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No Asset; this Generation, an All.:.Time.First
------~

URBANA,Ollio (UPI )-Philip ed by court martial of multiple
R. B,radley, a former law pro- slayings in the Vietn village,
lessor and military lawyer, said was "simply a murderer."
Sunday at commencement cere- "The Calley case by itself
monies at Urbana College that does not seriously shock or surapJll!rent public approval of Lt. prise me ... but for the popuWilliam Calley's actions at My lace to applaud, condone or tol·
Lai "is saddening beyond de- erate mass murder is saddenscription."
ing beyond description,'' BradBradley, who formerly taught . ley said.
here and now practices law in Those who accept the mur·
Columbus, said Calley, convict- ders, Bradley said, "have

OU Student Found·Dead
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) - Gallipolis , enrolled at OU,
Cecilia Marie Armstrong, a 23- refused to answer questions
year-old graduate art student at ' about the death of his wife,
Ohio University, was found Shields said, and also refused
dead Sunday in her Guysville permission to search his car
apartment about 10 miles from and aparlment.
here . Authorities said she ap"His refusal has resulted in
parently had been slain.
what we believe to be an un·
Athens County Sheriff Harold · necessary delay,'' Shields said.
Shields said the woman's nude
"The investigation is conbody was discovered in her qnuing anl! the results of the
bedroom by her roommate. An official aulopgy still pending."
autophsy was to be performed
The couple's one-year-old
loday to confirm the cause of daughter, Chris,lived with Mrs.
death. Shields said she had been Armstrong. She was found
beaten about tbe head.
unharmed in a room adjoining
Mrs. Armstrong's estranged tlle bedroom where the woman
husband, David, 22, of was found dead.

News... in Briefs

adopted a stance which con- WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
dones the abandonment of mar- lml3ll white wood cross was
ali ty and law, and the accep- banked by roses and mwns as
tance of absolutism or repres- the sun dropped behind the
sion ."
·
rolling hills of Arlington Nation"This constitutes a societal al Cemetery. The family was
crime far graver than that of there, carrying candles, tbeir
an individual,'' he said. "To faces serene.
deny a rule of law even in war On the third anniversary of
is to deny the virtue of law.
the death of Robert F.
" If violence is your bag then Kennedy, those who loved him
you must know that to resort to and admired him came to
it will ultimately result in your celebrate a guitar Mass.
loss of freedom and liberty,'' he It was. like a festival of
said.
children.
The Kennedy youngsters
stood along the edge of the
grave, so many of them that
their parents seemed almost
(Continued from Jll)ge I)
Vinton Lodge at the Waugh- hidden.
Rory Kennedy, with whom
Halley-Wood Funeral Home.
Funeral services will be at 2 Ethel Kennedy was pregnant at
p. m. Wednesday at the Grace the time of the death three
United Methodist ChurCh with years ago, lay on the grass and
Rev. Paul Hawks officiating. kicked her feet. Patrick KenneBurial will be in Sutton dy, who was standing by his
Methodist Church Cemetery mother Joan, broke his candle
and was swinging it by the
near Racine.
The body will be taken to the wick. But most of them stood
church one hour prior to the erect and proper, occasionally
se.Vices Wednesday· to lie In tossing their . heads to get the
state. Friends may call at the hair out of their eyes.
Several of them stepped
waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
forward
to take the part of the
Home between U and 7-9 on
lector in the Mass. Caroline
Tuesday.
In lieu of flowers, the famlly Kennedy, the daughter of the
requests donations to the slain President, prayed. Chris·
renovation program of Grace top her Kennedy, one of
Robert's younger sons, had to
United Methodist Church.
stand on tiptoes to reach the
microphone and say: "This is

Dr. Roush

the word -of the Lord."
Ethel Kennedy wore a simple,
sleevless while dress. Pat
Lawford and Jean Smith and
Eunice Shriver and their
husbands were there. Sen .
Edward M. Kennedy stood
silently under a tree in the
back of the group, his head
bowed.
Folk singers from Robert
Kennedy's parish at McLean,
Va ., sang the Mass and some
songs not usually identified with
a Catholic service- "The Battle
Hymn of the Republic, "
uAmazing Grace," and "This
Little Light of Mine."
The priest lighted a candle
and the children swarmed
around to light theirs. All 3,000
people had been given candles
and soon the hillsides glowed.
It was the end of a hot
muggy day in Washington, and
the people had come in shirt
sleeves, in suits, in nWls'
habits.
There were the mighty and
the once mighty- former Gov.
W. Averell Harriman, who
offered the prayer of .St.
Francis of Assisi during the
ceremony; Sen. John V. Tunney, .D-Calif., a best friend of
Edward Kennedy; former De·
fense Secretary Robert S.
McNamara, now president of
the World Bank; former White
House aide Arthur Schlesinger
Jr., the historian; Peter G.
Edelman, an aide to Robert
Kennedy, and his wife, Marian,
a black attorney.
After about 45 minutes, the
family began to file out. Ethel
Kennedy knelt and put a rose
on the grave.
Then Robert Kennedy's
sisters knelt, crossed themselves, and rose. And finally,
Joseph P. Kennedy III, knelt by
himself at the grave of his
father.
A few moments later the
wind picked up and it began to

(Continued from page 1)
heart attack while taking his regular 2G-Iap morning swim in his
aJll)rtment pool, was listed in critical condition loday. The veteran
Pleasant Valley Hospital
.character actor had no pulse and was not breathing, witnesses
ADMISSIONS - Hattie
said, when the fire department rescue crew arrived Sunday
Radcliff, Leon; Mrs. Danny
Stanley, Southside; Mrs.
morning. Rescuers administered oxygen and external heart
Sammy Clatworthy, New
massage and Heflin began breathing.
Joseph Everett Hysell, 69, Haven; Pauline Reynolds,
A spokesman at Cedars of Lebanon Hospital said early today
Pomeroy,
Rt. 2, died this Point Pleasant; Charles
that Heflin remained in critical condition In the intensive care
morning at Holzer Medical . Frazier, Carla Harrison,
ward.
Center .
,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Effie Turner,
Mr. Hysell is survived by his Mrs. Monroe Deal, Jr., Ashton;
wife, Mary Morris Hysell; two Joseph Kinnaird, Gallipolis
sons, Dale Albert, Middleport, Ferry; Mrs. Delbert Nichols,
MASON - Mrs. Sarah Jane Homer, Las Vegas, Nev. ; and Vernon, of Pomeroy; a Leon; Mrs. Carl Mattox, Point
Brinker, 84, Mason, died Ferrell, East St. Louis, Ill.; daughter, Roberta Irene Jef- Pleasant; Mrs. William Roush, rain.
Saturday evening at Pleasant !;toy, Mason, and Jesse, of fers, Minersville; two grand- .New Haven; Mrs . Robert
Valley Hospital.
Racine; 21 grandchildren, and a sorl!l, William Everett! Hysell Bateman, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
The daughter of the late John number of great-grandchildren. and Bobby Jeffers Hysell; a Carla Staats, Clifton; Mrs.
and Sarah Jane Quillen Mrs. Brinker was born at An- grandcaughter , Debbie Kay Donald Fry, West Colwnbia;·
Roberts, Mrs. Brinker was a tiquity, Ohio, on May 17, 1887. Jeffers, and two sisters, Mrs. Houston Brannon, Southside;
member of the First Church of
Anna Franks and Gertrude Mrs. James Johnson, Mason;
God at New Haven 40 years.
Funeral services will be held Stivers.
Mrs. Earl Wamsley, Point
She is survived by her at 11 a. m. Wednesday at the . Mr. Hysell was preceded in Pleasant; Michael Carlisle,
husband, Orion Edwin Brink· Foglesong Funeral Home with death by his parents, Filarider Henderson; Penny Burris,
er; three daughters, Mrs. the Rev . Tommy Reynolds and Lilly Powell Hysell, and two Apple Grove; Mrs. Ernest
VIrginia Roush, Kirkland, nt.; o!llel~\lhg .'Burlalwlll be In the children, Nancy Belle and Carter, Gallipolis; Mrs. George
Mrs. Frances Gibbs Roman, Letart Falls, Ohio, cemetery. Sammy.
Bailes, Grimms Landing; Mrs.
Hartford, and Mrs. Anna Faye Friends may call at the funeral Funeral services will be held Thomas Jennings, Dennis Park,
Roush , Mason; five sons, home from 2to 4and from 7 to 9 Thursday at 1 p. Ill .. at Ewing Point Pleasant; Mrs. Raymond
_Elmer, of Kirkland. Ill.; p. m. Tuesay.
Funeral Home with the Rev. Long, Wilkesville, Ohio.
Cecil Wise officiating. Burial
DISCHARGES - Willi.am
will be in Rock Springs Cern- Bryan, Leon Thompson,
tery. Friends may call after Timothy Ross, Cathy Stevens,
Jacob Baer, 85, Died on Sunday
noon Tuesday.
Karen Martin, Mrs. Marsha
Harrison, Harry Flowers, Mrs.
Surviving are his wife ,
Jacob Baer, 85, died Sunday
Homer Bonecutter, Mrs. Dennis
afternoon at his residence in Magdalena Rhodes Baer ; two Carrie Turnbull,
Stranaham
and daughter; Mrs.
Minersville. Mr. Baer, a daughters, Mrs. Kerns (Mary
Franklin Laudermilt, Mrs. Joe
charter member of the Forest Kay) Roush, and Helen Frances Died on Sunday
Bray, ·Tony a Randolph.
Run Mthodist Church, was the Baer, both of Minersville; a
BIRTHS- June 5, a daughter
son of the late George and brother, Albert, Minersville; HARTFORD, W.VA.- Mrs.
Catherine Grueser Baer.
two sisters, Mrs. U. S. Nease, Carrie Frances Turnbull, 93, to Mr. and Mrs. Torres
Besides his parents, he was Minersville, and Mrs. Purley Hartford, died Sunday at Williamson, Southside; June 5,
preceded in death by three Karr. Chester; three grand· Veterans Memorial Hospital. a son to Mr. and Mrs. Ammy
brothers, Charles, Joseph, and children, and seven great- Surviving are seven sons, Clatworthy, New Haven.
Dana, and a sister, Mrs. Anna grandchildren.
William, Paul and Richard, all
Funeral services will be at 1 of Mason; George, of Hartford;
Veterans MemorlalHospltal
Bailey.
p.m. Wednesday at the Ewing John of Clifton· Howard of SATURDAY ADMISSIONSFuneral Home with the Rev. Windsor, Ohio, ~nd Harry, of None .
Forrest Donley officiating. ·Albuquerque, N. M.; 13 grand- SATURDAY DISCHARGES
Burial will be in Gilmore children, and 18 .great- - Ray Sears, Vernon Nease,
Cemetery. Friends may call at grandchildren. Preceding her in Clifford Jenkinson, Marvin C.
the funeral home anytime.
death were her parents, James Walker.
and Martha Jane Proffitt ntffle,
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Audry Smith and Jessie
and
her
husband,
Richard
Joseph
Hood, Minersville; Jane
~derer spent several days
MEETING CALLED
James Burnbull, who died in Miller, Pomeroy; Barbara Ann
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Howard The Meigs County Tuber· 1946.
Lyons, Mason; Diana Nease,
Young of Paden City, W. Va. culosis and Health Assn. will
Funeral services will be held Syracuse; Anna Williams,
While there they toured several meet~~ 7:30p.m. Thursday at
at 2 p. m. Wednesday at the Pomeroy; Bertha Clark, Letart,
interesting points of West the Pomeroy United Methodist
Foglesong Funeral Home with W. Va.; Margaret Seidenabel,
Virginia.
Church .. All officers and board the Rev. David Fields, Jr., Pomeroy; Cheryl Dillon,
Clara Friend, MI. Alto, W. members are urged to attend.
officiating. Burial will be in Reedsville,
Va., spent severai' days with
Graham
Cemetery. Friends SUNDAY DIIICHARGES Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hensley.
THREE FINED
Sunday they all visited Mr. and Three defendants were fined may call at the funeral home James Pape, Leonard Lun·
Mrs . Lloyd McPeek of in Pomeroy Mayor Charles from 2 to 4 p. m. and from 7 to 9 sford, Linda Schultz, Tamara
p.m . Tuesday.
Mossman, Earl Riggs.
Belleville, W. Va.
Legar's Court Saturday night.
Mr. and Mrs. David Smith They were Marvin D. Wise, 28,
LAD BmEN
~¥-¥¥-¥-¥¥¥.\i.¥¥¥-¥¥-l:
were at Columbus recently to Pomeroy, $10, for squealing
SYRACUSE - Roger A.
A THOUGHT
attend the nursing band tires and $15 and costs for Sellers, six-year-old son 9f Mr.
. ceremony for their daughter, reckless operation; Otis Ray and Mrs. Paul Sellers,
.FOR TODAY
Pat.
~
VanMatre, West Columbia, $10 Syracuse, was bitten Saturday
Neva German is a patient at and costs, reckless operation, on the left leg by a dog owned by
More men fall through
Holzer Hospital in Gallipolis. and Albert Eugene Hess, Mrs. John Willbarger. The lad · ' lack of purpose than it
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Joe Albany, $5 and costs, improper was taken to Veterans
through lack of talent. it
Bissell were Mr. and Mrs. Ted backing.
Memorial Hospital, treated and
.
i~.
Hayman and family, Janet
released. The dog was im- ~
-Billy Sunday
Bissell and Tom Groenveld of
pounded by County Dog Warden
Columbus, Joe Bissell and Tim
THEFT REPORTED
Lowell Greer, according to
~
of Mason, w. va ., Mr. and !Yh'S.. The Meigs County Sheriff's
Otis Casto of Reedsville, Violet Dept., is investigating the theft Milton Varian, Syracuse · lfs Quick! Easy
,.
:
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Smith and Orva Jean Holter. of 15 stereo tapes and chrome Marshall.
LOCALTEMPS
:
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Dean speaker taken from a vehicle
of Columbus were visiting Mr. driven by Tom Kerns, Rt. 1,
Temperature in downtown ~
anq Mrs. Wayne Prince.
· Shade, Sunday between 2 and Pomeroy Monday at n. a. m.
Fridays Only
~
Mr and Mrs c B H
of 3:30 p. m. The veh1cle was was 74 d.~grees, under partly
The Drive-In Windo :
Col~ bus wer~ visiUn::~~d parked at Royal Oak Park.
cloudy sk1es.
~
- 0
wic..,
15
.
ic
pen
Mrs. Guy Hayman.
· Pllllllllllllllllil----•
~
9 A.M, to7 P,M, ...
Pat Smitll of Columbus spent
I Continuously&gt;
..,
r&gt;1AION
several days with Mr. and Mrs.
David Smith.
Othtr Bonlilng Hours 9 to
Tonight&amp; Tueidly
Mr, and Mrs. Howard Young
«
~nd 5 to 7 II USUII on
June 7-1
MON.- TUES,
of Paden City spent several .
: Fridlys:
.., .
days with Mr. and Mrs. Gartll
MEPHISTO WALTZ
"HONEY MOON
(Teehnleolor)
Smith.
Alan' Aida
WIUMEETATlPM
11
Jacqueline
Bl'sset
.KILLER"

Joseph Hysell

Died Monday

Sarah Brinker Died Saturday

COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
Schools Superintendent. Martin
W. Essex said today the current
teenage generation is the first
in history to be an economic
liability ·to its parents rather
than an economic asset.
Essex, in remarks prepared
for delivery before the Colum·
bus Rotary Club, said this was
true of children from both rich

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and poor families.
He said he believes the break·
do~n of the work ethic was the
basic ca,use and suggested that
youth be given the Chance to get
work experience in such jobs as
,harvesting crops, caring lor the
sick, aged and mentally ill and
combating pollution.
"Ours is the first teenage
in the
of the

t.iunan race to be an economic
liability to its parents ratber
than an economic asset," Essex
said. ·
"To be an integral Jll)rt of
American society, young people
need genuinely usefullllld prac·
tical work experience which
characterized the teenage y.ears..
of all prior generations."

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
'ARE HEADQUARTERS FOR
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DR!VE·IN

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lightweight knit · shoulder gripper

sonbak union suits.

Hanes Underwear is excellent

quality . Complele!y washable holds its shape washing after
wash ing. Stop in Elberfelds busy

mens and boys department on the

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
JUNE

t

TUPPEilS PLAINS ...- Tbe

Tuppers Plain~ Community
Club wUl meet W~nesday at I
p.Jn.lnslelid of at 108. m. at the
hllme of Onelta Cole,
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ALSO ·
"CHANGES"

"R''

Coloreartoons:
Wunder·Bar
Groat D•y
SHOW STARTS7 P,M.

·: FARMERS BANK
:and SAVINGS CO. t·
POMEROY, OHIO

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Member FDIC
Membtr Federal
. Reserve Sysltm
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COLUMBUS (UP!( - The ed to raise the excise tax on Jefferson, chairman of the Ways
House Ways and Means Com- financial institutions and Intan- and Means Committee, said he
mitte was to meet today to gibles dealers by one mill,' in· was dissatisfied with the flat
study the initial draft of Repub- creasing revenues by $6 million. rate of the personal income tax.
lican legislation proposing to -Public utilities would be The proposed income tax
raise $1.2 billion in net new tax- granted property tax relief, but would be levied at 1.75 per cent
es over the biennium, chiefly also would pay I per cent more on the adjusted gross income of
through a flat 1.75 per cent per· than originally planned in excise all Ohio residents, with exemptaxes.
sonal income tax.
tions of $1,200 allowed for perGOP Alternatives
The bill, made public for .the
sons with no dependents and
The
plan
was
the
latest
in
a
first time Monday, was an ap$2,400 for persons with depenparent attempt by the GOP lea- series of proposed Republican dents.
dership to refine earlier propo- alternatives to the tax package The revenues, estimated at
sals and eliminate objections to of Gov. John J. Gilligan, which slightly more than $1 billion for
language on a state or county would raise $1.6 billion in net a two-year period, would be renew taxes, primarily through a turned to counties for school aid,
income tax.
The new plan was basically graduatedstatepersonalincome library aid, local government
the same as the one that exist- tax of I to 8 per cent.
aid, property tax relief and
ed May 27 before the Republi· Republicans in the House have homestead exemptions.
can leadership gave up on it been unable to agree on all pro- The bulk of the revenues, $555
temporarily to concentrate on visions of any of the GOP al· million over two years, would
Jll!ssing a $7.8 billion appropria· ternatives, and there was no in· go for school aid. The rest would
dication they would do so on the be divided as follows: $300 mil·
lions bill.
However, these changes were latest plan.
lion for property tax relief, $94
Even Rep. E.W. Lampson, R·
made in the new draft:
Continued on Page 2
- The new language would allow a taxpayer to file his per·
. s~nal income tax return with
J
hiS county or w1th the state,
making the tax a "state" or
"county" income tax, whichever
COLUMBUS(UP!)-Ohioans, from one-half gallon to five galanyone pref~rs to call 1t.
drinking more water but ap· lons, have been skyrocketing
- An additlonal! per cent has parenUy enjoying it less, are during the past few months.
been added to the ce1hng of the turning in larger numbers to Nearly all grocery spokesmen
fl&lt;lt income tax proposed for bottled spring water, a survey surveyed agreed one of the
corpora lions w1th an annual net by United Press International prime factors in the bottled w~ ­
income of more than $25,000, in- reveals.
ter sales increase is the emphacreasing revenues by about $200
Ohio supermarket officials re· sis placed during the past two
million.
port sales of bottled spring water years on ecology and water pol-A provision has been includ- in containers usually ranging lution.

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ANYTHING AND EVERYTHING GOES AT A FLEA MARKET! That's what has been
added to the annual Big Bend Regatta Weekend activities. Above, Mrs. Rita Lewia, Chairman
of the market, on behalf of Ohio Eta Pill Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, exhibits antique
glassware typical of the wares at a flea market. Persons Interested In selling antiques at the
market from one to three days during regatta weekend should notify Mrs. Lewia, or simply
come with tbelr merchandise to the Pomeroy junior high sChool. Some of the booths of the
market will be Inside; others will be at the rear of the junior high auditorium.

Ca1~ival Fun Will Launch Regatta Day Early

EMPERIQR GROUP
Designed especially to capture Spanish influence featuring custom
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components, multl~step hand padded finish, Micarta plastic tops.

The 1971 Big Bend Regatta,
coming on for Its seventh time
Friday, Saturday and Sunday,
June 18-19-20, actually will
begin playing to the thousands
of visitors expected in the
county a day early.
Members of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce Monday, reviewing the completed
plans for the regatta, learned
that the Nolan Amusement
Company rides will be. in place
and hwnming Thursday afternoon and evening. a day
early. Tbe Carnival will be
located behind the old Pomeroy
JWlior High School.
Friday's events-the Big
Weekend itself-&lt;~tart at 9 a.m.
with a flea market, also located
behind the junior high building
with some exhibits inside the
gym. Its hours will be 9 a.m. to 9
p.m. At six o'clock the Jll!rade

.. .
will move from Middleport to
Pomeroy, non-stop.
The queen float belonging to
the Ohio .Festival Assn. and
sponsored by the Pomeroy
Chamber, will carry the seven
candidates for Regatta Queen.
Persons attending the
Regatta may vote on the queen
of their choice at the Pomeroy
Junior High where a booth will
be provided. Votes may be cast
until Saturday at 4 p.m. The
winner will be announced at
10:15 p.m. at the Frog Ball.
The queen will receive a $75
bond and first and second
runnersup will each receive $50
bonds. All girls will receive
trophies.
The Pomeroy National Bank,
Citizens National Bank, The
Farmers Rank &amp; Savings Co.,
and the Racine Home National
will provide the bonds.

At 8:30 p.m. The Grand
Squares from Gallipolis will
present an hour of entertainment which includes
western and fQik dancing in the
gym at the Pomeroy Junior
High. Admission is 50 cents per
person. At 9:30 an open-air teen
dance will be held.
On Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. the National O~n Class A,
All Trophy Baton Twirling
Contest, sanctioned by the
National Baton Twirling
Association will be held at
Meigs Junior High in Middleport. Judy Riggs is the
director . The Meigs Band
Boosters will serve refresh·
ments during the baton event.
The flea mart will be open
from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. with a
garden tractor pull from 10 to 11
a.m.
An art show will be on exhibit

.
_, .. .
\
.
from 12 nbon to 8 p.m. from a the Frog event.
school bus on the upper parking Fred W. Crow, past Grand
lot. Aflower show and ceramics Croaker, reported that all
display will be held .from 12 members of the Ohio Supreme
noon to 5 p.m. in the Pomeroy Court are members of the Frog
Senior High' building. At 2 p.m. Assn. and will attend the jwnps.
practice runs for the boat races On Sunday, church services
will be held.
at local churches will be held
The preliminary events for from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. Carnival
the Frog jumping contest rides begin at 11:30 and consponsored by the Ohio .tinue to 5:30, and the art show
Association for the Promotion runs from noon to 8 p.m. The
of Bull Frogs will be held at the flower 'show and ceramics
Meigs Football stadium in display is open from noon to 4
Pomeroy from 5 to 8 p.m. Finals p.m. and the flea mart from
in the junior and senior division noon to 6 p.m.
will be held from 8 to'9:30 p.m., Boa traces under the auspices
with approximately 10 con- of the American Power Boat
testants in each division.
Assn., Lorain Outboard Racing
During the frog event there Club, will be held from 1 to 2:30
will be a frog on a bicycle race, . p·m·
' !ted
ladies backwards race, frog
Local ~ontestants are mv
polo and a fat ladies race.
to parllc1pate. Qualifying boats
. The initiation of 24 honorary must be 13-16 feet in length with
Grand Croakers will conclude 60 to 180 horsepower. There wUI

r---------------------------, ~
•
·! News .•• in Briefs ! aggmg
By United Press International
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Summertime Detection
WASHfNGTON -TINY LIGHTNING bugs are being trained
to turn on to heroin, and the government is betting $29,012 this will
tielp police nab users and pushers. "The first tests have proved
successfUl," Richard W. Velde, associate administrator of the
Law Enforcement Assistance Agency, told Congress.
Veliie'b agency has a $29,012 contract with Huntington
Laboratories, aimed at developing herOin-aensitive fireflies
which will light up when they encounter a police suspect with
heroin on his person. The test involves a miniature version of the
common firefly. Rep. John J: Rooney, 0-N.Y., said skeptically his
recollection was that lightning bugs operated only In summer.
Velde ci:mceded thei~ "biouminescent agent&gt;~ wasn't good in cold
weather.

30 maybe 50 to a Grave

~IMPUR, INDIA - THEm ROAD began ifi East

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••

''

A new municipally-owned water system in Pomeroy, based :
on a new well completed In Syracuse, may depend on the quality '·
of tbe water in the ,well and upon winning a federal grant of
$170,000.
.
.
Pomeroy Mayor Charles Legar told council in a regular
meeting Monday ni~ht the State Departnoent of Health will
conduct tests ·soon. If these prove satisfactory, the mayor in·
dicated, application will be made for the grant.
It has been estimated the cost of the new system would be
$200,000, the grant covering all but $30,000.
Tests by the health depart- disclosed.
men! will certify as to the ln other business, the
mineral and bacteria content of resignation of policeman David
the water. Minerals often Jeffers was accepted. Jeffers
present in Meigs County wells has taken employment at the
include calcium, manganese new Gavin electric plant as a
and iron, all of which can he security guard. Jeffers will \«! ·
removed or neutralized- if retained as a bonded policen..,a ·
desired-&lt;!ither at the well-site in Pomeroy, however, as an
or in the home. Another factor extra officer.
involved in water quality is its Fire Chief Henry Werry
acidity, which has to do with its asked council to replace a • •
corrosiveness.
hydrant on West Main St. near
The new well is ap• Dannie's Trailer Sales and put a
proximately 100 to !50 feet new hydrant ·an Lincoln Hill
upriver from the present near the A. R. Knight property.
Syracuse well .
·council agreed to install the
The new water system would new hydrant within two weeks.
eliminate the present water The replacement on West Main
treatment plant In Pomeroy. will be done later.
Pollee Chief Jed Webster
Pomeroy's present system
supplies 400 gallons a rillnute asked that a "no left turn" sign
and the Syracuse system pumps be placed at the intersection of
only 100 gallons ·a minute, the Butternut and West Main St.,
mayor said.
for drivers pulling from Butternut onto Mali!. The matter
Middleport has three wells of was turned over to the safety
its own that it is not using, it was
Continued on Page 2

]i I.IYIYed Drinking Water Gaining
-ee

lsi floor. See the big selection of

styles in Hanes Underwear arid buy
what you need.

·

PHONE 992-2156

Committee Takes
GOP's TaX Idea

sleeveless style union suits - Sam·

DRJVE-IN ...
BANKING :

i

•

Briefs · Tee shirts · mut~ 1..1es Tee
shirts - athletic shorts in gripper
front and boxer waist styles .
Sleeveless undershirts - solid color
Tee shirts with a pocket . short
sleeve, ankle length union suits In

t

«

TUESDAY, JUNE 8, 1971

·---- ~=~--~-=------~-

from 281o 50 and some styles even to
si ze 54.

t

.
MEIGS

- -

POMEROY-MIDOLEPORT. OHIO

Elberfeids carry the complete Iine o'
nationally known Hanes Underwear
Boys sizes from 21o 20 - mens si z~s

Social Notes

i

Nn "(XIV NO. 39

80"~

Long Bottom

t

e Teste

""'"'yracuse to

Federal Grant of
$1.70,000 Wanted
If Water is . Good

UNDERWEAR
FOR MEN AND

ell

•

--

New - New -New at Ingels

Introducing

New

••
ID

and solids,

.

$27995

Two-drawer nigbt table 39.95

..

INGELS
FURNITURE
992-2635 ..
OPEN FRI. ~ SAT. NIGHTS

Pakistan and en~d In a lush green field a few miles inside India,
where cholera struck them down. About 900 civil war refugees
from Pakistan lie here in mass graves dug during the past 10 days
as the disease ravaged the men, women and Children fleeing to
·safety in India.
·
Some of them were brought to the improvised graveyard
from the town dispensary. But most of the corpses were picked up
along the road where they collapsed from weakness and died as
'their relatives continued to plnd along in search of shelter. The
·local pollee commandant, Sgt. Inspector Amal Bhattarcharjee,
has the job of collecting the bodies and surpervising their burial.
He has had time for nothing else.
"You can't imagine what it was like," he said. How many
bodies in each gtave'?" Thirty here," he said. "Maybe 50 t)lere.
We just put them In as the trucks brought them."

Charge Leveled at President

MIDDLEPORT

I

WASHINGTON- SEN, EDWARD M. KENNEDY, D·Mass,,
Monday accused President Nixon of prolonging the war iri In·
dochma to gain JDBxlmuf!l political impact for the re~lection bi~
Continued on Page 2

For Body
Resumed
Dragging operations resumed
this morning for the body of
Scott Simms, 16, Rt. 2, Crown
City, a junior at Gallia
Academy High School, who is
presumed to have drowned
Sunday evening in a farm pond
near the James Merry Stone
Quarry in the Rodney area.
Simms, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Simms, has not ·been
seen since late Sunday evening.
He had gone swimming with
friends during a party following
tlle annual Gallia Academy
High School graduation.
A member of the party told
CD officials loday that Simms
was swimming and suddenly
began yelling for help,
However, no one responded to
his calls; apparently assuming
he was ,·,joking". He was not
seen after that.
Others apparently thought
Simms had left the pond when
the party began dispersing.
Simms was not reported
.missing until Monday allj!rnoon
when his car, bill!~ and
clotnes were found near the
Merry pond.
Gallia Couhty sheriff's
deputies, assisted by the local
Civil Defense and Mason

too early for hard figures, have
been good."
Ben Bucell, a buyer for Pick·
'n,Pay Supermarkets in Cleveland said bottled spring water
wasjustplacedonhiscompany's
shelves in Ohio during the past
17 weeks.
"It's selling quite well," said
Bucell, "about 200 to 250 cases
a week."
Most bottled spring water Ia ·
used in preparing foods, coffee,
tea and other bevera.es . .
. ~l ~I\ •llmrJI,..,"
Bueell added. "I can't personal·
ly see paying 69 cents a gallon,
but some people· say it does
'make a really good un-polluted
drink and it does give a drink
a different taste."
.
Although supermarket of,
Continued on Page 2

... . .~ ···'"''!
be eight races, two heats per
race. ,First prize is $50, second
prize $30 and third $20 with
lrophies In each class.
From 2:30 to 3:30 a ski show
will be held by the Atbens Boat
and Ski Club. From 3:30 to 5:30
the final boat races.
Earl Ingels reported that the
Frog King and Queen will be
annoWlced at II p.m. at the
Frog Ball·which will be held in
the Pomeroy gym.
A chicken barbecue will be
held on the upper parking lot
Saturday,and Sunday sponsored
by members of Drew Webster
By Bob Hoeflich
Post 39 of the American Legion
and Pomeroy Firemen
Refreshment stands will be •
located throughout. the area of
Char1es (Chuck) Down!e, son of Mr . and Mrs. T, A. Downle,
:Regatta
actlv1t1es. The- Pomeroy leftovertheweekendforNewHampshlrewherehewlll
Chamber will meet again next spend his'ntnth summer as an advisor and le~r at eamp Robin
Monday at noon at Bowers
Drive-In.
Hood.
This week, Chuck, a teacher in the Meigs Local School District,
is attending a leadership training camp stresaing ecology at
Ossipee, N.H. Tbe training Is sponsored by the American Youth
Foundation for the ChrlsUan Leadership of American Youth at
Merra Vista Camp.
Then he will g~ to Center Ossipee to begin his duties as a
Two persons were treated and Bailey and Lucas ·were taken counselor at Camp Robin Hood. Chuck won't be returning home
· released at Veterans Memorial to the hospital for treatment by until near time for school to start In August.
Hospital for facial· lacerations the Pomeroy E!'lergency
suffered · in a three vehicle Squad. The Lucas and Batley
KERMIT WALTON COUNTINUES remodeling his the New
collision at 11:10 p.m. Monday vehicles were demolished ,
at tbe intersection of Rt. 7 and There was slight damage to York Clothing Stoce -certainly turned into a real swinging shop
County Rd. 5 In Meigs County. Walls' semi. Lucas was charged over the past few weeks. The latest addition at the back of the
According to the Gallia-Meigs witll excess speed for con- store area is the "slack shack".
Post State ' Highway Patrol, ditions.
Leslie
T.
Lucas,
36, A Gallia County mishap Oc·
EIGHTH GRADERS of the Chester Elementary School
Chesapeake, traveling south curred at 6:50 a.m. on Rt. 35,
five
tenths
of
a
mile
west
of
Rt.
honored
their teacher and principal, Gerald Rupe, upon hll
lost control, skidded left of the
retirement.
•
.
center striking a semi operated 588.
Aided by the room mothers, the class staged a Jll)fty In !tit
by William C. Walls, Rt. 4, Officers said Janet Ruth
Jackson. Lucas' car continued Hogan, 33, Gallipolis, attempted . former Meigs County Courthouse at O&gt;ester. There were g8Diel
on, striking another nprthbound to pus a truck, cut back in too and the youngsters recounted highlights of the past etgbt years.
auto driven by James Bailey, sharply, lost control and ran off Ponch, potato chips, soft drinks and a cOke Inscribed "Belt
the right side of the highway Wishes to Mr: Rupe" were served and the guest of honor wu
43, Rt. I, Longbottom.
SCOTI' SIMMS
into an embankment. ·
presented with a gift certificate by Mary' Lou Mills, clau
There was moderate damage president.
County Civil Defense, contO her car. She was cited for
ducted a thorough search
having
no operator's ljcense.
Monday evening until dark but
their efforts were fruitless.
IF YOUR'RE ENJOYING Meigs County's "green" lbla
DANCE PLANNED
Three boa Is and ap·
spring, think what It means to Forrest (Butch) Bachtel, MlclA.benefit dance will be held dleport, who has spent the past s!J: months In Alaska.
proximately a dozen CD
from 9 p.m. until midnight
volunteers were involved in
Butch arrived at the Lockborne Air Force Base in Colwnbul
Seven-year
old
Cindy
Smith
Saturday
at the Rutland
today's operations.
escaped serious injury Monday gymriasiwn · urider the span- Friday evening where he was met by his wife, Carol. It took !be
at 5:45p.m, when she rode her . sorshlp of the· Ladies Auxiliary plane- an Air Force jet- only six hours to reach Loctbome
'
MOTO-CROSS SET
bicycle into the side of a car that of tlie Rutland Fire Depart- from Fairbanks, Alaska,
Home
for
30
days,
liu'ch
wlll
then
return
to
Alaska
for
five
The Meigs Motorcycle Club
was s!;ltionary at a stop sign on menI. All proceeds will go to the
will hold 118 second "''otaThird St. in SyrliCUie.
y 115 t family funeral expense more months service at the Campion Air Force Radar site -.r
Cross of the year SUDday at
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. funll : Music will be provided by Galena. Galena hils a popbiation of some 300 persons. Butch flew
the club grounds locaied live Gene Smith, Cindy suffered Tex Harrl!ion and the Valley from Galena to Fairbanks via commercial airline.
Butch and Carol will :,. taking a two week trip any day IMIW
miles north of Pomeroy on abrasions to both knees and her Boys. Refreshments will be
ahd you can bet your bottom boola they'll be heading south. Cl·rol,
Route 33.
right arm. She was not lm, available. ..
mediately treated. David D.
. Practice will be held from
incidentally, a registered nurse, has been put!lng in some bDy
Parsons, 25, Syracuse, was the
11 a.m. to 1 p,m,, the races
days and nights nt the Holzer Medical Center d~ ' LOCAL TEMPS
Sll\rling ai 1:30 p.m. Tropbles driver of the car.
.
Temperature in downtown husband's absence.
There
was
minor
damage
to
will be awarded In all clas'"s,
Butch .reports that tbe snow and Ice of Aluka Is juat bejll.
Pomeroy Tuesday ·at. 11 a.m.
the bike, none to the car and no
a~d refreshments wUl be
ning tothaw.Hewas delighted Iosee something green apin.la'l
avallail)le at the club bouse, citation was issued, Marshall was 1i degrees., under sunny everybody?
, ..
·
skies,
Milton Varian reported. ·

Of the Bend

3 in Collision

Child Suffers ·
Minor Hurts
Jn Bike Mishap

I

•.

Although state and local waler quality standards are usual·
ly strict, tap water flows through
underground mains sometimes
50 years old and along miles of
rusted, corroded pipe before arriving in the home.
The water along the way often
picks up sand, dirt, silt and al·
gae which not only offends the
eye and nose but also gives the
water a brackish taste.
AspokeSJllan for A &amp; P stores
in Ohio 1 West Vlrglrlia dn4 Ken·
-tuclty· aald ·-•~· ,.:bo\11~
spring water is not a ''new"
item, many persons'were, until
lately, unaware such water was
available on the retail level.
"We have been offering lines
of bottled spring water in the
past couple of months," he said,
"and sales, although it still is

�-,

.

New Well
1

(

'
•'

f

Jugged Water

I

(Continued from page 1)
flclala say a small percentage of
penona shy away from bOttled
IIPrinl water beCause they fear
It Ia not subject to the same
quality testa g1ven to municipal
1 water IIUPPIIes, state officials
said bottled water standards
are more stringent than those
for municipal water supplies.
"We lnalston a lo.wer bacter111
count than In the c1 ties," said
' Dr. David Hill, chief of the di' vision of fOOds, dairies and drug
•In the Ohio Agriculture Department.
EnUUed To Best
Hill said there are three basic
standards which bottled water
producers must meet.
"First they have to have a
product free from chloroform
., bacteria, a bacteria indlctive of
contamination," said Hill. "Sec·
ond, merchants must be Inspected by a regulatory agency and
there Is a free Interchange of
Information between states, and
lastely, we must know the origin
1

.,.

BERRY'S WORlD

of the water and it has to be
located at least 300 feet away
from any contaminating

soutee.••

Hill added that If the consumer pays a h1gher price for water, "he Is entitled to the best
kind of water he can get "
Hill sa1d the relative high
price of botued water is due to
several factors .
"The consumer Is paying for
Inspection of facilities, for a periodic lab exammatlon of water
being offered for sale, better
quality water and an Identifiable source," said Hill
The state agricultural official
said. there were about 10 or 15
bottled water producers m Ohio
10 years ago and about 60 thiS
year.
"We guarantee the safety, the
purity of (bottled water) at Its
source for microbiological proposes," said Hill. "About the
only thing we don 'I teat for Is
mineral content."

"On your job application, you mentioned that there was
one pet!on who inltuenced and shaped your lile mostbut, tell me, who IS this Howdy Doody?"

Committee Gets

GOP's Tax Plan
(Continued from page I)
million for library support, $104
, miUion for local government a1d
and $9 million for adminlatralion.
Thecorporatlonfranchlsetax,
to raise an additional $562 million over two years, would be
paid at the rate of five mills
on a corporation's net worth, or
4 or 8 per cent on net Income,
whichever would produce more,
starting next year.
Properjy Tax Relief
A total of $140 million of the
corporate revenues would be
used for property tax relief and
the other $422 million would go
into the state general revenue
fund.
Included in the new GOP tax
bUI are provisions requiring a
vote of the people of Ohio if
the rate of the personal mcome
lax Is to be raised, and forbidd·
mg property tax relief to those

rrn

who do not pay their real estate
taxes on time,
The GOP leadership apparently abandoned plans to tighten
eight sales tax loopholes for
corporations, smce no mention
of the proposal was made In the
bill.
Other provisions m the bill ·
-Repeal of Intangible personal property tax paid by Individuals.
-A rollback of the tangible
personal property tax paid by
corporations
-A 10 per cent across-theboard real estate tax reduction
for individuals, corporations and
utilities.
- A$2 million Increase In taxes on domestic insurance companies.
- A ,2,500 homestead exemplion for families with a total income of less than $6,000; $1,000
for those with higher mcomes.

New.s•••.in.·Briefs

Market Report
SALES REPORT
of Oblo Valley Uvestock Co.
Gallipolis, Oblo
Saturday, June 5,1971
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs 18 to
18.35; 220 to 250 lba. 17.85 to 18;
LiRhl 14 to 16.35; Fat Sows 12 to
14.50; Boars 12 50 to 13.20;
Pigs 6 to 13.50.
CA'M'LE- Steers 25 to 32.85;
Heifers28to34,75; BabyBeef34
to 45.40; Fat Cows 18 to 22;
Canners 18 to 23.25; Bulls 21 to
28. 75; Milk Cows 150 to 300. .
VEAL CALVES- Tops 41.40;
Seconds 38 to 40; Medium 35 to
37; Com. &amp; Hvs. 34 to 40; Culls
34 doW!). Baby Calves 20 to 60.
LAMBS - Tops 30.85.
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
HOGS- 200-230, 18.25; No. 1,
18; W-260, 17.25; 200-260, 16.50;
28G-300; 15.75; 190-200, 14.60;
400-450, 14.50; Boars, 15.50;
Stock Hogs, 12.56-17.70; Pigs by
the Head, 7.56-16.50
CATTLE - Choice Steers 3233.30; Good 3().31.75; Holstein
27 .30-30.50; Choice Heifers 2930.60; Good 27 75-28.50; Good
Cows 22.56-24; Utility ~21.85;
Canners and Cullers, 18.85
down; Bulls M.51).J3; Stock
Cattle Steers 25.75-32; Heifers
25.56-29.75; Heavy Stock Calves
Steers 32.56-37.25,
VEAL CALVES . Choice 4446.50; Good 41; Medium 35;
Baby Calves by the Head 36-76.
LAMBS- Cho1ce 30-31; Ewes
and Lambs by the Head, 23-27.

11

News, Event
BIBLES GIVEN SENIORS
Carpenter Baphst Church
honored high school seniors who
attend their church on Sunday
morning recenUy. Bibles were
presented
to
Barbara
Brookhart, Murrell Bailey,
Rexie Cheadle, Dale Jordan and
Robert Peck. These young folks
all were graduates of Alexander
High School, Albany.
Area SIDdenIll Graduate
Among
the
students
graduating from the eighth
grade at Albany Elementary
School were the following from
this community. Connie Miller,
Jackie Jordan, Donald Wooten,
Ronald White, Everett Shlltz,
Alice Peck, Kathy Massey,
Pamela King, Rendy Johnson,
Vickie Hoyd and Kim Ellis.

Welcome, M. Heath--Of Course, There
Will Be a Slight Fee for Docking!''

Murtaugh Back, Pirates Rout Cubs

'~

By United Press International
The Pittsburgh Pirates sure
know how to make a manager
feel wanted.
The Pirates, who celebrated
the return of manager Danny
Murtaugh Sunday with a 17-hJt
attack, collected 15 more
Monday as they routed the
Chicago Cubs, ll-6, to remam a

(Continued from page I)
committee.
Webater also requested that
the police and mayor's office be
cleaned and painted. The
request was granted.
- Street Supt. Calvin Lane
reported that 150 feet of
guardrail1sneeded at the foot of
Breezy He1ghts hill off
Mulberry Ave As soon as the
price of the guardrail is secured
by Legar, the railing will be
mstalled
A request for a Ialii license
made by Charles Hutton was
demed. Don Covert has three
cabs m operation, and no
change will be made unless
warranted, council Indicated.
A letter from the State Highway Department was read
directing the village to remove
a water bne along SR 33 where
the mterchange and approaches
'
to II will be constructed at Rock
Sprmgs. Removal of the eight- '
mch water line will cost the '
villiige approximately $24,000
The Me1gs Water Company had
been informed by the State
Department of Highways of the
arrangement However, when
the town purchased the water
company several years ago, the
buyer was not made aware of
the agreement, the mayor Sllld.
Council will wa1t until b1ds
are opened by the state on the
Route 33 construction before
taking any actiOn.
The mayor's report for May
showmg receipts m the amount
of $2292 50 was accepted.
Attendmg were Legar,
councilmen Franklin Rizer,
Ralph Werry, Jun Mees, and
Don Collins; councilwoman
Elma Russell, clerk Jane
CLEVELAND (UP!) - OhiO
Walton and treasurer Phyliss Welfare D1rector John E. Han- fare "does nothmg more than
guarentee a perpetuatiOn of a
Hennessy.
son said Monday night the GOP system that IS hated by the peo- LOST ANO FOUND
ordained $7.8 b111ion b1enniwn ple Jt tires to help, the adminiS- LOST, BOYS glasses around So
6lh St, M1ddleporl Phone
budget passed recently failed to trators who run 11, and the leg992 7057
mstitute welfare reform and was Islators who provided the
6 8 3lc
"just a repeat of the empty pro· money," Hansan said.
LOST IN vlclnlly of Hemlock
m1ses of the last e1ght years " The dU''ector d1d not restr1ct Grove, black and rust
"They ignored what Gov. John h1s criticism to the Repbulican- Doberman Pinscher 'Pup
J. Gilligan proposed m the way controlled legislature, blammg Reward Phone 992 7291.
6 7 6lc
Veterans Memorial Hospital of 'welfare reform' and substimpart a number of Oh10 mayors - - - - -- - - ADMITTED- Phyllis Stone, tuted nothing m 1ts place," Han- who have "Ignored the relief
Pomeroy; Edna Runnel , san sa1d
given to the Cities m the GilliPomeroy; Gladys Brewer, "They talked a lot but when gan AdminiStratiOn budget and
Portland; Constance Craig, 11 came to performance, 11 was pushe«&lt;, for more."
Pomeroy
JUst a repeat of the empty pro- Hansan sa1d Cleveland could
DISCHARGED - Lov1e mises of the last e1ght years," have saved $1.75 milliOn a year
Watson, Ross Moms, Gordon he told the Cleveland chapter of under the Gilligan welfare budAe1ker, Pauline Gallagher.
the National Association of So- get
cial Workers.
PLEASANT VALLEY
COLUMBUS(UPI)-Here IS a
Admissions: Sharon and The welfare dll'ector said the
MUSICAL
PLANNED
table showmg the top 10 counties
Republican changed budget fail·
Kevin Denny, Gallipolis Ferry; ed
to accomplish weHare reform The Cbes~ Fire Department m the state m terms of dollar
Paul Allinder, Dhronda because II did not provide for will sponsor a public musiCal
amounts collectible under a ReRobertson, Mrs R L. Givens, relief for local governments program at 7:30Pm Saturday
Mrs. Hilda Coleman, all Pomt counties or C!lles of the welfar~ at the Chester Grade School publican-drafted 1 7~percentm­
come tax, with revenues returnPleasant ; Kevin Fields, cost. Also, he said, it did not With the Bissell Brothers from
Pomeroy, Chancery Meadows, provide for the shiftmg of the Chester and the Gospelall'es of able to the count1es
F1gures are for f1scal 1973,
Glenwood ; Mrs. Okey Van- health care fmancial burden Rutland to be featured musical
the
first full year of antiCipated
Meter, Mason, Mrs. Denms from state and county govern- groups. Proceeds Will go
operatiOn of the mcome tax.
Deal, Apple Grove.
ment to the federal government towards the purchase of fll'e COUNTY
DOLLARS
Discharges: David Gaines,
Hansan said Gilligan's $9 1 eqUipment
Cuyahoga
$145
2 nulbon
Mrs Wayne Capehart, Mrs
Hamilton
75.7 million
Donald Smith and son; Mrs. bill10n budget provided these
Franklin
48 4 mill10n
shlftings of financial responsiClarence Embnck.
MARRIAGELICENSES
Montgomery
41.7rnTllion
bility as well as maximization
of federal funds to promote Aid Elton Melvm Steele 19 Summ1t
36.1 million
'
'
Two Defendants
to Dependent Children and allo- Pomeroyl Rt 3, and Helen Jean Lucas
30 1 million
Grmun,
20,
Kirkland,
D1
;
Allan
Stark
20.0 milliOn
cations to htre state employes
Fined by Mayor
16 9 mil110n
to guard agamst welfare fraud Doyle Gibson, 21, Pomeroy, Rt Mahomng
Two defendants were fmed and abuse.
4, and Sabra Joanna Canaday, Trumbull
12.8 million
and two others forfeited bonds The substitute budget for wei- 21, Rutland.
Loram
12.6 million
m Syracuse Mayor Herman
London's court Monday night, , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Marshall Milton Var1an I
--------------~

Cites No Reform

HOSPITAL
NEWS

Comparison of
Impact Made

Mrs. Ida Denruson, Salem
Center, visited her sister, Mrs.
.
Continued from Page 1
Faye Jordan.
Mrs . Bernice McKmght,
In 1972. Kennedy said the only reason . Nixon continues a
Sharon
and Christy, Columbus,
"diacredited" policy of Vlelnllllli2ation Is the President's "invisited her mother, Mrs. Goldie
' tendon to plsy hla last great card for peace at a time closer to
Gillogly and other relatives
• November, 1972, when the chances will be greater that the action
here on Sunday. On Monday
' will benefit the coming presidential campaign."
theyaccomparuedMr. and Mrs.
•
The Massachuselt8 Democrat spoke to a band of high-level
D.
0. McKnight to Downington
' lobbyists In town In an effort to talk Congress Into ending the
1
where they a!tended a birthday
' Vietnam war this year. "What has the President to fear?"
dinner for Mr. and Mrs. Glen
' Kennedy asked the lawyers Involved in the "Lobby of
Haning.
, Americans" activity. "Surely,notthe loss of office. Surely not the
Guests of Mrs. Murl Galaway
" Judcment of history.
were Mr. and Mrs. Richard
·
"In the loas of office is a fear that can never justify the
Parsons, Dayton; Kathy
: sacrillce of a single human life. And the judgment of history
Woodrum and Mrs. Wilma
PI'. PLEASANT
; should not be feared at all, since it Is a judgment made long ago on
Petty
and Bill, McArthur. Mrs.
LIVESTOCK SALES CO.
. Vietnam by people of the world.
Galaway accompanied the
Pl. Pleasant, W.Va.
Parsons to Lancaster where
Saturday, June 5, 1971
. Gothamites Living Hard
HOGS - 175 to 220 17.50 to they visited Mrs. Goldie Chase
&gt;
NEW YORK - CITY OFFICIALS and Army engmeers 18.60; Heav1es 14.50 to 17 25; at Crites Nursing Home. Mrs.
~ werked through the night to keep New York Clty functioning Lights 14-16.50; Fat Sows 12 to Chase Is the mother of Mrs.
., today and prevent a repeat of Monday's massive traffic snarl 16; Boars 11 to 14.75; Pigs 6 to Parsons and sister of Mrs.
caused by a municipal employe strike.
11; Stock Shoats 13 to 21.
No one guaranteed they would do it. Union leaders threatened
Dye, Columbus,
II
CATTLE - Steers 24 40 to
an escalat1011 of the strike. Drawbridge operators employed by 28 50; Heifers 20 to 28.50; Fat andMUdredCarpenter,Aibany, Racine, $5 and costs for failure
~ the city walked off the job Monday morning, leaving 28 of the Cows 19.50 to 23.75; Canners were guests of Mr. and Mrs. to)'leldrightofway to a passmg
BY JACK O'BRIAN
duke &lt;lined there with pals.
g city's 29 vital drawbridges open and inoperable. Other city em- 16.75 to 20.25; Bulls 25.25 to Dale Dye.
vehicle, and Gary W. Eynon,
''MARIGOLDS" AUTHOR
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Larry
Stanley
Syracuse,
$10
and
costs,
for
Rployes left trucks stalled In traffic lanes.
Betsy Palmer and Anne Meara secretly taped
28.50; Milk Cows 140 to 195;
and
Anna,
Erie,
Penn.,
spent
diSturbing
the
peace.
Forfeiting
FINDS
MUGGERS
FLOWERING
The result was lelll of thousands of motorisla lined bumper- Stock &lt;;ows and Calves 220 to
an ABC-TV panel possibility, "Says Who?"
NEW YORK - Pulitzer Prize dramatist (this (Edmund Lowe's ooooold cinema catch-phrase)
~ IIHRunper coml!i In and out of Manhattan during the morning 310; Stock Steers 23.85 to 31; the weekend here with their bonds were Donna J. Sellers,
:~ and evening rush hours. The commuters' plight worsened when Stock Heifers 19.50 to 27 50; parents, Mr . and Mrs. Lewis Syracuse, $15, unsafe operation, year for "Marigolds") Paul Zindel moved on his - there also wer.e early TV quizzes tagged
and Nancy, local, and and James P. Sellers, Syracuse, wave of success from placid Staten Island to E. "What's the Story" and "Who Said That?" ...
'~ the temperature rose to 93 degrees, New York's hottest day of the Stock Steer Calves 29.75 to Smith
Mr.
and
Mrs. Eugene Stanley, $15, squealing tires.
11th St. In Greenwich VIllage and prompUy was !be N. Y. Musicians Union can't get Mayor
35.50; Stock Heifer Calves 27 80
f. year.
Albany.
mugged at knifepolnt ... ''It was boring," Paul Lindsay to accept the offer to pony up half 1ts
to 33.50.
Betty Jean Jordan was a
told us. "l'dreadaboutsomanyandwatchedTV
VEAL CALVES - Tops 42.75;
matching cash for a free series ofmUSlc InN. Y.
guest
of
her
cousin,
Virginia
news
pictures so often, it seemed we'd rehearsed parks ... On May 29, Bea llllle snubbed 73, Bea
Seconds 40.10; Medium 33 to
~ Margaret Jane Miller, 81,
She was preceded In death by 36.50; c.'ommon &amp; Heavies 35 to Jordan frbm Sunday until
it." ... The mugg got $4 of Paul's unregal told Great British Disaster pub-owner Aubrey
~ Pomeroy Route 4 (the Hysell her parents, George and Nancy 41.50.
Tuesday.
royalties ... The forecast for Joe E. Lewis'
Franklin: "At least no one can say I was •29 on
~ Run area) died Monday at Miller, a brother, Thomas, and
Mrs. Jerry Culwell fell at her
diabetes~glect coma Is tragic .
May 73rd....ABC-TV newscaster Tom Dunn, who
~ Veterans Memorial Hospital. two SISters, Alvy and Iva Miller, Top 10 Counties
home here and is confined to
Paul Bochicchio our friend who as got caught mnocently In a wild headlined realty
:: A member of the Bradford Funeral semces will be held
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital, A Pomeroy commumty "Originals by Paul" :oakes custom Wigs high
~ Church of ChriSt, Miss 1\.filler Is at 3 p.m. Thursday at the Subject to Tax
Athens, with a l:i'oken hlp and vacationchurchschoolhasbeen aboveBdwy.&amp;42ndSI.,suffered the too-familiar ~e and finally exlricated himself laudably,
~ surviVed by two 818ters, Mrs. Bradford Church of Christ wilh
fractured riba.Tuesday
She underwent
• • , it was an- armeckobbery ,wlldfirlng' hla hope1ess ne igh- started his deflated career all over again at N. y.
1 for Aug .....
COLUMBUS (UPI)-Here is surgery
Called
se
indie news station WINS.
011
~ Lucy Glenn, Pataskala, and the Rev. Clifford Smith ofan impact comparison of the In· here by her ~ous ~ondltion nounced today. Young people borhood ... Pauls Insurance adjuster apologized
Mel Brandt, fanner president of the radio TV
~ Mrs. Ruby Reibel, Hillsdale, fJc1ating. Burial will be In the dividual income taxes proposed
bers of h f mil from age three through the for arriving two weeks late and told Paul that, union AFTRA, conducted classes for un~ ~ch.; three brothers, Herbert Bradford Cemetery. Fr1ends
by the administration of Gov. ;:: :::Collier, ~c~naX; completion of the ninth grade since the start\ of 1971, 9,300 robberies have derprivileged high school-age kids who want to
~and Ronald, of Middleport, and may call at the Ewing Funeral
John J. Gilligan and House Re· Mr. and Mrs. Jolm Culwell, are invited to attend the school plagued the 14th precinct alone! ... Paul says get Into broadcasting or even JUS! lnnprove their
-•ry area all now wor k
Home anytime.
publicans.
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. which will be held from 6:30 to bu.sinesH'olk In hla """
elocution and enunciation for the future. Mel
Prepared by Glll~gan 's state Roscoe Tackett and Mrs. Ed 8:30 p.m. at the former behind locked doors, peepholes are standard,
discovered what has annoyed lots of TV-viewers
Finance Department, 11 shows Hensley Flatwoods Kentucky· Pomeroy Junior High School. chained doors the norm, huge trained-to-befor years: The endless use of "you know" every
the burden of taxes paid by and Mr. ~nd Mrs. T: H. Blan~ Children are Invited to attend vici0118 dogs at the ready 1n office building
regardless of church affilliition. lobbies plus all manner of wild safeguards and few sylliibles and indiscriminate conversational
a res1dent of 1620 Chatham and James, of Chicago; Mrs. vanous groups of taxpayers un- and Greg, Jackson.
punctuation using "man" for nervous self.
der the 1 to 8 per cent gradual· Mr. and Mrs. John Kimes Anyone having questions sighs. "What can be done?" ... A lot more !n- mterruption.
Ave., GaUipohs, died In the Orville (Lucy) Randolph
Holzer Medical Center on Buffalo, w. Va.; Mrs. Ro~ ed tax of the Gilligan admlnsi- (Jane Caldwell), Columbus, about the school may call992- terestlnvicUmsandalotlessfearfortherights
Toile Fields Is getting rich In Las Vegas,
of crf!nlnals.
If Fourth Ave., at 11:15 p.m., (Delores) Day, Crown City traUon (G) and the 1.75per cent were weekend guests o1 her 2507, 992-2010 or 992-3172.
Charley Clarke of the famed P. J Clarke's 3rd Miami, and elsewhere so tenants in her OO&amp;t
.~~Monday Shehadbeenmfaillng Mrs. Allen (Mary) Sayre, flat tax of House Republicans uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.
apartment building at 750 Shore Rd, Long
William Th01ll88.
Ave. saloon dynasty (Charley was born upstiiits Beach, N. Y., )llsh she'd do something about its
health the past four years.
Pennsylvania; and Mrs. (R).
Guests of Mr. and Mrs . during the past year 'at Car· and has bartended there 25 years) takes his
Mrs. Kerwood was born in Virginia Roberts, Gallipolis.
condition ... They've appealed to the authorities
Meiga County on July 19, 1887, One son preceded her in death. Income Bracket Per Cent of William Lawson and family penter Baptist Church were lovely wife to Bermuda for the1r silver an. who seem to have joined ToUe, a group of tenants
Tax Burden were Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wood given to Mrs. Reymond Nelson, niversary this week . . Champ Joe FraZier, who now sighs to us, at the inattention.
dauaJ!ter of the late DaVId and Forty-two grandchildren
llrglnia Belle McCardle survive.
G
R and family, Charleston, W.Va., Rayma Sue Wllaon, Mr. and reacts With plenty of cool to all Muhammad Ali's
Producer David Merrick said In the Wall St.
Tayler. She was one of seven She was a member of the $0 to $6,000
3.3 6.4 hla brother, Tommy Daniels, Mrs. William Cteeclle, Heleo lojmx, may not appreciate Clayfooted Cassius'
$8,000 to $10,000
~ clllldren. She attended Meigs Church of God In Putnam $1,000 to 116,000
11.2 17.9 Detroit, Mich., and their son, Jeffers, Bonnie, Don and Kathy desire to take over Joe's Vacation Valley Journal he Isn't happy unless he has "a half
dozen offerings at least" 011 Bdwy.; DaVid must
~ CQunty ~hooll,
County, W. Va.
27.2
35.5
Mllre
Lawson,
wbo
has
emCheadle
and
Emma
Wbittrail!lng
camp
in
the
Poconos
for
his
Jlminy
Ellis
$15,000 to $25,000
be a doleful fellow indeed with just one show left
23.5 23.0 ployment at Fremon~ Ohio.
tlngton.
tuneup
One Iiiier surviVes, Mrs. Funeral services will be held
$25,000 to $50,000
("PromlBeS, Promisea") and that on twofm ...
12.9 6.6 Vlsitcrs of the Ney Carpenter Mr alid Mrs Cecil Black'
Irene Phaelen of Urlchsville, 2 p.m., Thursday at Miller's ISO,OOOandover
21.9 8.6 home during the netend were ood.and Ua
CMrabelle
Celebtlty jetjullketsare dashing farther every Dep't store heir Peter Gimbel's "Blue Water
' Ohio.
Home for Funerals with Rev.
Margaret Edmnnston Vinlcln· ~ Vllltld 111111 '111r ~~~e~ea' Digbt:'lbenextfawncyVIPairllftwillbea week White Death" actlon.flick II a llll88h
She married ffichard Ker· Everett Delaney o!flclating.
Anna Parker, ~nd; Mr:
and Wlllllm C ·Ptck
In Tellll¥ for the 2,10011! anniversary of Iran's everyone agrees it couldn't happen to a nicer
wood in 1111. They Uyed In Burial will be In Pine Stnet
LODGE TO MEET
and Mrs. Albert~vey,Dover; at lbe Dale Dye~.
11111 ezlsltl}ce 11111 Oct.... ~ormer N.Y. hotelier millionaire ... Jolm Wayne's 84th birthday
Muon County, W. Va., IDIW Cemetery.
•
Work will be In the master Mrs. John Dye Columbus· Mrs Emile Olivia PaltersNeal Lar!g'a up 14&gt; bta old\Scnticb: Hired half a !J1!sent last week was the bullelln that bo!lllfflce
1141. He Jlf'eCeded her In death Friends may clll at the mason degree when Shade
va.,1NnPataatthe dGan H-. Kq dolla to hQateas hla Grand gorssea fer hla "Big Jake" film are both big afd
JD U.. dran
funeral borne anytime after 2 River Lodge 463, FMM, meets MlldredCirpen~,Aibany,and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ollie
Dye,
Jocal.
Peckbcmeandlllllta•ill•uf
Babamt club, XanadQ ... The Duchess of Wind· jake; It's a family .rfalr - hil eldest son
llcbt chll survivlna are p.m. Wedneaday.
at Cheater*' 8 p.m. Thursday.
Perfect attendance pinl for lbeDivlaflmla,forapiiiW!ng IOI'~ta~note!GJOIIIIPIIMelz,bosachef produced and two of hla !ada are In it ... Bob
•on: ~t, Coal
All muter maaona are Invited
thoee pre-tat~ School at the Ttwple 01ft11 Grow.· ci La foret in tbe Pierre Hotel, after she and the Mitchum's 8011 01rla also.

G=.a~ellle

re~~!~d~ereFrancesi.Foster,

1

11

vOICe
• along Broadway

Pomeroy CJturch
School Planned

half game beh1nd the St. LoUis
Cardmals m the NatiOnal
League East
St. LOUIS ralhed from behmd
to edge Atlanta, 7-6, m 10
mmngs m the only other maJor
league game
Murtaugh had been Sidelined
for nearly three weeks w1th
chest pams but returned

S~nday

to watch the Pirates
outslug the Houston Astros, ~.
He was at the helm agam
Monday as the Pirates pounded
SIX pitchers for 15 h1ts,
mcludmg homers by W1l11e
Stargell, AI Oliver and Bob
Robertson
Despite the awsome show of
power over the last two days,

CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
Cleveland lnd1ans downed the
Cmcmnab Reds 3-2 Monday
mght In an exhibitiOn game cut
short m the Sixth mnmg by
ram .
The stop here was the start
of a road trip for the Reds,
who move mto Houston tomght,
and the start of a homestand
for the lnd1ans, who entertam
the Ch1cago Wh1te Sox tomght
Gary Nolan, 3-6, was set to
p1tch for the Reds agamst the
Astros' Don Wilson, 4-3. "Sudden Sam" McDowell, 5-5, was
startmg pitcher for the Tribe
agamst the Sox' Wilbur Wood,

4-2
Cincmnah nghthander Milt
W!lcox walked m an lnd1an
Monday mght m the fiflb that
proved to be the wmnmg run
The game was the second th1s
season between the cross-state
teams, Cmcmnall wmmng 3-1
on Apnl 22 at home
Rich Hand, the wmnmg pitcher, went 5 1-3 mnmgs before
rook1e Ed Farmer came m to
stnke out Pat Corrales w1th
runners on second and th1rd
and one out m the s1xth. With
two stnkes on Woody Woodward the rams came to end the
game
"I thought Hand threw the

ball hard for the first three mmng ," Cleveland Manager Alvm Dark said "But his arm IS
st1ll not as strong as 11 was
last season "
Hand, who posted a 6-13 record last season, walked three
and fanned three The 22-yearold nghthander tnggered a
two-run Reds fourth mmng by
throwmg a w1ld pitch to second
on a doubleplay ball and the
Reds went on to t1e the score
at 2-2.
Roy Foster smgled home the
f1rst Cleveland run m the second mmng and a Red throwmg
error m the third gave the
Tnbe an unearned run

Two One-Hitters in Openers
The Middleport Little League
season opened Monday with two
teams rackmg up unpreSSJve
VICtories and two young hurlers
tossmg one h1tters.
The Indians' Jeff Beaver held
the Mets to one smgle m an
abrev1ated contest that went
only four mnlngs, The Indians
pounded out 14 h1ts that
P.l'oduced 15 runs. In h1s stellar
performance, Beaver walked no
one and fanned SIX. Jeff Miller
was the loser. He passed SIX and
struck out three
Big stickers for the Indians
were Lynch w1th two smgles
and a double, Hlndy a tr1ple and
smgle, Beaver two singles,

Cheshire And
Addaville Top
OVL Standings
Cheshire and Addav1lle
contmue to lead the Ohio Valley
Little League followmg VICtones Monday mght
Cheshire's Tigers edged Rw
Grande, 2-1 , AddavJile bombed
Green, 14-1; Centerville tripped
Salem, 9-3; and Vmton shutout
Syracuse, 7./J on a perfect no hit
effort by Cla1r Wellington
In the only other league
game, Racme defeated the
defendmg champion Bidwell
Pirates, 11-7
The OhiO Valley Little League
opened last Thursday with
Chesh1re defeatmg Bidwell, 156; Addav1lle tnmmed Rio
Grande, 10-2; Centerville edged
Syracuse, 5-2 and Salem mpped
Green, 4-3
In Saturday mght achon,
Vmton posted a 6~ wm over
Green; Centerville crushed RIO
Grande, 16-4; Cheshire bombarded Salem, 17-3 and Addavllle outslugged B1dwell, 8-4

NOW···

jpt1Jad.

A TIE TACK
BY ANSON

Gleason two doubles, M Venoy
a double, T. Venoy, Gardener,
Lee, and DeLong each a smgle
Greg Becker had the only hit
for the Mets, a smgle
The Middleport Braves were
unpress1ve as they banged out
11 h1ts and !hell' star pitcher
threw a brllhant one hitter at
the Reds, wmnmg 17-3. M1ck
Davenport had a no-hitter for
fiVe and a thU'd mmng before
Del Call broke it up w1th a last
mmng smgle. The Braves led
only 3-0 after five innmgs but
exploded for 14 runs m the last

frame to wm gomg away
The VIctory was all the more
sweet for the Braves as 11 came
over the defending champiOns
managed by Woody Call.
Steve Pickens was charged
w1th the loss He needed last
ummg relief from Ronme Casc1.
Steve Bachner lead the
Braves' onslaught With three
hits, while Steve Bachner led
the Braves over the Reds With
three hits; Tun Thomas, M1ck
Davenport and Mike Lavender
all had two h1ts and Dave Snuth
and Dick Owen had smgles.

Yanks, Tigers Winners
The Yankees whipped the
P1rates 6-2 and the T1gers
routed the Dodgers 11-5 Monday
m Pomeroy Little League play
In the Yankee-P1rate hit,
M1ke Owens and Greg
Brownmg teamed to pitch the
Yankees to victory as they
limited the Pirates to only four
hits. They KO'd seven and
pass ed seven Doug Browmng,
who struck out two and walked
one went the route for the
losers
Yankee batters supported
their pitchers With 14 hlts,Tlm
Hood leadmg the attack with
two smgles and a double Other
hitters were Dave Burt a smgle
and double, Pat Owens a smgle
and double, Greg Brownmg two
songies, M1ke Owens a double
and a homer, Charhe Burton
two songles, Rick Snyder a
tr1ple and Kelley Taylor a
songle
For the losers, Jeff Couch had
a single, Duane Quails, Doug
Browmng and Edd1e S1sson
each a double
In the other game the T1gers
banged out 11 hils off two
Da1e
Do d ger
P1t Chers
Browmng went all the way on
the mound for the Tigers,
hold mg the Dod gers t0 seven
hits Dale KO'd seven and
walked one Rick Taylor fanned
e1ght and walked f1ve for the
Dodgers
Tiger hillers were Sc1tes With
two homers, Kelley Hawk a
triple, Dale Browmng, a double
and a smgle, Bob McClure, a
double, Dan Moms a smgle,
Rick J ohnson and Don
Icenhower each a smgle
Yankees
302 liJO-.j) 14 0
011 000--2 4 1
PIra tes
Owens, G. Browmng and

an d Perry, M1nn 8 4, Lollch,

Det 8 s

VISIT BAKER'S

i ~~~a!~=~v~:~~~poUs,

f

IF'atoh ch1ld or grandch1ld
represented by a
in their birth month color.
IChl,ice of white or black
Mot:her of Pearl center,
bellow or wh1te fimsh.

oJe

Pa.J

Mr:

..i

bari.w.

,,

and

'

INCLUDING UONfl

GOESSLER
Jewelry Store
.'

Court St.

Pomeroy

;; m

yJ:,,

Young~

Triple
In Sixth Wins

Murtaugh "G1ush and Veale
d1d the JOb today and Mudcat
Grant 1s capable of domg the
same thong "
Veale, who took over from
starter Nelson Briles m the
th1rd and worked 2 1-3 onmngs
before mJunng his shoulder,
sa1d he doubted the InJury was
a muscle pull
"1 felt somethmg tear m the
back of my left shoulder, h1gh
up It's not a muscle pull I've
had those before and 1! doesn't
fee l hke that It JUS! hurts like
hell I'm goong to talk to the
club doctor and I hope 1t's not
senous I'm usually a fast

•

FURNITURE
M"lddle ' 0.
'------i~------iiiiiii.ll...,....lol_

BAKER

....

healer so I hope there's no
problem
The Cardmals ralhed from a
four-run deficit to tie the score
m the mnth before Wlnmng m
the lOth on a run-scQrmg smgle
by Ted Sunmons Matty Alou
was hJt by a p1tched ball on a
controversial call to lead off the
lOth then stole second before
sconng on S1mmons' hJt
Two-run doubles by Ted
S1zemore and Gerry McNertney
on the mnth enabled the
Cardmals to tie the score. Hank
Aaron, Ralph Garr and Zollo
Versalles each collected four
h1t.s for the Braves
11

The Cwcmnatl Reds will
conduct a tryout camp and
clime at St Albans H1gh School
F1eld, St Albans, W Va.,
Saturday, June 12, 1971, at 9 a.
m.
Lyle Wolverton, local scout
for the Reds, sa1d the camp will
be m charge of area Scout
Elmer Gray, ass1sted by Scouts
Jun Vennan of Pomeroy, Gene
Bennett and h1mself
Players, 16-years old or over,
b
DUNFEEDOESITAGAIN
should report at 9 a m and e
prepared to work until 1 p m - Kenneth Dunfee, Pomeroy,
Amencan LegiOn players must displays his prize catch of
have wntten pennlsslon from catfish taken at Hidden Lakes
their managers or post com- near Pomeroy. From the left
mander Players are expected are a three pounder; 21'l
to be 10 umform and furmsh pounder and a SIK pounder.
their own shoes and gloves. The Dunfee earlier had another
Reds w111 furmsh all other outstandmg catch at Hidden
eqmpment
Lakes.
Prospects will pay their own
MaJor League Results
expenses to and from the camp, By Unrted Press Jnternaloonal
but 1f s1gned to a contract by the
Nahonal League
( 10 onnongs)
Reds, will be reimbursed.
st L
000 011 oo 4 1_ 7 l2 2
Atla
100 001 310 o- 6 13 1
lJos~on
Torres.
171 Shaw
171
Arroyo 18) Lonzy
Drabowsky
(9) and
Simmons. ' Reed Priddy (9) ,
Barber 1101 and Kmg WP.J I y
Drabowsky (3 0) LP- Pnddy

Ace
'T'ons All-Star
JJalloting

(2 2)

NEW YORK (UP! ) - Early
returns from fans vollng for
AmeriCan League all-stars put
Boston Red Sox outfielder Carl
Yastrzemsk110 the vanguard of
the ballotmrl for the !971 mld• m Detrmt, July
season classiC
·ll,ltwasdtsclosedMondoy )'f"'&gt;.,
Yastrzemsk1, a three-llme
A L battmg champiOn who IS
currently hlttmg .298, polled
31,645 votes to take a commandmg lead for one of the
three startmg outfield posts.
Tony Ohva of Mmnesota
collected 19,707 votes and
Frank Robmson of Ball!more
rece1ved 17,924 m the outfield
ballotmg
Balhmore has three players
leadmg m the votmg accordmg
to Baseball CommiSSioner
Bowie Kuhn The Or10les' other
Robmson, Brooks, heads the
th1rd basemen w1th 27,818 votes
and Boog Powell appears
headed for the startmg f1rst
base pos11JOn w1th 28,458
Boston had another apparent
starter m Luis Apancw when
the Red Sox shortstop gamed a
surpnse leadmg margin of
19,434 despite a balling average
that has dropped below 200
Rod Carew of Mmnesota led
all second basemen w1th 18,878
and B•ll Freehan of DetrOit was
ahead in the poll for catchers
w1th 15,181 votes .
Top runners-up for each
pos11lon were Norm Cash of
Detroot at hrst base, 8,047;
Dave Johnson of Baltimore at
second base, 8,759; Harmon
Killebrew of Mmnesota at third
base, 13,266; Jun Fregosl of
Callforma at shortstop, 7,062;
Ray Fosse of Cleveland,
catcher, 13,066; and Outfielders
Bobby Murcer, New York,
14,993; Frank Howard, Washmgton, 13,146, and AI Kaline,
DetrOit, 8,120
Earl Weaver of Baltimore,
who will manage the AmeriCan
League, w11l chose the pitchers
and substitutes
The National League f1rst
~e_turns will be relea~I!_Fndat

RACINE - J F Young
tr1pled home two runs m the
SJK!h and last mmng here
Sunday to g1ve Racme L1ttle
League a 7-6 victory over
Syracuse Young, the pitcher,
held Syracuse to f1ve smgles, h1t
by K Wmebrenner, Cundiff,
Gumther, Roush and Huston.
Other fu!cme hitters were
Hendncks a tr1ple and smgle,
Young, two doubles With his I
The. Daily Sentinel
triple, Perry H1ll 'two smgles,
DEVOTED
TO THE
Mark Sayre a smgle, Billy
INTEREST OF
Harns two smgles and Terry
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
Turner a double
Exec Ed .
Battenes . Racme, Young and
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
Ctty Edttor
Steve H1ll , Syracuse, Bass, K.
Publt she d dally except
Wm ebrenner (4) and B Satu rda y by Th e Ohio Valley
Publ•sh•no Company , 111
Hamilton
Court St
Pom eroy , OhtO,
MANAGERS TO MEET
Managers of the Galli a-Meigs
Pony League Associahon will
meet this evemng on the
Pomeroy Diamond followmg all
league games to determine the
outcome of a protest flied by
Middleport Manager Woody
Call 1D COn]UnCI!On Wllh last
Friday's 11·2 loss at Bidwell All
managers are- urged to be
present

~

'

Reds Set
Tryouts

so

'

:l ~

Bnles, Veale (31 GIUsti (51
and Sangul llen , Pappas, New
man 181.
(5) , Tompkms
Bonham 171,
son
181.Stephen
Regan
(9) and Breeden WP- Vea le 12
Ol LP- Pappas (6 61 HRsStargell
Oliver
(1st) ,
Roberlson(19lh).
(11th),
Williams
(141N. • , , ,
• ''

Three More
By United Press lnternaUonal
Don B1es, Art Wall, Tom
WeiSkopf, Mike Souchak
Doug Sanders qualified Monday
for the June 17-20 U.S. Open_ln
Phtladelphia. Dan Sikes, Dow
Finsterwald, Jacky Cupit and
George Knudson failed to make
the grade
A total of 72 players, led by
B1es' ~7-135 at the Atlanta
Country Club, qualified for the
t971QpenattheMerwn Country
Club. Another 43 will earn
berths m the f1eld today after
sectional qualifying rounds in
Washmgton,
St
LoUis,
Pinehurst, N.C., Pittsburgh and
Montclair, N.J.
Most of the top names who
qualified Monday earned entry
m Atlanta as 39 players made
the 145 cutoff. Sikes lost h1s b1d
m a six-man playoff for the last
two spots. Dave Marr and Gr1er
Jones rea ched the tourney
proper with the two low scores
m the playoff
Lou Graham turned in a 136 at
Atlanta, Dave Eichelberger
carded a 138, Romero Blancas
and Charles Coody shot !40's,
Art Wall and Rod Funseth made
11 with !41's and Weiskopf and
Charles Sifford were in at 112
Sanders tied Dave Bradbury

anp

. . ·-- .---

the Sports Desk
bv chet Tannehill

. __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . . _ _ . . , . . . _ . . . _ . ........ . . _ . _ _ , _ _. _ _ . . . . _ _ . . ,_ _~

Notes to pass the Time of Day :
I was haP.PY for Henry Clatworthy's sake to learn over the
weekend that e1ther he has qwt bowling or hla game has gone
sour How has 11 been deduced he's no longer bowling? Because he
wasn't m the lineup of champion teams published Monday, or in
the gallery of spec111l recognition winners on Sunday.
Henry obviously had to do something about his bowling, The
last time I v~1ted his living room trophies were everywhere, and
he hkely had a few bushels stashed away out of sight to boot. He
Just has no more trophy space
Th1s may all be wrong Henry may still be bowling at
Gallipolis, or Pt. Pleasant, or have teammates at the Pomeroy
Lanes who, like me, have trouble keepmg the ball' free of the
gutters That would be Henry He'~ forever willing to use hla vast
store of pal!ence and knowledge to help the less endowed.
H that's 1t, maybe Henry just couldn't pull hiS team into a title
and 1ts share of the shiney hardware passed out by the Lanes'
management last Friday night
EVERYONE WHO SAW JEFF MORRIS come on fast as a
pass rece1vmg end last fall, and as the Marauders' big man on the
boards last Winter, has to be anticipating the coming football and
basketball seasons. Jeff, who 1s commg mto hiS senior year, Is
b1gger than ever - he looks at least 6-4 but may be a shade shy of
that - w1thout a wasted pound anywhere
The word was around last fall that Jeff lacked straightaway
speed But this handsome young man hsd then, and no doubt still
wdl have, the uncanny knack of getting open the InStant needed to
get h1s hands on a football. HIS height and jumping ability are
great pass catching assets, too Some faster boys around the
league, perhaps, have gone down and out and been covered by the
defense, whereas Jeff will be open for a snare of the ball.
Morris has what is known in the trade as good hands. What
touches them sticks That's espeCially valuable to an end in
football and a rebounder in basketball
SOME40YEARSAGO,giveortakeacouple,Donald(Pizzle)
Wolfe coached basketball at Middleport. His tenure (perhaps
mercifully) was shorWved; he shortly moved upriver to Racine
High School where Charles Hayman was fashioning basketball
won-lost records the envy of about everybody Don took over
baseball which he coached well into the 195Qi.
It's probable that Dan's move from Middleport in the early
30s to a head coaching position in Racme was the last before Bob
Ashley, a native of Middleport and football coach there for a
time, took the head football job at Racinethe
in 1966. Ashley
h f may
1
have begun a precedent, for thiS year Sou rn Hlg , ormer y
Racme, Will have two head coaches who are natives of Middleport, and graduated from Middleport High School.
hall
b k ft
full
Bruce Wallace, Mars
U. defensive ac , a er a
season workmg at the junior high level, now has his old high
school coach's (Ashley) head football job. And Asa Bradbury,
fresh out of Marietta College, IS taking over the basketball job.
Bradbury'shlghschoolcoachwasCariWoHe,whostillholdsmost
of Racme's mdividualscorlng recorda.
The best of luck to both. May they enjoy the success coaching
that Don Wolfe did in baseball
llln
bo
I hope they have half as much fun later te g tales a ut
the1r early coaching as does Wolfe spinning yarns of his early
daysa tM'ddl
I epor.t Togethimtalkingaboutthose days of the 10
to 8scores in basketball is to beguaranteedalaugha minute.
Wolfe has been teaching commercial subjects at Meigs since
' Is
1 ex tra duy
1 qn the Cerf
1 1 a1 .and, a·
d
I cqnsollda,tiOli,, !!Jld dong

u.• s• Open

Jlilillllll;~tl'6e"'ld~BMile alh\et\el~llt.--

£)..,

0

Y~AD

l"f.
'
n
l y r or

at 143 for the low score ln
quahfymg at Dallas as seven
golfers reached the Open
Souchak, playing at the Red
Run Golf Club m RoYal
Oak,
'
M1ch, also had a 143.
The veteran Torruny Bolt, 53year-old former U.S. Open
champion, Withdrew from the
Michigan qualifymg ro1md because he still was suffering the
effects of a recent bout with
pneumonia
Fmsterwald was not among
the three who qualified at the
Rolling Hills Country Club In
Denver. Bill Blsdorf of Evergreen, Colo., made it with a 137,
George Keyes of Phoenix
qualified with a 141 and Paul
Purtzer of Phoernx With a 142.

-· • "'

Bob Smith of Sacramento,
Calif, headed seven qualifiers
at Chicago with a 139. Bob Ellis
of Fondulac, Wis., had II good
shot at a berth
ded with a firsttheround
las
68, but fa
to a 79 on
t
18 for a 147, two short of the
qualifymg figure.
Sam Carmichael, a golf
course operator from Martin.sVIlle, Ind., showed them how its
d
t th Cl
k Country
one a e ovemoo
Club in Cincinnati, Ohio, when
he came through with a threeunder par 139 on a 68 and 70.
Jun McLean, a 21-year~ld
amateur from Seattle had a 144
and Jolm Kallnka,
1 a 47-year~ld
f
pro from Hono ulu shota 140 or
the two qualifying spots from
Seattle, Wash

Bank the "One-Stop" way
Wouldn't it be more efficient to
have one. central place for all
your banking
one place to
save, to check, to borrow? It
s ure would! And this is the
place.

Yes, and a good lime lo

I

check Insurance onf boats,

ca mp1ng and sporls
equlpmenl - also family
acc1dent and liability

2157

Second class postage pa1d at
Pome,.oy , Oh•O
Nat .ona l adverttstng
represen tati ve
Bott•nelll
Gallagher , Inc, 12 Easl 42nd
Sf , New York C1ty , New York
Su bscr •ptton rates
De
livered by carrier where
availa ble SO cen ts per week .
By Motor Route where carrie r
se r v•ce not available One
month $1 75 By mall In Ohto
and W Va , One year SU 00
Stx month s $7 2S
Three
months U
Subscrtr,t•on
price •ncludes Sunday T mes
Senttnel

~~~~~~;~h ~~ ~~ ~~g::: 1 ~

~· ~--·-~·-·--·

"Vacation $
almost here! "

45769 Bus•ness Offt ce Phone
992 2156, Ed•tor.al Phon e 992

$7.50

0

By Unoted Press lnlernatoonal
Amencan League
Easl
w L Pel GB
Baltimore
31 19 620
Boston
~~
!Y;:
Detroot
23 28 451 8'12
Cleveland
New York
23 30 434 9'12
Washmgton
33 365 13
w L Pet GB sa• s
West
Oakland
')'; ~8 ~~~ GB
Kansas C1ty 26 23 531 8
Minnesola
27 27 500 9'12
Ca liforn 1a
26 29 473 11
Ch1cago
20 28 417 13'12
Milwaukee 20 29 408 14
Monday 's Results
No games scheduled
Today's Probable Pitchers
at NeCal oyg;~,al Stt~~~~:;e o6o~'.
nlghl
Boston (Culp 6 41 at Oakland
~~~~h.~~/onn'gt~ox 1 2) at
Kansas C1ly ISplittorff o Ol.
mghl
M1nnesola I Blyleven 6 61 at
Ball1more (Dobson 2 3), nrghl
Ch1cago (Wood 4 21 at Cleve
land (McDowell 5 51· n•ghl
Molwaukee (Parsons 56) at
Detr01t ( Loloch 8 Sl. n1ghl
Wednesday's Games
Boston
al Oakland
mght , n1ght
New York
al Cal1torn1a
Washington at Kan C1ty. n1ght
Molwaukeeal Detr01t n1ght
Chrcago at Cleveland noght

Snyder Doug Brownmg and
Ph1lhps
Mmnesota at Balt1more , n1ght
Tigers
300 323--11 10 1
Natrona! League
Dodgers
010 022- 5 7 0
,, E~sl L
GB
Taylor and Seth Dale St Lou•s
35 21 ~~~
Browmng and McClure
Pottsburgh
34 21 618 '12
N Y k
30
20 600
2
C~~a g~r
26 29
473 8'12
MaJOr League Leaders
21 27 438 10
By Un1ted Press International Montrea l
Leadong BaUers
Philadelph ia 20 32 385 13
Nahonal League
West
G AB R H Pet
Garr, All
57 242 42 87 360 SanFranoiSco ~8 t9 p~~ GB
Dav 1s, LA
54 214 34 77 360
Beckert, Cho 54 215 35 77 358 Los Angeles 29 26 527 8
l~ ;~ :;~ :~
Cash, P1tl
47 185 38 M 357 ~~~~~\~n
22 33 400 15
Torre, St L 56 213 36 76 357 Concmnalo
Brock. All
55 227 49 81 357
18 37 327 19
Alou, Hou
43 152 11 53 349 San D1ego
P•ttsbu~~n~y~~~~=~~~~s
Mays. SF
so 171 35 57 333
Sng ln, P1ll 51 193 17 63 326 st Lou•s 7 Atla 6, 10 mn , n1ght
Staub, Monl 49 172 30 56 326
Today's Probable Pitchers
Amerocan League
2 71
San
D•ego IArlin
G. AB R H Pet York (Gentry
4 41. n1g hl at New
Oliva. Mmn 46 181 34 68 376 San FranciSco IManchal 8 31
Murcer NY 53 187 31 68 364 at Monlreal (Sloneman 7 3).
Kalme Del 45 149 26 48 322
Ro1as. KC
49 187 28 60 321 "'~~~ Lou•s ICarllon 10 .21 at
BRbnsn, Bit SO 193 28 61 316 Atlanta (Jarvos 1 7), n1ght
Smilh. Bos 53 210 38 65 310
Concmnat• INolan 3 61 at
Re1chdt. Ch• 39 143 u 44 308 Houslon (W•Ison 4 31, mght
Tovar, Mmn 52 216 34 66 306
Philadelphoa (Short 4 7l at
Ot1s. KC
46 186 31 56 301 Los Angeles 1s1nger 3 91 , n1ghl
Yastrz. Bas 53 181 39 54 298
P1tlsburgh (Johnson 4 4 or
FRbnsn, Bll 40 i41 24 42 298 Walker2 6) al Chocago (Jenkins
Home Runs
51 Wednesday's Games
Naloonal League Slargell. 9
P1ll 19 , Aaron, Atl 17, Bench, San Fran at Montreal, n•ghl
c1n, Cepeda, Atl , Williams, Ch1 San
Diego at New York, night
14
Los
Angeles
PhiIa. night
Amer1can League
Oliva, P11tsburgh alatChicago
Mmn 12, Cash and Horlon, Del, Cmcinnah at Houston. noght
Oils, KC and Jackson, Oak 11 St Lou1s at Allanta, n•ght
Runs Balled In
Nalronal League Slargell, International League Standings
Pill 52, Aaron. Atl 43 . Torre, By Umled Press lnternatoonal
st L 42 . Sanlo, Chi 40 ,
W L Pet GB
Syracuse
30 15 667 Cardenal. St L JS
32 20 615 1'12
Amerocan League Killebrew, T1dewater
25 22 532 6
Mmn 47, Petrocell •, Bos 40, Charleslon
26 24 520 6'12
Bando, Oak 36 , Wh1te, NY 35, R1chmond
23 23 500 7'12
Powell. Ball and Murcer, NY Rochester
LouiSville
21
29 420 1J112
32
Toledo
19
30
388 13
Prlchrng
17 30 362 14
National League Dierker, W1nn1peg
Monday's Results
Hou 10 1, Carllon, St L 10 2,
Tidewater
10 Charleston 7
Jenk1ns, Chr 9 s, Ell1s, Pitt and
R1chmond
9
Louisville 7
Mancha I, SF 8 3
Amerocan League. Blue, Oak Rochesler 3 Winnipeg 2
12 2; S~eber t , Bos 9 2. Hunter, Syracuse at Toledo, ppcl rain
Oak 9 3; Cuellar, Ball 8 1,
Palmer, Ba it 8 3, McNally, Bait

~ ::~::r!l1~~! a~;~~~~~w:nd

f

Murtaugh was more Impressed
by the team's rehef p1tchmg.
Bob Veale and Dave GIUsh
turned in 6 2-3 mmngs of
scoreless rehef agamst the
Cubs, although Veale suffered
an mJured shoulder and was
forced to leave the game
"The reason we're m the race
IS because of our bullpen," sa1d

Indians Win Exhibition Contest

a

~Margaret Miller Dies on Monday

r·-

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, (l ..111ne8, 1971

---

Carpenter

(

cove rage
Be sure of
proper Insurance with a
tree
survey
by
the

Downing Chdds

Aoency

Downing·
Childs
Agency, Inc.

j

l.iibens /ialioNJI
-4o.£lHICIHI~ATI

MIDDLEPORT
OHIO

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
Memhet Federal Dep01lt l111unace Corporal!•

'

�-,

.

New Well
1

(

'
•'

f

Jugged Water

I

(Continued from page 1)
flclala say a small percentage of
penona shy away from bOttled
IIPrinl water beCause they fear
It Ia not subject to the same
quality testa g1ven to municipal
1 water IIUPPIIes, state officials
said bottled water standards
are more stringent than those
for municipal water supplies.
"We lnalston a lo.wer bacter111
count than In the c1 ties," said
' Dr. David Hill, chief of the di' vision of fOOds, dairies and drug
•In the Ohio Agriculture Department.
EnUUed To Best
Hill said there are three basic
standards which bottled water
producers must meet.
"First they have to have a
product free from chloroform
., bacteria, a bacteria indlctive of
contamination," said Hill. "Sec·
ond, merchants must be Inspected by a regulatory agency and
there Is a free Interchange of
Information between states, and
lastely, we must know the origin
1

.,.

BERRY'S WORlD

of the water and it has to be
located at least 300 feet away
from any contaminating

soutee.••

Hill added that If the consumer pays a h1gher price for water, "he Is entitled to the best
kind of water he can get "
Hill sa1d the relative high
price of botued water is due to
several factors .
"The consumer Is paying for
Inspection of facilities, for a periodic lab exammatlon of water
being offered for sale, better
quality water and an Identifiable source," said Hill
The state agricultural official
said. there were about 10 or 15
bottled water producers m Ohio
10 years ago and about 60 thiS
year.
"We guarantee the safety, the
purity of (bottled water) at Its
source for microbiological proposes," said Hill. "About the
only thing we don 'I teat for Is
mineral content."

"On your job application, you mentioned that there was
one pet!on who inltuenced and shaped your lile mostbut, tell me, who IS this Howdy Doody?"

Committee Gets

GOP's Tax Plan
(Continued from page I)
million for library support, $104
, miUion for local government a1d
and $9 million for adminlatralion.
Thecorporatlonfranchlsetax,
to raise an additional $562 million over two years, would be
paid at the rate of five mills
on a corporation's net worth, or
4 or 8 per cent on net Income,
whichever would produce more,
starting next year.
Properjy Tax Relief
A total of $140 million of the
corporate revenues would be
used for property tax relief and
the other $422 million would go
into the state general revenue
fund.
Included in the new GOP tax
bUI are provisions requiring a
vote of the people of Ohio if
the rate of the personal mcome
lax Is to be raised, and forbidd·
mg property tax relief to those

rrn

who do not pay their real estate
taxes on time,
The GOP leadership apparently abandoned plans to tighten
eight sales tax loopholes for
corporations, smce no mention
of the proposal was made In the
bill.
Other provisions m the bill ·
-Repeal of Intangible personal property tax paid by Individuals.
-A rollback of the tangible
personal property tax paid by
corporations
-A 10 per cent across-theboard real estate tax reduction
for individuals, corporations and
utilities.
- A$2 million Increase In taxes on domestic insurance companies.
- A ,2,500 homestead exemplion for families with a total income of less than $6,000; $1,000
for those with higher mcomes.

New.s•••.in.·Briefs

Market Report
SALES REPORT
of Oblo Valley Uvestock Co.
Gallipolis, Oblo
Saturday, June 5,1971
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs 18 to
18.35; 220 to 250 lba. 17.85 to 18;
LiRhl 14 to 16.35; Fat Sows 12 to
14.50; Boars 12 50 to 13.20;
Pigs 6 to 13.50.
CA'M'LE- Steers 25 to 32.85;
Heifers28to34,75; BabyBeef34
to 45.40; Fat Cows 18 to 22;
Canners 18 to 23.25; Bulls 21 to
28. 75; Milk Cows 150 to 300. .
VEAL CALVES- Tops 41.40;
Seconds 38 to 40; Medium 35 to
37; Com. &amp; Hvs. 34 to 40; Culls
34 doW!). Baby Calves 20 to 60.
LAMBS - Tops 30.85.
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
HOGS- 200-230, 18.25; No. 1,
18; W-260, 17.25; 200-260, 16.50;
28G-300; 15.75; 190-200, 14.60;
400-450, 14.50; Boars, 15.50;
Stock Hogs, 12.56-17.70; Pigs by
the Head, 7.56-16.50
CATTLE - Choice Steers 3233.30; Good 3().31.75; Holstein
27 .30-30.50; Choice Heifers 2930.60; Good 27 75-28.50; Good
Cows 22.56-24; Utility ~21.85;
Canners and Cullers, 18.85
down; Bulls M.51).J3; Stock
Cattle Steers 25.75-32; Heifers
25.56-29.75; Heavy Stock Calves
Steers 32.56-37.25,
VEAL CALVES . Choice 4446.50; Good 41; Medium 35;
Baby Calves by the Head 36-76.
LAMBS- Cho1ce 30-31; Ewes
and Lambs by the Head, 23-27.

11

News, Event
BIBLES GIVEN SENIORS
Carpenter Baphst Church
honored high school seniors who
attend their church on Sunday
morning recenUy. Bibles were
presented
to
Barbara
Brookhart, Murrell Bailey,
Rexie Cheadle, Dale Jordan and
Robert Peck. These young folks
all were graduates of Alexander
High School, Albany.
Area SIDdenIll Graduate
Among
the
students
graduating from the eighth
grade at Albany Elementary
School were the following from
this community. Connie Miller,
Jackie Jordan, Donald Wooten,
Ronald White, Everett Shlltz,
Alice Peck, Kathy Massey,
Pamela King, Rendy Johnson,
Vickie Hoyd and Kim Ellis.

Welcome, M. Heath--Of Course, There
Will Be a Slight Fee for Docking!''

Murtaugh Back, Pirates Rout Cubs

'~

By United Press International
The Pittsburgh Pirates sure
know how to make a manager
feel wanted.
The Pirates, who celebrated
the return of manager Danny
Murtaugh Sunday with a 17-hJt
attack, collected 15 more
Monday as they routed the
Chicago Cubs, ll-6, to remam a

(Continued from page I)
committee.
Webater also requested that
the police and mayor's office be
cleaned and painted. The
request was granted.
- Street Supt. Calvin Lane
reported that 150 feet of
guardrail1sneeded at the foot of
Breezy He1ghts hill off
Mulberry Ave As soon as the
price of the guardrail is secured
by Legar, the railing will be
mstalled
A request for a Ialii license
made by Charles Hutton was
demed. Don Covert has three
cabs m operation, and no
change will be made unless
warranted, council Indicated.
A letter from the State Highway Department was read
directing the village to remove
a water bne along SR 33 where
the mterchange and approaches
'
to II will be constructed at Rock
Sprmgs. Removal of the eight- '
mch water line will cost the '
villiige approximately $24,000
The Me1gs Water Company had
been informed by the State
Department of Highways of the
arrangement However, when
the town purchased the water
company several years ago, the
buyer was not made aware of
the agreement, the mayor Sllld.
Council will wa1t until b1ds
are opened by the state on the
Route 33 construction before
taking any actiOn.
The mayor's report for May
showmg receipts m the amount
of $2292 50 was accepted.
Attendmg were Legar,
councilmen Franklin Rizer,
Ralph Werry, Jun Mees, and
Don Collins; councilwoman
Elma Russell, clerk Jane
CLEVELAND (UP!) - OhiO
Walton and treasurer Phyliss Welfare D1rector John E. Han- fare "does nothmg more than
guarentee a perpetuatiOn of a
Hennessy.
son said Monday night the GOP system that IS hated by the peo- LOST ANO FOUND
ordained $7.8 b111ion b1enniwn ple Jt tires to help, the adminiS- LOST, BOYS glasses around So
6lh St, M1ddleporl Phone
budget passed recently failed to trators who run 11, and the leg992 7057
mstitute welfare reform and was Islators who provided the
6 8 3lc
"just a repeat of the empty pro· money," Hansan said.
LOST IN vlclnlly of Hemlock
m1ses of the last e1ght years " The dU''ector d1d not restr1ct Grove, black and rust
"They ignored what Gov. John h1s criticism to the Repbulican- Doberman Pinscher 'Pup
J. Gilligan proposed m the way controlled legislature, blammg Reward Phone 992 7291.
6 7 6lc
Veterans Memorial Hospital of 'welfare reform' and substimpart a number of Oh10 mayors - - - - -- - - ADMITTED- Phyllis Stone, tuted nothing m 1ts place," Han- who have "Ignored the relief
Pomeroy; Edna Runnel , san sa1d
given to the Cities m the GilliPomeroy; Gladys Brewer, "They talked a lot but when gan AdminiStratiOn budget and
Portland; Constance Craig, 11 came to performance, 11 was pushe«&lt;, for more."
Pomeroy
JUst a repeat of the empty pro- Hansan sa1d Cleveland could
DISCHARGED - Lov1e mises of the last e1ght years," have saved $1.75 milliOn a year
Watson, Ross Moms, Gordon he told the Cleveland chapter of under the Gilligan welfare budAe1ker, Pauline Gallagher.
the National Association of So- get
cial Workers.
PLEASANT VALLEY
COLUMBUS(UPI)-Here IS a
Admissions: Sharon and The welfare dll'ector said the
MUSICAL
PLANNED
table showmg the top 10 counties
Republican changed budget fail·
Kevin Denny, Gallipolis Ferry; ed
to accomplish weHare reform The Cbes~ Fire Department m the state m terms of dollar
Paul Allinder, Dhronda because II did not provide for will sponsor a public musiCal
amounts collectible under a ReRobertson, Mrs R L. Givens, relief for local governments program at 7:30Pm Saturday
Mrs. Hilda Coleman, all Pomt counties or C!lles of the welfar~ at the Chester Grade School publican-drafted 1 7~percentm­
come tax, with revenues returnPleasant ; Kevin Fields, cost. Also, he said, it did not With the Bissell Brothers from
Pomeroy, Chancery Meadows, provide for the shiftmg of the Chester and the Gospelall'es of able to the count1es
F1gures are for f1scal 1973,
Glenwood ; Mrs. Okey Van- health care fmancial burden Rutland to be featured musical
the
first full year of antiCipated
Meter, Mason, Mrs. Denms from state and county govern- groups. Proceeds Will go
operatiOn of the mcome tax.
Deal, Apple Grove.
ment to the federal government towards the purchase of fll'e COUNTY
DOLLARS
Discharges: David Gaines,
Hansan said Gilligan's $9 1 eqUipment
Cuyahoga
$145
2 nulbon
Mrs Wayne Capehart, Mrs
Hamilton
75.7 million
Donald Smith and son; Mrs. bill10n budget provided these
Franklin
48 4 mill10n
shlftings of financial responsiClarence Embnck.
MARRIAGELICENSES
Montgomery
41.7rnTllion
bility as well as maximization
of federal funds to promote Aid Elton Melvm Steele 19 Summ1t
36.1 million
'
'
Two Defendants
to Dependent Children and allo- Pomeroyl Rt 3, and Helen Jean Lucas
30 1 million
Grmun,
20,
Kirkland,
D1
;
Allan
Stark
20.0 milliOn
cations to htre state employes
Fined by Mayor
16 9 mil110n
to guard agamst welfare fraud Doyle Gibson, 21, Pomeroy, Rt Mahomng
Two defendants were fmed and abuse.
4, and Sabra Joanna Canaday, Trumbull
12.8 million
and two others forfeited bonds The substitute budget for wei- 21, Rutland.
Loram
12.6 million
m Syracuse Mayor Herman
London's court Monday night, , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Marshall Milton Var1an I
--------------~

Cites No Reform

HOSPITAL
NEWS

Comparison of
Impact Made

Mrs. Ida Denruson, Salem
Center, visited her sister, Mrs.
.
Continued from Page 1
Faye Jordan.
Mrs . Bernice McKmght,
In 1972. Kennedy said the only reason . Nixon continues a
Sharon
and Christy, Columbus,
"diacredited" policy of Vlelnllllli2ation Is the President's "invisited her mother, Mrs. Goldie
' tendon to plsy hla last great card for peace at a time closer to
Gillogly and other relatives
• November, 1972, when the chances will be greater that the action
here on Sunday. On Monday
' will benefit the coming presidential campaign."
theyaccomparuedMr. and Mrs.
•
The Massachuselt8 Democrat spoke to a band of high-level
D.
0. McKnight to Downington
' lobbyists In town In an effort to talk Congress Into ending the
1
where they a!tended a birthday
' Vietnam war this year. "What has the President to fear?"
dinner for Mr. and Mrs. Glen
' Kennedy asked the lawyers Involved in the "Lobby of
Haning.
, Americans" activity. "Surely,notthe loss of office. Surely not the
Guests of Mrs. Murl Galaway
" Judcment of history.
were Mr. and Mrs. Richard
·
"In the loas of office is a fear that can never justify the
Parsons, Dayton; Kathy
: sacrillce of a single human life. And the judgment of history
Woodrum and Mrs. Wilma
PI'. PLEASANT
; should not be feared at all, since it Is a judgment made long ago on
Petty
and Bill, McArthur. Mrs.
LIVESTOCK SALES CO.
. Vietnam by people of the world.
Galaway accompanied the
Pl. Pleasant, W.Va.
Parsons to Lancaster where
Saturday, June 5, 1971
. Gothamites Living Hard
HOGS - 175 to 220 17.50 to they visited Mrs. Goldie Chase
&gt;
NEW YORK - CITY OFFICIALS and Army engmeers 18.60; Heav1es 14.50 to 17 25; at Crites Nursing Home. Mrs.
~ werked through the night to keep New York Clty functioning Lights 14-16.50; Fat Sows 12 to Chase Is the mother of Mrs.
., today and prevent a repeat of Monday's massive traffic snarl 16; Boars 11 to 14.75; Pigs 6 to Parsons and sister of Mrs.
caused by a municipal employe strike.
11; Stock Shoats 13 to 21.
No one guaranteed they would do it. Union leaders threatened
Dye, Columbus,
II
CATTLE - Steers 24 40 to
an escalat1011 of the strike. Drawbridge operators employed by 28 50; Heifers 20 to 28.50; Fat andMUdredCarpenter,Aibany, Racine, $5 and costs for failure
~ the city walked off the job Monday morning, leaving 28 of the Cows 19.50 to 23.75; Canners were guests of Mr. and Mrs. to)'leldrightofway to a passmg
BY JACK O'BRIAN
duke &lt;lined there with pals.
g city's 29 vital drawbridges open and inoperable. Other city em- 16.75 to 20.25; Bulls 25.25 to Dale Dye.
vehicle, and Gary W. Eynon,
''MARIGOLDS" AUTHOR
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Larry
Stanley
Syracuse,
$10
and
costs,
for
Rployes left trucks stalled In traffic lanes.
Betsy Palmer and Anne Meara secretly taped
28.50; Milk Cows 140 to 195;
and
Anna,
Erie,
Penn.,
spent
diSturbing
the
peace.
Forfeiting
FINDS
MUGGERS
FLOWERING
The result was lelll of thousands of motorisla lined bumper- Stock &lt;;ows and Calves 220 to
an ABC-TV panel possibility, "Says Who?"
NEW YORK - Pulitzer Prize dramatist (this (Edmund Lowe's ooooold cinema catch-phrase)
~ IIHRunper coml!i In and out of Manhattan during the morning 310; Stock Steers 23.85 to 31; the weekend here with their bonds were Donna J. Sellers,
:~ and evening rush hours. The commuters' plight worsened when Stock Heifers 19.50 to 27 50; parents, Mr . and Mrs. Lewis Syracuse, $15, unsafe operation, year for "Marigolds") Paul Zindel moved on his - there also wer.e early TV quizzes tagged
and Nancy, local, and and James P. Sellers, Syracuse, wave of success from placid Staten Island to E. "What's the Story" and "Who Said That?" ...
'~ the temperature rose to 93 degrees, New York's hottest day of the Stock Steer Calves 29.75 to Smith
Mr.
and
Mrs. Eugene Stanley, $15, squealing tires.
11th St. In Greenwich VIllage and prompUy was !be N. Y. Musicians Union can't get Mayor
35.50; Stock Heifer Calves 27 80
f. year.
Albany.
mugged at knifepolnt ... ''It was boring," Paul Lindsay to accept the offer to pony up half 1ts
to 33.50.
Betty Jean Jordan was a
told us. "l'dreadaboutsomanyandwatchedTV
VEAL CALVES - Tops 42.75;
matching cash for a free series ofmUSlc InN. Y.
guest
of
her
cousin,
Virginia
news
pictures so often, it seemed we'd rehearsed parks ... On May 29, Bea llllle snubbed 73, Bea
Seconds 40.10; Medium 33 to
~ Margaret Jane Miller, 81,
She was preceded In death by 36.50; c.'ommon &amp; Heavies 35 to Jordan frbm Sunday until
it." ... The mugg got $4 of Paul's unregal told Great British Disaster pub-owner Aubrey
~ Pomeroy Route 4 (the Hysell her parents, George and Nancy 41.50.
Tuesday.
royalties ... The forecast for Joe E. Lewis'
Franklin: "At least no one can say I was •29 on
~ Run area) died Monday at Miller, a brother, Thomas, and
Mrs. Jerry Culwell fell at her
diabetes~glect coma Is tragic .
May 73rd....ABC-TV newscaster Tom Dunn, who
~ Veterans Memorial Hospital. two SISters, Alvy and Iva Miller, Top 10 Counties
home here and is confined to
Paul Bochicchio our friend who as got caught mnocently In a wild headlined realty
:: A member of the Bradford Funeral semces will be held
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital, A Pomeroy commumty "Originals by Paul" :oakes custom Wigs high
~ Church of ChriSt, Miss 1\.filler Is at 3 p.m. Thursday at the Subject to Tax
Athens, with a l:i'oken hlp and vacationchurchschoolhasbeen aboveBdwy.&amp;42ndSI.,suffered the too-familiar ~e and finally exlricated himself laudably,
~ surviVed by two 818ters, Mrs. Bradford Church of Christ wilh
fractured riba.Tuesday
She underwent
• • , it was an- armeckobbery ,wlldfirlng' hla hope1ess ne igh- started his deflated career all over again at N. y.
1 for Aug .....
COLUMBUS (UPI)-Here is surgery
Called
se
indie news station WINS.
011
~ Lucy Glenn, Pataskala, and the Rev. Clifford Smith ofan impact comparison of the In· here by her ~ous ~ondltion nounced today. Young people borhood ... Pauls Insurance adjuster apologized
Mel Brandt, fanner president of the radio TV
~ Mrs. Ruby Reibel, Hillsdale, fJc1ating. Burial will be In the dividual income taxes proposed
bers of h f mil from age three through the for arriving two weeks late and told Paul that, union AFTRA, conducted classes for un~ ~ch.; three brothers, Herbert Bradford Cemetery. Fr1ends
by the administration of Gov. ;:: :::Collier, ~c~naX; completion of the ninth grade since the start\ of 1971, 9,300 robberies have derprivileged high school-age kids who want to
~and Ronald, of Middleport, and may call at the Ewing Funeral
John J. Gilligan and House Re· Mr. and Mrs. Jolm Culwell, are invited to attend the school plagued the 14th precinct alone! ... Paul says get Into broadcasting or even JUS! lnnprove their
-•ry area all now wor k
Home anytime.
publicans.
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. which will be held from 6:30 to bu.sinesH'olk In hla """
elocution and enunciation for the future. Mel
Prepared by Glll~gan 's state Roscoe Tackett and Mrs. Ed 8:30 p.m. at the former behind locked doors, peepholes are standard,
discovered what has annoyed lots of TV-viewers
Finance Department, 11 shows Hensley Flatwoods Kentucky· Pomeroy Junior High School. chained doors the norm, huge trained-to-befor years: The endless use of "you know" every
the burden of taxes paid by and Mr. ~nd Mrs. T: H. Blan~ Children are Invited to attend vici0118 dogs at the ready 1n office building
regardless of church affilliition. lobbies plus all manner of wild safeguards and few sylliibles and indiscriminate conversational
a res1dent of 1620 Chatham and James, of Chicago; Mrs. vanous groups of taxpayers un- and Greg, Jackson.
punctuation using "man" for nervous self.
der the 1 to 8 per cent gradual· Mr. and Mrs. John Kimes Anyone having questions sighs. "What can be done?" ... A lot more !n- mterruption.
Ave., GaUipohs, died In the Orville (Lucy) Randolph
Holzer Medical Center on Buffalo, w. Va.; Mrs. Ro~ ed tax of the Gilligan admlnsi- (Jane Caldwell), Columbus, about the school may call992- terestlnvicUmsandalotlessfearfortherights
Toile Fields Is getting rich In Las Vegas,
of crf!nlnals.
If Fourth Ave., at 11:15 p.m., (Delores) Day, Crown City traUon (G) and the 1.75per cent were weekend guests o1 her 2507, 992-2010 or 992-3172.
Charley Clarke of the famed P. J Clarke's 3rd Miami, and elsewhere so tenants in her OO&amp;t
.~~Monday Shehadbeenmfaillng Mrs. Allen (Mary) Sayre, flat tax of House Republicans uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.
apartment building at 750 Shore Rd, Long
William Th01ll88.
Ave. saloon dynasty (Charley was born upstiiits Beach, N. Y., )llsh she'd do something about its
health the past four years.
Pennsylvania; and Mrs. (R).
Guests of Mr. and Mrs . during the past year 'at Car· and has bartended there 25 years) takes his
Mrs. Kerwood was born in Virginia Roberts, Gallipolis.
condition ... They've appealed to the authorities
Meiga County on July 19, 1887, One son preceded her in death. Income Bracket Per Cent of William Lawson and family penter Baptist Church were lovely wife to Bermuda for the1r silver an. who seem to have joined ToUe, a group of tenants
Tax Burden were Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wood given to Mrs. Reymond Nelson, niversary this week . . Champ Joe FraZier, who now sighs to us, at the inattention.
dauaJ!ter of the late DaVId and Forty-two grandchildren
llrglnia Belle McCardle survive.
G
R and family, Charleston, W.Va., Rayma Sue Wllaon, Mr. and reacts With plenty of cool to all Muhammad Ali's
Producer David Merrick said In the Wall St.
Tayler. She was one of seven She was a member of the $0 to $6,000
3.3 6.4 hla brother, Tommy Daniels, Mrs. William Cteeclle, Heleo lojmx, may not appreciate Clayfooted Cassius'
$8,000 to $10,000
~ clllldren. She attended Meigs Church of God In Putnam $1,000 to 116,000
11.2 17.9 Detroit, Mich., and their son, Jeffers, Bonnie, Don and Kathy desire to take over Joe's Vacation Valley Journal he Isn't happy unless he has "a half
dozen offerings at least" 011 Bdwy.; DaVid must
~ CQunty ~hooll,
County, W. Va.
27.2
35.5
Mllre
Lawson,
wbo
has
emCheadle
and
Emma
Wbittrail!lng
camp
in
the
Poconos
for
his
Jlminy
Ellis
$15,000 to $25,000
be a doleful fellow indeed with just one show left
23.5 23.0 ployment at Fremon~ Ohio.
tlngton.
tuneup
One Iiiier surviVes, Mrs. Funeral services will be held
$25,000 to $50,000
("PromlBeS, Promisea") and that on twofm ...
12.9 6.6 Vlsitcrs of the Ney Carpenter Mr alid Mrs Cecil Black'
Irene Phaelen of Urlchsville, 2 p.m., Thursday at Miller's ISO,OOOandover
21.9 8.6 home during the netend were ood.and Ua
CMrabelle
Celebtlty jetjullketsare dashing farther every Dep't store heir Peter Gimbel's "Blue Water
' Ohio.
Home for Funerals with Rev.
Margaret Edmnnston Vinlcln· ~ Vllltld 111111 '111r ~~~e~ea' Digbt:'lbenextfawncyVIPairllftwillbea week White Death" actlon.flick II a llll88h
She married ffichard Ker· Everett Delaney o!flclating.
Anna Parker, ~nd; Mr:
and Wlllllm C ·Ptck
In Tellll¥ for the 2,10011! anniversary of Iran's everyone agrees it couldn't happen to a nicer
wood in 1111. They Uyed In Burial will be In Pine Stnet
LODGE TO MEET
and Mrs. Albert~vey,Dover; at lbe Dale Dye~.
11111 ezlsltl}ce 11111 Oct.... ~ormer N.Y. hotelier millionaire ... Jolm Wayne's 84th birthday
Muon County, W. Va., IDIW Cemetery.
•
Work will be In the master Mrs. John Dye Columbus· Mrs Emile Olivia PaltersNeal Lar!g'a up 14&gt; bta old\Scnticb: Hired half a !J1!sent last week was the bullelln that bo!lllfflce
1141. He Jlf'eCeded her In death Friends may clll at the mason degree when Shade
va.,1NnPataatthe dGan H-. Kq dolla to hQateas hla Grand gorssea fer hla "Big Jake" film are both big afd
JD U.. dran
funeral borne anytime after 2 River Lodge 463, FMM, meets MlldredCirpen~,Aibany,and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ollie
Dye,
Jocal.
Peckbcmeandlllllta•ill•uf
Babamt club, XanadQ ... The Duchess of Wind· jake; It's a family .rfalr - hil eldest son
llcbt chll survivlna are p.m. Wedneaday.
at Cheater*' 8 p.m. Thursday.
Perfect attendance pinl for lbeDivlaflmla,forapiiiW!ng IOI'~ta~note!GJOIIIIPIIMelz,bosachef produced and two of hla !ada are In it ... Bob
•on: ~t, Coal
All muter maaona are Invited
thoee pre-tat~ School at the Ttwple 01ft11 Grow.· ci La foret in tbe Pierre Hotel, after she and the Mitchum's 8011 01rla also.

G=.a~ellle

re~~!~d~ereFrancesi.Foster,

1

11

vOICe
• along Broadway

Pomeroy CJturch
School Planned

half game beh1nd the St. LoUis
Cardmals m the NatiOnal
League East
St. LOUIS ralhed from behmd
to edge Atlanta, 7-6, m 10
mmngs m the only other maJor
league game
Murtaugh had been Sidelined
for nearly three weeks w1th
chest pams but returned

S~nday

to watch the Pirates
outslug the Houston Astros, ~.
He was at the helm agam
Monday as the Pirates pounded
SIX pitchers for 15 h1ts,
mcludmg homers by W1l11e
Stargell, AI Oliver and Bob
Robertson
Despite the awsome show of
power over the last two days,

CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
Cleveland lnd1ans downed the
Cmcmnab Reds 3-2 Monday
mght In an exhibitiOn game cut
short m the Sixth mnmg by
ram .
The stop here was the start
of a road trip for the Reds,
who move mto Houston tomght,
and the start of a homestand
for the lnd1ans, who entertam
the Ch1cago Wh1te Sox tomght
Gary Nolan, 3-6, was set to
p1tch for the Reds agamst the
Astros' Don Wilson, 4-3. "Sudden Sam" McDowell, 5-5, was
startmg pitcher for the Tribe
agamst the Sox' Wilbur Wood,

4-2
Cincmnah nghthander Milt
W!lcox walked m an lnd1an
Monday mght m the fiflb that
proved to be the wmnmg run
The game was the second th1s
season between the cross-state
teams, Cmcmnall wmmng 3-1
on Apnl 22 at home
Rich Hand, the wmnmg pitcher, went 5 1-3 mnmgs before
rook1e Ed Farmer came m to
stnke out Pat Corrales w1th
runners on second and th1rd
and one out m the s1xth. With
two stnkes on Woody Woodward the rams came to end the
game
"I thought Hand threw the

ball hard for the first three mmng ," Cleveland Manager Alvm Dark said "But his arm IS
st1ll not as strong as 11 was
last season "
Hand, who posted a 6-13 record last season, walked three
and fanned three The 22-yearold nghthander tnggered a
two-run Reds fourth mmng by
throwmg a w1ld pitch to second
on a doubleplay ball and the
Reds went on to t1e the score
at 2-2.
Roy Foster smgled home the
f1rst Cleveland run m the second mmng and a Red throwmg
error m the third gave the
Tnbe an unearned run

Two One-Hitters in Openers
The Middleport Little League
season opened Monday with two
teams rackmg up unpreSSJve
VICtories and two young hurlers
tossmg one h1tters.
The Indians' Jeff Beaver held
the Mets to one smgle m an
abrev1ated contest that went
only four mnlngs, The Indians
pounded out 14 h1ts that
P.l'oduced 15 runs. In h1s stellar
performance, Beaver walked no
one and fanned SIX. Jeff Miller
was the loser. He passed SIX and
struck out three
Big stickers for the Indians
were Lynch w1th two smgles
and a double, Hlndy a tr1ple and
smgle, Beaver two singles,

Cheshire And
Addaville Top
OVL Standings
Cheshire and Addav1lle
contmue to lead the Ohio Valley
Little League followmg VICtones Monday mght
Cheshire's Tigers edged Rw
Grande, 2-1 , AddavJile bombed
Green, 14-1; Centerville tripped
Salem, 9-3; and Vmton shutout
Syracuse, 7./J on a perfect no hit
effort by Cla1r Wellington
In the only other league
game, Racme defeated the
defendmg champion Bidwell
Pirates, 11-7
The OhiO Valley Little League
opened last Thursday with
Chesh1re defeatmg Bidwell, 156; Addav1lle tnmmed Rio
Grande, 10-2; Centerville edged
Syracuse, 5-2 and Salem mpped
Green, 4-3
In Saturday mght achon,
Vmton posted a 6~ wm over
Green; Centerville crushed RIO
Grande, 16-4; Cheshire bombarded Salem, 17-3 and Addavllle outslugged B1dwell, 8-4

NOW···

jpt1Jad.

A TIE TACK
BY ANSON

Gleason two doubles, M Venoy
a double, T. Venoy, Gardener,
Lee, and DeLong each a smgle
Greg Becker had the only hit
for the Mets, a smgle
The Middleport Braves were
unpress1ve as they banged out
11 h1ts and !hell' star pitcher
threw a brllhant one hitter at
the Reds, wmnmg 17-3. M1ck
Davenport had a no-hitter for
fiVe and a thU'd mmng before
Del Call broke it up w1th a last
mmng smgle. The Braves led
only 3-0 after five innmgs but
exploded for 14 runs m the last

frame to wm gomg away
The VIctory was all the more
sweet for the Braves as 11 came
over the defending champiOns
managed by Woody Call.
Steve Pickens was charged
w1th the loss He needed last
ummg relief from Ronme Casc1.
Steve Bachner lead the
Braves' onslaught With three
hits, while Steve Bachner led
the Braves over the Reds With
three hits; Tun Thomas, M1ck
Davenport and Mike Lavender
all had two h1ts and Dave Snuth
and Dick Owen had smgles.

Yanks, Tigers Winners
The Yankees whipped the
P1rates 6-2 and the T1gers
routed the Dodgers 11-5 Monday
m Pomeroy Little League play
In the Yankee-P1rate hit,
M1ke Owens and Greg
Brownmg teamed to pitch the
Yankees to victory as they
limited the Pirates to only four
hits. They KO'd seven and
pass ed seven Doug Browmng,
who struck out two and walked
one went the route for the
losers
Yankee batters supported
their pitchers With 14 hlts,Tlm
Hood leadmg the attack with
two smgles and a double Other
hitters were Dave Burt a smgle
and double, Pat Owens a smgle
and double, Greg Brownmg two
songies, M1ke Owens a double
and a homer, Charhe Burton
two songles, Rick Snyder a
tr1ple and Kelley Taylor a
songle
For the losers, Jeff Couch had
a single, Duane Quails, Doug
Browmng and Edd1e S1sson
each a double
In the other game the T1gers
banged out 11 hils off two
Da1e
Do d ger
P1t Chers
Browmng went all the way on
the mound for the Tigers,
hold mg the Dod gers t0 seven
hits Dale KO'd seven and
walked one Rick Taylor fanned
e1ght and walked f1ve for the
Dodgers
Tiger hillers were Sc1tes With
two homers, Kelley Hawk a
triple, Dale Browmng, a double
and a smgle, Bob McClure, a
double, Dan Moms a smgle,
Rick J ohnson and Don
Icenhower each a smgle
Yankees
302 liJO-.j) 14 0
011 000--2 4 1
PIra tes
Owens, G. Browmng and

an d Perry, M1nn 8 4, Lollch,

Det 8 s

VISIT BAKER'S

i ~~~a!~=~v~:~~~poUs,

f

IF'atoh ch1ld or grandch1ld
represented by a
in their birth month color.
IChl,ice of white or black
Mot:her of Pearl center,
bellow or wh1te fimsh.

oJe

Pa.J

Mr:

..i

bari.w.

,,

and

'

INCLUDING UONfl

GOESSLER
Jewelry Store
.'

Court St.

Pomeroy

;; m

yJ:,,

Young~

Triple
In Sixth Wins

Murtaugh "G1ush and Veale
d1d the JOb today and Mudcat
Grant 1s capable of domg the
same thong "
Veale, who took over from
starter Nelson Briles m the
th1rd and worked 2 1-3 onmngs
before mJunng his shoulder,
sa1d he doubted the InJury was
a muscle pull
"1 felt somethmg tear m the
back of my left shoulder, h1gh
up It's not a muscle pull I've
had those before and 1! doesn't
fee l hke that It JUS! hurts like
hell I'm goong to talk to the
club doctor and I hope 1t's not
senous I'm usually a fast

•

FURNITURE
M"lddle ' 0.
'------i~------iiiiiii.ll...,....lol_

BAKER

....

healer so I hope there's no
problem
The Cardmals ralhed from a
four-run deficit to tie the score
m the mnth before Wlnmng m
the lOth on a run-scQrmg smgle
by Ted Sunmons Matty Alou
was hJt by a p1tched ball on a
controversial call to lead off the
lOth then stole second before
sconng on S1mmons' hJt
Two-run doubles by Ted
S1zemore and Gerry McNertney
on the mnth enabled the
Cardmals to tie the score. Hank
Aaron, Ralph Garr and Zollo
Versalles each collected four
h1t.s for the Braves
11

The Cwcmnatl Reds will
conduct a tryout camp and
clime at St Albans H1gh School
F1eld, St Albans, W Va.,
Saturday, June 12, 1971, at 9 a.
m.
Lyle Wolverton, local scout
for the Reds, sa1d the camp will
be m charge of area Scout
Elmer Gray, ass1sted by Scouts
Jun Vennan of Pomeroy, Gene
Bennett and h1mself
Players, 16-years old or over,
b
DUNFEEDOESITAGAIN
should report at 9 a m and e
prepared to work until 1 p m - Kenneth Dunfee, Pomeroy,
Amencan LegiOn players must displays his prize catch of
have wntten pennlsslon from catfish taken at Hidden Lakes
their managers or post com- near Pomeroy. From the left
mander Players are expected are a three pounder; 21'l
to be 10 umform and furmsh pounder and a SIK pounder.
their own shoes and gloves. The Dunfee earlier had another
Reds w111 furmsh all other outstandmg catch at Hidden
eqmpment
Lakes.
Prospects will pay their own
MaJor League Results
expenses to and from the camp, By Unrted Press Jnternaloonal
but 1f s1gned to a contract by the
Nahonal League
( 10 onnongs)
Reds, will be reimbursed.
st L
000 011 oo 4 1_ 7 l2 2
Atla
100 001 310 o- 6 13 1
lJos~on
Torres.
171 Shaw
171
Arroyo 18) Lonzy
Drabowsky
(9) and
Simmons. ' Reed Priddy (9) ,
Barber 1101 and Kmg WP.J I y
Drabowsky (3 0) LP- Pnddy

Ace
'T'ons All-Star
JJalloting

(2 2)

NEW YORK (UP! ) - Early
returns from fans vollng for
AmeriCan League all-stars put
Boston Red Sox outfielder Carl
Yastrzemsk110 the vanguard of
the ballotmrl for the !971 mld• m Detrmt, July
season classiC
·ll,ltwasdtsclosedMondoy )'f"'&gt;.,
Yastrzemsk1, a three-llme
A L battmg champiOn who IS
currently hlttmg .298, polled
31,645 votes to take a commandmg lead for one of the
three startmg outfield posts.
Tony Ohva of Mmnesota
collected 19,707 votes and
Frank Robmson of Ball!more
rece1ved 17,924 m the outfield
ballotmg
Balhmore has three players
leadmg m the votmg accordmg
to Baseball CommiSSioner
Bowie Kuhn The Or10les' other
Robmson, Brooks, heads the
th1rd basemen w1th 27,818 votes
and Boog Powell appears
headed for the startmg f1rst
base pos11JOn w1th 28,458
Boston had another apparent
starter m Luis Apancw when
the Red Sox shortstop gamed a
surpnse leadmg margin of
19,434 despite a balling average
that has dropped below 200
Rod Carew of Mmnesota led
all second basemen w1th 18,878
and B•ll Freehan of DetrOit was
ahead in the poll for catchers
w1th 15,181 votes .
Top runners-up for each
pos11lon were Norm Cash of
Detroot at hrst base, 8,047;
Dave Johnson of Baltimore at
second base, 8,759; Harmon
Killebrew of Mmnesota at third
base, 13,266; Jun Fregosl of
Callforma at shortstop, 7,062;
Ray Fosse of Cleveland,
catcher, 13,066; and Outfielders
Bobby Murcer, New York,
14,993; Frank Howard, Washmgton, 13,146, and AI Kaline,
DetrOit, 8,120
Earl Weaver of Baltimore,
who will manage the AmeriCan
League, w11l chose the pitchers
and substitutes
The National League f1rst
~e_turns will be relea~I!_Fndat

RACINE - J F Young
tr1pled home two runs m the
SJK!h and last mmng here
Sunday to g1ve Racme L1ttle
League a 7-6 victory over
Syracuse Young, the pitcher,
held Syracuse to f1ve smgles, h1t
by K Wmebrenner, Cundiff,
Gumther, Roush and Huston.
Other fu!cme hitters were
Hendncks a tr1ple and smgle,
Young, two doubles With his I
The. Daily Sentinel
triple, Perry H1ll 'two smgles,
DEVOTED
TO THE
Mark Sayre a smgle, Billy
INTEREST OF
Harns two smgles and Terry
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
Turner a double
Exec Ed .
Battenes . Racme, Young and
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
Ctty Edttor
Steve H1ll , Syracuse, Bass, K.
Publt she d dally except
Wm ebrenner (4) and B Satu rda y by Th e Ohio Valley
Publ•sh•no Company , 111
Hamilton
Court St
Pom eroy , OhtO,
MANAGERS TO MEET
Managers of the Galli a-Meigs
Pony League Associahon will
meet this evemng on the
Pomeroy Diamond followmg all
league games to determine the
outcome of a protest flied by
Middleport Manager Woody
Call 1D COn]UnCI!On Wllh last
Friday's 11·2 loss at Bidwell All
managers are- urged to be
present

~

'

Reds Set
Tryouts

so

'

:l ~

Bnles, Veale (31 GIUsti (51
and Sangul llen , Pappas, New
man 181.
(5) , Tompkms
Bonham 171,
son
181.Stephen
Regan
(9) and Breeden WP- Vea le 12
Ol LP- Pappas (6 61 HRsStargell
Oliver
(1st) ,
Roberlson(19lh).
(11th),
Williams
(141N. • , , ,
• ''

Three More
By United Press lnternaUonal
Don B1es, Art Wall, Tom
WeiSkopf, Mike Souchak
Doug Sanders qualified Monday
for the June 17-20 U.S. Open_ln
Phtladelphia. Dan Sikes, Dow
Finsterwald, Jacky Cupit and
George Knudson failed to make
the grade
A total of 72 players, led by
B1es' ~7-135 at the Atlanta
Country Club, qualified for the
t971QpenattheMerwn Country
Club. Another 43 will earn
berths m the f1eld today after
sectional qualifying rounds in
Washmgton,
St
LoUis,
Pinehurst, N.C., Pittsburgh and
Montclair, N.J.
Most of the top names who
qualified Monday earned entry
m Atlanta as 39 players made
the 145 cutoff. Sikes lost h1s b1d
m a six-man playoff for the last
two spots. Dave Marr and Gr1er
Jones rea ched the tourney
proper with the two low scores
m the playoff
Lou Graham turned in a 136 at
Atlanta, Dave Eichelberger
carded a 138, Romero Blancas
and Charles Coody shot !40's,
Art Wall and Rod Funseth made
11 with !41's and Weiskopf and
Charles Sifford were in at 112
Sanders tied Dave Bradbury

anp

. . ·-- .---

the Sports Desk
bv chet Tannehill

. __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . . _ _ . . , . . . _ . . . _ . ........ . . _ . _ _ , _ _. _ _ . . . . _ _ . . ,_ _~

Notes to pass the Time of Day :
I was haP.PY for Henry Clatworthy's sake to learn over the
weekend that e1ther he has qwt bowling or hla game has gone
sour How has 11 been deduced he's no longer bowling? Because he
wasn't m the lineup of champion teams published Monday, or in
the gallery of spec111l recognition winners on Sunday.
Henry obviously had to do something about his bowling, The
last time I v~1ted his living room trophies were everywhere, and
he hkely had a few bushels stashed away out of sight to boot. He
Just has no more trophy space
Th1s may all be wrong Henry may still be bowling at
Gallipolis, or Pt. Pleasant, or have teammates at the Pomeroy
Lanes who, like me, have trouble keepmg the ball' free of the
gutters That would be Henry He'~ forever willing to use hla vast
store of pal!ence and knowledge to help the less endowed.
H that's 1t, maybe Henry just couldn't pull hiS team into a title
and 1ts share of the shiney hardware passed out by the Lanes'
management last Friday night
EVERYONE WHO SAW JEFF MORRIS come on fast as a
pass rece1vmg end last fall, and as the Marauders' big man on the
boards last Winter, has to be anticipating the coming football and
basketball seasons. Jeff, who 1s commg mto hiS senior year, Is
b1gger than ever - he looks at least 6-4 but may be a shade shy of
that - w1thout a wasted pound anywhere
The word was around last fall that Jeff lacked straightaway
speed But this handsome young man hsd then, and no doubt still
wdl have, the uncanny knack of getting open the InStant needed to
get h1s hands on a football. HIS height and jumping ability are
great pass catching assets, too Some faster boys around the
league, perhaps, have gone down and out and been covered by the
defense, whereas Jeff will be open for a snare of the ball.
Morris has what is known in the trade as good hands. What
touches them sticks That's espeCially valuable to an end in
football and a rebounder in basketball
SOME40YEARSAGO,giveortakeacouple,Donald(Pizzle)
Wolfe coached basketball at Middleport. His tenure (perhaps
mercifully) was shorWved; he shortly moved upriver to Racine
High School where Charles Hayman was fashioning basketball
won-lost records the envy of about everybody Don took over
baseball which he coached well into the 195Qi.
It's probable that Dan's move from Middleport in the early
30s to a head coaching position in Racme was the last before Bob
Ashley, a native of Middleport and football coach there for a
time, took the head football job at Racinethe
in 1966. Ashley
h f may
1
have begun a precedent, for thiS year Sou rn Hlg , ormer y
Racme, Will have two head coaches who are natives of Middleport, and graduated from Middleport High School.
hall
b k ft
full
Bruce Wallace, Mars
U. defensive ac , a er a
season workmg at the junior high level, now has his old high
school coach's (Ashley) head football job. And Asa Bradbury,
fresh out of Marietta College, IS taking over the basketball job.
Bradbury'shlghschoolcoachwasCariWoHe,whostillholdsmost
of Racme's mdividualscorlng recorda.
The best of luck to both. May they enjoy the success coaching
that Don Wolfe did in baseball
llln
bo
I hope they have half as much fun later te g tales a ut
the1r early coaching as does Wolfe spinning yarns of his early
daysa tM'ddl
I epor.t Togethimtalkingaboutthose days of the 10
to 8scores in basketball is to beguaranteedalaugha minute.
Wolfe has been teaching commercial subjects at Meigs since
' Is
1 ex tra duy
1 qn the Cerf
1 1 a1 .and, a·
d
I cqnsollda,tiOli,, !!Jld dong

u.• s• Open

Jlilillllll;~tl'6e"'ld~BMile alh\et\el~llt.--

£)..,

0

Y~AD

l"f.
'
n
l y r or

at 143 for the low score ln
quahfymg at Dallas as seven
golfers reached the Open
Souchak, playing at the Red
Run Golf Club m RoYal
Oak,
'
M1ch, also had a 143.
The veteran Torruny Bolt, 53year-old former U.S. Open
champion, Withdrew from the
Michigan qualifymg ro1md because he still was suffering the
effects of a recent bout with
pneumonia
Fmsterwald was not among
the three who qualified at the
Rolling Hills Country Club In
Denver. Bill Blsdorf of Evergreen, Colo., made it with a 137,
George Keyes of Phoenix
qualified with a 141 and Paul
Purtzer of Phoernx With a 142.

-· • "'

Bob Smith of Sacramento,
Calif, headed seven qualifiers
at Chicago with a 139. Bob Ellis
of Fondulac, Wis., had II good
shot at a berth
ded with a firsttheround
las
68, but fa
to a 79 on
t
18 for a 147, two short of the
qualifymg figure.
Sam Carmichael, a golf
course operator from Martin.sVIlle, Ind., showed them how its
d
t th Cl
k Country
one a e ovemoo
Club in Cincinnati, Ohio, when
he came through with a threeunder par 139 on a 68 and 70.
Jun McLean, a 21-year~ld
amateur from Seattle had a 144
and Jolm Kallnka,
1 a 47-year~ld
f
pro from Hono ulu shota 140 or
the two qualifying spots from
Seattle, Wash

Bank the "One-Stop" way
Wouldn't it be more efficient to
have one. central place for all
your banking
one place to
save, to check, to borrow? It
s ure would! And this is the
place.

Yes, and a good lime lo

I

check Insurance onf boats,

ca mp1ng and sporls
equlpmenl - also family
acc1dent and liability

2157

Second class postage pa1d at
Pome,.oy , Oh•O
Nat .ona l adverttstng
represen tati ve
Bott•nelll
Gallagher , Inc, 12 Easl 42nd
Sf , New York C1ty , New York
Su bscr •ptton rates
De
livered by carrier where
availa ble SO cen ts per week .
By Motor Route where carrie r
se r v•ce not available One
month $1 75 By mall In Ohto
and W Va , One year SU 00
Stx month s $7 2S
Three
months U
Subscrtr,t•on
price •ncludes Sunday T mes
Senttnel

~~~~~~;~h ~~ ~~ ~~g::: 1 ~

~· ~--·-~·-·--·

"Vacation $
almost here! "

45769 Bus•ness Offt ce Phone
992 2156, Ed•tor.al Phon e 992

$7.50

0

By Unoted Press lnlernatoonal
Amencan League
Easl
w L Pel GB
Baltimore
31 19 620
Boston
~~
!Y;:
Detroot
23 28 451 8'12
Cleveland
New York
23 30 434 9'12
Washmgton
33 365 13
w L Pet GB sa• s
West
Oakland
')'; ~8 ~~~ GB
Kansas C1ty 26 23 531 8
Minnesola
27 27 500 9'12
Ca liforn 1a
26 29 473 11
Ch1cago
20 28 417 13'12
Milwaukee 20 29 408 14
Monday 's Results
No games scheduled
Today's Probable Pitchers
at NeCal oyg;~,al Stt~~~~:;e o6o~'.
nlghl
Boston (Culp 6 41 at Oakland
~~~~h.~~/onn'gt~ox 1 2) at
Kansas C1ly ISplittorff o Ol.
mghl
M1nnesola I Blyleven 6 61 at
Ball1more (Dobson 2 3), nrghl
Ch1cago (Wood 4 21 at Cleve
land (McDowell 5 51· n•ghl
Molwaukee (Parsons 56) at
Detr01t ( Loloch 8 Sl. n1ghl
Wednesday's Games
Boston
al Oakland
mght , n1ght
New York
al Cal1torn1a
Washington at Kan C1ty. n1ght
Molwaukeeal Detr01t n1ght
Chrcago at Cleveland noght

Snyder Doug Brownmg and
Ph1lhps
Mmnesota at Balt1more , n1ght
Tigers
300 323--11 10 1
Natrona! League
Dodgers
010 022- 5 7 0
,, E~sl L
GB
Taylor and Seth Dale St Lou•s
35 21 ~~~
Browmng and McClure
Pottsburgh
34 21 618 '12
N Y k
30
20 600
2
C~~a g~r
26 29
473 8'12
MaJOr League Leaders
21 27 438 10
By Un1ted Press International Montrea l
Leadong BaUers
Philadelph ia 20 32 385 13
Nahonal League
West
G AB R H Pet
Garr, All
57 242 42 87 360 SanFranoiSco ~8 t9 p~~ GB
Dav 1s, LA
54 214 34 77 360
Beckert, Cho 54 215 35 77 358 Los Angeles 29 26 527 8
l~ ;~ :;~ :~
Cash, P1tl
47 185 38 M 357 ~~~~~\~n
22 33 400 15
Torre, St L 56 213 36 76 357 Concmnalo
Brock. All
55 227 49 81 357
18 37 327 19
Alou, Hou
43 152 11 53 349 San D1ego
P•ttsbu~~n~y~~~~=~~~~s
Mays. SF
so 171 35 57 333
Sng ln, P1ll 51 193 17 63 326 st Lou•s 7 Atla 6, 10 mn , n1ght
Staub, Monl 49 172 30 56 326
Today's Probable Pitchers
Amerocan League
2 71
San
D•ego IArlin
G. AB R H Pet York (Gentry
4 41. n1g hl at New
Oliva. Mmn 46 181 34 68 376 San FranciSco IManchal 8 31
Murcer NY 53 187 31 68 364 at Monlreal (Sloneman 7 3).
Kalme Del 45 149 26 48 322
Ro1as. KC
49 187 28 60 321 "'~~~ Lou•s ICarllon 10 .21 at
BRbnsn, Bit SO 193 28 61 316 Atlanta (Jarvos 1 7), n1ght
Smilh. Bos 53 210 38 65 310
Concmnat• INolan 3 61 at
Re1chdt. Ch• 39 143 u 44 308 Houslon (W•Ison 4 31, mght
Tovar, Mmn 52 216 34 66 306
Philadelphoa (Short 4 7l at
Ot1s. KC
46 186 31 56 301 Los Angeles 1s1nger 3 91 , n1ghl
Yastrz. Bas 53 181 39 54 298
P1tlsburgh (Johnson 4 4 or
FRbnsn, Bll 40 i41 24 42 298 Walker2 6) al Chocago (Jenkins
Home Runs
51 Wednesday's Games
Naloonal League Slargell. 9
P1ll 19 , Aaron, Atl 17, Bench, San Fran at Montreal, n•ghl
c1n, Cepeda, Atl , Williams, Ch1 San
Diego at New York, night
14
Los
Angeles
PhiIa. night
Amer1can League
Oliva, P11tsburgh alatChicago
Mmn 12, Cash and Horlon, Del, Cmcinnah at Houston. noght
Oils, KC and Jackson, Oak 11 St Lou1s at Allanta, n•ght
Runs Balled In
Nalronal League Slargell, International League Standings
Pill 52, Aaron. Atl 43 . Torre, By Umled Press lnternatoonal
st L 42 . Sanlo, Chi 40 ,
W L Pet GB
Syracuse
30 15 667 Cardenal. St L JS
32 20 615 1'12
Amerocan League Killebrew, T1dewater
25 22 532 6
Mmn 47, Petrocell •, Bos 40, Charleslon
26 24 520 6'12
Bando, Oak 36 , Wh1te, NY 35, R1chmond
23 23 500 7'12
Powell. Ball and Murcer, NY Rochester
LouiSville
21
29 420 1J112
32
Toledo
19
30
388 13
Prlchrng
17 30 362 14
National League Dierker, W1nn1peg
Monday's Results
Hou 10 1, Carllon, St L 10 2,
Tidewater
10 Charleston 7
Jenk1ns, Chr 9 s, Ell1s, Pitt and
R1chmond
9
Louisville 7
Mancha I, SF 8 3
Amerocan League. Blue, Oak Rochesler 3 Winnipeg 2
12 2; S~eber t , Bos 9 2. Hunter, Syracuse at Toledo, ppcl rain
Oak 9 3; Cuellar, Ball 8 1,
Palmer, Ba it 8 3, McNally, Bait

~ ::~::r!l1~~! a~;~~~~~w:nd

f

Murtaugh was more Impressed
by the team's rehef p1tchmg.
Bob Veale and Dave GIUsh
turned in 6 2-3 mmngs of
scoreless rehef agamst the
Cubs, although Veale suffered
an mJured shoulder and was
forced to leave the game
"The reason we're m the race
IS because of our bullpen," sa1d

Indians Win Exhibition Contest

a

~Margaret Miller Dies on Monday

r·-

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, (l ..111ne8, 1971

---

Carpenter

(

cove rage
Be sure of
proper Insurance with a
tree
survey
by
the

Downing Chdds

Aoency

Downing·
Childs
Agency, Inc.

j

l.iibens /ialioNJI
-4o.£lHICIHI~ATI

MIDDLEPORT
OHIO

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
Memhet Federal Dep01lt l111unace Corporal!•

'

�~-The Daily SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., June 8,1911

~: . Jr.

Feeney-Bennett Unit
.~ Wins ·HighestState Award
~

~·

The Marie Moore Trophy, the enrollment.
highest Junior American The Pomeroy unit, Drew
Legion Auxiliary award given Webster Post 39, awards were
I'
I
at the state level, was won by second in handwork, Contest ·1,
'
the Middleport Junior unit of Class I ; an honorable mention
j• Feeney-Bennett Post 128.
on veteran affairs narrative,
Presentation
of
the
trophy
with
an honorable mention on
'.
r
was made at the Saturday conference cover going to
Department Junior Conference Jackie Carsey.
in Columbus hosted by Bexley sheryl Simpson of the Racine
Unit 430. Seleclion of the Unit 602 took third in the state
Midclleport unit to receive the on her costumed doll. The only
award was based on a narrative other award made to units in the
report of all activities prepared Eighth District ,.;ent to
by the advisor.
Somerset with Jennifer Sue
Both the Middleport, Racine Hempfling taking second place
and Pomeroy junior units came in the foreign relations essay.
in for department awards at the About 260 girls were in at·
conference.
tendance at the meeting with
Besides the Marie Moore Sue Stroltz of District 1 being
trophy, Middleport won the elected the new Department
second place Americanism junior president.
trQphy, and ·look second place The juniors of Pomeroy and
.:. ·awards on the conference cover Middlepor.t presented a skit
,., . made by Debra McGuffin, · entitled "Our Wonderful
·
veterans affairs narrative, and American Heritage." Several
the handwork in Contest 2, Class other skits were presented by
·2. Pamela Morris got an other units.
honorable mention on history Mrs. Richard Board of
,. , entry and .Becky Roush placed Maumee, Department Junior
• firal in the alate on membership activities chairman, opened the
I'

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TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE Chapter,
conference ·with ·the host unit of DES, will have their regular
Bexley extending the welcome meeting Tuesday at ~ p.m. at
and the Bond Hill unit g[ving the the lodge hall.
response. The meeting opened
in ritualistic form with Sarah
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
·Ann Oberkonz, president, in
Lions Club noon, Wednesday,
charge.
Going from here for the United Methodist Church,
conference which was followed Pomeroy.
POMEROY CHAPTER 60,
by a tea were Mrs. Harry Davis,
Cheryl and Debra Lehew, Mrs. RAM, stated meeting, WedPaul Casci and Ida, Mrs. Grace nesday, 7:30 p. m. Pomeroy
Pratt and granddaughter, Pam Masonic Temple: to elect new
Powers, Mrs. Jack Carsey and officers. Rituals are to be
_
daughters, Diana and Jackie, returned to tlje desk.
TUPPERS PLAINS ComNa ncy Thompson , Maureen
munity
Club Wednesday I p.m.
Hennesy, Melanie Burt, Shari
Reuter, and , Terri Russell, of home of Oneita Cole.
the Pomeroy unit.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Attending from the Mid· Gardeners, &amp; p.m. Wednesday
dleport unit were Mrs. Robert night, home of Mrs. Elizabeth
Morris, Pamela and Melinda, Burkett with Mrs. Glenn
Mrs. Dale Roush and Sherri, Lambert and Mrs. Phillip
Mrs. Claire Might and Sandra, Mowery, co-hostess. Mrs. John
, Mrs. Harold Will, Mrs. Charles Reese, ·Region 11 director, and
Kessinger, Christina Smith, Mrs . Fred Biaettnar, Meigs
Becky, Kimberly, Lois and County contact chairman, will
·Jeannie Roush, Judy Gilkey, be guests. A rose show will be
Melinda Humphreys, Terri Fox, featured .
Camifla
Lewis,
Debra
THURSDAY
McGuffin, and Sheryl Barnhart. CATHOLIC Women 's Club, 8
p.m. Thursday, preceded by
Mass and Rosary, Sacred Heart
Church.
MEIGS Chapter, DAV,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. regular
meeting at hall, Butternut Ave.
New officers installed, refreshments. Veterans of all wars
invited.
MEIGS TB&amp;H Assn., 7:30
p.m ., Thursday at Pomeroy
United Methodist Church. All
officers, board members to
attend .
OHIO VALLEY Grange 2612,
Letart Falls, Thursday, 8 p.m.
home of H. E. Shields, East
Letart. All members to dress in
hillbilly costuming and take
instrument for band. Members take potluck refreshments.

a

Wedding Day Set

&lt;..·•

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Saturday, June 26

MEMBERS of die Mua
Baptist Chur~h joined Ia
Saaday 1o help wllll lbe of.
~·
1-.
flclal
groundbreaklng ser·
. ...
,;- ..
vices lor the new Mason
·=: . Bapll1t Church. Left to right
are: Allee Roach, VIrginia
Yonker, Carol Johnson,
·"'
Janice Couch·, William
PU11to, Mn. Stan Cralg,Rev.
'·.
Sllln Craig, Charles Lambert,
. Mn. Jim Pauley, Jo Aaa
Hannon, Betty Lambert and
,
John Pauley.

Mr. and Mrs. George Hobstetter of Pomeroy, Route 3, are
announcing the approaching
marriage of their daughter,
Pamela Hobstetter O'Loughlin,
to Mr. John Allen King, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert King of
·xenia .
The wedding will be an event
of Saturday, June 26, at 3:30
p.m. at the Fairview United
Methodist Church, Dayton. A
reception will be held from 5 to 7
p.m. at the Starford HouseRamada Inn, 330 West First St.,
in Dayton.

~

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.HOSPITAL
.·&gt;
......:. .:
NEWS
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o

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••••

Calendar ·~

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Social

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7~ p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth c.
Blecher, Patriot, a daughter;
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Webb,
SOuth Webster, a son; Mr. and
Mrs . Harold D. Leach,
Pomeroy, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
Richard L. Butcher, Cheshire, a
daughter ; Mr. and Mrs. Paul R.
Higginbotham, Pt. Pleasant, a
daughter; and Mr. and Mrs.
Ervin R. Arrowood, Oak Hill, a
son.
Discharges
James F. Baker, Jeffrey R.
Barcus, Mrs. Raymond L.

THE BASEMENT PORTION of the new Mason Baptist
Church is under construction. Members held groundbreaking
services Sunday afternoon in Mason where the new Church
will be constructed.
Black, Mrs. Samuel E. Clark,
Mrs. Addie M. Delawder,
Robert Keith Donnally, Mrs.
Mary C. Goodwin, Charlotte G.
Griffith, Shantilal G. Goradia,
Sonja M. Higginbotham ,
Charles E. Jenkins, Mrs. John
M. Napier, Mrs. Darrell D.
Rash and daughter, Mrs. Jack
Lee Rathburn and son, David P.
Raymer, Lester Roush, Mrs.
John W. Trago and son, Guss
Thevenir, Mrs. Homer Stotts,
and Mrs. M. Florence Kaylor.

GENE, NOT KEITH
Gene Riggs, not Keith Riggs,
was appointed to the Board of
Directors of the MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club at Friday
night's meeting. He succeeds
the late Emmet Shuler.

SALE SET
A bake sale will be held at
Dudley's Saturday morning by
the American Legion Auxiliary
of Feeney-Bennett Post 128.
Auxiliary members are asked
Longest bone in the human body is the thigh bone, to have their contributions there
by 9 a.m.
or femur.

SWISHER HAS DEGREE
Don Swisher, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Swisher, Pomeroy,
graduated on May 30 from
Marshall University, Huntington, W.Va. with a degree in
business. Attending the commencement besides his parents
were his grandmother, Mrs.
Freda Heines, and Miss Elaine
Davis, Middleport.

Sharon Glaze ·Honored with Bridal Shower
Miss Robyn Mills and Miss
Jean Whitehead entertained
recently with a bridal shower
honoring Mi~ Sharon Glaze
whose wedding to Michael
Stewart will be Saturday

evening.

The shower was held at the
Middleport · Church of Christ
where decorations featured
blue and white streamers and a
bride and groom replica .

Diocese to Convene
Aconvention of the Diocese at Baudo of the St. Patricks
Steubenville on June 16 was Church of Buchtel wa s
announced during Sunday 's moderator and thanked the
Nativity of Mary Deanery Deanery for cooperation dW'ing
meeting held at the Sacred the past year and urged conHeart Church .
· tinued help in the parishes.
"Man by his Work Shares The next meeting was an·
with God" will be theme of the nounced for Sept. 12 at St.
convention with Sister Ellen Andrew's Church in NelsonCurran, S.C.N., of the In- ville . Represented at the
ternalional Affairs Commission meeting were women from Holy
Workshop to be the speaker.
Rosary Church in Glouster, St.
A sermon preceding the P.atrick 's. Church in Buchtel, St.
meeting presided over by Miss Andrew's ChW'ch in NelsonAlice Rowan, president, was ville, St. Palll's Church in Albgiven by the Rev . Mr. Donald ens, and the Sacred Heart
Wehrung who used "Vatican II Church in Pomeroy .
At the conclusion of the
- Implications of Upheavels"
as his topic. The Rev. Fr. Frank meeting, refreshments were
served by the women of the
Catholic Women's Club of the
host church.

Pomeroy....

Personal Notes
Miss Jeanne Hines of
Columbus spent the weekend
here ll'ith her mother, Mrs. Ed
Hines, Minersville.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lowe
and ch1'ldren of Columbus were
here for a weekend visit with
her p~rents , Mr. and Mrs.
Bradford Maag .
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
and
Jayne Lee spent the
weekend in Columbus with Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Hammer, Lou
Ann and Kimberly. They went
especially for the commencement of Lou Ann at the
Walnut Ridge High School. ·
Mr . and Mrs. Kennard
Faucett of Indianapolis, Ind .
were weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Downie coming
especially for the funeral
services of Louis A. Carl on
Sunday.
Mr . and Mrs. Paul Chapman,
Mitchell and Jennifer, and Dr.
and Mrs. Keith Riggs, Andrea
and Nicky, are vacationing in
Florida. The Chapmans will
return this weekend; the Riggs
family will remain for another
week.
Mr. and .Mrs. Carl B. Weese
and Miss Marcia Karr were
Monday visitors at the Fenton
Glass Co. at Williamstown, W.
Va .
Mr. and Mrs . Henry Fischer
and son of Williamstown, W.Va.
were Sunday visitors of their
son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Grueser
'
Darwin .

•
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D
Picnic

Games were played with Mrs. Mrs. Glaze were Miss Susie
Carolyn Bachner a nd Mrs. Miller, Miss Jenmfer Goble,
Charlene Fry winning prizes. Miss Anita Fultz, Mrs. Brenda
Cake mints nuts and punch Edwards, Miss Stella Neutzling,
were' served.'
Mrs. Belva Glaze, Mrs. Phyllis
Others attending were Miss Johnson, Mrs: Margaret
Bonnie Rife, Mrs. Irene Fisher, Johnson,
Mtss
Becky
Mrs. Charlotte Roush, Mrs. Houdashelt, Mrs. Joyce Blake,
Mabel Johnson, Mrs. Grace Mrs. Connie Patterson, Miss
Glaze, Mrs. June Glaze, Miss Martha Baker, Miss Debbie
Patty Glaze, Jane Wise, Mrs. Johnson, Miss Pennie J?hnson,
Gemma Casci, Miss Cindy MisSJudy McKnight,. Mtss Pam
Glaze, Miss Marcy Owens, Mrs. Manley, Miss Georgma Tyree,
Donna Glaze, Mrs . Louise Miss · Diana Rose, Mrs . .Joyce
Radford, Mrs. Patty Johnson, . Mills, Mrs. Eula Hensler, Mrs.
and Mrs. Deb Zuspan.
Betty Archer and .Bobby, and
Others presenting gifts to Mrs. Betty Ohlmger and SOnya.

SUPERIORS BARBECUE

·
S
BOLOG
..
NA
W.lE.NER.
------Corner Mill and SecQnd Sts.

SUPERIORS BRAND

BUDGET BACON
4 LBS.

Oberlin,
at .,herElyria,
home 44035.
42008
Telegraphor Rd

fM, - pd ~
-

~NESTLE'S
Group

R~

5.98

--.

I
I'

POLYESTER
KNITS .
: 60'' Wide
I

I
I
I

398

:

10.

:

SALE

J

I
·-----------------J

i
i

I~ Selection
"''II"

·

SU~ER

PlEa GOODS

1
1I

plain~

1

and prinh .

1

Dolled Swtu

l&lt;e"lecllllh.

1 Saitclotll

~

3 OFf

1
I

i
I

.-.~d

vnu (Ould

!1 ~1 $1~0 or

'

SAVE

SPECIAL

PURPOSE

4%%

.::===========J
Pomeroy , 0 .

~~m;•"~'~"":·:··~··:"·:·:"'~·

SUMMER
Young or Old . . . For
Smiles All Around and
Prices to Please . Stop In
, For Cool, Cool Refresh·
ments.

DAIRY VALlEY
992-2556

· At The End Of Pomeroy Bridge

LARGE
UNCLASSIFIEn .

MILK

MtCALL'S &amp;SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

~5 f. 'GAL

RONCO
BRAND

SCOT LAD

HOLIDAY AT FREEPORT
Lorry Gladwell, a teacher
at Fort Louderdale, Fla. spent
the Memorial Day weekend
with friends at Freeport on the
Grand Bahama Island. He is
formerly of Middleport.

1 lb.
bxs.

LIQUID
DETERGENT

00

Free! Extra Right

:~:~..~~~~.............. ~.a.i~ .... 9 9 ~

S.n•·uee
ttp ·

FAMOUS
TROPICANA

Sure you can! But that one hand
has to be something el.~e!

SPRUCE UP YOUR
HOME OUTSIDE .
WITH A FREE
SPRUCE TREE

Electric heating is based on simplicity.
To start yo ur electric heating system set the thermoslal 1 That 's all!
Electric heating creates no smoke. soot
or smudge . Cuts down cleaning and

Como tn, see what's new .
tn ceilings. Ask us how yoU ·
can get I FREE 3·yr.·OIII
\ spruce tile aeedlllli.
1

redeco ratin ~.

With Electnc Heating. temperatures
are even from lloor to rt:ilint,. It\ ;.t

See your

King Builders

.....

· ----/iI

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-·

---

BANQUET
TV DINNERS
. SCOT LAD

MYRL COAKLEY ELECTRIC
HEATING &amp;.INSULATION
.
667-3415

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•
•

--___,;----:-----....,.-...;_.-~----' : .

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h

Size Box

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lf2 gal. jug

Orange Juice .

~$1

New!!
cOFFEE RICH

CAPE ANN lb•
·OCEAN\ PER~H

lvs.for

ARMOUR'S

POTTED MEAT

49 ~

3
cans

00

NESTE A
INSTANT TEA
Large gg~ With
3 oz. Jar
Coupon

BANQUET BRAND

39

AT: MARK V STORE

EXPIRES SATURDAY

21 b.

Mark .V Produce Specials

BANANAS

I~

choice®
FREEZE·ORIED COFFEE
8 oz. size
ONLY

1.49

ld' , (L'I ~.
\IHl!ff'

with this coupon

I OFfE~-~!I'IRES

RED RIPE

6 oz. crt.

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-

Fami~

CHICKEN

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gen tle warmth wi thout hot blasts or
sudden chills. Very quiet . too.
However, 1f you prefer a conservative
hand With the usual number of fingers
COUntlhiSwar electric heatin g is
clean , conven1ent. economical and very
quiet, ton.
,
·
Our special low electdc heating rate.
a nd eq~ a llllonthly .payment pian,
make Elcctnc Hca tmg aftiJrdahie! Gel
all the !itcls ahout The E'IN·tri&lt;' C/imau.

COLUMIUS AND SOUTI-U:nN OHIO ELECTRIC COMPANV

Supply Co.
N . ~NDAVE.

gat

You cofl count

the benel/t.1 ol Electric Heot

EGGS
4 1.00

FRYING

CREAM
ononehond.

59e

bot

Tide

3q~furl.OO

ORANGE DRINK

·Season Cooler! Scot Pride

ICE

3 ::1.00
1

5 l~ves fur 1.00

RUBBER GLOVES

WlnfANEW

oz.

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PLAYTEX
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3·doz.1.00.

EASY MONDAY

CRACKERS

YOUR HOME INSIDE

1 lb.
.pkg.

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lb.

King Size 32

EGG NOODLES

1

,-----------------------------------------~·

ARMSTRONG
CEILING

ADOLPH'S PREDICTION:
ALONG HOL __ _

.1,

SINGER SALES &amp; SERVICE

COMPLETES BASIC
Army Private Gary L.
McKnight, 20, son of Mr. and
Mrs. William D. McKnight,
Route I, Middleport, recently
completed eight weeks of basic
training at the U. S. Army
Training Center, Armor, Ft.
Knox, Ky . His wife, Nancy,
lives at 180 E. Tompkins,
Columbus.

presented were from Bethel 79, initiate two candidates at the
International Order of Jobs next meeting.
Daughters, McConnelsville;
Pro tern officers were Albert
Mount Olive Chapter, ·Athens Woodard, worthy patron; ·Tom
Chapter, and ·Aurelius Chapter Edwards, associate patron;
which
is ob- Freda Grueser I Martha·I Maude
at Macksburg
'
'
servmg its 75th anmversary. ! Grueser, EJecta, and Mabel
A memorial tribute to Dorsey Moore, sentinel.
Smith, past grand patron who
Refreshments were served by
dted on May 18 was read, and Mrs. Thelma Dill, Mrs. Annette
the altar was dri'ped in his Knight, Mrs. Norma Parker,
memory. Plans were made to Mrs. Ula Matlack

SLICED CHEESE

EGGS

SP:ALTEST
992-2214

NECK BONES

IVORY
LIQUID

22 Count
Bag Now

:

Eastern Star50-Year Pins Awarded Couple
Mrs. Kathleen Kesterson
accepted 5().year pins for her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
Ebersbach, at a recent meeting
'
of Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order
of the Eastern Star, at the
FOR YOUR OWN
Masonic Temple.
Mrs. 'Elsie Smith made the
·presentations to Mrs. Kesterson
with congratulatory comments
Enjoy safety ... plus on the couple's long membership in the chapter. Also
extra earning power.
. l
receiving 50 year pins recently
were Mrs. Kate Chase, Mrs.
Louise Kreinbihl of Columbus,
Mrs. Helen Lyons; Pomeroy,
and Mrs. Ethel Sargent of
Athens:
PASSBOOK RATE
Communications were read
from Mrs. Roberta K. Mindling,
Meip Co. Bnllldl
past grand matron, {egarding
the O:E.S. cancer project. She
was recently appointed state
chairman. The worthy matron
appointed Mrs . Smith as
·Melt• County lrtndlof Tho chapter chairman for the
Alhens County S.vlngs I
project, with Mrs. Florence
I.Nn Co.
Well,
Mrs. Wanda Rizer and
· 296 Second St.
Mrs. Joan Rayburn to serve on
Pomeroy, Oflfo
the youth committee.
Plans for the banquet to bl!
held at the Grand session in
October were announced in a
, leller from . the banquet com..1!11___1111!_ _ _.. rnittce chairman. Invitations

$100,000 CANDY BARS

~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.J

m w. Second

MR. TOPS

5

SPECIAL SALE!

I

You can'! get tess
than uo for anv old
se wing
ma c hine
you've got
Sing er One Tttu(h Soewing

lb. 69~

LEAN AND MEATY

I
I

NOW!

Whe n ylllj !ride In lowarth

BACON

Regular
sge Bag

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

I
I

FRENCH CITY

1.00

The Fabrk Shop in Pomeroy

"'-~------··---

GROUND BEEF..... ~~·.
LEAN FRESH PURE BEEF
.
lb.
GROUND CHUCK.....
LEAN QiOICE QiOPPED
SIRLOIN STEAK ... l~·.

lb.

s
FABRIc SAV IN
~

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

FRESH GROUND DAILY - ANY AMOUNT

The Rev. Raullin Moyer will
officiate at the double ring
ceremony.
Mrs. Deb Zuspan of Mason,
W. Va ., will be the matron of
honor and. bridesmaids will be
Miss Robyn Mills, Chester, and
Miss Cindy Glaze, sister of the
bride-elect. Darlene Priddy of
Minersville will be the nower
girl.
Mr. James Glaze, brotuer of
the bride, will be best man.

Given Sunday---------------...
G
Mrs. Gary Lee of Elyria, the
former Dorothy Howell, was
honored Sunday with a picnic
dinner at the home of Edward
Templeto(}, Bailey Run .
Guests included her brother
and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Howell and children,
Donnie, Sherrie and Eddie of
Comfort, w. va., and several
former school mates and
families of Pomeroy. 'I:he Lee
family visited with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Johnson, and Mr. and Mrs .
Charles McNickles, Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Cleland, Mr. and
Mrs. Louis Lee, Racine, and
Mr . and Mrs. Virgil Lee of
Harrisonville Road.
Mrs. Lee has been ill for
several weeks and will re-enter
Allen Memorial Hospital,
Oberlin, June 13. She is
scheduled to undergo surgery
June 14. Mr. Templeton, Mrs.
Lee's mother , Mrs . Betty
Howell, and her brother, Roy
Howell, will be with her at that
time. The Lee children are
being cared for by Miss Brenda
Le e.
Cards may be sent to Mrs.
Lee at Allen Memorial Hospital,

" We Reserve The Right T o L imit Ouantit•es"

GROUND FRESH FROM USDA

lb.

Wedding Plans Completed
Plans have been completed
for the wedding of Miss Sharon
Glaze, daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
Glenn Glaze, to Mr . Michael
Stewart, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ross Stewart, Jr ., Minersville ,
The open church wedding will
be an event of June 12, Saturday, at 7:30 p.m. at the Middleport Church of Christ. Ahalfhour of pre-nuptial music will
be presented by Miss Patty
Glaze of Pomeroy, organist.

SUPERIORS BRAND . SUPER MARKET • Open Daily g to 10 . Sun. 10 to 10
WeAcce~~~;~;9~~3~~odStamp.~

0:-, ....\

TOMATOES·

NESCAFE
INSTANT Wtttt

,,,\

.2 lb.
pkg.
v

-' lO _oz • .

Jar

1• 19
with C.OIIPOII
At Mark V

�~-The Daily SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., June 8,1911

~: . Jr.

Feeney-Bennett Unit
.~ Wins ·HighestState Award
~

~·

The Marie Moore Trophy, the enrollment.
highest Junior American The Pomeroy unit, Drew
Legion Auxiliary award given Webster Post 39, awards were
I'
I
at the state level, was won by second in handwork, Contest ·1,
'
the Middleport Junior unit of Class I ; an honorable mention
j• Feeney-Bennett Post 128.
on veteran affairs narrative,
Presentation
of
the
trophy
with
an honorable mention on
'.
r
was made at the Saturday conference cover going to
Department Junior Conference Jackie Carsey.
in Columbus hosted by Bexley sheryl Simpson of the Racine
Unit 430. Seleclion of the Unit 602 took third in the state
Midclleport unit to receive the on her costumed doll. The only
award was based on a narrative other award made to units in the
report of all activities prepared Eighth District ,.;ent to
by the advisor.
Somerset with Jennifer Sue
Both the Middleport, Racine Hempfling taking second place
and Pomeroy junior units came in the foreign relations essay.
in for department awards at the About 260 girls were in at·
conference.
tendance at the meeting with
Besides the Marie Moore Sue Stroltz of District 1 being
trophy, Middleport won the elected the new Department
second place Americanism junior president.
trQphy, and ·look second place The juniors of Pomeroy and
.:. ·awards on the conference cover Middlepor.t presented a skit
,., . made by Debra McGuffin, · entitled "Our Wonderful
·
veterans affairs narrative, and American Heritage." Several
the handwork in Contest 2, Class other skits were presented by
·2. Pamela Morris got an other units.
honorable mention on history Mrs. Richard Board of
,. , entry and .Becky Roush placed Maumee, Department Junior
• firal in the alate on membership activities chairman, opened the
I'

,,

..

.o

.'··...r..·.
/'.

.... ~. .

'

"'.;.1',,

.•.·'.
....

TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE Chapter,
conference ·with ·the host unit of DES, will have their regular
Bexley extending the welcome meeting Tuesday at ~ p.m. at
and the Bond Hill unit g[ving the the lodge hall.
response. The meeting opened
in ritualistic form with Sarah
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
·Ann Oberkonz, president, in
Lions Club noon, Wednesday,
charge.
Going from here for the United Methodist Church,
conference which was followed Pomeroy.
POMEROY CHAPTER 60,
by a tea were Mrs. Harry Davis,
Cheryl and Debra Lehew, Mrs. RAM, stated meeting, WedPaul Casci and Ida, Mrs. Grace nesday, 7:30 p. m. Pomeroy
Pratt and granddaughter, Pam Masonic Temple: to elect new
Powers, Mrs. Jack Carsey and officers. Rituals are to be
_
daughters, Diana and Jackie, returned to tlje desk.
TUPPERS PLAINS ComNa ncy Thompson , Maureen
munity
Club Wednesday I p.m.
Hennesy, Melanie Burt, Shari
Reuter, and , Terri Russell, of home of Oneita Cole.
the Pomeroy unit.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Attending from the Mid· Gardeners, &amp; p.m. Wednesday
dleport unit were Mrs. Robert night, home of Mrs. Elizabeth
Morris, Pamela and Melinda, Burkett with Mrs. Glenn
Mrs. Dale Roush and Sherri, Lambert and Mrs. Phillip
Mrs. Claire Might and Sandra, Mowery, co-hostess. Mrs. John
, Mrs. Harold Will, Mrs. Charles Reese, ·Region 11 director, and
Kessinger, Christina Smith, Mrs . Fred Biaettnar, Meigs
Becky, Kimberly, Lois and County contact chairman, will
·Jeannie Roush, Judy Gilkey, be guests. A rose show will be
Melinda Humphreys, Terri Fox, featured .
Camifla
Lewis,
Debra
THURSDAY
McGuffin, and Sheryl Barnhart. CATHOLIC Women 's Club, 8
p.m. Thursday, preceded by
Mass and Rosary, Sacred Heart
Church.
MEIGS Chapter, DAV,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. regular
meeting at hall, Butternut Ave.
New officers installed, refreshments. Veterans of all wars
invited.
MEIGS TB&amp;H Assn., 7:30
p.m ., Thursday at Pomeroy
United Methodist Church. All
officers, board members to
attend .
OHIO VALLEY Grange 2612,
Letart Falls, Thursday, 8 p.m.
home of H. E. Shields, East
Letart. All members to dress in
hillbilly costuming and take
instrument for band. Members take potluck refreshments.

a

Wedding Day Set

&lt;..·•

..

.....•.•'•'·

Saturday, June 26

MEMBERS of die Mua
Baptist Chur~h joined Ia
Saaday 1o help wllll lbe of.
~·
1-.
flclal
groundbreaklng ser·
. ...
,;- ..
vices lor the new Mason
·=: . Bapll1t Church. Left to right
are: Allee Roach, VIrginia
Yonker, Carol Johnson,
·"'
Janice Couch·, William
PU11to, Mn. Stan Cralg,Rev.
'·.
Sllln Craig, Charles Lambert,
. Mn. Jim Pauley, Jo Aaa
Hannon, Betty Lambert and
,
John Pauley.

Mr. and Mrs. George Hobstetter of Pomeroy, Route 3, are
announcing the approaching
marriage of their daughter,
Pamela Hobstetter O'Loughlin,
to Mr. John Allen King, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert King of
·xenia .
The wedding will be an event
of Saturday, June 26, at 3:30
p.m. at the Fairview United
Methodist Church, Dayton. A
reception will be held from 5 to 7
p.m. at the Starford HouseRamada Inn, 330 West First St.,
in Dayton.

~

...

.

·'
.
...
:·

·-:'
... .•,.

.HOSPITAL
.·&gt;
......:. .:
NEWS
I I • •

...:..
o

...

1.'

.,'

••••

Calendar ·~

\

,."

I:
..
.••&lt;
.,
,, .•'
·,

Social

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7~ p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth c.
Blecher, Patriot, a daughter;
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Webb,
SOuth Webster, a son; Mr. and
Mrs . Harold D. Leach,
Pomeroy, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
Richard L. Butcher, Cheshire, a
daughter ; Mr. and Mrs. Paul R.
Higginbotham, Pt. Pleasant, a
daughter; and Mr. and Mrs.
Ervin R. Arrowood, Oak Hill, a
son.
Discharges
James F. Baker, Jeffrey R.
Barcus, Mrs. Raymond L.

THE BASEMENT PORTION of the new Mason Baptist
Church is under construction. Members held groundbreaking
services Sunday afternoon in Mason where the new Church
will be constructed.
Black, Mrs. Samuel E. Clark,
Mrs. Addie M. Delawder,
Robert Keith Donnally, Mrs.
Mary C. Goodwin, Charlotte G.
Griffith, Shantilal G. Goradia,
Sonja M. Higginbotham ,
Charles E. Jenkins, Mrs. John
M. Napier, Mrs. Darrell D.
Rash and daughter, Mrs. Jack
Lee Rathburn and son, David P.
Raymer, Lester Roush, Mrs.
John W. Trago and son, Guss
Thevenir, Mrs. Homer Stotts,
and Mrs. M. Florence Kaylor.

GENE, NOT KEITH
Gene Riggs, not Keith Riggs,
was appointed to the Board of
Directors of the MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club at Friday
night's meeting. He succeeds
the late Emmet Shuler.

SALE SET
A bake sale will be held at
Dudley's Saturday morning by
the American Legion Auxiliary
of Feeney-Bennett Post 128.
Auxiliary members are asked
Longest bone in the human body is the thigh bone, to have their contributions there
by 9 a.m.
or femur.

SWISHER HAS DEGREE
Don Swisher, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Swisher, Pomeroy,
graduated on May 30 from
Marshall University, Huntington, W.Va. with a degree in
business. Attending the commencement besides his parents
were his grandmother, Mrs.
Freda Heines, and Miss Elaine
Davis, Middleport.

Sharon Glaze ·Honored with Bridal Shower
Miss Robyn Mills and Miss
Jean Whitehead entertained
recently with a bridal shower
honoring Mi~ Sharon Glaze
whose wedding to Michael
Stewart will be Saturday

evening.

The shower was held at the
Middleport · Church of Christ
where decorations featured
blue and white streamers and a
bride and groom replica .

Diocese to Convene
Aconvention of the Diocese at Baudo of the St. Patricks
Steubenville on June 16 was Church of Buchtel wa s
announced during Sunday 's moderator and thanked the
Nativity of Mary Deanery Deanery for cooperation dW'ing
meeting held at the Sacred the past year and urged conHeart Church .
· tinued help in the parishes.
"Man by his Work Shares The next meeting was an·
with God" will be theme of the nounced for Sept. 12 at St.
convention with Sister Ellen Andrew's Church in NelsonCurran, S.C.N., of the In- ville . Represented at the
ternalional Affairs Commission meeting were women from Holy
Workshop to be the speaker.
Rosary Church in Glouster, St.
A sermon preceding the P.atrick 's. Church in Buchtel, St.
meeting presided over by Miss Andrew's ChW'ch in NelsonAlice Rowan, president, was ville, St. Palll's Church in Albgiven by the Rev . Mr. Donald ens, and the Sacred Heart
Wehrung who used "Vatican II Church in Pomeroy .
At the conclusion of the
- Implications of Upheavels"
as his topic. The Rev. Fr. Frank meeting, refreshments were
served by the women of the
Catholic Women's Club of the
host church.

Pomeroy....

Personal Notes
Miss Jeanne Hines of
Columbus spent the weekend
here ll'ith her mother, Mrs. Ed
Hines, Minersville.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lowe
and ch1'ldren of Columbus were
here for a weekend visit with
her p~rents , Mr. and Mrs.
Bradford Maag .
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
and
Jayne Lee spent the
weekend in Columbus with Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Hammer, Lou
Ann and Kimberly. They went
especially for the commencement of Lou Ann at the
Walnut Ridge High School. ·
Mr . and Mrs. Kennard
Faucett of Indianapolis, Ind .
were weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Downie coming
especially for the funeral
services of Louis A. Carl on
Sunday.
Mr . and Mrs. Paul Chapman,
Mitchell and Jennifer, and Dr.
and Mrs. Keith Riggs, Andrea
and Nicky, are vacationing in
Florida. The Chapmans will
return this weekend; the Riggs
family will remain for another
week.
Mr. and .Mrs. Carl B. Weese
and Miss Marcia Karr were
Monday visitors at the Fenton
Glass Co. at Williamstown, W.
Va .
Mr. and Mrs . Henry Fischer
and son of Williamstown, W.Va.
were Sunday visitors of their
son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Grueser
'
Darwin .

•
tnflef
D
Picnic

Games were played with Mrs. Mrs. Glaze were Miss Susie
Carolyn Bachner a nd Mrs. Miller, Miss Jenmfer Goble,
Charlene Fry winning prizes. Miss Anita Fultz, Mrs. Brenda
Cake mints nuts and punch Edwards, Miss Stella Neutzling,
were' served.'
Mrs. Belva Glaze, Mrs. Phyllis
Others attending were Miss Johnson, Mrs: Margaret
Bonnie Rife, Mrs. Irene Fisher, Johnson,
Mtss
Becky
Mrs. Charlotte Roush, Mrs. Houdashelt, Mrs. Joyce Blake,
Mabel Johnson, Mrs. Grace Mrs. Connie Patterson, Miss
Glaze, Mrs. June Glaze, Miss Martha Baker, Miss Debbie
Patty Glaze, Jane Wise, Mrs. Johnson, Miss Pennie J?hnson,
Gemma Casci, Miss Cindy MisSJudy McKnight,. Mtss Pam
Glaze, Miss Marcy Owens, Mrs. Manley, Miss Georgma Tyree,
Donna Glaze, Mrs . Louise Miss · Diana Rose, Mrs . .Joyce
Radford, Mrs. Patty Johnson, . Mills, Mrs. Eula Hensler, Mrs.
and Mrs. Deb Zuspan.
Betty Archer and .Bobby, and
Others presenting gifts to Mrs. Betty Ohlmger and SOnya.

SUPERIORS BARBECUE

·
S
BOLOG
..
NA
W.lE.NER.
------Corner Mill and SecQnd Sts.

SUPERIORS BRAND

BUDGET BACON
4 LBS.

Oberlin,
at .,herElyria,
home 44035.
42008
Telegraphor Rd

fM, - pd ~
-

~NESTLE'S
Group

R~

5.98

--.

I
I'

POLYESTER
KNITS .
: 60'' Wide
I

I
I
I

398

:

10.

:

SALE

J

I
·-----------------J

i
i

I~ Selection
"''II"

·

SU~ER

PlEa GOODS

1
1I

plain~

1

and prinh .

1

Dolled Swtu

l&lt;e"lecllllh.

1 Saitclotll

~

3 OFf

1
I

i
I

.-.~d

vnu (Ould

!1 ~1 $1~0 or

'

SAVE

SPECIAL

PURPOSE

4%%

.::===========J
Pomeroy , 0 .

~~m;•"~'~"":·:··~··:"·:·:"'~·

SUMMER
Young or Old . . . For
Smiles All Around and
Prices to Please . Stop In
, For Cool, Cool Refresh·
ments.

DAIRY VALlEY
992-2556

· At The End Of Pomeroy Bridge

LARGE
UNCLASSIFIEn .

MILK

MtCALL'S &amp;SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

~5 f. 'GAL

RONCO
BRAND

SCOT LAD

HOLIDAY AT FREEPORT
Lorry Gladwell, a teacher
at Fort Louderdale, Fla. spent
the Memorial Day weekend
with friends at Freeport on the
Grand Bahama Island. He is
formerly of Middleport.

1 lb.
bxs.

LIQUID
DETERGENT

00

Free! Extra Right

:~:~..~~~~.............. ~.a.i~ .... 9 9 ~

S.n•·uee
ttp ·

FAMOUS
TROPICANA

Sure you can! But that one hand
has to be something el.~e!

SPRUCE UP YOUR
HOME OUTSIDE .
WITH A FREE
SPRUCE TREE

Electric heating is based on simplicity.
To start yo ur electric heating system set the thermoslal 1 That 's all!
Electric heating creates no smoke. soot
or smudge . Cuts down cleaning and

Como tn, see what's new .
tn ceilings. Ask us how yoU ·
can get I FREE 3·yr.·OIII
\ spruce tile aeedlllli.
1

redeco ratin ~.

With Electnc Heating. temperatures
are even from lloor to rt:ilint,. It\ ;.t

See your

King Builders

.....

· ----/iI

"G(Jod Comfort

-·

---

BANQUET
TV DINNERS
. SCOT LAD

MYRL COAKLEY ELECTRIC
HEATING &amp;.INSULATION
.
667-3415

·COOLVIU£, 'OHIO

•
•

--___,;----:-----....,.-...;_.-~----' : .

;." .

h

Size Box

29
FAVORITE BREAD

lf2 gal. jug

Orange Juice .

~$1

New!!
cOFFEE RICH

CAPE ANN lb•
·OCEAN\ PER~H

lvs.for

ARMOUR'S

POTTED MEAT

49 ~

3
cans

00

NESTE A
INSTANT TEA
Large gg~ With
3 oz. Jar
Coupon

BANQUET BRAND

39

AT: MARK V STORE

EXPIRES SATURDAY

21 b.

Mark .V Produce Specials

BANANAS

I~

choice®
FREEZE·ORIED COFFEE
8 oz. size
ONLY

1.49

ld' , (L'I ~.
\IHl!ff'

with this coupon

I OFfE~-~!I'IRES

RED RIPE

6 oz. crt.

Guy.~"

-

Fami~

CHICKEN

Mark V Frozen Food Specials

gen tle warmth wi thout hot blasts or
sudden chills. Very quiet . too.
However, 1f you prefer a conservative
hand With the usual number of fingers
COUntlhiSwar electric heatin g is
clean , conven1ent. economical and very
quiet, ton.
,
·
Our special low electdc heating rate.
a nd eq~ a llllonthly .payment pian,
make Elcctnc Hca tmg aftiJrdahie! Gel
all the !itcls ahout The E'IN·tri&lt;' C/imau.

COLUMIUS AND SOUTI-U:nN OHIO ELECTRIC COMPANV

Supply Co.
N . ~NDAVE.

gat

You cofl count

the benel/t.1 ol Electric Heot

EGGS
4 1.00

FRYING

CREAM
ononehond.

59e

bot

Tide

3q~furl.OO

ORANGE DRINK

·Season Cooler! Scot Pride

ICE

3 ::1.00
1

5 l~ves fur 1.00

RUBBER GLOVES

WlnfANEW

oz.

FAVORITE BREAD

PLAYTEX
:;:

3·doz.1.00.

EASY MONDAY

CRACKERS

YOUR HOME INSIDE

1 lb.
.pkg.

1.00

lb.

King Size 32

EGG NOODLES

1

,-----------------------------------------~·

ARMSTRONG
CEILING

ADOLPH'S PREDICTION:
ALONG HOL __ _

.1,

SINGER SALES &amp; SERVICE

COMPLETES BASIC
Army Private Gary L.
McKnight, 20, son of Mr. and
Mrs. William D. McKnight,
Route I, Middleport, recently
completed eight weeks of basic
training at the U. S. Army
Training Center, Armor, Ft.
Knox, Ky . His wife, Nancy,
lives at 180 E. Tompkins,
Columbus.

presented were from Bethel 79, initiate two candidates at the
International Order of Jobs next meeting.
Daughters, McConnelsville;
Pro tern officers were Albert
Mount Olive Chapter, ·Athens Woodard, worthy patron; ·Tom
Chapter, and ·Aurelius Chapter Edwards, associate patron;
which
is ob- Freda Grueser I Martha·I Maude
at Macksburg
'
'
servmg its 75th anmversary. ! Grueser, EJecta, and Mabel
A memorial tribute to Dorsey Moore, sentinel.
Smith, past grand patron who
Refreshments were served by
dted on May 18 was read, and Mrs. Thelma Dill, Mrs. Annette
the altar was dri'ped in his Knight, Mrs. Norma Parker,
memory. Plans were made to Mrs. Ula Matlack

SLICED CHEESE

EGGS

SP:ALTEST
992-2214

NECK BONES

IVORY
LIQUID

22 Count
Bag Now

:

Eastern Star50-Year Pins Awarded Couple
Mrs. Kathleen Kesterson
accepted 5().year pins for her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
Ebersbach, at a recent meeting
'
of Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order
of the Eastern Star, at the
FOR YOUR OWN
Masonic Temple.
Mrs. 'Elsie Smith made the
·presentations to Mrs. Kesterson
with congratulatory comments
Enjoy safety ... plus on the couple's long membership in the chapter. Also
extra earning power.
. l
receiving 50 year pins recently
were Mrs. Kate Chase, Mrs.
Louise Kreinbihl of Columbus,
Mrs. Helen Lyons; Pomeroy,
and Mrs. Ethel Sargent of
Athens:
PASSBOOK RATE
Communications were read
from Mrs. Roberta K. Mindling,
Meip Co. Bnllldl
past grand matron, {egarding
the O:E.S. cancer project. She
was recently appointed state
chairman. The worthy matron
appointed Mrs . Smith as
·Melt• County lrtndlof Tho chapter chairman for the
Alhens County S.vlngs I
project, with Mrs. Florence
I.Nn Co.
Well,
Mrs. Wanda Rizer and
· 296 Second St.
Mrs. Joan Rayburn to serve on
Pomeroy, Oflfo
the youth committee.
Plans for the banquet to bl!
held at the Grand session in
October were announced in a
, leller from . the banquet com..1!11___1111!_ _ _.. rnittce chairman. Invitations

$100,000 CANDY BARS

~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.J

m w. Second

MR. TOPS

5

SPECIAL SALE!

I

You can'! get tess
than uo for anv old
se wing
ma c hine
you've got
Sing er One Tttu(h Soewing

lb. 69~

LEAN AND MEATY

I
I

NOW!

Whe n ylllj !ride In lowarth

BACON

Regular
sge Bag

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

I
I

FRENCH CITY

1.00

The Fabrk Shop in Pomeroy

"'-~------··---

GROUND BEEF..... ~~·.
LEAN FRESH PURE BEEF
.
lb.
GROUND CHUCK.....
LEAN QiOICE QiOPPED
SIRLOIN STEAK ... l~·.

lb.

s
FABRIc SAV IN
~

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

FRESH GROUND DAILY - ANY AMOUNT

The Rev. Raullin Moyer will
officiate at the double ring
ceremony.
Mrs. Deb Zuspan of Mason,
W. Va ., will be the matron of
honor and. bridesmaids will be
Miss Robyn Mills, Chester, and
Miss Cindy Glaze, sister of the
bride-elect. Darlene Priddy of
Minersville will be the nower
girl.
Mr. James Glaze, brotuer of
the bride, will be best man.

Given Sunday---------------...
G
Mrs. Gary Lee of Elyria, the
former Dorothy Howell, was
honored Sunday with a picnic
dinner at the home of Edward
Templeto(}, Bailey Run .
Guests included her brother
and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Howell and children,
Donnie, Sherrie and Eddie of
Comfort, w. va., and several
former school mates and
families of Pomeroy. 'I:he Lee
family visited with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Johnson, and Mr. and Mrs .
Charles McNickles, Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Cleland, Mr. and
Mrs. Louis Lee, Racine, and
Mr . and Mrs. Virgil Lee of
Harrisonville Road.
Mrs. Lee has been ill for
several weeks and will re-enter
Allen Memorial Hospital,
Oberlin, June 13. She is
scheduled to undergo surgery
June 14. Mr. Templeton, Mrs.
Lee's mother , Mrs . Betty
Howell, and her brother, Roy
Howell, will be with her at that
time. The Lee children are
being cared for by Miss Brenda
Le e.
Cards may be sent to Mrs.
Lee at Allen Memorial Hospital,

" We Reserve The Right T o L imit Ouantit•es"

GROUND FRESH FROM USDA

lb.

Wedding Plans Completed
Plans have been completed
for the wedding of Miss Sharon
Glaze, daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
Glenn Glaze, to Mr . Michael
Stewart, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ross Stewart, Jr ., Minersville ,
The open church wedding will
be an event of June 12, Saturday, at 7:30 p.m. at the Middleport Church of Christ. Ahalfhour of pre-nuptial music will
be presented by Miss Patty
Glaze of Pomeroy, organist.

SUPERIORS BRAND . SUPER MARKET • Open Daily g to 10 . Sun. 10 to 10
WeAcce~~~;~;9~~3~~odStamp.~

0:-, ....\

TOMATOES·

NESCAFE
INSTANT Wtttt

,,,\

.2 lb.
pkg.
v

-' lO _oz • .

Jar

1• 19
with C.OIIPOII
At Mark V

�EEK

'.

- - - - - - - , 1 For Sale

Helen Help Us
By Helen Bottel

196S DODGE

HELPFUL NEIGHBORS
DISCOURAGE ROMANCE
Dear Helen:
I'm 19, arid able to take care of myseU. But my parents still
alert our neighbors when they leave me alone for a weekend. And
our neighbors are very burglar-conscious! So I'm out one perfectly good boy friend, unless you can tell me a way I can
apologize.
1met this new guy at college. He's a stereo and hi.fi nut, as I
am, so he said he'd bring over some of his portable equipment,
plus records, Friday night, We had a great time listening to the
good sounds, and talking, and It was almost 2 a. m. when he
ga11lered up his stuff and left.
·
Then's when It happened! Our 'neighbors, seeing a man load
wbat they thought was "stolen goods" into his car "in the nnlddle
lithe tllght," rushed out with shouts of "Stop Thief !" and stuck a
shotgun in his face, while the women hopped around saying the
pollee were on their way.
Sure enough, they were. It took haU an hour of explaining to
.gel'the emabarraased fellow off the hook, as by that time a crowd
had gathered and everyone was telling a different story, plus
trying to be in on the capture.
lhaven'theardfromhir.1since. What can I say that will bring
him around again? -NEIGHBORED OUT
Dear N.O.:
If you two can't joke about this by now, then maybe you'd
never make mu&amp;ic together. A humorous card of "apology"
should be sufficient - especially if you add, "Our neighbors now
take sleeping pills." -H.

S79S

Dart, 6 cy L, 4 door, automatic tran s., radio, good tires,
clean inside &amp; out.

196S CHEVROLET

$595

Pi ck up 8' Fl eetside, V-8 engine, Delu xe cab, runs ext ra

good .
lWFORD

Slrn

4 Door sedan L.T.D., power' steer ing, power brak ~s, air
conditioning. Vinyl interior, blk. vinyl' roof, maroon f ini sh,
radio, new w.w tires.

REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed
objectional.
The
pu~sher

will not be responsible

for more than one incorrect
insertion.

RATES

guess because she thinks that's the only way she can make my
brothers behave. It doesn't work very well.
How can I get adopted out? If I don't soon, I'll run away. -

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word minimum.

Each addifiona\ word 2c .
BLIND ADS

HURTING

Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.

Dear HurUng :
Let the S(!hool nurse see your bruises. If your mother's
OFFICE HOURS
8:30a .m. to 5:00p.m . Da ily,
beatings are \his severe, she needs psychiatric help, and YOU
8: 30a .m. fo 12 : 00 Noon
need. a foster
home.
.
. The nurse will contact the proper agencies. - Saturday .

H.

Card of Thanks

Dear Helen :
Ia It 1rue the Black Panthers invented the saying, "Right
onl"? - ' CURIOUS
Dear Curious :
That's what Huey P. Newton says. - H.

WE 1wiSH to ex press our
grateful thank you and our
appreciation for the help and
concern we have received the
past year in the care and
health of our mother and
grandmother, Josephine C.
Pickens. Our gratitude and
appreciative thanks to the
Ewing Funeral Home sta ff ,

WIN AT BRIDGE

the pallbearers, Rev. Charles
Norri s, those who sent
flowers. ca rds, food and those

South Picks Winning Line

•s

• 72

••o

A-Pass. Your side has no

TODAY'S QUESTION

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
With nine high-card points ,
South has aIm o s t a maximum JACOBY MODERN
weak two-bid. North has just
enough to make a forcing
two no -trump response. He
has every intention of passing if South reb ids three
spades to show a minimum ,
but South rebids three hearts
to show a maximum with
something in hearts . This is
enough lor North to bid
spade game . .,
The game contract is a
good one, but the spade
finesse is wrong and there is
no play for four spades if a
heart or club is opened.
When the hand was. played
in a rubber bridge ga me in
Fort Worth, Texas, the bid·
ding went just this way . West
made his normal openin g
lead of the jack of diamonds .
South won in dummy and
studied the hand for some
time. He intended to try for
a club discard on the third
high , diamond, but he won dered if he shouldn't play
the ace of trumps first. It
was just possible that this
play might catch a singleton
king of trumps or find kingsmall of trumps or a small
singleton in a hand with just
two diamonds . It would cost
him a trick if the diamonds
went three time s and the
trump finesse was on .
South decided to cash •that
ace of t rum p s and it was
well that he drd so. East did
hold a sin~leton trump and
only two diamonds so that
without the
ploy he
to r11fl'

SHIRl
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At 5

ORDINANCE
NO . 975-71

An Ord inance to Regulate the
removal of curbs along the
Streets and Highway of th e

Village and the Fee thereof .
Be it ordained by .the Cou ncil
of the VIllage of Midd l eport as
tallow s :

• 16 E.lnd1 F'oiiiii'OY

•

Let Us Show You How You Can Become A' Homeowner We Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home, V.A.. F.H.A.,
And Conventional Loans . .
Come See Us At 971/., N. Second St., Middleport.
PH. 992-7129

HiHo· Bar.

NICE GENTLE spoiled mare
pony , 3 years old. broke to
ride . See James Hollon , one

purposes from the Office of the
Mayor of the Village .
Sect . 11 . No removal Is valid
unless authorized or supervised
by the Street Ma i ntenance
Supervi sor so as to con tro l
drainage of adiacent proper .
ti es .
Sec . Ill. Th e fee for such
perm it Is $5 .00 .

YOUNG couple looking to buy
farm . Contact Jim Nally, P.
D. Box 603, Athens.
5-25-12tp
TELEPHON~S . brass beds,
clocks, dishes, old furniture,

ANTIQUES :

ALL SIZES IN STOCK

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

CHEST FREEZERS
19 cu. ft .
229.95
Reg. S285. Limited supply.

Sec . IV . The penalty for
making such remova l without
said permit and Supervisor
sha ll be not le ss than $5 .00 nor
more than $50 .00 .
Sec. V. Th is Ord inan ce sha ll
take effect and be in for ce from
and after May 25, 1971.
Passed the 24th day of May

1971 .

.

John W. Zerkl e
Pres ident of Council
Attest : Gene Grate
Cler k

161 L 8. 115,31

ORDINANCE
NO. 971-71

An Ordinance lo Approve plat
of R lvervie w Acres Subdivision .
Be it ordained by th·e_Council
of Village of M idd leport as
follows : .
. Sec. t. That the proposed plat
of Riverview Acres Subd i vision
be end it is hereby approved
and confirmed by the Council.
Sec. II. This Ordinance shall
take effect on the earliest dat e
provided by law .
Passed the 10th day of May

1971.

John W . Zerkle
President -of Counc II

(61 1.B,e1.

'.

ITEM : ·rom Hill. He plays
Blood, Sweat &amp; Tears and
ama Cass. But he plays
oon light Seren\de and
Andy Williams tao. Variety
·, lhe spice of our rnusic.
I

WMP0/1390,

mares . Fran cis Benedum .

Phone Coolville 667-3856.
5·16-3otp

.IT'S ONE OF TllOSE N'W

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
r-t~WINSOR

«BUDDY

«·cHAMPION
,-jr_VAN DYKE

10X50

~

5-27-JOtc

300 BALE S of red clover or
alfalta hay . Phone 304-8953972 .
6-3-6tc

Special
At

12' · 14' · 24' · WIDE

MILLER

MOBILE HOMES
1220 Washington Blvd.

lost and Found

Belpre, Ohio

6, 98

Plus

Parts

Blaettnar's
PHONE 992-2143

RACINE, 0.

Real Estate For Sale

Leading Cree k area. Phone

DIAL N' SEW zfg.zag
992-3497 . 1971
608 East Main
se
wing
machine left in
Reward for safe return .
Pomeroy
layaway . Beautiful p-a stel
6-Htc
color, full size model. All WANT TO RETIRE? HERE IS
YOUR HOME. - 2 bedroom s,
built-in to buttonhole, overor

For Rent

CHO ICE lots for rent on Oh io
River across fr om M id·
dleporl. Enjoy a relaxing
summer of camping, boat ing,
and swimming. Call Maxine

casta ndfancy stitch. Pay just
$48 .75
cash
or
terms
available. Trade -ins ac -

cepted. Phone 992·56• ..

6-2-6tc

Gr iffith al 992-5782 afler 5 VACUUM cleaner, brand new
1971 model. Complete with all
p.m.
cleaning fools . Small paint
6-6-31c
8 ROOM HOUSE , 4 bedrooms,
nice kitchen, 145 Bufternut
Ave., Pomeroy . Phone 992-

7170.

damage in shipping . Will take
$27 cash or budget plan
available. Phone 992-5641.
6-2-6tc

carpel paths and
6·6·61c REMOVE
spot s. fluff beaten down nap
with Blue Lustre . Rent
Shampooer Sl, Baker Fur niture Company .

6-2-6tc

For Sale

10-18-lfc

36"

X 23" X .009

Sheets

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20~
81or Sl.OO

The
Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.

TRAILER for rent. Brown 's
Trailer Pa r k, Miner sville,

in Mason, W. Va. Call Robert
Dixon collect at 614-667-3891.
5-30-tfc

For Sale

TH' "WILL H E'

·TH'''WH~· ·
\HONT 1..

- 2 story frame, 7 rooms , 4
bedrooms , 1V2 baths , full
basement, larg e front porch,
garage with renovated room

GLAND BEGINS
A·QUIVERIN'
IN TERROR-

HE.'!....

ASTH'MALE.
DON'T DO
NOTHIN', TH'
''WH'/ WON'T HE"
GLAND STA~S .
A·QU I VERIN'.~

-

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

Limestone Driveways

_WINNIE WINKLE

Septic Tanks and Leach

MEAN, I 1l1E
MOUNTAIN 'lvOIJT

)oOU

delivered right to your
project. Fast ~nd easy . Free

CAll GEORGE 985-3837
OR DON 992-6883

estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
Middleporf, 011\o.
•
6-30-tlc

Roofing &amp;Carpenter
Work
Spouting, Roof
Paintinf

-~--=~

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284

The Fabric Shop,) Pomeroy. _
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Shar:pen Scissors.

3-19-tfc

-------=

COME TO
MOHAMMED.... '

,.

NEW &amp;- OLD WORK
All Weafher Roofing &amp;
construction Co .

DEXTER, 0. 45726
PHONE 742·1945

1nsured- E xperlenced

Work Guaranteed

-·

.

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
fu ll basement with garage, EXPERT TREE service. Call Reasonable
rates. Ph. 446-4782
collect after 5 p.m ., Ri chard
NEW forced air gas furnace,
Gallipoli
s.
John Russell ,
Hayman, Reedsville 667·3041.
$10,900.
Owner
&amp;
Operator.
S-19-30tp
5-13-tfc

WANT TO SELL? WE HAVE
BUYERS FOR YOUR FARM
OR HOME.

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer

Complete Service
Phone 949-3821

'.

SEPTIC tanks creanea. Miller
Sanitation , Stewart, Ohio. Ph .

662-3035.

Racine, Ohio

2-12-tfc

Crill Bradlord

THE ·BORN LOSER

o'ver·

haul ed. Phone 992·3494.
'
6·4·41c
1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr .
hardtop . power steeri ng,
pow er brakes, air, 18 ,000
miles. Ex cellent condition.

quees ,

aluminum

siding

Rac ine, Ohio.

and railing. Carl A. Jacob,

~U. ~.~1M:
~ tWJ5 1IOSE

rooms, bath, Rutland . Phone

742-5613.
5·12-tfc

Ed Hedrick , 2137 Wadsworth

f.OO LEFT tAA.Y 001 ~1
~~ ~IU: I IW6 / ......_
,..:..:::?-'j

sa les representative . For free - - - - - - - - -

estimates, phone Charles RALPH'S
CARPET
Lis le , Syracuse . V. V.
Upho\sfury Cleaning Service.

IF I WASN'T SO "''fRVIf1 ... TfRED t'D
8E WOI1DERtN' WHO SACKS UP HERE
'"AN' HOY/COME THEY TOOK OFF
"•LEAVtN' ALL 111E BEDS MADe
,fVi' READY"" , - - - -

'
HEY"' SOMEBODY
MUS! 'VE LEFT THE

OJr~TOMJl

DOORQru!!

tune up and brake service.

992-7357 .

5-18-tfc
B_A
_C
_K
~
H,..
O_
E_A
_N
_D
_D_D_Z_E_R~
work .

Wheel s balanced
Ironically .
All
guaranteed .

Sl X ROOM house, bath, fuli

elecwork

Reasonable

Septic tanks installed. George rates . Phone 992-3213.
(Bil\1 Pullins, Phone 992-2478.
5.22.3otc
4·25-tfc - - - - - - - - -

-----Real Estate For Sale

DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSR

Insurance

I . Capt.'a

Drive, Columbus, Ohio, phone NICE HOME IN COUNTRY- . A\JTO"MOBILE insurance been·

237-4334, Columbus.

5-9· tic

_ V~g!l

B.

TEAFORD
-·
SR.

One acre, nicely finished two
bedroom home with firep lace,
built -in kitchen ,
wood
paneling, carpeted, city
wate r . Loca ted on Athens
County road C-64, Vanderhoff
Rd .. one mile from Rt. 1 and
lhree miles tram Rt. 50.
Twenty minutes to Parkers-

l

cancelled?
Los\
.your
operator's license? Call.- 992.
2966.
6-l.S.tfc,

8. Ostrich·

9. Wasa

· glutton
13. Hotbed
u. Thougbt
up

-BAG MAN!

This Week's S.peclll
,.
... ___ ,_ .

'burg, Athens, or Pomeroy i
20 miles (18 miles 4 lane high -

15. Auroral
11. Speechless
18. Founder of
Arianism

VALUE
RATI!D

way) , 19 miles, and 18 miles,

20. After
Wlnalow
21. All that's

left

22. Equip for
battle
23. Col\l))lratorlal group
211. "Walling
Cor Lefty"

66 OLDS CUTlAsS-

TEI\RY

$1295

radios. televisions, stereos.
budget terms or pay balance HOUSE .:_ i642.Llncoln Heights. BY OWN.ER , House, In Mason, S
and records found in AmeriCall Danny Thompson, 992rooms and bath down, 3 small
of $83.29 . Call 99H08S.
2196.
.
rooms up. lot size 77' , x 100ft.
can dcparlmcnt and special. 6-6-6tc
Would
take tarm tractor or
5-26-lfc
ly slnrcs get 1 ~rc hy truck .•
truck as part payment. For
In 196\1, 1rucks carried more· STR AWBERRIES. Geraldine ' HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts,;· information phone 773-5249 or
Clel"nd, Racine, 011\o.
!han 7S per cent of all such
Pomeroy . Phone 992-2293.
, wrile Box 317, Mason, W. Va.
6-3-121c
.
10-25-tf&lt;
- goods:
'
6·3·5tp

''Carouser·
aong
(Swda.J
f . Musical

sections
5. Ancient

110¥01

(3wda.)

\'~P&lt;deri.ar'•

holm

32. "According

for

' to

Grilnt

.

'IOU 1 LL A6f{EE
10 SAY IT.

'"===~:=.:~~~~~:;_..:•.::u•::•::•:::.•t=:;ed by the above cartocm.
11
r
PritUt SMISE IISWII,ltre

(2wds.)

'(ANwen to.,orrowJ

U f i J"

Jun&gt;bl•" I LIMP MlNII SUITU' WINNOW
'

'""I' llwU in torit&gt;'Y you·,..
IWIM

AXYDLBAAXB
lo LONGFELLOW
One letter elmply otandO for another. ln thto Mmple A trr
wred for the th!'&lt;e L'J, X for the two O'i etc. SlnJie !etten,
apootrophe•, the lonJih and formation of the worda arc an
lllnll. Eacb dOy the Code tetton mo dtftermt.
GCYM
llOM, B.

GCCXB
SVD

BFMKI:~

JOD

APDT

DTMEMKOEM

l!'HPJDMN

'

I rJ I I I

otold
comlca
83.Apropoo

A CrJptoJI'MI QadaUan

'

um:.w I

Now arran1e the clrcleclletten .
to form the ourpri.. an~wer, u

'
.
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Rent's how to work It:

0.

II Vi

~·-~! \i.~·.•:~::u·-

l.lr!lilad Is

30. HOalert
thread
32. Hooligan

one

'''

l

u ·f;tL

"

34.Minecar
se; Froudlan
tonn
se:Ha"o.rd
. claulc
"majeltJCill
89. Yellow
root"
oc'her
30.Colleen

26. Spigot
plug
27. Shakea·
··peare'•

George. will you honor us with
o lew well -choson words?

A••w•r

3t.C&amp;yor

48. BUppery

RUTLAND FURNITURE .
'

merie
20.Cblneae
weight

'/'f.:.uti\S

MAY TAG

Rutland,

Ill. Tur·

311. Splintered
37. Burro'•
relaUve
40. Whel'&lt;!
Dakar Ia
41, "Windy
City," !or
abort
42. "J!lternat
City"

RH Carpot
Servlct

Arnol" Grate.

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

:U.Trouble

Egyptian
city
6.Racethe
motor
1. OriJ(nal
10. Sloan
Wlllon

We Sptclillae in

742-4211

18. Circle
· eecment

3f, Knell

F liter.

-----~

(3Wda.)

Down,

29. Where

•••••-.1
-

-:-:---:-:--:-:---

·

Down

tne

HI PUI?6EON IS A IIEA'S()HMI.e
o\WI, I'll A55Uoi1E 'IAAT ~ otota
51JITAIII£ roi'II'YAHCfS FOR

-------

automatic changer, dual
volume control. Use our

16.See 8

28. Mexican

~

MQst

2. Wooden·

YM.-)"1 Oryplo\uoto: rr IB Bllll'tlCR FOR A W0KA.N
TO li(AJIRY A MAN WHO LOVES HER THAN A KAN
SHill LOVES.- ARAB PROVIlRB
(0 1m KlDI l'•turu B)'JIIdleatt. Jne.)

playwright
LEE,

Kan:.&amp;Van,·tandi:

:-:-:-=-- - - -

.-

11, Bardot's

core
3. With 18

like bird

I HAVE A NATURAL .JOB
FOR YOU, OLD BUOOY-

DOWN
I. Of the
healing ·

"head"
12. Germon
orta (abbr.)
river

superior

'· Find fault

" DICK TRACY

Broker
res pectively i 3'12 miles from
1967 TAGALONG ca mper .
110
Mechanic
St.
Coolville. 1 mile from Tup·
Phone 992-2288.
SWIMMING lessons starting at
Excellent condition . Fully
Pomeroy,
Ohio
·
pers Plai-ns. S14,SOO by
6-J.tfc
Maplewood Lake. ~hone 949·
equipped. Phone 247-2554.
owners,
Frank and Pat
USED CARS
4074 .
..
BUSINESS OPPOR1'UNITY 6-3-6tc ---::--::------:--Goebel
,
667-3838.
58
CHEVY,
automatic
$75.
Call
6-6-3tc
General store with all mer6-6-tfc
:R:-:E:-:G:-A
:-:T::T:-A
:---::S-pe- c..,.ia""lc-,--:cl7. ft.
992·7128.
c handise and fixtures . 2
6·8-3tc
Thompson boat, dock covers,
LABOR LOCAL NO. 83, election
houses,
double garage .
;
ACRE FARM, Long Bollom;
extras , 75 HP newly rebuilt - -- - -- - June 19, 1971. 9 a . m. · 3 p. m.
Several buildings. Excellenl 24 with
Holiday
Coupe:
White
over
or
without
farm
motor, trailer . Good ski boat. 66 CHRYSLER Newport. 4 door,
Vote for Gardner (June)
chance for you. Asking only
machinery
.
House
with
3 turquoise, while ylny\ int., v.
power
steeri
ng
,
power
$600 . Call 992·2003. Will
Dunham , Jr. tor business
$30,000.00.
8, auto., P.S., bucket seats.
ing
bedrooms, dining room , liv
demonstrate.
brakes, factory air, 61 ,000
agent. Support his staff. Why
room
,
l
'l2
baths,
enclosed
miles. Good tires, two new. NEARLY NEw-3 bedrooms,
6-8-tfc
are local laborers loafing
back porch, wall -to wall
$800 for quick sale. Phone 882·
when outside men are coming
hot water heating, bat~, nice
carpeting
. Aluminum siding,
2889
New
Haven
.
in to our area working . I FOR A Meyers aluminum boat
kitchen, dishwasher, dining
awning,
storm
windows and
6-8-3tc
promise If elected to work
- won't rust, rot , or leak . Call
area . Large living . Lots of
slorm
doors.
City water.
loca l men In their area first
---'------:------:
992-6256 atter 5 p.m. Also,
closets. Ba sement. Carport.
Selling
due
to
Ill
health.
Phone
1966 IMPALA convertible, 327
before outside laborers come
fibergl ass 15 foot canoes .
$23,000.00.
614-985-3938
..
;,You'll . Like ·our Giuaiiiy:
cu. in., automatic, power
into your area . A man to serve
5·16-JOtc
5-18-301p
Way of Doing Business."
you, not rule you . Your vote
steering and power brakes. 80 ACRES - Moslly tractor
appreciatited .
GMAC FINANCING
Electric
top.
glassback
lillable on school and mai l
NEW 4 FT. or 5 Ft . brush hog .
window,
radio,
.heater,
$900.
"2-5342
Pomeroy
6-8-9tp
Phone 992-6329.
routes . 6 room house . Several 3 BEDROOM brick home .·
Can
be
seen
anytime.
Phone
----'---Open
Evenings
'TII6:00
Choice location In Middleport .
outbuildings. ALL
MIN·
6-2-6tc
992-7105.
Tll5 p ,M, Sat
Seen by appointment only.
ERALS. Asking $25,000.00.
Instruction .
BESTL\NE PRODUCTS. Ca\1
INSTRUCTIONAL
Phone 992-5523 after ~ 5-7p.m.
-ttc • • -...
Myron Ba iley, Phone 992-5327.
RACINE - Lar9e 7 room hom~,
TRUCK LINES - City and road
...........
5-4-3Q Real Estate For Sale
large bath, nrce kitchen and
driver training . Call or write
dining
r,oom
.
Nearly
full
Big Capacity
Sheridan Truck Lines, 1255 COAL , limestone . Excelsior'· 24 ACRE FARM, Long Boltom ,
basement . , Garage with
Mavtag
with
or withoul
farm
Corwin Avenue, S\3-863-6404,
Salt
Works,
E.
Main
Sf.,
carport
.
Concrete
drive.
3
Autom•tlct
Hamilton, Ohio, 4.5015.
machinery . House with 3
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
· 2 speed operation .
. porches .
Asking
only
bedrooms, dining r oom, living
6-7-2tc
Choice of ·water
4-9-tfc
$12,500.00.
.
r oom , 1'12 baths, enclosed
temps .
Auto.
back porch, wall to wa ll
water
level
MODERN
WALN0T
s
iereoLost
carpeling . Aluminum siding, IF YOU W,IINT TO SELL OR
control .·
Lint"
rad ia combination, 4-speaker
~OS T, Vicinity of Hemlock
SEE THE BEST CALL 992awning, slorm windows and
Filter
or
Power
4-speed
sound
sys tem,
3325
Fin Agitator .
Grove, black and rus\
storm door s. City water.
changer,
separa
le
controls
.
Ptrmi·Pi'ISI .
HELEN L. TEAFORD
Doberman Pinscher pup.
Selling
due
lo
ill
health.
Phone
Balance
$68.31.
Use
our
Maytag
992-2378
Reward. Phone 992-7291.
614-985-3938.
Halo
of Hut
budge!
terms
.
Call
992-7085.
6-7-6tc
6·6-6tc
5-18-JOtp
Dryers
6-6-6tc
~:-::-::-::-::-:c:---­
Surround clothes .
~----TWO BEDROOM house, large
With
gentle, even 1
5
ROOMS
and
bath.
Sun
porch.
MAPLE STEREO -radio
lot , assume FHA loan of 5 per
heat . No hot spots,
Full
basement.
Phone
992·
combination, AM&amp;FM radio,
cenl. Phone 992·2619.
no overdrylng,
Radios Ride Trucks
four· . speakers, 4-speed '. 5162 .
Fine Mesh Lint
6-4-6tp
6-8·3tc

WASHINGTON -·

CO 'OJ liiiiJK I'P
Ml Ril.lO\II

a:

LI'I'll.E ORPHAN ANNID

7-31 -tfc

HENRY CLELAND
Johnson and Son , Inc.
Fre e estimates .
Phone.
REALTOR
5-27-ttc
Gallipolis 446·0294.
Otlice 992-2259
~---:c:-=---:-----d
3-12-tfc
Residence 992-2568
EXPERT lawn mower an - - - - - - - - 6-3-6tc
tiller repair . Free pickup and ·O'DELL WHEEL alignment
delivery .. Warren'\ Mohw~r located at Crossroads, Rl. 124. ·
HOUSE , story and half, 6 Shop, 248 Condor S · P 0 e Complete front end service,

basement, 133 Butternut Ave.,
just walking distance from
downtown Pomeroy . Contact

Pomeroy, Ohio

com pletely

AT TH' APPROACH
OFA MAl..E-

Free Estimates

LOCATED ON
QUIET HARR't'SON'S TV AND AN·
TENNA SERVICE. Phone
STREET, LOW UTILITIES.
992-2522.
$5,300.
6-10-tfc
RECENTLY REMODELED NICE 1 s tory frame , 2 O' BRIEN ELECTRIC SER VICE . Phone 949-4551 .
bedrooms , closets , bath,
5-30-tfc
NICE kitchen , range and ref.,

A HOME FOR YOUR FAMILY

_

!
.......

Beds

CONCRETE

GARDENSPACEORYAR~

car pet i ng, air co ndition er,

~

s.J.ttc ----~---over (COULD BE UTILITY
NEIGLER Construction . For
APARTMENT) , c lose fo ------~~grade school. A BUY AT AWNINGS, storm doors and building or remodel ing your
home. Catt Guy Nelg\er,
wind ows, carports, mar .
JUST $18,500.

.

Aluminum

Motor

bath, ni ce kitchen, utility
room , NEW forced air furnace and hot water tank,
about II&lt;~ acre of NICE

~

Backhoe Service
and Hauling

VILLAGE
FLOWER SHOP

READ'{MIX

i

742-4902

Single Flowers

0pen9Ti\S
Thurs .. Fri. t Sat .
Or Phone 949-2223

Cleland Realty

BLACK and tan hound, los\ in

Artificia I Flowers

Cemetery
Flowers
&amp;
Wrealhs
Also Arrangetnents made to
your specification.

Re-Charge

dishes ,

~

'

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

Arrangements

Air Conditioning
lnspectjpn and

.

Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios
Backhoe And
End loader Work

,EE TOM CROW, GUY Stf(JLER OR BOB CROW

Have Your seasonal

~

i

Complete
Remodeling

.ALSO
DOUBLE..;WIDES

FllENCH MENU •

!

JOHNSON MASONRY

TWO

BEDROOM
housetrailer, $2,000. Phone
992-3954.
6-Htp

····-~

tTS CALLE!&gt;, ·
'HOW TO READ A

'llELEVANT' COUU&amp;S. IN
FACT, 'TloiE W\oiOLE C~i
· WAll ~tS 1DeA

Pomeroy

,Ph. ~92 ·2143 .

MEMORIAL BRIDG! TRAFFIC CIRCLE
. PARKERSB'URG, W.VA.

telephones, clocks, brass
beds, lamps, etc. Lee Rudisill,

Phone 992-3403.

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!

Time You Ever Spent.

etc. Wrile M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy , Ohio. Call 992-6271 .
4-27-tfc

homes for rent or sale, on lot

REGISTERED Appaloosa stud
service ; $50
reg i stered
mares, any breed ; $40 grade

From the Lar·ae:sl Truck ·or;
Bulldozer
.
to the
Smallest Heater Core.

Evenings Call 992-2534, Dale Dutton

.40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most P~ofitable

Wanted To Buy

304-675-1159

CI.OD'$ STUCHING I'RGNC/1
T!HS SUMM611.1 YOV MUST
lie ~VPIN~ ME. J

GREEN !:tiLL HOMES, INC.

mile off Rt. 7 at Five Points.
6-6-3tp

,_.,

e"" "wrA.-.. T.M. ..._ ut. Pwt. Olf.
AND HIS FRIENDs '

PARKERSBUR.G MOBILE HOMES, INC.

REGISTERED quarter stud
service, Hanks Rock 209498 . FURNISHED modern Ranch
Contact Mike Jones, Rt. 3,
house , 5 rooms , double
Pomeroy, 011\o. Phone 992· garage.
12 x 65 mobile home. 1
6880.
accepled
in either. M &amp;
child
6-2-12tc G Food Markel,
3 mi . south
Middleport,
Rl.
7.
1 WILL nol be responsible for
6-6·31c
any debts contracted by any
one olher \han myself. Signed ,---------,TRAILER LOTS . Bob's Mobile
John T. Reltmire.
Court, Rl. 124, Syracuse ,
6·6·31p
Ohio. 992-2951.
"R"E"'D"u"c"Eo-::sa~f&lt;.:e-a
=n:::d..-.1a:::s-:;1~w it h
4-2-tfc
Gobese lablels and E-Vap·
Waler pills. Nelson Drugs.
4 ROOM furnished apartment
5-26-30tp with bath: Reynolds Flower
Shop, Mason, W. Va . Also 2
bedroom trailer. Phone 773SAVE UP to one half . Bring
your sick TV to Chuck's TV 5147.
6-8-tfc
Shop, 151 Butlernut Ave.,
4-23-tfc
- --.,----,------

6-6-6tc

SeMce

You will have something of value to show for the S$$ you

responsible for acci dents. 541

High St.. Middleport.

EXPERJENCED

* A STACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS! ! *

spend when you buy your home - plus, you gain an In·
cOme Tax benefit you bulld an equity and you are not
bound by the terms of a rental agreement.

HOME sewing . Phone 992-5327 .
Ohio. Phone 992-3324.
Auto Sales
Sec. 1. That no person sha ll
6_·3·6lc 1961 DODGE tor paris, $50.
5·9-30tp,
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
remove anv curb or portion
Phone 992-5972.
thereof in the Village of Mid · ;;;:~;;:;::--:-::-;:-==.=;=C"
dleport for the purpose at REDUCE sate and fast with ' For Rent or Sale
6·6·31p
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
establish i ng a dr i veway or
water pills. Nelson Drugs.
AVAILABLE June IS, two new
open ing in said curb without
4-14-60tp
SOx 12 two -bedroom mobi \e 1961 OLDS 98. Good condition .
secu ring a perm it tor such

'Lilt'Our,FrH P•rking Lot

RObinson's Cleaners

BARMAID. Apply in person.

Phone 992-5434.

Pomeroy.

.

.
What Do You Have For The sss You Pav In Rent?

dishes, five -leg dining table,
stands, toy· train, pool table,
many other items . Not

apartments. Close to schoo l.

Notice

6-2-ttc

YARD SALE, Saturday, June
12, 10 a.m. Most all an1iques,
pos ter beds and other types,

6-B-ltp FURNISHED and unfurnished

What do you do now?

You do pass and West bid'l
two spades which is passed
around to you. What do you do
now?

Help Wanted

Lest we forget, May God's

The bidding has been:
West
North
East South
1.
Dble
I N.T.
Pass
2•
Pass
?
You, South, hold:
r11K732 ¥H tK93 .Q162

p ... 2N.T. Pass
Pua ••
Pass
Pass
Opening lead- + J

99B113.

Sl78.95 UP

richest blessings be upon each TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
112-mile north of new Meigs
one, as .. ea"l:h 6ne was a
High School. Phone 992-2941.
bless ing'to us. Thomas J . and
3·5-lfc
Jed C. Pi ckens and our
Families.

.. I':'"'SP.._PER f.N1UPll1l ASSN I)

game and you belong in clubs.

Pass

Without having regrets of
leaving any person out, we
cannot mention all by name.

the third diamond and keep
South from .getting a club
discard.

3
Both vulnerable
West North Eut South

3.2.

who had thoughts of us.

·B usiness Services.

AIR CONDITIONERS

L--~-- ---------------•,

Monday Deadline 9 a.m .
CDnce llatlon &amp; Correction$
Will b·e accepted until9a.m. for
Day of Publication

••

and -accessories. Call us for
your needs. We deliver
dist r ibutors, Brown 's, Phone

OP.EN EVES. 8:00P.M.
~EROY, OHIO
WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication

wigs

PRJO::S:...?:.----J~-::.-\1

. BLAETTNARS

Pomeroy Motor Co.

For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one Insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
Dear Helen:
,
12 cents per word three
I go to S(!hool with bruises, and when my friend asks how I got
consecutive in sertions.
them I can't tell her, because it's my mother:
18 cents per word six con I get the knocks for whst my brothers do. They won't obey, secutive insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
and she takes It out on me. Almost every day I get a beating, I ads
and ads paid wjthin 10 days .

NORTH
8
.Q64
• Ql084
... .
t AKQ~
.. .,.
.72
WEST
EAST
•K92
.76
¥11.952
tJ10965
+83
•11.9•
.KQJ865
SOUTH (D)
.AJ10873
¥KJ3

Pomeroy·
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

KOSCOT .. KOSMETICS,

MEEK .

~ MUCH W..\IE
'rOV ReDIJCE.D 'ttX.R

I'LL BE RIGHT
_... ·-.
, ELVINfv· .. GO ON
IN TH' HOUSE AN '
MAKE "'ORESELF
AT HOME

More

Bargains, Bargains,

Afo.'[)

PB

DTK

APDT
ZPJN.

APJWMN • LVFPN

SGPJN .. ·- A . .

BTHXN•

�EEK

'.

- - - - - - - , 1 For Sale

Helen Help Us
By Helen Bottel

196S DODGE

HELPFUL NEIGHBORS
DISCOURAGE ROMANCE
Dear Helen:
I'm 19, arid able to take care of myseU. But my parents still
alert our neighbors when they leave me alone for a weekend. And
our neighbors are very burglar-conscious! So I'm out one perfectly good boy friend, unless you can tell me a way I can
apologize.
1met this new guy at college. He's a stereo and hi.fi nut, as I
am, so he said he'd bring over some of his portable equipment,
plus records, Friday night, We had a great time listening to the
good sounds, and talking, and It was almost 2 a. m. when he
ga11lered up his stuff and left.
·
Then's when It happened! Our 'neighbors, seeing a man load
wbat they thought was "stolen goods" into his car "in the nnlddle
lithe tllght," rushed out with shouts of "Stop Thief !" and stuck a
shotgun in his face, while the women hopped around saying the
pollee were on their way.
Sure enough, they were. It took haU an hour of explaining to
.gel'the emabarraased fellow off the hook, as by that time a crowd
had gathered and everyone was telling a different story, plus
trying to be in on the capture.
lhaven'theardfromhir.1since. What can I say that will bring
him around again? -NEIGHBORED OUT
Dear N.O.:
If you two can't joke about this by now, then maybe you'd
never make mu&amp;ic together. A humorous card of "apology"
should be sufficient - especially if you add, "Our neighbors now
take sleeping pills." -H.

S79S

Dart, 6 cy L, 4 door, automatic tran s., radio, good tires,
clean inside &amp; out.

196S CHEVROLET

$595

Pi ck up 8' Fl eetside, V-8 engine, Delu xe cab, runs ext ra

good .
lWFORD

Slrn

4 Door sedan L.T.D., power' steer ing, power brak ~s, air
conditioning. Vinyl interior, blk. vinyl' roof, maroon f ini sh,
radio, new w.w tires.

REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed
objectional.
The
pu~sher

will not be responsible

for more than one incorrect
insertion.

RATES

guess because she thinks that's the only way she can make my
brothers behave. It doesn't work very well.
How can I get adopted out? If I don't soon, I'll run away. -

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word minimum.

Each addifiona\ word 2c .
BLIND ADS

HURTING

Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.

Dear HurUng :
Let the S(!hool nurse see your bruises. If your mother's
OFFICE HOURS
8:30a .m. to 5:00p.m . Da ily,
beatings are \his severe, she needs psychiatric help, and YOU
8: 30a .m. fo 12 : 00 Noon
need. a foster
home.
.
. The nurse will contact the proper agencies. - Saturday .

H.

Card of Thanks

Dear Helen :
Ia It 1rue the Black Panthers invented the saying, "Right
onl"? - ' CURIOUS
Dear Curious :
That's what Huey P. Newton says. - H.

WE 1wiSH to ex press our
grateful thank you and our
appreciation for the help and
concern we have received the
past year in the care and
health of our mother and
grandmother, Josephine C.
Pickens. Our gratitude and
appreciative thanks to the
Ewing Funeral Home sta ff ,

WIN AT BRIDGE

the pallbearers, Rev. Charles
Norri s, those who sent
flowers. ca rds, food and those

South Picks Winning Line

•s

• 72

••o

A-Pass. Your side has no

TODAY'S QUESTION

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
With nine high-card points ,
South has aIm o s t a maximum JACOBY MODERN
weak two-bid. North has just
enough to make a forcing
two no -trump response. He
has every intention of passing if South reb ids three
spades to show a minimum ,
but South rebids three hearts
to show a maximum with
something in hearts . This is
enough lor North to bid
spade game . .,
The game contract is a
good one, but the spade
finesse is wrong and there is
no play for four spades if a
heart or club is opened.
When the hand was. played
in a rubber bridge ga me in
Fort Worth, Texas, the bid·
ding went just this way . West
made his normal openin g
lead of the jack of diamonds .
South won in dummy and
studied the hand for some
time. He intended to try for
a club discard on the third
high , diamond, but he won dered if he shouldn't play
the ace of trumps first. It
was just possible that this
play might catch a singleton
king of trumps or find kingsmall of trumps or a small
singleton in a hand with just
two diamonds . It would cost
him a trick if the diamonds
went three time s and the
trump finesse was on .
South decided to cash •that
ace of t rum p s and it was
well that he drd so. East did
hold a sin~leton trump and
only two diamonds so that
without the
ploy he
to r11fl'

SHIRl
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At 5

ORDINANCE
NO . 975-71

An Ord inance to Regulate the
removal of curbs along the
Streets and Highway of th e

Village and the Fee thereof .
Be it ordained by .the Cou ncil
of the VIllage of Midd l eport as
tallow s :

• 16 E.lnd1 F'oiiiii'OY

•

Let Us Show You How You Can Become A' Homeowner We Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home, V.A.. F.H.A.,
And Conventional Loans . .
Come See Us At 971/., N. Second St., Middleport.
PH. 992-7129

HiHo· Bar.

NICE GENTLE spoiled mare
pony , 3 years old. broke to
ride . See James Hollon , one

purposes from the Office of the
Mayor of the Village .
Sect . 11 . No removal Is valid
unless authorized or supervised
by the Street Ma i ntenance
Supervi sor so as to con tro l
drainage of adiacent proper .
ti es .
Sec . Ill. Th e fee for such
perm it Is $5 .00 .

YOUNG couple looking to buy
farm . Contact Jim Nally, P.
D. Box 603, Athens.
5-25-12tp
TELEPHON~S . brass beds,
clocks, dishes, old furniture,

ANTIQUES :

ALL SIZES IN STOCK

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

CHEST FREEZERS
19 cu. ft .
229.95
Reg. S285. Limited supply.

Sec . IV . The penalty for
making such remova l without
said permit and Supervisor
sha ll be not le ss than $5 .00 nor
more than $50 .00 .
Sec. V. Th is Ord inan ce sha ll
take effect and be in for ce from
and after May 25, 1971.
Passed the 24th day of May

1971 .

.

John W. Zerkl e
Pres ident of Council
Attest : Gene Grate
Cler k

161 L 8. 115,31

ORDINANCE
NO. 971-71

An Ordinance lo Approve plat
of R lvervie w Acres Subdivision .
Be it ordained by th·e_Council
of Village of M idd leport as
follows : .
. Sec. t. That the proposed plat
of Riverview Acres Subd i vision
be end it is hereby approved
and confirmed by the Council.
Sec. II. This Ordinance shall
take effect on the earliest dat e
provided by law .
Passed the 10th day of May

1971.

John W . Zerkle
President -of Counc II

(61 1.B,e1.

'.

ITEM : ·rom Hill. He plays
Blood, Sweat &amp; Tears and
ama Cass. But he plays
oon light Seren\de and
Andy Williams tao. Variety
·, lhe spice of our rnusic.
I

WMP0/1390,

mares . Fran cis Benedum .

Phone Coolville 667-3856.
5·16-3otp

.IT'S ONE OF TllOSE N'W

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
r-t~WINSOR

«BUDDY

«·cHAMPION
,-jr_VAN DYKE

10X50

~

5-27-JOtc

300 BALE S of red clover or
alfalta hay . Phone 304-8953972 .
6-3-6tc

Special
At

12' · 14' · 24' · WIDE

MILLER

MOBILE HOMES
1220 Washington Blvd.

lost and Found

Belpre, Ohio

6, 98

Plus

Parts

Blaettnar's
PHONE 992-2143

RACINE, 0.

Real Estate For Sale

Leading Cree k area. Phone

DIAL N' SEW zfg.zag
992-3497 . 1971
608 East Main
se
wing
machine left in
Reward for safe return .
Pomeroy
layaway . Beautiful p-a stel
6-Htc
color, full size model. All WANT TO RETIRE? HERE IS
YOUR HOME. - 2 bedroom s,
built-in to buttonhole, overor

For Rent

CHO ICE lots for rent on Oh io
River across fr om M id·
dleporl. Enjoy a relaxing
summer of camping, boat ing,
and swimming. Call Maxine

casta ndfancy stitch. Pay just
$48 .75
cash
or
terms
available. Trade -ins ac -

cepted. Phone 992·56• ..

6-2-6tc

Gr iffith al 992-5782 afler 5 VACUUM cleaner, brand new
1971 model. Complete with all
p.m.
cleaning fools . Small paint
6-6-31c
8 ROOM HOUSE , 4 bedrooms,
nice kitchen, 145 Bufternut
Ave., Pomeroy . Phone 992-

7170.

damage in shipping . Will take
$27 cash or budget plan
available. Phone 992-5641.
6-2-6tc

carpel paths and
6·6·61c REMOVE
spot s. fluff beaten down nap
with Blue Lustre . Rent
Shampooer Sl, Baker Fur niture Company .

6-2-6tc

For Sale

10-18-lfc

36"

X 23" X .009

Sheets

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20~
81or Sl.OO

The
Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.

TRAILER for rent. Brown 's
Trailer Pa r k, Miner sville,

in Mason, W. Va. Call Robert
Dixon collect at 614-667-3891.
5-30-tfc

For Sale

TH' "WILL H E'

·TH'''WH~· ·
\HONT 1..

- 2 story frame, 7 rooms , 4
bedrooms , 1V2 baths , full
basement, larg e front porch,
garage with renovated room

GLAND BEGINS
A·QUIVERIN'
IN TERROR-

HE.'!....

ASTH'MALE.
DON'T DO
NOTHIN', TH'
''WH'/ WON'T HE"
GLAND STA~S .
A·QU I VERIN'.~

-

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

Limestone Driveways

_WINNIE WINKLE

Septic Tanks and Leach

MEAN, I 1l1E
MOUNTAIN 'lvOIJT

)oOU

delivered right to your
project. Fast ~nd easy . Free

CAll GEORGE 985-3837
OR DON 992-6883

estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
Middleporf, 011\o.
•
6-30-tlc

Roofing &amp;Carpenter
Work
Spouting, Roof
Paintinf

-~--=~

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284

The Fabric Shop,) Pomeroy. _
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Shar:pen Scissors.

3-19-tfc

-------=

COME TO
MOHAMMED.... '

,.

NEW &amp;- OLD WORK
All Weafher Roofing &amp;
construction Co .

DEXTER, 0. 45726
PHONE 742·1945

1nsured- E xperlenced

Work Guaranteed

-·

.

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
fu ll basement with garage, EXPERT TREE service. Call Reasonable
rates. Ph. 446-4782
collect after 5 p.m ., Ri chard
NEW forced air gas furnace,
Gallipoli
s.
John Russell ,
Hayman, Reedsville 667·3041.
$10,900.
Owner
&amp;
Operator.
S-19-30tp
5-13-tfc

WANT TO SELL? WE HAVE
BUYERS FOR YOUR FARM
OR HOME.

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer

Complete Service
Phone 949-3821

'.

SEPTIC tanks creanea. Miller
Sanitation , Stewart, Ohio. Ph .

662-3035.

Racine, Ohio

2-12-tfc

Crill Bradlord

THE ·BORN LOSER

o'ver·

haul ed. Phone 992·3494.
'
6·4·41c
1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr .
hardtop . power steeri ng,
pow er brakes, air, 18 ,000
miles. Ex cellent condition.

quees ,

aluminum

siding

Rac ine, Ohio.

and railing. Carl A. Jacob,

~U. ~.~1M:
~ tWJ5 1IOSE

rooms, bath, Rutland . Phone

742-5613.
5·12-tfc

Ed Hedrick , 2137 Wadsworth

f.OO LEFT tAA.Y 001 ~1
~~ ~IU: I IW6 / ......_
,..:..:::?-'j

sa les representative . For free - - - - - - - - -

estimates, phone Charles RALPH'S
CARPET
Lis le , Syracuse . V. V.
Upho\sfury Cleaning Service.

IF I WASN'T SO "''fRVIf1 ... TfRED t'D
8E WOI1DERtN' WHO SACKS UP HERE
'"AN' HOY/COME THEY TOOK OFF
"•LEAVtN' ALL 111E BEDS MADe
,fVi' READY"" , - - - -

'
HEY"' SOMEBODY
MUS! 'VE LEFT THE

OJr~TOMJl

DOORQru!!

tune up and brake service.

992-7357 .

5-18-tfc
B_A
_C
_K
~
H,..
O_
E_A
_N
_D
_D_D_Z_E_R~
work .

Wheel s balanced
Ironically .
All
guaranteed .

Sl X ROOM house, bath, fuli

elecwork

Reasonable

Septic tanks installed. George rates . Phone 992-3213.
(Bil\1 Pullins, Phone 992-2478.
5.22.3otc
4·25-tfc - - - - - - - - -

-----Real Estate For Sale

DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSR

Insurance

I . Capt.'a

Drive, Columbus, Ohio, phone NICE HOME IN COUNTRY- . A\JTO"MOBILE insurance been·

237-4334, Columbus.

5-9· tic

_ V~g!l

B.

TEAFORD
-·
SR.

One acre, nicely finished two
bedroom home with firep lace,
built -in kitchen ,
wood
paneling, carpeted, city
wate r . Loca ted on Athens
County road C-64, Vanderhoff
Rd .. one mile from Rt. 1 and
lhree miles tram Rt. 50.
Twenty minutes to Parkers-

l

cancelled?
Los\
.your
operator's license? Call.- 992.
2966.
6-l.S.tfc,

8. Ostrich·

9. Wasa

· glutton
13. Hotbed
u. Thougbt
up

-BAG MAN!

This Week's S.peclll
,.
... ___ ,_ .

'burg, Athens, or Pomeroy i
20 miles (18 miles 4 lane high -

15. Auroral
11. Speechless
18. Founder of
Arianism

VALUE
RATI!D

way) , 19 miles, and 18 miles,

20. After
Wlnalow
21. All that's

left

22. Equip for
battle
23. Col\l))lratorlal group
211. "Walling
Cor Lefty"

66 OLDS CUTlAsS-

TEI\RY

$1295

radios. televisions, stereos.
budget terms or pay balance HOUSE .:_ i642.Llncoln Heights. BY OWN.ER , House, In Mason, S
and records found in AmeriCall Danny Thompson, 992rooms and bath down, 3 small
of $83.29 . Call 99H08S.
2196.
.
rooms up. lot size 77' , x 100ft.
can dcparlmcnt and special. 6-6-6tc
Would
take tarm tractor or
5-26-lfc
ly slnrcs get 1 ~rc hy truck .•
truck as part payment. For
In 196\1, 1rucks carried more· STR AWBERRIES. Geraldine ' HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts,;· information phone 773-5249 or
Clel"nd, Racine, 011\o.
!han 7S per cent of all such
Pomeroy . Phone 992-2293.
, wrile Box 317, Mason, W. Va.
6-3-121c
.
10-25-tf&lt;
- goods:
'
6·3·5tp

''Carouser·
aong
(Swda.J
f . Musical

sections
5. Ancient

110¥01

(3wda.)

\'~P&lt;deri.ar'•

holm

32. "According

for

' to

Grilnt

.

'IOU 1 LL A6f{EE
10 SAY IT.

'"===~:=.:~~~~~:;_..:•.::u•::•::•:::.•t=:;ed by the above cartocm.
11
r
PritUt SMISE IISWII,ltre

(2wds.)

'(ANwen to.,orrowJ

U f i J"

Jun&gt;bl•" I LIMP MlNII SUITU' WINNOW
'

'""I' llwU in torit&gt;'Y you·,..
IWIM

AXYDLBAAXB
lo LONGFELLOW
One letter elmply otandO for another. ln thto Mmple A trr
wred for the th!'&lt;e L'J, X for the two O'i etc. SlnJie !etten,
apootrophe•, the lonJih and formation of the worda arc an
lllnll. Eacb dOy the Code tetton mo dtftermt.
GCYM
llOM, B.

GCCXB
SVD

BFMKI:~

JOD

APDT

DTMEMKOEM

l!'HPJDMN

'

I rJ I I I

otold
comlca
83.Apropoo

A CrJptoJI'MI QadaUan

'

um:.w I

Now arran1e the clrcleclletten .
to form the ourpri.. an~wer, u

'
.
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Rent's how to work It:

0.

II Vi

~·-~! \i.~·.•:~::u·-

l.lr!lilad Is

30. HOalert
thread
32. Hooligan

one

'''

l

u ·f;tL

"

34.Minecar
se; Froudlan
tonn
se:Ha"o.rd
. claulc
"majeltJCill
89. Yellow
root"
oc'her
30.Colleen

26. Spigot
plug
27. Shakea·
··peare'•

George. will you honor us with
o lew well -choson words?

A••w•r

3t.C&amp;yor

48. BUppery

RUTLAND FURNITURE .
'

merie
20.Cblneae
weight

'/'f.:.uti\S

MAY TAG

Rutland,

Ill. Tur·

311. Splintered
37. Burro'•
relaUve
40. Whel'&lt;!
Dakar Ia
41, "Windy
City," !or
abort
42. "J!lternat
City"

RH Carpot
Servlct

Arnol" Grate.

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

:U.Trouble

Egyptian
city
6.Racethe
motor
1. OriJ(nal
10. Sloan
Wlllon

We Sptclillae in

742-4211

18. Circle
· eecment

3f, Knell

F liter.

-----~

(3Wda.)

Down,

29. Where

•••••-.1
-

-:-:---:-:--:-:---

·

Down

tne

HI PUI?6EON IS A IIEA'S()HMI.e
o\WI, I'll A55Uoi1E 'IAAT ~ otota
51JITAIII£ roi'II'YAHCfS FOR

-------

automatic changer, dual
volume control. Use our

16.See 8

28. Mexican

~

MQst

2. Wooden·

YM.-)"1 Oryplo\uoto: rr IB Bllll'tlCR FOR A W0KA.N
TO li(AJIRY A MAN WHO LOVES HER THAN A KAN
SHill LOVES.- ARAB PROVIlRB
(0 1m KlDI l'•turu B)'JIIdleatt. Jne.)

playwright
LEE,

Kan:.&amp;Van,·tandi:

:-:-:-=-- - - -

.-

11, Bardot's

core
3. With 18

like bird

I HAVE A NATURAL .JOB
FOR YOU, OLD BUOOY-

DOWN
I. Of the
healing ·

"head"
12. Germon
orta (abbr.)
river

superior

'· Find fault

" DICK TRACY

Broker
res pectively i 3'12 miles from
1967 TAGALONG ca mper .
110
Mechanic
St.
Coolville. 1 mile from Tup·
Phone 992-2288.
SWIMMING lessons starting at
Excellent condition . Fully
Pomeroy,
Ohio
·
pers Plai-ns. S14,SOO by
6-J.tfc
Maplewood Lake. ~hone 949·
equipped. Phone 247-2554.
owners,
Frank and Pat
USED CARS
4074 .
..
BUSINESS OPPOR1'UNITY 6-3-6tc ---::--::------:--Goebel
,
667-3838.
58
CHEVY,
automatic
$75.
Call
6-6-3tc
General store with all mer6-6-tfc
:R:-:E:-:G:-A
:-:T::T:-A
:---::S-pe- c..,.ia""lc-,--:cl7. ft.
992·7128.
c handise and fixtures . 2
6·8-3tc
Thompson boat, dock covers,
LABOR LOCAL NO. 83, election
houses,
double garage .
;
ACRE FARM, Long Bollom;
extras , 75 HP newly rebuilt - -- - -- - June 19, 1971. 9 a . m. · 3 p. m.
Several buildings. Excellenl 24 with
Holiday
Coupe:
White
over
or
without
farm
motor, trailer . Good ski boat. 66 CHRYSLER Newport. 4 door,
Vote for Gardner (June)
chance for you. Asking only
machinery
.
House
with
3 turquoise, while ylny\ int., v.
power
steeri
ng
,
power
$600 . Call 992·2003. Will
Dunham , Jr. tor business
$30,000.00.
8, auto., P.S., bucket seats.
ing
bedrooms, dining room , liv
demonstrate.
brakes, factory air, 61 ,000
agent. Support his staff. Why
room
,
l
'l2
baths,
enclosed
miles. Good tires, two new. NEARLY NEw-3 bedrooms,
6-8-tfc
are local laborers loafing
back porch, wall -to wall
$800 for quick sale. Phone 882·
when outside men are coming
hot water heating, bat~, nice
carpeting
. Aluminum siding,
2889
New
Haven
.
in to our area working . I FOR A Meyers aluminum boat
kitchen, dishwasher, dining
awning,
storm
windows and
6-8-3tc
promise If elected to work
- won't rust, rot , or leak . Call
area . Large living . Lots of
slorm
doors.
City water.
loca l men In their area first
---'------:------:
992-6256 atter 5 p.m. Also,
closets. Ba sement. Carport.
Selling
due
to
Ill
health.
Phone
1966 IMPALA convertible, 327
before outside laborers come
fibergl ass 15 foot canoes .
$23,000.00.
614-985-3938
..
;,You'll . Like ·our Giuaiiiy:
cu. in., automatic, power
into your area . A man to serve
5·16-JOtc
5-18-301p
Way of Doing Business."
you, not rule you . Your vote
steering and power brakes. 80 ACRES - Moslly tractor
appreciatited .
GMAC FINANCING
Electric
top.
glassback
lillable on school and mai l
NEW 4 FT. or 5 Ft . brush hog .
window,
radio,
.heater,
$900.
"2-5342
Pomeroy
6-8-9tp
Phone 992-6329.
routes . 6 room house . Several 3 BEDROOM brick home .·
Can
be
seen
anytime.
Phone
----'---Open
Evenings
'TII6:00
Choice location In Middleport .
outbuildings. ALL
MIN·
6-2-6tc
992-7105.
Tll5 p ,M, Sat
Seen by appointment only.
ERALS. Asking $25,000.00.
Instruction .
BESTL\NE PRODUCTS. Ca\1
INSTRUCTIONAL
Phone 992-5523 after ~ 5-7p.m.
-ttc • • -...
Myron Ba iley, Phone 992-5327.
RACINE - Lar9e 7 room hom~,
TRUCK LINES - City and road
...........
5-4-3Q Real Estate For Sale
large bath, nrce kitchen and
driver training . Call or write
dining
r,oom
.
Nearly
full
Big Capacity
Sheridan Truck Lines, 1255 COAL , limestone . Excelsior'· 24 ACRE FARM, Long Boltom ,
basement . , Garage with
Mavtag
with
or withoul
farm
Corwin Avenue, S\3-863-6404,
Salt
Works,
E.
Main
Sf.,
carport
.
Concrete
drive.
3
Autom•tlct
Hamilton, Ohio, 4.5015.
machinery . House with 3
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
· 2 speed operation .
. porches .
Asking
only
bedrooms, dining r oom, living
6-7-2tc
Choice of ·water
4-9-tfc
$12,500.00.
.
r oom , 1'12 baths, enclosed
temps .
Auto.
back porch, wall to wa ll
water
level
MODERN
WALN0T
s
iereoLost
carpeling . Aluminum siding, IF YOU W,IINT TO SELL OR
control .·
Lint"
rad ia combination, 4-speaker
~OS T, Vicinity of Hemlock
SEE THE BEST CALL 992awning, slorm windows and
Filter
or
Power
4-speed
sound
sys tem,
3325
Fin Agitator .
Grove, black and rus\
storm door s. City water.
changer,
separa
le
controls
.
Ptrmi·Pi'ISI .
HELEN L. TEAFORD
Doberman Pinscher pup.
Selling
due
lo
ill
health.
Phone
Balance
$68.31.
Use
our
Maytag
992-2378
Reward. Phone 992-7291.
614-985-3938.
Halo
of Hut
budge!
terms
.
Call
992-7085.
6-7-6tc
6·6-6tc
5-18-JOtp
Dryers
6-6-6tc
~:-::-::-::-::-:c:---­
Surround clothes .
~----TWO BEDROOM house, large
With
gentle, even 1
5
ROOMS
and
bath.
Sun
porch.
MAPLE STEREO -radio
lot , assume FHA loan of 5 per
heat . No hot spots,
Full
basement.
Phone
992·
combination, AM&amp;FM radio,
cenl. Phone 992·2619.
no overdrylng,
Radios Ride Trucks
four· . speakers, 4-speed '. 5162 .
Fine Mesh Lint
6-4-6tp
6-8·3tc

WASHINGTON -·

CO 'OJ liiiiJK I'P
Ml Ril.lO\II

a:

LI'I'll.E ORPHAN ANNID

7-31 -tfc

HENRY CLELAND
Johnson and Son , Inc.
Fre e estimates .
Phone.
REALTOR
5-27-ttc
Gallipolis 446·0294.
Otlice 992-2259
~---:c:-=---:-----d
3-12-tfc
Residence 992-2568
EXPERT lawn mower an - - - - - - - - 6-3-6tc
tiller repair . Free pickup and ·O'DELL WHEEL alignment
delivery .. Warren'\ Mohw~r located at Crossroads, Rl. 124. ·
HOUSE , story and half, 6 Shop, 248 Condor S · P 0 e Complete front end service,

basement, 133 Butternut Ave.,
just walking distance from
downtown Pomeroy . Contact

Pomeroy, Ohio

com pletely

AT TH' APPROACH
OFA MAl..E-

Free Estimates

LOCATED ON
QUIET HARR't'SON'S TV AND AN·
TENNA SERVICE. Phone
STREET, LOW UTILITIES.
992-2522.
$5,300.
6-10-tfc
RECENTLY REMODELED NICE 1 s tory frame , 2 O' BRIEN ELECTRIC SER VICE . Phone 949-4551 .
bedrooms , closets , bath,
5-30-tfc
NICE kitchen , range and ref.,

A HOME FOR YOUR FAMILY

_

!
.......

Beds

CONCRETE

GARDENSPACEORYAR~

car pet i ng, air co ndition er,

~

s.J.ttc ----~---over (COULD BE UTILITY
NEIGLER Construction . For
APARTMENT) , c lose fo ------~~grade school. A BUY AT AWNINGS, storm doors and building or remodel ing your
home. Catt Guy Nelg\er,
wind ows, carports, mar .
JUST $18,500.

.

Aluminum

Motor

bath, ni ce kitchen, utility
room , NEW forced air furnace and hot water tank,
about II&lt;~ acre of NICE

~

Backhoe Service
and Hauling

VILLAGE
FLOWER SHOP

READ'{MIX

i

742-4902

Single Flowers

0pen9Ti\S
Thurs .. Fri. t Sat .
Or Phone 949-2223

Cleland Realty

BLACK and tan hound, los\ in

Artificia I Flowers

Cemetery
Flowers
&amp;
Wrealhs
Also Arrangetnents made to
your specification.

Re-Charge

dishes ,

~

'

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

Arrangements

Air Conditioning
lnspectjpn and

.

Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios
Backhoe And
End loader Work

,EE TOM CROW, GUY Stf(JLER OR BOB CROW

Have Your seasonal

~

i

Complete
Remodeling

.ALSO
DOUBLE..;WIDES

FllENCH MENU •

!

JOHNSON MASONRY

TWO

BEDROOM
housetrailer, $2,000. Phone
992-3954.
6-Htp

····-~

tTS CALLE!&gt;, ·
'HOW TO READ A

'llELEVANT' COUU&amp;S. IN
FACT, 'TloiE W\oiOLE C~i
· WAll ~tS 1DeA

Pomeroy

,Ph. ~92 ·2143 .

MEMORIAL BRIDG! TRAFFIC CIRCLE
. PARKERSB'URG, W.VA.

telephones, clocks, brass
beds, lamps, etc. Lee Rudisill,

Phone 992-3403.

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!

Time You Ever Spent.

etc. Wrile M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy , Ohio. Call 992-6271 .
4-27-tfc

homes for rent or sale, on lot

REGISTERED Appaloosa stud
service ; $50
reg i stered
mares, any breed ; $40 grade

From the Lar·ae:sl Truck ·or;
Bulldozer
.
to the
Smallest Heater Core.

Evenings Call 992-2534, Dale Dutton

.40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most P~ofitable

Wanted To Buy

304-675-1159

CI.OD'$ STUCHING I'RGNC/1
T!HS SUMM611.1 YOV MUST
lie ~VPIN~ ME. J

GREEN !:tiLL HOMES, INC.

mile off Rt. 7 at Five Points.
6-6-3tp

,_.,

e"" "wrA.-.. T.M. ..._ ut. Pwt. Olf.
AND HIS FRIENDs '

PARKERSBUR.G MOBILE HOMES, INC.

REGISTERED quarter stud
service, Hanks Rock 209498 . FURNISHED modern Ranch
Contact Mike Jones, Rt. 3,
house , 5 rooms , double
Pomeroy, 011\o. Phone 992· garage.
12 x 65 mobile home. 1
6880.
accepled
in either. M &amp;
child
6-2-12tc G Food Markel,
3 mi . south
Middleport,
Rl.
7.
1 WILL nol be responsible for
6-6·31c
any debts contracted by any
one olher \han myself. Signed ,---------,TRAILER LOTS . Bob's Mobile
John T. Reltmire.
Court, Rl. 124, Syracuse ,
6·6·31p
Ohio. 992-2951.
"R"E"'D"u"c"Eo-::sa~f&lt;.:e-a
=n:::d..-.1a:::s-:;1~w it h
4-2-tfc
Gobese lablels and E-Vap·
Waler pills. Nelson Drugs.
4 ROOM furnished apartment
5-26-30tp with bath: Reynolds Flower
Shop, Mason, W. Va . Also 2
bedroom trailer. Phone 773SAVE UP to one half . Bring
your sick TV to Chuck's TV 5147.
6-8-tfc
Shop, 151 Butlernut Ave.,
4-23-tfc
- --.,----,------

6-6-6tc

SeMce

You will have something of value to show for the S$$ you

responsible for acci dents. 541

High St.. Middleport.

EXPERJENCED

* A STACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS! ! *

spend when you buy your home - plus, you gain an In·
cOme Tax benefit you bulld an equity and you are not
bound by the terms of a rental agreement.

HOME sewing . Phone 992-5327 .
Ohio. Phone 992-3324.
Auto Sales
Sec. 1. That no person sha ll
6_·3·6lc 1961 DODGE tor paris, $50.
5·9-30tp,
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
remove anv curb or portion
Phone 992-5972.
thereof in the Village of Mid · ;;;:~;;:;::--:-::-;:-==.=;=C"
dleport for the purpose at REDUCE sate and fast with ' For Rent or Sale
6·6·31p
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
establish i ng a dr i veway or
water pills. Nelson Drugs.
AVAILABLE June IS, two new
open ing in said curb without
4-14-60tp
SOx 12 two -bedroom mobi \e 1961 OLDS 98. Good condition .
secu ring a perm it tor such

'Lilt'Our,FrH P•rking Lot

RObinson's Cleaners

BARMAID. Apply in person.

Phone 992-5434.

Pomeroy.

.

.
What Do You Have For The sss You Pav In Rent?

dishes, five -leg dining table,
stands, toy· train, pool table,
many other items . Not

apartments. Close to schoo l.

Notice

6-2-ttc

YARD SALE, Saturday, June
12, 10 a.m. Most all an1iques,
pos ter beds and other types,

6-B-ltp FURNISHED and unfurnished

What do you do now?

You do pass and West bid'l
two spades which is passed
around to you. What do you do
now?

Help Wanted

Lest we forget, May God's

The bidding has been:
West
North
East South
1.
Dble
I N.T.
Pass
2•
Pass
?
You, South, hold:
r11K732 ¥H tK93 .Q162

p ... 2N.T. Pass
Pua ••
Pass
Pass
Opening lead- + J

99B113.

Sl78.95 UP

richest blessings be upon each TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
112-mile north of new Meigs
one, as .. ea"l:h 6ne was a
High School. Phone 992-2941.
bless ing'to us. Thomas J . and
3·5-lfc
Jed C. Pi ckens and our
Families.

.. I':'"'SP.._PER f.N1UPll1l ASSN I)

game and you belong in clubs.

Pass

Without having regrets of
leaving any person out, we
cannot mention all by name.

the third diamond and keep
South from .getting a club
discard.

3
Both vulnerable
West North Eut South

3.2.

who had thoughts of us.

·B usiness Services.

AIR CONDITIONERS

L--~-- ---------------•,

Monday Deadline 9 a.m .
CDnce llatlon &amp; Correction$
Will b·e accepted until9a.m. for
Day of Publication

••

and -accessories. Call us for
your needs. We deliver
dist r ibutors, Brown 's, Phone

OP.EN EVES. 8:00P.M.
~EROY, OHIO
WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication

wigs

PRJO::S:...?:.----J~-::.-\1

. BLAETTNARS

Pomeroy Motor Co.

For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one Insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
Dear Helen:
,
12 cents per word three
I go to S(!hool with bruises, and when my friend asks how I got
consecutive in sertions.
them I can't tell her, because it's my mother:
18 cents per word six con I get the knocks for whst my brothers do. They won't obey, secutive insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
and she takes It out on me. Almost every day I get a beating, I ads
and ads paid wjthin 10 days .

NORTH
8
.Q64
• Ql084
... .
t AKQ~
.. .,.
.72
WEST
EAST
•K92
.76
¥11.952
tJ10965
+83
•11.9•
.KQJ865
SOUTH (D)
.AJ10873
¥KJ3

Pomeroy·
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

KOSCOT .. KOSMETICS,

MEEK .

~ MUCH W..\IE
'rOV ReDIJCE.D 'ttX.R

I'LL BE RIGHT
_... ·-.
, ELVINfv· .. GO ON
IN TH' HOUSE AN '
MAKE "'ORESELF
AT HOME

More

Bargains, Bargains,

Afo.'[)

PB

DTK

APDT
ZPJN.

APJWMN • LVFPN

SGPJN .. ·- A . .

BTHXN•

�•

\

'

'l

Flagger Hit ::::;~:;~;~:~* Reason Why Patton:, Resigned
job safely rule lor lal'llls
WASHINGTON (UPI) -An PattOn wanted to cut aU his outright. He said Patton also
would
slir,
up
widespread
aide
S. Patton military ties so he could live wanted to "strike back" at
By CrUiser aager agal-.t the govern- Jr.. tosaysGen.theGeorgecontrov.
ersia,\ and speak freely .
Eisenhower, who took away hia
MARSEILLES, Ohio (UP!) An Ohio Highway Patrol cruiser
struck and killed a teenager
near here early today while en
route to a fatal auto accideflt.
The teenager, involved in the
fatal crash, was flaggind down
the patrolman when struck.
Officers said Patrolman R. E.
Hartsook II had been dlspat·
ched to the scene of the fatal
lruck accident on Ohio 67, two
miles east of here, at 2:12a.m.
Investigators said David
Halsey, 18, Kenton, one of the
persons involved ih the truck
accident, stepped out onto the
highway to flag down the officer
as his cruiser rounded a curve.
Hartsook reportedly slammed
on his brakes but his car slid
sideways and struck the victim.

meal without . maldng farm ·world War 11 commander
Robert s. Allen, who was command rebuked him private,
wort aay safer, a top Nbon ·decided tq resign from the ·Patton 's chief of combat ly, and at the army helrarchy
admlnlstralion farm official Army "with a reverberating intelligenc~ and who now is an he felt had let him down.
says.
· blast of indignation" at Gen . author and columnist, gave the "Hiid he not made up hia
J. Pbll Campbell, un· Dwight D. Eisenhower and account in an article written for mind to quit with a reverheratdersecretary of agrlcultlire, other superiors shortly before the June i5sue of Army ing blast of indignation, It Is .
made the comment in a letter he was fatally injured in an Magazine, published by the highly unlikely the trip on
asking Labor Secret'ary auto crash in 1945.
As,sociation of the United States which the auto aecldent OC·
James D. Hodgson to exempt
Army, a private group.
curred would have been made.':
most farmers from a
outraged and deeply hurt
Allen wrote. The columnist saicf
regulation requiring em· because he lost command of his Allen said retirement would the article was an eff(!l't to lay
ployers to keep records of job- beloved Third Army after an have left the 61-year-old West to rest rumors thst there was
related Injuries and Illnesses. outspoken comment at a news Pointer still sutiject to military. ·~omething sinister ·about Pat.
The · .proposed regulation conference, the aide said, control, so he decided to quit ton'" death.
·.- ... . .
,,
woUld require keeping three
sets of records which would
be open to Inspection by
Labor Department agents
under the new Occupational
Safety and Health Act.

CHEERLEADERS - Wahama cheerleaders recognized at a school function recently,
front row, from left, are Chetti Hayes, Debbie King, Libby Brown; second row, Cathy Weaver,
Kathy Roush ; back row, Linda Roush, Connie Haggerty, Regina Hesson.

For Louis Carl
Funeral services for Louis A.
Carl, 78, of Baltimore, Md. who
die&lt;! in Pom~roy while visiting
at the home of Mrs. T. W.
Bengel, were conducted Sunday
at the Ewing Funeral Home.
Burial was in Beech Grove
Cemetery.
Out-of.town relatives and
friends here for the services
wete Mrs. Mabel King,
Hopedale, Ohio; Charles M.
Hedges, Pedmont, Ohio; Mr.
and Mrs . Kennard Faucett,
Indianapolis, Ind.; Miss Gladys
Bengel, Mrs. George Seigler,
and Mr . and Mrs. Ralph
Farhnam, all of Marietta; and
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Bright,
Dunbar, W. Va.
The Women 's Society of
Christian Service of the
Pomeroy United Methodist
CJJUrch provided a dinner for
the out-of-town people at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Downie, High St., Pomeroy.

•

Weather

Argument Ended
In Death for One

Cosmodom Shifts
Into New Orbit

Lows tonight from the low 50s
northwest to the lower 60s
southeast. Partly cloudy and
cooler Wednesday with a
chance of a few showers ex·
treme south portion. Htghs from
UJe low 70s north to the low Blls
south
·

(UPI)

_

App}e GrOVe

News, Events

• '

'PIIOEI II EFFEIT , . . . . s•DAY, •1 11 .
WHILE QUANT,IttE$ LAST.
.
'

·'~

.,••

Began Monday
Summer school in the Meigs
Local School District under the
Title II program got underway
Monday at the Pomeroy
Elementary School.
The schedule for three buses
being used in the program includes:
Ernest Wood : Leave home to
681, down 681 to Route 33
Darwin, down old 33 past
Salisbury School, Karr's Run,
33 &amp; 7 to Pomeroy Elementary.
Approximately 45 minutes,
leave home 7:45, arrive Bedford
8, Salisbury Elementary 8:15,
Pomeroy Elementary 8:30.
Ralph Macomber - Leave
home 7:30, leave Harrisonville
Elementary 7:45, Route 7 by·
pass, lower end of Middleport
8:15, Tiny's 8:20, Pomeroy
Elementary 8:30.
Marvin Wilson - Leave home
7:30, leave Salem Center 7:40,8
Rutland, 8:15 Pomeroy, 8:30
Pomeroy Elementary.

••

~

•

•
.,

BIG SHIPMENT OF
12 FOOT WIDE NYLON RUGS

'l

,.

'

from one of the country's best makers. 12 foot wid!! and 15 to
18 foot in length, a II on sale for

88.00

Y

i
~

-* *.. *

: Jfs. Quick! ,...,
t DRIVE-IN
BANKING

·

·!
t

1t
lit
1

$ 45
· GAL t fARMERS BANK

e.

.

.

Pomeroy Ceptent .Block.CO. .

: and SAVINGS 00. ;

:ji&lt;

The Department Store of Building Since 1915

L------ --.

p~~~~;~~~·O· . ! NowTheYourealKnow
name of Mexican
~

Member Federal ·
Reserve System .
til rtvolulionary leader Pancho
Villa was Dorotea Arango.

'

•......................,.

'tI

•

•

)

•

STORE HOURS MAY VARY AT DIFFERINI HECK'S LOCAftONS

Also a big shipment of 6x9 foot and 9x12 foot nylon rugs. Also
see the big selection of linoleum at the warehouse.

'

:l

I

Also See The Big Selection of Lawn Boy and Toro Mowers.

Elberfelds Warehouse on Mechanic St'

,.

•

•

•

'
f

WHITE
CLOuD
' '

TOILET TISSUE

91NCH

1 Pll PKG.

PAPER PLATES

-~"~tft

100
COUNT
~~-&lt;AI- ..... ~

SYCAMORE

I

19" LAWN MOWER

•

•'
••

4••als1 ~t

17$0NLY
PER STORE

'

_.. ,It!" ~

.

I

,.......

1oiiO'oNLY PlfSTORE .

LIMIT 2 PACKS

.

UMITONE

HICK'S
RIG.
)Jc

MEIGS THEATRE

t A
Thought
F Toda. ·

••

'

At Elberfelds Warehouse on Mechanic St.

Langsvi•lle

THE PEELIN&amp; PROBLEM

l

..

1

.t

RUG SALE

MOSCOW (UP!)- The three
Soviet cosmonauts aboard the
James Bullock, 22, Clevel~nd,
world's first ,.'Cosmodom"
has. been charged wit~ fust·
shifted their bottleshaped,
degr~e manslaughter m con·
railroad car . size space
necbon w1th the shootmg death
laboratory into a new and
of Richard V. Austm, 19.
higher orbit today, the Tass
Austin was shot Sunday
news agency reported.
during an argument following a
The three men blasted off
baseball game. Both men were
Sunday in their Soyuz 11 space
members of the B &amp; L team
ferry, linked up Monday with
which had just lost a game at
the big Saiyut station already in
Morgana Ball Park.
orbit and began today the
second working day aboai-d the
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burri 25-ton orbiting scientific station.
MINK IN TROUBLE
and boys of Bolivar Dam, Mr. - - - - -- - - WASHINGTON - Mink and
Mrs. Butch Wilson and
ranchers, plagued by low prices family, local, Mr. and Mrs. two numbers on piano and
and import competition, Dorsel Wilson and baby of clarinet for the evening ser·
r«!uced production and closed Charleston, Mrs. Pete Bearhs of vices.
up shop in droves last year, a Virginia were over Memorial
Mr · and Mrs. Don Beegle,
government report indicates. A weekend guests of Mrs. Erma Zane and Tracy, of Marietta,
further sharp decline in Wilson.
Ga., spent Memorial weekend
production is expected this Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Miller . with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Buck Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Sayre and
year.
· ·
f and Pam. Zane Beegle
.
.
.
an d· daug ht er, Pa t nc1a , o remained for an indefinite visit Chad of Mmersv1lle were •
Memphis,
Tenn.,
were with M
d M B k Oth , SaturdayguestsofMr.and.Mrs.
Memorial weekend guests of
r. an
rs. uc · er Jess Anderson
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Miller guests of the Bucks Sunday
·
and also visited Mr. and Mrs. were Mr. and Mrs. Early
Bob Cornwell at Gallipolis.
Roush, Mrs. Cora Buck,
Mrs
.
Howard
Lawrence Beegle of Dorcas, Michael Barr of Glenville
Mr.
and
TONIGHT ONLY
Hoverman and children, Mrs. and Mrs. Don Hammond and State College and classmate
Beltllce Shook of Van Wert, Robbi, and Mrs. Betty Stewart Danny Williams spent the week
"HONEY MOON
spent Memorial Day weekend of Columbus.
end with his parents Mr. and
with . R.ev. and Mrs. Robert
Mrs. Carrie Nease of Racine Mrs. Alpha Barr.
KILLER"
Shook and attended services at called Suhday evening on Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Alpha Barr and
the United Brethren Church at and Mrs. St. Clair Hill.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Bail of
ALSO
Letart Sunday evening. Linda
Mr. and Mrs. Qon Bell spent Hamden, 0. went to Lancaster,
and
Philip
Haverman
played
Tuesday
evening with Mr. and 0 ., Sunday to the Phelps
''CHANGES''
Mrs~ Paul Erwin on Bashan Reunion.
Road.
Mr. and Mrs. Alpha Barr and
Miss Lorna Bell spent Dena Hoffman have been ill
DIVORCE ASKED
·
'
Linda Priddy, Pomeroy, has Wednesday night with Barbara with a virus.
filed suit for divorce in Meigs Nease at Racine.
Tim Willcox is ·a medical
County Common Pleas Court
Mrs. Albert McClain, Bobby patient at the Holzer Medical
Tonight, June B
against
James
Priddy, and Janice, of Cutler, Thomas Clinic.
Pomeroy, charg ing gross · McClain of Cincinnati were Mrs. Evelyn Montgomery is
MEPHISTO WALTZ
( Technicolor)
neglect of duty and extreme guests of Mr. and Mrs. St. Clair home and doing nicely after
Alan Aida
Hill Saturday.
surgery at Riverside Hospital in
cruelty.
Jacqueline Bi sset
Mr. and Mrs . George Columbus, 0.
"R"
Donohew,
Mark, Doug and Lori, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Wright
Colorcartoons :
COOKOUT
PLANNED
of Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. and children of Dublin ,
Wunder·Bar
Mrs.
Charles
Cohen
will
· Great Day
Gene Webster and daughter, Virginia, came for a visit with
entertain the Past Councilors Anita of Cleveland spent Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Morris and
SHOW STARTS I P.M.
Club of Theodorus. Council 17 ' Memorial weekend with Mr. family. Mr. Wright returned
Daughters · of America , at a and Mrs. Roy Donohew and home on Sunday. Mrs. Wright
Wed. &amp; Thurs.
cpokout at her home at 6:30 sons.
and chlldrren remained lor a
June 9-10
p.m.
Thursday.
Misses Polly and Sandra week with her parents on
NOT OPEN
Taylor of Columbus spent Saturday. Larry Morrinnd his
, . - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - -..., Memorial Day weekend with mother took Mrs. Betty Wright
:Mr. and Mr~. Leo Taylor at and children home.
)Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr and
:Stone · and children of Leon, children spent Sunday visiting
spent Monday with the Taylors. hl~ sister and family , Mr. and
Monday evening guests of Mr. Mrs . Chester tJesser of
and Mrs. Benny Boggess were Magnetic Springs, Ohio and also
Mrs. Shirley Ables and Vtcki, visited the Zoo in the Columbus
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Michael area.
and family, Susie, Kim and Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Bails of
Norma Jarrell.
Hamden, 0. spent Saturday
Mr. and Mrs, Wayne Camp· afternoon with her sister and
bell and children of Charleston.. family Mr. and Mrs. Alpha
Barr. Other week end visitors at
, the Barr home was Mr. and
JfJf'f.Jf.Jf'f.Jf.Jf'f.¥¥¥¥•• Mrs .. Blair Cadwallader and
bOys of Seaman, Ohio.
il
Mr. and Mrs. Alpha Barr, Mr.
:
Or
and Mrs. Blair Cadwallsder,
it and Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr
Faith can place a candle It attended the Rutland Alumni
~ in the darkest night.
.f · Banquet. Others reared in
~
.j; Langsville area was Carl Miller
Margaret E Sangster ~ of Athens, Mr. and Mrs. Burl
:f
it~ White (Evelyn Hill), Elnore
"'
~ WIUillrtlson of Charleston, W.
Va., Mrs . Allee · Crouser
~
WMJ
Uvlhgston of Dunbar, W. Va.,
Maxine Dyer, , Langsville, Mr.
~
and Mrs.· LarrY Hoffman of
'~
~ Albany, 0 . and Marlene Hoff.
• Durable, low-sheen latex
~~
man of Gallipolis, Mr. and Mrs.
• Applies easily; drlea last
il
Fridays Only
·
Robert Rife, Judy Chase Miller
• Mildew and blister resistant
The Dr'ive- ln Window
of Dallas, Texas, Ferne Folden
• Fpr wood, masonry and
is Open
Kenneaw and Josephine Folden ·
prepared melal, hardboard or
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
Stiles of Columbus, Jay Stiles of
1:
fiber board
il
(Continuously)
Albany, 0., Mr. and Mrs. Owen
it:
Hoffman, of Columbus, 0., Mr.
• Excellent color retention
il Other Banking Houn' '• f and Mrs. Dwight Nelson and
:
l and l to 7 as usual on :ji Mr .. and Mrs. Cecil Nelson of
Plain tap-water tlean-up
it Fridays.
f Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
etn whlla, black and hundreds
ol color's
:ji Braley of Columbus, 0. spent
...
the week end with her sister Mr.
ai\d Mrs. Clair Nelson .
CLEVELAND

• . • ,h

'"

Summer School
Last Rites Held

y

10

'

HECK'S REG.

.

HECK'S

'

RIG.

HOUSEWARE
D.PT.

$46.99

HARDWARE

DEPT.

PROcrOR

STEAM'IRON
PlentY of 1"-am for .a1ier ironing • .Clear-view
hHI for ironl~g in ony direc+io"n •. ~ . Itt&amp; you Mit

as you iron. Eosy.fo4M fabric diai. ,Lto.proof.
U9hlwti9ht. Block hondle,' chrome cover. 1200
watit, 110 voln. AC only. UL l;md.

$52
7
95
As low as

'

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,1.,.·

HIQt'SIIG.

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

HMDWAIE

aut

DII'T.

SPARK.PLUGS

BOUNTY

JUMBOTOWRS

AC, Ct4AMPION, OR
AUTOLITE ·

3000 ONLY PER STORE

· , IIANON,IW
UMITI ·

LIMIT4

CHOICE

410LLS

'69·9

LP-Gas barbecue grill
when you buy an Ashland
LP-Gas forced air heating system.

77c·

.....

•
!liCK'S

RIG.

$·100

$9.96

HECK'S REG.

JEWELIY
.DEPT.

41c

'

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

·SUPER BLEND

QUAKER STATE
10W30
MOTOR OIL
4100 ONLY PaSTORE

49c

LIMITS QTS.

HECK'S REG.
77c.

QUART
HECK'S REG.

:. SP()RTS

'

..._....._

. DEPt.

I .

35c
59c

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

CONVI!NII!NT

•uu, ln•talted. · :.~:.':'::

~-S 's HoiT SLEEVE .

. DRESS SHIRTS '·
Did you have trouble with your
furnace last winter? If so, now's the
time to take advantage ot our spe·
cial summertime otfer. Order a new
Ashland LP-Gas Heating system
now and we'll include a deluxe LP·
Gas barbecue grill FREE . The heavy
duty cast' aluminum grill is an $80
value. Your bonu~· with a comp le1!!,
modern Ashland LP·Gas heating
system installation.
You also get tree in~tallation and
rent-tree use ot the storage tank.
And 'Ashland otters you a conven·
ient LP-G as budget plan. Levels out
your annual heating bill in equal in·
stallments over a 10 month period .

SPECIAL FREE BARBECUE
GRILL OFFER EXPIRES AUG . 31,
1971. So don't delay.
Want more information? Write or
phone the Ashland LP-G as Bulk
Plant nearest you .

WITH
Tw~

1 ~. OZ. MISS BRECK

HAIR SPRAY

..

Regular, superhold, unscented, and un~en1ed
ouporhold.
·'

Ash/anti

HicK'S IIG. 69c

GENE COLEMAN, Agent
Box 471, Stale Road 124
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone: 992-5111
Ripley. W. Va. - Phone: 372-2221

'

'

p'"i••• moclol of

'""'"

,.,....

P""
motetlal.
Cuflod , A, .. riod
prillti. SiM-tl-11.

,$'2 99
fiiCK'IIIG. ,
13.96

COSIAETIC DEPT.
ASHLAND PETROLEUM COMPANY
Dl¥tolon o1 Aohiond 011, Inc.

--

Tht fas~lonobli whitt and d••P toned coiou
accent thtdylint af'thtu IOO % ·Nylo~ tricot
: ohm Siml4~·17.
'1

CLOTHING
DEPT.

.MEN'S

DRES.SSOCKS

. Banlon • Nyktn • Orion c:~w. Auor+td colon. On• sim fits si111 II). I].

HICK' I

39C'P&amp;IR
HECK' SRIG. 79c

Q.OTHING DEPT.

IIG.
. 11.991AOI

CLOTHING

DIPT.

'l

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'l

Flagger Hit ::::;~:;~;~:~* Reason Why Patton:, Resigned
job safely rule lor lal'llls
WASHINGTON (UPI) -An PattOn wanted to cut aU his outright. He said Patton also
would
slir,
up
widespread
aide
S. Patton military ties so he could live wanted to "strike back" at
By CrUiser aager agal-.t the govern- Jr.. tosaysGen.theGeorgecontrov.
ersia,\ and speak freely .
Eisenhower, who took away hia
MARSEILLES, Ohio (UP!) An Ohio Highway Patrol cruiser
struck and killed a teenager
near here early today while en
route to a fatal auto accideflt.
The teenager, involved in the
fatal crash, was flaggind down
the patrolman when struck.
Officers said Patrolman R. E.
Hartsook II had been dlspat·
ched to the scene of the fatal
lruck accident on Ohio 67, two
miles east of here, at 2:12a.m.
Investigators said David
Halsey, 18, Kenton, one of the
persons involved ih the truck
accident, stepped out onto the
highway to flag down the officer
as his cruiser rounded a curve.
Hartsook reportedly slammed
on his brakes but his car slid
sideways and struck the victim.

meal without . maldng farm ·world War 11 commander
Robert s. Allen, who was command rebuked him private,
wort aay safer, a top Nbon ·decided tq resign from the ·Patton 's chief of combat ly, and at the army helrarchy
admlnlstralion farm official Army "with a reverberating intelligenc~ and who now is an he felt had let him down.
says.
· blast of indignation" at Gen . author and columnist, gave the "Hiid he not made up hia
J. Pbll Campbell, un· Dwight D. Eisenhower and account in an article written for mind to quit with a reverheratdersecretary of agrlcultlire, other superiors shortly before the June i5sue of Army ing blast of indignation, It Is .
made the comment in a letter he was fatally injured in an Magazine, published by the highly unlikely the trip on
asking Labor Secret'ary auto crash in 1945.
As,sociation of the United States which the auto aecldent OC·
James D. Hodgson to exempt
Army, a private group.
curred would have been made.':
most farmers from a
outraged and deeply hurt
Allen wrote. The columnist saicf
regulation requiring em· because he lost command of his Allen said retirement would the article was an eff(!l't to lay
ployers to keep records of job- beloved Third Army after an have left the 61-year-old West to rest rumors thst there was
related Injuries and Illnesses. outspoken comment at a news Pointer still sutiject to military. ·~omething sinister ·about Pat.
The · .proposed regulation conference, the aide said, control, so he decided to quit ton'" death.
·.- ... . .
,,
woUld require keeping three
sets of records which would
be open to Inspection by
Labor Department agents
under the new Occupational
Safety and Health Act.

CHEERLEADERS - Wahama cheerleaders recognized at a school function recently,
front row, from left, are Chetti Hayes, Debbie King, Libby Brown; second row, Cathy Weaver,
Kathy Roush ; back row, Linda Roush, Connie Haggerty, Regina Hesson.

For Louis Carl
Funeral services for Louis A.
Carl, 78, of Baltimore, Md. who
die&lt;! in Pom~roy while visiting
at the home of Mrs. T. W.
Bengel, were conducted Sunday
at the Ewing Funeral Home.
Burial was in Beech Grove
Cemetery.
Out-of.town relatives and
friends here for the services
wete Mrs. Mabel King,
Hopedale, Ohio; Charles M.
Hedges, Pedmont, Ohio; Mr.
and Mrs . Kennard Faucett,
Indianapolis, Ind.; Miss Gladys
Bengel, Mrs. George Seigler,
and Mr . and Mrs. Ralph
Farhnam, all of Marietta; and
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Bright,
Dunbar, W. Va.
The Women 's Society of
Christian Service of the
Pomeroy United Methodist
CJJUrch provided a dinner for
the out-of-town people at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Downie, High St., Pomeroy.

•

Weather

Argument Ended
In Death for One

Cosmodom Shifts
Into New Orbit

Lows tonight from the low 50s
northwest to the lower 60s
southeast. Partly cloudy and
cooler Wednesday with a
chance of a few showers ex·
treme south portion. Htghs from
UJe low 70s north to the low Blls
south
·

(UPI)

_

App}e GrOVe

News, Events

• '

'PIIOEI II EFFEIT , . . . . s•DAY, •1 11 .
WHILE QUANT,IttE$ LAST.
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.,••

Began Monday
Summer school in the Meigs
Local School District under the
Title II program got underway
Monday at the Pomeroy
Elementary School.
The schedule for three buses
being used in the program includes:
Ernest Wood : Leave home to
681, down 681 to Route 33
Darwin, down old 33 past
Salisbury School, Karr's Run,
33 &amp; 7 to Pomeroy Elementary.
Approximately 45 minutes,
leave home 7:45, arrive Bedford
8, Salisbury Elementary 8:15,
Pomeroy Elementary 8:30.
Ralph Macomber - Leave
home 7:30, leave Harrisonville
Elementary 7:45, Route 7 by·
pass, lower end of Middleport
8:15, Tiny's 8:20, Pomeroy
Elementary 8:30.
Marvin Wilson - Leave home
7:30, leave Salem Center 7:40,8
Rutland, 8:15 Pomeroy, 8:30
Pomeroy Elementary.

••

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BIG SHIPMENT OF
12 FOOT WIDE NYLON RUGS

'l

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from one of the country's best makers. 12 foot wid!! and 15 to
18 foot in length, a II on sale for

88.00

Y

i
~

-* *.. *

: Jfs. Quick! ,...,
t DRIVE-IN
BANKING

·

·!
t

1t
lit
1

$ 45
· GAL t fARMERS BANK

e.

.

.

Pomeroy Ceptent .Block.CO. .

: and SAVINGS 00. ;

:ji&lt;

The Department Store of Building Since 1915

L------ --.

p~~~~;~~~·O· . ! NowTheYourealKnow
name of Mexican
~

Member Federal ·
Reserve System .
til rtvolulionary leader Pancho
Villa was Dorotea Arango.

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'tI

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•

)

•

STORE HOURS MAY VARY AT DIFFERINI HECK'S LOCAftONS

Also a big shipment of 6x9 foot and 9x12 foot nylon rugs. Also
see the big selection of linoleum at the warehouse.

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Also See The Big Selection of Lawn Boy and Toro Mowers.

Elberfelds Warehouse on Mechanic St'

,.

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f

WHITE
CLOuD
' '

TOILET TISSUE

91NCH

1 Pll PKG.

PAPER PLATES

-~"~tft

100
COUNT
~~-&lt;AI- ..... ~

SYCAMORE

I

19" LAWN MOWER

•

•'
••

4••als1 ~t

17$0NLY
PER STORE

'

_.. ,It!" ~

.

I

,.......

1oiiO'oNLY PlfSTORE .

LIMIT 2 PACKS

.

UMITONE

HICK'S
RIG.
)Jc

MEIGS THEATRE

t A
Thought
F Toda. ·

••

'

At Elberfelds Warehouse on Mechanic St.

Langsvi•lle

THE PEELIN&amp; PROBLEM

l

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1

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RUG SALE

MOSCOW (UP!)- The three
Soviet cosmonauts aboard the
James Bullock, 22, Clevel~nd,
world's first ,.'Cosmodom"
has. been charged wit~ fust·
shifted their bottleshaped,
degr~e manslaughter m con·
railroad car . size space
necbon w1th the shootmg death
laboratory into a new and
of Richard V. Austm, 19.
higher orbit today, the Tass
Austin was shot Sunday
news agency reported.
during an argument following a
The three men blasted off
baseball game. Both men were
Sunday in their Soyuz 11 space
members of the B &amp; L team
ferry, linked up Monday with
which had just lost a game at
the big Saiyut station already in
Morgana Ball Park.
orbit and began today the
second working day aboai-d the
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burri 25-ton orbiting scientific station.
MINK IN TROUBLE
and boys of Bolivar Dam, Mr. - - - - -- - - WASHINGTON - Mink and
Mrs. Butch Wilson and
ranchers, plagued by low prices family, local, Mr. and Mrs. two numbers on piano and
and import competition, Dorsel Wilson and baby of clarinet for the evening ser·
r«!uced production and closed Charleston, Mrs. Pete Bearhs of vices.
up shop in droves last year, a Virginia were over Memorial
Mr · and Mrs. Don Beegle,
government report indicates. A weekend guests of Mrs. Erma Zane and Tracy, of Marietta,
further sharp decline in Wilson.
Ga., spent Memorial weekend
production is expected this Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Miller . with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Buck Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Sayre and
year.
· ·
f and Pam. Zane Beegle
.
.
.
an d· daug ht er, Pa t nc1a , o remained for an indefinite visit Chad of Mmersv1lle were •
Memphis,
Tenn.,
were with M
d M B k Oth , SaturdayguestsofMr.and.Mrs.
Memorial weekend guests of
r. an
rs. uc · er Jess Anderson
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Miller guests of the Bucks Sunday
·
and also visited Mr. and Mrs. were Mr. and Mrs. Early
Bob Cornwell at Gallipolis.
Roush, Mrs. Cora Buck,
Mrs
.
Howard
Lawrence Beegle of Dorcas, Michael Barr of Glenville
Mr.
and
TONIGHT ONLY
Hoverman and children, Mrs. and Mrs. Don Hammond and State College and classmate
Beltllce Shook of Van Wert, Robbi, and Mrs. Betty Stewart Danny Williams spent the week
"HONEY MOON
spent Memorial Day weekend of Columbus.
end with his parents Mr. and
with . R.ev. and Mrs. Robert
Mrs. Carrie Nease of Racine Mrs. Alpha Barr.
KILLER"
Shook and attended services at called Suhday evening on Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Alpha Barr and
the United Brethren Church at and Mrs. St. Clair Hill.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Bail of
ALSO
Letart Sunday evening. Linda
Mr. and Mrs. Qon Bell spent Hamden, 0. went to Lancaster,
and
Philip
Haverman
played
Tuesday
evening with Mr. and 0 ., Sunday to the Phelps
''CHANGES''
Mrs~ Paul Erwin on Bashan Reunion.
Road.
Mr. and Mrs. Alpha Barr and
Miss Lorna Bell spent Dena Hoffman have been ill
DIVORCE ASKED
·
'
Linda Priddy, Pomeroy, has Wednesday night with Barbara with a virus.
filed suit for divorce in Meigs Nease at Racine.
Tim Willcox is ·a medical
County Common Pleas Court
Mrs. Albert McClain, Bobby patient at the Holzer Medical
Tonight, June B
against
James
Priddy, and Janice, of Cutler, Thomas Clinic.
Pomeroy, charg ing gross · McClain of Cincinnati were Mrs. Evelyn Montgomery is
MEPHISTO WALTZ
( Technicolor)
neglect of duty and extreme guests of Mr. and Mrs. St. Clair home and doing nicely after
Alan Aida
Hill Saturday.
surgery at Riverside Hospital in
cruelty.
Jacqueline Bi sset
Mr. and Mrs . George Columbus, 0.
"R"
Donohew,
Mark, Doug and Lori, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Wright
Colorcartoons :
COOKOUT
PLANNED
of Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. and children of Dublin ,
Wunder·Bar
Mrs.
Charles
Cohen
will
· Great Day
Gene Webster and daughter, Virginia, came for a visit with
entertain the Past Councilors Anita of Cleveland spent Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Morris and
SHOW STARTS I P.M.
Club of Theodorus. Council 17 ' Memorial weekend with Mr. family. Mr. Wright returned
Daughters · of America , at a and Mrs. Roy Donohew and home on Sunday. Mrs. Wright
Wed. &amp; Thurs.
cpokout at her home at 6:30 sons.
and chlldrren remained lor a
June 9-10
p.m.
Thursday.
Misses Polly and Sandra week with her parents on
NOT OPEN
Taylor of Columbus spent Saturday. Larry Morrinnd his
, . - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - -..., Memorial Day weekend with mother took Mrs. Betty Wright
:Mr. and Mr~. Leo Taylor at and children home.
)Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr and
:Stone · and children of Leon, children spent Sunday visiting
spent Monday with the Taylors. hl~ sister and family , Mr. and
Monday evening guests of Mr. Mrs . Chester tJesser of
and Mrs. Benny Boggess were Magnetic Springs, Ohio and also
Mrs. Shirley Ables and Vtcki, visited the Zoo in the Columbus
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Michael area.
and family, Susie, Kim and Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Bails of
Norma Jarrell.
Hamden, 0. spent Saturday
Mr. and Mrs, Wayne Camp· afternoon with her sister and
bell and children of Charleston.. family Mr. and Mrs. Alpha
Barr. Other week end visitors at
, the Barr home was Mr. and
JfJf'f.Jf.Jf'f.Jf.Jf'f.¥¥¥¥•• Mrs .. Blair Cadwallader and
bOys of Seaman, Ohio.
il
Mr. and Mrs. Alpha Barr, Mr.
:
Or
and Mrs. Blair Cadwallsder,
it and Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr
Faith can place a candle It attended the Rutland Alumni
~ in the darkest night.
.f · Banquet. Others reared in
~
.j; Langsville area was Carl Miller
Margaret E Sangster ~ of Athens, Mr. and Mrs. Burl
:f
it~ White (Evelyn Hill), Elnore
"'
~ WIUillrtlson of Charleston, W.
Va., Mrs . Allee · Crouser
~
WMJ
Uvlhgston of Dunbar, W. Va.,
Maxine Dyer, , Langsville, Mr.
~
and Mrs.· LarrY Hoffman of
'~
~ Albany, 0 . and Marlene Hoff.
• Durable, low-sheen latex
~~
man of Gallipolis, Mr. and Mrs.
• Applies easily; drlea last
il
Fridays Only
·
Robert Rife, Judy Chase Miller
• Mildew and blister resistant
The Dr'ive- ln Window
of Dallas, Texas, Ferne Folden
• Fpr wood, masonry and
is Open
Kenneaw and Josephine Folden ·
prepared melal, hardboard or
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
Stiles of Columbus, Jay Stiles of
1:
fiber board
il
(Continuously)
Albany, 0., Mr. and Mrs. Owen
it:
Hoffman, of Columbus, 0., Mr.
• Excellent color retention
il Other Banking Houn' '• f and Mrs. Dwight Nelson and
:
l and l to 7 as usual on :ji Mr .. and Mrs. Cecil Nelson of
Plain tap-water tlean-up
it Fridays.
f Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
etn whlla, black and hundreds
ol color's
:ji Braley of Columbus, 0. spent
...
the week end with her sister Mr.
ai\d Mrs. Clair Nelson .
CLEVELAND

• . • ,h

'"

Summer School
Last Rites Held

y

10

'

HECK'S REG.

.

HECK'S

'

RIG.

HOUSEWARE
D.PT.

$46.99

HARDWARE

DEPT.

PROcrOR

STEAM'IRON
PlentY of 1"-am for .a1ier ironing • .Clear-view
hHI for ironl~g in ony direc+io"n •. ~ . Itt&amp; you Mit

as you iron. Eosy.fo4M fabric diai. ,Lto.proof.
U9hlwti9ht. Block hondle,' chrome cover. 1200
watit, 110 voln. AC only. UL l;md.

$52
7
95
As low as

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q•

,1.,.·

HIQt'SIIG.

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

HMDWAIE

aut

DII'T.

SPARK.PLUGS

BOUNTY

JUMBOTOWRS

AC, Ct4AMPION, OR
AUTOLITE ·

3000 ONLY PER STORE

· , IIANON,IW
UMITI ·

LIMIT4

CHOICE

410LLS

'69·9

LP-Gas barbecue grill
when you buy an Ashland
LP-Gas forced air heating system.

77c·

.....

•
!liCK'S

RIG.

$·100

$9.96

HECK'S REG.

JEWELIY
.DEPT.

41c

'

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

·SUPER BLEND

QUAKER STATE
10W30
MOTOR OIL
4100 ONLY PaSTORE

49c

LIMITS QTS.

HECK'S REG.
77c.

QUART
HECK'S REG.

:. SP()RTS

'

..._....._

. DEPt.

I .

35c
59c

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

CONVI!NII!NT

•uu, ln•talted. · :.~:.':'::

~-S 's HoiT SLEEVE .

. DRESS SHIRTS '·
Did you have trouble with your
furnace last winter? If so, now's the
time to take advantage ot our spe·
cial summertime otfer. Order a new
Ashland LP-Gas Heating system
now and we'll include a deluxe LP·
Gas barbecue grill FREE . The heavy
duty cast' aluminum grill is an $80
value. Your bonu~· with a comp le1!!,
modern Ashland LP·Gas heating
system installation.
You also get tree in~tallation and
rent-tree use ot the storage tank.
And 'Ashland otters you a conven·
ient LP-G as budget plan. Levels out
your annual heating bill in equal in·
stallments over a 10 month period .

SPECIAL FREE BARBECUE
GRILL OFFER EXPIRES AUG . 31,
1971. So don't delay.
Want more information? Write or
phone the Ashland LP-G as Bulk
Plant nearest you .

WITH
Tw~

1 ~. OZ. MISS BRECK

HAIR SPRAY

..

Regular, superhold, unscented, and un~en1ed
ouporhold.
·'

Ash/anti

HicK'S IIG. 69c

GENE COLEMAN, Agent
Box 471, Stale Road 124
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone: 992-5111
Ripley. W. Va. - Phone: 372-2221

'

'

p'"i••• moclol of

'""'"

,.,....

P""
motetlal.
Cuflod , A, .. riod
prillti. SiM-tl-11.

,$'2 99
fiiCK'IIIG. ,
13.96

COSIAETIC DEPT.
ASHLAND PETROLEUM COMPANY
Dl¥tolon o1 Aohiond 011, Inc.

--

Tht fas~lonobli whitt and d••P toned coiou
accent thtdylint af'thtu IOO % ·Nylo~ tricot
: ohm Siml4~·17.
'1

CLOTHING
DEPT.

.MEN'S

DRES.SSOCKS

. Banlon • Nyktn • Orion c:~w. Auor+td colon. On• sim fits si111 II). I].

HICK' I

39C'P&amp;IR
HECK' SRIG. 79c

Q.OTHING DEPT.

IIG.
. 11.991AOI

CLOTHING

DIPT.

'l

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d
!

�•

t
•I

.

.\ . '·
,

l.

.•••
'

'.

''

·•

G.IRLS'

'·•

HOT PANTS'

..
•,

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BOYS'

These Hot Pants for girls
feature· a 5-buttotl front,
and a mod fly. Choose
fram a~sorted prints.
Available in denim and
. paplin. Simi 4-14.

BOYS'

.SWIM TRUNKS' WALK
Permantnt preU fatlrie in ct.ol~
&gt; of ooHd colon and ·ploldo. s;,., .

AnOrttd rtyles fra:m boxer to
,..... olntch m9doh.
41o
14.
.
.

...._~~~MEN'S

s;....

FRUIT OF THE LOOM

~~~

" Right on!", .. , tM world't 9"0i t ll dod will
lilt the look ol the1e lomou1 m o~• r-rmo.
nenl pr •n thirh. Comfll.ll with a \ foihion
eollot, the .. 1hirt1 ort ov~;~ il o~l t in ~ari 0111
prinh , ttfipill and iO ~ d. . Silfl 14 ~-!1.
•

.

COLORED JEAIIS
Asoorltd colon in
3Fll . '
pormononl pron •
fabric. Sias 6-16.
500
'
.

_
HeciC:• Reg11!ar
·$2.49 erich

CLOTHING DEPT.

··.·

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',,

CLOtHING DEPT.

.

'

Heclc' s Regular $ J.28
· CLOTHING DEPT~

TAIII TOPs·

\•

I HilTS

The~~t

·fteveless cotton 'tonk tap•
are avilab!. 1ft assorted colors.

»•• rei colla r ""'•• with ~ulor or long

ggc

ggc

.

LADIES'
ROLL SLE~VE
AND SI.EEYELESS

GIRLS'

· Cute 1;111. out/;n for yOur loddt.f to rOmp in ftte sun ot horrt•
or ol tho booch.

.

,#It

Heck's Reg.
ro $2,49

INFANT
· BOYS' • GIRLS' .

·SUN.SUITS

3. FOR'ssoo
·

$·1''

DRESS SHIRTS

I

'

•

'

tGU. tMy .Mrh orwl ,.m. fr111h ar• o~aHobi. In .olid toiOI'I II" printJ. Sim U-Jl

$159

•

Heck's Reg. $2.28

'

'

DEPT.

DEPT.

.,

•

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'

•Rber ff.'am._e ;~ft sidt luqgoge;with o tiPPer: o~ the ~id~ Fa·r. .easy pading. Deep o,-ning givl$ loh of r~om . Blad St.wort

CLOTHING
DEPT.

MEN'S PERMANENT PRESS

DRESS PANTS

Plaid.

18''..... 21'' .....
.

44
24'' ................... '5
Sf!ll

26''1111129''.' ·••t~••tt.•••·················· ,Til

31'' ....................................... ~ ..

Swing into Summer fashion with
theJe attractive dreu pantt. The
Ban·rol waist bond and Scotch

0

$J91

to$11.98

Assorted ...... print..'
s; ... lto·4.
'

CLOTHING
DEPT•.

sac

. CLOTHING
' 'DEPT.

'

LADIES' STRJTCH DENIM .

PANTIES

POLO SHIRTS

leg.

ble and stylish combination. Basic wardrobe colors include:'
Gray, Blue, Olive, and Gold.
Sim1 29-42.

· LADIES'
NYLON • SATIN .

BOYS' IL GI-S'

Heclc's

Guard finilh make a comforta-

HOI PlN'JS

White ~nd postol ••!on ;~tho brief
• style. 51~ 6-IO:

A &lt;uffod bottom ond udo oip•.otylo
af porma pmo IGbric. Nylan-coiiOrs
blond In talld colon ond prinll. s;.,
1-14.
·

,::~.Reg. 2~ ~ 100

R
.2alfl·

$119 ' ..
Heclr'alteg.

4-\ '· ,....__..
'

SHORT SLEEVE

KNIT

'lhiiS!hi:!V. ,;. ,;lh l " deop lroy. ·Hoavy
, . ,two hafsdlos, IO".'JUO anjl groovo, woot¥r
style locl Colan: black, blue, ,.ld, - n.

slay . W1190~

·

SHIRTS

COTTON

'

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R,:·

$10.66

BIRDSEYE
.
.

CLOTIING
.DEPT.

s;,.,

DIAPERS

'

GILLETTE .

. Soft, absprbent diapers
measure 21'•21'.

IIJECTOI
.... aAtiS ·

37

7'•

IOZEI

..

Hed&lt;'s ltlfluiar $2.99 Each

CLOTHING DEPT.

Heclc's Regular
$2.00

Heclc'• lllfl.
$1.09 ..

COSMETIC
DEPT. ,

I .

•

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ESQUIRE

·SHOE POLISH.

CLOTHING DEPT.

·f ·8 OUNa

SOFT
'
f
DRI
.ANTI-PERSPIRANT

.

r .~

' .

Heck's

Easy living is extra nice in •
these comfortable knit
shi rtl. Rela1 in •ither the
crew-ned or placket style.
AYoiloble in ~tripes or sol;ds.
S-M·L-XL.

.,

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' $798

SPORT

2 FOR

.

P'!'¥.· ond hasp

.-

PERMANENT PRESS

WORK SETS
Fort;f;ed w~h C.lonoso.• I'Ortr.l. Thott
permal\ently prened 5" Fortrel po·
lyeder, SOCK, c:otton twill wai-k clothe•
have all the big feature' You ••ped
w;lh tho ·Big Yank label. &amp;&lt;luoive "NoTare" tunl\tl loops. And free fitting'
comf~.
+f.orhl i1 a trQO.marl: ol Fiber lndudries, In(.

Sl101'!91o 44

Two otylto·fr••m

chaooo.

and hloo cup
with onr ond under style
tlntpo. White ..ly. s;,.. 12,

40. ABCoup.

· Jgc·
1-!eclt'l Rlfl.
99c

CLOTHING DEPT.

LADIES' •
NYLON '

. GI.L£TT£

PANn HO$E·

. DOUBLE '

~

One ,;,. fj1&gt; oil. Colan: bo;go,
~cinnamon, taupe, brown encf

EDGE

.IIA~ES '
5'.1· l't

omolt. All l;nt quality Amorican

rna'".

··

-5l·C. -&amp;ac

ColOn: Spruct1 gretn,
wood, navy and charcoal

.,.,

'
. Heclr'•
aeg;

$499
EACH

Hte.'t Rlflu/ar

••n

CLOTHING DEPT.

' $1.18

MATattNG SHQIT SUIVE

, COSMETIC
DEPT.·· .

Sl. . l41o 17

. 14

$379
EACH

oz.

GI.LLETTE

LJSOL
.
·· SPRAY

ALSO: LONG ILIMI SIKIL.,fC.29
1-.T.

ADJUSTABLE ,

RAZOR

.

DEODORANT .

$ 28

C·
...
Heek's
Regular
51c
COSMETIC
. DIPT;

.

,

•

,LUGGAGE SPECIAL .
L.

'
· .: H
eclc'i'
. R.egulai · .

.

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Haclc's

$1.58

.. '
Haclc' s leg.

.

Reg.

~

$1.44
' '

cOsME11C .

COSMETIC DIP1.

•
.DEPT
'

~

,.

1"601.

4 oiiNa ;·

,.

12'11 OZ. J II J

BABY
.

I

Heclc'a
leg. $1.69
.
.
CO$MITIC '
lll'f,·
~-·-· '':'

COSMETIC
DIPT•

. · 32 OUNa

PRELL

RIGHT GUARD

$1.14

.LIS
.
.

�•

t
•I

.

.\ . '·
,

l.

.•••
'

'.

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·•

G.IRLS'

'·•

HOT PANTS'

..
•,

.

'

•

BOYS'

These Hot Pants for girls
feature· a 5-buttotl front,
and a mod fly. Choose
fram a~sorted prints.
Available in denim and
. paplin. Simi 4-14.

BOYS'

.SWIM TRUNKS' WALK
Permantnt preU fatlrie in ct.ol~
&gt; of ooHd colon and ·ploldo. s;,., .

AnOrttd rtyles fra:m boxer to
,..... olntch m9doh.
41o
14.
.
.

...._~~~MEN'S

s;....

FRUIT OF THE LOOM

~~~

" Right on!", .. , tM world't 9"0i t ll dod will
lilt the look ol the1e lomou1 m o~• r-rmo.
nenl pr •n thirh. Comfll.ll with a \ foihion
eollot, the .. 1hirt1 ort ov~;~ il o~l t in ~ari 0111
prinh , ttfipill and iO ~ d. . Silfl 14 ~-!1.
•

.

COLORED JEAIIS
Asoorltd colon in
3Fll . '
pormononl pron •
fabric. Sias 6-16.
500
'
.

_
HeciC:• Reg11!ar
·$2.49 erich

CLOTHING DEPT.

··.·

'

.

',,

CLOtHING DEPT.

.

'

Heclc' s Regular $ J.28
· CLOTHING DEPT~

TAIII TOPs·

\•

I HilTS

The~~t

·fteveless cotton 'tonk tap•
are avilab!. 1ft assorted colors.

»•• rei colla r ""'•• with ~ulor or long

ggc

ggc

.

LADIES'
ROLL SLE~VE
AND SI.EEYELESS

GIRLS'

· Cute 1;111. out/;n for yOur loddt.f to rOmp in ftte sun ot horrt•
or ol tho booch.

.

,#It

Heck's Reg.
ro $2,49

INFANT
· BOYS' • GIRLS' .

·SUN.SUITS

3. FOR'ssoo
·

$·1''

DRESS SHIRTS

I

'

•

'

tGU. tMy .Mrh orwl ,.m. fr111h ar• o~aHobi. In .olid toiOI'I II" printJ. Sim U-Jl

$159

•

Heck's Reg. $2.28

'

'

DEPT.

DEPT.

.,

•

'

'

•Rber ff.'am._e ;~ft sidt luqgoge;with o tiPPer: o~ the ~id~ Fa·r. .easy pading. Deep o,-ning givl$ loh of r~om . Blad St.wort

CLOTHING
DEPT.

MEN'S PERMANENT PRESS

DRESS PANTS

Plaid.

18''..... 21'' .....
.

44
24'' ................... '5
Sf!ll

26''1111129''.' ·••t~••tt.•••·················· ,Til

31'' ....................................... ~ ..

Swing into Summer fashion with
theJe attractive dreu pantt. The
Ban·rol waist bond and Scotch

0

$J91

to$11.98

Assorted ...... print..'
s; ... lto·4.
'

CLOTHING
DEPT•.

sac

. CLOTHING
' 'DEPT.

'

LADIES' STRJTCH DENIM .

PANTIES

POLO SHIRTS

leg.

ble and stylish combination. Basic wardrobe colors include:'
Gray, Blue, Olive, and Gold.
Sim1 29-42.

· LADIES'
NYLON • SATIN .

BOYS' IL GI-S'

Heclc's

Guard finilh make a comforta-

HOI PlN'JS

White ~nd postol ••!on ;~tho brief
• style. 51~ 6-IO:

A &lt;uffod bottom ond udo oip•.otylo
af porma pmo IGbric. Nylan-coiiOrs
blond In talld colon ond prinll. s;.,
1-14.
·

,::~.Reg. 2~ ~ 100

R
.2alfl·

$119 ' ..
Heclr'alteg.

4-\ '· ,....__..
'

SHORT SLEEVE

KNIT

'lhiiS!hi:!V. ,;. ,;lh l " deop lroy. ·Hoavy
, . ,two hafsdlos, IO".'JUO anjl groovo, woot¥r
style locl Colan: black, blue, ,.ld, - n.

slay . W1190~

·

SHIRTS

COTTON

'

..

R,:·

$10.66

BIRDSEYE
.
.

CLOTIING
.DEPT.

s;,.,

DIAPERS

'

GILLETTE .

. Soft, absprbent diapers
measure 21'•21'.

IIJECTOI
.... aAtiS ·

37

7'•

IOZEI

..

Hed&lt;'s ltlfluiar $2.99 Each

CLOTHING DEPT.

Heclc's Regular
$2.00

Heclc'• lllfl.
$1.09 ..

COSMETIC
DEPT. ,

I .

•

..

ESQUIRE

·SHOE POLISH.

CLOTHING DEPT.

·f ·8 OUNa

SOFT
'
f
DRI
.ANTI-PERSPIRANT

.

r .~

' .

Heck's

Easy living is extra nice in •
these comfortable knit
shi rtl. Rela1 in •ither the
crew-ned or placket style.
AYoiloble in ~tripes or sol;ds.
S-M·L-XL.

.,

'

'

' $798

SPORT

2 FOR

.

P'!'¥.· ond hasp

.-

PERMANENT PRESS

WORK SETS
Fort;f;ed w~h C.lonoso.• I'Ortr.l. Thott
permal\ently prened 5" Fortrel po·
lyeder, SOCK, c:otton twill wai-k clothe•
have all the big feature' You ••ped
w;lh tho ·Big Yank label. &amp;&lt;luoive "NoTare" tunl\tl loops. And free fitting'
comf~.
+f.orhl i1 a trQO.marl: ol Fiber lndudries, In(.

Sl101'!91o 44

Two otylto·fr••m

chaooo.

and hloo cup
with onr ond under style
tlntpo. White ..ly. s;,.. 12,

40. ABCoup.

· Jgc·
1-!eclt'l Rlfl.
99c

CLOTHING DEPT.

LADIES' •
NYLON '

. GI.L£TT£

PANn HO$E·

. DOUBLE '

~

One ,;,. fj1&gt; oil. Colan: bo;go,
~cinnamon, taupe, brown encf

EDGE

.IIA~ES '
5'.1· l't

omolt. All l;nt quality Amorican

rna'".

··

-5l·C. -&amp;ac

ColOn: Spruct1 gretn,
wood, navy and charcoal

.,.,

'
. Heclr'•
aeg;

$499
EACH

Hte.'t Rlflu/ar

••n

CLOTHING DEPT.

' $1.18

MATattNG SHQIT SUIVE

, COSMETIC
DEPT.·· .

Sl. . l41o 17

. 14

$379
EACH

oz.

GI.LLETTE

LJSOL
.
·· SPRAY

ALSO: LONG ILIMI SIKIL.,fC.29
1-.T.

ADJUSTABLE ,

RAZOR

.

DEODORANT .

$ 28

C·
...
Heek's
Regular
51c
COSMETIC
. DIPT;

.

,

•

,LUGGAGE SPECIAL .
L.

'
· .: H
eclc'i'
. R.egulai · .

.

'

'

Haclc's

$1.58

.. '
Haclc' s leg.

.

Reg.

~

$1.44
' '

cOsME11C .

COSMETIC DIP1.

•
.DEPT
'

~

,.

1"601.

4 oiiNa ;·

,.

12'11 OZ. J II J

BABY
.

I

Heclc'a
leg. $1.69
.
.
CO$MITIC '
lll'f,·
~-·-· '':'

COSMETIC
DIPT•

. · 32 OUNa

PRELL

RIGHT GUARD

$1.14

.LIS
.
.

�.
12th '

12th

IIIIIIVERSIRY

IIIIIIVERSIRY

SiLE

SALE

8FT.

'

12 FT.

X

10· FT.

X

8FT.

..CABI,, lENT·

1 2 FT.

DINING CANOPY'
Mode of ,l ent twill • . . Guy
ropes with rope ;guides ... adjust.able spring button aluminum center p_ole ... complete with ropes,
stokes,.and aluminum poles.
.

BAR-B-Q GRILL

Heck's Regular $64:88

Heclc' s R,gular $21.97

HARDWARE
· DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

. ·SPORTS DEPT.

.

.

'

Dependable quality ~ebco model 202 reel with
5'3" light action two piece Zebco 2020 rod and
abrasion resistant premi~ m :Z.bco mono line.

' .

•

. HARDWARE DEPT.

Hecll's Reg.
~1.39

_.

SPORTS
DEPT
•.
.
.

.BED

•'

.' '
•

.,j

'

·'

.,

;g1,.

SPORTS
DEPT.

PECD' CHAISE -lOUIGE~~

.

.

-..

)

- .

'• '

1

loam. malfNII wllh lfr iped cottor~ tidint •n•
llid.; ¥111,4 tilt ...y.,.. &amp;ld~.
.

Heck's
Regular
'

1

•

I

~:''

. •

'

Fi110 'fo''li+, ~~~~:~t-rial• on.d f1ructuro1 •"91'*1ri!t9
I'IIO:Ik• tilil Nrltitur. "" ttol!d" of .... irwl~~Stfy.
Cool on~ c:otu'ol with b•Rd.OII'IO 9'"'" / •hlto
wobbing. Extruatd pn~ fonnod olu!!'in""" 01'1111 lri•
Wftorfllll '*ifn, NHMI tllbukar frOIMI. Wobblftt
Niitfl fodiag, lroll'l.o-.i"' OlfiOIIWD ta sllftlhint
OC' woofflor,

HARDWARE DEPT.

Heck's Reg. .
$1.59

'

CAR lOP CARRIERS
$366 -·

Heclr's Reg,

Lorge load capacity. Ri9id one pi.ce eandruc·

$13.99

tion. Attractive ba~ed-on enamel fini1h. Com-

HARDWARE
. DEPT• .

SPORTS DEPT.

.--

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.-

' '''#'..!; Sin9l1 let.l"ll'd. h1biif~' . tl• thid vir9in

'•

Heck's /leg'. $9.88

I

.

1-

10FT.

9" scalloped valance -front
,..ond sides. Rope in hem
. , ,and top to go through
, · track on trailer. · Complete
with jointed poles, guy
'lines and steel stokes.
Heck's Reg. $22.99

$7.48

There when you need it, gone when
you •don't. The perfect solution to
tho~ limited space problems.
'

When a camper is a long way
from home and all that's
between him and o good
· night's sleep is a sleeping
bag, it hod better be com.fortoble. And this is one of
our best.
Heck's Regular $12.9!

uALL\In ,.

99

$ 99

FOLDING TABLE
$J88

FP,..._·

Rustproof, chrome-plated
grid. New positive grid
adjustment has 4 heights
and cool, hardwood handle. Removable straight
tripod-type legs of .plated
steel.

ZEBCO .ROD. I REEL C
'

·

X

TRAILER CAN

·coLEMAN :

. 24'.' STRUCTO

Mode of "colorfast" tent twill,
completely adjustable oukide aluminum frame. Sewn-in floor.
68"x22" screened picture window
on each side of the tent with st~rm
flaps. 80" screen door. Sweepout .
floor . Complete with frame and
steel stokes.

'

l

•

'

. pie., with lashin9 draps. Suction cups assure sol·
id position 9rip.

1

Heck's Regular $8.49

HARDW;tRE DEPT,

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT:

lET

.

I

Hltf~·~ ~as- $4.99

I

I

'

WILSON'K28
.
.

GOLF BA.LLS

VINYL ., , .

BALLG.LOVE

.

'•

20'' FAN

Heck's

'
""·"'
' -..~·
.

'3. '

.\ii;~):tb\

·'$1'1-;99
SPORTS
DEPT.

. Heck's R.,u/or $1.38

.2-PIECE
SIn

SPORTS DEPT.
'

.. ARDWAilE DEPT.

.

f1.8.\ ~

.

Heck's Reg.
$1 .19

c

HARDWARE
D~PT.

•

WAT·ER H-OSE

:GAS-CAN

A real bargain on this good quality gor:
den hose. 50 ft. length.

SPQRTSpEPT.

$

·.t ··',

Heck's Reg.
$1.19

Heck's Reg.
. $1.99

HARDWARE
~ . DEP~.

HARDWARE
DEPT.

~.

~SIZES

I

' LOIMJ~ co~

$166

I

•

66

·. SD
Heck's Rlfl. to '$2.99
AUTOMOTIVE .
DEPT.

porioblo
l•mp. ~'*"'" 1 doc:o,.ttvo flb.r tMin tllo4o o11d
c:oordlnot.d powtl' pcKt Lltfm up room e.nt, troilor,
., hot ~~~~111. A p1rfolt &amp;ulutlt"*\.111 '•'!'''''"C:Y
blodftts. •

-

' ..

WRENCH

'

c

·,

c
•

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

·AUTOMOTJVE DEPT.

$5.~7-·

Heck's Regular 99c

.'·SPORTS DEPt. " '.
1

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.
.-

(

~
B

f
r

•
s

•

l,

-: )'
With 52 inch
· foldiog·hand!..

II
y
II

H,kt(. llagular..
. ~ $6.11'11'

e

,f

r.n

•

AUfOMOTIVE
DEPT.
'

I'
r

.

n

II

KOOLIT

F.'

RADIATOR TREATMENT

t.iII

&lt;e

Hi9hly efficient in ait
conditioned ca.n \ Prevents en9ine overheotlnq.
Dililpaltl hoot qulclly.

$13"~
;

Heck's Reg.

'

99

DEPT.

OIL FILlER

'
A.lflod.,n ·Novtifully lllolltno4 urllllou

' ~eclc's Reg. $2.27&gt; ·

·•

HARbWARE

LEE

'

~

s

.

'

HIPWELL .

B

·• DEPT.

t

'

s

SPet!TS

us

· • Heck's
.' Reg.
· $1.r9

Regular
. $1 ;44

c

CIRTRIDIE TIP£·

,-S,PII:ON TYPE.• .

·$UP' .

J,

. HARDWARE
DEPT.

5tt torlliJft of:

wt1 not includtd. Sol lndut.l: ~illtt, Conclowr altd
Jlolor.

·•

-,..

SCIS.SORS
·.JACK.

c

H..:~'s

TO&gt;'Ffl' MOST,, CARS
,

I
I

CAMP,LAMP

' for inwt populcr c:llll"l. Hl,h ,..f«monc.
A'lliiiiW.

I

c

oltoyod mttol.Durablo,
P01itlvo,1111111-Corrodip lod:

I
I

·i

. Heck'1 Regi to $:N69

IGNITION CABLE SET·
"""'~

.

·~•pt nonlo odjtntod for at~y kind of
spcly ,.tt.m c~M.d . \

· EE
OIL F;~;kTERS

8 CYLINDER HYPALON

.

;:;;.; ..,_

'

1fe(Ks . •

. SPORTS DEPT.
• f.

"'"' "*"'"""'·

,~.••

SPORTS DEPT.

/~·

HOSE'NOZZi.E·

.

Heck's Regulor
. 38t

• AIII'IK*Wiry '-'"l"h
• 011~ oM coil nip...
' Ac:c:orMtl typo .,.. f)iut

e

e··

$16.9l'

Loo•p~oof nd clog proof. All br~11

I

ONE
G'ALLON

9

.~

,.

HARDWARE DEPT.

C·.

.. '
· HARDWARE
DEPT.

r

. Regular.

'

'

r

B

n. FIIIIIGLAS$ ~ ,

Heck's Reg. $28.88

• 40 .- FT.
. . 4 QU~RT
.
TROU·BLE .EXTENSION
C
ORD
ICE
BUCKET
.
liGHT

1' '

Biac~ finish·. Small·siut for fre1h ~·ater u1e. Two
spools. Thllmb hand!. lnob. Standard rotriovo.

t

'

'•

IJ-ll

SPIN CAST REEL

.:,.p,.

He4'sRegular
~
'
.

SPORTS DEPT.

SOUTH

I

FISHING ROD

.
Heck's Regular $5.99
.. ,

.
EL

300 .

Powerful l-speed GE motor. High
velocity 5 element blade. Room or
window 20" fan . Grilles remove
easily lor quick blade cleaning.
Retractable vinyl grip handle._

3·BLADE
POOKET •

'

27''x72' 1

PATIO
LIGHT

GENERAL ELECTRIC

Cowhide leather with sturdy stitching fodong wear.

·~ _. AIR MATTRESS

.

· SCHRADE

'

d
lr '
11
n
I.

ll
~~

'

H..:lr's Regular
$1.11'7 01.'

AUTOMOTM

DEPT, . '

til_ .

Heck's 1.{,. $3.P9 fo.
3000 lb. cOp.

II
'
'II

~

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

·,_~

~~

lit

SHOCK
SPRINGS
•

'

Reliabl• 1had aprings for
your qutomobile •that will .
tive you o 1moother, softtr
ricle. Adds up to ·750 lbs. '
, overlooc:J topa(;ity.

Heck's Reg.
$5.99 Pt.

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

6'h

RED
DEVIL

ANTIQUE
KIT
. Ntw fwtlllint

lo'-• bow 1m

you~il,........ ,....,..

..nw

*"r· lndUIMt en 114M

coot, tlo••· tondpopor ond
et...c:lott..~

Heel!'•
lleg.
$3.99

oolan,.

"D" SIZE ·

oz.

OFF .

INSECT
.REPRLENT

HECK'S.
BRAND

Heck's R.,.
. $J .09

· Heclc's

HARDWARE
DIPT.,

12c
SPORTS DIPT.

'

•

·FLASHLIGHT
BAnERIES ,

R~ular

HECK'S
6-VOLT

LANTERN
BATTERY
Heclc's
Regular
99c

131f1

oz.

.EASY
WAY

SPRAY
PAIIT

-

h.e nted IM•vtiM ..lwM

-S TP
15 oz.

·mL
TREATMENT

tpre, fer "m• •••rotlnt•

..__

.~

... ""'-"

i119 !Mtal, wood 011d tklo, '
~colon.

Heclr's
Regular
pp,

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT. ·

10

AEROSOL

ll'

20 FL. OZ.

AUTO
BODY
UNDER
COAT
Heck's R., •
$1.66

'Y'

GUNK

:4 .'

:a

SPRAY
DEGREASER
AUTOMOTIVE

DEPT•

AUTOMOTM

DIPT.

_.

.

'

�~------. --~----------~-----------;c-------~~~--------------------~·~----------------------~~-- ,

-~

·-

.e
I.

e '

d~

..

_-·. MURRAY
BOYS' oil GIRLS'

lf
ll '

a···

.261NCH
3·5PEED
BIKES

ll .

•

h
I$ &gt;

.d .

n:

• GE PORTA COLOR® Chomi1.

, •
•
•
•
•
•
.;.
•

GE "In -line" Pict urt~ TYN Sydtm
UHf Solid Stott TUnt1
VHf " l'ft·S.t " Fi~~e Tu,..ing Cantr~;~l
P\,,h 8ulfo)n Color !Vifitl'
Kt.,.cl AGC
TtiiKopi~ Dipol. Anfe..,o
0.-C;II Mttol Hondlt
10" Oi119Q11ol. ~0 1q. inch viewi11q area

PORTACOLOR
TELEVISION
88

$169

:j •
' 1r .

,.

~,''

d,

1. .
i .. ..

·-

.PORTABLE

:J

GE 12'' BLACK &amp; WHITE
-TELEVISION

For af" l-1. A brifhtty cotor.d pl11y '-" fOt th.
~t.MI c.hik,l, tho:at con hll QIYI!IbltO tollly wi+h
nlolh ol'!d lioolh ll.t llko 11M requW. tool1. Silt: 2.4"W
~ l2"L 1 l4"Ji. Hilt d011bi.-&lt;loor tn+rJ , 2 rHr "in·
do-.., ond openi119 slyll9ht, Compl.+tly wolhablt
W weott.r.mistanttnltr\lction1 ·i~~~:lud.d.

• Hiqh Goin VHF Tun..• Solid Stott UHF Tu0'141t .
• Front Sound
• front Contfol1

• S..llt-1• M• ""' Hoodlo
• Monopo le Ant.nflll

o

WHAM-0 -

$' •ss.a·
00

Plusuft riding wifh Murroy 4•sign,d
ligMwoivht. Hub; Footory odi ..tod l Spttd with twist grip control. Caliper
, brobo wHh otblo orgoni1tr. Sodlllo: All
whitt vinyl. Rims: Tubular. Tires:
_26"•1~" ..Podols; Boll bearin' with ref_loetor,

ONTV

_Hec/c's Reg.
$J.44
TOY '{)EPT.

•

TOY· DEPT.

7 oz.

-

FRIIBII HORIDHOIID
BYWHAMO

244.

,

.
·

·

cup·s

'
SUP-ER PLANE
poww~~d.
c

•

'

88

Rubt.r
Huge 2 If. wi"9·
$pOn,
filM ltr.,iiJht,
dioftbi, loopt.
All pl ..ll&lt; f,Mfoo•. pcop•ll.,,

,

TOY DEPT-

. Heck's Regular $I 29.96

$100

'

-P UFFS·
200COUNT

·
.
$1
00
4

Heck's Reg.
· ' 38c fach

. Heck's Re~. 59c

· HOUSEWARE
DEPT. ·

101NCH

Smith-Corona
CORSAIR DE~UXE

TEFLON II
SKILLET

M•aty;. it.. ~&lt;llut of· thi1 GmOti'"J portoblt b~ ilt
fi1111 performance, tMn bv ih. haf~Y li• and Un .
tom wtiiJht. It's d-ble ond hot oil Mttntlry ln.

Teflon coated fry pan in
Avocado, Ha,...t•ond Pop-

7-PIECE ALU'M

$16 6

H.re It "f1 b.ltllfv . . . COLOR..CRAH.
ED in AVKO~; PoP'PY· •nd Ho!'l'ftt Gold.)

-

to molch-ft'loh your litdten. Won't lode
~ 1:~1~. So~

;, . .

l:•·~ho•!

loin

$944

to~l p~~~itlwMntl without chippif19.
. c:tockln, or !Minq. DuPoe~l S"f*·Hard

Heck's Regular $2.99

TEFLON II finitl.

HOUSEWARE DEPT:

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

,. . '~'''''$3~9~ 7

TEFLON II COOKWARE SET

py.

IOIU

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

CG II

JEWELRY
DEPT...

rtol!y tolt it!

HOUSEWARE n~DT

Quality and durdy dt·.
1ign mokt thi~ attractive,
dreamlined stool ideal
ror ~.~ .. in .itchen, 'den or
bor. Wood 1lot Mot and
bo&lt;l. lO" 24".

~nol·~ ef to111~ pol~propylll\1 pl111tlt • ao
tt .~~a,..
to fit tht tlfftr,
. . . . thon .....~. Rmft tt~:ldi, ... ~. ond

, "-•'WI

.,.rwt'"

,....,

~ thtmlcth. "-!'"colon.

'

$1.99

Choo.,. from a wide, wolldtrlul wt.etion .
Of foarn.topped honocb in colon the~t
odd MW b.ollty to your hcttlw.AI 'o..r.d
ill wi~l.an vi11JI with' the loo~ and t..l
~ leo"-. A•oilaW. lR o.m.d dtcont·

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

"''"'"'

Heck's
Regular

$9.44

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

Heclc~s

'4.44
AND
'4.88

c

19c

All pwpo" quality !Nih pi•· •
tv,.. fnmot. 2 oi:m por paok·
_ .,., 5•1 and lxl 0.

C

~SEWAll

DEPT.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.
.

.

HOUSEW~RE DEPT.

.

DIAL .

BATH SQf\P

'

Ht&lt;l's

Heclc's Reg.
48c

99c

•

GALlON PLA$TIC

.DEWITER
i'

•, ••u • •

"'

HOUSIWARI

-, .

BALLER~NA
Heclc's
Regular

HOUSIWARE
DEPT,

HOUSIWAII DIPT. .

H.

a.'o~tifillly "''"""'"" pi&lt;~le bo.Ut. Easily
,-. holdst+.e items.that you would nMd on an
in9.

SH~DES
,.

FOI

d•
or
on
ill
id~

'

1) INCH · .

QT. ICE CREAM FREEZER
$9.99

KDtpt. hot foocl1 hot;
celd foo~h cold. Flolure• five bri.t.tlr pol.
i1had ohiJ"liiUfll p1111
which nell Into ....
eompad unit.• lottom

$7•.41 .

LAMP

7

t;

oUt:'

.

$ 4• 4

on

· PICNIC BASKET

PIOCTOI SIUX

,_eclc'tlleg.

I

·s.

utility~ .

PLASTIC

LAUNDRY
BASKET'
'

ve··
~~~ \

lle' '

llogular

HOuSEWAII.E DEPT.,

lle

at

CCH'IIfl'rfiiM1!t ...........,.

ond 50IO&lt;IJ.

Heck's-lltgular $1.22

HOUSEWAIE DEPT.

•

c

Disposable '•atlng
utensils for picnics or
, ony outing. 50 .,......

i'y
as

&gt;Y

PLASTIC SPOONS~
&amp;. FORK$

88

)0

~~

§

Heck'slteg.
$5.33

ld

ps
h,

HOUSEWAIE
DEPT.

-UTILITY,TABLE

Hedc's
llegu_lar

y,

'k,r

Reg.

PI.CNIC
'PACK '

.PI~TURE_' FRAMES

le
lg

in

REGAI:WARE ·

. 10COUNT

le

of

$15.88

OIOICE

MARSHALLAN J. TIER

TRASH BAGS

!e

ld
gs
ld

$1o••

FRAMED

HASSOCKS

TYPEWRITER

~n

4PAII&amp;NS

Heck's Regular

This l·tier•d table
olso comes with a
rtceptaclt on one
side.

le

tis

CIIOO$II FIOM

....:C:;::!;

A complllt wiM of, popu~ 2Jl"..U" 01 24"rUo" ,.ptodudioM
of filii oil fX!intinvt, -.:~d. ,.lllie,.d with highly dr4111otic ond
l'ftllitti&lt;: btwl! tlrolet. lndudld if! thll fobulout ouortment ore

HOUSEWARE
DIPT.

:n

-u

D~NNERWARE SET

a

~.

ld .

"'l

45

' Swptrilly c:""'ftrltW., U......i9l,t oM duroblt

: AN·tfMI c:ontlruction • tO" ce~rriog. ~
'
el.elriG .. yboorcl • Puah-vGrioble pie.
flln • R•f*!l 1pc1~• bor • S.ctric le9mtllll Ullft •
R.movablt • .cny-cJ.on p!ailfl • •Kr,-W Tab.dd.
lor lm- tlton 80 t~f.J. Ouid-a.l vitibl. mar9itn • Forword..j~d. tap dtcl:. Hi9h !*formo~"
n'IO!or. • Powll': 119- 120 V AC . Carrying ' catt:
g.nuine NougahyO. to "-P '"11chiM h. ol ~nt 1 ~ ·
oncl dYII when tfored Gnd li1Jhl in weiqht whtn JEWELRY
ear!i.d • Colon: Wint.r Whit. Body wifll Rtqolftad'
to Blue Keyboard.
.,_, .

~d

.3·PIIS.

c

.'

•

WiiiCJI ,

TOY DEPT.

l60COUNT

50 COUNT

Sq . ln. Vj.,win9 Art a

l:

CH'ARMIN
NAPKINS

FOAM

7•8

I . •
I :r

'

'

COMI'UTI YARD S£T, Zyofi,. '"""" 'I '
,.d Fri.'*'. 2lniiGWI'ing totd&amp;, 2 w06d goal
1fol.t, 2 b..lh.,. loopl, toiJ inlfrvctioM.·

7~

$I

I -

' '

c
'

HOUSIWAU DEPT. ,

'

'

HKic's

llegular
$3.66

HOUSIWARE
DEPT; _ .

.

1'1

FESCO MASTIC ' ..

~,~,

·2_
0GAL TRASH CAN

ol,d
lh,

OR

"

i'Ml

''

'

'

�~------. --~----------~-----------;c-------~~~--------------------~·~----------------------~~-- ,

-~

·-

.e
I.

e '

d~

..

_-·. MURRAY
BOYS' oil GIRLS'

lf
ll '

a···

.261NCH
3·5PEED
BIKES

ll .

•

h
I$ &gt;

.d .

n:

• GE PORTA COLOR® Chomi1.

, •
•
•
•
•
•
.;.
•

GE "In -line" Pict urt~ TYN Sydtm
UHf Solid Stott TUnt1
VHf " l'ft·S.t " Fi~~e Tu,..ing Cantr~;~l
P\,,h 8ulfo)n Color !Vifitl'
Kt.,.cl AGC
TtiiKopi~ Dipol. Anfe..,o
0.-C;II Mttol Hondlt
10" Oi119Q11ol. ~0 1q. inch viewi11q area

PORTACOLOR
TELEVISION
88

$169

:j •
' 1r .

,.

~,''

d,

1. .
i .. ..

·-

.PORTABLE

:J

GE 12'' BLACK &amp; WHITE
-TELEVISION

For af" l-1. A brifhtty cotor.d pl11y '-" fOt th.
~t.MI c.hik,l, tho:at con hll QIYI!IbltO tollly wi+h
nlolh ol'!d lioolh ll.t llko 11M requW. tool1. Silt: 2.4"W
~ l2"L 1 l4"Ji. Hilt d011bi.-&lt;loor tn+rJ , 2 rHr "in·
do-.., ond openi119 slyll9ht, Compl.+tly wolhablt
W weott.r.mistanttnltr\lction1 ·i~~~:lud.d.

• Hiqh Goin VHF Tun..• Solid Stott UHF Tu0'141t .
• Front Sound
• front Contfol1

• S..llt-1• M• ""' Hoodlo
• Monopo le Ant.nflll

o

WHAM-0 -

$' •ss.a·
00

Plusuft riding wifh Murroy 4•sign,d
ligMwoivht. Hub; Footory odi ..tod l Spttd with twist grip control. Caliper
, brobo wHh otblo orgoni1tr. Sodlllo: All
whitt vinyl. Rims: Tubular. Tires:
_26"•1~" ..Podols; Boll bearin' with ref_loetor,

ONTV

_Hec/c's Reg.
$J.44
TOY '{)EPT.

•

TOY· DEPT.

7 oz.

-

FRIIBII HORIDHOIID
BYWHAMO

244.

,

.
·

·

cup·s

'
SUP-ER PLANE
poww~~d.
c

•

'

88

Rubt.r
Huge 2 If. wi"9·
$pOn,
filM ltr.,iiJht,
dioftbi, loopt.
All pl ..ll&lt; f,Mfoo•. pcop•ll.,,

,

TOY DEPT-

. Heck's Regular $I 29.96

$100

'

-P UFFS·
200COUNT

·
.
$1
00
4

Heck's Reg.
· ' 38c fach

. Heck's Re~. 59c

· HOUSEWARE
DEPT. ·

101NCH

Smith-Corona
CORSAIR DE~UXE

TEFLON II
SKILLET

M•aty;. it.. ~&lt;llut of· thi1 GmOti'"J portoblt b~ ilt
fi1111 performance, tMn bv ih. haf~Y li• and Un .
tom wtiiJht. It's d-ble ond hot oil Mttntlry ln.

Teflon coated fry pan in
Avocado, Ha,...t•ond Pop-

7-PIECE ALU'M

$16 6

H.re It "f1 b.ltllfv . . . COLOR..CRAH.
ED in AVKO~; PoP'PY· •nd Ho!'l'ftt Gold.)

-

to molch-ft'loh your litdten. Won't lode
~ 1:~1~. So~

;, . .

l:•·~ho•!

loin

$944

to~l p~~~itlwMntl without chippif19.
. c:tockln, or !Minq. DuPoe~l S"f*·Hard

Heck's Regular $2.99

TEFLON II finitl.

HOUSEWARE DEPT:

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

,. . '~'''''$3~9~ 7

TEFLON II COOKWARE SET

py.

IOIU

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

CG II

JEWELRY
DEPT...

rtol!y tolt it!

HOUSEWARE n~DT

Quality and durdy dt·.
1ign mokt thi~ attractive,
dreamlined stool ideal
ror ~.~ .. in .itchen, 'den or
bor. Wood 1lot Mot and
bo&lt;l. lO" 24".

~nol·~ ef to111~ pol~propylll\1 pl111tlt • ao
tt .~~a,..
to fit tht tlfftr,
. . . . thon .....~. Rmft tt~:ldi, ... ~. ond

, "-•'WI

.,.rwt'"

,....,

~ thtmlcth. "-!'"colon.

'

$1.99

Choo.,. from a wide, wolldtrlul wt.etion .
Of foarn.topped honocb in colon the~t
odd MW b.ollty to your hcttlw.AI 'o..r.d
ill wi~l.an vi11JI with' the loo~ and t..l
~ leo"-. A•oilaW. lR o.m.d dtcont·

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

"''"'"'

Heck's
Regular

$9.44

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

Heclc~s

'4.44
AND
'4.88

c

19c

All pwpo" quality !Nih pi•· •
tv,.. fnmot. 2 oi:m por paok·
_ .,., 5•1 and lxl 0.

C

~SEWAll

DEPT.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.
.

.

HOUSEW~RE DEPT.

.

DIAL .

BATH SQf\P

'

Ht&lt;l's

Heclc's Reg.
48c

99c

•

GALlON PLA$TIC

.DEWITER
i'

•, ••u • •

"'

HOUSIWARI

-, .

BALLER~NA
Heclc's
Regular

HOUSIWARE
DEPT,

HOUSIWAII DIPT. .

H.

a.'o~tifillly "''"""'"" pi&lt;~le bo.Ut. Easily
,-. holdst+.e items.that you would nMd on an
in9.

SH~DES
,.

FOI

d•
or
on
ill
id~

'

1) INCH · .

QT. ICE CREAM FREEZER
$9.99

KDtpt. hot foocl1 hot;
celd foo~h cold. Flolure• five bri.t.tlr pol.
i1had ohiJ"liiUfll p1111
which nell Into ....
eompad unit.• lottom

$7•.41 .

LAMP

7

t;

oUt:'

.

$ 4• 4

on

· PICNIC BASKET

PIOCTOI SIUX

,_eclc'tlleg.

I

·s.

utility~ .

PLASTIC

LAUNDRY
BASKET'
'

ve··
~~~ \

lle' '

llogular

HOuSEWAII.E DEPT.,

lle

at

CCH'IIfl'rfiiM1!t ...........,.

ond 50IO&lt;IJ.

Heck's-lltgular $1.22

HOUSEWAIE DEPT.

•

c

Disposable '•atlng
utensils for picnics or
, ony outing. 50 .,......

i'y
as

&gt;Y

PLASTIC SPOONS~
&amp;. FORK$

88

)0

~~

§

Heck'slteg.
$5.33

ld

ps
h,

HOUSEWAIE
DEPT.

-UTILITY,TABLE

Hedc's
llegu_lar

y,

'k,r

Reg.

PI.CNIC
'PACK '

.PI~TURE_' FRAMES

le
lg

in

REGAI:WARE ·

. 10COUNT

le

of

$15.88

OIOICE

MARSHALLAN J. TIER

TRASH BAGS

!e

ld
gs
ld

$1o••

FRAMED

HASSOCKS

TYPEWRITER

~n

4PAII&amp;NS

Heck's Regular

This l·tier•d table
olso comes with a
rtceptaclt on one
side.

le

tis

CIIOO$II FIOM

....:C:;::!;

A complllt wiM of, popu~ 2Jl"..U" 01 24"rUo" ,.ptodudioM
of filii oil fX!intinvt, -.:~d. ,.lllie,.d with highly dr4111otic ond
l'ftllitti&lt;: btwl! tlrolet. lndudld if! thll fobulout ouortment ore

HOUSEWARE
DIPT.

:n

-u

D~NNERWARE SET

a

~.

ld .

"'l

45

' Swptrilly c:""'ftrltW., U......i9l,t oM duroblt

: AN·tfMI c:ontlruction • tO" ce~rriog. ~
'
el.elriG .. yboorcl • Puah-vGrioble pie.
flln • R•f*!l 1pc1~• bor • S.ctric le9mtllll Ullft •
R.movablt • .cny-cJ.on p!ailfl • •Kr,-W Tab.dd.
lor lm- tlton 80 t~f.J. Ouid-a.l vitibl. mar9itn • Forword..j~d. tap dtcl:. Hi9h !*formo~"
n'IO!or. • Powll': 119- 120 V AC . Carrying ' catt:
g.nuine NougahyO. to "-P '"11chiM h. ol ~nt 1 ~ ·
oncl dYII when tfored Gnd li1Jhl in weiqht whtn JEWELRY
ear!i.d • Colon: Wint.r Whit. Body wifll Rtqolftad'
to Blue Keyboard.
.,_, .

~d

.3·PIIS.

c

.'

•

WiiiCJI ,

TOY DEPT.

l60COUNT

50 COUNT

Sq . ln. Vj.,win9 Art a

l:

CH'ARMIN
NAPKINS

FOAM

7•8

I . •
I :r

'

'

COMI'UTI YARD S£T, Zyofi,. '"""" 'I '
,.d Fri.'*'. 2lniiGWI'ing totd&amp;, 2 w06d goal
1fol.t, 2 b..lh.,. loopl, toiJ inlfrvctioM.·

7~

$I

I -

' '

c
'

HOUSIWAU DEPT. ,

'

'

HKic's

llegular
$3.66

HOUSIWARE
DEPT; _ .

.

1'1

FESCO MASTIC ' ..

~,~,

·2_
0GAL TRASH CAN

ol,d
lh,

OR

"

i'Ml

''

'

'

�·•

'Fill or Marauder High Athletic Layout Wanted

;

••

.

Hopes for lhe evenlual con- contractor will be willing to
slrucliprr of an athletic layout .haul dirt to lhe school site sin~
that would Include a footbaU it is closeby and would held
field, basebaU diamonds, and a hold down lhe contractor's
modern, cinder track at the new C&lt;ISts.
Meigs High School may be Chancey pointed out where
&amp;«&lt;vanced this SUIIIQler when lhe two fields and track facWty
the Rts. 33-7-124 interchange is will he located In reference to
begun. ·
· lhenewhighschool,statlng that
'Meeting In regular session although it j)robably will be
Tuesday night, the Meigs Local some years before the. fields
School. District Board of become a reality, obtalnillg dirt
Education authorized athlelic for. the fill at this time could
director Charles Chancey to advance the project.
contact the contractor who The board authorized
receives lhe highway jobs near Chancey to seek procurement of
the school for fill dirt. Betause lhe fill dirt which will be
great quantities of dirt are unloaded at locationS which he
expected to be moved during deems advisable. Award of the
the highway changes, It Is the contract for the highway
concensus of the board Utat the JB'Oject is expected soon.

Plans were completed also for
the begiming of Ute Head Start
Program on June 14. Fenton
Tayl«&lt;t was named director of
Ute program at a salary of $1667
for the 10 week period.

Teachers employed at a
salar:Y of$1080 for eight weeks
include Mar:Y Skinner, Vinus .,
Lee, Elma Louks, Olive· Page,
Sharon Grueser,
Linda
Badgley, Joy Bentley, carolyn
Parker, Daisy Blakeslee and
Karen Brown.
1
Sharon Birch, to be employed
for nine weeks, was named
nurse of the program at salary
of $1,125; Harold Sauer, social
worker, at a salary of $1013 for
nine weeks; Pat Lehner, one-

half time as speech an~ hearing
therapist; L. W. McComas as
part lime bookkeeper for eight
weeks at $408; Mary Romine,
Iva See, Alma Smitll,' Lucy
Hardaway, Helen Harper and
Ullian Napper, cooks, at $408
each for eight weeks; Marilyn
Meier, part lime secretary ,at
$272 for eight · weeks and
teachers aides, Nora Nitz ,
Clara bell Landers, Carolyn
Yancy, Patty Harmon, Patty
Barrett, Mary Garnes, Dorothy
Jolmson and Dale Herman at
$272 for eight weeks, part time
work ..
Taylor said classes will be
held at centers in Harrisonville ,
Salem Center, Rulland, Middleport and Salisbury 'with

classes to be held from 9 a. m.
to 12 noon each week. Children
·five ami six years old who have
not entered the first grade and
who fall within the criteria are
invited. Parents of su~h
children can contact Taylor to
enroll their youngsters.
The board appointed for the
1971•72 school year Gary
Walker, radio and television
repair instructor at Ute higb
school; Janice Wehrung Kirker,
Barbara E. Logan, Janis
Schmoll and Mary Catherine Francis as elementary
teachers. The resignations of
Richard Sweet, an elementary
teacher, and Terry Ohlinger,
instructor at the Meigs Junior

High School and coordinator of
federal pr"!lrams, were accepted.
The salaries of Ohlinger and
Robert Morris were increased
$200eachfor the Title I swnmer
program in which they are
participating. Appointed were
additional employes in the
program including Dan a
Kessinger, teacher, effective
June 7 and Rick VanMa ll'e and
Dean Weber as custodians.
Suzanne Wolfe was named
assistant principal at the
Middleport Elementary School
for the next year.
A delegation from the
Salisbury . Elementary School
was on hand to discuss with the
board the need for playground

improvements . Board
President Frank W. Porter
ouUined the processes which
have been recorrunended to help
a drainage problem at the
playground. Cost of the project
would amount to about $2500
even witll donated labor and
equipment, Porter said.
· Porter stated that Ute board
of education had decided that it

did not have that amount of
money to spend on the
playground; but felt that
something might be worked out
if the school's PTA could help
wi lh the project.
The delegation pointed out
that the PTA had voted against
any financial help feeling Utat

71/•" POWER SAW

60o ONLY PEl STOll
UMIT ONE . '.

Ntw wptr Miao9roo...- AootirMJ"'-111 d.li v•~
rnic.ro-c:le" 1ho~u. _Flip-top tiNning. Pop.o~t ·
frimmtr, 011 off 1witeh, 110.120 ,.olt.:.p, eoil eord r
ondtro~~elw~alltt.
/·
l

100 OHI.Y PER STORE

'

After the American Civil War,
Confederate President Jef·
ferson Davis spent two years in
prison. He refused to ask· for
amnesty arid never regained U.
S. citizenship.

GARBAGE·CAN·

l llo H.P. mo,tor i1 -~~~~ for !OUIJh c.yttin9. Zip~

fiw0119h 21-4'1 • .,." ot '" .... 9'" ~nqlll. Retrotl~ ·
~t. Work. ;word.

LIMITONE

WITH CQUPON

. LIMIT 1

WiTH COUPON

71 ONLYPEitsTORE

$1'44 .

· WITH
. ' COUPON
.
'

' $1299

•·

$1999

VOL. XXIV

WITHOUT.COUPON ~1.19

•

I•

'

PRESSURE COOKER

CAN OPENER

WITH 'COUPoN

$399.

..

. "_$499 ·,

960NLY
P.. STORE
. .'.. . .
..
UMITl
. WITHOUT COUPON $5.66

'

, LIMIT ONE

LIMIT

~lO~~ .

· IOOONLY
PER~TORE

lllte'!fVIiM

WKT;

SPORTS"DEPT.

.,\ · :~~~~~·!~~~~!~ll:~

lwd, _.. hWltiM41or ~t·
Thwmb tOfltlool b..fMI!',-'11'11

White House Says
Negotiators in
Very Hard Stand

.,

WITHOUT CO\II'P." ~ 18.88

JEWELRY DEPT.

llel: r ·!'!;II/

" ' \•'

lotht.tvtnldomaUeH wHti 1'" hiiacb. JhrHHd hanclltt. lltd tn·
lUMI.i:d "''~~ifh 111 ..... tl.lbillar 1~1 upri91rl,. 1n.l
'~ton.

100 ONLYPIIR STORE
UMITdNE

dlt. OutdOor spar voml1h flfli"',

C:0"'t"!il

so ONLY PER STORE

WITH COUPON

UMITONI,

WITH COUPoN

.

·.·· ·'-599

'.' _/WITNOUT~UPON $10.99

W,ITHoUT COUPON $3.11

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

. ATH SCALES

A preci1&amp;e stlf~lwUr,ti1 movement tha:t 'P'tigM. accurately on any floor
surface .. . with a 260-lb. ~ight capacity.
•

72 ONLY PUI STORE
LIMIT ONE •

· WITH COUPON

~·1~9
..•w11'
,.. HOUTcoUPON
.
~

..-~·

MUNSEY \

WX ELE(:TRIC

POPCORN
POPPER
·
' WITII COlD

ALARM CLOCK
Eltetric alonn i1 t1H~ -Ioo~~9 olf-w~t.
"~ Moldtd in alyr.M. ~glbl• nt,ll'fl.l-- ' · 1 ,
c:~h ond ho~1 . Cor~tln110u1 alarm lional. i

Bit 3 CIIMirt capacity. Hwir ,..~~Jit tlou tol'lr.

60 ONLY PER STORE ·
LIMIT ONE ,.

60 ONI.Y.Pill STORE
LIMIT ONI

WJTH COUPON

WITH COUI'ON · · ..

.,21__,
·-··

.

WITHOUT COUPON
.
..$3.19

HOUS!WARE DEPT.

~n lilts. 111f

b!lw for I&lt;IIY d•olling and wvir~g, Non1·~ t~~ ltq1. ,-.

c,,$200,
sua

WITHOUT

·.

JEWELRY DEPT.

WEDNESDAY, JUNE
9, 1971.
"

OHIO

. TEN

PHONE 992·2156

)

·

•

'

·&gt;-

I"

.~ti.99

·- · JEWELRY~iiPT.

·

WASIDNGTON (UP!) -The White House says Communist
negotiators in Paris were sticking "very hard" to the offiCial
position that they would only agree to discuss - not to pledge release of American POWs in response tb a firm date for U. S.
withdrawal from Vleln'llll.
·President Nixon's press secretary·, Ronald L. Ziegler; made
the comment in reply to reporters' questions about separate
reports Tuesday_that the Vietnamese Communists might be
wil\lnl! to promise to free prisoners of war quickly after a U. S.
pullout announcement..
Clafk M. Cllffo~, 'defense even before completion of an
secretary in the latter part of American withdrawal.
the Johnson administration, The Washington Post, in a
said in a speech he had "reason dispatch from Paris today,
to believe" that a short, simple quoted the chief of the North
agreement could be reached for Vietnamese delegation as saya Vietnamese settlement--in- ing Uta! once a "reasonable
eluding Ute prisoner isSue. This date" was set by' Nixon for
would entail a U.S. pullout by American witlldrawal, the POW
the end of lhe year and release isSue "will be settled."
of POWs within 30 days, he The Post carried excerpts of
said.
Ute Paris interview with North
Clifford based his statement Vietnam's Xuan Thuy, in which
on various persons whom he Chalmers M. Roberts sought to
declined to identify. He did not clarify the Hanoi position on a
say whether be had contact settlement and release of
with Commlll!ist negollators.
POWs.
Rep. Robert L. Leggett, 0calif., told a news conference In response to one question
he conferred In Paris with the .Xuan Thuy linked a final
second-ranking member of lhe settlement not only to withdra·
Viet Cong delegation to the wal of "the totality of all U.S.
peace talks and was told that forces in Vietnam," but also to
the VietCong would release the a pledge of a halt in American
American prisoners it holds weapons and other support to

16

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CENTS .,

Roger Kirkhart of llhaca, N.
Y., was employed as head
football coach of the ~astern ,
Local School District for lhe
new year by the disll'ict board
of education Tuesdsy night.
Kirkhart received his degree"
from Ithaca CoUege where he
played on the football learn. He ·
has had coaching and teaching
experience In Perry County,
Ohio, Besides seniing as ~ead '
football coach - the position
held last year by the late Larry
Ritchie- Kirkhart will serve as ,
an elementary teacher In the '
district. He ia expected to move··
here from N8'!1' Ylltk DeKt week;'

the present Saigon government. only to discuss prisoner re·
He was quoted as saying lease.n

Hanoi would be prepared to
settle the POW issue while the
Thieu regime was still in
power. He said the POW issue
was not directly tied tO lhe
longtime Communist demand
for installing a coalition government.
In response to one question,
Xuan Thuy said " If a
reasonable date is set (for U.S.
withdrawal), the question of
prisoners may be settled."
Roberts asked:
"Why do you say 'may' and
not 'will'?"
· Xuan Thuy : "Yes, you can
put it down 'will be settled.'
From n·ow on it is 'will'."
Roberts: "You know Mr.
Nixon has said you have offered

Xuan •Thuy: "Nixon is
unwilling to withdraw. Therefore he tries to use one pretext
and another. Nixon's allegation
about discussing and not
settling is because he is
unwilling to settle. He wants to
split hairs. "
Ziegler said the POW issue
was raised at last Thursday's
weekly meeting of negotiators
and that the Communist
delegates "stuck very hard to
lheir previous position- that
they would 'discuss' Ute release
of prisoners if a deadline for
wilhdrawal is set. "
Leggett said he talked in
Paris May 29 with Nguyen Van
Tien, No. 2 man on the Viet
Cong negotiating team.

Shelly, Sands
wms Road Bid
1

Shelly and Sands, Inc.,
Zanesville, was apparent low
bidder on lhe construction of 2.8
miles of Ohio Route 7 on new
location in Salisbury Township
when bids were opened on the
Meigs County Project by the
Ohio Department of Highways
in Colwnbus Tuesday.
The bid of Ute Shelly-Sands
finn was $5,155,708.55. while the
state estimate on the job was
$6,089,000.
Bids of other firms included, a
joint proposal by the A. and M.
Construction Co. and the

Melbourne Brothers Con·
struction Co., Steubenville,
$6,743,991.14; A. J. Baltes, Inc.,
Norwalk, $5,895,502.99; J. J.
Blazer Construction Co.,
Wheelersburg, $5,786,562.92; a
joint offer by the Engle Con·
struction Co. and the Diamond
Stone Quarries, Inc., McArthur,
$5,324,384.17; Fisher Con·
struction Co ., Cincinnati,
$5,397,050.50; S. J. Groves and
Sons, Minneapolis, $6,819,965.76,
and Harry Miller Excavation
Co., Mogadore, $5,811,826.24.
(Coillinueil on page 16)

THe llmd I t•~iid lht

-

THE HOME OF JAMES QUALLS on I\Oute,7 near tt,. Pomeroy Corp. line was exte111ively
damaged about 1a.m. today when struck by an auto driven by Donald Randolph, 21, Pomeroy.
Pomeroy police said Randolph's car, out of control, struck the Qualls house and his compact
auto, demolishing it. Randolph is charged with reckless operation. The Pomeroy emergency
squad went to the scene, but Randolph refused treatment. However, he was later taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital by Pomeroy pollee where he was treated for a fractured shoulder
and released.

Frank H. Johnston Dies
Frank H. Johnston , 60, widely Mr. Johnston was clerk of the
known Pomeroy resident, died Salisbury Township Trustees 45
Tuesday night at his residence years and was chief clerk for
on East Second St.
the New York Central Railroad

'ftlliiln&amp;tl.on · of J~ ~la!l!),i11F.
.school · mathematic• teacher, .
and that of J. L. Bush, a bus
driver . A Jetter fro'll pareniB
reques'tlng that thew' children
be permltte~ 1 to atten!l
elementary sc~ool ' ln l!le Meip .
Local School' District, was reacl
and the request de~led in ,
keeping with tqe sfalejj policy of
the board on SQCh ~tiers.
Approved · to do ·~ummer
tutoring were Kath~ Flck,
mathein~tlcs; Alice Phlllips
and Donna Chadwell, English, .
~nd Norman Bahr, social
studies. The tutors are paid by
the students, bQt the bOard musi
approve the instruqtors.
.
Hired .as custodian at the
Riverview School was Mrs.
Roger Dillon and Roger DIUon
was employed as a bus driver:
He also 'will &amp;Silist Mts. Dillon
with her custodial work. ·
The Rue Motor Co, of Mid•
dleport will not provide a car for.
the summer driver education
program. The vehicle will
he provided by the R.
Rawlings . Sons Co. at Mid:.:
dleport.
'·.
Mr. and Mrs. George Kulln

for many · years before his
retirement. He had served as
secretary of the Meigs County
Fair Board several years.
Aveteran of World War I, Mr.
Johnston was a member and a
past commander of Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion, and was a member of
Voiture 776, 40 et 8. He was an
Employment of a swnmer day, June 14.
The
1971
Head
Start
Program
honorary member of Ute county
s.taff and a review of programs
funded
for
$112,307
wilf
also
fair
board.
highlighted the monthly
meeting of the Gallia·Meigs begin Monday. A total of 420 Surviving are hjs wife,
Community Action Tuesday children have enrolled in the Dorothy Morrison Johnston ; a
program. A general teachers' daughter, Mrs. Will (Betty Lou)
night at Pomeroy.
Don Hodge, Gallipolis, was ltaining session will be held Hellerman of Columbus; a discussed with the board 111!1
hired as summer NYC director . Friday at Cheshire·Kyger sister, Mrs. Alice Sands of availability of non.certlfled
Columbus; two grandchildren, positions in the district, Thelr&lt;
Mrs. Paul Aikman, Dexter, was Elementary School.
Craig
and Christi Hellerman, names will be added to Ute 1Jat
employed as assistant director Submitting reports Tuesday
of substitute bus drivers wheil
and Miss Shelia Childs of were Assistant Director Loren Columbus, and a niece, Mrs.
reviewed Richard (Jane ) Jones, also of the list is compiled in the faD.
Middleport was
named Hoffman who
A statement about the strike, lhe strike and picketing. Then
The board dlscuased at length
Operation Mainstream; David Columbus.
or lockout, at the Imperial we can meet witll the union to
secretary-bookkeeper.
The program for 120 enrolees Fox reported on the Out of Funeral services will be held major increasea in the I!Cboc!l .
Elecll'ic Co. in Middleport was work out the orderly operation
isSued today by the company. of the plant and resume
in both counties will continue School NYC project; Mrs. Edna at 3 p. m. Friday at the Ewing census ne~t I!Chq l year. ~
negotiations
on
a
new
con· for eight and one·half weeks for Russell, coordinator, Project Funeral Home witll lhe Rev. w. _£'!_nstrucbon of_ some I~ ,
It .;ays:
· · B 'al . modular homes in the Five
students still enrolled In high Assist Medical Program and H. Perr In offl c1a 1mg. ur1 w111 p . Is
"It is regretable that we have tract."
f til disll'l t ~
OVer
80
Jtlem~ars
of
the
In·
be
in
Beech
Grove
Cemetery.
om
area
o
e
c u1'
Mrs.
Barbara
Scites,
RN,
school. It has been funded for
a strike at the Imperial Electric
Friends
may
call
at
the
funeral
Green
H!liHom~s,
Inc.
will
plaJ
ternational
Brotherhood
of
$47,520. Work at 10 area centers reviewed their respective
Co. Middleport Plant through a
home after 6 p.m. today.
a role . m the mcrease. Supl:•.
is scheduled to begin on Mon- programs.
breakdown In negotiations. This Electrical Workers are affected
John Riebel was asked to cbecJi ~
is the first contract strike •we by Ute situation at Ute Midclosely all major increases Ill
have had in 25 years of dleport plant. workers have
lhe school census and was ~ '
operations in Middlport. The charged they were locked out of
asked
to secure the prices fc!l!
plant has been picketed since Ute plant last Thursday morportable education unils, if the)~ , •
ning. They are maintaining
June 3.
' •
Abid submitted by the Bridge business, approved a resolution County for two years. The should be needed.
"The company was, and is around-lhe-clock picketing and
SUESWIES
BJLLQUJCKEL
At
the
Jllly
meeting
th~
boar4
,.
Cons !ruction Company, to vacate.certain roadsin .Salem commissioners also approved a
now, willing to . extend Ute a number have signed for
Cambridge, in the amount of and Colombia Townships. A plat for a nine-lot subdivision in will accept bids on dair~
contract as we suggested • unemployment benefits · and
$22,804.00 for construction of a viewing of lhe .roads to ~ Chester Township belonging to products, baked goods a!14
provided the union will call off food stamps, it is reported.
bridge in Columbia Township vacated will be hel~ at 10 a. m, William Witte, Pomeroy, Rt. 3. gasoline and tires for the nell
•
was accepted by the Meigs · onJune29wilhthehearing tohe
Permission was granted to school year.
Trustees-: Decide
County Commissioner s held at 1 p. m. at the com· Sutton Township trustees to Attending Tuesday hightla ,. '
JAYCEE SHOW
MISS SUE SWIES,Ohio DeMolay State Sweetlleart, wiU
Tuesday.
mission office in . the court purchase a used combined meeting were I. 0, McCoy ~
The Meigs County Jaycees
attend as lin honored guest at the instaUation of officers, ·
The Ben Tom Corp., house.
tractor, loader, backhoe and Ernest Whitehead, Donatd
On Meeting Date
are sponsoriJig a Dower show
Meigs Chapter, Order of DeMolay, Saturday at 7:30p. m.,
Columbus, also submitted a bid,
John M; (Jack ) Welsh of. mower , and to offer as trade-in, Mora, Roger Epple, Oris sh1itb,
at tbe Pomeroy aenlor btgb
Middleport Masonic Temple.
but in the amount of $36,293.60. Middleport was reappointed to one Case tractor and one In- board members; · Crestoa
CHESTER
Chester building on Regatta weekend.
MisS Swles resides in Gahanna, and before compeling for
Newland, clerk, Riebel, 1114
The commissioners, in other the housing authority of Meigs ternational tractor.
Township trustees during their Meigs County garden clubs
State Sweetlleart she represented Ute 4th DeMolay District
Attending
were
Bob
Clark
and
Principal Bob Ord.
regular meeting recently voted have been asked to par·
~::::::::::::~::::t:::~~:%:~:::~:::::=~~::::::;::~::%::::;:::::::::::~: ,.,,.
,..·: Warden Ours, commissioners,
which Includes the area around Columbus.
to meel the first Friday of each tlclpate altbougll tbe show Is
Bill Quickel of Cheshire will be installed .as Master
DEE!\ KILLED
DONATIONS NOTED
and Marthn Chambers, cl~rk .
montll at' 8 p.m. at t)le Chester not being sponsored by the
Councilor of Meigs Chapter for a six month term.
A
deer
was
killed
Tuesday
at
Trophies
lo
be
presented
to
", '
TWOFIN~P
Town Hall. Bills to be submitted · Meigs Coullly Garden Club
The installing officer, Stu Ubman, is from Athens. He is
10:35 a. m. on County Road 31, the Regatta Queen, and first
Fined in the court ofPomergJ
are to be turned in before each Associallon. ,
.
nine
miles
north
of
Racine
when
and
second
runnerS·UP
and
a
Past
Master
cOuncilor
also
a
Representative
DeMolay.
DEFY
VETo
Mayor
Charles Legar 'l'ueldQ
meeilng night in order for
Mrs. Fred Blaetlnar,
it
ran
into
Ute
path
of
a
car
'momentos
for
the
other
Several
of
the
presenlOhio
State
Officers
will
assist.
WASHINGTON (UPl )
night were Albert Jt•.
payments to be made.
county conlaet cbalrman,
driven
by
Phillip
David
Rad·
contesta.
n
ts
have
been
.
John
Kauff,
Middleport,
will
serve
as
Senior
Councilor.
Despite
the
threat
of
a
Pomeroy , UO and c011ai
Attending the recent meeting reporls that no ofllclaf
fot'd,
37,
Pomeroy,
Rt.
3,
the
donated
by
the
Pomeroy
All
Master
Masons·
,
Ealern
Stars,
Job's
Daughters,
RainPresidential
vel.\l,
the
Senate
disturbing
the peace, ~
were Charles Bis5ell, president, requeat for .the· Garden Club ,
Meigs
County
Sheriff's
Dept;
Branch
of
tbe
Alhens
Savings
bow Glrls, parents and friends are invited. Bill is the son of
Tuesday passed 45 to 33 a bill William Reeves, Pllllleroy, e:il
David Koblentz, vice president, Association to 1po1110r the
reported.
The
grill
and
radiator
•
·and
Loan
Company.
that would spend $? billion 1D and coals each, on two cllaqjll
Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Quickel, Cheshire Route I. Dad
Artbur Orr and Willis Fr01t, sbow was made lbrougll ber.
(Robert) King, Middleport, Is chapter advisor.
or the car was damaged.
• ~::;:::::?r::::~;:m::::::~:s~:=:!::;:::c::::::::~;~;:::;:::::::?.~:~==:~~=~=:=::::::x:. create public works Jobs.
of intoxication.
clerk.

Don Hodge Hired

u:

Cambridge Firm Lowest Bid

Sweetheart Here

1

·

Eastern::
Hires
Coach

Imperial Regrets
Labor Situation

1•

.
.

'

lS ute

.

WITH COUPON.

'1 .

WITHOUT COUPON $•.88

JEWELRY DEPT.

·-·-

40 ONLT ·PEI STORE

home cooking a brttte.

WITH~OUPON

..POMEROY·MIDDLEPOR:f,
.. ··- - ..

To~ qUality, precision, and niperbly eng,ineered, feclturing coated opti~l,
eenter focus. Case a~d strap induded.

In this age of high food prices this i! +he ~ltchen · helper that will mo••

Op." your CII!!Md 90Gdt wltfl tl. f111uc.h of o /i"9'1l. Fin•
quolity machlnf wH~ mCJ9Ilttlc: lid holdtr.

Devoted To The lntereat&amp; Of The Meigs-Mason Area

7x35 BINOCULARS

· MIRRO 4 QUART

.. ,

Mostly sunny and mild today .
Highs in the 70s. Clear and cool
· again tonight. Lows in. the ~Os .
Increasing cloudiness and a
little warmer Thursday. Highs
from the mid 70s to lower 80s.

•

HARDWARE DEPT.

VANWYCk
· ELECTRIC ,

NO. 40

proper maintenance of the ,:
school playground was the
responsibility of .the .board.'· ..
Porter acknowledged . the · '
board's responsibility but added •
thalli Is a mutual problem of
the board and the PI'A and that ·
the job couldn't be done on a:
partial basis and the board at • ·
this time could not finance such
a costly repair project. It was ;.
decided that the board wruld .
discuSs the matter further at an ~·
executive session, traditlonaUy .
held following each regulllr .
meeting after visltors and the ·
press are dismissed.
.'
A long discussion was held .
wi til Middleport Police Olief J. ,
J. Cremeans on the use of mini, ;'
(Continued on page 13)

Weather

No'! You J{n,Qw
20 GAL. 'GALVANIZED

·,

'

'

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