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...

"'1

~ow
•-Tbe DdySeatinel, Midolepurl.f'lmaoy, o., Aueuat 10,1m

.·.·.·.·.· .·.....·...

Yacht's Hija~kers in' Irons
By ROBERT C. MlLLER

· HONOLULU !UP! ) - The
luxury yacht Kamalil returns to
Honolul~ ionight with a Coast
Guard escort, three alleged
hijackers in irons and her
millionaire owner Larry Dohe·'Y at the helm.
..
Oilman· Doheny hoarded the
sleek 'lf&gt;.loot ketch Monday
morning with Coast Guardsmen
from the cutter cape Corwin
who recaptured her ''without
inCident" 250 miles SOUthwest of
Honolulu after a high sea
chase.
.
The details of the unusual
hijacking were reported by the
Coast Guard.
The million-dollar yacht was
taken from the_Ala Wai Yacht
Harbor Friday night by three
gunmen who bound and imprisoned her cap)ain and two
crewmen and then took her to
sea, apparenUy headed for
Tahiti.
Saturday afternoon they cast
the three crewmen - Bob
Waschkeit, John Fretis and
Frank Power -adrift in a
, rubber raftl60 miles from land
and the yacht disappeared over
the southern horizon, the Coast
Guard said.
3 CREWMEN SAVED
Five hours later the Yokohama-bound Italian freighter Benavir steamed out of the tropical
night. The freighter crossed
direcUy in front of the bobbing
life raft and fished its three
occupants aboard. captain Waschkeit radioed Honolulu that
they were safe and uninjured,
despite their ordeal.
A four-engined Coast Guard
' patrol plane found the Kamalii
Sunday afternoon 265 miles
southwest of Oahu. The KamaIii's helmsman tried to hide the
ketch in a rain squall, but she
stood out clear and bright on
the plane's radar screen, and
there she stayed during the rest
of Sunday as the plane circled
the yacht.
The
Lt.

For
School

Elepnt liHie ovat,
pale arey or smoke
brown dial.

Bulova
Watches
Start
As Low As

even at 535 you know
getting a precision

ime•pie•:'e ... 17 jewels, shock

with an un mainsprlng . We
a fine selection of
watches in this
•:~•·•:, price range. See
11
now

GOESSLER
JEWELRY
STORE
Court St.

Pomeroy

EXTENDED WEATHER

Ohio: Estended auUook for
Thunday through Saturday:
i{lcident" and the cha$0 ended
.Variable cloudiness and
2511 miles from Hawaii with mild during lhe period wllh a
Doheny -who foUowed the chance of showers soutb
boarding Jl3TIY -back in. Thursday and over the state
control of his boat.
011 Saturday. .
The Coast Guard identified · Highs In lhe 70s to lower
the three suspected hijackers and mid IIGs. Overnight lows
as Kerry D. Bryant, 25, Los · In the upper 50s to low and
Angeles; Michael R. Melton, 24, mid 60s. .
Bakersfield, Calif. , and Mark ~g;
JE:&amp;&amp;:i
E. Maynard, 'rl, Lewiston,
Idaho. All were described as
ex..servrcemen but there was no
known motive for the bizarre
hijacking. The still unanswered
question was whether the
aUeged hijacking was politically
. .
. .
or criminally motivated.
.
·
Honolulu police said they wiU
try the three men on charges of
attempted murder. Deputy U.S.
Expenditures by Middleport
Attorney Harold Fong believes in July totaled $17 ,931.27
they can be tried on piracy slightly more than the receipts
charges, along with the viola- of $! 7,730 _62 according to the
lion of the Little Lindbergh monthly report of Clerkkidnaping law which carries a Treasurer Gene Grate subpossible death penalty.
milled to council Monday night
The Coast Guard expects the Receipts and disbursements,
Kamalii to dock at Honolulu respectively, for the various
late this evening.
funds and the balance of each as
of July 31 include:
General, $2,547.40, $2,504,85,
$20,160.51; cemetery, $274.82,
~ec
$717.62, $311.35, parking meter,
no receipts, no disbursements,
.
$6.03; fire equipment, $330,

tJG ) Gregg Wilson, ·Morristown, N.J., and carrying
Doheny aboard, followed and
picked up · the Kamalii at
midnight Sunday (liST) about
300 miles southwest of jlonolulu, still moving southward.
Wilson called for illumination
and the Cl30 ringed the vessel
wi'th flares. The cape Corwin
moved in warily until Wilson
got within shouting range,
where he demanded the KamaIii to halt.
Under the glare of Corwin's
searchlight and illuminated by
the overhead _flares, the men onthe yacht drifted to a stop. A
searchlight signal from the
Kamalii acknowledged the order and a few minutes later
the ' yacht turned around and
retreated tow3rds Honolulu
with the cape Corwin sheepdogging her from port astern.
HIJACKERS FACE TRIAL
Early Monday a Coast Guard
boarding party leaped aboard
the Kamalii.
Wilson radioed a· laconic
"boarding carried out without

JnCOme
. Near

Balanced by
spending·

Ou St. udent s .Ob • t"mg
To New Undergrad Fees $2,245.20,
$3
$440.
$2,167.09,
,

ATHENS, Ohio (UP I) -Mem-.
bers of the student government
at Ohio University Monday labeled recent fee increase as a
"fiscal as weU as a moral outrage" aqd asked students to refuse to pay the higher fees.
The OU Board of Trustees
last week approved an increase
of $30 per quarter for most undergraduates.
"The student body has put up
with increased tuition year aft-

er year, and no one has taken
any .action to stop it," said Art
Silverman, a member of the
student government. "It is our
responsibility to condemn these
hikes and to fight with every
weapon at our disposal to have
them repealed."

a

A university spokesman said
students who do not pay fees
are not entitled to campus privileges or course credits.

Speeding, Drinking Top
-Offenses in Middleport
Speeding and intoxication led
the list for which arrests were
made in Middleport dilring
July. There were nine arrests
for intoxication and seven for
speeding of a total of 35 in the
month.
Other arrests included two for
left of center; three for driving
while intoxicated; two · for
running a stop sign; three for
disturbing the peace, and one
each for assured clear distance;
wrong way on a one way street;

failure to yield right of way;
reckless operation; running a
red light; concealed weapon; no
operator's license; assault, and
failure to pay parking meters.
Six accidents were investigated and parking meter
receipts totaled $1,173. Police
cruiser mileage was 3,89!&gt; miles.
The monthly repo~l was submitted to village council by
Police Chief J. J. Cremeans
Monday night.

Film Ban Asked
By ROBERT F. BUCKHORN
WASHINGTON (UPI) -In a
precedent-setting action, the
government _has urged 500
television stations to ban the
showing of "The Doomsday
Flight," a television film
depicting a bomb hoax plot to
extort money from an airline.
Federal Aviation Administrator John H. Shaffer told
stations in 150 cities, "You
would be malting the highest
possible contribution to the
safety of the more than 160
million passengers" if the film
is not shown, UPI learned
today.
Written by playwright Rod
Sterling and first aired in 1967•

AUTO LOANS
We have low·
cost financing
Let our bank help
you purchase that
new or used car
with a low - cost
auto loan.

"The Doomsday Flight" describes the predicament of an
airliner believed carrying a
bomb set to detonate when the
plane drops below a certain
altitude. The bomber telephones
the airline and demands a
ransom in return for information on where the bomb is
planted.
In a letter to the television
stations, Shaffer said each time
the film is shown, "the number
of anonymously telephoned
bomb threats received by the
local airline rises significantly."
''Our great concern is that
the film may have a highly
emotional impact on some
unstable individual and stimulate him to imitate the fictional
situation in the movie," Shaffer
said.
·
Shaffer, whose agency has no
power to order the film
dropped , mailed the letter
30.
So
far,
June
only 20 stations replied that
they would not show the film, a
spokesman for the FAA said
"to our knowledge the fihn has
not been shown in the United
States since the letter was sent,
and we have been led to believe
that the distributor will remove

t-!.~Sn!-' nDIII.C·IN
-~

'\

., .!"' ... -

---··

Tonight, Aug. 10
Double Feature Program

THE
OUT-OF-TOWNERS

'
Monthly payments at our bank are ta1lored
to fit your budget and include insurance to
protect you, the buyer. Before buying,
inquire about our loans.

Jack Lemmon

Sandy Dennis
IColor)

- PlusDARLING LILI

G

Rock Hudson
IColor I

G

Wed., Thu. &amp; Fri.
Aug. 11-12·13
Double Feature

M-A-S-H
I Color!
Donald Sutherland
Elliolt Gould
Tom Skerrilt

•.11 DOLE PORT. OH 10
Member Federal DeposiUnsurance CorporaUon

- PlusTHE CRIMSON
CULT
I Color)
. Boris Karl oil
Christopher-Lee

R

Gi'

Teeners of the Tri-County
area are being invited to hear
the Young Folk of CinCinnati,
associated with C&lt;lllege Hill
Presbyterian Ch~rch this
weekend in Gallipolis.
They ask, are you bored?
Uptight? Ready to drop out
of society? Are _you ready to try
anything- acid, smack- or
have you been lhro~h ~~
scene and found tha~ rt d:""" l
fill the emptiness erther. Y_ou
have trred filli~g that vmd wtth
beer, popularity, ~~ts, sex,
drugs, or. by declarmg open
sea so~ on freaks (an~one who
doesn I look and act like y~u).
You fmd that these things
occupy you for a while, bu~ you
always wake up to a livmg
nightmare, a world that
las
t
sceintists say may not
another 50 years because of
pollution, famine, overpopulation, and that ever
present threat of nuc 1ear
destruction.
You believe
u there is more tolife, but a you can see IS

Goble Lot

(Continued from Page I)
dieport.
Childs also pointed out that
the non-conformity permit
9.07 •
94 ; swimming pool, gives Goble permission only to
$3,021.95; use the former Lambert
planning commission, no property ·as a used car lot. He
receipts, $116.74, $1,249.46; cannot build any structure on it.
street maintenance, $2,042.58, If Goble wants to do this, then
$2,25UH, $9,578.08; state high- he would have to request that
way, no receipts, no disbur- the property be rezoned, Childs
sements, $309.14; sanitary said.
sewer, $3,875.56, $4,357.41, Speaking to council, Goble
$19,937.15; water, $6,292.06, said that use of the property for
$5,-391.55, $23,935.01; water the used car lot is vital for him
meter deposit trusts, $125, $200, _to meet competition. He pointed
$S,363.57; water construction, out that his firm employs
no receipts, $185, $1,374.21; persons from 18 families and
sanitary sewer escrow, no that he is a "good taxpayer.''
receipts, no disbursements, During the discussion,
$55,587.94; general bond C&lt;luncilman John Zerkle had
retirement, no receipts, no suggested a meeting of all indisbursements, $12,723.84.
terested parties in the matter,
The balance in all funds is including the council and
$154,004.18.
Planning
Commission.
Residents near the former
HOSPITAL NEWS
Lambert property had also
Veterans Memorial Hospital believed that permission for
ADMITI'ED _ James Owens, Go!Jie to operate the lot at the
Pomeroy; Raymond Lambert, location had been rescinded
Rutland; Larry Grant, Vinton; back in 1968, Zerkle said.
Nannie Radcliff, Rutland; However, Goble and connClara Powell, Wellston; Delores cilmen, for the most part, felt
Zech, Parkersburg; Shawnee that the original permission
Salser, Pomeroy; Thurman granted in 1968 was never
Martin, Syracuse; Alva Faber, rescinded and that Goble could
Pomeroy; Creston Newland, proceed with improvements to
Reedsville.
the property under that
DISCHARGED
Troy assumption.
Ohlinger, Jr., Eber carpenter, Harold Chase, . village
Charles Estep.
rnamtenance supei'VISor, who
also serves as mspector for the
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Planning
Commission ,
ADMISSIONS: Vinton Cossin, following the discussion and the
Leon; Ronald Cornell, Point granting of permission for
Pleasant; Havanna Lewis, Goble to continue his plans on
Southside; Joan and Kimberly the lot, said he was "ready to
Burris, Point Pleasant; Mrs. quit" his duties with the comGarland Bostic, Gallipolis mission.
Ferry; Mrs. T. R. Melrose, "Everything in the book is
Point Pleasant; Alonzo Roush, wrong," Chase said in comLetart; Mrs. Stephen Wood, menting about the matter and
Clifton; Homer Davis, Fraziers referring to the manual which
Bottom, and Mrs. Charles guides Planning Commission
Staats, Point Pleasant.
operations
and
recomDISCHARGED: Marion Ben- mendations.
nett, Mrs. John Long, Regina Upon the recommendation of
Roach, Mrs. James Hall, Clifford Stumbo, councilman,
William Bartley, Roy Bush, the council voted that in the
Mrs. Otis Rhodes, Mrs. Wayne future any recommendations
Black and Mrs. Howard Shaw. made by the Planning ComBIRTH: August 10, a son to mission to the council must be
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Staats, accompanied by the minutes of
Point Pleasant.
the commission's preceding
meeting. Acopy of the council's
---'-- - - - - - - decision will be sent to all
it from film packages sold to members of the commission
stations."
which includes Chase, Childs,
The film was shown in Councilman David Oblinger,
canada on July 26, and on Aug. Edison Baker and Mayor C. 0 .
3 a British 747 jetliner was Fisher.
diverted to Denver on a flight Council approved the report
from Montreal to London. In a of Mayor Fisher for the month
threat that followed the script of July. The report showed
of "The Doomsday Flight," the receipts of $984.20 in fees and
caller said the bomb would fines and $204 in merchant
explode if the plane dropped police collections for a total of
below 5,000 feet. The jumbo jet $1,188.20.
landed at Denver's Stapleton
Allen Lee King, Independent
Airport, which is 5,300 feet candidate for mayor in the fall,
above sea level. No bomb was discussed with council the $S
found.
permissive auto license tax
which council approved
recently.
King said the public should be
COMPLETES BASIC
MASON - Army Private informed of the moral
Robert M. Reed, son of Mr·. and obligation which officials of the
Mrs. Earnest Reed, of Mason, town have in earmarking
recently completed eight weeks proceeds from the $S tax per
of basic training at the U. S. vehicle for street repair and
Army training center, armor, improvements. The law
provides for spending such
Fl. Knox, Ky.
money in other ways, but
Middleport officials have asked
for the tax to provide street
money only.
Solicitor Bernard Fultz said a
To~ight, August10
$60,000 bond issue which would
provide funds for the conSTATUE
(Techni~olorl
struction of a new fire departDavid Niven
ment headquarters has been
Virna Usa
filed with proper authorities
R
and will be voted upon at the
TA1&lt;:E A GIRL
LIKE YOU
Nov. 2 election.
IT e~hnicolor l
Attending the meeting were
Hayley Mills
Mayor. Fisher, Clerk-Treasurer
Oliver Reed '
Grate,
Chief of Police J. J.
R
SHOW STARtS 7 P.M.
Cremeans, Council members,
Zerkle, Stumbo, Mrs. Roger
Morgan, Ohlinger, Lawrence
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
A,ugusl11-12
· .. ,7 Stewart, and Gobl'e, Fultz;
NOT OPEN
Childs, King ,and Danny
Thompson. · ·

MEIGS THEATRE

Julie Andrews

Cincinnati Young Folk Coming

·---'---

hypocrisy - People who' talk Recreation Area across from
about love but destroy others the · city park. The group's
with gassip; pe~!e who say ·spokesman is Gary Sweeten,
they want peace but make assoeiate dean of UC.
handsome profits from theii. The next morning at 10:30
war industries. Have you had they will be holding a Jesus
enough? Do you want ,an Celebration at French City
escape? There is still hope.
Baptist Church and will be on
Come and hear the "Young theriverfront,agalnat3Sunday
Folk" of CinciMati. They sing afternoon.
about Good News with a con- The "Young Folk" have a
temporary sound. See them secret they would Uke to share:
Saturday, Aug. 14, at7:30 p.m. Jesus Christ ts alive and living
at the Gallipolis Public
'

You Know

Zebr~' stripes, like human
fingerprinta, are individually
different and cpn be used for
· identification purposes.

in their hearis. Theirs is not the
watered down JesiiB so often
prf!!ched today, but the Jesus
who still heals the blind, raises
the dead and says, "I am the
way, the truth and the life."
Jesu8 loves you. Would you •
like to rap about it? The "Young
Folk" and many Of your friends
who know Jeswi will be in the
area of the Gallipolis City Park
aU day on Saturday, A~. 14,' in
order to talk to visitors.

Devoted To 'I'M ln~ere~ta Of'llu! MeigJ-M01011 An!o
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

TEN-CENTS

PHONE 992-2156 ·

'WFONESDAY. AUGUST ll, 1971

ants

astern

Dowler Appointed Principal
North Gallia's Local Board of
Education Monday named
Charles Dowler, Gallipolis, a
high school instructor, as
principal at Bidwell-Porter
Elementary succeeding Robert
PoweU whose resignation was
accepted.

· Gallia High School for the pa&amp;t
six years since earning his
Master's Degree from East
Kentucky University.
The board accepted t_he
resignation of Tana GriHin, an
elementary teacher. Ernestine
Polsley was. hired as a fulltlme
bus driver. Substitute drivers
PoweU will ·remain as a employed
were
Robert
teacher and principal at Vinton Hamilton,. John Bryant, B~Elementary. He had served as a bara Bryant and Mary George.
roving prmcipal.
Hamilton was designated as
Dowler has taught at North freshman basketball coach.

NAPPER IN
fod ay.SFUIIIo.Jiilo.JIY
1"11111"1111
.. OGDEN, Utah.

UTAH

- Staff
Sergeant Donald E. Napper, son
of Mrs. Evelyn Napper of Rl. 1,
Middleport, is on duty at the U.
S. Air Force's new consolidated
and advanced helicopter
training school at Hlll AFB,
Utah. He Is a 1966 graduate of
Pomeroy High School. His wife
is the former Pamela L. Crew.
MARRIAGE LlCENSE
Charles Lewis, 48, Po'"eroy,
Rt. 3 and Ruth Doreen Bunch,
42, Pomeroy, Rt. 3.

Today's FUNNY will poy $1.00 for
Cil(~ originol "1111111,.. uM4. S.ltd vat•

Bruce Gabriel was hired as
junior ·high school teacher at . ·
Bidwell-Porter.
Sohlo was granted the fuel oil
bid for the high school while ·
Sterling -received the contracts
at Bidwell-Porter and the bus
garage. Wiseman Insurance
will furnish the bus insurance
while F~aoces Cottrell will
deliver the coal.
Coaching ·aSsignmenta were
designated at a recessed
meeting of the Hannan Trace
Board of Education.
· Tom Belville a Marshall
University graduate, and
former member of the Huntington East High football team,
was designated as head football
coach.
Belville, a special education
instructor, served as assislant
football coach two years ago.
He will be assisted by Danny
Cornell.
Paul Dillon, former Southwestern High and Rio Grande
cage star, was named head
basketball coach. Cornell will
also serve as junior high cage
coach and head baseball coach.

News .•. in Briefs

(Continued from Page I)
least 14 persons as ldlied in tlie violence, which Intensified
Mooday when Piime Minister Brian Faulkner annnounced the rePICNIC PLANNED
introduction ofintermnent without trial-a blow at the IRA.
The Meigs County Democrat
•
executive committee will hold a Dollar m Market Trouble
business meeting and picnic at
LONDON -1UE AMERICAN DOI.LIIR was the target in
7:30 p.m. Thursday at Forest money markets again today: The dollar traded at low levels In
~ere: ParkRo~lath~ New Lima Europe and gold prices hit a two-year bigh. In the Far East, gold
oa near u n · ,
hit a 15-year peak on the Hong Koog 1111rket. Money dealers said
distrust ol the dollar was straining the global money system.
The climbing perch is na- Another factor was the weekend report from Washington that
tive to Thailand. This fish discussed dewluatioo ol the dollar. A long run ol depressing U. S.
has prickly scales and can
crawl on the ground or economic news also has played a role in the pessimistic attitude
toward dollars.
climb trees.
to: Tadap's FUNNY, 1100 Wts.t Third
St., CltYtlaftd, Ohio 4411J.

Elberfelds Are Headquarters For

\1llsterllto~~Xt~ ~

Sizes
6 to 24
Months

Junior Fair's
Royalty Named
Miss Debbre Ohlinger,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
William Ohlinger, Pomeroy,
and Daniel Midkiff, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Rl\y Midkiff, Salem
Center, are queen and king ol
the 1971 Meigs County Junioc
Fair.
Their selection was announced at the old Pomeroy
Junior High Tuesday night in
conjunction with the annual 4-H
Style Rewe.
Miss Ohlinger and Midkiff
will reign over the five-day fair
which opens next Tuesday. The
royal :ouple will be presented to
audiences at the grandstand
eyenta each evening.
• Ptesidlh~ over the' crowning
of the new royalty were Rhea
Mora and KennetiLBD.Ien, the
1970,fair king and qileen.
Miss Ohlinger has been in Girl
Scouting since the second
grade. In the junior scouting
program she earned the highest
awards.offered, the Sign of the
Star and Sign of the Arrow.
During the c~det program she
was made a first class scout.
She is presenUy enroUed in
Senior Scout Troop 198 where
she Is taking the leader-in·
training course, leading toward
her Senior Aid Bars.
She has served as a member
and secretary of the Meigs
County Fair Board the past five
years and has served as
secretary-treasurer of the
Future Teachers Chapter and
treasurer of the Girls' Athletic
Association at Meigs High
School.
She has been a member of the
Meigs High School marching
band the past four years,
member of the Youth Against
Cancer and the Ohio Youth
Association for Retarded
Children, and is a candystrlper
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Dan- Midkiff has been a
member of the Salem Center
Boys 4-H Club the past six
years. He has been a member of
Meigs High School Future
Farmers Association the past
three years and a member of
the Meigs Better Livestock Beef

Club three years.
He is a chapter farmer ·who
last year received the FFA
Achievement Award and an
awatd in Horticulture through
4-H . He has carried steer
projects the past three years,
along with rope and garden
projects.
·
He is not only active in FFA
and 4-H but also a loyal member
of Star Grange where he holds
the office of gatekeeper.

rze1 s :
I

MORE AND MORE YOUNG children are going to be killed
unless they and their parents recognize the dangers involved in
the use of minibikes," the government said today.In a stronglyworded warning to parents, the National Highway Traffic Safety
AdminiStration said more than 1,500,000 miniiHes - most of
them operated by children between the ages of 10 and 14 years old
-will be in use by the end of 1971.
"While off-11treet riding under parental supervision can be a
safe and popular reereation, the minibike becomes a high-risk
vehicle on sidewalks and roadways. The ageney categorically
opposes aU use of minibikes on sidewalks or streets," the advisory

said:

Slacks in knit, no iron polyester and cotton and corduroy
in stripes, plains and figured patterns.
Also shorts, scooter skirts, vests, undershirts, training
pa!"'ts, ruffled ccifton panties, band-leg . panties,
paJamas, knee socks, cuffed socks, stretch socks, crew
socks and romper sets.

•

.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Mrs. Maxine Goeglein and
Mrs.
Kathryn
Windon ,
representatives of the Chester
PTA, discussed improvements
made by the board at the
Chester Elementary School and

.

Alioto Won't Run from Fight
SAN F!!ANCISCO - MAYOR Joseph L. Alioto,

Ten additional teachers were emplored for the lm-72 school
year Tuesday night by the Meigs Local School District Board of
Education.
Hired were John Arnot~ Mrs. Kay Grueser Barr, Mn.
Eleanor Blaettnar, Mrs. Kate Jarrell, Mrs. Phyllis Miller, Klm
Neal, Mrs. Evelyn Sweet, Phillip Swindell, W'llliam Wickline and
Miss Mona P. ·WilliaiDB.
SUbstitute cooks employed were Mrs. Sterry Ward, Mn.
Mildred L&lt;llg, Mrs. Eliza!Jeth Oblinger, Mrs. W'dda W'l'lftB!ID,
Mrs. Helen Soclair, Mrs. Eleanor Well, Mrs. Helen Hood, Mn.
Margaret Sheets and Mrs. Marjorie Davis. Ted Hatfield, Jr., was
named a substitute custodian and Roy W'rseman and Lee Burnam
were appointed subatitule bus drivers.
Policies dealing with student
absences were adopted. One other determined satisfactory
new rule provides that during cause, the absence of any senior
each school year a student may high school student in excess ol
POPULAR OUIIIIS FOR THIS FAIL WERE WORN
be permitted one day of absence IS days during any single
BY 1-r Stephanie Radford of Pomeroy, wearing a joyful
for a special purpose, provided semester shall result in the loss
t llllpl!r which was a class witmer, Marylu Mills, Pomeroy, the request for such absence is of any and all credit for subjects
also a class winner in clothes foc school category, wearing a
in written form and signed by taken during the semester.
maxi, patdlwn design, and Deborah Boatright, Long
the student's parent or guar- With the same exceptions as
Bottom, wearing the popular pants suit.
dian . Tbe request must be made listed above, the absence of any
and approval given by the student in grades one lhro~
principal prior to the absence. eight in excess of 311 ~ys during
As with all excused absence, all a school year shall result in the
work may be made up and no loss of any and all credit for the
penalty of any kind will be school year. Finally, the poliry
provides with the same exassessed.
A second rule pertains to ceptions, tbe absence of any
extensive absence. It provides student in excess of 10 days
that with the exception of home during any single semester
BY KATIE CROW
with Rhea Mora and Jean instruction, extended illness, shall be reported in wriling by
(Continued on page 14)
Talents of 198 Meigs County 4- Whitehead serving as co- preganancy, hospitalization or
H girls in creating garments chairman, Mrs. Janet Izard,
·:·: ·.. ·:·. :·. ·. ·.·&gt;:·.·.· .·... :· ·.·.• ·.· ·:· ·.·.·, ,•,·
and accessories for their former Ohio University clothing
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
wardrobes was displayed in the instructor and a former West
Cbauce of sbowen Friday
~nual Style Revue Tuesday Virginia 4-H agent, .served as
1
and Saturday clearing
mghl &amp;t the old Pomeroy Jumor narrator. Miss Shem McCain, a
~Sunday
and mild throagb the
High School building.
student of East High School,
period. Hlglls In tbe lis ud
·Mrs. Norma Deyo, extension was the pianist.
low
IIGs. Overulgbt lows mid
specialist_in ?oUting at Ohio Adults assisting with the
50s to low lh.
State Umverstty; Miss Patsy rewe were Mrs. Herd Young . BELFAST, Northern freland
Glass, Jackson area ~ztension and Mrs. Roy ~olter, summer (UPI) -British forces stormed
agent, home econonucs; Mrs. county 4-H assiStants and Eva
.
.
.
~a:; ca:olic
Darlene Lambert, Jackson Walker, Mae Jordan, Rosalie hamca~es
County extensioo agent, bome Story, Maxine Whitehead, a~s f' astodaun erB .tainavy
·
· · Col e, Mary J or dan and smper
y.
n 600 .
economtcs,
and. Mrs. Sharon F ame
dispatchedrrean addiUonal
•
Ston~k, Gallia County ex- Rhea Mora.
.
troo to Ulster to crush street
fo
tensron agent, borne econonucs, Escorts were Mike Benedum, . ps
.
.
·
judged the costwnes.
Tom Hamm and Allan Holter frgh~g protesUng rnternment
Damage was estimated at
All of the girls who modeled and Daniel Midkiff.
wtthout trial.
$1;250
in a barn frre at 11:58
may appear in ''Yooth Night" Thanks are extended to the Troops of the ~oyal G~een
at the Meigs County Fair next Pomeroy Cement Block Jackets shot and ltilled a smper a.m. Tuesday . at the Wayne
Wednesday night.
Company, Ewing Funeral as they fought therr way ~der Palmer farm, Rt. l, Cheshire.
Debbie Conklin, Meigs Cowlty Home and the Pomeroy Fabric hea? f:e mto a bak~? se~ Gallipolis volunteer firemen
exiension
agent
home
. .
ear ~er y gunmen an conver - were called to assist Middleport
omics served~ chairman (ConUnued on page 5)
ed mto a strongpomt m the firemen in the blaze caused by
econ
•
Eliza Street-Cromach Road spontaneous combustion.
area of the city, an army Firemen used 2,000 gallGns of
spokesman said.
water to protect an adjoining
The death of the gunman outbuilding. Over 1,000 gallons
bro~ht to 19 the number of was transported from the Kyger
Entries in the Meigs Cllllnty Fair prince and princess contest persons killed in street clashes Creek Power Plant. According
are oow being accepted according to junioc fair ollicials.
which broke oot Monday and to Fire Chief James A. Northup,
Contestants must be between the ages of three and six, in- increased sharply when Pre- 1,500 bales of hay burned.
clusive,andenlryNanb,printedbelow,are to be sent to Jo Ellen mier Brian Faulkner ordered
Diehl, Mulberry lleigbts, PCIIIIei'Oy, before Mooday. All entry internment withoot trial in a
blanis must!Jeacccmpaniedby afeeof50cents.
bid to eliminate the ouUawed
All contestants must participate in the parade at the junior Irish Republican Army (IRA).
fair activities oo Wechlsday, Allg. 11- Following the parade the . The Wll of dead surpassed the
INJURED
names olthe prince and Jrincesswill be drawn. If a contestant . is . numbers killed in any one year The Middleport E-R squad
not. pr nt and the names are drawn, other names will be since current Roman catholic- was called to the corner of
selected. All contestants are to meet at the gate of the grand Protestant violence broke out in Hamilton and Shoct Fourth Sts.
stand on A~. 11, at 6:45 p.m.
1969. Stree~ clashes claimed t2 in Middleport at · $:06 p.m.
1be 1m prince and princess will be eljleeted to be pres111llfor lives in 1969 and 17 in 1970.
Tuesday for Megan Miller. wbo,
all activities ci junior fair night. Use the form below:
Soldiers surrounded the bake- when the bicycle she was riding
ry, forcing snipers to scurry to struck a parked tru~. was
rooftops from where they thrown off, sufferrng a
NAME·--~----------------~__nGE
leveled steady fire at advancing laceration of her left leg. The
troops.
squad took her to Veterans
P~'NAME~--------~--------~
The troops later seized the Memorial Hospital where she
. 1Continued on :J3ge 14)
was treated and released.
ADDR~R~~~~--~------~--------------~-

Revue Displays
Young Talents

lu lhe sports clothes category
at the aunual MeJ«s Ceunty f.
H style revue Tuesday aigbt.
Jean wore brown cotton
velveteeo knlcken wilh a
matchlug vest, tunic leagtb
wllh patch pockets and brown
lace up boots. The latest style
for campus wear.

Minibike'S Threaten Youngsters

New fall line of Buster Brown including knit shirts in
crew neck line, turtle neck snap shoulder, knit peasant
blouses in plain, stripe and plain with trim .

.

JEAN WHITEHEAD et
Reedsville was a class winDer

By Ualted Press lnternaUooal

{~

additional improvements which
might be made .
They suggested a part-time
seCretary, but it was concluded
by the board that this is not
possible financially, even
though the need is present.
Purchase of an automatic dishwasher for the Chester Scbool
as well as other school
caleterias in the district was
discussed. Here, it was felt this
need could be met. Sidewalk
improvements at the Chester
School also were planned.
Arvella Frecker was appointed a cook at the Tuppers
Plains School. The board also
entered into a contract with
Educational
TV
for
Southeastern Ohio, Inc. foc
some programs to be shOwn in
the district durinR the school

year.

Linda Hutdlinson, Raven·
S'OIIood, was employed as an ·
e!e,_tary teacber. ~ is a
graduate li Ohio Uru-sity IIJid
completed ber sludent tew+ing
in the Meigs Locd .S«:!Jooo
District

The board agreed to ~part
in the National S«:!Jooo Landi
PI ogtam with the c:unpletiGD li

the arrangement dependent'
upon delails to be 1aotided by
the Obio Department of
Education. Bills wt!ft appoted

for payment
Altending the .....,ling were
John Reibel. superintendent,
and board members I. 0. Jle..'

Coy , Roger Epple, Emes(
Whitehead and tmald M11r11..
Clerll. C. 0 . Newland is a patiellt
at Veterans Memorial Hospital_

Policy Revisions
Made by Board

:I 11ews••• rn
,
(~

facilities for a Library, Music
and Art.
The Marietta frrm is " -·'ey,
• .,.. at
Lee and Vargo, represented
the meeting by W'ill Eesley and
Mr. Vargo. The Columbus frrm
is Kelam and Foley, with Ray
Johnson and Dan Siminsky as
representatives.
The board was notified that
Ralph Wigal of Reedsville who
was employed as a grade S:,hool
teacher earlier has declined
employment. O.rl Doddrill a
member of the high school sblf,
was employed as junior high
school foothall coach.

10 ..New Teachers s·

(---------------------------,
I
7\T
•
B . ~~ I

3 to 6x

7 to 14

Representatives of two architectural firms - one in
· Marietta, the other in Columbus
-discussed building plans with
the Eastern Local School
District Board of Education
Tuesday night.
No action was taken last
nigh~ however, since detailed
finanCing will have to be worked
out as well as details with the
State Department of Education.
However, it was the consensus
that the logical move for a
building progrm_n_would be_to
construct an addition to the high
school which would provide
classroom facilities for seventh
FOUR ROYALTY -Daniel Midkiff, son of Mr. and Mrs. · and eighth graders, thereby
relieving crowded conditions in
Ray Midkiff, Salem Center, and Debbie Ohlinger, daughter
elementary schools of the
of Mr. and Mrs. William Ohlinger, Pomeroy, left, were andistrict.
IIOIIIICed ltiog and queen of the Meigs County Junior Fair
Such an addition to the high
Tuesday night when the pre-fair rewe was held .at the
school would also include
Pomeroy Junior High Scbool. With the new king and queen
are last year's winners, Rhea Mora and Ken Bolen.

.

blaming
political eneinies for a federal bribery indictment and other legal
difficulties, announced Tuesday he will seek a second terni in
· office. With the election less than three months away, the
Democratic attorney rates as a heavy favorite to win another four
years as mayor of this city of 710,000.
"I've never ducked a fight and I don't intend to duck it now,"
Alioto told a luncheon gathering of -his backers, "I want you to
know that you'.ve done such a great job that I wouldn't dllSfrl you
at this hour:'' Alioto, r.s, the !!On of a Sicilian fisherman, took office
tCuntinued on paMe l4)

F•a htmg
•
Growmg
•

a:

Bam, its Hay

Lost

- Entries Wanted in Contest

FU'e

HANDYMAN-M tlnltlni,-'.J ..i *'led
ci the Meigs Cwnty Fair llcJard, :.S bUl I ~ ef ...
wcationlrom tbe Ql)nmiiWIIIId Sl iilhH'BOIIIDEitdlk:Oo.
to work at the fairgrounds Ibis 1ftiS pafGrwilc Gdd jlia Ill
getting .the grooDds and bnildinp ready for the fllr wl*h
opens Tuesday. King bas been •nwd fD fiB the
(I~
lerm li the late Charles Rallord.

Big Switch
NEW YORK (UPI ) -Mayor a candidate fw the Da•A!ii6:
John V. Lindsay plans to IHDiinatiGD far .. '•·t. ... It
announce today that he is was believed be ...-. IIIII
switching his political aile- make the PI · 'e1till liid

glance from Republican to today.
.
Democrat, UP! learned. The
Lindsay Dew U.S fnm b!
move would open the way for west 1'--'ay night IIIII liDIIl
Lindsay to seek the Democratic: fleWSIDtfi, 'TID CCiiiiC llld: 10
presidential nomination in 1972. the offic:e IIIII Cider willa
The mayor, fresh from a two- members li IIIJ sfalf." Beweek vacation in the o....a.... scheduled to .,...
I ....
Mountains, has been ~ plate hmd raisinc lllillet
reporters questions about the tmight.
'bl
'tch .
. Once cmsid-ed - of&amp;the
~e~
Sources close to the mayor rising stars of the R :Asaid he planned to announce the Party, . • • : :
4 wed
change during a news confer- con~-;-' 11"4 wD
·ence scheduled at his home tbat affilialioa.
••
Gracie Mansion , at n :311 a.m:
First, be lost the R I '&amp;
EDT.
primlry far JDaJIIf ill IJ8 _.
11 also has been speculated had to be re J led • b!
that Lindsay, 49, would become ~-plalfonn. ~lie ...
COOiimlinl! bMUes willa COl'
Gov. fl
A. R ' ' -..
BEGIN SENTENOO
MembersoftheNila
I i
Marion E. Snider, II, u•
'-lion
· 11M• h r I ..._PI
..
•
YICCi
I .I
Columbus, formerly of Meigs Spiro T. Apew line
aMI! 1
Counly , and Nels Gregory himfwbis~WI!I'~
Pickens, 19, Racine, Rt. 1, who In lflll be ewtatad D
tel
were sentenced Monday ' by · - ' - " ••
._
•
Meigs County Common Pleas "'..,. ...,
" ,,. .-·- '
'•
Judge John C. Bacon to Ohio
Slate Reformatory at Mansfaeld
a.lJB 'fO V+ f I
lo indeterminate ter111s were
taken to Mansfreld .today by The lliddleport·.,_.roJ
Depury Sheriff Robert Beegle. Rolli')' &lt;lab will . . . all~
Frida.)' al lbe 11'1 Ill :l
American
Le&amp;i• a.Q,
lOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown Followac diiae
Ill
,Pumeroy Wednesday alll a.m. 1:" to Veten. M
~ efllle
11.3S 16 deg"""' under clwdy HtosPi~
4
addili&lt;lll.
ski.!S.

!-'

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�1-tt.._..,s '

.IDIJOIIAL

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WJ, 0, Alii, II, J1?1

. ': •

.

-

. . .';. '

'- .

.

.

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.

.

"

'. '

nuiiiBfWR '10 WOIDWAY
NEW YORK ..... We'ft bd frim tbe !IJdll
,..;..licll ff • llllilltn- 81111 lbo we
lolefcuip lraft!l;...-aQJiniiJI;Jwberewe
·traftl less Ibm we .....,.. deli&amp;lllfall1, ·
AmSiao nmr is fiqGUea: It's lllariag JOU in ···
- ....,
,.,_,_•enrr .....
_,, ,._
awes a ·"
....,.
~~
tbe. ._..,....
traiple into tbe DIIDIIaiDI, as we do liecp•IIJ
,, 'lbe lips of U, S, mllarure.e;a)wbere;
IIIII fal' frdn a•ip!cliic tbla i s - WIW • one
lorliYe haoodintll Jltlian lradilicll, illellplllld ·
lbeir pooa'!&amp; .-e ....V lMMCht ...., We

..;..m..

.

It was only six mo11ths ago !bat the 'Ballilllore Colts
olllded. the 1!1'10 season llY defeatiJ!g the Dall;ls Cowboys
in the most underachieviilg Super Bowl of all time. Thus
was the colllltry liberated, albeit temporaz:ily; from I be

hypnotically .choreographed · thrasbings of byperthytoid
. yo~~~~g men, from tbe infinile canister set of bowl games,
from analyses of quarterbact sneaks that verge on analytic geometry, from the soPorific droniilgs of Pal
Summerall.· and Frank Gifford: .
· · But', inevitably, the new season bas arrived, in another
1eassuring liUlnifestation of the never-i!llding cycle of
life, It is. A-ugust .and our Monday nigbts and Saturday and
Sunday afternoons wiU soon be 6lled with 24-inch color
visiOns of George Blanda comiilg bact from the dead once
agaill to wreak havoc upon all those upstart youngsters.
Reschedule those Monday night outdoor barbecues,
mother. ne cbe( will be -l)usy cbeckillg the offeJJSe-de.
fense matchlips and scanning the screen to see if be can
tell wbich way the play will run by. studying Leroy KeUy's
foot placement.
Forget that _Saturday picnic, kids. Tbe scoutmaster
will be marvliling at the latest addition to the telecasters'
arsenal of equipment, which tbis year may include-who
tno1fs?-a new X:J'ay camera that will allow us to peer
into Joe Namath's digestive b"act and · see what be ate
for diilner. before the game. "Yes, Frank, Joe's gastric
juices seem .to be flowing exceptionally weU tonigilt."
'"lbal's right, Curt, Tbe fans can see right there what
makes bim sucb a standout at. quarterback. Fillesl amino
acids since Otto Graham."
.
Tlie kids can have their pot and s(ll!ild. We can get high
011 a Gale Sayers' toucbdown.run, on a long bomb thrown
by Jobn Unitas, on a last-second field goal kicked by
anybody, And now we can do it practically year round,
It would seem graceless of football to stomp in earlier
and earlier every year, tnockillg aside the gentlermaybe lbereby less American-sport of baseball, which
after all was the first pro sport to become a mass medjum, thereby opening the flood gates and allowing all
that shaving lotion and beer to inundate us.
But it is an honorable busiiless; let us remind ourselves
of that now, before even one fleet-footed scathack or
sticty..fingered slot man bath embait:ed upon a newly
-tional ~- So are they all honorable busiilessespro baseball and hockey and basketball, too.
Prepare now to shed tears at least twice a week duriilg the season as Vince Lombardi's militant saintliness is
evoked but remember !bat only costless sentiment is
allowed. ,What co1111ts is the satisfying sound of tumstyles clicking like cri!Zed wheels of fortune and the
sighs of contentment issuing from sponsors as they view
the ratings. ·
•Just mate sure, as the excitement of the new season
incubates"ill the yawning yeUow summer, .that tbe televisiOII set is in shape.

..

-------------1

WJ,O~-. U,lfll

.
BY'lACit O'DIIN

Tbe. $ooree C!f all that dull thudding Y!IU're heariilg
d&amp;ys ·is not the nation's e c_ o.nomy rebOundiilg list·
lealy off rock bottom. It is the start of the 1971 football

WIN AT BRIDGE

.! .

I

·~~~eee

.•

.

•[V;)iee~c).;g-B~adway 1

"Coax Me!''

.Pigskins flying~~
Bock to the TV
18110!1.

--:.
'

m-

onefcatignetwbo*hs~bltCJch'Dacsin
~ (ad !bey laak lillie oct111 Iinera. c.wn~

Wuccidenlllly jetted bame at lfti If tbe
mrmeahrbe!!Atlanllejetlniftl!M1' n _liele: M
tbe . jampeclted eutem frllcllll to FA • I
Capilalallldlbelater-l!lrmlj!!'rlllhbame ,, '11!e
plane wasn't lldl, P' cu•
rr.t tcuilt
aeall fled blclt fer bells' vlewl ollbe morie
8Ueen, leavlnl!lbe lint coupleGfi'CIWllfree to tbe
f'""•0"""-'"'",-'-1"--'
... tootonr!GIIr iea_ll
_ .,.._,.. .,,... .,.,....
eac11, strelcbed out and feltfar IDift !au 111111

In

!be swena In First Oaa,
Sollie fcrelgn minl:bardles a,e more fllnD1
!ban disturlling:

May wbeD we
sweltered wilb the air ccildllialen pi;nl) In
sight ,, On pboolng lbe dow• tirl ._, we
asked ~t lbe air CGIIitlming: 'l'be ..,tdy,
DlCIIt explansiDry and qle reply: ".am.

Beirut -

last f0\11' games on the sevengame card ill Tuesday's round
of the Ohio American IA!gim
Bueball Tounument weft
raiiled out They weft
uled for this lllCII1ling wilb the
~round immediat.el) ~-

1... ,..,L

tng .

Ashtabula edged Wadsworth

In,.,.

lHelen· Help Us !
I

:

I

By Helen Bottel

1

MARRIAGE ISN'T "OWNERSHIP" BE SAYS

Thoughts
"We must work the works
of Him who sent me, while it
is dtly; night comes, when no
one can work."-John 9:4.
"'

e

•

Find your place and bold
it:
find your work and do it.
t1rese dames who yeU and beat their cbesls becal15e their
And
put everything you've
bttsbands have been slightly wtailltul!
got into it-Edward Bok,
Look, it's man's nature. My wife llllderstands this. No American philanthropist.
Jroblem at our bouse,
We agreed early on that "to have and to bold" doesn't mean
"to own." U I want a little extra activity, I'm entiUed, I tell her ·
aboutit.Sbe'sadult.Shedoesn'tgetjealous -because she ~mows
I love her best.
contract would be played at
We both go 011t oo dales with other people. Sometimes we take
the other f!lbte, The second short vacations from each other, no questiOIB asked, Our only
was that, if be went down rule: Dm't get emotionally involved wilb anyone else, We don't
and the band made at the
. .
being
ba
. te
1e M wife
SCIIIleW I pnva
peop , Y
,
0 the r table, the s win g go for SWJDglllg,
against bim would be 3,11611 naturally, doesn't "date" dlen.
poiilts and might cost the
These peAl)' bot meaniilgless affairs keep us from being
cham~.
bored wilb eacb jllher: Make us see that we can still altract, get
He could ~ard three of us out to differeot places. (With no need to hide, we cao go
dummy's diamonds on the
pi
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
top clubs but there was an wherever we ease.)
.
'
I reccmmend the modem way of mamage. - VARIETY
Dear Dr, Lamb-To end a
~. 111p ..,... llooir PACK
lot of arguing in the family
-·
1 w' , ; .,, 't iw • Dear Pack:
I would like your answer be- IU·HCOIY
I dCII't!!!
cause I know I'm right
.MODfiH. fo&lt; Sl
Bot then 1have this rutty idea that emotional involvement is though my family says I'm
~· ~ .W ~ tbenameollbegame,andsex.fer-ego'ssakeisliket:lngiilgabell not. Sittiilg on one's seal all
oth '"' "W• td Jriiwo, lei• ·dtis .,_,1the cia
,_of ti but
.
H
the time doesn't m a k e it
""" 1 L I. P.O. . . ""· t.lio C'Jty wteuuu
ppe,r- 1o.... a~ m
DOI?IISlC. ~ •
broader does it?
Yori:, N.Y. JGOit,
P,S..... AIIdillbetyourwifeagleeswtthme.
- - - - - - - - Dear Helen :
Dear Reader-It can be a
eventual diamond problem.
Here's Cllef&lt;rWomen'sLib to get its pearlyteethiilto:
contributing factor. A per·
Of course, wben be finally
Looking through "Who's Who iii America," I found eiaCtly son who sits all the time and
played the second diam~. three wcmen listed ill l'JI pages! That's about par for the whole gets no exercise is apt to be
building ' up f a t deposits
the queen showed up and 11 book.
around
the body, The seat
was all over.
So they llrowa bCile to females lly putting out ''Who's Who of is one of
.nature's favorite
Jacoby has tefused to 58'! American Wcmen," patendy an "alao-nm" edilioo.
storage locations for lat.
what be would have done if
.
.
What fries me IS that wcmen must be at tbe absolute TOP to Then there is the question
East bad played the eight
iilstead of the queen, but gain entrance in lbe supposedly illlegrated ''Who's Wbo," while a of muscle tone, poor muscle
tone does increase dlmenMorris Elis, wbo sat South mancanmateitifbeisonlyhalf-waythere.
sions - but more noticeably
at the other table, said, " If
WbynolaManplis"'Wbo'sWbool American Men "same for in the abdomen. Many Jli!O'
the eil!ht bad ~. 1 women and then ''The illtimate Who's Who "which ~ludes the ple lose muscle lone in the
was gomg to toss a com and
•
•
see if you could ~tguess it"
both cr&lt;¥~1-:- ANOTHER LIBERATIONIST
. a belomen from jobs or habits
that involve sitting and very
(HEWSI'Am £HTUniSl ASSH.)
Dear Lib: (ADd Marqws : )
tittle
use of the stomach
How now, Wlao'sWbo: Telluswhat'swbat,andwby. -H.
muscles.
Dear Helen:
.

Dear Helen:

7-', Pomaoy eliminated Kent
9-4 and Euclid beat Onrinnati
Bodde
befcre
_ the raiil interrupled the Lima - Ridunmd

a,z

Ashley-Piqua and Cambridg •

mnstvro games w~

and Archbold ~ took the
field for their aftemooo

11

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North-$ovtb wlnerable
Will N - lllot Soo.tlo

Pass
.... Pus . Pass
Open!DI!Jead-. Q

Sitting Can Make
Seat Get Brooder

An Ugly, Jostling,
Selfish Horde

._.ow

tAKJ
• AKQ

s• s•

BRUCE BIOSSAT

7.2.

By OtnrUI 1: Jamet Jaaby
Tbere was a short period
in coatract history when the
graad:Siam bonus -:as 1,500
points not vulnerable and
2,250 vulnerable. These enor·
mous bonuses were exciting,
but they proved unpopular.
At ·the next change in the
laws, it went back to 1,000
and 1,5110.
Tbey did have one effect
on bidding. Prior to their in·
· lroduclion, the experts didn't
: botlr.er much with grand
: slams. But they went to work
: on them with the super bo: nuses. Tilt! methods they
· learned then have bad a
~ m:;~ elfect on modem bid·
: Today's band is taken from
: the last quarter of the 1937
• Spingold finals. Oswald Ja: coby's team bad a 3,000-poiilt
: lead wben be picked up the
: South band.
. It didn't take bim long to
: reach seven spades and,
• wben he saw the dummy,
: two tbiilgs became apparent.
: Tbe first was that the same

•illl-

-·How

cream'!

The bidding bas been: ~- ...
West
Nordo
J!'ast
~...
Pass
Pass

1•

3•

1•

Pass
Pass

3•
?

You, South bold·

uxn•A'ztK.Qt•tun

What do you do now.,
A~ ,_,.
'n SMw

tbat 7oa .....W ...:ve loiol 1spodes over- ...... to.t W
a trifle too mado.
TODAY'S QtJESnoN
Your
partner continues to live
clubs. What
do you do now?

'

BERRfS WORLD

Last fall I got booked by one ol those companies that adverlises "make money at home."
II was sopposed to send me samples. I would try the Jrodocls
andsendmyopinioo,forwbicbl'dgelpaid.Ailofthis,aflerlpaid
a$10registrationfee,refundguaranteediflwasnotsatislied.
I ha
t been
.. the products and of
ve no
~VJDg
.
•
coone no
paymenll wrote asking, then demanling my money back, but
.
ly
after three letters, I still have to rep .
What should I do? - MRS. W.
Dear Mrs, W.:
Write to lbe District Attorney iii the city where this cunpany
Gperllles Also coolacl the Better Bus;, a Bureau to see whether
't. listed. asrepu tab!e. Seod copli!S
. of your letters to the CUDpany
I IS
and indicate your nell stop wiD be at a lawyer's offke .... after
you bear bow many olbe!' housewives bave been rooked,
And consider you've learned a relatively inexp&gt;mive leS50D :
newrmail011tmCiley to getmmeyback! -H,
Pony Express
The first relay of pony
express mail left St. Joseph,
Mo., on April 3, UMiO, and ar·
rived at Sacramento, Calif. ,
on April 13. The service was
discontiilued in 0 c I o be r ,
1861, when transcontinental
was

Location of fat deposits on
the body is also related to
i n her it e d characteristics.
One native b"ibe in Africa
has a tribal characteristic
of a very large seal, which is
fat. Incidentally in their cui·
ture that is a sign of true
beauty.
Fat serves a useful tunclion for some people. It acts
as a pillow to protect the
body from external pressure.
A person who has recently
-lost a lot of fat from lbeir
seat has essentially lost his
piUow and he will notice the
pressure of his pelvic bones
when he sits, at least until
he regains enough muscle

Dear Dr, Lamb- Would
you please clarify the "CliP'
per bracelet" for arthritis.
So many of my. friends vow
it's curing them and I'm a
nonbeliever. Is it or isn't it
of value?
Dear llellller-Faith is a
wonderful thiilg. Tbere . is
even somethiilg magic in the
heating power of the pbysi·
ciao just because his patients
believe in him. Cripples have
walked from listening to iii,
al
·
Pint
spiration
m u 51 c, ·
water bas relieved a lot of
people of a genuine feeling of
discomfort. I never discount
and be
health
the psychic
nee
•
ful benefits a patient can get
from faith - even iii copper
bracelets.
Other t h a n the psychic
benefits - which can favorably affect the course of a
disease - · there is no evidence that copper bracelets
do anything else to cure or
prevent arthritis. Arthritis
bas a tendency for unex·
p 1a i n e d remissions and
sometimes it doesn't return
-in spite of medicine, not
because of it.
1 don't lhiilk copper brace,
. lets do any harm. I am only
concerned that someone who
should be under the care of
a rheumatologist (specialist
in arthritis) may not be gel·
ling the care they should be
getting in prevention of deformities and. crippling that
can be minimized or in some
cases prevented. That is the
only real da~~ger.
!N£W$PAPEl EN1uraost ASSH.o

,---------:=----:-:------------------,
'
They11 Do It Every Time

·
. The ~ that were slqoped
m play will take .., exactly
where the rain sllopped them,
.. · toda
starling
. at a,.., a.m.
Y.
Wortbingtoo and Archbold tate
to lbe field at 10 a.m.
Tournament officials wiD
draw winner's bracket and loser's bracket positions fer the
day's regularly scbedJoled umpetition afles' lbe seo:ond round
is disposed of. Three in loser's

..'

'

•

By BRUCE BIOSSAT

'.·'.
..'
..
5

~

.·i·- ------ - - - - -.·· ---•.

,•

~0

CNII't:JA.

I!

e::"

Boston
64 51
Detroit
62 52
New YO&lt;~
58 58
Washington &lt;16 67
Cleveland w:St 69

w.

Vert.

n~ht :;~~~~~o~:k::m:·r~r:::

Na-1 LNgue

.557

.5«
.500
..W7

-~

L Pet.

~

6'h

8
13
231!&gt;
24'12
GB
...
131!•
18
19
21

Pillsburgh
Chicago
~~~;..
Philadelphia
Montreal

W. L Pet.

GB

.10:1
6l St .SS3 6

10 •

~ ~ :~ l~V:
st 64 .«1 18'1'
45 70 .391 24V&gt;
West
GB
W L Pel
San Francisco '69 so .saO ...

O.kland
73 42 .635
Kansas City 53 54 .518
Chicago
55 60 .478
California
55 62 .470
Minnesota
51 62 .451
Los Angeles
6l S3 .so 4'1:
Milwaukee
ol8 65 .425 2~ Atlanta
61 S8 .513 B.
Tuesday's Results
Houston
58 SJ .504 9
O.kland6 Boston 5 llst)
Cincinnati
5'* 64 .4511 14'12
Oakland 7 Boston 5 (2nd)
San Diego
42 76 .356 76'12
Kansas Ci!y 9 Wash 2 (lsi)
Tuesday's ResuHs
Kansas City 9 Wash 1 I2nd)
Chic 2 Pitt. I
California 7 New YO&lt;k 6
Houston 7 SI.L 1
Bait~ Minnesota 3 {10 innins) N.Y. 6 San Diego •
Cleveland ~ Chicago I
LA 6 Phila. 1
Detroit 12 Milwau.kee 3
S.FT.odl •Mooy's!:_O.,_ble PilcheToday's Probable Pitchers
~
~u••
Ca!ifomia (Messersmith 11
Montreat (Renko 10-171 at
11) at New York {Stottlemyre San FrancisaJ (Cumberland to11 -~liimore (Dobson 15-51 at ,11Chicago (Jenkins 111-9) at
Minnesota (Perry 12-131. night. Pittsburgh (Ellis 1!&gt;6). night.
Detroit (Niekro 4- ~1 at
Atlanta !Ketley ~&gt;-31 aT " ·
MIIwaukee (lockwood 8-7) , Louis !Zachery 3-7), nigh!.
night.
· Houston (Billingham S-10) at
Cleveland !Dunning B-81 at Cincinnati I Me
_ rritt 0- m. night.
Chicago ( Horlen 6-91. night
Philadelphia (Reynolds J.3l
O.kland I Blue 20-~1 at Boston at Los Angeles (Aie""nder 3-3),
(Siebert 14-7), night.
noghl.
Kansas City (Splittorff 4-5 New York (Sea- 12-31 at
and Wright 2--4) at Washington San Diego (Roberls9-12), night.
(Shellenback J.B and Goglewski
Wednesday's Games
7-1 ;, 2. twi-nighl.
Chicago at Pin.• night
Thursday's Games
Atlanta at St.L, night
Baltimore at Minnesota, night

p tzarro

Hous. at Cine. night

Detroit at Milwaukee
Pnila. at LLA.. night
Cleveland at Chicago
N.Y. at S. D., nigh!
Kan City at Washington, night Mon. at S.F.

Top Shoe Thrower
MIDDLESEX, N.J. (UPI) Curtis Day, a 54-year-old machinist from Frankfort, Ind., is
the wiilner of the 1971 National
Horseshoe Pitch Association
(NHPA) open men's competi-

rules,

Police whistles are still heard, but they exercise only

sporadie command over chaotic motor traffic. Some
blocks in busy city centers look like badly governed
parting lots,
In the three-mile trip from home to office, any day I
can count at least 15 or l'JI gross b"affic violations by motorists. At minimum, these mean blatant discourtesy toward others. At most, they risk life.
Pedesbian traffic, too, bas become a kind of unraveled,
bnttally impersonal exercise iii disorder. People cut nar,
rowly in front of others as if they were sidestepp!Qg lamppoats. Markets and other stores are iilcredible tangles of
indifferent, bustling human bodies.
Scripp&amp;-Howard reporter Robert Dietsch bas just told
us grapbically bow staggeriil~ly widespread is thievery of
every sort in this ·nation. It 1s not, of course, strictly an
urban phenomenon. But the concentration of people in
the cities mates stealing seem an urban plague.
Dietsc~explodes anew the notion that thievery is almost entftely a "catc~rg" device for disadvantaged
people dazzled by the
uence around them. Figures
show shoplifting more common in well:Off suburbs than
in cities proper. Some of the "inflation" people moan
about comes from price boosts by employers who pass on
their losses from shoplifting and thefts by their employes
(total loss, $3.5 billion yearly).
Most disturbin!l is not the magnitude of the thievery,
grave !bough it IS. It is the callous attitude of our millions of "respectable" thieves. Their contempt for the
law of the community is massive, and not concealed by
their cbUdisb assortment of alibis:
"Everybody does it . .. I needed the tbiilf, and anyway the store is covered l!y iilsurance . . . wanted to
burt the system ... It's ~m law, not ours . . . It was
just sort of borrowing (a prank, a joyride, a game) , .. "
Some stealing is so bold as to be almost funny, In one
southwestern city, people have become quite adept at
backing up a b"uck and stealing every stick of furniture.
In the Newart:Jersey City zone, some rallroads no
looger briilg freight cars laden with food into their yards.
Tbey are balled, broken open aild stripped bare.
Tbe spray-pai:nt:On-tbe-walls syndrome, seen at work
iii new areas and old, is lbe signature of the disorganiud.
Tile sc:rawlers don 'I tnow it, but lbey are advertising not
just disrespect for law and decency but self:COntempt.
The self·seekitig of politicians, unions, corporations
weU~lebrated, adds paiilful iilgredienls to the
miL Pollution lays a pall over the chaos. Air, says author
Robert Ardrey, ~'bas become an industrial producl·"
And we go iii heavily for visual pollution. We litter and
disfigure the landscape. For many of lbe disenchanted ill
cities, persOnal ugliness is a chosen hallmark.
The famous author H. G. Wells, describing early ch•ilizations, insisted lbey were NOT communities liviil' IInder
law, but really no more than collections of "Jostling
crowds." Is this wbat we are becomiilg today? If we can
shrug that one off, we may be far down a crumbling road.

'11tenening stars are Merm- off Cape Hatteras, N,C.
ry, Mars ml Jupit«.

·

•

·

By NEIL HERSHBERG
UP! Sports Writer
The fountain of youth that
Juan Pizarro has discovered
may turn into a money-making
gusher for the Chicago Cubs.
The well-travelled · Pizarro,
with his seventh big league
team, kept the charging Cubs on
the move in the National
League Eastern Division race
Tuesday night, firing a fivehitteranddrivinginthewinning
run on a sacrifice fly for a 2-1
victory over the fading Pitts·
burgh Pirates.
The Cubs, who have won
seven of their last eight games,
have gained five games on
Pittsburgh in the last II days

-·-11 _.....

and now trail the Division
leaders by only six games.
Pittsburgh has dropped nine of
its last 12 starts.
Pizarro, winning his fourth
game out of his five decisions
since the Cubs recalled him
from the minors on July 5,
pitched his first victory over
Pittsburgh since 1960, the last
year the Pirates won the pen-

HeckJ Bids

erson

w·m ,..,op

Gold Med.aJs

,_,..,

In Pee ·Wee
Title Game

AMNTION:

::,::ea:=~y

SMALL CAR '-ERS

1---------------------------------1
liOOD,.'EAR "POWER.

FRE.E

FREE

See Goble
For The

At Your Ceilified Oi Campany Statim
"Your Gasoline Purchase Free" H We Fail To
Clean Your ' Windshield. Wea1her Permitting.
No Ottrer Conipany Dares To Offer This
Po.l icy,
.
_----..,
~--

Certified Gas Stations
992-9911
Sli~,Main

Simpson happy, especially since
the Reds .righthander ,gave ·
Morgan a piU:h which was
right where lbe Reds' hurler
wanted it.
"It was a low. pitch, and I
was hoping he would hit l.t on
the ground for a double play,"
said Simpson.
Forsch, a rookie righthander
who has beaten the Reds three
in a row this season, yielded
only four hits in going tile
route for his seventh victory
against five losses.
Three of the hits - doubles
by Pete Rose and Tony Per•.,
and a single by Johnny Bench
- came in the first inning and
accowoted for the Reds' only
runs ·of the game. Thereaf~r.
Pitch Wa~ Dellberale
the Reds made only one hll.
"Did you know I was 1),10
The Reds and Astros wiild up
when 1 hit that homer tonight," the series tonight when Gary
said Morgan .
. Nolan goes against Houston's
This bit of information Jack Billingbam.

said Joe, grinning.
Morgan 's more amused than
anything of the fact that he's
tied for the club's lead in
homers.
"I'm not knocking anyone/'
he said, "but I'm only leading
because of the inability of a
few others to hit up to their
-normal standards."
Morgan was referring to Jim·
my Wynn, Rader, Bob Watson
and Cesar Cedeno.
The 15 homers Morgan bit in
1969 rated is his career high .
Wynn has hit only seven this
season, but he has a career
high of 37, attained in 1967.
Last year Rader hit a career
high of 25.

Real Big with Cubbies

Rio, Racine

'

"I think I'm up to 159 now," couldn't' have made Wayne

Coast League. His recall was
necessitated by the in·
consistency of Ken Holtzman
and manager Leo Durocher's
desire for an added left-banded
starter.
"The way he's pitched there
is no way I'd take him out of the
starting rotation," Durocher
said.
"! hadn't seen Pizarro pitch
in around four years but tonight
he was throwing harder than
the last time I saw him," said
home plale umpire Harry
Wendelstedt.
The Cobs had been blanked
for the first six innings by
Pirate starter Bruce Kison. Jim

Hickman opened up the seventh
with a doublf. Ron Santo
walked and Rison fumbled
Brock Davis' bunt to load the
bases. J. C. Martin tied the
score with a long fly. Santo
moved to third on the play,
scoring on Pizarro's sacrifice
fly.
In other NL action San
Francisco blanked Montreal 1,
0, Los Angeles downed
Philadelphia &amp;-1, New York
tripped San Diego 6-4, Atlanta
nipped St. Louis 2-1 and Houston
edged Ciilcinnati 3-2.

Levias Ready to .Play

w1•11J•ng

_!We ttanor

I

and two in winner's competition were planned.
In lbe axnpleled g3!111!S Toes·
day Jeff Albert singled home
Pat Garvay with the wiilniilg
run in the bottom of the niiltb
as AsbtaiMtla gaiiled its win,
. Stan l'trTy held Kent to just
four bits and helped Pcmeroy's
cause with two hils himself.
Pot:neroy stac:ted up five of its
runs in the second inning.
One of .,._,, hits as a
• ~ ., s . w
three run 1riple capplllg a five
nm seo:ond inning outburst.
Olber Meigs hitters were Bob
Werry, Gene PoweU and Roger
Dixon 'l!ith two hils eacb.
Dave Burnett had a two run
dcotble and David Boyd slamdouble .,__ .
.
med a
. • g,, ~ gomg
the route, fanned rune and
walked eight. Mains, the losiilg
'idler atid his li
Bruss
~....... four freere
'11tey'
7~
pa_es"
struct out four·
11Gb FoSter powered Euclid's
wiil lly scoring three runs on
three hits and pitching the vic.tory over Oncinnali.
play

.:,:::":t :.:.toss- And

WASHINGTON (NEAl
DO we still have "communities" iii tbis counby? Tbe
answer is not at all clear, even though anyone can see
the environs of our big cities sprawliilg farther and farther.
A community is a "body of people living in the same
place under the same laws." Is that what we bave in
New York, Chicago, Wasbiilgton, Detroit, San Francisco,
Los Angeles and a host of other urban clusters?
Move about today in any of these places, and what
strikes you most is the sense of disorder, the feliling that
the life you see swirling in the streets goes by no set

Atti.

I

•

High on Phipps

Those born oo this day are
By)J.Wrre. w atioaal under the sign o! 'Leo,
Today is Wednesday, Aug. 11, American song wrilft' clme
11, ·1112.
J 4&lt;~-.c&gt; A -·t~lbe ZDni ""' o1 1m.
Bond wa~_.l!c!r!t
w
Tbe moon iSbetween its fUif 0n this day 1n history:
pbaae ml last quarter. .
In 19011 the llrst radio 3lS
Tbe Dl!ming stars are Venus was receiYed when the liner
wau..NoO
and Saturn. .
"Arapahoe" ~ed fW'Irelp

(

.•

As many as &amp;tltl cootestants
nant.
from across the &lt;WD!ry and
The 34-year-&lt;~ld lefty, who
Canada participated in junior
one-hit San Diego in his last
girlandboy,llpell,intermediate
start, stymied the Pirates in
and senior men and wumen's
allowing only one extra base hit.
divisions for some 'iS trophies
'
Pizarro, who won 19 games
lion.
and $1,500 in ca&gt;i1 prizes.
with the Chicago White Sox in
PALO ALTO, Calif, (UP!:) _ nenuus before the game, but Day compiled a· 35-0 won-loss The 36 competitors trying iii
1964, started the season with the
Bill N~, abo bas last his maybe "anxious."
record Tuesday to earn his open men's competition comHawaii Islanders of the Pacific
slarting qnarterbact job 1o "I think amious is a better share of some $1,500 in prize pleted qualifying rcJillldoi last
JOlmgSies' Mike PWpps at least wmd," be said, "I returned to money. He had a riilger per- week. They bad been l!llg&amp;ged
for lbe summer believes hismyrocmaflerdiilnerSalurday, cenlage of 85.
inadaily round-robin regimenl
]ll'Oiege ''!bould
a great reed a lillie and then went over
"I had a real good tourna- of six games for lbe past six
one fer us,''
lbe cdatSe wilb DoD Gault, · men!," Day said after complet- days. Tournament o11icia1s said'
Phipps got IU 6rst di.,.. of ''I woke up al t:30 &amp;today ing his fiilal game on one of they estimated eacb player
the year Sunday apiml tbe San momlng, but I thiilt it . was the 24lighted tournament pitch- about six miles during bis
By JOE CARNICELLI
Larry Smith, the running
Francisco tilers, 81111 altbotlgb DIGIIIIy because ol tbe lime dif- ing courts. "I was consistent." nightly competition on the 46UP! Sports Writer
back who missed Los Angeles'
the ae.eJ.anc1 llrowm lost, Nel- faBLt," be said, ''Once I was
Elmer Hohl, of Weelesley, foot court.
Jerry LeVias can start first two pre:season games
81!11 said be showed "a lot o1 awake, tbotlgb, it was im- OnL, fiilished second, four
The NHPA competition for ha ving his fun again.
while recuperating from off.
courage."
PI 'b)e to think ol anytbiilg but games behind Day, with a 31-4 nert August is scbeduled to
LPVias, the speedy receiver season ankle surJlery, may open
Phipps' pa
weft twice in- the game,''
record and a riilger percenlate lake place at Greenville, Ohio. and return specialist acquired against Cleveland Friday night.
llereepled, mc:e for a IAiud!of 84. John Walker of Cllula
by San Diego from Houston is a John Wright, out last year
.._ but -"his
VIS'Ia ·""'"''" ~--~ · lblrd p'·ce
trade for linemen Ron Billing· w'tth a severed Achilles tendon,
~in
bonO:S ';;ill;;~,;;'mark,~sley and Gene Ferguson, signed informed the Detroit Lions that
~ two tocw "do•n P'
llld
mg one game ahead of left.
with the Chargers Tuesday he is quitting football. Wright, a
tnt!Jling W,.nla for 1be g-.
banded, 17-year-old Mark Sieafter a holdout .
. wide receiver, told Coach Joe
'l1te tilers woo Jt..a
bold, of Huntington, Ind., whoT
" It was not fun silting around Sclunidt he had lost his speed
"It's tough he~ out lba'e in
competed in the open men's
0
.1
and . watching ~ootball, " said and couldn't play th.e position .
)'OW' 6rst game, haded up in
tournament lor the first time.
LeV1as, Houston s leadmg pass Dan Devme, attempting to
thebolellldtbewindswirling,"
Tournament officials said
n!ce'ver.~thhiSyears wtth the compensate for ·the _loss of
saidNelsen,wbobasbemlumTuesday's weather- with no
Oilers. Ever~-thmg IS very offensive tackle Francts Peay,
pered with bad knees. ''Mia
wiild and clear skies - was
satisfactory. It s fme to be wtth who walked out of camp
awed a lot of CGUI'lllle to CDDe WIU\IINGTON, Ohio (UPI )- "ideal.", They said more than CAU, lliomlia (UPI) - San Diego, especially for a Monday, has moved center Phil
back the way he cid. It !bowed 'l1te !lncinnali Bengals want 5,1100 persons watched the fi,nal Frank Hedd's bid to btnMtw- receiver."
Vandersea to left tackle, Cle
wby be sbould beccme a weal rookie quarterback Ken Ander- competition at Mountainside the greatest gold medal swimContract terms were not Walker from linebacker to
111e for us."
son to l15e bis bead - but not Park here.
mer in the bistmy of the Pan revealed but LeVias said it was
Qlacb N'lck storidl plans to as a battering ram.
American Games bighligllt;s lbe virtually an extension of his
startPbippsiilalltheelbililiCII Quarterllad;coachoftheclob,
United States' attempt to scale current contract. '
SCIOTO RESULTS
games to give mn a c1tance to Bill Walsh, said Tuesday Anderlbe century mart in -victories
LeVias is&amp;xpected to replace COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Penearn lbe~job by tbe lime son showed himself "too wiUiilg tnterna_lional League Sta~dings today 00 the nextto-lasl day Ill veteran receiving star Lance sion Fund won the featured
,_.,
to _......_.. _,n;.~~t" in the By Unoted Press lnternatoonal
ti'ti ,..,._
Alworth, traded to Dallas, in eighth race, a $1,500 pace, at
the
,....~,
W L Pet. GB compe 00 ""'"'
"Be bad good ]ll'Oleclicat and Bengals' %7-10wiillast Saturday Rochester
69 &lt;16 .600 The blond, &amp;-loot~ Becti wiD the San Diego lineup and will Scioto
Downs Tuesday,
be stood in lba'e well," Nellen night over the Miami Dolpbiils. Tidewater
69 ~9 .585 p;, stamp himself as the ·DIIlll to be the Chargers' primary punt returning $3,40, $3 and $2.60.
said. "Now be just bas to keep
"A couple of times when he ~Yh~;~~~on
~ ~ :~ ~1, beat iii the Olyoqjc Games at and kickoff return man.
Second was Anita Brewster,
111 improving."
ran with the ball be lowered his Richmond
57 60 .ol87 13
Muncih, Germany, ned year if
Jim "Earthquake" Hunt, a paying $5.40 and $3.60, with the
Phipplwoulm'tacmitbewas bead and went irito a couple of louisville
56 61 .479 14
he can win two more gold veteran of II years of pro show spot captured by
44 71 ·383 25
·-~
when
e
would
have
Toledo
· the ••--'s
_,.,en;
w
Winnipeg
39 75 .3~2 29'12 medals '-'""t
-....- 1D
...,., 1110 football, announced his retire- Sophisticated Gal, $6.20.
preferred blm to go out of
Tuesday's Results
Meter Freestyle 81111 the Men's ment at the New England Adaily double combination of
bounds," Walsbsaidof the play- Rochester 8 Winnipeg ~
400 Meles' FreeslJle Rela:r.
Patriots' camp.
3-6, Roving Reporter and Early
er !rem Augustana College.
Tido;w'!ter 9 Charleston 1
That would give him a total of Hwot, 32, was named an Farr, paid $16. Attendance was
Walsb is still not sure bow ~~~~::,',~ ~ 5.f'~!%s; 4
six gOO! here, plus one silver - American Football League All- 7,795 and the day's handle was
well Anderson will do in the pro
~ lbe teori of live gold Star at defensive tackle for $279,6t2.
ranks, but the coach said his
medals set by Mld Spitz of the four seasons and holds the AFL
2 STOKES COACHES
two toucbdown pasws in the
United States in tbe l!IS'I Pan reccord for fwnble recoveriesMONTICELLO, N. Y. (UPI)
seo:ond half showed promise.
American Games at Winnipeg, 14. He wiU be replaced in the
Red Auerbach, who coached
"Until now we weren't really
lJTI'LE GAM WINS
Canada.
starting lineup by Julus Adams,
sure what to eqii!Ct of him," CINCINNATI (UP!) - The Three other swimmi~~g litlah 'a 6-foot-4, 265-pounder from the Boston (;eltics of the
Rio Grande and Raciile wiD Walsb said, ''primarily because fealured eighth race Tuesday at are scheduled tonigbt and tbe Texas Southern was New National Basketball Association
meet at 6:ll p.m. this eveniilg of the college background he River Downs, a $3,800 Ohio five events are most liRly to England's No.2 draft choice.
to nine championships, and AI
for the championship of the had.
Thoroughbred Fund race, was push the United Slates, wbidl Los Angeles traded offensive Atlles, coach of the Golden
Second Annual Cbesbire Pee
" PlayiJog against the teams in won by Little Gam in 1:10 3:5, goes into the day with 96 gold · tackle Mitch Johnson to Cleve- State Warriors have been
wee Tournament.
theNFLiulittledifferenttban paying $41.60, $14.21) and $1.
medals, over lbe •• mark, land as payment for Joe named head coaches for the
Rio Grande advanced to tbe playing a;pinst teams like Val- Squabble was second, payiilg However, it now seems clear Talloni, a lineman the Rams annual Maurice Stokes game at
championship tilt Tuesday paraiso," be said. "But some $4.80 and $4.20, with Dantive the U.S. wiD 1riill .., with obtained from the Browns last Kutcher's Country Club, Aug.
night by ousting Mason's people del 'I seem to have any lblrd, returniilg $9.
17.
sligbdy more !ban 100 Yiclories week..
Angels, 9-$.
1rouble with any kind of com- Traceys Pal and Vineyard llY the time oompelitkll ems in
11te winners took a +0 lead in petition. They can play as well . Lark, 9-4, combined for a return virbJally all evmls 1bmsday
the first and wrapped it up with againstObio Slate, for instance, of $59.60.
night-quite a .,......••n from
a five run outburst in the fifth. as against Valparaiso. Kenny
tbe l%i caphftd at
Mason scored one run in eacb Ill appears to be that kind of prethe first and fourth iilnings and
f..~~Andelson'spassto
three in the fifth.
S. Rainey bad a grandslam
showed
homer for the winners; Tony
Weiher !!ingled and doubled in ·~yr.utheallernate~
three trips to . the plate and ceiver, but Kemy was able to
·
~~
get out o1 trouble and bit him,"
McCoy doobled.
Runnion led the ~ with Walsb said. "Alot of youngSters
three bits iilclwling a triple. with a lot better college credenY01111g had two singles.
tials aren't alE to do this,''

disorderly

•
•

PlayBaByltiUmno=re.~68~~~~2.9 ~61118i~:~ fi!~:~·~:~

be.:,...,

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

tone to be comfortable.

eon-

test

Coin-tossing Made Easy
NOII'DI
.KllOU2

Legi·o·n

. CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Joe &lt;!iwn.
Morgan hails from the San
Francisco Bay area, which
spawned such former Reds
I'm just a second baseman try. players as Frank RobinsOn,
ing to help the club win Vada Pinson, Cort Flood and
"
games," said the gre gario:~S in- Tommy Harper .
fielder.
Morgan Too Small
Surprisingly enough, though,
5-7, lli().pound Morgan today, is And, like Robinson and the
tied with teammate Doug Ra· others, Morgan. played for
der , a &amp;-2, 21(}.pound third base- George Powles in sandlot balL
f
man , or the Houston Astros' "Powles tried to interest the
Reds in me," said Morgan ,
home run lead.
Morgan's ninth homer of the "but I think they thought I
.
·
season, commg with a runner was too small ."
So did a lot of other major
on base in the third inning
Tuesday night, matched two league clubs.
fi
· ·
ed b
''Houston,'' reca,lled Morgan ,
trst mnmg rWls scor
y the
"was
only one of three teams
Cincinnati Reds.
And the home run by Morgan interested in me."
also set the stage for Jay
Morgan can't blame those
Alou's seventh inning single clubs which weren't interested.
which scored catcher Jack Hi- " I only weighed 145 pounds,"
a ll to give rookie righthander said Joe.
Ken Forsell and the Astros a Morgan hasn 't gotten any
:1-2 vtctory at Riverfront Sta- taller but he has added weight.

ASHl.AND, Ohio ( UP!:)- 'l1te

atyqualmga'••lbrcvslcr!arylinJltaliancars)
wbQ ew'ainrd 1!11 ·I 'NI!Ie "'"••Wm mop~)
....._, ''lllbfarei&amp;D~:~n,Nbelllid,llinti!iely. 15th!"
Bu.tlbe otlla' l i p l - more obvioal!; IIIICb ·
lli Bcmg K!lng, at the fallled old P...h•l•
as:
Hotel no matla' bow .many times we left 4111'
Coca Cola: It's. i:ca)wbae, ~ . is ~ aar tbiee pms o!
weni .hlllly
JIL!IIa; far fnm ~ling ill uiqalbls 1n1m- polished and delivlnd In penaa - WI 4111'
peting,Ifati-~itca.,ntly ,., 1'alte8 tbe return; lbe reason: A~ 11'*'11 ltq tip
sameal)onrtbewarld, we.cautlelltfnm trips eacb lime; that's 15 cenla America.
to mere than 30 ~lries ·"' '1\'e lllll"fQd at its . Lots of ~b;ts to Italy pnfer the tiny fiat
pie nt MD""
ml 3 ' at, in llcalg 50tla just to capture tbe dmJeltiC Ilallla mood of
Kcmg and C)nuda ,, We'ft laid it's lftetmed nenoU8 traffic, bat we preli!r the wwbat
sligbtJy Dicre than elsuibae in eerW8 ,-rddle more coinmOdlous famil) dlmri_..._ Gf tile 1H
East and Afrieln !pC11a, bot wbaecu we've ,,, PrcJbably premalure fogey•
, bat -.e do
palllled lc6esli••l)· it's .... "' • • 41y .the trampcrt two cmlren .and • de ... alwQa
admirable same,
scme baggagP., if ODl) fnm the locallbapo ..,
n
e 1ft: we man~!! at a t e;uy- tid It's an enssnble rut In wblch we- vlrtully
wilbwt tbe lnlliniatimell) pop!•• .........ble ml off fnm lbe Pepsi gl!llel'llicll, llni!D luDtwnties in lbe olden U,S.
lA:&amp;"Cbiefs, white flannel panla and Wbatlea, aD
Levis: 111e old WGbwl'a blue·jeans Levi adminiiE but somehow 11y our darable hilltll,
SII811SS created haft 1llten OM tbe 1rlll'ld of igllcred .. , Odd, for lie'll eapeihwt 1rilb
JIIUDI!people ofeverycmJilledetiliillr)',fnm Ciur sll'lqe rl!lltaurants, Ullknol!ll wa., unf-IHar
perscaul dJ&amp;a tatkll .., Allbou&amp;b detlim bas roads and shop~~ b!Jt 1101111! lbinp ri'D"in cal·
been armild siDc:e 5GO ,ears belate Crill, It's stanlly ill our cbolen I!Joove, cr ru_
t ...
cmsi.-!eed bj YirluaDy aD fcnigners an
Of all aar favcrlte sllllpl alnld per111ps
American inftoliCII,
' Beale &amp;Inman at 131 W, Bmd St., lmdon, is Gill'
~- •--'-- •'-"-__, Hlrlz car rental favorite •. .•Napo.....,.....,.,_
• - .~_.... !.....
L...........,,..,..,.,
...,.,...,.
~, It ,_ in tbe
signs are eta)wlae, aad we Wl!ft • '*......,Nil of llrst LCIIdCII directory in 1131!, a cbtqae rnm
our mm acceptaace ol aD IIIICb firms in cme Clarles Diclti!IIS, framed, ll!lrl' l'ieo be apeat H
•"'den laugh of ~: Oar daggl*r, P"'llda five wmnga lbere In lllit; 81111 lbe ftavar
&lt;bled CJUt in deDm panla, wasllling a !C """ olllie quiet, Cild.fasbiCIIed prun' I il Ill wry
wNJe baJancing a Coca Cola u we wailed in aar ~ y011 eqii!Ct 11Gb CDicbit to ]11 ! 1 nt lbe
llel1Henled fiat 1H fer lbe lady Ill 01r11Da to liD ,, ADd now we're bome, vaguely reluclant to
buy 1lice Cril('n, more Ccltes and same leutall go to return to tbe lbiMiwat jangle; 1111
lks sb.!y ban to lnlt the jllmp • • Rime to that's where we make like Tanan for a ltriag
pick .., Gill' Pan-Am 747 airline liclels back to and in aar own wnplainable fashion, love It tbe
New Yart.
best. Nat dateline: Broadway.

•lboel

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

Little Guy with ·Big Bat

After Rains

ow ~write of aD ,_ at tbe

~ Getqe Hotel in

Reschedule

Pomeroy, Ohio

BanlcAmericard and Mister

e)

Tubeless
Black Wall
Plus $1.96
or $2.01
Fed. Ex.
FI'M Mounlift!l

White Walls

Tax

oni·y Sl':sO more

~IZER OIL 00.,
71D E. Main

,992,2101

INC.

Best In Use4
Cars
..,.

.

KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CM lDT

l'lo"*"'

992-3422

Locust St.

Middleport. o.

Watch Your
$$Grow
'• • you add to your savings
eoch week at the Meigs Co.
Branch of the Athens Co.
S.vings ond Loan.

center and Kevin Hunt from
defensive to offensive tackle.
The New York Jets an,
nounced the signing of veteran
running back Emerson Boozer
CURRENT,
while the New York Giants
PASSBOOK RATE
were still trying to iron out
·~uearn
n•
contract diffi'culties ,With quar- Sa ve"b''t
y he .lOth,
terback Fran Tarkenton, who from the ·1st, . ·.,
left the team Monday.
In this week's pre-reason
action, Cleveland is at Los
Angeles and Miami plays host
to San Francisco Friday night.
Saturday action finds Chicago
at Baltimore. Cincinnati at
The Athens County
Detroit, Houston at St. Louis,
S.vinos &amp; loin co.
Atlanta at Kansas City, Pitts296 Second St.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
burgh at Green Bay, New
Orleans at Dallas, Washington Member Federal Home Loan
at Denver New York (AFC) at Bank.
Oakland and Minnesota at San
Member Federal -Savings &amp;
Diego.
Loan Insurance Corp. All
The New York Giants are at accounts Insured up to
New England Sunday night and $20,000.00.
Buffalo is at Philadelphia the .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _•
following evening.

Meip Co. Branch

~)
---=-·

LUV-A BIG DEAL?
3 Speed GE

3 • 20" Fans
3 • 20" Fans s:d) ~
4Cycle

1 20" Mower

96:95 f6495

4Cycle

.15 H,P,
· 18" Mower
1 Riding Mower
W, G, Catcher

1 21" Lawn Boy
6 Lawn Chairs

)5:18'

1- 5Foot

Lawn Glider Swing~ '26•
8,000 G£

1 Air Conditioner ~'19t'
'
12,000 GE
1·Air Conditioner. !2ft00''24411

·.....··, ·ri&amp;nic"i&amp;e"CilesiS. ,~ ..,... ···
Water Jugs ·• ,
Ufe Vests &amp;Cushions.
All Prices Reduced!

H&amp;R FIRESTONE
.
'

N,2nd

992-2238.

�1-tt.._..,s '

.IDIJOIIAL

',":S I

.

IF

~-

WJ, 0, Alii, II, J1?1

. ': •

.

-

. . .';. '

'- .

.

.

·,

.

.

"

'. '

nuiiiBfWR '10 WOIDWAY
NEW YORK ..... We'ft bd frim tbe !IJdll
,..;..licll ff • llllilltn- 81111 lbo we
lolefcuip lraft!l;...-aQJiniiJI;Jwberewe
·traftl less Ibm we .....,.. deli&amp;lllfall1, ·
AmSiao nmr is fiqGUea: It's lllariag JOU in ···
- ....,
,.,_,_•enrr .....
_,, ,._
awes a ·"
....,.
~~
tbe. ._..,....
traiple into tbe DIIDIIaiDI, as we do liecp•IIJ
,, 'lbe lips of U, S, mllarure.e;a)wbere;
IIIII fal' frdn a•ip!cliic tbla i s - WIW • one
lorliYe haoodintll Jltlian lradilicll, illellplllld ·
lbeir pooa'!&amp; .-e ....V lMMCht ...., We

..;..m..

.

It was only six mo11ths ago !bat the 'Ballilllore Colts
olllded. the 1!1'10 season llY defeatiJ!g the Dall;ls Cowboys
in the most underachieviilg Super Bowl of all time. Thus
was the colllltry liberated, albeit temporaz:ily; from I be

hypnotically .choreographed · thrasbings of byperthytoid
. yo~~~~g men, from tbe infinile canister set of bowl games,
from analyses of quarterbact sneaks that verge on analytic geometry, from the soPorific droniilgs of Pal
Summerall.· and Frank Gifford: .
· · But', inevitably, the new season bas arrived, in another
1eassuring liUlnifestation of the never-i!llding cycle of
life, It is. A-ugust .and our Monday nigbts and Saturday and
Sunday afternoons wiU soon be 6lled with 24-inch color
visiOns of George Blanda comiilg bact from the dead once
agaill to wreak havoc upon all those upstart youngsters.
Reschedule those Monday night outdoor barbecues,
mother. ne cbe( will be -l)usy cbeckillg the offeJJSe-de.
fense matchlips and scanning the screen to see if be can
tell wbich way the play will run by. studying Leroy KeUy's
foot placement.
Forget that _Saturday picnic, kids. Tbe scoutmaster
will be marvliling at the latest addition to the telecasters'
arsenal of equipment, which tbis year may include-who
tno1fs?-a new X:J'ay camera that will allow us to peer
into Joe Namath's digestive b"act and · see what be ate
for diilner. before the game. "Yes, Frank, Joe's gastric
juices seem .to be flowing exceptionally weU tonigilt."
'"lbal's right, Curt, Tbe fans can see right there what
makes bim sucb a standout at. quarterback. Fillesl amino
acids since Otto Graham."
.
Tlie kids can have their pot and s(ll!ild. We can get high
011 a Gale Sayers' toucbdown.run, on a long bomb thrown
by Jobn Unitas, on a last-second field goal kicked by
anybody, And now we can do it practically year round,
It would seem graceless of football to stomp in earlier
and earlier every year, tnockillg aside the gentlermaybe lbereby less American-sport of baseball, which
after all was the first pro sport to become a mass medjum, thereby opening the flood gates and allowing all
that shaving lotion and beer to inundate us.
But it is an honorable busiiless; let us remind ourselves
of that now, before even one fleet-footed scathack or
sticty..fingered slot man bath embait:ed upon a newly
-tional ~- So are they all honorable busiilessespro baseball and hockey and basketball, too.
Prepare now to shed tears at least twice a week duriilg the season as Vince Lombardi's militant saintliness is
evoked but remember !bat only costless sentiment is
allowed. ,What co1111ts is the satisfying sound of tumstyles clicking like cri!Zed wheels of fortune and the
sighs of contentment issuing from sponsors as they view
the ratings. ·
•Just mate sure, as the excitement of the new season
incubates"ill the yawning yeUow summer, .that tbe televisiOII set is in shape.

..

-------------1

WJ,O~-. U,lfll

.
BY'lACit O'DIIN

Tbe. $ooree C!f all that dull thudding Y!IU're heariilg
d&amp;ys ·is not the nation's e c_ o.nomy rebOundiilg list·
lealy off rock bottom. It is the start of the 1971 football

WIN AT BRIDGE

.! .

I

·~~~eee

.•

.

•[V;)iee~c).;g-B~adway 1

"Coax Me!''

.Pigskins flying~~
Bock to the TV
18110!1.

--:.
'

m-

onefcatignetwbo*hs~bltCJch'Dacsin
~ (ad !bey laak lillie oct111 Iinera. c.wn~

Wuccidenlllly jetted bame at lfti If tbe
mrmeahrbe!!Atlanllejetlniftl!M1' n _liele: M
tbe . jampeclted eutem frllcllll to FA • I
Capilalallldlbelater-l!lrmlj!!'rlllhbame ,, '11!e
plane wasn't lldl, P' cu•
rr.t tcuilt
aeall fled blclt fer bells' vlewl ollbe morie
8Ueen, leavlnl!lbe lint coupleGfi'CIWllfree to tbe
f'""•0"""-'"'",-'-1"--'
... tootonr!GIIr iea_ll
_ .,.._,.. .,,... .,.,....
eac11, strelcbed out and feltfar IDift !au 111111

In

!be swena In First Oaa,
Sollie fcrelgn minl:bardles a,e more fllnD1
!ban disturlling:

May wbeD we
sweltered wilb the air ccildllialen pi;nl) In
sight ,, On pboolng lbe dow• tirl ._, we
asked ~t lbe air CGIIitlming: 'l'be ..,tdy,
DlCIIt explansiDry and qle reply: ".am.

Beirut -

last f0\11' games on the sevengame card ill Tuesday's round
of the Ohio American IA!gim
Bueball Tounument weft
raiiled out They weft
uled for this lllCII1ling wilb the
~round immediat.el) ~-

1... ,..,L

tng .

Ashtabula edged Wadsworth

In,.,.

lHelen· Help Us !
I

:

I

By Helen Bottel

1

MARRIAGE ISN'T "OWNERSHIP" BE SAYS

Thoughts
"We must work the works
of Him who sent me, while it
is dtly; night comes, when no
one can work."-John 9:4.
"'

e

•

Find your place and bold
it:
find your work and do it.
t1rese dames who yeU and beat their cbesls becal15e their
And
put everything you've
bttsbands have been slightly wtailltul!
got into it-Edward Bok,
Look, it's man's nature. My wife llllderstands this. No American philanthropist.
Jroblem at our bouse,
We agreed early on that "to have and to bold" doesn't mean
"to own." U I want a little extra activity, I'm entiUed, I tell her ·
aboutit.Sbe'sadult.Shedoesn'tgetjealous -because she ~mows
I love her best.
contract would be played at
We both go 011t oo dales with other people. Sometimes we take
the other f!lbte, The second short vacations from each other, no questiOIB asked, Our only
was that, if be went down rule: Dm't get emotionally involved wilb anyone else, We don't
and the band made at the
. .
being
ba
. te
1e M wife
SCIIIleW I pnva
peop , Y
,
0 the r table, the s win g go for SWJDglllg,
against bim would be 3,11611 naturally, doesn't "date" dlen.
poiilts and might cost the
These peAl)' bot meaniilgless affairs keep us from being
cham~.
bored wilb eacb jllher: Make us see that we can still altract, get
He could ~ard three of us out to differeot places. (With no need to hide, we cao go
dummy's diamonds on the
pi
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
top clubs but there was an wherever we ease.)
.
'
I reccmmend the modem way of mamage. - VARIETY
Dear Dr, Lamb-To end a
~. 111p ..,... llooir PACK
lot of arguing in the family
-·
1 w' , ; .,, 't iw • Dear Pack:
I would like your answer be- IU·HCOIY
I dCII't!!!
cause I know I'm right
.MODfiH. fo&lt; Sl
Bot then 1have this rutty idea that emotional involvement is though my family says I'm
~· ~ .W ~ tbenameollbegame,andsex.fer-ego'ssakeisliket:lngiilgabell not. Sittiilg on one's seal all
oth '"' "W• td Jriiwo, lei• ·dtis .,_,1the cia
,_of ti but
.
H
the time doesn't m a k e it
""" 1 L I. P.O. . . ""· t.lio C'Jty wteuuu
ppe,r- 1o.... a~ m
DOI?IISlC. ~ •
broader does it?
Yori:, N.Y. JGOit,
P,S..... AIIdillbetyourwifeagleeswtthme.
- - - - - - - - Dear Helen :
Dear Reader-It can be a
eventual diamond problem.
Here's Cllef&lt;rWomen'sLib to get its pearlyteethiilto:
contributing factor. A per·
Of course, wben be finally
Looking through "Who's Who iii America," I found eiaCtly son who sits all the time and
played the second diam~. three wcmen listed ill l'JI pages! That's about par for the whole gets no exercise is apt to be
building ' up f a t deposits
the queen showed up and 11 book.
around
the body, The seat
was all over.
So they llrowa bCile to females lly putting out ''Who's Who of is one of
.nature's favorite
Jacoby has tefused to 58'! American Wcmen," patendy an "alao-nm" edilioo.
storage locations for lat.
what be would have done if
.
.
What fries me IS that wcmen must be at tbe absolute TOP to Then there is the question
East bad played the eight
iilstead of the queen, but gain entrance in lbe supposedly illlegrated ''Who's Wbo," while a of muscle tone, poor muscle
tone does increase dlmenMorris Elis, wbo sat South mancanmateitifbeisonlyhalf-waythere.
sions - but more noticeably
at the other table, said, " If
WbynolaManplis"'Wbo'sWbool American Men "same for in the abdomen. Many Jli!O'
the eil!ht bad ~. 1 women and then ''The illtimate Who's Who "which ~ludes the ple lose muscle lone in the
was gomg to toss a com and
•
•
see if you could ~tguess it"
both cr&lt;¥~1-:- ANOTHER LIBERATIONIST
. a belomen from jobs or habits
that involve sitting and very
(HEWSI'Am £HTUniSl ASSH.)
Dear Lib: (ADd Marqws : )
tittle
use of the stomach
How now, Wlao'sWbo: Telluswhat'swbat,andwby. -H.
muscles.
Dear Helen:
.

Dear Helen:

7-', Pomaoy eliminated Kent
9-4 and Euclid beat Onrinnati
Bodde
befcre
_ the raiil interrupled the Lima - Ridunmd

a,z

Ashley-Piqua and Cambridg •

mnstvro games w~

and Archbold ~ took the
field for their aftemooo

11

.K

tl097654

•Void
WWPI...,!II'I'l

EAST

• Void
.3
.QJ109762 .85 4 3

tU

tQ2

.11096.

.875432

"

-

SOtml (D)
• AQ9765

·A·

North-$ovtb wlnerable
Will N - lllot Soo.tlo

Pass
.... Pus . Pass
Open!DI!Jead-. Q

Sitting Can Make
Seat Get Brooder

An Ugly, Jostling,
Selfish Horde

._.ow

tAKJ
• AKQ

s• s•

BRUCE BIOSSAT

7.2.

By OtnrUI 1: Jamet Jaaby
Tbere was a short period
in coatract history when the
graad:Siam bonus -:as 1,500
points not vulnerable and
2,250 vulnerable. These enor·
mous bonuses were exciting,
but they proved unpopular.
At ·the next change in the
laws, it went back to 1,000
and 1,5110.
Tbey did have one effect
on bidding. Prior to their in·
· lroduclion, the experts didn't
: botlr.er much with grand
: slams. But they went to work
: on them with the super bo: nuses. Tilt! methods they
· learned then have bad a
~ m:;~ elfect on modem bid·
: Today's band is taken from
: the last quarter of the 1937
• Spingold finals. Oswald Ja: coby's team bad a 3,000-poiilt
: lead wben be picked up the
: South band.
. It didn't take bim long to
: reach seven spades and,
• wben he saw the dummy,
: two tbiilgs became apparent.
: Tbe first was that the same

•illl-

-·How

cream'!

The bidding bas been: ~- ...
West
Nordo
J!'ast
~...
Pass
Pass

1•

3•

1•

Pass
Pass

3•
?

You, South bold·

uxn•A'ztK.Qt•tun

What do you do now.,
A~ ,_,.
'n SMw

tbat 7oa .....W ...:ve loiol 1spodes over- ...... to.t W
a trifle too mado.
TODAY'S QtJESnoN
Your
partner continues to live
clubs. What
do you do now?

'

BERRfS WORLD

Last fall I got booked by one ol those companies that adverlises "make money at home."
II was sopposed to send me samples. I would try the Jrodocls
andsendmyopinioo,forwbicbl'dgelpaid.Ailofthis,aflerlpaid
a$10registrationfee,refundguaranteediflwasnotsatislied.
I ha
t been
.. the products and of
ve no
~VJDg
.
•
coone no
paymenll wrote asking, then demanling my money back, but
.
ly
after three letters, I still have to rep .
What should I do? - MRS. W.
Dear Mrs, W.:
Write to lbe District Attorney iii the city where this cunpany
Gperllles Also coolacl the Better Bus;, a Bureau to see whether
't. listed. asrepu tab!e. Seod copli!S
. of your letters to the CUDpany
I IS
and indicate your nell stop wiD be at a lawyer's offke .... after
you bear bow many olbe!' housewives bave been rooked,
And consider you've learned a relatively inexp&gt;mive leS50D :
newrmail011tmCiley to getmmeyback! -H,
Pony Express
The first relay of pony
express mail left St. Joseph,
Mo., on April 3, UMiO, and ar·
rived at Sacramento, Calif. ,
on April 13. The service was
discontiilued in 0 c I o be r ,
1861, when transcontinental
was

Location of fat deposits on
the body is also related to
i n her it e d characteristics.
One native b"ibe in Africa
has a tribal characteristic
of a very large seal, which is
fat. Incidentally in their cui·
ture that is a sign of true
beauty.
Fat serves a useful tunclion for some people. It acts
as a pillow to protect the
body from external pressure.
A person who has recently
-lost a lot of fat from lbeir
seat has essentially lost his
piUow and he will notice the
pressure of his pelvic bones
when he sits, at least until
he regains enough muscle

Dear Dr, Lamb- Would
you please clarify the "CliP'
per bracelet" for arthritis.
So many of my. friends vow
it's curing them and I'm a
nonbeliever. Is it or isn't it
of value?
Dear llellller-Faith is a
wonderful thiilg. Tbere . is
even somethiilg magic in the
heating power of the pbysi·
ciao just because his patients
believe in him. Cripples have
walked from listening to iii,
al
·
Pint
spiration
m u 51 c, ·
water bas relieved a lot of
people of a genuine feeling of
discomfort. I never discount
and be
health
the psychic
nee
•
ful benefits a patient can get
from faith - even iii copper
bracelets.
Other t h a n the psychic
benefits - which can favorably affect the course of a
disease - · there is no evidence that copper bracelets
do anything else to cure or
prevent arthritis. Arthritis
bas a tendency for unex·
p 1a i n e d remissions and
sometimes it doesn't return
-in spite of medicine, not
because of it.
1 don't lhiilk copper brace,
. lets do any harm. I am only
concerned that someone who
should be under the care of
a rheumatologist (specialist
in arthritis) may not be gel·
ling the care they should be
getting in prevention of deformities and. crippling that
can be minimized or in some
cases prevented. That is the
only real da~~ger.
!N£W$PAPEl EN1uraost ASSH.o

,---------:=----:-:------------------,
'
They11 Do It Every Time

·
. The ~ that were slqoped
m play will take .., exactly
where the rain sllopped them,
.. · toda
starling
. at a,.., a.m.
Y.
Wortbingtoo and Archbold tate
to lbe field at 10 a.m.
Tournament officials wiD
draw winner's bracket and loser's bracket positions fer the
day's regularly scbedJoled umpetition afles' lbe seo:ond round
is disposed of. Three in loser's

..'

'

•

By BRUCE BIOSSAT

'.·'.
..'
..
5

~

.·i·- ------ - - - - -.·· ---•.

,•

~0

CNII't:JA.

I!

e::"

Boston
64 51
Detroit
62 52
New YO&lt;~
58 58
Washington &lt;16 67
Cleveland w:St 69

w.

Vert.

n~ht :;~~~~~o~:k::m:·r~r:::

Na-1 LNgue

.557

.5«
.500
..W7

-~

L Pet.

~

6'h

8
13
231!&gt;
24'12
GB
...
131!•
18
19
21

Pillsburgh
Chicago
~~~;..
Philadelphia
Montreal

W. L Pet.

GB

.10:1
6l St .SS3 6

10 •

~ ~ :~ l~V:
st 64 .«1 18'1'
45 70 .391 24V&gt;
West
GB
W L Pel
San Francisco '69 so .saO ...

O.kland
73 42 .635
Kansas City 53 54 .518
Chicago
55 60 .478
California
55 62 .470
Minnesota
51 62 .451
Los Angeles
6l S3 .so 4'1:
Milwaukee
ol8 65 .425 2~ Atlanta
61 S8 .513 B.
Tuesday's Results
Houston
58 SJ .504 9
O.kland6 Boston 5 llst)
Cincinnati
5'* 64 .4511 14'12
Oakland 7 Boston 5 (2nd)
San Diego
42 76 .356 76'12
Kansas Ci!y 9 Wash 2 (lsi)
Tuesday's ResuHs
Kansas City 9 Wash 1 I2nd)
Chic 2 Pitt. I
California 7 New YO&lt;k 6
Houston 7 SI.L 1
Bait~ Minnesota 3 {10 innins) N.Y. 6 San Diego •
Cleveland ~ Chicago I
LA 6 Phila. 1
Detroit 12 Milwau.kee 3
S.FT.odl •Mooy's!:_O.,_ble PilcheToday's Probable Pitchers
~
~u••
Ca!ifomia (Messersmith 11
Montreat (Renko 10-171 at
11) at New York {Stottlemyre San FrancisaJ (Cumberland to11 -~liimore (Dobson 15-51 at ,11Chicago (Jenkins 111-9) at
Minnesota (Perry 12-131. night. Pittsburgh (Ellis 1!&gt;6). night.
Detroit (Niekro 4- ~1 at
Atlanta !Ketley ~&gt;-31 aT " ·
MIIwaukee (lockwood 8-7) , Louis !Zachery 3-7), nigh!.
night.
· Houston (Billingham S-10) at
Cleveland !Dunning B-81 at Cincinnati I Me
_ rritt 0- m. night.
Chicago ( Horlen 6-91. night
Philadelphia (Reynolds J.3l
O.kland I Blue 20-~1 at Boston at Los Angeles (Aie""nder 3-3),
(Siebert 14-7), night.
noghl.
Kansas City (Splittorff 4-5 New York (Sea- 12-31 at
and Wright 2--4) at Washington San Diego (Roberls9-12), night.
(Shellenback J.B and Goglewski
Wednesday's Games
7-1 ;, 2. twi-nighl.
Chicago at Pin.• night
Thursday's Games
Atlanta at St.L, night
Baltimore at Minnesota, night

p tzarro

Hous. at Cine. night

Detroit at Milwaukee
Pnila. at LLA.. night
Cleveland at Chicago
N.Y. at S. D., nigh!
Kan City at Washington, night Mon. at S.F.

Top Shoe Thrower
MIDDLESEX, N.J. (UPI) Curtis Day, a 54-year-old machinist from Frankfort, Ind., is
the wiilner of the 1971 National
Horseshoe Pitch Association
(NHPA) open men's competi-

rules,

Police whistles are still heard, but they exercise only

sporadie command over chaotic motor traffic. Some
blocks in busy city centers look like badly governed
parting lots,
In the three-mile trip from home to office, any day I
can count at least 15 or l'JI gross b"affic violations by motorists. At minimum, these mean blatant discourtesy toward others. At most, they risk life.
Pedesbian traffic, too, bas become a kind of unraveled,
bnttally impersonal exercise iii disorder. People cut nar,
rowly in front of others as if they were sidestepp!Qg lamppoats. Markets and other stores are iilcredible tangles of
indifferent, bustling human bodies.
Scripp&amp;-Howard reporter Robert Dietsch bas just told
us grapbically bow staggeriil~ly widespread is thievery of
every sort in this ·nation. It 1s not, of course, strictly an
urban phenomenon. But the concentration of people in
the cities mates stealing seem an urban plague.
Dietsc~explodes anew the notion that thievery is almost entftely a "catc~rg" device for disadvantaged
people dazzled by the
uence around them. Figures
show shoplifting more common in well:Off suburbs than
in cities proper. Some of the "inflation" people moan
about comes from price boosts by employers who pass on
their losses from shoplifting and thefts by their employes
(total loss, $3.5 billion yearly).
Most disturbin!l is not the magnitude of the thievery,
grave !bough it IS. It is the callous attitude of our millions of "respectable" thieves. Their contempt for the
law of the community is massive, and not concealed by
their cbUdisb assortment of alibis:
"Everybody does it . .. I needed the tbiilf, and anyway the store is covered l!y iilsurance . . . wanted to
burt the system ... It's ~m law, not ours . . . It was
just sort of borrowing (a prank, a joyride, a game) , .. "
Some stealing is so bold as to be almost funny, In one
southwestern city, people have become quite adept at
backing up a b"uck and stealing every stick of furniture.
In the Newart:Jersey City zone, some rallroads no
looger briilg freight cars laden with food into their yards.
Tbey are balled, broken open aild stripped bare.
Tbe spray-pai:nt:On-tbe-walls syndrome, seen at work
iii new areas and old, is lbe signature of the disorganiud.
Tile sc:rawlers don 'I tnow it, but lbey are advertising not
just disrespect for law and decency but self:COntempt.
The self·seekitig of politicians, unions, corporations
weU~lebrated, adds paiilful iilgredienls to the
miL Pollution lays a pall over the chaos. Air, says author
Robert Ardrey, ~'bas become an industrial producl·"
And we go iii heavily for visual pollution. We litter and
disfigure the landscape. For many of lbe disenchanted ill
cities, persOnal ugliness is a chosen hallmark.
The famous author H. G. Wells, describing early ch•ilizations, insisted lbey were NOT communities liviil' IInder
law, but really no more than collections of "Jostling
crowds." Is this wbat we are becomiilg today? If we can
shrug that one off, we may be far down a crumbling road.

'11tenening stars are Merm- off Cape Hatteras, N,C.
ry, Mars ml Jupit«.

·

•

·

By NEIL HERSHBERG
UP! Sports Writer
The fountain of youth that
Juan Pizarro has discovered
may turn into a money-making
gusher for the Chicago Cubs.
The well-travelled · Pizarro,
with his seventh big league
team, kept the charging Cubs on
the move in the National
League Eastern Division race
Tuesday night, firing a fivehitteranddrivinginthewinning
run on a sacrifice fly for a 2-1
victory over the fading Pitts·
burgh Pirates.
The Cubs, who have won
seven of their last eight games,
have gained five games on
Pittsburgh in the last II days

-·-11 _.....

and now trail the Division
leaders by only six games.
Pittsburgh has dropped nine of
its last 12 starts.
Pizarro, winning his fourth
game out of his five decisions
since the Cubs recalled him
from the minors on July 5,
pitched his first victory over
Pittsburgh since 1960, the last
year the Pirates won the pen-

HeckJ Bids

erson

w·m ,..,op

Gold Med.aJs

,_,..,

In Pee ·Wee
Title Game

AMNTION:

::,::ea:=~y

SMALL CAR '-ERS

1---------------------------------1
liOOD,.'EAR "POWER.

FRE.E

FREE

See Goble
For The

At Your Ceilified Oi Campany Statim
"Your Gasoline Purchase Free" H We Fail To
Clean Your ' Windshield. Wea1her Permitting.
No Ottrer Conipany Dares To Offer This
Po.l icy,
.
_----..,
~--

Certified Gas Stations
992-9911
Sli~,Main

Simpson happy, especially since
the Reds .righthander ,gave ·
Morgan a piU:h which was
right where lbe Reds' hurler
wanted it.
"It was a low. pitch, and I
was hoping he would hit l.t on
the ground for a double play,"
said Simpson.
Forsch, a rookie righthander
who has beaten the Reds three
in a row this season, yielded
only four hits in going tile
route for his seventh victory
against five losses.
Three of the hits - doubles
by Pete Rose and Tony Per•.,
and a single by Johnny Bench
- came in the first inning and
accowoted for the Reds' only
runs ·of the game. Thereaf~r.
Pitch Wa~ Dellberale
the Reds made only one hll.
"Did you know I was 1),10
The Reds and Astros wiild up
when 1 hit that homer tonight," the series tonight when Gary
said Morgan .
. Nolan goes against Houston's
This bit of information Jack Billingbam.

said Joe, grinning.
Morgan 's more amused than
anything of the fact that he's
tied for the club's lead in
homers.
"I'm not knocking anyone/'
he said, "but I'm only leading
because of the inability of a
few others to hit up to their
-normal standards."
Morgan was referring to Jim·
my Wynn, Rader, Bob Watson
and Cesar Cedeno.
The 15 homers Morgan bit in
1969 rated is his career high .
Wynn has hit only seven this
season, but he has a career
high of 37, attained in 1967.
Last year Rader hit a career
high of 25.

Real Big with Cubbies

Rio, Racine

'

"I think I'm up to 159 now," couldn't' have made Wayne

Coast League. His recall was
necessitated by the in·
consistency of Ken Holtzman
and manager Leo Durocher's
desire for an added left-banded
starter.
"The way he's pitched there
is no way I'd take him out of the
starting rotation," Durocher
said.
"! hadn't seen Pizarro pitch
in around four years but tonight
he was throwing harder than
the last time I saw him," said
home plale umpire Harry
Wendelstedt.
The Cobs had been blanked
for the first six innings by
Pirate starter Bruce Kison. Jim

Hickman opened up the seventh
with a doublf. Ron Santo
walked and Rison fumbled
Brock Davis' bunt to load the
bases. J. C. Martin tied the
score with a long fly. Santo
moved to third on the play,
scoring on Pizarro's sacrifice
fly.
In other NL action San
Francisco blanked Montreal 1,
0, Los Angeles downed
Philadelphia &amp;-1, New York
tripped San Diego 6-4, Atlanta
nipped St. Louis 2-1 and Houston
edged Ciilcinnati 3-2.

Levias Ready to .Play

w1•11J•ng

_!We ttanor

I

and two in winner's competition were planned.
In lbe axnpleled g3!111!S Toes·
day Jeff Albert singled home
Pat Garvay with the wiilniilg
run in the bottom of the niiltb
as AsbtaiMtla gaiiled its win,
. Stan l'trTy held Kent to just
four bits and helped Pcmeroy's
cause with two hils himself.
Pot:neroy stac:ted up five of its
runs in the second inning.
One of .,._,, hits as a
• ~ ., s . w
three run 1riple capplllg a five
nm seo:ond inning outburst.
Olber Meigs hitters were Bob
Werry, Gene PoweU and Roger
Dixon 'l!ith two hils eacb.
Dave Burnett had a two run
dcotble and David Boyd slamdouble .,__ .
.
med a
. • g,, ~ gomg
the route, fanned rune and
walked eight. Mains, the losiilg
'idler atid his li
Bruss
~....... four freere
'11tey'
7~
pa_es"
struct out four·
11Gb FoSter powered Euclid's
wiil lly scoring three runs on
three hits and pitching the vic.tory over Oncinnali.
play

.:,:::":t :.:.toss- And

WASHINGTON (NEAl
DO we still have "communities" iii tbis counby? Tbe
answer is not at all clear, even though anyone can see
the environs of our big cities sprawliilg farther and farther.
A community is a "body of people living in the same
place under the same laws." Is that what we bave in
New York, Chicago, Wasbiilgton, Detroit, San Francisco,
Los Angeles and a host of other urban clusters?
Move about today in any of these places, and what
strikes you most is the sense of disorder, the feliling that
the life you see swirling in the streets goes by no set

Atti.

I

•

High on Phipps

Those born oo this day are
By)J.Wrre. w atioaal under the sign o! 'Leo,
Today is Wednesday, Aug. 11, American song wrilft' clme
11, ·1112.
J 4&lt;~-.c&gt; A -·t~lbe ZDni ""' o1 1m.
Bond wa~_.l!c!r!t
w
Tbe moon iSbetween its fUif 0n this day 1n history:
pbaae ml last quarter. .
In 19011 the llrst radio 3lS
Tbe Dl!ming stars are Venus was receiYed when the liner
wau..NoO
and Saturn. .
"Arapahoe" ~ed fW'Irelp

(

.•

As many as &amp;tltl cootestants
nant.
from across the &lt;WD!ry and
The 34-year-&lt;~ld lefty, who
Canada participated in junior
one-hit San Diego in his last
girlandboy,llpell,intermediate
start, stymied the Pirates in
and senior men and wumen's
allowing only one extra base hit.
divisions for some 'iS trophies
'
Pizarro, who won 19 games
lion.
and $1,500 in ca&gt;i1 prizes.
with the Chicago White Sox in
PALO ALTO, Calif, (UP!:) _ nenuus before the game, but Day compiled a· 35-0 won-loss The 36 competitors trying iii
1964, started the season with the
Bill N~, abo bas last his maybe "anxious."
record Tuesday to earn his open men's competition comHawaii Islanders of the Pacific
slarting qnarterbact job 1o "I think amious is a better share of some $1,500 in prize pleted qualifying rcJillldoi last
JOlmgSies' Mike PWpps at least wmd," be said, "I returned to money. He had a riilger per- week. They bad been l!llg&amp;ged
for lbe summer believes hismyrocmaflerdiilnerSalurday, cenlage of 85.
inadaily round-robin regimenl
]ll'Oiege ''!bould
a great reed a lillie and then went over
"I had a real good tourna- of six games for lbe past six
one fer us,''
lbe cdatSe wilb DoD Gault, · men!," Day said after complet- days. Tournament o11icia1s said'
Phipps got IU 6rst di.,.. of ''I woke up al t:30 &amp;today ing his fiilal game on one of they estimated eacb player
the year Sunday apiml tbe San momlng, but I thiilt it . was the 24lighted tournament pitch- about six miles during bis
By JOE CARNICELLI
Larry Smith, the running
Francisco tilers, 81111 altbotlgb DIGIIIIy because ol tbe lime dif- ing courts. "I was consistent." nightly competition on the 46UP! Sports Writer
back who missed Los Angeles'
the ae.eJ.anc1 llrowm lost, Nel- faBLt," be said, ''Once I was
Elmer Hohl, of Weelesley, foot court.
Jerry LeVias can start first two pre:season games
81!11 said be showed "a lot o1 awake, tbotlgb, it was im- OnL, fiilished second, four
The NHPA competition for ha ving his fun again.
while recuperating from off.
courage."
PI 'b)e to think ol anytbiilg but games behind Day, with a 31-4 nert August is scbeduled to
LPVias, the speedy receiver season ankle surJlery, may open
Phipps' pa
weft twice in- the game,''
record and a riilger percenlate lake place at Greenville, Ohio. and return specialist acquired against Cleveland Friday night.
llereepled, mc:e for a IAiud!of 84. John Walker of Cllula
by San Diego from Houston is a John Wright, out last year
.._ but -"his
VIS'Ia ·""'"''" ~--~ · lblrd p'·ce
trade for linemen Ron Billing· w'tth a severed Achilles tendon,
~in
bonO:S ';;ill;;~,;;'mark,~sley and Gene Ferguson, signed informed the Detroit Lions that
~ two tocw "do•n P'
llld
mg one game ahead of left.
with the Chargers Tuesday he is quitting football. Wright, a
tnt!Jling W,.nla for 1be g-.
banded, 17-year-old Mark Sieafter a holdout .
. wide receiver, told Coach Joe
'l1te tilers woo Jt..a
bold, of Huntington, Ind., whoT
" It was not fun silting around Sclunidt he had lost his speed
"It's tough he~ out lba'e in
competed in the open men's
0
.1
and . watching ~ootball, " said and couldn't play th.e position .
)'OW' 6rst game, haded up in
tournament lor the first time.
LeV1as, Houston s leadmg pass Dan Devme, attempting to
thebolellldtbewindswirling,"
Tournament officials said
n!ce'ver.~thhiSyears wtth the compensate for ·the _loss of
saidNelsen,wbobasbemlumTuesday's weather- with no
Oilers. Ever~-thmg IS very offensive tackle Francts Peay,
pered with bad knees. ''Mia
wiild and clear skies - was
satisfactory. It s fme to be wtth who walked out of camp
awed a lot of CGUI'lllle to CDDe WIU\IINGTON, Ohio (UPI )- "ideal.", They said more than CAU, lliomlia (UPI) - San Diego, especially for a Monday, has moved center Phil
back the way he cid. It !bowed 'l1te !lncinnali Bengals want 5,1100 persons watched the fi,nal Frank Hedd's bid to btnMtw- receiver."
Vandersea to left tackle, Cle
wby be sbould beccme a weal rookie quarterback Ken Ander- competition at Mountainside the greatest gold medal swimContract terms were not Walker from linebacker to
111e for us."
son to l15e bis bead - but not Park here.
mer in the bistmy of the Pan revealed but LeVias said it was
Qlacb N'lck storidl plans to as a battering ram.
American Games bighligllt;s lbe virtually an extension of his
startPbippsiilalltheelbililiCII Quarterllad;coachoftheclob,
United States' attempt to scale current contract. '
SCIOTO RESULTS
games to give mn a c1tance to Bill Walsh, said Tuesday Anderlbe century mart in -victories
LeVias is&amp;xpected to replace COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Penearn lbe~job by tbe lime son showed himself "too wiUiilg tnterna_lional League Sta~dings today 00 the nextto-lasl day Ill veteran receiving star Lance sion Fund won the featured
,_.,
to _......_.. _,n;.~~t" in the By Unoted Press lnternatoonal
ti'ti ,..,._
Alworth, traded to Dallas, in eighth race, a $1,500 pace, at
the
,....~,
W L Pet. GB compe 00 ""'"'
"Be bad good ]ll'Oleclicat and Bengals' %7-10wiillast Saturday Rochester
69 &lt;16 .600 The blond, &amp;-loot~ Becti wiD the San Diego lineup and will Scioto
Downs Tuesday,
be stood in lba'e well," Nellen night over the Miami Dolpbiils. Tidewater
69 ~9 .585 p;, stamp himself as the ·DIIlll to be the Chargers' primary punt returning $3,40, $3 and $2.60.
said. "Now be just bas to keep
"A couple of times when he ~Yh~;~~~on
~ ~ :~ ~1, beat iii the Olyoqjc Games at and kickoff return man.
Second was Anita Brewster,
111 improving."
ran with the ball be lowered his Richmond
57 60 .ol87 13
Muncih, Germany, ned year if
Jim "Earthquake" Hunt, a paying $5.40 and $3.60, with the
Phipplwoulm'tacmitbewas bead and went irito a couple of louisville
56 61 .479 14
he can win two more gold veteran of II years of pro show spot captured by
44 71 ·383 25
·-~
when
e
would
have
Toledo
· the ••--'s
_,.,en;
w
Winnipeg
39 75 .3~2 29'12 medals '-'""t
-....- 1D
...,., 1110 football, announced his retire- Sophisticated Gal, $6.20.
preferred blm to go out of
Tuesday's Results
Meter Freestyle 81111 the Men's ment at the New England Adaily double combination of
bounds," Walsbsaidof the play- Rochester 8 Winnipeg ~
400 Meles' FreeslJle Rela:r.
Patriots' camp.
3-6, Roving Reporter and Early
er !rem Augustana College.
Tido;w'!ter 9 Charleston 1
That would give him a total of Hwot, 32, was named an Farr, paid $16. Attendance was
Walsb is still not sure bow ~~~~::,',~ ~ 5.f'~!%s; 4
six gOO! here, plus one silver - American Football League All- 7,795 and the day's handle was
well Anderson will do in the pro
~ lbe teori of live gold Star at defensive tackle for $279,6t2.
ranks, but the coach said his
medals set by Mld Spitz of the four seasons and holds the AFL
2 STOKES COACHES
two toucbdown pasws in the
United States in tbe l!IS'I Pan reccord for fwnble recoveriesMONTICELLO, N. Y. (UPI)
seo:ond half showed promise.
American Games at Winnipeg, 14. He wiU be replaced in the
Red Auerbach, who coached
"Until now we weren't really
lJTI'LE GAM WINS
Canada.
starting lineup by Julus Adams,
sure what to eqii!Ct of him," CINCINNATI (UP!) - The Three other swimmi~~g litlah 'a 6-foot-4, 265-pounder from the Boston (;eltics of the
Rio Grande and Raciile wiD Walsb said, ''primarily because fealured eighth race Tuesday at are scheduled tonigbt and tbe Texas Southern was New National Basketball Association
meet at 6:ll p.m. this eveniilg of the college background he River Downs, a $3,800 Ohio five events are most liRly to England's No.2 draft choice.
to nine championships, and AI
for the championship of the had.
Thoroughbred Fund race, was push the United Slates, wbidl Los Angeles traded offensive Atlles, coach of the Golden
Second Annual Cbesbire Pee
" PlayiJog against the teams in won by Little Gam in 1:10 3:5, goes into the day with 96 gold · tackle Mitch Johnson to Cleve- State Warriors have been
wee Tournament.
theNFLiulittledifferenttban paying $41.60, $14.21) and $1.
medals, over lbe •• mark, land as payment for Joe named head coaches for the
Rio Grande advanced to tbe playing a;pinst teams like Val- Squabble was second, payiilg However, it now seems clear Talloni, a lineman the Rams annual Maurice Stokes game at
championship tilt Tuesday paraiso," be said. "But some $4.80 and $4.20, with Dantive the U.S. wiD 1riill .., with obtained from the Browns last Kutcher's Country Club, Aug.
night by ousting Mason's people del 'I seem to have any lblrd, returniilg $9.
17.
sligbdy more !ban 100 Yiclories week..
Angels, 9-$.
1rouble with any kind of com- Traceys Pal and Vineyard llY the time oompelitkll ems in
11te winners took a +0 lead in petition. They can play as well . Lark, 9-4, combined for a return virbJally all evmls 1bmsday
the first and wrapped it up with againstObio Slate, for instance, of $59.60.
night-quite a .,......••n from
a five run outburst in the fifth. as against Valparaiso. Kenny
tbe l%i caphftd at
Mason scored one run in eacb Ill appears to be that kind of prethe first and fourth iilnings and
f..~~Andelson'spassto
three in the fifth.
S. Rainey bad a grandslam
showed
homer for the winners; Tony
Weiher !!ingled and doubled in ·~yr.utheallernate~
three trips to . the plate and ceiver, but Kemy was able to
·
~~
get out o1 trouble and bit him,"
McCoy doobled.
Runnion led the ~ with Walsb said. "Alot of youngSters
three bits iilclwling a triple. with a lot better college credenY01111g had two singles.
tials aren't alE to do this,''

disorderly

•
•

PlayBaByltiUmno=re.~68~~~~2.9 ~61118i~:~ fi!~:~·~:~

be.:,...,

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

tone to be comfortable.

eon-

test

Coin-tossing Made Easy
NOII'DI
.KllOU2

Legi·o·n

. CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Joe &lt;!iwn.
Morgan hails from the San
Francisco Bay area, which
spawned such former Reds
I'm just a second baseman try. players as Frank RobinsOn,
ing to help the club win Vada Pinson, Cort Flood and
"
games," said the gre gario:~S in- Tommy Harper .
fielder.
Morgan Too Small
Surprisingly enough, though,
5-7, lli().pound Morgan today, is And, like Robinson and the
tied with teammate Doug Ra· others, Morgan. played for
der , a &amp;-2, 21(}.pound third base- George Powles in sandlot balL
f
man , or the Houston Astros' "Powles tried to interest the
Reds in me," said Morgan ,
home run lead.
Morgan's ninth homer of the "but I think they thought I
.
·
season, commg with a runner was too small ."
So did a lot of other major
on base in the third inning
Tuesday night, matched two league clubs.
fi
· ·
ed b
''Houston,'' reca,lled Morgan ,
trst mnmg rWls scor
y the
"was
only one of three teams
Cincinnati Reds.
And the home run by Morgan interested in me."
also set the stage for Jay
Morgan can't blame those
Alou's seventh inning single clubs which weren't interested.
which scored catcher Jack Hi- " I only weighed 145 pounds,"
a ll to give rookie righthander said Joe.
Ken Forsell and the Astros a Morgan hasn 't gotten any
:1-2 vtctory at Riverfront Sta- taller but he has added weight.

ASHl.AND, Ohio ( UP!:)- 'l1te

atyqualmga'••lbrcvslcr!arylinJltaliancars)
wbQ ew'ainrd 1!11 ·I 'NI!Ie "'"••Wm mop~)
....._, ''lllbfarei&amp;D~:~n,Nbelllid,llinti!iely. 15th!"
Bu.tlbe otlla' l i p l - more obvioal!; IIIICb ·
lli Bcmg K!lng, at the fallled old P...h•l•
as:
Hotel no matla' bow .many times we left 4111'
Coca Cola: It's. i:ca)wbae, ~ . is ~ aar tbiee pms o!
weni .hlllly
JIL!IIa; far fnm ~ling ill uiqalbls 1n1m- polished and delivlnd In penaa - WI 4111'
peting,Ifati-~itca.,ntly ,., 1'alte8 tbe return; lbe reason: A~ 11'*'11 ltq tip
sameal)onrtbewarld, we.cautlelltfnm trips eacb lime; that's 15 cenla America.
to mere than 30 ~lries ·"' '1\'e lllll"fQd at its . Lots of ~b;ts to Italy pnfer the tiny fiat
pie nt MD""
ml 3 ' at, in llcalg 50tla just to capture tbe dmJeltiC Ilallla mood of
Kcmg and C)nuda ,, We'ft laid it's lftetmed nenoU8 traffic, bat we preli!r the wwbat
sligbtJy Dicre than elsuibae in eerW8 ,-rddle more coinmOdlous famil) dlmri_..._ Gf tile 1H
East and Afrieln !pC11a, bot wbaecu we've ,,, PrcJbably premalure fogey•
, bat -.e do
palllled lc6esli••l)· it's .... "' • • 41y .the trampcrt two cmlren .and • de ... alwQa
admirable same,
scme baggagP., if ODl) fnm the locallbapo ..,
n
e 1ft: we man~!! at a t e;uy- tid It's an enssnble rut In wblch we- vlrtully
wilbwt tbe lnlliniatimell) pop!•• .........ble ml off fnm lbe Pepsi gl!llel'llicll, llni!D luDtwnties in lbe olden U,S.
lA:&amp;"Cbiefs, white flannel panla and Wbatlea, aD
Levis: 111e old WGbwl'a blue·jeans Levi adminiiE but somehow 11y our darable hilltll,
SII811SS created haft 1llten OM tbe 1rlll'ld of igllcred .. , Odd, for lie'll eapeihwt 1rilb
JIIUDI!people ofeverycmJilledetiliillr)',fnm Ciur sll'lqe rl!lltaurants, Ullknol!ll wa., unf-IHar
perscaul dJ&amp;a tatkll .., Allbou&amp;b detlim bas roads and shop~~ b!Jt 1101111! lbinp ri'D"in cal·
been armild siDc:e 5GO ,ears belate Crill, It's stanlly ill our cbolen I!Joove, cr ru_
t ...
cmsi.-!eed bj YirluaDy aD fcnigners an
Of all aar favcrlte sllllpl alnld per111ps
American inftoliCII,
' Beale &amp;Inman at 131 W, Bmd St., lmdon, is Gill'
~- •--'-- •'-"-__, Hlrlz car rental favorite •. .•Napo.....,.....,.,_
• - .~_.... !.....
L...........,,..,..,.,
...,.,...,.
~, It ,_ in tbe
signs are eta)wlae, aad we Wl!ft • '*......,Nil of llrst LCIIdCII directory in 1131!, a cbtqae rnm
our mm acceptaace ol aD IIIICb firms in cme Clarles Diclti!IIS, framed, ll!lrl' l'ieo be apeat H
•"'den laugh of ~: Oar daggl*r, P"'llda five wmnga lbere In lllit; 81111 lbe ftavar
&lt;bled CJUt in deDm panla, wasllling a !C """ olllie quiet, Cild.fasbiCIIed prun' I il Ill wry
wNJe baJancing a Coca Cola u we wailed in aar ~ y011 eqii!Ct 11Gb CDicbit to ]11 ! 1 nt lbe
llel1Henled fiat 1H fer lbe lady Ill 01r11Da to liD ,, ADd now we're bome, vaguely reluclant to
buy 1lice Cril('n, more Ccltes and same leutall go to return to tbe lbiMiwat jangle; 1111
lks sb.!y ban to lnlt the jllmp • • Rime to that's where we make like Tanan for a ltriag
pick .., Gill' Pan-Am 747 airline liclels back to and in aar own wnplainable fashion, love It tbe
New Yart.
best. Nat dateline: Broadway.

•lboel

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

Little Guy with ·Big Bat

After Rains

ow ~write of aD ,_ at tbe

~ Getqe Hotel in

Reschedule

Pomeroy, Ohio

BanlcAmericard and Mister

e)

Tubeless
Black Wall
Plus $1.96
or $2.01
Fed. Ex.
FI'M Mounlift!l

White Walls

Tax

oni·y Sl':sO more

~IZER OIL 00.,
71D E. Main

,992,2101

INC.

Best In Use4
Cars
..,.

.

KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CM lDT

l'lo"*"'

992-3422

Locust St.

Middleport. o.

Watch Your
$$Grow
'• • you add to your savings
eoch week at the Meigs Co.
Branch of the Athens Co.
S.vings ond Loan.

center and Kevin Hunt from
defensive to offensive tackle.
The New York Jets an,
nounced the signing of veteran
running back Emerson Boozer
CURRENT,
while the New York Giants
PASSBOOK RATE
were still trying to iron out
·~uearn
n•
contract diffi'culties ,With quar- Sa ve"b''t
y he .lOth,
terback Fran Tarkenton, who from the ·1st, . ·.,
left the team Monday.
In this week's pre-reason
action, Cleveland is at Los
Angeles and Miami plays host
to San Francisco Friday night.
Saturday action finds Chicago
at Baltimore. Cincinnati at
The Athens County
Detroit, Houston at St. Louis,
S.vinos &amp; loin co.
Atlanta at Kansas City, Pitts296 Second St.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
burgh at Green Bay, New
Orleans at Dallas, Washington Member Federal Home Loan
at Denver New York (AFC) at Bank.
Oakland and Minnesota at San
Member Federal -Savings &amp;
Diego.
Loan Insurance Corp. All
The New York Giants are at accounts Insured up to
New England Sunday night and $20,000.00.
Buffalo is at Philadelphia the .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _•
following evening.

Meip Co. Branch

~)
---=-·

LUV-A BIG DEAL?
3 Speed GE

3 • 20" Fans
3 • 20" Fans s:d) ~
4Cycle

1 20" Mower

96:95 f6495

4Cycle

.15 H,P,
· 18" Mower
1 Riding Mower
W, G, Catcher

1 21" Lawn Boy
6 Lawn Chairs

)5:18'

1- 5Foot

Lawn Glider Swing~ '26•
8,000 G£

1 Air Conditioner ~'19t'
'
12,000 GE
1·Air Conditioner. !2ft00''24411

·.....··, ·ri&amp;nic"i&amp;e"CilesiS. ,~ ..,... ···
Water Jugs ·• ,
Ufe Vests &amp;Cushions.
All Prices Reduced!

H&amp;R FIRESTONE
.
'

N,2nd

992-2238.

�•
5-_TbeD8llySenliDel,~. o., Aug.ti, 1971

1.
0
4- Tile,.._,,_,
Mlli~illt\I'II&amp;IOUrtloP.PQ-I"IIJ
.
_..,a8ialllrfiiiii',.J
I" •
0),0.,Auc.11,1171

Tar~enton,

Way to Celebrate

Today's Sport Parllde •

lly SJEYB tr1L8TElN .,
cilly
bcime ryns behind I'm very proud to bave reached
By MILTON RICHMAN
411 hit Ilia llintb of tbe .this . point in my career,"
VPI Spwll Wltw
Killebrew,
·. NEW YORK (UPI)-Fran
lllnnoD JW1e11ie!r 11.-J jlllt ,e.- in the lOth
to ateal Ki11ebfew said.
Tarkenton will be back with the
lit b1a IOOtb Clfttr bame run lllnnoo's lbow arid give tbe
Killebrew 18 a quiet mari. He
New York Giants soon.
llld 10 be celelnted tbe best BalllmoreOrloleaa 4-3vicbl'y baa built his reputation the 0°
"
How soon?
00
WIY he la1e!r how. He hit his avec the MIMe8ota TWins
wid he bas done. He baa led
the.
tMI La
Leld
A week; two . Maybe sooner.
·501It. •
"Not
takes a 'little American League tn llcDe runs By Uni:C.
The 31·year4d quarterback,
But Ilia berolcs were In vain. sbine off what happened, but siJ: times, more than any player
Leading BaHers
. now home In Atlanta, figures to
Merv RetlelB!IWid. who is 11011'
e&gt;:cept Babe Ruth.
·
G. liB R. · H. Pet. rejoin the Giants foUowing that
He was bit more than
Bckrt, Chi 108 435 71 156 .359 inevitable Interval which has
40
homers in a --eight times. ~'::.~A~r L n~ ~ ~~ l~ :~~ become a familiar shirt-tail to
He is - d to Ruth, .also, In Cimnl, .Pit 99 395 62 129 .327 all deadlocks these days,

~

J

~

Pr=~nter.::i"onal

· Lineseores
fMior 1-eogue Rnulh · ,

By Unilwd Prtss lnltrnlotlanal
,
AmeriCIIn LHtue
lsi Game
Kan City 300 101 on-·9 IJ .1.
Washn!lln 100 100 ooo- 2 6 2
Fitzmorris, York 16) and
Paepke; Bosman. Rlddleberger
11), Co• (8) and Casanova WP
-Fitzmorris (..H. lP...:Bos.
man 19"131 · ~0"!' 1 " 5 16th).
2nd Geme
KanCIIy 000 100 110- 3 6 1
Washngtn 100 000 ooo- 1 ~ 0
Hedlund, Abernathy (8) and
Kirkpatrick; Thomspon Plna
(8), Rlddleberaer (8), Co• 191
and Billings. WP-Hedlund (96) . lP-Thomspon 10.4)
· ·
1st Geme
Oakland 102 101 001- 6 14 o
Boston
002 002 1oo- s 11 o
Hunter. Finger · (8) and
Tenace; Peters, Tatum IS),
Lyle 19) and Josephson. WPFingers (J.6) . LP-Lyle 1._4).
HR&gt; - Davis (2nd), Green
111th), Lahoud (11th).
. 2nd Geme
Oakland · 000 131 110--'- 1 11 1
Boston
010 102 001- s 10 1
Ddom, Grant 161 and Dun·
can; Culp, Lee (7), Moret (9)
and Montgomery. WP-Odom
(7-8) , LP-Culp 113-10). HRrBando (181hl, Flore (lsi),
Jackson (20th), Duncan (12th),
Smith (24th).

Sanaulll.,., lP-KI$011
HR-Robemon (2Jrd).

13-3).

Hous
002 000 1oo- 3 6 o
Cln.c
200 000 ooo- 2. ~ 0
Forsch (7-S) a'ld Hiatt;
Simpson, Carroll 18), Granger
19) and Bench. LP-Simpson
(J.S). HR- Morgan 191h).
N.Y.
000 401 010- 6 11 o
S.D.
000 211 ooo- ~ 8 o
G...lry, Sadeckl (5), McGraw
16) and Grote; Kirby, Kelley
161. Severlnsen (8) and Barton.
WP-McGraw (8-3). LP-Kirby
110.10). HR-Colbert l22ndl.
-Phlla
010 000 ooo- 1 6 2
L.A.
010 020 03x~ 6 11 2
Lersch, Bunning (6) and
McCaver; Singer (7.13) and
Hailer. LP-lersch (4-10). HR
- Hailer 1~th) .
Man
000 000 ooo- 0 2 0
S.F.
000 000 001- 1 s 0
Stoneman {12-10) and Baleman ; Marlchal 111-Bl and
Dietz.

Meigs

Property

frequency d heme"-· bit
. ..,...
per
time at bat lifetime.
Kill~ 18 lhe ~q~. active
American League player In
~.:... and careei"
,._.ers
stands
lOth
the all-time home
.run list,
00
only 10 sbll'l of Mel Ott and
Ernie Ballks.
1be Twins toot a 1-0 lead 1n
the first
Klllebrew's 5GOib
00
· fr-" bebind 3-lln ..__ .._,_, d•
""
IIIC uw" an
then
lied the game
wben
Harmon ~ed his 501st in the
slxlhwith"--·To·-·-base ..
·- - until
Nlether ....,....
team scored
Rettenmund hit his _gamewlming shot In the lOth and
ruined Killebrew's celebratioo.
In other American League
aclioo,OaklandsweptBosiCII65 and 7-S, Delni.t lMIIlbed
Milwaukee 12--3, Qeveland beat
Chicago 4-1 Kansas City
romped over' Washington !1-2
and 3-1, in lhe first game of a
twinbill, and California edged
New Yll'k 7~
_
·
Gene "l'enace singled home
Tommy Davis with two out In
tb top of .... ·
.
e
...., IUDth to give
Oakland the flrst-«ame victory
and then.Reggie Jacbon lk-ove
!"lhreenmstobelpbeatBoston
1D lhe secood game.
DickMcAuliffesnappedoutof
the doldrums of a _193 - · -·
average by bitting a single, a
1riple and a home run as be led
the ngers• 12-hit assault 011
Brewers'pilclllng. Joe Coleman
scattered eight hits to pick up

' California 200 011 0»- 1 12 3
New York 110 200 020- 6 11 1
Wright. Allen 181 and Ste- .
~son ; Bahnsen. McDaniel
Ill. Aker 191 and Munson. WP Clifford Stumbo, Exec .. Ollie
- Wright I 11-ll) . LP-Bahnsen Hindy. dec'd., to Jack Bachner,
(10.9). HRr-Spencer (14th)
Carolyn Bachner, lots, Mid·
Repoz 19th).
' dleport.
Detroit
10. 102 202-12 12 1 Armo Stansbury, Trus.,
William E. Stansbury, dec'd.,lo
Mllwakee 100 000 20G- 3 8 o Jack
Carolyn
Coleman Ill-S) and Freehan; Bachner, Bachner.
Lots, Middleport.
Parsons. Weaver 16), Krasse
J. Frederick Stanley, June A.
(7), Hannan (8) and Rodriguez; Stanlel to Myrtle Stanley,
LP-Parsons (9-14). HRr- 1"· 20 ereS, ScIpIo.
theGall
vicbl'y.
H...J..lno kept bis hot"
Free h an (17th), McAuiiHe -Harriet
B.
Sterrett,
Evelyn
..,_..wwith a thre«un
(14th), Cash (26th) .
·
M. Day, dec .• to l'cy M. Hoover, slreat rolling
Cleveland 002 000 2oo- 4 13 o Bedford-Orange.
bomer In the first Inning to start
Chicago 000 000 001- 1 6 1 Beryle Dorst. Pearl Dorst, theRoyalstotheirtrl·-b
McDowell, Foster (7), Hennl- Sharon Balles. John Balles to ""e Sell8'- u_..,_::"'"'bittino~r
gan (7) and Fosse; Bradley,. Hobart E. Day, Retha Day. "'
..,,. ....,......
g
Forst_er 17), Kealey (7), Hinton Beverly L. Dandrea. Danny .382 over ~ last 24 ' games,
181 and Egan. WP-McDowell Dandrea, Pomeroy.
powered his sixth borne ·nm to
(11-10) . LP-Bradley (11·10).
John Sauvage to Mary A. _
Fred Patek and Joe
Webster, Lots. Pomerov.
~-·
10 ""'lngs
William Merlin Russell, dec'd. Keoogb and give the Royals a
Ball
021 000 000 1- 4 11 2 to Richard Waller Russell. Cert.
·
Mlnn
100 002 000 0- 3 7 o of Trans.. Syracuse.
qwck 3-0 lead.
Cuellar OH) and EtchebarMichael J. larsen. Derora
Jlm~cerandRogerRepoz
r"'; Hall, Corbin 181 and Larsen to Joseph F. Lar..,., gangedupoostanBabnaenand
llerweld.~ LI?-.Corbin 12-91 . 29.93 Acres•.C91Ufllbla •.,
reliever Lind• McDaniel with
~IIIWII!W•• t ·• (13th &amp;
Marvin o , Mill.,, • Helen• hom
~ ·• In ·~'----'- .J.Il ·
hl r •
'
Miller, Minnie M. Marsh to
ers
a ... IW&lt;I'" _..th
Franklin Real Estate co .• s7.375 1m1ng rally that broke a 4-4 tie
•
N•lion•l League
All
ooo 010 lOGAcres. Salem. ,
and gave the Angels' tbeir
St. L
000 100 ooo- 21 81 21 Leonard Hash, Phyllis Hash · .._.
tb Yank
Slone. Upshaw (B) and 1o Franklin Real Estate Co VIC_, 11'11/!r e
ees.
Wiliams; Cleveland; Linzy 181 169.375 Acres. Salem.
·•
SUdden Sam McDowell came
and Simmons. WP-Sione (H) . Harold B. Grimm, Violet l. rn strcmg after returning to
LP-Cieveland (10,10).
A.GriGmml to Eparl A.,Grslmllm, Lois action ·following a contract
__
r mm, arce s. u on.
Chi ·
000 000 20G- 2 5 0 Armo Stansbury Trust dlsputeasheheldtheWbileSox
Pill
000 100 ooo- 1 5 1 William E. Stansbury: dec'd.• i~ to four hits over six inninga and
Pizarro (4-1) and ·Martin; CIIHord Stumbo, Exec .. Ollie picked up bis !lib vi tory f
Klson, Veale 18), Giusti (8) and Hlndy, dec'd., lots, Middleport. the Indiana.
c
or

Transfers

E

.

Brck, Sl.l 114 470 92 153 .326
Davs. ~API 113 457 63 1-18 .324.
Sngllin,
_
102 398 47 129 324
AJo nes,SNt l(l
96 ~ 43 118 .322
108 - 58 141 .320
1ou, .
H.Aarn.AII 102 354 64 111 314
Americanl,eague.
. .
.
G. AB R. H. ·Pet.
Oliva.Min 92 358 58131 .366

1

~~~K~y . l~ ~ ~: g~ :~~

Roias. KC 10s 379 53 117 .309
Rchrdl, Chi 98 365 41 112 .307
Tovar. Min 110 460 70 139 .302
Rllnmd,BosBal 96 324 60 98 .302
Smith,
115 446 67 134 _300
Kaline, Del 95 306 51 91 .297
Mnchr, Wash 97 31135 92 .296
Runs
NalionalHome
LHgue
: Stargell, '
Pll39; May. Cln 32; H. !'•ron.
All 31; Johnson, Ph1l 26;
Cash, Del
26; Mellon, Chi 25; Smith, Bos
24 ; Horton. Del and Murcer,
NY 21. Runs Balled In
National league: Stargell,
Pitt 101; Torre, St.l 90 ; H.
:t,r:;;'u~::.s~th~tanez. Phil
American league: Killebrew,
Minn 77 ; Petrocelli, Bos and
Bando•. Oak 72 ; Murcer, NY 71 ;
B. Rob~nson . Ball69.
.
Pitching
Nahonal League: ·Jenkins,
Chi 18-9; Ellis, Pill and
Carlton. Sl.l15-6; Downing, LA
14-7; Pappas. Chi 13-10.
Amerl~an League: Blue. Oak

~~':.'i:~:r::a;~,

name_ly, a reasonable .cooling
ff perlod bY both parlies.
• ThtheeGpl_aamn·tstruothuldof thketomahatler
11 e
18
·1
w
ve
·Fran Tarkenton back and he'd
like to be back with them.
Here is the classic case of
":hat happens in an~ n~ber of
divorces. Both parties wmd up
unhappier than they were
before. . ·
,
The fact ·there were no
recriminations when Tarkenton
and the Giants split has to
that
rnake th e reconc illati
much eaSier. Nobody will .have
to walk the cat back.
Wellington Mara has left the
door open for Tarkenton's
return and Tarkenton likewise
did not slam the door behind

°

~n

Cooled Off, to Retum

him when he walked up to the Tarkentonbecamedisenchanted is
Giants' president In the Houston Astrodome Sunday and told
him he could no longer continue
playing · foot~ under the
conditions.
Mara says he took that to
mean Tarkenton was retiring,
preswnably because the Giants
had said no to a request for a
loan of more than $200,000.
Tar kenton insists his request
for a loan had nothing to do
with the basic issue of his not
· h'mg
· t o keep
. PIaylng without
WIS
amo·r~eignhed cm:,trac~ • F1urthehr.
, e ma~es 1 c ear e
hasn't re_tired.
"!like New York and 1 want
toplayforNewYork,"hesays.
"~ just don't want to play
Without a contract. I have not
retired as such. I'm only 31.
Most quarterbacks don't even
reach their prime until they're
in their 30's."
Howard CoseU, the sports-'
ter , went
the air · and
sa1d the G1ants became·
disenchanted with Tarkenton
when he was so vocal in behalf
of the players during their brief
strike against the owners a
year ago. Cosell also said

~ling

1

ca~

~n

with the Giants when they
sought to lure Don Meredith out
of retirement and obtain htm as
their regular quarterback last
year.
The report has that good ring
of truth about it despite the
fact that Tar):enton discounts it
as having anything to do with
the present situation.
"Neither ofthose points are a
factor, " he says. "I heard
rwnors abo11t the •Giants
' overtures to get Mere·
making
ditht albut I dond't.dknoSow-t!lat they
ac u 1y ever 1 . me people
are trying to make it look like
there are murky overtones to
this whole thing but it all
comes down to one basic factthe simple labor-management
contract -difference. There are
no otherreamifications."
What there really seems to
be now between Tarkenton and
Maraisalanguagebarrier.
The_ Giants' owner claims
there IS "no unbridgeable gap"
between Tarkenton and htm
insofar as contract is concerned. Tarkenton received an

~id to have been offered a

raise this year;
The entire bone of contention
is the loan Tl!l'kenton asked for,
Mara says.
Tarkenton says no, it's not .
that a( all. It'S only the tenns
of the contract. ·
Somewhere along the line
both these feUows should get
together on exactly what they
.;miiieiiiaiiin.. _ _ - - - -. . .
1

SPEOAL SALE

.

.

_ALL

.SPRING &amp; SUMMER
PERMANENT
"LLFEUKE"
ARRANGEMENTS

300110 OFF
.
DUDlfr5
fLORIST

·
Serving:
Gallipolis, Pomeroy,
. Middleport, Ohio
V:a:·: ::

es~tim;a;ted;;.;$1;00;000:l:a:st~y:ear:.:an:d~=&amp;:Ma:;s;o;n:Co::··:W:.
'

Browns Gettmg' Johnson

~ti ~~~~\~e~~a~~B~a~~~;

Drago, KC 14-6; Siebert, Bos 14·
7; Wood, Chi 14-8; Hunter. Oak
14-10.

son had agreed to waive his notrade clause with the Rams and
would report to the Browns
training at Palo Alto this
week In preparation for the
second exhibition game of the
season Friday night against the

SENTENCING SET
KENT, Ohio (UP!) - Robert
E. Kelley, 22, Rocky River, a
Kent State University student
found guilty of disorderly
conduct and resistiilg arrest
during a disturbance in the
downtown May 22, will be
sentenced Aug. 17. Kelley was
hospitalized two days from
Injuries suffered during the
disturbance.

Taffoni, a tackle. was traded
. to the Rams after walking out
of the Browns' training camp
three weeks ago and asking to
be put on waivers.
The 6-foot-4, 250 pound Johnson was drafted by Dallas 1n
1965, -moved to the Washington
Redskins and has played with
the Rams the last two years.
The Browns said he would
probably be used as a backup
tackle.

3 ROOMS

PAPAL APPOINOMENT
VATICAN CITY (UP!) Msgr. Nicholas Elko was
nariled'auxiliary W Archbishop·
.
·. . · .
Pa)ll Leibold of' Cirrcmnall by

P~Pa~V1Tuesday. Elko,61,

has lived m Rome since 1967 and
ha
ed
s serv as a prelate of the
Byzantine Rite. He was born in
Donora, Pa ., and has been a
· t ·
1934 H
ed
pnes smce
. ewasnam
a bishop in 195!i and holds the
honorary post of titular bishop
of Dara.

latex Paint
For Interior and
Exterior Use

MITE_ 399

.&lt; •

·
·•
$35.0Ci"""DoWn:"Balan~e

·on

Convenient
Terms.

MATERIALS CO.

MASON
FURNITURE
Mason. w.

773-5554

Va.

produ~lion.

wbeat program are
:.
for 1972. The loan~
remain at $1 ~
b will
ll81ionalav
~ ~ usbel,
to provide ";:tecti~ofenough
Income if tbe market farm
pectedlyfalls
1llltlt1
be the de~~:!"
10
market prices for wbea
The
_ . . t.
19 7 11
domestic .,h.a:"~o'i::;.~cre
the nali . unchan
for
~~
~
ged from
1971

war~house·s~:.~;t~:ed

an:

purchases will
. a~ '!!
available to continue to be
ticipating i ~ parwheat
e vo untary
Wheat prod~ In 1m
will rereive 100
of
'tyalso
1
production of
allotment the
year, th;ougb :.n-:s
wheat certificates Face v
of certificates
be the
terence between 100 pet of
parity on July
and. the
1 1972
national avterag~
received by fanners
through November 1m
As was true this year par
ticipants
will
re'celv;
preliminary payments
as possible after July 1
75 pet. of the estimated fac:e
value of the wbea
.
with the ~ :ca~
after December 1 1972. • paid
dates for
'
SigJHJp
wheal and other
voluntary fann programs will
be February 28 through April?,
19'12.
A leaflet summarizing lbe
1972wheatprogramiselji0Cied
to be received in ASCS county
offices about mid-August and
will be distributed by the county
offices tAl local wheat produl:ers
as soon as rereived.

progr.::O

We Deliver

MASON

U:U, fun::::..,.:

U:

a:

wui

.I .
fromrw;:Y

DAVID POLING, D.D.

Phebe's
.
Dollar
Da
.Qt

bil

two .in ~ !~lineS- Bat Cmunittee oo a . .~ .-.
a five-year requirement for ap- The vote rono-t ,. bassJr
plicants would be reduced to over whethl!r olber inlet led
threeyrars.
parti15sucbaslleoholderson
~lnbo~guoiousandlHII· The House unanimoustly thepiiljltlty sbouldalsobegivge'"lP" ~. . agreed to Smate IJIIt!!olmea':&amp; en advance nrning.
,
'lbe 1DIJie safety legisl•tion and Sl!llt tAl Gov ..Jobn J. Gilli· I.egis!•tion uquiling lhe sop~approved ~y dlaing a gao a bill maJring Ohio a party aratioo of pet food and human
brief !lenate. lfllSIOD. ~ ~ totheM!dwestNucUI"Com~t food on glUCtiJ store shelves
111'8~ . ~1sb subnomwlleeS forsbaringnuclearinformalion met surprising resis!alft and
continued to work on and technology on a regional was defeated. o10 • 40, wilb 50
the budget and taxes, !;lasis.
votes~ for passag•.
but each w~______!Wait· The House also finaUy ironed
_ IIepa ~~rn 'J
1
inginforma~ before tack !ng out a_ probate refQI"III bill, in· Thed!ibalebeganroutinelyas
amendments m bqles of getting creaS!Dg from $3,000 to ~.000 the sp••• • Rep.. Tom Fries,
a lisral priag• togelber by the
of an estate that ~ D • Daytan, I"'PJained the _bill
nest week.
be distributed without admims- was. m•ended tAl require a barSponsored by Sells.~ L. tralioo.
rier II' a -.food pnxluct to be
~,R-Logan, and Doug·
Olljeetlau Ov~
placed betften displays of anilas~ gate, D • Sleubenville, The Senate • JlllSS d bill bad mal and '-'an food tAl prevent
the mme ~bill actually re- already cleared tbe House last &lt;mSi1lDdS from making an er~ practical expenence re- June 30, but the value of an es- roneoos purcba:;E.
qwrements for the foremen and late e&gt;:empl from probate court Rep. Robert E. Netzley, Rremoves minimmn age noquire- had~ boosted to $l.O,~cmr La~, added a note of bmoor.
~:::::bill is to the obJI!Ciions of lawyers m the ::havetwodogs,"Neb:leysaid.
chamber. .
. .
and my dogs have ' - ' CIDIattract more IIJ'P)irants from All parties of the legi~a~ plalning to me about mmog
wbicb fire bosses aDd foremen agreed to revert to the original human food up with the dog
may be chosen.
figure of ~.000 as oflt&gt;ed by food;, so I am In fa...- of this
Ale RajuiJtJLEots GiveR
Sen.~M.Motti.D-~. bill.
the chief
and the bill Then things got serious. Rep.
duty In gaseious mine; Zl in paTw0d ' : ; ': : ~':;.. H
E. W. Iampson, R.Jellerson,
.m
ouse s:"d the bill ''impt
upon the
•
non-gaseious mines. 1bese age were not Slii' d Iegisla~
:
•
righl of free trade" in that
61
;:""'appli
. .""'~would be waived ~tr-pa. ~ . .
ti~ re- slorHeeper.;aretoldbowiAlcfis.
can ·
qumng mwnapalllies to g~ve 30 play their wares.
at«elDDI:Jl would ba~e to ~ve days notice to -~e ho~ ''I think lhe mac::badls lDIISI
least three years practical bef!H'e ~· . repmnng have had eDOilllh marbling exor removmg bwldings was perience to know when! to place
their food and . . far ' ......~
•
II IS
the scope of..lhe state of Obio
"
1D teU them, Iampson said.

l\fnate baa JNnimoal)t P' d
~ sent to the . Houle •
aimed at~ tbe supply
of qualified fiHemen and fire

to~~=23--=~ld~:

.

FREE
12 01. pkg.

.

RONCO
NOODLES

FACIAL TISSUE SALE

4
'1
PUff$ .•••••••••••••• •
·Pork &amp;_Beans.....7 !: ' 1
Catsup .......•........;3 20oz.'1
Tom·
t
.
·
3
1
. .aoes.............
Corn, Peas, Spinach 4!
Peaches...............3 ~~lfl' 1
Pear Halves....~....3 : •1
~~
12
$
1
FCJCJd•••••••••···
1
0
oz.'
1
Potatoes.............. ·
PRINTS

.

With 110 Order
or More

460ct

5th and·PEARL STS., RACINE
'The Store With AHeart
You, WE liKE"

boles

.HEINZ

.

.

1

WE FEATURE
USDA CHOICE BEEF

DEL MONTE

btls.

By REV. DAVID POLING

Right reserved to limit qu·aritities

We

Glad~

Accept Fed. Food Stamps

Prices Effective Aug. 11-17
Mon. Tues., Wed.~..;9 to. 7
Thurs., Fri, Sat ;.._·;9 to 9

•

STANDARD PACK

2
No. Yl'

CLOSED SUNDAYS

cans

DE~ MONTE (Mix or Match)

·

--

STOKELY (Halves &amp; Slices)

DEL MONTE

cans

a

SUPREME IDAHO

.

.

,INSTANT

·

314

bags

~

-

PRODUCE
SPECIALS!

·Meat Loaf Mix
BEEF
and PORK

2.

USDA atOICE .

1bs.
for

.

Boiling Beet 39~
Ohio Valey Sliced

Russett
ORANGES Potatoes
Calif.

Home Made

001.

69~

51~ 49~

DAIRY SPECIALS!

Fainnont's Best

ICE CREAM
lfl gaL

crt ·

79':
All fellllnd 011

"lUll THE MRS.'
OUR BAKERY SPECIAL!

. HOlSUM REG. 49'
Pc:wtdered Sugar
.

DONUTS"' 39~

The
that the Vietnam war bas been one
enormous mistake is now wide·spread and the reading of
the Pentagon Papers may place the final seal on such a
judgment. '
The one spark of hope that emerges from such an apparent miscalculation by the presidents, the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, and the State Department is that some people
were righ~ ! hat they opposed the folly, and pursued their
arguments all the way to the top. One such person was
George Ball, undersecretary of State. Another. more
recent, was Clark Clifford. He advised his friend and
boss, Lyndon B. Johnson, to deescalate tbe war, after
being appolnfed secretary of Defense.
There are always those people in the world who are
early to seize an opportunity, spot a naw, measure a
trend, or suggest new goals. They exist in government
are found in science and industry ; their names are lmowri
in the university and the church. Often they are a success, for they have the courage to act on information
and the willingness to take large risks for even larger
gains. These are the leaders of men and they are very
early in the issue, not late.
Right now the business community is all excited about
-Canadian oil . The energy 'people are pushing pipelines
into the Arctic Circle. When you look at the lease maps,
you find millions of acres belonging tAl an unknown company called West Coast Production Ltd. Trace its ancestry and you discover Phillips PetroleUm in control because
K. S. Adams, 30 years ago believed that 01! and natural
gas would on~ day flow from the far North.
· This same oil man signed up the North Sea tracts back
in '511. Some people are early~but often a tiny few have
the raw courage to act on their beliefs.
Sen. Mark 0 . Hatfield was one of the earliest on Vietnam. Back in 1965, then governor of Oregon. he was 1be
only political leader at the Governors' Conference to
resist the President whO all but demanded support for
the war in Vietnam . They voted 49-1 to back LBJ. Not
·
Hatfield.
And•now President Nixon will go IAl China. For almost
a dozen years or more the National Council of Churches
hilS pleaded with this country t~ find the way to. establish
normal diplomatic relatiOns With the _largest country 011
'eartll. The council and 1ts leaders, hke Euge1_1e Carson
Blake, the late Bromely Oxna~ and others, did not get
much applaus~-;-and a mountam of abuse-for !herr pursuit of recogmhon of Red Chma.
This topic more than any other brou~t a . ~uspicious
tone to the affairs of the Nat10nal Co,uncil-cntics called
themo ·Communist. se•ht10~s, un-Amencan. Now, when the
council is almost out of s1ght, the early cause IS popular.
making front-page news around the world. .
. , ·
Organizations. like people, can pay a stiff ~riCe for
being ahead ol the crowd. Or. Spock an~ Cha1_11am Colf"m
of Yale are still dlltking tomatoes for the•r antiwar~ ­
ll will be up to the histonans I_? wr~te the commentaries
on their public adivity. But, the Penla~on papers alreacly
·
·h 1,. Th&lt;· herd is tuo often wron~ :, nt) only a few
~~~elk~v~~~ ·;i,.. insi&amp;obl and piercing view of what ought
. In hki&gt;IM'n in th~ affnir;&lt; of m&lt;•n.
,

Blaetlnar, Paula Eichinger ,
Oleryl Lawsoo, Juli Whitehead
and Slophanie Radford.
Marylu Mills, Neisel Duvall,
Jan Holter, Mary Beth Sauer
and Rachel Hunter were judged
best in lhe clothes for school

spm-.

bey~

New Haven So""ial Events

David Roush d Grand Rapids.
Mich., and Mr. and Mrs. Milton
Roush and Randy of Syracuse,
Ohio.
Mrs. Larry LeMasters and
son, Stepben, visited lbe past
twoweekswilhberparents Mr
and Mrs. B. J. Howard'
Mike. Mr. LeMasters was attending National Guard Camp.
Mrs. Tom Vance and
children, Barbara, Jeff and
DebbieofSaltPoint,N. Y. spent
the past week visiting Mr and
Mrs. Deibel Vance
·

Market Report

'

Pentagon Papers
And ~eking Visit

(Continued from Page 1) .
Shop for assistance In the revue.
Best in the class of a "joyful
jumper" category were Sonia
~.June Ann Wam.sley, Mary

:ue.

Sewside acreage for the 1972
wbeat program will be equal to
83 pet. of a !ann's domestic
wheat allotment, the maximum
allowable under the law. This
supplies from this year's
harvest. in 1971 wheat set-aside
acreage was 75 pet.
Details of the program were
, announced
recently
by
!!ecretary of Agriculture
Clifford M. Hardin. Inclusion of
barley and soybeans as subititule crops and the higher set~side percentage are the most
notable changes In the 1972
wheat program
: These chang~ reflect the
present poSsibility of a large
wheat harvest in ,
the need
971 •
for increased soybean acreage,
and the necessity of assuring
mcome protection for the
while also maintaining
h1s greater decision-making
Mrs. Jobn E. Barringer and
freedom provided by the
son, Steve, of Burtonsville,
Agricultural Act of 1970.
Maryland arrived bere WedThe substitution provision
nesday and will visit her
will enable a producer to plant
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
aU or any combination of bis
Roush. They will be joined in a
a~eage to wheat; feed grain
few days by Rev. Barringer.
(corn, barley, grain sorghum)
Mrs. Walter Bush of Allan
or soybeans without loss of
BROO'IIER STEPS UP
Park, Micblpn spent several
planting history or program DAYTON, Ohio (U_PI) - daysberelastweeltaslheguest
benefits.
Richard J. Jacob, prmdent of of Mr. aDd Mrs. Donald F.
The announcement that Dayco Corp: bere, Wll5 named Roush. She aune tAl attend lhe
barley will be includf!l in the board . chatr~an and Chief funeral senices of ber aunt,
feed grain prOgram for l972 executive officer Tuesday, Mrs. Ora Rousb.
and may be substituted fo; succeeding his lrother. Robert, Mr. and Mn. Bumll DaWllOO
wheat or vice-versa, was made who died last Friday.
and Mrs. n.eJma Reibnire
because In some areas fall·
attended the second IDplanted barley is an alternate ·
ternational Gospel Singing
1
crop for wheat.
CLAIM VICI'IM
Convention on Friday and
Soybeans will be allowed as a
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - ~ Saturday nights at Nashville
supslitute crop 1n the feed grain Charles _Hines, 30, Toledo, Tenn.
'
[ll"tgram as weD as tbe wheat · drowned m MatUDee Bay bere Mrs. Sadie Warth recently
program. Full details of the Tuesday when high waves IIIJI!IIl a tftl.e. day vacatiCII
feed grain program will be capsized a boat he and bis with her oister, Florence
announced as soon as' possible. brother • Richard, 1lel'e riding Yooker at Cambridge, Ohio.
J. Melvin Gilbert is chairman m.
She spent sewaal days with
of the Gallia County Agriculture
.
.
Mrs. Harry Fcram at ByersStabilization and qnstrvation
JUJube IS a sPec_i e s of .ville Ohio and also visited Mr.
Co ·t•·- d W
small, spmy trees wbicb pro- · and·Mrs ,..__.._ y-L- and
mnu_ """• an
ayne Olase, duce fruits resembling dates,
.
· ....-~ .......- .
the Me1gs chairman.
according tAl Encyclopaedia family at S..a;a Late, Ohio.
Several provisions of the 1971 Britannica.
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Burrell Dawson were Lewis
Roush, Jr. aDd srn of l'albn-burg, W. Va., Mr. and Mrs.

f~nner

GAUDN

NEW
fURNITURE
S'J~g 95
·;pt ,-

Participants in the i972 wheat
~t-aside program may subst1tute barley, corn, grain
sorghum,orsoybeansforwbeat
andaUII earn ~am benefits
and prQ~t their wbeat allotment h1story, local ASC
Commitu:es po~t out.
There 18 no limit on wheat
acrejlge. Producers may grow
their' full allQtrnent, or mor.e
than their allotment and
remain within the ~gram
"Se,t-aslde" does not mea~
diverting land from production
of a specific crop. It means
setting aside an acreage from a
farril's total potential crop

c;:

Rams.

TURBINES PRODUCED
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - The
f'U"St comm
· I prod uc t'lOR 0f
_ erclB_
gas tur bme engmes be gao at the
Ford Motor C~. here Tuesday.
The first turbme engmes are
designed for the boating In·
dustry and for . construction
eqwpment, electric generators,
aU" compressors and ptUDps. ,-------:--::-:-:--:-:--::-::-::::-----,--,---.,

In_ Wheat Program ~~!~1..~~~,~~~~

:W"'":

.

LOS ANGELES (UP!) -Los
Angeles Rams offensive tackle
Mitch Johnson will go to the
Cleveland Browns In exchange
for Joe Taffoni.
A spokesman for the Browns
said Tuesday night that John·

_~e Supervision Upgraded

Four Substitutes

PI'. PLEASAHl"
L1VES'l'OCK su n CO;
PI'. PLEASAHI',W. VA.
Sodlu•1•. All- 7, un
HOGS -175 to 2211 It to 211.25;
Heavies 17.511 to 18.75; Lights
16.50 to 19.25; Fat Sows 15.211 to
16.25; Boars 13 to 14.211; Pigs 5 to
11; StockSloatsBy Hd.141Al211.
CATILE- Steers 23.35 to rl;
Heifers 17 to %1.40; Fat Cows II
to Zl; Canners 14 tAl 17; Bulls
22.75 to 25.10; Stock Cows and
Calvea Iii to :141.511; Stock
Steers 25.10 to 29.511; Stock
Heifers It to llli; Stock Sleer
Calws 21 to 33; Stock Heifer
Calves 24 to 30.
VEAL CALVI'll- Tops 40.40;
Secoods 37.111; MedilDl 35.~ to
37; Common. Heavies 32.5111Al
«1.

and

·

"Ali~:Otryingtodo,'' Fries
replied, ~ mate.511n!theySI!I_)"
arate their ~CE from their

Gainesburgers.
Rep. Sam Sped&lt;, R-New Conalso
against tbe
bill, cmteming •t was lllliii!COS-sary.
"It's one 1bing tAl mate 5Ift
horsemeat and hamburger are
said. ''llut
~you're talking about~
taking a can
!'-"a~ of Dinty M...,, this
18 ~ ndiculous bill."
Both chamber.; 'ftl'e •cbedul·
ed lo meet at 1:311 p.m. today.

~

separated," ~
'!- Keo-L-Ba~

wo.

Cattle: ClDce Steers, 3333.40; Good Steers. 29.631;
Holalein, :lf-30.10; Choice
Heifers, 30.til.lUI; Good Cows,
lt.2D-Z2; Utility Cows, 11.111-lt;
ea.....,.. and Cutter• 17 down·
• •
Bulls. llli.58-21; Stock cattle
Steers, %7-i§; Stock Cattle
Heifers, ~.50. .
Veal Calves, Choice. 47 ;
Good, 41.50; lwbn, 34; Baby
Calvea by the bead, 21J.47.
Lllmbl, cboice, 31.111; good,
29.~; Ewes and I .ambo by the
head, 311.25.
'

Taking top honors in the
lounging garments were
Qarbara Ann.Jordan and cathy
Pickens. Judged best in the
spirts clothes category were
Jean Whitehead, Debbie
Kennedy, Joy Hayes, Sandra
VanMeter, Jennie Ulapman,
Barbara Well and Bette Upton.
Tops in the dress up dress class
were Marcia Carr and Jane
Jordan.
Others taking part were:
TOP TO TOE ~ Deborah
Wood!ard, Teresa Meadows,
~I

L"ura Hoover. Ruth Coen, Debbie

Bonnie Morris, Belly Jordan.
Susan Henderson. Vanessa
Folmer, Beverly Bishop, Cathy
Blaetlnar. Failh Perrin, Kim
Allman, Diana Pullins, Debbie
Windon, Becky Thomas, Betsy
Amsbary , Belly McKnight,

Lawrence,

Susie

Goebel. Sheri Young. Teresa
Bud&lt;ley, Teresa Carr, Connie
Garnes. Dinah Erlewine and
Pat Robson.
DRESS UP DRESS - Sharon
Holter. Lisa Peerey, lngr.ld
Hawley and Ruth Ann, Jord,n.

Dyer. laura Hoo)ler, Nick i

Van Meter, Kim Ward, Debbie
Weddle, Jody Grueser, Mary
Sue Durst. Melinda Dailey ,
Cathy Gill, Jerri Sue Jordan,
Rebekah Long. Alicia Evans,
Debbie Miller, Cindy Dorst,
Cynthia
Pitzer.
Kalhy

JUMP

Lawrence. Tammy K. Dav is,

LIKE TBE

Rhonda Haning, Elizabeth
Blevins. Belinda Deeter, Beth
Headley, Robin Napper, Brenda ~
Ash, Vicky Gillogly, Darla Gill, .
Belinda Whittington, Rilla
Rhodes, Carla Sue NoHingham.
Kim Jones. Sandy Hamilton,
Jill Well, Janel Middleswart,
Diane Smith, Linda Donohue.
Daleanna LiHie, Carla Teaford,
Marsha Holcomb, Tammy
Smith, Kim Sebo, Angela

FINAL CLOSE-OUT SALE
ON AU

Dailey, Diane Ward and Connie

Ellis.
CLOTHING MATES
Debbie Birchfield. Kathy
Pullins. PaHy Dyer, Kimberly

BOLENS
--·- ------------

1971

Grueser. Jackie King, Terri

SJmpathy Flowers

TERRIFIC DISCOUNTS -

MI!S.'illngers of love
&amp; Understanding

B~y

now and beat the 72 prices. Bolen w1th the latest equipment.

We Deli•er Flowers

Araund The

General Tire Sales

Corner

Around The
World

m -7161
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

IUiejs Flolist
St N. Second St.

m -ss.o

~lepart.O.

992-3148

MILL ST.

MIDDLEPORT

3 ·BIG DAYS tHURSDAY· FRIDAY ,; SATURDAY ·AUG. 12-13-14
BURRY! ! QUANTITIES LIMITED
•

•

I

~rted

REG. 10e

1.00

Garbage Can (20 gal. I ·

1.00

Flair Marking Pens
Theme Book
Steno Notebook- aii count
Floral Arrangements
Shoe Bag

2 for 1.00

Nail Polish Remover

4 fol' 1.00

Cream Rinse. 12 oz. btl.

4for 1.00

Egg Shampoo, 8 oz. bot I.

4forUO

Mouthwash, 16 oz. bofl.

4for 1.00
4for 1.00

.

Wave Set
Landers Cosmetics (your choicel-4 for 1.00
Petroleum Jelly. aoz. jar·_ _ _ _ 4for 1.00
Olloropltyll Stick Deodoranl _ _ _ 4 for.1.00
Dusting Powder

4 boxes l.GO
1.00

wllll -

'"

Ieaiie ... ......
........... a " '•
.......

.

REG.Z

SALE
PRICE

'
FOR 15c

A precision instnunent with ball beuin&amp;Get this multi-use item for only 18 cents
this IIi&amp; sale. Hurry!

EG.

zse .
· SAL£ PRICE

24 cr.

I

CRAYOlA
Binder Ensemble

SAVE •
$1.77

Hi-Intensity
34c

Wastebasket (22 qt.J

1.00

Vinyl Binder (with booster)

77c

Dish Drainer, 191J:i xl6"x~

1.00

Styling Brush

Waste Basket (14 qt.l

1.00

Expanding Clothes Rack

66c

Mug Set (MIIm &amp; Pop I

1.33

Infant Carryi~g Seat

2.00

!.GO

I

"EMPIRE"

" Bic" Pens. Reg. 87'c

Salad Set. 3 pc-. .

"EMPIRE"

1

Iit -

Drainbolrd Tray _ _ _ _ _...:....
' _ _ 1.00

6 for 1.00

COMPASS

I' . . . io lldpt IIOCII-

3.88

Sau~rs (white)

ISALE PRICE
CIRCLE ARC

Desk Light. Reg. SUS

Cups &amp;

se

PENCIL
s

for 1.00
4 for 1.00

Kitchen Towels (16X3GI

I SAVE

---BIG CAP

Uor 1.00
3 for 1.00

ach 1.00
1.00

PlASTfC

transparent colors. Plastic. Get one or more al half

pnce and save.

Filler Paper, 800 sheets

t

I

12 INCH RULER

Mirror-10" Doubletaced

GOES WIIB G0P11B11S
MINNEAPOlJS, llina. (UPIJ
- F..-.ner Oblo Stale irt•t
coach BiD )Onras baa J.n
named auiotant basketbaU
coach at tbe Unha m1 of
Minnesota~ KlllCU, 31, wiU
assist new eo8Cb Bill
Musselman, tormerly of
Ashlarld.
'
•

class.

MIDOLE PORT DEPT. STORE

Colgate Tooth Paste ( Limitll

SCIOI'O I.IVI!SI'OCK
Bop: aal, 211; No. 1, 211.25;
2311-HJ, u.~; 211 -.u.25; II02lll,l&amp;.:ill; IJUIII,19.511; 1..190,
19; Sows, 16.111-17.0~; Boars,
13.6&amp;-14.90; Stock Hogs, 15%1.58; Pigs by lbe ~. 7.5G-

~

LyM Pullins. Diana Epple. Kay Rachel c-t, Patricia Boo!Gft, ·
Jones. Pam North. Becky King. Cindv Garnes, Chrloll Mlirtln
Tammy Milliron, Robin and Rhonda Reuter.
Reeves. M¥y Mora, Cynthia
CLOTHES FOR SCHOOL lane. Sharon Karr, Sally Jo Debbie Boatright, Tammy
Walters. Melba Thomas, Becky Smith. Nancy ·Lawreftee, P•m
Windon. Paula Kloos. Debbie Nottingham. Brende Donah.,.,
King, Rochelle Robinson, Jayne Smith, Cathy Davis, Jav
Pamela Harden, Margaret While, R~ ith Blevins. Noncy
Province, Pearl
Thomas, Gill." Nola Young, Beverly
Doreatha · Robinson, PaiiT. Smith, Rayanno Cole; .
Lambert. Paula Kay Hysel ,
LOUNGING GARMENTS ,Cheryl Barnhart. Ellen Darst, Crystal 'Erwin, O...lse Deen,
Patty Darst, Diana Painter, JeMy Bailey. Mltndle Rose.
Becky
Painter. Tammy Linda Myers, O...lse Pullins.
Mossman, Karen Ellis and , SPORTS CLOTHES .,...
Cindy Ellis.
·
Kimberly Kraueller, Gwt'lda
JOYFUl JUMPER - Janel Depoy, Bonnie Smith, Pam
Mora. Sharon Henderson. Opal Holcomb, Debbie GarnH,
Berry , Sherri Shiltz, Celia Bonnie
Welsh,
Vicki
Shillz. Melody Snoulfner, Dberholzer, Julia Schultz. Patty
Tammy Petrey, Connie Miller, Grossnickle. Helen Cotter ill.
Susan Wright, Tammy Pitzer. Jennie While, Lola Walker,

2 for49c

.,

I
· u2

Wa II Can Opener.
Dish Cloth (pkg. ot 3)

4lc

Bowl Briish

21c

Gasoline Can (gallon sin)

6lc:

Curtain ROd (single I

24c

Wood Kitchen Novenies
Many More Speci•ls
Store

1111

u-

PldiMc

111e

�•
5-_TbeD8llySenliDel,~. o., Aug.ti, 1971

1.
0
4- Tile,.._,,_,
Mlli~illt\I'II&amp;IOUrtloP.PQ-I"IIJ
.
_..,a8ialllrfiiiii',.J
I" •
0),0.,Auc.11,1171

Tar~enton,

Way to Celebrate

Today's Sport Parllde •

lly SJEYB tr1L8TElN .,
cilly
bcime ryns behind I'm very proud to bave reached
By MILTON RICHMAN
411 hit Ilia llintb of tbe .this . point in my career,"
VPI Spwll Wltw
Killebrew,
·. NEW YORK (UPI)-Fran
lllnnoD JW1e11ie!r 11.-J jlllt ,e.- in the lOth
to ateal Ki11ebfew said.
Tarkenton will be back with the
lit b1a IOOtb Clfttr bame run lllnnoo's lbow arid give tbe
Killebrew 18 a quiet mari. He
New York Giants soon.
llld 10 be celelnted tbe best BalllmoreOrloleaa 4-3vicbl'y baa built his reputation the 0°
"
How soon?
00
WIY he la1e!r how. He hit his avec the MIMe8ota TWins
wid he bas done. He baa led
the.
tMI La
Leld
A week; two . Maybe sooner.
·501It. •
"Not
takes a 'little American League tn llcDe runs By Uni:C.
The 31·year4d quarterback,
But Ilia berolcs were In vain. sbine off what happened, but siJ: times, more than any player
Leading BaHers
. now home In Atlanta, figures to
Merv RetlelB!IWid. who is 11011'
e&gt;:cept Babe Ruth.
·
G. liB R. · H. Pet. rejoin the Giants foUowing that
He was bit more than
Bckrt, Chi 108 435 71 156 .359 inevitable Interval which has
40
homers in a --eight times. ~'::.~A~r L n~ ~ ~~ l~ :~~ become a familiar shirt-tail to
He is - d to Ruth, .also, In Cimnl, .Pit 99 395 62 129 .327 all deadlocks these days,

~

J

~

Pr=~nter.::i"onal

· Lineseores
fMior 1-eogue Rnulh · ,

By Unilwd Prtss lnltrnlotlanal
,
AmeriCIIn LHtue
lsi Game
Kan City 300 101 on-·9 IJ .1.
Washn!lln 100 100 ooo- 2 6 2
Fitzmorris, York 16) and
Paepke; Bosman. Rlddleberger
11), Co• (8) and Casanova WP
-Fitzmorris (..H. lP...:Bos.
man 19"131 · ~0"!' 1 " 5 16th).
2nd Geme
KanCIIy 000 100 110- 3 6 1
Washngtn 100 000 ooo- 1 ~ 0
Hedlund, Abernathy (8) and
Kirkpatrick; Thomspon Plna
(8), Rlddleberaer (8), Co• 191
and Billings. WP-Hedlund (96) . lP-Thomspon 10.4)
· ·
1st Geme
Oakland 102 101 001- 6 14 o
Boston
002 002 1oo- s 11 o
Hunter. Finger · (8) and
Tenace; Peters, Tatum IS),
Lyle 19) and Josephson. WPFingers (J.6) . LP-Lyle 1._4).
HR&gt; - Davis (2nd), Green
111th), Lahoud (11th).
. 2nd Geme
Oakland · 000 131 110--'- 1 11 1
Boston
010 102 001- s 10 1
Ddom, Grant 161 and Dun·
can; Culp, Lee (7), Moret (9)
and Montgomery. WP-Odom
(7-8) , LP-Culp 113-10). HRrBando (181hl, Flore (lsi),
Jackson (20th), Duncan (12th),
Smith (24th).

Sanaulll.,., lP-KI$011
HR-Robemon (2Jrd).

13-3).

Hous
002 000 1oo- 3 6 o
Cln.c
200 000 ooo- 2. ~ 0
Forsch (7-S) a'ld Hiatt;
Simpson, Carroll 18), Granger
19) and Bench. LP-Simpson
(J.S). HR- Morgan 191h).
N.Y.
000 401 010- 6 11 o
S.D.
000 211 ooo- ~ 8 o
G...lry, Sadeckl (5), McGraw
16) and Grote; Kirby, Kelley
161. Severlnsen (8) and Barton.
WP-McGraw (8-3). LP-Kirby
110.10). HR-Colbert l22ndl.
-Phlla
010 000 ooo- 1 6 2
L.A.
010 020 03x~ 6 11 2
Lersch, Bunning (6) and
McCaver; Singer (7.13) and
Hailer. LP-lersch (4-10). HR
- Hailer 1~th) .
Man
000 000 ooo- 0 2 0
S.F.
000 000 001- 1 s 0
Stoneman {12-10) and Baleman ; Marlchal 111-Bl and
Dietz.

Meigs

Property

frequency d heme"-· bit
. ..,...
per
time at bat lifetime.
Kill~ 18 lhe ~q~. active
American League player In
~.:... and careei"
,._.ers
stands
lOth
the all-time home
.run list,
00
only 10 sbll'l of Mel Ott and
Ernie Ballks.
1be Twins toot a 1-0 lead 1n
the first
Klllebrew's 5GOib
00
· fr-" bebind 3-lln ..__ .._,_, d•
""
IIIC uw" an
then
lied the game
wben
Harmon ~ed his 501st in the
slxlhwith"--·To·-·-base ..
·- - until
Nlether ....,....
team scored
Rettenmund hit his _gamewlming shot In the lOth and
ruined Killebrew's celebratioo.
In other American League
aclioo,OaklandsweptBosiCII65 and 7-S, Delni.t lMIIlbed
Milwaukee 12--3, Qeveland beat
Chicago 4-1 Kansas City
romped over' Washington !1-2
and 3-1, in lhe first game of a
twinbill, and California edged
New Yll'k 7~
_
·
Gene "l'enace singled home
Tommy Davis with two out In
tb top of .... ·
.
e
...., IUDth to give
Oakland the flrst-«ame victory
and then.Reggie Jacbon lk-ove
!"lhreenmstobelpbeatBoston
1D lhe secood game.
DickMcAuliffesnappedoutof
the doldrums of a _193 - · -·
average by bitting a single, a
1riple and a home run as be led
the ngers• 12-hit assault 011
Brewers'pilclllng. Joe Coleman
scattered eight hits to pick up

' California 200 011 0»- 1 12 3
New York 110 200 020- 6 11 1
Wright. Allen 181 and Ste- .
~son ; Bahnsen. McDaniel
Ill. Aker 191 and Munson. WP Clifford Stumbo, Exec .. Ollie
- Wright I 11-ll) . LP-Bahnsen Hindy. dec'd., to Jack Bachner,
(10.9). HRr-Spencer (14th)
Carolyn Bachner, lots, Mid·
Repoz 19th).
' dleport.
Detroit
10. 102 202-12 12 1 Armo Stansbury, Trus.,
William E. Stansbury, dec'd.,lo
Mllwakee 100 000 20G- 3 8 o Jack
Carolyn
Coleman Ill-S) and Freehan; Bachner, Bachner.
Lots, Middleport.
Parsons. Weaver 16), Krasse
J. Frederick Stanley, June A.
(7), Hannan (8) and Rodriguez; Stanlel to Myrtle Stanley,
LP-Parsons (9-14). HRr- 1"· 20 ereS, ScIpIo.
theGall
vicbl'y.
H...J..lno kept bis hot"
Free h an (17th), McAuiiHe -Harriet
B.
Sterrett,
Evelyn
..,_..wwith a thre«un
(14th), Cash (26th) .
·
M. Day, dec .• to l'cy M. Hoover, slreat rolling
Cleveland 002 000 2oo- 4 13 o Bedford-Orange.
bomer In the first Inning to start
Chicago 000 000 001- 1 6 1 Beryle Dorst. Pearl Dorst, theRoyalstotheirtrl·-b
McDowell, Foster (7), Hennl- Sharon Balles. John Balles to ""e Sell8'- u_..,_::"'"'bittino~r
gan (7) and Fosse; Bradley,. Hobart E. Day, Retha Day. "'
..,,. ....,......
g
Forst_er 17), Kealey (7), Hinton Beverly L. Dandrea. Danny .382 over ~ last 24 ' games,
181 and Egan. WP-McDowell Dandrea, Pomeroy.
powered his sixth borne ·nm to
(11-10) . LP-Bradley (11·10).
John Sauvage to Mary A. _
Fred Patek and Joe
Webster, Lots. Pomerov.
~-·
10 ""'lngs
William Merlin Russell, dec'd. Keoogb and give the Royals a
Ball
021 000 000 1- 4 11 2 to Richard Waller Russell. Cert.
·
Mlnn
100 002 000 0- 3 7 o of Trans.. Syracuse.
qwck 3-0 lead.
Cuellar OH) and EtchebarMichael J. larsen. Derora
Jlm~cerandRogerRepoz
r"'; Hall, Corbin 181 and Larsen to Joseph F. Lar..,., gangedupoostanBabnaenand
llerweld.~ LI?-.Corbin 12-91 . 29.93 Acres•.C91Ufllbla •.,
reliever Lind• McDaniel with
~IIIWII!W•• t ·• (13th &amp;
Marvin o , Mill.,, • Helen• hom
~ ·• In ·~'----'- .J.Il ·
hl r •
'
Miller, Minnie M. Marsh to
ers
a ... IW&lt;I'" _..th
Franklin Real Estate co .• s7.375 1m1ng rally that broke a 4-4 tie
•
N•lion•l League
All
ooo 010 lOGAcres. Salem. ,
and gave the Angels' tbeir
St. L
000 100 ooo- 21 81 21 Leonard Hash, Phyllis Hash · .._.
tb Yank
Slone. Upshaw (B) and 1o Franklin Real Estate Co VIC_, 11'11/!r e
ees.
Wiliams; Cleveland; Linzy 181 169.375 Acres. Salem.
·•
SUdden Sam McDowell came
and Simmons. WP-Sione (H) . Harold B. Grimm, Violet l. rn strcmg after returning to
LP-Cieveland (10,10).
A.GriGmml to Eparl A.,Grslmllm, Lois action ·following a contract
__
r mm, arce s. u on.
Chi ·
000 000 20G- 2 5 0 Armo Stansbury Trust dlsputeasheheldtheWbileSox
Pill
000 100 ooo- 1 5 1 William E. Stansbury: dec'd.• i~ to four hits over six inninga and
Pizarro (4-1) and ·Martin; CIIHord Stumbo, Exec .. Ollie picked up bis !lib vi tory f
Klson, Veale 18), Giusti (8) and Hlndy, dec'd., lots, Middleport. the Indiana.
c
or

Transfers

E

.

Brck, Sl.l 114 470 92 153 .326
Davs. ~API 113 457 63 1-18 .324.
Sngllin,
_
102 398 47 129 324
AJo nes,SNt l(l
96 ~ 43 118 .322
108 - 58 141 .320
1ou, .
H.Aarn.AII 102 354 64 111 314
Americanl,eague.
. .
.
G. AB R. H. ·Pet.
Oliva.Min 92 358 58131 .366

1

~~~K~y . l~ ~ ~: g~ :~~

Roias. KC 10s 379 53 117 .309
Rchrdl, Chi 98 365 41 112 .307
Tovar. Min 110 460 70 139 .302
Rllnmd,BosBal 96 324 60 98 .302
Smith,
115 446 67 134 _300
Kaline, Del 95 306 51 91 .297
Mnchr, Wash 97 31135 92 .296
Runs
NalionalHome
LHgue
: Stargell, '
Pll39; May. Cln 32; H. !'•ron.
All 31; Johnson, Ph1l 26;
Cash, Del
26; Mellon, Chi 25; Smith, Bos
24 ; Horton. Del and Murcer,
NY 21. Runs Balled In
National league: Stargell,
Pitt 101; Torre, St.l 90 ; H.
:t,r:;;'u~::.s~th~tanez. Phil
American league: Killebrew,
Minn 77 ; Petrocelli, Bos and
Bando•. Oak 72 ; Murcer, NY 71 ;
B. Rob~nson . Ball69.
.
Pitching
Nahonal League: ·Jenkins,
Chi 18-9; Ellis, Pill and
Carlton. Sl.l15-6; Downing, LA
14-7; Pappas. Chi 13-10.
Amerl~an League: Blue. Oak

~~':.'i:~:r::a;~,

name_ly, a reasonable .cooling
ff perlod bY both parlies.
• ThtheeGpl_aamn·tstruothuldof thketomahatler
11 e
18
·1
w
ve
·Fran Tarkenton back and he'd
like to be back with them.
Here is the classic case of
":hat happens in an~ n~ber of
divorces. Both parties wmd up
unhappier than they were
before. . ·
,
The fact ·there were no
recriminations when Tarkenton
and the Giants split has to
that
rnake th e reconc illati
much eaSier. Nobody will .have
to walk the cat back.
Wellington Mara has left the
door open for Tarkenton's
return and Tarkenton likewise
did not slam the door behind

°

~n

Cooled Off, to Retum

him when he walked up to the Tarkentonbecamedisenchanted is
Giants' president In the Houston Astrodome Sunday and told
him he could no longer continue
playing · foot~ under the
conditions.
Mara says he took that to
mean Tarkenton was retiring,
preswnably because the Giants
had said no to a request for a
loan of more than $200,000.
Tar kenton insists his request
for a loan had nothing to do
with the basic issue of his not
· h'mg
· t o keep
. PIaylng without
WIS
amo·r~eignhed cm:,trac~ • F1urthehr.
, e ma~es 1 c ear e
hasn't re_tired.
"!like New York and 1 want
toplayforNewYork,"hesays.
"~ just don't want to play
Without a contract. I have not
retired as such. I'm only 31.
Most quarterbacks don't even
reach their prime until they're
in their 30's."
Howard CoseU, the sports-'
ter , went
the air · and
sa1d the G1ants became·
disenchanted with Tarkenton
when he was so vocal in behalf
of the players during their brief
strike against the owners a
year ago. Cosell also said

~ling

1

ca~

~n

with the Giants when they
sought to lure Don Meredith out
of retirement and obtain htm as
their regular quarterback last
year.
The report has that good ring
of truth about it despite the
fact that Tar):enton discounts it
as having anything to do with
the present situation.
"Neither ofthose points are a
factor, " he says. "I heard
rwnors abo11t the •Giants
' overtures to get Mere·
making
ditht albut I dond't.dknoSow-t!lat they
ac u 1y ever 1 . me people
are trying to make it look like
there are murky overtones to
this whole thing but it all
comes down to one basic factthe simple labor-management
contract -difference. There are
no otherreamifications."
What there really seems to
be now between Tarkenton and
Maraisalanguagebarrier.
The_ Giants' owner claims
there IS "no unbridgeable gap"
between Tarkenton and htm
insofar as contract is concerned. Tarkenton received an

~id to have been offered a

raise this year;
The entire bone of contention
is the loan Tl!l'kenton asked for,
Mara says.
Tarkenton says no, it's not .
that a( all. It'S only the tenns
of the contract. ·
Somewhere along the line
both these feUows should get
together on exactly what they
.;miiieiiiaiiin.. _ _ - - - -. . .
1

SPEOAL SALE

.

.

_ALL

.SPRING &amp; SUMMER
PERMANENT
"LLFEUKE"
ARRANGEMENTS

300110 OFF
.
DUDlfr5
fLORIST

·
Serving:
Gallipolis, Pomeroy,
. Middleport, Ohio
V:a:·: ::

es~tim;a;ted;;.;$1;00;000:l:a:st~y:ear:.:an:d~=&amp;:Ma:;s;o;n:Co::··:W:.
'

Browns Gettmg' Johnson

~ti ~~~~\~e~~a~~B~a~~~;

Drago, KC 14-6; Siebert, Bos 14·
7; Wood, Chi 14-8; Hunter. Oak
14-10.

son had agreed to waive his notrade clause with the Rams and
would report to the Browns
training at Palo Alto this
week In preparation for the
second exhibition game of the
season Friday night against the

SENTENCING SET
KENT, Ohio (UP!) - Robert
E. Kelley, 22, Rocky River, a
Kent State University student
found guilty of disorderly
conduct and resistiilg arrest
during a disturbance in the
downtown May 22, will be
sentenced Aug. 17. Kelley was
hospitalized two days from
Injuries suffered during the
disturbance.

Taffoni, a tackle. was traded
. to the Rams after walking out
of the Browns' training camp
three weeks ago and asking to
be put on waivers.
The 6-foot-4, 250 pound Johnson was drafted by Dallas 1n
1965, -moved to the Washington
Redskins and has played with
the Rams the last two years.
The Browns said he would
probably be used as a backup
tackle.

3 ROOMS

PAPAL APPOINOMENT
VATICAN CITY (UP!) Msgr. Nicholas Elko was
nariled'auxiliary W Archbishop·
.
·. . · .
Pa)ll Leibold of' Cirrcmnall by

P~Pa~V1Tuesday. Elko,61,

has lived m Rome since 1967 and
ha
ed
s serv as a prelate of the
Byzantine Rite. He was born in
Donora, Pa ., and has been a
· t ·
1934 H
ed
pnes smce
. ewasnam
a bishop in 195!i and holds the
honorary post of titular bishop
of Dara.

latex Paint
For Interior and
Exterior Use

MITE_ 399

.&lt; •

·
·•
$35.0Ci"""DoWn:"Balan~e

·on

Convenient
Terms.

MATERIALS CO.

MASON
FURNITURE
Mason. w.

773-5554

Va.

produ~lion.

wbeat program are
:.
for 1972. The loan~
remain at $1 ~
b will
ll81ionalav
~ ~ usbel,
to provide ";:tecti~ofenough
Income if tbe market farm
pectedlyfalls
1llltlt1
be the de~~:!"
10
market prices for wbea
The
_ . . t.
19 7 11
domestic .,h.a:"~o'i::;.~cre
the nali . unchan
for
~~
~
ged from
1971

war~house·s~:.~;t~:ed

an:

purchases will
. a~ '!!
available to continue to be
ticipating i ~ parwheat
e vo untary
Wheat prod~ In 1m
will rereive 100
of
'tyalso
1
production of
allotment the
year, th;ougb :.n-:s
wheat certificates Face v
of certificates
be the
terence between 100 pet of
parity on July
and. the
1 1972
national avterag~
received by fanners
through November 1m
As was true this year par
ticipants
will
re'celv;
preliminary payments
as possible after July 1
75 pet. of the estimated fac:e
value of the wbea
.
with the ~ :ca~
after December 1 1972. • paid
dates for
'
SigJHJp
wheal and other
voluntary fann programs will
be February 28 through April?,
19'12.
A leaflet summarizing lbe
1972wheatprogramiselji0Cied
to be received in ASCS county
offices about mid-August and
will be distributed by the county
offices tAl local wheat produl:ers
as soon as rereived.

progr.::O

We Deliver

MASON

U:U, fun::::..,.:

U:

a:

wui

.I .
fromrw;:Y

DAVID POLING, D.D.

Phebe's
.
Dollar
Da
.Qt

bil

two .in ~ !~lineS- Bat Cmunittee oo a . .~ .-.
a five-year requirement for ap- The vote rono-t ,. bassJr
plicants would be reduced to over whethl!r olber inlet led
threeyrars.
parti15sucbaslleoholderson
~lnbo~guoiousandlHII· The House unanimoustly thepiiljltlty sbouldalsobegivge'"lP" ~. . agreed to Smate IJIIt!!olmea':&amp; en advance nrning.
,
'lbe 1DIJie safety legisl•tion and Sl!llt tAl Gov ..Jobn J. Gilli· I.egis!•tion uquiling lhe sop~approved ~y dlaing a gao a bill maJring Ohio a party aratioo of pet food and human
brief !lenate. lfllSIOD. ~ ~ totheM!dwestNucUI"Com~t food on glUCtiJ store shelves
111'8~ . ~1sb subnomwlleeS forsbaringnuclearinformalion met surprising resis!alft and
continued to work on and technology on a regional was defeated. o10 • 40, wilb 50
the budget and taxes, !;lasis.
votes~ for passag•.
but each w~______!Wait· The House also finaUy ironed
_ IIepa ~~rn 'J
1
inginforma~ before tack !ng out a_ probate refQI"III bill, in· Thed!ibalebeganroutinelyas
amendments m bqles of getting creaS!Dg from $3,000 to ~.000 the sp••• • Rep.. Tom Fries,
a lisral priag• togelber by the
of an estate that ~ D • Daytan, I"'PJained the _bill
nest week.
be distributed without admims- was. m•ended tAl require a barSponsored by Sells.~ L. tralioo.
rier II' a -.food pnxluct to be
~,R-Logan, and Doug·
Olljeetlau Ov~
placed betften displays of anilas~ gate, D • Sleubenville, The Senate • JlllSS d bill bad mal and '-'an food tAl prevent
the mme ~bill actually re- already cleared tbe House last &lt;mSi1lDdS from making an er~ practical expenence re- June 30, but the value of an es- roneoos purcba:;E.
qwrements for the foremen and late e&gt;:empl from probate court Rep. Robert E. Netzley, Rremoves minimmn age noquire- had~ boosted to $l.O,~cmr La~, added a note of bmoor.
~:::::bill is to the obJI!Ciions of lawyers m the ::havetwodogs,"Neb:leysaid.
chamber. .
. .
and my dogs have ' - ' CIDIattract more IIJ'P)irants from All parties of the legi~a~ plalning to me about mmog
wbicb fire bosses aDd foremen agreed to revert to the original human food up with the dog
may be chosen.
figure of ~.000 as oflt&gt;ed by food;, so I am In fa...- of this
Ale RajuiJtJLEots GiveR
Sen.~M.Motti.D-~. bill.
the chief
and the bill Then things got serious. Rep.
duty In gaseious mine; Zl in paTw0d ' : ; ': : ~':;.. H
E. W. Iampson, R.Jellerson,
.m
ouse s:"d the bill ''impt
upon the
•
non-gaseious mines. 1bese age were not Slii' d Iegisla~
:
•
righl of free trade" in that
61
;:""'appli
. .""'~would be waived ~tr-pa. ~ . .
ti~ re- slorHeeper.;aretoldbowiAlcfis.
can ·
qumng mwnapalllies to g~ve 30 play their wares.
at«elDDI:Jl would ba~e to ~ve days notice to -~e ho~ ''I think lhe mac::badls lDIISI
least three years practical bef!H'e ~· . repmnng have had eDOilllh marbling exor removmg bwldings was perience to know when! to place
their food and . . far ' ......~
•
II IS
the scope of..lhe state of Obio
"
1D teU them, Iampson said.

l\fnate baa JNnimoal)t P' d
~ sent to the . Houle •
aimed at~ tbe supply
of qualified fiHemen and fire

to~~=23--=~ld~:

.

FREE
12 01. pkg.

.

RONCO
NOODLES

FACIAL TISSUE SALE

4
'1
PUff$ .•••••••••••••• •
·Pork &amp;_Beans.....7 !: ' 1
Catsup .......•........;3 20oz.'1
Tom·
t
.
·
3
1
. .aoes.............
Corn, Peas, Spinach 4!
Peaches...............3 ~~lfl' 1
Pear Halves....~....3 : •1
~~
12
$
1
FCJCJd•••••••••···
1
0
oz.'
1
Potatoes.............. ·
PRINTS

.

With 110 Order
or More

460ct

5th and·PEARL STS., RACINE
'The Store With AHeart
You, WE liKE"

boles

.HEINZ

.

.

1

WE FEATURE
USDA CHOICE BEEF

DEL MONTE

btls.

By REV. DAVID POLING

Right reserved to limit qu·aritities

We

Glad~

Accept Fed. Food Stamps

Prices Effective Aug. 11-17
Mon. Tues., Wed.~..;9 to. 7
Thurs., Fri, Sat ;.._·;9 to 9

•

STANDARD PACK

2
No. Yl'

CLOSED SUNDAYS

cans

DE~ MONTE (Mix or Match)

·

--

STOKELY (Halves &amp; Slices)

DEL MONTE

cans

a

SUPREME IDAHO

.

.

,INSTANT

·

314

bags

~

-

PRODUCE
SPECIALS!

·Meat Loaf Mix
BEEF
and PORK

2.

USDA atOICE .

1bs.
for

.

Boiling Beet 39~
Ohio Valey Sliced

Russett
ORANGES Potatoes
Calif.

Home Made

001.

69~

51~ 49~

DAIRY SPECIALS!

Fainnont's Best

ICE CREAM
lfl gaL

crt ·

79':
All fellllnd 011

"lUll THE MRS.'
OUR BAKERY SPECIAL!

. HOlSUM REG. 49'
Pc:wtdered Sugar
.

DONUTS"' 39~

The
that the Vietnam war bas been one
enormous mistake is now wide·spread and the reading of
the Pentagon Papers may place the final seal on such a
judgment. '
The one spark of hope that emerges from such an apparent miscalculation by the presidents, the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, and the State Department is that some people
were righ~ ! hat they opposed the folly, and pursued their
arguments all the way to the top. One such person was
George Ball, undersecretary of State. Another. more
recent, was Clark Clifford. He advised his friend and
boss, Lyndon B. Johnson, to deescalate tbe war, after
being appolnfed secretary of Defense.
There are always those people in the world who are
early to seize an opportunity, spot a naw, measure a
trend, or suggest new goals. They exist in government
are found in science and industry ; their names are lmowri
in the university and the church. Often they are a success, for they have the courage to act on information
and the willingness to take large risks for even larger
gains. These are the leaders of men and they are very
early in the issue, not late.
Right now the business community is all excited about
-Canadian oil . The energy 'people are pushing pipelines
into the Arctic Circle. When you look at the lease maps,
you find millions of acres belonging tAl an unknown company called West Coast Production Ltd. Trace its ancestry and you discover Phillips PetroleUm in control because
K. S. Adams, 30 years ago believed that 01! and natural
gas would on~ day flow from the far North.
· This same oil man signed up the North Sea tracts back
in '511. Some people are early~but often a tiny few have
the raw courage to act on their beliefs.
Sen. Mark 0 . Hatfield was one of the earliest on Vietnam. Back in 1965, then governor of Oregon. he was 1be
only political leader at the Governors' Conference to
resist the President whO all but demanded support for
the war in Vietnam . They voted 49-1 to back LBJ. Not
·
Hatfield.
And•now President Nixon will go IAl China. For almost
a dozen years or more the National Council of Churches
hilS pleaded with this country t~ find the way to. establish
normal diplomatic relatiOns With the _largest country 011
'eartll. The council and 1ts leaders, hke Euge1_1e Carson
Blake, the late Bromely Oxna~ and others, did not get
much applaus~-;-and a mountam of abuse-for !herr pursuit of recogmhon of Red Chma.
This topic more than any other brou~t a . ~uspicious
tone to the affairs of the Nat10nal Co,uncil-cntics called
themo ·Communist. se•ht10~s, un-Amencan. Now, when the
council is almost out of s1ght, the early cause IS popular.
making front-page news around the world. .
. , ·
Organizations. like people, can pay a stiff ~riCe for
being ahead ol the crowd. Or. Spock an~ Cha1_11am Colf"m
of Yale are still dlltking tomatoes for the•r antiwar~ ­
ll will be up to the histonans I_? wr~te the commentaries
on their public adivity. But, the Penla~on papers alreacly
·
·h 1,. Th&lt;· herd is tuo often wron~ :, nt) only a few
~~~elk~v~~~ ·;i,.. insi&amp;obl and piercing view of what ought
. In hki&gt;IM'n in th~ affnir;&lt; of m&lt;•n.
,

Blaetlnar, Paula Eichinger ,
Oleryl Lawsoo, Juli Whitehead
and Slophanie Radford.
Marylu Mills, Neisel Duvall,
Jan Holter, Mary Beth Sauer
and Rachel Hunter were judged
best in lhe clothes for school

spm-.

bey~

New Haven So""ial Events

David Roush d Grand Rapids.
Mich., and Mr. and Mrs. Milton
Roush and Randy of Syracuse,
Ohio.
Mrs. Larry LeMasters and
son, Stepben, visited lbe past
twoweekswilhberparents Mr
and Mrs. B. J. Howard'
Mike. Mr. LeMasters was attending National Guard Camp.
Mrs. Tom Vance and
children, Barbara, Jeff and
DebbieofSaltPoint,N. Y. spent
the past week visiting Mr and
Mrs. Deibel Vance
·

Market Report

'

Pentagon Papers
And ~eking Visit

(Continued from Page 1) .
Shop for assistance In the revue.
Best in the class of a "joyful
jumper" category were Sonia
~.June Ann Wam.sley, Mary

:ue.

Sewside acreage for the 1972
wbeat program will be equal to
83 pet. of a !ann's domestic
wheat allotment, the maximum
allowable under the law. This
supplies from this year's
harvest. in 1971 wheat set-aside
acreage was 75 pet.
Details of the program were
, announced
recently
by
!!ecretary of Agriculture
Clifford M. Hardin. Inclusion of
barley and soybeans as subititule crops and the higher set~side percentage are the most
notable changes In the 1972
wheat program
: These chang~ reflect the
present poSsibility of a large
wheat harvest in ,
the need
971 •
for increased soybean acreage,
and the necessity of assuring
mcome protection for the
while also maintaining
h1s greater decision-making
Mrs. Jobn E. Barringer and
freedom provided by the
son, Steve, of Burtonsville,
Agricultural Act of 1970.
Maryland arrived bere WedThe substitution provision
nesday and will visit her
will enable a producer to plant
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
aU or any combination of bis
Roush. They will be joined in a
a~eage to wheat; feed grain
few days by Rev. Barringer.
(corn, barley, grain sorghum)
Mrs. Walter Bush of Allan
or soybeans without loss of
BROO'IIER STEPS UP
Park, Micblpn spent several
planting history or program DAYTON, Ohio (U_PI) - daysberelastweeltaslheguest
benefits.
Richard J. Jacob, prmdent of of Mr. aDd Mrs. Donald F.
The announcement that Dayco Corp: bere, Wll5 named Roush. She aune tAl attend lhe
barley will be includf!l in the board . chatr~an and Chief funeral senices of ber aunt,
feed grain prOgram for l972 executive officer Tuesday, Mrs. Ora Rousb.
and may be substituted fo; succeeding his lrother. Robert, Mr. and Mn. Bumll DaWllOO
wheat or vice-versa, was made who died last Friday.
and Mrs. n.eJma Reibnire
because In some areas fall·
attended the second IDplanted barley is an alternate ·
ternational Gospel Singing
1
crop for wheat.
CLAIM VICI'IM
Convention on Friday and
Soybeans will be allowed as a
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - ~ Saturday nights at Nashville
supslitute crop 1n the feed grain Charles _Hines, 30, Toledo, Tenn.
'
[ll"tgram as weD as tbe wheat · drowned m MatUDee Bay bere Mrs. Sadie Warth recently
program. Full details of the Tuesday when high waves IIIJI!IIl a tftl.e. day vacatiCII
feed grain program will be capsized a boat he and bis with her oister, Florence
announced as soon as' possible. brother • Richard, 1lel'e riding Yooker at Cambridge, Ohio.
J. Melvin Gilbert is chairman m.
She spent sewaal days with
of the Gallia County Agriculture
.
.
Mrs. Harry Fcram at ByersStabilization and qnstrvation
JUJube IS a sPec_i e s of .ville Ohio and also visited Mr.
Co ·t•·- d W
small, spmy trees wbicb pro- · and·Mrs ,..__.._ y-L- and
mnu_ """• an
ayne Olase, duce fruits resembling dates,
.
· ....-~ .......- .
the Me1gs chairman.
according tAl Encyclopaedia family at S..a;a Late, Ohio.
Several provisions of the 1971 Britannica.
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Burrell Dawson were Lewis
Roush, Jr. aDd srn of l'albn-burg, W. Va., Mr. and Mrs.

f~nner

GAUDN

NEW
fURNITURE
S'J~g 95
·;pt ,-

Participants in the i972 wheat
~t-aside program may subst1tute barley, corn, grain
sorghum,orsoybeansforwbeat
andaUII earn ~am benefits
and prQ~t their wbeat allotment h1story, local ASC
Commitu:es po~t out.
There 18 no limit on wheat
acrejlge. Producers may grow
their' full allQtrnent, or mor.e
than their allotment and
remain within the ~gram
"Se,t-aslde" does not mea~
diverting land from production
of a specific crop. It means
setting aside an acreage from a
farril's total potential crop

c;:

Rams.

TURBINES PRODUCED
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - The
f'U"St comm
· I prod uc t'lOR 0f
_ erclB_
gas tur bme engmes be gao at the
Ford Motor C~. here Tuesday.
The first turbme engmes are
designed for the boating In·
dustry and for . construction
eqwpment, electric generators,
aU" compressors and ptUDps. ,-------:--::-:-:--:-:--::-::-::::-----,--,---.,

In_ Wheat Program ~~!~1..~~~,~~~~

:W"'":

.

LOS ANGELES (UP!) -Los
Angeles Rams offensive tackle
Mitch Johnson will go to the
Cleveland Browns In exchange
for Joe Taffoni.
A spokesman for the Browns
said Tuesday night that John·

_~e Supervision Upgraded

Four Substitutes

PI'. PLEASAHl"
L1VES'l'OCK su n CO;
PI'. PLEASAHI',W. VA.
Sodlu•1•. All- 7, un
HOGS -175 to 2211 It to 211.25;
Heavies 17.511 to 18.75; Lights
16.50 to 19.25; Fat Sows 15.211 to
16.25; Boars 13 to 14.211; Pigs 5 to
11; StockSloatsBy Hd.141Al211.
CATILE- Steers 23.35 to rl;
Heifers 17 to %1.40; Fat Cows II
to Zl; Canners 14 tAl 17; Bulls
22.75 to 25.10; Stock Cows and
Calvea Iii to :141.511; Stock
Steers 25.10 to 29.511; Stock
Heifers It to llli; Stock Sleer
Calws 21 to 33; Stock Heifer
Calves 24 to 30.
VEAL CALVI'll- Tops 40.40;
Secoods 37.111; MedilDl 35.~ to
37; Common. Heavies 32.5111Al
«1.

and

·

"Ali~:Otryingtodo,'' Fries
replied, ~ mate.511n!theySI!I_)"
arate their ~CE from their

Gainesburgers.
Rep. Sam Sped&lt;, R-New Conalso
against tbe
bill, cmteming •t was lllliii!COS-sary.
"It's one 1bing tAl mate 5Ift
horsemeat and hamburger are
said. ''llut
~you're talking about~
taking a can
!'-"a~ of Dinty M...,, this
18 ~ ndiculous bill."
Both chamber.; 'ftl'e •cbedul·
ed lo meet at 1:311 p.m. today.

~

separated," ~
'!- Keo-L-Ba~

wo.

Cattle: ClDce Steers, 3333.40; Good Steers. 29.631;
Holalein, :lf-30.10; Choice
Heifers, 30.til.lUI; Good Cows,
lt.2D-Z2; Utility Cows, 11.111-lt;
ea.....,.. and Cutter• 17 down·
• •
Bulls. llli.58-21; Stock cattle
Steers, %7-i§; Stock Cattle
Heifers, ~.50. .
Veal Calves, Choice. 47 ;
Good, 41.50; lwbn, 34; Baby
Calvea by the bead, 21J.47.
Lllmbl, cboice, 31.111; good,
29.~; Ewes and I .ambo by the
head, 311.25.
'

Taking top honors in the
lounging garments were
Qarbara Ann.Jordan and cathy
Pickens. Judged best in the
spirts clothes category were
Jean Whitehead, Debbie
Kennedy, Joy Hayes, Sandra
VanMeter, Jennie Ulapman,
Barbara Well and Bette Upton.
Tops in the dress up dress class
were Marcia Carr and Jane
Jordan.
Others taking part were:
TOP TO TOE ~ Deborah
Wood!ard, Teresa Meadows,
~I

L"ura Hoover. Ruth Coen, Debbie

Bonnie Morris, Belly Jordan.
Susan Henderson. Vanessa
Folmer, Beverly Bishop, Cathy
Blaetlnar. Failh Perrin, Kim
Allman, Diana Pullins, Debbie
Windon, Becky Thomas, Betsy
Amsbary , Belly McKnight,

Lawrence,

Susie

Goebel. Sheri Young. Teresa
Bud&lt;ley, Teresa Carr, Connie
Garnes. Dinah Erlewine and
Pat Robson.
DRESS UP DRESS - Sharon
Holter. Lisa Peerey, lngr.ld
Hawley and Ruth Ann, Jord,n.

Dyer. laura Hoo)ler, Nick i

Van Meter, Kim Ward, Debbie
Weddle, Jody Grueser, Mary
Sue Durst. Melinda Dailey ,
Cathy Gill, Jerri Sue Jordan,
Rebekah Long. Alicia Evans,
Debbie Miller, Cindy Dorst,
Cynthia
Pitzer.
Kalhy

JUMP

Lawrence. Tammy K. Dav is,

LIKE TBE

Rhonda Haning, Elizabeth
Blevins. Belinda Deeter, Beth
Headley, Robin Napper, Brenda ~
Ash, Vicky Gillogly, Darla Gill, .
Belinda Whittington, Rilla
Rhodes, Carla Sue NoHingham.
Kim Jones. Sandy Hamilton,
Jill Well, Janel Middleswart,
Diane Smith, Linda Donohue.
Daleanna LiHie, Carla Teaford,
Marsha Holcomb, Tammy
Smith, Kim Sebo, Angela

FINAL CLOSE-OUT SALE
ON AU

Dailey, Diane Ward and Connie

Ellis.
CLOTHING MATES
Debbie Birchfield. Kathy
Pullins. PaHy Dyer, Kimberly

BOLENS
--·- ------------

1971

Grueser. Jackie King, Terri

SJmpathy Flowers

TERRIFIC DISCOUNTS -

MI!S.'illngers of love
&amp; Understanding

B~y

now and beat the 72 prices. Bolen w1th the latest equipment.

We Deli•er Flowers

Araund The

General Tire Sales

Corner

Around The
World

m -7161
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

IUiejs Flolist
St N. Second St.

m -ss.o

~lepart.O.

992-3148

MILL ST.

MIDDLEPORT

3 ·BIG DAYS tHURSDAY· FRIDAY ,; SATURDAY ·AUG. 12-13-14
BURRY! ! QUANTITIES LIMITED
•

•

I

~rted

REG. 10e

1.00

Garbage Can (20 gal. I ·

1.00

Flair Marking Pens
Theme Book
Steno Notebook- aii count
Floral Arrangements
Shoe Bag

2 for 1.00

Nail Polish Remover

4 fol' 1.00

Cream Rinse. 12 oz. btl.

4for 1.00

Egg Shampoo, 8 oz. bot I.

4forUO

Mouthwash, 16 oz. bofl.

4for 1.00
4for 1.00

.

Wave Set
Landers Cosmetics (your choicel-4 for 1.00
Petroleum Jelly. aoz. jar·_ _ _ _ 4for 1.00
Olloropltyll Stick Deodoranl _ _ _ 4 for.1.00
Dusting Powder

4 boxes l.GO
1.00

wllll -

'"

Ieaiie ... ......
........... a " '•
.......

.

REG.Z

SALE
PRICE

'
FOR 15c

A precision instnunent with ball beuin&amp;Get this multi-use item for only 18 cents
this IIi&amp; sale. Hurry!

EG.

zse .
· SAL£ PRICE

24 cr.

I

CRAYOlA
Binder Ensemble

SAVE •
$1.77

Hi-Intensity
34c

Wastebasket (22 qt.J

1.00

Vinyl Binder (with booster)

77c

Dish Drainer, 191J:i xl6"x~

1.00

Styling Brush

Waste Basket (14 qt.l

1.00

Expanding Clothes Rack

66c

Mug Set (MIIm &amp; Pop I

1.33

Infant Carryi~g Seat

2.00

!.GO

I

"EMPIRE"

" Bic" Pens. Reg. 87'c

Salad Set. 3 pc-. .

"EMPIRE"

1

Iit -

Drainbolrd Tray _ _ _ _ _...:....
' _ _ 1.00

6 for 1.00

COMPASS

I' . . . io lldpt IIOCII-

3.88

Sau~rs (white)

ISALE PRICE
CIRCLE ARC

Desk Light. Reg. SUS

Cups &amp;

se

PENCIL
s

for 1.00
4 for 1.00

Kitchen Towels (16X3GI

I SAVE

---BIG CAP

Uor 1.00
3 for 1.00

ach 1.00
1.00

PlASTfC

transparent colors. Plastic. Get one or more al half

pnce and save.

Filler Paper, 800 sheets

t

I

12 INCH RULER

Mirror-10" Doubletaced

GOES WIIB G0P11B11S
MINNEAPOlJS, llina. (UPIJ
- F..-.ner Oblo Stale irt•t
coach BiD )Onras baa J.n
named auiotant basketbaU
coach at tbe Unha m1 of
Minnesota~ KlllCU, 31, wiU
assist new eo8Cb Bill
Musselman, tormerly of
Ashlarld.
'
•

class.

MIDOLE PORT DEPT. STORE

Colgate Tooth Paste ( Limitll

SCIOI'O I.IVI!SI'OCK
Bop: aal, 211; No. 1, 211.25;
2311-HJ, u.~; 211 -.u.25; II02lll,l&amp;.:ill; IJUIII,19.511; 1..190,
19; Sows, 16.111-17.0~; Boars,
13.6&amp;-14.90; Stock Hogs, 15%1.58; Pigs by lbe ~. 7.5G-

~

LyM Pullins. Diana Epple. Kay Rachel c-t, Patricia Boo!Gft, ·
Jones. Pam North. Becky King. Cindv Garnes, Chrloll Mlirtln
Tammy Milliron, Robin and Rhonda Reuter.
Reeves. M¥y Mora, Cynthia
CLOTHES FOR SCHOOL lane. Sharon Karr, Sally Jo Debbie Boatright, Tammy
Walters. Melba Thomas, Becky Smith. Nancy ·Lawreftee, P•m
Windon. Paula Kloos. Debbie Nottingham. Brende Donah.,.,
King, Rochelle Robinson, Jayne Smith, Cathy Davis, Jav
Pamela Harden, Margaret While, R~ ith Blevins. Noncy
Province, Pearl
Thomas, Gill." Nola Young, Beverly
Doreatha · Robinson, PaiiT. Smith, Rayanno Cole; .
Lambert. Paula Kay Hysel ,
LOUNGING GARMENTS ,Cheryl Barnhart. Ellen Darst, Crystal 'Erwin, O...lse Deen,
Patty Darst, Diana Painter, JeMy Bailey. Mltndle Rose.
Becky
Painter. Tammy Linda Myers, O...lse Pullins.
Mossman, Karen Ellis and , SPORTS CLOTHES .,...
Cindy Ellis.
·
Kimberly Kraueller, Gwt'lda
JOYFUl JUMPER - Janel Depoy, Bonnie Smith, Pam
Mora. Sharon Henderson. Opal Holcomb, Debbie GarnH,
Berry , Sherri Shiltz, Celia Bonnie
Welsh,
Vicki
Shillz. Melody Snoulfner, Dberholzer, Julia Schultz. Patty
Tammy Petrey, Connie Miller, Grossnickle. Helen Cotter ill.
Susan Wright, Tammy Pitzer. Jennie While, Lola Walker,

2 for49c

.,

I
· u2

Wa II Can Opener.
Dish Cloth (pkg. ot 3)

4lc

Bowl Briish

21c

Gasoline Can (gallon sin)

6lc:

Curtain ROd (single I

24c

Wood Kitchen Novenies
Many More Speci•ls
Store

1111

u-

PldiMc

111e

�'

'

SAVE
30~ LB.

LB.
CENTER.I RRST aJTS MIXED

~KAHN'S

IMGE
SAVE . GERMM

1 LB. PKG.

FINEST

20~

AT
I.G.A.
WE

HONEYDALE
BOLOGNA

IRER IUT IF
SOUTHERN STAR
CANNED

CARRY

f

..

•

,,

SAVE
,. 20'
lB. lB.

59~LB. ~:lB.

CHUNK
STYLE

KRAFT'S

JET PUFFED

CiRCLE IF)

OUT
.

. ._
79

'

SLICED BACON

~

FINE WIJH
.KRAUT
' '

CHOPS

YOUR

3 LB.

GROCERIES

CAN

89!!

CHOPS

SAVE

.,.10

,.

FISH PORTIONS

2LB. $}19 SA;r
PKG.

PKG.

:TRUCKLOAD SALE

WATERMELONS

· CHEF .BOY ARDEE

IHEI·VIliES!

o•

Maxwell House

I
1
1

WELL HOISEe

I

ELECTRA rERI coFFEE

I

I
I

TM

AT.

I

I.G.A. FOODLINER -

2

·COFFEE

40 oz.
CAN

LB. CAN ONLY

I
I

$}29

~~

I
WITH COUI'OII

DEL MONTE

BEANIE
WIENIE
8 oz.

29

2 LB.
CAN

DEL MONTE .

TOMATO
FRUIT
JUICE
.
COCKTAIL
46 oz.
29 OZ. CAN
'

I.G.A.
CORN

Willi OOUPON
ON lHIS PAGE

W. KERNEL

•

HI C FRUIT'
'

DRINKS

SWEET, RIPE

CRWA or

'

I Jl

IEIE THE

'

CANTALOUPES

c

46 oz. '

36 SIZE

CAN

FOR
CAN
MIITE I
OOlDRS

•
'

'

,

.

[

..-I
-=-=-...1

ALL GRINDS ·

VAN CAMPS

14 oz.

'

304 ~~ !

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY A_ 2 LB . CAN OF

&amp;
MEAT BALLS

CATSUP

I

'

SPAGHETTI

IGA

-------,

·

A-1

'2" . CAULKING CfDIPOUND

RAID
1101J~E &amp; GARDEN
BUGKIWR

· ·

REG.
' . 1.59
\

�,.:.

0., Aug.U, 1971

..

&amp;_.......,.

ri ;
' ..
,. 2 loP
• _...,;...n..n..a
u
-

-,O~AIC-~If71
-.

-

•

.

J.Harrah New· Po.lice Chief
i!"!
;;
•;
~:

Durfac a . P"'i

1111 "OW Ill

Tile ........"

tbe 'l'CIIIII 111 Mal!llll ~ . en, pa~ldlc llld

~tidalea the etl\'• immedj!Qe1f.

.

·

llle

.

~ Ill dis,

ue al'""'oe tnll- Couacll Wlo . _ . 1*-e _ . .. r ·i ims which shall
~ 111111t, a - w •
• era aad !l!oNJ• hollies prorid.. ·1he lets Mlid1,_,. 5 z•Oe ._liept •• ~!Do order to pre.
c~Wt• willa llaue trailln Iiiii 1ng fGr 111e ~al Ill t;rall- en~ a 1
e1, .., 6e spnod ol disease.

'molllle~wuwowedand ereourlullllpruridiJt!paiaiQ' eleared &lt;tall" is-:__ . · 'filt Fftd Som.lell making
: ; Jalm llarrab wu ........ MW for Yiol- Ill tbe sellan. accnmglo111dlnllt...,:aslnel doe
•••, llanah was lilred
: : Chlel p1 Pllll....
'11le .,;.u.._ willbec:omee!!e- and weedl. C&lt;mdl iis- as lie lle!l' police chief for tbe
••
·'De wren was second~·
I•
t b lite Ltll I .. 0 p p Ill........ . .
llr Joe.JaiH IIId · carried.
q
'
-.
: :
~ dofiidte·aclionwas
~.
a II
' fte . _ ,
fW . . riCM t. ' lis loCtln.
1a1m, &lt;11111eil discussed the r&amp;1•
AI 'k lllln .... lie IICI t, wll7l a Iii 'I
• #1 ..,
t5D
calionnvsfem bei
: ; · w75 P . . , . _ . ... ~a rt ·
Jdieedle-ntand
•·
·
£l
lloe lire d'epumleQt. George
::
Q~ ,
_
CU.. ami! George VanMatre
IJN~. ~J}-f=~~
1R!ft p esent to1 discuss." "thls
fapK
- tlre· cwncu.." No
::
The Fourth Dis'tridl Qut of ::""7i: . : r ; :pendlngaddl.
PI
c4i nre Mayor Roy
:: · They'll Know He's an Honest Man
Appealshas•ovem!lfdu"'it•
u ·..........,..,Obio by the Rev. Nyle D. limB. 5I. llli' , Reamler Ga.,- Gibbs,
• _·.
:
.......,._ •
Gallipolis, a!ikii'lll · l:laoe bis ()
a
Ridlardl Fowler,
::
Aug. 10, 1971 case ~ in Ga1lia l'k!r!miJ Fred !illm.!eii and' Joe Jones•
•' '· Dear Sir·.
Common "'--r"""' OourL
R
r0 Billt&lt;JII llld · John Sisi
WilY clo they eaD blm -~ &amp;me peqlle eaD him pg, but On June :i, lile 1!nJ ftllrl
DUe "'-'1.
'
; , no ooe bu really slq)ped to l7illt before they U.J, hey, JOil jJig !, reaffirmed an earlier ni!il!c al - .'lk
aa:l lllfttil!l:' will be held
I tllat wbea ooe Is 7llrt or sldl: tbey are alwaJs lbel'e Ill he!p; when by the .Slate .F!ersmnel B-.1 c1. . . . . 15 ;U 6"-:301p int.
•• scmeonels lryq to kill yon, or - me is 81'0111111 yonr IDne, Review whiclll'elllW4lcllkn!llm
~
tllattheyareahrayslberetoeenbatlbelrllUbleiS.
from his posi!ionas d ¥' -,.,lit
~~ JOII can still eaD bim pg.
lhe Gal!jpoljs 'Smlie Iml!jj!!JpJp
'
Slap and tbil* before JOII Clll•mes. f'eGRPe 18.J, wby i:an'l Borden .appealed l.ba1 nfiDv:
:• we ba-ve
a cop lbat ays,.''lo bell wllb it all," llld let it fl at thai. and asked the-ease be nq ""
••
w.,n
Jet me ten an 111 y011 a s1ary lbat 1s the God's truth: in Gallia CountyG•"""'" P!lms
•
~ lbere':Dw.lamilylbatUWHedtdllc'•Pepart,Obiotobavea!iUle Court with iinstrrutlioo I» all
•• peace of miDd aDd the raa.er of !be family - a cop by lraDng two witnesses Ill eSfattllisb lbe
••' llld be got 011 at lbe 'MlMiepli t Pliliee Dept. and be wcrted truth of the mat~ms in l(lrltin Dlrirrg a llrief session of the
.~~. ::U;~,::.,: ~ llilus T1111111 Council held
-t lmllelflothebllleslobelpllllkepeG!IIebawJ.
Bat tbe Dill! IIIia 111811 wcdtdlorwere lao COII8Idly to face a - ·~s
Ill I If - · il was voted to
reallyblgproblem,butlbisooeandanlymantriedto bePoyaito ~= :.~ adtriittM :Sie pmda!ea ,_lu liglll for the
an 111e people. Be Jet lbembow tilat crime cloeai't .., ~ in llie
appeTianteourt~ potiao CI1Jiiae&gt;", . .
•
end.'ftlilooereallyfailbfulcoptried.BIItantheydidwauay bad the motion ,under serlti!m m..u
--:_ Cl!ufes. Zerkle_~resid
tiWca lbout Ibis man lb8t wmo't !rue.
of lhe Ohio Rmsed l::k* -.tiido ed :uoill il - ~ olso decided to
Dcll'lthink lhiamaadidll'tldleadioaCIIIIis.lleweottocity provides in •p art, ori1ia+"' 11111 poUII&gt; brlo!s ""Mill,~· and
ball Ill prove his rigbfa. Be j&amp;Goed lbem ..U wrong; the people proceedings oolii'P""', ilbat
F_., ~ 'li'li~ motion to
cldn'twantanbmetcop,theywmtedacrimo!cop. 'l'bismaubas Court of Crmmon Pleas Sba!l1 ......., 1b lu light for the
.......... Cecil Dun.wtrted fir tbe ~ lor J1!US, be luMMs crime doeso't pay. This proceed as •in ~ lliiia! aT a mil CI'IISB" !Ja• ,_,., ...,. llooald
man bu a relelift wllo lmtl in crime, and his family lives the action and the eourt
~~Y made
ume 'Will'· Just beca~ lbilmu is hmet, people pal bim and determine ,the ~ d 1111e
b
. -.. Ia patch the streets
Iii lamily down.
parties in accmlancr..
I'U beiJCII'reWIDIIerinsbowl 5mDw ..U dis! Well, I am Ibis
The deciSion was QlA!! b.f ud h ••m ,..., seconded by
man'adaagbaer. Iamnotjust~lbilherapspbe'smyfather. Homer E. Abele, Gmlml R. - · • 1;1111 .
z- ldPJ
I! MR' ~OF er e
I am say!ng It twauelra lnle. &amp;me diQr poq~le will look up to Gray and Eari E. S•q~ ,, '*'Ill
uo1 CWnrlm""' lllln!&gt;;0 Embte.
~llllllandsa)', "Now,lhere'aanbmetman.
A thought lor today: Fnml:ill
t-.,
lllllriM ~y. Luther
MIIJGodblelllllim.NoooeCIDsaybediE'tlrytogivethem writer Victoc ~:sail!, ~A liiilD81d Cecil1kut&lt;:an0 Police
a UltJe peace of mind.
compliment is sane.,;.., ae a (ilio{ Ti
PlurSIHIS llld WaPhillis Lawson
.,...,.
kiss through a Yeit~
ter~eni RicllardWal-

=:

t

:: ···''Vl• ~=

Donien's

...

Appeal
· .

_

WEEKEND

..

3

Prices Start
Tomorrow
urs., August 12th
Penny Hill and~ brotber, Delbert, ..-epared Tanya for
the Pet Parade at the 1971 Mason County Fair.

Tonya, Penny Hill, Top

New Cruiser Pet Parade at '71 Fair
tip~ Approved

;rAm

P"ibe

MASON - Pretty Uttle Miss animal in the show. This tiUe
Penny Hill, &gt;-year oPd daughter also was presented to Penny for
of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Hi7l of the St. Bernard, receiving a
Mason, with "Tonya" a 10-week trophy with the inscription,
old St. Bernard owned by Mr _ "Mason County Fair 1971, Pet
and Mrs. Michael V. Gardner of Parade, Best of Show."
Mason, walked away from the Mr. and Mrs. Gardner pur1971 Mason County Fair with chased the St. Bernard from
top honors in the Pet Parade Bill Webb's Kennel, Gallipolis,
last Friday.
Ohio.
The St. Bernard won first
place. in the " Best Dog" ............-.....·.•,•, ,•,•,·,·····-·.·.··...·.·......·.
category. For this a trophy and
PAmJNGS SET
Pairings
for the annual
~~:n;~sette was presented to GalUpoUs Slo-PIIcb
Softball
Later all animals par- League Post seaoon tour·
t JCJpa
' · t mg
' ' ·m th e 1971 Pet Parade nameot were . announced
were judged to select the best Tuesday night. Games will be
pPayed Tbursday tbroogh
Sunday on the GSI and Elks
fs
Diamonds. Tbe f!rst game
eC
wm begin at &amp;: 15 p.m.
F!rst night pairings are:
Quaker Slate service Center
vs Cbris Craft and Redman
a ; WINE SPILL
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Arthur bm vs Barr's Conslruclion
lllllinl:RE:Y PARK, Calif. Erman, Coshocton, of the bolb on the GSI Diamond.
(liPI) _ A !ruclt trailer Frontier Power a&gt;., _was re- Falls City will meel the
OII'Pl"""llt ""'..., •aiTon:s of wine elected Tuesday president of Jaycees and American 011 .
UIIIJ-.. -.....-"
.
and The Elks will tangle on :
addWIIIH&amp;"ejildinifedon a the 0 h'10 Rura I El ec t nc
bBJo r.awaJ ~y, filling Cooperatives at its 30th annual the Elks Diamond.
illlle air trilli !Jmdil!i fumes that r:neeting here.
.·.· ··.•....·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.•·.•,•,•.• •.·.··...·.......·•·.
mdJd 1Jr 5JII!l.&amp;d a qu.uter mile
Also re-ePected were E!mer .
......,. 1Jb2, MUtumed !ruck Born, first vice president, of 1·- - - - - - - •
Ded-w1llll l,tli rases: of cold Marietta, from the Washin~ton
drd&lt; dwmlii@)'"' ami olher rural Electnc CooperaiJve;
·
,..
·
GoiJIIo .......~~~ from Frdsno, "second vice president Wayne
QB.., IJAided ai] tfJFee east- Grandey, Edgerton, Northwest
blamlt bus of 1!Jr san Ber- Rural Electric Cooperative, and
- oliwliczuy for more than Charles Wyckoff, Ohio's
(

:;.-,,a:,

.

:· Poll Result Announ.ced
WASHiNGTON, D. C. Congreuman Clarence E.
Miller today 11111101wced !be
reaulla of public ..,tnioo poll
'-"'*ted at lbe Gallia Counly
.ilini.r Fair. 'lbe'llnGPng.-of the
.1-vey are 11 follows:
-Do .1'011 poippn the 1* nt
Adminlslrafloo policy ct with· drawing from Vietnam! Yes, 63
pet.; No, 34 pel; Und., 3 pel
- Would you support a
national heaPth Insurance
prGgr8lll which j&amp; ovidts in.e&lt;me lax credila far lbe cost ol
purchasing private health in.-

--

suranc:e! Yes, 62 pel; No, 34 Und., 3 pet.
pel; Und., f pel
- Do you 'supporU a ~
- Do .1'1111 01ippCI'1 federal reform plan ,of IJI'IIridi'lll a
involvement in lbe conlrol and minimwn incoole for ewry
regalalillact~l!lining! Yes, ADierican fami1y~ va, .n p:il;
74pCC;No, 2D pel; Und., 6 pel No, 68 pet. ; Und., 1 pdf.
-Do y011 ravar lbe adnriWon
ct Rtd lllina 1o the U. N.? Yes, - Should tlb.e lfedBal
50 pet.; No, 46 pel; Unl., 4 pet. government pt'lon de
nre
- Do .1'1111 !Pqoparl the Ad- supper! fir education! Yes, '1'1
ministralioo's genera! revenue pel.; No, 11 pet.; {!Ind., •I p:il
sbiriDg plan iD -.bidi $5 billion - Do you sqppcrt .S!Iiidltu
iD federal lax c1o11ars would be federallaws ·to eontrtdl
retumed Ill the slates and local even if it ~y mean blijher ..
govamueols 1o ~ as they see prices for some ..,oduolls? Yes,
lit? Yes, 70 pel; No, %7 pel; 12 pet.; No, 11 :p el; (gnd., !I pd.

Co-Op EZ

Arthur Erman

2uouR

lmrrs.

director
of the Cooperative
National Rural
Electric
Association in Washington, D.
C. Harry Garner of Oxford, of
the Buller Rural Electric
Cooperative, was elected
secrelary treasurer.

CLEANING
upon Request}
.
ROBINSON-'S

WHILE
.QUANT,TIES LAST
.

·--

were m

enbies 7n the Chesler Volunteer
Fire Department horse show
last Saturday evening at the
Bar-30 show grounds oo State
Route 7 between Tuppers Plains
and Chester. Resulls were:
Walt-TrotPony,won bylitUe
Johnny Serre!, Tony Kennedy,
Middleport.
Show Horse,
Western
Equipment, won by Koppers
King, Gerald Warner, Alma, W.
Va.
Registered Quarterhorse
Pleasure, won by Pecbo Star,
Linda Ewing, Cambridge, Ohio.
Flag Race, won by Olief's
Day, Buddy Martin, Arabia,
Ohio.
Weslan PleaSure Pony under
48", woo by NaughtY Boy, Tony
Kennedy.
Western Arabian Pleasure
h«se, won by Silver Sheik,
Irene Vanscoy, Williamstown,
W. Va.

·

Westan Pleasure Pony, 41"
Pick-up Race, IWOII I!Y nmm
and onder S6", woo by Lady, Star, Ray Pooler, Cam~
Car!a Hendershot, Whipple,
Appaloosa ~ ..,., 11y
Ohio.
Goldie 's Nugget, SaDlily
Weslan Stake race, won by Matheny, GanDWliY, Ohio.
Sklnny, Baddy Marlin.
Youth HorsemanShip, lli 1111nn
Show
Horse,
Eng!ish 19 yr.;., won •by Oomi::S .mn,
Equipment, won by Koppers Oluck Hand, Z8nesville..
King, Gerald Warner.
Open Reining, won by Ni!11f
Walt-Trot Horse, won by Della,
Robe r.! Phm;ps ,
Clarice McOie, Tony Kennedy. Frederickstown, Obio.
Youth Harsemaosllip 13 thru
Non-Reg. Western Pleasure
1$ yn., WCJD by King Pin Jan, · h«se, won :by Montigo Sm!lrie,
Joe Hoopes-, Mc:Coonels-oille. Kathy Higgins, Sistemiille, w.
Egg and Spoon, won by Dusty Va.
Riva-s, Becky Scott, Mariella.
Barrel Race, won by Oiiff's
Ride and Rnn, won by Tufty Day, Buddy Martin.
T, Berman Coey, Reyno!ds-Western
Senior
Hocburg.
semanship won •by Pe Ill
W'eslan Pleasure, Jrs. lo Casino, ~ Ann iMi1iJ'he'll,.
Ride, won by Clarice McCue, Marietta.
Tooy Kennedy.
Open trail class, ..on by
Youth Horsel118115bip, l% and Clarice McCue, Dr. \Rieuutoilf,
Wider, won by Clabbers Candy, Middleport.
Sberry "Pnander, Cllillicolhe.
The high point awarlil d $11.
English Pleasure Horse, won donated by the ~omeriiJ
by Jaadon, Denise Laplante, National Bank, was won l&gt;y Pe
Waverly, W. Va.
El Casino owned by Jamlt
Woodard of Wa!etifood. 1be
judge for the .s.J!JOHEA . proved show was RiokRaiil!IPJ
of CaUettsburg, K;y .

lb.
SkinPess Wieners
SPiced Bologna, a !I meat
SPiced Bacon, Dart
Lard, French City

The Best! Lean

· GROUNf)

SIDea
k
.er Has 2o-2o Ears
T
OOWMBUB (UPI J - Bt.le Rep. 1'Gm Fries, D-Oay!Ga,
51 -.Iy a fr 5 n•• UJhPieiiPd ..ve -u...:.:.,. .:ad of
7l7m tlmq bla M'VIc:e Ia a.e a-. Tasday ... ""'-of

tbein.

Frlelllld two !lliPIIo mu111e • llle a - n-. NeUber
ptii!d,.., llle e!Gie
aerwd lo ... a!lla bJa
wOIUidl.
'l'be llnl bDI, !lbady c3eared by IIJe Sme, called f..mrwlrlpaH!Im lo.ollfy rnwlp«t •.:den Plehre deDM!hhla&amp;
h!ildP••·
.
011 a rnoll• tG lelld llle bDl t.ct 1o doe ~
(:_-nrnllll!e, u- Spetfltr CllarPrs F. Kmfess uRcP for a
v~ vue ..: detenilllled wl"-' Pnllall• l!tat ''!be ayes
..~ !t IIJid llle biJl ill IHoftil'fll!."
Fries lleanlllle P... dJaw II ''ae'l" ..: dernmded u
. l.uvtdlal "" pD. ftt
ta!ltll.
'
"Fwly-two aya ..: 11 .,.," pw d ltarfess. "Sa

nil""""_,.

nil -

DtUCK

Out Of High Sdm Can't Get AJob?

Go To GBC, and 1111 M • Qne
To You. GBC Ollas file Qapkfe
Pnea•s • Basils.
• Bus. Adminimllitrn
• Elec. Seaelarial

• Stclli!biill

• GC•IIII n -

-. APtai5sti. -Edll'

... ••I !lave P. rilly," lli!l llle a• •led Fries u 71e

.,. . . . . Pill - ~ I ......................... gJWI) llore '

5 .... de!lale -

llteha..
TlleraPl-llla •lbe bll!, ... ltfailed • a ..._.vete.
"'11ial'l OJ I eaJPed 'l ie nil • litis - ." Klriess
ftiiiUIIJed .. llle de!ll" ., IIJe dlamber.

,,

BROUGHTON'S

MILK

~p: 99$

BREAD
6 lvs. 1.00

Rinso. king size, reg. 1.55
Pure VegetabPe
Mrs. Tucker's Shortening
Jo· Bo Dog Food
Can Pop, Faygo
Liquid Detergent For Dishes
' Debbie, 22 oz.

COFFEE

GaiUpolis
lalocvst
Stoto Reg. No.'71&lt;12.j)JJU:S

Go% 5

c
i

Replar or Drip

1.00

Jib. 79c
12 cans 1.00
9 cans 1.00
3 for 1.00

NOW!

clearance group. Big asst. of colOrs.

c

Reg

'*'

gr

8 Pak "BIC"

can

2

Pair

FOR

•500

,.

· Ladies Sneakers

long wearing duck uppers in yoor
choice of white, blue or black .
Molded sole construction with
cushion inner sole.
1.99 1 .

wILL PIIIT
wan : -

lllEI fUj
II WIITE •
IILI•S

Hiib

cjlaUtY latex'
t in
wlilte and ocilon or Latex':~,
elterior painI in while only. Save
now.

Ball Point

PENS

IECUlll $3.4! VALUE

FOR BACK TO .SCHOOL
REG. $2.99 AND $3A9

BIC MILL ASSGITiEil

_JOYS SPORT SHIRTS
Boys perm. press. no-iron famous

Campus Brand. Size 6 to 16 short
sloeve sport shirts, plaids - stripes .
fancy and plain colors.

2

Fln'a. IISfn Styli

DUIIIIIEES

AREA RUGS
'

-

2

IIY'S ll.

, · F•J :Friqa ·1.10, an Sliag

$500

FOR

.

$.500

CAL.
FOR

REG. $1.99 VALUE
CHILD'S SCHOOL

Regular f4.99 ~
'Adjustable Metal ·'

33

99
Ladies &amp;Girls

TENNIS
SHOES

'247EACH

FilE.
SEWIII

CLOSE OUTS, VALUES TO 1.79
VISCOSE LOOP DECORATOR

,••••••

ASST. AREA RUGS

II 1e111E IIIITUY IIIII

Values to 1.79 Viscose Rayon loop and
sbag, asst. sizes in this clean-up group. Big
assf. of colors - no skid back. see these for

REG. 89c TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
QUICK_j)RYING, BEST COLORS

!~~~!cc~~d~y~T
rust lnhiblling, noo-toxic. Suifable flir ·
Interior or exterior use. Town and Country

81h' x lllh' Room Size

RUGs ·

Tweed Pattern

$}0!

Reg . .1.99 children's school
lunch kits with Thermos.
Special purchase al a big
savings for you . Assf. colors.
Gel yoors now.
·

STilE-WilE
SUIIER

18ttema and plaiD colon.

MESS • CASUl ·STYlES
. IIEilll • MESS IEils
Save

-.btlf -

111 .,_

-r

~·;:.e•..:;~=t-.!"~
a.ruce.
~ Of

1'1
styles.

·
BONE-WHITBAND ·
FAIIHION COI.(iQ
. .
.

...,-1l ~EIILa
/2· PillE

·

52~CAN

ILEIIIRE!

FIIIIC ·caSUAL
Z IILE IIIIPS - 111.111 TIIUI

·a,..a-.·_$ ·

TO 1.59 24x46 FANCY
SHEERED COnON

~~!~~~~,:-lRWEL
colors .

in a supply now.

$} 0~

Sheer, fine mee11 nyJan net. .n--

GROUP. VALUES TO 1.00
VmSE LOOP AND SHAG
this clean-up group.
now at this _
low

values, stock up

60-JNQI REG.- $5.00 POLYESTER

!!~~~
!I!~ $359
ratricsin(R~colon.~4
YUI

For drier baby, -Daylime 30
Pampor•. Reg. 1.99 vaiue.
Stock up now a! tnls low, 1ow
price at your favorite Dept.
Store. Buy several boxes now.

$_J5!.

LATEX PAINT
Save on paint ;&gt;I Stiffler's. Vim
la.tex interior wall pain! or
Vim &lt;;loss Oil Base pain! in
whlie and asst. colors.

., ••

$
.

99
PR.

REG $1.59 VALUE ·
CHILDREN

'

$} 0()

-

$ &amp;7

YAL•s Tl $11.

1

IPIUNOa. .•••

VALUES TO 1.99 MENS ASSORTED

SUMMER SNEAKERS

Reg. 1.59 value children's sport
sneakors· in white. blue, red.
Stock up now for school.
.,;llilllill:lii:il:lm~o=ldid sole.

summer sandals. Red, blue,

green, white. Gel yours now at
lhl• low, low price. ·

PR.

IITYLD

oo·
,.

Sport Caps • Hats
Values fo -1.99. Men's roll-up
slyle golf caps - sporf straws.
Big group for quick clearanco.
Shop Early .
·

Reg. 1_.79 value, 36"x6' size, in green, white, light
tan and beige. Vynocel constructed, washablo,
mildew proof, slain proof, flame proof. Stock up
now.

SLICIS

MMERSANDA
Values lo 2.99, 1.99 and 3.99 . .
One big table of ladies better

WINDOW _SHADES

- s•IEI CUAIIICE - .

LADIES CLOSE OUT GROUP

SKETBALL SHOES
American made. High and low ·
styles, black &amp; white. Shop
Stiffler's and save . This value for
you for back to school. Shop our
shoe department.
'

. res!llan •.

.

-·
REG '2.99 and •3.99

Reg. $2.99
Men's &amp; Boys'

30 DAYnME

PAMPERS

Pnehet wide.

WI

fUR DRIER:HAPPIER BABY

REG '1.79 VAWE
VYNOCEL 36"x6'

inchet wide in your cho!ee of a
dozen (RIIy colon and wblte.

g,J:.~~~~v;~UGS 74~EA. .

PAIR

WITH ntERMOS

$1 ·9_9
,.,r

IRONING BOARD

With Cord

L.U.N,CH .KIT, c:,.~

,\1.7. lll7.t:s • n1 ••

VIM OIL BASE OR

3 lb.

..

Lint tree, full bed size spreads. Reg.

WHITE

MAXWELL

"I...,._.., lie !It I 5.,. fw W. a.zlbearfll&amp; bitt rvay
t

89~

5

film!''

p .

lb.·

SAVE

SAVE
YOU
MONEY

3.99 value. Asst. colors. Special

EAat

21b. 1.19
21b. 1.00
2 lb. 1.09
25 lb. en. 4.95

•'

BED SPREADS

ELECTRIC PERK

980

WE
CAN

PAP·ER

CLEANERS

ROUND
STEAK

SAVE BIG-30% -40%-50% OFF I

REG. 3.99 LINT FREE lURID FULL SIZE

6 Cup Size
USDA
CHOICE

.1061AIN ST.~POIEIOY, OHIO

500 Count Pkg.
5 Hole Notebook

_ _
216 E. 2nd
Pomerqy
Phone 992-5428

115 W. MAIN e POMEROY

.ALL SPRING AND SUMMER MERCHANDISE

SUMMER CLEANUP

334 Entered ·Bar
30's Show
.
'
~- 'lbere

I

SPECIALS ~

De '"ed
m

.•

ONCE A YEAR REMNANT CLEARANCE
3 BIG DAYS ,THURSDAY - FRIDAY &amp; .
SATURDAY
..

$}~
" .

$}~
ILEtellll
U.S' f• .

�,.:.

0., Aug.U, 1971

..

&amp;_.......,.

ri ;
' ..
,. 2 loP
• _...,;...n..n..a
u
-

-,O~AIC-~If71
-.

-

•

.

J.Harrah New· Po.lice Chief
i!"!
;;
•;
~:

Durfac a . P"'i

1111 "OW Ill

Tile ........"

tbe 'l'CIIIII 111 Mal!llll ~ . en, pa~ldlc llld

~tidalea the etl\'• immedj!Qe1f.

.

·

llle

.

~ Ill dis,

ue al'""'oe tnll- Couacll Wlo . _ . 1*-e _ . .. r ·i ims which shall
~ 111111t, a - w •
• era aad !l!oNJ• hollies prorid.. ·1he lets Mlid1,_,. 5 z•Oe ._liept •• ~!Do order to pre.
c~Wt• willa llaue trailln Iiiii 1ng fGr 111e ~al Ill t;rall- en~ a 1
e1, .., 6e spnod ol disease.

'molllle~wuwowedand ereourlullllpruridiJt!paiaiQ' eleared &lt;tall" is-:__ . · 'filt Fftd Som.lell making
: ; Jalm llarrab wu ........ MW for Yiol- Ill tbe sellan. accnmglo111dlnllt...,:aslnel doe
•••, llanah was lilred
: : Chlel p1 Pllll....
'11le .,;.u.._ willbec:omee!!e- and weedl. C&lt;mdl iis- as lie lle!l' police chief for tbe
••
·'De wren was second~·
I•
t b lite Ltll I .. 0 p p Ill........ . .
llr Joe.JaiH IIId · carried.
q
'
-.
: :
~ dofiidte·aclionwas
~.
a II
' fte . _ ,
fW . . riCM t. ' lis loCtln.
1a1m, &lt;11111eil discussed the r&amp;1•
AI 'k lllln .... lie IICI t, wll7l a Iii 'I
• #1 ..,
t5D
calionnvsfem bei
: ; · w75 P . . , . _ . ... ~a rt ·
Jdieedle-ntand
•·
·
£l
lloe lire d'epumleQt. George
::
Q~ ,
_
CU.. ami! George VanMatre
IJN~. ~J}-f=~~
1R!ft p esent to1 discuss." "thls
fapK
- tlre· cwncu.." No
::
The Fourth Dis'tridl Qut of ::""7i: . : r ; :pendlngaddl.
PI
c4i nre Mayor Roy
:: · They'll Know He's an Honest Man
Appealshas•ovem!lfdu"'it•
u ·..........,..,Obio by the Rev. Nyle D. limB. 5I. llli' , Reamler Ga.,- Gibbs,
• _·.
:
.......,._ •
Gallipolis, a!ikii'lll · l:laoe bis ()
a
Ridlardl Fowler,
::
Aug. 10, 1971 case ~ in Ga1lia l'k!r!miJ Fred !illm.!eii and' Joe Jones•
•' '· Dear Sir·.
Common "'--r"""' OourL
R
r0 Billt&lt;JII llld · John Sisi
WilY clo they eaD blm -~ &amp;me peqlle eaD him pg, but On June :i, lile 1!nJ ftllrl
DUe "'-'1.
'
; , no ooe bu really slq)ped to l7illt before they U.J, hey, JOil jJig !, reaffirmed an earlier ni!il!c al - .'lk
aa:l lllfttil!l:' will be held
I tllat wbea ooe Is 7llrt or sldl: tbey are alwaJs lbel'e Ill he!p; when by the .Slate .F!ersmnel B-.1 c1. . . . . 15 ;U 6"-:301p int.
•• scmeonels lryq to kill yon, or - me is 81'0111111 yonr IDne, Review whiclll'elllW4lcllkn!llm
~
tllattheyareahrayslberetoeenbatlbelrllUbleiS.
from his posi!ionas d ¥' -,.,lit
~~ JOII can still eaD bim pg.
lhe Gal!jpoljs 'Smlie Iml!jj!!JpJp
'
Slap and tbil* before JOII Clll•mes. f'eGRPe 18.J, wby i:an'l Borden .appealed l.ba1 nfiDv:
:• we ba-ve
a cop lbat ays,.''lo bell wllb it all," llld let it fl at thai. and asked the-ease be nq ""
••
w.,n
Jet me ten an 111 y011 a s1ary lbat 1s the God's truth: in Gallia CountyG•"""'" P!lms
•
~ lbere':Dw.lamilylbatUWHedtdllc'•Pepart,Obiotobavea!iUle Court with iinstrrutlioo I» all
•• peace of miDd aDd the raa.er of !be family - a cop by lraDng two witnesses Ill eSfattllisb lbe
••' llld be got 011 at lbe 'MlMiepli t Pliliee Dept. and be wcrted truth of the mat~ms in l(lrltin Dlrirrg a llrief session of the
.~~. ::U;~,::.,: ~ llilus T1111111 Council held
-t lmllelflothebllleslobelpllllkepeG!IIebawJ.
Bat tbe Dill! IIIia 111811 wcdtdlorwere lao COII8Idly to face a - ·~s
Ill I If - · il was voted to
reallyblgproblem,butlbisooeandanlymantriedto bePoyaito ~= :.~ adtriittM :Sie pmda!ea ,_lu liglll for the
an 111e people. Be Jet lbembow tilat crime cloeai't .., ~ in llie
appeTianteourt~ potiao CI1Jiiae&gt;", . .
•
end.'ftlilooereallyfailbfulcoptried.BIItantheydidwauay bad the motion ,under serlti!m m..u
--:_ Cl!ufes. Zerkle_~resid
tiWca lbout Ibis man lb8t wmo't !rue.
of lhe Ohio Rmsed l::k* -.tiido ed :uoill il - ~ olso decided to
Dcll'lthink lhiamaadidll'tldleadioaCIIIIis.lleweottocity provides in •p art, ori1ia+"' 11111 poUII&gt; brlo!s ""Mill,~· and
ball Ill prove his rigbfa. Be j&amp;Goed lbem ..U wrong; the people proceedings oolii'P""', ilbat
F_., ~ 'li'li~ motion to
cldn'twantanbmetcop,theywmtedacrimo!cop. 'l'bismaubas Court of Crmmon Pleas Sba!l1 ......., 1b lu light for the
.......... Cecil Dun.wtrted fir tbe ~ lor J1!US, be luMMs crime doeso't pay. This proceed as •in ~ lliiia! aT a mil CI'IISB" !Ja• ,_,., ...,. llooald
man bu a relelift wllo lmtl in crime, and his family lives the action and the eourt
~~Y made
ume 'Will'· Just beca~ lbilmu is hmet, people pal bim and determine ,the ~ d 1111e
b
. -.. Ia patch the streets
Iii lamily down.
parties in accmlancr..
I'U beiJCII'reWIDIIerinsbowl 5mDw ..U dis! Well, I am Ibis
The deciSion was QlA!! b.f ud h ••m ,..., seconded by
man'adaagbaer. Iamnotjust~lbilherapspbe'smyfather. Homer E. Abele, Gmlml R. - · • 1;1111 .
z- ldPJ
I! MR' ~OF er e
I am say!ng It twauelra lnle. &amp;me diQr poq~le will look up to Gray and Eari E. S•q~ ,, '*'Ill
uo1 CWnrlm""' lllln!&gt;;0 Embte.
~llllllandsa)', "Now,lhere'aanbmetman.
A thought lor today: Fnml:ill
t-.,
lllllriM ~y. Luther
MIIJGodblelllllim.NoooeCIDsaybediE'tlrytogivethem writer Victoc ~:sail!, ~A liiilD81d Cecil1kut&lt;:an0 Police
a UltJe peace of mind.
compliment is sane.,;.., ae a (ilio{ Ti
PlurSIHIS llld WaPhillis Lawson
.,...,.
kiss through a Yeit~
ter~eni RicllardWal-

=:

t

:: ···''Vl• ~=

Donien's

...

Appeal
· .

_

WEEKEND

..

3

Prices Start
Tomorrow
urs., August 12th
Penny Hill and~ brotber, Delbert, ..-epared Tanya for
the Pet Parade at the 1971 Mason County Fair.

Tonya, Penny Hill, Top

New Cruiser Pet Parade at '71 Fair
tip~ Approved

;rAm

P"ibe

MASON - Pretty Uttle Miss animal in the show. This tiUe
Penny Hill, &gt;-year oPd daughter also was presented to Penny for
of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Hi7l of the St. Bernard, receiving a
Mason, with "Tonya" a 10-week trophy with the inscription,
old St. Bernard owned by Mr _ "Mason County Fair 1971, Pet
and Mrs. Michael V. Gardner of Parade, Best of Show."
Mason, walked away from the Mr. and Mrs. Gardner pur1971 Mason County Fair with chased the St. Bernard from
top honors in the Pet Parade Bill Webb's Kennel, Gallipolis,
last Friday.
Ohio.
The St. Bernard won first
place. in the " Best Dog" ............-.....·.•,•, ,•,•,·,·····-·.·.··...·.·......·.
category. For this a trophy and
PAmJNGS SET
Pairings
for the annual
~~:n;~sette was presented to GalUpoUs Slo-PIIcb
Softball
Later all animals par- League Post seaoon tour·
t JCJpa
' · t mg
' ' ·m th e 1971 Pet Parade nameot were . announced
were judged to select the best Tuesday night. Games will be
pPayed Tbursday tbroogh
Sunday on the GSI and Elks
fs
Diamonds. Tbe f!rst game
eC
wm begin at &amp;: 15 p.m.
F!rst night pairings are:
Quaker Slate service Center
vs Cbris Craft and Redman
a ; WINE SPILL
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Arthur bm vs Barr's Conslruclion
lllllinl:RE:Y PARK, Calif. Erman, Coshocton, of the bolb on the GSI Diamond.
(liPI) _ A !ruclt trailer Frontier Power a&gt;., _was re- Falls City will meel the
OII'Pl"""llt ""'..., •aiTon:s of wine elected Tuesday president of Jaycees and American 011 .
UIIIJ-.. -.....-"
.
and The Elks will tangle on :
addWIIIH&amp;"ejildinifedon a the 0 h'10 Rura I El ec t nc
bBJo r.awaJ ~y, filling Cooperatives at its 30th annual the Elks Diamond.
illlle air trilli !Jmdil!i fumes that r:neeting here.
.·.· ··.•....·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.•·.•,•,•.• •.·.··...·.......·•·.
mdJd 1Jr 5JII!l.&amp;d a qu.uter mile
Also re-ePected were E!mer .
......,. 1Jb2, MUtumed !ruck Born, first vice president, of 1·- - - - - - - •
Ded-w1llll l,tli rases: of cold Marietta, from the Washin~ton
drd&lt; dwmlii@)'"' ami olher rural Electnc CooperaiJve;
·
,..
·
GoiJIIo .......~~~ from Frdsno, "second vice president Wayne
QB.., IJAided ai] tfJFee east- Grandey, Edgerton, Northwest
blamlt bus of 1!Jr san Ber- Rural Electric Cooperative, and
- oliwliczuy for more than Charles Wyckoff, Ohio's
(

:;.-,,a:,

.

:· Poll Result Announ.ced
WASHiNGTON, D. C. Congreuman Clarence E.
Miller today 11111101wced !be
reaulla of public ..,tnioo poll
'-"'*ted at lbe Gallia Counly
.ilini.r Fair. 'lbe'llnGPng.-of the
.1-vey are 11 follows:
-Do .1'011 poippn the 1* nt
Adminlslrafloo policy ct with· drawing from Vietnam! Yes, 63
pet.; No, 34 pel; Und., 3 pel
- Would you support a
national heaPth Insurance
prGgr8lll which j&amp; ovidts in.e&lt;me lax credila far lbe cost ol
purchasing private health in.-

--

suranc:e! Yes, 62 pel; No, 34 Und., 3 pet.
pel; Und., f pel
- Do you 'supporU a ~
- Do .1'1111 01ippCI'1 federal reform plan ,of IJI'IIridi'lll a
involvement in lbe conlrol and minimwn incoole for ewry
regalalillact~l!lining! Yes, ADierican fami1y~ va, .n p:il;
74pCC;No, 2D pel; Und., 6 pel No, 68 pet. ; Und., 1 pdf.
-Do y011 ravar lbe adnriWon
ct Rtd lllina 1o the U. N.? Yes, - Should tlb.e lfedBal
50 pet.; No, 46 pel; Unl., 4 pet. government pt'lon de
nre
- Do .1'1111 !Pqoparl the Ad- supper! fir education! Yes, '1'1
ministralioo's genera! revenue pel.; No, 11 pet.; {!Ind., •I p:il
sbiriDg plan iD -.bidi $5 billion - Do you sqppcrt .S!Iiidltu
iD federal lax c1o11ars would be federallaws ·to eontrtdl
retumed Ill the slates and local even if it ~y mean blijher ..
govamueols 1o ~ as they see prices for some ..,oduolls? Yes,
lit? Yes, 70 pel; No, %7 pel; 12 pet.; No, 11 :p el; (gnd., !I pd.

Co-Op EZ

Arthur Erman

2uouR

lmrrs.

director
of the Cooperative
National Rural
Electric
Association in Washington, D.
C. Harry Garner of Oxford, of
the Buller Rural Electric
Cooperative, was elected
secrelary treasurer.

CLEANING
upon Request}
.
ROBINSON-'S

WHILE
.QUANT,TIES LAST
.

·--

were m

enbies 7n the Chesler Volunteer
Fire Department horse show
last Saturday evening at the
Bar-30 show grounds oo State
Route 7 between Tuppers Plains
and Chester. Resulls were:
Walt-TrotPony,won bylitUe
Johnny Serre!, Tony Kennedy,
Middleport.
Show Horse,
Western
Equipment, won by Koppers
King, Gerald Warner, Alma, W.
Va.
Registered Quarterhorse
Pleasure, won by Pecbo Star,
Linda Ewing, Cambridge, Ohio.
Flag Race, won by Olief's
Day, Buddy Martin, Arabia,
Ohio.
Weslan PleaSure Pony under
48", woo by NaughtY Boy, Tony
Kennedy.
Western Arabian Pleasure
h«se, won by Silver Sheik,
Irene Vanscoy, Williamstown,
W. Va.

·

Westan Pleasure Pony, 41"
Pick-up Race, IWOII I!Y nmm
and onder S6", woo by Lady, Star, Ray Pooler, Cam~
Car!a Hendershot, Whipple,
Appaloosa ~ ..,., 11y
Ohio.
Goldie 's Nugget, SaDlily
Weslan Stake race, won by Matheny, GanDWliY, Ohio.
Sklnny, Baddy Marlin.
Youth HorsemanShip, lli 1111nn
Show
Horse,
Eng!ish 19 yr.;., won •by Oomi::S .mn,
Equipment, won by Koppers Oluck Hand, Z8nesville..
King, Gerald Warner.
Open Reining, won by Ni!11f
Walt-Trot Horse, won by Della,
Robe r.! Phm;ps ,
Clarice McOie, Tony Kennedy. Frederickstown, Obio.
Youth Harsemaosllip 13 thru
Non-Reg. Western Pleasure
1$ yn., WCJD by King Pin Jan, · h«se, won :by Montigo Sm!lrie,
Joe Hoopes-, Mc:Coonels-oille. Kathy Higgins, Sistemiille, w.
Egg and Spoon, won by Dusty Va.
Riva-s, Becky Scott, Mariella.
Barrel Race, won by Oiiff's
Ride and Rnn, won by Tufty Day, Buddy Martin.
T, Berman Coey, Reyno!ds-Western
Senior
Hocburg.
semanship won •by Pe Ill
W'eslan Pleasure, Jrs. lo Casino, ~ Ann iMi1iJ'he'll,.
Ride, won by Clarice McCue, Marietta.
Tooy Kennedy.
Open trail class, ..on by
Youth Horsel118115bip, l% and Clarice McCue, Dr. \Rieuutoilf,
Wider, won by Clabbers Candy, Middleport.
Sberry "Pnander, Cllillicolhe.
The high point awarlil d $11.
English Pleasure Horse, won donated by the ~omeriiJ
by Jaadon, Denise Laplante, National Bank, was won l&gt;y Pe
Waverly, W. Va.
El Casino owned by Jamlt
Woodard of Wa!etifood. 1be
judge for the .s.J!JOHEA . proved show was RiokRaiil!IPJ
of CaUettsburg, K;y .

lb.
SkinPess Wieners
SPiced Bologna, a !I meat
SPiced Bacon, Dart
Lard, French City

The Best! Lean

· GROUNf)

SIDea
k
.er Has 2o-2o Ears
T
OOWMBUB (UPI J - Bt.le Rep. 1'Gm Fries, D-Oay!Ga,
51 -.Iy a fr 5 n•• UJhPieiiPd ..ve -u...:.:.,. .:ad of
7l7m tlmq bla M'VIc:e Ia a.e a-. Tasday ... ""'-of

tbein.

Frlelllld two !lliPIIo mu111e • llle a - n-. NeUber
ptii!d,.., llle e!Gie
aerwd lo ... a!lla bJa
wOIUidl.
'l'be llnl bDI, !lbady c3eared by IIJe Sme, called f..mrwlrlpaH!Im lo.ollfy rnwlp«t •.:den Plehre deDM!hhla&amp;
h!ildP••·
.
011 a rnoll• tG lelld llle bDl t.ct 1o doe ~
(:_-nrnllll!e, u- Spetfltr CllarPrs F. Kmfess uRcP for a
v~ vue ..: detenilllled wl"-' Pnllall• l!tat ''!be ayes
..~ !t IIJid llle biJl ill IHoftil'fll!."
Fries lleanlllle P... dJaw II ''ae'l" ..: dernmded u
. l.uvtdlal "" pD. ftt
ta!ltll.
'
"Fwly-two aya ..: 11 .,.," pw d ltarfess. "Sa

nil""""_,.

nil -

DtUCK

Out Of High Sdm Can't Get AJob?

Go To GBC, and 1111 M • Qne
To You. GBC Ollas file Qapkfe
Pnea•s • Basils.
• Bus. Adminimllitrn
• Elec. Seaelarial

• Stclli!biill

• GC•IIII n -

-. APtai5sti. -Edll'

... ••I !lave P. rilly," lli!l llle a• •led Fries u 71e

.,. . . . . Pill - ~ I ......................... gJWI) llore '

5 .... de!lale -

llteha..
TlleraPl-llla •lbe bll!, ... ltfailed • a ..._.vete.
"'11ial'l OJ I eaJPed 'l ie nil • litis - ." Klriess
ftiiiUIIJed .. llle de!ll" ., IIJe dlamber.

,,

BROUGHTON'S

MILK

~p: 99$

BREAD
6 lvs. 1.00

Rinso. king size, reg. 1.55
Pure VegetabPe
Mrs. Tucker's Shortening
Jo· Bo Dog Food
Can Pop, Faygo
Liquid Detergent For Dishes
' Debbie, 22 oz.

COFFEE

GaiUpolis
lalocvst
Stoto Reg. No.'71&lt;12.j)JJU:S

Go% 5

c
i

Replar or Drip

1.00

Jib. 79c
12 cans 1.00
9 cans 1.00
3 for 1.00

NOW!

clearance group. Big asst. of colOrs.

c

Reg

'*'

gr

8 Pak "BIC"

can

2

Pair

FOR

•500

,.

· Ladies Sneakers

long wearing duck uppers in yoor
choice of white, blue or black .
Molded sole construction with
cushion inner sole.
1.99 1 .

wILL PIIIT
wan : -

lllEI fUj
II WIITE •
IILI•S

Hiib

cjlaUtY latex'
t in
wlilte and ocilon or Latex':~,
elterior painI in while only. Save
now.

Ball Point

PENS

IECUlll $3.4! VALUE

FOR BACK TO .SCHOOL
REG. $2.99 AND $3A9

BIC MILL ASSGITiEil

_JOYS SPORT SHIRTS
Boys perm. press. no-iron famous

Campus Brand. Size 6 to 16 short
sloeve sport shirts, plaids - stripes .
fancy and plain colors.

2

Fln'a. IISfn Styli

DUIIIIIEES

AREA RUGS
'

-

2

IIY'S ll.

, · F•J :Friqa ·1.10, an Sliag

$500

FOR

.

$.500

CAL.
FOR

REG. $1.99 VALUE
CHILD'S SCHOOL

Regular f4.99 ~
'Adjustable Metal ·'

33

99
Ladies &amp;Girls

TENNIS
SHOES

'247EACH

FilE.
SEWIII

CLOSE OUTS, VALUES TO 1.79
VISCOSE LOOP DECORATOR

,••••••

ASST. AREA RUGS

II 1e111E IIIITUY IIIII

Values to 1.79 Viscose Rayon loop and
sbag, asst. sizes in this clean-up group. Big
assf. of colors - no skid back. see these for

REG. 89c TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
QUICK_j)RYING, BEST COLORS

!~~~!cc~~d~y~T
rust lnhiblling, noo-toxic. Suifable flir ·
Interior or exterior use. Town and Country

81h' x lllh' Room Size

RUGs ·

Tweed Pattern

$}0!

Reg . .1.99 children's school
lunch kits with Thermos.
Special purchase al a big
savings for you . Assf. colors.
Gel yoors now.
·

STilE-WilE
SUIIER

18ttema and plaiD colon.

MESS • CASUl ·STYlES
. IIEilll • MESS IEils
Save

-.btlf -

111 .,_

-r

~·;:.e•..:;~=t-.!"~
a.ruce.
~ Of

1'1
styles.

·
BONE-WHITBAND ·
FAIIHION COI.(iQ
. .
.

...,-1l ~EIILa
/2· PillE

·

52~CAN

ILEIIIRE!

FIIIIC ·caSUAL
Z IILE IIIIPS - 111.111 TIIUI

·a,..a-.·_$ ·

TO 1.59 24x46 FANCY
SHEERED COnON

~~!~~~~,:-lRWEL
colors .

in a supply now.

$} 0~

Sheer, fine mee11 nyJan net. .n--

GROUP. VALUES TO 1.00
VmSE LOOP AND SHAG
this clean-up group.
now at this _
low

values, stock up

60-JNQI REG.- $5.00 POLYESTER

!!~~~
!I!~ $359
ratricsin(R~colon.~4
YUI

For drier baby, -Daylime 30
Pampor•. Reg. 1.99 vaiue.
Stock up now a! tnls low, 1ow
price at your favorite Dept.
Store. Buy several boxes now.

$_J5!.

LATEX PAINT
Save on paint ;&gt;I Stiffler's. Vim
la.tex interior wall pain! or
Vim &lt;;loss Oil Base pain! in
whlie and asst. colors.

., ••

$
.

99
PR.

REG $1.59 VALUE ·
CHILDREN

'

$} 0()

-

$ &amp;7

YAL•s Tl $11.

1

IPIUNOa. .•••

VALUES TO 1.99 MENS ASSORTED

SUMMER SNEAKERS

Reg. 1.59 value children's sport
sneakors· in white. blue, red.
Stock up now for school.
.,;llilllill:lii:il:lm~o=ldid sole.

summer sandals. Red, blue,

green, white. Gel yours now at
lhl• low, low price. ·

PR.

IITYLD

oo·
,.

Sport Caps • Hats
Values fo -1.99. Men's roll-up
slyle golf caps - sporf straws.
Big group for quick clearanco.
Shop Early .
·

Reg. 1_.79 value, 36"x6' size, in green, white, light
tan and beige. Vynocel constructed, washablo,
mildew proof, slain proof, flame proof. Stock up
now.

SLICIS

MMERSANDA
Values lo 2.99, 1.99 and 3.99 . .
One big table of ladies better

WINDOW _SHADES

- s•IEI CUAIIICE - .

LADIES CLOSE OUT GROUP

SKETBALL SHOES
American made. High and low ·
styles, black &amp; white. Shop
Stiffler's and save . This value for
you for back to school. Shop our
shoe department.
'

. res!llan •.

.

-·
REG '2.99 and •3.99

Reg. $2.99
Men's &amp; Boys'

30 DAYnME

PAMPERS

Pnehet wide.

WI

fUR DRIER:HAPPIER BABY

REG '1.79 VAWE
VYNOCEL 36"x6'

inchet wide in your cho!ee of a
dozen (RIIy colon and wblte.

g,J:.~~~~v;~UGS 74~EA. .

PAIR

WITH ntERMOS

$1 ·9_9
,.,r

IRONING BOARD

With Cord

L.U.N,CH .KIT, c:,.~

,\1.7. lll7.t:s • n1 ••

VIM OIL BASE OR

3 lb.

..

Lint tree, full bed size spreads. Reg.

WHITE

MAXWELL

"I...,._.., lie !It I 5.,. fw W. a.zlbearfll&amp; bitt rvay
t

89~

5

film!''

p .

lb.·

SAVE

SAVE
YOU
MONEY

3.99 value. Asst. colors. Special

EAat

21b. 1.19
21b. 1.00
2 lb. 1.09
25 lb. en. 4.95

•'

BED SPREADS

ELECTRIC PERK

980

WE
CAN

PAP·ER

CLEANERS

ROUND
STEAK

SAVE BIG-30% -40%-50% OFF I

REG. 3.99 LINT FREE lURID FULL SIZE

6 Cup Size
USDA
CHOICE

.1061AIN ST.~POIEIOY, OHIO

500 Count Pkg.
5 Hole Notebook

_ _
216 E. 2nd
Pomerqy
Phone 992-5428

115 W. MAIN e POMEROY

.ALL SPRING AND SUMMER MERCHANDISE

SUMMER CLEANUP

334 Entered ·Bar
30's Show
.
'
~- 'lbere

I

SPECIALS ~

De '"ed
m

.•

ONCE A YEAR REMNANT CLEARANCE
3 BIG DAYS ,THURSDAY - FRIDAY &amp; .
SATURDAY
..

$}~
" .

$}~
ILEtellll
U.S' f• .

�·.

Ill.!

Homebuilders Honor Patients

SoCial
Calendar

Fun with Foods
.
by Charlene Hoeflich

i! !
Ham ag8in? Out goes the crt after ftve days In a row. ~
ham which started out as a hearty beginning of a festlve .occasion
cr family meal, the second, cr tblrd, cr fourth time al'lllllld just
Isn't the same.
The word '1eftover" is almost too much for the average man
of the house '-so dm't 1L!e it. The lblng to do 18 to b4!come a
creative coot, cmeeal those leftovers in a ca e ole and give it a
fancy name.
I
'l'lll8casserolerecipe could bit the spot andit'sa 1100chray to
flni8b off leftover ham.
GOLDEN HAM CASSEROLE
3 cups diced cooked ~ked ham,~ cup chopped Clllion, v.
cup shortening, ooe-third cup nour, v.teaspoon ~&gt;"Wet. I 'ill cups
milk, 1 can cream of celery soup, I can (four ounces) mlllhnJom
stems and pieces, drained, (optional), 1 'package shredded
ateddar &lt;lleese and 2 cups biscuit mix.
Cook the m1:m in the shortening until tender. Add the flour,
pepper, milk and celery soup. Mix well and coot, stirring COilstantly until thickened
.
Addthehamandm.ooms. Removefromthebeatandstir
in \!t cup shredded cheese.
Follow directions for drop biscuits on biscuit mix package
mixing in \(a Cup shredded cheese.
" quart M·--le Spoon
·
Tum th ham mix!
. to
.
e
ure m a 2"'
. ~v •
biscuit mixture over the top ~ bate, uncovereCI, m a hot oven
(400 degrees) for about 20 mmutes.
Serves six to eight people.

WEDNESDAY
SPECIAL meeting, Eastern
Athletic Boosters, a p.m.
Wedne-lay, at higb school.
Pleaae attend. ·
.
POMEROY " MIDDLEPORT
Uons Club, regular meeting,
Wednesday noon, Pomeroy
United Methodist lllurch.
POMEROY _ CLUSTER,
united Methodist Churches,
picnic, 8:30 p.m. WedneSday,
Route 33roadside park. Take a
covered dish and own table
- ~· ~the event of rain the
:;:nc will be beld at the
"'MMrY School.
. WHIM ROSE Lodge, annual
picnic, Wedn~y•6 P~· home
of Mrs. Wiiiiain Moms. Take
:::ed dish and own ~ble

~AY

REGm •n MEETING · Shad
• UL&gt;nn
'
e
River Lodge W, F&amp;:AM, Bp.m.
at ball in Chester. All Master
Masons Invited.

A.party fer 4t P.lienla at the ten:bielil, ~ oars. gum,
Southeastern Ohio Ment.l bolle,powclalllcljl!ftlrybeing
Health Center was staged nanled. •
.
Tueaday nlgbt by the lla)'iiliilll Stewart, pnel~nt'
Homebuilders Class of the ri the claD, gave. the prayer,
Mlddiepcrt Clmdl af Cla'tlt. and . Mr. carl Roacb icFive employees of the companied hymn singing.
hoopital assisted with the party Refl:eidlt*'llbl of cake, JIIIIICb,
cb'hc wtach time gameo were candies and fruit were served.
played with prlres af sbavfn8 Gcing over for the party were
cream, soap, · mints, hand•
·

sts

'l'lc-TocOMI,Mn. ~=

By Alma M~hall
RE&lt;EIVED A STORY FROM Millard Gra1 elf 'BeJWre

Ce • Exbi'Z.:~ramte
t:/UoJ
ACCehwu
~-J
R.
at (ltf
'J'

Wbil .the .
..., for
~ . re 18 00 ca...,~
cei'8DIICS m the Domestic Arts
Department of the 1011tb anntal
M~Coun~Falr,Mrs. Robert
Lewis,.~· •epuvls tbat
ceriiiDIC exhibits will be accepted in Division 909 (Bobby
W~) ) Class 73 (Any ()'aft
un
Mrs
. Lewis' tatement

Birthday Party

For William Bush

·

1.-

''Yep," replied Rowley, "I follow the river, have a boat and
9ell wood." .
''Well, tbat'S.anbonesl ~ofession, " said James, "ever been
• Mlewi way?"
.
II the· Blmlhclmt Bllilk."
·
''Nope, only as fur as Cincinnaij."
Hewro~ that the rabbety toot place bact In Uie taa., the euct.
''I aee you have been a soldier."
dille be 18 mt IAJ'e; an be ,..mrort lrl lbaut It Ia wbat his late
Said Rolrley, ''I fought fer Abe Lincoln, but I was borned In
grancmother, 8arab (SIIlle} Rowley, told blm.
the soulb.J scmelimes think I was on the wrong side ri the war."
'11le .Jamel boys did rob lbe llanli1l8lilil, W.VL t.lt; Ibis Ia (In later JUrs wben the pension checks started coming In, he
well known, but the dlrec:tioo they toot When the jab wu dalle is cltangect bis mind.)
nottnowo.
The tall man grinned, "!was with the boys of old Missouri and
They m01t likely split 1111· One wwden '-' they could bave fGught lllldef Quantrell, and the South, but that's all over now.
Cflllmltted 80 many roliJerlea and get away wltb It 10 loag, Bat Youloollliteafel!ow tbatcanbe trusted, anything I hate is a blow
the fact Ia the comtry, especially lh'"ll Comity, Will a huge gul"
!crest and lad transfer "!~~(~a. A tl*fWIIB bard to lind llince tiMft
Grandfather Rowley had not heard about the big robbery as
DO fast way to comlllliDicate.
.
news
in lbe pioneer days traveled slow. The man seemed to want
Afler theHnntingtCIIholdup,Jeile rodenortb,Cn 1 the big to talk.
Kanawlll river at Pl Pleeiant, ~ 1111 through Mason Ollmty
''Friend, I will pay you well for .putting me up tonight.
by a bact trail In the woods. He en
j the t1tio River at Grandpa Rowley toot the bini, put his fingers over his mouth. "I
!'aD*OJ, went out lbnJugb the valley tonrd 'fiiAien Plains. Bla didn't see notblng - I didn't hear nothing."
goal 'Willi to meet atme of his men near Marietta, then go 011
"Friend, did you ever hear of a fellow by the name of Jesse
lbrougb the Mlllllngum River Valley to Zane8ville; fnm tblft lames!n
Iii tran - lost.
Grandpa Rowley jumped back in amazement, "Don't tell me
AI:COfdlng to a newspaper story li 1948, ali aged Negro wbo you are lim!"
,
said be rode with Jesse CIIIIU job, said they buried .the loot Under
Andbisreplywas, "Yours truly, and I want to cross that big
I IiiebD tree oo a farm near Zanesville. The elderly illlll led river togetlntoObio (meaning Ohio).How's the chance to show
SOllie policemen to the spot wlleni be claimed they buried the
me wbere to cross;? 11
mmey. They dug deep, and fwnd an old nasty Iron bell, they
kJuded the lock off, and opened tbe bell but it COIItalned [W!i'll!.
At the time af Ibis robbery, Grew said bls grandfather,
Emanuel Rowley, a Civil w.. veteran, lived In an old boule near
wbat was calle4 at the time Sand Hill. The old boule ilno lmeer
atan!l'll!. Mr. Rowley wcned on tile river many yean after the
great war, owned his own boatwlicb plied between Powaoy and
Onclnnatlaelllng wood and other tbingJ to mate alivfn8.
At the time of the robbery, Mr. Rowley was at loDe, And one
ev~ a~t dust aman on borsebacli: rode into the yanl, got
df, tied.., to the fence, walked over to the bouse, and tnocted 011
the door.
'
lnpiooeerdayslhras very nn•sual toaee anyone at 1llis time
II the day, travelers and neighbors were,scarce. Nla p-ecaution
-Grandfather Rowley lol* down his· civil war mnstet saying,
''Open that door, Sallie." As sbe opened tile door, Mr. Rowley
railed the gun and atan!lng befcn bim wu a tall weD built man
with a heavy black beard. Upon aeeing the uplifted gun, be spuR,
''HoJd It, pard, I doo't mean 110 lifenae, sb'qer, I am just
loctingftr a place toputupfor thenlgbt. Imean no harm."
Grandfather Rowley stood lllcli: and said, ''Ollie ln." The
Prices Good Thru Aug. 14th
~er entered and shut the door. "Ome fur, Mister," asked
Grandma! ''Yes, and I'm dead tired, dusty, and a~! starved."
• Sbe shoved a chair toward bim and grandfather Rowley 1umg
.., IU gun. ''Make youfeelf comfortable, I'll fix some~ to eat.
Bud (nickname fCl' Mr. Rowley), you glt some water from the
cistern 80 the man ldn warsb."
The stranger asked, ''Have you got any lay for my bOis?"
Bud said !bathe bad. So the two men Wl!lll io the bam and bedded
BONELESS
the animal for the nigbt. By tbe time they again entered the oo.e,
. Grandmother Rowley bad I'Uitled 1111 atme egp, bacon, beans and
ccrnbread with plenty af atrcllg eolfee.
·
The man then washed, combed his !nag hair, and Cllllllplimented her on beq a good cook.
GREAT ON YOUR GRILL
'"!bat's wbat llll81Tied Sallie for," said Bud. ''You got a nice
.
lillie ce here, ()lll'd, rd up to find a place like Ibis- time:

When you know
it's for keeps ·

soon

ftnDce Well, pnmo~ of
bospitlility; and Betty
tz,
JI'CIIIIoler of finance.
· The new Comcll ·was appoiJited by members af the
retiring C!OWICll with &amp;J41111val ...,"'.."
af the Grand Council of Ohio.
The· diamond engagement
Brenda Taylor, honored
you'll treasure forever
queen, presided during which ... a Keepsake, guaranteed,
time plans were made for a registered and pertecl.
swimming party to be held at
the M'oddl'1JWI pool tonigbt. J-( 1 . , 'f ,._,;tl-..t'
-L...L .
M........,.
may """'
guesls .

The &amp;eCODd Mcllday in Sepwill be a night for the
initlatloo of five candidates. It
was reported that past honored ~ ~
queens baw started a fund to
~. ~ ..
~
purchase crowns for the three
- - ~-elf!l
ljghMt officers li the Bethel. N&lt;::'.....,.
oc,.,w.- ' •
Punch and cooties were
·
ed ron . the
ling
sa •
cnnng
mee ·
tember

&amp;

_.....,.. • .__....._._...,.

SEE BAIER···
YOUR HEADOUADERS

'

FOR

ADMIRAL

NABISOO

BLADE CUT

Honey

..

CHUCK ROAST

45~

LB.

New Haven Social Events

MIDDl!PORT

lDDI

3

CENTER CUI.;~~....... 6 7~~ APPLES
ARM ROAST.....~ ....... 77~
NIONSbal
2
FRANK IES •.••.•.•••.2 ~; 89~
Yellow Globe

3 lb.

SUPERIOR

KRAFT

Frozen Foods
CHEF-BOY-AR-DEE

-·n

Cheese
Pizza

PIZZA

With
Cheese

131h oz.
box

MIRACLE -MARGARINE

3 lb.

99~

5~~ 99~

Nice 'n Lite

CHOC. MILK

TEEN QUEEN

FAIRMONT

PORK &amp;BEANS

Red, While and Blue

79~

CARNATION

MILK

Dairy Specials

. . . :·

Rl&amp;hl
ReMRil

2·
9
~
ALUMINUM FOIL
12" ROLl

•

RINSO

.99

HOLSUM
ANGEL FOOD

CAKES

Sweet Peas

79~

l

s•oulclers Shampoo

::'1"

~

'

~

'

'

'

'22 Ol.

-

•r*EJt

Tlllll 'II Fndf

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

IMJc•&amp;:.

d

•

:A
I

-10c

Lemonade

. Puddings •

dessert

Head

I

,29

I

FRESH
StewiiiCJ Chicllens

1411.
pq,

Whole
. Chick•••

29C
.,

lOC
. ·~ 10c
; lit

Cake Mixes •

I~

'"-1

FRISKIES
·CAT FOOD

Frosting Mixes •

~

-

.......

IIIIIIIDFnl

Corn Muffins

Baui•

lace lacs
l«Jc

CJ9c

DAILY- ALL VARIETIES

Doz Foo•

y

.•%-10c
......
... 10c

Green Beans

Evaporated

LAUNDRY DETERGENT

Liquid

Pineapple Juice • ~lit

Corn Chips • •. ~r.- 10c

CHEER ·

IVORY
Bakery Buys

REYNOLDS

~5t

Steak Sauce

FOLGER'S

Fryer Legs
ALL GOOD
.
.
......
Sliced Bacon • • • 2
COUNTRY TREAT
c
69
Fresh Sausage~·.
SUPERIOR
Frankies • • • •

THURS •• FRI •• SAT. ONLY!

llr

et

POPS

FRESH

Sliced Potatoes •

To
.lt.it'
QlllltRln

~::r

CENTER BLADE CUT

Paul Lutheran Church, New Mrs. Philip Globobr, guests.
Haven, held their annual picnic
REBECCA CIRCLE
in the New Haven Garden Club The RebeCca Circle of the , .
IJc 011
lb.
Part, July 20, the husbands and Lutheran Cburch Women elf St.
D c .... I
•
.......
•
I....
'pkc,
1
children of the members' Paul Lutheran Church met on
I
•
families being invited guests. Wednesday afternoon with the
$
esc:~
Members present were Mrs. members of The Esther Circle
lb.
William Powell, Mrs. Harry as guests, with Mrs. Kenneth
Layne, Mrs. Herman Layne, Thompson as · hostess. Mrs.
Mrs. Donald Bumgardner, Mrs. Carroll Adams, Jr. presented
William Russell and Mrs. J. V. the lesson from the boot
McGrew.
"Paul's Letten."
Guests attending were David :rboae attending were Mrs.
Russell and friend, Judy Edna Burris, Mrs. Otto Grimm,
Counts, Dwain Russell, William Mrs. William Powell, Mrs. J . V.
Rusaell, Harry Layne, Jimmy McGrew, Mrs. William Rnssell,
Moy and Pastor James Moy. Mrs. Donald Bumgardner, Mrs.
CLUB MEETS
· Harry Layne, Mrs. Herman
I
•
• :;.
Mrs. John c. Fry was hostess Layne, and Mrs. Carron
to the members of the Julia T. Adams, Jr.
I
•
I
I
LIBBY'S
Bryant Sewing Club Tuesday
PERSONALS
aflernoon.
Mrs. Larry LeMasters and
CHOCOLATE
Members present were Mrs. son' of Cleveland, Ohio bave
ALLEN BRAND
F. A. Batey, Mrs. N. 0 . Weln, been visiting her parents, lifr.
Mrs. Lena Knight, Mrs. Her- andMn.BillHowardandMite.
man Layne, Mrs. Howard Mr. and Mrs. Harold Rille
Wagenhals, Mrs. Donald Smith, and family visited relatives In
DAWN FRESH
Mrs. James McKnight, Mrs. the Washington, D. C. . ...,
Uoyd Roush and the hostess. during the weekend and also
• •
The next meeting will be held toured many of the historical
ALLEN FANCY CUT
at the home of Mrs. J. W. Me- sites.
Murray in Mason.
Mr. and Mrs. James Gress
• •
GARDEN CWB
and ·son visited during the
LIBBY'S FROZEN
5112-oL
The Nehaclima Garden Club weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
held its annual Progressive Okey Killingsworth and family
can
Size
Detergent
I
""!'
•
•
•
Dinner on Monday evening. The at Prince George, Va. Their
appetizer course was held at the daughter stayed with ber
s- 56c! DIXIE
Union Campgrounds, where grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Woill Coupon
I
several relish trays, crackers Wilbur Webb during 1heir abloiowl
·and dip were served. The main sence.
25c Off Lobel A&amp;P BRAND
course was held at Sandy Acrea Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Roush
New
Camp Site below the .Mason of Dearborn, Michigan were
Mil~
Mixed Grill
Bridge at the camping site of weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
h
&amp;
B
A'd
Sale!
MY.T.fiNE
and Jixie Dinner
Mrs. Philip Globokar. Lasagna Donald F. Roush and Sheryl.
was served to those attending. Mrs. Roland Karr and
0
I
The
course was held on daughters returned to their
the patio of the home of Dr. and home at Owensboro, Ky.,
IONA
Mrs. Ray Pickens In Mid- Monday after spending the past
I
0
0
dleport, 0 .
week with her parents, Mr. and
Ashort business meeting was Mrs. Otto Grimm.
ALL FLAVORS CHARM
&amp;
held at the dessert course, with Mr. Tom McKee, second-year
Mrs. Harold Bumgarner student
at
Gettysburg
0
I
.,
!M'esidlng. Progralil. booklets for Seminary, was guest pastor at
"LL FLAVORS CHARM
lhe ye"" were distributed by St. Paul Lutheran Church
61fz-oL
Mrs. Roy Jones.
Sunday. He will conduct aerSea
DeociDraut
·
can
Those attending were Mrs. vices each Sunday at the church
Carroll Adams, Mrs. Phil through September 5.
'~ 2u..S1•'~2u..S128 . CHARM
Baley, Mrs. Donald Bumgard- Mr. and Mrs. Fred I'&lt;PwltiiD
.II!i'OO)'
ner, Mrs. Harold Bumgarner, and children af LIS Vegas, New
Mrs. Pete Burris, Mrs: David Mexico left Sunday for
Fielda, Jr., Mrs. WUUsm Gibbs, qreenvllle, Pa. where they will
Mrs. Bill Grinstead, Mrs. Uoyd spend this week visiting his
Hefty
Hoffman, Mrs. Tom Hoffman, parents. From there they will
Detlrpd
Mrs. Roy Jones, Mrs. Robert return to their borne In New
w..
Layne, Mrs. Harry Miller, Mrs. . Mexico. They haw IIJeDl the
1&lt;-lb',
w;tt.
lflil
W'oilllllit Coupon Who.
, pkr.
n;,
pkl.
W;th
u..oa,;
CoYpoll
James N. ,Roush, Mrs. David pastweekwithMrs. PumaV}'S
n·
ofJO
Coupol't
; You luy 0.. •I
of 3D
Cou;.,,.
Simonton, Mrs. Gerald Slm- pare nil, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
15&lt; OFf lAili.
Rot. Price
Good Thru Sot.
Good Thru S.t.
mons, Mrs. A. L. Sprouse, Mrs. 'F. Roush and Sheryl
Good Thru Sot.
$ooolllns.J.
Goad '"'"' S.t.
Aug. 14th ot AlP
Aug, 1-4th •t AlP
John Thorne and Mrs. Chester ·
Aug. ......, liM
. Aug._l~ ot A&amp;P,
Limit
0.. Coupon
, • Umit 0.. Coupon
t Weaver, members and Mrs. In 1962 a Soviet tc6w•ut
~o. .c~ pu
Limit Ono Coupon
..._ 0. Ct:Mp•
M~hael Merritt, Mrs. William ·was launcbed Into llpiCE oo a
'
DeMoss, Mrs. John F. Roush, · four-411J trip.

Ice •It ~~

LYONS

COFFEE

1 18

99

9

Fn• I1Hies swr

.
.
AT JUPPERS PLAINS

3~1b. $
can

BONELESS STEAK OR ROAST

·Breast
Quarters
TO II CHOPS QTR. LOIN
Pork Chops • • • •
..-.4'k FREEZER
Meat QUEEN
Entrees . • 2 $119
25
':=- ~ LEAN TENDER
$159
Cube Steaks • • .

'II ,_.......,
n
Ill
e 011 Co rn Flak

Regular
Drip
Elect
Petk

There will be special sessions fer young htmemakei's during
me day, Including free babysitting service at Cedar Lakes for the
special sesSions.
THE MASON COUNTY Health Department, In cooperation
with the West Virginia State Health Dept., Division ri Matemal
and Child Health, and the Mason County Unit of the American
Cancer Society, is sponsoring the Mobile Pap Smear Unit.
This unit will be In Mason County the week of August Z3 and
will he located at St. Paul's United MethOdist Cl1irth (across
from Fruth's Pharmacy). There is no charge. H~on August 24,
25,and 26th will be from IOa.m. to 12noon; 1p.m. to 3p.m.; &amp;p.m.
to 8 p.m. On the last day, August 27, the clinic hours are 10 a.m.
until 12 noon.

•

FRYER

The Cburch Women of St. Miss Mary Ann Hoffman, and

Buys

.

'

• • •b.

BAKER FURNITURE

Fresh Produce

West Vir~inia ," and many moie. Special fe2lura In!~·
construction, designing sets, story writing, activating. Crafls will
be Included in the program and many mere lnstrucllons for
assisting in Homemakers Clubs throughout the state as Wl!l.l u
Mason County.
PleaSe let Vicki Keefer know if you plan to attend the Conrerence by September 1. Her adm-ess is Cooperative ExtensiOn
Service, Courthouse Annex, Pt. Pleasant.
THE HOMEMAKERS CRAFT camp bas been rescheduled
· for November lOth, lith at Cedar Lakes. All of the Charleston
area, Mason, Jackson and Roane Cnunty Home Demonstration
dub members are invited to participate.
·
A FAMILY UFE CONFERENCE is planned for October U.
13 at Cedar U.kes, open to all women sponsored by ~
organizations of a four county area. It will include do 11 and
assemblies m drug abuse, the later years, time manag-nt In
housework , the way yoo look, sound, and 11\!t; eliminating the ·
wasbday blues, youth in a changing society, patriotism, and
others.

Delmonico Steaks~b1 Top Round •. • ~ 1
Ground Round 98c Chuck Steaks •~ 69c '_

• Air Cooditioners • Radios
e Duplex Reqaaluls e SteAm
e Cc*lr T.V.

.PRICE
EFFECTIVE
AT
3 LOCATIONS
THRU
AUGUST 14

'

.

Emma. K. Clatwcrthy, retiring
guardian, were Tbomas Eelwards, aBSOCiate guardian;
Joan Rayburn, secretary;
Carolyn Thomas, treasurer;
Rc nn ,Sebo, dln:dtew af
lllllllie; Wanda Rizer, cu..tocti.on
af paraphernalia; Peggy
'l'aylor,pnmolerriiOC.'iabillty;

m

Grandpa Rowley's reply was, "You won't have much trouble
right now, the river is low."
"Yw think I might swim my hoss over?"
Rowley replied, "No trouble at all. Come morning I'll show
you where it can be done."
''That's fine, pard."
')'he long nigbt passed. Grandmother Rowley fixed him his
lreatfast and a lunch to take with him. Grandfather Rowley went
with him to the river bank ; he crossed at the upper end of
Pomeroy. As he rode up the river bank, he waved goodbye and
was
out of sight to Grandfather Rowley forever.
Grandmother Rowley cleaned up the table ; under a plate was
$20.She smiled and said that she wished they would come through
here mere often.
Well, friends, according to Millard Gress, Jesse James spent
me night in Mason, and the secret was never told all these years
until now.
Grandfather and Grandmother Rowley have long been gone
and they could tell some fantastic tales about ghosts, Indian wars,
Morgan raiders, etc. but according to Mr. Gress, the one about
Jesse James sounds reasonable. It could have bappened. I don 't
know, I wasn't born at that time.
Many Homemakers activities are planned for the coming
mon~.
·
The Stale Leadership Conference at Jackson's Mill will be
held September 2'/.()ctober I. The cost from Monday through
Friday will he $22; this includes lunch Monday. Group sessions
will include "Me and Learning," "Me and Great Decisions in

&amp;Gob lite tbe gronnd Is pocr. Have any side lines?"

(Jdo, fuDiill;f of )heon, W. Va. In wblcb be 11e111 lbaut Jelle
...... and bls .....-ent( !) villi to tbe borne af lila p-anclather'
En
'Roirley. The Utle afMr. Grail' story Ia, "l'be Mlbei)

Installatim af offic:ers elf the past honored queen. Other
Guardian Council blgbllgbted a officers installed by Mrs.
meeting of Bethel 62, International Order af Jobs
Daughters, Mondaynigbtat the
Pllmeroy Masonic Temple.
New guardian of the Belhel is
Mrs. Debbie King Finlaw, a

.

.

af the Loyal Wcmen s
•
Mr.andMn:DenverRICe,Mn·
~ Stdll'l, lfn. Mar)'
Martin and Mrs. Norman
Yea1111er.
p.~;;;;;;,;._.;.._..,

1/ed
New Council )jficers lnsta

U:

110nors

]esse Ja.m es.SOjourn a Night in Mason?

Mr.lllcl Mrs. DCII Enrin af the

Q

MEIGS COUNTY Democratic
Executive Committee picnic
7:30 p.m., Forest Acres Part.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Brlcldes, Route 2, P&lt;meroy, are anFROM MRS. EDIOON HOIUlN of Route 1, Minersville, we
FRIDAY
nouncing ~ engagement and approaching marriaile of their received a recipe for a Coca Cola Cake. It's different and
PHILATHEA WOMEN'S
daughter,CarolynSue, to Mr. Larry Wayne Banks, son of Mr. and delicious, she tells us.
Society of Middleport Cburcb of
Mrs. Homer Banks, Route 2, ·P~meroy.
COCA COLA CAKE
·--·'-' family pi-'·
Christ "'""""
~'""
Tbeopenchurchweddingwillbean event of Saturday, at 6:30 . 2 cups ftour, 2 cups sugar, 1 cup shortening or butter, 4
FriPar.dat.yBring,
~ p.mcov. eredF~\s:cresand ceramics elhibl~ came
p.m. at the Burlingliam Church.
tablespoons cocoa, 1 cup coca-cola orR. c., ~ cup buttermllt, 2
repeated Inquiries. She points
eggs, beaten, I teaspoon soda, 1 teaspoon vanills, 1~ cup table service.
SA.'11JRDAY
011t
tbat the ruleupecify that no
miniature marslunallows.
CONFIRMATION CLASSES more than one entry can be
Combine the nour and sugar. Heat the shortening and butter.
cocoa, and coca-cola to boiling, stirring constantly. Pour this over will be resumed at Trinity made In the same class by the
IJ
Gue
.
person.
0 30 a.m. same
. die sugar and ftour, mix well. Add milk, eggs, soda, vanUJa and Cbureh • Pomeroy, 1:
Grouninascanbe-tedaa
ICE CREAM Social, Bashan
,_.,.
---..
marshmallows. Mix well.
me entry, Mrs. Lewis repcii'ls.
Pour in a greased and floured 9 by 13 Inch pan. Bate at 350 Fire House, 6 =30 p.m. Spon- This not only app!a'es to
The fourth birthday ansored by the Ladies Auxiliary. ceramics, but also to small
niversary of William Nichols degrees abwt45-50mlnutes or until done. Ice while still hot.
COCA&lt;:oLA ICING
Mrs. Keigh G. Aiker, Sr. and Bush )VliS observed recently
Public invited.
· Christmas decorations, plcMrs. JMII W. Neville, Jr. en- withayardparty at the home of
3 tablespoons cocoa, \!t cup butter, 6 tablespoons coca-cola, I
MONDAY
lures, stuffed dolls or animals
RUTLAND Firemen ' s and several other cJ• · s of the
tertained recently with a dinner Mrs. William Ault, Middleport. box powdered sugar and chopped nuts.
bODorin« Clarence M. Neville A blue color scheme was
Mix the cocoa, butter and cola and bring to a boil. PoiD' over AuD!iary, special meeting, 7:30 hobby comer.
All articles for judging are to
and his family of Baldwin Park, carried out In ~ decorations, some of the sugar and then put in the remainder of the sugar. Add p.m. at the firehouse.
Calif.
.
be oo the groulMis between 9
and the birthday cake featured nuts if desired, and spread m the cake wblle it is still hot.
• Atlfllding were Mr. and Mrs. a baseball diamond replica.
a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Tuesday.
Neville and children, Kerry, Games were played with prizes
Anylblng arriving after that
SEVERAL OF YOU HAVE PROMISED to send along a
Kenny, Tomlyn, Tammie, going to Julie Freeman and Jeff favorite recipe fer our ''Fun with Foods" column. Do get them to HOSPITAL NEWS
willbemarkedfordisplayonly.
Sandy; Mr. and Mrs. Keith G. Glaaa.
·
Articles awarded a premium in
us. We want this to be your column. Just mail to ''Fun witb
Aellrer, Sr., Pcmeroy; Mr. and
Holzer Medical Center, First the last two years are not
Guests were Julie and Jeff, Foods," The Daily Sentinel, Pcmeroy. Tips on food preparation,
Mrs. John W. Neville, Jr. and Unda Groves, Debbie Taylor, how to make something good taste even better, and strecbers In Ave. and Cedar St. General eligible fer entry.
cblltren, JMII, Butch and Joo, Laura Lynn Sayre, Kim Glass,
visiting hours 2-4 and
p.m. MrS. Lewis says that where
Henderson, w. Va.; Sterling G. Randy and Bob Yates, Britt, this day of high food costs, are always appreciated,
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to there is a question of class
Nevllle, Middleport; Everett A. Davie, Pam and Danny riodson,
4:30 p.m. Parents only on which an.item is to be entered,
SHIVERS BACK SOON
GUESTS HERE
Neville, Point Pleasant, W.Va.; Gregory Bush, Ja~on Eric
that It should be entered under
Pediatrics Ward.
LAKE FOREST, lli. (UP!)- Mr. and Mrs. Carl Austin and
· Mr. and Mrs. Ed Johnson and Bush, Merrie Ault, Perry Ault
Discharges
the miscellaneous class in the
The St. Louis Cardinals of the daughter, Laura of Portsmouth
. children, Debbie, Mildred, and Gerald Todd Ault.
Aaron Allen, Ellsworth Bolen, appropriate divisim.
National Football League an- were guests of her parents, Mr.
IJnda, Diane, Connie and
Timothy
Coiner, W'illie Cook,
Mrs. Celesta Bush, Mrs. Gene
Teresa, Gallipolis; Mr. and Dodson and Mrs. Kay Logan nounced Tuesday that running and Mrs. Roy Herrmann, Mrs. Archie Gillman, Mrs.
Mrs. Keith G. Aeilrer, Jr., Todd assisted Mrs. Ault with the back Roy Shivers, who un- Oleshire. The Austin family Bobby Hemby and daughter,
WEEK SPENT HERE
derwent
surgery
to
repair
will
move
to
Florida
where
he
apdJi!!eJ)y, N~w Haven, "f'· Va.; party. Mr, and Mrs. William
Mrs. Robert Qalter aild SOD,
Charles Hill, Mrs. Boyd Legg
MP.llatd Mrs. Harlin D. Qiner and Mr. and Mrs. C. H. damaged cartilage, is expected will be leaching this fall.
Bart,
of Olarll!lliJil spent the
and son, Mrs. Hershel
Wbltlalcb, and children, Mike, Wise, Jr. of Waverly sent gifts. to start workouts again in about
CAIJED TO WBEEIJNG Longfellow, Mrs. Robert past week here visiting Mr. and
three weeks.
Caihy and Kelly, Pomeroy; Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Allen, Jr. Melvin, Joseph Moore, Jr., Roy Mrs. James Criswell, Mid•and Mrs. John F. Aelker and In 1965 Negroes began rioting
of Pomeroy were called to Pierson, Mrs. Arthur Roush, J . dleport. Mr. Custer of the West
children, John, Anita Jo, in the Watts section of Los
Wheeling, W.Va. Monday nigbt Everett Saunders, C. Ma:r Virginia State Police was
Althea, Brian and Delores, Artgeles. During the six days of
Largest landlocked harbor by the illness of bis father, Hoyt Nibert, Uoyd Walker, Shelly receiving training in scuba
Middleport.
violence, 34 persons were killed in the world is that of San Allen, Sr.
Vigar, and Mrs. Sallie Allison. diving.
·
and 856 injured.
Francisco, Calif.

Dinner Party

,,

r.-Bacs
S«Jc

I

1

•

1

CHARM

Pancake Mix

•

I

CHARM

Biscuit Mix

c

I

1

I

SHOESTRING

Potatoes

I

•

I

I

ASSORTED

Northern N1,ki1s

u:.-llr,
~llr
~~11r

·-.......

WAXTEX

San•wich lap

1

I

HARD WORKING

Sail Cleanser

•

I

PL41N OR IQDIZEO

Table Salt

~

•

JANE PARKER

Snack Pies

I

I

I

I

AMERICAN BEAUTY

Homiay ~

•

I

:fi

.•

llr

-= 1r:
-11r

•

:::lr
··~lr

.........
........
....,.27c
-25·-.....
DOl foH ........

HENNY PENNY

I

I-

.ur-c:• ., ••

· - Iiiii

· ~~~~a~

W'..

...

no.

Coupoo

Good Tiwu Sot.
. Aug. i4tlo ot AlP
L;~a 0... Coup..

•

-

c:..o

6oecl ,.,. Sot.

Alot.l. . . , .
LWO.c

�·.

Ill.!

Homebuilders Honor Patients

SoCial
Calendar

Fun with Foods
.
by Charlene Hoeflich

i! !
Ham ag8in? Out goes the crt after ftve days In a row. ~
ham which started out as a hearty beginning of a festlve .occasion
cr family meal, the second, cr tblrd, cr fourth time al'lllllld just
Isn't the same.
The word '1eftover" is almost too much for the average man
of the house '-so dm't 1L!e it. The lblng to do 18 to b4!come a
creative coot, cmeeal those leftovers in a ca e ole and give it a
fancy name.
I
'l'lll8casserolerecipe could bit the spot andit'sa 1100chray to
flni8b off leftover ham.
GOLDEN HAM CASSEROLE
3 cups diced cooked ~ked ham,~ cup chopped Clllion, v.
cup shortening, ooe-third cup nour, v.teaspoon ~&gt;"Wet. I 'ill cups
milk, 1 can cream of celery soup, I can (four ounces) mlllhnJom
stems and pieces, drained, (optional), 1 'package shredded
ateddar &lt;lleese and 2 cups biscuit mix.
Cook the m1:m in the shortening until tender. Add the flour,
pepper, milk and celery soup. Mix well and coot, stirring COilstantly until thickened
.
Addthehamandm.ooms. Removefromthebeatandstir
in \!t cup shredded cheese.
Follow directions for drop biscuits on biscuit mix package
mixing in \(a Cup shredded cheese.
" quart M·--le Spoon
·
Tum th ham mix!
. to
.
e
ure m a 2"'
. ~v •
biscuit mixture over the top ~ bate, uncovereCI, m a hot oven
(400 degrees) for about 20 mmutes.
Serves six to eight people.

WEDNESDAY
SPECIAL meeting, Eastern
Athletic Boosters, a p.m.
Wedne-lay, at higb school.
Pleaae attend. ·
.
POMEROY " MIDDLEPORT
Uons Club, regular meeting,
Wednesday noon, Pomeroy
United Methodist lllurch.
POMEROY _ CLUSTER,
united Methodist Churches,
picnic, 8:30 p.m. WedneSday,
Route 33roadside park. Take a
covered dish and own table
- ~· ~the event of rain the
:;:nc will be beld at the
"'MMrY School.
. WHIM ROSE Lodge, annual
picnic, Wedn~y•6 P~· home
of Mrs. Wiiiiain Moms. Take
:::ed dish and own ~ble

~AY

REGm •n MEETING · Shad
• UL&gt;nn
'
e
River Lodge W, F&amp;:AM, Bp.m.
at ball in Chester. All Master
Masons Invited.

A.party fer 4t P.lienla at the ten:bielil, ~ oars. gum,
Southeastern Ohio Ment.l bolle,powclalllcljl!ftlrybeing
Health Center was staged nanled. •
.
Tueaday nlgbt by the lla)'iiliilll Stewart, pnel~nt'
Homebuilders Class of the ri the claD, gave. the prayer,
Mlddiepcrt Clmdl af Cla'tlt. and . Mr. carl Roacb icFive employees of the companied hymn singing.
hoopital assisted with the party Refl:eidlt*'llbl of cake, JIIIIICb,
cb'hc wtach time gameo were candies and fruit were served.
played with prlres af sbavfn8 Gcing over for the party were
cream, soap, · mints, hand•
·

sts

'l'lc-TocOMI,Mn. ~=

By Alma M~hall
RE&lt;EIVED A STORY FROM Millard Gra1 elf 'BeJWre

Ce • Exbi'Z.:~ramte
t:/UoJ
ACCehwu
~-J
R.
at (ltf
'J'

Wbil .the .
..., for
~ . re 18 00 ca...,~
cei'8DIICS m the Domestic Arts
Department of the 1011tb anntal
M~Coun~Falr,Mrs. Robert
Lewis,.~· •epuvls tbat
ceriiiDIC exhibits will be accepted in Division 909 (Bobby
W~) ) Class 73 (Any ()'aft
un
Mrs
. Lewis' tatement

Birthday Party

For William Bush

·

1.-

''Yep," replied Rowley, "I follow the river, have a boat and
9ell wood." .
''Well, tbat'S.anbonesl ~ofession, " said James, "ever been
• Mlewi way?"
.
II the· Blmlhclmt Bllilk."
·
''Nope, only as fur as Cincinnaij."
Hewro~ that the rabbety toot place bact In Uie taa., the euct.
''I aee you have been a soldier."
dille be 18 mt IAJ'e; an be ,..mrort lrl lbaut It Ia wbat his late
Said Rolrley, ''I fought fer Abe Lincoln, but I was borned In
grancmother, 8arab (SIIlle} Rowley, told blm.
the soulb.J scmelimes think I was on the wrong side ri the war."
'11le .Jamel boys did rob lbe llanli1l8lilil, W.VL t.lt; Ibis Ia (In later JUrs wben the pension checks started coming In, he
well known, but the dlrec:tioo they toot When the jab wu dalle is cltangect bis mind.)
nottnowo.
The tall man grinned, "!was with the boys of old Missouri and
They m01t likely split 1111· One wwden '-' they could bave fGught lllldef Quantrell, and the South, but that's all over now.
Cflllmltted 80 many roliJerlea and get away wltb It 10 loag, Bat Youloollliteafel!ow tbatcanbe trusted, anything I hate is a blow
the fact Ia the comtry, especially lh'"ll Comity, Will a huge gul"
!crest and lad transfer "!~~(~a. A tl*fWIIB bard to lind llince tiMft
Grandfather Rowley had not heard about the big robbery as
DO fast way to comlllliDicate.
.
news
in lbe pioneer days traveled slow. The man seemed to want
Afler theHnntingtCIIholdup,Jeile rodenortb,Cn 1 the big to talk.
Kanawlll river at Pl Pleeiant, ~ 1111 through Mason Ollmty
''Friend, I will pay you well for .putting me up tonight.
by a bact trail In the woods. He en
j the t1tio River at Grandpa Rowley toot the bini, put his fingers over his mouth. "I
!'aD*OJ, went out lbnJugb the valley tonrd 'fiiAien Plains. Bla didn't see notblng - I didn't hear nothing."
goal 'Willi to meet atme of his men near Marietta, then go 011
"Friend, did you ever hear of a fellow by the name of Jesse
lbrougb the Mlllllngum River Valley to Zane8ville; fnm tblft lames!n
Iii tran - lost.
Grandpa Rowley jumped back in amazement, "Don't tell me
AI:COfdlng to a newspaper story li 1948, ali aged Negro wbo you are lim!"
,
said be rode with Jesse CIIIIU job, said they buried .the loot Under
Andbisreplywas, "Yours truly, and I want to cross that big
I IiiebD tree oo a farm near Zanesville. The elderly illlll led river togetlntoObio (meaning Ohio).How's the chance to show
SOllie policemen to the spot wlleni be claimed they buried the
me wbere to cross;? 11
mmey. They dug deep, and fwnd an old nasty Iron bell, they
kJuded the lock off, and opened tbe bell but it COIItalned [W!i'll!.
At the time af Ibis robbery, Grew said bls grandfather,
Emanuel Rowley, a Civil w.. veteran, lived In an old boule near
wbat was calle4 at the time Sand Hill. The old boule ilno lmeer
atan!l'll!. Mr. Rowley wcned on tile river many yean after the
great war, owned his own boatwlicb plied between Powaoy and
Onclnnatlaelllng wood and other tbingJ to mate alivfn8.
At the time of the robbery, Mr. Rowley was at loDe, And one
ev~ a~t dust aman on borsebacli: rode into the yanl, got
df, tied.., to the fence, walked over to the bouse, and tnocted 011
the door.
'
lnpiooeerdayslhras very nn•sual toaee anyone at 1llis time
II the day, travelers and neighbors were,scarce. Nla p-ecaution
-Grandfather Rowley lol* down his· civil war mnstet saying,
''Open that door, Sallie." As sbe opened tile door, Mr. Rowley
railed the gun and atan!lng befcn bim wu a tall weD built man
with a heavy black beard. Upon aeeing the uplifted gun, be spuR,
''HoJd It, pard, I doo't mean 110 lifenae, sb'qer, I am just
loctingftr a place toputupfor thenlgbt. Imean no harm."
Grandfather Rowley stood lllcli: and said, ''Ollie ln." The
Prices Good Thru Aug. 14th
~er entered and shut the door. "Ome fur, Mister," asked
Grandma! ''Yes, and I'm dead tired, dusty, and a~! starved."
• Sbe shoved a chair toward bim and grandfather Rowley 1umg
.., IU gun. ''Make youfeelf comfortable, I'll fix some~ to eat.
Bud (nickname fCl' Mr. Rowley), you glt some water from the
cistern 80 the man ldn warsb."
The stranger asked, ''Have you got any lay for my bOis?"
Bud said !bathe bad. So the two men Wl!lll io the bam and bedded
BONELESS
the animal for the nigbt. By tbe time they again entered the oo.e,
. Grandmother Rowley bad I'Uitled 1111 atme egp, bacon, beans and
ccrnbread with plenty af atrcllg eolfee.
·
The man then washed, combed his !nag hair, and Cllllllplimented her on beq a good cook.
GREAT ON YOUR GRILL
'"!bat's wbat llll81Tied Sallie for," said Bud. ''You got a nice
.
lillie ce here, ()lll'd, rd up to find a place like Ibis- time:

When you know
it's for keeps ·

soon

ftnDce Well, pnmo~ of
bospitlility; and Betty
tz,
JI'CIIIIoler of finance.
· The new Comcll ·was appoiJited by members af the
retiring C!OWICll with &amp;J41111val ...,"'.."
af the Grand Council of Ohio.
The· diamond engagement
Brenda Taylor, honored
you'll treasure forever
queen, presided during which ... a Keepsake, guaranteed,
time plans were made for a registered and pertecl.
swimming party to be held at
the M'oddl'1JWI pool tonigbt. J-( 1 . , 'f ,._,;tl-..t'
-L...L .
M........,.
may """'
guesls .

The &amp;eCODd Mcllday in Sepwill be a night for the
initlatloo of five candidates. It
was reported that past honored ~ ~
queens baw started a fund to
~. ~ ..
~
purchase crowns for the three
- - ~-elf!l
ljghMt officers li the Bethel. N&lt;::'.....,.
oc,.,w.- ' •
Punch and cooties were
·
ed ron . the
ling
sa •
cnnng
mee ·
tember

&amp;

_.....,.. • .__....._._...,.

SEE BAIER···
YOUR HEADOUADERS

'

FOR

ADMIRAL

NABISOO

BLADE CUT

Honey

..

CHUCK ROAST

45~

LB.

New Haven Social Events

MIDDl!PORT

lDDI

3

CENTER CUI.;~~....... 6 7~~ APPLES
ARM ROAST.....~ ....... 77~
NIONSbal
2
FRANK IES •.••.•.•••.2 ~; 89~
Yellow Globe

3 lb.

SUPERIOR

KRAFT

Frozen Foods
CHEF-BOY-AR-DEE

-·n

Cheese
Pizza

PIZZA

With
Cheese

131h oz.
box

MIRACLE -MARGARINE

3 lb.

99~

5~~ 99~

Nice 'n Lite

CHOC. MILK

TEEN QUEEN

FAIRMONT

PORK &amp;BEANS

Red, While and Blue

79~

CARNATION

MILK

Dairy Specials

. . . :·

Rl&amp;hl
ReMRil

2·
9
~
ALUMINUM FOIL
12" ROLl

•

RINSO

.99

HOLSUM
ANGEL FOOD

CAKES

Sweet Peas

79~

l

s•oulclers Shampoo

::'1"

~

'

~

'

'

'

'22 Ol.

-

•r*EJt

Tlllll 'II Fndf

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

IMJc•&amp;:.

d

•

:A
I

-10c

Lemonade

. Puddings •

dessert

Head

I

,29

I

FRESH
StewiiiCJ Chicllens

1411.
pq,

Whole
. Chick•••

29C
.,

lOC
. ·~ 10c
; lit

Cake Mixes •

I~

'"-1

FRISKIES
·CAT FOOD

Frosting Mixes •

~

-

.......

IIIIIIIDFnl

Corn Muffins

Baui•

lace lacs
l«Jc

CJ9c

DAILY- ALL VARIETIES

Doz Foo•

y

.•%-10c
......
... 10c

Green Beans

Evaporated

LAUNDRY DETERGENT

Liquid

Pineapple Juice • ~lit

Corn Chips • •. ~r.- 10c

CHEER ·

IVORY
Bakery Buys

REYNOLDS

~5t

Steak Sauce

FOLGER'S

Fryer Legs
ALL GOOD
.
.
......
Sliced Bacon • • • 2
COUNTRY TREAT
c
69
Fresh Sausage~·.
SUPERIOR
Frankies • • • •

THURS •• FRI •• SAT. ONLY!

llr

et

POPS

FRESH

Sliced Potatoes •

To
.lt.it'
QlllltRln

~::r

CENTER BLADE CUT

Paul Lutheran Church, New Mrs. Philip Globobr, guests.
Haven, held their annual picnic
REBECCA CIRCLE
in the New Haven Garden Club The RebeCca Circle of the , .
IJc 011
lb.
Part, July 20, the husbands and Lutheran Cburch Women elf St.
D c .... I
•
.......
•
I....
'pkc,
1
children of the members' Paul Lutheran Church met on
I
•
families being invited guests. Wednesday afternoon with the
$
esc:~
Members present were Mrs. members of The Esther Circle
lb.
William Powell, Mrs. Harry as guests, with Mrs. Kenneth
Layne, Mrs. Herman Layne, Thompson as · hostess. Mrs.
Mrs. Donald Bumgardner, Mrs. Carroll Adams, Jr. presented
William Russell and Mrs. J. V. the lesson from the boot
McGrew.
"Paul's Letten."
Guests attending were David :rboae attending were Mrs.
Russell and friend, Judy Edna Burris, Mrs. Otto Grimm,
Counts, Dwain Russell, William Mrs. William Powell, Mrs. J . V.
Rusaell, Harry Layne, Jimmy McGrew, Mrs. William Rnssell,
Moy and Pastor James Moy. Mrs. Donald Bumgardner, Mrs.
CLUB MEETS
· Harry Layne, Mrs. Herman
I
•
• :;.
Mrs. John c. Fry was hostess Layne, and Mrs. Carron
to the members of the Julia T. Adams, Jr.
I
•
I
I
LIBBY'S
Bryant Sewing Club Tuesday
PERSONALS
aflernoon.
Mrs. Larry LeMasters and
CHOCOLATE
Members present were Mrs. son' of Cleveland, Ohio bave
ALLEN BRAND
F. A. Batey, Mrs. N. 0 . Weln, been visiting her parents, lifr.
Mrs. Lena Knight, Mrs. Her- andMn.BillHowardandMite.
man Layne, Mrs. Howard Mr. and Mrs. Harold Rille
Wagenhals, Mrs. Donald Smith, and family visited relatives In
DAWN FRESH
Mrs. James McKnight, Mrs. the Washington, D. C. . ...,
Uoyd Roush and the hostess. during the weekend and also
• •
The next meeting will be held toured many of the historical
ALLEN FANCY CUT
at the home of Mrs. J. W. Me- sites.
Murray in Mason.
Mr. and Mrs. James Gress
• •
GARDEN CWB
and ·son visited during the
LIBBY'S FROZEN
5112-oL
The Nehaclima Garden Club weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
held its annual Progressive Okey Killingsworth and family
can
Size
Detergent
I
""!'
•
•
•
Dinner on Monday evening. The at Prince George, Va. Their
appetizer course was held at the daughter stayed with ber
s- 56c! DIXIE
Union Campgrounds, where grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Woill Coupon
I
several relish trays, crackers Wilbur Webb during 1heir abloiowl
·and dip were served. The main sence.
25c Off Lobel A&amp;P BRAND
course was held at Sandy Acrea Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Roush
New
Camp Site below the .Mason of Dearborn, Michigan were
Mil~
Mixed Grill
Bridge at the camping site of weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
h
&amp;
B
A'd
Sale!
MY.T.fiNE
and Jixie Dinner
Mrs. Philip Globokar. Lasagna Donald F. Roush and Sheryl.
was served to those attending. Mrs. Roland Karr and
0
I
The
course was held on daughters returned to their
the patio of the home of Dr. and home at Owensboro, Ky.,
IONA
Mrs. Ray Pickens In Mid- Monday after spending the past
I
0
0
dleport, 0 .
week with her parents, Mr. and
Ashort business meeting was Mrs. Otto Grimm.
ALL FLAVORS CHARM
&amp;
held at the dessert course, with Mr. Tom McKee, second-year
Mrs. Harold Bumgarner student
at
Gettysburg
0
I
.,
!M'esidlng. Progralil. booklets for Seminary, was guest pastor at
"LL FLAVORS CHARM
lhe ye"" were distributed by St. Paul Lutheran Church
61fz-oL
Mrs. Roy Jones.
Sunday. He will conduct aerSea
DeociDraut
·
can
Those attending were Mrs. vices each Sunday at the church
Carroll Adams, Mrs. Phil through September 5.
'~ 2u..S1•'~2u..S128 . CHARM
Baley, Mrs. Donald Bumgard- Mr. and Mrs. Fred I'&lt;PwltiiD
.II!i'OO)'
ner, Mrs. Harold Bumgarner, and children af LIS Vegas, New
Mrs. Pete Burris, Mrs: David Mexico left Sunday for
Fielda, Jr., Mrs. WUUsm Gibbs, qreenvllle, Pa. where they will
Mrs. Bill Grinstead, Mrs. Uoyd spend this week visiting his
Hefty
Hoffman, Mrs. Tom Hoffman, parents. From there they will
Detlrpd
Mrs. Roy Jones, Mrs. Robert return to their borne In New
w..
Layne, Mrs. Harry Miller, Mrs. . Mexico. They haw IIJeDl the
1&lt;-lb',
w;tt.
lflil
W'oilllllit Coupon Who.
, pkr.
n;,
pkl.
W;th
u..oa,;
CoYpoll
James N. ,Roush, Mrs. David pastweekwithMrs. PumaV}'S
n·
ofJO
Coupol't
; You luy 0.. •I
of 3D
Cou;.,,.
Simonton, Mrs. Gerald Slm- pare nil, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
15&lt; OFf lAili.
Rot. Price
Good Thru Sot.
Good Thru S.t.
mons, Mrs. A. L. Sprouse, Mrs. 'F. Roush and Sheryl
Good Thru Sot.
$ooolllns.J.
Goad '"'"' S.t.
Aug. 14th ot AlP
Aug, 1-4th •t AlP
John Thorne and Mrs. Chester ·
Aug. ......, liM
. Aug._l~ ot A&amp;P,
Limit
0.. Coupon
, • Umit 0.. Coupon
t Weaver, members and Mrs. In 1962 a Soviet tc6w•ut
~o. .c~ pu
Limit Ono Coupon
..._ 0. Ct:Mp•
M~hael Merritt, Mrs. William ·was launcbed Into llpiCE oo a
'
DeMoss, Mrs. John F. Roush, · four-411J trip.

Ice •It ~~

LYONS

COFFEE

1 18

99

9

Fn• I1Hies swr

.
.
AT JUPPERS PLAINS

3~1b. $
can

BONELESS STEAK OR ROAST

·Breast
Quarters
TO II CHOPS QTR. LOIN
Pork Chops • • • •
..-.4'k FREEZER
Meat QUEEN
Entrees . • 2 $119
25
':=- ~ LEAN TENDER
$159
Cube Steaks • • .

'II ,_.......,
n
Ill
e 011 Co rn Flak

Regular
Drip
Elect
Petk

There will be special sessions fer young htmemakei's during
me day, Including free babysitting service at Cedar Lakes for the
special sesSions.
THE MASON COUNTY Health Department, In cooperation
with the West Virginia State Health Dept., Division ri Matemal
and Child Health, and the Mason County Unit of the American
Cancer Society, is sponsoring the Mobile Pap Smear Unit.
This unit will be In Mason County the week of August Z3 and
will he located at St. Paul's United MethOdist Cl1irth (across
from Fruth's Pharmacy). There is no charge. H~on August 24,
25,and 26th will be from IOa.m. to 12noon; 1p.m. to 3p.m.; &amp;p.m.
to 8 p.m. On the last day, August 27, the clinic hours are 10 a.m.
until 12 noon.

•

FRYER

The Cburch Women of St. Miss Mary Ann Hoffman, and

Buys

.

'

• • •b.

BAKER FURNITURE

Fresh Produce

West Vir~inia ," and many moie. Special fe2lura In!~·
construction, designing sets, story writing, activating. Crafls will
be Included in the program and many mere lnstrucllons for
assisting in Homemakers Clubs throughout the state as Wl!l.l u
Mason County.
PleaSe let Vicki Keefer know if you plan to attend the Conrerence by September 1. Her adm-ess is Cooperative ExtensiOn
Service, Courthouse Annex, Pt. Pleasant.
THE HOMEMAKERS CRAFT camp bas been rescheduled
· for November lOth, lith at Cedar Lakes. All of the Charleston
area, Mason, Jackson and Roane Cnunty Home Demonstration
dub members are invited to participate.
·
A FAMILY UFE CONFERENCE is planned for October U.
13 at Cedar U.kes, open to all women sponsored by ~
organizations of a four county area. It will include do 11 and
assemblies m drug abuse, the later years, time manag-nt In
housework , the way yoo look, sound, and 11\!t; eliminating the ·
wasbday blues, youth in a changing society, patriotism, and
others.

Delmonico Steaks~b1 Top Round •. • ~ 1
Ground Round 98c Chuck Steaks •~ 69c '_

• Air Cooditioners • Radios
e Duplex Reqaaluls e SteAm
e Cc*lr T.V.

.PRICE
EFFECTIVE
AT
3 LOCATIONS
THRU
AUGUST 14

'

.

Emma. K. Clatwcrthy, retiring
guardian, were Tbomas Eelwards, aBSOCiate guardian;
Joan Rayburn, secretary;
Carolyn Thomas, treasurer;
Rc nn ,Sebo, dln:dtew af
lllllllie; Wanda Rizer, cu..tocti.on
af paraphernalia; Peggy
'l'aylor,pnmolerriiOC.'iabillty;

m

Grandpa Rowley's reply was, "You won't have much trouble
right now, the river is low."
"Yw think I might swim my hoss over?"
Rowley replied, "No trouble at all. Come morning I'll show
you where it can be done."
''That's fine, pard."
')'he long nigbt passed. Grandmother Rowley fixed him his
lreatfast and a lunch to take with him. Grandfather Rowley went
with him to the river bank ; he crossed at the upper end of
Pomeroy. As he rode up the river bank, he waved goodbye and
was
out of sight to Grandfather Rowley forever.
Grandmother Rowley cleaned up the table ; under a plate was
$20.She smiled and said that she wished they would come through
here mere often.
Well, friends, according to Millard Gress, Jesse James spent
me night in Mason, and the secret was never told all these years
until now.
Grandfather and Grandmother Rowley have long been gone
and they could tell some fantastic tales about ghosts, Indian wars,
Morgan raiders, etc. but according to Mr. Gress, the one about
Jesse James sounds reasonable. It could have bappened. I don 't
know, I wasn't born at that time.
Many Homemakers activities are planned for the coming
mon~.
·
The Stale Leadership Conference at Jackson's Mill will be
held September 2'/.()ctober I. The cost from Monday through
Friday will he $22; this includes lunch Monday. Group sessions
will include "Me and Learning," "Me and Great Decisions in

&amp;Gob lite tbe gronnd Is pocr. Have any side lines?"

(Jdo, fuDiill;f of )heon, W. Va. In wblcb be 11e111 lbaut Jelle
...... and bls .....-ent( !) villi to tbe borne af lila p-anclather'
En
'Roirley. The Utle afMr. Grail' story Ia, "l'be Mlbei)

Installatim af offic:ers elf the past honored queen. Other
Guardian Council blgbllgbted a officers installed by Mrs.
meeting of Bethel 62, International Order af Jobs
Daughters, Mondaynigbtat the
Pllmeroy Masonic Temple.
New guardian of the Belhel is
Mrs. Debbie King Finlaw, a

.

.

af the Loyal Wcmen s
•
Mr.andMn:DenverRICe,Mn·
~ Stdll'l, lfn. Mar)'
Martin and Mrs. Norman
Yea1111er.
p.~;;;;;;,;._.;.._..,

1/ed
New Council )jficers lnsta

U:

110nors

]esse Ja.m es.SOjourn a Night in Mason?

Mr.lllcl Mrs. DCII Enrin af the

Q

MEIGS COUNTY Democratic
Executive Committee picnic
7:30 p.m., Forest Acres Part.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Brlcldes, Route 2, P&lt;meroy, are anFROM MRS. EDIOON HOIUlN of Route 1, Minersville, we
FRIDAY
nouncing ~ engagement and approaching marriaile of their received a recipe for a Coca Cola Cake. It's different and
PHILATHEA WOMEN'S
daughter,CarolynSue, to Mr. Larry Wayne Banks, son of Mr. and delicious, she tells us.
Society of Middleport Cburcb of
Mrs. Homer Banks, Route 2, ·P~meroy.
COCA COLA CAKE
·--·'-' family pi-'·
Christ "'""""
~'""
Tbeopenchurchweddingwillbean event of Saturday, at 6:30 . 2 cups ftour, 2 cups sugar, 1 cup shortening or butter, 4
FriPar.dat.yBring,
~ p.mcov. eredF~\s:cresand ceramics elhibl~ came
p.m. at the Burlingliam Church.
tablespoons cocoa, 1 cup coca-cola orR. c., ~ cup buttermllt, 2
repeated Inquiries. She points
eggs, beaten, I teaspoon soda, 1 teaspoon vanills, 1~ cup table service.
SA.'11JRDAY
011t
tbat the ruleupecify that no
miniature marslunallows.
CONFIRMATION CLASSES more than one entry can be
Combine the nour and sugar. Heat the shortening and butter.
cocoa, and coca-cola to boiling, stirring constantly. Pour this over will be resumed at Trinity made In the same class by the
IJ
Gue
.
person.
0 30 a.m. same
. die sugar and ftour, mix well. Add milk, eggs, soda, vanUJa and Cbureh • Pomeroy, 1:
Grouninascanbe-tedaa
ICE CREAM Social, Bashan
,_.,.
---..
marshmallows. Mix well.
me entry, Mrs. Lewis repcii'ls.
Pour in a greased and floured 9 by 13 Inch pan. Bate at 350 Fire House, 6 =30 p.m. Spon- This not only app!a'es to
The fourth birthday ansored by the Ladies Auxiliary. ceramics, but also to small
niversary of William Nichols degrees abwt45-50mlnutes or until done. Ice while still hot.
COCA&lt;:oLA ICING
Mrs. Keigh G. Aiker, Sr. and Bush )VliS observed recently
Public invited.
· Christmas decorations, plcMrs. JMII W. Neville, Jr. en- withayardparty at the home of
3 tablespoons cocoa, \!t cup butter, 6 tablespoons coca-cola, I
MONDAY
lures, stuffed dolls or animals
RUTLAND Firemen ' s and several other cJ• · s of the
tertained recently with a dinner Mrs. William Ault, Middleport. box powdered sugar and chopped nuts.
bODorin« Clarence M. Neville A blue color scheme was
Mix the cocoa, butter and cola and bring to a boil. PoiD' over AuD!iary, special meeting, 7:30 hobby comer.
All articles for judging are to
and his family of Baldwin Park, carried out In ~ decorations, some of the sugar and then put in the remainder of the sugar. Add p.m. at the firehouse.
Calif.
.
be oo the groulMis between 9
and the birthday cake featured nuts if desired, and spread m the cake wblle it is still hot.
• Atlfllding were Mr. and Mrs. a baseball diamond replica.
a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Tuesday.
Neville and children, Kerry, Games were played with prizes
Anylblng arriving after that
SEVERAL OF YOU HAVE PROMISED to send along a
Kenny, Tomlyn, Tammie, going to Julie Freeman and Jeff favorite recipe fer our ''Fun with Foods" column. Do get them to HOSPITAL NEWS
willbemarkedfordisplayonly.
Sandy; Mr. and Mrs. Keith G. Glaaa.
·
Articles awarded a premium in
us. We want this to be your column. Just mail to ''Fun witb
Aellrer, Sr., Pcmeroy; Mr. and
Holzer Medical Center, First the last two years are not
Guests were Julie and Jeff, Foods," The Daily Sentinel, Pcmeroy. Tips on food preparation,
Mrs. John W. Neville, Jr. and Unda Groves, Debbie Taylor, how to make something good taste even better, and strecbers In Ave. and Cedar St. General eligible fer entry.
cblltren, JMII, Butch and Joo, Laura Lynn Sayre, Kim Glass,
visiting hours 2-4 and
p.m. MrS. Lewis says that where
Henderson, w. Va.; Sterling G. Randy and Bob Yates, Britt, this day of high food costs, are always appreciated,
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to there is a question of class
Nevllle, Middleport; Everett A. Davie, Pam and Danny riodson,
4:30 p.m. Parents only on which an.item is to be entered,
SHIVERS BACK SOON
GUESTS HERE
Neville, Point Pleasant, W.Va.; Gregory Bush, Ja~on Eric
that It should be entered under
Pediatrics Ward.
LAKE FOREST, lli. (UP!)- Mr. and Mrs. Carl Austin and
· Mr. and Mrs. Ed Johnson and Bush, Merrie Ault, Perry Ault
Discharges
the miscellaneous class in the
The St. Louis Cardinals of the daughter, Laura of Portsmouth
. children, Debbie, Mildred, and Gerald Todd Ault.
Aaron Allen, Ellsworth Bolen, appropriate divisim.
National Football League an- were guests of her parents, Mr.
IJnda, Diane, Connie and
Timothy
Coiner, W'illie Cook,
Mrs. Celesta Bush, Mrs. Gene
Teresa, Gallipolis; Mr. and Dodson and Mrs. Kay Logan nounced Tuesday that running and Mrs. Roy Herrmann, Mrs. Archie Gillman, Mrs.
Mrs. Keith G. Aeilrer, Jr., Todd assisted Mrs. Ault with the back Roy Shivers, who un- Oleshire. The Austin family Bobby Hemby and daughter,
WEEK SPENT HERE
derwent
surgery
to
repair
will
move
to
Florida
where
he
apdJi!!eJ)y, N~w Haven, "f'· Va.; party. Mr, and Mrs. William
Mrs. Robert Qalter aild SOD,
Charles Hill, Mrs. Boyd Legg
MP.llatd Mrs. Harlin D. Qiner and Mr. and Mrs. C. H. damaged cartilage, is expected will be leaching this fall.
Bart,
of Olarll!lliJil spent the
and son, Mrs. Hershel
Wbltlalcb, and children, Mike, Wise, Jr. of Waverly sent gifts. to start workouts again in about
CAIJED TO WBEEIJNG Longfellow, Mrs. Robert past week here visiting Mr. and
three weeks.
Caihy and Kelly, Pomeroy; Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Allen, Jr. Melvin, Joseph Moore, Jr., Roy Mrs. James Criswell, Mid•and Mrs. John F. Aelker and In 1965 Negroes began rioting
of Pomeroy were called to Pierson, Mrs. Arthur Roush, J . dleport. Mr. Custer of the West
children, John, Anita Jo, in the Watts section of Los
Wheeling, W.Va. Monday nigbt Everett Saunders, C. Ma:r Virginia State Police was
Althea, Brian and Delores, Artgeles. During the six days of
Largest landlocked harbor by the illness of bis father, Hoyt Nibert, Uoyd Walker, Shelly receiving training in scuba
Middleport.
violence, 34 persons were killed in the world is that of San Allen, Sr.
Vigar, and Mrs. Sallie Allison. diving.
·
and 856 injured.
Francisco, Calif.

Dinner Party

,,

r.-Bacs
S«Jc

I

1

•

1

CHARM

Pancake Mix

•

I

CHARM

Biscuit Mix

c

I

1

I

SHOESTRING

Potatoes

I

•

I

I

ASSORTED

Northern N1,ki1s

u:.-llr,
~llr
~~11r

·-.......

WAXTEX

San•wich lap

1

I

HARD WORKING

Sail Cleanser

•

I

PL41N OR IQDIZEO

Table Salt

~

•

JANE PARKER

Snack Pies

I

I

I

I

AMERICAN BEAUTY

Homiay ~

•

I

:fi

.•

llr

-= 1r:
-11r

•

:::lr
··~lr

.........
........
....,.27c
-25·-.....
DOl foH ........

HENNY PENNY

I

I-

.ur-c:• ., ••

· - Iiiii

· ~~~~a~

W'..

...

no.

Coupoo

Good Tiwu Sot.
. Aug. i4tlo ot AlP
L;~a 0... Coup..

•

-

c:..o

6oecl ,.,. Sot.

Alot.l. . . , .
LWO.c

�'·

-. '

•
IJ-Tile DIIIIJa&lt; 'iM, MJ'Irtlarf,p

I

Ofo 0,, Aal,lJ,IJ'Il

.

•
,.

&gt;

ID The Sentinel Oassifieds
,.••,., ·Busfu_ess Services,~ ·;.__..

Bargains; Bargains and More Bargains
.

.

.

r---~-----------~----------, ·

Washington
By
Report

Clarence

Miller .

The recently settled 18-day
railroad strike placed a severe
strsin oothe natioo's economy.
'J'Itis time, unlike siqillar oc·
casions in the past 8 months in
wiUch Congress enacted temporary eleventh hour setUements, the strike
settled
without Congressional in·
tervention. Negotiators announced last Mooday that a
contract settlement providing
for a t2 pet. wage increase over
a 42 month period had been
reached between the 10 struck
railroads and the United
Transportatioo Union.
Final settlement came alter a
17--hour marathon bargaining
oession in Washington and only
four days before the start of the
Congressional races. After the
Supreme Court recently af.
finned the start of railroad
unions to strike selectively, the
UTU struck rail lines at dif.
ferent intervals in time rather
than in one, mass work stoppage.
In fact, when the strike
threatened to push into the
Congressional recess period, I
was one of only 41 House
members wbo voted against a
"""""'feeling that with such an
important
issue
before
Congress we could not simply
put off our responsibilities to the
American people.
Because the &amp;tpreme Court's
ruling impceed no effective
limits on selective strikes, the
recent strike halted rail shippiag in to slates, idled :rl pet. of
the nation's railworkers and
closed. more than to pel of
America's rail lliileage. Neardisaster conditions had already
beset a n~ber of industries
greatly dependent upon rail
service. Produce and farm
products, with no where to go
were being plowed under or

was

~nter

"...,, .. , ::;:.• .,......._
•
•, .... • ' .·.
j"~'·"'"
~

1 1:~ . .

.

--

News, Event
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kalb,
Minneapolis, Minn., are
spending some time here with
Mrs. Kalb's brother-in-law and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. William
Thomas.
Vina Rutherford, Columbus,
visited with her mother, Faye
Jordan, .and other relatives in
the area.
Mr. and Mrs. Emzie bavis,
Parkersburg, were guests of
Mrs. Davis' brothers, W. C. and
Paul Peck.
Mr. and Mrs. Austin Weyand,
former residents of this community, attended Sunday School
and church al Temple United
Methodist Church on Sunday
morning. and visited with
friends. The Weyands were in
the vicinity to attend the Stout
reunion which was held at the
lwme of Mrs. C. E. Stout,

Albany.
Druzilla Woodrwn, Albany,
was a caller on Sunday af.
temoon at the Ney Carpenter

home.
Mr. and Mrs. Waid JefferS
and family, London, visited his
grandmother, Mrs. Frank Boho
and other relatives here.
Bertie Tackett and niece,
F1atwoods, Ky., are spending a
few days with her sister, Mrs.
William Culvell.
Mrs. Mella Fisher is visiting
her brother and sister-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffers.
Mrs. Mary .Staneart Patterson and children of near
Washington, D. C., vacationed
at the home of her mother, Mrs.
C. E. Staneart.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
were in Columbus where he
attepded.the monthly meetings
for directors of his insurance
company. They called on his
sister, Mrs. Jessie Jewell,
Columbus, and visited their
daughter, Mrs. Wanda Jones
and family, Nelsonville,
enroute.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Mosier,
Cecil, Ohio, were guests of her
grandmother, Mrs. Murl
Galaway and other relatives' in
the area,

I
I
I
I

I

l
I
I
I
I

were left rotting in crates.
Poullry was near starvation in
the Southeast and Appalachia
coal mines were being shut
down throughout a four-fllate
region,
.
It has been my view that the
Congress of the United States is
not the ·appropriate place to
reSOlVe iSSUeS in a labor
dispute. The Congress is not in a
position to legislate prowty in
these circumstances. Many
times, however, the Congress
has little choice but to becollie
involved because of the
overriding obligation to protect
the public interest. At best,
Congressional interventioo is a
stopgap and only postpones a
resolution of the issues involved.
Four times -in 1963, in 1967
and twice last year - Congress
was called upon to enact special
legislation dealing with a
railroad strike. Congressional
leader-S·point out that Congress
became involved in these cases
because existing · federal
statutes are deficient in dealing
with such strikes - strikes
which will cause severe
economic hardship and will
adversely affect the public
welfare. The deficiencies in the
Railway Labor Act and the
Taft-Hartley Act have long been
a basis of controversy.
fn a Special Message to the
9lst Congress, President Nixon
made a specific recommendation "to repair the
deficiencies
of
existing
legislation and to better protect
the public against the daniaging
effects of work stoppages in the
transportation induslry!' The
recommendation was ignored.
President Nixon renewed his
recommendation to the 91Jid
Congress, but it was not until
late July - during the most
critical days of the latest rail
strike - that the subconunittee
on
transportation
and

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Belor~ Publication
Monday Deadline9,.m.
.. Can__geiJ.tfon &amp;Cor~!l!n~ - ,
Will be ~led until9 a.m. for
Day of Publication
•
REGULATIONS
The Publisher · reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed objection~_•.... The
publisher will not be r"""""slble
for more than CX'Ie incorrect:

inse.rtion.

RATES
For W~nl AIJ Service

ScentsperWotdoneinserlion .
Minimum Charge 75c

,

12 cents per worq three.
consec•rtive insertions.

QUALifY.

1970 CHEVROLET MONTE
Beautiful Gobi Beige color with blli. vinyl roof, factory air
a&gt;ndllioning, tinted glass, black nylon bucket seals,
a&gt;nsol~, Poslfradion axle, Gt cu. in. engine, Turbo
Hydromalic, power steering, power disc brakes, radio &amp;
r. 5eat ·speaker, bumper guards &amp; Rally Wheels, undersea!. Save, Save. Balance of warranty.
lJU BUICK WILDCAT CPE.
$1195
Automatic trans., power steering &amp; brakes, good w-w
!ires, radio, ~ater, white finish. clean interior. Reg. price
$1395.00. Spectal.
·
t967FORD LTD
.
$1595
4 Door Sedan, power steering &amp; brakes, vinyl interior, blk.
vinyl roof, maroon finish, radio.. neww w-w tires, V~B with
automatic fra~s. &amp; factor}: aiL~_ili"!"ing - Special

Piiierly MOtor Co. W1\.
~

Educatilnal

Card of Thanks

steel

WE WISH to extend our sincere
thanks to Or. Blazewicz and
Daisy,

White's

Funeral

Home, the Rev. Eldon Blake
for his consoling words, all
relatives,

neighbors

and

friends and our dear friend,
Grace Louden, for all the
food, flowers and cards and
all those who helped in any
way during the illness and
death of our Dad and
husband. The Guy Hayman
Family.
8-11-llp

Notice

hauling

For Sale

training

available. New classes SOFA BED and matching chair,
weekly. Train in Middleport, $50. Phone 992~ alter 5
Ohio. call or write, ,Tri-State p.m.
Driver Training~ Inc., Box

experience, no investmentcar necessary. call 949-3233
or write Toy Ladies Party
Plan, Johnstown. Pa. 15902.
8-10.3tp

Help

GARAGE sale, Friday and
Saturday at Llwrence Eblin.
Llurel Oiff.
8-11-Jic

- -- - - -

YARD SALE, Thursday and
Friday ,

Charles

Spires ·

residence, Main St., Rulland,
Ohio.

For Sale or Trade

...

---.

L-------------1

WMP0/-1390

992-2094

606 E. Main

And

FURNITURE
Floor Display.

EXPERT
~ment

-? ~
-G~ARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open I Tits

Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

From the Largest Truck or
Bulld9zei' Radiator. to the
Smalle5t Healer Core.

BlAETTNARS
--- -

- -Ph. m-2143

Pomeroy

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Roofing &amp;
construction Co.' and Anthony Plumbing &amp; Heating.
Complete
Plumbing,
Healing and Air Condilio!ling.
240 Lincoln St., Middleport

SENTINEL
CARRIER
WANTED IN
NEW ttAVEN

fr-eezer, ice·maker no-frost

refrigerator ,

Frigidaire

electric range, Tappan gas
range, double bed and pair
twin beds, complete, one
davno bed, two living room
cha irs. room divider, desk
and chair, modern dresser.

pole and desk lamps, coffee
.a nd end tables, sewing cart,
two rinse tubs and stand, bath
tub, utility cabinet. Antiques:
old beds, three dressers, three
stands, very old piano, record

cabinet, round table. six

chairs and bullet, trunks,
wicker set, old floor lamps,
clock, books and dishes .
Miscellaneous, folk guitar,
sump pump, pair reclining
seats tor Rambler, Ward's
chain saw, like new. Many
other items too numerous to
mention. Nol responsible for

and

.HARTFORD
Phone 992-2156

' - - , - - - - - - ---..u

EARN AT home addressing
envelopes. Rush .slamjled
sell-addressed envelope. The
Ambrose eo., 4325 Lakebom,
Davisburg , Mich. 48019.
8-1-JO!p
- - - - -- -- -

For Rent

2 BEDROOM mob lie horne WI'th
air conditioning in Racine
area. Phone 992-6329.
8-10-5tc
FURNISHED and unfurnished
?t,";';:'~t-~~lose 10 school..
lG-18-tfc

accidents or loss of property.
Lunch served. Dorset Miller,
owner, I. 0 . (Macl McCoy,
auctioneer.
8-11 -31c
- - - - - - -- FIVE Keystone custom wheels
with spmners and lug nuts fils
;:" 14 .;~·· s~ 1 ~~~bi~~ ~j'
.p.,
m
•
· 1hg ·
monlh old puppy, has s ots
free. Phone 992-7376.
________ 8_.1J.Jfc
TWIN
NEEDLE
sewing
machine 1971 model in new
walnut stand. All features
buill -in to make fancy
desiqns . Also buttonholes,
blind hems etc .• $43.25 cash
~~~-~efts available.
8-11 -61c

=..,.,:-=::-:-=::::::--::-":-:

Wanted To Buy

8-5-6lc APPLES Peaches, Fitzpatrick
Orchard. Stale Route IHI.
Phone Wilkesville 669-3785.
8-1 -10tc

ANTIQUES, telephoi"les, brass

197 1 HONDA 5crambter 175,
beds . clocks, dishes, old excellent condition , S675.
furniture , etc. Write M. D.
Miller. R1. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 992-5323.

can 992-6271.

8-~6tp

7-9-Hc

- -- - - - - - -

- -- - - -

DASHCHUND pUppies, $40
GINSENG $2.17 oz., SJ5 lb.; ea~e Athens 592-1555 or
snake roo I $S lb., Golden Seal, 593..
$1.90 lb. ; Wahoo -Root bark S2
8-6-6tp
lb. Bill Bailey. Reedsville,
--Second Sl.
Shepherd pups. 8
8-8-tOte ENGLISH
weeks old . Waid Smith,
Darwin. Ol io.

For Sale

8-10-3tp

MODERN WALNUT stereo, 3 ROOM APARTMENT WITH
BATH, FURNISHED, AIR
AM-FM radio features 4CONDITIONED, WATER
speed record changer, 4
PROVIDED. LOCATED AT
speakers, separate controls.
516
S. 4TH. PHONE 992-2053.
Balance $62 .89 . Use our
8-I0-3tc
_:__:
budget terms. Calf 992-7085.
8-8-6tc
CANNING lomaloes, already
picked, $1.25 bu ., bring
SINGER, zig zag sewing

_____

----~---

machine, n;eeds no cam!., all

buil f ·ln features ; makes
buttonholes. monograms,

con1ainers .

Geraldine

Cleland, East Main. Racine.
7-28-llc

tancvdes iqns, etc. Pay $49.78.
Use our budget terms. can
992-7015.
8-8-6tc

..

For Sale

'!6" X 23n X..OD9 .

1Z' · 14 24' · WIDE
1

·Aluminum
Sheets
HAVE

.

...

2fr

lfodi .oO

The

Sentinel

Ill Court St.
P..-roy, 011i0

•

MIWR

MANY USES

Dai~

Here's the war it works ...
you get seven ice cream

BACKHOE AND OOZER work.
Septic tanks Installed. George
(BiUI Pullins, Phone 992-2.08.
4-25-llc

freezer. refrigerator or
combination.
UNI!:O 20FT. UPRIGHT

QUEEN and Shamblin Con-·
slruclion . Roofing,
remodeling, aluminum
siding. Phone 992-7324 or 742·

FREE (CE CREAM OFFER
bars. or a half.gallon of ice
cre~m,
FREE tor every
cubtc foot you buy In a Unico

FREEZER
a
Ut.U
With this one you get l-40 free
ice cream bars or 20 half
gallons ol FREE ice cream .

4'179.

~

"'

M~SummerS.Ie

8-4-121c

-=R-ea-:--,1E=-s-:ta.,te -=
F~
cir --::Sa..,.le-­

AND IDS FiuENns

S.ve Up To $200.00
OVer 10 Percent
HAWK'S :I-DAY
CYCLE SALE
2 milessou'"tll of Aillens, 0.
.
Rt. :13
Open Mon., Wod., Fri.
to a:m. lo I p.m. .

HM Yaiir Si

IGUI_ETl

-

.

/QUIET/

01!11

Air Con~ing ·
~and
Re-Charge
Special
AI

I

HE SERVED I-llS TIME.
I GAVt=: HIM $moo, A

6.98._Plus
Parts

NICE LECTURE -AND
SET HIM FREE-

Blaettnar'•
PHONE m -2143

If •
I

MlHNsON MASONRY
cOmpleteRemodeling
Kitchens, B•llls
Room Additions
And Patio)&gt;
Backhoe And
Endloador Work

-

. - ...

Septic T•nks
And LNch Beds.

742-4902
Roofintil&amp; Carpenter
'Work
Spouting. Roof .
_Painting
NEW&amp;OLD WORK
;
All WNther Roofing &amp; Con· !
struction Co. •nd Anthony :
Ptumbi119 &amp; Healinv.
Complete Plumbing, ·Heati119
.i.l!d. ~ir COnditioning.
240 Lincoln St. Middleport, 0.
Phone m-2550
Insured. Experienced
Work Gur•ranteect

toNvENtENT but secludea
POMEROY
building lots on T79 at Rock
J~cll W. C1rsey,. Mtr. 1
Phone tt2-2111
Springs. Within walking
d1stance of Meigs High C. BRADFORD, Aucttooeer) ,
School, a 5 minute drive from
cc,
$400.
1970 HONDA. 175
Complete Service
,
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
•
f'hone 992-5170.
Phone 949-3821
•
Wille weekends or alter S
8-8-51p
Racine. Ohio'
'
p.m
.
weekdays.
Phone
992-~---Crill Bradford,
6887.
5-1-lfc
.
HALF RUNNER beans, S2
7· 11 ·11c
bushel, pick your own .
Cucumbers and tomatoes . ~H"'ou=s"E,...,"'1"'64"'2,...,..L,...In-co"'i-n...,H,.,e"'l-ghls. AU-TOMOBILETnsuranc;t been
cancelled?
Lbsl" ' yi!IJt" "
Clarence_ ~f!ilt, Portland.
Call Danny Thompson, 992.
operator's
license?
Call 992- _
2196_
Phone s.o.
.
2966.
8-J-t5tc
7-18-tlc
~ 15-llc •
----------------.,.---'---~~...,.,"
COAL, limestone. Excelsior
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Salt Works. E. Main St.,.
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
Pomeroy. Phone 992 -389l.
'
662-3035.
•-9-ffc
2-12-tfc
16 FT. TRA17£L trai ....-, 5wiSS
·'
~WING MAC.HINES. R~palr
Colony, in good condition,
service, all makes, 992-2284, ~
SUl95. Phone 992-6329.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy . • ~
8-8-61c
608 East Main
Authorized Singer Sales and ,
POI,IEROY
Service. We Sharpen Scissors. ·
3-29-tfc
Auto
RUTLAND
NEW
·--. . ..storm doors and
ALUMINUM
SIDING , AWNINGS,
PL VMOUTH with 426 Heml·
STORM
DOORS
AND
engine, complete with clutch,
windows, carports,
WINDOWS, nice lot on quiet
~ - sjleed, front and rear cross
marquees, aluminum siding
street for kids . 1112 story
members. Phone Cheshire
and
railing . Call A. Jacob,
frame, 3 large bedrooms,
367-7379 after 6 p. m.
sales
representative. For free
8-10.3tc
~lh. about ''• acre, needs
phone Charles
estimates,
paper and paint inside, A
Syracuse.
V. V.
Lisle,
BUY AT JUST 16,900.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
F
S-27-tfc
ROUTE 124 - JUST OUT OF
tOWN . 3.33 acres level O' DELL WHEEL alignment
NEW, 3-bedroom home In ground, I story home, 3
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
NEW
bedrooms, bath,
Middleport. Buill-In kitchen,
Complete front end ser.vlce, :
ALUMINUM SIDING, NEW
ceramic tile bath, all-electric
tune up and brake service.
GAS FORCED-AIR FURheal' good neighborhood. Can
Wheels b11tanced elec.
NACE, (low ga_s bills) , 2 other
arrange FHA financing .
Ironically . · Ali
work ·,
Telephone 992-3600 or 992· buildings, MEIGS SCHOOL
guaranteed .
Reasonable .1
DISTRICT. JUST $15,900.
2186.
rates. Phone 992-3213.
'
7-25-llc
.,
7-27-tfc
POMEROY - 1 story frame, 3
bedrooms , bath, garage, ROOF' pairiilng &amp; minor roof
basement, needs paint and
repair. Phone 992-2239.
paper for A DO-IT YOUR3 BEDROOM brick home.
8·10.61c
· Choice location in Middleport.' SELFER. GREAT BUY AT
'
Seen by appointment only. $5,500.
READY -MIX
CONCRETE ~
Phone 992-5523 after 4 p.m. PLACE THE SALE OF YOUR
delivered right to your ~
PROPERTY IN GOOD
S-7-tfc
project. Fast and easy. Free '·
.HANDS
estimates . Phone 992-3284. ··
HENRY CLELAND
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co., .:
REALTOR
Middleport, Ohio.
••
Office m -2259
6 ROOM house on 60x100 lot.
6--30-tfC' ' ;
Residence 992·2568
Also. 10-room house. Phone
8-11-61c PAPER HAIHiiNG , Interior
992-5786.
and exterior painting . Phone
8-6·61c
m-3630.
- -- - - -- 7-13-JO!p
MIDDLEPORT - 5 room brick
O' BRIE.N ELECTRIC SERhome with bath, paneling and
VICE. Phone 949-4551.
•.
wall to wall carpeting. Phone
S-JO.IIc ).
992-2540 or 992-346.1.
8-6-7tc
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph. -446-4782,
Gallipolis . John · Russell,
SIX ROOM house, bath, full
IIi ke C..ner &amp;~rator .
basemen I,, 133 Bullernul Ave.,
110 Mech:ni; Sf t
5-13-tfc
;usl walkmg dos_lance from
l'l!meroy Ohro"
downtown Pomeroy. Contact
'
Ed Hedrick, 2137 Wadsworth $8,000.00- 6 rooms, nice bath, NEIGLER Construction. For
Oriv~. Cotumbus;·Ohio, phone
furnace. Garage. Minersville
building or remodeling your · :
home. Call Guy Nelgler,
237-4334, Columbus.
- NEW LISTING
Racine, Ohio.
-----------------~5-~9-~ll~c $25,000.00 BUSINESS
7-~ 1_-tfc
TRAILER LOT lor sale, SSOO. building with 3 rentals.
Rutland St .. Middleport, Oh1o.
RALPH ' S CARPET - Up- ',
Will hold 6-4&gt;&lt;12 trailer. can $20,000.00-3 bedrooms. steam
holstery Cleaning Service.
992-5310.
8- 11 -61
hea.l , 1'12 baths, nice kitchen.
Free estimates . Phone :·
P Garage. POMEROY
:·
Gallipolis -446-0294.
J-12-lfc
DUPLEX HOME, 6 rooms and $12,000.00 - 3 bedrooms, bath',
bath. Apartmef)l, 3 rooms and new kitchen. Gas furnace. HARRISON'S TV AND AN TENNA SERVICE. Phone ··
bath. Private entrances. Ideal POMEROY
992-2522.
..
lor family with extra rental or
~10-llc
i
investment propertT. Priced $21,000.00 - 3 bedrooms, ~lh,
lor quick sale. (at 992-2431 furnace . Beautiful inside.
•
aller s p.m.
Basement. POMEROY
t
8-11-12tc
$12,000.00 - 3 or 4 bedrooms,
NOTICE OF
:
~lh, furnace . Modern kitAPPOINTMENT
'
chen. SYRACUSE
C111 No. 20532 :

rr.

'

Thank l.jOU! 1 think

I¥JI.f broke m~ arm!

8-11

'•IIJ;
.til. ...

•"""&lt;&gt;

~ 1,~- THE II()_;;;.RN:.:....::l..OSE=;;.;.R- - - - - - - .

Deland

0

•

Realty

Sales

,•

~

TRAILER LOTS, BOb's Nlobile A GOOD BUY - give it a try.
Court, Rt . 124, Syracuse,
Blue
Luslre America s
favorite car-pet shampoo.
Ohio. 992-2951.
Baker Furniture Company.
4-2-tfc
8-11-61c
_5_ R_O_O_M_S_a_n_d_b_a-th-,-g-ood - - - -- condition . For more in- TWO BEDROOM and bath,
formation call 992-7128 before slorm windows and doorS,
upstairs partially finished ,
2 p.m. and afler 5 p.m.
full
basement, front porch
8-ll -lfc
.
and palio. Phone alter 4 p.m.
992-3370.
.
4 ROOMS and bath, unlumished
house, 1650 Lincoln Hts . - - - - - - - 8-11-3tc
Phone 992-3874.
16
FT.
TAGALONG
travel
8-11-tfc
frailer, fully self contained.
Ready to go. $1500. Phone 7735651 . Mason, W. Va .
TRAILER. Brown' s Trailer
7-23-llc
Park, Minersville, phone 9923324.

••

house, built-In kitchen, all ROSEBERRY Furnace Inelectric. garage, city water.
stallalion. Free estimates on
Tuppers Plains, Phone 667362
new furnaces, oW or gas..
~8-10-Jfc
Service work. Call Cecil
Roseberry, Racine, Ohio.
Phone 614-843,2274.
7-22-JOfc

~ . FREEZE~.~

'I'
•
,.••
'

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
.
SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING

,,'

.•'

and moving into a mobile

home so will sell the following
-household: 11ft. Signature

11. ...

·-- On Ali Models

OFFIC£ SUPPUES

FETCH TH' STICK,
0~ BULlET

,'

-..J.I.

..

" '

Pomeroy

Stop In and See Our

,. ~

EXPERIENCED.
Radiator Senice

Female Help

I WILL not be responsible for - - -- - Wanted
any debts contracted by
anyone other than myself. HOUSEKEEPER to live in.
Jack Ward, Rl. 2, Pomeroy.
R1
eel
8-11-6tp
e erences requir . Write
Box 729- F in care The Daily
GUN SHOOT, Forked Run
Sentinel, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Sportsman Club, Sunday, . .----'~~--.....::8-8~-6+!t
Aug. 15, 12 noon.
8-11-Jic

- -- -- -

HOME&amp; AUTO

For Sale

any other commitments. No

YARD SALE, corner 5th and
Main, Middleport, Saturday,
August 1&lt;.
8-11-Jip

8·11 -3tp

POMEROY

528, 2507 N~ Verity Pkwy., ---rf-.....,.----Middletown, . Ohio 45042. APACH
camping trailer .
Phone 992-2418.
Phone 513-42~1.
FENDER PA system, -almost
8-11-21c
8-11-61p
hkenew. $500. Phone 949-345.
------------------------8-10-Jic
ianted
GE 15 cu. ft. upright freezer.
Phone 992-2550
Very good condition. Phone
Insured. Experienced
ONE STOKERMATIC stove.
HOUSEWIVES, evenings free?
742-3773.
8-11-61c
one Stilh chain saw, 18", one
Work Guaranteed
Earn 25 per cent demon8x3S trailer with tipout. Phone · See - - us- for -- Free
strating toys and gills with
992-3954.
the highest paying party plan. AUCTION, Saturday, Aug. 14 at
8-1D-3tc
Estimate on Furnace
Compare our program and 12:30 p.m. at Tuppers Plains,
color catalog before making Ohio. I have sold my house _2_A
_C_R_E_S-.-~-r-oom---an-d--~th ~l~ns~t~a~la~t~io~"~·-----~

USED OFFSET PLATES
ITEM: Morning . A
tzestful lime for some
people. DOuble dismal
for others. Jim Mees
somellow gels -us all
together every day.

lotor ·Co.

,-

18 cents per word six consecutive insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp;OBITUARY
I
$1.50 for 50 word minimum.
liach additional word 2c.
BLIIW ADS
OP.EM EVES.I:OO P.M.
Additional 25c Charge per
-'f'CIIIEROY, 01110
Advertisement.
OFFICE HOURS
. 8:30a.m. lo 5:00p.m. Daily,
8:30 a .m. to 12:00 Noon·
Saturday.
TRUCKDRIVING-Tral~now VITO B FLAT clarinet in good
to be a semi driver. Local or condition, $75. Phone 985-3573.
long distance. Specialized _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _B-_1Htc

8-11 -llc
- -- - - -----,
SAVE UP to one hall. Bring
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.
•
aeronautics of the House In·
&lt;1-23-llc
·ters~luxlFore~Co!ivnei.l" ·
~
•
Corruilitiee' opene(fhearings on MEIGS"SENIORS tall Gro~er's
th
b' t f
Studio now . Make ape su Jec o permanen1 pointment for your senior
legislation to settle Iranportraits to be taken during
sportation labor disputes. A week of August 23rd. Save 10
long list of witnesses are yet to
:'.lercen~:~~5.01 your
8- 4- lotc
be heard . When the Comnu'ttee
will conclude its hearings and
GROVER'S STUDIO will be
when, if at all, the Congress will
closed for vacation Aug. 16th
lake final action on this im·
thru 22nd. Visit our booth at
portant
remedial
labor
the Meigs County Fair.
legislation is difficult to
8- 10-lOtc
determine.
WILL DO babysitling in my
The possibility exists, that, in
home lor pre-school cllildren,
experienced. Mrs. Glenn
the absence of up-to-date
Smith, &lt;Pock Springs Road.
permanent legislation to deal
cau 992-6187.
with national transportation
8-11)-6tc
strikes the counlrywill face still KOSCOT Kosmetics, July another catastrophic disruption
August special, Kare Konof commerce.
dition oil ss. Value now only
The remarks of Labor
$2 .50. Distributors. Brown's,
phone 992 ·5113·
Secretary ' James Hodgson
7-4-tfc
made in mid-July before the - - - - - - . . . . , - American Bar Association GUN Shoot, Sunday, A(;Yust 15,
1 p.m., Racine Gun C~~0. tc
could hardly he more timely:
5
'~Out of all this," he said, "we
draw three conclusions. The
public will no longer tolerate
2 REG !STEREO Heoelord
national emergencies caused by
bulls. Will sell or trade lor
hay. Phone 949-21114.
labor disputes. Bargainers no
8-11-Jip
longer fear Congressional
action as they once did, so
~--------therefore more and more 1 • •your phon~ wi 11 j in&amp;l•l
disputes will end up in the lap of I •• cuh r••ulu•. too.· eent
Congress. Congress thus had a I JOU phce an action lant 1
Ad. Tou ctn aell furniture,
choice of equipping itself to get I ~ppl ian.c••· doth••· •• do· I
heavily into the labor dispute l••n• of other u•n•••• but I
I
setUing business or it must I ua.r"' ,,.•• !
enact some legislation to
forestall assumption of this
unwanted burden."
I feel it is incumbent upon the
Congress to address itself to the
obvious deficiencies in the
present Railway-Labor Act and
give the President new options
by which he can induce
bargaining between the parties
and fesolve the outstanding ·
issues separating them. I will
support meaningful permanent
legislation which will preclude
the necessity of Congressional
Intervention in transportation
disputes and stimulate the
resolution of issues through the
collective bargaining process.

New Haven

2 SillS
Of

.

'

MOBiLE HOMES
1220 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Ollio

COLONIAL style stereo, AMFM radio, 4 speakers, •-speed
record changer . Balance
$13.99. Use our budget terms.
(all 922-7085.
_ _ __ _ __ _8_-8-6tc
:
1968 HOI!IDA 125 S.crambler,
like new. All accessories.
including hel~el ; 5,600 aclual
miles .. Phone 992-7175.
_ _ _ _ _ _ __:8-~10-3tc

1

'I

f

••i

.

Real Estate qr Sale

CROSSWORD

SR.

LEGAL NOTICE

HOBSTETTEI

I&gt;'UU&lt;.'"'•

"'""1."0

lp~~;~~~~~~lr~~~~~£~~~o·

Estate

of

CHARLES

______

•

ITs FOR

NN-ENE
l

4. Affect

"o!AIUER A PRIYATIE
11'1.-1. I WANT TO DROP
'rniS FROM TilE AIR."

G. ~~late
(2wds.)
Mt
tlonecta-

Yl!lltenla,J•a Ceyp~: VACATION: CAR, CAJO:RA
CREDIT CARD AND CIDJ,D'UrN '11U.\IJ:LING
POINT A TO POINT B.-GAJI.Y B. WRIGHT

FROM

20. Actor,
Stephen

&lt;C 1171 Ktq

--h2.. Chester·
,...

bu111t,
as
need
of
13. Auto device
laughter
(2 wds.)
24. Nose
17. Nettle
dive .
18. Pral.oe
26. .\coustlc
19. Comedian,
organ
30. 200 mllllJohnson
grams
portiOn
9. Golfing

(2wds.)

H.Corrlda
shout
Golf score

16. Skating
enclosure
18. Place for
expertmenta
2I.Homeot

THE RIJ55!AII SUJ COIJlP HAVE
5tlflf.-cfl&gt; tl 5.41&gt; WfAlltfK,
.._.YR Tllf SAME ~UZZAKP
tHAT 1&gt;11&gt; 11?11 tl, IJEI&gt;fliA,

(2wds.)
27. Roll Of

~~jt~~IJI055()M·C::'T AVOIP

31. Withered
33. ''Bonanza'

I

character
M.Engllsh

queen
36. C&amp;p style
36. Color
~

38. Still

I I

I~"-~A
r1
I I I t.r..u.w.... ••·•
~~~~-u lul.,doe....,.wa

cloth
28.Foniged
29. "Summer"
In Dljon

!_,.. .. _

~mple

35. Steinbeck
novelette
(3wds.)

39. Etnanatlon
40.French
river
U . Convene
42. Beginning

DOWN
1. Adap

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here'a how to work It:
AXYDLBAAX&amp;
Ia . LONGFELLOW
One let~r simply stands Cor another. In this sample A I•
used for the three L's, X to.- the two 0'8, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of tho words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
A Crypto,nm Quo-

W B 0

XOTF

I
f

TBO

HL

WTZOP

N. . . . J U.dl

...

1

T L

HK

LK

QKFR

H SK L 0

NOOI

WKZHKF

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HSOX .

Kf/
RK

LO·
F K H

WSTDZOL

II

eo

8

[IIHlU]
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YeeterMJ'•

FKFO

...

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• L-lJJHER ""~

32.Sblnto

w:-:•

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S7. Philippine

30. Sandburg
31. Egyptian
cotton

•

C' ,_,,....

rorm rour ordinal')' wor4a.

· Norse
deltlea
24. Rootstock

25. Fictional
horae

hic.l

~ethelefourJe-'11' .
letUr to _., to

clan Of note
a
7. Opening
coin
II. Obetlnate 23. OUt·

ton's '"lbe

lP'-rea.S;,.~tcate.

c1Jt1JWIB~;-"-~u

reciprocally 21. French
5. Teamster's
priest
command 22. Place
6. Pecllatrt·for

Ballad of
the - -"

.

.~
$2,500.00 - CNer 2 acres on 33. RADFORD, Jr., Deceased
Notice is henby glvtn · that :
GEORGE HOBSTETTER,
All utilities available.
Emma C. Radford, of Pomeroy, :•
Bn*er
·
Ohio, hos been duty appointed I
100 ACRES land, plenty of $2.50C).OO - I acre, old house, 5 Admin istratrix of thr Estate on·
Charles W. Radford. Jr., t
water, 80 acres timber. good rooms.
de~eased,late of MeigS Cou~ty , 1
location. a very good buy at
•
$25,000.00 - Lot at Cheshire OhiO.
$10,000.
Cr-editors are required to file 1
wilh
vacant
service
station
on
-.
t~elr claims with said tidut;lary I
1 LOT suitable tor trailer in ·RI.-. 7
w1thln four months..
)
Racine area. Very good
Oaled this 30th doy of' July
HAVIN\7 TROUBLE SELLING 1911.
location. s1.100.
OR BUYING, TRY US NOW.
John C~ Bacon
Hilton Wolfe, Sa~m•n
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Probate Judge
. Phone 949-3211 .
of Slid County
ASSOCIATE
R•cine, Ohio
(8) . , 11, 11,31
m.ms
8-11-3tc
.. __

2. Roman
emperor
3. Seethe

ACROSS
1. Ferber
novel

Virgil B.

TEAFORD

a

~
'j

J_.t.., - T IIMJIO YAIIIIH - . t Y

•••,

�'·

-. '

•
IJ-Tile DIIIIJa&lt; 'iM, MJ'Irtlarf,p

I

Ofo 0,, Aal,lJ,IJ'Il

.

•
,.

&gt;

ID The Sentinel Oassifieds
,.••,., ·Busfu_ess Services,~ ·;.__..

Bargains; Bargains and More Bargains
.

.

.

r---~-----------~----------, ·

Washington
By
Report

Clarence

Miller .

The recently settled 18-day
railroad strike placed a severe
strsin oothe natioo's economy.
'J'Itis time, unlike siqillar oc·
casions in the past 8 months in
wiUch Congress enacted temporary eleventh hour setUements, the strike
settled
without Congressional in·
tervention. Negotiators announced last Mooday that a
contract settlement providing
for a t2 pet. wage increase over
a 42 month period had been
reached between the 10 struck
railroads and the United
Transportatioo Union.
Final settlement came alter a
17--hour marathon bargaining
oession in Washington and only
four days before the start of the
Congressional races. After the
Supreme Court recently af.
finned the start of railroad
unions to strike selectively, the
UTU struck rail lines at dif.
ferent intervals in time rather
than in one, mass work stoppage.
In fact, when the strike
threatened to push into the
Congressional recess period, I
was one of only 41 House
members wbo voted against a
"""""'feeling that with such an
important
issue
before
Congress we could not simply
put off our responsibilities to the
American people.
Because the &amp;tpreme Court's
ruling impceed no effective
limits on selective strikes, the
recent strike halted rail shippiag in to slates, idled :rl pet. of
the nation's railworkers and
closed. more than to pel of
America's rail lliileage. Neardisaster conditions had already
beset a n~ber of industries
greatly dependent upon rail
service. Produce and farm
products, with no where to go
were being plowed under or

was

~nter

"...,, .. , ::;:.• .,......._
•
•, .... • ' .·.
j"~'·"'"
~

1 1:~ . .

.

--

News, Event
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kalb,
Minneapolis, Minn., are
spending some time here with
Mrs. Kalb's brother-in-law and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. William
Thomas.
Vina Rutherford, Columbus,
visited with her mother, Faye
Jordan, .and other relatives in
the area.
Mr. and Mrs. Emzie bavis,
Parkersburg, were guests of
Mrs. Davis' brothers, W. C. and
Paul Peck.
Mr. and Mrs. Austin Weyand,
former residents of this community, attended Sunday School
and church al Temple United
Methodist Church on Sunday
morning. and visited with
friends. The Weyands were in
the vicinity to attend the Stout
reunion which was held at the
lwme of Mrs. C. E. Stout,

Albany.
Druzilla Woodrwn, Albany,
was a caller on Sunday af.
temoon at the Ney Carpenter

home.
Mr. and Mrs. Waid JefferS
and family, London, visited his
grandmother, Mrs. Frank Boho
and other relatives here.
Bertie Tackett and niece,
F1atwoods, Ky., are spending a
few days with her sister, Mrs.
William Culvell.
Mrs. Mella Fisher is visiting
her brother and sister-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffers.
Mrs. Mary .Staneart Patterson and children of near
Washington, D. C., vacationed
at the home of her mother, Mrs.
C. E. Staneart.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
were in Columbus where he
attepded.the monthly meetings
for directors of his insurance
company. They called on his
sister, Mrs. Jessie Jewell,
Columbus, and visited their
daughter, Mrs. Wanda Jones
and family, Nelsonville,
enroute.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Mosier,
Cecil, Ohio, were guests of her
grandmother, Mrs. Murl
Galaway and other relatives' in
the area,

I
I
I
I

I

l
I
I
I
I

were left rotting in crates.
Poullry was near starvation in
the Southeast and Appalachia
coal mines were being shut
down throughout a four-fllate
region,
.
It has been my view that the
Congress of the United States is
not the ·appropriate place to
reSOlVe iSSUeS in a labor
dispute. The Congress is not in a
position to legislate prowty in
these circumstances. Many
times, however, the Congress
has little choice but to becollie
involved because of the
overriding obligation to protect
the public interest. At best,
Congressional interventioo is a
stopgap and only postpones a
resolution of the issues involved.
Four times -in 1963, in 1967
and twice last year - Congress
was called upon to enact special
legislation dealing with a
railroad strike. Congressional
leader-S·point out that Congress
became involved in these cases
because existing · federal
statutes are deficient in dealing
with such strikes - strikes
which will cause severe
economic hardship and will
adversely affect the public
welfare. The deficiencies in the
Railway Labor Act and the
Taft-Hartley Act have long been
a basis of controversy.
fn a Special Message to the
9lst Congress, President Nixon
made a specific recommendation "to repair the
deficiencies
of
existing
legislation and to better protect
the public against the daniaging
effects of work stoppages in the
transportation induslry!' The
recommendation was ignored.
President Nixon renewed his
recommendation to the 91Jid
Congress, but it was not until
late July - during the most
critical days of the latest rail
strike - that the subconunittee
on
transportation
and

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Belor~ Publication
Monday Deadline9,.m.
.. Can__geiJ.tfon &amp;Cor~!l!n~ - ,
Will be ~led until9 a.m. for
Day of Publication
•
REGULATIONS
The Publisher · reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed objection~_•.... The
publisher will not be r"""""slble
for more than CX'Ie incorrect:

inse.rtion.

RATES
For W~nl AIJ Service

ScentsperWotdoneinserlion .
Minimum Charge 75c

,

12 cents per worq three.
consec•rtive insertions.

QUALifY.

1970 CHEVROLET MONTE
Beautiful Gobi Beige color with blli. vinyl roof, factory air
a&gt;ndllioning, tinted glass, black nylon bucket seals,
a&gt;nsol~, Poslfradion axle, Gt cu. in. engine, Turbo
Hydromalic, power steering, power disc brakes, radio &amp;
r. 5eat ·speaker, bumper guards &amp; Rally Wheels, undersea!. Save, Save. Balance of warranty.
lJU BUICK WILDCAT CPE.
$1195
Automatic trans., power steering &amp; brakes, good w-w
!ires, radio, ~ater, white finish. clean interior. Reg. price
$1395.00. Spectal.
·
t967FORD LTD
.
$1595
4 Door Sedan, power steering &amp; brakes, vinyl interior, blk.
vinyl roof, maroon finish, radio.. neww w-w tires, V~B with
automatic fra~s. &amp; factor}: aiL~_ili"!"ing - Special

Piiierly MOtor Co. W1\.
~

Educatilnal

Card of Thanks

steel

WE WISH to extend our sincere
thanks to Or. Blazewicz and
Daisy,

White's

Funeral

Home, the Rev. Eldon Blake
for his consoling words, all
relatives,

neighbors

and

friends and our dear friend,
Grace Louden, for all the
food, flowers and cards and
all those who helped in any
way during the illness and
death of our Dad and
husband. The Guy Hayman
Family.
8-11-llp

Notice

hauling

For Sale

training

available. New classes SOFA BED and matching chair,
weekly. Train in Middleport, $50. Phone 992~ alter 5
Ohio. call or write, ,Tri-State p.m.
Driver Training~ Inc., Box

experience, no investmentcar necessary. call 949-3233
or write Toy Ladies Party
Plan, Johnstown. Pa. 15902.
8-10.3tp

Help

GARAGE sale, Friday and
Saturday at Llwrence Eblin.
Llurel Oiff.
8-11-Jic

- -- - - -

YARD SALE, Thursday and
Friday ,

Charles

Spires ·

residence, Main St., Rulland,
Ohio.

For Sale or Trade

...

---.

L-------------1

WMP0/-1390

992-2094

606 E. Main

And

FURNITURE
Floor Display.

EXPERT
~ment

-? ~
-G~ARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open I Tits

Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

From the Largest Truck or
Bulld9zei' Radiator. to the
Smalle5t Healer Core.

BlAETTNARS
--- -

- -Ph. m-2143

Pomeroy

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Roofing &amp;
construction Co.' and Anthony Plumbing &amp; Heating.
Complete
Plumbing,
Healing and Air Condilio!ling.
240 Lincoln St., Middleport

SENTINEL
CARRIER
WANTED IN
NEW ttAVEN

fr-eezer, ice·maker no-frost

refrigerator ,

Frigidaire

electric range, Tappan gas
range, double bed and pair
twin beds, complete, one
davno bed, two living room
cha irs. room divider, desk
and chair, modern dresser.

pole and desk lamps, coffee
.a nd end tables, sewing cart,
two rinse tubs and stand, bath
tub, utility cabinet. Antiques:
old beds, three dressers, three
stands, very old piano, record

cabinet, round table. six

chairs and bullet, trunks,
wicker set, old floor lamps,
clock, books and dishes .
Miscellaneous, folk guitar,
sump pump, pair reclining
seats tor Rambler, Ward's
chain saw, like new. Many
other items too numerous to
mention. Nol responsible for

and

.HARTFORD
Phone 992-2156

' - - , - - - - - - ---..u

EARN AT home addressing
envelopes. Rush .slamjled
sell-addressed envelope. The
Ambrose eo., 4325 Lakebom,
Davisburg , Mich. 48019.
8-1-JO!p
- - - - -- -- -

For Rent

2 BEDROOM mob lie horne WI'th
air conditioning in Racine
area. Phone 992-6329.
8-10-5tc
FURNISHED and unfurnished
?t,";';:'~t-~~lose 10 school..
lG-18-tfc

accidents or loss of property.
Lunch served. Dorset Miller,
owner, I. 0 . (Macl McCoy,
auctioneer.
8-11 -31c
- - - - - - -- FIVE Keystone custom wheels
with spmners and lug nuts fils
;:" 14 .;~·· s~ 1 ~~~bi~~ ~j'
.p.,
m
•
· 1hg ·
monlh old puppy, has s ots
free. Phone 992-7376.
________ 8_.1J.Jfc
TWIN
NEEDLE
sewing
machine 1971 model in new
walnut stand. All features
buill -in to make fancy
desiqns . Also buttonholes,
blind hems etc .• $43.25 cash
~~~-~efts available.
8-11 -61c

=..,.,:-=::-:-=::::::--::-":-:

Wanted To Buy

8-5-6lc APPLES Peaches, Fitzpatrick
Orchard. Stale Route IHI.
Phone Wilkesville 669-3785.
8-1 -10tc

ANTIQUES, telephoi"les, brass

197 1 HONDA 5crambter 175,
beds . clocks, dishes, old excellent condition , S675.
furniture , etc. Write M. D.
Miller. R1. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 992-5323.

can 992-6271.

8-~6tp

7-9-Hc

- -- - - - - - -

- -- - - -

DASHCHUND pUppies, $40
GINSENG $2.17 oz., SJ5 lb.; ea~e Athens 592-1555 or
snake roo I $S lb., Golden Seal, 593..
$1.90 lb. ; Wahoo -Root bark S2
8-6-6tp
lb. Bill Bailey. Reedsville,
--Second Sl.
Shepherd pups. 8
8-8-tOte ENGLISH
weeks old . Waid Smith,
Darwin. Ol io.

For Sale

8-10-3tp

MODERN WALNUT stereo, 3 ROOM APARTMENT WITH
BATH, FURNISHED, AIR
AM-FM radio features 4CONDITIONED, WATER
speed record changer, 4
PROVIDED. LOCATED AT
speakers, separate controls.
516
S. 4TH. PHONE 992-2053.
Balance $62 .89 . Use our
8-I0-3tc
_:__:
budget terms. Calf 992-7085.
8-8-6tc
CANNING lomaloes, already
picked, $1.25 bu ., bring
SINGER, zig zag sewing

_____

----~---

machine, n;eeds no cam!., all

buil f ·ln features ; makes
buttonholes. monograms,

con1ainers .

Geraldine

Cleland, East Main. Racine.
7-28-llc

tancvdes iqns, etc. Pay $49.78.
Use our budget terms. can
992-7015.
8-8-6tc

..

For Sale

'!6" X 23n X..OD9 .

1Z' · 14 24' · WIDE
1

·Aluminum
Sheets
HAVE

.

...

2fr

lfodi .oO

The

Sentinel

Ill Court St.
P..-roy, 011i0

•

MIWR

MANY USES

Dai~

Here's the war it works ...
you get seven ice cream

BACKHOE AND OOZER work.
Septic tanks Installed. George
(BiUI Pullins, Phone 992-2.08.
4-25-llc

freezer. refrigerator or
combination.
UNI!:O 20FT. UPRIGHT

QUEEN and Shamblin Con-·
slruclion . Roofing,
remodeling, aluminum
siding. Phone 992-7324 or 742·

FREE (CE CREAM OFFER
bars. or a half.gallon of ice
cre~m,
FREE tor every
cubtc foot you buy In a Unico

FREEZER
a
Ut.U
With this one you get l-40 free
ice cream bars or 20 half
gallons ol FREE ice cream .

4'179.

~

"'

M~SummerS.Ie

8-4-121c

-=R-ea-:--,1E=-s-:ta.,te -=
F~
cir --::Sa..,.le-­

AND IDS FiuENns

S.ve Up To $200.00
OVer 10 Percent
HAWK'S :I-DAY
CYCLE SALE
2 milessou'"tll of Aillens, 0.
.
Rt. :13
Open Mon., Wod., Fri.
to a:m. lo I p.m. .

HM Yaiir Si

IGUI_ETl

-

.

/QUIET/

01!11

Air Con~ing ·
~and
Re-Charge
Special
AI

I

HE SERVED I-llS TIME.
I GAVt=: HIM $moo, A

6.98._Plus
Parts

NICE LECTURE -AND
SET HIM FREE-

Blaettnar'•
PHONE m -2143

If •
I

MlHNsON MASONRY
cOmpleteRemodeling
Kitchens, B•llls
Room Additions
And Patio)&gt;
Backhoe And
Endloador Work

-

. - ...

Septic T•nks
And LNch Beds.

742-4902
Roofintil&amp; Carpenter
'Work
Spouting. Roof .
_Painting
NEW&amp;OLD WORK
;
All WNther Roofing &amp; Con· !
struction Co. •nd Anthony :
Ptumbi119 &amp; Healinv.
Complete Plumbing, ·Heati119
.i.l!d. ~ir COnditioning.
240 Lincoln St. Middleport, 0.
Phone m-2550
Insured. Experienced
Work Gur•ranteect

toNvENtENT but secludea
POMEROY
building lots on T79 at Rock
J~cll W. C1rsey,. Mtr. 1
Phone tt2-2111
Springs. Within walking
d1stance of Meigs High C. BRADFORD, Aucttooeer) ,
School, a 5 minute drive from
cc,
$400.
1970 HONDA. 175
Complete Service
,
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
•
f'hone 992-5170.
Phone 949-3821
•
Wille weekends or alter S
8-8-51p
Racine. Ohio'
'
p.m
.
weekdays.
Phone
992-~---Crill Bradford,
6887.
5-1-lfc
.
HALF RUNNER beans, S2
7· 11 ·11c
bushel, pick your own .
Cucumbers and tomatoes . ~H"'ou=s"E,...,"'1"'64"'2,...,..L,...In-co"'i-n...,H,.,e"'l-ghls. AU-TOMOBILETnsuranc;t been
cancelled?
Lbsl" ' yi!IJt" "
Clarence_ ~f!ilt, Portland.
Call Danny Thompson, 992.
operator's
license?
Call 992- _
2196_
Phone s.o.
.
2966.
8-J-t5tc
7-18-tlc
~ 15-llc •
----------------.,.---'---~~...,.,"
COAL, limestone. Excelsior
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Salt Works. E. Main St.,.
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
Pomeroy. Phone 992 -389l.
'
662-3035.
•-9-ffc
2-12-tfc
16 FT. TRA17£L trai ....-, 5wiSS
·'
~WING MAC.HINES. R~palr
Colony, in good condition,
service, all makes, 992-2284, ~
SUl95. Phone 992-6329.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy . • ~
8-8-61c
608 East Main
Authorized Singer Sales and ,
POI,IEROY
Service. We Sharpen Scissors. ·
3-29-tfc
Auto
RUTLAND
NEW
·--. . ..storm doors and
ALUMINUM
SIDING , AWNINGS,
PL VMOUTH with 426 Heml·
STORM
DOORS
AND
engine, complete with clutch,
windows, carports,
WINDOWS, nice lot on quiet
~ - sjleed, front and rear cross
marquees, aluminum siding
street for kids . 1112 story
members. Phone Cheshire
and
railing . Call A. Jacob,
frame, 3 large bedrooms,
367-7379 after 6 p. m.
sales
representative. For free
8-10.3tc
~lh. about ''• acre, needs
phone Charles
estimates,
paper and paint inside, A
Syracuse.
V. V.
Lisle,
BUY AT JUST 16,900.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
F
S-27-tfc
ROUTE 124 - JUST OUT OF
tOWN . 3.33 acres level O' DELL WHEEL alignment
NEW, 3-bedroom home In ground, I story home, 3
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
NEW
bedrooms, bath,
Middleport. Buill-In kitchen,
Complete front end ser.vlce, :
ALUMINUM SIDING, NEW
ceramic tile bath, all-electric
tune up and brake service.
GAS FORCED-AIR FURheal' good neighborhood. Can
Wheels b11tanced elec.
NACE, (low ga_s bills) , 2 other
arrange FHA financing .
Ironically . · Ali
work ·,
Telephone 992-3600 or 992· buildings, MEIGS SCHOOL
guaranteed .
Reasonable .1
DISTRICT. JUST $15,900.
2186.
rates. Phone 992-3213.
'
7-25-llc
.,
7-27-tfc
POMEROY - 1 story frame, 3
bedrooms , bath, garage, ROOF' pairiilng &amp; minor roof
basement, needs paint and
repair. Phone 992-2239.
paper for A DO-IT YOUR3 BEDROOM brick home.
8·10.61c
· Choice location in Middleport.' SELFER. GREAT BUY AT
'
Seen by appointment only. $5,500.
READY -MIX
CONCRETE ~
Phone 992-5523 after 4 p.m. PLACE THE SALE OF YOUR
delivered right to your ~
PROPERTY IN GOOD
S-7-tfc
project. Fast and easy. Free '·
.HANDS
estimates . Phone 992-3284. ··
HENRY CLELAND
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co., .:
REALTOR
Middleport, Ohio.
••
Office m -2259
6 ROOM house on 60x100 lot.
6--30-tfC' ' ;
Residence 992·2568
Also. 10-room house. Phone
8-11-61c PAPER HAIHiiNG , Interior
992-5786.
and exterior painting . Phone
8-6·61c
m-3630.
- -- - - -- 7-13-JO!p
MIDDLEPORT - 5 room brick
O' BRIE.N ELECTRIC SERhome with bath, paneling and
VICE. Phone 949-4551.
•.
wall to wall carpeting. Phone
S-JO.IIc ).
992-2540 or 992-346.1.
8-6-7tc
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph. -446-4782,
Gallipolis . John · Russell,
SIX ROOM house, bath, full
IIi ke C..ner &amp;~rator .
basemen I,, 133 Bullernul Ave.,
110 Mech:ni; Sf t
5-13-tfc
;usl walkmg dos_lance from
l'l!meroy Ohro"
downtown Pomeroy. Contact
'
Ed Hedrick, 2137 Wadsworth $8,000.00- 6 rooms, nice bath, NEIGLER Construction. For
Oriv~. Cotumbus;·Ohio, phone
furnace. Garage. Minersville
building or remodeling your · :
home. Call Guy Nelgler,
237-4334, Columbus.
- NEW LISTING
Racine, Ohio.
-----------------~5-~9-~ll~c $25,000.00 BUSINESS
7-~ 1_-tfc
TRAILER LOT lor sale, SSOO. building with 3 rentals.
Rutland St .. Middleport, Oh1o.
RALPH ' S CARPET - Up- ',
Will hold 6-4&gt;&lt;12 trailer. can $20,000.00-3 bedrooms. steam
holstery Cleaning Service.
992-5310.
8- 11 -61
hea.l , 1'12 baths, nice kitchen.
Free estimates . Phone :·
P Garage. POMEROY
:·
Gallipolis -446-0294.
J-12-lfc
DUPLEX HOME, 6 rooms and $12,000.00 - 3 bedrooms, bath',
bath. Apartmef)l, 3 rooms and new kitchen. Gas furnace. HARRISON'S TV AND AN TENNA SERVICE. Phone ··
bath. Private entrances. Ideal POMEROY
992-2522.
..
lor family with extra rental or
~10-llc
i
investment propertT. Priced $21,000.00 - 3 bedrooms, ~lh,
lor quick sale. (at 992-2431 furnace . Beautiful inside.
•
aller s p.m.
Basement. POMEROY
t
8-11-12tc
$12,000.00 - 3 or 4 bedrooms,
NOTICE OF
:
~lh, furnace . Modern kitAPPOINTMENT
'
chen. SYRACUSE
C111 No. 20532 :

rr.

'

Thank l.jOU! 1 think

I¥JI.f broke m~ arm!

8-11

'•IIJ;
.til. ...

•"""&lt;&gt;

~ 1,~- THE II()_;;;.RN:.:....::l..OSE=;;.;.R- - - - - - - .

Deland

0

•

Realty

Sales

,•

~

TRAILER LOTS, BOb's Nlobile A GOOD BUY - give it a try.
Court, Rt . 124, Syracuse,
Blue
Luslre America s
favorite car-pet shampoo.
Ohio. 992-2951.
Baker Furniture Company.
4-2-tfc
8-11-61c
_5_ R_O_O_M_S_a_n_d_b_a-th-,-g-ood - - - -- condition . For more in- TWO BEDROOM and bath,
formation call 992-7128 before slorm windows and doorS,
upstairs partially finished ,
2 p.m. and afler 5 p.m.
full
basement, front porch
8-ll -lfc
.
and palio. Phone alter 4 p.m.
992-3370.
.
4 ROOMS and bath, unlumished
house, 1650 Lincoln Hts . - - - - - - - 8-11-3tc
Phone 992-3874.
16
FT.
TAGALONG
travel
8-11-tfc
frailer, fully self contained.
Ready to go. $1500. Phone 7735651 . Mason, W. Va .
TRAILER. Brown' s Trailer
7-23-llc
Park, Minersville, phone 9923324.

••

house, built-In kitchen, all ROSEBERRY Furnace Inelectric. garage, city water.
stallalion. Free estimates on
Tuppers Plains, Phone 667362
new furnaces, oW or gas..
~8-10-Jfc
Service work. Call Cecil
Roseberry, Racine, Ohio.
Phone 614-843,2274.
7-22-JOfc

~ . FREEZE~.~

'I'
•
,.••
'

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
.
SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING

,,'

.•'

and moving into a mobile

home so will sell the following
-household: 11ft. Signature

11. ...

·-- On Ali Models

OFFIC£ SUPPUES

FETCH TH' STICK,
0~ BULlET

,'

-..J.I.

..

" '

Pomeroy

Stop In and See Our

,. ~

EXPERIENCED.
Radiator Senice

Female Help

I WILL not be responsible for - - -- - Wanted
any debts contracted by
anyone other than myself. HOUSEKEEPER to live in.
Jack Ward, Rl. 2, Pomeroy.
R1
eel
8-11-6tp
e erences requir . Write
Box 729- F in care The Daily
GUN SHOOT, Forked Run
Sentinel, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Sportsman Club, Sunday, . .----'~~--.....::8-8~-6+!t
Aug. 15, 12 noon.
8-11-Jic

- -- -- -

HOME&amp; AUTO

For Sale

any other commitments. No

YARD SALE, corner 5th and
Main, Middleport, Saturday,
August 1&lt;.
8-11-Jip

8·11 -3tp

POMEROY

528, 2507 N~ Verity Pkwy., ---rf-.....,.----Middletown, . Ohio 45042. APACH
camping trailer .
Phone 992-2418.
Phone 513-42~1.
FENDER PA system, -almost
8-11-21c
8-11-61p
hkenew. $500. Phone 949-345.
------------------------8-10-Jic
ianted
GE 15 cu. ft. upright freezer.
Phone 992-2550
Very good condition. Phone
Insured. Experienced
ONE STOKERMATIC stove.
HOUSEWIVES, evenings free?
742-3773.
8-11-61c
one Stilh chain saw, 18", one
Work Guaranteed
Earn 25 per cent demon8x3S trailer with tipout. Phone · See - - us- for -- Free
strating toys and gills with
992-3954.
the highest paying party plan. AUCTION, Saturday, Aug. 14 at
8-1D-3tc
Estimate on Furnace
Compare our program and 12:30 p.m. at Tuppers Plains,
color catalog before making Ohio. I have sold my house _2_A
_C_R_E_S-.-~-r-oom---an-d--~th ~l~ns~t~a~la~t~io~"~·-----~

USED OFFSET PLATES
ITEM: Morning . A
tzestful lime for some
people. DOuble dismal
for others. Jim Mees
somellow gels -us all
together every day.

lotor ·Co.

,-

18 cents per word six consecutive insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp;OBITUARY
I
$1.50 for 50 word minimum.
liach additional word 2c.
BLIIW ADS
OP.EM EVES.I:OO P.M.
Additional 25c Charge per
-'f'CIIIEROY, 01110
Advertisement.
OFFICE HOURS
. 8:30a.m. lo 5:00p.m. Daily,
8:30 a .m. to 12:00 Noon·
Saturday.
TRUCKDRIVING-Tral~now VITO B FLAT clarinet in good
to be a semi driver. Local or condition, $75. Phone 985-3573.
long distance. Specialized _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _B-_1Htc

8-11 -llc
- -- - - -----,
SAVE UP to one hall. Bring
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.
•
aeronautics of the House In·
&lt;1-23-llc
·ters~luxlFore~Co!ivnei.l" ·
~
•
Corruilitiee' opene(fhearings on MEIGS"SENIORS tall Gro~er's
th
b' t f
Studio now . Make ape su Jec o permanen1 pointment for your senior
legislation to settle Iranportraits to be taken during
sportation labor disputes. A week of August 23rd. Save 10
long list of witnesses are yet to
:'.lercen~:~~5.01 your
8- 4- lotc
be heard . When the Comnu'ttee
will conclude its hearings and
GROVER'S STUDIO will be
when, if at all, the Congress will
closed for vacation Aug. 16th
lake final action on this im·
thru 22nd. Visit our booth at
portant
remedial
labor
the Meigs County Fair.
legislation is difficult to
8- 10-lOtc
determine.
WILL DO babysitling in my
The possibility exists, that, in
home lor pre-school cllildren,
experienced. Mrs. Glenn
the absence of up-to-date
Smith, &lt;Pock Springs Road.
permanent legislation to deal
cau 992-6187.
with national transportation
8-11)-6tc
strikes the counlrywill face still KOSCOT Kosmetics, July another catastrophic disruption
August special, Kare Konof commerce.
dition oil ss. Value now only
The remarks of Labor
$2 .50. Distributors. Brown's,
phone 992 ·5113·
Secretary ' James Hodgson
7-4-tfc
made in mid-July before the - - - - - - . . . . , - American Bar Association GUN Shoot, Sunday, A(;Yust 15,
1 p.m., Racine Gun C~~0. tc
could hardly he more timely:
5
'~Out of all this," he said, "we
draw three conclusions. The
public will no longer tolerate
2 REG !STEREO Heoelord
national emergencies caused by
bulls. Will sell or trade lor
hay. Phone 949-21114.
labor disputes. Bargainers no
8-11-Jip
longer fear Congressional
action as they once did, so
~--------therefore more and more 1 • •your phon~ wi 11 j in&amp;l•l
disputes will end up in the lap of I •• cuh r••ulu•. too.· eent
Congress. Congress thus had a I JOU phce an action lant 1
Ad. Tou ctn aell furniture,
choice of equipping itself to get I ~ppl ian.c••· doth••· •• do· I
heavily into the labor dispute l••n• of other u•n•••• but I
I
setUing business or it must I ua.r"' ,,.•• !
enact some legislation to
forestall assumption of this
unwanted burden."
I feel it is incumbent upon the
Congress to address itself to the
obvious deficiencies in the
present Railway-Labor Act and
give the President new options
by which he can induce
bargaining between the parties
and fesolve the outstanding ·
issues separating them. I will
support meaningful permanent
legislation which will preclude
the necessity of Congressional
Intervention in transportation
disputes and stimulate the
resolution of issues through the
collective bargaining process.

New Haven

2 SillS
Of

.

'

MOBiLE HOMES
1220 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Ollio

COLONIAL style stereo, AMFM radio, 4 speakers, •-speed
record changer . Balance
$13.99. Use our budget terms.
(all 922-7085.
_ _ __ _ __ _8_-8-6tc
:
1968 HOI!IDA 125 S.crambler,
like new. All accessories.
including hel~el ; 5,600 aclual
miles .. Phone 992-7175.
_ _ _ _ _ _ __:8-~10-3tc

1

'I

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.

Real Estate qr Sale

CROSSWORD

SR.

LEGAL NOTICE

HOBSTETTEI

I&gt;'UU&lt;.'"'•

"'""1."0

lp~~;~~~~~~lr~~~~~£~~~o·

Estate

of

CHARLES

______

•

ITs FOR

NN-ENE
l

4. Affect

"o!AIUER A PRIYATIE
11'1.-1. I WANT TO DROP
'rniS FROM TilE AIR."

G. ~~late
(2wds.)
Mt
tlonecta-

Yl!lltenla,J•a Ceyp~: VACATION: CAR, CAJO:RA
CREDIT CARD AND CIDJ,D'UrN '11U.\IJ:LING
POINT A TO POINT B.-GAJI.Y B. WRIGHT

FROM

20. Actor,
Stephen

&lt;C 1171 Ktq

--h2.. Chester·
,...

bu111t,
as
need
of
13. Auto device
laughter
(2 wds.)
24. Nose
17. Nettle
dive .
18. Pral.oe
26. .\coustlc
19. Comedian,
organ
30. 200 mllllJohnson
grams
portiOn
9. Golfing

(2wds.)

H.Corrlda
shout
Golf score

16. Skating
enclosure
18. Place for
expertmenta
2I.Homeot

THE RIJ55!AII SUJ COIJlP HAVE
5tlflf.-cfl&gt; tl 5.41&gt; WfAlltfK,
.._.YR Tllf SAME ~UZZAKP
tHAT 1&gt;11&gt; 11?11 tl, IJEI&gt;fliA,

(2wds.)
27. Roll Of

~~jt~~IJI055()M·C::'T AVOIP

31. Withered
33. ''Bonanza'

I

character
M.Engllsh

queen
36. C&amp;p style
36. Color
~

38. Still

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cloth
28.Foniged
29. "Summer"
In Dljon

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~mple

35. Steinbeck
novelette
(3wds.)

39. Etnanatlon
40.French
river
U . Convene
42. Beginning

DOWN
1. Adap

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here'a how to work It:
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One let~r simply stands Cor another. In this sample A I•
used for the three L's, X to.- the two 0'8, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of tho words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
A Crypto,nm Quo-

W B 0

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25. Fictional
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reciprocally 21. French
5. Teamster's
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6. Pecllatrt·for

Ballad of
the - -"

.

.~
$2,500.00 - CNer 2 acres on 33. RADFORD, Jr., Deceased
Notice is henby glvtn · that :
GEORGE HOBSTETTER,
All utilities available.
Emma C. Radford, of Pomeroy, :•
Bn*er
·
Ohio, hos been duty appointed I
100 ACRES land, plenty of $2.50C).OO - I acre, old house, 5 Admin istratrix of thr Estate on·
Charles W. Radford. Jr., t
water, 80 acres timber. good rooms.
de~eased,late of MeigS Cou~ty , 1
location. a very good buy at
•
$25,000.00 - Lot at Cheshire OhiO.
$10,000.
Cr-editors are required to file 1
wilh
vacant
service
station
on
-.
t~elr claims with said tidut;lary I
1 LOT suitable tor trailer in ·RI.-. 7
w1thln four months..
)
Racine area. Very good
Oaled this 30th doy of' July
HAVIN\7 TROUBLE SELLING 1911.
location. s1.100.
OR BUYING, TRY US NOW.
John C~ Bacon
Hilton Wolfe, Sa~m•n
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Probate Judge
. Phone 949-3211 .
of Slid County
ASSOCIATE
R•cine, Ohio
(8) . , 11, 11,31
m.ms
8-11-3tc
.. __

2. Roman
emperor
3. Seethe

ACROSS
1. Ferber
novel

Virgil B.

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,,_ 'l1le Dailv Sentilloi. Middletlor~or. o., AUg. li,J971

•
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•

Delta Queen Bi~s for
Permanent Exemption
Two senatQrS from Ohio and designed to prevent sub· November 1 of last year.
one frum Pennsylvania offered standard foreign vessels from
on Aug. 6 new leRislalion (S. calling on U. S. ports . Since thai time the owners of
2470) to permanently exempt Recognizing
the
inap- the .Queen have .spent another
the river steamboat Delta propriateness of the deep draft $500,000 for restoration,
Queen from the 1966 Safety at legislation , the Congress repairs, renewal Blld safety
Sea Law.
delayed enacbnent .of the bill improvements. ThoUsands of
Senator Robert Taft (R- for twoyearssotheDelta Queen · fans have cheered the boat at
Ohio ),
sponsoring
the .owners could determine what each port stop this year and
legislation said, "By definition action could lie taken. An ad- letters pleading for a perand intent the Delta Queen !litional two year extension was manent exemption have
should never have been in- granted in 1968 which permitted conoinued to pout into
eluded in the Safety at Sea Law the Delta Queen to operate until Congressional offices.
to begin with. The Delta Queen
is a shallow draft vessel and its
ope~ation is_limited entir~ly to
the inland nvers - specif1caUy
· ·
· • • • I&lt;
the Mississippi and its
(Continued from Page I)
~~utaries.
.
·
fllree and one-half years ago liter a whirlwind campaign. He
IllS only a few mmutes from quickly became a potential candidate for governor of California
shore and never encounters the and even was talked of as a possible Democratic vice presidential
hazards of the open sea. On nominee. But a Look Magazlne article linking him with Mafia
three OCCBSIOns the U.S. Senate fig
' a
and the H
ures, and disciosw-e of a feMillilt'mg arrangement m
1 Re
led pedresethn- Washington State anti-trust suit before his election, forced AUoto
tat1.ves haveouseckno
a ow g
e to rul t · ti0118 f bighe offi · 1968
inappropriateness of the law as
e ou aspll'a
or
r ce m
·
itrelatesto.theDeltaQueenand 1
P, rtial Pullb k
have voted to exempt her from
srael'l 01#.
JJ er a
· ac
the provisions of the Safety at
AN ISRAEU NEWSPAPER SAID TODAY Israel has offered
Sea Law. Most recently, after a tw&lt;h'itage withdrawal of ita trODpll from the occupied east bank
unanimous approval by the of the Suez canal as part of ita terms for reopening the waterway
Senate, the House of to achieve an interim middle east peace setUement.
·Representatives voted 295 to 73
Egyptian troops would not be permitted to cross the canal, as
to exempt the Delta Queen from Egypt has demanded, tbe newspaper Ma' Ariv said. Tbe paper
the Safety at Sea Law until
November 1,1973." Co-sponsors said the proposal was outlined to Assistant secretary of State
were Sen. William Saxbe (R- Joseph J. Sisco during his recent ~y mission to Jerusalem
Ohio) and Senate Minority to seek an interim accord. It did not mention a time span for the
withdrawal.
Leader Hugh Scott.
The battle to save the Queen IdJJho Prisoners Revolt
has been under way ever since
BOISE, IDAHO - ANGERED BY RECORD hot weather,
the S\lffillltl',of 1966 when she
was caught in safety legislation dirty water and other problems, convicts at the century-old Idaho
State Prison rioted Tuesday night, flreb\)mblng four buildings and
stabbing two leUow inmates. ·
Raymond May, state director of corrections, and two aides
conferred with a six.Jnmate council foc more than an hour and
then acceded to most of the convicts' demands, which he said
(Continued from Page I)
"are justified." May noted that several days of hot weather had
building. They 10und toe dead pushed temperatures to 110.118 degrees In some poorly-ventilated
ganman inside, an army ceUs and that an inadequately repaired laundry limited convicts
• spokesman said.
to one change of clothes a week.
As soldiers fanned out
hunting snipers they believed.
escaped from the bakery, an
elderly woman, a black lace
,
rr.ontuouea trom Page I)
scarf on her head, waved a T\! _ .J 'l'.
white fiSt and shouted - vrea ~
the princtpal to the juvenue
"Bloody British won't even let
··
court.
.
.
me get to mass."
Oliver Vincen~ Dailey, 86, The board also adopted
"I know this is an unpopular formerly of Ra_cme, but more another policy recommended
measure, but we are not paid to recently .a reSident of Black by
George
Hargraves,
take chances," a young British Lick•. Oh10, d1ed. Tuesday al- superintendent. This provides
officer said. "We believe some ternoon at _Hiverstde MethodiSt that because during the sumof the gunmen are stiU in the Hospital m Columbus. Mr: mer months the buildings in the
ea and unlil we know dif- Dailey was preceded in death district are being prepared for
~:rent we shall stay here."
by his wife, Lucy Ellen Dailey, the fall opening of school, and in
In Britain, more than 600 and.tw? sons, Elmer and Clark. order to assist the custodial
troops of the first battalion, the
Surv1vmg are three sons, staff in this work, the foUowing
Royal Fusiliers--00. third of Wilmer, Ocala, Fla.; and limitation on summer building
them recalled from leave a Herbert, and Carl, beth of use is established:
week early -moved out bar- Blackhck ; two daughters,
Normally , buildings will not
Freda Johnson, ~uppmgsport, be available for use by nonracks enroute to Ulster.
Pa., and Clelestine Johnston, school organizations during the
Columbus; 12 grandchildren, 12 period of time from July 15 to
grea !-grandchildren ; two the opening day of the school
sisters, Mamie Riggs and year. Buildings that will not be
America's #lTV Maggie Riggs, both of Odeville, used for classes in the fall are
W. Va . ; a brother, Omar not included in this policy.
Dailey , Racine; two halfnow with
The board agreed to hold
brothers, Bruce Dailey, New the annual building inspection
Brighton, Pa., and Howard preparatory to the opening of
Portable TV's
Dailey, Long Bottom, and two
on Aug. 24 from 6 to 8
biggest picture half-sisters, Celesta . Pickens, school
p.m.
Racine, and Lena Aley of
Accepted by the beard was
plus
Charleston, W. Va .
the bid of the Pomeroy Motor
Funeral services will be held Co. on three Chevrolet bus
room-to-room
at 10 a.m. Saturday at the
chassis at a price of $5,456 each.
portability
Ewing Funeral Home with the The bid is subject to the apRev . Freeland Norris of- proval of the State Deparbnent
ficiating . Burial will be in the of Education. Bids by other
Drift Run Cemetery in Jackson firms included Meigs EquipCounty, near Sandyville, W. Va. ment, $5,670 on the InFriends may call at the funeral ternational; Keith Goble, $5,827
home any time after noon on the Ford and Rawlings and
Thursday.
Sons, $5,869 on the D&lt;Jdge.
The board accepted the bid of
the Downing-Childs Insurance
Agency on motor vehicles of the
FINED $5, COSTS
Fined by Pomeroy Mayor district at a price of $4,294.31.
Charles Legar Tuesday night The bid of the Rizer Oil Co. on
was Arthur Koenig, 22, Reed- front bus tires was accepted and
sviUe, fined $5 and costs on the bid of the Pomeroy Home
conviction of failing to keep · and Auto on rear bus tires and
recaps.
assured clear distance.
John Lisle, teacher and
principal. of the Salisbury
Elementary School was named
as hall-time coordinator of
~ federal programs. The board
il v
.
il voted to advertise for coal for
at the Salem Center and
~ use
Harrisonville
Ele!Dentary
il The troubl e with op- il
i' porlunity is that it il Schools. Hargraves reported
The IIRLINGTON · B2213W i'g eneral ly comes il !hal the budget presented' to the
disguised as hard work. ~ Meigs County Budget Com·
l··' pressnl'e vmyl·clad metal cabin; sculp1wed ui bold cle-an reeil
- Anonymous il mittee had been tentatively
: ·'"~ ~1111Ur lmes Grumed t1strm r
approved.
\V;,In 11 t;olor O e lu ~ c V1deo Rang"
l ; ·""'0 System Po•Ner Tr.lrlS·
The Pomeroy National Bank,
il
• the Citizens National Bank at
k• .,(:, 20.000 Volts o l Prctu re
Middleport and The Farmers
As Low As
Bank and Savings Co. were
accepted as the official
depositories of the district for
the next two years. Karen
iC
Fridays Only
il Alltop Spurlock and Betty
The Drive-In Window! Alltop McDonald were granted
Full Featured.'
i£
IS Open
il diplomas having completed
• Cus1om ''Perma -Sef' VHF
F1ne Tuning
il
9 A.M . to 7 P.M.
i1 their high school work via
• l ·S iil9e IF Amphf1er
(Continuously)
correspondence lessons. ·
• A u r o-~ 11{; '' F,.nqe -locll" C1•cu ot
• 4 ~ RoU nd Sound -Our -Front Spea ker
Attending the meeting were
il Other Banking Hours 9 to il
• Gated 8 eam ~ Sovnd System
: l and 5 to 7 as usual on il Hargraves, Larry Morrison ,
· Zenith ·· - · 1 il Fridays.
il assistant superintendent; board
Exclusive
members, Frank W. Porter,
XIP~I I
I
Virgil King, Hiram Slawter,
Don Mullen and Joe Sayre,
se:r~~~
Clerk L. W. McComas,
il
il
-fl.
POMEROY, OHIO
--~il
Member FDI C
i1
BOARD TO MEET
il
Member Federal
il
The Southern Local School
-fl
Re':!ervC' System
ir
Pomeroy
Bu~
rd will meet Monday at 7:30
' 992·2635
p.m. aLl he high schooL
~-

News ..•n Brte.
• ifis

Fighting

Oliver Dailey
da
ues

Schools

y

•**************'
: .\ Thought
: cor Today

!

•
•!• *'
* * •
It's Quick! Easy :

! DRIVE-IN !
! BANKING !
•!
•

!

X ;) .!
.

INGELS
FURNITURE

.

!

:
FARMERS BANK !

! and SAVINGS CO. !

.
• ******"****•·--

..

•

~~~~er~=.Hunger, the Gap, and This .

.-...·..·.. ·.... ·-··.··.· ·· ····.· . ··.

Charles Jones
Died Tuesday

i.

VOL:iXr£ NO.
84
.... '

Friday with a chance ·~ a few
afternoon thundenboweri
norllt f'ridlly. LQws IGnilbt In .
the upper 50s and lotJ . .. Bllbe
Friday in the b . ·
'

PHONE 992-2156

. t(ff. CfNJS

First Deep-Mine Coal
To Gavin Seen in 1973
•

ATHENS COUNTY

McARTHUR

0
VINTON
COUNTY

r--''-------------1

----,

MEIGS COUNTY

I
I
I

I

I

I
I
JACKSON I---COUNTY

0 H

Lightweight, _durable,
everyday dishes that
cost only '$19.95 for a
20-piece service for four!

0
GALL/A
COUNTY

_ _ _ _ .J

WEST
PT . PLEASANT

VIRGINIA

CHESHIRE - Ohio Power
Co. today ouilined plans for the
development, over a period of
time, of a major deep-mine coal
complex near here that wiU cost
$115 million.
Plans for ultimate development include several slopes, a
preparation plant, 15-mile
conveyor system, and other
facitities .
The operation will provide
fuel to be delivered to Ohio
Power's new $4811-million, 2.6million-kilowatt General James
M. Gavin Plant here. Its
first generating unit is
scheduled for.operation in 1974,
the second in 1975.
Construction of the mining
complex w!U start soon; initial
deliveries of coal are· expected
in late 1973. When in fuU
production, the complex is
expected to deliver e.million
tons of coal per year.
- When finaUy brought to fuU
operation, the mining facility is
expected to provide employment for 2,1100 miners and
non-mining personnel. In this
connection, the company plans
to undertake employment and
training programs for boll]
miners and mine supervisors.
Coal seams owned by Ohio
Power underlie some 56,1100
acres in parts of Meigs, Vinton
and Gallia counties, and are
estimated to contain approximately 290 million
recoverable tons. The coal,
known as the Clarion 4A seam,
lies 300-350 feet below the

•
.lS

Plant, Mine Complex
OPC's Biggest Project

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

.

! News ..• in Brief~ JJohn Dowd Will Gwde

•

Ifsomething in your house goes on the blink,
you better hope it's your telephone.

surface.
The project's slopes are
expected to be located in the
western portion of Meigs
County, in the general areas of
Salem Center and Point Rock.
A five-mile intermine conveyor wiU carry coal southward
to the project's large
preparation plant, and from
there, a larger overland conveyor will deliver washed coal
about 10 miles to the power
plant- at the rate of 2,500 tons
per hour.
During the period of the mine
project's development, the'
Gavin Plant will receive coal
via Ohio River barge from other
sources on the American
Electric Power System - in
which Ohio Power is the largest
operating company. For this
purpose, a barge-unloading
facility is being built at the
plant site.
.:s:..::::~

::;,::;_,~

Ohio Extended Outlook for
Saturday through Monday:
Mostly fair weather
through the period. Gradual
waimlng trend with highs In
the upper 70s and lower 60s
Saturday, rising to lhe mid
and upper 80s by Monday.
Overnight lows In lhe 50s and
lower 60s Saturday and
Sunday mornings and In the
60s Monday morning.

..

•,•,•

·. . . ·. ·...;.::·.····-·..:-:-:-:-:-:-:

Driver Held for
Hogging Highway

TOUR TAKEN - Agricultural agency representatives of Meigs County recently toured 1
animal waste disposal systems in Highland and Ross Counties. From left to right are C. E.
Wakeslee, Meigs extension agent; Bob Unger, owner of the animal waste di51J0Sl'l system in
Highland County ; Dave Larkins, manager of Highland A&amp;: office; Orion Roosb)deigsCouuty
ASC committeeman and co-owner of a 100 cow dairy operation at Salem Center, and Dave _
Parry, Meigs Soil and Water District conservationist. Others taking part in the tour were Dan
Cowdery, Highland County extension office ; Bill Smith, a farmer having an animal waste
disposal unit, and Tom Parry, Highland Soil and Water District conservationist.

corn Headmg to
New crop Record
e

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - The
Agriculture Department's
monthly crop report said Wednesday the corn harvest would
be a record breaking 5.345 billion bushels on the basis of
Aug. I conditions. Ohio's corn
crop was estimated at 292.6
million bushels.
The Ohio total - which averages out to 83 bushels per
acre - is an increase of almost
60 million bushels over last
year.
Soybean production in Ohio
was estimated at 77.8 million
bushels for 1971 compared to
69.4 million last year.
A top administration farm official warned, however, the
corn crop "is not yet in the
crib" and could be cut by corn
blight which has spread in recent weeks.
The report said total production of all crops appeared headed for a ncord, II per cent
above last year, with record-

breaking prospects for crops ineluding corn, wheat, soybeans
and grain sorghums.
Most attention in the report
issued late Wednesday, however, centered on corn . Last
year, blight disease slashed
corn output sharply and led to
fears of possible animal feed
shortages if this year's crop
should be crippled by the fun·
gus ailment.
The report bore out private
forecasts that up tllrough at
least Aug. 1 a combination of
increased acreage and aharply
improved per-acre yields bad
laid the foundation for a barvest up 30 per cent from last
year and 12 per cent above the
previous record.
But Don Paarlberg, the Agriculture Department's chief economist, told newsmen the Aug.
1 report may be revised down
as the season wears on. Point..
ing out that in 1970, most com
blight damage occurred after

AChesapeake, Ohio, man was
arresested following a two car
accident Wednesday at 12:26 p.
m. on the SR 7 bypass.
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. said John Frederick
Carter, 39, Chesapeake, was
traveling north when he went
left of center and struck a south
bound car driven by Gloria J .
r--------------~------------,
Buck, 23, Pomeroy, Rt. 2. The
Buck car went off the highway
into the James Gihnore yard.
Carter was cited to court for
failure to yield one half of
I
II)' uafled Preli Inlerllatllllal
roadway. There was medium
damage
to both vehicles. No
Sniper Continue in Belfast
GALIJPOIJS - Appointment of John T. Dowd as project injuries were reported.
BELFAST, Northern Ireland -&amp;llper fire co8tinued today In ·manager for construction of Obit Power Co.'s major new electric
Reman CathoUc areas of Belfast and BriUsh troops in Lon- power COIIlplex near here was announced today.
ATTEND SCHOOL
donderry struggled to keep apart separate crowds of Protestants
President Donald C. Cook described the COIIlplex as '1he
David Parry, new Meigs Soil
and CalhoUcs. The army claimed it hall given the outlawed lriah largest and most important project the company has ever un- Conservationist; Roy Miller, a
Republican Army "a devU of a knock" in tllree days of street dertaken." It incorporates the new 2.6-million-kilowatt General supervisor of the Meigs Soil and
fighting, but tbe IRA denied Its leaders have been arrested. At James M. GaYin Plant and its aasoclated coal supply and tran- Water Conservation District,
leaat 2t persons have been listed as killed In the Northern Ireland smlssim facilities. For this reasOn, he explained, the project and Mrs . Wilma Sargent,
management concept is being used for the first time on the district secretary, attended a Twelve Meigs County high Alcohol and Drugs at Ohio
violence, s!J: of them Wednetlday.
American Electric Power System, in which Ohio Power is the recent school for soil and water school students will leave Dominican CoUege in Columlargest operating COIIlpany ..
· conservation districts held at Sunday to be among the 250 bus.
Attacks Pressed in Vietnam
participants at the Seventh The institute will be condevelopment,
including
the
Marietta
CoUege.
Annual Tenage .Institute on ducted through Wednesday.
Cook also announced today
· SAIGON -N!I"th Vietnamese forces atined coordinated shell- the appointment of Earle T. preparation plant and 15 miles
Richard E. Guggenheim,
ing and ground attacks today at South Vietnam's defense line Snodgrass, of Roanoke, Va., as of overland . conveyor. MOlt
director of the Ohio Department
along the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ). At least 34 soldiers were resident engineer for tbe coal recently AEP's SUpervisor al
of Liquor Control, said "Inldlled In the fighting, the heaviest in the area In six weeks. Two mine portlm of the project. building construction, he bad
terest in aU parts of tbe state
Americans were wounded. The U.S. Command said today 18 EarUer, Fred R. Carman had sreviously served as residellt
has been very high this year,
Americans were killed In battle last week and 74 wounded -four been designated as resident engineer for construction of
promising the largest atmore deatbi than last week and the hlgbeat toll in three weeks.
engineer f!l" the power plant. Appalachian Power Co.'s Clinch
tendance in the history of the
River
Plant
and
Smith
Moun·
Both . Mr. Snodgrass and Mr.
Institute. "
Carman are veteran con- lain pumped-storage and hydro· "Selections of tho5e to attend
Presidential Ambitions?
electric
develllpment,
both
In
struction engineers with the
were based on two major points
Virginia and Ohio VaUey
NEW YORK -Leading Democrats have welcomed John Lind- AEP System.
- sincere interest in Ohio's
teenage drinking and drug
say's defectim from the Republican party, but moat prominent · DQwd, prOO.oted to project Electric Corp.'s Clifty Q-eek
Plant in Indiana.
mariager
from
his
previous
problems and leadership
political figures have predicted a sreslden\41Jcampalgp would be
CJrHER KEY appoinlmenta
ability.
difficult fill' the New York City mayor. Lindsay, who said Wed· postion as 1\ead of tbe American
in cmjunctim with the new
Attending from here will be
nesday in his party-llwitchlill! announcement that he hall not yet Electric Power Service Corp.'s
plant.mlne complex, also an·
Construction'
Scheduling
Robin
Humphrey, Reedsville;
decided on any national candidacy, called for ''reaUgiUilent"
nounb!d,
are
those
of
John
R.
Division, will coordinate all
Julia Ann Holter, Pomeroy
among progressive Republicans, Independents and Democrats.
Jones as 'spoosor engineer for
~ases of the project, This work
Route 3, both of Eastern High
the
power
plant
construction,
will include:
School ; John William Eiching,
l)ruce H. Bennett as 9p0nsor
(
1)
Engineering,
design
and
Syracuse; Candy Carl '-oback,
Rebellion Possible Says Ky
constructilll of the power plant, engineer for construction of the
Racine Route I; Connie Elaine
-VIce President Nguyen Cao Ky, who has so far been Including coal-handling and mining facilities, and C. R.
Warner, Minersville Route I, aU
Gage as mine construction
excluded frCill Patllcipatq In South VIetnam's presidential storage facilities.
of Southern High School; Tom
eJectlm by a court decision he cmtends Is ''Unlawful and ar(2) Engineering, design and office manager.
AUan Crisp, Langsville Route I;
bitrary," said today a rebeiilmls pol8ible in the Southeast Asian construcUlll of the plant's ltlgh- Jones, a mechanical engineer
Debra Jo May, Rutland ; Milisa
country if , Pre8ident Ngu;yen Van 'lbleu rtlll!' •or rNlection voltage switchyard and trans- with the AEP Service Corp,,
K. Rizer, Pomeroy; Linda
will coordinate the plant
unq~Jl(~led. Gen. Dumg Van "Big" Minh, TIL.~ Lilly opposition mission outlets.
Rebecca Rupe, Pomeroy; John
atpruent, hall said he may withdraw from the race In view of the · (3) Coal mine entries and engineering, design and conHarold Kauff, Middleport;
struction work, and Bennett, an
~porting
faclllties.
Christil10 Robinson, Middleport,
court decision againat Ky.
Coal
preparation AEP ~rvice Corp. civil
(4)
engineer; wtll perform the same
facilities.
HANDINJURED
GOTOREGISTER
U) . Intra-mine 1:081 con- function with respect to the
mining facilities. Gage, of
Earl Smith, two-year-old son New residents of the Meigs veyors.
MEET ATSCHOOL
of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Local School District who bave
(6) Coal conveyors from Stockport, Ohio, had been accounting
and
stores
supervisor
A meeting will be held in
Smith, Langsville Route 1; was chUdren of high school age are mines to power plant.
for
AEP's
Central
Ohio
Coal
lN
cONn:R!:NCE
Wal1aee
llnllard
and
lira.
room
110 of tbe Meigs Junior
takep to Veterans Memorial asked to take them to the school (7) Mine recruitment and
Co.,
whiCh
operates
the
large
Mickey
King,
vice
president
and
secretary
of
the
Meigs
High School building in Mid·
Hospital by the Middleport E-R so that they .may be regislered training activities.
Musklngum
Mine
south
of
C!Rinty.Fair
Board,
respectively
confer
on
tbe
registration
of
dleport
for all sixth graders of
· squad at 2 p. m. Wednesday for the fall term, James Diehl, (I) Development of any
Zanesville.
entries for tbe annual . Meigs County Fair which opens the Bradbury School and
suffering from a laceration of principal, said.
Decessary related faclllties.
the left hand received when a
He wt11 continue to maintain
Tuesday. Mrs. King is at the fair board office on the . seventh graders of tbe junilll'
WASHEli.AFIRE
Ilia ~ICI!I at AEP's New York Pomeroy firemen were called fairgrounds from 10 a.m: to 4 p.m. tllrough Thursday to high wbo are interested in
car hood fell on lt. He had been
taken to Middleport viUage hall
MARRIAGE LICENSE.
headquarters.
accept reg_islratlons for the various ccmpetitions. 'Ibis is the . taking part in the safetY palrol.
to the East · .Main St. Launand plck!!d up there by the Charles ltumphrey Bartels, . Snodgrass wtll be primarily dramalat7:55p.m. Weditesday
llra.t year Jkadford will be beading the county fair board All children must be acsquad. He . .was released 21, Pomeroy, R\. 2, and ,c;arolyn responsible for conatrucUm of whefl a · washer caught fire.
operation. Board President Fred Leifheit dled,several weeks companied by .at least one
· foUowlng treatlilent.
.Maxlile Jones, 21, Shade, Rt. 1. faclUties involved In .the m!Dng tiamage&amp; were Ught.
parent.
ago.

.

All Construction Phases

GRANGE TO MEE'1
The Ohio Valley Grange 2612,
Letart Falls, wiU meet Thursday at 8 p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Erma Wilson. Potluck
refreshments will be served.

Aug. 1, Paarlberg said bligbt
"has shown some increase in
·recent weeks and the threat ~
widespread damagP. J'I'ID!lins "
In a sepante report, meanwhile, the Agric:ullure Deparl.ment's cern blight idonnatim
center said bligbt conditi0111
worsened by sllgbt Ill sn!"tanlialmarginsinmanyfannareas

during the past week.

.

If the CrGp J'I'ID!liiiS in the $.3
billioo bushel range, Paarlberg
cooceded ccn market prkes
might rest down around the
government support level of
$1.05 a bushel - a aharp disappointment to farmers who
had seen much bigber prkes
over the last seasm But be
said the ubazard" of a harqper
crql is less dislw bii« to farmers than tbe alternate huard
they had fated earlier - !be
year that ravaging llligbt migbt
produce a crq~ failure in 1971.

12 Going to Institute

SUIT FILED
A suit to partition real estate
in Scipio Twp. has been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Beulah Cross, Winfield, W. Va., against Lolita
Cross, Huntington, etal.

Tonight., Thu. &amp; Fri.
Aug. 11· 12-13
Double Feature
M·A·S·H
I Color)
Donald Sutherland
Elliott Gould
Tam Skerritl

-PlusTHE CRIMSON
CULT
I Color I
Boris Karloff
Christopher Lee

THURSDAY, AUGUST 12, 1971

'

HOUSEWARES DEPARTMENT

TO CELEBRATE
Pomeroy firemen will again
stage a Laber Day celebration
in the community. A parade and
chicken barbecue are being
planned on Sept. 6.

.. ,

Partly cloudy · Ulllghl m1

.
Devoted To The lntere.ll Of The Meigt-MtuOil Area

@~u.~·

t:

w~

at

Amerlelna sp6nt •lu biDion
In 1988 onllcohoUc beverages,
and ~ million on playing
. cards.

Gardner in

Tie for 4th

•

Now You :Know

lluaerftrUie Claeluatl
·
over even 10 years,'.' Shaw said Ul health. ,
Reduad defeulvupeelalllt
NEWARK, N .J. (UPI)~U.S. as the . defendants listened U.S. Attorney Herbert J.
Charles Homer Jones, 77, Tommy Helnu wtll aulal Ill District Court Judge Robert ·
· el
Stern, who helped wlit the
'
Shaw leaned forward on his unpasslv Y·
•
•
•
.South Third Ave., Middleport,
groad brf'lklal ceremollies
desk looked down on seven The governmen~has char~~ extortion-conspll'acy ConVlc-:
died Tuesday afternoon at 1butlday for the lleWelt Bob
• .
.
. l(lngtime Hudson County pohll· lions against (ormer Newark '
Cabeli-Huntlngton H~ital In Ev01 Fa~ ouUel wblcb J~~ City :"d Hudson ~D?ty cal bess John v Kenny, 77, Mayor Hugh J. Addonizio 1~.
Huntington. Mr. · Jones, a will be eoutruded ln.. Cbl- po clans e was. sen nr;m~ with mastermlnd;;.g· the extor- months ago, said Kenny wiU be
member of the United Brethren clmlatl TbiB Ia the slxtll . for extortion convictions an .
h
B t he has not tried wben a government doctor:
said:
·
lion sc erne. u.
·
·
Church at Ripley, W. Va., was
reataurant eoaolrlicled
''It is a sad state of affairs ~n brought to trial because of gives the okay.
an army veteran of World War I outalde
Glilla County.
and he was aretired engineer of ....'1' •• "•• •• ···-.·•• •• ·.·: •• ••• ••• -· • when in our system of
government, the a~erage citizen
the New York Central Railroad.
iS struggling to make a living,
Mr. Jones was born April II,
is struggling to send his
1894, a'tJacksonCounty, W. Va.,
children to school and money is ·
the son of the late Charles A.
going into the pockets of
and Mary Jane BattreU Jones.
avaricious
politicians.''
Besides his parents, he was
, Before him were the defenpreceded in death by three
dants. "'l'lie Boys Downtown,"
brothers and five sisters.
bycqRNINO
as
he
caUed
them,
including
Surviving are his wife, HUah FAIRBORN, Ohio (UP!) L. Knapp Jones; two sisters, Robert Pow~ of Hamilton led former Jersey City Mayor
Mrs. Chloe Ann Myers of a field of !53 going into the final Thomas J. Whelan, former City
Columbus, arid Mrs. Lulah round today of the annual Ohio Council Presi~ent Thomas M.
Sickies of Detroit, Mich., and Junior Golf Championships with Flaherty and former City
Purchasing Agent Bernard G.
several nieces and nephews. .a one-under-par 71.
Murphy
..
Funeral services will be held Steve GBrdner of Gallipolis
He sentenced those three
at I p.m. Friday at the was in a tie for fourth with Bob
Tuesday
to 15 years in prison,
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home Smith of Franklin.
with the Rev. Raullin Moyer Powers put together a 32 and the other four to terms ranging
officiating. Burial wiU be in the 39 over the 7,125 yard Greene from six months to 10 years,
Leon Cemetery at Leon, W.Va. ·Country Club here Tuesday in for their convictions July 5 of
Friends may call at the funeral the first 18 holes. Robert Chew extorting $168,1100 and conspiring to extort $3.3 miUion from
home from 2 to 4 and from 7 to 9 was second with a par 72.
p.m. Thursday and Friday until Rick Hartoin was in third with contractors and suppliers doing
time of services.
73. At 76 were Steve Dietz of business with the city.
"In these times we have the
Columbus, Mark Heisler of
Aurora and Rodney LOesah of unrest that exists in the cities,
CAU.ED TWICE
which I lind understandable in
The Pomeroy emergency Mansfield. In the IS-and-under light of the testimony / Shaw
squad was summoned today at division, Paul Spadafora had a said. "It's a· shameful situation ·
1:13 a.m. and 2 a.m. The first threwhot lead with him 74. where a city is up against a
caU was to the Sundown Night Tied at 77 were Craig Scheiber! waU for funds and on a $40
Club for Lester Haning, ~ and Bill Mitchell, both of miUion contract Mr. Murphy
medical patient, who was taken Middletown, and Andy Amrein says to add 7 per cent for the ii
,.,.
to Veterans Memorial Hospital of Hamilton.
beys downtown."
~-·
where he refused treabnent.
Two fanner "political ins!- ~ =·&gt;.
The second was for Erwin
ders," who were the governON COMMITTEE
Smith who was lying in a ditch
ment's star witnesses during
Two Meigs Countians have the trial, testified that corrupon County Road 26. He was
taken to his residence by the again been selected to serve on tion was "a way of life" in ~
squad.
standing committees of the Ohio Jersey City and each contractor !!:
Bankers Assn. . They are wanting to do business with the ~
i.Thereon Johnson, Racine, of
IN HOSPITAL
city had to shell out "10 per !f:!
The Farmers Bank and Savings cent for the boys downtown." ;~:
Doyle Hudson, Rutland, and a
Co. who will continue as
"It reaUy taxes the 'imagina- ii
member of Pipefitter Union,
chairman of the agricultural lion as to how much money ~
local 521, is a patient at
committee, and Mrs. Maxine seeped out by corrupt practices 1:!
Memorial Hospital, Charleston.
Griffith of the Pomeroy
~=·
His room number is 323.
National Bank who wiU continue serving on the bank
NO ONE HURT
~!
SERVICE SET
operations
committee
for
the
No one was injured or cited in ~;
A prayer service will be held
next year.
a
two
car accident at 11:30 p.m. ~
at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Mid·
on Rt. 33, five tenths miles south
dleport Church of Christ in
of Rt. 691 in Meigs County. State '•
Christian Union on Pearl St.
Dissatisfied with price and with the look and practicality
highway patrol officers said
Okey Ahart wiU be the leader. Veterans Memorial Hospital
of everyday dishes. Now, because of careful Corn11111
ADMITTED
Gerald Roger K. Morgan, 24, Midresear ch, you finally have a choice. A brand-new choice
The public is invited.
Lehew, New Haven; General J. dlepor~ attempted to pass just
called Corelle Livingware. It's the first daily dinnerware
to combine beauty, practicality, and low price.
AUXILIARY TO MEET
Hall, Racine; Frank Still, as a car operated by Don H.
The Women's Auxiliary of Middleport; Leland Norman, Carper, 21, Rt. 2, Pomeroy,
• It has the look, feel and " ring" of china.
Veterans Memorial Hospital Pomeroy; Willard Faudree, made a left tw-n . There was
will hold a potluck picnic at 6 Harrisonville; Anna Frank, moderate damage to both cars.
e It's translucent. yet strong. Guaranteed to be replaced If It
breaks, chips, crazes or stains .
p.m. Tuesday at the park on Pomeroy; Norman Schoonover,
new Route 33, on .the left, going, Pomeroy; John Kauff,. Mid,
THREE FINED · - eJt's sale In the dishwasher and oven .
north A regular meeting will dleport; Minme H811, Vmton;
Middleport Mayor c. 0.
folio~.
AUdena Collins, Rutland.
ell's amazingly lightweight.
DISCHARGED - James Fisher Tuesday night lined
Jessie H. Gardner, 22,
FIREME[oj TO MEET
Owens, Vicki Koetting, De Loris
elf's available anytime, in sets and individual pieces - in
Columbus, $125 and costs and
four go-wi th-everything patterns.
All Pomeroy firemen are ZeciJ., Leonard Lunsford, sentenced him to three days in
requested to meet at 7:15p.m. Gerald Lehew, Raymond jail on conviction of driving
today at Pomeroy town hall Lambert.
while intoxicated ; William .
preparatory to going to the
Gardner, 62, Cheshire, $10 and
MARRIAGE LICENSE
F. wing Funeral Home. to pay
costs, intoxication,and John D.
respects to the late Charles J. William Alan Blackwood, 21, Sebo, l8, Pomeroy, $5 and costs,
Rutland, Rt. I, and Marta Kay
Werry .
squealing tires.
Hubbard, 20, Middleport.
1'1111

•

sAIGON

GP

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Thursday
Auguslll -12
NOT OPEN

•'

Friday &amp; Saturday
AugustlJ-14
WHEN DINOSAURS
RULED THE EARTH
ITechnicolor l
Victoria Velrl

1

'

'

It's annoying to have anything break. But it's less annoying when it's your telephone.
Our repair service is good-we'll fix your phone within 24 hours. Our price iseven better:
no charge for repairs.

Robin Hawdoo
G

I WALK
THE LINE
ITechnicolorl
Gregory Peck
Tuesday Weld
SHOW STARTS 7 p.M.

General Telephone

'
•

''

'

'
I ,

.

'

'

aU studenls ~ Mei«J; lfi&amp;b
School.
1be institute is SjlOland bJ
tbe Ohio Deparbnents ~ Be.lth
and liquor Control, the -Obio
Congress of Parents and
Teachers, the Ohio Scbool
Counselors Assn. and the
Governor 's Committee on
Teenage Drinting. Part.nta
will conduct an indepth
examination of the physical,
psycological, social and lepl
aspects of underaged drinking
and drug abuse.
The Institute fonnat will
include lectures, discussion
groups and extension ljiii!Stion
and answer periods. ·

Film &amp;Jaibited
Don Pearch ~ 'l'bo General
TelepboneCo. of Ohio odli wed a
fihn, ' 'Speed s-e" on tine
abuse, provided by the company, when the PomeroyMiddleport Lions Club met fill' a
luncheon at noon Wtdllwlay at
tbe Pomeroy United Melllodist
Claireh.
Karl Kraut!B repcrted on tbe
proga ! 11 ~ alloJe.ln.Gae con tat
to be staged at the Roct Slail9
FairgroUnds foUowing tbe .fair
and a final meeting ~ the
conunilteewas ll!t fer &amp;:•p. m.·
'!11ursday at the fOp• 1t
Earl Ingels was a gwst ~ o.Je
Warner.

FIREP\JTOOY
At 10:58 p. 111. w ' : 0
Middlepcrtflr- _ . aW
to .the BaiFey 11.- ..... ·tinguilh a W.. wllk:llll I I ill
rubbish ml tnlb tiiLidl ...
been ............ .....

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