<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="17785" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/17785?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T05:39:41+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="50937">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/87f11c98e11e693edcdc71a5b58f865c.pdf</src>
      <authentication>f92212e1059504544543e4da5efdb868</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="56612">
                  <text>•

!
8- The Dally SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., July 30,1973

Union officer denies violence at Sporn Plant
·

"To every story there are President Carl E. Searls said
two sides and lhe membership today.
of Local No. 426 UWUA wishes., Se~ rl s, who issued the
lhe public to know that the union's stde or the strike,
cherg-es of violence at the asked, " How can the
Sporn Plant last Thursday masterminds or management
night are grossly inaccurate ," at Sporn pinpoint the blame for
the alleged cable-cutting and
broken pane of glass on

•
' i

"
. ~

•
•

.'
•

'

I ..

•

"I!. it a littl~ . medium or a

big job?"

.-.'

..
•

I

Whether it !s a big ,
medium, or sma ll job, you
will alway ~ f ind the
"FRIENDLY ONES" at

the Pomeroy Cement Block

Company ready and willing
to help with materials {or
advi ce. when necessary) for

"I

th.e job you have lo do.

i

strike began 2ll days a~o ."
"The company refrains from
any mention, naturally, o( the
many instances the pickets
have sal.watching llie several
car loads of supervisors
coming and going through the
main gate, night after night for
the past three weeks, wilhout
members of the union '!''
making a gesture to ship
"These happenings," said Ulem," rempcked Searls.
Searls, "Could have occurred
"Many ' times," said. Searls,
by many means and by any ol "the pickets ~ave been anseveral involved or uninvolved tagonized by some of these
pariies, not discounting the same supervisors with slurring
possibility of Ule company's remarks and gestures."
own supervision.
Searls was also strong in his
"There are inahy super- criticism of Assistant Plant
visors re tained inside against Manager Ralph E. Wartheir wishes, so to speak, but ner
for
his
actions
tl1ey cannot and do not resist on at least two octhe organization and speak casions. Searls said lhe first
out," said Searls, adding, "We was "an atrocious scheme to
believe some of them would harass and irritate at the
rather be home wilh their outset of the strike, in which a
picket was falsely accused of
families. ''
"Yet " continued the union felonious assault and subpresident, " the company sequenly fired .";'
"They carefully manipulated
chooses to blame all
their
plan to secure a
vio lence on pickets andor union members . It 'scapegoat' and were sucseems the word violence is cessful ," char~ed Searls.
used rather loosely. Nothing
Searls said the second inresembling violence has oc- stance was after th allaged
curred at Sporn Plant since lhe violence when Warner called
him (Searls) out of bed at 1
a.m. Friday to meet him at the
MASON DRIVE-IN
main gate .. Searls said he
'/1 I I II 1/'; V 1
arrived lhere soon after and
1\ ( .I !dOll ~lqhJI 1
Warner never appeared. Searls
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
said
Warner later stated he
•
July J0-31
was fearful of belng attacked if
Double Feature Program
he came outio the main gate.
" NIGHT CALL
NURSES"
Searls cited other points
Pa trfcia T Byrne
about the strike lhat he says
Alana Coll ins
"the general public Is unaware
Mittie Lau r en ce
of."
He said:
Rated R
- "An estimated 70 to 100
- Plus'scabs' imported from other
' LADY FRANKENSTINE"
Joseph Cotten
plants and offices and from out
Sarah Bay ·
.Rated R·

IT!
· TUESDAY ONLY
&lt;

'

KRAFT

aunER
MINTS lb.
•

'•
'

I .

BLUE GRASS

pkg. of 4

FISHING
LURES

¢

Sickness
(Continued from Page 1)
Doctors said Lousma
vomited once after Saturday's
launch and twice Sunday
morhlng. But by bedtime he
had been able to eat applesauce ~nd drink water.
Dr. Royce Hawkins, the
astronauts' chief physician ,
said Lousma felt · "considerably better" after he
vomited and continued a
regular.work pace allhough at
a reduced rate. He said Bean
and Garriott also felt nauseous
and displayed persistent
symptoms of motion sickness
but their condition was nothlng
to be overly concerned about.

of state are inside tho pl•nl.
They don't show U1elr faces too ·
often nnd are transported in
and oul by helicopter and other
undercover means_."
- "At least four young boys.

JulyJO.Jl

Walt Disney 's
CHARLIE &amp; THE ANGEL

( Technicolor J
~so
Walt DisneY's
CINDERELLA

CTe(hnicolor}

Show Starts 7 p.m .

The Easiest Bank To Get To

" G"

• • •

ws rtJttY

STATE AWARDS RECEIVED - Members of Meigs County Chapter 8 and 40 are pictured
with the state awards lhe chapter won at the recent state convention. From the left are Mary A.
Martin wilh the first place publicity scrapbook and second p)ace history book; Lula Hampton
wilh the publicity scrapllook plaque, first in the state, and the Grace Garrison trophy ~9r the
best memorial service in Ohio conducted for the late Ruth H. Thornton, and Rhoda Hackett,
petit chapeau, with plaques, one for the best tuberculosis program in the state and one for the
most money spent in the battle against cystic fibrosis in Ohio. The publicity award is known as
Uie "Mary A. Martin trophy," given in her honor when she was state chapeau.

MANILA - PRESIDENT FERDINAND E. MARCOS appeared on his war today to a lopsided victory ln a two.&amp;y
national referendum to decide If he should rule indefinitely urxler
· martial law.
·
Alandslide victory was forecast even before the polls opened 1
and the only question was the size of Marcos' mandate to stay In
office beyond Dec. 31, when his term normally would end under
the constitution. Marcos captured 83 pet. of the vote In Manila, a
traditional opposition stronghold, and latest results showed'
overwhelming support elsewhere.

Albert Wamer
of Guysville dies
Albert Franklin Warner, 84,
Guysville Route I, died Sunday
evening at the home of a
daughter, Mrs. Russell Archer
following an extended illness.
Mr. Warner was born it
Chester, the son of the late
William
and
Rachel
Beitelsheef Warner. He was a
lifelong member of the Allred
United Melhodist Church and
was a retired farmer and mall
carrier.
Surviving are two sons,
Wilbur of The Plains, and
Clarence, Athens; a daugh,
fer, Mrs . Russell (Eloise)
Archer, Guysville; a brother,
Herman Warner of Pomeroy;
seven grandchildren and three
greaQrandchildren. He was
preceded in dealh by his wife,
Hazel, in 1959, two sisters and a
grandson.
Funeral services will be held
al 2 p. m. Wednesday at the
Alfred United -Methodist
Church wilh the Rev. Robert
Meece and the ' Rev. Walter
·Frost officiating, Burial will be
in Chester Cemetery. Friends
may call at the White Funeral
Home in CoolvUie anytime
·after noon Tuesday .

NEW HAVEN ,- Charle•
Anderson, 7~. New Haven, died
Sunday morning at the Holzer
Medical Center. Mr. Anderson
·was a member of lhe First
Baptist Church at Weirton, W.
Va. He hed been an employe of
the Weirton Steel Corp. for 40
years and was a Jllember of the
firm's 25 year club. He was a
general foreman of the
maintenance deparbnent the
last 10 years prior to his ·
retirement.
'
Born on July 29, ·1898, ln
Pembroke, Ky., Mr. An~erson
was the son of the late Peter
and Georgia Ella McFaddin
Anderson.
Surviving are his wife,
Mildred Zerkle Anderson;
three sons, Robert and Donald
of Steubenville; James of
Weirton; three daughters, Mrs.
· Gladys Dye, Roselle, Ill. ; Mrs.
Ula Miley, Fort Worlh, Tex.,
and Mrs. Jane Wtight, Weir-·
ton; 14 grandchildren, and a
sister, Mrs. Ruby Butler,
Elktown, Ky.
Funeral services will be held
at the Foglesong Funeral
Home at 1:30 p. m. Tuesday
with the Rev. William DeMoss
officiating. Burial will be in
Graham Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
between 3 and 5 and 7 and 9 p.
m. today.

• •

•

'I

Charles Harber at convention of state DAV
Charles
D.
Harber
represented Meig~ County
Chepter 53 at lhe ,52nd annual
state convention of the Ohio
Disabled American Veterans
ln Dayton, July 20-22.
Ralph G. Beck, Monclove,
Ohio, a retired employee of
Lucas County, was elected the
new D'.A.V. state couunander
for the 1973-74 year. A World
· War II Navy veteran, he was
disabled June 6, 1944, during
the invasion of France.
Also elected were Wayne
McClung of Columbus, senior
vice. commander, James Priest
of Leesburg, first junior vice
commander , .and Stanley
Sorrell of Middletown, second
junior vice corrunander.

Members of the executive
committee .lected were 1-{ick
Marinelli of'-aellaire, William
McGovern of Cincinnati,
William Morelli of Steubenville
and AI Nigoff of Cleveland.

During the convention,
resolutions were approved
protesting threatened cutbacks in veterans' medical
care, compensation and employment services.

Strike near end

•
(Continued from Page 1)
A strllre by warehousemen and macblnlsts against
Kroger continued today, but Whiling said he hoped tbe
tentative settlement with lhe Teamsters would speed
negotiations.
Whiting said he did not know when tbe 33 stores shut •
down by the strike would re-open, but he said It could come
later Ibis week. The 34 stores which shortened the~ hours
were to resume regular hours today.
,

VISIT ELBERFELD$ 3.rd

•

PO~EROY,

OHIO

Member of Federal Reserve System
$20,000 Maximum Insurance for Each Depositor

OPEN FRIDAYS 9 'TIL 7

which Is then sold in Japanese
supermark'cl&lt; for up to $14 a
pound .
'
Norrn
Maffll , ·
the
~ssociation 's vice president,
said he did not know how much
beef the Japanese are buying,
"But it Cl!rtalnly doesn't appear the purchases are enough
to have an effect on our market
or sales prices."

,

Present controls do not cover
the price at which farmers can
sell cattle, but the prices of

ton he1 the memorial service
- a tribute to the late Mrs.
Ruth H. Thorn ton - which won
the Garrison Trophy. Mrs.
Marie Boyd of Racine; children
and youth chairman for the
local salon, was unable to
attend the Marche to accept
the Mary A. Martin Trophy and
the Arree Marshall Trophy.
Money awards received were
for second place in the state for
history, first for partnership,
and first for having all dues in .
Mrs. Rhoda Hackett, chapeau
of the Meigs Salon, took part in
the memorial service for
deceased members at the ·
convention, and Mrs. Golda
Roush of Middleport served on
the resolutions committee.
Mrs. Hackel! was also a page
for Mrs. Martin.
Installation of the state officers for 1973-74 was conducted by Mts. Martin, a
departemental chapeau passe,
using a red and white color
scheme. Newly elected officers
installed were Mrs. Irene Mier,
chapeau; Mrs . Doris Stanriff,
first de,mi chapeau; Mrs.
Marcy Huston, second demi
chapeau; Mrs. Reva Cinla, Ia
archiviste; Mrs . Audrey
Glaub, l'aumonler ; Mrs. Betty
kortvely, Ia concierge, and
Mrs . . Mar,YIU Giblin, Ia
secretaire.
(Continued on Page 2)

means processors have to pay
more for cattle than they can
sell them lor to supermarkets.
As · a result, many plants
have shut down , or ·slowed
down, until the freeze ends.
The most recent to close was
Ule Glover Packing Co. of
Texas, which shut down its
mai n Texas processing plant in
Amarillo Monday. H. F . Glover
said his company was losing
$.15 to $40 on every head or
catlle it processed.

The firs! to feel the ef(ects of
the situation will be lnstitullons. School lunch administrators say they may not
be able to buy beef at all for
children returning to cia·.. this
autumn.
HI'm scared," said Virginia

•
Ball, food services director for
the St. Paul , Mlnrl., school "
system. She ha s Invited blds to
be received Wednesday ' for .
125,000 pounds of ground beer ,
Ule school system wants to buy.

Burr Oak lodge evacuated after phoned threat
CLOUSTER, Ohio (UPI) Morgan County sheriff's deputies evacuated the strike-bound
Burr .Oak State Park lodge
early today In search of an
explosive reported tO be in the
lodge.
Deputies searched the lodge
for more than four hours, but'
found no explosive.

A New Lexington telephone
operator notified the sheriff's
office a telephoned bomb
lhreat had been received. The
caller had said ihe bomb would
go off'at 2:30a.m.
Lodge employes have been
on strike, seeking representation by the Hotel, Motel and
Res~urant l!lmployes Union.

Ohio Inns, which employs the
workers, has refused to
recognize the union and
refused to' hergain.
The Department of Natural
· Resources has warned Ohio
Inns to recognize the union or
ris~ loslng Its contract with the
state to operate the lodge ,

enttne
,,

Devokd To '1'he lnh!reat. Of'l'he
Meigs·MtuOn Area
.
.

_VO_L_.X_XV_ N_
O._75_ _ _PO_M
_E_
RO_Y-_
MI_DD_LE_PO_R_T, _OH_IO_-,--_ ___:_T..:..:
UE:.:. :SD
__:_
AY_:._,.:. .: .JL
U.Y__:
:_ _321, .:..:.
19~73:___ _ ____:P.:.:.HO:;:N:.:_E:.:_99::_2-~21::,56~_-T::::EN CENT$

Meigs hoard

appoints 8
I

Four resignations were
accepted and eight appointments were made durlng the
second part of a recessed
meeting of the Meigs Local
School District Bo~rd of
Education Monday night.
Resigna~~ons · ca,me from
Reoecca Tate, junior high
school cheerleader coach, who
will be teaching at Pomeroy
elementary; Sandra Peters,
elementary teacher; Joette
Weber, junior high school
teacher and June Yost, bus
driver.
Appointed were Kenda
Chaney, junior high school
cheerleader coach; Sharon
Ransdel, chemistry teacher;
Penny Williams Knapp, EMR
tea~b~t; Courtney Knight,
elementary; Daisy Cook, Title
I remedilll reading ; Jeanne
·Parsons, elementary; Au~rey
Kunzman, elementary, and
Gay Perrin, junior high school.
The Downing-Childs Agency
was approved to handle

student accident insurance,
and a request by Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Yoyng for their son to
attend Salisbury as a tuition
pupil was approved.
· Two proposals, to raise the
price of lunches and recharge
fire extinguishers, were
discUSSed and are to be decided
upon· at the August meeting.
Walter Grueser, representing the Midland Mutual Ins.
Co., presented a new employee
Insurance plan to the board.
In other buslness, George
Hargraves, district superintendent, announced that there
are still two lacqlty vacancies,
one Cor an elementary vocal
· music teacher, and for a
primary teacher.
. It was decided lhat three
buses not in use will be ~ld
later.
. Attending ' were board
members Doo Mullen, Frank
W. Porter, Carroll Pierce, Joe
Sayre and Virgil King, and
Superintendent Hargraves.

By Unlted Press International
NEW YORK - FORMER ATI'ORNEY GENERAL John M.
Mitchell's argument thet charges against him be dropped
gospel music, will appear at 8:30p.m. on the final evening of
FIRST F AMJLY OF GOSPEL MUSIC - The nationally
because of Watergate publicity shows he wants "one-standard of
the fair, Saturday, Aug. 18. The family has recorded more
known Speer Family, billed as Arrierlca's First Family of
justice for ordinary defendants and another for the powerful and
than 30 long-play albums. Television has taken the family
Gospel Music, wlU )le a part of the free grandstand enthe famous," federal pfoi'ecutors said Monday. l\fltcbell and ·
lnto
millions of American homes on such programs as
tertainment offered at the 1973 Meigs County Fair. The ·
former Commerce Secretary Maurice Stuns are charged with
"Heaven's Jubilee", "Old Time Singing Convention.'; arxl
family, · three time winner of the coveted Gospel Music
Purchase of a 1973 mem- pointedoutlhatitwasmerelya
perjury and conspiring to obstruct justice in connection wilh a
"Gospel Singing Caravan",
Association "Dove Award" for the best mixed group in
secret $200,000 donation to President Nixon's r~lection c8lll- bership ticket is not required to money-savings routine to
secure a copy of lhe lair distribute premium books in :o,;•,.
.o- !.:.:·:·:·..··:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·;·;· :·:·~·-·;-;•;•,•;•,•,•,·,·,•,o,
paign.
;w;.-..... : •••9 ••• .••• .-.. "'' ·' -' ·' ·' ·' ·' ·' ·' ·' · '·'·' ·' ·'·'·'•' •
premium
book,
Mrs.
Mickey
this
manner
rather
than
by
Government attorneys refuted the -argument submitted. by
KINPERGARTEN
Mitchell and Stans tl)at a fair trial was impossible because both King, fair board secretary, .mall.
RACINE - Robert Ord,
said today.
· The books may be secured at superintendent or the Southtiaci'iieen maiigned bY the nationally televised Senate Watergate
D~e to the high cost . of I Domlgan's Sohlo Serv.ice
neanngs ana In newspaper articles covering the hearings.
ern Local School District,
"Despite tbe 2,615 pages of purpUrtedly prejudicial publicity, mailing, the premium books Station, Route 33, norlh of said today bus routes are
what the defendants Mitchell and Stans are attempting to Ulis year heve been placed in Pomeroy; New ' York Clothing being organized for transdemand from lhe court is not equal justice but rather one stand- business houses where the House, Green . Lantern, portation of kindergarten
Friday is the deadline for see the fair wilhout walking,
ard of justice for ordinary defendants and quite anolher standard membership tickets are belng Swisher-Lohse Pharmacy, students. Parents of all
The buses will leave the
sold,
However
purchase
of
a
Sugar
Run
Flour
Mill,
Five
senior
citizens
to
make
Senior
citizens
crafts
will
be
for the powerful and the famous, ;'. tbe prosecution's brief to the
Center
In Pomeroy at 7 a.m.
.children who will be going to
membership
ticket
Is
not
Points
Grill,
Pomeroy
;
Midfor
a
chartered
reservations
for sale and anyone here and retur~ to tbe Center at 7
court said.
kindergarten in the district
required to receive a premium dlepori Department Store,
bus
trip
to
'the
Ohio
State
Fair
desiring to display should p.m. For those who want to
are asked to see In person or
book,
Mrs.
King
said.
She
sports
depar\ment;
Miller
. contact lhe Center, 992-7886 or attend the State Fair on
. PHNOM PENH - CAMOODIAN MiliTARY officials
call Ord any day from 8-12 Friday, Aug. 24.
·
Brothers
Grocery,
Rutland;
Mrs
.
Eleanor
Thomas,
992-7884. Local residents are another day, tickets will be
reported more heavy ground fighting and AmeriCan bom~ing
and 1-4 al his office to Inform
Wald
Cross
Sons,
Raci~e, and
for
the
Meigs
project
director
also invited to participate in available at the Center for 75
near Phnom Penh today while Inside the capita l, authorities
him where they live.
the
Baum
Lumber
Co.,
County Cowicil on Aging,ls one the talent show.
rounded upmore men to bolster the city's defense.
cents for those over 60.
i::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::. of three trip chairmen. Senior
Chesler.
Fighting raged 10 mile)&gt; from the city out on ,Highway 3 and
All or these locations do have
nine miles out on Highway 2, lhe Cambodian high command said.
membership itcketa lor sale . .
are inMore fighting was reported 10 miles northwest of the capital. U,
Premium·
books
also
m~y
be
Mrs
Thomas
Said
the
cost
for
S. warplanes flew heavy strikes in all three areas, the conCANTON (UP!) - The Ohio picked up at Landmark in
transportation and admission
RIO GRANDE - Mark students.
cussions of their bombs rumbling through Phnom Penh
Power Co. raised to $35,000 its Pomeroy, "
·
·Two drivers were cited to Into the fairgrounds is $6.50. Abell, Jackson, is the new
throughout lhe night.
He · will ,also prepare the
reward leading to the arrest
Mrs. King also reports that court following traffic ac- Two air-conditioned buses to director of financial aid for Rio student workstudy program
HOUSTON - WITH TIIEIR FIRST spacewalk delayed and convlctiQil of persons for closing time for all open class cldents Monday in Gallla and accommodate 72 persons have Grande College.
budget and will act as advisor
been chartered. Once at the
Anative of Mt. Vernon, Ohio, to the Inner-Fraternity Council
again, the Skylab astronauts today sought a cure Cor their motion vandalism during the em- entries for the 1973 fair is 4 Meigs Counties.
ployes strike after tbe Sunday p.m. on Friday, Aug. 10. The
The first mishep occurred in falrgroounds, the buses will Abell has spent most of his life on campus. He Is married , to
sickness throUgh exercise, rest and 11Quate meals.
Mission conunander Alan' L. Bean predicted that with an ni~ht breakin at five area sub- horse and pony puUs are not Meigs County on Rt, . 7, unload the passengers at lhe in Jackson. He ts a graduate of Hilary H. Abell, and they and·
Included nor is lhe horse show, six tenths of . a mile Senior Citizen Tents where Ohio State University with a their son, Brion Mark Abell,
easy schedule lhe next two days aboard their orbiting spacecraft stations.
011 was let out of . trans- All other open Clal!ll entries north of Pomeroy . where activities will be goin~ on all B.S. d,egree in educ&amp;tlon, and live in Jackson.
be and rookie c!'tlwmates Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. Lousma
.
. before coming to Rio Grande
would be ready to venture outside Thursday, Flight director Neil formers and circuit breakers, must be made by the deadltne. several pieces of n\aterial slid day ·
allowing
thousands
or
gallons
Mrs.
King
and
ber
stat(
will
be
off the bed of a semi operated l There will beawar(ls given to was a vocational counselor
·Hutchinson said, however, "It wouldn't surpriSe me" If the
to
flow
on
lhe
grourxl
and
adjaat
lhe
secretary's
office
on
lhe
by
Larry D. Lllz, 31, senior citizens during the day, wilh the Ohio Bureau or EmPORTRAITS SET
sp~~cewalk to deploy another sunshade over tho research ship
cent
roads,
whlclt'hed
to
be
Rock
Sprlnga
Fairgrounds
Ch.esapeake ..Litz was charged along .with def11onstrations on ployment Services In Jackson
Meigs High School Hnlon
wu put off until Friday II lhe crew fallod to catch up on
nushed.
Power
outages
of
30
from
lOa.m.
to
4
p.m.
on
Aug
9
with having a loose toad.
nutnhon, Persons to confer lor two and a half years.
may make appolntmenl! to
houaekeeplng chores vital to the two-month mission .
minutes arxl two hoW'uffected and 10 only tb receive entries.
A similar charge was . filed with about social services,
, His duties as director for have their senior por(falts
Mre. Margaret Ella Lewis, against Mike McCoy Jr. 4 ~ entertainment by one of the . fmanctol aid will include taken ut Gtover'a Studio,
WASHI!&gt;{O'I'ON - ADMINISTRATION olliclals say a new 3,100 local cuaton1ers.
James T. Powell, Ohio chelrman of the· fair flower Ashland Ky. Olllc~rs 'said groups at tl1e fair, a talent financial counseling wilh both Middleport, on Aug. 22, 23, :14,
"definitive" statement to be made public later this week will
place govei'rumjnt spending on President Nixon's Florida and Power manager here·, aald the ehows, will be on harxl for the brick f~ll off McCoy's truck cOntest of senior citize.ns, 'and .students and parents, assisting and 2$ . Bernice Hoffman ,
California hon1es at fU million to f3. 7million. The new report on loss of lubricating oil could . two days to accept ah~ en- striking an auto driven by free coffee and soft drtnks.
parents In completing their Meigs Annual advltor an.
have
caused
the
tranaformers
tries.
,
.
government expenditures on the Nixon properties at San
Erma M. Calhoun, 48 , Rt. I, There will also be free confide ntial
financial nounced. Seniors are ursed to
and
ctrclilt
breaker•
1o
ex·
The
1973
fair
will
be
held
Crown City. 1'hcre was minor shuttle bus pusses avallablefor sta tements, and awarding . rnat.e their own appoiDtmenta
Clemente, Calif., s~d Ke1 Biscayne, Fla .,ls being prepared by
plode.
·
Aug . 14-18, .
~~
·domage to her cor ,
senior cll~ens so t\lat they can grants and (~holarshiPs to by ~alli:.S 1192-2470.
·
• ''
(Continued on page 10)
1\

•

Day at State Fair offered
senior citizens of region

AND
CARPET
Living Room Furciture - Bedroom Furniture - Dining Room Furniture - Kitchen Furniture- Lamps- Pictures . Tables- Wall Accessories - Baby Furniture - Mattresses - Everything in Furniture
an~ Carpet for every room in your home. Sensible Credit - Prompt
. delivery to your home_

I

Reward raised
by Ohio Power

Visii Elberfelds Warehouse on Mechanic Street for Appliances _
Washers- Dryers - Refrigerators - Freezers- Gas Ranges . Electric
Ranges · Humidifiers - Dehumidifiers - Air Conditioners - Metal ·
C_abinets- Wardrobes_. Water Heaters 1 Kitchen Cabinets- Kitchen
Smks _- Room H~aters - Linoleum - Cong~leum . all widths. Big
select1on Room S1ze Rugs · 12 and 15 foot w1de Carpet- Metal Trim.

J

'

tQJJ prices for U.S, beer, processed beef are frozen . This

are ava)lable

IN POMEROY

·~

1s

puyln ~

Premium books .

FLOOR FOR

ERFELD

Farmers .Bank &amp; .Savings Co.

Members of. the Meigs
County Salon 710, Eight and
Forty, returned froin the 46th
Annual Marche Departemental
d'Ohlo in Toledo last week with
four trophies and three cash
awards in recognition of outstanding achievement in the
organization's program ,
In addition three : members
received appointments to state
committees. Mrs. Mary Martin
· was appoin!OO third member
lln·· the state flnance colnmlttee; Myrtle Walker,
member of the children and
youth committee; and Mrs.
Catherine Welsh, chairman of
lhe scholarship committee.
"! The four trophies won by the
Salon were presented at the
Eight and Forty banquet which
featured Dr. Frederick,Henry,
staff member of tQe Toledo
Hospital Cystic Fibrosis Clinic,
·as the speaker.
The trophies r'eceived were
the Mary Martin Trophy for
the best publicity scrapbook in
Ohio, the Grace Garrison
Trophy for the best memorial
service; the Mary A. Martin
Trophy, for the b~st tuberculosis program In Ohio and
the Arree Marshall Trophy for
the most funds spent for cystic
fibrosis In Ohio,
Mrs. Mary Martin prepared
t1e scrapbook which w~n the
trophy, and Mrs. Lula Hamp-

UNIFORMS EXHIBITED - The Point Pleasant Junior High School Redsklns
Rangerettes, under lhe direction above of Jacque Gabrltsch, exhibit their new red and white
uniforms. The girls, raising money Cor a trip to New Jersey for the National Majorette Competition, will participate in tbe Mason County Fair Parade, and perform for lhe jwiior high
football and basketball games this fall arxl winter. AU girls who will be ln junior high this fall
are Invited to joln this group. Miss Gabritsch is the world majorette chempion, a title she won
in Spain last sprlng. She is director of the Mason County Twirling Corps, Mason County Baby
Dolls, and lhe Mason County Dance Twirl tesm, as well as instructor last season for the Kyger
Creek Majorette Corps. She is now Instructing Winfield High School majorettes and the Buffalo
Putnam High School majorettes, and has been busy this summer making personal ap- ~
pearancea and performing before groups. Above,lront, from left, Pam Ba.ker, Connie Wedge;
back, Milissa Bauer, Janie White, Kathy Adams, Darlene Roach. - Picture by Jim Roach.

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharges : Harold Price,
Middleport ; Melvin Bush ,
I,(}all.lpollls Ferry; Alfred Casto, . ·
John Greenlee, Kelly Scarberry, Mrs. Junior Mattox,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Virgil ·
Patterson, Henderson ; Mrs.
Granville Mitchell, son,
Henderson; Geraldine Hill,
Letart; Mark Holley, Hatoland
Adkins, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
William Dye, New Haven, and
Charles Siuuns, trown Clty,O. L-...~--:-----·~-~...-~---------_..._.;.__.;._______

'

reaffirmed Monday that U1e
price ceiling on IJeel woulu not
be lifted until Sept. 12.
Economists expect beef prices,
which have already risen by
more than 60 pet. during ·the
past six months, to lurch upward again after the freeze is
lifted.
But A~ri c ulture Secretary
Earl Butz said the American
people are eating twice us
much beef per c~pita
they
did in 195~ and need not worry
about getting enough food .
"We're not going to run out of
food," Butz said. "That's scare
talk."
On the West Coast, It was
learned that some ca tlle
American ranchers are withholding from lhe U. S. market
during the price freeze are
being bought by Japanese.
According to the Western
States
Meat . Packers
Association, representing
producers from California to
Texas , the Japanese are

•

wins 7 ·aWards

'

.

The admlnislratlon calls it
"Scare wlk," but meat packers
warn thui Uley are caught In a
IIQUeeze b~tween the retail
price ceiling and the cost or
cattle that will cause a
nationwide shortage of beef beginning pO!!Sibly as soon us
Ibis weekend .
"Area supermarkets are
facing a drJ~stic shortage of
beef, which by this weekend
cou ld lead to the disappearance of some cuts from
store meat ca~s._a]ld in some
cases - no beef al.Ail," Lyle
Everingham; president or the
nationwide Kr9ger Food
Stores, .gaid In Cincinnati.
Mayor John V. Lindsay said
New York City has taken steps
· to provide appropriate meat
substitutes to hospitals', prisons
and other Institutions because
lhe city failed to.secure a firm
bid·for beef requiremellls after
Aug. 6.
Despite warnings of shortages, the administration

;Salon program

Charles Anderson
died on Sunday

NEW HAVEN - Telephone
and microwave cables leading
into ·the Philip Sporn Plant
near New Haven over the
weekend were cut for Ule
fourth time since a strike
began there July I.
Repairs were made Saturday
afternoon after Ulese cables
were cut around 11:30 p. m.'
Thursday and were ln· Service
approximately 12 hours when
they were severedagaln at 3:15
and 4:15 ·Sunday morning.
Repair to lhe telephone lines
was made Sunday afternoon,
but lhe microwave cable was
still out of service this morning, it was learned from
company officials.

The Pomeroy Angels
defeated
the
Pomeroy
Redlegs 11-1 to tie them for
first place In Peewee action
Friday, The winning pitcher
was Todd Fife, who.struck out 9
and walked one. He gave up 4
hits. The losing pitcher, Mike
Whitlatch, gave up l7 walks
and struck out 7 and gave up
four hits.
Hitting for .lhe Angels were
Ricky Smllh, J . R: Wamsley,
Todd Fife, and Randy Murray,
all singles. Hitting for the
Redlegs were ToQy Jewell,
Mike Whitlatch, and Brent
Houdashelt with a single each·,
and Tracy Hysell, with a
double . The championship
game will be played Tuesday.

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

0

411

PHNOM PENH '- U.S. WARPLANES ,AGAIN battered
Insurgent
positions
around Phnom Penh late Surxlay and early
I
.
today ln support of Cambodian troops fighting on aU sldea of the
capital. Cambodian military officers reported "some" gains in
the fighting .
Military authorities said lhe bombing ralds killed more than
600 lnsurgenta. Field reports said the bombing occurred on all
sides' of the capital as the government fought to reverse ln.
surgent advancea I&lt;&gt; the south and northwest.
•

Angels in win

DBIVB·IN BJINICINQ·

just contract and are willing to
bllrgain In good failh . Can Ibis
be so when they refuse to so
much as read over the points
we asked for at negotiations

(Continued from page I )
wilhln the Army recruiting couunand." ·

I

BANK

~ "The company has swtcd
U\ey have offered a fair and

Bee shortages to hurt

(29),

News .-. . in Briefs

Cables cut
over weekend
'MEIGS THEATRE' at Sporn uf!,it
Tonight&amp; Tuesday

around the clock to det~oct lhe
two of which are supervisors' slightest flaw In
the
sons , hired as temporary
movements of Ule pickets."
laborers, are also working as
- "Company vehicles pass
1
SCabs.'
- "The company has freely and regularly through
the main gate for materials
cameras and telescopes poised Jllld
supplies."

much less dlscu•• lhem
over the bllrgalnlng table."
Searls concluded
hla
remarks, saying, 1"fhls is an
honest effort to place the lac~
from 'the other side' on a true
perspective."

,

Patrol cites
two drivers

~::~ ~;t~cf;I~Ies

..

..:

., I'

.I

··
-•

..

Abell named aid director
,;
::

::
·'

;

·1

�! - rhe Dally tlcnflnel, Mlddlrport-l'omeroy 0 July 11 1971

1

~. Phil pitcher the
·Haldeman, ·like Ehrlich man, supports Mr. Nixon ,."".!

fht·D.nh St•ntlnd Muldlt•purtl'onhru\ 0

S~ JANE DENISON
WASHING !'ON 1UP I) - Th~

Berlin Wall, !he Senate
Watergate Comnutt"" d1scov
ered Monday wears a gray
.sllit and cr~sply starched sh1rt
and stands foresquare for
R1cfiord NIXon and the belief
he 1s mnocent of scandal
Back to back the two most
formidable men mNIXon's f~rst
four years-John E Ehrhch
1pan and H R Haldemangave the senators and the
Arner1can v1ewmg public a
close look at these men behmd
the President
DISplaying the quahhes that
earned them the collective
name of "the Berlm Wall"
among White House ms1ders,
Haldeman and Ehrllchman
were cool, prec1se, steely
Ehrllclunan, . wrappmg up

·-

luh

l1 t•IJ '

five da) s of testunony compia med he h 111 luld no t hance
to ra1se a vo1ce for the
President
tlaldeman, JUS!
begum1ng Ius turn ra1sed h1s
vo1ce at the outset'-StuMmg
the comm1ttee by revealmg he
had hstened to two of U1e secret
wpes that Nll&lt;on has demed
both the senators an~ Special
Watergate Prosecutor Ar·
ch1bal Cox
He sa•d the !apes- made of
conversations N1xon had with
White House counsel John W
Dean III last Sept 15 and on
March 21 this year- refute
Dean's allegations that the
President was at least aware of
efforts to hush up h1gh-level
mvolvement m the Watergate
buggmg plot
I am convmced that the

Presulent had no n\\ nrrm•!u;

(lf

any such acts until March of
th••)' ar I!.Jidcmltll sa•d 111 .t
94-page opemng sllltcment tlull
took h1m some iwo hours to
read
Thequesuomng or Haldeman
begms toMy and IS hkely to
last the rest of the week
Bone-weary and nundful that
their hearmgs are far behmd
schedule the comm1ttee voted
to take a break after hearmg
just seven more Wllnessesserubbmg at least temporanly
the scheduled appearances of a
half-&lt;lozen more m the "Watergate phase" of 1ls probe into
alleged m•sconduct durmg the
1972 presidential campa1gn
Postponed was a !mal dec1
s1on on bow-and when-best
to file su1t agamst NIXon
seekmg to force hun to release

tht• st• crct
tapt: s ,uuJ
prc&gt;ulcntlnl P•I(JCr&gt; that
presiUnably &lt;'Ould p1 ove 01
disprove Ius knowledge of the
scandal The su1t, triggered by
NIXon's r•fusal to &lt;1,0mply w1th
comm1ttee subpoenas for the
materml, was expected to be
f1led sometune th1s week
The push for 'court action was
heightened by Haldeman's dis
closure that he had listened to
two of the tapes- one of them
as recently as this month m the
pnvacy of his own home, more
than two months after he left
his powerful pos1t1on as White
House ch1ef of staff
He sa1d the President
authorized him to rev1ew the
tapes and report to him on their
contents
' It's strange that Mr Haldeman can hear the tapes but the

Panel says 1984ish fears justified
ByCRAIGA PALMER
WASHINGTON (UPI )
C1tizen surveillance was so
e:(j)anded while John N Mitchell was attorney general as
to Justify fears about a 1984·
type American soc1ety, a
gqvernment adv1sory panel
sa1a today
'l'he panel, in a report to the
Department of Health,
Education and Welfare
(HEW), recommended extensive restramts on operation
of computer data banks con·
l!Unmg mformatlon about
rndlvlduals
It also urged curbs on what 1t
called a dangerous dr1ft toward

•

-

•

use of SoCial Secur1ty niUnbers
as standard umversal Identifiers
The group made several
references to the highly con.
trolled type of society dep1~ted
by novelist George Orwell In
h1s book ' 1964 " And m a
statement summanz1ng the
report, HEW also made
mention of fears of Orwellian
type surveillance of Citizens
Citing M1tchell by name, the
report on ' Records,

Com~

pulers and the R1ghts of
Citizens" sa1d hiS maJor goals
while m off1ce - frqm early
1969 to mld-1972 - were to
strengthen the law en-

Salon recognized
(Continued from Page 1)
Elected delegates at large to
the national convenf!on were

Mrs Mar1m and Mrs Evallne
Berkley Delegates are Mrs
M1er Mrs V1otet Alchholz,
Dons Stannff, and Mrs Myr-tle
Walker of Racme The alter
nates

are

Mrs

Bernice

Christensen, Mrs Ann Me
Cudden Mrs Hazel Ell•off
and Mrs Mary Jane Patro
A, reception honoring Mrs
Mier was held immediately
following her Installation as
deportementat chapeau
Flowers gifts, and the chapeau
wings wer-e presented to her

one from Mrs M1er who noted
that Oh10 was goal on part
nershlp for the past year Mrs•

Huston noted that 30 partners
have d1ed dur~ng the past year

and she concluded her report
by presentrng a book of prayers

to Mrs Berkley
Mrs Glaub noted that 01110

has one new salon

L1ckmg

County She further reported
that Meigs County Salon gave
S100 to the Natural JewiSh
Hospital In the name of Mrs
Marlin Mrs Cihla unable to
attend due to 1llness senr
thanks to the color bearers,
Winners 10 the parodies Donna Pal Mrs Grace Shade.
presented followmg a dutch Mrs Helen Bolllngs, and Mrs
: • supper on the opening night of Donna Chnst1an
1he marche were won by
Mrs Marlin Area Dch1ldren
Franklin 'County, f~rsl and youth cha1rman reported
Summit County second and that 16,315 children have been
\. Cr.awtord third place A asmled and that $47 204 24 has
L reception was also held that been spent 1n the work The
•

evening for Mrs Evallne
Berkley
1mmed1ate past
chapeau

~

,'

Mrs Martin presided at the
departementat chapeau passe

'

breakfast extendmg a welcome

~

'

:}

•
•
~
•

arrangements for the break

••'

..
~

,

r.

I

•
I '
~
t

•
:

•

"

~
\
~
i

t

t.:•
'

~
..

.,{

~}

Mary Martm national pquv lor
member
Mrs
Martin
presented a resume of the

Reports were qlven lncludmg

nurses scholarship fund and a
certificate of ment for having ...

years

WIN AT BRIDGE

The right lead, down 1100
31

.K

+J965

• 32
+AKJI08 5

+K4
., AQJI062
• Q85
+63

EAST ID)

+A1072

,97 3
t AKJ 10
+ 72

SOUTH

••

luncheon in the Big AI room

placed forst m the state In
h1story of the Eight and Forty payment of dues ThiS latter
ancf read a poem
'My award has been won by the
Friend
Meigs Salon the past eight

WEST

!:

10::. :«:-~ ,v , v:..-=x: .. ..

..

~

These developments, when
v1ewed m conJunCtiOn w1th the
new surveillance technology
funded by LEAA {the Jushce
Department's Law En
for~~ment Assistance Ad·
m•mstratwn) grants and the
natl~hal• computeriZed file on
cnlnlnal offenders, greatly
mcrease the capability of the
government to monltor 11 the
actiVIties of all c1hzens and to
step m to prevent or pun1sh
those actiVIties where 11
chooses to do so,'" the report
sa1d
"The new cnmmal JUStice
mformallon network can be
used Ill COnJUnCtiOn Wllh the
vast government and pr~vate
computer dossiers bemg
complied by credit bureaus,
msurance compames, welfare
agencies menial health umts
and others

.'

~

y.....

'

'

Generation Rap

~:

'

By Helm and Sut; \:loUd

%

'

I asked someone how an "adult" book store or movie house IS
different from the ordmary, an&lt;IJ)e sa1d, "That's where the dirty
stuff 15

"

o4

Isn't that kmd of a slam at adults' - ALWAYS THINKING
AT
You started ME thmking also
To a Child, the word "adult" could eas1ly mean "dirty" or
"bad" Why' Well, there's an adult book store Why IS 11 for
d 1 ' Bee
Jls
a u ts
ause 11 se dirty stuff An 'adults only" mov1e
(everyone knows) IS a d1rty movie The root word of "adultery"
IS • adult,' and that's always been bad too
lmagme bemg a child who IS told not to go mto an adult book
store because1t ISadirtybookstore He may f1gure he'll grow up
to be a "dirty"' _ SUE

+++

+Q83
., 854
• 9761
+Q94

Wcol

.
None vulnerable
Norah
Easl South
Dble

It

Pass
I'
Dbte Pass
Pass
Openmg lead-'1 A

Pass

INT.

Pass

~

~ By Oswald &amp; Jamu Jacoby
North s double of one heart
was one of thos~ match point
duplicate b1ds H1s parlner JUSt
mighl have four spades and he
...• wanted to g1ve h1m a chance to
bid them
•
South s one no-trump was
~ one of those b1ds from fnght
: He d1dn t want to pass one
r
heart doubled and watch de·
: clarer score overtricks and he
d1dn I want to bid a three card
• suit Of course, the least harm·
ful of the vanous b1ds at h1s
• • 4ilposal would have been one

i...
'

4

t

lpllde •.,

Had n. bid that, West would

bave reached four hearts and

'!oc

+++
ADDED THOUGHT Maybe by the lime the next crop of
young people come along, hard core pornograpi)y will~ve gone
out of style After all, 1t gets dull pretty fast, nght? And, hes1des,
11 s mainly anti-female, portraymg women as bramless, wlllrng
slaves
only
useful m fulf11lmg male fantas1es • •Liberattonlsts
•
l
won't stand still for thiS sort of thing long, smce they now
recogmze all the chauVImst Implications - HELEN AND SUE

+++

made tl As 1t was, West doubled one no trump
North passed hopefullv He
though! South had some sort of
stoppers m the red su1ts and
that ma ybe hiS clubs would
produce s1x tricks
If West had led the queen of
hearts as many players m•ght
have South would have been a

~~~~'::ou?t!:,~ih! f:~~f~~~~~

&amp; THINGS

Does "Adult" Mean "Dirty""
Rap

Helen and Sue
I'm glad you prmted the rebuttal to Unborn Child's D1ary"
The R1ghtto Life groups are very act1ve m trymg to save life
before b1rth, but what do they do to help the child after he has
,
arrived m a home that d1dn t want him'
I worked last semester on a term paper about abused
children, and the way these children suffer would be incomprehensible to the average person Worst part is what we
read and hear about IS only the tip of the Iceberg Child abuse IS
much 'Po~~ preval.~nt than we'd like to believe, and mvolves
otherwise normal people who have too many children and too
many problems
The whole p1cture IS much more complicated than numbers
of children in.a family, still, forcmg a woman to bear a ch1ld she
does not want IS running the riSk of forcing a life of despair and
pain on an mnocent child If he could speak, would he thank us for
defendmg that "right"? - N P A
,

and 81 x clubs would follow
qu1ckly afterwards
West d1d lead a heart but he
saw no reason not to start With
the ace He had plenty of reentries for later on and he wanted
to hold the first tnck
After that slar t East and
West had no tr9uble runmng off
12 tricks for plus 1100 and a top Dear Rap
score
The girl I want to marry Is m pi!ys1cal danger from her
(NEWSF'A.PEA ENTERPAtSEASSN I
parents They beat her and have threatened to kill her She hll!l
marks and bruises on her face, back and legs Her mother grabs
herby theha1rand uses a belton her
The bidding has been,
An example last week she and her father were In the
West
Norah
East
South
grocery store and he slapped her face four or fiVe llmes because
abe didn't know if there was any salt at home! They blame her
' for everything that goes wrong
My glrlls seared and nervous all the time She's 18, 1m 18,
and we've been g01ng together for two years, when she's allowed
to get out wh1ch 1sn 't often
They 'd never allow us to get married Is there some way I
can'save her ' - LOVING AND WORRIED BOYFRIEND

LA¢B:1:1•!M&gt;.fitU

1.

Lear LWB
If your girl can )li'Ove cruelty (brulseS might convmce the
Welfare Office) st1t! could be placed m a foster home Is she
desperate enough to make a complaint' - HELEN ANh SUE

top~

-

.

Adults Everywhere
Now here's a mce lively protest for you 1 Why should our
American Legion Aux 111ary carried out In the h1ve cen
label be made synonymous w•th "d~rty, ' We 're blamed
department preSident Galen terpiece and favors
enough already without THAT' ' ""' ~· • "'
Houser outgo1ng commander
In add1hon to the awards
If adult movie houses and book stores don t get another
of the Amen can Leg 1on David above Meigs County Salon
Cropper
New American rece1ved an honorable men11o.o
name, perhaps we'llsoon hear our kids sa)'lng, 'Oh, well, when I
L-egion commander and Mrs for a 1100 contrlbuhon !0 tHe: 'Srowupl'll be dirty enough tound~taitd l " - HELEN

.

(

A thought for the day
Amencan wn ter Henry Thoreau sa1d, 'It takes two to
speak the truth, one to speak
the other to hear "

repor-t on cystic fibrosis and
tuberculosts work showed

Mrs Berkley was mll•aled •nlo
fast In 1974
The Marthe opened with the club A g1fl of S100 to the
Mrs Berkley pres•dlng A National Jewish Hospital In
welcome was given by Mrs
Denver for cystic f1brosrs and
Patro conventlon chairman'" tuberculoSis research In the
with Mrs Me~r giving the name ot Dr Sanford Avner a
reponse A total of 188 were pedlatrlctan there formerly of
reg1sfered
lntroducet:l were Gall ipolis was made by the
Mr~
Helen Sloan national group
executive comm1ttee member
For the decorations for the
of the Amer~can Legion luncheon Nlrs Marton used a
Auxiliary , Mrs Nancy Sa/lot, bumble bee theme which was

NORTH

••
•

bf Mrs Eleanor Ullum stands
a 1848 50 Calherme Baker s

expenditures of $9 731 62 and
to Mrs Erma Reese of Camp also noted that 5 700 Betty
bell, Calif one of the guests at Crocker coupons for hosp•lal
the ccnvehf1on Mrs Esther equ1pmenl has been collected
Edgar and Mrs Marlin were
Mrs Martin had charge of
appointed
to
handle the annual chapeau passe

;

I

scholarship fund as reported

forcement capability of the
federal government and to
mcrease the powers of pollee
and prosecutors at all levels
"To th~,U~n(he greatly ex
panded'federal surveillance of
Citizens thought to be threats to
mternal secur~ty, jusllfymg h1s
action on the theory that the
executive has mherent, pnd
discretionary power to protect
Itself," the report sa1d
He made aggressive use of
existing laws and sought and
obtamed .., §l§lllflcant new
leg1slatwn to arm police and
prosecutors with expanded
authority to mom tor md1v1dual
conduct m order to prevent or
punish potential cnmes "
Act1v111es c1led " under
Mitchell's leadershtp" m
eluded such thmgs as greater
federal wiretapping,
prevenhve detention of
suspects, authority for pollee to
enter homes Without warnmg
(the so-c~tl!.,.ed no-knock law)
and gtvmg judges power to
1m pose greatly expanded
sentences for ' dangerous
spemal offenders "

his aide, Gordon Strachan, to ''contain" the WotorKu tu tl• lil (lerlod, Dean •~~Sureq us
destroy sensitive documents problem lo "rtodu c adverso U1at there was absolutely nq
after the June t7, 1972 bugging political and public11y full evidence that anyone In the
White House had been Involved
arrests, of approving the OIJL I I
In Watergate In any way"
project to raise money for the
Echoed Ehrllchman "On at
Both Haldeman and Ehrlichseven original defendants, or of
hearing Dean and Nixon man- who was Nixon s chief least c•ght occasions the
The crew-cut Haldeman, discuss the money and execu- domestic affairs adviser-Bifid President made that request "
Ehrllchman's final day
wearing a gray &gt;WI and white tive clemency at a March 13 the President had tried repeal·
shirt, quickly bore out his meeting
edly to get tbe full facts about before the committee was an
lawyer's predictlon Like Ehr·
- Acknowledged that he did the scandal but was thwarted acnmonlous one, sparked by
llchman, whose gray swt was approve siphoning *-15(),000 in repeatedly, primarily by Dean repeated clashes with his lnunrumpled and blue shift cash from the Nixon Cllmpaign
"The President ra!Bed ques- lcrrogators - primarily chief
unw1lled after a fmal four for private White House opera- tions as to the facts of committee counsel Samuel
hours under the hot television tions, Including support of Gov Watergate !tom lime to time Dash
He accused Dash of "em·
hghts, Haldeman disavowed George C Wallace's ~uber­ during the period of June
belllshlng"
and "festooning"
any personal wrongdoing and natorlal pr11118ry opponent and through the election," Haldeattempted to pm most of the of pobllcal "pranks" by man said • HIS mteresl con- his questions with op~~Uons and
blame for the scandal on Dean Donald H Segretti, and that Sistently was to get the facts interrupting hlm before he
" Dean moved 1n Im- Ute White House sought to and get them out throughout could answer
•
mediately after the Incident as
sort of the Watergate project
officer m the Wh1te House ,"
Haldeman sa1d "Dean kept
Ehrlichman and me posted
from time to lime on
topaz and lots more You II be amazed at the
developments and, through us,
BY J!CK O'BRIAN
rich effect of many an 10expenslve stone
the President He apparently
THE WELL-SPENT VACATION
Gucc! s of Italy has mstalled its rich,
did not keep us fully posted and
NEW YORK (KFS) - Yesterday the big
1t now appears he d1d not keep stores, today the smaller shops Tiffany s and beautiful merchandiSe, mostly leather, mto
us accurately posted
(Qtier's aren't huge by Macy's-Bioomlngdale three separate locations 111 one 5th Ave block"{The President) was • standards burtoo big to be mcluded among the at the corner of 5th and 54th St , farther north in
relying primarily on one man, "little shops" which summon a VISitor s Ill· the same block In the St Regis Hotel building
John Dean, who has admitted teres! Both Tiffany and Cartier need no ex- and the third lns1de the St RegiS lobby Gucci
that he was a major par- planahon here: we've patroniZed both, know merchandise 1s fantastically fine, extremely
tlc1pant m the Illegal and''' they have 1super1or merchandise and ex- expensive, everythmg the best - except the
Improper cover-up, a fact traordmanly expert sales folk, so we pass on to sales help, a heavy proportion V(lth Italian
accents and a manner totally unlike European
anknown to the PreSident until timer prenuses
sales staffs You may have heard comedienne
March, 1973 •
Arthur King on Madison Ave near 59th St
Joan Rivers on the Tonight Show belabor the
I
' designs h1s own jewelry, unusualm the extreme
salespeople
at Guec1's m New York - and she
' Tickmg off the many allega- without touching the grotesque Artistic, beardlions agamst him-prunarlly ed, enthusiastic to the pomt of carbonation, was hllanously correct They practice the ageby Dean-Haldeman
Arthur King's baubles are famous m the select old bad""i'les paradox of plainly working as
- Demed havmg any groups, it's plain nothing he does can be turned sales help while lrymg to unpress customers
'knowledge of or Involvement out on an aS.!Iembly lme, everythmg totally that they are above 11 - and you II doesn't
m the plannmg or execution" of mdiVIdually designed and executed, you won't work The best shopgals we've encountered are
the buggrng of Democratic meet your jeweled double wh1ch can happen the young lad1es of considerable breedmg and
party headquarters, asking the even to Tiffany or Cartier customers BoriS, even some affluence anx1ous to work rather
CIA to cover up the break·m or further along Madison Ave m the 60s IS another than loll m the ch1c luncheon spots and bars ,
to take respons1bil1ty for 11, successfully unconforming Jewelry deSigner Gucc1's suggest the help has taken a chance to
bemg familiar w1th the With a distinctly p~rsonal style Both Boris and see New York while resenting the Intrusion of
work But the merchandise, if you get past the
"plwnbers" squad of Whlre King are expensive
House secret agents playmg a
Still gem • happy but w1sh some- bad manners and drab attitude of the help, Is the
best Add Caterrna Valente, great mternat10nal
prunary role In the i972 Nixon thmg less wallet • cnpphng' Try
campa1gn, or knowing that Jeb Atltro Minerals at 155 E 34th St , slar ,to the list of anti N Y Guccl's Caterma 1s
Stuart Magruder, the deputy dubbed "Topkapl of 34th St " lis Gallery of a personal fnend of owner Gucm and after
campa1gn manager, was Gems rans a price gamut from the miraculously several bitter brushes w1th theN Y personnel,
comnutting perJury
mexpens1ve to the most Along w1th the rubles, adviSed the owner she'd never enter lis doors
-Said he had "no recollec- sapphires, emeralds, you'll fmd senu-prec1ous again - m N Y S1gnor Gucc1 tried to correct
lion" of seemg the fruits of tije bargains 1n opals, malach1re, rhndochros1te, the Ill manners, by our observation, plamly he
Watergate operation , oftelltJ)g lapis, tourmaline, rock crystal, rose quartz, fa1led
l nlllf' \1 ' tt.'(t tannot hear them,"
mused chAirllllln Sam J Ervin,
D-N C , refusmg to accept
Haldeman's plea that he was
IUlder preSidential orders not
to disclose what was 111 them

BY PAUL CRABTREE

Television Log
t}

TUESDAY, JULY J1 1973
6 00 - News3 4"5 10-13 15 Trul~orConseq 6 SesameS! 20
Around the Bend 33
6 30 - News3 4 6, 8 10, 15 I Dream of Jeann1e 13 Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33
7 00 - WHat s My Lme 8 I ve Got A Secret 13 Etec Co 20
Beat the Clock 4 News 6 10 Untamed World 13 Truth or
Conseq 3 L1vmg 33 Lee Trevino s Golf tor Swingers 15

I'm gomg to utter some words of praiSe today for a televisiOn 7 30- To Tell the Truth 6 Price IS R1ght 8 10 Beat the Clock
13 This ls Your L1fe 3 Corcus 4 RFD 20 Charles Blairs
program that 1s genumely remarkable - "Gunsmoke "
Belter World 15 Cancer Life or Death 33
CBS this week Is windmg up a rerun of a three-part episode 8 00 - Movoe The Alamo 3 4 TemperaturesRislng6 13
that welcomed Doc Adams) (Milburn Stone) back to the show 8 30 - Hawa11 Five 0 8 Mov1e The Weekend Nun 6 13
Changmg Mus1c 20
after he suffered a very real heart attack, and although I am no 9 00
- International Performance 20 33
longer an ardent viewer of Matt Dillon and Co , I tuned 11 111 and 9 30 - V•rg1n1an B Movie The Woman Hunter" 10
was Impressed, for about the 800ih time, by Ute professiOnalism 10 00 - Marcus Welby MD 6 13 News 20 NBC Reports 3 4
15
and credib1hty of this longest-I"Uilllmg of all TV Westerns
1100 - News 3 4 8 13 15
It ISII't great drama The actors, indiVIdually, aren't out- 11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Comedy Concert 6 13 Mov1es
The Face of Fear 8 Su1c1de Commandos 10
standmg Some of the plots are flimsy contrivances, to be kind
1 00 - Perry Mason 4 News 13
But nux them all together, and some sort of subtle chenustry 2 00 - Your Health 4
takes place, an:l 1t becomes •easy to anderstand why "GunWEDNESDAY,AUG I 1973
smoke" enJoys 1ts seenungly-endless run of popularity on CBS
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
It's JUS! one whale of a show that has undergone great changes m 6 15 - Farmt•me lU English 3
almost a quarter-century of eXIstence, yet seems to mamtam a 6 20- Farm Report 13
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
continUity that 1s appeallll8
6 30 - Columbus Today 4 Bible Answers 8 Urban League 10
.t¢"i1i:.""..... d:!.•
The Story 13
00Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 News 6 Jeffs Collie 13
7
How many programs, of any sort, could undergo the 7 30 - Romper
Room 6 R,ocky &amp; Bullwlnkle 13 Popeye tO
following evolution'
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame Sf 33
Lassie 6
"?ansmoke" was born on radi~ ,V!" TV,!'IId,was popular, 8 30Jack LaLanne 13 New Zoo Revue 6 Romper Room 8
but not spectacular, m Its early yeal'll
• •· •
8 55- News 13
Transferred to the home screen, things began to happen Jim 9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Phil Donahue 15 What Every Woman
Wants to Know 3 Concentration 6 Merv Gnffln 8 Friendly
Arness, one of show busmesa' noted recluses, appeared m what
Juncl1on 10 Ben Casey 13
became known as an "adult" Wea1Cl11
,
9 30 - Etec Co 33 To Tell The Truth 3 Jeopardy 6
That word "adult" has ap entirely diHerent meaning today 10 00 - Dinah Shore 3 15, Wild Wll~ West 6 Jokers Wild 8 10
Dick Van Dyke IS
than 1t had m the early Fifties Then, it ll)eant Uta! the star didn't 10 30Baftle3 4 15 SlOOOOPyramld8 10 Spill Second 13
always win the fight, nor carry a guitar and slx-fihooter w1th 11 00 - Sale of the Genlury 3 15 Love Amencan Style 6
Gambit 8 10 Password 13
equal aplonb, nor r1de the range for days without getting dirty,
11
30
- Hollywood Squares 4 13 Love of Life 8 10 Bewitched 6
bearded, hot and pretty darned s1ck of It all
13 Sesame 51 20
II 55 - CBS News 81Dan Imel s World 10
12 00 - Jeopardy 3 15 Password 6 Bob Braun s 50 50 Club 4
In other words, Marshal Dillon was a real human bemg, and
News \3 Contact S News 10
12
30
SearchlorTomorrow8 10 3 Ws 3 15
so was the cast he worked with They marked the end for the 12 55 -- Spi11Second6
NBC News 3 15
antiseptic, utopian antics of the Roy Roger!Hiene Autry genre,
I 00 - News Weather Soorfs 3 All Mv Children 6 IS Not For
and spawned a whole new craze for western shows With
Women Only 15 Green Acres 10 If's Your Bel s Chan Ese
Way 33
believable people and plots
I 20 - Fashions In Sewing 3
(GIVIng credit where due, there's some evidence that the 1 30 - 3 On A Match 3 4, 15 As The World Turns s 10 ' Bowling
6 These Are Our Children 33
success of the film, "lfigh Noon," lltSplred "Gunsmoke" to take
2
00
- Days ot our Lives 3 4 15 Bowling 6 Newlywed Game
on a more mature look when it moved to the TV screen )
13 Mike Douglass 6 Guiding Light 8 10 International
Since then, the show has undergone evolution, but never
Performance 33
2 30 - Dating Game 13 Doctors3 4 15 Edge of NightS 10
revolution
- Another World 3 15 General Hospital 6 13 RFD 20
When Dennis Weaver who had been an outstanding semi- 3 00Price
Is Righi S 10 Tommy Johnson and Son 33
comic Sidekick to Arness as Chester Goode, decided to avoid a 3 30 ~ Return of Peyton Place 3 4 15 One Life to Live 6 13
Secret Storm 10 This Week 20 Hollywood Talking 81 Phl't
life of typecasting, he wu replaced by a character (borrowed
Donahue 4 Time For Timothy 33
from the equally-good "Have Gun, Will Travel"),capably played 4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 20 33 Love
by Ken Curtis
American Style 13 Merv Griffin 4 Huckleberry Hound &amp;
Yogi Bear6 Secret Storm 8 Movie' Convicted 10
4 30 - Pelf/coal Junction 3 Marv Grlftln 4 F Troop6 Abbott &amp;
When the show shifted from a haU-bour to an hour, It unCostello 8 My Lillie Margie 15 Daktarl 13
'
5
00
Mr
Rogers
33
Bonanzo
3
4
Hazel
8
Andy
Griffin
15
derwent a period where principles seemed almoet secondary
Here Comes The Brides 6
to the stories being presented (something lilnilar to "Wagon 5 so - Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 3 Beverly Hillbillies 8
Train"), but eventually a balance was restored, and the very
Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Trails West 13
5
55
- Earl Nightingale t!
honest characters of Matt, Kilty, Festus and Doc resumed a
6 00 - Truth or Con seq 6 News 3 4 S 10 15 Sesame St 30
roughly-equal balance with the plots
~ltlas , Yoga and You 33
,
All the years rolled by, there was no attempt made to htde tile 6 30 - News 3, 4 6 S 10 15, I Dream ot Jeannie 13 Zoom 33
Inevitable aging of the stars Amanda Blake, one of the moet 7 OQ - News 6 10 What s My Line 8 Truth or Cqns~q 31 Beat
The Clock 4 Anything You Can Do 1l Elec Co 20 ; Saint lS I
beautiful women ever to appear on the screen, doesn't try to look
Book Beat 33
under 30 to her everlasting credit Ditto for Mat, Do&lt;: and aU the 7 30 - To Tell The TruthS The JudgeiO Pollee Surgeon 3 41
Beat The Clock 13 Andy Griffith IS How Do Your Children
rest
Grow 20 Episode Action 33
And 110 "Gu11811loke" beCIIme a minor American Institution, 8 00 - Adam 12 3 41 Baseball 15 Newsmaker 73 13 Whllt 1
Big ldea7 20 33 Thicker Than water 6 Sonny &amp; Cher 8,
and 110on will roll Into another sea1011
The high and the rnlMhty at CBS, which backed off from an S 30 - &amp;onacek 3 41 Movie 'The Devil and Min Sarah 6 13
annoUilCed declllon to cancel the show a few years back u an 9 00 - Dan A1J9ust S lO Mualca t Encounter 20 33
outraged cltl!enry roae up in anger, are probably very glad they 9 30 - Man Builds Man Destroy• 20 33
10 00 - News 20 Owen Maroha/16 13 s,.,rch 3 4 I Cannon s 0;
kept It around
First Edition - Tell II All 33
And even If I am now only a "seldom" watcher of Matt •nd 11 00 - Newa3 4 6 8 10, 13 15
- Johnny Carson l 4 t! 1 Or Jeky ll &amp; Mr Hyde 6 13 1
friend~ no longer dashing to the set each week to see the latest 11 30
Movi~t Tne Patsy' S • Brigham Young 10
thriller, I'm glad It's still around too It we~then wonderfully 1 «1 - Perry Mason ~~ Newa 13
'
ZIOO - News 4,
well
,

Jt•

1

,
1

"

..
,
,
-

•
,
,
,
,
"
'
"
"

Pirates Sports

By FRED McMANE
UPI Sporla Writer
Steve Carlton has rmally
found It, and young Steve
Rogers still hasn't lost It
Carlton, the National League's Cy Young awurd winner
last year when he won '1:1 and
lost 10 for the Phlladelphw
Philltea, has been struggling
continually this seasop in an
effort to dupllcate his performance of last year, but his long
walt may be over
Carlton turned in what
Manager Danny Ozark termed
"hls best pitched game of the
year" Monday night when he
stopped the Pitt.sburgh Plra l!'ll
on SIX hits whtle pltchtng the
Phillles to a I~ triumph The
lanky southpaw struck out 10
and walked only one In postmg
his third shutout of the year
and besting Bob Moose
"Tomght I finally foand my
groove because I was commg
on top harder," sa1d Carlton
"I had my breaking ball
workmg and my control was
good My sl1der was going
down hard I've been trymg to
fllld the groove all year and
I've finally got 11 "
The other Steve- Rogershas only been around smce
mld.July but IS fast becoming
the most unpressive young
pitcher m the National League
Rogers, only 23, turned 111 his
second straight shutout and
third stellar performance m a
row Monday mghl when he
tamed the New York Mets on
seven hils while p1tchmg the
Montreal Expos to a 1~ victory
m the f~rst game or a
doubleheader The Expos also
won the rughtcap, 5-2, m 10
llllllllgs
Rogers, who had a one-hitter
aga1nst the Philadelphia Phil·

lie• m his last start and allowed
only two run• In eight IMmgs
m hiS only other outing, is a llfoot-2, 177-pounder w1th a
rising fastball that Mets'
batters had trouble meeting
solidly
In the only olher scheduled
NL games, l.&lt;Js Angeles beat
San t:'rancillco, 5-2, AUanta
whipped Houston 7-3 and
Ch1cago topped St Louts, 3-1
J1m Bibby tossed a no-hitter
as Texas blanked Oakland, IHJ,
Boston edged New York, 4-3,
DetrOit beat Baltimore, 4-3,
and Chicago whipped Minnesota, 9 I, In the only
Amencan League action
Bob Boone smgled home the
game's only run in the Plull1es'
tnumph over the Pirates
Boone's hit came in the fourth
IMmg and scored Greg Luzmski, who had smgled and
moved to second on a walk to
Del Unser
Ken Singleton, an ex Met,
delivered the wmnrng hit for
the Expos m the nmth mnmg of
the opener when he doubled
home Ron Hunt, who had
opened the mmng with a single
and moved to second on a
sacnf•ce
In t~e rughtcap, John Boccabella drilled a three-run
double m the loth to g1ve the
Expos a sweep of the twlnbtll
Mike Marshall, who worked
four mmngs in relief, got credit
for hiS loth VIC!o,ry
Dave Lopes and Joe Fergu_JOn each homered for the
l)odgers m Ute1r triUmph over
the G1ants Lopes also drove in
another run with a single as he
supported the four-btl p1tchmg
of Claude Osteen Osteen, 12-5,
lost his shutout m the fourth
when Gary Matthews hit a tworun homer

·. Glover proves
skeptics wrong
pacified
BY JOE CARNICEU.l
0 J Sunpson IS expected to
UPI Sports Writer
R1ch Glover has begun to lake his f1rst real test with the
Buffalo Bills today after spendprove the skeptics wrong
Glover, who earned just mg nearly a week m the hopabout every honor available to Sital w1th a stomach v1rus
linemen as a star nuddle guard Simpson was the Amencan
for the Uruvers1ty of Nebraska Conference Player 6f the Year
last season, had h1s first taste last season
of a pro football tra1rung camp
Monday when he began work·
•ng out with the New York
G1ants And the Giants liked
what they saw
Despite his excellent college
credentials-be won both the The Middleport Little League
Outland Trophy and the LomAll-Star team bounced back
bardi Trophy as the nation's
from 1ts opemng round loss
outatanding lineman - Glover,
Sunday, wh1ppmg Weston, 4~.
atll-foot-1 and 242 pounds, wll!l
1n the Belpre All-Star tourconsidered .too small to play
the !me in the pros and not nament
Greg Becker and Mike Hlndy
agile enough to play
combmed to hold Weston to
linebacker
only 2 h1is , Becker g1vmg up I
But after one workout, Coach
hit m four mnmgs, wh1le Hlndy
Alex Webster was ready to
relieved hun In the fifth and
comm1t Glover, a secondround draft pick but the f1rst surrendered only I
Becker struck out 2 and
made by the Giants, to action
agamst the San D1ego walked only I, while Hmdy
Chargers m their pre-season fanned 3 and gave up 2 free
passes
opener Saturday night
R•ck Hovatter and Mark
"We'll probably use him
Saturday n1ght against the Venoy were the leadmg hitters
Chargers; Webster sa1d 'He for Middleport, slammlng
unpressed me out there today doubles, while Terry Gardner
He looked very strong and I'm
sure we'll be able to get him out
of some of the hab1ts he's m

Desk
By /Jentt y Fobes

"The G•ants' defense with a
middle guard Is just right for

me," Glover said "Sure, I
have a tough job m front of me
trying to beat out John Mendenhall He has experience
over me, but I feel that just as
soon as I get everything down,
I'll have a good chance "
Elsewhere In the Lralnlng
camps, San Diego Coach
Harland Svare said he may
oold veteran quarterback John
Unltas, obtained from BalUmore in the off-11eason, out of
prc-aeason activity
"I want him there In September.'' said Svarc UniiiL!I
has been complaining about
knee problems
Defensive end Elvin Bethea,
one of the few established stars
on lite Houston roster, slgnll\l a
three-year contract with the
Oilers Bethea hod become
dlegruntled and asked to be
traded in the off-lleason but
apparently
has
been
Peace Is no! made at the
council !able or by treaties
but In the hearls of men
Herber! Hoover
I

lly } REO DOWN
Ul'l Sport&amp; Writer
It took Jim Bibby !Ieven und
a half years to get from
Marlon, Va , In !he Appalachl~m League to the Texas
Rangers In the ••• weekumce
then, he'll become a no-hit
pitcher and the American
l.eague's newest star
The 28-year old, 6-foot-5, 230pound right-hander pitched the
f~rst no-hitter In the Rangers'
history aJW! the fourth of the AL
season Monday night when he
overpowered the Oakland A's,
IHJ, with a 13-strliroout perfor·
mance The Rangers had
acquired him from the St
Louis Cardinals on June 6 and
he immedllltely developed into

one of the AL's mO!lt effective
pitchers with one-hit, two-hit,
four-hit and flve-hlt perforlllant'Os m his fwr other victories for Texas,
B1bby gave up six walks but
allowed only two runners to
reach aecond and one to advance to third He was helped
by excellent defensive plays by
shortstop Jim Fregosl, center
fielder Vic Harris and
defensive shorllltop replacement Pete Mackantn
Steve Busby of the Kansas
C1ty Royall pitched the first
noh1tter of the AL season on
April 'Z1 and Nolan Ryan of Ute
California Angels pitched nohitters on May 15 aJW! -tuly 15

Afthough U1e football sea110n Ia r1ght around the corner, one
man m Meigs County Js looking ahead to and planning for the
1973-74 basketball •eason
Roger Brauer new head cage coach for the Marauders, has
been keepmg a close eye on the action thiS summer at the Me1gs
Jumor High gym, as several key prospects for thiS year's' squad
play m p1ck-up games
Brauer, whose mam program consists of fundamentals, hard
work and good condihonlll8, figures one of the main problems he
w1ll face m this, h1s f1rst year at Meigs, will be fmd1ng a big man
for the p1vot Brauer IS also a b1t diSappointed m fmdmg that few
kids can be seen playing basketball around town dur1ng these
I
summer months The Middleport summer cage league plays
every Sunday and Monday mghts, but most of these players are
e1ther from GallipoliS or have been graduated from Meigs
A native of Youngstown, Brauer began his playing career at
'
S!ruthers High School, before playrng freshman ball for Findlay
CHICAGO (UPI) - Roland had worked together on such
College HIS first coachmg job came at the northwestern Oh1o
college, where he coached the freshman team only two years Hemond, credited with engl. key trades as the acqubitlon of
neermg the trades that turned slugger Dick Allen, had been
after graduating
the Ch1cago White Sox mto Increasingly at odds with
In !950 he went to Urbana, 111 southwestern Ohio, and was
pennant contenders, has Holcomb over the handling of
named head football coach there m 1954 In 1961 he was appomted
moved
up from the persoMel contract and personnel mathead basketball coach, and coached both sports unhl!963 In one
four-year spree at Unbana, Qrauer's teams molded an 89-8 office to take over as the club's ters
general manager and VICe
record, Wlth1:3 district chlllnp10nsh1ps and one regwnal crown
pres1dent
The H11ltopper mentor was named UP! Ohio Coach of the Year m
The change was @noounced
1965
Monday by John AUyn, the Sox
When asked what type of offense he prefers - run ana gun,
owner,
who added he planned
pattern off~nse, or II combination thereof, Brauer replied that he
feels he'll have to wa1t and see what kmd of team he comes up to assume the dutles of ch1ef
w1th He did pomt out that the prospects he's seen so far have executive officer and take a
been qwck and aggressive which may give some md1cat1on of more active role in running the
which way he'll lean thiS.wmter.!lrauer also pomted out that he club,.hiiiiself
The new general manager
believes a good defense IS the key to a good offense, and conditioning ancf1undamentals will obviously be the mam starting replaces Stu Holcomb wbo quit
last week m a feud with
pomt when practiCe beglliS later thiS fall
LEGION NOTES--An area newspaper made a b1g boo- Hemond and Manager Chuck
boo m the cutlme of the picture 11 ran m Monday's paper Tanner
Hemond, who had been
following Athens' wm over Me1gs The pboto shows an Athens
presumed
m lrne to succeed
runner slidmg mto a base, and the cutlme declares that Me1gs
"He's checking
catcher M1ck Ash Is taggmg out Les Champlin of Athens Ftrst of Holcomb ever Since the latter's
all, whoever IllS that Is making the tag IS droppmg the ball resignation became known,
my expense
took
over
his
new
duties
bnSecondly, the fielder IS wearing while shoes, which g~ves some
account."
md1cat1on thalli may be third baseman Lou McKinney Frnally, medwtely Holcomb retired to
his
Flor1da
home
All the expense of Illness or
the fielder IS obviOusly wearmg a regular fielder's glove, not a
The
switch
follows
a
ser~es of
1n1ury plus household
catcher's null, and hll!l none of the regular catcher's protective
expenses
can be covered by
mjur•es to key players, which
apparel on One consolation 11 IS a good picture
health accident 1nsurance
comclded w!Ut the Sox' fall
with disability 1ncome
from f1rst place to fourth in the
from
the
GRID GRIND-Torught IS tpe official start of the 1973 Me1gs
American
League's
West
DiviMarauder footballcam)l!llgn with the annual meeting at the high
school begmnmg at 6 30 F1rst cond1tionmg dnll starts Sion Holcomb was blamed by
some for lettmg Rick
tomorrow, and then the first order of busmess when regular
pracllces begm Will be finding a quarterback to replace Reichardt and Mike Andrews
go m contract d1sputes,
graduated Andy \la ughan •
compounding the shortage of
DIAMOND DUST - Woolly Call, m a letter to the Sentinel,
fight-handed h1tters created by
I
says '!'The' Mlllgs
Pony Leagu~ went over great this year and we
mjur1es
,
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
are looking for more teams and a b1gger league next year I w1sh
Hemond and Tanner, who
to thank each of the.managm,J.l.ll!Pires, parents and fans for the
good JOb each and everyone did m helping our new league I also
wish' to thank Kenny Wiggins for keepmg thef1eld m tip-top shape
all ~eason long " Cllll•s president of the Me1gs Pony League and
one of the most successful managers m the area

Chicago makes
office change

Middleport stars
bounce back, 4-0

now"

Ranger no-hits A'.~

2-HOUR
CLEANING ,
(Upon' Request)

Inning on a grand slam h'Omer
by Jeff Burroughs followed by
a solo homer by Blll Sudakls
Burroughs has hit two grand
slams in the last five days- the
only grand slams in Texas'
history
Dick McAuliffe, Duke Sims
and J1m Northrup homered for
the Tigers and Mickey I.ollch
won his loth game with the
ninth-inning relief help ol John
Hiller, who earned his 22nd
save
The Red So~ dealt relief ace
Sparky Lyle of the Yankees his
sixth Joss when Rick Miller's
runth~nfllllg single drove in
Rico Petrocelli Petrocelli, who
hit a two-run bomer earlier In
the game, led off the ninth with
a single, moved to second on a
wild pitch by Lyle and went to
third on an Infield o~t The
Yankees had tted Ute score In
the lAlp of the ninth on Jilp Ray
Hart's two-run horner

Final Shipment of Season
- -, .:;r- Y• ..e•tone
'
\ 18"-'FHRIFTI-CUT
'

-'·

Ruggedly constructed
for long mowing life!

$5995

t'i!N lll1

WITH TMDEl

•Powerful 3 H P engme recotlal.arter

I

DowningChilds

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO'

AGENCY INC.

992-2094

•6 wheell

Your Complete Tire Center
P.omeroy,o.

606 E. Main

$35,000 REWARD

ThiS Week's Specoal

and H1ndy contributed smgles
Middleport's next game 111
the double • ellmmpl10n
tourney will be Saturday alo I
p m agamst the wmner of the
Pt Pleasant • V1enna game

Detroit defeated Baltbnore
4-3, In the nationally televised
game, Boston beat New York,
4 3, and Chicago downed
MiMesota, ~~. tn the other AL
games
National League scores were
Chicago 3St Loula 1, Montreal
over New York H) and ~2
Philadelphia 1 'Pittsburgh o:
Atlanta 7 Houston 3 and 1,os
Angeles 5 San Francisco 2
A native of Franklinton,
N c , Bibby broke in with
Marlon m 1965, spent 1966 and
1&amp;67 m military service, pitched Impressively in the New
York Met !ann system In 1968
and 1969 and then underwent
spinal surgery which sidelined
him for the entire 1970 season
He then got lost in the shuffle,
was traded to the Cardinals m
1972 and pitched spottily for
them this se11110n
The Rangers scored five runs
off loser VIda Blue in the f1rst

(For information leading to arrest and conviction)
USED CARS

69 FORD Fairlane

500
2 Door H.T.
V fl motor auto trans and

Central Operating Company offers to reward any person or persons furnishing to the Company,
or to any law enforcement agencies of the States of Ohio and West Virginia, or of the Federal

power sfeenng

•1295
Karr &amp; Van landt

'

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS,

You'll [Ike Our QualifY,

Government, or to the Sheriff of any county or to the Police of any municipality, information leadmg
direct~

to the arrest and conviction of any person willful~ or

malicious~

mjuring or destroying any of

Way of Domg Business

GMAC FINANCING
992 5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'TitS 00
Tll5 PM Sal

210 E 2nd
Pomeroy
Phone 992 5428

the Company's electrical operating equipment or facilities or who threatens
or who

USTUS
DLE
A
OF
$2,000.

PEOPLE TRUST US TO HANDLE
SAVINGS OF OVER $150,000,000.

unlawful~

bodi~

harm to

commits 1njury to any person or mahcously damages the property of any

employee of the Company or of any member of his immediate

fami~

because such employee works,

or attempts to work during the strike, or for aiding or procuring any peBOn to do such an act. •
Any such acts will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.
The maximum reward payable in each instance described above is $35,000 and the total
amounts of rewards payable for all instances shall not exceed $140,000.
The Company reserves the right to determine the per$on or persons enlttled to the reward and

If you need ,, l o~fl y(&gt;u need someone you can
trust Whn tc\cr the .tmount you need
City Loon Is n dlifcrcm ki nd of Ia '"
campnny We hnnJ\c snvi"R' roo If pco1Jic
trUSt \I S to Ill On 1).t~.: their S!t\ 111RS you k110w
yo u l:r\11 tm !l l IH 10 hnndlc ;. ou r lo w
Whor make~ '" a d1fferent kind of

the proportion•te amount of such reward to which each is entitled in uch conviction .

lo m comp tny, m ~Lk••!l; us .a hetter kmd of

loan comp~tn' .

,z) E Mnin St
j

J

l'

•'•
r

• 992-2171

•

·~ ''

\

�! - rhe Dally tlcnflnel, Mlddlrport-l'omeroy 0 July 11 1971

1

~. Phil pitcher the
·Haldeman, ·like Ehrlich man, supports Mr. Nixon ,."".!

fht·D.nh St•ntlnd Muldlt•purtl'onhru\ 0

S~ JANE DENISON
WASHING !'ON 1UP I) - Th~

Berlin Wall, !he Senate
Watergate Comnutt"" d1scov
ered Monday wears a gray
.sllit and cr~sply starched sh1rt
and stands foresquare for
R1cfiord NIXon and the belief
he 1s mnocent of scandal
Back to back the two most
formidable men mNIXon's f~rst
four years-John E Ehrhch
1pan and H R Haldemangave the senators and the
Arner1can v1ewmg public a
close look at these men behmd
the President
DISplaying the quahhes that
earned them the collective
name of "the Berlm Wall"
among White House ms1ders,
Haldeman and Ehrllchman
were cool, prec1se, steely
Ehrllclunan, . wrappmg up

·-

luh

l1 t•IJ '

five da) s of testunony compia med he h 111 luld no t hance
to ra1se a vo1ce for the
President
tlaldeman, JUS!
begum1ng Ius turn ra1sed h1s
vo1ce at the outset'-StuMmg
the comm1ttee by revealmg he
had hstened to two of U1e secret
wpes that Nll&lt;on has demed
both the senators an~ Special
Watergate Prosecutor Ar·
ch1bal Cox
He sa•d the !apes- made of
conversations N1xon had with
White House counsel John W
Dean III last Sept 15 and on
March 21 this year- refute
Dean's allegations that the
President was at least aware of
efforts to hush up h1gh-level
mvolvement m the Watergate
buggmg plot
I am convmced that the

Presulent had no n\\ nrrm•!u;

(lf

any such acts until March of
th••)' ar I!.Jidcmltll sa•d 111 .t
94-page opemng sllltcment tlull
took h1m some iwo hours to
read
Thequesuomng or Haldeman
begms toMy and IS hkely to
last the rest of the week
Bone-weary and nundful that
their hearmgs are far behmd
schedule the comm1ttee voted
to take a break after hearmg
just seven more Wllnessesserubbmg at least temporanly
the scheduled appearances of a
half-&lt;lozen more m the "Watergate phase" of 1ls probe into
alleged m•sconduct durmg the
1972 presidential campa1gn
Postponed was a !mal dec1
s1on on bow-and when-best
to file su1t agamst NIXon
seekmg to force hun to release

tht• st• crct
tapt: s ,uuJ
prc&gt;ulcntlnl P•I(JCr&gt; that
presiUnably &lt;'Ould p1 ove 01
disprove Ius knowledge of the
scandal The su1t, triggered by
NIXon's r•fusal to &lt;1,0mply w1th
comm1ttee subpoenas for the
materml, was expected to be
f1led sometune th1s week
The push for 'court action was
heightened by Haldeman's dis
closure that he had listened to
two of the tapes- one of them
as recently as this month m the
pnvacy of his own home, more
than two months after he left
his powerful pos1t1on as White
House ch1ef of staff
He sa1d the President
authorized him to rev1ew the
tapes and report to him on their
contents
' It's strange that Mr Haldeman can hear the tapes but the

Panel says 1984ish fears justified
ByCRAIGA PALMER
WASHINGTON (UPI )
C1tizen surveillance was so
e:(j)anded while John N Mitchell was attorney general as
to Justify fears about a 1984·
type American soc1ety, a
gqvernment adv1sory panel
sa1a today
'l'he panel, in a report to the
Department of Health,
Education and Welfare
(HEW), recommended extensive restramts on operation
of computer data banks con·
l!Unmg mformatlon about
rndlvlduals
It also urged curbs on what 1t
called a dangerous dr1ft toward

•

-

•

use of SoCial Secur1ty niUnbers
as standard umversal Identifiers
The group made several
references to the highly con.
trolled type of society dep1~ted
by novelist George Orwell In
h1s book ' 1964 " And m a
statement summanz1ng the
report, HEW also made
mention of fears of Orwellian
type surveillance of Citizens
Citing M1tchell by name, the
report on ' Records,

Com~

pulers and the R1ghts of
Citizens" sa1d hiS maJor goals
while m off1ce - frqm early
1969 to mld-1972 - were to
strengthen the law en-

Salon recognized
(Continued from Page 1)
Elected delegates at large to
the national convenf!on were

Mrs Mar1m and Mrs Evallne
Berkley Delegates are Mrs
M1er Mrs V1otet Alchholz,
Dons Stannff, and Mrs Myr-tle
Walker of Racme The alter
nates

are

Mrs

Bernice

Christensen, Mrs Ann Me
Cudden Mrs Hazel Ell•off
and Mrs Mary Jane Patro
A, reception honoring Mrs
Mier was held immediately
following her Installation as
deportementat chapeau
Flowers gifts, and the chapeau
wings wer-e presented to her

one from Mrs M1er who noted
that Oh10 was goal on part
nershlp for the past year Mrs•

Huston noted that 30 partners
have d1ed dur~ng the past year

and she concluded her report
by presentrng a book of prayers

to Mrs Berkley
Mrs Glaub noted that 01110

has one new salon

L1ckmg

County She further reported
that Meigs County Salon gave
S100 to the Natural JewiSh
Hospital In the name of Mrs
Marlin Mrs Cihla unable to
attend due to 1llness senr
thanks to the color bearers,
Winners 10 the parodies Donna Pal Mrs Grace Shade.
presented followmg a dutch Mrs Helen Bolllngs, and Mrs
: • supper on the opening night of Donna Chnst1an
1he marche were won by
Mrs Marlin Area Dch1ldren
Franklin 'County, f~rsl and youth cha1rman reported
Summit County second and that 16,315 children have been
\. Cr.awtord third place A asmled and that $47 204 24 has
L reception was also held that been spent 1n the work The
•

evening for Mrs Evallne
Berkley
1mmed1ate past
chapeau

~

,'

Mrs Martin presided at the
departementat chapeau passe

'

breakfast extendmg a welcome

~

'

:}

•
•
~
•

arrangements for the break

••'

..
~

,

r.

I

•
I '
~
t

•
:

•

"

~
\
~
i

t

t.:•
'

~
..

.,{

~}

Mary Martm national pquv lor
member
Mrs
Martin
presented a resume of the

Reports were qlven lncludmg

nurses scholarship fund and a
certificate of ment for having ...

years

WIN AT BRIDGE

The right lead, down 1100
31

.K

+J965

• 32
+AKJI08 5

+K4
., AQJI062
• Q85
+63

EAST ID)

+A1072

,97 3
t AKJ 10
+ 72

SOUTH

••

luncheon in the Big AI room

placed forst m the state In
h1story of the Eight and Forty payment of dues ThiS latter
ancf read a poem
'My award has been won by the
Friend
Meigs Salon the past eight

WEST

!:

10::. :«:-~ ,v , v:..-=x: .. ..

..

~

These developments, when
v1ewed m conJunCtiOn w1th the
new surveillance technology
funded by LEAA {the Jushce
Department's Law En
for~~ment Assistance Ad·
m•mstratwn) grants and the
natl~hal• computeriZed file on
cnlnlnal offenders, greatly
mcrease the capability of the
government to monltor 11 the
actiVIties of all c1hzens and to
step m to prevent or pun1sh
those actiVIties where 11
chooses to do so,'" the report
sa1d
"The new cnmmal JUStice
mformallon network can be
used Ill COnJUnCtiOn Wllh the
vast government and pr~vate
computer dossiers bemg
complied by credit bureaus,
msurance compames, welfare
agencies menial health umts
and others

.'

~

y.....

'

'

Generation Rap

~:

'

By Helm and Sut; \:loUd

%

'

I asked someone how an "adult" book store or movie house IS
different from the ordmary, an&lt;IJ)e sa1d, "That's where the dirty
stuff 15

"

o4

Isn't that kmd of a slam at adults' - ALWAYS THINKING
AT
You started ME thmking also
To a Child, the word "adult" could eas1ly mean "dirty" or
"bad" Why' Well, there's an adult book store Why IS 11 for
d 1 ' Bee
Jls
a u ts
ause 11 se dirty stuff An 'adults only" mov1e
(everyone knows) IS a d1rty movie The root word of "adultery"
IS • adult,' and that's always been bad too
lmagme bemg a child who IS told not to go mto an adult book
store because1t ISadirtybookstore He may f1gure he'll grow up
to be a "dirty"' _ SUE

+++

+Q83
., 854
• 9761
+Q94

Wcol

.
None vulnerable
Norah
Easl South
Dble

It

Pass
I'
Dbte Pass
Pass
Openmg lead-'1 A

Pass

INT.

Pass

~

~ By Oswald &amp; Jamu Jacoby
North s double of one heart
was one of thos~ match point
duplicate b1ds H1s parlner JUSt
mighl have four spades and he
...• wanted to g1ve h1m a chance to
bid them
•
South s one no-trump was
~ one of those b1ds from fnght
: He d1dn t want to pass one
r
heart doubled and watch de·
: clarer score overtricks and he
d1dn I want to bid a three card
• suit Of course, the least harm·
ful of the vanous b1ds at h1s
• • 4ilposal would have been one

i...
'

4

t

lpllde •.,

Had n. bid that, West would

bave reached four hearts and

'!oc

+++
ADDED THOUGHT Maybe by the lime the next crop of
young people come along, hard core pornograpi)y will~ve gone
out of style After all, 1t gets dull pretty fast, nght? And, hes1des,
11 s mainly anti-female, portraymg women as bramless, wlllrng
slaves
only
useful m fulf11lmg male fantas1es • •Liberattonlsts
•
l
won't stand still for thiS sort of thing long, smce they now
recogmze all the chauVImst Implications - HELEN AND SUE

+++

made tl As 1t was, West doubled one no trump
North passed hopefullv He
though! South had some sort of
stoppers m the red su1ts and
that ma ybe hiS clubs would
produce s1x tricks
If West had led the queen of
hearts as many players m•ght
have South would have been a

~~~~'::ou?t!:,~ih! f:~~f~~~~~

&amp; THINGS

Does "Adult" Mean "Dirty""
Rap

Helen and Sue
I'm glad you prmted the rebuttal to Unborn Child's D1ary"
The R1ghtto Life groups are very act1ve m trymg to save life
before b1rth, but what do they do to help the child after he has
,
arrived m a home that d1dn t want him'
I worked last semester on a term paper about abused
children, and the way these children suffer would be incomprehensible to the average person Worst part is what we
read and hear about IS only the tip of the Iceberg Child abuse IS
much 'Po~~ preval.~nt than we'd like to believe, and mvolves
otherwise normal people who have too many children and too
many problems
The whole p1cture IS much more complicated than numbers
of children in.a family, still, forcmg a woman to bear a ch1ld she
does not want IS running the riSk of forcing a life of despair and
pain on an mnocent child If he could speak, would he thank us for
defendmg that "right"? - N P A
,

and 81 x clubs would follow
qu1ckly afterwards
West d1d lead a heart but he
saw no reason not to start With
the ace He had plenty of reentries for later on and he wanted
to hold the first tnck
After that slar t East and
West had no tr9uble runmng off
12 tricks for plus 1100 and a top Dear Rap
score
The girl I want to marry Is m pi!ys1cal danger from her
(NEWSF'A.PEA ENTERPAtSEASSN I
parents They beat her and have threatened to kill her She hll!l
marks and bruises on her face, back and legs Her mother grabs
herby theha1rand uses a belton her
The bidding has been,
An example last week she and her father were In the
West
Norah
East
South
grocery store and he slapped her face four or fiVe llmes because
abe didn't know if there was any salt at home! They blame her
' for everything that goes wrong
My glrlls seared and nervous all the time She's 18, 1m 18,
and we've been g01ng together for two years, when she's allowed
to get out wh1ch 1sn 't often
They 'd never allow us to get married Is there some way I
can'save her ' - LOVING AND WORRIED BOYFRIEND

LA¢B:1:1•!M&gt;.fitU

1.

Lear LWB
If your girl can )li'Ove cruelty (brulseS might convmce the
Welfare Office) st1t! could be placed m a foster home Is she
desperate enough to make a complaint' - HELEN ANh SUE

top~

-

.

Adults Everywhere
Now here's a mce lively protest for you 1 Why should our
American Legion Aux 111ary carried out In the h1ve cen
label be made synonymous w•th "d~rty, ' We 're blamed
department preSident Galen terpiece and favors
enough already without THAT' ' ""' ~· • "'
Houser outgo1ng commander
In add1hon to the awards
If adult movie houses and book stores don t get another
of the Amen can Leg 1on David above Meigs County Salon
Cropper
New American rece1ved an honorable men11o.o
name, perhaps we'llsoon hear our kids sa)'lng, 'Oh, well, when I
L-egion commander and Mrs for a 1100 contrlbuhon !0 tHe: 'Srowupl'll be dirty enough tound~taitd l " - HELEN

.

(

A thought for the day
Amencan wn ter Henry Thoreau sa1d, 'It takes two to
speak the truth, one to speak
the other to hear "

repor-t on cystic fibrosis and
tuberculosts work showed

Mrs Berkley was mll•aled •nlo
fast In 1974
The Marthe opened with the club A g1fl of S100 to the
Mrs Berkley pres•dlng A National Jewish Hospital In
welcome was given by Mrs
Denver for cystic f1brosrs and
Patro conventlon chairman'" tuberculoSis research In the
with Mrs Me~r giving the name ot Dr Sanford Avner a
reponse A total of 188 were pedlatrlctan there formerly of
reg1sfered
lntroducet:l were Gall ipolis was made by the
Mr~
Helen Sloan national group
executive comm1ttee member
For the decorations for the
of the Amer~can Legion luncheon Nlrs Marton used a
Auxiliary , Mrs Nancy Sa/lot, bumble bee theme which was

NORTH

••
•

bf Mrs Eleanor Ullum stands
a 1848 50 Calherme Baker s

expenditures of $9 731 62 and
to Mrs Erma Reese of Camp also noted that 5 700 Betty
bell, Calif one of the guests at Crocker coupons for hosp•lal
the ccnvehf1on Mrs Esther equ1pmenl has been collected
Edgar and Mrs Marlin were
Mrs Martin had charge of
appointed
to
handle the annual chapeau passe

;

I

scholarship fund as reported

forcement capability of the
federal government and to
mcrease the powers of pollee
and prosecutors at all levels
"To th~,U~n(he greatly ex
panded'federal surveillance of
Citizens thought to be threats to
mternal secur~ty, jusllfymg h1s
action on the theory that the
executive has mherent, pnd
discretionary power to protect
Itself," the report sa1d
He made aggressive use of
existing laws and sought and
obtamed .., §l§lllflcant new
leg1slatwn to arm police and
prosecutors with expanded
authority to mom tor md1v1dual
conduct m order to prevent or
punish potential cnmes "
Act1v111es c1led " under
Mitchell's leadershtp" m
eluded such thmgs as greater
federal wiretapping,
prevenhve detention of
suspects, authority for pollee to
enter homes Without warnmg
(the so-c~tl!.,.ed no-knock law)
and gtvmg judges power to
1m pose greatly expanded
sentences for ' dangerous
spemal offenders "

his aide, Gordon Strachan, to ''contain" the WotorKu tu tl• lil (lerlod, Dean •~~Sureq us
destroy sensitive documents problem lo "rtodu c adverso U1at there was absolutely nq
after the June t7, 1972 bugging political and public11y full evidence that anyone In the
White House had been Involved
arrests, of approving the OIJL I I
In Watergate In any way"
project to raise money for the
Echoed Ehrllchman "On at
Both Haldeman and Ehrlichseven original defendants, or of
hearing Dean and Nixon man- who was Nixon s chief least c•ght occasions the
The crew-cut Haldeman, discuss the money and execu- domestic affairs adviser-Bifid President made that request "
Ehrllchman's final day
wearing a gray &gt;WI and white tive clemency at a March 13 the President had tried repeal·
shirt, quickly bore out his meeting
edly to get tbe full facts about before the committee was an
lawyer's predictlon Like Ehr·
- Acknowledged that he did the scandal but was thwarted acnmonlous one, sparked by
llchman, whose gray swt was approve siphoning *-15(),000 in repeatedly, primarily by Dean repeated clashes with his lnunrumpled and blue shift cash from the Nixon Cllmpaign
"The President ra!Bed ques- lcrrogators - primarily chief
unw1lled after a fmal four for private White House opera- tions as to the facts of committee counsel Samuel
hours under the hot television tions, Including support of Gov Watergate !tom lime to time Dash
He accused Dash of "em·
hghts, Haldeman disavowed George C Wallace's ~uber­ during the period of June
belllshlng"
and "festooning"
any personal wrongdoing and natorlal pr11118ry opponent and through the election," Haldeattempted to pm most of the of pobllcal "pranks" by man said • HIS mteresl con- his questions with op~~Uons and
blame for the scandal on Dean Donald H Segretti, and that Sistently was to get the facts interrupting hlm before he
" Dean moved 1n Im- Ute White House sought to and get them out throughout could answer
•
mediately after the Incident as
sort of the Watergate project
officer m the Wh1te House ,"
Haldeman sa1d "Dean kept
Ehrlichman and me posted
from time to lime on
topaz and lots more You II be amazed at the
developments and, through us,
BY J!CK O'BRIAN
rich effect of many an 10expenslve stone
the President He apparently
THE WELL-SPENT VACATION
Gucc! s of Italy has mstalled its rich,
did not keep us fully posted and
NEW YORK (KFS) - Yesterday the big
1t now appears he d1d not keep stores, today the smaller shops Tiffany s and beautiful merchandiSe, mostly leather, mto
us accurately posted
(Qtier's aren't huge by Macy's-Bioomlngdale three separate locations 111 one 5th Ave block"{The President) was • standards burtoo big to be mcluded among the at the corner of 5th and 54th St , farther north in
relying primarily on one man, "little shops" which summon a VISitor s Ill· the same block In the St Regis Hotel building
John Dean, who has admitted teres! Both Tiffany and Cartier need no ex- and the third lns1de the St RegiS lobby Gucci
that he was a major par- planahon here: we've patroniZed both, know merchandise 1s fantastically fine, extremely
tlc1pant m the Illegal and''' they have 1super1or merchandise and ex- expensive, everythmg the best - except the
Improper cover-up, a fact traordmanly expert sales folk, so we pass on to sales help, a heavy proportion V(lth Italian
accents and a manner totally unlike European
anknown to the PreSident until timer prenuses
sales staffs You may have heard comedienne
March, 1973 •
Arthur King on Madison Ave near 59th St
Joan Rivers on the Tonight Show belabor the
I
' designs h1s own jewelry, unusualm the extreme
salespeople
at Guec1's m New York - and she
' Tickmg off the many allega- without touching the grotesque Artistic, beardlions agamst him-prunarlly ed, enthusiastic to the pomt of carbonation, was hllanously correct They practice the ageby Dean-Haldeman
Arthur King's baubles are famous m the select old bad""i'les paradox of plainly working as
- Demed havmg any groups, it's plain nothing he does can be turned sales help while lrymg to unpress customers
'knowledge of or Involvement out on an aS.!Iembly lme, everythmg totally that they are above 11 - and you II doesn't
m the plannmg or execution" of mdiVIdually designed and executed, you won't work The best shopgals we've encountered are
the buggrng of Democratic meet your jeweled double wh1ch can happen the young lad1es of considerable breedmg and
party headquarters, asking the even to Tiffany or Cartier customers BoriS, even some affluence anx1ous to work rather
CIA to cover up the break·m or further along Madison Ave m the 60s IS another than loll m the ch1c luncheon spots and bars ,
to take respons1bil1ty for 11, successfully unconforming Jewelry deSigner Gucc1's suggest the help has taken a chance to
bemg familiar w1th the With a distinctly p~rsonal style Both Boris and see New York while resenting the Intrusion of
work But the merchandise, if you get past the
"plwnbers" squad of Whlre King are expensive
House secret agents playmg a
Still gem • happy but w1sh some- bad manners and drab attitude of the help, Is the
best Add Caterrna Valente, great mternat10nal
prunary role In the i972 Nixon thmg less wallet • cnpphng' Try
campa1gn, or knowing that Jeb Atltro Minerals at 155 E 34th St , slar ,to the list of anti N Y Guccl's Caterma 1s
Stuart Magruder, the deputy dubbed "Topkapl of 34th St " lis Gallery of a personal fnend of owner Gucm and after
campa1gn manager, was Gems rans a price gamut from the miraculously several bitter brushes w1th theN Y personnel,
comnutting perJury
mexpens1ve to the most Along w1th the rubles, adviSed the owner she'd never enter lis doors
-Said he had "no recollec- sapphires, emeralds, you'll fmd senu-prec1ous again - m N Y S1gnor Gucc1 tried to correct
lion" of seemg the fruits of tije bargains 1n opals, malach1re, rhndochros1te, the Ill manners, by our observation, plamly he
Watergate operation , oftelltJ)g lapis, tourmaline, rock crystal, rose quartz, fa1led
l nlllf' \1 ' tt.'(t tannot hear them,"
mused chAirllllln Sam J Ervin,
D-N C , refusmg to accept
Haldeman's plea that he was
IUlder preSidential orders not
to disclose what was 111 them

BY PAUL CRABTREE

Television Log
t}

TUESDAY, JULY J1 1973
6 00 - News3 4"5 10-13 15 Trul~orConseq 6 SesameS! 20
Around the Bend 33
6 30 - News3 4 6, 8 10, 15 I Dream of Jeann1e 13 Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33
7 00 - WHat s My Lme 8 I ve Got A Secret 13 Etec Co 20
Beat the Clock 4 News 6 10 Untamed World 13 Truth or
Conseq 3 L1vmg 33 Lee Trevino s Golf tor Swingers 15

I'm gomg to utter some words of praiSe today for a televisiOn 7 30- To Tell the Truth 6 Price IS R1ght 8 10 Beat the Clock
13 This ls Your L1fe 3 Corcus 4 RFD 20 Charles Blairs
program that 1s genumely remarkable - "Gunsmoke "
Belter World 15 Cancer Life or Death 33
CBS this week Is windmg up a rerun of a three-part episode 8 00 - Movoe The Alamo 3 4 TemperaturesRislng6 13
that welcomed Doc Adams) (Milburn Stone) back to the show 8 30 - Hawa11 Five 0 8 Mov1e The Weekend Nun 6 13
Changmg Mus1c 20
after he suffered a very real heart attack, and although I am no 9 00
- International Performance 20 33
longer an ardent viewer of Matt Dillon and Co , I tuned 11 111 and 9 30 - V•rg1n1an B Movie The Woman Hunter" 10
was Impressed, for about the 800ih time, by Ute professiOnalism 10 00 - Marcus Welby MD 6 13 News 20 NBC Reports 3 4
15
and credib1hty of this longest-I"Uilllmg of all TV Westerns
1100 - News 3 4 8 13 15
It ISII't great drama The actors, indiVIdually, aren't out- 11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Comedy Concert 6 13 Mov1es
The Face of Fear 8 Su1c1de Commandos 10
standmg Some of the plots are flimsy contrivances, to be kind
1 00 - Perry Mason 4 News 13
But nux them all together, and some sort of subtle chenustry 2 00 - Your Health 4
takes place, an:l 1t becomes •easy to anderstand why "GunWEDNESDAY,AUG I 1973
smoke" enJoys 1ts seenungly-endless run of popularity on CBS
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
It's JUS! one whale of a show that has undergone great changes m 6 15 - Farmt•me lU English 3
almost a quarter-century of eXIstence, yet seems to mamtam a 6 20- Farm Report 13
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
continUity that 1s appeallll8
6 30 - Columbus Today 4 Bible Answers 8 Urban League 10
.t¢"i1i:.""..... d:!.•
The Story 13
00Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 News 6 Jeffs Collie 13
7
How many programs, of any sort, could undergo the 7 30 - Romper
Room 6 R,ocky &amp; Bullwlnkle 13 Popeye tO
following evolution'
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame Sf 33
Lassie 6
"?ansmoke" was born on radi~ ,V!" TV,!'IId,was popular, 8 30Jack LaLanne 13 New Zoo Revue 6 Romper Room 8
but not spectacular, m Its early yeal'll
• •· •
8 55- News 13
Transferred to the home screen, things began to happen Jim 9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Phil Donahue 15 What Every Woman
Wants to Know 3 Concentration 6 Merv Gnffln 8 Friendly
Arness, one of show busmesa' noted recluses, appeared m what
Juncl1on 10 Ben Casey 13
became known as an "adult" Wea1Cl11
,
9 30 - Etec Co 33 To Tell The Truth 3 Jeopardy 6
That word "adult" has ap entirely diHerent meaning today 10 00 - Dinah Shore 3 15, Wild Wll~ West 6 Jokers Wild 8 10
Dick Van Dyke IS
than 1t had m the early Fifties Then, it ll)eant Uta! the star didn't 10 30Baftle3 4 15 SlOOOOPyramld8 10 Spill Second 13
always win the fight, nor carry a guitar and slx-fihooter w1th 11 00 - Sale of the Genlury 3 15 Love Amencan Style 6
Gambit 8 10 Password 13
equal aplonb, nor r1de the range for days without getting dirty,
11
30
- Hollywood Squares 4 13 Love of Life 8 10 Bewitched 6
bearded, hot and pretty darned s1ck of It all
13 Sesame 51 20
II 55 - CBS News 81Dan Imel s World 10
12 00 - Jeopardy 3 15 Password 6 Bob Braun s 50 50 Club 4
In other words, Marshal Dillon was a real human bemg, and
News \3 Contact S News 10
12
30
SearchlorTomorrow8 10 3 Ws 3 15
so was the cast he worked with They marked the end for the 12 55 -- Spi11Second6
NBC News 3 15
antiseptic, utopian antics of the Roy Roger!Hiene Autry genre,
I 00 - News Weather Soorfs 3 All Mv Children 6 IS Not For
and spawned a whole new craze for western shows With
Women Only 15 Green Acres 10 If's Your Bel s Chan Ese
Way 33
believable people and plots
I 20 - Fashions In Sewing 3
(GIVIng credit where due, there's some evidence that the 1 30 - 3 On A Match 3 4, 15 As The World Turns s 10 ' Bowling
6 These Are Our Children 33
success of the film, "lfigh Noon," lltSplred "Gunsmoke" to take
2
00
- Days ot our Lives 3 4 15 Bowling 6 Newlywed Game
on a more mature look when it moved to the TV screen )
13 Mike Douglass 6 Guiding Light 8 10 International
Since then, the show has undergone evolution, but never
Performance 33
2 30 - Dating Game 13 Doctors3 4 15 Edge of NightS 10
revolution
- Another World 3 15 General Hospital 6 13 RFD 20
When Dennis Weaver who had been an outstanding semi- 3 00Price
Is Righi S 10 Tommy Johnson and Son 33
comic Sidekick to Arness as Chester Goode, decided to avoid a 3 30 ~ Return of Peyton Place 3 4 15 One Life to Live 6 13
Secret Storm 10 This Week 20 Hollywood Talking 81 Phl't
life of typecasting, he wu replaced by a character (borrowed
Donahue 4 Time For Timothy 33
from the equally-good "Have Gun, Will Travel"),capably played 4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 20 33 Love
by Ken Curtis
American Style 13 Merv Griffin 4 Huckleberry Hound &amp;
Yogi Bear6 Secret Storm 8 Movie' Convicted 10
4 30 - Pelf/coal Junction 3 Marv Grlftln 4 F Troop6 Abbott &amp;
When the show shifted from a haU-bour to an hour, It unCostello 8 My Lillie Margie 15 Daktarl 13
'
5
00
Mr
Rogers
33
Bonanzo
3
4
Hazel
8
Andy
Griffin
15
derwent a period where principles seemed almoet secondary
Here Comes The Brides 6
to the stories being presented (something lilnilar to "Wagon 5 so - Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 3 Beverly Hillbillies 8
Train"), but eventually a balance was restored, and the very
Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Trails West 13
5
55
- Earl Nightingale t!
honest characters of Matt, Kilty, Festus and Doc resumed a
6 00 - Truth or Con seq 6 News 3 4 S 10 15 Sesame St 30
roughly-equal balance with the plots
~ltlas , Yoga and You 33
,
All the years rolled by, there was no attempt made to htde tile 6 30 - News 3, 4 6 S 10 15, I Dream ot Jeannie 13 Zoom 33
Inevitable aging of the stars Amanda Blake, one of the moet 7 OQ - News 6 10 What s My Line 8 Truth or Cqns~q 31 Beat
The Clock 4 Anything You Can Do 1l Elec Co 20 ; Saint lS I
beautiful women ever to appear on the screen, doesn't try to look
Book Beat 33
under 30 to her everlasting credit Ditto for Mat, Do&lt;: and aU the 7 30 - To Tell The TruthS The JudgeiO Pollee Surgeon 3 41
Beat The Clock 13 Andy Griffith IS How Do Your Children
rest
Grow 20 Episode Action 33
And 110 "Gu11811loke" beCIIme a minor American Institution, 8 00 - Adam 12 3 41 Baseball 15 Newsmaker 73 13 Whllt 1
Big ldea7 20 33 Thicker Than water 6 Sonny &amp; Cher 8,
and 110on will roll Into another sea1011
The high and the rnlMhty at CBS, which backed off from an S 30 - &amp;onacek 3 41 Movie 'The Devil and Min Sarah 6 13
annoUilCed declllon to cancel the show a few years back u an 9 00 - Dan A1J9ust S lO Mualca t Encounter 20 33
outraged cltl!enry roae up in anger, are probably very glad they 9 30 - Man Builds Man Destroy• 20 33
10 00 - News 20 Owen Maroha/16 13 s,.,rch 3 4 I Cannon s 0;
kept It around
First Edition - Tell II All 33
And even If I am now only a "seldom" watcher of Matt •nd 11 00 - Newa3 4 6 8 10, 13 15
- Johnny Carson l 4 t! 1 Or Jeky ll &amp; Mr Hyde 6 13 1
friend~ no longer dashing to the set each week to see the latest 11 30
Movi~t Tne Patsy' S • Brigham Young 10
thriller, I'm glad It's still around too It we~then wonderfully 1 «1 - Perry Mason ~~ Newa 13
'
ZIOO - News 4,
well
,

Jt•

1

,
1

"

..
,
,
-

•
,
,
,
,
"
'
"
"

Pirates Sports

By FRED McMANE
UPI Sporla Writer
Steve Carlton has rmally
found It, and young Steve
Rogers still hasn't lost It
Carlton, the National League's Cy Young awurd winner
last year when he won '1:1 and
lost 10 for the Phlladelphw
Philltea, has been struggling
continually this seasop in an
effort to dupllcate his performance of last year, but his long
walt may be over
Carlton turned in what
Manager Danny Ozark termed
"hls best pitched game of the
year" Monday night when he
stopped the Pitt.sburgh Plra l!'ll
on SIX hits whtle pltchtng the
Phillles to a I~ triumph The
lanky southpaw struck out 10
and walked only one In postmg
his third shutout of the year
and besting Bob Moose
"Tomght I finally foand my
groove because I was commg
on top harder," sa1d Carlton
"I had my breaking ball
workmg and my control was
good My sl1der was going
down hard I've been trymg to
fllld the groove all year and
I've finally got 11 "
The other Steve- Rogershas only been around smce
mld.July but IS fast becoming
the most unpressive young
pitcher m the National League
Rogers, only 23, turned 111 his
second straight shutout and
third stellar performance m a
row Monday mghl when he
tamed the New York Mets on
seven hils while p1tchmg the
Montreal Expos to a 1~ victory
m the f~rst game or a
doubleheader The Expos also
won the rughtcap, 5-2, m 10
llllllllgs
Rogers, who had a one-hitter
aga1nst the Philadelphia Phil·

lie• m his last start and allowed
only two run• In eight IMmgs
m hiS only other outing, is a llfoot-2, 177-pounder w1th a
rising fastball that Mets'
batters had trouble meeting
solidly
In the only olher scheduled
NL games, l.&lt;Js Angeles beat
San t:'rancillco, 5-2, AUanta
whipped Houston 7-3 and
Ch1cago topped St Louts, 3-1
J1m Bibby tossed a no-hitter
as Texas blanked Oakland, IHJ,
Boston edged New York, 4-3,
DetrOit beat Baltimore, 4-3,
and Chicago whipped Minnesota, 9 I, In the only
Amencan League action
Bob Boone smgled home the
game's only run in the Plull1es'
tnumph over the Pirates
Boone's hit came in the fourth
IMmg and scored Greg Luzmski, who had smgled and
moved to second on a walk to
Del Unser
Ken Singleton, an ex Met,
delivered the wmnrng hit for
the Expos m the nmth mnmg of
the opener when he doubled
home Ron Hunt, who had
opened the mmng with a single
and moved to second on a
sacnf•ce
In t~e rughtcap, John Boccabella drilled a three-run
double m the loth to g1ve the
Expos a sweep of the twlnbtll
Mike Marshall, who worked
four mmngs in relief, got credit
for hiS loth VIC!o,ry
Dave Lopes and Joe Fergu_JOn each homered for the
l)odgers m Ute1r triUmph over
the G1ants Lopes also drove in
another run with a single as he
supported the four-btl p1tchmg
of Claude Osteen Osteen, 12-5,
lost his shutout m the fourth
when Gary Matthews hit a tworun homer

·. Glover proves
skeptics wrong
pacified
BY JOE CARNICEU.l
0 J Sunpson IS expected to
UPI Sports Writer
R1ch Glover has begun to lake his f1rst real test with the
Buffalo Bills today after spendprove the skeptics wrong
Glover, who earned just mg nearly a week m the hopabout every honor available to Sital w1th a stomach v1rus
linemen as a star nuddle guard Simpson was the Amencan
for the Uruvers1ty of Nebraska Conference Player 6f the Year
last season, had h1s first taste last season
of a pro football tra1rung camp
Monday when he began work·
•ng out with the New York
G1ants And the Giants liked
what they saw
Despite his excellent college
credentials-be won both the The Middleport Little League
Outland Trophy and the LomAll-Star team bounced back
bardi Trophy as the nation's
from 1ts opemng round loss
outatanding lineman - Glover,
Sunday, wh1ppmg Weston, 4~.
atll-foot-1 and 242 pounds, wll!l
1n the Belpre All-Star tourconsidered .too small to play
the !me in the pros and not nament
Greg Becker and Mike Hlndy
agile enough to play
combmed to hold Weston to
linebacker
only 2 h1is , Becker g1vmg up I
But after one workout, Coach
hit m four mnmgs, wh1le Hlndy
Alex Webster was ready to
relieved hun In the fifth and
comm1t Glover, a secondround draft pick but the f1rst surrendered only I
Becker struck out 2 and
made by the Giants, to action
agamst the San D1ego walked only I, while Hmdy
Chargers m their pre-season fanned 3 and gave up 2 free
passes
opener Saturday night
R•ck Hovatter and Mark
"We'll probably use him
Saturday n1ght against the Venoy were the leadmg hitters
Chargers; Webster sa1d 'He for Middleport, slammlng
unpressed me out there today doubles, while Terry Gardner
He looked very strong and I'm
sure we'll be able to get him out
of some of the hab1ts he's m

Desk
By /Jentt y Fobes

"The G•ants' defense with a
middle guard Is just right for

me," Glover said "Sure, I
have a tough job m front of me
trying to beat out John Mendenhall He has experience
over me, but I feel that just as
soon as I get everything down,
I'll have a good chance "
Elsewhere In the Lralnlng
camps, San Diego Coach
Harland Svare said he may
oold veteran quarterback John
Unltas, obtained from BalUmore in the off-11eason, out of
prc-aeason activity
"I want him there In September.'' said Svarc UniiiL!I
has been complaining about
knee problems
Defensive end Elvin Bethea,
one of the few established stars
on lite Houston roster, slgnll\l a
three-year contract with the
Oilers Bethea hod become
dlegruntled and asked to be
traded in the off-lleason but
apparently
has
been
Peace Is no! made at the
council !able or by treaties
but In the hearls of men
Herber! Hoover
I

lly } REO DOWN
Ul'l Sport&amp; Writer
It took Jim Bibby !Ieven und
a half years to get from
Marlon, Va , In !he Appalachl~m League to the Texas
Rangers In the ••• weekumce
then, he'll become a no-hit
pitcher and the American
l.eague's newest star
The 28-year old, 6-foot-5, 230pound right-hander pitched the
f~rst no-hitter In the Rangers'
history aJW! the fourth of the AL
season Monday night when he
overpowered the Oakland A's,
IHJ, with a 13-strliroout perfor·
mance The Rangers had
acquired him from the St
Louis Cardinals on June 6 and
he immedllltely developed into

one of the AL's mO!lt effective
pitchers with one-hit, two-hit,
four-hit and flve-hlt perforlllant'Os m his fwr other victories for Texas,
B1bby gave up six walks but
allowed only two runners to
reach aecond and one to advance to third He was helped
by excellent defensive plays by
shortstop Jim Fregosl, center
fielder Vic Harris and
defensive shorllltop replacement Pete Mackantn
Steve Busby of the Kansas
C1ty Royall pitched the first
noh1tter of the AL season on
April 'Z1 and Nolan Ryan of Ute
California Angels pitched nohitters on May 15 aJW! -tuly 15

Afthough U1e football sea110n Ia r1ght around the corner, one
man m Meigs County Js looking ahead to and planning for the
1973-74 basketball •eason
Roger Brauer new head cage coach for the Marauders, has
been keepmg a close eye on the action thiS summer at the Me1gs
Jumor High gym, as several key prospects for thiS year's' squad
play m p1ck-up games
Brauer, whose mam program consists of fundamentals, hard
work and good condihonlll8, figures one of the main problems he
w1ll face m this, h1s f1rst year at Meigs, will be fmd1ng a big man
for the p1vot Brauer IS also a b1t diSappointed m fmdmg that few
kids can be seen playing basketball around town dur1ng these
I
summer months The Middleport summer cage league plays
every Sunday and Monday mghts, but most of these players are
e1ther from GallipoliS or have been graduated from Meigs
A native of Youngstown, Brauer began his playing career at
'
S!ruthers High School, before playrng freshman ball for Findlay
CHICAGO (UPI) - Roland had worked together on such
College HIS first coachmg job came at the northwestern Oh1o
college, where he coached the freshman team only two years Hemond, credited with engl. key trades as the acqubitlon of
neermg the trades that turned slugger Dick Allen, had been
after graduating
the Ch1cago White Sox mto Increasingly at odds with
In !950 he went to Urbana, 111 southwestern Ohio, and was
pennant contenders, has Holcomb over the handling of
named head football coach there m 1954 In 1961 he was appomted
moved
up from the persoMel contract and personnel mathead basketball coach, and coached both sports unhl!963 In one
four-year spree at Unbana, Qrauer's teams molded an 89-8 office to take over as the club's ters
general manager and VICe
record, Wlth1:3 district chlllnp10nsh1ps and one regwnal crown
pres1dent
The H11ltopper mentor was named UP! Ohio Coach of the Year m
The change was @noounced
1965
Monday by John AUyn, the Sox
When asked what type of offense he prefers - run ana gun,
owner,
who added he planned
pattern off~nse, or II combination thereof, Brauer replied that he
feels he'll have to wa1t and see what kmd of team he comes up to assume the dutles of ch1ef
w1th He did pomt out that the prospects he's seen so far have executive officer and take a
been qwck and aggressive which may give some md1cat1on of more active role in running the
which way he'll lean thiS.wmter.!lrauer also pomted out that he club,.hiiiiself
The new general manager
believes a good defense IS the key to a good offense, and conditioning ancf1undamentals will obviously be the mam starting replaces Stu Holcomb wbo quit
last week m a feud with
pomt when practiCe beglliS later thiS fall
LEGION NOTES--An area newspaper made a b1g boo- Hemond and Manager Chuck
boo m the cutlme of the picture 11 ran m Monday's paper Tanner
Hemond, who had been
following Athens' wm over Me1gs The pboto shows an Athens
presumed
m lrne to succeed
runner slidmg mto a base, and the cutlme declares that Me1gs
"He's checking
catcher M1ck Ash Is taggmg out Les Champlin of Athens Ftrst of Holcomb ever Since the latter's
all, whoever IllS that Is making the tag IS droppmg the ball resignation became known,
my expense
took
over
his
new
duties
bnSecondly, the fielder IS wearing while shoes, which g~ves some
account."
md1cat1on thalli may be third baseman Lou McKinney Frnally, medwtely Holcomb retired to
his
Flor1da
home
All the expense of Illness or
the fielder IS obviOusly wearmg a regular fielder's glove, not a
The
switch
follows
a
ser~es of
1n1ury plus household
catcher's null, and hll!l none of the regular catcher's protective
expenses
can be covered by
mjur•es to key players, which
apparel on One consolation 11 IS a good picture
health accident 1nsurance
comclded w!Ut the Sox' fall
with disability 1ncome
from f1rst place to fourth in the
from
the
GRID GRIND-Torught IS tpe official start of the 1973 Me1gs
American
League's
West
DiviMarauder footballcam)l!llgn with the annual meeting at the high
school begmnmg at 6 30 F1rst cond1tionmg dnll starts Sion Holcomb was blamed by
some for lettmg Rick
tomorrow, and then the first order of busmess when regular
pracllces begm Will be finding a quarterback to replace Reichardt and Mike Andrews
go m contract d1sputes,
graduated Andy \la ughan •
compounding the shortage of
DIAMOND DUST - Woolly Call, m a letter to the Sentinel,
fight-handed h1tters created by
I
says '!'The' Mlllgs
Pony Leagu~ went over great this year and we
mjur1es
,
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
are looking for more teams and a b1gger league next year I w1sh
Hemond and Tanner, who
to thank each of the.managm,J.l.ll!Pires, parents and fans for the
good JOb each and everyone did m helping our new league I also
wish' to thank Kenny Wiggins for keepmg thef1eld m tip-top shape
all ~eason long " Cllll•s president of the Me1gs Pony League and
one of the most successful managers m the area

Chicago makes
office change

Middleport stars
bounce back, 4-0

now"

Ranger no-hits A'.~

2-HOUR
CLEANING ,
(Upon' Request)

Inning on a grand slam h'Omer
by Jeff Burroughs followed by
a solo homer by Blll Sudakls
Burroughs has hit two grand
slams in the last five days- the
only grand slams in Texas'
history
Dick McAuliffe, Duke Sims
and J1m Northrup homered for
the Tigers and Mickey I.ollch
won his loth game with the
ninth-inning relief help ol John
Hiller, who earned his 22nd
save
The Red So~ dealt relief ace
Sparky Lyle of the Yankees his
sixth Joss when Rick Miller's
runth~nfllllg single drove in
Rico Petrocelli Petrocelli, who
hit a two-run bomer earlier In
the game, led off the ninth with
a single, moved to second on a
wild pitch by Lyle and went to
third on an Infield o~t The
Yankees had tted Ute score In
the lAlp of the ninth on Jilp Ray
Hart's two-run horner

Final Shipment of Season
- -, .:;r- Y• ..e•tone
'
\ 18"-'FHRIFTI-CUT
'

-'·

Ruggedly constructed
for long mowing life!

$5995

t'i!N lll1

WITH TMDEl

•Powerful 3 H P engme recotlal.arter

I

DowningChilds

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO'

AGENCY INC.

992-2094

•6 wheell

Your Complete Tire Center
P.omeroy,o.

606 E. Main

$35,000 REWARD

ThiS Week's Specoal

and H1ndy contributed smgles
Middleport's next game 111
the double • ellmmpl10n
tourney will be Saturday alo I
p m agamst the wmner of the
Pt Pleasant • V1enna game

Detroit defeated Baltbnore
4-3, In the nationally televised
game, Boston beat New York,
4 3, and Chicago downed
MiMesota, ~~. tn the other AL
games
National League scores were
Chicago 3St Loula 1, Montreal
over New York H) and ~2
Philadelphia 1 'Pittsburgh o:
Atlanta 7 Houston 3 and 1,os
Angeles 5 San Francisco 2
A native of Franklinton,
N c , Bibby broke in with
Marlon m 1965, spent 1966 and
1&amp;67 m military service, pitched Impressively in the New
York Met !ann system In 1968
and 1969 and then underwent
spinal surgery which sidelined
him for the entire 1970 season
He then got lost in the shuffle,
was traded to the Cardinals m
1972 and pitched spottily for
them this se11110n
The Rangers scored five runs
off loser VIda Blue in the f1rst

(For information leading to arrest and conviction)
USED CARS

69 FORD Fairlane

500
2 Door H.T.
V fl motor auto trans and

Central Operating Company offers to reward any person or persons furnishing to the Company,
or to any law enforcement agencies of the States of Ohio and West Virginia, or of the Federal

power sfeenng

•1295
Karr &amp; Van landt

'

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS,

You'll [Ike Our QualifY,

Government, or to the Sheriff of any county or to the Police of any municipality, information leadmg
direct~

to the arrest and conviction of any person willful~ or

malicious~

mjuring or destroying any of

Way of Domg Business

GMAC FINANCING
992 5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'TitS 00
Tll5 PM Sal

210 E 2nd
Pomeroy
Phone 992 5428

the Company's electrical operating equipment or facilities or who threatens
or who

USTUS
DLE
A
OF
$2,000.

PEOPLE TRUST US TO HANDLE
SAVINGS OF OVER $150,000,000.

unlawful~

bodi~

harm to

commits 1njury to any person or mahcously damages the property of any

employee of the Company or of any member of his immediate

fami~

because such employee works,

or attempts to work during the strike, or for aiding or procuring any peBOn to do such an act. •
Any such acts will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.
The maximum reward payable in each instance described above is $35,000 and the total
amounts of rewards payable for all instances shall not exceed $140,000.
The Company reserves the right to determine the per$on or persons enlttled to the reward and

If you need ,, l o~fl y(&gt;u need someone you can
trust Whn tc\cr the .tmount you need
City Loon Is n dlifcrcm ki nd of Ia '"
campnny We hnnJ\c snvi"R' roo If pco1Jic
trUSt \I S to Ill On 1).t~.: their S!t\ 111RS you k110w
yo u l:r\11 tm !l l IH 10 hnndlc ;. ou r lo w
Whor make~ '" a d1fferent kind of

the proportion•te amount of such reward to which each is entitled in uch conviction .

lo m comp tny, m ~Lk••!l; us .a hetter kmd of

loan comp~tn' .

,z) E Mnin St
j

J

l'

•'•
r

• 992-2171

•

·~ ''

\

�:
~ - Th&lt;.'

Daily·S.ntinel, Middlrpori-Pnnwroy. 0 .. July :ll. 1!17:1

• · ~~ ·ort ''
I ,.J.Il(

''

Maj' or League Results

Major League Leaders
By United Pren lnternalional

Leading Baiters

National league

ab r h ·pet.
Mot•.
LA
6l
714'
77 7" .346
N•llonal league
Sl. Louis
100 000 000 - 1 6 o Rose. Cin 104 414 72 140 .330
Chicago
300 000 OOx ..'- 3 9 0 Wa]son, Ho 107 397 73 131 .330
Rb!tsn,Phll 69 252 39 .so .317
Gibson 111 -101 and Simmons; MAddox,
SF 90 358 49 11 3 .31 6
lleuschel , LaRoche 181 and Goodsn.SF
90 341 34 107 .314
Hundloy . WP-Reuschel ( tl -8) .
Crdnal, Chi 97 351 57 110 .31 3
Mthews. SF 95 332 47 103 .310
list Go mel
Cedeno,
Ho '86 326 58 101 .310
Montreal
000 000 001 - 1 4 1
NEWYOHK (UP! ) - Right now, Bnb\l Ruth would be throwing
N~w,York
000 000 000- 0 7 0 Millan. NY 91 391 54 121 .309
·:, ~oger s (7 ~ 0 1 and Boccabella ; Crwfrd, LA 96 3/1 52 96 .309 one of hts arms around Hank Aaron, squeezing him inn bear hug
·
American League
:,,.!lack 17-141 and Hodges.
g ab r h pet . so lhe photographers could get themselves a good picture and
•
•
Carew.
Min
96
374 63 129 .345
'(2nd game)
Hrtn, Del 65 231 32 79 .342 slyly telling him to stick Atlanta for at least a million next year,
QO inn)
carry-over contract or not.
~treal 000 010 100 3- s .8 2 Blmbrg , NY 70 217 34 74 .341
'
May , Mil 100 405 62 134 .331
~'hal's the Babe Ruth I knew.
.
,.ew York 000 110 000 o-- 2 8 0 Murcr,
NY
IQ7
41~ sa 130 .313
He was always lOOper cent for the Individual, no matter who 11
• Renko, Marshall (71 and Dvs, Bit 83 337 32 lOS .312
iloccabella; McGraw, Parker Bmbry,
was,
and I'm sure he'd be rOI)ting for Aaron to break his home
Bit 70 212 42 66 .3li
!61. Capra (10) and Grole . WPD.Ain,
Chi
69
~ 245 39 76 .310
run record now .
Marshall (10 ~ 61 . LP-Capra (I ~
Otis, KC 102 404 71 122 .302
Publicly, anyway .
~Munso~ , NY97 334 54 101 .302
Privaiely ,&lt;it would be son1elhlng else again. Babe Ruth was as
Runs
Philadelphia 000 100 000- 1 s 0 NallonalHome
League
:
Stargell,
P,iltsburgh 000 000 000-0 6 0 Pitt 31; Evans, All 29 ; Bonds human_as ...well ...Hank Aaron. It's not hard to picture how'd he
·. Carllon (10-11) anij Boone ; SF
; Aaron,' All 27 ; Johnson: be feehng now and what he'd be saying to some of those in hill
Moose. Hernande z (8) and All 28
close circle.
.
25.
Sangulllen. LP-Moose (6.)0).
American League : Jackson,
"Hell, lf I knew that 30 years later some bum woold come along
24; Mayberry and Otis, KC
Atlanta · 211 102 000- 7 11 2 Oak
and break that 714 record of mine, I'd have hung around a little
21
;
Hou•ton
102 000 000- J 7 1 Hendrick, Clev 20 ; Bando, Oak longer and hit 600," Babe Ruth would be saying.
Schueler (6·6) and Casanova ;
The "bum" would be nothing personal against Hank Aaron.
Dierker, Crawford (31. Griffin 19.
Runs BaHed In
(6), Forsch 16), Upshaw (8)
League: Bench. Cin Babe Ruth used the term a lot . Oflen, even affectlonalely.
••
and Edwards. LP~ Dierker (0-1/. andNational
Stargell.
Pitt 77 ; Evans,
The . years have a way of trifling with your judgment
HRS-Evans (29th ), Agee (8th ),
'
Atl
74
;
Bonds
,
SF
70
;.
Watson
,
Tepe'dlno (3rdl. Watson (lOth ).
sometunes, b~t . even though nearly four decades have gone by
Hou 67.
San Fran. 000 200 000-2 4 1 American League: Mayberry, smce lhe last tune! saw him tap his bato.n th~plllle, bring it hack
KC 85 ; Jackson , Oak 83 ; up agam and \hen ~wing it in that classic style imitated by
Los Angeles 003 010 Olx- s 7 1 Murcer,
NY 71; Otis, KC 65 ; thoUSands but never really duplicated by anyone there isn't the
Bryant, Moffitt (7) and Mellon .- Chi
and Darwin, Ml nn
Rader; Osteen (12-5) and
slightest doubt in my mind that George Herma~ Ruth was the
62.
Ferguson . LP-Bryant 115-8) .
Pitching
.
greatest ballplayer I have ever seen. ·
HRS-Lopes (3rd), Ferguson
National league: Billingham ,
(15th) , Matthews (7th ).
He could run, he coulp field and he could hit. Lord, how he
Cin 15-6; Bryant, SF 15-8;
Osteen, LA and Seaver, NV. 12- could hit.
S; Sutton. LA 12-7. · ,
American league
Aim?st like clockwork, every day, you'd look in the paper and
Chicago
001 014 210 - 9 10 1 American league : Wood , Chi there 11 would be: home 11111--Ruth. Sometimes two
Minnesota 000 000 010 - I 8 1 20-14; Coleman, Det 16-8;
For many people today Babe Ruth is merely a' lege~d, only a
Bahnsen (14-10) and Brink- l;lunter, Oak 15-3; Singer, Cal
man ; Kaat, Corbin 16), camp- 15-7: Holtzman , Oak ll-9.
name.
bell (9) and Mitterwald. LPThe vast majority never have seen him perform, and those who
Kaat (11 · 101 . Hrs . Bradford
haven't Include Hank Aaron.
(7th), . Henderson (6th) Oliva
REDS'AT ATLANTA
(lOth).
.
'
But once you sa.w Ruth play, you never forgot him. He had a
ATLANTA (Ui?l) - The CinNew York 001 000 002- 3 6 2 cinnati Reds will be here to- way of sta!ing in your mind indeiibly, regardless of whether you
' ''
Bos.ton
020 010 001- 4 9 o
saw him hit a home run or strike out.
. Beene, Lyle (9) and Munson ; night for a doubleheader with
Every pitcher who was ever a home run victim of his
T1ant (13-9) and Fisk .·LP-Lyle the Atlanta Braves. . ·
remembers
him.
'
(4-6) . HRS-Petrocelli (13th)
Harper (11th), Hart (9\h) .
' .Cincinnati slated Ross
Says Fritz Ostermueller, of whom he hit No. 703, exac~ly 39
Grimsley, 10-6, and Fred
years
ago today:
·
Detroit
110 110 000- 4 8 1 Norman, 8-9, as probable
"How can anyone possibly forget Babe Ruth?"
Baltimore 100 000 002- 3 so starters against Jimmy
Loll~h , ' Hiller (9) and Sims;
I know I never will.
Jefferson, Jackson (5) and Freeman, 0.2, and Carl MorHe had a voice like cracked ice and the jolly, laughing
Etchebarren . WP-Lolich {10-10), ton, 11-8.
disposition
of Santa Claus, but he could get hill hack up too
LP-Je(ferson (3-3) . HRS.McAuHank Aaron, trying to at
ilffe (9th), Sims (8th), Northrup
He did with the late Jake Ruppert, who used to o~n t~ New
(6th), Etchebarren list). .
least tie Babe Ruth's all-time
York
Yankees .
•
career reoorl\ of 714 homers
Texas ;
500 000 001- 6 9 o
"Oammlt," he told him once, "don'lialk tome like a boy, I'm a
· Oakland
000 000 000- 0 0 2 this year, hasn 'I . pla,yed · in man and I wanna get paid like one." 1 ·
Bibby (5-4) and Billings; Blue three of the Braves' last five
Ruth was proud of the 15 years he put in with the Yankees but
(9-7) ~nd Fosse, Tenace (8) games. He sat out Monday
HRS-Burroughs (17th), Sudakl~
n,lght's 7-3 win over the bitter about the fact he never got a chance to manage them.
(71h ). ..
Not long before he died, he said to me .:
Houston Astros, but should
"The
Yankees gave me shoe ·polish. (Only he used another
return to the plate tonight.
•
word), and if it wasn't for the Ford Foundation I wouldn't even
: International
have a job now. "
'
McGRATH ON l'OP
•league Standings
~any people thought Babe Huth was an orphan. He wasn't.
By United Press International
PENNSVILLE, N.J. (UPI)·AmE!rican Division
I know who my.parents were," he said to me. "Only they were
'Mike McGrath, a southpaw
w
:
l . Pet. G. B.
so
poor
they had to send me to Ihis home in Baltimore when 1was
' .
from El Cerrito, Calif., heads a
Rochesler
60 · 48 .s56
Syracuse
54 52 .509 5
field of five bowlers going into seven."
52 55 .486 7'b the finals of the $47,500 Horne
. Pawtucket
When I asked him what his biggest thriU was, Ruth's answer-"
·. Toleda
4S 60 .429 13V,
was "that Root thing."
·
. ·
Box Office Open bowling tour~. National Division
He.meant calling his shot against Cub pitcher Charlie Root In
, Chatl.;,lon
~· ~ P~~o G.B. nament today.
.McGrath, who trailed by 133 the 19_32 Wo~ld S'eries. Huth said he pointed to the centerfield
Tidewater
57 45 .559 Ph
Peninsula • 55 40 .524 5
pins going into the semifinals wall, mdica~g he was going to hit the. ball over it and he did.
Richmond
39 67 .368 2Jlh Monday night, finished 265-175 Now Root sa1d that was absolute garbage. If Ruth had done
Monday'&gt; Re•ull&gt;
over Earl Anthony of Tacoma, ~methlng like lhat, pointed, he meant, he would have knocked
'
Pawtucket 4 Charleslon 1
Richmond 7 Syr~cuse 0
Wash., bringing his actual pin- him down.
Rochester 6 Tidewater 3
Years late~, I asked the Babe's widow, Claire, if he actually
fall over 42 games to 9,583. An(Only games scheduled)
had
called h1s shot.
thony spilled' 142 less pins.
By Uni ed Press lnternationctl

g

.

·-

..-

Herd neuers top Giants
M•l'k V Thundering
He!'cl slippt&gt;d into a first-place
Uc,us they clippt'lllhe lea~ue ­
leading Giants, ~4 in double
overtime, in tl•e Middleport
Summer Cnge League Mon- ·
T ho·

d~y .

The Herd trailed aln!ost all
tl1e way In regulation lime, and
never led In overtlme, until the
second extra period, when they
outscored the Giants 6-0. The

,_

r

,

11

. '

1

wife of the Interior . species under the sponsorship
secretary, were killed early of the Fund for Animals and
North
Amerlcun
Sunday when someone pried the
open the back of a van In which Association for the Protection
Animal s
the wolves were sleeping and of ' Predatory
led them chicken parts spiked •·{NAAPPA).
The wolves appeared at a
with strychnine.
benefit
program in Bowling
Clem ·and Jethro, the two
wolves, were on a ·cross- Green, Ohio, two weeks ago.
In addition, according to
copntry tour of "Humane
Cleveland
Amory,
the
Education," to dramatize the
plight of North American columnist and president of the
wolves as an endangered Fund for Animals, the tour was
to show "that wolves simply
aren't the horrible beasts
we've all been hearing about
:
.,The Daily Sentinel
since childhood in stories like
'
DEVOTED TO THt - . 'Little Riding Hood'i"i!'
IN.J'ERESTOF
In a telh
MEIGS-MASON
AREA
ep one itei
n rv ew
. CHESTeR L. TANNEHILL, '~ from Washingtdn where he is
.ROBERT
ExecHOEFLICH
. Ed .
. a tten d'mg federa I comCity Edilor
' t mwuca
· t'tons hearings, Am ory
P~blished
dal ly exce
Psalurday by Th• Oh io Vall~y said, "If the fiendish poisoner
ubltshlng Company
111
· Courl Sl., Pomeroy , ·Ohio
thought he could stop this
45769 . Business Office Phone
. 992·2156, Editorial Phone 992 ~ . humane ed uca ti on o1 the
2157 ·
public • he's go'1ng to fail ·"
Sec;ond class -postage pa id a:
Pomeroy , Ohio . ,
Nat1onal advert ising
representative
aottinelll · ;
Gallag her . I he .• 12 East .42nd
Sl,. New York c;ty, Ne"- York .
. Sub~crlpllon
r~tes .' :
Dellver:ed by carrier · where 1
a~ailable 55 cerits per week : 1·

'i '

,.
Major League Standin9s
By United Press International

11

eFREEZ~S

•AIR ·CONDITIONERS
•DEHUMIDIFIERS

. Thorn MeAn
heritage house

BAKER FURNITURE

· Middleport'

MIDDLEPORT
'

,.

CING
'

The Babe Ruth I re~emberwas unlike many of the ballplayers
today. He loved the k1~. who surrounded him for his autograph .
but also ~ad a way of giVIng them the slip occasionally. · ·
Sometimes when they'd cluster around hlm with pieces of
paper, pictures or autograph albums before the game he'd say·
"I'll only sign baseballs."
'
·
Then when he'd be mobbed after a game he'd day·
"I only sign before the game."
'
.
The episode which personifies Babe Ruth best to me however
took place after he was the house guest of a good fri~nd of
Ruth spent a full week with !hill fellow at his home. A day late."
they we.n: together again when another of the Babe's acquain:
Lances JOined them.
. . Ruth, who had a terrible memory for names, knew he had to
mtroduce the friend at whose home he had spent a week only a ·
day before,
" Uh ... how do you pronounce your name again," he finally
asked.
·c,
"Joe/' said his friend.

~

NEW SAVINGS INTEREST
RATES

his'

'

'

PASSBOOK SAVINGS

%

\1 If I'

COM POUNDED QUARTERLY
·~·

1

3 MONTH CERTIFICATE

% PAYABLE QUARTERLY

2'

1 YEAR CERTIFICATE

FANS
2·SPEED

$ 99

REG. 114.95

.MINIMUM $11100

PAYABLE QUATERLY
MINIMUM '1000

%

2 YEAR CERTIFICATE

PAYABLE QUARTERLY
MINIMUM '1000

·SOAP
SUPER 20

seoa Jean Van Meier
'
,
graocldliug~ter 91 Mr, and
Mr1. Gene Van Meter, the
former ' Donna Woll, 11 all
dre11ed up In the dre" worn
by her great-grandfather,
· Curlll Wolf, ol near wng
""
Bottom, when he was an
• Infant. Sena Is nine monlhs
, old.

I,ETART, W. Va. - 'l'be
annual Howell family reunion
was held July 15 allhe horne of
Mrs. Cordia Howell, Wellsville
RO, with • basket dinner at
noon,
!
Atlendlng were Henry
Pa,tricla, Audrey, Billie, and
Maxine Work, Joyce and Billy
Arlson, John Shedlock, Mrs.
Lucille Burris, Donnie and
Unda; Mrs . George Shedlock,
Chriswne Marshall, Mr. and .
Mrs. Clarence lloyer, Carolyn,
Jack,. Goldie, Roblri, David,
James, Helen and Paul ; Mr.
and Mrs. Floyd Boyer, Floyd
Jr. and John, of Burgetlstown,
Pa.; Leona, Raymond Woods,
Bryant Hudson, Wilmar,
George, Mike, Susan, HiQhard,
David Shedlock, and Robert
Boyer, of Paris~ Pa. ; Doris J .
,
1

.

•

Thomas, Charles, Harry and
Randy ; Mrs. Ronald Boyer,
Marsha, Teresa, Tracy, and
Ronald ; Ron and Bette Howell,
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Howell, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Hughes, all of
Wellsville ; Mrs. f;dith Brown,
son Michael , Mrs . Pau't
PosUeU1w_ait, Weirton : Mr. and
Mrs . Ri chard Rector, son
Richard Jr .; Mrs . Estella
Rector , Delbert, Donna,
Jeanne, Wade,. and lommy
Rector; Mr . and Mrs. O'Dell :
!Wctor, of Carrollton; Mr. and
Mrs . Russell Howell, of
Georgia, and Mr. and Mrs.
Ronnie Howell, Hawaii.
· Harry , June, Mike, ·and
Timmie Brooks; Mr. and Mrs.
John Gerlach, •llff\.. and Mrs.
Clyde Gerlach, Letari, w. v~.;
Nancy Bosworth, Chester, w.
Va.; Mr and Mrs. UoydSmith,

Mrs. John Hentz, Hick and
Chris, Reynoldsburg; Mrs.
Emma Burkhard, Clarksville,
tnrl . Ml's. Oliver Landers, Mrs.
!\!lldred Weaver, Columbus·
Mr. and Mrs. Garner Jones'
Clarksville, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs:
Warren Reas, New Albany,
!pd.; Mr. and Mrs. Don Tate
Cle~~Iand; VIrgil Lewis'
Wellston; Mr. and Mrs. Elde~
Frick, Ann and Stephanie, FL.
Mitchell, Ky .; Fred Brown,
Columbus; Mr.andMrs John
Allen, Mr. and Mrs. Calvin
Mitchell, Mr and Mrs. Marian
Harrison, Gallipolis ; Mr. and
Mrs. Cleland Dailey Mapleton
lll.

· ·

'

'

RUTLAND - The fifth
annual Taylor. Haprer reunion
took place Sunday at the Forest
Acres Park at Rutland.
•'oil owing a potluck dinner at
which grace was given by Ben
RJfe, a business session was
held. Officers elected for 1!174
wero Mrs. Ben Rife, president;
John Wernel', vice president;
Mrs. John Werner, secretary;
Earl, Werner, treasurer.
Recognized were James A.
Taylor, Middleport, the oldest
.man present ; Mrs. Joe Taylor,
Grove City, the oldest woman,
and Mark Edward Taylor, two
week old son of Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Taylor, Ravenna, the
youngest.
Also recognized were Mr.
and Mrs. Dave Blrkby ,
Tonawanda, N.Y. The couple
was making their first vlsll Jn

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE INQUIRE AT THE BANK

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
~ember

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

ol

The birthdays eight senior
citizens Included
Mrs.
Elizabeth Wickham , who
obl!llrved her llltlth birthday
anniversary on July 27, wete
celebrated with a party at the
Senloc Citizens Center Thurs·
dAly.
In the honored group besides
Mn . Wickham were Mrs.
Gertrude Butler, Mn: Edna
Wayland, Mrs . Emma
Wayland, ChriatiM O'Donnel,
Clara Paulsen, Wilbur Logan
and
Emmell
Hawk.
llome~de Ice cream and
cake were aetved to ihe ap•
pro1lmately 60 men and
women attending, Among the
flll'lll was Mr1. Hue! Wlliker
vltlll"' her .from ArktnNI,
Two cakea lor the party were
baked llld donated to the
tenter by Mra, l.oretta Beegle,

and Mn. Clarence Taylor and
lamlly, Mr , and Mrs. Larr1'
Taylor and son., , Roottown ·
Mr. and Mrs. Jlm Starkey and
son, Kent ; Arthur Taylor ,
James Taylor, Mr . and Mrs .
garl ·werner, Mr. and Mrs.
John Werner, Middleport; Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Rickard, Norwnlk; Mr. and Mrs. John
Lemley, Galloway ; "Mr. and
Mrs. Willis Beyce, Columbus ;
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Berke,
Tonawanda, N. Y.; Mr. and
THURSDAY
Mrs. Ben Rile and daughters
Middleport; Mr.
and Mrs:
PHODUC.'TS party, St. Paul
LesterTaylor Middleport and ,United Methodist Church
Mary Smith Waterford
annex, Tuppers Plains, 7:30
'
'
p.m. Public Is invited.

GOOD FOOD

.COOD EATERS
MEET HERE

Adolph's Dairy Valley
At the Pomeroy -Mason. Bridge

'

the Chase Manhattan Bank in
1
New York.
Plans were made to have the
reunion at the Slime time next
year, the last Sunday In July,
at the same place.
Door prizes were won by
Mrs . Lester Taylor, Mid, dleport; Mrs. Janel Kronenbltwr Beverly; Mrs. ·· penny
G~rland: Grove City; and Ben
R•le Middleport.
Jviti,tli~ jiirSOil'farnliY'p~esent,,, Atiending were Mr . and 'IJJ:rs.
The feunldn will be hel(J',at' 'Guy Harper, Pomeroy; Mr .
the home of Mr. and Mrs; and Mrs. Guy W, Harper and
O'Dell Rector of Carrollton fam1ly, Middleport: Berke
ne~t year. Una~ble to ai~JIIj; .Lyons, Middleport; Mr. and
were. ,tla~ei :LOjldino, of ~on·- · Mrs. Charles Kronenbitler and
lana, Calif. and Mr. and Mrs. family, Beverly; Mr. and Mrs.
Jake Howell of Logan, Ohio. Dave Taylor and family,
·Fostoria; Mr. and Mrs . Joe
Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Mrs. Opal Kloes, Miss Eleanor Garland, Harold Taylor and
Robson, MrS. Leo Kennedy,
Toda'y Would Be A
Terri SproiiSC, Mr. and Mrs.
'Good Day to Send
Homer Radford, Mr. and Mrs.
R. L. Jacoba, Mr. and Mrs.
Bernard Fultz, Mr.' and Mrs.
Manning Webster, Mrs Rose
G'm th er, Mrs. William Morgan,
Mrs. Le ona· Smi'~
' Helene
''
u~ · MrS.
From
Mullins, Howard Mullins, Mr.
an4 Mrs. Charles 'Grilfilh ..md
Katen Lynn li 1 W~ l B,eatrice
59 N. Second St.
Bucl\,_ill!:f. Karl Grueser, Mrs.
Middleport I
WelbyWhaley,I.atryGrueser,
Harty Keiser, Frank Arnott.

NOW
IN
PROGREss·

1

was

'

.Rvth Barry " •

SHEER KNEE-HI HOSE

~';·~~~~ :~

IJrnd e iU t 1c
top Pe rteC t
und er pamsr

Ont Ill•

2'pr 9'9'·~,

''

•

litl 8'11- 11

ABOUQUET
TO ASHUT-IN
'5.00

Dudley's Aorist

Miner' :J21o 38

NOTJI'r: JO All CLIENTS
T,·r,,

DtS \InC\ tv ety ta rl o red

tong ·s tee ve sh trts o r
po l.y.e ster a r d ca tion .
Ma n-style d. tong pQtr, ted
colla r and 2·button c ults.

WMe

•

.

•

THE 'FO'RMER

Glrlt ' and Miu•• '

Permanent·Press SHIRTS

o.

BUY , AT ONLY

Su ede and so lt · \Ouch and

saddle call leathers m

2'1

w tdt&gt; 'r ange ot st~t e s
d oubl e n and le and
I·should e r -st rap

•

Under50,you
save more
than money.·

Ira me purses and credn

~

•

ca rd cases Many colors 1

•

'.

EACI:I

CREW SOCKS
Qrlon · acry lic aM '!retch ny·
lon . H1 ·bu lk comtort soc~~;s
stretc;h to ht IIJSI rl gMt. In black

47~

aMI colors.

~-~~~~~~~ES

Wome{l "t Sfzet
Com l¥ all
0 1 SPICY

. n ~lorl

colo rs

lois

63. .

PR.

BIKINIS AND BRIEFS

2,.~1.

Bn gh t·colo red

bi kiniS. SI ZeS 5·7.
Wh1te and pastel·
co lo red b r1 ets .
$1Zes 5· 10

.

'

y

MEN'SI ·Sin
Fil$1010 1:1

PR.

'

WA TER I!ESIST,4NT"

WATCHES
Mer1 s end wom en' s ,

•

dressy and spor l y cMrome ·
ar~d ye!lo w
gre at ne w
IHh 1on w al ch es ! rom
petite 10 masculine de·
S1gns Some day·date an d
Calenda r tyoes All w111"1
unbrea kable ma•nspr1ngs
and Stan11ess steel bac ks

WHILE QUANTITIES
LAST
'

'

,:

ONLV$895
and

'

'

'

.,

.
'.

•

'I.,

'

JHJ~·

Men's and Boys' UNDERWEAR
r---.- •

Uttt.onrtllfon•llr Gultlnleed!
Mach1ne Wash W:a rm
Tutnt)le Dry MeduJm Our
bost Qu;'llll y b fle ls ,and
r · Silu iS ot Oacron P.Oiy·
ester and cot tOn SoH

On modem highways, your car uses 11%
less gasoline at 50 miles per hour than at60.
• if you drop from 70 to 50, you save one
gallon in every seven!

comfortable torg·
wear tr'l9 NO·IIOn.

There are many ways every American
can help save energy. You're saving
much more than money when you hold
your speedometer below 50. You're
saving precious energy that this country
·
can't afford to waste.

BOYS' JIS, S, M. l

Juver~lle Boys' Sizes 4 to 7 ... Ju'ltnll.e Glrlt ' Slns4 to· 6X

,~FOR....189

Boys ' Swtss·nb, alt co tt on kM. tur tlenecks go great over
pol~ester and eolian brushed tw1U, fl ared jeans Girl$
choose long ·sleeve kn tl tops of co tt on an d con onl po!yester 1n lots o f styles to go w1th prmts . platds and soiJdli,
in denims and brushe d d en 1ms Choice of coord inating
and contrasting colors.

YOUR CHOICE:

Every American can help save energy. Write
today for a free copy of ''A Consumer's
·.
Guide lo Efficient Energy Use In the Home.''
H's packed wilh Ideas that can $ve the
nallon's energy and your money.

,

AMY · ~

Your Loctal Oil Companies
Ohio Petroleum Council
88 East Broad Street
Columbus, Ohio 43215

,

1

' ''
.&lt;

Men'• •nd l!loy1 '

Jn!

'·

2?.!

61carry
~;m~~s~~~~
P~·,v~ :s -~~
alone Btll l ol ds ,

•

·ORENZO D..DAVIS •

77.

PURSE ACCESSORIEs

Calf-Skin HANDBAGS

I

SENSATIONAL

•

DA"I"WARNER INS. SERVICE

.
'\

son, Marty, Grove City ; Mr .

Mt. Alto; Ray Geriach and
family, Powell., Oh/o;
and
Mrs. Dencii _, Ray Hudson,
Hichard, Den~il, Jr:, · liecky,
V1rgil, and .Nancr, ·, ·Hpdson,
Racine:
Myla Hudson,
Syracuse, and Susie Hudson,
. MinersviUe. · ·
•' 1 , .'
The oldestr&lt;and Ionaest
married couple presen(
Mr. •and Mrs. Clyde Gerla.ch.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Boyer

Meigs residents attending
were Mr . .and Mrs. Herbert
Dixon, Mrs. Mike Brothers an.:l
Amy Beth, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Kesterson, Mrs . Frances
Scholl, Mrs. Mildred Mitch,
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Jennings,
Mrs. Don Hunnel and Artie ,
Mrs. Eth.el Smith
. , Mr . and
Mrs. James F. Will, Becky,
Brenda, Beverly and Brian,
Phil Ohllnger, .Laura Ohlinger,
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bowen,
Mr. ana Mrs. '•iillard Wilson, .
Mrs. Susan Pullins, Scott and
Lisa, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Bowen, Mrs . Ralph Spncer, • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •!
Rev. and Mrs. William •
Sydenstricker, Christine and · : •
'·"•' :,; :"
Brian, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff •
,,"
-•
Wilson, Kelly and Terri, Mr. •
-·
Of
' '
and Mrs. Paul Frick, Lisa Jett, •
· "
' .
.
:
Mrs. Paula Hall and Danny, •
•
Mr. and Mrs. Lorenzo Davis, :
Joey Mohler, Mr. and Mrs. Bill •
'1 ;;r .
·
•
Pullins; Rodney, Lori Ann, e
•
.Stevie and Kevin.
• M
0
·
•
[llrs.BemiceEvans,Mr.and.
r. avi.s H&lt;!S Opened An Office At :
Mrs. Ed King, Mr. and Mrs. • 100112 E. Main St., Pomeroy (Over the •
Carl Moore, Mr. and Mrs. • Blue &amp; Grey Restaurant), Under the •
Clarence Curtis, Mrs. Dorothy : Name of Davis Insurance Service
•
Clark, Mrs. Martha Husted, •
•
Miss Freda Leiving, Mrs . •
We are in a position to service your in- •
Beulah Utterback, Patty • sura' nee needs. ll will not be necessary for you •
Edwards, Mr. and Mrs. Mark • to signiu1y statement mailed or given to you to :
Tannehill and Brian, Mr. and • have the same protection· on your car or · •
Mrs. William F'recker, Mrs. : properly. We will give you honest and efficient •
Clara Karr, Mrs. Elhel • service. Please stop by .or call as to the reason •
Williamson, Mr. and Mrs. Dale • ~the division~
~~~vJ.~-Warner lnsuran~ •
Davis and Chris, Miss •
gency.
. :.. :'J ~; ! 'l"'\ 1
•
:

,.

I

~ Calendar ~ w~c~J~l~R

~~~~~. ~.~~~ ~~~~i~~n~~

"was held at noon P"j!Ceding the Elizabeth Davis, Miss Joyce A. •
I"observance.
Davis, Miss Helen M. Davis, :
L
•
' ' Out-of-town relatives and Robert Davis, Mr. and Mrs. •
•
friendsatiA!ndingwereMr.and Fred Goeglein, Mr . and Mrs. •
' Mrs. Alberl Brown, MI. Ver· Walter Schrieber, Mrs. J. E. D. •
•
:
non; Mr. and Mrs. Orrie Lewis, Harting~r, Mr. and Mrs. Philip • We can insure your Mobile Home. Ask about •
~ackson; Mrs. Elsie Brown, Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas : our pacK~~e;'t)CIIItyl . ~ ·•
•
LIJulsvUle, Ky.; Mrs. Lenora Bentz, Mr. and Mrs. Peg •
•
•
Lewis, Jackson; Randy and Dailey, MiSII Mary Virginia •
Agent For:
•
Diana Wilson, Duncan Falls; Reibel, Virgil V. Browq,~Mrs. •
Stale Auto Mutual Insurance Co .
:
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Mcln- Lucille Jesse.
•
Ohio Farmers
•
. ' tOih, Dayton; Trudy Perdue,
Mrs. Patricia Young, Mr. !
Wesffielci Coli\panies
e
' Peeble~; Mr. and Mrs. Edwin and Mrs . .Edison Hobstetter, • • • e • • • • • • • ·• • • • • • • • • • • • • • e e e
Uvlngston, John, Leslie and · MrllrJi.-=~·~Mt~s~-~~~~~-------~-----------.
Leigh Ann, New Albany, Ind. ; ,
Brad watts, Gallipolis; · Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Connell,
Charity and Saran, Mr. and

Seniors have
birthday meet

IN HOSPITAL
SIJNDA V
Mra. Nellie V~le, a Meigs
REVIVAL, Zion Church Ill
~ C.'hn~t on SR 143, Au•ust 5-6
Cuunty
Elementary School
Y.•
N
~
'
~
~ 7:30 ·each night. Everyone is supervisor, ia a pallent at
Mount Carmel Hospital. J1e1
reunion , archery room number is n4. Mrs. Vale
~ '
.
~ building at Royal Oak Park . underwent hlp sw-gery •' rlday,
Basket dlnpcr at noon.
her second such surgery. In
recent months.
TUF..S DAV
MrDDI.EPOHT Masons and
E•slern Star family picnic,
Forest Acres Park, Rutland, 6
p.m. Eat al 6:30 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
HA CINE
~' lremen 's
AuKillary will sell homemade
and
ice cream in containers ,
Wednesday, 6 to 8 p.rn. at fire
house. Anyone wanting ice
cream before Wednesday
evening call 949-J411 or 949329:1.
••

fifth reunion held

Mr. . and
Mrs.
Eldon
Weeks~~~~~ ~:::~:ir;,e:~:~~~~~
7 lu.
' ,
ce.
~e(/'f'ate anmversar11
M~.
.
J
_ Approximately 200 relatives
andfrlendsrecently celebrated
the golden wedding a~nlversary of Mr. and Mrs.
Eldon Weeks, Pomeroy,hosted
by their son and daughter-inlaw,_Mr. and Mrs. John Weeks,
Galhpolis. .
·• Mr. and .Mrs. Weeks were
married on July 21, 1923 and
have ~pent most of their lives
in Me1gs . County. For the ob- ·
· servance, Mrs. Weeks wore a
yellow rosebud corsage and
Mr. W~ks a y~llow rosebud
boutonntere, gifts of their
grandchildren, Tom and Mary
. .
''Beth Weeks.
' Flowers decorating the hous
were gift:! . from , Mrg, John
Rollinson~. ~L. Sln}ons lsla,ntl,
·Ga.; Mt. and Mrs . Sam
' Shuman and employes of lhe
'Julian Spears Co.; Mr . and
'Mrs. Manning Webster, the
"Pomeroy National Bank, the
·United Methodist Women of the
Enterprise Church; Mr. and
'Mrs. Millard Van Meier, Miss
•Mary Virginia Reibel, and the
·,family of the late Jay Myers.
The refreshment table
;featured ;)l \hree.-!iered an, ~iversary cake topped with the
,gold numerals "50". Mrs.
·Thomas Bowen, Pomeroy, and
'Mrs. Warren Rea s, New
' Albany, Ind., served· the cake,
and pow-ing the coffee and tea
lvere Mrs: Don Hunnel and
Miss Becky Will. Mrs. Carl
Moore also assisted with the
serving. Regislering the guests
~ere Mrs. Willard Wilson and
!&gt;lrs ..Ed Bowen. Napkins were
inscrlbedandminlaJurescrolls
·bearingatrlbutetofrienpsand
relatlvesweregiventoeachof
the guests.
' A featw-e of the decorations
'was a bulletin board displaying
pictures through the years of
clhe Weeks' family. Among the
; numerous gifts presented to
;the couple was a Living Bible
!rom the Enterprise United
Methodist Church of which
both Mr, and Mrs. Weeks are
' Iong·lime members. A picnic

.

,

PHONE 992 5120

,

IT!

.I

SENA VAN METER

1

.

Pittsburgh at New York, 2, twinight
·
,·
Nationa.l League
Chicago
at
Philadelphia,
nig ht
East
Cincinnati
at
Atlanta,
night
w. I. pel. g.b. Los Angeles at Houston, night
. St. Louis
ss 48 .534
San Francisco at San Diego,
Chicago
54 50 .519 l'h nioht
.
Pittsburgh
so 51 .495 4
Montreal
so 52 .490 .4112
Arnerica·n league
Phlla '
48 56 .462 71f2
East
·
New York
44 56 .440 91f::
w.
I. pet. g.b.
West
New York
59 48 .551 ...,.
'L
.
w. I. pel. g.b. Baltimore
54 45 .545
, os Angeles 66 39 .629
Boston
54 48 .529 2'1'
•Cincinnati
61 44 .581 s Detroit
54 48 .529 . 2'h
;san Fran
59 . 46 .·562 7
so 51 .49!&gt; 6
•Houston
54 53 .S05 13 Milwaukee
Cleveland
38
67 )62 20
:;Atlanta
· 48 60 .444 19'h
West
..•.;,.r,
.,San Diego
35 69 .337'30'12 Oa
w. I. pel. g.b.
Monday's Results
'
kland
58 47 .552
Chicago 3 St ..Louis 1
Kansas Clly 59 48 .551
,Montreal I New York o lsi Minnesota
53 49 .520 · 3'h
. '
' Ch.icago
•twill ht
Going to the mound for the
INDIANS VS. ORIOLES
52 52 .500 s•;,
;Monfreal 5 New York 2, 2nd, 10 C.llfornia
49 53 .480 7'h
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The Tribe will be Dick Tidrow, 8-9,
1 1nnlngs~ night
Texas
39 63 .382 17'1' Cleveland Indians open at with Jim Palmer, 12-6, pitc~ing
;~~~~1delph la ~ Pittsburgh o,
Monday's Results
home tonight with a game for the Orioles.
Chicago
9 Minnesota 1
. Atlanta' 7 Houston 3; night
Boston 4 New York 3, night
against Baltimore .
.'Los Angeles 5 San Francisco 2, Delroit 4 Baltimore 3, night
. night
.
Texas 6 Oakland o. night
'·
~ (only ga'!'es sche~uled)
(only
games
scheduled)
_ Today s Probable Pitchers
· Today~s Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDTI
I All Times EDTl
.
St. Louis (Wise 11 ·6) ·' at Minnesota
(Woodson
10.
S) at
Montreal (McAnally · 7-5) 1 s Oakland (Holtzman )5.9), 11
p.m.
Pittsburgh (Ellis 9-9) at New p.m.
Texas (Clyde 2-31 at Cali. York ( ~oosman 8-10), 8 p.m.
fornia
(Wright 8-14), 11 p.m.
. Lo• · Angeles (John 10-5) at
Kansas
(Splittorff 13·ll
· Housto~ (Roberts IU-S), 8:30 at Chicago CIIY
'
(
Stone
4-8), 9 p m.
p.m .
Baltimore
(Palmer
at
San Francisco (Marlchal 8-6) Cleveland (Tidrow 8-91. 12-6)
6 p.m.
at San Diego (Arlin 6·8), 10:30 New York (Dobson 6·3) at
p.m.
WEDNESDAY ONLY
(Leel7-S), 7:30p.m.
Chicago (Pappas l-9 and Boston
Detroit (Perry 9·10 and
Jenkins 9-9) at Philadelphia Fryman
2-7) at Milwaukee
(Brett 9·4 and Lonborg 9-7), 2, .(Colborn 13-6
and Slaton 7 9), 2,
l :30p.ll) .
'
SAFEGUARD
7p.m.
Cincinnati !Grimsley 10-6 and
Wtdne•day's Game•
Facial Size
Norman 8-9) at Atlanta (Free- Minnesota
at Oakland, nlghl
man 0·2 and Morton 8-8), 2, 6 Texas at California,
night
p.m. .
Kansas
'City
at
Chicago,
night
Wednesday's Games
Detroit
at
Milwaukee,
nlghl
St. Louis at Monlleal, 2, twl- Baltimore at Cleveland
nlahl
New York at Boston
.j

a

TIMELY
SAVINGS

..

"I'm surprised you'd ask me that;" she said.

Hart 6-0;10,
Eubank 16-2-34, May 2-2~ ,
Haggerty lfl.0-20, Cremeans 41
fl.8, Ihle 3-(J-6.
Newly acquired 6·4 Bill
Hensler made his de~ut for
Lulgls and led the Anchovies
over Adolph's Rajun Cajuns,
7fl.82. Hensler ied the winners
with 22 points, was lhe top
rebounder and blocked shots.
Haystack Walburn followed
with 16, · Tom 0owntown'i
Walters added 14 and 2-door
Ferguson chipped In 10.
The losers were paced by
Torrid Topper Orr who was
game high wllh 29 polnls. Mike
Magnotta added 13 and Bob
Ford 12.
·
Luigis (70)- T. Walters li-2-.
14, 4-door Ferguson 4.fl.8, 2·
door Ferguson S0-10, Walbw-n
~16, Hensler 11-ll-22.
Rajun Cajuns (62) - Fen.
derbosch :1-1-7, Ford 6fl.l2,
Magnotta 6-1-13, Orr 14-1-29,
Harris fl. I-I.

Mort~n ,

'

~

H annahs~ .
Giants ( 84 ) -

'

The Almanac
'"
. By United Press International
Today ls Tuesday, July 31,
the 212th day of 1973 with IG3 to
!oliOW.
The moon is approaching its
.
f1rst quar te r.
.
Th e mormng
stars are
Mercw-y,MarsandSaturn.
The evening stars are Venus
an d J up lter.
Those born on this d8 te are
under the sign of Leo.
·
.
h
Amertcan
wrt1er Jo n K~nt
was born J I 31 1763
UY • · •
.. Olj ,thisdayinhistory:
I~ · 1792, Director David
Rittenhouse laid the corner- serv1ce
By ~otor Route where carrier
not ava ilabl e: One
stone in Philadelphia for the W.
monVa
th ..,12.One
By mall In Oh io ond
year , $16 ; 51)(
U.S. Mint, the first building of mo~ lh s, months. SB.SO : Three
the fed 1
months! ss .so, Elsewhere $18 1
era governmen.1
year ; -s1x rnon1hs $9 .50; three
In 1948, as 900 planes flew price
months
. S6 . Subscr iption
Includes Sunday Ti mesoverhead, President Harry Tru- Senlinel.
1
'man dedicated the New York
International Airport at Id·
lewild Field, later to be
re named for assassinated
JUST
·President John F. Kennedy.'
ARRIVED
In 1953, senate Majority
Leader Robert Taft' of Ohio Shipment of women's
died in New York City.
a(ld children's Thorn
In 1972, Missouri Sen. MeAn fall shoes .
Thomas Eagleton withdrew as
'
Democratic vice-presidential
nominee, six days after disclosing previous hospitalization and
psychiatric treatment.
·

•

fi

rr l
u p
'l
.f.'..::W#W.Ua&lt;:&gt;:~&lt;&gt;"Wb'D,::m.&gt;/&gt;$)
.1 (lY or-liar: er .amt[1J
:.J' 1
: ;: Socl'al j~

'Howell family
has .reunion

Old DQmlnlon Co llc~e •lor S.
4 Cary Eubank p8CeQ ' the
Giants with 34 . Chipper
Ha~ger ty aciJled 20 points and
Dlno Hart chipped In 10.
Mark v 190) - Walwr~ 17·:137, Boggs 5-0-10, Fife 5-0-10,
Pullen 6-fl.l2, Moyer s-0-16,

Herd plllced 5 men in double
figures, led by F'uts Waller.
with 37 points, Preacher''
Moyer, 16, Killer Pullen, 12,
and Peal Boggs and Tarzan
File with 10.
,

R eward for poisoners ·Upped
NEW 'fflRK (UPl ) - The
reward for inform~tlon on the
poisoner of two famous Umber
wulves has been increased
from $1,000 to $4,000, partially
because of a contribution from
television talk show host Dick
Cavett.
The wolves, which appeared
twice on Cavett's late night
ABC show and once on,Li]e CBS
"Today" show with Mrs. C. B.

.

I - The Dilly SenliMI, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0'" July 31, 1073

'

FOR

_
*S.

HALL'S BEN FRANKLIIN
MIDDLEPOitT, OHIO

•• •

'

,,

•

�:
~ - Th&lt;.'

Daily·S.ntinel, Middlrpori-Pnnwroy. 0 .. July :ll. 1!17:1

• · ~~ ·ort ''
I ,.J.Il(

''

Maj' or League Results

Major League Leaders
By United Pren lnternalional

Leading Baiters

National league

ab r h ·pet.
Mot•.
LA
6l
714'
77 7" .346
N•llonal league
Sl. Louis
100 000 000 - 1 6 o Rose. Cin 104 414 72 140 .330
Chicago
300 000 OOx ..'- 3 9 0 Wa]son, Ho 107 397 73 131 .330
Rb!tsn,Phll 69 252 39 .so .317
Gibson 111 -101 and Simmons; MAddox,
SF 90 358 49 11 3 .31 6
lleuschel , LaRoche 181 and Goodsn.SF
90 341 34 107 .314
Hundloy . WP-Reuschel ( tl -8) .
Crdnal, Chi 97 351 57 110 .31 3
Mthews. SF 95 332 47 103 .310
list Go mel
Cedeno,
Ho '86 326 58 101 .310
Montreal
000 000 001 - 1 4 1
NEWYOHK (UP! ) - Right now, Bnb\l Ruth would be throwing
N~w,York
000 000 000- 0 7 0 Millan. NY 91 391 54 121 .309
·:, ~oger s (7 ~ 0 1 and Boccabella ; Crwfrd, LA 96 3/1 52 96 .309 one of hts arms around Hank Aaron, squeezing him inn bear hug
·
American League
:,,.!lack 17-141 and Hodges.
g ab r h pet . so lhe photographers could get themselves a good picture and
•
•
Carew.
Min
96
374 63 129 .345
'(2nd game)
Hrtn, Del 65 231 32 79 .342 slyly telling him to stick Atlanta for at least a million next year,
QO inn)
carry-over contract or not.
~treal 000 010 100 3- s .8 2 Blmbrg , NY 70 217 34 74 .341
'
May , Mil 100 405 62 134 .331
~'hal's the Babe Ruth I knew.
.
,.ew York 000 110 000 o-- 2 8 0 Murcr,
NY
IQ7
41~ sa 130 .313
He was always lOOper cent for the Individual, no matter who 11
• Renko, Marshall (71 and Dvs, Bit 83 337 32 lOS .312
iloccabella; McGraw, Parker Bmbry,
was,
and I'm sure he'd be rOI)ting for Aaron to break his home
Bit 70 212 42 66 .3li
!61. Capra (10) and Grole . WPD.Ain,
Chi
69
~ 245 39 76 .310
run record now .
Marshall (10 ~ 61 . LP-Capra (I ~
Otis, KC 102 404 71 122 .302
Publicly, anyway .
~Munso~ , NY97 334 54 101 .302
Privaiely ,&lt;it would be son1elhlng else again. Babe Ruth was as
Runs
Philadelphia 000 100 000- 1 s 0 NallonalHome
League
:
Stargell,
P,iltsburgh 000 000 000-0 6 0 Pitt 31; Evans, All 29 ; Bonds human_as ...well ...Hank Aaron. It's not hard to picture how'd he
·. Carllon (10-11) anij Boone ; SF
; Aaron,' All 27 ; Johnson: be feehng now and what he'd be saying to some of those in hill
Moose. Hernande z (8) and All 28
close circle.
.
25.
Sangulllen. LP-Moose (6.)0).
American League : Jackson,
"Hell, lf I knew that 30 years later some bum woold come along
24; Mayberry and Otis, KC
Atlanta · 211 102 000- 7 11 2 Oak
and break that 714 record of mine, I'd have hung around a little
21
;
Hou•ton
102 000 000- J 7 1 Hendrick, Clev 20 ; Bando, Oak longer and hit 600," Babe Ruth would be saying.
Schueler (6·6) and Casanova ;
The "bum" would be nothing personal against Hank Aaron.
Dierker, Crawford (31. Griffin 19.
Runs BaHed In
(6), Forsch 16), Upshaw (8)
League: Bench. Cin Babe Ruth used the term a lot . Oflen, even affectlonalely.
••
and Edwards. LP~ Dierker (0-1/. andNational
Stargell.
Pitt 77 ; Evans,
The . years have a way of trifling with your judgment
HRS-Evans (29th ), Agee (8th ),
'
Atl
74
;
Bonds
,
SF
70
;.
Watson
,
Tepe'dlno (3rdl. Watson (lOth ).
sometunes, b~t . even though nearly four decades have gone by
Hou 67.
San Fran. 000 200 000-2 4 1 American League: Mayberry, smce lhe last tune! saw him tap his bato.n th~plllle, bring it hack
KC 85 ; Jackson , Oak 83 ; up agam and \hen ~wing it in that classic style imitated by
Los Angeles 003 010 Olx- s 7 1 Murcer,
NY 71; Otis, KC 65 ; thoUSands but never really duplicated by anyone there isn't the
Bryant, Moffitt (7) and Mellon .- Chi
and Darwin, Ml nn
Rader; Osteen (12-5) and
slightest doubt in my mind that George Herma~ Ruth was the
62.
Ferguson . LP-Bryant 115-8) .
Pitching
.
greatest ballplayer I have ever seen. ·
HRS-Lopes (3rd), Ferguson
National league: Billingham ,
(15th) , Matthews (7th ).
He could run, he coulp field and he could hit. Lord, how he
Cin 15-6; Bryant, SF 15-8;
Osteen, LA and Seaver, NV. 12- could hit.
S; Sutton. LA 12-7. · ,
American league
Aim?st like clockwork, every day, you'd look in the paper and
Chicago
001 014 210 - 9 10 1 American league : Wood , Chi there 11 would be: home 11111--Ruth. Sometimes two
Minnesota 000 000 010 - I 8 1 20-14; Coleman, Det 16-8;
For many people today Babe Ruth is merely a' lege~d, only a
Bahnsen (14-10) and Brink- l;lunter, Oak 15-3; Singer, Cal
man ; Kaat, Corbin 16), camp- 15-7: Holtzman , Oak ll-9.
name.
bell (9) and Mitterwald. LPThe vast majority never have seen him perform, and those who
Kaat (11 · 101 . Hrs . Bradford
haven't Include Hank Aaron.
(7th), . Henderson (6th) Oliva
REDS'AT ATLANTA
(lOth).
.
'
But once you sa.w Ruth play, you never forgot him. He had a
ATLANTA (Ui?l) - The CinNew York 001 000 002- 3 6 2 cinnati Reds will be here to- way of sta!ing in your mind indeiibly, regardless of whether you
' ''
Bos.ton
020 010 001- 4 9 o
saw him hit a home run or strike out.
. Beene, Lyle (9) and Munson ; night for a doubleheader with
Every pitcher who was ever a home run victim of his
T1ant (13-9) and Fisk .·LP-Lyle the Atlanta Braves. . ·
remembers
him.
'
(4-6) . HRS-Petrocelli (13th)
Harper (11th), Hart (9\h) .
' .Cincinnati slated Ross
Says Fritz Ostermueller, of whom he hit No. 703, exac~ly 39
Grimsley, 10-6, and Fred
years
ago today:
·
Detroit
110 110 000- 4 8 1 Norman, 8-9, as probable
"How can anyone possibly forget Babe Ruth?"
Baltimore 100 000 002- 3 so starters against Jimmy
Loll~h , ' Hiller (9) and Sims;
I know I never will.
Jefferson, Jackson (5) and Freeman, 0.2, and Carl MorHe had a voice like cracked ice and the jolly, laughing
Etchebarren . WP-Lolich {10-10), ton, 11-8.
disposition
of Santa Claus, but he could get hill hack up too
LP-Je(ferson (3-3) . HRS.McAuHank Aaron, trying to at
ilffe (9th), Sims (8th), Northrup
He did with the late Jake Ruppert, who used to o~n t~ New
(6th), Etchebarren list). .
least tie Babe Ruth's all-time
York
Yankees .
•
career reoorl\ of 714 homers
Texas ;
500 000 001- 6 9 o
"Oammlt," he told him once, "don'lialk tome like a boy, I'm a
· Oakland
000 000 000- 0 0 2 this year, hasn 'I . pla,yed · in man and I wanna get paid like one." 1 ·
Bibby (5-4) and Billings; Blue three of the Braves' last five
Ruth was proud of the 15 years he put in with the Yankees but
(9-7) ~nd Fosse, Tenace (8) games. He sat out Monday
HRS-Burroughs (17th), Sudakl~
n,lght's 7-3 win over the bitter about the fact he never got a chance to manage them.
(71h ). ..
Not long before he died, he said to me .:
Houston Astros, but should
"The
Yankees gave me shoe ·polish. (Only he used another
return to the plate tonight.
•
word), and if it wasn't for the Ford Foundation I wouldn't even
: International
have a job now. "
'
McGRATH ON l'OP
•league Standings
~any people thought Babe Huth was an orphan. He wasn't.
By United Press International
PENNSVILLE, N.J. (UPI)·AmE!rican Division
I know who my.parents were," he said to me. "Only they were
'Mike McGrath, a southpaw
w
:
l . Pet. G. B.
so
poor
they had to send me to Ihis home in Baltimore when 1was
' .
from El Cerrito, Calif., heads a
Rochesler
60 · 48 .s56
Syracuse
54 52 .509 5
field of five bowlers going into seven."
52 55 .486 7'b the finals of the $47,500 Horne
. Pawtucket
When I asked him what his biggest thriU was, Ruth's answer-"
·. Toleda
4S 60 .429 13V,
was "that Root thing."
·
. ·
Box Office Open bowling tour~. National Division
He.meant calling his shot against Cub pitcher Charlie Root In
, Chatl.;,lon
~· ~ P~~o G.B. nament today.
.McGrath, who trailed by 133 the 19_32 Wo~ld S'eries. Huth said he pointed to the centerfield
Tidewater
57 45 .559 Ph
Peninsula • 55 40 .524 5
pins going into the semifinals wall, mdica~g he was going to hit the. ball over it and he did.
Richmond
39 67 .368 2Jlh Monday night, finished 265-175 Now Root sa1d that was absolute garbage. If Ruth had done
Monday'&gt; Re•ull&gt;
over Earl Anthony of Tacoma, ~methlng like lhat, pointed, he meant, he would have knocked
'
Pawtucket 4 Charleslon 1
Richmond 7 Syr~cuse 0
Wash., bringing his actual pin- him down.
Rochester 6 Tidewater 3
Years late~, I asked the Babe's widow, Claire, if he actually
fall over 42 games to 9,583. An(Only games scheduled)
had
called h1s shot.
thony spilled' 142 less pins.
By Uni ed Press lnternationctl

g

.

·-

..-

Herd neuers top Giants
M•l'k V Thundering
He!'cl slippt&gt;d into a first-place
Uc,us they clippt'lllhe lea~ue ­
leading Giants, ~4 in double
overtime, in tl•e Middleport
Summer Cnge League Mon- ·
T ho·

d~y .

The Herd trailed aln!ost all
tl1e way In regulation lime, and
never led In overtlme, until the
second extra period, when they
outscored the Giants 6-0. The

,_

r

,

11

. '

1

wife of the Interior . species under the sponsorship
secretary, were killed early of the Fund for Animals and
North
Amerlcun
Sunday when someone pried the
open the back of a van In which Association for the Protection
Animal s
the wolves were sleeping and of ' Predatory
led them chicken parts spiked •·{NAAPPA).
The wolves appeared at a
with strychnine.
benefit
program in Bowling
Clem ·and Jethro, the two
wolves, were on a ·cross- Green, Ohio, two weeks ago.
In addition, according to
copntry tour of "Humane
Cleveland
Amory,
the
Education," to dramatize the
plight of North American columnist and president of the
wolves as an endangered Fund for Animals, the tour was
to show "that wolves simply
aren't the horrible beasts
we've all been hearing about
:
.,The Daily Sentinel
since childhood in stories like
'
DEVOTED TO THt - . 'Little Riding Hood'i"i!'
IN.J'ERESTOF
In a telh
MEIGS-MASON
AREA
ep one itei
n rv ew
. CHESTeR L. TANNEHILL, '~ from Washingtdn where he is
.ROBERT
ExecHOEFLICH
. Ed .
. a tten d'mg federa I comCity Edilor
' t mwuca
· t'tons hearings, Am ory
P~blished
dal ly exce
Psalurday by Th• Oh io Vall~y said, "If the fiendish poisoner
ubltshlng Company
111
· Courl Sl., Pomeroy , ·Ohio
thought he could stop this
45769 . Business Office Phone
. 992·2156, Editorial Phone 992 ~ . humane ed uca ti on o1 the
2157 ·
public • he's go'1ng to fail ·"
Sec;ond class -postage pa id a:
Pomeroy , Ohio . ,
Nat1onal advert ising
representative
aottinelll · ;
Gallag her . I he .• 12 East .42nd
Sl,. New York c;ty, Ne"- York .
. Sub~crlpllon
r~tes .' :
Dellver:ed by carrier · where 1
a~ailable 55 cerits per week : 1·

'i '

,.
Major League Standin9s
By United Press International

11

eFREEZ~S

•AIR ·CONDITIONERS
•DEHUMIDIFIERS

. Thorn MeAn
heritage house

BAKER FURNITURE

· Middleport'

MIDDLEPORT
'

,.

CING
'

The Babe Ruth I re~emberwas unlike many of the ballplayers
today. He loved the k1~. who surrounded him for his autograph .
but also ~ad a way of giVIng them the slip occasionally. · ·
Sometimes when they'd cluster around hlm with pieces of
paper, pictures or autograph albums before the game he'd say·
"I'll only sign baseballs."
'
·
Then when he'd be mobbed after a game he'd day·
"I only sign before the game."
'
.
The episode which personifies Babe Ruth best to me however
took place after he was the house guest of a good fri~nd of
Ruth spent a full week with !hill fellow at his home. A day late."
they we.n: together again when another of the Babe's acquain:
Lances JOined them.
. . Ruth, who had a terrible memory for names, knew he had to
mtroduce the friend at whose home he had spent a week only a ·
day before,
" Uh ... how do you pronounce your name again," he finally
asked.
·c,
"Joe/' said his friend.

~

NEW SAVINGS INTEREST
RATES

his'

'

'

PASSBOOK SAVINGS

%

\1 If I'

COM POUNDED QUARTERLY
·~·

1

3 MONTH CERTIFICATE

% PAYABLE QUARTERLY

2'

1 YEAR CERTIFICATE

FANS
2·SPEED

$ 99

REG. 114.95

.MINIMUM $11100

PAYABLE QUATERLY
MINIMUM '1000

%

2 YEAR CERTIFICATE

PAYABLE QUARTERLY
MINIMUM '1000

·SOAP
SUPER 20

seoa Jean Van Meier
'
,
graocldliug~ter 91 Mr, and
Mr1. Gene Van Meter, the
former ' Donna Woll, 11 all
dre11ed up In the dre" worn
by her great-grandfather,
· Curlll Wolf, ol near wng
""
Bottom, when he was an
• Infant. Sena Is nine monlhs
, old.

I,ETART, W. Va. - 'l'be
annual Howell family reunion
was held July 15 allhe horne of
Mrs. Cordia Howell, Wellsville
RO, with • basket dinner at
noon,
!
Atlendlng were Henry
Pa,tricla, Audrey, Billie, and
Maxine Work, Joyce and Billy
Arlson, John Shedlock, Mrs.
Lucille Burris, Donnie and
Unda; Mrs . George Shedlock,
Chriswne Marshall, Mr. and .
Mrs. Clarence lloyer, Carolyn,
Jack,. Goldie, Roblri, David,
James, Helen and Paul ; Mr.
and Mrs. Floyd Boyer, Floyd
Jr. and John, of Burgetlstown,
Pa.; Leona, Raymond Woods,
Bryant Hudson, Wilmar,
George, Mike, Susan, HiQhard,
David Shedlock, and Robert
Boyer, of Paris~ Pa. ; Doris J .
,
1

.

•

Thomas, Charles, Harry and
Randy ; Mrs. Ronald Boyer,
Marsha, Teresa, Tracy, and
Ronald ; Ron and Bette Howell,
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Howell, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Hughes, all of
Wellsville ; Mrs. f;dith Brown,
son Michael , Mrs . Pau't
PosUeU1w_ait, Weirton : Mr. and
Mrs . Ri chard Rector, son
Richard Jr .; Mrs . Estella
Rector , Delbert, Donna,
Jeanne, Wade,. and lommy
Rector; Mr . and Mrs. O'Dell :
!Wctor, of Carrollton; Mr. and
Mrs . Russell Howell, of
Georgia, and Mr. and Mrs.
Ronnie Howell, Hawaii.
· Harry , June, Mike, ·and
Timmie Brooks; Mr. and Mrs.
John Gerlach, •llff\.. and Mrs.
Clyde Gerlach, Letari, w. v~.;
Nancy Bosworth, Chester, w.
Va.; Mr and Mrs. UoydSmith,

Mrs. John Hentz, Hick and
Chris, Reynoldsburg; Mrs.
Emma Burkhard, Clarksville,
tnrl . Ml's. Oliver Landers, Mrs.
!\!lldred Weaver, Columbus·
Mr. and Mrs. Garner Jones'
Clarksville, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs:
Warren Reas, New Albany,
!pd.; Mr. and Mrs. Don Tate
Cle~~Iand; VIrgil Lewis'
Wellston; Mr. and Mrs. Elde~
Frick, Ann and Stephanie, FL.
Mitchell, Ky .; Fred Brown,
Columbus; Mr.andMrs John
Allen, Mr. and Mrs. Calvin
Mitchell, Mr and Mrs. Marian
Harrison, Gallipolis ; Mr. and
Mrs. Cleland Dailey Mapleton
lll.

· ·

'

'

RUTLAND - The fifth
annual Taylor. Haprer reunion
took place Sunday at the Forest
Acres Park at Rutland.
•'oil owing a potluck dinner at
which grace was given by Ben
RJfe, a business session was
held. Officers elected for 1!174
wero Mrs. Ben Rife, president;
John Wernel', vice president;
Mrs. John Werner, secretary;
Earl, Werner, treasurer.
Recognized were James A.
Taylor, Middleport, the oldest
.man present ; Mrs. Joe Taylor,
Grove City, the oldest woman,
and Mark Edward Taylor, two
week old son of Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Taylor, Ravenna, the
youngest.
Also recognized were Mr.
and Mrs. Dave Blrkby ,
Tonawanda, N.Y. The couple
was making their first vlsll Jn

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE INQUIRE AT THE BANK

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
~ember

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

ol

The birthdays eight senior
citizens Included
Mrs.
Elizabeth Wickham , who
obl!llrved her llltlth birthday
anniversary on July 27, wete
celebrated with a party at the
Senloc Citizens Center Thurs·
dAly.
In the honored group besides
Mn . Wickham were Mrs.
Gertrude Butler, Mn: Edna
Wayland, Mrs . Emma
Wayland, ChriatiM O'Donnel,
Clara Paulsen, Wilbur Logan
and
Emmell
Hawk.
llome~de Ice cream and
cake were aetved to ihe ap•
pro1lmately 60 men and
women attending, Among the
flll'lll was Mr1. Hue! Wlliker
vltlll"' her .from ArktnNI,
Two cakea lor the party were
baked llld donated to the
tenter by Mra, l.oretta Beegle,

and Mn. Clarence Taylor and
lamlly, Mr , and Mrs. Larr1'
Taylor and son., , Roottown ·
Mr. and Mrs. Jlm Starkey and
son, Kent ; Arthur Taylor ,
James Taylor, Mr . and Mrs .
garl ·werner, Mr. and Mrs.
John Werner, Middleport; Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Rickard, Norwnlk; Mr. and Mrs. John
Lemley, Galloway ; "Mr. and
Mrs. Willis Beyce, Columbus ;
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Berke,
Tonawanda, N. Y.; Mr. and
THURSDAY
Mrs. Ben Rile and daughters
Middleport; Mr.
and Mrs:
PHODUC.'TS party, St. Paul
LesterTaylor Middleport and ,United Methodist Church
Mary Smith Waterford
annex, Tuppers Plains, 7:30
'
'
p.m. Public Is invited.

GOOD FOOD

.COOD EATERS
MEET HERE

Adolph's Dairy Valley
At the Pomeroy -Mason. Bridge

'

the Chase Manhattan Bank in
1
New York.
Plans were made to have the
reunion at the Slime time next
year, the last Sunday In July,
at the same place.
Door prizes were won by
Mrs . Lester Taylor, Mid, dleport; Mrs. Janel Kronenbltwr Beverly; Mrs. ·· penny
G~rland: Grove City; and Ben
R•le Middleport.
Jviti,tli~ jiirSOil'farnliY'p~esent,,, Atiending were Mr . and 'IJJ:rs.
The feunldn will be hel(J',at' 'Guy Harper, Pomeroy; Mr .
the home of Mr. and Mrs; and Mrs. Guy W, Harper and
O'Dell Rector of Carrollton fam1ly, Middleport: Berke
ne~t year. Una~ble to ai~JIIj; .Lyons, Middleport; Mr. and
were. ,tla~ei :LOjldino, of ~on·- · Mrs. Charles Kronenbitler and
lana, Calif. and Mr. and Mrs. family, Beverly; Mr. and Mrs.
Jake Howell of Logan, Ohio. Dave Taylor and family,
·Fostoria; Mr. and Mrs . Joe
Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Mrs. Opal Kloes, Miss Eleanor Garland, Harold Taylor and
Robson, MrS. Leo Kennedy,
Toda'y Would Be A
Terri SproiiSC, Mr. and Mrs.
'Good Day to Send
Homer Radford, Mr. and Mrs.
R. L. Jacoba, Mr. and Mrs.
Bernard Fultz, Mr.' and Mrs.
Manning Webster, Mrs Rose
G'm th er, Mrs. William Morgan,
Mrs. Le ona· Smi'~
' Helene
''
u~ · MrS.
From
Mullins, Howard Mullins, Mr.
an4 Mrs. Charles 'Grilfilh ..md
Katen Lynn li 1 W~ l B,eatrice
59 N. Second St.
Bucl\,_ill!:f. Karl Grueser, Mrs.
Middleport I
WelbyWhaley,I.atryGrueser,
Harty Keiser, Frank Arnott.

NOW
IN
PROGREss·

1

was

'

.Rvth Barry " •

SHEER KNEE-HI HOSE

~';·~~~~ :~

IJrnd e iU t 1c
top Pe rteC t
und er pamsr

Ont Ill•

2'pr 9'9'·~,

''

•

litl 8'11- 11

ABOUQUET
TO ASHUT-IN
'5.00

Dudley's Aorist

Miner' :J21o 38

NOTJI'r: JO All CLIENTS
T,·r,,

DtS \InC\ tv ety ta rl o red

tong ·s tee ve sh trts o r
po l.y.e ster a r d ca tion .
Ma n-style d. tong pQtr, ted
colla r and 2·button c ults.

WMe

•

.

•

THE 'FO'RMER

Glrlt ' and Miu•• '

Permanent·Press SHIRTS

o.

BUY , AT ONLY

Su ede and so lt · \Ouch and

saddle call leathers m

2'1

w tdt&gt; 'r ange ot st~t e s
d oubl e n and le and
I·should e r -st rap

•

Under50,you
save more
than money.·

Ira me purses and credn

~

•

ca rd cases Many colors 1

•

'.

EACI:I

CREW SOCKS
Qrlon · acry lic aM '!retch ny·
lon . H1 ·bu lk comtort soc~~;s
stretc;h to ht IIJSI rl gMt. In black

47~

aMI colors.

~-~~~~~~~ES

Wome{l "t Sfzet
Com l¥ all
0 1 SPICY

. n ~lorl

colo rs

lois

63. .

PR.

BIKINIS AND BRIEFS

2,.~1.

Bn gh t·colo red

bi kiniS. SI ZeS 5·7.
Wh1te and pastel·
co lo red b r1 ets .
$1Zes 5· 10

.

'

y

MEN'SI ·Sin
Fil$1010 1:1

PR.

'

WA TER I!ESIST,4NT"

WATCHES
Mer1 s end wom en' s ,

•

dressy and spor l y cMrome ·
ar~d ye!lo w
gre at ne w
IHh 1on w al ch es ! rom
petite 10 masculine de·
S1gns Some day·date an d
Calenda r tyoes All w111"1
unbrea kable ma•nspr1ngs
and Stan11ess steel bac ks

WHILE QUANTITIES
LAST
'

'

,:

ONLV$895
and

'

'

'

.,

.
'.

•

'I.,

'

JHJ~·

Men's and Boys' UNDERWEAR
r---.- •

Uttt.onrtllfon•llr Gultlnleed!
Mach1ne Wash W:a rm
Tutnt)le Dry MeduJm Our
bost Qu;'llll y b fle ls ,and
r · Silu iS ot Oacron P.Oiy·
ester and cot tOn SoH

On modem highways, your car uses 11%
less gasoline at 50 miles per hour than at60.
• if you drop from 70 to 50, you save one
gallon in every seven!

comfortable torg·
wear tr'l9 NO·IIOn.

There are many ways every American
can help save energy. You're saving
much more than money when you hold
your speedometer below 50. You're
saving precious energy that this country
·
can't afford to waste.

BOYS' JIS, S, M. l

Juver~lle Boys' Sizes 4 to 7 ... Ju'ltnll.e Glrlt ' Slns4 to· 6X

,~FOR....189

Boys ' Swtss·nb, alt co tt on kM. tur tlenecks go great over
pol~ester and eolian brushed tw1U, fl ared jeans Girl$
choose long ·sleeve kn tl tops of co tt on an d con onl po!yester 1n lots o f styles to go w1th prmts . platds and soiJdli,
in denims and brushe d d en 1ms Choice of coord inating
and contrasting colors.

YOUR CHOICE:

Every American can help save energy. Write
today for a free copy of ''A Consumer's
·.
Guide lo Efficient Energy Use In the Home.''
H's packed wilh Ideas that can $ve the
nallon's energy and your money.

,

AMY · ~

Your Loctal Oil Companies
Ohio Petroleum Council
88 East Broad Street
Columbus, Ohio 43215

,

1

' ''
.&lt;

Men'• •nd l!loy1 '

Jn!

'·

2?.!

61carry
~;m~~s~~~~
P~·,v~ :s -~~
alone Btll l ol ds ,

•

·ORENZO D..DAVIS •

77.

PURSE ACCESSORIEs

Calf-Skin HANDBAGS

I

SENSATIONAL

•

DA"I"WARNER INS. SERVICE

.
'\

son, Marty, Grove City ; Mr .

Mt. Alto; Ray Geriach and
family, Powell., Oh/o;
and
Mrs. Dencii _, Ray Hudson,
Hichard, Den~il, Jr:, · liecky,
V1rgil, and .Nancr, ·, ·Hpdson,
Racine:
Myla Hudson,
Syracuse, and Susie Hudson,
. MinersviUe. · ·
•' 1 , .'
The oldestr&lt;and Ionaest
married couple presen(
Mr. •and Mrs. Clyde Gerla.ch.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Boyer

Meigs residents attending
were Mr . .and Mrs. Herbert
Dixon, Mrs. Mike Brothers an.:l
Amy Beth, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Kesterson, Mrs . Frances
Scholl, Mrs. Mildred Mitch,
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Jennings,
Mrs. Don Hunnel and Artie ,
Mrs. Eth.el Smith
. , Mr . and
Mrs. James F. Will, Becky,
Brenda, Beverly and Brian,
Phil Ohllnger, .Laura Ohlinger,
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bowen,
Mr. ana Mrs. '•iillard Wilson, .
Mrs. Susan Pullins, Scott and
Lisa, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Bowen, Mrs . Ralph Spncer, • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •!
Rev. and Mrs. William •
Sydenstricker, Christine and · : •
'·"•' :,; :"
Brian, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff •
,,"
-•
Wilson, Kelly and Terri, Mr. •
-·
Of
' '
and Mrs. Paul Frick, Lisa Jett, •
· "
' .
.
:
Mrs. Paula Hall and Danny, •
•
Mr. and Mrs. Lorenzo Davis, :
Joey Mohler, Mr. and Mrs. Bill •
'1 ;;r .
·
•
Pullins; Rodney, Lori Ann, e
•
.Stevie and Kevin.
• M
0
·
•
[llrs.BemiceEvans,Mr.and.
r. avi.s H&lt;!S Opened An Office At :
Mrs. Ed King, Mr. and Mrs. • 100112 E. Main St., Pomeroy (Over the •
Carl Moore, Mr. and Mrs. • Blue &amp; Grey Restaurant), Under the •
Clarence Curtis, Mrs. Dorothy : Name of Davis Insurance Service
•
Clark, Mrs. Martha Husted, •
•
Miss Freda Leiving, Mrs . •
We are in a position to service your in- •
Beulah Utterback, Patty • sura' nee needs. ll will not be necessary for you •
Edwards, Mr. and Mrs. Mark • to signiu1y statement mailed or given to you to :
Tannehill and Brian, Mr. and • have the same protection· on your car or · •
Mrs. William F'recker, Mrs. : properly. We will give you honest and efficient •
Clara Karr, Mrs. Elhel • service. Please stop by .or call as to the reason •
Williamson, Mr. and Mrs. Dale • ~the division~
~~~vJ.~-Warner lnsuran~ •
Davis and Chris, Miss •
gency.
. :.. :'J ~; ! 'l"'\ 1
•
:

,.

I

~ Calendar ~ w~c~J~l~R

~~~~~. ~.~~~ ~~~~i~~n~~

"was held at noon P"j!Ceding the Elizabeth Davis, Miss Joyce A. •
I"observance.
Davis, Miss Helen M. Davis, :
L
•
' ' Out-of-town relatives and Robert Davis, Mr. and Mrs. •
•
friendsatiA!ndingwereMr.and Fred Goeglein, Mr . and Mrs. •
' Mrs. Alberl Brown, MI. Ver· Walter Schrieber, Mrs. J. E. D. •
•
:
non; Mr. and Mrs. Orrie Lewis, Harting~r, Mr. and Mrs. Philip • We can insure your Mobile Home. Ask about •
~ackson; Mrs. Elsie Brown, Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas : our pacK~~e;'t)CIIItyl . ~ ·•
•
LIJulsvUle, Ky.; Mrs. Lenora Bentz, Mr. and Mrs. Peg •
•
•
Lewis, Jackson; Randy and Dailey, MiSII Mary Virginia •
Agent For:
•
Diana Wilson, Duncan Falls; Reibel, Virgil V. Browq,~Mrs. •
Stale Auto Mutual Insurance Co .
:
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Mcln- Lucille Jesse.
•
Ohio Farmers
•
. ' tOih, Dayton; Trudy Perdue,
Mrs. Patricia Young, Mr. !
Wesffielci Coli\panies
e
' Peeble~; Mr. and Mrs. Edwin and Mrs . .Edison Hobstetter, • • • e • • • • • • • ·• • • • • • • • • • • • • • e e e
Uvlngston, John, Leslie and · MrllrJi.-=~·~Mt~s~-~~~~~-------~-----------.
Leigh Ann, New Albany, Ind. ; ,
Brad watts, Gallipolis; · Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Connell,
Charity and Saran, Mr. and

Seniors have
birthday meet

IN HOSPITAL
SIJNDA V
Mra. Nellie V~le, a Meigs
REVIVAL, Zion Church Ill
~ C.'hn~t on SR 143, Au•ust 5-6
Cuunty
Elementary School
Y.•
N
~
'
~
~ 7:30 ·each night. Everyone is supervisor, ia a pallent at
Mount Carmel Hospital. J1e1
reunion , archery room number is n4. Mrs. Vale
~ '
.
~ building at Royal Oak Park . underwent hlp sw-gery •' rlday,
Basket dlnpcr at noon.
her second such surgery. In
recent months.
TUF..S DAV
MrDDI.EPOHT Masons and
E•slern Star family picnic,
Forest Acres Park, Rutland, 6
p.m. Eat al 6:30 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
HA CINE
~' lremen 's
AuKillary will sell homemade
and
ice cream in containers ,
Wednesday, 6 to 8 p.rn. at fire
house. Anyone wanting ice
cream before Wednesday
evening call 949-J411 or 949329:1.
••

fifth reunion held

Mr. . and
Mrs.
Eldon
Weeks~~~~~ ~:::~:ir;,e:~:~~~~~
7 lu.
' ,
ce.
~e(/'f'ate anmversar11
M~.
.
J
_ Approximately 200 relatives
andfrlendsrecently celebrated
the golden wedding a~nlversary of Mr. and Mrs.
Eldon Weeks, Pomeroy,hosted
by their son and daughter-inlaw,_Mr. and Mrs. John Weeks,
Galhpolis. .
·• Mr. and .Mrs. Weeks were
married on July 21, 1923 and
have ~pent most of their lives
in Me1gs . County. For the ob- ·
· servance, Mrs. Weeks wore a
yellow rosebud corsage and
Mr. W~ks a y~llow rosebud
boutonntere, gifts of their
grandchildren, Tom and Mary
. .
''Beth Weeks.
' Flowers decorating the hous
were gift:! . from , Mrg, John
Rollinson~. ~L. Sln}ons lsla,ntl,
·Ga.; Mt. and Mrs . Sam
' Shuman and employes of lhe
'Julian Spears Co.; Mr . and
'Mrs. Manning Webster, the
"Pomeroy National Bank, the
·United Methodist Women of the
Enterprise Church; Mr. and
'Mrs. Millard Van Meier, Miss
•Mary Virginia Reibel, and the
·,family of the late Jay Myers.
The refreshment table
;featured ;)l \hree.-!iered an, ~iversary cake topped with the
,gold numerals "50". Mrs.
·Thomas Bowen, Pomeroy, and
'Mrs. Warren Rea s, New
' Albany, Ind., served· the cake,
and pow-ing the coffee and tea
lvere Mrs: Don Hunnel and
Miss Becky Will. Mrs. Carl
Moore also assisted with the
serving. Regislering the guests
~ere Mrs. Willard Wilson and
!&gt;lrs ..Ed Bowen. Napkins were
inscrlbedandminlaJurescrolls
·bearingatrlbutetofrienpsand
relatlvesweregiventoeachof
the guests.
' A featw-e of the decorations
'was a bulletin board displaying
pictures through the years of
clhe Weeks' family. Among the
; numerous gifts presented to
;the couple was a Living Bible
!rom the Enterprise United
Methodist Church of which
both Mr, and Mrs. Weeks are
' Iong·lime members. A picnic

.

,

PHONE 992 5120

,

IT!

.I

SENA VAN METER

1

.

Pittsburgh at New York, 2, twinight
·
,·
Nationa.l League
Chicago
at
Philadelphia,
nig ht
East
Cincinnati
at
Atlanta,
night
w. I. pel. g.b. Los Angeles at Houston, night
. St. Louis
ss 48 .534
San Francisco at San Diego,
Chicago
54 50 .519 l'h nioht
.
Pittsburgh
so 51 .495 4
Montreal
so 52 .490 .4112
Arnerica·n league
Phlla '
48 56 .462 71f2
East
·
New York
44 56 .440 91f::
w.
I. pet. g.b.
West
New York
59 48 .551 ...,.
'L
.
w. I. pel. g.b. Baltimore
54 45 .545
, os Angeles 66 39 .629
Boston
54 48 .529 2'1'
•Cincinnati
61 44 .581 s Detroit
54 48 .529 . 2'h
;san Fran
59 . 46 .·562 7
so 51 .49!&gt; 6
•Houston
54 53 .S05 13 Milwaukee
Cleveland
38
67 )62 20
:;Atlanta
· 48 60 .444 19'h
West
..•.;,.r,
.,San Diego
35 69 .337'30'12 Oa
w. I. pel. g.b.
Monday's Results
'
kland
58 47 .552
Chicago 3 St ..Louis 1
Kansas Clly 59 48 .551
,Montreal I New York o lsi Minnesota
53 49 .520 · 3'h
. '
' Ch.icago
•twill ht
Going to the mound for the
INDIANS VS. ORIOLES
52 52 .500 s•;,
;Monfreal 5 New York 2, 2nd, 10 C.llfornia
49 53 .480 7'h
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The Tribe will be Dick Tidrow, 8-9,
1 1nnlngs~ night
Texas
39 63 .382 17'1' Cleveland Indians open at with Jim Palmer, 12-6, pitc~ing
;~~~~1delph la ~ Pittsburgh o,
Monday's Results
home tonight with a game for the Orioles.
Chicago
9 Minnesota 1
. Atlanta' 7 Houston 3; night
Boston 4 New York 3, night
against Baltimore .
.'Los Angeles 5 San Francisco 2, Delroit 4 Baltimore 3, night
. night
.
Texas 6 Oakland o. night
'·
~ (only ga'!'es sche~uled)
(only
games
scheduled)
_ Today s Probable Pitchers
· Today~s Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDTI
I All Times EDTl
.
St. Louis (Wise 11 ·6) ·' at Minnesota
(Woodson
10.
S) at
Montreal (McAnally · 7-5) 1 s Oakland (Holtzman )5.9), 11
p.m.
Pittsburgh (Ellis 9-9) at New p.m.
Texas (Clyde 2-31 at Cali. York ( ~oosman 8-10), 8 p.m.
fornia
(Wright 8-14), 11 p.m.
. Lo• · Angeles (John 10-5) at
Kansas
(Splittorff 13·ll
· Housto~ (Roberts IU-S), 8:30 at Chicago CIIY
'
(
Stone
4-8), 9 p m.
p.m .
Baltimore
(Palmer
at
San Francisco (Marlchal 8-6) Cleveland (Tidrow 8-91. 12-6)
6 p.m.
at San Diego (Arlin 6·8), 10:30 New York (Dobson 6·3) at
p.m.
WEDNESDAY ONLY
(Leel7-S), 7:30p.m.
Chicago (Pappas l-9 and Boston
Detroit (Perry 9·10 and
Jenkins 9-9) at Philadelphia Fryman
2-7) at Milwaukee
(Brett 9·4 and Lonborg 9-7), 2, .(Colborn 13-6
and Slaton 7 9), 2,
l :30p.ll) .
'
SAFEGUARD
7p.m.
Cincinnati !Grimsley 10-6 and
Wtdne•day's Game•
Facial Size
Norman 8-9) at Atlanta (Free- Minnesota
at Oakland, nlghl
man 0·2 and Morton 8-8), 2, 6 Texas at California,
night
p.m. .
Kansas
'City
at
Chicago,
night
Wednesday's Games
Detroit
at
Milwaukee,
nlghl
St. Louis at Monlleal, 2, twl- Baltimore at Cleveland
nlahl
New York at Boston
.j

a

TIMELY
SAVINGS

..

"I'm surprised you'd ask me that;" she said.

Hart 6-0;10,
Eubank 16-2-34, May 2-2~ ,
Haggerty lfl.0-20, Cremeans 41
fl.8, Ihle 3-(J-6.
Newly acquired 6·4 Bill
Hensler made his de~ut for
Lulgls and led the Anchovies
over Adolph's Rajun Cajuns,
7fl.82. Hensler ied the winners
with 22 points, was lhe top
rebounder and blocked shots.
Haystack Walburn followed
with 16, · Tom 0owntown'i
Walters added 14 and 2-door
Ferguson chipped In 10.
The losers were paced by
Torrid Topper Orr who was
game high wllh 29 polnls. Mike
Magnotta added 13 and Bob
Ford 12.
·
Luigis (70)- T. Walters li-2-.
14, 4-door Ferguson 4.fl.8, 2·
door Ferguson S0-10, Walbw-n
~16, Hensler 11-ll-22.
Rajun Cajuns (62) - Fen.
derbosch :1-1-7, Ford 6fl.l2,
Magnotta 6-1-13, Orr 14-1-29,
Harris fl. I-I.

Mort~n ,

'

~

H annahs~ .
Giants ( 84 ) -

'

The Almanac
'"
. By United Press International
Today ls Tuesday, July 31,
the 212th day of 1973 with IG3 to
!oliOW.
The moon is approaching its
.
f1rst quar te r.
.
Th e mormng
stars are
Mercw-y,MarsandSaturn.
The evening stars are Venus
an d J up lter.
Those born on this d8 te are
under the sign of Leo.
·
.
h
Amertcan
wrt1er Jo n K~nt
was born J I 31 1763
UY • · •
.. Olj ,thisdayinhistory:
I~ · 1792, Director David
Rittenhouse laid the corner- serv1ce
By ~otor Route where carrier
not ava ilabl e: One
stone in Philadelphia for the W.
monVa
th ..,12.One
By mall In Oh io ond
year , $16 ; 51)(
U.S. Mint, the first building of mo~ lh s, months. SB.SO : Three
the fed 1
months! ss .so, Elsewhere $18 1
era governmen.1
year ; -s1x rnon1hs $9 .50; three
In 1948, as 900 planes flew price
months
. S6 . Subscr iption
Includes Sunday Ti mesoverhead, President Harry Tru- Senlinel.
1
'man dedicated the New York
International Airport at Id·
lewild Field, later to be
re named for assassinated
JUST
·President John F. Kennedy.'
ARRIVED
In 1953, senate Majority
Leader Robert Taft' of Ohio Shipment of women's
died in New York City.
a(ld children's Thorn
In 1972, Missouri Sen. MeAn fall shoes .
Thomas Eagleton withdrew as
'
Democratic vice-presidential
nominee, six days after disclosing previous hospitalization and
psychiatric treatment.
·

•

fi

rr l
u p
'l
.f.'..::W#W.Ua&lt;:&gt;:~&lt;&gt;"Wb'D,::m.&gt;/&gt;$)
.1 (lY or-liar: er .amt[1J
:.J' 1
: ;: Socl'al j~

'Howell family
has .reunion

Old DQmlnlon Co llc~e •lor S.
4 Cary Eubank p8CeQ ' the
Giants with 34 . Chipper
Ha~ger ty aciJled 20 points and
Dlno Hart chipped In 10.
Mark v 190) - Walwr~ 17·:137, Boggs 5-0-10, Fife 5-0-10,
Pullen 6-fl.l2, Moyer s-0-16,

Herd plllced 5 men in double
figures, led by F'uts Waller.
with 37 points, Preacher''
Moyer, 16, Killer Pullen, 12,
and Peal Boggs and Tarzan
File with 10.
,

R eward for poisoners ·Upped
NEW 'fflRK (UPl ) - The
reward for inform~tlon on the
poisoner of two famous Umber
wulves has been increased
from $1,000 to $4,000, partially
because of a contribution from
television talk show host Dick
Cavett.
The wolves, which appeared
twice on Cavett's late night
ABC show and once on,Li]e CBS
"Today" show with Mrs. C. B.

.

I - The Dilly SenliMI, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0'" July 31, 1073

'

FOR

_
*S.

HALL'S BEN FRANKLIIN
MIDDLEPOitT, OHIO

•• •

'

,,

•

�&amp;- Tilt&gt; Dally Stnllnrl, Middleport-Pomeroy:o .. July 31.1973

Dinner honors
Miss Geffl?eimer
•

•'

..'
·-•
'

•

'•

.--'
''

.,.
••

'!be 9:1nd birthday of Miss
Lucretia Genheimer was oblei'Ved at the recent potluck
dinner of the Pomeroy
Wop~en's Christian Tem:.e':l'nce Union held at the
;Deiohetmer home.
~ f!!ra. NeUe · Bing presented
"'llts Genhelmer with a
(jtcorated cake, and the WCTU
'r!vmbers sang "Happy Birthday." Grace preceding the,
poUuck was given by Mrs.
Lena Huber.
Mrs , Allen
Hampton
presided at tbe business
meeting during which time
officers for. the 1973-74 year
'Were elected. They are Mrs.
Hampton, president; Mrs. T.
T. Shelton, vice . president;
Mrs .
Robert
Warner,

secretary; Mrs. Joseph Cook,
treasurer ; Mrs. Shelton,
spiritual life chairwoman;
Mrs . Warner , legislative
chairwoman; Miss Genheimer, .
chairwoman of. yooth lem·
perance education.
Following groop singing of
"What a Fellowship," Mrs,
Cook had prayer, and Mrs.
Elsie Roush gave devotions
using tl)e topic "Women Guardians of Community
Standards'~ with scripture
from II Cor. 7:1-10. Mrs. Della
Curtis read Psalm 90.
Serving on the nominating
committee which reported at
the meeting were Mrs. Ellen
Couch, chairwoman ; Mrs.
warner, and Mrs. Cook.

.,

·Honor Story family
A famlly retullon was held
Sunday at the Route 33 road·
side park in honor of Mr. and
Mrs. Noel Story, visiting here
fromLaVern,Jowa. Mrs Story
Js the former Anna 'lborna of
Meigs Cotulty.
A ,ttendlng the get-together
~li-e Mr. and Mrs. George·
Zleglerandson,Roger Megan
Turner, Dayton;. Mr. and Mrs.
Leo Klng, Columbus; Mr. and
!\Irs. Charles Carper, Kirks' ville; George aild Elsie Story,
LaVern, Iowa; Ola Smith, Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Smith, Nancy,
Paul and Pearl, Mr. and Mrs.
LOwell Carper, Mr. and Mrs.

George Carper, Dawn, Wendr,
George, and Robert, Mrs.
Wilhelmlns Thoma, Mr. and
Mrs. Glen Thoma, Gail and
Linda, Mrs. Georgia Thoma,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Thoma,
Kelly and Suzan, Roy Thoma,
Diane, Helen, Cannen and
Danny, · 'Mr. and Mrs. Otto
Lohn,Mr.andMrs
DaleE.
Smith, Mr. and Mrs.r CI!l~ence
Story and RosaUe, Mr. and
Mrs. Homer WUlard, Mrs·.
Mina Hart, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Lee, Mrs. Ethel Grueser, Mrs.
Ada Morris, Mr. and Mrs .. \.
Jewell Story, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Carl.

·
d
M
'
H
l1
'
(
"
owe
Mr. an
r.
observe anniversary
,

.J ,

CANTON - Mr. and Mrs.
• V.ernon Howell of Canton,
former residents of Meigs
County, recently · observed
~ir 57th wedding anniversary
JVith a celebration at the ho.me
. ''
o! their son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. RO&amp;a
' '
Poulton in Canton, July 24.
1\fSny relatives and friends
attended the observance and
numerous .
cards
of
. :.qongratulatlons were received.
. • : .on July 26, Mrs. Howell
celebrated her 82nd birthday at
Beach City at the home of the
, cQuple's son-in-law and
~ --.

·

daughter, Mr. and Mrs. G. E.
Caru~hers and daughter
G~orgie . Mr. Howell ac·
companied his wHe to Beach
City for the celebration.
A party was held and among
those attending were the
Howells' granddaughter,' Mrs.
Robert Nicewander, of Dun·
dee, and their two sons. Ice .
cream and cake were served.
The cake had been baked by
Mrs. Caruthers and decorated
by her daughter. Mr. and Mrs.
Howell have 10 grandchildren
and 16 great-grandchildren.

.

Pomeroy Garden has meet
Meigs County Fair fiower
show particlpa lion was
C!tscuaaed at a recent meecirog
of the PomeroY Garden Club
!ild at the Episcopal Parish

Hoose.

..
'

The club will' assume
respmslbllity for filling the
class entitled "Pomeroy
' G'arden Club" in the Aug. 15
Show which has as Its theme
· ''Honoring the Garden Clubs of

Meigs County." The category
calls for traditional mass
arrangements indicative .of the
county seat.
·
Plans were made for a
meeting on Aug. 6 at the home
of Mrs. Walter Grueser with
each member to take a flower
arrangement suitable for
class . A potluck dinner
preceded the meeting.

•

f41RAC
· DO

The '~.ea ·

Vell•r S.w~gt
Treatment Plant near
London pul goldfish In lis
effluent
ponds
tor
dec:orellve purposes. one
ff'oer floh were unusually
ttsllng showld
the pond't pnflcl~ eontent wes higher then
normal. Now, regular
observetlont of tho fish
give • quick etsy rough
measure of the toxic level
of the plant's oulpul.

'lla''

Careful design and .
&lt;:ontlnulng research
development euure you or
the moot modtrn end tf·
tecllvt wettr relining unit
' on tho market today .
UnpiHsent taste end odors
of
I
acid, rust end
, )&gt; ~iote•rgornt rotldut' · trt
' removed,
trtnoltrring
, ordiMry tap water Into a
• dallcocy . .Your family,
: homo end everything In II
wlll-..ct-.r btcaua any
• clotnlng agent worko
• bettor with rotintd water.
' Call 112-2525. .

First birthday
is celebrated
HARTFORD W.Va. - Amy
Denise Rizer celebrated her
first birthday with 1!, party in
her honor at the home of John
and Mary Janet McDermitt
Sunday, July 22.
Refreshments of homemade
ice cream, cake and iced tea
were served and gifts were
received.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Sayre imd Timothy, Mr.
and Mrs. Vernon L. Rizer, Mr.
and Mrs. Vernon L. Rizer
(parents) and Andrea Dawn,
Opal and Jackie Zerkle, ~Y
Zerkle, Mary Ann Elias and
Mr. and 'Mrs. John McDermitt
and Scott.
McDennitt and Scott. ·

Atti;;ND OPEN HOUSE
Mrs. Bruce Wallace and son,
Buck, and Mrs. Dwight
Wallace and daughter, Nancy,
were In Columbus Friday for
the open house at the Ohio
Patrol's Academy. Bruce D.
Wallace Is a cadet at the
Academy. '!bey were joined for
the day by Mr. and Mrs. Alan
Wallace. Mrs. Dwight Wallace
and daughter remained in
Columbus for. a weekend .visit
with the _Alan Wallace family .

l Kingsbury

llhlll~·:!:pit~;·(~~ .:·~~b~~~-t~~~~~:~ ~ :~
I tdltor) and mu_ll

be elptd with !be •l&amp;nH'I

ocldmo.

I

1 N1me1 nwy be withheld Upllll publlcalloo. However, 011
1 req~~eot , DlllltS will be dlad01ed. l&lt;ll&lt;n &amp;hould be In loud
1 laote,

oddret~IAI

£) ~h ,1,

I

I1

ltsueo, not penouUIIes.

I. •• •
I

~L

rrV[.-

.

I
1

1

News, Notes

I The Curieton Church
1 currently havin~ a revival to
5. Evangelist
II .rtuli.s thethruRevAUKusl
. John Lanier nnd the

)s

.

..Q'KVtdl#t~
~
•

•

pastor of the church, Rev. Jay
' Stiles extends nn invitation to

I

Why an ordinance if .? areal~r.announcing
and Mrs. David ~ach
the birth of a
o

Syracuse, Ohio
July 'f!, 1973
Dear Sir :
1 saw a picture of Mr. London and three boys holding new
street signs, which is very good, as our streets should be mark.ed
so visitors can find the people.
But there are .other things we need, too, like cutting the
weeds and brush. The lot next to me is like a jungle ; il has been
for years. '!be hoose hasn't been lived in .for years, the lot untended. My husband has cut lots of the weeds next to our lot for
years. But lie isn't able to cut even,our own lot this year. I have
paid to have it cut.
I ·talked to two of thecouncll members about it, to the mayor.
Every time my husband sits down to our table to eat a meal we
have to look at this jungle. The town has an ordinanCe requiring •
people to keep their lots clean or the vUJage can have it done with
the cost on their taxes.
.
What is the use of having an ordinance if you don't abide by
it?! would like to see something done about it.
Mrs. MaheiPickens, College Road.

:r~~~;;:;:=:-~:&lt;.&lt;:,:&gt;.«'8«.'W&amp;&amp;~3ll
-. ~

The Poet'S
"'
~::
Co
f
rner ,
~-

Big Run

daughter who will answer to
the name or Mellisa Gail.
Mrs. Louise Harrison visited
recently with Mrs. Fay..- Pratt
and Mrs. Bernice Riffle.
Recent guest of Mr. and Mrs.
John Dean and Mr . and Mrs.
John Waller Dean were. Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Markins of
Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Rled and Walter Terrell of
Pataskala, Mrs. Connie Smith
and Mrs. Kathleen Bricker of
North Canton, Mr . and Mrs .
Hobart Smalley Jr., Judy,
Dale, Susie and Hobart of
Wierton, W.Va., Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Gilkey, ·Rick, Tammy
and Cindy of Athens.
Recent visitor of Mrs. Neva
King and Mr. and Mrs. Harold
White was Ralph Carr of
Virginia Beacli, Va. and while

112-UU

..,_,w.v.,
..

~ .

•

In 1967, reports f~om behJDd
the "Bamboo Curtsln" told of a
rna~ purge of the Red Chinese
army.

"'

-

SPEC lA~

o;olumbus vislllns relatives
there.

•

•••
•

Va/tJ~,S

FREE .,
ON-STREET
PARKING •~•.I.

••

•

ALL OVER

OUR STORE

AFTER 5 PM

I

•

lOLA'S

''

Main AI Sycamore
POMEROV. OHIO

'
f

-SUfER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to ~0 - Sun. 10 to 10

1

TH£"

FABRIC

I
I
I

.,

· 1!17:1

f

a------------I
I
I

0 ,.lu

•

Clearance

HOSTS GUF.STS
weekend guuts of Mrs.
David Entsminger, Mid ·
dleport, were Mr . Ents·
mlnger's brother and sister-In·
law, Mr. and Mrs. Wendell
Miller, Groveport, and her
granddaughters, Kimberly
Entsminger, Cincinnati,' and
Jill Entsminger, Sl. l,lbans, W.
Va.

..•
•

SHOP

••

--...
~

POMEROY, OHIO

•.

PH. 992-2284

••

..•
•

I
I

Second

We Accept f;ederal Pood Stmnps
PHONE: 992-3480

••
•••
•••

SWIFT'S PREMIUM

SWIFT'.S PREMIUM

SWIFT'S PREMIUM

SPICED
LUNCHEON
~~· $799

CHOPPED
HAM
3J~·
59

CANNED
·HAM

'

I
I
1
I
I
I
I

heretheyallattended~ecarr

I
I
1
I
I
I
I

Dotted Swiss
Kettlecloth

.

Seersucker
Bathing Suit
Fabrics
Body Suit Fabrics
J~rseys

:; SUPERIORS ALL BEEF

12

~

: SUPERIORS

. _.

0~

·

pkg.

lb.

'

I

I

I

~ BY tHE

OFF ; I
yd. 2.49 ! I
112

PATCHES
- ..• • •
CREPE .. - . . . • . ·
COTTON AND
POLYESTER KNIT · -

-10/SISL

"ALL YOU ADD IS LOVE" ®

Come in and see our
many styles in popular

price range a.

I

~

I
I
I

1

I

L1N1NG . - .

· - · 4 yds. $1

I

GOESSLER

SINGER $
SALE

~ JEWELRY STORE
Court St.

Pomeroy

I
I
I

I
I
I
I
I
I

•••
••
••
•••

-

-

•
•

~--~----~----------J

AS OF AUGlJST 1, 1973 IT WILL

o

WIENERS
-12

89~

%

6,000 to.
24,000 BTU

AMOUNT

$20.00
MINIMUM

$1,000.00

•

COMPUTED
FROM DAY OF
DEPOSIT .

Quarterly

$1,000.00 . .Quarterly

%

$1,000.00

Quarterly

Farmers Bank &amp;Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO .
Member of Fe~eral Reserve System
$20,000 Maximum Insurance for Each Depositor

PH . 773-55?2

ICE

OZENFOODS

l-Ib.

4

...

0

INSTANT POTATOES

"
1ft :gal.

Hb.

bag

HUNT'S
\'

•

...
....•
...•
.•.
....•

FISH STICKS .
1fz lb.

pkg.

DAYTIME
.

49t;

-·

DOG FOOD

TOPPING

SAUCE CUBE DOG FOOD

SIZe

••••

•.·SPECIAL·

GRADE A SMALL

~

-

•

.,; .CHEWING
TOBACCO
CRT.

· TOilET TISSUE

A'l

RC· COLAi

'2 88

PAK
16 oz.

SMOKING
·TOBACCO

4•• roll

CRT. $139

pack

LAREDO

Diet Rite Cola or Dad's Root Beer

TOBACCO
REG. Of
MENTHOL

TOMATOES
•·

3-lb•

bsk.

SPECIAL
'
PAPER TOWELS

89e

Jumbo
Rolls

16 oz. bo1s.

8
pak

WINCHESTER CIGARS
f P-ACK
BUY A
CARTON
FREE

•1''

11111111-

NORTHERN .

3

doz.

BUGLER

'

,..•

.•" .
,....•.
,.

EGGS·

(AT OUR TOBACCO W.U~lER
ALL BRANDS

NORTHERN

HOME GROWN .

,,• .

''1&lt;;/T UI'). 1 •r' I"

..

'

$ 59

lb.
bag

FRISK.I.ES.

BARS
.·

$ 49

'• I

6 PAK ~ .. ,4,9~

·~

25 lb.
bag

MEAL OR
CHUNK

$}0,0

10 OZ.

FUDG~
.
•·

...••

.

TRAIL BLAZER

RICH'S WHIPPED

..•

30 ct
box

PAMPERS

.

3

..

cans

BOOTH

••
••
•••

.....•
-...."".
••
......•
.....
."....
.....
..."...
.....
......
....••"'.
.
•..
...

12 oz.

TOMATO SAUCE

-·-..

1. r

.

•• •
'

.I DAHO POTATO FLAKES

•

~

MASON, W. VA .

jar

.,., '

N

•

tonight . Total ven tilation .

Mason Furniture

INTEREST PAID

ql

KRAFT MIRACLE

,.

INTEREST

KRAFT SALAD DRESS.~~G

M1-RACLE WHIP

pkg.

OL

\~

CERTIFICATE

AIR
CONDITIONERS

'

NORTH STAR
... ,,\JiH ,. ,..,,

1-YEAR

Kel,lno:l:or

I

-~

3-MONTH
CERTIFICATE

. 2-YEAR
CERTIFICATE

can

Superiors All Meat

.On SAVINGS ACCOUNTS

PASSBOOK

5 lb.

SERVE WIENERS WITH BEANS! .

Pay the Higher Legal Rates
'

\

'

•

ANNOUNCES

lb.

'

\

.-~ CREAM
crt

I

The Farmers .Bank &amp; Savings Company

lb.

CANNED

Sealtest -

.
•

•

UP

.

: HOMEMADE

yd. 1.98 :

POLYESTER THREAD· • · • · · ·. 39c
STRETCH AND
SEW PATTERNS • - · • 1/2 OFF
WONDER UNDER • · • · - _112 OFF

I
I

PIECE

~ LONGHORN

,~~~~~~~ s~ -. -. ·. ·. ·. ~ ziP·P~dRs~-:~

I

can

·~.

SWIFT'S PREMIUM

$519

31b.

.••

I

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

•we Reserve The Right To Umit Qll8ntitlell"

$4
BIG SALE I
9
9¢
WIENERS.............. . ·
OFF
9
9
¢
: POLISH SAUSAGE •••••••
I
/
I
9
9¢
CHEESE ••••• .
I
I HAM. SALAD. •••••••••••89¢
._ .
1
·1
HAS A

Have coo l clean air

SAYRI
' HARDWARE

-------,•

f~mily spent the weektnd in

I

Clarence Randolph and Inez reunion.
Randolph visited Dorsei Biggs Going to Forked Rtul Lake
and Dorset Miller at Veterans for. a picnic Sunday were Mr.
Memorial Hospital Thursday. and Mrs. Homer Bailey, Mr.
TbeStrangestStranger
Mr. Biggs was discharged and Mrs. Roger Yotulg and
Of AU
Saturday and is Improving .
Wesley, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
A Poem by Forest Kyle, Llttle Dinner guests at the home of Beat and Denise, Mr. and Mrs.
Hocking, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Ran- Russell Well, Mrs. Evelyn
dolph Sr . .and Inez Randolph Well, Barbara and Bryon, Mr.
Have you seen a mysterious Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Kirk Chevalier and
symbol
Kenny Siders and Chrislina of Mrs. Betty Chevalier.
Of a rider whose stud is pale? Point Pleasant, W. Va., Mr. Visiting 'with her grand·
A( his · coming brave men and Mrs. Donald Randolph and mother, Mrs. Louise Harrison
tremble
..son and Frankie Day, Mr. and was Jodi Harrison.
,
And the strongest heart will Mfs. Edgar Randolph of North Recent guests of Mr. and
fail.
. Canton. Aftern?On callers ~ere Mrs. Rowland Dais were Mr.
Miss Cheryl Boggs and frle,nd, and Mrs. Bernard Paulsen and
There is a rendezvous
Eddie McPherson of Marietta. children, Tracy and Gayla of
To be kept by great and small: Miss Biggs is in nurses training Dallas, Texas. Mrs. Paulsen is
Somewhere he waits for you- at Nelsonville.
Mrs. Dais' niece. Other dinner
The strangest stranger of all.
F1orence Biggs and friend· guests were Mr. and Mrs.
John Schlotterbeck Jr · of Frank Burson, Mrs. Goidle
·nawrhim riding by
Marietta and John's parents, Colmer, Mrs. Fred Burson and
In a vision I recall;
Mr. and Mrs. John Schlot- .daughters, Christie and Jana of
terbeck
Sr. called on Mr .. and Shade.
I heard his mournful sigh :
(The strangest slranger of all). Mrs. Dorset Biggs Sunday Recent visitors of Mr. and
evening.
Mrs. Roy Sauer were Mr. and
A voice in earnest prayer:
Pearl Randolph has ear and Mrs. Ernest Perkins and
"Spare him, oh, Lord above." )lead infection.
children of Newark.
Mr. and Mrs. Orner Hess
I felt hiS presence there,
And learned that God Is Love. called on William and Pearl
Randolph Sa!urday evening.
Bernita Biggs of Columbus
I felt an ·icy breath
W~re darkest shadows fall; spent a week with her aunt,
I learned his name is Death, Hazel Biggs and family.
George Smith called on Ziba
The Strangest Stranger of all.
Midkiff recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Randolph spent Monday
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Saturday, July 28, 197$
Donald Randolph and two
SALES REPORT OF
boys.
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Day
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 52.50 and son, Jeff, recently visited
to 52.85; 220 to 250 lbs. 52.50 to Mr. and Mrs. Donald Randolph
53.20; Light 44 to 50; Fat Sows and children.
42.50 to 46.50; Slags 35 Down;
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Curtis
Boars 34 to 36.50; Pigs 25 to 40; called on Mr. and Mrs. Dorset
Shoats' 34 to 50.
Biggs Monday evening.
CATl'LE - Steers 50 to
Mr. and Mrs. Kenny· Siders.
.
57.50; HeHers 39.75 to 52; Baby and Chrisllne called on Mr. and
Beef 55 to 71; Fat Cows 34 to Mrs. Dorsel Biggs Monday and
39.25; Canners 28 to 36.10; Bulls Miss Janet Biggs went home
40 to 44 .25; Milk Cows 395 to with them to spend a few days.
545.
Greg Sheets visited Denver
VEAL CALVES -Tops .72.50 Biggs Sunday afternoon.
to 76.50; Seconds 70 to 72;
Mr ~ and Mrs . Clarence
Medium 64 to 70;_Com. &amp; Hvs. (Sonny) Randolph Jr. of
68 to 73; Culls 00 to 60.
Chillicothe called on her
BABY CALVES -62.50 to parents, Roy Sayre and family
135,
and also on his parents, Mr.
TYPE ACCOUNT
and Mrs. Clarence Randolph
Sr. on Wednesday evening,
SCJOTOLIVESTOCK
The Hatfield family of
Steers; Choice, 51.911-52.50; Cleveland is spending some
Good, 47-50.10; Standard 41· ' time at their home here on Big
45.50.
Run.
Denver Biggs helped Russel
Heifers : Choice, 48.6&gt;-51.10:
Good, 46-17.85. .
Cullums with his hay one day
Cows: Commercial, last week.
28.2li-39.85; Utility, 35.~.85 ;
Hazel Biggs recently visited
Canner and Cutter 28.35-33.10. her mother, Inez Randolph.
Bulls: Commercial, 43-6().
Mrs. Bob White recently
46. 75. ·
· called on Pearl Randolph.
Stockers and Feeders: Steer
Mr. and Mrs .. Wilbur Van
Calves 51-63.50; Helfer M~~r spent the weekend with
Calves, 45.50·55 ; Yearlings Wolham and Pearl Randolph.
Steers: 41.50-66.25; Cows and
Calves 430-621.50.
Up1 and Downs
Veal Calves: Choice, 70.50;
. The bladderwort , a plant
Good, 65.50.
that lives under water most of
Lambs: Choice, 39.
the year, rises to the surface
Hogs : 200-230, 53.25; No. I, when it flowers . At blossom53.50; 230-240, 53; sOws, 46- ing time, the bladders fill with
air and the plant rises to the
48.30; Boars, 39.25.
surface.

•'

•'f '

Severo! youth !rum the
t:urlclon Chw·dl will be ~t­
lendmK Bible Camp at the
Willow Biblu Cump July 29th,
1\et'Cnt visitors of Mrs. Hu~el
Arnold were Mr. and Mrs.
!.ester Arnold and Billy Of
Westerville, Mr. and "'!rs.
Ronutd McNally of AU1ens, Mr.
and Mrs. Nathan Arnold and
.family or Chester. Mrs. Arnold
received word that her
granddaughter had Wlder{6ile
surgery at Holzer Medical
Center : She is the child of Mr.
and Mrs . Patrick Williams of
McArthur.
Mr . and Mrs. Floyd Ross and

.
I
-------------~------------~
1

00

OXYDOL
,ONLY
~l~t:Jlll~ 0

••

$}19

-=
=
I~

!

. WITH THII COUPON ~

MARK V.

....... 8-24-73

WITHOUT
COUPON

LIMIT 1 COUPON P£A 'URCHAIE

•

FRIDAY ONLY

Coca-Col
Big 32 oz. bots.
Returnable Bottle ··

�&amp;- Tilt&gt; Dally Stnllnrl, Middleport-Pomeroy:o .. July 31.1973

Dinner honors
Miss Geffl?eimer
•

•'

..'
·-•
'

•

'•

.--'
''

.,.
••

'!be 9:1nd birthday of Miss
Lucretia Genheimer was oblei'Ved at the recent potluck
dinner of the Pomeroy
Wop~en's Christian Tem:.e':l'nce Union held at the
;Deiohetmer home.
~ f!!ra. NeUe · Bing presented
"'llts Genhelmer with a
(jtcorated cake, and the WCTU
'r!vmbers sang "Happy Birthday." Grace preceding the,
poUuck was given by Mrs.
Lena Huber.
Mrs , Allen
Hampton
presided at tbe business
meeting during which time
officers for. the 1973-74 year
'Were elected. They are Mrs.
Hampton, president; Mrs. T.
T. Shelton, vice . president;
Mrs .
Robert
Warner,

secretary; Mrs. Joseph Cook,
treasurer ; Mrs. Shelton,
spiritual life chairwoman;
Mrs . Warner , legislative
chairwoman; Miss Genheimer, .
chairwoman of. yooth lem·
perance education.
Following groop singing of
"What a Fellowship," Mrs,
Cook had prayer, and Mrs.
Elsie Roush gave devotions
using tl)e topic "Women Guardians of Community
Standards'~ with scripture
from II Cor. 7:1-10. Mrs. Della
Curtis read Psalm 90.
Serving on the nominating
committee which reported at
the meeting were Mrs. Ellen
Couch, chairwoman ; Mrs.
warner, and Mrs. Cook.

.,

·Honor Story family
A famlly retullon was held
Sunday at the Route 33 road·
side park in honor of Mr. and
Mrs. Noel Story, visiting here
fromLaVern,Jowa. Mrs Story
Js the former Anna 'lborna of
Meigs Cotulty.
A ,ttendlng the get-together
~li-e Mr. and Mrs. George·
Zleglerandson,Roger Megan
Turner, Dayton;. Mr. and Mrs.
Leo Klng, Columbus; Mr. and
!\Irs. Charles Carper, Kirks' ville; George aild Elsie Story,
LaVern, Iowa; Ola Smith, Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Smith, Nancy,
Paul and Pearl, Mr. and Mrs.
LOwell Carper, Mr. and Mrs.

George Carper, Dawn, Wendr,
George, and Robert, Mrs.
Wilhelmlns Thoma, Mr. and
Mrs. Glen Thoma, Gail and
Linda, Mrs. Georgia Thoma,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Thoma,
Kelly and Suzan, Roy Thoma,
Diane, Helen, Cannen and
Danny, · 'Mr. and Mrs. Otto
Lohn,Mr.andMrs
DaleE.
Smith, Mr. and Mrs.r CI!l~ence
Story and RosaUe, Mr. and
Mrs. Homer WUlard, Mrs·.
Mina Hart, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Lee, Mrs. Ethel Grueser, Mrs.
Ada Morris, Mr. and Mrs .. \.
Jewell Story, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Carl.

·
d
M
'
H
l1
'
(
"
owe
Mr. an
r.
observe anniversary
,

.J ,

CANTON - Mr. and Mrs.
• V.ernon Howell of Canton,
former residents of Meigs
County, recently · observed
~ir 57th wedding anniversary
JVith a celebration at the ho.me
. ''
o! their son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. RO&amp;a
' '
Poulton in Canton, July 24.
1\fSny relatives and friends
attended the observance and
numerous .
cards
of
. :.qongratulatlons were received.
. • : .on July 26, Mrs. Howell
celebrated her 82nd birthday at
Beach City at the home of the
, cQuple's son-in-law and
~ --.

·

daughter, Mr. and Mrs. G. E.
Caru~hers and daughter
G~orgie . Mr. Howell ac·
companied his wHe to Beach
City for the celebration.
A party was held and among
those attending were the
Howells' granddaughter,' Mrs.
Robert Nicewander, of Dun·
dee, and their two sons. Ice .
cream and cake were served.
The cake had been baked by
Mrs. Caruthers and decorated
by her daughter. Mr. and Mrs.
Howell have 10 grandchildren
and 16 great-grandchildren.

.

Pomeroy Garden has meet
Meigs County Fair fiower
show particlpa lion was
C!tscuaaed at a recent meecirog
of the PomeroY Garden Club
!ild at the Episcopal Parish

Hoose.

..
'

The club will' assume
respmslbllity for filling the
class entitled "Pomeroy
' G'arden Club" in the Aug. 15
Show which has as Its theme
· ''Honoring the Garden Clubs of

Meigs County." The category
calls for traditional mass
arrangements indicative .of the
county seat.
·
Plans were made for a
meeting on Aug. 6 at the home
of Mrs. Walter Grueser with
each member to take a flower
arrangement suitable for
class . A potluck dinner
preceded the meeting.

•

f41RAC
· DO

The '~.ea ·

Vell•r S.w~gt
Treatment Plant near
London pul goldfish In lis
effluent
ponds
tor
dec:orellve purposes. one
ff'oer floh were unusually
ttsllng showld
the pond't pnflcl~ eontent wes higher then
normal. Now, regular
observetlont of tho fish
give • quick etsy rough
measure of the toxic level
of the plant's oulpul.

'lla''

Careful design and .
&lt;:ontlnulng research
development euure you or
the moot modtrn end tf·
tecllvt wettr relining unit
' on tho market today .
UnpiHsent taste end odors
of
I
acid, rust end
, )&gt; ~iote•rgornt rotldut' · trt
' removed,
trtnoltrring
, ordiMry tap water Into a
• dallcocy . .Your family,
: homo end everything In II
wlll-..ct-.r btcaua any
• clotnlng agent worko
• bettor with rotintd water.
' Call 112-2525. .

First birthday
is celebrated
HARTFORD W.Va. - Amy
Denise Rizer celebrated her
first birthday with 1!, party in
her honor at the home of John
and Mary Janet McDermitt
Sunday, July 22.
Refreshments of homemade
ice cream, cake and iced tea
were served and gifts were
received.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Sayre imd Timothy, Mr.
and Mrs. Vernon L. Rizer, Mr.
and Mrs. Vernon L. Rizer
(parents) and Andrea Dawn,
Opal and Jackie Zerkle, ~Y
Zerkle, Mary Ann Elias and
Mr. and 'Mrs. John McDermitt
and Scott.
McDennitt and Scott. ·

Atti;;ND OPEN HOUSE
Mrs. Bruce Wallace and son,
Buck, and Mrs. Dwight
Wallace and daughter, Nancy,
were In Columbus Friday for
the open house at the Ohio
Patrol's Academy. Bruce D.
Wallace Is a cadet at the
Academy. '!bey were joined for
the day by Mr. and Mrs. Alan
Wallace. Mrs. Dwight Wallace
and daughter remained in
Columbus for. a weekend .visit
with the _Alan Wallace family .

l Kingsbury

llhlll~·:!:pit~;·(~~ .:·~~b~~~-t~~~~~:~ ~ :~
I tdltor) and mu_ll

be elptd with !be •l&amp;nH'I

ocldmo.

I

1 N1me1 nwy be withheld Upllll publlcalloo. However, 011
1 req~~eot , DlllltS will be dlad01ed. l&lt;ll&lt;n &amp;hould be In loud
1 laote,

oddret~IAI

£) ~h ,1,

I

I1

ltsueo, not penouUIIes.

I. •• •
I

~L

rrV[.-

.

I
1

1

News, Notes

I The Curieton Church
1 currently havin~ a revival to
5. Evangelist
II .rtuli.s thethruRevAUKusl
. John Lanier nnd the

)s

.

..Q'KVtdl#t~
~
•

•

pastor of the church, Rev. Jay
' Stiles extends nn invitation to

I

Why an ordinance if .? areal~r.announcing
and Mrs. David ~ach
the birth of a
o

Syracuse, Ohio
July 'f!, 1973
Dear Sir :
1 saw a picture of Mr. London and three boys holding new
street signs, which is very good, as our streets should be mark.ed
so visitors can find the people.
But there are .other things we need, too, like cutting the
weeds and brush. The lot next to me is like a jungle ; il has been
for years. '!be hoose hasn't been lived in .for years, the lot untended. My husband has cut lots of the weeds next to our lot for
years. But lie isn't able to cut even,our own lot this year. I have
paid to have it cut.
I ·talked to two of thecouncll members about it, to the mayor.
Every time my husband sits down to our table to eat a meal we
have to look at this jungle. The town has an ordinanCe requiring •
people to keep their lots clean or the vUJage can have it done with
the cost on their taxes.
.
What is the use of having an ordinance if you don't abide by
it?! would like to see something done about it.
Mrs. MaheiPickens, College Road.

:r~~~;;:;:=:-~:&lt;.&lt;:,:&gt;.«'8«.'W&amp;&amp;~3ll
-. ~

The Poet'S
"'
~::
Co
f
rner ,
~-

Big Run

daughter who will answer to
the name or Mellisa Gail.
Mrs. Louise Harrison visited
recently with Mrs. Fay..- Pratt
and Mrs. Bernice Riffle.
Recent guest of Mr. and Mrs.
John Dean and Mr . and Mrs.
John Waller Dean were. Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Markins of
Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Rled and Walter Terrell of
Pataskala, Mrs. Connie Smith
and Mrs. Kathleen Bricker of
North Canton, Mr . and Mrs .
Hobart Smalley Jr., Judy,
Dale, Susie and Hobart of
Wierton, W.Va., Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Gilkey, ·Rick, Tammy
and Cindy of Athens.
Recent visitor of Mrs. Neva
King and Mr. and Mrs. Harold
White was Ralph Carr of
Virginia Beacli, Va. and while

112-UU

..,_,w.v.,
..

~ .

•

In 1967, reports f~om behJDd
the "Bamboo Curtsln" told of a
rna~ purge of the Red Chinese
army.

"'

-

SPEC lA~

o;olumbus vislllns relatives
there.

•

•••
•

Va/tJ~,S

FREE .,
ON-STREET
PARKING •~•.I.

••

•

ALL OVER

OUR STORE

AFTER 5 PM

I

•

lOLA'S

''

Main AI Sycamore
POMEROV. OHIO

'
f

-SUfER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to ~0 - Sun. 10 to 10

1

TH£"

FABRIC

I
I
I

.,

· 1!17:1

f

a------------I
I
I

0 ,.lu

•

Clearance

HOSTS GUF.STS
weekend guuts of Mrs.
David Entsminger, Mid ·
dleport, were Mr . Ents·
mlnger's brother and sister-In·
law, Mr. and Mrs. Wendell
Miller, Groveport, and her
granddaughters, Kimberly
Entsminger, Cincinnati,' and
Jill Entsminger, Sl. l,lbans, W.
Va.

..•
•

SHOP

••

--...
~

POMEROY, OHIO

•.

PH. 992-2284

••

..•
•

I
I

Second

We Accept f;ederal Pood Stmnps
PHONE: 992-3480

••
•••
•••

SWIFT'S PREMIUM

SWIFT'.S PREMIUM

SWIFT'S PREMIUM

SPICED
LUNCHEON
~~· $799

CHOPPED
HAM
3J~·
59

CANNED
·HAM

'

I
I
1
I
I
I
I

heretheyallattended~ecarr

I
I
1
I
I
I
I

Dotted Swiss
Kettlecloth

.

Seersucker
Bathing Suit
Fabrics
Body Suit Fabrics
J~rseys

:; SUPERIORS ALL BEEF

12

~

: SUPERIORS

. _.

0~

·

pkg.

lb.

'

I

I

I

~ BY tHE

OFF ; I
yd. 2.49 ! I
112

PATCHES
- ..• • •
CREPE .. - . . . • . ·
COTTON AND
POLYESTER KNIT · -

-10/SISL

"ALL YOU ADD IS LOVE" ®

Come in and see our
many styles in popular

price range a.

I

~

I
I
I

1

I

L1N1NG . - .

· - · 4 yds. $1

I

GOESSLER

SINGER $
SALE

~ JEWELRY STORE
Court St.

Pomeroy

I
I
I

I
I
I
I
I
I

•••
••
••
•••

-

-

•
•

~--~----~----------J

AS OF AUGlJST 1, 1973 IT WILL

o

WIENERS
-12

89~

%

6,000 to.
24,000 BTU

AMOUNT

$20.00
MINIMUM

$1,000.00

•

COMPUTED
FROM DAY OF
DEPOSIT .

Quarterly

$1,000.00 . .Quarterly

%

$1,000.00

Quarterly

Farmers Bank &amp;Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO .
Member of Fe~eral Reserve System
$20,000 Maximum Insurance for Each Depositor

PH . 773-55?2

ICE

OZENFOODS

l-Ib.

4

...

0

INSTANT POTATOES

"
1ft :gal.

Hb.

bag

HUNT'S
\'

•

...
....•
...•
.•.
....•

FISH STICKS .
1fz lb.

pkg.

DAYTIME
.

49t;

-·

DOG FOOD

TOPPING

SAUCE CUBE DOG FOOD

SIZe

••••

•.·SPECIAL·

GRADE A SMALL

~

-

•

.,; .CHEWING
TOBACCO
CRT.

· TOilET TISSUE

A'l

RC· COLAi

'2 88

PAK
16 oz.

SMOKING
·TOBACCO

4•• roll

CRT. $139

pack

LAREDO

Diet Rite Cola or Dad's Root Beer

TOBACCO
REG. Of
MENTHOL

TOMATOES
•·

3-lb•

bsk.

SPECIAL
'
PAPER TOWELS

89e

Jumbo
Rolls

16 oz. bo1s.

8
pak

WINCHESTER CIGARS
f P-ACK
BUY A
CARTON
FREE

•1''

11111111-

NORTHERN .

3

doz.

BUGLER

'

,..•

.•" .
,....•.
,.

EGGS·

(AT OUR TOBACCO W.U~lER
ALL BRANDS

NORTHERN

HOME GROWN .

,,• .

''1&lt;;/T UI'). 1 •r' I"

..

'

$ 59

lb.
bag

FRISK.I.ES.

BARS
.·

$ 49

'• I

6 PAK ~ .. ,4,9~

·~

25 lb.
bag

MEAL OR
CHUNK

$}0,0

10 OZ.

FUDG~
.
•·

...••

.

TRAIL BLAZER

RICH'S WHIPPED

..•

30 ct
box

PAMPERS

.

3

..

cans

BOOTH

••
••
•••

.....•
-...."".
••
......•
.....
."....
.....
..."...
.....
......
....••"'.
.
•..
...

12 oz.

TOMATO SAUCE

-·-..

1. r

.

•• •
'

.I DAHO POTATO FLAKES

•

~

MASON, W. VA .

jar

.,., '

N

•

tonight . Total ven tilation .

Mason Furniture

INTEREST PAID

ql

KRAFT MIRACLE

,.

INTEREST

KRAFT SALAD DRESS.~~G

M1-RACLE WHIP

pkg.

OL

\~

CERTIFICATE

AIR
CONDITIONERS

'

NORTH STAR
... ,,\JiH ,. ,..,,

1-YEAR

Kel,lno:l:or

I

-~

3-MONTH
CERTIFICATE

. 2-YEAR
CERTIFICATE

can

Superiors All Meat

.On SAVINGS ACCOUNTS

PASSBOOK

5 lb.

SERVE WIENERS WITH BEANS! .

Pay the Higher Legal Rates
'

\

'

•

ANNOUNCES

lb.

'

\

.-~ CREAM
crt

I

The Farmers .Bank &amp; Savings Company

lb.

CANNED

Sealtest -

.
•

•

UP

.

: HOMEMADE

yd. 1.98 :

POLYESTER THREAD· • · • · · ·. 39c
STRETCH AND
SEW PATTERNS • - · • 1/2 OFF
WONDER UNDER • · • · - _112 OFF

I
I

PIECE

~ LONGHORN

,~~~~~~~ s~ -. -. ·. ·. ·. ~ ziP·P~dRs~-:~

I

can

·~.

SWIFT'S PREMIUM

$519

31b.

.••

I

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

•we Reserve The Right To Umit Qll8ntitlell"

$4
BIG SALE I
9
9¢
WIENERS.............. . ·
OFF
9
9
¢
: POLISH SAUSAGE •••••••
I
/
I
9
9¢
CHEESE ••••• .
I
I HAM. SALAD. •••••••••••89¢
._ .
1
·1
HAS A

Have coo l clean air

SAYRI
' HARDWARE

-------,•

f~mily spent the weektnd in

I

Clarence Randolph and Inez reunion.
Randolph visited Dorsei Biggs Going to Forked Rtul Lake
and Dorset Miller at Veterans for. a picnic Sunday were Mr.
Memorial Hospital Thursday. and Mrs. Homer Bailey, Mr.
TbeStrangestStranger
Mr. Biggs was discharged and Mrs. Roger Yotulg and
Of AU
Saturday and is Improving .
Wesley, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
A Poem by Forest Kyle, Llttle Dinner guests at the home of Beat and Denise, Mr. and Mrs.
Hocking, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Ran- Russell Well, Mrs. Evelyn
dolph Sr . .and Inez Randolph Well, Barbara and Bryon, Mr.
Have you seen a mysterious Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Kirk Chevalier and
symbol
Kenny Siders and Chrislina of Mrs. Betty Chevalier.
Of a rider whose stud is pale? Point Pleasant, W. Va., Mr. Visiting 'with her grand·
A( his · coming brave men and Mrs. Donald Randolph and mother, Mrs. Louise Harrison
tremble
..son and Frankie Day, Mr. and was Jodi Harrison.
,
And the strongest heart will Mfs. Edgar Randolph of North Recent guests of Mr. and
fail.
. Canton. Aftern?On callers ~ere Mrs. Rowland Dais were Mr.
Miss Cheryl Boggs and frle,nd, and Mrs. Bernard Paulsen and
There is a rendezvous
Eddie McPherson of Marietta. children, Tracy and Gayla of
To be kept by great and small: Miss Biggs is in nurses training Dallas, Texas. Mrs. Paulsen is
Somewhere he waits for you- at Nelsonville.
Mrs. Dais' niece. Other dinner
The strangest stranger of all.
F1orence Biggs and friend· guests were Mr. and Mrs.
John Schlotterbeck Jr · of Frank Burson, Mrs. Goidle
·nawrhim riding by
Marietta and John's parents, Colmer, Mrs. Fred Burson and
In a vision I recall;
Mr. and Mrs. John Schlot- .daughters, Christie and Jana of
terbeck
Sr. called on Mr .. and Shade.
I heard his mournful sigh :
(The strangest slranger of all). Mrs. Dorset Biggs Sunday Recent visitors of Mr. and
evening.
Mrs. Roy Sauer were Mr. and
A voice in earnest prayer:
Pearl Randolph has ear and Mrs. Ernest Perkins and
"Spare him, oh, Lord above." )lead infection.
children of Newark.
Mr. and Mrs. Orner Hess
I felt hiS presence there,
And learned that God Is Love. called on William and Pearl
Randolph Sa!urday evening.
Bernita Biggs of Columbus
I felt an ·icy breath
W~re darkest shadows fall; spent a week with her aunt,
I learned his name is Death, Hazel Biggs and family.
George Smith called on Ziba
The Strangest Stranger of all.
Midkiff recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Randolph spent Monday
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Saturday, July 28, 197$
Donald Randolph and two
SALES REPORT OF
boys.
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Day
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 52.50 and son, Jeff, recently visited
to 52.85; 220 to 250 lbs. 52.50 to Mr. and Mrs. Donald Randolph
53.20; Light 44 to 50; Fat Sows and children.
42.50 to 46.50; Slags 35 Down;
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Curtis
Boars 34 to 36.50; Pigs 25 to 40; called on Mr. and Mrs. Dorset
Shoats' 34 to 50.
Biggs Monday evening.
CATl'LE - Steers 50 to
Mr. and Mrs. Kenny· Siders.
.
57.50; HeHers 39.75 to 52; Baby and Chrisllne called on Mr. and
Beef 55 to 71; Fat Cows 34 to Mrs. Dorsel Biggs Monday and
39.25; Canners 28 to 36.10; Bulls Miss Janet Biggs went home
40 to 44 .25; Milk Cows 395 to with them to spend a few days.
545.
Greg Sheets visited Denver
VEAL CALVES -Tops .72.50 Biggs Sunday afternoon.
to 76.50; Seconds 70 to 72;
Mr ~ and Mrs . Clarence
Medium 64 to 70;_Com. &amp; Hvs. (Sonny) Randolph Jr. of
68 to 73; Culls 00 to 60.
Chillicothe called on her
BABY CALVES -62.50 to parents, Roy Sayre and family
135,
and also on his parents, Mr.
TYPE ACCOUNT
and Mrs. Clarence Randolph
Sr. on Wednesday evening,
SCJOTOLIVESTOCK
The Hatfield family of
Steers; Choice, 51.911-52.50; Cleveland is spending some
Good, 47-50.10; Standard 41· ' time at their home here on Big
45.50.
Run.
Denver Biggs helped Russel
Heifers : Choice, 48.6&gt;-51.10:
Good, 46-17.85. .
Cullums with his hay one day
Cows: Commercial, last week.
28.2li-39.85; Utility, 35.~.85 ;
Hazel Biggs recently visited
Canner and Cutter 28.35-33.10. her mother, Inez Randolph.
Bulls: Commercial, 43-6().
Mrs. Bob White recently
46. 75. ·
· called on Pearl Randolph.
Stockers and Feeders: Steer
Mr. and Mrs .. Wilbur Van
Calves 51-63.50; Helfer M~~r spent the weekend with
Calves, 45.50·55 ; Yearlings Wolham and Pearl Randolph.
Steers: 41.50-66.25; Cows and
Calves 430-621.50.
Up1 and Downs
Veal Calves: Choice, 70.50;
. The bladderwort , a plant
Good, 65.50.
that lives under water most of
Lambs: Choice, 39.
the year, rises to the surface
Hogs : 200-230, 53.25; No. I, when it flowers . At blossom53.50; 230-240, 53; sOws, 46- ing time, the bladders fill with
air and the plant rises to the
48.30; Boars, 39.25.
surface.

•'

•'f '

Severo! youth !rum the
t:urlclon Chw·dl will be ~t­
lendmK Bible Camp at the
Willow Biblu Cump July 29th,
1\et'Cnt visitors of Mrs. Hu~el
Arnold were Mr. and Mrs.
!.ester Arnold and Billy Of
Westerville, Mr. and "'!rs.
Ronutd McNally of AU1ens, Mr.
and Mrs. Nathan Arnold and
.family or Chester. Mrs. Arnold
received word that her
granddaughter had Wlder{6ile
surgery at Holzer Medical
Center : She is the child of Mr.
and Mrs . Patrick Williams of
McArthur.
Mr . and Mrs. Floyd Ross and

.
I
-------------~------------~
1

00

OXYDOL
,ONLY
~l~t:Jlll~ 0

••

$}19

-=
=
I~

!

. WITH THII COUPON ~

MARK V.

....... 8-24-73

WITHOUT
COUPON

LIMIT 1 COUPON P£A 'URCHAIE

•

FRIDAY ONLY

Coca-Col
Big 32 oz. bots.
Returnable Bottle ··

�•

'"
ft - Thf Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Jull' 31. 197:1

·

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
r-----~------------~--------~2 SIGNS
Pome~oy
Business
Services
OF '
--DEADLINES

5 I" .M .• OiJY Betare flobllutlon .
Monday Oelldline 9 a . m .
Can ce11aHon Correc t ions }
Will be accepted "Until 9 &amp;.m , far '
Dev of Publication
'

QUALITY

REGULATIONS

,.

The PllbJISher reserves the ·
right to edlt or reject any ads
de.emed
oblectlooat .
The
publisher w i ll not be r,es ponslble
for more than one Incorrect
Insert ion .
RATES
For wanr Ad Serv ice

.5 cen ts per word one ln!!!ertion
M inimum Cha rge 7Sc .
12 cents per word tt}ree
consecutive lnsr.rtions .
18 cents per word siX con sec ut ive lnsert!Of!S .
.
~-Per Cent Dlstoun! on paid
ads and ads pa id w ith in 10 days.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

S1.50 for so word minimum .
Each add itional word 2c .
BLIND ADS

Additional 2Sc
Advertisement .

Charge per

8 : 30 a . m .
Saturdily .

12:00

OFFICE HOURS
8: 30 a·. m. to 5:00p .m . Da lly,
to

1971 CHEVROLET IMPALA

Card of Thanks

REDUCED$2695

Custom Coupe, local 1-owner car. like new white-wall
t lres,Jactory air. (lutoma li c lransmls'slon. power steer ing
&amp; brakes . Dark green finish wi th black vinyl roof , sPotless
interior, radio. R~ill sharp I ·
.

1968 OLOS TORONADO

$1695

Cpe,, silver grey finish w ith wh. vlnvl roof. clean Interior
f~ll power equipment including tactorv air, power win :
dows &amp; tift &amp; Tel. st . wheel. Local 1 oWner car &amp; had
regular service.

71 CHEV . ~, TON
REDUCEDS2389
350. V-8, I5&lt;' H. Duty tires, 3 sp""d std. trans., red tlnish,
sha rp as new truck inside &amp; out.

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

Noon

WE WOULD like to 1hank all
1hose who gave monev on
flowers In Mason, W.Va. and

Motor Co.

YARD SaleOWednesday, Thurs·, TRAILER .on private, 10. x 50, 2
day . and .Friday. Lower .Pearl
bedroom, part1ally furnished .
frle'nds and relatives who ·
Street,
Middleport.
9
a.m.
till
·
Lawn and patio , good
he!~ed In any way due to lhe
. 3 p.m.
·
IQCatlon. Hartford, W. Va.
death of James Haro ld
7-31 -3tc
Call 773-5975.
Chattin, which we deeply
7-31 ,7tc
miss, and most of all to Rev.
H-::EC:D:--a- p_a_r..,.
lm
- ents.
George Hoschilr for , his GARAGE SALE, 50~ E. Main "F"'Li-::R-:-N"'t"s"'
Street, Pomeroy, near Buick
Reynolds Flower Shop,
consoling words . His wife,
·Garage . Antiques , avons ,
Mason, W. Va. on Main high·
Susie and family .
clothing, dishes, pots pans,
way. Call 773-5147 .
- - ' - - - -- --7--3-ltp
toys, bottles, jars, jewelry,
7-25-6fp
radios, typewriter, August 1,
Notice
2, 3 and ~ - 9 a.m. till 7 p.m., APARTMENTS, Hartford, w.
dally.
Va .. 1 and 2 bedrooms un.
UPHOLSTER your own fur 7-31-5tp
furnished . 773-5975.
nl1ure. We have all the sup7-24-7tc
plies you will need, fabdcs ,
MEIGS
SENIORS,
Make
your
--,
foam for cUshions and pad-

- -----

ding. We cui toam to any size
or shape. Swivel bases, cotton
burlap le95 ~ zipPer. welt·cord,
webbing, dacron. chip board
plus many other Items and
living room suites at low, low
prices . · Pomeroy Rec·overv .

622 E. Main, Phone 992-7554.
7-19-3Dtc

appqintment now to have your

SENIOR PORTRAIT taken.
Dates for takbg ME !GS
SENIORS, are August 22, 23,
24 and 25, and Sept. 1. Take'
advantage of Special Senior
Price~ for these days ,only .
Cal GROVER's STUDIO,
Middleport, Ohio. Phone 9922~75 .

8·1 -22tc
YARD SALE - ~ miles soulh of
Mlddleporl, on Old Rt . 7 near MEAT CUTTER·. No phone
Meigs and Gallia line at the
calls. D&amp;D Meats.
Richard Finks residence,
l-18-tfc
Tuesday, July 3151, through
Friday, 9 a.m . !ill 6 p.m. Lots DEAD STOCK, horses, cattle,
of nice Items.
hogs, sheep, reasonable
7-J1-2tp charge. Call 24.1· 551~.
2: FAMI~ Y Yard Sale, Meiss- - - - -- -.,---6·_26_-JOt_c
·Gallla line, Friday and ·
Saturday. R. E. Mcintosh
Pets For Sale
residence.
AKC Toy Poodle puppies, $75
8-1-lfc
and $85. Also Siamese kittens
$10. Phqn~ 1-156-6241·, Kennels
of Calhoun .

GRAND
OPENING
SPECIAL

July 25-Aug. 1
Cars Painted
$50.00
$60.00
Pick-ups

6- 2~- JOtc

PARKVIEW Kennels. Poodles.
I toy male and 1 female.
Phone 992.5~~3.
7-15-tft

BRUSH. HOGS. 4x5 If., phone
992'5858.
715lfc
--~ ---

20 INCH Multi speed Ions, ooly

$1 7.95. Alspcha)•e lounges for

porch. lawn or pool , only
$6.99. Pomeroy recovery, 62:2

E. M.'lln, Pomeroy,
Phone 992-7554.

ROOFING

1-11-ISfc

Ohio.

From the laroest

Ph:\92-2174

family room. Priced n mid
20's, plus lot . Located on large ·
country lot off Rt . 7 20
minutes lrom Parkersburg
and 15 minutes from
Pomeroy . Financing already
arranged with low down
payment.
· h Contact
R ItPauline
Ph E.
Cunnong am ea Y·
one
(614) ~23-8690 Coqec!.
PRIVATE meeting room for
any organization ; phone 992·
I 19 It c
- -- - -- --·.,...·
J975.
3-JJ.tfc
22 APRIL lambs. Call m -2630.
- - - -- -- -MOBILE home space in - -- - - - - - 7-293tc
Syracuse . Phone 992-5858 ..
KOSCOT KOSMETICS and
6-21-tfc
Name Brand Wigs. Special
sale prices during month of
For Sale .
July . Phone Helen Jane
8 ACRES on Rt . 1~3. good
Brown ~ 992-5113.
building sites, .city water.
6-29-tfc
Phone 992-3640.
7-22-121c CANNING peaches arriving
Saturday. Bring containers,
NOW OPEN, P.andJ . Odds and Midway Markel, Pomeroy.
Ends, -Glorified lunk, ap - Call 992-2565 or 992-2582.
7-29-3tc
. pliances, furniture. 215 North
Second, Middleport.
·
6-29-30tc 196f TRUCK, 1969 Camper and
a 1973 Kawasaki. Phone 742·
3810.
WILKINSON Small Engine
7-29-llp
Sales-.nd Service, 810 3rd St.,
Middleport. Lawn mower and
chain_saw repair . Free pickUp 10 H.P. BOLEN tractor with
mower, good condltiOfl, $650.
and delivP.rv . Phone 99?-3092.
Harold Brewer, Long Bottom,
Also Briggs and Stratton and
98S-3554.
Tecumseh pafts.
7-29-tfc
6-21 -30tc

1973 - Zig Zag sewing machine.

1- 60x 12 3 Bed room Atlantlc,
54•495 ·00 ·
l-60xl 2 2 bedroom Champion,

$~.~ 5 · 00 ·

1- 60x12 2 bedroom PMC,
1 $S46,1x9152.oo2. bed
R
1
- $3,895.00.
room
egen •
1-60x12 2 bedr·oom Mon•rch,
"
save$2,000 .00 .
1-60x12 Elcona Custom, save
S1.800.oo.
·
These prices Include deliverY.
and complete setup. Don t
wait - stop now al BerryMiller Mobile Homes Sales,
705 Farson Street, Belpre,
Ohio, phone 423-9531 - Closed
Sundays.
7-26-61c
Air Conditioners
Awnings
Underpinning

Wheel AI'1gnment
*5~55
On Most A~erican Cars
·

-GUARANTEED.

Phone 992-2094
Pomeroy
Ho . &amp; t
me
U0
A.

Open&amp;TiiS
Mond~y lhru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
606

E.

992-2094
Main Pomero_y

Complete mobile hom ~
se rvice - plus gigantic
displav of mobile homes
always. available at ...

OFFICE SUPPLIES

MILLER
• MOBILE HOMES

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

1220 Washington Blvd.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0.

GENE'S BODY SHOP

7

' ''
'
'

Pomtra,.

·'

DON'T THE PEiOPI.E

.

OF iAMSTfR~-'lltl
WOODEN
SHOe$ ANY MORE~

DARN, I

T~OUG~T

·. ~

7d/

'

W~AR

WITI-l SANDPAPER~

215 N. Second
Phone 992-3509
24 Hour Service

OUT Of iOIIIN

H~

MURDER!/

~­

..••
•...
..•
~

~

MIDDLEPORT

•

1 Unfurnished Apartment 114 N. Fourth, 2 bedrooms,
has all kitchen appliances.
No pets .

•
JI
I

PHONE 992-3863
BEFORE3PM

All work guaranteed.
Specialist
Wheel
Alignment

•

ASK US ABOUT
PRE-FABRICATED

WOOD TRUSSES

It Must

Be Right
or we will

ke f' Right.

Bulttlo Your'$pecs
Oeltveroclto Job Silt

HOGG

FURNITURE

Real Estate For Sale

&amp; ZUSPAN
8 - ~ , lO Daily,8-12Sal.
In fhe R. H. Rawlings Sons
MATERIALS CO.
Building.
713-S5S4
Mason, W.Va.
Middleport, 0.
.992-1101
O' DELL WHEEL . Ali nment·. MOBIL.E home repair, t:leclocatedal Crossroads, ~1. 124,
trlcal plumbing and heating.
now back to work. Complete Phone 992-5858.
7· 15-tfc
front end -service, tune up and
brake
service .
Wheels

~-

..

.GASOUNE AILEY

- -- - - -

·~-------~-----------------------,

!
I1

GRADUATE LICENSED
PRACTICAL NURSES

Needed for the evening and night shift in the
Geriatric .Unit and Med./Surg. Unit .,

I

II
I
I

I

1

retirem~nt

pro~ram,

I

1
I

I

.. .

•

auru:l? !..

doe6n't matter which
wall a piq~,; tail
curls,

Mr. ·

e
mf.l'T '-OU 11\II.JI&lt;
. lt.\AT, AfTER liP
LE'5S'Ot.JS, 'iOtJ
'SHOUL.P B6 A
Um8 FARll-iBR

d

e
'n
X

h
!,

f&gt;.LO.ip '?-

It
ID

Is
~

IF. YOU'RE LYINQ TO ME AOOUT BEINQ
ori rll'f 51Df1 YOUR GIANT FR.JEriD AND
)OUR OOQ I)OE FIRST! YOIJ Will LIVE
l001Q ENOU&lt;1H TO WITNESS TltEIR.
!lGOI!Y! DO lOU WISI1 TO CHANGE
YOUR. SToRY?

NATitAM HALE COULD
IT AH' DIE FOR. HIS
COI,.II'lTRY SO CAti I'" Al'l.'

PUNJAB·-. AH. "' SAND't'~

:. 19Jl ., &gt;1(1,

r.. , T,M

I C,
1.. U.t. ' ''· 011.

oy

?-

~

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THERE is MOllE P~EASURE IN
BUILDING CASTLES IN THE AIR THAN ON THE GROUND
~EDWARD GIBBON
.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

40. Comedian
Blanc
fl. Cervine
DOWN
! . Shaded

(@ 19'73 Kin~r FeJttu res :'i yndicate, Inc .)

~l!lJWID~;&amp;.t 41lt•wU..I.-l ,_.

recess

2. Greek·

CALL 593-776·1, EXT. 272

L.~l~~§..!~~J~LH..E.!\~T.H.l~~!~
"

•

•

. al
:e,

th
Ul

3; Toumt .
attftctlon
in County
eork -

Yesterday'S Answer
11. Take
27. Coilcern·
wing
lng glee
12. Portion
clubs
16. Other·
29. Com-

J fll~! f

4. Milslllm

Easter
5. Short
poem
6. Receded
7. Ancient
times
10. Lepre·

me mora·

wise

tl've pillar
30. Useful
31. Nero
36, Comedian
DeLuise
37. Lamentable

19. Cabbage
22. Drooping
23. Rival of
Athens
24. Less
huge
25. Froth

chauns

wds.)

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

a
1,"

ay

UnKrambleth••• four Jumbles,
one letter to tach square, to
form four ordinary words.

market,
;,11place.

(2

.11!

ed

ag

: lid

· de

'

c

nd

!

I BEPOR
tYESVR1'

J

I

Or
; ol.
10n

tJ I

ool

so

III

IIACING ~

I

WMP0/1390

...'·•

lHf?EE AM.r

GRAY MANOR
APARTMENTS

J}

like ' person.

F

WHAlS lHe E31b
roeA -eLOWrN'
RE:\TEII.l-E RT -

1--t

We,talk to you

•

and

FORD truck bed with racks, 7 x
12, off 1973' truck. Call 985·
355~. Harold Brewer, Long .Real Estate For Slle
LARGE, · conventem oundlng
Bottom. .
·
lots at Roc~ Springs. Area
7-29-tfc

_____....,

...

ji

.,

HOTPOINT
AIR CONDITIONERS
$gg,95

PUBLIC NOTICES .

I.

'

Phone 742-6271

Heating . Air Cond .
R•lriger r·on
Plumbo' ng
1
'
• Apphances
•
Electrocal
. Auto•
Air Cond. · Residenlial or
C,o.mmercial.

t
••
'·

A LoC:AL ANI.STHf.tiC

! COULD PlilK UP A LITTLE

For Estimates

P AND J HOME
MAINTENANCE
&amp; REPAIR

DO You WANT

Oil. Allf. You FIZ0/0\

BREAD S~ I NtNG SHOES~

balanced electronically. All SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
This machine darns, em·
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
work guaranteed. Reasonable
broiders, overcasts, button
Help Wanted
CLEANED, REPAIRED.
rates. Phone 7~2-3232 .
1
holes. All wlthoul at,
MILLER SANITATION ;
2-18-tfc
MALE or Female desk clerk, tachments. Pay balance of
restricted
for houses ohly .
STEWART,
OHIO. PH. 662·
must be able to live ln. Appl(. $38.5C or pay S5 per month.
Lincoln Hill- Pomeroy •
RON Sl'fEPARD, Floor, Wall . 3035.
10'1• CAB-OVER truck camper, . Toppers Plains &amp; Chesler
in person at the Ohio Hole,
Call 992-5331.
10,4-lfc
Water available. Call or see
ijemodellng, .Ceramic tile
El Dorado , self-contained,
992-5271
Middleport.
6-10-tfc
Bill
Witte,
992-2789.
baths.
Bax
28D,
Rutland
742·
~Ice
condition
.
Reasonably
7-31-6tc
Repairs Additional
7-24-tfc
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
3664.
priced. With ·lacks and holdservice, all makes. 992-2284"
6-26-tfc
· Work Guaranteed
down . Call 985·3554. Harold
HOUSE
for
sale,
210
Condor
The Fabric Shop, Poll\eroy .
JUST
ARRIVED
Brewer,
Long
Bottom
.
Wanted To Rent
Street. 3 rooms and bath .
Authorized Singer Sales and
NEW SHIPMENT
RUMMAGE · sale,
Coats
7-29-tfc
FARM
DOZER and batl; hoe work,
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
Phone 992-7310.
Building In Middleport, HOUSE In coun·lry, furnished or
42 ACRES - . Near eastern
ponds and septic tanks, ditch7·25-12tp school. 6 room house, modern
unfurnished. Call 992-5190 or
3-29-tfc
Thursday only, August 2.
PAINT DAMAGE 1973 Zig-Zag
ing service; top soil, fill dirt,
7-31 -2lc
m -7717 .
SEWING MACHINES Still in
bath , modern kitchen, gas
limestone; B&amp;K Excavatlnn ,
7-31-3tp
dozer, loader
orlqinal cartons. No at- 7 ROOM house with bath In forced air fur-nace. Bank barn,
Phone,~92-5367 or 992-386.1-... EXCAVATING,
and backhoe work; septic.
tachments needed as our
Rutland. air conditioned, good fences. Some fruit, and all
9-1-tfc
tanks instalfed; dump trucks
l controls are · built-ln. Sews carpeted, gas furnace, dish- minerals. Only $19,500.00.
As Low As
=-=--and
lo-boys for hire; will haul
Want'-" To Buy
' with 1 or 2 needles~ makes
washer, double oven, range,
JUST LISTED
EXCAVATING. Dozers, large
fill dirt, top soli, limestone
buttonholes. Sew on buttons,
double garage, large carporf, MIDD~EPORT - Clean 2 ahd small; Backhoes and
Other sizes also available.
and gravel; Call Bob or Roger
NO. I Copper; 55c, Radiators,
monograms, and blind hem
4 acres cleared and fenced, bedroom home, wllh nice bath, loaders on track and tires;
Your Right to Know
See them today.
Jeffers, day phone 992-7089;
JOe, brass, 20c, batteries, 90c
stitch. Full cash price $38.50
small barn and other and all furniture . Level lot,
Dump trucks Lo-boy
night phone 992-3525 or m each, clean, dry Ginseng
buildings.
Phone
614-742-683~.
or
budget
plan
avalloble.
and 'be informed of the func front and - back p6rahes. car.
service. Septic tanks in - . 5232.
roots, S55 alb . Yellow root,~ .
Phone 992-298~.
5·30-tfc port. Asking $8900.00.
9..
POMEROY
'tlon S of your government are .
stalled. George I Bill) Pullins,
·2-li-tfc
May apple, SOc, per lb. M. A.
6il!l'' Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
7-29-61c
embod ied In public notices. ln.
REAL BUY
phone 992 ·2~78 or 992-7402.
Hall, Reedsville. Call 378that ·self -government charges
·
Phone 992-2181
WELL PLANNED 3 beqroom, 2 88 .ACRES Vacant land In ====:-::--:---:--:-=2·=-=
:all cit izens to be informed ;
6249.
9-ttc ELNA .and While Sewing
VACUUM Cleaners new 1973
bath home with
full
th is newspaper urges every .
7-3l-tfc CANNING tomatoes, cucum- Model. Complete with all
Scipio Township, Sectlon26. All FURNITURE Stripping alii!' Machines ... Service on all
basement, 2 car garage and
icitlzell to read and study these
makes . Reasonable rates.
KEWPI E dolls and anything
bers mangoes, and can - cleaning tools. Small paint
family room . Priced In r.old minerals. At $125.00 per acre. Refinishing. Abraham's
notices. we strongly advisE
The Sewing Center, Mid·
POMEROY
Antiques,
132
Fayette
Street,
:those cttrhns, seek.il1g further
else related 10 Kewpies. Also,
talopes. Geraldine Cleland, damage In shipping. Will take
20s, plus lot. Located on large
Ohio.
dleport,
info rma t ion. to exerc ise their
country lot off Rl. 7, 20 2 BEDROOMS - Nice bath, Nelsonville, Ohio. Phone 753· old postcards In good conRacine.
$27 cash or budget plan
11 -16-ltc
;right of access lo public
natural gas furnace. Compact 1302.
dillon, write and describe
7-30-ttc available. Phone 992-298~ ..
minutes from Parkersburg
·records and pub-lic meetings.
7-3-IO!c
·t
1
1
ted
=------,-----..::.:
7-29-6tc - and 15 mlnules from kitchen, basement, and nice
READY .MI)C ' CONCR~TE
oems a so pr ce wan . GROCERY business .ioi sai; • - -- - - - - - ::- - - - - - - -Pomeroy . Financing already lot. Only 56500.00.
delivered right to your
Alyce Schneider. 1~5 South
Building . tor sale or lease: SINGER Automatic Zig -Zag
NEW BUSINESS
REFRIGERATOR Repair.; Air·
arranged with low down
prl&gt;/ect. Fast and easy. Frae
NOTICE OF
Kanawha. Buckhannon, W.
Phone 773-5618 from 8:30p.m.' Sewing Machines, In sewing
BUILDING
Cond Ill on I ng,
He all ng,
i!AYmenl. Contact Pauline E.
est
mates . Phone 992 - 328~.
APPOINTMENT
Va . 26 201.
to 10 p.m. for appointment.
table . Makes buttonholes,
Repair,
Cupnlngham Realty, phone BRICK - Aircondlllonedand Electrical
Goegleln
Ready -Mix Co.,
case No.20971
7-8-JOtp
J-20-tfc
sews on buttons blind hems, · 61•-~23- 8690 collect.
gas forced air heat (both Residential or commercial,
Middleport,
Ohio.
E•tote of Or on c . Weor•
~------etc Top notch condition. Pay
7-24-tfc central), 2 large rest rooms, auto air-conditioning, 266 Mill
6-30-tfc.
o~:t~~:~;. hereby.given that Jo OLD furniture, oak tables. REDUCE excess fluids with
$51 or terms avolloble. Phone
and 2 storage rooms, with Street 992-3509.
b
clocks, Ice boxes, brass beds,
Fluldex - Lose wo'p,ht with
m-29U.
A
w
f 5
6-29-301~
SEPTIG TANKS CLEANED
nn
ears o
ails urv
dishes
or
complete
D A Dl 1
7-29-6tc s ROOM house, bOth, basement, plenty of parking.
Township, Rt . 2, Pomoroy, has
household•. Write M. D.
ex- · e
capsu es
at
NEW LISTING
FOR FREE- estimates on REASONABLE rates. Ph . 446LITTLE_
SA.VE
A
.
gas
heat,
21ots.
S.
D.
Buskirk,
.
been duly appointed Executrix
"
Nelspn Drugs.
DRIVE. A
341 Page Street, Middleport. NEAR HARRISONVILLE - 3 aluminum siding. Storn Doors
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
of the Estate of oren c . Wears ,
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio,
30
7·_::
LOT at KUHL'S BARGAIN
7-29-llp bedrooms , bath , lots of · and Windows, Carports,
Owner and Operator.
deceased , iate Of SaliSbury
call 992-6271.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _:_
·31p
5-12-tfc
paneling. Front and side ·Marquees and Railing, Phone
CEN~ER for clean used -==-========::.....,.
Townsh ip, Meigs County , Ohio.
5-13-tfc ONE7200acrelotforsale. 60AC
furniture, guaranteed ap- r
Charles Lisle, Syracuse, Ohln.
porches. Asking 56,500.00.
Creditors are requ ired to file
their claims with said f lduc llJrY WANTED
for
auction,
all-crop Harvester, also .
pi la nces . Electric, . gas
RACINE AREA .
Carl Jacob, Sales Rep within four . months.
household goods. Tools, most
Phone 742-3656.
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer•
ranges, auto . washers;
NEW - 3 bedrooms, beautiful resentalive. V. V. Johnson
Dated th.s 25th day of July anything of value. Will buy or
7-6-2~tp
eledrlc, gas dryers; also,
Complete Service
bath, large kitchen with bar. and Son, Inc.
1973 '
Phone 949-3821
refrigerators from $19 .95
6-22-tfc
Mannino D Webster sell on commission. Will haul. A-M--F-M_S_t-er-e-o--R-a_d_lo-,-8--T-rack
Level lot. Only $16,000.00.
Racine, Ohio
· Judge Call 992-3354. Hayman 's.
NEW LISTING
(Just
arrived
LATE~-~~~~~~
171 l1 181 6, 13,' 3tc
·
7-254fc
tape player, ~-way speaker
MODEL
refrigerators,
$85)
.
Crill
Bradford
WILL
TRIM
or
;;;t'
frees
,
POMEROY - 2 bedrooms,
system. .B~Iance $108.32 or
Couches, love-seats, straight
5-1-tfc
shrubbery.
Also
paint
roofs
.
use our budget terms. Call
bath, basement. Front porch,
ond
ov
rotufled
chairs,
949-3221
or
742-44~1.
Phone
0
992-3965.
utl.llty building and small
----,------'---- ;.-_:.:...:_
Jor Rent
Roger Hysell's
tables, · dlneftes; chests,
7-18-JOtc OPEN garden. 56,500.00.
...,...:._~---'---7-~
29-6tc
Garage near crossroad$ on st. o
dressers;
aevered heavy,
IN THE
PROPERTIES ARE
MING HARRTSON'S TV service and
Rt. 124; all mechanlcol work
bedroom suites.
GRAY MANOR lO H.P. ALLIS Chalmers tractor beautiful
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
IN,
AND
SO
A
THE
Including
automatic transBest
selection
of
THRIFTEX
.
'
2
YEARS
OLD
ser'
\
lice
cal
ls.
Phone
992-2522.
PROBATE DIVISION
~2" with Rotary lawnBUYERS
.
YOU
SHOULD
mlsslo~s.
Monday -Friday, ·
2-9-tfc
LINOLEUM
RUGS
In
Mel~s
MIDDLEPORT
3
MEIGS COUNTYoOHIO
APARTMENTS
mower and snow-blade.
STOP TO SEE OUR LATEST
8:30 o.m . to s p.m. Salurday
Co. 9 x ll's, $6.95, 9 x 15 s, bedrooms with large closets
IN THE MATTER OF SET·
MID
RT
Contact Marvin Keebaugh,
LISTINGSr PICTURES ON
- 8' 30 to 12 noon - unlesa by
$8.75 . New furniture at excellent bath with shower ~
,TLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS,
DLEPO
days m -5342- otter 7 p.m.
oppolnlment. Phone 992-5682
THE
BULLETIN BOARD OF Auto Sales
DISCOUNT
PRICES
kitchen
with
everything
1'
t
PROBATE COURT, MEIGS
985-3913 . .
or
992-7121 .
EACH
ONE
OFFERED.
qualltr
living
room
suites;
'o
r
.
mom
.
Dining
roo~
1971 MONTE Corio, P.S., P.
COUNTY, OH 10
1 Unfurnished Apartment 7 29 31
7-25-JOlc
swlve
rockers
much
more.
Jtlllty
room
Car
d.
Disc Brakes, air-conditioning.
Accounts and vouChlirs of the 11 4 N. Fourth, 2 bedrooms,
.. p
Shop Tuesday through Sun- 3
·
pe 1e .
Call 992-7073 after 5 p.m .
following named fid uciari es has all kitchen appliances. 1966 CHEVROLET 2.fon truck, 'day until 7 p.m . _ KUHL'$ asement. Large level lot.
heve been flied in the Probate
7-31-4fp ' AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
.
Cpurt. Meigs county , Ohio, for No pets.
8ft. flat bed, good condltlooi .
BARGAIN CENTER, St. RL 7 . All electric. $11.000.00.
Lo}l
vour.
ca nce lled?
approval and settlement :
1963 International 3 quarter
·:at caution light," TUPPERS
MIDDLEPORT
· 1964 FORD Pi ck up Truck . Call
operator's license. Coil 992·
CASE NO . 20,677 FlrsMnnual
PHONE 992.,3863
ton pickup, V-8, Hpeed trans·
PLAINS, OHIO.
A nice building lot or mobile
843-2778.
. 1~28.
Account of Ruth L Wolle,
miss ion . Call 992-6279.
7-29-6tc
t1ome
space
about
70x90,
lots
7-27-6lc
6-15-tlc
Guardian of TimothY Darrell
BEFORE 3 PM
7·29-3tp
I-972_H_O_N_D_A_. -SOO
--M
-,ot~
orc~cle, of -trees, good nelghborhgod.
Wolle, Thomas Glenn Wolfe ,
1
.lUST $2,000.00.
Charles Bryan Wolfe and
·
Jimmy Christopher Wolle.
After6 Call992·5~44
PLEASURE BOAT with lriller.
excellent ,condition. Exras, •
TODAY'S BEST BUY
CASE NO . 20..97 .First and
Tri-liull , 17 ft . top 60 h.p .
$1,000. Call Dennis Keney at 5 bedrooms, 1'12 baths, large
Final Account Of Bernard v .
Evlnrude motor . All ac ·
Pomeroy Nallonol Bank or dining room , lots of ca binets ,
Fultz, Administrator • of the TRAILER SPACE on old route
cessorles. Phone 992-7132.
985-3828 after 6 p.m.
double S.S. si nk In the kltEstate of Ethel Chevalier ,
JJ, 112 mile from Nlelgs High
1·23-9tc
- -- - - - - - 7-_31-llc chen, utility room , 2 glassed
Deceased .
School. Call 992·2W .
CASE NO . 10,834 First and
7 26 171 =
=--=-=
:::-----90
CC
KAWASAKI
.
Call
9~9- porc~es, storm doors ond
Final Account of PaulL . Cascl ,
· · C EXCELSIOR Salt Works, E.
4785.
windows, small' cellar,
Administrator of lhe Estate of - - - - - - - - - - ,,Main St., Pomeroy . All klnda
.
c
garage
and carport . ALL
.
Bruno P . easel, Deceosed.
3 AND ~ ROOM furn l· · "J and· 1 of salt water pellets, water
7 31 31
~:-::-:,...--.,.-----THIS JUST $12,800.00.
CASE
NO
.
20,1lBO First e'nd
~
I
bl
k
It
d
'f.Jnal Account of Bertha M .
unfurnished
apartments.
nu ge s, oc s.a an own
3 APARTMENTS
,Hysell. Guardian ol the Guard ·
Phone 992-543~.
Oh o River Salt. Phone m- 12' ROOM Brick home. For one
family
or
divided
Into
3
apls.
3
furnished
, I unfurnished.
lanshlp Estate of Mary Emma
.4-12-ffc
3891 .
6-5-lfc
Can
be
seen
any
time
after
5
Close
In
on
a good street.
BrlckiH .
.
p.m. Call 992·3173 for ap- Always rented. Could live In
' Unl~ss e&gt;&lt;oeptlons are filod ROOMS by the week .$oi up
1.
polntmenl or 992-5131 during one and rent two. This Is a
~~:rh•::r~~:ig,,~;;o:a'l:c:~~~ ~~ . Meigs Inn, PomerOY.
·
day.
l:rlck bvlldlng.
tho 30th ~oy of August 19il, of
. 7' 12-tfc
I
~tarting sala~y $2.9~ hr.; $6,094 annually, Fringe bent!flts
-------~7...:..·
31 -Stp
GENUINE SACRIFICI,!
which time said accounts will be
_
3 bedrooms. new bath, new
1nclude 9 pa1d holidays, 15 days annual sick leave 2 1
considered and continued from TWO lra ljer lots In Middleport ;
_C,&lt;\NNING
Tomotoes, forced olr lurnoce, Iorge
day to day until finally diSposed
o;, duplex In Bradbury ; phone
1
cucumbers , mangoes, and ncreatlon room , utility
weeks vacation, premium pay for overtime,
of.
before 6 p,m., 991-5693.
ca nl'lllopes . Geraldine rJom, new cellar wllh
Any · periOn lnttrested me y
7-JO-Stc
Blue Cross available at half cost, etc.
1
file wrltftn exceptions to said
Cleland, Racine.
· b.Jildlng over . Pore~. 0 good
1
1
account1 or to matters per 7-31 -lfc olze lot. WHY PAY RENr?
Reg1stered
Nurses
needed
also.
l'fOUS
E,
3
bedroom
un
taining to tht e~Cecuflon ·of the
---------'lil,SOO.OO.
, furnished, porch and yard.
trust, not itll than five dav.s
Apply at the Personnel Office or
Call
992-2780
or
992
·3~32
.
Mobile Homes For Sale
PROPERTY 1s SELLING
prior to the dare ut for hearing .
FAST WE
NEED
7-8-lfc
s . Mann/nliJ 0 , Wtblttr =-=-=~=-----____:
55 x 10 BEDROOM. Owner' will , LISTINGS.
JUDGE 3 BEDROOM 1'12 bath mobile
flnaoice . Inquire ot P&amp;J Odds
IIENRY E. CLELAND,
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
home
,
308
Page
Street,
992·
and
End1
Shop,
215
N.
2nd
BROKER
·
ON
YOUR
DIAL
•
PROBATII DIVISION
3509.
Ave., Middleport.
.
.·
. · 992-2211
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
7-8-tlc
. (71 31, l,tc
. ,1
~,~;:.....;....;_._r_--''-:-~- - - - - - - -- ·-1·6-lfc , lf.noon wtr99HS61
-..,..-------'"- -~--~-

~

'I

I

Roofing, Spouting,
Home Remodeling .

1:_:=========~
r
..,

EXPERT

''

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION

.MODERN
SANITATION

of dollars

no.rk

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC..

Hoard House

even ousands on these units :

H/i.Rt&lt;IW '.£l.lil¥&gt; T((tW;;o.J€'
'10 P';'I'O IOA•IAL'l&lt;;t~ I

QUICK.M

I

Bulldoz.er Radiator to lh•
!»mauest Heater C.::ort.
,
Nathon Biggs
Radiator SpediiiSI

ALL WEATHER

and

n

Rad

7-26-6tc

gara~e

~~

&lt;;.E.LL 11-.X'.. "

I GOT TO .eAT AN'

Frank, 992-7717. I can help.
Larry's Mobile Homes Soles,
600 Wes t Main Street,

8 x 28 MOBILE home, very"'ood
_.
condition. 163 Pearl Street,
Siding
Spouting
Rem'odeling
Middleport. $1 ,095 . Call
Coolville, 667-3619 .
Heating. Complete
Plumbing
SEVERAL new damaged living
7-31 -Jic
room suites, several up to lfz
Building . Vinyl &amp; ·Aluminum Siding.
olf regular price . Hurry !hay
won' t last long et these p_
r lces . 22 FT. TRAVEL Trailer, all
modern
shower,
bath ,
Pomeroy Recovery, 622 E.
lovatory, toilet. This trailer
Main , Pomeroy, Of1lo. Phone
was special built, full size
992-7554.
bed, will sleep six. Plenty of
7-l6-6tc
cvpboard space. wall -to-wall
Middleport. 0.
992-2550
carpet, electric, w,ater, and
1973 t4x70 MOBILE home,
gas already on troller . At
washer and dryer , dish Roushes Landing, Racine .
washer, stainless steel sink.
$3,000. Trailer space can be .
SEPTIC TANKS
garbage disposal , eye level
rented for $35 per month.
Dick's
oven , range, dacron.polvester
Contact Edwin Bill Cozart,
CLEANED
carpel, large lot. Phone 7~2 ·
Racine, Ohio, 9~9-4992 .
3083.
7-3-3tc
DUMP TRUCK
"STRIPPERS"
-::--:-::cc-----~:._,7.18-If
SERVICE
BLACK three quarter Ten · 'CASH paid for a ll makes and' We Strip Paint, Varnishes,
Etc. from Furniture.
24
HOUR SERVICE
nessee Walker colt, broke to
models ot mobile homes .
Antlques~
Modern-Melals
ride. Phone 992-3640.
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
No ruinous lyes or caustics
7-22-121c
~ - 13 - tfc
used.
ONEGENTLEAppaloosamare ATTENTION. A~L MOBILE
Plck-UpServlce
lind colt, one 3 yr. old Ten· · HOME SUYERS.,
Available
nessee Walker gelding , Berry -Miller Mobile Home
We Buy &amp; Sell Antiques.
JOHN'TU.CKER
registered . ?92-3518.
Sales have lust received on·
· Dock Seylor-Owner
Rt. 4, Pom&amp;rqy, 0 .
---'------!.;.7·;£26!!:·!!!61£.C their lo.t 6late model used and
Kerr St.
Pomeroy, 0.
991-1954
WELL PLANNED 3 bedroom, 2 repossess.ed Mobile Homes. ~===ft=bo:"::':99:2:::·2:7:98==~
::
both
home with
full
You 'than save hundreds basement, 2 car

S AMWITCH ..

Been
tvrned
down?
Remen,ber, I c"" sav "yes"
when others say " no." Ca ll

Pomeroy , Ohio.

N" !WI:· fQ: •'D r:.
APA,,VIU"o o/:M£ C"llX"l1 0l {) ,

FIX ME A HAM

TRYING to buy a mobile home?

- - - -- -

For Rent

Notice

BARNJ!:Y

Mobile Homes For Sale

for Sale

WANT ADS
INFORMATION

•

I

JOt ,

:- M
ne
.ch
Now orranre the eln:loclletters
io form the ou~oe aruwor, u .

'-1
I
I
:=::=::=:::=~=~..-l==~=~·:u~r~c•:•::t..r:_:b:r~the above canopn,

lei

'• he
..
, be

~--~~~~~·~·=~~~·~~1[111) -: of
:- he

(AMwen

AMANDA PANDA
YetttnbJ't

'5'/LVIA! LOOK WHAt' I fOUND.'
A TKANboR 'iPIPER'£ 1-{0ME\
IT!; UNDER61'\0UN1i'/

'

I

•
I

l

l•mbk" ADULT

•

•

VITAL

IAlr.IN

lomorr(Jw~

fAIRLY

·
An.wer1 Lf"n1wl into lhf! bunk'• lfl[el y
depu1i1 - VA"LTIO
·.

1er
~et

18

'~ •

•

. ..•

nd
ed

•

'

lilt

!
I

0

!

I

II
I

I

lI
I

''

•

· lOr
·: be

•

. .!'

1n,

genus

CAPI'AIN EASY

1

•

lie

•
•

I
I
I

up

om
·na

AI

DAILY CRYP'fOQUOTE- Her~·· how to wor!t lt:

rt-

~

AXYDLB,4.AXR
· Is L o· N G Jl E L L 0 W
One lcllcr simply stands lor another. In this 'sample A is
u1ed for th e three L's, X for 1ho two O's, etc. Si ngle letters,
apostrophes, the length •nd rormation of the words are all
hints. Each day lhe code letters ore different.

: 'he

lrY

be,

»&gt;

CRYPTOQUOTES
XP

~U

PZ

JC\ I XJB

YZVNRJU

ZL

OBXPXFW

PQ CF

EBXt'KXEVJ
l'ZVUPZ~

ne

EBZGNKJ

••

PJF

EQXVZUZEQXKCV

X¥'PZ

PZ

ENP

ZFJ

EBCKPXKJ .- VJZ

·•

i

'
,

�•

'"
ft - Thf Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Jull' 31. 197:1

·

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
r-----~------------~--------~2 SIGNS
Pome~oy
Business
Services
OF '
--DEADLINES

5 I" .M .• OiJY Betare flobllutlon .
Monday Oelldline 9 a . m .
Can ce11aHon Correc t ions }
Will be accepted "Until 9 &amp;.m , far '
Dev of Publication
'

QUALITY

REGULATIONS

,.

The PllbJISher reserves the ·
right to edlt or reject any ads
de.emed
oblectlooat .
The
publisher w i ll not be r,es ponslble
for more than one Incorrect
Insert ion .
RATES
For wanr Ad Serv ice

.5 cen ts per word one ln!!!ertion
M inimum Cha rge 7Sc .
12 cents per word tt}ree
consecutive lnsr.rtions .
18 cents per word siX con sec ut ive lnsert!Of!S .
.
~-Per Cent Dlstoun! on paid
ads and ads pa id w ith in 10 days.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

S1.50 for so word minimum .
Each add itional word 2c .
BLIND ADS

Additional 2Sc
Advertisement .

Charge per

8 : 30 a . m .
Saturdily .

12:00

OFFICE HOURS
8: 30 a·. m. to 5:00p .m . Da lly,
to

1971 CHEVROLET IMPALA

Card of Thanks

REDUCED$2695

Custom Coupe, local 1-owner car. like new white-wall
t lres,Jactory air. (lutoma li c lransmls'slon. power steer ing
&amp; brakes . Dark green finish wi th black vinyl roof , sPotless
interior, radio. R~ill sharp I ·
.

1968 OLOS TORONADO

$1695

Cpe,, silver grey finish w ith wh. vlnvl roof. clean Interior
f~ll power equipment including tactorv air, power win :
dows &amp; tift &amp; Tel. st . wheel. Local 1 oWner car &amp; had
regular service.

71 CHEV . ~, TON
REDUCEDS2389
350. V-8, I5&lt;' H. Duty tires, 3 sp""d std. trans., red tlnish,
sha rp as new truck inside &amp; out.

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

Noon

WE WOULD like to 1hank all
1hose who gave monev on
flowers In Mason, W.Va. and

Motor Co.

YARD SaleOWednesday, Thurs·, TRAILER .on private, 10. x 50, 2
day . and .Friday. Lower .Pearl
bedroom, part1ally furnished .
frle'nds and relatives who ·
Street,
Middleport.
9
a.m.
till
·
Lawn and patio , good
he!~ed In any way due to lhe
. 3 p.m.
·
IQCatlon. Hartford, W. Va.
death of James Haro ld
7-31 -3tc
Call 773-5975.
Chattin, which we deeply
7-31 ,7tc
miss, and most of all to Rev.
H-::EC:D:--a- p_a_r..,.
lm
- ents.
George Hoschilr for , his GARAGE SALE, 50~ E. Main "F"'Li-::R-:-N"'t"s"'
Street, Pomeroy, near Buick
Reynolds Flower Shop,
consoling words . His wife,
·Garage . Antiques , avons ,
Mason, W. Va. on Main high·
Susie and family .
clothing, dishes, pots pans,
way. Call 773-5147 .
- - ' - - - -- --7--3-ltp
toys, bottles, jars, jewelry,
7-25-6fp
radios, typewriter, August 1,
Notice
2, 3 and ~ - 9 a.m. till 7 p.m., APARTMENTS, Hartford, w.
dally.
Va .. 1 and 2 bedrooms un.
UPHOLSTER your own fur 7-31-5tp
furnished . 773-5975.
nl1ure. We have all the sup7-24-7tc
plies you will need, fabdcs ,
MEIGS
SENIORS,
Make
your
--,
foam for cUshions and pad-

- -----

ding. We cui toam to any size
or shape. Swivel bases, cotton
burlap le95 ~ zipPer. welt·cord,
webbing, dacron. chip board
plus many other Items and
living room suites at low, low
prices . · Pomeroy Rec·overv .

622 E. Main, Phone 992-7554.
7-19-3Dtc

appqintment now to have your

SENIOR PORTRAIT taken.
Dates for takbg ME !GS
SENIORS, are August 22, 23,
24 and 25, and Sept. 1. Take'
advantage of Special Senior
Price~ for these days ,only .
Cal GROVER's STUDIO,
Middleport, Ohio. Phone 9922~75 .

8·1 -22tc
YARD SALE - ~ miles soulh of
Mlddleporl, on Old Rt . 7 near MEAT CUTTER·. No phone
Meigs and Gallia line at the
calls. D&amp;D Meats.
Richard Finks residence,
l-18-tfc
Tuesday, July 3151, through
Friday, 9 a.m . !ill 6 p.m. Lots DEAD STOCK, horses, cattle,
of nice Items.
hogs, sheep, reasonable
7-J1-2tp charge. Call 24.1· 551~.
2: FAMI~ Y Yard Sale, Meiss- - - - -- -.,---6·_26_-JOt_c
·Gallla line, Friday and ·
Saturday. R. E. Mcintosh
Pets For Sale
residence.
AKC Toy Poodle puppies, $75
8-1-lfc
and $85. Also Siamese kittens
$10. Phqn~ 1-156-6241·, Kennels
of Calhoun .

GRAND
OPENING
SPECIAL

July 25-Aug. 1
Cars Painted
$50.00
$60.00
Pick-ups

6- 2~- JOtc

PARKVIEW Kennels. Poodles.
I toy male and 1 female.
Phone 992.5~~3.
7-15-tft

BRUSH. HOGS. 4x5 If., phone
992'5858.
715lfc
--~ ---

20 INCH Multi speed Ions, ooly

$1 7.95. Alspcha)•e lounges for

porch. lawn or pool , only
$6.99. Pomeroy recovery, 62:2

E. M.'lln, Pomeroy,
Phone 992-7554.

ROOFING

1-11-ISfc

Ohio.

From the laroest

Ph:\92-2174

family room. Priced n mid
20's, plus lot . Located on large ·
country lot off Rt . 7 20
minutes lrom Parkersburg
and 15 minutes from
Pomeroy . Financing already
arranged with low down
payment.
· h Contact
R ItPauline
Ph E.
Cunnong am ea Y·
one
(614) ~23-8690 Coqec!.
PRIVATE meeting room for
any organization ; phone 992·
I 19 It c
- -- - -- --·.,...·
J975.
3-JJ.tfc
22 APRIL lambs. Call m -2630.
- - - -- -- -MOBILE home space in - -- - - - - - 7-293tc
Syracuse . Phone 992-5858 ..
KOSCOT KOSMETICS and
6-21-tfc
Name Brand Wigs. Special
sale prices during month of
For Sale .
July . Phone Helen Jane
8 ACRES on Rt . 1~3. good
Brown ~ 992-5113.
building sites, .city water.
6-29-tfc
Phone 992-3640.
7-22-121c CANNING peaches arriving
Saturday. Bring containers,
NOW OPEN, P.andJ . Odds and Midway Markel, Pomeroy.
Ends, -Glorified lunk, ap - Call 992-2565 or 992-2582.
7-29-3tc
. pliances, furniture. 215 North
Second, Middleport.
·
6-29-30tc 196f TRUCK, 1969 Camper and
a 1973 Kawasaki. Phone 742·
3810.
WILKINSON Small Engine
7-29-llp
Sales-.nd Service, 810 3rd St.,
Middleport. Lawn mower and
chain_saw repair . Free pickUp 10 H.P. BOLEN tractor with
mower, good condltiOfl, $650.
and delivP.rv . Phone 99?-3092.
Harold Brewer, Long Bottom,
Also Briggs and Stratton and
98S-3554.
Tecumseh pafts.
7-29-tfc
6-21 -30tc

1973 - Zig Zag sewing machine.

1- 60x 12 3 Bed room Atlantlc,
54•495 ·00 ·
l-60xl 2 2 bedroom Champion,

$~.~ 5 · 00 ·

1- 60x12 2 bedroom PMC,
1 $S46,1x9152.oo2. bed
R
1
- $3,895.00.
room
egen •
1-60x12 2 bedr·oom Mon•rch,
"
save$2,000 .00 .
1-60x12 Elcona Custom, save
S1.800.oo.
·
These prices Include deliverY.
and complete setup. Don t
wait - stop now al BerryMiller Mobile Homes Sales,
705 Farson Street, Belpre,
Ohio, phone 423-9531 - Closed
Sundays.
7-26-61c
Air Conditioners
Awnings
Underpinning

Wheel AI'1gnment
*5~55
On Most A~erican Cars
·

-GUARANTEED.

Phone 992-2094
Pomeroy
Ho . &amp; t
me
U0
A.

Open&amp;TiiS
Mond~y lhru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
606

E.

992-2094
Main Pomero_y

Complete mobile hom ~
se rvice - plus gigantic
displav of mobile homes
always. available at ...

OFFICE SUPPLIES

MILLER
• MOBILE HOMES

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

1220 Washington Blvd.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0.

GENE'S BODY SHOP

7

' ''
'
'

Pomtra,.

·'

DON'T THE PEiOPI.E

.

OF iAMSTfR~-'lltl
WOODEN
SHOe$ ANY MORE~

DARN, I

T~OUG~T

·. ~

7d/

'

W~AR

WITI-l SANDPAPER~

215 N. Second
Phone 992-3509
24 Hour Service

OUT Of iOIIIN

H~

MURDER!/

~­

..••
•...
..•
~

~

MIDDLEPORT

•

1 Unfurnished Apartment 114 N. Fourth, 2 bedrooms,
has all kitchen appliances.
No pets .

•
JI
I

PHONE 992-3863
BEFORE3PM

All work guaranteed.
Specialist
Wheel
Alignment

•

ASK US ABOUT
PRE-FABRICATED

WOOD TRUSSES

It Must

Be Right
or we will

ke f' Right.

Bulttlo Your'$pecs
Oeltveroclto Job Silt

HOGG

FURNITURE

Real Estate For Sale

&amp; ZUSPAN
8 - ~ , lO Daily,8-12Sal.
In fhe R. H. Rawlings Sons
MATERIALS CO.
Building.
713-S5S4
Mason, W.Va.
Middleport, 0.
.992-1101
O' DELL WHEEL . Ali nment·. MOBIL.E home repair, t:leclocatedal Crossroads, ~1. 124,
trlcal plumbing and heating.
now back to work. Complete Phone 992-5858.
7· 15-tfc
front end -service, tune up and
brake
service .
Wheels

~-

..

.GASOUNE AILEY

- -- - - -

·~-------~-----------------------,

!
I1

GRADUATE LICENSED
PRACTICAL NURSES

Needed for the evening and night shift in the
Geriatric .Unit and Med./Surg. Unit .,

I

II
I
I

I

1

retirem~nt

pro~ram,

I

1
I

I

.. .

•

auru:l? !..

doe6n't matter which
wall a piq~,; tail
curls,

Mr. ·

e
mf.l'T '-OU 11\II.JI&lt;
. lt.\AT, AfTER liP
LE'5S'Ot.JS, 'iOtJ
'SHOUL.P B6 A
Um8 FARll-iBR

d

e
'n
X

h
!,

f&gt;.LO.ip '?-

It
ID

Is
~

IF. YOU'RE LYINQ TO ME AOOUT BEINQ
ori rll'f 51Df1 YOUR GIANT FR.JEriD AND
)OUR OOQ I)OE FIRST! YOIJ Will LIVE
l001Q ENOU&lt;1H TO WITNESS TltEIR.
!lGOI!Y! DO lOU WISI1 TO CHANGE
YOUR. SToRY?

NATitAM HALE COULD
IT AH' DIE FOR. HIS
COI,.II'lTRY SO CAti I'" Al'l.'

PUNJAB·-. AH. "' SAND't'~

:. 19Jl ., &gt;1(1,

r.. , T,M

I C,
1.. U.t. ' ''· 011.

oy

?-

~

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THERE is MOllE P~EASURE IN
BUILDING CASTLES IN THE AIR THAN ON THE GROUND
~EDWARD GIBBON
.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

40. Comedian
Blanc
fl. Cervine
DOWN
! . Shaded

(@ 19'73 Kin~r FeJttu res :'i yndicate, Inc .)

~l!lJWID~;&amp;.t 41lt•wU..I.-l ,_.

recess

2. Greek·

CALL 593-776·1, EXT. 272

L.~l~~§..!~~J~LH..E.!\~T.H.l~~!~
"

•

•

. al
:e,

th
Ul

3; Toumt .
attftctlon
in County
eork -

Yesterday'S Answer
11. Take
27. Coilcern·
wing
lng glee
12. Portion
clubs
16. Other·
29. Com-

J fll~! f

4. Milslllm

Easter
5. Short
poem
6. Receded
7. Ancient
times
10. Lepre·

me mora·

wise

tl've pillar
30. Useful
31. Nero
36, Comedian
DeLuise
37. Lamentable

19. Cabbage
22. Drooping
23. Rival of
Athens
24. Less
huge
25. Froth

chauns

wds.)

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

a
1,"

ay

UnKrambleth••• four Jumbles,
one letter to tach square, to
form four ordinary words.

market,
;,11place.

(2

.11!

ed

ag

: lid

· de

'

c

nd

!

I BEPOR
tYESVR1'

J

I

Or
; ol.
10n

tJ I

ool

so

III

IIACING ~

I

WMP0/1390

...'·•

lHf?EE AM.r

GRAY MANOR
APARTMENTS

J}

like ' person.

F

WHAlS lHe E31b
roeA -eLOWrN'
RE:\TEII.l-E RT -

1--t

We,talk to you

•

and

FORD truck bed with racks, 7 x
12, off 1973' truck. Call 985·
355~. Harold Brewer, Long .Real Estate For Slle
LARGE, · conventem oundlng
Bottom. .
·
lots at Roc~ Springs. Area
7-29-tfc

_____....,

...

ji

.,

HOTPOINT
AIR CONDITIONERS
$gg,95

PUBLIC NOTICES .

I.

'

Phone 742-6271

Heating . Air Cond .
R•lriger r·on
Plumbo' ng
1
'
• Apphances
•
Electrocal
. Auto•
Air Cond. · Residenlial or
C,o.mmercial.

t
••
'·

A LoC:AL ANI.STHf.tiC

! COULD PlilK UP A LITTLE

For Estimates

P AND J HOME
MAINTENANCE
&amp; REPAIR

DO You WANT

Oil. Allf. You FIZ0/0\

BREAD S~ I NtNG SHOES~

balanced electronically. All SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
This machine darns, em·
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
work guaranteed. Reasonable
broiders, overcasts, button
Help Wanted
CLEANED, REPAIRED.
rates. Phone 7~2-3232 .
1
holes. All wlthoul at,
MILLER SANITATION ;
2-18-tfc
MALE or Female desk clerk, tachments. Pay balance of
restricted
for houses ohly .
STEWART,
OHIO. PH. 662·
must be able to live ln. Appl(. $38.5C or pay S5 per month.
Lincoln Hill- Pomeroy •
RON Sl'fEPARD, Floor, Wall . 3035.
10'1• CAB-OVER truck camper, . Toppers Plains &amp; Chesler
in person at the Ohio Hole,
Call 992-5331.
10,4-lfc
Water available. Call or see
ijemodellng, .Ceramic tile
El Dorado , self-contained,
992-5271
Middleport.
6-10-tfc
Bill
Witte,
992-2789.
baths.
Bax
28D,
Rutland
742·
~Ice
condition
.
Reasonably
7-31-6tc
Repairs Additional
7-24-tfc
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
3664.
priced. With ·lacks and holdservice, all makes. 992-2284"
6-26-tfc
· Work Guaranteed
down . Call 985·3554. Harold
HOUSE
for
sale,
210
Condor
The Fabric Shop, Poll\eroy .
JUST
ARRIVED
Brewer,
Long
Bottom
.
Wanted To Rent
Street. 3 rooms and bath .
Authorized Singer Sales and
NEW SHIPMENT
RUMMAGE · sale,
Coats
7-29-tfc
FARM
DOZER and batl; hoe work,
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
Phone 992-7310.
Building In Middleport, HOUSE In coun·lry, furnished or
42 ACRES - . Near eastern
ponds and septic tanks, ditch7·25-12tp school. 6 room house, modern
unfurnished. Call 992-5190 or
3-29-tfc
Thursday only, August 2.
PAINT DAMAGE 1973 Zig-Zag
ing service; top soil, fill dirt,
7-31 -2lc
m -7717 .
SEWING MACHINES Still in
bath , modern kitchen, gas
limestone; B&amp;K Excavatlnn ,
7-31-3tp
dozer, loader
orlqinal cartons. No at- 7 ROOM house with bath In forced air fur-nace. Bank barn,
Phone,~92-5367 or 992-386.1-... EXCAVATING,
and backhoe work; septic.
tachments needed as our
Rutland. air conditioned, good fences. Some fruit, and all
9-1-tfc
tanks instalfed; dump trucks
l controls are · built-ln. Sews carpeted, gas furnace, dish- minerals. Only $19,500.00.
As Low As
=-=--and
lo-boys for hire; will haul
Want'-" To Buy
' with 1 or 2 needles~ makes
washer, double oven, range,
JUST LISTED
EXCAVATING. Dozers, large
fill dirt, top soli, limestone
buttonholes. Sew on buttons,
double garage, large carporf, MIDD~EPORT - Clean 2 ahd small; Backhoes and
Other sizes also available.
and gravel; Call Bob or Roger
NO. I Copper; 55c, Radiators,
monograms, and blind hem
4 acres cleared and fenced, bedroom home, wllh nice bath, loaders on track and tires;
Your Right to Know
See them today.
Jeffers, day phone 992-7089;
JOe, brass, 20c, batteries, 90c
stitch. Full cash price $38.50
small barn and other and all furniture . Level lot,
Dump trucks Lo-boy
night phone 992-3525 or m each, clean, dry Ginseng
buildings.
Phone
614-742-683~.
or
budget
plan
avalloble.
and 'be informed of the func front and - back p6rahes. car.
service. Septic tanks in - . 5232.
roots, S55 alb . Yellow root,~ .
Phone 992-298~.
5·30-tfc port. Asking $8900.00.
9..
POMEROY
'tlon S of your government are .
stalled. George I Bill) Pullins,
·2-li-tfc
May apple, SOc, per lb. M. A.
6il!l'' Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
7-29-61c
embod ied In public notices. ln.
REAL BUY
phone 992 ·2~78 or 992-7402.
Hall, Reedsville. Call 378that ·self -government charges
·
Phone 992-2181
WELL PLANNED 3 beqroom, 2 88 .ACRES Vacant land In ====:-::--:---:--:-=2·=-=
:all cit izens to be informed ;
6249.
9-ttc ELNA .and While Sewing
VACUUM Cleaners new 1973
bath home with
full
th is newspaper urges every .
7-3l-tfc CANNING tomatoes, cucum- Model. Complete with all
Scipio Township, Sectlon26. All FURNITURE Stripping alii!' Machines ... Service on all
basement, 2 car garage and
icitlzell to read and study these
makes . Reasonable rates.
KEWPI E dolls and anything
bers mangoes, and can - cleaning tools. Small paint
family room . Priced In r.old minerals. At $125.00 per acre. Refinishing. Abraham's
notices. we strongly advisE
The Sewing Center, Mid·
POMEROY
Antiques,
132
Fayette
Street,
:those cttrhns, seek.il1g further
else related 10 Kewpies. Also,
talopes. Geraldine Cleland, damage In shipping. Will take
20s, plus lot. Located on large
Ohio.
dleport,
info rma t ion. to exerc ise their
country lot off Rl. 7, 20 2 BEDROOMS - Nice bath, Nelsonville, Ohio. Phone 753· old postcards In good conRacine.
$27 cash or budget plan
11 -16-ltc
;right of access lo public
natural gas furnace. Compact 1302.
dillon, write and describe
7-30-ttc available. Phone 992-298~ ..
minutes from Parkersburg
·records and pub-lic meetings.
7-3-IO!c
·t
1
1
ted
=------,-----..::.:
7-29-6tc - and 15 mlnules from kitchen, basement, and nice
READY .MI)C ' CONCR~TE
oems a so pr ce wan . GROCERY business .ioi sai; • - -- - - - - - ::- - - - - - - -Pomeroy . Financing already lot. Only 56500.00.
delivered right to your
Alyce Schneider. 1~5 South
Building . tor sale or lease: SINGER Automatic Zig -Zag
NEW BUSINESS
REFRIGERATOR Repair.; Air·
arranged with low down
prl&gt;/ect. Fast and easy. Frae
NOTICE OF
Kanawha. Buckhannon, W.
Phone 773-5618 from 8:30p.m.' Sewing Machines, In sewing
BUILDING
Cond Ill on I ng,
He all ng,
i!AYmenl. Contact Pauline E.
est
mates . Phone 992 - 328~.
APPOINTMENT
Va . 26 201.
to 10 p.m. for appointment.
table . Makes buttonholes,
Repair,
Cupnlngham Realty, phone BRICK - Aircondlllonedand Electrical
Goegleln
Ready -Mix Co.,
case No.20971
7-8-JOtp
J-20-tfc
sews on buttons blind hems, · 61•-~23- 8690 collect.
gas forced air heat (both Residential or commercial,
Middleport,
Ohio.
E•tote of Or on c . Weor•
~------etc Top notch condition. Pay
7-24-tfc central), 2 large rest rooms, auto air-conditioning, 266 Mill
6-30-tfc.
o~:t~~:~;. hereby.given that Jo OLD furniture, oak tables. REDUCE excess fluids with
$51 or terms avolloble. Phone
and 2 storage rooms, with Street 992-3509.
b
clocks, Ice boxes, brass beds,
Fluldex - Lose wo'p,ht with
m-29U.
A
w
f 5
6-29-301~
SEPTIG TANKS CLEANED
nn
ears o
ails urv
dishes
or
complete
D A Dl 1
7-29-6tc s ROOM house, bOth, basement, plenty of parking.
Township, Rt . 2, Pomoroy, has
household•. Write M. D.
ex- · e
capsu es
at
NEW LISTING
FOR FREE- estimates on REASONABLE rates. Ph . 446LITTLE_
SA.VE
A
.
gas
heat,
21ots.
S.
D.
Buskirk,
.
been duly appointed Executrix
"
Nelspn Drugs.
DRIVE. A
341 Page Street, Middleport. NEAR HARRISONVILLE - 3 aluminum siding. Storn Doors
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
of the Estate of oren c . Wears ,
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio,
30
7·_::
LOT at KUHL'S BARGAIN
7-29-llp bedrooms , bath , lots of · and Windows, Carports,
Owner and Operator.
deceased , iate Of SaliSbury
call 992-6271.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _:_
·31p
5-12-tfc
paneling. Front and side ·Marquees and Railing, Phone
CEN~ER for clean used -==-========::.....,.
Townsh ip, Meigs County , Ohio.
5-13-tfc ONE7200acrelotforsale. 60AC
furniture, guaranteed ap- r
Charles Lisle, Syracuse, Ohln.
porches. Asking 56,500.00.
Creditors are requ ired to file
their claims with said f lduc llJrY WANTED
for
auction,
all-crop Harvester, also .
pi la nces . Electric, . gas
RACINE AREA .
Carl Jacob, Sales Rep within four . months.
household goods. Tools, most
Phone 742-3656.
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer•
ranges, auto . washers;
NEW - 3 bedrooms, beautiful resentalive. V. V. Johnson
Dated th.s 25th day of July anything of value. Will buy or
7-6-2~tp
eledrlc, gas dryers; also,
Complete Service
bath, large kitchen with bar. and Son, Inc.
1973 '
Phone 949-3821
refrigerators from $19 .95
6-22-tfc
Mannino D Webster sell on commission. Will haul. A-M--F-M_S_t-er-e-o--R-a_d_lo-,-8--T-rack
Level lot. Only $16,000.00.
Racine, Ohio
· Judge Call 992-3354. Hayman 's.
NEW LISTING
(Just
arrived
LATE~-~~~~~~
171 l1 181 6, 13,' 3tc
·
7-254fc
tape player, ~-way speaker
MODEL
refrigerators,
$85)
.
Crill
Bradford
WILL
TRIM
or
;;;t'
frees
,
POMEROY - 2 bedrooms,
system. .B~Iance $108.32 or
Couches, love-seats, straight
5-1-tfc
shrubbery.
Also
paint
roofs
.
use our budget terms. Call
bath, basement. Front porch,
ond
ov
rotufled
chairs,
949-3221
or
742-44~1.
Phone
0
992-3965.
utl.llty building and small
----,------'---- ;.-_:.:...:_
Jor Rent
Roger Hysell's
tables, · dlneftes; chests,
7-18-JOtc OPEN garden. 56,500.00.
...,...:._~---'---7-~
29-6tc
Garage near crossroad$ on st. o
dressers;
aevered heavy,
IN THE
PROPERTIES ARE
MING HARRTSON'S TV service and
Rt. 124; all mechanlcol work
bedroom suites.
GRAY MANOR lO H.P. ALLIS Chalmers tractor beautiful
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
IN,
AND
SO
A
THE
Including
automatic transBest
selection
of
THRIFTEX
.
'
2
YEARS
OLD
ser'
\
lice
cal
ls.
Phone
992-2522.
PROBATE DIVISION
~2" with Rotary lawnBUYERS
.
YOU
SHOULD
mlsslo~s.
Monday -Friday, ·
2-9-tfc
LINOLEUM
RUGS
In
Mel~s
MIDDLEPORT
3
MEIGS COUNTYoOHIO
APARTMENTS
mower and snow-blade.
STOP TO SEE OUR LATEST
8:30 o.m . to s p.m. Salurday
Co. 9 x ll's, $6.95, 9 x 15 s, bedrooms with large closets
IN THE MATTER OF SET·
MID
RT
Contact Marvin Keebaugh,
LISTINGSr PICTURES ON
- 8' 30 to 12 noon - unlesa by
$8.75 . New furniture at excellent bath with shower ~
,TLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS,
DLEPO
days m -5342- otter 7 p.m.
oppolnlment. Phone 992-5682
THE
BULLETIN BOARD OF Auto Sales
DISCOUNT
PRICES
kitchen
with
everything
1'
t
PROBATE COURT, MEIGS
985-3913 . .
or
992-7121 .
EACH
ONE
OFFERED.
qualltr
living
room
suites;
'o
r
.
mom
.
Dining
roo~
1971 MONTE Corio, P.S., P.
COUNTY, OH 10
1 Unfurnished Apartment 7 29 31
7-25-JOlc
swlve
rockers
much
more.
Jtlllty
room
Car
d.
Disc Brakes, air-conditioning.
Accounts and vouChlirs of the 11 4 N. Fourth, 2 bedrooms,
.. p
Shop Tuesday through Sun- 3
·
pe 1e .
Call 992-7073 after 5 p.m .
following named fid uciari es has all kitchen appliances. 1966 CHEVROLET 2.fon truck, 'day until 7 p.m . _ KUHL'$ asement. Large level lot.
heve been flied in the Probate
7-31-4fp ' AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
.
Cpurt. Meigs county , Ohio, for No pets.
8ft. flat bed, good condltlooi .
BARGAIN CENTER, St. RL 7 . All electric. $11.000.00.
Lo}l
vour.
ca nce lled?
approval and settlement :
1963 International 3 quarter
·:at caution light," TUPPERS
MIDDLEPORT
· 1964 FORD Pi ck up Truck . Call
operator's license. Coil 992·
CASE NO . 20,677 FlrsMnnual
PHONE 992.,3863
ton pickup, V-8, Hpeed trans·
PLAINS, OHIO.
A nice building lot or mobile
843-2778.
. 1~28.
Account of Ruth L Wolle,
miss ion . Call 992-6279.
7-29-6tc
t1ome
space
about
70x90,
lots
7-27-6lc
6-15-tlc
Guardian of TimothY Darrell
BEFORE 3 PM
7·29-3tp
I-972_H_O_N_D_A_. -SOO
--M
-,ot~
orc~cle, of -trees, good nelghborhgod.
Wolle, Thomas Glenn Wolfe ,
1
.lUST $2,000.00.
Charles Bryan Wolfe and
·
Jimmy Christopher Wolle.
After6 Call992·5~44
PLEASURE BOAT with lriller.
excellent ,condition. Exras, •
TODAY'S BEST BUY
CASE NO . 20..97 .First and
Tri-liull , 17 ft . top 60 h.p .
$1,000. Call Dennis Keney at 5 bedrooms, 1'12 baths, large
Final Account Of Bernard v .
Evlnrude motor . All ac ·
Pomeroy Nallonol Bank or dining room , lots of ca binets ,
Fultz, Administrator • of the TRAILER SPACE on old route
cessorles. Phone 992-7132.
985-3828 after 6 p.m.
double S.S. si nk In the kltEstate of Ethel Chevalier ,
JJ, 112 mile from Nlelgs High
1·23-9tc
- -- - - - - - 7-_31-llc chen, utility room , 2 glassed
Deceased .
School. Call 992·2W .
CASE NO . 10,834 First and
7 26 171 =
=--=-=
:::-----90
CC
KAWASAKI
.
Call
9~9- porc~es, storm doors ond
Final Account of PaulL . Cascl ,
· · C EXCELSIOR Salt Works, E.
4785.
windows, small' cellar,
Administrator of lhe Estate of - - - - - - - - - - ,,Main St., Pomeroy . All klnda
.
c
garage
and carport . ALL
.
Bruno P . easel, Deceosed.
3 AND ~ ROOM furn l· · "J and· 1 of salt water pellets, water
7 31 31
~:-::-:,...--.,.-----THIS JUST $12,800.00.
CASE
NO
.
20,1lBO First e'nd
~
I
bl
k
It
d
'f.Jnal Account of Bertha M .
unfurnished
apartments.
nu ge s, oc s.a an own
3 APARTMENTS
,Hysell. Guardian ol the Guard ·
Phone 992-543~.
Oh o River Salt. Phone m- 12' ROOM Brick home. For one
family
or
divided
Into
3
apls.
3
furnished
, I unfurnished.
lanshlp Estate of Mary Emma
.4-12-ffc
3891 .
6-5-lfc
Can
be
seen
any
time
after
5
Close
In
on
a good street.
BrlckiH .
.
p.m. Call 992·3173 for ap- Always rented. Could live In
' Unl~ss e&gt;&lt;oeptlons are filod ROOMS by the week .$oi up
1.
polntmenl or 992-5131 during one and rent two. This Is a
~~:rh•::r~~:ig,,~;;o:a'l:c:~~~ ~~ . Meigs Inn, PomerOY.
·
day.
l:rlck bvlldlng.
tho 30th ~oy of August 19il, of
. 7' 12-tfc
I
~tarting sala~y $2.9~ hr.; $6,094 annually, Fringe bent!flts
-------~7...:..·
31 -Stp
GENUINE SACRIFICI,!
which time said accounts will be
_
3 bedrooms. new bath, new
1nclude 9 pa1d holidays, 15 days annual sick leave 2 1
considered and continued from TWO lra ljer lots In Middleport ;
_C,&lt;\NNING
Tomotoes, forced olr lurnoce, Iorge
day to day until finally diSposed
o;, duplex In Bradbury ; phone
1
cucumbers , mangoes, and ncreatlon room , utility
weeks vacation, premium pay for overtime,
of.
before 6 p,m., 991-5693.
ca nl'lllopes . Geraldine rJom, new cellar wllh
Any · periOn lnttrested me y
7-JO-Stc
Blue Cross available at half cost, etc.
1
file wrltftn exceptions to said
Cleland, Racine.
· b.Jildlng over . Pore~. 0 good
1
1
account1 or to matters per 7-31 -lfc olze lot. WHY PAY RENr?
Reg1stered
Nurses
needed
also.
l'fOUS
E,
3
bedroom
un
taining to tht e~Cecuflon ·of the
---------'lil,SOO.OO.
, furnished, porch and yard.
trust, not itll than five dav.s
Apply at the Personnel Office or
Call
992-2780
or
992
·3~32
.
Mobile Homes For Sale
PROPERTY 1s SELLING
prior to the dare ut for hearing .
FAST WE
NEED
7-8-lfc
s . Mann/nliJ 0 , Wtblttr =-=-=~=-----____:
55 x 10 BEDROOM. Owner' will , LISTINGS.
JUDGE 3 BEDROOM 1'12 bath mobile
flnaoice . Inquire ot P&amp;J Odds
IIENRY E. CLELAND,
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
home
,
308
Page
Street,
992·
and
End1
Shop,
215
N.
2nd
BROKER
·
ON
YOUR
DIAL
•
PROBATII DIVISION
3509.
Ave., Middleport.
.
.·
. · 992-2211
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
7-8-tlc
. (71 31, l,tc
. ,1
~,~;:.....;....;_._r_--''-:-~- - - - - - - -- ·-1·6-lfc , lf.noon wtr99HS61
-..,..-------'"- -~--~-

~

'I

I

Roofing, Spouting,
Home Remodeling .

1:_:=========~
r
..,

EXPERT

''

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION

.MODERN
SANITATION

of dollars

no.rk

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC..

Hoard House

even ousands on these units :

H/i.Rt&lt;IW '.£l.lil¥&gt; T((tW;;o.J€'
'10 P';'I'O IOA•IAL'l&lt;;t~ I

QUICK.M

I

Bulldoz.er Radiator to lh•
!»mauest Heater C.::ort.
,
Nathon Biggs
Radiator SpediiiSI

ALL WEATHER

and

n

Rad

7-26-6tc

gara~e

~~

&lt;;.E.LL 11-.X'.. "

I GOT TO .eAT AN'

Frank, 992-7717. I can help.
Larry's Mobile Homes Soles,
600 Wes t Main Street,

8 x 28 MOBILE home, very"'ood
_.
condition. 163 Pearl Street,
Siding
Spouting
Rem'odeling
Middleport. $1 ,095 . Call
Coolville, 667-3619 .
Heating. Complete
Plumbing
SEVERAL new damaged living
7-31 -Jic
room suites, several up to lfz
Building . Vinyl &amp; ·Aluminum Siding.
olf regular price . Hurry !hay
won' t last long et these p_
r lces . 22 FT. TRAVEL Trailer, all
modern
shower,
bath ,
Pomeroy Recovery, 622 E.
lovatory, toilet. This trailer
Main , Pomeroy, Of1lo. Phone
was special built, full size
992-7554.
bed, will sleep six. Plenty of
7-l6-6tc
cvpboard space. wall -to-wall
Middleport. 0.
992-2550
carpet, electric, w,ater, and
1973 t4x70 MOBILE home,
gas already on troller . At
washer and dryer , dish Roushes Landing, Racine .
washer, stainless steel sink.
$3,000. Trailer space can be .
SEPTIC TANKS
garbage disposal , eye level
rented for $35 per month.
Dick's
oven , range, dacron.polvester
Contact Edwin Bill Cozart,
CLEANED
carpel, large lot. Phone 7~2 ·
Racine, Ohio, 9~9-4992 .
3083.
7-3-3tc
DUMP TRUCK
"STRIPPERS"
-::--:-::cc-----~:._,7.18-If
SERVICE
BLACK three quarter Ten · 'CASH paid for a ll makes and' We Strip Paint, Varnishes,
Etc. from Furniture.
24
HOUR SERVICE
nessee Walker colt, broke to
models ot mobile homes .
Antlques~
Modern-Melals
ride. Phone 992-3640.
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
No ruinous lyes or caustics
7-22-121c
~ - 13 - tfc
used.
ONEGENTLEAppaloosamare ATTENTION. A~L MOBILE
Plck-UpServlce
lind colt, one 3 yr. old Ten· · HOME SUYERS.,
Available
nessee Walker gelding , Berry -Miller Mobile Home
We Buy &amp; Sell Antiques.
JOHN'TU.CKER
registered . ?92-3518.
Sales have lust received on·
· Dock Seylor-Owner
Rt. 4, Pom&amp;rqy, 0 .
---'------!.;.7·;£26!!:·!!!61£.C their lo.t 6late model used and
Kerr St.
Pomeroy, 0.
991-1954
WELL PLANNED 3 bedroom, 2 repossess.ed Mobile Homes. ~===ft=bo:"::':99:2:::·2:7:98==~
::
both
home with
full
You 'than save hundreds basement, 2 car

S AMWITCH ..

Been
tvrned
down?
Remen,ber, I c"" sav "yes"
when others say " no." Ca ll

Pomeroy , Ohio.

N" !WI:· fQ: •'D r:.
APA,,VIU"o o/:M£ C"llX"l1 0l {) ,

FIX ME A HAM

TRYING to buy a mobile home?

- - - -- -

For Rent

Notice

BARNJ!:Y

Mobile Homes For Sale

for Sale

WANT ADS
INFORMATION

•

I

JOt ,

:- M
ne
.ch
Now orranre the eln:loclletters
io form the ou~oe aruwor, u .

'-1
I
I
:=::=::=:::=~=~..-l==~=~·:u~r~c•:•::t..r:_:b:r~the above canopn,

lei

'• he
..
, be

~--~~~~~·~·=~~~·~~1[111) -: of
:- he

(AMwen

AMANDA PANDA
YetttnbJ't

'5'/LVIA! LOOK WHAt' I fOUND.'
A TKANboR 'iPIPER'£ 1-{0ME\
IT!; UNDER61'\0UN1i'/

'

I

•
I

l

l•mbk" ADULT

•

•

VITAL

IAlr.IN

lomorr(Jw~

fAIRLY

·
An.wer1 Lf"n1wl into lhf! bunk'• lfl[el y
depu1i1 - VA"LTIO
·.

1er
~et

18

'~ •

•

. ..•

nd
ed

•

'

lilt

!
I

0

!

I

II
I

I

lI
I

''

•

· lOr
·: be

•

. .!'

1n,

genus

CAPI'AIN EASY

1

•

lie

•
•

I
I
I

up

om
·na

AI

DAILY CRYP'fOQUOTE- Her~·· how to wor!t lt:

rt-

~

AXYDLB,4.AXR
· Is L o· N G Jl E L L 0 W
One lcllcr simply stands lor another. In this 'sample A is
u1ed for th e three L's, X for 1ho two O's, etc. Si ngle letters,
apostrophes, the length •nd rormation of the words are all
hints. Each day lhe code letters ore different.

: 'he

lrY

be,

»&gt;

CRYPTOQUOTES
XP

~U

PZ

JC\ I XJB

YZVNRJU

ZL

OBXPXFW

PQ CF

EBXt'KXEVJ
l'ZVUPZ~

ne

EBZGNKJ

••

PJF

EQXVZUZEQXKCV

X¥'PZ

PZ

ENP

ZFJ

EBCKPXKJ .- VJZ

·•

i

'
,

�•
f

10- The Dail~ Sentinel, Middlepori-Pomeroy. 0 . July 31, 1973

Reds cause

Dh·c~no~·~&gt; gr:m h·d
Tw o divorces have been

grantro and a suit to quiet title
on real estate has been filed In
the Meigs County Common
SAlOON 1UPll - Shelling Pleas Court.
Charlotte Mayle was granted
and terrorism took a heavy toll
a
divorce from Calvin Mayle,
1)1 civilians, and Communist
cease-nrc violations edged Jr., and her maiden name.
upward today, the final day of Marcinko, was restored .
Canada 's peacekeeping role in Mitsuko Harris was granted a
Vietnam, government military divoree from Ernest Harris
and her maiden name of
spok.esmen said.
Three civilians died and 17 Isunoda was restored. Georgia
were wounded when Com- Mae Hayman, Jackson, filed
munists lobbed grenades into the suit to quiet title against
Ruth D. Steele, Chillicothe, et
~omes in a Central Coast
at.
The property is loeated In
hamlet, Sai,gon command
spokesman, Lt. Col. Le Trung Meigs County.
Hien said, and another civilian
died and three were wounded Cambodia bombing
in a shelling .2f miles north or
Saigon.
termed essential
Hien said a land mine
WASHINGTON (UP! )
detonation 40 miles north of
Saigon killed three civilians. Melvin R. Laird vigorously
He listro 92 Communist truce defended today secret bombing
violations in the 24 hours en- of areas of neutral Cambodia in
ding at noon today, 18 more 1969-70 as essenUal to save
than in the previous 24-hour American lives but said the
Pentagon committed a snafu In
period.
Canada withdrew its truce giving Congress doctored
supervision Ioree from South reports.
Laird, who as defense
Vietnam today, ending .six
months of rutile peacekeeping secreta ry proposed the
·attempts and bringing to a halt bombing and said he go t
Nixon's
:the international operation to President
authorization,
insisted
it was
police the cease-fire.
necessary both to reduce
American casualties at the
Ume and expedite U. S. with,
drawal.

.heavy toll

s
w
rl•
d&lt;
po

to
In

s

..
••

A
8

s

c
w

u

MEIGS THEATRE'.
Tonight, July ll.

Walt· Disn~y's
CHAR~I E &amp; THE ANGEL

(Technicolor) .

-

'

Also
Walt Disney's
CINO.ERELLA
{ Technicolor)

Show Starts 7 p.m .
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
August 1·2

NOT OPEN

MASON DRIVE-IN
.'.

'\'
;, (

l'

'

I, •&lt;1 1 ·~ lJI !1 •

Tonight, July 31
Double Fea1ure Program·
"NIGHT CALL
NURSES"
Patricia T.Byrne .
Alana Collin s
Mittie Laurence
Rated R
-Plus'LADY FRANKENSTINE"
Jo~eph

PIant b ug ·blarned
for crop damage
MOULTON, Ala. · (UP!)
Heavy damage to tlie Alabama
cotton crop Is being blamed on
the invasion of a pest described
as " worse than the boll
weevil."
Sam McLendon, county
extension chairman for
Lawrence County, said
Monday the tarnished plant
bug "is in every one of the
33,000 acres plantro in the
colUlty."
"Damage is heavy, "
McLendon said. "This thing's
worse than the weevil."
Officials said the hardest hit
area is the Tennessee Valley
region of north Alabama,
where 65 per cent of the state's
cotton is grown..

Cotlen

Sarah Bay

Rated R ·

Wed.-,Thur. -Fri.
Aug. 1-2-l
Double Feature Program
JOE KIOO

I Color I
Clint Eastwood

l PG I
-Pt usULZANA'S RAID

IColorl

Burt Lancaster

I Rl

REUNION SET
The annual Weber family
relUlion will be held Sunday at
the archery building of Royal
Oak Park with a basket dinner
.. at noon. Local relatives are
askoo to notify those living a
dislance since there will bti no
special mailed notices. Games
are planned in the afternoon
said Mrs. Marcia Keller, head
of this year's reunion.

Owen Hawley,
•
7l, dies Monday

patents In Ja(Jlln, the United
dlc~ted fuel savtl18• of more Stalea, France, Britain arid
TOKYO ( UPJ) - Toyota ts easy to install.
A spokesinan satd tests ln thim 12 per cent and reduction West Germany.
Owen Hawley, 71, Miners·
r0 ()(-&gt;} ~'
Motor Co. said today it soon
ville, who died (IJonda)' at
will market an electronic traffic driving In Tokyo In- of the vetllcle'• output or air
"black box" that turns off a
Velcrans Memorial Hospital,
was the son or the tate James
·
car'sengtoewhenitstovsatan
\
and Elizabeth Blont! Hawley.
intersection and reslarts the
Preceding him in dealh also
George M. Gordon to Jerry enl!lnewhonthedriverisready.
were his first wife, the former Bault, 11.75 A., Pomeroy.
to go.
Lllty Sayre, and seyen brothers
Lindsey Lyons, aff)davil ,
Aspokesman said the device
I
and sisters. Mr. Hawley was a' John E. Lyons Heirs, Affidavit, will offer major savings in fuel
member of the Racine Church Meigs.
consumption and contains anti·
of the Nazarene.
Clyde J. Morlan, EtherMarie pollution features for big cities,
Surviving are his wile, Morlan to Clarence R. Barnett, where most driving is on a
Zebna Rizer Hawley ; a son, . Carol A. Barnett, 0.92 A., stop-and-go basis .
Owen Kel)y Hawley, and a Orange.
. Called the "automatic engine
daughter, Eswr DeMoss, both
David N. Riggs, Au(lrey L. stop and start system," the
or Rhinelander, Wise.; four Riggs, to Beryl A. Wilson, Jr., device will sell in Ja(llln for
stepsons, Norman Rizer, Linda Wilson, 0.302 A., Orange. $75.50 as an accessory at
Racine ; Vernon Rizer, Hart· ' John W. Arbaugh, Ethel Toyota dealers.
A company spokesman said
rord, W. Va.; Mar1·on Rl zer , Arbaugh to Wm. Wesley Ar·
Mason, w. va., and William baugh, Norma Aibaugh, 5.65 the small1lbox-like devlee also
Rizer, Minersvilte; two A., Olive.
has been tested with success on
brothers, Edward Hawley of
Harold L. Spencer, L. such models as the Chevrolet
Minersville, and Ernest Frances Spencer to Harold L. Camaro and the Ford MaveHawleyofChester; two sisters, Spencer, Frances D. Spencer, rick.
Mrs. Howard Hinton and Mrs. 7.20 A. , Chester. .
The device, the company
Elmer Glenn, both of
Homer H. Bailey, Alpha F. said, is a small computer that
ColUinbus; 20 grandchildren, Bailey to Manning Mohler, automatically stops the engine
and eight great-grandchildren. Elizabeth A. Mohler, 8.47 A., when the car . reaches .zero ·
Funeral services will be at 1 BeQord.
speed. It restarts the ·vehicle
New 31.000 volt chassis, RCA plug in accucircult models, new RCA Super ·
p.m. Thursday at the Ewing ' V~rneda Hartung to Vena v, when the driver puts the car in ·
Accu Color picture tube for the most brilliant color picture In RCA
Funeral Home with the Rev. Marcinko, 53.42 A., Chesler. gear and touches the ac·
history, ACM touch control tunes your picture for yo!for you can adjust
Morris Wolfe officiating .
Roy Icenhower, Evelyn celerator.
, yourself, all of the features available in 25", 21" and 19" diagonal
Burial will be in the Letart Icenhower to Charles Bailey,
But, the company said, the
~ measur.e sets.
Falls Cemetery. Friends may Doris M. Balle~ , Ease., device will not shut off engines
call at the funeral home · Le~anon.
when· cars stop on slopes or' '
anytime.
Creston o. Newland, Phyllis greater than three degrees.
NeWland to Dennis Newland,
Moreover, the company said,
Also right now a complete selection of all the new 1974 RCA products such
He leo NFwland 80 A. orange the device will not stop engines
as:
new table radios, new transistor radios, clock radios, tape players
Veterans Memorial Hospllal
·
M
'
c.'Vl( ,&amp;tory', Leo 'Story t~ when batteries are run down. ~r
and recorders. black and white TV sets, stereos, portable record players.
ADMITTED
Sarah P.a ·~ La¥/ Christine Lasjl . when water lemp~atures m
Burkett, · Cheshire ; Mary
,..:' I:Bediord
' radiators are excessively h~t.,
Clark ; Middleport'; E;dith · . 1' B.~ ·O 'Brie~.,..,R~~~ta ·C. '; ~ cold.
L~
'
McKenzie , Middleport; O'Brien to Dorothy M. Bobrof, ·' The company ssid the devft!@ ·•
Ask for a demonstration of any product you'd like and remember
Kathryn Weaver, Pomeroy; · 63 ' 8•'I A• ' Ol1've •
.:::;:::;::::~::~:;::::::::::::::•:·:·:·:•::;:::::;::.:;:·:~·=·~=·~:·~:·:
Elberfelds has their own Service Department to lake care of TV, radio,
. . .• ' . . . -. . . . . ·•·•·•·•·•· .... - .-. ~ . • • •
Ronald Erb, New Haven; Elsie
James Hazelton, V.ada
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
stereo and tape products after you make your purchase.
White, Long Bottom.
Hazelton to . James'\. Quillen,
Mostly fair through the
- 'DISCHARGED - Dannie Marvel Quillen, • Parcels, period, Daytime highs 75 to
.
. Barber, .Linda WoHe, Lowell Rutland.
80 on Thursday warming to
Wingett; Sheila Hicks, Adalee
Masthead, Inc. to Standard 80 to 85 by Saturday. Lows at
Coe, Elly Lemley, Jacquelyn Oil, .40 A., Pomeroy.
night in upper 50s and lower
Johnston, Thelma Berry,
Lorena J . Wolf, Marian 60s.
Daniel Davidsoon , Cora Well, Czaik3 tO Charles A. Corder, :::;::::::::::::~::::::::8:::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::~:::~:~:~.
Richard Bable.
Johan Corder, Parcel, Chester.
Mitsuko Harris· to Ernest E.
JURY TO MEET
Harris, % A., Sutton.
A grand jury has been
Clarence Gans, Margaret
directed to meet at 9 a.m.
Gans to Sybil Ebers bach, Lots,
Wednesday, Aug. 8, in the
Pomeroy.
..
Meigs County Common Pleas
Sybil
Ebersbach
to
Court upon the request of
&lt;;larence Gans, Margaret
Prosecutor Bernard Fultz
Gans, Lots, Pomeroy.
under an order by Judge John
Dap L L. , Farme~. Mary C.
C. Bacon.
Farmer to Sybil . Eb~rsbach,
Lots, Middlepart.

1
P
Trfl.JlSf'.ers

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
THE NEW XL·100

COLOR TV SETS

4i.i

.

.

.

1

~

'

.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

ll••••••••-••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••1

LODGE TO MEET
Pomeroy Lodge !ojo. 164,
BOOSTERS TO MEET
F&amp;AM will hold its regwar
CHESTER - All Eastern
meeting Wednesday; Aug. I at
7:30 p.m. All master masons Athletic Boosters will meet at ·
the high school Tuesday at 7:30
invited.
p.m. to discuss preparations
for the fair booth.
BOOSTEltS TO MEET
Meigs High School Athletic
. Marriage License
Boosters will meet Wednesday,
.
.
Mark Edwin Smith, 20,
8 p.m. at the high school to
make plans for the fair booth. Sytacuse, and Jenny Marie
All parents of athletes are Proffitt, 21, Portland.
urged _to attend.
AT CONVENTION
LOCAL TEMPS
Charles D. Hauber attended
The temperature in down· the 52nd annual stale contown Pomeroy at 11 a.m. vention of the Disabled
Tuesday was 81 degrees under American Veterans.
sunny skies.
'

NOUNCING NEW
INTEREST RATES
'

.

"
•

.

I PASSBOOK SAVINGS I

%

Date of Deposit To

ANNUAL
RATE

Date of Withdrawal
"' ..•

/z%

1

13-MONTH CERTIFICATE I

ANNUAL
RATE

/~','l._l_·Y....,EA.._Rc_E,;,;.;.RJ.;.;.;,IFI,; .; CAT.;.; ; ,E_,I
...... ,·~! 4-

'·

11'

"

Payable Quarterly
• Minumum $1,0000.00

.

••

ANNUAL
RATE

• Payable Quarterly

J,

.

I

'

·'

%

• Payable Quarterly

ANNUAL
RATE

• Minimum $1,000.00

Phone Us At 992-2133 in Pomeroy or 742-4681 in Rutland.

WED., AUG..1

Checking, Savings, loans

BART WEIDEL

Auto Teller Window and
Walk-up Window

RGH

Bart will have a stunning display of the
world's finest fabrics for clothes custom·
tailored by

I

KAHN TAILORING CO.

;

I

CONTACT HIM AT KERM'S KORNER
'

New York Qothing House
POMEROY, OHIO

•

pomeroy
rutland

pomeroy
national
bank
the bank of
the century
established 1872

All Deposits Insured to $20,000.00 By The Fee~tral Deposit ·Insurance Corp.

'

.

Council in recognition for their having driven approximately
575,000 accident free miles. Receiving the awards from the
left are Ed Voss, three years; Durward Cumings, four years;
David Cumings, 13 years, and Elmer Finlaw,10 years.
85 meat cutters at Safeway's Milwaukee and Gibbon, Neb .
Richmond, Calif., plant were In Washington, businessman

laid off .
Bernard Goldstein, who has
Harmel shut down beef been a supplier ol beef to.. the .
slaug htering operations in its White House lor 16 years, ·S.Id '
Austin, Minn., packJng plant for Tuesday he turned down an :
the week and curlailed opera- order from the executive
lions at plant~ in South Dakota - mansion's staff mess for 15 ~ ·
and Nebraska .
po1111ds of filet mignon and New ·:
In Wisconsin, the Peck Meat York strip steak. Goldstein said
Packing Co. closed Its plant at Nixon should not order the .
Menominee, Mich., and said it finest beef lor himself since it
planned to shut down two other was his actioo that caused the
plants later this week in shortage.

••

enttneDevoled To The lnlernll Of The Meigs~MtUOn Area

B
,.f. :·:·
~~1 ' ews .. zn
rze1 s~;
:~:::*-:::::::::::::;;;:;:::::::::~:::: :::::: ::::::::::::::::: ·:::~ :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::~:::::=:::::::::::::::::;:::::::::\~:

~ 1\.T

By United Press International
. LEAVENWORTH, KAN. - TWO CONVICTS .held three
prison employes hostage for II hours in the prison laundry
Tuesday before releasing them unharmed in return for a
bargaining session with the prison warden. The convicts claimed
.they did not iake part in the killing of a guard during a ltu1ch hour
·riot ear)ier in the day.
Prison officials were warned by irunates a disturbance was
planned. It began in the prison dining room and during· the out·
break the two convicts rushed to the latu1dry, where they
grabbed a civilian employe and three guards. They released the
civilian eight hours later to set up preliminary negotiations.
During the lunch hour riot, which spread from the dining room to
two cellblocks and a dormitory, one guard was killed and five
others were Injured, one with a broken jaw.

VOL. XXV NO. 76

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1973

.PHONE 992-2156

PHNOM PENH - U.S. WARPLANES, INCLUDING B52
bombEirs, carried out·more intense bombing raids on two fronts
near Phnom Penh today and the goverpment reported heavy
fighting south of the capital.
Warplanes dropped bombs ~uring the night less than six
miles south of Phnom Penh's center and reverberations from the
blasts shook the city all night. !twas the !47th day of an intensive
U.S. air war that must end Aug. 15 under an agreement between
Congress and President Nixon. Field reports also said American
warplanes carried out raids about six miles to the northwest of
the capital, attacking insurgent concentrations withiri a few
miles of the city's l'ochentong airport.
CHICAGO - AFl.rCIO LEADERS APPARENTLY are
moving toward what they hope will be a peaceful settlement of
the biller juridictional battle in California farm fields between
the Teamsters Union and the AFlrCIO United Farm Workers
headed by Ce~ar C11avez .
Chavez met for nearly three hours Tuesday with AFL-CIO
President George Meany and other officials of the labor
federation to discuss the Inroads on his union by the giant
Teamsters Union, which is not an An,.CIO member. Cheaves
left irr)mediately afterward for California, where his members
(Con tinued on page 15)

.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - H.
R. Haldeman today defended
the decision to have John W.
Dean III sit in on Interviews
last summer of White House
staffers by FBI agents .trying
to learn who had advance
knowledge ol plans to Mug the
Watergate.
President Nixon 's former
chief of staff also told the
Senate Watergate committee
that nothing ominous could be
read into Nixon's congratulat·
ing Dean for "doing a fine job"

.

at their meeting on Sept. 15,
1972, the day the grand jury
indicted only the seven original
Watergate defendants and no .
high officials of Nixon's campalgn committees.
Dean, when he testified, said
Ni*on had congratulated him
at that meeting 'for "containing'; the indictments and
keeping the ca!le from touthing .
the White House itself·.
Disputing · · that
in·
terprelation, Haldeman said
Nixon's was an innocent

Bids to he taken
Bids to remodel the courthouse and build two additions
will be opened at noon Aug. 21
in the common pleas courtroom, the county com.
missioners have announced.
Approximately $236,000 in
federal revenue sharing funds
will be used to pay for the
renovation which have been
planned by a Marietta ar·
chitectural firm .
Meeting Tuesday , the
commissioners di~cuS.sed with
several represenlatives of the

Racine community the
establishment of an emergency
medical service in that area. A
number of residents in that
area have completed the
necessary training to become
employes or the service which
is now !IUlctioning in Pomeroy.
The . commissioners have
applied for a Racine area
vehicle. All the commissioners
were present along with Meigs
County Engineer Wesley
Buehl.

remark, spurred in part by
Dean -hls counsel - havfng
said how hard he had worked
on the Watergate case over the
previous three months.
"What had he done to your
knowledge ot~r than sit in
while the FBI Interviewed
aides?" asked Chairman Sam
J. Ervin Jr., 0-N.C.
Haldeman said Dean had
been busy ~ talking with
"everybody" at the White
House "who might have had
any involvement in this thlng,"·
checking into charges printed
in newspaper stories of White
House involvement and provid·
lng liaison with the Justice
Department and the U.S.
prosecutor's office.
This exchange occurred :
"ErVin: "Don 't you know
that when you have a man
sitting here monitoring interviews of witnesses by the FBI
there is a natural tendency to
inhibit those Wi!flesses from
making a full disclosure?"
Haldetnan : "No sir, I don't
know that. It's my IUlderstand·
ing that that's not an unusual
p1·ocedure and that in fact the
counsel lor the Democratic
National Comnilttee sat In on

all the FBI Interviews with the
DNC committee members'
staff."
Ervin: "Don't you think that.
has a tendency to keep a witness from disclosing ~nythlng
he thinks might be IUlpleasant
news to the person sitting

·there.''
Haldeman: "I shouldn 't

think so, no.'.'
I

Ervin: ''Well, your under·
standing of human psychology
and mine differ on that."
Ervin said he could not
understand why all the news
accounts about .the Watergate
burglars and the campaign

money found in their
possession did not engender
deeper suspicions .at the White
House.

was alleged, were .zealous in
!racking down tax cases
against administration supporiers but .indifferent abo)lt
going alter Democratic supEarlier, in response to · porters.
.
quesUonsfromSen. Heiman E.
He said there was a concern .
Talmadge, 0-Ga., Halde~~U~n aliout the "balance of zeal" at
said tlje White House ·half the ffiS.
relayed to the Internal
But he expressed general
ReveriQe Service , som~ IUlfamUiarity with a memo
suggestions "from friends ol addressed to him urging efforts
the administration" to conduct to make the IRS •'mor&amp;lax audits .on "foes of the ad· politically responsive" and to
ministration ."
·staff It with more admlnistraHe said the White House was tion supporters. Dean had
concerned about Democratic produced the memo when ·he
holdovers in the IRS who, it. testified.

:!~:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::•:~:~;::~:::~:::~:~~:::~::~::~:::::::::::::::~:::::::~::::~:::::::::~::,:::::~:::::::::::~:~:8!:;::::::~:!::::~=:~:::::;:::::::::::;:;:~:::::::::::::;:::::::::::::;:;:;~:;:~::::.:::::::~~;.

fj ·

WASHINGTON (UP!)- The
Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) Ol'dered today that high
doses of vitamins A and D be
placed on a prescription-only
basis. It also la id down plans
for other general restrictions
on saie of vitamins.
The order on vitamins A and
0 takes effect in 60 days. The
FDA Issued a final order on the
matter, the most controversial

of its proposal. The other
reslricUons will lake effect at
the end of i97t
The FDA said .there was
evidence that Vilamin A in
heavy doses can cause ·
pressure inside the skull that
may mimic the symptoms of a
brain tumor, and may also

Health fair
.events next

farm, food' bill

week listed

(UP! ) - The passage vote.
Senate has passed the huge, The bill includes a fo ur-year
four-year farm and food stamp support plan for grains and
bill, responding to Agriculture cotton under which growers
Secre~ry
Earl L. Butz's would get subsidy payments
statement he was dropping his only if market prices fall bolow
·plans to recommend a veto.
congressionally-set "targets."
The measure, passed Tuesday This is u sharp departure from
night by tile Senate, was current law, expiring this year,
shipped to the House, where it which provides fixed subsidy
was expected to receive final payments In most cases no
consldilration before the con· matte1' how high market prices
gresslonal recess ·begins at the go. It also raises the floor
end of the week. Republican under milk supports to 80 per
leader&amp;reported they now had cent of parity for the 1974 and
an "un(lerslandlng" that Presl- .1975 marketing yours.
dent Nixon would sign the
compromise.
AdminlstraUon experls have
One p1ajor remaining obsta- estimated that grain and cotton
cle wa ~ u prOposed ban on food su bsidy costs under the new bill
slampa for strikers which wus In 1974 may d!"op to $800 million
approved by U1e Bouse' in an from the $3.8 billion level of ·
earlier version of tho bill but . 1972 and ,the estimated $2.8
isnore4 by the Senate In its billion In 1973 payments.
first aotlon on the measure in
The legislation also include• a.
. June, and defeated on tho cut In subsidy collings for big
Senate floor Tuesday i1ighl; · rut•murs, bul Is minus a House
Hou~e backers of tho bun plan to close "loopholes" In
could lry to restore It when the cufo,·dng tho ceiling on cotton
measijr~ returns to the !louse, furms. t.nothcr major new
despite o warning by Sen. icuturo is n clause allowing ·
H.u~rl H. Humphrey, ()·Minn., Dutz lo order Nixon to ease
that locluslon of the ban would govcl'nmenl controls on foods"klll the bill" by fol'c ln~ House Including beer- if Butz certifies
liberal~ to desert on
IIIla! control ~ !I I'll cnus ln~ n shorlllgc.

"

"

"'I

Vitamins restricted l ..

Senate passes

u

. TEN CENTS:

Haldeman
defends ·decisions
.

).

"Come to the Fair."

WAS~IINGTON

For Fur!her Information Visit Our Main Office in Pomeroy or Our
Branch 1n Rutland.
OR

KAHN TAILORING MAN IS HERE

WENDJ'LL HOOVER left, president of the Pomeroy ·
Middleport Uons Club, presents a set of matched golf clubs
tO Robert SaWYers, Mason, W. Va. , for coming closest to the
hole in the Uons' annual hole-in-ooe contest last week at the
Pomeroy (loll Course. Hitting 10 inches from the pin,
Sawyers also will receive the men's trophy , . Mrs. Eloise
Davis of Columbus won t~e ladies' tropily and a golf glove for
being 14 feet 11 inches from the hole, and Jeff Warne1· won the
junior troph{(age 16 and under) being 5 feet 10 inches from
the pin. There was no hole-in-&lt;&gt;ne made. Hoover indicated the
contest was "very successful ." Proceeds go into the club's
sight conservation program.

•Minimum $1,000.00

1111(1)

' 2-YEAR CERTIFI,CATE
.

%%

Unlled I:J'CII Il\tUnatlonal .
Major wholeBIIIe beef suppliers In New York City followed a
1
national trend and closed for the day today because of a ahOI'lage
of beef. Elsewhere thou51111dibf meat packers were out 01 work
113 lhc shorlllge spread aero!lll the country.
Panic buyers hoar~d· meat In home freezers, meat
distributors reported they were sold out by Tuesday, butchers
turned away customers - and even the Whiw House was lurned
down by II:! ·beef supplier.
1'he"American collll.umer was
By Tuesday, the shortage of
raced with prospect:s or etlmJ . beef still ccnwred mostly in the
nat.ing from family menus proeesslng, distributin~. and
hamburger, steak, meatloaf, wholesaling end of lhe business
meatballs and roast beef- and ~but several spots around the
eating instead che.ese, pork, nation reportro the shortage
CARRIERS RECOGNIZED - Pomeroy Postmaster
fis h, poultry and lamb chops. had already hit the supermar· James Soulsby, left, Tuesday presented safe driving cards
One agricultural expert said the ket.
and pin.9 to four mall carriers from the National Safety
nation's big c\lies will "suffer
In New Jersey , ''beef is
like hell."
.
almost nonexistent at this
The nation's biggest city point;" according tp· Gerald
appeared to be already sui· Gilliga n, diredor of the meat was already serious and would make a profit.
fering. The major wholesale division or the Wakefern Food get critical within a week.
Iowa Gov. Robert D. Hay
suppliers of beef to New York Corp., a statewide group of Dceb urged President· NiKon sa id :1,000 persons in his slate
supe1·markets closed today be· gri&gt;cerystores. "We are In dire to lift the retail price freeze on have lost their jobs because of
cause "the remaining supplies straits for beef."
.,. l;eef before Sept. 12, the date "complex problems · that have
of beef do not warrant a five·
In Baltimore, Paul Diamond, announced in the. President's developed in !he nation's fOOd
day operation," according to the head buyer lor 10 FOOd·A· Phase · IV economic plan . Chain and me~ t supply situathe Greater New York Assoeia· Rama supermarkets, said beef Ranchers and beef packers tion ." He joined the meat
lion of' Meat and Poultry supplies are 40 per cent of have complained that with aU industry in asking Nixon to lift
Dealers.
normal.
other cosls rising, the fixed the ceiling on retail beef prices.
President of the association
In Detroit, Edward Deeb, groeery store price of meat Sareway announced it has
AHred Mayer said beef supplies chief o( the Associated Food keeps them from passing laid off 79 meal wrappers in the
were "less than half or normal Dealers of Michigan said the Inflation on to the consumer, San Francisco area because of
and dwindling."
shortage to groeery shoppers and means they ca n no longer diminishing supplies . Earlier,

·r

•

' •'

\.

.

1

'.

'•

/

Visit the Music Depal-tment
On The 2nd Floor

'

WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE

stores
almQst gone

cars · pe~.~~~;saldllhauppuedr

Black box will stop-start

... . ~

'Ooen Friday Evenings 5 to 7 P.M.

~Beef

pollutlntl ausea bY aboul

The fr ee Meigs County
Health Fair, that is, which will
be staged Aug. 6-10 at the
Meigs Junior High School in
Middleport.
The fair, offering a variety~~
daily programs, will be held
from 2 to 4p.m., and 7to 9 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, With
several morning presenlations
in outlying areas. These
include Rutland school yard, 10
a.m :, Tuesday; Harrisonville
school yard, Wednesday, 10
a.m., and Syracuse school
yard, 10 a.m. Thursday. The
sessions will be held in a neigh·
boring church in case of rain.
The fair will include games,
balloons and fun for all In
addition to fr ee information on
many areas of health, free
health tests such as breathing ·
capacity, eye and hearing
tests, bloo~ pressure and
·others There will be free health
cartoon type movies and other '
health shows. On hand will be
nurses a doetor and medical
studenls. There will be a
dentist al the fair oil Wed·
nesda·y and Thursday.
Anyone wishing any further
information on the free fair
may call 91l2.:l876.

cause retarded growth in
children. Vitamin D in high
doses has also been known to 1 ·
retard menial and physical
growth in children, the agency
added.
The othe' major rule says
that any vitamin, food sup·
plement or fOOd containing
more than loO pet. of the
recommended daily allowance
of any vitamin shall be
classified as a drug.
Once classified as drugs such
products may continue to be
sold over the counter the way
cough medicines and aspitins
are now. But they will be
subject to revie.w by the FDA
as drugs and some may later.
be put on a prescription basis
or banned entirely .

E)(TENOED OUTLOOK
Fatr and mild through the
period. Highs on Friday In
mid 70s and low ·sos
becoming mostly In the 80s
by Sunday. Lows at night
from mid 50s to mid 605.

will

WAHAM~

HIGH SCHOOL'S Majorette Corps,
r!'Preaenttns West VIrginia's bono! band from · Mason,
.walked off with top majorette line honor• at,the 1973 1Gallla
County Junior Fair Tuesday. Fairland Hl&amp;h School of
Proctorville look aecond and the Oallla Academy majorette•
were third In the compemton. Kyger Creek High and Ilun·
Un.(!ton • Vln"'n High al!o participated. John Wilson and

.

Jerry Stevens were judges for the event. i&lt;aln Sue Waugh,
center, 1972 GalUs County Jtu1lor Fair Queen, presented the
1973 majorette line trophy to the following: (noll!\ order In
picture), Mary Jones, Cheryl Lewis, Debbie Fields, Sharon
Froenoll, Terri Blockhurst, TereSI! VanMeter, and Vran
Woodrum.
)

I

~

Eight more file
election p1.11Jers
Eight more c andidu~ ~~
today had flied petitions with
the county board of eleetionl
for township, school board
and village positions.
They ore Alber! Hill lor
Racine VIllage Council;
Frank W. Porter, Jr., lor a
seat on the Melga L11cal
Board of Education, aad
tntstee candidates Charln
Williams, Bedford; Gordoa
Proffitt, Lebanon; Charlet
D. Barrett, Jr., Rutland; W.
H. Cheadle and Gordo&amp; N,
Perry, both Columbia, IIIII
Harold Norrtt, Scipio. Fllllll
deadllllf· for caadldllel II i
p.m. on Aua. 8.

J:

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="740">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11140">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="56614">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="56613">
              <text>July 31, 1973</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="114">
      <name>hawley</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
