
L i nt
Fil l ~r
or Pow er
Fin Ag i tator .
Per"rn a. P. res s

Arnold Grate.

l'e•lerd•y'•

or

* MOBILE HOMES

5eTTLE:P.

(JJ'

&lt;

25 . To ran -

IN MIDDLEPORT

741-4211

BOW:\'

I. Fad s
2. ( 'un s unwr
:1. Ari s111-

;mew
15. " Twu hy

DICK TRACY

- Low. Li•w

l' i\11'1'

le ss

PROPERTY

RUTLAND

&lt;1 L lt.rili:Jn

X. GltntiH· r
suhjc:l't
!J. Sumntit s
3. Comtmnli ·
calc:
14. Fas hi m11•tl

,_.

Unsr:ramble these four Jumbles.,
one letter to ea~:;h square, to
rorm four ordinary wordso

tow n

5. 1\lnn g n ·l

5 · 21 ~ 30ip

~t!llMID!1rn®lki-UJ .-~

40. Sew
(;IIi 111'&lt;1

,\CJtOHS
I .Ki nrl of

PARKWOOD
KIRKWOOD
ACADEMY

be

-~---~---:'_3·:.':
="0· He

~_..,.

IBAlNK

For Your Mobile HomeLando-No Down Paymeni

Buift to Your ' Specs
Delivered to Job Site

Real Estate For Sale

AI\IGEL !!

Years · 10.75 A. P. R.
for Your

12

WOOD TRUSSES

MATERIALS CO.
7nSSS4
Ma son , W. Va ,

PIGGY

G\JODER' N
ARV

BANK FINANCING

PRE. FABRICATED

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

NATJONAL

••

'IO'RE:

VETERANS

ASK US ABOUT

Real Estate For S.iile

NEW 3 bedr oo m home in
Mason , brick froni, hardwood
2 A IR con diti oner s. 1-8500
fl oors. gas hea t , large lot.
B. T .U ., 1-500 B .T .U. $200 for
Phone 773-555&lt;'1.
both . Call aff er 6. 992 2827 .
5-22 -6tc
S·20·31p
" PHONE " L. Parker for Cattle
1971 BSA 650. Less than 2,000
A . l. Sire Service, Po m eroy
actual mi les. Paisley paint,
992 2264.
mat chi ng helmet, ex tra part s.
5- 13- 12tc
Excell en t ·condi ti on. $895 992 .
7210 .
.
HOUSE in Long Bo ttom . Phone
5-2 -3tp
985-3529 .
~::.-::=--c-c­
6· 11 -tfc
UPHOLSTER your ow·n fur niture . Foam t ushions, any
size . Cotton, burlap , sw i vel 3 BEDROOM rancY style in
Pomeroy ; w -tocw ca r pe ting, 2
bases, zi pper , dacron , web· .
ca r garage attached . air bing ,
well .
Pomer oy · cond itioned ; pl1one 992-5593 .
Recover y, 622 E , Ma in St .,
5-20-6tc
phone 992 7554 .
5-3·241p
2 BEDROOM h ouse on SO ft . lot
on river . $9000 for house. With
NEW 2 pc. Ear ly Am erican
furn i ture $10 ,000 . Ph one 992l iving room suite wi th wood
5532 an.y lim e. Ca n be seen
trim and r eversi bl e zippered
after 4 p . m .
cus h ion~. This week qn ly
5- 17-6tc
$ 1&lt;1 9 .95 . Cash ahd carry .
~------Pomeroy Recove ry , 622 E. N E W Hpm es on your lot or ours.
Ma in 51., Pomeroy . Phone
NO MON EY
DOWN t ar
992-7554 .
qualified buye·r s using F .H.
A9m . loan. (Cl osing costs
on l y .) A var ie t y of Hoar pl ans
.GO LF CARTS and 3-whee l
various
fi nan ci ng
w i th
tracks ters. gas and electric,
p
rograms
avai
l
able
. We
for .
fa rm ,
ho m e
and
specia li ze in wor king w ith
warehou se uses . $75 and up .
AE P Co. employees although
Phone 1-875-2362 .
we are ava ilable to all. M ei gs
5- 17·6fc
Deve l opm en l Co ., 150 N .
Second
Ave..• Middl epo r t,
BEAUTIFUL
se l ectio n
of
Oh
i
o.
Phone
992 ·5976 f or in flower s, wreath s and ba skets ·
.f orma t ion .
for M emorial Day . Ctitl 's
5-6-30tc
Sf'loe Rep.;.ir , Midd le p ort.
Open evenin.gs until 8 p .m .
5-'2 3-4tc 6 ROOM house with bath and
furnitur e. Inqu ire 992~ 5373 .
5- 1B-l6tp
N E W Bla ck infant ca r seat with
all safet y regulations .
5-23 -3fc

GUARANTEED-

WELCOME MAT

.
FIR'ST

PAW!!

I F 'lORE BROTHER
BUBBA IS COM IN ' FER
A V ISIT, MAW··I BETTER
THROW OUT TH ' OL'

Business 'Services

2 - Pa int damage - 197J Zi9
Zag sewi ng machines . Still Jn
origin al' cartons. No at .
tachments needed as ou r
con trols ar-e bvill -tn . Sews
with 1 or 2 needles , makes
buttonl1oles . sew on buHons,
monograms, and bl ind hem
stitch . Full cash pr ice $38 .50
or budget pl an a0J11ilable .
Etectro -Hyg iene Co . P11one
992 7755.

'

'

BARNEY

i

OWWB

QEYD

HYKRTPKW
ATW

GKI

NGXW
QEY

AE

XGKKEA

HTGIE C.- TWSWK

AT W
HWW

OWSSWD

• Ye•terday's Cryptoquolo : LIFE CANNOT SUBSIST I N SO.

.

L.:.......----__:.:_:=-~~~

'~

'· .

..

&lt;;JETY BUr BY RECJPJ\O CA L CC)Nf'P.SSJONS.-SA MU!l L
JOHNSON
•
(@19!3

Kint! l&lt;~cntllH:}:

!-iXmlicalc, l'nt-,1

�'
lll- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., May 23, 1973

Head Start has 10 centers
Parent. who wish to enter
their children in Meigs

persons listed below. To be
ellgihle a child must be 5 or 6

There will be 10 center s
around the counly including

COW1ty's Head Stirt program
are a sked to notify any of the

years of age and must not have

one in HMrisonville, one in

entered first grade.

Salem Center-, two in Rutland ,

ruur in Middleport, and two at

l 'Wilact any ur the following :

Pumcroy, at 992-5132; Ed

Chaney, Rt. I, Shade. at 992·

Salisbury , Transpvrtation will

Husc Anr1 Jenkins. 808 F.. Main

Rotr1cl!'&gt; , Bux 85, Minersville, at

6949, John Arnott, Salisbury

be furnished .
Medical
and

Sl.,

992-57:12; Margaret Ella Lewis,
B"x 168, Rt . 1, Middleport, at
992-5308 : J ennifer Butcher, 765

Pomeroy at !192-3871:
dental Stcp~nie Niemiec, Rt. 1, Box
examin&lt;:1llon:) and vision and 918, Athens, at 593-3138; Donn.a
hearing testinK will be Ch•dwell. Chesler , al985-3875:
pruvided during: the session. Olive Page, Langsville, at 742l nLer~sted parents may :M3J; Charisse Porte r. Box 486,

Gr•de School, at 992.3404; or
Fenton Taylor, Meigs High
School, at 992-2158.
ilruadway St., Middleport, at '
Friend of ours with an
992-5388 : Vinas Lee, Box 57,
eye for the girls likes to
Racine. at 949-2681; Kenda
go water sheing.

'

The Daily Sentinel. May 23, 1973

EVERYTHING YOU NEED FOR THAT

•

eOPEN
MEMORIAL

MEMORIAL DAY PICNIC

No one can make a jar
of mustard go farther than
a ball park hot dog entre ..

preneur.

DAY
.,
'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SHASTA CANNED POP
COLA
ROOT BEER
ORANGE
12 Ol
GRAPE

'

YOUR CHOICE

Shop Thursday .9:30 to .5 P.M.
Open Both Friday ·and
Saturday
. 9:30 .to 9 P.M.

VAN CAMP'S

'

KRAFT

.....

..

CASUAL SHIRTS

i

Mens Double Knit

Boys Double Knit

DRESS SLACKS

' Small, medium, large and extra large

Boys sizes 8 to 18 in slims, regulars
and husky sizes. Fine ne'!" selection . .

All At Sale Prices

Sale Prices

Sizes 29 to 50 waist. Our entire stock
included in this sale .

Mens

Mens and Young M.ens.

TANK TOPS
Sale prices now on these popular pullover .

Walk Shorts Sale
Our entire stock of mens and young
mens walk shorts including double
knits and blends and cut.offs.

'

Boot Cut lee Riders
Save on these popular slacks for men
. and young men. Sizes 29 to 42 waist.

Regular knit shirts and tank tops .
Boys sizes 6 to 18. An excellent .
selection.

Sizes 6 to 18. Our entire stock of boys
jackets is included.

Sale Prices

Mens

Entke Stock

Mens Short Sleeve

Boys Sport and Dress

.JACKET SALE

Boys Knit Shirts

Sport and Dress Shirts

Sale Prices
Lee Tech-Twill .

WORK UNIFORMS

Permanent pre~s. Shirts sizes 14 to 17.
Pants sizes 29 tb 44 waist.
Save on this excellent quality mens
work ·pants and shirts to match. .

Our entire stock reduced . Solid colors ·
· patterns. Small, medium, large and
· extra large sizes.
·
Regular $2.95 to $9.95.

Boys sizes 6 to 20. Includes our enrtre
stock of short sleeve boys shirts .- An
excellent selection.

Sale Prices

Reduced For This Sale

Mens Lee

MENS T SHIRT

Mens Blue Denim

COVERALLS

With Pocket

Now At Sale Prices

longs. Green .twill or Fisher stripe.

Sizes small through extra large.
Excellent selection of solid colors. Our
. two best known brands.

Heavy weight blue denim · full cut ·
. sizes 29 to 44 waist. Sanforized shrunk.
Regular and extra large sizes.

Reduced For This Sale

Reduced For This Sale
Mens Blue Chambray

WORK SHIRTS

. Mens and Boys

Mens and Boys

Mens Spring and Summer

SOCKS

PAJAMAS

CAPS and HATS

Includes our entire stock of work and
dress socks. Mens and boys sizes.

All At Sale Prices
Mens and Young Mens .

'

Mens sizes A, B, C and D. Boys sizes 6
to· 18. Regular pajamas and shortie
styles included.

Straw hats . cloth hats · golf and
fishing and everyday summer weight
caps.

All At Sale Prices

Save During This Sale

.

,I

·Jea~ Type Slacks

FLARE LEG JEANS

SPORTING GOODS

Brushed denims . . corduroys . dacron
and cotton blends. Sizes 29 to 42. Indudes our entire stock.

True western style· 14112 ounce weight
blue denim. Sizes 6 to 18. Includes boys
regular sizes · slim sizes and huskies.

.DRESS AND
WORK
.BELTS
Popular wide widths, narrower

Reduced .For This Sale

Sale Prices

101/2 OZ. CAN

WHITE
PICNIC
PAPER PLATES
100 COUNT

VAN CAMP
BEANEE s oz.

t

0

WEENEE

CAN
FINE FOR PICNICS

R

CHARM IN
ASSORTED

KRAFT

JET PUFFED MARSHMALLOWS

NAPKINS

. '. . .

160 CT.

'

IGA

Includes entire stock. Baseballs· ball
gloves . bats. tennis balls· badminton
set~ . basketballs . footballs.

widths, reversibles. Boys sizes 20 to 28.
Mens sizes 30 to 50. Excellent color
selection.

Well Known Brands

DAYTIME .

32

oz.

'

TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE SPECIAL SALE PRICES - WOMEN'S AND CHILDREN'S FASHIONS ON THE SECOND FLOOR.
BE THRIFTY! SAVE ALL OF YOUR SALESLIPv_...
ELBERFELDS IN .POMEROY.

.

'

•

R

Save! Sale Prices
Sale Prices

.

0

..

Long sleeve or short sleeve styles.
Regular and extra large sizes. Entire
stock included. ·"
·

Sale! Mens and Boys

( ,_;.

~

JUST RITE

'

Boys Wrangler

.

PKG

32 ·oz. JAR

·'

WORK DUNGAREES

..

BIG 29 OZ. CAN

VLASIC HAMBURGER
DILL CHIPS
PICKLES

SHIRTS · .

Sale Prices

Sizes 36 to 50 in ·regulars, shorts and

Picnic
Cookies

18 oz.

Boys Knit ·Shirts

JACKETS .
Now At Sale Prices

Regular knit shirts and tank tops.
Boys sizes 6 to 18.
An excellent selection.

&amp;

FLAVORS

Entire Stock

Boys Ughtweight

Sale Prices

Sale ·prices now on mens summer ·
weight jackets. Our entire stock is
reduc:ed.

ASSORTED

HOT DOG SAUCE

All

sleeveless shirts. Big selection.

•

'

BARBECUE
SAUCE

Mens and Young Mens

. DRESS SLACKS
Sale Prices Now on· Mens
.Knit Slacks

sizes. Your c:;hoic:e of many styles and .
c:olors.

PORK
BEANS

'

Mens Knit

CAN

'

PAMPERS 30's .

LIMEADE

¢

ALUMINUM
FOIL

18"X25'

�'
lll- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., May 23, 1973

Head Start has 10 centers
Parent. who wish to enter
their children in Meigs

persons listed below. To be
ellgihle a child must be 5 or 6

There will be 10 center s
around the counly including

COW1ty's Head Stirt program
are a sked to notify any of the

years of age and must not have

one in HMrisonville, one in

entered first grade.

Salem Center-, two in Rutland ,

ruur in Middleport, and two at

l 'Wilact any ur the following :

Pumcroy, at 992-5132; Ed

Chaney, Rt. I, Shade. at 992·

Salisbury , Transpvrtation will

Husc Anr1 Jenkins. 808 F.. Main

Rotr1cl!'&gt; , Bux 85, Minersville, at

6949, John Arnott, Salisbury

be furnished .
Medical
and

Sl.,

992-57:12; Margaret Ella Lewis,
B"x 168, Rt . 1, Middleport, at
992-5308 : J ennifer Butcher, 765

Pomeroy at !192-3871:
dental Stcp~nie Niemiec, Rt. 1, Box
examin&lt;:1llon:) and vision and 918, Athens, at 593-3138; Donn.a
hearing testinK will be Ch•dwell. Chesler , al985-3875:
pruvided during: the session. Olive Page, Langsville, at 742l nLer~sted parents may :M3J; Charisse Porte r. Box 486,

Gr•de School, at 992.3404; or
Fenton Taylor, Meigs High
School, at 992-2158.
ilruadway St., Middleport, at '
Friend of ours with an
992-5388 : Vinas Lee, Box 57,
eye for the girls likes to
Racine. at 949-2681; Kenda
go water sheing.

'

The Daily Sentinel. May 23, 1973

EVERYTHING YOU NEED FOR THAT

•

eOPEN
MEMORIAL

MEMORIAL DAY PICNIC

No one can make a jar
of mustard go farther than
a ball park hot dog entre ..

preneur.

DAY
.,
'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SHASTA CANNED POP
COLA
ROOT BEER
ORANGE
12 Ol
GRAPE

'

YOUR CHOICE

Shop Thursday .9:30 to .5 P.M.
Open Both Friday ·and
Saturday
. 9:30 .to 9 P.M.

VAN CAMP'S

'

KRAFT

.....

..

CASUAL SHIRTS

i

Mens Double Knit

Boys Double Knit

DRESS SLACKS

' Small, medium, large and extra large

Boys sizes 8 to 18 in slims, regulars
and husky sizes. Fine ne'!" selection . .

All At Sale Prices

Sale Prices

Sizes 29 to 50 waist. Our entire stock
included in this sale .

Mens

Mens and Young M.ens.

TANK TOPS
Sale prices now on these popular pullover .

Walk Shorts Sale
Our entire stock of mens and young
mens walk shorts including double
knits and blends and cut.offs.

'

Boot Cut lee Riders
Save on these popular slacks for men
. and young men. Sizes 29 to 42 waist.

Regular knit shirts and tank tops .
Boys sizes 6 to 18. An excellent .
selection.

Sizes 6 to 18. Our entire stock of boys
jackets is included.

Sale Prices

Mens

Entke Stock

Mens Short Sleeve

Boys Sport and Dress

.JACKET SALE

Boys Knit Shirts

Sport and Dress Shirts

Sale Prices
Lee Tech-Twill .

WORK UNIFORMS

Permanent pre~s. Shirts sizes 14 to 17.
Pants sizes 29 tb 44 waist.
Save on this excellent quality mens
work ·pants and shirts to match. .

Our entire stock reduced . Solid colors ·
· patterns. Small, medium, large and
· extra large sizes.
·
Regular $2.95 to $9.95.

Boys sizes 6 to 20. Includes our enrtre
stock of short sleeve boys shirts .- An
excellent selection.

Sale Prices

Reduced For This Sale

Mens Lee

MENS T SHIRT

Mens Blue Denim

COVERALLS

With Pocket

Now At Sale Prices

longs. Green .twill or Fisher stripe.

Sizes small through extra large.
Excellent selection of solid colors. Our
. two best known brands.

Heavy weight blue denim · full cut ·
. sizes 29 to 44 waist. Sanforized shrunk.
Regular and extra large sizes.

Reduced For This Sale

Reduced For This Sale
Mens Blue Chambray

WORK SHIRTS

. Mens and Boys

Mens and Boys

Mens Spring and Summer

SOCKS

PAJAMAS

CAPS and HATS

Includes our entire stock of work and
dress socks. Mens and boys sizes.

All At Sale Prices
Mens and Young Mens .

'

Mens sizes A, B, C and D. Boys sizes 6
to· 18. Regular pajamas and shortie
styles included.

Straw hats . cloth hats · golf and
fishing and everyday summer weight
caps.

All At Sale Prices

Save During This Sale

.

,I

·Jea~ Type Slacks

FLARE LEG JEANS

SPORTING GOODS

Brushed denims . . corduroys . dacron
and cotton blends. Sizes 29 to 42. Indudes our entire stock.

True western style· 14112 ounce weight
blue denim. Sizes 6 to 18. Includes boys
regular sizes · slim sizes and huskies.

.DRESS AND
WORK
.BELTS
Popular wide widths, narrower

Reduced .For This Sale

Sale Prices

101/2 OZ. CAN

WHITE
PICNIC
PAPER PLATES
100 COUNT

VAN CAMP
BEANEE s oz.

t

0

WEENEE

CAN
FINE FOR PICNICS

R

CHARM IN
ASSORTED

KRAFT

JET PUFFED MARSHMALLOWS

NAPKINS

. '. . .

160 CT.

'

IGA

Includes entire stock. Baseballs· ball
gloves . bats. tennis balls· badminton
set~ . basketballs . footballs.

widths, reversibles. Boys sizes 20 to 28.
Mens sizes 30 to 50. Excellent color
selection.

Well Known Brands

DAYTIME .

32

oz.

'

TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE SPECIAL SALE PRICES - WOMEN'S AND CHILDREN'S FASHIONS ON THE SECOND FLOOR.
BE THRIFTY! SAVE ALL OF YOUR SALESLIPv_...
ELBERFELDS IN .POMEROY.

.

'

•

R

Save! Sale Prices
Sale Prices

.

0

..

Long sleeve or short sleeve styles.
Regular and extra large sizes. Entire
stock included. ·"
·

Sale! Mens and Boys

( ,_;.

~

JUST RITE

'

Boys Wrangler

.

PKG

32 ·oz. JAR

·'

WORK DUNGAREES

..

BIG 29 OZ. CAN

VLASIC HAMBURGER
DILL CHIPS
PICKLES

SHIRTS · .

Sale Prices

Sizes 36 to 50 in ·regulars, shorts and

Picnic
Cookies

18 oz.

Boys Knit ·Shirts

JACKETS .
Now At Sale Prices

Regular knit shirts and tank tops.
Boys sizes 6 to 18.
An excellent selection.

&amp;

FLAVORS

Entire Stock

Boys Ughtweight

Sale Prices

Sale ·prices now on mens summer ·
weight jackets. Our entire stock is
reduc:ed.

ASSORTED

HOT DOG SAUCE

All

sleeveless shirts. Big selection.

•

'

BARBECUE
SAUCE

Mens and Young Mens

. DRESS SLACKS
Sale Prices Now on· Mens
.Knit Slacks

sizes. Your c:;hoic:e of many styles and .
c:olors.

PORK
BEANS

'

Mens Knit

CAN

'

PAMPERS 30's .

LIMEADE

¢

ALUMINUM
FOIL

18"X25'

�·'
•

•

•

'

'

The Daily ""ntmel, Ma; l1, 1971
'lh· I J.

•

OPEN

MEMORIAL

•••
14 oz.
BOTTlE

. IGA

DAY!.

•

KING SIZE

CHICKEN
DINNER

D
...•...'•
..

PKG•
OF 12

PICK oF THE CHICKEN
16 BEST PIECES
4 BREAST
..4 THIGHS

CELERY

ROLLS

LOAVES

•

LARGE SIZE

. BETSY ROSS

---=-=-=-=--------•
.
IGA
HAMBURGER
·. OR
HOTDOG
BUNS

4 DRUMSTICKS
4 LEGS .

·LONG GREEN

CUCUMBERS

.

'

'

·sLICED E

I-I 'LL

..

.......- ,.. ·-·

·:··

... ---,~ ·:~.

._

•

•
":''

..... J
. .....
'?

'~~

,· "'.

·,

ALL MEAT .

LB.

BOLOGNA .

ELM HILL

1-LB.
VAC

e

PAK ·

PREMIUM
SLICED
BACON

CHOPPED
·. SIRLOIN ~~RE .
STEAK . COO~OUTS

19
lb.

PKG.

OF
· 8's

·fAI.RMONT

BUTTER
•

1-LB. TRAY P.ACKED

•
~

IGA

ICE CREAM

. CRISP GREEN .

¥z GAL
CARTON

.. ·.SOLID HEADS.
\

· · VINE RIPENED.
SUPE~IORS

ALL MEAT
. ____....

FAIRMONT

·oRANGE ·
ORIN
LB. · .

.

QT. .CARTON ·
•

I

'

' ·'

-

.12 oz.·
·
PKG.
•

e CHARCOAL
EA.

10 LB.
BAG

.

· ·69¢LB

CHICKEN LEGS.......

. ·

CHICKEN BREASTS ••• 79¢LB.

. .

LB.

�·'
•

•

•

'

'

The Daily ""ntmel, Ma; l1, 1971
'lh· I J.

•

OPEN

MEMORIAL

•••
14 oz.
BOTTlE

. IGA

DAY!.

•

KING SIZE

CHICKEN
DINNER

D
...•...'•
..

PKG•
OF 12

PICK oF THE CHICKEN
16 BEST PIECES
4 BREAST
..4 THIGHS

CELERY

ROLLS

LOAVES

•

LARGE SIZE

. BETSY ROSS

---=-=-=-=--------•
.
IGA
HAMBURGER
·. OR
HOTDOG
BUNS

4 DRUMSTICKS
4 LEGS .

·LONG GREEN

CUCUMBERS

.

'

'

·sLICED E

I-I 'LL

..

.......- ,.. ·-·

·:··

... ---,~ ·:~.

._

•

•
":''

..... J
. .....
'?

'~~

,· "'.

·,

ALL MEAT .

LB.

BOLOGNA .

ELM HILL

1-LB.
VAC

e

PAK ·

PREMIUM
SLICED
BACON

CHOPPED
·. SIRLOIN ~~RE .
STEAK . COO~OUTS

19
lb.

PKG.

OF
· 8's

·fAI.RMONT

BUTTER
•

1-LB. TRAY P.ACKED

•
~

IGA

ICE CREAM

. CRISP GREEN .

¥z GAL
CARTON

.. ·.SOLID HEADS.
\

· · VINE RIPENED.
SUPE~IORS

ALL MEAT
. ____....

FAIRMONT

·oRANGE ·
ORIN
LB. · .

.

QT. .CARTON ·
•

I

'

' ·'

-

.12 oz.·
·
PKG.
•

e CHARCOAL
EA.

10 LB.
BAG

.

· ·69¢LB

CHICKEN LEGS.......

. ·

CHICKEN BREASTS ••• 79¢LB.

. .

LB.

�I

J.t~ii~~~l~~~~~~~~~~~~iii~i~1i~~t~~i:i:il~~ifi:;~;:~:;~~~;j~~~~1~;~~~~f:~~~~li:i=~~;=~~~~!~l~1~~[;~~if:~~;~~i~i~;~~~~t~~1~~~;~~~1i~§l~§3~:~~::~;~~~=i=[~ffg~~~;~~j~~1;1f:~~;~1~;~!~;~;~~1;;~~;~t~1;~1~m~t~~~~~~~~~~~j~l~~~~t~~t~t~:t~t~i1

-.
t'l\ut. ruuK- M&amp;K lit:L1'10N

The Daily :;entinel, May 23, 19TJ

l~l•

I

VALUE PLUS
GAL

WHITE LATEX

HOUSE PAINT
BLACK PLASTIC

4"Xto·

DRAIN PIPE
TEES, ELLS,
WYES 4"
.

WHITE
CEILING 12"Xl2"
TILE
. 9'X12'
PLASTIC
DROP
c
CLOTHS
EA.

STYROFOAM

'

-.

familv , and rriends were or·

prov1dcd to hire someone to

dinar). .

the almost

at the cor ner of Plum and
Condor Sts. It has been gone

mow the ceme tery :1bout twice
a yea1·. Miss Grucser's molher
a sistt! r . a brother and others

for~otten

St. J ohns

'"".•,

I

-.
·;1;;..

;

29

VOL. XXV

NO. 29

65 LB.

15 Kinds to Choose
From

lf2"XlOO'

~gg

PLASTIC PIPE
SPALDING

. IN COLORS

EA.

~------------------------------···'

Chan(e of shOwers mainly
southeast today . Pa,tly cloudy
tonight, low in the 50s. Friday
variable cloudiness and chance
or showers, high in upper 60s to

Interest.~

mid 70s.

Of The Mei~.~·Ma.son Area

THURSDAY, MAY 24, 1973

PHONE 992-2156

''

TEN CI:.NI::i

Prominent legionaire to speak here
C. William Heacock, 1965-&lt;i6
commander of The American
Legion, Department of Ohio,
will be speaker at annual
Memorial Day se rvi ces at
Pomeroy's Beech Grove
Cemetery following a parade
through the business se·ction.
Serv"ing now as co-chairman
of th e American ism Committee of the Arneriqan Legion
in Ohio, Heacock is a veteran of
three ye.3rs' service_with the
Navy Seabees in the Pacific
during World War II . He attended Western Rese rve
-University and established a
career in accounting.
When business took hi"m to
Columbus from Kent, Heacock
became a member of the

·7 PC. SET

OFFICIAL
LITTLE LEAGUE

BASEBALLS

88
EA

---------------------------------i.·
•

THOUSANDS TO CHOOSE FROM

By United Press International
DELAWARE, OHIO - FORMER ATTORNEY General
Richard
Kleindienst said Wednesday higher standards. in
.
goverrune:nt will emerge from the Watergate case. " The magic
of America is its regenerative , ability ,11 said Kleindienst, who
resigned during the Watergate -investigation and was replaced by
Elliot Richardaon. ·
Although the inVestigation has shown persons in high positions
apparently abused trust placed in them, Kleindienst said, "the
criminal justice system will prove it works with the high and the
mighty as well as t,e poo r and weak."
.
1
Kleindienst, speaking at a news conference at Ohio Wesleyan
University, said he had been "slowly going broke" as attorney
general _and plans to return to private law practice in
Washington. Two of his children attend Ohio Wesleyan. "I have a
wife; four children, two dogs, four cats and 27 fish to support,'' he
said.

' EASTON, MD. (,liPI )- Rep. William 0. Mills, R·Md ., was
found shot to death early today, apparently having committed
suicide five days after disclosure that he had received -.secret
financial aid from the Nixon campaign organization in 1971 .
Shortly after Mills' Washington office confirmed police
reports of Mills' death at 48, William B. Horne, the state's attorney in Talbot County, Md., said Mills' body was found at a
farm near hiS: Easton home and "at this tirrte, there is no
evidence or foul play."

GOLF CLUBS

BUY THEM IN POTS OR BUY THE ARTS
AND MAKE YOUR OWN

Technology not
reached to meet
Ohio's standards

Legion 's Bexley Post 430 and
later its commander . Elections
as commander of the 12th
District, Franklin County, and
Cher de Gare or the Forty et
Eight fOllowed . He was (irst
selected to a state Le ~ i on orfice
in 1963 ."
Besides Leg ion affairs,
Heacock is acti ve in civic and
church work. He was honored
in l96:i for eight years service
as .treasurer of hi s chl!rch in
suburb;.w White ball. He is
treasurer ofA the East Broad

Appliu m.:e Co.
His wife, Cathy, is active in
th e Legion ,\ux.ili ar)• of
Franklin County . They have
three daughters acti ve il) the
junior auxil iary.

BUENOS AIRES - THE FORD MOTOR CO. said today it
has made contact with leftwing terrorists who threatened to
kidnap employes if the company did not send $1 million worth of
medical equipment and suppUes to Argentine hospitals. In
Detroit, the company said Wednesday. it would meet the
demands.
Two employes shot and wounded Wednesday were Luis V.
Giovanelli, a cost analysis directOr listed in critical condition, ·
and Noemi Baruj de Da Rin, supervisor of social welfare
programs, who was slightly wounded in a machine-gun at~ack .
LONDON - PRIME MINISTER Edward Heath, moving
quickly to quash any idea he would tolerate a Watergate-style
coverup, plarmed to address Parliament today on Britain 's most
explosive sex, security and drugs scandal in a decade.
Officials said Heath decided to act quickly because of
political pressures and various seamy stories circulating in
parliament and newspapers . But, they said Heath will not an·
nounce be is setting up a judicial inquiry. The scandal exploded
Wednesday with apublic confession by Lord Lambton, 50, a
fonner minister in Heath's goVernment, tha't he had ''a casual
acquaintance" with a call girl and that her husband had tried
WJsuccessfully to sell compromising photographs of them to
newspapers.
COLUMBUS GOY.. JOHN J. GILLIGAN has asked President
Nixon to declare Hamilton and Washington counties disaster
areas as the result of heavy rainfall and mud-slides during
February and March.
GiUigan said estimates of damage are nearly $4 million in
Hamilton CoWJty and more than $6 miUion in Washington
County, both to private and public land .
CINCINNA'O - COLUMBIA GAS CO. made "significant
( Conoinued ~ n pa ge 6)

will . be held to open. the
Memori al DHY obse rvance
which i.s being t;pon:wred by
Drew Webster Post 39. The.
cemetery servi ce~ at Which
Heacock will speak will follow
the p&lt;irade .

~ce Hateli c report on
emi ssion stlludurds on page 6

No rebuttal

I"'Ja y.

Violation

•
dumping
m

waste found

Ten .fined
by mayor
Ten persons were fined and
th ree others forfeited bonds in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Don Collins Wednesday night.
Fined were Albert Woodard,
Pomeroy, r oslc;, passing a
school bus: Charles Wills, 24,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, ex ~
cessive speed for road tOn·
ditions; Mark Miller, Mesa,
Ariz ., $5 and costs, red light,
cmd $10 and costs, eluding a
police officer ; Patricia Jacks,
·Pomeroy, $5 and 'costs , assured
clear distan ce; James Neece,
Cleve land. $10 and cos ts,
reckless operation ; Herbert
Mille r, Letart, W. Va .; $5 and
costs, throWing debris on the
street;
Ronald Ba chtel ,
Pomeroy, $5. and costs, red
li ght;
Harr y
Butcher ,
Pomerov. , $5 and. costs,. unsafe
vehicle; Harold Crouch, Flint,
Mich., $10 and costs, speed ing,
and Donald Bolen,$&amp; an d cosL'&gt;,
intoxicati on.
Forfeiting bonds were
Harold Reeves, 40. Pom~roy,
$25, Intoxication; Alber t
WeaYer·. r\ew Haven, W. Va .,
$25 b11: :d, red light, and Ed·
ward Findley, Pomeroy, $50
bond, reckless operation.

'

TAKE TOP HONORS IN FlEW DAY E;VENTS - Lorna
Gri ndley and Johnny · Davidson; fifth graders at Syracuse
Elcmen~r-:r. ·were presented trophies Wednesday ul an
awards assernbly for having most points overfill iri a recent
fie.ld day . See Page 4 for more pictu res of awa_rds assembly
winner:-; .

Lions put up
$75 to support
summer theater

I•: XTENDED OUTLOOK

Cha nce of scattered
showers. llighs aYCragill~ 65
tlJ 711 nnrt~ and 70 to 75 south.
LtJws in the upper 4fls to mid

Tl1e Pon•eroy,-Middlepor·t
I.ions CJub l1as voted to' pay $75
Lowanls the appearance of a
Ohio Va lley Summer Thea tre
group in Meigs County this

50s.

SC &lt;I SO II .

The money furnished by_the

Lions Club is a partial amount
c1f the total needed. Other
se rvice clubs t:~rc being invited
Ma X:inc Griffith , ca:-;hi cr, l.r~ (;{)!) tribute tcJ underwl'ilf! the
Pomc(oy Na ti onal Ban k, was thea tre's &lt;:Jppea rance .
elt.:l·lcd vice prcs iden~ .of the
Don Pca rch, pre s i d ent,~
Ohio Valley Chapter or the presi din g ove r a bu sin ess
Amcric:m Instituto of Banking S(;Ssion fo llowing lunch at the
ut iL'&gt; f:lnnual dinner meeting in Meigs l nn Wedn esday, ank
Parkersburg Tuesday evening. nounced CJ directors' meeting
H.lclwrU
Poulin , assistant · for .Jun e 4 at the Columbus and
'
ca shie r , Pomeroy Nationa l Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Bank, was elected a director of[ice in Middleport. N. W.
fflr the ~ornin ~ . yC&lt;.II'.
Compt.on and i{ob Jacobs were
1\ttendi.ng fr"or'n the Pomeroy n~-·mcd to the flag committee
Nationa l Bank were Edison for Mcmori&lt;Jl Day . ·Guests
H ob st~ttcr, Richard Poulih,
were George Green, Columbus,
Don Nelson, Maxine Griffith, and Don Mullen , Pomeroy, of
J~J an Mc•y , Joan Wolfe , an1l
C. J. Struble. Sixteen attec1ded
Millie MidkirL
the noon luncheon.

· Maxilw Griffith

An inspection at Shade River
State Forest in the Reedsville
Hrca ha s disc losed improper
di s pos iti ll n of sewa ge uc
cordin g to Mei gs County
Sanitarian Char les (Chuck )
Bartels.
Bartels said ~od(;ly sewage
pumped from Forked Run
Sta le Park was being -dumped
over a hill and allowed to run
toward the OhiO River . The
infraction was brough t to his
atlenlion by Victor Bahr, c hi~£
ranger of the forest, Bartels
sJid . Ail inspection was made
Mrs. Sullivan, cha irman of
by Bartels, Fran k Petrie, an
WASHINGTON ( UP! ) - A
the
House Merchant Marine and
engineer with the southeast new campaign to sav.e the Delta
Dis trict Health Offi ce ot Quee n has been lt~unched , with Fisheries Comtnlttee , tllld 'her
Nelsonville i D. M. Smales, o'ne of the paddlewheeler's fans colleagues tha1 ir the bill is not
par k manage r , an &lt;.I Jack im plorin g Congress not to let approved, it would mean that
Westfal l an emplOye of the . the boat "be drowned in a tide " anothfr of our great Amef'i c.: an
traditions will have passed from
park .
of apathy and indifference ."
ll is reported an out-of-town · Rep. Leonor K. Sullivan , D· the scene."
company contracte9 to dispose MI.!·· has introduced a bili to
exempt the last overni ght pas"Grand Old Lady"
the sewage in question is
responsible for the violation. senger boa t stil-l operating in
' ' I am confident that the Con~
Smales said that he told the the United States .from mari· gress can . only resolve to let
company's driver it would be time safety laws.
America continue to have this
necessary to take the sewage to
Meanwhile, in the Senate, Sen. part of her cultural heritage
Nelsonville where it could be Robert Taft Jr ., R-Ohio, sai·d and romance of the past and
dischar ged into a landfill, Wednesda y he and Sen . William that this grand old lady of the
Bartels said. Bartels sa id it is B. Saxbe, R-Ohio, had · been ri vers wi ll not1be drowned in
alSo believed that the hauler joined by 15 other senators in ·a tide of apathy and indifferhas dumped the sewage into a sponsorin~ similar legislation, ence,''. she said.
dried up farm pond on Slate . Taft sJid the Co sponsors in
The Delta Queen has beer
Route 248. A check is being cludct!SenateOemocraticleader plying the walers of the Mis
made on that report. Mike Mansfield of-Montana and sissi ppi an~ Ohio r.ivers for
' Photographs have bee n taken · Republican leader Hugh Scntl some 45 years and now calls on
of Ihe violation.
of Pennsylvania .
p t~rl s in 17 st;1tc.s.
•
.

4

even within the environmental
protection agency - t11at the
technology exi.sls for the ef
ficient removal of sulfur
dioxide from sl.clck gases.
"Three surveys of the s tate
or the a.rt Of . this technology
development have recently
been completed . The first two,
by .nalionally recognized
reliabili ty and resea rch
organizatiOns, concluded that
sulfur
dioxide
removal
techn ology for application to
lat'ge~scc.de . power plants has
not yet been prove n.
'" The third , by Battelle
Memori cJI
[ns tit ute and
commi ss ioned
by
theAmer ica n Elec tric Power
System , by the way, has just
been completed and it:;; fi lld·
ings made avaiJable to us."
(See
se parate
article
elsewhere in today's paper.)
In conclusion , Gill said :
11
The most dramatic and
si gnificant event on the issue of
.s ulfur
dioxide
control
techn ology occurred in April of
this year. A common pleas
Co urt in Pennsylvania, in a
case entitled, Commonwea lth
of Pennsylvania vs . Pennsylvania Power Company,
after a full-sca le trial on the
issue or the present stat~ of the
art of stack gas desulfurization
tec hnolo gy, concluded that,
" All technological processes
pr ese ntly existing for this
purpose throughout .the world
4

25 persons
representing area newspapers
and radi u and telev ision
staf.ions were mlvised by Gills ,
"There i.s a third ·way of
complying with Ohio standard::;
- shut We power plants down.
ThiS last-ditch solution would
create rt1ore problems, induding en\•ironmcntal ones,
than it would solve.' '
Continued Gill: " In the
~~b::;cncc of sulfur dioxide
removal
know -huw and
equipm ent , we have been
applyin~ the 'tall stack' con.
cept, which we pioneer·ed in the
1950s. We build stacks above
te mperature inversion level,
some &lt;J S ta ll as the Emp ire
StG~te Building, high enough to
insure dispersion an d dilution
of thc.sc gases before they ·
rc&lt;.~ &lt;.: h the ground. This resul ts
in ground·level concentrations
t11at meet ambient air standards and ass ure no harmful
cffu (·t..,.
"But, if something doesn 't
give, if there is no relaxation of
these stri ngen t standards ,
certa inly Ohio Power could not
he expected to operate .power
plants in
violation of
regulations that carry with
them crim inal penalties ~
incluUing. imprisonment!
" In spite of a considerable
arr&lt;:ly of evidence to the con
trary , the belief still p ersists ~
Appro~ i1na tely

rather than recessing at the
Senate Wate rgate committee end of today's session until
today rejected a demand from June 12 as had been planned.
its star ·witness, -James W.
McCord had demanded to be
McCOrd Jr. , to return to the allowed to retw·n to the witness
stand to refute a charge that he table after his former attorney,
and his lawyer were out "to get Gerald Alch, testified Wednes~
th e President."'
. day that he had been told
The committee's decisio n recehtly by McCord 's curren.t
was announced by Chairman co un se l,
Bernard
F'en~
Sam J . Ervin, D·N .C., at the sterwald : "We are going to get
outset of the fifth day of the President of th e United
televised hearings by .the
fCo ntinucU on page 6)
specia l sevenman panel set up
to probe the Watergate
bugging last year and other
alleged acts or political
espionage in the 1972
presidential campaign.
Ervin also announced the
committee had decided to hold
an additional three days of
hearings ~June 6, 7 and 8-

4

•

!Continued on page 6)

Campaign revived, to save boat

4

4

4

·I

'

Joe P . Gills, Executive· Vice President, .Ohio
Power Co , Canton, said Wednesday night that it will
be impossible for power plants in Ohio to comply
with the slate's present sulfur d.ioxide 'emission
standard by 1975.
"The technology for removing sulfur dioxide
from the stack gas dOes not yet exist on a com·
mercially reliable basis,' ' Gills told a press con·
ference at the Holiday Inn in South Point.
" The so-called 'clean' fuel s are not available as
a method of compliance in Ohio except possibly on a
very limited basis," he said .

1\ parade at 10 a.m. Monday

ROLL

BLA-CK

99

Weather

PANELING

ROLL
ROOFING

METAL
FOLDI.NG
CHAIRS . .

;:;:;:::::::::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;::::;:::=::::::~::i:~~::::::::::::?.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::=:::::::::::::::::-

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

C. WM. HEACOCK

ELECTRIC DRILL

11lESE YOUNG PEOPLE, at right. armed with rakes
and cutters, are beautifying the nearly abandoned St. Johns
Cemetery off Sprtng Ave. Left to right are Teresa Almanza ,
Jan Van Vranken and Tami Hunnell , with little Tanya
stephens, mascot or the project.

~------~==~~~----~~~~~~----~--~~~--------~~

QT.

EA.

her fami l)' are buried there.
ln fact, her brother, Albert;
Wiis buried there in 1954, which
was about the last time a body
was La ken to the cemetery for
burial. Miss Grueser's nephew,
(Con tinued on page 6)

EA.

2'X4'

--·-- ···

AMERICAN
HARDWARE

4

many many years However
Miss Grueser has $soo whicl;
belonged to the church in a
savings account and from the
interest, plus her personal
conttibutlon, enough money is

of

Now You Know

MOTOR
OIL

K'ngfisher Reel

Clilhbing to the cerneten·.
·
·
one m1ght
surm1.·se that the
path once was a narrow
roadway that may have ac
commodated horse and wagon.
However.
Miss Thelma
Grueser who still has the funds
of the St. Johns Church, long
disbanded said no vehicle ever
used the 'path. Caskets were
hand-carried up , th e: stee p
hillside . Pallbearers had to be
strong. Rest stops along the
way for them, the bereaved

St. Johns Church once stood

Warts are ca used by .8 virus.

GULF
MULTI-G

GARCIA

also is dlfficult.

' • .. l i

'

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

30 QT.

..

MON. ·SAT.

EA.

id

. By BOB HOEFLICH
cemetery location. There is
0
H~gh ~ a ~iU overlooking another a pproach from the
Pomeroy s Sprmg Aye. stands rear of the cemetery, but that
Cemetery, burtal plot for many
Past Porn
· eroy rest"dents. Th.IS
week a grou'p Qf' yoWlg people
began_t~e lo_ng, di£ricult job or
beautlfymg tt.
Small won~er that the ~td
cemetery • which was the burtal
place for members of St. Johns
Church, was abandoned . Access is diUicult. To reach it,
one must chmb a r.ock-studd~
path aroWJd the Side of a h11l
which seems to get steeper
Wltil it finally levels orr at the

~

IIIII

Devoted To The

SUSPENDED

CEILING
TILES

c

OPEN
9 AM · 6 PM

.•!llw.l

New attention
comes to
.
. abandoned· cemetery

Because of her wooden superstructure, however, the boat
violates "safety at sea" regulalions. Twice before , the Queen
has beer) grai:Jled temporary ex
ern ptil;ms Erom the law over the
opposition of the Coast Guard.
Rear Adm . William F. Rca
Ill. head of the Coast Guard's
Orrice of Merchant Marine Safe·
ty. said he could not support
a new exemption bill, betause
"we do feel a re-s ponsibility and
un obligation to assure that the
vesseldoesmeet the standards.''
Training Use
.
William Muste, president · of
Greene Line Steamers Inc.,
which owns the Qtieen. said he
wants an exemption only tintil
a new all-steel vessel is com·
pic ted.
··Qui" big red paddlewheel, the
stCam calliope and our old4

fashioned style has captured the
i'magination
of
IT!illions, ''
M\lster said. "We've sparked a
revival of inte rest in old steamboats, riverboat gamblers and
the colorrul histor~· of our Midwest and South ."
,One reason why it is neces·
~a ry __ to keep the boat operat- ~
ing, he said·, was to use it """"tO
train crews for the new Qu·een:
"The Delta Queen is the only
vessel where they can be trained and licensed in equipment
that is comparable," Muster
said .
Mrs. Sullivan, in urging that
the &lt;:;incinnati-based steamer
be allowed to continue, said the
owners had fireproofed the
superstructure and had installed a sprinkler system to make
the vessel as safe as possible.··

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