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                  <text>----·.

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·· '

~-

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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 :

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MEN.V.OMEN.alYSGIRLS
WEARING APPAREL

25% to 50% OFF

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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:
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to 7 as usual
*
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SERVICE

In At 9-0ut Ats

Racine Department Store

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use-Our Free Parking lot

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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

'

�¥-TIIID.urao Mi•t.lll""ife't-PiiiWOJ,O.,M&amp;.I,lt'11

r---------------------------1 Election Filings

lHelen Help Us!
1

By Helen Bo.ttel

1
I

(QinUnaed from ~e l)

II

clerk.
Scipio- Earold Dean, J-.eph
Carsey, for lnlstee; Glenn E.
Jewell aDd Pauline H. Altln8,
for clerk.
•
Sutton _ ·Roy Jones, Delbert
A. Smith foi' ·. lnlstee and
WilliamS. Cross and·William F.
Harris for clerk.
··
VILLAGE RACES
A much sought-after post In
villages is mayor's posiUoo
in Racine with three csndidates
filing for elecUoo; They are
Olarles F. Pyles, incumbent;
HerberiJ. While and James E.
Roush. 1bree 'candidates seek
two Racine VIllage council
posts; They are Glenn Rizer,
~Gene J,.yoos, and Unley
. M. Hart. Mae Cleland Is
' unopposed In her bid for Racine
Village Clerk.
Rutland Village bas a council
race In sloJe with three candldatesaeelllng two posts. '11ley
are John J. Fry, Ernest
Nicholson and Jerry Eads.
Eugene Tbompson, mayor, and
Vernoo L. Weber, clerk, are
unopposed for their respecUve
jobs In Rutland.
Syracuse Village has just the
right number of candidates for
the job openings. Herman
London seeks reelection as
mayor; Allen G: Lipsccm1b and
Olarles I. Blalle seek the two
council seats and Kathryn H.
Qoow is the clerk candidate.
Veteran Incumbent Clerk
Richard Duckworth is' retiring.
All three local boards of
educatioo wiD have races at the
Nov. 2 elecUon.
Four candidates have filed for
three posts In lbe Meigs Local

U.lllwelct•n•lauelllbulwm'ldodgeuerkJuaquealicxnrltha

bniJh.GII.
.
Smlycur ._..., ~llcm to YOtmf AS1CEI) FOR rr, care
of J1111a Help Ua! 11M Mnpllpel'.
GIVE THE BRIDE HER DAY
Dell: Belell:
lllrriage I'm not wcmect about. It's GE'ITING marrl~. My
na-llldimaynoteve~~beapeall!.,ooouneddlngday .
Her
Melbodla~ Mine II Baptist. Sbe and ber mother

r.mtl7il

IIAhreptilllrrllldiDHERchurchiDbertown.lfee!Iambelng
led bJ tile n~~~e.l pl'llferiiiJ church, u a "neulrlll" idle.
I want lbe wMIDC,oo Frida)' Dl&amp;bl, ao we can have a fuD
wnbDd boneJIIIOCII belcire I go bad: to~.~ a college
llludlntwllbGutmucb IIICIIef, I can't tUe Ume off in tbe •mmer,
cr cle • off c1ur1JW lbe IICboo1 year. So why 8bould we walt tiD
Botardly aflemoall! J!eM!nee her pareolll want to give out«town
Ume to arrtw I
Helen oboo!d a man be fcJm!d to llllll'I'Y In a cburdl be doesl't
.....t ata'time be ~'t want, Ia a town be dC~BJ't lllle! Why
can'lwebaveCU"w-'c'i"'tbenywenntlt? -PAUL
Detr Paw·
·
"We"!, Yocr future wife seenllr happy wilb arrangep~e~~ts,
ln"'I'ICh ull'albe ''bride's day" yon're &amp;.tined to Joae Ibis
..__...
....., t
d
...;,,.,_ In tbe ln....;... of ha
--aow...,. no ()111!-&amp;1'1.... ....,,
- - 1 PPY
llallaDillnlll-- (~ lbort)?
C.. - I mucb better Idea - fcrget tbe 1ig wedding bills cmd

,._Ia

elope. - H.
Delr Helen:

'

I

YIWl'H ASQD FOR IT!
'11111 &lt;C'."""' 11 fclr ""''"a -'a, tbelr ft...,,__ aDd
• - • ......,_
,..~
p'r •-.lbelr hulllelllld fun. At wtlb lbe l'Wit of Helen Help

.

FrCIID lblnp yCII'ft written, I 11C1'1a get tbe feelio8 you don't
care far big W"ddiq&amp;a True! - ME TOO
Delr Me Too:
True and double true!
I Clcm't care fer lig, eztravapnt, peiaonal wmopteema,
period -be IIIey weMqa, codlllll partiiiB, whatever. Tbey're
b'"" ndGU8wulleaoftime,maQIIIIIIIICJIIe1-andtbeyHJ1•lly

eadlnbarcll'eeliD8II,CIIeftJcr'QOtber.-H.
Delr BeleD:
I'm l'ellly dlldlllled about my friend. Sbe COIIII8 to acbool
wtlllbru1811B, beca-llerbi:Qiberand llister ml mother beat ber
..,,

~~~ec~:!e

Owen Jenilns. Voters of tbe

Dis:: .
members. There are four
candidates includin&amp; Howard
COLUMBUS _ Ohio School
Caldwell, Jr., Roger Epple, Boards Atsociation Board of
Clifford Longenette and Clyde Trustees have unanimously
E. Kuhn.
adopted a resolution urging the
In the Southern Local School Ohio Legislature to adopt a
District where only two can- personal and corporate Income
ctidates wiD be elected for lbe tax and to pass an educatioo bill
board of educatioo there are . so that school districts can plan
also- Jour cancildates wbo In- for the rapidly approaching
elude Grover Salaer, Jr., Patsy school year.
s. White, David u..Nease and The Board of Trustees held
Jack Bostick. Nease is that the 109th General
Assembly is "cOmpounc!iDg the
currentiy 8ei'Vin8.
.With two to be elected there problem by maldng it lmare just two candidates -both possible . for boards to coorIncumbents _ for the cOunty dlnate levies with state aid,"
board of education. They · are said OSBA president Paul
Harold G. Roush and Gordon Langdim, a member of the
Collins.
Collllllbl18 city board.
Candidates have untilt p.m. The president added tbateach
on Aug. 13 to withdraw day of delay makes it more
petitions.
difficult for boards around the

.ci:l.
111e bu to do aD tbe w-"
anc1 if any"''goes .......
a, she
vaa.
~
no.v-.r.
pll Ileal Sbe aleeplln the ldldlll. N01r she tellll me ber mother

•-t""'fte._Je
ber
ba..l.'--.lo.-1
,..• • - . , t
come "".,......,..

Wbatcan I do tobelp? -CONCERNED FRIEND

n.... .....,__.,,
&amp;lVIII- rl"ftiiN

Firat, vriy lbe stcry. 'lben, If wbat your friend says is true,
C.U tile ali1d Welfare Asmcy, and ull for an lnvestlgaUoo. The
o1.o1 wiD be puliD a fCIIfer bame If ber famllv envlromnelll
r•
'J
Wlrl'lllllll -H.

Johruwn Family Reunion Held
ijTbe annual Jobntlon famlly Edward Ater, Tonya and
&amp;union~ held at Tar Ho1101r Candy, all ·!lf;~ Grove City; Mr.

oo•

spring, when most coolraclural
commitments are made with
employes, for the coming school
tenn rather tban waiU., until
school begins. Many districts
are now facing school closings
· and cutUng back staff and
services for lack of adequate
· financing "at the present
level," said Langdon.
.
. Currently the educaliOD bill is
Included In tbe total state approprlaUon being sludied by the
Senate, having already been
pillised by the House. Hciwever,
it does appear as If a different
program will be approved by
tbe Senate, necessitsU., that
both be compromiSed In a joint
committee, said the OSBA
president.
Members of the Board of

y Is The lmperi
Electric Plant Close

Mrs. Maggie Caruthers,
Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy, and
Edward Caruthers, Cl!esbire,
were honored recently in 00.
servance of th eir birthday
anniversaries during a family
picnic at the ROute 33 Roadside
Par k ·
A decorated cake was inscribed "Happy Birthday,
Mother and Eddie". Also
honored al the picnic were Mr.
·
and Mrs. Evan Taylor and.son,
Michael, who have relumed to
Ohio after residing in;
Alamogorda,N. M.andFlorida.
S. Sgl. Taylor received bis
discharge from the u. s. Air
Force at the HPlliman Air
Force Base in New Mexico 011
June 29 having completed eight

tc!::n:

ment In Germany. Mrs. Taylor,
the fomler Billie Carutbers, is
tbe daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Hoadley Caruthers, former
Pomeroy area residents.
Others attending were Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Hoffman,
B~llevllle ; Mrs. Robert
N1cewander and sons, Bobby
and Bryan, Dundee; Mr. and
Mrs. George Hoadley Caruthers
~daughter, Georgana, Beach
City ; Mrs. Edward Caru~
Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Taylor and sons, Lonnie (Boots)
and Tim ( Butch), Ralph
Carutbers and Tim Kreider,
Pomeroy, anct' Joannie Hall of
Fostoria.
.
Visiting the Caruthers and
Taylor families over the
weekend were Barbara
Caruthers, Mrs. Henry

?
•

0

for the construction, reconstructlon, resurfacinG and

repair
of streets In Beech Grove
Cemetery, Pomeroy, Ohio, and
doccarlng the amount of taxes
that may be levied at the
maximum rate aulhorlzed by
law wllhouta vote of electors lo
be lnsufliclentand declaring the
necessity of a levy In excess of
sui~ [~~~-solved by lho council
of lhe Vlllago of Pomeroy, Stalo
of Ohio, an members thereto
concurring:
Sec. I: ThoC Ills necessary to
have construction , recon.
struction, resurfacing and
repa:lr of streets laying within
Beech Grove Cemetery,

:::~=~·.:::::r!::
Caruthers.

BIRTII ANNOUNCED
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Connolly of Syracuse are
of their
announcing the birth
·
1
ugh
second child, a da ler, a
Holzer Medical Center on
July
named
23 weighing Sibs., 12 oz.
Shelly Renee. Grandparents are
,..._...,,_
Mr, and Mrs. Everette""'~'
of Lelart Falls . and Mr. and
_. East
Mrs. Lester Roush "'
1
Letart,
and a greaifandmother, Mrs. Lillian
Duffy of 'SyraCIIIfl. Sbelly was
welcomed by a brother, Brian •

A new contract could not be negotiated since the union only agreed
to a few meetings. The week preceding the contract termination,
May 24 through May 28, the company representative was at the
plant, available to negotiate. The union was only willing to meet on
Friday, May 28th. If the union had been willing to seriously
negotiate those five days, the company believes settlement would
have been achieved. This contract would have been fair and
equitable to both employees and-- ~he company:

Pomeroy, Ohio.

ta!:~·t~~t ~~avt bt!~a~'!'3~~~ t~~·
levy of taxes at the maximum
rate authoriled bV Section
5705.02 of the Revised Code on
the taxable property in said
village will be Insufficient to
provide an adequate amount for
the necessary requirements of
sald, village, and that it is
necessary for the purpose of
providing additional funds for
the general construction.
reconstruction , resurfacing and
repair of streets In Beech Grove
Cemetery, Village of Pomeroy;
Ohio, as provided In S&amp;e11on

i .,

''

Friday
TIIEOOORUS COUNCIL 17
D. of A., 7:30p.m. IOOF hall',
Inspection. Members to take
cooki
· sand · hes
es or
WIC
•
SATIJRDAY
ICE CREAM Social, beginning2p. m. Salurdayonlotnext
to Sobio Station In Tuppers
Plains, sponsored by Tuppers
PlalnsCommunityClubtoraise
funds for community building.
Homemadeicecream,piesand
cates available.
SUNDAY
GREEN - OGDIN -CASTER
reunion, Aug. 8 at tbe Colwnbia
Chapel Christian Church,
n ....eI dinner at noon.
Sunday........
ANNUAL WEBER reunion

,l.

·

lJ

Descendants of the late
Samuel and Alice Staneart held
a family get-together at the
attractive rural home of Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Parker
Iocaled on Route 7 east of
Cheste Sunda
r
y.
Some of the family who began
arriving on Friday evening
were weekend guesls of local
·
re 1a lives.
A pol1uc k baske t
· ed · t
dinner was en)oy
• pte ures
lak
d
1a ed
were en, an games P Y ·
Aboul 60
ttended
personsa
·
Attending were Charles
Stanearl, Mr. and Mrs. Bradley
.Wein and daughters, Marcia

Since June 3rd, the union has shown no interest in resuming
negotiations, while the company has been and is now ready to meet.
The negotiations scheduled by the Federal Mediator and held July
2oth and 21st, resulted in no change in the union committee's attitude regarding their will'ingness to seriously negotiate a new
contract.

could agree on.

.

Jirllllb Qll I,lmouiba - CactiD•a~, lJnc:Ginl, ~. Mercedu Belli 30111 and
. . plan - dlplllted pillnly wealthy lypel
oo•

Clbri 4i ICCUI!Gmed to aea travel
The
"n: owfne aeliiiCIItly cmied just hllld lugpge
ljnlllrj, ecaneUca etc.), lbeir trunb - yes,
111Je .-mer lnllb - 1e11t ahead hours earlier.
000

__ ,,.

•

and Cathy, David Stanearl all of
ToJedo, Mr · and Mrs· J ames
Mefford and children, Herbie,
Allan and Connie, Mr. and Mrs.
Pearl Schrader and sons,
Shannon and Scott, Mr. and
Mrs. Rupert .Schrader, all of
Fran'"'ort,
Ky., Leon Schrader
...
of Wauchula, Florida, Mr. and
Mrs. James Carpenter aDd son,
Jay and Miss Carolyn Parter of
Coolville, Mrs. Roger Adams
and daughter, IArl, of Racine,
Mr. andMrs.LeslieFriandson,
Chuck, of MCJ\rlbur, Mr• .and
Mrs. William Pierce of Newark,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Parker
and childre n, KellY and BobbY
· tta , Mr. and Mrs . ""illis
of Mar1e
"'
Parker and children, Debbie,
Brenda
· • TimmYand Russell • of
o t--•
w · va., Mr · and
~ar .,..,urg,
Mrs. Garth Keller of Gambier,
Mr . an· d Mrs.· Homer Parker,
Rutland , Mr· and Mrs· Herbert

992-2709

ATTEND OBSERVANCE
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Goegleln,
Herman Hoffner and Dana
Howell attended lbe diamond
anniver.. rv observance of Mr.
-'
and Mrs. Houlllaning -:ecentiy
at the United Methodist Church
at Mlllersporl. The Hanlngs are
former Meigs County residents.
•~;~•tel• 60 friends and
•.,.... ·-·- '
relatives called d!D';na the 2 to 4
-...
p. m. open house hours with an
anniversary cake and punch

being served.

intent on preparing baby for the
Ivy League, hurried lbe child
forward aDd called all the shots.
Researchers found her child apt
to be a good learner but
emotlonaliy immature, even
infantile, In other situations.
- The ALMOST MOTI!ER,
loved and enjoyed her child but
appeared intellectually un·
prepared to meet the needs of
his developing mind and personality. Whatever his polenlial, he was likely to level off
and remain on an Intellectual
and social plateau.
- The OVERWHELMED
MOTI!ER U5Ually had so many
children and mooey problems
that _the child _rececved little
~dlv1dusl attention ~grew up
m the IIUdsl of chrome chaos.
There were also middle-class

mothers among tbe overwhelmed. Their strengths were
absorbed by the battle of survival each day.
The
ZOOKEEPER
MontER runs a taut, neal
ship, but has a minimwn of real
communicatioo and interactioo
with her child, researchers
found. Usually a middle or
upper middle-class organizer,
she bought the "right" toys for
the child and left him alooe to
play with them while she
carried on her household
routines. The child generally
showed "repetitive stereotyped
behavior, despite the variety of
toys."
According to Dr. White, how a
mother responds to the toddler
- the willful, curious, active.

Miss AI

H kan

W~E. HysetMrs~Jru:~:

Loudermilk and daughter,
Bruce E. Masters, Robert A.
McDonald, William Henry
Reebel, Mrs. Kenneth W.
RobinsOD and daughter, Mrs.
Paul D. Sluul&gt;, Charles E.
Simms, Mrs. Mary D. Spear,
Albert Eugene Welch III, and
Charles E. Wolfe.

c1,osed A ugust 5 and 7
Holzer Medical Center
business offices will be closed
Friday and Saturday, Augus16
and 7,to complete separaUon of
tbe business office procedures
from one Into two offices.
Beginning on August 9, the
Clinic and lbe Medical Center

wiD · have their own business
office, and the two offices will
be open for business on thai
date to accept paymenls or
answer questions concerning
charges.
Each patient who visits the
ClinicortheMedicalCenterwiD
be affected by this change since
it signifies that he will be
recetvmg
two separate
slatemenls; one for Hospital
services and one for Clinic
charges which includes
physicians' lees.
The two business offices wiD
be located on the first floor of
the Holzer Medical Center,
First and Cedar Streets,
Gallipolis.

Pres

tio
erva R
Soc•olv Wiill
~J

M

eef

A

ug.

14

CHILIJOOTIIE _ The next
weekend of the Soulb Central
Ohio Preservation Society Inc.
(SCOPS) will be held at the

Harrisonville
S . N
OCiety ews
Mrs. Minnie Foil had her
da ug hter and a friend from
Colwnbus as guests over the
weekend.
Mr. andMrs.LarryClarkand

H, al 10 a.m.
PreservaUon and restoration
of historic landmarks will he
discussed in seminars with
special attention on infonnaUon
obtained during the recenUy
held regional meeUng of the
National Trust for Historic
Preservation in Cincinnati.
Displays will ljugiDenl the open

0

Mrs. Wilber Parker, son, Eddie
and a friend of Pomerey, Route
3, Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Michael
and Samuel Michael of
Minersville Route I, Mrs. Edna
Summerlield, Mr. and Mrs.
Marion Parker and SOD, Dennis,
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Parker
and children, April and

1---------------------------..
MOTORIZED GRILL
$.

in
error
been
sold.and the farm has not

MIDDLEPORT

'

Summer Closeouts!

1-----------..
,, .. . ~•

PATIO
.
TABLE

Hollywood's Name
Hollywood was named, In
the 1880s, after lbe summer
residence of a Chicago
friend by Mrs. Horace H.
Wilcox, who moved lbere
from Topeka, Kan., accord·
ing to Encyclopaedia Britan·

PORTABLE GRILL

.

Heavy steel grill. 18" diameter
chrome plated grid odjusts to J
positions.

$277

REG. $3.69
SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE
OF
OUTDOOR
COOKING
CESSORIES

nica .

AC-

FlM

UFT-OFF TOP IS

IIG. $3.99

A SERVING TRAY

.HEATING
AND CENTRAL
AIR CONDITIONING
GAS- OIL- ELECTRIC

'

eFREE ESTIMATES
eFREE DELIVERY
eEASY TERMS
.SALES AND SERVICE

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
MIDIIII'OIT, 0.

BOOKCASE

5 DRAWER

$2695 MAHOGANY $2} 95
$
KNICK-KNACKS
2995
BO~N:..NGS
20% OFF
MAPLE
CHEST

'

each .

Also Special Prices On Other Items
• •• See Us At The
•
992-7261

$137

i.~RGE

SIZE
REG. $1.79
~ETAl

INSULATED BAG
FOR

PICNICS
CAMPING
DIAPERS
AND 100
. OTHER
THINGS

$

SWAP SHOP
Open Ti19 P.M.

'

I010s

Middleport, 0.

'

,,•

HANDLES

,_

MOORE'S
IN

POMEROY
CHOICf 01
~ATTfRNS

.•

w.

YES!- At
Meigs Co. Branch

d Mrs Letha "-·
" led
an
·
""wen VISl
the M· A· Epples ·
Meigs C..Unly Br•nch o1 Tile
Athens Counly Savings &amp;
Mr. and Mrs. A1la Jordan
Loon Co.
visited the M. A. Epples
2H Second St.
recenUy.
CERTIFIED WELDER
. Pomeroy, Ohlo
Mr. and Mrs. Estep moved
,Portabl!_ ~ij)ment
Member Federal Home Loan
fromtheWilJCionchproperty to
Bank.
a trailer on the old Kern Alkire
Shop or Field
farm owned by Mr. and Mrs.
Ph. 992-2511
Member Federal Savings &amp;
Jerry Cline who are occup&lt;ring
Loan Insurance Corp. All
discussion period.
'-·
ccounts insured up to
the fonner Mae Scharberth
Tbe meeUng is open to aU
,000.00.
home.
Locust s•
SCOPS members, as well as
others Interested in preservat.ion.
,.----------------------------..
f•l'
Participanls are asked tQ
bring a sack lunch, and
beverages will be supplied (plus
a good ·sound system and air
conditioner.)
After lunch a walking lcJur. of
Chillicothe has been planned,
with emphasis on recent
restorations.
Another date to remember is
·chrome plaled grid wilh ~ide
Aug. 7~ when the Highland
County Historical Society· will
handl., . . . "perma·lilt" grid
positioner
. . . tubular stHI legs
sponsor an antique show and
with
plastic
caps ~ . . snap-on
sale at the Highland County
hood .. . removoble spit.
Fairgrounds in Hillsboro.

IN MIDDLEPORT, FRIDAYI AUG. 6
BARGAINS ALL OVER TOWN.

The union committee rejected this company offer and refused to
submit the proposal to the membership.

'

LOANS

0

4. Resume negotiations to provide a new contract.

THE IMPERIAL ELECTRIC COMPANY

Aome lmpraement

r------.,

· =~~:er:U::;~hAu~n ~=~k~~=·
led the
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Haning

·~ ·1 117D

Reviewing all of the above, one must conclude that the
union committee wanted a strike from the beginning.
Also, they are willing to prolong the strike and not conduct serious negotiations. This plan of action has resulted
in hardships on both sides and possible loss of jobs due to
loss of customers. It is seriously affecting the job
security that Imperial employees have enjoyed for more
than 23 years.

'lpersonality , ''
detennlnes how much a child's
potential will be developed and
realized.
Harvard researchers are
confident the day wiD come
when "mother" will be taught
the stills of motberlng and wiD
be able ID raise their child to
have confidence In his own
competence, which Is a good
foundation for just about any
type of learning siluatipn.
underfoot

PICNIC BASKET

3. After the vacation period is over, return to work.

•

DEBBIE CONKLIN

~

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

The time period allocated to vacations could be flexible;
depending on whether employees wanted time off for
vacations with pay, or wanted to take a portion of vacation
pay in cash and limit the vacation period to none or to 1 week
or 2 weeks, or some other plan which would satisfy the wishes
of a majority of the employees.
..

V~ice along Broadway !!

0000

R

8

VAll FY WMBER &amp;SUPPLY 00.

2. Pay all employees their vacation pay immediately.

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

•lrlk•

811'.

Mrs

Termite Control Concentrate. Add an Arab fiose.ena
spray Applicator and you're ready to completely termiteproof the average 3-bedroom home! Saves you over $100
compared fo the cost of calling in a professiOMI exterminator. Buy Arab and do both you and your home a
favor. Pr_ice may vary sli9htly.

1. Extend the old contract for any period of time the parties

------

TilE RJ(B 1R'1LL APPEAR
TO Bit WEAL'IBY
LONDON - II lbere a recession oo? 'l1le
Democrata bad: bGme blame It all- cin Nlzoo ml
Ml' bere, lbe papen \,and Tv·'ai.i radio 81'e
awub with Laber Plrlj Bad: Benchers being
1nta viewed11btt it'a aD TGry Prime Mlnllller
HeaGI'I fault and anyway be'a not lola lied In
llljlblng but bis yacbUng, IIIey ICftiiJII; as
~. 11'1 1 patlw! .cbolr, and meanwhile,
del!ite
In lbe n«&lt;b and other llighl of
dlatatllf1ction llioaUy by ·Labor leaders,
~~~~-to be deep In an era of elegal'lee,
lbe lli&amp;DI of lbe beaiDIIIoqe appll'elltly faWng
any In aie ..._ we IDve~llpted.
We Gf*lencecl an eytfD1 of luswy en mallll!
lrciD lbe - t we a rived at Pler 112 oo
Ya!betlall'l Ncrtb River to board tbe very

m. Monday at tbe grange ball.
The grange wiD vacate the hall
.
~preparty
F ~IIoo for the Meigs

, AND SAVE •100 OR MORE

Our position is that you can't be on strike and vacation at the same
time. The company offered to solve this problem as follows:

published, .u required by law.
Charles w. Lt9ar
Mayor

We'd suspected such large and lavish and
difficult luggage bad mCIIUy dilllweared In Ibis
modern era d. casual Uvlng, dresilng aDd
traveling; but not quite ao, our loogsbcreman
frlelld, Ray Sarecld, told us; Ray's a muscled,
handsome,lllllllng lad who wallis his dod: wilb
such an easy CGIIfldence tbat he cunes ccmplelely armed without guns - be's a black bell
karate champ, a whlz under Marquis of
~eelllbury rules, also; beUmes aperalelllarate
aDd judoscbool.l, Jnllloles flghlll oolmg bland
and carries himself lllle a jaunty Mark VII Ill*
~y pointed Clll the piles of elepnt lrunlls
being loled aboard by doc:li: wallapera, many In
wlite shirts; white lhlrta! We'd been a dod:
waDoper in tv early days, ml we never wore
IDYtbiJW. 1J10re lmmac:lilllte than ooe of !bole
"tbousand.milen," dart blpe, blad: or at most
fCI'IIIa), gray fJanne) shirts.
The liaggage and freight today 1.1 picked up
not oo two-wheel truclls balanced dangerously
by sheer arm llld hsd: music but via powered
fcrl:-llit, IQipd neatly under lbe heavy stuff,
placed Cll fclll'-wheel trucks, In lin lnllldled
onto tbe QE2 111 1111aD lraclCI'-type gadleta; no
puffing, not even perspiring; aDd we didll'l
perspire - we sweated!

ROCK SPRINGS Grange, I p.

Hale

FARM NOT SOLD
In a recent report of news
evenls in the llarrison.ville area
it was reported that the
Jacksons have sold their farm
- the former Mart Olase farm
- ID a Cleveland businessman.
Mrs. Jackson reports thai this is

notice of such election to be

BY JACit O'BRIAN .

serv ·

WHAT ABOUT VACATION PAY?

1

I

MONDAY
MEIGS CHAPTER 53 •
D.A.V., regular meeting,
Monday, 7' 311 p. m. home on
Butternut_ Ave., P~oy. Neal
Petty, e~g~th distnct commander, wiD be present. All
~.!:!ntsplwme~sebe attenedd.

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiUng hours Z-1 and 7~ p. m.
Maternity visiUng hours 2:30 to
4:30 p. m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Loren J.
Coleman,
Pomeroy,
a
daughter ; Mr. and Mrs. Delmar
G. Hawley, Middleport, a
daughter; Mr. and Mrs.
Howard w, ,Johnson, Mason, a
'daughter ; Mr. and Mrs. Steven
E. Stevenson, Jacllson, a son.
Discharges·
Mrs. Paul Alba, Mrs.
Thurman R Babcock Jeffrey
B Bland
Julia
Davis
'
'
.
.
Melanie Jane rlavis, Mrs. John' '
F. Dierker, Frank Manning
Dill, Ralph c. Downard, Emil
G. Eynon, Mrs. Eugene H.

The company's reason for not extending the old contract on a day.
to-day basis is the impossible task to schedule orders and plan
operations to meet customer delivery schedules without knowing
how long the employees would continue to work.

servic9 not avolloble : One FOR SALE
Passed Aug . 2, 1971
· monlll 51 .75 . By men In Ohio COO
G
Charles W. Logar
. ond w. vo., one year 514.00. .
KIN AND eating apples. Approved Mayor
Sb months 51 .25 . Three
Bring container. H. L. Roush,
month• suo. Subscription
Welshtown'Road, Minersville. Attest Jane Walton
price includts ~undar Timet·
Olio.
Clerk
5enllnel.
·
·
8-S.3tp
(8) 5, 12, 19,31

1

ANNUAL AARON Fry family
reunion Sunday at Pmd IIIli,
Le_tart, W. _Va. Bring basket
dinner
tartlng 1 12
In
s
a
noon.
case of.rain reunioo will be held
at Salem Community building.
Everyone welcome.

arA:efS llOSt eunton

1

. •vallable 50 unts ptr week ;
. By Motor Route where carrier

1

, viled.

WHY ARE NEGOTIATIONS STALLED?

s

Subscription rates : Dt ·
· tivtrtd by carr i er where

mothers and IDddlers in 30
ElteulollAieal, HCIIDe Ecta. homes have found five
of
mothers'
Research in the last few years prototypes
has placed great emphasis on behavior. These are :
the part that ''IIIClther" plays In
the flralthree years of a child's - The SUPER-MOTHER,
life, especially In the area of the who produced the competent
young child's intellectual child best able to cope with life
growth . Researchers regard In all areas, was relaxed, able to
enjoy the child as he was, and
mother as educable.
The child considered out- lnsUnctively was a teacher. She
standing today will be regarded naturally used every opas only normal In 50 years portunlty to acquaint the child
because mothers will have been with tbe names and qualities of
taught more productive the objecls around him, enmethods of child-rearing, couraged and joined him In
predicted Dr. Burton L. White, sessions of mate-believe, yet
Director of the Preschool gave him plenty of chances to
Project at Harvard Graduate 1ry things for himseH. Encouragingly, super-mothers
School of Education.
Dr. E. Robert LaCrosse and were found In every socio.
four. colleagues, sludylng the economic bracket
_ The SMOTIIER-MOTIIER,
everyday happenings between

11Y Debonb M. C.Ulin

THURSDAY
, SUnday at home of Mr. and Mrs~
OPERATING engineers Roger Gaul, SUmner · Road,
asked to mate special effort to dinner at noon; ~orman Weber,
attend the special meeting president; Rosemary Keller,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m., .at treasurer.
American Legion Hall, Athens. FAMD w.s OF Abraham and
lfEGULAR MEETING MaryW'lllBahrreunion Sunday
Evangeline Olapter 172, OES, at Forked Run Late, basket
Middleport, '1:30 p.m. Thurs- dinner • 12 :30 p.m.
day, at temple. All members CARMEL METHODIST
welc&lt;me.
Olurch Homecooling . Sunday.
LAUREL ciJFF Health Club Sunday School 10 a.m., dinner
7:30 p.m. Thursday at home of at nooo, afternooo serviCes 1:30
Nellili Tracy.
p.m. Guest speaker the Rev.
SpEC I AL ME E T I NG Carl Hicks of Zanesville.
Southern Loc:al School District . FREEDOM GOSPEL
Band Boosters, 7:30 p.m. Mission,
Bald
Knobs,
Thursday at Racine Righ Homecoming Sunday. Sunday
School. Seventh and eighth School 9:30a.m., basket dinner
grade band parents urged to al noon. Rev. 0. G. McKinney
attend.
guest speaker In charge of
BRICKLAYERS LOCAL 32 afternoon services. Special

EblinR

Anew contract was negotiated
OR
The old conbact was extended on a day to day basis

ORDINANCE NO. 411
Declaring t~at It Is necessary

It Takes All Kinds of,·Mothers

~~:X;;re2 ::!"g·..:e::~ Th=y3~~ ~-f::!/~::\.~ r-----H-O_S_P--1-TAL--NE_W_S
•
_____ \ Center's Business Door

The reaso.lS would appear to be that the union was unwilling to work June 3rd and the days
and weeks following, now numbering eight weeks, unless:

aDd Mt;l· Everett Ray Johnson
aDd AUdra Renee and Jeffrey
Ray, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Lewis
Johnson and Charles and Roger
and friend, Debbie Grabill, of
Col1mbui;Mr.andMn. W.Lee
Roush, Rodney and Cheryl of
Lotlan; Mr. and Mrs. ·Jacob
Jolmson, Mona, RuUand; Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Johnson, Jamie 5705.19 of the Revlse&lt;l COde, that
axes be levied on the taxable
Sue, Todd and Teresa, .tproperty
within the village for a
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Larry period of five years at a rate in
excess of such maximum rate
J~. Gina Rae, Tahnee Jo tuthorlzed In Section 5105.02 of
and Brady Gene, Mrs. Geneva the Revised Code .
Sec. 3: That IS It necessary to
Shuinate and Mrs. Josepb R. levy
the taxes for the years 1971,
(Helen) Johnson, Route 4, 1972, 1973, 197o&amp; and 1975 at the
rate of one-half mill on each
dollar
of the tax valuation of the
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - , . Pomeroy.
taxable property within the
village of Pomeroy In excess of
The Dlily lllilll
the rate authorized by the said
DEVOTED TO THE
Secllon 5705.02 of the Rev ised
Coined EJ:preralon
INURESTOF
CCK'e. That there would be
.MEIGS·MASON AREA
· Tbe expression, "Tbe Nine levied the sum of Scents on each
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL, : Old Men," to characterize 1100.00 of the taxable property
' Inc. Ed.
the said Village of
lbe conservative atUtude of within
ROaERT HOEF~ICM,
Pomeroy .
City Editor ·
lbe Supreme Court during
Sec. ~ = Thallhe clerk be and
Published dairy except lbe Franklin Roosevelt ad· he is hereby directed to certify a
Solurdoy by The Ohio Valley
copy of this resolution Jo the
Publishinll Comp•ny, Jll mlnlstration was coined by deputy state supervlr.ors and
. Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, columnists Dr e w Pearson inspectors of elections of Meigs
.t$169. Business OHice Phone and Robert Allen.
County, Oh io, in order that said
992-2156, Ed itorlel Phone H2·
supervisors and inspectors of
1157.
'
elections may make tht
Stcond clus postaoe paid at ~
necessary arrangements for the
Pomeroy, Ohio.
submission of such question to
National advert isi ng
the electors of said village. as
representaHve
Bottlnelll ·
provided by law , !Sec. 5705.171.
Gellagher, Inc., 12 East 42nd
Sec. 5: That the clerk be and
St., New York Clty New York.
he Is hereby directed to caun

near Laure1vllle Sunday, Aug.
I.
Attending were Mrs. NCI'a
Jalbon, Mr. and Mrs. lJoyd
Beets (former Madeline
Jollllon); her 1011, Steve and
daugbter Kay ol Grove City and
friend Tom Johnson of
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
William Byrd, Ray and
dangbter, Mr. and Mrs. Steven
Corbin, Kelly; Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Ray Jcmnaon, Mr. and
Mrs. JIDitS Stqb and Joyce,
Cheryl and David, Mr. and Mrs.
Roo Hately, Mr. and Mrs.

state to determine what size
levies lbey shou14 seek voter
apprllVal. 'He )K!inled out tbat
the deadline for filing levies for
cerUfication to county boards of
election ill Sept. Ill.
RepresenUng 92 pet. of tbe
state's public school boards
from the.smallestlocais to the
large c1ties, the Truste~s
blam~d the Le~islalure for
making this falls levy campaigns "almost impossible to
pass because of lbe cloud~
stale aid picture
we don t
know how ~uch we'll get from
the, foundati~? pr~am or when
we~ know, sa1d lbe OSBA
prest!lent. .
l,angdon said schools should
be able to plan for an adequate
educational program from

Birthdays ~Social Cale.ndar
Celebrated

year In Japan, and an assign- American Legion Hall.

Etwillilc IIIII L'l.-w, abe pll blamed fer. If sbe tells :tri~,'.:.,.~Kingare
iii)GDI bw brotba' bit her (acllllll1111uaed lila balta' WCI'd) ber
"6"
•
•
JD&lt;O- iiJIIDID her 1c1r ''teiUal fami)J tbingl."
and Carol F. Pierce and David
two -llla.,oher P'"'"diw bumed.IIIOCII of her clolbes,
.LEGAL NO T1 CE
bec-*ibegatDiad, 'Ibill-lbhermCJiberbumedmoreofber
t:lolbol. eo DOW sbe bas cme liiOUie, two clreiJiel and two pair of

Legislature Urged to
Approve· .·E. .d.ucation ·Act

\ -Tile llaliy SetdineJ, lli.lqu loPII!EDI, 0., ~· 5, 1171

Trustees pre!ienl.at the meeU.,
were Langdon; sec011d vice
president Charles Tabor,
3acbon city; immedlall! past
president Mrs. Jean Dye, .
Cleveland HeigbtHJnl-mty
Heights city; Donald WilHam•,
Marion County; Kenneth
Gibson, CresUlne ezempted
village; Ectward Foster, Toledo
city; Richard Lee, Wayne
Township local (Montgcmery);
John Dye, Eaton city; Cooper
Snyder, Clinton County;
W'llliam Case, Vandalia-Butler
city; Mrs. Mary SchlCIII, Cincinnati city; Bryce KendaD,
Salem city; Weldon Mohr,
Triway local (Wayne); Dr.
Wade Bacon, lJsbon ezempi"CC
village; first vice pr 1""'1
Robert Boatllian, Beavao et
local (Greene); Richard
Elllnaugle, PCI'tmiCiltb city; P.
B. Stod:moo, .( :learmell local
(Warren); Donald Elliott,
ColmnNAna County; Dr. Don
Adams, Four County Joint
VocaUOIIBl Schoo' (Williams);
Edith Hell, Allron city;

124 w. MAll .

PllR-2148.

�¥-TIIID.urao Mi•t.lll""ife't-PiiiWOJ,O.,M&amp;.I,lt'11

r---------------------------1 Election Filings

lHelen Help Us!
1

By Helen Bo.ttel

1
I

(QinUnaed from ~e l)

II

clerk.
Scipio- Earold Dean, J-.eph
Carsey, for lnlstee; Glenn E.
Jewell aDd Pauline H. Altln8,
for clerk.
•
Sutton _ ·Roy Jones, Delbert
A. Smith foi' ·. lnlstee and
WilliamS. Cross and·William F.
Harris for clerk.
··
VILLAGE RACES
A much sought-after post In
villages is mayor's posiUoo
in Racine with three csndidates
filing for elecUoo; They are
Olarles F. Pyles, incumbent;
HerberiJ. While and James E.
Roush. 1bree 'candidates seek
two Racine VIllage council
posts; They are Glenn Rizer,
~Gene J,.yoos, and Unley
. M. Hart. Mae Cleland Is
' unopposed In her bid for Racine
Village Clerk.
Rutland Village bas a council
race In sloJe with three candldatesaeelllng two posts. '11ley
are John J. Fry, Ernest
Nicholson and Jerry Eads.
Eugene Tbompson, mayor, and
Vernoo L. Weber, clerk, are
unopposed for their respecUve
jobs In Rutland.
Syracuse Village has just the
right number of candidates for
the job openings. Herman
London seeks reelection as
mayor; Allen G: Lipsccm1b and
Olarles I. Blalle seek the two
council seats and Kathryn H.
Qoow is the clerk candidate.
Veteran Incumbent Clerk
Richard Duckworth is' retiring.
All three local boards of
educatioo wiD have races at the
Nov. 2 elecUon.
Four candidates have filed for
three posts In lbe Meigs Local

U.lllwelct•n•lauelllbulwm'ldodgeuerkJuaquealicxnrltha

bniJh.GII.
.
Smlycur ._..., ~llcm to YOtmf AS1CEI) FOR rr, care
of J1111a Help Ua! 11M Mnpllpel'.
GIVE THE BRIDE HER DAY
Dell: Belell:
lllrriage I'm not wcmect about. It's GE'ITING marrl~. My
na-llldimaynoteve~~beapeall!.,ooouneddlngday .
Her
Melbodla~ Mine II Baptist. Sbe and ber mother

r.mtl7il

IIAhreptilllrrllldiDHERchurchiDbertown.lfee!Iambelng
led bJ tile n~~~e.l pl'llferiiiJ church, u a "neulrlll" idle.
I want lbe wMIDC,oo Frida)' Dl&amp;bl, ao we can have a fuD
wnbDd boneJIIIOCII belcire I go bad: to~.~ a college
llludlntwllbGutmucb IIICIIef, I can't tUe Ume off in tbe •mmer,
cr cle • off c1ur1JW lbe IICboo1 year. So why 8bould we walt tiD
Botardly aflemoall! J!eM!nee her pareolll want to give out«town
Ume to arrtw I
Helen oboo!d a man be fcJm!d to llllll'I'Y In a cburdl be doesl't
.....t ata'time be ~'t want, Ia a town be dC~BJ't lllle! Why
can'lwebaveCU"w-'c'i"'tbenywenntlt? -PAUL
Detr Paw·
·
"We"!, Yocr future wife seenllr happy wilb arrangep~e~~ts,
ln"'I'ICh ull'albe ''bride's day" yon're &amp;.tined to Joae Ibis
..__...
....., t
d
...;,,.,_ In tbe ln....;... of ha
--aow...,. no ()111!-&amp;1'1.... ....,,
- - 1 PPY
llallaDillnlll-- (~ lbort)?
C.. - I mucb better Idea - fcrget tbe 1ig wedding bills cmd

,._Ia

elope. - H.
Delr Helen:

'

I

YIWl'H ASQD FOR IT!
'11111 &lt;C'."""' 11 fclr ""''"a -'a, tbelr ft...,,__ aDd
• - • ......,_
,..~
p'r •-.lbelr hulllelllld fun. At wtlb lbe l'Wit of Helen Help

.

FrCIID lblnp yCII'ft written, I 11C1'1a get tbe feelio8 you don't
care far big W"ddiq&amp;a True! - ME TOO
Delr Me Too:
True and double true!
I Clcm't care fer lig, eztravapnt, peiaonal wmopteema,
period -be IIIey weMqa, codlllll partiiiB, whatever. Tbey're
b'"" ndGU8wulleaoftime,maQIIIIIIIICJIIe1-andtbeyHJ1•lly

eadlnbarcll'eeliD8II,CIIeftJcr'QOtber.-H.
Delr BeleD:
I'm l'ellly dlldlllled about my friend. Sbe COIIII8 to acbool
wtlllbru1811B, beca-llerbi:Qiberand llister ml mother beat ber
..,,

~~~ec~:!e

Owen Jenilns. Voters of tbe

Dis:: .
members. There are four
candidates includin&amp; Howard
COLUMBUS _ Ohio School
Caldwell, Jr., Roger Epple, Boards Atsociation Board of
Clifford Longenette and Clyde Trustees have unanimously
E. Kuhn.
adopted a resolution urging the
In the Southern Local School Ohio Legislature to adopt a
District where only two can- personal and corporate Income
ctidates wiD be elected for lbe tax and to pass an educatioo bill
board of educatioo there are . so that school districts can plan
also- Jour cancildates wbo In- for the rapidly approaching
elude Grover Salaer, Jr., Patsy school year.
s. White, David u..Nease and The Board of Trustees held
Jack Bostick. Nease is that the 109th General
Assembly is "cOmpounc!iDg the
currentiy 8ei'Vin8.
.With two to be elected there problem by maldng it lmare just two candidates -both possible . for boards to coorIncumbents _ for the cOunty dlnate levies with state aid,"
board of education. They · are said OSBA president Paul
Harold G. Roush and Gordon Langdim, a member of the
Collins.
Collllllbl18 city board.
Candidates have untilt p.m. The president added tbateach
on Aug. 13 to withdraw day of delay makes it more
petitions.
difficult for boards around the

.ci:l.
111e bu to do aD tbe w-"
anc1 if any"''goes .......
a, she
vaa.
~
no.v-.r.
pll Ileal Sbe aleeplln the ldldlll. N01r she tellll me ber mother

•-t""'fte._Je
ber
ba..l.'--.lo.-1
,..• • - . , t
come "".,......,..

Wbatcan I do tobelp? -CONCERNED FRIEND

n.... .....,__.,,
&amp;lVIII- rl"ftiiN

Firat, vriy lbe stcry. 'lben, If wbat your friend says is true,
C.U tile ali1d Welfare Asmcy, and ull for an lnvestlgaUoo. The
o1.o1 wiD be puliD a fCIIfer bame If ber famllv envlromnelll
r•
'J
Wlrl'lllllll -H.

Johruwn Family Reunion Held
ijTbe annual Jobntlon famlly Edward Ater, Tonya and
&amp;union~ held at Tar Ho1101r Candy, all ·!lf;~ Grove City; Mr.

oo•

spring, when most coolraclural
commitments are made with
employes, for the coming school
tenn rather tban waiU., until
school begins. Many districts
are now facing school closings
· and cutUng back staff and
services for lack of adequate
· financing "at the present
level," said Langdon.
.
. Currently the educaliOD bill is
Included In tbe total state approprlaUon being sludied by the
Senate, having already been
pillised by the House. Hciwever,
it does appear as If a different
program will be approved by
tbe Senate, necessitsU., that
both be compromiSed In a joint
committee, said the OSBA
president.
Members of the Board of

y Is The lmperi
Electric Plant Close

Mrs. Maggie Caruthers,
Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy, and
Edward Caruthers, Cl!esbire,
were honored recently in 00.
servance of th eir birthday
anniversaries during a family
picnic at the ROute 33 Roadside
Par k ·
A decorated cake was inscribed "Happy Birthday,
Mother and Eddie". Also
honored al the picnic were Mr.
·
and Mrs. Evan Taylor and.son,
Michael, who have relumed to
Ohio after residing in;
Alamogorda,N. M.andFlorida.
S. Sgl. Taylor received bis
discharge from the u. s. Air
Force at the HPlliman Air
Force Base in New Mexico 011
June 29 having completed eight

tc!::n:

ment In Germany. Mrs. Taylor,
the fomler Billie Carutbers, is
tbe daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Hoadley Caruthers, former
Pomeroy area residents.
Others attending were Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Hoffman,
B~llevllle ; Mrs. Robert
N1cewander and sons, Bobby
and Bryan, Dundee; Mr. and
Mrs. George Hoadley Caruthers
~daughter, Georgana, Beach
City ; Mrs. Edward Caru~
Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Taylor and sons, Lonnie (Boots)
and Tim ( Butch), Ralph
Carutbers and Tim Kreider,
Pomeroy, anct' Joannie Hall of
Fostoria.
.
Visiting the Caruthers and
Taylor families over the
weekend were Barbara
Caruthers, Mrs. Henry

?
•

0

for the construction, reconstructlon, resurfacinG and

repair
of streets In Beech Grove
Cemetery, Pomeroy, Ohio, and
doccarlng the amount of taxes
that may be levied at the
maximum rate aulhorlzed by
law wllhouta vote of electors lo
be lnsufliclentand declaring the
necessity of a levy In excess of
sui~ [~~~-solved by lho council
of lhe Vlllago of Pomeroy, Stalo
of Ohio, an members thereto
concurring:
Sec. I: ThoC Ills necessary to
have construction , recon.
struction, resurfacing and
repa:lr of streets laying within
Beech Grove Cemetery,

:::~=~·.:::::r!::
Caruthers.

BIRTII ANNOUNCED
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Connolly of Syracuse are
of their
announcing the birth
·
1
ugh
second child, a da ler, a
Holzer Medical Center on
July
named
23 weighing Sibs., 12 oz.
Shelly Renee. Grandparents are
,..._...,,_
Mr, and Mrs. Everette""'~'
of Lelart Falls . and Mr. and
_. East
Mrs. Lester Roush "'
1
Letart,
and a greaifandmother, Mrs. Lillian
Duffy of 'SyraCIIIfl. Sbelly was
welcomed by a brother, Brian •

A new contract could not be negotiated since the union only agreed
to a few meetings. The week preceding the contract termination,
May 24 through May 28, the company representative was at the
plant, available to negotiate. The union was only willing to meet on
Friday, May 28th. If the union had been willing to seriously
negotiate those five days, the company believes settlement would
have been achieved. This contract would have been fair and
equitable to both employees and-- ~he company:

Pomeroy, Ohio.

ta!:~·t~~t ~~avt bt!~a~'!'3~~~ t~~·
levy of taxes at the maximum
rate authoriled bV Section
5705.02 of the Revised Code on
the taxable property in said
village will be Insufficient to
provide an adequate amount for
the necessary requirements of
sald, village, and that it is
necessary for the purpose of
providing additional funds for
the general construction.
reconstruction , resurfacing and
repair of streets In Beech Grove
Cemetery, Village of Pomeroy;
Ohio, as provided In S&amp;e11on

i .,

''

Friday
TIIEOOORUS COUNCIL 17
D. of A., 7:30p.m. IOOF hall',
Inspection. Members to take
cooki
· sand · hes
es or
WIC
•
SATIJRDAY
ICE CREAM Social, beginning2p. m. Salurdayonlotnext
to Sobio Station In Tuppers
Plains, sponsored by Tuppers
PlalnsCommunityClubtoraise
funds for community building.
Homemadeicecream,piesand
cates available.
SUNDAY
GREEN - OGDIN -CASTER
reunion, Aug. 8 at tbe Colwnbia
Chapel Christian Church,
n ....eI dinner at noon.
Sunday........
ANNUAL WEBER reunion

,l.

·

lJ

Descendants of the late
Samuel and Alice Staneart held
a family get-together at the
attractive rural home of Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Parker
Iocaled on Route 7 east of
Cheste Sunda
r
y.
Some of the family who began
arriving on Friday evening
were weekend guesls of local
·
re 1a lives.
A pol1uc k baske t
· ed · t
dinner was en)oy
• pte ures
lak
d
1a ed
were en, an games P Y ·
Aboul 60
ttended
personsa
·
Attending were Charles
Stanearl, Mr. and Mrs. Bradley
.Wein and daughters, Marcia

Since June 3rd, the union has shown no interest in resuming
negotiations, while the company has been and is now ready to meet.
The negotiations scheduled by the Federal Mediator and held July
2oth and 21st, resulted in no change in the union committee's attitude regarding their will'ingness to seriously negotiate a new
contract.

could agree on.

.

Jirllllb Qll I,lmouiba - CactiD•a~, lJnc:Ginl, ~. Mercedu Belli 30111 and
. . plan - dlplllted pillnly wealthy lypel
oo•

Clbri 4i ICCUI!Gmed to aea travel
The
"n: owfne aeliiiCIItly cmied just hllld lugpge
ljnlllrj, ecaneUca etc.), lbeir trunb - yes,
111Je .-mer lnllb - 1e11t ahead hours earlier.
000

__ ,,.

•

and Cathy, David Stanearl all of
ToJedo, Mr · and Mrs· J ames
Mefford and children, Herbie,
Allan and Connie, Mr. and Mrs.
Pearl Schrader and sons,
Shannon and Scott, Mr. and
Mrs. Rupert .Schrader, all of
Fran'"'ort,
Ky., Leon Schrader
...
of Wauchula, Florida, Mr. and
Mrs. James Carpenter aDd son,
Jay and Miss Carolyn Parter of
Coolville, Mrs. Roger Adams
and daughter, IArl, of Racine,
Mr. andMrs.LeslieFriandson,
Chuck, of MCJ\rlbur, Mr• .and
Mrs. William Pierce of Newark,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Parker
and childre n, KellY and BobbY
· tta , Mr. and Mrs . ""illis
of Mar1e
"'
Parker and children, Debbie,
Brenda
· • TimmYand Russell • of
o t--•
w · va., Mr · and
~ar .,..,urg,
Mrs. Garth Keller of Gambier,
Mr . an· d Mrs.· Homer Parker,
Rutland , Mr· and Mrs· Herbert

992-2709

ATTEND OBSERVANCE
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Goegleln,
Herman Hoffner and Dana
Howell attended lbe diamond
anniver.. rv observance of Mr.
-'
and Mrs. Houlllaning -:ecentiy
at the United Methodist Church
at Mlllersporl. The Hanlngs are
former Meigs County residents.
•~;~•tel• 60 friends and
•.,.... ·-·- '
relatives called d!D';na the 2 to 4
-...
p. m. open house hours with an
anniversary cake and punch

being served.

intent on preparing baby for the
Ivy League, hurried lbe child
forward aDd called all the shots.
Researchers found her child apt
to be a good learner but
emotlonaliy immature, even
infantile, In other situations.
- The ALMOST MOTI!ER,
loved and enjoyed her child but
appeared intellectually un·
prepared to meet the needs of
his developing mind and personality. Whatever his polenlial, he was likely to level off
and remain on an Intellectual
and social plateau.
- The OVERWHELMED
MOTI!ER U5Ually had so many
children and mooey problems
that _the child _rececved little
~dlv1dusl attention ~grew up
m the IIUdsl of chrome chaos.
There were also middle-class

mothers among tbe overwhelmed. Their strengths were
absorbed by the battle of survival each day.
The
ZOOKEEPER
MontER runs a taut, neal
ship, but has a minimwn of real
communicatioo and interactioo
with her child, researchers
found. Usually a middle or
upper middle-class organizer,
she bought the "right" toys for
the child and left him alooe to
play with them while she
carried on her household
routines. The child generally
showed "repetitive stereotyped
behavior, despite the variety of
toys."
According to Dr. White, how a
mother responds to the toddler
- the willful, curious, active.

Miss AI

H kan

W~E. HysetMrs~Jru:~:

Loudermilk and daughter,
Bruce E. Masters, Robert A.
McDonald, William Henry
Reebel, Mrs. Kenneth W.
RobinsOD and daughter, Mrs.
Paul D. Sluul&gt;, Charles E.
Simms, Mrs. Mary D. Spear,
Albert Eugene Welch III, and
Charles E. Wolfe.

c1,osed A ugust 5 and 7
Holzer Medical Center
business offices will be closed
Friday and Saturday, Augus16
and 7,to complete separaUon of
tbe business office procedures
from one Into two offices.
Beginning on August 9, the
Clinic and lbe Medical Center

wiD · have their own business
office, and the two offices will
be open for business on thai
date to accept paymenls or
answer questions concerning
charges.
Each patient who visits the
ClinicortheMedicalCenterwiD
be affected by this change since
it signifies that he will be
recetvmg
two separate
slatemenls; one for Hospital
services and one for Clinic
charges which includes
physicians' lees.
The two business offices wiD
be located on the first floor of
the Holzer Medical Center,
First and Cedar Streets,
Gallipolis.

Pres

tio
erva R
Soc•olv Wiill
~J

M

eef

A

ug.

14

CHILIJOOTIIE _ The next
weekend of the Soulb Central
Ohio Preservation Society Inc.
(SCOPS) will be held at the

Harrisonville
S . N
OCiety ews
Mrs. Minnie Foil had her
da ug hter and a friend from
Colwnbus as guests over the
weekend.
Mr. andMrs.LarryClarkand

H, al 10 a.m.
PreservaUon and restoration
of historic landmarks will he
discussed in seminars with
special attention on infonnaUon
obtained during the recenUy
held regional meeUng of the
National Trust for Historic
Preservation in Cincinnati.
Displays will ljugiDenl the open

0

Mrs. Wilber Parker, son, Eddie
and a friend of Pomerey, Route
3, Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Michael
and Samuel Michael of
Minersville Route I, Mrs. Edna
Summerlield, Mr. and Mrs.
Marion Parker and SOD, Dennis,
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Parker
and children, April and

1---------------------------..
MOTORIZED GRILL
$.

in
error
been
sold.and the farm has not

MIDDLEPORT

'

Summer Closeouts!

1-----------..
,, .. . ~•

PATIO
.
TABLE

Hollywood's Name
Hollywood was named, In
the 1880s, after lbe summer
residence of a Chicago
friend by Mrs. Horace H.
Wilcox, who moved lbere
from Topeka, Kan., accord·
ing to Encyclopaedia Britan·

PORTABLE GRILL

.

Heavy steel grill. 18" diameter
chrome plated grid odjusts to J
positions.

$277

REG. $3.69
SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE
OF
OUTDOOR
COOKING
CESSORIES

nica .

AC-

FlM

UFT-OFF TOP IS

IIG. $3.99

A SERVING TRAY

.HEATING
AND CENTRAL
AIR CONDITIONING
GAS- OIL- ELECTRIC

'

eFREE ESTIMATES
eFREE DELIVERY
eEASY TERMS
.SALES AND SERVICE

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
MIDIIII'OIT, 0.

BOOKCASE

5 DRAWER

$2695 MAHOGANY $2} 95
$
KNICK-KNACKS
2995
BO~N:..NGS
20% OFF
MAPLE
CHEST

'

each .

Also Special Prices On Other Items
• •• See Us At The
•
992-7261

$137

i.~RGE

SIZE
REG. $1.79
~ETAl

INSULATED BAG
FOR

PICNICS
CAMPING
DIAPERS
AND 100
. OTHER
THINGS

$

SWAP SHOP
Open Ti19 P.M.

'

I010s

Middleport, 0.

'

,,•

HANDLES

,_

MOORE'S
IN

POMEROY
CHOICf 01
~ATTfRNS

.•

w.

YES!- At
Meigs Co. Branch

d Mrs Letha "-·
" led
an
·
""wen VISl
the M· A· Epples ·
Meigs C..Unly Br•nch o1 Tile
Athens Counly Savings &amp;
Mr. and Mrs. A1la Jordan
Loon Co.
visited the M. A. Epples
2H Second St.
recenUy.
CERTIFIED WELDER
. Pomeroy, Ohlo
Mr. and Mrs. Estep moved
,Portabl!_ ~ij)ment
Member Federal Home Loan
fromtheWilJCionchproperty to
Bank.
a trailer on the old Kern Alkire
Shop or Field
farm owned by Mr. and Mrs.
Ph. 992-2511
Member Federal Savings &amp;
Jerry Cline who are occup&lt;ring
Loan Insurance Corp. All
discussion period.
'-·
ccounts insured up to
the fonner Mae Scharberth
Tbe meeUng is open to aU
,000.00.
home.
Locust s•
SCOPS members, as well as
others Interested in preservat.ion.
,.----------------------------..
f•l'
Participanls are asked tQ
bring a sack lunch, and
beverages will be supplied (plus
a good ·sound system and air
conditioner.)
After lunch a walking lcJur. of
Chillicothe has been planned,
with emphasis on recent
restorations.
Another date to remember is
·chrome plaled grid wilh ~ide
Aug. 7~ when the Highland
County Historical Society· will
handl., . . . "perma·lilt" grid
positioner
. . . tubular stHI legs
sponsor an antique show and
with
plastic
caps ~ . . snap-on
sale at the Highland County
hood .. . removoble spit.
Fairgrounds in Hillsboro.

IN MIDDLEPORT, FRIDAYI AUG. 6
BARGAINS ALL OVER TOWN.

The union committee rejected this company offer and refused to
submit the proposal to the membership.

'

LOANS

0

4. Resume negotiations to provide a new contract.

THE IMPERIAL ELECTRIC COMPANY

Aome lmpraement

r------.,

· =~~:er:U::;~hAu~n ~=~k~~=·
led the
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Haning

·~ ·1 117D

Reviewing all of the above, one must conclude that the
union committee wanted a strike from the beginning.
Also, they are willing to prolong the strike and not conduct serious negotiations. This plan of action has resulted
in hardships on both sides and possible loss of jobs due to
loss of customers. It is seriously affecting the job
security that Imperial employees have enjoyed for more
than 23 years.

'lpersonality , ''
detennlnes how much a child's
potential will be developed and
realized.
Harvard researchers are
confident the day wiD come
when "mother" will be taught
the stills of motberlng and wiD
be able ID raise their child to
have confidence In his own
competence, which Is a good
foundation for just about any
type of learning siluatipn.
underfoot

PICNIC BASKET

3. After the vacation period is over, return to work.

•

DEBBIE CONKLIN

~

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

The time period allocated to vacations could be flexible;
depending on whether employees wanted time off for
vacations with pay, or wanted to take a portion of vacation
pay in cash and limit the vacation period to none or to 1 week
or 2 weeks, or some other plan which would satisfy the wishes
of a majority of the employees.
..

V~ice along Broadway !!

0000

R

8

VAll FY WMBER &amp;SUPPLY 00.

2. Pay all employees their vacation pay immediately.

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

•lrlk•

811'.

Mrs

Termite Control Concentrate. Add an Arab fiose.ena
spray Applicator and you're ready to completely termiteproof the average 3-bedroom home! Saves you over $100
compared fo the cost of calling in a professiOMI exterminator. Buy Arab and do both you and your home a
favor. Pr_ice may vary sli9htly.

1. Extend the old contract for any period of time the parties

------

TilE RJ(B 1R'1LL APPEAR
TO Bit WEAL'IBY
LONDON - II lbere a recession oo? 'l1le
Democrata bad: bGme blame It all- cin Nlzoo ml
Ml' bere, lbe papen \,and Tv·'ai.i radio 81'e
awub with Laber Plrlj Bad: Benchers being
1nta viewed11btt it'a aD TGry Prime Mlnllller
HeaGI'I fault and anyway be'a not lola lied In
llljlblng but bis yacbUng, IIIey ICftiiJII; as
~. 11'1 1 patlw! .cbolr, and meanwhile,
del!ite
In lbe n«&lt;b and other llighl of
dlatatllf1ction llioaUy by ·Labor leaders,
~~~~-to be deep In an era of elegal'lee,
lbe lli&amp;DI of lbe beaiDIIIoqe appll'elltly faWng
any In aie ..._ we IDve~llpted.
We Gf*lencecl an eytfD1 of luswy en mallll!
lrciD lbe - t we a rived at Pler 112 oo
Ya!betlall'l Ncrtb River to board tbe very

m. Monday at tbe grange ball.
The grange wiD vacate the hall
.
~preparty
F ~IIoo for the Meigs

, AND SAVE •100 OR MORE

Our position is that you can't be on strike and vacation at the same
time. The company offered to solve this problem as follows:

published, .u required by law.
Charles w. Lt9ar
Mayor

We'd suspected such large and lavish and
difficult luggage bad mCIIUy dilllweared In Ibis
modern era d. casual Uvlng, dresilng aDd
traveling; but not quite ao, our loogsbcreman
frlelld, Ray Sarecld, told us; Ray's a muscled,
handsome,lllllllng lad who wallis his dod: wilb
such an easy CGIIfldence tbat he cunes ccmplelely armed without guns - be's a black bell
karate champ, a whlz under Marquis of
~eelllbury rules, also; beUmes aperalelllarate
aDd judoscbool.l, Jnllloles flghlll oolmg bland
and carries himself lllle a jaunty Mark VII Ill*
~y pointed Clll the piles of elepnt lrunlls
being loled aboard by doc:li: wallapera, many In
wlite shirts; white lhlrta! We'd been a dod:
waDoper in tv early days, ml we never wore
IDYtbiJW. 1J10re lmmac:lilllte than ooe of !bole
"tbousand.milen," dart blpe, blad: or at most
fCI'IIIa), gray fJanne) shirts.
The liaggage and freight today 1.1 picked up
not oo two-wheel truclls balanced dangerously
by sheer arm llld hsd: music but via powered
fcrl:-llit, IQipd neatly under lbe heavy stuff,
placed Cll fclll'-wheel trucks, In lin lnllldled
onto tbe QE2 111 1111aD lraclCI'-type gadleta; no
puffing, not even perspiring; aDd we didll'l
perspire - we sweated!

ROCK SPRINGS Grange, I p.

Hale

FARM NOT SOLD
In a recent report of news
evenls in the llarrison.ville area
it was reported that the
Jacksons have sold their farm
- the former Mart Olase farm
- ID a Cleveland businessman.
Mrs. Jackson reports thai this is

notice of such election to be

BY JACit O'BRIAN .

serv ·

WHAT ABOUT VACATION PAY?

1

I

MONDAY
MEIGS CHAPTER 53 •
D.A.V., regular meeting,
Monday, 7' 311 p. m. home on
Butternut_ Ave., P~oy. Neal
Petty, e~g~th distnct commander, wiD be present. All
~.!:!ntsplwme~sebe attenedd.

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiUng hours Z-1 and 7~ p. m.
Maternity visiUng hours 2:30 to
4:30 p. m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Loren J.
Coleman,
Pomeroy,
a
daughter ; Mr. and Mrs. Delmar
G. Hawley, Middleport, a
daughter; Mr. and Mrs.
Howard w, ,Johnson, Mason, a
'daughter ; Mr. and Mrs. Steven
E. Stevenson, Jacllson, a son.
Discharges·
Mrs. Paul Alba, Mrs.
Thurman R Babcock Jeffrey
B Bland
Julia
Davis
'
'
.
.
Melanie Jane rlavis, Mrs. John' '
F. Dierker, Frank Manning
Dill, Ralph c. Downard, Emil
G. Eynon, Mrs. Eugene H.

The company's reason for not extending the old contract on a day.
to-day basis is the impossible task to schedule orders and plan
operations to meet customer delivery schedules without knowing
how long the employees would continue to work.

servic9 not avolloble : One FOR SALE
Passed Aug . 2, 1971
· monlll 51 .75 . By men In Ohio COO
G
Charles W. Logar
. ond w. vo., one year 514.00. .
KIN AND eating apples. Approved Mayor
Sb months 51 .25 . Three
Bring container. H. L. Roush,
month• suo. Subscription
Welshtown'Road, Minersville. Attest Jane Walton
price includts ~undar Timet·
Olio.
Clerk
5enllnel.
·
·
8-S.3tp
(8) 5, 12, 19,31

1

ANNUAL AARON Fry family
reunion Sunday at Pmd IIIli,
Le_tart, W. _Va. Bring basket
dinner
tartlng 1 12
In
s
a
noon.
case of.rain reunioo will be held
at Salem Community building.
Everyone welcome.

arA:efS llOSt eunton

1

. •vallable 50 unts ptr week ;
. By Motor Route where carrier

1

, viled.

WHY ARE NEGOTIATIONS STALLED?

s

Subscription rates : Dt ·
· tivtrtd by carr i er where

mothers and IDddlers in 30
ElteulollAieal, HCIIDe Ecta. homes have found five
of
mothers'
Research in the last few years prototypes
has placed great emphasis on behavior. These are :
the part that ''IIIClther" plays In
the flralthree years of a child's - The SUPER-MOTHER,
life, especially In the area of the who produced the competent
young child's intellectual child best able to cope with life
growth . Researchers regard In all areas, was relaxed, able to
enjoy the child as he was, and
mother as educable.
The child considered out- lnsUnctively was a teacher. She
standing today will be regarded naturally used every opas only normal In 50 years portunlty to acquaint the child
because mothers will have been with tbe names and qualities of
taught more productive the objecls around him, enmethods of child-rearing, couraged and joined him In
predicted Dr. Burton L. White, sessions of mate-believe, yet
Director of the Preschool gave him plenty of chances to
Project at Harvard Graduate 1ry things for himseH. Encouragingly, super-mothers
School of Education.
Dr. E. Robert LaCrosse and were found In every socio.
four. colleagues, sludylng the economic bracket
_ The SMOTIIER-MOTIIER,
everyday happenings between

11Y Debonb M. C.Ulin

THURSDAY
, SUnday at home of Mr. and Mrs~
OPERATING engineers Roger Gaul, SUmner · Road,
asked to mate special effort to dinner at noon; ~orman Weber,
attend the special meeting president; Rosemary Keller,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m., .at treasurer.
American Legion Hall, Athens. FAMD w.s OF Abraham and
lfEGULAR MEETING MaryW'lllBahrreunion Sunday
Evangeline Olapter 172, OES, at Forked Run Late, basket
Middleport, '1:30 p.m. Thurs- dinner • 12 :30 p.m.
day, at temple. All members CARMEL METHODIST
welc&lt;me.
Olurch Homecooling . Sunday.
LAUREL ciJFF Health Club Sunday School 10 a.m., dinner
7:30 p.m. Thursday at home of at nooo, afternooo serviCes 1:30
Nellili Tracy.
p.m. Guest speaker the Rev.
SpEC I AL ME E T I NG Carl Hicks of Zanesville.
Southern Loc:al School District . FREEDOM GOSPEL
Band Boosters, 7:30 p.m. Mission,
Bald
Knobs,
Thursday at Racine Righ Homecoming Sunday. Sunday
School. Seventh and eighth School 9:30a.m., basket dinner
grade band parents urged to al noon. Rev. 0. G. McKinney
attend.
guest speaker In charge of
BRICKLAYERS LOCAL 32 afternoon services. Special

EblinR

Anew contract was negotiated
OR
The old conbact was extended on a day to day basis

ORDINANCE NO. 411
Declaring t~at It Is necessary

It Takes All Kinds of,·Mothers

~~:X;;re2 ::!"g·..:e::~ Th=y3~~ ~-f::!/~::\.~ r-----H-O_S_P--1-TAL--NE_W_S
•
_____ \ Center's Business Door

The reaso.lS would appear to be that the union was unwilling to work June 3rd and the days
and weeks following, now numbering eight weeks, unless:

aDd Mt;l· Everett Ray Johnson
aDd AUdra Renee and Jeffrey
Ray, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Lewis
Johnson and Charles and Roger
and friend, Debbie Grabill, of
Col1mbui;Mr.andMn. W.Lee
Roush, Rodney and Cheryl of
Lotlan; Mr. and Mrs. ·Jacob
Jolmson, Mona, RuUand; Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Johnson, Jamie 5705.19 of the Revlse&lt;l COde, that
axes be levied on the taxable
Sue, Todd and Teresa, .tproperty
within the village for a
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Larry period of five years at a rate in
excess of such maximum rate
J~. Gina Rae, Tahnee Jo tuthorlzed In Section 5105.02 of
and Brady Gene, Mrs. Geneva the Revised Code .
Sec. 3: That IS It necessary to
Shuinate and Mrs. Josepb R. levy
the taxes for the years 1971,
(Helen) Johnson, Route 4, 1972, 1973, 197o&amp; and 1975 at the
rate of one-half mill on each
dollar
of the tax valuation of the
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - , . Pomeroy.
taxable property within the
village of Pomeroy In excess of
The Dlily lllilll
the rate authorized by the said
DEVOTED TO THE
Secllon 5705.02 of the Rev ised
Coined EJ:preralon
INURESTOF
CCK'e. That there would be
.MEIGS·MASON AREA
· Tbe expression, "Tbe Nine levied the sum of Scents on each
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL, : Old Men," to characterize 1100.00 of the taxable property
' Inc. Ed.
the said Village of
lbe conservative atUtude of within
ROaERT HOEF~ICM,
Pomeroy .
City Editor ·
lbe Supreme Court during
Sec. ~ = Thallhe clerk be and
Published dairy except lbe Franklin Roosevelt ad· he is hereby directed to certify a
Solurdoy by The Ohio Valley
copy of this resolution Jo the
Publishinll Comp•ny, Jll mlnlstration was coined by deputy state supervlr.ors and
. Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, columnists Dr e w Pearson inspectors of elections of Meigs
.t$169. Business OHice Phone and Robert Allen.
County, Oh io, in order that said
992-2156, Ed itorlel Phone H2·
supervisors and inspectors of
1157.
'
elections may make tht
Stcond clus postaoe paid at ~
necessary arrangements for the
Pomeroy, Ohio.
submission of such question to
National advert isi ng
the electors of said village. as
representaHve
Bottlnelll ·
provided by law , !Sec. 5705.171.
Gellagher, Inc., 12 East 42nd
Sec. 5: That the clerk be and
St., New York Clty New York.
he Is hereby directed to caun

near Laure1vllle Sunday, Aug.
I.
Attending were Mrs. NCI'a
Jalbon, Mr. and Mrs. lJoyd
Beets (former Madeline
Jollllon); her 1011, Steve and
daugbter Kay ol Grove City and
friend Tom Johnson of
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
William Byrd, Ray and
dangbter, Mr. and Mrs. Steven
Corbin, Kelly; Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Ray Jcmnaon, Mr. and
Mrs. JIDitS Stqb and Joyce,
Cheryl and David, Mr. and Mrs.
Roo Hately, Mr. and Mrs.

state to determine what size
levies lbey shou14 seek voter
apprllVal. 'He )K!inled out tbat
the deadline for filing levies for
cerUfication to county boards of
election ill Sept. Ill.
RepresenUng 92 pet. of tbe
state's public school boards
from the.smallestlocais to the
large c1ties, the Truste~s
blam~d the Le~islalure for
making this falls levy campaigns "almost impossible to
pass because of lbe cloud~
stale aid picture
we don t
know how ~uch we'll get from
the, foundati~? pr~am or when
we~ know, sa1d lbe OSBA
prest!lent. .
l,angdon said schools should
be able to plan for an adequate
educational program from

Birthdays ~Social Cale.ndar
Celebrated

year In Japan, and an assign- American Legion Hall.

Etwillilc IIIII L'l.-w, abe pll blamed fer. If sbe tells :tri~,'.:.,.~Kingare
iii)GDI bw brotba' bit her (acllllll1111uaed lila balta' WCI'd) ber
"6"
•
•
JD&lt;O- iiJIIDID her 1c1r ''teiUal fami)J tbingl."
and Carol F. Pierce and David
two -llla.,oher P'"'"diw bumed.IIIOCII of her clolbes,
.LEGAL NO T1 CE
bec-*ibegatDiad, 'Ibill-lbhermCJiberbumedmoreofber
t:lolbol. eo DOW sbe bas cme liiOUie, two clreiJiel and two pair of

Legislature Urged to
Approve· .·E. .d.ucation ·Act

\ -Tile llaliy SetdineJ, lli.lqu loPII!EDI, 0., ~· 5, 1171

Trustees pre!ienl.at the meeU.,
were Langdon; sec011d vice
president Charles Tabor,
3acbon city; immedlall! past
president Mrs. Jean Dye, .
Cleveland HeigbtHJnl-mty
Heights city; Donald WilHam•,
Marion County; Kenneth
Gibson, CresUlne ezempted
village; Ectward Foster, Toledo
city; Richard Lee, Wayne
Township local (Montgcmery);
John Dye, Eaton city; Cooper
Snyder, Clinton County;
W'llliam Case, Vandalia-Butler
city; Mrs. Mary SchlCIII, Cincinnati city; Bryce KendaD,
Salem city; Weldon Mohr,
Triway local (Wayne); Dr.
Wade Bacon, lJsbon ezempi"CC
village; first vice pr 1""'1
Robert Boatllian, Beavao et
local (Greene); Richard
Elllnaugle, PCI'tmiCiltb city; P.
B. Stod:moo, .( :learmell local
(Warren); Donald Elliott,
ColmnNAna County; Dr. Don
Adams, Four County Joint
VocaUOIIBl Schoo' (Williams);
Edith Hell, Allron city;

124 w. MAll .

PllR-2148.

�:r-••----------------·· .-'----~.-

t-Then.,DySentiDel,MI . . . t.l'wwrOJ,O.• Aul.l,.lt'll

.G·ih
. son ·Records Lineac:ores
Beat•
Ill h ~~;'aN•i:E -~ ~ !.Of.the Bend
200th
.·
.Tnu p
By &amp;b
~lor IAIIue R1141111

I
· A

By Unlt.cl I'NIS lo.......lionll .1

g
(7~~e:~ H:JI'n:~; ~ ;11.

llyFREDM~MANE
UPI!Iporll Writer
·Bob Gibson reached another
:nUeslone in hJs Wuslrious
.:areer Wednesday night, and he
treated It with hla usual
indifference.
Gibson, who has tended io
play down his accomplishments
throu&amp;hout hla career, ·won hla
200th major league game when
he pitched the St. Louis
~als to a 7-2 victory over
the San Francisco Giants. But,
although it ma~ him only the
second pitcher in St. Lollis
hlatory to achieve 200 victories,
the 35-year-old Gibeon was
unawed by his SCC!liiiPUshment.
Gibson, who won his first
major league game on July 30,
191!9, joined Jim Bunning of
Philadelphia and Juan Maricbal
of San Francisco as the only
active major league pitchers
with 200 or more victories. He
also is the only Cardinal pitcher
other than Hall of Farner Jesse

Haines to reach that figure.
Haines won 210 games from
191S-193'1.
Gibson held the Giants to
seven hits Wednesday night in
beating them for the fourth
lime in four starts thiS season.
Gibson, who has not lost to the
Gianta sin~ Sept. 17, 1968,
raised his season record to 1~
in becOIJ)ing the 66th pitcher to
post 200 career victories. '
Ted . Kubiak's thtee-nm homer, hla first in the National
j..eague, gave Gibson all the
offensive support he needed.
Joe Torre chipped in with three
hils to raise his league-leading
batting average to .363.
In other NL action Houston
beat Los Angeles ~,'Montreal
edged Pittsburgh 4..'1 in 11
Innings, Atlanta defeated Phi·
!adelphia s-a, Cincinnatlllipped
New York loll and Chicago
topped San Diego ~ after
winlling a suspended game of
May 16, IM.

'

·

.

I

Hoen:~-...

'1......

'. I
I

.

~

15th).

I

"""""'*

a.. ID select •

Conflict ·
I

•

Public Notice!
.

:7- '

"

·•

.

,.

. . '· ·

The Shoe Box

Sidewalk Sale Day Has Been
Cancelled Due To Fire At Our
Store ·Early This Morning.

Advice Given by Drug User

CLEVELAND (UPI) - ifril.
Cheryl Sclmidt of suburban Independence took a .trip to New
York City to see 901111! Broadway plays.
~ "'While she wu waldting the
hit masiral "Applause," a thief
stole her purse fr4m a car she
left parked near the theatre.
Missing were ber eyegla
,
her driver's Ucense, ber credit
cards, and a small amount oE
cash.
Mrs. Schmidt was furious at
herseH for.ber carel
e11 and
angry at the thief wbo bad
ruined her trip to New Ylrl.
But even before ber relatms
here had fmiahed notifyiug her
department stores and credit
card companies about the theft,
a package ahived at her bCIIne,

--------

Walth For Other Announcements From

THE SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT

WHILE WEARE
REMOQELING.
"NEW EARLY
AMERICAN DRUG STORE"

bGrtiCillture

and
IIJU8t"lll!llt in the artistic
tiwisiclll oE •llowa show. Sbe is
CD'ftlllly sbtdylng to becmle
•auedited judge o1. the Ohio
.•
iatiOn oE Ganlen Cluba.
ID discussing preparalioo oE a
.
'
;
111"'
'
for a flower show
abibit lfrs. Wtllfard recomthai buds be removed
1tut tbat foliage b&amp; left oo. 8be
Slid once the 11"'1;""" has been
d ted the plant should be
dlsbadded several days in
athattre oE pi«tiiC so that the
plaDt hal time In heal.
Tbe specimen should be
pio '"' bro days before the
llower sboor, she ssid, allowing
s1g;. irnl time to harden. Tall
slnigbt "'"';"Mi"' mate the
best ones, she said, and
l2Utioned againsl picking a
small variety unless the

Wayne Swisher. Harold Lohse. .Kenneth ·
McCullo.ugh, and Charles · Riffle arl! your
fril!ndly pharmacists at Swisher and Lohse
RexaTI- -Drugs. They
·
have low prescription
prices and prompt
service and dlscoun1
drug prices seven days
a week. Let us serve you
for all your prescription
and drug needs.

NEW SIGNS

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI)
-The state of Callfomia
announced plans Wedrieaday to
replace Ita current blgbway
s1gns with ''international" picture symbols during the nen
five to 15 years.
Highway Engineer JjDI A.
Legarra said the change .fnm
the current signs wriltl!n in
EngUah wiD be helpful to nonEngUah speaking motorlsta and
to Americana who travel In
other counlries. 1be new signs
conform with
lldopted by
the United NaUCIII Rcl8d
Traffic Conference In lR

with 35 c:mta postage due.
'lbe pacbgP. cmtained Mrs.
Sdwnidt's parse and everything
in it but the money. Also in the
parse was a letter, written on
lbe stationery of the Britiah
Ova · as Airlines COrp., crumpled up and stuck in the eyeglass case.

is not forthcoming.
"H there is a program in
your home town that helps addicts, please do all you can to
support it.
And maybe
has happened to you,'Jb' me, won't
happen to o
, (or, who
knows, you may be hit again.)
uSo long,
~'The Thief."

'Die letter read:
''New York, NY
"July 2&amp;, 1971
''ReDo, Mrs. Sclunidt'1 am returning the items to
you that I feel JOU wiD need
very much. Also, these Items
bave no monetary value to me.
"Mrs. Schmidt, JOU have run
afoul of one of these infamous
New York drug addicts. And • ·
beUeve me, I am truly sorry
to have J)OIISibly soured your
visit to Fun City.
"But 1 did what I did for
sheer necessity and I am sorty.
"Please dCIII't hate all drug
addicts because ol. what I bave
done to you. We are sick people and need the belp of the
C'OO!munity to cure our sickness. In ICIIIM! cases, this aid

r-------.
SHIRT
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SEJtVICE
In At 9-0ut At 5

Mary Carol Femll to Wed

PHARMACY

"'""'de specificaDy calls

SYRAQR: - Mr. and Mrs. Di1ford Femil are anIMMM iDC the WIP&amp;IIDWt of lbeSr eldest rl-cJ•w, lflrJ
IMd, to lfr." !win Ray Fry,- oE Mr. and Ills.. Banld
Pry oENftHavm, W.Va. Misa Femll is a IJ71 pacqle of

mrJfJurDru§lleeils.

lllipl!iPti I" Berfla-, wbograda.atedfnm WaJwne
Hi&amp;b Sclwt' Ill !Ia, is~ at lbe l'llllip Spcn l'!anlat
Nft Haw.IL
'Blew! •litcwlllb&amp; aneveotoESept. Ziat 7:31p.m.atlbe
- · - ltlbQ Uaited Metltodist OtardL 'Die .... ;,
• ' " ~apeD dudt 1rillb&amp; chsa ;ed.

COSMETICS
AND
TOILORIES

RU11.AND - 'Die 42nd an- member present; J.-s
llllllNio holsCIIIreunioo wu held Larim, Jr., aged two 111111tlts,
bday, AD&amp;. l, an ideal day for youngest;
Mrs.
Eve!Jn
-tber.
Schilling, coming tbe fal II rt;
The
president,
John M. A. Nicholsan, bawiag lbe
W""??"'n, ~ted a sbort most cbil~en present, and
buslileSS RSSiun after a Micbael Nicholson, tbe doar
bowllifltl pimio: dinner. 'Die prize.
secretary-treasurer, Seth F. PI n( 'lll!re Mrs. Evelyn
N"tcho!i--•, read minutes oE the Shilling, Mrs. Linda FJuo:is
19711 meeting 111111 ~ the and~· and Jfr. and Ills..
treasarer's report. Norman C. James LariDa and James, Jr.
Will, Dale Nicholson, and oE Vermilion; Mr. and Mrs.
~N,·~
were ... Jo~ J'isemu, llliss Kim
Ill tlie mm~ CCIIIiiiiltlee. Bostir, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
'l'beir report_ wu -.,ted; Wisana~ and ~ Jr. and
and the follwlng ·offian fer Jacqueline oE Springfield; Mr.
1m were rh•n: I* "rlen(, and Mrs. Mari111 N"•tv!i 9 a•,
Mrs. Allegra Will; vice Dellas Kinder, and Jfr. and
;a "lent, James Nirl&gt;nm· Mts.JobnSbmingoEO!i 1#m·
and secretary~. Seth Mr. and Mrs. Rmald N"d•n;,
F. N"lchoboit. Fonst Acns 111111 Jobn Ray oE Hi11ilon:l;
Pan: will be the sill!.
Kermit Epple ~ N
iiille;
Mrs. Eliubeth McCaniber, Miss Martha Nicbolsoa of
-sedt8,ncitedalmg,J111trlotlc Pamnburg; Mr. and Mrs.
poan, "011 the Baonks oE the Larry Cart and TMn aad
Ta11
River," and Duane Penny of Reedsftlle; llrs.
Willgewanint..:estingaccount Elinl"!tbMcCnm!wrand Waid
of his Ill: a a k touroEEurqle Nic.holson, $1'. and WUI
a • ._,.t-oE the Ohio State Nicholson, Jr. oE Deder; lfr.
Ycttith am.
and Mrs. Dair If• •·•••. Mil
Priza were gival to Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. .Gale Sbtinpin
McCumber as the oldest and W•yne IIIII Pat oE IW-

Choose yours from our wide selection
of famous brands- all fairly priced.

:it

I

BUY YOUR

for

these.
Ills.. Wil1fonl ihiewed the
llower "'- 1\dtEdule, "Busy
Days" o1. lbe Rutland Friendly
Club slated for Seplll, 2 p. m.
to 7 p. m. at the Rutland
£1enen'lary Scftool, She urged
wlries by all of the juni« club
-mbe'5, noting the class
SJumber Part)'," a
favorite Bl'Bngement which
cauld bave a restful loot abollt
il
Fur lll!lle under 10 there is a
claD. "Munday's Playtime,"
witb tbe cmtalner to be a toy.
Tbe 'Meigs County Fair
Floftr Sbo.- schedule incl1wles
d
far · · edtibitors _
"New Scb~othes" and
"JJaoess". A sheet of arranging
,• ·gm wm displayed by Mrs.
W"tllford who conducted an
UTIIIging workshop using
janiper
privet
zinnias
~ ~. butternY
weed and nas.
Meelille at lbe home oE Mrs.
lllnlld.Walfe,lbegroupdecided
to ......-.1 p1a11s fer a swimming
.,.ny this ...S at Royal Oak
Part.. Mia Tensa Blown, vice
I* - Mol,
1 the meeiing
with lbe pledg.! to tbe flag .
Debbie 11filliamsm gave the
secretary's report.
''OIIIin in Fall Perennials"

.....-,·a

Nicholson Reunion Held
August 1 at Fort Meigs

.

I

.,n..

dlepart; Mr. and Mrs. Micbael

Thursday Friday

Heat and wok For L~s

Saturday

•

MEN'S WALKING
SHORTS. Reg. 4.91 &amp; Uf
Now2.33

OUURS
ocr.AS10M... PIECES
.
-v.

lOX FAN

DAN MEADOWS

does II all,
wry

10

roaiOMIIIyl

992-5759

Middleport,

BEN'F~NKUN•
PHONE
992-3498

202 Eotst #Min St• .
Pomeroy, Ohio

Rutland
F-urniture
.
BOTTLED GAS SERVICE

Arnold Grate

742-4211

-.

=~

~~Gal~

Harbrecbt Tueaday nigbt.
Named for lbe- year were
Mrs. Harbrecbt, president;
Miss Joyce EberlJbacb, vice
president; Mrs. Ethel aiffcltd,
treasurer; and Mrs. Veda
Davis, secretary.
Plans
!JI8de during the
meeting canducted by Mrs.
~:!.ee... Windon to go to
..,..;._._to visit Mrs. Harold
Johnsan in September. r..ames
wereplayedwitbprizasgoillgto
Mrs. Ethel Clifford and Mrs.
Davis. Mrs. Lucille VaQglwl
won the door prize. The
traveling prize dCIIIIted by Mts.
Ruth Ebersbacb was WCII1 by
Mrs. Ellen Ebersbllch.
Aletter fnm Mrs. C1leryl Fry
nowinthel'b!Jippineswuread.
A salad course was lid ved to
those named and Debbie
Harbrecbl. Mrs. Davis wiD be
hostess f« the Aug. 21meetiDg.

were

Rutland, 0.

BAKER

Din..-

::r,:rn:
..

'·

'

SlACKS ;i~~s Jh PRICE
12

.

GROUP OF FALL DRESSES
Values To $9.00

ONLY S3.00 '
Came See Our Otlior Items

GruiiJ RediiCIII.

THE
KIDDIE SHOP
ON THE TIN

Mli)DL.E~)RT

BARGAINS ON THE SIDEWALK
READ AND HEED!
READING TIME: 2 MINUTES

d•mnates at tbe Natiwwidt:
Beauty Academy in Co11unbols.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gress

ENJOY BIG SAVINGS A.T • • •

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS TIL 9

"·

:e::e0:,

Officers were elected at a

Mr. and Mrs. Ted Spires and
daughter, .nu, of Defiance spent
several days here visiting ber
parents, Mr. and Mrs. William
Fred Smith, Sr. and other area
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smart
returned home Wednesday
after visiting witb their son-inlaw and daughter, the Rev. and
Mrs. George Siddall and family
in Cincinnati. Mrs. Smart aeCODipllllied the Siddall family to
Cincinnati Saturday and ,_.
husband joined her there
Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Oliva"'
and famUy of College Park,
Md., have been visiting ·In
Middleport this past weet witb
his mother, Mrs. Bessie Olive!'
and Grove!". 1bey !r1!l'e also
guesls oE Mr. Oliver's sisler,
Mr. and Mrs. Arlhtr Miller and
daughter. Tetrie, Rutland.
· Miss Tenie Miller wu In
Mount Vemoo recently for lbe
wedding ol. Miss Omie Stftn.
The two were former

y fAT

SICWES

Jillngt if4armary
"THE CREATOR .OF REASONABLE DRU-G PRICES"

'.JllfA"I oJ

1 T~ble Boys &amp; Girls

Personal Notes

R...,-!

OUIIIG ·

Beige Steel C.se

Q\R:,..._.

met

NAME BRAND FURNITURE
&amp; APPLIANa5

SUMMER TO.YS - Glo. . . Sets, a...,. Mowors, a..ts,
hr•solel, a.tmlnlllll, Pltdl GoMos, Flyillg S.ucen,
Crochot ..... etc.
SWIM TOY5-~IIs, Rings. Wading Pools, Everything for
summer fun. PICNIC 5UPPLIE5-l'lales, Nad&lt;lns, Forks.
Sooons, Table Cloths, Cups, .Jugs and Ice O..Sts, Picnic
Grills, Sun Glasses.

11. TeW
1 ~~

(Jebbje Williamcm and Dlrla N~ and lc £1 I
Williamson of the MerTJ Co. •t Miltan. W. V•. Ill ...,..
Ganleners Club, al8o .made the 'lbe nalln loUr IIIII plcllic .
lour IS did Diane wiDiamPI, wiD be held in Seplr' If wbeD
Ricky and Mike Echrards, memben'!rillptber_lhlred_
David and Denny Davis and wood and matertall far .W
Mark Gaddis.
arraitging In tbe winter. Mn.
1bis is the fourth 11m oE the .Jerry Elldl wiD c:bllru.l til
club this ,_.' 0111! beillj! tO the tour. Other tours 'A4'I! plann-1
Dispatch Olllritles FlOwer and by Mrs. Tom Mattln, wbo hal
Garden Sbow in Mardi at the since resigned from the dab.

Middleport

Ptmnal NotEs

COMING SOON II
Speeial Clannce! '-----.
WALKING
SHORTS, Reg.2.47
Now 1.77

C'I.. L AT
1'\.Jn JUU 1 'riatneS
v;

Howells Here to

Pomeroy....

•

•

:id

RU'IUND- Members oE the bCIInet ~ tbe Sllowdens, Wolfes,
Rutland Friendly G.vdenas Diebls, Mrs. llruce Devis, Mrs.
Club toured ·the IaWilS and Larry Edwards, Mrs: Bill
gardensol.ltsmemhen Mitllday Williamson, Mrs. William
bepnlng at 1 p. m. to see the Wtllfurd, Mrs. Fred Williamson,
varieties of trees, ftowalng Mrs. Homer Parker, Mrs.
trees and ldtruba, -~~-. Howud Blrdtlield, Mrs. Jerry
roses, annuals, perennialS, Eads, Mrs. Tom Stewart and
cacti, and 111C.'CU!enls pvwn by Mts. Joe Bolin.
the memhen.
At each garden, plants , _
discu:aeduwellasplaoting
procedures, care and the .Au--.1 fll-.1.1:
quality of the planta. Many of
U61/U rr ~ng
the gardens used rocks,
weathered wood and bark Mr. and Mts. Vernoo Howell
mulches to mate them more oE Canllln, former Pomeroy
residenls, made one of their
attractive.
infrequent visits here recently,
Outstanding . was the roae
coming especially for the
gardw of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
wedding of their grandSnowden where Mr. Snowden
canducted.the lour, Mming tbe daughter, Kaye Howell,
ol. Mr. and Mrs. Roy
manr varieties of roaes wbidt daughter
be had mllldle!' entirely witb Howell of Laurel Cliff.
Tile HoweDs, who have lived
chqJped auger cane.
in Canllln about five years,
He also demonstrated to the
moved there due to the ill health
memben how to cut roaes and
start propagation ·or new ol. both. Mr. Howell is a f!tmer
Pclneroy h11stn m•n.
t.,ahes. He dug back some ~1be
Recently Mr. and Mrs. Howell
muleh to show how it retains
were bonored witb a party at
moisture underneath, essential
to good growth and blocms. He the bome of theit grandMrs.
Robert
also told bow be sprayed and daughter,
Nicewand.er,
Dundee
dusted the roaes to elimiMte
(Tuscarawas County) in
beetles and mildew blight.
1be group also lourned lbe celeliratloo of Mrs. Howell's
10th birthday anniversary and
gardw of Mrs. (]Iris Diehl, a
the couple's 55111 wedding anmember of the Rutland Ganlen
niversary.
Club. Mrs. Harold Wolfe,
president of the club, treated At the celebration !r1!l'e Mr.
the members to lemonade at and Mrs, Gecrge Caruthers (tl!e
former Opal Howell) and
her home.
.
Gardens visited were at the dsughter, Gecrgana, of Beach
City; Mr. and Mts. Evan Taylor
(Billie Caruthers) and their-·
Mike, Cleanrater' Fla., tbe
hosts and their two sons, Bobby
and Bryan.

and son, Pat, have returned
fromSanAntanio, TI!DS, wbae
they visited ber brother and
sister.uHaw, Majer and Mrtt.
James Roller and family. Wbile
In Teus they took a trip Into
Mexico.
Mrs. Ma1coirn Roller and
Mrs. Gecrge Freeland spent
Saturday night in Athens with
Gregory Allen Tinley, - of tbe Ruger Qulsenbaiy famDy.
Mr. and Mrs. Oiarles Tinley~ 1'bey were in Athens to attend
Hosepnda Heights, Colif., is
the O"olr-Hol.fee wedding.
here lor a month's visit with hla
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Delmar A. Canaday. He wu
r;~·-n
at lbe Cnltmbus airport
,_, UJW
Tuesday by Mr. and Mrs.
Canaday•. Mrs. Paullltapman lf;-.1-I:.,u
11
and Jennif« Cbapman
~6
~1 "J
Mrs . Paul Andrews and
dalll!bter Barbara Lang lfr · and Mrs. Robert H. aBotiGm visited in obnbua far entertained Friday night with a
a few ~ys with Ilia 11.-llary dinner preceding tile re11tarsa1
Atllliewsandlfr. and Mrs. Paul far the a fting oi their 1011,
Atidiews. Mrs. AIDews also Bob, to Miss Oleeyl Hoffee, at
visited with ber lister, Mrs. the University Inn,, Athena..
Jcwepbine Corripn 111111 Mrs. Gues1a were Mr. and Mrs.
Non McCrery.
T001 llenderabot, Misa Judy
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Divis . Martin, Mr. Phil &amp;rlndell, Mrs.
have returned after llll'llwting Wendy Wlnn, Miss Lynn
tbe a 1 el a'ldlii S!lriiCfleld with Yllttoff and the Rev. and Mrs.
her sister, Mrs. Harold Jolm- Lon1n Kreider, all of Athws;
- · Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Miss Pam Neutding, Mr.
Rldlard lftbelt wtertalned Denny Crow, Pometoy; Roba't
witb a family dlmoer with Mr. Wlqett, Jim Crow, .SJra11111 Mrs. Davia, Mrs. Jo!i••ll, cue; and Byron Hoffee,
Emma Jo and CUrtis 1,eil!ie!t, Daytm.
and Mrs. Robert Lebew,
Debr1, Cberyl and Robin,
c~:~~~ as guests. Mrtt.
DAUGHTER BORN
G
Runyoo ,... an llf.
RACINE - lfr. and Mrs.
lrmoon caller. Cake and ice
~:;were saved In tbe af. ScoU Wheeler oE Wbee1erlbarg,
lei 11000 in chsa vance oE the Ohl.o are MP'UUCUII the l*tb oE
llirtbday anni-,. oE Mr. their fint dild, a dallll*r at
Scioto County Memorial
Devis.
llalpltalat Pt:t tlmouth Clll July
I , . . . 1.141
22, wefglWng ~ poij!ils, named
......~
. , . Elllabetb. Gt , .....
can start losl'!O weilthl
MONADEX li • lfny are ....
. , and Mra. Tb eron
to t•ke. u.- ~ Radne R.D. and
f.': Mrs. A. K. Wheeler of
Uamllt. Jirs. J • • n IP!ftl
• w.t at the Wheeler home
carinB f« Mn. Wbeeler and
baby.

:
~ .
=
•.--- -- :-

2NI:.211d,~or

the late summer perennial
discussed. Miss Brwn noted
that the article says not more
than three colara should be used
in one planting and that red is
''msociable" if it is "a Dare oE
fire cr tbe flame oE brilli•M! oE
the Or! tal
. ..
She
~tlf J the. ,.,_,
mos ..
__,
peretmials oE late smnmer need
a sunny apen place with wind
protectlan sudl as a hedge,
feN", cr bouse wsll.. Tbey grow
well in ordinary sail and tall
plaota, flowers and (o]iage can
be used instead ol. stakes to bold
them up.
The ned meeliug was
planned for 'D-'ay at 2 p. m.
with Mts. Bill William- u
iMtructor f« a workahop In
ceramics. Each member wiD
make a CCllltainer. Judith Lynn
Snowden wiD have a poster of
seeds for an educational
esbibil.
PIe a at at tbe llll!etiDg were ·
Autumn Ellis, Lori Soowden,
Denise Gaddis, Kimberly
Birchfield, Carla Smith, Kelly
Brown, Karla Blown, Teresa
Brown, Debbie William•'ln,
Beth Ann Wolfe, Darla
~lliamsan, Darin Wolfe, Mrs.
Willford and Mrs. Wolfe.
Refreshments were sa ved by
Mrs. WiiifonL

Nioofw... I, William Nicbollrn,
Ills.. Dina Epple, Mr. and Mrs.
Emest Molden, Mr. and Mts.
Notman C.. Will and Duane,
lin. lla Wiseman, M . A.
Nioh ..... ,lfr.andlfrs.SethF.
Nioofw... a•,lfrs. Ruby Halliday,
5
Ills.. Pit " " Altins, Mrs. Dean ---~-----.
Blackwood and llwai, Deanna,
and DuleQe,and Mr. and Mts.
..._ N"td ...... o1. Rutland.

3 BIG SALE DAYS

FIOI YOUR FA WRITE DEALER

Use'Our F- hrtdng Lot

WATCH~~

section

""''' te.i

SWISHER
&amp; LOHSE

u.-

PLEASE PARDON···
OUR DUST, NOISE, TURMOIL,
INCONVENIENCE

•

Sunday 10:~ AM.
to 12:3.0 PM and ·
5:00to 9:00PM

a

·

OPEN DAILY

:a:oo A~ to lO:OO·I"JIILo

e:;:t::

-

.

.

Richey Is Upset
By 18- Year-Old

&amp; Lohse Drugs.

flower .00. was teviewed by Mia BawtL
1111 • 1e, and l«hnlqnet oE 'Die IDIIterial she . I*
1ted
",it,~ dlsct•
~..,. fr4m the Flower aild ~
Mrs. WiDi•m Willford wbo Magu!ne, Aupst ' - • noted
Cll:dw:tEd a ACII bbop for the tbst' ''in CO ......"J" is bow. fall
tlm7 Gwdwlrs n-tay.
peremials sbradd be seen and
lln. WIDford, a member ~ used. This meons, she Yid, tbst
the YrialdlJ Ganeners wblcb the si&amp;e and cal« oE cme group
sponsiln the junior club, ~ complrmenl o- oE its
1ft(aced the workahop with an nerghbcn.
. illilstnlted tallta1••.,.siring tbe Asters, hardy pblox, ordiftaeoce b&amp;tween specimen in ll&amp;illtiltal grass were 901111! ~

........

Claimed

Ill Innings)
Ttro 1 11en'll line jollied ba'*-s fr4m aD parts of Ohio,
Pills Oil 000 01
3 8 0 memheraJthe"'"'-J!e..... • - 1n~ · ollelc!forameeting ·
Mtrl 001 020 000 Dl-.. 4 11 1
"' ....,
, -·
Iiiii
Wal~~.
Gninl (71'-.._and }'Uid'day and today at Scclt'sllll.
5angulllen; Slaneman,Ma~
'Die occallloola tile - 1 m !ire ~ the OBA "offldal
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
(101 and Boccabella. WI'-" ·
.
n'
.;r l!yrloolgned plan the Natural Resources Dirl!ctor
~rshall · (3-6) . LP-Granl (5- ~lly"withthe"w'- 1 1 Clllll"'' ,..
to
.
3). HR,-Sangulllen (5th).
rs ~UCIII'a progt'I1D far lbe nmlng )'011". Dd getes to the Willli!m B. Nye said today the
Reclamation Board of Review,
5an Fran 100 000 001- 2 7 2 meelirC are lllketa IIIII ............. oE tbe OBA CotJicil of Ad· which authorizes licenses to
St. Louis 010 005 Olx- 7 8 1 mllU!ntlan and
oE the .a-riatloo's Dine standing
strip mille In the state, bas a
Perr.y, Barr (7) and DietZ; 01illlldtleel.
Glb$on (10.91 and Simmons. LP
A!tencfliC fr4m here are 'l'llaeua JGhi!IQII, Racine, ezecutlve "buil(..ln confli~t of . interest"
..,-Perry (10.9). · HRs-Kublak
(lsi), Henderson (13th).
vice!* INntoE'l'be Fauill!is llu*andSaviJCs Co., chairman of because ita members are lied to
tbe IIP'bltural ccmmlltee, 1111 Mrs. Muine Griffith, rasbler of industries directly rel8ting to
Los Angls 000 001) ooo- o 4 0
slrip mining.
Houston 000 002 OOx- 2 · 9 1 the Pomeroy NatiGnll Dink, a """ .... oE the bank operatklna
Nye, disturbed at the board's
Downing, Brewer (7) and committee;
decision
to overrule the
Ferguson; Forsch (6-5) and
Hiatt. LP-Downlng (13-7) .
department's first denial of a
THE JIEIGS COUNTY American Legicm baseball team strip mine permit, said
,- Cincinnati 000 000 QTo- 1 7 0 wblcb has taken fin! pllce bCIIICII's in the dl8trlct needs a helpin'
members of the board represent
New York 000 000 ooo- 0 5 0
Nolan, Carroll (9) and Bench; band.
strip miners, agriculture,
1be team wiD b&amp; gcins to A~bland CoD ge at MhJand &amp;lnday forestry and other inaUBtries
Gentry 19-9) and Grate. WPNolan (9·12).
for the alate flnala. Tt • S(Mtliitioo for team members bu been directly related to the board's
arranged but a van II needed to lrmipCII1 the "'P'iP"""l 'lbe van functions.
would liaw Ill reiiiiin for aivaal days at Ashland or else be
''The law itseH puts people
m(l'e."
returned
to
briDe
tbe
ejuipmenl
back
Ill
Meigs
Colli!)'
following
tied
to industries directly
1be artlflclai clay courfl at
the
pmea.
relating to slrip mining on a
the Onclnuall Te~JD(s Club 'INI'e
board
to pass judgment on a
Ally~~~~e
baYing
a
~o~allltii
-In
111e
way
of
vl!ll
cr
suitable
drenched fr001 a day-lq rain
Wednetl!ay, but neither player ve!icle :.... Ia ubd to "llllaict Geuqe Nesselroad, DCIII HWIIIel or miner," Nye said.
"While It may be possible for
C11J!P1aiDec1 about the condltloo Paul Cad. 'Die-. the hellier.
of the surface.
Another localgrwp Is In need oE a piece oE ..,.q,ment during a person with that background.
'"lbe court wu a little alow, the county fair wbldl c.- Clll AD&amp;. 17. Tile grwp Ia the Meigs and esperience to be fair, I still
but It wasn't too bad," So!OIIllll Hlgb School Aibletlc a-tn whidl needa an iMi"'l machine to tblilk it is a bad law that puts
said.
-for the weet at their restaant Clll the falrRJounds. Anyone people with an inherent conflict
Richey. Ida bead In hla bands wi1lbw to cbutte a JM+ftl;re fer tbe 'ftel is ubd to cmtact of Interest in a judicial
CINCINNATI (UPI)- Harold SoliKIIan swatted hla passing as he ut dejecledl)' in a corner
position," he said.
Solcman, an IS-year-old Rice shots past Richey, tbe No. 2 of the locker l'DOID, also said the Kermit WaliAII, boiollei 1* 11ent.
''These people are on an ·
University aophcmore, took the ranked player In the U.S., with court surface Will good and had
. MRS. ROBERT LEWIS, dlainnlm of a ftmd drive f« George appeals board, reviewing what
part oE slant killer Wednesday uncanny accuracy, repeatedly nolhin8 to do with his 10111.
l!lld ..,set second seeded Cliff nlcldng the lines when Richey "I 11111 my patience In the 'lbcmpom, Fllmeroy, wbo 1llda wwt a tidDey lranlplant in the has been done, and they should
......ftd' reports one belated liilli(JIWIS CG~Iribatioo has been
he lite judges, responsible to
Richey S-7, 1M, S-Uer the big- rushed the net.
second set," the 1988 Western ..,. ""'
the pubUc and not be there as
gest upset in the Mth Western
"I played the same as I have Ouunpian said. ''Then I started recel~ fr4m ..,...,, W. Va. 'Die c:aatribatim bu been turned representatives of interests
TennlB CbampioosNpa.
in the past," be said, ''but my doing nothing, just notblng." llff!t to the family. lrilfllh•l!y, the ftmd 1t1ve total weot over involved," he lidded.
Solomon,
a
abort, ovel"hands !r1!l'e a little better Asked why be didn't charge . $9,000. ~CIIllloilug the drive -lbe WiDdiDg Trail Garden Club. . The director said his
111119Cularlybul!t native of Sliver than Ullllll."
the net as much u be nCI'DIIlly
department would appeal the
~. Md., admitted It would
SoliKIICII, who plays the net does, Richey replied: "He
IF YOO PIAN TO ENIU!mo the CCIIIlpetitioo oE the Meigs board's recent decision
be "safe to assume this is my veryaeld(lll,saldhe thought be (Solcman) passes very weD, County Fair, JOU Can't nit until tbe last minute. Fair rules allowing the Marietta Coal Co.
biggest win.."
bad Rlcbey oo several crucial that's why."
.
req1llre lbatmuetentriesb&amp;hlljlded by4p.m. on Aug.12.
of Cambridge toespand Ita slrip
points during the tight first set "I probably abou1d have atMrs. Mlcby ltiDc will be at tbe fair boud olllc:e Clll the Rock mining operations near BarkATHLII'E'S POOT ~M but the ftery San Allgelo, Tel., tacked him more, though," he ~ f'alr8Nanda fnm 10 L m. to 4 p. m. fnm Mandsy camp State Park. He said he
HOW TO lULL IT.
ace came back With IOIIll! cmtlnued.
1flrou&amp;b 'l1RndaJ liSt we4 Ill accept wlrles. Deadline for beef would file an appeal with the
IN ONE HOill,
fantastic sbota.
1be wiil moved Solomoo Into anddairycat11e,llbetpanchnrlllell4p.m.Wed,...layand4p. m. Franklin County Court of Ap~~-:..
,!;:-~:'::= "He plays the clutch points the tblrd round oE the $30,000 oo Aug. 12 fer aD other deparlmenls.
peals.
·2! u:.~-~n:t; 't !if. well," Solcmoo said. "II be- tourney,wherebewiDmeetJim
wr..~ H&amp;ALTHY...., .,_"fNow came a matter of who got the Osbct'ne of Bountiful, Utah,
ol Molson Drug Store; Swisher best ahots and I got a few later today

lAwns and .Gardens ·are Toured ~l:sta;~~
a..

Workshop Held

y

1

f

.

andon 19), Hoerner (9) end ·
rver.WP-McQueenll-1!. I
LP- ndot&gt; (5-S) . HR-Freed I

I·
1,

'.

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY, AUGUST 6-7

See the bapiiS dispiiJid in fnlnt of e~~r mae. For 9' JOU

can buy a Mite, fiR. spo61~ pai' of thalli\ can of cj,
hockey -

ell:. Fer the

bucltJHninded )011 IIIIJ also

puiChase far a nidrel a piBSik bowl, jewelly, butlans and

oiiB pdies. If JUU are 29-J)-31-32 aruund the wait JOU
can buy a pair of

pas fer 9!r. We hM 4 plkiiS white

1a1a paint at $U4 e&amp;, 3 hwllic a

to se1 far sua
'

HIM aba11t a tennis·radlet PIISS fer 117 (We hM 3

11115 a 44', ane table of ter11is shall fer 33', same illle

ails'

'

.

sdlaolst.ues fer ar, sandlls ... 50', 2 ...... .

$4.00 ea., 1 Curlee suit .. $4.00,

ra q.s fer 25'.

Lots of Merchandise that is soiled,
ladies' slips, blouseS, P.J.'s, etc.
--1

A Little Cray But Fun, Frua, To StmeJ

�:r-••----------------·· .-'----~.-

t-Then.,DySentiDel,MI . . . t.l'wwrOJ,O.• Aul.l,.lt'll

.G·ih
. son ·Records Lineac:ores
Beat•
Ill h ~~;'aN•i:E -~ ~ !.Of.the Bend
200th
.·
.Tnu p
By &amp;b
~lor IAIIue R1141111

I
· A

By Unlt.cl I'NIS lo.......lionll .1

g
(7~~e:~ H:JI'n:~; ~ ;11.

llyFREDM~MANE
UPI!Iporll Writer
·Bob Gibson reached another
:nUeslone in hJs Wuslrious
.:areer Wednesday night, and he
treated It with hla usual
indifference.
Gibson, who has tended io
play down his accomplishments
throu&amp;hout hla career, ·won hla
200th major league game when
he pitched the St. Louis
~als to a 7-2 victory over
the San Francisco Giants. But,
although it ma~ him only the
second pitcher in St. Lollis
hlatory to achieve 200 victories,
the 35-year-old Gibeon was
unawed by his SCC!liiiPUshment.
Gibson, who won his first
major league game on July 30,
191!9, joined Jim Bunning of
Philadelphia and Juan Maricbal
of San Francisco as the only
active major league pitchers
with 200 or more victories. He
also is the only Cardinal pitcher
other than Hall of Farner Jesse

Haines to reach that figure.
Haines won 210 games from
191S-193'1.
Gibson held the Giants to
seven hits Wednesday night in
beating them for the fourth
lime in four starts thiS season.
Gibson, who has not lost to the
Gianta sin~ Sept. 17, 1968,
raised his season record to 1~
in becOIJ)ing the 66th pitcher to
post 200 career victories. '
Ted . Kubiak's thtee-nm homer, hla first in the National
j..eague, gave Gibson all the
offensive support he needed.
Joe Torre chipped in with three
hils to raise his league-leading
batting average to .363.
In other NL action Houston
beat Los Angeles ~,'Montreal
edged Pittsburgh 4..'1 in 11
Innings, Atlanta defeated Phi·
!adelphia s-a, Cincinnatlllipped
New York loll and Chicago
topped San Diego ~ after
winlling a suspended game of
May 16, IM.

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I

Hoen:~-...

'1......

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15th).

I

"""""'*

a.. ID select •

Conflict ·
I

•

Public Notice!
.

:7- '

"

·•

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,.

. . '· ·

The Shoe Box

Sidewalk Sale Day Has Been
Cancelled Due To Fire At Our
Store ·Early This Morning.

Advice Given by Drug User

CLEVELAND (UPI) - ifril.
Cheryl Sclmidt of suburban Independence took a .trip to New
York City to see 901111! Broadway plays.
~ "'While she wu waldting the
hit masiral "Applause," a thief
stole her purse fr4m a car she
left parked near the theatre.
Missing were ber eyegla
,
her driver's Ucense, ber credit
cards, and a small amount oE
cash.
Mrs. Schmidt was furious at
herseH for.ber carel
e11 and
angry at the thief wbo bad
ruined her trip to New Ylrl.
But even before ber relatms
here had fmiahed notifyiug her
department stores and credit
card companies about the theft,
a package ahived at her bCIIne,

--------

Walth For Other Announcements From

THE SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT

WHILE WEARE
REMOQELING.
"NEW EARLY
AMERICAN DRUG STORE"

bGrtiCillture

and
IIJU8t"lll!llt in the artistic
tiwisiclll oE •llowa show. Sbe is
CD'ftlllly sbtdylng to becmle
•auedited judge o1. the Ohio
.•
iatiOn oE Ganlen Cluba.
ID discussing preparalioo oE a
.
'
;
111"'
'
for a flower show
abibit lfrs. Wtllfard recomthai buds be removed
1tut tbat foliage b&amp; left oo. 8be
Slid once the 11"'1;""" has been
d ted the plant should be
dlsbadded several days in
athattre oE pi«tiiC so that the
plaDt hal time In heal.
Tbe specimen should be
pio '"' bro days before the
llower sboor, she ssid, allowing
s1g;. irnl time to harden. Tall
slnigbt "'"';"Mi"' mate the
best ones, she said, and
l2Utioned againsl picking a
small variety unless the

Wayne Swisher. Harold Lohse. .Kenneth ·
McCullo.ugh, and Charles · Riffle arl! your
fril!ndly pharmacists at Swisher and Lohse
RexaTI- -Drugs. They
·
have low prescription
prices and prompt
service and dlscoun1
drug prices seven days
a week. Let us serve you
for all your prescription
and drug needs.

NEW SIGNS

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI)
-The state of Callfomia
announced plans Wedrieaday to
replace Ita current blgbway
s1gns with ''international" picture symbols during the nen
five to 15 years.
Highway Engineer JjDI A.
Legarra said the change .fnm
the current signs wriltl!n in
EngUah wiD be helpful to nonEngUah speaking motorlsta and
to Americana who travel In
other counlries. 1be new signs
conform with
lldopted by
the United NaUCIII Rcl8d
Traffic Conference In lR

with 35 c:mta postage due.
'lbe pacbgP. cmtained Mrs.
Sdwnidt's parse and everything
in it but the money. Also in the
parse was a letter, written on
lbe stationery of the Britiah
Ova · as Airlines COrp., crumpled up and stuck in the eyeglass case.

is not forthcoming.
"H there is a program in
your home town that helps addicts, please do all you can to
support it.
And maybe
has happened to you,'Jb' me, won't
happen to o
, (or, who
knows, you may be hit again.)
uSo long,
~'The Thief."

'Die letter read:
''New York, NY
"July 2&amp;, 1971
''ReDo, Mrs. Sclunidt'1 am returning the items to
you that I feel JOU wiD need
very much. Also, these Items
bave no monetary value to me.
"Mrs. Schmidt, JOU have run
afoul of one of these infamous
New York drug addicts. And • ·
beUeve me, I am truly sorry
to have J)OIISibly soured your
visit to Fun City.
"But 1 did what I did for
sheer necessity and I am sorty.
"Please dCIII't hate all drug
addicts because ol. what I bave
done to you. We are sick people and need the belp of the
C'OO!munity to cure our sickness. In ICIIIM! cases, this aid

r-------.
SHIRT
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SEJtVICE
In At 9-0ut At 5

Mary Carol Femll to Wed

PHARMACY

"'""'de specificaDy calls

SYRAQR: - Mr. and Mrs. Di1ford Femil are anIMMM iDC the WIP&amp;IIDWt of lbeSr eldest rl-cJ•w, lflrJ
IMd, to lfr." !win Ray Fry,- oE Mr. and Ills.. Banld
Pry oENftHavm, W.Va. Misa Femll is a IJ71 pacqle of

mrJfJurDru§lleeils.

lllipl!iPti I" Berfla-, wbograda.atedfnm WaJwne
Hi&amp;b Sclwt' Ill !Ia, is~ at lbe l'llllip Spcn l'!anlat
Nft Haw.IL
'Blew! •litcwlllb&amp; aneveotoESept. Ziat 7:31p.m.atlbe
- · - ltlbQ Uaited Metltodist OtardL 'Die .... ;,
• ' " ~apeD dudt 1rillb&amp; chsa ;ed.

COSMETICS
AND
TOILORIES

RU11.AND - 'Die 42nd an- member present; J.-s
llllllNio holsCIIIreunioo wu held Larim, Jr., aged two 111111tlts,
bday, AD&amp;. l, an ideal day for youngest;
Mrs.
Eve!Jn
-tber.
Schilling, coming tbe fal II rt;
The
president,
John M. A. Nicholsan, bawiag lbe
W""??"'n, ~ted a sbort most cbil~en present, and
buslileSS RSSiun after a Micbael Nicholson, tbe doar
bowllifltl pimio: dinner. 'Die prize.
secretary-treasurer, Seth F. PI n( 'lll!re Mrs. Evelyn
N"tcho!i--•, read minutes oE the Shilling, Mrs. Linda FJuo:is
19711 meeting 111111 ~ the and~· and Jfr. and Ills..
treasarer's report. Norman C. James LariDa and James, Jr.
Will, Dale Nicholson, and oE Vermilion; Mr. and Mrs.
~N,·~
were ... Jo~ J'isemu, llliss Kim
Ill tlie mm~ CCIIIiiiiltlee. Bostir, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
'l'beir report_ wu -.,ted; Wisana~ and ~ Jr. and
and the follwlng ·offian fer Jacqueline oE Springfield; Mr.
1m were rh•n: I* "rlen(, and Mrs. Mari111 N"•tv!i 9 a•,
Mrs. Allegra Will; vice Dellas Kinder, and Jfr. and
;a "lent, James Nirl&gt;nm· Mts.JobnSbmingoEO!i 1#m·
and secretary~. Seth Mr. and Mrs. Rmald N"d•n;,
F. N"lchoboit. Fonst Acns 111111 Jobn Ray oE Hi11ilon:l;
Pan: will be the sill!.
Kermit Epple ~ N
iiille;
Mrs. Eliubeth McCaniber, Miss Martha Nicbolsoa of
-sedt8,ncitedalmg,J111trlotlc Pamnburg; Mr. and Mrs.
poan, "011 the Baonks oE the Larry Cart and TMn aad
Ta11
River," and Duane Penny of Reedsftlle; llrs.
Willgewanint..:estingaccount Elinl"!tbMcCnm!wrand Waid
of his Ill: a a k touroEEurqle Nic.holson, $1'. and WUI
a • ._,.t-oE the Ohio State Nicholson, Jr. oE Deder; lfr.
Ycttith am.
and Mrs. Dair If• •·•••. Mil
Priza were gival to Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. .Gale Sbtinpin
McCumber as the oldest and W•yne IIIII Pat oE IW-

Choose yours from our wide selection
of famous brands- all fairly priced.

:it

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BUY YOUR

for

these.
Ills.. Wil1fonl ihiewed the
llower "'- 1\dtEdule, "Busy
Days" o1. lbe Rutland Friendly
Club slated for Seplll, 2 p. m.
to 7 p. m. at the Rutland
£1enen'lary Scftool, She urged
wlries by all of the juni« club
-mbe'5, noting the class
SJumber Part)'," a
favorite Bl'Bngement which
cauld bave a restful loot abollt
il
Fur lll!lle under 10 there is a
claD. "Munday's Playtime,"
witb tbe cmtalner to be a toy.
Tbe 'Meigs County Fair
Floftr Sbo.- schedule incl1wles
d
far · · edtibitors _
"New Scb~othes" and
"JJaoess". A sheet of arranging
,• ·gm wm displayed by Mrs.
W"tllford who conducted an
UTIIIging workshop using
janiper
privet
zinnias
~ ~. butternY
weed and nas.
Meelille at lbe home oE Mrs.
lllnlld.Walfe,lbegroupdecided
to ......-.1 p1a11s fer a swimming
.,.ny this ...S at Royal Oak
Part.. Mia Tensa Blown, vice
I* - Mol,
1 the meeiing
with lbe pledg.! to tbe flag .
Debbie 11filliamsm gave the
secretary's report.
''OIIIin in Fall Perennials"

.....-,·a

Nicholson Reunion Held
August 1 at Fort Meigs

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.,n..

dlepart; Mr. and Mrs. Micbael

Thursday Friday

Heat and wok For L~s

Saturday

•

MEN'S WALKING
SHORTS. Reg. 4.91 &amp; Uf
Now2.33

OUURS
ocr.AS10M... PIECES
.
-v.

lOX FAN

DAN MEADOWS

does II all,
wry

10

roaiOMIIIyl

992-5759

Middleport,

BEN'F~NKUN•
PHONE
992-3498

202 Eotst #Min St• .
Pomeroy, Ohio

Rutland
F-urniture
.
BOTTLED GAS SERVICE

Arnold Grate

742-4211

-.

=~

~~Gal~

Harbrecbt Tueaday nigbt.
Named for lbe- year were
Mrs. Harbrecbt, president;
Miss Joyce EberlJbacb, vice
president; Mrs. Ethel aiffcltd,
treasurer; and Mrs. Veda
Davis, secretary.
Plans
!JI8de during the
meeting canducted by Mrs.
~:!.ee... Windon to go to
..,..;._._to visit Mrs. Harold
Johnsan in September. r..ames
wereplayedwitbprizasgoillgto
Mrs. Ethel Clifford and Mrs.
Davis. Mrs. Lucille VaQglwl
won the door prize. The
traveling prize dCIIIIted by Mts.
Ruth Ebersbacb was WCII1 by
Mrs. Ellen Ebersbllch.
Aletter fnm Mrs. C1leryl Fry
nowinthel'b!Jippineswuread.
A salad course was lid ved to
those named and Debbie
Harbrecbl. Mrs. Davis wiD be
hostess f« the Aug. 21meetiDg.

were

Rutland, 0.

BAKER

Din..-

::r,:rn:
..

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SlACKS ;i~~s Jh PRICE
12

.

GROUP OF FALL DRESSES
Values To $9.00

ONLY S3.00 '
Came See Our Otlior Items

GruiiJ RediiCIII.

THE
KIDDIE SHOP
ON THE TIN

Mli)DL.E~)RT

BARGAINS ON THE SIDEWALK
READ AND HEED!
READING TIME: 2 MINUTES

d•mnates at tbe Natiwwidt:
Beauty Academy in Co11unbols.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gress

ENJOY BIG SAVINGS A.T • • •

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS TIL 9

"·

:e::e0:,

Officers were elected at a

Mr. and Mrs. Ted Spires and
daughter, .nu, of Defiance spent
several days here visiting ber
parents, Mr. and Mrs. William
Fred Smith, Sr. and other area
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smart
returned home Wednesday
after visiting witb their son-inlaw and daughter, the Rev. and
Mrs. George Siddall and family
in Cincinnati. Mrs. Smart aeCODipllllied the Siddall family to
Cincinnati Saturday and ,_.
husband joined her there
Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Oliva"'
and famUy of College Park,
Md., have been visiting ·In
Middleport this past weet witb
his mother, Mrs. Bessie Olive!'
and Grove!". 1bey !r1!l'e also
guesls oE Mr. Oliver's sisler,
Mr. and Mrs. Arlhtr Miller and
daughter. Tetrie, Rutland.
· Miss Tenie Miller wu In
Mount Vemoo recently for lbe
wedding ol. Miss Omie Stftn.
The two were former

y fAT

SICWES

Jillngt if4armary
"THE CREATOR .OF REASONABLE DRU-G PRICES"

'.JllfA"I oJ

1 T~ble Boys &amp; Girls

Personal Notes

R...,-!

OUIIIG ·

Beige Steel C.se

Q\R:,..._.

met

NAME BRAND FURNITURE
&amp; APPLIANa5

SUMMER TO.YS - Glo. . . Sets, a...,. Mowors, a..ts,
hr•solel, a.tmlnlllll, Pltdl GoMos, Flyillg S.ucen,
Crochot ..... etc.
SWIM TOY5-~IIs, Rings. Wading Pools, Everything for
summer fun. PICNIC 5UPPLIE5-l'lales, Nad&lt;lns, Forks.
Sooons, Table Cloths, Cups, .Jugs and Ice O..Sts, Picnic
Grills, Sun Glasses.

11. TeW
1 ~~

(Jebbje Williamcm and Dlrla N~ and lc £1 I
Williamson of the MerTJ Co. •t Miltan. W. V•. Ill ...,..
Ganleners Club, al8o .made the 'lbe nalln loUr IIIII plcllic .
lour IS did Diane wiDiamPI, wiD be held in Seplr' If wbeD
Ricky and Mike Echrards, memben'!rillptber_lhlred_
David and Denny Davis and wood and matertall far .W
Mark Gaddis.
arraitging In tbe winter. Mn.
1bis is the fourth 11m oE the .Jerry Elldl wiD c:bllru.l til
club this ,_.' 0111! beillj! tO the tour. Other tours 'A4'I! plann-1
Dispatch Olllritles FlOwer and by Mrs. Tom Mattln, wbo hal
Garden Sbow in Mardi at the since resigned from the dab.

Middleport

Ptmnal NotEs

COMING SOON II
Speeial Clannce! '-----.
WALKING
SHORTS, Reg.2.47
Now 1.77

C'I.. L AT
1'\.Jn JUU 1 'riatneS
v;

Howells Here to

Pomeroy....

•

•

:id

RU'IUND- Members oE the bCIInet ~ tbe Sllowdens, Wolfes,
Rutland Friendly G.vdenas Diebls, Mrs. llruce Devis, Mrs.
Club toured ·the IaWilS and Larry Edwards, Mrs: Bill
gardensol.ltsmemhen Mitllday Williamson, Mrs. William
bepnlng at 1 p. m. to see the Wtllfurd, Mrs. Fred Williamson,
varieties of trees, ftowalng Mrs. Homer Parker, Mrs.
trees and ldtruba, -~~-. Howud Blrdtlield, Mrs. Jerry
roses, annuals, perennialS, Eads, Mrs. Tom Stewart and
cacti, and 111C.'CU!enls pvwn by Mts. Joe Bolin.
the memhen.
At each garden, plants , _
discu:aeduwellasplaoting
procedures, care and the .Au--.1 fll-.1.1:
quality of the planta. Many of
U61/U rr ~ng
the gardens used rocks,
weathered wood and bark Mr. and Mts. Vernoo Howell
mulches to mate them more oE Canllln, former Pomeroy
residenls, made one of their
attractive.
infrequent visits here recently,
Outstanding . was the roae
coming especially for the
gardw of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
wedding of their grandSnowden where Mr. Snowden
canducted.the lour, Mming tbe daughter, Kaye Howell,
ol. Mr. and Mrs. Roy
manr varieties of roaes wbidt daughter
be had mllldle!' entirely witb Howell of Laurel Cliff.
Tile HoweDs, who have lived
chqJped auger cane.
in Canllln about five years,
He also demonstrated to the
moved there due to the ill health
memben how to cut roaes and
start propagation ·or new ol. both. Mr. Howell is a f!tmer
Pclneroy h11stn m•n.
t.,ahes. He dug back some ~1be
Recently Mr. and Mrs. Howell
muleh to show how it retains
were bonored witb a party at
moisture underneath, essential
to good growth and blocms. He the bome of theit grandMrs.
Robert
also told bow be sprayed and daughter,
Nicewand.er,
Dundee
dusted the roaes to elimiMte
(Tuscarawas County) in
beetles and mildew blight.
1be group also lourned lbe celeliratloo of Mrs. Howell's
10th birthday anniversary and
gardw of Mrs. (]Iris Diehl, a
the couple's 55111 wedding anmember of the Rutland Ganlen
niversary.
Club. Mrs. Harold Wolfe,
president of the club, treated At the celebration !r1!l'e Mr.
the members to lemonade at and Mrs, Gecrge Caruthers (tl!e
former Opal Howell) and
her home.
.
Gardens visited were at the dsughter, Gecrgana, of Beach
City; Mr. and Mts. Evan Taylor
(Billie Caruthers) and their-·
Mike, Cleanrater' Fla., tbe
hosts and their two sons, Bobby
and Bryan.

and son, Pat, have returned
fromSanAntanio, TI!DS, wbae
they visited ber brother and
sister.uHaw, Majer and Mrtt.
James Roller and family. Wbile
In Teus they took a trip Into
Mexico.
Mrs. Ma1coirn Roller and
Mrs. Gecrge Freeland spent
Saturday night in Athens with
Gregory Allen Tinley, - of tbe Ruger Qulsenbaiy famDy.
Mr. and Mrs. Oiarles Tinley~ 1'bey were in Athens to attend
Hosepnda Heights, Colif., is
the O"olr-Hol.fee wedding.
here lor a month's visit with hla
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Delmar A. Canaday. He wu
r;~·-n
at lbe Cnltmbus airport
,_, UJW
Tuesday by Mr. and Mrs.
Canaday•. Mrs. Paullltapman lf;-.1-I:.,u
11
and Jennif« Cbapman
~6
~1 "J
Mrs . Paul Andrews and
dalll!bter Barbara Lang lfr · and Mrs. Robert H. aBotiGm visited in obnbua far entertained Friday night with a
a few ~ys with Ilia 11.-llary dinner preceding tile re11tarsa1
Atllliewsandlfr. and Mrs. Paul far the a fting oi their 1011,
Atidiews. Mrs. AIDews also Bob, to Miss Oleeyl Hoffee, at
visited with ber lister, Mrs. the University Inn,, Athena..
Jcwepbine Corripn 111111 Mrs. Gues1a were Mr. and Mrs.
Non McCrery.
T001 llenderabot, Misa Judy
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Divis . Martin, Mr. Phil &amp;rlndell, Mrs.
have returned after llll'llwting Wendy Wlnn, Miss Lynn
tbe a 1 el a'ldlii S!lriiCfleld with Yllttoff and the Rev. and Mrs.
her sister, Mrs. Harold Jolm- Lon1n Kreider, all of Athws;
- · Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Miss Pam Neutding, Mr.
Rldlard lftbelt wtertalned Denny Crow, Pometoy; Roba't
witb a family dlmoer with Mr. Wlqett, Jim Crow, .SJra11111 Mrs. Davia, Mrs. Jo!i••ll, cue; and Byron Hoffee,
Emma Jo and CUrtis 1,eil!ie!t, Daytm.
and Mrs. Robert Lebew,
Debr1, Cberyl and Robin,
c~:~~~ as guests. Mrtt.
DAUGHTER BORN
G
Runyoo ,... an llf.
RACINE - lfr. and Mrs.
lrmoon caller. Cake and ice
~:;were saved In tbe af. ScoU Wheeler oE Wbee1erlbarg,
lei 11000 in chsa vance oE the Ohl.o are MP'UUCUII the l*tb oE
llirtbday anni-,. oE Mr. their fint dild, a dallll*r at
Scioto County Memorial
Devis.
llalpltalat Pt:t tlmouth Clll July
I , . . . 1.141
22, wefglWng ~ poij!ils, named
......~
. , . Elllabetb. Gt , .....
can start losl'!O weilthl
MONADEX li • lfny are ....
. , and Mra. Tb eron
to t•ke. u.- ~ Radne R.D. and
f.': Mrs. A. K. Wheeler of
Uamllt. Jirs. J • • n IP!ftl
• w.t at the Wheeler home
carinB f« Mn. Wbeeler and
baby.

:
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=
•.--- -- :-

2NI:.211d,~or

the late summer perennial
discussed. Miss Brwn noted
that the article says not more
than three colara should be used
in one planting and that red is
''msociable" if it is "a Dare oE
fire cr tbe flame oE brilli•M! oE
the Or! tal
. ..
She
~tlf J the. ,.,_,
mos ..
__,
peretmials oE late smnmer need
a sunny apen place with wind
protectlan sudl as a hedge,
feN", cr bouse wsll.. Tbey grow
well in ordinary sail and tall
plaota, flowers and (o]iage can
be used instead ol. stakes to bold
them up.
The ned meeliug was
planned for 'D-'ay at 2 p. m.
with Mts. Bill William- u
iMtructor f« a workahop In
ceramics. Each member wiD
make a CCllltainer. Judith Lynn
Snowden wiD have a poster of
seeds for an educational
esbibil.
PIe a at at tbe llll!etiDg were ·
Autumn Ellis, Lori Soowden,
Denise Gaddis, Kimberly
Birchfield, Carla Smith, Kelly
Brown, Karla Blown, Teresa
Brown, Debbie William•'ln,
Beth Ann Wolfe, Darla
~lliamsan, Darin Wolfe, Mrs.
Willford and Mrs. Wolfe.
Refreshments were sa ved by
Mrs. WiiifonL

Nioofw... I, William Nicbollrn,
Ills.. Dina Epple, Mr. and Mrs.
Emest Molden, Mr. and Mts.
Notman C.. Will and Duane,
lin. lla Wiseman, M . A.
Nioh ..... ,lfr.andlfrs.SethF.
Nioofw... a•,lfrs. Ruby Halliday,
5
Ills.. Pit " " Altins, Mrs. Dean ---~-----.
Blackwood and llwai, Deanna,
and DuleQe,and Mr. and Mts.
..._ N"td ...... o1. Rutland.

3 BIG SALE DAYS

FIOI YOUR FA WRITE DEALER

Use'Our F- hrtdng Lot

WATCH~~

section

""''' te.i

SWISHER
&amp; LOHSE

u.-

PLEASE PARDON···
OUR DUST, NOISE, TURMOIL,
INCONVENIENCE

•

Sunday 10:~ AM.
to 12:3.0 PM and ·
5:00to 9:00PM

a

·

OPEN DAILY

:a:oo A~ to lO:OO·I"JIILo

e:;:t::

-

.

.

Richey Is Upset
By 18- Year-Old

&amp; Lohse Drugs.

flower .00. was teviewed by Mia BawtL
1111 • 1e, and l«hnlqnet oE 'Die IDIIterial she . I*
1ted
",it,~ dlsct•
~..,. fr4m the Flower aild ~
Mrs. WiDi•m Willford wbo Magu!ne, Aupst ' - • noted
Cll:dw:tEd a ACII bbop for the tbst' ''in CO ......"J" is bow. fall
tlm7 Gwdwlrs n-tay.
peremials sbradd be seen and
lln. WIDford, a member ~ used. This meons, she Yid, tbst
the YrialdlJ Ganeners wblcb the si&amp;e and cal« oE cme group
sponsiln the junior club, ~ complrmenl o- oE its
1ft(aced the workahop with an nerghbcn.
. illilstnlted tallta1••.,.siring tbe Asters, hardy pblox, ordiftaeoce b&amp;tween specimen in ll&amp;illtiltal grass were 901111! ~

........

Claimed

Ill Innings)
Ttro 1 11en'll line jollied ba'*-s fr4m aD parts of Ohio,
Pills Oil 000 01
3 8 0 memheraJthe"'"'-J!e..... • - 1n~ · ollelc!forameeting ·
Mtrl 001 020 000 Dl-.. 4 11 1
"' ....,
, -·
Iiiii
Wal~~.
Gninl (71'-.._and }'Uid'day and today at Scclt'sllll.
5angulllen; Slaneman,Ma~
'Die occallloola tile - 1 m !ire ~ the OBA "offldal
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
(101 and Boccabella. WI'-" ·
.
n'
.;r l!yrloolgned plan the Natural Resources Dirl!ctor
~rshall · (3-6) . LP-Granl (5- ~lly"withthe"w'- 1 1 Clllll"'' ,..
to
.
3). HR,-Sangulllen (5th).
rs ~UCIII'a progt'I1D far lbe nmlng )'011". Dd getes to the Willli!m B. Nye said today the
Reclamation Board of Review,
5an Fran 100 000 001- 2 7 2 meelirC are lllketa IIIII ............. oE tbe OBA CotJicil of Ad· which authorizes licenses to
St. Louis 010 005 Olx- 7 8 1 mllU!ntlan and
oE the .a-riatloo's Dine standing
strip mille In the state, bas a
Perr.y, Barr (7) and DietZ; 01illlldtleel.
Glb$on (10.91 and Simmons. LP
A!tencfliC fr4m here are 'l'llaeua JGhi!IQII, Racine, ezecutlve "buil(..ln confli~t of . interest"
..,-Perry (10.9). · HRs-Kublak
(lsi), Henderson (13th).
vice!* INntoE'l'be Fauill!is llu*andSaviJCs Co., chairman of because ita members are lied to
tbe IIP'bltural ccmmlltee, 1111 Mrs. Muine Griffith, rasbler of industries directly rel8ting to
Los Angls 000 001) ooo- o 4 0
slrip mining.
Houston 000 002 OOx- 2 · 9 1 the Pomeroy NatiGnll Dink, a """ .... oE the bank operatklna
Nye, disturbed at the board's
Downing, Brewer (7) and committee;
decision
to overrule the
Ferguson; Forsch (6-5) and
Hiatt. LP-Downlng (13-7) .
department's first denial of a
THE JIEIGS COUNTY American Legicm baseball team strip mine permit, said
,- Cincinnati 000 000 QTo- 1 7 0 wblcb has taken fin! pllce bCIIICII's in the dl8trlct needs a helpin'
members of the board represent
New York 000 000 ooo- 0 5 0
Nolan, Carroll (9) and Bench; band.
strip miners, agriculture,
1be team wiD b&amp; gcins to A~bland CoD ge at MhJand &amp;lnday forestry and other inaUBtries
Gentry 19-9) and Grate. WPNolan (9·12).
for the alate flnala. Tt • S(Mtliitioo for team members bu been directly related to the board's
arranged but a van II needed to lrmipCII1 the "'P'iP"""l 'lbe van functions.
would liaw Ill reiiiiin for aivaal days at Ashland or else be
''The law itseH puts people
m(l'e."
returned
to
briDe
tbe
ejuipmenl
back
Ill
Meigs
Colli!)'
following
tied
to industries directly
1be artlflclai clay courfl at
the
pmea.
relating to slrip mining on a
the Onclnuall Te~JD(s Club 'INI'e
board
to pass judgment on a
Ally~~~~e
baYing
a
~o~allltii
-In
111e
way
of
vl!ll
cr
suitable
drenched fr001 a day-lq rain
Wednetl!ay, but neither player ve!icle :.... Ia ubd to "llllaict Geuqe Nesselroad, DCIII HWIIIel or miner," Nye said.
"While It may be possible for
C11J!P1aiDec1 about the condltloo Paul Cad. 'Die-. the hellier.
of the surface.
Another localgrwp Is In need oE a piece oE ..,.q,ment during a person with that background.
'"lbe court wu a little alow, the county fair wbldl c.- Clll AD&amp;. 17. Tile grwp Ia the Meigs and esperience to be fair, I still
but It wasn't too bad," So!OIIllll Hlgb School Aibletlc a-tn whidl needa an iMi"'l machine to tblilk it is a bad law that puts
said.
-for the weet at their restaant Clll the falrRJounds. Anyone people with an inherent conflict
Richey. Ida bead In hla bands wi1lbw to cbutte a JM+ftl;re fer tbe 'ftel is ubd to cmtact of Interest in a judicial
CINCINNATI (UPI)- Harold SoliKIIan swatted hla passing as he ut dejecledl)' in a corner
position," he said.
Solcman, an IS-year-old Rice shots past Richey, tbe No. 2 of the locker l'DOID, also said the Kermit WaliAII, boiollei 1* 11ent.
''These people are on an ·
University aophcmore, took the ranked player In the U.S., with court surface Will good and had
. MRS. ROBERT LEWIS, dlainnlm of a ftmd drive f« George appeals board, reviewing what
part oE slant killer Wednesday uncanny accuracy, repeatedly nolhin8 to do with his 10111.
l!lld ..,set second seeded Cliff nlcldng the lines when Richey "I 11111 my patience In the 'lbcmpom, Fllmeroy, wbo 1llda wwt a tidDey lranlplant in the has been done, and they should
......ftd' reports one belated liilli(JIWIS CG~Iribatioo has been
he lite judges, responsible to
Richey S-7, 1M, S-Uer the big- rushed the net.
second set," the 1988 Western ..,. ""'
the pubUc and not be there as
gest upset in the Mth Western
"I played the same as I have Ouunpian said. ''Then I started recel~ fr4m ..,...,, W. Va. 'Die c:aatribatim bu been turned representatives of interests
TennlB CbampioosNpa.
in the past," be said, ''but my doing nothing, just notblng." llff!t to the family. lrilfllh•l!y, the ftmd 1t1ve total weot over involved," he lidded.
Solomon,
a
abort, ovel"hands !r1!l'e a little better Asked why be didn't charge . $9,000. ~CIIllloilug the drive -lbe WiDdiDg Trail Garden Club. . The director said his
111119Cularlybul!t native of Sliver than Ullllll."
the net as much u be nCI'DIIlly
department would appeal the
~. Md., admitted It would
SoliKIICII, who plays the net does, Richey replied: "He
IF YOO PIAN TO ENIU!mo the CCIIIlpetitioo oE the Meigs board's recent decision
be "safe to assume this is my veryaeld(lll,saldhe thought be (Solcman) passes very weD, County Fair, JOU Can't nit until tbe last minute. Fair rules allowing the Marietta Coal Co.
biggest win.."
bad Rlcbey oo several crucial that's why."
.
req1llre lbatmuetentriesb&amp;hlljlded by4p.m. on Aug.12.
of Cambridge toespand Ita slrip
points during the tight first set "I probably abou1d have atMrs. Mlcby ltiDc will be at tbe fair boud olllc:e Clll the Rock mining operations near BarkATHLII'E'S POOT ~M but the ftery San Allgelo, Tel., tacked him more, though," he ~ f'alr8Nanda fnm 10 L m. to 4 p. m. fnm Mandsy camp State Park. He said he
HOW TO lULL IT.
ace came back With IOIIll! cmtlnued.
1flrou&amp;b 'l1RndaJ liSt we4 Ill accept wlrles. Deadline for beef would file an appeal with the
IN ONE HOill,
fantastic sbota.
1be wiil moved Solomoo Into anddairycat11e,llbetpanchnrlllell4p.m.Wed,...layand4p. m. Franklin County Court of Ap~~-:..
,!;:-~:'::= "He plays the clutch points the tblrd round oE the $30,000 oo Aug. 12 fer aD other deparlmenls.
peals.
·2! u:.~-~n:t; 't !if. well," Solcmoo said. "II be- tourney,wherebewiDmeetJim
wr..~ H&amp;ALTHY...., .,_"fNow came a matter of who got the Osbct'ne of Bountiful, Utah,
ol Molson Drug Store; Swisher best ahots and I got a few later today

lAwns and .Gardens ·are Toured ~l:sta;~~
a..

Workshop Held

y

1

f

.

andon 19), Hoerner (9) end ·
rver.WP-McQueenll-1!. I
LP- ndot&gt; (5-S) . HR-Freed I

I·
1,

'.

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY, AUGUST 6-7

See the bapiiS dispiiJid in fnlnt of e~~r mae. For 9' JOU

can buy a Mite, fiR. spo61~ pai' of thalli\ can of cj,
hockey -

ell:. Fer the

bucltJHninded )011 IIIIJ also

puiChase far a nidrel a piBSik bowl, jewelly, butlans and

oiiB pdies. If JUU are 29-J)-31-32 aruund the wait JOU
can buy a pair of

pas fer 9!r. We hM 4 plkiiS white

1a1a paint at $U4 e&amp;, 3 hwllic a

to se1 far sua
'

HIM aba11t a tennis·radlet PIISS fer 117 (We hM 3

11115 a 44', ane table of ter11is shall fer 33', same illle

ails'

'

.

sdlaolst.ues fer ar, sandlls ... 50', 2 ...... .

$4.00 ea., 1 Curlee suit .. $4.00,

ra q.s fer 25'.

Lots of Merchandise that is soiled,
ladies' slips, blouseS, P.J.'s, etc.
--1

A Little Cray But Fun, Frua, To StmeJ

�•
form $'10,000 annually ~ ~p-

~'h
·
·
·
.
Bl.d vor· . omas e~FL~

=
.!..· OlJJ•t
.
tey.
·
.
D
.
erway
-·-!
·

BylRAMDIER.
VPI...._.•.,riter.
;. AKRON .,..._,.,
Obio (UPI)-,With
.,. 1M
ill a slump and m
vacalioa, it was just lille old
4 imell again fGr Arnold Palmer
llld Jed: Nktlaus today as the
t AinericanGW!Ciissic began at
Flreslooe Country Oub.
all
the center stage

w

~

~ ~o
~

~bad

ID themselves.
Palmer and Nicklaus.• who
teamed .last week ID '1!111 tbe
PGA team champi&lt;mhip, eacb
sought lis fifth tournament
victu-y of the year pm, a PGA
rec«d fc.- IIICIIeJ winnings in a
sqle year.
'(be field ol11L'l
included
h alao
·
defending c amp1on F rank

Beard, Masten willler Olarles Flrestooe course,
. •
·
its deman

.. ,.
champ Tony Jac...Un,
Ray
Floyd, Bruce lhmptoo and
hostprollllbbyNichola. But all
eyes were m the ''lig two" who
appeared frlme fc.- a hesd.to.
head batUe.
Palmer and Nictlaus usually
bave PIaye d well on the

R ose,. .nelms, Ca,r b0' J1\TOlan
t4 .

~~ ts 1 o
Shl•ne A
... S R eds. 1J\7:•
tl" lr~e
• .
'r
kept New York from 0scaring
and gave tbeCincima
-'·an
. ti ..........
the
a.+ edge wer the Mets 1111
seasm . The game marted the
lasttimethetwoclubswiUmeet

~·'·•
cluing the·~~ season.

1be Cllly nm ol the ~ame
came m
.......
. and
the top
t ofndtheto olnhth
1be 16
iming, . ~ an e
SCiftless IDIDIII!S Gary Gentry

badractedup.Hetooklbeloss,
. bis as-rec-dat••
everuug se =
.~ .....
The Reds are off today, but Genlry also slrucll. rut a caopen at b. ome Friday night reer bigbrl.ll batters, SIII'Jl8S&amp;. the first · 1118
. bls JftVl·ous ...,...
,.,..., ol nine ·
against Mm treal
.
m
game of their lmgeat heme Plldoen BilGe
slaDI ol the ""aiiOII.
Genlry and N_olan bad beenttle
locked in a pitcher's ba
througbwt the game.
But the Meta burler waited
Woodwanltoleadofflbeeigbth
inning. Nolan sacrificed
Woodward to secood and he
so:OJed when Rille doubled off
the "'oht field wall.
• ..,..
But Rme was thrown out at
third when he tried to stretch
lis bit lniD a triple.
The defensive unit was outstanding in belping Nolan ID bls
clef •· and
ninth winapinst 12 ea..
his tenth win over 1be Mets
· t "agams
,,.o •
.........
However, Nolan needed help
from Clay Carroll in tbe lmt
iooiog. The ace relief hurler
fa-' two batters in picll.lng up
..,.
his 12th save r1. the year.
Clllr
11aa
tbe
. Olf
-~ · ·
d

CHAIN
SAW
....

••

t

-·~

'

.
·•

~

·~

I

I
I
I

crJie

..;~~:in
otbertlmes,whileNirklauswoo
to their strnna
- ... ••......,

twice
w: . : 10 sii

tbe!lassic in 1161 and alao bas
sii other top 10 finishes.
-•-o, who mi ed the cut

"""u'

in
rich ago
Westchester
twothe
weeks
and in theClassic
team

G•~PiayerandslumjingBilly
~sPer were the Cllly noleable

·-•
•

(

absentees from the field.
AviciDryfoeitherPalmeror
Nicldauswouldvaultbimahead
of Casper's 1961 record $3Xi,168
and set a new mark - but
TrevinoWlll!inslrikingdlstance
~.... ...,.......
of "·-·s
two
d__...... 1be lastemp
weeks an came up
·
t}obanded.
'
Palmer, winning ·both at
·w.,.tchester and in the team
_
c
ooiiijletitim on bis home ooune
last week at Ugmler, Pa., Is
ounning to becoole the first
•---·
tllt'e~H~Iralght winnel" m tbe
tour since 1962, wheo he alao
won three in 8 row.
'"'bis Is their type of oourse,
it's certainly not the beskulted
f&lt;l'me,"saldCoody,"becausel
don't bit 1be ball that far."
Hale Irwin, still looking for
lis first toornament vicl«ry
although be has earned $62,129
in 1971, said the FlresiDne
coorse 1s playing even lmger
than usual because ol some
early-week rains.

U S Has
B:ag· Lead
•

•

Jn Games

first and third.
pia · the
TWo sharp
ys m
seventb ~ ml off two other
~ 'lire runs.
Helms again made another

!he

c~es

;=:-

Make your
.
..'·.. dreams come
true ... call
•'
us for
~~~~~~
••
•
~

\

I

•

ho e improve ent
when
ma1 1IIIL OUr home .., lie~
You etld ..... " wall u COII-Ieuee
JIIU
•
or t St• "·
experts will help lJOII plan ond build that p,..., ·
1M beet
We ello .._ roll 1M lint ..._ 1n buillllnl: matwol• ltD P. JIIU

"ldleo•

lob

~
........

lor tile IIIOMJ.

FREE ESTIMATES ON YOUR REMODELING NEEDS

••

I

I

I
I
I
:~. : : : : : : : : : :: :: : : : : : : : : : : :: : :::::::::~: I
~
J

• .......... tao· , .... checll tile 1111 I 'I*'C lob JIIU
we. can llencllt your mwwkt lllre inont filE£ lnlonnotion abaut.

0 FINISHED
0 KITCHEN

.

UPSTAIIIS

I o =.a..
I o=y ~ ~
POliCH

0 IATH!'OC* 0 Q.IIIAGE

'0O AWfiiNQS

0 I om lntorntlll In • -

hamL
I do ...... do not ...... ' - lnJ -

lot.

Mime ........ ...................................................... ..

0 FAIIM
IUILOING

s,.,e ............................

CHICAGO (UPI)-Even a
woeld championship wouldn't
make his Washington Sei!Bior's
"a solvent biiSiness,'' club
owner Bob Short told American
League owners in bis effort to
bail out the sinking franchise.
Short reported to ihe owners
Wednesday concerning his efforts to solve the finan~ial
problems of the club, and said
lhe Armory Board, from whom
he leases KeMedy Stadiwn,
was unyielding in maintaining
all current charges.
He said he had ID spend
about $800,000 a year for rent,
. and that if he could obtain "a
Milwaukee Lease,'' about $1 per
year, he would have broken
about even in bis. first two

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

Pomeroy Cement Block Co.
The Department Store of Building

.

$1nce 1915

~ers

a-~--...

412 $e&lt;Ond Ave.
Gallir-olls. Ohio

salary Medved said he
$22.000
till eco erwas
dropped
s
r v
. from an anlde operation.
while.
•

Prices
Effective
.

~ks, wb~ be!" ::! ~';:'oii;,

w:'

- ~~':

~

~

.

. Or~ :r'

amountbissaiarywOUld~cu

-~

0

August 5 to September 1

r----------------,

11011

FOR BAt~~TO·ICHOOll

PENCIL
SHARPENER

JUST ARRJVE'D
.
A-J ]I t
une ... or

10'

61h

lEGRIN SHAMPOO

Syracuse
Richmond
Lauisvil"'

TWimipeg
WednesclaJ"s Results
Syracuse II Wimipeg 3

500 COUNT

FILLER PAPER
Reg.
'1.29

rain)

(Only games scheduled)

66'

MYADEC
VITAMINS

School Smrter Special

30's

100 WITH 30 FREE

Reg. '1.49

•3.77

Open All

NOW

W'X450"

' ;/!;.

OUTSIDE WHITE
PAINT
BUY!
0

0

44'
VENUS -

•

HOUSE .PAIN
. • HIGH GLOSS
• READY-MIXED
• MULTIPLE PIGMENT

~'

ER!G~~.RS

REG. 19'

6 TO CARD,
REG. 19

Reg. 2Sc

In 5·Gal. Lois

6.84.gal.

•
E~ersbach

Hard.rare
•

2For 25$
PUS CRAYON
PENCilS
12 ASST.
COLORS
KEG. 39'

",fllfl}tlting In Hardwarl"

POMEROY

2

19~

2

!OIOR·RWI

99$

"'

~~I

SUDDE.N BEAUTY
HAIR SPRAY

• For the Nalural Hair·Do
• Look
Extra Hold w~hout

POLAROID

FOR

FOR

19~

VENUS

SENATORS

99$

'5.49
TEK

TOOTH BRUSHES

2

Free Pencil

29~
CRAYOlA
Reg.
35c

g~

FOR

BAN
. ROLLON
DEODO·RANT .
Reg. 7!r

10l

PRISTEEN

THERAGRAM
VITAMINS

Sharpener
Reg. 49c

lOO's

30 FREE
11.10· VALUE

•4e99 .

80l

39~

oz.

l·'

DEODORANT

..
BONUS PACK"'

REG. $1.07
4 OZ. CAN

.

31h

SPRAY

VASEUNE
PETROl£UM JELLY

R" 6!r

1'

REG. '1.40

REG.

8 to Pak ,

49 .

FILM

NO. 108

PENCilS

12lfz Ol

stiffness-tven in
damp irellher Reg . 95 c

CX-126
KODAK

FILM

19~

RUBBER HEAD ERASER ·

TYPEWRITER
ERASER

IDe '

FOR

VENUS - NO. 5999-S
INK AND PENCIL

15cc

•1e29

21

Reg. $1.39

CARI.

•1.33

Reg. '2.35

LIMIT 1

lOVING

REG..'2.75

SYLVANIA
MAGIC CUBES

PINK PENCIL

· No.-605· 5

"Shall

~

IOO's

Now
99~ only

a.·•- ~

COLOR FOAM

0 0 0
""'"ll .ac..- . • _,...

NO. 3979-S

VENUS

.•

··-·

ONLY

•1e29

NEW LOVING CARE

"'•'
",...,,.c
..........~ -:--

PENS

22~

REG.

QT.

REG.
'1.85

"BIC"
Scotch Tape

.

24's

LISTERINE

Thursdays

,.....

Reg. $1.49

Reg. 52.29

POMEROY
KERM'S KORNER

110 W. lAIN

Reg. 1.49
7 oz.

7 oz.

New York Clothing House

~XTERIOR

you with Rizer's healing
oil . Call us for . a tankful
today. Watch how careful

co

Reg . 1.33

69$

. ERASER

We' re on our toes to serve

GROOMS
WITHOUT
GREASE

VITALI$
DRY

."

0

thnce?"

100's

lis

5 Ol,

aa~

'

11/u!Ht

Reg. '1.60

and
Slacks.

Charleston at Richmood (ppd,
rain!
.
Roche5ter at Lo1.nsvllle lppd.

j

47~

P~.,..

Sizes 28 to 38

61 46 .570 2'"'
Sf 56 .491 II
52 i1 .Ul 12'"'
•I 68 .376 23'1:!
37 71 .343 27

l

oz.

111/t'll,: \Ill/ ~

PHI SOH EX

'10.38.VALUE

66 46 .589 -,
63 45 .583
60 45 .ill 2'"'

Rochester
Char...s!Gn

Reg. '1.68

REG. 79'

ln-tiaMI t.Hgve ·s~'!lllnv•
By United Press I n - Iiana I
W L ~t. GB

r-ter

EXCEDRIN
TA·BLETS

TALC·

BY

Bost at Ball 2nd, ppd., ram
Detroit2 Washington I, night
Chicago 10 Calilornia 3, night
Oakland 6 Milwaukee s, night
TDNJ'S Probable Pitclllrs
Milwaukee (Lod&lt;wood 7-7 or
Salton 7·31 at Oakland (H..,ter
13-101, night.
Chicago (Wood 12·81 . at
Calilornia IWrighllG-10). Dlght.
Minnesota (Hall HI at
~i:~'::'s City t Oal Canton B-51,
Cleveland (Colbert 2-2l at
wash lngtoo CShellenbadt 3-8).
ni'ttitimore (Cuellar 13-4) at
New York !Kline 8-10), night.
Detroit (Niekro3-•lal Boston
(Culp 13-8) , night.
Friday's Games
Chicago at Oakland. night
Minnesota at California, night
Milwaukee at Kan. City, night

PONDS
DREAM FLOWER

3$

REG.

5-1~1

your fawn.

Tawney Jewelers

~

=~d
file a grievance ag~t
the Eagles to recover hiS

2•
sine&amp; latil~g over as coach and General Manage_r Harland m~e Wlde receiver Otto
1.. Pet GB general manager of. the Wash- svare.
hlnhly impressive in the ·
San Francisco 6i 46 .sv.i ... ingtoo Redstino · after last Dave
WliS hospitalized
7
Los Angeles 59 S2 .532
season.
· during a dispute concenung t,
Wednesday with aelzures
1
:
:: : : · AlleniK'qllired 13-year-veterunknOIVII origin Stowe
Cincinnati
52 62 .&amp;lsY&gt; ao safetyman Ric:bie Petitbon signed ' with the New
an 'ct and unable to
San Diego
73
21
from the Llls Angeles Rams for Saints aflel' winning bis pom · was 51 . 1e and w•• rushed
Wldnesda\"s
Results
·
and Parks refused OUld
to sign
a cunmumca
Chicago 6 San Diego •
a future draft choice
t him
to the bospi.tal for tests
Chicago 3 San Diego o
pi&lt;t"ed up nmning bact Tom contract that w
cu
,
·
·
Phil
3
ight
·
Cincinnati
0 m
D ........._
New Orleans
Atlanta
a •Vorl&lt;
n
· exrbana;efrom
fGr defensive
5 I New
MITI 4 Pitts 3, 11 1m. night
_:::.~ • ,.,_ti,,__ . end
the
Houston 2 l.os Angls 0, night.
.,....., ........,
..., """' 18
St Louis 7 San Fran 2, n19ht seventh teamer R8m acqllired
.
. •Today's ProbabltPitclllrs
..., •n- _.._ ·coached at Llls
.
r: ,.,.
J;'1
New Vorl&lt; (Saded&lt;l 5-31 at ~......... ......
~n
~
Atlanta (Kelley 6-3), night.
Angeles bebe taking over
flU US
.
San Diego (Kirby 10.71 at Washingtm during the winter.
Chicago
!Pizarro(Marid!al10.71
2·11.
Allell ma•' eveoiDally gel
San Francisco
f
at Sf. Louis !Oeveland 9-9), · 8IVIIIId to making a bid or
night.
'l'bcimas, the coolroversial ruo·Los Angeles !Singer
at Ding bad: wbo·was sent bact to
1
H~~~~i~lln~:;-' :i.~ 19 ~ DallasWedJ!esobiy,uegalingthe
walker HI at Montreal !Stone- major portim •of a trade with
man 2·9 or Strohmyer •·3) , the New England Patriots.
night. FridaJ's Games
lb&lt;ma• lasted ooe day in the
Phila at Pittsburgh, night
Patriots' camp, estshlishe&lt;l
New York at A"anta. ni¥ht
bimseH as a disciplinary
Montreal at Cincinnati, ntght
...,.,_ and was cadeied off
San Fran at St. Louis, night
.-San Diego at Houston, n•ghl
the field by Coacb Jobn Mazur.
'lbomas left camp and New
Ameri&lt;'tn LNgue
England General Manager UpThe nicest selec·
E•st
tDn Bell and Tel Scbramm, bis
tion of casual jeans
W. L. Pd. GB cwDierpart at Dallas, agreed
and casual slacks
Baltimore
66
··· to call all the WeiHJil trade of
Boston
61 l9
46 .629
.i74 5Vz
we've ever shown
Detroit
58 50 .537 ' "" nmning bacb. nuoas was
for school time.
14
New York
56 .495
L - - ' to Dalla and Carl
"S5 63
.•11 23
re.........s
~:~~~~J'" fl 67 .391 25\fz Garrett was sent bacll. to New
West
w. L. Pet. GB Eugland
'lbe ~ of the tradeDacron -cotton and
Oakland
69 l9 .639 •..
offensive lineman Halv&lt;l' Hagen
Kansas City 54 S2 .509 1•
H
corduroy never -ir on
California
53 59 .m 18
androctiewidereceiver oocr
casuals in straight leg
Chicago
.
s1
sa
.ol68 18ll&gt; Jackson to the Patriots for
and flare leg models.
Minnesota
49 59 ..c54 20
Button and zipper front.
Milwaukee
46 62 .&lt;126 23

we fip-foe when we cross

For Elegance 1n Pipe
Smoking Plea ~ ure , Select a
Pipe that Needs No
Bruking ln.

CIP''!,~ ~:::dropped Monday, said he

problembynotreportlng
Diego. LeV'IIS,dealtby=
to the
for
Gene
Ron Billingsley and
F"""'"""• is as!ring foe
- .. ~·__., __ to""- Diego
money,
''""
.

oal~

L ••••••••••••
'

'flvmasprettysoon.
Allen, wbo'sgrdaallybecomiDg the Fnnt Lane rl. pro
football with his wbeeler-dealer
......_ pulled off two more
u~s laty-bls 16th and 17th
WedJ

~ ~~~;::,a;: ~I ~~~~~;r; ~~~~

ore Than

Parks was

CI)ITeCt and could only be cut to
$63.000 and he signed for that
.
w...uElse here in the triiiiWig figure.
·
d .
. w another. traded pia yer, Philadelphia
recalle Ron
I 18
Dor&gt;'tVPis,.ts
be D'jll'ised"""
if Gelrge camjL'I,
.
safetYman
011 the veteran, who
Allen mates a bid foe Duane Jerry I.eVIas, was
after

Senators Losing

•

. ·onerPeteRoz-

. .. . . .
fuliD'edraftchoices-st.and:'·.
. .

44 66 .olllO

Games today and is expected to
add several more victories to a
the
suddenly large lead in
games.
The Yanks, after fairly close
diving stop - this time oo a batUin
'th Cuba over the
gr01D1
baD
from
pncb-bitler
g
WI
Stop In and See
Dave Marsball.
first four days of competition,
Later that iming with the suddenly blew the unofficial
bases
loaded and two men out, team race nearly out of
Stull
left fielder Bernie Carbo leaped water Wednesday by sweepmg
bigbtDspearalinedriveGentry a fantastic 16 out 17 gold
At--·
bad bit to the warning lracll.. medals available f~ the day.
A walk to pinciHiitter Art
That gave the Uruted Stales a
Shamsliyintheninthwaaallfor total of 36 gold medals m the
..... ,.._,, -~~ pincb- games against just 12 for
Nwau.
.....,,.., """"""
miter 11om! Clendenon, bot got runner-up Cuba.
~Iter Ken Bowell to bit a
Track and field, always the
Pomeroy,O.
Ph. 992-2094
_...._ to sbort to end tbe US mainstay in these games,
to an end with nine
events tonight and the U.S. IS Detroit al Boslon, night
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , expected to win at least five of
. them. In one, the 1,600-meter
relay, the Yanks say they will .
be shooting for a world record - - - - - - - to celebrate the 21st birthday of years owning the club.
brilliant anchor man John
Short said he would bave ID
Smith of Los Angeles.
have about $3.5 million by Oct.
Swimming, in which the 31 to make debt and interest
United States is virtually as payments.
strong as in track, begins on
He tDld the league he was
Friday.
trying to maintain 1be francbise
The Yanks won all three in Wlll!bington and would be
track finals on the Thursday willing to sell full or part
night card, and all with Pan- ownership ID other interests
Am records. Jan Johnson of who would keep the club there,
Chicago Heights, m., soared 17 but that no one bad offered to
feet 5% inches on bis third buy iniD the group. He said that
atte~t at that height to win he would sell to interest wbo
the pole vault, 41-year-old AI would mwe the club only as a
Hall of Charlton CitY, Mass., last resort.
heaved the hammer 216 feet, 0
"I don't have any desire to go
inches, and Lynn Grhama ol bankrupt."
Fresno, Calif., took the woinen's shot put with 51 feet, 8
inches .

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto

'

-~

cbampilllShlp last week, plus Montreal

The Newest Light Weight'Chain

l

By United Press l n - - 1
National Logue
E:_t L. Pd. GB
.Pittsburgh
68 42 .618 ...
Sf. Louis
60 50
I
Chicago
59 50 .itI l 'h
New York
55 53 .lll9 12
Phlladell&gt;hia
o111 62 .436 20

..._.,.,.. 111111118 seem
lwseman TCllllmy Helms ended
I.
Wednesday's Results
a 8CCiring threat when he made
CAIJ, Colombia (UP!)-'!be New York 7 Cleve 3. !'!ght
a di&gt;rina stab and tJrew out United Stales makes one final K.C. 2 Minn 0, lsi, lw•l.'ghl
•...,
trip to the track and field gold K.C. 3 Min n o, 2nd, nt?ht.
Jerry Grote with nmners Cll mm
· e ·m the Pan-American Ball 5 Bost •· 1st, 10 ·~nmgs
In

This Chain Saw is . equipped with a
patented AV _ (anti -vibration~ han~le
which guarantees nearly V•~rahon
Free working with the saw.

~
.· BjJOECARNICELLl
.

.£

Coody, former U.S. Opel! dlngleugthri.?,I.Mlyards SIDled

lJ

CINCINN ATI (UP!) _ The
· -'ma
' ti~"" Pe·· n-•s bat
LVWU
~ ,.., ~ """""
and the fielding of Tcmmy
Helms and Bernie Carbo p1i....ced ·· •-f&lt;I'G~_ Nolan.
,.. &amp;VIc-,
-•
,
Rmelinedadoubletorigbtto
· Woody Woodward Wedsc&lt;resda
the &lt;lnclnnati Reds
ne
as York loG in a game
edged1New
bekl up by rain.
:
"'·'"'. ,_..,.,_ defensive plays
.........--...

centcut.

7- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 5, 1971

,

2

$}

. FOR

REG. fl.49

89C:

Today!
II

'

'

�•
form $'10,000 annually ~ ~p-

~'h
·
·
·
.
Bl.d vor· . omas e~FL~

=
.!..· OlJJ•t
.
tey.
·
.
D
.
erway
-·-!
·

BylRAMDIER.
VPI...._.•.,riter.
;. AKRON .,..._,.,
Obio (UPI)-,With
.,. 1M
ill a slump and m
vacalioa, it was just lille old
4 imell again fGr Arnold Palmer
llld Jed: Nktlaus today as the
t AinericanGW!Ciissic began at
Flreslooe Country Oub.
all
the center stage

w

~

~ ~o
~

~bad

ID themselves.
Palmer and Nicklaus.• who
teamed .last week ID '1!111 tbe
PGA team champi&lt;mhip, eacb
sought lis fifth tournament
victu-y of the year pm, a PGA
rec«d fc.- IIICIIeJ winnings in a
sqle year.
'(be field ol11L'l
included
h alao
·
defending c amp1on F rank

Beard, Masten willler Olarles Flrestooe course,
. •
·
its deman

.. ,.
champ Tony Jac...Un,
Ray
Floyd, Bruce lhmptoo and
hostprollllbbyNichola. But all
eyes were m the ''lig two" who
appeared frlme fc.- a hesd.to.
head batUe.
Palmer and Nictlaus usually
bave PIaye d well on the

R ose,. .nelms, Ca,r b0' J1\TOlan
t4 .

~~ ts 1 o
Shl•ne A
... S R eds. 1J\7:•
tl" lr~e
• .
'r
kept New York from 0scaring
and gave tbeCincima
-'·an
. ti ..........
the
a.+ edge wer the Mets 1111
seasm . The game marted the
lasttimethetwoclubswiUmeet

~·'·•
cluing the·~~ season.

1be Cllly nm ol the ~ame
came m
.......
. and
the top
t ofndtheto olnhth
1be 16
iming, . ~ an e
SCiftless IDIDIII!S Gary Gentry

badractedup.Hetooklbeloss,
. bis as-rec-dat••
everuug se =
.~ .....
The Reds are off today, but Genlry also slrucll. rut a caopen at b. ome Friday night reer bigbrl.ll batters, SIII'Jl8S&amp;. the first · 1118
. bls JftVl·ous ...,...
,.,..., ol nine ·
against Mm treal
.
m
game of their lmgeat heme Plldoen BilGe
slaDI ol the ""aiiOII.
Genlry and N_olan bad beenttle
locked in a pitcher's ba
througbwt the game.
But the Meta burler waited
Woodwanltoleadofflbeeigbth
inning. Nolan sacrificed
Woodward to secood and he
so:OJed when Rille doubled off
the "'oht field wall.
• ..,..
But Rme was thrown out at
third when he tried to stretch
lis bit lniD a triple.
The defensive unit was outstanding in belping Nolan ID bls
clef •· and
ninth winapinst 12 ea..
his tenth win over 1be Mets
· t "agams
,,.o •
.........
However, Nolan needed help
from Clay Carroll in tbe lmt
iooiog. The ace relief hurler
fa-' two batters in picll.lng up
..,.
his 12th save r1. the year.
Clllr
11aa
tbe
. Olf
-~ · ·
d

CHAIN
SAW
....

••

t

-·~

'

.
·•

~

·~

I

I
I
I

crJie

..;~~:in
otbertlmes,whileNirklauswoo
to their strnna
- ... ••......,

twice
w: . : 10 sii

tbe!lassic in 1161 and alao bas
sii other top 10 finishes.
-•-o, who mi ed the cut

"""u'

in
rich ago
Westchester
twothe
weeks
and in theClassic
team

G•~PiayerandslumjingBilly
~sPer were the Cllly noleable

·-•
•

(

absentees from the field.
AviciDryfoeitherPalmeror
Nicldauswouldvaultbimahead
of Casper's 1961 record $3Xi,168
and set a new mark - but
TrevinoWlll!inslrikingdlstance
~.... ...,.......
of "·-·s
two
d__...... 1be lastemp
weeks an came up
·
t}obanded.
'
Palmer, winning ·both at
·w.,.tchester and in the team
_
c
ooiiijletitim on bis home ooune
last week at Ugmler, Pa., Is
ounning to becoole the first
•---·
tllt'e~H~Iralght winnel" m tbe
tour since 1962, wheo he alao
won three in 8 row.
'"'bis Is their type of oourse,
it's certainly not the beskulted
f&lt;l'me,"saldCoody,"becausel
don't bit 1be ball that far."
Hale Irwin, still looking for
lis first toornament vicl«ry
although be has earned $62,129
in 1971, said the FlresiDne
coorse 1s playing even lmger
than usual because ol some
early-week rains.

U S Has
B:ag· Lead
•

•

Jn Games

first and third.
pia · the
TWo sharp
ys m
seventb ~ ml off two other
~ 'lire runs.
Helms again made another

!he

c~es

;=:-

Make your
.
..'·.. dreams come
true ... call
•'
us for
~~~~~~
••
•
~

\

I

•

ho e improve ent
when
ma1 1IIIL OUr home .., lie~
You etld ..... " wall u COII-Ieuee
JIIU
•
or t St• "·
experts will help lJOII plan ond build that p,..., ·
1M beet
We ello .._ roll 1M lint ..._ 1n buillllnl: matwol• ltD P. JIIU

"ldleo•

lob

~
........

lor tile IIIOMJ.

FREE ESTIMATES ON YOUR REMODELING NEEDS

••

I

I

I
I
I
:~. : : : : : : : : : :: :: : : : : : : : : : : :: : :::::::::~: I
~
J

• .......... tao· , .... checll tile 1111 I 'I*'C lob JIIU
we. can llencllt your mwwkt lllre inont filE£ lnlonnotion abaut.

0 FINISHED
0 KITCHEN

.

UPSTAIIIS

I o =.a..
I o=y ~ ~
POliCH

0 IATH!'OC* 0 Q.IIIAGE

'0O AWfiiNQS

0 I om lntorntlll In • -

hamL
I do ...... do not ...... ' - lnJ -

lot.

Mime ........ ...................................................... ..

0 FAIIM
IUILOING

s,.,e ............................

CHICAGO (UPI)-Even a
woeld championship wouldn't
make his Washington Sei!Bior's
"a solvent biiSiness,'' club
owner Bob Short told American
League owners in bis effort to
bail out the sinking franchise.
Short reported to ihe owners
Wednesday concerning his efforts to solve the finan~ial
problems of the club, and said
lhe Armory Board, from whom
he leases KeMedy Stadiwn,
was unyielding in maintaining
all current charges.
He said he had ID spend
about $800,000 a year for rent,
. and that if he could obtain "a
Milwaukee Lease,'' about $1 per
year, he would have broken
about even in bis. first two

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

Pomeroy Cement Block Co.
The Department Store of Building

.

$1nce 1915

~ers

a-~--...

412 $e&lt;Ond Ave.
Gallir-olls. Ohio

salary Medved said he
$22.000
till eco erwas
dropped
s
r v
. from an anlde operation.
while.
•

Prices
Effective
.

~ks, wb~ be!" ::! ~';:'oii;,

w:'

- ~~':

~

~

.

. Or~ :r'

amountbissaiarywOUld~cu

-~

0

August 5 to September 1

r----------------,

11011

FOR BAt~~TO·ICHOOll

PENCIL
SHARPENER

JUST ARRJVE'D
.
A-J ]I t
une ... or

10'

61h

lEGRIN SHAMPOO

Syracuse
Richmond
Lauisvil"'

TWimipeg
WednesclaJ"s Results
Syracuse II Wimipeg 3

500 COUNT

FILLER PAPER
Reg.
'1.29

rain)

(Only games scheduled)

66'

MYADEC
VITAMINS

School Smrter Special

30's

100 WITH 30 FREE

Reg. '1.49

•3.77

Open All

NOW

W'X450"

' ;/!;.

OUTSIDE WHITE
PAINT
BUY!
0

0

44'
VENUS -

•

HOUSE .PAIN
. • HIGH GLOSS
• READY-MIXED
• MULTIPLE PIGMENT

~'

ER!G~~.RS

REG. 19'

6 TO CARD,
REG. 19

Reg. 2Sc

In 5·Gal. Lois

6.84.gal.

•
E~ersbach

Hard.rare
•

2For 25$
PUS CRAYON
PENCilS
12 ASST.
COLORS
KEG. 39'

",fllfl}tlting In Hardwarl"

POMEROY

2

19~

2

!OIOR·RWI

99$

"'

~~I

SUDDE.N BEAUTY
HAIR SPRAY

• For the Nalural Hair·Do
• Look
Extra Hold w~hout

POLAROID

FOR

FOR

19~

VENUS

SENATORS

99$

'5.49
TEK

TOOTH BRUSHES

2

Free Pencil

29~
CRAYOlA
Reg.
35c

g~

FOR

BAN
. ROLLON
DEODO·RANT .
Reg. 7!r

10l

PRISTEEN

THERAGRAM
VITAMINS

Sharpener
Reg. 49c

lOO's

30 FREE
11.10· VALUE

•4e99 .

80l

39~

oz.

l·'

DEODORANT

..
BONUS PACK"'

REG. $1.07
4 OZ. CAN

.

31h

SPRAY

VASEUNE
PETROl£UM JELLY

R" 6!r

1'

REG. '1.40

REG.

8 to Pak ,

49 .

FILM

NO. 108

PENCilS

12lfz Ol

stiffness-tven in
damp irellher Reg . 95 c

CX-126
KODAK

FILM

19~

RUBBER HEAD ERASER ·

TYPEWRITER
ERASER

IDe '

FOR

VENUS - NO. 5999-S
INK AND PENCIL

15cc

•1e29

21

Reg. $1.39

CARI.

•1.33

Reg. '2.35

LIMIT 1

lOVING

REG..'2.75

SYLVANIA
MAGIC CUBES

PINK PENCIL

· No.-605· 5

"Shall

~

IOO's

Now
99~ only

a.·•- ~

COLOR FOAM

0 0 0
""'"ll .ac..- . • _,...

NO. 3979-S

VENUS

.•

··-·

ONLY

•1e29

NEW LOVING CARE

"'•'
",...,,.c
..........~ -:--

PENS

22~

REG.

QT.

REG.
'1.85

"BIC"
Scotch Tape

.

24's

LISTERINE

Thursdays

,.....

Reg. $1.49

Reg. 52.29

POMEROY
KERM'S KORNER

110 W. lAIN

Reg. 1.49
7 oz.

7 oz.

New York Clothing House

~XTERIOR

you with Rizer's healing
oil . Call us for . a tankful
today. Watch how careful

co

Reg . 1.33

69$

. ERASER

We' re on our toes to serve

GROOMS
WITHOUT
GREASE

VITALI$
DRY

."

0

thnce?"

100's

lis

5 Ol,

aa~

'

11/u!Ht

Reg. '1.60

and
Slacks.

Charleston at Richmood (ppd,
rain!
.
Roche5ter at Lo1.nsvllle lppd.

j

47~

P~.,..

Sizes 28 to 38

61 46 .570 2'"'
Sf 56 .491 II
52 i1 .Ul 12'"'
•I 68 .376 23'1:!
37 71 .343 27

l

oz.

111/t'll,: \Ill/ ~

PHI SOH EX

'10.38.VALUE

66 46 .589 -,
63 45 .583
60 45 .ill 2'"'

Rochester
Char...s!Gn

Reg. '1.68

REG. 79'

ln-tiaMI t.Hgve ·s~'!lllnv•
By United Press I n - Iiana I
W L ~t. GB

r-ter

EXCEDRIN
TA·BLETS

TALC·

BY

Bost at Ball 2nd, ppd., ram
Detroit2 Washington I, night
Chicago 10 Calilornia 3, night
Oakland 6 Milwaukee s, night
TDNJ'S Probable Pitclllrs
Milwaukee (Lod&lt;wood 7-7 or
Salton 7·31 at Oakland (H..,ter
13-101, night.
Chicago (Wood 12·81 . at
Calilornia IWrighllG-10). Dlght.
Minnesota (Hall HI at
~i:~'::'s City t Oal Canton B-51,
Cleveland (Colbert 2-2l at
wash lngtoo CShellenbadt 3-8).
ni'ttitimore (Cuellar 13-4) at
New York !Kline 8-10), night.
Detroit (Niekro3-•lal Boston
(Culp 13-8) , night.
Friday's Games
Chicago at Oakland. night
Minnesota at California, night
Milwaukee at Kan. City, night

PONDS
DREAM FLOWER

3$

REG.

5-1~1

your fawn.

Tawney Jewelers

~

=~d
file a grievance ag~t
the Eagles to recover hiS

2•
sine&amp; latil~g over as coach and General Manage_r Harland m~e Wlde receiver Otto
1.. Pet GB general manager of. the Wash- svare.
hlnhly impressive in the ·
San Francisco 6i 46 .sv.i ... ingtoo Redstino · after last Dave
WliS hospitalized
7
Los Angeles 59 S2 .532
season.
· during a dispute concenung t,
Wednesday with aelzures
1
:
:: : : · AlleniK'qllired 13-year-veterunknOIVII origin Stowe
Cincinnati
52 62 .&amp;lsY&gt; ao safetyman Ric:bie Petitbon signed ' with the New
an 'ct and unable to
San Diego
73
21
from the Llls Angeles Rams for Saints aflel' winning bis pom · was 51 . 1e and w•• rushed
Wldnesda\"s
Results
·
and Parks refused OUld
to sign
a cunmumca
Chicago 6 San Diego •
a future draft choice
t him
to the bospi.tal for tests
Chicago 3 San Diego o
pi&lt;t"ed up nmning bact Tom contract that w
cu
,
·
·
Phil
3
ight
·
Cincinnati
0 m
D ........._
New Orleans
Atlanta
a •Vorl&lt;
n
· exrbana;efrom
fGr defensive
5 I New
MITI 4 Pitts 3, 11 1m. night
_:::.~ • ,.,_ti,,__ . end
the
Houston 2 l.os Angls 0, night.
.,....., ........,
..., """' 18
St Louis 7 San Fran 2, n19ht seventh teamer R8m acqllired
.
. •Today's ProbabltPitclllrs
..., •n- _.._ ·coached at Llls
.
r: ,.,.
J;'1
New Vorl&lt; (Saded&lt;l 5-31 at ~......... ......
~n
~
Atlanta (Kelley 6-3), night.
Angeles bebe taking over
flU US
.
San Diego (Kirby 10.71 at Washingtm during the winter.
Chicago
!Pizarro(Marid!al10.71
2·11.
Allell ma•' eveoiDally gel
San Francisco
f
at Sf. Louis !Oeveland 9-9), · 8IVIIIId to making a bid or
night.
'l'bcimas, the coolroversial ruo·Los Angeles !Singer
at Ding bad: wbo·was sent bact to
1
H~~~~i~lln~:;-' :i.~ 19 ~ DallasWedJ!esobiy,uegalingthe
walker HI at Montreal !Stone- major portim •of a trade with
man 2·9 or Strohmyer •·3) , the New England Patriots.
night. FridaJ's Games
lb&lt;ma• lasted ooe day in the
Phila at Pittsburgh, night
Patriots' camp, estshlishe&lt;l
New York at A"anta. ni¥ht
bimseH as a disciplinary
Montreal at Cincinnati, ntght
...,.,_ and was cadeied off
San Fran at St. Louis, night
.-San Diego at Houston, n•ghl
the field by Coacb Jobn Mazur.
'lbomas left camp and New
Ameri&lt;'tn LNgue
England General Manager UpThe nicest selec·
E•st
tDn Bell and Tel Scbramm, bis
tion of casual jeans
W. L. Pd. GB cwDierpart at Dallas, agreed
and casual slacks
Baltimore
66
··· to call all the WeiHJil trade of
Boston
61 l9
46 .629
.i74 5Vz
we've ever shown
Detroit
58 50 .537 ' "" nmning bacb. nuoas was
for school time.
14
New York
56 .495
L - - ' to Dalla and Carl
"S5 63
.•11 23
re.........s
~:~~~~J'" fl 67 .391 25\fz Garrett was sent bacll. to New
West
w. L. Pet. GB Eugland
'lbe ~ of the tradeDacron -cotton and
Oakland
69 l9 .639 •..
offensive lineman Halv&lt;l' Hagen
Kansas City 54 S2 .509 1•
H
corduroy never -ir on
California
53 59 .m 18
androctiewidereceiver oocr
casuals in straight leg
Chicago
.
s1
sa
.ol68 18ll&gt; Jackson to the Patriots for
and flare leg models.
Minnesota
49 59 ..c54 20
Button and zipper front.
Milwaukee
46 62 .&lt;126 23

we fip-foe when we cross

For Elegance 1n Pipe
Smoking Plea ~ ure , Select a
Pipe that Needs No
Bruking ln.

CIP''!,~ ~:::dropped Monday, said he

problembynotreportlng
Diego. LeV'IIS,dealtby=
to the
for
Gene
Ron Billingsley and
F"""'"""• is as!ring foe
- .. ~·__., __ to""- Diego
money,
''""
.

oal~

L ••••••••••••
'

'flvmasprettysoon.
Allen, wbo'sgrdaallybecomiDg the Fnnt Lane rl. pro
football with his wbeeler-dealer
......_ pulled off two more
u~s laty-bls 16th and 17th
WedJ

~ ~~~;::,a;: ~I ~~~~~;r; ~~~~

ore Than

Parks was

CI)ITeCt and could only be cut to
$63.000 and he signed for that
.
w...uElse here in the triiiiWig figure.
·
d .
. w another. traded pia yer, Philadelphia
recalle Ron
I 18
Dor&gt;'tVPis,.ts
be D'jll'ised"""
if Gelrge camjL'I,
.
safetYman
011 the veteran, who
Allen mates a bid foe Duane Jerry I.eVIas, was
after

Senators Losing

•

. ·onerPeteRoz-

. .. . . .
fuliD'edraftchoices-st.and:'·.
. .

44 66 .olllO

Games today and is expected to
add several more victories to a
the
suddenly large lead in
games.
The Yanks, after fairly close
diving stop - this time oo a batUin
'th Cuba over the
gr01D1
baD
from
pncb-bitler
g
WI
Stop In and See
Dave Marsball.
first four days of competition,
Later that iming with the suddenly blew the unofficial
bases
loaded and two men out, team race nearly out of
Stull
left fielder Bernie Carbo leaped water Wednesday by sweepmg
bigbtDspearalinedriveGentry a fantastic 16 out 17 gold
At--·
bad bit to the warning lracll.. medals available f~ the day.
A walk to pinciHiitter Art
That gave the Uruted Stales a
Shamsliyintheninthwaaallfor total of 36 gold medals m the
..... ,.._,, -~~ pincb- games against just 12 for
Nwau.
.....,,.., """"""
miter 11om! Clendenon, bot got runner-up Cuba.
~Iter Ken Bowell to bit a
Track and field, always the
Pomeroy,O.
Ph. 992-2094
_...._ to sbort to end tbe US mainstay in these games,
to an end with nine
events tonight and the U.S. IS Detroit al Boslon, night
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , expected to win at least five of
. them. In one, the 1,600-meter
relay, the Yanks say they will .
be shooting for a world record - - - - - - - to celebrate the 21st birthday of years owning the club.
brilliant anchor man John
Short said he would bave ID
Smith of Los Angeles.
have about $3.5 million by Oct.
Swimming, in which the 31 to make debt and interest
United States is virtually as payments.
strong as in track, begins on
He tDld the league he was
Friday.
trying to maintain 1be francbise
The Yanks won all three in Wlll!bington and would be
track finals on the Thursday willing to sell full or part
night card, and all with Pan- ownership ID other interests
Am records. Jan Johnson of who would keep the club there,
Chicago Heights, m., soared 17 but that no one bad offered to
feet 5% inches on bis third buy iniD the group. He said that
atte~t at that height to win he would sell to interest wbo
the pole vault, 41-year-old AI would mwe the club only as a
Hall of Charlton CitY, Mass., last resort.
heaved the hammer 216 feet, 0
"I don't have any desire to go
inches, and Lynn Grhama ol bankrupt."
Fresno, Calif., took the woinen's shot put with 51 feet, 8
inches .

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto

'

-~

cbampilllShlp last week, plus Montreal

The Newest Light Weight'Chain

l

By United Press l n - - 1
National Logue
E:_t L. Pd. GB
.Pittsburgh
68 42 .618 ...
Sf. Louis
60 50
I
Chicago
59 50 .itI l 'h
New York
55 53 .lll9 12
Phlladell&gt;hia
o111 62 .436 20

..._.,.,.. 111111118 seem
lwseman TCllllmy Helms ended
I.
Wednesday's Results
a 8CCiring threat when he made
CAIJ, Colombia (UP!)-'!be New York 7 Cleve 3. !'!ght
a di&gt;rina stab and tJrew out United Stales makes one final K.C. 2 Minn 0, lsi, lw•l.'ghl
•...,
trip to the track and field gold K.C. 3 Min n o, 2nd, nt?ht.
Jerry Grote with nmners Cll mm
· e ·m the Pan-American Ball 5 Bost •· 1st, 10 ·~nmgs
In

This Chain Saw is . equipped with a
patented AV _ (anti -vibration~ han~le
which guarantees nearly V•~rahon
Free working with the saw.

~
.· BjJOECARNICELLl
.

.£

Coody, former U.S. Opel! dlngleugthri.?,I.Mlyards SIDled

lJ

CINCINN ATI (UP!) _ The
· -'ma
' ti~"" Pe·· n-•s bat
LVWU
~ ,.., ~ """""
and the fielding of Tcmmy
Helms and Bernie Carbo p1i....ced ·· •-f&lt;I'G~_ Nolan.
,.. &amp;VIc-,
-•
,
Rmelinedadoubletorigbtto
· Woody Woodward Wedsc&lt;resda
the &lt;lnclnnati Reds
ne
as York loG in a game
edged1New
bekl up by rain.
:
"'·'"'. ,_..,.,_ defensive plays
.........--...

centcut.

7- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 5, 1971

,

2

$}

. FOR

REG. fl.49

89C:

Today!
II

'

'

�..

'

~

.

..

•

1-'l'be DllllySenHnel,Micldleport.l'lmlny,O., AIJ«.$, 1971

en
I

I

•

o

.

Sentinel Classifieds
. Bargains, Bargains and ·More Bargains.In The
.

of Thanks

· For Sale

Notice

WOULD like to thank
••11
yone ft.r the lovely cards
lndlelter. that I received on

SAVE UP to one half. Bring
your sick TV to Clluck's TV
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
my birthday, July 30. Your
Pomeroy.
..
thoughtfulness Is greatly
4-23-lfc
....,recla!ed. Jean Kiser" .
.
8-5- ltp

FREEZER corn ·- yellow .
white. Pick yourself .. "lllotmis
Sayre, phone 843-2436.
l-5-3tc
HOUSEHOLD ~ Including
stove, table, old radio, Iron'
bed. See Charles Burdette. 380
Grant St., MiddlepOrt.
1-5-ltp

Autcp Sales

For Sale or Trade

'59 FORO Falrlane 500. motor
good, 57,000 miles. Phone 9'12·
6MO
'
·
8-5-~tc

1966 VOLKSWAGEN , 1969
Toyota Station Wagon . Phone
4· YEAR OLD sorrel, gaited
9'12-6547.
gelding horse - my wife's
7-29-tfc
horse - See in evenings at
Arnold Grate residence,
Rutland. Phone days 7-12-4211,
evenings 7~2·5502.
S.5-6tc

PlYMOUTH -126 cu. ln. Hem I·
.engine, complete with clutch,
~ speed, front and rear cross
members. Call 9'12-6005 after 6
p.m.
8-5-3lc
1962 PlYMOUTH Vallant •.good
condition, UlO or best offer.
Phone 696-1123.
8-1-61c
'67CHEVELLEMallbu2door, 1
local owner. V-8 automatic,
new tires, excellent condition.
Phone 9'12-2084 or 9'12-70'18.
7-4-lfc
'70 OOOGE Dart. Phone 9'12·
J597 after 5 p.m.
B·3-3tp .

Business Opportunities
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
M•norWom•n

Reliable Person from this
area to ser·vice and collect
from automatic dispensers.
No experience needed. We
establish accounts fOr:" . you .
Car, references, and $995 to
S1885 cash capital necessary .
• to· 12 hours weekly nets
excellent monthly Income.
Full time more . For local
interview, write:
(Include telephone number J

EAGLE
INDUSTRIES

----1970 CONTINENTAL Mark

1971'h HONDA. 350 Ss, 2,400
miles. gold, many extras,
looks and runs like new,
always garaged,· $750; 3-rall
cycle trailer. lights. good
tires, also trails good. S75.
Phone evenings only, 992-7173
or 992-7066.
S.5-3tc
ONE NEW bathtub, never been
uncrated. one hot water
tank. one push lawn mower.
Call Ira Beegle, Racine, Ohio,
phone 9~-~52.
8-5-3tc

19
lUI Meodowbrook Rood
SWEET CORN, pick your own,
st. Louis Pork, Minn. 55426
complng trailer, tully sell 3 dozen lor $1. Picked, 3
contained. excellent con- .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
dozen, $1 .50. M. A. Halt,
Reedsville, Ohio. Phone 378~~on. Call 992-2367 before s
62•9.
8-3-6tp COUNTRY- and western band
8-5-ltc
-----~--wanted Friday and Saturday
nights. Apply in person at t:OAL, 1imestorre. Excelsior
Jack's Club.
Salt Works, E.
St ..
WILL CARE for elderly female
S.J-Jtc · Pomeroy. Phone
.. Jliltlentsln my home. Mrs. Iva - . . , - - - - - - - Stewart, Minersville. 992 · EARN AT home addressing
2785.
envelopes. Rush stamped
8· 3·llc
self-addressed envelope. The
Ambrose Co .• 4325 Lakeborn,
Davisburg, Mich. 48019.
8-1-30fp

ROSEB-ERRY Furnace ln- AWNINGS, sfurm doors and
windows., . carport$ .
stattatlon. Free estimates on
marquees, aluminum siding
new furnaces. oil or ga~.
and
ralltng. Call A. Jji(Qb,
Service work . Call Cecol
sales
""'esentative. For fne
Roseberry , _ Racine , Ohio.
estimates, phone Charles
Phone 61o4-&amp;C-2274.
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
7·22-lOfC
Jollnson and Son. Inc.
5-27-tfc
READY-MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to ~our FOR .YOUR new shingled roof.
project. Fast 01nd ea•Y· Free
contact Roush Construction. ·
estimates. Phone 992-32U.
Phone 992-5039. .
Goegleln -Ready-Mix Co .•
7-9-lOic
Middleport, Ohio.
1&gt;-30-tfc SEWING MACHINES. Repali'
service, oil mokes, 992-22114.
The Fabric Shop, Pomet oy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
HOUSEWIVES - Even ings
Service.
We Sharpen Scissors.
free ... Earn 25 per cent
3-29-tfc
demonstrating 'toys and gifts
with the highest paying party
plan. Compare our program AUToMOBI LE insur.;,;.;e been
cancelled?
Lost
your
and color catalog before
operator's license? Call 992·
maktng any other com·
2966.
mttments. No experience, no
6-15-tfc
Investment. Car necessary.
Call 9~ 1?n or wrlfe Tov
Ladles Party Plan. Johns- SEPTIC tanks cleaned.- Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
town, Pa. 1.51102.
~
S.3-3tp
662·3035.
2-12-tfc

Female Help Wanted

Real Estate F..- Sale

Virgil B.

TEAFORD
SR.

DANa

Saturday !Night
10 Til 2
Music By Cindy Ct.rlc
&amp; TM Night Riders
4 Pc. S.nd, And Singer
From Beverly, Ollio

Whispering P111es
Nite Qub
-~

Rt. 7

Pomeroy,O.

SENTINn
CARRIER
WANTED IN
NEW lfAVEN

1Z. · 14' - 241 - WIDE
.

MIWR

.

MOBil£.HOMES
1220 WasllinghHI Bhrd ..
Bel.,., Ollio

HARTFORD

THOROUGHBRED Stud
Phone 992-2156
Service. Roman Captain No.
8-1 -6tc
637410. SSG registered mares,
$35 grade mares . . Return
To Buy
MODERN· walnut stereo, AM~rlvlleges . Greg
Roush.
FM radio features 4-speed
Phone 992-5039.
USED
vegetable
grader
record changer. 4 speakers,
7-9-30fc
suitable for tomatoes . Kim
separate controls. Balance
Wells,
Rt.
3,
Warsaw.
Ohio,
$67.89. Call 992-7085.
GUN SHOOT• Augus t 8• 1 p.m.,
43884, 614-82H013.
S.1-6tc
8'5-ltc - - - - - - - - Racine Gun ClUb.
8-4-·tp - - - - - - - SINGER zig zag , sewing
ANTIQUES.
telepnones.
brass
machine needs no cams, all
MEIGS SENIORS call Grover's
beds.
clocks,
dishes
,
old
buill +in features. Makes
Studio now . Make ap.
furniture, etc. Write M. D.
bullonholes, etc. Pay balance
polntment for your senior
Miller, Rt . •· Pomeroy. Ohio.
$49.75. Call 992-7085.
portraits to be taken during
Ca II 99'1-6271 .
S.1-61c
week of August 23rd. Save 10
;
~
t f
7.9-tfc
t
per· cen on me coo o your - - - - - -- - CANNING tomatoes, picked
otder. Phone 992-2475.
S1.50 bushel. Raymond Rowe,
·
8-4-lotc
phone 247-25-47.
8-3-31c
GUN SHOOT, Forked Run 1968 CHEVY, 2 docir hardtop.
air conditioning, power
Sportsman Club. Sunday.
steering and power brakes. • GRAVE lot
Chesler
August a..12 noon.
1969 Camaro, 4 speed. 350
Memory Gardens. Phone 9'12·
8-4-3tc
engine. Phone 992-~7 .
5771. Roland Russell.
.
7-23-tfc
8-3·3tp
i&lt;OSCOT Kosmetlcs, July---:-::-::---:-:August" special, Kare KonlWO mate A. K.C. registered
ditfon oil ss. Value now only
beagle pups. 8 weeks old. ~
$2.50. Distributors, Brown's,
each
.Phone 9'12-3126.
phone 992-5113.
FURNISHED
and
unfurnished
8-3-3tp
7-Hfc
apartments . Close to school , - - - - - - - - : - : - : Phone 992-~.
GENTLE 2 year old saddle bred
RUMMAGE Sale, Friday and
10-18-lfc
stud sorrel, 2 white sox.
Saturday. Fry Building.
Phone 992-2436.
Middleport. 9 a.m . to~ p.m.
8-J-ltc
furnished . Phone
S.~·2tC 5 ROOMS Mrs . A. R. Knight 9'12-243:
S.l-6tc ONE gentle Morgan riding
1WILL NOT be responsible for
mare, also her gelded
any debts contracted bl.
yearling thorobred . Phone
anyone other than mysel . TRAILER LOTS, Bpb's Mobile
773-S333
or write Box 286,
Signed: Charles Aeiker. ·
Court, Rt . 124, Syracuse,
Mason,
W.
Va.
S.~·31P
Ohio. 992·2951.
S.J-6tp
AKC REGISTERED black
Poodle, miniature and toy for FURNISHED apartment in CANNING tomatoes, already
stud service. Call 992-6978.
country, Ideal for con picked, $1.2S bu ., bring
struction worker or couple,
8-3-6tc
containers . Geratdine
IS-minute drive from town.
Cleland, East Main. Racine.
Wi II accept one child. Inquire
7-28-tfc
337 N. 2nd St., Middleport.
8·1-7tc TREE ripened peaches at the
NOTitE OF
Mason
Peach
Orchar~
APPOINTMENT
C•n No. 20527 HOUSE, 1637 Lincoln Hgts .• 4
slarling Sat., July 31st. Hours
Estate of LEWIS MARION
rooms, bath, basement, aHic,
9 a.m . to 6 p.m. Phone 773·
BROWN. Deceased.
storage and
driveway.
S5S9.
Notice Is hereby given thot
Available alter Aug . Sth .
7-30-6tc
Vlruii .V. Brown, of Pomeroy,
Phone 992-2780 or 992-~2 .
Ohio, has been duly appointed
B-3-lfc
Administrator of the Est11e of
HALF RUNNER beans, $2
Lewis Marion Brown, deceased ,
bushel, p ick your own .
late of Meigs County, Ohio.
TRAILER. Brown's Trailer
Cucumbers and toma1oes .
Creditors ore required to file
Park. Minersville, phone 9'12·
Clarence Prolfilt, Portland.
their claims with sold fiduciary
3324.
Phone 8-13-2254.
within four months .
8-S-6tc
S.3-15tc
Doled thiS 19th day of July
1911.
John C. Bacon COUNTRY home, close to
Probate Judg~ of said Countv
Forked Run Lake. Must have
references . Prefer retired
17) 22,29 (8) 5, 31
couple. Free gas, unfurnished
or partly furnished . Call 378·
Here's the way it works ...
6298.
vou get seven ice cream
8-5·3tc
bars, or a half-gallon of ice
'l1le AlmaDac
cream. FREE for every
cubic foot you buy in a Un ico
ByUDitedPrmiDteruUouJ
freezer , refrigerator or
Today is Thlll"lllay, Aug. 5,
combination .
the 2171h day of 19'11.
APPLES. Peaches, Fitzpatrick
UNifO 20 FT. UPRIGHT
The moon Is between its first Orchard, Stale Route 689.
FREEZER
26U5
.
d full ha
Phone Wilkesville 669-3785.
With th is one you get l.COfree
quarter an
p se.
8-1 -10tc
ice cream bars or 20 half
The morning stars are Venus, - - - - - - - gallons of FREE ice cream .
Mars and Saturn.
15 CU. FT. KELVINATOR
POMEROY
'!'he eveni"" stars are Mereu- freezer. new; one month old.
J1ck W. Canty, Mgr. ,
~..,
44magnumplstol, new ; 12ga.
Phone "2·2111
ry and Jupiter.
double barrel shotgun, 12 ga .
Those born on this day are 36" borret goose gun. new. 16 FT. TAGALONG travel
Jack Layne, Prospect Hill ,
Wlder the sign of Leo.
trailer. fully sell contained.
"
"
d
Pomeroy.
Ready to go, $1500. Phone 773French noveus 1 ,.uy
e
8-4-Jfp
5651. Mason, W. Va.
Maupassant was born Aug. 5, - - · - -- - -7-23-llc
1150
.
NEW 1971 ZIG-ZAG sewing
'~'- da . h' to
machine In original factory
On. u""
Y m IS ry:
carton . Zig-zag to make
In 1861 the U.S. government buttonholes. sew on buttons,
imposed the first Income tax
monograms, and make fancy
36"x2J"x .OOt .
· designs with just the twist ol a
All Incomes over $800 were single dial : Left in lay-away
taxed 3 per cent.
and never been used. Will sell
for only $47 cash. or credit
terms available. Phone 992-

Wanted

------

For Sale or Trllde

For Rent

------

------

.LEGAL NOTICE

----~--

For Sale

For Sale
Alu.mirium ·
Sheets

8-4-61c

We talk to )1111
lille a pnn.

WMP0/1390

- -- -vacuum
ELECTROLUX

cleaner complete with af .
tachments, cordwinder and
paint spray. Used but In like
new condition. Pay $34.45
cash or budget plan available.
Phone 992-5641.
·
8-4-6tc
CLEAN INGEST carpet cleaner
yo u ever used, so easy 100.
Get Blue Lustre. Rent electric
shampooer, St. Baker Furn~ture

USED OFFSET PLATES
.
HAVE
MANY USES

20'
The

lforSI.OO

Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy; Ohio

Company.
8+61c

1 ......

.PdMUOY
HOMi&amp; AUTO

MOTORCYCLES
Mid-Summer Slife
On All Mo&lt;tels .
S.ve Up ToS2GO.OO
OverlO Percent
HAWIC'S3-DAY
CYCLE SALE
2 miles south of Athens, 0 .

992-2tt4

606 E. Ml.in

Pomeroy

· OfFICE SIJIPUES
And

FUIIIlURE

RaJIIC I CARPEIITEI

~

6.98 Plus
Parts
Blaalhtar's

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

NEW &amp; ciLD WoRK

PomenJJ Hoine &amp; Auto

All Weatller RHfing &amp;
c
ildiN Ca. Mil An-

PHONE ft2-21G

HARRISON;$ TV AND AN·
TENNA SERVICE . Phone
992-2522.
WILL DO paneling, ceilirg$. a ll
6-l().tfc
·~=~ of carpenter wart.
7Q-3344.

_ , ....- . &amp;

-

~

bedroom.s . l&gt;ath,
central heat and air conditioning. MIDDLEPORT

$10,000.00 - 3 large ooms
with large closets. Bath, gas
hell, garage on corner lot.
MIDDLEPORT NEW
LISTING
$20,000.00 - 2 barns. 5 room
home . bath, furnace, IU
ACRES.

NEIGLER Construction. For
building or remodeling your
home. Catt Guy Nelgler,

r========~
Roofi~rpenter

RALPH'S ·cARPET Up·
holstery Cleaning Sl!rvice.
Free estimates.
Phone
Gallipolis oW6-0294.
J.12-tfc

Openanu

Monday tiro Satunlly
·606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

-ling.

Co•plele
PI• Mlli•g.
Heafi.. alld Air Con••· . I
I
2• I Sf., Middlopof1

HOUSE, 5 rooms and both, has
new aluminum siding, storm
windows and doors. good
ccndltion, in · Monkey Run
area. Priced reasonable. Call
992-7121 or 992-3784.
8-3-tfc
-A-P-PR-O.,-X_I_MA-::T:::E-:-L:-:Y-:1-a-cr-e tot
with drilled well, at Dexter,
Ohio. Phone.992-3223.

. 8-3-Jic

HOUSE, 1~ Lincoln Heights.
Catl Domy Thompson, 992·
2196.
7-18-tfc
HOUSE. 1640 lincoln His .,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
1().25-tfc
3 BEDROOM brick home.
Choice location In Middleport.
Seen by appointment only.
Phone 992-5523 after ~ p.m .
5-7-lfc
\:ONVENIENT but secluded
building tots on T79 at Rock ·
Springs. Within walking
dostance of Meigs High
Schoof, a 5 minute drive from
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
Witte weekends or after 5
p.m. weekdays. Phone 9926887.
7-11-tfc

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

SIX ROOM house, bath. full
basement, 133 Butternut Ave.;
jusl walking distance from
downtown Pomeroy. Contact
Ed Hedrick, 2137 Wadsworth
IXive, Columbus, Ohio, phone
237 -~. Columbus.
-5-9-lfc
NEW, 3-bedroom home in
Middleport. Buitl-ln kitchen,
ceramic lite both, all-eteclrlc
heat, good neighborhood. Can
arrange FHA financing .
Telephone 992-3600 or 992-

NEW&amp; DLD WORK
All . ._ . R r1111 &amp;
511 ....... Ca. . . . "

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

C..llte Plw
Ne 'i:y
O'DELL WHEEL alignment Mll~c lir · a
located at Crossroads. Rt. 124. Nt l.illorlll Sf. Millil...... 0.
Complete front end se&lt;vice,
m-:r:s.
tune up and !rake service.
. ..
Wheels
b~lanced etec'"=c~ 1 i
Ironically . · All
work
guaranteed .
Reasonable
rates . Phone 992-3213.
.QUEEN and Shamblin C.....
7-27-tfc
strucllon . Roo fi ng ,
•

DutsoN MASONRY

Route, in small community.

includes. ground - IQQx:JOO
and modem building together
with all equipment . NOT
VERY OLD.
POMEROY - ALMOST NEW
BRICK HOME - 3 farge
bedrooms. double closets.
beautifUl buitt-in kitchen for
mom, carpeted. full basement
wilh recreation room . tots ot
storage. utility room. about
one acre of ground, concrete
basketball court, carport, air
conditioned. $27,500.
WANT TO SELL? YOU HAVE
THE PROPERTY WE
HAVE THE BUYERS LET'S GET TOGETHER.
HENRY CLELAND
REALTOR
Office ft2 ·22St
Residence tt:-25atl
· 8-Htc

Kitchens, &amp;.Ills
Room Additions

.And Patios
Blckhoe .And
Endloader Work
Septic Tonks
And Leodl Beefs.

Sopliclar*:sinsfal led.George .
Cllill) Pullins. Phone 992-2.al.
4-25-tfc

&amp;ouNDS
EXCITING
AND LIKE

LOT50F

L--------""""""'

N'OTICEJ

a...
Mante CaOO Cue. '3695,
I 1970
Beautiful Galli Beige color with blk. vinyl roof, factory air
1 cudilimoing,
linled glass. black nylon bucket seats,
wosole, Paoilradion axle. 400 cu. ln. engine. Turbo
I r.l.,..unaspeaker.
lic. _.steering, power disc !rakes. radio&amp;
guards &amp; Rally Wheels. unI da I. S..w, Save.bumper
Balance of warranty.
11970 ..... tpe. .
'3495 1
I Sport
l..eS5- II.GIID miles &amp; appearance of 71 model, Rally · I
Clas.sic a&gt;pper with sandalwood Interior,
I - equipped.
gtau, factory a ir COildltioned. sports mirrors. 1
II -..s.
wosole, air spoiler. hydramatic, power steering
.lll cu. in. V.J ..,ine. Really Sharp.
1
seal

Bill Miller is joining our Company. a specia list
in air conditioning and refrigeration. boftl
home and commercial.

OONTACI':

&amp;

ANTII)NY PWMBING &amp;IIAnNG
240 Uncoln St .• Middleport

OR PHONE
992-2550 DAYS OR 992-3509 NIGHIS

11970 a.ulel SeMi' 4 Doer '2995 I
~ "-ltl,llllllmilesby focal....,., . Sharp as new In all I
I ways.
finish. 3.50 V-8 engine, power .
1
1 stw ilog..wllile .,..wllife.watls,
wh. covers.
I :19M
a.dll------------ ~ I
¥i T.., Pidup, wide body. G78x1S tires. H. duty rear I
I spilogs. ,_.step bumper, tess than 9000 miles and leS$ I
I ._,mo.olcl. Beautitut
-- red finish . Shows best of care. I
II 1966
a. 2 TCII-------Only $1750 I
ll"cabtonte. good825x211 tires, 2 speed rear axle, Int. &amp;
like,_ truck. cyl.
cu. in: eng. A real clean I
I trv&lt;k.
II 1966 P1J. VI-Sta. Wapi _______ '895 I1
V.J engine, good lire. dean body &amp; nice vinyl Interior, I
trans., steering. radio. luggage rack .
I automatic
Regolarty Priced at S11195.00 Special!
I
I 11965 a-*~ Impala Cpe.-----·'895 I
II· J96.ar.
in. V-1 engine. 3
std. sllilt, clean Interior. I
nicebluefmish.goodHres, radio &amp;heater. A fine buy.
1

THE 11 IEA, ..
GOES ON··

cab

The 'Bur goes on ... - are ........ &amp; h lilol all..,.
new car deafen willl our 'd"' ' blo' dells • lt71cars during ""r clearance N fe ••• 42 jorsf a _ . _ , ....,
to lOin 5lodl now ... • m wllile sekcliuw is sliH .... below ~re 10111e " " ' Arrials • IIIW ar lri ' ·- all
prices in effect en ""r used ur tat, tao.

6

AOR088

1965 DODGE 0100 Sweptline 1h ton pickup,
slant six, 3 speed, long bed. new paint.
,..

II
II

Ford Thunderbird 2 door hardtop. V-8.
automatic, p. st., p: br.• 46,000 miles.

Oldsmobile F85 -4 door sedan. V-8,
automatic, lots of m iles left here.
1962

1968 Pontiac Tempest LeMans Sport Coupe.
au1omatic, p. st., sharp late model trade.

Hornet SST 4 door sedan. six cylinder,
radio. sharp as a tack.
1970

1964 Dodge Custom 880 4 door sedan. V-8.' tflite. p. st .• sharp as a 1971.
See the •• Dependilbles" at R.lwlings
Peiirl Ash, Emerson Jones, lilian- Wolfe,
Wallace Amberger. Dick Riiwlings.

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS
992-2151

Middleport. o.

992-2152

1
I

II
I

I .

•••••

Pomeroy

___

l •v " ' '""

brown

6. R&lt;sldue

oeedy
'1. Faucet
8. Time In

26. Tal&lt;e

der

32. llold

oftlee

9. Belligerent
state
11. Diverted
H. Carpenter,
for one

you 10!

34."-

Trlate ..

•

SlbeUu
cornpoaoltloll

19. Pen
20. Jazz
great,
Kid - ·
21, lnltlblt
23. Conlumed

at«~/ FIC&amp;ZE Rl8lfl'
'IIIERE! HAI'fN'T '100
HfARI&gt;IT'S LW'OLI7E

'

•

I
39.N.T.
book
(abbr. )
40. AI·
tar
con·
stella·
Uon

PRJJ'E

.,..

'

"'"~'­

I t)

I (

IOSMACT ~
INDOAJ

I

r

'i

I

II
1

v~

Now...,..... tho elrcW IIUin
tor.... the ............. .

lrrt-+--t ~~~1-.~.A==~::::::~;;::~"-~A:.,suaeolad bJ tho...._

I

u .- k

Prillat . .IIISIII..,

28.Coop

resident
28. lUUilriOUII
31. Linoleum
prole&lt;:tor
32. Appendage
33. Bulgarian

o:-"''*""'

tA ·auo too

I

JaoOblcooLUNOI DICAY AnAIN

Ynt~rd•y'•

rt111

I tiiiUl tJ
-At.

Am•er1 One con'« DO IT - A "DU.JT'"

coin

35. Likely
36. Color
37, G""'k
letter ·
38. Speclalty
of14
Down
(Jwdot.)

•

CAPl'AIN EASY

n.Purport
U.Brald

DAILY CB'fl"l''QUOTE- Here'• how to work It:
AXYDLBA.t.XR.
.. LO:NGi'J:LLOW
oae ~ llfmpiy atandl tor .,..thor. In IIIIo oample Ji. Ia
UOid for U.. thne L's, X tor tlte two O'o, etc. Slntrle totten,,------ - - - - , r~~~~~~L'~=l
apoetrvpllu, u.. leltlth ond tormatloll ot the wordo .,.. all WE J)II)NT COO

ltllltll. -

p

~I.AICE~~lii~BE~~~~~ r

417 tileA oode
Jotten an
oan.....,.
ca dlttemtt.
.......

KRFMWR

LJ

WR.FllFL

FllJT

MF

llDVHPTLRK

KT

!.IWR

.JY

DPT.-LP8llLlF

r-_..

7

JVVWR~·-

LOR ' TP· 1--~

r----t

;..J
I

'

._..,..._
..

.
'.

'

U~~~eramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each oquue, to
form fou·r ordinary words,

211. Ernmet

26. Goulet
27. CUr·
rently
exlltlng
29. Football
team
30. Aboml·
nate
31. Squan·

""-''

II
I

yOUT Uaeuy Dt!JJler
992-2126

eiB.Bitc, with
'"Tbe"
ped ..tal

I

Open Eves- Till

titan
5. Shabby;

16. Welotlt
river
17. upthe
works
18. One
kind of
herring

1·Pomeroy Motor Co. I

I
1

Weill
(2 wd!r.)

I

I

2. Tltoucttt
3. Altered
.f. Sooner

15.Put -

22. Nut·

pl&amp;ce

spin

c ity

I
All Shas
I
New '71
Chevrolets
I
.
I
'sa Time To IUY.I
a Time To Savel 1

I
I
I

1. Go fora

-

Clearance Priced

1
I
I
I
I

DOWN

13.H. G.

'

Now~Do lotlti

paid

darn
10. Puccini's
forte
12. Colorado

vinyl roof, .....--.

1962

43. nous
44, Price

1. AddlUonal
5. AootheU·

5pl!l!d,

Special.

JI&amp;Mffi~®f'J =!!:! ...J r::

AlLY CROSSWORD

Price

1964 Ch~ysler New Yorker 4 door sedan, V-8.t·
trite, power everything, ready.

11E~~!

292

119&amp;6 a-*~ Impala Cpe. ______SJ99 1
I 6 Cyt_ sfanr:L trans., focal I owner car, good tires. radio, 1
I - a . Reg. St09S.OO. Special.
. 1
1 1966 Buick
Cpe. ______ '1195 I
tran.s.. _ . r steer ing &amp; brakes. good w-w I
I JWiornalic
lires.radioa. he;ofer, whi"'finlsh. ct•an Interior. Reg. price I
I SIJ95.00.
1 1967
Fan1 LlD------------·'1595 I
!rakes, vinyl interior, blk. I
I ~OaorS&amp;Ian. ~steering&amp;
finish, radio. new w-w tires, V-8 with
l i e trans. &amp; faclory air conditioning - Special. I
I -Special
I
I

1966 Dodge Coronet '440' -4 door sedan. V-8, f.
trite, p. sl., very nice. one owner trade.

tl,~ICS

l PUT IT 'lH~!

~

Anthony Plumbing &amp; Hei11ing is now open '
Days a Week.

oW9&gt; HE

lllAT AAISl: 't'll\li f!iml
HCUilDtlll- NE ABOJT...

gold

601 e.st Main
POMEROY

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY A DRIVE-IN located on State

Comvlere
Remodelimc
.

;

7-25-lfc

WANT TO BUILD? We have
two nice building sites. one
has a house on it which does
need some repair. Located in
Pomeroy on quiet street .
GOOD BUY $6,900.

l--,L=I=O=N~S!!

, ,

2186.

Cleland Realty

--f'

RJN/

$35,000.00 - Beautiful NEW 8
room
ranch home, -4
bedroom.s with large closets, 2
full baths. Double garage. - - - - - - - : : : : ----:
remodeling.. al uminum
15 ACRES.
0 1 BRIEN ELECTRIC SER- ~ng
. . Plule . 992·132~Gr 70·
VICE . Phone 9~~~ _,.
5-ll).tfc
IJ+121c
$12.500.00 large 3 bedrooms.
bath, furnace , garage.
.:.iiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiRACINE
•
FOR APPOINTMENT
CALL tn-3325
HELEN L TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
S.1-6tc

IT'S a-lE OF THEFINE~T CLA~SES
WE.''-IE EVER GP.ADUATED.•rT!-1
IN LAM&amp;sf!-

Spouting. Roof
Pitinling

I

Tt-IING!

0\lf~EM!

Racine, Ohio.

7-31 -Hc

At.rf-

SO 001-l'l' JUST
SIT ll-IERE LIKe A
OODfSA'(SoMET~IN6
1o ME THAT HECAN

•

SPOUIIIIG,
•llOOf- PAIIIIJRG

PAPER HANGING, Interior.
l-5-3tp
and exterior painting. PIDie ---:---:-:--:--::-~
" " - 992-2550
992-3630.
PIANO luning. Lone A. Daniels.
_,__.
1~·- _o::w..-ienced
$6,500.00- 2 bedrooms. bath,
7-IJ.lOip
Phone 992-5509. Ref&amp;aOC£.
............. •
garage, gas heat- 2nd house.
Elbet ~ds.
&amp;-5-3tp
Wortc Guitran1ee41
6 rooms , bath . $4,500.00. boG · grooming
Poodles,
- ·
F.
BASHAN
Schnauzers. Experienced
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
See US 1Or
ree
professional
work,
no Reasonable rate. I'll. -.oa,
Estimille on Furnace
$7,500.00 - ~ bedrooms, bath,
tranquilizers, gentle handGallipolis. John Russel l.
lnstalilfion.
garage.
Fenced
yard .
ling, S5 up. c.x.lvllte 667-6214.
Owner &amp; ~alor.
1...:====~---_j
MIDDLEPORT
_ _ __ _ __ 7_-~_
· 12tp...:..
5-13-tfc BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
2 bedrooms.
$9,500.00 paneled, bath. large lot.
RUTLAND

END! .

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
" 15.55 '

..

I

ANYTI-Itl'ltl·-1

l WIWT 10 MAKE Fl2t:&lt;KLES
.JEI'J..OCF;!

Ph!lne 593-166,

Specilol
At

5-1-tfc

HAVE THE ANSWER ON tiE
TIP OF YOUR. 'TON'UE

SAY

WHEN THEY a:\Y.E BY HE12E.

-ON ~E OTWEit.

Open Mon .• Wed.. Fri.
10 o.m. to I p.m.

IIIII Y• S.S.-I"
AiC~1"1

NO... ANTs' HILL

All, CWD, l SEE VOIJ

Rt.:tl

Stop In iilld See Our
Fro. Displily.

lltMK!IanicSfneel
!'limeroy, 011io

$1~,500.00

and

5641.

Bo'lilaor ·

C. BRADFORD, AuctiComptete Servia!
Phone9&lt;19-31121
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford

CHARGE IT
TO MV .ACCOONT

Business Services. J

•

Help Wanted

Notice

.

Business Services

Business Services

JEST

•
----·---------------------------

•"

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

..

�..

'

~

.

..

•

1-'l'be DllllySenHnel,Micldleport.l'lmlny,O., AIJ«.$, 1971

en
I

I

•

o

.

Sentinel Classifieds
. Bargains, Bargains and ·More Bargains.In The
.

of Thanks

· For Sale

Notice

WOULD like to thank
••11
yone ft.r the lovely cards
lndlelter. that I received on

SAVE UP to one half. Bring
your sick TV to Clluck's TV
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
my birthday, July 30. Your
Pomeroy.
..
thoughtfulness Is greatly
4-23-lfc
....,recla!ed. Jean Kiser" .
.
8-5- ltp

FREEZER corn ·- yellow .
white. Pick yourself .. "lllotmis
Sayre, phone 843-2436.
l-5-3tc
HOUSEHOLD ~ Including
stove, table, old radio, Iron'
bed. See Charles Burdette. 380
Grant St., MiddlepOrt.
1-5-ltp

Autcp Sales

For Sale or Trade

'59 FORO Falrlane 500. motor
good, 57,000 miles. Phone 9'12·
6MO
'
·
8-5-~tc

1966 VOLKSWAGEN , 1969
Toyota Station Wagon . Phone
4· YEAR OLD sorrel, gaited
9'12-6547.
gelding horse - my wife's
7-29-tfc
horse - See in evenings at
Arnold Grate residence,
Rutland. Phone days 7-12-4211,
evenings 7~2·5502.
S.5-6tc

PlYMOUTH -126 cu. ln. Hem I·
.engine, complete with clutch,
~ speed, front and rear cross
members. Call 9'12-6005 after 6
p.m.
8-5-3lc
1962 PlYMOUTH Vallant •.good
condition, UlO or best offer.
Phone 696-1123.
8-1-61c
'67CHEVELLEMallbu2door, 1
local owner. V-8 automatic,
new tires, excellent condition.
Phone 9'12-2084 or 9'12-70'18.
7-4-lfc
'70 OOOGE Dart. Phone 9'12·
J597 after 5 p.m.
B·3-3tp .

Business Opportunities
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
M•norWom•n

Reliable Person from this
area to ser·vice and collect
from automatic dispensers.
No experience needed. We
establish accounts fOr:" . you .
Car, references, and $995 to
S1885 cash capital necessary .
• to· 12 hours weekly nets
excellent monthly Income.
Full time more . For local
interview, write:
(Include telephone number J

EAGLE
INDUSTRIES

----1970 CONTINENTAL Mark

1971'h HONDA. 350 Ss, 2,400
miles. gold, many extras,
looks and runs like new,
always garaged,· $750; 3-rall
cycle trailer. lights. good
tires, also trails good. S75.
Phone evenings only, 992-7173
or 992-7066.
S.5-3tc
ONE NEW bathtub, never been
uncrated. one hot water
tank. one push lawn mower.
Call Ira Beegle, Racine, Ohio,
phone 9~-~52.
8-5-3tc

19
lUI Meodowbrook Rood
SWEET CORN, pick your own,
st. Louis Pork, Minn. 55426
complng trailer, tully sell 3 dozen lor $1. Picked, 3
contained. excellent con- .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
dozen, $1 .50. M. A. Halt,
Reedsville, Ohio. Phone 378~~on. Call 992-2367 before s
62•9.
8-3-6tp COUNTRY- and western band
8-5-ltc
-----~--wanted Friday and Saturday
nights. Apply in person at t:OAL, 1imestorre. Excelsior
Jack's Club.
Salt Works, E.
St ..
WILL CARE for elderly female
S.J-Jtc · Pomeroy. Phone
.. Jliltlentsln my home. Mrs. Iva - . . , - - - - - - - Stewart, Minersville. 992 · EARN AT home addressing
2785.
envelopes. Rush stamped
8· 3·llc
self-addressed envelope. The
Ambrose Co .• 4325 Lakeborn,
Davisburg, Mich. 48019.
8-1-30fp

ROSEB-ERRY Furnace ln- AWNINGS, sfurm doors and
windows., . carport$ .
stattatlon. Free estimates on
marquees, aluminum siding
new furnaces. oil or ga~.
and
ralltng. Call A. Jji(Qb,
Service work . Call Cecol
sales
""'esentative. For fne
Roseberry , _ Racine , Ohio.
estimates, phone Charles
Phone 61o4-&amp;C-2274.
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
7·22-lOfC
Jollnson and Son. Inc.
5-27-tfc
READY-MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to ~our FOR .YOUR new shingled roof.
project. Fast 01nd ea•Y· Free
contact Roush Construction. ·
estimates. Phone 992-32U.
Phone 992-5039. .
Goegleln -Ready-Mix Co .•
7-9-lOic
Middleport, Ohio.
1&gt;-30-tfc SEWING MACHINES. Repali'
service, oil mokes, 992-22114.
The Fabric Shop, Pomet oy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
HOUSEWIVES - Even ings
Service.
We Sharpen Scissors.
free ... Earn 25 per cent
3-29-tfc
demonstrating 'toys and gifts
with the highest paying party
plan. Compare our program AUToMOBI LE insur.;,;.;e been
cancelled?
Lost
your
and color catalog before
operator's license? Call 992·
maktng any other com·
2966.
mttments. No experience, no
6-15-tfc
Investment. Car necessary.
Call 9~ 1?n or wrlfe Tov
Ladles Party Plan. Johns- SEPTIC tanks cleaned.- Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
town, Pa. 1.51102.
~
S.3-3tp
662·3035.
2-12-tfc

Female Help Wanted

Real Estate F..- Sale

Virgil B.

TEAFORD
SR.

DANa

Saturday !Night
10 Til 2
Music By Cindy Ct.rlc
&amp; TM Night Riders
4 Pc. S.nd, And Singer
From Beverly, Ollio

Whispering P111es
Nite Qub
-~

Rt. 7

Pomeroy,O.

SENTINn
CARRIER
WANTED IN
NEW lfAVEN

1Z. · 14' - 241 - WIDE
.

MIWR

.

MOBil£.HOMES
1220 WasllinghHI Bhrd ..
Bel.,., Ollio

HARTFORD

THOROUGHBRED Stud
Phone 992-2156
Service. Roman Captain No.
8-1 -6tc
637410. SSG registered mares,
$35 grade mares . . Return
To Buy
MODERN· walnut stereo, AM~rlvlleges . Greg
Roush.
FM radio features 4-speed
Phone 992-5039.
USED
vegetable
grader
record changer. 4 speakers,
7-9-30fc
suitable for tomatoes . Kim
separate controls. Balance
Wells,
Rt.
3,
Warsaw.
Ohio,
$67.89. Call 992-7085.
GUN SHOOT• Augus t 8• 1 p.m.,
43884, 614-82H013.
S.1-6tc
8'5-ltc - - - - - - - - Racine Gun ClUb.
8-4-·tp - - - - - - - SINGER zig zag , sewing
ANTIQUES.
telepnones.
brass
machine needs no cams, all
MEIGS SENIORS call Grover's
beds.
clocks,
dishes
,
old
buill +in features. Makes
Studio now . Make ap.
furniture, etc. Write M. D.
bullonholes, etc. Pay balance
polntment for your senior
Miller, Rt . •· Pomeroy. Ohio.
$49.75. Call 992-7085.
portraits to be taken during
Ca II 99'1-6271 .
S.1-61c
week of August 23rd. Save 10
;
~
t f
7.9-tfc
t
per· cen on me coo o your - - - - - -- - CANNING tomatoes, picked
otder. Phone 992-2475.
S1.50 bushel. Raymond Rowe,
·
8-4-lotc
phone 247-25-47.
8-3-31c
GUN SHOOT, Forked Run 1968 CHEVY, 2 docir hardtop.
air conditioning, power
Sportsman Club. Sunday.
steering and power brakes. • GRAVE lot
Chesler
August a..12 noon.
1969 Camaro, 4 speed. 350
Memory Gardens. Phone 9'12·
8-4-3tc
engine. Phone 992-~7 .
5771. Roland Russell.
.
7-23-tfc
8-3·3tp
i&lt;OSCOT Kosmetlcs, July---:-::-::---:-:August" special, Kare KonlWO mate A. K.C. registered
ditfon oil ss. Value now only
beagle pups. 8 weeks old. ~
$2.50. Distributors, Brown's,
each
.Phone 9'12-3126.
phone 992-5113.
FURNISHED
and
unfurnished
8-3-3tp
7-Hfc
apartments . Close to school , - - - - - - - - : - : - : Phone 992-~.
GENTLE 2 year old saddle bred
RUMMAGE Sale, Friday and
10-18-lfc
stud sorrel, 2 white sox.
Saturday. Fry Building.
Phone 992-2436.
Middleport. 9 a.m . to~ p.m.
8-J-ltc
furnished . Phone
S.~·2tC 5 ROOMS Mrs . A. R. Knight 9'12-243:
S.l-6tc ONE gentle Morgan riding
1WILL NOT be responsible for
mare, also her gelded
any debts contracted bl.
yearling thorobred . Phone
anyone other than mysel . TRAILER LOTS, Bpb's Mobile
773-S333
or write Box 286,
Signed: Charles Aeiker. ·
Court, Rt . 124, Syracuse,
Mason,
W.
Va.
S.~·31P
Ohio. 992·2951.
S.J-6tp
AKC REGISTERED black
Poodle, miniature and toy for FURNISHED apartment in CANNING tomatoes, already
stud service. Call 992-6978.
country, Ideal for con picked, $1.2S bu ., bring
struction worker or couple,
8-3-6tc
containers . Geratdine
IS-minute drive from town.
Cleland, East Main. Racine.
Wi II accept one child. Inquire
7-28-tfc
337 N. 2nd St., Middleport.
8·1-7tc TREE ripened peaches at the
NOTitE OF
Mason
Peach
Orchar~
APPOINTMENT
C•n No. 20527 HOUSE, 1637 Lincoln Hgts .• 4
slarling Sat., July 31st. Hours
Estate of LEWIS MARION
rooms, bath, basement, aHic,
9 a.m . to 6 p.m. Phone 773·
BROWN. Deceased.
storage and
driveway.
S5S9.
Notice Is hereby given thot
Available alter Aug . Sth .
7-30-6tc
Vlruii .V. Brown, of Pomeroy,
Phone 992-2780 or 992-~2 .
Ohio, has been duly appointed
B-3-lfc
Administrator of the Est11e of
HALF RUNNER beans, $2
Lewis Marion Brown, deceased ,
bushel, p ick your own .
late of Meigs County, Ohio.
TRAILER. Brown's Trailer
Cucumbers and toma1oes .
Creditors ore required to file
Park. Minersville, phone 9'12·
Clarence Prolfilt, Portland.
their claims with sold fiduciary
3324.
Phone 8-13-2254.
within four months .
8-S-6tc
S.3-15tc
Doled thiS 19th day of July
1911.
John C. Bacon COUNTRY home, close to
Probate Judg~ of said Countv
Forked Run Lake. Must have
references . Prefer retired
17) 22,29 (8) 5, 31
couple. Free gas, unfurnished
or partly furnished . Call 378·
Here's the way it works ...
6298.
vou get seven ice cream
8-5·3tc
bars, or a half-gallon of ice
'l1le AlmaDac
cream. FREE for every
cubic foot you buy in a Un ico
ByUDitedPrmiDteruUouJ
freezer , refrigerator or
Today is Thlll"lllay, Aug. 5,
combination .
the 2171h day of 19'11.
APPLES. Peaches, Fitzpatrick
UNifO 20 FT. UPRIGHT
The moon Is between its first Orchard, Stale Route 689.
FREEZER
26U5
.
d full ha
Phone Wilkesville 669-3785.
With th is one you get l.COfree
quarter an
p se.
8-1 -10tc
ice cream bars or 20 half
The morning stars are Venus, - - - - - - - gallons of FREE ice cream .
Mars and Saturn.
15 CU. FT. KELVINATOR
POMEROY
'!'he eveni"" stars are Mereu- freezer. new; one month old.
J1ck W. Canty, Mgr. ,
~..,
44magnumplstol, new ; 12ga.
Phone "2·2111
ry and Jupiter.
double barrel shotgun, 12 ga .
Those born on this day are 36" borret goose gun. new. 16 FT. TAGALONG travel
Jack Layne, Prospect Hill ,
Wlder the sign of Leo.
trailer. fully sell contained.
"
"
d
Pomeroy.
Ready to go, $1500. Phone 773French noveus 1 ,.uy
e
8-4-Jfp
5651. Mason, W. Va.
Maupassant was born Aug. 5, - - · - -- - -7-23-llc
1150
.
NEW 1971 ZIG-ZAG sewing
'~'- da . h' to
machine In original factory
On. u""
Y m IS ry:
carton . Zig-zag to make
In 1861 the U.S. government buttonholes. sew on buttons,
imposed the first Income tax
monograms, and make fancy
36"x2J"x .OOt .
· designs with just the twist ol a
All Incomes over $800 were single dial : Left in lay-away
taxed 3 per cent.
and never been used. Will sell
for only $47 cash. or credit
terms available. Phone 992-

Wanted

------

For Sale or Trllde

For Rent

------

------

.LEGAL NOTICE

----~--

For Sale

For Sale
Alu.mirium ·
Sheets

8-4-61c

We talk to )1111
lille a pnn.

WMP0/1390

- -- -vacuum
ELECTROLUX

cleaner complete with af .
tachments, cordwinder and
paint spray. Used but In like
new condition. Pay $34.45
cash or budget plan available.
Phone 992-5641.
·
8-4-6tc
CLEAN INGEST carpet cleaner
yo u ever used, so easy 100.
Get Blue Lustre. Rent electric
shampooer, St. Baker Furn~ture

USED OFFSET PLATES
.
HAVE
MANY USES

20'
The

lforSI.OO

Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy; Ohio

Company.
8+61c

1 ......

.PdMUOY
HOMi&amp; AUTO

MOTORCYCLES
Mid-Summer Slife
On All Mo&lt;tels .
S.ve Up ToS2GO.OO
OverlO Percent
HAWIC'S3-DAY
CYCLE SALE
2 miles south of Athens, 0 .

992-2tt4

606 E. Ml.in

Pomeroy

· OfFICE SIJIPUES
And

FUIIIlURE

RaJIIC I CARPEIITEI

~

6.98 Plus
Parts
Blaalhtar's

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

NEW &amp; ciLD WoRK

PomenJJ Hoine &amp; Auto

All Weatller RHfing &amp;
c
ildiN Ca. Mil An-

PHONE ft2-21G

HARRISON;$ TV AND AN·
TENNA SERVICE . Phone
992-2522.
WILL DO paneling, ceilirg$. a ll
6-l().tfc
·~=~ of carpenter wart.
7Q-3344.

_ , ....- . &amp;

-

~

bedroom.s . l&gt;ath,
central heat and air conditioning. MIDDLEPORT

$10,000.00 - 3 large ooms
with large closets. Bath, gas
hell, garage on corner lot.
MIDDLEPORT NEW
LISTING
$20,000.00 - 2 barns. 5 room
home . bath, furnace, IU
ACRES.

NEIGLER Construction. For
building or remodeling your
home. Catt Guy Nelgler,

r========~
Roofi~rpenter

RALPH'S ·cARPET Up·
holstery Cleaning Sl!rvice.
Free estimates.
Phone
Gallipolis oW6-0294.
J.12-tfc

Openanu

Monday tiro Satunlly
·606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

-ling.

Co•plele
PI• Mlli•g.
Heafi.. alld Air Con••· . I
I
2• I Sf., Middlopof1

HOUSE, 5 rooms and both, has
new aluminum siding, storm
windows and doors. good
ccndltion, in · Monkey Run
area. Priced reasonable. Call
992-7121 or 992-3784.
8-3-tfc
-A-P-PR-O.,-X_I_MA-::T:::E-:-L:-:Y-:1-a-cr-e tot
with drilled well, at Dexter,
Ohio. Phone.992-3223.

. 8-3-Jic

HOUSE, 1~ Lincoln Heights.
Catl Domy Thompson, 992·
2196.
7-18-tfc
HOUSE. 1640 lincoln His .,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
1().25-tfc
3 BEDROOM brick home.
Choice location In Middleport.
Seen by appointment only.
Phone 992-5523 after ~ p.m .
5-7-lfc
\:ONVENIENT but secluded
building tots on T79 at Rock ·
Springs. Within walking
dostance of Meigs High
Schoof, a 5 minute drive from
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
Witte weekends or after 5
p.m. weekdays. Phone 9926887.
7-11-tfc

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

SIX ROOM house, bath. full
basement, 133 Butternut Ave.;
jusl walking distance from
downtown Pomeroy. Contact
Ed Hedrick, 2137 Wadsworth
IXive, Columbus, Ohio, phone
237 -~. Columbus.
-5-9-lfc
NEW, 3-bedroom home in
Middleport. Buitl-ln kitchen,
ceramic lite both, all-eteclrlc
heat, good neighborhood. Can
arrange FHA financing .
Telephone 992-3600 or 992-

NEW&amp; DLD WORK
All . ._ . R r1111 &amp;
511 ....... Ca. . . . "

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

C..llte Plw
Ne 'i:y
O'DELL WHEEL alignment Mll~c lir · a
located at Crossroads. Rt. 124. Nt l.illorlll Sf. Millil...... 0.
Complete front end se&lt;vice,
m-:r:s.
tune up and !rake service.
. ..
Wheels
b~lanced etec'"=c~ 1 i
Ironically . · All
work
guaranteed .
Reasonable
rates . Phone 992-3213.
.QUEEN and Shamblin C.....
7-27-tfc
strucllon . Roo fi ng ,
•

DutsoN MASONRY

Route, in small community.

includes. ground - IQQx:JOO
and modem building together
with all equipment . NOT
VERY OLD.
POMEROY - ALMOST NEW
BRICK HOME - 3 farge
bedrooms. double closets.
beautifUl buitt-in kitchen for
mom, carpeted. full basement
wilh recreation room . tots ot
storage. utility room. about
one acre of ground, concrete
basketball court, carport, air
conditioned. $27,500.
WANT TO SELL? YOU HAVE
THE PROPERTY WE
HAVE THE BUYERS LET'S GET TOGETHER.
HENRY CLELAND
REALTOR
Office ft2 ·22St
Residence tt:-25atl
· 8-Htc

Kitchens, &amp;.Ills
Room Additions

.And Patios
Blckhoe .And
Endloader Work
Septic Tonks
And Leodl Beefs.

Sopliclar*:sinsfal led.George .
Cllill) Pullins. Phone 992-2.al.
4-25-tfc

&amp;ouNDS
EXCITING
AND LIKE

LOT50F

L--------""""""'

N'OTICEJ

a...
Mante CaOO Cue. '3695,
I 1970
Beautiful Galli Beige color with blk. vinyl roof, factory air
1 cudilimoing,
linled glass. black nylon bucket seats,
wosole, Paoilradion axle. 400 cu. ln. engine. Turbo
I r.l.,..unaspeaker.
lic. _.steering, power disc !rakes. radio&amp;
guards &amp; Rally Wheels. unI da I. S..w, Save.bumper
Balance of warranty.
11970 ..... tpe. .
'3495 1
I Sport
l..eS5- II.GIID miles &amp; appearance of 71 model, Rally · I
Clas.sic a&gt;pper with sandalwood Interior,
I - equipped.
gtau, factory a ir COildltioned. sports mirrors. 1
II -..s.
wosole, air spoiler. hydramatic, power steering
.lll cu. in. V.J ..,ine. Really Sharp.
1
seal

Bill Miller is joining our Company. a specia list
in air conditioning and refrigeration. boftl
home and commercial.

OONTACI':

&amp;

ANTII)NY PWMBING &amp;IIAnNG
240 Uncoln St .• Middleport

OR PHONE
992-2550 DAYS OR 992-3509 NIGHIS

11970 a.ulel SeMi' 4 Doer '2995 I
~ "-ltl,llllllmilesby focal....,., . Sharp as new In all I
I ways.
finish. 3.50 V-8 engine, power .
1
1 stw ilog..wllile .,..wllife.watls,
wh. covers.
I :19M
a.dll------------ ~ I
¥i T.., Pidup, wide body. G78x1S tires. H. duty rear I
I spilogs. ,_.step bumper, tess than 9000 miles and leS$ I
I ._,mo.olcl. Beautitut
-- red finish . Shows best of care. I
II 1966
a. 2 TCII-------Only $1750 I
ll"cabtonte. good825x211 tires, 2 speed rear axle, Int. &amp;
like,_ truck. cyl.
cu. in: eng. A real clean I
I trv&lt;k.
II 1966 P1J. VI-Sta. Wapi _______ '895 I1
V.J engine, good lire. dean body &amp; nice vinyl Interior, I
trans., steering. radio. luggage rack .
I automatic
Regolarty Priced at S11195.00 Special!
I
I 11965 a-*~ Impala Cpe.-----·'895 I
II· J96.ar.
in. V-1 engine. 3
std. sllilt, clean Interior. I
nicebluefmish.goodHres, radio &amp;heater. A fine buy.
1

THE 11 IEA, ..
GOES ON··

cab

The 'Bur goes on ... - are ........ &amp; h lilol all..,.
new car deafen willl our 'd"' ' blo' dells • lt71cars during ""r clearance N fe ••• 42 jorsf a _ . _ , ....,
to lOin 5lodl now ... • m wllile sekcliuw is sliH .... below ~re 10111e " " ' Arrials • IIIW ar lri ' ·- all
prices in effect en ""r used ur tat, tao.

6

AOR088

1965 DODGE 0100 Sweptline 1h ton pickup,
slant six, 3 speed, long bed. new paint.
,..

II
II

Ford Thunderbird 2 door hardtop. V-8.
automatic, p. st., p: br.• 46,000 miles.

Oldsmobile F85 -4 door sedan. V-8,
automatic, lots of m iles left here.
1962

1968 Pontiac Tempest LeMans Sport Coupe.
au1omatic, p. st., sharp late model trade.

Hornet SST 4 door sedan. six cylinder,
radio. sharp as a tack.
1970

1964 Dodge Custom 880 4 door sedan. V-8.' tflite. p. st .• sharp as a 1971.
See the •• Dependilbles" at R.lwlings
Peiirl Ash, Emerson Jones, lilian- Wolfe,
Wallace Amberger. Dick Riiwlings.

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS
992-2151

Middleport. o.

992-2152

1
I

II
I

I .

•••••

Pomeroy

___

l •v " ' '""

brown

6. R&lt;sldue

oeedy
'1. Faucet
8. Time In

26. Tal&lt;e

der

32. llold

oftlee

9. Belligerent
state
11. Diverted
H. Carpenter,
for one

you 10!

34."-

Trlate ..

•

SlbeUu
cornpoaoltloll

19. Pen
20. Jazz
great,
Kid - ·
21, lnltlblt
23. Conlumed

at«~/ FIC&amp;ZE Rl8lfl'
'IIIERE! HAI'fN'T '100
HfARI&gt;IT'S LW'OLI7E

'

•

I
39.N.T.
book
(abbr. )
40. AI·
tar
con·
stella·
Uon

PRJJ'E

.,..

'

"'"~'­

I t)

I (

IOSMACT ~
INDOAJ

I

r

'i

I

II
1

v~

Now...,..... tho elrcW IIUin
tor.... the ............. .

lrrt-+--t ~~~1-.~.A==~::::::~;;::~"-~A:.,suaeolad bJ tho...._

I

u .- k

Prillat . .IIISIII..,

28.Coop

resident
28. lUUilriOUII
31. Linoleum
prole&lt;:tor
32. Appendage
33. Bulgarian

o:-"''*""'

tA ·auo too

I

JaoOblcooLUNOI DICAY AnAIN

Ynt~rd•y'•

rt111

I tiiiUl tJ
-At.

Am•er1 One con'« DO IT - A "DU.JT'"

coin

35. Likely
36. Color
37, G""'k
letter ·
38. Speclalty
of14
Down
(Jwdot.)

•

CAPl'AIN EASY

n.Purport
U.Brald

DAILY CB'fl"l''QUOTE- Here'• how to work It:
AXYDLBA.t.XR.
.. LO:NGi'J:LLOW
oae ~ llfmpiy atandl tor .,..thor. In IIIIo oample Ji. Ia
UOid for U.. thne L's, X tor tlte two O'o, etc. Slntrle totten,,------ - - - - , r~~~~~~L'~=l
apoetrvpllu, u.. leltlth ond tormatloll ot the wordo .,.. all WE J)II)NT COO

ltllltll. -

p

~I.AICE~~lii~BE~~~~~ r

417 tileA oode
Jotten an
oan.....,.
ca dlttemtt.
.......

KRFMWR

LJ

WR.FllFL

FllJT

MF

llDVHPTLRK

KT

!.IWR

.JY

DPT.-LP8llLlF

r-_..

7

JVVWR~·-

LOR ' TP· 1--~

r----t

;..J
I

'

._..,..._
..

.
'.

'

U~~~eramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each oquue, to
form fou·r ordinary words,

211. Ernmet

26. Goulet
27. CUr·
rently
exlltlng
29. Football
team
30. Aboml·
nate
31. Squan·

""-''

II
I

yOUT Uaeuy Dt!JJler
992-2126

eiB.Bitc, with
'"Tbe"
ped ..tal

I

Open Eves- Till

titan
5. Shabby;

16. Welotlt
river
17. upthe
works
18. One
kind of
herring

1·Pomeroy Motor Co. I

I
1

Weill
(2 wd!r.)

I

I

2. Tltoucttt
3. Altered
.f. Sooner

15.Put -

22. Nut·

pl&amp;ce

spin

c ity

I
All Shas
I
New '71
Chevrolets
I
.
I
'sa Time To IUY.I
a Time To Savel 1

I
I
I

1. Go fora

-

Clearance Priced

1
I
I
I
I

DOWN

13.H. G.

'

Now~Do lotlti

paid

darn
10. Puccini's
forte
12. Colorado

vinyl roof, .....--.

1962

43. nous
44, Price

1. AddlUonal
5. AootheU·

5pl!l!d,

Special.

JI&amp;Mffi~®f'J =!!:! ...J r::

AlLY CROSSWORD

Price

1964 Ch~ysler New Yorker 4 door sedan, V-8.t·
trite, power everything, ready.

11E~~!

292

119&amp;6 a-*~ Impala Cpe. ______SJ99 1
I 6 Cyt_ sfanr:L trans., focal I owner car, good tires. radio, 1
I - a . Reg. St09S.OO. Special.
. 1
1 1966 Buick
Cpe. ______ '1195 I
tran.s.. _ . r steer ing &amp; brakes. good w-w I
I JWiornalic
lires.radioa. he;ofer, whi"'finlsh. ct•an Interior. Reg. price I
I SIJ95.00.
1 1967
Fan1 LlD------------·'1595 I
!rakes, vinyl interior, blk. I
I ~OaorS&amp;Ian. ~steering&amp;
finish, radio. new w-w tires, V-8 with
l i e trans. &amp; faclory air conditioning - Special. I
I -Special
I
I

1966 Dodge Coronet '440' -4 door sedan. V-8, f.
trite, p. sl., very nice. one owner trade.

tl,~ICS

l PUT IT 'lH~!

~

Anthony Plumbing &amp; Hei11ing is now open '
Days a Week.

oW9&gt; HE

lllAT AAISl: 't'll\li f!iml
HCUilDtlll- NE ABOJT...

gold

601 e.st Main
POMEROY

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY A DRIVE-IN located on State

Comvlere
Remodelimc
.

;

7-25-lfc

WANT TO BUILD? We have
two nice building sites. one
has a house on it which does
need some repair. Located in
Pomeroy on quiet street .
GOOD BUY $6,900.

l--,L=I=O=N~S!!

, ,

2186.

Cleland Realty

--f'

RJN/

$35,000.00 - Beautiful NEW 8
room
ranch home, -4
bedroom.s with large closets, 2
full baths. Double garage. - - - - - - - : : : : ----:
remodeling.. al uminum
15 ACRES.
0 1 BRIEN ELECTRIC SER- ~ng
. . Plule . 992·132~Gr 70·
VICE . Phone 9~~~ _,.
5-ll).tfc
IJ+121c
$12.500.00 large 3 bedrooms.
bath, furnace , garage.
.:.iiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiRACINE
•
FOR APPOINTMENT
CALL tn-3325
HELEN L TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
S.1-6tc

IT'S a-lE OF THEFINE~T CLA~SES
WE.''-IE EVER GP.ADUATED.•rT!-1
IN LAM&amp;sf!-

Spouting. Roof
Pitinling

I

Tt-IING!

0\lf~EM!

Racine, Ohio.

7-31 -Hc

At.rf-

SO 001-l'l' JUST
SIT ll-IERE LIKe A
OODfSA'(SoMET~IN6
1o ME THAT HECAN

•

SPOUIIIIG,
•llOOf- PAIIIIJRG

PAPER HANGING, Interior.
l-5-3tp
and exterior painting. PIDie ---:---:-:--:--::-~
" " - 992-2550
992-3630.
PIANO luning. Lone A. Daniels.
_,__.
1~·- _o::w..-ienced
$6,500.00- 2 bedrooms. bath,
7-IJ.lOip
Phone 992-5509. Ref&amp;aOC£.
............. •
garage, gas heat- 2nd house.
Elbet ~ds.
&amp;-5-3tp
Wortc Guitran1ee41
6 rooms , bath . $4,500.00. boG · grooming
Poodles,
- ·
F.
BASHAN
Schnauzers. Experienced
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
See US 1Or
ree
professional
work,
no Reasonable rate. I'll. -.oa,
Estimille on Furnace
$7,500.00 - ~ bedrooms, bath,
tranquilizers, gentle handGallipolis. John Russel l.
lnstalilfion.
garage.
Fenced
yard .
ling, S5 up. c.x.lvllte 667-6214.
Owner &amp; ~alor.
1...:====~---_j
MIDDLEPORT
_ _ __ _ __ 7_-~_
· 12tp...:..
5-13-tfc BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
2 bedrooms.
$9,500.00 paneled, bath. large lot.
RUTLAND

END! .

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
" 15.55 '

..

I

ANYTI-Itl'ltl·-1

l WIWT 10 MAKE Fl2t:&lt;KLES
.JEI'J..OCF;!

Ph!lne 593-166,

Specilol
At

5-1-tfc

HAVE THE ANSWER ON tiE
TIP OF YOUR. 'TON'UE

SAY

WHEN THEY a:\Y.E BY HE12E.

-ON ~E OTWEit.

Open Mon .• Wed.. Fri.
10 o.m. to I p.m.

IIIII Y• S.S.-I"
AiC~1"1

NO... ANTs' HILL

All, CWD, l SEE VOIJ

Rt.:tl

Stop In iilld See Our
Fro. Displily.

lltMK!IanicSfneel
!'limeroy, 011io

$1~,500.00

and

5641.

Bo'lilaor ·

C. BRADFORD, AuctiComptete Servia!
Phone9&lt;19-31121
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford

CHARGE IT
TO MV .ACCOONT

Business Services. J

•

Help Wanted

Notice

.

Business Services

Business Services

JEST

•
----·---------------------------

•"

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

..

�-'

'

..

' ' ' ' ' " ' \1
11 \ ' . - '
'

• 1 l\

'

.
D
raft
Lottery
Prison
. ,:/ l..ab
.. ·. . .
.
· ··
R e orm.
·
*•-·
d
'
d.
re·
·
..e ·.
IJVIUU

OJ

·

·

·

~

Ge~rge ihrgrave_s,
.
..-nntendent of tbe
. Me•u• .
....,...
..,..
Local School Dislrict, hilS been
..,.,.u·~ a member of t b e O' r
board of directors of the •~
·
· •alachia Educationa_l · .
. .
l,aboratory in Chlirleston, W.
Va .
·
.
The laboratory LS one of ·11
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
regiooallaboralories funded in John J_ Gilligan today ordered
Pari by ·the .United Sillies Office
mail
.
an end to the censorship of . of Educatioo to mount In· ofObio prism imnales becall!le
nov alive. progra01s by the it Is "esseotial that inmates
educational development retain
·. some.......;ofdigni'ly and
·
Th - Cb 1 t
-process.
e
ar es on that fundamental rights_be
laboratory is developihg three proll!cted."
major
programs
early
mmd•ft, in aDIIOunclng a ser'ldh d
d ' T1
......,.....
h
c _1 }lD
e uca on • ies c1 sweeping prison reforms,
educational cooperatives, and said the- mail regulations
vocational guidance in response would permit inmates to write
to~ ~ucational needs~ to-andtoreteivemailfrundef1c1~ncJes of the Appalachian any person c1 their cboosing.
Region.
Gilligan said the end to mail
beli'eved to be
The laboratory 's early
.
.
_....,. ~childhood education program lbe 6rst in tbe nation.
hall received national acclaim Tbe governor said mail would
and wW probably $0011 be only be ,_.oo in an enm_ina.
' deDI 1r ted · tber
.,.
ons a
m o
areas. tim fer contraband materials.
Tbe governoralsosaidhisad• • tration wruld adopt a polIDUDS

--h'"' -·

Correction!
Our Wed. Ad

STA-PRUF
FABRIC.SOFTENER

2

\2 grlls.

for

99'

A&amp;P Super 1*1

icy that no more large iiL'Ititu.
lions_ sucb as lbe one under
construction at Lucasville-

would be buill
He said a recmunendatim by
lis Task Fcrce 111 Conections
Refonn that all institutions be
converted into specialized
nining units would be inJ..

plemented when funds and
facilities become availalile.
Gilligan also said the Divlsim
c1 Correctim, beaded by Com·

missioner Bennett J. Cooper,
would be reargaDized on a func.
tiona! basis.
IA!gWatim luts been introooced in the General AssmNy

to _..,te the Divisie&amp;of Cor--ti.-on..__· tbe n-......._1 of
·~

Tllursdlly &amp; Fridlly
AugiiSfS-6
Oouble Future Program
Grandpa Jones
&amp; Randy Boone
In
" HERE COMES
THAT
NASHVILLE SOUND"
-Plus"COUNTRY MUS.IC
ON' BROADWAY"

MEIGS THEATilE.
Tonight, Aut~~~sl s
NOT OPE.N

Friday &amp; Saturdlly
Autust 6-7
· THERE.WAS A
CROOKED MAN
(Technlaolorl
Kirk Douglas
Henry Fondd
R
StDEHACKERS
CTechnicolorl
rprlse! Action! Mystery!
hrills! Comedy! Motorcles!
.
R
SHow-sTARTS 1 P.M.

uuw

....,_. - ·

Meolallfygjeneand Correction.
"~~"-ft ·said be would also
.......,....
begin to implement otber reccmmendations by his Task
Fon:e to solve "ani of the rnn.t
aod _..;nu _.,~.
sen'N••
•--.. . - facillg state government" pison refmm.
'Ibis includes the hiring of two
persons to bear inmate
grievanres, be said.
He also announced ~es in
tbe bmvUi~ of parole bearings
to give prisoners as much infca-mation as possible about
their own cases and a study of
1be feepbjlity ci aRJOinting
"ja!!bnp lawyers" to assist
inmates -in solving legal
problems.
Tbe governer said a priwte
CQJBU}ting 6rm would be employed to evaluate inclJslries in
tbe state's penal institutions
and determine their future.
In tbe area ci employe relalions, Gilligan said he WOiild
"jcin the Task Force in recom·
..-~;
to tbe '-'•'•lure that
Oil
_......
CCllllpetitive salary levels be estaNisbed f&lt;r e&lt;neetions per-

SIIIIDel.

WASHINGTON . (UPil ~
t=ollowint is tile draft tanery
dra•: Jim """"'"' has no
si9ftifican.e wMtw..- in tbe
draft se•en.e. It "'mply slloW5
in whidl ......,. tile dlltes _ .
Aller tile birth daR is
tile key dralt .•mber. (Of*r,
Birth. Do-all of 'Draw, O.R and
Nurnberl·
lstJ...taJO,:indS.t. 2lO,
lrd Jan. 5 :w, 4111 ~- 2S m.
Sill April11 2)0 6th Feb.BU, 7111
Dec. JO 167, llh J - 29 IN, till
March s m, Jatto April U 211,
11th March I m. 12th Feb. 16
353, 13th Jan. 1311:1, 14111 June 7
211, 15th Nov. 22 93, 16th Moly 22
164,17th.Se!&gt;t. lt2S5,1atJ Oct. 5
339,Jtlll)jlly 14267, 20th Feb. It
Z11.11st Dec. 2S 1352211!1 Oct. 1
11, 2Jrd_Aug. • us. 24th Jan. 1
2t2, l51hMorcll t n, Hlh Maio 1
U4, 27th June 11, 101. illh Jan.
26 114, mil March 3 11e, JOIII
July2195,3ls1Sept.l02t!l, :12nd
April &amp;291. 33rd Juty 21121, 34th
Feb.2lH&amp;,3SthAug. t153, 31th
Oct. 10 312. 37th Marc• 26, 122.

.ncl

1h

PANTY HOSE

PRICE

Sale 1.00

DUB-L-KNEE
JEANS

News ..• in Briefs
(Continued from page I )
final approval of legislation to revive the draft, thus making ·
certain Preri.....tN'lDII wiD be left withoot draft authority until
mid-September or beyond.
Senate Democratic Leade!' Mike Mansfield of Mmtana, said
be was unhappy wilb a CQ11111nJ111ise amendment approved by the
Rouse WedJo Jay camng f&lt;r witbchawal of U. S. troops from
Vietnam without setting a date. And draft OPJlCIIeols said they
planned to filibuster tbe Home-pa eJ measure anyway.

75 pd. Polyeoter - 25 pet. ·
cotton Jeans. Permanent
press. Made with taper
leg - no cuffs - wide belt
loops. Good selection of
soli~ colors in regulars
and slims. Sizes 6 to 12.

4.50

...- Jor
r. a Long T.'lme
100, OOO u~en
WASHINGTON- rrWJLLBE ABSOLUTELY necessary for
tbeUnltedStates to keep a minimum of 100,000troops in Vietnam
fer several years. accwding to Sen. Jobn C. Stennis, O.Miss.,
chairman of the Senate Armed Senices Qwnmittee.
" .. 1 wish it CGUld be less, but we ought to be realistic about
this thing," Slmnls said during bearings on the mililary
Jrocuremenl bill.

Two Appeal in

LU:ense Action

Boys Wrangler Hondo Permanent Press Slacks. 100 pet.
Colton. Sizes 6 to 11. Regulars and Slims
l.SO
Mens 7.98 Short Sleeve

Boys 'Sizes 3 fo 7

Kni·, Shirts

1.95

SPORT SHIRTS
Permanent press - solid
colors, stripes, pla ids . Big

Small , medium, large and
extra large. Zipper neck
with fash ion collar. 80 pet.

1.49

On Fridays Our Drive- In Window
is Open 9 a.m . to 1 p.m •• (Con-

NEWOOMERS TO
OUR COMMUNITY
WE INVITE YOUk ACCOUNT
COME IN AND ~EE US!

9.00

3.00

Member Federal Reserve System

GOESSLER
Jewehy Sbe
Court St.

Pomeroy

y~r home.

temperature Is below 50 degrees
Fahrenheit and cannot move at
all at 45 degrees or slightly

below•

OUYELEAVES
FUKUOKA, Japan ( Ui'l )Typhoon Olive ranked Japan 's
southernmost island of Kyushu
today, leaving it heavily flooded
and swept oot lo sea.
Officials said at least seven
persons were dead, five reported missing and 14 injured.
All
iransportation
was
knocked out including railroads.
air •lraffic and shipping. Officials said n roads 1&lt;o:re washed
oul ~

Weather

-e

..

VOL XXIV NO. 80

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PHONE 992-2156

FRIDAY, AUGUST 6, 1971

.CORDUROY FLARE LEG JEANS
Fine quality . washable corduroy in navy .blue· or brown.
Waist sizes 29 to 38, made with wide belt loops- F rontier type

pocl&lt;ets. Ideal for schoo l wear .

6.95
Boys Sizes 8 to 18
Flare Leg Corduroy Jeans . . • • • • .. 4. 95
Mens Blue Denim

WORK DUNGAREES
Anolher big shipment ollhese long wearing work dungarees.
Sanfori zed, shrunk, tr iple s1itch jeans. Sizes 29 to 42. Waist

and exira large size 44 lo SO.

Stop in ~Ow and select 't he sizes you neec~.

..
.-:...·

".,

Mostly sunny afld mild Friday
and Saturday . High · tern·
peratures both days from il&gt;e
upper 70s to the lower •80s.·
Mainly clear and tonight lows in'
the 50s.
·

Devoted To 'I7U! lnteru~ Of The ~eigi-MOMm Area

~

TEN CENTS

Explorers
Speed Home
12-Day, $455 Million
Odyssey Will .End on

big selection
Wrangler jeans for
men and boys. These

· A-

pop!Jiar jeans are

m;&gt;de of heavy
weight blue delllm.

Saturday at 4:46 pm.

Sanforized shrunk , long
wearina - oerfect fittinq.

By JOSEPH L. MYLER, UPI Senior Editor
This was splashdown day minus one for the. Apollo 15
astronau is as they plunged toward earth with a scientific (or tune
in new informs lion aboot lhe moon and solar system.
· Their command ship, bearing a treasure of moon rocks and
photographs, was scheduled to drop into lhe Pacific at 4:46pm.
EDT Saturday, about 316 miles north of Hawaii. The U.S.
helicopter carrier Okinawa was standing by !o pick them up.
For astronauts David R. Scott, Alfred M. Worden, and James B.
Irwin, splashdown will end a !:May, $445 million expendition
which happy moon scienlisis already are ranking among _the
great explorations of all time.
This was get-ready-for-home- that had photographed a vast
coming day, tidying up, seeing area of the moon in the six
everything was securely days he flew solo in lunar orbit.
stowed, checking instruments Also aboard the command
and supplies, and sacking out ship were the closeup pi,ctures
for nine hours mpreparatlon laken by Scott and Irwin during
for Saturday's re-entry rigors, lheir three days of surface
While the astronauts thus roving at lhe Apennine Mounkept busy, scientists on earth tain landing site beside the
started an inventory of Apollo chasm of Hadley Rille.
IS's scientific achievements The pictures taken by Worden
that will take years to in the most extensive photogracomplete.
phic mapping ever made Of the
Command pilot Worden moon's front and back sides
Thursday made a 20-minute were in their magazines Thursspacewalk-the first in deep day in a litUe instrument bay
space- to retrieve more than a 18 feet from the command
mile of film from two cameras module's hatch.
Since lhis is part of the
command-service module combination which will be jettisoned to burn up when the
astronauts make their fiery
return into the earth's denae
atmosphere, Worden had to go
out. and get them. This he did
Two cars were total losses, Thursday morning at a moment
three persons were injured, and when ApoUo 15 was .diving at
the driver of one was cited in an 2,000 miles per .hour toward the
accident on East Main St., earth 196,000 miles below.Pomeroy, at 5:20 p.m. Thurs- Using external handrails and
day.
footrests, he struggled _18 feet
Pomeroy police said Edward to_the camera bay ani!.returned
White 38 Pomeroy· had IVIth one of the magazines; he
stopped• his• vehicle at 'lhe fn. went ba ck and ~turned with
tersection of Main and Spring the second magaZine; and then
Ave. to make a left hand turn made a third trip- just to see
when he was struck from the how things had fared wilh the
rear by another eastbound car no-longer useful sensors whleh
driven by George Pierce, 24, had shared space with - the
Middleport
cameras.
Troy Ohlinger arid David Thi~ "CBS for the benefit ?f
Pierce, passengers in the SCientists plannln~ next years
Pierce vehicle, wete taken to ~polio 16 and 17 flights,
last
Veterans Memorial Hospital by m the manned lunar exploration
the Pomeroy E·R squad. Pierce program.
. .
declined treatment, but On each !Moot tr1p Worden
Ohlinger was admitted for head was preserved from death by
abrasions and lacerations. an oxygen tube reeled out from
George Pierce, the driver, lhe conunand cabin and a 25suffered an arm laceration and foot tether to keep him from
was taken to the hospilal by drifting~ into space. This was
Henry Werry, investigating all done m 20_~utes and ~II
officer. Pierce has been cited to on color televiSion.
mayor's court on assured clear
distance charges.

Boys sizes 6 to 18 in regular,

and slim. Flare leg or. tap..-ed
legs.

Mens and young mens sizes 29

to 42 in super lean tap..-ed
style - regular tapered leg
style or flare leg model.
Ask any of the sales people to
help-you find the style and size
you wa·n t.
-I

'"""

...... ,

" .

--

MGH
SCHOOL
vanity
fooiiJell
players began physical conditioning this , week
in preparalion fer praclice which will get
underway Aug. 20. This scene Is being repeated in
all area high schools as football season gets underway. At
left, Head coach Charles Chancey looks on as his squad
began fitness drills. There are 60 boys out. The first game is

Lee Prest - Oouble Knee

NO IRON- JEANS

A real biJy In Jeans lor boys.
Sizes .-4 to 14 in regular and
slims - 50 pet. pol~ster ·_ 50
pet. coHon. Made woth tap..-ed
leg. Cuffless - wide belt loop.
Choose blue denim or twill In

1ICbeduled Sept 10 at Melp

S!pdJvm 1n l'ometOJ Ly' ,
Reemelin (BIS). Below, Meigs High band members were Cll
hand Tuesday night waiting for the first band practice of the
season to begin. David Bowen is band director. Left to right 1
are Patty Darst, Joyce Hukhinson, Debbie Taylor and Am •
Caldwell. See more pictures, all by Katie Crow, on Pg. 12.

olive or tan bark.

' 410 12 • - - - 4.49
SilOS
Sizes 14- ta 16 - - - - S.49

---w . ,. --

Woman Escapes

N- is a gooc1 time to buy
Mens long sleeve Sport Shirts.

Sizes small, medium, large

and extra large In solid colors,
beautiful stripes, plaids,
navelty paHerns. You'll like
this fine selection.
Let any of the sales people
help you lind the size. color.
paHern you'd like.
Take advantage of tile Sale PriceS.

MEN'S AND BOYS' WEAR

Mens
3.49 Permanent press ~hort sleeve W..rll Sltlrl - - - Sale Ul
Boys 2.95 Short ~leeve Sport Shirts •
Sale 2.11·
Mens 4.95 Short sleeve Sport Shirts - - • • - Sale 3.5t
Mens 3.95 Short ste..ve Sport Shirl - . - - . Sale 2.st
Sale price$ Men and Boys swim trunks. Sale priciS leys alld
Mens Walk Shorls.

SHED SALE
CaMon no-iron Bleached Muslin. While they last

Another Shlpmentl Slush Mugs
For family fun - changes drinks to slush like magic. Simply
freeze while tumbl..-. pour In cold drink - Stir and you've got
instanlslush. Onsalenow Housewares Dept. lstfloor.

33'/, RECORD ALlUMS
Come in and browse in the music department on the 2nd
floor . See the new shipment of albums in country western,
popular and sacred.

,..,

Bargains In Rugs On Sale At
Elberfelds Warehouse

on Mechanic Street

=

12H.x13tt. GPink Shag Nylon Rug • - - . . . . • •
911 .xn11 . reen Nylon Rug - - - - - - - . . . .
12~-·:::·4in.
:rlon Rut - - - . - - . _
1122fl.x1ilft
. .Jon. Gr
NylolotonRut - - - • - . • - .x .2on. een Y Rug - - - - - •
~:ri"'"i 3&lt;;;een ~crilan Rug . - - . _ _ • _ .
121.t'"7·f•t z· .3~:~r:;_n Nylon Rug - - -• • on. -· • ""'"" Wool Rut
~~-·:;~·':n~c:i!' ~ion Rug - - 'stt e' G r '!"I Rut - - lllt.xll'
- on.x . on. rftn ..crilan Rug -

=:y:::

~:::~~~ft~:.~~-c:r:~r~..; Rug

:~~-·~~-

-

u.oo
"oo
n:eo
"·00
7411
,.:..
30.00
45 11

40.io

25.00
40.00
::·:

so:..

:ug - • - ' - - - .x2Sft
.
li
RedyT~
ugA : • - - - - •
3$.00
2".x . n.
~ cro"'n Rug
- .
25 ,.
6ft.x9ft. Gold Tweed Nylon R~ • - •
2teo
9ft.x12ft. Gold &amp; Green Twoed Nylon Rugs
sa'et
6ft.x9ft. Gold &amp; Green Twoed NyiM Rugs
2flt
'. ll.a12in. Blu~reen Tweed Nylon Rug
·
6fl.x9ft. Blue-green Tweed Nylon Rug · .
::: .
9ft.x12fl. Red Kilclten C...ssic Nylon Rug · _
"tS
6ft.x911 . Avocado T - Nylon Rug - ' . .
.
12H.x1411. ~ile Rubber &amp;.do Rust Nylon Rug . . : ·:
6ft.Ufl. G&lt;ild, Brown, Rust T - Nylon Rug - • 29'00
9ft.xnfl. Gold, Brown. Rust Tweooi Nylon Rug _ . ' S.:oo
9fl.x1211. ~vocado T - Nylon Rug
5100
1511.xt9ft. Green Nylon Rw - . 111.00
12ll.xlllt. Green &amp; Gold Nylon Rug 111~11
12ft.alilft. Green Nylon Rug - • - - 11011
ISII.x1711. Green Nylon Rug • - ~ - UfH
ISII.xt5ft._Gold Nylon Rug • - - . . . . _ . lSI••
1SII.x9ft.lin. Blue - 1 Twist Rug . . _ • 151.11
ntt.x10ft.4in. Red &amp; ·Black_Twoed Polyester Rug • 1ft5
12fl.x1111. Green Sltog Nylon Rug~ _ • _ _ , 11:11
lllt.xiSfl. Red NYlon Rug - . . - .• __ ~ _ : _ II.• .
1211.a1111. Green SIJog Nyloto Rug - • • _ . _ • _ II.• ·

~---~~--~--':""_ _ __..._ _....,,_,_.._ _ _ _ _._....,_ _ _ _ __._ _ _..__;..;-.-1

ELBERfELDS IN POM

y

From Ou
Tllirly-()fte young men and
WCIIIIen of Meigs County were
awarded degrees by Ohio
University at .the end of the
acadeinic year ill June, Jn.
eluding 21 bacbeloc degrees,
nine master degrees, and one
Ph. D.
W1nner ci the Ph. D. was Jack
Hart, Pomeroy RD 1, in
Philosophy. •
Master degrees went to
Robert H. Wllson; Deiter,
Education; Mary E. J!acm,
Mldclleport, Education; James
R.
Adams, . Pomeroy,
Education; Roger Keith
Morgan, Mldclleport, Science;
· Terry w. Ohlinger, Mid·
dleport, Educatim; Yvonne H.
Scally, Middleport,
Education; Marjorie Lynn
Van Vooren, Coolville Rt. 2,
Education; Richard Glen Well,
Middleport, Education, and
Kenneth Lawrence Hartung,
Pomeroy, Bu8ineaa Ad·

'

A near tragedy was avoided
early Thursday when a car,
boat and trailer belonging to
Bill Harden, Racine, Rt 1, went
into the Ohio River at the
Pomeroy levee.
Harden decided Wednesday
evening to take his 18-foot semi
cabin cruiser out of the river
because of lhe high water. The
boat was docked near his
Racine, Rt. 1, home.
Harden asked the assistance
of his neighbors, Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Cundiff, who own and
operate the Maplewood Lake,
In order to get to the boat, the
men had to swim out from shore
to where the boat was tied. Mrs.
Cundiff drove Harden's car to
Pomeroy to meet the men at the
levee.
By 12:30 a.m. Thursday, lhey
had pulled the boat out of the
river and had it on the trailer,
which was attached -to lhe car,
waiting for the water to drain
from lhe boat.
Harden and Cundiff were
behind the trailer, Mr. and Mrs.

Bachelor degrees were
awarded to James Edward
Baer, Middleport, Business
Administration;
Ladona
Hayes Boyd, Rt. 1, Shade,
Education; EdwardM. Brown,
Racine,
Communication;
Sammy R. Clatworthy,
Middleport, Business .Ad·
ministration; Carson Crow,
Syracuse, Journalism;
Fcrrest Rutherford Dmley,
Arts; Michael H. Gardner,
Middleport, Industrial and
- - (cOnlimied on page 12)

Cundiffs' young son, Jimmy,
was in the boat, and Mrs.
Cundilf was in lhe car holding
her foot on the brake when the
brake pedal suddenly went to
the floor.
The trailer, boa I and car wept
into the river. Cundiff and
Harden were able to jump
aside. The trailer broke in two,
jack-knifed, and struck the
boat.
Mrs. Cundiff unable to get the
door open, managed to get the
window down and was able to
get out of the sinking car
through the window.
She suffered several bruises
but was nol immediately
treated .. Young Jimmy Cundiff,
who was in the boat, swam
ashord.
The 1966 model car, valued at
$1,1100, was destroyed.
Mrs. Cundiff lost her purse
which contained a considerable
sum of money. The only
damage to the boat was a hole in
its side. The car was recovered
by 2:30a.m.

Swim Classes Set

~traUon.

A new series of swimming
classes will begin at the Mid·
dleporl pool Monday according
to Mrs. Ruby Vaughan, park
manager.
The classes are in junior life
saving, 9 am. to 10:30; advanced beginners, 10:30 am. to
11 :.15; beginner 3 and ·4, 11:15
a.m. to noon and beginner I and
2, noon to 12:45 p.m. A pool fee
of $5.75 includes a needed book.
Instructor will be Miss
Bernadatte Hennessy of
Pomeroy. Those interested can

register at the pool anytime
during regular pool hours.
A tennis tournament also will
start at the Middleport Park
Wednesday. There wW be a 75
cent fee per person for each
division . A junior division wW
be included. Registrations will
be accepted during pool hours.
Mrs. Vaughan said season
passes have been reduced in
price for the remainder of the
summer to $6 per individual
pass or $10 plus $2 per child for
family passes.

Equine Census Needed
The epidemic t&gt;f Venezuelan
Equine Encephalomyelitis in
lhe Southwest has prompted the
Extension Service (USDA) to
ask the staie extension services
to conduct an .accurate census
of all h&lt;irses and other equines
in the country in the next two
weeks.
The census in Ohio will be
conducted at the local level
through the county extension
agent, working with a com·
- mittee of hical interested
people.
Dr. Roy M. Kotlman, dean of
Ohio State University's College
of Agric11Iture and Home
Economics and director of the
Ohio Cooperati~e Extension
Service, met With representalives of the Ohio Department
of
A~ricultu·re,
State
Veterinarian's Office, and Ohio
State's College of Veteriilary
Medicine, AgriCulture, ~n&lt;! the
Cooperative Extension Service.
to plan the censtis.
.
Iofnrmation is needed by the

'

.i

Sinking Auto

31 Have
Degrees

us. us. us. 4. ts

BROADCLOTH PAJAMAS

WDGE TO MEET
Aspecial meeting of Pomeroy
Lodge, F&amp;AM, will be held at
7:30p.m. Friday. Work will be
In the Fellowcraft degree . All
master masons are invited.

•

Bees cannot Oy when the

UVING ROOM

SHORT SLEEVE SPORt SHIRTS

POMEROY, 0.

' ''

'

5.00

Veierans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Doris Dailey,
Sizes small (14-14'121, medium 115-15'1&gt;}, large {16-16'12} and
Pomeroy; leonard Lunsford,
extra
large (17-17'1•}. 65 pet. Dacron polyester, 35 pet
Pomeroy; Richard Lodwick,
combed coHon. Two pockets- permanent press. Solid color
Chester; Teresa . Johnson,
green br grey.
Racine; George Jeffers,
Wudield, W. Va.
DISCHARGED - -Irvin
Cremeans, Ullian Duffy, Neal l------~----~----~--!
Wbite and Ronald Smilh.
Young Mens Wrangler

•,

1

Dacron polyester. 20 pet.
Two appeals for rein·
selection of styles.
combed cotton.
Sale Price
statement of driver's licenses
SALE PRICE
Friday
and Saturday
bave been filed in Meigs County
Also see tile many oth..- items in·tbe music department. 1 T
Tape,
IT. Tope Cte.ners,IT. C..rrying Caws.
Common Pleas Court against
the Bureau of Motor Vehicles.
Making the appeals were Judy
Visit the Dross Goods
S..ve on KrMIJier
A. Landers, Pomeroy, whose 1----------~------~--"i Department on tbe 2nd floor.
See tho many ne• Fabrics
license was suspended July 10
Sale! Mens 3.95
arriving
every day. Solid
for failing to slop and be
colors ond Plltlems. 100 pet.
idenlified at the scene of an
Potrster double knit, Mag
FURIQURE
Kni
- Bonded knit - Terry
~ccident, and Harry Jackson,
warp knit.
Elbtrfelds lnl Floor
Sizes A. B. C and D. BuHon front and coat style with boxer
Rutland, whose license was
waist -adjustable gripper bollom . A fine selection of printed
suspended July 22, also as a
paHerns. Permanent press.
result of an accident.
In the same court Carl E.
Moore, Syracuse filed suit for
Mens US Coat Style Top Pajamas Size A. B. c. D. Ex .ellen!
divorce against Kate Marilyn
Selection.
Moore, Middleport, charging
gross neglect of duly and ex·
Ireme cruelty_
Sale Mens 4.98

Sale 2

The .Farmers Bank·
and Savings Co.

' ', t

Full size-Flat or Fitted - - · · "- • • · Sale 2.79
Twin Size-Flat or FiHed - - - - - • • - Sale 2.29
Pillowc.ases - - - - - . - - . . Sale Ut Pllir

2 pair 7.00

you fur orderly. efficient managcmcnl
of your affairs. Come rhcck with us!..

-

WRANGLERS

READY TO WAR

/(s u ,·fdtus :m11bol. People n:spccl

1

GIRLS READY TO WEAR .
2nd floor

10.95 . 12.95 . 13.95

--

.

9 IN 1HE EVENING ·

AND SATURDAY SIIJP.

WOMEN'S SHIFI'S

''if

'

129111 July 231Sl, 1301h Oct. 22
.243.!31st f'eb. 28 83, 132nd June
Wearlng apparel .for your family
furnishings -,.,.
10 226, l33rd Feb. 9 130, l~h ·
June22 59. 13Sth July 13178, ·
l361h Dec. 11S6,1371h July 7 354, ·
- : ,-...
1381h Aug. 23 143. -139th Aug. 13,
365; I &lt;lOth Sept .1 302, wst.June
19 41. l~nd Dec.. 2J 171, 143rd
OctJ 141, i411h A&lt;Jg. 11 34, l4Sth
July 26 350, U61h Dec. 7 141,
l.OthFeb.2115,1&lt;181hDec.86S,
l.jffh Aua. 19 150, I 50th Sept. 22
US, 1S1sfSept. 21 -16, 152nd Aug.
•
•• 309. 153rd Dec. 20 221, 156th
April 12 165, 157th May 20 m ;
158th .Nov. 10 227, 1S91h April 27
124. l~h March 13 173.
· Visit the girls department on the 2n~ lloor. Make your
16151 June 28 57, 162nd Dec. 17
selection early for schooL Girls dresses in knits, cotlon$ and
293, 163rd Dec . 13204, 164th Nov. · wash and wear fabri cs. Also miK and match coordinates in
Buy Your
s 211, 165th July 21 235, 1661h
vests, slacks, skirts, blouses, Sweaters. "Also see the slips.
Wrangler Jeans
June 11 :?Q2, 167th Feb. 29 305,
panties and socks.
·
_
1681h Jan. 10 231. 169th Oct. 15
Our selection ot sizes are from 3 to 6&gt; - 1 to 14 and gorls teens
Now For
75, 170th Oct. 16 159. 171st Dec.
and half sizes. ·•
Back to Scll!lol
19 19, 172nd Dec. 3 40, 17Jrd
Wear
April 5 294, 174th May 30 301, 1--~~--.....,-...-~-----------1
.1 75th Aprl120 39, 176th Dec. u
275, mth March 1 149, 178th
Womens and Girls
~ 2 326, ' 1791h Nov. 6 186,
1
Aug. 24 256, 181st Jan. 24

28~~t~~~~~~.:::~.;~: r-7~- ~~~t4t~61::il1183:,

ADMISSIONS: Eva Fellure,
Apple Grove; Howard Johnson,
Patty Frye, Point Pleasant;
William Dye, New Haven; Mrs.
0 . r. Rhodes, Bulfalo; Mrs.
Ernest Denney, Gallipolis
Ferry; George McCarl}&gt;, Southside ;
Mastom Roberts,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Robert Fisher,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Leroy
Chattin, Leon, and Jodi Randolph, Point Pleasant.
DISCHARGES: Mrs. Clay
Hinkle, Kermit Higginbotham,
Relda Mayes, C8!TJI Rhea, Mrs.
Arthur McCoy.

'

Make Elberfeld• In Pomeroy your·shopplng a.nter-

60, .CJrdMay 27241, 4Ith Nov. 20 18Sth April26 45, 186th Sept. 8 .o.
125. 45th June 1 274, 46th Sept. 3 187th Oct. 13 .236, 188th;Oct. Jl
321,47111 0ct.66, - Feb.11 351, 160,1~Aug.l520,190th0ct.7
Anew shipment in Wranglers - Flare leg and Slim.
.
49th Sept. 24 2n. 50th Nov. 23 so. 19rs1 July 19100.192nd Aug.
Preshrunk in str~tch and plain denim. Colors: Bl!3ck, \'. hite,
181,51st May8 216, 52nd April23 20 115, 193rd May 10 220, 194th
denim blue, faded blues. red. burgundy, wheat.
179, 53rd March 16 347, Sllh Jan. Aug 2133, 1951h Jan. 2 225, 1961h
Sizes 5-6 tp 20.
4 264. 55th Aug. 26 348. 56th JQiy Aug. 4 272. I 97th Aug. 18 11, ·
Also a shipment of Jamaica Shorts and Hot Pants in blue
18131 ,571hDec.24245, 58thDec. 1981h0ct. 23152,1991hJuly261,
denim.
10362, S9th Feb. 13118, 61st Feb. 200ih April 22 126.
18 189. 61st Oct. 28 10, 62nd
201sl June 2 363, mnd Feb. 26
March 24 133, 63rd June 2S 213, 136, 203rd Nov. 25 97, 2041h June ~---------------------------1
6olthAug: 2837, 65thSepl.17178, 23 336, 2051h May 25 24, 206th
66th Aug. 31 111, 67th Nov. 29 March 28 215, 207th Feb. 22 13,
230, 68th July 4142, 69th April 28 208!h Sept. 4 J2, 2091h Dec. 12
281. 7oth Jan. 21 206, 71sl April 249, 210th May 1 106. 211st Jan .
11 324, nnd Aug; 22 82. 74th 25 2, 212nd July 29 146, 21Jrd
100 pet. Acrylic double knit. 80 pd. wool, 20 pet. nylon, 100
April 9 289, 75th April 17 251, May 26 26, 2Wh Feb. 11 198,
pet. textured tort rei, 100 pet. dacron knit. Jewel necklines, V
77th May 21 12, 78111 July 6 185, 21Sth Dec. 9 27, 216th Feb. 5 233,
neck . Checks and solid colors of brown, black, red, green,
19th June 24 31t, 80th March 14 217th Feb. 27 217, 21Bih Aug. 27
paprika, navy, grey. Regular and half sizes.
203.
352, 219th May 9 311, 220th April
81st May 13 lOS, 82nd June'6 2 129, 221sl June 9 140, .222nd
218, 83rd April 8 35, 84th 'June • March 15 319, 223rd March 31
187, 8Sih Oct. 26 69, 86th 161, 224th March 30 191. 225th
Sept. 12 308. 87th April 24 Nov. 2 190,226111 Dec. 26 361,
21 , ssth Jan. 22109, 89th Sept. 27 227th April 21 342, 22Bth Oct. 14
314, 90th March 11 m. 91st Aua- 36, 229lh AprillO 194. 230 th Nov.
Special Purchase!
1 180. 92nd Jan. 31 239, 94lh 13 247, 231st Oct. 27 98, 2J2nd
A Group of
March 22 345, 95th March 12 251i, June 5 78, 233rd Jan. 6 242. 2341h
Canfrece II
96th July 17182, 97th June 30 123, Sept. 23 323, 2351h March 29 3-43.
Womensand
98th Aprl125 238. 99th Jan. 1 207,
236th Feb. 8 208, 2371h Dec. 28
HJOth Sept. JS'JOJ, 101s1 June 3 174, 2381h Jan. 20 310, 239th Jan.
Chilc!rens
. RUNl£SS
54, 102nd Dec.i6 356, 103rd Jan. 15 325, 240th July 14 307, 241st
16 74, 104th Dec. 2 99, 105th "Joy_ May 12 52, 242nd Sept. 5 147,
3 300., 1061h Nov. 9237, 107th May 243rd Oct. 25, 138, 241th Sept. 25
19 55, 1081h Aug. 1 325.
224. 24Sih March 6 327, 2461h
1091h April 3 262. 110111 June Feb. 3 250, 24th Jan. 27 12. 2&lt;18th
Beigs , Cinnamon, Brown,
21, 296. 111th July II 223, 112th Sept. 13 94, 2491h Jan. 8 287,
While, Taupe.
Nov. 12 259, 113111 March 27232, 2SOfh May 4137, 25lth May 3 177,
1141h June 26 346, llSih Feb. 19 2S2nd Jan. 23. 349, 2S3rd March
210, 116th Oct. 8 317, 117th Dec. 17 117, 254th Jan. 30 268, 255111
22 156. 118th Jan 9 338, 119th May 6 50, 2S6th Oct. 30 87, 2571h
Aug. S63,1201h0ct.18134.121st Sepl.6 110, 258th0cl. 2979, 259th
Nov. u 316. 122nd June 12 m, Dec. 5 252, 260th March 10 360,
123rd Nov, 26209, 124th 0ct. H6, 261st March 2 184, 262nd Nov. 1
Boys Sizes 6 to 12
1251hNov. 8M0,126thMay188S, 17,263rdJuly 1284.264111 Nov.
Mr. Wrangler
127th July 30 112, 128th Feb. 1• 18 175.
"'-

PLEASANT VAU.EY

l

Now You Know

Hargraves _on

n_ ::._:~

·,

USDA so that it may he
prepared to lake action should
lhe disease occur outside the
existing federally quarantined
areas of the nation. Althoug~
lhe disease has thus far been
contained in Texas, and while
·lhere is no cause for panic,
there is a need for prepared·
ness, he pointed out.
This cooperative effort will be
given top . priority due to the
two-week deadline in which the
information mtlst be available
to the USDA;
· Dr. Kottman said since the
local practicing veterinarjan is
lhe first line of defense in any
animal disease effort, the
monitoring of any suspicious
horse diseases would be
reported by him to stale or
fed era I reg u I at or y
veterinarians wOrking with the
state veterinarian.
Offices for the regulatory
ve1erinarians
Will
be
eslabUshed In each of the
cuunty ' agenl offices, .and any

suspiCIOUS or unusual horse
sicknesses should be reported
Immediately .
Signs of VEE in horses inelude a rapid rise in body
temperature up to 106 degrees
F ., with rapid pulse, loss of
appetite, and depression. The
animal displays a · " drifting"
gait. 11 may hang its. head,
appear drowsy, press its head
against objects, and assume a
cross-legged stance. ·Com·
mQnly, the animal may circle
continuously until prostrated.
Death !Qay occut in six to eight
days.
Jl was suggested by. the
Equine Census task Force
Committee that county coin·
mi\tees utilize lhe services of
county 4-Hand olher groups and
individual' 'Clubs to co11duct the
survey . Cooperation of the
entire equine industry is needed
to provide the information
within the two-week deadline,
, .Dr. Kottman sai~. · ·

3Hurt

In Wreck

Goal Achieveq
BY BOB HOEFLICH
While most of us tend to follow
lhe line of least resistance, Mrs.
Nancy Burns Van Meter is an
exception to the rule.
Mrs. Van Meter has for as
long as she can remember
wanted to be a nurse. Today,
lhat dream has become reality,
but not without some good old
fashioned pluck and fortitude.
It was May, 1964, when Nancy
graduated from Pomeroy High
School and was given the first
nursing scholarship ever
awarded by the Meigs County
Tuberbulosis and Health Assn.
She entered the Holzer School of
Nursing
in
September.
However, Cupid had his say and
Nancy was married in July,
1965 to Melvin Van Meter, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Van
Meter of Pomeroy.
AI lhe time, nursing school
rules provided that students
could not marry until the last
six months of training if they
were to continue in classes.
So Nancy's marriage brought
her student days to an end.
However, rules do change and
the school of nursing rules were
changed permitling married
studen:S to take part. During

the three years that lapsed from
the time Nancy married to the
change in lhe rules, she worked
as a nurses aide at Meigs
General Hospital in Pomeroy.
This employment only intensified her desire to some day
become a registered nurse.
Encouraged by her husband,
Nancy resumed her studies in
the Holzer School of Nursing in
September of 1968 and on June
11 this year she graduated.
Since her graduation, she hilS
been employed at the hospital in
intravenous therapy and is .
currently receiving additional
instruction in intravenous
MRS. MELVIN VAN
feeding, blood tran~usions and
near Gallipolis, the
drawing blood from donors for
former
Nancy
Burns of
lhe blood bank.
Wednesday, Mrs. Van Meter Pomeroy, bas realized a
received notification that she ~am of maay years In her
had passed the examination of gradualioa from tbe Holzer
the Ohio Board of-Registry for School of Nursing.
Nurses. She scored so well, in
fact , on the slate board near Gallipolis. Making her
examination that she qualified home with them is Mrs. Van
for national certification which Meter's mother, Mrs. Ida
means she can practice in any Burns, formerly of Pomeroy,
slate in the nation without who cares for Melvin, Jr.,
laking the examination of the nicknamed "Buddy!' Mr. Van
respective slate.
Meter-Is associated in- business
Mr. and Mrs. Van Meter and with his parents at the Pomeroy
their son, Melvin, Jr., reside Flower Shop. .

\he

•IETER.

SKIN TESTS SET
Eastern Athletic Boosters
planning on helping wilh the
group's county fair food stand
may have skin tests at the office
of the Meigs County Health
Depl. between 6 and 7 p.m.
Monday. A special meeting of
lhe group will be held at 8 p.m.
Wednesday at the high school.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Marie Mills,
Middleport; Mary F, Sharon,
Middleport; Richard Bearhs,
Sr., Pomeroy; Edrui Stiles,
Pomeroy; Troy Oblinger, Jr.,
Pomeroy; Bertha Kennedy,
Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED Ethel
Drake, Jerty Frederick ,
Thelma Drake, Paul Rife. . :

Summer Catch ·Up Study -Helped Many:
' By Geq-ge &amp;rgraves, Supt.
Meigs Local School District

Just recently our summer Title I "catch up"
program was completed. The concluding activity was
an evening meeting that was well al!ended by parents
and staff members.
This summer program Included intense efforts to
improve the participating students' achievement,
particularly in reading and math. This was .done in
small groups taught by the staff members. The pupil-

Speaking of Schools-- No. 199
,t-eacher ratio was five students. for each teacher.
Teachers also visited the homes of the students and
made a real effort to understand and assist each in·
dividual student.
.
.
The program also included a lrip to Greenfield
Village in !11ichigan for the older students and a trip to
Camden Park for the y01mger ones. These were not
just outings but were an importimt part of a planned
incentive program. ·
The direction of this entire program was in the
capable hands of Robert Morris. He was closely

assisted by Terry Ohlinger. They and the buay staff of described above. We should not take them for grapted.
teachers and Mrs. Curlls, as secretary, did a fine job in Their continued existence rests on the federal support
this program. They helped a lot of young people "cakh for lhem. It woold be of real value for you to 'let obr
up."
congressman and senators know what these fulli1S
Our Title I JX'ogram cllring the school year Is mean to a lot of yoong people in our district. I am
aimed at two areas. The first of these Is the reading certain that lhey, our representatives in Wasbinglon,
Jroblemingradesooe.twoandthree. The second is the woold be interested ln your COI!UDents. .
remedial problem in grades seven and eight In both
NEWS AND NOTES - Recently we had 33 busaes
parts of this in~ool program we are again vitally inspected and. 10 failed to pus. The miner problems
concerned with helping students to "cakh up"_ We feel wilh these 10 hsve been correcled and il&gt;eY have now
that Is tbe purpose for which Title l funds are intended. been reinspected and approved. - If you are new to
. During this ctming year we plan to have a full time oor district and will have children in school thls'fall,
remeillai reading teacher in each' of the elementary call 992-2153 to register your youngsters -' We still
wildings in the system. These JrOfessionals will work · have student.openings at the_junior level in drafting, ·
wilh students in grades one, two, and three. Jn the radio-TV repair, and cosmetology. Call Jm.-2151 ·...:
junior high school we wW bave two grade 7 and two Students who will be workihg in high school shop
_grade asmall classe- of ydungsters who just need that , courses must Show evidence of effective tetanus inJ.. '
little bit olema help in !rlerto "catch up" and have a mtlilization - Silfdents entering Meigs Local for the
betterchanceofstayingootocompletehighschool.
first time milS! show evidence of inununization fer
This in-6chool program and the summer program tetanus, small pox, diphlherUI, whooping cough, poUo,
are paid fer cQmpletely frtiD federal funds. We feel and measles, plus a recent TB test - .The.lint day of
that the program tt.at we have well serves the stu den is school will be Monday, August 30 - Season .football
of ourdlslriet. we also feel that this type of program is ijcketsfor Marauder home games are now on sale- U
lhekind that Title I funds are meant to support.
you are over 65, you can get a Sold Card f&lt;r free ad·
Too li:elJ!ently we come to take things foc granted. · mission to all Mefgs School District activities. CaU 992'
That may be happening with such programt~ as 2153 and we'U send one to you.

'

'.,

..

.

·.

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