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'l' lk' llnll~· S.-nt uw I, MuhUl'JKtrl · l '~nlll'l'tl.\ •( t, ,luly :!5. W7:t

/

Fake cops with real guns _
are
upping the chances for death
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By Tom Tiede
NEW YORK - !NEA l Recenlly· &gt;n New Jers•y a
reportrr in a ban k was challing with the security guard.
The gua rd . in his ea rly 60s.
wa s d i~cu ss ing his r~spon si bil­
ities and pointed lo his .38 cal.
revolver to m?.ke a reVealing
point. " I guess I'm supposed
to use this. but I !)ope~ I don I
have to . I couldn 't hit the
broad side or ~ barn."
The admission: numbing .by
itself, is not unusual. Ameri·
ca. which has for generations
condemned the proliferation
or guns in the erratic 'hands or
criminals, now is beginning to
worry about the numbe rs of
weapons in the erratic hands
o( anti -c rim i nal ~.

New York has of late begun
to weed out ils ·" gun-happy"
policemen . Boston is try ing to
tighten up rules for arms
use by law e.nlorcem. enl per·

art?

Most distressing of ali , per·

MASON DRIVE-IN
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lion who are being issued in- •
creasing Qumbers of weapons . .
These men - numbering '
about ~00 , 000 , mostly volun leers - were origina'lty as signed simple clerical, traffic
or crowd control duties. But
in many towns , they have
acquired many of the . same
responsibilities a~ offictal police officers and lpo. sse members.
The situation. says former
anti·gun Congressman Abner
Mikva ID-Ill.) . is out of control : ' 'Guns beget guns , violence begets violence. We are
approaching In this country
what the Kerner Commission
(1968) predicted ..: our cities
have become armed camps."
Not only must a citizen rear
the bad guys today , Mikva
suggests ; he must fear the
good guys too.

To be. sure . A factory owner
hiring an untrained retiree for
late night security can, in
many slates , arm the man
Double FeaturQ. Program
with a cannon .. An agency
"CRY UNCLE"
security
guard, low paid and
Adults Only
bored
.
can
and often will draw
Oulrageous - Shocking but
.
his
revolver
to shoot at noises
hllarlous.
in the night Recently in New
Rated R
York City a Housing Authority
-PLUs"THE FEMALE"
sentry shol two teen-agers for
Rated R
simple trespassing .. And not
long ago an auxiliary cop in
Dallas killed a burglar with a
shotgun he kept under the patrol carseal.
Mikva says such indiscrititi·
Tonight &amp; Thu~sday _
nate gun use, even if legal,
July 25 -26
is u,nacceplable . And many
NOT OPEN
security authorities agree .
John Horan of the Pinkerton
Friday lhru Tuesdav
Detective Agency says his
July 27-28 -29-30-31
men are " discouraged from
Walt Disney's
having weapons except when
CHARLIE &amp; THE ANGEL
they are experienced and in
ITechnicolor)
hazardous
duty." Otto Yehle ,
A!$0
of !he Renational
director
Walt Disney's
serve
Law
Ollicers
AssociaCINDERELLA
lion,
says,
no
auxiliary
officer
(Technicolorl
should be given a weapon un"G"
less he has passed mental as .
Show Starts 7 p.m .
well as physical requireTonight, Thurs. Fri.
Julv 25·26-27

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MEIGS THEATRE

SPECIAL
ANNOUNCEMENT
New lnterestRates Now Available
At Athens County Savings &amp; Loan

MEIGS BRANCH
296 W. Second St., Pomeroy, 0.

5.25%

Retro·a ctive
To July I, 1973

PASSBOOK INTEREST

.5.75%

90-Day Certificates
MINIMUM Sl,OOO
of Deposit

6.00%

l:Year Certificates
of Deposit
MINIMUM $1,000

6.50%. 30 Months Certif!C3tes
MINIMUM

~5 , 000

of Deposit

Existing Certificates of Deposit Must Be
Exchanged lor the New Higher Rates In
Compliance With Federal Regulations.
It Makes Sense To Save
Wilh People Who Care ...

Bul ne ither approach is
likely to bring quick improvemenl . Anti -gun laws have
failed in ConJress lor dec·
ades. And quahf~in~ people on
rille ranges wtll m no way
reduce the worry oltoo many
substitute cops having too
many real guns.
·
An easier answer , one
which regular cops them selves •suggest, is to arm nono!licial law and security peopie with non-lethal weapons.
II they must be ·givell weapons
to direct tra!lic or guard eggs
in a warehouse , tel them be
chemical stunning agents, ·or
rubber bullets , or any of the
myriad of potent but safe delensive devices now on the
market.
As the New Jersey bank
guard puts it : " Ev~n a sli~g
shot would be better than thiS
.38. How could I justify using
it? What If I missed and hit a
customer • I shouldn't even
have it on. "
tNewsP•PeA ENTERPA1se ASSN.)

Cincinnati man
drowns Tuesday
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Offi·
cials here today said they believe Robert Keith, .25, Cincin·
nati, drowned Tuesday when a
wall of water - triggered by
more lhan , an inch of rain
within a 1f&gt;-minute period swept down a shallow creek
bed at nearby Cummins ville.
Authorities said Keith, who
had a cast on one leg, was
heip\ngMr .andMrs. Vic Addis
ivash their car in the creek bed.
The Addis family and Keith
climbed into the car when it
began raining heavily . . The
water flipped the car onto its
side.
The Addis family cUmbed
out of the vehicle through its
windows, assisted by a group of
lennagers. The car, with Keith
inside, disappeared in the
water.

SOHIO'S income
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ClEVELAND (UP!) - The
Standard Oil Company of Ohio
(SOH!O) announced Tuesday
its gross income for the second
quarter· of 1973 was up 60 per
cent - $25.7 million - ·over the
same period a year ago.
According tQ SOH!O, its first
half income was J48.5 million, a
51 per cent increase over 1972.
Charles E. Spahr, SOHIO
· Board Chairman, said the
£igures were "reassuring."th
Spahr said net income lor e
quarter was J42.3 million com·
pared with $12.8 million in 1972.
Net income for the half was
$~9.8 million compared to
1972's $24.6 million.

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lemns are needed

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MOTHER LOVE oulweighs all else as this Cam·
bodian woman leads her Qhildren to a safer •.rea
aboul 20 miles west of Phnom Penh.
HolzerMedlcaiCenter
VeleransMemorlaiHospltal
(Discharged)
Admissions - Barbara
Susan Rittenhouse, Joyce McMahon, Middleport ; James
Potier; Ed Keller, Clifford Allen Wilson, Shade; Donald
Hayden,Mrs.CharlesHuttand Cottrill, Syracuse; Ed Finley,
son, Dorothy Brookins, Edna Racine ; Linda Bragg, Vinton.
Arthur, Anna Taylor, Gregory
Discharges - Sissie Collins,
Simpson, Gwendolyn Robin· Ethyl Bush, !\osalee Clarke,
son, Dennis
Mollohan, Kenneth Mankin, Dixie
Margaret Johnson, Virginia Snyder, Ralph Werry, James
Dean, Josephine Crow and Stewart, Harold Sauer, May
Florence Crace.
Koenig, Belly Grady.
(Births)
Mrs. Richard Mills, a son,
Gallipolis; Mrs . Robert
Barrell, a daughll!r, LangsMountaineers are good till
the
first drop.
ville; Mrs. Harold Brinker, ·a
+ +harness
+ polilison Middleport; Mrs. Jerry
If they could
Fredrick, a daughter, Long cat hot air, the energy crisis
Bottom.
··would be over.

7-2S.Jtc

Police seize seven
sex· moVIes
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1xon re uses,

WASHINGTON (UP[) - President Nixon
refused to comply today with subpoenas demanding
tape recordings of his. White House conversations
about W!ltergate. A historic Supreme Court battle
appeared certain.
The President chose not to fight directly in
federal court lhe subpoenas issued for the tapes by
the Senate Watergate Committee:

This left it to the committee to ~turt a const.itutlonal b~ttlc in the courts over presidential
powers, which is expected to lead swiftly to the
Supreme Court. The committee will move " very
quickly" l.o initiate . the fight, Chairman Sam J .
~~rvin, 0-N.C., said.
·
Ervin announced Nixon's decision at the sl.;lrt of
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VOL XXV NO. 72

Regatta queen
attended events
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Devolftl To The lntere." Of The Meig•·Ma10n Area
THURSDAY;JULY 26, 1973

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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The Meigs County Commissioners Tuesday accepted
lhe estimates on force accounts
for dust control and lm. provemelllll to county highways as submitted by Wesley
Buehl, highway engineer.
The commissioners ap.
proved dust control for all
county roads, where needed, at
a total cost of $18,045 and 12,000
. tons of bituminous cold mix
and 160,000 gallons of asphalt
and barling at a cost of $81,888.
Meeting with the com.
missioners was Gene Griplett,
a representative of the Ohip

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WHEN IT'S finished Pomeroy's new fife department will
looknkethedrawingahove.Groundbreakingrortheedilice,
designed by Harder and Reed, occurred last Monday tJuly
16), Total cost ofthe building will be $103,263.

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MIAMI - REPUTED UNDERWORLD financial wizard
Meyer Lansky won another skirmish ..with the government
Wednesday when a federal jury acquitted hini of two cotu1ts' of
~ ~ tax fraud.
In 50 years of legal skirmishes, the ailing, 71-year-old Lansky
has been convicted in federal court only once - and that sentence of a year and a day for conlempt of a federal grand jury·is
Wlder appeal. Lansky served three months in jail' in New York
for gambling in 1953, and has served several short sentences on
other local charges.

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MOSCOW - THE SOVIET UNION said today it has launched Mars 5, its second unmanned Mars probe in five days, on a
six-month journey to the red planet. The news agency Tass said
Mars 5 blasted off Wednesday at 9:56p.m. (3:56p.m. EDT) and
began chasing Mars 4, which was launched Saturday.
Tass gave no specific detailS of the joinl mission, but in·
dicated that ~he first Soviet Mars·shots since 1971 would try to put
life-seeking electronic gear on the planet's surface.
"Simultaneous scientific research by lhe two stations will make
It possible to obtain fuller data about the planet and the dynamics
of physical processes that occur in spoce, " Tass said in annotulcing the Mars olaunch.

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WASHINGTON - THE LABOR DEPARTMENT has an·
sweredthe question : Who Is the highest paid labor leader in the
United States? He Is Frank E. Fitzsimmons, the president of the
2-rnilllon-member Teamster Union, who drew $125,000 last yem·,
plus $6,481 in expense allowances.
.
The ,second highest paid labor leader is Murray W. Miller,
the Teamslers' secretary-treasurer, who is p9id $100,973 with
$13,255 In allowanees. The Labor Department issued a list of
Wllon leaders' salaries Wednesday .

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Uve·a·Utt'1e

a lh,ck I
lillie I ayer Of !
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a
oop
oop · .
. Cl like a s or Acrif s- lat bo
Sot! and d"''Ilion t' an ®aery{' uncy
alwa''s Olicate 'ny &lt;usn. 'CIhat
' Popu1ar I' Yet durab/•ons..

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NEW YORK- A FEDERAL JUDGE ruled Wednesdu~ that
U. s. military operations In Cambodia are unconstllutional, and
ordered them halted. It was the first court ruling that the
President does not have authority to l'Onduct wars without the
ilpproval ot congress.
·
U. S. District Court Judge Orrin Judd In his rulir1g provided
that his permanent Injunction holting U. S. action In CumbOdlu
not go Into e!lect unlll4 p.m. F'rlday so thul U1c government will
have time lo appeal.

e, 'n tho

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All are made of Acrilan· acrylic fiber.
Over 60 colors to choose from.

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Be Thrifty! Save All Of Your Saleslips From

ELBE.RFELDS IN PO-MEROY

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Wearing· Apparel For Your Family and Furnishings For Your Home
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JJI':• PoUer' . 81 ' JTac·
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WASiliNGTON - '!'HE BOMBING OF CAMB0f)IA by U. S.
Air Force B5281n 1969 and l970was so secret thul t11e seCI'tllllry of
the Air Force dldn't.evcn know about it. 111is point wus n111dc
. public Wednesday D9l'OnRicllng accounts et.ncrgcd on thc.tlxtcut
to which Sfnate and House committees knew about the tl tublnw
and on just what Cambodia's chlel of stole ut thc time, P.riii&lt;"&lt;J
Norodom Sihanouk, had to do wllh it .
It was disclosed last week lhat the Unlled SIOtcs sccrclly
carrllll out 3,630 m2 sorlles dropping 100,000 tons of bombs 011
C8mbodialrom March, 1969, until May, 1970, While lhOPenlnlt&lt;ln
kept lai!Hl records to make It appea~ the r1ti&lt;J.ot wct·c In South
(Continued On PHKC 12) .
·
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A net total of $42,538,054.23
was allocated in July to Ohio's
city, exempted village and
local school districts, siate
auditor Joseph T. Ferguson
repor~ today.
.. .., .
A total of $186,934,76 was
received In Meigs County. The
following Ia a breakdown of
state subsidy paymenlll to each
school district and county
board of educa lion, net
payment : Eastern Local
School District, $40,071.93;
Meigs Local School Dislrlct,
$110,882.46; Southern Local
School District, $3~ , 980 . 37;
direct allotment to county
board, amOunt not included In
the net Iota!, $3,807.43.
The gross July State School
Found.ation subsidy paymen't
amounted to $61,132,699.67.
However, the actual amounts
the school districts received
were reduced by direct sUite
payments to the leachers and
schwl employes retirement
systems and to the county
boards of education.
The
State
Teachers
Retirement System received
$14,I21l182.87, and the School
Employes Retirement System
received $3,024,474. As the
employers snare of the pension
programs, Ferguson said the
88 county boards of educalion
shared in $I,443,688.57 for lhe
month.

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Foundation
funds are
announced

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in 3 .of today's ·
most popular colors

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PHONE 992-21 56

TEN CENTS

County accepts
improvem~nt bids

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with our new LEES carpet of Acri/an®

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The character of Charlie
Chan , the Orien!Jtl delectlve,
llrst appeared in the movies In
1926.

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Now You Know

enttne

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the Cox subpoena was signed personally by Nixon . ·
The President's lawyers could ha ve asked Sir len
to invalidate the subpoenas, but Nixon elected not to
start the court proceedings, himself.
Ervin said the committee probably would seck a
declaratory judgment to require the President to
comply with the subpoenas.

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ELBERFELDS .IN POMEROY
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today's Watergat~ hearings, 1:eading a letter from
lhe President.
Nixon in effect ignored the subpoenas for the
tapes, although he also sent a Jetter to the chief
federal district judge in Washington, John J . Siriea,
notifying him of noncompliance with the orders for
the tapes.
Sirica said the letter he received in respect to

A chance o! a lew heavy
' thunderstorms today . Low
tonight In the 70.. ~'rlday
mostly cloudy with a chance o!
showers.

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att e certain

Weather

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SLEEPING rooms In Pomeroy
by week . Call 992 7775.

Teams from Meigs, Mason or
Gallia County wishing io
participate In a pon~c !.~a gue
tournall\enl which will be
played on the Middleport,
Eastern or Syracuse field
beginning Aug . 1 through ~·
are asked to contact Charles
Marshall at 992-6794 or Gene
Mitch at 992-3478.
· There will be a meeting at
the Pomeroy city hall for
managers of learns who plan to
participate Monday, July 31, at
7: 30p.m.

o

BIKE TIRE$ GLQW
CHICAGO (UP! ) - Bicycle
tires that glow like neon In the
refleclion of ·automobile
headlights were IntrOduced as
a bi~ycling safety measure
Tuesday.
The lires, made b~Uoodyear
'fire and Rubber Co., glo.w
because' of refl ective tape
molded lrito t~eir sidewalls, a
co~pany spokesman ~aid .

For Rent

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Brenda Taylor'" i973 Big:'
Bend Regatta Queen, has at-'~
tended two Ohio Festivals.:
during the month of July.
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vw YORK (UP!) - Police in the raids, and warranls were She atlended the Old Canal' .
Se ized seven sex movies from issued lor four others. "Behind Days Festiv· a1 at Canal Fulton,j
theaters in the Times Square the Green Door," a popular sex and the Potlery•Festival
area Tuesday in what was film, was among those confls· Crooksvllle. She p::~~i:~~::~
described as their first major cated.
in lhe parades and took a
such move against obscenity Police said the attacks were boat ride on the Erie Canal,'
since the Supreme Court ruling. aimed at "hl!rd core" sex She plans to attend
·
But one of the theaters films, and not at movies such festivals throughout the
reopened shortly after ·the as "Last Tango in Paris,''
RecenUy she received trn•rn "
ral'ds, showing another print of which
they
said
had
solid
the
l. pa·rtment of "•,g:rletillut~al''
, •
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. ·
,
ue
the film that had been claims to "sertous hterazy, of Ohio a commission as 1973 .
confiscated.
artistic, political or other Regatta Queen signed by
Three.persons were arresled scientific value."
Governor John J. Gilligan.
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soririN the measure insisted It " reswne and pursue..
~o before the
l ~member el!orlli In the area.
lnslead, ,the. council
council lor cunslderalion.
Consult•tionHwent on all day asked tQ deplore the lsrilell
Tuesrlay In efforts to sway the oo:cupatlon on grounds
u.s:delegatiSn In lis opposition violates the U.N. charter.
The Uni~ States objeclll
to the resolution deploring
Israel's continued occupation of lhat and to mention of
Arab territory captured in the "rights and legitimate .,nlr"'!
Uons of the Palesllnlans,''
Six-Day War of 1967.
. II was not certain which of major point o! conn bt belween
the I~ council members would Israel and the Ar~~ · .
sponsor the measure when th~
"'
council meets today . Some of
the non-aligned council mem- Vaughan attends
bers, which include Guinea,
annual seminar
India, Indonesia, Kenya, PanaLeo L. Vaughan, manager of ,
ma, Peru, Sudan and Yugos·
lavia, were awaiting last Logan Monument Co., Inc. of •
minute Instructions from their Meigs County altended the
Monument Builders of Ohio •
governments.
Dipl~matic sources said back· Annual Seminar at Scot's Inn
ers of Arabs who want strong Motel in Columbus, Ohio,
anti-Israel action COUll ted on 13 Monday, July 23.
yes votes in the council. China
The two main educational .
was expected to abstain with sessionS were ;,Bronze and the
the Uniled States voting no .
Memorallst" presented by Mr.·
The United States unsuccess· Herb. Wengler and "Per-;
fully circulated a working sonalizatt!)n or Stock Size·
paper that would limit the Memorials"· by AI Yaeger,;
council to regretting the lack of. retired designer from Rock of
progress in bringing peace to Ages Corporation, Barre, '
the Middle East under a U.N. Vennont.
resolution unanlmously ~;dopted
All consultanta and area :.
on Nov . 22, 1967, and calling on--managers of LOf!.an Monument,
the world organization to Co., Inc. were tn attendance: ~
with company personnel.

UN ITED NATIONS 1UPI ) _:
Diplomatic moves failed to
persuade the t)nltcd Sta tes to
drop its opposi tion 'l'u~&gt;sday to a
Middle East resolution that Is
critical of Israel, thu~ making
U1e !i!lh U.S. veto at the Uniled
Na tions almost certain.
American sources said Am·
bassador John Scali is ready to
veto the resolulion when it
comes loa vote in the Security
Council, possibly on Thursday.
Despile American opposition,
the non-aligned countries spon-

Pony tournament

BUSMEN QUI'ITING
BRIGHTON, England (UP])
_ Nagging women are driving
Brighton's bus conductors and
drivers of! the road. ·
A bus company spokesman
said Tuesday thai many em·
ployes have resigned because
women waiting at bus stops
insulted them, Because of this,
the spokesman said , the
company was forced to cut
services by five per cent.

Thoma . Toby Youn?,, Larry

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sho.ws increase

Noti
ces
OANC~ Salurday night, . ~ed ' s
Clu b. Mason, W Va. Guy

All Deposits Insured to $20,000 by The Federal
Savings and Loan Insurance Corp.
,

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Mikva believes gun-banning
and " de-esca lation"' would
redu ce the prolif erati on Gf
legally carried firearms . Law
and securily authorities feel
the solutio n would be better
han.dled through legisl,ation .
Gera.ld A~enberg of the llmer- ·
ican Federation o'f Police ,
say s he would like to see all
stales adopt similar taws re·
qulring slrtct. training for"Jun
carriers.

There are no reliable statistics on the matter , bu t evi dence suggests the bank guard
is one or hundreds or thou·'
sands of grossly inept yet lega l
gun ·wea rers in the co untr y.
.N ew York's Port Au t hority
police carry weapons whi le
they direct bridge and tunnel
tra ff iC . Priva te detectives
carry sidearms while they tail
and invesligate playbor husbands. All of the nation s esti·
mated 220,000 plus professional security guards are eligible
lor gun duty. Man y amateur
secur ity people , mosl of .
whom are hired off the street,
also carry guns. Today, armed
men work m churches. in buses and at baseball games.

•

.Diplomatic moves fail

me nts : "' II '&lt; not e n o u ~ h to
kn ow how to stiool. A man
with a badge must also know
' when and when not to shoot. "

fessional sec un ty men who
believe bank guards are outda ted . he is a danger . If pa~­
icked. who's lo say how'd he d

sonnel. There are demands m haps, are the legions of "auxseveral cities ·that off-duty iliary
·• police across the na- ~

cops leave their weapons In
the station house.
But the far greater danger,
too seldom considered, .comes
not from official police forces.
Today all manner of non-official security people are strapping guns to the&gt;r .hips, often
without proper tratmng, often
without psychological clearance - and very often without
any real need other than prestige and bluster.
The bank guard in New Jersey is one example. A retired
Army clerk with no combat
experience , . he was hired
mainly as a pistol packin · deterrent. But not only is he not
a deterrent according to pro-

, I ._ .
•-'

~

.

Potter , 81, retired vice High School in 1910. Mr. Pot. preceded' his lathe~ i~ death i~
general ter's blast furnace career 1940.
president and
manager of the Jack •on Iron started in 1911 when he joined Surviving is. one son, J .
and Steel Co., and weu-..nown Jackson Iron and Steel as a Willard (Bill) Potter , Jr.,
area business leader, died at payrole clerk.
Worthington, former editor of
1:15 a.m. Wednesday at his
He was promoted to the Gallipolis Tribune-Times
home on 70 High St., Jackson. secretary and sales manager and Pomeroy Sentinel. Two
Mr . Potter had been ill since o! lhe company, then became granddaughters survive.
last September.
general manager and vice Friends may call at the
At the tlme of his death, Mr. president.
Elsnaugle Funera!' Home ,
Potter was a director of the
.Following his retirement in Jackson, in the afternoon on
First National Bank, Jackson ; 1962, he continued to serve for a Friday. FWleral services will
trustee and executive com. time as a member of the be I p.m. Saturday at the
mitteeman of Rio Grande company's operaling and Jackson Presbyterian Church
College; and a board member policy committee.
with Rev. Stuart Barr an'd Rev.
of tho Automobile Club of
Mr. Potier and the former George Wilmer officiating .
Southern Ohio, Porlllmouth. Mae Pierce, Wellston, were Burial will be in FairmQunt
He wasalsoamemberofthe married in 1915. Mrs. Potter Cemelery, Jackson .
Jackson Library Board and preceded hlm in death In 1958.
past president of the Jackson
Rotary Club. He was active in
the Jackson Presbyterian
Churcli and served several
terms as a church trustee. He
was a head usher for aP·
pt·oximatcly 50 years. He also
Thurman Babcock, 70,.
served as a Sunday School
teacher .
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The problems of Ohio farmers and Tuppers Plains, formerly of
Long Botlom, died Wednesday
Mr . Potter served three Ohio Farm Bureau Federation migrant workers.
at Camden Clark Memorial
terms on the Jackson City has attacked Gov. John J.
- Adoption of recommend&amp;· Hospital,
Parkersburg,
Council during the J960.s. He Gilligan's rec e nl liOns or. migrant housing which
was a two-term member of the reorganization of the Ohio Swank said "reflects th~ exclu· following an exlended illness.
He was born · In Columbia
.Jackson Board of Education Migrant Affairs Commitlee, sivc thinking of the ml~ ·ants ."
County,
Ohio, to the lale Riley
when the present high school charging the · action "ef. · - Passage of rules which in·
building was constructed in the focUvely emasculated the dicate the executive committee David and Peggy McDole
Babcock:"- Prior lo his
,1930s. He held life mem- group."
~ which has the power of de- retirement, he was in the
'
berships In nil Jackson
.C. William SWank, executive cision making for the overall trucking business with his
Masonic bOdies, was a past vice president of U1e federation committee - will conduct .its
conunantler of the Jackson and a member of the commit- busiriess in sessions. "not only brother, Oscar, for 25 years
Comm a ndry , Kni ghts Tem- tee , said new procedures closed to the public, but also to and operated a grocery store In
plur , a char ter member of ihe adopted by the committee other members of the overall Long Bottom.
Preceding him in death were
·Jackson Moose Lodge, and a ignored the !artners' problems, committee."
a
slsler and two half s,isters.
member of U1o Ja ckson Elks and lh e reorganization
Swunk said he was advised , Survivors Include his wife,
LOdge ..
" r c nd e r~ d· il incapable of by the federation 's board of
His professional affiliation~ performing the function lor dlr~clors to conllnue as a Josephine Coleman Babcock,
one brother, Oscar Babcock,
fnclud •d life membership In whl rh It was established ."
mcniber of the committee, but Tuppers Plains ; one half.
the .(l merlcan Foundry
Swank listed three issues to Issue " minority reports
Association and American tn.k~ u up t~t the co1nmlttee's · pojntlng out the needs and brother, George Umberger,
Ordnance Association. During lusl meeting ns ''totally In· problems of lhe j[owers as Otisville, Michigan; one niece,
1\'ol'ld Wnr, l.l, omd the Korean upproprinte" lor tho commit. they relate to migrant workers, Mrs . Charles Karamer ,.,
Columllus, and one nephew,
Conflld ·which followed,. he tee's lw&gt;etlon .
' · since these Issues obviously Ray Justice, Tuppers Plains.
:&lt;Crvetl as a member of the
111ey were :
arc not likely to be respected
Funeral services will be
Silicon Iron Advisory Com- - Endorsement of the by lhe conunltlec ."
Saturday at 2 p.m. at White
luitlce of the Wur Production secondary boycotls sponsored
Funeral Home, Coolville, with
Oourtl In Washington.
by Ce!ll&gt;r Chavez and the
LOCAL
TEMPS
Rev . Robert Wyolt omdating.
~on or the lulc John W. and
Unltt'&lt;l r arm Workers. Swank
Temperature
In
do
town
Burial will he In the Sand IIIII
Mtu·y Wells Potter, Mr . Potier said the ncllons should be of no
Pomeroy Thursday at II a. m. Cemelery, Long Bottom.
WI!M born ncar Wellston, Ohio
l'Ont'crn lo un Ohio commitlce was 81 degrees under cloudy Friends mny call at the funeral
"" Dt•c. G, 1691.
or i) llnl ~ &lt;· d
lo ' d ~ul wtth skies.'
·
home !liter noon on ,Friday.

Ohio Farm Bureau
attacks governor

r

Department of Transportation,
who presented ~" " action
plan" tQ be revieWed by the
commissioners with a response
to be ·made by Aug. 24.
The commissioners reported
lhat the ~ounty landfill Is being
used more frequenUy by local
persons and business firms.
The sile has been checked and
b-ash Is being· covered each
day. No burning is pennitted.
It was reported that the
commissioners discussed the
delayed project of im·
provement of the Hiland
Church Road, which has been
designated as having' top

priority in highway projecls. to
be compleled by the state. But,
to dale no action has been
taken. With the completion of
SR 7 bypass, the Hiland Church
Road was to be the main road ·
into Pomeroy from the bypass,
and would be widened for
trafltc.
At the present time, Union
Ave ., which needs improvement, Is the main road
into Pomer9-y.
Attending were Robert
Clark , Warden Ours, and
Henry Wells, commissioners;
Wesley Buehl, engineer; and
Ma~tha Chambers, clerk,

Area sheriffs
get helicopter
Senator Oakley C. Collins of
Ironton annOIQl~ed today a new
Bell TH-13-T heljcoptet is
expected to arrive in Gallia
C~ty shortly for use by
Sheriff Departmenlli' )n a live
county area.
. The helicopter will be used
by lawmen from Gallla,
Jackson, Lawrence, Vinton
and Meigs Counties for air
duty. This, combined with
sheriff's cruisers, ambulances,
and mounted deputies shOuld
provide the area wii.h quick
service.during any emergency.
Senator Collins said· Sheriff
James W. Saunders was instrumental in obtaining the
'copter which wJII cost the five
counties only $400. The
counties will share the cost of
operation and maintenance.
Although the helicopter will
be shared by all five counties,
it will be based in Gallia
County. It was obtained under
EXTENDED OUTWOK
Ohio Extended OUtlook:
A cbance of showers
Saturday then clearing. High
Temperatures In the upper
70s and In the 80s: Overnight
lows In the upper 50s and the
808.

a Ohio Civil Defense act. F'rilz
Stover, Ohio Civil Dele~
chief, and Sherilf Saunders
have been wfrking on the
project during ths past three

months.

New squadman
hegins duties
Fritz Sisson, Syracuse, has
been hired as a !ufl time em·
ployee by the Southeastern
Ohio Emergency Medical
Service, Pomeroy. The three
other lull lime employees are
Raymond Adams , Letart
Falls; Rick Gilmore, Pomeroy,
and John Wiles, Minersville,
In operation less than six
weeks, the service has answered 53 calls.
Tuesday EMS was cafled to
Shade to assist James Wilson,
9, who had been attacked by a
dog and had severe lacerations
of the head, eye, chest and l~g. He was taken to Vetet·ans '
Memorial Hospital.
Wednesday EMS treated
David" Might and Arminda
Anderson who had been injured
in a two car collision in La ngsville. They were bolh taken to
Holzer Medical Cenler.

neath claims

Mr. Bdbcock .

YOU'll~;

NEVER TOO YOUNG OR 'fQO OW - Wult•or
Cook, Syracuse, who Is pretty spry at 79, waa seen riding a
new thn'C wheel bicycle about village atreell Tuesday
cv c nln~. Mr. Cook wus &lt;'Tijoylng the riding and sold he fell
gnwL

'

•

�.
.•..•,

&amp; TN/NBS

the

1

'

'·

the credit of the finest perfonnance in a play,
BY JACK O'BRIAN
certainly In an English in1port, of any season :
L SELLOU1S,STANOOUTS
Alan Bates in a crushingly dramatic rote; onANDWENTOUTS
.
stage all the time, difficult, mercurial, daring ,
tiEW YORK (KFS) - The 1972-73 Broad- deep in concept and range, and he was up to it
way !heater seaeon ended, It's lbne for an ap- all the. way ; It could have otayed on Bdwy. in-'
prailal, • looking-back without turning into a definitely but its promise of a limited run for a
pillar of salty despair. For the waned season change was true ; that'sthe promise usually of a
w1111't a triumph in the total of plays and
play ·wfth a star who rears a quick flop
musicals nor In any highly sustained quality;
engagement impairs his image.
more than 25 theaters are closed for the swnLack of customers limited the rWl of "The
merandlt's a grand time to get to the few plays Jockey Club Stakes," a delighiful frippery
which were selling wt all season ; plus a nifty
imported from London where it ran ror a couple
new cutrate ticket headquarters · on Times
of seasons starring Wilfrid Hyde-White who
Square (near the George M. CohBI! statue; on repeated this London triwnph at the Cart
I.Dngacre Square actually, the northern end of Theatre for 69 performances, unanimously fine
Times Square) where you may buy tickets for .reviews and unexpected red Ink. "Jockey Club
_ almost all Bdwy. shows earlier on the same day Stakes" is off on a sununer tour with the daz.
at half-price plus a small handling charge. It's zling old gentleman stlll in the starring role, and
an especially great saving for the overpriced if we may stick our enthusiasm into the summer
miJl!lcals (Uj) to '15! ) lind fills a hole in the theater schedules, if Wllly plays in your area, be
Bdwy. history not closed since prewar days SW'e to catch one of the drollest performances In
when Leblailg's Culprice Ticket Agency in the the history of stage whimsy.
'
· basement of Gray's Drugstore WIIS the happiest
Three plays about Mrs. Lincoln carne in and
hunting ground for theater lovers with limited like their heroine, were burled, gloomUy,
cash.
swi!tly. Rex Harrison's certainly inarguable
The ~ows on Bdwy. this season were the acting talents couldn't save th~ desultory
usual attractiVl!ly motley parade: umgest
••.Emperor Henry IV," and it was given an
running of them all, "6 Rms Riv Vu," a Wlroyally hasty bW'ial, without obsequies.
delightful comedy, ran 247 performances - and
"No Sex Please, We're British" did no
still lost its investment. Times past, 100 per- credit to its amusing title ; it was an uncomic
formances could be recognized as tht\ hii1JQinl; farce, dreadful in every department and
we've had shows run 18 months ("Follies" and
collapsed in 16 performances. "Status Quo
''Company" for Instance) which were total
Vadis " came in without an advance sale of
financial disasters. So "6 Rms" vacated its consequence, received a bad notice from the
Jl'emises in a sl)ower of red ink.
contented ogre of the N. Y. Times which decided
Not, however, Neil Simon's "The Sunshine
the management to close it after one Bdwy.
Boys," still running around the 2SIJ.performperformance; a mistake artistically if not
ance mark and solldly In the profit column
financially, for it was one of the most
while, amazingly, considering rave reviews and
imaginative comedies of any season. It should
Tony-&amp;ie star performance by Jack Albertson, and probably will be revived some day off" .
-· '·
not selling out. It's worth seeing, especiaUy for
Bdwy.
INJEREST OF
no!lalgia-freaks who remember with affection
Notable musicals included of course the hits
MEIGS-MASON AREA
old vaudeville days; .for the sl'ilr roles (Sam
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
"Pippin," " A little Night Mwic" and "Irene."
Exec . Ed .
·
Levene also gives a matv~lous performance)
R0 BERT H0 E FLl C H,
"Pippin" is popping along close to the 20(1.
Ci1y Editor
,
are based nagrantly on the lives of Smith &amp; Dale
performance mark and coining a deserved
Publ i5 hed daily exce pt
who spanned all the history of vaudeville in
ur_da~
by The
Ohio valley
fortune. "A Little Night Music" also is headed Sat
Publl
sh tng
Company
, 111
their 85 years together ending, not traglcaUy
Court St... Pomer~y , Ohio,
into the calm seas of black ink, "Irene" is 45
769 . Bvsmess Off1 ce Phone
though poignantly, in the Old Actors' home;
wrapped in Reynolds, Debbie by given name,
Editorial Phone 992which is not the sign of geriatric indigence but of
plus Patsy Kelly and a grand old·fashioned 21 ~~·cond class pos tage paid at
aging looeliness and inability to cope with daily
cornycopia of vintage songs and will be aroWld Pomeroy.
Ohio.adverttstng
. .
Nat 1o n at
life alooe.
another year or so, most of that time with re pr esen tativ e Boll inell i.
.Jean Kerr's "Finishing Touches" had a
Ga lla gher , In c., 12 Ea st 42nct
Debbie - and vitamins take her.
St. , New York City, New, York.
respectable if not profitable !54-performance
···~esaw" is teetering . "Cyrano" as a ,.Oels 1v
~ bered
sc r iby
p t ion
. r ate"
earner wh·e re
Bdwy. run; its impact plainly mild as most of
musical was an expensive mistake and ran 49 available 55 tents per week:
the critics treated it with transparent enBy Motor Route where ca rrier '
losing times; "Dude" lost $1,000,000 for one serv
ice not available : one
thusiasm. It earned back only 15 pet. qf.its
fantastic performance, dreadful ; Melina W
month,
12. By n\ail in Oh io and .
. Va., On e year , $16 , S1x
$100,000 cost ; the reSt marginal history written
MercoW'i couldn't keep "Lysistrata" alive mon ths, months, 18.50; Three
in red ink.
months , SS .SO, Elsewhere $18
(eight performances) and "Via Galactica" was year
; six months $9.50 ; three ·
"The Changing Room" is perking along to
tl!e other $1,000,000 disaster. Risky liuslness, pr
m9nt~s.
S6 . Sunday
Subscription
1ce mclu des
T1mes .
150 performances, well in the black. "Sutley,"
Broadway. (One more column and we'll let the Sentinel.
in for a Umitedrun,stretchedthe limits and was season die decently.)
safely prosperous all the way, considerably to

. BY PAUL ClUBTRJil11l ,
Our schools today are producing YOUII8 !*Pit who CM

spell.
1 nt i:e
Their punctuallon Is dreadful. Their knowledlle 0 11 en .
construction l• terrible.
Good
And yet, many ol the.te young people can write.
heavens but how some or them can wrlte.
I've ' just finished two books by members of the Now
· Generation, very different books. One Is Tom Wo~~e the
Younger's ln-per$ln accoWll of the gradual rise of the nower
chlldren" and the cult of LSD, "The Electric Kooi·Ald Acid
Test."Theother Is a flimsy, but frequently fllnnY:,Ilttle farce on
the American Western, called "Me In the Middle, by an author
whose name I shall mei'Clfully spare.
Now, Wolfe can write. He tries to emulate the trlp-&lt;~~ts. he
7
witnessed
and heard about in his own special v~bulary, which
'
is every bit 8s good, in II$ place, sa John Updike •. or the other
Thomas Wolfe's, both masters.
But his convoluted sentances and rambling pry~e .often
crowd you clear off the trac~ olthe Idea he's conveying, the point
he's making, the emotion he's describing.
" .
And his punctuation ts an ephemeral thing, here orle mbiute
and gone the next. (Inexplicably, he often uses a long row of
colons::::: :::: to convey I don't ltnow what.)
But thanks to a decent editor, he comes acrosa fairly weD.
The' unfortunate chap who wrote "Me In the Middle" cllt11t't
come off so wen. He suffered all Ill• sins attributed above. to
Wolfe, but also just nat-&lt;&gt;ut misspelled a ltu·ge number of words.
He had only a nodding acquaintance with the comma, aeldom
recognized a pair of quotation marks, and was a total stranger to
such old-timers as the semlcoloo, dash, and parenthese,.
And his editors weren't any more literate than he. Most of hiJ
mistakes and omissions remained In the text - distracting !rom
what wlis a slightly-above-average cunedy.
·Who's 1o blame for this decline in proper English, properly
written and JI'Operly punctuated?
Many people would say television - since the Pllpel
Generation grew up getting Its Information out Of a calif de tube,
Instead of a book. The best of all lines In the best of all 1 V shows
still is delivered orally; and leaves the listener with no Idea how .
its author composed his immol'tal prOse, or how be p~uated lt.
That's partially right, in my opinion. but only ~lly. I
·
.
H
1
d
'
B
I
would put equal blame on the ultra-pedantic English IJ,lasler&amp; of
~
By e en an ue otte
the turn of the century, who tried to straitjacket Eng~ Into the
The l.DIIt.Generation
same
strictures as Latin and the Romance lllllgllqe. English
,,!
Rap:
J
When 1 graduated from hi""
school five years ago ' I wss didn't (and doesn't) fit the straitjacket. And these are the people
&amp;''
who taught the people who taught today 's younger authors.
named class secretary. One of my duties was lo plan a class
They were obviously turned off by their teachers,. and they
,
· •
est
•nm•.
reunionfor1973.ltwon'tcomeoff!Cantstirupenoughmter . just as obviously turned off the students now tta:ning out
As you know, w:e were the i'drug crowd.'' The late'~ was worthwhile, but nawed, works of literature.
when dope. took over and if students
didn't do It, they still picked
·
up on the attitudes that went with the drug scene. ·
Iguesst hey hav:en 'I go1 over·th'lS "going~owhere, ''"up
. the daysisn'tl.ike It used to be - even in MY day !
Establishment" thing.
Out of
about
200 graduates, less ·than a
.
+++
·
.
.
dozen are really making it. The rest have either dropped out of
.
If
·
· 1j b
f ss· al
s1ght, or are on we are, m margma o s, or are pro e ton
Rap;
two are for Women's Ub and all thatstu!f, but I
students, still partly on dope. A few are in communes,
getting
still say they're a bunch of "MSflts" trying to take over a man's
· •
di
subsidies from home. Those who got married are etther vor- world! - BOB
1 ·
d
ced, separated or p aymg aroun .
Bob:
Whatl'dlike to know -and this is why I ask you to. print my
Someday you'll SW'ely meet a MS. wbo will show you how
letter - is, are the members .of 1967, '68, and '89 high school MStakenaMr. can be. Let's hope it'ssoon. - HELEN AND SUE
classesalloverthecountrythes8me as MY class members? Did
drugs or the general "don't care" slant during that time have
some kind of permanent effect on these people? Do they still feel
estranged and hopeless - and do they realize they've been
damaged, or 11p they still think they have found the "true way to
THURSDAY, JULY26,1973
FUNNY BUS/NESS .
happiness" by dropping out? ·
~ : 00 - News 3, A 8, 10, 15; Trulh or Con seq. 13; Aroun~ lhe Bend
I
SEE
33 : Sesame Sf. 20.
Could you ask comments either from members of these
~:30- NBC News 4, 15; ABC News 8,.0; I Ore.1m of Jeannie 13;
MEil sHCill\.t::&gt; MIUE
classes in various parts of the country, or from people who know
Designing Women 33 .
/&gt;.ll'l DII'FEI('I:Ni ·
,
them? - FRANK M., Class of '69
7:00
- Truth or Conseq. 3: Beat the Clock 4: Cou rse of Our
111EA1\AEIJI' rH~~ CHICKS
J
Times 33; Dick Van Dyke 4 ; What's My Line 8: Big Red
;,
•
Jubilee 15; News ~ ; Elec. Co. 20; Let's Make A Deal 13;
Frank:
Course of' Our Times JJ .
Will do. But it would take more than one questioo in an a&lt;!- 7:30-HollywOod Squares 3; To Telllhe Truth~ ; Wild Kingdom
10; I'l l See You in Court 4: Lassie 8: Zoom 20: Beat the Clock
vice column 1o "prove" late '60s high school graduates were
13 : Help Wanted 33.
markedly damaged, as a class, liy drug culture attitudes of that ' 8:00 - Mod Squad 6, 13; The Wallons 8, 10; Helen Reddy 3, 15;
lbne.
Playhouse New York Bl~raphy 20. 33: Movie "Whars ·So
Bad About Feeling Good' 4.
However yoW' interesting .theory should stir up con- Kung Fu 6, I$; lronolde 3, 4, 15 ; Movie "Ten Italians For
siderable a&lt;g(unent; for this is sure : what with an unpopular 9:00
On• German" 8; "The Mocin 1$ Blue" 10.
·
war, value shifts, drugs, and the "don't trust anyone over 30" 9:30 - Just Jozz 20, 33.
WIN AT BRIDGE
10:
Oo
Streets
of
San
Francisco
6,
13
;
Music
Country 3, 4, IS; An
syndrome, the 1960s produced a different breed of young person
Amencan Family 33; News 20.
from what we've ever seen before or since. - HELEN
11 ;00 - News 3, 4. ~. a, 13, 15
II : 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, IS ; Jack Paar ~ . 13; Movies "They
+++
Ran for :'fheir Lives" 8 ; "War of Wildcats" 10.
lou r trumps to the king -10· Dear Helen and Sue:
NORTH
26
1;00 - Perry Mason 4: News 1$.
eight. The fin esse also would
I like this really nice girl who Jives in my neighborhood. 1: oo - News 4.
+ AQ64
cos t hi rfl if Eas t won with a
'I' KJ2
We're
both nearly 13.
singleton king.
FRIDAY, JULY27,1973
t AQH
One day we decided w~ would go for a walk along a creek in 6:00 - Sunrise Semir}ar
As soon as the dummy hrt the
.4; Sacred Heart 10.
+ K9 8
tabl
e
M
ordr
ed
had
counted
thewoodsnearby.Hermothermadesurethatthreeorfourother
~ :15 - Paul Harvey 13.
WEST
EAST
points. It was possible for West .. boys and girls went with us! Another time we wanted to ride 6;30 - Columbus Today 4 ; Bible Answers 8 ; Right On 10; Blue
+5
+K10 82
Ridge Quartet 13.
to have one point. He could not around the block on OW' bikes. Again, the whole neighborhood 7:00
'1'109 873
'1'6 5
- Today 3, 4, 15; News 6, 8, 10; Fllntstones 13.
hold two since that would leave
oth ,
·
tJ 52
tl074 :!
7:30 - Romper Room 6; Popeye10 ; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle 13.
Ka y with onl y 15 points and tagged along - at her m . er s suggestion.
"
+1064 :!
+J 72
- Capt . Kangaroo 10: New Zoo Revue 13: Sesame St. 33;
Kay never bid 15 point no·
Don't you think we can be trusted alone together,? I get 8:00
Lassie 6.
SOUTH iiJ J
trumps.
embarrassed leading a parade, Sort of. - RONNIE WHO IS IN 8:30 - Jack La Lanne (3 ; New Zoo Revue6.
• J 97 3
Mord red needed two trurnp LOVE
9:00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15; AM 3; Let's Make A
'I' AQI
Dean 6.; Capt. Kangaroo 8; Mr. Rogers 33: Peyton Place 13.
tricks and saw only one wa y to
t K96
9:15 - Mathema 33.
·
get them . He dropped tho eight Dear Ronnie:
+ AQ5
9:30-To Telllhe Truth 3; Jeopardy 6; Hollywood's Talking 10.
or .spades.
,
9:40 ~ Physics Demonstrations 33.
None ~¥u ln er&lt;ib l e
Mothers
can't
help
being
JI'Oiectlve
about
their
13-year-&lt;&gt;ld
Kay could now have insured
10:00
Dinah
Shore
3,
15:
Phil
Donahue
4; Spill Second 13; Price
Wesl
North
Eon l South
his contruct against all trump daughters. Even in a crowd, you can still get far enough away
Is Right 8, 10.
IN .T.
brea ks by re turmng to his hand from the others 1&lt;&gt; talk, right? ·
10:30 - Baffle 3, 4, 15; S10,000 PyramidS, 10: Split Second 13.
Pass 2+
Pass 2+
and leading the spade nine. but
11 :00 - Live. American Style 6: Sale ol the Century 3, ~. IS ;
What more do you want? - HELEN
Pass 6+
Gambil 8, 10; Elec. Co. 10.
PiA SS
Pass
K ay wanted an overtrick . He
11
:1
5 - Physics Demonstrations 33.
Pass •
led the st&gt;ade jack in an effort Note From Sue :
11
::l0
- Hollywood Squares 3, 4, IS; Bewitched 6, 13; Love ol Life
Opening lead - ¥ 10
to pickle a doubleton lU and the
B. 10: Sesame St. 20.
·
wily Mordrcd had triumph ed
You shouldn't have asked that question, Mom. Age-13 these 11:55 - CBS News 8; Dan Imel's World 10.
ce .
12:00 - Jeopardy 3, IS ; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; PassJiord 6;
By Oswald &amp; James Jaco by for Ion
NEWSPAP ER ENTERPRI SE M)SN )
Local News 8, 10. 13.
12:30 - 3 W's Game 3, 1S: Search for Tomorrow 8, 10; Split
A Canadian reader wa nts to
Second 6.
knOw lf the wily and villainuus
12:55
- NBC News 3, 15.
.
Mu rdrcd ever goLa good resu lt
1:
00
News
3;
All
My
Children
6,
13;
Green
Acres
1
0;
Secret
in the play at King Arthurs
The bit.!tling h&lt;~ s been:
Storm
8:
No!
for
Women
Only
I S.
bridge table .
I: 30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15; lei's Make A Deal 6, 13; As The
West
North
East
South
Tho an swer .to th at IS that
World Turns 8, 10.
I+
while Gala had the Pure and It
- Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 13: Mike
2:00
Pass
rJass
Dble
Douglass
6: Guiding Light 8, 10.
.,
Lancc lot the Pe erl ess were Pass
1
I+
l uss
2:30·
Doclors
3 4, IS; General Hospltal6, 13; Price Is Right a,
successfu l
aga in st
hi m .
):'ou . Sou lh . ho ld ~ 1
10;
Economic
Education 20.
Mordred did very we ll agai nst + •I 46\0A ij4 tK J ! .A K 4 ~
3:30Relurn
to
Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13i
the lesser kni ghts.
Secret Storm 10; Book Beat 20.
Wlwt do you do now'.'
Here we find ~i r Kay the
4: oo - Mr. Cartoon 3: Somerset 15: Sesame Sl. 33 ; Fllntstonn
A- l':1ss or bid one no-trump . We
seneschal in a s pt~dc slam. Ka y
8: Love. American Style 13: Movie "BelwHn Midn ight &amp;
faVor the unt: no.trump bid sll~hll y .
Da wn" 10.
won the heart l e&lt;.~d i n hlx hantl
TOII AY'S QU~; STION·
and in Hn~diiltc l y led hi s three
d: 30 - I Love Lucy 6: Petticoat Junction J/ Merv Grlflln 4;
Abbot! &amp; Costello 8; Marshall Dillon IS ; Wild, Wild Weat 13.
You 1.h1 Oid one no -l rum tl and
ol s p~de s ~111 d i'ine ssed durn ·
S:OO - Mister Rogers 20. 33 ; BoMnza 3; Hazel 8; Andy Grlflllh
my 's qucr n.
'
your pnrtnl.! r hids two clubs. Wtwt
15 : Big Vall ey ~·
· This was an error . Kay could du you du nuw ''
5:30-Eiec. Co, 31: Gomer Pyle 13; Hodgepodge Lodge 20:
not make the slarn if West hold
Beverly Hillbillies 8.
·
6:00 - News 3, ~ . 8, 10, 151 NBC News 13; Truth or ConHq. 6 ;
Sesa me St. 20 ; lnslghl 33.
~ : 30 - NBC News, 3, 4, lS I ABC News 6; CBS News 8, 10; I

\/
'

·~~0~~~ ~~~:~ r~..~(;~;;;;~;i~;~ii~p

EDITORIALS

·Now 'Sallie Mae,'
to help students
The Guaranteed Student Loan Program IGSLP) was established under tbe HiJher Education Act or 1965. \{)provide
young Americans With the means or borrowing to finance
part of their post-secondary edu~ation .
Through the GSLP, a student may borrow up to $2,500
each academic year up lo ~ maximum total of $10,000 extending through graduate school. He may enroll in a variety
of post-secondary educational institutions, including voca·
,tiona! and trade schools.
At the core of the program is the issuance of student loans
by participating lenders, with the loans guaranteed by state
or private nonprofit agencies or insured by the federal gov·
ernm.ent.
The U.S. Office of Education estimates that since 1965
more than three million young men and women att~nding
nearly 7,000 eligible institutions have benefited from these
1Nli1s. About $4.5 billion in insured student loans is currently
outstanding.
From. the beginning, however, the GLSP has been hom·
pered by the problem of " liquidity " . ~ th ere has been no
secondary market for student loans. More-over, loan repay·
ments are often deferred for relatively long and uncertain
periods of time. Repayments do not .comm.ence until 9 to 12
munths after a student completes hts educatton and can be
suspended by service in the military, the Peace Corps or
Vista.
The result has been a decrease in the flow or funds into
student loans. in recent months.
To remedy this situation and lo enlarge the economic opportunities for lower· and middle·income youths to attend
the schools of their choice, a government-sponsored priv ~ te
corporation has been created - the Student Loan Marketing
Association, or "Sallie Mae." .
The new corporation is designed to establish a secondary
market in student loans and expects to tackle the liquidity
problem in two major ways : By lh• outright purchase of
student loans and by making advances to eligible lenders
using their portfolios of student loans as collateral.
Sallie Mae plans to obtain funds for its initial operations
thrw&amp;h the sale of 700,000 shares of common stock in mid·
Aueust. A nationwide underwriting group will be co-managed
by-Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch , Pierce . Fenner &amp;
.Smith, and Morgan Stanley &amp; Co.
The law under which Congress chartered Sallie Mae requires that advances acquired by lenders be channeled iuto
additional student loans, thus enabling more students to ob·
tain the educational financing they may need.

'

..

'

I

'·

'

Starfish get a reprieve
A truce has been declared in the war against the crown-ofthorns. ·
Coral reef buffs will recall that this oversized starfish
experienced a populatioo explosion in the late 1960s and be·
aan eating away at Pacific coral reefs, especially in Austral·
II and Guam. Bounties were put on the creature throughout
the Pacific and Wllold thwsands were destroyed.
Now, report. Smithlonian magazine, evidence is accumu.
Iatini that the starfish may not be such a villain ·after all.
Accordinc lo one scientist, the starfish population may not
really have exploded ; it may simply be that hi the 1960s
more people beaan snooping ·around reefs and thus more
people be&amp;an notfcing the crown-&lt;&gt;f·lhorns because it was des·
· IIJIIIIed as a threat.
It's :JIOIIlble, he say1, that the starfish is simply one of
MYtrlllllltural ways that coral·reef growth has always been
Umlled.
In any case, except in a few places where the starfish is
provebly binning a reef, the recommendation is to halt the
trldlc:lllon pro1ram, at least until we know more about
IIIII! we think we are doing.

•

,,

s

~wyou

Television Log

Sir Mordred dupes Sir Kay

uaa:l :1•Mwmn

Sports
·Desk

1

HIRAM, Ohio (UP! ) Cleveland Browna' bead Coach
Nick Skorlch gave hla rookies
encouragement and hla veter•
81111 a warning Wed.nelday,
aarm. many starting J)OIIItlona
w.ere atiU in doubt.
By Denny Fobes
Skorlch aaii'i be would not
•
name vettrw whole jobs •were
In je~dy ; but Indicated thOle
Involved
include guards, offen'
The announcement during the All.Star game Tuesday night
: that NBC will be on the scene with cameras wlilrltng when Hank sive and defensive enda and
• Aaron blasts numbers 714 and 716 is a welcome one. Bulletins running backa.
"This doesn't 111ean !Alroy
have !Jeen used on television for years, covering every aspect of
Amerlclin IHe - assasinations, tornadoes, rlota; deaths of Kelly Isn't going to run juat
becauae of Greg Pruitt coming
famous people - but never a great sporting feat.
Finally, NBC has stated that a camera crew will follow in, but there are a numbe~_of
, Aaron, g&amp;me by game, atbat by atbat, and !wing by swing, from other running backa (veterana
; the time he gets within striking distance of Ruth's record until he and rookies) who are fighti"l!
: b-eaks it. At that historic moment, aU .programming will be lor jobs," the coach said. "And
: interrupted, and vide&lt;Hape replays of one of the greatest it doesn't mean that Pllte
Adamll will move in at guard
moments in athletic history wut fill the airways.
Blil when number 715 sails over the fence, will Henry Aaron, immediately. But It does mean
.
•for too long one of the most unheralded athleles ill the world, be he'll have the opportunity to
win the poaiUon juat like
the 'ho"'ie run king' of our national past Ume.
·
·• !think not ; and for one reason. Hank ABron has already been everyone else."
One rookie expected to win a
' lo bat nearly 3,000 more times than Babe Ruth. An astonishing
starting
poaiUonla wide receiv' figure, it unfortunately detracts from the amazing feat that .
, Aaron wUI certainly accomplish before this season ends. True, er Steve Holden cl Arizona
,_Aaron will be the king in one respect - he'll have parked more State, Cleveland's first draft
~balls over more fences than any player has, or poasibly ever wlll. choice. Holden, Pruitt and
;BUt to take over 3,000 more at bats than Ruth to do it, leaves no Adams are currently in Chicago
doubt in lnany minds that the Babe will still be, and may always preparing for the College All·
Star game.
be, the King of Baseball.
Four veterw are still
•
GRID NOTES ~ It's a weUkno\vn fact that coaches around bothered by injuries as ttalnlng
:here don't like to make any forecasts on their teams' pqsslble camp fast approaches · the
' performance this year, b~t Coach C. L. (Johnny) Ecker went out
'.on a limb when the question of Gallia Academy's chances was
put lohlm. Hisreply -"We'llshow up for every game, if the bus
...
doesn't break down."
.
• . I

....

.

new
Thephase.
morning stars are
Mercury, Mars, Jupiter and
SatW'n.
The evening star Is Venus.
Those born on this date are
Wlder the sign of Leo.
Irish playwright George Bernard Shaw was born July 26,
1856.
~

•

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

·:-="' - - -

..

thur 'I'Jls named
World War
II•
commander
of United
States
forces In the Philippines.
In 1967, four days of racial
rioting In Detroit ended with 311
dead.
''"
Wat~r111te
thlnglen't /uet 1
In 1971, Apollo 15 ~lasted off "How do we know thla c
diversionary
tactic
to
try
tb
t1ke
our
mlndl off In•
lor the moon with astronauts
flit/Of'."
David Scott, James Irwin and
Alfred Worden aboard.

-

r

-

"'"""'"~

•

or

the

e~hlbttlon

lle&amp;IGII.

Jim Qlpelind, knocked out of
the starting center slot In last
year'• regular season opener by
a dlalocated hlp ~s 8 pulled
groin muscle. '
"The doclol: said this is all
the altermath of the hlp
Injury," Skorlch aald. "It's
going to be thla wa~ Wltll he
geta It rebuilt fully. Jim's going
to have to go through the
seaiOII with problema. He'll
ha e to set the pace on how
m:Ch he can do "
Walter Jo~on pulled a
hamstring muscle just before
camp opened and Irritated It
the first da of r ell
b1
was In fJ; dr~.: f:· d:e
afternoon practice Wednesday ,
Wide receiver Frank Pitt.
suff ring ' 1
a hamstrlnti
pu)le 8 ~
k d
,_ ' ted to
nee
an leda
.. cera
ngue, was expec
to be ready for today's drlils.
Runnln ba k Bo Sc 0It is
. g c
~ow
working with the o:nse ~~
011
!on ~r~ed AP:•
0
tend use a s a
c es
on.
Linebacker Dale Undsay bas
a sore ~ee injured in last
Saturdays scrimmage, but he
bas been well enough to run
sprints.
,.

:!

•

zn
tourney finals
1

'

Things you never wanted to know, but y0u're going.to now There's rumor floating around the Ohio Valley Pubiiabing Co. ·
that a new forecaster will be .on the scene for the high school
;foot hall season, . Hope he's better than the two 'fearle$
It will be 'Green and Rio · The flnallata are two of 36
· :forecasters' that have graced tb~ pages in recent years.
Grande of the Ohio Valley · teams which began action July
•
·'
League Little League in the 9 for the 1973 title.
: One of the most lopsided coUege football games in hiStory championshiP gjlme of the 15th
Green reached the finals by
;occured Oct. 7, 1916, when Georgia Tech nipped Cmnberl!lnd anpual Kyger Creek Little downing the Gallipolis Indians
: College,~- 1'm new around here, ao this may be a stllpid League baseball tournament at H. GaiUpoUs Red Sox 8-1,
:question, but Is Cumberland near Wellston?
-·
7:15 this evening,
Salem 17-5, Pt. Pleasant
'
Green ousted the Middleport Kiwanis :&gt;-1, and Middleport
'
,
The last scoreless tie in a professional football game WIIS Indians 8-4 and Rio Grande Indians 8-4,
:way back in 1943 when the New York Giants and Detroit Lions downed the Gallipoils Cubs, 14Rio Grande reached the
;battled to a ~ standoff.
2 In semifinal action.
finals
by
eliminating
Pomeroy's Giants, 11-7, Racine
25-4, Frulha Phtirmacy of Pt.
Pleasant ~•.Vinton 12-4, and
the Gallipoils Cubs, 14-2,
··
Prior to the
. championship
earlier suspended game, are end sometime in the wee hours
By FRED McMANE
Wt this evening, the Mld.
scheduled in both major lea- 0 f FridaYmonung.
UP! Sporta Writer .
· ·
d G Ill I'
Only six of the 25 major , dlepoft Indians an
a p~ IS
The three days of leisure for go~.
Cuba
will
battle
for
consolation
There are seven twi-night Ieague teams will en joY the bon
major leaguers ends ·abruptly
t 6 • I · k·.
the
Ia
·
just
e
ors
a
o
c
oc
on
.
I
f
0
00
doubleheaders
scheduled
In
today··in what is undoubtedly
uxury
P Y1118
ld
rial
the ·~ongest day" of baseball both leagues-four in the game today. Houston is at Los · James B. Harre Memo
National and three in the Angeles tonight in the only· Field at Ky~er Creek.
in history.
Blankenship was credited .
Those players who didn 'I American League-plus an aft- single game on the Natlooal ·
participate in Tuesday night's ernoon doubleheader at San League schedule and Detroit with Green's win over the
All .Star game enjoyed a three- Francisco and the completion hosts Boeton and New York __Middleport Indians. Hindy was
day holiday this week-a most of a suspended game from entertains Milwaukee tonight
welcome respite in this age of April :it followed by a regularly in American League activity:
E;lsewhere, It's San Diego at
162 games and cross-country . scheduled single game at
San Francisco for an afternoon
travel-but It's back to work on Oticago's Wrigley Field.
The Hit 'n Misses girls softThe day's activity begins at doubleheader, Pltllburgh at
a full scale today as 21 games,
including the completion of an 1:30 p.m. EDT and lig~res to Chicago for the suspended . ball team divided a pair of
game plus a single contest and games this past weekend In the
Mootreitl at Philadelphia, New Pl. Pleasant Girls League,
York at St. Louis and Atlanta · winning easily over the
at Cindnnali for twl-nigbt . Jaycees, 27-2, and then being
doubleheaders in National . edged by Johnson's Market, 14League games.
12, for their first loss of· the
In the American League; seclind round. .
California is at Texas, Chicago . In the Jaycees' game,
at Kansaa City, Oakland at Debbie West paced the hitters
Minnesota and Clevelantl at with 3 /lome runs, while JUI
Ballbnore for twl-night ·dou- Warner had a homer and 4
bleheaders.
singles.
The second half of the
Other hitters were Nancy
campaign promises to offer Crow a single, double and
more drama than the Water- home run, Demaris Ash, Trina
gate hearings as cloae pennant FelTeD and Debbie Roush,
races are prevalent in both each 3 1inglea, and Lee Ord,
divlsloos cl each league.
Karen Guinther, Rhonda West

a

'Longest day' ·be~s

Save

"LUCITE" House Paint
• Shown to last longer
than other leading paints
• Dries to a protective sh"t
• Seals out the weather
• Soap and water clean-up
.
Houn: 7o.m. lol1JO p.m. Dllily
77J·lll3
MASON, W.VA.
7a .m. to' p.m. Frldoy &amp; ~f"urdoy

..

boast
lendDodgers
of any
The the
Losbiggest
Angeles
divlaloo front runner with a 5 l'.r
game advantage over the
Cincinnati Reds In the NL
West, but that is hardly an
Insurmountable lead and the
NL West figurel to be a three,
or possibly four-team race,
additionally involving San
Francisco and HoUJton, before
the sea1011 ends.
St. Louis, which started
slowly, has crept into first
place In the NL Ea!l, but there
is only a 1 l'.r game bulge
separating all six teams in that
divl1lon .

CAMDiN PARK RISERVED
SATURDAY-JULY 21th
"
.

Today's

Sport Parade
lly MIIIIHI Klchma"
Ufl Spt~rla Editor

•
CHEYENNE, Wyo. (UP!) - Joe Aleunder finished nis work
lor the day, and some ~ople, only thOle who didn't know, would
say he hid a cinch.
The whole thing took him I""" than !Oseconds.
He had done well, considering he hadn't had much sleep.
He waa alttlng Wlder the white wooden stands Wednesday
talldng about his work while lhouta of encouragement, and some
groans, filtered ~own from the stands above. They .were wal·
chlng other competitors In the 77th annual Cheyenne FronUer
Dltys PI' as they ~all it, ''The daddy ol 'em all," when it comes to
pure old fashioned rodeo.
Joe Alexander, who hnd competed in Ogden, Utah, the night
before and who had then gotten into his car and drl~ennearly 500
mlies so he could get up on one of thOBejman-maurung broncs
again here, was talking about how ~olks think he's a Uttle
soft vpetairs to he doing whalhe's dolngfor a living.
"I gueas the question they keep asking me most is, 'How do you
stand all this streu and strain?"' he said. "You know how some
people are, they think, Olrtst,you're gonna get kiUed. But It isn't
really that bad. You have to know what you're doing wben you
get up there on that .bronc. If you know what y01,1're doing, and
you have a little luck, you can do all right for yourseH."
Joe Alexander, 29, did all right!or himself last year.
He set a record for .the moat money ever won in bareback
ridingwithearningsof~,I28.ThatwaaaUright. Butitcos! hlm
at leBSt $15,000ineJ&lt;penses to win that money. That wasn't so all
ri~t. ,
·
I can t speak for ~erybody on why they rodeo, but with me,
it's 100 per cent for lll(llley," said Alexander.
He makes himself out much more commercial than he actually
is. You can tell that when you ask him about the gold bell buckle
he wears, the one which says, "Joe Alexander, world champion
bareback bronc rider."
"Yes," he says, glancing down at the buckle, "it means a lot to
me. 1 think It wholesales for $500 or something like that, but the
competition 1got itfor is open to the whole world."
What Joe Alexander leaves unsaid is that he's the best in the
world at what he does, and once you see him in action you understand why.
·
Alexander has his own style, which is usually the mark of a
champ.
Most bareback bronc riders lean backwards when they're
trying to stay up for the necessary eight seconds, but Alexander
sits right up on the rigging.
He looks in complete command. He's human, though. He can
be frightened by a horse the same way you can, and he
remembers a time he was during a rodeo in. Ellensburg, Wash.
"I hWlg up on a horse and couldn 'I get my hand outta the rig,"
he said. "I was scared. The only thiilg I could think of was getting
loose, Bu,t I couldn 'I: They took me to the hospital. I had a concussion and was klnda goofy there for awhile, but I don't call that
anything serious. There were no broken bones."
Joe Alexander is one of the few rodeo competitors with a
college diploma.. He got his from the University of Wyoming. ·
The toughest part about rodeo work as far as he's concerned is
the traveling and the physical strain that comes from trying to
stay on bareback broncs.
Joe Alexander is ooly Moot~ and checks in at 1~, but anybody
who would argue he isn't really a professional athlete would be
dead wroog.
He Is paid to engage in physical competltioo before crowds in
an arena, and there are boxers and ballplayers who aren't iri
anywhere near as good shape as he is. His waistline is 28 iliches.
"I have to watch my diet," says Alex:mder . " If a cowboy gets
fat, he's all fin.ished."

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CONSTRUCTION DEPARTMENT
&amp;
.
•
K.V. COMPUTING DEitT. .

UNION CARBIDE TECH. CENTER

By RICK VAN SANT
Paul Brown lo keep Cook out ol'
WILMINGTON, Ohio ( UPI) some drills "au precaution,"
- After three shoulder opera- Cook toaed a few paaaea in a
lions and three missed seasons gymnasiwn at Wilmington ColGreg Cook Is still tryljlg to do lege Wednesday a!ternoon, but
what most people long ago wasn't allowed to lhrow ·in the
thought Impossible- return as Intense outdoor workout. But he
the Cincinnati Bengals starting looked on admiringly at the
quarterback.
bullets !Ired by lh• two
"I'm throwing at 65 or 70 per quarterbacks he hopes eventucent of what I need to do t~ ally to sllrpass-Vlrgll Carter
make it," Cook said at the and Ken Anderson.
Bengals training camp here Carter stepped in and reWednesday. "If 1could Improve placed Cook alter the 1969.
one per cent a day, or even one season, but since then Andel'llonbalf of a per cent, then It bas won the No. I quarterbackwouldn't be long. But 1 don 't ing Job.
always Improve. There have
heen some low days."
As a rookie in 1969, the tall
and husky Cook led the
American Football League in
•
• }
passing and his teammates
voted him most valuabl~ player
· on the team.
'
ZANESVILLE, Ohio (UPI)
But an injury to his right
shoulder led to three operations - Jtinlor high school all-star
and no football the next three baseball players from Youngsseasons for the S.foot-4, 215- town scored four runs in the
sixth Inning Wednesday to poet
pound Cook.
Cook began his comeback a 4-0 shutout over MI. Healthy
early this year- throwing the to win the Babe Ruth league
football daily In hopes of state competition.
Youngstown, undefeated,
returning to his old form by
training camp time. But the now goes to Springfield for
comeback so far has fallen national all-star. competlUon
beginning Aug. 3.
·
short.
The winning piicher, · Bill
1'h• 2fl.vear-&lt;&gt;ld can throw
Sattler,
struck out 11, allowed
bard enough and far enough to
participate in most passing one hit and walked one. He also
driils, but one big thing still drove iii the first run of the
agooizes Cook and worries his game.
MI. Healthy had advanced to
cooches-the arm is still sore.
the
finals In the double
"I wouldn't actually describe
it as pain," the bushy blond- elimination tournament by
haired University of Cincinnati downing Fairborn in the losera
graduate said. "It's sore. The bracket.
soreness is still there and I feel Gary Greenwalt drov-. in the ..
final home run with a triple In
it every day,"
The continuing ailment bas the sixth .inning.

I

Factory Purchase!

•-----------------"1

"ANNUAL SUMMER OUTING~'

'
'

Cook keeps
•
on tryzng

singles.
In the nightcap, Rio Grande
erupted for seven runs in the
first rung to win going away. J.
Lanham was credited with the
win. ChriB Brown was charged
with the loss . The Cubs .
managed only two hits., singles
by Robinson and Griffith.
The winners managed only
and Lisa Allen, 2 singles each four hils, singles by C. Ramey
for a total of 28 hits . Ord was and T. Weiher, a double and
the winning pitcher, bringing grand slam home run by R. .
McCoy.
her league record to 10-1.
In the Johnson's game, the
Misses committed numerous
errors afield, in going down to
their first loss this round. They
clld collect 13 hits, with Ash
getting a home run and 2
singles, Warner a home run
and single, Debbie West and
Allen, 2 singles each, Autumn
Sayre, Crow, Rhonda West and
Guinther, each a single.
Rhonda West was the losing
pitcher. Their league record
now stands al4-l, With 3 games
remaining.
cllarged with the loss. Smith
and Foster had doubles for the
winners. Blankenship bad two
singles. Lynch and Hovatter
each bad a double for the Indlans. Gardner had two

.
zsses sp1lt. pazr

u· , . M"

.edt n

Dream of Jeann ie 13 ; Let 's Travel l3.

The Almanac
On this day in history :
By,Unlled Press lntemation·at
In 1847, Liberia, the only
Today is Thursday, July 26, sovereign Negro democracy in
the, 207th day ol 1973 with 158 to Africa, was declared a republollow.
,.
lie.
The monn Is approaching ~~~
In 19;11, Gen. Douglas MacAr-

beginning

G een R-•lO

· BERRY'S WORLD

7:00- What's My Line 8; Truth or Consez. 3; Beal the Clock~;
News ~. 10; Elec. Co. 20 ; Wild Klngdo"' 13: Tom ·Jonet 15:
Man Builds, Man Destroys 33.
7:30 -. To Tell The Truth 6: Po rent Game iO ; Beat the Cloc;k 13:
Porler Wagoner 3; Young Mr. Kildare 4; Evil Touch 81World
Press 33 ; The Session 20.
·
8:00-S&lt;lntord &amp; Son 3, 4 , 15; BrodY Bunch 6, 13; 60 Mlriutul,
Wa shlnglon Week In Review 20, 33.
8: JO ..... Lillie People 3, '· 15: Odd Couple 6 13 ' World Prtn 20 ·
Bleck PerspeciJve On the News '33; 1&gt;in All - America~
Football Tum 6.
,
9&lt;00 - Ma!terplece Theatrel3 ; Movlea "Cell Me Bwtno" 3 4
S: "The Seven Hills of Rome" 101 "Hoi Mililani" 8; ABC
News Specia l 6, 13.
91JO - Collfllle All-Sta r Foolboll 6, 13.
10:00 -· News 20; Hondlul ol Aohetl3.
10:30- NoW! 3, -4 6, 8. 10 1l IS
11 :00 - News3• 4,6,8,'IO,'u,fl.'
11 ;30 - Johnny Carton 3, •. 11 1 Movln '' Horum sea~um" 11
"The Demon Planet" 10.
I; 00 - Midnight Speclall 1' ' Movie " UndO. r Ceprlcorn'' 13.
I:·15 -. Movlo "The Mou of Dillon" 10.
2:.30 -· News ~ . 1l,

rowns 'vets :
in jeopardy

"Everythin&amp; In Hardware"

POIIUOY

�.
.•..•,

&amp; TN/NBS

the

1

'

'·

the credit of the finest perfonnance in a play,
BY JACK O'BRIAN
certainly In an English in1port, of any season :
L SELLOU1S,STANOOUTS
Alan Bates in a crushingly dramatic rote; onANDWENTOUTS
.
stage all the time, difficult, mercurial, daring ,
tiEW YORK (KFS) - The 1972-73 Broad- deep in concept and range, and he was up to it
way !heater seaeon ended, It's lbne for an ap- all the. way ; It could have otayed on Bdwy. in-'
prailal, • looking-back without turning into a definitely but its promise of a limited run for a
pillar of salty despair. For the waned season change was true ; that'sthe promise usually of a
w1111't a triumph in the total of plays and
play ·wfth a star who rears a quick flop
musicals nor In any highly sustained quality;
engagement impairs his image.
more than 25 theaters are closed for the swnLack of customers limited the rWl of "The
merandlt's a grand time to get to the few plays Jockey Club Stakes," a delighiful frippery
which were selling wt all season ; plus a nifty
imported from London where it ran ror a couple
new cutrate ticket headquarters · on Times
of seasons starring Wilfrid Hyde-White who
Square (near the George M. CohBI! statue; on repeated this London triwnph at the Cart
I.Dngacre Square actually, the northern end of Theatre for 69 performances, unanimously fine
Times Square) where you may buy tickets for .reviews and unexpected red Ink. "Jockey Club
_ almost all Bdwy. shows earlier on the same day Stakes" is off on a sununer tour with the daz.
at half-price plus a small handling charge. It's zling old gentleman stlll in the starring role, and
an especially great saving for the overpriced if we may stick our enthusiasm into the summer
miJl!lcals (Uj) to '15! ) lind fills a hole in the theater schedules, if Wllly plays in your area, be
Bdwy. history not closed since prewar days SW'e to catch one of the drollest performances In
when Leblailg's Culprice Ticket Agency in the the history of stage whimsy.
'
· basement of Gray's Drugstore WIIS the happiest
Three plays about Mrs. Lincoln carne in and
hunting ground for theater lovers with limited like their heroine, were burled, gloomUy,
cash.
swi!tly. Rex Harrison's certainly inarguable
The ~ows on Bdwy. this season were the acting talents couldn't save th~ desultory
usual attractiVl!ly motley parade: umgest
••.Emperor Henry IV," and it was given an
running of them all, "6 Rms Riv Vu," a Wlroyally hasty bW'ial, without obsequies.
delightful comedy, ran 247 performances - and
"No Sex Please, We're British" did no
still lost its investment. Times past, 100 per- credit to its amusing title ; it was an uncomic
formances could be recognized as tht\ hii1JQinl; farce, dreadful in every department and
we've had shows run 18 months ("Follies" and
collapsed in 16 performances. "Status Quo
''Company" for Instance) which were total
Vadis " came in without an advance sale of
financial disasters. So "6 Rms" vacated its consequence, received a bad notice from the
Jl'emises in a sl)ower of red ink.
contented ogre of the N. Y. Times which decided
Not, however, Neil Simon's "The Sunshine
the management to close it after one Bdwy.
Boys," still running around the 2SIJ.performperformance; a mistake artistically if not
ance mark and solldly In the profit column
financially, for it was one of the most
while, amazingly, considering rave reviews and
imaginative comedies of any season. It should
Tony-&amp;ie star performance by Jack Albertson, and probably will be revived some day off" .
-· '·
not selling out. It's worth seeing, especiaUy for
Bdwy.
INJEREST OF
no!lalgia-freaks who remember with affection
Notable musicals included of course the hits
MEIGS-MASON AREA
old vaudeville days; .for the sl'ilr roles (Sam
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
"Pippin," " A little Night Mwic" and "Irene."
Exec . Ed .
·
Levene also gives a matv~lous performance)
R0 BERT H0 E FLl C H,
"Pippin" is popping along close to the 20(1.
Ci1y Editor
,
are based nagrantly on the lives of Smith &amp; Dale
performance mark and coining a deserved
Publ i5 hed daily exce pt
who spanned all the history of vaudeville in
ur_da~
by The
Ohio valley
fortune. "A Little Night Music" also is headed Sat
Publl
sh tng
Company
, 111
their 85 years together ending, not traglcaUy
Court St... Pomer~y , Ohio,
into the calm seas of black ink, "Irene" is 45
769 . Bvsmess Off1 ce Phone
though poignantly, in the Old Actors' home;
wrapped in Reynolds, Debbie by given name,
Editorial Phone 992which is not the sign of geriatric indigence but of
plus Patsy Kelly and a grand old·fashioned 21 ~~·cond class pos tage paid at
aging looeliness and inability to cope with daily
cornycopia of vintage songs and will be aroWld Pomeroy.
Ohio.adverttstng
. .
Nat 1o n at
life alooe.
another year or so, most of that time with re pr esen tativ e Boll inell i.
.Jean Kerr's "Finishing Touches" had a
Ga lla gher , In c., 12 Ea st 42nct
Debbie - and vitamins take her.
St. , New York City, New, York.
respectable if not profitable !54-performance
···~esaw" is teetering . "Cyrano" as a ,.Oels 1v
~ bered
sc r iby
p t ion
. r ate"
earner wh·e re
Bdwy. run; its impact plainly mild as most of
musical was an expensive mistake and ran 49 available 55 tents per week:
the critics treated it with transparent enBy Motor Route where ca rrier '
losing times; "Dude" lost $1,000,000 for one serv
ice not available : one
thusiasm. It earned back only 15 pet. qf.its
fantastic performance, dreadful ; Melina W
month,
12. By n\ail in Oh io and .
. Va., On e year , $16 , S1x
$100,000 cost ; the reSt marginal history written
MercoW'i couldn't keep "Lysistrata" alive mon ths, months, 18.50; Three
in red ink.
months , SS .SO, Elsewhere $18
(eight performances) and "Via Galactica" was year
; six months $9.50 ; three ·
"The Changing Room" is perking along to
tl!e other $1,000,000 disaster. Risky liuslness, pr
m9nt~s.
S6 . Sunday
Subscription
1ce mclu des
T1mes .
150 performances, well in the black. "Sutley,"
Broadway. (One more column and we'll let the Sentinel.
in for a Umitedrun,stretchedthe limits and was season die decently.)
safely prosperous all the way, considerably to

. BY PAUL ClUBTRJil11l ,
Our schools today are producing YOUII8 !*Pit who CM

spell.
1 nt i:e
Their punctuallon Is dreadful. Their knowledlle 0 11 en .
construction l• terrible.
Good
And yet, many ol the.te young people can write.
heavens but how some or them can wrlte.
I've ' just finished two books by members of the Now
· Generation, very different books. One Is Tom Wo~~e the
Younger's ln-per$ln accoWll of the gradual rise of the nower
chlldren" and the cult of LSD, "The Electric Kooi·Ald Acid
Test."Theother Is a flimsy, but frequently fllnnY:,Ilttle farce on
the American Western, called "Me In the Middle, by an author
whose name I shall mei'Clfully spare.
Now, Wolfe can write. He tries to emulate the trlp-&lt;~~ts. he
7
witnessed
and heard about in his own special v~bulary, which
'
is every bit 8s good, in II$ place, sa John Updike •. or the other
Thomas Wolfe's, both masters.
But his convoluted sentances and rambling pry~e .often
crowd you clear off the trac~ olthe Idea he's conveying, the point
he's making, the emotion he's describing.
" .
And his punctuation ts an ephemeral thing, here orle mbiute
and gone the next. (Inexplicably, he often uses a long row of
colons::::: :::: to convey I don't ltnow what.)
But thanks to a decent editor, he comes acrosa fairly weD.
The' unfortunate chap who wrote "Me In the Middle" cllt11t't
come off so wen. He suffered all Ill• sins attributed above. to
Wolfe, but also just nat-&lt;&gt;ut misspelled a ltu·ge number of words.
He had only a nodding acquaintance with the comma, aeldom
recognized a pair of quotation marks, and was a total stranger to
such old-timers as the semlcoloo, dash, and parenthese,.
And his editors weren't any more literate than he. Most of hiJ
mistakes and omissions remained In the text - distracting !rom
what wlis a slightly-above-average cunedy.
·Who's 1o blame for this decline in proper English, properly
written and JI'Operly punctuated?
Many people would say television - since the Pllpel
Generation grew up getting Its Information out Of a calif de tube,
Instead of a book. The best of all lines In the best of all 1 V shows
still is delivered orally; and leaves the listener with no Idea how .
its author composed his immol'tal prOse, or how be p~uated lt.
That's partially right, in my opinion. but only ~lly. I
·
.
H
1
d
'
B
I
would put equal blame on the ultra-pedantic English IJ,lasler&amp; of
~
By e en an ue otte
the turn of the century, who tried to straitjacket Eng~ Into the
The l.DIIt.Generation
same
strictures as Latin and the Romance lllllgllqe. English
,,!
Rap:
J
When 1 graduated from hi""
school five years ago ' I wss didn't (and doesn't) fit the straitjacket. And these are the people
&amp;''
who taught the people who taught today 's younger authors.
named class secretary. One of my duties was lo plan a class
They were obviously turned off by their teachers,. and they
,
· •
est
•nm•.
reunionfor1973.ltwon'tcomeoff!Cantstirupenoughmter . just as obviously turned off the students now tta:ning out
As you know, w:e were the i'drug crowd.'' The late'~ was worthwhile, but nawed, works of literature.
when dope. took over and if students
didn't do It, they still picked
·
up on the attitudes that went with the drug scene. ·
Iguesst hey hav:en 'I go1 over·th'lS "going~owhere, ''"up
. the daysisn'tl.ike It used to be - even in MY day !
Establishment" thing.
Out of
about
200 graduates, less ·than a
.
+++
·
.
.
dozen are really making it. The rest have either dropped out of
.
If
·
· 1j b
f ss· al
s1ght, or are on we are, m margma o s, or are pro e ton
Rap;
two are for Women's Ub and all thatstu!f, but I
students, still partly on dope. A few are in communes,
getting
still say they're a bunch of "MSflts" trying to take over a man's
· •
di
subsidies from home. Those who got married are etther vor- world! - BOB
1 ·
d
ced, separated or p aymg aroun .
Bob:
Whatl'dlike to know -and this is why I ask you to. print my
Someday you'll SW'ely meet a MS. wbo will show you how
letter - is, are the members .of 1967, '68, and '89 high school MStakenaMr. can be. Let's hope it'ssoon. - HELEN AND SUE
classesalloverthecountrythes8me as MY class members? Did
drugs or the general "don't care" slant during that time have
some kind of permanent effect on these people? Do they still feel
estranged and hopeless - and do they realize they've been
damaged, or 11p they still think they have found the "true way to
THURSDAY, JULY26,1973
FUNNY BUS/NESS .
happiness" by dropping out? ·
~ : 00 - News 3, A 8, 10, 15; Trulh or Con seq. 13; Aroun~ lhe Bend
I
SEE
33 : Sesame Sf. 20.
Could you ask comments either from members of these
~:30- NBC News 4, 15; ABC News 8,.0; I Ore.1m of Jeannie 13;
MEil sHCill\.t::&gt; MIUE
classes in various parts of the country, or from people who know
Designing Women 33 .
/&gt;.ll'l DII'FEI('I:Ni ·
,
them? - FRANK M., Class of '69
7:00
- Truth or Conseq. 3: Beat the Clock 4: Cou rse of Our
111EA1\AEIJI' rH~~ CHICKS
J
Times 33; Dick Van Dyke 4 ; What's My Line 8: Big Red
;,
•
Jubilee 15; News ~ ; Elec. Co. 20; Let's Make A Deal 13;
Frank:
Course of' Our Times JJ .
Will do. But it would take more than one questioo in an a&lt;!- 7:30-HollywOod Squares 3; To Telllhe Truth~ ; Wild Kingdom
10; I'l l See You in Court 4: Lassie 8: Zoom 20: Beat the Clock
vice column 1o "prove" late '60s high school graduates were
13 : Help Wanted 33.
markedly damaged, as a class, liy drug culture attitudes of that ' 8:00 - Mod Squad 6, 13; The Wallons 8, 10; Helen Reddy 3, 15;
lbne.
Playhouse New York Bl~raphy 20. 33: Movie "Whars ·So
Bad About Feeling Good' 4.
However yoW' interesting .theory should stir up con- Kung Fu 6, I$; lronolde 3, 4, 15 ; Movie "Ten Italians For
siderable a&lt;g(unent; for this is sure : what with an unpopular 9:00
On• German" 8; "The Mocin 1$ Blue" 10.
·
war, value shifts, drugs, and the "don't trust anyone over 30" 9:30 - Just Jozz 20, 33.
WIN AT BRIDGE
10:
Oo
Streets
of
San
Francisco
6,
13
;
Music
Country 3, 4, IS; An
syndrome, the 1960s produced a different breed of young person
Amencan Family 33; News 20.
from what we've ever seen before or since. - HELEN
11 ;00 - News 3, 4. ~. a, 13, 15
II : 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, IS ; Jack Paar ~ . 13; Movies "They
+++
Ran for :'fheir Lives" 8 ; "War of Wildcats" 10.
lou r trumps to the king -10· Dear Helen and Sue:
NORTH
26
1;00 - Perry Mason 4: News 1$.
eight. The fin esse also would
I like this really nice girl who Jives in my neighborhood. 1: oo - News 4.
+ AQ64
cos t hi rfl if Eas t won with a
'I' KJ2
We're
both nearly 13.
singleton king.
FRIDAY, JULY27,1973
t AQH
One day we decided w~ would go for a walk along a creek in 6:00 - Sunrise Semir}ar
As soon as the dummy hrt the
.4; Sacred Heart 10.
+ K9 8
tabl
e
M
ordr
ed
had
counted
thewoodsnearby.Hermothermadesurethatthreeorfourother
~ :15 - Paul Harvey 13.
WEST
EAST
points. It was possible for West .. boys and girls went with us! Another time we wanted to ride 6;30 - Columbus Today 4 ; Bible Answers 8 ; Right On 10; Blue
+5
+K10 82
Ridge Quartet 13.
to have one point. He could not around the block on OW' bikes. Again, the whole neighborhood 7:00
'1'109 873
'1'6 5
- Today 3, 4, 15; News 6, 8, 10; Fllntstones 13.
hold two since that would leave
oth ,
·
tJ 52
tl074 :!
7:30 - Romper Room 6; Popeye10 ; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle 13.
Ka y with onl y 15 points and tagged along - at her m . er s suggestion.
"
+1064 :!
+J 72
- Capt . Kangaroo 10: New Zoo Revue 13: Sesame St. 33;
Kay never bid 15 point no·
Don't you think we can be trusted alone together,? I get 8:00
Lassie 6.
SOUTH iiJ J
trumps.
embarrassed leading a parade, Sort of. - RONNIE WHO IS IN 8:30 - Jack La Lanne (3 ; New Zoo Revue6.
• J 97 3
Mord red needed two trurnp LOVE
9:00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15; AM 3; Let's Make A
'I' AQI
Dean 6.; Capt. Kangaroo 8; Mr. Rogers 33: Peyton Place 13.
tricks and saw only one wa y to
t K96
9:15 - Mathema 33.
·
get them . He dropped tho eight Dear Ronnie:
+ AQ5
9:30-To Telllhe Truth 3; Jeopardy 6; Hollywood's Talking 10.
or .spades.
,
9:40 ~ Physics Demonstrations 33.
None ~¥u ln er&lt;ib l e
Mothers
can't
help
being
JI'Oiectlve
about
their
13-year-&lt;&gt;ld
Kay could now have insured
10:00
Dinah
Shore
3,
15:
Phil
Donahue
4; Spill Second 13; Price
Wesl
North
Eon l South
his contruct against all trump daughters. Even in a crowd, you can still get far enough away
Is Right 8, 10.
IN .T.
brea ks by re turmng to his hand from the others 1&lt;&gt; talk, right? ·
10:30 - Baffle 3, 4, 15; S10,000 PyramidS, 10: Split Second 13.
Pass 2+
Pass 2+
and leading the spade nine. but
11 :00 - Live. American Style 6: Sale ol the Century 3, ~. IS ;
What more do you want? - HELEN
Pass 6+
Gambil 8, 10; Elec. Co. 10.
PiA SS
Pass
K ay wanted an overtrick . He
11
:1
5 - Physics Demonstrations 33.
Pass •
led the st&gt;ade jack in an effort Note From Sue :
11
::l0
- Hollywood Squares 3, 4, IS; Bewitched 6, 13; Love ol Life
Opening lead - ¥ 10
to pickle a doubleton lU and the
B. 10: Sesame St. 20.
·
wily Mordrcd had triumph ed
You shouldn't have asked that question, Mom. Age-13 these 11:55 - CBS News 8; Dan Imel's World 10.
ce .
12:00 - Jeopardy 3, IS ; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; PassJiord 6;
By Oswald &amp; James Jaco by for Ion
NEWSPAP ER ENTERPRI SE M)SN )
Local News 8, 10. 13.
12:30 - 3 W's Game 3, 1S: Search for Tomorrow 8, 10; Split
A Canadian reader wa nts to
Second 6.
knOw lf the wily and villainuus
12:55
- NBC News 3, 15.
.
Mu rdrcd ever goLa good resu lt
1:
00
News
3;
All
My
Children
6,
13;
Green
Acres
1
0;
Secret
in the play at King Arthurs
The bit.!tling h&lt;~ s been:
Storm
8:
No!
for
Women
Only
I S.
bridge table .
I: 30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15; lei's Make A Deal 6, 13; As The
West
North
East
South
Tho an swer .to th at IS that
World Turns 8, 10.
I+
while Gala had the Pure and It
- Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 13: Mike
2:00
Pass
rJass
Dble
Douglass
6: Guiding Light 8, 10.
.,
Lancc lot the Pe erl ess were Pass
1
I+
l uss
2:30·
Doclors
3 4, IS; General Hospltal6, 13; Price Is Right a,
successfu l
aga in st
hi m .
):'ou . Sou lh . ho ld ~ 1
10;
Economic
Education 20.
Mordred did very we ll agai nst + •I 46\0A ij4 tK J ! .A K 4 ~
3:30Relurn
to
Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13i
the lesser kni ghts.
Secret Storm 10; Book Beat 20.
Wlwt do you do now'.'
Here we find ~i r Kay the
4: oo - Mr. Cartoon 3: Somerset 15: Sesame Sl. 33 ; Fllntstonn
A- l':1ss or bid one no-trump . We
seneschal in a s pt~dc slam. Ka y
8: Love. American Style 13: Movie "BelwHn Midn ight &amp;
faVor the unt: no.trump bid sll~hll y .
Da wn" 10.
won the heart l e&lt;.~d i n hlx hantl
TOII AY'S QU~; STION·
and in Hn~diiltc l y led hi s three
d: 30 - I Love Lucy 6: Petticoat Junction J/ Merv Grlflln 4;
Abbot! &amp; Costello 8; Marshall Dillon IS ; Wild, Wild Weat 13.
You 1.h1 Oid one no -l rum tl and
ol s p~de s ~111 d i'ine ssed durn ·
S:OO - Mister Rogers 20. 33 ; BoMnza 3; Hazel 8; Andy Grlflllh
my 's qucr n.
'
your pnrtnl.! r hids two clubs. Wtwt
15 : Big Vall ey ~·
· This was an error . Kay could du you du nuw ''
5:30-Eiec. Co, 31: Gomer Pyle 13; Hodgepodge Lodge 20:
not make the slarn if West hold
Beverly Hillbillies 8.
·
6:00 - News 3, ~ . 8, 10, 151 NBC News 13; Truth or ConHq. 6 ;
Sesa me St. 20 ; lnslghl 33.
~ : 30 - NBC News, 3, 4, lS I ABC News 6; CBS News 8, 10; I

\/
'

·~~0~~~ ~~~:~ r~..~(;~;;;;~;i~;~ii~p

EDITORIALS

·Now 'Sallie Mae,'
to help students
The Guaranteed Student Loan Program IGSLP) was established under tbe HiJher Education Act or 1965. \{)provide
young Americans With the means or borrowing to finance
part of their post-secondary edu~ation .
Through the GSLP, a student may borrow up to $2,500
each academic year up lo ~ maximum total of $10,000 extending through graduate school. He may enroll in a variety
of post-secondary educational institutions, including voca·
,tiona! and trade schools.
At the core of the program is the issuance of student loans
by participating lenders, with the loans guaranteed by state
or private nonprofit agencies or insured by the federal gov·
ernm.ent.
The U.S. Office of Education estimates that since 1965
more than three million young men and women att~nding
nearly 7,000 eligible institutions have benefited from these
1Nli1s. About $4.5 billion in insured student loans is currently
outstanding.
From. the beginning, however, the GLSP has been hom·
pered by the problem of " liquidity " . ~ th ere has been no
secondary market for student loans. More-over, loan repay·
ments are often deferred for relatively long and uncertain
periods of time. Repayments do not .comm.ence until 9 to 12
munths after a student completes hts educatton and can be
suspended by service in the military, the Peace Corps or
Vista.
The result has been a decrease in the flow or funds into
student loans. in recent months.
To remedy this situation and lo enlarge the economic opportunities for lower· and middle·income youths to attend
the schools of their choice, a government-sponsored priv ~ te
corporation has been created - the Student Loan Marketing
Association, or "Sallie Mae." .
The new corporation is designed to establish a secondary
market in student loans and expects to tackle the liquidity
problem in two major ways : By lh• outright purchase of
student loans and by making advances to eligible lenders
using their portfolios of student loans as collateral.
Sallie Mae plans to obtain funds for its initial operations
thrw&amp;h the sale of 700,000 shares of common stock in mid·
Aueust. A nationwide underwriting group will be co-managed
by-Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch , Pierce . Fenner &amp;
.Smith, and Morgan Stanley &amp; Co.
The law under which Congress chartered Sallie Mae requires that advances acquired by lenders be channeled iuto
additional student loans, thus enabling more students to ob·
tain the educational financing they may need.

'

..

'

I

'·

'

Starfish get a reprieve
A truce has been declared in the war against the crown-ofthorns. ·
Coral reef buffs will recall that this oversized starfish
experienced a populatioo explosion in the late 1960s and be·
aan eating away at Pacific coral reefs, especially in Austral·
II and Guam. Bounties were put on the creature throughout
the Pacific and Wllold thwsands were destroyed.
Now, report. Smithlonian magazine, evidence is accumu.
Iatini that the starfish may not be such a villain ·after all.
Accordinc lo one scientist, the starfish population may not
really have exploded ; it may simply be that hi the 1960s
more people beaan snooping ·around reefs and thus more
people be&amp;an notfcing the crown-&lt;&gt;f·lhorns because it was des·
· IIJIIIIed as a threat.
It's :JIOIIlble, he say1, that the starfish is simply one of
MYtrlllllltural ways that coral·reef growth has always been
Umlled.
In any case, except in a few places where the starfish is
provebly binning a reef, the recommendation is to halt the
trldlc:lllon pro1ram, at least until we know more about
IIIII! we think we are doing.

•

,,

s

~wyou

Television Log

Sir Mordred dupes Sir Kay

uaa:l :1•Mwmn

Sports
·Desk

1

HIRAM, Ohio (UP! ) Cleveland Browna' bead Coach
Nick Skorlch gave hla rookies
encouragement and hla veter•
81111 a warning Wed.nelday,
aarm. many starting J)OIIItlona
w.ere atiU in doubt.
By Denny Fobes
Skorlch aaii'i be would not
•
name vettrw whole jobs •were
In je~dy ; but Indicated thOle
Involved
include guards, offen'
The announcement during the All.Star game Tuesday night
: that NBC will be on the scene with cameras wlilrltng when Hank sive and defensive enda and
• Aaron blasts numbers 714 and 716 is a welcome one. Bulletins running backa.
"This doesn't 111ean !Alroy
have !Jeen used on television for years, covering every aspect of
Amerlclin IHe - assasinations, tornadoes, rlota; deaths of Kelly Isn't going to run juat
becauae of Greg Pruitt coming
famous people - but never a great sporting feat.
Finally, NBC has stated that a camera crew will follow in, but there are a numbe~_of
, Aaron, g&amp;me by game, atbat by atbat, and !wing by swing, from other running backa (veterana
; the time he gets within striking distance of Ruth's record until he and rookies) who are fighti"l!
: b-eaks it. At that historic moment, aU .programming will be lor jobs," the coach said. "And
: interrupted, and vide&lt;Hape replays of one of the greatest it doesn't mean that Pllte
Adamll will move in at guard
moments in athletic history wut fill the airways.
Blil when number 715 sails over the fence, will Henry Aaron, immediately. But It does mean
.
•for too long one of the most unheralded athleles ill the world, be he'll have the opportunity to
win the poaiUon juat like
the 'ho"'ie run king' of our national past Ume.
·
·• !think not ; and for one reason. Hank ABron has already been everyone else."
One rookie expected to win a
' lo bat nearly 3,000 more times than Babe Ruth. An astonishing
starting
poaiUonla wide receiv' figure, it unfortunately detracts from the amazing feat that .
, Aaron wUI certainly accomplish before this season ends. True, er Steve Holden cl Arizona
,_Aaron will be the king in one respect - he'll have parked more State, Cleveland's first draft
~balls over more fences than any player has, or poasibly ever wlll. choice. Holden, Pruitt and
;BUt to take over 3,000 more at bats than Ruth to do it, leaves no Adams are currently in Chicago
doubt in lnany minds that the Babe will still be, and may always preparing for the College All·
Star game.
be, the King of Baseball.
Four veterw are still
•
GRID NOTES ~ It's a weUkno\vn fact that coaches around bothered by injuries as ttalnlng
:here don't like to make any forecasts on their teams' pqsslble camp fast approaches · the
' performance this year, b~t Coach C. L. (Johnny) Ecker went out
'.on a limb when the question of Gallia Academy's chances was
put lohlm. Hisreply -"We'llshow up for every game, if the bus
...
doesn't break down."
.
• . I

....

.

new
Thephase.
morning stars are
Mercury, Mars, Jupiter and
SatW'n.
The evening star Is Venus.
Those born on this date are
Wlder the sign of Leo.
Irish playwright George Bernard Shaw was born July 26,
1856.
~

•

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

·:-="' - - -

..

thur 'I'Jls named
World War
II•
commander
of United
States
forces In the Philippines.
In 1967, four days of racial
rioting In Detroit ended with 311
dead.
''"
Wat~r111te
thlnglen't /uet 1
In 1971, Apollo 15 ~lasted off "How do we know thla c
diversionary
tactic
to
try
tb
t1ke
our
mlndl off In•
lor the moon with astronauts
flit/Of'."
David Scott, James Irwin and
Alfred Worden aboard.

-

r

-

"'"""'"~

•

or

the

e~hlbttlon

lle&amp;IGII.

Jim Qlpelind, knocked out of
the starting center slot In last
year'• regular season opener by
a dlalocated hlp ~s 8 pulled
groin muscle. '
"The doclol: said this is all
the altermath of the hlp
Injury," Skorlch aald. "It's
going to be thla wa~ Wltll he
geta It rebuilt fully. Jim's going
to have to go through the
seaiOII with problema. He'll
ha e to set the pace on how
m:Ch he can do "
Walter Jo~on pulled a
hamstring muscle just before
camp opened and Irritated It
the first da of r ell
b1
was In fJ; dr~.: f:· d:e
afternoon practice Wednesday ,
Wide receiver Frank Pitt.
suff ring ' 1
a hamstrlnti
pu)le 8 ~
k d
,_ ' ted to
nee
an leda
.. cera
ngue, was expec
to be ready for today's drlils.
Runnln ba k Bo Sc 0It is
. g c
~ow
working with the o:nse ~~
011
!on ~r~ed AP:•
0
tend use a s a
c es
on.
Linebacker Dale Undsay bas
a sore ~ee injured in last
Saturdays scrimmage, but he
bas been well enough to run
sprints.
,.

:!

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zn
tourney finals
1

'

Things you never wanted to know, but y0u're going.to now There's rumor floating around the Ohio Valley Pubiiabing Co. ·
that a new forecaster will be .on the scene for the high school
;foot hall season, . Hope he's better than the two 'fearle$
It will be 'Green and Rio · The flnallata are two of 36
· :forecasters' that have graced tb~ pages in recent years.
Grande of the Ohio Valley · teams which began action July
•
·'
League Little League in the 9 for the 1973 title.
: One of the most lopsided coUege football games in hiStory championshiP gjlme of the 15th
Green reached the finals by
;occured Oct. 7, 1916, when Georgia Tech nipped Cmnberl!lnd anpual Kyger Creek Little downing the Gallipolis Indians
: College,~- 1'm new around here, ao this may be a stllpid League baseball tournament at H. GaiUpoUs Red Sox 8-1,
:question, but Is Cumberland near Wellston?
-·
7:15 this evening,
Salem 17-5, Pt. Pleasant
'
Green ousted the Middleport Kiwanis :&gt;-1, and Middleport
'
,
The last scoreless tie in a professional football game WIIS Indians 8-4 and Rio Grande Indians 8-4,
:way back in 1943 when the New York Giants and Detroit Lions downed the Gallipoils Cubs, 14Rio Grande reached the
;battled to a ~ standoff.
2 In semifinal action.
finals
by
eliminating
Pomeroy's Giants, 11-7, Racine
25-4, Frulha Phtirmacy of Pt.
Pleasant ~•.Vinton 12-4, and
the Gallipoils Cubs, 14-2,
··
Prior to the
. championship
earlier suspended game, are end sometime in the wee hours
By FRED McMANE
Wt this evening, the Mld.
scheduled in both major lea- 0 f FridaYmonung.
UP! Sporta Writer .
· ·
d G Ill I'
Only six of the 25 major , dlepoft Indians an
a p~ IS
The three days of leisure for go~.
Cuba
will
battle
for
consolation
There are seven twi-night Ieague teams will en joY the bon
major leaguers ends ·abruptly
t 6 • I · k·.
the
Ia
·
just
e
ors
a
o
c
oc
on
.
I
f
0
00
doubleheaders
scheduled
In
today··in what is undoubtedly
uxury
P Y1118
ld
rial
the ·~ongest day" of baseball both leagues-four in the game today. Houston is at Los · James B. Harre Memo
National and three in the Angeles tonight in the only· Field at Ky~er Creek.
in history.
Blankenship was credited .
Those players who didn 'I American League-plus an aft- single game on the Natlooal ·
participate in Tuesday night's ernoon doubleheader at San League schedule and Detroit with Green's win over the
All .Star game enjoyed a three- Francisco and the completion hosts Boeton and New York __Middleport Indians. Hindy was
day holiday this week-a most of a suspended game from entertains Milwaukee tonight
welcome respite in this age of April :it followed by a regularly in American League activity:
E;lsewhere, It's San Diego at
162 games and cross-country . scheduled single game at
San Francisco for an afternoon
travel-but It's back to work on Oticago's Wrigley Field.
The Hit 'n Misses girls softThe day's activity begins at doubleheader, Pltllburgh at
a full scale today as 21 games,
including the completion of an 1:30 p.m. EDT and lig~res to Chicago for the suspended . ball team divided a pair of
game plus a single contest and games this past weekend In the
Mootreitl at Philadelphia, New Pl. Pleasant Girls League,
York at St. Louis and Atlanta · winning easily over the
at Cindnnali for twl-nigbt . Jaycees, 27-2, and then being
doubleheaders in National . edged by Johnson's Market, 14League games.
12, for their first loss of· the
In the American League; seclind round. .
California is at Texas, Chicago . In the Jaycees' game,
at Kansaa City, Oakland at Debbie West paced the hitters
Minnesota and Clevelantl at with 3 /lome runs, while JUI
Ballbnore for twl-night ·dou- Warner had a homer and 4
bleheaders.
singles.
The second half of the
Other hitters were Nancy
campaign promises to offer Crow a single, double and
more drama than the Water- home run, Demaris Ash, Trina
gate hearings as cloae pennant FelTeD and Debbie Roush,
races are prevalent in both each 3 1inglea, and Lee Ord,
divlsloos cl each league.
Karen Guinther, Rhonda West

a

'Longest day' ·be~s

Save

"LUCITE" House Paint
• Shown to last longer
than other leading paints
• Dries to a protective sh"t
• Seals out the weather
• Soap and water clean-up
.
Houn: 7o.m. lol1JO p.m. Dllily
77J·lll3
MASON, W.VA.
7a .m. to' p.m. Frldoy &amp; ~f"urdoy

..

boast
lendDodgers
of any
The the
Losbiggest
Angeles
divlaloo front runner with a 5 l'.r
game advantage over the
Cincinnati Reds In the NL
West, but that is hardly an
Insurmountable lead and the
NL West figurel to be a three,
or possibly four-team race,
additionally involving San
Francisco and HoUJton, before
the sea1011 ends.
St. Louis, which started
slowly, has crept into first
place In the NL Ea!l, but there
is only a 1 l'.r game bulge
separating all six teams in that
divl1lon .

CAMDiN PARK RISERVED
SATURDAY-JULY 21th
"
.

Today's

Sport Parade
lly MIIIIHI Klchma"
Ufl Spt~rla Editor

•
CHEYENNE, Wyo. (UP!) - Joe Aleunder finished nis work
lor the day, and some ~ople, only thOle who didn't know, would
say he hid a cinch.
The whole thing took him I""" than !Oseconds.
He had done well, considering he hadn't had much sleep.
He waa alttlng Wlder the white wooden stands Wednesday
talldng about his work while lhouta of encouragement, and some
groans, filtered ~own from the stands above. They .were wal·
chlng other competitors In the 77th annual Cheyenne FronUer
Dltys PI' as they ~all it, ''The daddy ol 'em all," when it comes to
pure old fashioned rodeo.
Joe Alexander, who hnd competed in Ogden, Utah, the night
before and who had then gotten into his car and drl~ennearly 500
mlies so he could get up on one of thOBejman-maurung broncs
again here, was talking about how ~olks think he's a Uttle
soft vpetairs to he doing whalhe's dolngfor a living.
"I gueas the question they keep asking me most is, 'How do you
stand all this streu and strain?"' he said. "You know how some
people are, they think, Olrtst,you're gonna get kiUed. But It isn't
really that bad. You have to know what you're doing wben you
get up there on that .bronc. If you know what y01,1're doing, and
you have a little luck, you can do all right for yourseH."
Joe Alexander, 29, did all right!or himself last year.
He set a record for .the moat money ever won in bareback
ridingwithearningsof~,I28.ThatwaaaUright. Butitcos! hlm
at leBSt $15,000ineJ&lt;penses to win that money. That wasn't so all
ri~t. ,
·
I can t speak for ~erybody on why they rodeo, but with me,
it's 100 per cent for lll(llley," said Alexander.
He makes himself out much more commercial than he actually
is. You can tell that when you ask him about the gold bell buckle
he wears, the one which says, "Joe Alexander, world champion
bareback bronc rider."
"Yes," he says, glancing down at the buckle, "it means a lot to
me. 1 think It wholesales for $500 or something like that, but the
competition 1got itfor is open to the whole world."
What Joe Alexander leaves unsaid is that he's the best in the
world at what he does, and once you see him in action you understand why.
·
Alexander has his own style, which is usually the mark of a
champ.
Most bareback bronc riders lean backwards when they're
trying to stay up for the necessary eight seconds, but Alexander
sits right up on the rigging.
He looks in complete command. He's human, though. He can
be frightened by a horse the same way you can, and he
remembers a time he was during a rodeo in. Ellensburg, Wash.
"I hWlg up on a horse and couldn 'I get my hand outta the rig,"
he said. "I was scared. The only thiilg I could think of was getting
loose, Bu,t I couldn 'I: They took me to the hospital. I had a concussion and was klnda goofy there for awhile, but I don't call that
anything serious. There were no broken bones."
Joe Alexander is one of the few rodeo competitors with a
college diploma.. He got his from the University of Wyoming. ·
The toughest part about rodeo work as far as he's concerned is
the traveling and the physical strain that comes from trying to
stay on bareback broncs.
Joe Alexander is ooly Moot~ and checks in at 1~, but anybody
who would argue he isn't really a professional athlete would be
dead wroog.
He Is paid to engage in physical competltioo before crowds in
an arena, and there are boxers and ballplayers who aren't iri
anywhere near as good shape as he is. His waistline is 28 iliches.
"I have to watch my diet," says Alex:mder . " If a cowboy gets
fat, he's all fin.ished."

wms tit e

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i' .
rI
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!
!

I

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Villaee Pharmacy continues to provide
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·

EBERSBACH ·HARDWARE
MAIN ST.

Closed Every Monday Except Labor Day

,.

I

• Amana Electr&lt;H:oating fin ~ • ·Engln.arad for Quiet oper•
tion, in,doors and out.
ish for maximum rust pro·
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SIZES·

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.,

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OF

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ALL

ENGINEEIUNO DEPARTMENT
CONSTRUCTION DEPARTMENT
&amp;
.
•
K.V. COMPUTING DEitT. .

UNION CARBIDE TECH. CENTER

By RICK VAN SANT
Paul Brown lo keep Cook out ol'
WILMINGTON, Ohio ( UPI) some drills "au precaution,"
- After three shoulder opera- Cook toaed a few paaaea in a
lions and three missed seasons gymnasiwn at Wilmington ColGreg Cook Is still tryljlg to do lege Wednesday a!ternoon, but
what most people long ago wasn't allowed to lhrow ·in the
thought Impossible- return as Intense outdoor workout. But he
the Cincinnati Bengals starting looked on admiringly at the
quarterback.
bullets !Ired by lh• two
"I'm throwing at 65 or 70 per quarterbacks he hopes eventucent of what I need to do t~ ally to sllrpass-Vlrgll Carter
make it," Cook said at the and Ken Anderson.
Bengals training camp here Carter stepped in and reWednesday. "If 1could Improve placed Cook alter the 1969.
one per cent a day, or even one season, but since then Andel'llonbalf of a per cent, then It bas won the No. I quarterbackwouldn't be long. But 1 don 't ing Job.
always Improve. There have
heen some low days."
As a rookie in 1969, the tall
and husky Cook led the
American Football League in
•
• }
passing and his teammates
voted him most valuabl~ player
· on the team.
'
ZANESVILLE, Ohio (UPI)
But an injury to his right
shoulder led to three operations - Jtinlor high school all-star
and no football the next three baseball players from Youngsseasons for the S.foot-4, 215- town scored four runs in the
sixth Inning Wednesday to poet
pound Cook.
Cook began his comeback a 4-0 shutout over MI. Healthy
early this year- throwing the to win the Babe Ruth league
football daily In hopes of state competition.
Youngstown, undefeated,
returning to his old form by
training camp time. But the now goes to Springfield for
comeback so far has fallen national all-star. competlUon
beginning Aug. 3.
·
short.
The winning piicher, · Bill
1'h• 2fl.vear-&lt;&gt;ld can throw
Sattler,
struck out 11, allowed
bard enough and far enough to
participate in most passing one hit and walked one. He also
driils, but one big thing still drove iii the first run of the
agooizes Cook and worries his game.
MI. Healthy had advanced to
cooches-the arm is still sore.
the
finals In the double
"I wouldn't actually describe
it as pain," the bushy blond- elimination tournament by
haired University of Cincinnati downing Fairborn in the losera
graduate said. "It's sore. The bracket.
soreness is still there and I feel Gary Greenwalt drov-. in the ..
final home run with a triple In
it every day,"
The continuing ailment bas the sixth .inning.

I

Factory Purchase!

•-----------------"1

"ANNUAL SUMMER OUTING~'

'
'

Cook keeps
•
on tryzng

singles.
In the nightcap, Rio Grande
erupted for seven runs in the
first rung to win going away. J.
Lanham was credited with the
win. ChriB Brown was charged
with the loss . The Cubs .
managed only two hits., singles
by Robinson and Griffith.
The winners managed only
and Lisa Allen, 2 singles each four hils, singles by C. Ramey
for a total of 28 hits . Ord was and T. Weiher, a double and
the winning pitcher, bringing grand slam home run by R. .
McCoy.
her league record to 10-1.
In the Johnson's game, the
Misses committed numerous
errors afield, in going down to
their first loss this round. They
clld collect 13 hits, with Ash
getting a home run and 2
singles, Warner a home run
and single, Debbie West and
Allen, 2 singles each, Autumn
Sayre, Crow, Rhonda West and
Guinther, each a single.
Rhonda West was the losing
pitcher. Their league record
now stands al4-l, With 3 games
remaining.
cllarged with the loss. Smith
and Foster had doubles for the
winners. Blankenship bad two
singles. Lynch and Hovatter
each bad a double for the Indlans. Gardner had two

.
zsses sp1lt. pazr

u· , . M"

.edt n

Dream of Jeann ie 13 ; Let 's Travel l3.

The Almanac
On this day in history :
By,Unlled Press lntemation·at
In 1847, Liberia, the only
Today is Thursday, July 26, sovereign Negro democracy in
the, 207th day ol 1973 with 158 to Africa, was declared a republollow.
,.
lie.
The monn Is approaching ~~~
In 19;11, Gen. Douglas MacAr-

beginning

G een R-•lO

· BERRY'S WORLD

7:00- What's My Line 8; Truth or Consez. 3; Beal the Clock~;
News ~. 10; Elec. Co. 20 ; Wild Klngdo"' 13: Tom ·Jonet 15:
Man Builds, Man Destroys 33.
7:30 -. To Tell The Truth 6: Po rent Game iO ; Beat the Cloc;k 13:
Porler Wagoner 3; Young Mr. Kildare 4; Evil Touch 81World
Press 33 ; The Session 20.
·
8:00-S&lt;lntord &amp; Son 3, 4 , 15; BrodY Bunch 6, 13; 60 Mlriutul,
Wa shlnglon Week In Review 20, 33.
8: JO ..... Lillie People 3, '· 15: Odd Couple 6 13 ' World Prtn 20 ·
Bleck PerspeciJve On the News '33; 1&gt;in All - America~
Football Tum 6.
,
9&lt;00 - Ma!terplece Theatrel3 ; Movlea "Cell Me Bwtno" 3 4
S: "The Seven Hills of Rome" 101 "Hoi Mililani" 8; ABC
News Specia l 6, 13.
91JO - Collfllle All-Sta r Foolboll 6, 13.
10:00 -· News 20; Hondlul ol Aohetl3.
10:30- NoW! 3, -4 6, 8. 10 1l IS
11 :00 - News3• 4,6,8,'IO,'u,fl.'
11 ;30 - Johnny Carton 3, •. 11 1 Movln '' Horum sea~um" 11
"The Demon Planet" 10.
I; 00 - Midnight Speclall 1' ' Movie " UndO. r Ceprlcorn'' 13.
I:·15 -. Movlo "The Mou of Dillon" 10.
2:.30 -· News ~ . 1l,

rowns 'vets :
in jeopardy

"Everythin&amp; In Hardware"

POIIUOY

�5- The Dally Sentlnei,MiddlellOrt·Pomeroy, o .. Julv 211,19r.J
4- Thr Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o:. July 26, 1973

Prices~

pn eggs, pork,
pou~try continue spiral

Mine fatalities
hit 50•year low

'

CHARLESTON , W.Va .
(UP!) - The west Virginia
Coal Association says the rate
of coal mine fatalities last year
dropped to the lowest level
since the late 1920s.
In a report for 1972, the as!Gelation said there were 0.62
fatal accidents per million
manhours worked. That compores with a ratio of 0.73 in 1971
and 1.02 in 1970'
The report, based on statistics ()I the U. S. ·Bureau of
Mines, said there were 156 fatalities throughout the coal industry last year, compared
with 181 the year before. West
Virginia led the nation In fatalities with 48.
Colorado, which · recorded
only five fatalities, had the
highest fatality rate of 2.05.
Twelve states recorded no
fatalities, but they all produced
less coal than West Virginia,
the report said.
About 590 million tons of coal
were mined nationwide last
year, compared to 549 million
in 1971.
The top coal producing companies, according to the report, were Peabody Coal Co.,
C'~solldatlon Coal Co., Island

'

CreekCoaiCo.andthePittston
Co.
Value of coal prnduced in
1972 was mor~ than $4.4 billion , compared to $3.9 billion
for !971. Average weekly earnings rose 12.9 per cent last
year, and coal exports declined
slightly. ·
CROSS DE;MONSTRATION
FOLKSTONE , England
(UPI ) - It took a sitdown
demonstration an a busy road
by 700 residents before offidals
realized Wednesday the protest
was over a pedestrian
crossing.
"We thought they wanted a
subway built under the road,"
one official said. "They could
have had the croSSing in the
first place if we had known."
GUSH111AN RESIGNS
WASHINGTON (UP!)
President Nixon Wednesday
accepted the resignation of
John Louis Gushman of Lancaster, Ohio, as a member of
the President's Commission on
Personnel Interchange .
Nixon nominated Thomas R. ·
Byrne; a career diplomat, to be
ambassador to Norway.

The Clowns Are Coming! The Clowns Are Coming! qrcus Kirk proudly presents another season of circus
cutups. Planning their attacks in the safe confines of clown
3lley, these modern jesters are liable to do anything to
produce tears of laughter. The Circus Kirk Clowns are under
tile expert guidance of Dr, Charles W. Boas. Dr. Boas,
director of Circus Kirk, was a nationally famous clown for
many years, appearing in both circuses and on television. He
has played a great role in shaping the Circus Kirk clowns into
one of the tightest troups of jesters on the road today , Circus
Kirk will appear on Friday, July '1:1 at Fire Co. Grounds in
·Racine . Performances are scheduled for 2 and 8 p.m. with
the mlqway opening one hour earlier. Proceeds from the
sponsorship ofthe show will be used by Vollmteer Fire Co. for
their civic and charitable work. Tickets may be purchased
from club members at reduced prices in advance of circus
day or at the gate.

VALUES

ranging between 11.89 and $1.95
a pound in some cities, Including Boston,' where Harold
Slawsby of Capitol Markets
said, "Pork sUcks out llke a
sore thumb." Slawsby was
selling bacon for $1,75 a pound .
The same brand went for $1 .45
to $1.49 last week .
The Safeway spoke911lan said
the cost of produce is dropping.
"Almost half of our produce
prices went down this week, 16
or 18 Items, and some substantially."

By Uaited ~ress lntemallonal
It was a day of fluctuation in
food prices, but the trend in
eggs, pork and poultry was
clear . A spokesman for the
Utah agriculture department
put it this way : "Now you can
stop eating the eggs you used to
eat With the bacon you stopped
eating l.ast week."
Cattle industry leaders
Wednesday warned of a shortage if the freeze an the price of
beef is not Ufted before the
scheduled date of Sept, 12.
Agriculture Secretary Earl
Butz, however, said he Is more
concerned about "panicky
buying" due to Phase IV
C\lntrols.
Speaking' with reporters in
Dallas, J;!utz said beef' was
singled out to remain Wider
price controls because "it was
felt there was much less
pressure under beef prices
than under pork prices or
chicken prices."
. Asked whether meat producers would hold animals from ,
the market to walt for higher
prices, he said, "Tbe. thjng I
fear more than holding hack
animals is panickY buyinj! on
the part of housewives.''
Butz said a run on meat by 40

At the cattlemen's meeting
in Chicago, Lamar Holley,
eJecutive director of the Texas
and Southwestern Meat
Packers ~elation, said "If
beef ceilings had been removed
last week there would have
been a slight increase. A large
Increase eould have been
expected after two weeks, bot
there wi_Ube an explosion after
September 12."
The · 'cattlemen formed a
committee to caU on Butz Ill

1 seek an immediate end to the
freeze.
In Washington, a spokesman
for the Safewar supermarket
chain said the impact of Phase
IV may not he seen fully for
some time. "If there's a l~g
and Involved pipeline-in other
words, many middlemen-and
if each person gets increases,
then the trnpact in the gl'QC(!ry
store takes longer," he · said.
Tbe immediate Impact was
easy' to see, with pork chops

million housewives would require the slaughter of a million
steers, and ''they can dry up
counters fast if you, do
sotpethlng like that."
Resaid the Phase IV controls
were designed to gra~lly
ease an "inflation bubble"
caused by the tight controls
under Phase III.

attempt to coerce information , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
out of him.
The investigating officers
said fingerprints from Santos
and David do not match those
at the scene of the burglarized
gas station. The officers said
they could find no other
evidence to link the Rodriguez
brothers with the burglary at

Slain boy believed innocent
DAIJ,AS (UP!) - Investigating officers said today fingerprints found at the scene of a
burglarized service station do
not match th~ of a 12-year-old
boy shot to death by a pollee
Officer questioning the hando;uffed lad about the burglary,
The boy, Santos Rodriguez,
was shot as he sat handcuffed
In the hack seat of a patrol car
Tuesday morning. His brotber,
David Rodriguez, 13, who was
sitting in the front seat of the
cat, said a pollee officer was
playing a form of Russian
roulette with Santos in an

the service station.
Tbe older brother claimed
after the officers arrested him
and his brother at their home,
they drove them back to the
gas station where the pollee
Officer played Russian roulette
with his .357 magnum pistol.
"He (the policeman) roUed
the chamber around, and then
be opened it and .there were
two or three bullets In it,"
David Rodriguez said.
"He snapPed it closed and
then rolled it again.
"''feU the truth,' · the officer
told Santos," the brother said

Wednesday. "He told him we
did not burglarize the gas
station .
"The gun clicked, but It
didn'tflre ,
•'
"The officer said, 'Tbls Ume
It has a bullet in it.'

·Swisher &amp; Lohse
Pharmacy

Myers acting SW head;
Ashley new grid coaCh
.

Southwestern;s Local Board
of Education TUesday night in
special session, appointed
Uoyd L. Myers of Gallipolis a.s
acting superintendent.
Myers, a Southwestern and
Morehead State University
graduate, has served as
principal at Southwestern High
School the last four years.
Myers
rec.eived
his
Bachelor's . and Master's
Degree from Morehead
UniverSity. He had done additional work at Oh.io
University. The appointment
will continue until a local
superintendent can be legaUy
employed by the Southwestern
Board.
Donald McKenzie, of
Pomeroy, Local School
Superintendent for the past
five years, resigned his post

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19.5 CU. FT. FROSTLESS
UPRIGHT FREEZER
White was
$334.95

'·.,.•
"
•

$29488

Colorswere
$339.95

$29088
;, ·

A continuously circulating stream of cold air keeps more thin a

quarter of a ton of food frost free .

'~

Keeps every Item free from frost, easy to see and to rea ~ h. Four

•

grille-lypt! shelves 12 adjust). glide-out basket at bottom . Five

:

deep shelves, 2 iuice-soup can racks on door. Por·celain -enamel

liner. Acrylic finish cabinet with flush-hinged right-hand door,
&gt; magnetic gasket. Safety lock, pop-out key . Etflclenl polurelhane
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foam Insulation . 65 7'aX283J.. )(J23/,. Inches wide .

effective July .31 after the
board failed · to renew his
contract last February ,
The board also employed two
substitute teachers, who were
designated as coaches.
Robert (Bob) Ashley of
Meigs County was hired as
head football and baseb311
coach. Ashley, a graduate of
Middleport High School and
Marsh aU Universlt~, began his
teaching career in the Southwestern Local School District.
. Ashley, who has coached at
Eastern, Southern and Mid"
dleport High Schools, will also

Health Is
Our Main
Concern

I

serve as assistant basketball
coach.
,
Keith Carter of Cadmb, a
graduate of Southwestern High
School and Rio Grande College,
was employed as a substitute
teacher and as5istant footb311
and head basketb311 coa~h
Carter, a former AU SVAC
guard under Uoyd Myers, will
begi.n his coaching career,
· ASliley and Carter were
employed
without · the
recommendation of County
School Superintendent Cbmer
Bradbury. Bradbury said he

will . recommend
stBff
replacements when the board~ s
.teacher, suit is settled in GaUia
County Coriunon Pleas Court.
Last March, Southwestern's
Local Board of Education
voted to not reemploy 11
teachers. Since that time; eight
of the instructors filed a court
action seeking re-instatement
of their jobs.
The case is still pending In
Gallia COUlltY Common Pleas
Court . Judge Thomas W.
· Mitchell of Jackson County is
expected to decide the issue

Whatever is necessary to
keep your family in the
pink ; .. you'll find here.
First aid supplies, vitamins,
medicine cabinet items can
be obtained.

soon.

We Fill Prescriptions

Sterilization ruling delayed

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UP!)
- U. S. District Court Judge
Robert Varner delayed indefinitely Wednesday a decision on
whether to allow two black
girls to move their $5 million
sterilization suit from his court
to
a state court.
SAME .DAY'
Mter listening to an hour of
SERVICE
arguments by attorneys for tne ·
In At9- 0ut At 5
teen-age girls and for the
U$e Ou; Fr_ee Parking Lot
defendants, Varner said he
wanted more time to study the
plaintiffs ' request that the suit
.__•2•16•E•.•2•nd•,•P•om-er•o~y..l be
dismissed
without
~
prejudice.
'

. SHIRT
FINISHING

Robinson's Ceaners ·

. Approval would allow the
suit to be filed again In Mont,.
gomery County circuit court.
The girls, Minnie and Mary
Alice Relf, sued federal agencies and local hospital' and
family planning officials on
grounds they were sterilized
without their consent. .
Attorneys Joe Levin Jr. and
Morris Dees, representing the
girls, said they erred in, flllng
the suit last month in his court
against the U. S. Department
of Health , Education and
,Welfare, the u. s. Office of
Economic Opportunity apd the ·

""'::&gt;o&lt;::&gt;o&lt;;o.::;o.::;&gt;&lt;;;&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;:&gt;.c&gt;.o&gt;.o&gt;.o-.oo-oo-oo-o-o-ooOl Food
and Drug : ADministration.
Instead, they said; they
should have filed an adminisl!eg. 12.791!ound Bird Baths
trative claim againSt the ·
Special S1.91
l!eg. 11.1213 in. Plastic Owls
Special S1.33
agencies under the (ederal tort
Reg. S4.88 Lawn DarJ .Game-s
Special S3.ll
claims act. The claims were
Special 56.9'1 ·
Reg . S9.99 Lawn Bowling Game
w:eg . 51.J9. J.Sx8 m. tnt . Elephant Chairs
ftled last week after the atSpec. S1.19
l!eg. 13.19 Quart Thermos Bollles
Spoc. 12.57
torneys aaked for cllsmissal of
Reg. 11.47-75 Wall Black Bulbs
Special 11.29
the sult.
l!eg. 19c-Bic Pens I Blue Ink Only)
Special 12c
The agencies ha~e six
l!eg. 99c Novelty Hang Ups
Speciot 66c
Reg. 15.66 Buckskin Brave Pistol Set
· Spec. $3 .84
months to reply to the claim
Req. S15.88-20in. 3 Speed Electric Fans
Spec .Sll.88
and
if they deny It or r_rrke no
10 i11 . Multi Purpose Elec1rlc Fans
$9,99
reply, then· suit could be filed.
2 Player Badminfon Games
$1 .57
4 Player Badm inton Games
Levin and Dees arguild that
14.97
since the claim has been flied,
the federal court no longer h811
BEACH AND SWIM TOYS .AND SUPPlES
jurladiction. Tbey w~nt the
Sand Pails and Sets, Garden Toys, Wading Pools, Ear and
part of the ault involvblg local
Nose Plugs, Wading Pools, etc.
officials to be heard In state
court.
"The most direct means for
PICNIC SUPPLIES
obtaining damages Is before
clro;uit court In Montgdmety,"
Nilpkins, Plates, Cup~, Spoons, Forks, ole. Thermo• Ju•s
1ce Che!its a1 Bargatn Prices .
·
• '
Dee! told Varner.
Attorneys for the local
defendants want thb case
rut
L
either trled in Varner's court
or dlsmisled with pr~judlce,
preclulling a reflling.
·
"We can prove these .charges
iof negligence) completely and
10tally false," said William
Hill . an attorney for one of the
lho&lt;:&gt;o?"o-..o-..o-..o-..:::&gt;&lt;c~::&gt;-&lt;:?&lt;:?&lt;:?&lt;;o.:::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;:N "" renctHn t~ .

5WI5HER,,LDH5

.Defense attorneYll contend
Levin and Dees are Interested only in getting the
case before a judge other than

Pharmacy

tll~t

Varn~r :

Varner earlier refused a
motion by the two attorneYll
that he excuse himself from the
case. An attempt to have the U.
S. Circuli Court of Appeals at
New Orleans · remove Varner
also failed,

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252"

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• ,._ llft·Ovl llilllwft for ~'k
Mr~t

JorXI

•Ttlltl 1111 -~ »h~ ln;hef. 1&gt;1

SALE PRICES INQ.UDE 'DELIVERY
CATALOG
.SALES MERCHANT
LOU OSBORNE

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220 E. Main

992-2178

Pomeroy

&gt; '

S•veral area women at. 128 , Middleport. Certificates Unit 128, Mlddlepdrt, Mr$.
tended the state convention of
the American l..e"'on AuxlUar• went to Unlll 420, Murray City' Geraldine Kessinger, and also
,..
, and 476, Wllkl!!lvllle.
a $5 check for goal ~!strict.
Friday through Sunday In
Membership certificates for
Unit ~Uvltles Group C.Toledo with headquarters at 10 members or more went to Communications - plaque and
the Holiday Inn West.
Unit 11, Lancaster - Carrie certllicate to Unit 128, MidThe rpeetings opened Friday Vasbinder, Lorraine Snyder, dleport ; Poppy window contest
morning !"lth Mrs. Dooald Ann Hooker; Unit '1:1, G3llipolll - 181 place - Unit 128, MidMiller, department president, .:.• •Elizabeth Taber, Mabel dleport juniors; Mls3 Poppy
in charge . Greetings were Brown; Unit 39 , Pomeroy _ Scrapbook, Class B, 2nd place
· extended by Galen J. Houser, Mrs. Ben Neutzllng: Unit 161, - Unit 39, Pomeroy, Lori
department co mmander Vinton _ Hazel Amos, Thelma Wood; unit activities, IBI place
Roger A. Munson, . nationai Fisher; Unit 222, Crooksville - Unit 128, Middleport, and
committeeman, Mrs . Lenora Atkins, Bernetta certification of merit to Units
Raymond Sloan, national Frame, Goldie Whitehouse; 21, '1:1, 128, 222, 3'1:1 and 371.
executive commltteewontap, Unit 102, Racine - Mra . Virgil
Attending from Unit 128,
Mrs. Melvin Junge, nauonal . Roush, Mrs. VIrgil Walker , and Middleport, were Mrs. Albert
chairwoman of junior ac- .. Unit 677, LithoPolis - IAJcille Roush, Mrs. Norman Wayland
tivlties 1 Mrs. Arthur Harbak, Taylor, Martha Waddell and and Mrs. Geraldine Kessinger,
.Area Dchab'woman of national Eileen Howes.
district president; from Unit
communica.tions commltlee,
Half sentry club award for 39, Pomeroy - Mrs. Mary
' and Mrs, Lester Nlmon, Area securing 50 members or more Martin, Mrs. Rhoda Hackett
' D chalnvoman of nationa,l went to Unit 11, Lancaster, an&lt;l Mrs: Kate Welsh ; from
education and scholar~hip Mrs, Devon Tipple and Mrs . Unit 002, Racine - Mrs. Myrtle
• committee.
Doro~hy McCann, and the Walker, Mrs. Eunie Brinker
The main speaker for the Sentry Club ' award, · for and Mrs, ,Frances Roberts, and
' convention was Mrs. Louis securing 100 members went to Unit 263, Middleport, Mrs. Lul~
Unfer, central division vice·
Hampton.
p-esident, of ntinols.
Newly el~ed department
·• otficers were Mrs. George
~ SaUot, Parma, president; Mrs.
111
Robert E. RUey, Mt , Sterling,
-, J
o first vice president; Mrs. Jack
The Loyal Bereans of the
o BaUzhlser, Cincinnati, second
Middleport Church of Christ
• vice-president, and Mary Jane ~eld their · annu'l · picnic
Patro, Cleve!Jnd, treasurer. recently at the home of Mrs.
Mrs. Devon Tipple, Lan- Clyda Allensworth, . Midcaster, the new president of the dleport, with Martha Childs
THURSDAY
: 8th district, will represent the giving the prayer.
EASTERN ATHLETIC
: district at the national conDuring · a short business BoQstersmeeting, 7:30p.m. for
: vention In Honolulu . Her meeting which foUowed the all par-ents and football
: alternate is Mrs. Robert picnic it was reported that
players.
: Waddell, Lithopolis.
$135.65 was made on the yard
FINAL PLANNING session
: Awards presented to Ullits in sale held July 13, $100 of which for Meigs County Health Fair,
; the ath district were Com- will go into the church's 7:30 p.m. at Middleport First
: munity service, group 3, 1st
United Ilresbyterian Church.
building fund.
: plaee - Unit _'J:I, Gallipolis;
Reported as being Ill were Public ir.vitffi.
, Junior activities - Lenora Mary Meinhart, Eula Rice,
FRIDAY .
; Atkins,, Unit 22, ·. Crooksville, Carrie Roosh and Leslie Ervin.
PAsT
matrons
of Evangeline
: past district chairwo!llan for Cards may he sent to Mary
: he!' reports; Marie Moore, Meinhart at 3381 Irvin Ct., Chapter will meet at 7:30p.m.,
Masonic.Iemple.
:.Trophy• Narrative, Unit 128,
Grove City ,
: Middleport; Veterans Affairs
Attending the picnic were
SATURDAY
: and Rehabilitation, 00 hour pin Regina
Swift, · Martha
HYMN SING Saturday, 7:30
: and certificate - Helen Haggerty, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
p.m., Midway Community
• Billings, Unit 21,.Athens; Unit
McElhinny, Tressa Spencer,
Langsville·Dexter
1Activities, Group A - History Edith Spencer, Thelma Wiley, Church,
Road. Worley Haley, Pastor.
. • award, honorable mention lleMie Ashley, Lena McKinley, Public is invited. Singers
: Mrs. KeMeth Harris, Unit 311,
Clyda Allensworth, Martha welcome to participate.
: POmeroy; I..eglslatlve award,
Gertrude Miller.
CHICKEN DINNER,
I· 1st place - Unit 378, Junction Childs and
'
Syracuse Fire Statton. Com: City: hOnorable mention plete menu. Sponsored by
: Mrs. Clovis Strawsbaugh, Unit
Syracuse Ladies· Auxiliary ,
: 476, Wllk.esvllle; Unit AcMORTON family reunion,
' tivities, Group B - Book of
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
•' Prayers - Unit 81, Jackson,
· SUNDAY
. : certificate; Foreign Relations
ENJOYTR(l&gt;
SINGSPIRATION, Bradford
: Essay, 2nd place - Unit ljl7,
Churc!J
of Christ, 7:30 p.m.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Paul
Hap: Lithopolis, 3rd place - Unit 27,
Everyone
invited.
: Gallipolis; Foreign Relations tonstall, Middleport, and Mr ,
SINGER reunion Sunday at
: Scrapbook, 1st place - Unit and Mrs. Glenn Sharp,
: 677, Lithopolis; 2nd place - Reynoldsburg, went on a short Royal OakPark. Basket dinner
trip last week to Pigeon .Forge, at noon . All friends and
· : Unit '1:1, Gallipolis.
' Membership goal ribbons Tenn., Gatlinburg, Tenn., and relatives welcome.
the · Smoky .HYMN sing, 1:30 p.m., Hazel
· •• were presented to Units, 9, 11, throughout
~ 21, '1:1, 39, 58, 76, 128, 161, 222, Mountains and the Blue Ridge Corrunuhity Church, off Rt. l24
: 229, 263, 327, 371, 002, 677, 476, Mountains. They traveled on to · between Long Bottom arid
: and 420.Afive year goal ribbon Colwnbus, and ·the Sharps Porlland. Anderson Family
: was awarded to Unit 21, returned to their home in from Ripley, W. Va., featured
singers. Everyone welcome .
: Athens, and a 10 year, to Unit Reynoldsburg on Monday.
CHESTER High School Cla'Ss
of 1931 will hold its annual
reunion Sunday a\12:30 at the
Chester Firehouse. A basket
Mason,
dinner will begin at 12:30. All
members of the clasa, their
W.Va.
teachers, and schoolmates are
welCome.
ANNOUNCING NEW HOURS
8 A.M. TIL9 P.M.-TUE;S. - SAT.
Taking E;vening Appointments Until 9 P.M.
1

Loyal Bereans
enti0 pzc·nzc'·

~

CAT

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100E,st
Main St.
Pomeroy

Featuring the·World'5
largest Bag of Groceries
You1/
to See •• to Be/Jere!

a,,

FRIDAY ONLY
PURl Nil

lot11ted 1t

I

To Be Gfvtil ~y DriWing

News Notes

ITI

GRAND
OPENING
·of Your New
Pomeroy Kroger
Opening Sunday
July 29th ..
10

.
££
I .JaureI Cli •

Marilyn Clarke
Operators: Etta Richardson
Betty Cadle

Plan Now ·
to Attend the

SPECIALS

'

Open Daily 8:00a.m. to !O:OOp.m.
Sunday IO :l0 - 12:JOand5lo9p.m.

PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992-2955
Friendly Service
112 E. MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

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"He clicked it, and It fired.
"The bullet went through my
brother's head and blew the
other side of his face off.
"Oh, my God," David said be
beard the officer yell. "Maybe
be thought there wasn't a bullet
in the gun."

.Shower honors Mrs.Haggy

Legion ladies attend
recent state convention

FOOD
.

OUR IGA

ICE
CREAM

GAL
CONT.

By Bel1ba Parker
Sabbath School attendance
July 22.a\ the Free Methodist
Church was 91, offertng for all
services was $234.84.
Mr . and Mrs. William
Jacobs, Columbus, visited over
the weekend with Mr, and Mrs.
Pearl Jacobs. Mr. and Mrs.
Jacobs, Columbus, attended
church service Sunday mor·
nlng at the local church. Mr.
Jacobs led the singing.
Mr . Thomas Durst and
children, Mylln, ·visited
recently with Mr. and Mrs.
James Gilmore.
Mr . Olin Rife, Colwnbus,
spent several days . recently
with hts mother, Mrs. Cora

Mrs . Erneat Haggy 1\088
honored with 9 layette shower
given by Ml'll. Judy Wolfe and
Mra. Sandy Dorst recently al
the Meigs COWlly Infirmary .
The gift table was decorated
with a stork centerpiece and
blue streamera and blue and
pink bowl, A bassinet waa alao
decorated wlih blue and pink
streamers and bows.
Refreshments of cake
decorated with blue and pink
booUes, ice cream, mints, nul!,
tea, coffee, and Kooi-Aid were
served.
Games were won by Mn.
Delores Lynch, Mrs . Ivy
Powell, Mrs. Lelia Raggy, and
the door prize was won by Mrs.
Eula Haggy.
Attending were those above
and Mrs. Shirley Meadows,

Winding Trail
elects officers .. ,

Mill Dodl Seth, Mrs. Patty
Berton, Mra. Mabel Tracy,
Mrs. Sandy Kenny, 1M and
AIIJha , Mn. Gladys Wolfe,
M!Ja Becky Eblin, Mra. Jean
Norton, Mrs. Mildred Jacoba,
Officers for the coming year
Mu . Karen Staoley, Jean
were
elected when the Winding
Windon, Betty Will , Mr1 .
Ktrolyn Black, Mra. Berbara G~rden Club met for their July
Eblln ll1d PeMy, Mra. Ruby meeting reC4!nUy at the home
Gum, Mu. Pearl Jacobs, Mn. It Mrs. Etrl Thoma, PomerpY.
Donnal:iTJmore, M!Ja Sherrie Offlceu are Mn . Aaron
Clark, Mra. Joyc. Haggy and Kelton, prealdent, Mrs .
Charles liayet, vice prt!lident,
Detnna and U.. Dorst
Sending gltta but unable to and Mrs . Earl' Thomas,
attend were Miu Dl!lne Lynch, secretary.
During the bu.8ineae meeUng
Mrs. Susan Stone, Mrs. Susan
It
was announced that -the club
Tracy, Mra. Wanda EpUn, Mrs.
Shirley Wise, Miss Diane will receive an honor~ble
Lewis, Mrs. Kathy Pullins, mention award at the Regional
Mn. Sharon Darst, Mrs. Jane II meeting for their program
Jacobs, and Miss Janice book. A report from the state
chairperson of program books
Neece.
was read and dlscussed ,
Allee Thompaon, Addalou
Lewla, Nancy Collins, Wilma
Terrell, Cora Beegle, and Ruth
Moore planned to attend
participate In a work shop for
the Meigs County Fair.
It was reported that Nancy

Mrs. Dave Secoy.is
honored at shower
A stork shower was held at
the mobile home of Mr. and
M~s. LoweU Kemper Jr. In
honor of Mrs. Dave SeCoy (the
former Frances Kemper ) with
Mrs. Barbara Kemper, Mrs .
Janet Miller and Mrs. Kate
Dauber as hostesses of the
evening.
Streamers decorated the
living room, as Mrs. SeCoy's
personal baby bed was loaded
with gifts.
The dining table held punch,
cookies and nuts which were
served to Mrs. Audrey Hatten,
Mrs. Dale Kemper, Mrs. Mary

Collins, Pat Thoma 'and Allee
Thompson weeded and cleaned
up the civic plll~ting dono by
the club. at the county llome.
The Wildwood Garden Club
qlen meeting was annOUilCed
for July 25.
TRINA REEVES
Mra . Allsrd Pratt preaented
the program Utled "Ways to
Att.ract Blrda to Your Garden".
Flower arrangenients were
judged by Mrs. Richard Colllns
and awarda were presented to
Ruth Moore, blue ribbon,
Wilma TerreD. red ribbon, and
Mrs. Earl Thoma, blue rtbbon
Mr. and Mrs, Harold Reeves,
in the .horticulture divlalan.
Pomeroy, entertained at their
Mrs. Robert Thompson led home recenUy with a party
the recreational part of the honoring their daughter, Trina
meeting in which the club Gale Reeves, on her sixth
Identified plants, vines and bir\llday. A "Raggedy Ann"
tree leaves.
theme was carried out.
Following the meeting Mrs.
Games were played, and
Thoma served refreshments prizes were awarded to all of
asalsted by her son, Kelly.
the children.
Refreslunents of cake, Ice
cream, potato chips and KoolAid were served to Charlene
--·
Swartz, Jaye Roberts, Usa
Ferrell, Jeff Dilcher, David
Reeves, Mandy Reeves, Ricky
Reeves,
'
.
Also attelidlnv were Mrs.
Juanita Reeves, Mrs. Janet
By POLLY CRAMER
Lee, Mrs. Wanda Swartz, Mrs.
Ethel
Clark, her grandmother,
OEAR POLLY - I am answeri·ng Karen who ha s the
smled whtte beaded bag. I have kep! mine in good shape for Mrs. Jessie Reeves, and Mr.
II years . The cleaners doubtless would not clea n Karen's
and Mrs . Clyde Dllcher,
b~ cause it was lined with cardboard - even the most expenColumbus. Sending a gift was
stve ones are . Take a sharp razor blade and VERY CAREFULLY split the end seams until you can open and remove Kelly Dean, Albany.
the cardboard and then replace 1t with severa ll ay~rs of
basted-together nylon net to help keep its shape . Resew in
the original needle holes in th• seams. Whether the beads
are gl~ss or plastic. the bag can then be washed in that cold
water liquid we associate with the washing o( woolens. Thi s
VeterBDJ Memorial Hoapllll
does work , I know from experience. If Karen is not clever
w11h a needle surely someone close to her will volunteer to
AdmisaiQilS - Owen Hawley,
do the sewing part for her. - MRS. C. V. B.
Syracuse ; Walter Walker,
Pomeroy; James Hawley,
DEAR GIRLS- Mrs, C. V. B. was most Ingenious in solvIng her problem but ,I tblnk it would be much easier to rip
Pomeroy ; Harold Triplett,
the lining and not touch the outside of the hag. Even If the
Pomeroy, and Corvin Earl
bag had to be re-hned, that is not too big a job. - POLLY
Custer, Sytacllse.
DEAR POLLY - Karen could clean her beaded bag ·by
Discharges- Wanda Roush,
usmg a flat, ra ther wide toothbrush or other smalt brush and
Helena Dodson, Pammy
a GOOD grade liquid soap . Place bag on a heavy towel that
will absorb the excess water . Brush the area of the dir ty Johnson,. Eloise Snyder and
z1 pper very hard . rinse well with clear water and pat dry. Eber Gillilan.
Place the soiled side of the strap up , also on a heavy toweL
and proceed in the same manner until the cloth is clean .
Remove soil and soap with a clean damp cloth . rub strap
w1th a dry towel and allow. to dr y. I have had good luck usmg th1s method when the cleafters refused to chance it. CATHERINE
. _DEAR POLLY - Did yo u eve r have a pesky fly that
would not land long enough to swat it? Ne&lt;t time just spray
some window clea,ner as it goes by . just enough to get its ·
wmgs wet and slicky. and it will soon land for goOd . VONNY

and

Burnette, Miss Tammy Burnette, Mias Kathy Burnette,
Mrs. ome Burnette, Mrs. Rita
Kiser, Mrs. Karen Frye, Miss
Pam Kiser, Mrs. Nettle Carter,
Mrs. Hazel Peninger, Mrs.
Olive Kemper, Miss Carol Ann
Kemper and Mrs, Lowell
Kemper.
Tbe table centerpiece bought
especially for Mrs. Secoy, was
given to her by the hostesses as
a remembrance of the shower.
Sending gifts, but unable ·to
attend, were Mrs. Lucille
Voreh, f.!r. Amy Sexton and
Mrs. Virginia Adams.

Alfred WSCS meets
ALFRED - Tbe Women's
Society held its regular
meeting on Tuesday evening,
July 17, at the home of Nellie
Parker, with an attendance of
12 members and five visitors
from the Enterprise ··soclety.
Visitors were Mrs. Eldon
Weeks, Mrs. Herbert Dixon,
Mrs. Don Hunnel, Becky Will
and Mrs. Dale Davis.
The m.eeting, in. charge of
!Sellie Parker, president,
opened with prayer by Helen
Woode. The hymn; "What a
Friend" was sung.
The visiting society was
welcomed by the president and

POLLY'S POINTERS

End Beaded Bag
Cleaning Woes

the_visitors and home . members Introduced themselves.
Greeting card, gelatin,
napkin and rug sales were
discussed and some were sold
during the evening.
Roll call was made and 28
sick and shut-in calls reported
by members and visitors.
A donation was made to the
Southside Settlement in
Columbus. A communication·
was read from the district
· president, Mrs. Ballard.
It was decided to order
another shipment of vanllla.
The making of a banner was ~---Polly's Problem-=======:~~~
discusSed and Ideas are to be
DEAR PULLY - How can I store my lit'tle girl' s
brought in at the August
F1rst Communion dress so it will sl&lt;ty as beautifully
white as il is now ? - ISSY
lJ.
meeting.
.
.
Nellie Parker led the
program on "Empowering
Women for Miasions" with
readings and discussion.
·
·
Some present human needs
LONG BOTTOM _ Frank on local, national and In;
Andrew returned to his em- ternationallevels were named _
ployment in Saigon after and discussed. Isola Taylor
spending a vacation here In the gave the closing prayer .
states with his parents, Mr.
The hostess served dellcloos
and Mrs. Francis Andrew, refreshments of home made .
Long Bottom and other ice cream a~d cookies during
relatives and friends .
the social hour.
Sunday School attendance on
Enroute to Ohio he visited
The next meeting will be held July 22 was 54, the offering
with eight of his former air at the church on Tuesday $23.50, Worship services were
force friends in Great Falls, evening, August 21, at .8 with held at 11 with the Rev. Meece
Mont. DUring their years in Emma Finch, the hostess, and speaking on "What Does God
service together they were June Stearns, the program Require of Us"? Attendance
stationed at Malmstrom AFB leader.
was 21, offering $40.75 and $52
near Great Falls.
pledges.
On his return trip to the west
The WSCS met at the home of
coast he visited hls sister, - - - - - - - - - Nellie Parke.r on Tuesday
Cathy and husband at Gulfport,
evening, July 17, with. an atmeeting at Mansfield this tendance of 12 members and
Miss.
Andrew is employed by Air week.
five visitors from the EnMr.
and
Mrs.
Merle
Harris
America Inc. in the I.C.C.S.
terprise Church. The next
program. He has been with Air and Brenda, St. Albans, W. meeting will be held on
America for two years, prior to Va., visited recently with Mrs. Tuesday evening, Aug. 21, at
that time he worked In VIet- Cora Renshaw.
the church with Emma Finch
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Phil
Wise
nam.
hostess, and June Stearns:
He and his men have been McConnelsvllle, attended program leader.
commended for outstanding chur-ch services Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
duly 'performed In Viet Cong morning at the local church. Woode visited Saturday at the
Mr. and Mrs , Charles Karr Clifford Hayes home in Midterritory.
Sr. and Mrs. . Robert DeCon- dleport, Mr, Hayes and son
nlck and Kelly Sue and Mrs. Gregory are recovering at
Bertha Parker attended the home !rom injuries received jn
Renshaw.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Perhaps you're no_t aware of the many ather
Mrs. Georgia Diehl, grand- gathering Sunday at Royal oak a truck accident which put Mr.
Hayes
In
Holzer
Hospital
for
a
son, Charles Anthony Diehl, Park, Mrs. Parker won a door
couple of days a week ago.
products we offer for your convenience, in
visited Sunday with 'Mr. Ed prize which was a lawn chair
Mr. and Mrs .. John Barn_ett,
'
Russell and Mr. and Mrs. Guy
addition to prescriptions and health needs . .
Russell, Bradbury.
'
Thirty-seven persons atso, we invite you Ia visit our fountain .. ,
tended the Laurel Cliff Health
browse through our magazine
Club plcplc which was held at
the roadside park on Route 33 .
section • • , shop for cosmetics,
Rev. Robert Buckley and
by 11 . david
family are attending a camp
film and ather Items ot

I._'fan kA ndrew
h
returns ome

'Social Notes

From Your Pharmacist

.

Cornucopia Family Pin

·counters tha.l feature the very

Before You Buy You Should Try,

best brand names.

CARPET-LAND, INC.
.WBII To Wall CBrpet Specialists
116 W. MAl~ ·

Free
Estimates

Miss Reeves
celebrates

POMEROY

PH. 992·7590

Open Monday thru Saturday 9 to 5

. Frida, Ni&amp;ht

nu a:oo

Budaet Terms or BlnkAmeriurd

'

$14.95
E:specially creattod to portray yonr family'•
•tory ill bl'fluli/111 IJirtlrmonlh colon.

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE
Court St

Pomeroy

�5- The Dally Sentlnei,MiddlellOrt·Pomeroy, o .. Julv 211,19r.J
4- Thr Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o:. July 26, 1973

Prices~

pn eggs, pork,
pou~try continue spiral

Mine fatalities
hit 50•year low

'

CHARLESTON , W.Va .
(UP!) - The west Virginia
Coal Association says the rate
of coal mine fatalities last year
dropped to the lowest level
since the late 1920s.
In a report for 1972, the as!Gelation said there were 0.62
fatal accidents per million
manhours worked. That compores with a ratio of 0.73 in 1971
and 1.02 in 1970'
The report, based on statistics ()I the U. S. ·Bureau of
Mines, said there were 156 fatalities throughout the coal industry last year, compared
with 181 the year before. West
Virginia led the nation In fatalities with 48.
Colorado, which · recorded
only five fatalities, had the
highest fatality rate of 2.05.
Twelve states recorded no
fatalities, but they all produced
less coal than West Virginia,
the report said.
About 590 million tons of coal
were mined nationwide last
year, compared to 549 million
in 1971.
The top coal producing companies, according to the report, were Peabody Coal Co.,
C'~solldatlon Coal Co., Island

'

CreekCoaiCo.andthePittston
Co.
Value of coal prnduced in
1972 was mor~ than $4.4 billion , compared to $3.9 billion
for !971. Average weekly earnings rose 12.9 per cent last
year, and coal exports declined
slightly. ·
CROSS DE;MONSTRATION
FOLKSTONE , England
(UPI ) - It took a sitdown
demonstration an a busy road
by 700 residents before offidals
realized Wednesday the protest
was over a pedestrian
crossing.
"We thought they wanted a
subway built under the road,"
one official said. "They could
have had the croSSing in the
first place if we had known."
GUSH111AN RESIGNS
WASHINGTON (UP!)
President Nixon Wednesday
accepted the resignation of
John Louis Gushman of Lancaster, Ohio, as a member of
the President's Commission on
Personnel Interchange .
Nixon nominated Thomas R. ·
Byrne; a career diplomat, to be
ambassador to Norway.

The Clowns Are Coming! The Clowns Are Coming! qrcus Kirk proudly presents another season of circus
cutups. Planning their attacks in the safe confines of clown
3lley, these modern jesters are liable to do anything to
produce tears of laughter. The Circus Kirk Clowns are under
tile expert guidance of Dr, Charles W. Boas. Dr. Boas,
director of Circus Kirk, was a nationally famous clown for
many years, appearing in both circuses and on television. He
has played a great role in shaping the Circus Kirk clowns into
one of the tightest troups of jesters on the road today , Circus
Kirk will appear on Friday, July '1:1 at Fire Co. Grounds in
·Racine . Performances are scheduled for 2 and 8 p.m. with
the mlqway opening one hour earlier. Proceeds from the
sponsorship ofthe show will be used by Vollmteer Fire Co. for
their civic and charitable work. Tickets may be purchased
from club members at reduced prices in advance of circus
day or at the gate.

VALUES

ranging between 11.89 and $1.95
a pound in some cities, Including Boston,' where Harold
Slawsby of Capitol Markets
said, "Pork sUcks out llke a
sore thumb." Slawsby was
selling bacon for $1,75 a pound .
The same brand went for $1 .45
to $1.49 last week .
The Safeway spoke911lan said
the cost of produce is dropping.
"Almost half of our produce
prices went down this week, 16
or 18 Items, and some substantially."

By Uaited ~ress lntemallonal
It was a day of fluctuation in
food prices, but the trend in
eggs, pork and poultry was
clear . A spokesman for the
Utah agriculture department
put it this way : "Now you can
stop eating the eggs you used to
eat With the bacon you stopped
eating l.ast week."
Cattle industry leaders
Wednesday warned of a shortage if the freeze an the price of
beef is not Ufted before the
scheduled date of Sept, 12.
Agriculture Secretary Earl
Butz, however, said he Is more
concerned about "panicky
buying" due to Phase IV
C\lntrols.
Speaking' with reporters in
Dallas, J;!utz said beef' was
singled out to remain Wider
price controls because "it was
felt there was much less
pressure under beef prices
than under pork prices or
chicken prices."
. Asked whether meat producers would hold animals from ,
the market to walt for higher
prices, he said, "Tbe. thjng I
fear more than holding hack
animals is panickY buyinj! on
the part of housewives.''
Butz said a run on meat by 40

At the cattlemen's meeting
in Chicago, Lamar Holley,
eJecutive director of the Texas
and Southwestern Meat
Packers ~elation, said "If
beef ceilings had been removed
last week there would have
been a slight increase. A large
Increase eould have been
expected after two weeks, bot
there wi_Ube an explosion after
September 12."
The · 'cattlemen formed a
committee to caU on Butz Ill

1 seek an immediate end to the
freeze.
In Washington, a spokesman
for the Safewar supermarket
chain said the impact of Phase
IV may not he seen fully for
some time. "If there's a l~g
and Involved pipeline-in other
words, many middlemen-and
if each person gets increases,
then the trnpact in the gl'QC(!ry
store takes longer," he · said.
Tbe immediate Impact was
easy' to see, with pork chops

million housewives would require the slaughter of a million
steers, and ''they can dry up
counters fast if you, do
sotpethlng like that."
Resaid the Phase IV controls
were designed to gra~lly
ease an "inflation bubble"
caused by the tight controls
under Phase III.

attempt to coerce information , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
out of him.
The investigating officers
said fingerprints from Santos
and David do not match those
at the scene of the burglarized
gas station. The officers said
they could find no other
evidence to link the Rodriguez
brothers with the burglary at

Slain boy believed innocent
DAIJ,AS (UP!) - Investigating officers said today fingerprints found at the scene of a
burglarized service station do
not match th~ of a 12-year-old
boy shot to death by a pollee
Officer questioning the hando;uffed lad about the burglary,
The boy, Santos Rodriguez,
was shot as he sat handcuffed
In the hack seat of a patrol car
Tuesday morning. His brotber,
David Rodriguez, 13, who was
sitting in the front seat of the
cat, said a pollee officer was
playing a form of Russian
roulette with Santos in an

the service station.
Tbe older brother claimed
after the officers arrested him
and his brother at their home,
they drove them back to the
gas station where the pollee
Officer played Russian roulette
with his .357 magnum pistol.
"He (the policeman) roUed
the chamber around, and then
be opened it and .there were
two or three bullets In it,"
David Rodriguez said.
"He snapPed it closed and
then rolled it again.
"''feU the truth,' · the officer
told Santos," the brother said

Wednesday. "He told him we
did not burglarize the gas
station .
"The gun clicked, but It
didn'tflre ,
•'
"The officer said, 'Tbls Ume
It has a bullet in it.'

·Swisher &amp; Lohse
Pharmacy

Myers acting SW head;
Ashley new grid coaCh
.

Southwestern;s Local Board
of Education TUesday night in
special session, appointed
Uoyd L. Myers of Gallipolis a.s
acting superintendent.
Myers, a Southwestern and
Morehead State University
graduate, has served as
principal at Southwestern High
School the last four years.
Myers
rec.eived
his
Bachelor's . and Master's
Degree from Morehead
UniverSity. He had done additional work at Oh.io
University. The appointment
will continue until a local
superintendent can be legaUy
employed by the Southwestern
Board.
Donald McKenzie, of
Pomeroy, Local School
Superintendent for the past
five years, resigned his post

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19.5 CU. FT. FROSTLESS
UPRIGHT FREEZER
White was
$334.95

'·.,.•
"
•

$29488

Colorswere
$339.95

$29088
;, ·

A continuously circulating stream of cold air keeps more thin a

quarter of a ton of food frost free .

'~

Keeps every Item free from frost, easy to see and to rea ~ h. Four

•

grille-lypt! shelves 12 adjust). glide-out basket at bottom . Five

:

deep shelves, 2 iuice-soup can racks on door. Por·celain -enamel

liner. Acrylic finish cabinet with flush-hinged right-hand door,
&gt; magnetic gasket. Safety lock, pop-out key . Etflclenl polurelhane
~

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foam Insulation . 65 7'aX283J.. )(J23/,. Inches wide .

effective July .31 after the
board failed · to renew his
contract last February ,
The board also employed two
substitute teachers, who were
designated as coaches.
Robert (Bob) Ashley of
Meigs County was hired as
head football and baseb311
coach. Ashley, a graduate of
Middleport High School and
Marsh aU Universlt~, began his
teaching career in the Southwestern Local School District.
. Ashley, who has coached at
Eastern, Southern and Mid"
dleport High Schools, will also

Health Is
Our Main
Concern

I

serve as assistant basketball
coach.
,
Keith Carter of Cadmb, a
graduate of Southwestern High
School and Rio Grande College,
was employed as a substitute
teacher and as5istant footb311
and head basketb311 coa~h
Carter, a former AU SVAC
guard under Uoyd Myers, will
begi.n his coaching career,
· ASliley and Carter were
employed
without · the
recommendation of County
School Superintendent Cbmer
Bradbury. Bradbury said he

will . recommend
stBff
replacements when the board~ s
.teacher, suit is settled in GaUia
County Coriunon Pleas Court.
Last March, Southwestern's
Local Board of Education
voted to not reemploy 11
teachers. Since that time; eight
of the instructors filed a court
action seeking re-instatement
of their jobs.
The case is still pending In
Gallia COUlltY Common Pleas
Court . Judge Thomas W.
· Mitchell of Jackson County is
expected to decide the issue

Whatever is necessary to
keep your family in the
pink ; .. you'll find here.
First aid supplies, vitamins,
medicine cabinet items can
be obtained.

soon.

We Fill Prescriptions

Sterilization ruling delayed

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UP!)
- U. S. District Court Judge
Robert Varner delayed indefinitely Wednesday a decision on
whether to allow two black
girls to move their $5 million
sterilization suit from his court
to
a state court.
SAME .DAY'
Mter listening to an hour of
SERVICE
arguments by attorneys for tne ·
In At9- 0ut At 5
teen-age girls and for the
U$e Ou; Fr_ee Parking Lot
defendants, Varner said he
wanted more time to study the
plaintiffs ' request that the suit
.__•2•16•E•.•2•nd•,•P•om-er•o~y..l be
dismissed
without
~
prejudice.
'

. SHIRT
FINISHING

Robinson's Ceaners ·

. Approval would allow the
suit to be filed again In Mont,.
gomery County circuit court.
The girls, Minnie and Mary
Alice Relf, sued federal agencies and local hospital' and
family planning officials on
grounds they were sterilized
without their consent. .
Attorneys Joe Levin Jr. and
Morris Dees, representing the
girls, said they erred in, flllng
the suit last month in his court
against the U. S. Department
of Health , Education and
,Welfare, the u. s. Office of
Economic Opportunity apd the ·

""'::&gt;o&lt;::&gt;o&lt;;o.::;o.::;&gt;&lt;;;&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;:&gt;.c&gt;.o&gt;.o&gt;.o-.oo-oo-oo-o-o-ooOl Food
and Drug : ADministration.
Instead, they said; they
should have filed an adminisl!eg. 12.791!ound Bird Baths
trative claim againSt the ·
Special S1.91
l!eg. 11.1213 in. Plastic Owls
Special S1.33
agencies under the (ederal tort
Reg. S4.88 Lawn DarJ .Game-s
Special S3.ll
claims act. The claims were
Special 56.9'1 ·
Reg . S9.99 Lawn Bowling Game
w:eg . 51.J9. J.Sx8 m. tnt . Elephant Chairs
ftled last week after the atSpec. S1.19
l!eg. 13.19 Quart Thermos Bollles
Spoc. 12.57
torneys aaked for cllsmissal of
Reg. 11.47-75 Wall Black Bulbs
Special 11.29
the sult.
l!eg. 19c-Bic Pens I Blue Ink Only)
Special 12c
The agencies ha~e six
l!eg. 99c Novelty Hang Ups
Speciot 66c
Reg. 15.66 Buckskin Brave Pistol Set
· Spec. $3 .84
months to reply to the claim
Req. S15.88-20in. 3 Speed Electric Fans
Spec .Sll.88
and
if they deny It or r_rrke no
10 i11 . Multi Purpose Elec1rlc Fans
$9,99
reply, then· suit could be filed.
2 Player Badminfon Games
$1 .57
4 Player Badm inton Games
Levin and Dees arguild that
14.97
since the claim has been flied,
the federal court no longer h811
BEACH AND SWIM TOYS .AND SUPPlES
jurladiction. Tbey w~nt the
Sand Pails and Sets, Garden Toys, Wading Pools, Ear and
part of the ault involvblg local
Nose Plugs, Wading Pools, etc.
officials to be heard In state
court.
"The most direct means for
PICNIC SUPPLIES
obtaining damages Is before
clro;uit court In Montgdmety,"
Nilpkins, Plates, Cup~, Spoons, Forks, ole. Thermo• Ju•s
1ce Che!its a1 Bargatn Prices .
·
• '
Dee! told Varner.
Attorneys for the local
defendants want thb case
rut
L
either trled in Varner's court
or dlsmisled with pr~judlce,
preclulling a reflling.
·
"We can prove these .charges
iof negligence) completely and
10tally false," said William
Hill . an attorney for one of the
lho&lt;:&gt;o?"o-..o-..o-..o-..:::&gt;&lt;c~::&gt;-&lt;:?&lt;:?&lt;:?&lt;;o.:::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;:N "" renctHn t~ .

5WI5HER,,LDH5

.Defense attorneYll contend
Levin and Dees are Interested only in getting the
case before a judge other than

Pharmacy

tll~t

Varn~r :

Varner earlier refused a
motion by the two attorneYll
that he excuse himself from the
case. An attempt to have the U.
S. Circuli Court of Appeals at
New Orleans · remove Varner
also failed,

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252"

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• ,._ llft·Ovl llilllwft for ~'k
Mr~t

JorXI

•Ttlltl 1111 -~ »h~ ln;hef. 1&gt;1

SALE PRICES INQ.UDE 'DELIVERY
CATALOG
.SALES MERCHANT
LOU OSBORNE

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220 E. Main

992-2178

Pomeroy

&gt; '

S•veral area women at. 128 , Middleport. Certificates Unit 128, Mlddlepdrt, Mr$.
tended the state convention of
the American l..e"'on AuxlUar• went to Unlll 420, Murray City' Geraldine Kessinger, and also
,..
, and 476, Wllkl!!lvllle.
a $5 check for goal ~!strict.
Friday through Sunday In
Membership certificates for
Unit ~Uvltles Group C.Toledo with headquarters at 10 members or more went to Communications - plaque and
the Holiday Inn West.
Unit 11, Lancaster - Carrie certllicate to Unit 128, MidThe rpeetings opened Friday Vasbinder, Lorraine Snyder, dleport ; Poppy window contest
morning !"lth Mrs. Dooald Ann Hooker; Unit '1:1, G3llipolll - 181 place - Unit 128, MidMiller, department president, .:.• •Elizabeth Taber, Mabel dleport juniors; Mls3 Poppy
in charge . Greetings were Brown; Unit 39 , Pomeroy _ Scrapbook, Class B, 2nd place
· extended by Galen J. Houser, Mrs. Ben Neutzllng: Unit 161, - Unit 39, Pomeroy, Lori
department co mmander Vinton _ Hazel Amos, Thelma Wood; unit activities, IBI place
Roger A. Munson, . nationai Fisher; Unit 222, Crooksville - Unit 128, Middleport, and
committeeman, Mrs . Lenora Atkins, Bernetta certification of merit to Units
Raymond Sloan, national Frame, Goldie Whitehouse; 21, '1:1, 128, 222, 3'1:1 and 371.
executive commltteewontap, Unit 102, Racine - Mra . Virgil
Attending from Unit 128,
Mrs. Melvin Junge, nauonal . Roush, Mrs. VIrgil Walker , and Middleport, were Mrs. Albert
chairwoman of junior ac- .. Unit 677, LithoPolis - IAJcille Roush, Mrs. Norman Wayland
tivlties 1 Mrs. Arthur Harbak, Taylor, Martha Waddell and and Mrs. Geraldine Kessinger,
.Area Dchab'woman of national Eileen Howes.
district president; from Unit
communica.tions commltlee,
Half sentry club award for 39, Pomeroy - Mrs. Mary
' and Mrs, Lester Nlmon, Area securing 50 members or more Martin, Mrs. Rhoda Hackett
' D chalnvoman of nationa,l went to Unit 11, Lancaster, an&lt;l Mrs: Kate Welsh ; from
education and scholar~hip Mrs, Devon Tipple and Mrs . Unit 002, Racine - Mrs. Myrtle
• committee.
Doro~hy McCann, and the Walker, Mrs. Eunie Brinker
The main speaker for the Sentry Club ' award, · for and Mrs, ,Frances Roberts, and
' convention was Mrs. Louis securing 100 members went to Unit 263, Middleport, Mrs. Lul~
Unfer, central division vice·
Hampton.
p-esident, of ntinols.
Newly el~ed department
·• otficers were Mrs. George
~ SaUot, Parma, president; Mrs.
111
Robert E. RUey, Mt , Sterling,
-, J
o first vice president; Mrs. Jack
The Loyal Bereans of the
o BaUzhlser, Cincinnati, second
Middleport Church of Christ
• vice-president, and Mary Jane ~eld their · annu'l · picnic
Patro, Cleve!Jnd, treasurer. recently at the home of Mrs.
Mrs. Devon Tipple, Lan- Clyda Allensworth, . Midcaster, the new president of the dleport, with Martha Childs
THURSDAY
: 8th district, will represent the giving the prayer.
EASTERN ATHLETIC
: district at the national conDuring · a short business BoQstersmeeting, 7:30p.m. for
: vention In Honolulu . Her meeting which foUowed the all par-ents and football
: alternate is Mrs. Robert picnic it was reported that
players.
: Waddell, Lithopolis.
$135.65 was made on the yard
FINAL PLANNING session
: Awards presented to Ullits in sale held July 13, $100 of which for Meigs County Health Fair,
; the ath district were Com- will go into the church's 7:30 p.m. at Middleport First
: munity service, group 3, 1st
United Ilresbyterian Church.
building fund.
: plaee - Unit _'J:I, Gallipolis;
Reported as being Ill were Public ir.vitffi.
, Junior activities - Lenora Mary Meinhart, Eula Rice,
FRIDAY .
; Atkins,, Unit 22, ·. Crooksville, Carrie Roosh and Leslie Ervin.
PAsT
matrons
of Evangeline
: past district chairwo!llan for Cards may he sent to Mary
: he!' reports; Marie Moore, Meinhart at 3381 Irvin Ct., Chapter will meet at 7:30p.m.,
Masonic.Iemple.
:.Trophy• Narrative, Unit 128,
Grove City ,
: Middleport; Veterans Affairs
Attending the picnic were
SATURDAY
: and Rehabilitation, 00 hour pin Regina
Swift, · Martha
HYMN SING Saturday, 7:30
: and certificate - Helen Haggerty, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
p.m., Midway Community
• Billings, Unit 21,.Athens; Unit
McElhinny, Tressa Spencer,
Langsville·Dexter
1Activities, Group A - History Edith Spencer, Thelma Wiley, Church,
Road. Worley Haley, Pastor.
. • award, honorable mention lleMie Ashley, Lena McKinley, Public is invited. Singers
: Mrs. KeMeth Harris, Unit 311,
Clyda Allensworth, Martha welcome to participate.
: POmeroy; I..eglslatlve award,
Gertrude Miller.
CHICKEN DINNER,
I· 1st place - Unit 378, Junction Childs and
'
Syracuse Fire Statton. Com: City: hOnorable mention plete menu. Sponsored by
: Mrs. Clovis Strawsbaugh, Unit
Syracuse Ladies· Auxiliary ,
: 476, Wllk.esvllle; Unit AcMORTON family reunion,
' tivities, Group B - Book of
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
•' Prayers - Unit 81, Jackson,
· SUNDAY
. : certificate; Foreign Relations
ENJOYTR(l&gt;
SINGSPIRATION, Bradford
: Essay, 2nd place - Unit ljl7,
Churc!J
of Christ, 7:30 p.m.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Paul
Hap: Lithopolis, 3rd place - Unit 27,
Everyone
invited.
: Gallipolis; Foreign Relations tonstall, Middleport, and Mr ,
SINGER reunion Sunday at
: Scrapbook, 1st place - Unit and Mrs. Glenn Sharp,
: 677, Lithopolis; 2nd place - Reynoldsburg, went on a short Royal OakPark. Basket dinner
trip last week to Pigeon .Forge, at noon . All friends and
· : Unit '1:1, Gallipolis.
' Membership goal ribbons Tenn., Gatlinburg, Tenn., and relatives welcome.
the · Smoky .HYMN sing, 1:30 p.m., Hazel
· •• were presented to Units, 9, 11, throughout
~ 21, '1:1, 39, 58, 76, 128, 161, 222, Mountains and the Blue Ridge Corrunuhity Church, off Rt. l24
: 229, 263, 327, 371, 002, 677, 476, Mountains. They traveled on to · between Long Bottom arid
: and 420.Afive year goal ribbon Colwnbus, and ·the Sharps Porlland. Anderson Family
: was awarded to Unit 21, returned to their home in from Ripley, W. Va., featured
singers. Everyone welcome .
: Athens, and a 10 year, to Unit Reynoldsburg on Monday.
CHESTER High School Cla'Ss
of 1931 will hold its annual
reunion Sunday a\12:30 at the
Chester Firehouse. A basket
Mason,
dinner will begin at 12:30. All
members of the clasa, their
W.Va.
teachers, and schoolmates are
welCome.
ANNOUNCING NEW HOURS
8 A.M. TIL9 P.M.-TUE;S. - SAT.
Taking E;vening Appointments Until 9 P.M.
1

Loyal Bereans
enti0 pzc·nzc'·

~

CAT

•

• 1

100E,st
Main St.
Pomeroy

Featuring the·World'5
largest Bag of Groceries
You1/
to See •• to Be/Jere!

a,,

FRIDAY ONLY
PURl Nil

lot11ted 1t

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To Be Gfvtil ~y DriWing

News Notes

ITI

GRAND
OPENING
·of Your New
Pomeroy Kroger
Opening Sunday
July 29th ..
10

.
££
I .JaureI Cli •

Marilyn Clarke
Operators: Etta Richardson
Betty Cadle

Plan Now ·
to Attend the

SPECIALS

'

Open Daily 8:00a.m. to !O:OOp.m.
Sunday IO :l0 - 12:JOand5lo9p.m.

PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992-2955
Friendly Service
112 E. MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

l

v

I

"He clicked it, and It fired.
"The bullet went through my
brother's head and blew the
other side of his face off.
"Oh, my God," David said be
beard the officer yell. "Maybe
be thought there wasn't a bullet
in the gun."

.Shower honors Mrs.Haggy

Legion ladies attend
recent state convention

FOOD
.

OUR IGA

ICE
CREAM

GAL
CONT.

By Bel1ba Parker
Sabbath School attendance
July 22.a\ the Free Methodist
Church was 91, offertng for all
services was $234.84.
Mr . and Mrs. William
Jacobs, Columbus, visited over
the weekend with Mr, and Mrs.
Pearl Jacobs. Mr. and Mrs.
Jacobs, Columbus, attended
church service Sunday mor·
nlng at the local church. Mr.
Jacobs led the singing.
Mr . Thomas Durst and
children, Mylln, ·visited
recently with Mr. and Mrs.
James Gilmore.
Mr . Olin Rife, Colwnbus,
spent several days . recently
with hts mother, Mrs. Cora

Mrs . Erneat Haggy 1\088
honored with 9 layette shower
given by Ml'll. Judy Wolfe and
Mra. Sandy Dorst recently al
the Meigs COWlly Infirmary .
The gift table was decorated
with a stork centerpiece and
blue streamera and blue and
pink bowl, A bassinet waa alao
decorated wlih blue and pink
streamers and bows.
Refreshments of cake
decorated with blue and pink
booUes, ice cream, mints, nul!,
tea, coffee, and Kooi-Aid were
served.
Games were won by Mn.
Delores Lynch, Mrs . Ivy
Powell, Mrs. Lelia Raggy, and
the door prize was won by Mrs.
Eula Haggy.
Attending were those above
and Mrs. Shirley Meadows,

Winding Trail
elects officers .. ,

Mill Dodl Seth, Mrs. Patty
Berton, Mra. Mabel Tracy,
Mrs. Sandy Kenny, 1M and
AIIJha , Mn. Gladys Wolfe,
M!Ja Becky Eblin, Mra. Jean
Norton, Mrs. Mildred Jacoba,
Officers for the coming year
Mu . Karen Staoley, Jean
were
elected when the Winding
Windon, Betty Will , Mr1 .
Ktrolyn Black, Mra. Berbara G~rden Club met for their July
Eblln ll1d PeMy, Mra. Ruby meeting reC4!nUy at the home
Gum, Mu. Pearl Jacobs, Mn. It Mrs. Etrl Thoma, PomerpY.
Donnal:iTJmore, M!Ja Sherrie Offlceu are Mn . Aaron
Clark, Mra. Joyc. Haggy and Kelton, prealdent, Mrs .
Charles liayet, vice prt!lident,
Detnna and U.. Dorst
Sending gltta but unable to and Mrs . Earl' Thomas,
attend were Miu Dl!lne Lynch, secretary.
During the bu.8ineae meeUng
Mrs. Susan Stone, Mrs. Susan
It
was announced that -the club
Tracy, Mra. Wanda EpUn, Mrs.
Shirley Wise, Miss Diane will receive an honor~ble
Lewis, Mrs. Kathy Pullins, mention award at the Regional
Mn. Sharon Darst, Mrs. Jane II meeting for their program
Jacobs, and Miss Janice book. A report from the state
chairperson of program books
Neece.
was read and dlscussed ,
Allee Thompaon, Addalou
Lewla, Nancy Collins, Wilma
Terrell, Cora Beegle, and Ruth
Moore planned to attend
participate In a work shop for
the Meigs County Fair.
It was reported that Nancy

Mrs. Dave Secoy.is
honored at shower
A stork shower was held at
the mobile home of Mr. and
M~s. LoweU Kemper Jr. In
honor of Mrs. Dave SeCoy (the
former Frances Kemper ) with
Mrs. Barbara Kemper, Mrs .
Janet Miller and Mrs. Kate
Dauber as hostesses of the
evening.
Streamers decorated the
living room, as Mrs. SeCoy's
personal baby bed was loaded
with gifts.
The dining table held punch,
cookies and nuts which were
served to Mrs. Audrey Hatten,
Mrs. Dale Kemper, Mrs. Mary

Collins, Pat Thoma 'and Allee
Thompson weeded and cleaned
up the civic plll~ting dono by
the club. at the county llome.
The Wildwood Garden Club
qlen meeting was annOUilCed
for July 25.
TRINA REEVES
Mra . Allsrd Pratt preaented
the program Utled "Ways to
Att.ract Blrda to Your Garden".
Flower arrangenients were
judged by Mrs. Richard Colllns
and awarda were presented to
Ruth Moore, blue ribbon,
Wilma TerreD. red ribbon, and
Mrs. Earl Thoma, blue rtbbon
Mr. and Mrs, Harold Reeves,
in the .horticulture divlalan.
Pomeroy, entertained at their
Mrs. Robert Thompson led home recenUy with a party
the recreational part of the honoring their daughter, Trina
meeting in which the club Gale Reeves, on her sixth
Identified plants, vines and bir\llday. A "Raggedy Ann"
tree leaves.
theme was carried out.
Following the meeting Mrs.
Games were played, and
Thoma served refreshments prizes were awarded to all of
asalsted by her son, Kelly.
the children.
Refreslunents of cake, Ice
cream, potato chips and KoolAid were served to Charlene
--·
Swartz, Jaye Roberts, Usa
Ferrell, Jeff Dilcher, David
Reeves, Mandy Reeves, Ricky
Reeves,
'
.
Also attelidlnv were Mrs.
Juanita Reeves, Mrs. Janet
By POLLY CRAMER
Lee, Mrs. Wanda Swartz, Mrs.
Ethel
Clark, her grandmother,
OEAR POLLY - I am answeri·ng Karen who ha s the
smled whtte beaded bag. I have kep! mine in good shape for Mrs. Jessie Reeves, and Mr.
II years . The cleaners doubtless would not clea n Karen's
and Mrs . Clyde Dllcher,
b~ cause it was lined with cardboard - even the most expenColumbus. Sending a gift was
stve ones are . Take a sharp razor blade and VERY CAREFULLY split the end seams until you can open and remove Kelly Dean, Albany.
the cardboard and then replace 1t with severa ll ay~rs of
basted-together nylon net to help keep its shape . Resew in
the original needle holes in th• seams. Whether the beads
are gl~ss or plastic. the bag can then be washed in that cold
water liquid we associate with the washing o( woolens. Thi s
VeterBDJ Memorial Hoapllll
does work , I know from experience. If Karen is not clever
w11h a needle surely someone close to her will volunteer to
AdmisaiQilS - Owen Hawley,
do the sewing part for her. - MRS. C. V. B.
Syracuse ; Walter Walker,
Pomeroy; James Hawley,
DEAR GIRLS- Mrs, C. V. B. was most Ingenious in solvIng her problem but ,I tblnk it would be much easier to rip
Pomeroy ; Harold Triplett,
the lining and not touch the outside of the hag. Even If the
Pomeroy, and Corvin Earl
bag had to be re-hned, that is not too big a job. - POLLY
Custer, Sytacllse.
DEAR POLLY - Karen could clean her beaded bag ·by
Discharges- Wanda Roush,
usmg a flat, ra ther wide toothbrush or other smalt brush and
Helena Dodson, Pammy
a GOOD grade liquid soap . Place bag on a heavy towel that
will absorb the excess water . Brush the area of the dir ty Johnson,. Eloise Snyder and
z1 pper very hard . rinse well with clear water and pat dry. Eber Gillilan.
Place the soiled side of the strap up , also on a heavy toweL
and proceed in the same manner until the cloth is clean .
Remove soil and soap with a clean damp cloth . rub strap
w1th a dry towel and allow. to dr y. I have had good luck usmg th1s method when the cleafters refused to chance it. CATHERINE
. _DEAR POLLY - Did yo u eve r have a pesky fly that
would not land long enough to swat it? Ne&lt;t time just spray
some window clea,ner as it goes by . just enough to get its ·
wmgs wet and slicky. and it will soon land for goOd . VONNY

and

Burnette, Miss Tammy Burnette, Mias Kathy Burnette,
Mrs. ome Burnette, Mrs. Rita
Kiser, Mrs. Karen Frye, Miss
Pam Kiser, Mrs. Nettle Carter,
Mrs. Hazel Peninger, Mrs.
Olive Kemper, Miss Carol Ann
Kemper and Mrs, Lowell
Kemper.
Tbe table centerpiece bought
especially for Mrs. Secoy, was
given to her by the hostesses as
a remembrance of the shower.
Sending gifts, but unable ·to
attend, were Mrs. Lucille
Voreh, f.!r. Amy Sexton and
Mrs. Virginia Adams.

Alfred WSCS meets
ALFRED - Tbe Women's
Society held its regular
meeting on Tuesday evening,
July 17, at the home of Nellie
Parker, with an attendance of
12 members and five visitors
from the Enterprise ··soclety.
Visitors were Mrs. Eldon
Weeks, Mrs. Herbert Dixon,
Mrs. Don Hunnel, Becky Will
and Mrs. Dale Davis.
The m.eeting, in. charge of
!Sellie Parker, president,
opened with prayer by Helen
Woode. The hymn; "What a
Friend" was sung.
The visiting society was
welcomed by the president and

POLLY'S POINTERS

End Beaded Bag
Cleaning Woes

the_visitors and home . members Introduced themselves.
Greeting card, gelatin,
napkin and rug sales were
discussed and some were sold
during the evening.
Roll call was made and 28
sick and shut-in calls reported
by members and visitors.
A donation was made to the
Southside Settlement in
Columbus. A communication·
was read from the district
· president, Mrs. Ballard.
It was decided to order
another shipment of vanllla.
The making of a banner was ~---Polly's Problem-=======:~~~
discusSed and Ideas are to be
DEAR PULLY - How can I store my lit'tle girl' s
brought in at the August
F1rst Communion dress so it will sl&lt;ty as beautifully
white as il is now ? - ISSY
lJ.
meeting.
.
.
Nellie Parker led the
program on "Empowering
Women for Miasions" with
readings and discussion.
·
·
Some present human needs
LONG BOTTOM _ Frank on local, national and In;
Andrew returned to his em- ternationallevels were named _
ployment in Saigon after and discussed. Isola Taylor
spending a vacation here In the gave the closing prayer .
states with his parents, Mr.
The hostess served dellcloos
and Mrs. Francis Andrew, refreshments of home made .
Long Bottom and other ice cream a~d cookies during
relatives and friends .
the social hour.
Sunday School attendance on
Enroute to Ohio he visited
The next meeting will be held July 22 was 54, the offering
with eight of his former air at the church on Tuesday $23.50, Worship services were
force friends in Great Falls, evening, August 21, at .8 with held at 11 with the Rev. Meece
Mont. DUring their years in Emma Finch, the hostess, and speaking on "What Does God
service together they were June Stearns, the program Require of Us"? Attendance
stationed at Malmstrom AFB leader.
was 21, offering $40.75 and $52
near Great Falls.
pledges.
On his return trip to the west
The WSCS met at the home of
coast he visited hls sister, - - - - - - - - - Nellie Parke.r on Tuesday
Cathy and husband at Gulfport,
evening, July 17, with. an atmeeting at Mansfield this tendance of 12 members and
Miss.
Andrew is employed by Air week.
five visitors from the EnMr.
and
Mrs.
Merle
Harris
America Inc. in the I.C.C.S.
terprise Church. The next
program. He has been with Air and Brenda, St. Albans, W. meeting will be held on
America for two years, prior to Va., visited recently with Mrs. Tuesday evening, Aug. 21, at
that time he worked In VIet- Cora Renshaw.
the church with Emma Finch
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Phil
Wise
nam.
hostess, and June Stearns:
He and his men have been McConnelsvllle, attended program leader.
commended for outstanding chur-ch services Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
duly 'performed In Viet Cong morning at the local church. Woode visited Saturday at the
Mr. and Mrs , Charles Karr Clifford Hayes home in Midterritory.
Sr. and Mrs. . Robert DeCon- dleport, Mr, Hayes and son
nlck and Kelly Sue and Mrs. Gregory are recovering at
Bertha Parker attended the home !rom injuries received jn
Renshaw.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Perhaps you're no_t aware of the many ather
Mrs. Georgia Diehl, grand- gathering Sunday at Royal oak a truck accident which put Mr.
Hayes
In
Holzer
Hospital
for
a
son, Charles Anthony Diehl, Park, Mrs. Parker won a door
couple of days a week ago.
products we offer for your convenience, in
visited Sunday with 'Mr. Ed prize which was a lawn chair
Mr. and Mrs .. John Barn_ett,
'
Russell and Mr. and Mrs. Guy
addition to prescriptions and health needs . .
Russell, Bradbury.
'
Thirty-seven persons atso, we invite you Ia visit our fountain .. ,
tended the Laurel Cliff Health
browse through our magazine
Club plcplc which was held at
the roadside park on Route 33 .
section • • , shop for cosmetics,
Rev. Robert Buckley and
by 11 . david
family are attending a camp
film and ather Items ot

I._'fan kA ndrew
h
returns ome

'Social Notes

From Your Pharmacist

.

Cornucopia Family Pin

·counters tha.l feature the very

Before You Buy You Should Try,

best brand names.

CARPET-LAND, INC.
.WBII To Wall CBrpet Specialists
116 W. MAl~ ·

Free
Estimates

Miss Reeves
celebrates

POMEROY

PH. 992·7590

Open Monday thru Saturday 9 to 5

. Frida, Ni&amp;ht

nu a:oo

Budaet Terms or BlnkAmeriurd

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$14.95
E:specially creattod to portray yonr family'•
•tory ill bl'fluli/111 IJirtlrmonlh colon.

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE
Court St

Pomeroy

�..•
.••

6- l'he Da\lySentinei,Middleport-Pumeroy, O.,July26, t973

Major concession~ reached·on ....
....
..
...
state lottery hill W~dnesday
, COLUMBUS (UPI)- The strike the d ouse.
the headquarters should be lo- nues would be depo1ited In the
general lund, some 4li ~ cent
. Ohio House and Senate agreed
Gray said It would be futile to cated in the state capital,
to major concessions on the lot- have to argue with the House
Under the legislation, lottery of revenue• would be paid ou~
· tery corrunlsaion bill Wed- "at this late hour of the ses- tickets would be sold by agents as prizes and the remainder or
nesday and sent the me.. sure to slon ."
licensed · by the comrnlSiion the money would go lor opel':
Gov. John J . Gilligan for his
Sen. Ronald M. MotU, D- and would be available at.retail atlng expenses.
A full-time direCtor of tho
·
Parma, who fought for two store• throughout the state.
signature.
The ·Senate approved the years to get the constitutional
The bill appropriates $2 mll- lottery commission would tie
to
oversee
House lottery bill without the amendment clearing the way lion to cover implementing appointed
controversial "emergency for the lottery, warned It would costs. The money would be re- operations. He would be paid
clause" that has been a slum- be delayed several months and paid to the general revenue Is $25;000 a year.
bling.block to final passage for the state would lose millions of · ea~d .
months. The bill was approved dollars In revenues.
After the lotterY has begun to
For Complete
30-1 with only Sen. Richard C.
He said, however, he would operate normally, at least 30
Rei chel,
R-Masslllon, reluctantly go alorig with per cent of ticket sales reve·
Insurance
dissenting.
Gray 's move. .
nqes wOuld be deposl The bill
However, the Senate inserted
"It's a practicality of life," appropriates $2 million to
Protection
a major amendment, making Mottl said.
cover implementing costs. The
lottery winnings subject to the
The amendment to kill Jan- money would be re-paid to the
Phone 992-7428
state income tax. Because of guage In the bill exempting lot- general revenue fund after the
or 992 ·2724 after 5 p.m .
the amendment, the biU was tery winnings from the state first $2 million In net lottery
sent back to the House for con- income tax was introduced by revenue is earned.
•
currence.
Sen. Michael J. Maloney, RAfter the lottery has begun to
·
Refp. Tom Ffrthies,bD-Daydton, ' Cinc.innati.
!"" operate no rmally, at least 30
Agency
. ·
ch te sponsoro e Ill, sal he
"1 see no reason to exc uue-per cent o1 ticket sales reve-... 1-----=-.....;.~--...-J
was willing to accept the lottery money from Ohio tax•
Senate amendment to assure es," Maloney said.
passage of the bill before adAlrilost all income is Included
journment and urged concur- in the adjusted gross income
renee.
figure used as a basis for the
Fries said he probably will state income tat, Maloney
introduce legislation next year said, and lottery winnings
exempting lottery winnings shoul&lt;l be no exception.
from state taxes, however.
Sen. Paul E. Gilhnor, R-Port
Durit)g a special evening ses- Clinton, said the exemption
sion, the House agreed to t.he would
be
"grossly
Senate change by a 72-1~ vote . inequitable."
The legislation now needs only
"It violates one of the princiGilligan's signature, which is pies of the state Income taxexpected, to become law. Gilli· the ability to pay," Gilhnor
gan will be able to appoint a said, "and a person who wins
five-member lottery com- the stste lottery certainly has
mission in 90 days, and the the ability to pay::
lottery is expected to ' be
Lost Revenues
operating early next year.
Mottl warned that taxing the
The emergency clause, lottery winnings would induce
which would have allo&gt;xed many Ohioans to buy tickets in
Gilligan to set up the com· the Michigan and Pennmission in)rnediately, had been sylvania lotteries. This could
blocked repeatedly by House cost the Ohio lottery $20mijlion
Republicans.
in revenues, he said.
·
Kurfess Opposed
An amendment by Sen. Paul
House GOP leader Charles R. Malia, R-Westlake, to esF. Kurfess, R·Bowling Green, tablish state lottery headquarsaid this week he would con- ters in Cleveland was defeated.
tinue to oppose the emergency
Malia said the majority of
provision, although the op- lottery ticketS will be purposition would no longer be an chased in the Cleveland area.
official party position.
He said putting the main of.
. With House Republicans fices in Cleveland would also
standing firm' against the an·swer some of the pressure
emergency, Setlate President for decentralization of state
Pro Tempore Ted M: Gray, R· government.
Columb'"!, indicating he had
Malia was opposed by two
conferred with Kurfess, in- Columbus area senators and
troduced the amendment to other legislators who argued

Dal C. Wa

e · . mer,

,I

'

'

SAVE'
Bl

....
•

"

WORK IS CONTINUING on and near the conveyor belt
line running from the Meigs !\line to the $488 miUion James

· M. Gavin Plant at Cheshire. Photo above shows the belt line
connecting with the giant generating plant overlooking
Gravel Hill Rd.
.,
'

Rights argued during
Ehrlich man's testimony

GREGORY DROPS SHOWBIZ
CHICAGO
(UP!)
Comedian Oick Gregory has
decided to leave show business
and devote more time to his
family. His wife gave birth to
the .couple's loth child Wednesday.
In . a brief statement,
Gregory said he planned to
wind up his night club career
after two more appearances.
"He has decid~d to devote the
rest of his life to lecturing at
colleges and university
campuses," the statement
said.
Gregory said his wife,
Ullian, gave birth to their lOth
child and third son, an 8-pound4-&lt;&gt;unce hoy, at a Chicago
hospital shortly after midnight.

By. WESLEY. G. PQ'PERT
waveringly through two days one of the critical conWASHINGTON (UP!)- All in the witness chair at the stitutlonal confrontations
day the titans argued it: "Does Senate hearings that even between the President and
the king have the right Ill enter though Watergate defendants Congress lit the history of the
a humble man 's cottage G. Gordon Liddy and E. nation.
without his consent~
Howard_Hunt Jr. were unwiSe
The President was conOr, specifically,didagentsof in breaking into the office of fronted with a deadline to
President Nixon have a consti- Ellsberg's psychiatrist, they answer a committee subpoena .
tutional right on grounds of had a right to do so.
for tapes and other documents
national security to break ·into
in his possession relating to the
a psychiatrist's office to obtain . The debate on thnight ofthe Watergate scandal.
records about the emotional President to commit burgla,-y · 11 he refused to provide
· state of Pentagon Papers overshadowed the · puri)OSe of them, as expected, the comdefendant Daniel EUbserg?
the committee's current round mlttee was expected to file suit kook or whether we were
With a nationwide television of . hearings- who
was In u.s. Districl CoiU't for a dealing with a serious penetraaudtence and a hearing room of responsible for the bugging of declaratory judgment. This Uon of the nation's military
chastened spectators looking the Democratic national of- could lead to a landmark profile," Ehrlichman said. " ...
on • the men went at 'I·t :
f'tees at the Watergate complex Supreme Court test.
You must also note that at this
--Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr., 76, on June 17,1972, and who was
Wilson,
Ehrllchman's time, the Strategic Arms
honor graduate of Harvard law responsible for trying to cover lawyer, said that the 1968 Safe Umitation Treaty negotiation
school ' former prest'd'tng Up the extent of the crime?
Streets Act, which was ap- documents had been comJustice of the North Carolina
The break-in at the psychia- proved by Ervin 's Senate promised, so that the President
Supreme Court, the Senate's trist's office took place on Judiciary
Committee, by tile 24th of July knew that
fo_re"?ost expert on con- La bot Day weekend in 1971 , provided "a reservoir of power his negotiating position vs. the
stttuttonal law, and chairman about 60 days alter the ... for the sake of permitting Russians in the SALT negolia·
.Of the Senate 's· se Iec t newspaper publ'tcatlon of the the President to do what would tions were known to the
Watergate investigating PentagonstudyoftheVIetnam otherwise be a crime, to Russians .. .''
committee.
war. Ehrlichman said the protect the nation against
As the day wore to a close,
- JohnJ. Wilson, 73yearsold operation, which he would not foreign intelligence ... "
Ervin said that he wanted to
· on Wednesday, who went to law have approved, was conducted
"There is no one in this room, talk "a little of the Bible, a
school at night and gained a by the White House plumbers who can assert with litUe of history, and ·a little of
.
repu t at ton
as one of t he group that was established to categorical certainty that the law."
n~lion's lop trial lawyers, who help plug leaks In the future. President does not have a
He quoted an Old Testament
in 1952 argued against PresiErvin, who has been drawing constitutl9Dal power to cause prophet and ci!ed Talmadge's
dent Harry S Truman's applause whenever he enters an entry, under what would be quotation from William Pitt .
seizure of the nation's steel the Senate Caucus Room otherwise
illegal
cir"And yet we're wid here
mills.
admonished the partisan audi: cumstances, in pursuit of today and yesterday that what
- Sen.
Herman
E. encetobequietWednesday. AI foreign intelligence,'.' Wilson the King of England can't do,
Tahnadge, former .governor of one point, they had jeered said. "When we get to that · the President of the United
Georgta and member of one of Ehrlichman.
point, the Fourth Amendment States can," Ervin said.
his stale'S greatest political
In the afternoon however may have vanished from the
"Now President Nixon himdynaslies.
.
Ehrlichma~ gave E•rvin a jab: . scene."
self defined national security in
- John D. Ehrlichman, 48, The former feared White
The Fourth Amendment en- one of his directives as inConner re~l estate and land use House aide told Ervin, 28 years SW'es "the right of the people to eluding only two thingslawyer tn Seattle, W.ash ., his elder, "Mr. Chairman, you be seC)Ire in their persons, national defense and the
former counsel and domestic interrupted me. You have a houses, papers, and effects, relations with foreign counaffa~rs adviser to the delightful trial room praclice against unreasonable searches tries.
Prest dent, and, the man over of interrUpting something you and seiziU'es." It has been cited
"How in the wo'rld the
whom the argument was being do not want to h~r." .
. repeatedly by Ervin during the . opinions of a psychatrist about
waged:
The committee faced !&lt;;day Watergate hearings.
the mental state or the
Ehrhchman has argued un- ·what may be another step in . Talmadge, with charac- emotional state or the psychoterislic emotionlessness and logical state .of his patient,
Georgian drawl, ssld, "You even if his palient was
remember when we were In Ellsberg, could have any
law sdtool we studied a famous relation to national defense or
principle of law that came relations loa foreign country is
from England and is also well something that eludes the
known in this country, that 110 Imagination of lhis countrY
matter how humble a man's lawyer."
cottage Is that even tbe King of
England can not enter without ,

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...

his consent."
"I'm afraid that has · been
considerably eroded over the
years, hasn't It?" Ehrlichman
shot back.
"What we're talking al&gt;Qut
here Is an unauthorized entry
and burglarizing a man's
premises who wasn't ' even
involved in stealing the pa~s
in the first instance," Talmadge sa!d.
Ehrllcbman said the Investigative technique of a psychia,
trlc profile was perfected · by
the CIA. He 'said that Hunt and ·
IJddy acting as White House
agents carried out the
operation because FBI
Dire&lt;.1or J . Edgar Hoover had
refused to conduct 10me interviews in the Ellsberg ca~.
" ... We did not know whether
we were dealing here with a .
.spy r.lng or just an individual
I

'

Soybean stocks smallest in seven years in Ohio
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Soybean stocks in Ohio a,s of July I
were the smallest in seven
years, the Ohio Crop Reporting
Service said Wednesday. Only
stocks of wheat and barley
were above the levels of July !,
1972.
Officials said wheat stores in
all positions totaled 5.5 million
bushels, up from 2.6 million
bushels a year ago. Wheat
stored off farm totaled 5.3
million bushels, up 2.2 million
bushels from a year ago.
Barley stored in all positions
totaled 107,000 bushels, compared with 93,000 bushels for
the same period last year.
Corn in aU positions was 82
million bushels on July I, 24 per
cent below the 108 million
bushels on band July I, 1972.
Corn stored on farms accounted for 51.2 million
bushels, down from 67.1 million
bushels on farm a year earlier
and is 63 per cent of the total
corn stocks. Off-farm stocks ·
were at 3e.5 million bushels the
first day of this month, down 24
per cent from the same day
last year.
Soybeans in storage in all
positions on July I, 1973,

SUMMER SALE
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ON -ANGEL TREADS
AND SUMMER.
HOUSE SLIPPERS
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Our Shoesare Still Sensiblv l&gt;riced
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

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totaled about II million
bushels, 32 per ~;ent below the
Jt~IY I, 1972, level of 16 million
bushels. This is the smallest
soybean stock for the July 1
quarter since 1966, officials
OFFER LIMITED TO PRESENT STOCK
said.
COME EARLy- SAVE REAL MONEY!Total soybeans ztored on
farms was 2.4 milllon bushels,
Regular list 15.85 gal.
50 per cent below the 4.8
bushels stored on farms a year
YOU PAY JUST
•
earilier. Off farm stocks account for nearly 77 per cent ·or
the total soybean stocks, the
service said.
Oat stocks in all positions
t!ltaled 4.8 million bushels, 46
per cent below the 8.9 million
bushels on hand July I, 1m.
The total on-farm stocks were
992-2709
at 2.7 million bushels, comMiddleport
pared with 5.1 million bushels a .._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;.;;:,;;;;;:;;;~
year ago.

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7- '!'he DallySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. July 211, 197J

Pay hike taken out ·Of measure
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A ~'O n­
troverslal pay hike lor state
legislators, Inserted by the
· House Judlciflry Committee
into legislation raising the
salaries of major ele&lt;.1ed olflclallt and judges, will be taken
out when the measure· goes
before the full House today.
Houae Speaker A. G. loanclone, D-Beltalre, confirmed
Wednesday the leadership Is
supporting an amendment to
strike the provision raising the
pay of legislators from $14,000
to $17 ,ijOO a year.
Legislative leaders feel the
pressure against another ·pay
raise Is too great at this time.
Members of the General Assembly got a boost from $12,750
to $14,000 only seven months
ago.
Disagreement over the
raises had delayed the Senatepassed blll that contains sala,-y
hikes for the governor,
lieutenant governor, auditor,
treasurer, attorney general
and secretary of state as well
as state, common pleas an&lt;i
munl~ipal court judges.
Still fighting for adjournment by the middle of
next week at the latest, House
leaders scheduled votes today
on a comprehensive no-fault
automobile insiU'ance bill and
legislation on aid to impacted
cities.
·
The House approved Wednesday a bill requiring courts
to clear the record of a first
offender who completed a
period of rehabilitation. The
bill, approved by a 52-44 vote,
has already passed the Senate.
It must go back, however, because of minor changes made
by the House.
·Recorda Cleared
A first offenqer convicted of
a felony would be able to apply
for "expungement" of his re- ·
cord three years after his release from prison. A first offender convicted on a misdemeanor cbarge could apply for
expungement after one year.
U the offender's record "has
remained clean and it appears
he is rehabilitated," the court
'
of conviction must expunge the
conviction record.
Persons involved in motor
vehicle offenses or persons i!t·
eligible for probation under the
Ohio Revised Codes could not
· apply for expungement.
·- "This apparently is Be Kind
to Criminals Week in the Ohio
., House," said Rep. Joseph P.
Tulley, R-Willoughby.
•
The House passed a similar
bill Tuesday allowing the records of offenders placed on
probation instead of going to
prison to be cleared after the
probation' is completed.
"And just yesterday, we notice that doWn' at Lucasville.
the people who would benefit
from this kind of legislation
don't appear to be reciprocatIng the concern we have for
them with a concern for society," Tulley said.
His comments were directed .
at the deaths of two guards
Tuesday at the Southern Ohio
Correctional Institution.
Supporters of the expungemen! plan argued that hardened criminals would not
normally be eligible under the
bill, and that the chance of
getting his record cleared
would be incentive to a first ·
offender to remain within the
law.
Rallonlng Plan
The House passed and sent to
the Senate a bill directing tlie
Public Utilities Comml!!Slon to ·
th-aw up a rationing plan In the
event of an energy crisis. The
commission would be empoW·
ered to enforce rationing If a
crisis were declared by · the
United States president or the
Ohio governor with the concurrence of the legislature.
A bill giving golf courses,
camp ground and other outdoor
recreational facilities a tax
RAY SUES LAWYER
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP!) James Earl Ray, the convlctM
assassin of Martin Luther King
In 1968, filed a suit Wednesday
accusing his trial lawyer and
on author of conspiring to keep
personal papers from him.
Ray ssys his attorney Percy
Foreman gave loiters -Ray
wrote him from · jail to
Altibama · author William
Bradford Hule and that Hule
then tised exceprts froni the
letters in the book "He Slew the

was lorc•!d Into ~-o n ­
lcrence comm itlcc Wed .
nesdny . l:lmler tl • ~Ill . th e
property would be IJ.'Iliells\.'li lot·
ta.a tlon based on cur rent US\'
and not market value.
'l11e bill, a S&lt;lnato mea urc,
was approved by the llousc last
week, but wilh wt ume ndmenL
making facilities that dis·
criminate on the basis of sex,
race or religion Ineligible for
the tax break.

Ray, who Is serving a 99-year
prison sentence, said he now
needs the letters to ask for o
new hearing In federal court.
He argued F'oretnllll and Hule
"acted In colluslort by posses.·
lng and converting · personal
proptJrly lor .their own RUin;"

60's

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The reorganization bill, alto Nov. 15 through Departmen't of Adminllllratlve
re~dy
passed by the Senate,
Murch 15. A conference com- Service•.
millt:c will Iron out the difler- Urider the comprehensive now ~ocs to the governor .
le~l slation, the administrative
t'tlce.
McetiOR In a special night services departme nt would ATH LE T E' S FOOT
session , the House, by a 73-15 take over the functions of HOW TO TREAT ITApply qu lc:k -drylnt T -4·L.
vote, approved a Gilligan ad- public works and personnel F u l It flk e hold to check Itch,
burn inv in MINUTES . In J to s
ministration meuure that ana some of tile responslbllitle$ d1y1,
lnfe c.ted sllln sloughs. ott.
abollsheu the departments of of the finance department.
W•tc:h HEALTHY sk i n nplace
ltl If nol delighted IN ONE
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finance, public workl and state
HOUA , ,-our Stc b•ck II ~ny
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Office of Budget, and functions of the finance depart· &amp;Store
.
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The S...nute refused to t'Oncw·
wl ih the IIIJICildrnent Tuesday,
. JU nl Wc(fiocf;(lay 1111! HOUHC re.
fus" l to ~ive It up,
'll w Senate pasiiCiin btll prohibilin~ the use of Blud snow
ti res duriOR the nonwwlnter
mon ths except on safety ve·
hiclcs nnd schools buses.
'lloe bill has already passed
the House with the tires allowed only from Nov. !through
March 3. The Senate changed

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�..•
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6- l'he Da\lySentinei,Middleport-Pumeroy, O.,July26, t973

Major concession~ reached·on ....
....
..
...
state lottery hill W~dnesday
, COLUMBUS (UPI)- The strike the d ouse.
the headquarters should be lo- nues would be depo1ited In the
general lund, some 4li ~ cent
. Ohio House and Senate agreed
Gray said It would be futile to cated in the state capital,
to major concessions on the lot- have to argue with the House
Under the legislation, lottery of revenue• would be paid ou~
· tery corrunlsaion bill Wed- "at this late hour of the ses- tickets would be sold by agents as prizes and the remainder or
nesday and sent the me.. sure to slon ."
licensed · by the comrnlSiion the money would go lor opel':
Gov. John J . Gilligan for his
Sen. Ronald M. MotU, D- and would be available at.retail atlng expenses.
A full-time direCtor of tho
·
Parma, who fought for two store• throughout the state.
signature.
The ·Senate approved the years to get the constitutional
The bill appropriates $2 mll- lottery commission would tie
to
oversee
House lottery bill without the amendment clearing the way lion to cover implementing appointed
controversial "emergency for the lottery, warned It would costs. The money would be re- operations. He would be paid
clause" that has been a slum- be delayed several months and paid to the general revenue Is $25;000 a year.
bling.block to final passage for the state would lose millions of · ea~d .
months. The bill was approved dollars In revenues.
After the lotterY has begun to
For Complete
30-1 with only Sen. Richard C.
He said, however, he would operate normally, at least 30
Rei chel,
R-Masslllon, reluctantly go alorig with per cent of ticket sales reve·
Insurance
dissenting.
Gray 's move. .
nqes wOuld be deposl The bill
However, the Senate inserted
"It's a practicality of life," appropriates $2 million to
Protection
a major amendment, making Mottl said.
cover implementing costs. The
lottery winnings subject to the
The amendment to kill Jan- money would be re-paid to the
Phone 992-7428
state income tax. Because of guage In the bill exempting lot- general revenue fund after the
or 992 ·2724 after 5 p.m .
the amendment, the biU was tery winnings from the state first $2 million In net lottery
sent back to the House for con- income tax was introduced by revenue is earned.
•
currence.
Sen. Michael J. Maloney, RAfter the lottery has begun to
·
Refp. Tom Ffrthies,bD-Daydton, ' Cinc.innati.
!"" operate no rmally, at least 30
Agency
. ·
ch te sponsoro e Ill, sal he
"1 see no reason to exc uue-per cent o1 ticket sales reve-... 1-----=-.....;.~--...-J
was willing to accept the lottery money from Ohio tax•
Senate amendment to assure es," Maloney said.
passage of the bill before adAlrilost all income is Included
journment and urged concur- in the adjusted gross income
renee.
figure used as a basis for the
Fries said he probably will state income tat, Maloney
introduce legislation next year said, and lottery winnings
exempting lottery winnings shoul&lt;l be no exception.
from state taxes, however.
Sen. Paul E. Gilhnor, R-Port
Durit)g a special evening ses- Clinton, said the exemption
sion, the House agreed to t.he would
be
"grossly
Senate change by a 72-1~ vote . inequitable."
The legislation now needs only
"It violates one of the princiGilligan's signature, which is pies of the state Income taxexpected, to become law. Gilli· the ability to pay," Gilhnor
gan will be able to appoint a said, "and a person who wins
five-member lottery com- the stste lottery certainly has
mission in 90 days, and the the ability to pay::
lottery is expected to ' be
Lost Revenues
operating early next year.
Mottl warned that taxing the
The emergency clause, lottery winnings would induce
which would have allo&gt;xed many Ohioans to buy tickets in
Gilligan to set up the com· the Michigan and Pennmission in)rnediately, had been sylvania lotteries. This could
blocked repeatedly by House cost the Ohio lottery $20mijlion
Republicans.
in revenues, he said.
·
Kurfess Opposed
An amendment by Sen. Paul
House GOP leader Charles R. Malia, R-Westlake, to esF. Kurfess, R·Bowling Green, tablish state lottery headquarsaid this week he would con- ters in Cleveland was defeated.
tinue to oppose the emergency
Malia said the majority of
provision, although the op- lottery ticketS will be purposition would no longer be an chased in the Cleveland area.
official party position.
He said putting the main of.
. With House Republicans fices in Cleveland would also
standing firm' against the an·swer some of the pressure
emergency, Setlate President for decentralization of state
Pro Tempore Ted M: Gray, R· government.
Columb'"!, indicating he had
Malia was opposed by two
conferred with Kurfess, in- Columbus area senators and
troduced the amendment to other legislators who argued

Dal C. Wa

e · . mer,

,I

'

'

SAVE'
Bl

....
•

"

WORK IS CONTINUING on and near the conveyor belt
line running from the Meigs !\line to the $488 miUion James

· M. Gavin Plant at Cheshire. Photo above shows the belt line
connecting with the giant generating plant overlooking
Gravel Hill Rd.
.,
'

Rights argued during
Ehrlich man's testimony

GREGORY DROPS SHOWBIZ
CHICAGO
(UP!)
Comedian Oick Gregory has
decided to leave show business
and devote more time to his
family. His wife gave birth to
the .couple's loth child Wednesday.
In . a brief statement,
Gregory said he planned to
wind up his night club career
after two more appearances.
"He has decid~d to devote the
rest of his life to lecturing at
colleges and university
campuses," the statement
said.
Gregory said his wife,
Ullian, gave birth to their lOth
child and third son, an 8-pound4-&lt;&gt;unce hoy, at a Chicago
hospital shortly after midnight.

By. WESLEY. G. PQ'PERT
waveringly through two days one of the critical conWASHINGTON (UP!)- All in the witness chair at the stitutlonal confrontations
day the titans argued it: "Does Senate hearings that even between the President and
the king have the right Ill enter though Watergate defendants Congress lit the history of the
a humble man 's cottage G. Gordon Liddy and E. nation.
without his consent~
Howard_Hunt Jr. were unwiSe
The President was conOr, specifically,didagentsof in breaking into the office of fronted with a deadline to
President Nixon have a consti- Ellsberg's psychiatrist, they answer a committee subpoena .
tutional right on grounds of had a right to do so.
for tapes and other documents
national security to break ·into
in his possession relating to the
a psychiatrist's office to obtain . The debate on thnight ofthe Watergate scandal.
records about the emotional President to commit burgla,-y · 11 he refused to provide
· state of Pentagon Papers overshadowed the · puri)OSe of them, as expected, the comdefendant Daniel EUbserg?
the committee's current round mlttee was expected to file suit kook or whether we were
With a nationwide television of . hearings- who
was In u.s. Districl CoiU't for a dealing with a serious penetraaudtence and a hearing room of responsible for the bugging of declaratory judgment. This Uon of the nation's military
chastened spectators looking the Democratic national of- could lead to a landmark profile," Ehrlichman said. " ...
on • the men went at 'I·t :
f'tees at the Watergate complex Supreme Court test.
You must also note that at this
--Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr., 76, on June 17,1972, and who was
Wilson,
Ehrllchman's time, the Strategic Arms
honor graduate of Harvard law responsible for trying to cover lawyer, said that the 1968 Safe Umitation Treaty negotiation
school ' former prest'd'tng Up the extent of the crime?
Streets Act, which was ap- documents had been comJustice of the North Carolina
The break-in at the psychia- proved by Ervin 's Senate promised, so that the President
Supreme Court, the Senate's trist's office took place on Judiciary
Committee, by tile 24th of July knew that
fo_re"?ost expert on con- La bot Day weekend in 1971 , provided "a reservoir of power his negotiating position vs. the
stttuttonal law, and chairman about 60 days alter the ... for the sake of permitting Russians in the SALT negolia·
.Of the Senate 's· se Iec t newspaper publ'tcatlon of the the President to do what would tions were known to the
Watergate investigating PentagonstudyoftheVIetnam otherwise be a crime, to Russians .. .''
committee.
war. Ehrlichman said the protect the nation against
As the day wore to a close,
- JohnJ. Wilson, 73yearsold operation, which he would not foreign intelligence ... "
Ervin said that he wanted to
· on Wednesday, who went to law have approved, was conducted
"There is no one in this room, talk "a little of the Bible, a
school at night and gained a by the White House plumbers who can assert with litUe of history, and ·a little of
.
repu t at ton
as one of t he group that was established to categorical certainty that the law."
n~lion's lop trial lawyers, who help plug leaks In the future. President does not have a
He quoted an Old Testament
in 1952 argued against PresiErvin, who has been drawing constitutl9Dal power to cause prophet and ci!ed Talmadge's
dent Harry S Truman's applause whenever he enters an entry, under what would be quotation from William Pitt .
seizure of the nation's steel the Senate Caucus Room otherwise
illegal
cir"And yet we're wid here
mills.
admonished the partisan audi: cumstances, in pursuit of today and yesterday that what
- Sen.
Herman
E. encetobequietWednesday. AI foreign intelligence,'.' Wilson the King of England can't do,
Tahnadge, former .governor of one point, they had jeered said. "When we get to that · the President of the United
Georgta and member of one of Ehrlichman.
point, the Fourth Amendment States can," Ervin said.
his stale'S greatest political
In the afternoon however may have vanished from the
"Now President Nixon himdynaslies.
.
Ehrlichma~ gave E•rvin a jab: . scene."
self defined national security in
- John D. Ehrlichman, 48, The former feared White
The Fourth Amendment en- one of his directives as inConner re~l estate and land use House aide told Ervin, 28 years SW'es "the right of the people to eluding only two thingslawyer tn Seattle, W.ash ., his elder, "Mr. Chairman, you be seC)Ire in their persons, national defense and the
former counsel and domestic interrupted me. You have a houses, papers, and effects, relations with foreign counaffa~rs adviser to the delightful trial room praclice against unreasonable searches tries.
Prest dent, and, the man over of interrUpting something you and seiziU'es." It has been cited
"How in the wo'rld the
whom the argument was being do not want to h~r." .
. repeatedly by Ervin during the . opinions of a psychatrist about
waged:
The committee faced !&lt;;day Watergate hearings.
the mental state or the
Ehrhchman has argued un- ·what may be another step in . Talmadge, with charac- emotional state or the psychoterislic emotionlessness and logical state .of his patient,
Georgian drawl, ssld, "You even if his palient was
remember when we were In Ellsberg, could have any
law sdtool we studied a famous relation to national defense or
principle of law that came relations loa foreign country is
from England and is also well something that eludes the
known in this country, that 110 Imagination of lhis countrY
matter how humble a man's lawyer."
cottage Is that even tbe King of
England can not enter without ,

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Sizes 2· 12
Also Trunks &amp; 8-12 Shorts

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT

...

his consent."
"I'm afraid that has · been
considerably eroded over the
years, hasn't It?" Ehrlichman
shot back.
"What we're talking al&gt;Qut
here Is an unauthorized entry
and burglarizing a man's
premises who wasn't ' even
involved in stealing the pa~s
in the first instance," Talmadge sa!d.
Ehrllcbman said the Investigative technique of a psychia,
trlc profile was perfected · by
the CIA. He 'said that Hunt and ·
IJddy acting as White House
agents carried out the
operation because FBI
Dire&lt;.1or J . Edgar Hoover had
refused to conduct 10me interviews in the Ellsberg ca~.
" ... We did not know whether
we were dealing here with a .
.spy r.lng or just an individual
I

'

Soybean stocks smallest in seven years in Ohio
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Soybean stocks in Ohio a,s of July I
were the smallest in seven
years, the Ohio Crop Reporting
Service said Wednesday. Only
stocks of wheat and barley
were above the levels of July !,
1972.
Officials said wheat stores in
all positions totaled 5.5 million
bushels, up from 2.6 million
bushels a year ago. Wheat
stored off farm totaled 5.3
million bushels, up 2.2 million
bushels from a year ago.
Barley stored in all positions
totaled 107,000 bushels, compared with 93,000 bushels for
the same period last year.
Corn in aU positions was 82
million bushels on July I, 24 per
cent below the 108 million
bushels on band July I, 1972.
Corn stored on farms accounted for 51.2 million
bushels, down from 67.1 million
bushels on farm a year earlier
and is 63 per cent of the total
corn stocks. Off-farm stocks ·
were at 3e.5 million bushels the
first day of this month, down 24
per cent from the same day
last year.
Soybeans in storage in all
positions on July I, 1973,

SUMMER SALE
CONTINUES

--sPECIAL SALE--

ON -ANGEL TREADS
AND SUMMER.
HOUSE SLIPPERS
I

THE SHOE BOX.
Our Shoesare Still Sensiblv l&gt;riced
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

)I

II

Yes, while stocks last, you can save
in a big way. Big value -

big saving!

President Latex Flat is a lot of paint for y~ur
money. High hiding · high performance and
your choice of 12 smart colors including 3
beautiful whites. Goes on fast, too, roller
brush .

totaled about II million
bushels, 32 per ~;ent below the
Jt~IY I, 1972, level of 16 million
bushels. This is the smallest
soybean stock for the July 1
quarter since 1966, officials
OFFER LIMITED TO PRESENT STOCK
said.
COME EARLy- SAVE REAL MONEY!Total soybeans ztored on
farms was 2.4 milllon bushels,
Regular list 15.85 gal.
50 per cent below the 4.8
bushels stored on farms a year
YOU PAY JUST
•
earilier. Off farm stocks account for nearly 77 per cent ·or
the total soybean stocks, the
service said.
Oat stocks in all positions
t!ltaled 4.8 million bushels, 46
per cent below the 8.9 million
bushels on hand July I, 1m.
The total on-farm stocks were
992-2709
at 2.7 million bushels, comMiddleport
pared with 5.1 million bushels a .._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;.;;:,;;;;;:;;;~
year ago.

S

3 99

Valley Lumber &amp;
Supply Co.
Plan Now
to Attend the

•

GRAND

OPENING
of Your New
Pomeroy Kroger
Opening Sunday
·July 29th

10

•
•

••'
••
••

'

,.
•

,.

•

lotltlll It

100Eat
M•in St.
P01111roy

Featuring a Deluxe Delicatessen
with Freslt Made Donuts and

Prepared Take-out Foods
lu1t Rltht for the ll•r P"plt 01 the Go I

'
••

..•
•

.,•
·~

•••••
••

••

"•

••"

-

•..

•

A

•
7- '!'he DallySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. July 211, 197J

Pay hike taken out ·Of measure
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A ~'O n­
troverslal pay hike lor state
legislators, Inserted by the
· House Judlciflry Committee
into legislation raising the
salaries of major ele&lt;.1ed olflclallt and judges, will be taken
out when the measure· goes
before the full House today.
Houae Speaker A. G. loanclone, D-Beltalre, confirmed
Wednesday the leadership Is
supporting an amendment to
strike the provision raising the
pay of legislators from $14,000
to $17 ,ijOO a year.
Legislative leaders feel the
pressure against another ·pay
raise Is too great at this time.
Members of the General Assembly got a boost from $12,750
to $14,000 only seven months
ago.
Disagreement over the
raises had delayed the Senatepassed blll that contains sala,-y
hikes for the governor,
lieutenant governor, auditor,
treasurer, attorney general
and secretary of state as well
as state, common pleas an&lt;i
munl~ipal court judges.
Still fighting for adjournment by the middle of
next week at the latest, House
leaders scheduled votes today
on a comprehensive no-fault
automobile insiU'ance bill and
legislation on aid to impacted
cities.
·
The House approved Wednesday a bill requiring courts
to clear the record of a first
offender who completed a
period of rehabilitation. The
bill, approved by a 52-44 vote,
has already passed the Senate.
It must go back, however, because of minor changes made
by the House.
·Recorda Cleared
A first offenqer convicted of
a felony would be able to apply
for "expungement" of his re- ·
cord three years after his release from prison. A first offender convicted on a misdemeanor cbarge could apply for
expungement after one year.
U the offender's record "has
remained clean and it appears
he is rehabilitated," the court
'
of conviction must expunge the
conviction record.
Persons involved in motor
vehicle offenses or persons i!t·
eligible for probation under the
Ohio Revised Codes could not
· apply for expungement.
·- "This apparently is Be Kind
to Criminals Week in the Ohio
., House," said Rep. Joseph P.
Tulley, R-Willoughby.
•
The House passed a similar
bill Tuesday allowing the records of offenders placed on
probation instead of going to
prison to be cleared after the
probation' is completed.
"And just yesterday, we notice that doWn' at Lucasville.
the people who would benefit
from this kind of legislation
don't appear to be reciprocatIng the concern we have for
them with a concern for society," Tulley said.
His comments were directed .
at the deaths of two guards
Tuesday at the Southern Ohio
Correctional Institution.
Supporters of the expungemen! plan argued that hardened criminals would not
normally be eligible under the
bill, and that the chance of
getting his record cleared
would be incentive to a first ·
offender to remain within the
law.
Rallonlng Plan
The House passed and sent to
the Senate a bill directing tlie
Public Utilities Comml!!Slon to ·
th-aw up a rationing plan In the
event of an energy crisis. The
commission would be empoW·
ered to enforce rationing If a
crisis were declared by · the
United States president or the
Ohio governor with the concurrence of the legislature.
A bill giving golf courses,
camp ground and other outdoor
recreational facilities a tax
RAY SUES LAWYER
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP!) James Earl Ray, the convlctM
assassin of Martin Luther King
In 1968, filed a suit Wednesday
accusing his trial lawyer and
on author of conspiring to keep
personal papers from him.
Ray ssys his attorney Percy
Foreman gave loiters -Ray
wrote him from · jail to
Altibama · author William
Bradford Hule and that Hule
then tised exceprts froni the
letters in the book "He Slew the

was lorc•!d Into ~-o n ­
lcrence comm itlcc Wed .
nesdny . l:lmler tl • ~Ill . th e
property would be IJ.'Iliells\.'li lot·
ta.a tlon based on cur rent US\'
and not market value.
'l11e bill, a S&lt;lnato mea urc,
was approved by the llousc last
week, but wilh wt ume ndmenL
making facilities that dis·
criminate on the basis of sex,
race or religion Ineligible for
the tax break.

Ray, who Is serving a 99-year
prison sentence, said he now
needs the letters to ask for o
new hearing In federal court.
He argued F'oretnllll and Hule
"acted In colluslort by posses.·
lng and converting · personal
proptJrly lor .their own RUin;"

60's

Reg . $1.69

.

The reorganization bill, alto Nov. 15 through Departmen't of Adminllllratlve
re~dy
passed by the Senate,
Murch 15. A conference com- Service•.
millt:c will Iron out the difler- Urider the comprehensive now ~ocs to the governor .
le~l slation, the administrative
t'tlce.
McetiOR In a special night services departme nt would ATH LE T E' S FOOT
session , the House, by a 73-15 take over the functions of HOW TO TREAT ITApply qu lc:k -drylnt T -4·L.
vote, approved a Gilligan ad- public works and personnel F u l It flk e hold to check Itch,
burn inv in MINUTES . In J to s
ministration meuure that ana some of tile responslbllitle$ d1y1,
lnfe c.ted sllln sloughs. ott.
abollsheu the departments of of the finance department.
W•tc:h HEALTHY sk i n nplace
ltl If nol delighted IN ONE
Bud ~e t and management
finance, public workl and state
HOUA , ,-our Stc b•ck II ~ny
P.ersonnel and cre ates the would take over the major drut counter . NOW •t Swisher
Loh se Drug s, Ne lson Drug
Office of Budget, and functions of the finance depart· &amp;Store
.
Management
and
the ment.

the

Clairoi

·cEPACOL

FROST

14 Ol.

&amp;

Have cool cl enn air
tonight . Toto! ve n.
Il lat ion .

Mason Furniture

BROMO
SELTZER

Colgate

INSTANT
SHAVE

9 oz .

TIP KIT

Reg . $1.37

11 oz.

Reg. $2 .29

'

Reg . $79c

MFG. SUGGESTED LIST PRICE .
18.95/15.37
1
5.251'3.15
17.50/ 14.50
15.00/13.00
17.001'4.20
14.25/12.55
16.50/13.90
13.25/11.95
15.50/13.30
12.00/11.20

SAN ANOA0/230

.

~

Ot:'

CONOAD0/236 .

.

~ ·

'

.

'

.

-.............-..... ..
'Q){)I flAY" T M ...

... c- ~... ....

.

Square Shooter 11

· ~

C..... H ...

Polaroid

~

NEW

Oscillating Lawn

CAR CARE

CAMERA

SPRINKLER

Insecticide &amp; Deodorant

Reg. $24.95

Reg . $4.70

by Shell
Reg . $1.49

IIIIiIIJN{{/\'

Max Factor introduces

Revlon

INTIMATE

Jromutit6~dg~tkJlll
six perfume oils to annoint the oody and stimulate the senses

COLOGNE
8 oz .

New one-note essences thai work beautifully alone or when topped by another.
They're ea11hy. They're scn SUl)US. They're rich. And each fn1g1~ant oil

is so potent . the

St'l;~ llt

lingers on. and l~n . amf lWt.

Max . Factor
Waterproof

Max Factor
Waterproof

Plastic Wrought Iron
' CLEAR
EyES

FENCE

- ~- ·101,,....

"' 001"

...

--·

Reg. 59'

AIR
CONDITIONERS
6,000 to
24,000 BTU

COOL RAY P.OLAROID SUNGlASSES
40% OFF

'

.

dn~a

Reg . $5. 95

I

I ..

The S...nute refused to t'Oncw·
wl ih the IIIJICildrnent Tuesday,
. JU nl Wc(fiocf;(lay 1111! HOUHC re.
fus" l to ~ive It up,
'll w Senate pasiiCiin btll prohibilin~ the use of Blud snow
ti res duriOR the nonwwlnter
mon ths except on safety ve·
hiclcs nnd schools buses.
'lloe bill has already passed
the House with the tires allowed only from Nov. !through
March 3. The Senate changed

EFFERDENT
TABLETS

ll 011101 I fl l&gt;f'l \1

Dreanier."

1.

l~·ea k

KeLI/ln.at:or

PINE-SOL
15 oz.

Reg. 69c.

PH . 77J. $5 92

MASON, W. VA.

CLAIROL
FINAL NET
Reg . $2 .25

�1

'I

.

8- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 26,1973

one
drop

'' .

'

• - The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-PO!llcroy, 0., July :Ill, 1173
NOTICE OF SAL I

Racine Social Events

Bldt will b11 rhtlvtcJ at the

'

For Sale

For Sale

WILKINSON Smell Enlline STRAW. Cell 992-6860 or 992·
7306 ·
Sales and Service, aiO 3rd Sl..
1 20 -&lt;11
BulldlnQ . Pomeroy , Ohio, until
"Middleport
,
Lawn
Mower
and
·
c
11 :00 1 .m . on Jvtv 30, 1973, tor
chalnsawrepalr
.
Free
pickup
!ht lilt ol tht JOhr'l IIUYIQt
6600 AI R condlllonor, S6Q,

afflct ot B•rnarcJ V F'VUJ In the
Pomeroy
National
Blnk

lly Mnl. Fra~~~:ll Morrll
mer Cttll!d", "A Prayer", "Let
Z1111 A111lvenary
Nothlns Dl.lturb You", 1be
and dP.IIvPrv · Phtln" 9fn.:tc')9?,
l l tuet•d o" Butt~rnut
'TIIeaday e~~ening, July 17, program cloeed with prayer. A rtlldtnce
.automatic washer lilnd dryer ~
Avenv• In tht Vllllglll ol
Alao Briggs and Stratton and
s•9.95. electric ranqe $39.9~,
"fr · and Mrs. Willlllm Hayman bullnesi · seuion followed PomarOv1 Ohio. SJJd rnldtnct
Tecumseh par1s.
cabinet •Ink, $20, re It
1
two
·tforv.
two
·btdroom
6-2t-30tc
. w,ere honored with open hoUJe · coPducted by Marte Rouall, homt , l 11:r bathl, and .IMIUd"
frigerator s, ~5 end up. P II.
- - - --J" ,.,..__ - J Odds end Endo Shop, 215 N.
- ll;i oblervance of thelr silver president. Closed by linglng thr., loll .
Bld1 may be tubm ltttd 11 fht
Second,
Middleport.
wedding 1111111veraary at tbelr "My Prayer" and '111e lord'a tlmt of lilt , Tht right It
).25·41C
to rtltct any and all
JUST ARRIVED
home which WIUJ hoeted by Prayer In unlaon. Potluck rllervtd
--:-:-:--...,.-~-­
bldl.
NEW SHIPMENT
JUST arrived 197• modal fold·
Mra. Gretta Sim(l1011 and Mrs. refrelllunllnls ·were aerved.
down caMpers . 5-th An .John
G.
Sauvage,
Mary Louise Shuler. The
Mra . Ollie Mae Cozart
niversary tale on STAR ·
Eatcvlor ot the Estate
I
refreshment table wBI Cf)n- returned from attending Camp
CRAFT trailers. 55,592 unit
of .John SIUYI9t,
dtceaud
lor s•.2ol9. $4,515 unit for
tered .,tth a large weddins Kirkwood at Wllmln£\00, Ohio.
$3,500. $4,050 unit for $3,099.
cake which was served by Mrs. 9le waa a coll!llelor and Dean 171 2•. 25. 26. 27, 2t, SIC
All contained. Sleeps 6.
As lo~ As
Frances Butcher. Mrs. Mary of Girls. This Is a Baptillt camp
Priced reduced on 1973 fold ·
downs.
Two used unlls In
Loulle Shuler served punch owned by the Ohio ·Baptist.
NOTICE OF $ALE
other sizes also available.
aloe~ .
CAMP CONLEY
and Mrs. Shirley Simpson ConvenUon.
Bids will be rtcelwed at the
Stt them today .
·
STARCRAFT SALES. Rt. 62
of. eernlrtl v . Fultz In tht
N. of Pl. PleaSIIni behind Red
served coffee. Approlllmately · The ~rt family reunion office
Pom,erov
Netlonal
Bank
,
'
Carpet
Inn. Phone 304-675·
Building,
Pomeror
,
Ohio,
unlit
9.
_
POMEROY
3:i were present. Miss Vera was held SUnday at the Shrine
5384.
Friday;
Julv
27,
973.
at
11 :00,
11011·
Jac~W . Conev,MIJr .
!leegle presented a nice Park.
a .m . for the ule of 1hl Phoebt
Phone 992·.2111
7-,5-Aic ,
p;ogram. Mr. Dennis Manuel
Guests of Rev. and Mrs. Amand• Clark r&amp;ll tltate, 1-_ _ _ _...__ _ _..J - - - - - -- - constsllno ol • -six-room. twn- uROCI:I&lt;Y business for sate.· 1973 ZIG ZAG sewing machine.
waa acccmpanied on the plano Walter P. Blkacsan were his 1torv
cement block r .. tdenc:e
with 1111 baths. located on u . s . Building tor sale or lease.
this machine darns , em by babel Slmpeon to Bing parents, Mr. and Mra. F. Route- 33 et Enterprl .. north of Phone 773·5618 from 8130 p.m.
broldens . overcests, all
lo 10 p.m . for appolnlmenl.
Without atlachmenls. Pay
10101 and there was group Bikacaan .of Tallmadge and Pomeroy In Meigs Counly .
Persons
may
appear
and
bid
3-20-llc
balance of S38.SOor pay $6 per
linglng of hymns and love their son and daughter-ln~aw, all he time of solt, to.wlt: 11 :00
month . Call 992-5331.
aonp, and piano mllsic by Mr. and Mrs. Denn!J Blkacsan a .m . on July 27. 1973.
ESH PRODUCE
N
7 22 61c
The rlgM Is reserved 10 relocl FR
- · ew
- Keith Aahley. Mr. and Mrs. of West Carrollton. They came any and all bldl, and lhOSalfls pol a toes' tom a I oe s; 1973 8 TRACK sl••eo In Walnul
to the •pproval of the
cucum~rs, sqUesh. Charles
..,
Hayman received a telephone for the inBtallation service held subject
Common Plus Court, Probate
R. H~rrl~ &amp;nd Son, Portland.
console will sell for small
call of congratulations from for Pasror Blkacsan, July 15. Division, Molga Coun1v. Ohio.
1·19-lfc ' balance down $86.SO or
llleir 8on, Mike of Kenton.
Hazel Carnahan and Frances
Oorolhy Clark, - - - - - - - - paymenls can be arranged.
Admtntslralr xoflhe 1973 STEREO radio lape 992- 533 1.
_ .7-i2-61c
' 1be Booster Sunday School Foster spent ths weekend with
Etlaleof comblneiiQ!l with buill-In 8
Class met Friday evening, July Mrs. Loe Tladale at Buckeye
Phoiba 1\manda Clark track. Take ,over paymenis of 8 ACRES on Rl. 143, good
171 22. 1J, 2•. 2S, 26, 51c
$7.55 per month . or pey
building sites. city waler.
20 at the home of Mrs. Margie Latre.
$102.50.
Call
992-5331.
Phone 9'12-3640.
Grimm. The devotional
Mr, Joseph Foster and
_.:.:
7-22-6tc
program by Mrs. Do'rolhy children, Robin, Patty and
Badgley opened with group Anlhol)y, of Livonia, Mich.
LEGAL NOTICE
WALNUT stereo-radio tape
bids will be received
combination, am-fm radio, 8
singing "Some Golden visited Mr. and Mrs. Ralph bvs,al&amp;d
Ladies' Fashions
the Meigs Local School
track tape combination, .ct
Daybreak". Sa-lpture reading Webb and Mrs. Edward District Board of Education at speaker sound system .
SPORTSWEAR
their office In the Melg1 Junior
Balance $107.39, or use· our
was Psalm 91. Readings of Foster.
High School Building , Mid · budge! terms. Call 992·3965.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb dltport, Ohio, for school bus
members included "God's
7-22-6tc
untlll2 :00 o'clock Eastern - - - - - - - - l;Jnlalling Grace", "Speaking spent Sunday afternoon with tlrts
Daylight Saving Time on
of Man", "Tell Him", "God Mr. and Mrs. John Heath at Augu1t 9, 1973, at which time NOW OPEN, P.andJ .Oddsand
Endo, Glorified Iunk, .ap·
bids Will be opt!"ed . The tire -bid
Moves", "Wearing 50 Stars", Marietta.
pll•nces, turnll~re. 215 North
prices
ire
tO
ln(!Ude
1
"Malting Contact", "A Sum· Mt. and Mrs. Solon Butcher demounting of the old tire end
Second, Middleport.
mounting of th• neW or
6-29,301&lt;
of Spencer, W. Va., were guests recepped on the rim ~nd placing
of Mrs. Grella SimpsOn here to the mounted tire and rim on the TOMATOES, cucumbers, green
bus.
attend the Z5lh wedding an· · For specifications please call
peppers . Cleland Farms,
Maln at Sycamore
Geraldine Cletend, Racine.
niversary of Mr. and Mrs. 992-5650 .
Meigs Local
POMEROY, OHIO .
7-8-tfc
William Hayman.
School DISirlct
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Curtis of
L. W. McComas,
Lorain spent the wookend with
Clerk
171
12,
19.
26
IBI
2,
•1c
his p!II'fnts, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Curtis. Mrs. Marcia
Wells of Washington C.H. spen\
over July 15 weekend with her
parents. .
For Sale
Mrs. Edmond Henry and
LOSE weight with New Shape
mother, Mrs. Harry Hayman
Tablets and Hydrex Water
Pills at Dutton Drug In
of Jack~ called on Miss Edith
Middleport
and Nelson Drug .
Hayman recently. ·
. 1·24-31p
Mi. and Mrs. Jerry Powell
spent a vacation last week with 1 AIR conditioner, 12,000 BTU .
Used for 3 months. Phone
relatives and friends In PeM·
(304) 882-2810.
sylvania and also at Lake Erie.
7-2+3tc
Mrs. Bill McKeMie and three --..,---__.::...
7200acre lotlor sale. ,60 AC
children of Galllpolis were ONE
all -c rop Harveste.r, also.
guests Friday .of Mr. and l\1rs.
Phone 742-3656.
7.6·2~1p
&amp;y Riffle.
Mr .. and Mrs. Frank Cleland . • ·
VI~E PRES. · TECHNICAL
NEW 1973 Zig-Zag Sewing
.spent the weekend at Cedar 13)Machines
In original factory
Point.
carton. Zig-Zag to ma~e
but1onholes. sew on buttons,
"This is our finest uttx
Mrs. Isabel Simpson spent a
monograms, and make fancy
house paint. I developed couple dsys In ColwnbUB with
designs with
just lhe
it 15 y11n 190 and todoy, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Beegle twist
of
a
single lay -away
dial. Lefl In
through rtfinements•. it · and their guests, Mr. and Mrs.
and never been used. Will sell
tht btlt product of its type Garner Roush of Florida.
for !lf1iy $47 cash, or terms

-.Jam•·~ W. Mcl.•nt, Cool of

.

-,nillions
think.
.,

Byron
•

•

J/-a.~
2 GAL. PAll

Sl492

There are few things as powerful as the printed word. As a custodian of this awesome power, your
daily newspaper accepts the responsibility for factual, complete reporting. Not just partial reporting,
or biased reporting, or even hearsay reporting, but proven, researched facts that can influence the lives
and well-being of its readers. •

REUSABLE .2 GAL. PAIL
- ACTUAL 20% SAVINGS!

SAYRE
·HARDWARE

Your newsp1,1per feels an obligation to vigorously defend its right and ability to report the facts, the
complet'e facts, 'rather than segments wrcelled out by regulatory bodies. It feels strongly that the protection of a reporter's news source is vital to an unimpeded flow of information and has joined in
the strong fight to preserve this and other rights guaranteed to a free people.

882-2525

NEW HAVEN

I'
SHOP YOUR DEPENDABLE
GRAY-SEAL DEALER
-,

'Lend your support to preserving our freedoms.

FARMERS

,

•

e

PUBLIC NOTICES
Your Right to Know
an·d be ,lntor'·med of the fuflC·
tions 9f yolJr government are
embodied in public notices . In
that se lf.gOvernment charges
all citizens to be InfOrmed;
this neWspaper. urges· every
citizen to read and stUdy these
notices. we strongly advise
those citizens, seeking further
informatloll'. to exercise their
right of access to public

records and public m.eetlngs .

..NOTICE OF

A GUARDIAN OF INDIVIDUAL FREEDOM

PUBLIC HEARING

7-24·2tc

Lillian Frost 1972 YAMAHA 250 MX . Phone
Cheoter Ohio •sno
992-2~52.
171 26, 11c
7·24·3tC

Plan Now
to Attend the

"'

GRAND

of Your New
Pomeroy Kroger
Opening Sunday
July 29th
10

...

Two Kroger
Shields Standing
for Guaranteed
ProduCts

...

"

}

'"

"

•

•

'J

'

....
~

"'

r

•lS

Chisler Twp. Clerk

------

••,,

OPEN FRIDAYS 9 'TIL 7'

Machine, good condition. Ca
992-731.1.

.

l'

Membe,r of Federal Reserve System
520,000 ~aximum Insurance for Each Depositor

----TREADLE Singer SewlnR

Budgellor J:heoter Twp. for lhe -:-::--::------~~7~a. l year ending Dec . 31sl, AT Showalter's Wet Pel,
Chester, Ohio. Sliver angels,
Such hearing Will be held at
39C 3 f
d 11
10 II
CheSler Town Hall, Chesler.
' or a o ar.
ga on
Ohio.
sehJps, SIO.
1·23-13tc

•

"'

I

POMEROY, OHIO

16 FT. FIBERGLASS boat, 80
h.p. Mere motor, trailer, two
gas tenks, lop. 5900. Call 7426501 after S p.m.
·
7-24-Jip

July 27th al 7 p.m. a public

M

"'

.

Farlllers Bank &amp; Savings CQ.-

CANNING tomatoes now ready.
Geraldine Cleland, Racine,
Ohio. 9~9-4121.
7-23-llc

hearlna wlll be held on the

•••
••
•••

••

..

Easy does it ... no pain, no strain. You don't ev~n have to get ovt
of your car.- and that ends pesky parking problems. Just pull up
and transact your business . On Fridays our Drive-In Window ·is·
open 9 a.m . to 7 p.m . continuously to better ser~e you.

7-2~-31c

OPENING
,,

DBIVB•IN BJI.NICINQ

CANN lNG peaches arriving
Tuesday. Bring containers.
Midway Markel, Pomeroy.
Call 992-2565 or 992-2582.

Notice Is hereby glv•n that on

••

entine

a1

i

BANK

available. Phone 992-nB4.
· 7-22-61c

~

.

lOLA'S

------

ovoiltble. Our d11lers now
havi it on 11lt - like -~d:
vtntlgl of tht liVings," ·

•

·-·

'

·t housands.,

I

Most Summer
Items Now ..
h price

LlvinK Council deputy dlreclor.

I

AIR OONDITIONERS
$99,95

·-,nahes

•

wrll ~"up "La mudcr•lc rate.

The Easiest Bank To Get To •••

HOTPOlNT

_____

,

It ts dear thatlood pnccs
arc ~cung tu gu up and they

'"'"'.,
100E1st

,.,,.,
M1inSt.

clean
?

•

Clean energy-energy that doesn't blacken skies or pollute
rivers-is obviously worlh quite a bit. And here's I he
paradox. The cleanest-burning fuel -and thus the most
valuable fuel-is· urastically under priced.
That fuel is natural gas.
· But, because natural gas is so clean, and so inexpensive, '
lhc demanu has far outgrown conven lional supplies,
We need new sources of clean energy. And we need them now.
Columbia Gas is investing hun.dreds of millions of dollars
in developing drumutic new sources, such as gas from the Arctic,
from overseas, from under the sea, from petroleum
·
liquids ... even from plentiful coal.
Gas from these new sourc~s l:OSts more to tind &lt;wd delive r, and
eventually we'll probubly all notice it in our gas bills .
~ut natural gas will continue to be your besl energy buy .
What is clean energy renlly worth?
Try to imagine your world without it.
Imagine your clrildm1 without it.

Columbin Ga s is working to help solVe the
~ncrgy crisis. It's ~:xpcnsivc hl duplic:l(c na ture's work, but w~ ca n do i!. w~·re building
a rdorming plant , at a cos t of ovl!r fllrty mil llon dolli.irs th ul turns petroleum liqu ids int o

pipeline qualjty gu.'i. It i!'l- dc :- ign~ll to Jclivcr
eighty-eig ht billi on cu hic feet of u;1s each
ycnr. ll''i only a tr idlc- uf thl' nc\~ cnerg~
Amcr:cn ne e d~. Still. it\ shedding a bright

hope (l fl lnm(J rro w.

~WMBIAGAS

Gas is pn•rinhs, pure enerRy ... use II wise I~,
•

'·

�1

'I

.

8- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 26,1973

one
drop

'' .

'

• - The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-PO!llcroy, 0., July :Ill, 1173
NOTICE OF SAL I

Racine Social Events

Bldt will b11 rhtlvtcJ at the

'

For Sale

For Sale

WILKINSON Smell Enlline STRAW. Cell 992-6860 or 992·
7306 ·
Sales and Service, aiO 3rd Sl..
1 20 -&lt;11
BulldlnQ . Pomeroy , Ohio, until
"Middleport
,
Lawn
Mower
and
·
c
11 :00 1 .m . on Jvtv 30, 1973, tor
chalnsawrepalr
.
Free
pickup
!ht lilt ol tht JOhr'l IIUYIQt
6600 AI R condlllonor, S6Q,

afflct ot B•rnarcJ V F'VUJ In the
Pomeroy
National
Blnk

lly Mnl. Fra~~~:ll Morrll
mer Cttll!d", "A Prayer", "Let
Z1111 A111lvenary
Nothlns Dl.lturb You", 1be
and dP.IIvPrv · Phtln" 9fn.:tc')9?,
l l tuet•d o" Butt~rnut
'TIIeaday e~~ening, July 17, program cloeed with prayer. A rtlldtnce
.automatic washer lilnd dryer ~
Avenv• In tht Vllllglll ol
Alao Briggs and Stratton and
s•9.95. electric ranqe $39.9~,
"fr · and Mrs. Willlllm Hayman bullnesi · seuion followed PomarOv1 Ohio. SJJd rnldtnct
Tecumseh par1s.
cabinet •Ink, $20, re It
1
two
·tforv.
two
·btdroom
6-2t-30tc
. w,ere honored with open hoUJe · coPducted by Marte Rouall, homt , l 11:r bathl, and .IMIUd"
frigerator s, ~5 end up. P II.
- - - --J" ,.,..__ - J Odds end Endo Shop, 215 N.
- ll;i oblervance of thelr silver president. Closed by linglng thr., loll .
Bld1 may be tubm ltttd 11 fht
Second,
Middleport.
wedding 1111111veraary at tbelr "My Prayer" and '111e lord'a tlmt of lilt , Tht right It
).25·41C
to rtltct any and all
JUST ARRIVED
home which WIUJ hoeted by Prayer In unlaon. Potluck rllervtd
--:-:-:--...,.-~-­
bldl.
NEW SHIPMENT
JUST arrived 197• modal fold·
Mra. Gretta Sim(l1011 and Mrs. refrelllunllnls ·were aerved.
down caMpers . 5-th An .John
G.
Sauvage,
Mary Louise Shuler. The
Mra . Ollie Mae Cozart
niversary tale on STAR ·
Eatcvlor ot the Estate
I
refreshment table wBI Cf)n- returned from attending Camp
CRAFT trailers. 55,592 unit
of .John SIUYI9t,
dtceaud
lor s•.2ol9. $4,515 unit for
tered .,tth a large weddins Kirkwood at Wllmln£\00, Ohio.
$3,500. $4,050 unit for $3,099.
cake which was served by Mrs. 9le waa a coll!llelor and Dean 171 2•. 25. 26. 27, 2t, SIC
All contained. Sleeps 6.
As lo~ As
Frances Butcher. Mrs. Mary of Girls. This Is a Baptillt camp
Priced reduced on 1973 fold ·
downs.
Two used unlls In
Loulle Shuler served punch owned by the Ohio ·Baptist.
NOTICE OF $ALE
other sizes also available.
aloe~ .
CAMP CONLEY
and Mrs. Shirley Simpson ConvenUon.
Bids will be rtcelwed at the
Stt them today .
·
STARCRAFT SALES. Rt. 62
of. eernlrtl v . Fultz In tht
N. of Pl. PleaSIIni behind Red
served coffee. Approlllmately · The ~rt family reunion office
Pom,erov
Netlonal
Bank
,
'
Carpet
Inn. Phone 304-675·
Building,
Pomeror
,
Ohio,
unlit
9.
_
POMEROY
3:i were present. Miss Vera was held SUnday at the Shrine
5384.
Friday;
Julv
27,
973.
at
11 :00,
11011·
Jac~W . Conev,MIJr .
!leegle presented a nice Park.
a .m . for the ule of 1hl Phoebt
Phone 992·.2111
7-,5-Aic ,
p;ogram. Mr. Dennis Manuel
Guests of Rev. and Mrs. Amand• Clark r&amp;ll tltate, 1-_ _ _ _...__ _ _..J - - - - - -- - constsllno ol • -six-room. twn- uROCI:I&lt;Y business for sate.· 1973 ZIG ZAG sewing machine.
waa acccmpanied on the plano Walter P. Blkacsan were his 1torv
cement block r .. tdenc:e
with 1111 baths. located on u . s . Building tor sale or lease.
this machine darns , em by babel Slmpeon to Bing parents, Mr. and Mra. F. Route- 33 et Enterprl .. north of Phone 773·5618 from 8130 p.m.
broldens . overcests, all
lo 10 p.m . for appolnlmenl.
Without atlachmenls. Pay
10101 and there was group Bikacaan .of Tallmadge and Pomeroy In Meigs Counly .
Persons
may
appear
and
bid
3-20-llc
balance of S38.SOor pay $6 per
linglng of hymns and love their son and daughter-ln~aw, all he time of solt, to.wlt: 11 :00
month . Call 992-5331.
aonp, and piano mllsic by Mr. and Mrs. Denn!J Blkacsan a .m . on July 27. 1973.
ESH PRODUCE
N
7 22 61c
The rlgM Is reserved 10 relocl FR
- · ew
- Keith Aahley. Mr. and Mrs. of West Carrollton. They came any and all bldl, and lhOSalfls pol a toes' tom a I oe s; 1973 8 TRACK sl••eo In Walnul
to the •pproval of the
cucum~rs, sqUesh. Charles
..,
Hayman received a telephone for the inBtallation service held subject
Common Plus Court, Probate
R. H~rrl~ &amp;nd Son, Portland.
console will sell for small
call of congratulations from for Pasror Blkacsan, July 15. Division, Molga Coun1v. Ohio.
1·19-lfc ' balance down $86.SO or
llleir 8on, Mike of Kenton.
Hazel Carnahan and Frances
Oorolhy Clark, - - - - - - - - paymenls can be arranged.
Admtntslralr xoflhe 1973 STEREO radio lape 992- 533 1.
_ .7-i2-61c
' 1be Booster Sunday School Foster spent ths weekend with
Etlaleof comblneiiQ!l with buill-In 8
Class met Friday evening, July Mrs. Loe Tladale at Buckeye
Phoiba 1\manda Clark track. Take ,over paymenis of 8 ACRES on Rl. 143, good
171 22. 1J, 2•. 2S, 26, 51c
$7.55 per month . or pey
building sites. city waler.
20 at the home of Mrs. Margie Latre.
$102.50.
Call
992-5331.
Phone 9'12-3640.
Grimm. The devotional
Mr, Joseph Foster and
_.:.:
7-22-6tc
program by Mrs. Do'rolhy children, Robin, Patty and
Badgley opened with group Anlhol)y, of Livonia, Mich.
LEGAL NOTICE
WALNUT stereo-radio tape
bids will be received
combination, am-fm radio, 8
singing "Some Golden visited Mr. and Mrs. Ralph bvs,al&amp;d
Ladies' Fashions
the Meigs Local School
track tape combination, .ct
Daybreak". Sa-lpture reading Webb and Mrs. Edward District Board of Education at speaker sound system .
SPORTSWEAR
their office In the Melg1 Junior
Balance $107.39, or use· our
was Psalm 91. Readings of Foster.
High School Building , Mid · budge! terms. Call 992·3965.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb dltport, Ohio, for school bus
members included "God's
7-22-6tc
untlll2 :00 o'clock Eastern - - - - - - - - l;Jnlalling Grace", "Speaking spent Sunday afternoon with tlrts
Daylight Saving Time on
of Man", "Tell Him", "God Mr. and Mrs. John Heath at Augu1t 9, 1973, at which time NOW OPEN, P.andJ .Oddsand
Endo, Glorified Iunk, .ap·
bids Will be opt!"ed . The tire -bid
Moves", "Wearing 50 Stars", Marietta.
pll•nces, turnll~re. 215 North
prices
ire
tO
ln(!Ude
1
"Malting Contact", "A Sum· Mt. and Mrs. Solon Butcher demounting of the old tire end
Second, Middleport.
mounting of th• neW or
6-29,301&lt;
of Spencer, W. Va., were guests recepped on the rim ~nd placing
of Mrs. Grella SimpsOn here to the mounted tire and rim on the TOMATOES, cucumbers, green
bus.
attend the Z5lh wedding an· · For specifications please call
peppers . Cleland Farms,
Maln at Sycamore
Geraldine Cletend, Racine.
niversary of Mr. and Mrs. 992-5650 .
Meigs Local
POMEROY, OHIO .
7-8-tfc
William Hayman.
School DISirlct
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Curtis of
L. W. McComas,
Lorain spent the wookend with
Clerk
171
12,
19.
26
IBI
2,
•1c
his p!II'fnts, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Curtis. Mrs. Marcia
Wells of Washington C.H. spen\
over July 15 weekend with her
parents. .
For Sale
Mrs. Edmond Henry and
LOSE weight with New Shape
mother, Mrs. Harry Hayman
Tablets and Hydrex Water
Pills at Dutton Drug In
of Jack~ called on Miss Edith
Middleport
and Nelson Drug .
Hayman recently. ·
. 1·24-31p
Mi. and Mrs. Jerry Powell
spent a vacation last week with 1 AIR conditioner, 12,000 BTU .
Used for 3 months. Phone
relatives and friends In PeM·
(304) 882-2810.
sylvania and also at Lake Erie.
7-2+3tc
Mrs. Bill McKeMie and three --..,---__.::...
7200acre lotlor sale. ,60 AC
children of Galllpolis were ONE
all -c rop Harveste.r, also.
guests Friday .of Mr. and l\1rs.
Phone 742-3656.
7.6·2~1p
&amp;y Riffle.
Mr .. and Mrs. Frank Cleland . • ·
VI~E PRES. · TECHNICAL
NEW 1973 Zig-Zag Sewing
.spent the weekend at Cedar 13)Machines
In original factory
Point.
carton. Zig-Zag to ma~e
but1onholes. sew on buttons,
"This is our finest uttx
Mrs. Isabel Simpson spent a
monograms, and make fancy
house paint. I developed couple dsys In ColwnbUB with
designs with
just lhe
it 15 y11n 190 and todoy, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Beegle twist
of
a
single lay -away
dial. Lefl In
through rtfinements•. it · and their guests, Mr. and Mrs.
and never been used. Will sell
tht btlt product of its type Garner Roush of Florida.
for !lf1iy $47 cash, or terms

-.Jam•·~ W. Mcl.•nt, Cool of

.

-,nillions
think.
.,

Byron
•

•

J/-a.~
2 GAL. PAll

Sl492

There are few things as powerful as the printed word. As a custodian of this awesome power, your
daily newspaper accepts the responsibility for factual, complete reporting. Not just partial reporting,
or biased reporting, or even hearsay reporting, but proven, researched facts that can influence the lives
and well-being of its readers. •

REUSABLE .2 GAL. PAIL
- ACTUAL 20% SAVINGS!

SAYRE
·HARDWARE

Your newsp1,1per feels an obligation to vigorously defend its right and ability to report the facts, the
complet'e facts, 'rather than segments wrcelled out by regulatory bodies. It feels strongly that the protection of a reporter's news source is vital to an unimpeded flow of information and has joined in
the strong fight to preserve this and other rights guaranteed to a free people.

882-2525

NEW HAVEN

I'
SHOP YOUR DEPENDABLE
GRAY-SEAL DEALER
-,

'Lend your support to preserving our freedoms.

FARMERS

,

•

e

PUBLIC NOTICES
Your Right to Know
an·d be ,lntor'·med of the fuflC·
tions 9f yolJr government are
embodied in public notices . In
that se lf.gOvernment charges
all citizens to be InfOrmed;
this neWspaper. urges· every
citizen to read and stUdy these
notices. we strongly advise
those citizens, seeking further
informatloll'. to exercise their
right of access to public

records and public m.eetlngs .

..NOTICE OF

A GUARDIAN OF INDIVIDUAL FREEDOM

PUBLIC HEARING

7-24·2tc

Lillian Frost 1972 YAMAHA 250 MX . Phone
Cheoter Ohio •sno
992-2~52.
171 26, 11c
7·24·3tC

Plan Now
to Attend the

"'

GRAND

of Your New
Pomeroy Kroger
Opening Sunday
July 29th
10

...

Two Kroger
Shields Standing
for Guaranteed
ProduCts

...

"

}

'"

"

•

•

'J

'

....
~

"'

r

•lS

Chisler Twp. Clerk

------

••,,

OPEN FRIDAYS 9 'TIL 7'

Machine, good condition. Ca
992-731.1.

.

l'

Membe,r of Federal Reserve System
520,000 ~aximum Insurance for Each Depositor

----TREADLE Singer SewlnR

Budgellor J:heoter Twp. for lhe -:-::--::------~~7~a. l year ending Dec . 31sl, AT Showalter's Wet Pel,
Chester, Ohio. Sliver angels,
Such hearing Will be held at
39C 3 f
d 11
10 II
CheSler Town Hall, Chesler.
' or a o ar.
ga on
Ohio.
sehJps, SIO.
1·23-13tc

•

"'

I

POMEROY, OHIO

16 FT. FIBERGLASS boat, 80
h.p. Mere motor, trailer, two
gas tenks, lop. 5900. Call 7426501 after S p.m.
·
7-24-Jip

July 27th al 7 p.m. a public

M

"'

.

Farlllers Bank &amp; Savings CQ.-

CANNING tomatoes now ready.
Geraldine Cleland, Racine,
Ohio. 9~9-4121.
7-23-llc

hearlna wlll be held on the

•••
••
•••

••

..

Easy does it ... no pain, no strain. You don't ev~n have to get ovt
of your car.- and that ends pesky parking problems. Just pull up
and transact your business . On Fridays our Drive-In Window ·is·
open 9 a.m . to 7 p.m . continuously to better ser~e you.

7-2~-31c

OPENING
,,

DBIVB•IN BJI.NICINQ

CANN lNG peaches arriving
Tuesday. Bring containers.
Midway Markel, Pomeroy.
Call 992-2565 or 992-2582.

Notice Is hereby glv•n that on

••

entine

a1

i

BANK

available. Phone 992-nB4.
· 7-22-61c

~

.

lOLA'S

------

ovoiltble. Our d11lers now
havi it on 11lt - like -~d:
vtntlgl of tht liVings," ·

•

·-·

'

·t housands.,

I

Most Summer
Items Now ..
h price

LlvinK Council deputy dlreclor.

I

AIR OONDITIONERS
$99,95

·-,nahes

•

wrll ~"up "La mudcr•lc rate.

The Easiest Bank To Get To •••

HOTPOlNT

_____

,

It ts dear thatlood pnccs
arc ~cung tu gu up and they

'"'"'.,
100E1st

,.,,.,
M1inSt.

clean
?

•

Clean energy-energy that doesn't blacken skies or pollute
rivers-is obviously worlh quite a bit. And here's I he
paradox. The cleanest-burning fuel -and thus the most
valuable fuel-is· urastically under priced.
That fuel is natural gas.
· But, because natural gas is so clean, and so inexpensive, '
lhc demanu has far outgrown conven lional supplies,
We need new sources of clean energy. And we need them now.
Columbia Gas is investing hun.dreds of millions of dollars
in developing drumutic new sources, such as gas from the Arctic,
from overseas, from under the sea, from petroleum
·
liquids ... even from plentiful coal.
Gas from these new sourc~s l:OSts more to tind &lt;wd delive r, and
eventually we'll probubly all notice it in our gas bills .
~ut natural gas will continue to be your besl energy buy .
What is clean energy renlly worth?
Try to imagine your world without it.
Imagine your clrildm1 without it.

Columbin Ga s is working to help solVe the
~ncrgy crisis. It's ~:xpcnsivc hl duplic:l(c na ture's work, but w~ ca n do i!. w~·re building
a rdorming plant , at a cos t of ovl!r fllrty mil llon dolli.irs th ul turns petroleum liqu ids int o

pipeline qualjty gu.'i. It i!'l- dc :- ign~ll to Jclivcr
eighty-eig ht billi on cu hic feet of u;1s each
ycnr. ll''i only a tr idlc- uf thl' nc\~ cnerg~
Amcr:cn ne e d~. Still. it\ shedding a bright

hope (l fl lnm(J rro w.

~WMBIAGAS

Gas is pn•rinhs, pure enerRy ... use II wise I~,
•

'·

�,.

....

'

J

' '•

'

s;;;'{;;,;rc~;$if;eds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
MOnaa~

2 SIGNS
Of
QUAliTY

Deactllne 9 a. m .

Cencellallofl -

Corrections

Will be accepted until 9 a .m . far

Day of Publicat io n 1

REGUL.t.TIONS

fhe Publisner reserves the

right to edU .or re lec t a ny ads

•

•
•

•'
~

!•

~-

~

1

1- '
ra ....

r·

dee11"jtd
ob jectional.
The
P\Jblisher will not be responsible

for more than one incorrect

Insert ion .

RATES

For Wtnt Ad Service

5 cents per word one Inser tion

Min imum Charge 75c
12 cents per word lhrt~
consecut lve lnsert lon !i .
JB cent s per word siX con -

stcvHve insertions .
25 Per Ce11t Discount on paid
. ads and ads pa ld within tO do!lys .

CA·RD OF THANKS

OBITUARY
51.50 for SO word m inimum .
Eet h addit ional word 2c .
BLIND ADS
&amp;

Add itional

2Sc

Advertise ment .

Charge per

OFFICE HOURS

For Sale

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

111:1 mile east of Danville. Ohio

1972 NOVA ''6"

12195
4-door •. local ! -owne r , light green finish. good tires,
au tomaflc 1ransmlssron, power steering, radio, real

ecooomv .

1t11 CHEVROLET

SJ695

2 Sea t K i ~gsw_ood Wa gon , 16,500 miles by local 1 owner,
factory a.r, t1nt. glass. 400 ehgine, automatic trans ..
po~er steeri ng &amp; brakes, radio. luggage rack, go ld finish .
wh1 fe- w~ll tires. A sharp clean car .

1911 FOliO TORI N0 500

12095

Cou pe, l·owne r Cl!lr, less than 33,000 miles, brown finish
with matching vinyl roof and viny l Interior , 302

Real Utale for Sale

v.a

engine, sta nda rd transm ission, power steeri ng and
brakes, radio, really sharp. ·
'
·

on Coun ty Rd. 2 &lt;Danville Is
located on State Rt. 325
betwten

Langsville

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Bill Witte, 992-2789.

7-24·1fC

TO 'iliROW OUT

Vinton. QnloJ July 28, 1973, II 3 BEDROOM house, l VI bath,
a.m. China cupboard, living two room ~ wafl .fo .wall
room sui te , cedar chest. 3 pc. carpe ting, anti• gaa furnace.
bed rm . sui te, chairs, glass Call 992-:164.
door dish cu pboard , two
1·24·31P
utility cabinets, two metal -~---'---­
beds, Davis treadle se-wing '~

1

machine, battery ra dio, pole
.
.
lamps. frost free refrlgeratO&lt;', 7 ROOM brick veneer house,
o.d: kitchen ca binets, ukeltn, bath. lull basement, attached
rQCker recliner, old wood 2 cor garage., Lots of Iorge
rocker , library table, dresser, closets . Broo~t Glow Birch
9 pc. dinette set, o.ld buffet, bullt·ln kitchen. PlentY good
chlftorobe, two army trunks, water, free gas, stocked pond.
9xl2 wool rug. dry ·goods, 35acresmostly woods. I large

~

992-2094
•
Pomero.Y

OFfiCE SUPPLIES
FURNITURE
Slop In and See Our
Floor Dis p!ay •

See

by

IF

I
•••

...

Specialist
Wheel

ap -

ASI&lt; US ABOUT
PRE:F.AaRtcATED

Alignme~nt

MXlD TRUSSES

It Must

.
••

ACCEL!IWOR
&lt;iOCMeTI~.

..'

EXPERIENCED
Radlato
Service

CH i l l Mll'•l.•_.AIIII

'

BulldoZJ!r Radiator to the

·:,mallest Heater C.: or,.

I

•

'

'

'
'

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC..

HOGG

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION

•
,-

'

EXPERT
·Wheel Alignment

·--

'

'

I

·.MODERN
SANITATION

- -----

TICKET!

SUFFICIEf.IT 1

MISS
OUR. PLANE. .J

From the laraesf Truck ·or

'Be Right
or.we will

:,..

••

~eePtNG

wou
BEEN

·-

l
'

~AVE

· W5tl.

reect•

11:.••

GET

EIIEINONE 16 fOOT
G&amp;T6 A Lrm.E
HEIN'I ON THE

, I

lamps, machinery Includes ootntment. Call 99H~.
1949 Farmall H. 1andom disc,
7-21J.8tc•
two bottom plow, 30 ln. cut oft
saw with belt, dirt scrapper,
Block
lawn . mower, bostype corn WAREHOUS'E,
shell er, hand tools, grinder Building, 72' ,x 120', Steel
with motor, two wheel dottle, Trusses, Insulated Roof ,
large block and tackle, lime Clear Space. NQ Columns, 16'
spreader·, cycl on~ seeder , Overhead doors , Motor
stone (ars, 50 gallon drum, 2 Operated, Has Electri c,
bee hives . Terms: Cash. Not Water and Gas. Large lot 196'
res ponsible lor accidents. on Union Avenue, above flood,
Bra dford Auction Company, 3.56 acres, steel fence. 0.9
C. c. Bradford , Auct.; A. . c. miles from Pomeroy Court
Bradford, Mgr. Signed : Ancll House, one mile from Route 7
by ·r,a ss. Suitable lor '"'Y
Cross. Lunch served.
lots of
7-26-llc bus ness that
space. We res~! all Real
ONE GENTLE Appaloosa mare Estate Brokers. ,Price ~.500.
and colt, one 3 yr. old Ten· Pomeroy Motpr Company.
nessee Walker gelding , Phone 992·2126.1
registered. 992-3518.
. ;:=======:7:
-20
;:·:_61'-&gt;c
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;_1·::.26:.:·6:::1~

cards ,

WE DON'r

A RtDE SOON ,

Middleport. O.

992-2550

(M 60 ASHAMED. Nr-1
WIFE JJtaT G01' "loO!We~

CAMPUS CLATl'ER

ALL WEATHER

and

nice lot near hquY. Quiet and
Pomeroy .

.
5 tlng • Remodeling •
Siding • Rooftn~ • . Cpou I te Building . Vinyl
Plumbing · Heattng . omp e
&amp; Alumi11um Siding.

E. Main

pictures, Home Comfor t coa t private. 6 mites north of
cook stove. extra nice, oil

TH' iJOK.ERS

"Let Us Help You"

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

Mal&lt;e II Right.
Bult1 to Your··Spec•
Nathan Blgp&gt;
MOBILE
home
space
In
GORDON
Setters,
male.
must
flowers and food or helped In
Detlvtrtd
to Job Silo
Radiator
Specialist
Syracuse.
Phone
992·6329
.
be AKC registered . · Year or
any way due Ia lhe loss of our
6·.21 -lfc
older . Call {304~ 882-2810.
wife, mother and grandma •.
7·24-ltc
Fannie Hart. She ·was loved
&amp; ZUSPAN
8·4:30
FURNISHED apartments .
by all and will never be
In
the
R.
!leynolds Flowe r . Shop,
MATERIALS CO.
forgotten . Eor I Hart and KE WPIE dolls and anything
~oilding .
else related to Kewples . Also,
Mason, W. Va. on Main high.
773·5554
·Mason, W. Vo.
Ph., 92·2174
Pomeroy
:.... fam ilies,
Middleport, 0 .
992-2101
old postcards in good con- way . Call 773-5147.
7·26·llp
. I
d ition, wrl fe and describe
7-25-6tp
Items also price wa nted .
Alyce Schneider. 145 South SLEEP ING rooms In Pomeroy
In Memory
SEPTIC TANKS
Dick's
Kanawha , Buckhannon , W.
by week. Call 992-7775.
IN MEMORY of our brother, Va . 26201.
7-25-31c
CLEANED
R ic~ W. Snider, on hi s 19th
7·8·30tp
Hoard
House
birthday.
DUMP TRUCK
PING rooms In Pomeroy
I
know
that we cannot send a OLD fur niture. oak tables, SLEE
"STRIPPERS" ,
by week . Call 992-7775.
'
card, your hand we cannot
We Strip Paint, Varnishes,
SERVICE
clocks, Ice boxes, brass beds,
7-25-41c
Roofing, Spouting,
touch.
Etc. from Furniture.
24 HOUR SERVICE
dishes
or
complete
PLEASURE
BOAT
with
trailer.
But God will take our gl vl ngs to
Anllques-Modern-Melats
households. Write M. 0 . TRAIL ER SPACE on old route
Trl-hull, 17 ft . lop 60 h.p.
Home Remodeling
fhe one we loved so much.
No ruinous tyes or caustics
Miller, Rl. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio,
33,
'h mil e from Meigs Htgti
Evinrude
motor.
All
ac·
The gift we send is not "" very
used.
call 992.6271.
School. Call 992-2'141.
cessorles. Phone 992·7132.
new, It's worn and torn and
Pick-Up Strvlce
5· 13-ttc
7-26-171c
7.2.3'9tc
cried Itself blue.
Available
For Estimates
.
•• The love It holds no words can WANTED for auct ion •
We Buy &amp; Sell Anllques.
1971
MONTE
Carlo,
automatic,
' · JOHN'TUCKER
Imparl, on your birthday dej~r household goods. Tools, most TWO !railer lots in Middleport;
Dick Seyler-Owner
power steering, power disc 608
112 duplex in Bradbury ; phone
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, 0 .
Rich, we glveJ.ou our hearts. · anything of va lue. Will buy or
Phone 742-6271 .
Kerr
St.
Pomoroy,
0.
brakes, atr cond.ttlonlng. Call E. MAiN '\ill--~
l'
before 6 p.m. 992-5693.
992-3954
Sadly missed an loved by Morn sell on comm ission. Wilt haul.
Phonem.ma
992-7073 after 5 p.m.
.
7-23-51c
and Dad , Sisters and Call 992.JJ54. Hayman's.
~
7-26-3tp POMEROY
Brothers.
7-25-ftc
'·lo
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
WE HAVE NEW LISTINGS
I•
7·26-llp -~---~--20 INCH Multi speed fans, only EACH WEEK.
unfurnished
f
apartmenf
s.
GRAY MANOR
••
AND J HOME
$17.95. Also chaise lounges for
I•
Phqne 992·5434.
Mobile
Homes
For
Safe
CLOSE
TO
POMEROY
porch, lawn or pool , only
••
Notice
4· 12-tlc
APARTMENTS
•I
MAINTENANCE
'CAS H paid for all . makes and
$6.99. Pomeroy recovery, 622 8 room frame . 4 large
YARD SALE , Fr iday and
bedrooms.
balh,
dining
models of mobile hom es .
E. Main, Pomeroy, Ohio.
MIDDLEPORT
by the week, $18 up.
10 a. m. till 5 p.m .
&amp; REPAIR
I onSaturday,
room , utlllly r;f9m, 'cellar,
Phone area code 614·423·9531. ROOMS
Phone 992-7554.
Meigs
Inn,
Pomeroy.
Brownell Ave. Baby bed,
'
Heating . Air Cond .
4-13·1fc
7-26-61&lt; some carpeting ,and lots of
7-12-ifc
l Unfurnished Apartment cradle, antlqus, dishes. tots of
tile and panel! no. 1.36 Acres.
Refr!gerafion . Plumbing
Items. Come out and ·see.
114
N. .Fourth, 2 bedrooms,
ATTENTION ALL MO.BILE
On Most Americ1n Cars
Etedrical Appliances ~ AUto
'I ; .
NIC6.8 x 35 Trailer with Tlr·OUI. SEVERAL new damaged living &gt;On n~w Rt. 7. JUST 59,500.00.
'
7-26-2tp
has
all kitchen appliances.
HOME BUYERS.
IN NEW ADDITION '
roorn suites~ several up to 112
Air Cond .• Residential or
room, l bedroom, · Idea for
I .
·
.
.
GUARANTEEDNo
pets.
Berry -Miller Mobile Ho111e
off regular price. Hurry they Just 2 years . old. · Owner
couple . 10 miles north of
.commercial.
I
SHOOTING MATCH , Corn
Sates have just received on
won
't
last
long
at
these
prices.
Phone
992-2094
transferred.
3
bedrooms
with
Pomeroy.
Call
992-7479
.
.
Hollow Gun Club, turn llret
their tot 6 late model used and
'•
215 N. Second
Pomeroy Recovery, · 622 E. . nice closets. Lovely kitchen
l· 12-ttc
right after Miles Cemetery,
repossessed Mol&gt;ile Homes.
Pomeroy
Home
&amp;
Auto
Main,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Phone
I
Phone
992-3509
with
lots
of
cabinets.
Nice
Rutland, factory choked Quns
You can save hundreds 992-7554
.
Open
Hit
5
PHONE 992-3863
bath.
Utility
room.
Hard·
HOUSE.
3
bedroom
un·
only, Sunday, July 19, 1. p.m.
24 Hour Service
even thousands - of dollars
Monday
thru
Satutday
I
BEFORE3 PM
7-26-Jic
furnished, porch and yard. -;::;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;7;;
·2;6·;;6t..
c wood floors. Carport. Large
on these units:
All work guaranteed.
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .
tot IOOxiOO. ALL THIS AND
Ca ll 992-27f0 or 992·3432.
t
l-60xl2 3 Bedroom Atlantic,
7-8-lfc
MORE $20,000.00.
DANCE Saturday night, Red's
s.4.m.oo.
RON SHEPARD, Fioor, Wall SEP TIC TANKS AR6B·IC E LNA an d White Sew in g
LIKE OLDER 'HOMES?
For the Lowest
Club, Mason, W. Va. Guy 1~xf2 2 bedroom Champion,
Remodeling , Ceramic tile
3
BEDROOM
l'h
bath
mobile
Here
Is
one
In
good
shape.
4
Mach ines ... Service on all
SEWAGE SYS TEMS
$.4,395.00.
Thoma. Tobv Youna. Larrv
baths
. Box 28D, Rutland 742·
hom,e,
308
Page
Street,
992·
Tire
Prices
mak es. Reaso nabl e rate s.
Hubbard, Charlie Blake {The l- 60xl2 2 bedroom PMC,
bedrooms, · 2 baths, dining
CLEANED.
REPAIRED
.
3664,
3509.
MILLER SA NITATION ,
The Sew ing Center, Mid ·
Country Cut· Ups~ .
,$5, 195.00.
room, utility room , some
I'
].S.tfc
6·26·tfc
' ,.
STEWART, OHIO. PH. 662·
dleport. Ohio.
7-25-Jic l- 46xl2 2 bedroom Regen),
carpeting, paneling &amp; tile.
i n' the Area
---.....,--3035.
.
11-16-llc
$3,895.00.
Garage, lull !basement,
I~
DOZER
and
back
hoe
work,
I0-4·tfc
ROOM l.or elderly lady patlenl l-60xl2 2 bedroom Monarch, APARTMENTS, Hartford, W.
t
porches. Gas torc,e&lt;l air heat.
It's
Va ., I and 2 bedrooms un.
ponds and septic tanks, ditch·
save $2,000.00.
In private home. Phone 667·
Nice level tot. $8.200.00.
furnis hed , 773·5975.
lng servlc$; lop soil. 1111 dirt. SEWING MACHINES, Repair
l-60xl2 Etcona Custom , save
3305.
MIDDLE~ORT
I :
limestOne
; B&amp; K ExCavatinn . service, all makes. 992-2284,,
7-24-ltc
$1,800 .00.
7-24-Jic
Large lot 100xl35 (level). 2
Phone
992-5367
or 992-3861 ·- . . The Fabric Shop, Pome roy .
These
prices
include
dellverr,
bedrooms , bath, dining
t : UPHOLSTER your own fur . and complete setup. Don t
· .9-1-tfc Authorized Srnger Sales and
room , utility . sp~ce, porch,
waif - stop now at Ber ry - For Sale
Serv ice. We Sharpen Stlssor s.
ntture. We have all the sup·
storrn doors and wJndows,
EXC.AVATING. -Dozers, large
.
3·29-tfc
Miller
Mobile
Homes
Sales,
plies
you
will
need,
fabrics
,
BRUSH
HOGS,
4X
S
II.,
phone
1l
renov.aied lust 3 )years ago.
705 Farson Street, Belpre, 992·6329.
and small; Backhoes and --~---==:-­
foam for cushions and pad·
882·2817 New Haven,' W. Va.
In good condjton . ~ UST
onto. phone 423-9531 - Closed
loaders on ·track and tires; !:XCAVATING, dozer , loader
ding. We cuf foam to any si ze
7-15-lfc
__:
$6,500.00.
'
'
or
shape-.
Swivel
bases,
cotton
Sundays.
Dump trucks - · Lo·boy
and backhoe work ; septic
•
, COTTAGE
.
7-26·61c WELL PLANNED 3 bedroom , 2 BLACK thr ee quarter Ten -·
builap legs, zipper. welt cord,
service : Septic tanks in · · tanks instaHed ; dump trucks
.I
stalled. George !Bill) Pullins.
and lo-boys for hire; will hau l
webbing. dacron, chip board
full
nessee Walker colt, broke to 2 bedrooms~ bafhl some new
bath home with
I'
plus many ot~r items and
plumbing,
dining
room
,
phone
992·2478
or
992·7402.
fill dirt, top soil , limestone
ride.
Phone
992-3640.
,
basement,
2
car
garage
and
I
living room suites at low. low
Air Conditioners
porches,
large
·
2·9·
ldt,
close
·to
tic
and
gravel ; Call Bob or Roger
family room . Priced In mid
7-22-121c
---'
prices . Pomeroy Recovery,
shopping.
ASKING
JUST
Jeffers,
daY phone 992-7089;
20's,
plus
lot.
Located
on
large
Awnings
622 E. Main. Phone 992-7554 . .
FURNITURE
Stripping
.ana
night
phone
992-3525
or
992·
·
.
country lot off Rt. 7 20 GIBSON air conditioner, 8,000 · $5,000.00. i
Underpinni'ng
. Refinishing . Abraham 's
5232
7·19·30tc
'I
minutes from Parkersbyrg
BTU, Kelvlnator 18 cubic feet
·
WANTED
Antiques,
132
.Fayette
Street,
·
2- ll ·lfC
an.
d
IS minutes
from
type
freezer,
Gas
kit·
chest
I story, 3 bedroom homes,
Complete
mo~lle
home
Nelsonville,
Ohio.
Phone
753·
MEAT
CUTfER
.
-No
phone
'
chen stove, dinette set,. kif· {not too old) ·from $17,000.00
Pomeroy . Financing already
se rv ice - plu s gigantic
1302.
calls. O&amp;D Meats.
chen cabjnef, easy wringer
OPEN Roger Hysell 's
arranged with low ~own
up . 9 YEAR•S REAL
7-3-JO!c
........::..
7-18·11C display of mobile homes
type washing machine, Warm
payment. Contact Paul ine E.
Garage near crossroads on St.
EStATE
EXPERIENCE
IN
always available at
~---=----· Cunn ingham Realty . Phone
Morning bottled gas heater MEIGS COUNTY. ·
Rt. 124 ; all mechan ical work
DEAD STOCK, horses, came,
FOR FREE estimates on
65,000 BTU. Call 985-4180.
{614) 42J.8690 Collect.
InCluding
automatic transHENRY E. CLii'LANO,
hogs, sheep, reasonable
aluminum siding. Storn Doors
.
7·19·tfC
missions.
Monday-Friday ,
7,22-ltp
MILLER
REALTOR
charge. Call 245·5514.
and Windows . Carports,
a:
30
a.m.
to
5 p.m. Saturday
3assocl1les to help you.
_
6-26-JOtc
Marquees and Railing, Phone
- 8:30 to 12 noon - unless by
14x70 MOBILE home,
MOBILE HOMES • - - - - - · - - - · 1973
9t2·22Sf
Beech &amp; Locust Sl
Charles Lisle. Syracuse. onto. appointment. Phone 992·5682
washer and dryer , diSh·
If
no
answer
992·2568
Cart
Jacob,
Sales
Repwasher,
stainless
steel
sink,
or
992-7121.
1220 Washington Blvd.
re,.,ntative. V. V. Johnson
garbage disposal, eye level
7-25-30tc
42J.7521
BELPRE, 0 .
and Son, Inc.
Middleport1 0.
oven, range , dacron -polyester
6·22·tlc READY -MIX
carpet, large lot. Phooe 742·
CONCRETE
3083.
TRYING to buy a fY1obile hom~1
.';:::O::E::-L:-L
(y
""w
~H:=-E~::-L-A"'II_gn
:.::ment delivered right to your
Been
iurned
down
?
7-18-tt
project. Fast and easy . Free
July 25-Aug . 1
· located at Crossroads, Rt. 124,
Remember. I ca h say " yes"
1- : - - - - - es
timates . Phone 992-3284 .
•
now back to work . Complete
Cars Painled
$50.00
when othen say "no." Call
Goeglein Ready.Mi x Co .•
1973 -· Zig Zag sewing machine.
front end service~. tune up and
Frank. 992·T777. I can help.
Pick-ups
$60.00
This machine darns, em•
Middleport. Cillo.
brake service. Wheels
Larry's Mobile ~ Sates,
broider! , overcasts. button
6-30-lfc
balanced electronically. All
600 w.. l Ma in Street,
holes. All without at.
work guaranteed. Reasonable
Pomeroy, Cillo.
tachments. Pay balance of ,
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
rates. Phone 742·3232.
·
DEMONSTRATORS
1·11·
18tc
$38.50 or pay $5 per month.
REASONABLE rates. Ph . 446· Tune Up, All Mechanical
Lincoln Hill-Pomeroy
2-18-tlc
Call 992·5331.
4782, Gallipolis. John RulSetl, Work, All Accossorlos
992-5271
BRICK
BUSINESS
I
Snapper
I
HP
Riding
6-10-tfc
55 x 10 BEDROOM. Owner witt
Owner
and Operator .
Available. Cars Washed &amp;
.
OPEN Roger Hysell's
BUILDING
Mower. Etoc. start. Lis!
Repairs Addition'al
finance . Inquire at P&amp;J Odds
s.
12-tfc Waxed . Mechanic on Duty at
Garage
near
crossroads
on
Sf.
1629.95.
and Ends Shop. 215 N. 2nd
KOSCOT KOSMETICS and LARGE - 2 story storage
Work Guaranteed
All Times.
Rt. 124; all mechanical work
Ave., Middleport.
Sale SS2U5
Name Brand Wigs. Special building . Ideal fo• furniture,
,..
Including
aut.
trans
WILL do babysitting in my _ _ _ __ __ ___:
sale prices during month of grocery, contractor, etc .
7-6-tfc
C. BRADFORD. Auctioneer
mission
.
·
Monday-Friday
,
THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL ~
home. Married, age 25. Call
Ju ly. Phone . Helen Jane Loading platform, and over
I Gravely Super C·S Tractor.
Complete Service
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday
· 992-7857. Live In Middleport.
Brown, 9'1" 1113.
one acre of land. Asking only
Phooe
949·3821
Lis! 1747.00.
Oil Change. Filler &amp;
- 8:30 to 12 noon - unless by
·
7-2S.41c Auto Sales
Racine, Ohio a
6·2'1 -tfc $20,000.00.
· Sale1600.0tJ
appointment: Phone · 992-5682
Grease Job.
Crltt Bradford
NEW LISTING
SELL or take over payments,
or 992-7121.
5·
I
.lf
c
.PORCH and yard sale, Thurs. 1972 Pontiac Catalina, &gt;400
~
XCEL~IOR
..
Si
ll
Works,
E:
MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedroom
1 EtecTrak E-a Riding
6-27-JO!c
day and Fro day, July 26 and engine, P.B., P.S., forced air,
Main St., Pomeroy. All kinds house, both, 111 furnace and
Mower. 'Lisl S990.QO.
·
on~ $~95
·~
HARRISON'S TV service and
·21. Antique dishe s, Hull
('I~ ~ It water pellets, weter garage. All out of high water . AUTOMOBILE insurance been
4 door hardtop, vinyl top,
Sale17DO.OO
Fillup
Gas
pottery, old tamps, old clocks, 10,000 miles , just like new.
r.• ·ggels, block salt and own on level lot . Asking 115,500.00.
cancelled?
Loaf
you r}. service calls. Phone 992-2522.
2-9-tfc ,___ With
__
_:_of __:_:__:_:_J
furnilure, etc . 838 South
Ohlo
River
Salt.
Phone
992·
Phone 992·3225 a1ter 5 p.m. or
operator 's llcen511 . Call 992·
SYRACUSE
Second Ave ., Middleport, write Box 46 in Middleport. ·
3891.
~::&amp;"::&amp;"::&amp;"==-=
7428 .
Floor
Model-New
6.
ROOMS
On
level
iot.
Ohio.
6•5·tfc Garage and storage bu ild ing.
J.24-3tc
6·15- ttc
7·25-Jip - - - - - - - - 1 Gravely 408 Rldtnv Tractor 1- - - - - - ' - - - - Asking lust $5,000.00.
1970 CHRYSLER Newport,
MOBILE home repa ir, Elec- •
&amp; Mower. List 1923.00
4 BEDROOMS
31 ,000 miles P.S ., P.B. .
trlcal plumbing and heating. e
•
Sale182l.OO
Estate
Slile
NICE KITCHEN - Gas
Forced air. 2 door hardtop.
Phone 992·6329.
. e
.•
. · ~EAUTICIAN . Pratt's Beauty
lurmice,
bath,
full
basement
ROOM house with bath In with garage and 2 family
S.a!on, Middleport. Phone m . excellent condition. Call 992·
I Gravely 111 Rkttng Tractor 7 Rutland
- - - - - - - -7·_
15-tfc ••
e
, 3225 after 5 p.m.
, air conditioned ,
. 3751 or 992-3703.
&amp; Mower. List $1633.00.
rooms. Front porches, large
notc
Repair,
Air
·
•
carpeted,
gas
furnace
,
dish·
7·2Htc
Sate 11500.00
washer •. double oven, range, lot. Asking SI8,900.!JO.
Conditioning,
Heating ,
•
NEW LISTING
1964 OOOGE Dart. automatic
double garage. large carport,
Electrica l Repair , •
•
I Electrak E-ID Riding
Renovated 5 I Residential or comm,rclat. •
transmission . 1966 Rambler ,
-4 acres clea red and fenced , RUTLAND Tractor &amp; Mowe r. List
Sta ndard. Con tact Sa.m
small barn and other bedroom home. Haa. 1'h blths,
auto air-conditioning, 266 Mill •
Uft ~ "
'
I
NIGHT COOK at Ma rtin
l
or
ca
ll
985·3956.
11342.00,
.
Ml&lt;hae
buildings. Phone 614·142-6834. large closets, and largo · Street 992·3509.
•
•
Restaurant. Apply In person,
7-24-3tp
SateiiiOO.OO
6·29·301&lt; •
•
S-30·tfc rooms. Nice kitchen with u .
Experienced.
sink
,
di
shwa
sher,
and
7-26-3tc
1968 PLYMOUTH VIP air ·
I Snapper 8 HP Riding ·2 STORY. 6 room with full bath disposal. Natura l gas furnace. WILL TRIM or cut !root, • Mr. Davis Has Opened An Office At :
shrubbery, Also paint roolt.
condl1iof'!ing,
new
steel
belh,
Mower. ' List 151,.95.
WAITR ESS and bar maid.
home, fu ll baumenf has Large front porch.
: 100'12 E. Main St., Pomeroy (Over the •
Phone 949·3221 or 7~2 ·U41.
I ow ner. P &amp; J Odds &amp; Ends
Apply In person, Phillips '
SaleS45o.oo
REASONABLE
lavatory.
commode
&amp; shower,
7-11•30tc
Shop , 215 N. Second, Mid·
• Blue &amp; Grey Restaurant). Under the •
Bar , Pomeroy .
atte~ ched garc,~ ge o~~nd exi r a LONG BOTTOM - 5 rooms.
dleport.
7·2Htc
bath
,
forc
ed
air
furna
ce.
,
I Snapper 5 HP AIding
lot. Double ove n gas range
Real
For
Name of Davis Insurance Service
:
7-25-4fc
Mower. Ll&gt;t 1429.95.
and
r efrig erator -lreezer Tuppers Plains wa1er. Asking
only
14,000.00.
Sale1360.00
combination inclu ded . Near
WELL PLANNED 3 btaroom, 2 1
We are In I POSition to service your In· 1
1960 v,. TON Chevy, J175 , P 1o J
Employment Wanted
NEW
LISTING
Pomeroy Elementary School.
bath home wtlh
full e
·
ed If 111
•
4 Snapper walking mowers
Odds &amp; Ends Shop.
basement, 2 car garage and 1 sur~nce ne 5· W not be necessary for you •
. Call 992-7384 .
3
YEARS
OLD
Modern
2
INTER lOR and exterior
wifh
grass.ca1chers
.
HS-41 c
family room . Priced tn mid 1 to stgn any statement mailed or given to you to •
7-24·51p bedrooms , bath , ~ built - In
painting and roofl.ng. G. G.
20 Pet. Off List
Congo, Long Bottom. Ohio. CHEVROLET IV' ton truck,
r---------......;·, ranve . All electrl ¢ ~om e .
20s. plut lot. Located on lervo 1 have .the same. protection on your csr or •
Phone ~3·2984.
Large
IQI
In
Tupper!
Plaln1,
country tot ott Rl. 7b 20
t W
11 1
p
1963 Volkswag'Oti. Call 985·
Used Traetors
ml~uta&amp; · tro111 Parktra urg 1 .. proper Y· 1 Wt II ve you honest and efficient •
7-17·101p
Want Just 115,000.00.
4118.
and u · rntnutu fro111 a service. Please stop by or callas to the reason •
,•
BEEN LOOKING FOR A
I Grovt ly C.IO A tractor
GOOD BUY, TH E)'l YOU
Pomtroy. l"ln1nc1ng alroady 1 of the division. of the Davis. Warner lnsuran~
•
with dials.
1550.00
arranged with tow down
Ag
~• 1
SHOULD CONSIOEII ONE
Pets
Sale ·
~aymont. Contact Plullnt E: I
tncy. ·
I
I MUHV·FtrguSOII 12 HP
OF THE ABOVE L. 1$~'T~IN~G1~S .
For
Rent
with
mower
and
Hyra.•tallc
CuMin~m
Rtllty,
phone
•
•
AKC Toy Poodle puppies, m
WE AlSO HAVE
1700.00
drlvo.
1nd S85. Also Siamese kittens
AFTER
THE
614-42J·
•• uect. , .2wc :
SID. Ph on~ 1-256·6247, Kennels PRIVATE meeting room for
PAYMENT IT MAY
any
organi
zation
;
phone
99~.
of Calhoun .
LIKE RENT. SAVE
HOUSE for aato; 210 Condor
J975.
6- 2~· 30fC
US NOW, TODAY. 1
3·11 ·11&lt;
and bath. :
1
512 E, M&lt;lln St.
.
~----7;25·121p •
•
PARKVIEW Kennels. PoOdles, SLEE PING room ov&lt;r the Wine
Pomeroy, Olllo
I toy male 1nd I female . Store In Pomeroy. Reference
:-::-:-:----....,.._.:;:.:..
a
We
can
lnsurt
your
Mobile
Home
.
Ask
about
·
•
ON YOUR DIAL
""'"'- m .2m
Phone 992·5.«3.
BEDROOM
home
In
Rutt1nd.
•
our
packagt
policy
.
•
3
required. Call 992.5293.
Open Mon •• fhvr I :OOto 5:30
Phone 7&gt;12·415.
•
1
Fri. &amp; Sat. Ito I
'
7·6·tfC
MHte
•
who senf

001\l'T FER61i

Water ave liable. Call or see

and

pictures, SunrlJy gas range,

t~

friends

I'M BUSTIN' A FRE&lt;;H
DECK FER THIS
BODACIOUS CARD

Business Services

PUBLIC AUCTION
LARGE, conJentenl bulldtnv
TH E- PERSONAL property of tots at Rock Sorlngs . Arej~
the late Addle Cross will be restricted for hou"' only.
sold at the residence located Tuppers Pl~lno &amp; Ches ter

8:l 0a . ni . to 5 :00p .m . Daily,
!l.OPEN EVES. 8 :00P. M.
8:30 &amp;. m . to 1'2 :00 Noon
1
POMEROY. OHIO
Saturday
.
'• .....
Cilrd of Thanks
,.._ ·WE
WAN T to thank the mony
Want&amp;tt To Buy
For Rent

'

BARNEY

•

GAME, FELlERS

WANT AD$
, INFORMATION
' OE.t.OLINeS
s P.M 111 _Dey Befort Publ lcetlon .

...•

•

~ MY VAC!iTloN 16 DAAWiNe10
A CL06E, euT fTie NICE
6PENDtNI3111E: LMT ~""
FEW DI\Ye IN PCI\OE ""'

'

'·

WHY ARE 'IOU AFRAID

MY SCHEME 1DGcTRID
oF 1UTU1e e~t:R
REALLY WORKEO. HE'S
ecEN CON&amp;Picuoue
13YHI5 A5&amp;cNCE.

10WALKON1HE~,

IMI&gt;IO? lHAT W!NKLF:

I~ NOT GOING
· 10A7TACKYOU

\'.OMAN

tM NOT 50 OORE OF lHAT,
MY FRIEND.lHE WAY 6HE:
ACTED ON OUR DATI: ·
PROVED 10 ME SHE: I, A
PESPE/?ATE \'.OMAN I

i'\NOQUI~T.

P

'5.55

r

l

l:

Il ,,

..
"
..

-

Ij ,. ' - -- - - -

I

-OPEN FOR
BUSINESS

NEW HAVEN
DISCOUNT TIRE

I·

I
II :

GASOLINE ALLEY

_____

j

____

1

'

'

~

'

~L.WS

I

'

, I

~Rl"/ Hl~D
SO e.I"JX(,

UTILE ORPllAN ANNIE

- - - - - --

G'RAND
OPENING
SPECIAL

GENE'S BODY SHOP

JULY

CLEARANCE
SALE

7 DAYS .A WEEK

Wanted

Real

,•.......................... •.
NOTICE TO All CLIENTS

for

~EFRIGERATOR

Of 1HE fORMER
1\A'VIt' 'W'ARNER INS. SERVICE

Help Wanted

Estate·

s.1e

e

•

:

.We talk to you

For

.like a person.,

Gravely Tractor Sales

DICK TRACY

T~;,~~

6·10

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

WMP0/1390

9

LORENZO D. DAVIS :

~~~;· J2.~ft~m•

PHONE 992·5120

:

--------- · ··~··················,_·~·.·····

CiJME.

eu~:nlt»-'1

Basham's
Ashland
Service

I'
'

r

,,

IM PI-IONING
BEU.USE
"fl..EV TOOtC
MV '2.-WAV.

IN 'fi.IE'' ' ~r·. •.
BUIL,OINO ,
MANAGERS
OI"I=ICI!'??
we've C.ONI!'
NUT1 LOOKING
FOR YOU

BUT
LET ANV
NEWS OF ~IS OET ON
POLICE RAOto·VIT,

TWO·

•

•
•

·- -

AMANDA PANDA

•

TH~AMOUNTO~INS£CiS

•

A MN BIRO MA'/ EAT IN ONE PA'/

•

-•

•.

MA'/ ~~

"fi{E

.
...
..

AS MUCH AS

~1~17 WEIGHS!

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2. Minneapolis
....-.-, 1. Beelze·
bub's
suburb
abode
3. Enumera 5. Portion
tions
Hombre's
4. Spanish
farewell
article
Church
5. Hound's
guide
decree
6. Cottontail
Atlantic
City at·
7. Black
traction
cuckoo
{2wds.l
8. Fabled
bird
.. lti. Business
9. Last
Spanish
one's in
queen
17. Lend a
I CAN I-IARDL'f WAJT TO
hand
11. or a
WEAR TJ.IAT BULLETIN. 19. Capture.
Frankish
as game
people
U. Unsu ited
- Mahal
18. Family
Heroic
fare
narrati\le
19. Exclude
24. Legend·
20. ln lhe ·
ary ship·
. past
launcher
21. Blithe·
( 3 wds.)
some
28. Acknowl·
edge
29. Dock·
workers'
union
L - - - - - - - - - - 30.' Playing
marble
31. "Sawed
logs"
34. Beer to
Berliners
35. Cat lulk

~~~~~~~~~~~· ::::Emmel

Yelterday's Ceyptoquote: IT IS NOT HOW FAll YOU GO,
BUT HOW DEEPLY YOU GO THAT MINES THE GOLD OF
EXPER1ENCE.-WILFERD PETERSON
(C 1979 Kin&amp;' Futuro 8)-ndlcato,lnc.)

JIWIWIDlLJl;ll.i !:::!:! -v =~·
Yesterday's Answer
23. Heodline
a tt rac~

tio n
·24. "Bean"
warm er
25.Tanguay
26. "Swing

_ ,.

Unocramble the1e four Jumbln,
one letter to eaeh oquare, to
form rout ordinary wordo. ·

33. Actor

Alain
34. Piece or
sculpture
36. "I Dance"
37. Ciiburn
38; "Down

27. Little

.1 RVI'/'1'

0

under" bird

flower

39. Young
insect
40. Go to the

31. Mama 's

boy
32. Zola

lJ I

S'/1GED

A FIISH'Tit&lt;o!:&gt;

·Of'PONENi.

C4VI''I'E
..

.

Now orraJ110 tht drtledltt1tll
to form the aurprtM ~n~wtr, u
•uno•I4MI br tiM IIMm canooa.

I MUs Ill a iiGWII""' I A(llXIIIIJ
Yetterd•y'•
·

37 . LO U\'C(' '

attra ctio n·
IJ wds. 1

(A.inrt lo... r... w)-

l

)unobl•oo DICIY HAVIN MUIICIT NOODLI
A.n•wer1

..4 klnrl o/•••rnplltimu bnll
Jllrtyl"lf - ~~~NDIIHAND''

41. ll's as

a

good ns &lt;I

•

42. Animal's

•

43. l,{kc a
kook

mile
(2 wds. 1

duw

-14. Camper's

•

nbode

•

I. Syrl•n

llOWI'&gt;

•

clly

t

•

DAILY

••

!'RYPTOilUOTF;- Here's how to work
A X Y D J, 18 II. A X R

Is l. 0 N G F. E L L 0 W
One ' letocr slmpiy stond• for another. In this sample A i•
used for the th roe L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
aposorophcs, tho .length and formation or the words are all
hints. Each doy t.lte code letters are dltTcrcnt.
·
'
CRYPTOQUOTli:S

•:

.
•

•
•.•
•
•

liSL
B U A IS
IE L .

•

0 RI 0

•

l ' II N I Z

URVHFV
llRl'

OLFFD

Bl'AIS
BUIIFV
ll, 1'

~·

SLMLZ
URU
OLF ••

US!,

OZHDO
RLZ

UUHFV

ZLIF
OLFF

I SCORTSE .-

V l.

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'

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'

s;;;'{;;,;rc~;$if;eds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
MOnaa~

2 SIGNS
Of
QUAliTY

Deactllne 9 a. m .

Cencellallofl -

Corrections

Will be accepted until 9 a .m . far

Day of Publicat io n 1

REGUL.t.TIONS

fhe Publisner reserves the

right to edU .or re lec t a ny ads

•

•
•

•'
~

!•

~-

~

1

1- '
ra ....

r·

dee11"jtd
ob jectional.
The
P\Jblisher will not be responsible

for more than one incorrect

Insert ion .

RATES

For Wtnt Ad Service

5 cents per word one Inser tion

Min imum Charge 75c
12 cents per word lhrt~
consecut lve lnsert lon !i .
JB cent s per word siX con -

stcvHve insertions .
25 Per Ce11t Discount on paid
. ads and ads pa ld within tO do!lys .

CA·RD OF THANKS

OBITUARY
51.50 for SO word m inimum .
Eet h addit ional word 2c .
BLIND ADS
&amp;

Add itional

2Sc

Advertise ment .

Charge per

OFFICE HOURS

For Sale

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

111:1 mile east of Danville. Ohio

1972 NOVA ''6"

12195
4-door •. local ! -owne r , light green finish. good tires,
au tomaflc 1ransmlssron, power steering, radio, real

ecooomv .

1t11 CHEVROLET

SJ695

2 Sea t K i ~gsw_ood Wa gon , 16,500 miles by local 1 owner,
factory a.r, t1nt. glass. 400 ehgine, automatic trans ..
po~er steeri ng &amp; brakes, radio. luggage rack, go ld finish .
wh1 fe- w~ll tires. A sharp clean car .

1911 FOliO TORI N0 500

12095

Cou pe, l·owne r Cl!lr, less than 33,000 miles, brown finish
with matching vinyl roof and viny l Interior , 302

Real Utale for Sale

v.a

engine, sta nda rd transm ission, power steeri ng and
brakes, radio, really sharp. ·
'
·

on Coun ty Rd. 2 &lt;Danville Is
located on State Rt. 325
betwten

Langsville

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Bill Witte, 992-2789.

7-24·1fC

TO 'iliROW OUT

Vinton. QnloJ July 28, 1973, II 3 BEDROOM house, l VI bath,
a.m. China cupboard, living two room ~ wafl .fo .wall
room sui te , cedar chest. 3 pc. carpe ting, anti• gaa furnace.
bed rm . sui te, chairs, glass Call 992-:164.
door dish cu pboard , two
1·24·31P
utility cabinets, two metal -~---'---­
beds, Davis treadle se-wing '~

1

machine, battery ra dio, pole
.
.
lamps. frost free refrlgeratO&lt;', 7 ROOM brick veneer house,
o.d: kitchen ca binets, ukeltn, bath. lull basement, attached
rQCker recliner, old wood 2 cor garage., Lots of Iorge
rocker , library table, dresser, closets . Broo~t Glow Birch
9 pc. dinette set, o.ld buffet, bullt·ln kitchen. PlentY good
chlftorobe, two army trunks, water, free gas, stocked pond.
9xl2 wool rug. dry ·goods, 35acresmostly woods. I large

~

992-2094
•
Pomero.Y

OFfiCE SUPPLIES
FURNITURE
Slop In and See Our
Floor Dis p!ay •

See

by

IF

I
•••

...

Specialist
Wheel

ap -

ASI&lt; US ABOUT
PRE:F.AaRtcATED

Alignme~nt

MXlD TRUSSES

It Must

.
••

ACCEL!IWOR
&lt;iOCMeTI~.

..'

EXPERIENCED
Radlato
Service

CH i l l Mll'•l.•_.AIIII

'

BulldoZJ!r Radiator to the

·:,mallest Heater C.: or,.

I

•

'

'

'
'

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC..

HOGG

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION

•
,-

'

EXPERT
·Wheel Alignment

·--

'

'

I

·.MODERN
SANITATION

- -----

TICKET!

SUFFICIEf.IT 1

MISS
OUR. PLANE. .J

From the laraesf Truck ·or

'Be Right
or.we will

:,..

••

~eePtNG

wou
BEEN

·-

l
'

~AVE

· W5tl.

reect•

11:.••

GET

EIIEINONE 16 fOOT
G&amp;T6 A Lrm.E
HEIN'I ON THE

, I

lamps, machinery Includes ootntment. Call 99H~.
1949 Farmall H. 1andom disc,
7-21J.8tc•
two bottom plow, 30 ln. cut oft
saw with belt, dirt scrapper,
Block
lawn . mower, bostype corn WAREHOUS'E,
shell er, hand tools, grinder Building, 72' ,x 120', Steel
with motor, two wheel dottle, Trusses, Insulated Roof ,
large block and tackle, lime Clear Space. NQ Columns, 16'
spreader·, cycl on~ seeder , Overhead doors , Motor
stone (ars, 50 gallon drum, 2 Operated, Has Electri c,
bee hives . Terms: Cash. Not Water and Gas. Large lot 196'
res ponsible lor accidents. on Union Avenue, above flood,
Bra dford Auction Company, 3.56 acres, steel fence. 0.9
C. c. Bradford , Auct.; A. . c. miles from Pomeroy Court
Bradford, Mgr. Signed : Ancll House, one mile from Route 7
by ·r,a ss. Suitable lor '"'Y
Cross. Lunch served.
lots of
7-26-llc bus ness that
space. We res~! all Real
ONE GENTLE Appaloosa mare Estate Brokers. ,Price ~.500.
and colt, one 3 yr. old Ten· Pomeroy Motpr Company.
nessee Walker gelding , Phone 992·2126.1
registered. 992-3518.
. ;:=======:7:
-20
;:·:_61'-&gt;c
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;_1·::.26:.:·6:::1~

cards ,

WE DON'r

A RtDE SOON ,

Middleport. O.

992-2550

(M 60 ASHAMED. Nr-1
WIFE JJtaT G01' "loO!We~

CAMPUS CLATl'ER

ALL WEATHER

and

nice lot near hquY. Quiet and
Pomeroy .

.
5 tlng • Remodeling •
Siding • Rooftn~ • . Cpou I te Building . Vinyl
Plumbing · Heattng . omp e
&amp; Alumi11um Siding.

E. Main

pictures, Home Comfor t coa t private. 6 mites north of
cook stove. extra nice, oil

TH' iJOK.ERS

"Let Us Help You"

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

Mal&lt;e II Right.
Bult1 to Your··Spec•
Nathan Blgp&gt;
MOBILE
home
space
In
GORDON
Setters,
male.
must
flowers and food or helped In
Detlvtrtd
to Job Silo
Radiator
Specialist
Syracuse.
Phone
992·6329
.
be AKC registered . · Year or
any way due Ia lhe loss of our
6·.21 -lfc
older . Call {304~ 882-2810.
wife, mother and grandma •.
7·24-ltc
Fannie Hart. She ·was loved
&amp; ZUSPAN
8·4:30
FURNISHED apartments .
by all and will never be
In
the
R.
!leynolds Flowe r . Shop,
MATERIALS CO.
forgotten . Eor I Hart and KE WPIE dolls and anything
~oilding .
else related to Kewples . Also,
Mason, W. Va. on Main high.
773·5554
·Mason, W. Vo.
Ph., 92·2174
Pomeroy
:.... fam ilies,
Middleport, 0 .
992-2101
old postcards in good con- way . Call 773-5147.
7·26·llp
. I
d ition, wrl fe and describe
7-25-6tp
Items also price wa nted .
Alyce Schneider. 145 South SLEEP ING rooms In Pomeroy
In Memory
SEPTIC TANKS
Dick's
Kanawha , Buckhannon , W.
by week. Call 992-7775.
IN MEMORY of our brother, Va . 26201.
7-25-31c
CLEANED
R ic~ W. Snider, on hi s 19th
7·8·30tp
Hoard
House
birthday.
DUMP TRUCK
PING rooms In Pomeroy
I
know
that we cannot send a OLD fur niture. oak tables, SLEE
"STRIPPERS" ,
by week . Call 992-7775.
'
card, your hand we cannot
We Strip Paint, Varnishes,
SERVICE
clocks, Ice boxes, brass beds,
7-25-41c
Roofing, Spouting,
touch.
Etc. from Furniture.
24 HOUR SERVICE
dishes
or
complete
PLEASURE
BOAT
with
trailer.
But God will take our gl vl ngs to
Anllques-Modern-Melats
households. Write M. 0 . TRAIL ER SPACE on old route
Trl-hull, 17 ft . lop 60 h.p.
Home Remodeling
fhe one we loved so much.
No ruinous tyes or caustics
Miller, Rl. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio,
33,
'h mil e from Meigs Htgti
Evinrude
motor.
All
ac·
The gift we send is not "" very
used.
call 992.6271.
School. Call 992-2'141.
cessorles. Phone 992·7132.
new, It's worn and torn and
Pick-Up Strvlce
5· 13-ttc
7-26-171c
7.2.3'9tc
cried Itself blue.
Available
For Estimates
.
•• The love It holds no words can WANTED for auct ion •
We Buy &amp; Sell Anllques.
1971
MONTE
Carlo,
automatic,
' · JOHN'TUCKER
Imparl, on your birthday dej~r household goods. Tools, most TWO !railer lots in Middleport;
Dick Seyler-Owner
power steering, power disc 608
112 duplex in Bradbury ; phone
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, 0 .
Rich, we glveJ.ou our hearts. · anything of va lue. Will buy or
Phone 742-6271 .
Kerr
St.
Pomoroy,
0.
brakes, atr cond.ttlonlng. Call E. MAiN '\ill--~
l'
before 6 p.m. 992-5693.
992-3954
Sadly missed an loved by Morn sell on comm ission. Wilt haul.
Phonem.ma
992-7073 after 5 p.m.
.
7-23-51c
and Dad , Sisters and Call 992.JJ54. Hayman's.
~
7-26-3tp POMEROY
Brothers.
7-25-ftc
'·lo
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
WE HAVE NEW LISTINGS
I•
7·26-llp -~---~--20 INCH Multi speed fans, only EACH WEEK.
unfurnished
f
apartmenf
s.
GRAY MANOR
••
AND J HOME
$17.95. Also chaise lounges for
I•
Phqne 992·5434.
Mobile
Homes
For
Safe
CLOSE
TO
POMEROY
porch, lawn or pool , only
••
Notice
4· 12-tlc
APARTMENTS
•I
MAINTENANCE
'CAS H paid for all . makes and
$6.99. Pomeroy recovery, 622 8 room frame . 4 large
YARD SALE , Fr iday and
bedrooms.
balh,
dining
models of mobile hom es .
E. Main, Pomeroy, Ohio.
MIDDLEPORT
by the week, $18 up.
10 a. m. till 5 p.m .
&amp; REPAIR
I onSaturday,
room , utlllly r;f9m, 'cellar,
Phone area code 614·423·9531. ROOMS
Phone 992-7554.
Meigs
Inn,
Pomeroy.
Brownell Ave. Baby bed,
'
Heating . Air Cond .
4-13·1fc
7-26-61&lt; some carpeting ,and lots of
7-12-ifc
l Unfurnished Apartment cradle, antlqus, dishes. tots of
tile and panel! no. 1.36 Acres.
Refr!gerafion . Plumbing
Items. Come out and ·see.
114
N. .Fourth, 2 bedrooms,
ATTENTION ALL MO.BILE
On Most Americ1n Cars
Etedrical Appliances ~ AUto
'I ; .
NIC6.8 x 35 Trailer with Tlr·OUI. SEVERAL new damaged living &gt;On n~w Rt. 7. JUST 59,500.00.
'
7-26-2tp
has
all kitchen appliances.
HOME BUYERS.
IN NEW ADDITION '
roorn suites~ several up to 112
Air Cond .• Residential or
room, l bedroom, · Idea for
I .
·
.
.
GUARANTEEDNo
pets.
Berry -Miller Mobile Ho111e
off regular price. Hurry they Just 2 years . old. · Owner
couple . 10 miles north of
.commercial.
I
SHOOTING MATCH , Corn
Sates have just received on
won
't
last
long
at
these
prices.
Phone
992-2094
transferred.
3
bedrooms
with
Pomeroy.
Call
992-7479
.
.
Hollow Gun Club, turn llret
their tot 6 late model used and
'•
215 N. Second
Pomeroy Recovery, · 622 E. . nice closets. Lovely kitchen
l· 12-ttc
right after Miles Cemetery,
repossessed Mol&gt;ile Homes.
Pomeroy
Home
&amp;
Auto
Main,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Phone
I
Phone
992-3509
with
lots
of
cabinets.
Nice
Rutland, factory choked Quns
You can save hundreds 992-7554
.
Open
Hit
5
PHONE 992-3863
bath.
Utility
room.
Hard·
HOUSE.
3
bedroom
un·
only, Sunday, July 19, 1. p.m.
24 Hour Service
even thousands - of dollars
Monday
thru
Satutday
I
BEFORE3 PM
7-26-Jic
furnished, porch and yard. -;::;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;7;;
·2;6·;;6t..
c wood floors. Carport. Large
on these units:
All work guaranteed.
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .
tot IOOxiOO. ALL THIS AND
Ca ll 992-27f0 or 992·3432.
t
l-60xl2 3 Bedroom Atlantic,
7-8-lfc
MORE $20,000.00.
DANCE Saturday night, Red's
s.4.m.oo.
RON SHEPARD, Fioor, Wall SEP TIC TANKS AR6B·IC E LNA an d White Sew in g
LIKE OLDER 'HOMES?
For the Lowest
Club, Mason, W. Va. Guy 1~xf2 2 bedroom Champion,
Remodeling , Ceramic tile
3
BEDROOM
l'h
bath
mobile
Here
Is
one
In
good
shape.
4
Mach ines ... Service on all
SEWAGE SYS TEMS
$.4,395.00.
Thoma. Tobv Youna. Larrv
baths
. Box 28D, Rutland 742·
hom,e,
308
Page
Street,
992·
Tire
Prices
mak es. Reaso nabl e rate s.
Hubbard, Charlie Blake {The l- 60xl2 2 bedroom PMC,
bedrooms, · 2 baths, dining
CLEANED.
REPAIRED
.
3664,
3509.
MILLER SA NITATION ,
The Sew ing Center, Mid ·
Country Cut· Ups~ .
,$5, 195.00.
room, utility room , some
I'
].S.tfc
6·26·tfc
' ,.
STEWART, OHIO. PH. 662·
dleport. Ohio.
7-25-Jic l- 46xl2 2 bedroom Regen),
carpeting, paneling &amp; tile.
i n' the Area
---.....,--3035.
.
11-16-llc
$3,895.00.
Garage, lull !basement,
I~
DOZER
and
back
hoe
work,
I0-4·tfc
ROOM l.or elderly lady patlenl l-60xl2 2 bedroom Monarch, APARTMENTS, Hartford, W.
t
porches. Gas torc,e&lt;l air heat.
It's
Va ., I and 2 bedrooms un.
ponds and septic tanks, ditch·
save $2,000.00.
In private home. Phone 667·
Nice level tot. $8.200.00.
furnis hed , 773·5975.
lng servlc$; lop soil. 1111 dirt. SEWING MACHINES, Repair
l-60xl2 Etcona Custom , save
3305.
MIDDLE~ORT
I :
limestOne
; B&amp; K ExCavatinn . service, all makes. 992-2284,,
7-24-ltc
$1,800 .00.
7-24-Jic
Large lot 100xl35 (level). 2
Phone
992-5367
or 992-3861 ·- . . The Fabric Shop, Pome roy .
These
prices
include
dellverr,
bedrooms , bath, dining
t : UPHOLSTER your own fur . and complete setup. Don t
· .9-1-tfc Authorized Srnger Sales and
room , utility . sp~ce, porch,
waif - stop now at Ber ry - For Sale
Serv ice. We Sharpen Stlssor s.
ntture. We have all the sup·
storrn doors and wJndows,
EXC.AVATING. -Dozers, large
.
3·29-tfc
Miller
Mobile
Homes
Sales,
plies
you
will
need,
fabrics
,
BRUSH
HOGS,
4X
S
II.,
phone
1l
renov.aied lust 3 )years ago.
705 Farson Street, Belpre, 992·6329.
and small; Backhoes and --~---==:-­
foam for cushions and pad·
882·2817 New Haven,' W. Va.
In good condjton . ~ UST
onto. phone 423-9531 - Closed
loaders on ·track and tires; !:XCAVATING, dozer , loader
ding. We cuf foam to any si ze
7-15-lfc
__:
$6,500.00.
'
'
or
shape-.
Swivel
bases,
cotton
Sundays.
Dump trucks - · Lo·boy
and backhoe work ; septic
•
, COTTAGE
.
7-26·61c WELL PLANNED 3 bedroom , 2 BLACK thr ee quarter Ten -·
builap legs, zipper. welt cord,
service : Septic tanks in · · tanks instaHed ; dump trucks
.I
stalled. George !Bill) Pullins.
and lo-boys for hire; will hau l
webbing. dacron, chip board
full
nessee Walker colt, broke to 2 bedrooms~ bafhl some new
bath home with
I'
plus many ot~r items and
plumbing,
dining
room
,
phone
992·2478
or
992·7402.
fill dirt, top soil , limestone
ride.
Phone
992-3640.
,
basement,
2
car
garage
and
I
living room suites at low. low
Air Conditioners
porches,
large
·
2·9·
ldt,
close
·to
tic
and
gravel ; Call Bob or Roger
family room . Priced In mid
7-22-121c
---'
prices . Pomeroy Recovery,
shopping.
ASKING
JUST
Jeffers,
daY phone 992-7089;
20's,
plus
lot.
Located
on
large
Awnings
622 E. Main. Phone 992-7554 . .
FURNITURE
Stripping
.ana
night
phone
992-3525
or
992·
·
.
country lot off Rt. 7 20 GIBSON air conditioner, 8,000 · $5,000.00. i
Underpinni'ng
. Refinishing . Abraham 's
5232
7·19·30tc
'I
minutes from Parkersbyrg
BTU, Kelvlnator 18 cubic feet
·
WANTED
Antiques,
132
.Fayette
Street,
·
2- ll ·lfC
an.
d
IS minutes
from
type
freezer,
Gas
kit·
chest
I story, 3 bedroom homes,
Complete
mo~lle
home
Nelsonville,
Ohio.
Phone
753·
MEAT
CUTfER
.
-No
phone
'
chen stove, dinette set,. kif· {not too old) ·from $17,000.00
Pomeroy . Financing already
se rv ice - plu s gigantic
1302.
calls. O&amp;D Meats.
chen cabjnef, easy wringer
OPEN Roger Hysell 's
arranged with low ~own
up . 9 YEAR•S REAL
7-3-JO!c
........::..
7-18·11C display of mobile homes
type washing machine, Warm
payment. Contact Paul ine E.
Garage near crossroads on St.
EStATE
EXPERIENCE
IN
always available at
~---=----· Cunn ingham Realty . Phone
Morning bottled gas heater MEIGS COUNTY. ·
Rt. 124 ; all mechan ical work
DEAD STOCK, horses, came,
FOR FREE estimates on
65,000 BTU. Call 985-4180.
{614) 42J.8690 Collect.
InCluding
automatic transHENRY E. CLii'LANO,
hogs, sheep, reasonable
aluminum siding. Storn Doors
.
7·19·tfC
missions.
Monday-Friday ,
7,22-ltp
MILLER
REALTOR
charge. Call 245·5514.
and Windows . Carports,
a:
30
a.m.
to
5 p.m. Saturday
3assocl1les to help you.
_
6-26-JOtc
Marquees and Railing, Phone
- 8:30 to 12 noon - unless by
14x70 MOBILE home,
MOBILE HOMES • - - - - - · - - - · 1973
9t2·22Sf
Beech &amp; Locust Sl
Charles Lisle. Syracuse. onto. appointment. Phone 992·5682
washer and dryer , diSh·
If
no
answer
992·2568
Cart
Jacob,
Sales
Repwasher,
stainless
steel
sink,
or
992-7121.
1220 Washington Blvd.
re,.,ntative. V. V. Johnson
garbage disposal, eye level
7-25-30tc
42J.7521
BELPRE, 0 .
and Son, Inc.
Middleport1 0.
oven, range , dacron -polyester
6·22·tlc READY -MIX
carpet, large lot. Phooe 742·
CONCRETE
3083.
TRYING to buy a fY1obile hom~1
.';:::O::E::-L:-L
(y
""w
~H:=-E~::-L-A"'II_gn
:.::ment delivered right to your
Been
iurned
down
?
7-18-tt
project. Fast and easy . Free
July 25-Aug . 1
· located at Crossroads, Rt. 124,
Remember. I ca h say " yes"
1- : - - - - - es
timates . Phone 992-3284 .
•
now back to work . Complete
Cars Painled
$50.00
when othen say "no." Call
Goeglein Ready.Mi x Co .•
1973 -· Zig Zag sewing machine.
front end service~. tune up and
Frank. 992·T777. I can help.
Pick-ups
$60.00
This machine darns, em•
Middleport. Cillo.
brake service. Wheels
Larry's Mobile ~ Sates,
broider! , overcasts. button
6-30-lfc
balanced electronically. All
600 w.. l Ma in Street,
holes. All without at.
work guaranteed. Reasonable
Pomeroy, Cillo.
tachments. Pay balance of ,
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
rates. Phone 742·3232.
·
DEMONSTRATORS
1·11·
18tc
$38.50 or pay $5 per month.
REASONABLE rates. Ph . 446· Tune Up, All Mechanical
Lincoln Hill-Pomeroy
2-18-tlc
Call 992·5331.
4782, Gallipolis. John RulSetl, Work, All Accossorlos
992-5271
BRICK
BUSINESS
I
Snapper
I
HP
Riding
6-10-tfc
55 x 10 BEDROOM. Owner witt
Owner
and Operator .
Available. Cars Washed &amp;
.
OPEN Roger Hysell's
BUILDING
Mower. Etoc. start. Lis!
Repairs Addition'al
finance . Inquire at P&amp;J Odds
s.
12-tfc Waxed . Mechanic on Duty at
Garage
near
crossroads
on
Sf.
1629.95.
and Ends Shop. 215 N. 2nd
KOSCOT KOSMETICS and LARGE - 2 story storage
Work Guaranteed
All Times.
Rt. 124; all mechanical work
Ave., Middleport.
Sale SS2U5
Name Brand Wigs. Special building . Ideal fo• furniture,
,..
Including
aut.
trans
WILL do babysitting in my _ _ _ __ __ ___:
sale prices during month of grocery, contractor, etc .
7-6-tfc
C. BRADFORD. Auctioneer
mission
.
·
Monday-Friday
,
THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL ~
home. Married, age 25. Call
Ju ly. Phone . Helen Jane Loading platform, and over
I Gravely Super C·S Tractor.
Complete Service
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday
· 992-7857. Live In Middleport.
Brown, 9'1" 1113.
one acre of land. Asking only
Phooe
949·3821
Lis! 1747.00.
Oil Change. Filler &amp;
- 8:30 to 12 noon - unless by
·
7-2S.41c Auto Sales
Racine, Ohio a
6·2'1 -tfc $20,000.00.
· Sale1600.0tJ
appointment: Phone · 992-5682
Grease Job.
Crltt Bradford
NEW LISTING
SELL or take over payments,
or 992-7121.
5·
I
.lf
c
.PORCH and yard sale, Thurs. 1972 Pontiac Catalina, &gt;400
~
XCEL~IOR
..
Si
ll
Works,
E:
MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedroom
1 EtecTrak E-a Riding
6-27-JO!c
day and Fro day, July 26 and engine, P.B., P.S., forced air,
Main St., Pomeroy. All kinds house, both, 111 furnace and
Mower. 'Lisl S990.QO.
·
on~ $~95
·~
HARRISON'S TV service and
·21. Antique dishe s, Hull
('I~ ~ It water pellets, weter garage. All out of high water . AUTOMOBILE insurance been
4 door hardtop, vinyl top,
Sale17DO.OO
Fillup
Gas
pottery, old tamps, old clocks, 10,000 miles , just like new.
r.• ·ggels, block salt and own on level lot . Asking 115,500.00.
cancelled?
Loaf
you r}. service calls. Phone 992-2522.
2-9-tfc ,___ With
__
_:_of __:_:__:_:_J
furnilure, etc . 838 South
Ohlo
River
Salt.
Phone
992·
Phone 992·3225 a1ter 5 p.m. or
operator 's llcen511 . Call 992·
SYRACUSE
Second Ave ., Middleport, write Box 46 in Middleport. ·
3891.
~::&amp;"::&amp;"::&amp;"==-=
7428 .
Floor
Model-New
6.
ROOMS
On
level
iot.
Ohio.
6•5·tfc Garage and storage bu ild ing.
J.24-3tc
6·15- ttc
7·25-Jip - - - - - - - - 1 Gravely 408 Rldtnv Tractor 1- - - - - - ' - - - - Asking lust $5,000.00.
1970 CHRYSLER Newport,
MOBILE home repa ir, Elec- •
&amp; Mower. List 1923.00
4 BEDROOMS
31 ,000 miles P.S ., P.B. .
trlcal plumbing and heating. e
•
Sale182l.OO
Estate
Slile
NICE KITCHEN - Gas
Forced air. 2 door hardtop.
Phone 992·6329.
. e
.•
. · ~EAUTICIAN . Pratt's Beauty
lurmice,
bath,
full
basement
ROOM house with bath In with garage and 2 family
S.a!on, Middleport. Phone m . excellent condition. Call 992·
I Gravely 111 Rkttng Tractor 7 Rutland
- - - - - - - -7·_
15-tfc ••
e
, 3225 after 5 p.m.
, air conditioned ,
. 3751 or 992-3703.
&amp; Mower. List $1633.00.
rooms. Front porches, large
notc
Repair,
Air
·
•
carpeted,
gas
furnace
,
dish·
7·2Htc
Sate 11500.00
washer •. double oven, range, lot. Asking SI8,900.!JO.
Conditioning,
Heating ,
•
NEW LISTING
1964 OOOGE Dart. automatic
double garage. large carport,
Electrica l Repair , •
•
I Electrak E-ID Riding
Renovated 5 I Residential or comm,rclat. •
transmission . 1966 Rambler ,
-4 acres clea red and fenced , RUTLAND Tractor &amp; Mowe r. List
Sta ndard. Con tact Sa.m
small barn and other bedroom home. Haa. 1'h blths,
auto air-conditioning, 266 Mill •
Uft ~ "
'
I
NIGHT COOK at Ma rtin
l
or
ca
ll
985·3956.
11342.00,
.
Ml&lt;hae
buildings. Phone 614·142-6834. large closets, and largo · Street 992·3509.
•
•
Restaurant. Apply In person,
7-24-3tp
SateiiiOO.OO
6·29·301&lt; •
•
S-30·tfc rooms. Nice kitchen with u .
Experienced.
sink
,
di
shwa
sher,
and
7-26-3tc
1968 PLYMOUTH VIP air ·
I Snapper 8 HP Riding ·2 STORY. 6 room with full bath disposal. Natura l gas furnace. WILL TRIM or cut !root, • Mr. Davis Has Opened An Office At :
shrubbery, Also paint roolt.
condl1iof'!ing,
new
steel
belh,
Mower. ' List 151,.95.
WAITR ESS and bar maid.
home, fu ll baumenf has Large front porch.
: 100'12 E. Main St., Pomeroy (Over the •
Phone 949·3221 or 7~2 ·U41.
I ow ner. P &amp; J Odds &amp; Ends
Apply In person, Phillips '
SaleS45o.oo
REASONABLE
lavatory.
commode
&amp; shower,
7-11•30tc
Shop , 215 N. Second, Mid·
• Blue &amp; Grey Restaurant). Under the •
Bar , Pomeroy .
atte~ ched garc,~ ge o~~nd exi r a LONG BOTTOM - 5 rooms.
dleport.
7·2Htc
bath
,
forc
ed
air
furna
ce.
,
I Snapper 5 HP AIding
lot. Double ove n gas range
Real
For
Name of Davis Insurance Service
:
7-25-4fc
Mower. Ll&gt;t 1429.95.
and
r efrig erator -lreezer Tuppers Plains wa1er. Asking
only
14,000.00.
Sale1360.00
combination inclu ded . Near
WELL PLANNED 3 btaroom, 2 1
We are In I POSition to service your In· 1
1960 v,. TON Chevy, J175 , P 1o J
Employment Wanted
NEW
LISTING
Pomeroy Elementary School.
bath home wtlh
full e
·
ed If 111
•
4 Snapper walking mowers
Odds &amp; Ends Shop.
basement, 2 car garage and 1 sur~nce ne 5· W not be necessary for you •
. Call 992-7384 .
3
YEARS
OLD
Modern
2
INTER lOR and exterior
wifh
grass.ca1chers
.
HS-41 c
family room . Priced tn mid 1 to stgn any statement mailed or given to you to •
7-24·51p bedrooms , bath , ~ built - In
painting and roofl.ng. G. G.
20 Pet. Off List
Congo, Long Bottom. Ohio. CHEVROLET IV' ton truck,
r---------......;·, ranve . All electrl ¢ ~om e .
20s. plut lot. Located on lervo 1 have .the same. protection on your csr or •
Phone ~3·2984.
Large
IQI
In
Tupper!
Plaln1,
country tot ott Rl. 7b 20
t W
11 1
p
1963 Volkswag'Oti. Call 985·
Used Traetors
ml~uta&amp; · tro111 Parktra urg 1 .. proper Y· 1 Wt II ve you honest and efficient •
7-17·101p
Want Just 115,000.00.
4118.
and u · rntnutu fro111 a service. Please stop by or callas to the reason •
,•
BEEN LOOKING FOR A
I Grovt ly C.IO A tractor
GOOD BUY, TH E)'l YOU
Pomtroy. l"ln1nc1ng alroady 1 of the division. of the Davis. Warner lnsuran~
•
with dials.
1550.00
arranged with tow down
Ag
~• 1
SHOULD CONSIOEII ONE
Pets
Sale ·
~aymont. Contact Plullnt E: I
tncy. ·
I
I MUHV·FtrguSOII 12 HP
OF THE ABOVE L. 1$~'T~IN~G1~S .
For
Rent
with
mower
and
Hyra.•tallc
CuMin~m
Rtllty,
phone
•
•
AKC Toy Poodle puppies, m
WE AlSO HAVE
1700.00
drlvo.
1nd S85. Also Siamese kittens
AFTER
THE
614-42J·
•• uect. , .2wc :
SID. Ph on~ 1-256·6247, Kennels PRIVATE meeting room for
PAYMENT IT MAY
any
organi
zation
;
phone
99~.
of Calhoun .
LIKE RENT. SAVE
HOUSE for aato; 210 Condor
J975.
6- 2~· 30fC
US NOW, TODAY. 1
3·11 ·11&lt;
and bath. :
1
512 E, M&lt;lln St.
.
~----7;25·121p •
•
PARKVIEW Kennels. PoOdles, SLEE PING room ov&lt;r the Wine
Pomeroy, Olllo
I toy male 1nd I female . Store In Pomeroy. Reference
:-::-:-:----....,.._.:;:.:..
a
We
can
lnsurt
your
Mobile
Home
.
Ask
about
·
•
ON YOUR DIAL
""'"'- m .2m
Phone 992·5.«3.
BEDROOM
home
In
Rutt1nd.
•
our
packagt
policy
.
•
3
required. Call 992.5293.
Open Mon •• fhvr I :OOto 5:30
Phone 7&gt;12·415.
•
1
Fri. &amp; Sat. Ito I
'
7·6·tfC
MHte
•
who senf

001\l'T FER61i

Water ave liable. Call or see

and

pictures, SunrlJy gas range,

t~

friends

I'M BUSTIN' A FRE&lt;;H
DECK FER THIS
BODACIOUS CARD

Business Services

PUBLIC AUCTION
LARGE, conJentenl bulldtnv
TH E- PERSONAL property of tots at Rock Sorlngs . Arej~
the late Addle Cross will be restricted for hou"' only.
sold at the residence located Tuppers Pl~lno &amp; Ches ter

8:l 0a . ni . to 5 :00p .m . Daily,
!l.OPEN EVES. 8 :00P. M.
8:30 &amp;. m . to 1'2 :00 Noon
1
POMEROY. OHIO
Saturday
.
'• .....
Cilrd of Thanks
,.._ ·WE
WAN T to thank the mony
Want&amp;tt To Buy
For Rent

'

BARNEY

•

GAME, FELlERS

WANT AD$
, INFORMATION
' OE.t.OLINeS
s P.M 111 _Dey Befort Publ lcetlon .

...•

•

~ MY VAC!iTloN 16 DAAWiNe10
A CL06E, euT fTie NICE
6PENDtNI3111E: LMT ~""
FEW DI\Ye IN PCI\OE ""'

'

'·

WHY ARE 'IOU AFRAID

MY SCHEME 1DGcTRID
oF 1UTU1e e~t:R
REALLY WORKEO. HE'S
ecEN CON&amp;Picuoue
13YHI5 A5&amp;cNCE.

10WALKON1HE~,

IMI&gt;IO? lHAT W!NKLF:

I~ NOT GOING
· 10A7TACKYOU

\'.OMAN

tM NOT 50 OORE OF lHAT,
MY FRIEND.lHE WAY 6HE:
ACTED ON OUR DATI: ·
PROVED 10 ME SHE: I, A
PESPE/?ATE \'.OMAN I

i'\NOQUI~T.

P

'5.55

r

l

l:

Il ,,

..
"
..

-

Ij ,. ' - -- - - -

I

-OPEN FOR
BUSINESS

NEW HAVEN
DISCOUNT TIRE

I·

I
II :

GASOLINE ALLEY

_____

j

____

1

'

'

~

'

~L.WS

I

'

, I

~Rl"/ Hl~D
SO e.I"JX(,

UTILE ORPllAN ANNIE

- - - - - --

G'RAND
OPENING
SPECIAL

GENE'S BODY SHOP

JULY

CLEARANCE
SALE

7 DAYS .A WEEK

Wanted

Real

,•.......................... •.
NOTICE TO All CLIENTS

for

~EFRIGERATOR

Of 1HE fORMER
1\A'VIt' 'W'ARNER INS. SERVICE

Help Wanted

Estate·

s.1e

e

•

:

.We talk to you

For

.like a person.,

Gravely Tractor Sales

DICK TRACY

T~;,~~

6·10

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

WMP0/1390

9

LORENZO D. DAVIS :

~~~;· J2.~ft~m•

PHONE 992·5120

:

--------- · ··~··················,_·~·.·····

CiJME.

eu~:nlt»-'1

Basham's
Ashland
Service

I'
'

r

,,

IM PI-IONING
BEU.USE
"fl..EV TOOtC
MV '2.-WAV.

IN 'fi.IE'' ' ~r·. •.
BUIL,OINO ,
MANAGERS
OI"I=ICI!'??
we've C.ONI!'
NUT1 LOOKING
FOR YOU

BUT
LET ANV
NEWS OF ~IS OET ON
POLICE RAOto·VIT,

TWO·

•

•
•

·- -

AMANDA PANDA

•

TH~AMOUNTO~INS£CiS

•

A MN BIRO MA'/ EAT IN ONE PA'/

•

-•

•.

MA'/ ~~

"fi{E

.
...
..

AS MUCH AS

~1~17 WEIGHS!

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2. Minneapolis
....-.-, 1. Beelze·
bub's
suburb
abode
3. Enumera 5. Portion
tions
Hombre's
4. Spanish
farewell
article
Church
5. Hound's
guide
decree
6. Cottontail
Atlantic
City at·
7. Black
traction
cuckoo
{2wds.l
8. Fabled
bird
.. lti. Business
9. Last
Spanish
one's in
queen
17. Lend a
I CAN I-IARDL'f WAJT TO
hand
11. or a
WEAR TJ.IAT BULLETIN. 19. Capture.
Frankish
as game
people
U. Unsu ited
- Mahal
18. Family
Heroic
fare
narrati\le
19. Exclude
24. Legend·
20. ln lhe ·
ary ship·
. past
launcher
21. Blithe·
( 3 wds.)
some
28. Acknowl·
edge
29. Dock·
workers'
union
L - - - - - - - - - - 30.' Playing
marble
31. "Sawed
logs"
34. Beer to
Berliners
35. Cat lulk

~~~~~~~~~~~· ::::Emmel

Yelterday's Ceyptoquote: IT IS NOT HOW FAll YOU GO,
BUT HOW DEEPLY YOU GO THAT MINES THE GOLD OF
EXPER1ENCE.-WILFERD PETERSON
(C 1979 Kin&amp;' Futuro 8)-ndlcato,lnc.)

JIWIWIDlLJl;ll.i !:::!:! -v =~·
Yesterday's Answer
23. Heodline
a tt rac~

tio n
·24. "Bean"
warm er
25.Tanguay
26. "Swing

_ ,.

Unocramble the1e four Jumbln,
one letter to eaeh oquare, to
form rout ordinary wordo. ·

33. Actor

Alain
34. Piece or
sculpture
36. "I Dance"
37. Ciiburn
38; "Down

27. Little

.1 RVI'/'1'

0

under" bird

flower

39. Young
insect
40. Go to the

31. Mama 's

boy
32. Zola

lJ I

S'/1GED

A FIISH'Tit&lt;o!:&gt;

·Of'PONENi.

C4VI''I'E
..

.

Now orraJ110 tht drtledltt1tll
to form the aurprtM ~n~wtr, u
•uno•I4MI br tiM IIMm canooa.

I MUs Ill a iiGWII""' I A(llXIIIIJ
Yetterd•y'•
·

37 . LO U\'C(' '

attra ctio n·
IJ wds. 1

(A.inrt lo... r... w)-

l

)unobl•oo DICIY HAVIN MUIICIT NOODLI
A.n•wer1

..4 klnrl o/•••rnplltimu bnll
Jllrtyl"lf - ~~~NDIIHAND''

41. ll's as

a

good ns &lt;I

•

42. Animal's

•

43. l,{kc a
kook

mile
(2 wds. 1

duw

-14. Camper's

•

nbode

•

I. Syrl•n

llOWI'&gt;

•

clly

t

•

DAILY

••

!'RYPTOilUOTF;- Here's how to work
A X Y D J, 18 II. A X R

Is l. 0 N G F. E L L 0 W
One ' letocr slmpiy stond• for another. In this sample A i•
used for the th roe L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
aposorophcs, tho .length and formation or the words are all
hints. Each doy t.lte code letters are dltTcrcnt.
·
'
CRYPTOQUOTli:S

•:

.
•

•
•.•
•
•

liSL
B U A IS
IE L .

•

0 RI 0

•

l ' II N I Z

URVHFV
llRl'

OLFFD

Bl'AIS
BUIIFV
ll, 1'

~·

SLMLZ
URU
OLF ••

US!,

OZHDO
RLZ

UUHFV

ZLIF
OLFF

I SCORTSE .-

V l.

.I

\,

,

.

�•

12 - The DaUy Sentinel. Mlddl•,.•rt.•PnmA"n• n .lnlv !Ill. 19'13 ·

•

IN

ELBERFELD$

House approves legislation rais~ng salaries

POMEROY

COLUMBUS (UPI) - TI1e
Ohio Houae, meeting until
nearly 3a.m. today to clear the
way for adjournment this
weekend, pallaed lel!lslation
raising the salaries of
leglalators and other state
pfflclala . .
Respollding to a charge by
Rep. Arthur Wllkowski, DToledo, that the news media
- had attempted to Intimidate
the House, the legislator~

OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 PM

.STOREWIDE SALE
FALL DRESSES

Y«&gt;VEN RUGS

Selected from ·stock.
Misses - Juniors · Half Sizes.
Hit and Miss pallern In
beautlful bright stripes .

SALE PR.ICES

•

Machine washable.

Another Shlpmenl

RCA
CAR TAPE PLAYERS.,
Be s.ure to see this fine

selection Qf 8 track t~pe

playcr.s

for

your car ·

depe ndat!le qualify - easy

I
;j

STEP IN ADVANCEMENT - Syracuse Mayor Hennan
L.4lndon and Council members in their efforts to improveL'Onditions in the village for the benefit of residents have
purcha&gt;ed and placed new street signs throughout the town.

News . . . in Briefs
I

'

1

1ConUnued from page I)

Vietnam.
PHNOM PENH - LESS THAN 24hours after President Lon
Nul warned of new Cornmunist pressures of Plmom Penh, ipsurgcnts fired shells into crowded areas of the city and killed a
reported '18 per$0ns Wednesday, Military police sources said
another 26 persons were wounded, many of them seriously.
After the shelling, the government tightened security
precautions in·the city and Afllerican warplanes flew heavy
concentrations ofair strikes south, west.and north of the capital.

MASON DRIVE-IN
!'lilfll W V l

A ( ,u !onn NiQh!ll'

Tonight &amp; Friday

July 26-27
Double Fea ture Program

" CRY UNCLE"
Adults Only

Two·lrurt
in traffic
accident

Outrageous - shock ing bu1
hilar ious. ·

Two persons were injured
and
transported to Holzer
Raled R
- PLUSMedical Cenler as a result of a
"THE FEMALE"
two car accident Wednesday at
Rated R
4:42p.m. on SR 124, one lenth
of a mile west of Leading Creek
Bridge, Langsville.
Erma Elsie Kiplinger, 60,
Barberton, Ohio, was headed
south
on County Road 10 when
Tonig'hf, July 26
NOT OPEN
her car pulled onto SR 124 in .
the path of a car driven by
Jessie
Marie Might, 34, Vinton.
Ffiday thru Tuesday
Ju ly 27 -28-29-30- 31
Arminda Anderson. 87, Dexter,
Wa ll Di sney 's
' a passenger In the . Kiplinger
CHIIRLIE &amp; THE ANGEL
car, and David Elton Might, 8,
(Tcchn icu lor)
a passenger in the Might car,
Also
Wall Disney 's
were taken to Holzer by the
CINDERELLA
emergency
medical service.
· ( Technicolor)
"G"
There was heavy damage to
. ._ S
•h•o•w•s•'•.rl.;.',;.7;,P·.;;'";,;,·-..&amp; bolh cars.

MEIGS THEATRf

·"IT'S TRUE"---

ARE

Shown with the attractive new green and white markers,
which are also visible at night, are 1..-, Bob Varian, Mick Ash
and David Smith, sununer employes of the village and Mayor
Herman 1.4lndon.

Robert Potter
goHwinner
In the Pomeroy-Middleport
Lions Club sponsored hole-inone con lest, Robert Potter,
Wednesday, was clOsest to the
pin by one foot and two inches.
'l:he conies! i$ being held at
the Pomeroy Gold Golf Course.
Twenty-two persons participated Wednesday, Wendell
Hoover reported. The con lest is
held from 5 p.m. until dark. A
person making a hole-in-one
will receive $2110, •
The contest will. be held
Saturday from I p.m. until
dark due to make up for
Tuesday,
Other winners Wednesday
were Bub Stivers, .second ;
Roger Stewart, third; Shorty
Hackett, fourth and Max
Folmer, fifth, -

Visit the Busy Mens and Boys Depart:
ment . lsi Floor. -

Our entire stock Is included. Many new fabrics
and s tyles in Mi sses. Junior and Preteen sizes.

New Back.to-Schoo l and Fall Merchandi s,e arriving dally .

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Ten defendants
fined, three
forfeit bonds

VOL XXV NO. 73

o.

•

By United Press International
WASHINGTON - THE CENSUS BUREAU estimates the U.
S. population was about 210,284,000 on June I, up 127,000 from the ·
previous month.
The increase resulted from a natl!l'al gain- excesS of births
over deaths - of 97,000, plus an estimated net Immigration of
30,000 the Census Bureau said Thursday.
The June I population figure was about 1.6 million, or 0.8
pet., greater than a year earlier.

Broken sizes . .Limited quantities .

SALE PRICES II
Famous Make

MEN'S
NECKTIES
Includes entire stock. Ready lied ties and the

'"

ones you lie yourself . An excellent selection of
solid colors and patterns:.

SANTIAGO, CHILA - A NAVAL AIDE to Pt!!sident
Salvador Allende was assassinated by terrorists wielding
machine guns. Navy Capt. Arturo Araya was shot down as he
stood in his pajamas on the llahmy of his home, police reported.
The killing was the first attempt against a Chilean government
official since the aborted mllllary uprising in which 22 persons
were slain on June 29.

SALE PRICESI

BOYS'
The New 1974

KN-IT
SHIRTS

WASHINGTON - THE PAST FlljCAL YEAR'S federal
budgetdetlclttumed outto be $14.4 billion, $10.4 billion below the
$24.8 billion that had been predicted earlier.
President Nixon Issued the figures Thursday and predicted a
balanced budget for the current fiscal year - if Congress holds
spending to about $269 billion.

RCA COLOR TELEVISION
Visit the musiC department • 2nd floor. See the tine new line .

of RCA XL 100 co!or television . Portables and Consoles,
Also the new.'74 Stereos - Radios . Tape. Ptlyers • Black and
White Television Sets . Portable-s and Consoles .

Sizes 6 to 18 . Tank tops
· shirt s with colla r s .
cr ew neck shirts. Buy
yo ur schoo l sup pl Y
now.

SAIGON - COMMUNIST TROOPS attempting to re-occupy
a district town 30 miles northeast of Saigon fought government
troops Thursday in the bloodiest battle since the South Vietnam
cease-fire came into force Jan. 28.
It also was the heaviest fighting in the Saigon area since last
October. The South Vietnamese command said 89 Communists
and 15 government soldiers died in the B'k-hour battle northeast
of Saigon near the district town of Phu Giao. Nineteen other
government troopa were wounded.

HOUSEWARES
Limited Quantities - While They Last

'

'

s.oo Wicker

Flower Baskets . . -- . . - - Sale 2.10
1.00 Plastic Jardenieres . .
.
Sale SOc
1.5'9 Plastic Jardenieres . . . . ·
Sale 79c
3. 95 Tree and Well Platters - . - .
.- · Sale 2.00
One lot Arlifjcial Flowers · ' .
•
Sale lf2 price
LOO Harker Ware Brown Mugs ·. . •
.
Sale 39c 1
10 Quart Galvanized Pails . . . - . . .
Sole 99c
Gafv·anized Scrub Tubs - - - . . - . .
Sale , 1.39
6.95 Enameled Lasagna · Pan's - - . .. .
Sale 4.00 .
5 .95 Cheese Server with .-Tray - . . Sale 2.99
23.85 Corning Ware Saucepan Sets - . ..
Sale lf.88

Sale Prices

Boys'
Short Sleeve

SHIRTS
Buy your back-loschool shirts now at
these sale prices .

Sizes 8 to 20. Solids
and pattern s. All
permanent press.

Boys 2.95 Shirts

Sale $1.99
Boys 3.9S Shirts

Sale $2.49
Boys 4.9S Shirts

Sale $3.19

98c Door and Wall Storage Bens · - - .
• 69c Door and Wall Storage Bens - - .
·

1. 99 Pla stic Watering Cans - . . •
1-2 .9S 2 Compartment Electric Servers

7.00 Large Size

Glazed Pottery Mixing Bowls

.

-

11.95 Wood Shadow Boxes . - - . . - 5.29 Mini' Bottle Racks . . . - - - .

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

PHNOM ~~AM):!ODIAN troops supported by intense, · concentrated U. S. air strikes hammered insurgent
positions Thursday near Phnom Penh in assaults the Cambodian
high CO!llll1llnd said was meant to ease pressure on the capital.
The high command said 400 insurgent troops were killed in the
fighting.
Fie!~ reports said the government operation involved two
battaliops of troops and 25 armored personnel carrlrs and was
concentrated at positions about 12 miles south of Phnom Penh
near i!jghway 3.

60c
40c

1.09

7.00

Sale 4.00
Sale 7.00
Sale 2.79

ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE
. ON MECHANIC STREET

WASHINGTON - MELVIN R. LAIRD, the former defense
secretafY, says he ordered the clandestine bombing of Cambodia
but did pot authorize falsification of the records of the raids.
Laird now an adviser to President Nixon, described his role
in the 1967-70 bombing campaign at a White House news conference Thursday. He said President Nixon approved the raids
and that they were kept secret because of a diplomatically
sensitive situation.

Pre-Season sale - Perfection Gas and Fuel Oil
Healers; A good selection of all sites. Now is a
good time to buy.
·Youngstown Kitchen Sinks
A n~w shipment in 42", 54" and 66" sizes. Double bow l and
single bowl models.
.
• Special Purchase and Sale of Armstrong Linoleun\

12 tt . width. VInyl. Sale price 11.80 a square yard. Bring In

yo ur measurements.
• Big selection of Room Site Rugs for $88 .00.
Sizes up to 12' xl8'.
• Whirlpool Appliances - Washers . Dryers . Refrigerators .
Deep Freezers . De Humidifiers.

Gfls officials

· • Whi.rlpool Air Conditioners.

hosted dinner

Drive lo Elberfelds Warehouse o~ Mechanic Street. Plenty of
free parkmg and you can shop 1n cool air conditioned com fort.

Sale Friday and Saturday!

Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc.
dlvlslon manager Bob Artrup
of Chl!llcothe and Gallla-Meigs
division manager John (Jake)
Koebel were dinner hosts
Thurs&lt;(ay evening at the Meigs
Inn. Tfle dinner was given for
local vlllage offlclals and their
wives ·.
There was no program, no
speec~es,
only informal
remarks of greeting by Artrup
and Koebel, both of whom are
new In their posts and anxious
w become acquainted wlth
local residents . Koebel
recenQy was appointed man;
ager
of
the
Meigs
Coun!y operations of the
utility, surceedlng Tom
Cassell, who was transferred to
Ada Ohio . Artrup was
recenUy profJlbted to division
manager. H~ Is a native of
Cohuqbus as ls Koebel.
Accompanying Artrup and
Koebel were their wives.
GueaiB were Mr, and Mrs.
Fred Crow, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Vaughan, Mr. and
Mrs. David Ohlinger, Mayor

--

All .Purpose Throw Covers
Non Slips· - Fringed - Washable. Good colors . Florals and
IZOS 60x70, 70x90, 70x120, 70xl40.

So_11ds.
'

REGULAR
REGULAR
REGULAR
REGULAR
REGULAR
REGULAR
REGULAR
REGULAR
REGULAR

3.95
4.95
5.95
7.95
8.95
9.95
10.95
11.95 · · · · · ·
12 .95 · · · · · · .

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

2.69
3.39
3.99
5.39
5.99
6.69
7.39
7.99
8.99

'

'

PleasaotValleyHospllal
Discharges- Pearl Pearson,
Martha Simpkins, Point
Pleasant; LarryDeanLee, Jr.,
Point Pleasant; Nannie Lee,
Henderson ; Mrs . Bryan
Higginbotham, son, Buffalo;
James Hurlow, Leon; Guy t~--·------~--,._
_;;,_;::;.:;.:;_J
Another shipment of bicycles just received. Now
Rawlins, Jackson, Ohio ;
at sale proces.
Edmund Grimes, Point
•
Pleasant; Mrs. Loren Halley,
Standard 26lnch bikes -20 Inch bicycles with banana seal and
Crown City;· Mrs. Kirby A.
high rise handle bars · 241nch bikes · 3 speed Boys and Girls
Smith, Jr., Hartford ; Thomas
models · 10 speed blkeslh 27 Inch and 26 1nch sizes.
Wllliams, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Lasting "rheauty - mi-n imum earn..- . 100 per cent
11 '11 pay you lo see lhls line line of American made bicycles ·
Se lec t th e onlior on es you want and really save.
John Hess, infant, Pomeroy;
Polyestj!r-. ~utstanding durability . machine ,_------------·-----~.J
Ralph Spencer, · Gallipolis
washable
· little or ?,o ironing - stand s up to 1
Ferry; Thoma s 'Campbell,
stron~est sunloght . so wide per pair . White and
Mason ; Mrs . Wllllam J ,
beautoful pa stel s hades.
Somervllle, daughter, West
Columbia; Dewey Roten,
CUSTOM DRAPERIES AND BEDSPREADS
3.49 36" LENGTH
Galllpolls Ferry; Robert
SALE 2.79
4.49 4S" LENGlH
SAL.E 3.19
Davis, Langsville, and Mrs.
Take advantage of our 20 per ct~nt !lflvlngs ni;w being offered
4:79
54"
LENGTH
on
beoulllul custom '!lade Draperies and Bedspreads. Seltcl
SALE 3.39
Thomas O'Brien, Hartford .
from
hundreds of labrlc a, colors and patterns made lo flt any
4,99 ~3 " LENGTH
•
SALE 3.69
window
In your home. We make thi s offer for a limite~ tlrrie
S.!9 72" LENGTH
.
SALE 3.99
only _
Ma~s• License•
5.39 81" LENGTH
SALE 4.19
John Virgil Bogard, 48, ""'"KI 5.69 90" LENGTH
SALE 4.39
Bottom, and Donna Ma
.SRING IN YOUR WINDOW MEASUREMENTS
Hauber, 37, Long Bottom.
~----·----~....~......._...._.__ _ _ _ _,1.-..........________________
JQSeph William Wright, Jr
37, Minersville, and Rita Joan
Free Customer Parking on Second Street and at EtbtrfeldJ Mechanic Str-t Wa h
· h
h h
,. _ re ouse.
Wrog
l, 34, Rt. I, C es ire.
Gordon Lynn Holter ,
Long Botlom, and Jill ' u''"' 1
Swuin , 18, Reedsvi lle.

__

.Bicycle Sale

.. .

_J

!. " '

POMEROY-MIOOLEPORT, OHIO

Fall 1973.

SAVE 20%

Your ThOm "\CAn Store

To ~ lnle~WII Of~ .MeiB'·ltltuOn Area
-Devoted
.

Ciao, which means both hello
and goodbye In llalian, Is a
corruption of an old VeneUan
phrase meaning " I am your
slave."

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1973

Now Is a fine t ime to buy your needs. Se lections are good. The
va lues are excell ent. loQk around and see what's new for

DACRON NINON SHEERS

heritage ho_u se

pacted," or ghetto areas,
would contract with private
developer~ for urban renewal
projects .
Because of the amendment,
ell}inent domain would be reserved (o lllUIIicipal governments as In present law.
"The power of eminent d&lt;r
main is the power to condemn
private-pruperty for - at least,
under the Constitution (Continued on page 12)

Aid to CitiesThe House -passed a comprehensive impacted clUes aidbill, but struck a provision
giving the right of eminent
domain to private developers,
The legislation, approved by a
63-34 vote, has a!ready passed
the Senate, but must go back
because of !he amendment .
Under the legislation, which
Is based on a Ml!l.\IOuri state
law , municipalities with "im-

entitle
'

TWO DAY SALE

SIIOES F'OR WOMEN

wage" instead of nat dollar
maximums and minimums ""
In present law .
The Senate passed the Gill!.-'
gan administration's capital
improvements bill, but inserted $20 million for construction or vocational schools,
sending the bill back· to the
House for concurrl!llte. The
Senate Increased the total
appropriations in the measure
to $350 million ,

Now You Know

Boys Long Sleeve Shirts - Boys fla nnel Shlrls - Boys Jackets

Save over 50 per cent on Womens
Blouses - Pants · Shorts . Tops.

Golf contest
Lions' topic

.

housekeeping se!!8lons Aug. 14
and Aug. 27.
Th,e SeM~ pa~ and, sent
to the governor a comprehensive workmen's compensation
bill . that extenda coverage to
employers with one or more
worken, Including households
with dP~~W~tlc help.
. Ull(l~ the bill, .weekly benefiLs would be figured on a
changing pert-entage of the
''statewide average weekly

Clear and a . little cooler
tonight. Lows in the mid 60s.
-Partly cloudy, little change In
temperatures Saturday, Highs
in the upper 70s and low 80s.

· Young Mens Sport and Dress Shi rts . Mens and Boys
Sweaters Including a wonderful selection or the popular
sl eeveless sWeat ers . M ens Jackets • Mens Flannel Shirts ·

SUMMER SPORTSWEAR

Ten were fined and three
forfeited bonds in Pomeroy
Mayor's Court Wednesday with
Mayor Don Collins presiding.
Fined ·were
Burwell
McJ{inney, Middleport, $100
and costs and 3 days in jail,
DWI;
Douglas
Phalin,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
reckless operation ; Henry
Price, Long Bottom, $5 and
costs, squealing tires; ·James
Harmon, Rutland; $5 and costs,
littering; Marty Morarity ,
Columbus, $5, passing .on a
yellow line, and $5 and costs,
reckless operation ; William
Fry, Jr., Mason, $5 and costs,
squealing tires; Agnes Sellers,
Pomeroy, $15 and costs,
speeding ; Kenneth Wheeler,
Dexter, $5 and eosts, squealing
tires;
William
Hayes ,
Syracuse, $5 and costs·, running
. a stop sign; and Donald Lovett,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, inThe Hole-In-One contest toxication. Forfeiting bonds were Roger
being sponsored by the
Rutland,
$25,
Pomeroy-Middleport Lioiis Searles,
Club was the topic of con- squealing tires; Christopher
versation wben the club met Mcleish, 'Marietta, $23 ,70,
Wednesday at noon at the speeding, and Leeman . Alltop,
Meigs Inn.
Jr., Mason , $200, DWI,
It was reported th;!t the
conies! has been well attended.
Tuesday , the event was
SQUAD CALLED
postponed due to a rain storm. The Middleport emergency
To make up for Tuesday, the squad was called to the
event will be held over an extra residence of Thelma McDaniel
day, Saturday beginning at I on Rt. 7 at 11 :17 a. m. Wedp.m. at the Pomeroy Golf Club . nesday where 'she was having
Proceeds from ths hole-in- difficulty breathing. She was
one contest will be used for the transported to Holzer Medical
Lions Sight Conservation Center,
The
Pomeroy
Program . Wendell Hoover emergency squad answered a
presided.
call to assist Waller Walker,
Rt. 7, near Pomeroy Golf •
Course at 11 :52 •a. m. WedYOUTH INJURED
nesday. He was taken to
Terry Lee Pickens, 16, Rt. 4, Veterans Memorial Hospital
Pomeroy, was injured in a and admitted.
motorcycle accidental 10:15 p,
m, Wednesday in Meigs
Coonty, north of Rutland.
CAR RECOVERED
According to the GalllaMeigs
County Sheriff Robert
Meigs Post Stale Highway
Patrol, Pickens' cycle was C. Harlenbach reported today
filrced off the roadway by an that a car allegedly stolen
unknown motorist. He lost Wednesday morning in
conlrol of the cycle which Pomeroy was recovered this
turned over. The accident Is morning at the stale park on
U.S. Rt. 33.
stlll under Investigation.
The car, a 1963 Chevrolet,
belonged to Clifford Jenkinson,
Second Street, Pomeroy_
REDS MEET BRAVES
Herman Henry of the BCI -has
CINCINNATI (UPI ) - The
processed the vehicle and it
Cincinnati Reds open at
has been returned to its owner.
Riverfront Stadium tonlghi in a
doubleheader with the Atlanla
Braves.

To slip ~ moolhly
urid_er flares or straight
.
legs, to hug your foot gently, to tak_e
you where the action is- oorefree, re!~xed, at ease. Choose a gore,

Shaker Heights, argued raises
for members of the General
Assembly !lhould be dealt with
· In a separate blll.
.;We should not piggyback
upon thla biD,'' Lehman said.
Both houses cleared up legi&amp;latlon standing In the way for
adjournment, making way 101'
• windup _se811ion today.
The Senate formally adopted
a resolution for adjournment
today
with
one-day

Mens and Boys Back-to-School Slacks.

1··-·-

BAKER

to Install.

Save on a new Fall Coat during this twoday sale.
·

o

common pleas court Judges.
Wllkowskl, quoting from
new8pllper lil'tlclet and editor!·
aiscr!Ucal of ipcreased pay for
leglalators-, charged the integrity of the House was at
slake.
He called on repre-sentatives
to ignore the criticism, and cor·
reel "a glaring inequity In the
state's compensation schedule."
Rep: Harry J. Lehman, ().

Weather

Sevtt ral new models '

WOMEN'S COAT SALE

ooostt!d their llillarles from '
$14,000 to $t7,500 a year, '111e
increase would llQt lake effect
until 1975.
The bill now goe• to the Senale where_favorable acUon Is
••peeled before adjournment.
The legislation also ln·
creases the pay of the gover·
nor, lieutenant governor,
auditor, treasurer, attorney
general and secretary of state,
as well as state,'munlcipaland

j

ELBERFELD$ IN POM EROY

•I .

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'

WASN'T C!)RNSII..K
. Sl'qKANE, Wash. ( UPI) Pollee suspected It wasn't jWlt
cornsllk that was being smok~d
In a relghborhood backyard.
· Brl~n Lewla, 23, and ,Jill
McGee, 20, were arrested
Thunday when officers found
mariJrana plants growing
amlda the couple's rows of1
corn.

and Mrs. Don Collins, Mayor
and Mrs. John Zerkle, Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard Fultz, Fire Chief
and Mrs. Bob Byer, Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Davis, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Snouffer and Chet
Tannehill .

More violence at Sporn;

WAslUNGTON (UPI) - Agrlculiure Seeretary Earl L.
Butz predicted ,today some apot thortagea of beet start lug
next week and auggested suppliers mlgbt _be maklD!I a
mistake by bold!ng aolmala from market until the bed price
!reete ends.
Because of the withboldlng action and a heavy run by
"Mrs. Housewife" on beef In markets, Bulzaald tl!er• would
be some !lhortase• next week In some places but he
dlscou~ted forecaorta by aome cattle leaden of a beef crlala.
Butz said the freeze would remain on until Sept. 12 and
said If beef Ia held back until then, 1uppllen "might end up
selling for lower prices" rather than for higher prices
because of a glut of bed on the market.

second cable severed
and then last night plant of.
ficlals determined the cable
was cut at 1l :30·p,m.

company and Local No. 426 of plant.
the Utility Workers Onion of
Carl E. Searls, union
America, AFL.{)lO expired, president and John R. Larew,
"'
..
personal director for the
Reportedly a window Wall
Since the expiration, pickets company along wlth Raymond
broken at the substation, which were set up at plant outlets.
G. Musgrave, union attorney,
and William B. Poff and
Is located on the opposite side
· of U. S. 33 from where the plant
An agreement was reached Samuel D. Littlepage, atIs situated.
early this month, ~uly 6, be· torneys for the companr,
iwee~ the two groups in an penned the nine-point pact that
These acts have, occun:pd _,
,
since a strike began at the Joc8J "'tempt to settle anucably -was adopted by !be court on a
plant site July 1 when a tw&lt;r differen ce s concerning consent order signed by Judge
;~~~~~ni~g:·11'ht,!1&amp;JulyllUide
20, year contract between ..t~~e.....J!IS!t~\l!lg at enlrances to the James Lee Thompson.
l!')L the President wlla\ his ,
obligations were without
Saying speeifically whether to
sUrrender the Japes to Jn.
vestigators.
"Almost surely that would ·
ney_er happen," Cox sald. He
1111ld he could not "think of the
court ever telling people what
they ought to do" rather than
what they had-to do.
"The courts exist to define
people's legal duties. For the
court to rule that the whole
Issue was 011e it could not
decide on woUld be absolulely
unprecedented."
,
Cox added : "I tnlend to push ·
forward 'I' the courts rlgoo'ous-

NEW HAVEN - Further
repo/:1/J _of violence1 . at ·.the
;;~:!::~::::~:i~:::::::~::.:'.;;;;;;::o;,::t.::?.:&gt;-).;::~::(.:::=~:~:W.&lt;o::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::-;~:i::::::::~::::::::::::::~:=:: ~bl ~ating ~ COmpany's
-· Philip Sporn Plant near New
Haven were lodged today by
company officials when
telephone service into' the plant
was.dlsrUpted during the night.
to.
This is ttie second tlnle
witlliln a wee~·s \lme that a
.lfl!AI,the plan\ ,was

Cox fe:f3ls Nixon
will obey court.
l

j

..

WASHINGTQN · (UPI) -;-.
Special Pr()5ecutor Archiba~p
Cox said today that he -was
confident President Nixon
would surrender White House
tape recordings on his Watergate conversations if the
Supreme Court ultimately or·
ders him to do so.
-Cox said he could not envision any . circlimstance In
which the 1\igh court would not
make a definitive judgment In
the case if called on to do I!!!,
"Our history bas been o~. of
our Presidents CQjl!llb'lng with
constitutional -declsioos of· the

courts," Cox said. 141 don't
assume this President will do
anything different than his
predecessors."
Cox told a news conference
that a Supreme Court decision
on what Sen. Howard H. Baker,
R-Tenn ., Senate Watergate
committee vice chairman,
calls "a historic conflict"
would be the quickest way to
resolve the matler.
He refused to concede that
the court might render a
judgment that would simply

-·

,1y."

.

He said the tapes are "highly
relevant" for determining not
only whether President Nixon
was involved personally in the
cover-up of the scope of the ·
Watergate scandal but also
whether some of his aides were
involved in the cover-up, and to
ascertain whether perjury
might have been committed by
soine witnesses before the
Watergate grand jury.
I

Mineral Lodge is
HEARINGS SET
The Meigs County Budget
Commission as noted' In
section 5705.27 of the Ohio
Revised Code will meet at
the County Auditor's office
Monday, Aug. 6 at I p.m. to
review all department,
townships, corporations and
schools.
Any person wishing to
attend the meeting Is
welcome to do so, Gordon
Caldwell, county auditor,
reported.

Speaking of Schools-No. 281

granted charter
Mineral Lodge 242, of the
Independent Order of Odd
Fellows, Inc. has been granted
a corporation charter by
secretary of stale Ted W.
Brown to operate a non-profit
corporation, The principal
office of . the corporation is
located in Pomeroy, Meigs
CoUIIty.
Three Pomeroy residents
have been named to the board
of lruslees - Albert D. Hlll,
Richard Vaughan, Sr ., .and
Lester Hart. Hart Is the
statutory agent.

'

TWENTY -FOUR children enrolled in Head Start at
Rutland Center enjoyed a luncheon at Meigs Inn Thursday
afternoon. It w~ their last field trip of the year, this being

Services held for Mr. Gaul
FUIIeral services for G. G,
"Glad" Gaul were held July 19
at Hughes Funeral Home,
Athens, by the Rev. Paul
Williams and entombment was
In the West Union Street
Mausoleum. Mr. Gaul died
July17 at O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital in Athens at the age of
83,
Born In Meigs County to the
!ale Jacob and Clara Ga ul, he
was retired prominent Athens
County farmer and stock
dealer, He was a member of
the Silver Ridge EUB Church.
Survivors include his wife,
Mabel Reed Gaul, two
daughters, Mrs . Ina Faye
Harr, Athens; Mrs. Helen

Hines , Guysville; three
grandsons, Larry, Richard and
Gene Hines; all of Guysville; a
great-grandson, Todd Hines,
twosislers, Mrs. Freda Griffin,
Columbus, and Mrs. Jesse
Weber, Chester.
He was preceded in death by
his parents, two slslers, Mrs.
Bess Koehlar, Mrs'. Scalia
Follrod, three brothers
Frank, Oris and Delbert Gaul.
Several relatives !rom the
Chester area attended the
funeral services.
LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature ln downtown
Pomeroy Friday at l1 a.m. was
82 d'egrees under partly cloudy
skies.

'

New school term will s~art shortly
By George Hargraves, Superintendent

Meigs Local Scbools
This is the first column for some time. I had my
first two week vacation in seven years. Since 1
returned, I've been too busy to wrlle a column, I'm
still busy, but I need to start supplying you with
some Information again ... so, here we go.
The flr~t day of school Is julll four weeks from
next Tuesday. We still have much to do and the t!me
Is short.
We still need an elementary vocal music
teacher. We are also seeking a primary L D
teacher. A couple of el~mcntary vacancies are still
not fllled. Tbe junior high school staff ls complete.
The 'high school staff llhould be completed at
Monday 's board meeting. All of this depends on no
future resignations.
A lot of work Is now being done In setting up the
classos and bus routes for kindergarten. 1'hese will
be half day sessions again this year. We have about
seventy' registered Jn Pomeroy. Just about thirty
are registered in Middleport. RuUand has clooe to
forty. We hope to get a letter to the home of each
kindergarten student with a schedule of when the
student will attend . These will go out' by mid·
August. If you don't get one, call 992-21~ for the
In!ormation .
In setting up this schedule we have to. l'Oilsldcr
the size of the morning and afternoon classes. They

should be roughly equal. We also have to plan best
use of ,the buses Involved. Please, gl_ve us your
cooperation and don't request changes.
Anyone who h8s been close to a grocery swre
within the past few, months knows that food costs
have gone up, up, and up. We are faced with these
· saine cost increases when It c'omes to the school
lunch pro~am. We will have to have an increase In
price ,'lihere Is no doubt about that and you shoppers
well know the reason.
We will have the same federal support for the
lunch program as far as dollars are concerned .
There has been no change In the "per lunch " support figure . We will certainly have a decrease In
iederalsurpl118 foods. These justdon'texlst. Tie this
ull to too price Increase of food and you sec that an
Increased charge !Of a school lunch has to be made.
At the July 16 Board meetlns the close of the
·meeting was Ml an adjournment but a recess until
July 30. Thus; the meeting next Monday ls really a
continuation of the July 16 meeting. It Is needed to
facilitate the transaction of many important lt~ms
of business.
With the start of school there comes the thrill of
hlgh school football ; It looks like we face ooly a nine
game sehedule. We have boen informed that
Remelln has dropped the sport. It would be highly
unlikely that we could find a replacement at this

the last week of the county-wide program. Kenda Chaney and
Charisse Porter are the teachers of the two Rutland classes.

= ==~===:::::::;~::;;:;;: Members
Chance of sbowers each
day, Hlgha from the mid 70s
to mid 808. Lows mostly In
the lOs.

Senator Inouye
will speak in
native tongue
WASHINGTON (UPI )
Sen, Daniel K. Inouye, DHawall, who was' embarra!!8ed
Wednesday
when
a
microphon e caught him
muttering "what a liar" in
response to John Ehrllchman's
testimony, thinks he's f.ound a
way to avoid future slips,
Asked about the incident
T~ ursday, Inouye responded
wiH1 something unlnteUiglble
wa reporter,
" What's
that
mean,
Senator?" the reporter asked.
"That means from now on 1
talk to myself In Hawaiian,"
Inouye replied.
•

not

responsible
for damage
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI)- The
assistant strll&lt;;e director for Local 4 of the Communications
Workers of America said 109aY
"neither the union nor its
members are responsible for
any vandalism" that has been
committed against the
strikebound General
Telephone Co,
.
. Martin Kirkendall said the
telephone company has
"publicly harassed and in·
tlmidated" the union since the
strike began July 16 in a
conlract dispute.
"Neither the union nor lts
members are responsible for
any vandallsm or service outages that may have happened
since the strike went into ef•
feet," said Kirkendall .
He also said four union mem.bers who have been ch'l/'ged by
General Telephone with violations of a court order have "denied any and all charges.
"They feel they ore being
singled out and publicly persecuted for reasons that are
unknown to them," said
Kirken-dalL
The compuny contended the
four violated a temporary restraining order prohibiting In·
terfereioee with non-etrlklng
employes at a Gene.ral
Telephone Installation at
'Athenil. '

time. The band of Dir_ector Dwight Goins will put in
a lot of hard work between now and the first game.
Mr. Goins and his able asslslant, Fred Ruth, will
have their hundred and a half stepping high and
playing loud and clear , Your support of their 14
. day was appreciated,
We will slart the school year with the same
haslo.bus routes that we hsd at the close of last
CALLED TWICE
year.' t na Hkes will be made as situations demand. The Middleport E-R squad
We can'llist all the schedules in print or mall them was called to the home of
to you. They fill a fat book and lite quite lengthy. If Emmett Hughes, Second St , at
you are new to the ares, your best source of ln· 9: 54p.m. Thursday, where he
formation is the kids in your area . Check them for was treated fo r breathing
details on bus routes and shedules.
difficulty,
John Beaver, transportation director, and our The squad answered a call at
mechanlcs,JohnFischerandJohnScrasg,arebusy 7:54a.m. Friday on Rt. 554 to
preparing our builes for the Inspection that is Van Zant Rd . David Pierce,
scheduled for August 6 slartlng at 7 a.m. It's a big Injured In an auto wreck, was
job and requires a lot of time and· effort. We will taken to Pleasant Valley
have over thirty buses to be checked by the State HospitaL
Highway PalroL
l !rust that you have found something of interest
MARRIAGE LICENSES
In this colunm. I wlll try to do better ln the weeks
George
Marion Glllllan, 21,
HOMECOMING SET
ahead. Your comments Of questions are always
Chester, and Linda L~e
welcome. Drop me a note. or call 992-2153 , I don't The annual Long Bottom
Provence, 19, Long Bottom;
claim to have all the answers but I willllsten and try Homecoming will be held at the
Roger Keith Stewart, 30, Rt. 3,
to provide information when-possible, And that's the Methodist Church Sunday with
Poflleroy, and Linda Lou
end of column No. 2~L You know - that's over five a basket dinner at noon. The
Enfourlh, 24, Syracuae.
public ls Invited.
'
years' worth,

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