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Sid Spencer with Wind Flower
Wins Second and Fifth Races

.

Friday an~ · Saturday 2-Day Sale.
ELIERFELDS 'IN POMEROY.

.AW's

. '"

·Freeze

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• -

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IIOS'roN (UPI) .:_United Auto Wcrl:en President ~
. Wooclcock, describing President NIJ:111'1 ngf1lrlce freeze
. ·~ dlacrimiJIJtory aptnst wcrl:ers," said Wednesday the
UAW wiD "atroogly conitler" termiDa~ Ita cootracta with the
•11oo's Clll' makl!llllf the fneze Ill elteDded beyond !10 dllys;
Woodcock, here to alte!KI a UAW Sldlled Trades Conf~,
told.-~ the fl'eele Ill weighted In favot" of lndw!trY'
•'We ire lug ClUJ' legal department to lnvestl&amp;ate the p&lt;ulbUlty
.. ofllllll," WoOdcoct lllld, "because we don't WlderstaDd how ihe
govaWit41 can leD rompontes not to pay IIICIIey already cootraded to wcab&lt;saDd, lnatead, telllbe ccanpallies they can keep
that mcmey iD their private &lt;dfers."

SHOP IN OOMFORT AU. DAY
9:30 A.M~ TO 9:00 AT NIGHT•. AGOOD nME FOR BACK-m.satOOL AND FAMILY HPPING
.
.
ON All3 FlOORS- WEARING APPAREL FOR YOUR FAMILY AND FURNISHINGS FOR·YOUR HOME.
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~·Take
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JBI!l11181!1l118!188118!188118!188118!1881,f»-.18!1881~
. •·

The Poet's
Corner

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PEACE FOR ALL MANKIND
I, like you, am puuled
Why men look but cannot find
A mosl simple answer for
Peace for All Mankind.
It hasn'l been yet solved. we've

seen.

By anything rl done
By men jus talking of this
peace
Or lhe sourding of their guns.
Men's lives don't seem to gain
it,

Or victories they have won,
Or trips they've made lo lhe
moon,
Or
their knowledge of the sun.
1
Tears cannot achieve it:
For millions have been cried;
Men can't seem to obtain It

No matter what they've tried.
You'd think lhal they would
realize

•

Since everything has failed
That peace is right there with us
On the Cross where Christ was

nailed.

So cast your net lo still waters
And let not )'our eyes be blind!
But raise them lo our heavenly
father
And there shall be ....
Peace for All Mankind !
-Miry Bohr

. MEIGS THEATRE
Tonigllllhru S.turdoy .
Augusl 19-21
NOT OPEN

sun.• Mai.., fo Tues.

August22-24
LITTLE MURDERS
ITechnicolor)
Elliott Gould
Donald Sutherland
R
lor"" rloons :

Royal Royalty
Klondike Strikeout
Riverboal Mession
·sHOW STARTS7 P.M.

.

Tuppers Plains
.
Society News
By Mrs. Evelyn Brlekles
Mrs. Neisel Weatherman
spent last week with friends,
Mrs. Robert Guthiel and family
of Lockbourne, Ohio;- Mrs.
Gutheil came down and accompanied Mrs. Weatherman
to and from Lockbourne.
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Brooks
of Reynoidabw-g visited Mr. and
Mrs. Oscar Babcock Saturday.
The children and their
families of the late Mr. and Mrs .
. ' Sr. met at the
Charles Marcinko
home of one of their sons, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Marcinko and
family Sunday. :: was the first
lime they have all been together
since 1964.
Diana Massar celebrated her
lith birthday Sunday at her
home at Eastern. Attending the
celebration were Mr. and Mrs.
Dinsmore Boyles, Mr. and Mrs.
Phillip Boyles and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Spencer and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
Babcock all of Tuppers Plains,
Mrs. Esther Riggs and

-------~· daughters of Logan, Ray Justis

of Success and Mrs. !J!Ota
Massar of Eastern. Homemade
ice cream and cake were served .
and
the honored guest received
Tonight &amp; Fridooy
many lovely gifts.
Augusl 19-2G
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Rine of
Double FHture Pragram :
"A BOY NAMED
' Bethesda is spending a few days
here this week with her sister,
CHARLIE BROWN"
The ' Peanuts' Gang In lheir Mr. and Mrs. Blain Taylor.
first movie!
Miss Jennifer Bailey,
I Color)
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
G
Jimmie Bailey of the Ashland
-PLUsStation, underwent an apELDORADO
, (Tedlnlcolor)
pendectomy at Camden Clark
John.Wayne
llospital, Pakersburg, Monday.
Robert Mitchum
Tressie Stethem and daughter
It's "'• big one with the big of l.ong Bollom spent a recent
two!
day with Mrs. ~ llalpcOC.k·

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SpeCial Purchase

Another bil shipment of Wils bj Pa11111 ·

Advantage ·of Elberfelds-

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Save this Weekend ·
Reg. 25.00 and
30.00 Wigs
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•

Sale· 999

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brothers and Dr. Weinberger.
As winner of both races for
the two year old paces, "Gentry
Mir" was awarded the trophy
blanket donated by the New
York
Clothing
llouse.
Presenting the trophy was Mrs.
Lucille Leifheit, widow of the
late Fred Leifheit, long-time
president of the Meigs. County
Fair Board. The trophy was
given in memory of Mr .
Leifheit, Charles Radford and
Frank ll. Johnston. All had been
active with the fair board
through the years and all died

within the past year.
In the third race, ''Tukma,"
owned by C. William Clw,
Portsmouth, driven by Omar
Van Fossan, was first. Second
was Lovely Filly owned by
Raymond Grant of Jackson and
driven by Rodney llanson.
Lovely Filly was first in the
sixth race and won the trophy
bla!!ket given by R. ll. Rawlings
Sons. Co. and presented by
William Smith of the fair board.
Quarter horse racing was
held earlier Thursday.
One rider, J. T. Taylor of

SPIRIT HOSIERY SALE
on

Save now
Splrll by Stevens Pantyhose and' Stockings
during the big First Annual Sale.
Reg. 1.25 OM-sire Scanty-h- . . ·• . . . • S.le fk
Reg. 2 pr. 1.50 KnH-HI •• - . . · · · - S.le 2 for l.lt
Reg. 1.75 Baby Skin Pentyhose . . . . . - • S.le 1.39
Reg. ioo Support Stockings . . . . . . . Site 1.59
Reg. 3.75 SUpport PenfY"- . . · - . . S.le 2.tt
Reg. 1.25 Sl)eer Pntyhose . . •. • . . . . S.le ttc
Reg. 2 pr. 1.00 Mesh Stvckings •. - . . . S.le 2 pr. nc
Hosiery lltpartiiMIII, First Floor

·•

For Balllroom
"Decor1tor's
Choice"
$tU5 Walllo Wal!.

Come in and see our
outstanding values in
women's coats - including
pants coats, car coats, all
w~ather coats, ciasual
coats and fur trims:.A fine
selection of styles, fabrics
al'id colors. All sizes from
Junior Petites to:~ extra
siies. Be sure to come in
and make your selection
this weekend and take
advantage of the great
savings.

100' DUPONT
. NYLON CARPETING
Sal· T Soft Back, 5x8 feel.
Machine
washable .
Beautiful decoralor colors.

Salel2.00

$1.79
54"

The first effective method of
curing tobacco in America was
developed in 1612 by John Rolfe,
the man who later married
Pocahontas, the daughter of ·
Indian chief Powhatan.

Mattress and Box Spring . Maple Headboard and Steel
, frame. Durable, attractive- Floral quilled tick-side vents
and hardles for easy turning.

$179.85 Value

Sale

119~00

SALE! AIR-TEMP AIR CONDITIONUS
Reg. 319.00 11000 BTU Air Conditioners . • S.le 2.59.00
Reg. 259.00 12000 BTU Air Condilloners . • S.le 209.00
Reg. 169.Ci0 6000 BTU Air Conditioners . . Sale 129.00
Furniture
Dept.

Wmners in quarter horse
racing were:

.

First race: Jenning.s ~gie,
first; Paul Kilpatrick, second.
Second race: Darryl Stumbo,
first ; Larry Davis, second;
(Continued on page 10)

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXIV NO. 90

POMEROY'S SIDNEY SPENCER, popular hamesa horse trainer and driver, ill pktuted
receiving a trophy award for driving Wind F1ower (pictured) to first place yict&lt;&gt;ries in the
second and fifth races at the Meigs County Fair Thursday. With Spencer are Mrs. George
Keigley, Richwood, Ohio, who owns, with her hllsband, Wind Flower, and James Stewart, on
the right, who provided the blanket trophy on behalf of the Five Points GrilL

Reg. 15.00 Sleeping Bags · - . · · · ..
Reg. 12.00 Sleeping Bags - . - - -· . Reg. 4.00 Matching Carry-all
Reg . . 2.98 Matching Carry-all • · - -

KNIT NTUCK

.Saie i.39
yd..
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%Price
Back to School Clothes
For Boys- Young Men

You'll want lo visit the busy mens and boys dei&gt;Orlment on

selections of shirts for school wear . line quality slacks ord
Jeans•ln ·all sires and all-real·valuu Be sU'I'i!'fo ... oil llii
wonderlulatyl..- of SIN81Wn'fo(.'fn11ft lllitiiolY. · Jackels for
· school and winter wear . Socks lor men and bon In oil the
pOpular styles and colors. Belts . ~nos linderwear .
Pajamas • 1-!ardker&lt;:ftteves. You'll enjoy your IH!ck-fo.school
shopping In the mens and boys depertmenl - .everything
arranged for your easy selection ready for you tv buy.

GIRLS' SLEEPWEAR SALE
GOWNS - ROBES - PAJAMAS
SIZES 4 to 14 and TODDLERS-

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... - · · · · - · ·
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· . . · -- . - · · · . · · · ·
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• -. · . .
• -· · - ..• · - ·
- · · · · -

. Sale 5.99
Cannon Royal Family
· Sale 5.59
Contempo Stripe .
- Sale 5.39
Reg. 5.99 Full Size Sheets - • .. • • ' Sale 4.79
Sale 5.19
Reg. 4.99 Twin Size Sheets - - - - • Sale 3.99
Sale 5.09
Reg. 3.49 Pillowcases · • • - - - Sale 2.79 pr.
Sale 4.79
Sale 4.39
Cannon Royal Family
Sale 3. 99
. Sale 3.59 •
•
Seven Seas
Sale 3.49
Reg. 4.39 Full Size Sheets •• - ..• - Sate 3.59
Sale 3.39
Reg. 3.49 Twin Size Sheets - - - • • Sale 2.79
Sale 3.19
Reg. 2.79 Pillowcases . • • · • - - Sale 2.29
Sale 2.79
Cannon
Royal. Family
Sale 2.69
'
Sale 2.39
No-Iron Percale
Sal,. 1.99
Reg. 8.59 King Size Sheets -·• • • - - • Sale 6.89
Reg. 6.49 Queen Size Sheets . - - . • Sale 5.19
Sheets and Pillow Cases
Reg. 4.29 Full Size Sheets • • • • - - . Sale 3.49
Cannon Royal Faf!liiY
Reg. 3.39 Twin Slie Sheets · - · - - - Sale 2.79
Watercolor Rose
Reg. 2.19 Pillowcases - ·- • - • • - Sale 1.79 pr.
Reg. 5.49 Full Size Sheets . - · · - Sale 4.39
Cannon Royal Family
Reg. 4.99 Twin Size Sheets . - .. - Sale 3.99
Feather lite- No-Iron
Reg. 3.49 Pillowcases - · - · · - · Sale 2.79 pr.
Reg. 4.49 Queen Size Sheets • • - - - Sale 3.59
Cannon Royal_Family
Reg. 3.69 Full Size Sheets--- •..• Sale2.99
Renoir Rose
Reg. 2.99 Twin Size Sheets • • • - · - Sale 2.~9
Reg ~ 5.49 Full Size Sheets • · .... - Sale 4.39
Reg. 1.89 Pillowcases - - - - - • - Sale 1.49 pr.
Reg. 3.19 Pillowcases . . • . - · . Sale 2.59 pr.

Cannon Royal Famify
Solid Color Featherlite
Reg. 5.99 Queen Size Sheets · • · · · Sale 4.79
Reg. 4.39 Full Size Sheets - - -· • - · Sale 3.59
Reg, 3.49 Twin Size Sheets · · · - - · Sale 2.79
Reg. 2.79 Pillowcases · - - - · · - Sale 2.29 pr.
.
Cannon Royal Family
·
Dogwood Floral
Reg. 4.39 Full Size Sheets • · • · · · · Sale 3.59
Reg. 3.49 Twin Size Sheets . - - - - · Sale 2.79
Reg. 2.79 Pillowcases .. - .. • · Sale 2.29 pr.
Cannon No-Iron Floral
Reg. 4.39 Full Size Sheets - · · · · · · Sale 3.59
Reg~ 3.49 Twin Size Sheets · · · • · · Sale 2.78
Reg. 2.79 Pillowcases .. - .. • · Sale 2.29 pr.
Cannon Royal Family
Cameo Rose
Reg. 4.39 F!JII Size Sheets - • · ·· · · - Sale 3.59
Reg. 3.49 Twin Size Sheets · - · - - · Sale 2.79
Reg. 2.79 Pillowcases . • · . · -· Sale 2.29 pr.
Cannon Royal Family
Versailles
.
Reg. 5.99 Queen Size Sheets · · - -· Sale 4.77
Reg. 4.39 Full Size Sheets - - - • • · · Sale 3.59
Reg. 3.49 Twin Size Sheets - - - - - • Sale 2.79.
Reg. ~.79 Pillowcases · • - · - · · Sale 2.29 pr.

TEN CENTS

Otampions in the dairy cattle cow, 4 yrs. and over, 1st, 2nd &amp; Roy Holler, Earl Dean, Virgil

divisions """' selected Thursday at lhe IIIIth Meigs County
Fair.
In the Holstein !ned, Earl
Dean, Pomeroy Route 3,
exhibited the champion bull and
the senior and junior champion
fema les witb Roy llolter ,
Pomeroy Rllule 3, exhibiting the
grand champion female.
In the GUernseys, llarold
Carnahan exhibited the
champion bull, the grand
champion and lbe senior
dlampioo females and Donald
Mora, Pomeroy Route 3,
exhibited the jmior champion
female.

IIARY lOlA AND IIABI[ IIORA allllllted IIIIIP'IJII
duunpl.m and reserve champion In the Guernsey division,
better livestock, cattle judging at the Meigs Juni..- Fair
Thursday.

JENNY DEAN EXIDBITED the grand cbampim bull,
open class at the Meigs County Fair Tlmrsday. Sbe is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Dean, &amp;ulmer Road, both of
wbom were outstanding 4-H members as teenagers, now
operating a modern dairy.

the lot IIPQr ard select back-to-school clothing. Excellenl

Second Floor ~~!l~rep'~ ~pt.

PHONE 992-2156

Dairy Champions Judged

Acetate and Nylon blerd.
Machine washable. Colors:
Black, White, Blue. Rose,
Red, Wine, Gold, Brown.
Gr-. Royal.

Regularly 2.95 1o 4.95. Solid colors. mens and boys sizes. Not
every size In every color.
Whlie they last

Sale 8.99
Sale 7.19
Sale 2.39
Sale 1.79

variable cloudiness and
warm with chance of thundershowers today, High from
mid 80s to low 90s. Partly cloudy
tonight and Saturday with
chance of. thundershowers
central and south portion.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 20. 1971

press.
PANTS In sizes 29tv -46 and extra sizes 48 and 50. Made of 50
percent. Fortrel Polyester. !o percenl. Cotton twill. Permanent press. Colors: Dark Spruce. Chl•co•l grey · Khaki.

7.49 Table Covers
6.99 Table Covers
6.69 Table Covers
6.49 Table Covers
6.29 Table Covers
5.99 Table Covers
5.49 Table Covers
4. 99 Table Covers
4.49 Table Covers
4.29 Table Covers
4.19 Table Covers
3.99 Table Covers
3.49 Table Covers
3.39 Table Covers
2.99 Table Covers
2.49 Table Covers

Emergency

Devoted To The lntuesb Of The Meigs-Mmon Area

~de by Wrangler
SHIRTS In sizes 14 to 17112 In your correct sleeve length. 50 ·
percent. Polyester, 50 P.,rcenl. Cotlon twill. Permanent

SLEEPING BAGS

Rej.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reo.
Ret.
Reg.
·Reg.
Reg.
Reo.
Reg.
Reg.
Ret·
Reg.
Reg.

Pomeroy

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AUGUST WHITE SALE FIRST FLOOR DOMESTICS DEPT.
Reg. 18.98 Mattress Pads · - · . - - - Sale 15.19
Reg. 13.98 Mattress Pads- - · • - - - Sale 11.19
Reg. 11.98 Mattress Pads·· ... - - . Sale 9.59
Reg. 9.98 Mattress Pads • . · · - • · Sale 7.99
Reg. 7.98 Mattress Pads · . · . - - - Sale 6.39
Reg. 6.98 Mattress Pads - . - . - • . Sale 5.59
Reg. 5.98 Mattress Pads · · · .. • • Sale 4.79
Reg. 4.98 Mattress Pads - - · · • •- Sale 3.99
Reg. 3.98 Mattress Pads - · · - • - - Sale 3.19
Reg. 3.49 Mattress Pads • - • .. - - Sale 2.79
Reg. 7.95 Coil Spring Covers - · - • Sale 6.39
Reg. 5.95 Coil Spring Covers · . • - Sale 4.79
Reg. 2.98 Vinyl Mattress Covers - ~ - Sale 2.39
Reg. 2.09 Pillow Ticks · • • - · - • • Sale 1.69
Rea. 2.19 Satin Pillow Covers- - - . Sale 1.79
Reg. 1.59 Satin Pillow Covers - . - • Sale 1.29
Reg. 1.00 Cotton Pillow Covers - • · Sale 79c
Reg. 79c Cotton Pillow Covers - • - Sale 59c
Rea. 2.391roning Board Pad &amp; Cover
Sale 1.89
Reg. 1.991roning Board ~ld &amp; Cover SaiP. 1.59
Reg . 1.79 Ironing Board P1d &amp; Cover' .. Sale 1.4t
Reg. 1.00 Ironing Boa rei Covers · - - Sale 79c
Reg. 89c Ironing Board Covers • • - Sale 69c
·Reg. 79c Ironing Board Covers Sale 59c
Reg. 59c Ironing Board Covers •
Sale 49c
Reg . 49c Ironing Board Covers - • · Sale 39c
Reg . 39c Ironing Board Covers •
Sale '29c
Reg. 1.00 Place Mats - · · · · • ·- Sale 79c
Reg. 49c Place Mats • • - · · • • Sale 39c
Reg. 1.99 Blender Covers ·- · · - • • Sale 1.59
Reg. 1.49 Toaster Covers - · · · - • · Sale 1.19
Reg. 1.00 Toaster Covers · · · · - • • Sale 79c
Reg. 49c Pot Holders - · · - · · , - Sate 39c
Reg. 3.39 Dresser Scarfs - · · · • - • Sale 2.69
Reg . 2.79 Dresser Scarfs - - · · - - - Sale 2.29
Reg. 2.19 Dresser Scarfs - • · : - - Sale 1.79
Reg. 1.79 Dresser Scarfs · · - · · • ·_ Sale 1.49
Reg. 1.69 Dresser Scarfs · · - · • • • Sale 1.39
Reg . 1.59 Dresser Scarfs · · - - - · · Sale 1.29
Reg. 1.49 Dresser Scarfs · · · · · • · Sale 1.19
Reg . 1.29 Dresser Scarfs · · · · · -- Sale 1.09
Reg. 99c Dresser Scarfs · · · · • • • Sale 79c
Reg. 1.29 Doilies · · . • · · · • • Sale 1.09
Reg. 1.09 Doilies · - - · · - ·
Sale 89c
Reg. 89c Doilies · · · · · ·
Sale 69c
Reg . 69c Doilies · · - · · · · • - Sale 59c
Rea. 49c Doilies · - · · · · - . • Sale 39c
Reg. 19.99 Table Covers · · .. · · - Sale 15.99
Reg. 10.99 Table Covers · · - · . . Sale 8.79
Reg. 10.89 Table Covers · · · · - . Sale 8.69
Reg. 10.49 Table Covers · · · · · • Sale 8.3~
Reg . 9.98 Table Covers · · · · · • Sale 7.99
Reg . 9.49 Table Covers • · · · .. - Sale 7.59
Reg. 8.99 Table Covers • - - · · - Sale 7.19
Reg. 8.49 Table Covers · • ·
Sale 6.79
Reg. 7.99 Table Covers · · · · · - Sale 6.3t

the

Squad.

I

SALE! MEN'S MATatm WORK SUITS

First Floor Lingerie Dept.

EXTRA RRM

not yet oo the lrad:, Taylor was
appareoUy thrown and injured
when his 00.... stepped oo him
allel- tbe fall. He was taken to
lhe Hoher Medical Center by

Weather

Sale! Men's and Bojs' Twil Jeans

TWIN SIZE ONLY

lhird race. Just mounted and

Now You h,ow

Sale Price l99 asuit

SALE! SERTA COMFORT a ASSIC ENSEMBLI

Mason, was injured before the

First Annual

Friday and Saturday

HOSPITAL
NEWS

.

.

. .This Week End

I

llolzer Medical Center, First
Ave. a\Jd Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-3 p. m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p. m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Blrtbs
Mr, and Mrs. Robert E.
Barton, Pcaneroy, a son; Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Smith,
Gallipolis, a son, and Mr. and
Mrs. l\'I!Wie &lt;;. Waligh, Nor:
thup, ll daughter.
-"-DJSCIIARGES
James A. Baldwin, Kimberly
Sue Bueltley, Lorita M. Carlisle,
Mrs. Robert V. Durst and ion,
Jerald B. Eberts, Mrs. Larry F.
Hill, Mrs. llollie E. Jordan,
Mrs. James R. KaruJ!ard and
son, Mrs. Luella McGhee, Mrs.
James C. Mitchell and son,
Cliff&lt;I'd s. Montgomery, Miss
Juanita C. Napper, John P.
Scott, Mrs. Fern M. Sheets,
Mrs. Anna E. Sims, Carolyn
Jean Stout, Mrs. Ada R. Warner, Mrs. Cora L. Withers,
David Allen Gray, Mark T.
Musick, Brian Josei!!!...Warth,
Mrs. Delbert .D. Good and
daughter, Abner J. Pleasants,
Witmer G. Vincell, Walter D.
Miller, Mrs. A. A. Craig, and
Willard F. llarvey.

.

COAT -SALE·

Woodcock predicted the than would be provided even if
freeu on prices would be the combination of excise lax
ineffective because there is M cuts and the import levy were
machinery for enforcement. . to ~crease demand for domes' "The wage fl'eele, in con- lically produced ·ears by as
: lrast, will. be enforced by much as 5(10,000 units," be said.
employers who will welcome an He added, "U it is the
• opportunil{ to increase their intention of the administration
• prmts b~ ~..!lenying justified to carry the freeze bey~ 90
: wage ~ to their work- days, we will seriously COIISider
: ers," he sald.
declaring contracts airea~y
"President· Nixon bas now negotiated null and votd.
: sprung into action with a General Motors and othe_r
program that is grossly discri- companies stand to beneftt
minatory against workers, that from the concessions they have
will have little or no effect- won (in negotiations with
and more likely a negative labor)."
effect ---oo the present The UAW will postpone until
: intolerable level of unemploy- Nov. 20 a special convention it
' ment and that . reflects a bad planned for Sept. 11 in
perverse order of priorities Detroit, be said, in order to
fully in k~ina with traditional expand the agenda to include
Republican adherence to the •."all necessary action to protect
triekhHiowntheory,"Woodcock the integrity of our contracts.
said.
TheeoUective bargainina rights
Woodcock called lbe prllpO&amp;ed of ClUJ' members and the
investment lax credit "a huge economic future of both the
windfall to industry although it U.S. and Canada."
is labeled, in typical Madison
Avenue, as a job development
•

not be aided by tbe President's
action because industrY would
move to utili7.e more automated
equipment rather than hiring
mOI'e workers.
"The only significant pcslt!ve
elemePt of the program, from
the standpoint of employment,
ill the proposed ending of the
excise lax on autos, which we
supperI, provided tbe lax
savings are passed on to
consumers," Woodcock said.
"But tbe President's ~ per
cent cut in government employmenl will wipe out JIIOI'e .jobs
. •

- -

•·.

•

I

JDe8SUJ'e.''
He said unemployment would

:.;- -

Local bsrness horse driver . Hobert Pugh of Barll!w, also the
and trabier Sidney Spencer of driver, and third in the second
Pomeroy gave racing fans race was "Song of Cal:ypso"
plenty to cheer for ThiD'sday at · with ''Modockin Bock" first in
the Meigs County Fair as be the fifth .
drove to two straight victories.
The Spencer name again
Driving "Wind , Flower " came before racing fans
owned by Mr. and Mrs. ~rge Thw-sday when ·~Gentry Mir"
Keigley of Richwood, Spencer owned by Sidney imd Roger
drove the three-year old trotter Spencer and Dr. Jacob Weinto first place honors in the .berger, Gallipolis, won the first
second and fifth races. lie ·and fow-th races with B. Davis
. received the trophy blanket driving. Second place went to
presented by Five Points Grill. "Que Vero" and third to
Second place in both races was "Fascination Mir," both also
"Just Something" owned by owned by the two Spencer

Bath Towels- Hand Towels
Wash Cloths
Cannon Royal Family
Fragrance
Reg. 1.89 Bath Towels • • - - - - - - Sale 1.49
Reg. 1.29 Hand Towels · - - - • • - • Sale 99c
Reg. 59c Wash Cloths • • • • • - ·- Sale 49c
. Cannon Royai ·Family
Crystal Palace
Reg. 2.50 Bath Towels - • • • • . - . Sale 1.99
Reg. 1.59 Hapcl Towels • · • - - . : • Sale 1.29
Reg . 69c Wash Cloths - - • · • - · - Sale 5fc
Cannon Royal FamUy
Cameo Rose -.
Reg. 2.50 Bath Towels • • • • • - - - Sale. 1.99
Reg. 1.59 Hand Towels • - - · • - •• Sale 1.29
~eil- 69c Wash Cloths • • • • _· - - Sale 59c
Cannon Royal Family
Rose,Pattern
Reg. 3.50 Bath Towels . - - • - - - - Sale 2.79
Reg. 1.79 Hand Towels · • • . - .•• Sale 1.39·
Reg. 69c Wash Cloths • - - · - . • - Sale 59F

'Friends Die in Tragedy
Two Ruliand, Route 2 men Jacks in lhe back of the bead. llarrisonville ; Mary Louise,
are dead following an apparent Officials further believe that Judy Ann, Cathy, and Laura
accidental shooting and Sigler, whenhelearnedwhathe Mae, all at h&lt;me; a steprelllltant suicide near Salem had dooe, tiD'ned his own gun daughter, linda Lou S.anmer,
Center.
upon himself.
also at hcane; three soos, EdDead are Virgil Eugene Sigler was shot in the ward, of Columbus; Leroy and
Jacks, 51, and Uoyd Sigler, 51, forehead. Officials said they Michael Lee, at home; his
loog-time frlenda who spent bad talked to a number of mother, Mrs. Nellie !igler, of
many hours hunting together. people in the Rutland Rnute I SalemCenter,andasister,Mrs.
The men lived with their area and had learned that the Evelyn Might, also of Salem
families within a mile of each two men were the best of Center.
other in the Beech Grove area, friends.
Funeral services will be held
Rutland Route I.
The sheriff's dept. first at 4:30 p.m. &amp;lnday at the
Theirbodleswerefoundabout received a call at 8:10a.m. Martin Funeral Home in
ftve feet apart near a wooded Thw-sday inquiring about in- Rutland with the Rev. Uoyd
area at 1:55 p.m. Thw-sday. formation the department Grimm officiating. Bmial will
llowever, officials believe that might have had on the he in Miles Cemetery. Rutland
both bad been dead since about whereabouts of Jacks, who had American Legion Post 467 will
dusk Wednesday evening.
not ret\ll'lled home from a conduct military rites. Friends
()t the scene to investigate groundhog hunting expedition. may call at the funeral hune
after the bodies were found Jacks and Sigler were last seen 811y time after 2 p.m. Saturday.
Thursday 11fternoon were early Wednesday evening
Mr; Jacks is survived by bis
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach, purcbasi"" gaa for a truck in wife, Lucille; 10 daughters,
· · Kessmger,
·
Coroner R. R. Pickens , which -..,
they were riding in lhe Mrs .. v·rrgmta
Prosecutor Bernard Fultz and Langsville area.
Flortda ; Mrs. . Margaret
IIerman llenry of the BID'eau of W&lt;l'd of the two men being Johnson, Langsville; Mrs .
Qiminai Investigation.
missing spread in the Salem YertineMozingo, Bremen; Mrs.
Officials lheorized that the Center ar.ea and numerous Wanda Myer, An~adale, Va. ;
friends bad arrived at hunting volunteers were searching for Mrs. Doros llalftnll, Rutland :
dealinatim (for groundhogs) them when lhe bodies were Mrs: Rachel M~, Mrs.
Wtidnesday evening and had found about I :55 by Wtlbur lJtcille Kennedy, ·Diana, Anna
split up at the edge of the llolden a_nd lloward _Romine. ,Louise and Judy Kay, all at
wooded area to circle it.
Both victims had .22 rifles.
home; four soos, Earl, of West
It Ill believed that ·as they Mr. Sigler was a coal miner Virginia ; Tim, Columbu_s ;
rounded the f..-est area at the. and a _veter~ of World _war. II .. Vu-gil, Jr., and Joseph ~d,
rear,Siglerfireduponhearmg a lie IS survtved by his wife, both at heme; three sisters,
inove~~~ent, lhinking it was a Natalie; five daughters, ~·· Mrs.
Gottshall, Maryland;
grollldltoa.lnatead he bad shot IloDDa Jean Laudenrult, . Mrs. DollieOeland, Langsville;

om.;

'

In tbe Millring lblrthorn class
aU awards including the
champion bull, junior and
senior female and the grand
champion female were won by
Fred Leroy Jlurbap of Wellston.
In the .ler.;rJs, David Nlase
and Son, Mino!sville, abibited
tbe mampi01i liun, senior and
juniOI' cbampiqn female and the
grand champion female.
Olher winoe!'S were (in order

Mrs. Ethel Priddy, Middlep&lt;rl; listed):
a brother, Ben of Ironton, 211 IJolstein, bull calf, under I yr.
grandchildren and ooe great- andoverfmmtbs,Earlllean;
•,•,•,•,•,•,•,• ... ·.••• '•' '•' •,•,•,•,•,•, .•.•,•,• ...... •,•.· •t. •
grandchild.
FT. MrPIIERSON, Ga.
Funeral services will be held (UPII _ u. William L
at 2 p.m. Sunday at tbe Martin caJiey's life ~ for the
Funeral Heme wilb the Rev. · mlll'lltr e1 zz Yietaamese
Ray Roush officiating. Burial civilias at My l.ai was
will be in Miles Cemetery. •""'-'l 18 a years conFriends may call at tbe funeral fillemem Ieday 11y u. Gen.
borne any lime alter' 2 p.m. 111 Alloert o. Coaaar.
Saturday.
:1:1.&lt;&gt;::;:.;:,;;:,:,._,.,~

3rd, Roy Holler ; cow 2 yrs. and
under 3 yrs ., Virgil King, 1st,
2nd &amp; 3rd; senior yearling
heifer, Earl Dean ; Roy Holter,
Virgil King .
Junior Yearling lleifer, Earl
Dean, Virgil King; senior heifer
calf, Dean, King; junior heifer
calf, Dean, Phillip Radford ; get
of sire, Roy Holler, Virgil King,
Earl Dean; produce of cow, Roy
Holler. Virgil King ; 3 females
bred and owned by exhibitor,

King.
Guernseys, bull, 1 yr. and
under 2 yrs., llarold Carnahan;
cow, 4 yrs. and over, lsi &amp; 2nd,
Harold Carnahan ; cow 3 yrs,
and under 4, llaroid Carnaham,
Daniel Nease, Donald Mora.
Cow, 2 yrs. and under 3 yrs.,
lsi &amp; 2nd, Carnahan, 3rd, Daniel
Nease; senior yearling heifer,
Carnahan, 2nd &amp; 3rd, Donald
Mora ; junior yearling heifer,
(Continued on Page 4)

Horse Judging Results
The results of the low- classes
in the horse and pony cooformation judging held Wednesday at the 108tb annual
Meigs County Fair were
reported today by the Meigs
Fair Board. They are (in order
listed) :
Western llorse, stallion (2
yrs. and over), Cole Stables;
Sherry Indestad.
Parade Type-mare or
geldings, Lynn Baker, Marjorie
llouck.
Western Mare or llorse, Cole
Stables, Cole Stables, L. T.
Taylor.
Western Mare with spFing
foal, Susan Yost, Robert Meier,
Danny Sayre.
Western . Yearling, Cole
Stables, Susan Yost, Danny
Sayre.
·
English llorse Conformation,
Stallion (2 yrs. and over),

Sherry Indestad, E. J. llill.
English Show llorse, E. · J.
Hill.
English Saddlebred Pleasw-e,
Sherry lndestad, Claud K.
Nease.
English Saddlebred mare
with foal, Sherry Indesiad.
English Saddlebred Yearling,
E. J. llill, Sherry lndestad.
Conformation (Pony 48 to 5I
inches), !\lares and Gelding,
any age, Cole Stables; Tony
Kennedy, E. J . Hill.
RHEA MORA, MeiJI
Filly or Stud Cold, (I yr. and
County
Dairy Priacen, wu
under 2), E. J. Hill.
Wednesday
and
Conformation (pCIIY under 48 busy
inches), Stallioo (2 yrs. and Tbunday asslllting wilb lbe
aver ), Nancy Collins, E. J . Hill, beef and catue juclglag at the
Meigs County Fair.
E. J . llill.
Mares and Geldings (any
age), Tmy Kennedy, Robert
LOCAL TEMPS
Meier, Lark Napier.
.
Temperature in downtown
Mares with Foal , Lark Pomeroy Friday at lJ am. was
Napier.
76 degrees under sunny skies.

their children to respect the
improvements that have been
made and to attempt to keep the
buildings in the best possible
condition for the longest
possible time.
In connection with the
preparation of our wildings for
lhe ~ of school, ow- board
members will inspect all
buildings next Tuesday.
Following the inspection they
will meet as a group to discuss
what they have seen. We are
looking forward to this experience.
Speaking of inspections, all of
our buses have been inspected,
passed, and are now ready to
roll.
Look for a report of bus
schedule changes next week.
Check this closely. There will be
some changes, particularly in
the Pomeroy area.
EACH' liiGll SCHOOL
student by now should have
received a post card with his or

her class schedule for this
coming year. A request for a
change should have been made
within the lime period indicated
oo the card. We go to all this
trouble to avoid changing
schedules after school starts
·
and causing the unnecessary
confusif&lt;l that results.
We still have SOOie textbooks
arriving. A few of our shipmenta have been a little late.
We are hopeful that all needed
books will be 111 band by Aug.

I
19
1
Countdown· Begm·s to c asses m· 7
By Geerge llu'paves Sapl. our home 11ames are now
Meigs Loeal ·Scll.,. Dtslri&lt;l available to lhe general publi~.
In last week's report 1 The period of bolding back
ment(oned seVeral points im- lickels for previous season
portant to the'openiqpi school ticket ~
ended.
Todaylsballaddan item..- two you'n! mleresled m a reserve
and
basize
of lbose.
sm tkket, can the high
reemp
some
·of last
week.
school at !1112-!l!il.
But first, let me encwrage o...tng the past three ffiCIIths
to
tr .
the M .
Harold HniDanl, No. 1 man d
booth at~ our rusbdal stalf, and several
c
young men under special
•
Is finallcial support programs,
Speakmg of Schoo bavebeenbllsyinprepariq:our
00 ~ r... lbe openiog of
-No. 201
scbooL L.any Mcatisw and u.,
McComas have also been
Fair tonight and tomorrow. The deeply involved in lbe plans and
people wbo are working in this wcrl: of the»"'""" .
booth
are
contributing Alot has been done. There is
significanUy to tbe financial still a lot to do. There is a lot
supp..-t of our total athletic that just .,..'t be finished
prognun. They d s ve your N.,...,..* ' , all of us in lbe
lrCIIa
dis ·
debt of
Utude
tude and
grali
your pa
ge. · trict owe a
gra
Why not drop in, make a to the extra effort eqJeDled by
purcltase, and thank them for all these !o1b in dis important
their eff..-ts?
.
wcrl:. We hope that the parents
Football season )ickets for t1. our dislrid wiD eocGUrllge

llas

ru:.eti

::as::.

u

30.

agreement among studenla,
tel!chers,
parents,
administrators, board memben,
and lhe general public. These
groups just do not agree wholly
on what proper school dresa
ahould be.
Never the1ess, the board L-"""
accepled the responsibility- as
supported by court decisions to develop, adopt, and •1m·
piement regulations dealing
with slll!ient dress and appearance.
Of all the groull' involved
mentiooed above, the board is
the one that baa this respon.
sibility. They have accepted it
and acted. Now they need the
support and understanding of
parents, teachers, studentS, and
the general public in implementing this policy with a
minimum amount of conflict.
We look forward to bsvmg· this

SEVERAL WEE~ AGO our
board adopted a revised dre111
code. This revision came after
studying recommendations
frun the high school student
council, the high schoolfaculty,
and the junior high school
faculty.
We recognize that this code
rybod ha
won't make eve
Y ppy.
Indeed, I doo't think that there support. ·
is any dreSs code that could
Can we count on yw? We
produce happmess for and hope so.

..

Reg. 19c
Cannon Dish Cloths·
Waffle Weave or Terry Rib
·Sale6for$1.00

Be Thrifty! Save All of ·Your Saleslips From
.

.

·~

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
'

.

'

.aLutPtON PAIR of 4-H market lamba was exhibife!l by_Denille.Dean at the junior fair
sbtnr Wednesday.

•

•

.

mLs WAS mE sc:ENE at tbe 1-. lleii!ICuuoCy Fair Thursday night
when lbefint twiJiBbthcnr l.at

raciuK ia'«&lt;aD was held ..'l1te twilight

rae ina will get underway again tonight ·at 6 and hone harness !'itci.~g wiD be
featured at 3p.m. Satunlay,'closing day of the fair.

�2-'I'IIIDII,S 11 1,1"' Jl~

-

uy, 0., ~.JD,IJ7J
'

.

•

-

: , ~ -The lliUq!entlnei,M!"' J41&gt;-1'\meivy,O.,Auj!. 20,1971

Wt;~rld Money System Shattered by Nixon
"'\CC'J!MIIillllliiii'JIM~~~~~~~~~~~

"'i! : :'"'r.:'%&gt;-'&lt;:'-~

.,

Gold, Lang Term, a Bad Buy
WASHINGTON CUPit - Som~ lnterltalional
.,_rata bive turaedallcly prcllt 011 the flucluatklnsof
1lle Cold uwblla receat yean but as a loag-term ID·
~1, -CGidllubeena bid boy.lf someone bad IJouPt
a bu ol gold at lhe official price of Pi an oanee ID lH4 '
wlten 1lle carreat 1Dtenall01181 m011ellry 1711~ went
Jato elf~t; be tould sell It today 011 the Londoa open
mirtel for a Utile over f'l,
·
·
Bit It w!JII)d lake ab011t $U5 today to buy lhe same
quitllt)' ol goodl •lid aervkes that could have been obtalned for $liD IMf. So lhe Ul be would set for bls OIIIICe
·al sold would be wortb less thaD • Ia terinS of lH4
prices. ADd be '!l'ould bave ICI8t the IDtemrt wblch would

&gt;;

~

~-'· .
~

~::
~:
·~:

~;

:~

:::.

:::;
~

::!

~~
~

be~~:::~.:.::::.:=-~v:.
veaAire~J
s
. v.:enemee.... . .

llave
. . .~

.~

,

.

By NORMAN KEMPSTER
certain yet, one effect may be
WAsHINGTON (UPi) - With · to. end the centurie~HJid use of
a single act, President · Nixon gold as money. The $36.9 billion
has shaken the , foundation of worth of gold in various
the world money system, government treasuries aroiUld
possibly clearing the way for the world may ultimately be
construction of a new. economic used for making jewelry and
structure more suited to the filling teeth.
In short; the United States
last quarter of the 20th century.
By suspending the convertibi· . has. revoked its promise to
lily of the dollar into gold. in redeem in gold upon demand
.international · .transactions, the dollar holdings of foreign
Nixon raised far-reaching governments and their cenlral
quesUons about the 'vJIIue of the banks.
dollar compared witli other free
The practical effect of the
world currencies and the action is to devalue the dollar
relation of those currencies to in comparison to most other
each other.
currencies. The amount of the
The step;-the most important devaluation will vary from one
money development since the foreign currency to another and
Bretton Woods conference 'll will be fixed by the laws of
years ago, was overshadowed supply and demand in intemadomestically by Nixon's 91klay tiona! exchange markets.
freeze on wages, prices and
In the argot of the money
rents. But it could be the most markets, the dollar is being
significant part of the package. permitted to "Doat." Other
Although the results are not currencies have been floated

Obi0 50th
.
When to In S ding
f~nore Signal pen
Ohio·
Parents
On Citizens
H
•
~oun~
anoi •

IWIN AT BRIDGE

.9743

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
ranks 50th among the states in
• AK9
the
of money it spends
WEST
EAST
on cttizens m proportion to the1r
.K105
wealth and is 49th in its per
• 942
.A87
capita financial resources, two DAYTON (UPI)- Charles madenoconunent. .
.KS
.A109862
Cleveland
State University eco· and Vera Dennis of Miamisburg
.. QJS43
.1062
Private examiners hired by
nomists have reported.
SOUTH (D)
believe Hanoi is holding ·lheir the Dennis', however, claim
John Burke Jr. and Eric Weld son Mark as a prisoner-of-war, various discrepancies.
.AQJ86
Jr., working in cooperation with
. ,KQ653
but the Navy says he was killDr. Roland Papucci, a pathol.• 7
Cleveland State's Institute of Ur- ed in a 1966 helicopter crash ogistfor the Papucci Laboratory
.87
ban Studies, said their conclu- and claim , a body sent home in Cincinnati which does work
North-South vulnerable
sions are largely based on 1970
four years ago was his.
for the Cincinnati Fire DepartWest North East South census data.
Mrs. Dennis said she was fir~ ment and the state of Ohio,
''Given,
Ohio's
inelastic
tax
Pass 3•
4•
notified of her son's death in said the body was a male, Causystem," they said, "the state July, 1966.
Pass Pass
Pass
casiank about 5-foot-3 or 5-foot--4.
is bound to fall further and fur- "I don't think anybody ever Mar Dennis was about 5-footOpening lead-· K
tlier behind in total revenues ... quite believes something lhey 11.
in
fact the natural growth rate don't want to, yet I know that's
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
"He could not have shrunk
of revenues from Ohio's present the road to insanity, so I ac- that much - certainly not
Jeremy Flint points out tax system is the lowest in the
cepted it," she said at her home eight inches," _said Papu~i.
that the winning bridge nation."
near here.
The pathologiSt also believes
player knows when to ignore
The inelasticity is caused by She and her husband first be- the man died in some kind of
partner's signal.
revenues based mainly on sales
Here is a hand from a rub- and •property" taxes which they gan to doubt that the body bur- ground action. Shrapnel from a
ber bridge game. East was
led with her son's name was hand grenade was found in the
an average player who liked said, do not grow as fast as not Mark's when they saw a skull, he said.
to bid. West was an expert the incomes of Ohio citizens. picture of a POW in a news
''This body was burned in
According to their study, Ohio
who knew this partner.
magazine.
gasoline,
certainly
not
Therefore, West did not ranked 50th in terms of general "The day before Thanksgiving helicopter fuel," he said. "My
consider pushing with a five- revenues availsble to state govdiamond bid against South's ernment per $1,000 of income. last year my husband brought guess, although I can't say for
vulnerable game. He opened Thenationalaveragewas$104.91 Newsweek magazine home/' sure, is that it was involved in a
the klnj: of diamonds and and Ohio's average was $69.71 Mrs. Dennis said. "He said jeep or some vehicular acnoted his partner's play of
'look at that' and l did and l cident."
. .
the deuce. Obviously his per $1,000.
looked al the picture and knew . Papucci also believes lhe dog
Ohio's general revenue was il w&amp;s Mark."
·-partner '!l'anted him to shift.
· ' " ' ' · !iigs''on the bOdy ' were not inCould the 41amond deuce be $262.70 per resident compared
• a suit-preference signal with 1\'ith a national average of $384. The body, which was not v'olved In the shme accident as
" a club void? Not likely at 11. Only New HampShire had viewed after it was first sent the body.
home, was exhumed twice this
"It's very difficult to explain
all. That would mean that less money to spend.
East held at I east five
Other conclusions reached by year for investigation. The -but the tags were in too good
hea-rts and, with 11 red
Navy conducted tests, but has of shape to belong to the body,"
cards. East was the sort to the economists:
-Ohio ranked 49!h on 11M
fly the flag to the live level.
'
. What could East hold in amount of state tax revenues
hearts? Probably the ace collected both on a per capita
and nothing else in the trick- and per $1,000 or personal in·
come basis.
-Ohio's tax revenue increass-1 $1 lor JACOBY MODERN book
to: "Wirr crt Bridge,'~ (c/o tltiJ ne-ws· ed in 1969-70 by 10.5 per cent
,.,.,), f.O. Box 489, Radio City over the previous fiscal year, .
Srolioo, New York, N:Y. 10019.
but the increase was 38th among
the states.
!airing line. Now West saw a
-Ohio ranked 49th in tenns
sure-fire set if East did hold of direct aid from the federal
that heart ace.
government.
West continued diamonds.
South ruffed, entered dummy with a club, led a spade
and finessed the jack.
.
West took his king and
Pass
1•
Pass
carefully led his highest Pass
3•
Pass
heart, the nine. East won Pass
Pass
5•
with th~ ·ace, thought awhile Pass
5•
Pass
and finally led a dl8mond.
You, South, hold:
Now West was sure to set the .AK87 .A2 .KQ9 .. K643
hand with his 10 of trumps.
What do you do now?
A-Poss. You have bid your
(HEWSPAPU. ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
full values.
.JlO

.QJ43

IS

•2

The bidding has been:
North
East

West

Ceutracllve Lellen ol Oplaloa., Ill good tute, ue
wekomed. 'l1le edllor ftHI'Vel lhe rfcbt to lborten !ellen.
AD !etten mut be llped, wiUI a fidl addrea, altboap
IIIIUall may be .eel apoa reqaf:lt.

... ~~:-.,.;::
-

Letter of Rebuttal
August 16, 1971
Dear Sir:
This letter is in rebuttal to the article entitled ''They'll Know
He's an HooestMan,"l am not quite sure that everything stated
in that article is completely and honestly true. Furthermore, I do
not believe that the name·signed to the article is lhe name of the
true author.
They stated that this policeman was called ''pig." Is there due
reasoo for this? Do people know more than is believed, or does the
truth hiU'I? What is the purpose !i the letter? Is it to hide the truth
oc to build up -seH-ego?
Il seems to me that' llle entire purpose of the letter is to raise
the t.t:ueauthor's ego and lower his "better off" relatives.
II was slated that the men he worked for were too cowardly to
lace a big problem. II ReJns to me the other policemen ,.ere
t1oiJW a fine job before he came, and will continue to do so after he
leaves.
This mantras not always a policeman. He was noi always as
salnUy as implied in the article. Ask anyone who knows the true
llllll. lsee no-reason to lower his relatives' reputation in order to
build up a !alae frool
Grow up, ''Mr. Policeman", and stop using your relatives
good name ID make you appear to be "Mr. Big Stuff".
·
Rose lawson
Route2
Che8hlre,Ohio

MIJ[E BENEDVM, REEDIMLLE, e&amp;hlblted

lhe Meigs County Junitt' Fair.

.

Holding Son

1.4.

TODA Y'S QUESTION
Instead of bidding three
spades your partner has raised
you from three to four dia ...
monds. What do you do now?

structure.
dollar into West German
The dollar is in a llllique If gold Ill elimlnaled as • marks, for instance, at the
position because the interna- base, It will wipe out the last official rate ~ then ·.buying
tional exchange rates of all vestige of the use of the metal goods and servtees With the
other currencies are fixed in as money. Americans have marks.
relationship to the dollar. With been unable to convet:t their This is something relatively
the dollar Doatlng, no one dollars into gold for about 40 new. For most of the post
,World War II period, inflation
knows for sure what .a dollar years.
The present world money in the United States .was
will be worth tomorrow or next
system
was created in the generally less severe than in
week or next year in terms of
French francs or British summer. of 1944 at an Europe, Japan, Canada and
internatiorull c&amp;nrerence held in other U.S. trading partners.
pounds, for instance.
This means.there also will be the resort COJIIJDUility ' of The Brjlish pound, the Fr~ch
uncertainty about the exch!mge Bretton Woods, N.H. · Most franc and other ~ctes .
rate of pounds for . francs Communist nations remained were devalued occastonally to
because both those currencies· oulside the system and their ~eep i!'eir purchasing power in
were fixed in relation to the Cl!"encies are not . freely line _wtth th.'l. !!Q!,I;u'.
convertible for other currency. "Birti!(I969 the West German
now uncertain. ·dollar.
The conference created the mark was increased in value in
The International Monetary
Fund (IMF), which includes IMF and gave 11 th&lt;;. responslbi- relation· to the dollar·and three
representatives of most non- lity--although not the real · months ago it was permitted to
Comnnmist nations, will hold power-to maintain stability in Doat up in value. This weala)ela
of the dollar encouraged
its regularly scheduled annual exchange rates.
As the dominant economic currency speculators to exmeeting in Washington Sept. 'r/poWer then as now, the United change their !follars for marks,
Oct.l.
became the center-of the francs and Japanese yen.
States
An effort will be made then
Some Speculators even bor·
to create a new exchange rate system. The U.S. government
a~ to buy and sell gold on row~ dollars which they
the open market at a fixed exchanged for marks, planning
price of $35 an ounce.
to buy back the dollars, when
In 1944, the United states had their value fell in relation to
ATl'RAcnNG A lot el
a seemingly inexhaustible sup- the mark. They then could
altentioa at the Meigs Co1111ty
ply of $21.2 billion worth of repay their dollar borrowings
Fair Ill tills clever display by
gold. That was 10 per cent of and keep the difference.
the Culligan Soft Water
the 1944 gross national product
On Wall Street, this is called
Company located Ia the
CGNP) of $210 bi11lon. This a "short sale" and speculators Commeretal Bulldlag.
year, the U.S. gold stock is who sold the dollar short in
down to about $10 billion--only rece~t weeks have reaped huge - - - - - - - - hesaid. "Thebodywassubject- 1 per cent of the $1 tri11lon profits.
andexceededthatfigureinthe
ed to very intensive heat, GNP.
·
Nixon blamed these specula- f1rst six months of this year. If
a minimum of 900 degrees. The
Even before Nixon revoked it, tors-the so-called Gnomes of the ouiflow in the sec00t1 half
dog tags were not. H they ,.ere, the pledge to redeem in gold ZIU'ich--for the dollar crisis.
of this year equals the rate in
they would have disintegrated. • the dollars held by foreign
"In recent weeks, the speula- the f1rst half, the 1971 deficit
Mrs. Dennis said the Navy governments could not have tors have been waging an all- will be a staggering 123.3
has been unable to present any been kept. Foreign official out war on the American bi11lon.
evidence to prove that the budy agencies now hold about $38. 2 dollar," Nixon said. "I have The primary . purpose of
was that of her son .
billion in dollars, almost four direc;ted the Secretary Or the devaluing the dollal' is to make
She said the only move by the limes the u.s. monetary gold Treasury to take action neces- U.S. exports cheaper iri foreign
Navy to restudy the case was stpck.
· sary tothedspeculefend the dollar markets and to make imports
its exhumation of the body The devaluation will not agamst
ators."
more expensive in the United
three weeks ago.
affect the domestic uses of the
But speculators, who often Stales. This is intended to help
"The man who came down dollar. Americans will continue include some perfecUy respec- U.S. business meet the increaswas supposed to make a deci- to be paid in dollars and they table American businessmen, ing foreign competition and
sion," she said, "but he admit- may continue to spend them. go after a currency only when stimulate employment at llome.
led he couldn't make ooe. It's However, imports will become it is weak. Selling a slrong In addition, Nixon imposed a
be&lt;;n three weeks now and we more expensive. . And tourists currency short can bankrupt a special 10 per cent tax on all
haven't heard from them. overseas already have dlscov- Speculator.
imports subject to tariff which
They've just shut us off.
ered that their dollars will not .The dollar was weak because are not covered by statutory
"I presume they are not go- go as far as before.
the total dollar outDow in the quota reslrictions. This special
ing to cooperate with us at all "
Why devalue the dollar at form of import purchases, tax covers about half of all
she continued, "because they~- all?
foreign aid, foreign invest- imports and is intended to
dered the body reburied.''
Because of inflation, a dollar ments,.overseas military spend- make them substantially more
Mrs. Dennis said she hoped will no longer buy as many ing, tourist lravel and so forth expensive in the United States.
the Navy would open a board goods and services as could be was greater than income from The President said the action
of inquiry or place her son•s obtained by changing that the sale of exports and other was intended to overcome the
name on the missing in action
sources.
·
effect of foreign taxes which
list.
Plrf.~aat V~!Y. ,...pllal
• lrl the. decade of the 1960's, dlserimi.,.~American
"Hanoi has never volunteered'. ADMISSIOfi!S: William ~~ United .Sll!tes ran a, deficit gcxidi, , • :'" · · 1
a name," she said. "If we put Sydenstrlcket",'"cMrs. Jobn m 1ts balance _~ payments~~ As one top official said, the
his name on the list, then Han· Brewer, Point Pleasant; Mrs. · averaged $1 bi11lon a year. This President is saying that Uncle
oi may come hack and say 'yes, W'illlam Carpenter, Grove City, was acceptabl~Sugar is no mtt'e. He has been
we have him."'
But llle deftcit soared to a replaced with a toUflh yankee
0 . William Keefer Point
l'i.;asant; Mrs. Gay' Yoq, record $10.7 billion last year trader.
Llllg Bottom, 0.; Mrs. Donald
Culsin,Leoo; Mrs. cart Oliver,
GallipoJis Ferry; Mrs. James
Neal, Letart; Howard Carder,
Point Pleasant, and &lt;llarles
Westmoreland, Cottagevllle.
DISCHARGES: . Oscar·
Tuller, RJchard McCartney,
Ira Hope, Mabel Cordray, Mrs.
FARAH Slak-Backs are shaPBCI and
·Lula Robinson, Gregory Hart.'
ley and Judith Huff.
flared as you like them with jean fit
¥~ but never the dollar .

Certain

ZO

NOKTII

IMr. Phipps in Acid Dallas Exam Tonight

!be r I · ve cl,an•tlm steer W'eoaflh-hllly at

BACK TO
SCHOOL

RACES RESCHEDULED
MARION, Ohio (UPI)-The
American Hot Rod Associatioo 's Grand Nationals, which
were delayed by rain last July,
have been rescheduled for Aug.
27-28-Z9 at the Marion County
International Raceway.

.

comfort in a variety of premium
fabrics. You need several pair.

good.
Ftt' Ohio, the peach crop Is
apecled to be up from last
year. The 1971 peach outcrop is
apecled to be about 28 million
pounds, the same level as the ·
· 1970 crop.
·

Fresh Peach Season Here
By Deborah M. Conldln
Exl. Agenl, Home Econ.
Peaches are one of our most
popular fruits. They rank fourth
in consumption, exceeded only
by apples, oranges, and
bananas. This is the time of
year when locally grown
peaches appear on the market.
Prices and quality are usually
best when the crop is at its peak
so plan to enjoy peaches now in
all the many ways they can be
served - in pies, on ice cream,
in salads, and for eating out-of
hand. ·
Tips on selecting peaches There are no easy rules for
.
h
Th
choosmg peac es. e pretty
blush on a peach may fool youit makes a peach look atlracUve
bulisnotasuresignofripeness
or good flavor. The background
color is really more important.
ll should be a creamy yellowish,
though color varies with
variety . Peaches may · be
yellow, yellow blushed, red in
varying amounts, white, or
white blushed.
·How peaches are sold Frequently, peaches are sold as
" tree-ripened.'' · Tree-ripened
peaches are those picked for
eating within two days of
maturity. , They will be com- ·
•

pletely soft in two days at room trays as they may become
temperatUr-e. Peaches picked at bruised when piled on top of
the "firm ripe" stage will soften each other.
more slowly and will be ripe for What's the supply picture? eating in three to five days if The Southern peach crop is
kept at room temperature. expected to be considerably
Peaches picked green will below the average for the· last
shrivel rather than ripen and . three years and for some
will not attain full Davor for the Southern areas, shipments to
variety.
date have been below last
The best way for the customer year's level. However, quality
toknowwhatheis purchasing is and size of the peaches has been
by means of a label containing
variety and degree of ripeness ,f'-~-,.
_ -Rdo
--Seft
-'---li.-,---,.
information. He may also ask .
IIIII _ ,
1111
the retailer. Generally, the :
D~~~~=~l-:'JFHE opportunities for purchasing 1
MEIGS-MASON AREA
tree-ripened peaches are CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
. E..c. Ed.
greater at the orehard or at a
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
fa~m rOadside market.
City Editor
.
Published daily except
Handling and storage - saturday by The Ohio Valley
Peaches brwse
· east'ly ,, so they Court
Pubtlshtng
Company, Ohio,
111
St.. Pomeroy,
should be handled with care. A · 4S769. Business Olfice Phont
bruised spot can quickly 99UIS6,
Editorial Phone 9'122157.
become a decayed spot. Sort
Second class postage paid at .
peaches alter purchasm· g and Pomeroy, Ohio. ·
National advertiSing ·
refrigerate the ripe ones till representative Bolllnelllthey are ready for use. Firm- Gallagher· Inc .. 12 Eost 42nd
St., New York City, New York .
ripe peaches can be kept in the
Subscription rates : Derefrigerator in good condition live_red by carrier whore
ava•lable SO cents per wHk;
for seven to ten days or they can . By Motor Route where carrier
be held at room temperature to service nol availablt: Ont
month $1 .15. B'f mall in Ohio
ripen and then refrigerated for and w. Va ., Ont year st•.oo.
a shorter time
, Six monlhs S7.2S . Throe
·
months U .SO. Subscrir,lion
For . best results, place i price Includes sunday T mes.
peaches ooly one ,layer deep in S.ntonet
·

By U•ited Press lnlwnil~t
American League
EatI
W. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
1~ 44 .627 ...
· Boston
66 51 .w 10'12
Detroit .. 6S 51 .533 11
New York
63 61 .508 14
Washington 51 70 ..QI 24'h
Cleveland
49 74 .398 27'h
West
W. L. Pet. GB
Oakland
78 -14 .639 ...
Kansas City 63 58 .521 Wh
Chicago
60 63 .-488 18'h
California
57 68 ,-156 22'h
Minnesota
55 66 .455 22'h
Milwaukee
Sl 70 ..Ql 26'h
Thursday's Results
Oakland at Baltimore, ppd.,
rain

·

(Onlygameschedufed) ·
Todoy's Problbty Pilchen
Boston (Peters 11,9) at
Oakland (Blue 22-4), night.
Washington (M&lt;;Laln 7-16 and
Bosman 9-131 at Kansas City
(Firtzmorrls S-1 and Wright 3~1 2, fwl-nlght.
Milwaukee (Parsons 10-1•) at
Detroit (Niekro HI; night.
Minnesota (Perry· 12-W at
Baltimore {Dobson 15-6), night.
Chicago (John· 10-121 at
Cleveland (Colbert 3-3), night.
New York (Peterson 13-7) at
California {May 7-8), night.
Saturday's Games
Boston at Oakland
New York at Claifornla, night
Wash at Kansas City, night
Milwaukee at Detroit
Chicago at Cleveland
Minnesota at Baltimore, night

NEW YORK (UPI)-lt's taken quite awhile, but it )oaks
llkesomebodyis6naUygolngto
do sometling about today's
''wayward athlete".
''There are too many athletes
today In need of being
1emembered," ex-lootball star
Buddy Young said 'lbnrsday as '
tile campaign to erect an
American Athlete's National
Heme was kicked olf at a IUDcheCII in downl.owtl New York.
Tbe hCIIle, wblch will CC/8t in
the vicinity Ill $4~ million, will
provide residence and medical
aid ftt' athletes whose fortunes
- - - - -...

J

I

By ~i\:. ~::.'1n'i::::g,at
Leading Ba1111rs
Notional le"!!ue
Torre, S!.l 12~lt,8 7~· 1~2 ~C:.
Bckrt, Chi 115 .w 7~ 163 .352
120 ol89 79 162 .331
Garr, All
Snglln, Pit 109 .QI 17 139 .330
Clmnte,
Pit 101412
13-1 .325
Bt-ock, St.l
120-186 65
92 157
.323
Jones, NY 10~ 398 « 128 .322
Alou, St.l 116m 61119 .316
121 -186 u 152 .313
·Davis,
H.Aron,LAAll 109
380 70 119 _313
American Logue
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Of
iva,
Min
100
.360
Murcer, NY l20 389
-136 61110
79 143 .328
Otis, KC
11~ 447 67 138 .309
Tovar, Min 118 495 76151 .305
· Rttmnd, Bal 103 35-4 65 107 .302
Rotas, KC 113 -109 55 123 .301
Mnchr, Was 102 325 39 97 .298
Rchrdl, Chi 105 390 « 116 .297
Smith, 8os 122 ~76 69 1.0 .29l
Horton. Del 113m 61126 .m
Horne Runs
NationAl Logue : Stargell,
Pitt ~1 : May Cln 33; H. Aaron,
All 32; Johnson, Phil 27 ;
Williams, All and Montanez,
Phil 25.
American Leogue: Melton.
Chi and Cash, Del 26 ; Smith,
Bos 25 : Petrocelli, Bos, Horton,
Del and Murcer, NY 22.
Runs Batted In
National League: Slargell,
Pill 109; Torre, Sl.l 99; H.
Aaron, All 86; Montanez, Phil
81; Williams, Chi 78.

FOR SALE
i

I '

ARTERS
420 ......"STRUT
f'OINJ PLIAUNT

MENswr 'R
'

.

.L..' "'\

have turned sour. Plans are in
the making for locations in
either the New York oc LOs
Angeles areas willl eventually
both sites acCCIIllllodated.
~rheading the drive are
aclor Richard Roundtree and
Jim Kervetas, the announcer
for the Baltimore Bullets of the
National Basketball Associatioo. In addition such names in
athletes as Roy Campanella,
Billy Talbert, jockey Nick
Jeama• and Young bave added
their assistance to the project.
''We want to remember these
people foc what they are-great
athletes," Kervelas said. "You
hope an athlete riever has to use
a facility like' this but unfortunately a great many do and

Reds. San Francisco will be at
Montreal, Los Angeles is at
Philadelpbia, Houstoo will be
playillg at O!ic:ago, Sl. Louis at
AUanta and San Diego will meet
lhe Mets in New York.
V"tda Blue lakes the mound in
seardlllf number 23 as the A's
take Cll the Baston Red Sox,
New York will play California,
Washingloo will meet Kansas
Oty, Milwaukee will be at
Delnlit, O!icago at Cleveland
and Minll""o'ta at Baltimore in
AL games.

He got the Cowboys off to a
front..-unning start in the club's
45-21 verdict over Los Angeles
and came on late with a hodgepodge lineup to re~eve Staubach in last week's 36-21 defeat
ol New Orleans.
Phipps, who has gone all the
way except for three plays in
the Browns' two losses, has
been promised veteran Bill Nelsen will come in to relieve him
for one quarter this lime.
Nelsen has been prolecting
some injury-prone knees and
Cleveland Coach Nick Skorich
has been very patient with
Phipps and his sophomorish
shortcomings.
"I feel he has been making

great progress and is sho ~A-ing
a lol of poise in settting down
afler finding himself in that 210 hole so quickly against the
Forly-Niners," says Skorich.
Cowboys Coach Tom Landry
agrees.
"Phipps looks very good at
quarterback," Landry said.
"He's tall, poised and accurate."

up unUI now there hasn't been
anyme to care enough what
happens to these people. The
people who are getting behind
this home do care."
Campanella, w1io has certainly seen the tragic side of
athletics after being struck
down and crippled for life from
a sudden automobile accident,
perhaps swnmed up the purpose of the hCIIle best.
"I was very ftt'tunate in
having the means to support my
family after my accident," the
ex-Brooklyn Dodger catcher
and member of baseball's Hall
of Fame said. "But what about
th~ _ ~~ 1 JVho .w~!!D,'t as
fortiUlate ·~we
w~o didn't
have a pension plan to cover

-

them - who didn't make the
salary I was able to make?
Where can these people turn for
medical and educational expenses? I .think a home such as
this is the answer to help those
ex-&lt;1thletes in need."
Funds for the home, which
will include residence areas
housing 148 persons and a
conununity area, are already
beginning to pour in. Prllfessional athletes are being asked
for a $50 membership and Earl
Foreman, owner of the Virginia
Squires of the American
Basketball :Associalioo, is soon
tO launch a campaign to get the
professional owners behind the
pro~ I.

MANSFfELD, Ohio (UPI) A field of 3S high - powered
sports cars, led by the two
bright orange Team ·McLaren
racers, will batUe this weekend
as Mid.Qhio Sports Car Course
hosts its biggest racing event of
the season, the $87,000 Canadian-American Challenge
Cup.
Over $1 rni11lon in racing rnachinery will be contesting the
lwisting 2.4-mile course here as
qualifying for the 192-mile race
opens Saturday. A $25,000 purse
awaits the winner Sunday.
Several well-known drivers
will try to end the dominalioo
of the Team McLaren cars,
'!'hich have won the last three
Can-Ams here.
Peter Revson of New York,
driving one of the McLaren
MBF-Chevys, is the current Can
Am points leader oo the
strength of victories in the last

InternaTional L.Ugue Standings
By Unit~d Press lnternali0111l
W L Pel. GB
Rochester
77 50 .606 Tidewater
71 55 .563 5'h
Charleston
67 55 .549 1'h
Syracuse
67 59 .532 9'h
Richmond
63 63 .500 13'h
63 U .496 I~
louisville
Toledo
52 73 .416 2~
Winnipeg
•1 82 .333 31

two races al Road Allanta and
Watkins Glen.
Teammate Dennis Hulme won
the first race of the series at
Mosport and 6nisbed second in
the next three to hold down the
No. 2 spot in the points standings.
The only driver lo beat the
McLarens this year and the
man who poses the biggest
threat to them at Mid.QIIio is
Scotsman Jackie Slewart, who
drove his Lola 1"26Mllev to
victory at St. Jovite.
Stewart has never raced a
car at Mid.Qhio but this is not
figured to make much difference since he seems to become
accustomed to any track in
short order.
Other competitors of note are
Grand Prix star Jo SiHert of
Switzerland, driving a I'I:Gsche
917-10 foc Andy Granatelli's
!rrP team; Lothar Motscbenbacher of Newport ' Beach, ,
Calif., in the ex-Team McLaren
MBD; and Tony Dean of Yorkshire, England, also in one of .
the·ex-Team McLaren MBD's.
Also entered is Hiroshi Kaza.
to of Tokyo, the 19'111 Japanese
Spocts Car Series champion,
who ,.;n be piloting his Lola T22Ultev. Kazato is presenUy
lith in the points standings.

r-----~;;~~;i;;;~;~;----,

DEER KILL UP
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Thiity
per cent more deer were killed
ih Ohio by motor vehicles and
other non4Junting causes during
the first haH of the year than
dtirlng tl)e same period of 1970,
the
Natural
Resources
Deparllllent said. There were
1,380 deer killed durtng the 1971 ·
period, compar~ to 1,001 lut

year.'

.

-

.

I

.

Meigs County Bt-anch of The
Athens County Savings &amp;.
Loon Co.

296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Member Federa l Home Loan

Bank.

Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loan ·Insurance Corp. All

accounts

insured up

to

.000.00.

BAHR

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

16 cu. ft. No Frost Refrigerator-Freezer
~~~~with - Jet Fneze ·
• Sub-zero air blows over
trays for fast freezingl
• Freezer holds up to
147 lbs.
• Four cabinet shelves,
one slides out
• Twi11 vegetable bins
hold 2/3 bushel
• Only 30Y2' wide,
64" high

ENJOY
OOCKTAILS, DINING
AND-DANCING AT
lfS BEST

MIDDLEPORT, 0 . .

YES!- At
Meip Co. Branch

Levi's For - Siluatian

°

King Builders.Supp~ Co.

LOANS

Cup at Mansfield

CINCINNATI (UPI)- Four For eight innings, Johnson clubs.
years ago the doctors told ,Bob was in a twirlers' duel with the The Pirates wrapped up the
Johnson he could forget about Reds Jim McGlothlin.
victory with a four-run gplurge
a ~eer as a pitcher in pro- Before lifted for a pinch-bit- in the ninth. Richie Hebner
fessi?nal baseball.
ter in the eighth, Mac yielded capped -the uprising with a
This was after he wound only two hits but one was a three..-un homer off Wayne
up in a hospital when he skid- homer by AI Oliver which gave Granger. Oddly enough, Pirate
Thursd,Jy's Resutts
ded into a steel guardrail while the Pirates a 1~ lead in the Manager Danny Murtaugh was Louisville 1 Syracuse 3
buzzing along on a motorcycle seventh.
bemoaning Hebner's lack of hit· Toledo 6 Richmond ~
Rochester 8 Charleston 6
at 70 miles per ho ur.
li
Two years ago, 0 'ver was a ting since l)is return from two
Johnson suffered severe in- Red nemesis.
weeks of military duty.
juries to the shin, knee and "It seemed like every lime I
Eight Straight
~jor league Results
kl
f
his
1
an e o
left eg.
faced them, I got a couple of
"I returned a week ago last By United Press tnlemiHOIIII
American Lugue
"The ankle was hurt worst," hits," said AI.
Sunday," said Richie. "I didn't
Oakland
at Baltimore, ppd .,
said Johnson Thursday night Thisyear,Ollver,hatting .268 play the following Monday. rain .
after he beat the \.omcinnati
"'-going into Thursday night's ""u•en the next day 1 got a hit (Only game scheduled)
National Le.,ue
Reds ~I in the opener of a game, hasn't broken too many off Ferguson Jenkins to heat
Piltsbrgh
000 000 leu- 5 5 U
four-game weekend series
the Cubs."
Cincnnfi 000 000 001 - 1 9 1
which winds up the homestand !
SCIOTO RESULTS
After that, Hebner experi- Johnson (8-8) and May ;
at Riverfront Stadium.
' COLUMBUS (UPI)- A dally enced an ~16 streak. He struck McGlothlin, Granger {9) and
Bench. LP- McGiothfin (6-10) :
First thing Johnson did after double combination of 5-7 paid out II of the 16 limes at bat. HRs
- Oliver (7th), Hebner
he was released from the hos· $23.20 on Miss Cruidy Travel and Eight of those slrikeouts came (17th), May (33rdl .
!Only games scheduled)
pital was ride his motorcycle. H C Adios at Scioto Downs in a row.
''I was still on crutches," he Thursday night.
"Then," said Richie, "I popsaid. "I guess I just wanted .to
In the first of two featured ped out.'' ·.
prove to myseH that l wasn't races, the first division of the Grinning, he added, "I could
afraid to ride one after the ac- $13,400 Scarlet and Gray Cup for have slruck out and made it
FIGHT RESULTS
cident.''
three-year-old pacers, AU Right nine in a row. That would have By United Press bdenlalional
Clyde Gra Canada stopped
Johnson, acquired by the covered the one-mile in 2:00 3-5 lied the National League recy,
•
Pittsburgh PirateS from the to win and pay $21.40, $7.20 and ord ... would have put me in Vic Doucette, Canada, (2).
Kansas City Royals during the $5.20. Jazzy Admiral was the Hall of Fame."
(weights unavailsble ) (Gray
off-&lt;;eason, wasn't any novice second, paying ....40 and u, As it was Hebner lied the defends Canadian welterweight
,....
,....
'
ti'll )
when he had the accident.
with Young Turk in third, mark ' set by Adolpho Phi11lps
e:
No More Cycles
. returning $4.80.
in 1966.
Skip Yeaton, 159, PorUand,
"I'd been riding one since 1
In the second division,
"The Cubs' Bill Hands once Maine, stopped Clermont
was 12 or 13," he said.
Thimblewonin2:022-5andpaid struck out 14 limes in a row" Bureau, 160, ·Canllda (5); Pbi1
"But," he added, "I'm not go- ...,.
.., 20 ' ••.
.. .,
•• and $2,60. Secon d said Hebner. "But that doem:'t ijudson,l'rl~.
Maine,
ted J JP~d,
J ...____
129
0
in•" to n"de another motorcy~1e was M'1SCh'tef Mike, .......
.. ••, ....
count.
''e's
a
p1'tcher."
outpoin
a~""""'•
•
..,,.,,
111
IDitill quit playing ball."
with Caspers Time in the show The Reds and Pirates re- Canada (8).
He flgures to crash more spot at $7.
sume !he series tonight with M~ Oba, 114'10, Japan,
than once would be foolhardy.
Attendance was 5,287 and the Bruce Kison going against Red outpointed_Tony Morena, 112~·
The Pirate righthander had a day's handle was $257,251.
- lefty Ross Grimsley.
San Antomo, Tex. (10)..
shutout going unUI IRe May
homered to lead off the ninth
BIG F'ISH KILL
.,
for the Reds only fUllCOLUMBUS ( UPI) - State
. Rep. John P. Wargo, 0-Usbon,
said today perhaps as many as
10,000 fish were killed this week
in Beaver Creek in Columbiana
County as the result of acid
draining into ·the water
•
property owned by Chemlime
Corporalion. Wargo said the
Ohio Board of Health was aware
''l,'rime Rib of Beef Steaks"
of the "existing dangerous
situalion as early as Oct. a, 1970
Our Specialty
·or before but took no follow up
. action to prevent the fiSh kill.

Tlf'mlfe Control CGncentr.... Add 1ft Arlit hole-end
oproy Applicator lftd you'ra i'eldy to completely lormll•
prooltht ovor- 3-bo\lnlom home I s.- you ...r SlOO
comportd to the _, of catting In • PrOfoulonat e•·
, lormlnafllr. Buy Arob •nd dO both you •nd your home a
favor. Price may v11ry str,hlly.

'

watclled by a national televisioo audience and an anlicipated lili,OOO live viewers in the
Cot1Am Bowl.
Morton, who is trying to save
bis starting job from the stiff
ehallellge or former Navy Heisman Trophy winner Roger
Slaubach, may go all the way
in this game unless Staubach's
sore ribs ha•·e healed.

35 in Challenge

/'

YElLOW CAB

I

unlortunate span that Hebner again until he's through playalso managed to go zero for 16. log," "I don't want to tempt
Bob· Johnson, however, is · fate," but if be keeps the form
another story. Four years ago that he had against ancinnali,
the doctors, who had just he may just ride the Pittsburgh
done the repairs on the exp-ess to a World Series.
righthander's left leg, injured No other games ~ schewhile zi~ aloog at 70 m.p.h. duled in the National League
oo his motorcycle, told him that Thursday ·and the only game in
no, there'll be no more the American League, a makeprofessional baseball.
up game between the Baltimore
But Johnson, who is not ooe to Orioles and the Oakland Athlelet a litUe injury to his shin, tics, was rained out again.
knee and ankle get him down, In NL action today, the
not only returned to his bike as Pirates will again meet the
soon as he was able to mount it,
but managed to pitch well
enough to now be a member !i a
slroog pennant contender.
He went the distance against
the Reds, scattering nine bits
and giving up only IRe May's
33rd homer in the ninth.
Johnson says he won 'I ride

Johnson Wouldn't Give Up
Ot

deficit.
He managed to escape the
pass rushes with two exceptloos
during which he was thrown
for 18 yards in losses. In contrast, the Cowboys have barried enemy passers for seven
lraps and 75 minus yards.
Phipps will be dueling Dallas
veteran Craig Morton in ionight's game, which will be

Pirates .Again Like Champions

Horne Asked for Wayward Athletes

Petrocelli, Bos, Murcer. · NY
and Bando, Oak
75.
P1.,chi ng
Notional Leogue: Jenkins,
Chi 19-9; Ellis, Pill 17-6;
Carlton, St.L 16-6; Pappas, Chi
1s- 10(~~~l:tt, Cin U-l ; Down'1t:mericanLeague: Blue, Oak
22-•; Lollch. Del 19-9; Wood,
Chi 16-9; Cuellar, Dobson and
Palmer, Ball 15-6; Drago, KC
15-7; Hunter, Oak 15-10.

Ntl income in excess of
OYtr Sl,~ per month.
(AWn &amp; wife oporlfionl.
Mutt self d!le to · olltor
business lnt.rest. lnquira
of 960 Second Ave.,
Gllttipolis, or phone 4461456.

the Browns were dropping 3&amp;-24
and 17-5 preseason games to
San Francisco and Los Angeles.
He suffered six Interceptions
in those two games while completing 'r1 of 61 attempts for
339 yards and a pair of touchdowns. Two of those steals resulted in San Francisco touchdowns to help leave Phipps
with a quick 21~ first quarter

\

M~~·~l~nBL"Jo~~~~e~j;:

GOING
TAXI
BUSINESS

By ED FITE
UPI Sr»rts Writer
DALLAS(UPI)-MlkePhlpps,
tlie Cleveland Browns' sophomore quarterback, gets lUI acid
test tonight against a Dallas
Cowboys secondary that has
·
Notional l.Hgue
pulled
off eight stolen passes in
E11t ·
W. L. Pel. GB two games.
Pittsburgh
74 51 .592
The&amp;-{oot-3, 207-pound Purdue
Chicago
66 55' .s~ 6
St. Louis
67 57 .540 6'12 graduate already has had a bitNew York
60 61 .496 12
ter taste of pass piHering while
Philadelphia 53 69 .ol34 19 112
Montreal
50 71 .413 22 ·
West
W. L. Pet. GB
San francisco 74 51 .592 ...
Los Angeles 66 58 .538. 7'1•
Alfanla
65 62 .512 10
HOustOn
61 62 .496 12
Cincinnati
60 66 .476 W I&gt;
By 1teve wllst.to
San Diego
o46 79 .368 28
Thursday's Result
UPI Sptt'fll Writer
Pittsburgh 5 Cincinnati 1
Richie Hebner is back. Bob
!Only game scheduled)
Johnson is back. The Pittsburgh
Today's Probable Pilchen
Pittsburgh ( Klson 3-3) at Pirates are !'e3dy to shake their
Cincinnati (Grlmsl'ey · 7 · 51. doldrums and act like chamnight.
,
los Angeles (Downing 14-8) pions again.
at Philadelphia (Fryman 8-4), Hebner, who was balUng
night.
51. LOUis (Cleveland 10-10) at close to .300 all season unUI he
left to serve the military for tWo
Alfanta (Jarvis 5-11), night.
San · Diego (Kirby 10-10) at weeks, returned to form
New York (Koosman 4-71. Thursday night after going oh!
night.
San Francisco (Marichil12-8) for too loog; as he hammered
at Montreal (Stoneman 13-10), out his 17th bomer with two oo
night.
in the ninth to lead the Pirates
Houston I Forsch 7-5 and to a 5-llriumph over the punchBillingham 5-12) at Chicago
{Jenkins 19-9 and Pizarro 4-2 or less Cincinnati Reds.
Holtzman9-12), 2, twl-nighl.
"I missed my chance for the
Saturday's Gllmes
Hall
of Fame," said Hebner
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati
San Francisco at Montreal. after the game. He was
night
referring to the eight slrikeputs
Los Angeles at Phlla, night
in a row that befell him as he
Houston at Chicaao
lried to regain his timing after
St. Louis at Atlanta, night ·
San Diego at New York, night the layoff. It was during that

Rome lmpcouement

-

•-------------------~
P•rty Fooda
For AU Occ.siom
I

DAILY

'

I

Phone 992·7038 or See Sonny
Smith For Reservations -·--~--·-··1
YOUR PLEASURE IS
OUR BUSINESS.

$329

TBF-15Sl

•

12. CU. FT. UP'RIGHT

FREEZER

16 CU. FT. UPRIGHT

FREEZER

.95
9
.'199. ~~~~~5- '2
H &amp; R FIRESTONE
95

N.2nd

.

992-2238

Holds

54tU..

�2-'I'IIIDII,S 11 1,1"' Jl~

-

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'

.

•

-

: , ~ -The lliUq!entlnei,M!"' J41&gt;-1'\meivy,O.,Auj!. 20,1971

Wt;~rld Money System Shattered by Nixon
"'\CC'J!MIIillllliiii'JIM~~~~~~~~~~~

"'i! : :'"'r.:'%&gt;-'&lt;:'-~

.,

Gold, Lang Term, a Bad Buy
WASHINGTON CUPit - Som~ lnterltalional
.,_rata bive turaedallcly prcllt 011 the flucluatklnsof
1lle Cold uwblla receat yean but as a loag-term ID·
~1, -CGidllubeena bid boy.lf someone bad IJouPt
a bu ol gold at lhe official price of Pi an oanee ID lH4 '
wlten 1lle carreat 1Dtenall01181 m011ellry 1711~ went
Jato elf~t; be tould sell It today 011 the Londoa open
mirtel for a Utile over f'l,
·
·
Bit It w!JII)d lake ab011t $U5 today to buy lhe same
quitllt)' ol goodl •lid aervkes that could have been obtalned for $liD IMf. So lhe Ul be would set for bls OIIIICe
·al sold would be wortb less thaD • Ia terinS of lH4
prices. ADd be '!l'ould bave ICI8t the IDtemrt wblch would

&gt;;

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.

By NORMAN KEMPSTER
certain yet, one effect may be
WAsHINGTON (UPi) - With · to. end the centurie~HJid use of
a single act, President · Nixon gold as money. The $36.9 billion
has shaken the , foundation of worth of gold in various
the world money system, government treasuries aroiUld
possibly clearing the way for the world may ultimately be
construction of a new. economic used for making jewelry and
structure more suited to the filling teeth.
In short; the United States
last quarter of the 20th century.
By suspending the convertibi· . has. revoked its promise to
lily of the dollar into gold. in redeem in gold upon demand
.international · .transactions, the dollar holdings of foreign
Nixon raised far-reaching governments and their cenlral
quesUons about the 'vJIIue of the banks.
dollar compared witli other free
The practical effect of the
world currencies and the action is to devalue the dollar
relation of those currencies to in comparison to most other
each other.
currencies. The amount of the
The step;-the most important devaluation will vary from one
money development since the foreign currency to another and
Bretton Woods conference 'll will be fixed by the laws of
years ago, was overshadowed supply and demand in intemadomestically by Nixon's 91klay tiona! exchange markets.
freeze on wages, prices and
In the argot of the money
rents. But it could be the most markets, the dollar is being
significant part of the package. permitted to "Doat." Other
Although the results are not currencies have been floated

Obi0 50th
.
When to In S ding
f~nore Signal pen
Ohio·
Parents
On Citizens
H
•
~oun~
anoi •

IWIN AT BRIDGE

.9743

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
ranks 50th among the states in
• AK9
the
of money it spends
WEST
EAST
on cttizens m proportion to the1r
.K105
wealth and is 49th in its per
• 942
.A87
capita financial resources, two DAYTON (UPI)- Charles madenoconunent. .
.KS
.A109862
Cleveland
State University eco· and Vera Dennis of Miamisburg
.. QJS43
.1062
Private examiners hired by
nomists have reported.
SOUTH (D)
believe Hanoi is holding ·lheir the Dennis', however, claim
John Burke Jr. and Eric Weld son Mark as a prisoner-of-war, various discrepancies.
.AQJ86
Jr., working in cooperation with
. ,KQ653
but the Navy says he was killDr. Roland Papucci, a pathol.• 7
Cleveland State's Institute of Ur- ed in a 1966 helicopter crash ogistfor the Papucci Laboratory
.87
ban Studies, said their conclu- and claim , a body sent home in Cincinnati which does work
North-South vulnerable
sions are largely based on 1970
four years ago was his.
for the Cincinnati Fire DepartWest North East South census data.
Mrs. Dennis said she was fir~ ment and the state of Ohio,
''Given,
Ohio's
inelastic
tax
Pass 3•
4•
notified of her son's death in said the body was a male, Causystem," they said, "the state July, 1966.
Pass Pass
Pass
casiank about 5-foot-3 or 5-foot--4.
is bound to fall further and fur- "I don't think anybody ever Mar Dennis was about 5-footOpening lead-· K
tlier behind in total revenues ... quite believes something lhey 11.
in
fact the natural growth rate don't want to, yet I know that's
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
"He could not have shrunk
of revenues from Ohio's present the road to insanity, so I ac- that much - certainly not
Jeremy Flint points out tax system is the lowest in the
cepted it," she said at her home eight inches," _said Papu~i.
that the winning bridge nation."
near here.
The pathologiSt also believes
player knows when to ignore
The inelasticity is caused by She and her husband first be- the man died in some kind of
partner's signal.
revenues based mainly on sales
Here is a hand from a rub- and •property" taxes which they gan to doubt that the body bur- ground action. Shrapnel from a
ber bridge game. East was
led with her son's name was hand grenade was found in the
an average player who liked said, do not grow as fast as not Mark's when they saw a skull, he said.
to bid. West was an expert the incomes of Ohio citizens. picture of a POW in a news
''This body was burned in
According to their study, Ohio
who knew this partner.
magazine.
gasoline,
certainly
not
Therefore, West did not ranked 50th in terms of general "The day before Thanksgiving helicopter fuel," he said. "My
consider pushing with a five- revenues availsble to state govdiamond bid against South's ernment per $1,000 of income. last year my husband brought guess, although I can't say for
vulnerable game. He opened Thenationalaveragewas$104.91 Newsweek magazine home/' sure, is that it was involved in a
the klnj: of diamonds and and Ohio's average was $69.71 Mrs. Dennis said. "He said jeep or some vehicular acnoted his partner's play of
'look at that' and l did and l cident."
. .
the deuce. Obviously his per $1,000.
looked al the picture and knew . Papucci also believes lhe dog
Ohio's general revenue was il w&amp;s Mark."
·-partner '!l'anted him to shift.
· ' " ' ' · !iigs''on the bOdy ' were not inCould the 41amond deuce be $262.70 per resident compared
• a suit-preference signal with 1\'ith a national average of $384. The body, which was not v'olved In the shme accident as
" a club void? Not likely at 11. Only New HampShire had viewed after it was first sent the body.
home, was exhumed twice this
"It's very difficult to explain
all. That would mean that less money to spend.
East held at I east five
Other conclusions reached by year for investigation. The -but the tags were in too good
hea-rts and, with 11 red
Navy conducted tests, but has of shape to belong to the body,"
cards. East was the sort to the economists:
-Ohio ranked 49!h on 11M
fly the flag to the live level.
'
. What could East hold in amount of state tax revenues
hearts? Probably the ace collected both on a per capita
and nothing else in the trick- and per $1,000 or personal in·
come basis.
-Ohio's tax revenue increass-1 $1 lor JACOBY MODERN book
to: "Wirr crt Bridge,'~ (c/o tltiJ ne-ws· ed in 1969-70 by 10.5 per cent
,.,.,), f.O. Box 489, Radio City over the previous fiscal year, .
Srolioo, New York, N:Y. 10019.
but the increase was 38th among
the states.
!airing line. Now West saw a
-Ohio ranked 49th in tenns
sure-fire set if East did hold of direct aid from the federal
that heart ace.
government.
West continued diamonds.
South ruffed, entered dummy with a club, led a spade
and finessed the jack.
.
West took his king and
Pass
1•
Pass
carefully led his highest Pass
3•
Pass
heart, the nine. East won Pass
Pass
5•
with th~ ·ace, thought awhile Pass
5•
Pass
and finally led a dl8mond.
You, South, hold:
Now West was sure to set the .AK87 .A2 .KQ9 .. K643
hand with his 10 of trumps.
What do you do now?
A-Poss. You have bid your
(HEWSPAPU. ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
full values.
.JlO

.QJ43

IS

•2

The bidding has been:
North
East

West

Ceutracllve Lellen ol Oplaloa., Ill good tute, ue
wekomed. 'l1le edllor ftHI'Vel lhe rfcbt to lborten !ellen.
AD !etten mut be llped, wiUI a fidl addrea, altboap
IIIIUall may be .eel apoa reqaf:lt.

... ~~:-.,.;::
-

Letter of Rebuttal
August 16, 1971
Dear Sir:
This letter is in rebuttal to the article entitled ''They'll Know
He's an HooestMan,"l am not quite sure that everything stated
in that article is completely and honestly true. Furthermore, I do
not believe that the name·signed to the article is lhe name of the
true author.
They stated that this policeman was called ''pig." Is there due
reasoo for this? Do people know more than is believed, or does the
truth hiU'I? What is the purpose !i the letter? Is it to hide the truth
oc to build up -seH-ego?
Il seems to me that' llle entire purpose of the letter is to raise
the t.t:ueauthor's ego and lower his "better off" relatives.
II was slated that the men he worked for were too cowardly to
lace a big problem. II ReJns to me the other policemen ,.ere
t1oiJW a fine job before he came, and will continue to do so after he
leaves.
This mantras not always a policeman. He was noi always as
salnUy as implied in the article. Ask anyone who knows the true
llllll. lsee no-reason to lower his relatives' reputation in order to
build up a !alae frool
Grow up, ''Mr. Policeman", and stop using your relatives
good name ID make you appear to be "Mr. Big Stuff".
·
Rose lawson
Route2
Che8hlre,Ohio

MIJ[E BENEDVM, REEDIMLLE, e&amp;hlblted

lhe Meigs County Junitt' Fair.

.

Holding Son

1.4.

TODA Y'S QUESTION
Instead of bidding three
spades your partner has raised
you from three to four dia ...
monds. What do you do now?

structure.
dollar into West German
The dollar is in a llllique If gold Ill elimlnaled as • marks, for instance, at the
position because the interna- base, It will wipe out the last official rate ~ then ·.buying
tional exchange rates of all vestige of the use of the metal goods and servtees With the
other currencies are fixed in as money. Americans have marks.
relationship to the dollar. With been unable to convet:t their This is something relatively
the dollar Doatlng, no one dollars into gold for about 40 new. For most of the post
,World War II period, inflation
knows for sure what .a dollar years.
The present world money in the United States .was
will be worth tomorrow or next
system
was created in the generally less severe than in
week or next year in terms of
French francs or British summer. of 1944 at an Europe, Japan, Canada and
internatiorull c&amp;nrerence held in other U.S. trading partners.
pounds, for instance.
This means.there also will be the resort COJIIJDUility ' of The Brjlish pound, the Fr~ch
uncertainty about the exch!mge Bretton Woods, N.H. · Most franc and other ~ctes .
rate of pounds for . francs Communist nations remained were devalued occastonally to
because both those currencies· oulside the system and their ~eep i!'eir purchasing power in
were fixed in relation to the Cl!"encies are not . freely line _wtth th.'l. !!Q!,I;u'.
convertible for other currency. "Birti!(I969 the West German
now uncertain. ·dollar.
The conference created the mark was increased in value in
The International Monetary
Fund (IMF), which includes IMF and gave 11 th&lt;;. responslbi- relation· to the dollar·and three
representatives of most non- lity--although not the real · months ago it was permitted to
Comnnmist nations, will hold power-to maintain stability in Doat up in value. This weala)ela
of the dollar encouraged
its regularly scheduled annual exchange rates.
As the dominant economic currency speculators to exmeeting in Washington Sept. 'r/poWer then as now, the United change their !follars for marks,
Oct.l.
became the center-of the francs and Japanese yen.
States
An effort will be made then
Some Speculators even bor·
to create a new exchange rate system. The U.S. government
a~ to buy and sell gold on row~ dollars which they
the open market at a fixed exchanged for marks, planning
price of $35 an ounce.
to buy back the dollars, when
In 1944, the United states had their value fell in relation to
ATl'RAcnNG A lot el
a seemingly inexhaustible sup- the mark. They then could
altentioa at the Meigs Co1111ty
ply of $21.2 billion worth of repay their dollar borrowings
Fair Ill tills clever display by
gold. That was 10 per cent of and keep the difference.
the Culligan Soft Water
the 1944 gross national product
On Wall Street, this is called
Company located Ia the
CGNP) of $210 bi11lon. This a "short sale" and speculators Commeretal Bulldlag.
year, the U.S. gold stock is who sold the dollar short in
down to about $10 billion--only rece~t weeks have reaped huge - - - - - - - - hesaid. "Thebodywassubject- 1 per cent of the $1 tri11lon profits.
andexceededthatfigureinthe
ed to very intensive heat, GNP.
·
Nixon blamed these specula- f1rst six months of this year. If
a minimum of 900 degrees. The
Even before Nixon revoked it, tors-the so-called Gnomes of the ouiflow in the sec00t1 half
dog tags were not. H they ,.ere, the pledge to redeem in gold ZIU'ich--for the dollar crisis.
of this year equals the rate in
they would have disintegrated. • the dollars held by foreign
"In recent weeks, the speula- the f1rst half, the 1971 deficit
Mrs. Dennis said the Navy governments could not have tors have been waging an all- will be a staggering 123.3
has been unable to present any been kept. Foreign official out war on the American bi11lon.
evidence to prove that the budy agencies now hold about $38. 2 dollar," Nixon said. "I have The primary . purpose of
was that of her son .
billion in dollars, almost four direc;ted the Secretary Or the devaluing the dollal' is to make
She said the only move by the limes the u.s. monetary gold Treasury to take action neces- U.S. exports cheaper iri foreign
Navy to restudy the case was stpck.
· sary tothedspeculefend the dollar markets and to make imports
its exhumation of the body The devaluation will not agamst
ators."
more expensive in the United
three weeks ago.
affect the domestic uses of the
But speculators, who often Stales. This is intended to help
"The man who came down dollar. Americans will continue include some perfecUy respec- U.S. business meet the increaswas supposed to make a deci- to be paid in dollars and they table American businessmen, ing foreign competition and
sion," she said, "but he admit- may continue to spend them. go after a currency only when stimulate employment at llome.
led he couldn't make ooe. It's However, imports will become it is weak. Selling a slrong In addition, Nixon imposed a
be&lt;;n three weeks now and we more expensive. . And tourists currency short can bankrupt a special 10 per cent tax on all
haven't heard from them. overseas already have dlscov- Speculator.
imports subject to tariff which
They've just shut us off.
ered that their dollars will not .The dollar was weak because are not covered by statutory
"I presume they are not go- go as far as before.
the total dollar outDow in the quota reslrictions. This special
ing to cooperate with us at all "
Why devalue the dollar at form of import purchases, tax covers about half of all
she continued, "because they~- all?
foreign aid, foreign invest- imports and is intended to
dered the body reburied.''
Because of inflation, a dollar ments,.overseas military spend- make them substantially more
Mrs. Dennis said she hoped will no longer buy as many ing, tourist lravel and so forth expensive in the United States.
the Navy would open a board goods and services as could be was greater than income from The President said the action
of inquiry or place her son•s obtained by changing that the sale of exports and other was intended to overcome the
name on the missing in action
sources.
·
effect of foreign taxes which
list.
Plrf.~aat V~!Y. ,...pllal
• lrl the. decade of the 1960's, dlserimi.,.~American
"Hanoi has never volunteered'. ADMISSIOfi!S: William ~~ United .Sll!tes ran a, deficit gcxidi, , • :'" · · 1
a name," she said. "If we put Sydenstrlcket",'"cMrs. Jobn m 1ts balance _~ payments~~ As one top official said, the
his name on the list, then Han· Brewer, Point Pleasant; Mrs. · averaged $1 bi11lon a year. This President is saying that Uncle
oi may come hack and say 'yes, W'illlam Carpenter, Grove City, was acceptabl~Sugar is no mtt'e. He has been
we have him."'
But llle deftcit soared to a replaced with a toUflh yankee
0 . William Keefer Point
l'i.;asant; Mrs. Gay' Yoq, record $10.7 billion last year trader.
Llllg Bottom, 0.; Mrs. Donald
Culsin,Leoo; Mrs. cart Oliver,
GallipoJis Ferry; Mrs. James
Neal, Letart; Howard Carder,
Point Pleasant, and &lt;llarles
Westmoreland, Cottagevllle.
DISCHARGES: . Oscar·
Tuller, RJchard McCartney,
Ira Hope, Mabel Cordray, Mrs.
FARAH Slak-Backs are shaPBCI and
·Lula Robinson, Gregory Hart.'
ley and Judith Huff.
flared as you like them with jean fit
¥~ but never the dollar .

Certain

ZO

NOKTII

IMr. Phipps in Acid Dallas Exam Tonight

!be r I · ve cl,an•tlm steer W'eoaflh-hllly at

BACK TO
SCHOOL

RACES RESCHEDULED
MARION, Ohio (UPI)-The
American Hot Rod Associatioo 's Grand Nationals, which
were delayed by rain last July,
have been rescheduled for Aug.
27-28-Z9 at the Marion County
International Raceway.

.

comfort in a variety of premium
fabrics. You need several pair.

good.
Ftt' Ohio, the peach crop Is
apecled to be up from last
year. The 1971 peach outcrop is
apecled to be about 28 million
pounds, the same level as the ·
· 1970 crop.
·

Fresh Peach Season Here
By Deborah M. Conldln
Exl. Agenl, Home Econ.
Peaches are one of our most
popular fruits. They rank fourth
in consumption, exceeded only
by apples, oranges, and
bananas. This is the time of
year when locally grown
peaches appear on the market.
Prices and quality are usually
best when the crop is at its peak
so plan to enjoy peaches now in
all the many ways they can be
served - in pies, on ice cream,
in salads, and for eating out-of
hand. ·
Tips on selecting peaches There are no easy rules for
.
h
Th
choosmg peac es. e pretty
blush on a peach may fool youit makes a peach look atlracUve
bulisnotasuresignofripeness
or good flavor. The background
color is really more important.
ll should be a creamy yellowish,
though color varies with
variety . Peaches may · be
yellow, yellow blushed, red in
varying amounts, white, or
white blushed.
·How peaches are sold Frequently, peaches are sold as
" tree-ripened.'' · Tree-ripened
peaches are those picked for
eating within two days of
maturity. , They will be com- ·
•

pletely soft in two days at room trays as they may become
temperatUr-e. Peaches picked at bruised when piled on top of
the "firm ripe" stage will soften each other.
more slowly and will be ripe for What's the supply picture? eating in three to five days if The Southern peach crop is
kept at room temperature. expected to be considerably
Peaches picked green will below the average for the· last
shrivel rather than ripen and . three years and for some
will not attain full Davor for the Southern areas, shipments to
variety.
date have been below last
The best way for the customer year's level. However, quality
toknowwhatheis purchasing is and size of the peaches has been
by means of a label containing
variety and degree of ripeness ,f'-~-,.
_ -Rdo
--Seft
-'---li.-,---,.
information. He may also ask .
IIIII _ ,
1111
the retailer. Generally, the :
D~~~~=~l-:'JFHE opportunities for purchasing 1
MEIGS-MASON AREA
tree-ripened peaches are CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
. E..c. Ed.
greater at the orehard or at a
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
fa~m rOadside market.
City Editor
.
Published daily except
Handling and storage - saturday by The Ohio Valley
Peaches brwse
· east'ly ,, so they Court
Pubtlshtng
Company, Ohio,
111
St.. Pomeroy,
should be handled with care. A · 4S769. Business Olfice Phont
bruised spot can quickly 99UIS6,
Editorial Phone 9'122157.
become a decayed spot. Sort
Second class postage paid at .
peaches alter purchasm· g and Pomeroy, Ohio. ·
National advertiSing ·
refrigerate the ripe ones till representative Bolllnelllthey are ready for use. Firm- Gallagher· Inc .. 12 Eost 42nd
St., New York City, New York .
ripe peaches can be kept in the
Subscription rates : Derefrigerator in good condition live_red by carrier whore
ava•lable SO cents per wHk;
for seven to ten days or they can . By Motor Route where carrier
be held at room temperature to service nol availablt: Ont
month $1 .15. B'f mall in Ohio
ripen and then refrigerated for and w. Va ., Ont year st•.oo.
a shorter time
, Six monlhs S7.2S . Throe
·
months U .SO. Subscrir,lion
For . best results, place i price Includes sunday T mes.
peaches ooly one ,layer deep in S.ntonet
·

By U•ited Press lnlwnil~t
American League
EatI
W. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
1~ 44 .627 ...
· Boston
66 51 .w 10'12
Detroit .. 6S 51 .533 11
New York
63 61 .508 14
Washington 51 70 ..QI 24'h
Cleveland
49 74 .398 27'h
West
W. L. Pet. GB
Oakland
78 -14 .639 ...
Kansas City 63 58 .521 Wh
Chicago
60 63 .-488 18'h
California
57 68 ,-156 22'h
Minnesota
55 66 .455 22'h
Milwaukee
Sl 70 ..Ql 26'h
Thursday's Results
Oakland at Baltimore, ppd.,
rain

·

(Onlygameschedufed) ·
Todoy's Problbty Pilchen
Boston (Peters 11,9) at
Oakland (Blue 22-4), night.
Washington (M&lt;;Laln 7-16 and
Bosman 9-131 at Kansas City
(Firtzmorrls S-1 and Wright 3~1 2, fwl-nlght.
Milwaukee (Parsons 10-1•) at
Detroit (Niekro HI; night.
Minnesota (Perry· 12-W at
Baltimore {Dobson 15-6), night.
Chicago (John· 10-121 at
Cleveland (Colbert 3-3), night.
New York (Peterson 13-7) at
California {May 7-8), night.
Saturday's Games
Boston at Oakland
New York at Claifornla, night
Wash at Kansas City, night
Milwaukee at Detroit
Chicago at Cleveland
Minnesota at Baltimore, night

NEW YORK (UPI)-lt's taken quite awhile, but it )oaks
llkesomebodyis6naUygolngto
do sometling about today's
''wayward athlete".
''There are too many athletes
today In need of being
1emembered," ex-lootball star
Buddy Young said 'lbnrsday as '
tile campaign to erect an
American Athlete's National
Heme was kicked olf at a IUDcheCII in downl.owtl New York.
Tbe hCIIle, wblch will CC/8t in
the vicinity Ill $4~ million, will
provide residence and medical
aid ftt' athletes whose fortunes
- - - - -...

J

I

By ~i\:. ~::.'1n'i::::g,at
Leading Ba1111rs
Notional le"!!ue
Torre, S!.l 12~lt,8 7~· 1~2 ~C:.
Bckrt, Chi 115 .w 7~ 163 .352
120 ol89 79 162 .331
Garr, All
Snglln, Pit 109 .QI 17 139 .330
Clmnte,
Pit 101412
13-1 .325
Bt-ock, St.l
120-186 65
92 157
.323
Jones, NY 10~ 398 « 128 .322
Alou, St.l 116m 61119 .316
121 -186 u 152 .313
·Davis,
H.Aron,LAAll 109
380 70 119 _313
American Logue
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Of
iva,
Min
100
.360
Murcer, NY l20 389
-136 61110
79 143 .328
Otis, KC
11~ 447 67 138 .309
Tovar, Min 118 495 76151 .305
· Rttmnd, Bal 103 35-4 65 107 .302
Rotas, KC 113 -109 55 123 .301
Mnchr, Was 102 325 39 97 .298
Rchrdl, Chi 105 390 « 116 .297
Smith, 8os 122 ~76 69 1.0 .29l
Horton. Del 113m 61126 .m
Horne Runs
NationAl Logue : Stargell,
Pitt ~1 : May Cln 33; H. Aaron,
All 32; Johnson, Phil 27 ;
Williams, All and Montanez,
Phil 25.
American Leogue: Melton.
Chi and Cash, Del 26 ; Smith,
Bos 25 : Petrocelli, Bos, Horton,
Del and Murcer, NY 22.
Runs Batted In
National League: Slargell,
Pill 109; Torre, Sl.l 99; H.
Aaron, All 86; Montanez, Phil
81; Williams, Chi 78.

FOR SALE
i

I '

ARTERS
420 ......"STRUT
f'OINJ PLIAUNT

MENswr 'R
'

.

.L..' "'\

have turned sour. Plans are in
the making for locations in
either the New York oc LOs
Angeles areas willl eventually
both sites acCCIIllllodated.
~rheading the drive are
aclor Richard Roundtree and
Jim Kervetas, the announcer
for the Baltimore Bullets of the
National Basketball Associatioo. In addition such names in
athletes as Roy Campanella,
Billy Talbert, jockey Nick
Jeama• and Young bave added
their assistance to the project.
''We want to remember these
people foc what they are-great
athletes," Kervelas said. "You
hope an athlete riever has to use
a facility like' this but unfortunately a great many do and

Reds. San Francisco will be at
Montreal, Los Angeles is at
Philadelpbia, Houstoo will be
playillg at O!ic:ago, Sl. Louis at
AUanta and San Diego will meet
lhe Mets in New York.
V"tda Blue lakes the mound in
seardlllf number 23 as the A's
take Cll the Baston Red Sox,
New York will play California,
Washingloo will meet Kansas
Oty, Milwaukee will be at
Delnlit, O!icago at Cleveland
and Minll""o'ta at Baltimore in
AL games.

He got the Cowboys off to a
front..-unning start in the club's
45-21 verdict over Los Angeles
and came on late with a hodgepodge lineup to re~eve Staubach in last week's 36-21 defeat
ol New Orleans.
Phipps, who has gone all the
way except for three plays in
the Browns' two losses, has
been promised veteran Bill Nelsen will come in to relieve him
for one quarter this lime.
Nelsen has been prolecting
some injury-prone knees and
Cleveland Coach Nick Skorich
has been very patient with
Phipps and his sophomorish
shortcomings.
"I feel he has been making

great progress and is sho ~A-ing
a lol of poise in settting down
afler finding himself in that 210 hole so quickly against the
Forly-Niners," says Skorich.
Cowboys Coach Tom Landry
agrees.
"Phipps looks very good at
quarterback," Landry said.
"He's tall, poised and accurate."

up unUI now there hasn't been
anyme to care enough what
happens to these people. The
people who are getting behind
this home do care."
Campanella, w1io has certainly seen the tragic side of
athletics after being struck
down and crippled for life from
a sudden automobile accident,
perhaps swnmed up the purpose of the hCIIle best.
"I was very ftt'tunate in
having the means to support my
family after my accident," the
ex-Brooklyn Dodger catcher
and member of baseball's Hall
of Fame said. "But what about
th~ _ ~~ 1 JVho .w~!!D,'t as
fortiUlate ·~we
w~o didn't
have a pension plan to cover

-

them - who didn't make the
salary I was able to make?
Where can these people turn for
medical and educational expenses? I .think a home such as
this is the answer to help those
ex-&lt;1thletes in need."
Funds for the home, which
will include residence areas
housing 148 persons and a
conununity area, are already
beginning to pour in. Prllfessional athletes are being asked
for a $50 membership and Earl
Foreman, owner of the Virginia
Squires of the American
Basketball :Associalioo, is soon
tO launch a campaign to get the
professional owners behind the
pro~ I.

MANSFfELD, Ohio (UPI) A field of 3S high - powered
sports cars, led by the two
bright orange Team ·McLaren
racers, will batUe this weekend
as Mid.Qhio Sports Car Course
hosts its biggest racing event of
the season, the $87,000 Canadian-American Challenge
Cup.
Over $1 rni11lon in racing rnachinery will be contesting the
lwisting 2.4-mile course here as
qualifying for the 192-mile race
opens Saturday. A $25,000 purse
awaits the winner Sunday.
Several well-known drivers
will try to end the dominalioo
of the Team McLaren cars,
'!'hich have won the last three
Can-Ams here.
Peter Revson of New York,
driving one of the McLaren
MBF-Chevys, is the current Can
Am points leader oo the
strength of victories in the last

InternaTional L.Ugue Standings
By Unit~d Press lnternali0111l
W L Pel. GB
Rochester
77 50 .606 Tidewater
71 55 .563 5'h
Charleston
67 55 .549 1'h
Syracuse
67 59 .532 9'h
Richmond
63 63 .500 13'h
63 U .496 I~
louisville
Toledo
52 73 .416 2~
Winnipeg
•1 82 .333 31

two races al Road Allanta and
Watkins Glen.
Teammate Dennis Hulme won
the first race of the series at
Mosport and 6nisbed second in
the next three to hold down the
No. 2 spot in the points standings.
The only driver lo beat the
McLarens this year and the
man who poses the biggest
threat to them at Mid.QIIio is
Scotsman Jackie Slewart, who
drove his Lola 1"26Mllev to
victory at St. Jovite.
Stewart has never raced a
car at Mid.Qhio but this is not
figured to make much difference since he seems to become
accustomed to any track in
short order.
Other competitors of note are
Grand Prix star Jo SiHert of
Switzerland, driving a I'I:Gsche
917-10 foc Andy Granatelli's
!rrP team; Lothar Motscbenbacher of Newport ' Beach, ,
Calif., in the ex-Team McLaren
MBD; and Tony Dean of Yorkshire, England, also in one of .
the·ex-Team McLaren MBD's.
Also entered is Hiroshi Kaza.
to of Tokyo, the 19'111 Japanese
Spocts Car Series champion,
who ,.;n be piloting his Lola T22Ultev. Kazato is presenUy
lith in the points standings.

r-----~;;~~;i;;;~;~;----,

DEER KILL UP
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Thiity
per cent more deer were killed
ih Ohio by motor vehicles and
other non4Junting causes during
the first haH of the year than
dtirlng tl)e same period of 1970,
the
Natural
Resources
Deparllllent said. There were
1,380 deer killed durtng the 1971 ·
period, compar~ to 1,001 lut

year.'

.

-

.

I

.

Meigs County Bt-anch of The
Athens County Savings &amp;.
Loon Co.

296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Member Federa l Home Loan

Bank.

Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loan ·Insurance Corp. All

accounts

insured up

to

.000.00.

BAHR

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

16 cu. ft. No Frost Refrigerator-Freezer
~~~~with - Jet Fneze ·
• Sub-zero air blows over
trays for fast freezingl
• Freezer holds up to
147 lbs.
• Four cabinet shelves,
one slides out
• Twi11 vegetable bins
hold 2/3 bushel
• Only 30Y2' wide,
64" high

ENJOY
OOCKTAILS, DINING
AND-DANCING AT
lfS BEST

MIDDLEPORT, 0 . .

YES!- At
Meip Co. Branch

Levi's For - Siluatian

°

King Builders.Supp~ Co.

LOANS

Cup at Mansfield

CINCINNATI (UPI)- Four For eight innings, Johnson clubs.
years ago the doctors told ,Bob was in a twirlers' duel with the The Pirates wrapped up the
Johnson he could forget about Reds Jim McGlothlin.
victory with a four-run gplurge
a ~eer as a pitcher in pro- Before lifted for a pinch-bit- in the ninth. Richie Hebner
fessi?nal baseball.
ter in the eighth, Mac yielded capped -the uprising with a
This was after he wound only two hits but one was a three..-un homer off Wayne
up in a hospital when he skid- homer by AI Oliver which gave Granger. Oddly enough, Pirate
Thursd,Jy's Resutts
ded into a steel guardrail while the Pirates a 1~ lead in the Manager Danny Murtaugh was Louisville 1 Syracuse 3
buzzing along on a motorcycle seventh.
bemoaning Hebner's lack of hit· Toledo 6 Richmond ~
Rochester 8 Charleston 6
at 70 miles per ho ur.
li
Two years ago, 0 'ver was a ting since l)is return from two
Johnson suffered severe in- Red nemesis.
weeks of military duty.
juries to the shin, knee and "It seemed like every lime I
Eight Straight
~jor league Results
kl
f
his
1
an e o
left eg.
faced them, I got a couple of
"I returned a week ago last By United Press tnlemiHOIIII
American Lugue
"The ankle was hurt worst," hits," said AI.
Sunday," said Richie. "I didn't
Oakland
at Baltimore, ppd .,
said Johnson Thursday night Thisyear,Ollver,hatting .268 play the following Monday. rain .
after he beat the \.omcinnati
"'-going into Thursday night's ""u•en the next day 1 got a hit (Only game scheduled)
National Le.,ue
Reds ~I in the opener of a game, hasn't broken too many off Ferguson Jenkins to heat
Piltsbrgh
000 000 leu- 5 5 U
four-game weekend series
the Cubs."
Cincnnfi 000 000 001 - 1 9 1
which winds up the homestand !
SCIOTO RESULTS
After that, Hebner experi- Johnson (8-8) and May ;
at Riverfront Stadium.
' COLUMBUS (UPI)- A dally enced an ~16 streak. He struck McGlothlin, Granger {9) and
Bench. LP- McGiothfin (6-10) :
First thing Johnson did after double combination of 5-7 paid out II of the 16 limes at bat. HRs
- Oliver (7th), Hebner
he was released from the hos· $23.20 on Miss Cruidy Travel and Eight of those slrikeouts came (17th), May (33rdl .
!Only games scheduled)
pital was ride his motorcycle. H C Adios at Scioto Downs in a row.
''I was still on crutches," he Thursday night.
"Then," said Richie, "I popsaid. "I guess I just wanted .to
In the first of two featured ped out.'' ·.
prove to myseH that l wasn't races, the first division of the Grinning, he added, "I could
afraid to ride one after the ac- $13,400 Scarlet and Gray Cup for have slruck out and made it
FIGHT RESULTS
cident.''
three-year-old pacers, AU Right nine in a row. That would have By United Press bdenlalional
Clyde Gra Canada stopped
Johnson, acquired by the covered the one-mile in 2:00 3-5 lied the National League recy,
•
Pittsburgh PirateS from the to win and pay $21.40, $7.20 and ord ... would have put me in Vic Doucette, Canada, (2).
Kansas City Royals during the $5.20. Jazzy Admiral was the Hall of Fame."
(weights unavailsble ) (Gray
off-&lt;;eason, wasn't any novice second, paying ....40 and u, As it was Hebner lied the defends Canadian welterweight
,....
,....
'
ti'll )
when he had the accident.
with Young Turk in third, mark ' set by Adolpho Phi11lps
e:
No More Cycles
. returning $4.80.
in 1966.
Skip Yeaton, 159, PorUand,
"I'd been riding one since 1
In the second division,
"The Cubs' Bill Hands once Maine, stopped Clermont
was 12 or 13," he said.
Thimblewonin2:022-5andpaid struck out 14 limes in a row" Bureau, 160, ·Canllda (5); Pbi1
"But," he added, "I'm not go- ...,.
.., 20 ' ••.
.. .,
•• and $2,60. Secon d said Hebner. "But that doem:'t ijudson,l'rl~.
Maine,
ted J JP~d,
J ...____
129
0
in•" to n"de another motorcy~1e was M'1SCh'tef Mike, .......
.. ••, ....
count.
''e's
a
p1'tcher."
outpoin
a~""""'•
•
..,,.,,
111
IDitill quit playing ball."
with Caspers Time in the show The Reds and Pirates re- Canada (8).
He flgures to crash more spot at $7.
sume !he series tonight with M~ Oba, 114'10, Japan,
than once would be foolhardy.
Attendance was 5,287 and the Bruce Kison going against Red outpointed_Tony Morena, 112~·
The Pirate righthander had a day's handle was $257,251.
- lefty Ross Grimsley.
San Antomo, Tex. (10)..
shutout going unUI IRe May
homered to lead off the ninth
BIG F'ISH KILL
.,
for the Reds only fUllCOLUMBUS ( UPI) - State
. Rep. John P. Wargo, 0-Usbon,
said today perhaps as many as
10,000 fish were killed this week
in Beaver Creek in Columbiana
County as the result of acid
draining into ·the water
•
property owned by Chemlime
Corporalion. Wargo said the
Ohio Board of Health was aware
''l,'rime Rib of Beef Steaks"
of the "existing dangerous
situalion as early as Oct. a, 1970
Our Specialty
·or before but took no follow up
. action to prevent the fiSh kill.

Tlf'mlfe Control CGncentr.... Add 1ft Arlit hole-end
oproy Applicator lftd you'ra i'eldy to completely lormll•
prooltht ovor- 3-bo\lnlom home I s.- you ...r SlOO
comportd to the _, of catting In • PrOfoulonat e•·
, lormlnafllr. Buy Arob •nd dO both you •nd your home a
favor. Price may v11ry str,hlly.

'

watclled by a national televisioo audience and an anlicipated lili,OOO live viewers in the
Cot1Am Bowl.
Morton, who is trying to save
bis starting job from the stiff
ehallellge or former Navy Heisman Trophy winner Roger
Slaubach, may go all the way
in this game unless Staubach's
sore ribs ha•·e healed.

35 in Challenge

/'

YElLOW CAB

I

unlortunate span that Hebner again until he's through playalso managed to go zero for 16. log," "I don't want to tempt
Bob· Johnson, however, is · fate," but if be keeps the form
another story. Four years ago that he had against ancinnali,
the doctors, who had just he may just ride the Pittsburgh
done the repairs on the exp-ess to a World Series.
righthander's left leg, injured No other games ~ schewhile zi~ aloog at 70 m.p.h. duled in the National League
oo his motorcycle, told him that Thursday ·and the only game in
no, there'll be no more the American League, a makeprofessional baseball.
up game between the Baltimore
But Johnson, who is not ooe to Orioles and the Oakland Athlelet a litUe injury to his shin, tics, was rained out again.
knee and ankle get him down, In NL action today, the
not only returned to his bike as Pirates will again meet the
soon as he was able to mount it,
but managed to pitch well
enough to now be a member !i a
slroog pennant contender.
He went the distance against
the Reds, scattering nine bits
and giving up only IRe May's
33rd homer in the ninth.
Johnson says he won 'I ride

Johnson Wouldn't Give Up
Ot

deficit.
He managed to escape the
pass rushes with two exceptloos
during which he was thrown
for 18 yards in losses. In contrast, the Cowboys have barried enemy passers for seven
lraps and 75 minus yards.
Phipps will be dueling Dallas
veteran Craig Morton in ionight's game, which will be

Pirates .Again Like Champions

Horne Asked for Wayward Athletes

Petrocelli, Bos, Murcer. · NY
and Bando, Oak
75.
P1.,chi ng
Notional Leogue: Jenkins,
Chi 19-9; Ellis, Pill 17-6;
Carlton, St.L 16-6; Pappas, Chi
1s- 10(~~~l:tt, Cin U-l ; Down'1t:mericanLeague: Blue, Oak
22-•; Lollch. Del 19-9; Wood,
Chi 16-9; Cuellar, Dobson and
Palmer, Ball 15-6; Drago, KC
15-7; Hunter, Oak 15-10.

Ntl income in excess of
OYtr Sl,~ per month.
(AWn &amp; wife oporlfionl.
Mutt self d!le to · olltor
business lnt.rest. lnquira
of 960 Second Ave.,
Gllttipolis, or phone 4461456.

the Browns were dropping 3&amp;-24
and 17-5 preseason games to
San Francisco and Los Angeles.
He suffered six Interceptions
in those two games while completing 'r1 of 61 attempts for
339 yards and a pair of touchdowns. Two of those steals resulted in San Francisco touchdowns to help leave Phipps
with a quick 21~ first quarter

\

M~~·~l~nBL"Jo~~~~e~j;:

GOING
TAXI
BUSINESS

By ED FITE
UPI Sr»rts Writer
DALLAS(UPI)-MlkePhlpps,
tlie Cleveland Browns' sophomore quarterback, gets lUI acid
test tonight against a Dallas
Cowboys secondary that has
·
Notional l.Hgue
pulled
off eight stolen passes in
E11t ·
W. L. Pel. GB two games.
Pittsburgh
74 51 .592
The&amp;-{oot-3, 207-pound Purdue
Chicago
66 55' .s~ 6
St. Louis
67 57 .540 6'12 graduate already has had a bitNew York
60 61 .496 12
ter taste of pass piHering while
Philadelphia 53 69 .ol34 19 112
Montreal
50 71 .413 22 ·
West
W. L. Pet. GB
San francisco 74 51 .592 ...
Los Angeles 66 58 .538. 7'1•
Alfanla
65 62 .512 10
HOustOn
61 62 .496 12
Cincinnati
60 66 .476 W I&gt;
By 1teve wllst.to
San Diego
o46 79 .368 28
Thursday's Result
UPI Sptt'fll Writer
Pittsburgh 5 Cincinnati 1
Richie Hebner is back. Bob
!Only game scheduled)
Johnson is back. The Pittsburgh
Today's Probable Pilchen
Pittsburgh ( Klson 3-3) at Pirates are !'e3dy to shake their
Cincinnati (Grlmsl'ey · 7 · 51. doldrums and act like chamnight.
,
los Angeles (Downing 14-8) pions again.
at Philadelphia (Fryman 8-4), Hebner, who was balUng
night.
51. LOUis (Cleveland 10-10) at close to .300 all season unUI he
left to serve the military for tWo
Alfanta (Jarvis 5-11), night.
San · Diego (Kirby 10-10) at weeks, returned to form
New York (Koosman 4-71. Thursday night after going oh!
night.
San Francisco (Marichil12-8) for too loog; as he hammered
at Montreal (Stoneman 13-10), out his 17th bomer with two oo
night.
in the ninth to lead the Pirates
Houston I Forsch 7-5 and to a 5-llriumph over the punchBillingham 5-12) at Chicago
{Jenkins 19-9 and Pizarro 4-2 or less Cincinnati Reds.
Holtzman9-12), 2, twl-nighl.
"I missed my chance for the
Saturday's Gllmes
Hall
of Fame," said Hebner
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati
San Francisco at Montreal. after the game. He was
night
referring to the eight slrikeputs
Los Angeles at Phlla, night
in a row that befell him as he
Houston at Chicaao
lried to regain his timing after
St. Louis at Atlanta, night ·
San Diego at New York, night the layoff. It was during that

Rome lmpcouement

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P•rty Fooda
For AU Occ.siom
I

DAILY

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Phone 992·7038 or See Sonny
Smith For Reservations -·--~--·-··1
YOUR PLEASURE IS
OUR BUSINESS.

$329

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Annual Dinner Held

Course Liked,
And Jnar Not,
From on Topt
! . PIIILAI&gt;ELPHIA (UPI) - A
guy named Hill, 1!1""41 a gall

tournament, Ukea tbe goH

uuae llld doesn't hesitate to
say Pl.
1be Hillis Mike, the younger
and quieter · brother of lbe
outspuke11 Dave, wiiOIII: fwtb,
right criticism of tbe golf
.couraes he maslers gets blm.in
trouble with profeasiooa) gall
officials,
By contrast, Mike, wbo ....
a """"'troke lead. into today'a
.._..t round of the $W,a
Philadelpbia Golf Oaal!ic, bad
betw tbinb to say about tbe
Whitemarsh Country Club

· One rareJyl falls' who Is
strict with himself.

·--Coftfucius

•

course than tournament of,

I'IIOVIDJNG A VALUAIIU!: WiltZ al tile ~
Meiga Crunty Fair in operatiDs tbe llllll and found departmalt U..., a tent near tbe secn!lary's office are Girl Sccut
Cadetie Troop lllllld Meigs Seai4r Troop 111. leta FloJd,
left, and lliaDe Rqway stalled tbt clopartmout Taesday

Social Events
ByMn.J'Judl'' dl
Mrs. Ed Falluer at Maysville,
K,y., lind Mrs. James Swarll at
MaJllllc*, K,y., visited Mr. and
Mrs. James Bees, Sr. Tbey 1ft
!DOIIwor and siller of Mrs. Rees.
They abo visited' Mr. and Mrs.
James Bees, Jr. Mr. Bees, ;Jr.,
look them to Wllliamslown, w.
v~. and they en~ tbe day at•
Fenkln Glass Co.
mben and Greua Simpsce
aDd Mr. llld Mrs. Bert Grimm
~ tbe NortbEastem Slates
and enjoyed a visit at tbe bome
of Mr. llld Mrs. Eldred Hart
llld daugbler, Debbie, at Kittery, Maille.
Mr. llld Mrs. Frank Cleland
are taking tbelr daugbl«, Mrs.
Ivan Powell, Ivanim and Llri,
to tbe airport at New Yart from
where tbey returned to
Newbary, England, after
...
tbe.-. Y1 ,_ • here.

EDGAR VANINWAGEN OF POMEROY, a vel«an of.
lbellatsan Death March ofW!I'Id War II, bas been a faithful
member ()( lbe traffic corps of Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legioa, Pomeroy. The post annually takes on the
project of maintsiuing lraffic at the Rock Springs
Fairgrrund durigg the county fair.

, (Continued from page I)
Daniel Nease, Carnahan,
Nease; senior heifer calf,
Daniel Nease, 2nd &amp; 3rd,
Carnahan; junior heifer. calf,
Carnahan ; get of sire, Car·
nahan; produce of cow, 1st &amp;
3rd, Daniel Nease; 2nd, Car·
nahan; 3 females bred &amp;owned
by exbibitor, Carnahan, Dailiel ,
Nease, Mora.
Milking Shorthorn, aU classes
in bolh bull calf, cows, senior
yearling heifers, senior heifer
calf, junior heifer calf, get of
sire . Won. by Fred LeRoy
Burhup, Wellston.
Jerseys, bull, I yr. and under
2, David Nease and Son; cow, 4
yrs. and over, David Nease and
Son; cow, 3 yrs. and under 4,
Hill Country Farm; cow, 2 yrs.
and under 3, Hill COuntry
Farms, David Nease and Son,
Hill Country Farms; senior
yearling heifer, David Nease
and Son, Hill Country Farm;

family of
Sunday I!J'I'Sis
.of Mr. llld Mrs. GureU Circle.
and

CAinmbqa were

:;..~o.:·~~ 3 Exhibitors W'mners
'l'bree

Meigs
County
exblbltors woo blue ribbon
awards fir tbeir abili.ts of
poultry in three dilierent
d•
in 11mnday's CWDly

puDeiS, Jl"ll of hens and Jl"ll at
two pallets llld ....s.ni, aD
won

by

Wllbor

Parker,

l'cmtloy.

New u.."'""i•e Rals, pen d.
fair ··utgq.
pu!Ws_... r
- - of two pallets
W"IDDers were (in order and..,. wdasel, aD woo b)'
listed):
Kmnelb Woad, Pcmauy.
White Plymruth Rocks, pen d. All Banbms, Jl"ll at pallets,
pen of ...... Jl"ll d. two pallets
Dick Young, J . F. and Aaron, and me" ' tt.andJIOilrl.lwo
local.
" - and oae aD. aD woo bJ
Mrs. Harry Hayman is Mls.llany Browa,Jiinemille.
visiting her daugbler, Mrs.
Audrey Wilson, and family in ,
Jackson.
uppers aiDS
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert MorTis
of Athens and Mrs. Elsie Rousb, Soeiety News
Pcmeruy, spent Sunday af.
temoon with Mr. and Mrs.
Francis Morris.
BJMn. llj: Jyallridles
1besuaeslmnlbatpa d
dlrougb Tuppers Plains Sunday
eveoiag did quite -a bi.t of

T

ONLY
12- '71's LEFT

senior heifer calf, 1st &amp; 2nd,
David Nease and Son, 3rd, Hill spent a weekend recenUy with
Farm; junior heifer calf, David his uncle Mr. and Mrs. Doyle
Nease &amp; Son, lsi &amp; 2nd; produce Knapp and family.
~f cow, Hill Country Farm; 3
Mr. and Mrs. WUiiam Boyce
feiDales bred and owned by of Cohonbus were weekend
exbibitor, David Nease &amp; Son, . visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Hill Country Farm.
Russell. .
Mr. and Mrs. James Reeves,
Robert, Unda and graudsoo,
Bryan, have moved to their new
trailer purchased recenUy.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Johnson,
Gina, Tahnee, Brady and lllr.
•
and Mrs. Kenneth Johnson,
Karen Gilkey of Albany and Annett and son left Tuesday for
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Russell of Orlando, Fla., where they will
Colwnbus were SUnday visitors spend some time.
ofMr.andMrs. LincolnRussell. Mr. and Mrs. Hayward
Mrs. Charley SrnltJJ also was a ParsitnsandfamilyandMr.and
visitor. '
Mrs. Gerald Wears and
Sunday visitor of Mr. and daughter were recent visitors of
Mrs. Larry Johnson were Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Hershel Wears.
and Mrs. James Johnson , Mrs. lee ·Roush and family of
Jamie Sue and Todd and Tisia, Logan were weekend visitors of
of Pomeroy, Mrs. lee Roush Mrs. Helen JobnSoo.
and family of Logan, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Harley JohnSon
Helen Johnson and Mr. and visited Mr. and Mrs. James
Mrs. Charley Smith.
Reeves and family Sunday
Mr, and Mr$. Harley Johnson morning.
were Sunday morning visitors

Wolfpen

News, Notes

69 Chevrolet

~295

"Greenbrier" VB Station Wagon. One careful
local owner; Low mileage · extra sharp.

69 Ford 6 cyl.

$J595

Falcon 2 dr. Sedan. Low mileage. a beautiful car.
new Buick trade-in.

&amp;&amp; 'Buick V8
Skylark -4 dr. Sedan. Uke new finish . sharp inside, one careful local owner.

66 Plymouth V8·

$1095

Sports Fury, 2 dr. hardtop, original dark blue
with matching vinyl bucket seats, and full
. operating console. Automatic tr-ans. &amp; power
steering. E:Xtra nice.

65 Buick LeSabre
2 dr. hardtop. one local owner.

PI ,

recent visitors
Charles
Sayre. of Mr. and Mrs.
· Michael Knapp of Colwnbus
THESE WERE 111E WINNERS ()( Wednesday night's dog show. From the left, Ted
M&lt;rarilywith "Jiaylll'," judged prettiest and lbe best of the show; "Mindy" owned by Brian
Denny and held by his sisl8', Deanna ; Josh with owner Susan Baer, and Caesar, the most
obedient with owner, Mila PoweU.

SON BORN AUG. 18
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Barton
of Pomeroy are announcing the
birlh of a son Aug. 18, at the
Holzer Medical Center,
Gallipolis. The eight pound six
ounce boy has been named Scott
Anthony.
Grandparents are Mrs .
Madeline Haggy of Middleport
and the late Jesse Haggy, and
Mr. and Mrs. Ardith Barton,
Pomeroy. Mr. 31)d Mrs. Steve
Eblin of Pomeroy are greatgrandparents.

CROW'S
STEAl .
HOUSE

'

Change in Time
In One Schedule

•

Home of

the Fabulous

Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Brickles
were Saturday guests of her
brother, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Spencer, of Belpre.
SP4 and Mrs. Gary Barnheart and children of South
carolina is spending a few days
withhergrandparents,Mr. and
Mr$. Fon Halsey and with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl

Barnheart of Reedsville.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Perrish of
Coolville and Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Burrough, local, called
on Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Bricldes, Thursday evening.
A surprise birthday party in
honor of the birthday of
Thurman Babcock was held at
free them. 1be patio of the lhe home of her niece, Mrs.
!railer of Mr. llld Mrs. Derrel Charles W. Kramer of
WeD was also film off tbeir Columbus. He received several
trailer and trees were blown gills.
down.
Mrs.' Mary Weaver of

995

MANY MORE

See Ceward C.lvertor Fred Blaeffn.iu'.--· -

BLAEnNARS

PONTIAC
- GMC TRUCKS '
Ill Yurs of Continuous Business
PRONEM 21a
POMEROY, OHIO

JuneCn!emanaFGSIAJria and

.fi~~-----

~=R_~: ~~~ ~ ·- ~-lj()UR
::!~~-Mrs. 0s1:ar ~ ~CUA~I"G ·~and Mrs. 'l'bunnan Babcock

Mrs. tea Jean 11awt~ns or
ColmnhJSspenta weekend here
with her paraiiS, Mr. and Mrs.
Jclm Arllaugb all8' returning

from her trip aiJroad. Sbe was
at l!mie, ltaly, Atbens, Greece,
'liJrkey and sewral other pla&lt;es
of in1eresl1bis was her setUJd

3

HOSPITAL
NEWS
SANDWICH
thought for today : American writer Edgar Watson Howe
said, "What people say behind
your hack is your standing in
the·community."
A

·Leg;r Monument
•=m:-;53~14!..,__..::::::..

Order 81 Phone

And Take E11 Home

992·5432

" N. W. COMPJO .~ 0. It

.:_---=.

. _~ _OPTQretmiST ~"

, ... .

, ·OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12,2 TO 5 (CLOSE' ·
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.;, .
- - - - - - - - - - - - -- -- - - - - - - - ' - - - - - ·
POMEROY.
·
.: ··
"' ·
'
trip to Europe.
Colwnbus was a Sunday guest Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Manley, '

damag• b)' roiiiDg over the
trailer Mo·~iog to Mr. and
Mrs. Rouoie llametL Ludily
no me was injlnd as Mrs.
Geurgla Barnette and granddaugb18', &amp;bin, were inside
lbe trailer when it was blown
OVd': (]Jde Kuhn came to their
rescue and Irate a window to

8EIIER IIJRRY. "· • •
OR ORDER YOUR '7'ls NCM!

BUICK

••ville

?Ier::Teif:t

~.tlril. ' Lawren~

·

- EDDIE PARKER WAS THE RESERVE cbampkm
sboWIIUIII in the Meigs Crunty Junill' Falr cattle judging beld
Thursday at theMeigsCouiltyFalr. Allan Hol18', not p JMI
for a picture, was ·the ~d dl!!mpion showman.

of Mr. and Mr$. Charley Smith . . - - - - - - - -..
Guy and Hope Harper were
LMNGMUqff•••
recent visitors of Mr. and Mr$.
Harley johnsOn.
,
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin
Russell of Middleport were
recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs .
Uncoln Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. William Sayre
of Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Sayre and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Sayre, Mr. and
Mr$. Rogers of Texas were

.!11!._

1

Business and Professional
WOIIIdl's Oub were appointed
lo assist at tbe fall district
meeting to be held Oct. II at
:Nell
wben the Oub met
Mmday night al tbe Middlepot:t
Ouch of Cllrist.
'
Mrs. Edltb Forrest will
arrange
a
"personal
development" section of the
pojpam; Mrs. Pearl Reynolds
will assist during the coffee
boU; Mrs. Harold Sargent wiih
resislration, and Mrs. Mary.
Kunzelman and Mrs. John
Werner, news reporting. .
Mrs. Grace Prall, president,
reported on the status of
bolpltal equipmnt owned by
the club, noting that one
wbeelcbair bas been aCcounted

Dairy

Racine

guests d. his mother, Mrs. Don
Neue.
· fiDel Carnahan and Rn 2u
lladcliff visited in CoJmnh.Ja
with Mrs. Fern Gllmcre and
Mr. ancl Mrs. Vemoa Bobb and
clWdren and Mr. and Mrs. Jolin
ParsoosandcbildrenofMiaml,
Fla. They also visited at
Bllckeye Lake with Mrs. Loe
Tisdale.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Dlle Hart and
daUghler of Ft. Meade, Md., are
spending a week with tbelr
parents, Mr. Uoley Hart and
Mr. llld Mrs. Edison Brace.
GuestsatMr.andMrs.Frank
Cleland and daugbl«, Mrs.
Ivan ' PoweU 1and daughter,
Sunday, were Mr. llld Mrs.
Steve Cleland, ViDce and Ryan,
of Columbus llld Mr. llld Mrs.

DRIVE-IN
BANKING
Ym"ers of tbe Middleport

evawc.

Hayman

lfs Quick! Easy

ROY HOLTER o:xHtBrrED the grand dl!!mpioo and senior champioa of the open class
cattle jndgi~ at tbe Meigs ColDlty Fair Thursday, HolStein breed, and Denise Dean ellhibited
the junior clvunpi.cn.

ficials.
Hill mastered tbe course
'ibursday with a aevdHIIIderpar 65 in the opening round.
Hill's round, wbidl featured
an eagle, six birdies on tbe bal;k
uine, and only one bogie, gave
him the slim lead over Jack
N'lcldaus, wbo bad a &amp;&amp;, and a
two-stroke lead over Bob
Rosburg, Bob Murphy and Tcm
Weiskopf, wbo fired B'ls.

.

***

'la!IORCAifPAIIILYU* IS,eff tl.~.wiP
befeelmedata G&lt;lpelllng at the Omrcb of God at {]!eAr,
· 7:•SallrillyDghl Tbepubliclsinvited to attend.

(Upon Request) ,·

ROBI-NSON-.,'S
r CL£ArtfiRS
,

iii E. Zlld

Pomeroy
•

Phone 992-5421

of Mrs. Bessie Webster.
DouglasJohnsonoflthaca, N.
Y., spent the past week here
with his grandparents, Mr. and
Mr$. R. K. Rowan and returned
to his home in New York on
Friday. Other visitocs in the
Rowan home uie past week
were Linda Jett of Pomeroy,

son , Ithaca, N. Y ., were

11elance -On
Convenient
Terms.

'68

·'·- ---

MERCURY---~---- 1

1595

TELEVISION

group
singing, Mrs.
Ernest
Powell dismissed
with prayer.
Olhers attending . were Mrs.
Esta Wise , Mrs. James
Gilmore, Mrs. Clarence Curtis,
Mrs. Evans, Mrs. Gerald
Pullins, Mrs. H. Wolfe, Mrs.
Lawrence Eblin, and Mrs.
Marguerite Leifheit.

DAUGIITER BORN
Mr. and Mr$. Tim Priddy,
Lockbourne Air Force Base, are
announcing the ·birth of a
daughter 9n. Al!ll. I~ a\ M~t
Carmel Hospital, Columbus.
The infant weighed eight
pounds and has been named
Victoria Ann. Grandparents are
· Mr. and Mrs. Dale Jacobs of
Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs.
Guy Priddy, Rutland. Mrs.
Bessie Fife of Storys Run is a
great-grandmother. Mr. and
Mrs. Priddy have a son, Brian,
four.

'67 DODGE OfARGER ........ ,. ......11295

68 Buick W"llckat Cpe., ait:.......... :....•. 2195

· '68 atEV. IMPAlA ........... , .... , 11495

1

67 Ford

FR~500

11495

2 Dr, H.T. air ..............

67 Che~elle Malibu 2 Dr. H.T...............11595 ~

Convertible, auto. trans .• P.S., color red:

'66 OLDS STATION WAGON ••.•... .,.'995
-"

67 CheRie 2 Door Hardtop,. .............. ~l595

'65 CORVAl R..... ., .~ ... ,. ......,.., ..... t595
4

p.--------.
BULOVA

Male your
dreams come
frue ... call
us for

Hurry •• ,;

Last,Day

home improve ent
•*'

65 Oldsmobile 98 4 Door ••••••• ., ••••• :., •• '895

v.a, auto.. ...•.. .. .. .. . '895

v...... eru·ISef', aar·•••••••••••••••••••• '595
DIG

'68 OOMET H.T• .,.: .., ..,.,.,. ...,, 12!5
· 6 Cyl.. auto. trans.

Elec. windows, alr condition .

'64 mMET .... ~ ........... ;.............. '595
Auto. trans.-, good shape.
.
''66 atEVROI.ET. ...........•......•.... '995
12 Ton pickup truck.

At Closeout Prices!
Buy Now &amp; Save At

Ingels Furniture · .·

1

.

-

-

RIGGS BRos.· INC. --

•

••
•
,

915-4100

-----Located on S. Rt. 7

I

OIIStll'. 0.
J ''

We h'ave a choice
collection of

EXCELLENT SELECTION

•
•

,.

992 _2635

*8:30 ~.M.
Jim Ed Brown Show

* G1_.NI Attractions

modestly priced
Bulova watches,

.

'

timed for
Back to School.

I
I
I
I

WIU '
..... JIU
J'OU pial- ........ ..

We c.n ...,... ,.... flo
wUit Jail .,_. flEE .....

o KITCHEN

r

[J

lc II

...... cllecl fie eu

I

llliaiL

UPSTAIIII

=.:.. ::=..

0 =Y

' 1 I ...

\

JIU

01 . . • • 1 1 1w • - . _ ,

o FtNIIHm

D 110011

I • -- • lilt -

._. _, -

let.

---------~----··--·-·-·-~

D IIAil'M

.....

0

'Pio -

·- - ···-·· --

I
I
I
I

J
.o:•: • • • • • • • ----,;
I

[J POliCH

FAIItl

.

0 IU!UII•

I

Clr -·
....

--·

....

Pomeroy Cement

The

OPEN iRI. &amp; SAT.. N-IGHTS .

•

Co.

hf•• lwsent Sloie of luH ..aQ
llna 191S

Middleport

..

!M1P

FREE ESTIMATES ON YOUR REMODELING NEEDS

R~g
•

aiel....._ • Will •

OUr IIUM
IE I 11 •
?PI •
W••laii!!Wraulhlllelt,..,.lw' ·•c•l I' • .,.,... . . . . .
Jab fDr.. . . . .,.

*3:00P.M.
Hone Harness

1

;66 BUICi(RIVERIA ,. ..• ., .... , ..,., 11695

You

aputs d

and Judging

Dr .• .auto. trans .. r(!dio.

IMFPOIJ, 0.

Lula R. Sheline, Carl R. Shock,
Mrs. Grover G. Turner, Louis
Vagar, Mrs. Leora ~w!Uing,
·and Milo W. Fellure.

. '9:00 A.M,
4ft Holse Show

9 Passenger. radio, P.S.

;

WERNER RADIO &amp; T.V.

~--------

SATURDAY
August 21st

Radio, P.S.

11~

-

V-8, auto. trans., radio, P.S.

68 Okls 88 Ill Sedan, air .•.. ,., .•.....• 12195

"'

Records and plays on 4 "C" ·Celt
batteries, or AC current. A.C.
. Adapter. Dynamic microphone with
remote control switch.

··---------------------------"'*'

'69 DiEVROI.ET, 4 DR·...... ., ......, 11&amp;95.

You'll Uke Our Qualil)t.Way
of Doing Business"
992-5342 GMAC FINANCING POMEROY
~ Evenings Until8: 00'- Til 5 P.M. Sal.

•

Saberjet, Col. Horace Hanes
reached an altitude of &lt;10,000
feet and a speed of 822 miles an
hour.

HANDCRAFTED

Montego MX. hardtop, coupe. radio. P.S.,
aufo. trans. Clean.

At Karr &amp; Van Zandt

!Jt 1955 Dying a Super·

'

-,SPECIAL-

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

MASON
FURNITURE
Mason. W_Va.

CR£AlE VIIIIS

CAR
BUYS

.e•
01c1s·
"

$3S:oo-oow..-

ALL 1971

Stop In lnd- RIY Ritts fiH' I rUI
deal at their new lot at Olelter.

#

'349.95

usmcARS

Thursday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Theodore Croy of Chester.

66 Buick Le Sabre 4 Door, air•• ., ......... '1295

FURNIIURE

'

•

P---~~~~~~-------------·

66 i:hewolet CollY.,

NEW

Mrs. James Danieis, Mrs. joe
Wilson, Mrs. Evelyn Grueser
and Mrs. J . B. Wayland, all of
Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs. R. K. Rowan
and grandson, Douglas John·

BUS CRASH KIUS t5
CASABLANCA, Morocco
(UPI) - A bus smashed
through a guard rail and
plunged off a bridge into a
ravine Wednesday near lbe
town of Boulaou, killing 45
persons and injuring 25 others.
Plllice said the victims were
aU Moroccans.

· Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-ll p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
iediatrics Ward.
Births
(llr. and Mrs. Warner E. Cox,
Gallipolis, a son and Mr. and
Mrs . Clarence 0. McCoy,
Ravenswood, a daughter.
Blrlbs
.
Mrs. Sterhe A.. Barnhtll,
Donald B. Brumfoeld, Mr~.
James 0. Bush, Howard Blall'
Caldwell, III, Mrs. Delores J .
Coon, Mrs. Arthur E. Dillon,
Max Haffelt, Mrs. David L.
'Hale, James F. Hamilton, Mrs.
Kennard C. Hill, Arius Hurt,
Mrs. Florence A. Hysell, Mrs.
,Major Ferris Justis, Mrs.
.Delbert D. King, Mrs. Keith J .
Lawrence and daughter, Mrs.
Earl N. Malone, Mrs. Dewey
Mullins, Mrs. Stella V.
Musgrave, Ferren Niday, Rita
F. Rappe, Robert T. Rutherford, Mrs. Ray L. Saunders,
Ernest E. Schwalbach Jr., Mr$.

Devotions were given by Mrs.
Pearl Jacobs at a recent
meeting of the Women 's
Missionary Society of the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church with Mrs. Uoyd Wri ht
presiding ·in the church
basement.
Devotions consisted of
prayer, scripture from Romans
61 , 1-4 and a meditation
"Dreams in the Desert" concerning questions and answers
on needs of missionaries. Mrs.
George Folmer led in the
missionary tidings, and Mrs.
Harry Clark gave a poem
"Missionary Vision.'' Following

Comoo In black
and
,..Jnut·
gr•lned

e

�'

•
4-'l'ltt-., 5 PI USPS t

'

Annual Dinner Held

Course Liked,
And Jnar Not,
From on Topt
! . PIIILAI&gt;ELPHIA (UPI) - A
guy named Hill, 1!1""41 a gall

tournament, Ukea tbe goH

uuae llld doesn't hesitate to
say Pl.
1be Hillis Mike, the younger
and quieter · brother of lbe
outspuke11 Dave, wiiOIII: fwtb,
right criticism of tbe golf
.couraes he maslers gets blm.in
trouble with profeasiooa) gall
officials,
By contrast, Mike, wbo ....
a """"'troke lead. into today'a
.._..t round of the $W,a
Philadelpbia Golf Oaal!ic, bad
betw tbinb to say about tbe
Whitemarsh Country Club

· One rareJyl falls' who Is
strict with himself.

·--Coftfucius

•

course than tournament of,

I'IIOVIDJNG A VALUAIIU!: WiltZ al tile ~
Meiga Crunty Fair in operatiDs tbe llllll and found departmalt U..., a tent near tbe secn!lary's office are Girl Sccut
Cadetie Troop lllllld Meigs Seai4r Troop 111. leta FloJd,
left, and lliaDe Rqway stalled tbt clopartmout Taesday

Social Events
ByMn.J'Judl'' dl
Mrs. Ed Falluer at Maysville,
K,y., lind Mrs. James Swarll at
MaJllllc*, K,y., visited Mr. and
Mrs. James Bees, Sr. Tbey 1ft
!DOIIwor and siller of Mrs. Rees.
They abo visited' Mr. and Mrs.
James Bees, Jr. Mr. Bees, ;Jr.,
look them to Wllliamslown, w.
v~. and they en~ tbe day at•
Fenkln Glass Co.
mben and Greua Simpsce
aDd Mr. llld Mrs. Bert Grimm
~ tbe NortbEastem Slates
and enjoyed a visit at tbe bome
of Mr. llld Mrs. Eldred Hart
llld daugbler, Debbie, at Kittery, Maille.
Mr. llld Mrs. Frank Cleland
are taking tbelr daugbl«, Mrs.
Ivan Powell, Ivanim and Llri,
to tbe airport at New Yart from
where tbey returned to
Newbary, England, after
...
tbe.-. Y1 ,_ • here.

EDGAR VANINWAGEN OF POMEROY, a vel«an of.
lbellatsan Death March ofW!I'Id War II, bas been a faithful
member ()( lbe traffic corps of Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legioa, Pomeroy. The post annually takes on the
project of maintsiuing lraffic at the Rock Springs
Fairgrrund durigg the county fair.

, (Continued from page I)
Daniel Nease, Carnahan,
Nease; senior heifer calf,
Daniel Nease, 2nd &amp; 3rd,
Carnahan; junior heifer. calf,
Carnahan ; get of sire, Car·
nahan; produce of cow, 1st &amp;
3rd, Daniel Nease; 2nd, Car·
nahan; 3 females bred &amp;owned
by exbibitor, Carnahan, Dailiel ,
Nease, Mora.
Milking Shorthorn, aU classes
in bolh bull calf, cows, senior
yearling heifers, senior heifer
calf, junior heifer calf, get of
sire . Won. by Fred LeRoy
Burhup, Wellston.
Jerseys, bull, I yr. and under
2, David Nease and Son; cow, 4
yrs. and over, David Nease and
Son; cow, 3 yrs. and under 4,
Hill Country Farm; cow, 2 yrs.
and under 3, Hill COuntry
Farms, David Nease and Son,
Hill Country Farms; senior
yearling heifer, David Nease
and Son, Hill Country Farm;

family of
Sunday I!J'I'Sis
.of Mr. llld Mrs. GureU Circle.
and

CAinmbqa were

:;..~o.:·~~ 3 Exhibitors W'mners
'l'bree

Meigs
County
exblbltors woo blue ribbon
awards fir tbeir abili.ts of
poultry in three dilierent
d•
in 11mnday's CWDly

puDeiS, Jl"ll of hens and Jl"ll at
two pallets llld ....s.ni, aD
won

by

Wllbor

Parker,

l'cmtloy.

New u.."'""i•e Rals, pen d.
fair ··utgq.
pu!Ws_... r
- - of two pallets
W"IDDers were (in order and..,. wdasel, aD woo b)'
listed):
Kmnelb Woad, Pcmauy.
White Plymruth Rocks, pen d. All Banbms, Jl"ll at pallets,
pen of ...... Jl"ll d. two pallets
Dick Young, J . F. and Aaron, and me" ' tt.andJIOilrl.lwo
local.
" - and oae aD. aD woo bJ
Mrs. Harry Hayman is Mls.llany Browa,Jiinemille.
visiting her daugbler, Mrs.
Audrey Wilson, and family in ,
Jackson.
uppers aiDS
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert MorTis
of Athens and Mrs. Elsie Rousb, Soeiety News
Pcmeruy, spent Sunday af.
temoon with Mr. and Mrs.
Francis Morris.
BJMn. llj: Jyallridles
1besuaeslmnlbatpa d
dlrougb Tuppers Plains Sunday
eveoiag did quite -a bi.t of

T

ONLY
12- '71's LEFT

senior heifer calf, 1st &amp; 2nd,
David Nease and Son, 3rd, Hill spent a weekend recenUy with
Farm; junior heifer calf, David his uncle Mr. and Mrs. Doyle
Nease &amp; Son, lsi &amp; 2nd; produce Knapp and family.
~f cow, Hill Country Farm; 3
Mr. and Mrs. WUiiam Boyce
feiDales bred and owned by of Cohonbus were weekend
exbibitor, David Nease &amp; Son, . visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Hill Country Farm.
Russell. .
Mr. and Mrs. James Reeves,
Robert, Unda and graudsoo,
Bryan, have moved to their new
trailer purchased recenUy.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Johnson,
Gina, Tahnee, Brady and lllr.
•
and Mrs. Kenneth Johnson,
Karen Gilkey of Albany and Annett and son left Tuesday for
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Russell of Orlando, Fla., where they will
Colwnbus were SUnday visitors spend some time.
ofMr.andMrs. LincolnRussell. Mr. and Mrs. Hayward
Mrs. Charley SrnltJJ also was a ParsitnsandfamilyandMr.and
visitor. '
Mrs. Gerald Wears and
Sunday visitor of Mr. and daughter were recent visitors of
Mrs. Larry Johnson were Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Hershel Wears.
and Mrs. James Johnson , Mrs. lee ·Roush and family of
Jamie Sue and Todd and Tisia, Logan were weekend visitors of
of Pomeroy, Mrs. lee Roush Mrs. Helen JobnSoo.
and family of Logan, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Harley JohnSon
Helen Johnson and Mr. and visited Mr. and Mrs. James
Mrs. Charley Smith.
Reeves and family Sunday
Mr, and Mr$. Harley Johnson morning.
were Sunday morning visitors

Wolfpen

News, Notes

69 Chevrolet

~295

"Greenbrier" VB Station Wagon. One careful
local owner; Low mileage · extra sharp.

69 Ford 6 cyl.

$J595

Falcon 2 dr. Sedan. Low mileage. a beautiful car.
new Buick trade-in.

&amp;&amp; 'Buick V8
Skylark -4 dr. Sedan. Uke new finish . sharp inside, one careful local owner.

66 Plymouth V8·

$1095

Sports Fury, 2 dr. hardtop, original dark blue
with matching vinyl bucket seats, and full
. operating console. Automatic tr-ans. &amp; power
steering. E:Xtra nice.

65 Buick LeSabre
2 dr. hardtop. one local owner.

PI ,

recent visitors
Charles
Sayre. of Mr. and Mrs.
· Michael Knapp of Colwnbus
THESE WERE 111E WINNERS ()( Wednesday night's dog show. From the left, Ted
M&lt;rarilywith "Jiaylll'," judged prettiest and lbe best of the show; "Mindy" owned by Brian
Denny and held by his sisl8', Deanna ; Josh with owner Susan Baer, and Caesar, the most
obedient with owner, Mila PoweU.

SON BORN AUG. 18
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Barton
of Pomeroy are announcing the
birlh of a son Aug. 18, at the
Holzer Medical Center,
Gallipolis. The eight pound six
ounce boy has been named Scott
Anthony.
Grandparents are Mrs .
Madeline Haggy of Middleport
and the late Jesse Haggy, and
Mr. and Mrs. Ardith Barton,
Pomeroy. Mr. 31)d Mrs. Steve
Eblin of Pomeroy are greatgrandparents.

CROW'S
STEAl .
HOUSE

'

Change in Time
In One Schedule

•

Home of

the Fabulous

Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Brickles
were Saturday guests of her
brother, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Spencer, of Belpre.
SP4 and Mrs. Gary Barnheart and children of South
carolina is spending a few days
withhergrandparents,Mr. and
Mr$. Fon Halsey and with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl

Barnheart of Reedsville.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Perrish of
Coolville and Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Burrough, local, called
on Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Bricldes, Thursday evening.
A surprise birthday party in
honor of the birthday of
Thurman Babcock was held at
free them. 1be patio of the lhe home of her niece, Mrs.
!railer of Mr. llld Mrs. Derrel Charles W. Kramer of
WeD was also film off tbeir Columbus. He received several
trailer and trees were blown gills.
down.
Mrs.' Mary Weaver of

995

MANY MORE

See Ceward C.lvertor Fred Blaeffn.iu'.--· -

BLAEnNARS

PONTIAC
- GMC TRUCKS '
Ill Yurs of Continuous Business
PRONEM 21a
POMEROY, OHIO

JuneCn!emanaFGSIAJria and

.fi~~-----

~=R_~: ~~~ ~ ·- ~-lj()UR
::!~~-Mrs. 0s1:ar ~ ~CUA~I"G ·~and Mrs. 'l'bunnan Babcock

Mrs. tea Jean 11awt~ns or
ColmnhJSspenta weekend here
with her paraiiS, Mr. and Mrs.
Jclm Arllaugb all8' returning

from her trip aiJroad. Sbe was
at l!mie, ltaly, Atbens, Greece,
'liJrkey and sewral other pla&lt;es
of in1eresl1bis was her setUJd

3

HOSPITAL
NEWS
SANDWICH
thought for today : American writer Edgar Watson Howe
said, "What people say behind
your hack is your standing in
the·community."
A

·Leg;r Monument
•=m:-;53~14!..,__..::::::..

Order 81 Phone

And Take E11 Home

992·5432

" N. W. COMPJO .~ 0. It

.:_---=.

. _~ _OPTQretmiST ~"

, ... .

, ·OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12,2 TO 5 (CLOSE' ·
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.;, .
- - - - - - - - - - - - -- -- - - - - - - - ' - - - - - ·
POMEROY.
·
.: ··
"' ·
'
trip to Europe.
Colwnbus was a Sunday guest Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Manley, '

damag• b)' roiiiDg over the
trailer Mo·~iog to Mr. and
Mrs. Rouoie llametL Ludily
no me was injlnd as Mrs.
Geurgla Barnette and granddaugb18', &amp;bin, were inside
lbe trailer when it was blown
OVd': (]Jde Kuhn came to their
rescue and Irate a window to

8EIIER IIJRRY. "· • •
OR ORDER YOUR '7'ls NCM!

BUICK

••ville

?Ier::Teif:t

~.tlril. ' Lawren~

·

- EDDIE PARKER WAS THE RESERVE cbampkm
sboWIIUIII in the Meigs Crunty Junill' Falr cattle judging beld
Thursday at theMeigsCouiltyFalr. Allan Hol18', not p JMI
for a picture, was ·the ~d dl!!mpion showman.

of Mr. and Mr$. Charley Smith . . - - - - - - - -..
Guy and Hope Harper were
LMNGMUqff•••
recent visitors of Mr. and Mr$.
Harley johnsOn.
,
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin
Russell of Middleport were
recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs .
Uncoln Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. William Sayre
of Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Sayre and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Sayre, Mr. and
Mr$. Rogers of Texas were

.!11!._

1

Business and Professional
WOIIIdl's Oub were appointed
lo assist at tbe fall district
meeting to be held Oct. II at
:Nell
wben the Oub met
Mmday night al tbe Middlepot:t
Ouch of Cllrist.
'
Mrs. Edltb Forrest will
arrange
a
"personal
development" section of the
pojpam; Mrs. Pearl Reynolds
will assist during the coffee
boU; Mrs. Harold Sargent wiih
resislration, and Mrs. Mary.
Kunzelman and Mrs. John
Werner, news reporting. .
Mrs. Grace Prall, president,
reported on the status of
bolpltal equipmnt owned by
the club, noting that one
wbeelcbair bas been aCcounted

Dairy

Racine

guests d. his mother, Mrs. Don
Neue.
· fiDel Carnahan and Rn 2u
lladcliff visited in CoJmnh.Ja
with Mrs. Fern Gllmcre and
Mr. ancl Mrs. Vemoa Bobb and
clWdren and Mr. and Mrs. Jolin
ParsoosandcbildrenofMiaml,
Fla. They also visited at
Bllckeye Lake with Mrs. Loe
Tisdale.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Dlle Hart and
daUghler of Ft. Meade, Md., are
spending a week with tbelr
parents, Mr. Uoley Hart and
Mr. llld Mrs. Edison Brace.
GuestsatMr.andMrs.Frank
Cleland and daugbl«, Mrs.
Ivan ' PoweU 1and daughter,
Sunday, were Mr. llld Mrs.
Steve Cleland, ViDce and Ryan,
of Columbus llld Mr. llld Mrs.

DRIVE-IN
BANKING
Ym"ers of tbe Middleport

evawc.

Hayman

lfs Quick! Easy

ROY HOLTER o:xHtBrrED the grand dl!!mpioo and senior champioa of the open class
cattle jndgi~ at tbe Meigs ColDlty Fair Thursday, HolStein breed, and Denise Dean ellhibited
the junior clvunpi.cn.

ficials.
Hill mastered tbe course
'ibursday with a aevdHIIIderpar 65 in the opening round.
Hill's round, wbidl featured
an eagle, six birdies on tbe bal;k
uine, and only one bogie, gave
him the slim lead over Jack
N'lcldaus, wbo bad a &amp;&amp;, and a
two-stroke lead over Bob
Rosburg, Bob Murphy and Tcm
Weiskopf, wbo fired B'ls.

.

***

'la!IORCAifPAIIILYU* IS,eff tl.~.wiP
befeelmedata G&lt;lpelllng at the Omrcb of God at {]!eAr,
· 7:•SallrillyDghl Tbepubliclsinvited to attend.

(Upon Request) ,·

ROBI-NSON-.,'S
r CL£ArtfiRS
,

iii E. Zlld

Pomeroy
•

Phone 992-5421

of Mrs. Bessie Webster.
DouglasJohnsonoflthaca, N.
Y., spent the past week here
with his grandparents, Mr. and
Mr$. R. K. Rowan and returned
to his home in New York on
Friday. Other visitocs in the
Rowan home uie past week
were Linda Jett of Pomeroy,

son , Ithaca, N. Y ., were

11elance -On
Convenient
Terms.

'68

·'·- ---

MERCURY---~---- 1

1595

TELEVISION

group
singing, Mrs.
Ernest
Powell dismissed
with prayer.
Olhers attending . were Mrs.
Esta Wise , Mrs. James
Gilmore, Mrs. Clarence Curtis,
Mrs. Evans, Mrs. Gerald
Pullins, Mrs. H. Wolfe, Mrs.
Lawrence Eblin, and Mrs.
Marguerite Leifheit.

DAUGIITER BORN
Mr. and Mr$. Tim Priddy,
Lockbourne Air Force Base, are
announcing the ·birth of a
daughter 9n. Al!ll. I~ a\ M~t
Carmel Hospital, Columbus.
The infant weighed eight
pounds and has been named
Victoria Ann. Grandparents are
· Mr. and Mrs. Dale Jacobs of
Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs.
Guy Priddy, Rutland. Mrs.
Bessie Fife of Storys Run is a
great-grandmother. Mr. and
Mrs. Priddy have a son, Brian,
four.

'67 DODGE OfARGER ........ ,. ......11295

68 Buick W"llckat Cpe., ait:.......... :....•. 2195

· '68 atEV. IMPAlA ........... , .... , 11495

1

67 Ford

FR~500

11495

2 Dr, H.T. air ..............

67 Che~elle Malibu 2 Dr. H.T...............11595 ~

Convertible, auto. trans .• P.S., color red:

'66 OLDS STATION WAGON ••.•... .,.'995
-"

67 CheRie 2 Door Hardtop,. .............. ~l595

'65 CORVAl R..... ., .~ ... ,. ......,.., ..... t595
4

p.--------.
BULOVA

Male your
dreams come
frue ... call
us for

Hurry •• ,;

Last,Day

home improve ent
•*'

65 Oldsmobile 98 4 Door ••••••• ., ••••• :., •• '895

v.a, auto.. ...•.. .. .. .. . '895

v...... eru·ISef', aar·•••••••••••••••••••• '595
DIG

'68 OOMET H.T• .,.: .., ..,.,.,. ...,, 12!5
· 6 Cyl.. auto. trans.

Elec. windows, alr condition .

'64 mMET .... ~ ........... ;.............. '595
Auto. trans.-, good shape.
.
''66 atEVROI.ET. ...........•......•.... '995
12 Ton pickup truck.

At Closeout Prices!
Buy Now &amp; Save At

Ingels Furniture · .·

1

.

-

-

RIGGS BRos.· INC. --

•

••
•
,

915-4100

-----Located on S. Rt. 7

I

OIIStll'. 0.
J ''

We h'ave a choice
collection of

EXCELLENT SELECTION

•
•

,.

992 _2635

*8:30 ~.M.
Jim Ed Brown Show

* G1_.NI Attractions

modestly priced
Bulova watches,

.

'

timed for
Back to School.

I
I
I
I

WIU '
..... JIU
J'OU pial- ........ ..

We c.n ...,... ,.... flo
wUit Jail .,_. flEE .....

o KITCHEN

r

[J

lc II

...... cllecl fie eu

I

llliaiL

UPSTAIIII

=.:.. ::=..

0 =Y

' 1 I ...

\

JIU

01 . . • • 1 1 1w • - . _ ,

o FtNIIHm

D 110011

I • -- • lilt -

._. _, -

let.

---------~----··--·-·-·-~

D IIAil'M

.....

0

'Pio -

·- - ···-·· --

I
I
I
I

J
.o:•: • • • • • • • ----,;
I

[J POliCH

FAIItl

.

0 IU!UII•

I

Clr -·
....

--·

....

Pomeroy Cement

The

OPEN iRI. &amp; SAT.. N-IGHTS .

•

Co.

hf•• lwsent Sloie of luH ..aQ
llna 191S

Middleport

..

!M1P

FREE ESTIMATES ON YOUR REMODELING NEEDS

R~g
•

aiel....._ • Will •

OUr IIUM
IE I 11 •
?PI •
W••laii!!Wraulhlllelt,..,.lw' ·•c•l I' • .,.,... . . . . .
Jab fDr.. . . . .,.

*3:00P.M.
Hone Harness

1

;66 BUICi(RIVERIA ,. ..• ., .... , ..,., 11695

You

aputs d

and Judging

Dr .• .auto. trans .. r(!dio.

IMFPOIJ, 0.

Lula R. Sheline, Carl R. Shock,
Mrs. Grover G. Turner, Louis
Vagar, Mrs. Leora ~w!Uing,
·and Milo W. Fellure.

. '9:00 A.M,
4ft Holse Show

9 Passenger. radio, P.S.

;

WERNER RADIO &amp; T.V.

~--------

SATURDAY
August 21st

Radio, P.S.

11~

-

V-8, auto. trans., radio, P.S.

68 Okls 88 Ill Sedan, air .•.. ,., .•.....• 12195

"'

Records and plays on 4 "C" ·Celt
batteries, or AC current. A.C.
. Adapter. Dynamic microphone with
remote control switch.

··---------------------------"'*'

'69 DiEVROI.ET, 4 DR·...... ., ......, 11&amp;95.

You'll Uke Our Qualil)t.Way
of Doing Business"
992-5342 GMAC FINANCING POMEROY
~ Evenings Until8: 00'- Til 5 P.M. Sal.

•

Saberjet, Col. Horace Hanes
reached an altitude of &lt;10,000
feet and a speed of 822 miles an
hour.

HANDCRAFTED

Montego MX. hardtop, coupe. radio. P.S.,
aufo. trans. Clean.

At Karr &amp; Van Zandt

!Jt 1955 Dying a Super·

'

-,SPECIAL-

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

MASON
FURNITURE
Mason. W_Va.

CR£AlE VIIIIS

CAR
BUYS

.e•
01c1s·
"

$3S:oo-oow..-

ALL 1971

Stop In lnd- RIY Ritts fiH' I rUI
deal at their new lot at Olelter.

#

'349.95

usmcARS

Thursday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Theodore Croy of Chester.

66 Buick Le Sabre 4 Door, air•• ., ......... '1295

FURNIIURE

'

•

P---~~~~~~-------------·

66 i:hewolet CollY.,

NEW

Mrs. James Danieis, Mrs. joe
Wilson, Mrs. Evelyn Grueser
and Mrs. J . B. Wayland, all of
Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs. R. K. Rowan
and grandson, Douglas John·

BUS CRASH KIUS t5
CASABLANCA, Morocco
(UPI) - A bus smashed
through a guard rail and
plunged off a bridge into a
ravine Wednesday near lbe
town of Boulaou, killing 45
persons and injuring 25 others.
Plllice said the victims were
aU Moroccans.

· Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-ll p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
iediatrics Ward.
Births
(llr. and Mrs. Warner E. Cox,
Gallipolis, a son and Mr. and
Mrs . Clarence 0. McCoy,
Ravenswood, a daughter.
Blrlbs
.
Mrs. Sterhe A.. Barnhtll,
Donald B. Brumfoeld, Mr~.
James 0. Bush, Howard Blall'
Caldwell, III, Mrs. Delores J .
Coon, Mrs. Arthur E. Dillon,
Max Haffelt, Mrs. David L.
'Hale, James F. Hamilton, Mrs.
Kennard C. Hill, Arius Hurt,
Mrs. Florence A. Hysell, Mrs.
,Major Ferris Justis, Mrs.
.Delbert D. King, Mrs. Keith J .
Lawrence and daughter, Mrs.
Earl N. Malone, Mrs. Dewey
Mullins, Mrs. Stella V.
Musgrave, Ferren Niday, Rita
F. Rappe, Robert T. Rutherford, Mrs. Ray L. Saunders,
Ernest E. Schwalbach Jr., Mr$.

Devotions were given by Mrs.
Pearl Jacobs at a recent
meeting of the Women 's
Missionary Society of the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church with Mrs. Uoyd Wri ht
presiding ·in the church
basement.
Devotions consisted of
prayer, scripture from Romans
61 , 1-4 and a meditation
"Dreams in the Desert" concerning questions and answers
on needs of missionaries. Mrs.
George Folmer led in the
missionary tidings, and Mrs.
Harry Clark gave a poem
"Missionary Vision.'' Following

Comoo In black
and
,..Jnut·
gr•lned

e

�,I
I

CHURCH OF THE NAZABIBLE BAPTIST TEMPLE
HEMLOCK
&amp;WOVE
_RENE - Mlddfeoort. Re~. . . Minersville. Sunday School, CHRISTIAN- Dilv~ Slilufler,
Audry Miller, pastor; Flo)'a 10 a.m.; peedllng, 11 a .m.; pastor; Stan!~ Stocldon; supt.
carson, sup!. S~y school, evening worship, 7:30p.m . Mkl- Mornong worship, 9:30 a.m.;
9:30 a.~.;
Morm~ . wor- -prayer _.,ice, Tuesday, church school, 10: 30 a .m.;
shl~,
10. 30 a.m. ,
tUnil!l'· 7:30p.m.
.
young peoples meeting, 6:30
K&gt;!;•~ty. 6.: 30 p.m. ;_NYPS 6; ~
.
.
p._m.; evenl.,, worship. 1:._
Boble •tudy. ....dJ-y, 7:30
FIRST SOUTHERN BAP- p!m. Sunday evangelistic'
r:-GMEROY
TIST - '182 Mulberry Ave., meeting , 7: 30 p.m . Prayet
MIDWAY
CHURCH - p.m.
Prayer
POMEROY
1 RINIT.Y Pomeroy. Affiliated with S. B.C. meelinq Wednesday,_ T: 30 p.m. langsville-Dexter.
meeting, 7:30 ·p.m. Tuesday.
Uol..,.~!t ," _CIIrist -Rev. Rev. Clifford Coleman, pastor.
Perrin, pastor. Fred BJaettnar, Sunday school. 9: 30 a . m.. MASOU COUNTY
Rev. Robert Searles, pastor.
MT. '!NION BAPTIST
• . sup!. Sunday School, 9: 15a. m .; Hershel McClure, supt.; war.
~·
.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF Rev . Cectl J:ox, pastor. Sundar
- . Worship, · ;o:25 a. m.r youth ship service, 10: 30 a .m. ; ..
CHRIST - Clifford Smith school Sljpl.. Joe Say~. s...daY
choir rehearsal, Monday, 6: 30 evening worship. 7: 30. WedTHE HILAND CHAPEL, minister. SIIIKiay Schoolt: JO a: ·school, 9: 45 ~.m .;
p , m. , Mro. Marvin Burt, nesday prayer meeting and Ge&lt;lrge casta, pastor. Sunday m.; m'omlng church 1o: 30 a. everung worshop, 7; 30.
director.
Senior
choir Bible studr._7: 30 p.m.
School, 9:30;. evening worship, m.; Sunday eYenlng service, nesday prayer and ·Bible s1udy.
:•ehearsal,7:30p. m. Thursday,
·E
PORT
7:30. "Thursday evening prayer T:30 p. m . Wednesday service. 1 7. 30 p.m .
.. • ..
Ml DDL
Mls.· Paul Nease, director.
servlce,7 :30 p.m:
p. m .
·
TU P' PERS
PLAINS
Thursday, all day· Busy Bee
MT. MORIAH BAPTI.STMASON FIRST BAPTIST HOBSON
CHRISTIAN CHURCH -Mr
.quilling party In church social Corner Fourth and Main , SecondandPomeroySts.,Stan UNION
CHRISTIAN
JohnWyalt,
past..-;J. S. Oov~
01
room.
Middleport. Rev. Henry L. K~y, ~ralg, pastor. Sunday ~hool, pastor. SUriday ~~~~: Sunday School 5\Jpl. ;' Sunday
PO~EROY CHURCH OF
Jr., pastor. Sunday School 9. 30 9. 45 a.m .; worship servtce, 11 m
Annie M!&gt;hl~ su 1 . school, 9:30 a . m .• llllorning
THE NAZARENE - Corner a.· m., Amold Rlcha,rds, supl. ; . a.m .; training union, 6:JI)"p.m.;
GilmOre. ~ el:;r: . Sermon, 10:30 a. m. Evening
·union and Mulberry. Rev . Morning worship 10:30 a, m. ; ev~lng worship serv_lce, 7: 30 ·eYenlng service, 11,
sermon, 1 P- m.
· ·
7 30 p.
'Clyde V. llenderson, pastor.
FIRST UNITED PRE . p. 'Mid-wee~ prayer service, Wednesday prayer meeting,
LETART FALLS UNITED
'Sunday School 9:30 a . m.;
.
.
S Wednesday, 7. 30 p.m.
7· 30 p m
BRETHREN
"R~
·
.Raymond Walburn, sup!. BYTI!RIAN,
MiddlepOrt-Rev . . 'cHRISTIAM
SCIENCE . .
. .
- ou:v. """' '
Morning worship 10:30 a . m. ; Russell lester, pastor. Sunday Services at 315 Main St., Pl.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF Shook, p;lstor; HersChel Norris.
·EIIenlng service 7: 30p.m. Mid- Schooi 9:30a._m .,l""'!is Sauer •. Pleasant, Sunday School 9:15 GOO- Racine Route 2. Tf\e · sup!. Sundayschool, f :30a.m.;
week service, Wednesday. 7:30 sup!. ; worshtp servoce 10:30 a.m. Sundays, 11 a .m. ; Wed- Rev. Olarles Hanct pastor. morning sermon, 10: 30 a .m.;
p.m.
7' 30 allera .m.
nesday,
sermon,
nating each
Sunday.
Prayer
A testimonial meeting 8 Sunday school, 9:45 a im.; evening
GRACE EPISCOPAL- Rev,
JEHOVAH'~ WITNESSES- p.m .. II ~!come.
~or"!(ng '"'!rshl~ . 11 a.m. service, Wednesday, 7:30p.m .
;~~r~g p~~~;~bu~~d ~~~:: Larry Carnahan pres iding FAIIIillliW BIBLE CHURCH Fveldantng ':""''ces, tlesday and Prayer meeting, 7: 30 p.m.
r · y, ·7. 30. ·
10:30 a . m . . Holy communion minister. Sundar,, Bible lecture, - L.e tart Route 1, the Rev. Stan
·
a Iter natlng Sunda
. Ys •
and · sermon, first Sundays, 9:30a. m. ; Wa chtower sl~dr., Craig, pastor. Sunday school,
BEAR.WALLOW RIDGE
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF
10:30 a. m. Church school, 10:30 a. m.;· Tuesday, Bob e 9: 30 a .m.; prayer and Bible CHURCH OF CHRIST- John GOO OF
'kindergarten through eighth study, 7:30 p. m.; Thursday, study, 7: 30p.m. Cottage prayer
PROPHECY, G. P.
grade, 10:30 a . m.
· ministry school 7:30 p. m., service, Tuesday, 10 a .m. ; ' Rockhold. pastor. Bible study, Sm ilh, paAsrthtor. Sunday School,
10
. POMEROY CHURCH OF service meeting 8:30 p. m..
worship service, Thursday, 7:30 ~~~ ,"·~~i"~::'sh'f"""p.7 ,1~
a.m.;
ur Henson. Supt.;
CHRIST- Mr. Hoyt Allen, Jr .•
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH p.m.
Morning Worship 11. a. m .;
'pastor. Bible School, 9:30a.m.; ·of Christ in Christian UniOnMASON " ·cHURCH • OF p.m. Wed
Y Bible study, Younp ~plesservice,1 p. m.;
worship, 10: 30; adult worship l.iwrence Manley, pastor i Mrs. CHRIST- John Steele, pastor. 7:30p.m.
Evenong service, 7:30 p. m.;
servlce ·.- and ~. yoUQQ. peoples_ Russell Young, Sunday Schobl W h'
o
B
Wed~sday
Mid-Week Prayer
PLANTS
COMMUNITY Serv1ce, 7:30p. m.
meeting, both· 7:30 p. m. Sun- Supt. Sundayr Schooi9:30 a . m.; 11 ";'5s 'P• 1 a .m.; lble study,
: . a .m .; evening worship, MISSION - Antiquity. Ser- meetin,g, 6:30 p. m.,· E -1·ng
day -Wednesday, combined Evenlng worship 7:30. Wed- 7· 30
p m Mid week
1
·~·
. . 7 30.
serv ce, vices, 7: 30p.m. Tloirsday and w..-shop, .7:30p.m.
.
Bible study and prayer nesday prayer meelinA. ' 7:30 p. Wed sd
m.
ne ay, : p.m.
Sunday evenings. John Dill,
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
meeting, 7:30 p. m.
THE SALVATION ARMY .MASON
ASSEMBLy
OF pastor.
NAZARENE - Rev. llerberl
,Envoy Ra~ S. Wining, officer In
M 1 O D L E PORT pEN_ GOD -Second St .• Mason, w.
T .. Rs· v·IL
.C
.. OM ' Grate, pastor. Worship service.
S IV E
LE
• 11 a . m. and 7:30p. m . Sunday.
, Va. Chesler Tennant, pastor.
~~s mu::::~.r.;;--i3:3o~·a.
TECOSTAL. Third. Ave .• the Sunday school , 10 a . m.; MUNITY CHURCH Rev. Sunday School, 9:30 a . m..
Sunday School. Young People's Rev. William Knittel, pastor; morning worship, 11 a. m.; Edsel Hart, pastor. Sunday Richard Barton, sup!. Prayer
· Leglon, -7p. m.; Thursday.llo3 RalPh Priddy, SundaY School evangelistic service, 7:30 p. m. morning wors.llip service, 10 roeeting, Wednesday, 7:30p.m_
p.-.m .. ladies llome league; 7 sup!.; Oas~ for all ages, , Bible study and prayer service, a .m., Dell Talbot, superin- - HARRISONVILLE
PRES-..
p. m. Prep cli!Slill.
evenl"? serv1ce, 8 p.m. Young Wednesday, 7:30 p. m. Phone tendenf. Prayer meeting, each BYTERIAN - Mrs. Norma
. SACR~D HEART -:::.. Rev.L. Peoples meeting and Bible 773 5133
Thursday, 7: 30 p.m. Sunday l
_ 'Super'
·
·
·
evening service, 7:30.
ee, Sunda Y .....
~,....,.
onQuiet m--vnents in solitude are good for the soul. Each of us needs those
Father Bernard Kralcovij:, Study Friday 8 p.m.
.
.
.
.
.
.
lendenl.
Sunday
School
9:30
a.
pastor.
Phone
992-2825.'
1NJIIIII'DU
apart from the busy world-where we can distill our thoygbts,
ZION CHURCH. OF CHRIST m . Sunday Service 8 p. m. Rev.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
Saturday evening Mass, 7: 30
FREEWILL BAPTIST
Pomeroy - Harrisonville Max Donahue, Middleport.
reshape OU1' pwpuee and revitalizi! our spirit.
·p.m. Sunday Mass, 8 and 10 CHURCH, - Corner Ash and CHRIST In Christian Union Middleport.
Noel Rev. O'Dell Manley, pastor. Road. Kenneth Eberts, pastor. pastor·
a.m. Confessions. Saturday 7-·· Plum,
This is nat the same as Jiving a solitary life-to be shut off from so·7:30p.m.
Herrmam, pastor; John Dill, Sunday school. 9:30a.m., Roger Paul
McElroy,
Sunday
LAUilEL CLIFF FREE
Manley, sup!. ; evening service,
ciety, aloof and Ulne. We must remain in touch with the rest of mankind,
• POMEROY FIRST BAPTISY: Sunday School Supt. Saturday 7:30. Wednesday even ing SciiOol Supt. ~nday Scllool9:30 METHODIST - Rev . Eugene
a.
m.
;
'!'ornong
worship
and
Gill,
pastor.
William
Bailey.
'- Robert Kuhn, pastor. Ge&lt;&gt;rge evening service, 7 p. m. Sunday prayer meeting, 7: 30 p.m.
or we will becon te lonely and selfish. We must be a part of the common
iSklnner, Sunday School sup!. School. 10 a . . m .; Sunday Sunday evening youth service commun1on, 10: 30 a .. '!' ·' supl. Sunday School, 9:30a. m .;
evening worship.. 1 p. m.
llow of life.
Sunday evening youth Chmtian Morning worship, 10:30 a . m .;
,Sun da y Sc hoof, 9:30 a . m.;
6: 45 with Macy Lou Carter. ~vor, 6:30; Worship ser- Evening worship, 7 : ~ p. m.
In a soeH!ty filled with patterns and cross-eurrents . of both good and
morning worship, 10: 30 a. m. ;
leader. No Tuesday service.
voces, Sunday, 7:30 p. m . Wednesday Christian Yoolh
FIRST BAPTIS'fCHURCH of
BYF, 6 p. m.; Bible Study
evil, when we dare not Jive in isolation, ev~ry person needs a streqth
Wednesday '!ven ing prayer Crusade, 6; 30 p. m.; Prayer
-Wednesday 1 p. m.; choir Middleport, corner of Sixth and
meeting
and
Boblesludy,7:30p.
meeting
7:30
p.
m.
Thursday.
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
greater than his own. That strength, derived from the presence of God in
.J!!:acllce, Wed., a::,o D. m.
Palmer Streets, Rev. Olarles
choir practice, 7 p. m.
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN _ Simons,
pastor.
Danny Services, 315 Main St., Pl. m.
OU1' lives, is the central coJH:em of the Church. Spend some time in solitude
Rev. Arthur C, Lund, pastor. Thompson, Sunday School Pleasant. Sunday services, 11
DEXTER
CHURCH
OF
with God before JOil attempt to meet the rush of life.
Suncjjoy School, 9:-15 a. m., ~uperintenden t. Sundav a.m. Wednesday Testimonial
_ST. JOHN LUTHERAN - CHRIST -Danny Evans,
Charles Evans, Supt.; worship church school 1or everyone meeting, 7: 30 p.m.
Pone Grove, the Rev. Arthur pastor. Norman C. Will ,. supf.
service, ,10:30 a. m. Con- 9:15 a .m.; N)orn_lng wor_ship
Combs, pastor . ~Y School, Sunday School 9:30 a. m.;
9 a . m. ; _c hurch serv1ces, lOa. Worship service, lO:JO a . m. .
flrmallan class, Saturday, 9:45 10:15 a .m.; Evenong servoces,
7:30 p.m.; Wednesday prayer
a. m.
MEIGS COUNTY
m.
Chri~tian Endeavor Sunday
FrioboJ' S.turcfaJ
. SEVENTH DAY ADVENT. service, 7:30p.m. Extra youth
even mg.
Ado Ea:l,.iuta
TIST
Pam
-acllvllles on Sunday, 5 p.m., for
REORGANIZED CHURCII
22 :17-21 7:1-10 .
fig ' eroy, Mulberry_ allyouthuplosixlhgrade;6:30
MEIGS
OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATs.:.;.t'i:"'s~r:,!l'tf:~cia~s:o;;: 's'"'ludeniutsnlor and seni..- high
COOPERATIVE
TER DAY SAINTS- Porfi-m.; worShip; 3: 15p.m. Dorcas
·
BRAOBURY CHURCH OF Racine Road. Ralph Johnson,
CHRIST. Roy Bill carter. pastor. Sunday School, 9:30 a .
~lety, lOa. m. each Thursday. CHURCH OF CHRIST, MidPAR ISH
evangelist; Thurman Carsey, m.; M:&gt;ming worship, lO:JO a .
GRAHAM UNITED METH- dleport, Sth and Main. Raullln
THE UNITED
Bible School supl.; Bible SchoOl m .; Sunday evening service. 7
METHODIST CHURCH
OOIST CHURCH - Preaching Moyer, pastor. Thomas Kelly,,
With the hope it will. in some meas!K'e, foster and help sustain that which is ,
9:30
a .m .; morning worship, p . m . Wednesday even ing
9:30 a. m., first and second Sundav School s pi B'b
Robert R. C•rd, Director
1
10:30 a.m.; youth meeting, 6 prayer services, 7:30p. m.
'
u ·
e
POMEROY CLUSTER
good in family and commooity life, this featiK'e is sponsored by the business
Sundays of each month; third
andfourthSundayseachmonth, School, 9' 30 a. m. ; morning
Rev. RobertR.card
p.m.,
evening
service,
7
p.m..
BETHLEHEM
BAPTIST
firms and organizati~s whose names appear below.
worship service at 7:30 p. m worship, 10 ' 30 a . m.; evening
Rev. Slanten Smith
C~rlstian Workers . Class, Great Bend, Charles Norris
7
30
Wednesday evenings at 7:30 worship, '
D. m.; orav.r
CHESTER- Worship 9: 15 a . Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. ; prayer pastor. Worship service, 9: 30a:
Prayer and Bible ~dr
' servi~ 1 p. m . WO!'nesday. · . m.; Church School 10 a.m .
~.
.. "
..
•
-1
•
·•
::.. :&gt; -" ., .._ s "' " -• ._:, ~ '" "'- ~~JOIMSE - Wdiship, 9 ,meeting ~nesday, 7:30p.m . "!-:~S'!"!!ay ~""9f ,_IO : Jpa. ""L ,.
~o .2..,2..~P o ' tte
' ~. o o o o co o~"? 0 o.:::. ~ m ~r "'-·-ch~. choo"' IG'il""' i'1'1t ENO CHURCH OF CHR!ST ;:&gt; -;(ARI;:f'fON·
,- " .
....------------"'"'-..
o "' " - ~ - ., . - ~- . ·- FLAlWOoD~· - W;;,.shlp,' i'i - 1iobart Newell, sup!. Servoces Kongsbury Road.
Sunday
~~
o i'~~
~
'
.
a. m. ; Church School 10 a . m. weokly, . 9:30 ~.m. on Sunday. School, 9:30 a . m ., Ralph carl,
ByPASTORR.EUGENEGDL
POMEROY- Worship, 10:30 Preachtng hrsl and third sup!. Worship service, JO:'Jo a .
laJKe!Ciffll'reeMetMdlal~ardl
•· m.; Church School9: 15 a.m. ; Sundays of month by Olfford m. and 7:30 p. m. alternately.
Keep;ake Diamond Rings
Phone 992-3481
· N. Second•Ave.
Smith. 9:30 a.m.
Prayer meeting, Wednesday,
, 1be
.
.,_
UMYF 6:30 p. m.
312 E. Main St.
A:lmeroy. 0.
Beatitudes of ...,tlhew Chapter 5 seem to make a
ROCK SPRINGS - Worship
7: 30 p. m. Rev . Jay Stiles,
Middleport, 0.
RACINE FIRST CIIURCH. pastor.
desirable bit li informaiiOP for a bookmarlt: or motto or 10 a. m.; Church School9 a.m. ;
OF ·THE NAZARENE · ~•wftftf-Sunda
•'""-I'""""........_ toeama
'
UMYF
6:30p.m. CLUSTER
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.;
OLD
DEXTER
CONw
y.,.....,
.......,.,n tolearn'm.,.,.,,
MIDDLEPORT
Morning Worship. 10:30 a. m.; GREGATIONAL CHURCH Bible; but for 11108t folk !be)' don't seem wry practical as a guide
Rev. Robert Bumgarner
Evening worship, 7:30 p. m. Rev . Willard Dutcher, pastor.
ftrdailyllviJ1!.Fcrpeq,lewboarueekillgm~~~eyandthings that
HEATH- Worship 10: 30 a . Wednesday,
PLUMBING AND HEATING
School Mrs. Worley Francis, Sunday
!twill buy p•--- f
and lbe """"ftN of.,_., 1 ts .t m .; Church School 9:30 a . m. ; Su.P':'Intendenl,Sunday
Pauline Mc- School Supt. Sunday School,
, """"""• ame,
sa-lu'5 ......,.y us , 1 UMYF 1 p. m.
992-2550
Middleport
leellll bani to aee any bappbeSil in humility and meelmess·
RUTLAND-Worship 9:15 a . Chnlock, pastor. Rev. Morris 9:45a. m. Church Services first
240 Uncoln St.
Middleport Phone 992-3284
and lhird Sundays fpllowing
'"·tk:eandmercy·andabeartclea._tfrom-'"·'--·
' m .; Church School 10 a. m.; M. Wolfe.
~"'"
•
.......,,.....,
UMYF 7 p. m.
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST- Sunday School. Second and
.
1be lllll'e8ener'ale heart finds It bard to believe that imyone
SALEM CENTER- Worship CharlesNorris. pastor. Sunday fourth Saturday evenings, 8 p.
Schoo~. 9: 30 a . m. ; Morning m. serv1ces.
could be bappy without simlng. With lbe sinnel' Ibis is true. For, 9 a.m .; Church School lOa. m.; worship,
10: 45 a . m.; Sunday
m than,,_
d. . SO he UMYF
Thursday, 7 p. m.
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
• be ~
....,,.. no otber .....
...w
,.., m&lt;men-,
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
evening worship, 7: 30 p.m.;
Mr. Robert WyaH, pastor;
Wednesday evening Bible
Baker.. of Good Bread
bchdgeutthecostoftearlngdownbOdy,mindandspirit.
Rev. Forrest R. Donley
Sunday School sup!., Ronald
Middleport. Cllio
Study,
7:30
o.
m
.
.
Oniatlanltyandtrue bappinesais for today . .~em! says to the
ASBURY- Worship II a.m .;
Hootinglon. W. Va.
Clsbonie. Bible School, 9: 30 a .
"--'•Uan, ''Toda ,
the .
Ugh
Church School 9: so a. m. ;
DANVILLE WESLEYAN, m .; preaching 10: 45 a . m.;
"'"'"
Y you are
splCil and
t of the wcrld. The WSCS, lsi Tuesday.
Rev
. lawrence Sullivan, Evenmg services, 7: JO p. m.
killgdam of God and Heaven is yours, including everlasting life.
FOREST RUN -Worshlp9 a . pastor
. Sunday School 9: 30
If
you are tired li sin's -·"ty and wtrldly toys why not 1ry "'·; Church School 10 a. m.; a .m .; youth and junior youth
flYSELL
RUN
FREE
.,_
•
WSCS, 3rd Wednesday, 7: 30 p.
,
Sales- Allis Chalmers· Service
METHODIST
Cecil
Wise.
servi~,
6:
45
p.m.;
evening
Gods ~oven remedy for dissatisfaction; Christ and His way. m.
Past..-.
Sunday
School,
9:
30
w..-shlp, 7: 30p.m.; prayer and
Farm-Industrial-Lawn-Garden
· Accept Christ's alooement ftr your Sins today and find real
MINERSVILLE - Worship praise, Wednesday, 7: 30 p.m . a.m .; Morni1&gt;9. w..-ship, 10:30
Middleport, Ol io
Tuppers Plains
667-3435
bap"'"ftess as described in the beatih ....;.
10 a . m.; Church School9 a. m.;
a .m.; Young Pecp~e·s service.,
,....
...._.
WSCS, 3rd Mcnday, 7: 30p. m.
SILVER RUN FREE BAP- 6: 45p.m.; Evangelistic service.
- - - - - - - - - - SYRACUE - Worship, 8 a . TIST - Rev. Howard Kimble, 7: 30 p.m. Prayer meeting ,
m.; Church School, 9 a. m.; pastor. Sunday school , 10 a .m .; Thursday, 7:30p.m.
readings by Guy Lee GarreU Prayer and Bible Study, Henry Davis, supI. ; evening
Athens Road - Pomeroy
. 1 ,....... :
Wednesday, 7:30p. m.
FREEDOM
GOSPE-L
serv
ice,
7:
30
p.m.
Prayer
Christy, V10
et ._.• .,ty, Mrs.
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
The Store with A Heart
A Family Thai Worships Together
meeling, Thursday, 7: 30 p.m. MISSION - Bald Knobs, Rev.
Sunday School attendance on Pearl Castle, MrS. Ella Yost,
Rev. W. Dole McClurg
L. R. Gluesencamp, pastor.
Racine
949-3342
Stays Together
A1J8usl 8 was 48 with the of. Helen Brooks of Reynoldsburg
Rev. Fronk Cheesebrew
CHESTER CHURCH OF Roger Willred, Sr., Sunday
~ · $18 60 Worship
·
.
.
'
Rev. Martha Ann Maltner
GOD- Rev. Donald A. Sheets, School Supt. Sunday School,
enng
. •
. semces and a qwz by Bern1ce Hawk.
APPLE GROVE- Worship 8 pastor.
Sunday School 9: 30 a. 9:30 . a . m .; Sunday evening
were held at 11 With Donna
Carrie Swartz, Clara O'Brien p. m. 2nd and 4th Sundays; m. ; ~orship service, 11 a . m.; worship 7:30. Prayer meeting,
.
Miller, lay speaker from and Seldon While were reported Church School 9: 30 a. m.; Mid Evenong service, 7:30. Prayer Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. Ernest
Bakers
of
Holsum
Bread
Ohio's
Oldest
Dodge
Dealer
Belpre, and an attendance of 35. ill and Harry Guthrie deceased. ~eek Service, Wednesday, 8 p. service and youth service. Deeter, class leader. Yough
Middleport,
Olio
Thursday, 7: 30 p. m.
Meelong Wednesday, 7:30p. m.,
Middleport, 0.
An official board meeting was The same officers w~~~
BETHANY (Dorcas) LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN Ernest Deeter, leader.
held ~t lhe_church last Monday returned for another year and Worship,. 9:30 a . m.; Church
- Homer Slephens, pastor )
MT . . HERMON UNITED
0
eve?mg wtth Uoyd Dillinger, are Clyde While, president ; Sc~~~ t·r&gt; ~ tl/orship. 11 a. Sunday School, 9:30 a .m.; BRETHERN CHURCH IN
chall11l:"l ·
Mary Carr, vice president, and m ., lsi and 3rd Sundays ; m..-ning worship, 10:30 a .m.; CHRIST- Rev. Robert Shook,
Member of 1he Big J
Rober t Bolbo, Sunday school pastor, Sunday School , 9:30 a .
Conm Sue Woode of Cir- Helen Woode, secretary- Church School, 10 a. m. .
General Mercbandise
· Sunda
·
·
m ., Roy Pooler, sup!. ; Allred
clevtlle has been visiting treasurer
E~ST LETART- W..-shlp , 9 supt
Chester. Cllio
. ·•
Y e~emng servtce.. Wolfe, asst . supt.; morning
Tuppers Plains
667-3280
·
h
f
.
·
a. m., I sl and 3rd Sundays;
I
1.30
.
Youlh
meetong,
M!&gt;nday,
1
worship
,
11
a
.m
.;
evening
re attves ere or some lime.
The -reunion will be held at the Church School, 10 a. m., lsi and
Herparenls, Mr.andMrs. Clair same lime and place in 1972. 3rd Sundays, 9 a . m .. 2nd and p.m. Mod-week service, Wed- sermon, 7: 30 p.m.. alternating
each Sunday. Ouss meeting, 11
Woode, spent the weekend here Attending lhts
' year
Mr 4th Sundays; Mid Week Servoce, nesday, 7: 30p.m .
were
. Wednesday, 8 p. m.
·
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF a . m . alternating Sunday
and at Keno ..
. .
and Mrs. Hobart Swartz of
GREAT BEND - Worsh ip II THE NAZARENE- Rev. M. C. mornings,
Allred
Wolle,
Mary Carr ts asststing at the Coolville, Route 2; Mr. and Mrs. a . m., 2nd and 4th Sundays ; lanmore, pastor. Bob M!&gt;..-e, layleader ; Christian Endeavor.
A:lmeroy-Member F.D. I.C. &amp;
Family Recreation
Sunday School Supt. Sunday 7:30 p . m . Sunday, Roger
S. W. O'Brien home in Oyde While Pomeroy Rt 3. Church School, 10 a. m .
.
Federal
Reserve
System
Swimming
School , cia~ for all~· 9:30 Buckley , president . Prayer
Columbus. Mrs. O' Brien is ill in Mr. and ~s. Pearl Ca~tle: 10 ~E~A;R[h~r~~\~hool~o~~';;,P a . m .; mor_pong worship, 10:45, meetong, Wednesday, 7:30p. m.
St. Anthony Hospital- there, Belpre ; Mr. and Mrs. Waid . MORNING STAR- Worsh ip NYI'S Sunday, 6:30 p. m .; Board meeting first Mcnday
Meigs County Branch
Room 555. ·
Swartz Athens · Carrie Burson 9: 30a. m.; ~hurch School10: 30 evangel istic service, Sunday, each month , 7: 30p. m.
~
M
dMr Ri h d
'
'
• a. m. ; ModWeek Service, 7:30 p.m. Mid-week prayer. ·
r . an .
s . c ar Swartz Athens ; Mrs. M. E. Guthrie, Wednesday , 8 p. m.
meeting , Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
SYRACUS~ FIRST UNITED
Rexall Drugs
and famtly of Raverma have Coolville · Pearl Randolph
MORSE CHAPEL-Worship Mssionary meeting, second PRESBYTERIAN -Re v.
We Fill All Doctors Prescriptions ,
Ru~lllester , pastor . Worship
been visiting Mr. and Mrs. Vere Coolville ·' Clara Follrod ami 11 a . m .. lsi and 3rd Sundays ; Wednesday, 7: 30p. m.
992-29SS
Pomeroy 296 W. Second
9
a.m.
;
Sunday
School
serv1ce,
Ph. 992-3165
Pomeroy
1z
'
Church School, 10 a . m.
UNITED
FAITH
NON - 10 a. m .
'
war ·
Nina Robinson, Coolville; Mr.
PORTLAND - Worship 7:30
Rev. ,
CARR SCHOOL REUNION
and Mrs. Emmett Hawk , p. m.; Church Schooi9:JO a . m. DENOMINATION Dennis
Weaver.
pastor.
Sunday
The lOth Carr School reunion Hemlock Grove · Mr and Mrs
SUTTON - Worship, 11 a . m . school. 9:30a.m.; Bolb Barber, RUTLAND
•
·
· 2nd and 4th Sundays ; Church
h ld · th Wood
sup!.; worship service, 10:30
RUTLAND FIRST BAPwas e tn e
e Grove Vere Swartz, Pomeroy Rl. 3; School 10 a . m.
a .m.; youthmeeling, 6:45p.m. ; TIST- Rev. Samuel Jackson.
Electric Motor Repair
at Alfred Sunday, Aug. 8 with Mr . and Mrs. Warren Bentz,
WESLEYAN &lt;R•cinel an attendance of 35. A basket Glouster· Mr and Mrs Lee Worship, 11 a . m.; Church church, 7: 30p.m. Bible study, pastor. Sunday School, lOa. m.;
810 W. Main
992-5750 •
Wednesday, 7: 30 p.m.
Mrs. Gertrude Buller, sup!.
0
dinner was •?joyed al ~oon with Hender,.;n, Guysville,
1; Sc~l;. ~ ~~ ~~churches oflhe
Prayer Service, 1: 30 p. m.;
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN' oreaching service, 2 p. m.
Clyde Wh1te asktng the Mrs. Ella Yost, Sugar Grove; Soulhern Cluster. 7:30 p. m.
.
blessing. An afternoon program Mr. and Mrs. Millard Brooks each Sunday at the Youth IN CHRIST- Elden R. Blake, .
•
paslor.
Sunday
School,
lOa.
m.;
RUTLAND
CHURCH
OF
·
· ed
· ti
f
·
' Center IO.k Grove Road l
· Winnie Holsinger, sup!. Mor· CHRIST- Sunday school, 9:30
was enJOY . consts. ng 0 mus1c Reynoldsburg ; Guy W. Lee,
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Building Supplies and Millwork
ning sermon, 11 a . m.; Evening a.m .. V. H. Braley, supl.;
b~ the Chrtsly famdy of Grove Pomeroy Rt . 2; Richard
Rev. Jacob Lehm•n
General Contracting
service Christian Endeavor, communion and devotions,
·- - Pomeroy. 0.
Clly; songs by the group , Swartz Ravenna · Emma
Rev . Stondley Br•ndum
E. Main St.
Pit. 992-3918
r · dl ' ' p
R'
.
ALFRED-Worshiplla. m.; 7: 30 p. m .; Mrs. lyda lq: 30 a .m . Regular board
tn tng, omeroy I. 3; Julta Church School 10 a. m.; Prayer Chevalier, president. Song meeting 7:30. third Saturday
.
Sl.aley, Chaunc-ey; Mr. and Mrs. meeting, Wednesday. 7: 4S p. m . service and sermon, 8: 20. Mid· · .,.ch m"lnth.
Week
prayer
meeting
WedTHE
RUTLAND
Garrell Christy, Grove City·
JOPPA- Worship 10 a. m.; nesday, 7:30 p. m . .Mrs. Mazie MUNITY CHURCH - COMRev .
GenerarRardware
Church School 9 a . m.; Prayer
Mr . and Mrs . Clarence Neul-' Meeting,
Amos Tillis, pastor. Sunday
Wednesday, 8 p. m. Holsinqer, class leader
PaintPlumbing &amp; Ell!drical Suj&gt;.
POMEROY LOWER . LIGHT School, 9' 30 a . m.; Worship '
zltng, Long Bottom R. D.; Jack
lONG BOTTOM- Worsh ip 9
plies
.
service, 11 a . m.; Wednesday
(Erroll ) Follrod Pomeroy and a . m.; Church School 10 a. m. CHIJRCH-Harrisonvllle Road. prayer meeting, 7:30 p. m.
,
667-J963
Ph. 9&lt;19-3712 Tuppers Plains
'
D Wood,
NORTH BETHEL- Worship
Mr . an d Mrs. Cha
e, lla. m.; ChurchSchoollOa. m. Hev. Roy Taylor. pastor; Henry Sunday night w..-ship, 7:30.
s. ·
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
All
llftnnCoolville Rl. 2.
REEDSVILLE - Worship 8 Eblin, Sunday School Supt.
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. ; THE NAZARENE-Rev. Lloyd
.-&amp;.
IIIUUI"IIftl
Gilts were awarded to Emma p. m.; Church ·School 10 a. m.; evening worship, ! :30 p .. m .' D. Grimm, Jr., pastor. Sunday
and
•
Findlin•
eldest·
Julia
Staley
Praver
Meetlno.
WedM&lt;AAv.
~
Pomeroy. ftarrlSGIIville Rd.
Prayer
and
prasle
serVICe,
School.
9:30
a.
m.
;
Morning
.
.
l'ft
hi
I
I
p, m.
9:30A.M.
worship, 10:30 a. m.; Young
U ,.
.,
"""
~...-_
youngest; Mr. and Mrs. Garrell
SILVER RIDGE - Worship, Thursday, 7:30 p. m.
Willi s,edel Prll!ltam
COMMUNITY
CHURCH.r:;le's
service,
_
6:45
p.
m.
;
·992-2550
__,
Christy, farthest away and ·Mr. 10 a . m.; Church School, 9 a . m.
AtlrMP.M.
7
30
and Mrs. Millard IJrooks next
TUPPERS
PLAINS
All Art Wtlclome
Dexter - Worship
Rev. Jamesservices
Queen. ~jo
' .P
Yservoc!'",
evenmg servoce'
WorshiP 9 a'm .; Church School pa•tor.
rartiest
I
away.
10 a . m.
Salurday- SUnday, 7:30p.m . · _P· m. .
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Social Notes

IIIII VSlORE

BOGGS EQUIPMENT

IDIIGM Dill SfAJI)N

RACINE fOOD MARKET ·

11110 Ylll FY BMING Ql

R. tl RAWLINGS SONS Ql

SWISID &amp; UIISE

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TUESDAY
.t: 30-f,. "Sante Fe••
7:110-3, "The Great Man"
1: 30-13, "The Sheriff"
9:110-3, "Ransom tor A O..d
Man"
WEDNESDAY

,.:30-8, ,.A Yank In Korea"
9: ~13, ,.The Sundowners"
11: 30-13,
"Grounds
for
Marriage"
THURSDAY
•:311-8,
"The
Enemy
General"
9: OQ-8, "The Frozen O..d"
11 : 30-13, "Lady for lhe_N,~ghl"

_____ . :. ______________

.

FRIDAY
"7th C.lvary"
9:11041, "Gidget"
11:30-8, " Bachelor Party"
n: ~13, "Dark Commend"
SATURDAY
3: 30--13, "Samar"
I! 311-3, "The Unsinkable
Molly Brown"
11: ls-3, "Girls
In the
Kremlin" and "Hells Island"
ll:ls-13, "Deed Eyes ol
London" and "Diabolical Dr.
~= 30-8,

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ROYAL OAK PARK

lHE ADINS ..COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp;1JWt m.

IDlER'S DRIVE~N .

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PlAINS HARDWARE

VWGE RJIB SIIIP

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12:30--1, "Crime School"

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lElNER'S BMERY

L1011S IIARIEI

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SUNDAY
2:Gt:-3. "City Bent..th the
Sea"'
3:G0-13, "East Side West
Side"
5:00-13. "Somebody Up There
Ukes Ne"
9:00-13. "Shout Loud. louder,
I can'1 Hlllr''
11 :30-13. "Belle of New York"
11: 30-8, "Confldonllal Agent"
MONDAY
4:30-8. ''The Walking Hills"
9:110-3, "Triple Play"
9:110-13. "EI Greed'
11: 30-13, "I Lave Melvin"

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CHURCH OF THE NAZABIBLE BAPTIST TEMPLE
HEMLOCK
&amp;WOVE
_RENE - Mlddfeoort. Re~. . . Minersville. Sunday School, CHRISTIAN- Dilv~ Slilufler,
Audry Miller, pastor; Flo)'a 10 a.m.; peedllng, 11 a .m.; pastor; Stan!~ Stocldon; supt.
carson, sup!. S~y school, evening worship, 7:30p.m . Mkl- Mornong worship, 9:30 a.m.;
9:30 a.~.;
Morm~ . wor- -prayer _.,ice, Tuesday, church school, 10: 30 a .m.;
shl~,
10. 30 a.m. ,
tUnil!l'· 7:30p.m.
.
young peoples meeting, 6:30
K&gt;!;•~ty. 6.: 30 p.m. ;_NYPS 6; ~
.
.
p._m.; evenl.,, worship. 1:._
Boble •tudy. ....dJ-y, 7:30
FIRST SOUTHERN BAP- p!m. Sunday evangelistic'
r:-GMEROY
TIST - '182 Mulberry Ave., meeting , 7: 30 p.m . Prayet
MIDWAY
CHURCH - p.m.
Prayer
POMEROY
1 RINIT.Y Pomeroy. Affiliated with S. B.C. meelinq Wednesday,_ T: 30 p.m. langsville-Dexter.
meeting, 7:30 ·p.m. Tuesday.
Uol..,.~!t ," _CIIrist -Rev. Rev. Clifford Coleman, pastor.
Perrin, pastor. Fred BJaettnar, Sunday school. 9: 30 a . m.. MASOU COUNTY
Rev. Robert Searles, pastor.
MT. '!NION BAPTIST
• . sup!. Sunday School, 9: 15a. m .; Hershel McClure, supt.; war.
~·
.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF Rev . Cectl J:ox, pastor. Sundar
- . Worship, · ;o:25 a. m.r youth ship service, 10: 30 a .m. ; ..
CHRIST - Clifford Smith school Sljpl.. Joe Say~. s...daY
choir rehearsal, Monday, 6: 30 evening worship. 7: 30. WedTHE HILAND CHAPEL, minister. SIIIKiay Schoolt: JO a: ·school, 9: 45 ~.m .;
p , m. , Mro. Marvin Burt, nesday prayer meeting and Ge&lt;lrge casta, pastor. Sunday m.; m'omlng church 1o: 30 a. everung worshop, 7; 30.
director.
Senior
choir Bible studr._7: 30 p.m.
School, 9:30;. evening worship, m.; Sunday eYenlng service, nesday prayer and ·Bible s1udy.
:•ehearsal,7:30p. m. Thursday,
·E
PORT
7:30. "Thursday evening prayer T:30 p. m . Wednesday service. 1 7. 30 p.m .
.. • ..
Ml DDL
Mls.· Paul Nease, director.
servlce,7 :30 p.m:
p. m .
·
TU P' PERS
PLAINS
Thursday, all day· Busy Bee
MT. MORIAH BAPTI.STMASON FIRST BAPTIST HOBSON
CHRISTIAN CHURCH -Mr
.quilling party In church social Corner Fourth and Main , SecondandPomeroySts.,Stan UNION
CHRISTIAN
JohnWyalt,
past..-;J. S. Oov~
01
room.
Middleport. Rev. Henry L. K~y, ~ralg, pastor. Sunday ~hool, pastor. SUriday ~~~~: Sunday School 5\Jpl. ;' Sunday
PO~EROY CHURCH OF
Jr., pastor. Sunday School 9. 30 9. 45 a.m .; worship servtce, 11 m
Annie M!&gt;hl~ su 1 . school, 9:30 a . m .• llllorning
THE NAZARENE - Corner a.· m., Amold Rlcha,rds, supl. ; . a.m .; training union, 6:JI)"p.m.;
GilmOre. ~ el:;r: . Sermon, 10:30 a. m. Evening
·union and Mulberry. Rev . Morning worship 10:30 a, m. ; ev~lng worship serv_lce, 7: 30 ·eYenlng service, 11,
sermon, 1 P- m.
· ·
7 30 p.
'Clyde V. llenderson, pastor.
FIRST UNITED PRE . p. 'Mid-wee~ prayer service, Wednesday prayer meeting,
LETART FALLS UNITED
'Sunday School 9:30 a . m.;
.
.
S Wednesday, 7. 30 p.m.
7· 30 p m
BRETHREN
"R~
·
.Raymond Walburn, sup!. BYTI!RIAN,
MiddlepOrt-Rev . . 'cHRISTIAM
SCIENCE . .
. .
- ou:v. """' '
Morning worship 10:30 a . m. ; Russell lester, pastor. Sunday Services at 315 Main St., Pl.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF Shook, p;lstor; HersChel Norris.
·EIIenlng service 7: 30p.m. Mid- Schooi 9:30a._m .,l""'!is Sauer •. Pleasant, Sunday School 9:15 GOO- Racine Route 2. Tf\e · sup!. Sundayschool, f :30a.m.;
week service, Wednesday. 7:30 sup!. ; worshtp servoce 10:30 a.m. Sundays, 11 a .m. ; Wed- Rev. Olarles Hanct pastor. morning sermon, 10: 30 a .m.;
p.m.
7' 30 allera .m.
nesday,
sermon,
nating each
Sunday.
Prayer
A testimonial meeting 8 Sunday school, 9:45 a im.; evening
GRACE EPISCOPAL- Rev,
JEHOVAH'~ WITNESSES- p.m .. II ~!come.
~or"!(ng '"'!rshl~ . 11 a.m. service, Wednesday, 7:30p.m .
;~~r~g p~~~;~bu~~d ~~~:: Larry Carnahan pres iding FAIIIillliW BIBLE CHURCH Fveldantng ':""''ces, tlesday and Prayer meeting, 7: 30 p.m.
r · y, ·7. 30. ·
10:30 a . m . . Holy communion minister. Sundar,, Bible lecture, - L.e tart Route 1, the Rev. Stan
·
a Iter natlng Sunda
. Ys •
and · sermon, first Sundays, 9:30a. m. ; Wa chtower sl~dr., Craig, pastor. Sunday school,
BEAR.WALLOW RIDGE
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF
10:30 a. m. Church school, 10:30 a. m.;· Tuesday, Bob e 9: 30 a .m.; prayer and Bible CHURCH OF CHRIST- John GOO OF
'kindergarten through eighth study, 7:30 p. m.; Thursday, study, 7: 30p.m. Cottage prayer
PROPHECY, G. P.
grade, 10:30 a . m.
· ministry school 7:30 p. m., service, Tuesday, 10 a .m. ; ' Rockhold. pastor. Bible study, Sm ilh, paAsrthtor. Sunday School,
10
. POMEROY CHURCH OF service meeting 8:30 p. m..
worship service, Thursday, 7:30 ~~~ ,"·~~i"~::'sh'f"""p.7 ,1~
a.m.;
ur Henson. Supt.;
CHRIST- Mr. Hoyt Allen, Jr .•
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH p.m.
Morning Worship 11. a. m .;
'pastor. Bible School, 9:30a.m.; ·of Christ in Christian UniOnMASON " ·cHURCH • OF p.m. Wed
Y Bible study, Younp ~plesservice,1 p. m.;
worship, 10: 30; adult worship l.iwrence Manley, pastor i Mrs. CHRIST- John Steele, pastor. 7:30p.m.
Evenong service, 7:30 p. m.;
servlce ·.- and ~. yoUQQ. peoples_ Russell Young, Sunday Schobl W h'
o
B
Wed~sday
Mid-Week Prayer
PLANTS
COMMUNITY Serv1ce, 7:30p. m.
meeting, both· 7:30 p. m. Sun- Supt. Sundayr Schooi9:30 a . m.; 11 ";'5s 'P• 1 a .m.; lble study,
: . a .m .; evening worship, MISSION - Antiquity. Ser- meetin,g, 6:30 p. m.,· E -1·ng
day -Wednesday, combined Evenlng worship 7:30. Wed- 7· 30
p m Mid week
1
·~·
. . 7 30.
serv ce, vices, 7: 30p.m. Tloirsday and w..-shop, .7:30p.m.
.
Bible study and prayer nesday prayer meelinA. ' 7:30 p. Wed sd
m.
ne ay, : p.m.
Sunday evenings. John Dill,
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
meeting, 7:30 p. m.
THE SALVATION ARMY .MASON
ASSEMBLy
OF pastor.
NAZARENE - Rev. llerberl
,Envoy Ra~ S. Wining, officer In
M 1 O D L E PORT pEN_ GOD -Second St .• Mason, w.
T .. Rs· v·IL
.C
.. OM ' Grate, pastor. Worship service.
S IV E
LE
• 11 a . m. and 7:30p. m . Sunday.
, Va. Chesler Tennant, pastor.
~~s mu::::~.r.;;--i3:3o~·a.
TECOSTAL. Third. Ave .• the Sunday school , 10 a . m.; MUNITY CHURCH Rev. Sunday School, 9:30 a . m..
Sunday School. Young People's Rev. William Knittel, pastor; morning worship, 11 a. m.; Edsel Hart, pastor. Sunday Richard Barton, sup!. Prayer
· Leglon, -7p. m.; Thursday.llo3 RalPh Priddy, SundaY School evangelistic service, 7:30 p. m. morning wors.llip service, 10 roeeting, Wednesday, 7:30p.m_
p.-.m .. ladies llome league; 7 sup!.; Oas~ for all ages, , Bible study and prayer service, a .m., Dell Talbot, superin- - HARRISONVILLE
PRES-..
p. m. Prep cli!Slill.
evenl"? serv1ce, 8 p.m. Young Wednesday, 7:30 p. m. Phone tendenf. Prayer meeting, each BYTERIAN - Mrs. Norma
. SACR~D HEART -:::.. Rev.L. Peoples meeting and Bible 773 5133
Thursday, 7: 30 p.m. Sunday l
_ 'Super'
·
·
·
evening service, 7:30.
ee, Sunda Y .....
~,....,.
onQuiet m--vnents in solitude are good for the soul. Each of us needs those
Father Bernard Kralcovij:, Study Friday 8 p.m.
.
.
.
.
.
.
lendenl.
Sunday
School
9:30
a.
pastor.
Phone
992-2825.'
1NJIIIII'DU
apart from the busy world-where we can distill our thoygbts,
ZION CHURCH. OF CHRIST m . Sunday Service 8 p. m. Rev.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
Saturday evening Mass, 7: 30
FREEWILL BAPTIST
Pomeroy - Harrisonville Max Donahue, Middleport.
reshape OU1' pwpuee and revitalizi! our spirit.
·p.m. Sunday Mass, 8 and 10 CHURCH, - Corner Ash and CHRIST In Christian Union Middleport.
Noel Rev. O'Dell Manley, pastor. Road. Kenneth Eberts, pastor. pastor·
a.m. Confessions. Saturday 7-·· Plum,
This is nat the same as Jiving a solitary life-to be shut off from so·7:30p.m.
Herrmam, pastor; John Dill, Sunday school. 9:30a.m., Roger Paul
McElroy,
Sunday
LAUilEL CLIFF FREE
Manley, sup!. ; evening service,
ciety, aloof and Ulne. We must remain in touch with the rest of mankind,
• POMEROY FIRST BAPTISY: Sunday School Supt. Saturday 7:30. Wednesday even ing SciiOol Supt. ~nday Scllool9:30 METHODIST - Rev . Eugene
a.
m.
;
'!'ornong
worship
and
Gill,
pastor.
William
Bailey.
'- Robert Kuhn, pastor. Ge&lt;&gt;rge evening service, 7 p. m. Sunday prayer meeting, 7: 30 p.m.
or we will becon te lonely and selfish. We must be a part of the common
iSklnner, Sunday School sup!. School. 10 a . . m .; Sunday Sunday evening youth service commun1on, 10: 30 a .. '!' ·' supl. Sunday School, 9:30a. m .;
evening worship.. 1 p. m.
llow of life.
Sunday evening youth Chmtian Morning worship, 10:30 a . m .;
,Sun da y Sc hoof, 9:30 a . m.;
6: 45 with Macy Lou Carter. ~vor, 6:30; Worship ser- Evening worship, 7 : ~ p. m.
In a soeH!ty filled with patterns and cross-eurrents . of both good and
morning worship, 10: 30 a. m. ;
leader. No Tuesday service.
voces, Sunday, 7:30 p. m . Wednesday Christian Yoolh
FIRST BAPTIS'fCHURCH of
BYF, 6 p. m.; Bible Study
evil, when we dare not Jive in isolation, ev~ry person needs a streqth
Wednesday '!ven ing prayer Crusade, 6; 30 p. m.; Prayer
-Wednesday 1 p. m.; choir Middleport, corner of Sixth and
meeting
and
Boblesludy,7:30p.
meeting
7:30
p.
m.
Thursday.
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
greater than his own. That strength, derived from the presence of God in
.J!!:acllce, Wed., a::,o D. m.
Palmer Streets, Rev. Olarles
choir practice, 7 p. m.
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN _ Simons,
pastor.
Danny Services, 315 Main St., Pl. m.
OU1' lives, is the central coJH:em of the Church. Spend some time in solitude
Rev. Arthur C, Lund, pastor. Thompson, Sunday School Pleasant. Sunday services, 11
DEXTER
CHURCH
OF
with God before JOil attempt to meet the rush of life.
Suncjjoy School, 9:-15 a. m., ~uperintenden t. Sundav a.m. Wednesday Testimonial
_ST. JOHN LUTHERAN - CHRIST -Danny Evans,
Charles Evans, Supt.; worship church school 1or everyone meeting, 7: 30 p.m.
Pone Grove, the Rev. Arthur pastor. Norman C. Will ,. supf.
service, ,10:30 a. m. Con- 9:15 a .m.; N)orn_lng wor_ship
Combs, pastor . ~Y School, Sunday School 9:30 a. m.;
9 a . m. ; _c hurch serv1ces, lOa. Worship service, lO:JO a . m. .
flrmallan class, Saturday, 9:45 10:15 a .m.; Evenong servoces,
7:30 p.m.; Wednesday prayer
a. m.
MEIGS COUNTY
m.
Chri~tian Endeavor Sunday
FrioboJ' S.turcfaJ
. SEVENTH DAY ADVENT. service, 7:30p.m. Extra youth
even mg.
Ado Ea:l,.iuta
TIST
Pam
-acllvllles on Sunday, 5 p.m., for
REORGANIZED CHURCII
22 :17-21 7:1-10 .
fig ' eroy, Mulberry_ allyouthuplosixlhgrade;6:30
MEIGS
OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATs.:.;.t'i:"'s~r:,!l'tf:~cia~s:o;;: 's'"'ludeniutsnlor and seni..- high
COOPERATIVE
TER DAY SAINTS- Porfi-m.; worShip; 3: 15p.m. Dorcas
·
BRAOBURY CHURCH OF Racine Road. Ralph Johnson,
CHRIST. Roy Bill carter. pastor. Sunday School, 9:30 a .
~lety, lOa. m. each Thursday. CHURCH OF CHRIST, MidPAR ISH
evangelist; Thurman Carsey, m.; M:&gt;ming worship, lO:JO a .
GRAHAM UNITED METH- dleport, Sth and Main. Raullln
THE UNITED
Bible School supl.; Bible SchoOl m .; Sunday evening service. 7
METHODIST CHURCH
OOIST CHURCH - Preaching Moyer, pastor. Thomas Kelly,,
With the hope it will. in some meas!K'e, foster and help sustain that which is ,
9:30
a .m .; morning worship, p . m . Wednesday even ing
9:30 a. m., first and second Sundav School s pi B'b
Robert R. C•rd, Director
1
10:30 a.m.; youth meeting, 6 prayer services, 7:30p. m.
'
u ·
e
POMEROY CLUSTER
good in family and commooity life, this featiK'e is sponsored by the business
Sundays of each month; third
andfourthSundayseachmonth, School, 9' 30 a. m. ; morning
Rev. RobertR.card
p.m.,
evening
service,
7
p.m..
BETHLEHEM
BAPTIST
firms and organizati~s whose names appear below.
worship service at 7:30 p. m worship, 10 ' 30 a . m.; evening
Rev. Slanten Smith
C~rlstian Workers . Class, Great Bend, Charles Norris
7
30
Wednesday evenings at 7:30 worship, '
D. m.; orav.r
CHESTER- Worship 9: 15 a . Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. ; prayer pastor. Worship service, 9: 30a:
Prayer and Bible ~dr
' servi~ 1 p. m . WO!'nesday. · . m.; Church School 10 a.m .
~.
.. "
..
•
-1
•
·•
::.. :&gt; -" ., .._ s "' " -• ._:, ~ '" "'- ~~JOIMSE - Wdiship, 9 ,meeting ~nesday, 7:30p.m . "!-:~S'!"!!ay ~""9f ,_IO : Jpa. ""L ,.
~o .2..,2..~P o ' tte
' ~. o o o o co o~"? 0 o.:::. ~ m ~r "'-·-ch~. choo"' IG'il""' i'1'1t ENO CHURCH OF CHR!ST ;:&gt; -;(ARI;:f'fON·
,- " .
....------------"'"'-..
o "' " - ~ - ., . - ~- . ·- FLAlWOoD~· - W;;,.shlp,' i'i - 1iobart Newell, sup!. Servoces Kongsbury Road.
Sunday
~~
o i'~~
~
'
.
a. m. ; Church School 10 a . m. weokly, . 9:30 ~.m. on Sunday. School, 9:30 a . m ., Ralph carl,
ByPASTORR.EUGENEGDL
POMEROY- Worship, 10:30 Preachtng hrsl and third sup!. Worship service, JO:'Jo a .
laJKe!Ciffll'reeMetMdlal~ardl
•· m.; Church School9: 15 a.m. ; Sundays of month by Olfford m. and 7:30 p. m. alternately.
Keep;ake Diamond Rings
Phone 992-3481
· N. Second•Ave.
Smith. 9:30 a.m.
Prayer meeting, Wednesday,
, 1be
.
.,_
UMYF 6:30 p. m.
312 E. Main St.
A:lmeroy. 0.
Beatitudes of ...,tlhew Chapter 5 seem to make a
ROCK SPRINGS - Worship
7: 30 p. m. Rev . Jay Stiles,
Middleport, 0.
RACINE FIRST CIIURCH. pastor.
desirable bit li informaiiOP for a bookmarlt: or motto or 10 a. m.; Church School9 a.m. ;
OF ·THE NAZARENE · ~•wftftf-Sunda
•'""-I'""""........_ toeama
'
UMYF
6:30p.m. CLUSTER
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.;
OLD
DEXTER
CONw
y.,.....,
.......,.,n tolearn'm.,.,.,,
MIDDLEPORT
Morning Worship. 10:30 a. m.; GREGATIONAL CHURCH Bible; but for 11108t folk !be)' don't seem wry practical as a guide
Rev. Robert Bumgarner
Evening worship, 7:30 p. m. Rev . Willard Dutcher, pastor.
ftrdailyllviJ1!.Fcrpeq,lewboarueekillgm~~~eyandthings that
HEATH- Worship 10: 30 a . Wednesday,
PLUMBING AND HEATING
School Mrs. Worley Francis, Sunday
!twill buy p•--- f
and lbe """"ftN of.,_., 1 ts .t m .; Church School 9:30 a . m. ; Su.P':'Intendenl,Sunday
Pauline Mc- School Supt. Sunday School,
, """"""• ame,
sa-lu'5 ......,.y us , 1 UMYF 1 p. m.
992-2550
Middleport
leellll bani to aee any bappbeSil in humility and meelmess·
RUTLAND-Worship 9:15 a . Chnlock, pastor. Rev. Morris 9:45a. m. Church Services first
240 Uncoln St.
Middleport Phone 992-3284
and lhird Sundays fpllowing
'"·tk:eandmercy·andabeartclea._tfrom-'"·'--·
' m .; Church School 10 a. m.; M. Wolfe.
~"'"
•
.......,,.....,
UMYF 7 p. m.
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST- Sunday School. Second and
.
1be lllll'e8ener'ale heart finds It bard to believe that imyone
SALEM CENTER- Worship CharlesNorris. pastor. Sunday fourth Saturday evenings, 8 p.
Schoo~. 9: 30 a . m. ; Morning m. serv1ces.
could be bappy without simlng. With lbe sinnel' Ibis is true. For, 9 a.m .; Church School lOa. m.; worship,
10: 45 a . m.; Sunday
m than,,_
d. . SO he UMYF
Thursday, 7 p. m.
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
• be ~
....,,.. no otber .....
...w
,.., m&lt;men-,
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
evening worship, 7: 30 p.m.;
Mr. Robert WyaH, pastor;
Wednesday evening Bible
Baker.. of Good Bread
bchdgeutthecostoftearlngdownbOdy,mindandspirit.
Rev. Forrest R. Donley
Sunday School sup!., Ronald
Middleport. Cllio
Study,
7:30
o.
m
.
.
Oniatlanltyandtrue bappinesais for today . .~em! says to the
ASBURY- Worship II a.m .;
Hootinglon. W. Va.
Clsbonie. Bible School, 9: 30 a .
"--'•Uan, ''Toda ,
the .
Ugh
Church School 9: so a. m. ;
DANVILLE WESLEYAN, m .; preaching 10: 45 a . m.;
"'"'"
Y you are
splCil and
t of the wcrld. The WSCS, lsi Tuesday.
Rev
. lawrence Sullivan, Evenmg services, 7: JO p. m.
killgdam of God and Heaven is yours, including everlasting life.
FOREST RUN -Worshlp9 a . pastor
. Sunday School 9: 30
If
you are tired li sin's -·"ty and wtrldly toys why not 1ry "'·; Church School 10 a. m.; a .m .; youth and junior youth
flYSELL
RUN
FREE
.,_
•
WSCS, 3rd Wednesday, 7: 30 p.
,
Sales- Allis Chalmers· Service
METHODIST
Cecil
Wise.
servi~,
6:
45
p.m.;
evening
Gods ~oven remedy for dissatisfaction; Christ and His way. m.
Past..-.
Sunday
School,
9:
30
w..-shlp, 7: 30p.m.; prayer and
Farm-Industrial-Lawn-Garden
· Accept Christ's alooement ftr your Sins today and find real
MINERSVILLE - Worship praise, Wednesday, 7: 30 p.m . a.m .; Morni1&gt;9. w..-ship, 10:30
Middleport, Ol io
Tuppers Plains
667-3435
bap"'"ftess as described in the beatih ....;.
10 a . m.; Church School9 a. m.;
a .m.; Young Pecp~e·s service.,
,....
...._.
WSCS, 3rd Mcnday, 7: 30p. m.
SILVER RUN FREE BAP- 6: 45p.m.; Evangelistic service.
- - - - - - - - - - SYRACUE - Worship, 8 a . TIST - Rev. Howard Kimble, 7: 30 p.m. Prayer meeting ,
m.; Church School, 9 a. m.; pastor. Sunday school , 10 a .m .; Thursday, 7:30p.m.
readings by Guy Lee GarreU Prayer and Bible Study, Henry Davis, supI. ; evening
Athens Road - Pomeroy
. 1 ,....... :
Wednesday, 7:30p. m.
FREEDOM
GOSPE-L
serv
ice,
7:
30
p.m.
Prayer
Christy, V10
et ._.• .,ty, Mrs.
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
The Store with A Heart
A Family Thai Worships Together
meeling, Thursday, 7: 30 p.m. MISSION - Bald Knobs, Rev.
Sunday School attendance on Pearl Castle, MrS. Ella Yost,
Rev. W. Dole McClurg
L. R. Gluesencamp, pastor.
Racine
949-3342
Stays Together
A1J8usl 8 was 48 with the of. Helen Brooks of Reynoldsburg
Rev. Fronk Cheesebrew
CHESTER CHURCH OF Roger Willred, Sr., Sunday
~ · $18 60 Worship
·
.
.
'
Rev. Martha Ann Maltner
GOD- Rev. Donald A. Sheets, School Supt. Sunday School,
enng
. •
. semces and a qwz by Bern1ce Hawk.
APPLE GROVE- Worship 8 pastor.
Sunday School 9: 30 a. 9:30 . a . m .; Sunday evening
were held at 11 With Donna
Carrie Swartz, Clara O'Brien p. m. 2nd and 4th Sundays; m. ; ~orship service, 11 a . m.; worship 7:30. Prayer meeting,
.
Miller, lay speaker from and Seldon While were reported Church School 9: 30 a. m.; Mid Evenong service, 7:30. Prayer Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. Ernest
Bakers
of
Holsum
Bread
Ohio's
Oldest
Dodge
Dealer
Belpre, and an attendance of 35. ill and Harry Guthrie deceased. ~eek Service, Wednesday, 8 p. service and youth service. Deeter, class leader. Yough
Middleport,
Olio
Thursday, 7: 30 p. m.
Meelong Wednesday, 7:30p. m.,
Middleport, 0.
An official board meeting was The same officers w~~~
BETHANY (Dorcas) LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN Ernest Deeter, leader.
held ~t lhe_church last Monday returned for another year and Worship,. 9:30 a . m.; Church
- Homer Slephens, pastor )
MT . . HERMON UNITED
0
eve?mg wtth Uoyd Dillinger, are Clyde While, president ; Sc~~~ t·r&gt; ~ tl/orship. 11 a. Sunday School, 9:30 a .m.; BRETHERN CHURCH IN
chall11l:"l ·
Mary Carr, vice president, and m ., lsi and 3rd Sundays ; m..-ning worship, 10:30 a .m.; CHRIST- Rev. Robert Shook,
Member of 1he Big J
Rober t Bolbo, Sunday school pastor, Sunday School , 9:30 a .
Conm Sue Woode of Cir- Helen Woode, secretary- Church School, 10 a. m. .
General Mercbandise
· Sunda
·
·
m ., Roy Pooler, sup!. ; Allred
clevtlle has been visiting treasurer
E~ST LETART- W..-shlp , 9 supt
Chester. Cllio
. ·•
Y e~emng servtce.. Wolfe, asst . supt.; morning
Tuppers Plains
667-3280
·
h
f
.
·
a. m., I sl and 3rd Sundays;
I
1.30
.
Youlh
meetong,
M!&gt;nday,
1
worship
,
11
a
.m
.;
evening
re attves ere or some lime.
The -reunion will be held at the Church School, 10 a. m., lsi and
Herparenls, Mr.andMrs. Clair same lime and place in 1972. 3rd Sundays, 9 a . m .. 2nd and p.m. Mod-week service, Wed- sermon, 7: 30 p.m.. alternating
each Sunday. Ouss meeting, 11
Woode, spent the weekend here Attending lhts
' year
Mr 4th Sundays; Mid Week Servoce, nesday, 7: 30p.m .
were
. Wednesday, 8 p. m.
·
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF a . m . alternating Sunday
and at Keno ..
. .
and Mrs. Hobart Swartz of
GREAT BEND - Worsh ip II THE NAZARENE- Rev. M. C. mornings,
Allred
Wolle,
Mary Carr ts asststing at the Coolville, Route 2; Mr. and Mrs. a . m., 2nd and 4th Sundays ; lanmore, pastor. Bob M!&gt;..-e, layleader ; Christian Endeavor.
A:lmeroy-Member F.D. I.C. &amp;
Family Recreation
Sunday School Supt. Sunday 7:30 p . m . Sunday, Roger
S. W. O'Brien home in Oyde While Pomeroy Rt 3. Church School, 10 a. m .
.
Federal
Reserve
System
Swimming
School , cia~ for all~· 9:30 Buckley , president . Prayer
Columbus. Mrs. O' Brien is ill in Mr. and ~s. Pearl Ca~tle: 10 ~E~A;R[h~r~~\~hool~o~~';;,P a . m .; mor_pong worship, 10:45, meetong, Wednesday, 7:30p. m.
St. Anthony Hospital- there, Belpre ; Mr. and Mrs. Waid . MORNING STAR- Worsh ip NYI'S Sunday, 6:30 p. m .; Board meeting first Mcnday
Meigs County Branch
Room 555. ·
Swartz Athens · Carrie Burson 9: 30a. m.; ~hurch School10: 30 evangel istic service, Sunday, each month , 7: 30p. m.
~
M
dMr Ri h d
'
'
• a. m. ; ModWeek Service, 7:30 p.m. Mid-week prayer. ·
r . an .
s . c ar Swartz Athens ; Mrs. M. E. Guthrie, Wednesday , 8 p. m.
meeting , Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
SYRACUS~ FIRST UNITED
Rexall Drugs
and famtly of Raverma have Coolville · Pearl Randolph
MORSE CHAPEL-Worship Mssionary meeting, second PRESBYTERIAN -Re v.
We Fill All Doctors Prescriptions ,
Ru~lllester , pastor . Worship
been visiting Mr. and Mrs. Vere Coolville ·' Clara Follrod ami 11 a . m .. lsi and 3rd Sundays ; Wednesday, 7: 30p. m.
992-29SS
Pomeroy 296 W. Second
9
a.m.
;
Sunday
School
serv1ce,
Ph. 992-3165
Pomeroy
1z
'
Church School, 10 a . m.
UNITED
FAITH
NON - 10 a. m .
'
war ·
Nina Robinson, Coolville; Mr.
PORTLAND - Worship 7:30
Rev. ,
CARR SCHOOL REUNION
and Mrs. Emmett Hawk , p. m.; Church Schooi9:JO a . m. DENOMINATION Dennis
Weaver.
pastor.
Sunday
The lOth Carr School reunion Hemlock Grove · Mr and Mrs
SUTTON - Worship, 11 a . m . school. 9:30a.m.; Bolb Barber, RUTLAND
•
·
· 2nd and 4th Sundays ; Church
h ld · th Wood
sup!.; worship service, 10:30
RUTLAND FIRST BAPwas e tn e
e Grove Vere Swartz, Pomeroy Rl. 3; School 10 a . m.
a .m.; youthmeeling, 6:45p.m. ; TIST- Rev. Samuel Jackson.
Electric Motor Repair
at Alfred Sunday, Aug. 8 with Mr . and Mrs. Warren Bentz,
WESLEYAN &lt;R•cinel an attendance of 35. A basket Glouster· Mr and Mrs Lee Worship, 11 a . m.; Church church, 7: 30p.m. Bible study, pastor. Sunday School, lOa. m.;
810 W. Main
992-5750 •
Wednesday, 7: 30 p.m.
Mrs. Gertrude Buller, sup!.
0
dinner was •?joyed al ~oon with Hender,.;n, Guysville,
1; Sc~l;. ~ ~~ ~~churches oflhe
Prayer Service, 1: 30 p. m.;
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN' oreaching service, 2 p. m.
Clyde Wh1te asktng the Mrs. Ella Yost, Sugar Grove; Soulhern Cluster. 7:30 p. m.
.
blessing. An afternoon program Mr. and Mrs. Millard Brooks each Sunday at the Youth IN CHRIST- Elden R. Blake, .
•
paslor.
Sunday
School,
lOa.
m.;
RUTLAND
CHURCH
OF
·
· ed
· ti
f
·
' Center IO.k Grove Road l
· Winnie Holsinger, sup!. Mor· CHRIST- Sunday school, 9:30
was enJOY . consts. ng 0 mus1c Reynoldsburg ; Guy W. Lee,
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Building Supplies and Millwork
ning sermon, 11 a . m.; Evening a.m .. V. H. Braley, supl.;
b~ the Chrtsly famdy of Grove Pomeroy Rt . 2; Richard
Rev. Jacob Lehm•n
General Contracting
service Christian Endeavor, communion and devotions,
·- - Pomeroy. 0.
Clly; songs by the group , Swartz Ravenna · Emma
Rev . Stondley Br•ndum
E. Main St.
Pit. 992-3918
r · dl ' ' p
R'
.
ALFRED-Worshiplla. m.; 7: 30 p. m .; Mrs. lyda lq: 30 a .m . Regular board
tn tng, omeroy I. 3; Julta Church School 10 a. m.; Prayer Chevalier, president. Song meeting 7:30. third Saturday
.
Sl.aley, Chaunc-ey; Mr. and Mrs. meeting, Wednesday. 7: 4S p. m . service and sermon, 8: 20. Mid· · .,.ch m"lnth.
Week
prayer
meeting
WedTHE
RUTLAND
Garrell Christy, Grove City·
JOPPA- Worship 10 a. m.; nesday, 7:30 p. m . .Mrs. Mazie MUNITY CHURCH - COMRev .
GenerarRardware
Church School 9 a . m.; Prayer
Mr . and Mrs . Clarence Neul-' Meeting,
Amos Tillis, pastor. Sunday
Wednesday, 8 p. m. Holsinqer, class leader
PaintPlumbing &amp; Ell!drical Suj&gt;.
POMEROY LOWER . LIGHT School, 9' 30 a . m.; Worship '
zltng, Long Bottom R. D.; Jack
lONG BOTTOM- Worsh ip 9
plies
.
service, 11 a . m.; Wednesday
(Erroll ) Follrod Pomeroy and a . m.; Church School 10 a. m. CHIJRCH-Harrisonvllle Road. prayer meeting, 7:30 p. m.
,
667-J963
Ph. 9&lt;19-3712 Tuppers Plains
'
D Wood,
NORTH BETHEL- Worship
Mr . an d Mrs. Cha
e, lla. m.; ChurchSchoollOa. m. Hev. Roy Taylor. pastor; Henry Sunday night w..-ship, 7:30.
s. ·
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
All
llftnnCoolville Rl. 2.
REEDSVILLE - Worship 8 Eblin, Sunday School Supt.
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. ; THE NAZARENE-Rev. Lloyd
.-&amp;.
IIIUUI"IIftl
Gilts were awarded to Emma p. m.; Church ·School 10 a. m.; evening worship, ! :30 p .. m .' D. Grimm, Jr., pastor. Sunday
and
•
Findlin•
eldest·
Julia
Staley
Praver
Meetlno.
WedM&lt;AAv.
~
Pomeroy. ftarrlSGIIville Rd.
Prayer
and
prasle
serVICe,
School.
9:30
a.
m.
;
Morning
.
.
l'ft
hi
I
I
p, m.
9:30A.M.
worship, 10:30 a. m.; Young
U ,.
.,
"""
~...-_
youngest; Mr. and Mrs. Garrell
SILVER RIDGE - Worship, Thursday, 7:30 p. m.
Willi s,edel Prll!ltam
COMMUNITY
CHURCH.r:;le's
service,
_
6:45
p.
m.
;
·992-2550
__,
Christy, farthest away and ·Mr. 10 a . m.; Church School, 9 a . m.
AtlrMP.M.
7
30
and Mrs. Millard IJrooks next
TUPPERS
PLAINS
All Art Wtlclome
Dexter - Worship
Rev. Jamesservices
Queen. ~jo
' .P
Yservoc!'",
evenmg servoce'
WorshiP 9 a'm .; Church School pa•tor.
rartiest
I
away.
10 a . m.
Salurday- SUnday, 7:30p.m . · _P· m. .
•

I

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MIIIINY

•·-thrill sm.

:4-lfred
Social Notes

IIIII VSlORE

BOGGS EQUIPMENT

IDIIGM Dill SfAJI)N

RACINE fOOD MARKET ·

11110 Ylll FY BMING Ql

R. tl RAWLINGS SONS Ql

SWISID &amp; UIISE

s

I.
.I

. .

TUESDAY
.t: 30-f,. "Sante Fe••
7:110-3, "The Great Man"
1: 30-13, "The Sheriff"
9:110-3, "Ransom tor A O..d
Man"
WEDNESDAY

,.:30-8, ,.A Yank In Korea"
9: ~13, ,.The Sundowners"
11: 30-13,
"Grounds
for
Marriage"
THURSDAY
•:311-8,
"The
Enemy
General"
9: OQ-8, "The Frozen O..d"
11 : 30-13, "Lady for lhe_N,~ghl"

_____ . :. ______________

.

FRIDAY
"7th C.lvary"
9:11041, "Gidget"
11:30-8, " Bachelor Party"
n: ~13, "Dark Commend"
SATURDAY
3: 30--13, "Samar"
I! 311-3, "The Unsinkable
Molly Brown"
11: ls-3, "Girls
In the
Kremlin" and "Hells Island"
ll:ls-13, "Deed Eyes ol
London" and "Diabolical Dr.
~= 30-8,

D.

..!!~

I

-

VIII SF aJf RilE

a.

••
•
•
•

••
•

••
•

GAUL'S MARKET

ROYAL OAK PARK

lHE ADINS ..COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp;1JWt m.

IDlER'S DRIVE~N .

J.·

___.....

._

PlAINS HARDWARE

VWGE RJIB SIIIP

Zioo
''Diuldl Of Christ

HJD

•cr•s•mllr••

v':::i:!l~

I
I
I

DIE DAILY SEITINQ
n S li....l

I

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IIIIIS'*Ii Ia ·

~~2~40:;L:inc:col::n~St~-----Mi=·d:-dl:e:p:'Cl:orl~J.-~S~14!1~V~III!I:.~TIIe::;!Big~·llet\d=:~~

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lot.~

1- J: 3:1- &lt;(

-

RESTAURMT

Gllpel' Harmony

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1

RMliE PUlliNG 1111

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~~!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:~:
---·-....
-·
------

I.
I

POMEROY ElfClRIC SERVICE

Rt.

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"

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12:30--1, "Crime School"

~~

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,..~~S!tca'E
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GOEGLEIN READY MIX Ql

M&amp; RFOOOUNER

liE
MD SAVINGS 00.

.

RM.l'S BEN FRANKUN S10RE .

lElNER'S BMERY

L1011S IIARIEI

.

SUNDAY
2:Gt:-3. "City Bent..th the
Sea"'
3:G0-13, "East Side West
Side"
5:00-13. "Somebody Up There
Ukes Ne"
9:00-13. "Shout Loud. louder,
I can'1 Hlllr''
11 :30-13. "Belle of New York"
11: 30-8, "Confldonllal Agent"
MONDAY
4:30-8. ''The Walking Hills"
9:110-3, "Triple Play"
9:110-13. "EI Greed'
11: 30-13, "I Lave Melvin"

');;:

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.

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i:JeJ.mUtte

·, .

Fold and Place Near ·Your Television Set 1
for. Convenient Reference·

30

The

..

'I

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·-·-&amp;;gain;:·B;gains and More ~ns f!n The Sentinel Classifieds
LEGAL NOTICE

· · WANT.Ao

NQTICEOF"~~~::~~~.~s1, SP.M.:::~~=icati...

Estate of Ioria M· • e . '
M Hh ws
hereby given
!hal
rsthor 8 _ Gross , 01 I_JD
~
Oh
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy,
tO,
hos been duly appointed Ad ministratrhc of the Estate of
Berta M. Matthews •. de"ased,
late of Pomeroy. Mtt95 County ,
Ohio.
.
I f'l
Credit'?'$ ar~lhreqaudorefdduacia~ye
!heir clooms wt s ' 1
within four months.
O. t·• this lith day of Auousl
197 ~
1.
JOHN c . BACON
Probate Judge of said County
Ill 13, 2t, 27, Jtc

o;:~~is

~"~i

,....,_y ..._.. ne 9 a .m.
..__._..tlan~~~
•• Can~l
Will be ~tel'~,.. · h.m.
OayoiPubli.c atim
'
REGUUTIONS
' The Publo'sher . r-arves lhe
"'"""'"
righl to edil or rejecl any ads
deemed objection~_l..:o..__ The
publisher will no! be '"""""Sible
for more than one incorrect.
insertion.
R•TES
~

For Sale

Notice

.

NOHUNTINGortrespassingon PAINT
DAMAGE.
lril
Liddle Wolle, Hlllan Wolfe ~hones,
ir•
Janet
Oyler, · ongonal
Zig • •
Zagstlll Sewing
-Ken,_th
Ray Wolfe.
Proffitt
poajoeolies
cartons.
No
by man. animals or , __ attachments needed as our
cycf-. s•--~ Ray L. ~of- a~~~lrols are bui_ll in. Sews
~· ""~
n•
"lh 1
2 needles. makes
fiH, Hillon Wolfe, Joe Prol-1!'~
•bu
-'n..,hoorles. sew.., L-ttons.
u-.;1111..
uu
monograms. and blind hem
stitch.. Full cash price, $311$
GROVER'S STUDIO will be
budge! plan available.
cthktsed for vacation Aug. 16th
Phone 992-SUl .
ru 22nd. Visll our buolh at
l-18-6tc
......., ••·t s County F 1
"~ ....,g
a r.
8-IO.lotc E'LECTROLUX vacu ·u m
cleaner complele with atFound
fac;hments. tordwinder and
pain! spray: Used but in li~e
2 PIGS - ido!nfify Pay new coilditim. Pay ~.~
garden do..._ and for ad. cash or credit terms
Phone 667 -6 144 evenings.
available. Phone 992-.5641.
B-18-ltc
·
B-18-6tc
_
'

or

· ·- ·

·

ll¥i 1AO' ere
LEETLE

· ··

'·

JolEARTS··

usiriess
SCrvice8~; .-~ .
-~·~~===~~~~~;;~=========~=====~-~===-

C.B~~~u :J· }_·· ·s··
Radne.~
CrittBo lhd

J

.

S-1-lk
.--~--~--SEPTIC.. T&lt;M•r CLr"M£D
·-~ ~
I{M5IJI1IIble rates. Ph..~
Golllipol is. Jolin Russell,
Owner &amp; QJerat.".
S.l:J.Ifc:
___
_
~
·BACK
. HOE .. uo OOZED ..t..
"'"
"
Septic 1aft!cslnslalled. Geaige

I R.NALLV

.

.•

. .. "

l CARP£111(_R
IIUUI"IIftl
WORI
_.Ill'

sroun~

a..IMEIOY
ru

•·

ROOF PAINTING

992-2094

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
lUI Weatfler ltoolillt &amp;

606 E, Main

$rr'EM

ROCKEDlO

1
EXP£Ririiii'
E
ft
~

HOME&amp; A_,TO

....,

IS.. ..

8L.ES51HEIR

"

SLEEP

.

Pomeroy

OfFICf SUPPU~

ForWaniAdService
IBiUI -~~- ~992•~
c h o&lt;tion Co. ...... ""-.
ScentsperWi:&gt;rdonelnserlion
....,.,.. """"' .a.~tk
And
liloay
Plltonllitll &amp; Healitll.
Minimum Charge75c
-'--..,--:------'.:....,-=
Coap.lett
Plu mbl ng,
12 &lt;enls per word lhree,
IIOSEilER~Y FurnaceInlf~atlnt
and
Air . Co!l·
consecutive inserlims.
i
stallalion. Free eslimalos m
Stop In and See Our
til...iag.
'
18 cenls per word six con"""' . . . . , _ oil or gas.
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
From the Largest Truck or
cue No. 20.Sl7 secutive insertions.
service ~- Call CKil · 24e Li~~e~~lll 51., .M iddleport
Floor Display.
Bul~ Radlalor lo lhe
1Estate of Leo · Hysell .
2S Per Cenl Discount m paid
Roseberry. Radne. Ohio.
Smallest Heater Core.
Dec..sod.
ads and ads paid within 10 days .
Phone 614t0-2VoL
Phone 992-2550
AND AN·
Notice is hereb1y givefn Mthadl
CARD oF THANKS
~el
7-22-30k
·Insured_ EXperl'enced
ICE. Phone
Bernard V. Fu tz, o
'
·
&amp;OBITUARY
••
1911'~
"-~,_ ;;.rid col- ---~====:-----::dleport. Ohio, has been duly• •
. .
·EA N -AT~ · hom -~
.
' """""'- ss,
- ·•
teed
I'll. m-21appolnted Administrator of lhe
SI.SO lor _so word monomum.
e awoes.song
highrisebars.cr
bars and SEWING MACHINES. Repair
WorkGuaran
6-IO-tfc · L.:.::....~---:-------1
Estole 01 Leo Hysell , deceased liach addthonal word 2c.
envelopes. Rush stamped
sissy • · under J,OOO miles,
service, all makes. 992-2214 See llsfor - Free ----:---~late of Meigs County, Ohio.
BLIND ADS .
sell-addr~ envelope. The
siMM room cmdltian, always
The Fabric Shop, Ptwtwsoy.
...;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. , ',•
Creditors are required to file
Additional 25c Charge per
Ambrose Co.• 432S Lakeborn.
garaged. Pricedlosell. Phone
.Aulharized Singer Sales and . Estimate on Furnace
!heir claims with said Hduciary Advertisem.ent.
Davisburg, Mich. 4019.
evenings only 992-nn or 992Service. weSharpon So·
s.
lnstalation.
within
lou~
months
.
OFFICE
HOURS
8-1
-JIItp
7066.
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
l-_29-_lk
~=~~~=====::;
Dated thiS lllh day of August
-a.19-3tc
r
-- ~
8, 30 a .m. lo 5:00 p.m. Daily, - - - - - - - - •
1971
•
·
JOHN C. &amp;ACON , 8:30 a.m . to 12: 00 Noon NEED lady lor housecleaning I
SEPTIC 1an11s deaned. Miller
~-~j
P~oboteJodtoolsoidCounty SaturdaY.
or 2 days a week. Reply c-o
San:ila6an.Siewart. &lt;Jiio.l'll. - · - ..
• .
:
Ill n, 20, 17, 31c
Box 729, Pomeroy, Oolo.
WALNUT STEREO radio
66l..JIJ35._
,
B-19-6tp
comb
in
ation,
AMFM
,
2-12-lk
NotICe
radio. 4 speakers. 4 speed
MOTORCYCLES
NOTICE OF SALE
HYMN-SING
MI. Herman SALESMEN needed. Work full
changer, dualvolume&lt;Dnlrol . AUTOMOBILE lnsuraiicebeen.
Mid-s-tnerSale
The pl!rsonal property of the
Uniled Brethren Church
or parffime. No door to door
Balance $69.74. Use our
c•ncelled?
Lost
your
- OnAifModels
Estate of Ed S. Grant.
featuring Ihe Revelations.
sales.
Advancemenl
op- 'budget terms. Call 992-7085. operator's lianse? Call ~Save Up To$20UO
Decused, will be sold at publ ic
porlunity. Call collect 5938-l~tc
2966.
Ower 10 Pwrc:ent
Sunday, Augusl 22 at 7:30
auction commencing at 1:00
5079
P .M . on Wednesday , Sep .
1
p.m .
·
6- S.Hc
HAWK'U-DAY
tember., 1971, at the Corner of
8-18-3tc
8-IUtc
CYCLE SALE
Main and Seventh Street in the
FINE COOKING and eating
VIllage of Middleport, Ohio . GUN SHOOT, Forked Run COMBINATION waitress and
apples. Ask lor quantify price
2 miles South of A!hens, 0.
There are many items that
Sportsman Club, Sunday .
bartender, Blue Tartan, day
or
small
lot,
just
all
of
State
appear to be fine antique fur NEW.
3-bedr-..
homein
Rl. 33
Aug. 22, at noon.
or night shift. No experience
Route 124, Welchlown Road.
niture included in this sale, and
Middleport
.
.
Buill-in
kilchen,
~Mon.,
Wed., Fri.
B-18-Jtc
necessary. Apply in person. - Hosmer Roush.
while no representatation i.s
ceramic
file
ba1h.,
aN
elecll
ic:
lta..m.
ta
I p.m.
8-IS-4tc
made 15 to age it is reported GUN SHOOT, Aug. 22, 1 p.m.
8-19-Jtp
heal,
good
ni!iglobarhood.
Can
5n-166f
much of the furniture is over 100
Mile Hill Road, 'h hog, hams.
years old. The property consists
arrange FHA financing. ~;;:;;;:======:::j
MAPLE , EARLY American
bacon, by Racine Fire Dept.
Te1cp1WJ!E 992-J6GO Cl" 99'2Of the following :
stereo-radio combinatic:wt, .._
B-18-4tc ANTIQUES, telephones, brass
Wicker rocker, rocker, Round
2116.
speaker sound system, AM7-25-Hc
table, iron bed. gas stove, table
.and ~ chairs, occasional table, SAVE UP to one hall. Bririg · beds, clocks, dishes, old
FM radio,Balance
-C:speed S17
intermixed
lumilure, etc. Write M.. D.
changer.
.31. Use ~ooSE:~;-u;;;;;;;-;;;~
upright chairs, glassware ,
your sick TV 1o Chuck's TV
Miller, Rt. 4. Pomeroy. Ohio.
silverware, G. M . Frigidaire,
our budget terms. Call 992- HOUSE. 16C2 llnaJin lleighls.
Shop, lSI Butlernul Ave.,
long table, 3 legged stool,
can 992-6271.
7085.
Call Damy ~ 992Pomeroy.
...
miscellaneous pots, pans and
2196.
7-9-ttc
8-1S-6tc
diShes, ironing board, Wicker
4-2J.tfc
7-11-lk
besket. writing desk, wOOden
12XSO. SCHULTZ 2-bedroom
_
-GUARANTEEDchest, wooden table, secretary, KOSCOT Kosmetlcs. Julymobile
home
located
on
MIDDLEPORT
-5
.
_
,
bridt
5 piece upholstered set, library
Au~ust special, Kare KonPhone 992-2094
table, single wooden bed and
corner of Third and Adams. home with bath.. ~.,.=
2 BEDROOM mobile home wilh
dresser, occasional table , . diloon oil ss. Value now only
Mason. W. Va. See Martin walllo wall carpeting.
air conditioning in Racine
S2.SO. Distributors. Brown's,
trunks, and old records, and
Graham,
Zuspan St., Mason. 992-u.l or 992-Je..
area
.
Phone
992-632'1.
phone 992-5113.
other items· too numerous to
W. Va.
l-20-121c
8-17-5tc
7-4-ttc
mention.
OpeniTill
8-17-61c
Terms of Hit : Cash.
DUPL EX HOME. 6 nans and
A~'lloll,.ndifily thru Salurday
Anna M. Ryther, GOSPEL SING at Church of TRAILER LOTS. 'B&lt;ib•s Mobile
HALF
RUNNER
beans,
$2
Admlnlstntrfx'ofthe Estate
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
God, Chester, Salurday.
Apartmenl. nans and ~~-~E;·~Ma~
· :i":·:P:ao:::m:::e.ra=y
of Ed S. Grant, Deceased .
bushel. pick your own . balh.
bath. PrivateenhaiQ!S. Ideal ;&lt;Joio.
99:1-2951. ·
•
,
August
21
at
7:
30
p.m.
with
Carnahan Auction SerVice, ·
Cucumbers and tomatoes. for lamily with extra n!lltal or
the Duncan Fomilyof Tampa,
4-2-ttc
Auctioneers
Walermelons.
cantaloupes, inveslment PI
Pr~ca~
Fla. Everyone welcome.
(1)20, 27,21
sweet corn,
potatoes . lor quick sale. Cal 992-Ull
B-17-&lt;ltc FURNISHED and unfurnished
Oarence Proffitt, Portland,
after 5 p.m.
apartmenls. Close to school ..
Phone
143-2254.
l-11-12lc •
Phone 992-SC"8-17-tfc
---=-~~~:::::;::=.::=:;-~;;;­
10-li-Hc _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _
II 16 ACRES localed T-19 al
'COAL. limestone. Excelsior Rock~-..,~
1 BEDROOM trailer apartH'ogh
. Canlact Bill
~all Worl&lt;s. E. Main St.ment, ideai for couples.
Wille Ilor L Foeldsl alter 5 p.
Pomeroy.
Ploone
992.Jtl91.
Contact IYlcCiure's Dairy Isle,
m. or on weel&lt;ends. phone 992.&lt;L9-tfc
I
·
. I 992-SUS or 992-J.IJ6.
6/IH7.
Speo;W.I
Plus
8-20-61c APPLE:S-Peaches. Fi.q&gt;au .coo:
l-12-1otc
AI
V.
P.lrts
Helen Bottel
Orchards, State Route 689, - - - - -- -- 2 BEDROOM mobile home.
phone Wilkesville, 669-3785. 6 ROOM house and bath located
nearly new. furnished in
IRliiBAND SAYS ''Mtm'N'T TOUCH"
--------~-15-ffc
~side Chesler. Phone
Mason. w. Va. can Robert
. PHONE 9fl·l14l
Dar Helm:
Dixon at Meigs Noobile Home
16
FT.
TAGALONG
travel
Plai~ fllo7Sales,
•
-..railledilla family wbose rret4 s Df:l&lt;el'__got
!railer, fully self contained. ----~--'"-1_2-1~c ~~~~==·~;=~~==\
•
.d
....
......~Dw
atfettlm
andreel;satrt
ii~
....
.
3891' ·""'
"" :!t
' C.o r,U3
Ready togo, SISilO. Phone TT3- SIX ROOM house. bath.. fuli
'Jii'a_Miu.
8-19-3tc
S651, Mason, w. Va.
lll'ln .-1 to Ibis - I l1oolr be lmes me, even lbougb bag9 and
!Jasemenl, ID Butll!mut Ave.. --tiY" ~~~
7-23-ttc
.-.. aren'f bls ltiug.
.just walking dislanc2 from
•
downtown Ptwl""'!· Conlact
•
Bat my familY Is demonstrative. We're buggers. It's natural
SINGER
ZIG
ZAG,
nee&lt;.s no
S1 FORD -~ tm pickup, good
·
~
d
Hedrick.
21.37
w
aoth
cams. all built-in features .
fclr me toklslpeciliewbeDiaee tbem, and Ulatmea•menanrell
'•
))rive. Col""'bus. Ohio. phone_
uue --e·
tondilim, sell $2SO or trade
Makes buttonholes. laney
for good used car. Jack
237-434..
Columbus.
Kitdlens,
ll;ollls
• wameo.lly bnsbencl1biJib It's outrageous wbeD I greet an old
'I
designs. elc. Pay just $42.39.
Layne,
Prospect
Hill ,
S-9-Hc
R - A&amp;ltliliaols
frillld (male) with a warm (plalllllic:) embrace. For heavens
Use
our
budget
terms.
Call
Pomeroy . ,
992-7CIIS.
3 B·E DROOM brick home.
Allcl Pafios
Ate, lllatd-'tmeaniWIIIItanaffairwilhbim!
8-19-Jtp
8-1S-6tc
Choice location in M' .... 11.
Bldd10t AMI
Be AJB be lsD't atraid of old beatm or ii 1osinl! me, it just
Seen by ..,......lment only.
Endlndtr WOrk
doea'l "look rigbL" He baa agreed to abide by wbat you say. If
Phone 992-.Sm alta- • p.m.
POODLE puppies. Silver Toy.
J
S-7-lk
5tptic T•nks
Parkview Kennels. Phone 992l'm wrong, I'll tr;r Ill be mere stantiomsb and if you tbink be's Auto
Allcl Leorlt Beds.
wrong, be'lltr;r to cbange. 'l1lanks for be~ a referee. -MRS. E. SPECIAL this week al Tom Rue S44J.
j
8-IS.ttc
Motors, 1963 Ford Pickup.
Dar Mrs. E.:
8-IS.tfc
11y wle goes to YOU. Fear of penoaal emlact puts a wall
-19-70:=;;D;:;A;:T;::S;:::U;:::N=p=-:-ic--;k--u-p-.-good
••
NEIGLER Conslruction. For
aUiildpecilie, ckl1es outwarmlh, makes tliemavoid athel- forms
condition, ne¥1 tires, never
building or remodeling your
li010mt•mlratilll. A friendly hug says 'TID.glad you're near and
•
wrecked . $1 ,515. Phone 992home. Call Guy Neigler,
5153.
l'm not afraid Ill say so."
Racine. Qlio.
8-18-12tc
7-31 -Hc
Came on, Mr. E., UJH"epress yourself! -H.
. . Ent ....
NEW 11 CHEVY KINGS WOOD WAGON. Color sea aqua,
.
POI!IEROY ,
tinted glass. n- mals, door ed. guards, ~season air. 25S
i'
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
1968 GRAND Prix Pontiac,
H.P. ~cu. in. engine. wh. covers, Comlorlill st. wh,ef., wlocated a! Crossroads, Rt. 12-1.
Dar Belen:
factory air cmdilioning, lull
CLELAND REALTY
w
tires, E. Oock, P. B., radio. turbo hydromatlc. power
•
Camplele
front
end
serv
ic&lt;!.
equipped, one loc~l owner.
"UflllooRd Now" Pl esented a very ugly picture ii diet pills.
Shop
. . Eftt Milito
steering
&amp;
brakes,
luggage
carrier.
Relall
SS04I
r
Phone 992-5871 .
up brake service.
POMEROY
E. Main
Pomenoy .
Bat actually lbe gave a picture ii benelf. Sbe look diOIIe pills to
SAVINGS PRICE 14441 .
Wheels
b~lanced
elec8-20-3tc
DEXTER-'-"""' LDI1311oo.100.
lronically . · All
work
pt bleb. and abe oven!Oied because she bad a jllOOian to begin
~
2 story frame.. " bedl 0111111!1. 2,
-latest 20th Cenlury Welders.
guaranteed.
Reasonable
•
with. I'm sure her doctcr never meant fir her to "graduate to a
porches one l!lldo L bam
leam ""rtical and ............,d
NEW71 CHEVY ST. WAGON. Conc:oun Estate, color red,
rates. Phone 992-3213.
wilh 2 c.- spaces and aoolle
bmlul a day." Any medicine, when used wrongly, can be exweldi.ng in 1 eveni~.
deluxe bells,linted glass, _ . ..tailgate, floor mats. reor
7-27-Hc
.'
storage building. GREAT
air
deflector. 4 season air c..,ditioning,lurbo hydrornotic.
~
Fl
.
EE
DOt'R
PRIZEStremely dauger01111.
NICE NORMANDY clarinel
•
FOR
THE
KIDS.
$1.91111.
·
AWNINGS.
storm
doors
and
o
307
V-8 engine, lugga!l!! carrier, power steering, G71-w.
with case. S60. Phone 742-4211
•
I'm pttlng tired of Ibis trend of labeling anyooe wbo takes
wall I ires, wh. covers, P. B., radio, lrt. &amp; rear vuards.
wi~dows,
carports .
•
after 5 p.m. 7-42-5163 or see
CANNING tomatoes, already POMEROY- FAMILY HOME
•
marquees, aluminum siding
any kind 1:1 medicatim as a bopbead. I take diet pills, ooe a day,
Reiail S4611US - SAVINGS PRICE S424t.
Wendell Grate, Rutland.
•
picked,
$1.25
bu.
,
bring
CLOSE
TO
ELEMENTARY
railing.
Call
A.
Jacob,
8-20-31c
.OObavefortwomontbi now, and I'm losing weight with no bad
•
containers . Gerald in e
SCHOOL- 2 slory frame. l ~
sales rep-esentative. For free
•
.dfeeta. - A LOSER Btrl' NOT HOOKED
Oeland. Easl Main, Racine.
••
baths~ 4 nice tw:drc:uns.. gas
estimates, phone Charles
NEW71 CHEVY GREENBRIER ST. WAGON. Color mod.
FENDER PA syslem, like new,
7-'ll-lfr
lorced ,air
heat.
fvll
Lisle, Syracuse. V. v .
Dear Helen:
••
blue, F &amp; R floor mals, rear window deflector, turbo
ssoo. Phone 9.c9-3485.
basement, porch. garage with
Jolnson and S..., Inc.
hydromatic.
_....steering,
307
V-8
engine,
G-78
white
"Unhooked Now" misused diet pills, and lbat's omrder, but
8-18-3tc
S-27-lfc
. renovated room over, line for
wall tires, wh. covers, P.B., rodio.luggage carrier. Relllil
eveo llkeo aa directed, me a day, they alter your personality. ----~:-office space or ulilify _ ..
53877.15SAVINGS PRICE S3491.
CONDITIONER, 8,000
men! . $ti.SOO.
READY -MIX
CONCRETE
Yw beccme mere nervous and impatient, ~ talbtive, and AIR
•
ll'' x23"x.Jit
B.T. U. Phone 992-3-403.
deli vered right to your
JIU jndpntgels faulty. When I toot "pep pills" I tliscove.-.d I
8-18-Jtc
MINERSVILLE - l'h sfory
projecl. Fast- easy. Free
NEW 71 CHEVY VEGA WAGON. 90 H. P. engine.
made three times.Smany mislakes In typing -ao!IW35D't eveo - - ' - - - - - frame, 7....,..... J - - ' "·
Hfimales. Phone 992-3284.
G.M.C. DIESEL bus, very good
automatic
trans.• body side mldg ., A78 whitewall tires.
bath, tile paneling, b serraJI,
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co.,
aware l:llbem until I read my copy back. I'd cbatler m and regret
condition. ready lor road.
P.B., radio, choice of color, sandalwood or bright green.
NEW ALUMINUM SIDING,
Middleport, Ooio.
what I said later. And very soon they weren't balding down my
Retail: 12741.
SUitable far singing group or
·
'-30-tlc
nice porch and yard. A IUY
camping
purposes.
Contact
AT
JUSTSII
....
1f1111Ctlle any mere. 'lberi came a choice: either increase the
USED OFFSET PLATES
Dan Hayman. Syracuse,
PLACETHESALEOFYOUR O'BRIEN ELECTRIC SElldoeage, or quit. I quit! -SECRETARY
HAVE
Qlio. Phone 992-3893.
PROPERTY
Ill GOOD
VICE. Phone 9.c9-45SI.
8-1~3tp
MANY USES
Dear Helen:
HANDS..
S-30-Hc
HENRY E. CLELMD.
11 CAMARO HT CPE.
biiiCk. custom sport equip.,
•
''UnhookEd Now" is Incky to have come lhrough with her li.fe.
REALTOR
sports mirror. HII steering wheel, deluxe belts, floor mals,
BE GENTLE, be kind, to lhal
My 211-year-dd daughter started on diet pills provided by one Of
~m-DB
P.B.• radio, Roily wheels, accent group, style trim !fToup,
expensive carpet, clean with .
Residttk:E tn-'2561
See Us At The ...
•
lhoae "clinks." 'lbat was in 1966. She died less than a year later,
power steering, furbo hydromaflc. console, F70 w-w tires.
Blue lustre. Rent electric
8-IUic
Retail
$l9M.75
SAVINGS
PRICE
$3491.
shampooer.
$1
.
Baker
Fur•
afler reducing from a size 22'1! to a size 12. 1Jle had aD the signs:
--niture Company.
111:1 f0i181 us, cGilpu]sive talking, the highs and lows. But we
'"•
8-18-6tc
11 CAMARO HT CPE. Color Classic copper, console, air
~hooch because a "doctor" was in charge, there was no danger.
I
·spoiler equipped, turbo hydromatic, power steering,
Laler, we read about_thooe reducing factmes and the pill 19SP FORD 4 door, nice, • ··•·
•
electric clock, super sport equipped, P.B., radio, Rolly
1947 Cadillac pickup. $150. 20
,..,.Pmeu that cai1 dangerously reduce potassium and other body
wheels, Rally~ equipment. RelliiS411t.:IO - SAVINGS
•
lb. gas trailer tanks, SIO each.
PRICE 52121.
111 C.Urt 51.
1959 Ooev. 2 door, perfecl
dlemlcals.Itwas too late. -A VERYWNELYMOTHER
•
l'otnei"'J'. Ollio
•
r,..ning cmdition, Sl25. One
•
p,:'d Wheelbarrow, side
•
Dear Helen:
rds. home made, many
other articles; chain saw, $20 . .
Yw've oot in favor of big weddings, but here's my side: My
a.· ' J
Come see. m County Road 163
wife was married the first time by a J.P. Some people frowned
111 A\1! rtnnic 5hwt
off old 33.., righl. second lane
:p ecwr. Ollilt
wbensheaoll decided for a big clrurcb wedding (a divorcee yet! )
on left. Irvin Miller.
I
I
8-20-3tp
bot we wouldn't have it any other way. Maybe the money could
NEAR RUTLMO - J
have been UBed for bills or furniture, but the memfllies of lbat A.K.C. Miniature dachshund.
bedrooms. beautiful l 'h
bdths, gas lvrnace. Nice
Phone 992-4573.
great day will last forever.
B-20-6tc
.
kilchen.
$l9,.SOO.OO.
· Not an men are against fancy weddings, Helen. -WAYNE

RJRNIJURE

1-ted

'iUEtiURS_
,.,..,..,

·

NOTHINGUkE

ai

•... Wt

-

Real Estate Far Sale

Wanted To Buy

------

•••• YOU'LL

EXPERT

For Rent

Pomeruy Home &amp; AulD

3

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

!Helen Help Us!

J6=·
t

·During Our Annual··

1!9B

. BicHtHnar's

r\II!I)OTS

-

'

III!OUT 1\Ll. THERE IS

10 SEE IN NEW -.cRK.

11M Your S •Ill
Air Qlnditioning .
lhspedi111 and
Re-Cha111

! ------

By

NEVER FORGET
THE SAVINGS I

GOEIH, MOM,I THINK
Wff!vE SEEN ~usr

':0:.=:

-·r-

l

A MAl-l

~.niiaW\11
_

For Sale or Trade

I

YEAR·END

y.

Complete
Rem-J:.lina:

1971 IOIIL CLOSE ·OU!

GARAGE
·SALE

Sales

..--~
~"-•

JI

!

-..
...

(leland

Free WeldiJg

7424902

~
•

R~ty

Dili:
WED., 8 P.M.
Landm.t

'

1
,

•

DAILY CROSSWORD

For Sale

For Sale

-

•!POSH

LA. lA&amp;

fl-.--

-

better

f . Be

The

Daily Sentinel

Virgil B.

TEAFORD
SR.

Delr Wayne:
True, butyw're tbefirstone I've bean! admit it. -H.

MIWR
.
.

un&amp;lfS
111111111£
IIUDI
IIUIII

lire a pnlrL

IRISH
Cobbler
potatoes.
Thomas D. Sayre, Great
Bend, Phme 843-UJ6.
8-20-3fp

GEl

1111111011

--------.---

DON' T PUMP your sluggish
septic tank . Gel Klean -EmAil sepllc tank cleoner .
landmark Farm~ Bureau,
Pomeroy.
1-20-llc

Real Estate For Sale

WE

BUY- SEU
OR

3 HOUSES- 2oOtoled. All haft
free gas. 3 ~" ,_ 1 "
home. SI~.OlliUII.
Jt ACRES - Qo 14 Several
building siles. 1.5.000.00 NEW '
LISTING.

•

Fornst

ROOM BRICK- Suca!ssful
business now operating. NEW
LISTING.

CONVENIENT but secluded
building lois on T79 al Rock
Springs. Within "'alking .
doslance of Meigs High DO YOU HAVE IW ACRES 011
School, a 5 minute drive from HIGHWAY. or RIVER
Pomeroy. Call or see BiU FRONTAGE TO SELL
Witte · weekends or alter S
. CA.L L fft-DIS
p.m . weekdays. Phone 992HELEM L TEAFORD.
81.
ASSOCIATE
7-ll-lfc
l-1541c

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

Beat Inflation!

TRADE

122t WaslrillgloooiiiYd.
ONE PULL TYPE corn
picker. New Idea No. 10. _ _ _
.._
. ._
. OIIio
_ _ _. . BUILDING LOT Phone 992-6214.
•
Run : l.ltilities.
8-20-6tc

We talk to JOU'

WMP0/1390

12x60 ll BERTY trailer, cenlral
air conditioned. 3 bedrooms.
Phone 992-~ 8-20-Jtp

1Z. ; 14t - 24t -.WIDE

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

.

BYE NOW '71

'11 SAVINGS HEADQUARTERS

NEW MD
.
IJSfll RJRNRURE

•

•••

•
•••

HOUSEWARES

9lii6TIIItrs. &amp; Sat.
m-7161
liSN.21111Awot. Miolilllflert

DOWN

m *"••
lT.ltlle

.........

U.Putlclple
lt.Tbne

Z.BeCDIUn·

s.c

pltte

C..OMIIc

"11ft"

$. Jl'dde

tewun:e

lite

10. Sinatra

rum

ol
liS&amp;
llwda.l
111. Footift

:11:. Chalice T.......... - -

::~ .
Arimlla

28. F!nt in
lmpat'-

taDoe

6..DI

,.

36. 8abora

28. C""'dten
dty

'"-'
ti.tlclll
4Z.l'MI•.. n,

30.Rat

UwaJII
44. ..!ltawe..

- 14--)

33. Piayltto
tbe
loUt

32. ~

T.aa.llaut

--...

pedod

F'IFff,

iOIFl' IOI'T FIIH

~LF. 1llfY ~- GV
10~ A51161.f0JKL

lOUR

~

Pomeroy M_
otor Co.

21.Capltal
28. Gleeflll
25. Bc:bool of

••

POMEROY

-

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I I K1I I I
CURSIC

I]

wlllla

u. lllllheled.

.......

J&amp;.Biq

a . . ell

.............
I

I

II ,,- •

;sa,•

Si ... ., ....... _ ,

at

e&amp;.OIY .LIAICT B"S It

Y_t4o.,oy,••• ,··-n

-...m.

JT.N...'a

J"'IIII&amp;Ul

......

lll.'l'llere-

ALL 'ltlU'tE POIN6 IS
aAIIIUN6 AROUM&gt;
lHE GRCnlt&gt;!

-

(2--)

•• Brulllai1
40.8p!nl•
"ppd"
-U. Doop ml!d

....

.&amp;XYDLBA.AXB
1e LO.&amp;:rJ:LLOW
ODe letter ....pl.y + ' tor uootber. Ill tillS •mp!e A Ia
- to.- tile U... Ihi, X for tile two O'o, etc. SIJo&amp;le leUEr-.
apooh J I e., lila Jlllcf:h IIJid formation_..!' tbet......a. ~ oil
- . - dQ' Uae cook Jotten ~ ...,....,

•

EQZ
NAZ
YGKKVZ
CGQVR
XGOZKN NA~XCR NAEN AEUUZ»
UZYUYZ.-EVYII:X

New ••

I- til._•••••.......... _,.._.,.. __
J

&amp;Jll7,u

NT

II I

I ,...... _... I A [ 1 I I I I I ]

JT.Doller
28. Qotteet

I

•

llNJYET

tSURDIA

I

••
"

OPEN EVES. TILl

PH. 992-2126 '

..•

[)_

20.11Jbbtll

DAILY CBIP.rolluoB-B,fft'sllow to werll: It:

APPUMCES
AIID
•

0,0.:
· flilf Moll., Toes.
Wtool&amp;Fri.

......,

8. Subj&lt;ct

•. Matclo

41.JU

AlSO-# '

SWAP SHOP

...

wd;y

L&amp;Gq--

jus

-

SWAP SHOP

"

8. Dei:ein
12wda.)
11. '1'eoaa~U•

lf.Sty
U.Jobfo.-&amp;

Sheets

-

t7. . Bert or

411. JDcbest

U.Gnelt
Jetter

Aluminum

Color

c1oimber
t6.81J1Dcmt

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

I

'71 CAMAROS

ILC"•

45.Pft:ft:l:for

lllcb-·

pzcblem
U.lliutenl

~

-=-======,--::--

Yo I ...,.. CQJto p le: FRIII:ND8BJP IS l'llili&amp;Dt A
.-oRilALlTT NOR A llODI!l: rr IS RAliiCR A I..IJ'IC.DAVJD GRAYBON '

-

SZOB

�.'

·-·-&amp;;gain;:·B;gains and More ~ns f!n The Sentinel Classifieds
LEGAL NOTICE

· · WANT.Ao

NQTICEOF"~~~::~~~.~s1, SP.M.:::~~=icati...

Estate of Ioria M· • e . '
M Hh ws
hereby given
!hal
rsthor 8 _ Gross , 01 I_JD
~
Oh
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy,
tO,
hos been duly appointed Ad ministratrhc of the Estate of
Berta M. Matthews •. de"ased,
late of Pomeroy. Mtt95 County ,
Ohio.
.
I f'l
Credit'?'$ ar~lhreqaudorefdduacia~ye
!heir clooms wt s ' 1
within four months.
O. t·• this lith day of Auousl
197 ~
1.
JOHN c . BACON
Probate Judge of said County
Ill 13, 2t, 27, Jtc

o;:~~is

~"~i

,....,_y ..._.. ne 9 a .m.
..__._..tlan~~~
•• Can~l
Will be ~tel'~,.. · h.m.
OayoiPubli.c atim
'
REGUUTIONS
' The Publo'sher . r-arves lhe
"'"""'"
righl to edil or rejecl any ads
deemed objection~_l..:o..__ The
publisher will no! be '"""""Sible
for more than one incorrect.
insertion.
R•TES
~

For Sale

Notice

.

NOHUNTINGortrespassingon PAINT
DAMAGE.
lril
Liddle Wolle, Hlllan Wolfe ~hones,
ir•
Janet
Oyler, · ongonal
Zig • •
Zagstlll Sewing
-Ken,_th
Ray Wolfe.
Proffitt
poajoeolies
cartons.
No
by man. animals or , __ attachments needed as our
cycf-. s•--~ Ray L. ~of- a~~~lrols are bui_ll in. Sews
~· ""~
n•
"lh 1
2 needles. makes
fiH, Hillon Wolfe, Joe Prol-1!'~
•bu
-'n..,hoorles. sew.., L-ttons.
u-.;1111..
uu
monograms. and blind hem
stitch.. Full cash price, $311$
GROVER'S STUDIO will be
budge! plan available.
cthktsed for vacation Aug. 16th
Phone 992-SUl .
ru 22nd. Visll our buolh at
l-18-6tc
......., ••·t s County F 1
"~ ....,g
a r.
8-IO.lotc E'LECTROLUX vacu ·u m
cleaner complele with atFound
fac;hments. tordwinder and
pain! spray: Used but in li~e
2 PIGS - ido!nfify Pay new coilditim. Pay ~.~
garden do..._ and for ad. cash or credit terms
Phone 667 -6 144 evenings.
available. Phone 992-.5641.
B-18-ltc
·
B-18-6tc
_
'

or

· ·- ·

·

ll¥i 1AO' ere
LEETLE

· ··

'·

JolEARTS··

usiriess
SCrvice8~; .-~ .
-~·~~===~~~~~;;~=========~=====~-~===-

C.B~~~u :J· }_·· ·s··
Radne.~
CrittBo lhd

J

.

S-1-lk
.--~--~--SEPTIC.. T&lt;M•r CLr"M£D
·-~ ~
I{M5IJI1IIble rates. Ph..~
Golllipol is. Jolin Russell,
Owner &amp; QJerat.".
S.l:J.Ifc:
___
_
~
·BACK
. HOE .. uo OOZED ..t..
"'"
"
Septic 1aft!cslnslalled. Geaige

I R.NALLV

.

.•

. .. "

l CARP£111(_R
IIUUI"IIftl
WORI
_.Ill'

sroun~

a..IMEIOY
ru

•·

ROOF PAINTING

992-2094

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
lUI Weatfler ltoolillt &amp;

606 E, Main

$rr'EM

ROCKEDlO

1
EXP£Ririiii'
E
ft
~

HOME&amp; A_,TO

....,

IS.. ..

8L.ES51HEIR

"

SLEEP

.

Pomeroy

OfFICf SUPPU~

ForWaniAdService
IBiUI -~~- ~992•~
c h o&lt;tion Co. ...... ""-.
ScentsperWi:&gt;rdonelnserlion
....,.,.. """"' .a.~tk
And
liloay
Plltonllitll &amp; Healitll.
Minimum Charge75c
-'--..,--:------'.:....,-=
Coap.lett
Plu mbl ng,
12 &lt;enls per word lhree,
IIOSEilER~Y FurnaceInlf~atlnt
and
Air . Co!l·
consecutive inserlims.
i
stallalion. Free eslimalos m
Stop In and See Our
til...iag.
'
18 cenls per word six con"""' . . . . , _ oil or gas.
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
From the Largest Truck or
cue No. 20.Sl7 secutive insertions.
service ~- Call CKil · 24e Li~~e~~lll 51., .M iddleport
Floor Display.
Bul~ Radlalor lo lhe
1Estate of Leo · Hysell .
2S Per Cenl Discount m paid
Roseberry. Radne. Ohio.
Smallest Heater Core.
Dec..sod.
ads and ads paid within 10 days .
Phone 614t0-2VoL
Phone 992-2550
AND AN·
Notice is hereb1y givefn Mthadl
CARD oF THANKS
~el
7-22-30k
·Insured_ EXperl'enced
ICE. Phone
Bernard V. Fu tz, o
'
·
&amp;OBITUARY
••
1911'~
"-~,_ ;;.rid col- ---~====:-----::dleport. Ohio, has been duly• •
. .
·EA N -AT~ · hom -~
.
' """""'- ss,
- ·•
teed
I'll. m-21appolnted Administrator of lhe
SI.SO lor _so word monomum.
e awoes.song
highrisebars.cr
bars and SEWING MACHINES. Repair
WorkGuaran
6-IO-tfc · L.:.::....~---:-------1
Estole 01 Leo Hysell , deceased liach addthonal word 2c.
envelopes. Rush stamped
sissy • · under J,OOO miles,
service, all makes. 992-2214 See llsfor - Free ----:---~late of Meigs County, Ohio.
BLIND ADS .
sell-addr~ envelope. The
siMM room cmdltian, always
The Fabric Shop, Ptwtwsoy.
...;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. , ',•
Creditors are required to file
Additional 25c Charge per
Ambrose Co.• 432S Lakeborn.
garaged. Pricedlosell. Phone
.Aulharized Singer Sales and . Estimate on Furnace
!heir claims with said Hduciary Advertisem.ent.
Davisburg, Mich. 4019.
evenings only 992-nn or 992Service. weSharpon So·
s.
lnstalation.
within
lou~
months
.
OFFICE
HOURS
8-1
-JIItp
7066.
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
l-_29-_lk
~=~~~=====::;
Dated thiS lllh day of August
-a.19-3tc
r
-- ~
8, 30 a .m. lo 5:00 p.m. Daily, - - - - - - - - •
1971
•
·
JOHN C. &amp;ACON , 8:30 a.m . to 12: 00 Noon NEED lady lor housecleaning I
SEPTIC 1an11s deaned. Miller
~-~j
P~oboteJodtoolsoidCounty SaturdaY.
or 2 days a week. Reply c-o
San:ila6an.Siewart. &lt;Jiio.l'll. - · - ..
• .
:
Ill n, 20, 17, 31c
Box 729, Pomeroy, Oolo.
WALNUT STEREO radio
66l..JIJ35._
,
B-19-6tp
comb
in
ation,
AMFM
,
2-12-lk
NotICe
radio. 4 speakers. 4 speed
MOTORCYCLES
NOTICE OF SALE
HYMN-SING
MI. Herman SALESMEN needed. Work full
changer, dualvolume&lt;Dnlrol . AUTOMOBILE lnsuraiicebeen.
Mid-s-tnerSale
The pl!rsonal property of the
Uniled Brethren Church
or parffime. No door to door
Balance $69.74. Use our
c•ncelled?
Lost
your
- OnAifModels
Estate of Ed S. Grant.
featuring Ihe Revelations.
sales.
Advancemenl
op- 'budget terms. Call 992-7085. operator's lianse? Call ~Save Up To$20UO
Decused, will be sold at publ ic
porlunity. Call collect 5938-l~tc
2966.
Ower 10 Pwrc:ent
Sunday, Augusl 22 at 7:30
auction commencing at 1:00
5079
P .M . on Wednesday , Sep .
1
p.m .
·
6- S.Hc
HAWK'U-DAY
tember., 1971, at the Corner of
8-18-3tc
8-IUtc
CYCLE SALE
Main and Seventh Street in the
FINE COOKING and eating
VIllage of Middleport, Ohio . GUN SHOOT, Forked Run COMBINATION waitress and
apples. Ask lor quantify price
2 miles South of A!hens, 0.
There are many items that
Sportsman Club, Sunday .
bartender, Blue Tartan, day
or
small
lot,
just
all
of
State
appear to be fine antique fur NEW.
3-bedr-..
homein
Rl. 33
Aug. 22, at noon.
or night shift. No experience
Route 124, Welchlown Road.
niture included in this sale, and
Middleport
.
.
Buill-in
kilchen,
~Mon.,
Wed., Fri.
B-18-Jtc
necessary. Apply in person. - Hosmer Roush.
while no representatation i.s
ceramic
file
ba1h.,
aN
elecll
ic:
lta..m.
ta
I p.m.
8-IS-4tc
made 15 to age it is reported GUN SHOOT, Aug. 22, 1 p.m.
8-19-Jtp
heal,
good
ni!iglobarhood.
Can
5n-166f
much of the furniture is over 100
Mile Hill Road, 'h hog, hams.
years old. The property consists
arrange FHA financing. ~;;:;;;:======:::j
MAPLE , EARLY American
bacon, by Racine Fire Dept.
Te1cp1WJ!E 992-J6GO Cl" 99'2Of the following :
stereo-radio combinatic:wt, .._
B-18-4tc ANTIQUES, telephones, brass
Wicker rocker, rocker, Round
2116.
speaker sound system, AM7-25-Hc
table, iron bed. gas stove, table
.and ~ chairs, occasional table, SAVE UP to one hall. Bririg · beds, clocks, dishes, old
FM radio,Balance
-C:speed S17
intermixed
lumilure, etc. Write M.. D.
changer.
.31. Use ~ooSE:~;-u;;;;;;;-;;;~
upright chairs, glassware ,
your sick TV 1o Chuck's TV
Miller, Rt. 4. Pomeroy. Ohio.
silverware, G. M . Frigidaire,
our budget terms. Call 992- HOUSE. 16C2 llnaJin lleighls.
Shop, lSI Butlernul Ave.,
long table, 3 legged stool,
can 992-6271.
7085.
Call Damy ~ 992Pomeroy.
...
miscellaneous pots, pans and
2196.
7-9-ttc
8-1S-6tc
diShes, ironing board, Wicker
4-2J.tfc
7-11-lk
besket. writing desk, wOOden
12XSO. SCHULTZ 2-bedroom
_
-GUARANTEEDchest, wooden table, secretary, KOSCOT Kosmetlcs. Julymobile
home
located
on
MIDDLEPORT
-5
.
_
,
bridt
5 piece upholstered set, library
Au~ust special, Kare KonPhone 992-2094
table, single wooden bed and
corner of Third and Adams. home with bath.. ~.,.=
2 BEDROOM mobile home wilh
dresser, occasional table , . diloon oil ss. Value now only
Mason. W. Va. See Martin walllo wall carpeting.
air conditioning in Racine
S2.SO. Distributors. Brown's,
trunks, and old records, and
Graham,
Zuspan St., Mason. 992-u.l or 992-Je..
area
.
Phone
992-632'1.
phone 992-5113.
other items· too numerous to
W. Va.
l-20-121c
8-17-5tc
7-4-ttc
mention.
OpeniTill
8-17-61c
Terms of Hit : Cash.
DUPL EX HOME. 6 nans and
A~'lloll,.ndifily thru Salurday
Anna M. Ryther, GOSPEL SING at Church of TRAILER LOTS. 'B&lt;ib•s Mobile
HALF
RUNNER
beans,
$2
Admlnlstntrfx'ofthe Estate
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
God, Chester, Salurday.
Apartmenl. nans and ~~-~E;·~Ma~
· :i":·:P:ao:::m:::e.ra=y
of Ed S. Grant, Deceased .
bushel. pick your own . balh.
bath. PrivateenhaiQ!S. Ideal ;&lt;Joio.
99:1-2951. ·
•
,
August
21
at
7:
30
p.m.
with
Carnahan Auction SerVice, ·
Cucumbers and tomatoes. for lamily with extra n!lltal or
the Duncan Fomilyof Tampa,
4-2-ttc
Auctioneers
Walermelons.
cantaloupes, inveslment PI
Pr~ca~
Fla. Everyone welcome.
(1)20, 27,21
sweet corn,
potatoes . lor quick sale. Cal 992-Ull
B-17-&lt;ltc FURNISHED and unfurnished
Oarence Proffitt, Portland,
after 5 p.m.
apartmenls. Close to school ..
Phone
143-2254.
l-11-12lc •
Phone 992-SC"8-17-tfc
---=-~~~:::::;::=.::=:;-~;;;­
10-li-Hc _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _
II 16 ACRES localed T-19 al
'COAL. limestone. Excelsior Rock~-..,~
1 BEDROOM trailer apartH'ogh
. Canlact Bill
~all Worl&lt;s. E. Main St.ment, ideai for couples.
Wille Ilor L Foeldsl alter 5 p.
Pomeroy.
Ploone
992.Jtl91.
Contact IYlcCiure's Dairy Isle,
m. or on weel&lt;ends. phone 992.&lt;L9-tfc
I
·
. I 992-SUS or 992-J.IJ6.
6/IH7.
Speo;W.I
Plus
8-20-61c APPLE:S-Peaches. Fi.q&gt;au .coo:
l-12-1otc
AI
V.
P.lrts
Helen Bottel
Orchards, State Route 689, - - - - -- -- 2 BEDROOM mobile home.
phone Wilkesville, 669-3785. 6 ROOM house and bath located
nearly new. furnished in
IRliiBAND SAYS ''Mtm'N'T TOUCH"
--------~-15-ffc
~side Chesler. Phone
Mason. w. Va. can Robert
. PHONE 9fl·l14l
Dar Helm:
Dixon at Meigs Noobile Home
16
FT.
TAGALONG
travel
Plai~ fllo7Sales,
•
-..railledilla family wbose rret4 s Df:l&lt;el'__got
!railer, fully self contained. ----~--'"-1_2-1~c ~~~~==·~;=~~==\
•
.d
....
......~Dw
atfettlm
andreel;satrt
ii~
....
.
3891' ·""'
"" :!t
' C.o r,U3
Ready togo, SISilO. Phone TT3- SIX ROOM house. bath.. fuli
'Jii'a_Miu.
8-19-3tc
S651, Mason, w. Va.
lll'ln .-1 to Ibis - I l1oolr be lmes me, even lbougb bag9 and
!Jasemenl, ID Butll!mut Ave.. --tiY" ~~~
7-23-ttc
.-.. aren'f bls ltiug.
.just walking dislanc2 from
•
downtown Ptwl""'!· Conlact
•
Bat my familY Is demonstrative. We're buggers. It's natural
SINGER
ZIG
ZAG,
nee&lt;.s no
S1 FORD -~ tm pickup, good
·
~
d
Hedrick.
21.37
w
aoth
cams. all built-in features .
fclr me toklslpeciliewbeDiaee tbem, and Ulatmea•menanrell
'•
))rive. Col""'bus. Ohio. phone_
uue --e·
tondilim, sell $2SO or trade
Makes buttonholes. laney
for good used car. Jack
237-434..
Columbus.
Kitdlens,
ll;ollls
• wameo.lly bnsbencl1biJib It's outrageous wbeD I greet an old
'I
designs. elc. Pay just $42.39.
Layne,
Prospect
Hill ,
S-9-Hc
R - A&amp;ltliliaols
frillld (male) with a warm (plalllllic:) embrace. For heavens
Use
our
budget
terms.
Call
Pomeroy . ,
992-7CIIS.
3 B·E DROOM brick home.
Allcl Pafios
Ate, lllatd-'tmeaniWIIIItanaffairwilhbim!
8-19-Jtp
8-1S-6tc
Choice location in M' .... 11.
Bldd10t AMI
Be AJB be lsD't atraid of old beatm or ii 1osinl! me, it just
Seen by ..,......lment only.
Endlndtr WOrk
doea'l "look rigbL" He baa agreed to abide by wbat you say. If
Phone 992-.Sm alta- • p.m.
POODLE puppies. Silver Toy.
J
S-7-lk
5tptic T•nks
Parkview Kennels. Phone 992l'm wrong, I'll tr;r Ill be mere stantiomsb and if you tbink be's Auto
Allcl Leorlt Beds.
wrong, be'lltr;r to cbange. 'l1lanks for be~ a referee. -MRS. E. SPECIAL this week al Tom Rue S44J.
j
8-IS.ttc
Motors, 1963 Ford Pickup.
Dar Mrs. E.:
8-IS.tfc
11y wle goes to YOU. Fear of penoaal emlact puts a wall
-19-70:=;;D;:;A;:T;::S;:::U;:::N=p=-:-ic--;k--u-p-.-good
••
NEIGLER Conslruction. For
aUiildpecilie, ckl1es outwarmlh, makes tliemavoid athel- forms
condition, ne¥1 tires, never
building or remodeling your
li010mt•mlratilll. A friendly hug says 'TID.glad you're near and
•
wrecked . $1 ,515. Phone 992home. Call Guy Neigler,
5153.
l'm not afraid Ill say so."
Racine. Qlio.
8-18-12tc
7-31 -Hc
Came on, Mr. E., UJH"epress yourself! -H.
. . Ent ....
NEW 11 CHEVY KINGS WOOD WAGON. Color sea aqua,
.
POI!IEROY ,
tinted glass. n- mals, door ed. guards, ~season air. 25S
i'
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
1968 GRAND Prix Pontiac,
H.P. ~cu. in. engine. wh. covers, Comlorlill st. wh,ef., wlocated a! Crossroads, Rt. 12-1.
Dar Belen:
factory air cmdilioning, lull
CLELAND REALTY
w
tires, E. Oock, P. B., radio. turbo hydromatlc. power
•
Camplele
front
end
serv
ic&lt;!.
equipped, one loc~l owner.
"UflllooRd Now" Pl esented a very ugly picture ii diet pills.
Shop
. . Eftt Milito
steering
&amp;
brakes,
luggage
carrier.
Relall
SS04I
r
Phone 992-5871 .
up brake service.
POMEROY
E. Main
Pomenoy .
Bat actually lbe gave a picture ii benelf. Sbe look diOIIe pills to
SAVINGS PRICE 14441 .
Wheels
b~lanced
elec8-20-3tc
DEXTER-'-"""' LDI1311oo.100.
lronically . · All
work
pt bleb. and abe oven!Oied because she bad a jllOOian to begin
~
2 story frame.. " bedl 0111111!1. 2,
-latest 20th Cenlury Welders.
guaranteed.
Reasonable
•
with. I'm sure her doctcr never meant fir her to "graduate to a
porches one l!lldo L bam
leam ""rtical and ............,d
NEW71 CHEVY ST. WAGON. Conc:oun Estate, color red,
rates. Phone 992-3213.
wilh 2 c.- spaces and aoolle
bmlul a day." Any medicine, when used wrongly, can be exweldi.ng in 1 eveni~.
deluxe bells,linted glass, _ . ..tailgate, floor mats. reor
7-27-Hc
.'
storage building. GREAT
air
deflector. 4 season air c..,ditioning,lurbo hydrornotic.
~
Fl
.
EE
DOt'R
PRIZEStremely dauger01111.
NICE NORMANDY clarinel
•
FOR
THE
KIDS.
$1.91111.
·
AWNINGS.
storm
doors
and
o
307
V-8 engine, lugga!l!! carrier, power steering, G71-w.
with case. S60. Phone 742-4211
•
I'm pttlng tired of Ibis trend of labeling anyooe wbo takes
wall I ires, wh. covers, P. B., radio, lrt. &amp; rear vuards.
wi~dows,
carports .
•
after 5 p.m. 7-42-5163 or see
CANNING tomatoes, already POMEROY- FAMILY HOME
•
marquees, aluminum siding
any kind 1:1 medicatim as a bopbead. I take diet pills, ooe a day,
Reiail S4611US - SAVINGS PRICE S424t.
Wendell Grate, Rutland.
•
picked,
$1.25
bu.
,
bring
CLOSE
TO
ELEMENTARY
railing.
Call
A.
Jacob,
8-20-31c
.OObavefortwomontbi now, and I'm losing weight with no bad
•
containers . Gerald in e
SCHOOL- 2 slory frame. l ~
sales rep-esentative. For free
•
.dfeeta. - A LOSER Btrl' NOT HOOKED
Oeland. Easl Main, Racine.
••
baths~ 4 nice tw:drc:uns.. gas
estimates, phone Charles
NEW71 CHEVY GREENBRIER ST. WAGON. Color mod.
FENDER PA syslem, like new,
7-'ll-lfr
lorced ,air
heat.
fvll
Lisle, Syracuse. V. v .
Dear Helen:
••
blue, F &amp; R floor mals, rear window deflector, turbo
ssoo. Phone 9.c9-3485.
basement, porch. garage with
Jolnson and S..., Inc.
hydromatic.
_....steering,
307
V-8
engine,
G-78
white
"Unhooked Now" misused diet pills, and lbat's omrder, but
8-18-3tc
S-27-lfc
. renovated room over, line for
wall tires, wh. covers, P.B., rodio.luggage carrier. Relllil
eveo llkeo aa directed, me a day, they alter your personality. ----~:-office space or ulilify _ ..
53877.15SAVINGS PRICE S3491.
CONDITIONER, 8,000
men! . $ti.SOO.
READY -MIX
CONCRETE
Yw beccme mere nervous and impatient, ~ talbtive, and AIR
•
ll'' x23"x.Jit
B.T. U. Phone 992-3-403.
deli vered right to your
JIU jndpntgels faulty. When I toot "pep pills" I tliscove.-.d I
8-18-Jtc
MINERSVILLE - l'h sfory
projecl. Fast- easy. Free
NEW 71 CHEVY VEGA WAGON. 90 H. P. engine.
made three times.Smany mislakes In typing -ao!IW35D't eveo - - ' - - - - - frame, 7....,..... J - - ' "·
Hfimales. Phone 992-3284.
G.M.C. DIESEL bus, very good
automatic
trans.• body side mldg ., A78 whitewall tires.
bath, tile paneling, b serraJI,
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co.,
aware l:llbem until I read my copy back. I'd cbatler m and regret
condition. ready lor road.
P.B., radio, choice of color, sandalwood or bright green.
NEW ALUMINUM SIDING,
Middleport, Ooio.
what I said later. And very soon they weren't balding down my
Retail: 12741.
SUitable far singing group or
·
'-30-tlc
nice porch and yard. A IUY
camping
purposes.
Contact
AT
JUSTSII
....
1f1111Ctlle any mere. 'lberi came a choice: either increase the
USED OFFSET PLATES
Dan Hayman. Syracuse,
PLACETHESALEOFYOUR O'BRIEN ELECTRIC SElldoeage, or quit. I quit! -SECRETARY
HAVE
Qlio. Phone 992-3893.
PROPERTY
Ill GOOD
VICE. Phone 9.c9-45SI.
8-1~3tp
MANY USES
Dear Helen:
HANDS..
S-30-Hc
HENRY E. CLELMD.
11 CAMARO HT CPE.
biiiCk. custom sport equip.,
•
''UnhookEd Now" is Incky to have come lhrough with her li.fe.
REALTOR
sports mirror. HII steering wheel, deluxe belts, floor mals,
BE GENTLE, be kind, to lhal
My 211-year-dd daughter started on diet pills provided by one Of
~m-DB
P.B.• radio, Roily wheels, accent group, style trim !fToup,
expensive carpet, clean with .
Residttk:E tn-'2561
See Us At The ...
•
lhoae "clinks." 'lbat was in 1966. She died less than a year later,
power steering, furbo hydromaflc. console, F70 w-w tires.
Blue lustre. Rent electric
8-IUic
Retail
$l9M.75
SAVINGS
PRICE
$3491.
shampooer.
$1
.
Baker
Fur•
afler reducing from a size 22'1! to a size 12. 1Jle had aD the signs:
--niture Company.
111:1 f0i181 us, cGilpu]sive talking, the highs and lows. But we
'"•
8-18-6tc
11 CAMARO HT CPE. Color Classic copper, console, air
~hooch because a "doctor" was in charge, there was no danger.
I
·spoiler equipped, turbo hydromatic, power steering,
Laler, we read about_thooe reducing factmes and the pill 19SP FORD 4 door, nice, • ··•·
•
electric clock, super sport equipped, P.B., radio, Rolly
1947 Cadillac pickup. $150. 20
,..,.Pmeu that cai1 dangerously reduce potassium and other body
wheels, Rally~ equipment. RelliiS411t.:IO - SAVINGS
•
lb. gas trailer tanks, SIO each.
PRICE 52121.
111 C.Urt 51.
1959 Ooev. 2 door, perfecl
dlemlcals.Itwas too late. -A VERYWNELYMOTHER
•
l'otnei"'J'. Ollio
•
r,..ning cmdition, Sl25. One
•
p,:'d Wheelbarrow, side
•
Dear Helen:
rds. home made, many
other articles; chain saw, $20 . .
Yw've oot in favor of big weddings, but here's my side: My
a.· ' J
Come see. m County Road 163
wife was married the first time by a J.P. Some people frowned
111 A\1! rtnnic 5hwt
off old 33.., righl. second lane
:p ecwr. Ollilt
wbensheaoll decided for a big clrurcb wedding (a divorcee yet! )
on left. Irvin Miller.
I
I
8-20-3tp
bot we wouldn't have it any other way. Maybe the money could
NEAR RUTLMO - J
have been UBed for bills or furniture, but the memfllies of lbat A.K.C. Miniature dachshund.
bedrooms. beautiful l 'h
bdths, gas lvrnace. Nice
Phone 992-4573.
great day will last forever.
B-20-6tc
.
kilchen.
$l9,.SOO.OO.
· Not an men are against fancy weddings, Helen. -WAYNE

RJRNIJURE

1-ted

'iUEtiURS_
,.,..,..,

·

NOTHINGUkE

ai

•... Wt

-

Real Estate Far Sale

Wanted To Buy

------

•••• YOU'LL

EXPERT

For Rent

Pomeruy Home &amp; AulD

3

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

!Helen Help Us!

J6=·
t

·During Our Annual··

1!9B

. BicHtHnar's

r\II!I)OTS

-

'

III!OUT 1\Ll. THERE IS

10 SEE IN NEW -.cRK.

11M Your S •Ill
Air Qlnditioning .
lhspedi111 and
Re-Cha111

! ------

By

NEVER FORGET
THE SAVINGS I

GOEIH, MOM,I THINK
Wff!vE SEEN ~usr

':0:.=:

-·r-

l

A MAl-l

~.niiaW\11
_

For Sale or Trade

I

YEAR·END

y.

Complete
Rem-J:.lina:

1971 IOIIL CLOSE ·OU!

GARAGE
·SALE

Sales

..--~
~"-•

JI

!

-..
...

(leland

Free WeldiJg

7424902

~
•

R~ty

Dili:
WED., 8 P.M.
Landm.t

'

1
,

•

DAILY CROSSWORD

For Sale

For Sale

-

•!POSH

LA. lA&amp;

fl-.--

-

better

f . Be

The

Daily Sentinel

Virgil B.

TEAFORD
SR.

Delr Wayne:
True, butyw're tbefirstone I've bean! admit it. -H.

MIWR
.
.

un&amp;lfS
111111111£
IIUDI
IIUIII

lire a pnlrL

IRISH
Cobbler
potatoes.
Thomas D. Sayre, Great
Bend, Phme 843-UJ6.
8-20-3fp

GEl

1111111011

--------.---

DON' T PUMP your sluggish
septic tank . Gel Klean -EmAil sepllc tank cleoner .
landmark Farm~ Bureau,
Pomeroy.
1-20-llc

Real Estate For Sale

WE

BUY- SEU
OR

3 HOUSES- 2oOtoled. All haft
free gas. 3 ~" ,_ 1 "
home. SI~.OlliUII.
Jt ACRES - Qo 14 Several
building siles. 1.5.000.00 NEW '
LISTING.

•

Fornst

ROOM BRICK- Suca!ssful
business now operating. NEW
LISTING.

CONVENIENT but secluded
building lois on T79 al Rock
Springs. Within "'alking .
doslance of Meigs High DO YOU HAVE IW ACRES 011
School, a 5 minute drive from HIGHWAY. or RIVER
Pomeroy. Call or see BiU FRONTAGE TO SELL
Witte · weekends or alter S
. CA.L L fft-DIS
p.m . weekdays. Phone 992HELEM L TEAFORD.
81.
ASSOCIATE
7-ll-lfc
l-1541c

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

Beat Inflation!

TRADE

122t WaslrillgloooiiiYd.
ONE PULL TYPE corn
picker. New Idea No. 10. _ _ _
.._
. ._
. OIIio
_ _ _. . BUILDING LOT Phone 992-6214.
•
Run : l.ltilities.
8-20-6tc

We talk to JOU'

WMP0/1390

12x60 ll BERTY trailer, cenlral
air conditioned. 3 bedrooms.
Phone 992-~ 8-20-Jtp

1Z. ; 14t - 24t -.WIDE

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

.

BYE NOW '71

'11 SAVINGS HEADQUARTERS

NEW MD
.
IJSfll RJRNRURE

•

•••

•
•••

HOUSEWARES

9lii6TIIItrs. &amp; Sat.
m-7161
liSN.21111Awot. Miolilllflert

DOWN

m *"••
lT.ltlle

.........

U.Putlclple
lt.Tbne

Z.BeCDIUn·

s.c

pltte

C..OMIIc

"11ft"

$. Jl'dde

tewun:e

lite

10. Sinatra

rum

ol
liS&amp;
llwda.l
111. Footift

:11:. Chalice T.......... - -

::~ .
Arimlla

28. F!nt in
lmpat'-

taDoe

6..DI

,.

36. 8abora

28. C""'dten
dty

'"-'
ti.tlclll
4Z.l'MI•.. n,

30.Rat

UwaJII
44. ..!ltawe..

- 14--)

33. Piayltto
tbe
loUt

32. ~

T.aa.llaut

--...

pedod

F'IFff,

iOIFl' IOI'T FIIH

~LF. 1llfY ~- GV
10~ A51161.f0JKL

lOUR

~

Pomeroy M_
otor Co.

21.Capltal
28. Gleeflll
25. Bc:bool of

••

POMEROY

-

[]

I I K1I I I
CURSIC

I]

wlllla

u. lllllheled.

.......

J&amp;.Biq

a . . ell

.............
I

I

II ,,- •

;sa,•

Si ... ., ....... _ ,

at

e&amp;.OIY .LIAICT B"S It

Y_t4o.,oy,••• ,··-n

-...m.

JT.N...'a

J"'IIII&amp;Ul

......

lll.'l'llere-

ALL 'ltlU'tE POIN6 IS
aAIIIUN6 AROUM&gt;
lHE GRCnlt&gt;!

-

(2--)

•• Brulllai1
40.8p!nl•
"ppd"
-U. Doop ml!d

....

.&amp;XYDLBA.AXB
1e LO.&amp;:rJ:LLOW
ODe letter ....pl.y + ' tor uootber. Ill tillS •mp!e A Ia
- to.- tile U... Ihi, X for tile two O'o, etc. SIJo&amp;le leUEr-.
apooh J I e., lila Jlllcf:h IIJid formation_..!' tbet......a. ~ oil
- . - dQ' Uae cook Jotten ~ ...,....,

•

EQZ
NAZ
YGKKVZ
CGQVR
XGOZKN NA~XCR NAEN AEUUZ»
UZYUYZ.-EVYII:X

New ••

I- til._•••••.......... _,.._.,.. __
J

&amp;Jll7,u

NT

II I

I ,...... _... I A [ 1 I I I I I ]

JT.Doller
28. Qotteet

I

•

llNJYET

tSURDIA

I

••
"

OPEN EVES. TILl

PH. 992-2126 '

..•

[)_

20.11Jbbtll

DAILY CBIP.rolluoB-B,fft'sllow to werll: It:

APPUMCES
AIID
•

0,0.:
· flilf Moll., Toes.
Wtool&amp;Fri.

......,

8. Subj&lt;ct

•. Matclo

41.JU

AlSO-# '

SWAP SHOP

...

wd;y

L&amp;Gq--

jus

-

SWAP SHOP

"

8. Dei:ein
12wda.)
11. '1'eoaa~U•

lf.Sty
U.Jobfo.-&amp;

Sheets

-

t7. . Bert or

411. JDcbest

U.Gnelt
Jetter

Aluminum

Color

c1oimber
t6.81J1Dcmt

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

I

'71 CAMAROS

ILC"•

45.Pft:ft:l:for

lllcb-·

pzcblem
U.lliutenl

~

-=-======,--::--

Yo I ...,.. CQJto p le: FRIII:ND8BJP IS l'llili&amp;Dt A
.-oRilALlTT NOR A llODI!l: rr IS RAliiCR A I..IJ'IC.DAVJD GRAYBON '

-

SZOB

�'
JI-'I'IIIDID,y8 41wi,M! .... t-1' «oy,O.• Aua.:ll.ll71

Communities in Action

Rebellion Faced Down
I

.

.

WASHINGTON (UPI) ' · Faced by rebellions from
organized labor, school officials
and the governor of Tens, the
administration has declared its
wage-price freeze will be en·
forced without exceptions and
hinted at court actions against
violators. ·
The threat from the administration came as complaints
against the program to cure the
ailing economy announced Sunday by President Nil&lt;on rose in
pitch. There were these exam·
pies:
-AFL-ClO President George
Meany and his Executive Board
denounced the !llklay freeze as
"inequitable, unjust, unfair and
Wlworkable." They announced
the 13.6 million-member federa-

Austeri~y

.MEIGS THEATRE.

'.

Toniqftlthru Saturuay
August lC..ll
NOT OPEN

Sun., Mon., &amp; Tues.
August22·24
LITTLE MURDERS
(Ttchnicolorl
Elliott Gould
Donald Sutherland

R

lor.artoons'
Royal Royalty
Klondike Strikeout
Riverboat Mession
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

lonoght, Aug. 20
Double Feature Program
"A BOY NAMED
CHARLIE BROWN"
The ' Peanuts' Gang In their
first movie!

(Color)

G
-PLU5ELOORAOO
CTedonicolor)
John Wayne
Robert Mitchum
It's the big one with the big
o!

Saturday, August2t
A Bullet For
PRETTY BOY
I Color)
Fabian Forte

Tbe Ohio Valley Raelng

Jocelyn Lane

Assn., formed oaly In May,

Astrid Warner

GP
And

.

TELL ME THAT YOU
LOVE ME JUNIE MOON
IColorl
Liza Minelli

---

GP

Sun., Mon. &amp; Tues.
August n-23-24

Double Feature Program

"MONTE WALSH"

Lee"Marvln

GP
-PLU50NCE YOU KISS
A STRANGER
I Color)
Paul Burke

Carol Lynley

Spencer

reeelved two flnta aaol two
seeood placet In lbe quarterbone ra&lt;IDB allbe Meigs
County Fair 'Jbarsday.
Tile auaclatloli has a
tralaiDg lndt IIIII a four hole
aatomaUc llariiDg gate just
below MaHD, w. Va. The
group plan! lborougllbred,
qaarterborse and possibly
poay raciDcatlbe track In the
aear fmure.

Jack Palance

Pletures and Re)lllrt
· By Bob Ho,eftlcb
CJIESHIRE.- u you're too yom~g for
Medicare and too affluent for welfare, the
Gallla·Meigs Community Action Program
may just have the answer to your medical
problem.
Und01 a $411,000 grant the Community
Action Program is operating a community
center In Cheshire und01 Project Assist.
Tile program is designed to help those who
need help but can't qualify through other
agencies.
In conjunction with the Project Assist
progr8111, a clinic is operated each
Tuesday of every week. On that day
1 patients - an average of some 25 - pour
into the clinic to .be seen by a doctor,
receive any medication needed and be
served refreshments by a church group.
Making the trip to Cheshire each

Members celtlng wias at
the 'Jbanday raciDg program
were Jennings Beegle, a first
aad a second; Darryl
Stumbo, a first, aod Robert
Meier, a second.

Threatened
.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov. ai revenue deficits. Tile only
John J. Gilligan, striving to way to come up with that $411
make up a $411 millioo deficit' millioo to cover our obligalioos
caused by two one-month in- lhrough January and February
terim state budgets, bas out. is to start saving ft now, by
lined an austerity program be making cuts in state expendiwill institute if !be General As- . lures ...
sembly fails ,to adopt a bal1 ecJolalare Milt Aet
anced two-y~ budget and t.u 1be goveroor said he bas
package by Sept. 1.
warned repeatedly about the
The program, announced oo possibility of an austerity prostatewide television and radio gram. He offered a $9.1 billion
Thursday, involves the la)'off of two-year budget last March 15,
almost 3,000 state employes, but the Republican-cootrolled
saiary cuts, state part closings General Assenibly has not apafter Labor Day, and reduced proved it.
aid for elementary and second- The Ohio House adopted an
ary schools, universities and Sl billioo budget and passed
college students, welfare recipi· $1.5 billion worth of new taxes,
ents and health care.
·
including Ohio's lint personal
Gilligan also said he would income tax, to finance it but
cut his own salary .by 10 per the Senate bas not acted on
cent and asked his cabinet-level either.
personni!i to follow suit oo a
Gilligan said his austerity
voluntary basis. The governor's measures could be avoided If
annual salary is $40,000. Cabi- the legislature acts on a budget
net members- receive about by Sept. 1.
$25,1100.
"11Jere is still lime, fbere..
The governor explained in- lore, to eliminate the need to
terim budgets for July and Au- reduce the level of state servgust have cost a projected casb .ices even below what we hove
shortage of $411 million by next now," the govemCJ' said. "But
February.
the legislature - !be elected
"I can no longer accept in- rei» esentatives of the peopleterim budgets which mooth by our representatives, must act
month push this state toward now. 1 hope they do."
bankruptcy," Gilligan said. "We
Gilligan said !allure of !be
are prohibited by law from bor- legislature to act would result
rowing money to finance gener- in the layoff of 2,1140 state ein· ·
_

Minh Pulls -O ut
Wilberl Weaver Died Thursday

GP

FIREMEN CAl I ED
Middleport firemen were
called to North Seeood St. at
12:56 p. m. Thursday when a
Royal Crown BotWng Co. truck
caught fire. There were minor ,
damages. At 5:29 p. m, the
Middleport E·R squad was
called to the home of Mrs.
George Miller in Middleport.
She was Iaten to tho Holzer
Medical Center via ambulance .

To
The

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE
On The T In Middleport

We'H get you a place
to hang it.

Many Gift

H~ms

Reduced

There's no place like home. Your own. of course.
And there's no better way to get it
than with our easy·to·arrange,row·cost Mortgage Loan.

'

POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK
POMEROY

RUJIMD

Serving Meigs County
Since 1872
Merr.ber Federal Reserve :System
Member Federal Deposit, Insurance Corporation

All Accounts Insured Up To S20,000.00

Continuous Service On
Fricloys 9 a.m. to 7 p.m•.

....
••

'

....
"""" tr ..,.. ot Ike 0111o
Departmeat of Meatal
llnfeDe ud c. ledio!l teday
auoueed a 1erle1 of
sweeplq calbcb ia ex·
p m.. es ftldl 11e · uld
wOIIId uve Ike stale ...28
mUHn Ill flleal 1J7Z.
Or. lame~~! Gaftr uld lbe .
catbacb ....td btehMie • 11
pet. catbaet Ill tile lleldl of
admlal•lratlaa illeladlllc
l!llllllllhn" admlalatraU.,
cenlnl offlfta ud Adalt
Plnle . Alllberlly ftlelt
would am-1 to
a
lllDIIIII.
. ·.. ··....·.·,·.v.·,,·.·, .·.·..·.·,·.•,·,•,•.•,••,•,·.·.·.·.·
ployes, more lhan balf of them
workers in the departments of
natural resources, highways
and mental hygiene and correclion.
Spending reductions in vari·
ous governmental departments
would approD!Iate 10 per cent,
the gov~ said, and new hir·
ing would he banned escept in
crucial situations. Equipment
purchases and maintenance expenses would be curtoiled, he
said.
Gilligan said no action would
be taken which · would lower
the level of care for patients in
state mental holpitals.
Paymenta to school districta
would be cut by 3 per cent a
montll starling In September,
the governor said, and spec1al
educatiONI!Itlivllloo peYII*Jt8
would be eliminated.
Stale Wlllld!l't . . .
"1be ultimate CGII8I!qllellCe of
this situalioo will he that many
Ohio chlldren will find that the
schools in their neighborbood
will not open this year," Gilli-·
gan said.
'
. Support paymenta to ROO•
public schools would be eHml.
nated Wider the program, and
various forms of financial aid
to universities would be lennlnatell, including subsidies for
ou~~tate students and spec1al
operating supplements for
Cleveland State University 11J1d
Wright State University.
PajmeniS to scholarship stu·
dents in botll public and private
colleges and universities would
be reduced under GUIIgan 's
plan.
A health care program for
welfare recipients would be
eliminated, and welfare checks
for October would be cut by
1\io per cent per month for dependent chlldren, the aged, the
blind and the disabled.
' ''No ooe who now """'ives
healtll care will be deprived of
that care," the governor assured, "but we will limit the
amount of reimbwsement to
hospi~ and nursing homes
and curtail some expe1Jditures
for dental and comparable
~ort by instituting tighter re-

vtew standards."

Both Friday and Saturday Nights

.. . With

WIN THE

8~ ­
o~t~te ·

8Pifel

·
BAKER

BUDGET
SHOP!

.t mts

A GOod

Ti~

Your lnvitro Guest
Reaching More

Than 11,000

Devoted To .The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

Families
THREE SECTIONS

. 30 PAGES

\IOL. VI NO. 30

SUNDAY. AUGUST 22. 1971

Pomeroy-Middleport

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Fair Feature
POMEROY - Excellent races
enhanced by local owners and drivers, and
pari-mutuel betting, featured the Friday
evening twilight harness racing program
at the IOBth Meigs County Fair.
Drivers included Sidney Spencer and
his soo, Don, of Pomeroy; Don McKenzie
of Pomeroy, and Burdell McKinney of
Middleport. Don Spencer, Sidney Spencer
and Mr. a,nd Mrs. McKenzie owned horses
in the racing.
\
THE RESULTS
First race, Z.year old trot, River
Valley Colt Circuit, Sassy, ·owned by
Richard Morgan and Deail Kelby, Belpre
aJilj Waterford, "irtlh Morgan driving.
S8cond, 0 Mblieasmine, owned by Helen
Eianaugle, Jacbon, driven by F. Hess.
Third, Woodlawn's JohMie, owned by
John Fosler, Piketon, driven by C. Har-

ness. Time, 2:23.2.
Second race, 3-year-old pace,
Elimination Dash, Big Red Machine, from
the Ecker . and Spencer Stables, of
Gallipolis and Marietta, Sid Spencer,
driver. Second, Way Late, owned by
Clinton Gilmore, Washington Courthouse,
driven by Larry Richard. Third, Volante
M owned by Clayton Daughterly,
Columbus, driven by Mr. Daughterly.
Third race, 3-year old pace, 2nd
Elimination dash, winner, Strike A Beat,
owned by Penny Richard, Washington CH,
driven by Larry Richard. Second, Fair
Ellen, owned by Othello Johnson,
Gallipolis, driven by Johnson. Third, Dale
8. Quick, Don Witekl, of lfollloll, Don
Spencer, driver, given to these drivers
because of a judges inquiry. Butches

For Comfortable

Family Shopping
All' Over The Store .

.,
AN EXCELLENT HORSE HARNESS RACING PROGRAM was presented for
Meigs County Fair fans Friday evening. Local Ol'lllers and trainers took active
roles in the program. This was how it looked as tile horses neared the finish line in
one of the races.
'

Old Church Will be Restored
BY BECKY VANCO
GALI.JPOI.JS - on top ol
Friendly Ridge, off Rt. 218, a
lillie log church overlooks the
valley below. It stands guard
over a graveyard, as II
protecting its loved ones in
hock.
A huge drooping tree in the
front yard of the church
suggests that age is to be
respected here.
The cnunbling chink, and the
powdery logs, hold the
memories of many people and
the last rites of others.
Inside, remnants of !be floor
have been ravaged; now
overrun with the Uttie animals
of the woods. Pews are stacked
into one comer. The windows
have been Broken out, but the
roof remains Intact, In good
condition.
This, the St. Nick Church of
Christ, was sla7ted in 1873.
Each farmer donated one log
for building into the church,
Two years passed before the
men were able to build enough
of lhe church so the first service
could be held.
Soloman Devor preached at
the first meeting. The first seats
were boards placed on top of the
bottoms of tree lrWlks.
Young John Herman White
(Continued oo page 3)

'

Bloodmobile Day
POMEROY - Tomorrow Is
BIOlJd!noblle Day in Meigs COWlty, Aug.
23, Iron! 1 lo 6 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Elementary School.
The recipient Is protected tllrough
careful selection of donors aod by
SPecial laboratory tests of the donated
blood. From the time the blood is
ooUected It is kepi refrigerated al from
39 to 43 degrees F. A sample of the
donor's blood is collected at the time of
the donali011 and used for all tile tests
necessary. Asecond sample is attached
·to the container holding his'blood. When
the blood is delivered to the hospital,
the donor's blood sample is carefully
crossmatebed with a sample of tbe
recipient's blood to make certain they
are compatible. Everyone concerned
with haodllDg the blood has been
speclnlly trained for lhe fWlctioos be
performs.
Please remember Aug. !3. Come lo
the Pomeroy Elementary Sehool.

Contract
THE OLD SAINT Nick Cllurch on Friendly Ridge is going to be restored for use on special.
occasions and as a landmark.

'" GAWPOLIS-Four barrel$ warning There was heavy damage to his car • none Crown City, driving north losi control of
drivers of a slip on the St. 35 by-pass to Stanley·
.
his car, struck an embankment and
Two persons were. . treated and overturned. Cox also complained of minor
wasn't enoug~ for Robert W. Stanley, 57,
Rt. 1, Thurman, at 2:05a.m. Saturday.
relea_sed at the H~lzer Medical Center for injuries but was not _treated. There was
The Slate Highway Pa\rol charged inJuries suffered 10 an acc1d~n~ at 10:10 moderate damage to his car. No citation
Stanley with driving while Intoxicated p.m. on Rt. 279m Th~n. Officers sa1d was issued.
after Stanley's auto rammed into all four. . Gary Waugh, 20, Rt. 2, Bidwell, lost control
of his car while making a turn, ran off the
right side of the highway and struck a tree.
He and a passenger, Brenda Rutt,'18, Rio
Grande, had bruises and abrasions. No
GALLIPOLIS- Dave Campbell, local
POMEROY - If you are 55 or over, . citation was issued.
superintendent of the North Gallia Local
whether ' you are retired, nearing
Charles Hill, 18, Chatham Ave., com- School District, said Saturday ~gistration
.retirement or jUst starting to· think about plained of minor injuries following a single for students at Bidwell-Porter Elemenla7y
it, now is the lime to become enlightened car accident at 4 a.m. Saturday· on Mill will be held from 9 to 11:30 a.m. Monday
says Mrs. VUma Pikkoja, librarian at the Creek Rd., one and eight tenths miles through Thursday.
Meigs Bookmobile headquarters.
north of Rl. 7.
Students at Vinton Elemenlary will be
· Mrs. Plkkoja has prepared a display of
Officers said Hill lost control of his registered from I to 3 p.m. Monday
boob of particular intereat to residents car, ran off the roadway and struck the . through Thursday and high school
nearing retirement. The booka will be guardrail.' He was chlWged _with speed in students from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. daily.
available on the bookmobile this wee~. The excess of road conditions. There was slight District drivers will meet at 9:30 a.m.
booka dell with dollar and cent J,lr6blems damage to his car. .
'
Thursday at North Gallia Higfi School and
on retirement, opPortuniiles for personal
A final mishap occurred at 7:56a.m. a meeting of all district teachers is on
growth 1 and enjoyment, retirement Saturday on Rt. 7, three and eight tent~ Friday, Aug. '!1, at 9;:J(i"a.m. All county
planning, iqvestment plans, social miles south of Rt. 218.
·
schools will open for th~ 1971-72 school
~IB'ily and Income taxes •
The patrol said Freddie Cox, 18, Rt. 2, term on Monday, Aug. 30.

Registration Time Set

Now is the Time

'

Veterans Memorial Hospital
from our
ADMITTED - · Martha
Graham, Pomeroy; Ada
Cramlell, Racine; Nellie Eblin,
Pomeroy;· Goldie Huson,
Langsville; George Nickinsky,
Middleport; Harry E. Young,
, Pomeroy; Molly Talbott,
Porlland; Robert Forrest,
Rulland; Mary Cooper, Athens;
Mae Brown, Pomeroy; Elthel
•Betzing, Syracuse. ·
FURNITURE
DISCHARGED - Nannie
.Radcliff, Gary -Eynon, Mark
MIDDLEPORT; 0.
Gilkey , Helen Riggs, Mary
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.Nelson . ·
'

'IHEWAmNG l«&lt;OIaaowdtcl eldl'l'llllldly • a cliJdc to JII'Ovlde old e!
attention and medicine is CO!Iducted in O!esbire.

+

ParUy cloudy, warm. . and
humid lhzough Monday with a
chance of thundersloFms
especially In the nortll portions,
some with hail and gusty winds.
Lows Sunday night in the mid
· lill9 to low 70s. High Sunday and
Monday in the mid 80s to low
90s.

Warning Barrels on 35 Clipped

UN.Til 9

PRICES ARE RIGHT!

A patient may be seen onll' once at the
clinic or, perhaps, many limes depending
upon his health. At limes, if serious
ailments are encountered during a course
of treatment, the patient may be referred
to another agency which might be able to
finance some ~osUy treatment or surgery
which cannot be provided out of Project
Assist funds. Some are also referred to
~pecialists for consultation and possible
treatment.
Housed in a building wtnch was formerly a furniture store, the Project Assist
(Continued on page 15)

•ne.•

Elberfelds ·Are Open

to Low Low Savings

Tuesday as attending physician is Dr:
Evelyn K-emp, M.D., of South Point.
Working with Dr. Kemp on clinic day are
Mrs. Edna Russell of Middleport, RN, who
heads the Project Assist program, and
Mrs. Barbara Scites, RN, near Pomeroy,
who on other days of a week works with a
CAP commm~ity service program.
In addition, there are six aides busy
each TueSday helping with the processes
involved and transporting patients to the
clinic from their homes which can be any
place in Meigs or Gallia Counties and as a
result can be far from the Cheshire clinic.

WEATHER REPORt

Jewelry, Etc.
Great~

Project Assist Program :
' SerVice where it is Needed
In Meigs, Gallia Counties

1.

·Ratified

CHARLIE BOYD OF DOVER, Ky., e&lt;bibited the granclcbulplon IJall allbe
Southeastern Ohio Polled Hereford Sbow at !be Meigs County Fair Friday. IIDJd
also had the reserve champion bull and tile reserve champion ftmale. (See page 2
other Meigs County Fair pictures).

Grant Johnson Had
Fair's Top Steer
(See Picturt on Page%)
POMEROY - Two years ago Grant
Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gay Johnsoo,
Albany Route 3, was very ill. His illness
was diagnosed as diabetes. Far the
youngster - just two days before his 13th
birthday -it was lhe end of the world.
However, Grant decided to learn to live
with his problem. Friday nigh! his grand
champion steer was sold al the Meigs
Counly Fair Steer and Lamb Sale for top

14, raise 45 head of catUe on lbeir paren!s'
l!ikcre farm . Although he loves, lbe
outdoor life and fanning , Grant lmowS that
he must have a college educatioo to beUBlive with his handicap. He hopes to proceeds from the sale of ca\l}e he raises
toward this end.
Grant administers an insulin sbOI to
himself each morning and must earefully
wal.ch his diet at all times. He has reculm'
medicalattention to help him live with his
ailment. He's getting along fine, but lbe
disease. isn't something that be will
outgroW.
•
Amember of the Meig$ County Better
Livestock Club, tllrough whicb bis JiiiR
steer was raised - lbeprojectstartiJ:C last
January - Grant will be a sophumcae at
j\lexander High School lllis )'W'. He
.belongs to the Fulure Farmers of Arne! icll
· at !be school.
Grant has been encouraged in ~
realisti~ approach to li~ ~
because his success may inspire o!la
young folkJ who suffer unavcidable rnw-11-

MARION - Ratification by union
membership of a new two-year. contract
between the Communications Workers of
America and General Telephone Co. of
Ohio was announced Saturday by labor
and management officials.
The new agreement, valued at a record
$3,438,1100, is subject to President Nixon's
price-wage freeze, however, officials said.
ll also provides improvement of fringe
money.
benefits and certain rules changes. The
Now-15, Grant and his brother, Randy,
agreement concluded 19 weeks of labormanagement lalks. Tentative agreement
had been reached Aug. 12.
Old Man Blanda
The cost of the package will total
$1,964,1100 the first year and $1,164,000 the
Does it Again
second. Effective date was listed as April
25.
BERKELEy, Calif. (UPI)
First-year wage increases for plant
Venerable Georce Blaada, oaktond's e
employes will range from !5 to 42 cents at
year-old II·Ollder, tossed a 35-ylt'd loach-·
the top. Traffic employes will receive 25 to dowu pass to Drew Bule ud boeted 1
29 cents increases and clerical, 24 to 30
pair of field goals S.turday to boost the
cents. Increases also were established for Raiders to a 21-1 preoeasoa victory over
night-duty tours, ranging from 18 cents to
the Los Aogeles Rams.
30 cents. AU increases are on an hourly
The game was the first professioul
basis.
contest played at !be UDiversity of
Major benefits ·changes call for an
California's Memorial Stadllllll ud
additional holiday (President's Day ) in
attracted a crowd of i'l,'l'D, a new
'
1972, and improved h\)SIIitalization and Raiders borne """'fd, Tbt eld DWtr; wu
COFC 10 liBEl'
major medical plans. Also, eligible emPOMEROY- The Pauaoy 0' ' «
iit,5M aplost S.a Diego last n s •
ployes will get three weeks vacalio~ after
of Commerce will meet ...lloolay at .... "
=~~==i&lt;!-~::~:~~~~!}~~-«~»:=:.'%:-1c-.~~ Bowen Rt'SIIlniiL
(Continued on. Page 2)
.

------ - -

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