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Wealthy person• serving
aentences In the ButDle In
Paris before Its overthrow on
Jqly 14, 1789, were permitted to
keep lhelr servants and to throw
lavish 'dinner parties for their
irtend• In the prison.
-

a- Tile Dally Sentille!of•iddleport.Pimeroy,0 ., July ll,1rn

Forest Lab
(Continued from Page 1)

E'l ·• • : .

OVernight Wire

Two othet cl1arler'e re$Ulted
from consoU~tiQOS. "'ttica and
Scipio-Republic local school districts consoldiated to form the
Sel)eea East Local School Oistrict In Seneca County and Hammersville and Mt. Orab joined
to fonn Western Brown Local
School District.
City school districts chartered
by boanl action were "'urora,
Portage County; Louisville,
Stark County; Sicoto • Darby,
Franklin County) Shadyside,
Belmon£ County; streetsboro,
Portage Co~~nty, Twinsburg;
Summit County; and Copley,
Summit County.
Twofederaluants were okayed by the boanl as its share of
· suppoct for employment of students In work-study programs.
Vocational Iunde totaling $4,662
wae approved for Lancaster City
School District and $1,210 for IndlanValleylnTuscarawasCounty.
'
Construction and equipment
are to be purchased for schools
in Clemont County with $585,-·
750 in "'ppalachlan Funds approved by: the boanl. The schools
are entering the Hamilton County Joint Vocational School Oistrict.
In other action, the board:
- "'pproved the transfer of
39.13 acres from HopewellLoudon Local School District to
TIHin City School District In
Seneca County.
-Adopted resolutions encouragil)g the use of newspapen ill
the classroom and urging more
education television programs.
- "'pproved a measure extendingdeadlineforhighschools
asSociated with joint vocational
districts to meet minimum state
standards to
1, 1975.

By tbe UPI
vestment advisors, wbich is tbe
WASIIINGTOI'II - The first step towards elhtrinaUnii
Bureau of Mines awarded a ~.9· low-yielding securities and
million contract Monday to the upgradillg portfolios," Hovey
FMC Corp., of San Jose, Calif., told a special legislative
to develop coal mining systems committee sludying state lnlbat coold reduce major WI· vestment practices.
derground safety hazards.
COLUMBUS - A TOI'AL of
Under tems of the contract, 601 cases of 'I''V"Ied welfare
the finn will work for three cbealing wae inftSiipted In
yean to fllld ways to eliminall! Ohio during tbe 1}-moalll period
_numerous dangers, especially .that ended June 3G, 1970,
those near the mine "face" amOWlting 1£ less than me-llalf
where coal is cut and wbere of 1 per cent of tbe state's CISe
falling rock and coal are con- load, slate Welfare Director
stant threats.:
John E. Hansall said today.
CINCINNATI
The Hansan said a report by tbe U.
American, Legion, John Birch S. Department of Health,
Society and several .other Education and Welfare for tbe
groups have accused the public period July · I, 1969, lhrougb
libfaries here of stocking books June 30, 1970, reported 33,900
on their shelves which preach ca!II!S were investigated In tbe
revolution. Library Board of nation. Tbe 601 cases in Obio
Trustees President Richard R. represented .38 of 1 pel of tbe
Deupree Jr. admitted to 11 average monthly case load.
members of the groups Monday The weHare direcllr said
that he did not know how fraud usually involves decepliterature was chosen and lion by a recipient about his
promised be would look into the needs or qualifications for
chatges.
public assistance~ Tbe greatest
J . Julian Bowman, who acted percentage of suspected fraud
as spokesman for the protesting reported and investigated ocorganizations represented at cUired In the Aid to l&gt;eJ'e'Aellt
thetrusteesboardmeeting, said Children (ADC) program. he
seven neighborhood sub-branch said. But in more than baH tbe
libraries -in so-called suspected fraud cases, "facts
disadvantaged areas" are necessary to support a question
leading "political and ·social of fraud were W18vailable,"
agitation and revolutionary Hansan said.
·
material, including straight WASHINGTON - OHIO'S
Moscow inspired material electric power reserve is only
designed to bring about the about. half that considered 111e
ultimate overthrow of our "safe" level to prevent
government."
"brownouts" this Simmer, U.
COLUMBUS - The- Ad- S. Rep. C1areoo! J. Brown, Rministration of Gov. John J. Ohio, said today. Brown said
Gilligan, apparently Irked at witb the approach of the hottest
the failure of major state part of summer major electric
pension fund officen to supply power shortages "appear
investment information, bas highly likely" because tbe
come up with a potent)al nation's power r s hes stand
solution - join them. State at only an estimated 15.3 pel
Finance Director Harold A. cOOlpared to the ro pel conHovey said Mond~y the ad- sidered safe.
Tonight, July 13
ministration has drafted The East Central Region,
legislation to include the which includes Ohio, has only a
LOV-ERS AND
governor or hla representative 12.6 pel res oe, he said, and
OTHER STRANGERS
will! full voting powen on the this marks a decrease from tbe
ITechnicolorl
'Sea Arthur
boards of direcm of the three 16.7 pet. of last summer. In
Bonnie Bedelia
major state retirement -some of the areas of the East
COLORCARTOONS:
systems,
the state Industrial Central Region, the Feclnl
NCIIiody's Goo I
Commission and the state Power Commissi6o and Edison
Deep Sea Doodle
Show Star1s 7 P.M.
Board of Deposit.
Electric Institute estimate that
"Such a mechanism would the cushion is less than 10 pel,
give the necessary authority Brown said. Tbe rea800 for the
Wednesday &amp;Tllursday
July 14-15
needed to obtain more in- danger of power shortages is
fonnation on investment ac- .that supply and demand haoe
_NOTOP=E=N==:: tivity, and to encourage the not caught up wilh each other,
systems to take greater ad· the congressman said.
vantage of professional in·

.

200 Walkoff Jobs
Ollie (lll'll -Aloia&amp; •
!IS ..
lieC
':a... Wden"-• r'a . . . . wlftlleJ"
litre ...., - - .. (llll!le&amp; . . . . . rn.t .. lie «** llell
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werefnelll I;

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wMdllnl I WfwhJIL

.....,..

'llle CWA oa 1ai 8ire aMllty will a II

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WASBINGroN (UPI)
_ , "A. Beirne,JA .....
J~
vn t of
tbeOwnm•micafiCIIsWorms of
America (CWA), said today it
wae lllllikely a nallmwide
telepbooe strike set for 6 a.m.
EDT Wednesday ciJuld be
avoided.
Affected would be 500,000
workers ill tbousands of etmDlllllities. Tile phone ·Ctn!p'lny
plarined to use lll8nagers and

the strike would be minimal at
first
Beirne said tbe BeD system
and tbe ~m cootract proposals were Vfrl close in terms
of overall benefits, but "lhe
question is how that money is
to be spent."
Tbe CWA originally asked fma tb:a year pay package
totaling Zi per- cenl Tbe
Clilip8ll)' offa ed a pactage of
supervisory persmnel to keep wage increases and fringe
pbooe service gling, and even benefits that it said totaled 30
the ~on conceded the effect of per- cent

·es
Dem
an
-Reag.

Tonight, July 13
Double Feature Program
"MYRA
BRECKENRIDGE"
Mae West
Rated IX·)
PLUS
MOVE
it's pure Gould
EllioM Gould
Paula Prentiss

--Co-lo•r- • R

Wed .. Tllur,,&amp; Fri.

July 14-15-16
Double Feature Progrom
Dt RTY DINGUS
MAGEE
GP
Panavision Metrocolor
Frank Sinatra
George Kennedy

-PiusELVIs'

a film abouf him.
"that's the way it is"

Color ·
Elvis Presley
G

Mrs. Letha C. (Callie)
Werner, 83, Powell St., Mid·
dleport, died this morning at
Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Werner was born March
10, 1888 at East Shade, the
daughter of the late Lafayette
and Martha Reed. She was also
preceded in death by her
husband, Chauncey F. Werner,
In 1967, four sisters, and two
brothers.
She is survived by a daughter,
Mrs. Roscoe (Betty) Fife,
Middleport, with whom she
made her home; two sons, Paul
C. Werner, Pomeroy, and Dal!!
D. Werner, Columbus; one
sister, Mrs. G. (Mabel) Gaul,
Athens, six gr§ndchildren, and
three great-grandchildren.
• She was .a member of the
former Silver Run Methodist
Church and the D of A at

' - - - - - - · Chester.

CHECKING ACCOUNTS
Budget minding
can be easier!
Use a bank Checking Account to
straighten out your
finances. Record
your finances.

I

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f

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Cancel led checks will tell you where every
penny goes each mor:th. It's the easy way

Funeral services will be held

Thursday at 2 p.m. at the
Raw~ts Funeral Home
with the Rev. Olester Lemley
officiating. Burial will be in
Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire.
Friends may call at the
funeral hOOle Wednesday from
2 to 4 and 7 to 9 and Thursday
until lime of services.

JACKSON HOLE, Wyo.
(UPI) C3lifornia Gov. Ronald
Reagan, backed by tbe White
House in his feud wilh Gov.
Tom McCall, planned to fly
bere tooigbt and tUlfi mt the
Oregmian about charges be is
holding President Nixon as a

California, not a boo$tage. He is
free to ame or go as be
pJeases,~• fteagan told newsmen
in Sacramento.
At the Western White House
iD San Clemente, PI i"'ential
Press Secrelaly Rmald L.
Ziegler said, "Gov. McCaD is
political "hostage."
apparently not aware of the
"'lbe President is a guest in good relations we have will!

BOSTON (UPl)-Ed Miller, a
television persooality bere wbo
formerly worked In Cincinnati,
'died Mmday at New England
Medical Center after la~ Into a coma . He Was -••

'this Week's Speci•l
.

...- ...
-- ~

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67 DIEVELU
MAUBU 2 Oil HT

.

'lbe Ways

8nd

~ !!!M•u-e.

Means Com-

''Using the system they use,
I'd say we're about 1 per cent
apart," Beirne said. .
.
Bnt be said Ulldl!r the
maMgemeDt Gfter, scme worters =inly men-would get
substantial raises, while other
wcrle: s mainly women operators-would nol
Beirne said the differential
between men and women In
SCIIIe cases would be 62 per
cent "That's just too damned
IJillch," beasserted.
Beirne wae interviewed on

W. Va., and Doris Fict, of
'Col•rrnlwls; a niece, whoot sbe
raised, Ella Osborne, Long
Bottom; two brothers, IJ!e and
Charles ~ . both of st.
Petersburg; a sister, Cora
McClain, Richmond, Ohio ;
seven granddlildren ; ooe great.grandson, and several nieces
and 1.epbews.
Mrs. Barnett was pr1'Ceded in
death by her husband,
Clarence; one son, Howard, a
grandsCII, Rogn- Barnett, and
.one infant grancbon, Charles
Marlin Batnett.
She wae a member of the
Reedsville United Methodist
ChJrch, Parkenburg Ollpll7
Mrs. C. E. Silvers, the former No. It, OE.S., American War
Easter Russell of Middleport, Mother&amp; of St. Petersburg, Fla.
died unexpectedly at ber IMme
FWleral sa obi will·be held
at 1025 Hardee Road Coral 'l'lllnday at 2 p.m. at the
Gables, Fla., Sunday ~- Reedsville United Methodist
She was the daughter of tile Cburch wilh the Rev. tnelaod
late W. C. and Easter Marlin Norris and Terry Barnett of.
Russell. She was also preceded 6cialing.
in death by three sisters Mrs. Burial will be ill Reedsville
Frank (Martha) Spain• and. Ceuietery. Friends may call at
Lelia and Floreilce
tbe White Funeral Hwne in
.She is survived by her Coolville after 4:30 p.m.
h•sband, c. E. Silven; four W"l1*'"'ay.
sisters, Mrs. H. 0. (Frances)
Ewing, Middleport; Mrs.
Kenneth (Elizabeth) Fuessle,
Mmsey, N. Y.; Julia Russell,
Chicago, and Mrs. C. T.
(Margaret ) Butler, Orlando,
Fla.; two nieces, Mrs. R. G.
Avery ( H~nrielta Ewing ), Floyd ~ ~· 113, Rl 1•
Arlingtoo, Va., and Mrs. W. B. Vmton, cfied m the Holzer
Davis (Easter Martin), Ormmd Medical
toda Center· around 3:30
Beacb, Fla., and one nephew,
·-;~ wasyborn July 6, 11181, ill
Lee Jamlsoo, in California.
Funeral services will be held Morgan Tirp., soo of the late
at tbe residence in Coral Gables Martin and ltebecxa Denney
, • He never married.
Wed1 lay at 11 a.m. Burial Swid:
plans, incomplete, will be anMr. Swid: is sw vived by one
sister,Mrs.MaryGeorge, Rll,
nounced.
Vinton, and one brother,
W'tlliam Swict, also of Rl. l,
AID G..,....,
Vmton. One brother IJIEinleol
,..,....
him in death.
'lbe Pomeroy E--R squad was He attended the Morgan
called this mnrn; •• at 1:38 to
,.......... Missi'
-··--..
Center..........
....

Mrs. Silvers
Died in South

pl'*ap..
r
Howe.ver, -R epubllce and
Da1•• •alie leak 1 met -cain
today tD~!!eelf 1111 c:anp~CIIIIae
ooald be !''*ted Clllt 411 1be lide ·
!BB.
Tile'- biD llllder CCIIIIderatieD jndwh I &amp;r&amp;U11Bd llate
pa.W~ncG~Detu:rfltofper

:!:'..!::W:V~mllla~
net wd or 4 per cent of net
illcame, wbicbeve II greater.
Dap01atiolll dluh.ijf $21,000 per yar or IDift waald pay 1
per ceDI of their iDoon1e.

the NBC-TV Today sbow.
He said negotialims were SCHOOL BESIJL'l'S GIVEN
Cllltinuing In WaeMng!on but OOLUMBUS (UPI) - Obio's
Unless iPUJement was ...ached work-cninled ICIKiol Jl««lam
"scmetime this artemom;" 1be fllr the DJeiiiUIJ retarded last
slrike macbil8y wi)Uid be "too ,ear resulted in 7,415 pupils be·
.CUiDbersome to dismantle." ' . q employed in tbe )IUbllc
.. Beirne actnovrledged that a rbools and 3,111 getting jobs in
strike would not aeriously their CCIIIIIIiUDIIie a survey redisrupt service at first becall!le le8sed.Monday said.
the telepbone system is largely State Schonls SUperintendent
autcmated, and the various Mlrin EDel said reaearch In·
phme companies are "top- cicates thai witbout the special
beavy with management"- edlll:atilllsmlces, ''a majority
especially tbe parenty CC111J1811Y of
these
bandlcapped
AT&amp;T.
youngsters would be unBut be added, "wbeD a baH )ll'eiiU1!d Ill funcllm as In·
mlllim people leaoe their job8, dependent contributing cltscmelhing must be aflected." izeas."
_
; .......................................................... !

=ti!::tri!e
~
aea:
and President-Nixon to be very,

El-ber1elds

.

very good."
Tbe etiJs: vative California
governor, wbo unsuc:cessfully •• ••••• ••. •. • • •• •• •.

Cllltested Nixon for the GOP
pr-trlential ncmination in 1961,
empbasized "I'm pledged to the
renmlinatiOo and tbe reelection of tbe · !'resident I
think be sbould be President for
a secUJd term. n
McCaU'sattacks oo Reagan- :•
for allegedly bartering political :
support in exchange for conces- •
sims oo welfare and other
issues-dominated tbe anmwl
Western Gonmor's Conference
wbich opened Monday for a
four-day run.
"I resent any governor
boldi"8 a President hostage,"
the outspoken McCall told
oewsmen.

~1

Pomeroy·
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as seen in
sEvENTEEN

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Tbe other GOP governors :
cautiously defended Reagan.
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&lt;

PT. Pl£\SANT

co.

LlVES'I'O(X SAlES
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
Sallu*)', Jmy It, U71
HOGS -175 to 2211 20jo to 21;
Heavies 18.75 to :00.25; iJ8hts 17

83, Claimed

to 20.25; Fat .SOW.l4.50 to 17.75;
lloer$12.50 to 14.25; Pigs6to 13;
Stock Sboats 12 to 21. .
CA1TLE - Steers 21.50 to
2!1.75; Heifers 19.75to 23.75; Fat
Cows 18.50 to 23.75; Canners 7to
17; Bulls :M to 2!1; Milk Cows 140
lo 4!10; Stock Cows and Calves
1115 to 260; Stock Steers 2% to
2!1.25; Stock Heifers 20.25 to
:M.~ Stoct Steer Calves 23.50
.
to 34 ; Stoct Heifer Calves 23.25
to 31.25.
VEAL CALVES - Tnno 39·
Secoods 35.50; Medhun 34.60 to
35.80; Crmmou r. Heavies 'l/.50
-to 38.50.

Early Today

Bell Strike

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Pantsuit-what a peasant approach!

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The niftiest needlework around. Lush look of crewel embroidery trim• a tunic with pure stitchery witchery. With
it? The very plainell ponb. By Vklcy Vaughn in mochine
wash-and-dry Docron~ polyester dilublekn~. llei9e with
brawn « nary. 5-15.
,

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( Cootinued from Page 1)
Beirne, said it appeared the
. t tbe BeD systern
strike agam!
He said oegot1ators ~ to try to pusb
managmenet mto ~ton
a =i~tictrael, but be was not
opA Bell ~ bere bow
saidoffi:;n
everttlement Could
cbeil
~ sevoid the trike
rea
~ trite . s Ohio. ould idle
" s
m
w.
abou_t l&amp;,OOO operators, lirii8181De11D1811,
,_.....,_ and other _,__

Roush who

nice.

a.EANING .

$1795
Kalr &amp; Van landt
GMAC FINANCING

Pom.roy
·O,.n Evening•· 'Til 1:11
Til5 P.M. S.t.

Now •

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Shap WuhdiJS 9:3Q 1D 5 P~M~

widely __. __

sttill'e IS

8IIMIU.IIl

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

, ........................~~...........................

Frigidaire
Skinny Mi.ai.
fits almost

anrwhere.

!Only 2feet wide)_
• Install it where the wash is-

k~cheri, bath, nurMI)' ... anywhere.
you c.n get adequate wirins. plumbing and venting.
• Washer and dryer each do .. lam·

ily·size load at the same time or in·

dependently.
I

Glw Your

'

FASTEETR• Powdor " - oB ol
this: 1) Jlolpo bold ....... u4 ....
.,. " - • ' " - · oladior. Zl Holdo
them .... conofartabl7. l) lie!..
7_o11at rnc:n ~. Wh,- W'011')1!
Ua FAS I E£1"H Dmtlln! AdM.i'ftl
Powder. De11lara tllat fit are
-tialto health. See 1J&gt;Ur .........
M(tll&amp;rty.

·
• 2-SP&lt;ted Washer. Regular plus
Delicate settings for the llelibility 1
family washer must-·
• Perm•nent Press Care in both
Washer and Dryer.

.._,_
-LC-2

B KER

'38995
FURNITURE·

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r-----------------~--------~,
By United Press 1DierllaM11181

Donald Wolfe to
·Coach Marauders
On Ball Diamond

I

! News ••• in Briefs
.

. ..

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Half a Million in Walkout
WASHINGroN- HALF A MILLION telephone worken
walked out today in a.nali,onwide strike, their first In more than
two Yeats. Negoliatlms broke down yesterday and union leaden
said the natlm can expect at leaet a two-week strike. Ben
Telephone officials said-automated equipment and tbe use of
supervisors to handle penon~n calls should not prevent
in~pllm of normal service.

Strong Quake Recorded
UPPSALA, SWEDE;N -THE SEISMOLOGIC Institute said a
''very sllong" earthquake occurred today near New Britain
Island east of New Guinea. The quake measured eight on the
Richter scale - the strongest quake so far this year. Another big
quake shook either Afghanistan or Paklstan early today, one
registering 7.3 on a scale of 10.

UITil BLACK
Keith Black, BOD of Mrs.
Carolyn Vance and the
grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
Marion Francis, Middleport,
Something Went Wrong
Is a patient at Children's
CAPE KENNEDY -A MOMENTAR~ DROP in spacecraft Hospital In Columbus. Keith
electrical power forced Apollo IS's astronauts to open their Is being treated for muscular
momship hatch today as a precautionary measure during a dystrophy. Keith Is scbeduled
si!D!dated flight. The electrical problem did not affect the to return to the home of his
progress If tbe final trial countdown for lhe aetronauts' scheduled grandparents Thursday,
July 26 launch to the moon.
... ''
however, he will have to
make periodic trips to lhe
Brute Force Taking Over
_hospital. His room number Is
LONDON -CHIEF JUmCE WARREN BURGER warned a A 310 West.
group of lawyers today that IerrO!" and b111teforce are threatening
the course of law snd legallraditims. Burgen' remarks came at
EXTENDED WEATHER
the opening of the Londm portion of the American Bar
Summery weatber wllh
Association's Mth annual cmoentim, which began last week in
New York. He said the struggle of reason over terror could best be highs In lbe 80s and lows in
lbe 60s. A chance of showers
resolved by looking to precedents in law .
Friday.

Guerrillas Catch it Again

JEIWIH, JORDAN - THE JORDANIAN ARMY today
renewed Its bomha.-dment of guerrilla baees 25 miles norlh of the
captal city of Amman, forcing hundreds of civilians to flee
villages and refugee C81111f8. An army doctor said 25 civilians had
been wounded but declined to give the number of military

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SALE SET .
A rununage sale will he held
Thursday and Friday in the Fry
Building on Mill Street in
Middleport from 9-5 sponsored
by Friends and Neighbors of the
Yost family .

The congregation of Mid·
dlepor! Heath United Methodist
Church Tuesday evening
·conducted
an
informal
reception for its new minister,
the Rev. Robert I. Bumgarner
and Mrs. Bumgarner.
Mrs. Francis Klein, program
chainnan, had as her theme,
"Getting To Know You." Sbe
interviewed the Rev. Mr.
Bumgarner about the aeveral
charges he has served. He is a
native West Virginia (Mason
County) and Mrs. Bumgarner is
a native of Jackson County, W.
Va.
Mrs. Jack Bechtle, incoming
president of the WSCS, intraduced officers of the church
circles. Eric Chambers,
chairman of the administrative
board and Sunday School
superintendent; chainnan of
the Afternoon Circle, Mrs.
Emma Wayland, and Mrs.
GleM Lambert of Class 12
Circle, and Mrs. Bernard Fultz

BY KATIE CROW
Donald Wolfe was named bead baseball coach, Roger Birch hls
assistant, and a dress code for the jumor and senior high schools
for the 1971-72 sChool year was adopted by the Meigs Local School
District Board of Education Tuesday night in Middleport.
Wolfe, office training Instructor at Meigs High School and
eecretary-treasurer of the Meigs Local Athletic Board, coached
old Racine High School baseball teams to 101 victories in 139
starts over a 15-yearperlod through the 40s and into the 50s.
More than half of the victories were over Class A teams (now
AAA and AA) since few schools comparable to Racine In size
fielded baseball teams in those years.
He has a Century Club Award for high school coaches
originated by Arch Ward of the Chicago Daily News, founder of
the All-Star game.
Other teacbers hired for the 1971-72 school year were Mrs.
EliZabeth Gooding, a graduate of Ohio University, who will-teach
In special education, and James Michae! Gerlach, a graduate of
Middleport High School and Ohio University ,
Resignations of Mrs. Jeanette
Thomas, James Sheets, Miss inappropriate and unacceptable
Judy King and Brent Lambiotte for boys to wear to school:
as teachers were accepted.
· Extremely long or unclean
DRESS COOE
hair (all hair will be cut and
A dress code for students in worn above the eyes, above the
the junior and senior high ears, and above the collar) ;
schools adopted by the board beards; mustaches; sideburns
emphasizes good taste in dress that extend more than one inch
and _grooming. It stresses that below the bottom of the ear lobe
important aspects of good taste or are more than two inches in
are neatness, simplicity and width; underwear type Tappropriateness.
shirts; insignia or unapproved
The code follows (sum- organizations on clothing;
marized):
collars of regular style shirts
The following are considered open more than one button from
inappropriate and unacceptable the top; outdoor type ja~kets in
for girls to wear to school: a classroom except with the
extreme ba~treme-~roval of the ci'!Ssroom
coloring; hair curlers or pins to
cher; shil'ttails outsidellie
set hair (except when permitted tr~user~ except for squar~ cut
by the principal pMor .to special shJ~ttatls; extremely light·
social event) ; low cut dresses; fttting or unclean trousers of
sheer blouses ; tight-fitting any type (boys are encouraged
sweaters, T-shirts,"sweatshlrts, to wear dress slacks .or cl~an
shorts h t
ts
d be
washable trousers mcluding
muda; o pan ' an
r- blue jeans or w;anglers to
.
.
- '
Girls and parents are to use school; neck pendants, beads,
d'Jscre I'Ion m.
· se 1ec t'ton th e medals
. on chams
. ' etc· worn
length o~ clothmg._ Clean, neat outside the shir~ if they . are
s~cks, Jeans, leviS, and pant noisy • unsafe, or mapproprtate.
sutls'may be worn to school any
Boys are to wear socks wtth
·
· ·
· te f00 t
Sa d Is
ti~e . Shirttails must be worn ::;propna
. wear.
na
JDSJde slacks, etc., except for a
ay be worn wtthout socks. .
· Boys are not to comb !herr
.l
squ~re cut shirtta I ·
.- - - .
..
&lt;:Jrrls are not to COf!lb th~ harr m classrooms or halls.
half or put on make-up m Restrooms should be ~sed for
classrooms or halls Restrooms all such acts of grooDllng.
·
Th d
d
'II b
should be_ used for all such acts
. e ress co e WI
e
of groommg._
.
revtewedannually by the board
The followmg are constdered
(Contmued 011 page lG)

representing the Eleanor a 6().year old banner spelling out
Circle, told of their activities. lhe word "Welcome" displayed
Chamben spoke on the phases by the children in attendance,
of the administrative board and with Mrs. James Jimiden
stressed the importance of - ,reading original verses which
church school work and the role extended cooperation and
that parents . should play in · fellowship of local members.
promoting church school atThere was a background of
tendance.
guitar music by Eric Chambers
The Rev. Charles Simons, with all singing "The More We
pastor of Mlddlepor,t First Gel Together."
Baptist Church, who is
Members and guests signed
president of the Meigs County an original scrapbook made by
Ministerial Assn., representing Mrs. Orin Smith which included
county and local churches clippings of the Bwngarner's
welcomed the Bumgarners.
start in the local church
Rev. Simons emphasized the ministry.
fe.Uowship between various
Mrs. Glen Lambert, refresh__denominational groups In the· ment chairman, invited
· county. A closing feature was members and guests to the
ihe presentation of the welcome refreshment table, which was
made in a unique manner, using covered with a white cloth, and
held a centerpiece of yellow and
white mwns flanked by white
tapers.
The estranged husband of
The table was arranged by Janie Hatfield is in critical
Mrs. Charles Asa Bradbury and condition today at Holzer
•
Mrs. John Compton. Assorted Medical Center but expected to
cakes and punch were served recover from a gunshot wound
'
with Mrs. Elizabeth Hibbs at in hla abdomen.
MiddleportVillagefundsasof the punch bowl.
Elias Hatfield, 42, according
June 30 totaled $158,686.38,
Attending the reception were to Gallia County Sheriff Denver
according to the monthly report the
Rev.
Bumgarners' A. Walker, who investigated,
I
of Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate brothers-and famllies,.Mr . and was shot at about 9:30 p.m.
submitted to Middleport Mrs. Harold Bumgarner and Tuesday as he tried to break
council Mondsy night.
·daughter, Mary, and Mr. and through the closed door of the
Receipts and disbursements, Mrs. Leland Bumgarner' and couple's mobile home on
A breaking and enteri"8 of respectively' during the monlh Mrs. Edna Roush, ~n aunt, all of Georges creek Road.
Mrs. Hatfield told Wailler that
the musewn located at Forest and balance in each fund as of New Haven.
Acre Park near Rutland, is June 30 were, general, $3,877.53,
being investigated by Mciigs $21,353.77,$21,430.36; cemetery, ·
County Sheriff Robert c. $701.25, $829.43, $1,233.70;
Hartenbach's deparlment.
Parlting meter, no receipts, no
Jack crisp, president of the disbursement, $6.03; fire
'
Leading Creek Conservancy -equipmen~ no receipts, $330.j!O,
GRASS VALLEY, Calif.
The mysterious assailant
Distric~ reported the incident $160.91;
swimming pool (UPI)-KennethGarbeandhis killed two persons, wounded
to the sheriff Tuesday morning. $4,083.70, $2,2221.74, $3,651.07; wife were playl"8 cards in their three ot!Mirs and terrorized 17
It had occurred on the night of planning commission, no tent when a heavyset, campers Monday night at the
July 12 or the morning of July receipts, $202.50, $1,466.:00.
bespectacled man toce back the remote campsite along the Bear
·Street maintenance , flap and said, "hello there."
River 50 miles northeast of
13A lock on the door was broken $22,304.28, $22,156.30, $10,381.91;
Then the stranger began Sacramento. He . dissppeared
off and two Italian dueUng state ldghway, no receipts, flailing wildly with a sickle.
after - 30 minutes without' a
pistols valued at $75 each were $2,989.75, $309.14; sanitary
Garbe saw the deadly blade trace:stolen.
sewer, $3,831.06, $4,249.21, flash through the air and
From the Garbe tent, the inan
Heman Henry, London, an $21,016.80; water $8,233.73, descent toward his wife, Jean, wen£ to the campsite ·of John
agent for the Bllreau of $5,888.78, $23,732.30 ; water 23. He leaped at the attacker, Simmons, 29, Of Weimer, Calif.
Criminal Investigation, has meter deposit trusts, $239.66, allowing his wife to escape, and · Simmons s'aw him coming and
been called in on the caae. '
$219.66, t5,M6.97; water. con- the two men grappled to the tent fired three shots from a .22
itructlon, no ·receipts, $38;00, floor. But the stranger, caliber pistol. It was too late
$1,559.21; sanitary escrow, weighing about 200 pounds and the attacker was too near.
'
Veterau Memorial Hospllal $778.52, no dlsbursemen~. tossed Garbe into the corner: The assailant overpowered
.IDMISSIONS - Carolyn Sue $55,587.94; general bond
Garbe threw up a hand to Simmons, hacked him to death
Wood, Pomeroy; E;rnestlne retirement, 110 receipts, $45.00, protect himself but the ugly, and look the gun, police said.
,Faber;--Pomeroy; Harold W. $12,723.84._ __
curved blade slashed him. He
Circle, Racine; Josie Roush, . Receipts for the month managed to scramble to his feet Mrs. Donna Fitzhugh,
Racine. ·
totaled $42,027.73 while ex- and fled but noi before the camping nearby with her sisterDISCHARGES - MJ!dred pendltures amounted to sickle raked his haCk on the way In-law, Mrs. Martha Marie
Odlster, Lena Hellman.
_.1,911.53.
out of the tent.
·
Parker, and their. six children

Husband Shot

FUfidS T 0 tal

At $158 686

Mr. Hatfield had been at the

home earlier in the evening
when he threatened her life and
the lives of their two sons.
She said he returned shortly
after 9 p.m., armed with a 24
inch s~l bar, again threatened
her, and attempted to enter by
tearing up the screen door.
He was attemp,ting to open the
door when Mrs. Hatfield said
she shot him in the lower left
abdomen. No arrests have been
made, pending further in·
vesligation.

['

,•

.·
WORKMEN FOR THE IIOOSIEREIEC'ntJCOOMPANY af Jndl- are hillt In die air a '•.
lhey replace electric cable Unes along SR 124 In Mtnemollle. The Hoosier Company. a subcontractor for the Ohio Power Company, is Installing larger cables to improve the eledric ••
service. Work is being done in Minersvllie and Syracuse. Motorists llfd asked to use cautim ·.
while driving up 124 as the large equipment needed In ·the ~.'brk makes one way traffic ·· .
necessary.
· ·.

Oh10
• Bell Phones·:
Expe'ct Problems·.
·

· · By JOHN T. K.\DY
United Press lntemalloMI
About 18,000 Ohioans today
joined a nationwide strike
against the Bell TeleSystem in a wage dispute. Su.
.
dperviSthory peulrsdonnel wthere conft·
ent ey co man e swttch·
boards but acknowledged there
could be problems.
"With supervisory personnel
on the switchboards, service
will be continued withJ'n acceptable limits," said Herbert
Hackenburg, news supervisor
.
.
..
for Oh10 Bellm Cleveland. But
we are not ,going to kid anybody into thinking it will be
n~·l ..
~ "~ ·
The strike started Tuesday
morning when about 200 memben of the ColiUDunications
Workers of America jumped
the gun and walked off the job
m Middletown at 10 a.m. Tilesday· ·
The union Monday gave the
company a 24-hour strike notice which expired Bt 2:15p.m.
Tuesday, The official strike
deadline was set for 6 a.m.
Wednesday although the workern could strike the Bell Systern anytime after that 2:15
p.m. expiration time.
Several locals walked out
Tuesday night.
7,500 In Cleveland
There are about 7 500 CWA
members in the Cleveiand area,
3 100 in the Columbus area
4'300 in the Cincinnati area and
1'600 in the Toledo area and
•

2 -Campers· Killed By Madman
.

MI»DLLPPIT, 0~

•

PHONE 992-2156

New
Dress ·Codes Approved

Are Stolen

I

•

.WEDNESDAY, JULY 14, 1971

''

Two Pistols

Open Bolh Friday and Saturday
9:30 to 9 P~M.

A deature ad•eelYe ea• •elp.

,..._.,

"'-m-54211

•

M- 111£1.. PDww

ROBINSON.'$
QFiftfRS

2'' E. 21111

I

FALSE TEETH

(Upon Request)

"You ' U Like Our Olalily
Way of Doing Business."
m -S342

down
Rousb
ID!SSlOO WI
I..Lifi'-l
• m.aa.
was trove C'anetery. .
~'taltof Veterans M~ Friends may call at the
H
OSjll
or a laceration of the McCoy Funeral Home 1nm :1-4
,bead, treated and released.
and_7~ _p.m. Wedne-lay.
LEE LEAPS STANDINGS
GU..UGAN REAPPOlNI'S
NEW YORK (UPI)-Dave
OOLUMBUS {UP!) _ Gov. Eichelberger bas entered the

.POM E~OY·M IDOLEPORT, OHIO .. .

Pastoral Couple Welcomed

.
.... . .

~inevitable.

Devoted To 1Jae Intereall Of The Meigi-Mawn Area

llltle temperature chance . ;:
'l'hunday. Highs In ...... ""' to .~::.
mid' 80s.
·~

•

ctr·~·uta.. . -

I

•

2-HOUR

Beige with matching inl.,
-283 V-8, auto., P.S., real

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal .Deposit lnsuratxe Corpontll•

•i•Ued to .....,.. befcft the
meeliD&amp; to detet'llline the
slrai!ICY of their WlQ'II and
11ea111 Cmnnittee memben.
llejJnbliaJns a~~~tnl tbe Cl1lllmittee, 11-7, but at 1eut lbree
rneml)m rt !be GOP are oppoeed to 1be g;adualed state
idctlile tu cmtaiDed ill the

.1o1m J . Gilligan Monday reap- PGA's top 10 money-elanding
poillted Columbus Auditor Hugb list with 1971 amings rl.
J. Dorrian to tbe board rl. trus- $118,309, including $25,11DD he won
lees of the state Polke and in Sunday's Greater Milwaukee
Firemen's Disalility and I'm- Open.
si111 Fund.
Lee Trevino leads tbe standDorria, 36, will serve 411 the . ings with $1!»,169. Tbe $13,200
, hoard IDllil June lD, 1974.. He Trevino collected for winning
represents the fiscal officers of 'the British Open does not count
Dlllllicipal corporatims oo the in the standings. Second
hoard.
through fifth on tbe list are
)act Nictlaus, $161,213; Gary.
Player, $119,510; Arnold Palmer, $llt.•. and · Miller
Barber, $102.'113.

USED CARS

' '

Savilla Queen BatneU, 113,
Parkersburg, died Monday
evening at Camden Clark
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Barnett, fll merly of St.
Petersburg, Fla., and of
Reedsville, made her b&lt;me at
926 Maple St., Paltersburg the
past four years.
She is.,.. oioed by three SOilS,
N'Jie, ~ Belpre; OleSter, of
Colwnbus, and Bert, of
Marietta; two daughters,
Oarahel Knight, Mineral Wells,

n; ...1 of

.-------iii

Apply for a Check;ng Account today.

'

, ane '""'menta attempting
House Democrat&amp; were to add $110 rn!Dim to the

Clear and cooler toeilht. ;··
Lows in the 5011 north 111111 Jowoer ••• ,
60s south, Mostly llllllll)' m~ ::;:­

VOL XXIV~ NO. 63

net.

no~:.:~::.;~r: ~s~~~
2~~~~!::t:!e~s:!'::
~
.
Elberfelds
In
Pomeroy
had fallen
a
. .
'th burial . Pine feltforscmetimebecauaepbooe
steps "'m
. .
ted

WNAC televisioo statim, was
stricken Thursday after finishing a (li'Qgram.
He joilled WN AC In 1966 after
five Yeai'S with WPRO-TV In
Providence. A graduate of West
Vu-glnia Univer:sity, be mce
worked for WLW-TV and WLW
radio ill Cincinnati.

to keep your budget straightened out.

'

Bamett Died on Monday

F. E. Swick,

TV HOST DIF.S

millee is scte"llecl 1D meet at I Da1oncrats 411 1be CGD!llllllee
p.m, to vote 411 -8 $U bi1IIGD lu last wetl said tbeJ would iiOI .
package agreed 1o by . a- wile for tbe biD llftlr RepJbllIoden from bolb pu!ies last cam knocked dowll two,out of

. .......nuttee.

ge

llussdJ.

TWO CAU.'I ANSWERW
The Middleport E-R squad,
called at 4:57 p.m. Monday to
Cook's Gap IDll to aid James
Barnhart who was inwlved In
an automobile accident,
removed him to Veterans
Memorial Hospital wbere be
was treated and released. At
11:44 p.m. the unit went to m
South Thin! St. for Lisa Scaggs
who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.

-'

. OOI.,UIIIBUS (UPI)- ~- E.
W. l.ampsou, R-Jeffn-son,
dlliiman of tile Houee Ways
ml '(=ns Ommit.tee, said today it waald be 11p tD aDen•iuats • to wlletbet hls
..Ut waves 11. tu biD a
. , . it tD the flaor IDday.
"I'm lUre we ean ccme up
wilh four va1e1 if !bey (Democrata) can CIIIIIO .., with six,"
said 1be Alllllbala Cllallty leg·
islallr, ~to 111e 10 votes
needed to get a bill out of hls

r'L o ...
\..diAA. ,

MEIGS THEATRE

Letha Werner Died Tuesday

Finger Put On ])ems ·in House Vote

Telephone Strike:. -Inevitable

~

•

Now You Know

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'

while their husbands mined for
gold 20 miles away, ran out of
her tent with a .22 caliber rifle.
But the Ontario, Calif.,
woman could not release the
gun's safety lock and the man
killed her.
He cut and gouged Mrs.
Parker, 24, of Walnut, Calif.11e
took her to a tree, laid her neck
over a bough and tried to
decapitate her, police said. The
woman was reported near death
today in a local hospital.
.
· ·.
T)len the stranger dJsap·
~ared into _the heavily w~ed
Srerra foothills as mystenously
as he appeared.
A search- forthe man was
C!'lled off ,today.
There were 17 persons including five- women an(! 10
children
at the remote

campsite when the killer struck
Monday night. The campsite
was at a spot called Dog Bar at
an altitud~ of about 2,600 feet in
the old gold rush mining
country.
Garbe said the killer "was
laughing , - grumbling and
growling !Ike an animal. "
Another witness said he was
"making animal noises" and
still another said he had a
"maniacal laugh,"
The police bulletin _said he
was a middle-age white man, 5feet.-8 to 5-feet-10-inches taU,
"heavy or chunky" in build,
havi!lg thick lasses___ll!ld_
wearing a light colored shirt,
tan pants and a tan jacket.
Brown said the man also had
~ .22 pistol and a .41 magnum
taken from ~immons.

.
1150 In the Youngstown area
terns
'"We are 0 · to do ev : sy~ .;..tract with the Bell
thing we ca~ :'keep the se~- Telephone Systems djiled
.
. "
'd J Philli .\pril30 but tbe CWA cootlnlled
~b~o~~ium:~ c~cm't worltingasoegoliations were in
'
manager.
progress.
.
1
. "There are certain emergen- The pay for Bell System emc1es -that have to be taken ployes ranges from $108.50 I
care of" said Gibbs "We are week for clerical help to 01 8050
• to do what
· we can a week for top grade ••cnf1s'
·
duty bound
to keep the service going."
such as _PBX ~lArs and
"It'~ the kind of thillg that PBX installers.
ha
if
ha
Lineme
·
· 1a11
s to go on
we ve any
n, repall'lllell, UJS •
continuation of our way of ers and dispatcben pt ently
life " sa1·d Gt'bbs "As a man- earn a top of$' .. a_........,.._
•
·
· ·• """"' .......
agement team we intend to do operatorS earn an average of
what we can to take care of $114 a week.
th
.
The average CWA ,_,= .
e emergency servtce."
mak
.
.. ..
~-=
Gibbs said some 1,200 non- now
es ....... an
union management personnel the union is asking for a :IS per
would replace operaton, install- cent wage increase in a oneen and repairmen.
year agreement. Tile COIJIPIIIJ
He predicted that the major offered a wage and fringe beneeffect of the slrikr would be in- fit package wilh a 30 per lftll
slalling of telephones but serv- increase over three years.
ice should not be hampered too The union is ,also •ski"8 fllr
much because of direct dial a closed shop.

:l}f}@}j~~@]@@tiJ@ti~1if®W&amp;l~Il@~%lMW\\t~Ktlt~~RIJ

$1 VJ-Million Plus Schools Budget
The ec411amlc Importance. of sdools In Me1p C..l)'
wae pointed up Tuesday night wbe11 Mle Melp IMII Sc • II
Dlslrict Board of EducaUon approved a 1m bad&amp;et "$1, '132,127.
ADUclpaled e~~pe~~dllares from tbe budget t..l ' :
admlutstraU411, $51,1%5; lnslntcU•, 1111,151; ~I J
agencies (lrallllporlatl411) $A,7S7; operaU. rl.schllplallt,
$55,058; mailllell&amp;nce, $lt,8113; special aenlca, $UI;_•
piles, $110,5t0; materials lor maiDiellaDce, $~; ;4
meat replacem&lt;nl, $ZI,IM; ...tract ad epea onler aenlc:e,
$68,70CI; fixed charges, $!33,451, aad capllaleaUa)', $Ill,
Tbe anUclpaled ..Venue for 1m Is $1,'15Z.-.a

.

Alumni to Shift
Banquet in -1972
Middleport High School
Alwnni Association President
Paul Gerard announced today
the annual Alwnni Banquet will
not he held In May, as is
lraditional.
"The Executive Committee
voted unanimously, upon my
recommendation, to schedule
the 1972 banquet to coincide
with R"gatta Weekend in
June," Gerard said.
H,e explained, _' 'One !1 our
maJor problems m tlii' _past has
been ~t many Middleport
Alumm are mamed to
Pomeroy ~nd R.utland Alumni
and go to e1ther the Pomeroy or

I,

..

'•. '
I

Rutland banquets. We doal
want any competition fllr tiJil
very special occasion. Tilt
banquet will be preceded in ...
afternoon by a ~
reception."
"At the 8ame meetinl." 111
continued, ''We also ""'lded ta.'
commlssllil a cenlellnlal IIIIi.
All suggestims are wdc41llie w·
to itS design,"
.
·~
A nwnber of polenMal ~­

lt
with an eye toWard 1
0 1!II.
for tbe Labur n., WI ' . \i
ralsingpro~ts-..ew

Plans wW be cwt\1 t fllMd
month's regular llll!fM II( a!(
execullve colllmiller:.
•

�'.

\

-----·--------.--I
r--------------------~---7- .
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Still More .Life
In Old · · Machine

.t

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HeIen-H-· eI·p u
. -S·I

All Coaches' Talk?

BRUCE BIOSSAJ:J •

.

.

. Many of these men are quite dovish on the war. It will
be interestinl! to ·see whether their Senate counterparts
will. exerciS&lt;! similar restraint in judgmenl- or whether .
.,, . they will tr_v t" uso• the P cnt agQ n l~apcrs as proof fur the

·:t·

.·''PLANT'':

,..._

,,

Lightner
Doubles
in Ploy

"''I

weet;

'

l4w

.

.

poc.-tbeybadarrlftdinlhia~trybJbua! ·.
Six years. Wow! And they llid It -.Jdn't
UNDER 'ftll BRIDGE _
"*·Even our best man toiiSied 111 wltb: ''To
· NEW YORK ~ As of July 16, my husband the haWY brille and grOom -giVe It a weet!" .
~ and I will baWl been llllll'ried six yean, and. I.can And Edgar Inscribed my lfedding rille: Tel Jolll,
'barcJiy 'believe It - DIBinly bec8UBI! I haw oot 111)' lirSt wife. Of COia'8e some tbialll haW
·
older ·.,._ ·
It · ...c
.jewety, the
. ~ llii,J
..... :years!
seems 1U1ever. cbahged, All the little gifts, the
· ,__,
recel"''. Happily fore11er.
ClQidy,tbe flowers .-bolr Edgar"'""'
•-..
· 'lbolle daperate single days seem SQ far them. And aU the ruimlng 8l'IIUIIIl whesnre ~
a'\Yiiy. Yes, Dy.sPERATE•.BylbetbDe I JOel my flist,_ married. Boy, did be take r:ne 011!. Arzy
llisband, I )VIIS tbe last girl In my set .to•get llrine1111 restaurant cl. my ch_oice. The sky was .
married.lhadlurned!IQ'ricloua that when twent the limit. ColumnA-C()Iumn B, he didn't care'
to a wedding and I thew rice, 1 aimed for the
I.astnigbllsaid to !lim: "~ar,I'm bored.
bride's eyes. 1 tried everything ill the Wli"Jd to I want to go rut tonight.- go danc:ing, rGIII8ll'impl'ess the endless Series 'of dates tbat were ·clng."
. .
. I
.
'
1
''Fine·
,
"
be
S8l
'
d,
''Go
."_
,.
pushed"tbrough my parents' home. I'd throw
.
away all the "Playboy" and '"'~"ian"
When we were first marl'led be ·Nm!l'
,........,....
,;,....i"'"""
.· . about an·""'"d. Lut . week · i.e ·
magazines and Ieaw the Bible caaual,ly open on ~........--u
the toffee table with ·~e" marked . on the started pl(:kinl! on my housekeeplllg and I told
ina,gb\. I'd sitfoc holn planning 1mg in- . ijm I can't do everything - cook, keep bouse,
~live ~v!n&amp;IIOns with future dates. One. perfocm, be a good wife, and tate care of the
openet that alwilya ll!ll!med to work in my case baby- He agreed anti told me to b1re a lady to
wasaatlng lbeyOWJg man: "How did you enjoy comeinmceaweektobehiswife.
. .
I admit I'm not much cl.' a Cook, but I'm ef}WISOII.
And then r met my clar!q busband, Edgar, ficient; 1 often brag that it Olily lakes me 30
and everything clumged. Of course, when we seconds to burn tbe minute rice - But Ed&amp;at
.met, he Wlllil't my tu,wnd or 8(1ybody's, thank hardly noUces the Uttle ~- Take the Uine I
~~ we met and married in four days. dyed my dark troWn hair to a .raliant liloDde and.
~ai never. bad.time to fealize that tbe long said: "Well? Wbat do yon think l'w done to my
blonde halr'iHl1d\led to touch could be folded in a hair?" .... He' said: "You've finaDy washed it?"
Somelililes be's very subUe. Lut week be
baggle and take~~ with him to the cl.flce,
The marriage worted fnm the ·very start, told me there were two wcmen in IU life and
mainly because of acme excellent advice wr they were both me.I.baven't touched food since
.
.
mother gave me. "Joan," she said on the ·mor- lhat day.
·Edgar and i re&amp;!llwd when we were first
nlng I( our wedding (~'l:'sandmlne -not my
WIN AT BRIDGE mother's aild mine), "I Wlllll you to remember marriecfnever to go to bed DIBd (as of now we've
marriage Is a matter ql give and tate. You must been awake for three weeks). In triltb I must
learn to love each other, trust each other, share admit it Is lhe English in Edgar that kee(ll111 "
the tittle and the lig thlnga with each other, and frCIII fighting. Whenever I start to yeD and
above all, get everything in your name." That scream, be doesn't answer, hilt the next ~
advice bas helped me have six glorious yean. there will be a letter to wbcm it may CIJIICel'llln
True, ~ were acme slight adjustments. the Lclldon Times, And oalil)' part, wbeoe\&gt;er he
My llisband Is Englisb I love the way he strides, gets upset over something· silly IUCb as my
like Prince Philip, with his bands behind bJs oversalting his jello oc )lumlng ~small""" when
answer bact:, I jilli wait
bact:. Edgar bas beautifully manicured bands I press his tie, I
111Ul
be'S
in
bed
and
tbfn
I turn on the ellttric
. - - - - - - - - - - , and strong tapering fingers I've been told. I've
'
never seen_them. You !mow bow; neat English. blanket to burn!
14
NORTH
Yes, BED. I believe that's the place to 1rGR
men area. He Is the only man I !mow who
.Q76
out
moat
of a couple's dlfft1ences. lArd "-z,
¥KQ4 1
polishes his sneakers. Also, he wears pinstriped
+K109
pajamas with vests. Of course lhia comes lhat's where Edgar and I have had 1i0iDe of !'W'
4&gt;AKJB
nalurally to biro because ci his bacQrollld. I cld closest and most beartfelt CQI(vera8UCIII, Only
WEST
EAST
put my foot down, however, when he insisted on last night we were in bed and I llid: "Darling,
.1082
.J94
it's six years already and look bolr happy we U'e.
¥963
¥J8752
tweed diapers for the baby.
+Q72
+65 .3
Ed&amp;at can lnice his family, tnie back io the I hope nothing ever ccmes behreeD .....
4&gt;7643
4&gt;Q5
"Nothing wUI, sweetheart," Edg• murDruids (Harry and Sylvia In~!~). I come fnm a
SOUTH (Dl
mured,
"but could yon please speak lwder! I
nice family too, but our roots are not that deep.
.AK53
We can trace our family as far back as 1940. can barely bear you lbrGugb the door."
¥AIO
And SQ our honeymoon ldyU CCIIIIinues. Nut
+AJ84
Once,in ~ toimpless 111m, I tried to trace us
4&gt;1092
when we leaVe foc the shore and Edgar Is
back even further, but the BrciiiX Zoo refused to
North-South vulnerable
playfully
burying me in the sand -face down release the re&lt;:Otda. On second thought, who •
Wesl North Easl Soulh WANTS to trace back their family? Lord knOWB I'll be counting my blessings ....
1N.T.

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
t:

Pentagon ·Papers:
History in Rough

'

. ' . . '. .

..

BY JoAN 1UVE11S
rr'SBIVER8'WATER

Jet transports envisioned .foi the 197~ decade wiU be
faster, quieter and more comfortable than today's air)inel's. They'll be lighter, cheaper to build and operate
'and By faster and farther with bigger payloads on less
. fuel 1\nd. they'll, emit fewer pollutants.
. "These are some of the qualities we plan to design into
the future .transport, based on current and projected
.. advances iii the.art," says Ken Carline, manager of Gen'
era! Dynamics Corporation.'s .advanced transport ~b­
nology program in Fort Worth, funded by a $1~m•!li!l"
s l!!ltract· from National Aeronautics and Space Admuustratlon.
.
·
.,
· Tomorrow's transport will probably cruise ·at 660 miles ,. ···
· an hour, just .under ~ speed of sound at .40,000 f~t.
.That's about 100 miles. an hour faster than the crwse
speecl of today's 1on~-range jets. It woUld reduce the
time for a transatlantic ftight from seven to six hours.
. The !ley to tl)is aclvarice is a new "supercritical" wing
~sign: I!!Stead of being curved on top and Bat on bottom
like today's airfoil, the supereritical wing will be relatively Bat on top aild curved on bottom.
Wings, tail surfaces aild possibly the. fuselage of the
advanced transport wiU be made of graphite epoxy composite, a material that is much lighter than aluminum,
yet as strong.
·
.
. By using eomposites, says Carline, "we can 'mold'
large sections of the ~raft in much the same way that
you would make a plastic boat. Parts woUld be made
from the outside shell inwards, rather than the present
way of riveting a skin on the outside of a skeleton."
This construction method woUld reduce the airplane's
weight by as much as 20 pet cent .and cut costs.
, Composite wings, combined with advanced ftigbt-control systems, could make air travel much smoother for ·
the passenger of the 1980 ~ra. sensors in the ft!gbt~ontrol
.-----..,.----------------------1
system would detect turbUlence and .automatically com- 1
mand the .wings to compensate by bending-rolling with 1
I
the punch. so to speak.
·
- I~- c
1\fanufacturers are also making headway in developing . 1
·
engines that will give off less .pollutants.
1
·
11
_ It all sounds great. You can still&amp;:· however, on 1 .
By Helen Bottel
1
leaving home at least an bour before · t time to strug- 1
1
gle through ground traffic on the way to the Airport.
'TIS FOU.Y TO BE WlSE ?
Dear·Helen:
One 1hing the women's liberation movemertt has caused lhat isn'tmentioned very much - is "awakening without hope for
There _was never any conspiracy to deceive the public
fulfillment," which can be worse than sleep.
about Vietnam, says Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, tOJ'mer · ~ '"'" Foi" the.fitst time in their lives, many women are realizing
chairman of the joint chiefs of sta1f, former ambassador
they aredownilraded, ''used," almost enslaved by their roles, but
to South Vietnam and military adviser to President KenWbatcantbeydoaboutit? If they rebel, family wars start. If they
nedy and Johnson.
Although 11 ublication of the " Pentagon papers" gives
div«ce their male chauvinists, they aren't equipped for ''single"
the impresSlon that the government was caught doing
struggle and they get into wocse troubles, besides being lonely:
things nobod7 ever !mew about, this was "nothing but the
Today, they're aware and resentful, therefore witcby.
Yesterday they were submissive and accepting so perhaps, on the
language gomg on in the huddle between the players.
Wbllt was important was the play, the game, the outcome.
whole, treated better than are modern wives who challenge their
''Here we're seeing nothin~ but what the coaches talked
lllsbands and often got the worst of it.
about .in the dressing room, ' says Taylor.
DOUBTFUL
His image is an appropriate one. The whole situation
Will true equality ever come? wbatever view of it one takes, bas about it an odor noi
Dear Doubtful:
unlike that of a locker room that has not been aired out
I think it will - in maybe two generations. Almost every
for a long time.
majoc social change takes at least lhat long, for the first
generation starts areas of CIJ!ltroversy and the secood, children of
the "old guard," are only half c&lt;Jllvinced. Not until the third batch
Pass 6 N.T. Pass Paso
DIB!ures will total equality be considered the n!li'IO.
Pass
Opening lead_. 3
.... And then, whaddya bel: someone will start a "liberate.
women from the drudgery of business" movement, and there
we'll go again .... - H.
By O~wald &amp; James Jacoby
Dear Helen:
We have t a Ike d some
I've seen a lot of ads lately about learning while you sleep. Do about Lightner slam doubles
you think pecpte·can really assimilate knowledge just because a the last couple of days. Here
tape recorder hands you the message as you snore? _ KARL
is an example of Lightner
.Dear Karl·.
slam play which should go
to show that, at the age of
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
I'll believe this "learn while you sleep" thing when it cures 77, Ted is still one or the
WASHINGTON &lt;NEAl
snoring by subconscious suggestion. Any takers? - H.
great players of the game.
From varied substantial sources it is clear now that
Dear Helen:
The hand is an example of
former Defense Secretary Robert McNamara was inter"A.D."
described
weD
the
l&lt;lrtures of a nervous breakdown the best rubbe~ bridge techested in supplying the raw materials of history- not any
and the inability of friends and family to understand.
nique.
kind of definitive, complete history-when he commisTed won the club lead in
sioned the massive study of the Vietnam war generally
I was the victim of two such breakdowns. My husband of 23 dummy. He led a diamond
called...the Pentagon PaperS'.
years thougbtl cwld help myself. He became disgusted and took to the ace to see if there
It was appreciated at the time of commissioning the
up with another woman. Then he started drinking, and eventually might he a singleton queen
work, in 1967, that the array of available documents,
around. There wasn't, so he
drankhimselftodeath.Myguill threwmeintodeeperde!K'fssion, led a second diamond and
however vast, would need to be read in the context of
other materials and to be supplemented extensively by
for bad I been well, my husband might still be with me. I loved finessed dummy's 10. lf he
the diligent researches of the historians.
·
lim.
had to lose the diamond fiThough some analysis and evaluation of the collected
Aiways, there was the terrible aloneness, the knowledge that nesse, he wanted to lose it to
papers was indicated fr.om the start, sources say •t was
1was acting "crazy," but the inability to change. Mental illness is East so he could postpone
McNamara's aim to keep the materials as free of bias as
hating life but fearmg· death, h;!ting yourself and fearing hunting for the queen of
possible.
clubs until later. The diaHis widely known decision not to allow the collectors
everyone else. I'm under psychiatric care now and there are mond 10 held and now Ted
and analysts to interview any of the administration prinwas sure of his contract.
momentswhenlhavehope. Prayforme! - MRS. A.R.C.
cipals who wrote some of the documents was rooted in
Dear Helen :
It was time to think about
this purpose. McNamara did not want the materials colI'm a college student, in the State Hospital because of at- the ·30 POints for an overored by the recollections and interpretations of their
tempted suicide. Wiry? Who knows. Depressions are hard to trick. He could afford to
authors.
play dummy's king of dia·
explain rationaUy.
Historians, of course,' will need those recollections. But
monds
to see if the queen
the judgment in 1967 was that it was the historians' job
'l1lere are many truths a psychiatric patient must face, and would dr6p, so he did exto get them, not the Pentagon's.
the toughest for me aren't those the dOctor digs out. The cruelest actly that. The queen did
Men having some familiarity with the undertaking say
"fact" of aU is that those "friends to the end" write you off when drop. Now Ted was up to 12
McNamara, in further pursuit of his desire to keep the
.
·
you go "mental."
tricks in top cards. He could
project unbiased, had nothing to do with any of the peoI'm not violent Helen. I'm just the same except aU the nerve a~ford to t~st the spades
ple involved in it. He did not choose them, and he never
•
' .
w1thout havmg to look for
talked to them.
ends are exposed. Why do they treat me as a parmh? Are they so , the queen of club.s.
II can be said with authority that more than half of the
afrm'd of me ,. - J ·J·
36 persons who worked on the study were military offiDear J.:
Amo•ko's top uperls ••plain llteir
cers. Nearly all of these went back to Vietnam later for
No,
they're
afraid
of
themselves.
They
are
fearful
that
they'll
,..,,••.,..,.•inning 1e&lt;hniqueo in •
second or third tours of duty, and some were killed
say the wrong uung and perha(lS head you toward another new 128-page book on J A C 0 I Y
there. Other analysts were U.S. Foreign Service officers.
Professional historians were not used. They could not be
dep:ession. Few people know how to face mental illness and so MODERN. For J'OIIr ' 0 "' senl $1
obtained on short notice, and it was felt they lacked
friends desert you when you need them IJ'ost, excusing them- wilh ,..r nome, •ddre" and zip
eotlr ta : "Win crt Bridge/ ' (c/o tltis
needed grounding in Vietnam affairs.
·
selves
with
"I
might
only
make
berworse."
l'msorry.H.
.-spaperl, P.O. "'' 419, Radio en,
With possibly a few exceptions, the Pentagon's compilers and analysts did not believe they were assembling
materials of stunning originality. Most did not imagine
that; if .disclosed. the papers would be represented as the
They11 Do It Every Time Ill
revelation of great new truths.
One source says some analysts think they got as much
HEY, ~E.. ·"'IU'LLAAVE
- 1ruitfut· i nformation about the war from reading the
WIFE ROSIE
Ttl ENW&lt;GE AND HIR!' A
newspapers of the time·as from plowing through the pile RAN AND
THEIR e.e.Ts:N SO
FeN fW&lt;DS-- ·
of documents.
WELL IT JOST HAP TO
(Some reporters who have canvassed 'the newspapers
PROSPER· ··
and news-magazines of the covered period say that most
of the stuff in the Pentagon study was indeed in print at
the time-though evidently little attended to. 1
McNamara's goal of assembling history's raw materials
untainted by any bias was, of course, not realized. The
analysts, aside from the fact they ranged from high competence to gross incompett&gt;nce, were human beings with
a full set o( prejudices.
· Everybody involved knew it, knew the analysis would
c~:--~+- be inescapably flawed. -Where bias in the final wr~ting
stirred protest from analysts of differing views, the off·
THEY~IRE
· setting judgments were inserted in the name of balance. ~
,O,OOITIONI&gt;.L.
None bf the 40-oild volumes went without cross,check- HEI..P FOR THE ·
ing scrutiny.
·
$WIH6 S HIFT
The sprawling newspap,er accounts of the study are
AND I'CJN· ARE
THINGS ' GOING
complete, for the moment. But before lon g the Senate
will be probing into our war involvement. and .the role
to~'~?
the Pentagon Papers play .in explaining it.
The one-time presidential advisers and other specialists who will .be testifying on the papers seem certain. on
the basis of their public or private utterances so fa~, to
mess the -limitations o!'the huge-study-ar'revlr.!lell 'his-

. tory."

'

.,. '" .,. ' . ' .
, Comtdiepe Joaa JUYen t&lt;un•eats oa 11er wbilt you .Jillghtfilll - h«&lt;e thief, UBildeia,
. IUrlfqe 111 a etlaiml for.Jilek O'Brtl!l, w11o 11 clel1tist, Word .... Onl!. frleiid of mine traced
·
· heril back tocll8coves' that her famll1 bad bemll!l
011 vae.tha.

America's abandonment of, the supersonic transP\)!1
may ot may not have been wise. But any idea Uiat this
country's progress in aircraft technology has now stopped,
that we've gone ;1s far as we can g9, coUldn't be more

.

'

'

JVoice :~ong Broadway •l

'.

wrong.

.

'·

.

'

Carbon Monoxide
Con Harm Brain
Dr. Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb-Is it possible for a person to get epllepsy from a bad case of
carbon monoxide poisoning?
There were never any signs
of epilepsy until after the
poisoning.
Dear Reader,;_In a "Word,
yes~ One might argue about
the meaning of the word epilepsy but to the extent that
it means convulsive episodes
like those seen in epilepsy;
it is true.
Any form of brain damage
can cause recurrent convulsive episodes. Carbon monoxide can cause brain dam· te rfenng
· WI
· ·th adeage bY m
quate delivery of oxygen to
the brain. Carbon monoxide
combines with the iron pig, ment, hemoglobin, in the red
blood cells, and makes it impossible for the cells to carry
oxygen.
Th b · · the
·
e ram IS
organ m
the body most .easily damaged by lack · of oxygen. If
\he brain is damaged a parson's threshold to have convulsions may be lowered and
then the convulsions start occurring. There may be, and
usually are other man1'fes
'
tations of brain
damage. InSlaticM,

.

.

.

1t~ .most severe for!D the m-

div1dual may be mcapable
of normal thought process.
There are other ways the
brain can be. dama11ed to
cause convuls•ve ~plsod_es.
Loss of oxygen, durmg h•gh
altitude IDghts, Is one example: A more co!"mon cauae
IS ma~uate crrculatlon to
the bram. A person m_ay
have a sudden Irregularity
of the heart or it may stop
beating_. If some means is
not qmc;kly devised to restore . the heart's pumping
capacity the brain may be
damaged. . ,
We see this m people with
:'heart _attacks." The pumpmg action of. ~- heart m~st
be restored Within four mmutes to prevent brain damage. External artificial heart
massage is often life saving
in such situations. By compressing the chest in a rhythmic manner (pressing down

on the stem~l-~reast bone)
the heart is ·anmciahy ·rom~·
pressed and· then re!Ue5,
This may force enough biood
to the brain and other vital ·
orgBDil to prevent serious
damage. If the equipment is
immediately available the
normal pumping action of ·
the heart may be restored by
electrical means.
The real problem is the
ever-present possibility that
the replacement of the circulatior will be too late and the
brai:: may be permanently
dar 1&lt;1ged. The /atient may
live but the en result may
'still be a major tragedy.
These events provide some
very dramatic moments, not
only as a race against death,
but a race to 8ave a life
worth living, The ·Same is
true of loss of oxygen or
poisoning that prevents de·
livery of oxygen to the brain.
Many people think all they
have to fear from heart attacks or strokes is death.
There is always that other
possibility, permanent incapacity and brain damage.
'
We say that a person who
is laying low is "playing .,.,._
sum" because the Virs\iili.
opossum, when e aug b t
feigns death.
'

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

BERRY'S -WORLD

Did Ted take a chance
with his slam ·when he
played the third diamond?
Suppose the queen didn't
drop? In that ease, Ted
woUld have taken the club
finesse so as to be sure that
West could not gain the lead
and m a k e his slam with
three · tricks in each of the
four suits.
·

~-'·-···

...•

1•
3.f•

Pass

What do you do now?
A-Bid three lia....ts You

ltllm .,"..:

'"' ·~~

•

·

could

.

l

'

\.

suffering Amencan League on top !ll the baseball

Wcrid,
,
.
With a .6-4 triilrnph over the National League
Tuesday mgbt added to the Baltimore Orioles' world
cbampionship last fall, the AL hils ended the
Nl!tional League's eight-year rUle in the diamond's
"glamor game" - and; just
in the "good old

as

days,"homenmpowerdidit.
"As far as I'm concerned, I've got 28 most
val
. ua,b
. le players on this squad," declar
. ed deligb
. ted
wmmng manager Earl Weaver after Tuesday's

triumph.

catcher Bench. ~·Reggie an4 I
both just stood there at h001e
plate and watched it for a wbile
before be started to nm. We
mustbave looked silly."
The NL was to look sillier
because that blast birned
whole tide. Moments later in the
same inning Rod Carew walked
and Frank Robinson lined his
two-run homer to right aild the
AL was out front, 4-3.
Killebrew's blast off reliever
Ferguson Jenkins in the sixth

Frank Robi(ISon of .Weaver's
Oriole!l, wbose two-run homer
put the AL .ooad to stay, was
olfieially voted the "MVP" of
thegame.Buttherewaslittleto
choose between him and the
other two men who hit two-run
homers for the AL-Reggie
Jackson
and
Harmon

u.;

KilletJrew.
As a matter of fact, the
American Leaguers themselves
did most of their post,.game
cheering about Jackson's

~

·

Q

&amp;.&amp;.~•

DETROIT (UPI) - Nobody
who wi,~ Tuesday night's
heme run - sbidded AU-star
game would argue with those
pitchers who claim Tiger
stadium is 8 hitters' ball park.
Except possibly Vida Blue,
who was stung for two of the
record-tieing six roundtrippers
in the three innings he pitched
and still managed to emerge as
the winner for the victorious
American League.

"Every ball park is a hitters'
ball park," said the 21-year-old
Oakland A's southpaw.
Bluefeltlhathe "threw good"
against the power-hitting
National Leaguers, but admilled that the satisfaction that
comes with pitching a complete
game and walking off the field
with the victory was not there.
Cincinnati's Sparky Anderson, who managed the
losers, said he thought Blue

0

"did an exceUent)'ob" and lhat
he showed " terrific poise" for a
young man participating in his
fitst All-star game.
Howevet, Andersonadded, "I
don't think I was seeing Vida
Blue at his best. Or Dock Ellis
( lbt! National Leaguer starter)
either, flir that matter. Both of
them are so young and must
have been under considerable
pressure."
Hank Aaron, the Atlanta

Sparky Reali
~nearlywentoutoftheball ;:.:;:ug::
... ~Y Depressed
bcmer- a tremendous blast afterKalinebadsingledmadeit

"You can go your whole life
and never see five balls hit that
bard," declared slugger Frank
Howard.
"He reaDy crushed it," added
6-foot-7 Howard, who has
crushed a few himself and did
indeed bit one out of Tiger
Stadium once upon a time.
Despite tbe MVP award to
Robinson, it was Jackson's
blast that tomed the game
around.
Until then it was all NL, jlist
as it had been since 1962. The
"seni,.- circuit" team bad teed
off ... the fasthaiis of young
Vida Blue fg- two hc.ners, a
two-run blast by Johnny Bench
in tbe aec011d inning and a
bam empty homer by Hank
Aaron in the third, and NL
starter Dock . Ellis was
Pl'l!!ec1in8. a ~ lead going into

Clemente hit a last,.gasp boDler
for the NL in the eighth to cut
the margin to 6-4.
The six bmners tied the All.star record, which was set in
thesameparkinl961andtiedin
·Cleveland in 1954.
"I knew we were going to see
some long balls bit," said IosiJig
manager Sparky Anderson,
"but this was the greatest
exhibition 1 ever saw in one
game."
There was speculation on bow
much part the .wind, which
gusted from 17 to 31 mph during
the game. blowing straight
toward right field, played in the
homer barrage. Four of the
homers were· by righthanded
batters to right field.
Aclually, the AL had good
pitching,too. Blue,JimPahner,
Mike Cuellar, and Mickey

DETROIT (UPI) - Sparky
Anderson has been having
problems with arms and legs
for almost a year.
Not his own, mind you, but
those lhat belong to other
people.
. It was a case of too much
arms and legs - all of them
belonging to the Baltimore
Orioles- in last season's world
series.
Then an achilles tendon this one belonging to Bobby

Tolan, who ruptured bJs playing
haskelhall in the ofl-6eaSOII and
then reinjured it trying to come
hack. That injury has no doubt
contributed to the current fiftyplace showing of the team
Anderson manages, the Cincinnati Reds, along with other
miseries Uke Wayne Simpson's
sore shoulder.
Then came Tuesday night's
AU-star game in Tiger Stadiwn,
in which Anderson's National
League team received a 6-4

Chesh 1·.e Gets
At Least sz·lCe
nve '" '
*..,...
Of rD 0 ny crown
•

.

U.,lllltA(llle~- ',
, . I..Oucfl'beld1he·NI;fo jUSt
Luis Aparicio ~ll!r'fed the AL hits. The AL made seven off · ·
c.meback with a single and Ellis aod three other pitchers.
~ Weaver sent Jackson - The lOllS was a tough one for

1•

.

"'n

_-"'
·' •

irooicallyonthesquadoolyasa Anderson.Everythinghasbeen
substitute for injured Tony downhill for the Reds' pilot
Oliva- up to pinch-bitfor Blue. since his ''Big Red Machine"
'Jackson slammed a high won the National League
slider by Ellis so far to right pennant last year. First, the
field that it would have gone Orioles crushed them in the
C:OiopJ:tely out of the stadium if "'aeries, then the Reds staggered
a .ligbt tower this year, and now this.
it had not S........
K u'"'
atop the -.foot stands.
"Now I have lost the world
"I wish it hadn't hit lhat series and I have lost the AllW..,," sighed AI Kaline of Star game," said Anderson. "I
Delroil "lwouldliketoseehow reaDy am beginning to feel
far it would hive gone."
depressed."
''That was some shot," said

·

The Cheshire Redlegs cliocbed at least a share of the 1971
Gallia-Meigs Pony League
baseball chanipionship Tuesday
night by posting a 1~ victory
over Bidwell at BidweU.
The Redlegs can win their
first undisputed G-M flag in the
loop's 10-year history by
beating Southwestern at
Cheshire Ftiday evening.
Cheshire is now 11).1 in league
play. BidweU dropped to 4-5 on
the year.
Cheshire had 13 runs on 13
hits. The winners made three
errors. BidweU coUected five
runs on seven hits, and committed four errors.
Johnny Baird was credited
Morrison a double, and K.
Buckley a single. T. Withers
bad a single foc the losers. J.
Withers had a triple, Dunlap a with the loss. He allowed five
single and Hannon a single.
hils, and fanned I} Braves. M.
In the second COiltest, the Lavender hiid a single and
Middleport Braves sc«red twice double for the winners. M.
in the first inning, theo went on Davenport had a single and
to eliminate the Gallipolis White double, and T. Thomas had a
double.
.
Sox, 3-41.
In the night,cap, Pl. Pleasant
S. Bachner was credited with
the win. He allowed only one bit, Peoples Bank broke a 1-1 tie in
a sixth inning double by T- the sixth inning with three big
Johnson. Bachner fanned 12 runs to oust the Pomeroy
Pirates, 4-1.
Gallians. ·
Foc the winners, JeweU had a
Brent Johnson was charged

Chester~ Braves,

Peoples Bank Win
Olester, Middlepllrt Braves
and Pt. Pleasant Peoples Bank
polled fitst round wins in the
13th an••al Kyger Creek Little
~ baseball tournament

'•'

.•:•.· '•'•' .,.,'

with the win. He fanned eight,
walked four and hit two. Keith
Saunders was charged with the
loss. He fanned · three and
walked seven.
The Redlegs broke a 3-3 tie in
the fourth with four big runs,
and added three more in the
fifth aod plated single runs in
the sixth and seventh rungs.
For the winenrs, MarshaU
French, Baird, 0 . Cremeans,
Dave Wise and Greg McCarty
each had two hits. For the
losers, Sterling Logan, Carl
Dewitt and Jeff Hash eacb had
two hits.

'

.. .

...

'·

iht!IIIO!t.important thing in the
1l1ll'itl H"" to control myself.
He lllld me, 'Reggie, go out
thne and ~I your ability do it
l'ven~verseenhimltse-~ JIOIL Don'l throw your bat;
of any situation. Look, l'ofiiOia "''llllrew
.
your helmet·, that's
hero WOI"Shipper. I'm nolsa}'ilr« _,- going to help you. [
he's the greatest lbing goillg, listened 11&gt; him. rt has made all
and I'm .not bllllring smrh. Tel llie differeOO! in the world."
me though, be's a .,.lling. Rolli.nsooconnected for one of
winning atlibide. He~~ me m: homers that were hit in
. ~...::!':o::~r
Ellisctimaxed afour-run rally

· ·

B

u:;: h;:,. ~u;,;

' I

B~:;e:or ~

~- ,...,....,

in lhe third inning and put the
Alnerian League ahead for
kerps.
Oddl)·, Jackson was playing
'lrilb 8 pulled hamstring muscle

third inning in his lirs1 eiira in his leg al.s&amp;. Before the game
ba hit · 20 AU.star
"" lllld Earl Weaver, the AL

~rances,~d

"bloom" ! Earn at our
current annual rate of

4%% or 5%
on 6-monlh savings
ce rtificate s .

Meigs Co. Branch

~

n:;

he

was ·~ ma~bewouldn'tbeableto

Meigs County Branch of
The Alhens County Sa vings
&amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Member Federal H o~e Loan
Bank.
'' '
Member Federal Savings a1
Loan Insurance Corp. All
accounts in su red up td '

impressed" with Blue's ~ nm uno..u.
.
SlO.OOO.()IJ.
,ball, which is his primary pildL IllUmed 001 he never had to. .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _•
But that didn't ·stop Aanlm
from lifting one of these fast
halls into the right field seats.

All star

Box Score
· National

AB R H 8 1

Mayscf
2 e o o
clubbing from the American Clemente
rt
2 1 I i
League.
Millan 2b
0 ~ 0 0
2 I I I
Two of Anderson's starters - Aaron rf
May lb
1 ~ 0 0
Henry Aaron of AUanta and Tor
re Jb
3 ~ 0 0
Willie McCovey of San Fran- Santo3b
I 0 0 0
1 l II 0
cjsco- had to come out after Stargell 11
Brock ph
1 0 0 0
three innings because the McC!lvey
lb
2 0 0 0
manager didn't want to take Marichal p
0 0 0 0
2 0 0 0
any unnecessary chances with Kessinger ss
Bench
c
• I t 2
llieir bad knees and thus hurt Beckert2b
3 0 0 D
their respective team's chances Rose rf
0 0 0 D
Harrelson ss
2 o o a
in the penDant race.
Jenkins
p
e oo o
"I didn't want to take them Colbert ph
I 0 0 0
out but I didn't want to hurt Wilsonp
0 0 0 0
I 0 0 D
them, either. Their teams are Ellis p_.. _ . .
Oa
viscf
I 0 I 0
fighting for a pennant San
Bonds cf
1 c 0 0
11 4 s 4
Francisco comes in to play us Totals
next," Anderson said.
American
abrhlbi
Carew2b
1 I 0 0
"And you've got to rememRojas 2b
I C 0 D
her," be said, "The feUows I Murcer cf
3 0 I D
replaced them with are pretty Cuellar p
0 0 0 D
Buford
ph
1 ~ 0 D
good ball players. Any time you Lolich p
0 0 0 0
put Willie Davis and Roberto Yastrzemski If
3 0 0 0
Clemente out there you're not E Robinson rf
2 I I 2
Kaline rf
l f I 0
hurting."
Cash
lb
2 ~ 0 0
Mays grounded out aild flied Killebrew 1b
l 1 I 2
3 0 I D
out and Aaron . grounded out B Robinson Jb
3 0 0 0
before showing Detroit fans Freehan c
Munson
c
0 c 0 0
why even be thinks be's got a Aparic ioss
3 I I 0
shot at Babe Ruth's 714 figure. Bluep
0 0 0 D
I I I 2
McCovey grounded to second Jackson ph
Palmer
p
'0 0 0 D
and strilck out before being Howard ph
I 0 0 0
removed.
Otiscf
I 0 0 0
1P 6 7 6
Anderson said be switched his Totals
plaDs to pitch Steve Carlton of National
021 000 011)-4
the St. Louis Cardinals and American
004 •002 ODJ&lt;-6
instead used Juan Marichal of DP - National2, A"""ican I.
San Francisco because the 2. LOB - National 2. American
Giants' righthander "gets left- H~s Bendl, Aon111.
F.
Robinson.
handed hitters out the way Jackson ,
Killebrew.
Clemente.
Cuellar (a Ieft.bander) gets
ip he« .....
right-banders hitters out."
Ellis (L)
3·4 4 4 1 2
2 o oo 1 1
"I've lost the world series and Marichal
I 322 00
now I've lost the All-Star Jenkins
WiiSOfl
2'0 0 G I 1
Anderson
531
'd.
"Now
I
,,
game'
Blue (WJ
3 2 3 l ol
Palmer
2 I 00 0 2
really feel depre ed."
Cuellar
2100 1 2
Lolich
2 I I l 0 I
Save - Lol ich. HBP - br
Browns Trade
Blue Slargell.

Willis To Jones To Cards
Get Chance
He 's W.an{ed
st.

.'•'•

'Nobodyhasany idenbatbe
did for me," Jacltsoa said, s.till
talking about noomw,_
''Franll: is a lremendous man.

r;·lg'nr sta d.lUm n·zHn.. Rar·k

14 cu. 11- Westinghouse

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ELEC. DRYER
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GAS RANGE
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T.V. CONSOI.E'24C)OO

H &amp; R FIRESTONE
N_2nd

A - 53,559.

992-2238

MIDDLEPORT

HIRAM, Ohio (UPI) - The
CAMDEN PARK RESERVED
Cleveland Browns of the
National Football ~.!!ague
SATURDAY-JULY 17th
1\-'ay evening.
Tuesday
trade&lt;i'Homer
Jones,
In the fitst outing, Chester
receiver used mostly last
bombed the Pt. Pleasant
"ANNUAL SUMMER OUTING"
seasm
as
a
kickoff
rebirn'
Steelworkers, !U. The winners
specialist, to the
Louis
wrawed it up with eight big
WILMINGTON, Ohio (UPI) Cardinals for an Wlllisclosed
nm in tbe second inning.
ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT
- Professional football 11ras draft choice.
EiclUger was credited with the
CONSTRUCTION DEPARTMENT
what Fred Willis wanted to Jones, a 6-foot, %15-pounder
win. Dunlap was charged with
&amp;
play.
'
frc.n
Pittsburg,
Te&gt;:.,
f~ to
the loBs. For the winners,
K. V. CQI\IIPUTING
"To be a professional foolhall reporl to the veterans' day in
TrusseD had two~ as did
Of
player is something I've always Cleveland two months ago.
Smith. Barton, bad a single,
·UNION
CARBIDE
TECH. CENTER
wanted all my ~e, " said Willis, Hisbesteffoctlastseason was
single,
badlosers,
a double
and an oulsU.nding rookie for the a 94-yard kickoff return in the
single. Fisher
For the
'Sisson
opening game against the New
OPEN TO PUIUC ARER 5 P.M.
was the big gun with a single, Cincinnati Bengals.
"I
didn't
care
which
team
1
Yock
Jets.
He
caught
10
passes
double and sixth inning home
U.S. 60 WEST- HUNTINGTON
run. Mitch bad the Pirates ooly played for," he said. "AU I for 141 yardS and finished
wanted
to
do
was
go
with
a
pro
·
seventhintheconferencewith
a
CLOSED EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT LABOR DAY
other bit, a single.
footbaU
team'that
1
could
help
25.5
yard
average.
M. Miller was credited with
the win. He fanned 13. Browning and lhat I could play with. U I
can play, I'D be happy.
was charged with the loss.
"I just didn't want to try 10
Tonight, the Gallipolis
inake
it with a club which had
Senators wUI battle the New
THE ONLY MAKER OF
an
all-pro
back
or
some
star
like
Haven Reds at li p.m. In the
POLYGLAS • TIRES
second C!!'llest, the Gallipolis lhat," he added.
Willis, a 23-year-old bact:
Athleties will batUe the Pl.
Pleasant Mason . Insurance from Boston College, was the
team at 7: IS. In the nightcap, fourtiH-ound draft choice of the
the Gallipolis Padres will battle Bengals. He was All'East and
AU-New Englahd · d1iflng his
BIChiell..P,.-ter at 8:30 pin.
three varsity years at Boston
College.
lnlet"n:~~!~~gue
His pass C!ltching and running
By United Press International out of the blickfield were what
&amp;
w L Pet. GB caught the scouts' eyes before
Syracuse
51 33 .607
,;,.. drafted Willis.
J'ldewaler.
52 38 .578 2
·~r
NYLON CORD
· '"'''"""
t,_.' Pl.
.........
Charleston · o48 36 .571 3
lrv Mallory from Virginia
__..,
Rib Hi-Miler
:':1!
\'.
15
THIJR., FRI. &amp; SAT.
Roches!.,4 . 37 .565 •'h Union arrived in the Benga1s
IIU. IIIill
I
.....ld ''"'
· ~
JULY 15-16-17 ONLY
Richmond
44 . 4.t .5oo 9
rookie
Tuesda the last
I
Louisville
38 48 .«! 1• .
camp
y,
'
Tofedo
:n s.l .372 20 rookie to sign with the team.
WiMipeg
31 s.l .365 20'h The veterans . will arrive
Tuesday's Resuns
F 'da
r ,
Ri&lt;!lmond 11 louisvi!le 3 (7 in- · · n Y·
n•ngs, rain)
·
Syracuse 3 Winnipeg 2 (lsi, ·7
lilningsl
·
Insulin was J lrst admlnis" You'll Like Our Service"
~-7
1
·5
31
...:.
•
..,
•
Syracuse
6
Winnipeg
S
!2nd,
tered
to human patients in
' 992-2101 '
~•' .a.a 0 : p.trt. ,_
Ma
W
7I I
)
. '
700E.
MAIN
POMEROY
773-5513 7a.trt. "'' p.trt. Friday &amp; S.iunt.y son, •
nn ngs
. January, 1922; according to
Rochester
&lt;Pfld rain) Encyclopaedia Britannica.
!Onlyatgames
sdledu!edl
• - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,Toledo
.. .

~isir!"

.

r

f.

•

····-··············································~······

. . $2295

-

"Isn't it wonderful abaul Mr. Agnew's good-will trtissioit?
I ml!an1 they were able to lind TfH trieiitlly nations 1te

do ,now?

ho.~liiE' \o'f'rflic·t . ht•y havr. ·alrcady J)fonnUnccd on lhe w·1r.

· _· . ?f the clock today and put the long-

the Puerto Rican League
championship this past winter.
" I could've played with
several clubs this ·winter but I
picked San,turce because Frank
was the . niana.ger," said
Jackson, who got into. Tuesday
night's AD-star game as a
substibite when Tony Oliva had
to pull out with a pulled halostring .mwicle.

a, HuffJ Yanhan

ZN.T.

?
Pall!l
You, South, hold:
6 AK5 ¥ A1..5 t kt4 .KQJ

have j1111t 11 painb . bat doe7 ore
.... klnp.
maotly ••• TOQAY'S QUESTION
Your partner continues to
lhrH no-~p. What do you·

.

turned

had the biggest crowd arOWid
him. Everybody wanted to aSk
him about his titanic third inning pinch homer lhat hit an
electric generator on the right
field roof and Frank Howard
said would have gone 600. feet
for sure if it hadn't.
But Jackson preferred talking
about Robinson, for whom he
played with Santurcewhich won

MOWERS

South

14&gt;

Pus
.....

DETROIT (UPI) _ Home nm muscle

back the hands

DETROIT (UPI) -Reggie
Jackson said tbey picked the
right llian,
He meant Frank Robinson,
who was voted MVP in lbe
Anierican League's 6-4 'rictory
over ·the National League in
Tuesday night's AU-star gaine.
In the clubhouse after the
game, it ·looked as if Jackson
:bad engineered the American
Leaguers' conquest because be

ON ~RIDING

bidding has been:
North • East

KiJJebrew
B-ia
GJIDS
.
..
.""e

~

GOOD/YEA•

· (NEWSPAPEl ENTEit_piiSE ASSN.)

Th~

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•.

.

'

".

Still More .Life
In Old · · Machine

.t

.

.

HeIen-H-· eI·p u
. -S·I

All Coaches' Talk?

BRUCE BIOSSAJ:J •

.

.

. Many of these men are quite dovish on the war. It will
be interestinl! to ·see whether their Senate counterparts
will. exerciS&lt;! similar restraint in judgmenl- or whether .
.,, . they will tr_v t" uso• the P cnt agQ n l~apcrs as proof fur the

·:t·

.·''PLANT'':

,..._

,,

Lightner
Doubles
in Ploy

"''I

weet;

'

l4w

.

.

poc.-tbeybadarrlftdinlhia~trybJbua! ·.
Six years. Wow! And they llid It -.Jdn't
UNDER 'ftll BRIDGE _
"*·Even our best man toiiSied 111 wltb: ''To
· NEW YORK ~ As of July 16, my husband the haWY brille and grOom -giVe It a weet!" .
~ and I will baWl been llllll'ried six yean, and. I.can And Edgar Inscribed my lfedding rille: Tel Jolll,
'barcJiy 'believe It - DIBinly bec8UBI! I haw oot 111)' lirSt wife. Of COia'8e some tbialll haW
·
older ·.,._ ·
It · ...c
.jewety, the
. ~ llii,J
..... :years!
seems 1U1ever. cbahged, All the little gifts, the
· ,__,
recel"''. Happily fore11er.
ClQidy,tbe flowers .-bolr Edgar"'""'
•-..
· 'lbolle daperate single days seem SQ far them. And aU the ruimlng 8l'IIUIIIl whesnre ~
a'\Yiiy. Yes, Dy.sPERATE•.BylbetbDe I JOel my flist,_ married. Boy, did be take r:ne 011!. Arzy
llisband, I )VIIS tbe last girl In my set .to•get llrine1111 restaurant cl. my ch_oice. The sky was .
married.lhadlurned!IQ'ricloua that when twent the limit. ColumnA-C()Iumn B, he didn't care'
to a wedding and I thew rice, 1 aimed for the
I.astnigbllsaid to !lim: "~ar,I'm bored.
bride's eyes. 1 tried everything ill the Wli"Jd to I want to go rut tonight.- go danc:ing, rGIII8ll'impl'ess the endless Series 'of dates tbat were ·clng."
. .
. I
.
'
1
''Fine·
,
"
be
S8l
'
d,
''Go
."_
,.
pushed"tbrough my parents' home. I'd throw
.
away all the "Playboy" and '"'~"ian"
When we were first marl'led be ·Nm!l'
,........,....
,;,....i"'"""
.· . about an·""'"d. Lut . week · i.e ·
magazines and Ieaw the Bible caaual,ly open on ~........--u
the toffee table with ·~e" marked . on the started pl(:kinl! on my housekeeplllg and I told
ina,gb\. I'd sitfoc holn planning 1mg in- . ijm I can't do everything - cook, keep bouse,
~live ~v!n&amp;IIOns with future dates. One. perfocm, be a good wife, and tate care of the
openet that alwilya ll!ll!med to work in my case baby- He agreed anti told me to b1re a lady to
wasaatlng lbeyOWJg man: "How did you enjoy comeinmceaweektobehiswife.
. .
I admit I'm not much cl.' a Cook, but I'm ef}WISOII.
And then r met my clar!q busband, Edgar, ficient; 1 often brag that it Olily lakes me 30
and everything clumged. Of course, when we seconds to burn tbe minute rice - But Ed&amp;at
.met, he Wlllil't my tu,wnd or 8(1ybody's, thank hardly noUces the Uttle ~- Take the Uine I
~~ we met and married in four days. dyed my dark troWn hair to a .raliant liloDde and.
~ai never. bad.time to fealize that tbe long said: "Well? Wbat do yon think l'w done to my
blonde halr'iHl1d\led to touch could be folded in a hair?" .... He' said: "You've finaDy washed it?"
Somelililes be's very subUe. Lut week be
baggle and take~~ with him to the cl.flce,
The marriage worted fnm the ·very start, told me there were two wcmen in IU life and
mainly because of acme excellent advice wr they were both me.I.baven't touched food since
.
.
mother gave me. "Joan," she said on the ·mor- lhat day.
·Edgar and i re&amp;!llwd when we were first
nlng I( our wedding (~'l:'sandmlne -not my
WIN AT BRIDGE mother's aild mine), "I Wlllll you to remember marriecfnever to go to bed DIBd (as of now we've
marriage Is a matter ql give and tate. You must been awake for three weeks). In triltb I must
learn to love each other, trust each other, share admit it Is lhe English in Edgar that kee(ll111 "
the tittle and the lig thlnga with each other, and frCIII fighting. Whenever I start to yeD and
above all, get everything in your name." That scream, be doesn't answer, hilt the next ~
advice bas helped me have six glorious yean. there will be a letter to wbcm it may CIJIICel'llln
True, ~ were acme slight adjustments. the Lclldon Times, And oalil)' part, wbeoe\&gt;er he
My llisband Is Englisb I love the way he strides, gets upset over something· silly IUCb as my
like Prince Philip, with his bands behind bJs oversalting his jello oc )lumlng ~small""" when
answer bact:, I jilli wait
bact:. Edgar bas beautifully manicured bands I press his tie, I
111Ul
be'S
in
bed
and
tbfn
I turn on the ellttric
. - - - - - - - - - - , and strong tapering fingers I've been told. I've
'
never seen_them. You !mow bow; neat English. blanket to burn!
14
NORTH
Yes, BED. I believe that's the place to 1rGR
men area. He Is the only man I !mow who
.Q76
out
moat
of a couple's dlfft1ences. lArd "-z,
¥KQ4 1
polishes his sneakers. Also, he wears pinstriped
+K109
pajamas with vests. Of course lhia comes lhat's where Edgar and I have had 1i0iDe of !'W'
4&gt;AKJB
nalurally to biro because ci his bacQrollld. I cld closest and most beartfelt CQI(vera8UCIII, Only
WEST
EAST
put my foot down, however, when he insisted on last night we were in bed and I llid: "Darling,
.1082
.J94
it's six years already and look bolr happy we U'e.
¥963
¥J8752
tweed diapers for the baby.
+Q72
+65 .3
Ed&amp;at can lnice his family, tnie back io the I hope nothing ever ccmes behreeD .....
4&gt;7643
4&gt;Q5
"Nothing wUI, sweetheart," Edg• murDruids (Harry and Sylvia In~!~). I come fnm a
SOUTH (Dl
mured,
"but could yon please speak lwder! I
nice family too, but our roots are not that deep.
.AK53
We can trace our family as far back as 1940. can barely bear you lbrGugb the door."
¥AIO
And SQ our honeymoon ldyU CCIIIIinues. Nut
+AJ84
Once,in ~ toimpless 111m, I tried to trace us
4&gt;1092
when we leaVe foc the shore and Edgar Is
back even further, but the BrciiiX Zoo refused to
North-South vulnerable
playfully
burying me in the sand -face down release the re&lt;:Otda. On second thought, who •
Wesl North Easl Soulh WANTS to trace back their family? Lord knOWB I'll be counting my blessings ....
1N.T.

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
t:

Pentagon ·Papers:
History in Rough

'

. ' . . '. .

..

BY JoAN 1UVE11S
rr'SBIVER8'WATER

Jet transports envisioned .foi the 197~ decade wiU be
faster, quieter and more comfortable than today's air)inel's. They'll be lighter, cheaper to build and operate
'and By faster and farther with bigger payloads on less
. fuel 1\nd. they'll, emit fewer pollutants.
. "These are some of the qualities we plan to design into
the future .transport, based on current and projected
.. advances iii the.art," says Ken Carline, manager of Gen'
era! Dynamics Corporation.'s .advanced transport ~b­
nology program in Fort Worth, funded by a $1~m•!li!l"
s l!!ltract· from National Aeronautics and Space Admuustratlon.
.
·
.,
· Tomorrow's transport will probably cruise ·at 660 miles ,. ···
· an hour, just .under ~ speed of sound at .40,000 f~t.
.That's about 100 miles. an hour faster than the crwse
speecl of today's 1on~-range jets. It woUld reduce the
time for a transatlantic ftight from seven to six hours.
. The !ley to tl)is aclvarice is a new "supercritical" wing
~sign: I!!Stead of being curved on top and Bat on bottom
like today's airfoil, the supereritical wing will be relatively Bat on top aild curved on bottom.
Wings, tail surfaces aild possibly the. fuselage of the
advanced transport wiU be made of graphite epoxy composite, a material that is much lighter than aluminum,
yet as strong.
·
.
. By using eomposites, says Carline, "we can 'mold'
large sections of the ~raft in much the same way that
you would make a plastic boat. Parts woUld be made
from the outside shell inwards, rather than the present
way of riveting a skin on the outside of a skeleton."
This construction method woUld reduce the airplane's
weight by as much as 20 pet cent .and cut costs.
, Composite wings, combined with advanced ftigbt-control systems, could make air travel much smoother for ·
the passenger of the 1980 ~ra. sensors in the ft!gbt~ontrol
.-----..,.----------------------1
system would detect turbUlence and .automatically com- 1
mand the .wings to compensate by bending-rolling with 1
I
the punch. so to speak.
·
- I~- c
1\fanufacturers are also making headway in developing . 1
·
engines that will give off less .pollutants.
1
·
11
_ It all sounds great. You can still&amp;:· however, on 1 .
By Helen Bottel
1
leaving home at least an bour before · t time to strug- 1
1
gle through ground traffic on the way to the Airport.
'TIS FOU.Y TO BE WlSE ?
Dear·Helen:
One 1hing the women's liberation movemertt has caused lhat isn'tmentioned very much - is "awakening without hope for
There _was never any conspiracy to deceive the public
fulfillment," which can be worse than sleep.
about Vietnam, says Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, tOJ'mer · ~ '"'" Foi" the.fitst time in their lives, many women are realizing
chairman of the joint chiefs of sta1f, former ambassador
they aredownilraded, ''used," almost enslaved by their roles, but
to South Vietnam and military adviser to President KenWbatcantbeydoaboutit? If they rebel, family wars start. If they
nedy and Johnson.
Although 11 ublication of the " Pentagon papers" gives
div«ce their male chauvinists, they aren't equipped for ''single"
the impresSlon that the government was caught doing
struggle and they get into wocse troubles, besides being lonely:
things nobod7 ever !mew about, this was "nothing but the
Today, they're aware and resentful, therefore witcby.
Yesterday they were submissive and accepting so perhaps, on the
language gomg on in the huddle between the players.
Wbllt was important was the play, the game, the outcome.
whole, treated better than are modern wives who challenge their
''Here we're seeing nothin~ but what the coaches talked
lllsbands and often got the worst of it.
about .in the dressing room, ' says Taylor.
DOUBTFUL
His image is an appropriate one. The whole situation
Will true equality ever come? wbatever view of it one takes, bas about it an odor noi
Dear Doubtful:
unlike that of a locker room that has not been aired out
I think it will - in maybe two generations. Almost every
for a long time.
majoc social change takes at least lhat long, for the first
generation starts areas of CIJ!ltroversy and the secood, children of
the "old guard," are only half c&lt;Jllvinced. Not until the third batch
Pass 6 N.T. Pass Paso
DIB!ures will total equality be considered the n!li'IO.
Pass
Opening lead_. 3
.... And then, whaddya bel: someone will start a "liberate.
women from the drudgery of business" movement, and there
we'll go again .... - H.
By O~wald &amp; James Jacoby
Dear Helen:
We have t a Ike d some
I've seen a lot of ads lately about learning while you sleep. Do about Lightner slam doubles
you think pecpte·can really assimilate knowledge just because a the last couple of days. Here
tape recorder hands you the message as you snore? _ KARL
is an example of Lightner
.Dear Karl·.
slam play which should go
to show that, at the age of
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
I'll believe this "learn while you sleep" thing when it cures 77, Ted is still one or the
WASHINGTON &lt;NEAl
snoring by subconscious suggestion. Any takers? - H.
great players of the game.
From varied substantial sources it is clear now that
Dear Helen:
The hand is an example of
former Defense Secretary Robert McNamara was inter"A.D."
described
weD
the
l&lt;lrtures of a nervous breakdown the best rubbe~ bridge techested in supplying the raw materials of history- not any
and the inability of friends and family to understand.
nique.
kind of definitive, complete history-when he commisTed won the club lead in
sioned the massive study of the Vietnam war generally
I was the victim of two such breakdowns. My husband of 23 dummy. He led a diamond
called...the Pentagon PaperS'.
years thougbtl cwld help myself. He became disgusted and took to the ace to see if there
It was appreciated at the time of commissioning the
up with another woman. Then he started drinking, and eventually might he a singleton queen
work, in 1967, that the array of available documents,
around. There wasn't, so he
drankhimselftodeath.Myguill threwmeintodeeperde!K'fssion, led a second diamond and
however vast, would need to be read in the context of
other materials and to be supplemented extensively by
for bad I been well, my husband might still be with me. I loved finessed dummy's 10. lf he
the diligent researches of the historians.
·
lim.
had to lose the diamond fiThough some analysis and evaluation of the collected
Aiways, there was the terrible aloneness, the knowledge that nesse, he wanted to lose it to
papers was indicated fr.om the start, sources say •t was
1was acting "crazy," but the inability to change. Mental illness is East so he could postpone
McNamara's aim to keep the materials as free of bias as
hating life but fearmg· death, h;!ting yourself and fearing hunting for the queen of
possible.
clubs until later. The diaHis widely known decision not to allow the collectors
everyone else. I'm under psychiatric care now and there are mond 10 held and now Ted
and analysts to interview any of the administration prinwas sure of his contract.
momentswhenlhavehope. Prayforme! - MRS. A.R.C.
cipals who wrote some of the documents was rooted in
Dear Helen :
It was time to think about
this purpose. McNamara did not want the materials colI'm a college student, in the State Hospital because of at- the ·30 POints for an overored by the recollections and interpretations of their
tempted suicide. Wiry? Who knows. Depressions are hard to trick. He could afford to
authors.
play dummy's king of dia·
explain rationaUy.
Historians, of course,' will need those recollections. But
monds
to see if the queen
the judgment in 1967 was that it was the historians' job
'l1lere are many truths a psychiatric patient must face, and would dr6p, so he did exto get them, not the Pentagon's.
the toughest for me aren't those the dOctor digs out. The cruelest actly that. The queen did
Men having some familiarity with the undertaking say
"fact" of aU is that those "friends to the end" write you off when drop. Now Ted was up to 12
McNamara, in further pursuit of his desire to keep the
.
·
you go "mental."
tricks in top cards. He could
project unbiased, had nothing to do with any of the peoI'm not violent Helen. I'm just the same except aU the nerve a~ford to t~st the spades
ple involved in it. He did not choose them, and he never
•
' .
w1thout havmg to look for
talked to them.
ends are exposed. Why do they treat me as a parmh? Are they so , the queen of club.s.
II can be said with authority that more than half of the
afrm'd of me ,. - J ·J·
36 persons who worked on the study were military offiDear J.:
Amo•ko's top uperls ••plain llteir
cers. Nearly all of these went back to Vietnam later for
No,
they're
afraid
of
themselves.
They
are
fearful
that
they'll
,..,,••.,..,.•inning 1e&lt;hniqueo in •
second or third tours of duty, and some were killed
say the wrong uung and perha(lS head you toward another new 128-page book on J A C 0 I Y
there. Other analysts were U.S. Foreign Service officers.
Professional historians were not used. They could not be
dep:ession. Few people know how to face mental illness and so MODERN. For J'OIIr ' 0 "' senl $1
obtained on short notice, and it was felt they lacked
friends desert you when you need them IJ'ost, excusing them- wilh ,..r nome, •ddre" and zip
eotlr ta : "Win crt Bridge/ ' (c/o tltis
needed grounding in Vietnam affairs.
·
selves
with
"I
might
only
make
berworse."
l'msorry.H.
.-spaperl, P.O. "'' 419, Radio en,
With possibly a few exceptions, the Pentagon's compilers and analysts did not believe they were assembling
materials of stunning originality. Most did not imagine
that; if .disclosed. the papers would be represented as the
They11 Do It Every Time Ill
revelation of great new truths.
One source says some analysts think they got as much
HEY, ~E.. ·"'IU'LLAAVE
- 1ruitfut· i nformation about the war from reading the
WIFE ROSIE
Ttl ENW&lt;GE AND HIR!' A
newspapers of the time·as from plowing through the pile RAN AND
THEIR e.e.Ts:N SO
FeN fW&lt;DS-- ·
of documents.
WELL IT JOST HAP TO
(Some reporters who have canvassed 'the newspapers
PROSPER· ··
and news-magazines of the covered period say that most
of the stuff in the Pentagon study was indeed in print at
the time-though evidently little attended to. 1
McNamara's goal of assembling history's raw materials
untainted by any bias was, of course, not realized. The
analysts, aside from the fact they ranged from high competence to gross incompett&gt;nce, were human beings with
a full set o( prejudices.
· Everybody involved knew it, knew the analysis would
c~:--~+- be inescapably flawed. -Where bias in the final wr~ting
stirred protest from analysts of differing views, the off·
THEY~IRE
· setting judgments were inserted in the name of balance. ~
,O,OOITIONI&gt;.L.
None bf the 40-oild volumes went without cross,check- HEI..P FOR THE ·
ing scrutiny.
·
$WIH6 S HIFT
The sprawling newspap,er accounts of the study are
AND I'CJN· ARE
THINGS ' GOING
complete, for the moment. But before lon g the Senate
will be probing into our war involvement. and .the role
to~'~?
the Pentagon Papers play .in explaining it.
The one-time presidential advisers and other specialists who will .be testifying on the papers seem certain. on
the basis of their public or private utterances so fa~, to
mess the -limitations o!'the huge-study-ar'revlr.!lell 'his-

. tory."

'

.,. '" .,. ' . ' .
, Comtdiepe Joaa JUYen t&lt;un•eats oa 11er wbilt you .Jillghtfilll - h«&lt;e thief, UBildeia,
. IUrlfqe 111 a etlaiml for.Jilek O'Brtl!l, w11o 11 clel1tist, Word .... Onl!. frleiid of mine traced
·
· heril back tocll8coves' that her famll1 bad bemll!l
011 vae.tha.

America's abandonment of, the supersonic transP\)!1
may ot may not have been wise. But any idea Uiat this
country's progress in aircraft technology has now stopped,
that we've gone ;1s far as we can g9, coUldn't be more

.

'

'

JVoice :~ong Broadway •l

'.

wrong.

.

'·

.

'

Carbon Monoxide
Con Harm Brain
Dr. Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb-Is it possible for a person to get epllepsy from a bad case of
carbon monoxide poisoning?
There were never any signs
of epilepsy until after the
poisoning.
Dear Reader,;_In a "Word,
yes~ One might argue about
the meaning of the word epilepsy but to the extent that
it means convulsive episodes
like those seen in epilepsy;
it is true.
Any form of brain damage
can cause recurrent convulsive episodes. Carbon monoxide can cause brain dam· te rfenng
· WI
· ·th adeage bY m
quate delivery of oxygen to
the brain. Carbon monoxide
combines with the iron pig, ment, hemoglobin, in the red
blood cells, and makes it impossible for the cells to carry
oxygen.
Th b · · the
·
e ram IS
organ m
the body most .easily damaged by lack · of oxygen. If
\he brain is damaged a parson's threshold to have convulsions may be lowered and
then the convulsions start occurring. There may be, and
usually are other man1'fes
'
tations of brain
damage. InSlaticM,

.

.

.

1t~ .most severe for!D the m-

div1dual may be mcapable
of normal thought process.
There are other ways the
brain can be. dama11ed to
cause convuls•ve ~plsod_es.
Loss of oxygen, durmg h•gh
altitude IDghts, Is one example: A more co!"mon cauae
IS ma~uate crrculatlon to
the bram. A person m_ay
have a sudden Irregularity
of the heart or it may stop
beating_. If some means is
not qmc;kly devised to restore . the heart's pumping
capacity the brain may be
damaged. . ,
We see this m people with
:'heart _attacks." The pumpmg action of. ~- heart m~st
be restored Within four mmutes to prevent brain damage. External artificial heart
massage is often life saving
in such situations. By compressing the chest in a rhythmic manner (pressing down

on the stem~l-~reast bone)
the heart is ·anmciahy ·rom~·
pressed and· then re!Ue5,
This may force enough biood
to the brain and other vital ·
orgBDil to prevent serious
damage. If the equipment is
immediately available the
normal pumping action of ·
the heart may be restored by
electrical means.
The real problem is the
ever-present possibility that
the replacement of the circulatior will be too late and the
brai:: may be permanently
dar 1&lt;1ged. The /atient may
live but the en result may
'still be a major tragedy.
These events provide some
very dramatic moments, not
only as a race against death,
but a race to 8ave a life
worth living, The ·Same is
true of loss of oxygen or
poisoning that prevents de·
livery of oxygen to the brain.
Many people think all they
have to fear from heart attacks or strokes is death.
There is always that other
possibility, permanent incapacity and brain damage.
'
We say that a person who
is laying low is "playing .,.,._
sum" because the Virs\iili.
opossum, when e aug b t
feigns death.
'

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

BERRY'S -WORLD

Did Ted take a chance
with his slam ·when he
played the third diamond?
Suppose the queen didn't
drop? In that ease, Ted
woUld have taken the club
finesse so as to be sure that
West could not gain the lead
and m a k e his slam with
three · tricks in each of the
four suits.
·

~-'·-···

...•

1•
3.f•

Pass

What do you do now?
A-Bid three lia....ts You

ltllm .,"..:

'"' ·~~

•

·

could

.

l

'

\.

suffering Amencan League on top !ll the baseball

Wcrid,
,
.
With a .6-4 triilrnph over the National League
Tuesday mgbt added to the Baltimore Orioles' world
cbampionship last fall, the AL hils ended the
Nl!tional League's eight-year rUle in the diamond's
"glamor game" - and; just
in the "good old

as

days,"homenmpowerdidit.
"As far as I'm concerned, I've got 28 most
val
. ua,b
. le players on this squad," declar
. ed deligb
. ted
wmmng manager Earl Weaver after Tuesday's

triumph.

catcher Bench. ~·Reggie an4 I
both just stood there at h001e
plate and watched it for a wbile
before be started to nm. We
mustbave looked silly."
The NL was to look sillier
because that blast birned
whole tide. Moments later in the
same inning Rod Carew walked
and Frank Robinson lined his
two-run homer to right aild the
AL was out front, 4-3.
Killebrew's blast off reliever
Ferguson Jenkins in the sixth

Frank Robi(ISon of .Weaver's
Oriole!l, wbose two-run homer
put the AL .ooad to stay, was
olfieially voted the "MVP" of
thegame.Buttherewaslittleto
choose between him and the
other two men who hit two-run
homers for the AL-Reggie
Jackson
and
Harmon

u.;

KilletJrew.
As a matter of fact, the
American Leaguers themselves
did most of their post,.game
cheering about Jackson's

~

·

Q

&amp;.&amp;.~•

DETROIT (UPI) - Nobody
who wi,~ Tuesday night's
heme run - sbidded AU-star
game would argue with those
pitchers who claim Tiger
stadium is 8 hitters' ball park.
Except possibly Vida Blue,
who was stung for two of the
record-tieing six roundtrippers
in the three innings he pitched
and still managed to emerge as
the winner for the victorious
American League.

"Every ball park is a hitters'
ball park," said the 21-year-old
Oakland A's southpaw.
Bluefeltlhathe "threw good"
against the power-hitting
National Leaguers, but admilled that the satisfaction that
comes with pitching a complete
game and walking off the field
with the victory was not there.
Cincinnati's Sparky Anderson, who managed the
losers, said he thought Blue

0

"did an exceUent)'ob" and lhat
he showed " terrific poise" for a
young man participating in his
fitst All-star game.
Howevet, Andersonadded, "I
don't think I was seeing Vida
Blue at his best. Or Dock Ellis
( lbt! National Leaguer starter)
either, flir that matter. Both of
them are so young and must
have been under considerable
pressure."
Hank Aaron, the Atlanta

Sparky Reali
~nearlywentoutoftheball ;:.:;:ug::
... ~Y Depressed
bcmer- a tremendous blast afterKalinebadsingledmadeit

"You can go your whole life
and never see five balls hit that
bard," declared slugger Frank
Howard.
"He reaDy crushed it," added
6-foot-7 Howard, who has
crushed a few himself and did
indeed bit one out of Tiger
Stadium once upon a time.
Despite tbe MVP award to
Robinson, it was Jackson's
blast that tomed the game
around.
Until then it was all NL, jlist
as it had been since 1962. The
"seni,.- circuit" team bad teed
off ... the fasthaiis of young
Vida Blue fg- two hc.ners, a
two-run blast by Johnny Bench
in tbe aec011d inning and a
bam empty homer by Hank
Aaron in the third, and NL
starter Dock . Ellis was
Pl'l!!ec1in8. a ~ lead going into

Clemente hit a last,.gasp boDler
for the NL in the eighth to cut
the margin to 6-4.
The six bmners tied the All.star record, which was set in
thesameparkinl961andtiedin
·Cleveland in 1954.
"I knew we were going to see
some long balls bit," said IosiJig
manager Sparky Anderson,
"but this was the greatest
exhibition 1 ever saw in one
game."
There was speculation on bow
much part the .wind, which
gusted from 17 to 31 mph during
the game. blowing straight
toward right field, played in the
homer barrage. Four of the
homers were· by righthanded
batters to right field.
Aclually, the AL had good
pitching,too. Blue,JimPahner,
Mike Cuellar, and Mickey

DETROIT (UPI) - Sparky
Anderson has been having
problems with arms and legs
for almost a year.
Not his own, mind you, but
those lhat belong to other
people.
. It was a case of too much
arms and legs - all of them
belonging to the Baltimore
Orioles- in last season's world
series.
Then an achilles tendon this one belonging to Bobby

Tolan, who ruptured bJs playing
haskelhall in the ofl-6eaSOII and
then reinjured it trying to come
hack. That injury has no doubt
contributed to the current fiftyplace showing of the team
Anderson manages, the Cincinnati Reds, along with other
miseries Uke Wayne Simpson's
sore shoulder.
Then came Tuesday night's
AU-star game in Tiger Stadiwn,
in which Anderson's National
League team received a 6-4

Chesh 1·.e Gets
At Least sz·lCe
nve '" '
*..,...
Of rD 0 ny crown
•

.

U.,lllltA(llle~- ',
, . I..Oucfl'beld1he·NI;fo jUSt
Luis Aparicio ~ll!r'fed the AL hits. The AL made seven off · ·
c.meback with a single and Ellis aod three other pitchers.
~ Weaver sent Jackson - The lOllS was a tough one for

1•

.

"'n

_-"'
·' •

irooicallyonthesquadoolyasa Anderson.Everythinghasbeen
substitute for injured Tony downhill for the Reds' pilot
Oliva- up to pinch-bitfor Blue. since his ''Big Red Machine"
'Jackson slammed a high won the National League
slider by Ellis so far to right pennant last year. First, the
field that it would have gone Orioles crushed them in the
C:OiopJ:tely out of the stadium if "'aeries, then the Reds staggered
a .ligbt tower this year, and now this.
it had not S........
K u'"'
atop the -.foot stands.
"Now I have lost the world
"I wish it hadn't hit lhat series and I have lost the AllW..,," sighed AI Kaline of Star game," said Anderson. "I
Delroil "lwouldliketoseehow reaDy am beginning to feel
far it would hive gone."
depressed."
''That was some shot," said

·

The Cheshire Redlegs cliocbed at least a share of the 1971
Gallia-Meigs Pony League
baseball chanipionship Tuesday
night by posting a 1~ victory
over Bidwell at BidweU.
The Redlegs can win their
first undisputed G-M flag in the
loop's 10-year history by
beating Southwestern at
Cheshire Ftiday evening.
Cheshire is now 11).1 in league
play. BidweU dropped to 4-5 on
the year.
Cheshire had 13 runs on 13
hits. The winners made three
errors. BidweU coUected five
runs on seven hits, and committed four errors.
Johnny Baird was credited
Morrison a double, and K.
Buckley a single. T. Withers
bad a single foc the losers. J.
Withers had a triple, Dunlap a with the loss. He allowed five
single and Hannon a single.
hils, and fanned I} Braves. M.
In the second COiltest, the Lavender hiid a single and
Middleport Braves sc«red twice double for the winners. M.
in the first inning, theo went on Davenport had a single and
to eliminate the Gallipolis White double, and T. Thomas had a
double.
.
Sox, 3-41.
In the night,cap, Pl. Pleasant
S. Bachner was credited with
the win. He allowed only one bit, Peoples Bank broke a 1-1 tie in
a sixth inning double by T- the sixth inning with three big
Johnson. Bachner fanned 12 runs to oust the Pomeroy
Pirates, 4-1.
Gallians. ·
Foc the winners, JeweU had a
Brent Johnson was charged

Chester~ Braves,

Peoples Bank Win
Olester, Middlepllrt Braves
and Pt. Pleasant Peoples Bank
polled fitst round wins in the
13th an••al Kyger Creek Little
~ baseball tournament

'•'

.•:•.· '•'•' .,.,'

with the win. He fanned eight,
walked four and hit two. Keith
Saunders was charged with the
loss. He fanned · three and
walked seven.
The Redlegs broke a 3-3 tie in
the fourth with four big runs,
and added three more in the
fifth aod plated single runs in
the sixth and seventh rungs.
For the winenrs, MarshaU
French, Baird, 0 . Cremeans,
Dave Wise and Greg McCarty
each had two hits. For the
losers, Sterling Logan, Carl
Dewitt and Jeff Hash eacb had
two hits.

'

.. .

...

'·

iht!IIIO!t.important thing in the
1l1ll'itl H"" to control myself.
He lllld me, 'Reggie, go out
thne and ~I your ability do it
l'ven~verseenhimltse-~ JIOIL Don'l throw your bat;
of any situation. Look, l'ofiiOia "''llllrew
.
your helmet·, that's
hero WOI"Shipper. I'm nolsa}'ilr« _,- going to help you. [
he's the greatest lbing goillg, listened 11&gt; him. rt has made all
and I'm .not bllllring smrh. Tel llie differeOO! in the world."
me though, be's a .,.lling. Rolli.nsooconnected for one of
winning atlibide. He~~ me m: homers that were hit in
. ~...::!':o::~r
Ellisctimaxed afour-run rally

· ·

B

u:;: h;:,. ~u;,;

' I

B~:;e:or ~

~- ,...,....,

in lhe third inning and put the
Alnerian League ahead for
kerps.
Oddl)·, Jackson was playing
'lrilb 8 pulled hamstring muscle

third inning in his lirs1 eiira in his leg al.s&amp;. Before the game
ba hit · 20 AU.star
"" lllld Earl Weaver, the AL

~rances,~d

"bloom" ! Earn at our
current annual rate of

4%% or 5%
on 6-monlh savings
ce rtificate s .

Meigs Co. Branch

~

n:;

he

was ·~ ma~bewouldn'tbeableto

Meigs County Branch of
The Alhens County Sa vings
&amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Member Federal H o~e Loan
Bank.
'' '
Member Federal Savings a1
Loan Insurance Corp. All
accounts in su red up td '

impressed" with Blue's ~ nm uno..u.
.
SlO.OOO.()IJ.
,ball, which is his primary pildL IllUmed 001 he never had to. .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _•
But that didn't ·stop Aanlm
from lifting one of these fast
halls into the right field seats.

All star

Box Score
· National

AB R H 8 1

Mayscf
2 e o o
clubbing from the American Clemente
rt
2 1 I i
League.
Millan 2b
0 ~ 0 0
2 I I I
Two of Anderson's starters - Aaron rf
May lb
1 ~ 0 0
Henry Aaron of AUanta and Tor
re Jb
3 ~ 0 0
Willie McCovey of San Fran- Santo3b
I 0 0 0
1 l II 0
cjsco- had to come out after Stargell 11
Brock ph
1 0 0 0
three innings because the McC!lvey
lb
2 0 0 0
manager didn't want to take Marichal p
0 0 0 0
2 0 0 0
any unnecessary chances with Kessinger ss
Bench
c
• I t 2
llieir bad knees and thus hurt Beckert2b
3 0 0 D
their respective team's chances Rose rf
0 0 0 D
Harrelson ss
2 o o a
in the penDant race.
Jenkins
p
e oo o
"I didn't want to take them Colbert ph
I 0 0 0
out but I didn't want to hurt Wilsonp
0 0 0 0
I 0 0 D
them, either. Their teams are Ellis p_.. _ . .
Oa
viscf
I 0 I 0
fighting for a pennant San
Bonds cf
1 c 0 0
11 4 s 4
Francisco comes in to play us Totals
next," Anderson said.
American
abrhlbi
Carew2b
1 I 0 0
"And you've got to rememRojas 2b
I C 0 D
her," be said, "The feUows I Murcer cf
3 0 I D
replaced them with are pretty Cuellar p
0 0 0 D
Buford
ph
1 ~ 0 D
good ball players. Any time you Lolich p
0 0 0 0
put Willie Davis and Roberto Yastrzemski If
3 0 0 0
Clemente out there you're not E Robinson rf
2 I I 2
Kaline rf
l f I 0
hurting."
Cash
lb
2 ~ 0 0
Mays grounded out aild flied Killebrew 1b
l 1 I 2
3 0 I D
out and Aaron . grounded out B Robinson Jb
3 0 0 0
before showing Detroit fans Freehan c
Munson
c
0 c 0 0
why even be thinks be's got a Aparic ioss
3 I I 0
shot at Babe Ruth's 714 figure. Bluep
0 0 0 D
I I I 2
McCovey grounded to second Jackson ph
Palmer
p
'0 0 0 D
and strilck out before being Howard ph
I 0 0 0
removed.
Otiscf
I 0 0 0
1P 6 7 6
Anderson said be switched his Totals
plaDs to pitch Steve Carlton of National
021 000 011)-4
the St. Louis Cardinals and American
004 •002 ODJ&lt;-6
instead used Juan Marichal of DP - National2, A"""ican I.
San Francisco because the 2. LOB - National 2. American
Giants' righthander "gets left- H~s Bendl, Aon111.
F.
Robinson.
handed hitters out the way Jackson ,
Killebrew.
Clemente.
Cuellar (a Ieft.bander) gets
ip he« .....
right-banders hitters out."
Ellis (L)
3·4 4 4 1 2
2 o oo 1 1
"I've lost the world series and Marichal
I 322 00
now I've lost the All-Star Jenkins
WiiSOfl
2'0 0 G I 1
Anderson
531
'd.
"Now
I
,,
game'
Blue (WJ
3 2 3 l ol
Palmer
2 I 00 0 2
really feel depre ed."
Cuellar
2100 1 2
Lolich
2 I I l 0 I
Save - Lol ich. HBP - br
Browns Trade
Blue Slargell.

Willis To Jones To Cards
Get Chance
He 's W.an{ed
st.

.'•'•

'Nobodyhasany idenbatbe
did for me," Jacltsoa said, s.till
talking about noomw,_
''Franll: is a lremendous man.

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MIDDLEPORT

HIRAM, Ohio (UPI) - The
CAMDEN PARK RESERVED
Cleveland Browns of the
National Football ~.!!ague
SATURDAY-JULY 17th
1\-'ay evening.
Tuesday
trade&lt;i'Homer
Jones,
In the fitst outing, Chester
receiver used mostly last
bombed the Pt. Pleasant
"ANNUAL SUMMER OUTING"
seasm
as
a
kickoff
rebirn'
Steelworkers, !U. The winners
specialist, to the
Louis
wrawed it up with eight big
WILMINGTON, Ohio (UPI) Cardinals for an Wlllisclosed
nm in tbe second inning.
ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT
- Professional football 11ras draft choice.
EiclUger was credited with the
CONSTRUCTION DEPARTMENT
what Fred Willis wanted to Jones, a 6-foot, %15-pounder
win. Dunlap was charged with
&amp;
play.
'
frc.n
Pittsburg,
Te&gt;:.,
f~ to
the loBs. For the winners,
K. V. CQI\IIPUTING
"To be a professional foolhall reporl to the veterans' day in
TrusseD had two~ as did
Of
player is something I've always Cleveland two months ago.
Smith. Barton, bad a single,
·UNION
CARBIDE
TECH. CENTER
wanted all my ~e, " said Willis, Hisbesteffoctlastseason was
single,
badlosers,
a double
and an oulsU.nding rookie for the a 94-yard kickoff return in the
single. Fisher
For the
'Sisson
opening game against the New
OPEN TO PUIUC ARER 5 P.M.
was the big gun with a single, Cincinnati Bengals.
"I
didn't
care
which
team
1
Yock
Jets.
He
caught
10
passes
double and sixth inning home
U.S. 60 WEST- HUNTINGTON
run. Mitch bad the Pirates ooly played for," he said. "AU I for 141 yardS and finished
wanted
to
do
was
go
with
a
pro
·
seventhintheconferencewith
a
CLOSED EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT LABOR DAY
other bit, a single.
footbaU
team'that
1
could
help
25.5
yard
average.
M. Miller was credited with
the win. He fanned 13. Browning and lhat I could play with. U I
can play, I'D be happy.
was charged with the loss.
"I just didn't want to try 10
Tonight, the Gallipolis
inake
it with a club which had
Senators wUI battle the New
THE ONLY MAKER OF
an
all-pro
back
or
some
star
like
Haven Reds at li p.m. In the
POLYGLAS • TIRES
second C!!'llest, the Gallipolis lhat," he added.
Willis, a 23-year-old bact:
Athleties will batUe the Pl.
Pleasant Mason . Insurance from Boston College, was the
team at 7: IS. In the nightcap, fourtiH-ound draft choice of the
the Gallipolis Padres will battle Bengals. He was All'East and
AU-New Englahd · d1iflng his
BIChiell..P,.-ter at 8:30 pin.
three varsity years at Boston
College.
lnlet"n:~~!~~gue
His pass C!ltching and running
By United Press International out of the blickfield were what
&amp;
w L Pet. GB caught the scouts' eyes before
Syracuse
51 33 .607
,;,.. drafted Willis.
J'ldewaler.
52 38 .578 2
·~r
NYLON CORD
· '"'''"""
t,_.' Pl.
.........
Charleston · o48 36 .571 3
lrv Mallory from Virginia
__..,
Rib Hi-Miler
:':1!
\'.
15
THIJR., FRI. &amp; SAT.
Roches!.,4 . 37 .565 •'h Union arrived in the Benga1s
IIU. IIIill
I
.....ld ''"'
· ~
JULY 15-16-17 ONLY
Richmond
44 . 4.t .5oo 9
rookie
Tuesda the last
I
Louisville
38 48 .«! 1• .
camp
y,
'
Tofedo
:n s.l .372 20 rookie to sign with the team.
WiMipeg
31 s.l .365 20'h The veterans . will arrive
Tuesday's Resuns
F 'da
r ,
Ri&lt;!lmond 11 louisvi!le 3 (7 in- · · n Y·
n•ngs, rain)
·
Syracuse 3 Winnipeg 2 (lsi, ·7
lilningsl
·
Insulin was J lrst admlnis" You'll Like Our Service"
~-7
1
·5
31
...:.
•
..,
•
Syracuse
6
Winnipeg
S
!2nd,
tered
to human patients in
' 992-2101 '
~•' .a.a 0 : p.trt. ,_
Ma
W
7I I
)
. '
700E.
MAIN
POMEROY
773-5513 7a.trt. "'' p.trt. Friday &amp; S.iunt.y son, •
nn ngs
. January, 1922; according to
Rochester
&lt;Pfld rain) Encyclopaedia Britannica.
!Onlyatgames
sdledu!edl
• - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,Toledo
.. .

~isir!"

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"Isn't it wonderful abaul Mr. Agnew's good-will trtissioit?
I ml!an1 they were able to lind TfH trieiitlly nations 1te

do ,now?

ho.~liiE' \o'f'rflic·t . ht•y havr. ·alrcady J)fonnUnccd on lhe w·1r.

· _· . ?f the clock today and put the long-

the Puerto Rican League
championship this past winter.
" I could've played with
several clubs this ·winter but I
picked San,turce because Frank
was the . niana.ger," said
Jackson, who got into. Tuesday
night's AD-star game as a
substibite when Tony Oliva had
to pull out with a pulled halostring .mwicle.

a, HuffJ Yanhan

ZN.T.

?
Pall!l
You, South, hold:
6 AK5 ¥ A1..5 t kt4 .KQJ

have j1111t 11 painb . bat doe7 ore
.... klnp.
maotly ••• TOQAY'S QUESTION
Your partner continues to
lhrH no-~p. What do you·

.

turned

had the biggest crowd arOWid
him. Everybody wanted to aSk
him about his titanic third inning pinch homer lhat hit an
electric generator on the right
field roof and Frank Howard
said would have gone 600. feet
for sure if it hadn't.
But Jackson preferred talking
about Robinson, for whom he
played with Santurcewhich won

MOWERS

South

14&gt;

Pus
.....

DETROIT (UPI) _ Home nm muscle

back the hands

DETROIT (UPI) -Reggie
Jackson said tbey picked the
right llian,
He meant Frank Robinson,
who was voted MVP in lbe
Anierican League's 6-4 'rictory
over ·the National League in
Tuesday night's AU-star gaine.
In the clubhouse after the
game, it ·looked as if Jackson
:bad engineered the American
Leaguers' conquest because be

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North • East

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el
;i:t:~~~:y~:;lls~:;:l
~~~~"'"'Massillon's .·Imm
American ·1~_,_ Co~g,- . But. • •.
·~···
Ohi.o·,
.Leader'

•

t- Tbt o.llySentinei,Mlddleport-Pomeroy,O., July 14, 1m ·

Today'll Sports Parade

DETROIT (UPI) -Brooks in 196$. " In a 162-game
Roblnsltn squeered the haU schedule, I mean if we played
bud. Alittle extra bud. He had them that many games, they'd
good reason.
come out on top. For one game
11IIs was the tricky wind- ihough, I don't think they're
blown pop-up Johnny Bench that much better."
llltejl in front of third base for This is a bit of semantics on
the final out.
Frank Robinson's part because
Brooka Robinson, the best he knowil the American League
tblrd baseman in. the game, is C&lt;IIDing but it hasn't caught
~even say in all basehaU up to the National yet. Not
history, has missed a couple of quite.
easy ones like that in his tiine Brooks Robinson knows it,
but be was going to iilake sure !Do.
of this (/lie. Very sure. '
With that exceDent recall
On the fourth finger of his left most ballplayers have for past
hand Brooks Robinson wears a contests, Brooks Robinson
· gold diamond ring com- leaned up against a whirlpOol
memorating the world cham- machine in the American
pionship his club, the Baltimore League clubhOuse after it was
Orioles, won rather easily last all over Tuesday night and
year. For . all tllat he was touched on all those All.Star
starting to feel like an in- losses he has been in the past
veterate loser. Playing on eight eight years.
straight losing American ... The 1963 game was played
. League All-Star teams had a lot· in Cleveland and we out hit
to do with it A thing like that 'em ·but got beat,". he
can give a m8n an inferiority remembered. "Tbe year after ·
complex even if he does wear a that I got two or three hils and
world championship ring.
they told me I would've been the
"It wasn't hwniliating so MVP but CaUison hit a threemuch," Robinson .explained run homer off Radatz in the
after grabbing Bench's pop-up ninth and we lost again."
Tuerlday night for the putout Brooks Robinson was
which nailed down a 6-t victory
over the National League. "It
·

thinkingoftheotheryears.now.
" ... Willie Mays hit a homer
off Milt Pappas in the first inning in '65 and they got out in
front quiet. We tied it up and it
could've gone either way but we
lost, 6-S. A year later the game
was in St. Low.. Tbe writers
t:Did me I would've IKien MVP
again, but they scored off Pete
Richert in extra innings to win
again."
Robinson's. memory was in
fine shape.
"I remember the glime in '67
very well," he said. "It was in
Anaheimandlhitahomertotie
the score in the sixth but Perez
hit one in the 15th for them and
that was it. The one in 1968.
could've gone either way. We
lost it tD Houston, 1~. 'and they
just killed us in '69. That was in
Washington. We had 'em 4-1 in
the ninth last year; I had a
triple and asingle, but they tied
it up with three runs in the ninth
and then they won it in the 12th
... boy, it was a long time between victories for us, wasn't
it?"
No
wonder
Robinson
squeezed Bench's final pop-up
so hard.

17aree..Hitter

·.

. In ~eigs-Gallia UtUe League

.

cooalderation also: ·

action'Mark Sayre gave up only
three hils, struck out three and
walked one as Racine defeated COLUMBUS (UPI) - Young
Green 12 tD 2 at Green. Sayre Craig Immel may have set goH
wa~ ai~ed by f!'ll" doubl~ p~ys ears hack a lew years with
which 18 ~unusual feat in litUe praise for his caddie idler he
league action.
· grabbed the first round lead in
Racine hitters were Sayre the 65th Ohio Amateur Golf
and J. F. Young ... two SIDgl~s Tournament with an even par 71
each,,Steve Hen~Cks and Eric Tuesday on the 6,822-yard
Dunnmg, each ~lth singles. · Sciot:D Country Club Course.
For Green, Gillesp~e s~ted Immel, of Massillon, whO
on the mound an~ was reUeved passed up his practice round
by K. Drummon m the. second. Monday and entered the
They gave up oilly six hils but Tuesday round "cold," gave
walked 10 and hit two. Com-. much of the credit for his
b~ed, they struck out 7· Green performance tD his big toier,
hitters were ~rov':", Evans and Bill Clark, a sophomOre-to-be at
Rut%, each With smgles.
Columbus Watterson High
:~:;;;;:;.:m."%&lt;~:::::::?.:~:~'?.1$$$:~~~~: School this faiL
"He's the best caddie I've
)!ad," .the. 22-year-old
ever
Two Forfeited
Baldwin-Wallace graduate said
of Clark. "He just told me
Two Meigs-Gallia Pony where tD hit the haD and I hit
League gaines were forfeited it."
Tuesday evening, both when the
Immel, slarting on the hack
losers failed to muster nine nine, "yipped from a foot
players. Pomeroy A was away" on the lOth hole for a
declared winner over Pomeroy three-putt bogey five . He
B and Middleport over Racine, finished the hack side, conboth by automatic 7~ scores. sidered the easiest of the two, in
DOe over 36 with another bogey

..

·

. Every place
the veteran
year-old
Robillson
would '34go

he'd have to try answering WhY
the Americans couldn't beat the
Nationals in the All.Star game.
He never was able to supply a . The Redman Inn behind, the Allen hit into a force play and
reaDy accepts ble answer. pitcbiDg and hitting of Mike then Dave Johnson was brOught
POIIIibly because he knew the Spurlock IIJI'I"t Fanners Bank &amp; in tD run for Allen. Bruce Wilson
· led and this set the stage for
Natlcmal Iague generally was Savings 3-2 Tuesday night in the smg
stronger.
35th amual Bit Bend Tour- Mike Spurlock's game winning
"I'd have to say they had the nament.
double scoring Johnson and
.
better players from 1960
Fanners Bank &amp; Savings, Wilson.
through 1968," Brooks Robinson winners of the fled!!U!n Inn 4th The Redmen had 3 runs on 9
said even after his league broke of July Tournament, were hits and committed I error.
their elght-year losing streak leading 2-1 going into the bottom Farmers Bank had 2 runs on 7
Tuerlday night. "I thought the of the seventh inning. •With one hits and played errorless baH.
players they picked for these oot Jon Rothgeb singled, Mike . The winning pitcher was Mike
All.star games overall were
Spurlock while ' the lOSS was
better than the ones we had.l'm
charged to Greg Gibbs.
la1kin8 about those Wticular ..
SCIOTO RFiiULTS
The leading hitters for the
yean. We should begin winning~ CQLUM!JUS (UP!) - Rozzie fledman Inn were Jon Rothgeb
perf
· h
Bee
oor share now."
Thorpe captured the featured ha ·
VIDg a
ect rug t 3-3.
P
Brooka Robillson isn't saying seventh race at Scioto Downs Matthews and ·~e ~lock
ooe ball game is any accurate Tuesday night, a $1,500 one-mile had 2 hits each. For the losers
yardatick with which to pace, and returned $6.40, $3.80
~ bot!I leagues and his and $3.40.
Bal~ teammate, Frank
Second was Saunders Echo,
Marriage Is Limited
Robinaon, who has played in . returning $3:80 and $4 with
Henogamy
as practiced in
botb leques, feeis the same Phi11it Darts in third paying ,
.
.
some parts of India permtts
way,
$4.20.
·
one member of the fam"I'm tired of hearing the A 1-9 daily double com- only
ily to marry as a way of
·
rt · Ia t
d
other league is better," said blnation of Flashy Buckeye and keeP.~g
prope y m c an
Frank Robinson, who spent nine East East paid $63.00.
lim1tin~ the number of heirs,
yeara with Cincinnati before Attendance was 8,143 and the according to Encyclopaedia
Britannica.
being traded to Baltimore late handle was $2116,649.

·

Bill Bossard, Akrali · 411·34,74:
l!~y Sovik, Columbus
36·38-741
Steve Groves, Columbus ..0.3S. •
75
'
*
Glenn Apple,Cieveland J6.:Jf.75
Sieve Plpoly, Youngstawn 38·37·'

·

. 75

d
:.~~oreelse~ppointing ~ R e m
· an Inn Nip
F1l&amp;s·
InToumey
t1Iere was another important

,
·

SETS NEW RECORD
HONOLULU (UPI )- Robert
Johnson's sleek ketch Windward Passag·e crowded on
every inch of the 69 vessels to
Don Swisher had 2 hits in 3 trips fiil1sh the 26th biennial Transto the plate.
.
pacific yacht race and set an
The Redmen play t:Dnight at a elapsed time record in the
'
against the winner of the Falls process Tuesday night.
City - American Oil game.
The 73-foot ketch, sailing
under the colors of Hawaii's
.----"--'--'---'--~~ Lahaina Yacht Club, barreled
·
Th Daily Sent
through rough island waters
e
inel
and t:Dok advantage of 31).knot
DEVOTED
TOOF
THE
.: Wl'nels to brmg
. her across th e
INTEREST
MEIGS-MASON AREA
· Diamond Head finish Une.
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
Eaec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
PubUshed da;ty .. cepl .
saturday by The Ohio valley ;
Publishing Companv. 111
Court st., Pomeroy, Ohio. ·
-45769. BOsiness Office Phone
992.2156, Editorial Phone 992 .

.

'

Ross Barlschy, Columbus 36-39·
75

on the 13th and a birdie two on
the tough 235-yard 14th.
· · Froat NIDe Better.
But Immel's fortunes picked
up on the front nine when be ran
in a ID-(ooter over a hump for a
birdie on No. 3 and~ chipped
in from 20 feei for another
birdie on the fifth. ·
"You didn't laiow how lucky I
was," .Immel said after ·his
round.
.
Oilly a stroke behind Immel
at 7~ is the 1969 champion, Gary
Ariz of Cuyahoga Falls, who
must be considered one of the
men to beat in this tournament.
Ariz, 24, a former Ohio State
golfer who owns a real estate
business in the Akron area, tied
· bth 1 t
ft
for e•g
as year a er
beating Dan Carmichael and
Dim Albert, both of Columbus,
in a sudden death playoff for .the
)969 title at the Sylvania
Country Club near Toledo.
One shot behind Ariz in third
place is 40-year-old Fred
Nadalin of Colwnbus, a cement
block contractor, who carne in
with a 36-37-73.
At 74 were Bill Bossard of
Akron, Ray Sovik of Columbus,
a senior tD be and the No. 2man
on the Ohio State golf team.
Group At 75
Grouped at 75 were Steve
Groves, the No. I shooter on the
Buckeye team, Glenn Apple of
Cleveland, Steve Pipoly of
Youngst:Dwn, Ross Bartschy of
Colwnbus, Barry Terjensen of
·Akron, Jack Hessler of
Columbus, and Jim Hodges, a
transplanted Kentuckian now
living in Zanesville.
Qnly 72 of the nearly 200
goUers who officially feed off in
Tuesday's opening round were
able tD break 80 on the
demanding Scioto Course,
although the weather was ideaL

After t:Dday's second round,
m be t •· th
the huge fileld w,..
cu "' e
low 60 scorers and ties for the
final two rounds of the tournamenl
· Among other scores were an
82 for four-time pubUc links and
·l967 amateqr winner Lalu
Sahotin of Warren, a. Tl for
Class AA high school champion
Kim Heisler of Aurora, a 7' for
loJ;~~~er NCAA chlimpion Rick
JonttSofColwnbus,an83forEd
Presler of Cjevelar!d, the 1946
champion, a 9lfor Robin Clouse
of GaUon, the reigning state
junior champion, and an 86 for
73-year-old John Roberts,
. I seruors
.
former nationa
ti'Wst.
COL liMB US , (UP I) Leaders after the fiht round of
th~ 65th Ohio Amateur Golf
Tournament being played at the
'Scioto Country Club here:
Craig fmmef, Massillon JH6-71

'

Barry Terl'esen, Akron 38·37·75
Jack Hesser. Columbus 36·39·75
Jim Hodges, Zanesville 38-37-75
Gus Mehallls, St. Clairsville 36·
40-76
Fritz Schmidt, Columbus 4().36.'
F::drick Finer. Westlake 39·37·
76
Frank Guarascl, Columbus 38·
~~:~allo. Beachwood 38.38.76
Don Albert. Columbus 38·38-76
Ed Rosenbaum. Cleveland 41·
~77

GW7~11klns, Bellefontaine ~·
Edwin Katz. Dayton
411-37·77
John Busemeyer, Cincinnati 39.
Je~'fBower. Portsmouth 37·4077

Jim Dalgarn, Columbus 38-39·77
James Galllcchlo. Columbus 38·
39 77
Kim-fieisler, Cleveland 37·~·77
Mark Hess)er. Columbus 39·38·
77

-

Ronallf,Radkle, Toledo 411·37-77
Grafton Mouen, Toledo 39·38·77
Dan Carmichael, Columbus ~·
37-77

lt

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•

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''The Store
Heart,
-- . With A
··-You, WE LIKE" .

Mon. Tues., Wed.f=..:.9 Ill 7
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COME AND SEE US THURS., JULY 15TH.
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el
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~~~~"'"'Massillon's .·Imm
American ·1~_,_ Co~g,- . But. • •.
·~···
Ohi.o·,
.Leader'

•

t- Tbt o.llySentinei,Mlddleport-Pomeroy,O., July 14, 1m ·

Today'll Sports Parade

DETROIT (UPI) -Brooks in 196$. " In a 162-game
Roblnsltn squeered the haU schedule, I mean if we played
bud. Alittle extra bud. He had them that many games, they'd
good reason.
come out on top. For one game
11IIs was the tricky wind- ihough, I don't think they're
blown pop-up Johnny Bench that much better."
llltejl in front of third base for This is a bit of semantics on
the final out.
Frank Robinson's part because
Brooka Robinson, the best he knowil the American League
tblrd baseman in. the game, is C&lt;IIDing but it hasn't caught
~even say in all basehaU up to the National yet. Not
history, has missed a couple of quite.
easy ones like that in his tiine Brooks Robinson knows it,
but be was going to iilake sure !Do.
of this (/lie. Very sure. '
With that exceDent recall
On the fourth finger of his left most ballplayers have for past
hand Brooks Robinson wears a contests, Brooks Robinson
· gold diamond ring com- leaned up against a whirlpOol
memorating the world cham- machine in the American
pionship his club, the Baltimore League clubhOuse after it was
Orioles, won rather easily last all over Tuesday night and
year. For . all tllat he was touched on all those All.Star
starting to feel like an in- losses he has been in the past
veterate loser. Playing on eight eight years.
straight losing American ... The 1963 game was played
. League All-Star teams had a lot· in Cleveland and we out hit
to do with it A thing like that 'em ·but got beat,". he
can give a m8n an inferiority remembered. "Tbe year after ·
complex even if he does wear a that I got two or three hils and
world championship ring.
they told me I would've been the
"It wasn't hwniliating so MVP but CaUison hit a threemuch," Robinson .explained run homer off Radatz in the
after grabbing Bench's pop-up ninth and we lost again."
Tuerlday night for the putout Brooks Robinson was
which nailed down a 6-t victory
over the National League. "It
·

thinkingoftheotheryears.now.
" ... Willie Mays hit a homer
off Milt Pappas in the first inning in '65 and they got out in
front quiet. We tied it up and it
could've gone either way but we
lost, 6-S. A year later the game
was in St. Low.. Tbe writers
t:Did me I would've IKien MVP
again, but they scored off Pete
Richert in extra innings to win
again."
Robinson's. memory was in
fine shape.
"I remember the glime in '67
very well," he said. "It was in
Anaheimandlhitahomertotie
the score in the sixth but Perez
hit one in the 15th for them and
that was it. The one in 1968.
could've gone either way. We
lost it tD Houston, 1~. 'and they
just killed us in '69. That was in
Washington. We had 'em 4-1 in
the ninth last year; I had a
triple and asingle, but they tied
it up with three runs in the ninth
and then they won it in the 12th
... boy, it was a long time between victories for us, wasn't
it?"
No
wonder
Robinson
squeezed Bench's final pop-up
so hard.

17aree..Hitter

·.

. In ~eigs-Gallia UtUe League

.

cooalderation also: ·

action'Mark Sayre gave up only
three hils, struck out three and
walked one as Racine defeated COLUMBUS (UPI) - Young
Green 12 tD 2 at Green. Sayre Craig Immel may have set goH
wa~ ai~ed by f!'ll" doubl~ p~ys ears hack a lew years with
which 18 ~unusual feat in litUe praise for his caddie idler he
league action.
· grabbed the first round lead in
Racine hitters were Sayre the 65th Ohio Amateur Golf
and J. F. Young ... two SIDgl~s Tournament with an even par 71
each,,Steve Hen~Cks and Eric Tuesday on the 6,822-yard
Dunnmg, each ~lth singles. · Sciot:D Country Club Course.
For Green, Gillesp~e s~ted Immel, of Massillon, whO
on the mound an~ was reUeved passed up his practice round
by K. Drummon m the. second. Monday and entered the
They gave up oilly six hils but Tuesday round "cold," gave
walked 10 and hit two. Com-. much of the credit for his
b~ed, they struck out 7· Green performance tD his big toier,
hitters were ~rov':", Evans and Bill Clark, a sophomOre-to-be at
Rut%, each With smgles.
Columbus Watterson High
:~:;;;;:;.:m."%&lt;~:::::::?.:~:~'?.1$$$:~~~~: School this faiL
"He's the best caddie I've
)!ad," .the. 22-year-old
ever
Two Forfeited
Baldwin-Wallace graduate said
of Clark. "He just told me
Two Meigs-Gallia Pony where tD hit the haD and I hit
League gaines were forfeited it."
Tuesday evening, both when the
Immel, slarting on the hack
losers failed to muster nine nine, "yipped from a foot
players. Pomeroy A was away" on the lOth hole for a
declared winner over Pomeroy three-putt bogey five . He
B and Middleport over Racine, finished the hack side, conboth by automatic 7~ scores. sidered the easiest of the two, in
DOe over 36 with another bogey

..

·

. Every place
the veteran
year-old
Robillson
would '34go

he'd have to try answering WhY
the Americans couldn't beat the
Nationals in the All.Star game.
He never was able to supply a . The Redman Inn behind, the Allen hit into a force play and
reaDy accepts ble answer. pitcbiDg and hitting of Mike then Dave Johnson was brOught
POIIIibly because he knew the Spurlock IIJI'I"t Fanners Bank &amp; in tD run for Allen. Bruce Wilson
· led and this set the stage for
Natlcmal Iague generally was Savings 3-2 Tuesday night in the smg
stronger.
35th amual Bit Bend Tour- Mike Spurlock's game winning
"I'd have to say they had the nament.
double scoring Johnson and
.
better players from 1960
Fanners Bank &amp; Savings, Wilson.
through 1968," Brooks Robinson winners of the fled!!U!n Inn 4th The Redmen had 3 runs on 9
said even after his league broke of July Tournament, were hits and committed I error.
their elght-year losing streak leading 2-1 going into the bottom Farmers Bank had 2 runs on 7
Tuerlday night. "I thought the of the seventh inning. •With one hits and played errorless baH.
players they picked for these oot Jon Rothgeb singled, Mike . The winning pitcher was Mike
All.star games overall were
Spurlock while ' the lOSS was
better than the ones we had.l'm
charged to Greg Gibbs.
la1kin8 about those Wticular ..
SCIOTO RFiiULTS
The leading hitters for the
yean. We should begin winning~ CQLUM!JUS (UP!) - Rozzie fledman Inn were Jon Rothgeb
perf
· h
Bee
oor share now."
Thorpe captured the featured ha ·
VIDg a
ect rug t 3-3.
P
Brooka Robillson isn't saying seventh race at Scioto Downs Matthews and ·~e ~lock
ooe ball game is any accurate Tuesday night, a $1,500 one-mile had 2 hits each. For the losers
yardatick with which to pace, and returned $6.40, $3.80
~ bot!I leagues and his and $3.40.
Bal~ teammate, Frank
Second was Saunders Echo,
Marriage Is Limited
Robinaon, who has played in . returning $3:80 and $4 with
Henogamy
as practiced in
botb leques, feeis the same Phi11it Darts in third paying ,
.
.
some parts of India permtts
way,
$4.20.
·
one member of the fam"I'm tired of hearing the A 1-9 daily double com- only
ily to marry as a way of
·
rt · Ia t
d
other league is better," said blnation of Flashy Buckeye and keeP.~g
prope y m c an
Frank Robinson, who spent nine East East paid $63.00.
lim1tin~ the number of heirs,
yeara with Cincinnati before Attendance was 8,143 and the according to Encyclopaedia
Britannica.
being traded to Baltimore late handle was $2116,649.

·

Bill Bossard, Akrali · 411·34,74:
l!~y Sovik, Columbus
36·38-741
Steve Groves, Columbus ..0.3S. •
75
'
*
Glenn Apple,Cieveland J6.:Jf.75
Sieve Plpoly, Youngstawn 38·37·'

·

. 75

d
:.~~oreelse~ppointing ~ R e m
· an Inn Nip
F1l&amp;s·
InToumey
t1Iere was another important

,
·

SETS NEW RECORD
HONOLULU (UPI )- Robert
Johnson's sleek ketch Windward Passag·e crowded on
every inch of the 69 vessels to
Don Swisher had 2 hits in 3 trips fiil1sh the 26th biennial Transto the plate.
.
pacific yacht race and set an
The Redmen play t:Dnight at a elapsed time record in the
'
against the winner of the Falls process Tuesday night.
City - American Oil game.
The 73-foot ketch, sailing
under the colors of Hawaii's
.----"--'--'---'--~~ Lahaina Yacht Club, barreled
·
Th Daily Sent
through rough island waters
e
inel
and t:Dok advantage of 31).knot
DEVOTED
TOOF
THE
.: Wl'nels to brmg
. her across th e
INTEREST
MEIGS-MASON AREA
· Diamond Head finish Une.
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
Eaec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
PubUshed da;ty .. cepl .
saturday by The Ohio valley ;
Publishing Companv. 111
Court st., Pomeroy, Ohio. ·
-45769. BOsiness Office Phone
992.2156, Editorial Phone 992 .

.

'

Ross Barlschy, Columbus 36-39·
75

on the 13th and a birdie two on
the tough 235-yard 14th.
· · Froat NIDe Better.
But Immel's fortunes picked
up on the front nine when be ran
in a ID-(ooter over a hump for a
birdie on No. 3 and~ chipped
in from 20 feei for another
birdie on the fifth. ·
"You didn't laiow how lucky I
was," .Immel said after ·his
round.
.
Oilly a stroke behind Immel
at 7~ is the 1969 champion, Gary
Ariz of Cuyahoga Falls, who
must be considered one of the
men to beat in this tournament.
Ariz, 24, a former Ohio State
golfer who owns a real estate
business in the Akron area, tied
· bth 1 t
ft
for e•g
as year a er
beating Dan Carmichael and
Dim Albert, both of Columbus,
in a sudden death playoff for .the
)969 title at the Sylvania
Country Club near Toledo.
One shot behind Ariz in third
place is 40-year-old Fred
Nadalin of Colwnbus, a cement
block contractor, who carne in
with a 36-37-73.
At 74 were Bill Bossard of
Akron, Ray Sovik of Columbus,
a senior tD be and the No. 2man
on the Ohio State golf team.
Group At 75
Grouped at 75 were Steve
Groves, the No. I shooter on the
Buckeye team, Glenn Apple of
Cleveland, Steve Pipoly of
Youngst:Dwn, Ross Bartschy of
Colwnbus, Barry Terjensen of
·Akron, Jack Hessler of
Columbus, and Jim Hodges, a
transplanted Kentuckian now
living in Zanesville.
Qnly 72 of the nearly 200
goUers who officially feed off in
Tuesday's opening round were
able tD break 80 on the
demanding Scioto Course,
although the weather was ideaL

After t:Dday's second round,
m be t •· th
the huge fileld w,..
cu "' e
low 60 scorers and ties for the
final two rounds of the tournamenl
· Among other scores were an
82 for four-time pubUc links and
·l967 amateqr winner Lalu
Sahotin of Warren, a. Tl for
Class AA high school champion
Kim Heisler of Aurora, a 7' for
loJ;~~~er NCAA chlimpion Rick
JonttSofColwnbus,an83forEd
Presler of Cjevelar!d, the 1946
champion, a 9lfor Robin Clouse
of GaUon, the reigning state
junior champion, and an 86 for
73-year-old John Roberts,
. I seruors
.
former nationa
ti'Wst.
COL liMB US , (UP I) Leaders after the fiht round of
th~ 65th Ohio Amateur Golf
Tournament being played at the
'Scioto Country Club here:
Craig fmmef, Massillon JH6-71

'

Barry Terl'esen, Akron 38·37·75
Jack Hesser. Columbus 36·39·75
Jim Hodges, Zanesville 38-37-75
Gus Mehallls, St. Clairsville 36·
40-76
Fritz Schmidt, Columbus 4().36.'
F::drick Finer. Westlake 39·37·
76
Frank Guarascl, Columbus 38·
~~:~allo. Beachwood 38.38.76
Don Albert. Columbus 38·38-76
Ed Rosenbaum. Cleveland 41·
~77

GW7~11klns, Bellefontaine ~·
Edwin Katz. Dayton
411-37·77
John Busemeyer, Cincinnati 39.
Je~'fBower. Portsmouth 37·4077

Jim Dalgarn, Columbus 38-39·77
James Galllcchlo. Columbus 38·
39 77
Kim-fieisler, Cleveland 37·~·77
Mark Hess)er. Columbus 39·38·
77

-

Ronallf,Radkle, Toledo 411·37-77
Grafton Mouen, Toledo 39·38·77
Dan Carmichael, Columbus ~·
37-77

lt

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Exterior Use

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months 54 .50. Subscription

pnc~ Includes Sunday Times-

sentmel .

nl-5554

1st· Prize
************************

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Fairmont

CHOC. MILK

q~art 19~
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PORK .CHOPS

USDA

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MAXWEU HOUSE (Reg., Drip, Elec. PeR)

CHOICE

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COFFEE .........................~~~.l. 69
HUNrS FANCY
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0
PEACHES............. cans 1. 0

WAGNER·s DRINK t.:$1

lb.

NEW! •• DIXIE LILY AU PURPOSE

PORK LIUER ....~~~~.................!~:.. 39~
POLl SH SAUSAGE.~.~~.~~!~~~
.....'~:..59~
.
,BOLOGNA .....~~~~~........................'~:. 59~
U. S. NO. 1 NEW WHITE

POTATOES
20

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10 oz. ·

CRACKER BARREL SHARP STICK

CELERY

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HAIR
SPRAY

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-==
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=
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~~:sg$

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BAKERY SPECIAL!
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TIDE

Holsum Regua 45'·

ONLY

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FOOD

MARKET
wmiOUT

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Just Fill Out And Drop In Box At Register

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SWEET
ROLLS

No purchase necesaary. \

STYROFOAM
ICE
CHEST

OPENING SPECIAL!

OPENING SPECIAL
'

BOYS' -&amp; GENTS'
SIDE BUCKLE

NOW

SIZE

RG. 5.87

3~-6

81h-3 Reg. 3.87

•

' '1~

~

NOW

•

2.99

NOW

•

LOOK FOR YELLOW TICKETS

e LOOK FOR THIS TICKET

OPENING
. SPECIAL!

MEN'S
WOMEN'S ·
CHILDREN'S

SPECfAL .SHOWING and

Sale of Wigs

OPENING SPECIAL

.........

lhuts., Fri 1·Sat. 0n1J

REG. PRICE $~--

'

THONGS

M~n's Quarter-Hi
SIDE BUCKLE STRAPS

87.

OXFORDS Rl£ 4.87
•

Bowl)

CIIIT SIZE

DRAWING SAT., JULY 24th .

••

Q.OSED SUNDAYS

KRAFT CHEESE . ,......~.69
MIS. F'lllert's (Plastic Re-Usable
SOn MARGARINE 3 tor$1
-

CAUFORNIA

~

Phon•·------------------------

.
Prices Effectiw July 14-20

Just Wonderful

.
ALCOA FOIL ..............:. ~~'. 59
7s ft.

••
'
'

.

ECONOMY PACKAGE

·

••

We Glad~ keept Fed. Food StamPs

~

,

AddreU-----------------------

Right reserved to limit quantities

FLOUR .............:...... lO :et.l9
NEW! DIXIE LILY SELF-RISING
.
2lb 25
CORN MEAL........... b~

30 qt.

Nam•------------------------·

5th and·· PEARL ·SIS., RACINE•
''The Store
Heart,
-- . With A
··-You, WE LIKE" .

Mon. Tues., Wed.f=..:.9 Ill 7
Th.urS., Fri., sit. --~9 Ill 9

*********************
11th Prize Thru 25th

M&amp;R ·sHOELINER PRIZES.

MARKET

·

FIRST QUALII'Y
LADIES

FOOD

7 9~

~·

'**lr********************
3rd Prize Tbru lOth .Prize

We Deller

FUDGIES

39~

Girls' Bicycle

FROM

RACINE

Fairmont .

LADIES
SCARFS

2nd Prize

•

Phebe Says:

WIDE SELECIION
OF

Boys' Bicycle

'fh,e

MATERIALS CO.

MASON
FURNITURE
Mason, W.Va.

FOR THE

Grand Opening Prizes

For

I()

KEY
CHAIN
LADIES

MANY MANY STYLES
AND COLORS

iook

eFREE

yourself ond sovo tho difference on dependable
footwoar !hot wo1 comparatively low-priced to
start with. Tho lind of 1 h o 1 1 that ~ro "modo-toorder., for families with limited budgets and on
unGmil8d sense of value. Tho money you'l sovo
here is your own!

s~

HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN

·. an

ENT

GENUINE

For Interior and ·

NEW
FURNITURE
'349.95

Pomeroy , Ohio .
National advertising 1
representative
Bottinelli S3~.0(llownGallagher, Inc ., 12 Eas.t .. 2nd '
Sl., New York City, New York . · 111tlan~;e
Subscr;ption rates : ·· oe .
Con~enient
: live_red by carrier where 1 Terms.
· available 50 cents per week ;
By Motor Route wh'ere carrier ·
service not ava ilable : One
month sus. By mail in Ohio
and W. va .• One year $14.00.

COME AND SEE US THURS., JULY 15TH.
Como in whenever you need shoes for younoH and
your family. Feast your eyes on hundreds of pairs
of FIRST-QUALITY Dress, Servjce end Casual
shoes. Ail displayed on open, "pick-and-choose..
shelving lor easy ..lokyour-time" shopping. Servo

THURSDAY, JULY 15th AT
(12) NOON
Closed Sunday

3 ROOMS

2157 .

A• NEW SELF-SERVE·SHOE

OPEN

Paint

I

•

.~

.

NOW .·$ _
PAIR

'

.

NO. •••••......••••; ........•.. ~ .....••

SJOCI(

9

factory Representative will H here to s.new, Ulloeiii-&amp;Wa
you in your selection. Tllis .. 1e lor 3do1Jl•lyl .

You will lind oPening Special Tickets .U
entire 'Shoe Department.
.

LIMIT 1 COUI'(1N "R PI

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�New Haven

~ial

Mason County

Events·'

News Notes
• · .BY ,Alnla Marshall

. eSAVE 2CJt ~

NESTE A

FRESH GROUND HOURLY

GROUND

BEE~

WI1H '
muPOII
FROII

Roush:

. tington ,

MRS. FRED SPENCER, Mason, returned from a three-week
Visit to St. Mammes, France where she visited her daugbter and
son.m.law, Mr. and Mrs. Walden Bennett Roush. While-there she
visited Paris, where she did some shopping . Prices are reportedly
higher there. She visited the Louvre, tbe Arch. of Triumph, a
Memorial to France's war dead; Notre Dame Cathedral and
Eilrel Tower, and had supper midway up the !,ower, seeing Paris
at night.
She attended the only English speaking Methodist Church in
Paris on tSwtday.
· ·
Mt. and Mrs. Roush and Mts. Spencer went to southern
France where IIIey visited the French Riviera at Nice and the
Medll.erraflelll Sea, especq.uy pretty here, she reports,
Mr. and Mrs. Bemelt and Mrs. Spencer visited Orange,
where IIIey uw the ruins of a Roman ampitheatre lefUrtin the
time when .RAme ruled thai part of Europe. It iB still being used.
Tbey went to a cily called Avingnon, a waned city, and from
lhete to a Roman aqueduct.
Tben Cll! tO Grenoble where the 1968 Olympics were held in the

CIRCLE

MEETS~

'nle Rebecca Clrcl{'"of Tbe
Lu~an Church W"oJ!Ien of St.

Paul lAltberan met on Wednesday afternoon at the church.
Mrs. J. V. McGrew presented
the program for the day. She
opened with a prayer followed
with a discussioo on the chapter
"Paul, The Marriage Col!n·
sel«r" taken. from the study
book "Paul's Letters." A sbort
business meeting foUowed.
They closed with The
Missionary Benediction.
Refreshments were served to
thOle attending: Mrs. Donald
Bumgardner, Mrs. .Edna
Burris, Mrs. Otto Grimm, Mrs.
John Fry, Mrs. Carroll Adams,
Jr., and Mrs. J. V. McGrew.
PERSONAI.'l
Mr. and Mrs. William PoweU,
Jr. and family, Jane, Bill and
Jim, accompanied by Mr. and
Mrs. William Powell, Sr. visited
for two weeks withMt. and Mrs.
John Powell and· sons In
Florida.
Mt. and Mrs. William Garfield and Carol Ann of Pittsburgh, Pa. have returned
home after visiting with her
parents, Mt, and Mrs. Willlllm
tly
Chisler
recen
Mr. and
Mrs. Pete Butris and

ATl'END REUNION
MASON - Several frml this
area attended the Sayre reunion
at Millersport, Obio on Sunday.
Attending 1from be'ie were Mr.
BJMQ~rs. Harry Staats, Mt. and
Mrs. Dm..J(.eadOW8, Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Staalru!! Jimmy of
letart; Miss lloru!ie "Staats,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mts. iinle8
Staats, Mason; Mr. · Wesley
Kelvington and family, IJ!tart.

SAUSAGE

10 lb•.

SUN., JULY 11 bag
NEWSPAPER

ta'

White Bread
16 oz.

·4 lb.
basket

'

loaves
on~

00
..
..

KRAFT
DRESSING
16 b:AIIes
·0

home from a four weeks
vacation ill which !bey visited
their son and ·family, Mr. at!d
Mrs. Walden Foreman at
Savannah, Ga. Tbe f~
spent several days sightseeiq
in Florida, visiting Cypriss ,._""""_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,;.._.,..

•••
•••
•

•'
••

pkg.·

CHARMIN

KERR REGULAR
FRUIT JARS

•

20 ct.

MASON - Mt, and Mrs.
.tester Foreman bave returned

= ~--------------~
CANNING SPECIAL!

•
•

•
•

HOME FROM SOV'l1l

case
of 12

· TOILET TISSUE
4 roll
pkg.

••

e SAVE 30c LB.

KRAFT APPLE BASE

DIAL

Boneless, ·Rolled &amp;Tied

JELLY

BATH SOAP

PORK ROAST
lb.

-

I

••

•
••
•
•

I

'

I

••
•

e SAVE 20c LB.

WALDORF SLICED

BACON

RELATIVES VISITED
CUF)'ON, W.Va. - L&lt;ri and
Lois Ann Lee, grandcbildren of
Mr. and ¥fs, Ted Riley, Sr. of
Clifton, W. Ya. and daughters of
Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Lee, Dexter
Cily, Ohio, spent last week. ·
visiting relatives here. Kenneth
Lee is the guest of his grandparents now, the girls having
returned ·home. Mr. and Mrs.
Ted Riley, Jr., Mrs. WJ!bur
ABhley, Middlepcrt, Mr., and '
Mrs. Ted Riley, Sr.· of Clifton
and their grandson spent the
Fourth of July at Ripley, W.Va.

' bots.

only

Evans French City Brclnd

WIENERS

20oz.

Ol.

e SAVE 30• LB. ·

VISIT MO'l1IER
NEW HAVEN - Mrs. Robert
A. Beach and children, Robin
and Amy, of .Allen Park,
1\flchigan, spent several da,a
with her mother, Mrs. Lufema
Weaver, and other relatives ID
the Bend Area,

DEL MONTE
CATSUP

THOUSAND ISlAND
OR ITALIAN

lb.

family vacationed· recently at Gardens, Silver Springs,
MyrUe Beach, s. c.
Marine Land and St. Augustine.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Layne .
and Jay visited recently with
his brother .and sister-in-law,
REUNION SUNDAY
Mr. and Mrs. John La~ at
NEW HAVEN - Tbe Hoffman .reunion will be held
Danville, Pa. They also toured Sunda
ul
scenic spots in West Virginia. .
y, J Y II, at Union:
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Howard are Campground, Dinner will be
vacationing this week at Myrtle served at 12:30 p.m.
Beach, S. C.· Mike Howard is
visiting this week with his sister
Sea snails move by .almost
and family, Mt. and Mrs. Larry
invisible
waves of muscular
LeMasters and Stephen in
movement which pass along
Qeveland, Ohio.
!be length of the foot and
Mrs. Roy Crawford Is a cause it to move forward.
patient at Holzer Hll9Pital.
Mt. and Mrs. Carroll Adams,
Jr. accompanied bY Mrs. C. M.
Adams of Gallipolis, 0., attended the wedding of a cousin,
Miss Ellen Marie Colvin, to Dr.
Thomas E. Condron at
Clarksbbrg, W. Va. on Saturday.
Mrs. William Russell attended a Worship School
at West Liberty College, Wheeling, W. Va. from July
S-13. This school was sponsored by Tbe Lutheran

ATl'END COOKOUT
MASON - Guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Reuben Stewart at a
cookout at .their home SUnday
were Timothy, Butch and Usa
Stewart; Mrs. Floyd Miller of
Marietta, Ohio ; Mrs. Kathaleen
Roush and grandsqn of New
Haven ; Mr. and Mts. Jack
fowler and family, . Pt.
Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Stewart and Missie, Pt.
Pleasani, and Mrs. Mary
Aumiller, Hartford.

•

TOMATOES

HOME MADE PORK

·suGAR

FROM

. RED RIPE

e SAVE 2CJt LB.

WITH
COUPON

3oz.

SU!I-, JULY" 11
NEWSPAPER

men

. AT HUNTINGTON'S ART AND CRAFT Fair I enjoyed
talilnt to lAlcie and VIrginia Lewis, daughters of the late Virgil A.
lkiiS,· and E]IZaMth Stme' lewts·,'" ~ .:,_ -..~-~ _.
I mentioned that I would like to write more about their latliei'
l«r Masm's 115th birthday, so for the information below about
their father to them I am Indebted.
Tbe Lewises, as many of you know, were residents of Mason
before moving to Huntington, and mce lived ill the home now
owned by Mrs. Ed
Remlnlsclng aboilt their father brought out that his greatest
mCIDellt (besides his children) was his appointment as ·West
Vll'gjliia's First State Historian. Tbe estl&gt;Nislunent of · the
Ilep8rtment rl Arcbives and Hisl«y was a life ambition
acl*ved.·
Tbe Lewises had beard that a trailer court was going to be
used rtel[! to tbeir former heme in Mason and they expressed
concern f« a Jlngko tree (also caUed gingko by the Japanese).
Tbey said there are lilly about live or six of the trees in the United
States. It was pia11ted by their father about 75 years ago. Tbis
tree, a native rl China, has fanlike foliage and reportedly has
edible fruiiB and !lilts. It iB also called a malden hair tree,
During their trip each fall the Vtrgillewls family hired a rig
to visit the Lewtaes on Ten Mlle. Mr. lewis would point out trees
with tbe buggy whip. He knew them all by tbeir sbape at l&lt;llg
rmtge, and by their leaves nearby.
He loved lbe ganlens, not only tbe balf acre for vegetables but
plots for the formal Dower garden, tbe blackberrY and raspberry
palcbes, the area for curranIll and goosel)erries and the orchards,
apples, pears and plums.
During lheirvisitatTeoMilelheyhaddiDnerwitb Gentleman
Ike and Anntllose, and supper aiFiddlin' Ike's.
According to Virglnla and Lucie Lewis there was Little Ike,
Big Ike, Ike on the Hill, and Ike-in-IJ!e.Holler. .
·
~ bapa Virgil Lewis wu iDipired by Billy r.amhi~,JI 1.011!!8
Qmlederate soldier who wandered into tbe community alter tbe
war with his bride. He reportedly ·~ round," he read
•blstory to Grandma Lewis and ber briWant young son, Virgil,
after they put the four other children to bed in ooe cCI'Der of the
log cabin.
Acccrding to Lucie I.ewia, rlO doubt it was her father's first
inllpiration toward being a blal«&lt;an. Little did Gamble realize be
had inspired him to "rescue the history of the past and preserve
the records of tbe pm mt" fll" the new-bin West Virginia.
Tbe future historian's boyhood co.'llsted of chlnldng tbe log
cabin at 10 years of age and working at several trades to earn a
pemy. Alter his father's death be helped his mother rear tbe
othei f01r children . .
He worked as a grocery boy, drug clerk, printer's devil,
lawyer's aide (no wonder his favorite song was "Hard Times").
He always found lime to study for something bigher -lawyer,
lreacber, principal, editor, politician, author, state superintendent of schools, espert book salesman.
Usually bebind every great man iB an outstanding .woman,
and this wcman, tbe wife of Vtrgil A. Lewis, Elizabeth Stone
Uwls, inlpired ber husband. She learned to lype on the caligraph.
He ~ pace the Door in the library, hands behind his back
dictating, with his wife subUy suggesting changes.
Someone said to Mrs. Lewis, "Oh yes, you married the State
Superintendent ~Schools," and according to Virginia Lewis, her
reply was, "I married a country scmoolteacher and made him
State &amp;tperintendent of Schools."
He was a bachelor of 38 when he met his future wife at a Pt.
P!.easant Teachers Institute.
HisJove letters to her written from VIrginia in tbe summer of
18811where he was doing research, referred to "our history " (The
big general history of West Virginia ).
All the former state superintendent of schools and the state
hist&lt;rian, he was alwa,a in demand as a lecturer for high school
and college commencements.
His reply to the Ohio and Pennsylvania guest instructors who
were so critical of West Virginia schools, was, according to his
daugbter, Lucie (quieUy and tactfully for he was a politician ) he
admitted the inadequacy of our state's schools but erplained that
West Virginia had been so busy driVing tbe Indlsns out of Ohio and
quieting whiskey insurrections in Pennsylvania that we had not
yet bad time to reach the'standards we had setfor our schools.
Another of y-ll'gil A. L&lt;!wls's dreams which came true was as
chairman of the Point Pleasant Battle Monument Commission,
for which he bad succeeded in pushing an appropriation through
Congress.
He had 14 books published on West Virginia. His daughters,
both lAlcie and Virginia, are teachers. Virginia taught history 45
years and is presenUy teacbing piano at her home in Huntington.
lAlcie L&lt;!wls bas taught art 45 years and has a master's from
Cd.umbii. in art. She gives private art lessons at home in Hun-

.,

INSTANT TEA

. 3 lb.
or

' ·

DOMINO

•
•

•••
•
•
•
•

•

STRAWBERRY

only

RASPBERRY

MA BROWN

KERR
RE .ULAR LIDS

Apple Butter
28 oz.

~

a box

•

bar

CANNING
SPECIAL!
. I
.

12 in

•••

•

Jar

0

•••
•

•••

GOLD SEAL

STA PUFF

Sweet Pickles

Fabric Softener

••

l·lb.

18 oz. jar

pkg.

64 ar. jug
ONLY

32ar.

..
•

e SAVE 20' LB.

HONEY DALE SLICED

BOLOGNA

~

some-Is P a m e I a Wood,
youn1 BriU.. actre11 par·
th!Ipatln1 In an It all'a •
beauty contest. Drawill«
beautte• from many coun·
tries, lbe ceatest, on Ute
M~llerraneaa. lshad af ' - - - - - - Sardinia, II called "New
Faces for Europe." ·

.lb.

·COIL ·PEAIL &amp; LOCUST

BUTTERMILK:

HOT DOG BUNS

N E W F A C E--.!ld tltea

Alps and from there to Geneva, Switzerland, mcit they found to
be a very beaullful place.
.
Tbey also visited a medieval casUe north of Paris and a
chateau where Napoleon and hll mistress, Joeepblne, Hved.
Mrs. Spencer traveled by TWA in 7 houn frwn New York
to Parll. Mt. Roush is empl!l)'ed by IBM in France.

FAIRMONT

HAMBURGER or

%gal.
crts.

of8
•

•

MIDDLIPORT

11

- .
M.DDLEPORT, OHIO

tT•s THE TOTAL THAT COUNTSrr

)

.

'

I.

�New Haven

~ial

Mason County

Events·'

News Notes
• · .BY ,Alnla Marshall

. eSAVE 2CJt ~

NESTE A

FRESH GROUND HOURLY

GROUND

BEE~

WI1H '
muPOII
FROII

Roush:

. tington ,

MRS. FRED SPENCER, Mason, returned from a three-week
Visit to St. Mammes, France where she visited her daugbter and
son.m.law, Mr. and Mrs. Walden Bennett Roush. While-there she
visited Paris, where she did some shopping . Prices are reportedly
higher there. She visited the Louvre, tbe Arch. of Triumph, a
Memorial to France's war dead; Notre Dame Cathedral and
Eilrel Tower, and had supper midway up the !,ower, seeing Paris
at night.
She attended the only English speaking Methodist Church in
Paris on tSwtday.
· ·
Mt. and Mrs. Roush and Mts. Spencer went to southern
France where IIIey visited the French Riviera at Nice and the
Medll.erraflelll Sea, especq.uy pretty here, she reports,
Mr. and Mrs. Bemelt and Mrs. Spencer visited Orange,
where IIIey uw the ruins of a Roman ampitheatre lefUrtin the
time when .RAme ruled thai part of Europe. It iB still being used.
Tbey went to a cily called Avingnon, a waned city, and from
lhete to a Roman aqueduct.
Tben Cll! tO Grenoble where the 1968 Olympics were held in the

CIRCLE

MEETS~

'nle Rebecca Clrcl{'"of Tbe
Lu~an Church W"oJ!Ien of St.

Paul lAltberan met on Wednesday afternoon at the church.
Mrs. J. V. McGrew presented
the program for the day. She
opened with a prayer followed
with a discussioo on the chapter
"Paul, The Marriage Col!n·
sel«r" taken. from the study
book "Paul's Letters." A sbort
business meeting foUowed.
They closed with The
Missionary Benediction.
Refreshments were served to
thOle attending: Mrs. Donald
Bumgardner, Mrs. .Edna
Burris, Mrs. Otto Grimm, Mrs.
John Fry, Mrs. Carroll Adams,
Jr., and Mrs. J. V. McGrew.
PERSONAI.'l
Mr. and Mrs. William PoweU,
Jr. and family, Jane, Bill and
Jim, accompanied by Mr. and
Mrs. William Powell, Sr. visited
for two weeks withMt. and Mrs.
John Powell and· sons In
Florida.
Mt. and Mrs. William Garfield and Carol Ann of Pittsburgh, Pa. have returned
home after visiting with her
parents, Mt, and Mrs. Willlllm
tly
Chisler
recen
Mr. and
Mrs. Pete Butris and

ATl'END REUNION
MASON - Several frml this
area attended the Sayre reunion
at Millersport, Obio on Sunday.
Attending 1from be'ie were Mr.
BJMQ~rs. Harry Staats, Mt. and
Mrs. Dm..J(.eadOW8, Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Staalru!! Jimmy of
letart; Miss lloru!ie "Staats,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mts. iinle8
Staats, Mason; Mr. · Wesley
Kelvington and family, IJ!tart.

SAUSAGE

10 lb•.

SUN., JULY 11 bag
NEWSPAPER

ta'

White Bread
16 oz.

·4 lb.
basket

'

loaves
on~

00
..
..

KRAFT
DRESSING
16 b:AIIes
·0

home from a four weeks
vacation ill which !bey visited
their son and ·family, Mr. at!d
Mrs. Walden Foreman at
Savannah, Ga. Tbe f~
spent several days sightseeiq
in Florida, visiting Cypriss ,._""""_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,;.._.,..

•••
•••
•

•'
••

pkg.·

CHARMIN

KERR REGULAR
FRUIT JARS

•

20 ct.

MASON - Mt, and Mrs.
.tester Foreman bave returned

= ~--------------~
CANNING SPECIAL!

•
•

•
•

HOME FROM SOV'l1l

case
of 12

· TOILET TISSUE
4 roll
pkg.

••

e SAVE 30c LB.

KRAFT APPLE BASE

DIAL

Boneless, ·Rolled &amp;Tied

JELLY

BATH SOAP

PORK ROAST
lb.

-

I

••

•
••
•
•

I

'

I

••
•

e SAVE 20c LB.

WALDORF SLICED

BACON

RELATIVES VISITED
CUF)'ON, W.Va. - L&lt;ri and
Lois Ann Lee, grandcbildren of
Mr. and ¥fs, Ted Riley, Sr. of
Clifton, W. Ya. and daughters of
Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Lee, Dexter
Cily, Ohio, spent last week. ·
visiting relatives here. Kenneth
Lee is the guest of his grandparents now, the girls having
returned ·home. Mr. and Mrs.
Ted Riley, Jr., Mrs. WJ!bur
ABhley, Middlepcrt, Mr., and '
Mrs. Ted Riley, Sr.· of Clifton
and their grandson spent the
Fourth of July at Ripley, W.Va.

' bots.

only

Evans French City Brclnd

WIENERS

20oz.

Ol.

e SAVE 30• LB. ·

VISIT MO'l1IER
NEW HAVEN - Mrs. Robert
A. Beach and children, Robin
and Amy, of .Allen Park,
1\flchigan, spent several da,a
with her mother, Mrs. Lufema
Weaver, and other relatives ID
the Bend Area,

DEL MONTE
CATSUP

THOUSAND ISlAND
OR ITALIAN

lb.

family vacationed· recently at Gardens, Silver Springs,
MyrUe Beach, s. c.
Marine Land and St. Augustine.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Layne .
and Jay visited recently with
his brother .and sister-in-law,
REUNION SUNDAY
Mr. and Mrs. John La~ at
NEW HAVEN - Tbe Hoffman .reunion will be held
Danville, Pa. They also toured Sunda
ul
scenic spots in West Virginia. .
y, J Y II, at Union:
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Howard are Campground, Dinner will be
vacationing this week at Myrtle served at 12:30 p.m.
Beach, S. C.· Mike Howard is
visiting this week with his sister
Sea snails move by .almost
and family, Mt. and Mrs. Larry
invisible
waves of muscular
LeMasters and Stephen in
movement which pass along
Qeveland, Ohio.
!be length of the foot and
Mrs. Roy Crawford Is a cause it to move forward.
patient at Holzer Hll9Pital.
Mt. and Mrs. Carroll Adams,
Jr. accompanied bY Mrs. C. M.
Adams of Gallipolis, 0., attended the wedding of a cousin,
Miss Ellen Marie Colvin, to Dr.
Thomas E. Condron at
Clarksbbrg, W. Va. on Saturday.
Mrs. William Russell attended a Worship School
at West Liberty College, Wheeling, W. Va. from July
S-13. This school was sponsored by Tbe Lutheran

ATl'END COOKOUT
MASON - Guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Reuben Stewart at a
cookout at .their home SUnday
were Timothy, Butch and Usa
Stewart; Mrs. Floyd Miller of
Marietta, Ohio ; Mrs. Kathaleen
Roush and grandsqn of New
Haven ; Mr. and Mts. Jack
fowler and family, . Pt.
Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Stewart and Missie, Pt.
Pleasani, and Mrs. Mary
Aumiller, Hartford.

•

TOMATOES

HOME MADE PORK

·suGAR

FROM

. RED RIPE

e SAVE 2CJt LB.

WITH
COUPON

3oz.

SU!I-, JULY" 11
NEWSPAPER

men

. AT HUNTINGTON'S ART AND CRAFT Fair I enjoyed
talilnt to lAlcie and VIrginia Lewis, daughters of the late Virgil A.
lkiiS,· and E]IZaMth Stme' lewts·,'" ~ .:,_ -..~-~ _.
I mentioned that I would like to write more about their latliei'
l«r Masm's 115th birthday, so for the information below about
their father to them I am Indebted.
Tbe Lewises, as many of you know, were residents of Mason
before moving to Huntington, and mce lived ill the home now
owned by Mrs. Ed
Remlnlsclng aboilt their father brought out that his greatest
mCIDellt (besides his children) was his appointment as ·West
Vll'gjliia's First State Historian. Tbe estl&gt;Nislunent of · the
Ilep8rtment rl Arcbives and Hisl«y was a life ambition
acl*ved.·
Tbe Lewises had beard that a trailer court was going to be
used rtel[! to tbeir former heme in Mason and they expressed
concern f« a Jlngko tree (also caUed gingko by the Japanese).
Tbey said there are lilly about live or six of the trees in the United
States. It was pia11ted by their father about 75 years ago. Tbis
tree, a native rl China, has fanlike foliage and reportedly has
edible fruiiB and !lilts. It iB also called a malden hair tree,
During their trip each fall the Vtrgillewls family hired a rig
to visit the Lewtaes on Ten Mlle. Mr. lewis would point out trees
with tbe buggy whip. He knew them all by tbeir sbape at l&lt;llg
rmtge, and by their leaves nearby.
He loved lbe ganlens, not only tbe balf acre for vegetables but
plots for the formal Dower garden, tbe blackberrY and raspberry
palcbes, the area for curranIll and goosel)erries and the orchards,
apples, pears and plums.
During lheirvisitatTeoMilelheyhaddiDnerwitb Gentleman
Ike and Anntllose, and supper aiFiddlin' Ike's.
According to Virglnla and Lucie Lewis there was Little Ike,
Big Ike, Ike on the Hill, and Ike-in-IJ!e.Holler. .
·
~ bapa Virgil Lewis wu iDipired by Billy r.amhi~,JI 1.011!!8
Qmlederate soldier who wandered into tbe community alter tbe
war with his bride. He reportedly ·~ round," he read
•blstory to Grandma Lewis and ber briWant young son, Virgil,
after they put the four other children to bed in ooe cCI'Der of the
log cabin.
Acccrding to Lucie I.ewia, rlO doubt it was her father's first
inllpiration toward being a blal«&lt;an. Little did Gamble realize be
had inspired him to "rescue the history of the past and preserve
the records of tbe pm mt" fll" the new-bin West Virginia.
Tbe future historian's boyhood co.'llsted of chlnldng tbe log
cabin at 10 years of age and working at several trades to earn a
pemy. Alter his father's death be helped his mother rear tbe
othei f01r children . .
He worked as a grocery boy, drug clerk, printer's devil,
lawyer's aide (no wonder his favorite song was "Hard Times").
He always found lime to study for something bigher -lawyer,
lreacber, principal, editor, politician, author, state superintendent of schools, espert book salesman.
Usually bebind every great man iB an outstanding .woman,
and this wcman, tbe wife of Vtrgil A. Lewis, Elizabeth Stone
Uwls, inlpired ber husband. She learned to lype on the caligraph.
He ~ pace the Door in the library, hands behind his back
dictating, with his wife subUy suggesting changes.
Someone said to Mrs. Lewis, "Oh yes, you married the State
Superintendent ~Schools," and according to Virginia Lewis, her
reply was, "I married a country scmoolteacher and made him
State &amp;tperintendent of Schools."
He was a bachelor of 38 when he met his future wife at a Pt.
P!.easant Teachers Institute.
HisJove letters to her written from VIrginia in tbe summer of
18811where he was doing research, referred to "our history " (The
big general history of West Virginia ).
All the former state superintendent of schools and the state
hist&lt;rian, he was alwa,a in demand as a lecturer for high school
and college commencements.
His reply to the Ohio and Pennsylvania guest instructors who
were so critical of West Virginia schools, was, according to his
daugbter, Lucie (quieUy and tactfully for he was a politician ) he
admitted the inadequacy of our state's schools but erplained that
West Virginia had been so busy driVing tbe Indlsns out of Ohio and
quieting whiskey insurrections in Pennsylvania that we had not
yet bad time to reach the'standards we had setfor our schools.
Another of y-ll'gil A. L&lt;!wls's dreams which came true was as
chairman of the Point Pleasant Battle Monument Commission,
for which he bad succeeded in pushing an appropriation through
Congress.
He had 14 books published on West Virginia. His daughters,
both lAlcie and Virginia, are teachers. Virginia taught history 45
years and is presenUy teacbing piano at her home in Huntington.
lAlcie L&lt;!wls bas taught art 45 years and has a master's from
Cd.umbii. in art. She gives private art lessons at home in Hun-

.,

INSTANT TEA

. 3 lb.
or

' ·

DOMINO

•
•

•••
•
•
•
•

•

STRAWBERRY

only

RASPBERRY

MA BROWN

KERR
RE .ULAR LIDS

Apple Butter
28 oz.

~

a box

•

bar

CANNING
SPECIAL!
. I
.

12 in

•••

•

Jar

0

•••
•

•••

GOLD SEAL

STA PUFF

Sweet Pickles

Fabric Softener

••

l·lb.

18 oz. jar

pkg.

64 ar. jug
ONLY

32ar.

..
•

e SAVE 20' LB.

HONEY DALE SLICED

BOLOGNA

~

some-Is P a m e I a Wood,
youn1 BriU.. actre11 par·
th!Ipatln1 In an It all'a •
beauty contest. Drawill«
beautte• from many coun·
tries, lbe ceatest, on Ute
M~llerraneaa. lshad af ' - - - - - - Sardinia, II called "New
Faces for Europe." ·

.lb.

·COIL ·PEAIL &amp; LOCUST

BUTTERMILK:

HOT DOG BUNS

N E W F A C E--.!ld tltea

Alps and from there to Geneva, Switzerland, mcit they found to
be a very beaullful place.
.
Tbey also visited a medieval casUe north of Paris and a
chateau where Napoleon and hll mistress, Joeepblne, Hved.
Mrs. Spencer traveled by TWA in 7 houn frwn New York
to Parll. Mt. Roush is empl!l)'ed by IBM in France.

FAIRMONT

HAMBURGER or

%gal.
crts.

of8
•

•

MIDDLIPORT

11

- .
M.DDLEPORT, OHIO

tT•s THE TOTAL THAT COUNTSrr

)

.

'

I.

�' II'

1- Tbe Dally Senllllel, Middleport-l'llmefoy, 0 ., July 14,19'11

New Fire . Station ~~

fOOD fOR AMERICANS

A-ll- Brides Need This Recipe
By AILEEN CLAIRE
NEA Feed Editor
A bride who has a basic
macaroni and cheese casserole recipe in ber file can
save herself and her new
spouse eating anguish. ManJIhusbands telr tale.J: of how
;t!ley suffered lhrough the·
·first year· of marriage because they discover~ their
• bride could not cook. Here is
a tasty recipe that can mean
at least one gond meal a
week.
.
M-'CARONl AND CHEESE
CASSEROLE .
! cups (8 oUDCel) uncooked
elllow macaroni ·
%tablespoons mar~:arlne
%tablespoons I!Gmstareb
%~ caps mil);
!~ Cll.t.,..~decl sharp "
. cheese
1 feupooa .salt
'I• teaspoea pepper
l4feupoH
Woreeitersbire sauce
~ tablespoons fine dry
bread crnmbs
Every b~ide needs
-·--,
· Coot macaroni according
to package directiolis until cornstarch. Remove from
just tender. Drain and turn h~at: Grad~ally add ·milk,
into 2-quart casserole. Melt stirrmg IJ!Itil smooth .. C«??k
margarine in 2-quart sauce- over medium ~eat, _stirrmg
pan over medium beat. With •copsfllnUy,. u~til mIX~ u r e
a wooden spoon blend in comes to boil ·and boils 1

-Coming to Maspn
· MASON M·- wiD,ha.e a
newmelallightbluefireslatiGII
whk:b will be located aa the
(Ol'lld' ol. AndenOo and Semvl
SIB.
·
Ge&lt;rge earsm, fire chief,
said the pre-fabricated meQI
bullcilng, 60 _by 1110 ft., -~ed
from the Mitchell EDgin ~
C&lt;mpanyofCO!umbus,Miss.,JS
eJpeCted to ~ve soon after

minute. Remove from beat. Mix remaining ~-cup cheese
Add 2 cups o( the cheese, and crumbs. Sprinlde evenly
sa~t. pepper and Woreester- over top of cassernle. Bake
shire sauce. Stir until cheese in 375-degree oven 25 minmelts. Pour ·cheese mixture utes. Makes 4 to 6 servings.
over macaroni ; mix well.
'

~

employe:

u.e

railr~~

ana

w~

wa~

m o n e y by being stamped
with an officially authorized
device." Accordingly, paper
becomes a legal substitute
lor metal when · imprinted
with a similar authoriZation.

wo~ds,

a piece of
legal currency may assume
any one of several sha!'4!s in
one or more compositions.
However, the device must remain uncomplicated to assure a simple understanding
of its value by everyone.
But ":hat" of the blind or
tho~e With impaired vision?
\Ybil~ a few mar QUickly disl;ingwsh one com denomina• •
· un
• lion from another, no amount
Mason ; Mr. and Mrs. Robert of practice will bring their
Mossman and children of dexterity to the point of
Winfield, and the host and identifying so much as a
hostess.
single piece of paper currency. And with the increasing popularity of p a p e r
money as the preferred form
r-- n=-JJ--=z-z_l
_ £---,of exchange, any limited use
M
obviously creates a problem.
R~. John Rarick,' D-La.,
haS taken the first legal step
to correct this . situation. He
has introduced a bill wbich
would require the Bureau of
Engraving and Printing to
produce paper money with
_its denomination duly noted
m Bra11le. A system· of raised
dots in two vertical rows of
three dots each, with no less
than six dots per character.

•

l
J

WASHINGTON (UP!)- U. S.
Rep. Wayne Hays, D-Ohio,
Tuesday introduced legislation
'calling for strict federal
regulation of all strip mining for
coal.
Hays said one of the six
MD·II,. JtiNG aETTt NG
counties in his eastern Ohio
.Adrl!llltic new setting will bring district wa's .the object of
out 111 tile fire and brilliance of your " irresponsible, wa.nton
dilmolld. We have everything from
pill to rings to pendants •• • eldl destruction" by coal slrip mine
dnltntd to """e any dlomond look operators. He said more than
lqor, lovelier, more stylish.
200,000 acres of Belmont
•
~-County's 348,000 acres have
· been sold, leased or optioned to
slrip mining .
His legialation would require
coal operators to obtain a
federal license, post performance bond and to have
&gt;li't========:::l
.before
i!lsuran.~e '-against damage
~
beginning operations.

*

BA'M'ER UP, or fore? Nobody seems too sure this
year. Baseball player Ken
Harrelson, left, apparently
· decided It would be easter
to break 100 going down
than .going up and quit the
Cleveland Indians for a lry
at tbe pro golf tour. MeanwbUe, bact at the battillg
cage, golf standout Jack
Nicklaus, above, toot Ills ·~~~~~r
turn at bat seriously as be ~
worked out wltb a · little
LeagU. team in West Palm
Beach, Fla. And Allanta
B r a v es outftelder Hank
Aaron h ad e d tools wl.th
golfer Ken Still during a
coif exhibition In Atlanta.

992·3557
E.

POMEROY 0•

OPEN 9-5 MOll. TIIRU TIIURS.-9-8 FRIDAY-9-9 SATURDAY

~h.:~~b; \~ede~!e :f ~=~

129 MILL STREET

MIDDLEPORT, .OHIO

Ju Ly

1iin:g~th:;e~lif~-e:_:sp:an:.=of~th:e~b~ill~-!::::::::~

PRICES START TODAY
GOOD THRU JULY 17th
WHILE QUANTITIES LAST!

.

FREE.

' ·tr\v:

Carnation

US.DA

CHOICE

Various
Colors

ReSII'fecr

FOL.DING _yy

BOY.'S SIZES
CUT.OFF SHORTS

BATHROOM
TISSUES

To

Limit

QIWI!ities

LAP TRAYS

!

&gt;

Enj~

Latest Styles

Airline Serving

I.

Comfort
At Home .

Variety
Of Colors

Ladies' &amp;Girls'
TENNIS SHOES.·
MOLDED SOLES
WASH .IN
WASHER

4 ROU PKGS. .

GOLDEN ISLE

PEARS

2

Vinyl
Hose

2lh
SIZE

99~

GOLDEN ISLE

ORANGE JUICE

'

46 OZ.

~NS

Round Steak
$
lb.

Charm in

Right

10Nf1 US ROUND mAK ........Jb. 1.G9

CUBE STEAK

... 1.29
GROUND BEEF.... ~ ••• 2 lb.

SUPER
-

1.39

FIDrida I.QI

-SPECIAL

CELERY
. bdl.

25•

.,~

..

GOLDEN ISLE

SUGAR

ALARGE
SELECTION
.
.

'

51b.

...

DUNCAN HINES

SUMMER TOYS .
Your Choice
·Regular
2 Price

. '

CAKE MIX

k

3 · ~:s 99~

PamiiiiJ, 0.

Main Sl

' ef

MILK·

ROLL

CHAPMAN'S SHOES

FREE

·Certified Gas Stations

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JULY 17

$,.77

and LADIES SPORT SHOES

&lt;

1

SWIM WE.AR
GIRLS SIZES

Garden
Hose

ALSO MENS TENNIS SHOES

B7. •

•

50 FT. 1!2"X 50

..

Ca

•

CLEARANCE

WOMENS SANDALS
GREAT REDUCTIONS
.-. · NOWI

HEMING AID
SERVICE CENTER

-----LATEST STYLES

coarse

· not restricted
·
money IS
to
those with sight.
In my opinion, Braille, as
we know it, is out of the
question. Results of a test
performed on a one-dollar
bill using a H o we Press
Braille writing instrument
precludes the use of thatsystern for t h r e e reasons: 1) · - - - - - - - -. .
Braille dots are too deep and
induce early wear to paper
currency; 2) Braille numbers can be raised In value
through the addition of one
· or more dots, which ·could
be done by anyone with a
properly sbaped tool; 3) Only
a small percentage of those
with sight impairment are
trained in the use of B~aille.
To be totally serviceable,
SfN. 2nd Ave.
any method of identification
Middleport
relying on the sense nf touch
992-5561
should be capable of endur-

BELTONE

Haing Aid Center

··-~

The system sbould be unalterable for ·the protection o1
the bJ,ind and universall7
recogruzable by anyone incapable of communicati!lg in
any fashion.
One such method employs
the use nf a continuous row
nf dots, less
t ba n
Braille, running f r o m one
edge of a piece of paper currency to the other in a pattern essentially different for
each denomination.
Interested readers should
address suggestions to Rep.
JolurRarick, U.S. Congress,
Washington, D.C.

,.;

BELTONE

With 510 Groeery Purchase
"' v

Excluding Cigarettes
•

INSTANT COFFEE

.

~

1

21b.

WHITE - YELLOW - DEVIL'S FOOD
'
./

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Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
. visiting hours 2-4 and 7-3 p.m.
Maternity viaiting hours 2:36to ellmlnate It wberev' .
4:30 p,m.
' Parents only on
be found ..
er 1t may Pedialrics Ward. ·
··
F. tcb ·
.
Btrtbi
a · ett cauhoned that
modern testing
thoda .
Mr. and Mrs. William Roush,
me
can
now detect aflemely mlnu'le New Haven, a daughter; Mr.
quantities of contamination and Mrs. Denver Lee Bates, Jr.,
"We must aD be alert to avoid ~allljmlis, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
even the
..
Dale Edward GWJ, Middleport,
lamina tion andSUBPICIOnt of kcon- a daughter; Mr. and Mrs.
mus wor to
strengthen sanitation standards Donald Lee Brown, Gallipolis, a
already the highest In th tire daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Jasper
food·~ industry " F::hett Hughes, oak Hill, a.daughter ;
declared
'
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Taylor,
·
,Gallipo)i.!;, a son.
·
Dlscluirges ·.
SUSPENDS TRADING
· Royall E. Beatiie, Richard
WASHINGTON (UPI) .,.. The Morgan Brammer, Doo,ald E.
Securities and Exchange Burchett, Mrs. George S.llurns
Commission has suspended and infant son, Mts.- Phyllis ,A.
over-tbe-eoullter trading In the Greer, Hughie l.eport, Sr., Mrs.
stock of Hotei, Inc., Clevelarid, James C. McCorkle and infant
for ten days because there was son, Mrs. Harry L. McDermott,
no adequate information Mrs. Donald Eugene Mourning
available about the firm's and infant daughter, Mrs.
financial condition. ·
Steven Elwood Nunn, Glennon

IUIERALOIE
The numeral one (l) in
Braille as illustrat~ above
!s made by using_ the top dot
m the fll'st verbcal row of
t h r e e, after the numeral
designate of four dots representing the letter "L" in reverse. It remains now for

!

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LADIES APPAREL

Frances .Mc![emie, Mildred
'flw•I•HCIO, and Mfs. Robert

•on IS 1.EC1

L

·'

;;"»:'J'&lt;&lt;•m;.;...-.,
- &lt;-I:
• T.•ii'4 •;•:-X!I:JiXJ;.:o:U.&lt;;».J,'

·
Stauffer ShU t Down

Rusche!, Frances
. Stewart, Barbara Zerkle, Kay
and Celine McGowan, Mrs.
Harry Miller, Gail 111111 Leann .
Also, Ada Wears, Crystal
While, Sadie Warth, Nita
Coode, Joyc:e Canwn, Mary
'l'babet, ·Karen Marsball, Ella
Rousb, Grace Wallace, Mrs.
Gary (Mary) Roush, Betty
Ross, Iva Roush, Louise Roush,
Thelma Roush, Jlnny Hubbard,

FOR AlL DEBTS, PulllM

•

Agricultural Research and
Develq~~~~e~~t Center, Wooster
Donald G. . Fatcbett oi
BIIAfield ..,... __..._
' """''·• ,. - n t of
otlle 7,400 member dairy
bargaining cooperative, told the
174 ~gates In attendance that
their COilpe.lative participates
actively on a committee
estab~ to study methods of
cJeallng with grieul(ju'al waste
dl8p"'lll as well as other related
. problems 111ch u antibiotic and
. pesti8de Control.
"We are qUite certain,"
Fak:bet said, "that agricultural
cootaminationiS a minor part of
the total ~uUm picture, but
weare none the less determined

•.·.·.•.·.·..· ..·..·
LONDON ( UPI) - Dick
Haymes, 52-year-old ·~
star of the 1HG'a ud IJ5t'a
who oace was married lo
Dale Persinger, Jr., Mrs. actress Rita Hayworth, at a
Terrance Powell, Miss Genieve
SAIGON (UJ&gt;1) - Vice Supreme Court Tuesday night and mualing the press. Tbe
Stobart, Mrs. Alvin N. Cooper, . bankruptty bearing Tuesday
Mrs. Sylvia Denney, Miss Erma :::~~:. w;~d,o:Yw~l~":; PresidentNguyen&lt;;aoKybroke ruled c~titutional an election 1~verni'nent routlnel7 MlJel
.
'
his )lolilical alltance with law to .limit ~ n.umber cl copies nf the newapeper Lap
P. Barnett and Herbert B. Hill. months~
President Nguyen Van Thieu eandidates who ~ ,l'lllllar the Trong (Politicsl Stand), llect .
Haymes, born In Argeatlna today , accusing Thieu of presidency. The .law was by Ky, on dayl When It prints
PLEASANT VALLEY
and currently married 1o "dictatorial practice•" and crlticiud ~ being''welghted in arUclea adjudged "acafnallbe
ADMISSIONS : Walter British-born Wendy Haymes, trying to conduct 1 fraudulent Thieu's favor.
.
public Interest."
Donohue, Richard McCartney, said hb preseat assets totaled ·election ned fall.
"My conscience demands
Bobby Plants, Mrs. Genevieve about $1,9%0 bul that he exKy hopes to oppose Thieu In ~~!at I put an end to thla
Higgins, Mrs. Thomas Cornell · ' peeled to earn "between the Oct.· 3 presidentlal.electi9!1 assoclatiQD which. exists only In
'
Jessie dreenlee, all Poini $35,000 ud $40,808" lnlm fUm along with Gen • •Duong van name and that I no longer
Pleasant; Oscar Priddy, work in Spain starting ne:d (Big) Minh,. although Ky blindlyfollowyouonthepathof
Buffalo; Mrs. W. M. Sharp, month.
reportedly is having trouble errors which have placed our
Reedsville, 0 .; Mrs. Brown ':'.&lt;$:=~~:~~-,~
getting needed support.
fatherland in peril," said Ky In
Watterson, Apple Grove ;
The South · Vietnamese a letter to Thieu.
Charles Samsel, Mason, and
·
"You promised . social
Mr. Noel Harlowe
Mrs. Terry Pilwell, Racine.. . Jl.t:•
u
J.,.._ J
n--d
reforms but our society Ia
Will Be At
DISCHARGES: Mrs. uirry lUISS lUC
USUIIIU'
' IS ~
fraught wllb unptecedented
La
Sa lie Hotel
Sturm, Eddie Black, Raymond
•
injusUce and corruption while
Middleport. Ohio
Thornton, Mrs. Roy Allen,
Miss Charlot!~ Emmett foster daughter, Mrs. Virglnili the soldiers, the civil servants
on
Eugene Hanes, Mrs. William McCausland, 8(, Pliny, W. Va., . Percy Bright, Carroll Ohio· and the unprivileged citizens
Thursday•
Wetzel, Mrs. Stephen Johnson died Tuesday morning in tile five nephews, Dr. ~118nd~ are condemned to a life of
July
15, 1971
and daughter, Mrs. Dewitt Holzer Medical Center after 1' McCausland m Roanoke Va. destitution Wllmown t.o this
Browning.
long illness. She was the Smith McCa~ and Georg~ date," Ky said. ·
from
~ta.m.
to 12 Noon
Birth: July 13, a daughter to daughter of the late .~neral McCausland, Pliny; Andrew "You
promised
the
Mr.. and Mrs. William Sharp, John McCausland of Civil War McCaustsnd, Houston, Te~. development of a democratic To repair and service
Rac1ne.
fame, and the late Charlotte and · Bright McCausland system yet tbe democratic hearing aids.
·
Emmett Hannah McCausland. Henderson.
' institutions have been abused
Sbe 'Was born October 27, 1883. Funeral services will be and corrupted and the basic Batteries and supplies
Confederate Brig. Gen. conducted at 2 p.m. Friday rigbts of the citizens are under for all makes for sale.
McCausland led the charge of from the Crow-Russell Funeral serious threat of annlhilaUon. Mr. Harlowe will be
the company that burned Home witll the Rev. Fred . "Those unfulfllled proinlses glad to give you a free.
Chambersburg, Pa., which McCalllster officlatlni. Burial are essentially responsible for hearing test with the
resulted in his self-impooed will be in the McCausland the slate of stagnation and l.atest Beltone l:lecexile in Europe. He later was family cemetery near Hen- regression which has weakened tronic equipment.
cleared of guilt and moved to · derson. Friends may call at the the efforts of this nation in Its
the Henderson area.
funeral home after 6 p.m. ioday. fight against communism," Ky
Miss McCausland was a
S81'd•
If hearing is your
member of the Pliny
-- "Moreover, because of your
problem Beltone is
Presbyterian Church and a
excesslv• aftachrilent to power,
the answer
' .L
Australia, a British Comgra dua te of Ashville Women's monwealth nation changed you luiv~lndWJed In dictatorial
College, Ashville, N\ C. She i.s its currency from pounds- practlcea, preferring the
survived by one niece, Mrs. shillings-pence to dollars and . flatteries of sycophants over the
Harriett Brown, Charleston, a cents in 1966.
advice of honest counsel. This i.s .
the reason why my·voice has not
·
been heard ..This iS tile reason
why llnconStiluU9J18l;-legal and
504 Tenth St.
repressive actions have conHuntington, W.Va.
' tinua!]f..developed ..."
I'll one 525~7221 , '
HOUSTON (UPI) - A plant might ceaSe- operations. -. Ky also accused Thieu of
chemical company accused of He declined comment 01! . tile silencing his political opposition
endangering human health by state order and a ~ty sUit until · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •
emitting toxic gas may have to he had time to study them.
close down if it can't meet an The citY filed a pollution suit
historic anti -pollption-·.against the big chemical
•emergency order issued agairtst company hours before the state
At Your Certified Oil Company Station
it.
,
action, seeking an immediate
Charles R. Barden, secretary restraining order against
of the Texas Air Control Board, further emissions by Stauffer.
"Your Gasoline Purchase Free" If We fan To
directed the Stauffer chemical Diatrict Judge William M.
Clean Your Windshield, Weatller Permi"ing.
plant to "discontinue im- Blanton Jr. refused to iasue an
No Other Company Dares To Offer This
mediately all emissions of air irtunediate order and set an
~licy.
'"
contaminants" along the injunction bearing for Aug. 3. "I
Houston ship channel.
will not grant my restraining
"How they do this Ia up to order without bearing from both
them," he said. " If they have to siiles," Blanton said.
close down, that's what it Stauffer, which employs 200
means. If they can shut down persons, makes sulpburl~ acid •
just a portion of the plant and About 200 dockwOI'kers and
.
992-9981
·
538 W
,
halt all emissions, that's what it fll(e J!l"'''be~ Qf a !isiting, New .
• Mam
Pomeroy, Ohio ,
'
means.n,
~
Y~k..~tN:'irlve { beert,~
1·1 t ·~, .. ~
&lt;w
~~
.'
,
.
•
' " .... _..
Stauffer plant manager E. G. sickened by snifur dioxide ·. e Honor ~nli:Americard "a nd Mast~r 'CJia
Lang declined to speculate if the fumes in four incidents near the
Stauffer plant since April •

HOSPITAL NEWS

.1

Grace

Hays .Offers
Strip Bill

,,j

I'

THIS

·

'

r------------~- ----~--------~

today's FUNNY =:·
:
.:n=il!::
Eleanor Roush, Terri Roush,

-..... -. .Roush.

a

In other

.

•

•

SALE

,_to

8difl~ ~· M~: ":e.J~~ ;Wtllfl U!MIIJ 1.were host and bosteas.
CU'Cy{a.t~se. m a d e. into .

of Winfield, W. Va. The
honorees
G ts ,received
of the many gifts.
ues
• Rileys Sunday
were Demp Riffle of U!M, and
Mr. and Mrs. Demp Riffle, Jr.
and children of Washington, D.
C.
In the evening the Rileys had
a cookout attended by Mr. and
Mrs. .Ralph Riley and grailddaughter Kippie of· Delaware
Ohio· Mr' and~ J' stover'

hrilding.
'
The dedicated 30 firemen not
only fight fires for free, they
also will help put up the

The buj]dlng will have a 60' :1
60' engine room, large enough
for eight trucks, kitchen, office
space, restrooms and a. meeting
room for ·the public 28 ft. wide
and 40 ft · deep. ·
~ides Fire Clliel · Carson
tl!ere i.s Asl!t. Fire·Chief Rosa
Roush; president, Walter
Werry; vice president, Howard
Jo.hnson·; secretary, John
Harr~, and treasurer, ~II
Jenkis, and the other firemen
all dedicated to this project.

· Marta Hubbard, Sarah Spencer,

MASON - Mr. and Mrs.
Palrick Riley were honCI'ed on
their 30th wedding annivers8ry Oxford's Universal DictionSaturday at their heme on ary describes a coin as -"a
Pomeroy St. here. Their piece of met.al (gold, sill(lr" ". ,
c!augbt..r ~•. S:!'{I.;il!-law Mr copper, etc.) ..of , Mfi·~•J"

Adeeoratedanniversarycate
was Inscribed, "Happy Anniversary 30th, Gladys and
. Patty."
Attending were the bon~,
Mr. and Mrs. Riley, Ml' ind
Mrs. Ted Riley, Sr., Clifttl ., Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph ' Riley,
Delaware, Ohio; Mrs. Herman
Ross, Mason, 8Jl!I·Mr. and Mrs.
Robert llfossman and cbildren

Karl Blelner and to buy the

The · Homestead Act became effective Jan. 1, 1863,
opening the vacant lands of
America's vast public domain to agricultural settle· ment. The World Almanac .
says that under the Homestead Act more than a million families received title
to over 248 !Dillion acres of
public Ian d across the .
plains, prairies and mountains of the West.
Puerto Rico is the only
U.S. territory ever visited by
Columbus.

"""

held July 8 at the Ohio

STOREWIDE
JULY·
CLEARANCE

Patrick IUteys

I

by 2111 feet lot purchased from more·

encireled the lighted white
candles · in holders. I '!'be cake
was deelnltd with daisies in
CGkn ol. wllite, yellow and
Mason United Methodist green. Cake,puncb, nuts, mints . . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
Omrch. Hostesses were· Mrs. ;md collee were served. Prizes
Nancy Cummins and Mrs. La were'awanled.
Vera Yeager.
The guest list included Mrs.
MissRIIUsbJriliJ1181'1'}'~ Vuginia Yonker, .Mrs. Joann
P. Conde, son of Mr. and Mrs. . F..-gusm 111111 Teresa, Mrs.
Eugene Conde, Middleport, Sarah Gibbs aild Marilyn, Mrs.
Sunday, July 18, at 2:30p.m. at Rhoda :Yeager, Mrs. Mildred
Mason United Methodist Tripp, Mrs. Olarlolte Rouah,
Clllrcb. Miss Roush is the Mrs. Kalby Davis, Mrs. Lottie
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jenb, Mrs. Ruth Roush, Mrs.
Robert· Roush, Mason. The Pal Smith, Mrs. Evelyn
ceremmy will be perfOimed by Proffitt. Mrs. Glen Hensler,
the Re.v. Parker Hinzman, Mra. Juanita Roush, Mrs. Mary
assisted by the. Rev. Father Pickens, Mrs. Wonona HoffPatella. The gracious custom of man, Lillian Maynard, Helen
open church will be observed. Bodimer, Cinda and Kathy
Tile, refreshment table was Foglesong, Lucille Harrison,.
centered with an arrangement Jean Swift, Lois Weaver, Sally
of white daisies and daisies RGss, Ann Summerfield, Sine
Murphy, Carol Proffitt, Pat

Rushsylvania.. lll:rea, To~o, employes such as acCresUine, Cleveland, Berwick, cumulations of debris and
Clyde, Kenton Burt Tower and uneven rail joints
Worthingtoq, '
·

8rai lie
' Honored Saturday Money .
For Blindt

·

$Sl,339tolinisb~forthel0

MASON- Miss Pam Roush,
Masm, was pest ol. boom- at a
Jll'e-bridal sbolter given in her
honor Tllunday evelliDg at the

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio BroWn said In each ca~ full complied In any respect witb
Br~ said lbe Toledo
Attorney General William J. public bearings were bel~ and the orders of the Public Ulilities conc;::ed a junction · ';::
Tuesday
a '14.1 when it was determined by Commission of Ohio," Brown Where railroad
are
Pennon ~e swt.agalnst lbe PUCO ~l!he comp~ts were said. "Therefore, upon the ;-equired to wort 1n such
h
ll'al Railroad and substantiated, the railroad was request of PUCO, I bave / dangerous coodi.lioos as waltSOUl! ta court trier to force lbe ordered to correct lbese "un- initiated a suit against
ways ~a · and lraclrs
to correct "unsafe safe condiUons" immedistely. railroad seeking enforcement of
mud,
rotten ·
condilio~s" . on .railroad In addition, Brown said, the the conunlsslon's orders ·and and oil have am;,.ula~
propa ty m_ Obio. .
railroad was ordered to submit demanding damages." .·
He said PUCO also found
Brown said that m 1be past 18 reports of completed repairs The suits pertain to,poper ty additional unsafe conditions
. ~onths the Public ':ftilities
_to also submit plans con- at Alliance, New,ton Falls, wbicb 11 mt a bazanl to

of te Oh1o had cenung present maintenance
•••'""' separa ~laints programs.
.
-~·the bankrupt rmlroad In
"Penn Central has not
regard to llllllllfe I!Gnditions.

Firemen ' have borrowed

Shower Given ~
D"..:..l--;to-be ··
,

a basic macaroni and cheese casserole recipe.

Evidence that datry farmers
are deeply concerned with
environmental problems was
presented at the mld -year·
df:)egate mee"ftft of Milk Inc

Jn1y lt.

hplding. Tbey are now potting
in the footer; D!!J:1 will be the
· fi.Q&lt;r. They llllve earned a lot of

814.1 Million Suit Facing.· Railroad

.:...,~~~~on

Dairymen Gkd to
)fight ·Pollution

.

.

:mown

~- Tbe O.lly Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pw.avy, 0 ., July 14, 1971

..

•
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..

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.'
I

•1.09

•

�' II'

1- Tbe Dally Senllllel, Middleport-l'llmefoy, 0 ., July 14,19'11

New Fire . Station ~~

fOOD fOR AMERICANS

A-ll- Brides Need This Recipe
By AILEEN CLAIRE
NEA Feed Editor
A bride who has a basic
macaroni and cheese casserole recipe in ber file can
save herself and her new
spouse eating anguish. ManJIhusbands telr tale.J: of how
;t!ley suffered lhrough the·
·first year· of marriage because they discover~ their
• bride could not cook. Here is
a tasty recipe that can mean
at least one gond meal a
week.
.
M-'CARONl AND CHEESE
CASSEROLE .
! cups (8 oUDCel) uncooked
elllow macaroni ·
%tablespoons mar~:arlne
%tablespoons I!Gmstareb
%~ caps mil);
!~ Cll.t.,..~decl sharp "
. cheese
1 feupooa .salt
'I• teaspoea pepper
l4feupoH
Woreeitersbire sauce
~ tablespoons fine dry
bread crnmbs
Every b~ide needs
-·--,
· Coot macaroni according
to package directiolis until cornstarch. Remove from
just tender. Drain and turn h~at: Grad~ally add ·milk,
into 2-quart casserole. Melt stirrmg IJ!Itil smooth .. C«??k
margarine in 2-quart sauce- over medium ~eat, _stirrmg
pan over medium beat. With •copsfllnUy,. u~til mIX~ u r e
a wooden spoon blend in comes to boil ·and boils 1

-Coming to Maspn
· MASON M·- wiD,ha.e a
newmelallightbluefireslatiGII
whk:b will be located aa the
(Ol'lld' ol. AndenOo and Semvl
SIB.
·
Ge&lt;rge earsm, fire chief,
said the pre-fabricated meQI
bullcilng, 60 _by 1110 ft., -~ed
from the Mitchell EDgin ~
C&lt;mpanyofCO!umbus,Miss.,JS
eJpeCted to ~ve soon after

minute. Remove from beat. Mix remaining ~-cup cheese
Add 2 cups o( the cheese, and crumbs. Sprinlde evenly
sa~t. pepper and Woreester- over top of cassernle. Bake
shire sauce. Stir until cheese in 375-degree oven 25 minmelts. Pour ·cheese mixture utes. Makes 4 to 6 servings.
over macaroni ; mix well.
'

~

employe:

u.e

railr~~

ana

w~

wa~

m o n e y by being stamped
with an officially authorized
device." Accordingly, paper
becomes a legal substitute
lor metal when · imprinted
with a similar authoriZation.

wo~ds,

a piece of
legal currency may assume
any one of several sha!'4!s in
one or more compositions.
However, the device must remain uncomplicated to assure a simple understanding
of its value by everyone.
But ":hat" of the blind or
tho~e With impaired vision?
\Ybil~ a few mar QUickly disl;ingwsh one com denomina• •
· un
• lion from another, no amount
Mason ; Mr. and Mrs. Robert of practice will bring their
Mossman and children of dexterity to the point of
Winfield, and the host and identifying so much as a
hostess.
single piece of paper currency. And with the increasing popularity of p a p e r
money as the preferred form
r-- n=-JJ--=z-z_l
_ £---,of exchange, any limited use
M
obviously creates a problem.
R~. John Rarick,' D-La.,
haS taken the first legal step
to correct this . situation. He
has introduced a bill wbich
would require the Bureau of
Engraving and Printing to
produce paper money with
_its denomination duly noted
m Bra11le. A system· of raised
dots in two vertical rows of
three dots each, with no less
than six dots per character.

•

l
J

WASHINGTON (UP!)- U. S.
Rep. Wayne Hays, D-Ohio,
Tuesday introduced legislation
'calling for strict federal
regulation of all strip mining for
coal.
Hays said one of the six
MD·II,. JtiNG aETTt NG
counties in his eastern Ohio
.Adrl!llltic new setting will bring district wa's .the object of
out 111 tile fire and brilliance of your " irresponsible, wa.nton
dilmolld. We have everything from
pill to rings to pendants •• • eldl destruction" by coal slrip mine
dnltntd to """e any dlomond look operators. He said more than
lqor, lovelier, more stylish.
200,000 acres of Belmont
•
~-County's 348,000 acres have
· been sold, leased or optioned to
slrip mining .
His legialation would require
coal operators to obtain a
federal license, post performance bond and to have
&gt;li't========:::l
.before
i!lsuran.~e '-against damage
~
beginning operations.

*

BA'M'ER UP, or fore? Nobody seems too sure this
year. Baseball player Ken
Harrelson, left, apparently
· decided It would be easter
to break 100 going down
than .going up and quit the
Cleveland Indians for a lry
at tbe pro golf tour. MeanwbUe, bact at the battillg
cage, golf standout Jack
Nicklaus, above, toot Ills ·~~~~~r
turn at bat seriously as be ~
worked out wltb a · little
LeagU. team in West Palm
Beach, Fla. And Allanta
B r a v es outftelder Hank
Aaron h ad e d tools wl.th
golfer Ken Still during a
coif exhibition In Atlanta.

992·3557
E.

POMEROY 0•

OPEN 9-5 MOll. TIIRU TIIURS.-9-8 FRIDAY-9-9 SATURDAY

~h.:~~b; \~ede~!e :f ~=~

129 MILL STREET

MIDDLEPORT, .OHIO

Ju Ly

1iin:g~th:;e~lif~-e:_:sp:an:.=of~th:e~b~ill~-!::::::::~

PRICES START TODAY
GOOD THRU JULY 17th
WHILE QUANTITIES LAST!

.

FREE.

' ·tr\v:

Carnation

US.DA

CHOICE

Various
Colors

ReSII'fecr

FOL.DING _yy

BOY.'S SIZES
CUT.OFF SHORTS

BATHROOM
TISSUES

To

Limit

QIWI!ities

LAP TRAYS

!

&gt;

Enj~

Latest Styles

Airline Serving

I.

Comfort
At Home .

Variety
Of Colors

Ladies' &amp;Girls'
TENNIS SHOES.·
MOLDED SOLES
WASH .IN
WASHER

4 ROU PKGS. .

GOLDEN ISLE

PEARS

2

Vinyl
Hose

2lh
SIZE

99~

GOLDEN ISLE

ORANGE JUICE

'

46 OZ.

~NS

Round Steak
$
lb.

Charm in

Right

10Nf1 US ROUND mAK ........Jb. 1.G9

CUBE STEAK

... 1.29
GROUND BEEF.... ~ ••• 2 lb.

SUPER
-

1.39

FIDrida I.QI

-SPECIAL

CELERY
. bdl.

25•

.,~

..

GOLDEN ISLE

SUGAR

ALARGE
SELECTION
.
.

'

51b.

...

DUNCAN HINES

SUMMER TOYS .
Your Choice
·Regular
2 Price

. '

CAKE MIX

k

3 · ~:s 99~

PamiiiiJ, 0.

Main Sl

' ef

MILK·

ROLL

CHAPMAN'S SHOES

FREE

·Certified Gas Stations

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JULY 17

$,.77

and LADIES SPORT SHOES

&lt;

1

SWIM WE.AR
GIRLS SIZES

Garden
Hose

ALSO MENS TENNIS SHOES

B7. •

•

50 FT. 1!2"X 50

..

Ca

•

CLEARANCE

WOMENS SANDALS
GREAT REDUCTIONS
.-. · NOWI

HEMING AID
SERVICE CENTER

-----LATEST STYLES

coarse

· not restricted
·
money IS
to
those with sight.
In my opinion, Braille, as
we know it, is out of the
question. Results of a test
performed on a one-dollar
bill using a H o we Press
Braille writing instrument
precludes the use of thatsystern for t h r e e reasons: 1) · - - - - - - - -. .
Braille dots are too deep and
induce early wear to paper
currency; 2) Braille numbers can be raised In value
through the addition of one
· or more dots, which ·could
be done by anyone with a
properly sbaped tool; 3) Only
a small percentage of those
with sight impairment are
trained in the use of B~aille.
To be totally serviceable,
SfN. 2nd Ave.
any method of identification
Middleport
relying on the sense nf touch
992-5561
should be capable of endur-

BELTONE

Haing Aid Center

··-~

The system sbould be unalterable for ·the protection o1
the bJ,ind and universall7
recogruzable by anyone incapable of communicati!lg in
any fashion.
One such method employs
the use nf a continuous row
nf dots, less
t ba n
Braille, running f r o m one
edge of a piece of paper currency to the other in a pattern essentially different for
each denomination.
Interested readers should
address suggestions to Rep.
JolurRarick, U.S. Congress,
Washington, D.C.

,.;

BELTONE

With 510 Groeery Purchase
"' v

Excluding Cigarettes
•

INSTANT COFFEE

.

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1

21b.

WHITE - YELLOW - DEVIL'S FOOD
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Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
. visiting hours 2-4 and 7-3 p.m.
Maternity viaiting hours 2:36to ellmlnate It wberev' .
4:30 p,m.
' Parents only on
be found ..
er 1t may Pedialrics Ward. ·
··
F. tcb ·
.
Btrtbi
a · ett cauhoned that
modern testing
thoda .
Mr. and Mrs. William Roush,
me
can
now detect aflemely mlnu'le New Haven, a daughter; Mr.
quantities of contamination and Mrs. Denver Lee Bates, Jr.,
"We must aD be alert to avoid ~allljmlis, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
even the
..
Dale Edward GWJ, Middleport,
lamina tion andSUBPICIOnt of kcon- a daughter; Mr. and Mrs.
mus wor to
strengthen sanitation standards Donald Lee Brown, Gallipolis, a
already the highest In th tire daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Jasper
food·~ industry " F::hett Hughes, oak Hill, a.daughter ;
declared
'
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Taylor,
·
,Gallipo)i.!;, a son.
·
Dlscluirges ·.
SUSPENDS TRADING
· Royall E. Beatiie, Richard
WASHINGTON (UPI) .,.. The Morgan Brammer, Doo,ald E.
Securities and Exchange Burchett, Mrs. George S.llurns
Commission has suspended and infant son, Mts.- Phyllis ,A.
over-tbe-eoullter trading In the Greer, Hughie l.eport, Sr., Mrs.
stock of Hotei, Inc., Clevelarid, James C. McCorkle and infant
for ten days because there was son, Mrs. Harry L. McDermott,
no adequate information Mrs. Donald Eugene Mourning
available about the firm's and infant daughter, Mrs.
financial condition. ·
Steven Elwood Nunn, Glennon

IUIERALOIE
The numeral one (l) in
Braille as illustrat~ above
!s made by using_ the top dot
m the fll'st verbcal row of
t h r e e, after the numeral
designate of four dots representing the letter "L" in reverse. It remains now for

!

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LADIES APPAREL

Frances .Mc![emie, Mildred
'flw•I•HCIO, and Mfs. Robert

•on IS 1.EC1

L

·'

;;"»:'J'&lt;&lt;•m;.;...-.,
- &lt;-I:
• T.•ii'4 •;•:-X!I:JiXJ;.:o:U.&lt;;».J,'

·
Stauffer ShU t Down

Rusche!, Frances
. Stewart, Barbara Zerkle, Kay
and Celine McGowan, Mrs.
Harry Miller, Gail 111111 Leann .
Also, Ada Wears, Crystal
While, Sadie Warth, Nita
Coode, Joyc:e Canwn, Mary
'l'babet, ·Karen Marsball, Ella
Rousb, Grace Wallace, Mrs.
Gary (Mary) Roush, Betty
Ross, Iva Roush, Louise Roush,
Thelma Roush, Jlnny Hubbard,

FOR AlL DEBTS, PulllM

•

Agricultural Research and
Develq~~~~e~~t Center, Wooster
Donald G. . Fatcbett oi
BIIAfield ..,... __..._
' """''·• ,. - n t of
otlle 7,400 member dairy
bargaining cooperative, told the
174 ~gates In attendance that
their COilpe.lative participates
actively on a committee
estab~ to study methods of
cJeallng with grieul(ju'al waste
dl8p"'lll as well as other related
. problems 111ch u antibiotic and
. pesti8de Control.
"We are qUite certain,"
Fak:bet said, "that agricultural
cootaminationiS a minor part of
the total ~uUm picture, but
weare none the less determined

•.·.·.•.·.·..· ..·..·
LONDON ( UPI) - Dick
Haymes, 52-year-old ·~
star of the 1HG'a ud IJ5t'a
who oace was married lo
Dale Persinger, Jr., Mrs. actress Rita Hayworth, at a
Terrance Powell, Miss Genieve
SAIGON (UJ&gt;1) - Vice Supreme Court Tuesday night and mualing the press. Tbe
Stobart, Mrs. Alvin N. Cooper, . bankruptty bearing Tuesday
Mrs. Sylvia Denney, Miss Erma :::~~:. w;~d,o:Yw~l~":; PresidentNguyen&lt;;aoKybroke ruled c~titutional an election 1~verni'nent routlnel7 MlJel
.
'
his )lolilical alltance with law to .limit ~ n.umber cl copies nf the newapeper Lap
P. Barnett and Herbert B. Hill. months~
President Nguyen Van Thieu eandidates who ~ ,l'lllllar the Trong (Politicsl Stand), llect .
Haymes, born In Argeatlna today , accusing Thieu of presidency. The .law was by Ky, on dayl When It prints
PLEASANT VALLEY
and currently married 1o "dictatorial practice•" and crlticiud ~ being''welghted in arUclea adjudged "acafnallbe
ADMISSIONS : Walter British-born Wendy Haymes, trying to conduct 1 fraudulent Thieu's favor.
.
public Interest."
Donohue, Richard McCartney, said hb preseat assets totaled ·election ned fall.
"My conscience demands
Bobby Plants, Mrs. Genevieve about $1,9%0 bul that he exKy hopes to oppose Thieu In ~~!at I put an end to thla
Higgins, Mrs. Thomas Cornell · ' peeled to earn "between the Oct.· 3 presidentlal.electi9!1 assoclatiQD which. exists only In
'
Jessie dreenlee, all Poini $35,000 ud $40,808" lnlm fUm along with Gen • •Duong van name and that I no longer
Pleasant; Oscar Priddy, work in Spain starting ne:d (Big) Minh,. although Ky blindlyfollowyouonthepathof
Buffalo; Mrs. W. M. Sharp, month.
reportedly is having trouble errors which have placed our
Reedsville, 0 .; Mrs. Brown ':'.&lt;$:=~~:~~-,~
getting needed support.
fatherland in peril," said Ky In
Watterson, Apple Grove ;
The South · Vietnamese a letter to Thieu.
Charles Samsel, Mason, and
·
"You promised . social
Mr. Noel Harlowe
Mrs. Terry Pilwell, Racine.. . Jl.t:•
u
J.,.._ J
n--d
reforms but our society Ia
Will Be At
DISCHARGES: Mrs. uirry lUISS lUC
USUIIIU'
' IS ~
fraught wllb unptecedented
La
Sa lie Hotel
Sturm, Eddie Black, Raymond
•
injusUce and corruption while
Middleport. Ohio
Thornton, Mrs. Roy Allen,
Miss Charlot!~ Emmett foster daughter, Mrs. Virglnili the soldiers, the civil servants
on
Eugene Hanes, Mrs. William McCausland, 8(, Pliny, W. Va., . Percy Bright, Carroll Ohio· and the unprivileged citizens
Thursday•
Wetzel, Mrs. Stephen Johnson died Tuesday morning in tile five nephews, Dr. ~118nd~ are condemned to a life of
July
15, 1971
and daughter, Mrs. Dewitt Holzer Medical Center after 1' McCausland m Roanoke Va. destitution Wllmown t.o this
Browning.
long illness. She was the Smith McCa~ and Georg~ date," Ky said. ·
from
~ta.m.
to 12 Noon
Birth: July 13, a daughter to daughter of the late .~neral McCausland, Pliny; Andrew "You
promised
the
Mr.. and Mrs. William Sharp, John McCausland of Civil War McCaustsnd, Houston, Te~. development of a democratic To repair and service
Rac1ne.
fame, and the late Charlotte and · Bright McCausland system yet tbe democratic hearing aids.
·
Emmett Hannah McCausland. Henderson.
' institutions have been abused
Sbe 'Was born October 27, 1883. Funeral services will be and corrupted and the basic Batteries and supplies
Confederate Brig. Gen. conducted at 2 p.m. Friday rigbts of the citizens are under for all makes for sale.
McCausland led the charge of from the Crow-Russell Funeral serious threat of annlhilaUon. Mr. Harlowe will be
the company that burned Home witll the Rev. Fred . "Those unfulfllled proinlses glad to give you a free.
Chambersburg, Pa., which McCalllster officlatlni. Burial are essentially responsible for hearing test with the
resulted in his self-impooed will be in the McCausland the slate of stagnation and l.atest Beltone l:lecexile in Europe. He later was family cemetery near Hen- regression which has weakened tronic equipment.
cleared of guilt and moved to · derson. Friends may call at the the efforts of this nation in Its
the Henderson area.
funeral home after 6 p.m. ioday. fight against communism," Ky
Miss McCausland was a
S81'd•
If hearing is your
member of the Pliny
-- "Moreover, because of your
problem Beltone is
Presbyterian Church and a
excesslv• aftachrilent to power,
the answer
' .L
Australia, a British Comgra dua te of Ashville Women's monwealth nation changed you luiv~lndWJed In dictatorial
College, Ashville, N\ C. She i.s its currency from pounds- practlcea, preferring the
survived by one niece, Mrs. shillings-pence to dollars and . flatteries of sycophants over the
Harriett Brown, Charleston, a cents in 1966.
advice of honest counsel. This i.s .
the reason why my·voice has not
·
been heard ..This iS tile reason
why llnconStiluU9J18l;-legal and
504 Tenth St.
repressive actions have conHuntington, W.Va.
' tinua!]f..developed ..."
I'll one 525~7221 , '
HOUSTON (UPI) - A plant might ceaSe- operations. -. Ky also accused Thieu of
chemical company accused of He declined comment 01! . tile silencing his political opposition
endangering human health by state order and a ~ty sUit until · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •
emitting toxic gas may have to he had time to study them.
close down if it can't meet an The citY filed a pollution suit
historic anti -pollption-·.against the big chemical
•emergency order issued agairtst company hours before the state
At Your Certified Oil Company Station
it.
,
action, seeking an immediate
Charles R. Barden, secretary restraining order against
of the Texas Air Control Board, further emissions by Stauffer.
"Your Gasoline Purchase Free" If We fan To
directed the Stauffer chemical Diatrict Judge William M.
Clean Your Windshield, Weatller Permi"ing.
plant to "discontinue im- Blanton Jr. refused to iasue an
No Other Company Dares To Offer This
mediately all emissions of air irtunediate order and set an
~licy.
'"
contaminants" along the injunction bearing for Aug. 3. "I
Houston ship channel.
will not grant my restraining
"How they do this Ia up to order without bearing from both
them," he said. " If they have to siiles," Blanton said.
close down, that's what it Stauffer, which employs 200
means. If they can shut down persons, makes sulpburl~ acid •
just a portion of the plant and About 200 dockwOI'kers and
.
992-9981
·
538 W
,
halt all emissions, that's what it fll(e J!l"'''be~ Qf a !isiting, New .
• Mam
Pomeroy, Ohio ,
'
means.n,
~
Y~k..~tN:'irlve { beert,~
1·1 t ·~, .. ~
&lt;w
~~
.'
,
.
•
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Stauffer plant manager E. G. sickened by snifur dioxide ·. e Honor ~nli:Americard "a nd Mast~r 'CJia
Lang declined to speculate if the fumes in four incidents near the
Stauffer plant since April •

HOSPITAL NEWS

.1

Grace

Hays .Offers
Strip Bill

,,j

I'

THIS

·

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r------------~- ----~--------~

today's FUNNY =:·
:
.:n=il!::
Eleanor Roush, Terri Roush,

-..... -. .Roush.

a

In other

.

•

•

SALE

,_to

8difl~ ~· M~: ":e.J~~ ;Wtllfl U!MIIJ 1.were host and bosteas.
CU'Cy{a.t~se. m a d e. into .

of Winfield, W. Va. The
honorees
G ts ,received
of the many gifts.
ues
• Rileys Sunday
were Demp Riffle of U!M, and
Mr. and Mrs. Demp Riffle, Jr.
and children of Washington, D.
C.
In the evening the Rileys had
a cookout attended by Mr. and
Mrs. .Ralph Riley and grailddaughter Kippie of· Delaware
Ohio· Mr' and~ J' stover'

hrilding.
'
The dedicated 30 firemen not
only fight fires for free, they
also will help put up the

The buj]dlng will have a 60' :1
60' engine room, large enough
for eight trucks, kitchen, office
space, restrooms and a. meeting
room for ·the public 28 ft. wide
and 40 ft · deep. ·
~ides Fire Clliel · Carson
tl!ere i.s Asl!t. Fire·Chief Rosa
Roush; president, Walter
Werry; vice president, Howard
Jo.hnson·; secretary, John
Harr~, and treasurer, ~II
Jenkis, and the other firemen
all dedicated to this project.

· Marta Hubbard, Sarah Spencer,

MASON - Mr. and Mrs.
Palrick Riley were honCI'ed on
their 30th wedding annivers8ry Oxford's Universal DictionSaturday at their heme on ary describes a coin as -"a
Pomeroy St. here. Their piece of met.al (gold, sill(lr" ". ,
c!augbt..r ~•. S:!'{I.;il!-law Mr copper, etc.) ..of , Mfi·~•J"

Adeeoratedanniversarycate
was Inscribed, "Happy Anniversary 30th, Gladys and
. Patty."
Attending were the bon~,
Mr. and Mrs. Riley, Ml' ind
Mrs. Ted Riley, Sr., Clifttl ., Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph ' Riley,
Delaware, Ohio; Mrs. Herman
Ross, Mason, 8Jl!I·Mr. and Mrs.
Robert llfossman and cbildren

Karl Blelner and to buy the

The · Homestead Act became effective Jan. 1, 1863,
opening the vacant lands of
America's vast public domain to agricultural settle· ment. The World Almanac .
says that under the Homestead Act more than a million families received title
to over 248 !Dillion acres of
public Ian d across the .
plains, prairies and mountains of the West.
Puerto Rico is the only
U.S. territory ever visited by
Columbus.

"""

held July 8 at the Ohio

STOREWIDE
JULY·
CLEARANCE

Patrick IUteys

I

by 2111 feet lot purchased from more·

encireled the lighted white
candles · in holders. I '!'be cake
was deelnltd with daisies in
CGkn ol. wllite, yellow and
Mason United Methodist green. Cake,puncb, nuts, mints . . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
Omrch. Hostesses were· Mrs. ;md collee were served. Prizes
Nancy Cummins and Mrs. La were'awanled.
Vera Yeager.
The guest list included Mrs.
MissRIIUsbJriliJ1181'1'}'~ Vuginia Yonker, .Mrs. Joann
P. Conde, son of Mr. and Mrs. . F..-gusm 111111 Teresa, Mrs.
Eugene Conde, Middleport, Sarah Gibbs aild Marilyn, Mrs.
Sunday, July 18, at 2:30p.m. at Rhoda :Yeager, Mrs. Mildred
Mason United Methodist Tripp, Mrs. Olarlolte Rouah,
Clllrcb. Miss Roush is the Mrs. Kalby Davis, Mrs. Lottie
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jenb, Mrs. Ruth Roush, Mrs.
Robert· Roush, Mason. The Pal Smith, Mrs. Evelyn
ceremmy will be perfOimed by Proffitt. Mrs. Glen Hensler,
the Re.v. Parker Hinzman, Mra. Juanita Roush, Mrs. Mary
assisted by the. Rev. Father Pickens, Mrs. Wonona HoffPatella. The gracious custom of man, Lillian Maynard, Helen
open church will be observed. Bodimer, Cinda and Kathy
Tile, refreshment table was Foglesong, Lucille Harrison,.
centered with an arrangement Jean Swift, Lois Weaver, Sally
of white daisies and daisies RGss, Ann Summerfield, Sine
Murphy, Carol Proffitt, Pat

Rushsylvania.. lll:rea, To~o, employes such as acCresUine, Cleveland, Berwick, cumulations of debris and
Clyde, Kenton Burt Tower and uneven rail joints
Worthingtoq, '
·

8rai lie
' Honored Saturday Money .
For Blindt

·

$Sl,339tolinisb~forthel0

MASON- Miss Pam Roush,
Masm, was pest ol. boom- at a
Jll'e-bridal sbolter given in her
honor Tllunday evelliDg at the

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio BroWn said In each ca~ full complied In any respect witb
Br~ said lbe Toledo
Attorney General William J. public bearings were bel~ and the orders of the Public Ulilities conc;::ed a junction · ';::
Tuesday
a '14.1 when it was determined by Commission of Ohio," Brown Where railroad
are
Pennon ~e swt.agalnst lbe PUCO ~l!he comp~ts were said. "Therefore, upon the ;-equired to wort 1n such
h
ll'al Railroad and substantiated, the railroad was request of PUCO, I bave / dangerous coodi.lioos as waltSOUl! ta court trier to force lbe ordered to correct lbese "un- initiated a suit against
ways ~a · and lraclrs
to correct "unsafe safe condiUons" immedistely. railroad seeking enforcement of
mud,
rotten ·
condilio~s" . on .railroad In addition, Brown said, the the conunlsslon's orders ·and and oil have am;,.ula~
propa ty m_ Obio. .
railroad was ordered to submit demanding damages." .·
He said PUCO also found
Brown said that m 1be past 18 reports of completed repairs The suits pertain to,poper ty additional unsafe conditions
. ~onths the Public ':ftilities
_to also submit plans con- at Alliance, New,ton Falls, wbicb 11 mt a bazanl to

of te Oh1o had cenung present maintenance
•••'""' separa ~laints programs.
.
-~·the bankrupt rmlroad In
"Penn Central has not
regard to llllllllfe I!Gnditions.

Firemen ' have borrowed

Shower Given ~
D"..:..l--;to-be ··
,

a basic macaroni and cheese casserole recipe.

Evidence that datry farmers
are deeply concerned with
environmental problems was
presented at the mld -year·
df:)egate mee"ftft of Milk Inc

Jn1y lt.

hplding. Tbey are now potting
in the footer; D!!J:1 will be the
· fi.Q&lt;r. They llllve earned a lot of

814.1 Million Suit Facing.· Railroad

.:...,~~~~on

Dairymen Gkd to
)fight ·Pollution

.

.

:mown

~- Tbe O.lly Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pw.avy, 0 ., July 14, 1971

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•1.09

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�It-'l1le Dll)ySeDIIntl,Middleport.Pomeroy,O.,Ju)y 14,19'11

u- 'l.'llell!dll a A""'' lfi."....,.. t-Puma o

Retirement Years WSCS Topic

.Meigs 4-H
OubNews

•

Love. • . Many-Splendored

The meeting of tlie W.S.C.S. of by Mrs .. Julia McComas using Olhers attending were Mrs ..
Heath United Methodist Church the subject, "Retlrement, Boon Edith Jividen, Mrs. Mildred

The ('4mnlia ~lake II 4-11 MondaJ evening at lhe church , or . Bore." She stressed ~I
aub met at ~ Jonlu's was opened with an organ retirement can be a begmmng,
11N1e July 6 With two adYisors prelude by Mfl!. para Henneily, not an end, ~t Christ walked
llld ZS l!!embers In attendance. and Mrs. Nan. Moore presiding with men ddring the golden
' They lid: tbelr ti*d "EJ:· and reading a poem,. ••My years and that retlred people
plarlng the Outdoors" trip Cll Creed" by Edgar Guest.
. want to lle busy and needed.
llary'a farm. Connie Miller and Devotionals were presen~
She said it is triumph to grow
Delllie BtrtNield, who pve a
·
.
old .gracefully. She read the

Roush Ramz"l1J

demonatraUoa on fitting a
Pl!llll'n, also were in cbarge of
lj
recreatioo. Joann M~WbOrter
gave a delilonatratlon on
lJ
CUTeCI table se~. Sherry
SbUiz and CiDdy Ellis served
it!fiahme.t~ - Ruth Jordan. The family of the late
, THE S'IITCH and Sew 4-11 Leooard and Susan Roush held
Qub met JuiJ i at the Portland thelr reuniQD SundaY at the
Part, two advison and four homeofMr.andMrs. JamesC.
"""""'" being present. For Roush, Letart, Route 1, West
refr.e sbments, everybody Virginia.
·. brougbt cookies. The next Aitending were Mrs. Nettie
meeting Ia scbeduled July 29 ~t Moore, Mrs. Norma Baker,
Ada Stlgllnao's bouse.- Leslie Angie and Ricky, Mr. and Mrs.
Rclberts.
Frank Grimm and Desiree, Mr.
THE PINK Panthers 4-11 Club and Mrs. Paul Johnson, Mr. and
-1 July 6 at the home of Mrs. Mrs. Kenneth Imboden and
Karen Werry. There were two Peggy, Mr. and Mrs. Franklin
advi8«s and eight members Imboden and Melissa, Debbie,
· tbet e. Taillmy Smith gave a Kimberly, Theresa, Timm:' and
demCIIslralioo oo table seUing. Tooy, Mrs. Doris Ford, John
Jody Grueser and Sandy and Susan, Mr. and Mrs. David
llamiltlln were In charge of Grueser, Glenn, Kay and
recreatloo. Saron Holter served Mistee, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
• refreabmenta. - Kimberly Halley a¢ Amy, Mr. and Mrs.
Grueaer.
LaiTy Hudson and Lori, Mr. and
THE SNOWBAlL 4-H Club Mrs. Detner Roush, Jr., Tom,
mel June 29 at the park Cll Beverly and Donald, Mr. and
Rwte 33 with tbree advisors Mrs. Delner Roush, the Thlrd,
and eight members in at- and Detner the Fourth; Mr. and
lendance. They discussed wbo Mrs. Howard Johnson, Angie,
would be clriviiW to Camden Diana and Tina, Mrs. Curtis ,
~ Jeff. and s~ Amclld Roush and Sylvia, Mrs. Cheryl
were, ID._eblrgeo ~ ·1ecljatiCJL ,Sta~ts and Bobby, Mr. and Mrs.
F.r- i'efreabmeDts, they bad a Liiwrence Roush, Mrs. Icy
c;ootout.- a.arlesOberbolzer. Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
• THE TUPPERS Plains 4-H Roush Bobby Jimmy and
GlrlametJuly&amp;aiMrs. Oiarles Danny: Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Carr's bome With two advisors Roush and Darin, Mr. and Mrs. '
and nine members in at- Jack Duffy, Jackie, Eddie and
jrndance They worbd 011 their David, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
.material and on, cut out pat- Miller and Joey, Mr. and Mrs.
lierna. Sonia ~ and Beth James C. Roush, Kimberly and
Headley were m cbatge of Bobby, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
recftlltion. Mrs. Olarles Carr Lawson and Charlie, Bruce
sened refresbments. - Teresa Reid, Richard Dean, Mr. and
Buckley.
.Mrs. Benny Hoffman, and Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Westen.

Reunzon
. 11e/d

OFF 'ro BELPRE
, LaiTy Glachren will ·lea
.
.ve
~-1 ~ Belpre to begin duties
usistant football coach at
Belpre High. ~boo! and
)lbysical educalionlllllnictor In
~e grade _school. Gladwell
laugbl pbysical educatloo the
past year in a Fort Lauderdale
elementary scbool in Flcrida.
He ~ the Slpmner with bis
graridplrents, Mr. and Mrs.
Delbort Becke!'' Middlepcrl. He
is a graduate of Middleport

Ziegler, and Rev. and Mrs.
. Bumgarner.
New officers installed by the
Rev .
Bumgarner
were
president, Mrs. Euvetta
· BechUe; vice-president, Nan
Moore; secretary, Mrs. Clara
Criswell; treasurer, Mrs .
poeril'b~·Billy Graham, "Older Eiizabeth Hibbs ; spiritual
People's~t and a prayer growth, Mrs. Rose McDade;
by Rev . Daniel Russell. . program material, Mrs. Nan
Scripture read by Mrs. Mary Moore; membe.rship comElizabeth Meinhart was the 16th l!litlee,
MJS: Frances
Psalm.
Brewington; Mrs. Edith
Sick and shut-ins are Bess,,Jividen, M~s. Ruth Euler; local
Sanborn, Hattie Smith, Robert ChUrch re!jponsibUity, Kathryn
Harris, Mary Emmish, Eleanor Knight,, Mrs. F.iance5 Wilson,
Zeiher, Frieda Faehnle, Mrs. Mrs. ~rna Wayland, and
Pat Gallagher, Lemma campus mm~. 1\ir~. Lettie
l.eighter, Blanche Haskins, and Young.
. ""·.
Mrs. Ebersbach.
.
Rev. Bumgai'ner ' closed the
Mrs. Emma Wayland said meeting with p&lt;ayer. Hostesses
$155 was cleared on a recent were May Lambert, chainruin,
rummage sale and Mrs. Moore and the contributors, Francis
reported on a missionary Klein, Lemma Leighter, Zelia
meeting in Marietta last week. Pullin, and Katherine Swanson.

·

..By BE'ITY CANARY

I was late for a lunch appointment the other day be·
cause a neighbor girl gave me some dandelions. Such a
gift quite naturally meant returning to the house in order
to find a pin for my lovely corsage.
.1 apologized to my friends for my tardiness, shared
my neighbor's gift, and the four of us agreed unanimously
that there's truly no end to the ways of being loved.
Somebody once said, "Only the aware are krateful."
Thinking about my dandelions should help
en I feel .r
neglected, unloved or alone. They'll remind m to become
more:aware of what I'.ve already been offer ' on a lonely
daY,
,. .1
' It's possible we spend too many hours t gJ:etting that /
no grand gestures have come our wa~
· ly. We sigq.
for the lifelong. avowals, the big proofs, e m3gnificent ·
gifts. We too often overlook the small estures of l!ffec- ·
lion, the gifts of little or no materi~/val~e. . . •· ·..
Gestures of love certainly inelude:·i n emerald bracelet'
on a bi~thday and a trip to Enjlland on a tenth anni·
versary.
;
Gestures of love are also:
·
A four-year-old offering dandelions.
The boy at the supermarket who always remembers

r

KAY'S BEAUTY SAWN
MIDDLEPORT
169iN. 2nd.Ave.
NEW HOURS:

8:00A.M. -8:00P.M.
8:00A.M. -6:00 P, M.
8:00A.M. ,4: 00P.M.

Mon. Thru Thurs.
Friday
"Saturday ·

0

~ry

6

OPERATORS

. Phyllis
Nina
Kay

Lois
Brenda

Appollltmeal Not
Alwayl Neceuary

'

Choice!

ChoiceI

•...

lb.

VISIT IN COLUMBUS
Mr. and Mrs. Harold EbersIbach and EnuneU Blackburn
of Pomeroy visited in Colwnbus
over the weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. James Ebersbach, While
there the blrthday of thelr ..
daughter-in-law, Kathy, was
observed
· ·
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HOMECOMING...$ET
RACINE .:... "The'3'it.. Moriah
Church of God here will bold its
annual homecoming Sunday
with lunch to be served at noon.
High School.
The Rev: AIlilian ·of Colwnbus
'
will be ·the afternoon speaker.
All singers of the Meigs area
NAMES OMIIlW . are invited to participate. The
The names of Mr. and Mrs • . public is invited.
.
Robert Freitag were inadyertently omitted fr&lt;m those
IN GERMANY
entertaining to honor Miss
Kathryn Reuter and Mr. LETART FAILS- Mr. and
Richard H. Freitag m. The Mrs. Charles Mugrage, fanner
IWbert Freitags entertained at Letart Falls residents, have
their home on Eagleoest Road, learned thelr son, Charles, is
Akroo, on June 12 with a 6:30 stationed with the U. S. Anny in
buffet dinner. Guests included Germany. His address is PFC
the wedding party and relatives Charles I. Mugrage, 28U2-li275,
of the prospective bride and A Btry, 516 Arty, APO N. Y.
09227.
groom.

49
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c

.,

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lb.$419
S9'
Pork Roast • • • .
Crab Lees • • • . I Groad Roun• • .0.99'
7 Pork Chops • • •
lienen •• • .::.69'
Sliced Bacon • .,.,. 68C
SEMI-BONELESS -

FRESH PICNIC

COOKED KING

FRESH GROUND

SIRLOIN CUT

SUPER-RIGHT SKINLESS

lb.

A&amp;P FANCY

•

pq.

STOCI UP Olf THIS

•

c

OVER-NIGHT
pkg. of

POLLY'S POINTERS

5-oL

Peeve: Have Coupon
TENDER GREEN

But No Merchandise

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$4 00

• 6":: I

Green Beans

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---~&gt;::i'W'"O'l"""""~;,;·;
~.-,-;.·~.:=:·~~-!IM,IFJ.M

~DEAR POLLY-I made a poncho out of our plaid wool
llbtomobife robe and find it
,
i§ used much more by ev·
eryone in the family. I
Washed it iri that cold water
~ ~uid for woolens, dried it . ~;wO
' : *'ay from the heat. cut a
; I)-inch gash in the center
• and finished the edges by
: &amp;;ing yarn to crochet a
• cfouble-chain stilch.-MRS.

:
:
•
:
:

~iest

lietween the tines of silver forks is to put the silver polish
~ a pipe clca••·r and il is easy to work around hctween
!hem.,-SUSAf\:
.
'

l'Jrn
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51/2·01.

Potatoes • •

. 3=.I
'

Dry Milk •

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. 5:: '1 Fre~d: Fries

THURSDAY
N F 0 MEETING Olester Mrs. Ernest Richmond, the
G~ Han Tlwrsdayat 9 p.m. · former Shlrley McKinney, was
TEACHERS AND workers of guest of honor at a layette
the Pomeroy Cburcb of Christ shower given recenUy at the
VacatidoBibleScboOIThursday Feeney-Bennett Post,
at a p.m.,jlible Scboo1 will be American Legion hall in Mid·
held trool Aug. 8 through 17 dleport. H~tesses were, Mrs.
from 8:30 to 9 p.m.
Lucy McKinney, Mrs. Betty
ROCK SPRINGS Grange Bale! and Mrs. Darrell
Thurllday at ap.m. at the ball. M~.
Inspection. Bring small bells for ·A pink ~ blue color scheme
the program.
·
was used, "::th a large stork as
TWIN CITY Shrinetles the centerpiece.
-...
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the The door prite was woo by
Shrine Club in Racine.
~· Colleen VanMeter. Other
SPECIAL meeting of tbe pnzes were awarded Clyda
Pcmeroy Lodge No. 164 R&amp;AM ~ensworth, Nola Swisher,
Friday 7:30 p.m. Work 1n EA Linda Boyles and Doris Richfurnlsbed.
degree. All Master Masons
MH&gt;DLE~RT A,qlateui invited.
~ aub"Wi1r P'y at a SATUilDAY
p.m. at the home of Mrs. MEIGS COUNTY Retired
Olarlel Gaakill, Front St. Role Teacher Assn. '!ftd guests pimic
Reynolds assistant hostess.
at the Roadside Park on Rt. 33
ooleft going nCrtb at 5:30p.m.
Saturday, July .17. Bring
covered dish and own table
service.
Mrs. J. 0. Roedel left
MEIGS COUNTY Retired Tuesday for Chillicothe for a
Teachers Assn. picnic for two weeks stay with Mr. and
members and guestS, Saturday, Mrs. Robert Hamm.
5:30 p.m. at roadside park on Mrs. Grace Faris of
Mr.JamesBringardofUpper left going ~orth. All retired Lawrenceburg, Tenn. is the
Mooldalr, N. J. accompanied ~chers inVIted: Bring covered houseguesl of Mr. and Mrs.
his children, Terry, Jill, Lori, dish, table sei'VICe.
Lorain Sterrett, E. Main St.
TCIII aDd Bobby for a three ICE CREAM social Saturday Miss Darla Ebersbach,
week's visit with their grand- at the Chesler Flre House Pwleroy, Miss Glcria EbersJIIAIIIa, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin sponsored by the Ladies ·bach of Gallipolis BD41 Miss
Haqerty, Hudson Street.
AuD1iary of the Olester Flre Karen Dubonna of Mari~tta who
Mrs. Lawrence F. Boyd and Department Serving will begin are in training for licensed
daughter Charleaanna Powell at 7 p.ln.
practical nurses, in Marietta,
of ~II spent the weekend .
· SUNDAY
have relurned from a tOur at
with Mrs. Ana Bryant in OOUNTY PRAYER Service Atlantic City, N. J., and
Rutland and visited Mr. and &amp;mday 2 p.m. at Rutland Philadelphia, Pa.
Mrs. Carl Qllalls, Pomeroy, and Community Chl!fcb. Okey
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Boyd Ahart eztends a welccme to
and Mrs. Birdie Powell of everyone.'
'
·
for a residual scale fpr .f11ms
Middleport.
espected to be sold in videoMr. and Mrs. Norman
cassette form for playback over
stewart. Barbara and Brian,
and Kelly Betz of Colwnbus
.
heme TV aets.
· were recent guesla of Mr. and
Mn. G. G. Werner. Mn. George
Dural of Wellatoo, and Mrs.

Personal Notes

Middleport

Personal Notes

DavidRobrofMlami,Fia. were
'flleldly guests of 'the Wernen.
lb. Stnart and Mrs. Durst
are dlasblera of the Wernen
and lin. Robr II 8 grand-

00

c

lO.oL
jar

Crea11

$4 00

• ~ 69 BuHer11ilk Bread 3-:: 1 Sultana Beans
C JANE PARKER

• •

San•wich -Bread 3t~L '100 Gol•en Corn
JANE PARKER

A&amp;P CREAM STYLE

3 ='100
•• . ·."'i"'61'

WITH TOMATO SAUCE

OUR OWN -

16 FREE

Tea Ba&amp;s

at the close of
turrlav. July 17th, 1971 A&amp;P Stores
area. wil l di-sco ntin,ue
1-li&lt;:tri hullon of the E.F. Mat Dorlalcil
mp Company's Plaid Sta mps.
IC•omplete Details on Redem~"'""1
Procedures are Available
A&amp;P Stores.

pt.
NECTARINES

FRESH

,,

L·

mond.
Refreshments of cake, ice
cream, l"'tato chips, .mints,
coffee and pop were served to
those attending: Kate Fink,
Nina Stiles, Frances Martin,
Nellie Cox, Charlotte Grant,
Carla McKinney, Brenda
Jividen, Mrs. ida~ Richmood,
Mrs. Audry Mi!Jer, Ann Zerkle,
Debbi, Terrie, Mable Hysell,
Kay LaudMnilt, Jeff and Greg,
Greg Grimm, Pattie and Vickie
Boyles, Mrs. Evelyn Grueser
and Mrs. Sylvia Byers. Sending
gifts were: Mary Roush,
Pauline Russell, Vivian
Phillips, Rosanna Manley,
Cathy Jruiott, Molly McGhee,
Mae Lewis, Downy, Katie and
~aijie, Grace .[lara~. Mrs.
Edward Perry .;;;(Unda, Ida
Mae Martin, Sandy Smith,
Thelma Berry and Opal, Alma
Fraizer, Linda Lane, Marie
Carruthers, Unda Laudermilt,
Sheila Carsey, and Kenda,
Connie Dodson, Sally Owens,
Bernice McKinney, Gladys
Fife, Jennie Engle, Mary
Bwngardner, Sandy Walker,
Janet Morris and Kathy, Mt;•
and Mrs. Ancil Cross, Faye
Walker, Ruth and Alisha,
Carolyn Haley, Kathy and
Barbie, Judy Cowan, and Mrs.
Carold Mimer of Herts,
England.

•~ AF Thought. •«.·...
~
or Today : :.:
• The oniy lhing worlh il l'~
• having in an earthly il tr
• el(iSience . is a sense of . . ,,
humor .. ·.:'.·.iL ' ~

il
il

.

.

.Anangement

lblley's fklist
S9 N. Second St.
Middleport, Ohio

m -s56G

::.. *It's Quidd
* *
...

E
.jr

t

-1&lt;
-1&lt;

:
:
-1&lt;

..,

for Quantum. A matching

Bikinis ore still preferred
beach wear for most girls
ond this year's variation
(left) is a chevron-printed
Treviro suit by Ellen Folk

tunic cover-up o r romper

suit ore available with the
suit. Trevirc star print is

(right) for the chee ry hal ter top, H a t p·a n t s and
mid-knee o v e r s k i r t by
Jock Bodi for Concept VII .

the perfect eve-ca tcher

"Adam's Apple"
Tbe projecting cartilage of
lhe larynx in the throat received the name of "Adam's
apple" from the belief that a
piece of the apple that Eve
gave to Adam stuck in his
throat.

attend the State Garden Club
Convention in Colwntius Aug.
10, 11, and 12 at the Neil House.
Arrangemenls for the Meigs
CGunty Falr Flower show were
discussed.
Three guesls were Mrs. Fred
Morrow and Mrs. Martha
Williams of Syracuse, and Mrs.
George Faris of Lawrenceburg,
Tenn., houseguest of Mrs. J. 0.
Roedel.

Mr. O"llle Barnett of
C8ylrille, Pa. wu the recent
· PfJII of Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Beebtle.
Mrs. Betty Gladwell and
Randy Becker of Cohvnms
1p1111 the wukerd with Mr. and
Mrs. Delbert Becker.
Actin Guild said lm&amp;er' taib

Screen

studios, independent productioo
ccmpanies and three major
,,GIVEN SURPRISE
RUTLAND ~ Mrs. Ana television networks as the 12:01
Bryant, Rutland, wu given a a.m. WednesdaY strike deadline
surpri.le birthday party Friday. neared.
Both sides refused conunent
Jaly t, 11y Jane Wise, Tam,
Abby, Timmie and Eric Marlin, on progress oo the dlscussim
JolmMorrla UICI Mooa JlbBKI. over a new u.r-year cootracl,
Mrs. Bryant was 12 yean old. saying only that there was
Ice cream, cake and kookld nothing new· to report.
A strike by the guild would
.. .,ed. Later, villlln
-Mr. and Mrs. Llw1ence simi dolm production in New
iloJd. Donna and David, Mrs. York and Hollywood u weD as
Illrdle Powell and L8wrence ballinl filml being sbot on
locatloo in foreign tountrlell bJ,
Fltldl of WM. , art
American cnmpeni-.
Key ._in the dilpOte WU I
...... ..... clemend lor • C!llln
l)w '!IIIII
royalty paJIDenta, called
The lbape of .lhe dandelion r ' hraie. made to ee~or~ · for
leaf-like thlt of a Uoo's • re1'11118 of their mmea ontooth-gave the plant its televislllll. At one pGint In the
name. The name comes from lll!lotlaUa a II Jll'' cent
the French words, ·'ctent de reduclian .liglft- repur led.
lion," meaning lion's tooth.
The gulld ...,. wu PI Inc

COURSE COMPLETED
MASON - Ariny Private
Paul D. Johnson, Jr., 20, whose
parenls live in Mason, recenUy
completed an eight-week Nike·
Hercules Flre Control crewman
course at Ft. Bliss, Tex.

Fridays Only
it
The Drive-In Window* '~'
is Open ..
::· ~
9 A.M. to7 P. M.
-1&lt; '·
I Continuously)
:,:::
Other Banking Hours 9 to fi·,·
3 and S to 7 as uoual on il • •
Fridays.
il.::\

··
·
1FARMERS BANK f .
...

~and SAVINGS CO.: ~·:
POMEROY, OHIO

~ •rC

;~··

~

~~~

~

WITH OUR FEDDERS .

~

-----

AIR CONDITION£·RS
All Si%es In Stock!

We Install!

'"l/1

.,..
~~

,..,.

INGELS FURNITURE .
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
PH. 992-2635
MIDDLEPORT

,..,J
' [1
,.,,

.---..:...,__..:..,_..-'======·
(
]
Keith
·111
'

Goble -Ford In Mld~leport

iii#:

End of Model

GIGANnC SILLDOWN Ill

Out They GO!

'71
FORD
July
·Sell down
It's NOW Tlmell

EXCELLENT SELECTION

.

65 CARS IN STOCK
Excellent Selection ... Maverick, Mustang, Falcons, Fairlane 500,
Torino, Torino GT, Galaxie 500, LTO, Station· Wagons ... ShopEarly For Big Bargains. Also FlOO &amp; F250 Pickup Trucks . V-B's,
6's, Std. &amp; Automatic Transmissions.

Buy Of AUfetime!
·Come In Now! .

Your Trade Is
Worth More NOW

ONLY

sggs

.c.,;,
....
,

a::~~= l~~

WE NEED
USED CARS...

Derl Millie
Us Do It!

....]',
:-~·

,.------------------a ·
JOINIHI
..~~l~ :]

r-

ROLLYWOOD (UPI
Extended negotiations were
initiated Monday and ri-iay\
inalastditdleffarltopie+enta
strike hY D,ooo · movie . and
television actors which could
vtrtuallyballthe American film
industry.
·
A spokesman for the

~ / ..

.-I&lt;
Member FDIC
i!· JL
GARAGE ·SALE SET
·i&lt;
Member Federal
.,: " '
The Happy Hustler Class of -1&lt;
Rese"'e System
il· ·""
the Wesleyan Methodist Church c
11. .,.
will hold a garage sale Friday ***************~ ,'~,

GaflrJen C'IU
7 b p.'
lJ /d
tcntc' 11e
The Pomeroy Garden Club's
annu.ai picnic. was enjoyed at
the home of Mrs. L. c. Karr in
Syracuse Monday evening with
Mrs. Howard Nolan co-boa tess.
DevotiO!IIlls were given by
Mrs. Karr wbo read the 92nd
Psalm. Members answered roll
call with, "what I have
blooming in my garden." An
invitation was extended to

E
.
asy

~

.

Brighten
Your Home
With A

l.olely Permanent

• -~ln ~teftans !~~

.

. I

f '

1'* ************1. _;

By Strt.ke

were begun witb major movie
MARVEL LEMON

-.

Th reatene'd

00

cons

AN. IMPORTANT
ANNOUNCEMENT
FROM A&amp;P

and Saturday in the garage at ,•
the church parsonage from t to :'_:
4.
•

~La . Shack'

.);';l Ia d
.r 1 m n

A&amp;P NON·FAT

: ft. E. N.

:..6E A RwayPI0know
L L Y- Thc
to clea"

JuJy

8y HELEN HENNESSY ..
'
.
NEA Wome11'1 Editor
NEW YORK - tNEA) Mary Lou Curtis, owner of
· the "La Shack" bouliql!es In
Lo.cust Valley, N.Y., and
Plllm Beach, Fla., has accumulated an enviable fol·
lowing of customers all over
the country. And now ber designa are available in many
cities.
. She designs clothes in the
bright, SUDD:f colors that are
most flattenng to the complexion and she makes only
styles that are PRE'ITY.
"I have never followed a
trend," says Mrs. Curtis.
"That's why my customers
return again and again or
caB me from all parts of the
country. And it's l!lso why
my customers who h a v e
daughters encouraged me to
open "La Shack, Jr."
Shown at the dressing room at ·La Shack lleftl is the perfect worm-weather
duo--the skirt slim but not tight,. the cool and lounderoble shirt. Lace-edged
Mrs. Curtis k n o w s how
young girls should d r e s s
HotPonts (right) ore in printed cotton and shown · with a little bore-rib blouse
aince four of her seven chilof cotton lace, · a Mary Lou Curtis interpretation of a favorite fashion.
dren ate girls, ages 7 to 20.
h
M
Her clients don't want the workroom right on the prem· with unusual trim of braid
, ost of the swnmer (as ·
tbrift soop look or the get-up ises in Locust Valley. On the or lace, long and short dress- ions\are in ·COlton, many of
of a costwne party. And lower floor is the cutting es, some with matching cash· them lined for perfect drape.
aince she is very mucb a room, with rolls and bolts of mere cardigans, slacks that
part of the milieu for which exclusive fabrics reaching are a triumph of fit, Hot· And to match each of the
abe designs, all her fashions nearly to the ceiling. And in Pants to tum a skirt or dress marvelous prints and woven
have quality workmanship, the back of the shop in the in t o a dual-purpose outfit checks are at least 20 diffastidious detailing and lady- sewing room sit local women and the very new "cool cue." ferent colors in the best looklike simplicity.
wbo honestly like to sew. · This is a short A-line sklrt ing shirts you've seen in a
T))e built of the styles are
From the workroom come that is really an abbreviated long time.
·
actuallY made In a cheerful long and short .skirts, each culotte.

dauPfl!r.

.•

..

.

AlP WHOLE OR SUCED

$400

A REAL CASH SAVEl

nw.ll*&lt;m&lt;-,..

. DEAR POLLY-The boards in my hardwood floors
• :if :1te coming apart and I do not know what to do about
: I them so I hope someone who knows will help me.: f MRS. R. B.

To11ato Juice

• •

IONA CUT

Polly's Problem

•

A&amp;P BRAND

lona Peas

By POLLY CRAMER

: DEAR POLLY-One of my Pet Peeves is that so often
: I find a coupon in the newspaper offering money off on a
: certain item and then I cannot find the item in the store.
• I •think' every store in an area should carry such items,
: not just the big ones.
~ :Also, I never seem to find a child's toothbrush, after
• !lie size for a 6-year-old, that does not fall down on the
: job after abol!l a month of use. Consequently I have been
: fqrced to buy an adult's size for a child.- M. A. S.
•• •DEAB
•
READERS-We have received so many Peeves
; about co•polll ud redeeming them which all seems a
: searee of Irritation to many of. the girls. Phyllis wishes
• Iiley would have 8D expiration dale printed on ALL of
: lllem-some do and some do not-so the old unused ones
:; Cjluld be discarded from time to time. Mrs. F •. N. would
- much prefer having the manufacturers lower thelr prices
: aad eliminate the ·coal of prinlin«, haqdliog and some·
:.limes maBing· these coupons. She says that .If one needs
• alld wants an Item It Is going to be bought with or without
·;. die coupon. Alld on and on they go.-POLLY
,

~

00

cans

12

~·

"I

WEDNESDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, annual picnic,
bome of Mrs. Betty Conkle,
Wednroolay, July 14. Members
tomeetallh.m. at the church
to go to the Conkle. home at
CbMhlre. Take food and own
table service along with a Purse
fCII' a sale.
ANNUAL PICNIC PomeroyMiddleport Uona Club, 6 p.m.
Wednepiay at country home of
Riebard Olamben, Flatwoods.
· SADDLE • Slrloin Riding
Club meeting at Gallla County
Jr. Fairgrounds, 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday. Members bring
covered.dish and drinks. Meat

$

Yo1r

Your
'

VJ,

Rags for Riches at

how you like your frozen items packed.
A daughter bringing coffee to you on the patiq.
The newsboy placing your paper behind the screen
door.
A smile shared with the bus driver while two children
hunt for correct change.

Prices Good Thru Saturday, July 17tltl

I

-

FASHION

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'

I

Open 8 to 8 Daily- Thu.s. &amp; Sat. Til 6
•' '

m-7161

MIDDLEPGRT, 0.

461

s. 3rd

KEITH GOBLE
Phone 992-2196

'""

�It-'l1le Dll)ySeDIIntl,Middleport.Pomeroy,O.,Ju)y 14,19'11

u- 'l.'llell!dll a A""'' lfi."....,.. t-Puma o

Retirement Years WSCS Topic

.Meigs 4-H
OubNews

•

Love. • . Many-Splendored

The meeting of tlie W.S.C.S. of by Mrs .. Julia McComas using Olhers attending were Mrs ..
Heath United Methodist Church the subject, "Retlrement, Boon Edith Jividen, Mrs. Mildred

The ('4mnlia ~lake II 4-11 MondaJ evening at lhe church , or . Bore." She stressed ~I
aub met at ~ Jonlu's was opened with an organ retirement can be a begmmng,
11N1e July 6 With two adYisors prelude by Mfl!. para Henneily, not an end, ~t Christ walked
llld ZS l!!embers In attendance. and Mrs. Nan. Moore presiding with men ddring the golden
' They lid: tbelr ti*d "EJ:· and reading a poem,. ••My years and that retlred people
plarlng the Outdoors" trip Cll Creed" by Edgar Guest.
. want to lle busy and needed.
llary'a farm. Connie Miller and Devotionals were presen~
She said it is triumph to grow
Delllie BtrtNield, who pve a
·
.
old .gracefully. She read the

Roush Ramz"l1J

demonatraUoa on fitting a
Pl!llll'n, also were in cbarge of
lj
recreatioo. Joann M~WbOrter
gave a delilonatratlon on
lJ
CUTeCI table se~. Sherry
SbUiz and CiDdy Ellis served
it!fiahme.t~ - Ruth Jordan. The family of the late
, THE S'IITCH and Sew 4-11 Leooard and Susan Roush held
Qub met JuiJ i at the Portland thelr reuniQD SundaY at the
Part, two advison and four homeofMr.andMrs. JamesC.
"""""'" being present. For Roush, Letart, Route 1, West
refr.e sbments, everybody Virginia.
·. brougbt cookies. The next Aitending were Mrs. Nettie
meeting Ia scbeduled July 29 ~t Moore, Mrs. Norma Baker,
Ada Stlgllnao's bouse.- Leslie Angie and Ricky, Mr. and Mrs.
Rclberts.
Frank Grimm and Desiree, Mr.
THE PINK Panthers 4-11 Club and Mrs. Paul Johnson, Mr. and
-1 July 6 at the home of Mrs. Mrs. Kenneth Imboden and
Karen Werry. There were two Peggy, Mr. and Mrs. Franklin
advi8«s and eight members Imboden and Melissa, Debbie,
· tbet e. Taillmy Smith gave a Kimberly, Theresa, Timm:' and
demCIIslralioo oo table seUing. Tooy, Mrs. Doris Ford, John
Jody Grueser and Sandy and Susan, Mr. and Mrs. David
llamiltlln were In charge of Grueser, Glenn, Kay and
recreatloo. Saron Holter served Mistee, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
• refreabmenta. - Kimberly Halley a¢ Amy, Mr. and Mrs.
Grueaer.
LaiTy Hudson and Lori, Mr. and
THE SNOWBAlL 4-H Club Mrs. Detner Roush, Jr., Tom,
mel June 29 at the park Cll Beverly and Donald, Mr. and
Rwte 33 with tbree advisors Mrs. Delner Roush, the Thlrd,
and eight members in at- and Detner the Fourth; Mr. and
lendance. They discussed wbo Mrs. Howard Johnson, Angie,
would be clriviiW to Camden Diana and Tina, Mrs. Curtis ,
~ Jeff. and s~ Amclld Roush and Sylvia, Mrs. Cheryl
were, ID._eblrgeo ~ ·1ecljatiCJL ,Sta~ts and Bobby, Mr. and Mrs.
F.r- i'efreabmeDts, they bad a Liiwrence Roush, Mrs. Icy
c;ootout.- a.arlesOberbolzer. Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
• THE TUPPERS Plains 4-H Roush Bobby Jimmy and
GlrlametJuly&amp;aiMrs. Oiarles Danny: Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Carr's bome With two advisors Roush and Darin, Mr. and Mrs. '
and nine members in at- Jack Duffy, Jackie, Eddie and
jrndance They worbd 011 their David, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
.material and on, cut out pat- Miller and Joey, Mr. and Mrs.
lierna. Sonia ~ and Beth James C. Roush, Kimberly and
Headley were m cbatge of Bobby, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
recftlltion. Mrs. Olarles Carr Lawson and Charlie, Bruce
sened refresbments. - Teresa Reid, Richard Dean, Mr. and
Buckley.
.Mrs. Benny Hoffman, and Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Westen.

Reunzon
. 11e/d

OFF 'ro BELPRE
, LaiTy Glachren will ·lea
.
.ve
~-1 ~ Belpre to begin duties
usistant football coach at
Belpre High. ~boo! and
)lbysical educalionlllllnictor In
~e grade _school. Gladwell
laugbl pbysical educatloo the
past year in a Fort Lauderdale
elementary scbool in Flcrida.
He ~ the Slpmner with bis
graridplrents, Mr. and Mrs.
Delbort Becke!'' Middlepcrl. He
is a graduate of Middleport

Ziegler, and Rev. and Mrs.
. Bumgarner.
New officers installed by the
Rev .
Bumgarner
were
president, Mrs. Euvetta
· BechUe; vice-president, Nan
Moore; secretary, Mrs. Clara
Criswell; treasurer, Mrs .
poeril'b~·Billy Graham, "Older Eiizabeth Hibbs ; spiritual
People's~t and a prayer growth, Mrs. Rose McDade;
by Rev . Daniel Russell. . program material, Mrs. Nan
Scripture read by Mrs. Mary Moore; membe.rship comElizabeth Meinhart was the 16th l!litlee,
MJS: Frances
Psalm.
Brewington; Mrs. Edith
Sick and shut-ins are Bess,,Jividen, M~s. Ruth Euler; local
Sanborn, Hattie Smith, Robert ChUrch re!jponsibUity, Kathryn
Harris, Mary Emmish, Eleanor Knight,, Mrs. F.iance5 Wilson,
Zeiher, Frieda Faehnle, Mrs. Mrs. ~rna Wayland, and
Pat Gallagher, Lemma campus mm~. 1\ir~. Lettie
l.eighter, Blanche Haskins, and Young.
. ""·.
Mrs. Ebersbach.
.
Rev. Bumgai'ner ' closed the
Mrs. Emma Wayland said meeting with p&lt;ayer. Hostesses
$155 was cleared on a recent were May Lambert, chainruin,
rummage sale and Mrs. Moore and the contributors, Francis
reported on a missionary Klein, Lemma Leighter, Zelia
meeting in Marietta last week. Pullin, and Katherine Swanson.

·

..By BE'ITY CANARY

I was late for a lunch appointment the other day be·
cause a neighbor girl gave me some dandelions. Such a
gift quite naturally meant returning to the house in order
to find a pin for my lovely corsage.
.1 apologized to my friends for my tardiness, shared
my neighbor's gift, and the four of us agreed unanimously
that there's truly no end to the ways of being loved.
Somebody once said, "Only the aware are krateful."
Thinking about my dandelions should help
en I feel .r
neglected, unloved or alone. They'll remind m to become
more:aware of what I'.ve already been offer ' on a lonely
daY,
,. .1
' It's possible we spend too many hours t gJ:etting that /
no grand gestures have come our wa~
· ly. We sigq.
for the lifelong. avowals, the big proofs, e m3gnificent ·
gifts. We too often overlook the small estures of l!ffec- ·
lion, the gifts of little or no materi~/val~e. . . •· ·..
Gestures of love certainly inelude:·i n emerald bracelet'
on a bi~thday and a trip to Enjlland on a tenth anni·
versary.
;
Gestures of love are also:
·
A four-year-old offering dandelions.
The boy at the supermarket who always remembers

r

KAY'S BEAUTY SAWN
MIDDLEPORT
169iN. 2nd.Ave.
NEW HOURS:

8:00A.M. -8:00P.M.
8:00A.M. -6:00 P, M.
8:00A.M. ,4: 00P.M.

Mon. Thru Thurs.
Friday
"Saturday ·

0

~ry

6

OPERATORS

. Phyllis
Nina
Kay

Lois
Brenda

Appollltmeal Not
Alwayl Neceuary

'

Choice!

ChoiceI

•...

lb.

VISIT IN COLUMBUS
Mr. and Mrs. Harold EbersIbach and EnuneU Blackburn
of Pomeroy visited in Colwnbus
over the weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. James Ebersbach, While
there the blrthday of thelr ..
daughter-in-law, Kathy, was
observed
· ·
/

•

I

HOMECOMING...$ET
RACINE .:... "The'3'it.. Moriah
Church of God here will bold its
annual homecoming Sunday
with lunch to be served at noon.
High School.
The Rev: AIlilian ·of Colwnbus
'
will be ·the afternoon speaker.
All singers of the Meigs area
NAMES OMIIlW . are invited to participate. The
The names of Mr. and Mrs • . public is invited.
.
Robert Freitag were inadyertently omitted fr&lt;m those
IN GERMANY
entertaining to honor Miss
Kathryn Reuter and Mr. LETART FAILS- Mr. and
Richard H. Freitag m. The Mrs. Charles Mugrage, fanner
IWbert Freitags entertained at Letart Falls residents, have
their home on Eagleoest Road, learned thelr son, Charles, is
Akroo, on June 12 with a 6:30 stationed with the U. S. Anny in
buffet dinner. Guests included Germany. His address is PFC
the wedding party and relatives Charles I. Mugrage, 28U2-li275,
of the prospective bride and A Btry, 516 Arty, APO N. Y.
09227.
groom.

49
I

....

c

.,

I

....

....

lb.$419
S9'
Pork Roast • • • .
Crab Lees • • • . I Groad Roun• • .0.99'
7 Pork Chops • • •
lienen •• • .::.69'
Sliced Bacon • .,.,. 68C
SEMI-BONELESS -

FRESH PICNIC

COOKED KING

FRESH GROUND

SIRLOIN CUT

SUPER-RIGHT SKINLESS

lb.

A&amp;P FANCY

•

pq.

STOCI UP Olf THIS

•

c

OVER-NIGHT
pkg. of

POLLY'S POINTERS

5-oL

Peeve: Have Coupon
TENDER GREEN

But No Merchandise

I
•
....

.: ''

$4 00

• 6":: I

Green Beans

-

·•

---~&gt;::i'W'"O'l"""""~;,;·;
~.-,-;.·~.:=:·~~-!IM,IFJ.M

~DEAR POLLY-I made a poncho out of our plaid wool
llbtomobife robe and find it
,
i§ used much more by ev·
eryone in the family. I
Washed it iri that cold water
~ ~uid for woolens, dried it . ~;wO
' : *'ay from the heat. cut a
; I)-inch gash in the center
• and finished the edges by
: &amp;;ing yarn to crochet a
• cfouble-chain stilch.-MRS.

:
:
•
:
:

~iest

lietween the tines of silver forks is to put the silver polish
~ a pipe clca••·r and il is easy to work around hctween
!hem.,-SUSAf\:
.
'

l'Jrn
....

•

51/2·01.

Potatoes • •

. 3=.I
'

Dry Milk •

•

. 5:: '1 Fre~d: Fries

THURSDAY
N F 0 MEETING Olester Mrs. Ernest Richmond, the
G~ Han Tlwrsdayat 9 p.m. · former Shlrley McKinney, was
TEACHERS AND workers of guest of honor at a layette
the Pomeroy Cburcb of Christ shower given recenUy at the
VacatidoBibleScboOIThursday Feeney-Bennett Post,
at a p.m.,jlible Scboo1 will be American Legion hall in Mid·
held trool Aug. 8 through 17 dleport. H~tesses were, Mrs.
from 8:30 to 9 p.m.
Lucy McKinney, Mrs. Betty
ROCK SPRINGS Grange Bale! and Mrs. Darrell
Thurllday at ap.m. at the ball. M~.
Inspection. Bring small bells for ·A pink ~ blue color scheme
the program.
·
was used, "::th a large stork as
TWIN CITY Shrinetles the centerpiece.
-...
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the The door prite was woo by
Shrine Club in Racine.
~· Colleen VanMeter. Other
SPECIAL meeting of tbe pnzes were awarded Clyda
Pcmeroy Lodge No. 164 R&amp;AM ~ensworth, Nola Swisher,
Friday 7:30 p.m. Work 1n EA Linda Boyles and Doris Richfurnlsbed.
degree. All Master Masons
MH&gt;DLE~RT A,qlateui invited.
~ aub"Wi1r P'y at a SATUilDAY
p.m. at the home of Mrs. MEIGS COUNTY Retired
Olarlel Gaakill, Front St. Role Teacher Assn. '!ftd guests pimic
Reynolds assistant hostess.
at the Roadside Park on Rt. 33
ooleft going nCrtb at 5:30p.m.
Saturday, July .17. Bring
covered dish and own table
service.
Mrs. J. 0. Roedel left
MEIGS COUNTY Retired Tuesday for Chillicothe for a
Teachers Assn. picnic for two weeks stay with Mr. and
members and guestS, Saturday, Mrs. Robert Hamm.
5:30 p.m. at roadside park on Mrs. Grace Faris of
Mr.JamesBringardofUpper left going ~orth. All retired Lawrenceburg, Tenn. is the
Mooldalr, N. J. accompanied ~chers inVIted: Bring covered houseguesl of Mr. and Mrs.
his children, Terry, Jill, Lori, dish, table sei'VICe.
Lorain Sterrett, E. Main St.
TCIII aDd Bobby for a three ICE CREAM social Saturday Miss Darla Ebersbach,
week's visit with their grand- at the Chesler Flre House Pwleroy, Miss Glcria EbersJIIAIIIa, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin sponsored by the Ladies ·bach of Gallipolis BD41 Miss
Haqerty, Hudson Street.
AuD1iary of the Olester Flre Karen Dubonna of Mari~tta who
Mrs. Lawrence F. Boyd and Department Serving will begin are in training for licensed
daughter Charleaanna Powell at 7 p.ln.
practical nurses, in Marietta,
of ~II spent the weekend .
· SUNDAY
have relurned from a tOur at
with Mrs. Ana Bryant in OOUNTY PRAYER Service Atlantic City, N. J., and
Rutland and visited Mr. and &amp;mday 2 p.m. at Rutland Philadelphia, Pa.
Mrs. Carl Qllalls, Pomeroy, and Community Chl!fcb. Okey
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Boyd Ahart eztends a welccme to
and Mrs. Birdie Powell of everyone.'
'
·
for a residual scale fpr .f11ms
Middleport.
espected to be sold in videoMr. and Mrs. Norman
cassette form for playback over
stewart. Barbara and Brian,
and Kelly Betz of Colwnbus
.
heme TV aets.
· were recent guesla of Mr. and
Mn. G. G. Werner. Mn. George
Dural of Wellatoo, and Mrs.

Personal Notes

Middleport

Personal Notes

DavidRobrofMlami,Fia. were
'flleldly guests of 'the Wernen.
lb. Stnart and Mrs. Durst
are dlasblera of the Wernen
and lin. Robr II 8 grand-

00

c

lO.oL
jar

Crea11

$4 00

• ~ 69 BuHer11ilk Bread 3-:: 1 Sultana Beans
C JANE PARKER

• •

San•wich -Bread 3t~L '100 Gol•en Corn
JANE PARKER

A&amp;P CREAM STYLE

3 ='100
•• . ·."'i"'61'

WITH TOMATO SAUCE

OUR OWN -

16 FREE

Tea Ba&amp;s

at the close of
turrlav. July 17th, 1971 A&amp;P Stores
area. wil l di-sco ntin,ue
1-li&lt;:tri hullon of the E.F. Mat Dorlalcil
mp Company's Plaid Sta mps.
IC•omplete Details on Redem~"'""1
Procedures are Available
A&amp;P Stores.

pt.
NECTARINES

FRESH

,,

L·

mond.
Refreshments of cake, ice
cream, l"'tato chips, .mints,
coffee and pop were served to
those attending: Kate Fink,
Nina Stiles, Frances Martin,
Nellie Cox, Charlotte Grant,
Carla McKinney, Brenda
Jividen, Mrs. ida~ Richmood,
Mrs. Audry Mi!Jer, Ann Zerkle,
Debbi, Terrie, Mable Hysell,
Kay LaudMnilt, Jeff and Greg,
Greg Grimm, Pattie and Vickie
Boyles, Mrs. Evelyn Grueser
and Mrs. Sylvia Byers. Sending
gifts were: Mary Roush,
Pauline Russell, Vivian
Phillips, Rosanna Manley,
Cathy Jruiott, Molly McGhee,
Mae Lewis, Downy, Katie and
~aijie, Grace .[lara~. Mrs.
Edward Perry .;;;(Unda, Ida
Mae Martin, Sandy Smith,
Thelma Berry and Opal, Alma
Fraizer, Linda Lane, Marie
Carruthers, Unda Laudermilt,
Sheila Carsey, and Kenda,
Connie Dodson, Sally Owens,
Bernice McKinney, Gladys
Fife, Jennie Engle, Mary
Bwngardner, Sandy Walker,
Janet Morris and Kathy, Mt;•
and Mrs. Ancil Cross, Faye
Walker, Ruth and Alisha,
Carolyn Haley, Kathy and
Barbie, Judy Cowan, and Mrs.
Carold Mimer of Herts,
England.

•~ AF Thought. •«.·...
~
or Today : :.:
• The oniy lhing worlh il l'~
• having in an earthly il tr
• el(iSience . is a sense of . . ,,
humor .. ·.:'.·.iL ' ~

il
il

.

.

.Anangement

lblley's fklist
S9 N. Second St.
Middleport, Ohio

m -s56G

::.. *It's Quidd
* *
...

E
.jr

t

-1&lt;
-1&lt;

:
:
-1&lt;

..,

for Quantum. A matching

Bikinis ore still preferred
beach wear for most girls
ond this year's variation
(left) is a chevron-printed
Treviro suit by Ellen Folk

tunic cover-up o r romper

suit ore available with the
suit. Trevirc star print is

(right) for the chee ry hal ter top, H a t p·a n t s and
mid-knee o v e r s k i r t by
Jock Bodi for Concept VII .

the perfect eve-ca tcher

"Adam's Apple"
Tbe projecting cartilage of
lhe larynx in the throat received the name of "Adam's
apple" from the belief that a
piece of the apple that Eve
gave to Adam stuck in his
throat.

attend the State Garden Club
Convention in Colwntius Aug.
10, 11, and 12 at the Neil House.
Arrangemenls for the Meigs
CGunty Falr Flower show were
discussed.
Three guesls were Mrs. Fred
Morrow and Mrs. Martha
Williams of Syracuse, and Mrs.
George Faris of Lawrenceburg,
Tenn., houseguest of Mrs. J. 0.
Roedel.

Mr. O"llle Barnett of
C8ylrille, Pa. wu the recent
· PfJII of Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Beebtle.
Mrs. Betty Gladwell and
Randy Becker of Cohvnms
1p1111 the wukerd with Mr. and
Mrs. Delbert Becker.
Actin Guild said lm&amp;er' taib

Screen

studios, independent productioo
ccmpanies and three major
,,GIVEN SURPRISE
RUTLAND ~ Mrs. Ana television networks as the 12:01
Bryant, Rutland, wu given a a.m. WednesdaY strike deadline
surpri.le birthday party Friday. neared.
Both sides refused conunent
Jaly t, 11y Jane Wise, Tam,
Abby, Timmie and Eric Marlin, on progress oo the dlscussim
JolmMorrla UICI Mooa JlbBKI. over a new u.r-year cootracl,
Mrs. Bryant was 12 yean old. saying only that there was
Ice cream, cake and kookld nothing new· to report.
A strike by the guild would
.. .,ed. Later, villlln
-Mr. and Mrs. Llw1ence simi dolm production in New
iloJd. Donna and David, Mrs. York and Hollywood u weD as
Illrdle Powell and L8wrence ballinl filml being sbot on
locatloo in foreign tountrlell bJ,
Fltldl of WM. , art
American cnmpeni-.
Key ._in the dilpOte WU I
...... ..... clemend lor • C!llln
l)w '!IIIII
royalty paJIDenta, called
The lbape of .lhe dandelion r ' hraie. made to ee~or~ · for
leaf-like thlt of a Uoo's • re1'11118 of their mmea ontooth-gave the plant its televislllll. At one pGint In the
name. The name comes from lll!lotlaUa a II Jll'' cent
the French words, ·'ctent de reduclian .liglft- repur led.
lion," meaning lion's tooth.
The gulld ...,. wu PI Inc

COURSE COMPLETED
MASON - Ariny Private
Paul D. Johnson, Jr., 20, whose
parenls live in Mason, recenUy
completed an eight-week Nike·
Hercules Flre Control crewman
course at Ft. Bliss, Tex.

Fridays Only
it
The Drive-In Window* '~'
is Open ..
::· ~
9 A.M. to7 P. M.
-1&lt; '·
I Continuously)
:,:::
Other Banking Hours 9 to fi·,·
3 and S to 7 as uoual on il • •
Fridays.
il.::\

··
·
1FARMERS BANK f .
...

~and SAVINGS CO.: ~·:
POMEROY, OHIO

~ •rC

;~··

~

~~~

~

WITH OUR FEDDERS .

~

-----

AIR CONDITION£·RS
All Si%es In Stock!

We Install!

'"l/1

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~~

,..,.

INGELS FURNITURE .
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
PH. 992-2635
MIDDLEPORT

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Keith
·111
'

Goble -Ford In Mld~leport

iii#:

End of Model

GIGANnC SILLDOWN Ill

Out They GO!

'71
FORD
July
·Sell down
It's NOW Tlmell

EXCELLENT SELECTION

.

65 CARS IN STOCK
Excellent Selection ... Maverick, Mustang, Falcons, Fairlane 500,
Torino, Torino GT, Galaxie 500, LTO, Station· Wagons ... ShopEarly For Big Bargains. Also FlOO &amp; F250 Pickup Trucks . V-B's,
6's, Std. &amp; Automatic Transmissions.

Buy Of AUfetime!
·Come In Now! .

Your Trade Is
Worth More NOW

ONLY

sggs

.c.,;,
....
,

a::~~= l~~

WE NEED
USED CARS...

Derl Millie
Us Do It!

....]',
:-~·

,.------------------a ·
JOINIHI
..~~l~ :]

r-

ROLLYWOOD (UPI
Extended negotiations were
initiated Monday and ri-iay\
inalastditdleffarltopie+enta
strike hY D,ooo · movie . and
television actors which could
vtrtuallyballthe American film
industry.
·
A spokesman for the

~ / ..

.-I&lt;
Member FDIC
i!· JL
GARAGE ·SALE SET
·i&lt;
Member Federal
.,: " '
The Happy Hustler Class of -1&lt;
Rese"'e System
il· ·""
the Wesleyan Methodist Church c
11. .,.
will hold a garage sale Friday ***************~ ,'~,

GaflrJen C'IU
7 b p.'
lJ /d
tcntc' 11e
The Pomeroy Garden Club's
annu.ai picnic. was enjoyed at
the home of Mrs. L. c. Karr in
Syracuse Monday evening with
Mrs. Howard Nolan co-boa tess.
DevotiO!IIlls were given by
Mrs. Karr wbo read the 92nd
Psalm. Members answered roll
call with, "what I have
blooming in my garden." An
invitation was extended to

E
.
asy

~

.

Brighten
Your Home
With A

l.olely Permanent

• -~ln ~teftans !~~

.

. I

f '

1'* ************1. _;

By Strt.ke

were begun witb major movie
MARVEL LEMON

-.

Th reatene'd

00

cons

AN. IMPORTANT
ANNOUNCEMENT
FROM A&amp;P

and Saturday in the garage at ,•
the church parsonage from t to :'_:
4.
•

~La . Shack'

.);';l Ia d
.r 1 m n

A&amp;P NON·FAT

: ft. E. N.

:..6E A RwayPI0know
L L Y- Thc
to clea"

JuJy

8y HELEN HENNESSY ..
'
.
NEA Wome11'1 Editor
NEW YORK - tNEA) Mary Lou Curtis, owner of
· the "La Shack" bouliql!es In
Lo.cust Valley, N.Y., and
Plllm Beach, Fla., has accumulated an enviable fol·
lowing of customers all over
the country. And now ber designa are available in many
cities.
. She designs clothes in the
bright, SUDD:f colors that are
most flattenng to the complexion and she makes only
styles that are PRE'ITY.
"I have never followed a
trend," says Mrs. Curtis.
"That's why my customers
return again and again or
caB me from all parts of the
country. And it's l!lso why
my customers who h a v e
daughters encouraged me to
open "La Shack, Jr."
Shown at the dressing room at ·La Shack lleftl is the perfect worm-weather
duo--the skirt slim but not tight,. the cool and lounderoble shirt. Lace-edged
Mrs. Curtis k n o w s how
young girls should d r e s s
HotPonts (right) ore in printed cotton and shown · with a little bore-rib blouse
aince four of her seven chilof cotton lace, · a Mary Lou Curtis interpretation of a favorite fashion.
dren ate girls, ages 7 to 20.
h
M
Her clients don't want the workroom right on the prem· with unusual trim of braid
, ost of the swnmer (as ·
tbrift soop look or the get-up ises in Locust Valley. On the or lace, long and short dress- ions\are in ·COlton, many of
of a costwne party. And lower floor is the cutting es, some with matching cash· them lined for perfect drape.
aince she is very mucb a room, with rolls and bolts of mere cardigans, slacks that
part of the milieu for which exclusive fabrics reaching are a triumph of fit, Hot· And to match each of the
abe designs, all her fashions nearly to the ceiling. And in Pants to tum a skirt or dress marvelous prints and woven
have quality workmanship, the back of the shop in the in t o a dual-purpose outfit checks are at least 20 diffastidious detailing and lady- sewing room sit local women and the very new "cool cue." ferent colors in the best looklike simplicity.
wbo honestly like to sew. · This is a short A-line sklrt ing shirts you've seen in a
T))e built of the styles are
From the workroom come that is really an abbreviated long time.
·
actuallY made In a cheerful long and short .skirts, each culotte.

dauPfl!r.

.•

..

.

AlP WHOLE OR SUCED

$400

A REAL CASH SAVEl

nw.ll*&lt;m&lt;-,..

. DEAR POLLY-The boards in my hardwood floors
• :if :1te coming apart and I do not know what to do about
: I them so I hope someone who knows will help me.: f MRS. R. B.

To11ato Juice

• •

IONA CUT

Polly's Problem

•

A&amp;P BRAND

lona Peas

By POLLY CRAMER

: DEAR POLLY-One of my Pet Peeves is that so often
: I find a coupon in the newspaper offering money off on a
: certain item and then I cannot find the item in the store.
• I •think' every store in an area should carry such items,
: not just the big ones.
~ :Also, I never seem to find a child's toothbrush, after
• !lie size for a 6-year-old, that does not fall down on the
: job after abol!l a month of use. Consequently I have been
: fqrced to buy an adult's size for a child.- M. A. S.
•• •DEAB
•
READERS-We have received so many Peeves
; about co•polll ud redeeming them which all seems a
: searee of Irritation to many of. the girls. Phyllis wishes
• Iiley would have 8D expiration dale printed on ALL of
: lllem-some do and some do not-so the old unused ones
:; Cjluld be discarded from time to time. Mrs. F •. N. would
- much prefer having the manufacturers lower thelr prices
: aad eliminate the ·coal of prinlin«, haqdliog and some·
:.limes maBing· these coupons. She says that .If one needs
• alld wants an Item It Is going to be bought with or without
·;. die coupon. Alld on and on they go.-POLLY
,

~

00

cans

12

~·

"I

WEDNESDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, annual picnic,
bome of Mrs. Betty Conkle,
Wednroolay, July 14. Members
tomeetallh.m. at the church
to go to the Conkle. home at
CbMhlre. Take food and own
table service along with a Purse
fCII' a sale.
ANNUAL PICNIC PomeroyMiddleport Uona Club, 6 p.m.
Wednepiay at country home of
Riebard Olamben, Flatwoods.
· SADDLE • Slrloin Riding
Club meeting at Gallla County
Jr. Fairgrounds, 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday. Members bring
covered.dish and drinks. Meat

$

Yo1r

Your
'

VJ,

Rags for Riches at

how you like your frozen items packed.
A daughter bringing coffee to you on the patiq.
The newsboy placing your paper behind the screen
door.
A smile shared with the bus driver while two children
hunt for correct change.

Prices Good Thru Saturday, July 17tltl

I

-

FASHION

.

'

I

Open 8 to 8 Daily- Thu.s. &amp; Sat. Til 6
•' '

m-7161

MIDDLEPGRT, 0.

461

s. 3rd

KEITH GOBLE
Phone 992-2196

'""

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· OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9~SUNDAY 1 TO 7-PR

IN EFFECT THROUGH. SU : JULY 18 WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
.

OPEN .DAILY 0 ro 9-SUNDAY 1 TO 7-PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY,

'

I
I

J.

I
I

PRICES IN EFFECT AT POINT PtEASANT STORE ONLY

SUMMER .

Y 18 WHILE

PRICES IN EFFECT

AT

I
I

'1

.

POINT PLEASANT
STORE ONLY

(

•

. I
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----

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---- -------- -/

•

WARING
7-SPEED

D-15-2

Blender

G. E.

I

1

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ZEBCO 202
REEL

G. E.

DEHUMIDIFIER
Heck's Reg .
$87.88 ..

Jewelry
Dept.

-

CI.OCK RADIO
STAND MIXER
Heck's Reg.
$24.96

HECK'S REG. $13.88

McGraw

20'' FAN

Heck's Reg. $24.96

JEWELRY DEPT.

J
(
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1
1

,.._ .. . . .

•
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HECK'S REG. PRICE

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ROD &amp;REEL

· ,~-.~-J'

COMBINATION

100 FT.

TV WIRE

Heck'sReg.
$6.99

PLASTIC
BASEBALL CAP

4 Lbs.
' GRASS SEED

. 5033
Reg. 1}6.48

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG. $1.99

..... '
'

'·

6Bc

TOY DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $1.24
HARDWARE DEPT.

6119

I

DRIVEWAY
MARKERS
HECK'S REG. 99c EACH

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••
••
••
•'

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••
••'

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15 oz .

GIRLS &amp; LADIES TENNIS OXFORDS, •••••••• Rag. '1 11 Now •1

PICKET FENCE

Includes The Following Plus Many More ltemsl

HECK'S REG. $1.78
SPORTS DEPT.

e MEN &amp;-. BOYS ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• WALK SHORTS
e MEN &amp; BOYS ••••••••••• ~••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •• SPORT SHIRTS
e MEN &amp; BOYS. ••••• •• •• •• ••••• ••••••••••• ••• ••••••••••• DRESS SHIRTS
e ME~ &amp;_BOYS. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .. •• SWIM TR.UNKS
e LADIES &amp; GIRLS••••• •••••••• •••••• ••••••••••••••• SUMMER-. DRESSES
e LADIES &amp; GIRLS ••••••••••••••••••••••••~••••••••••••• ~ ••••-.·••• SHORTS
e LADIES
&amp; GIRLS.•••••••••••••
~ •••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ .......'SLACKS
.
.
e LADIES &amp; GIRLS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ....... ~._••••••••••••••~· TOPS
e LADIES &amp; GIRLS •••••• ••• ............................... SWIM WEAR
e LADIES &amp; G_IRLS •••••••••••••••• •••••••··~······••••••••• · PANT SUIT_$__
Does.Not Include Short orpLong Sleeve Sweat Shirts ·
I

,

WIRE FENCE

'

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...

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'

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· FRIS•E
HORSESHOE
SET
Heck's Reg. $3.18
Toy Dept.

'

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"tJJllLiir.ahd 1n SMvin_q_ ?joiL tBilhk"

\

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------~------ ··~-~-----~

. CHARGE
Heck's Reg.
$1.38

Automotive
Dept.

11

oz.
AMMENS
Medicafed

WYNN'S

POWDER

SPIT FIRE

HECK'S REG. 51.19
COSMETIC DEPT .

douche

'

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WY N N' S !::::::::!:~=1

15 oz.

· ~q~:c

'

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STEEL
CAMP STOOL

lS oz.

'

4 oz.

8" Round
CAKE. DISH
•

KOTIQUE
Liquid &amp; Powder

•

Heck'sReg.
,1 .04

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

sse

UTILITY
OR
LOAF PAN
HECK'S REG.
99c
Houseware Dept .
'

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~

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•

Casserole Dish
Heck's Reg. 11.19

PONDS
DEODORANT
TALC
HECK'S REG. $1.04
COSMETIC DEPT.

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, , , _r r rr r

14- TIIellilliJ811 l'el,IAL' purl-¥

rrr

r r r 1·r ·

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EEKANDMEEK

rC&lt;tt_O.,;AIIJ1t,117J

-, Bargain~, - Bargalps and

Me·
. 188

1 '

WHAT ON
AIRTH IS SHE
SAVIN'?

More Bargains In The .Sentinel Oassifieds
...

.LEGAL NOllCE

2 S1G11S
OF
QUAliTY '

Transfers

-Po•eror
•tor.Co.

For Rent

50 LOW I CAN'T
MI'\KE \TOUT

·Btismess ·Services:::::::=J·

LEGA.L NOTII;E
,.
IN THE MATTEII. OF SET·
TLEMI!NT OF ACCOUNTS,
PIIQIATI! COUIIT, MEIGS
ONE·
BEDROOM
trailer· r
COUNTY, OHIO
.
apartment.
Ideal for couples.
Accounts and vouchers Of the
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
follow ing named fiduciarie s
3
99
248
992
2-5
or
·
43/i.
_
,
:
•
·
i
---.
.
MOBILE MOME_~UYERSI .
_
hove bHn filed In the Pr-te
7 14 121
Court, Meigs ·County, Ohio, for
.40 Minutes o1 Your Time Con Well Be .h _ . Profitable
tpprovtl and settlement :
.·
,Time You Ever s - t.
Ralph- E. Barton, dec. to CASE NO: 17,N1 TweiH.h
MIDDLEPORT - J room and '
Current Account of Marion Jean
both, furnished aperlment. 1
Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
Huel R. Barton, Greta Mae Worner, Guard ian of Jobn
'"'PLY. VISTA. WAGON
$195
Phone· m -3205 or m -2725.
Danaldlon, Larry E. Barton, Laurence Wlrntr r JeHrey J• y
Y-1 Mgine, good tires, dean body &amp; nice vinyl Interior,
;41ALIO
.
.
7-14-6tp '
_. ..__ Oli
Warner , and Stephen Ray
., ~"WINSOR
:i
.rtHAMPION
Cert. ....
trans., ~leering, radio, luggage rack.
....,.., ve.
warner, Minor&amp;. .
oOuBLE,.CWIDE~
.lUDDY
ii!,YAN DYKE
Regularly Priced at 51095.00 Special.
Greta Mae Donaldson, CASE NO. 17 ,NJ Twelffll and
FURNISHED
4
room
&amp; bath
...__..;_ "==
.
'"' CNEY~LET IMPALA CPE.
.
S7ff
1 _ _ E. Final Account ot Marion JNn
~EE TOM CROW OR BOB CROW .
apt., adults only, Middleport.
~- ~-.., ....... z
Warner. Guardian Of Linda Sue
6 Cyl •• stand. trans., local I owner car; good tires, radio,
Phone
m
-3874.
·
Barton, Carolyn Barton to Worner , • .M.lnor.
heals . "Reg. Price S1095.00. Special.
,
7-11-lfc
PARKERSIU~ _
MOBILE HOMES, INC.
CASE NO. .11.333 Eleventll
·
,.,..__
!M7 PONTIAC LEMAIIS CPE.
S12f5
Huel Barton, ·Parcell, uu:.c. curren t. Account of· 8effy L.
Sprint equipment Including b!ld!et seals, console, 3 speed
·•
MEMORIAL BRIDGJ' TRAFFIC CIRCLE
Clive QuiVe)', AJtnle Qulft1 to Smitll, Guardian of the Estotn
floar shift, 6 cyl., 01o11head cam .. good tires. radio,
.,....._.
V
of
1\\ory
K.
·
Go
llqher
ond •
.
PARKERSJI'URG, W.VA..
MOllie Vance, ....,_., IIICe, Debro L . Gallagher, Minors.
beaullful blu&amp; finlsh..b:allow mileage car. A nice one.
Parcell, $clplo,
._tAS E• NO. I 1off,7F11 I Tlodlr5d
u-•ene
Smith -·nuo 1 "ccoun
reo on .
Mary
lUlU
Norris, Gu•rdian of "'• Estate
Roofinf&amp; Carpenter
Flecbtner, ·ata Miry AlWine of Oonold Lovett, on ln.... competent p«san.
_ __.._ ... 'II ...
'Work .
Smllb r'""'
out
,.
CASE NO. 20,3t0 Fint and
Cp-,nplete
Spouting. Roof
tile Fint Baplill CbiJrdl, Lilt, Final AccOunt Of Ella M..
OP-EN
EVES.
P.M.
Painting
Rom ine Oftd l ibO Midkiff, CO Remodeling
Mlcldleport.
Exe&lt;utrix and Co-Extcu1or .o f
~~~~.01110
Fred Smltb, Beatrk;e ElleD tilt Eliott of ElSie Midkiff,
Kitchens. Baths
NEW&amp;OLD WORK
4-2-tfc
Room
Additions
All
Weai!Mr
Roofing &amp; Con·
Smltb to George Casto, l•!CIIIe ~::0'\xcepllons ore filed
struc:tion
eo,,_~nd - Antholly
And
Patios
WANT
AD
C8sto, Parcel, Sali!!ho"'Y.,
tlltrtto, Hid accounts Will be
MOBILE HOME, available Ju ly
For
or Trade
Backhoe And
,...,.....,"~,,nacO~,
___. .....,,_, u-•- ......,,_, tor
hnrlng befol'it sold COUrt on
!II FORMATIOII
..-nnv-.Heatlllll
·
15, 1971. Phone m -5592 .
Comf'lelt PlumbiiiJI,
tilt 12111 d_a y of August, 1f71, at
Endloocier
Work
DEADLINES
1969 CAMARO, 4-speed; 1968
7-12-tft
and Air Cond~to VirBII Eugene Westfall, Fay which time sold acc~untswlll be .S P.M. Day Before Publication
Chevrolet, 2-doo.r hardtop,
27tUncolnSI.
ltport,O.
.. -'--conslde.r ed 1nd continued from
Septic
Tonks
Monday
Deadline
9
a.m.
Wea tfall • •D..-1
automatic, power steering .. TRAILER SPACE cin-old Rt. 33,
Pt1Dntff1-25SI
~·.., ....,_,011,
doy to day until finally disposed . CitM!ellatlon &amp; Con-eclions
And Lnch Bods.
and power brakes, air con - tf2.mlle north of new Meigs
tns~-Ex,.nteted
Velma M. boning, W. D. of.
Will be ac.c:epled unlil9·a.in. for
L
La
Any
person
lnternted
m•y
dijloolng.
Pllone
992-6547.
High
School.
Phone
992-2941.
Work Guraranlltll
La nn Ing t o Frano.
Day of Publication
yne, file written exceptions to sold
7-13-3tc
3-5-tft
REGULATIONS
Brookle Layne,
Parcel, accounts or to molten perRutland
.t•inlng to the execution of the ' The Publisher ......,... the
FURNISHED and unfurnishi!d
·
trust, not l•ss th.Jn five days right to edit or reject any ads
apartments. Close to school.
Jackie K. Ginther to prior to tbe date 10t tor hear ing. deemed objectional. The
POMEROY
'
Pllone m -5434.
vmood
K
Ginther
'.2
.a.-F
.
H
.
O'
Brien
publisherwill
notbe~sible
Ra•GUN SHOOT, Sunday, July 18, I
10-18-lfc
·
•' ""'""•
PROBATE JUDGE
Ai
.HOME &amp; AUTO
Oleater. ,
MEIGSCOUNTY ,OHIO lor more than Ol"'e incorrect. p.m. at Racine Gun Club.
insertian.
7-13-Stt
Delmar L. Hollon, VIrginia
RATES
(71 14
NINE penny candy dispensers.
Auto
992-2094
I~ and
· For Wtnt Ad Service
Hollon to Mary Wrigllt, 81 1-3
SS each. Phone 992-3524.
REDUCE excess fluids with 1964 FORD Van - completely
606
E.
Main
Pometoy
5 cents per Word-Insertion .
7-11-llp
Fluldex, S1.69. Lose weight
Acres, Scipio.
overhauled, 5 new tires, $400.
Minimum Charge 75c
Rtalall'
safely with Oex-A-Diet. 98
Contact Albert Roseberry , PORTABLE" dishwasher, used
Dorolby E. Ralbbum to Floyd
OFFICE
SUPPUES
12 cents per wont three.
•
cents at Nelson Drugs.
Bashan-Keno Road.
consecutive Insertions.
few
times,
service
for
six
.
J. Rupe, J~ A. Rupe, ~Acre,
7- 14-ltp
And
Special
Plus
7-13-31p
18 cents per word six conMust have water pressure.
At
Ports
Rutlud.
secutive ins.er licwtS.
Cost $46. Sell for 530. Phone
FURNITURE
GUN SHOOT . Forked Run
Roy A. l'ltmlgan, Marie N.
25 Per Cent DisCount on paid
Sportsman Club, Sunday , 1961 OLDS. Super 88, $150; 1964 742-3290.
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
Stop In and See Our
7-13-ltp
Corvair,
$125. George
l'ltmlgan to Pllm Lud ~
July 18 at noon .
CARD
OF
THANKS
Hackett,
93
Seventh
Ave
.•
Sunday
School
attendance
011
7-14-ltt
Floor· Display.
Co., John aa-, 207.11 Acres,
PHONE tn-2143
&amp;OBITUARY
Middleport
.
Pllood
992-2444.
SINGER,
zfg.zag,
needs
no
July II was 46. 'lbe lllfering was SI.SO for SO word minimum.
Bedford.
7-13;31p cams, all built-In features,
THOROUGHBRED Stud
RIOR,-exteriOr decorator PAPER HANGING, Interior
$18.21.
iac:h additional word 2c.
.
. makes buttonholes, etc . "j NTE
Service.
Roman
Captain
No.
and
barn roofs. Phone 742- and exterior painting. Phone
BUilD
ADS
Wcnbip services were beld at
MERCURY. 4 door sedan, Balance $43.17. Call m -7085.
637410. SSO registered mares, '54good
5683.
Additional
25c Charge per
m -3630.
shape, one owner. May
7-11 -61&lt;
II wllb attmlance ci 44, wilb Alllid llsement.
SJS grade mares . Return
6-20-lOfc,
7-13-lOip
be seen at Dotson Rest Home - - - - - - - - privileges. Greg Roush ,
tile Rev.IAAman lp"'lking fnm
OFFICE HOURS
-·
-corner
of
Fourth
and
AnSTEREO-RADIO
console,
4Phone m-5039. ·
·
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer OHIO VALLEY Deco"ratlng
8:30a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Daily,
ll KiDp 2:7-f. •
derson Streets. Mason. or call speed intermixed changer,
7-9-lOtt
Complete Service
8:
30
a
.m.
to
12:00
Noon·
Services, Interior and exGeraldine
Dotson
at
614-773dual
volume
control,
4·
·Mr. and Mn. VereSwarlz and Saturday.
Phone 949-3821
..
terior painting. Pllone 610675712.
speaker
sound
system,
lovely
Sarab Woode ci Coolville bad
Racine, Ohio
SAVE UP to one hall. Bring
7685.
7-13-61c walnut finish . Balance $62.97.
Crill Bradford
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
7-13-61&lt;
-- dinner Salurday wltb the
Use our budget terms. Call
In
le•y
S-l-Ife
Shop,
151
Butternut
Ave.,
'67
CHEVELLE
Miilibu
2door,
1
992-7085.
Mr. and Mn. Jack Rulli, Vernon Swartz family at
Pomeroy.
local owner, V-8 automalit,
7-11-61t FREE ESTIMATE on gerieraf WILL DO roofing, painting,
Minneapolis, MinD. were dlnller Hockingport. The Swartzes IN MEMORY of Diver E. Sayre
4-23-lit
plumbing and carpenter
who left us- year ago July
new tires, excellent condition. jjiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiioit. .
remodeling
,
roofing
and'
guesll ci Mr. and Mrs: Wayne were accompanied bmJe by 12,
work
; also tear ing down old
Pllone 992-2084 or m -7098.
1970: May you always
painting. Phone 992.7729, 9 buildings. Phone 992-7324 or
7-4-Ift
~.
lbelr 11011, Vern011, and bia walk in sunshine; God's love REDUCE safe and fast with
~.m . to 6 p.m.
u2-~·m .
·
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
Villtln&amp; Mary Pierce were pes~~, Mr. and Mrs. · Fred arliiRd you glow. For lhe
6-9-30tc
7-6-12tc
waler pills. Nelson Drugs.
happineso· you bnlught us,
Suzie Cooley and Jimmie, Bryant and family It ,~J1al!o0!8
BUlCi&lt; LeSabre. 2-dr .
6-27-lOtp 1969
evetJanewassure'loknow. lt
hardtop,
power steering,
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
saUbetMIIe, 0., Mr. and Mrs. for tile evening.
bnlke ..,r hearts to IGse y..,,
For
power brakes, a ir, 18,000
Sanitation, Stewart, Oflio. 1'11.
but"yau did not go alone; part YARD SALE on Larkins St.,
Denver Curtis and family,
Clara Follrod and Nina
miles.
Excellent
condition.
662-303S.
of us -.twH.b you, wloen God
Rutland, Friday and SaturPhone 992-2288.
Cbarlestoo, W. Va.; Mr. and RobinsOII aiJd lbelr pes~~, Mr. called
2-12-tfc
you home on that
day.
6-3-tft
Mrs. Millard Van. Meier, andMn.JobnBarnettltGary,
Sunday afte hOCWI.
7-14-Jit
NEIGLER Construction. For
Sadly missed by wife Doris.
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mn. Hoblrt Ind., visited Mr. and Mn. Otto
bulldiiiJI or. remodeling your
children
and
grandchildren.
For
N!IW'ell and Sbiela, Oleate.-, and Swartz of Shade, 0., Sunday
home. Call Guy Nelgler,
7-14-ltt TEWKSBARY'S Barber Shop .
Mr. and Mra. 1Mry Curt1a and afternoon.
will be dosed Mon., July 19th 1970 KAWASAKI 350 5650 .
Racine, Ohio.
July
24th.
Roger
Bahr,
Reed$vllle,
Ohio.
. 7-31-tfc
thru
Sat.,
Wnlly.
A family get-together was IN LOVING memory of
Phone
985-3958.
·
7-14-31p
fob".~ Mn. ~ -llmilh beld·tat ·lbe•IJime •Jt Mr:"and ' . C!aronot Hleel -Howley: I
1220 Washington Bivd ..
RAL'PH'S CARPET .::. ·· up'
7-9-71&lt;
, 1 ed
. '· lth
f mil
•
camat say, and I will not say,
Broker
le
ta
Bet(ire,
Ohio
DO
IT
YOURSELF
Coin
holstery Cleaning Service .
en r n . w
a a Y Mra. Rotierl Burke, Jr, and fflat he is - - He is just
110 Mechanic Str"t
·
Operated
Car
Wash
In
TupFree
estimates. Phone
dinner hoooring Mr. and Mn. daughter 011 Sunday.
-ay, with a cheery smile,
2 ~ '60 TRANSMISSIONS - I
Pomeroy, Ohio
pers
Plains
now
open
for
~4.
Gallipolis
7-YEAR
OLD
palomino
mare,
Howard Young, Paden Clly, W.
The Women's Society 1rill and a wave of lhe hand. He
Pontiac and 1 Thunderbird for
business. Will iam Connolly.
3-12-tft
gentle, broke for riding . $2,500.00 - Business or home
$25
each.
Contact
Roy
and
7-14-6tp
Va. on tbelr 40111 Wftkl!ng an- hold its regular meetln&amp; on :::....;::a~=~ a..l~ett ~~
Phone 992-5090.
site near Pomeroy.
Steve Roseberry, BashanAWNINGS, storm doors and
7-7-61t
nlveraary. Otber gueall were n-lay, July 11, at a p.m. at dreaming very fair it
Keno Road.
wi ndows , carports,
521,000.00 - 3 bedrooms, both,
Mr. and Mrs. Emmett stetllem, tile home ci Florence Spel1cet, needs must be. sirKe he ATTN. ALL borned again 7-13-3tp
marquees, aluminum siding
STEREO-RADIO. combinat ion
modern kitchen , dining ropm
Bible believing Christians Jean Newlun and Kenny near'l'llppersPialnawilbNeDie =":~;;:;~~
and
railing. Call A. Jacob,
un
it,
with
AM-FM
rad
io,
4
with sliding glass doors to
Revival services will be held 8-YEAR OLD palomino mare,
sales
representative. For free
Reynolds.
Parker as proeram leader.
old-lime step and the glad
speak~
rs.
dual
volume
conporch. Fireplace In living.
July 9-18 at the (nongentle, saddle and bridle.
estimates,
phone Charles
Vlaltin&amp; Mr. and Mn. Guy Mrs. Tbelma Henderson return, think of him faring on,
Gas forced air furnace. 2 lots.
denomlnatlonall Covenant of
Pllone 742-5865 Harrisonville, trol, modern maple console.
Lisle,
Syracuse.
V. V.
Balance S79.76. Use our
Double garage.
Truth sanctuary, located in
Ohio.
Hayman were Mrs. Jenny attended 111e School ci Misai0118
:l'.e~':.'\:re.~~~r~i~
Johnson
and
Son.
Inc.
Racine, Ohio at the old post
7-14-6tc budget terms. Call m -7085.
5-27-tft
Hayman and 80118, ~ at Westerville, 0 ., over 111e still as the same, I say he is
7-11 -6tt 513,000.00 - 4 or s bedroom
office building. Pastors J . D.
Road; Mr. and Mn. Keith weekend wllb Marjcry Coakley not deaoJ, he is just away._
home.·
Bath,
gas
furnace
.
King and E. C. Fulcher along CANNING tomatoes. Geraldine
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been .
Ridenour Cbester and Mr. and ... Coolville 0
Sadly missed by family .
with visiting evangelists will
Modern kllchen, Garden.
Cleland, East Main, Racine.
cancelled?
Lost
your
t
J
Ul
I
•
7-14- l tp
be conducting the services.
Ohio.
·
FREEZER
SALE
license?
Call
992operator's
Mrs. TO~llo Hayman and
Rev. and Mrs. Jacob M. Leh- - - - -- - - Heavens and earth shall pess
$13,500.00 - 76 acres. 7 room
7-14-18tc
2966.
FREE ICE CREAM OFFER
house. Outbuildings . Well
awar, but the Word of God
daughters.
man and son, Ricky, bad Card
6-15-tfc
shal
stand
forever.
Here's
the
way
If
wor
ks
...
water. Minerals.
PINTO GELDING, 3 years old,
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Qurt Sunday dinner wllh Mr. and
WE WISH to thank lhe - r s
7-8-6lt
you gel seven Ic e cream
very gentle, 59 Inches tall.
BR I EN ELECTRIC SERand daughters, Lorain, 0., were Mrs. Cbarles D. Woode.
and nurses at Veterans
bars, or a half-gallon of Ice $26,500.00 - J bedrooms, 1'1:1 O'VICE
Pllone m -7066.
. Pllone 949-oiSSI.
Memoria l Hospital and KOSCOT Kosmefi ts, Ju.lycream , FREE tor every
baths, central heat and AIR
visiting Nellie Cozart.
Mr. and Mrs. Dinsmore
7-14-3tc
S.JO.Ifc
cubic toot you buy In • Un ico
CONDITIONING.
Gar-e.
especially thank the MidMr. and Mrs. BID Trace and Boyles have sold lbelr !ann and
~ust special, Kare Konfreezer
,
r efrig e r a tor or
dlep&gt;rl
Emergency
Squad,
NEEDLE sewing
dltoon oil SS. Value now only TWIN
~EWING MACHINES. Repair
comb ination .
1011, Wellston,
were visiting wiD be moving to 'l'lqJpers
lhe doctors and nurses at
machine 1971 model in new
UN ICO 2t FOOT CHEST
$10,000.00 - or a good offer. 4 service, all makes. 992-2214.
S2
.SO.
Distributors,
Brown's,
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Prince. · Plains SOOII.
Holzer Medical Center,
FREEZER
279.95
bedrooms, bath, garage.
walnut stand. All features
phone m -5113.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
friends and neighbors for the
built-in
Paige and_~uy Hayman and
Relatives and friends here
to
make
fan
cy
~ i th th is on e you get 196 tree
Middleport.
7-4-tfc
Authorized
Singer Sales and
courtesies received dowing
designs. Also butlonholes. •ce cream bar~ or 28 ha lfService.
We
Sharpen Scissors.
NeUie Apdml: have returned to learned of tile death ci Wayne
lhe death of our loved one,
blind hems, etc., $43.35, cash gallons ot FRS"E Ice cream . $19.500.00 - NEW 3 bedroom,
SOHIO
Service
Station
at
418
W.
3-29-tfc
1be1r hcmes here aflei' being Koehler, of Guysville, 0., on
aarence IOeel Hawley. Wife
price, or ·terms available.
POMEROY
one floor, 1'1:1 baths. CarMain
Street,
Pomeroy,
is
now
Diane,
daughter
Ingrid.
son
palleDII at local hospitals.
Sunday.
Pllone m -5641 .
J.ck w. caney, Mgr.
peting. Gas furnace. Carport. CUSTOM MEAT CUTTING.
under new management by
Tom. mother. boulhers and
7-14-61&lt;
Margaret Nessleroad has
Phone 992-2111
Monid
Good.
Starting
MonDick Vaughan. phone 992si s~.
relumed borne after attending
7-14-llp day, July 12th lhru saturday. VACUUM cleaner: Electro ~-:~;;=:;=:~~=====::1 525,000.00 - 806 acres. Barn, 337A, Dale Little. ptoone 992July l7th, a free grease job
For
';X,'~~i~~!~gs. room house. 6346.
funeral aervices for her father
Hygiene new demonstrator
will
be
given
with
every
oil
6-23-lOit
I WISH. to thank ~one who
has all cleaning attachments 24 ACRE farm i.on
In Oklahcma.
="g-'-'l:-Bo:-:11,.-o-m,
.
-·
chaJ190
and
fill
-up.
was so kind and thoughtful
plus
the
new
electro
suds
for
$12,000.00
3
bedroom
paneled
with
or
without
farm
SEPTIC
TANKS
CLEANED
Mr. and Mrs. Charles' Olne
7-11 -61&lt;
after the death of my wife.
shampooing carpet. Only
machinery . ·House with 3 home. Ceramic bath. Modern Reasonable rates. 1'11. 446-4782,
Margaret
M.
Will,
l•p
I
~Iaiiy
Tile AlmMK
and 11011S, MOUI1dnille, W. Va.
$27.50 cash price or terms
kitchen .
bedrooms, dining room, living
Gall i polis. John Russell,
wish to thank the Pomeroy
ava ilable. Phone m -5641.
room , Ph baths, enclosed
Owner &amp; Operator.
were visiting Mr. and Mrs. By Ullted l'rellllllentatiGul
Emergency Squad. Rev.
7-14-61t
$3,500.00 - 40 acres of
porch,
wall
to
wall
back
5-13-tfc
Ruaell Cline.
Today Is Wednesday, July 14,
Smith,
Ewing ANT IQUES, telephones, brass
Stanton
woodland. Drilled well , septic
carpellng. Aluminum siding,
Funeral Harne, ttwe sending
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Curtis tile 196111 day ~ lfTI.
tank, Minerals.
beds . clocks, dishes, old MILLIONS of rugs have been
awning, storm windows and
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
flowers,
Webstl!r Post
cleaned with Blue Lustre. It's
furniture, etc. Write M. D.
were villting Mr. and Mn.
111e moon is between ill full AmericanDrew
doors
.
City
wafer
.
storm
Septic tanks Installed. George
Legion Auxiliary,
Ameri ca's finest . Rent
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
$1 ,500.00 - Building lot. Chester
Selling
due
to
ill
health.
Phone
I Blll) Pullins, Phone 992-2A78.
Marvin Walker, Tuppers phase and last quarter.
lhe pallbearers and neighbors
electric shampooer, $1 , Baker
Call 992-6271.
water.
.·
614-985-3938.
4-25-lfc
and anyMe else who hefped in
Furniture Company.
m -m5 ff1·2371
7-9-Ift
6-23-lOtp
anyway. Your kindness will - - - -- 7-14-61t
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
HARRISON'S TV AND ANnever be forgotten.
ASSOCIATE
TENNA SERVICE. Phone
dtiughler, Parkersburg, W. Va. The evening stars are MercuAl:va C. Will 2 OR 3 BEDROOM used trailer.
7-ll-61t
992-2522.
1971
SOLID
State
Apache,
SYRACUSE
House,
3
rooms
Phone
m
-3935.
were villting Mr. and Mrs. Joe ry and Jupiter.
7-14-llp
sleeps six. Pllone 992-5592.
•nd bath, full basement, large
6-10-tft
7-13-61t
but secluded
Bissell.
Those born on Ibis day are
7-11 -lfc
lot. Phone m -3205 or 992-2725. CONVENIENT
7-14-6tp building lots on T79 at Rock FOR YOUR new Shingled roOf,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Dean, Wider tile sign ci Cancer.
ANTIQUES :
dishes ,
Springs . Wllhln walking contact Roush Construction.
COAL,
limestone.
Excel
sior
telephones, clocks , brass
Colwnbus, and Mr. and Mrs. SWedish film director 1ngmar
of Me igs High
distance
Salt
Works,
E.
Main
St
.•
Phone m -5039.
beds, lamps, etc. Lee Rudisill,
Wayne Prince atlended tile Arts Be
born Jul 14
School,
a
5
minute
drive from
Pomeroy. Pllone m -3891.
Phone m -3403.
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
l .Craft Show at Cedar Lake, w. 19lrrn was
y
•
4-9-Ift·
7-1-lOfp
.
Witte weekends or after 5 O' DELL WHEEL
alignment
Va.
On Ibis day In history·
p.m.
weekdays.
Pllone
992LOGAN FIRE and safety
locatedatCrossrood$, Rt. 12A.
TOP PRICE on ginseng and
6887 .
Mr. and Mrs. Elsworth llill,
In 1789 lbe French
608 East Main
equipment. Sales and service.
Complete
Iron! end service,
.JI.Ifc
Golden
Seal
·
yellow
root.
Seal
7
POMEROY
. All types and sizes of fire
Pmleroy, and Mr. and Mrs. !be Bastille Prison In Paris, a
tops and stem bone dry, _tiean
-:-:=:-:-:--:-----tune
up
and
brake service.
exllngulshers. Special prices POMEROY - CLOSE TO
Warren Connolly and Amy day now coriunemorated as a
BY BERTHA PARKER
ROOM
hoose,
garage,
water
Wheels
balanced
elec5
no dirt. All rools. Bill Bail«.
extinguishers for boats,
1'1&gt; story . and gas, good condlflon, 1 1.3 Iron i cally.
SHOPPING
P.O. · Box 14, Second Slreel. on
All
work
spent a .week at Florida and national holiday In France.
Sabbath Scbool alteodanee
campers, homes. Also
frame, bath, 3 or 4 bedrooms,
Reasonable
acres just off Route 7 bypass guaranteed .
Reedsville, Ohio .sm.
discount prices on other sizes.
otber pomls.
In !798 Congress pa e~ !be July 11 at tile Free Melbodist
full
basement,
cabinets
In"
the
7-1-lOit
on
Leading
Creek
Road
.
rates.
Pllone
992-3213.
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone
kitchen. A BUY $6,SOO.otl.
- VloletSmltb Sedition Act, making it a aime Ourcb was 101. Offerings for
Phone m-71~2.
6-24-301&lt;
992-3821. Owner Dwight
7
11
to publiab any ·~ralw, scanda· tile day was
Logan.
· -6tc READY-MIX
CONCRETE
124 CLOSE TO
6-16-lOit ROUTE
Ioos and malicious" writings Rev. Eugene GiU bas been
POMEROY AND MID- 3 BEDROOM brick home. delivered right to rour
DLEPORT - 3.33 ACRES, 1
Ch 0 I 1 11 1 Mlddl
t
project. Fast and eesy. Free
against 111e government, Con- assigned to tbe Free Melbodist . - - - - - - - - - - .
ce
oca on n
epor
·
estomates.
Phone 992-32U.
stor
y
house,
bath,
3
gress or tile president
Ollrdl for another year. This
Seen
by
appointment
only.
Goe!lltln
Ready-Mix
Co ..
bedrooms, for ced air furnace ,
Pllone 992·5523 after 4 p.m. Middleport, Ohio.
Commwul Ne1ten
In 19M U.S. Ambassador to IJ1IIb:s lbe tenth year for Rev.
Alum. siding , 2 water
5-7-tfc
6-30-lfc
. _36" X23" f •009 .
The anis in Florida and !be United Nati0118 .Adlai Gill. Rev. Gill and family are
systems,
2
additional
buildings. A NICE PLACE TO SIX ROOM house, bath; · fuli ::
Texas build communal nests Stevenson died of a heart alteDdlng camp meeting at
G::
O:-LF
=-::1-es_son
_ s_a-nd
- c,..
lu-:b-r-......,
-.,.,r.
LIVE. $15,900.00.
J
T
•.basement, 133 Bullernut Ave
and several females deposit attock 1n London.
Mansfield.
jus I walking distance from
ohn eaford.
their eggs in it. All the anis · - In !986 elgbt nurses were
Rev. RIJbert MUSIIer occupied
1 downtown Pomeroy. Contact
TUPPERS PLAINS
6-30-l2tt
LEVEL ACRE, 2 story.frame
take turns incubating and, foWJd murdered 011 tile SOIItb lbepulpiiSundayln !be absence
Ed Hedrick, 2137 Wadsworth -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..,
home, bath, 4 bedrooms, • Orive, Columbus, Ohio, phone I
later, in caring for !be Side of Chicago. Drifter Rlcb- ci Rev. Gill.
.
USED OFFSET PLATES
carpeted, cellar, garage. IN
237-4334, Columbus.
HAVE
young.
ard Speck later was convicted
Mr. . and Mrs. Mark Stahl,
GOOD CONDITION $8,900.00.
-5-9-lfc
MANY USES
and
ci lh !:rimes and aentenced to Stockdale, visited recently witll
POMEROY - 2 rentals. close to HOUSE In Mason, 6 rooms ancf
delltb. On June 21, 1971, lbe· Mr.andMrs.NDmiiD&amp;hef!l .
shopping, IN GOOD CON-- bath, lot 80 x 100. See Jack E..
Smith.
Supreme Court overruled tile Mrs. Carolyn Huris and
.
DITION, ALWAYS RENTED.
7-9..!tt
$6,900.00.
death sentence.
Brenda, Sl Albons, W. Va.
Phone 992-2156
----:--:-:--==-I
recently visited with ber
TO BUY DR SELL
HOUSE. 1640 Lincoln Hts ..
I'
llrlni you
1 A tbougbt for today : Samuel llllllh!r, Mrs. Cora Rasbaw.
EARN al home addressing
CALL US
Pom,roy. Phone 992-2293.
10-25-tfc .
Butler aald, "If ~~ would Ml'3. Roy Howell ac- envelopes. Rush stamped selfextr• cuh
HENRY CLELAND
addressed
envelope
.
The
dare
to
apelk
to
ooe
another
companied
her
.
h
usband
to
REALTOR
I
for '
I
HOUSE story and half, 6 rooms;
Ambrose Co.•. 4325 I.Akeborn,
I
I WJreservedly, there would be a Indiana where
11o11e11 is Davisburg, Mich .. -41019.
· both, Rutland. Phone 742Ofltce ff1 ·12S'
111 COUrt St.
shopplna sprus 1 good deal. ll!ls 8llq'OW In lbe eqdoyed. They wiD stay far !be
5613.
Residence
ff1·2568
7-2-lOfp
·Pom.roy, Ohio
6-25-lfc
7-7-6tc
.
world a llwldred yean hence." swnmer monlbs.
·

Property

WI-\'{ IS IT,
MOIJIQUE ...

SHE'S WHISPERIN '

· ~====~====;~~~~~=z:====~=::;=i·~--~-

EXPERIENCED
Service

~:;-~-f'

..

......,..It

~EV, SHARI&lt;, TAA1'
B&amp;ACU UMWI.l.A IS "IWIO

"'=

....~ Metlr:
.Co•.
i.oo

SllORr!iSr, .WEIRD!iST,

. FtEAKIESr...

iOHNSON M.RY

., MIA. 111. Ul lot. UJ. hot.

PJu•b'"' •

Sale

.742-4902

- ----Notice

Sales

- YO'LL

ElUT DATELESS
DEAR - IFWE
DON'TGITID
YORE ACRE
O ' GOLD -··

R·RECKOI-J AH DREADS
NO HUS&amp;IN MORE'N
TH' DREAD WATER
KRONKITINGALE !!
L-L E'S GO -

NEVAH
GIT

NO

HU$&amp;1N!!

HM Ywr Siisonll
Cclnll"itioninl '

For Sale

Alfred

6.98

Social Notes

BUGS BUNNY

BlaeHnar'•

Mi55
WINKLEi"
I HAVE A

HE !=OJND OliT I WA5
IN TOWN AND WANTS

TO TAKJ: ME TO
DiNNER TOMORRO\oV
NIGHT/ r=-_.-

~=

fOR~!

V!:R. 11RISS AR5 GeTTIN'
SN\OOT"H, POR!C-1! HOW
A80UT PUTTIN '

TH I5 MAY BE

niE BREAK.
I WA5

ON ANEW SETf

HOPING
FOR !

long Bottom
Social Notes

Real Estate

Pop needs me at

Virgil B.

12'. • 14' • 24' • WIDE

Sale

Let!; ju~t ~a4

Sale

the qaraqe and

let it 110 at
----.that !

TEAFORD

MILLER
MOBil£ HOMES

SR.

TilE BORN LOSER

------

fA Tha'*s ·

o:

------

Real Estate

AOROSS

1$, ALL BUT

JON NV SCORN !

Sale

A FEW CASES MOVED
I-IERE , A FEW CASES

•·4:l·

,-------------1 Classified Ads I

I

1

I
I

--------------''

.

t ra.nslaled
14. Favoring
17. Socially
coru&lt;!ious
inseCt

genus
18. Muske·
21. Makewa ves,
teer
figuratively %0. Trans·
(3wds.)
action
29. Fonnerly
30. Byword

GUITJiliU(AN

JtYMID~;II.J=:!!:!....,c
Unscramble th... four Jumbles,
one letter to each llqllllle, to
rorm four ordinary words.

proach

25. White

House
nick -

I

name

26. Arab
garment
28. P e riod
32. Fa.Uma's
husband

34. Brilliantl y

37. Colleen's

land
38. Usher
39. Bacon's

cousin

colored
fish

40. Indo-

35 ..0 ut or

Chinese

ra nge
36. Rounded
pa rt

TIM.4Y

language
fl. Snooze
42. Ma.caw

I [) I I I
UY.UIN

II

HE SAIV' WHEN
HE WAN'TEC' TO
ATTRA(;T "THE 9EAM&amp;TRE55'&amp; ATTEiffiON.

river
3%. Mad -

hatter
(2wds.)
l3. 11ualcal

note
JS. Pub
offertng11
31. GA: Swork

(AMwere

Jumhlo., fllON

(~wds.)

43. Field
44. Aalan

4nt•rr: ff'lull

peninsula
• 45. Command
loa dog
team
46. Family
member

Pf\,ll'-1

! . Outworn
l. Vory pi.IIId

3.11eramblo up

DAILY ()ltYI"l''QUO'l'E-Here'l bow to WOik It:
AXYDLBAAXB
lo

LONOIO'ELLOW
One letter simply •lands tor another. Jn th1a aampte A. II
1100&lt;1 for the lhree L"s, X for lhe two O'o, etc. SIDJie lotion,
a,.trophe•, the length and formation of the wonfll an .a
hints. Eaeh d&amp;y the code letters are different .

'

, A CI')'Jitorram Qaotat!on
OFJOHF

Daily Sentinel

UFWWFW

------

NPJ
TLF

PTEF

UJ

NFTV ·

IFLLZMHF ;

lPIO'LF

NTX JB ITVZUQ TSETUITQ)'

ZW

UJ

JB

!PFC , - - TUTJJHF

...
"

t1

IXIIT
~ood

IXPIIT IN

DOWN

CAPl'AIN EASY

Sheets

.....

QUESTION.- ARTHUR

otmouth
31. SCottish

The

II!"·

10. "Da,"

26. Maple

For Sale

HARTfORD

behavior
9. Electrical
unit

22. Lamenta·
tlon

.

A

(C lt71 Kine J'e.aturtl Syndit.att, Inc .)

ofap·

tr1o
8. Code or

room

Help Wanted

Aluminum

7. One ot a
warning

15. English
river
16. Make a
choi ce
11. Swiss river
19. Harem

Qeland Realty

·SENTINEL
·CARRIER
WANTED IN
NEW HAVEN

arbiter

(3 wds.o

'

NOT

21 . Bohem ·

ian ·
a. "Gold"' or
22 . Spur
23. Solitary
Italy
6. Abbreviated 24. Means

13. Porter
novel

MOVED TI-IERE
-QUIE.TLV-

Dr1nk to
excess

7. Agile
II. On terra
finna
U. Family .

~;.e.·Mn.CecUBisllelland ~~~areVenus,

;tormed News Notes

4.

1. Clergyma n

Wanted To Buy

Laurel (]iff

Y-TclaJ'o Cl)'ptoquoto: DON'T TELL FRIENDS ABOU'l'
YOUR INDIGESTION: "HOW ARE YOU !" IS A GREJ:l'INO

DAILY CROSSWORD

BLTUAF,

1•-.o,...,)

DAMPIN JIOGII

f•"""
IT'5 A MISTAKE IO 'n'( 10
· AVOID :THE UNPLEASANT
IIIIN65 IN LIFE ..

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--

, , , _r r rr r

14- TIIellilliJ811 l'el,IAL' purl-¥

rrr

r r r 1·r ·

.. '

I .

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EEKANDMEEK

rC&lt;tt_O.,;AIIJ1t,117J

-, Bargain~, - Bargalps and

Me·
. 188

1 '

WHAT ON
AIRTH IS SHE
SAVIN'?

More Bargains In The .Sentinel Oassifieds
...

.LEGAL NOllCE

2 S1G11S
OF
QUAliTY '

Transfers

-Po•eror
•tor.Co.

For Rent

50 LOW I CAN'T
MI'\KE \TOUT

·Btismess ·Services:::::::=J·

LEGA.L NOTII;E
,.
IN THE MATTEII. OF SET·
TLEMI!NT OF ACCOUNTS,
PIIQIATI! COUIIT, MEIGS
ONE·
BEDROOM
trailer· r
COUNTY, OHIO
.
apartment.
Ideal for couples.
Accounts and vouchers Of the
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
follow ing named fiduciarie s
3
99
248
992
2-5
or
·
43/i.
_
,
:
•
·
i
---.
.
MOBILE MOME_~UYERSI .
_
hove bHn filed In the Pr-te
7 14 121
Court, Meigs ·County, Ohio, for
.40 Minutes o1 Your Time Con Well Be .h _ . Profitable
tpprovtl and settlement :
.·
,Time You Ever s - t.
Ralph- E. Barton, dec. to CASE NO: 17,N1 TweiH.h
MIDDLEPORT - J room and '
Current Account of Marion Jean
both, furnished aperlment. 1
Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
Huel R. Barton, Greta Mae Worner, Guard ian of Jobn
'"'PLY. VISTA. WAGON
$195
Phone· m -3205 or m -2725.
Danaldlon, Larry E. Barton, Laurence Wlrntr r JeHrey J• y
Y-1 Mgine, good tires, dean body &amp; nice vinyl Interior,
;41ALIO
.
.
7-14-6tp '
_. ..__ Oli
Warner , and Stephen Ray
., ~"WINSOR
:i
.rtHAMPION
Cert. ....
trans., ~leering, radio, luggage rack.
....,.., ve.
warner, Minor&amp;. .
oOuBLE,.CWIDE~
.lUDDY
ii!,YAN DYKE
Regularly Priced at 51095.00 Special.
Greta Mae Donaldson, CASE NO. 17 ,NJ Twelffll and
FURNISHED
4
room
&amp; bath
...__..;_ "==
.
'"' CNEY~LET IMPALA CPE.
.
S7ff
1 _ _ E. Final Account ot Marion JNn
~EE TOM CROW OR BOB CROW .
apt., adults only, Middleport.
~- ~-.., ....... z
Warner. Guardian Of Linda Sue
6 Cyl •• stand. trans., local I owner car; good tires, radio,
Phone
m
-3874.
·
Barton, Carolyn Barton to Worner , • .M.lnor.
heals . "Reg. Price S1095.00. Special.
,
7-11-lfc
PARKERSIU~ _
MOBILE HOMES, INC.
CASE NO. .11.333 Eleventll
·
,.,..__
!M7 PONTIAC LEMAIIS CPE.
S12f5
Huel Barton, ·Parcell, uu:.c. curren t. Account of· 8effy L.
Sprint equipment Including b!ld!et seals, console, 3 speed
·•
MEMORIAL BRIDGJ' TRAFFIC CIRCLE
Clive QuiVe)', AJtnle Qulft1 to Smitll, Guardian of the Estotn
floar shift, 6 cyl., 01o11head cam .. good tires. radio,
.,....._.
V
of
1\\ory
K.
·
Go
llqher
ond •
.
PARKERSJI'URG, W.VA..
MOllie Vance, ....,_., IIICe, Debro L . Gallagher, Minors.
beaullful blu&amp; finlsh..b:allow mileage car. A nice one.
Parcell, $clplo,
._tAS E• NO. I 1off,7F11 I Tlodlr5d
u-•ene
Smith -·nuo 1 "ccoun
reo on .
Mary
lUlU
Norris, Gu•rdian of "'• Estate
Roofinf&amp; Carpenter
Flecbtner, ·ata Miry AlWine of Oonold Lovett, on ln.... competent p«san.
_ __.._ ... 'II ...
'Work .
Smllb r'""'
out
,.
CASE NO. 20,3t0 Fint and
Cp-,nplete
Spouting. Roof
tile Fint Baplill CbiJrdl, Lilt, Final AccOunt Of Ella M..
OP-EN
EVES.
P.M.
Painting
Rom ine Oftd l ibO Midkiff, CO Remodeling
Mlcldleport.
Exe&lt;utrix and Co-Extcu1or .o f
~~~~.01110
Fred Smltb, Beatrk;e ElleD tilt Eliott of ElSie Midkiff,
Kitchens. Baths
NEW&amp;OLD WORK
4-2-tfc
Room
Additions
All
Weai!Mr
Roofing &amp; Con·
Smltb to George Casto, l•!CIIIe ~::0'\xcepllons ore filed
struc:tion
eo,,_~nd - Antholly
And
Patios
WANT
AD
C8sto, Parcel, Sali!!ho"'Y.,
tlltrtto, Hid accounts Will be
MOBILE HOME, available Ju ly
For
or Trade
Backhoe And
,...,.....,"~,,nacO~,
___. .....,,_, u-•- ......,,_, tor
hnrlng befol'it sold COUrt on
!II FORMATIOII
..-nnv-.Heatlllll
·
15, 1971. Phone m -5592 .
Comf'lelt PlumbiiiJI,
tilt 12111 d_a y of August, 1f71, at
Endloocier
Work
DEADLINES
1969 CAMARO, 4-speed; 1968
7-12-tft
and Air Cond~to VirBII Eugene Westfall, Fay which time sold acc~untswlll be .S P.M. Day Before Publication
Chevrolet, 2-doo.r hardtop,
27tUncolnSI.
ltport,O.
.. -'--conslde.r ed 1nd continued from
Septic
Tonks
Monday
Deadline
9
a.m.
Wea tfall • •D..-1
automatic, power steering .. TRAILER SPACE cin-old Rt. 33,
Pt1Dntff1-25SI
~·.., ....,_,011,
doy to day until finally disposed . CitM!ellatlon &amp; Con-eclions
And Lnch Bods.
and power brakes, air con - tf2.mlle north of new Meigs
tns~-Ex,.nteted
Velma M. boning, W. D. of.
Will be ac.c:epled unlil9·a.in. for
L
La
Any
person
lnternted
m•y
dijloolng.
Pllone
992-6547.
High
School.
Phone
992-2941.
Work Guraranlltll
La nn Ing t o Frano.
Day of Publication
yne, file written exceptions to sold
7-13-3tc
3-5-tft
REGULATIONS
Brookle Layne,
Parcel, accounts or to molten perRutland
.t•inlng to the execution of the ' The Publisher ......,... the
FURNISHED and unfurnishi!d
·
trust, not l•ss th.Jn five days right to edit or reject any ads
apartments. Close to school.
Jackie K. Ginther to prior to tbe date 10t tor hear ing. deemed objectional. The
POMEROY
'
Pllone m -5434.
vmood
K
Ginther
'.2
.a.-F
.
H
.
O'
Brien
publisherwill
notbe~sible
Ra•GUN SHOOT, Sunday, July 18, I
10-18-lfc
·
•' ""'""•
PROBATE JUDGE
Ai
.HOME &amp; AUTO
Oleater. ,
MEIGSCOUNTY ,OHIO lor more than Ol"'e incorrect. p.m. at Racine Gun Club.
insertian.
7-13-Stt
Delmar L. Hollon, VIrginia
RATES
(71 14
NINE penny candy dispensers.
Auto
992-2094
I~ and
· For Wtnt Ad Service
Hollon to Mary Wrigllt, 81 1-3
SS each. Phone 992-3524.
REDUCE excess fluids with 1964 FORD Van - completely
606
E.
Main
Pometoy
5 cents per Word-Insertion .
7-11-llp
Fluldex, S1.69. Lose weight
Acres, Scipio.
overhauled, 5 new tires, $400.
Minimum Charge 75c
Rtalall'
safely with Oex-A-Diet. 98
Contact Albert Roseberry , PORTABLE" dishwasher, used
Dorolby E. Ralbbum to Floyd
OFFICE
SUPPUES
12 cents per wont three.
•
cents at Nelson Drugs.
Bashan-Keno Road.
consecutive Insertions.
few
times,
service
for
six
.
J. Rupe, J~ A. Rupe, ~Acre,
7- 14-ltp
And
Special
Plus
7-13-31p
18 cents per word six conMust have water pressure.
At
Ports
Rutlud.
secutive ins.er licwtS.
Cost $46. Sell for 530. Phone
FURNITURE
GUN SHOOT . Forked Run
Roy A. l'ltmlgan, Marie N.
25 Per Cent DisCount on paid
Sportsman Club, Sunday , 1961 OLDS. Super 88, $150; 1964 742-3290.
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
Stop In and See Our
7-13-ltp
Corvair,
$125. George
l'ltmlgan to Pllm Lud ~
July 18 at noon .
CARD
OF
THANKS
Hackett,
93
Seventh
Ave
.•
Sunday
School
attendance
011
7-14-ltt
Floor· Display.
Co., John aa-, 207.11 Acres,
PHONE tn-2143
&amp;OBITUARY
Middleport
.
Pllood
992-2444.
SINGER,
zfg.zag,
needs
no
July II was 46. 'lbe lllfering was SI.SO for SO word minimum.
Bedford.
7-13;31p cams, all built-In features,
THOROUGHBRED Stud
RIOR,-exteriOr decorator PAPER HANGING, Interior
$18.21.
iac:h additional word 2c.
.
. makes buttonholes, etc . "j NTE
Service.
Roman
Captain
No.
and
barn roofs. Phone 742- and exterior painting. Phone
BUilD
ADS
Wcnbip services were beld at
MERCURY. 4 door sedan, Balance $43.17. Call m -7085.
637410. SSO registered mares, '54good
5683.
Additional
25c Charge per
m -3630.
shape, one owner. May
7-11 -61&lt;
II wllb attmlance ci 44, wilb Alllid llsement.
SJS grade mares . Return
6-20-lOfc,
7-13-lOip
be seen at Dotson Rest Home - - - - - - - - privileges. Greg Roush ,
tile Rev.IAAman lp"'lking fnm
OFFICE HOURS
-·
-corner
of
Fourth
and
AnSTEREO-RADIO
console,
4Phone m-5039. ·
·
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer OHIO VALLEY Deco"ratlng
8:30a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Daily,
ll KiDp 2:7-f. •
derson Streets. Mason. or call speed intermixed changer,
7-9-lOtt
Complete Service
8:
30
a
.m.
to
12:00
Noon·
Services, Interior and exGeraldine
Dotson
at
614-773dual
volume
control,
4·
·Mr. and Mn. VereSwarlz and Saturday.
Phone 949-3821
..
terior painting. Pllone 610675712.
speaker
sound
system,
lovely
Sarab Woode ci Coolville bad
Racine, Ohio
SAVE UP to one hall. Bring
7685.
7-13-61c walnut finish . Balance $62.97.
Crill Bradford
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
7-13-61&lt;
-- dinner Salurday wltb the
Use our budget terms. Call
In
le•y
S-l-Ife
Shop,
151
Butternut
Ave.,
'67
CHEVELLE
Miilibu
2door,
1
992-7085.
Mr. and Mn. Jack Rulli, Vernon Swartz family at
Pomeroy.
local owner, V-8 automalit,
7-11-61t FREE ESTIMATE on gerieraf WILL DO roofing, painting,
Minneapolis, MinD. were dlnller Hockingport. The Swartzes IN MEMORY of Diver E. Sayre
4-23-lit
plumbing and carpenter
who left us- year ago July
new tires, excellent condition. jjiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiioit. .
remodeling
,
roofing
and'
guesll ci Mr. and Mrs: Wayne were accompanied bmJe by 12,
work
; also tear ing down old
Pllone 992-2084 or m -7098.
1970: May you always
painting. Phone 992.7729, 9 buildings. Phone 992-7324 or
7-4-Ift
~.
lbelr 11011, Vern011, and bia walk in sunshine; God's love REDUCE safe and fast with
~.m . to 6 p.m.
u2-~·m .
·
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
Villtln&amp; Mary Pierce were pes~~, Mr. and Mrs. · Fred arliiRd you glow. For lhe
6-9-30tc
7-6-12tc
waler pills. Nelson Drugs.
happineso· you bnlught us,
Suzie Cooley and Jimmie, Bryant and family It ,~J1al!o0!8
BUlCi&lt; LeSabre. 2-dr .
6-27-lOtp 1969
evetJanewassure'loknow. lt
hardtop,
power steering,
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
saUbetMIIe, 0., Mr. and Mrs. for tile evening.
bnlke ..,r hearts to IGse y..,,
For
power brakes, a ir, 18,000
Sanitation, Stewart, Oflio. 1'11.
but"yau did not go alone; part YARD SALE on Larkins St.,
Denver Curtis and family,
Clara Follrod and Nina
miles.
Excellent
condition.
662-303S.
of us -.twH.b you, wloen God
Rutland, Friday and SaturPhone 992-2288.
Cbarlestoo, W. Va.; Mr. and RobinsOII aiJd lbelr pes~~, Mr. called
2-12-tfc
you home on that
day.
6-3-tft
Mrs. Millard Van. Meier, andMn.JobnBarnettltGary,
Sunday afte hOCWI.
7-14-Jit
NEIGLER Construction. For
Sadly missed by wife Doris.
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mn. Hoblrt Ind., visited Mr. and Mn. Otto
bulldiiiJI or. remodeling your
children
and
grandchildren.
For
N!IW'ell and Sbiela, Oleate.-, and Swartz of Shade, 0., Sunday
home. Call Guy Nelgler,
7-14-ltt TEWKSBARY'S Barber Shop .
Mr. and Mra. 1Mry Curt1a and afternoon.
will be dosed Mon., July 19th 1970 KAWASAKI 350 5650 .
Racine, Ohio.
July
24th.
Roger
Bahr,
Reed$vllle,
Ohio.
. 7-31-tfc
thru
Sat.,
Wnlly.
A family get-together was IN LOVING memory of
Phone
985-3958.
·
7-14-31p
fob".~ Mn. ~ -llmilh beld·tat ·lbe•IJime •Jt Mr:"and ' . C!aronot Hleel -Howley: I
1220 Washington Bivd ..
RAL'PH'S CARPET .::. ·· up'
7-9-71&lt;
, 1 ed
. '· lth
f mil
•
camat say, and I will not say,
Broker
le
ta
Bet(ire,
Ohio
DO
IT
YOURSELF
Coin
holstery Cleaning Service .
en r n . w
a a Y Mra. Rotierl Burke, Jr, and fflat he is - - He is just
110 Mechanic Str"t
·
Operated
Car
Wash
In
TupFree
estimates. Phone
dinner hoooring Mr. and Mn. daughter 011 Sunday.
-ay, with a cheery smile,
2 ~ '60 TRANSMISSIONS - I
Pomeroy, Ohio
pers
Plains
now
open
for
~4.
Gallipolis
7-YEAR
OLD
palomino
mare,
Howard Young, Paden Clly, W.
The Women's Society 1rill and a wave of lhe hand. He
Pontiac and 1 Thunderbird for
business. Will iam Connolly.
3-12-tft
gentle, broke for riding . $2,500.00 - Business or home
$25
each.
Contact
Roy
and
7-14-6tp
Va. on tbelr 40111 Wftkl!ng an- hold its regular meetln&amp; on :::....;::a~=~ a..l~ett ~~
Phone 992-5090.
site near Pomeroy.
Steve Roseberry, BashanAWNINGS, storm doors and
7-7-61t
nlveraary. Otber gueall were n-lay, July 11, at a p.m. at dreaming very fair it
Keno Road.
wi ndows , carports,
521,000.00 - 3 bedrooms, both,
Mr. and Mrs. Emmett stetllem, tile home ci Florence Spel1cet, needs must be. sirKe he ATTN. ALL borned again 7-13-3tp
marquees, aluminum siding
STEREO-RADIO. combinat ion
modern kitchen , dining ropm
Bible believing Christians Jean Newlun and Kenny near'l'llppersPialnawilbNeDie =":~;;:;~~
and
railing. Call A. Jacob,
un
it,
with
AM-FM
rad
io,
4
with sliding glass doors to
Revival services will be held 8-YEAR OLD palomino mare,
sales
representative. For free
Reynolds.
Parker as proeram leader.
old-lime step and the glad
speak~
rs.
dual
volume
conporch. Fireplace In living.
July 9-18 at the (nongentle, saddle and bridle.
estimates,
phone Charles
Vlaltin&amp; Mr. and Mn. Guy Mrs. Tbelma Henderson return, think of him faring on,
Gas forced air furnace. 2 lots.
denomlnatlonall Covenant of
Pllone 742-5865 Harrisonville, trol, modern maple console.
Lisle,
Syracuse.
V. V.
Balance S79.76. Use our
Double garage.
Truth sanctuary, located in
Ohio.
Hayman were Mrs. Jenny attended 111e School ci Misai0118
:l'.e~':.'\:re.~~~r~i~
Johnson
and
Son.
Inc.
Racine, Ohio at the old post
7-14-6tc budget terms. Call m -7085.
5-27-tft
Hayman and 80118, ~ at Westerville, 0 ., over 111e still as the same, I say he is
7-11 -6tt 513,000.00 - 4 or s bedroom
office building. Pastors J . D.
Road; Mr. and Mn. Keith weekend wllb Marjcry Coakley not deaoJ, he is just away._
home.·
Bath,
gas
furnace
.
King and E. C. Fulcher along CANNING tomatoes. Geraldine
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been .
Ridenour Cbester and Mr. and ... Coolville 0
Sadly missed by family .
with visiting evangelists will
Modern kllchen, Garden.
Cleland, East Main, Racine.
cancelled?
Lost
your
t
J
Ul
I
•
7-14- l tp
be conducting the services.
Ohio.
·
FREEZER
SALE
license?
Call
992operator's
Mrs. TO~llo Hayman and
Rev. and Mrs. Jacob M. Leh- - - - -- - - Heavens and earth shall pess
$13,500.00 - 76 acres. 7 room
7-14-18tc
2966.
FREE ICE CREAM OFFER
house. Outbuildings . Well
awar, but the Word of God
daughters.
man and son, Ricky, bad Card
6-15-tfc
shal
stand
forever.
Here's
the
way
If
wor
ks
...
water. Minerals.
PINTO GELDING, 3 years old,
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Qurt Sunday dinner wllh Mr. and
WE WISH to thank lhe - r s
7-8-6lt
you gel seven Ic e cream
very gentle, 59 Inches tall.
BR I EN ELECTRIC SERand daughters, Lorain, 0., were Mrs. Cbarles D. Woode.
and nurses at Veterans
bars, or a half-gallon of Ice $26,500.00 - J bedrooms, 1'1:1 O'VICE
Pllone m -7066.
. Pllone 949-oiSSI.
Memoria l Hospital and KOSCOT Kosmefi ts, Ju.lycream , FREE tor every
baths, central heat and AIR
visiting Nellie Cozart.
Mr. and Mrs. Dinsmore
7-14-3tc
S.JO.Ifc
cubic toot you buy In • Un ico
CONDITIONING.
Gar-e.
especially thank the MidMr. and Mrs. BID Trace and Boyles have sold lbelr !ann and
~ust special, Kare Konfreezer
,
r efrig e r a tor or
dlep&gt;rl
Emergency
Squad,
NEEDLE sewing
dltoon oil SS. Value now only TWIN
~EWING MACHINES. Repair
comb ination .
1011, Wellston,
were visiting wiD be moving to 'l'lqJpers
lhe doctors and nurses at
machine 1971 model in new
UN ICO 2t FOOT CHEST
$10,000.00 - or a good offer. 4 service, all makes. 992-2214.
S2
.SO.
Distributors,
Brown's,
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Prince. · Plains SOOII.
Holzer Medical Center,
FREEZER
279.95
bedrooms, bath, garage.
walnut stand. All features
phone m -5113.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
friends and neighbors for the
built-in
Paige and_~uy Hayman and
Relatives and friends here
to
make
fan
cy
~ i th th is on e you get 196 tree
Middleport.
7-4-tfc
Authorized
Singer Sales and
courtesies received dowing
designs. Also butlonholes. •ce cream bar~ or 28 ha lfService.
We
Sharpen Scissors.
NeUie Apdml: have returned to learned of tile death ci Wayne
lhe death of our loved one,
blind hems, etc., $43.35, cash gallons ot FRS"E Ice cream . $19.500.00 - NEW 3 bedroom,
SOHIO
Service
Station
at
418
W.
3-29-tfc
1be1r hcmes here aflei' being Koehler, of Guysville, 0., on
aarence IOeel Hawley. Wife
price, or ·terms available.
POMEROY
one floor, 1'1:1 baths. CarMain
Street,
Pomeroy,
is
now
Diane,
daughter
Ingrid.
son
palleDII at local hospitals.
Sunday.
Pllone m -5641 .
J.ck w. caney, Mgr.
peting. Gas furnace. Carport. CUSTOM MEAT CUTTING.
under new management by
Tom. mother. boulhers and
7-14-61&lt;
Margaret Nessleroad has
Phone 992-2111
Monid
Good.
Starting
MonDick Vaughan. phone 992si s~.
relumed borne after attending
7-14-llp day, July 12th lhru saturday. VACUUM cleaner: Electro ~-:~;;=:;=:~~=====::1 525,000.00 - 806 acres. Barn, 337A, Dale Little. ptoone 992July l7th, a free grease job
For
';X,'~~i~~!~gs. room house. 6346.
funeral aervices for her father
Hygiene new demonstrator
will
be
given
with
every
oil
6-23-lOit
I WISH. to thank ~one who
has all cleaning attachments 24 ACRE farm i.on
In Oklahcma.
="g-'-'l:-Bo:-:11,.-o-m,
.
-·
chaJ190
and
fill
-up.
was so kind and thoughtful
plus
the
new
electro
suds
for
$12,000.00
3
bedroom
paneled
with
or
without
farm
SEPTIC
TANKS
CLEANED
Mr. and Mrs. Charles' Olne
7-11 -61&lt;
after the death of my wife.
shampooing carpet. Only
machinery . ·House with 3 home. Ceramic bath. Modern Reasonable rates. 1'11. 446-4782,
Margaret
M.
Will,
l•p
I
~Iaiiy
Tile AlmMK
and 11011S, MOUI1dnille, W. Va.
$27.50 cash price or terms
kitchen .
bedrooms, dining room, living
Gall i polis. John Russell,
wish to thank the Pomeroy
ava ilable. Phone m -5641.
room , Ph baths, enclosed
Owner &amp; Operator.
were visiting Mr. and Mrs. By Ullted l'rellllllentatiGul
Emergency Squad. Rev.
7-14-61t
$3,500.00 - 40 acres of
porch,
wall
to
wall
back
5-13-tfc
Ruaell Cline.
Today Is Wednesday, July 14,
Smith,
Ewing ANT IQUES, telephones, brass
Stanton
woodland. Drilled well , septic
carpellng. Aluminum siding,
Funeral Harne, ttwe sending
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Curtis tile 196111 day ~ lfTI.
tank, Minerals.
beds . clocks, dishes, old MILLIONS of rugs have been
awning, storm windows and
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
flowers,
Webstl!r Post
cleaned with Blue Lustre. It's
furniture, etc. Write M. D.
were villting Mr. and Mn.
111e moon is between ill full AmericanDrew
doors
.
City
wafer
.
storm
Septic tanks Installed. George
Legion Auxiliary,
Ameri ca's finest . Rent
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
$1 ,500.00 - Building lot. Chester
Selling
due
to
ill
health.
Phone
I Blll) Pullins, Phone 992-2A78.
Marvin Walker, Tuppers phase and last quarter.
lhe pallbearers and neighbors
electric shampooer, $1 , Baker
Call 992-6271.
water.
.·
614-985-3938.
4-25-lfc
and anyMe else who hefped in
Furniture Company.
m -m5 ff1·2371
7-9-Ift
6-23-lOtp
anyway. Your kindness will - - - -- 7-14-61t
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
HARRISON'S TV AND ANnever be forgotten.
ASSOCIATE
TENNA SERVICE. Phone
dtiughler, Parkersburg, W. Va. The evening stars are MercuAl:va C. Will 2 OR 3 BEDROOM used trailer.
7-ll-61t
992-2522.
1971
SOLID
State
Apache,
SYRACUSE
House,
3
rooms
Phone
m
-3935.
were villting Mr. and Mrs. Joe ry and Jupiter.
7-14-llp
sleeps six. Pllone 992-5592.
•nd bath, full basement, large
6-10-tft
7-13-61t
but secluded
Bissell.
Those born on Ibis day are
7-11 -lfc
lot. Phone m -3205 or 992-2725. CONVENIENT
7-14-6tp building lots on T79 at Rock FOR YOUR new Shingled roOf,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Dean, Wider tile sign ci Cancer.
ANTIQUES :
dishes ,
Springs . Wllhln walking contact Roush Construction.
COAL,
limestone.
Excel
sior
telephones, clocks , brass
Colwnbus, and Mr. and Mrs. SWedish film director 1ngmar
of Me igs High
distance
Salt
Works,
E.
Main
St
.•
Phone m -5039.
beds, lamps, etc. Lee Rudisill,
Wayne Prince atlended tile Arts Be
born Jul 14
School,
a
5
minute
drive from
Pomeroy. Pllone m -3891.
Phone m -3403.
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
l .Craft Show at Cedar Lake, w. 19lrrn was
y
•
4-9-Ift·
7-1-lOfp
.
Witte weekends or after 5 O' DELL WHEEL
alignment
Va.
On Ibis day In history·
p.m.
weekdays.
Pllone
992LOGAN FIRE and safety
locatedatCrossrood$, Rt. 12A.
TOP PRICE on ginseng and
6887 .
Mr. and Mrs. Elsworth llill,
In 1789 lbe French
608 East Main
equipment. Sales and service.
Complete
Iron! end service,
.JI.Ifc
Golden
Seal
·
yellow
root.
Seal
7
POMEROY
. All types and sizes of fire
Pmleroy, and Mr. and Mrs. !be Bastille Prison In Paris, a
tops and stem bone dry, _tiean
-:-:=:-:-:--:-----tune
up
and
brake service.
exllngulshers. Special prices POMEROY - CLOSE TO
Warren Connolly and Amy day now coriunemorated as a
BY BERTHA PARKER
ROOM
hoose,
garage,
water
Wheels
balanced
elec5
no dirt. All rools. Bill Bail«.
extinguishers for boats,
1'1&gt; story . and gas, good condlflon, 1 1.3 Iron i cally.
SHOPPING
P.O. · Box 14, Second Slreel. on
All
work
spent a .week at Florida and national holiday In France.
Sabbath Scbool alteodanee
campers, homes. Also
frame, bath, 3 or 4 bedrooms,
Reasonable
acres just off Route 7 bypass guaranteed .
Reedsville, Ohio .sm.
discount prices on other sizes.
otber pomls.
In !798 Congress pa e~ !be July 11 at tile Free Melbodist
full
basement,
cabinets
In"
the
7-1-lOit
on
Leading
Creek
Road
.
rates.
Pllone
992-3213.
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone
kitchen. A BUY $6,SOO.otl.
- VloletSmltb Sedition Act, making it a aime Ourcb was 101. Offerings for
Phone m-71~2.
6-24-301&lt;
992-3821. Owner Dwight
7
11
to publiab any ·~ralw, scanda· tile day was
Logan.
· -6tc READY-MIX
CONCRETE
124 CLOSE TO
6-16-lOit ROUTE
Ioos and malicious" writings Rev. Eugene GiU bas been
POMEROY AND MID- 3 BEDROOM brick home. delivered right to rour
DLEPORT - 3.33 ACRES, 1
Ch 0 I 1 11 1 Mlddl
t
project. Fast and eesy. Free
against 111e government, Con- assigned to tbe Free Melbodist . - - - - - - - - - - .
ce
oca on n
epor
·
estomates.
Phone 992-32U.
stor
y
house,
bath,
3
gress or tile president
Ollrdl for another year. This
Seen
by
appointment
only.
Goe!lltln
Ready-Mix
Co ..
bedrooms, for ced air furnace ,
Pllone 992·5523 after 4 p.m. Middleport, Ohio.
Commwul Ne1ten
In 19M U.S. Ambassador to IJ1IIb:s lbe tenth year for Rev.
Alum. siding , 2 water
5-7-tfc
6-30-lfc
. _36" X23" f •009 .
The anis in Florida and !be United Nati0118 .Adlai Gill. Rev. Gill and family are
systems,
2
additional
buildings. A NICE PLACE TO SIX ROOM house, bath; · fuli ::
Texas build communal nests Stevenson died of a heart alteDdlng camp meeting at
G::
O:-LF
=-::1-es_son
_ s_a-nd
- c,..
lu-:b-r-......,
-.,.,r.
LIVE. $15,900.00.
J
T
•.basement, 133 Bullernut Ave
and several females deposit attock 1n London.
Mansfield.
jus I walking distance from
ohn eaford.
their eggs in it. All the anis · - In !986 elgbt nurses were
Rev. RIJbert MUSIIer occupied
1 downtown Pomeroy. Contact
TUPPERS PLAINS
6-30-l2tt
LEVEL ACRE, 2 story.frame
take turns incubating and, foWJd murdered 011 tile SOIItb lbepulpiiSundayln !be absence
Ed Hedrick, 2137 Wadsworth -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..,
home, bath, 4 bedrooms, • Orive, Columbus, Ohio, phone I
later, in caring for !be Side of Chicago. Drifter Rlcb- ci Rev. Gill.
.
USED OFFSET PLATES
carpeted, cellar, garage. IN
237-4334, Columbus.
HAVE
young.
ard Speck later was convicted
Mr. . and Mrs. Mark Stahl,
GOOD CONDITION $8,900.00.
-5-9-lfc
MANY USES
and
ci lh !:rimes and aentenced to Stockdale, visited recently witll
POMEROY - 2 rentals. close to HOUSE In Mason, 6 rooms ancf
delltb. On June 21, 1971, lbe· Mr.andMrs.NDmiiD&amp;hef!l .
shopping, IN GOOD CON-- bath, lot 80 x 100. See Jack E..
Smith.
Supreme Court overruled tile Mrs. Carolyn Huris and
.
DITION, ALWAYS RENTED.
7-9..!tt
$6,900.00.
death sentence.
Brenda, Sl Albons, W. Va.
Phone 992-2156
----:--:-:--==-I
recently visited with ber
TO BUY DR SELL
HOUSE. 1640 Lincoln Hts ..
I'
llrlni you
1 A tbougbt for today : Samuel llllllh!r, Mrs. Cora Rasbaw.
EARN al home addressing
CALL US
Pom,roy. Phone 992-2293.
10-25-tfc .
Butler aald, "If ~~ would Ml'3. Roy Howell ac- envelopes. Rush stamped selfextr• cuh
HENRY CLELAND
addressed
envelope
.
The
dare
to
apelk
to
ooe
another
companied
her
.
h
usband
to
REALTOR
I
for '
I
HOUSE story and half, 6 rooms;
Ambrose Co.•. 4325 I.Akeborn,
I
I WJreservedly, there would be a Indiana where
11o11e11 is Davisburg, Mich .. -41019.
· both, Rutland. Phone 742Ofltce ff1 ·12S'
111 COUrt St.
shopplna sprus 1 good deal. ll!ls 8llq'OW In lbe eqdoyed. They wiD stay far !be
5613.
Residence
ff1·2568
7-2-lOfp
·Pom.roy, Ohio
6-25-lfc
7-7-6tc
.
world a llwldred yean hence." swnmer monlbs.
·

Property

WI-\'{ IS IT,
MOIJIQUE ...

SHE'S WHISPERIN '

· ~====~====;~~~~~=z:====~=::;=i·~--~-

EXPERIENCED
Service

~:;-~-f'

..

......,..It

~EV, SHARI&lt;, TAA1'
B&amp;ACU UMWI.l.A IS "IWIO

"'=

....~ Metlr:
.Co•.
i.oo

SllORr!iSr, .WEIRD!iST,

. FtEAKIESr...

iOHNSON M.RY

., MIA. 111. Ul lot. UJ. hot.

PJu•b'"' •

Sale

.742-4902

- ----Notice

Sales

- YO'LL

ElUT DATELESS
DEAR - IFWE
DON'TGITID
YORE ACRE
O ' GOLD -··

R·RECKOI-J AH DREADS
NO HUS&amp;IN MORE'N
TH' DREAD WATER
KRONKITINGALE !!
L-L E'S GO -

NEVAH
GIT

NO

HU$&amp;1N!!

HM Ywr Siisonll
Cclnll"itioninl '

For Sale

Alfred

6.98

Social Notes

BUGS BUNNY

BlaeHnar'•

Mi55
WINKLEi"
I HAVE A

HE !=OJND OliT I WA5
IN TOWN AND WANTS

TO TAKJ: ME TO
DiNNER TOMORRO\oV
NIGHT/ r=-_.-

~=

fOR~!

V!:R. 11RISS AR5 GeTTIN'
SN\OOT"H, POR!C-1! HOW
A80UT PUTTIN '

TH I5 MAY BE

niE BREAK.
I WA5

ON ANEW SETf

HOPING
FOR !

long Bottom
Social Notes

Real Estate

Pop needs me at

Virgil B.

12'. • 14' • 24' • WIDE

Sale

Let!; ju~t ~a4

Sale

the qaraqe and

let it 110 at
----.that !

TEAFORD

MILLER
MOBil£ HOMES

SR.

TilE BORN LOSER

------

fA Tha'*s ·

o:

------

Real Estate

AOROSS

1$, ALL BUT

JON NV SCORN !

Sale

A FEW CASES MOVED
I-IERE , A FEW CASES

•·4:l·

,-------------1 Classified Ads I

I

1

I
I

--------------''

.

t ra.nslaled
14. Favoring
17. Socially
coru&lt;!ious
inseCt

genus
18. Muske·
21. Makewa ves,
teer
figuratively %0. Trans·
(3wds.)
action
29. Fonnerly
30. Byword

GUITJiliU(AN

JtYMID~;II.J=:!!:!....,c
Unscramble th... four Jumbles,
one letter to each llqllllle, to
rorm four ordinary words.

proach

25. White

House
nick -

I

name

26. Arab
garment
28. P e riod
32. Fa.Uma's
husband

34. Brilliantl y

37. Colleen's

land
38. Usher
39. Bacon's

cousin

colored
fish

40. Indo-

35 ..0 ut or

Chinese

ra nge
36. Rounded
pa rt

TIM.4Y

language
fl. Snooze
42. Ma.caw

I [) I I I
UY.UIN

II

HE SAIV' WHEN
HE WAN'TEC' TO
ATTRA(;T "THE 9EAM&amp;TRE55'&amp; ATTEiffiON.

river
3%. Mad -

hatter
(2wds.)
l3. 11ualcal

note
JS. Pub
offertng11
31. GA: Swork

(AMwere

Jumhlo., fllON

(~wds.)

43. Field
44. Aalan

4nt•rr: ff'lull

peninsula
• 45. Command
loa dog
team
46. Family
member

Pf\,ll'-1

! . Outworn
l. Vory pi.IIId

3.11eramblo up

DAILY ()ltYI"l''QUO'l'E-Here'l bow to WOik It:
AXYDLBAAXB
lo

LONOIO'ELLOW
One letter simply •lands tor another. Jn th1a aampte A. II
1100&lt;1 for the lhree L"s, X for lhe two O'o, etc. SIDJie lotion,
a,.trophe•, the length and formation of the wonfll an .a
hints. Eaeh d&amp;y the code letters are different .

'

, A CI')'Jitorram Qaotat!on
OFJOHF

Daily Sentinel

UFWWFW

------

NPJ
TLF

PTEF

UJ

NFTV ·

IFLLZMHF ;

lPIO'LF

NTX JB ITVZUQ TSETUITQ)'

ZW

UJ

JB

!PFC , - - TUTJJHF

...
"

t1

IXIIT
~ood

IXPIIT IN

DOWN

CAPl'AIN EASY

Sheets

.....

QUESTION.- ARTHUR

otmouth
31. SCottish

The

II!"·

10. "Da,"

26. Maple

For Sale

HARTfORD

behavior
9. Electrical
unit

22. Lamenta·
tlon

.

A

(C lt71 Kine J'e.aturtl Syndit.att, Inc .)

ofap·

tr1o
8. Code or

room

Help Wanted

Aluminum

7. One ot a
warning

15. English
river
16. Make a
choi ce
11. Swiss river
19. Harem

Qeland Realty

·SENTINEL
·CARRIER
WANTED IN
NEW HAVEN

arbiter

(3 wds.o

'

NOT

21 . Bohem ·

ian ·
a. "Gold"' or
22 . Spur
23. Solitary
Italy
6. Abbreviated 24. Means

13. Porter
novel

MOVED TI-IERE
-QUIE.TLV-

Dr1nk to
excess

7. Agile
II. On terra
finna
U. Family .

~;.e.·Mn.CecUBisllelland ~~~areVenus,

;tormed News Notes

4.

1. Clergyma n

Wanted To Buy

Laurel (]iff

Y-TclaJ'o Cl)'ptoquoto: DON'T TELL FRIENDS ABOU'l'
YOUR INDIGESTION: "HOW ARE YOU !" IS A GREJ:l'INO

DAILY CROSSWORD

BLTUAF,

1•-.o,...,)

DAMPIN JIOGII

f•"""
IT'5 A MISTAKE IO 'n'( 10
· AVOID :THE UNPLEASANT
IIIIN65 IN LIFE ..

�....

I

,

[

H

11-Tbe
DaU,. Soatlnei,MV+pori-Pimeioy,.O.,
July 14,1971
•
.
.

Try _Again

They'll

OOLUMBUS (UPI) - Tbe Committee.
HOUle Ways and Means · At issue was the number d
,.. (D!!rDitlee wis IQ meet again votes eaCh Jlarty would fumisb ·
today In an effort to squeeze a fer a tax bill. Democra18 also
c:cmprclllllae tu .bill onw ·the wel"e demanding lbat the tax
Hcilse-ftoor fer a poaible vote bill be bolstered by IJl(ft than
1hls we.elr;.
$l.IML million IQ acc&lt;:mmodate
~ran and Democratic pet ·programs in the apmembers d the committee, in propria tlons biU already
addltlim wHouse leaders from cleared to the Senate.
both parties and represen· Tbe tu bill, agreed upon by
tdvesofthe o(flce of GoY. Jobn Democratic a_nd ~publican
J. Gilligan, jousted all day · leaders I&amp;'!t weet, includes a
Tuesday to no avail m the $1.4 graduated pel'S1)1181 state inliDim revenue package. All come tu of 1 w4 ~ cent and
cmcemedgaveuplate Tuesday corporate tax bites bringing in
nlgbt after three hours of $35( millim in new revenues
negotiations and agreed w over the next two years.
conUnue today.
Republicans, Democrats and
ltj)l ese-tatives of the goftrnor's office all declined fcrmal
comment for · fear any ac~Uabments IJ}lgbt be too
A large crowd attended the
fra811e to stand up under public
diaciCISIII'l!.
outdoor evangelistic services
"We dm't want anytbing w Tuesday night at the Southern
get mm ~ up," said Rep. Higb Sch00I f00 tball tadi
s urn
James J . Flannery, DCieveland, ranking minority
member of the Ways and Means crusad e each evemng through
July I8.
The subject of tonight's
sennon will be "Heaven," Song
leader is Duane Wolfe and
featuredtonigbtwillbetheKing
Tonight &amp; Thursday
Family. Services begin at 8
July 14-15
p.m.
NOT OPEN
In case of rain the Crusade
will be held in the high school
Fridoy thru Tuesday
July 16-20
auditorium at Racine. A IIIII'·
TORA! TORAI TORA!
sery is provided each evening.
(Technicolor!
The public is invited. Those
U. S. Sequences:
attending may sit on the
Martin Ba Isam
Joseph Cotton
bleachers, use a lawn chair, or
First showing at popular remain in automcibiles.
prices!
Thursday night Rev. Norris
"G"
will
use as his topic "The Man
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M. ,
Wbo Had Ev.....th;n«
But the
' - 06
Rigbt Thing,""
and
will feature
-.
_lbe Norris Quartet.

Big Crowd at

Crusade Meet

M,-s. Lunsfor.d
Died T_rle$day

Dress Code
Ill ::;:...

a'=

":,!)for
•eoisiaosiJali~SIIIIIhtfrom all

Kathryn Marie Lunilor\'1, 5t, LGUiual.. .
Pomeroy,Rt.3, died~at
Ellfan:emenl.

Veterans- Mem~ H"'ipil:ll
Mrs. Luns(ord was lk'"""""' lD
death by a brother, Otto
Aleshire.
. She is survived by her
husband, Leonard, and tlae
children·, David Wayne, at
home;JoyceAnnSianley,Beuy
JeanJones,Leooani,Jr.,David
E.,JaekieLee,andll":enneth.all
of Columbus; Brinda Abrie
Graham and Olarles E., both d
Pomeroy,andBillyS.uAklon;
four brothers, ·E mil and
Freeman Aleshire, bolb of
Pomeroy ; Stanley Aleshire,
Rutland, and Harland Aleshire,
of ·Cleveland ; one sister,
Genevieve V&lt;!gden, South Bend.
Ind. ; eight grandcbildren, and
seFuneraveralru·~"~will~beabelds.
- • ~~
Thursdayat3p.m.attbe .........,
~ft...,.
Funeral Home with lbe Rao.
E:ug
Gill offi · ling Bnrial

1

of
tbe
l*otisiuus 111 the *- code
:sbail be tile lt!l"''"''billty of
every prOfessional staff
member to enforce the
PiOOisiuus or tbe ..._ A special
responsibilily for doing so
~loags to lbe homeroom
'ea"""' wbo is the lirsl.oo see
lilt 5h•loeo•t eadl daJr. In t1Je
aiu• ... • 1 or lbe 0x1e the
......_._ .-ltBD ill Piotedures
;,;oi,;'faiiDRd:
Al)riolatiaaswiDbereported

to the ph'" itel pruoptly and in '

srillm rorm_ First ¥iola.tion,
wamiag to tbe sli*nl by tbe

principal; second l'iolalion,

c:&lt;~~lact 1rilb the parent by the
_. ......_.,; !bini violation,
;: ~ 111 the sli*nt by the

.J....,
~ ifio details and forms w
.
in•""•elt tbe eduicement of
the code :sbail be deYeiDped by

Leota &amp;w~ey ·
Died Tllesilay

Mrs. Leota Hawley, a. died
Tuesday morning at !be
resl«&lt;erw. -of ber son. Jack,
North 3rd St., M'rddleprt.
She was born May 25, • in
West Virginia, tbe daughter of
the Ia te William and Ella
Olambers Riley. She ""!' also
preceded in death by her first
husband, George Whiteside,
and her se¢ond husband,
Wellington Hawley. Sbe,Wal a
member of the Middleport
Clmrch of Cbrist.
Survivocs in a:dditioo oo her
son, include two daughters,
Mrs Joan Haas Bethel, and
·
•
Mrs. Amos (Eima) Bailey, New
h
Richmond; a stepdaug ter,
Miss Mildred_ Hawley, Middlepcrt; two SISters, Mrs. Roy
(Ella) Hannum, Long BoUom,
and Mrs. George (icie) Bayes,
Springfield, Va. ; a stepdaugbter-in-law, Mrs. James
H I
M'ddl
t
11
aw ey,
• epor ;
grandcbildren, six greatgrandchildren and two
t-

;.,~~lsRe:~:ar~~ ~~~- :ooeneterybe. iFrin·.endsR:kmays~~gsat
a.;:;:~staff will great-~
grea
..,..
ba.-e the' , . ,.!1rte support of
Fw!era1 serviCeS will be held

MEIGS lHEATR£

,~~,n~ !) ~ ! ~ £· 1M

Tonight, Tbur. Fri.
July 14-IS-16
Double Feelure Program
DIRTY DINGUS

MAGEE

GP

Pan a vision ·Metrocolor
'F rank Sinatra

George Kennedy

-PiusELVIS ·
a film about him.
"thars fhf!. way it Is"
Color
Elvis Presley
G

Cal1No.41&amp;

the funeraI horne any lime.

FIRE HITS CHURCII

AKRON (UPI ) - Fire
destroyed the Calvary United
Methodist Churcbbel"eTuesday
nigbl Firemen said the sewnd
floor of lbe church was engulfed
in flames wben they arrived and
the fire spread quickly to ihe
rest of lbe bUilding. Tbere were
no injuries and the cause was
not immediately determined.

STENGER SENTENCED .
CLEVELAND
C b
C 1 (UPl
Co l uya oga oun y
mmon
Pleas Court Judge Adrian B.
Fink Tuesday senteooed Jobn
Stenger, 21, Rocky River, to IO
to 1ll years in prison m drQg
charges stemming tnm an
arrest in April I970· Stenger
pleaded guilty 00 P' ss ssioo of
heroin for sale and P'
i Tlllllf
mariJ'uana and dilaudid, Fink

EXAMINERS NAMED
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Henry
W. Eckhart, cbainnan d lbe
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio has announced the appointment of four attorney
examiners to tbe Cf!Dmission. said.
Appointed were Mrs. Cheryl
Keith, Nathan Gordon, and
MARRIAGE IJCENSE
David Turano, all of Columbos,
Howard Leroy Barber, 21,
and Michael Work of Pleasant Reedsville, and Barbara
Hill.
Jeanne Robie, 18, Reedsville.

CbarterNo.BW.
Na~BalltRegiOilNO . l
REPORT OF OONDlrloN, OONSOLJDATING
OOMESI'IC SUBSIDIARIL'I, OF THE

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK
o1 Mlddlepertlll lbe State d Oblo, at the &lt;lOBe of bos'ness on JuDe 31, un
published Ill reiJHII8e to CaD made by COmpll'oller d the Curreacy, under Title
u, Ualled Slllel Code, .seca... m.
ASSEml ·
Cash and due from banks - - • • - - - - • • • • - • • • - - • $ 693,118.72
U.S. Treasui-y securities - • - - • - • - , - • • - - - • - - • 1,79I,468.75
Obligations d States and political subdivisions • • - - • - - - 1,159,0U.l3
Other securities • - - - - • • • - - • • • • • - I2,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
···
- • 500,000.00
Iinder agreements wresell • - - • - Loans • - - - - . - - - - • • • - • • • - - • - • 4,654,841.17
· Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises - - • • - - 56,888.16
Real estate owned other than bank premises - • • · - - • 10,959.70
Other assets - - - • - - - • • - - - - - - - • - - - • 5.352.89
TOTAL ASSETS - • - - • • • - - - • - • • • · - - $8,883,671.22
LIABll.lrJF.'I
Demand deposits of individuals, parlnerships,
and e&lt;rp(l'aiiiDS - - - • • - - - • • • - - - · - - - $I,597,660.50
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations • • • - • - • - - • • - • 5,692,200.89
Deposits of United States Government - - • · - - • • - - • 41,450.43
Depooits of States and political subdivisions • - - - - • - - • - 523,ln.57
Deposits of commercial banks - • • - - • - - - • • - - - 5,000.00
Certified and o(flcers' checks, etc. - - - - • - - - · • - - · 30,604.44
TOTAL DEPOSITS - • • - • • · - f7,890,093.88 ·
(a) Total demand deposits • - - • - • • · $2.037,370.36
(b) Total time and.savings deposits • • - - • $5,852,723.52
Other liabilities - - - - • - • • • • • • - - • - - - I65,929,30
TOTAL IJABILITIES - - - - • • - - - • - · · - • $8,056,023.18
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURll'JF.'I
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings ) - - - - • - - - - · • · - - - ~.137.10
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES - - · - - $64,137.10
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
763,510.94
Equity capital-ootal • - - · ·
• - • • - - • •
CorDmon Stock-total par value • • • • • · • •
100,000.00
No. shares authorized 2,000
No. shares outstanding 2,000
400,000.00
Surplus • - • - • • • - · · · - - • • • - - • • - ·
263,5I0.94
Undivided profi Is • • - • - • • • • •
763,510.94
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
• - $8,8131671.22
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS - • - • •
MEMORANDA
·'
Average of wtal aep®ts for the IS calendar
days ending with call date • • • - • - • - - • - • • • - -· $7,lMl9,I26.72
Average of ootalloans for the IS calendar
days ending with call date •• - - - - - - • - • • • • • • $4,635,408.7I

1, Harold E. Hubbard, Executive Vice President, the above-named bank do
hereby declare that this report of condition is true and correct wthe best of my
knowledge and belief.
HAROLD E. HUBBARD
We, lbe undersigned directors atl&gt;!st the correctness of Ibis report of conditioo and declare that it has been examined by us and w the best of our
1
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
· Rodoey DowDing
James F. Arnold - Directors
Paul s. Smart

1

the baai1l or education in the Frida y a t. 10 a.DL at "'""'
impl~talion of · the Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
....,.m...s Ill tbe dress code. with. ~ Rev•. Ra~J:llin ~oyer
OP'I'IoNIS BErAINED
· dfioating. Burial will be m the
A p•.. sa) oo alknr earty Sand Hill Cemetery at Long
~lion Ill lilt seni&lt;r year Bottcm.Friendsmaycallat~
far ...ue sh•iMIIs wbo qualifr funefr ~ ~ Thursdayevenmg
1l'liS disolssed by board
om •.
p.m.
s. George Hargraves,
!liljlbiabnlel!t, explained that
duo w iiiiCire subjects being
offered, some sludents are
acbkolng tbeir earned credits
OOLUMBUS (UPI ) -Home
early.
delivery of liquor in Ohio bas
Frank
Porler,
board been called "a total bomb" by
1M ' 1•111; suggested that the stale Liquor. Control Director
..,lion be loell"'*" and bandied Richard Guggenheim and the
on an indil'idual basis as officials says the delivery may
stodents in tbe voca ti'ona I be stopped at tbe end of the
eel li
.un on program mus t month.
"'''!lrte f_. J1!l8lS of high Tbe experiment was started
sciJool
in COlumbus, Cleveland, OnHargraves reported that cinnati, Toledo and Akron on
$l'lL3Z ..a.; receiftd as part of June 28 and was scheduled w
lllt.lrleigsL.ocaiSdloolllistricts run through August. Gug•
- a stal~ sw·1 ~nheim, however, said if
sew.ement 1n
agamst several publishers sales don't pick up the service
ao • • +&gt;I Ill text boot price may be· cut shcrt by a month.
"-'-.
Only 1• cases of liquor were
.......,.
•
Larry Morrison, assistant delivered in the first IO days of
superiniH•IH1I, n!ad the bids lbe experiment in the five cities.
received oo gaWine, oil and "I'm willing tn try anything that
grease. The board agreed oo might work, " said Gugac:apt the bid Sllllmitted by .genheim. "And if it doesn't
Teuco.
· work, I'll be the first oo admit
In other business Frank it. "
f'ortl&gt;r was named as the of.
6dal 1ep1
•lalive lo attend
lbe Ohio School Boards
TWO EARN HONORS
Association
meeting
in
Tbe spring semester dean's
Cleveland on Nov. I().ll . llst at Morehead State
Hargrares 'OS named as the University named I,~ fullUfirial iepreseDtalive of tbe time sludents, including two
boanl rw rereiWJg and ex- !from Meigs County. To be
pO.nd;ng fedeial funds.
listed a student must compile at
Grace Abbol1 was hired as a least a 3.0 average on a 4.0
c:oo* and Joe 1\kMurray and scale. They were, Ernest L.
Mrs. Jellie Ariz were hired as Smith, 3.SO, and Robert E.
su.bsli!Dte bus drtters pending Smith , Jr. , 3.53, both of
quatific::atioos.
Pomeroy.
1be bid Ill thE Ohio Valley
Baking Company was also
FINED $IO, COSTS
aa:epled._
Gary
Dale Arnold, 1J!, Mason,
Dom MulleD aslied if oil cwld
be sp:eacl 011 lbe parking lot was fined $10 and costs on
bebind tbe Megs Juni&lt;,o- Higll conviction 'of squealing tires in
Sdlool INor iisoo noted lbat Pomeroy Mayor Charles
arTallg4!IDellts bad been made Legar's Court Tuesday nigbl
oo take care d the matter.
lion'
U. ftPIIIIed tllat
LOCAL TEMPS
..,...,.., hr n ' !ism on
Temperature in downtown
... wp ..-.. wonkl
.... $I,GZ - illut • of Pomeroy Wednesday at II a.m.
~- .... Jal', ud was 7~ degrees, under sunny
.titer "
we Wtllld run skies .
,..... .'!1.1 I, aa illu • of

"*"•"

~

Defennents ·Explained
prq~&lt;seil
MARIETTA - Highway
1tae deferment of
resurfacing projects in nine higlnray improvement projects,
Sou.tbeastem Ohi.o counties inwbicbstatefundaareab;eadr
•le\Jiedwbeginnedmonth ·assigned,willpermltthemost
bave been affected by the State . immediate relief · of . the
Highway Department's projected defldt. The resureeon&lt;my measU'e and have facing prognpn is finlnced
been deferred, possibly unlil entirely with state funds, hence
early ne:xt year. acccrding w the logical curtailment of the
Jlivisicln 10 Director Max R. remaining portion of _that
Farley.
&lt;Un'ellt program. Gallla and
Farley said the economy
QJeUtreS anilounced by State
lligbWay Director J. Pbillip
.
Riebley last week is an attempt Four defendants ~ filled
to maintain "fiscal integrity" in ~three others fcrieited bonds
the face of a projected $50 m ~t Mayer c. 0 .
miJli' defi11 1·t t
nt rate of Fishers Court Tuesday night.
In
~ a curre
·
· ·
scbeduledcoolractlettings. The Fmed were Wtlliam 0 .
Carman 17 Chauncey fine
prejeeted deficit is due, In a ·
• •
· '
large part, w the obligation of ~· ~18 :-messe~, no
cunent highway revenue far operators ~· Pbillip F.
the relin!ment and servicing_of Bearbs, · 34, Raone, $15 and
tbe two bood issues, for high- costS, left of center; Heglnald
way COIISiruction, approved by Hill, 59, N~w Haven, $15 and
lbe voters in the 1960s.
costs, speeding, and Kenneth L.

Three
· .

Meigs deferments are (Meigs), ;
Route 124 from Minersville w

i

Ra&lt;ineof',Rfnmte~tlandRouWtej::-~

lion
ou - ;
'
from junction 346 to junction 180 '
in both Me. lgs I and v_inton
Counties, and (GaDia), Route·t
I60, from Porter 00 · VInton .County line. Two ( 2) major ::
bridge repairs, RaCOID Ci'tlelt "
and _Kyger Creek.
;

·i

F·m·'·ed' B·y M;ny
· or .:_'
a.

Allan 35 Rumford R 1 , 100 •
• • ·
• ' ·•
~
and costs, three days In jail, ~
DWI.
r
'
Forfeiting bonds were :;
Charles McCloud, 46, Mid- t"
dleport, $30 · bond posted,
disturbing the peace; Lyle :_
Smith, Marietta, $25, 1'111111in8-,
red light, and Lowell L:~
Neimeyer, 25, Gallipolis; $50, ~
intoxication and disturbing the-~
peace. ·
~
•'
.•
•

El.berfelds l'n Pomer:oy"

~

I'

r

-...
•

'·House Gives Senate $1.4 Billion Tax Package .
By LEE LEONARD
UPt Slal!lboai!e Reporln'
OOLUMBUS (UPI) - House Republican and Democratic
leaders bave parlayed a fragile CCliDpi'OIIlise on a $1.4 billion tax
package including lbe state's first pmoual in COOle tax into a M42 vlctcry, sending lbe controftrsial measure over w tbe
Senate.
The long-awaited House vote came Wednesday evening after
abnost tlree hours of floor debate, which followed burry'up
tactics by House leaders to speed lbe bill to the floor and
Jftsei'Ve lbe agreement which overrode lbe wishes of fiscal
cmservatives.
Approval olthe bill, which contains a I w4~cent graduated
state individual income tax, ended a House deadlock of more
than two mmlbs oo taxes, but changes appear in store for lbe
measure once it reaches. lbe Senate.
Senate leaders bave said they 1l!iD work fer a compromise in
lbat rbamber, but claim they need six weeks. Since the interim
budget for July expires in two weets, another one-month
spending plan fer August seems imminent.
.

The me.asure contains slightly more _than $I billion in revenues

'

Weather

Now You Know
Lake Baikal in Soviet Siberia
with a maximum depth of more
than 5,000 feet.

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason .Area

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

.·.·•

.·

BY CHET TANNEHILL
Continued operation of the
Imperial Electric Co. in Mid·
dleport is at a crossroad.
This was the main sense of a
letter from the company to its
employes Wednesday who
struck the new, modern plant
manufacturing AC and DC
motors on June 3. It has not
operated since.
Last week Local 1587, IBEW,
the local plant union, failed tn
establish at a fact-finding
preliminary hearing here that it
had been "locked oul" as
claimed.
John F. Kruse, vice president
in charge of production, Akron,
where Imperial's "mother
plant" is located, wrote to the
employes:

TOMATOES, AS THEY roll down tbe shute after being washed and dryed, are sorted
automatically. Cheryl Foster, above, packs the No. 2graded oomaooes.

Use· Elberfelds Free Parking Lots On

THE FIRSr STEP IN THE OPERATION of tbe toma oo grader Is oo place the oomaooes on a
conveyor belt as Pat Hill does here at left. The belt carries tbe tnmaooes to the washing and
drying operation. After the wmatoes are washed and dryed they are shoved ontn a wire screen
which auoomatically sorts them. See Page 2 for more pictures.

· Second Street and Mechanic Street

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Gasoline Tax Divvyup Made
The state distributed a total of

J-·

$8,628,978 in gasoline tax
revenue in July to Ohio's 88
counties, 229 cities, 7111 villages
and 1,320 townships, State
Audioor Joseph T. Ferguson
reported Wday. Meigs received
$5,075.

· - $1,511....- ....
1tae boanl also 8jllllu'ed tbe

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cont1nuously changing lhe directim of the cooled elr
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capac•ty benefits of modern air conditioned living.

:·cycle-Aire" produces balanced cool comfort- not

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..

township total of $1,584,000. The
townships shares are mailed oo
the county auditors for
distribution oo tbe oownships
witbin each county the audioor .
said.
Gasoline tax distribution to
Meigs County were, Middleport
village treasurer, $1,877;
Pomeroy, $I,934; Racine, $417;
Rutland, $436; and Syracuse
$411.

Middleport Council Wed·
nesday evening in a brief
session passed a resolution
authorizing a $60,000 bond issue
wbe placed before voters in lbe
fall election. The bond issue Is
for lbe construction of a new
fire station.
Atlendiilg were john Zerkle,
Jean Morgan, David Oblinger,
Lawrence Stewart, CUfford
Stwnbo and Dick Vaughan,
council members, and Tom
Darst and Pete Kloes,
representing_ the fire department.

Aire" and Comfort-Stat Cmtrol. are available .., the
compact, lightweight Super Princess mod!ls 11AY11A
and IQIAYI2A. Here's complete personal environment

Beojamia 0 . Oavis was
tbe first Negro to become
a general in tbe U.S. Army.
beiDg appoiDied (kl 25.
mo. tbe World Alman~
ootes. His son, Benjamin
Davis Jr.. a West Point
graduate, boeame tbe second Negro general and retired from the Air Foree as
a lieuteDanl genM~l

Issue .

Receiving the largest share of
the state collection tax, or
$4,404,978, were the cities and
villages. They are in lbe tax
revenue based on a formula of
$1 for every motor vehicle
registered within their borders,
Ferguson said.
The counties received $30,000
each, for a county. total of
$2,640,000, while the oownships
each received $1,200 for a

are elimina tett .

_. -BAKER FURNITURE·------.
.....1
1
_
MIDDLEPORT
r

Meigs county Sheriff's Hill, bad been stolen from the
Dept. is Investigating the wreck parking lot at a local tavern.
r1. a car reported swlen.
Upon investigation, the
The department received a wrecked car was lbat of Dale
call at 1:05 a.m. !Qday lbat Hill's. Tbeunidentifreddriver of
there had beeo an accident on lbecar, apparentlymovillgata
State Route 7. Shortly after this high rate of speed, went «if the
call, Michael Hill, Racine, Rt. 2, road inw 300 feet of guardrail.
calll!d wrep&lt;irt lbe car he was ,Tbe car was demolisbed · Tbere
driving, a 1970 Mavrick _ was no one at the scene when
belonging 00 his father, Dale W. 1be o(flcer arrived. 'lbe incident
is still under
HUGHES OUT
'WASHINGTON (UP!)- Sen. Fair ud mild Sahinlay t1JrMCb
LOCAL TEMPS
Harold E. Hughes, D-Iowa, said MOIIday. IIJ&amp;Ia ill tile lljlper 'Ill
today he '!"ould not be a can· and lbe 1ner • · Oven!Pt Temlll!r&amp;ture in downtown
dldate for the Democratic lows ill lite 511 _.. ud t.wer Pomeroy Thursday at 11 a.m.
was 74 degrees under sunny
~ldential nomination next 105 -til--"'-.
.....,........
._._ _ _ __skies.
year.

proposed we call in the servi£es
of Federal Mediation. This was

agreed oo and resulted in tbe
presence of lbe mediallr at the
meetings of June 1st and June
~-

~

When considering the union
was proposing more than 100
contract changes, it e med
unlikely indeed oo the company
that a genuine effort was being
made w effect a new cootract,
(Continued on Page 2)

Session Set

dleport, rumors develop that
are misleading and not factuaL"
One such apparent "nunor"
may have been the union claim
!bat it has offered wextend the
contract, subject to later
agreement on a new contract,
and been denied. In this con·
nection, Kruse wrote:
"Prior tn tbe morning of June
3, the company was willing 00
extend the contract for any
reasonable period of time, but
not on a day-to-day basis (as
demanded by the union). The
company was willing 00 extend
the conlract for three weeks,
three months, or longer, and is
stili willing to do so."
He further explained, "by a
reasonable period of time was
meant at least IO days."
About the sincerity of the
union leadership in its
wiUingness oo negotiate, ratber
than close down the plant no
matter what, Kruse's letter
says :
"In reviewing negotiations
prior to June 3, it appeared
strange to the company that so

r----------

!
1

•

• .

News ••• zn Bnefs
By UDited Presa !Ditnlall-.1

Heavy Air Strikes Resumed
SAIGON- RENEWED HEAVY air strikes in lbe l8lb d
South VIetnam were reported Wday by the U, S. OOO!DIIJICL On ti;Je
ground, American '}Is returned to ground fighting rw tbe first
time in two weeks, and Swth VleJruunese fcrces relined to Fire
Base Fuller,near the Demilitarized Zme, ovemmbyO•I'JI•"ist
lroops July 1. Military spokesman also said 29 Gls died last week
in Vietnam.

Somebody(?) Dragging His Feet
PARIS- THE VIETCONG charged at the VIetnam peace
talks today the Nixoo administration was~ i18 feet Oil tbe
Communist peace proposals. At the Western White House in Su
Clemente, Calif., meanwhile, Nlxoo and top policy aclrisen")
continued their consideration of lbe seven-point peace jllan, with
no details oo the adminlstra lion policy rea ss snent being made
public.

Missouri Trailers Ripped Up
DESLOGE, MO. - WGH WINDS RIPPED 11lllOUGII Ibis
lead mining wwn loday. leveling two trailer oourts, and lri)liag
three persons and injuring 23. But the Natiooal Weather Senioe
was unable w identify what type of sllrm boorled lllluigb tbe
small community, 60 miles south of St. Louis.

Clashes Move into Third Day
MMAN - FRESH FIGHTING BROKE oul today between
Cycle Rider . Arab'Acommandos
and soldiers of the Jordanian Army. R was tbe

Two Runs Made
Tile Middleport E·R squad
was called Wednesday at 1:09
p.m. oo 629 Pearl St. for a child
who bad fallen from a bicycle.
Before the squad arrived, the
child bad been taken by private
car oo the office of Dr. Pickens.
At :i:so p.m., !be squad was
called oo Route 554 for Dennie
Spires. Spires was taken w
Route 7 where he was lrans•
fered w a Rawlings Coats
~bulance, and taken wHolzer
Medical Center .

few meetings were scheduled
prior tn lbe expiration of the
contract. During the entire
month of May, only three
meetings were held. Only one
was held during the week im·
mediately preceding lbe expiration date.
"The reason for this was that
the union was unavailable to
meet that week other than on
Friday, May 28. It was at that
'
meeting that the company

U. S. Federal Mediator C. W. Miller announced
"We are now at the Wednesday a meeting of the Imperial Electric Co.
crossroads. Either the company management and the negotiation committee of
will be able to negotiate a Local 1587, IBEW, of Middleport, bas been
contract which is fair and scheduled next Tuesday, July 20; at 10:30 a.m. in
equitable lo the employees and Middleport.
the company, , or a long strike
A strike hilS been in progress since June 3 at the
will result. The consequences of plant employing approximately 80 men and womeo.
a strike are substantial losses of
cuslomers, reducing the orders The union last week failed to establish in a
to a point where fewer em· preliminary hearing (fact finding ) that its members
ployees would be required had been locked out of the plant on JUDe 3. Union
whenever the strike is setUed." President Tom Deeter said then the finding would be
Kruse wrote to the employes appealed.
tbe reason for his letter was ro
Members of the union negotiating committee
set facts straight. "In any are Deeter, William Harris,. Clara Frances, Keith
situation similar to what has
Kennedy and Roger Leifheit.
developed between the com·
Sel Smith is plant manager.
pany and the union in Mid·

THE TOMATO GRADER on the Bill Hill farm in Racine, at left, above,ls in full operation
this week with lbe tomato crop moving inoo high gear. Mrs. Bill (Rutb Ann) Hill packs tbe
mnnberone graded tomatoes from a rotating table at lbe end of the tomato grader. The grader
saves many hours of back breaking work. Bill Hill has been one of the first producers tn add a
grader oo his farm operation. At one time farmers paid $9a pound for oomato seed. Today the
cost is $350 a pound for hybrid seed. The profit from tomatoes loday is not much greater than it
was during the depression years, producers say.

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THURSDAY, JULY 15, 1971

~-- Imperial

A Sure Bomb

aUendalft of Sandra Lee CUrtis
at Meigs Bigb Sdlool
~lfendiq: the meeting were
Hargraves, Morrison, Lee
iML'Camas, dirt. and board
members. MuUeo. Porter,
Vqil King. l6nm Slawter and
Joe Sayre.

Clouay 10!1igbt wiih , cbaoce
of thundershowers east and
soutb. Lows in the middle 50s w
lbe lower 60s. Partly sunny
Friday , little change in tempera lure, cbancoe d sllowers
central and southeast in the
forenoon. Highs in the lower ID; ,

Is lbe deepest lake in the world

VOL XXIV NO. 64

ANOTHER BIG SHIPMEN'('_ ~F

This One Was

centao=

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·Just Received • • •

added $167 million in new slate appropriations, mainly for we).
the local level for education, properiy tax relief and local
fare and Medicaid.
government.
,
On the other hand, the chamber knocked out $30 million worth
Pari of lbe money' would go for a 10 pet
lbeboard
of revenues which would have been derived from closing sales
reduction in property taxes, amounting to $5!1 millim the first
tax exemptions oo business, pleasing Republicans and annoying
year and $125 million the secood year.
organized labor.
Homestead Exempli16 GOP Join Dems
Also in the bill are property tax exemptioos d $1,000 a year fer
Sixteen Republicans joined 38 Democrats in clearing the tax
homeowners 65 and over . Eligible homeoWI)ers ~ less
than $6,000 a year would r ·
$%,500 pzemplim . Tbese
measure, a product of weeks of negotiations between legislative
leaders from both parties and the governor's office.
exemptions woUldced
2 per cent increase in tbe
Only six Democrats opposed the bill, joining 36 of the 54
inheritance tax on estates • ued at over $40,000.
Republicans in the House.
The current five-mille cor ratim franchise tax on net wcrth
The persorial income tax would be levied on all income earned
of businesses would be rna · ed. This would be augmented by
in Ohio by residents and non-residents, based on adjusted gross
a new tax on the net inc e of corpcratioos at ~ per cent on
income as reported in federal tax returns. ·
income up 00$25,000 a yea and 8 per cent ... amounts over lbal
Taxpayers would he allowed a $500 exemption for each de- . The corporation 'would pay whichever tax produces more
pendent, up to a maximum of $3,000.
revenue.
The tax would be I per cent on income of $5,000or less, ranging
Other features of the bill include :
tn 4per cent on annual income in excess of $50,000.
,
- A lOper cent reduction in lbe tangible persooal pooperty tax
(Continued on page Il l
II would be collected at the stall! level and distributed back to

fr«m the proposed personal income tax, plus $354 million in new
revenues from added taxes on corporations oo finance a $7.8
billion general appropriatioo bill already passed by the House
and sent 00 the Senate.House Republican leaders, who could not muster enough votes
for any tax bill by themselves, indicated reHef the package is off
their backs and over on lbe Senate side.
Dems Plan Amendments
Democrats said they would seek oo attach even more revenues
and spending proposals in lbe Senate.
Gov. John J. Gilligan, who proposed $2.1 billion in new taxes to
finance a $9.1 billioo bndget, said he was "gratified" by House
clearance of the proposal, which in many respects represented a
miniature version of his own plan.
"I will renew efforts in the Senate to reswre ill-advised cuts in
spending for elementary and secondary education and for the
medically indigent," Gilligan told newsmen after the House
-~ v:ote.
· The Democrats received partial satisfaction when the House

third slraight day of clashes. In Cairo, lbe stmHIIfi£iai
newspaper AI Ahram said Egypt is ready to interwne in Jonilll
.tn prevent a "bloodbath." Meanwllile, in Israel, that Datiaa
celebrated Air Force Day, with flyovers, speedJes, and :m ...,..,
The Middleport police
· department investigated a car· to the United States tn provide more jets.
motorcycle accident Wed· Strike Picture Cloudier
nesday at 4:30 p.m. at the en·
WASHINGTON - A HALF-MII.UON tele(lloote -llera
!ranee of lbe A&amp;P parking lot.
4jq: 1. . . .
James Henry Stevenson, 71, remained off their jobs today, and a union •¥
E. Main St., Pomeroy, was railroad workers vowed to strike afleast twO ...ur..JI FlldQ.
!raveling south when he turned Railroad management spokesman said lilt slrih, by the Tlwj!el
inoo the parking lot in front of Transportation Unioo, would mesn layoffs lild PlY Ci!ls rar
Bill Little,17, Cheshire, riding a workers m non-&lt;~truck roads.
motorcycle north.
Uttle was taken w Veterans Italy Rocked,by Quake
Memorial Hospital by the
PARMA. ITALY -AN EARTHQUAD rmii!d llnu&amp;h .....
Pomeroy E·R , squad, treated ern Italy early today, killing at leaat two paiiOIWI, aDd w • •
and released. Stevenson was thoosands fleeing in panic. The temblor, wbidJ .w 1 I ·
cited for faillll'e oo yield right of buildings and sent television antema.s swaying, lllled far 31
way •
seconds.
·
·

Is Injured

HARRY M. CROOS of Middleport. fifty years a Muon,
received his SO.year lapel pin from Robert King, Worshipful
Master of the Middleport Lodge No. 363, F&amp;A.M. Helping
wilb the presentaUon at the Cross home were Charles T.
Cassell, senior deacon; John Ketchka, ]iast master and lodge
secretary; and Carl Taylor, past master and lodge chaplain.
Mr. Cross has been a Master Mason since July 12, 192I, and
with his allaining this honor gives Middleport Lodge Eight
Jiving SO.year members.
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