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I

10-TIIeDali7SentiDei,~,O.,-..a.lt'IJ ·

--------

f-------------;-------=-----:--1

Another Elderly Man Robbed S:.Jii! N~~:::~J!!!efs

A Swan Creek farmer, Sprouse, the third persoo enMerman S. (Tom) Sprouse, tered through the rear door.
Crown City, Rt. 2, Monday After threatening to shoot
. became lbe fourth elderly Sprouse, the lrio thol'oughly
vicUni of an armed robbery In ransacked the house, apGaUia County In lhe past four parently searching for DIOIIey.
•nonths.
They then threatened to pistol

'

Sheriff's deputies were
continuing . a search today for
three suspects, one armed, who
robbed Sprouse ik a small
amount of money after
threatening to ki11 him.
'lbe men were believed to be
Wiving a red Codillac with a
white · ~op bearing a Kentucky
license plate.
According to depuUes,
Sprouse, who lives alone, was
upstairs and beard sllllleone
yeiUng outside his front door at
approximately 10 p.m.. He
came downstairs and unlocked
the doer to see who was outside.
When Sprouse opened the door,
one of the two men waiting at
tile door pulled a gun and placed
it at Sprouse's neck. They
forced him Into the dining room
where be waa Ued to a heavy
steel cbalr. After blindfolding

~ MEIGS :ntEAJflr.

whip Sprouse, but later left,
taidng an undetermined amount
of old coins.
Sheriff's deputies were called
by an alert neighbor who bean!

Sprouse yeU for help.
plates. ·
It is not known if Ibis latest
Monday's robbery waa lhe
armed robbery bu any con- mth major anned robbery In
nectiOn with a sirnit.r one July . GaUia County In tbe past m
2. Hugh Niday, a resident of months, Orie and Emmett
Hannan Trace Rd., was robbed Roasiter, twin brothers,
at gunpoint of • · He was Ued residents of Good Hope Ridge
withadbeslvetapeandwlreand Rd., Rl 1, Crown City, were
his life also was lhreatened. beaten and robbed on March 29.
'l1lnie men are stiU sought In 'lbe VInton Bank waa robbed at
tbat robbery. They too drove a gunpoint on May 18. Three
car bearing ouklfo&amp;tate license peraona were involved In tbat

sgr3ement was reacbed on a
new contract between tbe UmtWall Disney's
ed Steel Workers union ani the
20,000LEAGUES
basic.....steeltrikelnduatry which
UNDER THE SEA
averocu
as
CTechnicolor)
'lbe first werkers to be called
Kirk Douglas
back by the Nr.W were 1rack,
James Mason
engine
and signal maintenance
G
1
talorcartoons:
~
exPect to be back In lull
Honorable HoUH Cat
Peonut Bottle
operaUon within two or three
Honorable Family days" Said an N&amp;W spokesProblems
man:
SI!OW STARTS 7 P.M.
Vandalism Reported
SPikes were removed from
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
some track In tbe Bellevue arAugust4-5
ea and tile N&amp;W bu asked tbe
NOT OPEN
FBI to Investigate.
The N&amp;W employes 9,000 per. .- - - - - - - • sons In Ohio and serves nearly
5,000 lnduslries.
Three major Ohio steel producers, Republic Steel, Youngs..
town Sheet a. Tube and Armco
Tonight, Aug. 13
Steel, Monday announced an increase In prices lilal would avDouble FNture Program
Hell Run I
erage about B per cent, tbe
ANGEL UNCHAINED
same as lhe earlier Increase
(talor)
announced by tf.S. Steel
Don Stroud
Armcosaidtheprlce.lnereaae
Luke Askew
would only partially offset tbe
-Pluscost
of the new contract with
DON'T CDME ALONE!
the USW which it called "tbe
.
(GPJ
(CGforJ
most costly ever negotiated "
COUNT YORGA,
The major i*ublem fadtlg.tbe
VAMPIRE"
steel fll'lllS and tbe USW now
Robert Quarry
is the amount of steel
Roger Perry
stockpiled by heavy steel users
which will cut down on tbe
Wed., Thur. &amp; Fri.
need for new steel.
August4-5-6
Double FNture Program
Industry Week Magazine In
Grandpa Jones
Cleveland said some steel users
&amp; Randy Boone
had stockpiled enough steel to
in
last them fer three months.
"HERE COMES
Layoffs Seen
THAT
NASHVILLE SOUND"
ArmCO, which Is based at
-PiusMiddletown, said it would lay"COUNTRY MUSIC
off 200 persons at its Asbland,
ON BROADWAY"
Ky., plant this week.
..,_ _ _ _ _ __ .
·
Tonight, Aug. 3

0

0

La--------'

Armco baa about 7,tl00 workers at its Middletown plant
..'lbe lu~ is pretty Bl;im."
said an Armco ~n.
U.S. Steel laid off t700 persoos at its Youngstown plant
before the negotiations started.
"We are golns back Into producUon very gradually," said a
u.s. Steel spokesman...As of
.now we haVe called only a ftrY
few people back to work and
lbeyareprimarilymalntenance
people."
'lbespokesmansaidlhemain-

tenance people would get the
furnaces going but bow many
other workers would be called
back would depend on the back·log of mdeis.
'lbe president of USW Dislrict Z6 in Cleveland said the
new contract with the steel industry was "the greatest pack:age ever won" by any union.
"It far exceeds anyone's expectatlons and lhe unlimited
cost of living clause would insure tbe workers' wages against
mounting lnflaUon," said Jos-

UPHiealer Edllur
Together again, the ~
Apollo 15 astronauts ~led
around the moon today m a
scienUfically exciting extension
of their search fer informaUon
about the birlh and evoluUon of
the solar gystem.
Nothing In today's achedule
could match Monday's drama.
Fer the first time, television
viewers saw In color tbe
blastoff of 11 spacecraft from a
celestial body other lhan Earth.
They saw the ascent stage of
the moon lander Falcon burl
David R. Scott and James B.
Irwin, after three days of
almost Incredibly successful
surface exploraUon, Into lunar
orbit to join Alfred M. Worden ·
aboard tile mothershlp Endeavour.
But for the scientists who
helped plan Ibis 12-&lt;lay, $445
million expediUon Into the dim
· ~t of billions of yeara ago,
tbe experiments being condoct..
ed with remote radiaUon
sensors and cameras _aboard
the Apollo command ship may
turn out to be as reVI!allng as
tbe great discoveries made by
Scott and Irwin on tile IWIIII'

.
surface. These experiments will
be continued for two days more
beftire the astronsuts start
heme on W~y.
Already, while Worden flew
solo 70 miles above the moon,
the command ship's instruments bave sent hllllle new
informaUonaboutlunarchemistry Including dala about radioactive materials which reveal their presence by the rays
they emit.
.
~ greatesb l ~nzethtbe&amp;ott andhe
Irwin broug t wt
mw n
tbey rejoined Worden was a
sample of rocks which may
date back to lhe time when the
moon was created--at about the
same time tbe SWI and its
planetary family came into
belng--aome 4.6 billion years
ago.
While Worden awaited them
In lunar orbit, Scott and Irwin
spent about 67 hours on the
moon. For 18 hours and 27
mln~les of that time . they
explcred tbe surface, ~d o~t
an atomilOWeJ'ed sclenliflc
laboratory' drilled holes into
lunar crust, and travelled 16
miles · over terrain never
explored before.
They brought back 228 poWlds

.

--

NEW YORK (UPI) -United
Press InternaUonalbas advised
its subscribers lila! rates for
UPI news and newspicture
services Win be Increased by 10
po;r cent effective Sept. . 5 to
meet a world-wide Increase In
costs of operaUon.
In a letter to subscribing
newspapers and broadcasters,
UPI Vice President Frank
Tremaine said UPI was meetlng much of the higher costs
with improved technological

facilities but that a general rate
Increase was unavoidable to
maintain tbe high standards
service.
"Payroll costs represent the
largest single item in our
expense structure," Tremaine's
letter said.
He pointed out in this area
UPI has had to absorb this
year sharp increases In wages
provided by union contracts,
Increased poyroll fringe costs
for health Insurance and

of

CHECKING ACCOUNT.
'./, H f N 't' 0 U V I ) I T f' A R k f R f E

.

'

t.iiilens ~aliONll
....... CIINCINNA Tl

MIDDLEPORT
-~OHIO

· TWO TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E-R squad
answered a call to New Haven
at 6:05 p.m . Monday for
·
Rob'mson, Sr ., who
Ha rrJSon
was having difficulty breathing.
He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where be
was admitted. At 8:46 a.m.
today Harry Hysell 660 High
St., Middleport, w.;. taken to
the same hospital by the squad.
He was sick at bla stomach. He
was · In the emergency room
Wldergoing examination this
morning.

'SHIRT
FINISHING
SAME DAY
.SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At 5

• Parlllng Lot .
Use"Our Fl'ft

MIDDLEPORl, OHIO
Member

Federal · Depolllllas~

216 E. 2nc1, l'l!merov

of

Church, served as organist over
50 years. She was a member
the Women's Society of
Christian ~ice and S.F.R.
Sunday School Class.
Surviving are a dall8bter,
Mrs. Evelyn Proffitt of Mason;
two sons, b'oth funeral
directors, Samuel, of Mullens,
W.Va.,Mrs.
andDonald,ofMason;a
sister,
Miles 0. Brown; a
brother, L. J. Ruttencutter,
Mason; 10 grandchildren, and
10 great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at lhe
Mason United Methodist ·
Church with the Rev. Parker
Hin2man officiating. Burial will
be In the Suncrest Memorial
Park at Point Pleasant. Friends
may call at the Foglesong
Funeral Home after 3 p.m.
Wednesday.

Middleport Sidewalk Sales Days

Two defendants forfeited
bonds and seven others were
fined Monday .;ahtln lhe court
•..,
of Pomeroy Mayor Charles
Legar. Forfejtlng a $200 bond
posted .for driving wbile intoxicated was Richard Johnson
of Letart, W.Va., and Coy Nitz,
Poineroy, forfeited a $25 bond
on an Intoxication charge.
Fined were Gerald Arnold,
Pllllleroy,$25andcosts,assault
and battery, and $10 and costs,
disturbln lhe peace· Julie
g
.
'
d
Ferrell, Flint, Mich:, $25 an

costs,assa~tandbattery;Jobn

.·...

. ··:&lt;

...·.·.·..

of

Showers likely today and

The Mexican government in
1944 officially banned the siesta
- the custom of stopping
business at midday for a nap and ordered continuous working
hours.

possibly some thundershowers

POME~OY-MIDDLEPORT,

VOL XXIV NO. 78

OHIO

rew
::::::;f}~::::;:;::::

Scott Would do
2 More Weeks

Carriers Count Single Gain
WASHINGroN - THE RAILROADS' IBIEFAm"" GAIN In the
cmtract settlement lila! elided lhe Jlday itrlke by Ule· umted
TranspcrtaUon Unloo was a new aeries of 1I'Cft rules tbat will
aUowrallcaniers to provide more efficient service to cnatomel'B.
'lbat iS a plua fer the railroads' CGIDpelitlon In lhe freight market
agallist li-ucts, shlpa, bargea aod other model of lranlpo!'t.
'lbe employea retained a D•nnber of the beneftlll tbey bad
under old work rules, however, such as edra pay for serving on a
1raln crew lilaI travels liiOI'e lhan 100 mllea In one worldng day.
'lbe union alao won a 42 pet. wage increase In tbe 42-mootb con'
1racl

re.::

137

of

Instructors go
To Notre Dame

of

of.----------------------------..
ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

r---------------------------,
N
• B •t

I

:
1

ews

•••

ln

ne

S

I
1
1

!

WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON bas coupled his
s1rongeststatementyetagalnstbuslng school children for racial
lntegraUoo wilh a request lila I Congress not allow use of proposed
federal funds for tbat prupose. At tbe same time lbe admlnistraUon
anaounced It was appealing a benchmark court
ruling against massive busing In the public schools of Austin, Tex.

Stop In the music department on the 2nd floor

" It is highly gratifying to
report that thousands are enjoying the hospitality, particularly tourists from all parts
of the United Stales who avail
themselves to the many
features of the park in providing
for the comfort and convenience
of an who enter its gates.
"It was but natural that the
park should be selected as the
home of the trophy after sufficient ground for lbe erection of
the memorial building had been
donated and its perpetual
upkeep guaranteed by Fides
Lodge 210, Knights of Pythias of

Color T.V. • Black and White T.V. • Tape P1aJets &amp;
Recorder .,• Stera · Portable Record Players and Racb
..

Use our sensible credit plan to purchase

""e .,

Allan Downie, a veteran of
Vietnam, joined the Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion, and Joe Hall, also a
veteran of Vietnam, was Introduced at the regular meeting
Tuesday night. ·
George Nesselroad, coa.h
the Meigs Legion baseball
team, expressed his thanks to
Legion members for their
support and displayed the
trllphy lhe team won when they
captured the Eighth District
championship last Saturday.
Nesselroad said the squad is
"filled with a determination to
win and gave a· great display of
determination."
Plans were made for the upcoming state playoff to be held
at Ashland College. All district
winners will meet Sunday for

of

R /a d

l\T _.J_

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

l
~

-------~-~~-----'·--'-------

.

the drawings. Teams will be
housed on the campus.
Also discussed was the Meigs
County fair police detail.
Volunteers are asked to sign up
to help park cars during the
week of the fair. Legion
members have been doing the
volunteer work the past 10
years.
Also discussed was · the
purchase of a new color TV for
the post home.
The All8. 17 meeting was
cancelled due to lbe fair. The
next meeting will be Sept. 7with
a meeting of trustees Tuesday,
All8." 31.
Plans were made for Cooches
Night and Boys Staters dinner
to be held at the Sept. 21
meeting . Post Commander
Leonard Jewell presided.
Refreshments were served by
Robert Vaughan.

n 1 ~e~ ~,_,.,.,,
. ""''·-··'·"''- ·' ' «&lt;.«O:X'&lt;';m~mm::;.;s'2
...,
Fire Equipment EXTENDED OUTLOOK
uf,

be

' what you want.

Middleport."
Ferd Hunker's Idea
The park was eventually
given up by the lodge.
The memorial structure was
the dream of Ferd G. HWlker,
Middleport, who was high in
slate ranks of the Knights of
Pythias lodge. The late Mr.
Hunker drew on paper his ideas
of what the memorial should
look like and the late James
Harley, who was a member of
the lodge and a former Middleport mayor, created a model
which was followed in the actual
(Continued on page 15 )

Downze
• . zn
• LP.UJOR
•

However, it Indica led it was appealing the case not to promote
raciaJ.buslngbuttocomplywithreceill&amp;lpremeCourtdecisions.
.
.
Nixon's statement Tuesday said: ..1 am against busing as
RUTLAND - Fire Chief
lhattenn lscOOIIIIonly used in acbool desegregaUon cases. I have ' Duke Kennedy and firemen Bill
consistently opposed lhe busing of out naUon's school chlldren to Smith .and Bill Willia'?"on told.
. balance and 1 am opposed to lbe busing of council :ruesday_ .mght the
ac hieve a raCIB 1
•
.
present f~re truck IS obsolete
children simply ~r tbe sake~ busing. .
.
and that if the equipment Is not
"Furlber,whiletbee:ecnU~ebranchwillconlillletoenfcrce updated, in-town :insurance
the crders ct the court, mcll~C!q court«dered busing, I bave rates would be Increased.
instructed lhe attlrney general and tbe ~~.of health,
Council asked firemen to
educaUonandweif~re tbat ~~to work~~~~ lndivtd~al school secure'eslimates to buy what is
districllltoholdbuaing!Dtbemmunwnrequ~redbylaw. Then he needed and said the matter
said Congress was being asked to amend legislation still under would
studied.
conslderaUon so tbat nooe of a proposed $1.5 billion In ·Attending
were . Gene
desegregation aid funds could be used for busing.
Thompson, mayor ; Bill Brown,
Harvey Erlewine, Ernest
OU Fee Schedules Raised
Nicholson, Jim Fry and Robert
ATHENS. OHIO- INSTRUcriONAL lee Increases of $30 per Snowden, council members,
and Vernon Weber, clerk.
(Continued on page 15)

- See the 1972 RCA.

-=--·--------......

BY BOB HOEFIJCH
of the memorial to the soldiers
Somehow and ap- and sailors of the COWlly In all
propriately so - Feeney- wars was hailed as lbe biggest
Bennett Post 128, American event ever held in Meigs
U!gion has got it aU together . . County.
The "aU," of course, is the The Middleport Herald's
impressive memorial - a edition of April 26, 1927,
World War I field cannon - to reported in part:
"There is little doubt that
veterans of aU wars and a park
in which to display it.
Meigs County will excel aU
It was over 44 years ago that other counties of the state in its
the memorial was dedicated in potriolism demonstrated, and
Middleport's old Pytbian Park its appreciaUon of the trophy
where the new Imperial presented by the government
Electric Plant is now located. It through the adjutant general's
was fell then lbat · the office of Ohio.
monument forever would be
"Meigs County may well feel
located there. However, van- proud of its · trophy when
dalism became so serious that compared with some of the guns
thememorialwasmovedln1940 intheaUotment,anditwasonly
ID what then was the state through the prompt action of
roadside park on Mill St..near those interested in the project
the postoffiee.
that secured the splendid
The roadside park, however, trophy. Pylhian Park, the only
was abandoned by the state In park in Meigs CoWlty and the
the mid-61xties, and through a permanenllocaUon of the gun,
bit of a complicated title was purchased several years
process, went to the village, ago bx the Knights of Pythias of
which turned it over to Feeney- Middleport for the purpose of
Bennett Post.
providing a commWlity park
Patriotism wasn't always out which the people of all sections
of style. In 192'1, the dedication could use and enjoy.

President Brakes Racial Busing

Headquarters For RCA

MIDDLEPORT'S FeeneyBennett Post 128, American
Legion, has the memorial to
all veterans and a park in
which to display it on Mill St.
The memorial was constructed and dedicated in the
former Pythian Park on May
30, 1927 but was moved in 1940
due to vandalism.

History Recalled
Of War Memorial

...____
11 1
By United rress blleriUI 0118

[Kl(]3LJO

SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) - As Apollo 15 circled the
moon for the sixth and last day, David R. Scott said today be
would like ID stay there for weeks gazing at the ''mind-boggling"
lunar labyrinth far below.
"I just wish we had more time because, believe me, there's an
awful lot to be seen and done up here." Scott said he and his two
colleagues were awakened 1D the tune the opening theme from
lbe movie .. 2001 : A Space Odyssey."
Before firing themselves out of lunar orbit late today, Scott,
Alfred M. Worden and James B. Irwin were leaving behind an ao.
pound sateilite that will circle lhe moon for a year, mooitorlng
radiation and magnetic forces .
But today marked the end of manned lunar exploraUon until
Apollo sets out March 17 on a mission as ambitious as Apollo 15.
Scott told ground control at Houston :
'• As we go aroWld in lunar
orbit here I can look down and Before the IWlar breakaway
I can just spend weeks and for splashdown !ale Saturday
weeks looking and I can pick 328 miles north of Hawaii, the
out any number of superb siles astronauts conducted as much
down there which would lake scientific investigation as they
you several weeks to analyze on could cram into their final
the surface."
orbits.
"There 's just so much here,
Mission controllers, planning
to coin · a phrase, it's 'mind- for the deep space Extra
boggling' ."
Vehicular Activity (EVA),
. This was a low-key joke, urged all three pilots to
since ''mind-boggling" was the continue to eat and drink well
term Sco,tt used to describe his to maintain their strength for
impression of the moon on the walk.
"I think everybody's in fine
Apollo 15's arrival there last
shape and ready to take care of
Thursday.
Dr. Leon T. Silver, a what's on the rest of the llight
geologist from California Insti- plan the rest of the way," Scott
tute of Technology, took the said.
The film will join an
microphone al mission control
an'd told Scott and his estimated 175 to 180 pounds of
colleagues lbey had done "a moon rock and dirt Scott and
Irwin collected from three days
lovely job."
"You just don't know how of surface exploration. Eager
we're jumping up and down scientists hope the samples and
the pictures will help unlock the
here," Silver said.
"I hope some day we can get secrets of the moon's earliest
you all up here too," Scott days.
Worden, who has spent more
replied. ''I think we really need
to have some good professional time circling the moon than
geologists up here .
"You all would just really
have a field day. There's just
so much to be gained here."

of

•

of

where a will
Miss
Majorettefrom
America
be selected
the state finalists during lhe
four day event. Emceeing the
pageant will be Miss Pamela
Ann Eldred, Miss America of
1970. World talent winners in
such areas as singing and
dancing also will be selected.
Ted Mack, TV :Jersonality, will
present special awards. The
American Youth on Parade Is a
National Baton Twirling Assn.
event.
There will be no baton class
this week for the students of
Forgery Charged
Miss Buck in. M~ddleport,
Geo-rge . Andrew Miller, Pome1·oy or Galtipolis.
Middleport, was charged with
forgery Moilday following an
lnvestigaUon over the weekend
Weather
by Sheriff Robert C. llarRoad Enemy
tenbach and Middleport Police
WASHINGTON- StudChief J . J. Cremeans.
ies show weather is the
.The charge was based on a $90 worsl enemy of good highcheck Mill~r wrote on lhe ways. So~king rains, frosl,
Racine Home National Bank. heal, and rapid temperature
There are also 10 Insufficient changes break up highw.,vs
!Wid checks bUt in lhe Mid- - even lhosc where lraflic
dleport area, the sheriff's is li~ht!
department reported.
LOCAL TEMPS
CWB TO MEET
Tempera lure in downtown
The Laurel Cliff Health Club Pomeroy Tuesday at 11 a.m.
will meet at 7::10p.m. Thursday wjs 70 degrees under rainy
at the home of Neltie Tracy.
skies.

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1971

At $21 973 34

n

south portion, e'nding this
.-•ening central portions. Lows
tooight in the SC&amp;. Olance of
showers soulb Thursday, highs
in the mid 10 upper 715.

Devoted To 17w lnterest.l OJTh.e Meigs-Mason Area

THE U.S. DECIUIN TO BACit A UNnED NATICI'ill aeat
fer CCJ!nmllnist Cblna cauaed UU!e upriae In world capltall
today. Some Ccimll!1mlst natiODS reacted with IIUIIplclon and
western Europe geoerally approved.
Approval came fnm such natiODS as F'raDce and Sweden,
whicb have diplomatic relatiODS wiUi mainland Clrina, tbe
Pllilipplnes, WtdCb baa been moving In lhal direction, and
Australia. Joaef Tekosb, lhe Israeli MDhaMM to WasbingtOD,
said he would recommend U.N. memberabJp.

surface and subsurface soli
and rock samples.
1n their last traverse Monday, Scott and Irwin confirmed
that the mile-wide, J,IMMJ-foot
deep chasm beside which IIJey
landed July 30 was, as
photographs had Indicated, a
many-layered canyon.
This indicated to scientists
that the gorge, known as
Hadley Rille, was the produce
of successive lava flows billions
of years ago which left )heir
Look at the Fine Print
individual marks as the moon
cooled gradually to its present Sales tax receipts on motor
COWMBUS -SlATE A'ri'MNEY GENERAL WUllam J.
relatively quiet state.
vehicles purchased by Meigs Brown said today bla ~lee Is continuing to nceive complaints
Meanwhile Worden In his Counlians during the month of reganllng "retirement heme" land frauds.
exploratory '1ravels ui orbit July totaled $21,973.34, Mrs.
Standard procedure In Bllcll fraud cases, Brown said, Ia for
reported discovery of a field of Evelyn Lucke, county clerk of lhe prospective buyera to be enticed Into lmatlng In bomesltes
volcanic cinder cones near courts, reports.
which are In remote and deaolate area.s ani promised imLittrow Crater on the edge of In addition a total of $4,475.19 provements are often far In lhe future er newr materlallzf.
theSes of Serenity.
waspaidincasualandusetaxes "Often," said Brown, "a personal visit at great espense Is
When the Falcon separated and there were inspections on 94 required to find lilaI tbe actual PI opa ty Is aowbere cl011e to exfrom the mothership on its way cars brought i(lto Meigs County pectatl0118," be said.
to lhe moon's surface Friday, from out of the state during lhe
Worden told his friends lilat month.
Price Boosts Sort of Sudden
"now you're on your own."
Receipts for othefautomoUve
PII i'SBURGB _ Wll'll A SUDDENNESS that embatTuaed
As tbey joined forces again ' activities in the office of Mrs.
Monday, billions years later Lucke for the month of July an~ .annoyed tbe Nixon admlnlstratloo, the steel lndllllry began
In terms of tile discoveries they totaled $1 644 'th the county to I'BISIII8 prices Monday, lea than 15 hours after negotlatu. a new
bad made he told Scott and receive $i 274~and lhe state to labor contract. U. S. Steel Corp., tbe nation's Jaiogeslproclleer,
Irwin.
'
. $36&amp; 5o
, announced prices would rise an average of a pel on aU Its
"W~Icome home."
acUrtU~ Included the · pr~cts ';!'oeptstalnlea steel, to finance what It caJ1ed tbe 'Inissuance of m certificates of fla~ooary three-year ~tract witll the United steelworkers
title · 227 nolations of Uen· 128 Umon (USW) negotiated m Wasblnglon SWiday.
me~orandums; 737, • apThe announcement here C8ll1e as u.s. Secretary of Labor
plications, affidavits and James D. Hodgson, briefing repcriers on tbe contract setuement
assignments and 10 certified In Wasb!nllton, was saying: "I hope if there are price Increases,
pensions, and higher Social copies.
tbeywll! be moderate." Wllhlnhoura, Betblebem steel, tbe No.2
Security taxes. He said tbat
producer, Republic, lhe No. 3 producer, Armco, ani YOUIIplown
UPI's payroll costs overseas
Sheet and Tube followed witb o!m!Jar lncreuea. Tbe real of tbe
also are up to a similar extent.
rJ.it•
lnduatrywasexpectedtofaUinllnebytlleendoflbeweek.
Tremaine said that UPI had
I
avoided a dramatic increase in
Jetliner Came Down
the cost of its leased Teletype Meigs Countians purchased
DENVER _ A I.ON-IIOllND BRll'1SII Overseas Airlines
lines by foreseeing the advog;e 137 new and 174 used motor Corp. (BOAC) 747 jetliner witb 379 penona on board was diverted
result
the press rates case vehicles in July, Mrs. Nellie to lhe miJe.blgb Denver Airport today wbenan anODymoua caller
and going to a new system. Brown, deputy clerk of clalmedapressurebonlbwasaboard,settogooflwbentheplanll
How~ver, lhe press rates courts, reports. Of
the
decision will Increase the cost new vehicles purchased, 18 dropped below 5•tl00 feet.
of some of UPI's circuits, were motorcycles, 22 were
The giant plant, which originated In Montreal, landed aafely
parUcularly ~,!Jose in lhe news- trucks,'BO were passenger cars at Stapleton lnlel'naliooal Airport at 4:06 a.m. (EDT). AU
pictures system, he added.
and 17 were trailers. Among the pamngers were taken off and Denver pollee searcbed It top to
used vehicles were 152 bottom, bulnobcmb was foWKI. Tbe airport, one of the Mgbellt on
passenger cars, four motor- lbeNortbAmericanconllnent,ls5,2501eetabclveaealevel.
cycles, 13 trucks and five
1railers.
Veteraaa Memortal Hoopltal
TJIUDEAU TO BELGRADE
O'ITAWA (UPI) - Prime ADMmED- Ronald Smith,
Neal
White,
Miss Gloria Buck Pomeroy
OES TO MEET
Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau Pomeroy;
and Miss Valorie Koker of
A regular meeting of and his wife are planning a trip Pomeroy; Mary Fcrd, Letart,
Athens County left today to Evange~ne Chapter No. 172, to Yll8oslavia ''In the near W.Va.; Harrlaon Robinson, Sr.,
attend the American Youth on OES, will be held at 7:30 p.m. future " a spokesman for New Haven.
Parade at Notre Dame Thursday at the Masonic TrudeAu's office said Monday DISCHARGED - Lydia A.
Hysell.
University in South Bend, Ind., Temple In Middleport.
night.

Sales

.

Weather

1

R

, ••.

Now YouKnQw

Ingles, Middleport, $10 and
Is
linn lire
Cal
cos • sque~~'tl
s;
vm
Black, ~emee, F!-"·· $5 and
costs, failure to yteld right . of
way ; Kenneth Hayes, ~·ddlepcrt, $5 and.costs,I'Wllllllll 8 Presidential Buddy in at Kent
n:&lt;Jiight; Cecil See and Gary
KENT, OHIO- DR. GLENN A. OUJS, a cl011e friend of
Rife, both of Middleport, $5 and
c?sts each, assured clear President Nlxoo and fermer U. S. tepl'eaentatiw to tbe United
Natlona, wasnamedpresldentofKentState Univeralty Monday, a
distance.
job be said be welcomes bee•use "I happen to be 111e wbo bellews
lheproblem81ilaiC81111! lntofocuaatKentare unlvenal."
111 •
Olda, 50, an Ordained Methodist mlnlater, was selected by the·
1r~ergs
ecerpts
acbool board of Cruatees, aflel' a sizofJIODih sCreening of potential
caMidatea by a apedal ccmmlttee. He 1rill become the sdlool's
seventJu!residentwbenRobertl. WbiteretlreaSepl15.
'
•
0

See Ads in Newspaper
Today and Thrusday

Little Surprise Anywhere

UPI Will Raise Rate 10 Per wnt

MASON - Mrs. Martha
Katharine (KaUe) Foglesong,
85, Mason, died Monday afternoon at the Kimes Convalescent Center In Athens.
Mrs. Foglesong was born
Feb. 24, 1886, in Mason, the
dall8hter of lhe 'late Sarah
Frances Jarrou and W. E.
Ruttencutter. Her husband, W.
H. Foglesong, died In 1962.
Mrs. Foglesong, a member of
the Mason United Melhodist

SEEMS TO HAVE WINGS •.•
KEEP TRACK OF IT
EASIER WITH A

Court Bond

Dr81113 u nmatc·hed

Mrs. Foglesong Died Monday

IF YOUR MONEY

epb Kender.
Kender said the unlimited cost
of living clause was so important a cost esUmate could not
be made.
"I honestly believe that the
Industry would have been shut
down for the longest period in
its history if it didn't grant ibe
clause," Kender said. .
..Anyone' who had lhe Interest of the union members at
heart couldn't possibly have
considered rejecting the poet,''
he said.

·

By JOSEPH L. MYLER

:

ReHIIftell"'lllllg allllputed . New China Policy Unclear
episode.
a s.,..p JI!IDe Ueeue 1e permit
·
ON ,__ not yet
A masked banfllt robbed tile lbe Martelli Coal Co. 1e
WASHINGTON - THE ADMlNIS'l'llATI
...,
Sllake Sh&lt;lPJ!e of • on May 24. upaad strip mlnlac In spelled out.bow It bclpai to~ Natlaaalill CIUa'svoice In
.The Niday ca.e occurred on Belmont Comdy.
lbe ~ted Naliona while opealnc tile door ~ tbe world bodt to
July 2and tbe Bonded Ga8ollne -· N • t 8 r a 1 R e 1 0 u r c e 1 Pek!Dg. ADd enil if It can tum Its policy Into fact, ll)ere Ia lliU 110
Station, Second Ave., Gallipolis, Dlrecter WIIIWii B. Nye Aid publlclndlcalloowbetbermalalandOiinawouldbewllllncto lab
and an A&amp;P trucker were· tbe appnval was a "~ up tile iavltallon.
robbed on July 22.
..U.recant of tbe pablle IaAs .receaUy as July 19 Premier Qlou Ea-lai reiterated
Thus far, only the VInton terest" and fDrlkr provided Pek!Dg's !q..taadlng CJIIIIOIIItiOII to any~ tbat would
Bank robbery and Bonded evlcleafe tbat Olllo'o pmeat Jeaw "twoOJ!us"ln tbe U.N. ''If IIICb a lllaatiOII eonllnueeln
Gasoline Station cases ap- strip mining Jaws are 1lle UnitedNatiODS,"beadded. ''wewinnotgolbere."
peared to have been solved.
woefully Inadequate to
'lbe ·Nixon administration's decision to vote for. Pek!Dg's
protect tbe atate •gala•t the a"m'sslon to tbe U.N. was both an oDttP:owlh of 1lle new cbaplel' In
ravages of strip ml•lag!'
U.S.-Cbicese n!latl01111118t produced NIIon's pllma for a~ to
•. &lt; ·. -:-:-:.: .·:·:-:.;-: : :·:·:·:·:··' :-· : . :·:·:·:···.·· tbe aDnese capital, and a recopltlon of tbe resUty tbat Peking
would probably haw beenaGIIItted to ned month's U.N.aesslm
anyway.

Steel Mills in No Hu1Ty Two Forfeit'
By JOiiN T. KADY
UaltedPreallaterlllltlouf
Norfolk r. Western Railroad
freight trains rolled through
Ohio today following a Uklay
strike that cost tbe state's economy over rr million but steel
mills were slow In returning to
producUon because of beavy
stockpiling by steel usen.
The strike against the N&amp;W
and n1ne other railroads by tbe
Cleveland based United TranspcrtaUon Union ended Monday,
a little over 24 hours after

.:: ·.:

~"""""'""

· E ted d
11 k F id
x n e ou oo
r ay
dFr
..
lwnatrmhe 150sng ("

tlhre~noaugdl.rhLow~w~s ~tdioawy

hi b f
h
0s
and g 8 rom 1 e upper 7
to the lower 80s. By Sunday
lows in the 60s with highs
generally in the 80s.
~"S*'«&gt;.w.&lt;':~:.::::::::l2Snii!IIM'ni':·;:.~l
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITIED _Steve Eblin,
Pomeroy; Harry Hysell ,
Middleport; Jerry Frederick,
Middl eport; Don covert,
Pomeroy : Alice Beaver,
Racine .
DISCHARGED
Hilda
Kuehl, Lena Markins.

$8 Million

Car
Won't Survive

Apollo 15 Schedule
SPACE CENTER. Houslon (UPU- The Apollo

I~

timetable all time EDT and subjKt to change:

TODAY
3:00 p.m. - Apollo 15 fires ih ~N:in engine for 3.4
seconds to raise orbit to 63 by 66 mUes above ttle moon.
4:10 p.m. - Small scientific wtellite is eiected

from Apollo IS's service module to study radiation and
magnetic forces for a ye•r.
S:23 p.m. - Apollo 15 fires its main engine tor 2
minutes, 18 seconds to break out of luur orbit and
head back toward Earth.
9:34 p.m. - Astronauts begin eight hour rest
period.

THURSDAY

5:24 a.m. - Crew wakes up.
1:26 a.m. - Course correction, il n-ec::e55ary .
11:34 ,a.m.- Worden starts spacewilk to retrieve

two film cassettes from the Qperiment Nr in the

service module. Telec.11st begins at 11 :44 a.m. The
spacew1lk will last a maximum of one hour.

10:04 p.m. - Astronauts be!Jin eight-hour sleep

.:,}.

period.

anyone, was doing most of the
orbital science work. He had to
switch the Endeavour's powerlui mapping cameras on and off
with precise timing and adjust
the set of sensors that have
been reporting on the general
composition of vast stretches of
moon terrain since Thursday.
By analyling the nature of
the radiation emitted and
reflected from the · lunar
surface, these sensors can give
scientists a general idea of the
crustal composition. This is
important in the overall £ffort
ID understand the origin and
evolution of the moon.
· The value-· of these studies
was enhanced by the exploration carried out by Scott and
Irwin. They provided the
"ground truth" to confirm the
accuracy of the orbital measurement.
Worden has said the mapping
is as significant as the surface
work to future exploration of
the moon and the planets.
"jt will provide planners with

more information on future
Apollo landing areas. It also
will point out potential sites for
unmanned exploration later this
decade and lell scientists what
kind of instrwnenls to put in
automated orbiten.
The science station ScoU and
Irwin left behind in the
mountain valley tbey called
Hadley Base was reported
working normally. And controller.; said Tuesday night that the
color television camera left
behind on the astronauts' moon
car bad plenl:Y of battery power
to view a solar eclipse Friday
and continue working IUltil
hmar sunset later this month.
As the three pilots prepared
to go to sleep, Scott reported
they had bad another. ":ater
leak, bul qwckly fixed 11 With a
wrench.
.
"We bad a little liiiScheduled

maintenance on our friendly
water valve again," the commander said, .. but it's Wider
control-same problem we had
before."

2 Million Futures on
Line in Capsule Drums

WASHINGTON ( UPI) -In a
SPACE CENTER, Houston locked and guarded room a
(UPI) -The most expeusive block from the White House
car ever made will become a there are two bulky objects
frozen bulk Aug. 13. No an- wrapped In brown paper. The
tifreeze oo the market could contents of those two packages
could change the lives or about
save it.
Rover 1 cost $8 million and 2 miltion young American men
took Apollo 15 astronsuts burn in 1952.
The wrapped objects are
David R. Scott and James B.
Irwin 17.4 mlles from the clear plastic drums, each with
slopes of the Moon's Apennlne 366 capsules inside. In the
Mountains to the rim of yellow capsules are numbers
from I to 366. In the brown
canyon-like Hadley Rille.
A bumper-mounted camera capsules are dates from Jan. I
took television viewers aloog to Dec. 31. They are the
for the ride that cost makings for the third annual
$458,111.44 a mile. The car Selective Service System draft
performed weD, but bad to be lottery to be held Thursday at
left behind. Rover was not 10 a.m. EDT.
Even though the law that has
designed to survive lbe frigid
lunar nights when tem- authorized the government to
peratures fall to 295 degrees conscript young men into lbe
below zero, said Flight armed forces explfed June 30,
Director Gerald P. Griffin. the Selective Service is going
So, when tbe sun sell on ahead wilb lbe draft lottery for
Hadley Base, Rover and ·111 1972 induction priorities on the
color television wiU freeze. assumption that Congress evenEarthbOund viewers wUI get tually will extend lhe law. Both
one last show before lbe big lhe Senate and House h3ve
freeze
wbea
ground voled to do so, but are at
conorollers train the camers loggerheads over a Vietnam
withdrawal rider added by the
on a solar eclipse Friday.
Senate.
Until that matter is
-: .• .,. •
. ·.··.·.··:·.-...:·:&lt;·:·.·.-:-:--· .,:.

'·

...;.

y.:::;;;.;:;:;.;•:;.; .\:_··:·.

worked out, the ·government
can't draft another persiJn in
1971, let alone 1972.
But Selective Service officials
believe youths who turned 19

this year and are draft eligible
in 1!172 desl:f:ve as much
advance notice as possi!&gt;le
abuut their status. 'lbat is what
(Continued on Page 10)

Drivers Certified
Certificates were issued to
bus drivers for lbe new school
year Tuesday night by the
· Meigs County Board of
Education. Supt. Robert Bowen
said several applications are
pending because they were not
completed properly.
Certificates were issued to:
Meigs Local School DistrictPauline D.arsl, Amos Tillis,
Worley Haley, Rosalie Sayre,
Teresa Cremeans, Vernon
Weber, Annette Knight, Hie!
French, Mary King , Lane
Daniels, Donna Daniels, Jetta
Arix Leo Morris Norman
. ' Linda Morris' William
Wood
' Ralph McCumber,
'
Ratliff,
Linda Jell, Ernest Wood, James
McMurray, Naoini Floyd,
Austin Philtips, U!alh&lt;! Colterill, Virgil Carl, Faye Manley,
Marvin Wilson, Anthony Jordan, Alice Globokar, Denver

Hysell, Laveda June Yost,
William Smith.
Meigs Coolmunity School Jean Wood, Dee Brown.
Eastern Local , District
Paul Baer, C. 0 . Newland, B. F.
Upton, Mary K. Rose; Cecil
CaldweU, Allred Wolfe, Robert
Shook, Harold Brannon,
Darlene Reed, Charles Bissell,
Helen Blake, Oscar Pennington,
Warren Rose, Roland Easbnan,
Francis Benedum.
Southern Local District Dan Smith, Gordon Proffitt,
Charles Cornell, Harold Circle,
Albert Hill, Jr., Clarence
Wickline, Earl Cross, Delbert
Smith, Russell Cline, Jesse
Brinker.
Board members presen,t lor
the meeting we:re Virgil Aikins,
Harold Roush, Gcrdon Collins
and Gecrge Perry.

Ky Files Question
• ·ed p· etitiOD
• •

By MARGARET A. ~ILGORE
SAIGON (UPil -Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky today
filed his petitions to qualify in
the Oct. 3 presidenUal .election
and left it up to his nation's
supreme court to determine if
the signatures were valid.
The vice president, who has
spent the past several weeks
trying to muster support lo
oppose President Nguyen Van
' Thieu, said he had filed 102
signatures: two more than

required by law.
. Ky, at a news conference at a. slogan ''molher of, Vietnam."
He conceded that only 61 of , presidential gueslhouse two He said he would 1101 have the
the signatures had been by hours after be filed, accused traditionalallemate vice presThieu-appointed province Thieu of intimidating his idential caodidale, but would
chiefs.
potentialsupporters, ofrunning tun only. with his friend,
The rest of the signatures a fraudulent election and of wealthy prinlel' Truong Vinh
were obtained !rom councillors harminJ the COWltry.
Le.
who switched their allegiance
"A change of leadership is Ky said a slate beaded by a
from Thieu to Ky. There is a essential," Ky said. "Mr. Thieu virtually unkncnm i &amp;ll'l"late.
legal question whether they can dare not accept a fair election Ngu)'l!ll Tran, was fiW ~
make the switch Wider the and has used rigged means at after he fiW and said if Tr-an
election law , ' ~ut Ky said he the very beginning of - the is 3l'Cfl'ted. it would would leave it up to the court eleclions."
Tran's suppor1 t.t to eume
to decide.
.Ky said he would run on lhe ft'llln Thi&lt;'u_

�. .

..
·o

.

. .-....-p
,
·-~

'M:S

'

;

'

.,

.

W'WiaoJ,O.,ili!p1114,1t'11

'

3- The Daily Sentbiel,

Happy Shopper Days

..

DEEP CUT MEAT PRICES

Sliced

.. BOILED
HAM

.'

'

~

..

-. ....-

,J'
'

....
•

'

· ~a,

~
•

5

...
."

TROOP JIEVIEW - Gov. Arclt A, Moore, Jr., &amp;Ill West
Ad)Dlt
Jack w. Blair were am~ the dig·
ni1arles who pirtidpated In the review oC 3664th Light.MalnteliaDce ()Jqpny &lt;1 PoUt Pleasant &amp;Ill .-her National Guard

\flriiDia

Geueru

units at Camp Pickett, Va., last weekend. The IO&lt;al gullhl unit
is now in its seCOIII week at Camp Pickett. The photo at left
is oC Gov, Moore ard Major General Blair in a jeep prepariq;:
to review the troops. '!be nen picture shows some of the.Onl-

The photo third from left is ol the four solcliers who received
speeial bcioors d~ the review activities. ~ John Kauff

- ~.

L....-1
PO_R_K_S_TE_AK_

-

... ca·mp Life~

Review .••

59~

Plcg.of91

lb.

who won secom place in 1\11-Guard shooting competition. At
far right is some m?re equipment of 3664th Ordnance Com·
pany passing in re view~

nanee Company equipment rolliq;: past the reviewing stand.

Tender Juicy

Al9:

ISliLOIN TIP ROAST I '1 0!
Round Steak ·!BONELESS ROUND STEA~ I 99!

).

••

•

••

•.
~

•

"
••
~

~

.•.•.
~

·-~

Choice &amp; Lean

BUCKET OF

RUMP
ROAST

OfiCKEN

lb.l.09

16 MEATY PIECES
4ThithS
4 Wings

•Lets

4 Breasls

lb.

49$

Ground Fresh Hourly
GROUND
BEEF

.

311
.• ·

DICIII

69~1b.

FRENCH CITY

WIENERS

____.I

99~

PKG.

49~

•

69!

AU BEEF WIENERS I lb. Pkg ,

i
:
CIRCLE K BACON· ~~
69~

IHYGRADE

Pkg ,

791

FRENCH CITY

RING LIVER PUDDING

IGA

SLAB
BACON
lb.

HYGRADE

59!

TOPPS

CHARM IN

PORK&amp;
BEANS

ROOT
BEER

~~ 10~

~:L 49~

IN THE PIECE

20ct

' 159~

I.'11~ IHam Sandwiches 99!

ICUBE STEAK

1

"

59~ . IPORif'oiOAST

~~~~~A~cU:e~S~A~G~E~_____Ro_"~'

Right Reserved to l imit Quantities.
..

f~~~:~

· 'iOiOGNA

.,. 1.19

-

1..._Prices_
.· _Good_oo_
... _AII_W_a__.l ·

1

TOILET
TISSUE
4 Roll
Pkg.

43~

•

RINSO

IVORY

CLOROX

SOAP POWDER

LIQUID FOR DISHES

BLEACH

At Camp
Pickett, Va.

KING SIZE
5 lb. 4 DL box

89 e
·. . ·

39~

.22 oz.

bot

With Coupon From

Sunday Newspaper ·

I

CHOC. QUIK
By NESnE

~,u~!L.

49 ~

JUG

.

.

..

79~

2 lb.
box

Coupon
From
Su11day Newspaper
With

5

CATSUP
.
IGA BRAND

-Reg., Drip, Elec. Perk

LARGE
14 Ol
BOTTL£

lb,

can

'

Bl.SY ON CHA:tTS - SP 4 Jessie llamm. Puint Pleasant
and PFC Morris Ferguson are sbo&gt;ln as they were busy preparing duty charts at Camp Picl&lt;ott.

COMPANY SUPPLIES - SP 4 RidJard Slreet, MWieport; SP 4 Barey Hamm, Po.ln!: Plea·
IIlii SP 5 WDllam Wood, PWt Pleasut, handle co:ppany St"plies IIlii dls!riblaioo o!per·
IGIIIl IIlii unit; JIIU for the 3664111 Light Moin!em..,., ~at Camp Pickett.

PilEPAlUNG CHOW - SP 4 John Grate, Letart, W.Va.; SP 5 RoMld Wright, Gallipolis;
SP 4 David Grate, Rutlard; Pfc Howard Deweese, Leon aoo SP ~ Jcxin Fuller, Kerr, 0,, coOkS
and K,P.'s, are shO'.&lt;n hardat wockpr eparing good Arrey chO'N for the 3664th Light MaiiQrwn~
Co~ at ~ Picke!t.
::

I

I

'.

.

00

...

16 Ill.

""

...
"••

,

GREET ONE ANOTHER - SP 5larry L. Fox, Mld!leport
and SP 5 Raymo.~ C.mdifl, Maso:1, two of the OrdlDnce ''hea·
vies" greet eac.i other in froot ofthe Machine S.o;&gt; at Pickett.
. SP ~ RQpr Hotrmu or Pumer&lt;v loolts 0!1.

Jumbo
Rolls

~

/ \

IGA BRAND

VIVA-JUMBO ROU.S

....
-•.
•..

•

PAPER WORK - SP I Rqy Woo:ner, Pulm Pleasant &amp;Ill
SP .; Cbarles flellson, Pu!nt Pleasant, are shown busy with
~ock at Camp Piclrett, Va.

Peas &amp;Carrots

Paper Towels

Peanut Butter

CREMORA

PLANTERS

INSTANT CREAMER BY BORDEN
16 OUNCE
JAR

18 oz.
JAR

ONLY_

n

,•

FRENCH FRIES

GLO-COAT

CLEAN!NG RIFLES - SP { Gregory Erwin, Mldcll~
and PFC Carl Dr ummmxl, Cheshire, are busy cleaning M-ll:
rilles Cor the 3664th Light Ma intemnce Company at Camp Pi~'
kett, Va. The Compan,y was only recently Sl(lplied with M-16.

PFC Bo!hal Jarrel, SoJth
Poin!, 0.; ~ J~U~~&lt;&gt;s Co~n, Galllpo1is &amp;Ill Firs~ Sgt. CarroO Cox, Po!nt Pleasant, go over training schodules in the
headqllll'ters sectiol of the 3664th Light Maintenance Co:npa.ey at Camp Plck.-tt, Va.
GOING OVER SCHEDULES -

..-

WAX BY JOHNSON

FROZEN DELIGHT
9 OUNCE

27' Ol.
r.M
OILY-

II)X

ONLY

TOMATOES

ICE MILK

HOMEGROWN

-MADE BY FAIRMONT
FULL

'I

~

•

UMIT
2GAL
PER PERSOII

5

lb,

•

bsk.

..

IN~'J'~LUNG

- SP 4 RqJer Holllla.'l, PI.ODe i'&lt;tf aad PfC
i!on.1ie Vance, Alhllllf, inst&amp;ll a beavy~uty S!!W~mae.~lne ror
canvass reptir work at Camp U.wsDIL

REQIJISITia'flNG - SP ~ Carles Mccormick, GalllpaHs; SP 4 Mack U;vne GalllPo'is·

sp ~ Rallllllarbour, Apj)le Gro.e, W,Va. ani SP. 5 Carl Barnett, PoiJt Pleasant ~re · Jnvolved ·
wldl O!'deriJv, i'e'JUisitioniQg lUll ! isoibur.ing W,s ror ve!licles,

•
•

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•

:::

LEND~G SUPPOH; - CW ·I E.·lley Me D_:&gt;~•ld, Poi.rt Pletts.1nt; SP 4 Ralp~ W.llllams, ·GqAI· ·
polis; SP • Rlehard Fe.t,y, Rutlend anl SP • Ll\rry·TUI!s, Rutian1, are part n!lhe units'
malo:e:nn~ seC:io:~, lenllru s&gt;;&gt;l!O.'t to ·JI.her units. ,:
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3- The Daily Sentbiel,

Happy Shopper Days

..

DEEP CUT MEAT PRICES

Sliced

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HAM

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TROOP JIEVIEW - Gov. Arclt A, Moore, Jr., &amp;Ill West
Ad)Dlt
Jack w. Blair were am~ the dig·
ni1arles who pirtidpated In the review oC 3664th Light.MalnteliaDce ()Jqpny &lt;1 PoUt Pleasant &amp;Ill .-her National Guard

\flriiDia

Geueru

units at Camp Pickett, Va., last weekend. The IO&lt;al gullhl unit
is now in its seCOIII week at Camp Pickett. The photo at left
is oC Gov, Moore ard Major General Blair in a jeep prepariq;:
to review the troops. '!be nen picture shows some of the.Onl-

The photo third from left is ol the four solcliers who received
speeial bcioors d~ the review activities. ~ John Kauff

- ~.

L....-1
PO_R_K_S_TE_AK_

-

... ca·mp Life~

Review .••

59~

Plcg.of91

lb.

who won secom place in 1\11-Guard shooting competition. At
far right is some m?re equipment of 3664th Ordnance Com·
pany passing in re view~

nanee Company equipment rolliq;: past the reviewing stand.

Tender Juicy

Al9:

ISliLOIN TIP ROAST I '1 0!
Round Steak ·!BONELESS ROUND STEA~ I 99!

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lb.l.09

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4ThithS
4 Wings

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FRENCH CITY

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Right Reserved to l imit Quantities.
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TOILET
TISSUE
4 Roll
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43~

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IVORY

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SOAP POWDER

LIQUID FOR DISHES

BLEACH

At Camp
Pickett, Va.

KING SIZE
5 lb. 4 DL box

89 e
·. . ·

39~

.22 oz.

bot

With Coupon From

Sunday Newspaper ·

I

CHOC. QUIK
By NESnE

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From
Su11day Newspaper
With

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CATSUP
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LARGE
14 Ol
BOTTL£

lb,

can

'

Bl.SY ON CHA:tTS - SP 4 Jessie llamm. Puint Pleasant
and PFC Morris Ferguson are sbo&gt;ln as they were busy preparing duty charts at Camp Picl&lt;ott.

COMPANY SUPPLIES - SP 4 RidJard Slreet, MWieport; SP 4 Barey Hamm, Po.ln!: Plea·
IIlii SP 5 WDllam Wood, PWt Pleasut, handle co:ppany St"plies IIlii dls!riblaioo o!per·
IGIIIl IIlii unit; JIIU for the 3664111 Light Moin!em..,., ~at Camp Pickett.

PilEPAlUNG CHOW - SP 4 John Grate, Letart, W.Va.; SP 5 RoMld Wright, Gallipolis;
SP 4 David Grate, Rutlard; Pfc Howard Deweese, Leon aoo SP ~ Jcxin Fuller, Kerr, 0,, coOkS
and K,P.'s, are shO'.&lt;n hardat wockpr eparing good Arrey chO'N for the 3664th Light MaiiQrwn~
Co~ at ~ Picke!t.
::

I

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'.

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00

...

16 Ill.

""

...
"••

,

GREET ONE ANOTHER - SP 5larry L. Fox, Mld!leport
and SP 5 Raymo.~ C.mdifl, Maso:1, two of the OrdlDnce ''hea·
vies" greet eac.i other in froot ofthe Machine S.o;&gt; at Pickett.
. SP ~ RQpr Hotrmu or Pumer&lt;v loolts 0!1.

Jumbo
Rolls

~

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IGA BRAND

VIVA-JUMBO ROU.S

....
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PAPER WORK - SP I Rqy Woo:ner, Pulm Pleasant &amp;Ill
SP .; Cbarles flellson, Pu!nt Pleasant, are shown busy with
~ock at Camp Piclrett, Va.

Peas &amp;Carrots

Paper Towels

Peanut Butter

CREMORA

PLANTERS

INSTANT CREAMER BY BORDEN
16 OUNCE
JAR

18 oz.
JAR

ONLY_

n

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FRENCH FRIES

GLO-COAT

CLEAN!NG RIFLES - SP { Gregory Erwin, Mldcll~
and PFC Carl Dr ummmxl, Cheshire, are busy cleaning M-ll:
rilles Cor the 3664th Light Ma intemnce Company at Camp Pi~'
kett, Va. The Compan,y was only recently Sl(lplied with M-16.

PFC Bo!hal Jarrel, SoJth
Poin!, 0.; ~ J~U~~&lt;&gt;s Co~n, Galllpo1is &amp;Ill Firs~ Sgt. CarroO Cox, Po!nt Pleasant, go over training schodules in the
headqllll'ters sectiol of the 3664th Light Maintenance Co:npa.ey at Camp Plck.-tt, Va.
GOING OVER SCHEDULES -

..-

WAX BY JOHNSON

FROZEN DELIGHT
9 OUNCE

27' Ol.
r.M
OILY-

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TOMATOES

ICE MILK

HOMEGROWN

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FULL

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IN~'J'~LUNG

- SP 4 RqJer Holllla.'l, PI.ODe i'&lt;tf aad PfC
i!on.1ie Vance, Alhllllf, inst&amp;ll a beavy~uty S!!W~mae.~lne ror
canvass reptir work at Camp U.wsDIL

REQIJISITia'flNG - SP ~ Carles Mccormick, GalllpaHs; SP 4 Mack U;vne GalllPo'is·

sp ~ Rallllllarbour, Apj)le Gro.e, W,Va. ani SP. 5 Carl Barnett, PoiJt Pleasant ~re · Jnvolved ·
wldl O!'deriJv, i'e'JUisitioniQg lUll ! isoibur.ing W,s ror ve!licles,

•
•

t

•

•

:::

LEND~G SUPPOH; - CW ·I E.·lley Me D_:&gt;~•ld, Poi.rt Pletts.1nt; SP 4 Ralp~ W.llllams, ·GqAI· ·
polis; SP • Rlehard Fe.t,y, Rutlend anl SP • Ll\rry·TUI!s, Rutian1, are part n!lhe units'
malo:e:nn~ seC:io:~, lenllru s&gt;;&gt;l!O.'t to ·JI.her units. ,:
• _

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REG.
25· ·.

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I- The Dally Sentinel, ..nddleport.Pomeroy, 0., August 4, 1971

silice June 29, piiched a

ly United Press International

Ameriaon Logue
National Leagoie
· East ·
By FRED McMANE
10 innings. Boston at Baltimore
Eo•t
Pd. GB
W. L. Pet. GB
UPI Sports Writer
was postponed because of rain.
.
W. L.
Baltimore
6S 39 .625
The Pittsburgh Pirates left
Alley's second homer of the
P'ttsburgh
68 41 .624 ... Bostcin
62 4.5 .579. 4'12
s; . Louis
59 50 .541 9
Detroit
.
their
slump
in
San
Francisco.
,
game
tied the score at S.,'i in
51 50 533 912
· O'lica1.:
51 50 .533 10
New York
54 56 .491 14
The Pirates, who dropped the eighth and the Pirates
:tra~~la ~ ~~ :~ :~ ~=~~:~~~on ~ ~
~.1, fourkln a r.ow to the Gianls last preceded to load the bases on a
r.Aontreal
43 66 .394 25
West
wee end, snapped their losing walk, an error by Bob Bailey
•
West
w. L. Pet. GB streak Tuesday night and and anolller walk. Sanguillen
• F
W. L. Pet. GB Oakland
68 39 .636 ... gained a full game in the then cleared the bases with his
Slln ranc1sco 61 45 .598 .. . Kansas City 52 52 .500 14'h N · a1
LGS Angeles 59 51 .536 7
California
at1on
L.eagu~ East by triple and, after Jose Pagan
53 58 . ~ 7 17
Houston
55 54 .505 10'12 Chlc;&gt;go
so 58 .463 181f, whipping the Montreal Expos walked, Vic Davalillo doubled
lllflanta
57 56 .504 lOif, Minnesota
49 57 .462 1811:1 ltl-6 on the hitting of Gene Alley
Oncinnali , 51 62 .451 16'12 Milwaukee
46 61 .430 22
Slln Diego
40 71 .360 26'h
Tuesday's Results
· and Manny Sanguillen.
;
Tuesday's Results
Oakland 1 Kan City 5, night
Alley hit· two home runs, the
IJJs Angeles 9 San Francisco I Minn 4 Chi 3 10 inn, night
second a. game-tying blast in .
Cine S N.Y. 2 1st, lwil
Washington 4 Detroit 2 night
th
· hth
~.
Y. 9 Cine 4 2nd. night
New York .8 Cleve! 1 night ·
e eJg ' and Sanguillen
Flhlla 3 Atlanta 2, night
Bost at Ball, ppd, rain
tripled with the bases loaded to
·
Slln Diego 6 St. Louis 1, night Milw 2 California o, night
highlight a six-rUn eighth inning
'
Cllicago s Houston 0, twll
Today's Probable Pitchers· as the Pirates stretched their
P.itts 10 Montreal 6, night
Minnesota 1Blyleven 8·12 and
: Toda(s Probable Pitchers
corbin 7.7) at Kansas City lead over the second place St.
, San Doego I Norman 1·7) at (Drago 12-6 and Fitzmorris 2. Louis Cardinals to nine games. NEW YORK (UP!) - Jim
qhlcago I P~ppas 11-10).
~ '"- 1). 2, twf.nlght.
San Di
be S
Merritt is having a discourag.•Cinconnato (Nolan 8·12) al
Milwaukee (Parsons 9·12) at
ego at· t. Louis 6-1,
~ew York !Gentry 9·8).
Oakland 1Dobson 10.1) night
Philadelphia edged Atlanta :1-2, ing season.
.· ~tlanta . (Niekro 11·8) at
Chica!l" (John 9-m · at OUcago blanked Houston 5-0,
No, it's not even that good.
~oladelplooa !Lersch 4 - 9). Calilornoa (Messersmith JO. JO). Los Angeles whipped San · After a 20-game winning sea~:~~ Franc;isco !Perry. J0.9l at niW~shlngton (Bosman 9. 111 at Francisco 9-1, and Cincinnati son in 1970, the 27-year~ld
Sj. Louos}Gobson9·9),noght.
Detroit ILollch 16.81 , night.
beat New York 5,2 in the first lefty is a puzzling case. He is
(. Los Angeles IDownong 13·6)
New York (Bahnsen 9·8) at game of a ·doubleheader then 11-11 this year. ·
;if Houston IForsch 5·5l. night. Cleveland !Dunning 7·8) night 1 th
h
·
, TuesdaynighiMerrittreaped
',Pittsburgh (Kison 2-2 or
Boston ILonbor~ 6-6 and ost e nig tcap 9-4, in other
Walker 5-7) at Montreal (Stroh· . Tlant o.5) at Ballomore (Pal" NL games
. ~~""""""'"'"•"···;o;·Y·&gt;······»·«&lt;,
·

:m

home the final two runs of th~
inning.
Ste.ve Arlin pitched a four,
hitter and Ollie Brown drove in
two runs with a pair of singles
to ·spark the Padres' victory.
The Padres collected 13 hits in
banding Jerry Reuss his 11th
loss in 21 decisions.
John Vukovich, batting only
.161, doubled home pinch-runner

Larry Bow a with one out in the
ninth inning to give the .Phillies
a victory over the Braves.
.
· led
Vukov1ch aIso
smg , .a seventh .inning home run for the
Phillies. Willie Montanez hit his
22nd homer for. Philadelphia
while Hank Aaron hit No. 31
and Earl Wllliarns · No, 19 for
the Braves.
Bill Hands, who hadn't won

five:
hitllir and Ron Santo snawe&lt;J
an 11-for-12 slump With a homer
to pace the Cubs' vic!Dry.
Hands, whcr·lost all four of his
decisions in July, posted his
lOth vic!Dry against 12 losses.
Steve Garvey and Maury
Wtlls each drove in a pair of
runs as the n..oners collected
. . . .~
.
16 hils m posting their ftfth
successive victory. Wtlls, Garvey '. Manny Mota. and W'~e
DaVIS eacb collected three hits
in helping rookie Doyle Alexander to his third victory in six
decisions.

Tony Perez' three-run hqlner
in. the sixth inning carried
Cincinnati to a victory in the
fli'St game, but the Mets
bounced back to take ~
nightcap as ~ Foil dro~e m
three runs wtth. 8 ~~· ~
doubles. Wl~less Jun Mem , "
20-garne .wmner a .yheart1 · 0J:0 •
suffered his lith str&amp;g oss m
the ni htca
g
p.

Met s·. R e·ds s l ·z•t Razr

mayer

4·3

or Stoneman 12·91. mer

njght.

,
Thursday sGames
New York at Atlanta night
5!tn Doego at Cho"'!go .
~n Fran at St. Louos mQht
~os Angeles at Houslon noghl
~ttsburgh al Montreal night
'·
!· ,

~

12·6 1and

.Dobson 15..4). 2.

lwl·night.
Thursday's Games
Milwaukee at Oakland night
Chicago at California night
Minnesota at Kansas City night
Cleveland at Washington night
Ball at New York. 2, lwi·night
Detroit at Boston night

·

a run with a single. In .the
Donn Clendenon singled
home the Mets' second run. ·
New York added two more in
the fourth, three in the fifth
and two in the sixth before
they were through. Tim Foli
drove in three runs with a

W"TI,

E~!~~::~~~::~~:t~t~

Blue Fails To Win 20th Game
~
~

By JOE CARNICEW

Low's 6-l.

-:

UPI Sports Writer
Rick Monday drove in four
Vida Blue's magic runs, the last two with a tie~- uch seems to bave vanished. breaking double in the ninth
t_~lue, the talented young .left- inning, to rally the Athletics
P""der who blew the Amencan over Kansas City. The A's
J'.eague apart lor the first four staked Blue to a 2-0 lead on
pwnths of ~e season, seems to 11111-scoring singles by Mike
!'ave lost.his effecti~eness. He Epstein and Gene Tenace in
J&amp;iled ln. hiS second btd to reach fourth but Bob Oliver wiped
lhe ~VIctory plateau Tuesday that out in the same inning with
~h::: the Kansas City Royals a three-run homer and the
ll"m
him for nine hits and Royals boosted llleir lead to 5-2
d.ve runs in five innings. ·m the fifth as Amos Otis'
qatdand managed to rally with double and Lou Piniella's
~e runs in the top of the single, one of his lour hits,
Sinth to win the game 7-li and brought home two runs.
t;.lp Blue avert his filth loss. Monday hit a two-run homer
~ Elsewhere in the American in the seventh and in the ninth,
&lt;.a.
Detr 't beat W••h;na
ecague,
Ol
-~... - singles by Tommy Davis, Dick
jpn 4-2, New York bombed Green and Bert Carnpaneris
~eveland 8-1, Minnesota nipped tied the score and Monday
t':hicago 4-3 in 10 innings, greeted reliever Bill Butler
f.titwaukeeblanked California 2- with his two-run double.
i, and . the 8oston-Baltimore

~Suddenly,

pme was rained out.
National League action,
J.oos Angeles ripped San Franpsco 9-1, Chicago 'shut out
pouston $-G, Cincinnati beat
York 5-2 before losing 9-4, ,
delphia shaded AUanla 3-2,
burgh defeated Montreal
jb-6 and San Diego whipped St.
::

: In

Tommy McCraw scored the
winning run when Aurelio
Rodriguez booted a grounder to
third as Washington rallied for
three runs in the ninth to beat
llle Tigers. Tim Cullen singled
home the tying run before
Rodriguez kicked pinch-hitter
Jeff Burroughs' grounder.
The rally helped Denny
McLain gain his sixth victory
against 15 defeats.
Felipe Alou's single and
Horace Clarke's run-scoring
double ignited an eight-run
second inning that carried Mike
Kekich and the Yankees past
Cleveland. The eight-run inning
was "e Yankees' bi' gges· t
"'
offensive burst in almost two

·
.

his latest loss, 9-4, at the hands
of the New York Mets after the
Cincinnati Reds had won the
opener of a doubleheader 5-2.
Merritt left the game in the
fifth inning with the score 7-0.
He gave · up nine hils before
giving way to Tony Cloninger.
The trouble in the nightcap
started in the very .first inning
o::xx:·x-..-.:-:.~~:.v..:.:...:~:·x-:o:o:•. when Clean Jones drove home

I''

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More sports
thir~
On p age 20

· :.:..s;;;:

In the American League
action, the Yankees routed
Cleveland 8-1, Oakland topped
Kansas City 7-5, Washington
beat Detroit ._2, Milwaukee
blanked California 2-0 and
Minnesota edged Chicago 4-3 in

·

Twins past Chicago. Oliva, who
stroked three hits and had a
two-run double in the eighth to .
tie the score, delivered his hit
after Carew singled off Bart
Johnson.
Lew Krausse and Ken Sanders combined for a six-hitter
and batterymate Paul Ratliff
hit a two-run homer to lead the
Brewers over California.
Krausse scattered four singles
in seven innings and Sanders
llllowed a single and a double lo
nail down the victory for
Krausse. Ratliff's homer came
in the fifth after Jose Cardenal
beat out an infield hit.
Th Bo 1 Bal ·
e son- tunore game,
a crucial one in the Eastern
Di
years.
·vision race, will be played as
Tony Oliva's two-&lt;Jut double part of a twi-night doubleheader
in the loth inning scored Rod tonight.
Carew from first to boost the

Johnny Bench.
Charley Williams allowed the

=
\V

hurdles; and '}Jj7 feet, 5'h
inches by Cary Feldmann of
Seattle, Wash., ··in the javelin
ihrow.
The U.S. also was mighty
happy to still be "alive" in
basketball, thanks to a heartstopping 8I-79 victory over
Brazil in overtime on Bob
McAdoo's 15-foot set shot with
30 seconds to play.

Tourney
Drawmg
•
.

Sunday
Fourteen American Legion
district baseball teams move
onto the Ashland College campus Sunday afternoon to settle the question, " Who has the best
baseball team in Ohio'"
beginning Monday morning.
Among them will be the Meigs
Legion team, which won its first
district title at Athens last
Sa[urday evening with a J().j)
Tomp over Lancaster, after
losing 4-{) in the morning to the
same team.

Team Business Manager Don
Hunnel said the squad will be
quartered on the campus in
Clayton Hall. Drawings for the
double elimination competition
will be cond.ucted at 4:30p.m.
Sunday.

Deril M1de
Us Do It!

- ~ ----

The Daily Sentinel

ONLY

Plus Recappable Tire

General Tire Sales
992·7 161
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS · MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL ,
Exec . Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
City Editor

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Published daily except .
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Publ1shm·g C.ompany , 111
Court Sf. , Pomeroy·, Ohio , :
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2157.

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Reds eight hils as he gained lead to 2-1. Perez then powered
his fourth win of the year. his 20th homer of the year over
Bernie Carbo drove in two runs ·the left center field fence.
with his fourlll homer of the
May cracked his 29th bonier
in the eighth inning. With it be
year.
The game was delayed lwice took over the club's RBI lead,
by rain, 64 minutes. the first 65 to Perez' 64.
time and 22 minutes the
Wayne Simpson, now 3-4,
second.
gave up four hits and the
The Mets were leading 2-0 in Mets' two runs before departthe sixth inning of the first ing in the sixth for Wayne
game when Tony Perez belted Granger, who blanked New
a three-run homer.
York the rest of the way on
one hit. He was credited with
Mets starter Nolan Ryan was his eighth save of the season.
riding along with a one-hitter The Reds finish up their curwhen he ran into a Red born- rent road trip tonight by sendbardment that netted four runs ing Gary Nolan (8-12) against
in the sixth.
the Mets' Gary . Gentry (9-ll).
After giving up an infield They then are idle Thursday,
single to Pete Rose and walk- opening a weekend series with
ing Bernie Carbo, Ryan al- Montreal at Cincinnati Friday
lowed a run-scoring single by night.
Lee May that cut New York's

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MON-EY

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"bloom"! Earn at our
passbook rate of

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PASSBOOK SAVINGS

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Meogs County Branch of
The Athens County Savings
&amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.

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24 X 20, CoaJultant •
Mrs. llcJwanl Wat!"rilol&amp;,
PbCIIe 882.:1527.
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Class IV
Point Pleuant, West Virginia. Ste~lhebatlleol POint

·PI•unt, 1714, ..,.times
called lhe first battle 11 tile
Revalutlonary War.
Batkgramd pale green. ~­
tarat - MrL Charles I,1nMm,
PbCIIe 675-4591.

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Pomeroy, ·Ohio

Member Federal Home Loan
Bank.
Member Federal Savings
Loan Insurance Corp. AI

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"No onr can serve two
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luJte tltr Oil£ and love the
GUI6, or he wtll be devoted
II&gt; fltr """ and despise the
Y1111 cmmot serve God
Gild mam mon."-Matthew
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UDIES SUMMER

LADIES

GOWNS AND

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50

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DROP CLOTHS

6. 'lbere will be !lYe •tries Ita •eb eluo wllb lhe
ueopi!Ga Clf Clua 7 wbleb
J1iJa1 bne ""1 gneJoer Clf .,_
lrles.
7. 1be . . af . _ _ . .
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I. No utlftdal n..rs a.(alia8N ......l'lllilled in IIIJ

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BOX FANS

24" FOLDING

BAR-B·Q GRilLS
REG. 3"

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Class I
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20

3. No llllllerlal Clllhe "Lei
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aenallatl Ust 11111 be used.
t. A tllllllstlnc all plaal,
materiata. siYina nrlelal
...--. vf MYer psfble,
sbollld be laeludod with eadl

dolle.

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2. · n.ta

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2t " "28 " 20 lacbea, llllliln
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BrGid- lined Eww•
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POMEROY,O.

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will ... l'llrtlbhed 1117 lhe
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10 EOOAL MONTHLY PAYMENT$
BUDGET PLAN STARTS AUGUST 10

NYLONS

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Clu7eentbeJ1111111

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milled In Ibis dan. 'Nior-

IL COST

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One atem.

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For Better, Quicker, More EHicient ·
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TWO-WAY RADIO

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Q_ur Trucks Are Equipped With

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10. Oal1 - •117 ~.
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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

sm.u, S Ia. cor leu, 1

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Dudejs Flolist

aus u

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4 H.P. TILLER

Welcome
Molller &amp; Baby
With

DIVISIDN m
Eclii:a- f'xhibil
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Books.
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cbalrmau; lin. 'll'allotrG!Ioitr,
Mrs. ~ .l!nlilel, lin. lJin.

FRIDAY-AUGUST 6 -ALL DAY

ClaM IS
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YOU

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cor..._ mm pla)'ed baD.

(OJnlinia&gt;JI
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aid
llaqlrdoer
IIIII IIn.

lnmbllll, Olllo.

children, ·Xer!ia ; Mr. and Mrs.
Eddie Price, Paulette, Sbellie
and Tina; Mr. and Mrs. Dotmie
Price, and Mr. and Mrs. RusRII
Riley (Mary Amos), all of
Colurn b us.

ar vatltQ . 1 ......,, 11111 cotor
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up " tc

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Presenl were Mr. and Mrs.
Arlie Price and Debbie, Linworth ; Mr. and Mrs. P. A.
Morrone, Wayne imd Betty
Anne,, . and a friend, Jenny
Brown, Bexley ; Mr. and Mrs.

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tltot

Rod I:aver, the Australian
left-bander who has won this
tournament five times in the
past seven years, sailed by
countryman Dick Crealy, 6-1, 61.

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Cliff Drysdale, the third
South African in the $50,000
tournament, also played Tuesday but he escaped the
demonstrators, apparently because it was an afternoon
match. The' third-seeded Drysdale defeated Ray Ruffels of
Australia, 6-1, 7-6.
All seeded players except
Maud won their first round
malches but Tom Okker of the
Netherlands, the fifth seed,
almost was eliminated.
Okker, who has won two
straight tournaments, could not
lind his timing and was one
game away from losing. But he
fought back to defeat Brian
Fairlie of New Zealand, 3-6, 7-6,
6-1. It was Okker's lith straight
match victory on the pro

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1.

By MICHAEL WIDMER
CHESTNUT HILL, Mass.
(UPIJ- "What would you do? "
With that simple but bitter
question, Rob Maud of &amp;.uth
Africa described how he
reacted to the chanting and
yelling of some 15 protesters in
his first round match in the
U.S. pro tennis championships.
Maud lost the match to Allan
Stone of Australia, 6-1, 7-li, a
match the 24-year-&lt;Jld Soulh
African felt he should have
won.
"! just feel sorry for the
spectators," he said. "They pay
money to see a tennis game but
what kind of tennis do they see
under those conditions?"
The demonstration Tuesday
night was the second time in as
many
days that protesters have
But i~ baseball Cuba scored
its big victory over the United attemped to disrupt a match
States 4-3, the revenge victory involving a South African
the Cubans have been seeking player. The NAACP, which
ever since 1967 when they were organized the demonstrations,
upset by the United States in a wants South Africans excluded
playoff for the Pan Am from U.S. sporting evenls until
baseball crown at Portage La foreign blacks can compete in
Prairie in Canada. And the way South Africa and South African
the Yanks lost really hurt- lour blacks can compete outside
errors, including three in the their homeland.
The object of the hooting and
seventh inning when Cuba
shouting
Monday night was
scored the two unearned runs
Frew McMillan, a South
that decided the game.
The U.S. isn't out of the African who lost as expected to
baseball race yet-but now its top-seeded John Newcombe of
only hope is that somebody will Australia.
pin a loss on Cuba.
The sloppy fielding wasted a EXHIBIT TRIO
three homer barrage by the
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI)Yanks4me each by Willie
The Kentucky Colonels anMims of Iowa , Jerry Tabb of nounced Tuesday that they will
Tulsa, and Fred Lynn of
play exhibition games with
Southern California, all wilh the
three top National Basketball
bases empty,
Association teams this yearThe United States was
the Baltimore Bullets, Sept. 22;
favored for more track gold
the Milwaukee Bucks, Oct. 8,
tonight in the pole vault and
and the New York Knicks, Oct.
harmner throw. There are also 9.
finals scheduled in shooting,
The games will give Artis
gymnastics,and weigh tUfting.
Gilmore, the Colonels' highpriced
rookie center, a chance
SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Mr. Val to see action against Wes
won the featured seventh race Unseld, Lew Alcindor and Willis
at Scioto Downs Tuesday night, Reed, three top NBA centers.
a $1,500 pace over one-mile,
paying $12.80, $7.40 and $5 for ITAUAN WINS
his 2:06 J..'i win.
DUBLIN (UP! )-Capt. RaiSecond was Cheekie Vic , mondo D'lnzeo of Italy won the
paying $31.80 and $8, with opening event of the Dublin
Rozzie Thorpe in the show spot, International Horse Show Tuesday on Bellevue in a 19-horse
paying $3.
The daily double combination jumpoll.
of 1-6 returned $41.20 on Marlo Ann Moore of Britain on April
and Henry Blackstone.
Love was second and Bill
Attendance was 5,123 and the Steinkraus of the United States
handle $238,798.
' on Fleet Apple was third.

s-. a

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g

Protesters Mar Action

U. S. Baseballers Lose

CAU, Colombia (UP!) Track and field power finally
enabled the United States to
open a little daylight between
itself and determined Cuba in
•:
Ou
the Pan American Garnes
Spencer
t
medal chase today, but the
•
•
Yanks still are hurting about
Ith Injury
the "big one that got away" in
:: Galllpolls' T
Spen
baseball.
L been lost f;n:seasoncetor Six times in eight events the
!IllS
U.S. flag flew on the center
three Rivers, Canada's Class pole of Pascual Guerrero
~ aprofesai&lt;lllll
team s
..
result of abaseball
knee injury tadiurn ,Tuesday night lor a
,..
VIctory m track-gtvwg the
pilffered about a mmth ago.
Americans 20 gold medals now
::Spencer left Canada last to 11 for Cuba, and 5! total to
jigh~ and before reporting to 39 f Cuba
n.
. ,.;·•t Hospital in em·Clllllll
.
ti And
or three· of those victories
~J!he~e he will undergo surgery were with Pan American
lio his nght knee, he will stop record performances- 11.2 seJEreovernightand visit with his conds by Iris Davis of Pompano
Parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Beach, Fla., in the women's
~cer,I32Pine St. Spencer is 100-meterdash ·, 49.1 seconds by
~
.. e in Galli""';.
""~ late Wed- Ralph Mann of Long Beach,
Calif., in the men's 400-rneter

~

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ror 1ta p•l , rac:torJ (187!1)
"""Ita f!lua .....U, (w0). A
I len In a pollel'l' • JiaU
emD'"r. Bedr&amp;•CiiUII caiai'

Amos Family Reunion Held Near Columbus

·t tiUr d. ... b
7
Rod&lt;
!I'm A - . . .
In a IIIIUJ
' ;,r. BackCOLU!IIBUS, Ohio - The
IJ1IO!!Id Beqo. C
ltet • -family mmioo was beld
lolrl. J.G.F. JH
-. Slon?ay, July 25, at the Darby
675-l26&amp;.
OM Mtbupolitan Park near
.·
au. Vl
bore with 441 mem!Jers present
Gree~~g~. Y - J b . Slle -Cif wbma"'•diJJoel'wasenJO
· yed..
tbe new lift ·npllifw tfDUar
u.ti
&lt;lam-jlllt a1 6e
, -...
1laere 'l'l!re games in the
tkOII Clf 111e Cloio Riwer ari- allernoon. cbildren enjoyed
ptiGaol oq-. ""allfoll- swilcs and olheuides, and the

.

�•
I- The Dally Sentinel, ..nddleport.Pomeroy, 0., August 4, 1971

silice June 29, piiched a

ly United Press International

Ameriaon Logue
National Leagoie
· East ·
By FRED McMANE
10 innings. Boston at Baltimore
Eo•t
Pd. GB
W. L. Pet. GB
UPI Sports Writer
was postponed because of rain.
.
W. L.
Baltimore
6S 39 .625
The Pittsburgh Pirates left
Alley's second homer of the
P'ttsburgh
68 41 .624 ... Bostcin
62 4.5 .579. 4'12
s; . Louis
59 50 .541 9
Detroit
.
their
slump
in
San
Francisco.
,
game
tied the score at S.,'i in
51 50 533 912
· O'lica1.:
51 50 .533 10
New York
54 56 .491 14
The Pirates, who dropped the eighth and the Pirates
:tra~~la ~ ~~ :~ :~ ~=~~:~~~on ~ ~
~.1, fourkln a r.ow to the Gianls last preceded to load the bases on a
r.Aontreal
43 66 .394 25
West
wee end, snapped their losing walk, an error by Bob Bailey
•
West
w. L. Pet. GB streak Tuesday night and and anolller walk. Sanguillen
• F
W. L. Pet. GB Oakland
68 39 .636 ... gained a full game in the then cleared the bases with his
Slln ranc1sco 61 45 .598 .. . Kansas City 52 52 .500 14'h N · a1
LGS Angeles 59 51 .536 7
California
at1on
L.eagu~ East by triple and, after Jose Pagan
53 58 . ~ 7 17
Houston
55 54 .505 10'12 Chlc;&gt;go
so 58 .463 181f, whipping the Montreal Expos walked, Vic Davalillo doubled
lllflanta
57 56 .504 lOif, Minnesota
49 57 .462 1811:1 ltl-6 on the hitting of Gene Alley
Oncinnali , 51 62 .451 16'12 Milwaukee
46 61 .430 22
Slln Diego
40 71 .360 26'h
Tuesday's Results
· and Manny Sanguillen.
;
Tuesday's Results
Oakland 1 Kan City 5, night
Alley hit· two home runs, the
IJJs Angeles 9 San Francisco I Minn 4 Chi 3 10 inn, night
second a. game-tying blast in .
Cine S N.Y. 2 1st, lwil
Washington 4 Detroit 2 night
th
· hth
~.
Y. 9 Cine 4 2nd. night
New York .8 Cleve! 1 night ·
e eJg ' and Sanguillen
Flhlla 3 Atlanta 2, night
Bost at Ball, ppd, rain
tripled with the bases loaded to
·
Slln Diego 6 St. Louis 1, night Milw 2 California o, night
highlight a six-rUn eighth inning
'
Cllicago s Houston 0, twll
Today's Probable Pitchers· as the Pirates stretched their
P.itts 10 Montreal 6, night
Minnesota 1Blyleven 8·12 and
: Toda(s Probable Pitchers
corbin 7.7) at Kansas City lead over the second place St.
, San Doego I Norman 1·7) at (Drago 12-6 and Fitzmorris 2. Louis Cardinals to nine games. NEW YORK (UP!) - Jim
qhlcago I P~ppas 11-10).
~ '"- 1). 2, twf.nlght.
San Di
be S
Merritt is having a discourag.•Cinconnato (Nolan 8·12) al
Milwaukee (Parsons 9·12) at
ego at· t. Louis 6-1,
~ew York !Gentry 9·8).
Oakland 1Dobson 10.1) night
Philadelphia edged Atlanta :1-2, ing season.
.· ~tlanta . (Niekro 11·8) at
Chica!l" (John 9-m · at OUcago blanked Houston 5-0,
No, it's not even that good.
~oladelplooa !Lersch 4 - 9). Calilornoa (Messersmith JO. JO). Los Angeles whipped San · After a 20-game winning sea~:~~ Franc;isco !Perry. J0.9l at niW~shlngton (Bosman 9. 111 at Francisco 9-1, and Cincinnati son in 1970, the 27-year~ld
Sj. Louos}Gobson9·9),noght.
Detroit ILollch 16.81 , night.
beat New York 5,2 in the first lefty is a puzzling case. He is
(. Los Angeles IDownong 13·6)
New York (Bahnsen 9·8) at game of a ·doubleheader then 11-11 this year. ·
;if Houston IForsch 5·5l. night. Cleveland !Dunning 7·8) night 1 th
h
·
, TuesdaynighiMerrittreaped
',Pittsburgh (Kison 2-2 or
Boston ILonbor~ 6-6 and ost e nig tcap 9-4, in other
Walker 5-7) at Montreal (Stroh· . Tlant o.5) at Ballomore (Pal" NL games
. ~~""""""'"'"•"···;o;·Y·&gt;······»·«&lt;,
·

:m

home the final two runs of th~
inning.
Ste.ve Arlin pitched a four,
hitter and Ollie Brown drove in
two runs with a pair of singles
to ·spark the Padres' victory.
The Padres collected 13 hits in
banding Jerry Reuss his 11th
loss in 21 decisions.
John Vukovich, batting only
.161, doubled home pinch-runner

Larry Bow a with one out in the
ninth inning to give the .Phillies
a victory over the Braves.
.
· led
Vukov1ch aIso
smg , .a seventh .inning home run for the
Phillies. Willie Montanez hit his
22nd homer for. Philadelphia
while Hank Aaron hit No. 31
and Earl Wllliarns · No, 19 for
the Braves.
Bill Hands, who hadn't won

five:
hitllir and Ron Santo snawe&lt;J
an 11-for-12 slump With a homer
to pace the Cubs' vic!Dry.
Hands, whcr·lost all four of his
decisions in July, posted his
lOth vic!Dry against 12 losses.
Steve Garvey and Maury
Wtlls each drove in a pair of
runs as the n..oners collected
. . . .~
.
16 hils m posting their ftfth
successive victory. Wtlls, Garvey '. Manny Mota. and W'~e
DaVIS eacb collected three hits
in helping rookie Doyle Alexander to his third victory in six
decisions.

Tony Perez' three-run hqlner
in. the sixth inning carried
Cincinnati to a victory in the
fli'St game, but the Mets
bounced back to take ~
nightcap as ~ Foil dro~e m
three runs wtth. 8 ~~· ~
doubles. Wl~less Jun Mem , "
20-garne .wmner a .yheart1 · 0J:0 •
suffered his lith str&amp;g oss m
the ni htca
g
p.

Met s·. R e·ds s l ·z•t Razr

mayer

4·3

or Stoneman 12·91. mer

njght.

,
Thursday sGames
New York at Atlanta night
5!tn Doego at Cho"'!go .
~n Fran at St. Louos mQht
~os Angeles at Houslon noghl
~ttsburgh al Montreal night
'·
!· ,

~

12·6 1and

.Dobson 15..4). 2.

lwl·night.
Thursday's Games
Milwaukee at Oakland night
Chicago at California night
Minnesota at Kansas City night
Cleveland at Washington night
Ball at New York. 2, lwi·night
Detroit at Boston night

·

a run with a single. In .the
Donn Clendenon singled
home the Mets' second run. ·
New York added two more in
the fourth, three in the fifth
and two in the sixth before
they were through. Tim Foli
drove in three runs with a

W"TI,

E~!~~::~~~::~~:t~t~

Blue Fails To Win 20th Game
~
~

By JOE CARNICEW

Low's 6-l.

-:

UPI Sports Writer
Rick Monday drove in four
Vida Blue's magic runs, the last two with a tie~- uch seems to bave vanished. breaking double in the ninth
t_~lue, the talented young .left- inning, to rally the Athletics
P""der who blew the Amencan over Kansas City. The A's
J'.eague apart lor the first four staked Blue to a 2-0 lead on
pwnths of ~e season, seems to 11111-scoring singles by Mike
!'ave lost.his effecti~eness. He Epstein and Gene Tenace in
J&amp;iled ln. hiS second btd to reach fourth but Bob Oliver wiped
lhe ~VIctory plateau Tuesday that out in the same inning with
~h::: the Kansas City Royals a three-run homer and the
ll"m
him for nine hits and Royals boosted llleir lead to 5-2
d.ve runs in five innings. ·m the fifth as Amos Otis'
qatdand managed to rally with double and Lou Piniella's
~e runs in the top of the single, one of his lour hits,
Sinth to win the game 7-li and brought home two runs.
t;.lp Blue avert his filth loss. Monday hit a two-run homer
~ Elsewhere in the American in the seventh and in the ninth,
&lt;.a.
Detr 't beat W••h;na
ecague,
Ol
-~... - singles by Tommy Davis, Dick
jpn 4-2, New York bombed Green and Bert Carnpaneris
~eveland 8-1, Minnesota nipped tied the score and Monday
t':hicago 4-3 in 10 innings, greeted reliever Bill Butler
f.titwaukeeblanked California 2- with his two-run double.
i, and . the 8oston-Baltimore

~Suddenly,

pme was rained out.
National League action,
J.oos Angeles ripped San Franpsco 9-1, Chicago 'shut out
pouston $-G, Cincinnati beat
York 5-2 before losing 9-4, ,
delphia shaded AUanla 3-2,
burgh defeated Montreal
jb-6 and San Diego whipped St.
::

: In

Tommy McCraw scored the
winning run when Aurelio
Rodriguez booted a grounder to
third as Washington rallied for
three runs in the ninth to beat
llle Tigers. Tim Cullen singled
home the tying run before
Rodriguez kicked pinch-hitter
Jeff Burroughs' grounder.
The rally helped Denny
McLain gain his sixth victory
against 15 defeats.
Felipe Alou's single and
Horace Clarke's run-scoring
double ignited an eight-run
second inning that carried Mike
Kekich and the Yankees past
Cleveland. The eight-run inning
was "e Yankees' bi' gges· t
"'
offensive burst in almost two

·
.

his latest loss, 9-4, at the hands
of the New York Mets after the
Cincinnati Reds had won the
opener of a doubleheader 5-2.
Merritt left the game in the
fifth inning with the score 7-0.
He gave · up nine hils before
giving way to Tony Cloninger.
The trouble in the nightcap
started in the very .first inning
o::xx:·x-..-.:-:.~~:.v..:.:...:~:·x-:o:o:•. when Clean Jones drove home

I''

~

·

More sports
thir~
On p age 20

· :.:..s;;;:

In the American League
action, the Yankees routed
Cleveland 8-1, Oakland topped
Kansas City 7-5, Washington
beat Detroit ._2, Milwaukee
blanked California 2-0 and
Minnesota edged Chicago 4-3 in

·

Twins past Chicago. Oliva, who
stroked three hits and had a
two-run double in the eighth to .
tie the score, delivered his hit
after Carew singled off Bart
Johnson.
Lew Krausse and Ken Sanders combined for a six-hitter
and batterymate Paul Ratliff
hit a two-run homer to lead the
Brewers over California.
Krausse scattered four singles
in seven innings and Sanders
llllowed a single and a double lo
nail down the victory for
Krausse. Ratliff's homer came
in the fifth after Jose Cardenal
beat out an infield hit.
Th Bo 1 Bal ·
e son- tunore game,
a crucial one in the Eastern
Di
years.
·vision race, will be played as
Tony Oliva's two-&lt;Jut double part of a twi-night doubleheader
in the loth inning scored Rod tonight.
Carew from first to boost the

Johnny Bench.
Charley Williams allowed the

=
\V

hurdles; and '}Jj7 feet, 5'h
inches by Cary Feldmann of
Seattle, Wash., ··in the javelin
ihrow.
The U.S. also was mighty
happy to still be "alive" in
basketball, thanks to a heartstopping 8I-79 victory over
Brazil in overtime on Bob
McAdoo's 15-foot set shot with
30 seconds to play.

Tourney
Drawmg
•
.

Sunday
Fourteen American Legion
district baseball teams move
onto the Ashland College campus Sunday afternoon to settle the question, " Who has the best
baseball team in Ohio'"
beginning Monday morning.
Among them will be the Meigs
Legion team, which won its first
district title at Athens last
Sa[urday evening with a J().j)
Tomp over Lancaster, after
losing 4-{) in the morning to the
same team.

Team Business Manager Don
Hunnel said the squad will be
quartered on the campus in
Clayton Hall. Drawings for the
double elimination competition
will be cond.ucted at 4:30p.m.
Sunday.

Deril M1de
Us Do It!

- ~ ----

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General Tire Sales
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Reds eight hils as he gained lead to 2-1. Perez then powered
his fourth win of the year. his 20th homer of the year over
Bernie Carbo drove in two runs ·the left center field fence.
with his fourlll homer of the
May cracked his 29th bonier
in the eighth inning. With it be
year.
The game was delayed lwice took over the club's RBI lead,
by rain, 64 minutes. the first 65 to Perez' 64.
time and 22 minutes the
Wayne Simpson, now 3-4,
second.
gave up four hits and the
The Mets were leading 2-0 in Mets' two runs before departthe sixth inning of the first ing in the sixth for Wayne
game when Tony Perez belted Granger, who blanked New
a three-run homer.
York the rest of the way on
one hit. He was credited with
Mets starter Nolan Ryan was his eighth save of the season.
riding along with a one-hitter The Reds finish up their curwhen he ran into a Red born- rent road trip tonight by sendbardment that netted four runs ing Gary Nolan (8-12) against
in the sixth.
the Mets' Gary . Gentry (9-ll).
After giving up an infield They then are idle Thursday,
single to Pete Rose and walk- opening a weekend series with
ing Bernie Carbo, Ryan al- Montreal at Cincinnati Friday
lowed a run-scoring single by night.
Lee May that cut New York's

~

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children, ·Xer!ia ; Mr. and Mrs.
Eddie Price, Paulette, Sbellie
and Tina; Mr. and Mrs. Dotmie
Price, and Mr. and Mrs. RusRII
Riley (Mary Amos), all of
Colurn b us.

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Brenda and l'ommie , New
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Mr . an d Mr s. "'h
""'ve H.ecky an d

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Presenl were Mr. and Mrs.
Arlie Price and Debbie, Linworth ; Mr. and Mrs. P. A.
Morrone, Wayne imd Betty
Anne,, . and a friend, Jenny
Brown, Bexley ; Mr. and Mrs.

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left-bander who has won this
tournament five times in the
past seven years, sailed by
countryman Dick Crealy, 6-1, 61.

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Cliff Drysdale, the third
South African in the $50,000
tournament, also played Tuesday but he escaped the
demonstrators, apparently because it was an afternoon
match. The' third-seeded Drysdale defeated Ray Ruffels of
Australia, 6-1, 7-6.
All seeded players except
Maud won their first round
malches but Tom Okker of the
Netherlands, the fifth seed,
almost was eliminated.
Okker, who has won two
straight tournaments, could not
lind his timing and was one
game away from losing. But he
fought back to defeat Brian
Fairlie of New Zealand, 3-6, 7-6,
6-1. It was Okker's lith straight
match victory on the pro

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By MICHAEL WIDMER
CHESTNUT HILL, Mass.
(UPIJ- "What would you do? "
With that simple but bitter
question, Rob Maud of &amp;.uth
Africa described how he
reacted to the chanting and
yelling of some 15 protesters in
his first round match in the
U.S. pro tennis championships.
Maud lost the match to Allan
Stone of Australia, 6-1, 7-li, a
match the 24-year-&lt;Jld Soulh
African felt he should have
won.
"! just feel sorry for the
spectators," he said. "They pay
money to see a tennis game but
what kind of tennis do they see
under those conditions?"
The demonstration Tuesday
night was the second time in as
many
days that protesters have
But i~ baseball Cuba scored
its big victory over the United attemped to disrupt a match
States 4-3, the revenge victory involving a South African
the Cubans have been seeking player. The NAACP, which
ever since 1967 when they were organized the demonstrations,
upset by the United States in a wants South Africans excluded
playoff for the Pan Am from U.S. sporting evenls until
baseball crown at Portage La foreign blacks can compete in
Prairie in Canada. And the way South Africa and South African
the Yanks lost really hurt- lour blacks can compete outside
errors, including three in the their homeland.
The object of the hooting and
seventh inning when Cuba
shouting
Monday night was
scored the two unearned runs
Frew McMillan, a South
that decided the game.
The U.S. isn't out of the African who lost as expected to
baseball race yet-but now its top-seeded John Newcombe of
only hope is that somebody will Australia.
pin a loss on Cuba.
The sloppy fielding wasted a EXHIBIT TRIO
three homer barrage by the
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI)Yanks4me each by Willie
The Kentucky Colonels anMims of Iowa , Jerry Tabb of nounced Tuesday that they will
Tulsa, and Fred Lynn of
play exhibition games with
Southern California, all wilh the
three top National Basketball
bases empty,
Association teams this yearThe United States was
the Baltimore Bullets, Sept. 22;
favored for more track gold
the Milwaukee Bucks, Oct. 8,
tonight in the pole vault and
and the New York Knicks, Oct.
harmner throw. There are also 9.
finals scheduled in shooting,
The games will give Artis
gymnastics,and weigh tUfting.
Gilmore, the Colonels' highpriced
rookie center, a chance
SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Mr. Val to see action against Wes
won the featured seventh race Unseld, Lew Alcindor and Willis
at Scioto Downs Tuesday night, Reed, three top NBA centers.
a $1,500 pace over one-mile,
paying $12.80, $7.40 and $5 for ITAUAN WINS
his 2:06 J..'i win.
DUBLIN (UP! )-Capt. RaiSecond was Cheekie Vic , mondo D'lnzeo of Italy won the
paying $31.80 and $8, with opening event of the Dublin
Rozzie Thorpe in the show spot, International Horse Show Tuesday on Bellevue in a 19-horse
paying $3.
The daily double combination jumpoll.
of 1-6 returned $41.20 on Marlo Ann Moore of Britain on April
and Henry Blackstone.
Love was second and Bill
Attendance was 5,123 and the Steinkraus of the United States
handle $238,798.
' on Fleet Apple was third.

s-. a

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g

Protesters Mar Action

U. S. Baseballers Lose

CAU, Colombia (UP!) Track and field power finally
enabled the United States to
open a little daylight between
itself and determined Cuba in
•:
Ou
the Pan American Garnes
Spencer
t
medal chase today, but the
•
•
Yanks still are hurting about
Ith Injury
the "big one that got away" in
:: Galllpolls' T
Spen
baseball.
L been lost f;n:seasoncetor Six times in eight events the
!IllS
U.S. flag flew on the center
three Rivers, Canada's Class pole of Pascual Guerrero
~ aprofesai&lt;lllll
team s
..
result of abaseball
knee injury tadiurn ,Tuesday night lor a
,..
VIctory m track-gtvwg the
pilffered about a mmth ago.
Americans 20 gold medals now
::Spencer left Canada last to 11 for Cuba, and 5! total to
jigh~ and before reporting to 39 f Cuba
n.
. ,.;·•t Hospital in em·Clllllll
.
ti And
or three· of those victories
~J!he~e he will undergo surgery were with Pan American
lio his nght knee, he will stop record performances- 11.2 seJEreovernightand visit with his conds by Iris Davis of Pompano
Parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Beach, Fla., in the women's
~cer,I32Pine St. Spencer is 100-meterdash ·, 49.1 seconds by
~
.. e in Galli""';.
""~ late Wed- Ralph Mann of Long Beach,
Calif., in the men's 400-rneter

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ror 1ta p•l , rac:torJ (187!1)
"""Ita f!lua .....U, (w0). A
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emD'"r. Bedr&amp;•CiiUII caiai'

Amos Family Reunion Held Near Columbus

·t tiUr d. ... b
7
Rod&lt;
!I'm A - . . .
In a IIIIUJ
' ;,r. BackCOLU!IIBUS, Ohio - The
IJ1IO!!Id Beqo. C
ltet • -family mmioo was beld
lolrl. J.G.F. JH
-. Slon?ay, July 25, at the Darby
675-l26&amp;.
OM Mtbupolitan Park near
.·
au. Vl
bore with 441 mem!Jers present
Gree~~g~. Y - J b . Slle -Cif wbma"'•diJJoel'wasenJO
· yed..
tbe new lift ·npllifw tfDUar
u.ti
&lt;lam-jlllt a1 6e
, -...
1laere 'l'l!re games in the
tkOII Clf 111e Cloio Riwer ari- allernoon. cbildren enjoyed
ptiGaol oq-. ""allfoll- swilcs and olheuides, and the

.

�i

"d
M
. r." R,.J1, .N am·ed P·. lt"LJSt e·nt·.
Fun ~:with foods
.): 0/ Middleport Garden Club ~~:.:n~~!~~ ::~~:b/Mrs~Jer~=._:.._punch_land_._:_a_'·gues_Mrs_t:_GeGI'g
·~.

,•

daughter.
In response to roll call
memb(n named • plant they
plan to move in August. Mrs. M.
L. French, program chairman,

I ~

:',:

Waggoner.
A low P.ink and white
arrangementusinggladioli,.day
lilies and zinnias made by Mrs.
Roller centered the refresh.

James Arnold and Mrs. E. M. ·
WoodwithMrs.C. A. Emmisha ·
contributing hostess. Mrs.
Hnrky Pi esided al the coffee
serviceandMrs.MichaeiFryat

by Charlene Hoeflich

·
Mrs. Michael Fry of Cheshire
iS the new president of the
Middleport Garden Club.
.
Officers were elected for the
1971·72 year at a meeting of the
ClubMondaynlghtalthehome
of Mrs. Malcolm Roller. Other
officers named were Miss Nellie
Zerkle, vice president; Mrs.
Walter Hnyes, 'secretary; and
Mrs. James Arnold, treasurer.
Plans were made dW'ing the
meeting for the club to enter
arrangements in the Meigs

.•·. 'be Cookie Bake-Off at the Ohio State Fair.
f
Grandmothers or grandfathers, if you're

over 60 you are
~ ·; eliiJNe to ccxnpete with. a favorite recipe in ooe of the three
· :; ealegorles of COOides - crisp, soft and bar.
:•
The contest is a part of the senior cimena' programs al the
•; ; stateFairandallbalrlngsuppliesandingredientsareprovidedby
··lbeDivislooofAdmlnistrali00 Ag;na 0 ftheOhi0 Departrn tof
:: . :: Mental Hygiene and Correction.
on - ...
en •
,: ,
Judging of the cookies is done by professional home
:: 'lCOilomlsls frtm the Colmnbus and Southern Ohio Electric. Co.
: . Prizes ar~ presented daily at the award ceremooles held in tbe
,,
•; aenlor citizen tents and the cookies are served at tile receptions.
Advancereglstrationofcookiebakersisnecessaryandwe're
·: .
' ; anxlousforsomeMeigsCountianstojoininthefun.
·:
All you have to do is write to the Divisloo of Administration on
:: · Aging, Room
State Departmenos Building, Columbus, to
• register for the
That agency will send you complete
, ; ~; lnformalloo. Tbls Is the fifth year for the cookie bake-d£.
,• .:
lfyouplantoctmpete,letushearfromyou.
•:•;·
•, ·
.: •
SUCH A NICE NOTE this week from Mrs. Don Rea· She
: ; • : suggested a new way ol preparing stuffed green peppers
) hi h
right
pi tiful d less
sl
·(
: : •:: mangoes w c are
now so en
an
expen ve
;: .:: tban at other times of the year,
Mrs. Rea says that while most people stuff peppers with
:
; :. bamburger and rice, her family prefers something a lilUe dif.
•' · ferent.
'
·
,, .
Hel' IIIIUe&amp;li&lt;ll Is for left-over beef roast, potatoes and
:: ,; carrolaput through the food chopper with a large onion and mixed
:: . : witbahalfcupof gravy. Mrs. Rea says that wbenshe buys a beef
, · routshegeiBonebigenoughtobaveleft.oversandthatshecooks
: ' · enough potatoes and carrots around it to assure they won't all be

::;::; . Wash and cut off the tops of peppers removing seeds. Place
: : ~: them alme in a pan ,ol salted water and bring to a boil, cooking
: .;. justenoughtoheattlrough. Thendrainandcool.
: ::'
Next step, Mrs. Rea says, is to put the .stuffing into the pep- .
:: 1- pers,put,littledabofcatsuponeachone,placeinabakingdish
:: .; cr pan. Add a little water in the bottom to keep them from
;: · slicking.
·
Cook t 400 d
bou
h
: .;
a
egrees a t 111 ours or until browned weD. A
;: meal all alooe and It sounds delicious. Mrs. Rea says for ber
" :: family she tops thestuffedpeppersoffwithappledumplings.
" .:
Anyooe else with pepper recipes?
,,.. '•
.'
•' ' "'
RHUBARB SALAD, doesn't that sound good!
',: ""·
Mrs. Garen Stansbury passed aloog the recipe to us this week.
: ~ , If you like rhubarb, you'll love this salad.
' I

,.,.A.

;:j :

•n
3 cups diced rhubarb, lit cup sUgar, ¥.t cup of water. Cook

:. ·: ; abcutfivemlnutes. Add two small packages of jello (strawberry
:: ;:: « rupberry ). Let cyol and then add one cup m diced celery. Chill.
"'*".
t

' -~
I I -4.,

::-~· Roy Smiths End Western Holiday
::
.;
':
::
;:
;:

:; Mr. and Mrs. Roy Smith and
•: sons Mike and Don have
~ returned from a three-week trip
... West, going especially to visit
;;; their son-in-law and daughter,
•Mr, and Mrs. Karl Russell, and
:! ,; daughter, Melissa Jlt Yuma,

: •: Ariz.
::
::
;,:Jooo•
~

·

Enroute there they visited My

ERIC ARNOLD BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Nelson
• Arnold ( Unda Moore) of 1834
~: Summitt St., Portsmouth, are
• : announcing the birth of a son,
- Eric Nelson. The eight pound,
.,.; nine ounce infant was born Aug.
"": 1 at the Holzer Medical Center.
. -i; Mfs. Edgar Arnold, Cave St.,
...,: Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs.
.~· Russell Moore, Syracuse, are
•: grandparents. Mrs. J. C. Moore
· of Lockney, W. Va. and Mrs.
.,, Howard Ball of Sturnptown, W.
.,.;. Va. are maternal greatgrandmothers.

Old Kentucky Home, Carlsbad
CavernsinNewMexico,theOld
Western Town at Tombstone,
Ariz., and Grand Canyon. At
Lake Hamilton, Ark., they were
guests of Mr. and Mr•· Charlie
Sargent. In Caliiornia, they
spent a day at Disneyland, saw
the Petrified Forest and the
Painted Desert.
Coming home they were
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Theo
Kasper , Rossville, Ill., and
Herman Kasper and family at
Dayton. The family traveled
6,000 miles.

WIG WASH
The synthetic wigs, which
are especially helpful after a
day at the beach, should be
washed in cold water with a
•·ery mUd detergent as you
w·ould your fine lingerie.

WANNA BIG DEAL?
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·
Classes for oils, acrylics,
water
colors, drawings,
charcoals and pastels have been
· 1 d d 1 th
·
me u e · n
e Amateur
Painting Division for exhibits at
the annual Meigs County Fair to
be held this mqnth at the Rock
Springs fairgrounds. William J .
Mayer Is ~gain superintendent
of the department.
The only entry fee for exhibit
in the division is the purchase of
a membership ticket. All en·
tries must, however, "'be
registered with the secretary at
the office on the fairgrounds
before 4p.m. on Thursday, Aug.
12.
The rules specify thai no
nwnber or tube paintings will
be accepted and that all painlings must come equipped with
some way of hanging them.
Only one entry can be made by
the same person in each class.
Pre~iums wiU be awarded in

Matlack Reunion
At Rising Park
In liincaster
LANCASTER- The Matlack
reunion was held at Rising Park
here on July 25.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Lowell MaUack, Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Matlack and children,
Sharon, Carla and Victoria,
Stewart; Mf. and Mrs. Hardy
Roush, Marysville; Mr. and
Mrs, John Arbaugh, Tuppers
Plains; Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow
Robinson, Woodstock, Va.;
Mrs . Josephine Matlack
McGhee, Pomeroy; .Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Brooks, Mans·
field; Mrs. Freda Bean and
Mrs. Dwight Kim, Guysville;
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Kinder and
children, Kelly and Kim,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Barkie and children, Charles,
Leslie, and William, Cincinnati;
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Taylor and
children, Kenneth and William,
local; Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
Poller and children, Susan and
James, Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Matlack and Mi-.
Emile F. Matlack, Parkers·
burg; Mrs. Jeanie Matlack and
chil(ren, Patsy and Wllliam;
Mr . and Mrs. Floyd Matlack,
Sr., Mr. and Mrs . Floyd
Matlack, Jr., Mr. Van Matlack,
.Greenfield; Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Humphrey and children, Ailsa
and Lon Eric, Newark; Mrs.
Mabel Sindle and son, Elwood,
Springfield, and Mr. and Mrs .
Virgil Roush, Chester..
The next reunion wiU be held
next July 30 at the same place,
dinner promptly at 12:30.

both first and second places in divisions there are classes for
each of the 19 classes of the landscape from nature, portrait
show. They range from $2 to 75 from life, still life, marine
study, flower study, .and animal
cents.
,
Tbe divisions for exhibit are study.
There Is also a class for
oil or acrylic painting, water
color, drawing or charcoal or modern art exhibits, and a best
pastel. In each of these three of show award to he given.

992·2238
Middleport

PICNIC ENJOYED
A picnic was enjoyed
Saturday at the Ohio River
camp site of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Sauer. Attending were Mrs.
Dorothy Durgee, Jeff and Ann,
Pittsburgh; Kenneth Sauer,
Sunnydale, Calif.; Mr . and Mrs.
Danny Brown, Robert, Joey,
Debbie, Megan and Dan , Mrs.
Helen Shuler, Dick Sauer, Mr.
and Mrs . George Buchanan,
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Crooks
Pam and Cindy, Mrs. Carolyn'
Satterfield and daughter, Amy,
Lois Ann Sauer, and Dennis
Gilkey.

Hair
Spray ·

Milk
Magnesia

•

Miss Rose Marie Hackett,
brid~lect of MarVin Fry, was
guest of honor at a surprise
luncheon and· kitchen shower
Saturday noon at the home of
Mrs. Charles Jordan in Wor·
thington.
Decorations featured
"Matilda," a doll replica in
utensils. A pink and white color

Middleport

""

)of':, rll-t'\0
IJILI'

scheme was carried out with a
taU centerpiece and streamers
accenting the gift table. Floral
arrangements centered the
luncheon tables.
Guests were Mrs. Karen
Faust, Peebles; Mrs. Joseph
Bright, Lucas; Mrs. Wesley
Ffy, Mrs. Paul Smart, Mrs.
George Hackett, Sr., Miss
Melanie Hackett, and Mrs.
George Hackett, Jr ., Middleport; Miss Cindy Bright,
Miss Paula Johnston, and Miss
Judy Milan, Columbus.

1------·
1.89

29'
1.29

250
Aspirins

utnl

I
LI-

Sprav'I

Bufferin
83~

49~

95

~

Others presenting gifts to t-----~"
Miss Hackett were Miss
Melanie Ravely, Mrs. Manning
Kloes, Mrs. George Siddall,
Mr. and Mrs. Wtlliam Houck Mrs. Yvonne Scally, and Mrs.
and daughters, Beth, Carol and Don Mullen.
Lynn, Marion, visited over the
weekend with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Perry Mitch. They
came especially for the HouckSheets wedding at Gallipolis on
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mitch,
Wheeling, were visitors last
week with Mr. and Mrs. Perry
Mitch and Mr. and Mrs. John
Seines.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold George
and children, Brian, Brent and
David, and Mrs. L. W. McComas returned Tuesday from
a visit in Woodbridge, Va. with
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Me·
Comas and children, Dianne,
Patty and Mike. Highlights of
the trip included a tour of
Washington, D. C., a visit to the
Baby Animal Zoo at Wood·
bridge , and drive through
Maryland, Virginia, and
Delaware to Rehobath Beach
for a swim in the ocean. Tbe
Edward McComas family
accompanied Mr. and Mrs.
George and children and Mrs.
McComas on the trip to the
beach.
Dr. and Mrs. Stephen Coats
and children, Sean and Wayne,
are here visiting his mother,
Good Sizes. Prices range from $2.18 to $7.50
Mrs. Charles Gaskill. After
vacationing during the month of
August they will go to F1int,
Mich. where Dr. Coats will be a
resident surgeon in the F1int
. By Ked
Osteopathic Hospital. Dr. Coats
recently received his discharge
Broken Sizes in Beige, Black, Navy. Light blue
from the U.S. Army. He had a
year's tour of duty in Vietnam .

Gillette
fOamy

Assorted

Tablels

Mtss 11j
uackett111
u

'

100

Personal Notes

THEOOORUS COUNCIL 17,
D. of A., 7:30p.m. IOOF ball,
Inspection. Members to take
cookies or sandwiches
.
SUNDAY
GREEN • OGDIN • CASI'ER
reunion, Aug. 8 at the Colmnhia
Chapel Christian Church
Sunda Basket dinner t
•
mJ'uAL WEBER ~~
Sunday at home of Mr. and Mrs.
~: Roger Gaul, Sumner Road,
• dinner at noon; Norman Weber,
president; Rosemury Keller,
ireasurer.
FAMILIES OF Abrsham and
Mary Will Bahr reunion Sunday
at Forked Run Lake, basket
dinner, 12:30 p.m.
CARMEL METHODIST

FRIDAY, AUGUST 6, STARTS 9 A.M.

Y2 Price

1 Group

PORTLAND - Coast Guard
Petty Officer Third Class Dale
F. Profiitt, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Dale R. Proffitt, is deployed to
the central Atlantic aboard the
high endurance Coast Guard
Cutter Spencer, homeported in
New York City. The ship will be
stationed in mid-Atlantic for
over a month carrying out
duties in oceanography and
meteorology, serving as a
navigational point for trans·
Atlantic aircraft, and maintain
search and rescue readiness in
case of an aircraft or surface
vessel emergency.
He is a 1968 graduate of
Southern
Local High School and
DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Wiles of attended Marshall University.
LaW' a are announcing the birth
of a daughter, Sarah Lee, born
Monday , Aug . 2, at the
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital at
Athens. The infant weighed
COVER UP
eight pounds, 12 ounces, and is If you've decided to go
Mr. and Mrs . Wiles' first child. bare-legged, try the new
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. transparent bndy br.onzers.
Otis McClintock, Racine, and The leg make-up covers
Mr. and Mrs. Orval Wiles close-to-the-surface v e i'n s
Pomeroy. Mrs. Lillian Jividen : and all those other little im·
Racine, Mrs. Lillian Pierce perlechons. You can also use
Pomer
d M
' the body bronzers on the
oy' an . rs. Ann back and shoulders or other
Lowdenback, Yakima, Wash. parts of the body vou wish
are great-grandmothers.
.to, expose.
·
·

,I

........
HoapltallQ': Tl!&amp;ldle-Wolll!d lll!!de..-.
.ll!d8al: ...... Lie Glbbl,
chalrl!llll.

lira. Oltle Rwlb,
Chalrmu, lin.. · RoY JclDet,

co.a.aum..

FWldQ': lira. Uo,ydRwlb
IDII llrL C&amp;rroll Adlml.
Artltdc Clerkl: 111'1. llall·
aid · Blmpri:Der 'and lira.
Rulb .Krodel. .
.Horticulture Clerka: Mn.
Cbeller WMYer IUid lira. JoiiD

C'"tlft&lt;atlcll: Mn. n..rl
Slxlao IIIII 111'1. Jobn Colllna.
Emrilll: ~~n: Ray Pro(fttt,
111'1. JluQid ~r 111d
Mri.Jack~.

G. F,
J...._ IUid Mra.lira.MelJ.Clark.
~\)tii'Mt:

BpopiR'!V: All C1llb

CallODl.

~

Kingsbury News, Notes
Swearinger and Bobby visited
with Mr. and Mrsc Nev White
and Mrs. Myrtle White of
Madison, W. Va.
' Mrs. Faye Pratt visited
recently with her sister, Mrs.
Louise Harrison.
Mrs. Uoyd King and children
who were visiting Mr. King who
is employed in F1orida, have
returned to their home here.
Richard Dean and Peggy
Imboden of Middleport, John
Walter Dean and Pam Garren
were all at Pataskala, 0.
Sunday to visit Mr·i and Mrs.
Walter Terrell and Billy and
Vickie Kendell and Anita
Watkins.
Rev. Donald Brickles, who
has been Ill and underwent
surgery, is somewhat im·
proved.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl
visited her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Harrison, recently.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean
visited recently with Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Paynter at Car·
penter.
Miss Evaline Arnold and Mr.
Ronald McNally were married
Saturday evening at the Chester
Church of God. They are living
at Amesville, Ohio.

Sunday School 10 a.m., dinner
at noon, afternoon services 1:30
p.m. Guest speaker the Rev.
Carl Hicks of Zanesville.
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
· ·
!tplsston, . Bald
Knobs,
Homecommg Sunday· Sunday
School 9:30 a.m., basket ~er
at noon. Rev. 0 . G. McKinney
guest speaker in cluirge of
aHe~noon . services. Speci~l
stngmg. Bissell Brothers ~
also be fea~ured . Public IS m·
vlted.
ANNUAL AARON Fry family
reunion Sunday at Pond Hill,
Letart, W. Va. Bring basket
dinner starting at 12 noon. In
case of rain reunion will be held
at Salem Community building .
Everyone welcome.

Meigs 4-H Onb News
THE POMEROY Messups
mel July 26 at the Wamsley
Iitme with eight members and
ooe advisor .present. The 4-H
club is going on a camping trip
and having a mother's meeting
on August 9th. They ~
about the Style Revue and a fair
booth. June Ami and Alice
Wamsley served refreslunents .
Tbe next meeting is ~ed
for August 9th at Nellie Wright'$
honte. - June Ann Wamsley.
THE MOONDUSTERS mel
twice recently both at Mrs.
Harold Sauer's ~. 'Jbere
were two advisors and ten
members present.
They plan to go skating and to
visit the salt worts. The leaders

The moon is between its fli'St
quarter and full pllase.
The morning stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn .
The evening stars are Mereu·
·ry and Jupiter.
r-----------------------------------------~-.~--,
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Leo.
Scottish comedian Sir Harry
Lauder Wi!S born Aug. 4, lil'/0.
On this day in history :
In 1735 freedom of the press
was established when John
Zenger, publisher of a New
York City newspaper, was
acquitted on libel charges.
In 1914 the United States
issued a proclamation of
neutrality in World War I.
A thought for today: Scottish
Orlt:lnated Practice
comedian Sir Hnrry Lauder
The
practice of using the
said, "Oh, it's nice to get up in
Bible in administering an
the morning, but it's nicer to oath was originallld by Jus·
stay in bed."
tinian, the great Byzantine
emperor, in 532, who took
the oath with a book of tbe
Gospels in his hand.

handcrafted

ALL 1971

TV and Stereo

At

&amp; Understanding
We Deliver Flo~
Around The

Ingels!

Comer
Around The

World

Dudley's Aolid
59 N. Sec- 51.
Middleport, 0.
992·

Save

BIG

ON All OUR SALE SHOES
BUY 1 PAIR AT REGULAR PRICE

BRIGHT EYES
Had a hard night last
night? Don't let those puffy
bags under your eyes be a
dead give-away. Before going to bed apply cotton pads
soaked with heated olive oil
beneath the eyes and fasten
with adhesive t~pe . By morn ..
mg no one will know . you
didn't get your full eight·
hour beauty sleep.

While

SECOND PAIR

..

They Last!

OF EQUAL VALUE

OR LESS •••••••

Ingels Furniture

!. Women's Dress and S(lort Shoes

2. Men's, Women~ and aa,s' Tennis

OPEN FRI. &amp;SAT. NIGHtS
MIDDlEPORT .

TRY DRY .

If you've been using a
shampoo for normal hair,
but your hair has been somewhat limp and lifeless lately,
try using a shampoo for dry
hair every other shampoo.
This will help combat the
dryness caused by summer
sun and salt water.

I'«&lt;MEN'S HMDBMiS, Sumllllll &amp; SIRw --'n price

Chapman's SHOES
PCMB'OY

MAIN ST.

l

Mens and Bars Oxfords
&amp;Loafers
CUBE STEAK

SUMMER SHOES

Original Price

Round Steak

c

Panty Hose

Broken Sizes

lb.

One size fits all

69 Pair 2 pair $1·
4

AT

111

2

lb.

':

•1.49

SLICED
BACON

All Summer Straw Handbags

lb.
New Crisp
'

1f2 price

Nice ' N Ute

COnAGE

IS

30 Count

79$

NICE 'N UTE
ICE MILK 'n gaL

Limited Number of Grab bags at
*1·00 Exact Size Mailed

.

Frosty Acres. Sliced
10 Oz.
Pkg.

3

.

Oz-31~

QT.

'

Where Shoes are sensibly Priced

'

MIDDUPORT. 0.

JAR

GOOD AT BICi 3

'

CABBAGE
lb.

9$

23' .

'5 9'

---:----, ORANGE OR
GRAPE DRINK

• Pillsbury

IISCUI1S

.
· Apple
V
Old
t
Jrgtma Blackberry

~~=~y 3 1~a~·89~

~JELLY
' PINTO BEANS

·.INSTANT COFFEE
lOot

CELERY

'

Wagner's

IIAIIELL ....

I

79

COOL WHIP

Crtn.

SHOE 101 ·

Michigan

STRAWBERRIES

--- ------·-

'

Ritht
Re'""ed'
To
LI•it
Quantities

RUTLAND
STORE

FRESH PRODUCE

ACA

.:

ATIIUTUIIII

•

Superior

PLAIN~

lYONS -MARKET

GROUND BEEF

Final Sale

~

CROSS SONS

lb.1.19

White and Natura I

Tennis Oxfords &amp;Shoes

L

Now

~palhJ FliJwels
Messengers of Love

FLY TO 11JlSA
Mrs. Karen Lee Russell,
Tuppers Plains, and Mrs. Janet
Kaye Compson, Mason, Dew by
jet to Tulsa , Okla., recently to
visit their sister, Miss Irene
Cooper of Syracuse, who is a
student at Oral Roberts
University. The three returned
to Ohio by car. Miss Cooper will
return to Tulsa on Aug. 23 to
resume her studies at the
University on Aug. 26.

3 LOCATIONS

EXTRA SPECIAL

N.· 2ncl. AVE.
''

..ll

Includes a Few Discontinued Hush Puppies

Original Price

Shoe Shine Sprar
$1.111 Can or 2 Cans $1 ·59

dlecUd !be project books. Joy
Sauer was in charge of
recnalion and MarY and Joy
Sauer were in charge of
refreshments. MarY Sauer gave

•3·00

Women's Colored Grasshopper

Proffiu on Duty
In Mid-Atlantic

-

a demonStration on different were two advllors! and nine
waystoflnishseams.Therewas members pr nt.TIIe minulel
a special report given by Patty were read and IJIPi'OYed. They
Dyer entitled Safety in the plan to go swimming and havu
Home. - Mary Sauer.
picnic at Royal oat Park'
THE TUPPERS PLAINS 1August 7th. Sonia Carr and Beth
Girls met July 71 at lifts . . Headly were In char~e of
Olatles Carr's home. There recreation. - Teresa Buckley:

Fall &amp;Winter Shoes for Women

All This Year's Sandals
~

m..,,.,

Friday

MIDDLEPORT MERCHANTS
SIDEWALK SALE

Women's Soft Moccasins

-

dal!ta.

7)

Several from the Carleton
Church attended Bible Camp
this past week. Couns•1nrs
were, Harold White, Grace
King, Mary King, Geneva King,
Karla Beal. Others taking part
were Helen King and David
King, Rodney Carl, Denise
Brickles, Mary Perkins. Also
there was Mrs. Delores King
who was one of the cooks.
Mr. and Mrs. Nev White and
Mrs. Myrtle White (who is
spending some time with the
White family) all visited Mr.
White's aunt at Dundas, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Butson
were Sunday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Rowland Dais.
Scott Harrison spent two
nights recenUy with his grand·
mother, Mrs. Louise Harrison.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. John Dean, John and
Richard, were Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Markins, Racine; Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Ried, Virginia,
David and Rodney of
Pataskala; Mrs. Anna Mae
Terrill and Juanita of Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs. Garold Gilkey and
daughters of Athens and Mr.
and Mrs. William Drake of
BRICKLAYERS LOCAL 32 Colwnhus.
meeting, 8 p.m. Thursday at
Mr . . and Mrs . Robert
Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion Hall.
ChW'ch Homecoming Sunday.

894

$1.49

Small group of Men's and Boys

r~~:.

SALE·

/f,

·

DDUD.DD OAT
RDUDIUUJ ~

SIDEWALK

1•--------w ·

Gille. •

TUF8DAY
ANNUAL Pomeroy comDiw.Uty Bible school, 6:30 to 1:36
p.m.'Monday through Friday at
Pomeroy Junicr High Scbool.
.Open to all young ~le. three
years old through junior high
school age.
MIDDLEPORT
Masonic
Lodge 383, F and AM, Tuesday,
7:30p.m. at temple.
POMEROY Chapter 186,
OES, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday,
regular meeting at Masonic
Temple:
MEIGS TEMPLE, Pythian
Sisters, 7:30 Tuesday at the
Legion hall, Middleport. Mrs.
Helen Latlwlr, East Palestine,
grand chief of Oblo, to visit.
WEDNF.IDAY
POMEROY LODGE 164
F&amp;AM regular stated meeting
Wednesday 7:30 p.m. All
Master Masons invited.
TIIUIISDAY
OPERATING engineers
asked to make special effort to
attend the special meeting
Thursday, 7:30 p.m., at
American Legion Hall, Athens.
REGULAR MEETING
Evangeline Chapter 172, OES,
Middleport, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, at temple. All members
welcome.
LAUREL CLIFF Health Club
7:30p.m. Thursday at home of
Nellie Tracy.
SPECIAL MEETING
Southern Local School District
Band· Boosters, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at Racine High
School. Seventh and eighth
grade band parents urged to
attend.

c17,.

~titioo.

' ...

·
·
displayed. One used yellow
marigolds in a crystal contsiner
and the second ond was a
modern design using an ebony
oriental bust from Nigeria for
the container with large white
pompon chrysanthemums,
magnolia buds and foliage.
Also on display at the meeting
was a porch arrangement of tall
white Mexican basket filled ·
with large brightly colored
arlificlal Mexican flowers, a
Mrs Roll fr · h
·gift to
·
er om er

(Colltiilued from page

Cafendar

A
A
IUSSes
nnounced fior rt;StS

1105,

..

·
County Fair flower show. .The
class drawn by the club is 53 or
"School Lunch," arrangements
including fruits or vegetables in
the second show.
"Swnmer Harvest of An·
nuals" was the theme of the
arrangements oI the mooth
made by Mrs. Carl Horky,
president. · She used red, pink
and yellow snapdragons in a
gray pottery container.
Arrangements made by Mrs.
John Kinca1'd were also

Tbe Alinanac
By Ualted Pltis Iaternalloul
Today is Wednesday, Aug. 4,
the 216th day of tm.

Fair Show Theme

Social ~

...
•

For you ojdsters who are still young at heart, why not get intO

:: ..: eaten.

- TlleDallv 9entlneUAt.lepart.Pwbeioy, O.,August 4, 1971

.

99~

_....

•••
1-7-71

.,.nolNG

Teen
Queen

. Cut Green
Stokely

J

'

' . I
. j'

fD SIJII BAKED

4

303
tans

89~

PAN ROLLS

4

4 II. 49~ .

.

.

BAKERY BUYS

15

Cautt'
......
,,

�i

"d
M
. r." R,.J1, .N am·ed P·. lt"LJSt e·nt·.
Fun ~:with foods
.): 0/ Middleport Garden Club ~~:.:n~~!~~ ::~~:b/Mrs~Jer~=._:.._punch_land_._:_a_'·gues_Mrs_t:_GeGI'g
·~.

,•

daughter.
In response to roll call
memb(n named • plant they
plan to move in August. Mrs. M.
L. French, program chairman,

I ~

:',:

Waggoner.
A low P.ink and white
arrangementusinggladioli,.day
lilies and zinnias made by Mrs.
Roller centered the refresh.

James Arnold and Mrs. E. M. ·
WoodwithMrs.C. A. Emmisha ·
contributing hostess. Mrs.
Hnrky Pi esided al the coffee
serviceandMrs.MichaeiFryat

by Charlene Hoeflich

·
Mrs. Michael Fry of Cheshire
iS the new president of the
Middleport Garden Club.
.
Officers were elected for the
1971·72 year at a meeting of the
ClubMondaynlghtalthehome
of Mrs. Malcolm Roller. Other
officers named were Miss Nellie
Zerkle, vice president; Mrs.
Walter Hnyes, 'secretary; and
Mrs. James Arnold, treasurer.
Plans were made dW'ing the
meeting for the club to enter
arrangements in the Meigs

.•·. 'be Cookie Bake-Off at the Ohio State Fair.
f
Grandmothers or grandfathers, if you're

over 60 you are
~ ·; eliiJNe to ccxnpete with. a favorite recipe in ooe of the three
· :; ealegorles of COOides - crisp, soft and bar.
:•
The contest is a part of the senior cimena' programs al the
•; ; stateFairandallbalrlngsuppliesandingredientsareprovidedby
··lbeDivislooofAdmlnistrali00 Ag;na 0 ftheOhi0 Departrn tof
:: . :: Mental Hygiene and Correction.
on - ...
en •
,: ,
Judging of the cookies is done by professional home
:: 'lCOilomlsls frtm the Colmnbus and Southern Ohio Electric. Co.
: . Prizes ar~ presented daily at the award ceremooles held in tbe
,,
•; aenlor citizen tents and the cookies are served at tile receptions.
Advancereglstrationofcookiebakersisnecessaryandwe're
·: .
' ; anxlousforsomeMeigsCountianstojoininthefun.
·:
All you have to do is write to the Divisloo of Administration on
:: · Aging, Room
State Departmenos Building, Columbus, to
• register for the
That agency will send you complete
, ; ~; lnformalloo. Tbls Is the fifth year for the cookie bake-d£.
,• .:
lfyouplantoctmpete,letushearfromyou.
•:•;·
•, ·
.: •
SUCH A NICE NOTE this week from Mrs. Don Rea· She
: ; • : suggested a new way ol preparing stuffed green peppers
) hi h
right
pi tiful d less
sl
·(
: : •:: mangoes w c are
now so en
an
expen ve
;: .:: tban at other times of the year,
Mrs. Rea says that while most people stuff peppers with
:
; :. bamburger and rice, her family prefers something a lilUe dif.
•' · ferent.
'
·
,, .
Hel' IIIIUe&amp;li&lt;ll Is for left-over beef roast, potatoes and
:: ,; carrolaput through the food chopper with a large onion and mixed
:: . : witbahalfcupof gravy. Mrs. Rea says that wbenshe buys a beef
, · routshegeiBonebigenoughtobaveleft.oversandthatshecooks
: ' · enough potatoes and carrots around it to assure they won't all be

::;::; . Wash and cut off the tops of peppers removing seeds. Place
: : ~: them alme in a pan ,ol salted water and bring to a boil, cooking
: .;. justenoughtoheattlrough. Thendrainandcool.
: ::'
Next step, Mrs. Rea says, is to put the .stuffing into the pep- .
:: 1- pers,put,littledabofcatsuponeachone,placeinabakingdish
:: .; cr pan. Add a little water in the bottom to keep them from
;: · slicking.
·
Cook t 400 d
bou
h
: .;
a
egrees a t 111 ours or until browned weD. A
;: meal all alooe and It sounds delicious. Mrs. Rea says for ber
" :: family she tops thestuffedpeppersoffwithappledumplings.
" .:
Anyooe else with pepper recipes?
,,.. '•
.'
•' ' "'
RHUBARB SALAD, doesn't that sound good!
',: ""·
Mrs. Garen Stansbury passed aloog the recipe to us this week.
: ~ , If you like rhubarb, you'll love this salad.
' I

,.,.A.

;:j :

•n
3 cups diced rhubarb, lit cup sUgar, ¥.t cup of water. Cook

:. ·: ; abcutfivemlnutes. Add two small packages of jello (strawberry
:: ;:: « rupberry ). Let cyol and then add one cup m diced celery. Chill.
"'*".
t

' -~
I I -4.,

::-~· Roy Smiths End Western Holiday
::
.;
':
::
;:
;:

:; Mr. and Mrs. Roy Smith and
•: sons Mike and Don have
~ returned from a three-week trip
... West, going especially to visit
;;; their son-in-law and daughter,
•Mr, and Mrs. Karl Russell, and
:! ,; daughter, Melissa Jlt Yuma,

: •: Ariz.
::
::
;,:Jooo•
~

·

Enroute there they visited My

ERIC ARNOLD BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Nelson
• Arnold ( Unda Moore) of 1834
~: Summitt St., Portsmouth, are
• : announcing the birth of a son,
- Eric Nelson. The eight pound,
.,.; nine ounce infant was born Aug.
"": 1 at the Holzer Medical Center.
. -i; Mfs. Edgar Arnold, Cave St.,
...,: Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs.
.~· Russell Moore, Syracuse, are
•: grandparents. Mrs. J. C. Moore
· of Lockney, W. Va. and Mrs.
.,, Howard Ball of Sturnptown, W.
.,.;. Va. are maternal greatgrandmothers.

Old Kentucky Home, Carlsbad
CavernsinNewMexico,theOld
Western Town at Tombstone,
Ariz., and Grand Canyon. At
Lake Hamilton, Ark., they were
guests of Mr. and Mr•· Charlie
Sargent. In Caliiornia, they
spent a day at Disneyland, saw
the Petrified Forest and the
Painted Desert.
Coming home they were
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Theo
Kasper , Rossville, Ill., and
Herman Kasper and family at
Dayton. The family traveled
6,000 miles.

WIG WASH
The synthetic wigs, which
are especially helpful after a
day at the beach, should be
washed in cold water with a
•·ery mUd detergent as you
w·ould your fine lingerie.

WANNA BIG DEAL?
.....
..:

8-Used Refrigerators
Apt. Size

$2goo to $34111

.·'·
•.•. .
••

....

'
'

, t.-".

•

.f... .

3-G.E. Dryers

t....

2-Maytag Dryers

.•••.;

••"• •

+••j.·...

,.
",.••

1-Maytag Washer

,. .

1-G.E. Washer
..
,,.:,.r..

'. J,....•'

Aulomalk

$75

Automatic

3-21" Console T.Vs
Sunray

••

2-Gas. Ranges
CLOSE OUT

GE AIR CONDITIONERS
1- 8,000
1-12,000

$200.00
$249.00

110 Volt
110 Volt

H&amp;R FIRESTONE
N. 2nd ·

~eg.

SAVE ON THESE BUYS
fRIDAY &amp;

79C

·
Classes for oils, acrylics,
water
colors, drawings,
charcoals and pastels have been
· 1 d d 1 th
·
me u e · n
e Amateur
Painting Division for exhibits at
the annual Meigs County Fair to
be held this mqnth at the Rock
Springs fairgrounds. William J .
Mayer Is ~gain superintendent
of the department.
The only entry fee for exhibit
in the division is the purchase of
a membership ticket. All en·
tries must, however, "'be
registered with the secretary at
the office on the fairgrounds
before 4p.m. on Thursday, Aug.
12.
The rules specify thai no
nwnber or tube paintings will
be accepted and that all painlings must come equipped with
some way of hanging them.
Only one entry can be made by
the same person in each class.
Pre~iums wiU be awarded in

Matlack Reunion
At Rising Park
In liincaster
LANCASTER- The Matlack
reunion was held at Rising Park
here on July 25.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Lowell MaUack, Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Matlack and children,
Sharon, Carla and Victoria,
Stewart; Mf. and Mrs. Hardy
Roush, Marysville; Mr. and
Mrs, John Arbaugh, Tuppers
Plains; Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow
Robinson, Woodstock, Va.;
Mrs . Josephine Matlack
McGhee, Pomeroy; .Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Brooks, Mans·
field; Mrs. Freda Bean and
Mrs. Dwight Kim, Guysville;
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Kinder and
children, Kelly and Kim,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Barkie and children, Charles,
Leslie, and William, Cincinnati;
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Taylor and
children, Kenneth and William,
local; Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
Poller and children, Susan and
James, Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Matlack and Mi-.
Emile F. Matlack, Parkers·
burg; Mrs. Jeanie Matlack and
chil(ren, Patsy and Wllliam;
Mr . and Mrs. Floyd Matlack,
Sr., Mr. and Mrs . Floyd
Matlack, Jr., Mr. Van Matlack,
.Greenfield; Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Humphrey and children, Ailsa
and Lon Eric, Newark; Mrs.
Mabel Sindle and son, Elwood,
Springfield, and Mr. and Mrs .
Virgil Roush, Chester..
The next reunion wiU be held
next July 30 at the same place,
dinner promptly at 12:30.

both first and second places in divisions there are classes for
each of the 19 classes of the landscape from nature, portrait
show. They range from $2 to 75 from life, still life, marine
study, flower study, .and animal
cents.
,
Tbe divisions for exhibit are study.
There Is also a class for
oil or acrylic painting, water
color, drawing or charcoal or modern art exhibits, and a best
pastel. In each of these three of show award to he given.

992·2238
Middleport

PICNIC ENJOYED
A picnic was enjoyed
Saturday at the Ohio River
camp site of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Sauer. Attending were Mrs.
Dorothy Durgee, Jeff and Ann,
Pittsburgh; Kenneth Sauer,
Sunnydale, Calif.; Mr . and Mrs.
Danny Brown, Robert, Joey,
Debbie, Megan and Dan , Mrs.
Helen Shuler, Dick Sauer, Mr.
and Mrs . George Buchanan,
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Crooks
Pam and Cindy, Mrs. Carolyn'
Satterfield and daughter, Amy,
Lois Ann Sauer, and Dennis
Gilkey.

Hair
Spray ·

Milk
Magnesia

•

Miss Rose Marie Hackett,
brid~lect of MarVin Fry, was
guest of honor at a surprise
luncheon and· kitchen shower
Saturday noon at the home of
Mrs. Charles Jordan in Wor·
thington.
Decorations featured
"Matilda," a doll replica in
utensils. A pink and white color

Middleport

""

)of':, rll-t'\0
IJILI'

scheme was carried out with a
taU centerpiece and streamers
accenting the gift table. Floral
arrangements centered the
luncheon tables.
Guests were Mrs. Karen
Faust, Peebles; Mrs. Joseph
Bright, Lucas; Mrs. Wesley
Ffy, Mrs. Paul Smart, Mrs.
George Hackett, Sr., Miss
Melanie Hackett, and Mrs.
George Hackett, Jr ., Middleport; Miss Cindy Bright,
Miss Paula Johnston, and Miss
Judy Milan, Columbus.

1------·
1.89

29'
1.29

250
Aspirins

utnl

I
LI-

Sprav'I

Bufferin
83~

49~

95

~

Others presenting gifts to t-----~"
Miss Hackett were Miss
Melanie Ravely, Mrs. Manning
Kloes, Mrs. George Siddall,
Mr. and Mrs. Wtlliam Houck Mrs. Yvonne Scally, and Mrs.
and daughters, Beth, Carol and Don Mullen.
Lynn, Marion, visited over the
weekend with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Perry Mitch. They
came especially for the HouckSheets wedding at Gallipolis on
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mitch,
Wheeling, were visitors last
week with Mr. and Mrs. Perry
Mitch and Mr. and Mrs. John
Seines.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold George
and children, Brian, Brent and
David, and Mrs. L. W. McComas returned Tuesday from
a visit in Woodbridge, Va. with
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Me·
Comas and children, Dianne,
Patty and Mike. Highlights of
the trip included a tour of
Washington, D. C., a visit to the
Baby Animal Zoo at Wood·
bridge , and drive through
Maryland, Virginia, and
Delaware to Rehobath Beach
for a swim in the ocean. Tbe
Edward McComas family
accompanied Mr. and Mrs.
George and children and Mrs.
McComas on the trip to the
beach.
Dr. and Mrs. Stephen Coats
and children, Sean and Wayne,
are here visiting his mother,
Good Sizes. Prices range from $2.18 to $7.50
Mrs. Charles Gaskill. After
vacationing during the month of
August they will go to F1int,
Mich. where Dr. Coats will be a
resident surgeon in the F1int
. By Ked
Osteopathic Hospital. Dr. Coats
recently received his discharge
Broken Sizes in Beige, Black, Navy. Light blue
from the U.S. Army. He had a
year's tour of duty in Vietnam .

Gillette
fOamy

Assorted

Tablels

Mtss 11j
uackett111
u

'

100

Personal Notes

THEOOORUS COUNCIL 17,
D. of A., 7:30p.m. IOOF ball,
Inspection. Members to take
cookies or sandwiches
.
SUNDAY
GREEN • OGDIN • CASI'ER
reunion, Aug. 8 at the Colmnhia
Chapel Christian Church
Sunda Basket dinner t
•
mJ'uAL WEBER ~~
Sunday at home of Mr. and Mrs.
~: Roger Gaul, Sumner Road,
• dinner at noon; Norman Weber,
president; Rosemury Keller,
ireasurer.
FAMILIES OF Abrsham and
Mary Will Bahr reunion Sunday
at Forked Run Lake, basket
dinner, 12:30 p.m.
CARMEL METHODIST

FRIDAY, AUGUST 6, STARTS 9 A.M.

Y2 Price

1 Group

PORTLAND - Coast Guard
Petty Officer Third Class Dale
F. Profiitt, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Dale R. Proffitt, is deployed to
the central Atlantic aboard the
high endurance Coast Guard
Cutter Spencer, homeported in
New York City. The ship will be
stationed in mid-Atlantic for
over a month carrying out
duties in oceanography and
meteorology, serving as a
navigational point for trans·
Atlantic aircraft, and maintain
search and rescue readiness in
case of an aircraft or surface
vessel emergency.
He is a 1968 graduate of
Southern
Local High School and
DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Wiles of attended Marshall University.
LaW' a are announcing the birth
of a daughter, Sarah Lee, born
Monday , Aug . 2, at the
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital at
Athens. The infant weighed
COVER UP
eight pounds, 12 ounces, and is If you've decided to go
Mr. and Mrs . Wiles' first child. bare-legged, try the new
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. transparent bndy br.onzers.
Otis McClintock, Racine, and The leg make-up covers
Mr. and Mrs. Orval Wiles close-to-the-surface v e i'n s
Pomeroy. Mrs. Lillian Jividen : and all those other little im·
Racine, Mrs. Lillian Pierce perlechons. You can also use
Pomer
d M
' the body bronzers on the
oy' an . rs. Ann back and shoulders or other
Lowdenback, Yakima, Wash. parts of the body vou wish
are great-grandmothers.
.to, expose.
·
·

,I

........
HoapltallQ': Tl!&amp;ldle-Wolll!d lll!!de..-.
.ll!d8al: ...... Lie Glbbl,
chalrl!llll.

lira. Oltle Rwlb,
Chalrmu, lin.. · RoY JclDet,

co.a.aum..

FWldQ': lira. Uo,ydRwlb
IDII llrL C&amp;rroll Adlml.
Artltdc Clerkl: 111'1. llall·
aid · Blmpri:Der 'and lira.
Rulb .Krodel. .
.Horticulture Clerka: Mn.
Cbeller WMYer IUid lira. JoiiD

C'"tlft&lt;atlcll: Mn. n..rl
Slxlao IIIII 111'1. Jobn Colllna.
Emrilll: ~~n: Ray Pro(fttt,
111'1. JluQid ~r 111d
Mri.Jack~.

G. F,
J...._ IUid Mra.lira.MelJ.Clark.
~\)tii'Mt:

BpopiR'!V: All C1llb

CallODl.

~

Kingsbury News, Notes
Swearinger and Bobby visited
with Mr. and Mrsc Nev White
and Mrs. Myrtle White of
Madison, W. Va.
' Mrs. Faye Pratt visited
recently with her sister, Mrs.
Louise Harrison.
Mrs. Uoyd King and children
who were visiting Mr. King who
is employed in F1orida, have
returned to their home here.
Richard Dean and Peggy
Imboden of Middleport, John
Walter Dean and Pam Garren
were all at Pataskala, 0.
Sunday to visit Mr·i and Mrs.
Walter Terrell and Billy and
Vickie Kendell and Anita
Watkins.
Rev. Donald Brickles, who
has been Ill and underwent
surgery, is somewhat im·
proved.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl
visited her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Harrison, recently.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean
visited recently with Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Paynter at Car·
penter.
Miss Evaline Arnold and Mr.
Ronald McNally were married
Saturday evening at the Chester
Church of God. They are living
at Amesville, Ohio.

Sunday School 10 a.m., dinner
at noon, afternoon services 1:30
p.m. Guest speaker the Rev.
Carl Hicks of Zanesville.
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
· ·
!tplsston, . Bald
Knobs,
Homecommg Sunday· Sunday
School 9:30 a.m., basket ~er
at noon. Rev. 0 . G. McKinney
guest speaker in cluirge of
aHe~noon . services. Speci~l
stngmg. Bissell Brothers ~
also be fea~ured . Public IS m·
vlted.
ANNUAL AARON Fry family
reunion Sunday at Pond Hill,
Letart, W. Va. Bring basket
dinner starting at 12 noon. In
case of rain reunion will be held
at Salem Community building .
Everyone welcome.

Meigs 4-H Onb News
THE POMEROY Messups
mel July 26 at the Wamsley
Iitme with eight members and
ooe advisor .present. The 4-H
club is going on a camping trip
and having a mother's meeting
on August 9th. They ~
about the Style Revue and a fair
booth. June Ami and Alice
Wamsley served refreslunents .
Tbe next meeting is ~ed
for August 9th at Nellie Wright'$
honte. - June Ann Wamsley.
THE MOONDUSTERS mel
twice recently both at Mrs.
Harold Sauer's ~. 'Jbere
were two advisors and ten
members present.
They plan to go skating and to
visit the salt worts. The leaders

The moon is between its fli'St
quarter and full pllase.
The morning stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn .
The evening stars are Mereu·
·ry and Jupiter.
r-----------------------------------------~-.~--,
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Leo.
Scottish comedian Sir Harry
Lauder Wi!S born Aug. 4, lil'/0.
On this day in history :
In 1735 freedom of the press
was established when John
Zenger, publisher of a New
York City newspaper, was
acquitted on libel charges.
In 1914 the United States
issued a proclamation of
neutrality in World War I.
A thought for today: Scottish
Orlt:lnated Practice
comedian Sir Hnrry Lauder
The
practice of using the
said, "Oh, it's nice to get up in
Bible in administering an
the morning, but it's nicer to oath was originallld by Jus·
stay in bed."
tinian, the great Byzantine
emperor, in 532, who took
the oath with a book of tbe
Gospels in his hand.

handcrafted

ALL 1971

TV and Stereo

At

&amp; Understanding
We Deliver Flo~
Around The

Ingels!

Comer
Around The

World

Dudley's Aolid
59 N. Sec- 51.
Middleport, 0.
992·

Save

BIG

ON All OUR SALE SHOES
BUY 1 PAIR AT REGULAR PRICE

BRIGHT EYES
Had a hard night last
night? Don't let those puffy
bags under your eyes be a
dead give-away. Before going to bed apply cotton pads
soaked with heated olive oil
beneath the eyes and fasten
with adhesive t~pe . By morn ..
mg no one will know . you
didn't get your full eight·
hour beauty sleep.

While

SECOND PAIR

..

They Last!

OF EQUAL VALUE

OR LESS •••••••

Ingels Furniture

!. Women's Dress and S(lort Shoes

2. Men's, Women~ and aa,s' Tennis

OPEN FRI. &amp;SAT. NIGHtS
MIDDlEPORT .

TRY DRY .

If you've been using a
shampoo for normal hair,
but your hair has been somewhat limp and lifeless lately,
try using a shampoo for dry
hair every other shampoo.
This will help combat the
dryness caused by summer
sun and salt water.

I'«&lt;MEN'S HMDBMiS, Sumllllll &amp; SIRw --'n price

Chapman's SHOES
PCMB'OY

MAIN ST.

l

Mens and Bars Oxfords
&amp;Loafers
CUBE STEAK

SUMMER SHOES

Original Price

Round Steak

c

Panty Hose

Broken Sizes

lb.

One size fits all

69 Pair 2 pair $1·
4

AT

111

2

lb.

':

•1.49

SLICED
BACON

All Summer Straw Handbags

lb.
New Crisp
'

1f2 price

Nice ' N Ute

COnAGE

IS

30 Count

79$

NICE 'N UTE
ICE MILK 'n gaL

Limited Number of Grab bags at
*1·00 Exact Size Mailed

.

Frosty Acres. Sliced
10 Oz.
Pkg.

3

.

Oz-31~

QT.

'

Where Shoes are sensibly Priced

'

MIDDUPORT. 0.

JAR

GOOD AT BICi 3

'

CABBAGE
lb.

9$

23' .

'5 9'

---:----, ORANGE OR
GRAPE DRINK

• Pillsbury

IISCUI1S

.
· Apple
V
Old
t
Jrgtma Blackberry

~~=~y 3 1~a~·89~

~JELLY
' PINTO BEANS

·.INSTANT COFFEE
lOot

CELERY

'

Wagner's

IIAIIELL ....

I

79

COOL WHIP

Crtn.

SHOE 101 ·

Michigan

STRAWBERRIES

--- ------·-

'

Ritht
Re'""ed'
To
LI•it
Quantities

RUTLAND
STORE

FRESH PRODUCE

ACA

.:

ATIIUTUIIII

•

Superior

PLAIN~

lYONS -MARKET

GROUND BEEF

Final Sale

~

CROSS SONS

lb.1.19

White and Natura I

Tennis Oxfords &amp;Shoes

L

Now

~palhJ FliJwels
Messengers of Love

FLY TO 11JlSA
Mrs. Karen Lee Russell,
Tuppers Plains, and Mrs. Janet
Kaye Compson, Mason, Dew by
jet to Tulsa , Okla., recently to
visit their sister, Miss Irene
Cooper of Syracuse, who is a
student at Oral Roberts
University. The three returned
to Ohio by car. Miss Cooper will
return to Tulsa on Aug. 23 to
resume her studies at the
University on Aug. 26.

3 LOCATIONS

EXTRA SPECIAL

N.· 2ncl. AVE.
''

..ll

Includes a Few Discontinued Hush Puppies

Original Price

Shoe Shine Sprar
$1.111 Can or 2 Cans $1 ·59

dlecUd !be project books. Joy
Sauer was in charge of
recnalion and MarY and Joy
Sauer were in charge of
refreshments. MarY Sauer gave

•3·00

Women's Colored Grasshopper

Proffiu on Duty
In Mid-Atlantic

-

a demonStration on different were two advllors! and nine
waystoflnishseams.Therewas members pr nt.TIIe minulel
a special report given by Patty were read and IJIPi'OYed. They
Dyer entitled Safety in the plan to go swimming and havu
Home. - Mary Sauer.
picnic at Royal oat Park'
THE TUPPERS PLAINS 1August 7th. Sonia Carr and Beth
Girls met July 71 at lifts . . Headly were In char~e of
Olatles Carr's home. There recreation. - Teresa Buckley:

Fall &amp;Winter Shoes for Women

All This Year's Sandals
~

m..,,.,

Friday

MIDDLEPORT MERCHANTS
SIDEWALK SALE

Women's Soft Moccasins

-

dal!ta.

7)

Several from the Carleton
Church attended Bible Camp
this past week. Couns•1nrs
were, Harold White, Grace
King, Mary King, Geneva King,
Karla Beal. Others taking part
were Helen King and David
King, Rodney Carl, Denise
Brickles, Mary Perkins. Also
there was Mrs. Delores King
who was one of the cooks.
Mr. and Mrs. Nev White and
Mrs. Myrtle White (who is
spending some time with the
White family) all visited Mr.
White's aunt at Dundas, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Butson
were Sunday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Rowland Dais.
Scott Harrison spent two
nights recenUy with his grand·
mother, Mrs. Louise Harrison.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. John Dean, John and
Richard, were Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Markins, Racine; Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Ried, Virginia,
David and Rodney of
Pataskala; Mrs. Anna Mae
Terrill and Juanita of Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs. Garold Gilkey and
daughters of Athens and Mr.
and Mrs. William Drake of
BRICKLAYERS LOCAL 32 Colwnhus.
meeting, 8 p.m. Thursday at
Mr . . and Mrs . Robert
Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion Hall.
ChW'ch Homecoming Sunday.

894

$1.49

Small group of Men's and Boys

r~~:.

SALE·

/f,

·

DDUD.DD OAT
RDUDIUUJ ~

SIDEWALK

1•--------w ·

Gille. •

TUF8DAY
ANNUAL Pomeroy comDiw.Uty Bible school, 6:30 to 1:36
p.m.'Monday through Friday at
Pomeroy Junicr High Scbool.
.Open to all young ~le. three
years old through junior high
school age.
MIDDLEPORT
Masonic
Lodge 383, F and AM, Tuesday,
7:30p.m. at temple.
POMEROY Chapter 186,
OES, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday,
regular meeting at Masonic
Temple:
MEIGS TEMPLE, Pythian
Sisters, 7:30 Tuesday at the
Legion hall, Middleport. Mrs.
Helen Latlwlr, East Palestine,
grand chief of Oblo, to visit.
WEDNF.IDAY
POMEROY LODGE 164
F&amp;AM regular stated meeting
Wednesday 7:30 p.m. All
Master Masons invited.
TIIUIISDAY
OPERATING engineers
asked to make special effort to
attend the special meeting
Thursday, 7:30 p.m., at
American Legion Hall, Athens.
REGULAR MEETING
Evangeline Chapter 172, OES,
Middleport, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, at temple. All members
welcome.
LAUREL CLIFF Health Club
7:30p.m. Thursday at home of
Nellie Tracy.
SPECIAL MEETING
Southern Local School District
Band· Boosters, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at Racine High
School. Seventh and eighth
grade band parents urged to
attend.

c17,.

~titioo.

' ...

·
·
displayed. One used yellow
marigolds in a crystal contsiner
and the second ond was a
modern design using an ebony
oriental bust from Nigeria for
the container with large white
pompon chrysanthemums,
magnolia buds and foliage.
Also on display at the meeting
was a porch arrangement of tall
white Mexican basket filled ·
with large brightly colored
arlificlal Mexican flowers, a
Mrs Roll fr · h
·gift to
·
er om er

(Colltiilued from page

Cafendar

A
A
IUSSes
nnounced fior rt;StS

1105,

..

·
County Fair flower show. .The
class drawn by the club is 53 or
"School Lunch," arrangements
including fruits or vegetables in
the second show.
"Swnmer Harvest of An·
nuals" was the theme of the
arrangements oI the mooth
made by Mrs. Carl Horky,
president. · She used red, pink
and yellow snapdragons in a
gray pottery container.
Arrangements made by Mrs.
John Kinca1'd were also

Tbe Alinanac
By Ualted Pltis Iaternalloul
Today is Wednesday, Aug. 4,
the 216th day of tm.

Fair Show Theme

Social ~

...
•

For you ojdsters who are still young at heart, why not get intO

:: ..: eaten.

- TlleDallv 9entlneUAt.lepart.Pwbeioy, O.,August 4, 1971

.

99~

_....

•••
1-7-71

.,.nolNG

Teen
Queen

. Cut Green
Stokely

J

'

' . I
. j'

fD SIJII BAKED

4

303
tans

89~

PAN ROLLS

4

4 II. 49~ .

.

.

BAKERY BUYS

15

Cautt'
......
,,

�loi:!r

. I

Harrv
Hysell
:n: __
• •.;
.
VWl§

11 More In Races
I

BERRfS WORLD

for trustee of Scipio Towuohip;
Floyd Thomas, for derll ·. of .•
Rutland Townsl!ip; llarenceG.
Lawrence for cle.t of LebanOn
Township; Grover Salser, Jr.,
for Southern Lo!:al School
loday.
.
Board; Alma E. Smilb for derit
Latest to file petitions for of Salem Township; Jerry Eads
PQSts include: Joseph Carsey and Ernest Nicholson for po:sls
oo Rutland Village Council;
Eugene Thomas for ma)'lll' of
Rutland Village; James Eads
for Rutland Towtiship cle.t;
· . (Continued from page 1)
William s. O'oss for SuUm
will be detennined by the Township cle.t, 11!1(1 Pauline H.
•• . . the De tment f Atkins for clerk of Scipio
wawmg an
par
o T -·"'
Comffierce
auditoriwn '!burs- o........p.
day.
I
Using a scientifically certified .
system of scrambling the
capsules three ways, draft
·
·
officials spent Tuesday prepar·
ing the lottery. '!bey selected at
random two of 50 lists of dates
and numbers prepared by U.S. LONG BOTTOM - Guy
Bureau of Standards computers' Daniel Hayman, 55, died urly
to determine the order of Wednesday at his home here
stuffmg the capsules and !ben following an e:~tended illness.
chose two more lists of Mr. Hayman was bin at
scnimbled nwnbers to deter- Long Bottom, the soo of Byrm
mine the order of loading the Hayman of Cbester and tbe !ate
drwns. Finally, they gave the Katherine O'Neal Hayman. He
us;IJCf! M,e to lie in qoorantine, we'd better
drums a couple of whirls, was a 20-year retired employe
get in same th--handec/ gin rummy n&lt;&gt;w!"
wrapped them in brown paper, of Uilioo Carbide Cmp. ci
sealed them wlh gold sticke!'S, Marietta, and had f'e5ided in
locked them up and PQSied a Long Bottom all of bis life. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - guard.
Besides his mother, Mr.
On lottery day, the clrumS Hayman was preceded in death
LOCAL TEMPS
will be rotated for 30 minutes. by an infant daughter.
Hearing Date Set
Temperature in downtown
SiJ: yo1111g members of the SUrviving are his wife, ErPomeroy at 11 a.m. Wednesday,
SelecliveService Youth Adviso- nestine Bartoo Hayman; two The Meigs County com- with rain falling , was 68
ry Conuinttee will extract sons, Guy Thomas Hayman, missioners Tuesday adopted a degrees.
capsules in pairs-first a date Long Bottom, and Richard •e;OOilim selting the date of a
and !ben a numbe!'. 'lbe ' Hayman of Reedsville; sis bearing that would lead the
number chosen .will determine daughters, Mrs. Elbert (Bar- ;;:::;.upatytothnillage
the draft status of all young hara) Fitzpatrick, Lancaster;
Tile jMapetly lies between the
men born on the matcbing date. Mrs. Robert (Katherine) uapcaalim limits and Yellow
'!bat process will cootinue until Freund, Iadianapolis, Ind.; Bush O'eet 00 SR 331. 1be
all 366 days of 1972, a leap Mrs. David (Margaret) bearingwillbelleldOcl?allG
year, bave been matched with Sherman, Mountain Home, a.m. at the Meigs County
nwnbers.
Idaho; Mrs. Keith ( Lila ) Courthouse. Attending were
··:: .·:· :.· .. ·:.:·:· ·.·:.·:·:•,•,·:•,•, .· .·:-:·:··:····.·,•.·, Ridenour, Diester; Mrs. Robert Bob !lad 8lld Wanlen Ow3
(Sharon) Fitzpatrick, commissioners, and .Marth~
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Columbus, and Mrs. Eugene " - - ' - - ...~
Slsty millloD fat Amerleaas (Connie) Walls, Carroll, and 14 .._._."' ...,._
are eontrlbatlag to tbe grandchildren.
uemployment problem,
Funeral services will be beld
CALL ANSWERED
aeo:enUag to Dr. IJncleH E. at 2 p.m. Friday at tbe Wbite
Tbe Pomeroy E-R squad
Noble of the Ualverslly of Funeral Home in Coolville. wwaed a call at 3:111 a.m.
catlfonlla.
Burial will be in Sand Hill Wednesday to the Leonard
He reported Tueilday lUI a Cemetery. Friends may call at I..unsf..-.1 biaoe oo Route 33 near
sllidy ol 1,• overweight the fwleral borne any lime after l'liudOJ. Mr. I.unsford was
people disclosed tUt U per noon Thursday.
taken to Veterans Memcrill
emt of lbem HUid ilOt get
Hospital wberl! be was admitted
)el becalllle tbey were too
r..- medical lreatmenl '
heavy.
COMO ALL RIGHT
....·.·.·.· ·,•,· . ....
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP!) - clition at Sunrise Hospital
Singer Perry Como was Tuesday suffering from an
reported in satisfaclllry con- appan:nt case 0( kDley stones.

Eleven additional petitions of
for the Nov. 2
•lions were filed Tuesday
. with the Meigs County Boal1l of
Elections.
Filing deadline is 4 pm.
~andidacy

Capsules

G JL
uy aynum., 55

Died Wednesday

- ·r

· Harry Hysell, 84, of 660 High
St., Middleport, died early
Wednesday . morning at
Veterans Memorial HospitaL
Mr. HyseU was born in Meigs
County, May 5, 1887, the son of
the late Valentine and Ella
Hoppers Hysell. Besides his
parents, be was preceded in
death by two sisters.

IF?-~---~-

W eune80ay
A member of the Middleport
First.. Baptist Church, Mr.
Hysell was a retired New York
Central Railroad conductor,
having been employed by the
company 51 years. .
Surviving are his wife, Ruby
M. (Braley) Hysell, and a
dau~hter,
Mrs. Charles
(Margaret Ella) Lewis, Mid·

Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS :
Kerinit
Rigginbolham, Robertsburg;
Terry Rhea, Point Pleasant;
Harry Goodnight, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. John McCarty,
Ashton.
DISCHARGES : Clifford
Schools, Ben Kesterson,
Patricia Schwartz, Charles
Cambrin ,
Mrs.
Rufus Search for Car
Greathouse.
BIRTIIS - August 3, twin
daughters to ,Mr. and Mrs. Made in Meigs
Richard Hysell, Rutland ;
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Dept. assisted' in the search for
James Barker, Glenwood.
a car recovei:ed Tuesday night
in Kenton that had been
TWO FINED
destroyed by fire. A 1965 Ford,
Fined by Middlewrt Mayor it was reported stolen in
C. 0. Fisher Tuesday night were Pickaway County and was seen
Edward L. McFall, 23, Point in the Wilkesville area Sunday
Pleasant, · $15 and costs, morning.
reckless operation, and Merlin The incident is still under
H. Tracy, 21, Pomeroy, $10 and investigation.
costs, disturbing .the peace, The department is also
Forfeiting bonds of. $30 each for · holding Jeffrey L. Tillis, wanted
intOXication were Philip D. by the FBI for desertion from
Bailey and Harold L. Levon, the U. S. Navy. Tillis was apboth of Nitro, W. Va., and prehended by Bruce Davis,
Edward A. Stark, 23, Pomeroy, marshall .of Rutland, Tuesday
forfeited one of $25.
afternoon,

SIDEWALK SPECIAL
FOR

BACK TO SCHOOL

WRANGLER

FRI. &amp; SAT.

HONDO

Polyester-Cotton

JEANS

Knits

Fashionable flare cut in p~rmanent
press fabric , Colors block, brown, Ioden and blue. Regulars, slims and huskies. Sizes 8·18.

58" wide Washable

LONG SLEEVE

Twin blade cutting deck
mows 30 inches wide)
Turns tight on iust a
26 inch radiu•l
Drives easiest with
·iusf brake &amp; accelerator! No gears to shift)

LOOK!•• ·swim

PRE-SEASON SAVINGS
ON

THE SEWING CENTER

MEN'S PLAYIIOY

"House of Fe~brics"

·SWEAT SHIRTS

Middleport, Ohio

4 HP

GARDEN
TILLER

in Minutes!

NAME BRAND FURNilURE &amp;APPUANCES

Big 6-Ft. Diameter Redi-Pool!
Steel Wall "Redi-Poal" Is Side, Sturdy and
Loads of Fun_;,Get Set for Big fun Naw •••
• Extra strength 1.5-in. rteel walls
Reg. $13.49
with bonded green enamel finis.hl
• Safety tubular .steel top roilingl
• Protective white vinyl liner em-

' Only

~.88

fish!

Slielcll o.t on Tltis
· ', Mal 1 11 Galse,
.
Relu... and• Sawel

Reg. $9.99

ALL PUSH
MOWERS

Sizes 6-16.

MEN'$

Corduroy, poplin or nylon material .
Sizes 3-7 and 6·16.

FLARE DENIM

$]66

HECK'S REG. 2.99

JEANS
Sanforized wa shable wit h four
pockets. Sizes 29-38,

TO

TO 5,99 EACH

HECK'S RIG. TO $6.99

HICK'S REG. $3.99

C/.01111/IG DEPT.

ClOTNIM DEPT.

ClDTIII/IG DEPT.

20%

White

Off

PADDED

CHAISE LOUNGE
Reg. $18.95
ONLY

'12.99

PICNIC
SUPPLIES

25%

HECK'S REG.

$1.48

PANTYHOSE
One size fits all. Miracle
stretch. Colors pacific, cinnamon, brown, coffee and
block.

REDUCED

40%

HICK'SREG.

HECK'S
REG.

T0$1.94

$1.28

25 oOFF

9'x12'
CABIN TENT

SPORT
SHIRTS

Easy to set up and take down. Storm
flaps for the windows and doors .
Canvas flooring.

Sm. - M - L
Reg. $1.49

HECK'S REGULAR
LOW PRICE

HUlliNG VEST
WITH GAME BAG
$299

87~

HICK'S REG ••99.88

HECK'S REG. $3.99

SHITSDIPT.

SPOITSDUT.

RACQUET
Wd bolonced ond ruggedly
construded to gi.,.. you yeors
ol good ploy. Jac:k Kromer.

~t CHEST

I

CI.DTMIJI{
IIEPT.

·WILSON

. . .__ TENNIS BALLS

TACKLE

WILSON

12.5

Stretch nylon. One size

ALL FISHING

MENS

.L___ __ __;__,_ __ _ __ . .

BRA&amp;
BIKINI
SETS

ClDTNIM
DEPT.

15%rff

ONLY

'

CI.DTII/11'
DEPT.

(NO DEUVERY)

SWIM FINS
SNORKELS
RAFTS
MASKS ETC.

LADIES'

fits all. Blue, pink, mint.
maize.

IN STOCK

CUSHIONS

and

SEE

BOYS'FALLJACKETS

CI.DTIIIM DEPT.

CAR

Green

•

.

Reg ular lo ng point colla r in permane nt
press. Assorted print and solid col ors.

LADIES'
NYLON
HALF SLIPS

HICK'S RIG. $2.~8

All Sizes

ENJOY BIG SA JIINGS AT • - •

SPORT
SHIRTS

YD. .

'

...... "''

rs

BOYS'

$2.98

THURSDAY
AUG. 5
,
FRIDAY AUG. 6
SATURDAY
AUG. 7

Regular 40!1.88
W.A. Value

Matching

BOYS'

THE FAMILY STORE

375.00

(

SUNDAY AUG. 8 WHILE QUANTITIES. LAST

PRICES II

ANO CATALOG OfiDER l"iC£ANftiEJI

MANY EXCELLENT GIFT ITEMS.

ocrASIONAI. PIECES

tOTO 9'

LADIES'

"Driver 11"-Best Buy!

DWRS

tOTO 9

tJ.DTNIM DEPT.

OF ITEMS GREARY REDUCED

TELEVISIONS

OPIIIIA!LY

HECK'S REG. $3.99
•

1 TABLE

Saturday

ltPiiiAILY

HECK'S
REG.

SIDEWALK SALE

Thursday Friday

DAv·roMEET

.Meigs~ 53, DAY, will
meetat7:311p.m. Mooday at the
home .on Butternut Ave.,
Pomerc.y, with Neal Petty ,
Eighth District r0111111ander,
· scheduled to attend. All
members are urged to be
presenl Refreshments will be
served. ·

Famous HANES brand with roglon
sleeves. Assorted colors . The official
PLAYBOY Sweai Shirt. Sizes S-M-l-Xl.

The Middleport E-R squad . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -..
answered a call at 6:42 a.m.
Wednesday from tbe Paul
Smith borne on Brownell Ave.
where Mr. Smith was ill. He was
FRIDAY AND SAniiDAY
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital, tn;ated, and released.

3 BIG-· SALE DAYS

-

dleport Route 1, a teacher at . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
Meigs High SchooL
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Friday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home.
Burial. will be in Gravel Hill
Cemetery at Cheshire. Friends
may call at lbe funeral home
any time after 10 a.m.' Thur.
I
sday.

CALL ANSWERED

ASKS DIVORCE
SANTA MONICA, Calif.
(UPI)- Aclresa Natalie Wood •
33, filed for divorce Tuesday
from her second husband,
movie producer ·Richard J .
Gregson, 41.

YUJoi;"Yu.l. YUM!

Homemade ice cream, cakrs
and pies .will feature an ice
cream
social
Saturday
beginning at 2 p.m. oo the lot
next h !lie Sobio Stalioo In
Tuppers Plains sponsored by
the Tuppers Plains Community
Club to r~ funds for the
community building and fire
station now under construction.

PROPANE
CONVERTER·
Everything you need to convert
your old gasoline camp stove to
the easy-to-operate propane sys·
tem.

GOLF BAGS

&amp;CARTS

25
0
F
HECK S REGULAR

HECK'S REG.

FREEZER $169· 95

$12.99

HICK'S
REG • .

$6.99

SPOITS
IJIPT.

~

BAG
Features practical and economical
quilt-through design with 4 lbs. of
insuiOn 100, o special worm polyes·
ter filling . Full Zipper.

HECK'SRIG. $13.9t

srl9
HECK'SRIG. $9.96

SHIT$ DEPT.

WILSON

GOLF BALLS

lFOR

$2~9~~sCHEST FREEZER$189·

HICK'S RIG. 3 FOR *3.21

S/IMT$ . .1.

N. 2nd

992-5515

95

· MIDDLEPORT, 0 •

. '

I

Wat.rpfooi on-t it float!.. loug ~. tl igh
i11patt tase. fu nctional, pu1h butto"
1witth, ecnp ttiP hondlt. brighl beam .

HICK'S RIG. $3.99

~

us AT YOUR--------WESTERN AUTO STOR-E

&gt;

6VOLT LANTERN
WITH BATTERY
5]33

$2"

15 Cu. Ft.

OFF

HECK'S REG.
3FOR $1.99

$CJ88

22 LONG

SOOIOUIDS

Reg.

SLEEPING

LOW PRICE

RIFLE SHELLS

199.95

The finest quality for lively action
and long life.

'

�loi:!r

. I

Harrv
Hysell
:n: __
• •.;
.
VWl§

11 More In Races
I

BERRfS WORLD

for trustee of Scipio Towuohip;
Floyd Thomas, for derll ·. of .•
Rutland Townsl!ip; llarenceG.
Lawrence for cle.t of LebanOn
Township; Grover Salser, Jr.,
for Southern Lo!:al School
loday.
.
Board; Alma E. Smilb for derit
Latest to file petitions for of Salem Township; Jerry Eads
PQSts include: Joseph Carsey and Ernest Nicholson for po:sls
oo Rutland Village Council;
Eugene Thomas for ma)'lll' of
Rutland Village; James Eads
for Rutland Towtiship cle.t;
· . (Continued from page 1)
William s. O'oss for SuUm
will be detennined by the Township cle.t, 11!1(1 Pauline H.
•• . . the De tment f Atkins for clerk of Scipio
wawmg an
par
o T -·"'
Comffierce
auditoriwn '!burs- o........p.
day.
I
Using a scientifically certified .
system of scrambling the
capsules three ways, draft
·
·
officials spent Tuesday prepar·
ing the lottery. '!bey selected at
random two of 50 lists of dates
and numbers prepared by U.S. LONG BOTTOM - Guy
Bureau of Standards computers' Daniel Hayman, 55, died urly
to determine the order of Wednesday at his home here
stuffmg the capsules and !ben following an e:~tended illness.
chose two more lists of Mr. Hayman was bin at
scnimbled nwnbers to deter- Long Bottom, the soo of Byrm
mine the order of loading the Hayman of Cbester and tbe !ate
drwns. Finally, they gave the Katherine O'Neal Hayman. He
us;IJCf! M,e to lie in qoorantine, we'd better
drums a couple of whirls, was a 20-year retired employe
get in same th--handec/ gin rummy n&lt;&gt;w!"
wrapped them in brown paper, of Uilioo Carbide Cmp. ci
sealed them wlh gold sticke!'S, Marietta, and had f'e5ided in
locked them up and PQSied a Long Bottom all of bis life. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - guard.
Besides his mother, Mr.
On lottery day, the clrumS Hayman was preceded in death
LOCAL TEMPS
will be rotated for 30 minutes. by an infant daughter.
Hearing Date Set
Temperature in downtown
SiJ: yo1111g members of the SUrviving are his wife, ErPomeroy at 11 a.m. Wednesday,
SelecliveService Youth Adviso- nestine Bartoo Hayman; two The Meigs County com- with rain falling , was 68
ry Conuinttee will extract sons, Guy Thomas Hayman, missioners Tuesday adopted a degrees.
capsules in pairs-first a date Long Bottom, and Richard •e;OOilim selting the date of a
and !ben a numbe!'. 'lbe ' Hayman of Reedsville; sis bearing that would lead the
number chosen .will determine daughters, Mrs. Elbert (Bar- ;;:::;.upatytothnillage
the draft status of all young hara) Fitzpatrick, Lancaster;
Tile jMapetly lies between the
men born on the matcbing date. Mrs. Robert (Katherine) uapcaalim limits and Yellow
'!bat process will cootinue until Freund, Iadianapolis, Ind.; Bush O'eet 00 SR 331. 1be
all 366 days of 1972, a leap Mrs. David (Margaret) bearingwillbelleldOcl?allG
year, bave been matched with Sherman, Mountain Home, a.m. at the Meigs County
nwnbers.
Idaho; Mrs. Keith ( Lila ) Courthouse. Attending were
··:: .·:· :.· .. ·:.:·:· ·.·:.·:·:•,•,·:•,•, .· .·:-:·:··:····.·,•.·, Ridenour, Diester; Mrs. Robert Bob !lad 8lld Wanlen Ow3
(Sharon) Fitzpatrick, commissioners, and .Marth~
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Columbus, and Mrs. Eugene " - - ' - - ...~
Slsty millloD fat Amerleaas (Connie) Walls, Carroll, and 14 .._._."' ...,._
are eontrlbatlag to tbe grandchildren.
uemployment problem,
Funeral services will be beld
CALL ANSWERED
aeo:enUag to Dr. IJncleH E. at 2 p.m. Friday at tbe Wbite
Tbe Pomeroy E-R squad
Noble of the Ualverslly of Funeral Home in Coolville. wwaed a call at 3:111 a.m.
catlfonlla.
Burial will be in Sand Hill Wednesday to the Leonard
He reported Tueilday lUI a Cemetery. Friends may call at I..unsf..-.1 biaoe oo Route 33 near
sllidy ol 1,• overweight the fwleral borne any lime after l'liudOJ. Mr. I.unsford was
people disclosed tUt U per noon Thursday.
taken to Veterans Memcrill
emt of lbem HUid ilOt get
Hospital wberl! be was admitted
)el becalllle tbey were too
r..- medical lreatmenl '
heavy.
COMO ALL RIGHT
....·.·.·.· ·,•,· . ....
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP!) - clition at Sunrise Hospital
Singer Perry Como was Tuesday suffering from an
reported in satisfaclllry con- appan:nt case 0( kDley stones.

Eleven additional petitions of
for the Nov. 2
•lions were filed Tuesday
. with the Meigs County Boal1l of
Elections.
Filing deadline is 4 pm.
~andidacy

Capsules

G JL
uy aynum., 55

Died Wednesday

- ·r

· Harry Hysell, 84, of 660 High
St., Middleport, died early
Wednesday . morning at
Veterans Memorial HospitaL
Mr. HyseU was born in Meigs
County, May 5, 1887, the son of
the late Valentine and Ella
Hoppers Hysell. Besides his
parents, be was preceded in
death by two sisters.

IF?-~---~-

W eune80ay
A member of the Middleport
First.. Baptist Church, Mr.
Hysell was a retired New York
Central Railroad conductor,
having been employed by the
company 51 years. .
Surviving are his wife, Ruby
M. (Braley) Hysell, and a
dau~hter,
Mrs. Charles
(Margaret Ella) Lewis, Mid·

Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS :
Kerinit
Rigginbolham, Robertsburg;
Terry Rhea, Point Pleasant;
Harry Goodnight, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. John McCarty,
Ashton.
DISCHARGES : Clifford
Schools, Ben Kesterson,
Patricia Schwartz, Charles
Cambrin ,
Mrs.
Rufus Search for Car
Greathouse.
BIRTIIS - August 3, twin
daughters to ,Mr. and Mrs. Made in Meigs
Richard Hysell, Rutland ;
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Dept. assisted' in the search for
James Barker, Glenwood.
a car recovei:ed Tuesday night
in Kenton that had been
TWO FINED
destroyed by fire. A 1965 Ford,
Fined by Middlewrt Mayor it was reported stolen in
C. 0. Fisher Tuesday night were Pickaway County and was seen
Edward L. McFall, 23, Point in the Wilkesville area Sunday
Pleasant, · $15 and costs, morning.
reckless operation, and Merlin The incident is still under
H. Tracy, 21, Pomeroy, $10 and investigation.
costs, disturbing .the peace, The department is also
Forfeiting bonds of. $30 each for · holding Jeffrey L. Tillis, wanted
intOXication were Philip D. by the FBI for desertion from
Bailey and Harold L. Levon, the U. S. Navy. Tillis was apboth of Nitro, W. Va., and prehended by Bruce Davis,
Edward A. Stark, 23, Pomeroy, marshall .of Rutland, Tuesday
forfeited one of $25.
afternoon,

SIDEWALK SPECIAL
FOR

BACK TO SCHOOL

WRANGLER

FRI. &amp; SAT.

HONDO

Polyester-Cotton

JEANS

Knits

Fashionable flare cut in p~rmanent
press fabric , Colors block, brown, Ioden and blue. Regulars, slims and huskies. Sizes 8·18.

58" wide Washable

LONG SLEEVE

Twin blade cutting deck
mows 30 inches wide)
Turns tight on iust a
26 inch radiu•l
Drives easiest with
·iusf brake &amp; accelerator! No gears to shift)

LOOK!•• ·swim

PRE-SEASON SAVINGS
ON

THE SEWING CENTER

MEN'S PLAYIIOY

"House of Fe~brics"

·SWEAT SHIRTS

Middleport, Ohio

4 HP

GARDEN
TILLER

in Minutes!

NAME BRAND FURNilURE &amp;APPUANCES

Big 6-Ft. Diameter Redi-Pool!
Steel Wall "Redi-Poal" Is Side, Sturdy and
Loads of Fun_;,Get Set for Big fun Naw •••
• Extra strength 1.5-in. rteel walls
Reg. $13.49
with bonded green enamel finis.hl
• Safety tubular .steel top roilingl
• Protective white vinyl liner em-

' Only

~.88

fish!

Slielcll o.t on Tltis
· ', Mal 1 11 Galse,
.
Relu... and• Sawel

Reg. $9.99

ALL PUSH
MOWERS

Sizes 6-16.

MEN'$

Corduroy, poplin or nylon material .
Sizes 3-7 and 6·16.

FLARE DENIM

$]66

HECK'S REG. 2.99

JEANS
Sanforized wa shable wit h four
pockets. Sizes 29-38,

TO

TO 5,99 EACH

HECK'S RIG. TO $6.99

HICK'S REG. $3.99

C/.01111/IG DEPT.

ClOTNIM DEPT.

ClDTIII/IG DEPT.

20%

White

Off

PADDED

CHAISE LOUNGE
Reg. $18.95
ONLY

'12.99

PICNIC
SUPPLIES

25%

HECK'S REG.

$1.48

PANTYHOSE
One size fits all. Miracle
stretch. Colors pacific, cinnamon, brown, coffee and
block.

REDUCED

40%

HICK'SREG.

HECK'S
REG.

T0$1.94

$1.28

25 oOFF

9'x12'
CABIN TENT

SPORT
SHIRTS

Easy to set up and take down. Storm
flaps for the windows and doors .
Canvas flooring.

Sm. - M - L
Reg. $1.49

HECK'S REGULAR
LOW PRICE

HUlliNG VEST
WITH GAME BAG
$299

87~

HICK'S REG ••99.88

HECK'S REG. $3.99

SHITSDIPT.

SPOITSDUT.

RACQUET
Wd bolonced ond ruggedly
construded to gi.,.. you yeors
ol good ploy. Jac:k Kromer.

~t CHEST

I

CI.DTMIJI{
IIEPT.

·WILSON

. . .__ TENNIS BALLS

TACKLE

WILSON

12.5

Stretch nylon. One size

ALL FISHING

MENS

.L___ __ __;__,_ __ _ __ . .

BRA&amp;
BIKINI
SETS

ClDTNIM
DEPT.

15%rff

ONLY

'

CI.DTII/11'
DEPT.

(NO DEUVERY)

SWIM FINS
SNORKELS
RAFTS
MASKS ETC.

LADIES'

fits all. Blue, pink, mint.
maize.

IN STOCK

CUSHIONS

and

SEE

BOYS'FALLJACKETS

CI.DTIIIM DEPT.

CAR

Green

•

.

Reg ular lo ng point colla r in permane nt
press. Assorted print and solid col ors.

LADIES'
NYLON
HALF SLIPS

HICK'S RIG. $2.~8

All Sizes

ENJOY BIG SA JIINGS AT • - •

SPORT
SHIRTS

YD. .

'

...... "''

rs

BOYS'

$2.98

THURSDAY
AUG. 5
,
FRIDAY AUG. 6
SATURDAY
AUG. 7

Regular 40!1.88
W.A. Value

Matching

BOYS'

THE FAMILY STORE

375.00

(

SUNDAY AUG. 8 WHILE QUANTITIES. LAST

PRICES II

ANO CATALOG OfiDER l"iC£ANftiEJI

MANY EXCELLENT GIFT ITEMS.

ocrASIONAI. PIECES

tOTO 9'

LADIES'

"Driver 11"-Best Buy!

DWRS

tOTO 9

tJ.DTNIM DEPT.

OF ITEMS GREARY REDUCED

TELEVISIONS

OPIIIIA!LY

HECK'S REG. $3.99
•

1 TABLE

Saturday

ltPiiiAILY

HECK'S
REG.

SIDEWALK SALE

Thursday Friday

DAv·roMEET

.Meigs~ 53, DAY, will
meetat7:311p.m. Mooday at the
home .on Butternut Ave.,
Pomerc.y, with Neal Petty ,
Eighth District r0111111ander,
· scheduled to attend. All
members are urged to be
presenl Refreshments will be
served. ·

Famous HANES brand with roglon
sleeves. Assorted colors . The official
PLAYBOY Sweai Shirt. Sizes S-M-l-Xl.

The Middleport E-R squad . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -..
answered a call at 6:42 a.m.
Wednesday from tbe Paul
Smith borne on Brownell Ave.
where Mr. Smith was ill. He was
FRIDAY AND SAniiDAY
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital, tn;ated, and released.

3 BIG-· SALE DAYS

-

dleport Route 1, a teacher at . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
Meigs High SchooL
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Friday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home.
Burial. will be in Gravel Hill
Cemetery at Cheshire. Friends
may call at lbe funeral home
any time after 10 a.m.' Thur.
I
sday.

CALL ANSWERED

ASKS DIVORCE
SANTA MONICA, Calif.
(UPI)- Aclresa Natalie Wood •
33, filed for divorce Tuesday
from her second husband,
movie producer ·Richard J .
Gregson, 41.

YUJoi;"Yu.l. YUM!

Homemade ice cream, cakrs
and pies .will feature an ice
cream
social
Saturday
beginning at 2 p.m. oo the lot
next h !lie Sobio Stalioo In
Tuppers Plains sponsored by
the Tuppers Plains Community
Club to r~ funds for the
community building and fire
station now under construction.

PROPANE
CONVERTER·
Everything you need to convert
your old gasoline camp stove to
the easy-to-operate propane sys·
tem.

GOLF BAGS

&amp;CARTS

25
0
F
HECK S REGULAR

HECK'S REG.

FREEZER $169· 95

$12.99

HICK'S
REG • .

$6.99

SPOITS
IJIPT.

~

BAG
Features practical and economical
quilt-through design with 4 lbs. of
insuiOn 100, o special worm polyes·
ter filling . Full Zipper.

HECK'SRIG. $13.9t

srl9
HECK'SRIG. $9.96

SHIT$ DEPT.

WILSON

GOLF BALLS

lFOR

$2~9~~sCHEST FREEZER$189·

HICK'S RIG. 3 FOR *3.21

S/IMT$ . .1.

N. 2nd

992-5515

95

· MIDDLEPORT, 0 •

. '

I

Wat.rpfooi on-t it float!.. loug ~. tl igh
i11patt tase. fu nctional, pu1h butto"
1witth, ecnp ttiP hondlt. brighl beam .

HICK'S RIG. $3.99

~

us AT YOUR--------WESTERN AUTO STOR-E

&gt;

6VOLT LANTERN
WITH BATTERY
5]33

$2"

15 Cu. Ft.

OFF

HECK'S REG.
3FOR $1.99

$CJ88

22 LONG

SOOIOUIDS

Reg.

SLEEPING

LOW PRICE

RIFLE SHELLS

199.95

The finest quality for lively action
and long life.

'

�.

.

•

•

''.

'

.

-1
..•

-

.

.•

.

.

'

,.._,
.I

.....u
10109

OPIIIAILY

' .

IOTO, . .

'

'i.·.

'

I

'

THROUGH.

PRICES II

'
''

QT.

LUCITE

GENERAL ELECTRIC

20'' FAN

LUCilE

PRESERVING. KmLE
.

HOUSEPAINT ·. WALL PAINT
.

Cooling power In 3 speeds. • ?0" Portable window
fun e .High velocity S element blade e Powerful 3
speed ·G.E. motor e 20'' portable room or window

'

.

e Proven to lost longer than other pain!&gt; •
protective sheet
water clean-up

Dries too

e Seok out.the weather e Soup and

• Superi~ co.ering power e Whatever you coYer
with LUCITE wet stays &lt;O....eci when it "dries. e Soup
pnd water deon·up.

$ 39
HECK'S lEG.

SOCKET SET
Set includes: • Spa rk .
$ .
plug socket e Extensions

GALLR
HECK'S lEG.

HKK'SIEG.

$7.61

$6.68

7''

'

• Reversible ratchet.

FORIUTO &amp;HOM£ USE

•3·~·

26" HAND SAW
HECK'S lEG.
$1.11

HECK'S REG. '4.49

9tc

.

S2U ·

Pl Pleasat'll Slln OniJ
' · 90UNCE

. BRAKE
FLUID

NAVAL JELLY

VISTA

OR

ALUMINUM
JELLY

PASTE WAX

$112

HECK'SIEG, $1.48

A.,.IITWI
1191.

sac

•r.

11 OUNCE

FLYING INSECT

SPRAY

-

-

-

.

AUTO BODY
REPAIR KIT
(OI'ItaiM,

QT.SIZE
c-... ioo'*'-'.

·

3FOR

......~.

$oo.tl,...,. .......... Glon s.:......

IIU/IWAIE IJEPI.

HECK'S lEG.
41' Eacl!

HECK'S REG.

AITOIIOTn/1-1.

NOUSEWARIIJIPT.

3·FOR 99&lt;

DINNERWARE SETS

s7''

Made from miracle melamine
with o smooth spa rkling finish
that's. easy to dean . Dishwosh·
-=r proof and chip r~sistont .

HECK'S REG. 52.88

HECK'S REG. $12.88

Available in 5 patterns.

IIOUSIWARE DEPT.

/IAIDWARI/JiiilP.IiT._ _ _ _ - - - - - -. . . - - - - - - -

16 QT. mvERED

7 PC. WATER
GLASS SET

SAUCE POT

3 PC.

SHELF PAPER
Easy to apply and available in

CHOICl$166

4 YDS.

'2'' H~~REG.

AUTOMOT/111/JIPT.

99(

*144 HECK'S REG.
'1.99

•

PT. PLEASANT STORE OILY

$1.60

PT. PLEASANT STORE ONLY

HECK'S REG.

$1 .20

NDI/SIWAIE
IJIPT.

HECK'S REG. 80'

HECK'S REG.

KLEAR

HECK'S
REG.
$1.09
NDUSEWAIE
DEPT.

PT. PWSANT STORE ONLY .

Pl. Pleasant Store Only

1101/SEWARI DEPT.

27 oz.

c

55-~--

many decorator shades.

HECK'S
REG.
TO $2 .38

CHOPPER

SALAD
SET

EASY-ON ·

6-PACK
~=

52"x70" TABLE CLOTH

45 .PC. MELAMINE

tiD AND REG.

1199

linited Quantities
Pl ,... nt S1Dre On~

IIABWAHIEPT.

$2.99

$5.99

MOTOR OIL

· • · " Reg.
HECK'S
17.99

HECK'S REG. 99'

/IIPT.

TO $1.29

Similar to Illustration

PRIZE PENN

FOLDING BED

$100

HECK'S REG.

MJGEWAIIIIIPT.

AUTOMDT/111/JEPI.

HECK'S

'6·" R~

IIOGIWARE

HECK'S REG. 491 EACH

HECK'S REG. $2.99

FOLDING BED

lfc" MASKING
TAPE

HECK'S REG.

$199

IIMIWAIIIIEPT.

BLACK KNIGHT

CHOICE

Attroctivl! o nd versatile, get one for every room . Mode of gloss

MOST SIZES

HICK'SREG. $1.99

AITOII011111-T.

• .f'' ..

77(

CAR
INNER TUBES
AYAILAIUIN

HKK'SIEG.
$1.19

A.,.Dnrtl

RAYON OR COnON

.

· CHOICE
HECK'S
lEG.
$1 .51

MOPS

FLINT ASH TRAYS

QUART

rosm

0-CEDAR

liARDWARE DEPT.

DOOR CLOSER

50NLY

PT. PLEASANT STORE ONLY

ICE BUCKET
Chooref~ "'" wlon. $)99

$122

REAR

'39.88

4-TRAY

BUG KILLER

S]U

88

HECK'S REG. '

POINT PWSMT STORE ONLY

HOUSE &amp; GARDEN

FRONT

1/0USIWARE /JEPT.

HECK'S REG. '3.48

13111. OUNCE

Heovy rubber auto floor mots. Full across front a nd
rear. Assorted colors.

MULTI-PURPOSE FAN

PT. PLEASANT STORE ONLY

NARJJWARE DEPT.

CAR MATS

55

AIR-KING 20 INCH

HECK'S
REG.
$1.33

HECK'SREG.
$9.99

·.•·

lAWN SPRINKLER

Pt. Mason Jars •••••••• •1., 19 ·
Qt. Wide.Mouth Mason Jars•1.99
Reg. Qt. Jars • • • • • • • • • 5 1.66
Reg. Pt. Jars • • • • • • • • • •1.29--

REG. '3.99 .

FOOD PRESS

lOPIECE

$21.11

MEIMOR

COLANDE-R

PT. PLWANI STORE ONLY

$

'

.

99

~ECK'S

JARS
Qt. Mason Jars ••••••• SJ.44 .

FOOD

.

2.5 OUNCE

VESPRE

MIST OR POWDER

TWICE AS NICE

:_Colgate03 M_F~

SHAMPOO
NORMAL, DRY, &amp; OILY• .

5 OUNCE

COLGATE
TOOTHPASTE

c

EACI

c

HECK'SIEG.
$1 .28

HECK'S lEG. $1.28

COSMETIC JJEPT.

GILLEnE
ADJUSTABLE
BANDS

8" BABY DOLL ON

PILLOW
Sofe all-vinyl construction.
She drinks a nd •els.

IO's

87&lt;

I $1 09
ft:_!_ ·
._..:'
0

0

0

TEQiMADC'

;~~·~

I

~ -$144

t -·-----,-f
!

!:

'

HECK'S
REG.
$1.99

; .!· IIDI/SIWAH
. /JIPI.

17 QT.

DISH PAN

SJ66

CLOWN
BOP BAG
Made of heavy duty &gt;inyl with
weighfed bottom a nd squeoUn,_

sse

ALUMINUM

HECK'S
REG.

H:~::s

ao•

NDUSEWARI
IJIPT•

$2.28

---....i!

PL Pleasant Store Oaly

301NCH

JAR
OPENER

PAIL

HECK'S REG. $1. 16

HECK'SiRlG. $1.54

COSMETIC 1191.

UTILITY

$1.28

TOYIIIPT.

Pt. Pleasant Store Oaly

Pt. Pleasant Store Ouly

HECK'S REG.

COSMETIC IJIPT.

TABS

90UNCE

J&amp;J

BABY

24's

POWDER

c

12 OUNCE

JAR

COLGATE
100

VASELINE

TURTLE STEP STOOL

PLA¥ BINOCULARS
WITH CASE

PLASTIC

MOUTHWASH

PUDDLE JUMPER
HECK'S REG. 88'

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

HICK' S REG.

- .~·

' 79'
HICK'S lEG. 78•

15 .0UNCE

ror.

DEPT.

HICK'S RIG. II'

COSIIITIC
IJEPI.

HECK'S REG• 94'

tDSMETKIJEPT.

CRAZY "A" WilD-UP
CArlS
HECK'S REG.

$1.08

TOY/191.

77;.
~

.

BUDDY OUTFITS

oR BAJA JEEP

, Action buddy outfits ore uniform s of

64&lt;

HECK' S REG. 78'

ALSO: IAJA JEEP. • • • • • 64'

-L

. HECI('S
99'REG.

tDYIJEPI.

TOY IJEP't.

COSIIltiC IJIPT. .

I'

•

'

r •

1/

74·;.

the armed services authentically re·
produced .

'

,
' 4

~

�.

.

•

•

''.

'

.

-1
..•

-

.

.•

.

.

'

,.._,
.I

.....u
10109

OPIIIAILY

' .

IOTO, . .

'

'i.·.

'

I

'

THROUGH.

PRICES II

'
''

QT.

LUCITE

GENERAL ELECTRIC

20'' FAN

LUCilE

PRESERVING. KmLE
.

HOUSEPAINT ·. WALL PAINT
.

Cooling power In 3 speeds. • ?0" Portable window
fun e .High velocity S element blade e Powerful 3
speed ·G.E. motor e 20'' portable room or window

'

.

e Proven to lost longer than other pain!&gt; •
protective sheet
water clean-up

Dries too

e Seok out.the weather e Soup and

• Superi~ co.ering power e Whatever you coYer
with LUCITE wet stays &lt;O....eci when it "dries. e Soup
pnd water deon·up.

$ 39
HECK'S lEG.

SOCKET SET
Set includes: • Spa rk .
$ .
plug socket e Extensions

GALLR
HECK'S lEG.

HKK'SIEG.

$7.61

$6.68

7''

'

• Reversible ratchet.

FORIUTO &amp;HOM£ USE

•3·~·

26" HAND SAW
HECK'S lEG.
$1.11

HECK'S REG. '4.49

9tc

.

S2U ·

Pl Pleasat'll Slln OniJ
' · 90UNCE

. BRAKE
FLUID

NAVAL JELLY

VISTA

OR

ALUMINUM
JELLY

PASTE WAX

$112

HECK'SIEG, $1.48

A.,.IITWI
1191.

sac

•r.

11 OUNCE

FLYING INSECT

SPRAY

-

-

-

.

AUTO BODY
REPAIR KIT
(OI'ItaiM,

QT.SIZE
c-... ioo'*'-'.

·

3FOR

......~.

$oo.tl,...,. .......... Glon s.:......

IIU/IWAIE IJEPI.

HECK'S lEG.
41' Eacl!

HECK'S REG.

AITOIIOTn/1-1.

NOUSEWARIIJIPT.

3·FOR 99&lt;

DINNERWARE SETS

s7''

Made from miracle melamine
with o smooth spa rkling finish
that's. easy to dean . Dishwosh·
-=r proof and chip r~sistont .

HECK'S REG. 52.88

HECK'S REG. $12.88

Available in 5 patterns.

IIOUSIWARE DEPT.

/IAIDWARI/JiiilP.IiT._ _ _ _ - - - - - -. . . - - - - - - -

16 QT. mvERED

7 PC. WATER
GLASS SET

SAUCE POT

3 PC.

SHELF PAPER
Easy to apply and available in

CHOICl$166

4 YDS.

'2'' H~~REG.

AUTOMOT/111/JIPT.

99(

*144 HECK'S REG.
'1.99

•

PT. PLEASANT STORE OILY

$1.60

PT. PLEASANT STORE ONLY

HECK'S REG.

$1 .20

NDI/SIWAIE
IJIPT.

HECK'S REG. 80'

HECK'S REG.

KLEAR

HECK'S
REG.
$1.09
NDUSEWAIE
DEPT.

PT. PWSANT STORE ONLY .

Pl. Pleasant Store Only

1101/SEWARI DEPT.

27 oz.

c

55-~--

many decorator shades.

HECK'S
REG.
TO $2 .38

CHOPPER

SALAD
SET

EASY-ON ·

6-PACK
~=

52"x70" TABLE CLOTH

45 .PC. MELAMINE

tiD AND REG.

1199

linited Quantities
Pl ,... nt S1Dre On~

IIABWAHIEPT.

$2.99

$5.99

MOTOR OIL

· • · " Reg.
HECK'S
17.99

HECK'S REG. 99'

/IIPT.

TO $1.29

Similar to Illustration

PRIZE PENN

FOLDING BED

$100

HECK'S REG.

MJGEWAIIIIIPT.

AUTOMDT/111/JEPI.

HECK'S

'6·" R~

IIOGIWARE

HECK'S REG. 491 EACH

HECK'S REG. $2.99

FOLDING BED

lfc" MASKING
TAPE

HECK'S REG.

$199

IIMIWAIIIIEPT.

BLACK KNIGHT

CHOICE

Attroctivl! o nd versatile, get one for every room . Mode of gloss

MOST SIZES

HICK'SREG. $1.99

AITOII011111-T.

• .f'' ..

77(

CAR
INNER TUBES
AYAILAIUIN

HKK'SIEG.
$1.19

A.,.Dnrtl

RAYON OR COnON

.

· CHOICE
HECK'S
lEG.
$1 .51

MOPS

FLINT ASH TRAYS

QUART

rosm

0-CEDAR

liARDWARE DEPT.

DOOR CLOSER

50NLY

PT. PLEASANT STORE ONLY

ICE BUCKET
Chooref~ "'" wlon. $)99

$122

REAR

'39.88

4-TRAY

BUG KILLER

S]U

88

HECK'S REG. '

POINT PWSMT STORE ONLY

HOUSE &amp; GARDEN

FRONT

1/0USIWARE /JEPT.

HECK'S REG. '3.48

13111. OUNCE

Heovy rubber auto floor mots. Full across front a nd
rear. Assorted colors.

MULTI-PURPOSE FAN

PT. PLEASANT STORE ONLY

NARJJWARE DEPT.

CAR MATS

55

AIR-KING 20 INCH

HECK'S
REG.
$1.33

HECK'SREG.
$9.99

·.•·

lAWN SPRINKLER

Pt. Mason Jars •••••••• •1., 19 ·
Qt. Wide.Mouth Mason Jars•1.99
Reg. Qt. Jars • • • • • • • • • 5 1.66
Reg. Pt. Jars • • • • • • • • • •1.29--

REG. '3.99 .

FOOD PRESS

lOPIECE

$21.11

MEIMOR

COLANDE-R

PT. PLWANI STORE ONLY

$

'

.

99

~ECK'S

JARS
Qt. Mason Jars ••••••• SJ.44 .

FOOD

.

2.5 OUNCE

VESPRE

MIST OR POWDER

TWICE AS NICE

:_Colgate03 M_F~

SHAMPOO
NORMAL, DRY, &amp; OILY• .

5 OUNCE

COLGATE
TOOTHPASTE

c

EACI

c

HECK'SIEG.
$1 .28

HECK'S lEG. $1.28

COSMETIC JJEPT.

GILLEnE
ADJUSTABLE
BANDS

8" BABY DOLL ON

PILLOW
Sofe all-vinyl construction.
She drinks a nd •els.

IO's

87&lt;

I $1 09
ft:_!_ ·
._..:'
0

0

0

TEQiMADC'

;~~·~

I

~ -$144

t -·-----,-f
!

!:

'

HECK'S
REG.
$1.99

; .!· IIDI/SIWAH
. /JIPI.

17 QT.

DISH PAN

SJ66

CLOWN
BOP BAG
Made of heavy duty &gt;inyl with
weighfed bottom a nd squeoUn,_

sse

ALUMINUM

HECK'S
REG.

H:~::s

ao•

NDUSEWARI
IJIPT•

$2.28

---....i!

PL Pleasant Store Oaly

301NCH

JAR
OPENER

PAIL

HECK'S REG. $1. 16

HECK'SiRlG. $1.54

COSMETIC 1191.

UTILITY

$1.28

TOYIIIPT.

Pt. Pleasant Store Oaly

Pt. Pleasant Store Ouly

HECK'S REG.

COSMETIC IJIPT.

TABS

90UNCE

J&amp;J

BABY

24's

POWDER

c

12 OUNCE

JAR

COLGATE
100

VASELINE

TURTLE STEP STOOL

PLA¥ BINOCULARS
WITH CASE

PLASTIC

MOUTHWASH

PUDDLE JUMPER
HECK'S REG. 88'

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

HICK' S REG.

- .~·

' 79'
HICK'S lEG. 78•

15 .0UNCE

ror.

DEPT.

HICK'S RIG. II'

COSIIITIC
IJEPI.

HECK'S REG• 94'

tDSMETKIJEPT.

CRAZY "A" WilD-UP
CArlS
HECK'S REG.

$1.08

TOY/191.

77;.
~

.

BUDDY OUTFITS

oR BAJA JEEP

, Action buddy outfits ore uniform s of

64&lt;

HECK' S REG. 78'

ALSO: IAJA JEEP. • • • • • 64'

-L

. HECI('S
99'REG.

tDYIJEPI.

TOY IJEP't.

COSIIltiC IJIPT. .

I'

•

'

r •

1/

74·;.

the armed services authentically re·
produced .

'

,
' 4

~

�15-Tile DailySentiDel, ~Y. 0., August 4,1971

..

.Memorial
(~linued

&lt;CO!Oilruction.

Continuing, 1he 1927 paper
reported:
"Tbe design of the memorial
building is octagllllll, 28-feet in
diameter and built of concrete.
Olnlinuous steps SUrTound it
and tbe Spanish red tile is
supp&lt;rted by eight coiUIIUlS.
Tbe trophy which weigh$ three
tons sits in the middle of the
building. Between the lower
step and the sidewalk which
SIIITOWUts tbe enlife structure
will be poppy beds. Twelve 1~
pound sheDs wiD support chains
along the sidewalk. When
finished, this memorial wiD be a
credit to the citiuns of M ·
County and a lasting and
tribute to those in whose honor
it wiD be dedicated.
''There has probably never
been a committee in Meigs
County that bas received as
hearty COOperation as the Meigs
County War Trophy Memorial
Committee and the interest and
entbuasiam bas been something
wllllderfuL The flllllllcing or a
project as big as this was a
matter to be reckoned with, but
Ute committee felt inclined to
Iackie 1he job without resorting
to subscriptioo papers and by a
series of entertainments and
drives bas secured money to
begin active operations. To
secure enough money to
complete the plans, a pageant
will be C\ven in Pythian Park on
the everung of the dedication Memorial Day, May 30, 1927 at which time a charge of 50
cents admission wiU be
charged. It is hoped that in this
way sufficient funds will be
received to finish paying the

'•

Ytil T119 , SUNDAY 1TO 1~PRICES II EFFECT TIIOUCH S.AY, AUGUST 8

fi~

QUAITinES LAST

PANASONIC

TAPE RECORDER

FM-AM POLICE BAND RADIP

350

n. ALLENDAlf boam m.. com;

1 dt1tgn , toste~ua,
5ty1otc1 ifl nMdnight l»odr: .and s;lftr rih itl OW1I wrdy~
eary-amy .hondae-. M exnltnt travel ~ ancL
Oft AC, a p.rfKt holM or affia' ~- A 3 V.• PM
dynomic 5pe01r;...- affords uMIII"ppWW'd .niKM:: or voice ,e..
production. The u~ ovtomotic tKOtding lewl eo~~.trol
ensures precise. occura» tKorcMg ..err iime. f'u5h hutlOft contro1o ..-;do.,...;..
opo oliooo ood uf.

Hoor confinuous weo1her plus ott...
public service broadcasts such os
police, fire, e1c. Plus fine quali1y FM
and AM . A squelch control on the
. public serYice band leb you mute
background noise. Ploys on either
batteries or AC power.

•-do•

S]988

NOit COii4Ctil:tiU.

•
•

HECK'S REG. $49.88

'

I Q 209AS

JErtur•r.

KODAK

POLAROID

M-22

• Instant drop-in loading-no threading. e Electric motor drive-no winding. • · Foldaway pistol grips .

'

I

'

'''

GENERAL ELECTRIC

,.''
•.

FM-AM CLOCK RADIO

'

''

'•

$1 CJ88

.

•

No dry heat to

where you can't use others.

beautifying mist . Includes attractive
"takt me olong" tote bog. Ideal for
travel and storage. 20 lightwtight cur·
t.n, 6 jumbo, 10 medium, ~ smoll. A
marvelous way to keep your hair ~u­
fiful economically.

HECK'SIEG. $21 .96

$1 CJII
HECK'S REG. $25.56
JIWIUT_,T.

gift case with extra set of blades:

$100

$1 CJ88

HECK'SIEG. $1.49

HECK'S REG. $21.9 9

JEWEUYI9T.

ICE CRUSHER

YOUTH PHONOGRAPH

YW-11

S]OO
HECK'S REG. $4.44

HECK'S lEG. $1 S.la

.,EUY11,1.

•ur•r.

JEWEUYIE,T.

SUNBEAM

PERCOLATOR
Comistently good coHee automatically. Big family size brews 4 to l::i
cups. Strength selector. Twist lode.
top and a light signols when the coffee is ready to serve. Keeps coffee

REFRIGERATOR DEFROSTER
Handy kitchen qpplionce cuts
defrosting time in half. Safe and
convenient. Comes with UL approved cord.

serving hot automatically.

5

11

99

JIIIEUF/191.

•
J

$ 99
HECK'S REG. $2.99

HECK'S lEG. $ 1.4 .96
73U9

you vlsl1 1hl• week.

BUY 1 • GET 1 FREE!

:

:

FAIRMONT

:

!

Buy lh gal and

i•

Gel ~ gal FREE

:

purchase

115% bombers new two
overnight missions in areas one
to two miles south !If tbe
Demilitarized ZDne ( DMZ)
against a North Vie bam ese
lnfiltralioo roule 13 miles northnorthwest Or the old U.S. base
at Kbe Sanb and suspected
troop concentrations and
bunkers ei«J&gt;I miles west-north-

ROUND STEA

apenliDg I»
miles southwest of Saigon ....,..
Cau Mau npwted
ll
()mmunis'l lnJops ;md sei it«
. """'*40weapllll&lt;m
. _ _ 11 "'
Al'There W«e no gutaiWtiil
casualties, 5p" t
I Wfl slid.

.wmc

U.S. market It supplies engines
to the Kiekctbaefer Mercufy
Corp. of Milwaukee lor i1s
Mercruiser s1em drive marine
po....- plants. II also supplies
both gasoline and diesel industrial engines to Teledyne
Continental Corp. and recenUy
Clllltracted to sell Allis Otalrner.; Co. 2,000 tractors.
Olrysle!' recently withdrew
the Simca from the United
States. saying it is hardly
worthwile for .Simca to try to
meet the increasingly tough
American exhaust emission

On/yS1Q95
Slllfr " A" Wjltr Jt!. IS11fll. prtc is ion
Jle•t ltG mowtmtnl , lhoCII·
f U I ~ttnl , '"''P sttoi'MI.

CAR AV ELLE"
by B uLOVA

CASH AND CARRY

SPECIAL

standanls. But PI · la•t Joan
Ordner Gf Jlena,.."s U.S.
subsidiary insists flrnanlt 'LiD
do at least as well zs Detroit in
meeting tbe clean air standards.
Ordner says be intmds ID
boost Reoa!ilt 5lles alaae • per
cent in tbe next 12 Ddllbs. Be
relies 011 lbree main fad'msvariety, -"" •lOt and tbe fnDt
wheel drive•
bas Ute fllllat
''Renault line of any fweiglt .,..
manufacbrer ""'Pc ill tlr
United States," OnDr slid.

Paneling
Sheet

NEW

MEDIUM PACESETTER
WHITE PACESETTER

FURNilURE
'349.95
$3$.00 ' Down-

HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN

1Wano;e·an
Convenient
Terms.

MATERIALS ·CO.

MASON
FURNITURE

We Deliver

Mason, W. Va.

MASON

. -

Faimwnt Week At Racine Food!

ICE MILK

tiE

By Fai111ont

•

*

All_

lb- .

can

Ol-

STOKELY

46

cans

5th and PEARL STS., R.M:INE
'The Store With A Heart
You, WE LIKE"
Right reserved to limit quantities
We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food Stlmps

Prices Effedi11e Aug. 4-10
Moo. Tues., Wed.-- -9 ID 7
TbuJS., Fri, Sat - -.9 1D 9

~6

Q.OSEDSUNDAYS

•2••
I

Y·21 1

PORTABLE MIXER

11 position IW~Ch. 10 Speeds for
icing, egg beating, deserts, whip·
ping, blending, •oko mix, creaming, P"~mix, folding and stirring.
Twin powerful chrome beuten.
!;ghtweigl&gt;t for pOrtable mixing.
finvertip tontrol. Automatic

lb.

Joy· Dog Food.,..........................;~:
Jo-Bo Dog food ...........,..12:;ns S1OO
Bon_us Detergent........................~ing~..,.S129
_
IVOIJ Liqu1"d................................Jav•••: 69C
2201

boor... release.

SCJ88 .

FRESH PORK
SHOULDER

HECK'SIIG, $ 14 .96

HOMEMADE
FRESH PORK

TASIY SMOKED
JOWL

.

FRESH YEI.UM

7 oz.a1 00

GOLDEN GRAIN MACARONI
.
AND CHEESE DINNER ................... .

11.

Pkg~

PEACHES

•

lb.

ROAST Sausage BACON
BREAD
2
lb.
.$
2
$ lb.$. 19

Holsum Gay Nineties

3-5 lb.

:

I

•

lb.

pkg.

Regular 3r

19C

U. S. No. 1 Wl:ite

POTATOES
20 lb."'

..s
,for
__ .___,..

FRESH

·

lb. I'
'
•

I

9

4x8

3 ROOMS

Instant Creamer

••I
J
''

,f••

Saigm.
Militialnell

Crea,mora..................................~~...oz..59'

,•'

I

•«

.,J

•

i
'

ll2mm mortar fft bit a miii1ia
camp in the M '
Delta
about 120 miles s:wllt:uat af

F0Ige. s Coffee . t?!"!~.,...,...3 '239
~~ 39'
Wh .1tney Tuna.....~ ...... .,.,..,...............
.
•
k
3
OZ-$ 100
0range Dnn ...................... .

necessary.

Features a 2-speed turntable; 1olid
stole performance; rugged polypropy·
lene case; 3 ¥1" dynamic speaker; builtin 45 RPM record storage; pofH'p -45
RPM adopter; syn1hetic sapphire slylus;
monourol crystal cartridge; •eigho only
5 lbs.
·

HECK'SIEG. $9.88

u.s.

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

Register free when

No

'1be price increase upset the
government and it's probably
not going to do much to restrict
imp&lt;lrts," said Dr. Reuben E.
9 ing...-, a professor of
.........,ics at the University of
PiUsburgb.
Tbe price increase lit into the
plans of steel exporters in
Japan, now the second largest
steel producer in the world,
llttOrding to Jaclr. A. Werter, a
steel salesman for Japanese
!inns in !Kl&lt;thern Ohio.
A lllDI'1' ominous threat to the
American economy is the
po!!Sibility, reported under active consideration by at least
1111! finn, 1hat United States
pGCb:a s may build steel mills

~

:

*~

AMERICAN

$1288

$666

,.................

••

a

FLAG

GENERAL ELECTRIC

The easy way 1o shave or crush your ice for
those tall, cool drinlu in summer. Perfect as
a bar occes&gt;Ory ond handy in the kitchen
too.

TRAVEL ALARM CLOCK

You may win
large 3'x5'

Tl00-5

VANWYCK

NEW YORK (UPI)-The
French, who led the foreign car
invasion of the United States
after World War D only to lose
out to the Germans and
Japanese, are moWJting a new
offensive.
French auto exports do well
everywhere except in the
United States. More French
cars are sold in Germany,
Britain and Sweden than the
aulomakers of those cotmlries
sell in France.
The French governmentowned Renault Co., which also
makes the Peugeot, is the
eighth largest auto builder in
the free world and seUs 60 per
cent of its annual production of
1.5 million cars abroad. It bas
plants in 29 coWJtries, including
two behind the Iron Curtain,
but Renault sales in the United
Slates last year were only
20,700. Volkswagen sold almost
half a million ; and the
Japanese expect to hit the U.S.
market this year with 600,000.
The Peugeot and two other
French cars, the Citroen and
the Simca, also sell well on the
world market. And Renault has
penetrated non-car areas of the

! ~gal 39e

PHEBESAYS:

in line.
The increase, in the form of
costlier autos, and appliances,
wiD be felt by all cmsumers.
Pn!sident N'IJJJD made clear his

More French Cars Coming

i FRUIT DRINK

HECK'SIEG. 13.96

JErtur•r.

C-60

Three Rated at 100 Pet.

Vietnam, a U.S. military
spokesman said today.
In Cambodia, North Vie1namese troops ambushed a
Cambodian Navy palrol today
42 miles northwest of Pbnom
Penh in the ftrst attack on a 10day-old government operatillll
aimed at cutting Communist
supply lines near the capita.
There were no reports of

•: Cherry Bomb !•

SJJOO

~ quietly ~

jobs abroad.
In anticipation of the strike
A «&lt;isp\ '"' ~ lbse is
attided last SWJday, major
only - of 1118)' lesat eoils
the industry f!'»idtnlly ~efa led steel users stockpiled enough
to a oaostly; fntilles5 ltlld for several months. The strike
tlnat gone, mill officials
lmP"1'"1 1 rstrib,
Other Jllo'•n•411tdiic batb ~edict shipments in August
the S!eelww !litiS ;md tlr 'lrill be. 4.5 million tons, lowest
Sfpe)mabr$ hw 'wk falling moolltly total sinee July, 1962.
demand, lm&gt;blingpmils. wide- Tbonsands of steelworkers will
spread layofls, plaut • • . « . wait 'fteks or even months lor
strengtbened. ... ,,..itiud. from llleir t'lrst pay checks at the
new contract·rates.
Japan and the eiPift of ~-

SAIGON (UPI) ' - American American casualties in the · west Gf Cam La.
South Vtetna=
spteme•
helicopter gunship crews killed s1rafing in 1he first action by
13 Communist soldiers in twa U.S. 1on:es in several days In said three militory ""' !eorts
were killed and line ., ......,
strafing runs in the far South Vietnam.
Tuesday .men 21 r01111d5 of
northern quarter of South Vielnam.

SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON-THE _IWl'TikmlroDed
color televisim camera 1hat beamed spedamla• pidiRs bact
fr&lt;m the moon during 1he Apollo 151anding will be -.-liD give the
w&lt;rld a view Friday !rim tbe lunar surface of a !datodipse.
!bee tbere is no a1mosphere m the JDOOD ID diotDrt Ji&amp;bl rays,
scientists plan to use the $1;i0,000caDIIR ID lryiDgeta clear view
of tbeeclipse and to look at 1he !lfilky Way, Sa111m andMeralry as
themiXIlmoves through the Eartb'ssbadolr. Tbeeclipse, as seen
fr«m the miXII, will be from 3:~ to 6:06p.m. EDT Friday. Tbe
Apollo 15 astrmauls wiD be able to see tbe •dq&amp; as tbey speed
toward Earth but it wiD not be visible from eartll itself_

Fly the Stars and Stripes!

natim's ieading
producer. served notice .the
party was over. Tbe cunpany
rnised prices I per cent,
dajming tbe increase was
nee ary to prevent ' 'further
-erosicm of earning power."
Mqst of Ute rest Gf the major

Steel, the

Gunships Kill 13 Reds

Eclipse from Moon on TY

Adjusts itself to all kinds of
bread. Toom to desired shade.
of brownnen. ~napdown
crumb tray for eosy cleaning.
Cushioned toast lift gently
hands toast to you. GleOm in g
chromo finish . Stoy cool hon·
dies.

High quality tope at a reasonable
price. UW! to send • spoken,.. letters to
friends and sweethearts for owoy.

or changing blades. Truly a feature loaded economy shaver in handsome

WMBJNGTON - A $ZI&amp; MD UON &amp;gn!"""'nl was signed
TUesday by lnteri&lt;r Secretary IWgen C. B. Morfarl and the
American Gas Association as a "great step" in the ,.-cb for a
"dean.Quning gas."
"To convert C&lt;l8l to clean~ gas is a ba!IM•Im• acCOOlplisbment," Morten said. '"'bis is ... agreatslep."
Under the program, tbe federal tovaument wiD allorate $31
millim 81Diually and the gas indusllydonate $10mj!Jjm a year for
a four-year pilot plant opera tim of the coal gasjfinrtjm ~oress.
1beo government aiXI indus)ry will allorate another fl26 mj!Jjm,
under a formula not yet wated out, to set up "deunalralim
p~anr• operatims f&lt;r anotber four years..

TOASTER

TAPE

able blades keep shoves like new. Pushup control utends heods for cleaning

By Rt!DY CERNKOVIC
PITl'SBURGH (UPI ) -United Steelworkers Union ( USW)
officials held a lavish party to
celebrate their new three-year
wage contract wi~ the steel
industry Sunday, and smaller
parties were held by USW
locals across the nation.
They may be the last
celebrations in the industry for
some time.
The following morning U.S.

Clean Burning Gas Accord Signed

SUNBEAM 2-SLICE

60 MINUTE SUNSD

CASSETTE RECORDING

New comfort control system sets shaver
just right for you. Super sharp replace--

AP-72

CLEANER

Mokts a great gilt. Carries like a camera. (only 4 lbs.). Use i1

out of your hair. Curls your hair wrth

JBIEUY . .T.

MEl'S SHAVER

PORTABLE V

smER
toke the life and shine

SJ777

ll-26

GENERAL ELECTRIC

MIST HAIR

HECK'S lEG. $26.96

REMINGTON

Accu rate clocks fold into
their own carrying cases.
Luminescen1 dial for easy
night reading.

.,...,.,.

HECK'S llEG. $25.99

SCHICK

Here's o dock rad io that lets you
wake up anyway you like-to FM,
to AM, to Music or to Alarm. And
C-4510
you con go to sle-ep to music too, the
, - - - - - - - - . . . . . , radio will shu1.ofl ou1omoticolly .
Lighted d iol fOr telling time in the
dorlt.

I

Move up to X with the all-new Kodak
lnstomatic X-25 Camero that tokes
flash pictures willlout flash batteries!
The Kodak lnstamotic X-25, a truly fuss·
free camera. Easy flcnb with the selfpowered Mogicubo, typo X. Drop-in
loading. Automatic film od..,nce.

AX25

. CriMI d fnm hie I
q!llll'ler f&lt;r undergradua~ and Sill 111!1' ~ fw ~aclaate
s~dents were approved Tuesday by the Ohio Uaiwasil;y ~of
'Ihlstees. Tbe bikes will raise fees fraD • to fl5t for undergraduate students for tbe aCil()emK, year aDd ina se yearly
feeslrom$660 to$900for grawate mvla!ts. Tbeiocreases go into
effect tiJis faD.
Fees fir sludents attendil1g brandl. • •"4" . . wiD go &amp;om
$540 lo $690 a year, a quarterly bikl! of $liD. Out"!f-!dalr student
instructillllll fees were also biked, inr!ndPrg an.aclditiaoal ~ per
quarter increase in 1he nm-nsideDt surdlarge. Tile rtDIH'eSident
oiust pay the $t00armial surcharge in addili!D to basic fees.

WMBJNGTON -U.S.REPS. Dmald0ancy, Samaelllerine
and John Ashbrook, all Republicans from (Jbio, received 1011 per
cent ratings by the American Col&amp;i i'lllive Uni4lo in its latest
sc&lt;recard on 10 key votes in Cmgress.
The ACU said 56 House members scored pafect ratings In
entire expense.
voting the way the &lt;rg.tim judged cmservative. 1bree olber
"Over 1011 organizations bave
Ohio representatives were gi-ven zero per cent ratings. Tbeywere
been invited to be represented
Reps. John Seiberling, James Stanton and Olarles Vanilr:, all
in the parade which will move
prompUy at I o'clock. It is Democrats.
hoped that the dedicatory
ceremonies may begin at 2
TURBAN TRICK
WASHABLE IASHF.S
o'clock. The parade wiD be iD A good way to achieve
Anyone who wears false
keeping with the day and in no height while wearing a tor- eyelashes bows ..,., witl&gt;instance wiD there be any ad- ban is to wrap paper towels out p.roper eare they tud to
vertisingpermitted. Quite a few around the hair . and then look .,W,y aDd exlftmtly
of the n 15 · 1he parade will place the scarf over tt and lake. Try tile •w washab!..
~ them
. the tie it at the side of the head. lashes whir• are soaked in a
be used U1
pagean 1 01
The towels ani not stiff so solution niJ:•tty and ~p tile
evening baYing been designed it will look like your ~wn lashes looldrlg natwral longwith this in mind."
hair beneath the turban.
er.
Gov. A. V. "Vic" Donahey
gave the dedicatory address
THE LOOP LOOK
assisted by Adjutant General 500 persons being scheduled to
make
the
trip
back
to
Meigs
Frank
D.
Henderson.
To eamHflage the DOlDignitaries from across Ohio CoiDity.
quite -small -e-Cir waist,
bad roles in the ceremooies Due to the vandalism at the belts are better won •• tile
including the late Rep. Thomas Pythian Park, the memorial hips tbaa Ole waist. Bat if a
was moved to hear the Mid- ebaill bell Is w•n~ u tile
A. Jenkins.
The 19'17 account of the ap- dlep&lt;rt Post Office and was waist, illsle:ul ef leltiat Ole
excess belt •ug stralpt
proaching dedication reported rededicated in services held down, II'}' JoopiJrg lbe belt.
that a special train was char· Nov. 11, 1940 with C. 0 . Fisher, This breab np Ole Hriaatal
tered by the Meigs County mayor of Middleport then and stripe effed ud mms tile
waist loot smaller.
Society of Columbus with some now, as speaker.

$2288

JIWEliY /JIPT.

JtWEl.Y1191.
I

KIT

INSTAMATIC

HECK'S REG. $133.96

HECK'S REG. $3 J .96

''

llriEUr•r.

77

$

$2488

I

HECK'S REG. $33.96

Electric timer lights up, counts, then beeps when pic·
ture's perfectly dewloped. Electric eye and electronic
shutter set exposures automatically. Single window
Zeiss Ikon folding range and viewfinder. Takes por·
traits and close-ups with optio'nol accessories.

MOVIE CAMERA
'•'I
•

$2888

COLOIWIEIA

SUPER 8
'•
'

•

Last Party by Steelmen .

from page JJ

finished s~eel oitd sbip illo.lite
United Stales for finilllinfl.

�15-Tile DailySentiDel, ~Y. 0., August 4,1971

..

.Memorial
(~linued

&lt;CO!Oilruction.

Continuing, 1he 1927 paper
reported:
"Tbe design of the memorial
building is octagllllll, 28-feet in
diameter and built of concrete.
Olnlinuous steps SUrTound it
and tbe Spanish red tile is
supp&lt;rted by eight coiUIIUlS.
Tbe trophy which weigh$ three
tons sits in the middle of the
building. Between the lower
step and the sidewalk which
SIIITOWUts tbe enlife structure
will be poppy beds. Twelve 1~
pound sheDs wiD support chains
along the sidewalk. When
finished, this memorial wiD be a
credit to the citiuns of M ·
County and a lasting and
tribute to those in whose honor
it wiD be dedicated.
''There has probably never
been a committee in Meigs
County that bas received as
hearty COOperation as the Meigs
County War Trophy Memorial
Committee and the interest and
entbuasiam bas been something
wllllderfuL The flllllllcing or a
project as big as this was a
matter to be reckoned with, but
Ute committee felt inclined to
Iackie 1he job without resorting
to subscriptioo papers and by a
series of entertainments and
drives bas secured money to
begin active operations. To
secure enough money to
complete the plans, a pageant
will be C\ven in Pythian Park on
the everung of the dedication Memorial Day, May 30, 1927 at which time a charge of 50
cents admission wiU be
charged. It is hoped that in this
way sufficient funds will be
received to finish paying the

'•

Ytil T119 , SUNDAY 1TO 1~PRICES II EFFECT TIIOUCH S.AY, AUGUST 8

fi~

QUAITinES LAST

PANASONIC

TAPE RECORDER

FM-AM POLICE BAND RADIP

350

n. ALLENDAlf boam m.. com;

1 dt1tgn , toste~ua,
5ty1otc1 ifl nMdnight l»odr: .and s;lftr rih itl OW1I wrdy~
eary-amy .hondae-. M exnltnt travel ~ ancL
Oft AC, a p.rfKt holM or affia' ~- A 3 V.• PM
dynomic 5pe01r;...- affords uMIII"ppWW'd .niKM:: or voice ,e..
production. The u~ ovtomotic tKOtding lewl eo~~.trol
ensures precise. occura» tKorcMg ..err iime. f'u5h hutlOft contro1o ..-;do.,...;..
opo oliooo ood uf.

Hoor confinuous weo1her plus ott...
public service broadcasts such os
police, fire, e1c. Plus fine quali1y FM
and AM . A squelch control on the
. public serYice band leb you mute
background noise. Ploys on either
batteries or AC power.

•-do•

S]988

NOit COii4Ctil:tiU.

•
•

HECK'S REG. $49.88

'

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JErtur•r.

KODAK

POLAROID

M-22

• Instant drop-in loading-no threading. e Electric motor drive-no winding. • · Foldaway pistol grips .

'

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GENERAL ELECTRIC

,.''
•.

FM-AM CLOCK RADIO

'

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'•

$1 CJ88

.

•

No dry heat to

where you can't use others.

beautifying mist . Includes attractive
"takt me olong" tote bog. Ideal for
travel and storage. 20 lightwtight cur·
t.n, 6 jumbo, 10 medium, ~ smoll. A
marvelous way to keep your hair ~u­
fiful economically.

HECK'SIEG. $21 .96

$1 CJII
HECK'S REG. $25.56
JIWIUT_,T.

gift case with extra set of blades:

$100

$1 CJ88

HECK'SIEG. $1.49

HECK'S REG. $21.9 9

JEWEUYI9T.

ICE CRUSHER

YOUTH PHONOGRAPH

YW-11

S]OO
HECK'S REG. $4.44

HECK'S lEG. $1 S.la

.,EUY11,1.

•ur•r.

JEWEUYIE,T.

SUNBEAM

PERCOLATOR
Comistently good coHee automatically. Big family size brews 4 to l::i
cups. Strength selector. Twist lode.
top and a light signols when the coffee is ready to serve. Keeps coffee

REFRIGERATOR DEFROSTER
Handy kitchen qpplionce cuts
defrosting time in half. Safe and
convenient. Comes with UL approved cord.

serving hot automatically.

5

11

99

JIIIEUF/191.

•
J

$ 99
HECK'S REG. $2.99

HECK'S lEG. $ 1.4 .96
73U9

you vlsl1 1hl• week.

BUY 1 • GET 1 FREE!

:

:

FAIRMONT

:

!

Buy lh gal and

i•

Gel ~ gal FREE

:

purchase

115% bombers new two
overnight missions in areas one
to two miles south !If tbe
Demilitarized ZDne ( DMZ)
against a North Vie bam ese
lnfiltralioo roule 13 miles northnorthwest Or the old U.S. base
at Kbe Sanb and suspected
troop concentrations and
bunkers ei«J&gt;I miles west-north-

ROUND STEA

apenliDg I»
miles southwest of Saigon ....,..
Cau Mau npwted
ll
()mmunis'l lnJops ;md sei it«
. """'*40weapllll&lt;m
. _ _ 11 "'
Al'There W«e no gutaiWtiil
casualties, 5p" t
I Wfl slid.

.wmc

U.S. market It supplies engines
to the Kiekctbaefer Mercufy
Corp. of Milwaukee lor i1s
Mercruiser s1em drive marine
po....- plants. II also supplies
both gasoline and diesel industrial engines to Teledyne
Continental Corp. and recenUy
Clllltracted to sell Allis Otalrner.; Co. 2,000 tractors.
Olrysle!' recently withdrew
the Simca from the United
States. saying it is hardly
worthwile for .Simca to try to
meet the increasingly tough
American exhaust emission

On/yS1Q95
Slllfr " A" Wjltr Jt!. IS11fll. prtc is ion
Jle•t ltG mowtmtnl , lhoCII·
f U I ~ttnl , '"''P sttoi'MI.

CAR AV ELLE"
by B uLOVA

CASH AND CARRY

SPECIAL

standanls. But PI · la•t Joan
Ordner Gf Jlena,.."s U.S.
subsidiary insists flrnanlt 'LiD
do at least as well zs Detroit in
meeting tbe clean air standards.
Ordner says be intmds ID
boost Reoa!ilt 5lles alaae • per
cent in tbe next 12 Ddllbs. Be
relies 011 lbree main fad'msvariety, -"" •lOt and tbe fnDt
wheel drive•
bas Ute fllllat
''Renault line of any fweiglt .,..
manufacbrer ""'Pc ill tlr
United States," OnDr slid.

Paneling
Sheet

NEW

MEDIUM PACESETTER
WHITE PACESETTER

FURNilURE
'349.95
$3$.00 ' Down-

HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN

1Wano;e·an
Convenient
Terms.

MATERIALS ·CO.

MASON
FURNITURE

We Deliver

Mason, W. Va.

MASON

. -

Faimwnt Week At Racine Food!

ICE MILK

tiE

By Fai111ont

•

*

All_

lb- .

can

Ol-

STOKELY

46

cans

5th and PEARL STS., R.M:INE
'The Store With A Heart
You, WE LIKE"
Right reserved to limit quantities
We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food Stlmps

Prices Effedi11e Aug. 4-10
Moo. Tues., Wed.-- -9 ID 7
TbuJS., Fri, Sat - -.9 1D 9

~6

Q.OSEDSUNDAYS

•2••
I

Y·21 1

PORTABLE MIXER

11 position IW~Ch. 10 Speeds for
icing, egg beating, deserts, whip·
ping, blending, •oko mix, creaming, P"~mix, folding and stirring.
Twin powerful chrome beuten.
!;ghtweigl&gt;t for pOrtable mixing.
finvertip tontrol. Automatic

lb.

Joy· Dog Food.,..........................;~:
Jo-Bo Dog food ...........,..12:;ns S1OO
Bon_us Detergent........................~ing~..,.S129
_
IVOIJ Liqu1"d................................Jav•••: 69C
2201

boor... release.

SCJ88 .

FRESH PORK
SHOULDER

HECK'SIIG, $ 14 .96

HOMEMADE
FRESH PORK

TASIY SMOKED
JOWL

.

FRESH YEI.UM

7 oz.a1 00

GOLDEN GRAIN MACARONI
.
AND CHEESE DINNER ................... .

11.

Pkg~

PEACHES

•

lb.

ROAST Sausage BACON
BREAD
2
lb.
.$
2
$ lb.$. 19

Holsum Gay Nineties

3-5 lb.

:

I

•

lb.

pkg.

Regular 3r

19C

U. S. No. 1 Wl:ite

POTATOES
20 lb."'

..s
,for
__ .___,..

FRESH

·

lb. I'
'
•

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4x8

3 ROOMS

Instant Creamer

••I
J
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Saigm.
Militialnell

Crea,mora..................................~~...oz..59'

,•'

I

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.,J

•

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'

ll2mm mortar fft bit a miii1ia
camp in the M '
Delta
about 120 miles s:wllt:uat af

F0Ige. s Coffee . t?!"!~.,...,...3 '239
~~ 39'
Wh .1tney Tuna.....~ ...... .,.,..,...............
.
•
k
3
OZ-$ 100
0range Dnn ...................... .

necessary.

Features a 2-speed turntable; 1olid
stole performance; rugged polypropy·
lene case; 3 ¥1" dynamic speaker; builtin 45 RPM record storage; pofH'p -45
RPM adopter; syn1hetic sapphire slylus;
monourol crystal cartridge; •eigho only
5 lbs.
·

HECK'SIEG. $9.88

u.s.

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

Register free when

No

'1be price increase upset the
government and it's probably
not going to do much to restrict
imp&lt;lrts," said Dr. Reuben E.
9 ing...-, a professor of
.........,ics at the University of
PiUsburgb.
Tbe price increase lit into the
plans of steel exporters in
Japan, now the second largest
steel producer in the world,
llttOrding to Jaclr. A. Werter, a
steel salesman for Japanese
!inns in !Kl&lt;thern Ohio.
A lllDI'1' ominous threat to the
American economy is the
po!!Sibility, reported under active consideration by at least
1111! finn, 1hat United States
pGCb:a s may build steel mills

~

:

*~

AMERICAN

$1288

$666

,.................

••

a

FLAG

GENERAL ELECTRIC

The easy way 1o shave or crush your ice for
those tall, cool drinlu in summer. Perfect as
a bar occes&gt;Ory ond handy in the kitchen
too.

TRAVEL ALARM CLOCK

You may win
large 3'x5'

Tl00-5

VANWYCK

NEW YORK (UPI)-The
French, who led the foreign car
invasion of the United States
after World War D only to lose
out to the Germans and
Japanese, are moWJting a new
offensive.
French auto exports do well
everywhere except in the
United States. More French
cars are sold in Germany,
Britain and Sweden than the
aulomakers of those cotmlries
sell in France.
The French governmentowned Renault Co., which also
makes the Peugeot, is the
eighth largest auto builder in
the free world and seUs 60 per
cent of its annual production of
1.5 million cars abroad. It bas
plants in 29 coWJtries, including
two behind the Iron Curtain,
but Renault sales in the United
Slates last year were only
20,700. Volkswagen sold almost
half a million ; and the
Japanese expect to hit the U.S.
market this year with 600,000.
The Peugeot and two other
French cars, the Citroen and
the Simca, also sell well on the
world market. And Renault has
penetrated non-car areas of the

! ~gal 39e

PHEBESAYS:

in line.
The increase, in the form of
costlier autos, and appliances,
wiD be felt by all cmsumers.
Pn!sident N'IJJJD made clear his

More French Cars Coming

i FRUIT DRINK

HECK'SIEG. 13.96

JErtur•r.

C-60

Three Rated at 100 Pet.

Vietnam, a U.S. military
spokesman said today.
In Cambodia, North Vie1namese troops ambushed a
Cambodian Navy palrol today
42 miles northwest of Pbnom
Penh in the ftrst attack on a 10day-old government operatillll
aimed at cutting Communist
supply lines near the capita.
There were no reports of

•: Cherry Bomb !•

SJJOO

~ quietly ~

jobs abroad.
In anticipation of the strike
A «&lt;isp\ '"' ~ lbse is
attided last SWJday, major
only - of 1118)' lesat eoils
the industry f!'»idtnlly ~efa led steel users stockpiled enough
to a oaostly; fntilles5 ltlld for several months. The strike
tlnat gone, mill officials
lmP"1'"1 1 rstrib,
Other Jllo'•n•411tdiic batb ~edict shipments in August
the S!eelww !litiS ;md tlr 'lrill be. 4.5 million tons, lowest
Sfpe)mabr$ hw 'wk falling moolltly total sinee July, 1962.
demand, lm&gt;blingpmils. wide- Tbonsands of steelworkers will
spread layofls, plaut • • . « . wait 'fteks or even months lor
strengtbened. ... ,,..itiud. from llleir t'lrst pay checks at the
new contract·rates.
Japan and the eiPift of ~-

SAIGON (UPI) ' - American American casualties in the · west Gf Cam La.
South Vtetna=
spteme•
helicopter gunship crews killed s1rafing in 1he first action by
13 Communist soldiers in twa U.S. 1on:es in several days In said three militory ""' !eorts
were killed and line ., ......,
strafing runs in the far South Vietnam.
Tuesday .men 21 r01111d5 of
northern quarter of South Vielnam.

SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON-THE _IWl'TikmlroDed
color televisim camera 1hat beamed spedamla• pidiRs bact
fr&lt;m the moon during 1he Apollo 151anding will be -.-liD give the
w&lt;rld a view Friday !rim tbe lunar surface of a !datodipse.
!bee tbere is no a1mosphere m the JDOOD ID diotDrt Ji&amp;bl rays,
scientists plan to use the $1;i0,000caDIIR ID lryiDgeta clear view
of tbeeclipse and to look at 1he !lfilky Way, Sa111m andMeralry as
themiXIlmoves through the Eartb'ssbadolr. Tbeeclipse, as seen
fr«m the miXII, will be from 3:~ to 6:06p.m. EDT Friday. Tbe
Apollo 15 astrmauls wiD be able to see tbe •dq&amp; as tbey speed
toward Earth but it wiD not be visible from eartll itself_

Fly the Stars and Stripes!

natim's ieading
producer. served notice .the
party was over. Tbe cunpany
rnised prices I per cent,
dajming tbe increase was
nee ary to prevent ' 'further
-erosicm of earning power."
Mqst of Ute rest Gf the major

Steel, the

Gunships Kill 13 Reds

Eclipse from Moon on TY

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WMBJNGTON - A $ZI&amp; MD UON &amp;gn!"""'nl was signed
TUesday by lnteri&lt;r Secretary IWgen C. B. Morfarl and the
American Gas Association as a "great step" in the ,.-cb for a
"dean.Quning gas."
"To convert C&lt;l8l to clean~ gas is a ba!IM•Im• acCOOlplisbment," Morten said. '"'bis is ... agreatslep."
Under the program, tbe federal tovaument wiD allorate $31
millim 81Diually and the gas indusllydonate $10mj!Jjm a year for
a four-year pilot plant opera tim of the coal gasjfinrtjm ~oress.
1beo government aiXI indus)ry will allorate another fl26 mj!Jjm,
under a formula not yet wated out, to set up "deunalralim
p~anr• operatims f&lt;r anotber four years..

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By Rt!DY CERNKOVIC
PITl'SBURGH (UPI ) -United Steelworkers Union ( USW)
officials held a lavish party to
celebrate their new three-year
wage contract wi~ the steel
industry Sunday, and smaller
parties were held by USW
locals across the nation.
They may be the last
celebrations in the industry for
some time.
The following morning U.S.

Clean Burning Gas Accord Signed

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Lighted d iol fOr telling time in the
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AX25

. CriMI d fnm hie I
q!llll'ler f&lt;r undergradua~ and Sill 111!1' ~ fw ~aclaate
s~dents were approved Tuesday by the Ohio Uaiwasil;y ~of
'Ihlstees. Tbe bikes will raise fees fraD • to fl5t for undergraduate students for tbe aCil()emK, year aDd ina se yearly
feeslrom$660 to$900for grawate mvla!ts. Tbeiocreases go into
effect tiJis faD.
Fees fir sludents attendil1g brandl. • •"4" . . wiD go &amp;om
$540 lo $690 a year, a quarterly bikl! of $liD. Out"!f-!dalr student
instructillllll fees were also biked, inr!ndPrg an.aclditiaoal ~ per
quarter increase in 1he nm-nsideDt surdlarge. Tile rtDIH'eSident
oiust pay the $t00armial surcharge in addili!D to basic fees.

WMBJNGTON -U.S.REPS. Dmald0ancy, Samaelllerine
and John Ashbrook, all Republicans from (Jbio, received 1011 per
cent ratings by the American Col&amp;i i'lllive Uni4lo in its latest
sc&lt;recard on 10 key votes in Cmgress.
The ACU said 56 House members scored pafect ratings In
entire expense.
voting the way the &lt;rg.tim judged cmservative. 1bree olber
"Over 1011 organizations bave
Ohio representatives were gi-ven zero per cent ratings. Tbeywere
been invited to be represented
Reps. John Seiberling, James Stanton and Olarles Vanilr:, all
in the parade which will move
prompUy at I o'clock. It is Democrats.
hoped that the dedicatory
ceremonies may begin at 2
TURBAN TRICK
WASHABLE IASHF.S
o'clock. The parade wiD be iD A good way to achieve
Anyone who wears false
keeping with the day and in no height while wearing a tor- eyelashes bows ..,., witl&gt;instance wiD there be any ad- ban is to wrap paper towels out p.roper eare they tud to
vertisingpermitted. Quite a few around the hair . and then look .,W,y aDd exlftmtly
of the n 15 · 1he parade will place the scarf over tt and lake. Try tile •w washab!..
~ them
. the tie it at the side of the head. lashes whir• are soaked in a
be used U1
pagean 1 01
The towels ani not stiff so solution niJ:•tty and ~p tile
evening baYing been designed it will look like your ~wn lashes looldrlg natwral longwith this in mind."
hair beneath the turban.
er.
Gov. A. V. "Vic" Donahey
gave the dedicatory address
THE LOOP LOOK
assisted by Adjutant General 500 persons being scheduled to
make
the
trip
back
to
Meigs
Frank
D.
Henderson.
To eamHflage the DOlDignitaries from across Ohio CoiDity.
quite -small -e-Cir waist,
bad roles in the ceremooies Due to the vandalism at the belts are better won •• tile
including the late Rep. Thomas Pythian Park, the memorial hips tbaa Ole waist. Bat if a
was moved to hear the Mid- ebaill bell Is w•n~ u tile
A. Jenkins.
The 19'17 account of the ap- dlep&lt;rt Post Office and was waist, illsle:ul ef leltiat Ole
excess belt •ug stralpt
proaching dedication reported rededicated in services held down, II'}' JoopiJrg lbe belt.
that a special train was char· Nov. 11, 1940 with C. 0 . Fisher, This breab np Ole Hriaatal
tered by the Meigs County mayor of Middleport then and stripe effed ud mms tile
waist loot smaller.
Society of Columbus with some now, as speaker.

$2288

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Electric timer lights up, counts, then beeps when pic·
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'•
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Last Party by Steelmen .

from page JJ

finished s~eel oitd sbip illo.lite
United Stales for finilllinfl.

�'

w.

1&amp;- Tbr Daily ~ntinel, Ml+•lqu t..Pimaoy, 0., Aupst 4, 1971

.·,r----...
----------------------,
I
h
•
·
1
. as. Inmon
':
l5 .,,
.-.:_•.. ,~.
1

1

. -~-c.· ,'1

families a.nd high t111em- Aproposed substitution of the
ployment; areas afleeted by an Appalachia concept wi!h . the
actualor!hreatenedaliruptrise Administration's . special
in unemployment. The intent is revenue sharing plan imto expedite funding of projects mediately touched off a wave of
1 in hard-hit uenployment areas. justifiable concern among ARC
1
By Clarence 1: continuation
Title II, which authorizes the supporters - myself included.
of the ApPSiachla
In February and .March of
Miller
program, authorizes a total of this year, 1 expressed my
I $1.5 billion - $925 million of complete support for the
I which is earmarked to continue program at three different
and authorizes a total of $2.4 construction of !he vast Ap- public hearings which were
billion for _public works palachian Highway network called to disCuss the future of
projeCts, teclmical assistance, . overthe11extfiveyearperiod.A the ARC. In each instance, I
economic planning, grants 'and lola) of $576 million has been strongly felt th8.t the many
other uplift projects managed allocated for the non-highway - health, education, construction,
by the Department of Com· programs. The ARC program is job training, library, and highmerce.
·a brick and moriar program, way programs of the ARC have
Of special interest to Ap- aimed at building. rural areas been purposely interwoven into
palachia, !he bill provides that and reversing outmigration aod the social .and economic
in each fiSCal year - FY72 and unemployment trends.
progres!l of Ohio's 28 ARC
FY73- not less than 25 pet. nor The House vote marked an counties. To sever this uniquemore than JS pet. of the funds end of a long, trying set of state-and local government
appropriated will be extended circumstances.
partnership, while in its in·
in special impact areas. Special The · campaign to extend fancy, would have been unwise.
impact areas are defined as authority of the ARC came into My campaign to underscore !he
areas whicll meet one of the public focus early this year contributions of !he ARC to
following criteria: rural areas when it was reported that !be Southeastern Ohio continued at
experiencing substantial out- Administration would ter- every opportunity. In June, bills
migration; a large con- minate the five-year-old extending ARC and EDA were
centra lion of low-income cooperative.
coupled with an accelerated

R·eport.
.

' I

·

· I
. ~ Aj!pa)achian Regiooal
• . Cllliunission is, at last, 'alive·
-'. Md well. By a vote of 347.- '!1,
the House passed legislation to
extend the non-highway
- _programs of Appalachian
~·· Regiooal Development Act for
:: f.«ir years and the highway
~ programs for an additional five
,. years. House approval of the
:: bill also extends the life of the
~ Public. Works and Ecooomic
;: Development Act for two years.
:: . The Senate previously passed
~ an almost identical bill and is
:: expected ., to accept a minor
!W House change and send the
i: measur~ 1.Q the White House for
:: Presidentbtfapproval.
~ Title I or'the bill extends EDA

pu:~ ;.~~e~~~id he would $54.3 Million Borrowed '{ ~~SPI~~~ '~~;~
· ; 111m
veto the entire bill because of

l971

7

APW's ·inflationary nature -

;~: u~~~ ~ ~:to~id. The
Shortly thereafter, I cosponsored legislaUon conlaining authorization only for
ARC and EDA. This bill came
before Congress and was
subsequently approved by a
healthy margin in both houses.
Now the ARC can continue to
work with and for the people of
Appalachia. Comparatively
speaking, ARC is young. The
programs have been described
as experimental and the Appalachian region as a national
laboratory .I fully agree. And it
seems to me that it would be in
!he best national interest to
carry !hi~ experiement · forward, to deal direetly with the
problems of Appalachia.

~-=-r

·

Off FHA.in Fiscal '71
·

·

~=iin~~o~ !i

J

The Farmers Home Ad- million in . loans aod· _grants
ministration in Obio extended during !he year, primarily for
more than $54.3 million in credit financing rural water and waste
to rural people during the 1971 disposal systems.
fiscal year. Gains were Farmers
Home
Ad·
especially strong in rural ministration Is the rural credit
housing loans. The agency service of !he United States
processed housing loans to 2,520 Department of Agriculture and
families for more than · $32.5 administers 23 major credit
million, compared to $13.2 programs for nir'!l people~
million during the previous
fiscal year.
Farmers in Ohio, wh.o lacked
VISIT IN CANADA
other sources of credit, turned Mr. and Mrs. Ted ·Reed and
to_ . Far~ers Hom~ . Ad· sons of Pom~oy have returned
numstralion for $3.5 million to from a vacation in Northern
purchase,,develop, oi' refinance Canada which included a tour of
their farms, and borrowed $3.3 the New England States. They
million for f~rm operating were joineil at a fishing cabin in
purposes.
Canada by Mr. and Mrs, Byron '
The Farmers_ Home A~- Roman and grandson · oi
In 1967 America ended its mmJslrabon Director said Niagara Falls, N. Y. Mr. aod
military airlift to the strife-torn co~munity _Improvement Mrs. Roman are former
Congo.
proJects receiVed over $15 Pomeroy residents.

Stones · to

:r.:.

Maternity visilinghoiii-s 2::io to
4,30 p.m. Parents only?' on
Pediatrics Ward.
·
Blrtbs
Mr. and Mrs. Larry' R.
Greenlee, Bidwell, a son; and
Mr. and Mrs. Kermit L.
Sowards; Jackson, a daughter.
Disebarges
Derek A. Ameel, Kevin
Eogene Bloomer, Mrs. Thomas
A. Campbell and son, Fred L.
Dauber,Mrs. MarthaG.Fulton,
Mr s. Jut'J aE. Grae,
1 Mrs.
Howard E. Hughes and
daughter, Lawrence B. Israel,
Mrs. Margaret E. Leifheit, Mrs.
0. Vernon Lucas and son; Mrs.
Michael c. McWilliams, Mrs.
Richard A. Moore, Elmer F.
Robinson, -Mrs. John R.
Shepherd and daugh~. ~s.
Retha J. Shuler, 't'!Obi,rt• W.
Stapleton, Mrs. James William
Stokes and son.

ToUr ·u. s.
DALLAS (UPI)-'-The Rollil'g
Stones, EngOO!d's popular and
contruveralal rock and roll
band, !his fall will make !heir
first tour of the United states
since the disaater at Altamont
during which four 'persons died
and !be Woodstock nation
collapsed.
Although the tour has not
been officially announced as
yet, it has been learned it will
concentrate mostly in the South
and will be a budget-tour which
Stones leader Mick . Jagger
wanted to dO the last time the
band toured here. It also will
fellture closed circuit telecasts.
The tour is expected to begin
il1 early Octol!er, giving Jagger
plenty of time to crisscross the
United States and be back
home In England in time for
the birth of his first child.
The route of the tour is not
known eucUy at this time, but
from various reports, UPI has
pieeed together ilome informaUOII about the trip.
The last time the Stones
toured !he United states they
played in Dallas and practically
nowhere else in !he South. This
time the Stones for sure will
play in three cities in Texas
alone-Dallas, Holl$n and San
Antonio.
The Stones will not bring any
equipment with !hem. They are
expected .to borrow instruments, amplifiers and other
sound equipment in each town
in which they play. Nor will
there be any guest acts-just
the Stones. Jagger believes !his

THURSDAY, FRIDAY and
SATURDAY ARE
THE LAST 3 DAYS
Hurry!
Save FROM REGULAR PRICES
'

POMEROY, OHIO

Nye Attacks·Reclamation Board Ruling

I

Holzer Medical center, First

.

.. _.....::;;.

'
· even if a moclei-ately
heavy
rain occurred in a limited per·
iod of time," the board aid.
Nye said the beard shwld not
usume lbat such eontrolll
ating from the strip mine area. would be inslalll!d. •
"It is the further consenq.. "The board's function' is to
of the board that adequate con· assure, not to assume,'' Nye
trol measures as stipulated by said. ''The board is SJII'P"'""' to
the strip mining law, instigated make certain that the strip
at the proper lime, could pre- miner's mining plan will prevent excessive soil erosion on vent euesslve soil erosion - .
the stripped areas and sohstan- not ~ly to say that ailetiaJ deposition in stream beds quate measures 'could prevent'
or on owned or adjacent lands erosion."

slJould hold down the costs of
producing the tour. He plans to
pass !he savings on in the form
of lower ticket prices-perhapa
as low as $1 to $3 each.
Two other things about
Jagger. He doean't allow armed
police in tl)e same hall where
h~ is performing and !he Stones
won't play to a. segregated
audience. It was the first
prohibition !hat resulted in !he
hiring of motorcycle ganga as
security guards at Altamont In
California. Four persons died
there. One of the four was
stabbed by a motorcycle gang
member when the victim
produced a pistol and began to
rush the stage where the Stones
were performing.
A low~ost tour by !he Stones
in October would bring the
group financial benefits beyond
just the ticket sales.
They would probably make at
least one commercial television
appearance. They also plan to
do at least one and perhaps as
many as three concerts which
will be telecast via closed
circuit to theaters throughout
the country. This would be a
first although !he idea has been
tossed aroWJd before.
The tOur would also boost the
Stones' record sales which is
now better than at any time in
the group's history. Their
current album "Sticky Fingers"
could be !heir best seller of all.
It has been outsold this year
only by "Jesus Christ Superstar" and Carole King's "Tapestry."

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The slate's history was "gross dis·
Ohio Reclamation Board of Re· regard of the public interest."
view Tueaday overruled the !Je. The Natural ·Resources Department of Natural Resources partment denied the license
and granted a license to the ApriL I, and Marietta Coal of
Marietta Coal Company for ex, Cambridge appealed !he denial
paosion of its.strip mining oper· to the review board. Nye said
ations in Richlaod Township, he would appeal the board's
Belmont County.
decision to the Fraoklin CoWJty
Natural Resources Direetor Common Pleas Court,
William B. Nye said !he refusal
"Thedecisionpro\ridesfurther
. of !he board to uphold the first' evidence !hat Ohio's present
strip mine license denial in !he . strip mining laws are woefully

'
MORTGAGES UP
WASlllNGTON (UPI) -The
Federal Home Loan Bank
Board reports that the nation's
federally insured savings aod
loao associations closed $4.1 .
billion in mortgages in June,
the highest figure in more than
two years.
The board sa1d !he figure was
more thao double the amount of
closings for the same month
one year ago.

YACHT WINNERS
GASCAIS, Portugal (UPI)Stig Wennerstrom aod Sture
Christensson of SWeden won
Tuesday's seeond race in the
22nd Europeao and North
African Yachting star class
championship in competition
wilh 93 other yachts from 14
coWJtries.
James Schoonmaker and Tom
Dudinsky of !he U.S. were
second.

inadequate to protect the slate
against the ravages of strip
mining," Nye said.
Nye said the original mining
plan submitted by Marietta
Coal called for construction of
seven dams to reduce siltation
of streams by sediment eroded
from the strip mined lands.
"When the matter came before the review board, the plan
RUTH TOURNEY SET
TRENTON, N.J. (UPI )-A 17memher team from Italy will
arrive at John F. Kennedy
Airport in New York today to
compete as the invitational
team in the annual International Babe Ruth Baseball Tournament of Champions in
Stamford, COnn., Aug . 12-19.
Prior to the tournament, the
Italia club will play several
exhibition games in the Long
lsland, N.Y., area, according to
Babe Ruth Baseball president
Richard W. Case.

had been modified to specify 14
dams and grass seeding," Nye
said. "This change would seem
to be evidence !hat the original
mining plan was inadequate,
but the review board disregarded iL"
The direetor said much of the
sill and sediment from the area
would be deposited in Bark·
camp Creek, which drains into
the lake in Barkcamp Slate
Park.
The board, which said it examined the strip mine area of
Marietta Coal, said "no evidence of excessive sedimentation was found at the points
.
ted . ..
lllSpeC
"There was limited sediment
deposition at certain and infrequent points along the stream
but in each instanee the sediment deposit observed was
mainly 'red dog· aod 'slag' material that came from the road_.
way," the board said. " There
was no deposition that could be
specifically identified as origin-

NOTICE!
LET'S GO TO THE FAIRI
We will be closed Thursday
afternoon August 5
to attend the Mason Co. Fair.

,

....

PRICES GOOD THRU ·sAT., AUG. 7th.

r---------------------------1

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U.S. =1 WHITE POTATOES 10 . 69&lt;
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23'

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- EIGHT O'CLOCK-

79 ~

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JANE PARKER

t.t&gt;.

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Delr Helen:
.
Maybe others are different, hut I doubt If psychiatry could .
belp me. Tbe very thought rl. that $35 an ho~ bill, building up
weekly form months or men, would drlw me bonkers.
Seeml to me a mentally dl.aturbed penon, who knows he can
mlyptiOIIMODe to liaten If he pays oothiaUfe's blood, woold turn
.oft the Jqb priced lialmer In the first five mlnutei.-DOM .
Delr He1ell:
You've already menUoaed t."EUROTICS ANONYMOUS as a
be~ for dlllurbed people. The addreu (-saln) IJ Room
Gl, Cokndo Bldg., 1341 "G" Street, N. 'f., W~. D. G.,
IIIII 1oc11 dlapter addmm may be obtained by sending a
stamped, self..ctdressed enwlope. -MRS. W. J.

'·

·

JSelti-lo•eless 1Pork Steak
I Cealer Cll Ha• • •

Big Del Monte Sale Stock Up!

"Desperate" aald, "ooly the rich fr the very poor can afford
psychiatric belp. And the poor must wait, and wall, and wait."
In New Jersey's Bergen County, we have six Mental Health
Centers, all r1. which operate on an "alillty to pay" basis. Our fees
ranee from 50 cents to $17 per treatment session, and w~ provide
the full range ·of outpatient psychiatric services. There iS no
question that additional services, centers and staff are needed,
and that we all have walling lists, hut we DO help many people
IIIII our service ~ not llmlted to the poor. ~ ADMINISTRATIVE
DIREC'roR
Delr Readers:
MClll larger cities have mental health centers and psychiatric
dlnlcs wblch charge much leu than the regulation $25-$60 per
11our f - of private paychologllls and psychiatrists. But getting
an early appolnbneni!J the blg problem. We need many more

s,..t

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•

Dear Helen:

--CLIAIANCI
'
llclies' Mi- &amp; Child,...,

SNEAKERS

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Tomato Juice

0

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II

1 ICE CREAM

Uolos · •

The Catholic Charities (sometimes called Catholic Welfare)
olfers reasonably priced counseling services to disturbed people HEARTS DELIGHT
w upaet famllles. Fees are based on ability to ~Y, and the service
is for allfalths-evenforthosewhobave littleornofaithat all.-

.,

ASS81TEI TIEEIS

44

-H.
Dear Helen:

pair

.

-·

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Sta-Puf •••

~ uig clearance group of the scasons· besl styles from Hi Brow and
othe~ famous brands. Whilt.&gt; and
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VALVES TOtul

CLURIICE OF lEI'S

FLAT
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It's true, waiting liats are long at most reasonably priced
c:ounseling facilities, but the Family Service Agency of Modesto,
California, 11 solving thl8 tnblem.
Here we hire, as part.t1me psychiatric social workers,'
cp••fllled people In other professions. For nample, a high school
Oo, I M,-., Th•
Blr 01"11· I 7-ol
counselor or a local minister with a Master's Degree in
Fnnl(ldl, Hathr·om Clt•anf'r
iJsychology may devote several bours of his spare time each week
hi R,•qu!ar Pr·•cc (,d 0'1t'
to family counseUng. With a number of these interested and inCali Ab,oluft·ly F•vp'
volved persons working for us, we've seen our waiting list
dwindle. Nowadays, clients in desperate need of help can receive
it within hours, not weeb or months. And we manage this within
our allotted budget. - BOARD MEMBER, MODESTO AREA
FAMILY SERVICE AGENCY
FAMILY SERVICE AGENCIES EVERYWHERE: Read and
If A(,p St lis lt-A&amp;P Guorontccs
heed. This system works; I know, f« I have observed It perIOIUIIly. Modesto's community-centered Family Service Agency FAIRIC SOFTENER
bu a key word - involvement. Its part.t1me counselors
(moonlighters if yoo will) aren't simply working for a few extra
dollars. They're concerned and detennined to help. And they do! CALIFORNIA ONION

·oUT'
TH£Y oo·

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NOW I

,_

Dear Helen:

12

Hot Pants - Jamaica Shorts - Sport Tops - Slacks . Skirts
Blouses. Mark down •;, Off original price. Select a ·

:

H.

BOBBIE BROOKS • RUSS TOGS • AILEEN

SPIRT DElliS

By Helen Bottel

HELP FOR MENTALLY DISTURBED
Dear Helen:
Two recent letters ~ompt me to write. First, a woman
wmdered why psychiatric help was so expensive that ordinary
pe~ can't afford 11. The second described touchingly and wen
the pllgbt of an ootcase who has had a nervous breakdown.
There's help in "REOOVERY, INC.," and branches of thia
great "••sod.atiut for nervous and former mental patients" are
in almCllt every large city.
Recovery, Inc. was founded in 1937 by !he late Abraham A.
Low, M.D. Members learn how to improve their mental heJ)!h in
weekly meetings which are open to the public at no charge. Over
1140 self.flelp Recovery groupa operate throughout the United
Slates and Canada.
Though Recovery Inc. does not replace the jilysician, and is
IIUIIP!ementary to professional aid, many of us have found in itthe
added something !hat makes usable tocopewlth our problems. J.R.
Dear Readers:
Further information about RECOVERY, INC. may be obtained by sending a stamped, self~ddressed envelope to national
headquarters, 116South Micligan Ave., Oticago, Dllnois, 60603. -

SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE

.....

I

0. 1-1._ Cu FII&amp;W
c.n. ••, lri..
Good Thrv Saturday ·
August 7tll.. At A&amp;P
Linoit 0.. C • I

0,••
Pit
._ 195 ca
·-~­
...

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Augost 7fl.. AI AM

Uotit Ooe Ca f

12 ..
CMS

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1&amp;- Tbr Daily ~ntinel, Ml+•lqu t..Pimaoy, 0., Aupst 4, 1971

.·,r----...
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families a.nd high t111em- Aproposed substitution of the
ployment; areas afleeted by an Appalachia concept wi!h . the
actualor!hreatenedaliruptrise Administration's . special
in unemployment. The intent is revenue sharing plan imto expedite funding of projects mediately touched off a wave of
1 in hard-hit uenployment areas. justifiable concern among ARC
1
By Clarence 1: continuation
Title II, which authorizes the supporters - myself included.
of the ApPSiachla
In February and .March of
Miller
program, authorizes a total of this year, 1 expressed my
I $1.5 billion - $925 million of complete support for the
I which is earmarked to continue program at three different
and authorizes a total of $2.4 construction of !he vast Ap- public hearings which were
billion for _public works palachian Highway network called to disCuss the future of
projeCts, teclmical assistance, . overthe11extfiveyearperiod.A the ARC. In each instance, I
economic planning, grants 'and lola) of $576 million has been strongly felt th8.t the many
other uplift projects managed allocated for the non-highway - health, education, construction,
by the Department of Com· programs. The ARC program is job training, library, and highmerce.
·a brick and moriar program, way programs of the ARC have
Of special interest to Ap- aimed at building. rural areas been purposely interwoven into
palachia, !he bill provides that and reversing outmigration aod the social .and economic
in each fiSCal year - FY72 and unemployment trends.
progres!l of Ohio's 28 ARC
FY73- not less than 25 pet. nor The House vote marked an counties. To sever this uniquemore than JS pet. of the funds end of a long, trying set of state-and local government
appropriated will be extended circumstances.
partnership, while in its in·
in special impact areas. Special The · campaign to extend fancy, would have been unwise.
impact areas are defined as authority of the ARC came into My campaign to underscore !he
areas whicll meet one of the public focus early this year contributions of !he ARC to
following criteria: rural areas when it was reported that !be Southeastern Ohio continued at
experiencing substantial out- Administration would ter- every opportunity. In June, bills
migration; a large con- minate the five-year-old extending ARC and EDA were
centra lion of low-income cooperative.
coupled with an accelerated

R·eport.
.

' I

·

· I
. ~ Aj!pa)achian Regiooal
• . Cllliunission is, at last, 'alive·
-'. Md well. By a vote of 347.- '!1,
the House passed legislation to
extend the non-highway
- _programs of Appalachian
~·· Regiooal Development Act for
:: f.«ir years and the highway
~ programs for an additional five
,. years. House approval of the
:: bill also extends the life of the
~ Public. Works and Ecooomic
;: Development Act for two years.
:: . The Senate previously passed
~ an almost identical bill and is
:: expected ., to accept a minor
!W House change and send the
i: measur~ 1.Q the White House for
:: Presidentbtfapproval.
~ Title I or'the bill extends EDA

pu:~ ;.~~e~~~id he would $54.3 Million Borrowed '{ ~~SPI~~~ '~~;~
· ; 111m
veto the entire bill because of

l971

7

APW's ·inflationary nature -

;~: u~~~ ~ ~:to~id. The
Shortly thereafter, I cosponsored legislaUon conlaining authorization only for
ARC and EDA. This bill came
before Congress and was
subsequently approved by a
healthy margin in both houses.
Now the ARC can continue to
work with and for the people of
Appalachia. Comparatively
speaking, ARC is young. The
programs have been described
as experimental and the Appalachian region as a national
laboratory .I fully agree. And it
seems to me that it would be in
!he best national interest to
carry !hi~ experiement · forward, to deal direetly with the
problems of Appalachia.

~-=-r

·

Off FHA.in Fiscal '71
·

·

~=iin~~o~ !i

J

The Farmers Home Ad- million in . loans aod· _grants
ministration in Obio extended during !he year, primarily for
more than $54.3 million in credit financing rural water and waste
to rural people during the 1971 disposal systems.
fiscal year. Gains were Farmers
Home
Ad·
especially strong in rural ministration Is the rural credit
housing loans. The agency service of !he United States
processed housing loans to 2,520 Department of Agriculture and
families for more than · $32.5 administers 23 major credit
million, compared to $13.2 programs for nir'!l people~
million during the previous
fiscal year.
Farmers in Ohio, wh.o lacked
VISIT IN CANADA
other sources of credit, turned Mr. and Mrs. Ted ·Reed and
to_ . Far~ers Hom~ . Ad· sons of Pom~oy have returned
numstralion for $3.5 million to from a vacation in Northern
purchase,,develop, oi' refinance Canada which included a tour of
their farms, and borrowed $3.3 the New England States. They
million for f~rm operating were joineil at a fishing cabin in
purposes.
Canada by Mr. and Mrs, Byron '
The Farmers_ Home A~- Roman and grandson · oi
In 1967 America ended its mmJslrabon Director said Niagara Falls, N. Y. Mr. aod
military airlift to the strife-torn co~munity _Improvement Mrs. Roman are former
Congo.
proJects receiVed over $15 Pomeroy residents.

Stones · to

:r.:.

Maternity visilinghoiii-s 2::io to
4,30 p.m. Parents only?' on
Pediatrics Ward.
·
Blrtbs
Mr. and Mrs. Larry' R.
Greenlee, Bidwell, a son; and
Mr. and Mrs. Kermit L.
Sowards; Jackson, a daughter.
Disebarges
Derek A. Ameel, Kevin
Eogene Bloomer, Mrs. Thomas
A. Campbell and son, Fred L.
Dauber,Mrs. MarthaG.Fulton,
Mr s. Jut'J aE. Grae,
1 Mrs.
Howard E. Hughes and
daughter, Lawrence B. Israel,
Mrs. Margaret E. Leifheit, Mrs.
0. Vernon Lucas and son; Mrs.
Michael c. McWilliams, Mrs.
Richard A. Moore, Elmer F.
Robinson, -Mrs. John R.
Shepherd and daugh~. ~s.
Retha J. Shuler, 't'!Obi,rt• W.
Stapleton, Mrs. James William
Stokes and son.

ToUr ·u. s.
DALLAS (UPI)-'-The Rollil'g
Stones, EngOO!d's popular and
contruveralal rock and roll
band, !his fall will make !heir
first tour of the United states
since the disaater at Altamont
during which four 'persons died
and !be Woodstock nation
collapsed.
Although the tour has not
been officially announced as
yet, it has been learned it will
concentrate mostly in the South
and will be a budget-tour which
Stones leader Mick . Jagger
wanted to dO the last time the
band toured here. It also will
fellture closed circuit telecasts.
The tour is expected to begin
il1 early Octol!er, giving Jagger
plenty of time to crisscross the
United States and be back
home In England in time for
the birth of his first child.
The route of the tour is not
known eucUy at this time, but
from various reports, UPI has
pieeed together ilome informaUOII about the trip.
The last time the Stones
toured !he United states they
played in Dallas and practically
nowhere else in !he South. This
time the Stones for sure will
play in three cities in Texas
alone-Dallas, Holl$n and San
Antonio.
The Stones will not bring any
equipment with !hem. They are
expected .to borrow instruments, amplifiers and other
sound equipment in each town
in which they play. Nor will
there be any guest acts-just
the Stones. Jagger believes !his

THURSDAY, FRIDAY and
SATURDAY ARE
THE LAST 3 DAYS
Hurry!
Save FROM REGULAR PRICES
'

POMEROY, OHIO

Nye Attacks·Reclamation Board Ruling

I

Holzer Medical center, First

.

.. _.....::;;.

'
· even if a moclei-ately
heavy
rain occurred in a limited per·
iod of time," the board aid.
Nye said the beard shwld not
usume lbat such eontrolll
ating from the strip mine area. would be inslalll!d. •
"It is the further consenq.. "The board's function' is to
of the board that adequate con· assure, not to assume,'' Nye
trol measures as stipulated by said. ''The board is SJII'P"'""' to
the strip mining law, instigated make certain that the strip
at the proper lime, could pre- miner's mining plan will prevent excessive soil erosion on vent euesslve soil erosion - .
the stripped areas and sohstan- not ~ly to say that ailetiaJ deposition in stream beds quate measures 'could prevent'
or on owned or adjacent lands erosion."

slJould hold down the costs of
producing the tour. He plans to
pass !he savings on in the form
of lower ticket prices-perhapa
as low as $1 to $3 each.
Two other things about
Jagger. He doean't allow armed
police in tl)e same hall where
h~ is performing and !he Stones
won't play to a. segregated
audience. It was the first
prohibition !hat resulted in !he
hiring of motorcycle ganga as
security guards at Altamont In
California. Four persons died
there. One of the four was
stabbed by a motorcycle gang
member when the victim
produced a pistol and began to
rush the stage where the Stones
were performing.
A low~ost tour by !he Stones
in October would bring the
group financial benefits beyond
just the ticket sales.
They would probably make at
least one commercial television
appearance. They also plan to
do at least one and perhaps as
many as three concerts which
will be telecast via closed
circuit to theaters throughout
the country. This would be a
first although !he idea has been
tossed aroWJd before.
The tOur would also boost the
Stones' record sales which is
now better than at any time in
the group's history. Their
current album "Sticky Fingers"
could be !heir best seller of all.
It has been outsold this year
only by "Jesus Christ Superstar" and Carole King's "Tapestry."

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The slate's history was "gross dis·
Ohio Reclamation Board of Re· regard of the public interest."
view Tueaday overruled the !Je. The Natural ·Resources Department of Natural Resources partment denied the license
and granted a license to the ApriL I, and Marietta Coal of
Marietta Coal Company for ex, Cambridge appealed !he denial
paosion of its.strip mining oper· to the review board. Nye said
ations in Richlaod Township, he would appeal the board's
Belmont County.
decision to the Fraoklin CoWJty
Natural Resources Direetor Common Pleas Court,
William B. Nye said !he refusal
"Thedecisionpro\ridesfurther
. of !he board to uphold the first' evidence !hat Ohio's present
strip mine license denial in !he . strip mining laws are woefully

'
MORTGAGES UP
WASlllNGTON (UPI) -The
Federal Home Loan Bank
Board reports that the nation's
federally insured savings aod
loao associations closed $4.1 .
billion in mortgages in June,
the highest figure in more than
two years.
The board sa1d !he figure was
more thao double the amount of
closings for the same month
one year ago.

YACHT WINNERS
GASCAIS, Portugal (UPI)Stig Wennerstrom aod Sture
Christensson of SWeden won
Tuesday's seeond race in the
22nd Europeao and North
African Yachting star class
championship in competition
wilh 93 other yachts from 14
coWJtries.
James Schoonmaker and Tom
Dudinsky of !he U.S. were
second.

inadequate to protect the slate
against the ravages of strip
mining," Nye said.
Nye said the original mining
plan submitted by Marietta
Coal called for construction of
seven dams to reduce siltation
of streams by sediment eroded
from the strip mined lands.
"When the matter came before the review board, the plan
RUTH TOURNEY SET
TRENTON, N.J. (UPI )-A 17memher team from Italy will
arrive at John F. Kennedy
Airport in New York today to
compete as the invitational
team in the annual International Babe Ruth Baseball Tournament of Champions in
Stamford, COnn., Aug . 12-19.
Prior to the tournament, the
Italia club will play several
exhibition games in the Long
lsland, N.Y., area, according to
Babe Ruth Baseball president
Richard W. Case.

had been modified to specify 14
dams and grass seeding," Nye
said. "This change would seem
to be evidence !hat the original
mining plan was inadequate,
but the review board disregarded iL"
The direetor said much of the
sill and sediment from the area
would be deposited in Bark·
camp Creek, which drains into
the lake in Barkcamp Slate
Park.
The board, which said it examined the strip mine area of
Marietta Coal, said "no evidence of excessive sedimentation was found at the points
.
ted . ..
lllSpeC
"There was limited sediment
deposition at certain and infrequent points along the stream
but in each instanee the sediment deposit observed was
mainly 'red dog· aod 'slag' material that came from the road_.
way," the board said. " There
was no deposition that could be
specifically identified as origin-

NOTICE!
LET'S GO TO THE FAIRI
We will be closed Thursday
afternoon August 5
to attend the Mason Co. Fair.

,

....

PRICES GOOD THRU ·sAT., AUG. 7th.

r---------------------------1

!Helen Help Us!
I

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..•

"-.L

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"' " -o~&lt;

-

Summer Clearance

-· --·

.. -.
.,..,__

.._.,~

SUMMER D ESSES

LINT-FREE lUFFED

. ~;..:

FilE
SEWIII
FIIIICS
II StillE IIIITESJ IIIII

BED SPREADS

SELEO FROI THE

Group 1 /alues to $10.99

Lint-free full size bed spreads. Reg. 3.99

value, asst. colors. SpeCial clearance

group - Save at Stiffler's.

Choose from an excellent selection or pretty
summer styles. Sleeveless and short sleeve

00

DRESS PIIITS

lEST STYLES AND FUIICS
Giaup 2Values 'to $14.99

$

This «rouP of tine
dresses is comprbed of
many o! the seuoni
most denrable styles &amp;
fabrics. Save over half

styles in fine blended

$

now!

fabrics and acetates.

'

NOW- ONLY

NOW,... ONLY

SPORTSWEAR

ColoifuJ ..~ .... faDey pet·
axclemm ~ - ra~na. RePar
!Sill In t5 bid! PI!I1IIUelll

$1.2tnlilea.

12·1111 FilE IESI SIEEI

summer wardrobe now- Famous Brands.

"-

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~~=~

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~ .

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II Ill A$5111100

Fai:y Fritptl U., IIIII

TOWN AND COUII-TRY

WILL PAIIIT

AREA

Hiih IP!IitY

latex well i!&amp;int in.
wliite and rotors or Latex mterior.
exterior paint in white only. Save
now.

A great selection of hip Qlllllity loop and shaa
viscooe rugs in 'tlxto and' 24134 sW.. Fri,.eil
finish in assorted decorator cokln.
•

2
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IW11lW - SIZE

FOAl CUSHIOI VISCOSE

LOOP RUGS

'GAt.
FOR

Sllll'l Sleeve
Styles
For Spirts

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JULY CLEARANCE SALE -MEN'S SHORT SLEEV~

. SPORT

ReguFar values to 14.99

- Men's short sleeve
sport shirts in regular
and button down collar
styFes. Sizes S-M·L.

loo$r at Stilllco

each

REG~

PRia

_Vile m. n;yun ~nd nylon loop COIIIII'UI:tiol!
1'811111 rugs 10 auor11!d tWeed patlenla
lllde with f01m CU!Ibioned back.
1

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95' Ll

pair

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a..-..
bU.

=. . .

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

•

00

pint

c

ctns.

dozen

U.S. =1 WHITE POTATOES 10 . 69&lt;
H ADP Sells Jt-A&amp;P G11arante-es

lt 1

White Bread

23'

.

•

.4 ~ggc Tootsie Pops

- EIGHT O'CLOCK-

79 ~

• A _.;; Se

J~

FROZEN

JANE PARKER

t.t&gt;.

t~F~E
~
$229
SALE
._

..25~·15' Post Tens

• •

•

.... .,Me
ll

.,.,-

Ice Milk •

••

•

ANN PAGE

• • •

. . . . 4t Freac~ Fries
11

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.....Pl&amp;·,.

2c Off
Labat

Mixed Vegetables 5:: s1.
Green Beans • .4 ::S1.
Sweet Peas • • 4=s1.
Golden Com • •4=SJ.

• •

Ope1 Pit=.

•

DEL MONTE WHOLE KERNEL

PINEAPPL£-GRAPEfRUIT

- U P COUPON-

AlP COUPON

Ann Page ·
Ketchup

Post Tens

. .. 48c

-

~

.11.'7--

~·
, ,q.tl 4eJc
""

••

. wn•

.

6ood Tloru S.turday .
Augoat 7111. At AJP
Limit Ono Coupon
.

.

AI y..,. fwwwllli ,_..,.,

•Good Tloru S.lordoy
AugusfJth. At AlP
linllt Ono Couf&gt; on ·

,_

p:iiii:FA&amp;P COUPON =-:llljl

Sw•
Liquid

SavelSc ':::

-

-

1111.

3te .~
-

Good Tloru Salordoy
A•90!'f 7tll. At AlP
Limit One
Coupon
.

-

~ONTE

A&amp;P COUPON

" ' 011 , _

:: • •

Swa• Li••i~ .! .

• •

~ONTE

DEL

DEL

~:

Ketc••• =.

Pear Halves • .3-S1.·
Piapple Juice 3=S1.
Delloate Drink 3=s1.
Frencll Style =.4=Sl.

DEL MONTE CUT

DELMONTE

;; :j

WITH COUPON IELOW

DEL MONTE

· DEL MONTE

·-A

1

WITH COUPON IB.OW

BORDEN'S VANILLA

A&amp;P FROZEN

WITH COUPON BELOW

·

Delr Helen:
.
Maybe others are different, hut I doubt If psychiatry could .
belp me. Tbe very thought rl. that $35 an ho~ bill, building up
weekly form months or men, would drlw me bonkers.
Seeml to me a mentally dl.aturbed penon, who knows he can
mlyptiOIIMODe to liaten If he pays oothiaUfe's blood, woold turn
.oft the Jqb priced lialmer In the first five mlnutei.-DOM .
Delr He1ell:
You've already menUoaed t."EUROTICS ANONYMOUS as a
be~ for dlllurbed people. The addreu (-saln) IJ Room
Gl, Cokndo Bldg., 1341 "G" Street, N. 'f., W~. D. G.,
IIIII 1oc11 dlapter addmm may be obtained by sending a
stamped, self..ctdressed enwlope. -MRS. W. J.

'·

·

JSelti-lo•eless 1Pork Steak
I Cealer Cll Ha• • •

Big Del Monte Sale Stock Up!

"Desperate" aald, "ooly the rich fr the very poor can afford
psychiatric belp. And the poor must wait, and wall, and wait."
In New Jersey's Bergen County, we have six Mental Health
Centers, all r1. which operate on an "alillty to pay" basis. Our fees
ranee from 50 cents to $17 per treatment session, and w~ provide
the full range ·of outpatient psychiatric services. There iS no
question that additional services, centers and staff are needed,
and that we all have walling lists, hut we DO help many people
IIIII our service ~ not llmlted to the poor. ~ ADMINISTRATIVE
DIREC'roR
Delr Readers:
MClll larger cities have mental health centers and psychiatric
dlnlcs wblch charge much leu than the regulation $25-$60 per
11our f - of private paychologllls and psychiatrists. But getting
an early appolnbneni!J the blg problem. We need many more

s,..t

99'

::

Good Thru Aug. 7th At A&amp;P-Limit Ole Coupon

•

Dear Helen:

--CLIAIANCI
'
llclies' Mi- &amp; Child,...,

SNEAKERS

Wishbone Dressing

&gt;

\

pk&amp;.

K.

'i
j

1-lb.

•

=. .

I -

MARvEL vANILLA

FREE!

Tomato Juice

0

••,••• Sell ....

II

1 ICE CREAM

Uolos · •

The Catholic Charities (sometimes called Catholic Welfare)
olfers reasonably priced counseling services to disturbed people HEARTS DELIGHT
w upaet famllles. Fees are based on ability to ~Y, and the service
is for allfalths-evenforthosewhobave littleornofaithat all.-

.,

ASS81TEI TIEEIS

44

-H.
Dear Helen:

pair

.

-·

.• Jb.58e

Sta-Puf •••

~ uig clearance group of the scasons· besl styles from Hi Brow and
othe~ famous brands. Whilt.&gt; and
fash1on colors. All sizes. Save on

FOOTWEAR

.

Chunk Bologna • •
BeLU Evans ... •
Bob Evans s;.: . · .

con~

F~T'i - CASUALS - DRESS

DO

WITH THIS COUPON • - • • • • • - - - - . ,

2 17-oL69c

FOOTWEAR

O.EARANa • LADIES
FAMOUS BRANDS • SPRING AND SUMMER

00

OFF
REG.
PRICE

SPECIAL CLEARANCE GROUP
LADIES' SPRING &amp; SUMMER

PE.AIDT PlESS FAIIICS
PLAII COLORS, PIIITS, PLAIDS

i-----------••

Top Quo/ Jty- Low Pr1ce 1

17 -oz. Fantastic
Bathroom Cleaner

•

COLORS

REGULAR $3.49 VALUE

VALVES TOtul

CLURIICE OF lEI'S

FLAT
II WHITE I

'

It's true, waiting liats are long at most reasonably priced
c:ounseling facilities, but the Family Service Agency of Modesto,
California, 11 solving thl8 tnblem.
Here we hire, as part.t1me psychiatric social workers,'
cp••fllled people In other professions. For nample, a high school
Oo, I M,-., Th•
Blr 01"11· I 7-ol
counselor or a local minister with a Master's Degree in
Fnnl(ldl, Hathr·om Clt•anf'r
iJsychology may devote several bours of his spare time each week
hi R,•qu!ar Pr·•cc (,d 0'1t'
to family counseUng. With a number of these interested and inCali Ab,oluft·ly F•vp'
volved persons working for us, we've seen our waiting list
dwindle. Nowadays, clients in desperate need of help can receive
it within hours, not weeb or months. And we manage this within
our allotted budget. - BOARD MEMBER, MODESTO AREA
FAMILY SERVICE AGENCY
FAMILY SERVICE AGENCIES EVERYWHERE: Read and
If A(,p St lis lt-A&amp;P Guorontccs
heed. This system works; I know, f« I have observed It perIOIUIIly. Modesto's community-centered Family Service Agency FAIRIC SOFTENER
bu a key word - involvement. Its part.t1me counselors
(moonlighters if yoo will) aren't simply working for a few extra
dollars. They're concerned and detennined to help. And they do! CALIFORNIA ONION

·oUT'
TH£Y oo·

SAVE 30% • 40% ·50%
NOW I

,_

Dear Helen:

12

Hot Pants - Jamaica Shorts - Sport Tops - Slacks . Skirts
Blouses. Mark down •;, Off original price. Select a ·

:

H.

BOBBIE BROOKS • RUSS TOGS • AILEEN

SPIRT DElliS

By Helen Bottel

HELP FOR MENTALLY DISTURBED
Dear Helen:
Two recent letters ~ompt me to write. First, a woman
wmdered why psychiatric help was so expensive that ordinary
pe~ can't afford 11. The second described touchingly and wen
the pllgbt of an ootcase who has had a nervous breakdown.
There's help in "REOOVERY, INC.," and branches of thia
great "••sod.atiut for nervous and former mental patients" are
in almCllt every large city.
Recovery, Inc. was founded in 1937 by !he late Abraham A.
Low, M.D. Members learn how to improve their mental heJ)!h in
weekly meetings which are open to the public at no charge. Over
1140 self.flelp Recovery groupa operate throughout the United
Slates and Canada.
Though Recovery Inc. does not replace the jilysician, and is
IIUIIP!ementary to professional aid, many of us have found in itthe
added something !hat makes usable tocopewlth our problems. J.R.
Dear Readers:
Further information about RECOVERY, INC. may be obtained by sending a stamped, self~ddressed envelope to national
headquarters, 116South Micligan Ave., Oticago, Dllnois, 60603. -

SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE

.....

I

0. 1-1._ Cu FII&amp;W
c.n. ••, lri..
Good Thrv Saturday ·
August 7tll.. At A&amp;P
Linoit 0.. C • I

0,••
Pit
._ 195 ca
·-~­
...

-- -

~-

Good Tl1n1 5:otwdr,
Augost 7fl.. AI AM

Uotit Ooe Ca f

12 ..
CMS

•

•

�·.
I

Lo-'ftR n.Qflk•4i•l,Wieport.PouaOJ, o., August 4,1971

EEKANDMEEK

Bargains, Bargains and More Barga'i ns In The Sentinel Classifieds
DANCE

SPECIAL thanks to the. Racine
Baptist Church for their
prayers and cards . Also

Sat~m~ay Night .

. 10 Til 2 .
.Miosic ly Cindy C...rll

AJ:!d Sii!!JOr
-ly.

4, I'll:. IIMd,

Ohio

Pines
Nile Qub
Rt. 7

Holman while confined to
Ch i ldren's Hospital,
Columbus.
God . bless
everyone. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob
Holman and Family.

- - -- -Auto Sales .,.

B-~- ltp

1962 PL Y/110\.ITH Vaiiant, good
L - - - - - - - - --J condition, ~00 or best offer.
Phone 696-1123.
Lost and F011111
STRAYED from Laurel (;lift -----c-;---B--l~lc
area, 3 blue lick pups. Two ,67 CHEVELLEMalibu 2door, 1
localod in Meigs County dog
local owner, V-B automatic,
pound.

Pelneroy, 0 .

Reward for safe

mum or information leading

i

new tires, excellent condition.
Phone 992-'108-4 or 992-709B.

ton!lum of third pup. Contact
7_4-tfc
Oscar T. Smith, Pomeroy.
Qlio. F'tGrie 992-559~.
'70 DODGE Dart. Phone 992-

~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiia.lii.J-Jip
EM: Jack
somehow
iftli1119 he has thO!II!Ih1
what
llunrina wi1h you. v-····
iftlitllg is right.

3597 after 5 p.m.

- 8-3-Jtp

1970 CONTINENTAL Mark 19
camping trailer, fully self·
contained, excellent condition. Coli 992-2367 before 5
p.m.

BESHORE AN'TELL
'iE HE'S HAlliN' A

Business Opportunities

2 SillS
Of
QUALITY

thanks to everyone else for
their . cards sent to John ·

&amp; Tho Niglll Rioters

F..,.

Po•eroy . .
,_fl

C.anl of Thaoks

MotOr

\M•

ManorWom•n

-,.uchev. 2 Ton
oni~Sl750
M" cab to axle, good 825x20 tires, 2 speed rear axle, Int.cab like new truck, ~ cyl. m cu. in. eng. A real ·clean
truck.
1967 Ford LTD
$1595
4 Door Sedan, power steering &amp; brakes, vinyl interior, blk.

EAGLE
INDUSTRI.ES

vinyl roof, maroon finish. radio, new w-w tires, v.a with
automatic· trans. &amp; factory air conditioning - Special,

Special.

3tH Meadowbroolll Ro•d
· $f. louis P•rk, Minn. 55426

Pomeroy Motor Ci.

For Sale

OP.£M EVES. 8:00 P'.M.
i'CIMEROY, OHIO

IS CU. FT. KELVINATOR
freezer, new; one month old,

pistol, new; 12 ga.
double barrel shotgun, 12 ga.
36" barrel goose gun. new.
Jack Layne, Prospect Hill,
Pomeroy.
8--'-Jtp
~magnum

Notic~ __

Notice

_

ROOFiNG &amp; CARPENTER
WORK

SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING
NEW &amp; OLD WORK
Ali Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co. and Anthony Plumbing &amp; Heating.
Complete
Plumbing,
Heating and Air Conditioning.
·
240 Lincoln St.,•Middleport
Phone 992-2550
Insured- Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See us -- for
Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnstala1ion.

WILL CARE lor elderly female SAVE UP to ·one half. Bring
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
patienfs in my home. Mrs. Iva
Stewart, Minersville, 992· Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
1953 FORD, VB, standard with
Pomeroy.
,.
27B5.
overdrive, good tires. exAir Con~itiooing ·
1971 ZIG-ZAG sewing
4-23-tlc NEW
B-3-3tc
cellen1 mechanical condifion.
machine in original factory
$150. Custom factory trailer
carton. Zig-zag to make
Inspection and
hitch for 68-70 charger $10.
butl,..holes, sew on buftons,
Two universal hitches S5
monograms,' and make fancy
each. Call 992-7173 evenings
RH:harge
designs with iustlhe twist of a
only.
single dial. Left In lay-away
B-J-2tc
Bill Miller is joining our Company, a specialist
and never been used. Will sell
Special
Plus
At
Parts
for only W cash, or credit
in air conditioning and refrigeration, both
terms
available.
Phone
992home and commercial.
Instruction
5641.
.tuCKING INDUSTRY
B-4-6tc
NEEDS MEN- You can now
,---,----- PHONE 992-2143
train fo become an over fhe
e
LECTROL UX vacuum
road driver or .city driver.
cleaner complete with atExcellent earnings after short
tachments, cordwlnder and
Sale
training on our trucks wlfh
paint spray. Used but in like
240 Uncoln 51., Middleport
CANNING
tomatoes, already
our driver instr-uctors to help
new condition. Pay SJ.4A5
picked,
$1.25
bu., bring
you .. For application and
cash or budge! plan available.
containers.
Geraldine
call
513-241
-5572,
or
interview,
Phone 992-5641.
4
NOJml
Cleland, East Main, Racine.
write
Training
Safefy
B-Utc
.97
·
7-2B-1fc
Division. United Sysfems,
.A73
Inc. , C-0 Motor Freight
·cLEAN INGEST carpet cleaner
.QJ952
registered
An1hony Plumbing &amp; Heating is now open 6
Terminal Bldg.. 3101 Gano
rou ever used, so easy too. 2-YEAR-OLD
quarter horse gelding. Phone
.1085
Road, Sharonvi lie, CinGet Blue Lustre. Rent electric
Days a Week.
WIST (D)
EAST
cinnati, Ohio, 45241.
shampooer, S1. Baker Fur- 992-2990.
7-30-51c
.AK2
.QJ8643
8-3-2tc
niture Company.
THOROUGHBRED Stud RUMMAGE Sale, Fridar. and
.5H
9K
B+6tc
Saturday, Fry Bui ding,
Service. Roman Captain No.
TREE ripened peaches at the
Middleport.
9 a.m. to ~ p.m.
•• ~31f3
tiOU
king of spades and continued
637.410. $50 registered mares.
Mason Peach Orchard
8-4-21c APPLES. Peaches, Fitzpatrick
S3S grade mares . Return
• 964
witb the deuce after East
starling Sal., July 31st. Hours
Orchard, Slate Route 689.
privileges . Greg Roush,
9 a.m. to 6 p.m . Phone 773~
played the queen. East led
1WILL NOT be responsible for
Phone
Wilkesville
669-3785.
5559.
Phone
992·5039.
•QJ10982
tbe four of clubs back.
8-I-1Dic
7-9-JOic any debts contracted by
7-JO~tc
• K
South won the trick with
anyone other than myself.
• AK Q J
the ace and proceeded to GUN SHOOT. August B, 1 p.m.,
Signed: Charles Aeiker.
'COAL. limestone: Excelsior
8-~-Jtp
Narth-Soulb YU!DonbJe
lead his king of diamonds.
5all Works, E. Main St ..
Racine Gun Club.
· Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891 .
8-4-~lp - - - , - - - - w.c Noodo Eoot S..tk West won with the ace and
•-9-ifc
AKC REGISTERED black
Pa. Pas
Pas 4 •
returned a club. Now South - - - - - - - poodle, miniature and loy for
36" X23" I .009
Pas
Pam
led his queen of trwnps, went MEIGS SENIORS call Grover's
stud service. Call 992$78.
Studio now. Make apOt ingler'
1Jp witb dwnmy's ace and
8-3-6tc
pointment for your senior
pickled East's singleton
portraits to be taken during
week of August 23rd. Save 10
By Olnlll 1: J'amell Jllnlly king.
per cent on the cost of your For Sale or Trade
II was all a matter of
order. Phone 992-2~75.
Wbea you !mow from your counting. He bad played his
USED OFFSET PLATES
8-4-lotc 1966 VOLKSWAGEN, 1969
c:ouat ~ •lflPOIII!IIt. holds ~ king of diamonds before
. Toyota Station Wagon. Phone
HAVE
tbe m'mag cards m a sult, touching trumps to locate the GUN SHOOT, Forked Run 992-6547.
MANY USES
you alao know be holds ~y ace and West bad played it.
7-29-Hc
Sportsman Club, Sunday,
bollors ~t are beld agamst West was also marked with
August 8, 12 noon.
YOIL Tbis JS known as a com- the ace and king of spades.
B-Ote
Female Help Wanted
plete I»UUIt. When you. know He could ilot hold another
be_ bolds m'!"' canis 10 the king, slhce he had dealt and KOSCOT Kosmetics, July- HOUSEWIVES - Evenings
August special, Kare Kon - free ... Earn 25 per cent
smt thaa _his ~. you passed. Therefore, South
1220 Washington Blvd.
dilion
oil S5. Value now only demonstrating toys and gifts ·
!mow be IS ~~ likely to knew where the king of
Belpr•,Ohio
S2.50. Distributors, Brown's, with the highest paying party
bald .BJl'f mtmag ~ - trumps was. He did not know
phone 992-5113.
plan. Compare our program
That IS ~ as a
ihat it would drop but he
7-4-tlc and color catalog before '-':~'-.'!" IAL style stereo. AMcount A: partial_ co~t IS a did know tbat a finesse
making any other comFM r adlo, 4 speakers, 4-speed
Ill Court St.
good
but 1t 1S not a would be a hopeless play.
mitments. No experience, no
record changer - Balance
sure
•
Pomeroy, Ohio
investment. Car necessary.
$79.19.
Use
our
budget
terms.
You, South. hold:
Tbere is a secGIId form of
Call 9~ ·3233 or write Toy
can 992-7085.
.AKI7
.AZ tKQt.K&amp;43
counting to help you locate
Ladies Party Plan. JohnsB-1-61c
town, Pa. 15902.
missing higb ards. CoUDt The bidding has been:
What do you do now?
, - - - -, - - - Real Estate For Sale
A-Bid six die_...,. Your _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __a_
-J.Jtp MODERN walnut slereo, AMyour 'Ml'JD"Uis' points and WISt
North
t:ast South
FM radio features 4-speed HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
partau- ..,..e a loa« diawbat this count will tell
Coil Danny Thompson, 992·
record changer, _. speakers,
you.
Pass
Pass
_..., uitlo ... - ...... little Help Wanted
I+
2196.
separale controls. Balance
3N.T. .-Joi11c • doe oide. Yoar
Pass
We area't sure that we like Pas
3t
7-18-lfc
$67.89. Call 992-7085.
_:._
COUNTRY
and
western
band
Pass
4t
Sauth's four-beart bid but be Pas
of dia......... jvotify
8-1-6tc
wanted Friday and Saturday
lllil olqht owabiol
Pass
?
did make il Welt ope!led. tbe Pas
nights. Apply In person at
HO.USE, 1640 Lincoln His.,
~·
SINGER zig zag , sewing
Jack's Club.
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
machine needs no cams, all
B-J.Jtc
·
10-25-tfc
built -in features. Makes
- - - -- - - bullonholes, etc. Pay balance
EARN AT home addressing
3 BEDROOM brick home.
~9. 75. Call 992-7085.
envelopes . Rush stamped
8-l -61c Choice location In Middleport.
self-addressed envelope. Tht
Seen by appointment only.
Ambrose Co., 4325 Lakeborn, - - -- - - - - I
Phone 992-5523 after ~ p.m .
u
•~h ts
.........., s11
1b
Davisburg, Mich. 48019.
CANNING tomatoes, picked
5-7-tfc
..oyce, caVJar,...,. 1 er ....,.._e oes .... e
8-1 -JOtp
S1.50 bushel. Raymond Rowe,
BY JACI[ O'BRIAN
la~fternooil sailing II. tbe QE2 was stylish
phone W-2~7.
l:ONVEN IE NT but secluaeo
enough; but always tbe vague 11&lt;11talgia for tbat
1:
B-J-3tc
building lois on T79 at Rock
PARtiES SHAPE uP WHEN
Springs.
Within walking
histcric Midnight Sailing we'd never ex_R
_A
_V
_E_ I-oi--C-h-esler
4_ G
distance
of
Meigs High
ONE SHIPS our
perienced, J)ll88ellgers in evening clothes and
Memory Gardens. Phone 992- School, a 5 minute
drive from
LONIXl'l -We sat bon in our ccmfortallly coofetti flying and U!m Perlgnon flowing and
5771. Roland Russell.
Pomeroy. Call or ·see Bli I
8-3-Jtp Witte weekends or after 5
mwudti!Odema dip at tbe a.mn Hotel on Portman Noel Coward PDAJing epigrams and Robert
- ---'---,--p.m. weekdays. Phone 992·
Slpre, batiDg a 'lfiolifieol, ,., befits our elegant Benchley laking on his liquid cargo with droll
TWO male A. K.c: registered 6887.
beagle pups. Bweeks old. W
7-11-tlc
1 mlon loca",llugb: We'd marveled at the fact CCIJUDI!nts in Elsa Maxwell's ear.
each. Phone 992-3126.
-::-:-:-:=:-:-:-:----:-:-::-lbat aoce wbea 'ft left m a lengthy round-lheWe wondered here again 1111 PIK1man Square
8-3-Jip SIX ROOM house, bath, lull
warld trip by air, ..,- a soul came ID wave us wby Midnight Sailings bave disappeared; we
----------:basement, 133 Butternut Ave.,
GENTLE 2 year old saddle bred
just walking dis lance from
goodbye ..... But just taU an ocean liner for so had woodered aboard ship and received assorted
and
stud
sorrel,
2
white
sox.
downtown
Pomeroy. Contact
IQICb • a cruise to BailliiiLl, never mind our evasions, none knowing precisely why ... But
Phone 992-2436.
Ed Hedrick, 2137 Wadsworth
I*
ltAtlanticocb J m tbe ~een Elizabeth everyme guessed.
B-3-ltc
Orive. Columbus, Ohio, phone
2, and you galber ao audience lit for a hit
237-4334,
Columbus.
Oleaper, said the cynic. Safer, decided the
Phone 992-2156
ONE
gentle
Morgan
riding
-- - - -·=.5-:.:;9·:,::.:1fc
'TU'iclol
1
Jl'agmatist. Tides bave shifted dangerously
---------~
mare, also her gelded
yearling thorobred. Phone NEW. 3-bedroom home In
U's DOt lbat tbe glaovr fl. airline travel has opined the pessimist. Thoae · blasted unioos, Wanted To Buy
773-5333
or write Box 286. Middleporl. . Buill-In kitchen,
wwa 11.1; just tbat tbe facilities fer par- gloomed the banker. Midnight mtlggings, ButMason, W. Va.
ceramic tile bath, all-electric
ANTIQUES, telephones, brass
liDs~aremeager,if at all .... But there's tered the Old Maid. Too many after-dark
B-J.6Ip
heat, good neighborhood. can
beds, clocks, dishes. old
arrange FHA financing .
furniture, etc. Write M. D.
~ about a huw7 liner tballrings out boozings for YisitOI's who then fergot ID leave and
Telephone 992-3600 or 992Miller, Rt. 4c Pomeroy, Ohio. 14- YEAR OLD sorrel gaited
- Jlllll' lriN'II, fnm clare and weleome friends to deadheaded stylishly off to Europe, gleed the (all
192-6271.
gelding horse - my wife's 2186.
arqaaintwes ym are wwb.at glad to greet, playboy. Someday we shallba-ve to drop a polite
7-25-tfc
7-9-llc
horse - See In evenings at
ID ngue facrs 7UU can't quite place, and even a query to Sr. Basil Smallpiece, bead of CUnard, - - -- - - - Arnold Grate residence, - - - - - - - - - - Rutland. Phone days 742-4211,
fl!lr 11111 1m.- you've never seen befcre, but who and get the truth, so help
Neptune.
For Sale
Trade
evenings 7~2 -5502.
CDIIIt 1111 YCIID' Instant camaraderie in tbe spirit
But the sailing parties remain delightful 1968 CHEVY, 2 door hardtop,
8-3·61c
II. the uilq ID dnJp in fer a clink; A drink? punctuation to anyme's vacatim; like the old air conditioning, power
608 East Main
RUNNER beans, S2
saw tbat it's not enonon in your life that you
steering and power brakes. HALF
MlnJdriab!
POMEROY
bushel, pick your own .
..,..
1969 camaro. 4 speed, 350
'lbe 7f7 airliners are glamorously buge, but succeed- your friends must also fail. A luxury
Cucumbers and tomatOes. WANT TO BUILD? We have
engine. Phone 992-6547.
Clarence
Proftltl, Portland.
enn Fat Albert, as tbe piloCs call these new liner lea-velaking coolains ooe not too nasty
7-23-Hc
two nice building sites, one
Phone Jl43.22~.
has a house on It which does
gialllll; bate ao facililies fer the !IHmg soirees triumph : You are sailing and your friends must
8-3-15tc
need some repair. Located in
lbat the QE2 and tbe oCher lavish liners generate debark, enviously .... Then tbey adorn the dock
Rent
Pomeroy on quiet street.
GOOD: BUY $6,900.
•••• WebeardGDelada pling oc two ago lamely of Pier 92 as confetti flutters and bands play and
and unfurnished
npl•i• be was just driving by the Cunard Pier the Moran lugs impudenUy wdge the imperious FURNISHED
apartments. Close to school. ~
OPPORTUNITYFREE ICE CREAM OFFER BUSINESS
aa Ilia ny to aaolber daR when he remembered new Queen iniD tbe North River cbamel and
Phone 992 -~.
A DRIVE-IN located on Slate
10-18-llc
Route. in small community,
our seilq; wby sore ! It was a Broadway Guy Away We Sail .... Nothing like a Sailing ever is
Here's the way It works ...
includes
ground - 100x300
you get seven ice cream
wilb an Gllice 1111the Main Stem and his sheepish duplicated on leavetakings in other caravan- 5 ROOMS - furnished. Phone
bars, or a half -gallon of ice
a~d modern b~llding toge)her
cream~
FREE for every
npluatian tbat be bad a date in the neigh- series, and ~e've been traveling by train since Mrs. A. R. Knighl 992 · 2~:
w1lh all equipment . NOT
cubic foot you buy In a Unico
VERY OLD.
8-l~tc
lubuod II. the NOI'Ib River 8DCI s:md St. was a infancy and by air since the days II. the DC-2
freezer"", refrigerator "or
combination .
·
R_
AIL_E_RLO
~T~S-,~Bob-:. -.,- :-:Mobile
lnnij HeJt SCIIII! for &amp; Cbampagne fix .... (yes, DC·2); no one then, our first such flight, _T_
POMEROY - ALMOST NEW
UNI~O 20FT. UPRIGHT
BRICK HOME - 3 large
Still, 1beJ do aot r'ullla ~party; proballly · even came to the airport; as the marvelous QE2 Courl, ~~- 12~. Syracuse,
FREEZER
1".95
Ohio.
992-2951
.
bedrooms,
double closets,
With this one rou get 1'(1 free .
IIIJ dadl; ••aal II. U.. a
and ingest drifted down the ri.er before shifting in!D ocean
4-2-ftc
beautiful buill-In kitchen for
ice cream bars or 20 half
• p llleet et 0 ~.to bald them UDtil the gear, we marveled that our suite bad played to
gallons of FREE ice cream.
mom, carpeted, full basement
with recreation room. lots of
faiiiOCill II P'l bt4! IDII'Iing parties begin. an audience !illiJI8 every available chair and FURNISHED apartmenl . in
'I',_
POMEROY
country, ideal for con storage, utility room, about
!Iii Joc,W. Corsey,Mgr.
liiBe day 'ft'd adJiile ID IUe part as a be&lt;kdge - and to lots II. vertic8Js in Drinking struction worker or couple,
one acre of ground, concrete
Pftooe "2-2111
15-minute drive from town.
basketball court, carport, air
ia a ftlll Wnjpt Sailing; we've Rooo1 Only.
Will
accept
one
child.
Inquire
$27,500.
conditioned.
aped • • p &lt;l.lb!m viariously- along
The fun and satisfactions of an ocean wyage
•
9N FORDfracfor with Sherman
337 N. 2nd St., Middleport.
-.lib a.t: Gable and Caudetle Colbert and in properly luxurious style doo't wear olf; even
8- f-Ile' overdrive ~ Phone 992-70«.
WANT TO SELL? YOU HAVE
THE PROPERTY - WE
Carale Lombard and Melvyn Douglas and the slight movement of the deck as the QE2
B-2-Jtc
HAVE THE BUYERS HOUSE,
1637
Lincoln
Hgls
..
~
Wlllilm PolleD lmd Myrna Loy and Cary Grant glides its6()()&lt;;ome miles a day slays with you fer
LET'S GET TOGETHER.
rooms. bath, basement, afflc, 16 FT. TAGALONG travel
_. Debonlfl 1terr 81111 Alllrey Hepburn and days; as yoo put on a pair of shoes or pants you storage and driveway.
HENRY CLELAND .
trailer,
fully
self
contained:
REALTOR
Gllelr '-llelll of Gill' pet iad Viraria; ihe Midnight CfC&amp;sionaUy experien~ the same gentle Wt, Available after Aug. 5th. Ready logo, $1500. Phone 773·
Office
992-225'
l!e'l'fll of . . and ana• always struck Ul as abnost unnoticeable, fer several lo-vely London Phone 992-2780 or"992-3'32.
5651, Mason, W. Va.
Residance 992-1561
8·3-lfc
7-23-llc
lbupilmaeafli&amp;IJ ltyle, far
thin a Roll&amp;- days.
8-Htc
B-3~1p

NOTICE I

WMP0/1390

Avoid the
Hopeless Ploy

Have Your Seascral

6.98
Blaettnar's

OONTACT:
AN1110NY PWMBING &amp;HEATING

For

OR PHONE

992-2550 DAYS OR 992-3509 NIGHTS

- --=-- ---:-

For Sale

•K

Aluminum
Sheets ·

U'. 14' • 24' WIDE
I

I

MIWR

MOBil£·HOMES

=

J&gt;a!1ial

1.2.

1

Voice along Broadway

The
Oaily sentinel

___

4. lduc-•r------------------------------------------

l!

;::=======:::.........,
.
SENTINEL
_
CARRIER
WANTED IN
NEW HAVEN ·
HARTFORD

I

rum

or

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

Qeland Realty

For

FIEEZER SALE

'•m••w

r

a

mare

IIOOACIOOS SALE ON

Busin_ess ,Services

BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY

Reiiable person from th is
area to service and collect
from automatic dispensers.
No experience needed . We
establish accounts tor you .
Car, references, and S995 to
S1U5cash capital necetsary.
• to 12 hours weekly nets
excellent monthly lnc;ome.
Full time · more. For local
interview, write :
(Include telephone number l

1970 Chevrolet
~
'h Ton Pickup, wi~ body, G7h15 tires, H. duty I rear
-springs. rear step bumper, less than 9000 miles and less
· than V'mo. old. Beautiful red finish. Shows best of care.

IGIT
STARTB&gt;-SU.AS SAID

- -- - - -

HANG TH'

BECAUSE fT H~S:
R£DEEMiklG
SllCIM. VALUE l

WH'f DO -mEV CN.L IT
nil&gt; ~ Pllil£ SPE&lt;:II.L?

DADBURN

~

COMMERCIAL-·
GITONWIF

TH'NEWS

lii.OCI&lt; ~AN'--

..

EXPERIENCED
Radiablr Senice
I.OUSY. BIMOt

TilER&amp; WERE NO
GALS lliEltE
From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

BlAElTN~

Ph. 992-2143

Pomeroy

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
15.55

POMEROY

HOME&amp; AUTO

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

992-2094
606 E. Main

Pomeroy

Pameroy Home &amp; Auto

OFFICE SUPPl:IES

Open8Til5
Monday thru Saturdoy
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

And

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.
l.o_u_E_E_N_a_nd
__
sha_m_b_lln_c_on.J.J.

tiJHNSON
MASORRY
Complete
R emodel'U&amp;ll

sir uct ion. Roo II ng,
remodeling.
aluminum
siding. Phone 992-73H or 7424979.
B· 4' 12tc
.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph. ~4782,
Gallipolis. John Russell,
Owner &amp; Operator.
5-13-llc

.If....__ _

Kilchalls, Baths
Room Additions
And Pollos
Backhoe And
Endlolder Worll

---

BUGS BUNNY

Septic Tonks
And Leach Bads.

MOM, tF I.
'TDI.D )QJ,

742-4902

AWNINGS, storm doors and

HAVE A
6000 OAV,
I='UDDSV!

~LDN'T

windows. carports.~==========::
marquees, aluminum siding r

""'""'''" IT!

and railing. Call A. Jacob,

Roofil!ll&amp; Carpenter
.
'Work
Spouting, Roof
Pain1ing
NEW&amp; OLii WORK
FOR YOUR new shingled roof, All Weather Roofing &amp; Con·
contact Roush Construction. strudlon Co. ond Anthony
Plumbing &amp; Healln9.
Phone 992-5039.
7-9-JOtc Complete Plumbing, 'Healing
1nd Air Conditioning.
SEWING MACHINES. Repa•i 240 Lincoln St. Middleport, 0.
service, all makes, 992-228-4,
Phone 992-1550
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Insured.
Experi..,clld
Authorized Singer Sales and
Work
GvrorontHd
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-lfc
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanks Installed. George
AUTOMOBILI: Insurance been
(BIU) Pullins, Phone 992-2~7B .
cancelled?
Lost
your
4-2S-Ifc
operator's license? Call 992·
sales representative. For free

estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse . V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
5-27-tlc

GASOUNE AILEY

2966.

6-15-ffc . NEIGLER Construction. For
S-E-PT-IC-ta"'n-ks-c-le_a_n_ed___ M_il_le~
building or remodeling .your '
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
home. Call Guy Neigler.
. Racine, Ohio.
662 _3035 _
7-31 -tlc
2-12-tlc
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer RALPH'S CARPET - Up.
holstery Cleaning Service .
Complete Service
Free estimates . Phone
Phone 9~·3821
Gallipolis
4-46-0294.
Racine, Ohio
3-12-tlc
Crill Bradford
5-1-llc
O' DELL WHEEL alignment
HARRISON'S___ TV -AND AN- localed al Crossroads, Rt. 124.
TENNA SERVICE . Phone Complete fiont end se~vlce,
June up and brake service.
992-2522.
6-10-lfc Wheels b&lt;1ianced electronically . · All
work
Reasonable
PAPER HANGING, interior guaranteed .
and exterior painting. · Phone rates. Phone 992-3213.
7-27-ttc
992-3630.
7-13-JDip -=----.- - - - -==~-...,.----::-ROSEBERRY Furnace In DOG grooming
Poodles, stallatlon. Free estimates on
Schnauzers. Experienced
new furnaces, oil or gas.
professional
work,
no Service work. Call Cecil
tranquilizers, gentle hand- Roseberry, Racine, Ohio.
ling, S5 up. Coolville 667-6214. Phone 614-B.U-2274.
--,--:__::.;..:;;.
7-23-12tp
7-22-JOtc

THE

IF I r.Nii 'iJil ,._~, MW' lNJ 1 EJi'E'GT
~ 1111Ellft11

tf'l f800T A M111UTE~ MR. tiOOHArt'U.
GNE 'IME SIGHAL-· THE!&lt; 111 A110Ti1Eit
MlHOTE, 'IME fiG'I!tlLMAllf. lHEIR MDI'E•··,

_____

•

DAilY CROSSWORD

READY-MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to your
pro/' ect. Fast and easy. Free
est mates. Phone 992-32B4.
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-JO.Ifc

Real Estate For Sale

•csoss

HOUSE, 5 rooms and bOth, has
new aluminum siding, storm
windows and doors, good
condition, In Manker, Run
area. Priced reasonab e. can
992-712B or 992-37&amp;...
B-3-llc O'BRIEN ELECTRIC SER - - -- VICE. Phone 9~-~51.
APPROXIMATELY 1 acre lot
5-JO.Ifc
with drilled well, at Dexter,
Ohio. Phone 992-3223.
B·3·31c LEGAL NOTICE

- - - -- -

Virgil B.
TEAFORD

WHAT

WAS

TMAT

535.000.00 room

Beautiful NEW 8

ranch

home,

&lt;4

bedrooms wilh large close is, 2
full ' baths . Double garage.
15 ACRES.
$12,500.00 Large 3 bedrooms,I
balh, furnace. garage.
RACINE
FOR APPOINTMENT
CALL 992-3315
HELEN L. tEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
8·1-61c

- -- -- -

-

I!Oie
17.Notln
pori

U.Grecory

T.ERRY

.._

17. Aoals-

tant
18.Ancbor-

DOWN
l . .Jeume
d' -

2.CVdpme
3. &amp;·qts.

4-s-1

COftrlDC

5. )(minl

compaoltiou.
6.Foot
(LaL)

7. J.i1rot
m&amp;~~.onthe

moon

-··

8.Ktn-y

o:xdamatiou.

un IJoc-..... s,....,..., ,..,_,

Jl!lld~®Ji,J ~::!:! ...J c

rlftr

Down

GOOD.~

10

14. Ne:thu-

d.ty
liO. See%2

21. AUJtnllan
marauplal
23. Apple
dderCirJ
2t. Second
man on the

IS TOO

. "C"
lli. Ad-

........
slowly

·~

.........

[ns&lt;:ramblelhtst four Jumbles.
ant letter to each squaft, to
form four ordinary ..-ords.

GU.El\.

3S. Feminine
suffix
36. Ship's
rigging

20.'S eet.l
Across
Z2. Illstaken,
wtlb50
AUIIIO
25. Dolpbln
JII'DWI
26. lndl·

support
37. Field
39. Falber
U . Golly!

-

III

t2. J(oxim
43. Lyric

28. Sllppery
21. Deotp&amp;le
32. Wept

poem
441. Wltli·
d.mi

I (

II

r ·r
v
___.e..
ONE CAN'i 110 IT.

moon
27. Horon
30. Sierra
31. Summer
TV
fan!
33.Never
(Ger. I

34.Czoeh
river
35. Zoundll !
311. Large

number

Meigs County, Ohio.
.
Creditors are required to file
their claims with ·s aid fudicuary
within four months . ·
· Dated this 16th day· or July

38. Btutor

bunion

40. Slrlll
••. Early

.

Probate Judge of said County

cnJn

!O.Brown
lilwt
11. Flail

"La - "
16. Guldonlan

Notice is hereby given thai

$20,000.00 - 2 barns. 5 room
home, bath, furnace. 114
ACRES.

make
7.IIanlof

15. Debussy'•

John P- Williams of Syracuse,
$14,500.00. - 4 bedrooms, bath, Ohio,
has been duly appointed
central heat and air con. Executor
of the Est6te of Mabel
dltioning. MIDDLEPORT
Winebrenner, deceased, late of

F . H.O'Brien

t9.~rian

13. Altlooaut,
JOdlael

(8) •• ll, IB, 3t
$7,500.00 - 4 bedrooms, bath, - - - - - - - - - - garage .
Fenced
yard.
' MIDDLE PORT
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
59,500.00 2 bedrooms,
c ..e No. 20,502
paneled, bath, largo lot. Estate
of
MABEL
WINEBRENNER
Deceased
RUTLAND

1971.

aubj.
... Cleo's

letter

SR.

$10,000.00 - 3 large bedrooms
with large closels. Bath, gas
heal, garage on corner lot .
MIDDLEPORT NEW
LISTING

48. Pib:h

l'eo-J'o Cant ; It: MANY A MAN FAJUI .&amp;&amp; Alf
ORlGINAL THINKER SDIPLY BECAUSE HIS ........y

9. Nick
Charles
wife

t7. Tllrmoll

). School

u.a...k

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Cost No. 20532
Estate of CHARLES W .
RADFORD. Jr., Deceased.

Notke is hereby given thai
Emma C. Radford, of Pomeroy, ·
Ohio. has been dulr appointed
Administratrix of the Estate of
Charles W . Radford, Jr .,
deceased , late of Meigs County
Ohio.
'
Br'oku
Creditors are required to file
110 Mochonic Street
their claims with said fiduciary
POmeroy, Ohio
with in four months.
Dated this 39th day of July
$6,500.00 - 2 bedrooms, balh, 1971.
garage, gas heal - 2nd house,
John C_Bacon
6 rooms, balh . $4,500.00.
Probate Judge
BAS HAN
of said County

LOSER

CAPI'AIN EASY

U\nJOU!ut
45. Under--

-

m 21,28 JBI4, Jt

stond
46. Poetical

NOTICE

DAILY CRYPI'OQUO'I'E-Here's how to work It: L~~~~~=:!~:!::J..__..___.....:;..__....r;;-.,

Bids will be received et the
offices of Webster end Fultz,
Pomeroy, Ohio. until Saturday,
August 7, 1971, at 10:00 O'Clock
A.M. for the sale of the Katie
Wilson properly, consisting of a
11!2 story, 6-room house and lot.
situated In the VIllage of
Harrisonville, Ohio.
The right Is reserved to reject
any or .all bids.
Nora Jordan,
Administratrix

.Alll'DLBAAX~

0... Jetter idmpl,. f«. UlOibtr. In lhls sample A 1o
tor tilt u.- Jl' doe
to LL'a,
0 NX G
Z Ltwo
L 0O's.
W ett. SiJ!Cle 1etttn.
apaotropllel. lbe ........ ..... f-tlaD o( lbe _..... ""' all
illllb. Bacll doJibe eodt leUen Oft dJffOfti!L

uotd

A CliP I

ERS

Estate of Katie Wll~.

AUME

a•- 1

~~~~~~~~~~J

, "

CAKUDEGYE

ERCYP

NGER.SD .JGY
BU
:NUD RCJ(
JR.ClBDSY CM EU IUO$ ERBCD

G

d&amp;ceased

(7) 25,28 (8) 1, •••

AUICRBD .-II:RSUBUDS

~·

.

I

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

A.

RSMWPDYR'-..__..__..=,._._

�·.
I

Lo-'ftR n.Qflk•4i•l,Wieport.PouaOJ, o., August 4,1971

EEKANDMEEK

Bargains, Bargains and More Barga'i ns In The Sentinel Classifieds
DANCE

SPECIAL thanks to the. Racine
Baptist Church for their
prayers and cards . Also

Sat~m~ay Night .

. 10 Til 2 .
.Miosic ly Cindy C...rll

AJ:!d Sii!!JOr
-ly.

4, I'll:. IIMd,

Ohio

Pines
Nile Qub
Rt. 7

Holman while confined to
Ch i ldren's Hospital,
Columbus.
God . bless
everyone. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob
Holman and Family.

- - -- -Auto Sales .,.

B-~- ltp

1962 PL Y/110\.ITH Vaiiant, good
L - - - - - - - - --J condition, ~00 or best offer.
Phone 696-1123.
Lost and F011111
STRAYED from Laurel (;lift -----c-;---B--l~lc
area, 3 blue lick pups. Two ,67 CHEVELLEMalibu 2door, 1
localod in Meigs County dog
local owner, V-B automatic,
pound.

Pelneroy, 0 .

Reward for safe

mum or information leading

i

new tires, excellent condition.
Phone 992-'108-4 or 992-709B.

ton!lum of third pup. Contact
7_4-tfc
Oscar T. Smith, Pomeroy.
Qlio. F'tGrie 992-559~.
'70 DODGE Dart. Phone 992-

~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiia.lii.J-Jip
EM: Jack
somehow
iftli1119 he has thO!II!Ih1
what
llunrina wi1h you. v-····
iftlitllg is right.

3597 after 5 p.m.

- 8-3-Jtp

1970 CONTINENTAL Mark 19
camping trailer, fully self·
contained, excellent condition. Coli 992-2367 before 5
p.m.

BESHORE AN'TELL
'iE HE'S HAlliN' A

Business Opportunities

2 SillS
Of
QUALITY

thanks to everyone else for
their . cards sent to John ·

&amp; Tho Niglll Rioters

F..,.

Po•eroy . .
,_fl

C.anl of Thaoks

MotOr

\M•

ManorWom•n

-,.uchev. 2 Ton
oni~Sl750
M" cab to axle, good 825x20 tires, 2 speed rear axle, Int.cab like new truck, ~ cyl. m cu. in. eng. A real ·clean
truck.
1967 Ford LTD
$1595
4 Door Sedan, power steering &amp; brakes, vinyl interior, blk.

EAGLE
INDUSTRI.ES

vinyl roof, maroon finish. radio, new w-w tires, v.a with
automatic· trans. &amp; factory air conditioning - Special,

Special.

3tH Meadowbroolll Ro•d
· $f. louis P•rk, Minn. 55426

Pomeroy Motor Ci.

For Sale

OP.£M EVES. 8:00 P'.M.
i'CIMEROY, OHIO

IS CU. FT. KELVINATOR
freezer, new; one month old,

pistol, new; 12 ga.
double barrel shotgun, 12 ga.
36" barrel goose gun. new.
Jack Layne, Prospect Hill,
Pomeroy.
8--'-Jtp
~magnum

Notic~ __

Notice

_

ROOFiNG &amp; CARPENTER
WORK

SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING
NEW &amp; OLD WORK
Ali Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co. and Anthony Plumbing &amp; Heating.
Complete
Plumbing,
Heating and Air Conditioning.
·
240 Lincoln St.,•Middleport
Phone 992-2550
Insured- Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See us -- for
Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnstala1ion.

WILL CARE lor elderly female SAVE UP to ·one half. Bring
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
patienfs in my home. Mrs. Iva
Stewart, Minersville, 992· Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
1953 FORD, VB, standard with
Pomeroy.
,.
27B5.
overdrive, good tires. exAir Con~itiooing ·
1971 ZIG-ZAG sewing
4-23-tlc NEW
B-3-3tc
cellen1 mechanical condifion.
machine in original factory
$150. Custom factory trailer
carton. Zig-zag to make
Inspection and
hitch for 68-70 charger $10.
butl,..holes, sew on buftons,
Two universal hitches S5
monograms,' and make fancy
each. Call 992-7173 evenings
RH:harge
designs with iustlhe twist of a
only.
single dial. Left In lay-away
B-J-2tc
Bill Miller is joining our Company, a specialist
and never been used. Will sell
Special
Plus
At
Parts
for only W cash, or credit
in air conditioning and refrigeration, both
terms
available.
Phone
992home and commercial.
Instruction
5641.
.tuCKING INDUSTRY
B-4-6tc
NEEDS MEN- You can now
,---,----- PHONE 992-2143
train fo become an over fhe
e
LECTROL UX vacuum
road driver or .city driver.
cleaner complete with atExcellent earnings after short
tachments, cordwlnder and
Sale
training on our trucks wlfh
paint spray. Used but in like
240 Uncoln 51., Middleport
CANNING
tomatoes, already
our driver instr-uctors to help
new condition. Pay SJ.4A5
picked,
$1.25
bu., bring
you .. For application and
cash or budge! plan available.
containers.
Geraldine
call
513-241
-5572,
or
interview,
Phone 992-5641.
4
NOJml
Cleland, East Main, Racine.
write
Training
Safefy
B-Utc
.97
·
7-2B-1fc
Division. United Sysfems,
.A73
Inc. , C-0 Motor Freight
·cLEAN INGEST carpet cleaner
.QJ952
registered
An1hony Plumbing &amp; Heating is now open 6
Terminal Bldg.. 3101 Gano
rou ever used, so easy too. 2-YEAR-OLD
quarter horse gelding. Phone
.1085
Road, Sharonvi lie, CinGet Blue Lustre. Rent electric
Days a Week.
WIST (D)
EAST
cinnati, Ohio, 45241.
shampooer, S1. Baker Fur- 992-2990.
7-30-51c
.AK2
.QJ8643
8-3-2tc
niture Company.
THOROUGHBRED Stud RUMMAGE Sale, Fridar. and
.5H
9K
B+6tc
Saturday, Fry Bui ding,
Service. Roman Captain No.
TREE ripened peaches at the
Middleport.
9 a.m. to ~ p.m.
•• ~31f3
tiOU
king of spades and continued
637.410. $50 registered mares.
Mason Peach Orchard
8-4-21c APPLES. Peaches, Fitzpatrick
S3S grade mares . Return
• 964
witb the deuce after East
starling Sal., July 31st. Hours
Orchard, Slate Route 689.
privileges . Greg Roush,
9 a.m. to 6 p.m . Phone 773~
played the queen. East led
1WILL NOT be responsible for
Phone
Wilkesville
669-3785.
5559.
Phone
992·5039.
•QJ10982
tbe four of clubs back.
8-I-1Dic
7-9-JOic any debts contracted by
7-JO~tc
• K
South won the trick with
anyone other than myself.
• AK Q J
the ace and proceeded to GUN SHOOT. August B, 1 p.m.,
Signed: Charles Aeiker.
'COAL. limestone: Excelsior
8-~-Jtp
Narth-Soulb YU!DonbJe
lead his king of diamonds.
5all Works, E. Main St ..
Racine Gun Club.
· Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891 .
8-4-~lp - - - , - - - - w.c Noodo Eoot S..tk West won with the ace and
•-9-ifc
AKC REGISTERED black
Pa. Pas
Pas 4 •
returned a club. Now South - - - - - - - poodle, miniature and loy for
36" X23" I .009
Pas
Pam
led his queen of trwnps, went MEIGS SENIORS call Grover's
stud service. Call 992$78.
Studio now. Make apOt ingler'
1Jp witb dwnmy's ace and
8-3-6tc
pointment for your senior
pickled East's singleton
portraits to be taken during
week of August 23rd. Save 10
By Olnlll 1: J'amell Jllnlly king.
per cent on the cost of your For Sale or Trade
II was all a matter of
order. Phone 992-2~75.
Wbea you !mow from your counting. He bad played his
USED OFFSET PLATES
8-4-lotc 1966 VOLKSWAGEN, 1969
c:ouat ~ •lflPOIII!IIt. holds ~ king of diamonds before
. Toyota Station Wagon. Phone
HAVE
tbe m'mag cards m a sult, touching trumps to locate the GUN SHOOT, Forked Run 992-6547.
MANY USES
you alao know be holds ~y ace and West bad played it.
7-29-Hc
Sportsman Club, Sunday,
bollors ~t are beld agamst West was also marked with
August 8, 12 noon.
YOIL Tbis JS known as a com- the ace and king of spades.
B-Ote
Female Help Wanted
plete I»UUIt. When you. know He could ilot hold another
be_ bolds m'!"' canis 10 the king, slhce he had dealt and KOSCOT Kosmetics, July- HOUSEWIVES - Evenings
August special, Kare Kon - free ... Earn 25 per cent
smt thaa _his ~. you passed. Therefore, South
1220 Washington Blvd.
dilion
oil S5. Value now only demonstrating toys and gifts ·
!mow be IS ~~ likely to knew where the king of
Belpr•,Ohio
S2.50. Distributors, Brown's, with the highest paying party
bald .BJl'f mtmag ~ - trumps was. He did not know
phone 992-5113.
plan. Compare our program
That IS ~ as a
ihat it would drop but he
7-4-tlc and color catalog before '-':~'-.'!" IAL style stereo. AMcount A: partial_ co~t IS a did know tbat a finesse
making any other comFM r adlo, 4 speakers, 4-speed
Ill Court St.
good
but 1t 1S not a would be a hopeless play.
mitments. No experience, no
record changer - Balance
sure
•
Pomeroy, Ohio
investment. Car necessary.
$79.19.
Use
our
budget
terms.
You, South. hold:
Tbere is a secGIId form of
Call 9~ ·3233 or write Toy
can 992-7085.
.AKI7
.AZ tKQt.K&amp;43
counting to help you locate
Ladies Party Plan. JohnsB-1-61c
town, Pa. 15902.
missing higb ards. CoUDt The bidding has been:
What do you do now?
, - - - -, - - - Real Estate For Sale
A-Bid six die_...,. Your _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __a_
-J.Jtp MODERN walnut slereo, AMyour 'Ml'JD"Uis' points and WISt
North
t:ast South
FM radio features 4-speed HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
partau- ..,..e a loa« diawbat this count will tell
Coil Danny Thompson, 992·
record changer, _. speakers,
you.
Pass
Pass
_..., uitlo ... - ...... little Help Wanted
I+
2196.
separale controls. Balance
3N.T. .-Joi11c • doe oide. Yoar
Pass
We area't sure that we like Pas
3t
7-18-lfc
$67.89. Call 992-7085.
_:._
COUNTRY
and
western
band
Pass
4t
Sauth's four-beart bid but be Pas
of dia......... jvotify
8-1-6tc
wanted Friday and Saturday
lllil olqht owabiol
Pass
?
did make il Welt ope!led. tbe Pas
nights. Apply In person at
HO.USE, 1640 Lincoln His.,
~·
SINGER zig zag , sewing
Jack's Club.
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
machine needs no cams, all
B-J.Jtc
·
10-25-tfc
built -in features. Makes
- - - -- - - bullonholes, etc. Pay balance
EARN AT home addressing
3 BEDROOM brick home.
~9. 75. Call 992-7085.
envelopes . Rush stamped
8-l -61c Choice location In Middleport.
self-addressed envelope. Tht
Seen by appointment only.
Ambrose Co., 4325 Lakeborn, - - -- - - - - I
Phone 992-5523 after ~ p.m .
u
•~h ts
.........., s11
1b
Davisburg, Mich. 48019.
CANNING tomatoes, picked
5-7-tfc
..oyce, caVJar,...,. 1 er ....,.._e oes .... e
8-1 -JOtp
S1.50 bushel. Raymond Rowe,
BY JACI[ O'BRIAN
la~fternooil sailing II. tbe QE2 was stylish
phone W-2~7.
l:ONVEN IE NT but secluaeo
enough; but always tbe vague 11&lt;11talgia for tbat
1:
B-J-3tc
building lois on T79 at Rock
PARtiES SHAPE uP WHEN
Springs.
Within walking
histcric Midnight Sailing we'd never ex_R
_A
_V
_E_ I-oi--C-h-esler
4_ G
distance
of
Meigs High
ONE SHIPS our
perienced, J)ll88ellgers in evening clothes and
Memory Gardens. Phone 992- School, a 5 minute
drive from
LONIXl'l -We sat bon in our ccmfortallly coofetti flying and U!m Perlgnon flowing and
5771. Roland Russell.
Pomeroy. Call or ·see Bli I
8-3-Jtp Witte weekends or after 5
mwudti!Odema dip at tbe a.mn Hotel on Portman Noel Coward PDAJing epigrams and Robert
- ---'---,--p.m. weekdays. Phone 992·
Slpre, batiDg a 'lfiolifieol, ,., befits our elegant Benchley laking on his liquid cargo with droll
TWO male A. K.c: registered 6887.
beagle pups. Bweeks old. W
7-11-tlc
1 mlon loca",llugb: We'd marveled at the fact CCIJUDI!nts in Elsa Maxwell's ear.
each. Phone 992-3126.
-::-:-:-:=:-:-:-:----:-:-::-lbat aoce wbea 'ft left m a lengthy round-lheWe wondered here again 1111 PIK1man Square
8-3-Jip SIX ROOM house, bath, lull
warld trip by air, ..,- a soul came ID wave us wby Midnight Sailings bave disappeared; we
----------:basement, 133 Butternut Ave.,
GENTLE 2 year old saddle bred
just walking dis lance from
goodbye ..... But just taU an ocean liner for so had woodered aboard ship and received assorted
and
stud
sorrel,
2
white
sox.
downtown
Pomeroy. Contact
IQICb • a cruise to BailliiiLl, never mind our evasions, none knowing precisely why ... But
Phone 992-2436.
Ed Hedrick, 2137 Wadsworth
I*
ltAtlanticocb J m tbe ~een Elizabeth everyme guessed.
B-3-ltc
Orive. Columbus, Ohio, phone
2, and you galber ao audience lit for a hit
237-4334,
Columbus.
Oleaper, said the cynic. Safer, decided the
Phone 992-2156
ONE
gentle
Morgan
riding
-- - - -·=.5-:.:;9·:,::.:1fc
'TU'iclol
1
Jl'agmatist. Tides bave shifted dangerously
---------~
mare, also her gelded
yearling thorobred. Phone NEW. 3-bedroom home In
U's DOt lbat tbe glaovr fl. airline travel has opined the pessimist. Thoae · blasted unioos, Wanted To Buy
773-5333
or write Box 286. Middleporl. . Buill-In kitchen,
wwa 11.1; just tbat tbe facilities fer par- gloomed the banker. Midnight mtlggings, ButMason, W. Va.
ceramic tile bath, all-electric
ANTIQUES, telephones, brass
liDs~aremeager,if at all .... But there's tered the Old Maid. Too many after-dark
B-J.6Ip
heat, good neighborhood. can
beds, clocks, dishes. old
arrange FHA financing .
furniture, etc. Write M. D.
~ about a huw7 liner tballrings out boozings for YisitOI's who then fergot ID leave and
Telephone 992-3600 or 992Miller, Rt. 4c Pomeroy, Ohio. 14- YEAR OLD sorrel gaited
- Jlllll' lriN'II, fnm clare and weleome friends to deadheaded stylishly off to Europe, gleed the (all
192-6271.
gelding horse - my wife's 2186.
arqaaintwes ym are wwb.at glad to greet, playboy. Someday we shallba-ve to drop a polite
7-25-tfc
7-9-llc
horse - See In evenings at
ID ngue facrs 7UU can't quite place, and even a query to Sr. Basil Smallpiece, bead of CUnard, - - -- - - - Arnold Grate residence, - - - - - - - - - - Rutland. Phone days 742-4211,
fl!lr 11111 1m.- you've never seen befcre, but who and get the truth, so help
Neptune.
For Sale
Trade
evenings 7~2 -5502.
CDIIIt 1111 YCIID' Instant camaraderie in tbe spirit
But the sailing parties remain delightful 1968 CHEVY, 2 door hardtop,
8-3·61c
II. the uilq ID dnJp in fer a clink; A drink? punctuation to anyme's vacatim; like the old air conditioning, power
608 East Main
RUNNER beans, S2
saw tbat it's not enonon in your life that you
steering and power brakes. HALF
MlnJdriab!
POMEROY
bushel, pick your own .
..,..
1969 camaro. 4 speed, 350
'lbe 7f7 airliners are glamorously buge, but succeed- your friends must also fail. A luxury
Cucumbers and tomatOes. WANT TO BUILD? We have
engine. Phone 992-6547.
Clarence
Proftltl, Portland.
enn Fat Albert, as tbe piloCs call these new liner lea-velaking coolains ooe not too nasty
7-23-Hc
two nice building sites, one
Phone Jl43.22~.
has a house on It which does
gialllll; bate ao facililies fer the !IHmg soirees triumph : You are sailing and your friends must
8-3-15tc
need some repair. Located in
lbat the QE2 and tbe oCher lavish liners generate debark, enviously .... Then tbey adorn the dock
Rent
Pomeroy on quiet street.
GOOD: BUY $6,900.
•••• WebeardGDelada pling oc two ago lamely of Pier 92 as confetti flutters and bands play and
and unfurnished
npl•i• be was just driving by the Cunard Pier the Moran lugs impudenUy wdge the imperious FURNISHED
apartments. Close to school. ~
OPPORTUNITYFREE ICE CREAM OFFER BUSINESS
aa Ilia ny to aaolber daR when he remembered new Queen iniD tbe North River cbamel and
Phone 992 -~.
A DRIVE-IN located on Slate
10-18-llc
Route. in small community,
our seilq; wby sore ! It was a Broadway Guy Away We Sail .... Nothing like a Sailing ever is
Here's the way It works ...
includes
ground - 100x300
you get seven ice cream
wilb an Gllice 1111the Main Stem and his sheepish duplicated on leavetakings in other caravan- 5 ROOMS - furnished. Phone
bars, or a half -gallon of ice
a~d modern b~llding toge)her
cream~
FREE for every
npluatian tbat be bad a date in the neigh- series, and ~e've been traveling by train since Mrs. A. R. Knighl 992 · 2~:
w1lh all equipment . NOT
cubic foot you buy In a Unico
VERY OLD.
8-l~tc
lubuod II. the NOI'Ib River 8DCI s:md St. was a infancy and by air since the days II. the DC-2
freezer"", refrigerator "or
combination .
·
R_
AIL_E_RLO
~T~S-,~Bob-:. -.,- :-:Mobile
lnnij HeJt SCIIII! for &amp; Cbampagne fix .... (yes, DC·2); no one then, our first such flight, _T_
POMEROY - ALMOST NEW
UNI~O 20FT. UPRIGHT
BRICK HOME - 3 large
Still, 1beJ do aot r'ullla ~party; proballly · even came to the airport; as the marvelous QE2 Courl, ~~- 12~. Syracuse,
FREEZER
1".95
Ohio.
992-2951
.
bedrooms,
double closets,
With this one rou get 1'(1 free .
IIIJ dadl; ••aal II. U.. a
and ingest drifted down the ri.er before shifting in!D ocean
4-2-ftc
beautiful buill-In kitchen for
ice cream bars or 20 half
• p llleet et 0 ~.to bald them UDtil the gear, we marveled that our suite bad played to
gallons of FREE ice cream.
mom, carpeted, full basement
with recreation room. lots of
faiiiOCill II P'l bt4! IDII'Iing parties begin. an audience !illiJI8 every available chair and FURNISHED apartmenl . in
'I',_
POMEROY
country, ideal for con storage, utility room, about
!Iii Joc,W. Corsey,Mgr.
liiBe day 'ft'd adJiile ID IUe part as a be&lt;kdge - and to lots II. vertic8Js in Drinking struction worker or couple,
one acre of ground, concrete
Pftooe "2-2111
15-minute drive from town.
basketball court, carport, air
ia a ftlll Wnjpt Sailing; we've Rooo1 Only.
Will
accept
one
child.
Inquire
$27,500.
conditioned.
aped • • p &lt;l.lb!m viariously- along
The fun and satisfactions of an ocean wyage
•
9N FORDfracfor with Sherman
337 N. 2nd St., Middleport.
-.lib a.t: Gable and Caudetle Colbert and in properly luxurious style doo't wear olf; even
8- f-Ile' overdrive ~ Phone 992-70«.
WANT TO SELL? YOU HAVE
THE PROPERTY - WE
Carale Lombard and Melvyn Douglas and the slight movement of the deck as the QE2
B-2-Jtc
HAVE THE BUYERS HOUSE,
1637
Lincoln
Hgls
..
~
Wlllilm PolleD lmd Myrna Loy and Cary Grant glides its6()()&lt;;ome miles a day slays with you fer
LET'S GET TOGETHER.
rooms. bath, basement, afflc, 16 FT. TAGALONG travel
_. Debonlfl 1terr 81111 Alllrey Hepburn and days; as yoo put on a pair of shoes or pants you storage and driveway.
HENRY CLELAND .
trailer,
fully
self
contained:
REALTOR
Gllelr '-llelll of Gill' pet iad Viraria; ihe Midnight CfC&amp;sionaUy experien~ the same gentle Wt, Available after Aug. 5th. Ready logo, $1500. Phone 773·
Office
992-225'
l!e'l'fll of . . and ana• always struck Ul as abnost unnoticeable, fer several lo-vely London Phone 992-2780 or"992-3'32.
5651, Mason, W. Va.
Residance 992-1561
8·3-lfc
7-23-llc
lbupilmaeafli&amp;IJ ltyle, far
thin a Roll&amp;- days.
8-Htc
B-3~1p

NOTICE I

WMP0/1390

Avoid the
Hopeless Ploy

Have Your Seascral

6.98
Blaettnar's

OONTACT:
AN1110NY PWMBING &amp;HEATING

For

OR PHONE

992-2550 DAYS OR 992-3509 NIGHTS

- --=-- ---:-

For Sale

•K

Aluminum
Sheets ·

U'. 14' • 24' WIDE
I

I

MIWR

MOBil£·HOMES

=

J&gt;a!1ial

1.2.

1

Voice along Broadway

The
Oaily sentinel

___

4. lduc-•r------------------------------------------

l!

;::=======:::.........,
.
SENTINEL
_
CARRIER
WANTED IN
NEW HAVEN ·
HARTFORD

I

rum

or

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

Qeland Realty

For

FIEEZER SALE

'•m••w

r

a

mare

IIOOACIOOS SALE ON

Busin_ess ,Services

BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY

Reiiable person from th is
area to service and collect
from automatic dispensers.
No experience needed . We
establish accounts tor you .
Car, references, and S995 to
S1U5cash capital necetsary.
• to 12 hours weekly nets
excellent monthly lnc;ome.
Full time · more. For local
interview, write :
(Include telephone number l

1970 Chevrolet
~
'h Ton Pickup, wi~ body, G7h15 tires, H. duty I rear
-springs. rear step bumper, less than 9000 miles and less
· than V'mo. old. Beautiful red finish. Shows best of care.

IGIT
STARTB&gt;-SU.AS SAID

- -- - - -

HANG TH'

BECAUSE fT H~S:
R£DEEMiklG
SllCIM. VALUE l

WH'f DO -mEV CN.L IT
nil&gt; ~ Pllil£ SPE&lt;:II.L?

DADBURN

~

COMMERCIAL-·
GITONWIF

TH'NEWS

lii.OCI&lt; ~AN'--

..

EXPERIENCED
Radiablr Senice
I.OUSY. BIMOt

TilER&amp; WERE NO
GALS lliEltE
From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

BlAElTN~

Ph. 992-2143

Pomeroy

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
15.55

POMEROY

HOME&amp; AUTO

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

992-2094
606 E. Main

Pomeroy

Pameroy Home &amp; Auto

OFFICE SUPPl:IES

Open8Til5
Monday thru Saturdoy
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

And

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.
l.o_u_E_E_N_a_nd
__
sha_m_b_lln_c_on.J.J.

tiJHNSON
MASORRY
Complete
R emodel'U&amp;ll

sir uct ion. Roo II ng,
remodeling.
aluminum
siding. Phone 992-73H or 7424979.
B· 4' 12tc
.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph. ~4782,
Gallipolis. John Russell,
Owner &amp; Operator.
5-13-llc

.If....__ _

Kilchalls, Baths
Room Additions
And Pollos
Backhoe And
Endlolder Worll

---

BUGS BUNNY

Septic Tonks
And Leach Bads.

MOM, tF I.
'TDI.D )QJ,

742-4902

AWNINGS, storm doors and

HAVE A
6000 OAV,
I='UDDSV!

~LDN'T

windows. carports.~==========::
marquees, aluminum siding r

""'""'''" IT!

and railing. Call A. Jacob,

Roofil!ll&amp; Carpenter
.
'Work
Spouting, Roof
Pain1ing
NEW&amp; OLii WORK
FOR YOUR new shingled roof, All Weather Roofing &amp; Con·
contact Roush Construction. strudlon Co. ond Anthony
Plumbing &amp; Healln9.
Phone 992-5039.
7-9-JOtc Complete Plumbing, 'Healing
1nd Air Conditioning.
SEWING MACHINES. Repa•i 240 Lincoln St. Middleport, 0.
service, all makes, 992-228-4,
Phone 992-1550
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Insured.
Experi..,clld
Authorized Singer Sales and
Work
GvrorontHd
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-lfc
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanks Installed. George
AUTOMOBILI: Insurance been
(BIU) Pullins, Phone 992-2~7B .
cancelled?
Lost
your
4-2S-Ifc
operator's license? Call 992·
sales representative. For free

estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse . V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
5-27-tlc

GASOUNE AILEY

2966.

6-15-ffc . NEIGLER Construction. For
S-E-PT-IC-ta"'n-ks-c-le_a_n_ed___ M_il_le~
building or remodeling .your '
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
home. Call Guy Neigler.
. Racine, Ohio.
662 _3035 _
7-31 -tlc
2-12-tlc
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer RALPH'S CARPET - Up.
holstery Cleaning Service .
Complete Service
Free estimates . Phone
Phone 9~·3821
Gallipolis
4-46-0294.
Racine, Ohio
3-12-tlc
Crill Bradford
5-1-llc
O' DELL WHEEL alignment
HARRISON'S___ TV -AND AN- localed al Crossroads, Rt. 124.
TENNA SERVICE . Phone Complete fiont end se~vlce,
June up and brake service.
992-2522.
6-10-lfc Wheels b&lt;1ianced electronically . · All
work
Reasonable
PAPER HANGING, interior guaranteed .
and exterior painting. · Phone rates. Phone 992-3213.
7-27-ttc
992-3630.
7-13-JDip -=----.- - - - -==~-...,.----::-ROSEBERRY Furnace In DOG grooming
Poodles, stallatlon. Free estimates on
Schnauzers. Experienced
new furnaces, oil or gas.
professional
work,
no Service work. Call Cecil
tranquilizers, gentle hand- Roseberry, Racine, Ohio.
ling, S5 up. Coolville 667-6214. Phone 614-B.U-2274.
--,--:__::.;..:;;.
7-23-12tp
7-22-JOtc

THE

IF I r.Nii 'iJil ,._~, MW' lNJ 1 EJi'E'GT
~ 1111Ellft11

tf'l f800T A M111UTE~ MR. tiOOHArt'U.
GNE 'IME SIGHAL-· THE!&lt; 111 A110Ti1Eit
MlHOTE, 'IME fiG'I!tlLMAllf. lHEIR MDI'E•··,

_____

•

DAilY CROSSWORD

READY-MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to your
pro/' ect. Fast and easy. Free
est mates. Phone 992-32B4.
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-JO.Ifc

Real Estate For Sale

•csoss

HOUSE, 5 rooms and bOth, has
new aluminum siding, storm
windows and doors, good
condition, In Manker, Run
area. Priced reasonab e. can
992-712B or 992-37&amp;...
B-3-llc O'BRIEN ELECTRIC SER - - -- VICE. Phone 9~-~51.
APPROXIMATELY 1 acre lot
5-JO.Ifc
with drilled well, at Dexter,
Ohio. Phone 992-3223.
B·3·31c LEGAL NOTICE

- - - -- -

Virgil B.
TEAFORD

WHAT

WAS

TMAT

535.000.00 room

Beautiful NEW 8

ranch

home,

&lt;4

bedrooms wilh large close is, 2
full ' baths . Double garage.
15 ACRES.
$12,500.00 Large 3 bedrooms,I
balh, furnace. garage.
RACINE
FOR APPOINTMENT
CALL 992-3315
HELEN L. tEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
8·1-61c

- -- -- -

-

I!Oie
17.Notln
pori

U.Grecory

T.ERRY

.._

17. Aoals-

tant
18.Ancbor-

DOWN
l . .Jeume
d' -

2.CVdpme
3. &amp;·qts.

4-s-1

COftrlDC

5. )(minl

compaoltiou.
6.Foot
(LaL)

7. J.i1rot
m&amp;~~.onthe

moon

-··

8.Ktn-y

o:xdamatiou.

un IJoc-..... s,....,..., ,..,_,

Jl!lld~®Ji,J ~::!:! ...J c

rlftr

Down

GOOD.~

10

14. Ne:thu-

d.ty
liO. See%2

21. AUJtnllan
marauplal
23. Apple
dderCirJ
2t. Second
man on the

IS TOO

. "C"
lli. Ad-

........
slowly

·~

.........

[ns&lt;:ramblelhtst four Jumbles.
ant letter to each squaft, to
form four ordinary ..-ords.

GU.El\.

3S. Feminine
suffix
36. Ship's
rigging

20.'S eet.l
Across
Z2. Illstaken,
wtlb50
AUIIIO
25. Dolpbln
JII'DWI
26. lndl·

support
37. Field
39. Falber
U . Golly!

-

III

t2. J(oxim
43. Lyric

28. Sllppery
21. Deotp&amp;le
32. Wept

poem
441. Wltli·
d.mi

I (

II

r ·r
v
___.e..
ONE CAN'i 110 IT.

moon
27. Horon
30. Sierra
31. Summer
TV
fan!
33.Never
(Ger. I

34.Czoeh
river
35. Zoundll !
311. Large

number

Meigs County, Ohio.
.
Creditors are required to file
their claims with ·s aid fudicuary
within four months . ·
· Dated this 16th day· or July

38. Btutor

bunion

40. Slrlll
••. Early

.

Probate Judge of said County

cnJn

!O.Brown
lilwt
11. Flail

"La - "
16. Guldonlan

Notice is hereby given thai

$20,000.00 - 2 barns. 5 room
home, bath, furnace. 114
ACRES.

make
7.IIanlof

15. Debussy'•

John P- Williams of Syracuse,
$14,500.00. - 4 bedrooms, bath, Ohio,
has been duly appointed
central heat and air con. Executor
of the Est6te of Mabel
dltioning. MIDDLEPORT
Winebrenner, deceased, late of

F . H.O'Brien

t9.~rian

13. Altlooaut,
JOdlael

(8) •• ll, IB, 3t
$7,500.00 - 4 bedrooms, bath, - - - - - - - - - - garage .
Fenced
yard.
' MIDDLE PORT
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
59,500.00 2 bedrooms,
c ..e No. 20,502
paneled, bath, largo lot. Estate
of
MABEL
WINEBRENNER
Deceased
RUTLAND

1971.

aubj.
... Cleo's

letter

SR.

$10,000.00 - 3 large bedrooms
with large closels. Bath, gas
heal, garage on corner lot .
MIDDLEPORT NEW
LISTING

48. Pib:h

l'eo-J'o Cant ; It: MANY A MAN FAJUI .&amp;&amp; Alf
ORlGINAL THINKER SDIPLY BECAUSE HIS ........y

9. Nick
Charles
wife

t7. Tllrmoll

). School

u.a...k

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Cost No. 20532
Estate of CHARLES W .
RADFORD. Jr., Deceased.

Notke is hereby given thai
Emma C. Radford, of Pomeroy, ·
Ohio. has been dulr appointed
Administratrix of the Estate of
Charles W . Radford, Jr .,
deceased , late of Meigs County
Ohio.
'
Br'oku
Creditors are required to file
110 Mochonic Street
their claims with said fiduciary
POmeroy, Ohio
with in four months.
Dated this 39th day of July
$6,500.00 - 2 bedrooms, balh, 1971.
garage, gas heal - 2nd house,
John C_Bacon
6 rooms, balh . $4,500.00.
Probate Judge
BAS HAN
of said County

LOSER

CAPI'AIN EASY

U\nJOU!ut
45. Under--

-

m 21,28 JBI4, Jt

stond
46. Poetical

NOTICE

DAILY CRYPI'OQUO'I'E-Here's how to work It: L~~~~~=:!~:!::J..__..___.....:;..__....r;;-.,

Bids will be received et the
offices of Webster end Fultz,
Pomeroy, Ohio. until Saturday,
August 7, 1971, at 10:00 O'Clock
A.M. for the sale of the Katie
Wilson properly, consisting of a
11!2 story, 6-room house and lot.
situated In the VIllage of
Harrisonville, Ohio.
The right Is reserved to reject
any or .all bids.
Nora Jordan,
Administratrix

.Alll'DLBAAX~

0... Jetter idmpl,. f«. UlOibtr. In lhls sample A 1o
tor tilt u.- Jl' doe
to LL'a,
0 NX G
Z Ltwo
L 0O's.
W ett. SiJ!Cle 1etttn.
apaotropllel. lbe ........ ..... f-tlaD o( lbe _..... ""' all
illllb. Bacll doJibe eodt leUen Oft dJffOfti!L

uotd

A CliP I

ERS

Estate of Katie Wll~.

AUME

a•- 1

~~~~~~~~~~J

, "

CAKUDEGYE

ERCYP

NGER.SD .JGY
BU
:NUD RCJ(
JR.ClBDSY CM EU IUO$ ERBCD

G

d&amp;ceased

(7) 25,28 (8) 1, •••

AUICRBD .-II:RSUBUDS

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c0

Standings

Persuas.ion Game Continues

•

·p Hand
on Schools

s Has

International-League Stondings .
By United Press lnternaliGhl
By JOE CARNICEUJ
latest in a string of misfortunes said: "He's been depressed."
W L Pet. GB
UPI ~rtl Writer
to strike the New England
In player transactions 'fl!es- Tidewater
66 46 .589 . Tr~ camp used to be a camp this I""'«IISCIII, First day, Kansas City traded Rochester
63 45 -.583 1
60 45 .571 2'h
Ume when pro footbaU teams Phil Olsen, their No. 1 draft veteran defensive back Goldie Charleston
60 46 .566 3
tried to get their players into choice of last year who mj ed · Sellers to Houston for a draft Syracuse
Richmond
.14 56 .491 11
shape. Now a lot of tbems are aU last season with a knee choice and St. Louis dealt Louisville
S2 57 .477 12'h
41 68 .376 23'h
spending that period just tryiJig injury, found a loophole in bis defensive back Tony Plummer Toledo
Winnipeg
37
70 .346 26'h
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The weeks ago, the House crippled theSeoatewwUmouslyawov- urging ~ t. eud
to. get players into camp.
contract and was ·declared a to Allanla, also for · a draft
Tuesday's Results
$1.4
billion income ta:r bill pass- it by exempting storm doors, edlegislationpennittingthe Div- legislatiGD ........ Sl ia
FOlD' more teams were busy free agent. Olsen signed with picl&lt;.
.
Louisville 8 Charleslon ·3
ed by the Ohio House fails to which cause about 65 per cent isioo of W"ddlife to isslte $5 wild- federal mGDeJ . hr' na'f
The Baltimore Colts released Syracuse 14 Rochester 6
playing the persuasion game the 1.AJs Angeles Rams.
Tidewater
5
Richmond
o
finance
the budget approved by of the injuries suffered when in- life stamps. ·
$1 raised bJ 1M slate
Next Joe Kapp, their veteran defensive back AI Godwin, a Toledo 3 Winnipeg 1
Tuesday.
the lower chamber, Senate He- dividuals crash into breakable
· ~ Wdcm
to mainboitl wildlile ....
The New England Patriots, quarterback, ·was lost when it free agent from Kentucky, and
publicans and the Gilligan ad- plate glass in homes.
Sen. Robert T. Secrest, D- In other adian lllle
who by now may be asking was revealed that he had not the New York Giants dropped
ministrationagreedTuesday.
Stronglegislationisbacl&lt;edby
Camlridge,thebill'schiefspaopa d 'egis'..tlm " ' · I
tbemselve$ what did they do to signed a standard player's · folD' players, including John
State Finance Director Harold the insurance industry, organiz- sor, said the 'M'lsnre would of- fnm 10 to 1i •
~
deserve aU this, were busy contract. KAPP was last Kirby,astartinglinebackertwo
Hovey
and
Tax
CommissiMer
edlabor,manufacturers,theNafertheprivatec:itizeoanopporof
days
a...,,,
WJ
•
trying to remedy the chaos reported over~ the con- years ago. Houston waived
RobertKosydarappearedbefore ti0nal Safety Clouncil and the tunity to contribute to the im- card or wiud.,.... &gt;" I · 111Q
caused by the disappearance of struclion of a motel in Canada. Mike Leinert and Worthy
a
six-man Ways and Means AmericanMedica!Associalion. provementofstatewildlifeecol- bedisplayedGDa:malar i l ' •
Duane •Thomas, their newly- Then linebacker
John McOure, b4!th rookies. ·
subcommittee headed by Sen. Thel!leasure'sHousesponsor, ogy and would raise additional and .increasinz lllle fees for
aCquired running hacl&lt;.
Bramett, the club's Most The New York Jets said five
Michael J . .Maloney, R-Gncin- Rep: George E. Maslics,R-Fair- revenues for conservati011 purllrCI l'nlm S7. til
Thomas, who verbally blasted Valuable Player last season, players-Steve Thompson, John
nati, and conceded the lai mea- view Park, claimed the Ohio poses.
and a WI ftl:enc!i•' 5 'Q fiiiJ
the entire Dallas organization was dropped suddenly and tben Dockery, Dennis Onkotz, rookie
sure
faDs
$74
million
shorl
of
HardwareAssociationgotstorm
Most
wildlife
revenues
came
to full -lime a.IJ zl ;a
and refused to play for the dealt to Green Bay. Bramlett Rich SoweUs and Harvey Nairn
the proposed lm-73 spending doors exempted from the House from the sale of hunting and with less tblll Iii m f.ts II
Cowboys, was sent to the balked at the deal, which mlght - will miss SaiiD'day night's
levels set by the House.
version because safety glass in fishinglicm , bu1Seaeslsaid service.
Patriots Saturday in a five- have cost the Pats the services poe seasoti opener against the
The
question
of
whether
to
fatstorm
doors does not break, and there have been many requests
Under pr
ll law lllle emplayer deal. Thomas re- of tackle Rich Moore, obtained Delroit lions in Tampa because
ten the lai bill or cut the $7.9 hardware dealers lose replace- from pa SOliS who do not hunt ploye with less 111111 siJ: rr 's
ported to the Pats ' camp in the deal, but Bramlett of injuries. ,,
biJlion budget remains unan- ment business.
or fish to be allowed to con!rib- of sen ice IDliSl al1lllr be dldMonday, worked out one day relented Tuesday and reported
r
swered, however.
In addition to storm doors, the ule to the support of wildlife pre- ed far the balida,f • 41
til
and left, clainling, " they don't to the Packers' CliiDP.
·
"The
size of the ta:r bill de- bill requires teinpered glass, serves.
work
in
ail dJIIIb l!lfice..
want me, they asked me to
Warren WeDs, Oakland's
By RICHARD PRA'IT
pends on the appropriations the laminated glass or Plexig~ in
He said the lntematimal As- Spmsrnu lbe 'I
e )fiiPI
leave", a charge denied by troversial widereceiver, reportEducationandFinanceCommil.patio
doors
and
shower
stalls.
sociatioo
of
Game,
Fish
and
it
wiD
maR
ranih
• II
Upton BeD, the New England ed to camp two days late.
Most of us don't take the
general manager.
WeDs, who is in danger of being
matter lightly when we are tees say they need," Maloney · In an afternoon Door session, Conservation Commio'Siomers is comtymp;esa*r.
forced to borrow money. A srid.
The Patriots are trying to jailed for violatioo of his
, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .
But Education Committee
good thing, too, or shortly
determine whether the deal, probation, has been in trouble
there wouldn't be any lend- chairman Oakley C. Collins, Rwhich cost them running back with the law twice for drunken
ers.
Ironlofl, said ~~ttee will
Carl Garrett and a No. 1 draft driving and ooce for attempted
decides
spending levels for
All the more reason you
choice next year, will remain rape. No explanation was given
COLUMBUS (UPI) - High should approach the moment schools after Maloney tens him
valid.
for wens: absence except by
school
footbaU team candidates of borrowing with supreme how much money is available.
Thomas' disappearance is the roommate Eldridge Dicl&lt;ey who
bave been warned to condition confidence. You know that
Whi)e Maloney, Collins and Fithemselves before they start in you plan to par back the nance Committee chairman·
money, and that s the name
Americ.Jn league
rigorons training.
.
of the game. Why, it's prac- Roger! Shaw, R-Columbus,
for
one
anothNew York 080 000 ooo- 8 8 o The_ ~hto State Med~cal. tically a privilege to lend wait
Mljor Leque ResuHs
Cleveland 000 000 001- 1 5 1 Assoctahon and Ohto Htgh money to an upstanding citi- er to make the first
By Unit.d Press lnlernaliona I
Kekich 1._5) and Munson;
move, further hearings on tax
Naflor,.l League
Foster, Austin (2}, Mi"9ori (7) School Athletic Association said zen like you.
Los Angls «10 000 302- 9 16 o and Fosse. LP-Foster 16-11). ~ope~ pre-practice con- That's why it's so deflat- bill mechanics will he held and
San Fran 000 000 OlD- 1 6 4
Collins will name a subcommitAlexander (3-3) and Fergu- Qakland 000 200 203- 7 12 1 dillonmg for pre-season ,ing to be turned down for a tee tonight to tailor the House
son ; Bryant, Barr (3). Carrith- Kan City 000 320 ooo- 5 12 0 workouts would help protect loan, but it can happen.
ers (6}, Reberger (9) and Dietz. Blue, Locl&lt;er (6), Fingers (9) teenagers against heat stroke Bankers estimate they grant version of the education budgLP- Bryant (.7-8).
and Tenace; Wright, York (4), and beat exhaustion.
some 85 per cent of the loans et to Senate priorities.
Burgmeier (7). Abernathy (9, The chairman of the Joint requested, but that leaves 15
Storm Doors Included
San Diego -012 100 no- 6 ,j 0 Butler (9) and Paepke. WPTheSenateCommerceandLaAdvisory
Committee
on
Sporls
pe~
cent
who
are
disapSt. Louis 000 000 OlD- 1 4 2 Locker (4-1}. LP-Burgmeler
bor Committee Tuesday Arlin (6·13) and BariM ; (4-6). HRs-Oiiver (5th}, Men- Medicine of the two groups, Sol pomted.
Reuss, Drabawsky (6), Linzy day (Uth).
u .....ed
'd th dan
·
If you get turned down, it's strengthened legislation re(8) and Simmons. LP-Revss
""'66' • . S8l
e
ger 18 because the lending officer quiring
safely
glass
(10.11).
Washngtn 001 000 003- 4 8 1 from htgh temperatures has d 0 u b t s a b 0 u 1 you
at
hazardous
locations
in
000 110 ooo- 2 8 1 combined with excessive Chances are he's scarcely
Detroit
(lit Glome)
one,
two
and
three-family
dwellMclain. Cox 191 and Billings;
Cincinnati 000 ocu OlD- 5 5 o Niekro, Timmerman (9}, Scher- humidity, frequently the case laid eyes on you before you ings.
New York 010 100 ooo- 2 5 0 man 191. Chance (9) and during the early pari of the asked for the loan, so his reThe committee passed WJanSimpson, Granger (6) and Freehan. WP-McLaln (6-15). footbaU training period.
]eclion must be based on
Corrales; Ryan, Frisella (8) LP- Niekro (3-5). HR- Howard '
imously
an amendment sponsorsomething you've told him
and Grote. WP- Simpson (3-4) . (20th}.
during the interview.
ed by Sen. Paul R. Malia, RLP- Ryan (8-9). HRs-Perez
(20th), May (29th) .
What kind of doubts can Westlake, eliminating an
00 Innings)
Minn
000 000 030 1- 4 13 o
he be harboring? There are exemption of storm doors drom
!2nd. Gome)
Chicago 100 011 000 o- 3 8 1
only lour basic possibilities , the provisions of the bill,
Cincinnati 000 002 002- 4 8 0 Kaat, Williams 181 and
according to the chief lend·
Before passing the bill six
New York 101 232 OOx- 9 12 2 Millerwald; Horlen, HintM (8),
ing officer of one Chicago
Merrill, CIMinger (5} and Johnson ( 10) and Egan; Herbank :Bench ; Williams (4-5) and rmann (10). WP-WIIIiams (4SUN-BRONZED LOOK
Dyer. LP-Merrlll 10.11}. HR- 4}. LP- Johnson (6-7). HRInsufficient Inc om e-One
N'i g h II y applications of
Carba (4th}.
Fine.Quality. 3 beautiful matching patterns. A prlnh!dflcral pattern in rose, yellow and b4u./
McKinney (7th).
prime reason for being baby oil will help keep that
-a ;acquard paftern In gold, green and blue, also a jac;quard flcral paffern ,in !IOkL g;reef·
scratched as a borrower is sun-bronzed look even and
and rose. Big bath towel · matching wash cloths and matching hand 1-..Js.
Chicago 010 000 004- 5 7 1 Milwakee ooo 020 ooo- 2 5o
ri 'I \"••'
•
..
to
be
practicing
financial
Houston 000 000 ooo- o s 2 Cal'f1
1 ooo ooo ooo- o
moist
by
preventing
the
skin
f
I
'\
Hands (1().12) and Marlin . K r:U~.!. Sanders 18) :n:
brinkmanship . If the guy from drying and peeling.
Dierker, Ray (7}, Gladdlntl9), Ratliff, Rodriguez 171; Murphy 0"
Sale Ul
Bath Towels - - - - - - '
you hope to borrow from
Culver (9) and Hiatt. P- (6-121 and Stephenson, Moses
thinks
the
debt
wiU
be
too
Sale 3lc
Matching Wash Cloths
Dierker 112-6). HR - Santo (8). WP-Krausse (4-11}. HRbig, he will turn you down.
for. If you wonder too, look
Sale 6lc
Major
League
leaders
Matching
Hand
Towels
( 17th).
Ratliff 15thI.
at it this way.
By United Press lnlernaliMal
He knows from experience
If you want some money to
Leading Batters
Atlanta
000 000 101- 2 5 0 Bos at Bait (ppd. rain)
are
no
pay
for reshingling the roof
that
good
intentions
Phila
010 000 101- 3 9 0
National League
Visit the Furniture on Jrd Floor. Prompt delivery and senReed, Priddy (6~ and WilG. AB R. H. Pd. match for too much debt.
of your house, thai's a good
sible credit.
liams; Short (7-12) and McCarTorre, St.L 110 423 63 152 .359
Slow Pay- Perhaps you're reason. It shows a sense of
ver. LP- Prlc.&lt;dy 14-9). HRsBeckrt, Chi 102 409 68 143 .350
Monlanez (22nd}, Aaron (31st}, WNG SWIM
Omte, Pit 92 368 61 123 .334 the kind who doesn't worry values, and the lender likes
Williams (19th) :
BADBRAHMSTEDT,Genna- Garr, All
108 441 71 147 .333 too much about making that.
Brocl&lt;,
SI.L
441 86 W .333 timely payments. You don 't
If you want lo borrow the
Pitt.brgh 002 200 060- 10 8 0 ny (UPI)-Dr: Peter Doebler, Sngln. Pit 107
95 369 44 123 .333
Montreal 100 030 101- 6 9 2 31, swam 28 miles across a hay Davis, LA 107 432 63 141 .326 really default, you just take m 0 n e y to pay off your ~-. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...,.. . . . . ..
your time about it.
bookie, that's another story.
Blass, Veale (7}, Giusti 18) of the Baltic Sea in 24 hours in Jones, NY
90 337 40 109 .323
From the lender's view- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 76 306 59 98 .320
lll)d Sangulllen; Morton, Me- escaping from East Germany Cash. Pit
GIM (8}, ReMO (8) and
. ' Alou, StL 101414 55 132 .319 point, that's bad too. He will 1
•
Bateman. WP- Veale (6-11} . LP West German border police
Amerian League
gef his money back-even-Morton (8-13) . HRs-Staub reported Tuesday.
G. AB R. H. Pd. tuaUy-bul he'll be doing it
(lOth), Alley, 2, 14th &amp; 5th).
Doebler wore a diver's suit Oliva, Minn 86 334 57 123 .368 the hard way. Mailing past
Murcer, NY 106 383 69 128 .334
and fins when a West German Otis,
KC
98 386 59 121 .313 due notices, making phone
yacht picked him up near the Tovar. Min 103 429 65 133 .310 caDs to jog your memory.
99 363 48 112 .309 and other procedures cos!
island of Fehmam July 25. He Rojas, KC
Rchdl,
Chi
92 340 39 105 .309 enough to eat up his profit
had entered the water at Rttmnd. Bit 90 297 .14 90 .303
on the deal.
RDstock,EastGermany.Police Hwrd. Wsh 104 386 43 116 .301
Unstable Employment-No
Tonight, Tbur.&amp; Fri.
said he told them be had Mnchr, Wsh 92 295 3~ ss .298
Crdns.
Min
105
379
42
112
.296
m
a II e r how conscientious
Augusl4-~
trained for the swim for two
Home Runs
you
may want to be, your
Double Feature Program
years.
· _National League : Stargell, good intentions will come to
Grandpa Jones
Pitt 38 ; Aaron, All 31 ; May,
&amp; Randy Boone
Cin 29; Johnson. Phil 26; nothing if your income stops
Montanez, Phil and Robertson. before your debt is repaid .
in
PiH 22.
Perhaps you don 't feel
"HERE COMES
PAlACE CLIMBERS
THAT
WNDON (UPI )-Two men · Ameriun League: MeltM, there's much chance of that,
Chi 2S; Smith, Bos and Cash,
NASHVILLE SOUND"
and a girl ctimbed over a waD Det 23; Petrocelli, Bos. Oliva, but the lender may.
-Piusonto the grounds of Bucking- MIM, Murcer. NY and Howard, He may have· heard ru"COUNTRY MUSIC
mors of plant closings, canham PalaC!' today but police Wash 20.
ON BROADWAY"
Runs BaHed In
cellation
of government conapprehended them almost imNational league: Stargell. tracts or other economic dis·
PiH 100; Torre, St.L 87 ; Aaron,
mediately.
All
80; Montanez. Phil 74; ruptions.
The three were taken to
Johnson, Phi170.
Undesirable Purpose-BorCannon Row police station for
Ameriun League: Killebrew, rowers often wonder why
questioning. Police said it was Minn 73; Petrocelli, Bos 70; lenders want to know what
.Tonight &amp; Tbursday
not determined whether they Murcer, NY 68 ; B. Robinson, they plan to use the money
August 4·5
Ball and Bando, Qak 67.
would be charged. A passing
Pitching
NOT OPEN
motorist spotting them scaling
N.ation.al Le.ague: Jenkins,
the wall and telephoned police. Chi 17-9; Ellis. Pitt 15-5; **~*************
'ridoy &amp; Saturd.iy
Carlton, St.L 15-6; Downing. LA
August 6-7
THOUGHT~
13-6; Johnson, SF 12-4; Dierker,
THERE WAS A
Hou 12-6; Stooeman, Mont 12-9.
CROOKED MAN
American League: Blue. Oak ~
SABRES'
OPENER
(Technicolor)
19-4; Lolich, Del 1._8; Dobson,
BUFFALO, N:Y. (UPI )-The Ball 15-4; Siebert. Bos 14-6; Jt Peace comes from within .
Kirk Bouglas
Henry FO(lda
Buffalo Sabres will play the Cuellar and McNally, Ballll-4; ~Do not seek it without.
:
R
Pittsburgh Penguins, Oct. 10, in Culp, Bos 13-8: Hunter, Oa~ 13SIDEHACKERS
:
their 197HI2 home season 11.
-Buddha :
ITechnicolor)
Hockey
League
opeNational
rprlse! Action! Mystery!
hrills! Comedy! Motorner. The Sabres scored two IIEIIER BUMPS
ycles! .
R victories over the Penguins and SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPl)
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
played four ties with them last -A bill requiring the bumpers
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . season.
of all new cars sold in
Quick! Easy
California after Sept. 1, 1973, to
be capable of withstanding a ~
mile-per-bour crash cleared the
stale assembly Tuesday.
The measure was returned to
the Senate on a ~ vote for :
Fridays Only ·
ON~
concurrence in amendments.
It The Dr~ve-ln Window :

lnSpen

Weather

Now You Know

Devoted To The ln~ere~t~ Of'l'lte MeisB·Mawn Area

VOl XXIV NO. 79

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

THURSDAY, AUGUST 5, 1971

Rules

""""""&amp;)

of the

Game

n

con-.JSMA Issues
Warning To

·Elberfelds Special Purchase and Sale
of Cannon Matching
Bath Towels
Hand Towels
Wash aoths

Candidates

Lineseores

'I

ii&amp;iiiiiiic=:===::JJ

ELBERF.ELDS IN POMEROy

MEIGS THEATRE

: A
FOR TODAY :

*

*

***

MEN.V.OMEN.alYSGIRLS
WEARING APPAREL

25% to 50% OFF

* .

949 4861

RACINE, 0.

Before
you lOOk them over,
look us oveJ.:

..-~--~-...·** . A. M.Open
IRT
to 7 P.M..
:
.
I
Continuclusly
I
*
SH
s
on
FINISHING
It
SAME DAY
*
1s

9

Go to lhe Yellow Pages
before you go 10 town.
That way you can call ahead to see
il they'vetunoul ot what you wanl
. ...;....::;._~ Or. iltt.ey'YI! just runoul.
Out sooth ing yellow page's won't hutli'OIJI eyes.
And. lhink what th&lt;&gt;y t:.in save your feet.

*Other Banking Hours9 to 3:
*and
to 7 as usual
*
*Fridays..
.t

SERVICE

In At 9-0ut Ats

Racine Department Store

**
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...
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*~

*
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*
: Irs
**... DRIVE-IN
: BANKING

SUMMER CLEARANCE

J

use-Our Free Parking lot

! FARMERS BANK 1
..-

~
~

.,..

and SAVINGS CO.i
POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve Systom

Robinson's Cleanis *
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21• E. 2nr1, Pomeroy
,._

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**************,.,..
•

ldlj

a

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

ace

5

PERSONAL
FINANCE

Partly cloudy south and mild
today. Clearing and cooler
tonight, in lower 00s south.
Sunny, little change In temperature 'Friday, highs in the
lower 80s.

Patridl: CID'Iis, . who . played
Oliva de Havilland's baby in
''Gone with the Wind", grew up
to marry Raquel Welch.
·

SPACE CENTER, Hooston (UPI) - Apollo 15 astronaut
Alfred M. Worden hand-Walked in space 196,000 miles above
Earth today to retrieve a film record ol more than 011e million
llj1llll'e miles of the moon. With James B. Irwin tending his OJYgen
hose, Wlrden floated carefully out of the cabin ol rrmmand ship
Endeavllll' on America's first truly 1lfCllting spacewalk. The
APollo 15 cmunander, David R. Scott, was at the spaceship's
COiltrOis.
Wlrden's route to the camera clinpartmenl in the service
module 18 feet frO)D the hatch was lined with handrails to
facilitate film retrieval.
The mile of film was in an instrument bay in the service
module, which is to be jettisoned in space prior to splashdown in
the Pacific late SaiiD'day.
The three astronauts began satisfactory weather conditions
their lOth day in space at 5::1JJ for the landing, planned for 328
a.m. EDT and an hour later miles north of the Hawaiian
were told by missiM control in island of Oahu.
Apollo 15 reached the
Houston their course was
welcome
influence of Earth's
almost dead center on the path
bacl&lt; to Earth and no correction gravity at 7:49 a.m. EDT. The
Earth was 21K,l38 miles ahead
was necessary today.
"That's pretty fantastic at the lime, the moon 38,000
guidance isn't it," replied Scott. miles behind.
"It's down hill from here on
Worden, Scott and Irwin shot
out of lunar orbit late Wed- in," astronaut-physicist Joseph
nesday to end the longest, Allen, the ground comcoslliest and most productive municator in the Houston Space
lunar exploration ever con- Center, told the astronauts.
" Rog, thank you Joe," said
dueled. They and the 170 pounds
Scott,
"1bat's nice to know."
of the moon they collected are
lllllOI.EPORTRASA PIWIP.EM,or atleut the residents of Beecll St. do. The sanitary
"Did you notice anything
speeding toward a Pacific
tiDes in the area bacl&lt;ed up and the heavy rain that feU Wednesday aggravated the
Ocean splashdown Saturday there, Dave, discontinuity in
si.luaticltl. Ed lbrtin, who lives in the lloyd Harris aparlment building, meaSures the water
afternoon. They are due back in velocity or anything like that?"
Jrnlat his garage entrance ( 34 Inches). A motorbike in llie garage was completely covered
Allen asked.
Houston late Sunday.
wiG! water as was a wuhing machine. Mrs. Harris said she reported the problem to village
"WeD, Joe, 1hat's one of the
Forecasters
predicted
cfi:iab as well 1111 the Meigs County Health IleparlmeM. One report by the Health Department
mysteries that we'D probably
...repa lied to have said that raw waste was in the water. This situation has occurred as many
have to keep to ourselves,"
Bl2 times since the sanitary sewer lines were laid, she said. Leo Kennedy, who also lives on
answered Scott.
Beech Sl, said be had 11lnches of water In hiS basement.
Beiore blasting out of lunar
orbit, the aslronauts left behind
a liWe satellite designed to
minitor lunar radiation and
magnetic forces for a year.
WASHINGTON (UPl}- The
Selective Service System
conducted a lottery today to
determine the order of induction for the nearly 2 million
young men born in 1952 who
The Eastern Local School school math teacher, and
face the possibility of being
District board of education will Herbert Matheny as fourth
drafted next year.
cli.s:lwl. with an architeciiD'al grade teacher and principal at
Final filings Wedoesday with
The first number drawn was
firm a bqjJdiDI! program.
Chester Elementary.
30 and it was 8ssigned to the the Meigs County Board of
The board has had before It The 1972 budget was adopted.
first date drawn, June 20. That Elections assured political
~ problem of additional II shows:
means healthy 19-year-olds races in most sections of the
d
ooms in order to meet Receipts - Balance on hand,
born
that date have a great county on Nov. 2.
estain state standards and tci $67,689.87 ; General Fund,
Altogether, 72 candidates bad
likelihood of being ordered for
reline Oieraowded conditions $495,400; Bond Retirement,
filed
petitions of candidacy with
induction next year - if and
in its elementary schools.
$25,800; Lunch Room Flinds,
when coogress extends the draft the board by the 4 p.m. deadline
· Theboanlnowhasdecided to $$7,407.36; Uniform Sapplies,
Wednesday. There are races in
law, which expired June 30.
baiJd Mditional classrooms for $2,000; 'Federal Funds, $30,000.
Draft officials have estimated 10 of the 12 townships.
lbe bigb school in the areas of fotal $678,297.23.
A clerk and a trustee will be
that young men assigned a
lllmic, libruy facilities and art.
Expenses - Administration,
RJCBAIU) KNIGHT
elected
in each of the 12
number above 150 or 160 can be
Olbor classrooms would benefit $23,200; Instruction, $300,000;
THE EAGLE l'llllk will be fairly confident of not being townships. The ooly townships
elementary grades where Library, $2,000;
Trans- given Richard W. KDight
drafted. (See Page 10 for without races are Bedford
~~ in' SOIIlO cases is in portation, $60,000; Auxiliary,
Saturday al 7:311 p.m. at St. drawing).
"'""' ~ 30 students per class $60,000; Operation, $50,000; Peter's Luthen111 ChiD'Cb In
( .me du!. has 45 students).
Maintenance, $6,000; Capital Pt. Ple851111L Youg KDight,
Abo, additional classrooms Outlay, $2,000; Transfers, son of Mr. aod Mrs. WWlam
are _,., for students with $3,500 ; Bond Retirement, Knight, Pt: PleiiiUt, ud a
AUTO SINKS
ll!arDing difficulties.
$25,500; Lunch Room, $53,500; member of Boy Seoul Troop
Heavy rUis In the area
The approximate cost of such Uniform Supplies, $2,000; 257, is the grandson of Mr.
caused • car drivea by
a IJuiiding program and the Federal Programs, $30,000. and Mrs. A. R. Knlgbl of
Larry Rose, Pomeroy, 1o
~of construction lime are Total, $617,750.
WASHINGTON(UPI)-MterPomeroy and of Mrs. Olan
sink Ia three feel of water
t.ool the major questions to be Attending were board Genhelmer of Minersville. tax profits of the nation's 100
Wf'da·nday 011 SR Ill.
dis: !se&lt;lwith an architeciiD'al members I. 0 . McCoy , The pubHc is Invited.
largest power companies, were
Tile Melgn Conoly
finn.
president ; members Ernest
revealed Wednesday by Sen.
Sl... lff's Depl. said RMe,
Duling the special meeting of Whitehead, Roger Epple,
Lee Metcalf., [).Mont., a slrong
traveling eut oa 181, had
the board Tuesday night, four Donald Mora and Oris Smith,
congressional critic of the pri- : drlvlltl bls car llu'Oilgb 111gb
teachers employed were and C. 0. Newland, clerk, and
vate power industry. Six were · water'. WileD lle attempted
Lawrence Rose and Violet John D. Riebel, local
Ohio firms.
to drive lllkMgb a secoad
lfilllnr for the Riverview superintendent.
PITTSBURGH (UPI) .,.- Two Metcalf cited industry reports
Ume llle car begu te Ileal
Sdlool, carla Salser as high
olfllle ldpny. He op d
more of the "big nine" steel that net profits for the electric
the door, uri the car sank.
producers, National Steel light and power industry
and Jones &amp; Laughlin, amouioted to $3.3 billion for
l
1\.T
•
I Corp.
have announced 8 per cent price 1970, up $250 million from the
1
1~ews
increases to match similar price previous year.
I
I hikes by their competitors.
Montana Power Co. topped
RECEIPI'S IN
I
•
By Ulllled Pma lnleraaU-1
The price boosts were made the list with profits of 22.67 per
Meigs COWJiy court receipts
to fmance the recent three-year cent revenue, figured on a rev- for the month of July totaled
Ky~ Petitions Ruled Out
contract agreement with the enue basis. That company is $3,599.3S according to Betty
SAJG(lll - 'l1IE SOtml VIEI'NAMESE SUPREME Court
United Steelworkers Union.
currently seeking a 17 per cent Hobstetter, clerk. Fines to state
.....,.todq 1hat Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky was ineligible
The first company to announce increase in electric rates.
tolaled $712.58, fees to sheriff
tllbearandidale in the Oct. 3 Presidential election. The decisioo a price hike was u. S. Steel The afler'-tax profits as a
fines and costs to county
m.... !bat President Nguyen Van Thleu and Gen. Duong Van Corp., the nation's No. 1 steel percenl.lge of gross revenues of $181.30,
general fund $1,642.06, law
"'lic~ Miab apparently will be the only candidates on the ballot. producer. Bethlehem Steel, the Ohio companies, as reportlibrary fund $796.37 and auto
'lilt del • •mapinsl Ky is subject to appeal before Aug. :IJJ before Armco, Youngstown Sheet &amp; ed by MetcaH:
. licenses and gas fund , $267.04.
Tube,lnlandandWheeling-Pitts- Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
l k - coarl.
111e caurt said Ky's pelitioo was re'jecled because 39' of the burg quickly followed.
Electric Co., 14.23; Cincinnati
LOCAL TEMPS
•
Dan wbo signed the qualifying papers did not have
The price increases for Jones Gas &amp; Electric, 14.10; Dayton
Temperature
In downtown
talidated liCJIIIID'es and because the same group already had &amp; Laughlin and National an: Power &amp; light, 12.37; Ohio Edinounced Wedoesday, wer~ for son, 17.77; Cleveland Electric Pomeroy Thursday at 11 a .m.
fer 'l'bieu.
virtually aU of both fll"lll's pro- lliuminaling, 16.60, and Toledo was 68 degrees under cloudy
skies.
duce lines.
Edison, 15.77.

U,ttery Held

For MUitary ··

Eastern Board
Wants to Build

--

PROPERTY LOSS had not been estimated this morning in a !Ire that gutted the front of
The Shoe Boi store 011 Middlepll't's North Second Ave., aboutl :50 a. m. today. Middleport
firemen, assisted by Pomeroy firemen, kept the fire confined to the front portion of the store.
Mrs. 0 . B. Stout, owner, said this morning repairs will be started at once so the firm can
resume operations. On the second Door of the building are the offices of Green Hill Homes, Inc.
Damages there were light. Asmall upstairs porch was destroyed. Owner of the building is Dale
Duttm, Middleport businessman. AI the request of Dutton and Mrs. Stout wbo are brother and
sister, a representative of the State Fire Marshal's office was asked to investigate. Some
firemen believed the fire may have developed from a large lighted sign In front of the store.

72 Offer Public Service

oo

UtUity Profit
Revealed by
Sen. Metcalf

TUXJ More with
Price Spiral

r---------------------------,
B . ,./.

... zn rze1 s :

.,.d

where R. G. Pickell has filed tor
trustee and Glenn Lee for clerk,
and in Salem Township where
Worley Francis has filed for
trustee and Alma E. Smith for
clerk.
In Rutland Township five
candidates - Edna M. Swick,
Esther T. Kennedy, Floyd
Thomas, William Brown and
James Eads - are seeking the
clerk's post while only Worley
Haley filed for the trustee
position. In Lebanon Township

three candidates are seeking
the trustee post - Ralph
Brewer, Paul Evans and Owen
Dailey - while Clarence G.
Lawrence is the only candidate
for -clerk.
Other townships and their
candidates include:
Chester - David Koblentz,
George A. Wolfe, for trustee;
Willis Frost, Elmer G. Young
and Gary Dill for clerk.
Columbia- R. A. Whittington
and Victory Perry lor trustees;

Gloria Hutton , clerk.
Letart, - C. Thomas Norris,
Richard B. Rowe for trustee;
Herbert L. Sayre lor clerk.
Olive - Dale Connolly, Oscar
Babcock for trustee ; Ada
Bissen for clerk.
Orange - Edgar Pullins,
Roland Torrence for trustee;
Nina R. Robinson for clerk.
Salisbury - Denver G.
Hysell, Herman Michael for
trustee; Richard B. Bailey for
· .ttinued on Page 2

Board Orders $25 Deposit
In order to encourage clean
up of the grounds following the
annual Meigs County Fair
beginning Aug. 7, food stands
will be required to post a $25
deposit with the Meigs County
Fair Board.
The board, meeting in regular
session Monday night at the fair
grounds, decided 1hal each food
stand will be required·to pay the
$25 deposit which wiD be forfelled if lhe area around a stand
is not cleaned up following the
fair which concludes on
Saturday, Aug. 21. Stands doing

permission to exhibitors in the
Polled Hereford dept. to leave
the fair after a show on Friday
in order to participate in the
Indiana State Fair. Members of
the department are to check
with tbe depariment head in
order to obtain this permission,
and leave before the Saturday
evening closing as is required
for other exhibitors. Only those
going to the Indiana fair will be
excused on Friday.
Attending the meeting were

::;r.~~~;:~p:7: Three

Amertcan l.egoon, has agam
accepted the parking assignment for the entire fair. The
board voted to change the
personnel parking area - for
members and those associated
with the running of the fair from beside the senior fair
building to the regular parking
lot, thereby making room for
additional exhibits ·and another
new ride which is being brought
in by the .Pugh Amusement Co.
The board voted special

Wallace
Bradford,
vice
president, who presided, and
board members Hugh Custer,
Fred Goeglein, Laoiren Hoffman, Bill Smith, Danny Zirkle,
Harold
Carnahan,
Rex
Shenefield , William Downie,
Charles Williams, David
Koblentz, Clarence Henderson,
Benny Slawter, ex-officio
members, Robert Bowen and C.
E . Blakeslee, Junior Kennedy
and Mrs. Janet Korn, publicity
director.

Jail.ed

Three Meigs County men Pickens, Syracuse, and Ralph
were jailed today in connection Rose, Racine. They were
with the breaking and entering hooked at 10:05 a.m.
of lhe farm home of Dr. and Taken from the Daniels' farm
Mrs. Roger Daniels of were tools, gas, a fire exPomeroy.
tinguisher,
. oil
.and
Sheriff'RobertC. Hartenbach, miscellaneous items, all of
who has been keeping the which have ~n recovered. A
Daniels property under sur- power mower was also
veilance since an earlier . rec9vered that allegedly had
breaking and entering in lhe be~n taken from another
area, residrnt in the vicinity, as were
Nease Settlement
received a radio call that a wh&lt;&gt;els and tires from either a
strange car was parked at tractor or wagon .
Carmel Cemetery next to the Sheriff Harlenbach slated
Daniels farm.
.
thai the area will continue to be
Har tenhach was at the scene constantly under surveilance.
in a maHer of minutes. He
Egg and Spoon.
checked the parked car and
Ride and Run.
Open Western Pleasure Class, found it to be loaded with goods.
CHAMBER TO MEET ,
Hartenbach then went lo
Jrs. to Ride.
There
will be a meetin~ of lhe
Youth Horsemanship, 12 another entrace to block it and
radioed Robert Beegle, deputy, Middleport Chamber of Comyears and under.
who arrived lo block a third merce Friday evening a! 7::JIJ in
English Pleasure Horse.
lhc social · rooms of the
exit.
.Pick-Up Race.
Appaloosa Pleasure Horse. They apprehended Ea rl Columbus and Southern Ohio
Youth Hor~manship, 16 thru Franklin Sn)'dcr, 37, of 339 Eleclrir Comp:my. ·
I01slry Sl.. Pomeroy, w110 go I
19 years.
,
I
TUII.Kt:Y
WITH
PEKING
SIUCk
in
tht•
mud
as
he
lried
to
Open Reining.
drin• frum the S&lt;.~ne. H!.l was HONG KONG \ UPil :__ The
Weslcm Pleasure llorse.
bl"kt'fl shun I)· allrr midnight . New China News !\~•·nr)·
Barrel Rac-e.
Western Seninr Horse- T \ic, 11 i hl'l' lwu suspec ts rCJll&gt;tled iuday 111&lt;• I'Slllbllshescapt.oc.l uu f1lP I. Snyder sivncd llll'll f tlf diploma til' rclalion!'l be·
manship.
a t·nnrcssi•,n this morning. Tht' 1\n'l'll ('•n•utmuist tltina and
Open Trail Class.
'
nlhcr-lwu impliraled an· Shrlby

Horse Show on Bar 30 Grounds
An approved Southeastern
Ohio Horse Exhibitors Assn.
show will he staged Saturday at
the new Bar 30 Horseman show
grounds just off Route 7 between Chesler and Tuppers
Plains.
Sponsored by the Chester
Volunteer Fire Department, the
show wiD get underway with the
halter classes al5 p. m., rain or
shine. Performance classes will
begin at 7:30.
Rick Ramsey of Catlletsburg,
Ky., will be judge and
~Balk on Draft.
ringnoasters will be J . R.
W.ASIIING1'0N - KEY SENATORS BAS-KED TOOA Y at ~nnedy, Grant Newland and
Dick Roach. Horner. Cole will
· (Cmiinued on page 10)

announce the show. The Registered Quarterhorse
Pomeroy National Bank has Pleasure.
donated a cash prize of $50 to be · Flag Race .
awarded high point horse or Western Pleasure Pony
(ionder 41" ) rider 12 yrs. or
pony of the show.
under.
Members of the fire depart- We5tern Arabian Pleasure
ment and ita aUiiliary wiD Horse ·(half-Arabs included).
serve food. The department is Western Pleasure Pony (4&amp;"
working for funds for a new fire and under 56"), rider under 16
truck said Harold Newell, yrs.
Western Stake Race.
president.
Horse
English
Performance classes for the Show
Equipment
shuw will include : .
Walk-Trot Pony Class, rider 8 Walk-Trot -Horse Class, rider
8 yrs and under.
years and under.
Youth Horsemanship, -13 thru
Show
Horse,
Western
I~ years.
Equipment.

·' l
•

l

--------

I

'

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