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'
a-.'l'beDIIIJSmtinel,~.o., Aug

n, tm

:T hree Collisions Reported
. Fo.ur accidents, divided
evenly . between Gallia and
lleigs Counties, were in\Jeltlgated over the weekend by
lbe Gallia-l.leigs Post State
~hway Patrol.
· The first occurr!ld ·Sunday at
on · the narrow township
road near Danville w))ere cars
driven by Allina Crisp, 20, Rt.l,
Vinton, and Terry M. Jarrell,
17, Rt. ·I, Langsville, collided.
1bere was moderate damage to
both cars, No one was injured or
cited.

noon

Also on \Sunday, at 2:30p.m.
on Sowards Ridge Rd., two and
four lenths miles from Rt. 553,
vehicles operated by Shennan
L. Parsons, 25, Rt. I, Crown
City, and Leoriard A. Biland, 50,
GallipOlis, collided in a curve.
· Again, no one was injured or

Autos Collide

Pomeroy police ·investigated
a two car accident Saturday at
8 : ~ p. m. at the intersection of
Nye Ave. and East Main St.
Melvin Swisher, Middleport,
was approaching the intersecljon when a car drt--•n by
William Johnson coming off
Nye Ave . st:·cck Swisher 's
vehicle in the left front.
Johnson was cited to court on
charges of driving left of center.
Tbere were no injuries and
Mollie Talbott, 95, Portland, medium damage to both
died Saturday in the Veterans vehicles.
Memorial Hospital. Born Oct. 2,
l875
she was the daughter of
.
UNIT CALLED
the late Isaac and Mary Haddox The Pomeroy E·R squad went
Wolfe. Her husband, William, Swtday at 1:29 p. m. to the
rued in 1953, and four children, Herbert Whaley residence on
Den, Rupbus, Holly, and Lyda, SR 681 for Bob Whaley who was
also preceded her in death.
taken to Veterans Memorial
Surviving are these children, Hospital and admitted.
Ada Fox, Belmont; Nelle
Middleswart, Portland;
Stanley, Clarksburg, W. Va.;
Floyd, Barberton; Charles,
Henry and Burl, all of
Steubenville; also, 45 grandchildren, sevel-al great and
CAMDEN, N.J . .(UPI)-Fe·
great-great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held deral authorities began checkTuesday at 1 p.m. at the Ewing ing "thoroughly" today to find
Chapel with the Rev. Freeland out how more than a quarter·
Norris officiating, Burial will be million cans of conUlJninated
lD tile Stiversvilie Cemetery. ~hicken . vegetable broth was
Friends may ·call at the fwteral shipped without detection from
the CampbeU Soup Co. plant at
bome any lime.
Paris, Tex., to 16 states.
Pleuant Valley Hospllal
Officials at Campbell headADMISSIONS Wiley quarters here recalled 4,799
Bonds, Point Pleasant; Mrs. cases of the soup-230.~2 cans
Richard Clonch, Gallipolis; -after company chemists dis·
Mrs. Bus Daniels, 'Leon; Mrs. covered Swtday that the
Paul Chadwell, Middleport; product was contaminated by
Alfred Hussell, Point Pleasant; botulism, a sometimes fatal
Oyde Devore, Fraziers Bot- !Qxic that attacks the nervous
tom; Mrs. Dencil Barnette, · system.
Hometown, W.Va.; Cecil Hall,
William Parker, director of
Charles LuckeydQo, Point Campbell's Information Servi·
PleaSilnt; Mrs. Norman ces, said the company had
Nicholson, Evans; Roger "ascertained the whereabouts
HudNIII, Morral, 0.
of 2,768 cases" by late Sunday
DI.SCHARGES - Herman night, leaving 2,0:Jl cases still
ltephens, Vinton Cossin, James unaccoWJted for.
Pore, Wirt· Robbins, William
it was the nation's second
McCoy, BonDe HudnaU, Mrs. major discovery of soup
Donald Cossin, Riley Bonds and contamination by botulism in as
Mrs. Anna Beller.
many months. Bon Vivant Co.
BffiTHS - AUgUSI2a,asonto of Newark, N.J., reported the
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Clonch, first in vichyssoise, 'a c_old
Gallipolis; a son to Mr .. and potato soup, and subsequently
Mrs. Bus 1&gt;aniels, Leon, and declared itself bankrupt.
daughter, Mr. and 1!Irs. Paul
Kenneth M. Clair, Campbell's
ChadweU, Middleport.
vice president for public
relations, said the cans of
contaminated soup, bearing the
code . nwnber "07,pl3,70lx,"
were shipped from the compa·
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
ny's Paris plant to Alabama,
August2~24
Arkansas, Colorado, Florida,
LITTLE MURDERS
Georgia,
Kansas, Kentucky,
ITecbnicolorl
Louisiana, Nebraska, New MexElliott Gould
Donald Sutherland
ico, Mississippi, Missouri, OklaR
homa, Tennessee, Texas and
ta~rcartoons :
Wyoming.
Royal Royally
Clair said the contaminated
Klondike Strikeout
Riverboat Mession
product was processed July 15,
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
but that Campbell was recalling

'Mollie Talbott

J)ied Saturday

At Age of95

..

F·eds

jiarol~

Marcwn, 42, Rt. 2,
Vinton, had minor injutl~s in a
' single car accident at 9 p.m.
Saturday on Rl. 325, six tenths
of a mUe north of Vinton. The
patrol Sllid Marci!ID lost ·control
Of his car, ran off the highway
and struck a tree.
A second Meigs CoWJiy ac·
cident was investigated ::t 7
p.m. Saturday on Coonty Road
298, three tenths of a mile west
of Rt. 7 where cars driven by V~LCALVES-Tops42.70;
Roger · L. Bah!', 24, Rt. 3, Seconds 38 to 41.50; Medium 35
Reedsville, and F;enneth V. to 39; Com. &amp; Hvs. 32 to 38.40;
Chafee, Rt. 3, Reedsville, Culls 35 DOwn.
collided in a curve. There was BABY CALVES - 20 to 70.
moderate damage to both cars,
no injuries or citations.
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
Hogs: 200-230, 1~.25; No. I,
WCALTEMPS
Temperature in downtown 19.50; 2J0.240, 19; 240-ZilO, 18.50;
Pomeroy Monday at 11 a. m. 260-280, 17.75; 100-200, 1~.75; 160was 12 degrees WJder cloudy 190, 18.25; Sows, 325-400, 15.6016; 4(10.000, 16.95-17.70; Boars,
skies.
14.95; Shoals, 13.50-19.75.
Cattle: Choir(! Steers, 33CLASSES BEGIN
Adult swinuning classes will 33.75; Good Steers, 29.85-31.50;
be given at the Middleport Pool Choice Heifers, 30.50-32; Good
beginning today through Heifers, 28-29.85; Good Cows,
Friday. Classes will be held 20-22.60; Utthty 18.75-!.9. 50:
from 10;30 to 12;30 daUy. Total Canners and Cutters, 17.50
cost is $8. Tbose Interested may down; Bulls, 27.50-30.10; He!'vy
call Bernie Hennessy at 99:!-2261 Feeder Steers, 27.50-30; Heavy
Stock Calves Steers, 28.51).35.75.
anytime.

BOOSTERS TO MEET
Southern
Local
Band
Booslers will meet Tuesday at
7:30p.m. at the high school.
GLENN HOGUE DIES
Mr. and Mrs. David T.
Grueser, Pomeroy, learned
Sunday of the death of Glenn
Hogue, 67, of New Palestine,
Ohio, of an apparent heart
attack. Mr. Hogue was the
father-in-law of Mrs. Mary
Donna Grueser Hogue. He also
is survived by his wife, two
children, and two grand·
children.

all of the chicken vegetable allow soup only to simmer to
soup packed at its Paris plant preserve its flavor.
"as an extra safety factor."
In Washington, the AgriculUnlike the botulism contamin- lure Department urged consuation of Bon Vivant Products, mers in the affected stales, as
Parker reported "there has . well as in neighboring locales,
been no illness and there is not to "carefully destroy any
likely to ~ any illness" as a chicken vegetable soup in such
result of the Campbell conta- a way as will prevent it being
mination. Parker said. most conswned by humans and
consumers would be repelled by animals."
"the foul odor" of the
contaminated prodpcls.
KennethM. McEnroe, head of
Bon Vivant recalled more the USDA's Meat and Poultry
than a million cans of Inspection Service, said the
vichyssoise and other products agency's resident inspector at
following the Jwte 30 death of Paris woUld "check thoroughly"
Samuel Cochran Jr., a Bedford, to discover how the contaminatN.Y., bsnker who died after ed soup escaped detection.
eating some of the supposedly The USDA's Consumer and
contaminatedpotatosoup.
Marketing Service also said it
Clair also said the botulism, was "contacting the Center for
which results from inadequate Disease Control In Atlanta, G;t.,
heating during .canning, could and the public health authoribe neutralized by boiling. But ties in the states in which the
an Agriculture Department possibly contaminated product
spokesman said most people has been distributed."

News••• in BriefS

DOllar's Strength_Spouy .

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
. SatUrday, A,;g. Zl, 1971,
. SALES REPORT OF
Oblo Vallev uvestock eo.
HOGS-175 to 220 lbs. 19.35 to
19.60; 220 to ' 250 lbs. 18.75 to
19.30; Light ,15 to 17.25; Fat
Sows 13.50 to 15.25; Boars 13 to
14.25; Pigs 4 to 10.25; Shoats 10
to 16.50.
CATTLE -Steers 28 to 33.50;
Heifers 23.50 to.29.50; Baby Beef
30to 36.25; Fat Cows 18 to 22.60;
Canners .15 to 22; Bulls 22 to
27.75; Milk Cows 175 to 265,

Begin Soup Probe

·.MEIGS tHEATRE

Tonight &amp; Tuesday
Augusl23·2•
Dotlble Feature Program
"MONTE WALSH"
· LeeMarvJn
Jack Palance
GP
-PLUSONCE YOU KISS
A STRANGER
I Color)
Paul Burke
Carol Lynley
GP

cited.

Market Report.

Now You Know

.
~~ tnm Po&amp;• 1)
WNDON IUPI) - Tlae U.S. dOllar n11e iD early .l radlil( ·
jungle clearing 32lliiles nartlnn!st of Saiiloo. military spoke$neD
1u WestGemlany butdr.,....J iD BriiBID and Swedea today iD
tile first test of liB slnugfll oa tile majcJr Eanpeu 111411ey . said.
mai'll:els siD«:e Preildeat Nlxoa's maslk ecllllemlc moves · ·FB/Tracking Precision RaWs
Aug. 15.
.
CAMDEN, N. 1.- FBI OONTINUED.IieQng logelller !be
· .· Tbe ferelga eurreaey markelll ·reapellelillda faoi111Dg
bizarre delillls today of Jftdsillll weekend ~ by anti-war •
after.remaiDing closed last week to live goveomeals . a
activists on Selective Ser-vice ~as here and itt Buffalo, N~;Y.
chanre to evalua~ .!be pr.U.bly effee61 of Nix,..•s aetlon,
Tweniy~ve per.II!OS 1ft!r1! arrested, incl1idiDg lwo RAman
wbicb lncbided floaliDI: ~ file dollar.
Catholic priests and oil Lutlleran millisfer. ,\it Obi08111!1S amont
The dollar opened af U175 Germu. marks iD FraDkfart
those arrested. . . ·.
.·
·
aad quickly rose to M~- II bad bit il D-year low of 3.3'135
Acljng oo. an ili~s lip, agents sa\4 they 8ITellled II
marks Ang. 13 prier to Nlxilll'~ IIIIIIOIIIICement.
pe~ in Camden -eigl!t in draft board Glites, eight ot6tn in
tile aparlml!nt of !be Protestant minW... and four otbers in a
nearby churehyanl- and me m4R susped8 as tbey J1IIIS!ICked
. the offices of the Buffalo Draft Board and an Army intelligence
unit.

SAIGON (UPI)-Vice Pres·
ident Nguyen Cao Ky pulled out
of the Oct. 3 presidential race
today despite U.S. efforts to
keep him . in. He proposed
instead that he and President
Nguyen Van Tbieu resign
immediately so a new election
could be organized.
The South Vietnamese supreme court placed Ky 's name
on the ballot Saturday, revers·
ing an earlier ruling that he
was ineligible, but Ky said the
law should be flexible enough to
allow him to remove it.
Ky said he was pulling out
because
of
Thien's
"maneuvers." Gen. Duong Van
"Big" Minh, the only other
major candidate, dropped out
of the race last week charging
the election was rigged.
The reduction of the field to
one man dismayed American
officials. U.S. Ambassador Ells·
worth BWJker had been meeting
with Thien, Minh and Ky in an
effort to avoid such a situation.

The U.S. em~ issued a
statement today' saying "we
regret the decision. of Vice
President Ky not to contest the
election for the presidency of
tile Republic of Vielnam. We
are studying the implications of
the situation and have no
further cOIJliilent at this lime."
(At San Clemente, President
Nixon was reported to be
deeply conrerned about Ky !s
decision but a spokesman had
no immediate comment. )

MASON
Geraldine
Wheeler, 61, Mason, died
Friday evening at Holzer
Medical Center. She was born
Nov ..39, 1909 at Rockland, Ohio,
the daUghter of the late Olarles
William and Alma Mae Fulton
Swan. She was a11;o preceded in
death by her husband, John F.
Wheeler.
Mrs . · Wheeler operated a

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Member FDIC
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MillS Esc.IIJM! Plot Hinted
SAN QUI!M'IN, CAUl'. - mE BUIODII!ST ou1lreat in
SID ,mill's llistmy may law.. laD ~ ol a plot for a mass
·wape alll!qlt by batlo&gt;:Ed o initu -=iic lhe wlifunm c:l
slala guads, pri!llla cftirials said lhdaJ. Black renlalianal)
Gecrge Jecbm pulled a ...cg~w~ p fnm his Afro.stJie bair
Salunlay, aflldalssaid.OalJ 'l"imml" befcn,bebad - - visitBl
by ~llllmeJ' S' 11w1 iiildlell Bitclwn, gno..._ ol a (ormer
O•uwllcut co•a• aDdu. s. - •TwaiiY mlnates later .. .... and live olbas lay dead, incltu!!ag ane glllldl aDd blo wlite nmtes " ' - tbroats were
odnJel will ruar Nadrs An&amp;rJ slate allllailils ""'dey set a
new g.ump Jdicy IIPind '\ew'*t!Dm) IJpr" immles and
lbeinililln, andJUChtBi•.-m, 2t,gJ•l'doY•t c:lthe late Biram
Bingham, ''for qweslialing about tbe snargJed PI-"

·DetaU. of Bedin. A«&lt;nl Rem.in
MR1 1N - oe•ss•.., OF tbe Uaited States, Britain,
Fralllleaud lbe Soviet UiaanJM"Gbablfwill u.ti!Pinae:d mmtb
t.o wove lalb by lbe East IIIII West Gauaas to wwt out
'tnelical details olthe 4"*"*''\ to ad fmsjm ill West Berlia..
An Allied!IP'•_..,said lbe Bill: fair
in Ibm- ae:d
meeU..W would initill tile aga...,.,. after Uleir guva 11•enls
... ov~ It, lbellatbcriR lbe talb by lilt East aDd West Ger-

n• •u

SAIGON - 1BE U. S.. CDIIUHD today wdtied all
AIDtrkan aenieaneD aft tbe slnds ol Soafll Vietaame!e cities
and townsbeatuae ol pD"Qtte palitalwesi ia "'"*"tim wilb
amday'l parlilmeDIIIy eleeliuas.
On latlleft wta, U. S. 1152 lat•e s and artiiler) p• •""'
Narfll Vleban r rodiet aqllpetrid:S,\nql '*'"H4•alians
and artillery pcl!itiWJS imide the llanilitariml Zoae. The U. S.
cmunand also l:!pCK1IJI tbat t.o ADBicaD Ft Fbantcm jets
atllcked BDIDtiainnft site iaside Nartll \"""""" ""'dey after
ltflredooatblniU.S.FUiyiagartmA · tum' ·wE by.

Veteran.a Urge Slmng Controla
WASIDNG10N - IRBEE FCP""R WAGB-I'IUCK admllUtralln ar:ged lbe govawt MtahJ Ill in' e kg tenD
eml-ois ooat least bask id 'V IIIII llig PW1s be{llle 1'\ · M
Nlzon's ~ helle mds Ill avaid a - rwmd ol inlla!Dm)
lacnues. The) IIIPeed tbat a buanl Ill wlnit · t..r the twltrols
aboald be made .. ol!ep tlalifts ~ labw-, '•ri• . and tile
cmmmer aDd should
lbeaalfuity 111 elun:e ils dro • • IK
~ ~ lhe Jciill """+nic f)mrniUee were Paul
Pui-ter, wbo b lied both lheBmtOIIItnll'\"ii- aDd the Olliee
ol Price Adndmslnltiua (OPA) iD Wwid War D; Mil' d V.
JliLDe, fouoer tldo g01auar _. prb adN ..,;. "41118
Wring the Koreaa war, and~ W. ,..., a nril•e olthe
War L11Mr Board in World W• n aud bead c:l lbe Wage
( cmt;rn..;;, ua (lllge j )
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-IRASH.

FIGHT LITTEll
Use Utter lags &amp; Returnable lottles

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PI 'I ' Npyea Vaa Tlllea
- tile sec-' saeh fiery
pn1est ill dCJ!t daJS.
fte Sealla Vlelumese
poljtirwl sltuliell faced tile
. . . . willa its pakst msts
slue tile !HI Baddlllst
... ilmj:i ....., a wave of
sub bvala1s swept the
.. ... ,. Belli lite u. s. and
s-lit Vldamese military
_,mawk taok pm2alloas
Way a,aiast furtller ex·
peded vlalellee.

WNDON (UPil-Tbe U.S. which existed before lbe mark
dollar suffered a sharp new was allowed to float on May 10.
setback on West German · This was a sharp drop
money markets today, and compared with the 3.4Zi0 marks
bankers said a report by the quotation fixed Monday wben
International Monetary FWld money markets reopened aft«
(lMF) appeared to be responsi- a week's closure to review lbe
ble. The dollar dipped slightly situation created by President
on other markets, then beld Nixon's Aug. 15 announcemeat
finn.
of a new U.S. economic policy.
The Frankfurt money market
fixed the official quotation for "Tbe sudden drop in Ole
the day at 3.39&amp;0 marks, dollar quotation in early trading
equivalent to a dollar devalua- between banks came as a
lion of 7.2 per cent compared surprise," a bank spokesman
with the officia13.66 marks rate said. " It appears a report by

lbe IMF ia Washington caused
a new rusb to arbange dollars
for marts.
Be said the IMF had listed
its prediclilm of eventual
quolatiiDS of leading currencies
against the dollar, when marke1s seUie dotni. The list
predicted aa upward revalua·
tim ol the mark against the
dollar of 12 to 13 per cent.
Such a de facto revaluation
would be a disaster for German
ezporters, and Eronomics and
Ji'lnaDfe Minister Karl Schiller
quietly deuouoced the lMF

gain a volWJtary hold on
interest rates-as requested by
Nixon in his A,;g. 15 8lliiOUIICiement-was totally inadequate.
He said credit control legisi•lion passed by Congress nearly
two years ago .gives Ole
President power to con1rol any
and all credit.
"This is broad power, giving
the President aut!Krity to
stabilize and roll back interest
rates to any level he desires,"
Patman said. "... It is
economic folly of the highest
order to let the banks go soot
free while the rest of the natiua
is called on for sacrifices."
Mortgage ihterest rates for
non FHA and VA loans have
been rising again, reaching ?.?t
per cent in July COOlpal'ed to
an average 7 per cent earlier
this year. During 1969 and 1970
rates peaked at a per cent er
mere, depressing the lMme
building buying market.
On anotller front it was
revealed that an a per cent
price hike announced by the
basic steel industry nine days
before the freeze began ·would
not be affected by the freeze.

Without the ruling !be industry

Mortgage
Money is
Loosened
WASHINGTON ( UP!) -The
government took action today
designed to stabilize interest
rates on mortgage loans and to
make more money available for
loans to lMme buyers.
The Federal Heme Loan
Bank Board (FHLBB), which
regulates savings and loan
institntious, announced a reductim ia the amount of cash
lhose institutiWlS must keep on
hand ia reserve for emergeacies, freeing up to $110 millioo
fer lending to home buyers.
AI the same time the Federal
Htme Loan Mlrlgage Corporalien fFIILMC), wbiclt buys
mortgages bun S-and-L's, cut
its dlarge wllich would reduce
tile cost ol a $20,000 mortgage
by $600 and also announced il
would make $300 million
available to buy FHA and VA
mortgages.
Preslou Martin, FHLBB
cbairmali, told a news conference be was coofident !be two
aetiWlS would bait an upward
climb ia m«tgage interest
rates.
The upswing started In Jwte
and accelerated ln July after a
sharp decline frwn histwic
highs reached during the tight
money period oll!lfi!l and 1970.
At lhat time interest rates paid
by lHme buyers ...,.., as high
as 9 per cent.
Said Martin ; ' 'Thi!l action and
the signal It tepr nts is to
say to lenders, 'Go ahead and
make your loan. We want you
to cmtiaue to make funds
(Coalinued oo page 8)

WASHINGTON (UP! ) -The
government moved today to
attempt some control over
mortgage interest rates, amid
new cbarges tbat President
Nixon's failure to include the
rates in .his wage-price freeze
constituted "sheer economic
foUy ."
The Federal Home Loan
Bank boanl planned a slatement at 10 a.m. EDT on the
interest question - something
that should have been dealt
with when tile freeze began
Aug. 15, acconling to Rep.
Wright Patman, D-Tex.
Patman, chainnan of the
House Banking Ownmittee, said
the administration's attempt to

TUJO Accidents
Investigated
Two single car accidents were
reported today by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Dept. There
were no injuries.
On SR :till Monday nigbt, Fred
Older, 22, Racine, Rt. 2, was
traviiling nertlleast wben a dog
ran in front of his car. Older
applied his brakes, the car slid
in loose gravel Into a guardrail,
traveled an additional 500 feet
and s~ an embankment.
Older was arrested oo cbarges
of reckless operation and no
operator's license. The car was
demOlished.
Today at a a.m. near
Whispering Pines Night Club,
Roy Kesterson, 39, Pomeroy,
got too close to lbe_edge of lbe
highway and went over an
embankment. Damage to his

Roral
Crown
loHiin1 Companr ·
r
.
,li~~le,.rt,

•i•

accep1ed by subewnmitlee members John
M. ScoU, R-Fairborn, and OmS. MadWs.
Befwe the ""lf'Niment, lbe bW would
have requlled ~ auJ gJWiiDg to
be started witia sill DIWllhs ol !be start of
miaing. ·ADQCber yar woald have Ileal
a11oweci far replanting and the chief of
forestry woald bate been able to grant
a:temiWII ,.. the planlit« deadline if a
~ o,riic
111 bad jUst p
eII.
Creasy's ameadment moves tbe
timelable fctrward, etinliales the loqJbole
IIIII allows lbe chief to reipdre an even
4 ! Jier redamalim .....
if praclk:able.
Reduutlilll llliiSt be COilCIU'Idlt with
milfit« ~Diet !be biD. 'l1IIIS, sill mualhs
frWD lbe time !be e.wlb Is 1m i£d, !bat spot
must he padtd. One gJowiJC iiWI later.
as little as. sill 100111111, planijt«
1111111 be cwupleled. A .ma•'"toun 11
IDCIIIbs Ia a&amp; wed for filial ndematioo.
0'..,- said the tec~amailwa provisions
a-e 1a1rtea frGm l'l!lliiql¥ I'I A-il 1 mt
ln,wl*llhuaid"u •lobeWwtl!c."
1be nw'''*"*dDpe fw ..... af ....

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HOYAL CROWN 'COI.A

•

amusement companies be
contacted in order to upgrade
the rides at the regatta. Mees
felt the quality of rides could be
improved .
Mees was given pennission to
contact other companies as to
cost and what additional rides
could be secured. Attending
were Kerr, Bill Grueser, Mees,
Earl Ingels, Richard Cham·
bers, Carsey, C. E. Blakeslee,
Beulah Jones and Katie Crow.

,.,

Beefed•up Strip Bill in Works ·

~

_J
..-FARMERS BANK t
-tc
.t... an
. d. ('~!...
A\liNGS
·-

*Y

Gla Ordered off .S.i,sun Sln:eta

t

...

cr..w

tile I*"......

IJKE FA'hlER, Ere. de)larilnelll. tMs lime wldo tw•
Getrce SaU Uf, - .r Ute BRfM Red Sol&lt;
t hawma•, sMwDJ: a llit If tile blllily f..,.. warmlag liP for Iaiiierat Femray Put..

Plllilicaloblerwnsaid lbe projetW talb bebreal East ...
West Germ111J coald a• ••udw 111MJ :uac:s. but Americaa
,&amp;mba
'er Keaaelb Ra!b said he felt llla!r talb nuld DDt taR
an iiD'diaalle !!!MU!I c:llime'. Bllsb, Sorie.t Ant
'" I'Jalr A..
Abrulmov, llrilisll Amt
n Sir ~~~p Joo •li•c _. Fraacb
Ambo · 'er Jean SaifCIIiigotS ~1ified lbl!ir a.gFMnent ua
lbe pact wilb lwwhle)e J1ca1aJ.

'

chants to see if IIIey would be
interested in donating an annual
smn to hire a parl1ime employe.
Beulah Jones suggested that a
bo odue of the county be made
available for oew residents.
Mrs. :Sones is to make a listing
ol what is available and submit
the typed inlormalion to C. E.
Blakeslee who will make
mimeographed copies for
dislrihutim.
.TIDl Mees SUAAested other

M I L I T A R Y ENGINEERING Is Susanne M.
Oeobock's game. The first
woman to OU such a post,
lbe Womea's Air Force
second lieutenant, !4, Is a
graduate of lbe Ualvenlty
of Mlcblgaa and aalgned
as an ladustrlal civil engineer at KeUy Air Force
Base, San Antonio.

.sea.

mmll.

-MOON.

forsaleorrentwasdiscusSedat
length. Paul Simon already bas
offered office space fer lhat
purpose.
Hiring a partlime employe to
perform the listings, to provide
information to new residents,
and to assist !be chamber witb
the annual Christmas promotion was discussed.
J:'ollowing a motion made by
Jack Carsey the cbamber
agreed to contact local 1111!1'·

\'eferu bwaed bjmsejt to
c.day ID Da Nug to
I* les' tile aiJeced riulnl of

B) Ullilel ..... ..._..,.

D.1·· lYE-INBANKING

7

..

therewasatievoteforthesixth
seat.
Membel's agreed to contact
boating •ssociatioos informing
them of next year's Regatta
dales in order to engage boats
for the boat races.
Kerr suggested the chamber
sponscr a banquet for 4-H
members and advisors. He said
this is done anm,ally in Lancaster by the chamber there.
The problem of listing houses

SAIGON fUPil - A
disabled Vietumese war

Veteraas Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Viola Moon, Chester; Naomi
Select what you need lor the boys and young men
Bissell, Chesler; William
going back to school. Big selections of pants in
regular cuts and flares. Many, many shirts for men
Haley, Rutland; Rebecca
and
boys, too, in cut and sewn types and knits. Be
South, Minersville.
sure -to see our fine line of Sweaters in all sizes. See
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
our many, many styles o.f Jackets and Coats. Hanes
- Herbert Bradley, Marjorie
Underwear· Belts · Socks · Blue Jeans by Wrangler
and
Lee · Pajamas - Robes - Gym Trunks · Alhlelic
Hunt, Timothy Imboden,
Supporters·
Boot Cut Lee Riders. You'll enjoy your
Raymond Lambert, Mae
back-to-school shopping at Elberlelds - All mer·
Brown.
chandise arranged for your easy selection
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Plainly marked - ready lor you to buy.
Winton ChadweU, Amesville;
NeD Haymaker, New Haven;
Harold Smith, New Haven;
Robert Whaley, Shade; Kevin
SCHOOL SUPPUES ON THE 1st FLOOR
Pullins, Gallipolis; Barbara
Pencils . Pens . Composition books - Clip Boanls Casto, Gallipolis; Frank
Theme paper . Typing paper · Erasers - Rulers Niggmeyer, Middleport ; John
Comp~sses and many other items you'll need for
Smith, Racine; Doris Haynes,
busy school clays ahead.
Middleport ; Minnie Hall ,
Vinton.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES ,-,
Martha Graham, Jo Ann Clark,
Kenneth Braun, Rodney Klein,
Darlene Klein, Thomas Smith,
Harry YoWJg, Cathy Yates, .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,

'

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

FIERY PROTEST

1

*If Qu'ckl
* Easy* t

· -

·.·.·.·.·.·.·•·..........·.·.·........·..·....

! News••. in Briefs !

a

-II Other Banking Hours 9 to -II
-1&lt; 3 and s to 7 as usual on- .fl:
Fri~ays.
-1&lt;

June 16, 17 and 18 are the
dates set down for !be 19'12 Big
Bend Regatta by tbe Pomeroy
Ownber ol Commerce.
·
Jack Kerr, president,
presiding Monday foUowing
luneh at Bowers Drive-In
Restaurant, appointed Bill
Groeser and Jack Carsey
Regatta chairmen.
Karr also named ~1 Ingels
to the boanl of directors. When
directors were elected earlier,

,---------------------------,

John Kauff.

TUESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1971

'12 Regatta Dates Set

Make Elberfelds II pomeroy Your
Headquarters For-Back-to-School Need

For Today ... '

...

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

CODValescent hilme here.
She .is survived by four
sisters, Mrs. Wade Hayman and
Mrs. HarrY Hayman, both of
PomeroY; Mrs, Carl Loomis,
Dayton, and Mrs. Pauline
McGuffin, Gallipolis.
Funeral services were held
today at tile Foglesong Funeral
Home wilb the Rev. George
Oiler officiating. Burial was in
Suncrest MemOrial Park.

t 'A Tho.....

OIL SLICK
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
(UPI)- An oil :dick estimated
1,200 gallons and stretch_mg
over a dtstance of 20 mtle~
began . washing ashor~ Sunday
night near the Western While
House, the Coast Guard
reported. The slick was
reported reaching the shore i_n a
tilree·mile stretCh from Dana
Point to San Clemente pier.

VOL XXIV NO. 92

Shop In The Busy Men's
And Boys' Department
On The 1st Floor

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Tbe 118th Ohio State Fair, with the
Carpenters and Tom Jones heaillining the entertainment, opens
here Thursday for a 12-day run. Gov. John J. Gilligan will of.
ficially open the fair at a 6 a.m. ribbon-&lt;:ntting ceremony. This
year's fairisbelngpubllcizedas "A Place In the Fun."
Fair manager Jerry L. Kaltenbach said there wiD be 63,000
exhibiUons, more than 100 grandstand attractions and more than
~ new events this year.
Scheduled opening day is the ces the first two days of the
2nd annual Marching Band Fes· fair and the fourth annual Amtival with 29 Ohio bands com- ateur Boxing Tournament will
peting for prizes. Each band is be conducted the first three days.
to perform four minutes and be Three rings are to be operated
graded on marching and play- simutaneously with more then
300boxerscompeting.
ing ability.
"Doc" Severlnsen of the "To- The grandstand entertainment
night" television program is to schedule includ"l': Tom Jones,
play a free concert with the the Blossoms and comedian Pat
winning band at a later date. Henry, Aug. 31 • Sept. 1; JohnThe Carpenters and Mac Da- ny Cash, Sept 2-3 : Cincinnati
vis are scheduled for performan Symphony, Sept. 4; Masters Fes
lival of Music with Boots Ran·
dolph, Chet -Atkins and Floyd
PITTSBURGH fUPil Cramer, Sept. 5 the "Doc" SeTbe Pittsburgh Pirates an· verinsen show, Sept. 4-ii, and
nouoeed today lballickels for Bobby Sherman, Sept. 6.
games 3, 4 aad 5 of the
· Dave Merrifield is to perform
National League cham· acrobatic stWJls dangling from a
pioosblp series will go on sale helicopter all 12 days of the
Sept. 13.
fair.
Tbe over-the-counter sale
will beglu at 9 a.m. at Three . ~lf-Jflf-¥¥¥¥-lf-lf-lf-lflflflf-J'
Rivers Stadium, at the
1._l__ ;
downtown G. C. Murphy Co. .,.
~-':
.,.
store and the Webster Hall ...
Hotel. Box seals are $7, ~
·
-1&lt;
reserved seals $5, regular ~ It is just as easy to form ~
general admission at $3 and -1&lt; good habit as it Is a bad -1&lt;
general admission youth -1&lt; one.
·
-11
tickets for youag people 16 -ti:
-William McKinley -1&lt;
and Wider are $2. Mall orders ~
~
will be accepted If they are -1&lt;
-1&lt;
postmarked after mldalght -1&lt;
-1&lt;
Saturday, Sept. 11. A $1 ~
S. I ..
malllng and baodUng charge ~-1&lt;
:f
should be added to each mall
.,.
order request. Eacb mall -1&lt;
~
order should he accompanied -11
.
-11
by a check ·or money order ~
Fridays Only
payable to Pittsburgh -1&lt; The Drive-In WindOVJ :;
Baseball Club, P. 0. Bo• 6415, -11
is Open
,
-11
Pittsburgh, Pa., 15%12.
-II
~ A.M. to 7 P.M.
-1&lt;

1Con1i n u ou s1y l

Ills.

Mrs. W/aeder. Buried Monday

Elberfelds In Pomero

'

t

SUnny and cool IOday. lfiCII
mid 70s to lower lis, Clear and
not as cool tooight. !,ow In the
5Cb. Wednesday ·mosUy IRIIliiY
and a little warmer. fll&amp;h
Wednesday upper 70s to llllddl!!

Open Voting Proposed

State Fair to
Open Thursday

;;:::::::::;::::::;&lt;:;,:::~,:;::=:::m=:=:=~;=~~;:::;;:::::;~;:

W~er

walla II 11ft I J

P

aq-e . . . .

111111

Jh rt'llna 1 w,o-,Aid.
I

IDQ:bt have been pinciJed tryin~
to _ . the lli per cent wage
iller
that wmt into effect
for steelww:kers Aug. 1, the
govaWidll said.
Under Ole general freeze
rules, a finn can aot seD its
p odacts at prices higher than
those at -.hidl it was selling a
su"s'antial number of its
I* odacls ia the 311 days befoce
lbe freeze began. Since steel
sales were sJorgisb, il was
doublfal uie indus1ry would
bave qualified to extend !be
pric:e rise into !be freeze
period.

In California the Western
White House aDllllllllced that
the gtKaWDeilt wuuld drop its
case against Teus Gov.
PresiAJo Smith, DOW that Smith
bas Ileal wemlled by his own
attomey genraJ in his defiance
ol the wage freeze. Smith
noted to grant wage lncnases
to IJZ,IIlll state employes and
scltool teacbas Sept. I, but
dropped his plans after the
Teus attomey general ruled
that the freez.e reached the

tCw"

rd •

':-I• a,

Mrs. Shuler Will
Direct Welfare

calculations as presenting "totally unreal values."
The IMF predicted 12 !o 13
per rent upward revaluation of
the mark, 7 per cent for the · - -- - - - - - French franc and pound sterling and 15 per cent for the
Japanese yen.
So far those figures have not
been reflected in market prices,
and Japan was still buying up
American dollars to protect the
360 to I · ratio. The Tokyo
market was flooded by !levalua·
lion rumors of up to 20 per cent
but the government today once
more refused to revalue.
Switzerland reopened its currency exchange markets today,
one day after most of Europe,
Charles A. Lawson was hired
and they traded the dollar at
as a village poliCeman, and all
3.9'170 Swiss francs, a devalua· policemen were placed on a 30lion of less than I per cent. The day trial period at the end of
dollar was slightly stronger in
which each will be informed
Austria when those eicbanges
whelber or not they are to be
reopened. Australian banks
retained. The edict included
recently cashed limited
alief of Police J. J. Cremeans:
amowtts of dollars at 23.50
Lawson, who attended the
schillings but the rate went to
meeting, asked COWlcil why he
24.47-24.57 today.
was not qualified to be a pollee
The dollar closed stronger
officer. He had not been
against the franc at tile end of
retained at the end of his trial
the second day of France's twotier market system, gaining a 2 period.
Lawson was not given a direct
per cent revaluation aglllnst
answer to his question. Nothing
Monday's rate. On the free
clear-&lt;:nt developed so counCil
market the price was UZ
agreed to bold a special meeljng
against the Monday close of
next Monday night to discuss .
5.5175.
the situation further.
In London the dollar slipped
In · other business, council
slighUy then beld its ground at
named the atizens National
$2.4425 to the powtd.
Bank as ~tory for village
funds for the next two yearil.
Also meeljng with councll
were Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Beechler who live in a houae
trailer behind Powell's Service
Station. Mr. and Mrs. Beechler
asked COIUlcll why debris nezt
to their property bas not been
cleaned up. The trash and
BY EDITH FOX
. rubbish is from where the old
MASON - The Meigs Cowtty building belonging to Royal
Fair turned into a frightening Crown BoWing Compally was
experience for Tommy ~ torn down. Council informed the
Jo:anne Taylor and therr Beechlers that tile company is
children, Jill and Barry.
in the process of building a new
This year was to be a UWe building and when finished
different because .Tom P~ would ciean up !be lot.
'
to enter Annie, his horse, m a
Attending were Mayor C. 0.
race. Preparations were Fisher, Dick VaUghan, Jolin
compleled.
Zerkle Lawrence Stewart and
But it was not to be. At the Cliffo;d Stumbo
council
starling gate, before Tom could members and u;ne Grate
'
get his foot_ in one stirrup, Annie clerk. '
became frightened, reared up
on her hind legs, threw Tmn to
WCAL TEMPS
the ground, feU on hino and
Temperature
in downtown
kicked hino.
Everyone was panic stricken. PomeroY TUesday at 11 am.
Joanne, his wife, fainted. His was 66 Degrees under sunny
father and mother, Point sties.
Pleasant, witnessed the accident. No ambulance could be
BOND FORFEITED
located at once, although
Mayor
Herman London of
finally, after a considerable
Syracuse
Monday night for.
time, Tom was removed to
Holzer Hospital in a Civil feited the $28.70 bond of DarreU
defense emergency vehicle. M. Olinger, 21, Fresno, Ohio, on
Seriously injured, be is in room cliarges o( speeling Marshall
Milton Varian filed tile charge.
239.

Lawmen

On Trial
30 Days

Accident at

Fair Proved
Frightening

Mrs. Barbara Shuler was
Alleiding were lllarles R.
appointed Meigs County Karr, Sr., JM ......~; Bob Clark,
Welfare Director effective Aug. and Wardea Ours, com·
23 by the Meigs County Com- missioners, , aad Martha
missioners today.
flwnbers, derL
Mrs. Shuler bas been tbe
a.cnHING DAY
e&gt;:ecutive secretary oldie Olild
The Sahatiua Army, BotWelfare Dept. for some time.
Earlier the commissioners lenlut Ave.,l'uudoy, will bold
regular clothing day Thursday
combined the Olild Welfare
frwn 11 a.m. to BOWl. Everyone
post with the Welfare dept.
in Ibis area ne =ng clothing is
Adele Cullums bad sened as
acting director of Ole Welfare "'*-·
Dept. the past three years. Mrs.
Cullums was assigned to the
welfare
department
as
Caseworker m.
In other business the . oom- One haadred aad seven E. May, .Tun Sisson, Robert
missioners approved tllrce.road pe.-soos visited !be lleigs Couch, Duane Stanley, Edward
surfacingprojectssubmittedby Cwully Jllollh!•We .....y . . Kennedy, Lawrence R. Win,
Theodore Beegle, countJ 1'llere ·a ~ as JuaeM.Mlqlby, Bill Andailll,
engineer.
duaors ~ whom 5I gave Gene Houdasbelt; Denals
Included are County Road t6 ,..,.. atH•t lllaod. 'lbere
Kelley, Howanl P. Lopn, Leo
from SR 7 to tile junction ol SR zs first lime clews.
Vaapn, Mary Fields, Harlan
248, 3.8 miles, at a total cost ol CzPm -.s Ednnl Webrung, Demaree Suto11,
$S,906.30; SR Ill to junctim c:l Darst, Rabert Sboot and Barry Clark, Albert MartiJ1,
County Road 124,2.7 milts, at a Ridtad Piebi• ~ blo pDm Carli Hall, Margaret Willie,
cost of $4,39UJ, and County do!Jar, Allert Rwab; line Om Humel, Hwner Smilb,
Road 36. frwn SR 611 to the p11ua dwws, Robert King, Kmnelb !kites, Mary A1M:e
junction of SR 7, U milts for a.-Pipit, Dwulll.r,J•••"; St=els, Ola Sl Oalr,llllbat
$6,639.60.
r.tpllallciDidilr, Evallallley; Mdatve. Breilda Tarner,
The bid from tile Bridge fiw pDaa . . . .. Oris !Jab. p.vid 11:....11, Jamet AnConatruclion Co; of Clmbriclge bard, a pillll tba s da IIWl, Rollin Radfwd, Kmwas accepted to build Walbr- ..-e Gibri Zwilliac IIIIi Ada aelb Harril, Ricbaid Bearlll,
Road bridge iu · Orange Z D
Jr., Ua,d 81 twwcl, Mary
Township in -the a11101a11 c:l Oilier d..-s were Raby lldapa,Bm.Bu:l!lr,G.R.
$13;ZS5.25.
IIIIi . ,lilly L. B I I
'111ompaGII, Fred l'blaJIIGII.
Tbe D. ~- Weber Couslauctian Bate i JneD, a.rlea Jerri E. Pleldit, llopa- Yoq,
Co., Reeclsville, mo sullmi~ V
, W n R i»d, lit- Rllblrt ...... IIIDtlJ S ) a
abidintbe¥N•t1_~-1L ........ Ahl .....-tlnJ o
~Wa .. IRc:IP *IJ.

107 Go to Give Blood
were

I

· h.

.iark 1'eaftl1 and tnm
Dllvidsm, Rullalll; 'J'bomu L.
Springer, Gallipolis;, OweDI ·
BadiJey,
Edwadl, c.rt
SIUI, Mary SliD, Rablrl ling,
Edward l)arst, . !llarlea
W11Jiaad, SUdnt TIJiar, Allla

"*

Ta:;lor, Linda 11a1eJ, Albert
Ra111b, On* Hc:lfuwn, E&amp; rt •
Kaaff, •DuaUI ~l!lr, lallr
lllml:e, nan. S. SQre, 0 '
Erwin, Gecqt Blr!ll, ..-, '
W-, lUtodl BaD, Jll'a

Haoda»e

r

lliddle(lll'l

a. IM,
W1Jc •• .Ita

Bai!IIIJ:

B•lpt

16•..
IQn, P ' II
c.•11, 0..
C 15
f

..

s,.a.r

�•

,\

.

-...

. , 1-fte~Ss

itM,Mich. . . . t..PwwtOJ,O-.~.....:at.Im.

==-==-===- _ _:____- ' - - - - - - ------'•.
t ·
•

.

EDnORIALS .

Soviet Also Had 'New Economics'

•

BERRfS WORLD

Play lor

-••

Game
You Bid

Watching the crazy ticker tape machine on Mad Monday, August 1&amp;; wben the stock market scored its great~t ooe-day gain in bistory, a Cleveland broker remarked
tbat ·~what is most int~resting to me is the fact tbat a
Republican president ·is curbing free enterpri$1!" (by
freezing wages and prices).
Curious. It is also a curious coincidence of history that
Presic!ent NiiDn sbould have called his series of measure;
desigDed to stop ioflation and perk up the economy a
"new economic policy. ,
,Just a half ce11tury ago, another .leader named N"atolai
Lenin illstituted what he called a New Economic Policy,
in capital letters, to rebuild the World Wat 1-shattered
:!CODOmy of the Soviet Union.
The aame; however, is the only simUarity.
The President's new economic policy, by temporarily
enlarging state control o\'er the business life of the nation,
i!J!!...tended to belp the economy get back on an even 1ree1
aiiilllius preserve the free enterprise system.
·
Lenin's NEP, by temporarily "tolerating a limited return of free enterprise-permitting peasants to sell their
grain on the open market and small employers to bire
and fire workers, for example-was intended to save a
faltering socialist revolution.
It is not that history repeats itself. Bllt sometimes it
seems to stu~.

•

II
.I

~

•••

..
..

• K110742
WIST

EAST (D)

• ,
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t KJ985

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.AQ1D93
t AQ 10

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.AQ lOSU

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.AQ3

.Both vulnenble

3.4. 1•3. 1.3.

!Iordi

-

Soa.tll

Pass

Pass

"

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

'... May Be lniurious ...'
If it was in the public interest for radio and television .
stations to broadcast antismoking messages to COUIIter
the insidious effects of cigarette commercials, then it
. would also seem in the public intereSt for them to be
required to Jl!&gt;inl.out the dangers of _big automobiles.
The U.S. Circwt Collrt of Appeals m Wasbington D.C.
has ruled just that in a sllit brought by Friends 'of ~
Earth against WNBC-TV in New York.
· "Commercia)s which continue to insinuate that the
-human personality finds greater fulfillment in the large
car With the qllick getaway do, it seems to us," wrote
· Judge Carl McGowan, "ventilate a point of view which
not only has become controversial but involves an issue
of public importance. ·
·
"When there is undisputed evidence, as there is bere,
that the hazards to health implicit in air pollution are
enlarged and aggravated by such products then the parallel With cigarette advertising is exact . : ."
I
I
•
What
for those who wou.ld protect us from ourBY JACK O'BRIAN
selves? How about alf those commercials for personal
hygiene products, which probably make up the bulk of
advertising revenue now that cigarettes are banned?
tap this off to press.
SAIL OVER FOR
Sbould it not be pointed out to naive, unsophisticated
"Right On" film producer Herbert Ilenska
IBESE CHINA TALKS
people that there are unforeseen hazards implicit in the
u,se of teeth whiteners: hair glisteners, underarm sweetNEW YORK - Mort Sabl aod wife, China ·and bis TV-producer wife, Dol.-es, adminaled a
eners and the .like? All t3nds of complications between Lee, split afleF less tban a year. Ghria Swan- joint production - a baby girl ... The Jolmny
the sexes can result, not stopping short of that immensely san'srel!ninglo Bdwy.Sepl7 in the marvelous Carson crew is awash Wilb nun.-s another
complicated thing called marriage. And after all, as some
· wag has remarked, there is undisputable evidence that molber-rale iD tbe delighlful loogplay "Bul- "C!'elltive turnover" Is due next mmlb ...•
lierfliesAre:Free" .••. Sbe'salreadytoured in the Mickey Rooney's delighted Wilb bis wt-of-town
marriage is the first 5t!!p to divorce.
Then there are the washday products, another beavily J.emanl Gersbe smash nationally for seven ''W. C." (Fields) biCHDusicai reviews, but isn't
a~venised category. Not only is there the danger of en1111111bs •••• Tbe new ~ McCartney rock group all choked up about assaulting Bdwy. f.- a
Vll'Onrnental pollution from detergents, think of the com- will st. Paul's wife Linda m piano.
lmgrun.
munity strife that could be caused by some housewife
Fonner Laugh-in victim Judy Carne's
JGID Ijndqy's daughter Kathy copped out
having whiter wash than her neighbor.
And surely women's liberationists should be accorded ofafa.timsbowattbe Playboy &lt;lub-oo Pop's getting a CBS-1V-linanced pilot haH-b&lt;Ur .•••
equal time to say something about commercials whidJ qgeslion: The show displayed slinky Crooner Neil Se&lt;Jalra took a Nevele singing
insinuate that the female personality finds no greater negligiNe 1llderduds .... Jawn's Dem-6Witch engagement, fairly rare-Neil says be's maki~
fuliiiiment and has no other purpose or interest in life
about $100,000 a year writing soogs, and lbat's
than removing the stubborn stains from hubby's wort - " ' e '""'I came just before it, and the Wbite enough f.- him .... New Yen Magazine beat the
Ba 5 "WY allllfelltice Democrat didn't want
~·
T
phn4m of his. ;!aughter in undies all over the New Ycrker Magarine -at softball.
Mary McBride manages the Frmcb Quarter
papn and 1V ... Tbe last-mirute model sWitch
(a I;nckay famiiy habit) got the job fo_r a cafe at the Americana Hotel; she knew pianist
mming blad: 20-year-old, Unda D. Smith .... Ken Kurtis who writes songs and Phil BritO who
Liuda's pap also is in public life- he's a cop iD sings 'em, knew bulb bad beart trouble and so
got them together - the odd finale : Brito just
the lJib Precinct
Alvin Ubar, me of tbe big investors in recorded a song album, ''It's Ballad Time
Again," With two ballads by Kurtis ("Just f.- a
I
.
I ''Lmg Day's Jwmey Iota Night," an off-Bdwy.
bit, lells ns lbere's huge llemand for the O'Neil While" and ''People O!ange").
Helen Bottel
Ell-60ng star Mary Small now is a Gal
nma lo low -but they can't find a star for the
male lead (Van Heflin was about to sign when he Friday at Esquire mag .... Oliver Reed says be
died in H'wood); amazing, its producers have has a pal who (fc.- a price) .ven can wangle a
Clll¥liS5Ied almcrrt ~&gt;Very name-actor and now ask private receplioo at Bucti~ham Palace Wilb
YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
'l1dl ri•""'" is flr yrung people, tbeir problems alii ns lo h111vp'1! their predicament in case some the ~een .... Reminds us of the late fabled
acllJr basn't beard of the virtually sure- Bdwy. timet scalper Georgie Sololaire: Gecrgie
pleasures, their lrciubles and fun. As With the rest of Helen Help
Us! ltwelcomeslaugbsbutwoo'tdodge a serious queslim wilb a hit opening .... Contact Lansbury-Duncan got fantastic prices foc bis ducats, always way
ProdDdions, 1&amp;50 Bdwy ., N. Y. flty .... Must be down front at all the newest bits; he never failed
brulb-dl.
a customer, and one Wired George from H'wood
Send y&lt;Ur teenage que.stioos to YOUTII ASKED FOR IT, care •-thob ool there.
Jadl Palance looks lilte a true 1929 Packard at the time of ~een Liz' coronatioo lbat be
of Helen Help Us! this newspaper.
tauring - car - with - the - curtains - drawn - ''dared" Georgie to get him two tidlets f.- the
1'BE ONLY WAY TO GET MARRIED ...
eetaway -car type, but he's just bought bis first Wesbninster Abbey ceremooy .... Geu-gie wired
Dear Belen:
lam 17andpregnant. Ididn'twanta baby this soon but, in OlD' RaiJs.Royce .... The Kansas Illy Royals are the bim back, ''I have two lidtets -but they're not
Slate, the ooJy way a fellow under 1Bcan get married is if he "has only majcr league team without a $50,000 a year together."
lldJplayer ••• Pres. Nixon's China policy bas
Bing's Wife Kathy Crosby will lour on bebalf
to."Wewanted to get married, so what else could we do?
!t
the
Sullivan Language School, acc«mpani'!ll
sbow
biz
""*ing
for
a
trend
:
Restaurateur
Irene
Nowl'll'-myemcation, becai.L'le of a dumb law.
Another tbiDg, in lUI" County there Is no sa educatioo euept Kuo hopes so - sbe's planning nightly Concerts by ber sister Frances; tbe Bings first are off to
oo back roads, and of course Wllll81ried people can't get auy kind O!ioois at ber famed Gingko Tree spot .... Paris any editioo ... Underworld rumcr: A
$125,1nl price bas been set fir a cootract lo knock
of cmlraceptives oc advice. Naturally, I woo't be able to attend BardJy e..,- dme ootside Chinatown.
Nomatlel- bow pocrthecowboy may seem in off a top crime investigat.- Artur Rubinsten
ligb ICbool afler I start showing. We live in the uptight~ Belt!
I t111n1t there should be liberalized laws all over the cwntry, 1V pione« cowpoke plots, every one of them is rich enough to let the butlei- do it but shops f.uot just lit.end-miss in a few states. Why doo't lawmakers caldl plaillly bares $3,000 to $5,1nl worth of capped bis own kosher goodies at the Dover Deli ...•
leelb .... TOiliismin Ireland is way off -for the Evidence of thegourmetstandard at~o Vadis:
"' wilb the times? -PREGNANT BUI' HAPPY
mislakeniiiJtion lbat Belfast atrocities somehow SawStu Levin, owner of high-dlic I.e Pavilloo,
Dear P but H :
... Beeause lawmaken dm't like to stir up h..-nel's nests: .-e iD the o...Jin area; just stay away from the cjining there.
T«m Ewell's in "Waiting for Godot" off.
' ~ liberalized se:r laws can lead to defeat at electioo liny narlbeast tamer, made up of the &amp;x
Bdwy ., and he proclairru; the Beckett drama is
Coonlies,
8111
you'll
skip
the
violence.
time. -H.
Tbe ''Kids Issue" of the National LamPoon "the most important play ever written" .... and
Dear Helen :
Now tbat .they have lbe 18-year-old serviceman and the 11- isD't at an fir kids; should be rated "R" ... so there siW ''Hamlet," all of Eugene O'Neill;
Pb)'llis Russomano has her first ~~oedipus." "Electra," "CaJigula,, not to
year cKd voter, isn't it kind of silly to tell a guy he bas to be 21 Smcst&gt;
befcre he can buy a drink? Or get married without bis parenls' rtt!Oid bit (fc.- Paramount) in ''I Said No," a mention "Uncle Tom's Cabin" .... Impresario
cirty lillie 190 double-entendre tune the late Ben Bonus is rushing in where financial angels
COilllellt? -BUTCH
.
Frank IJ 5 e and Jule Styne wrote with its always have feared to tread - he'll start a
Dear Butch :
I look f.- the time (and very soon) when the 1S.year-old wiD finally ~ pmchlioe explliining it wasn't Yiddish Repertory Theater in November,
be a legal adult - in all areas. What do you bet it wiD happen about seduclim but a subscription to Liberty redoing classical Yiddish plays fc.- the new
Magazine •.. Nolbing could be better to wrile;o- generatioo be bopes will want to explore that
befcre 1m?- H.
·
oolumD-by than a B!liJby Hackelt album as we honorable traditioo. Mit glik, Ben.

r------------------------------------------

along Broadway .!

next

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

!Helen Help Us!
By

~·

••

In "Tiger Bridge" Jeremy

l_

R

t3

West

Flint gives numerous examples of play by tigers who
bid like lambs.
. East and West can wrap
up five b ear t s yet they sell
our at four spades. Nottb
and South really belong in a
slam, hut they never consider getting past game. It
is just as well since a diamond opening will beat six
spades and somehow tigers
don't seem to be interested
in clubs.
Playing at four spades,
South ruffs the opening beart
lead. Since be is a tiger be
doesn't waste any energy
making talk about the slam
that appears to have been
missed. Io fact he wastes no
energy in thinking about the
slam at alL His problem is
to make four spades and be
knows that be is not living
in that happy tand where
trumps always b r e a k. He
decides to concentrate on
making the game.
There is nothing tigerish
about his lead of a low trump
at trick two but his. play
from dummy is a tiger's
play. He plays the nine, not
the king of trumps. East
takes bis jack but that
5MI $1 t.t JACOIY MODEIH !look
to: 'Wio Gf

~rMge;

(c/ o 1M _,_

,.,.,J, ,_o_... "'· hlio Citr
Stlltioft, New Yorlt, H.Y. 10019.

doesn't worry South. He is
going to make all hut one of
the remaining tricks. If he
bad played the king and then
the ace or queen of trumps
he would make six against a
3-2 break but would have
been set when the jack failed
to drop for him.
(NEWSPAPEI EHTEIPIISE ASSN.}

l

"*"'jd

nn

They11 Do It Every Time

DR. LAWRENCE f. LAMB
May Be Muscle Spasms

The biddmg bas been:
Wost
North
Eosl

1.

Pass
Pass
You, South, hold:
• •\11:87 • •\Z tKQ! .KI43
What do you do now?
A-Bi&lt;l two ao-tnuap, aot
two splllks. Yoar . . . - ...
!lid your -...a oait.
TOD.A.Y'S QUISJION
Your partner c:ontines

to
tine clubs. What do you do
now.

Answer

TOIUi&amp;iOW

fte Aim•ae
By Ullited Pfta bfenatleul
Today is Tuesday, Aug. 24,
the mit clay !t 19"11.
The mooo is between its new
phase l!nd first quarter.
The morning slars are Saturn
and Venus.
The evening slars are Mars,
Jupiter and Mercury.
Those born m Ibis day are
under the sign of \1"111!0.
Roman Catholic Cardinal
Richard Olshing was born Aug.
24, UBi.

M

•

NO&amp;nl
.K9
.K765

.985

'

S-'1'l1e DIUiy SentineL f,liddleoort.P«meroy, 0., August U, 197l •

- District Circle ·

WIN AT BRIDGE

Atlas

1Voice

~

B l tn ..

HlA.~~

•·

..
••

"We •auld lile some of llwrt 'no i1111h' Htswiii!Ce, m ' _
tlwrt, no MOllet •loa! happens, it's not our foul!!"
~
'.

BRUCE BIOSSAT
After 90 Days, What? ::

Nixon Faces
Tough Options

..

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON (NEA) •
Even as the confusions of President N"u;on's SIHiay
wage-price freeze are taking hold, the economic experts
are ·trying to guess what be will do wben tbe clam!Hlown
period expires. They don't think bis options are very
•
heartening.
One ecopomist, who wants to be anonymous because •
be has colleagues in the administration, thinks e:rtending the freeze another 90 days or more wouia be bad news- :
an admission the first free%e didn't do muclt. One of the ·
President's politically sensitive friends agrees.
A second option, of course, is just to forget any further:
restraints after mid-November. Such a decision, it is .
suggested, could be accompanied by an appeal to husi- ness and labor to be good boys and not go hog wild
~
The President' s friend argues that, if the lid is to be;
lifted in November, N"u;on will have to jawbone management and the unions beavily in the weeks ahead. Hisnecessary theme: If you don't behave wben the cootrols:
are removed, they'll go back ou, harder than now.
My anonymous economist says a third optiDII for the:
President wpuld be to supplant the present fteelle with•
more formal hut also more flexible cantrols. For exam-pie, the rule might be that prices could ·move up 10 or_
15 per cent at a maximum.
Another possible step is the establishment of detailed·
wage-price gllidetines on the general pattern set in the:
Kennedy.Jobnson era. This migbt be accompanied by a-strongly worded threat to impose stiff controls, selectively, on anybody who gets sharply out of line.
·
Under this arrangement, tbe President might very well·
blink at all but Dagrant violations of the guidelines. Indeed, their whole purpose might be conceived as an effort
to prevent extreme wage-price moves which others in
the economy use as a modeL
Nobody here, of course, has any idea wbicb optioo the
President will choose. If bis original economic block-·
buster is any indication, he may delay decision 111til· a
very late hour.
Many people in politics, business and labor are complaining about the " unfairness" of the impact of the
wage-price free%e. It is easy enougb to document this.
But that can hardly be used as an argmnent agalnsf
controls. At any given point in time, there is ~ways a
substantial amount of inequity in the economy, whether it
~ frmen . or unfrozen. If ~ were no free%e today, all;;
kinds r.l: lliibalances-working hardship on some individ-uals and businesses would be sb(lwi.ng up in fresb pro-;
fusion eacb day.
•
Obviously, the administration has to hope that the cur.:
rent freeze will not be outrageously inequitable and tba[
it will be reasonably effective in cbecking inlli.tion.
•
But some sources bere dare to say that the treeze
migbt have a damper effect on those parts of the Presl:
dent's economic package designed specifically to stim~
late the economy and produce more jails.
;
It's being assumed that if a man knnws be can bu:y a;
car cheaper under the N"IIOD plan be's more likely to
do it _It's being assumed, too, that Hbe knows bis inconn!!
tax btte next year will be a bit smaller be also might
be more in a buying mood
'
Maybe these things won't ~- Perhaps tbe man
whose wages are frozen, and migbt stay that way for
much longer than 90 days, will decide it's not prudent
~o buy a car or a new sofa even though their cost to him
IS held steady. Savmg mDDey might seem Wiser.
The pomt IS, buman .behavior is more Ullpredictahle
than ever today. Classic economic thinking Whicb assumes certain ~ss or consumer
will follow almos.t automatically from certain actions, may not
apply at all.

On Ibis day in history:
responRs
In . 79 A.D., thousands of
people were killed and the
cities• of Pompeii and Herculaneum buried by the eruption
of volcanic Momt Vesuvius iD In 1814 the British c:aplured
In lS3Z Amelia E.rbart
Itaiy.
Washington, D.C., burning the became the first womau to
Capitol Building and the make a tran.continenlll nonexecutive mansioo.
stop flight.
lnl961FJauoedetonatedits
first hydrogen bonlb iD tbe
South Pacific.

'Stitch. in Side' Is Ol·d Problem
s_harp bead just under the
liver under the right side of
the diap!JJ-aRm and again
under the spleen just under
l.t!e left side. Gas trapped in
etther of these locations can
cause severe pain. 1 suspect
that gas trapping is a more
~uent cause of m:urrent
s1de pain in exercise than
commonly recognized. What
causes gas? Aj!ain you have
a lot of reasons, DIC!uding
nervous tension.
In any case. recurrent episodes of '"stitch in tbe side,··
as painful as they may be.
all' not senous . When .1 was
studying the fes)lOIISeS of
the ,Pt-nlathletes (pistol
shootmg. t•rnss-country runnmr:. lt'Drint:. swimmin~: and
tws.-b.-...·k ridin)!i. 1 nul&lt;'tl

A thought for today: British

poet Robert Soalbwell .sUd.
"Wben Itt bate anri!es, I slllile
to think bow quickly !lbe will
&amp;own.''

Q-Who accepted llle
Brilislt 111rmadu terms at
1/le BoHle of Yod:toltllt?
A-Brig. Gen. Cbules
O'Hara, a c t i n g (or Lard
Cornwallis, gave bis sword
to Maj. Gen. Benjamin Lill·
coin, a c ti n g f.- Georce
Washington.

that ~~ lib the ....
in the side and tbe .....!led
" second wind" ~Me midi
more COIIliiiOil ill llldltM h
at· the begiuu"1111 of tlleir
training and
10 aft«
tht-y !'fte in tip-lop slalpe
f...- ............. iliaD.

'

A

.
et ugust 19th ,

The semi-annual meeling of
the Rllberla Circle of District
25, Order- of Eastern Star, was
hosted b Ev -"-• Cha
Y ang.wo:
pter
ofMiddloport on Aug. 19. Bessie
King, president of the Circle,
I* "leolandinlro!JucedMarlyn
W"rlcoz,. Worthy Matron of
Evangeline Ctapter, who gave
a ftlcGme on behalf of the
bustess chapter.
Afll!r 8 potluck dinner, Mrs.
r - ,.
nled "oberta K.
.....,.
·
"'
Miod!i'll!, Past Grand Matron of
lheGrandOtapter'ofOhio, and
Belen M. Bar1ley, Past Grand
Katroo and newly appointed
Assoc. Grand Matron of the
Grand Otapter of Obio, special
guests; Deputy Grand Matron
of Distriet 25, W"tlma Styer, of
. Bua'-,· W"mnifred Hooper, of

an-~
_ ,, Grand Representative;
~ MOfficersuse
, viceirestfrom.dSentoctk~
.,....u
port; 5B-year members, Evelyn
~ Grace French, Edith
Bowman, Beulah Hayes, Helen

Bessie King concluded the
program with a poem
"Greetings For Two."
TheCircledividediDtogroups
for their respective bns'ness
meetings by the Past Matrons,
Worthy Matrons, Associate
Matrons, Conductresses and
Associate Conduclrmes. There
were 84 registered at tbe
mDuringeeting. the business meeling
a short memorial service was
given by Bernice Hoffman of
Harrisonville Chapter in booor
~a=anSefd:~:=ibGr
' Pas~ :
Grand Palr'on of the Grand
Chapter of Obio.
Clara Mosely of Aurelius
Chapter, Macksburg, anced the" 75th
.
11
noun
anmversary
celebration for September 7
beginning with a smorgasborg
dinner at 6:30p.m., and that the
W th G d Patr of the
or Y ran
on
G d

K~:u~~=~:=-~.

it was announced tbat the
Worthy Grand Matron Joyce
Black would be visiting
Cheshire Chapter in hone.- of its
50th anniversary.
.....
"d t
ced the
""' prest en announ
April :Ill, 1972 meeting to be
hosted by Minear Chapter,
Guysville, an evening meeting
beginning with a potliiCk dinner
at 6:30 p.m., and the Aug. i7,
1972 meeting at noon at
Matamoras Chapter, New
Matamoras ·.
.
~.....
Olher Roberta Circle officers
and Helen M. Bartley; Sberri p~nt were Birdie Kroll, vtce
Kiltt!. dalJil)tter of P. M. Naomi prestdent, New Matamoras:
King, a baloo acl, and in the Ida Kierns, secretary, Albany
alatw:e of Rosemary Lyons, Chapter, and Fauna Combs,
treasurer Reinersville.
"***~ The following Chapters were
:;
OUght -.. represen led . at the meeling
. •
New Marshfield, Mount Moriah
il
it of Beverly, Matamoras of New
f...,
it
it Malam or_as, Valley of _ Meil For every minute you are it Connelsville, Athens, Re~
-tt angry,!'."" IOse60seconds it VIlle,_ Bartlett, Manetta,
-It ol ._,.,..._
it Aurelius of Macksburg, Ml.
: -Ra1pb Waldo Emerson : Olive of Chesterhill, Thea of
-It
it Glouster, Belpre, ~ of
-tt
41 Guysv11le , Harr1sonv11le,
-tt
.
it Pomeroy , Racine, Webb of
il
t.... « Stockport, Cheshire of Dist. 24,
:
' ~ it and Belmont Chapter of
-tt
Da ton the home Chapter of

Reynolds, all !t Evangeline
lf""''ep«rt, and Slella Studer of
Athens iolel
I
d
; Vi
Know ton, Gran
Page from Malamoras, and
llaryllugbes, from District 24.
........•.-.....
...-.,.mpresentedb
A....,
Y
the Past Matrons Club of
Jliddleport consisted of
ScripiDre given from memory
by Beulab Hayes; Linda
Dsrnell Mayer sang a number
from the Sound 01 Music and
gave two original poems
honoring the Past Grand
Ma-.. Roberta K. Mindling

1*******
... A 'fh
· ...
_, ,

_t

For Today

* * *
lfs Quicil

-tt

il

·

DllfVE-IN
--

:41

BANKING

-It
f ·d
Onl
it
r1 iiYS
-tt The Dr"
1 Wi y do -It
it
•
~ve-Open In w.it
:
np M.
it
9
1 7
-tt
( Contin~DIIsiyl
:
-It .
il
0111H ll.lnki"''l Haurs' to f
:: l ~ S 1D 1 •• usu•l on !:
... Fri.s.JL
.,.
il
il
-It ·
it
-tt f~DUERS
-t&lt;
-tt NUll
il

!...,

A.:_

!

BANK

:and SAVINGS 00. t
_.

-It .
.il

POMEROY, OHIO

Member FDIC
Member Federal

--tt

il

Reserv" System ·

il
it
it
il

-t&lt;

.............. ***"

•

it

Y '

~: ~~:~yMa':;~-~· ·
pomtment.

Y

a::

VISIT MRS. DODSON
CHESTER _ Recent guests
of Mrs. B. A. Dodson of Chester
were her children grandchildren
and ' greatd hildr
Mr and Mrs
gran c
en,
·
·
ErroU Conroy of Akron ; Mr.
and Mrs Durwood Conroy and

Arthur, Sadie

Social
Calendar
ruESDAY

Roush Reunion
-

th:

:,en

BACK Tot:
~c._1 scHOOL
.•.. ~

Personal Notes

Gibb A
s nnounce

Birth_ oif Child
Mr. and Mrs . Gregory
Gibbs, New Haven, announce the birth of their f11st
child, a son, Gregory Wean,
born on July 26 at Holzer
Medical Center. He weighed 8
pounds 11 ounces.
Mrs. Gibbs is the former
.
Patricia Rankin of Cheshire.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd E. 1\ankin
of Cheshire. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
V. Gibbs, Jr. of New Haven.
BOWLERS TO MEET
The Pomeroy Women 's
Bowling Assn. will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at ·the
Pomeroy Lanes. All league
secretaries are urged to attend,
also, everyone interested in
bo tin
w g.

FOR

IN AWIDE
SElfCTION

-'-c...:)

Iettie Clotll • Corduroy • Bonded AciJiics
B.ck To
Sdtool

wer:::.

RecentguestsofMr.andMrs.
C. R. Karr, Sr. were Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Karr and family of
Millersport, and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Lytle of Syracuse, Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Yeauger and
Kevin, Mrs. Reva Beach of
Middleport and Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Reuter and son of
Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. John Cannons,
S
ta· d Sat d
r .. enter me_
ur _ay
evenmg Aug . _21 wtth a reception
at the Xema Country Oub
honoring Mr. and Mrs. J~hn
Cannons, Jr., who were married
July 31 in Plantation, Fla. Attending from Pomeroy were
· Mr.
grandparents of the bride,
and Mrs. Landon Smith, Mrs.
W"tlliarn Starner and daughter
Beth of Plantation, Fla. and
Mrs. John Gothard, sons
Stephen and Philip of Malbern,
Pa.
of
Recent dinner gues~ Mr.
and Mrs. Landon Smith were
Miss Helena Gregory Mrs
'
and ' J~
~~t~~:O
Point
·
.
Pleasant, W. Va., Mrs. \Vtlliam
Starner_and daughter Beth of
Planlation, Fla., Mrs. John
Gothard sons Stephen and
h-1- ' d M
M · ·
p
I
lp,
an
rs.
Harris of Malbem, Pa. ar)Orte
Mr. and Mrs. Howard c.
Smith, Greg, Ricky and Tracy,
spent the weekend in Cincinnati
where they attended the Cincinnati-Pittsburgb ball game
and toured the Cincinnati Zoo.
They also visited Mr. and Mrs.
Oliver Carpenter at Lawrenceburg, Ind.

Durbin":

Slrasburg, Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Raullin Moyer
and daughter Barbara have
returned from Hammond, Ind.
where they visited Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Moyer and baby son
born Jul 24
•
Mrs. ~ar.ry Gobring has
returned from Akron afler
spending a week With ber son,
Rev. Richard Bailey and
da.....,.,
·~terMarie. Mr. Bailey was
a former Middleport resident
and is full-time minister of the
Wooster Church of Christ.
Mr and Mrs W"tlliam Mattox
son David, W~t ColiBDbia, and
Park
and Megan
~~1 ,
_ er,
·Long, De~1e Woodgerd, Mrs.
Earl McKinley, Jr. and son
Scott ~~ the weekend at
Cedar Poml.
. Mrs .. Elsa B. Kimes is ~nvalescmg at the R1vers1de
·
Nursmg
Home an d
valescent Center, 65011
Corlde Ave., St. Albans, W. Va.
Cards or letters would be
preCJated.
Miss llallie ~Ide, a pa~ient
at Holzer Medical Center,
scheduled to d
-lfl!ery
~ ergo ••
Monday mornmg.

n.......

Sec-- J B" lxJa
UTIU
trt ry
Is Celebrated

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••

~·

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GOESSLER
~IJ. Sbre
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Pomeroy

::".;!

INTEREST OF
.MElGS·M8SON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,

Ezec. Ed.

Q--Witat doeJ the lnm

.. largo" mean in music?

ROIIERT HOEFLICH,

A-Extremely slow.

Publis"ed d•lly except
Saturd•y by Th• OhiO Valle-~·
Publishing Company , 111
Court St., Pomtroy , Ohief,
U769. Business Otfict Phone
99'2-2156, Editorial Phone 992·

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Stc:ond clns postage paid at
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NOTEBOOK BINDERS

.
The second birthday anniversary of Bobbie Bowers was
celebrated August :Ill at the
home of bis grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Eddie Fife, Pomeroy.
_A birthday cake decorated
like a baseball field, m green
and yellow, ice cream and pop
were served. Attending were
Roy Roush of ~; Gary,
Todd, Scotty, and Debbte Fife of
Pomeroy. Sending gifts were
Mr. and Mrs. Harry c. Roush of
RELATIVES COME
Mason; Mrs. Golda Reed, Mr.
MINERSVILLE - Mrs. and Mrs. Shirley Guinther,
Frank Roush and Loretta
Larry Swift, Rhonda, Danny.
Joe and Bruce of Shadyside, Beegle, Pomeroy.
Ohio are guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Dana Swift. Other recent guests
at the Swift home were Mr. and
(")'
Mrs. W"tlliam Swift, Cindy and CHESTER Th edding of
Brad, of Carrollton, Ky., and Pam Ia Sue G~
J
Dr· and Mrs. Zane KH:"• Kathy' SwaneSteWer will be held
Karl and Danny of Pittsburgh, United · Methodist Church at
Pa.
Chester instead of the Long
VISIT IN COWMBUS
Bottom United Methodist
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Church, as previously anDillon Cross and Mr. and Mrs. nounced.
.
Harold Sargent visited recently Miss Griffin is the daughter of
with Mrs. Pat Roush and family Mr. and Mrs. Ernest E. Griffm
in Colwnbus. They mel CM-Sgt.· of Long Bottom and Mr. Stettler
Pat Roush at the Cohunbos is the soo of Mr. and Mrs.
Airport. Sgt. Roush spent a year Gordon Ridenour of Olester. An
in Vietnam. 1be Roushes and open church wedding is planned
daughter Pam will leave at 7:30 o'clock, Sept. 3.
Saturday for Fayetteville, N. C.
where Sgt. Roush will be .
The Daily Sallilll
stationed at the Polk AFB.
·DEVOT.EDTOTHE

:W

REG.•169.95
SALE •119.88

The Buy Little .

TakingaboatriderecenUyon

Place Chanued

SINGER

' 1 15 w. Second

Pomeroy"'"

SHOPPERS
MART

Personal Notes

sons,

WILDWOOD Garden Club,
Wednfl¢ay, 8 p.m. horne of
Mrs. Alfred Yeauger With Mrs.
Oifford Phillips assisting.

s• A'TED

FABRICS

Held Aug. 22nd

AT

\NG1tv·"~6'-'

JOINT meet~ng Tue~day,
RACINE _The Arthur and =:n~ to~~ipo~
American Legton Auxtllary 'Sadie Roush family reunion was and Mrs. Harold Clase, Mr. and
Drew_ Webs~er Post .39 held SUnda Aug. ;2, at the Mrs Gerald Anthon J and
Amen can · Leg1on and Juruor
;
y'.
·
Hall
.·
·.
Y' oe
.....m • ...;, 7. 30
• Barbara, and Mr. and Mrs.
1 hall Racme American Legion
Bnu.uuoukzw
' . ·ht pG.mi.la s·-te· The "welcome ho111e ~' was W"tllis Anthony, all of Midec Y n _g • r s "' given toCM-Sgt. Pat Roush wbo dleporl.
Rep_reset_~tative, guest speaker. has returned to the states after Mr. and Mrs. Gary Ault, sons
Juruor gu-ls will serve refresh- spending a year in Soc Trang, Toby and Todd of Springfield,
mRAentsCINE. •- .
, • . South Vietnam and a bon spenl the weekend with his
"'uencan ...,gton voyage to Rocky Roush son of
ts Mr d Mrs William
Auxiliary annual p1cmc
Ge ~ h paren '
· an
·
Tuesday 6 p.m Racine park Mr. and Mrs. ne
' w o Ault.
Brin tab!
: and ered leftforatour!tdutyinthenavy Mr. andMrs. CharlesWiseof
dishgJ _eservtcebers mcoeev1 at andisstationedinOrlando,Fla. Waverly spent Sunday in
· tim~tor mem
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Middleport.
same
e
G
Roush Pi
Mr
d
OHIOETAPHIChapter,Beta
aren
' qua;
·an
Mr. and Mrs. LeonBoucher,
Sigma Phi Sorority' get- Mrs. Harold Roush, PorUand; Mr. and Mrs. Corwin LyUe,
acquainted party at Royal oak Mr. and ~- Norman Roush, Mrs. Elmer Boucher, and Mrs.
· Robey Bamb1, and Garen; Mr. Roy Pattoo of Lancaster were
Par~, Tuesd~y 6' 30 p.m., and Mrs. Robert Euler Lori
ts Monda of Mr and Mr
haynde and wtener roast.
.chael
'
gues
Y
•
s.
PAST MATRONS, Pomeroy Ann and Mi
' Charles~, B. F. Turner.
.
.
Chapter 186, O.E.S., 6:30pm., W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Ori~ Mr. and Mrs. Marion FranciS
Slate Route 33, west side. Take Rousb, Mr. and Mrs. Oris returned Salurda! from
own table service and a favorite Roush, Salem Center; Mr · ~ Colm.d us, accomparued by Mr.
dish Io th
t f . th Mrs. Wayne Roush and Valene George Fry and the11 grandpl"cni:C wiDe
he~d ramal
Kay, Belpre; CM-Sgt. and Mrs.
Keith_Bla~ and Davt
_.d
p t Roush d Pam Mr and v
K th
derg
Temple
a
an
; .
ance. et
IS un
omg
SOUTHERN
- •
- Band Boosters Mrs. Dee Roush and Patton, treatment
at Children's
Tuesday 7·30 p.m at the high Mr. andMrs. RobertRoush~ Hospital. While in Columbus
h
·
·
Nancy, Mr. and Mrs. Tim they visited Mr. and Mrs.
sc oo1·
Trout, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. George Fry and Mrs. Katbryo
WEDNESDAY
Dill Cr
Mr
d Mrs Bill
MIDDLEPORT - Pomeroy
on oss, · an
·
Coppi.
Li
a b Wednesda
Cross, Cathy, Cindy and Carol, Mrs. Geneva Yates bas
~
u •
.
Y noon, Mr. and Mrs. Otis McOintock, returned from visiting relatives
Uno ted Methodist Church, Mrs Larry W"des and Sarah wbi h · 1 ded Mr
d Mrs
Pomeroy ·
~ Mr. . and Mrs. Owen Watson,' Cecil
c me
u
.
an
Lawrence of Me-.
WEEKEND meeting at Racine ; Mr. and Mrs. Gene Connellsville, Mr. and Mrs.
Church of Christ in Christian Roush, Chillicothe; Mrs. Dsvid R. Yates, Sr. and David
Union, Pearl St., Middleport, Elizabeth Workman, Mr. and R. Yates, Jr. and son Roger of
Wednesday through Sunday, Mrs . Harold Sargent, Mid- Cambridge, Mrs. Austin Fisher,
7:30 pm. The Rev. George dleport.
Mrs. Edna Holsinger and Mr.
Scott, Colwnljus, will be guest
and Mrs. -Russell Yates, and
speaker.
·
attended the Yates reunion at

•
.
LOHNS ON V.ISIT
son, John, of Memphis, Tenn.' Mr and Mrs Otto Lohn were
Mr. ~d Mrs. Robert Conroy of rece~t guests ~f Mr. and Mrs.
Miamt, Fla., Mr. andMrs.Jack Raymond Lobn of Westerville
Conroy, Mr. and Mrs. Rodney and Mr and Mrs Bentle '
Springer, Melinda and Todd, Pee les ~Mansfield.
y
Mrs Joe Ruhl all of Columbus
P
·
d ·Mr
.
d Mrs' H ard Neff
an
· an
· ow
and son ' Ricky ' of Belpre.
Lft

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

Middleport

DDAITIII.MT STOPEl SUNDAYS 110 &amp;!

rut PJL

•

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,\

.

-...

. , 1-fte~Ss

itM,Mich. . . . t..PwwtOJ,O-.~.....:at.Im.

==-==-===- _ _:____- ' - - - - - - ------'•.
t ·
•

.

EDnORIALS .

Soviet Also Had 'New Economics'

•

BERRfS WORLD

Play lor

-••

Game
You Bid

Watching the crazy ticker tape machine on Mad Monday, August 1&amp;; wben the stock market scored its great~t ooe-day gain in bistory, a Cleveland broker remarked
tbat ·~what is most int~resting to me is the fact tbat a
Republican president ·is curbing free enterpri$1!" (by
freezing wages and prices).
Curious. It is also a curious coincidence of history that
Presic!ent NiiDn sbould have called his series of measure;
desigDed to stop ioflation and perk up the economy a
"new economic policy. ,
,Just a half ce11tury ago, another .leader named N"atolai
Lenin illstituted what he called a New Economic Policy,
in capital letters, to rebuild the World Wat 1-shattered
:!CODOmy of the Soviet Union.
The aame; however, is the only simUarity.
The President's new economic policy, by temporarily
enlarging state control o\'er the business life of the nation,
i!J!!...tended to belp the economy get back on an even 1ree1
aiiilllius preserve the free enterprise system.
·
Lenin's NEP, by temporarily "tolerating a limited return of free enterprise-permitting peasants to sell their
grain on the open market and small employers to bire
and fire workers, for example-was intended to save a
faltering socialist revolution.
It is not that history repeats itself. Bllt sometimes it
seems to stu~.

•

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3.4. 1•3. 1.3.

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Pass

Pass

"

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

'... May Be lniurious ...'
If it was in the public interest for radio and television .
stations to broadcast antismoking messages to COUIIter
the insidious effects of cigarette commercials, then it
. would also seem in the public intereSt for them to be
required to Jl!&gt;inl.out the dangers of _big automobiles.
The U.S. Circwt Collrt of Appeals m Wasbington D.C.
has ruled just that in a sllit brought by Friends 'of ~
Earth against WNBC-TV in New York.
· "Commercia)s which continue to insinuate that the
-human personality finds greater fulfillment in the large
car With the qllick getaway do, it seems to us," wrote
· Judge Carl McGowan, "ventilate a point of view which
not only has become controversial but involves an issue
of public importance. ·
·
"When there is undisputed evidence, as there is bere,
that the hazards to health implicit in air pollution are
enlarged and aggravated by such products then the parallel With cigarette advertising is exact . : ."
I
I
•
What
for those who wou.ld protect us from ourBY JACK O'BRIAN
selves? How about alf those commercials for personal
hygiene products, which probably make up the bulk of
advertising revenue now that cigarettes are banned?
tap this off to press.
SAIL OVER FOR
Sbould it not be pointed out to naive, unsophisticated
"Right On" film producer Herbert Ilenska
IBESE CHINA TALKS
people that there are unforeseen hazards implicit in the
u,se of teeth whiteners: hair glisteners, underarm sweetNEW YORK - Mort Sabl aod wife, China ·and bis TV-producer wife, Dol.-es, adminaled a
eners and the .like? All t3nds of complications between Lee, split afleF less tban a year. Ghria Swan- joint production - a baby girl ... The Jolmny
the sexes can result, not stopping short of that immensely san'srel!ninglo Bdwy.Sepl7 in the marvelous Carson crew is awash Wilb nun.-s another
complicated thing called marriage. And after all, as some
· wag has remarked, there is undisputable evidence that molber-rale iD tbe delighlful loogplay "Bul- "C!'elltive turnover" Is due next mmlb ...•
lierfliesAre:Free" .••. Sbe'salreadytoured in the Mickey Rooney's delighted Wilb bis wt-of-town
marriage is the first 5t!!p to divorce.
Then there are the washday products, another beavily J.emanl Gersbe smash nationally for seven ''W. C." (Fields) biCHDusicai reviews, but isn't
a~venised category. Not only is there the danger of en1111111bs •••• Tbe new ~ McCartney rock group all choked up about assaulting Bdwy. f.- a
Vll'Onrnental pollution from detergents, think of the com- will st. Paul's wife Linda m piano.
lmgrun.
munity strife that could be caused by some housewife
Fonner Laugh-in victim Judy Carne's
JGID Ijndqy's daughter Kathy copped out
having whiter wash than her neighbor.
And surely women's liberationists should be accorded ofafa.timsbowattbe Playboy &lt;lub-oo Pop's getting a CBS-1V-linanced pilot haH-b&lt;Ur .•••
equal time to say something about commercials whidJ qgeslion: The show displayed slinky Crooner Neil Se&lt;Jalra took a Nevele singing
insinuate that the female personality finds no greater negligiNe 1llderduds .... Jawn's Dem-6Witch engagement, fairly rare-Neil says be's maki~
fuliiiiment and has no other purpose or interest in life
about $100,000 a year writing soogs, and lbat's
than removing the stubborn stains from hubby's wort - " ' e '""'I came just before it, and the Wbite enough f.- him .... New Yen Magazine beat the
Ba 5 "WY allllfelltice Democrat didn't want
~·
T
phn4m of his. ;!aughter in undies all over the New Ycrker Magarine -at softball.
Mary McBride manages the Frmcb Quarter
papn and 1V ... Tbe last-mirute model sWitch
(a I;nckay famiiy habit) got the job fo_r a cafe at the Americana Hotel; she knew pianist
mming blad: 20-year-old, Unda D. Smith .... Ken Kurtis who writes songs and Phil BritO who
Liuda's pap also is in public life- he's a cop iD sings 'em, knew bulb bad beart trouble and so
got them together - the odd finale : Brito just
the lJib Precinct
Alvin Ubar, me of tbe big investors in recorded a song album, ''It's Ballad Time
Again," With two ballads by Kurtis ("Just f.- a
I
.
I ''Lmg Day's Jwmey Iota Night," an off-Bdwy.
bit, lells ns lbere's huge llemand for the O'Neil While" and ''People O!ange").
Helen Bottel
Ell-60ng star Mary Small now is a Gal
nma lo low -but they can't find a star for the
male lead (Van Heflin was about to sign when he Friday at Esquire mag .... Oliver Reed says be
died in H'wood); amazing, its producers have has a pal who (fc.- a price) .ven can wangle a
Clll¥liS5Ied almcrrt ~&gt;Very name-actor and now ask private receplioo at Bucti~ham Palace Wilb
YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
'l1dl ri•""'" is flr yrung people, tbeir problems alii ns lo h111vp'1! their predicament in case some the ~een .... Reminds us of the late fabled
acllJr basn't beard of the virtually sure- Bdwy. timet scalper Georgie Sololaire: Gecrgie
pleasures, their lrciubles and fun. As With the rest of Helen Help
Us! ltwelcomeslaugbsbutwoo'tdodge a serious queslim wilb a hit opening .... Contact Lansbury-Duncan got fantastic prices foc bis ducats, always way
ProdDdions, 1&amp;50 Bdwy ., N. Y. flty .... Must be down front at all the newest bits; he never failed
brulb-dl.
a customer, and one Wired George from H'wood
Send y&lt;Ur teenage que.stioos to YOUTII ASKED FOR IT, care •-thob ool there.
Jadl Palance looks lilte a true 1929 Packard at the time of ~een Liz' coronatioo lbat be
of Helen Help Us! this newspaper.
tauring - car - with - the - curtains - drawn - ''dared" Georgie to get him two tidlets f.- the
1'BE ONLY WAY TO GET MARRIED ...
eetaway -car type, but he's just bought bis first Wesbninster Abbey ceremooy .... Geu-gie wired
Dear Belen:
lam 17andpregnant. Ididn'twanta baby this soon but, in OlD' RaiJs.Royce .... The Kansas Illy Royals are the bim back, ''I have two lidtets -but they're not
Slate, the ooJy way a fellow under 1Bcan get married is if he "has only majcr league team without a $50,000 a year together."
lldJplayer ••• Pres. Nixon's China policy bas
Bing's Wife Kathy Crosby will lour on bebalf
to."Wewanted to get married, so what else could we do?
!t
the
Sullivan Language School, acc«mpani'!ll
sbow
biz
""*ing
for
a
trend
:
Restaurateur
Irene
Nowl'll'-myemcation, becai.L'le of a dumb law.
Another tbiDg, in lUI" County there Is no sa educatioo euept Kuo hopes so - sbe's planning nightly Concerts by ber sister Frances; tbe Bings first are off to
oo back roads, and of course Wllll81ried people can't get auy kind O!ioois at ber famed Gingko Tree spot .... Paris any editioo ... Underworld rumcr: A
$125,1nl price bas been set fir a cootract lo knock
of cmlraceptives oc advice. Naturally, I woo't be able to attend BardJy e..,- dme ootside Chinatown.
Nomatlel- bow pocrthecowboy may seem in off a top crime investigat.- Artur Rubinsten
ligb ICbool afler I start showing. We live in the uptight~ Belt!
I t111n1t there should be liberalized laws all over the cwntry, 1V pione« cowpoke plots, every one of them is rich enough to let the butlei- do it but shops f.uot just lit.end-miss in a few states. Why doo't lawmakers caldl plaillly bares $3,000 to $5,1nl worth of capped bis own kosher goodies at the Dover Deli ...•
leelb .... TOiliismin Ireland is way off -for the Evidence of thegourmetstandard at~o Vadis:
"' wilb the times? -PREGNANT BUI' HAPPY
mislakeniiiJtion lbat Belfast atrocities somehow SawStu Levin, owner of high-dlic I.e Pavilloo,
Dear P but H :
... Beeause lawmaken dm't like to stir up h..-nel's nests: .-e iD the o...Jin area; just stay away from the cjining there.
T«m Ewell's in "Waiting for Godot" off.
' ~ liberalized se:r laws can lead to defeat at electioo liny narlbeast tamer, made up of the &amp;x
Bdwy ., and he proclairru; the Beckett drama is
Coonlies,
8111
you'll
skip
the
violence.
time. -H.
Tbe ''Kids Issue" of the National LamPoon "the most important play ever written" .... and
Dear Helen :
Now tbat .they have lbe 18-year-old serviceman and the 11- isD't at an fir kids; should be rated "R" ... so there siW ''Hamlet," all of Eugene O'Neill;
Pb)'llis Russomano has her first ~~oedipus." "Electra," "CaJigula,, not to
year cKd voter, isn't it kind of silly to tell a guy he bas to be 21 Smcst&gt;
befcre he can buy a drink? Or get married without bis parenls' rtt!Oid bit (fc.- Paramount) in ''I Said No," a mention "Uncle Tom's Cabin" .... Impresario
cirty lillie 190 double-entendre tune the late Ben Bonus is rushing in where financial angels
COilllellt? -BUTCH
.
Frank IJ 5 e and Jule Styne wrote with its always have feared to tread - he'll start a
Dear Butch :
I look f.- the time (and very soon) when the 1S.year-old wiD finally ~ pmchlioe explliining it wasn't Yiddish Repertory Theater in November,
be a legal adult - in all areas. What do you bet it wiD happen about seduclim but a subscription to Liberty redoing classical Yiddish plays fc.- the new
Magazine •.. Nolbing could be better to wrile;o- generatioo be bopes will want to explore that
befcre 1m?- H.
·
oolumD-by than a B!liJby Hackelt album as we honorable traditioo. Mit glik, Ben.

r------------------------------------------

along Broadway .!

next

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

!Helen Help Us!
By

~·

••

In "Tiger Bridge" Jeremy

l_

R

t3

West

Flint gives numerous examples of play by tigers who
bid like lambs.
. East and West can wrap
up five b ear t s yet they sell
our at four spades. Nottb
and South really belong in a
slam, hut they never consider getting past game. It
is just as well since a diamond opening will beat six
spades and somehow tigers
don't seem to be interested
in clubs.
Playing at four spades,
South ruffs the opening beart
lead. Since be is a tiger be
doesn't waste any energy
making talk about the slam
that appears to have been
missed. Io fact he wastes no
energy in thinking about the
slam at alL His problem is
to make four spades and be
knows that be is not living
in that happy tand where
trumps always b r e a k. He
decides to concentrate on
making the game.
There is nothing tigerish
about his lead of a low trump
at trick two but his. play
from dummy is a tiger's
play. He plays the nine, not
the king of trumps. East
takes bis jack but that
5MI $1 t.t JACOIY MODEIH !look
to: 'Wio Gf

~rMge;

(c/ o 1M _,_

,.,.,J, ,_o_... "'· hlio Citr
Stlltioft, New Yorlt, H.Y. 10019.

doesn't worry South. He is
going to make all hut one of
the remaining tricks. If he
bad played the king and then
the ace or queen of trumps
he would make six against a
3-2 break but would have
been set when the jack failed
to drop for him.
(NEWSPAPEI EHTEIPIISE ASSN.}

l

"*"'jd

nn

They11 Do It Every Time

DR. LAWRENCE f. LAMB
May Be Muscle Spasms

The biddmg bas been:
Wost
North
Eosl

1.

Pass
Pass
You, South, hold:
• •\11:87 • •\Z tKQ! .KI43
What do you do now?
A-Bi&lt;l two ao-tnuap, aot
two splllks. Yoar . . . - ...
!lid your -...a oait.
TOD.A.Y'S QUISJION
Your partner c:ontines

to
tine clubs. What do you do
now.

Answer

TOIUi&amp;iOW

fte Aim•ae
By Ullited Pfta bfenatleul
Today is Tuesday, Aug. 24,
the mit clay !t 19"11.
The mooo is between its new
phase l!nd first quarter.
The morning slars are Saturn
and Venus.
The evening slars are Mars,
Jupiter and Mercury.
Those born m Ibis day are
under the sign of \1"111!0.
Roman Catholic Cardinal
Richard Olshing was born Aug.
24, UBi.

M

•

NO&amp;nl
.K9
.K765

.985

'

S-'1'l1e DIUiy SentineL f,liddleoort.P«meroy, 0., August U, 197l •

- District Circle ·

WIN AT BRIDGE

Atlas

1Voice

~

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HlA.~~

•·

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••

"We •auld lile some of llwrt 'no i1111h' Htswiii!Ce, m ' _
tlwrt, no MOllet •loa! happens, it's not our foul!!"
~
'.

BRUCE BIOSSAT
After 90 Days, What? ::

Nixon Faces
Tough Options

..

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON (NEA) •
Even as the confusions of President N"u;on's SIHiay
wage-price freeze are taking hold, the economic experts
are ·trying to guess what be will do wben tbe clam!Hlown
period expires. They don't think bis options are very
•
heartening.
One ecopomist, who wants to be anonymous because •
be has colleagues in the administration, thinks e:rtending the freeze another 90 days or more wouia be bad news- :
an admission the first free%e didn't do muclt. One of the ·
President's politically sensitive friends agrees.
A second option, of course, is just to forget any further:
restraints after mid-November. Such a decision, it is .
suggested, could be accompanied by an appeal to husi- ness and labor to be good boys and not go hog wild
~
The President' s friend argues that, if the lid is to be;
lifted in November, N"u;on will have to jawbone management and the unions beavily in the weeks ahead. Hisnecessary theme: If you don't behave wben the cootrols:
are removed, they'll go back ou, harder than now.
My anonymous economist says a third optiDII for the:
President wpuld be to supplant the present fteelle with•
more formal hut also more flexible cantrols. For exam-pie, the rule might be that prices could ·move up 10 or_
15 per cent at a maximum.
Another possible step is the establishment of detailed·
wage-price gllidetines on the general pattern set in the:
Kennedy.Jobnson era. This migbt be accompanied by a-strongly worded threat to impose stiff controls, selectively, on anybody who gets sharply out of line.
·
Under this arrangement, tbe President might very well·
blink at all but Dagrant violations of the guidelines. Indeed, their whole purpose might be conceived as an effort
to prevent extreme wage-price moves which others in
the economy use as a modeL
Nobody here, of course, has any idea wbicb optioo the
President will choose. If bis original economic block-·
buster is any indication, he may delay decision 111til· a
very late hour.
Many people in politics, business and labor are complaining about the " unfairness" of the impact of the
wage-price free%e. It is easy enougb to document this.
But that can hardly be used as an argmnent agalnsf
controls. At any given point in time, there is ~ways a
substantial amount of inequity in the economy, whether it
~ frmen . or unfrozen. If ~ were no free%e today, all;;
kinds r.l: lliibalances-working hardship on some individ-uals and businesses would be sb(lwi.ng up in fresb pro-;
fusion eacb day.
•
Obviously, the administration has to hope that the cur.:
rent freeze will not be outrageously inequitable and tba[
it will be reasonably effective in cbecking inlli.tion.
•
But some sources bere dare to say that the treeze
migbt have a damper effect on those parts of the Presl:
dent's economic package designed specifically to stim~
late the economy and produce more jails.
;
It's being assumed that if a man knnws be can bu:y a;
car cheaper under the N"IIOD plan be's more likely to
do it _It's being assumed, too, that Hbe knows bis inconn!!
tax btte next year will be a bit smaller be also might
be more in a buying mood
'
Maybe these things won't ~- Perhaps tbe man
whose wages are frozen, and migbt stay that way for
much longer than 90 days, will decide it's not prudent
~o buy a car or a new sofa even though their cost to him
IS held steady. Savmg mDDey might seem Wiser.
The pomt IS, buman .behavior is more Ullpredictahle
than ever today. Classic economic thinking Whicb assumes certain ~ss or consumer
will follow almos.t automatically from certain actions, may not
apply at all.

On Ibis day in history:
responRs
In . 79 A.D., thousands of
people were killed and the
cities• of Pompeii and Herculaneum buried by the eruption
of volcanic Momt Vesuvius iD In 1814 the British c:aplured
In lS3Z Amelia E.rbart
Itaiy.
Washington, D.C., burning the became the first womau to
Capitol Building and the make a tran.continenlll nonexecutive mansioo.
stop flight.
lnl961FJauoedetonatedits
first hydrogen bonlb iD tbe
South Pacific.

'Stitch. in Side' Is Ol·d Problem
s_harp bead just under the
liver under the right side of
the diap!JJ-aRm and again
under the spleen just under
l.t!e left side. Gas trapped in
etther of these locations can
cause severe pain. 1 suspect
that gas trapping is a more
~uent cause of m:urrent
s1de pain in exercise than
commonly recognized. What
causes gas? Aj!ain you have
a lot of reasons, DIC!uding
nervous tension.
In any case. recurrent episodes of '"stitch in tbe side,··
as painful as they may be.
all' not senous . When .1 was
studying the fes)lOIISeS of
the ,Pt-nlathletes (pistol
shootmg. t•rnss-country runnmr:. lt'Drint:. swimmin~: and
tws.-b.-...·k ridin)!i. 1 nul&lt;'tl

A thought for today: British

poet Robert Soalbwell .sUd.
"Wben Itt bate anri!es, I slllile
to think bow quickly !lbe will
&amp;own.''

Q-Who accepted llle
Brilislt 111rmadu terms at
1/le BoHle of Yod:toltllt?
A-Brig. Gen. Cbules
O'Hara, a c t i n g (or Lard
Cornwallis, gave bis sword
to Maj. Gen. Benjamin Lill·
coin, a c ti n g f.- Georce
Washington.

that ~~ lib the ....
in the side and tbe .....!led
" second wind" ~Me midi
more COIIliiiOil ill llldltM h
at· the begiuu"1111 of tlleir
training and
10 aft«
tht-y !'fte in tip-lop slalpe
f...- ............. iliaD.

'

A

.
et ugust 19th ,

The semi-annual meeling of
the Rllberla Circle of District
25, Order- of Eastern Star, was
hosted b Ev -"-• Cha
Y ang.wo:
pter
ofMiddloport on Aug. 19. Bessie
King, president of the Circle,
I* "leolandinlro!JucedMarlyn
W"rlcoz,. Worthy Matron of
Evangeline Ctapter, who gave
a ftlcGme on behalf of the
bustess chapter.
Afll!r 8 potluck dinner, Mrs.
r - ,.
nled "oberta K.
.....,.
·
"'
Miod!i'll!, Past Grand Matron of
lheGrandOtapter'ofOhio, and
Belen M. Bar1ley, Past Grand
Katroo and newly appointed
Assoc. Grand Matron of the
Grand Otapter of Obio, special
guests; Deputy Grand Matron
of Distriet 25, W"tlma Styer, of
. Bua'-,· W"mnifred Hooper, of

an-~
_ ,, Grand Representative;
~ MOfficersuse
, viceirestfrom.dSentoctk~
.,....u
port; 5B-year members, Evelyn
~ Grace French, Edith
Bowman, Beulah Hayes, Helen

Bessie King concluded the
program with a poem
"Greetings For Two."
TheCircledividediDtogroups
for their respective bns'ness
meetings by the Past Matrons,
Worthy Matrons, Associate
Matrons, Conductresses and
Associate Conduclrmes. There
were 84 registered at tbe
mDuringeeting. the business meeling
a short memorial service was
given by Bernice Hoffman of
Harrisonville Chapter in booor
~a=anSefd:~:=ibGr
' Pas~ :
Grand Palr'on of the Grand
Chapter of Obio.
Clara Mosely of Aurelius
Chapter, Macksburg, anced the" 75th
.
11
noun
anmversary
celebration for September 7
beginning with a smorgasborg
dinner at 6:30p.m., and that the
W th G d Patr of the
or Y ran
on
G d

K~:u~~=~:=-~.

it was announced tbat the
Worthy Grand Matron Joyce
Black would be visiting
Cheshire Chapter in hone.- of its
50th anniversary.
.....
"d t
ced the
""' prest en announ
April :Ill, 1972 meeting to be
hosted by Minear Chapter,
Guysville, an evening meeting
beginning with a potliiCk dinner
at 6:30 p.m., and the Aug. i7,
1972 meeting at noon at
Matamoras Chapter, New
Matamoras ·.
.
~.....
Olher Roberta Circle officers
and Helen M. Bartley; Sberri p~nt were Birdie Kroll, vtce
Kiltt!. dalJil)tter of P. M. Naomi prestdent, New Matamoras:
King, a baloo acl, and in the Ida Kierns, secretary, Albany
alatw:e of Rosemary Lyons, Chapter, and Fauna Combs,
treasurer Reinersville.
"***~ The following Chapters were
:;
OUght -.. represen led . at the meeling
. •
New Marshfield, Mount Moriah
il
it of Beverly, Matamoras of New
f...,
it
it Malam or_as, Valley of _ Meil For every minute you are it Connelsville, Athens, Re~
-tt angry,!'."" IOse60seconds it VIlle,_ Bartlett, Manetta,
-It ol ._,.,..._
it Aurelius of Macksburg, Ml.
: -Ra1pb Waldo Emerson : Olive of Chesterhill, Thea of
-It
it Glouster, Belpre, ~ of
-tt
41 Guysv11le , Harr1sonv11le,
-tt
.
it Pomeroy , Racine, Webb of
il
t.... « Stockport, Cheshire of Dist. 24,
:
' ~ it and Belmont Chapter of
-tt
Da ton the home Chapter of

Reynolds, all !t Evangeline
lf""''ep«rt, and Slella Studer of
Athens iolel
I
d
; Vi
Know ton, Gran
Page from Malamoras, and
llaryllugbes, from District 24.
........•.-.....
...-.,.mpresentedb
A....,
Y
the Past Matrons Club of
Jliddleport consisted of
ScripiDre given from memory
by Beulab Hayes; Linda
Dsrnell Mayer sang a number
from the Sound 01 Music and
gave two original poems
honoring the Past Grand
Ma-.. Roberta K. Mindling

1*******
... A 'fh
· ...
_, ,

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For Today

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DllfVE-IN
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0111H ll.lnki"''l Haurs' to f
:: l ~ S 1D 1 •• usu•l on !:
... Fri.s.JL
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POMEROY, OHIO

Member FDIC
Member Federal

--tt

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.............. ***"

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it

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~: ~~:~yMa':;~-~· ·
pomtment.

Y

a::

VISIT MRS. DODSON
CHESTER _ Recent guests
of Mrs. B. A. Dodson of Chester
were her children grandchildren
and ' greatd hildr
Mr and Mrs
gran c
en,
·
·
ErroU Conroy of Akron ; Mr.
and Mrs Durwood Conroy and

Arthur, Sadie

Social
Calendar
ruESDAY

Roush Reunion
-

th:

:,en

BACK Tot:
~c._1 scHOOL
.•.. ~

Personal Notes

Gibb A
s nnounce

Birth_ oif Child
Mr. and Mrs . Gregory
Gibbs, New Haven, announce the birth of their f11st
child, a son, Gregory Wean,
born on July 26 at Holzer
Medical Center. He weighed 8
pounds 11 ounces.
Mrs. Gibbs is the former
.
Patricia Rankin of Cheshire.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd E. 1\ankin
of Cheshire. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
V. Gibbs, Jr. of New Haven.
BOWLERS TO MEET
The Pomeroy Women 's
Bowling Assn. will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at ·the
Pomeroy Lanes. All league
secretaries are urged to attend,
also, everyone interested in
bo tin
w g.

FOR

IN AWIDE
SElfCTION

-'-c...:)

Iettie Clotll • Corduroy • Bonded AciJiics
B.ck To
Sdtool

wer:::.

RecentguestsofMr.andMrs.
C. R. Karr, Sr. were Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Karr and family of
Millersport, and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Lytle of Syracuse, Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Yeauger and
Kevin, Mrs. Reva Beach of
Middleport and Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Reuter and son of
Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. John Cannons,
S
ta· d Sat d
r .. enter me_
ur _ay
evenmg Aug . _21 wtth a reception
at the Xema Country Oub
honoring Mr. and Mrs. J~hn
Cannons, Jr., who were married
July 31 in Plantation, Fla. Attending from Pomeroy were
· Mr.
grandparents of the bride,
and Mrs. Landon Smith, Mrs.
W"tlliarn Starner and daughter
Beth of Plantation, Fla. and
Mrs. John Gothard, sons
Stephen and Philip of Malbern,
Pa.
of
Recent dinner gues~ Mr.
and Mrs. Landon Smith were
Miss Helena Gregory Mrs
'
and ' J~
~~t~~:O
Point
·
.
Pleasant, W. Va., Mrs. \Vtlliam
Starner_and daughter Beth of
Planlation, Fla., Mrs. John
Gothard sons Stephen and
h-1- ' d M
M · ·
p
I
lp,
an
rs.
Harris of Malbem, Pa. ar)Orte
Mr. and Mrs. Howard c.
Smith, Greg, Ricky and Tracy,
spent the weekend in Cincinnati
where they attended the Cincinnati-Pittsburgb ball game
and toured the Cincinnati Zoo.
They also visited Mr. and Mrs.
Oliver Carpenter at Lawrenceburg, Ind.

Durbin":

Slrasburg, Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Raullin Moyer
and daughter Barbara have
returned from Hammond, Ind.
where they visited Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Moyer and baby son
born Jul 24
•
Mrs. ~ar.ry Gobring has
returned from Akron afler
spending a week With ber son,
Rev. Richard Bailey and
da.....,.,
·~terMarie. Mr. Bailey was
a former Middleport resident
and is full-time minister of the
Wooster Church of Christ.
Mr and Mrs W"tlliam Mattox
son David, W~t ColiBDbia, and
Park
and Megan
~~1 ,
_ er,
·Long, De~1e Woodgerd, Mrs.
Earl McKinley, Jr. and son
Scott ~~ the weekend at
Cedar Poml.
. Mrs .. Elsa B. Kimes is ~nvalescmg at the R1vers1de
·
Nursmg
Home an d
valescent Center, 65011
Corlde Ave., St. Albans, W. Va.
Cards or letters would be
preCJated.
Miss llallie ~Ide, a pa~ient
at Holzer Medical Center,
scheduled to d
-lfl!ery
~ ergo ••
Monday mornmg.

n.......

Sec-- J B" lxJa
UTIU
trt ry
Is Celebrated

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INTEREST OF
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Ezec. Ed.

Q--Witat doeJ the lnm

.. largo" mean in music?

ROIIERT HOEFLICH,

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NOTEBOOK BINDERS

.
The second birthday anniversary of Bobbie Bowers was
celebrated August :Ill at the
home of bis grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Eddie Fife, Pomeroy.
_A birthday cake decorated
like a baseball field, m green
and yellow, ice cream and pop
were served. Attending were
Roy Roush of ~; Gary,
Todd, Scotty, and Debbte Fife of
Pomeroy. Sending gifts were
Mr. and Mrs. Harry c. Roush of
RELATIVES COME
Mason; Mrs. Golda Reed, Mr.
MINERSVILLE - Mrs. and Mrs. Shirley Guinther,
Frank Roush and Loretta
Larry Swift, Rhonda, Danny.
Joe and Bruce of Shadyside, Beegle, Pomeroy.
Ohio are guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Dana Swift. Other recent guests
at the Swift home were Mr. and
(")'
Mrs. W"tlliam Swift, Cindy and CHESTER Th edding of
Brad, of Carrollton, Ky., and Pam Ia Sue G~
J
Dr· and Mrs. Zane KH:"• Kathy' SwaneSteWer will be held
Karl and Danny of Pittsburgh, United · Methodist Church at
Pa.
Chester instead of the Long
VISIT IN COWMBUS
Bottom United Methodist
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Church, as previously anDillon Cross and Mr. and Mrs. nounced.
.
Harold Sargent visited recently Miss Griffin is the daughter of
with Mrs. Pat Roush and family Mr. and Mrs. Ernest E. Griffm
in Colwnbus. They mel CM-Sgt.· of Long Bottom and Mr. Stettler
Pat Roush at the Cohunbos is the soo of Mr. and Mrs.
Airport. Sgt. Roush spent a year Gordon Ridenour of Olester. An
in Vietnam. 1be Roushes and open church wedding is planned
daughter Pam will leave at 7:30 o'clock, Sept. 3.
Saturday for Fayetteville, N. C.
where Sgt. Roush will be .
The Daily Sallilll
stationed at the Polk AFB.
·DEVOT.EDTOTHE

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SALE •119.88

The Buy Little .

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SHOPPERS
MART

Personal Notes

sons,

WILDWOOD Garden Club,
Wednfl¢ay, 8 p.m. horne of
Mrs. Alfred Yeauger With Mrs.
Oifford Phillips assisting.

s• A'TED

FABRICS

Held Aug. 22nd

AT

\NG1tv·"~6'-'

JOINT meet~ng Tue~day,
RACINE _The Arthur and =:n~ to~~ipo~
American Legton Auxtllary 'Sadie Roush family reunion was and Mrs. Harold Clase, Mr. and
Drew_ Webs~er Post .39 held SUnda Aug. ;2, at the Mrs Gerald Anthon J and
Amen can · Leg1on and Juruor
;
y'.
·
Hall
.·
·.
Y' oe
.....m • ...;, 7. 30
• Barbara, and Mr. and Mrs.
1 hall Racme American Legion
Bnu.uuoukzw
' . ·ht pG.mi.la s·-te· The "welcome ho111e ~' was W"tllis Anthony, all of Midec Y n _g • r s "' given toCM-Sgt. Pat Roush wbo dleporl.
Rep_reset_~tative, guest speaker. has returned to the states after Mr. and Mrs. Gary Ault, sons
Juruor gu-ls will serve refresh- spending a year in Soc Trang, Toby and Todd of Springfield,
mRAentsCINE. •- .
, • . South Vietnam and a bon spenl the weekend with his
"'uencan ...,gton voyage to Rocky Roush son of
ts Mr d Mrs William
Auxiliary annual p1cmc
Ge ~ h paren '
· an
·
Tuesday 6 p.m Racine park Mr. and Mrs. ne
' w o Ault.
Brin tab!
: and ered leftforatour!tdutyinthenavy Mr. andMrs. CharlesWiseof
dishgJ _eservtcebers mcoeev1 at andisstationedinOrlando,Fla. Waverly spent Sunday in
· tim~tor mem
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Middleport.
same
e
G
Roush Pi
Mr
d
OHIOETAPHIChapter,Beta
aren
' qua;
·an
Mr. and Mrs. LeonBoucher,
Sigma Phi Sorority' get- Mrs. Harold Roush, PorUand; Mr. and Mrs. Corwin LyUe,
acquainted party at Royal oak Mr. and ~- Norman Roush, Mrs. Elmer Boucher, and Mrs.
· Robey Bamb1, and Garen; Mr. Roy Pattoo of Lancaster were
Par~, Tuesd~y 6' 30 p.m., and Mrs. Robert Euler Lori
ts Monda of Mr and Mr
haynde and wtener roast.
.chael
'
gues
Y
•
s.
PAST MATRONS, Pomeroy Ann and Mi
' Charles~, B. F. Turner.
.
.
Chapter 186, O.E.S., 6:30pm., W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Ori~ Mr. and Mrs. Marion FranciS
Slate Route 33, west side. Take Rousb, Mr. and Mrs. Oris returned Salurda! from
own table service and a favorite Roush, Salem Center; Mr · ~ Colm.d us, accomparued by Mr.
dish Io th
t f . th Mrs. Wayne Roush and Valene George Fry and the11 grandpl"cni:C wiDe
he~d ramal
Kay, Belpre; CM-Sgt. and Mrs.
Keith_Bla~ and Davt
_.d
p t Roush d Pam Mr and v
K th
derg
Temple
a
an
; .
ance. et
IS un
omg
SOUTHERN
- •
- Band Boosters Mrs. Dee Roush and Patton, treatment
at Children's
Tuesday 7·30 p.m at the high Mr. andMrs. RobertRoush~ Hospital. While in Columbus
h
·
·
Nancy, Mr. and Mrs. Tim they visited Mr. and Mrs.
sc oo1·
Trout, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. George Fry and Mrs. Katbryo
WEDNESDAY
Dill Cr
Mr
d Mrs Bill
MIDDLEPORT - Pomeroy
on oss, · an
·
Coppi.
Li
a b Wednesda
Cross, Cathy, Cindy and Carol, Mrs. Geneva Yates bas
~
u •
.
Y noon, Mr. and Mrs. Otis McOintock, returned from visiting relatives
Uno ted Methodist Church, Mrs Larry W"des and Sarah wbi h · 1 ded Mr
d Mrs
Pomeroy ·
~ Mr. . and Mrs. Owen Watson,' Cecil
c me
u
.
an
Lawrence of Me-.
WEEKEND meeting at Racine ; Mr. and Mrs. Gene Connellsville, Mr. and Mrs.
Church of Christ in Christian Roush, Chillicothe; Mrs. Dsvid R. Yates, Sr. and David
Union, Pearl St., Middleport, Elizabeth Workman, Mr. and R. Yates, Jr. and son Roger of
Wednesday through Sunday, Mrs . Harold Sargent, Mid- Cambridge, Mrs. Austin Fisher,
7:30 pm. The Rev. George dleport.
Mrs. Edna Holsinger and Mr.
Scott, Colwnljus, will be guest
and Mrs. -Russell Yates, and
speaker.
·
attended the Yates reunion at

•
.
LOHNS ON V.ISIT
son, John, of Memphis, Tenn.' Mr and Mrs Otto Lohn were
Mr. ~d Mrs. Robert Conroy of rece~t guests ~f Mr. and Mrs.
Miamt, Fla., Mr. andMrs.Jack Raymond Lobn of Westerville
Conroy, Mr. and Mrs. Rodney and Mr and Mrs Bentle '
Springer, Melinda and Todd, Pee les ~Mansfield.
y
Mrs Joe Ruhl all of Columbus
P
·
d ·Mr
.
d Mrs' H ard Neff
an
· an
· ow
and son ' Ricky ' of Belpre.
Lft

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

Middleport

DDAITIII.MT STOPEl SUNDAYS 110 &amp;!

rut PJL

•

�·--y . . .

1- - - - - "

1 ....

1

.
-.,.o., Aiii;.:&amp;~Jt;1171

• ..

Wallace

~

Like~
•

PrOspects of 'l'omado Faothall
-

' :liP

BY iLEl•ll. wen
RACINE ~ n I' 1rill be
. ...,
. ·f ar ' .....
.,_...._
loctilll
.........
.,_.,.
Local 'l'arllldopid llfl8d IIIli
- i l l filslt!!afherd ~
Bruce Wwlllce lUeS over lbe
. belm.
•
11y UoliteiiPWess !.-filM I
Nalicliwol lugue
Willlace, .s-MI+Ietl 'It 8f&amp;ia
· 11•00•' NJFrt
East
Scbool
aDd Marshall {JDiwnitJ
East
W• . L. Pet, GB
W. L 1'1:1. GB Pittsburgh
76 54 .585 ••• grid star, has 12 · reba. ·c
76 45 .621 · •.• Chicago
69 st .548 s
BaJtimcn
lettermen, eight of them
[Jelroit
68 511 .S.O lOll&gt; St. louis
69 59 .539 6
Iii 60 .S28 12 · New YOrk
62 63 .496 11112 ,w-tets, from Coa~ Boll
Bosllin
AsbieJ'sl-ISaahnlamafa
NewYarl
6J 65 An .l6!'&gt; Aailadelllhi!l ~ .70 ....... 18
Sl
12
.04
25
Montreal
54
11
Waslliugtcwa
. (12 19V, )UI" agq..lt__..•PIJI!'r!bat
50 76 317 28ll&gt;
West
Oeiveland
1bL1 year's eil.licll of TwiUIIiilu
W. L Pet•. GB 1oQ1ba11 CGald be lbe best ill
W. L Pet. GB San Francisco 75 54 ,581 . ...
Olkland
12 45 .645 ... Los Angeles 67 6i .523 7V. maay years. SGulbem lila.,..
~ Crty
65 60 .S28 16
Atlanta ·
67 65 .5:18 9112
ChiclgD
62 ~ .m ,,., Houston
· 63 6$ .m nv. bcil five gamH In three J1!llls.
Calilamla
60 68 .&lt;169 22'1&gt; Cincinnati
63 67 .45 12112
MiNII!5IIIa
56 69 •.US :15San Diego . 47 12 ..364 28
3

52 12 ..n9 28'1&gt;
I Y's losults
Oelrvit 4 - - 2
Oakland I New YOrk 2
Only ga- schedled

.
llld
. 1 .........ld-.
·-·- · - BiD
llo'li!llr-.WafS.7,S.7,
..,... - ]....,.~ ~ ·
1.1'11elirl!e
. , wiD !Ill,.--•....:
. Nick lble.......ilodl- ........._
llllted
.. . . . ,.._ af·SCIIiolbaeit em. Iii sl-__.._. ....
,..-......-..
· t'lieTw•' i hlw:D•tr. Mlb~.•-•.....,
, _ . , a aood •DOUtfcr au end last ,_-, wiD lie . at

"A".....,. U..ire13frellb- tailbick,apd.._NellBiker,
- . lliDe ...-.es, five a starl!er 1aat ,_-,
lie at
jaiHis, apdflve lellicn.
fulllilck.
·
Baker iniiDa fiDe dl!lmtlw
wanace, oace the Mid- JDan, anally at middle
Aallltiolll C a•lieiea:e "pla,.er ~cker. Fl&amp;htiac r.- lbe
aflilewillrl:,Misp~ quatterback joll.-e ftaol••...,
*-l 1lil
li!l ~-He ],fildl~andllrlddyDvin, .
falsbeh.s:SZ"JJIocl''bil)'lwbo and sopbGmore VeraOrd.
lftll'talnid IDMlllebeliews
lie lam's 1111Q1e is ftmen- RelllmliW star1m 11wa lbe
daal,
iatmil' IIDe ..., lllliar '1'\irry
Relar'lliDB · st.rll!n iii lbe Vamey, jWiiGt r..ur,. 'lllicam!,

wm

•••••c

!'

Chicago 6 Cincinnati 3
San Franciscos New Ycwk 4
Pitl$burgh 4 AHanta 3 (1st)
Pitbbu111h IS Atlanta 4 (2nd)
Philadelphia 3 San Diego 1
,.,..,.. PI ' bit Pildlfrs
Montreal 12 Los Angeles 6
New York !Siulllem~ IHI) St. Louis 3 Houston 2
at Olkland ! Blue 22-S}, nigbl.
Wasllinghln llkobtog 5-31 at
Tod;of's Probabr.Pitclle"
Califamia (Wrighlll-13); night. CincinnaH !Grimsley 11-S) at
Baslan u...... g 1-S) at Chicago (Jenkins 2(1.9) . . . .
Kllil5aS City (Drago JS-1),
San Francisco !Maricltall2-9)
niQ1rt
at New York (Sadeckl 3-4),
M;,~....,ta (Pony ll-14) at night.
DelnMJ (lfieknl 6-5}. night.
San Diego (Kirby 11-10) at
Milwautee ( PilniiiiS 10.15) at Philadelphia (lench 4-11),
Oenhnd ( Calbert 3-4). night. night.
Chicago ( Bnldley ll-10i at . Pitlsbljrgh (Johnson 11-8) at
Baltill'l!lft I CUellar 1~1. night,. Atl.anta (Mc:Queenl-1 ), night.
St. Louis (Cleveland 10.10) at
w
'&gt;y's GOIIMS
HousiO'I ( Forsch 7-S), night.
Ch~ill:&amp;ltill'l!lft (night)
los Angeles (Downing 14-8)
. Mil-*eeat Cleveland (night) at Montreal !Stoneman U-101.
Milo · laatDelnlil !night)
night.
llustuu at Kansas City (nigbl)
Waslliilglo at Califumia (nigbl)
w.dnesd•y's Golmes
New Yarl at Qakl;nl (night) los Angeles at Montreal
(night)
San Francisco at New Ycwk
St. louis 1110 001 001- 3 6 0 San Diego at Phila (night)
GilD lilt OlD- 2 7 1 Cincinnati at Chicago
Gibian (12-111 and Simmons. Pittsburgh at Atlanta (night)
Wilson (ll-8) and tr~aff.
St. Louis at Houston (night)
I

ran

__, ............. _. '""'· c'"'~t sophamcns are Jim .Willl•ms
. • year'$ scoreS) Ia Iii follows:
~- · ··- _ , "''"" sl.ot end·, a·_,...., Allen, tlgb.t
Seplll, Fetlei:III;Hodhc (IIIIII lldJ l!;JDcln.
"""~'
·
De...O.. Fcrbell, sPit and
. $(), Away.
.,........,
.... "' ste~
·~ · ·tackle·•. .....,..,
·
te · . ·•
~feelatbat. tbeTU'II8does tight end; ~mls Han, slot Sept. 17, Gloila r (1-S!),
trill· Lack depth, sc), con- tackle; Qreg Middlesw~rt, Dame.
epenQJ,c:am.otalfQrdserlw.$ Mlbick, a!ld Barry TheiSS,
Sepl!t,ltygerO'eet(lt.'lt);
lnjGriei.
tight guard.
Hae.
bi
.. .
'l1le prnaining Southern
Oct. I, Wa ma (M!),DDe,
rudleris {resi"en 11m Maurer,
'lbe jwlior 1.1. Roo Hill, !!lot Oct. 8, Saaatw.lera ·(IN),
split ead; . Don Shaffer; tackle. Senicrl are Olal:les A'Q)'. ·
fullbaCk; Dave Huddleston, Yost, tight tsckle; Jim Smilb,
Oct. .U. U.u•a Tr8c:e IN);
aptprd; BGbJOOIIBQII, tight slot gUard, and Bill Cornell, Bae (B..-uql . .
laclie;Jii!DSalser,slotguanl; tight guard.
.
. · Oct. ZZ,OPJ!:N.
Gil!ll Sl"'"'"• ~~ elld; Tom 'lbe TU'II8does will scrim- Oct. Z., Symmes Valley
Bun1i1rt. slot tackle; Mlllly mage Nelsonville-York this (DNP), A~.
Bart, cenlll!r; Jeff Cirde, slot · Saturday and ;Meip "8''. next Nov. 5, Eulern (Nil, R-;
IJact; Jbn. Femll, tailback; Wednesday. Their regular Nov. 1!, Nil'lll (ldla 11-1!),
_. Tim Bill, tailback. The season schedule (and last . Away.
•

--ti..-, ·- :. . . ...

FAMILY PACK SALE
'

POR

Friday Only!

CHOPS

CUBE STEAK

lb.

•1.09
USDA CHOICE

SUPERIORS

CINCINNATI (UPI)- Teny
"I bilad-balted him ill the Bengals' third slraigbt and deBradshaw gave the Onrinnal;i helmet,"llddedde(enslvetactle pended m an eipbive first
Bengals a few sbak)' m••••••tls Sieve 0. 111) k
haH that saw them rack liP a
Monday night, bill lD the end 'l'be Slobdwil N·~ ill the final 21-3 lead only to fltllow Pillsit Was the YOUIII! l'IIQbuqb quarllr sot ro Brlldsbaw, who biJrgh araund iD lbe e ....
Steeler quarteaback 1!bo .-l- lad to be a ·sled olf lbe field baH.
ed help aft the field.
~ fdnhlin&amp; lbe ball, as the
RorstMnbim•nn .. ovidedlbe
lD a de 9ll6 ate lastdildl at- tlenp!s lag II! Ill win »-13.
lempt to give the Slle I s at
"lie nms lllolllllCb," Olomy·
least a lie with lbe &amp;qpis ill
the eshibililm· game at lliftrfroot Stadium here, Bradsba• lDgetlwl."
did il lot of nmnh~ ~~ put
his team deep in Bengal terrilllry wilb a few se«ttlls ld'L
And this is what "'Wdo:d to
him.
"I bit him iD lbe dov,IEI s
with a forearm," said &amp;!~gal
linebacker Bill Bergey.

USDA CHOICE FRESH

Benpls with their first quarter terback Virgil Carter for the good ·for. US: 'N_e needed. it."
, ''They toOk II to US m the
•
tr"Rn
s:armg,
.......,; field g!J8Is rest of the scoring.
Bengals coach Paul Brown, s:e"ond haH with ~lr front
fnrn 42 ... 16 yards.

1n the secmd quarter Doug who has built the fledgling club
Dr '7 look off m a 35.yard in four years time to a team
lo!rlwlown nm and Trumpy w be reckoned with, said the
look a 10 yard pass from. quar- tension in the second haH ''was

:-::::.~~Pirates

line football players, Brown
said. "These . tw? teams will
play some hwndinger. football
games when they get ready to
play for keeps.
·

said. "I was having trouble
k"*io"ll my cmfidence up and
my temper down. The team
bad been wailing for me and 1
fdt I had been leltin&amp; lhe team

down."
lie added: "lt was the best
night I've ever had in
priht •1 baseball." Oliver
siJ!&amp;Ii'd ill the first, tripled in a
third iDaing nm and scored
bin If, bit a 1wo-nu1 homer in
the r-th, si!llled and scored
ill lbe sixth, Died out in the
seventh and then bit another
two-nm IMmer lD the ninth.
In the other National League
pmes, Orirago downed Cincinnali IN, St. Louis nipped
ll&lt;mlo!l », Moolreal routed
Los An&amp;eles JU, San Francisco
ed&amp;ed New York. ~ and
Plril!!delphia nipped San Diego

Tbe llariiiilttshlve lbe ball Ill their own 40.
Vaa(tbi• ._. olllo WOJiams over left taekle far five yards.
WiiijMns tatits filr fGar llllll'e ,anb ower right end. WiDiams
a .SIP lileriWefil' tbreellllll'eapd a first down!
'11*1 8Silsaf dow• eilllld be lbe Marnlets' basic ftnnl¥8
ill Ill!••
lilis year. Tbe problble startiDg ~is
A1i1;J ~ &amp; , 171 •- juaiclr,lllil Williams, weD he could either
be Kart arID
• 'lilly. 8oth wiD have the ball tocked under
lleirarmslilis
·
AIU""cl• 'liDJ Pil.llart may &amp;he ~ and writers
• ' 1 1iR dllire
111 as 1be1 lry to distingui.sb wbo is
wlidL Bat•
ailm"lls CGald be deteded a~~~m~~ lbe fans.
llolilp · lo be rm 11111 ll!e leepe's 1qi I!J OUid gainers, and
lft~hlsllat• g n
'rfa'lfJ"Ptiatheapposi.lilm?
lllllliiNo. 31..S1111J wears No. II! Tliey are first cousins,
adl
alder :Wi6er who started far lbe Marauders in
past
M k'siaobiWasRGcky,adefensivebactstarter

.sa

l-J In the only A!Mrican
~ adim, Detroit edged
Mi~ f-1 and Oatland heal
New
~
lldJ Gihsl!n, boosting his

••iiC •

va::

Chicago Stops ·cincinnati, 6-3

a

iet.Ud to 12.-11, pilched sevenbiller and sinllled in the
winning nm ill the eighth inning
to &amp;he St. Louis the viclllry
over BousiGD. Gibeon struck out
his fint three times up before
winniDg his own game. He has
now won silt of his last eight.
Juan Pizarro, racking up his
fifth Yic1ary, pilched a fivebitter and Rm Santo drove in
line runs lo band Olicago the
Yiclllry over Cincinnati. Pizarro
bailn'l beaten the Reds in II

~

lbe standpOO!t ol the
hew!ti ,_PilartolftlllmtWe Chicago Cubs, the second
lim 11 years ilrbn!en vicllries lriumpb couldn't have come at
over 1be O••St•iali Reds, IIIII -a better time.

U.S. Captures

years.

'l'be Mmlreal Ezpos aren't
actin&amp; lite an ~on club
lbese da)IS. Tbey beat the
Dnd&amp;ers far their eighth
straight millry, the longest
winning streak iD the club's
his....,. Rusty Staub drove in

five runs with a gr.md slam

MY AMOUNT
lb.

homer and a sacrifice fiy and
Boots Day drove in four more.

Bobby Bonds drove in two
runs with his 24th homer of lhe
season and a double as San
Francisco edged New York.
Jerry Johnson saved the victory
with 3 2-3 innings of scoreless
relief.
RiCk W1se pilclled a fourhitler ID hand Philadelphia the
lriumph over San Diego. Tim
McCarver's two-run double
gave · Wise all the help he
needed.
Les Cain pilched a five-hitter
and struck out 13 as Detroit
topped Minnesola. Dick McAuliffe's three-run homer paced
lhe Tigers.
.
Oakland boosted tis runaway
lead in ~e AL !/est to 16
games With the vtCIIIry ov~r
New York. Tommy DaVIS,
Angel Man~ and Dick Green
each drove 10 two runs. And the
A's have Vida Blue going for
No. 23 tonight.

lb.

ANY AMOUNT
lb.

$}

SCOT LAD
Thursday Only!

Friday Only!

Saturday Only!

Double Cola

FROSTIE
ROOT BEER

Favorite Bread
loaves
for

200 N. 2nd
.MIDDLEPORT

,,oo

r--...,--------..,;.,--=====

LEARN TO DRIVE
A SEMI-TRACTOR
TRAILER!

TOPPS POP
6 flam
In throw-Away

Be job-reedy in 4 weeks
Join ona of the hilhest PlYing indllltrits in tilt llllion. ·In 11a thin a
month • 1:111 llldi you 10 driw a •mkrlctor trlilll' lnd Cll1ify
you undlr dlpannllftt of lnnrportltion r~gulatio111. FIM nationwide
piacllllltol aaislliKI upon lildllllion. For noon Information

Bottles

SEND COUPON OR CALL 130.0 3-u-1556

Clllollituo, W. VL, 21381

N111111 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Mdms,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Phone _ _ __

10

f!'ls~K

12oz, '
bottles

PAK

~~=====~~====~===~

~

CRT.

4602.

cans
"

TIDE

..

.. , 1

C~~tKERS 3

CURRENT
PASSBOOK RATE
'

Save by the loth, um
from the lst.

USED CARS

&amp;&amp;aEVDIT
1111

-

GROUPS AT $1.00 PER ADDITIONAL SUBJECT .

Tile AtiiiiiS Ctu

2MS..:c

bap

'

00

12 oz. ...

·WAFFLE BEEF
STEAKEnES
OCEAN BREEZE BREADED
16 oz. box
SHRIMP PIECES
GOLDEN RIPE

3 lb. can

BANANAS

PRUF

JOY
•
,

lb.

SPRAY

UQUID
giant

STARat
15 oz. can

size

..

Member Federal Home Loan

"YOio'll Like Our Qoality
Way of Doing Business."

Bank.

GMAC FINANCING

· Member

...••,.,

Loan

Federal. StY_lngs

&amp;

Insurance Corp. · All

ac:counls insured up lo

'Til 1:•

msP.M.s.t.

S20,GIIII.OO.

\

"CCI YHAll"

'

•
•
l
'\

,

pkg.

•'

Thursday,. August 26th
11:00 AM m7:00PM

'

'.'

FAVORITE
BREAD
.
EVERYDAY
'5 ~ •1.00
LOW PRICE

MARKET • Open ~ 9 to 10 • Sun." 10 to \Q
.

'

'••

II

Large Unclassified

TRASH CAN LINERS
10 cl

•I

Middleport Fire·Department

nt.

......, ••• Ollie

a

cit ., valous liHIIJid llYiesat IWSOIIIble prices,
.
.
'
.

ALL AGES- LI.. T ONE PER SUBJECT OR TWO PER FAMILY
tr
S.Yinp&amp;"-Ce-

0,.0. E,. I

Baggies

•
'
'

•.:-! olllllltfon to buy lddltioMI photbpphs; .howww,

priniUn a •
~

.Factary air. ·

.

IIOAPPOIIITIIIIIT NECESSARY
EXPERIENCED PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHER
ASSURES NATURALLY EXPf:IESSIVE POSES
~ fww

CGupe. GCIId finish,
blad&lt; vinyl top. gold int.

tn..ua

SIZe

2 lb.

REAMES
EGG NOODLES

COFFEE S-2_59

IVORY
I

each

' .

D

• H.

'

giant

size

BANQUET
TV DINNERS

99~

pl

SCOT LAD SALTINE

00
UQUID

giant

ICE CREAM

SeaHest Grade A

ORANGE CRUSH

_____ _

1h gal.

SCOT LAD
FRENCH FRIES

Qualify for High Paying Jobs!

HI-C ORANGE

c
T.

$

Frozen
Food
Treats

-..., BUDGET BACON

CHASE &amp; SANBORN

·--·--·-®

.

Meats at our Meat Counter

Downing·
Childs
.Agerq, IlK.

1121!1 I ,.. V6y la1k I -

lb.

59$

•

We have sliced to order Lunch

Awards In auto Injuries or
deat~s have greatly increased and now frequently
run to $50,000 or more. The
old $10,000 auto liability
Insurance is inadequate
today, especially as $100,000
liability coverage costs only
a few dollars more.

------mi~A~DAIVERm~NING

CHICKEN
BACKS ••••

BOSTON BUTTS

lb.

·''Our new car
- wrecked!"

AND tHIGHS ••••••••••

AND

GROUND GROUND
BEEF CHUCK

.

Fryer Parts Sale!
CHIC~EN . LEGS
lb.

PORK STEAK

Superiors USDA Choice Beef

End Slumn,
'I:"
Slug Atlanta Twice

urm WISECUP

(UPI)-Lefl

'

2

Beng

Vaughan to Williams to WiJiiams •••

CBJCAGO

us·cR··
CHOICE

••
'

_ , •• Results .

~...

BY

..•••'
.. '•

• •

We Accep,t Fedeial FOOd Stamps

Comer Mill and Second Sts..

~-

PHONE: 992~3480
"We Reserve The Righ,t To Limit Quantitie·s"

�·--y . . .

1- - - - - "

1 ....

1

.
-.,.o., Aiii;.:&amp;~Jt;1171

• ..

Wallace

~

Like~
•

PrOspects of 'l'omado Faothall
-

' :liP

BY iLEl•ll. wen
RACINE ~ n I' 1rill be
. ...,
. ·f ar ' .....
.,_...._
loctilll
.........
.,_.,.
Local 'l'arllldopid llfl8d IIIli
- i l l filslt!!afherd ~
Bruce Wwlllce lUeS over lbe
. belm.
•
11y UoliteiiPWess !.-filM I
Nalicliwol lugue
Willlace, .s-MI+Ietl 'It 8f&amp;ia
· 11•00•' NJFrt
East
Scbool
aDd Marshall {JDiwnitJ
East
W• . L. Pet, GB
W. L 1'1:1. GB Pittsburgh
76 54 .585 ••• grid star, has 12 · reba. ·c
76 45 .621 · •.• Chicago
69 st .548 s
BaJtimcn
lettermen, eight of them
[Jelroit
68 511 .S.O lOll&gt; St. louis
69 59 .539 6
Iii 60 .S28 12 · New YOrk
62 63 .496 11112 ,w-tets, from Coa~ Boll
Bosllin
AsbieJ'sl-ISaahnlamafa
NewYarl
6J 65 An .l6!'&gt; Aailadelllhi!l ~ .70 ....... 18
Sl
12
.04
25
Montreal
54
11
Waslliugtcwa
. (12 19V, )UI" agq..lt__..•PIJI!'r!bat
50 76 317 28ll&gt;
West
Oeiveland
1bL1 year's eil.licll of TwiUIIiilu
W. L Pet•. GB 1oQ1ba11 CGald be lbe best ill
W. L Pet. GB San Francisco 75 54 ,581 . ...
Olkland
12 45 .645 ... Los Angeles 67 6i .523 7V. maay years. SGulbem lila.,..
~ Crty
65 60 .S28 16
Atlanta ·
67 65 .5:18 9112
ChiclgD
62 ~ .m ,,., Houston
· 63 6$ .m nv. bcil five gamH In three J1!llls.
Calilamla
60 68 .&lt;169 22'1&gt; Cincinnati
63 67 .45 12112
MiNII!5IIIa
56 69 •.US :15San Diego . 47 12 ..364 28
3

52 12 ..n9 28'1&gt;
I Y's losults
Oelrvit 4 - - 2
Oakland I New YOrk 2
Only ga- schedled

.
llld
. 1 .........ld-.
·-·- · - BiD
llo'li!llr-.WafS.7,S.7,
..,... - ]....,.~ ~ ·
1.1'11elirl!e
. , wiD !Ill,.--•....:
. Nick lble.......ilodl- ........._
llllted
.. . . . ,.._ af·SCIIiolbaeit em. Iii sl-__.._. ....
,..-......-..
· t'lieTw•' i hlw:D•tr. Mlb~.•-•.....,
, _ . , a aood •DOUtfcr au end last ,_-, wiD lie . at

"A".....,. U..ire13frellb- tailbick,apd.._NellBiker,
- . lliDe ...-.es, five a starl!er 1aat ,_-,
lie at
jaiHis, apdflve lellicn.
fulllilck.
·
Baker iniiDa fiDe dl!lmtlw
wanace, oace the Mid- JDan, anally at middle
Aallltiolll C a•lieiea:e "pla,.er ~cker. Fl&amp;htiac r.- lbe
aflilewillrl:,Misp~ quatterback joll.-e ftaol••...,
*-l 1lil
li!l ~-He ],fildl~andllrlddyDvin, .
falsbeh.s:SZ"JJIocl''bil)'lwbo and sopbGmore VeraOrd.
lftll'talnid IDMlllebeliews
lie lam's 1111Q1e is ftmen- RelllmliW star1m 11wa lbe
daal,
iatmil' IIDe ..., lllliar '1'\irry
Relar'lliDB · st.rll!n iii lbe Vamey, jWiiGt r..ur,. 'lllicam!,

wm

•••••c

!'

Chicago 6 Cincinnati 3
San Franciscos New Ycwk 4
Pitl$burgh 4 AHanta 3 (1st)
Pitbbu111h IS Atlanta 4 (2nd)
Philadelphia 3 San Diego 1
,.,..,.. PI ' bit Pildlfrs
Montreal 12 Los Angeles 6
New York !Siulllem~ IHI) St. Louis 3 Houston 2
at Olkland ! Blue 22-S}, nigbl.
Wasllinghln llkobtog 5-31 at
Tod;of's Probabr.Pitclle"
Califamia (Wrighlll-13); night. CincinnaH !Grimsley 11-S) at
Baslan u...... g 1-S) at Chicago (Jenkins 2(1.9) . . . .
Kllil5aS City (Drago JS-1),
San Francisco !Maricltall2-9)
niQ1rt
at New York (Sadeckl 3-4),
M;,~....,ta (Pony ll-14) at night.
DelnMJ (lfieknl 6-5}. night.
San Diego (Kirby 11-10) at
Milwautee ( PilniiiiS 10.15) at Philadelphia (lench 4-11),
Oenhnd ( Calbert 3-4). night. night.
Chicago ( Bnldley ll-10i at . Pitlsbljrgh (Johnson 11-8) at
Baltill'l!lft I CUellar 1~1. night,. Atl.anta (Mc:Queenl-1 ), night.
St. Louis (Cleveland 10.10) at
w
'&gt;y's GOIIMS
HousiO'I ( Forsch 7-S), night.
Ch~ill:&amp;ltill'l!lft (night)
los Angeles (Downing 14-8)
. Mil-*eeat Cleveland (night) at Montreal !Stoneman U-101.
Milo · laatDelnlil !night)
night.
llustuu at Kansas City (nigbl)
Waslliilglo at Califumia (nigbl)
w.dnesd•y's Golmes
New Yarl at Qakl;nl (night) los Angeles at Montreal
(night)
San Francisco at New Ycwk
St. louis 1110 001 001- 3 6 0 San Diego at Phila (night)
GilD lilt OlD- 2 7 1 Cincinnati at Chicago
Gibian (12-111 and Simmons. Pittsburgh at Atlanta (night)
Wilson (ll-8) and tr~aff.
St. Louis at Houston (night)
I

ran

__, ............. _. '""'· c'"'~t sophamcns are Jim .Willl•ms
. • year'$ scoreS) Ia Iii follows:
~- · ··- _ , "''"" sl.ot end·, a·_,...., Allen, tlgb.t
Seplll, Fetlei:III;Hodhc (IIIIII lldJ l!;JDcln.
"""~'
·
De...O.. Fcrbell, sPit and
. $(), Away.
.,........,
.... "' ste~
·~ · ·tackle·•. .....,..,
·
te · . ·•
~feelatbat. tbeTU'II8does tight end; ~mls Han, slot Sept. 17, Gloila r (1-S!),
trill· Lack depth, sc), con- tackle; Qreg Middlesw~rt, Dame.
epenQJ,c:am.otalfQrdserlw.$ Mlbick, a!ld Barry TheiSS,
Sepl!t,ltygerO'eet(lt.'lt);
lnjGriei.
tight guard.
Hae.
bi
.. .
'l1le prnaining Southern
Oct. I, Wa ma (M!),DDe,
rudleris {resi"en 11m Maurer,
'lbe jwlior 1.1. Roo Hill, !!lot Oct. 8, Saaatw.lera ·(IN),
split ead; . Don Shaffer; tackle. Senicrl are Olal:les A'Q)'. ·
fullbaCk; Dave Huddleston, Yost, tight tsckle; Jim Smilb,
Oct. .U. U.u•a Tr8c:e IN);
aptprd; BGbJOOIIBQII, tight slot gUard, and Bill Cornell, Bae (B..-uql . .
laclie;Jii!DSalser,slotguanl; tight guard.
.
. · Oct. ZZ,OPJ!:N.
Gil!ll Sl"'"'"• ~~ elld; Tom 'lbe TU'II8does will scrim- Oct. Z., Symmes Valley
Bun1i1rt. slot tackle; Mlllly mage Nelsonville-York this (DNP), A~.
Bart, cenlll!r; Jeff Cirde, slot · Saturday and ;Meip "8''. next Nov. 5, Eulern (Nil, R-;
IJact; Jbn. Femll, tailback; Wednesday. Their regular Nov. 1!, Nil'lll (ldla 11-1!),
_. Tim Bill, tailback. The season schedule (and last . Away.
•

--ti..-, ·- :. . . ...

FAMILY PACK SALE
'

POR

Friday Only!

CHOPS

CUBE STEAK

lb.

•1.09
USDA CHOICE

SUPERIORS

CINCINNATI (UPI)- Teny
"I bilad-balted him ill the Bengals' third slraigbt and deBradshaw gave the Onrinnal;i helmet,"llddedde(enslvetactle pended m an eipbive first
Bengals a few sbak)' m••••••tls Sieve 0. 111) k
haH that saw them rack liP a
Monday night, bill lD the end 'l'be Slobdwil N·~ ill the final 21-3 lead only to fltllow Pillsit Was the YOUIII! l'IIQbuqb quarllr sot ro Brlldsbaw, who biJrgh araund iD lbe e ....
Steeler quarteaback 1!bo .-l- lad to be a ·sled olf lbe field baH.
ed help aft the field.
~ fdnhlin&amp; lbe ball, as the
RorstMnbim•nn .. ovidedlbe
lD a de 9ll6 ate lastdildl at- tlenp!s lag II! Ill win »-13.
lempt to give the Slle I s at
"lie nms lllolllllCb," Olomy·
least a lie with lbe &amp;qpis ill
the eshibililm· game at lliftrfroot Stadium here, Bradsba• lDgetlwl."
did il lot of nmnh~ ~~ put
his team deep in Bengal terrilllry wilb a few se«ttlls ld'L
And this is what "'Wdo:d to
him.
"I bit him iD lbe dov,IEI s
with a forearm," said &amp;!~gal
linebacker Bill Bergey.

USDA CHOICE FRESH

Benpls with their first quarter terback Virgil Carter for the good ·for. US: 'N_e needed. it."
, ''They toOk II to US m the
•
tr"Rn
s:armg,
.......,; field g!J8Is rest of the scoring.
Bengals coach Paul Brown, s:e"ond haH with ~lr front
fnrn 42 ... 16 yards.

1n the secmd quarter Doug who has built the fledgling club
Dr '7 look off m a 35.yard in four years time to a team
lo!rlwlown nm and Trumpy w be reckoned with, said the
look a 10 yard pass from. quar- tension in the second haH ''was

:-::::.~~Pirates

line football players, Brown
said. "These . tw? teams will
play some hwndinger. football
games when they get ready to
play for keeps.
·

said. "I was having trouble
k"*io"ll my cmfidence up and
my temper down. The team
bad been wailing for me and 1
fdt I had been leltin&amp; lhe team

down."
lie added: "lt was the best
night I've ever had in
priht •1 baseball." Oliver
siJ!&amp;Ii'd ill the first, tripled in a
third iDaing nm and scored
bin If, bit a 1wo-nu1 homer in
the r-th, si!llled and scored
ill lbe sixth, Died out in the
seventh and then bit another
two-nm IMmer lD the ninth.
In the other National League
pmes, Orirago downed Cincinnali IN, St. Louis nipped
ll&lt;mlo!l », Moolreal routed
Los An&amp;eles JU, San Francisco
ed&amp;ed New York. ~ and
Plril!!delphia nipped San Diego

Tbe llariiiilttshlve lbe ball Ill their own 40.
Vaa(tbi• ._. olllo WOJiams over left taekle far five yards.
WiiijMns tatits filr fGar llllll'e ,anb ower right end. WiDiams
a .SIP lileriWefil' tbreellllll'eapd a first down!
'11*1 8Silsaf dow• eilllld be lbe Marnlets' basic ftnnl¥8
ill Ill!••
lilis year. Tbe problble startiDg ~is
A1i1;J ~ &amp; , 171 •- juaiclr,lllil Williams, weD he could either
be Kart arID
• 'lilly. 8oth wiD have the ball tocked under
lleirarmslilis
·
AIU""cl• 'liDJ Pil.llart may &amp;he ~ and writers
• ' 1 1iR dllire
111 as 1be1 lry to distingui.sb wbo is
wlidL Bat•
ailm"lls CGald be deteded a~~~m~~ lbe fans.
llolilp · lo be rm 11111 ll!e leepe's 1qi I!J OUid gainers, and
lft~hlsllat• g n
'rfa'lfJ"Ptiatheapposi.lilm?
lllllliiNo. 31..S1111J wears No. II! Tliey are first cousins,
adl
alder :Wi6er who started far lbe Marauders in
past
M k'siaobiWasRGcky,adefensivebactstarter

.sa

l-J In the only A!Mrican
~ adim, Detroit edged
Mi~ f-1 and Oatland heal
New
~
lldJ Gihsl!n, boosting his

••iiC •

va::

Chicago Stops ·cincinnati, 6-3

a

iet.Ud to 12.-11, pilched sevenbiller and sinllled in the
winning nm ill the eighth inning
to &amp;he St. Louis the viclllry
over BousiGD. Gibeon struck out
his fint three times up before
winniDg his own game. He has
now won silt of his last eight.
Juan Pizarro, racking up his
fifth Yic1ary, pilched a fivebitter and Rm Santo drove in
line runs lo band Olicago the
Yiclllry over Cincinnati. Pizarro
bailn'l beaten the Reds in II

~

lbe standpOO!t ol the
hew!ti ,_PilartolftlllmtWe Chicago Cubs, the second
lim 11 years ilrbn!en vicllries lriumpb couldn't have come at
over 1be O••St•iali Reds, IIIII -a better time.

U.S. Captures

years.

'l'be Mmlreal Ezpos aren't
actin&amp; lite an ~on club
lbese da)IS. Tbey beat the
Dnd&amp;ers far their eighth
straight millry, the longest
winning streak iD the club's
his....,. Rusty Staub drove in

five runs with a gr.md slam

MY AMOUNT
lb.

homer and a sacrifice fiy and
Boots Day drove in four more.

Bobby Bonds drove in two
runs with his 24th homer of lhe
season and a double as San
Francisco edged New York.
Jerry Johnson saved the victory
with 3 2-3 innings of scoreless
relief.
RiCk W1se pilclled a fourhitler ID hand Philadelphia the
lriumph over San Diego. Tim
McCarver's two-run double
gave · Wise all the help he
needed.
Les Cain pilched a five-hitter
and struck out 13 as Detroit
topped Minnesola. Dick McAuliffe's three-run homer paced
lhe Tigers.
.
Oakland boosted tis runaway
lead in ~e AL !/est to 16
games With the vtCIIIry ov~r
New York. Tommy DaVIS,
Angel Man~ and Dick Green
each drove 10 two runs. And the
A's have Vida Blue going for
No. 23 tonight.

lb.

ANY AMOUNT
lb.

$}

SCOT LAD
Thursday Only!

Friday Only!

Saturday Only!

Double Cola

FROSTIE
ROOT BEER

Favorite Bread
loaves
for

200 N. 2nd
.MIDDLEPORT

,,oo

r--...,--------..,;.,--=====

LEARN TO DRIVE
A SEMI-TRACTOR
TRAILER!

TOPPS POP
6 flam
In throw-Away

Be job-reedy in 4 weeks
Join ona of the hilhest PlYing indllltrits in tilt llllion. ·In 11a thin a
month • 1:111 llldi you 10 driw a •mkrlctor trlilll' lnd Cll1ify
you undlr dlpannllftt of lnnrportltion r~gulatio111. FIM nationwide
piacllllltol aaislliKI upon lildllllion. For noon Information

Bottles

SEND COUPON OR CALL 130.0 3-u-1556

Clllollituo, W. VL, 21381

N111111 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Mdms,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Phone _ _ __

10

f!'ls~K

12oz, '
bottles

PAK

~~=====~~====~===~

~

CRT.

4602.

cans
"

TIDE

..

.. , 1

C~~tKERS 3

CURRENT
PASSBOOK RATE
'

Save by the loth, um
from the lst.

USED CARS

&amp;&amp;aEVDIT
1111

-

GROUPS AT $1.00 PER ADDITIONAL SUBJECT .

Tile AtiiiiiS Ctu

2MS..:c

bap

'

00

12 oz. ...

·WAFFLE BEEF
STEAKEnES
OCEAN BREEZE BREADED
16 oz. box
SHRIMP PIECES
GOLDEN RIPE

3 lb. can

BANANAS

PRUF

JOY
•
,

lb.

SPRAY

UQUID
giant

STARat
15 oz. can

size

..

Member Federal Home Loan

"YOio'll Like Our Qoality
Way of Doing Business."

Bank.

GMAC FINANCING

· Member

...••,.,

Loan

Federal. StY_lngs

&amp;

Insurance Corp. · All

ac:counls insured up lo

'Til 1:•

msP.M.s.t.

S20,GIIII.OO.

\

"CCI YHAll"

'

•
•
l
'\

,

pkg.

•'

Thursday,. August 26th
11:00 AM m7:00PM

'

'.'

FAVORITE
BREAD
.
EVERYDAY
'5 ~ •1.00
LOW PRICE

MARKET • Open ~ 9 to 10 • Sun." 10 to \Q
.

'

'••

II

Large Unclassified

TRASH CAN LINERS
10 cl

•I

Middleport Fire·Department

nt.

......, ••• Ollie

a

cit ., valous liHIIJid llYiesat IWSOIIIble prices,
.
.
'
.

ALL AGES- LI.. T ONE PER SUBJECT OR TWO PER FAMILY
tr
S.Yinp&amp;"-Ce-

0,.0. E,. I

Baggies

•
'
'

•.:-! olllllltfon to buy lddltioMI photbpphs; .howww,

priniUn a •
~

.Factary air. ·

.

IIOAPPOIIITIIIIIT NECESSARY
EXPERIENCED PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHER
ASSURES NATURALLY EXPf:IESSIVE POSES
~ fww

CGupe. GCIId finish,
blad&lt; vinyl top. gold int.

tn..ua

SIZe

2 lb.

REAMES
EGG NOODLES

COFFEE S-2_59

IVORY
I

each

' .

D

• H.

'

giant

size

BANQUET
TV DINNERS

99~

pl

SCOT LAD SALTINE

00
UQUID

giant

ICE CREAM

SeaHest Grade A

ORANGE CRUSH

_____ _

1h gal.

SCOT LAD
FRENCH FRIES

Qualify for High Paying Jobs!

HI-C ORANGE

c
T.

$

Frozen
Food
Treats

-..., BUDGET BACON

CHASE &amp; SANBORN

·--·--·-®

.

Meats at our Meat Counter

Downing·
Childs
.Agerq, IlK.

1121!1 I ,.. V6y la1k I -

lb.

59$

•

We have sliced to order Lunch

Awards In auto Injuries or
deat~s have greatly increased and now frequently
run to $50,000 or more. The
old $10,000 auto liability
Insurance is inadequate
today, especially as $100,000
liability coverage costs only
a few dollars more.

------mi~A~DAIVERm~NING

CHICKEN
BACKS ••••

BOSTON BUTTS

lb.

·''Our new car
- wrecked!"

AND tHIGHS ••••••••••

AND

GROUND GROUND
BEEF CHUCK

.

Fryer Parts Sale!
CHIC~EN . LEGS
lb.

PORK STEAK

Superiors USDA Choice Beef

End Slumn,
'I:"
Slug Atlanta Twice

urm WISECUP

(UPI)-Lefl

'

2

Beng

Vaughan to Williams to WiJiiams •••

CBJCAGO

us·cR··
CHOICE

••
'

_ , •• Results .

~...

BY

..•••'
.. '•

• •

We Accep,t Fedeial FOOd Stamps

Comer Mill and Second Sts..

~-

PHONE: 992~3480
"We Reserve The Righ,t To Limit Quantitie·s"

�'

•
1-'l'btDIIIJII

•

4!oei.MJI+eja~oy,O. ,Aa&amp;llll21,lfll

In The

Bargains, Bargains and More Bargains
.
.

2 51&amp;115
OF
QUAliTY.

Carpenter
- News, Event
Mr. and Mrs. Selh Huntley,
Vinton, were guests of Mr. and

housewor k and cook. f or

'------------------__J

Shops the

WANT AD WAY
")~

·

e

a

Pifot Training Offered in
Mason County Adult Center
PT. PlEASANT - U one
wanla to heccme· an airplane
pilot, either private or commercial, the Mason Cotulty
· Adult Learning Center now
offers an escellent opportunity
to study for a license.
Two programmed courses
have been received at the
center lhis week, and are now
available to the public for their
· Ulll, tuition free . The Private
Pilot Course, is a kit utilizing
the
new
method
of
"Prcltlrammed Aul.().lnstruction
(Self.Study).
All of the material relates
specifically to the pilot's job,
not to general academic subject
~m~. U the information doesn't
lpply -It Isn't Included!
Tilt brief, Jo..thei)oint explanltions, each followed by
Jll'CIII"'III1 ''frames" make
1 '*C euy. The methOd is
llllld to inlure that you will
111m It quickly and easily -

Airplane Operation and Performance,
Meteorology ,
Communications, PUblications
Used by a Pilot, Federal
Aviation Regulations ,
Navigation, Flight Computer
Uses, Radio Navigation, PreFlight Planning, Attitude Instrument Flying, Emergency
Procedures, and Private Pilot's
Job Performance Flight
Maneuvers.

The second course, Advanced
Private and Commercial Pilot,
is a progranuned kit, similar to
the Private Pilot Course, but
more advanced and also containing in~epth discussions,
necessary only for Commercial
pilots. Both kits contahi
e.verything needed to pass both
the FAA Private and the FAA
Commercial Pilot written
eums. Four copies of each kit
will be available so that a small
group may study at the same
. . 1 ..,..._ it.
lime if so desired.
.A "pr.ammed" Private New filmstrips wilh records
PIII'JMPafwmance section are now available at the Center
1 1'tl• 111e course by in
.the following areas :
1111 m.?W'Iiow and -Te~~niques of Paragraph
IIIIICtual job of Wnung; Focus on Language ;
r' 'l'he subject . Techniques of Theme Writing;
1,1\111 II !IIi ft~Qte Pilot and Fresh Perspectives fn
C
I ' It 1111 hllowifl8&lt; Composition. ,
·

J.

I

•

days

-

a-

·

IOOfiiG &amp; CAIPEII'IU
WOII
.

a.2A-lk:

Phon~ 992.301~.

bll~ t~

........ns.

Female Help lanled
LOCAL INTERV IEWERS lor
market research studies i n .a·u
counties. No selling. Hourly
w• and car allowance. Oc~·
caSional assig!lll'lents. Winona,
Inc., 3.C24 E. Lake St., Min- PAINT
DAMIIGE.
tm
.,._
Se ·
neapolis, .Minn. 55«16. 82A.IIp T Mad&gt;iJ»s.
...
in
----..,---,.;g;,a~
......
""'
HOUSEWIVES - evenlng.s artaduwts
• ...fr~? Earn · 25 per cent
a&gt;nlnlls
.-e
Wt
ilL
Sew$
demc&gt;nslraling toys and gills
wJiblcr21 •
m?
with the highest paying party bdlwl 'es. _ .. .........,
plan. Ccmpare our program .... .,..,... lliliiood 1oeno
and color catalog ·before stitch. hiS.- ~ $3l..lO
making any ot her coi11 - or h 1y F .... a • '+mitments. No experience. ;No P.bane 'lft.;J6fl.
invesl111ent. Car nem!!ssary.
Call .9oi'I.J233 or write :r~ ________ _..~
·'Ladies Party Plan. Johnst...:;;',
EL E CTROLUX v;oc,.um
Pa. 1902.
eana aa 2r k: with al8-2A.31p d~
cudat.., ..s
- - -- - - - paint -- Used ..... lib!

Wanted To Buy

.....

~

ash

,..

·

FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to school.,
Phone 992.50(.
10.18-lfc
I BEDROOM frailer apartment, ideal for couples.
Contad Mcaure's Oairy Isle.
992-524 or 992-306.
S.2Q.61c

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

w. Cnser.lltJr.

~

2BEDROOMmobilehome. M&amp; ----- ----GUip
G Food Market, 3 miles south
•
of Middleport on State Route 1960 G.M.C. pn.., - sm..
7
Mini'llike St2. Phone
.
S.22·31p '992.QII2.

Racine. Ohio

Crill Bradford

""*""

menl_ $11,500.

MillERSVIlLE - 1112 story
" ' - · 7rooms. 3 bedrooms,
ballt. tile paneling, basement.
.EW ALUMINUM SIDING,
· -'-and ard A BUY
rua ,.....~,,
Y •
AT JUST $11.....
PLACETHESALEOFYOUR
PltOPERTY IN GOOD
HANDS.
HENRY E. CLELAND,

0:::~~~

.BACKHOE AND DOZER Wlll'lc.
Septic tanks Installed. George

16· FT. FIBERG LASS boat
runabout. 50 h.p. Johnson
outboard and frailer. Good
condition, S685. Phone 992·
2881.
822-61c

------

HA LF RUNNER beans, $2
bushel, pick your own.
Cucumbers and tomatoes.

ReT• iiget•kw. Lg..
Gill
-11-l.u c
'U d'!~ ~
~
•
~:=;=-::--:-7""'--l ft;CIIIC'I ,. · · . . . -.. BEOR.--u.Jo. .
ma&lt;ihine. .glass doar ~
......... ranch style house

1...----

studellf's

cles.k.

~~u;,Y' ,s ;

For Sale
.A..I um1•0.001
Sheets

For Trade

The
Dailv

,_..,.,Ollie

2......_ ai n ondlllonect. double
groge.. Sysrs.old. Pomer&lt;¥y.
Cal 992-:lkS.
, 2, 31
o- ..,. C
HOUSE.
..
·16(2 Lincoln Heights.
~.:. llilnny Thompson, 992.

gu ilar, M.ytag -~washer. 2rinse ...... willologs.
picnic labile. w x • Sad,. 4
bicycles, 2 poau - . ,
m.,...,., l t' .... laill , slop
7·1S.Ifc
ladder. 2 bags insulalian
(newt• ..-1 fonoe JD1s. MIDDLEPORT- s room brick
Senalor ganleoo tiller. ' 64 .....__ bath, paneli~

New office training kits have
Watermelons, cantaloupes.
young be'iltos. 11 1•1 5 ."o).
also been added as follows: In
sweet
corn,
potatoes . Stone 1·ar.5w :dea ~ _
~
-- · ~
the Gregg Adult Education
Clarence Proffitt, Portland, .antiques,, to,s.
&lt;Mi04 manr llems t o o - ID
Phone 8Q.22S4.
a. u .ttc
Series, Bookkeeping Funmen1Jon.
Refwcs.,na !nls_
damentals Kit ; Accounting - - - - - - - - Owner: ,.....,._ Tillis. Autfi oneer: I, o. - M;,C" McCoy.
Fundamentals Kit; Gregg 1:0A L, li mestone. Excelsio.I-2UIIp
Quick Filing Practice Kit.
~all Works, E. Main St ..
Pomeroy. Phone 992·3891. ·
"-9-tfc
These are all Individual kits,
Auto Sales
with the student working the
bl
· his
kit Gregg BE GENTLE, be kind, IG t1)at
1910 DATSUN pidr...... _ ,
pro ems 1ft
own ·
expensive carpel. clean with
c;;ondtfian. ~ t.es. . . . .
Shorthand wilh accompanying Blue Lustre. Rent electric
wredr.ed, $1,.515. ~ 9ft.
records is also available, as sham.,...,.., St. Baker Fur- 5153.
a.J&amp;.Dk:
11 a Sten
· t the ABC niture Company.
we
s
oscnp •
8 186tc
shorthand, which utilizes the
individual sllldent workbooks. t---------_,· 1970 DODGE l'blara,. eao•'' •
•lr awodilirwlil. .
Programmed Business Math,
so:ondlllon.
1;&amp;SO. l'ihane tiS.m&amp; .._
Booksi,II,andlll,arealsonew
Bottom, Ohio.
_lt" x ::U" x...JP.
_ _ _ _ _ _JI.ll..llp_
.
additions to the well1!quipped
Center. The complete set of
SPECIA1.1fhis-at T- IIIIo
Mathematics in Action, film..
Molar$, 1913 Ford ~
str:ips with captions, h8s also
1-J5.1k
been added since the opening of
USED OFFSET PLATES
the Center.
HAVE
Charles Frum, Adult Basic
MANY USES
1959 CliEV. jpiicbp .._
Education Recruiter and Public
t&amp;G
ora c;on
1
... - -- •
Relations Man for !be Mason
F&lt;lOIIM
W.Jsoulh of M' d lll 5 I .., S..
County Schools, urges everyone
I lor SI.DG
Route1.
to stop in the Center and see f~
themselves whal the Center has
to offer. U further information
Pfts
is desirl!d, you may call Mr.
R'EGISTER EO. lle;o•filt12
Frwn at the Vocational Center,
O i -puss:¢
675-3039, or speak with Mrs.
, , 1 UIOirt ». '
black.- Qliu ...... s tud dog.
• e.
. Jl! JahL 3 1
Morrison, Vocational Secretary
.~·
.. ,,a, Ql.Ja1.
for the county.
J,..:..--- - -- ----:J
..»ttc

fwSale

..... ___ ..._

---

IH4

WHY DIDN'T )OU
LETU5I&lt;NOW

..OU WERE ON 11-IE
WAY HOME?

WE DON'T KNON, I!UT
11-l!:RE$ AN ITEM IN 'THE
PAPf:R WE 11-lOUGHT

YOU'D WANT 10 SEE! .

:'.~'"!'·~~~~.ng.

S.20-l21t
SIX ROOM house, bath, full
'
1oJ3 Butternut Ave,,

"'""1,1,
iH t walki ng

distance from

- - - - - - --.._,

• fonllla laid Apptiatjo., to Aae= ·b'e

...0 (D dwia&lt;dlo ...-0111...0
sna1a:1 afleaiq the a.ame and to ruile
NE IGLER Conslruclion. For ID ~_!".:'!.Tarilll.ii'.c.o. No.3, its
building or remodeling your 'Ga;eni,_.n:Toil'i Taril! P.u.c.o. N~
.home. Call Guy Neigler, ru. cJ'.~"N!~ 7,Tn:rtt~'ti~

THE BORN LOSER

Racine. Cltio.

SCnitc Tui4 P.U.C.O. No. 1. ita frtvuc
7-31 ffc U. Senia Tarill' P.U.C.O. No. l, and
ill
Artl Ttlec:ommunlcatJcJDI Sa'rice
- - - - -- - - - --Tariff P.U.C.O.
No. t. to eftea IUCb to-

•Ide

DNA?...

..

storm

AWN INGS,
doors. and• :::'ruu~r::::'iou::e ~~ti:!:
w i n d o w s • c a r p o r t s • IUe wtt1t Ute Cottunillioa ddii"'U.C ea·
marquees, alunoimRII siding IUtib tbueto attadlod aad ...., a pon
and railing. Call A. Jacob ihcRol.
·
sales~ esenlative. For fr..;
nw ' " - r.,;oi- wUl ell"' Ja.
estimates phone Ch I crnta and adjustmeott Ia ratca aa:1
•
c:Mrtaaaddlaapt lat.bcnpJattca&amp;Dd
Lisle, Syracuse.
V.ar e5
V pnctica
al!lldlDJtbuamo.._the
Jo1onsan and Son, Inc.
· o.....n.., ito "'""'""' c......, _.....
nw,..,uoltteAppticaU..,_.
527 H
-:&gt;'=- - - -__,=,......:.
··&lt; "" com-oa oo t1o the foilowiao:
O' BRIEN ELECTR IC SER
l•l Applooe ,... propooed"""""'
VICE. Alone fol9.4551 .
• ~0::::
applio&lt;i tor Ia oald

LI.'rl'LE ORPHAN ANNIE
H0881.ED 'Ill MIJSTA STAYED

'

;
l

•"

.....,..,

5-».Hc

-

Estate For Sale

J

!C~.'.!r.".'i::,\'!'~u:;:,"f~ ~-=

i

10

!

w

•

A~tioll, mDCtifted to renoet

::!u~ ~::~-:;·...~

•

virgil· .B. 01
TEAFORD ..

_ ,.., duriJ\1 the larerim- the

lllitlo
the Applicailoa ..........
•-wbiclualdpropooed...,..wuheetJ
......,. elledtre·
l&lt; l Eooabll"' ia ellocti,.datefouald

DAILY CROSSWORD

pr-IIChcdule-·, aocl

ACROSS

...~. v•-•"""
~
other aad further '"'
. u. Appliam is reasonably cat.idcd

!.Theater

10 '" 1be ,........

SR •

· ·,i_['theor...=..~~~~=

*'

..
lluloor

1 IIICI'Uie
auL
_.. __or decreae la .::a:n

baron

8. Run

...._.,.,.,.1.._..,..,. ..,1...,.....,
••1

$7,000.GO.

SEE US. NEAR KROGER,
WE MAY HAVE IT.
In-DIS
HELEII L TEAFORD.
ASSOCIATE.
fn.2J11

1-22-&lt;llc

brick home.

letter
11. Join a

18. Rhodesian
dialect
19. Earthly
21. "The Un·

-., ,,_, r=

~llllMID~;~.!:

9. Golf

eries

1. Peas'
container
2. Bungling
3. More

succinct

(2wds.)
16. An. gered

20. Bookie

Y""*'nlar•• Aaawf't'

sub-

22. Ani·

principle

4. California
fort

25. USSR

5. Chatted

27. Vapnr·

river
lze

6. Girl's name 28. Happy
7. Planting
indiimpJement
vidual

Unsmomble these fwr Ju111biel,
one letter to each aquare, to
form four ordinary wordo.

29. Tooth

worry

mating

hero
23. Schoolbook

HliiWOQD

IC ll!llllll.- ...._ ~. late.;

stan~

31. Edible
oil
sourc&lt;

32. Diminished
34. Lyric poem
40. Nigerian
elty
42. Collee n's

step

I I
I [J

b-+-+-f--++-

I t)

IPIIYNOTI

touchable&amp;'

HW.IUif.~

1

rJ

IMI&gt;N TIME5 FIVE
WOULD I!5E HALF iHI~!

~etten

tor-tho--.-.•
I:====v"~======-~·~watlod
IIJthe.....,calo
una..
..rn-rxxr
I

24. Pronoun
26. Telegraph· b--1--1-ic sound

I

27. Convince
30.Arab
boat

WMP0/1390

1

33. Board

Now..._ lhe dreW

1 1

1

,... .. 1

("-wen.

a jet
35. One of
Guido's
notes

• . .,

Jo..bt.:, AOILI

Yr.tttr••f •

36.Cnobe

olc:e

temps.

water

control .

I

AM... r :

lAIII fONOI.T lllniN
'
Wlal tine~ a.pun!' tur. ia.-.IHII '--A

ftiANOU

for abort

,

water

37. Once
around

Auto .

level

LinT

I.

. Filter or Power
Fin Agitator .

Moytot
Halo of Heat

· herb

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work It:

Wfth gentle, even
liNt. No hotspoto,
no. ovtrdrylng .
Fine Mtlh Lin '

m~ 'lq • J.. BuJit.-fn• kitchen,
ca •wNc: file- bath:, all Mectr ic
....... goad neigli • hood. Can
iOR'ilnge FHA fiMIIcint .
Tckploe fr1:..JQII or ft2.
21a.

A X Y D LB.\ A X R
r~~~~=4~~=~ 'r=~~!:::=~==~=!
Ia L 0 N 0 Jl' E L L 0 W
One Jetter,aimply standi for another. In tht. sample A I• '!HE LMT llAIE 1lW iW'I'alfa
'CUU'Lli&gt;J w~ IE FIRST .
uoor! Cor the three L's, X rot· the two O's, etc. Single letters. WE 60T 5TOCK WITH THAT
E~gi: llt/l\lfi'Eit
apoatroploes, the length and formation of the word a are all
STUPID I!EA6LE..
~E!
.
hlnl.l. Each day the cnde letters are different.
l:;~(::f)~:;::~y-~t-C~
.\ CrJptopal!l ..........

r

Filter.

Wo Speciollzo In

....,..

MATTA ..

hrtCor"'

. RIITIMD Grati
FURNITURE
·
742-4211

Arnold

Rutland, o. '

OBCTC'V

:~

---- ~-~~--------~--~~--------~--~------~~----------------~--~
L·

'

the
lnck
38. Scand.
country
38.-einal

Dryers
Surround clothn

in

.

CAPTAIN EASY

Ptrmi-Prtss · ·

7·11·1fc

~\

matory

f3wds.)

union

.

2ChSpHd

..,_

----'

DOWN

president
12. Pantry
13. Cross out
14. Insurance
statlstlc
15. Greek

ENDS WAS STIGMATIZiiD AS A LIAR! BROUN

swelling

ofa.trip

Korean

ou somehow get the
ling he has tho!lllht
bout what · he's
h;~ring with you. Your
ling is right.
.

8. Inflam-

port,

'CONVENI ENT bul secluded
llul'ldiing !ols. on• T79 af Rock
Sjwings. Within walking ,·
dis1aace of Meigs Hlg~ ·
~ • • Sminvte drive from
PcaaiEJ..,. ut cr see am
Witte -.net$. or aflw '
PilL. • nP •ys. Phone 992~ .

--_....
...

46. Poruon

South

Y..ter&lt;la)"o CrJplo.-: WHAT A DUU. WOIIU) TBIB
WOUUI BE IF' EVERY QIAGINATIVE KAKER OF 1m-

publication
score
45. Gaelic
10. Bean-

along!

5-7-lfc

1

44. Ready for

11. Fonner

D1aiu klcittim In Middleport.·
Som by appointment only. r--,--~~­
Phane 992-552:1 after l p.m.

F_,..

desert
43. Watch
over

Rosenkavaller"

IIWfmefttlllowlDithe&amp;IIIOUDt

of ... '
cbaa8ld

u. california

4. ''Der

- " ' rau or_,., ...o a •• ,_..
IIIMetlt•ic~
..._"':."':,~:l:r,~·!.''!.::i
P uut. Oilie
Pill&gt;' at the om.. dC lhe Comml..on, 111
NEW LISTINGS
Norih Hip Street, Coiumblu Obio ...t
MIDDLEPORT - l Dacre with ••
publi c bu•lne u oriJce oi the
a 6 .._.. house an1 garC...paay.
DEXTER _ 6 ,._,house ;,jih
1lw form of thia .,.;~ hu bmi ...
.
Sl,SOO.IIIL
:l"o;lo':'
TiwPuhil&lt;UIIlit,..Commiuion
2 1015
120 acr es of building lot$.
TELTHEB OHIO BELL
Olester water.
PHONE COMPANY
GOOD BUYS
Bji1 C. K. ""''•
IOACPES-60or rhorefrador
"~'""''1
tillable. 6 room house.
. (81 2, , 31 (91 7, 31&lt;
m.oao.011.
POMEROY - 7 ,._,.. bath.
lurnac:e, bas ment. 11.500.00.
MIDDLEPORT-PURAL-6
bath.
,. __den
ITEM: Jack Kane ~
rooms,
gar-. ,_ ·

S.12·121c

~25-lfc

t

INlERRUPTEI&gt;.... ... M.V.

- -- -:. - - - --

N5"t2

---:-- -NEW. ·;J.-oom, 1\omt

.
'),...--..,

a:ni£c. iDCrutale pri't'lte llae lti'Yica ud
6-10-Hc iDuutate wide a.rca Wecom
, doa~

•ROOM- and bath loCated
jusl outside Chesler. Phone

B~DPOOM

10 llW' FISHING
HE AN' DINNY

HARR ISON'S TV 1\ND .J\N. ::"'111"f:;"!'aJ"=~::,~t: ,$
TENNA SERV ICE. Phone _ , . . . .ko,iatrattate-tolli&lt;Jo.
992-2522.
...-. i..,_o. mollllo IA:kot'"'

-~~~~~ Pomeroy. Contact SYRACUSE - 5 rooms, !lath,
!Od Hed'ricli;. 2137 Wadsworth
llasemenl on 124. On ly
llriw. Columbus, Ohio, ph'""'
$6,11011.110.
ZJ1-«DDI,. Ollumbus.
· LETART - 5 rooms. !lath,
59-tfc
lumaa!. Basement. $1.000.011.

l

... MEBBE f CAN GET

AUTOMOBILE IIISIKailce been
lqll NDIICI
cancelled?
Lost
your · Public-~-"'"" ihot Tho
operaZar's license? Call 992· Obio ldl To~ Compaar tu lllod
2'166.
- Tho Public Utititi,. Caallnillioo dC
~ 1 51fc ObioaaAoollc.adooowlqtllotdloCom_ , ;a Oliolil!cl, - - o1 "" , _

ty.

canner...

Mid-Summer salt
-:on-AiiMOdtls
SavOUPTo$200.00
Over 10 Percont
HAWK'S :I-DAY
CYCLE SALE
2 miltS 50Ulh of Athens, 0.
Rt.ll
Open Mon., Wed., Fri.
1U.m. IGip.m.

-

Re "Jtnu m -2561
·R ·
a.1utc
eal

"'=

- -- - - -

,

IBiUI Pullins. Phone992·2A71.

~'E. 6 rooms andDUPLEX """'
EVEiNING AUCTION
.
•
lla!h..Aparfment,
3 roomsIdeal
and
Starto1ng a o 6 p.lii.,. -.;J•
batiL Private entrances.
Augusl17ilhCIIIIIRP--. .
~~u- · .~le ....~
~
........
;ly with extra rental or
,..,tSonn,
_ 1W1i14
•
sold my home . . 511!!8 h
lft'\LUI'men t propee
Priced
fOllowing:
llai da"tk Gats
f..- qtlid sal10. Cal 992-2431
R a 1n,ge .
Fr i Ji~a i re aflerSp.m.
..
1
cabine!.. ,.,...iyll,l piionQ, 2 pc..
li ving ,..,5WIIe.Jpc.. ..oello!
t
S -~
se • 12 X -no;. PI
n

5 1·HC

Galli polis. Joh~ Russell ,
Owner &amp; Operator.
5 13-lf&lt;

COLONIAL 51t1e "'"'- AMFMI'ad'H&gt;..44 I s.4 ~
ELECTRIC guitar and am· record d:l;onger. a..laiiO!!
plifier - S60. Gas heal ing ~·,'!,;..~_. h lg I lonns..
C!-£LAND REALTY
stove - SIO. Zenith, black and ~ ~· ~
. . EHI Main
while television - $75.
I-2'Uk
POMEROY
82A.31p
1· - - • Lot 150x1011
ER
DEXT
.MGDERI\1
sZaEQ. AM- ~
'
FM lillalons 4 ~
:t slary frame, 4 bedrooms, 2
p&amp;Wchls ane enclosed, bam
GRAVELY
TRACTOR recor;d dlang!r. .. ... *rs.
2car spaces and another
DEMONSTRATOR CLEAR· separa1e cmlrds.. Pd ce
slcwage building . GREAT
ANC E
1 demon- $67.119. Ca' I - . - _
FOR THE KIDS. $8.900.
strator ._,. C-1 w.mower, --------~a.~22~611r:lc
$650; I deniouslral..- super C-1
W·m&lt;Mer and dual wheels, CANNING ilou '
... ...., POMEROY- FAMILY HOME
Q.OSE TO ELEMENTARY
S750rl demonstrator Model «18 pichi!, Sl ..25 bu.. ...illg
5CHOOL-2s~frame, l'h
riding tractor. W 34" mower, c o n t • i ners ~ Ger•ld ine
ballls.
4 nrce
oorus, gas
S750; 1 new 10 h.p. riding
Cleland. &amp;5I - . . p ....
faned·a
k
heat,
full
tractor with 40'' mower, Sl ,190.
7 - t , nl!ftl f.,. porch, garage with
· Gravely Trador Sa les,
re:nG"'tafed room oyer, fine for
Pomeroy. W2·2975.
alfice space or utility apart.

822·3fc
- -- - - - - - RIDING horses. Phone 9~196.
S.22.otc

CI\OOKED .

Deland
Realty

For Sale

-------

-6'1 SHOOTI"-1' f.V'ft:(
CHIPPENDALE CHAIR
HESEEN!."UNFORitHNUTL'f,

-FO' PROTECTIN' FO.KS

SE.TTIIo¥ IN
MOSfOF'EM!!

...2Sifc
and pasture, large
~· 593-1669
born. implerrient shed and
olher bui ldings. Recently SEWING machine service In
reu I ~d. l bedioom farm your hclllle. Clean. oil and O'DELL WHEEL alignment
h&lt;ne, with. wall to wall adjust, M. Pllane 992-lGBS.
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
orpe!ir.q , ceramic tile bath, Twin Oly Sewing Maclllne
Complete front end ser.vice,
full basement . Shown by Company.
tune up and brake service.
:.'!'!..oilllrrlenl only. Phone 992- __ __ _ __ __a._2U lc
Wheels b~lanced elec·
~
Ironically. · All
work
guaranteed .
Reasonable
8-22-12fc SEWING MACHINES. Repair
rates. Phone 992·3213.
serThevi&lt;eFabr
' a.ll e
•PI992·2214.
7·27·tiC
1 - - - -- IC .......,
VIItti oy. ___'.:_
Aufhori111!1d Singer Sales and .
Sonlia!. we Shai pen Sciss&lt;lro. READY·MIX
CONCRETE
:J.2f-Hc
delivered right to your
.. . .
prp/' ed. Fast and easy. Free
t$1 mates . Phone 9'12·3284.
SEPTIC tanks deaued. Mi ller
Goeglein
Ready.Mix Co.,
Sanllatial, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
Middleport, Ohio.
·
662·31135.
. . lbst Main
~JO.Ifc!
2-12·1fc
POI!IEROY

Sl43.

U'.·lf - Z.f-WIIE

FOSDICK GOT
Uf..IFAIRL'I
J:'IRED i"UM
'rn' i"ORCE --

PHONE 992·2143

SEPTIC.. I AtiiKS CLEANED

19J ACRE stock farm, well
fenad1 farm pond, plenty of

TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Court, Rl . 124, Syracuse,
Ohio. 992-2951.
CHICKEN ~ at $yncuR
. 4.2-lfc wilt! 1.61 ......,., ........ 10-

BEAG LE PUPS, s ired by
Pearson ~ stock, s15.
Keith Ridenour, Chester, Ohio
9tin4175.
8-22.31p

P~rts

Blaettnar'•

Reasonable rates, Ph• ....,_.Q12,

Real Estate For Sale

lft.D..

16 FT., 25 H.P. Sea·King &amp;
frailer. S2SO. Phone 1-667&lt;1031.
1J.22·31p

l8·2-J~~ ~~~~

6,98 ·Plus

CBRADFORD. Auct~
Complello Sonlia!

Plt.tn-2:143

r..,.

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

Special
At

FOLKS W/&gt;6

'IUEnltARS

8X 35 TRAILER , country
I'10CIDLE Poh ies. _ .
location. Phone 9'12-39S4.
822·llc
~~-K M I - -

-------

~

l

Re-OiaiJI

_.,.,.,, ..... S.tunlor
-E. Mlilt1 PaiNiGJ, 0 .

Smallest Huller Core.

;EqujpmenL
We alsoihaw.i!CGI 5' !t lire
af Sit :f" FUI!I 01 lbleu

POMEROY

~

.t

Ai Conslitioning .
lnspldion and

OpeaiTitS

Frum the largest Truck or
Bulldozl!l' Radiator to the

3 lg I

and Funwms..

~

1

Pbone9-49XZI

AmomaHc D ; oe Day
Oo!liwey- Duel 0 s ... ,

.J.il4

Palla., llanle &amp; AWl

,

lli&gt;r Plill. IW'.-y s.. •._

I:.

RdaD Senice

.._

'l.AfiQMIItl[,
We llalll! ll!e -

J

-GUARANTEEDPisone 992-20?4 ·

IHms

cndit

ANTIQUES, telephones, brass aVll! - - 9 f t . 5 W I .
beds, clocks, dishes. old
furniture, etc. Write M. D.
Miller, Rt. l , Pomeroy, Ohio. .
Call 992-6271.
. ·BEAT ae OILIJ' lllliTEit
J.9.1fc ... IT"S COST WITH
HEATIIIG OIL F ltOM
.r

EXPERIENCED

...,. 131..6

SPECIFIC~

HiVe Yoi.r s-..,.111 .

15.55

1!-----------.

l LIKE
TOBeMOU

'

I

742:490~

Display.

.........

Free
·
mate on urnace
J....:lns::::t:::a::la::fi::.o:.:n::.·_ __ _ ..J

DOWN

AND IUS FRIENDS

Septic Tanks
And Lum Beds.

EXPERT

see
u5 icirEs1i
F

FOREMAN JEST
TOtO ME ,..,...._,~

And Patios
S.cllhoeAnd
Endloader Work

Slap In and See Our

Work Gu;~ranteed

!

Kitchens, S.ths
Room Additions

Pameroy

fuRIIRURE

Phone 992-2550 ·
Insured . Experienced

GUESS WHAT
· TH' SAWMILL

Re.modelinK

And

f~

e.Ael(. ..

.f.o!'JP.~- . .

UifiCE SUPPUES

tlitioooillg.
. 241l.itoc81n 51 •• Midollopart

...,

.....

....,

606 E. Main

Or:AV.

~·Rf; I'J,.OIJE,

KilftSON MASONRY

992-2094

IIEW &amp; OLD WORK
All W'N I:Mr ilHfiq &amp;
·~eo . ...,. All_ ,. Plul!lllinlf &amp; HNiillg.
C10mplete Pllllll•int ,
Haaling ·and A.i r Con-

992~

Services ~.

POMEROY
.HOMi&amp; AU10

SPOUTJ"G,
ROOF PAIIITJNG

etc. Full pricem.1~

_ _ _ _ _ _ _a._22;31p

For Renl

.

·B usfuesS

elderly ~le. No laundry. IJliiGZAi~;;;i;;;;;;d,;,~
and need not . stay nights; .6 1m ZIG ZAG
il4 ....me,

@).

EVERYBODY

'

en•=•·

Mrs. Reed Jeffers. .
·
~~~HEVROLET IMPALA
SIJH
Mr. and Mrs. OiniDn (}ilkey,
Conv. cpe.. local owner &amp; low mileage. Vinyl Interior,
Albllny, c:alled on their son-in·
dark blue fin ish, while lop, air conditioned, v.a engine,
lawanddaughter, Mr. andMrs.
automatic trans., power steering. radio. A nice car.
Th
1965 CHEVROLET IMPALA CPE.
1195
·
Wa Iter Jordan.
eY were
396 cu. In, V·B engine, 3 speed, std. shill, clean Interior,
acampanied by Mrs. J!ll'dan's
nice blue finish, good tires, radio &amp; heater. A fine buy.
_......, ,.._ Mrs A Gilk
~.::=.
. ovillew
·"" '.
· va
ey,
._,_,
Anna Parker, Qeveland, and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Parker
and family, Middleport, were
guesla of their grandparents,
OP.EM EYES. S:OO P.M.
--~
Mrs
N
~"•-•ter
i'CIMEROY, OHIO
Mr • IIIIU
•
ey _,..... •
and aunt, Martha Mays. Others
who visiiA!d at the Carpenter
•-Chari
M linda
WANT AD
'""""' 1l1!l't!
es, e
'
INFORMATION
0
Donald and David Dailey,
DEADLINES
Berne, Indiana.
5 P.M. Qay Be/ore Publication.
· th E · k
h
Monday0eadline9a.m.
Kenne
ric son
as
.. .~~llatlon &amp; O&gt;rrectlans
returned from Missouri where
Wlllbeas:cepteilunlil9'a.in.for'
he was called by the death of his
Day of Publication
•
father
REGULATIONS
•
The Publisher · reserves the
Mrs. Goldie Gillogly returned Mr. and Mrs. Franklin right to edit or reject any ads
to her lHme hen! after spending Russell of Middleport were deemed objection~!). _ The.
two'llftb in CollUDbus with her Tuesday evening visitors of Mr. publisher will not be responsible
daughter, llemice McKnight and Mrs. Lincoln Russell. Also l~r'tJ:!;,~ than one incorrect;
and family. Mr. and Mrs. Roger visillng Mr. Walter Jordan and
RATES
McKnight and family brought Mrs. Clinton Gilkey.
5 ce_t;~;t;~~=i~:...ion
bisgrandmotberbomeandthen Mr. and Mrs. William Boyce
MinlmumCharge75c
spent the weekend with his of Colwnbus, Mr, and Mrs. · 12 cents per word three
iiJWodparenla, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell, Brenda Baggy consecutive Insertions.
'
~ll'nl«h
18
cents
per
word
six
COO·
M
Otbo ~u..,...t.
and Ronald Russell were recent seculive insertions.
Mr. and Mrs. !llester Price visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Howard
25 Per Cent Discount an paid
1l1!l't! visiting with their son-in· Russell.
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Howard Russell, Lillie ,
CA~~~~~:::Ks
Jolm 'l'bloctmortoo and Leslie, Houck and Nancy Jo Mayer $1.50 for 50 word minimum.
Osfcri; and also were guests of were Tuesday visitors of Mr. liach additional word 2c.
' I
d
BLIND ADS
ano th er
son-In· aw
an and Mrs. Harley Johnson.
Add itional 25c Charge per
dausbter, Mr. and Mrs. Ken- Mr. and Mrs. Bill Earnheart Adverlise11\1!111.
neth Hulcbinson and David, of Logan, Emma Norring, her
OFf ICE HOURS
Deyton.
daughter and granddaughters
8: 30a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Daily,
8:30 a .m. to 12 : 00 Noon
Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jardan of California, were Sunday Saturday.
spent several days vacation in visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Harley · ·
· ·
the Ft. Worlb-Dallas, Texas, Jolmson. .
Notice
area where lbey were guests of Kail Lee Knapp spent the I WILL oot be responsible lor
Mrs. Jordan's brother, Evans weekend with Mrs. Lena Knapp debts contracted bv any one
other than myself. Signed.
Rutherford and family, Plano, .of Langsville.
Jack Frederick.
and other relatives in !bat area.
= :-:-::-:-:-:-_:___ _a._22·31p
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
REVIVAL, Eagle
Ridge
spent a day with their son-inCommunity
Church,
August
law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
25, 26, 27. 28. Rev. Roy Oeeter,
Donald Jones and son,
Evangelist.
Nelsonville.
~=:::-::----:-~S.~23-61p
Reier end Lindley, Rutland•.
KOSCDT Kosmetics, J uly·
filled. in at preaching services at
August special, Kare Kon·
dillon oil $5. Value now only
· · !be Mt. Union Baptist Olurch,
$2.50. Oislrlbutors, Bn&gt;wn's,
willie !be regular,pastor and his
phone 992·5113.
wifli,_Mr. and Mrs, Cecil Cox, relativ~ in the Akron, Ohio,
11"1 vacationing in Canada.
area for ,several days lhis past ~7.?~======~7~~*
SAVE UP to one hal:. Bring
M=bersofthe Cooley family week. ''
your sick TV to OIUdr.'s TV
held their annual n!UIIi'oo at the Miss Judy McCallie and Mrs.
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.
...
Terq,le Olurcb Grove recently. Jerrie Wllson and cllildren of
TbGae preaent for a family the Ann Arbor, Michigan,
picnic'attheTGTClubHouseto vicinity were guests of their REWARD for any information
celebrate the birthdays of grandmother, Mrs. Faye
leadinA to the arrest of the
Walter Swett and his grandson, Jordan, and called on relatives
persons who shot a horse in
Michael u.....o..
Mr d · the
·1
the Middleport Hili Area
·~,.were
an 1ft
commuru y.
between noon and 4 p.m ..
Mrs. W. I. Swett, Middleport;
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Smith
Thursday, August 19. Contact
Mr.andMrs. ArthurReedyand and daughter, Nancy, have
James Brewer, 1275 Vine or
family, l'onleroy; and Mr. and returned from a vacation
call 99b 343.
22-Jtc
Mrs. Walter Swett, local.
during which they visited Mr. - _ _ _ _ _ __;_"-=
Mr. and Mrs. €ecil Gillogly and Mrs. Frank Hertling and H 1 Wnled
and family enjoyed a vacation family, Redwood Falls, Min·
p
trip wbieh took them to the nesota. The group also made a NEED lady lor housecleaning I
IMme of their brother-in-Jaw · sightseeing bip to )Iasca State
or 2 days a week. Reply c.o
Box 7'29, Pomeroy, Oh\o.
and slater, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Park, Minn.
8-19-6tp
Morning, Elyria; and they
Guests of Mrs. Murl Calaway
visited Cedar Point and other were Mr. and Mrs. Leon SALESMEN needed. Work lull
or parllime. No door to door
poinls of interest in the Lake Woodrwn, Kathy and Randy, sales. Advancement opErie area.
and Chuck Petty, McArthur;
portunlly. Call collect m
5079
The Busy Bee Society of the andMr; andMrs. CiydeMcVey,
·
a- 1utc
Carpenter Baptist Church met Alhens.
_ _ _ _ _ ___:_,::
at !be church with Mrs. Reed
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey CAR HOP and waitress. Apply
Jeffers leading the devotions. attended the golden wedding · in person. Crow's Steak House.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Stansbury celebration for Mr. and Mrs.
and cbildren have returned Amos Leonard, Rock Springs,
from a vacation bip !bat took recently. They also visited their
WOMAN TO live in. light
them to Florida. They visiiA!d granddaughter's family, Mr. housework and cooking. Call
many poinla of interest enroute. and Mrs. Larry Clark and 9'12-3507 or 992·5397.
~2., llc
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey J!ll'dan daughters, Tamra and Penny,
and family vacationed with Tuppers Plains.

News, Notes

Sentinel Classifieds

~

EAI!N 1\T horne -...sing ;IIRODM h
'-vellllllr.M
Rush slom~ ..........
b 1itillt. Wll ID .~... - · :
. self
essed envelope. .
_....,.. oed ......
-·
Ambrose Co •• .ms Lakelx&gt;m, carport. tft.3ll2.. ·
'"
Davisburg, Mich. 411119,
l-24-4k.
81-JDip
·St. NGERLMD ._
NEED SOMEONE to do 2301.
lessillall•_..ald.-fft.

1%6 CHEVROLET 2 TON
ONLY $1750
8.4'' ciib foaxle, good B25x20 tires, 2 speed rear axle, Int. &amp;
cab like new truck, 6 cyl. m cu. ln. eng. A real clean

w lfipen

.

fir Sale

Help lanled

Po•eroy
Motor Co.

iL.
II.:.... (
rulllero,·
IIIUftr .••

-

/

ELRRCT

___

·OBC

VNZCANES
DPTOS

UBN

JCQCTB. - GLR

1}
----~--------------------------------------_.~~----------

''

PO

CXCTS

CPdV

BKAAPTE

PQQ

�'

•
1-'l'btDIIIJII

•

4!oei.MJI+eja~oy,O. ,Aa&amp;llll21,lfll

In The

Bargains, Bargains and More Bargains
.
.

2 51&amp;115
OF
QUAliTY.

Carpenter
- News, Event
Mr. and Mrs. Selh Huntley,
Vinton, were guests of Mr. and

housewor k and cook. f or

'------------------__J

Shops the

WANT AD WAY
")~

·

e

a

Pifot Training Offered in
Mason County Adult Center
PT. PlEASANT - U one
wanla to heccme· an airplane
pilot, either private or commercial, the Mason Cotulty
· Adult Learning Center now
offers an escellent opportunity
to study for a license.
Two programmed courses
have been received at the
center lhis week, and are now
available to the public for their
· Ulll, tuition free . The Private
Pilot Course, is a kit utilizing
the
new
method
of
"Prcltlrammed Aul.().lnstruction
(Self.Study).
All of the material relates
specifically to the pilot's job,
not to general academic subject
~m~. U the information doesn't
lpply -It Isn't Included!
Tilt brief, Jo..thei)oint explanltions, each followed by
Jll'CIII"'III1 ''frames" make
1 '*C euy. The methOd is
llllld to inlure that you will
111m It quickly and easily -

Airplane Operation and Performance,
Meteorology ,
Communications, PUblications
Used by a Pilot, Federal
Aviation Regulations ,
Navigation, Flight Computer
Uses, Radio Navigation, PreFlight Planning, Attitude Instrument Flying, Emergency
Procedures, and Private Pilot's
Job Performance Flight
Maneuvers.

The second course, Advanced
Private and Commercial Pilot,
is a progranuned kit, similar to
the Private Pilot Course, but
more advanced and also containing in~epth discussions,
necessary only for Commercial
pilots. Both kits contahi
e.verything needed to pass both
the FAA Private and the FAA
Commercial Pilot written
eums. Four copies of each kit
will be available so that a small
group may study at the same
. . 1 ..,..._ it.
lime if so desired.
.A "pr.ammed" Private New filmstrips wilh records
PIII'JMPafwmance section are now available at the Center
1 1'tl• 111e course by in
.the following areas :
1111 m.?W'Iiow and -Te~~niques of Paragraph
IIIIICtual job of Wnung; Focus on Language ;
r' 'l'he subject . Techniques of Theme Writing;
1,1\111 II !IIi ft~Qte Pilot and Fresh Perspectives fn
C
I ' It 1111 hllowifl8&lt; Composition. ,
·

J.

I

•

days

-

a-

·

IOOfiiG &amp; CAIPEII'IU
WOII
.

a.2A-lk:

Phon~ 992.301~.

bll~ t~

........ns.

Female Help lanled
LOCAL INTERV IEWERS lor
market research studies i n .a·u
counties. No selling. Hourly
w• and car allowance. Oc~·
caSional assig!lll'lents. Winona,
Inc., 3.C24 E. Lake St., Min- PAINT
DAMIIGE.
tm
.,._
Se ·
neapolis, .Minn. 55«16. 82A.IIp T Mad&gt;iJ»s.
...
in
----..,---,.;g;,a~
......
""'
HOUSEWIVES - evenlng.s artaduwts
• ...fr~? Earn · 25 per cent
a&gt;nlnlls
.-e
Wt
ilL
Sew$
demc&gt;nslraling toys and gills
wJiblcr21 •
m?
with the highest paying party bdlwl 'es. _ .. .........,
plan. Ccmpare our program .... .,..,... lliliiood 1oeno
and color catalog ·before stitch. hiS.- ~ $3l..lO
making any ot her coi11 - or h 1y F .... a • '+mitments. No experience. ;No P.bane 'lft.;J6fl.
invesl111ent. Car nem!!ssary.
Call .9oi'I.J233 or write :r~ ________ _..~
·'Ladies Party Plan. Johnst...:;;',
EL E CTROLUX v;oc,.um
Pa. 1902.
eana aa 2r k: with al8-2A.31p d~
cudat.., ..s
- - -- - - - paint -- Used ..... lib!

Wanted To Buy

.....

~

ash

,..

·

FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to school.,
Phone 992.50(.
10.18-lfc
I BEDROOM frailer apartment, ideal for couples.
Contad Mcaure's Oairy Isle.
992-524 or 992-306.
S.2Q.61c

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

w. Cnser.lltJr.

~

2BEDROOMmobilehome. M&amp; ----- ----GUip
G Food Market, 3 miles south
•
of Middleport on State Route 1960 G.M.C. pn.., - sm..
7
Mini'llike St2. Phone
.
S.22·31p '992.QII2.

Racine. Ohio

Crill Bradford

""*""

menl_ $11,500.

MillERSVIlLE - 1112 story
" ' - · 7rooms. 3 bedrooms,
ballt. tile paneling, basement.
.EW ALUMINUM SIDING,
· -'-and ard A BUY
rua ,.....~,,
Y •
AT JUST $11.....
PLACETHESALEOFYOUR
PltOPERTY IN GOOD
HANDS.
HENRY E. CLELAND,

0:::~~~

.BACKHOE AND DOZER Wlll'lc.
Septic tanks Installed. George

16· FT. FIBERG LASS boat
runabout. 50 h.p. Johnson
outboard and frailer. Good
condition, S685. Phone 992·
2881.
822-61c

------

HA LF RUNNER beans, $2
bushel, pick your own.
Cucumbers and tomatoes.

ReT• iiget•kw. Lg..
Gill
-11-l.u c
'U d'!~ ~
~
•
~:=;=-::--:-7""'--l ft;CIIIC'I ,. · · . . . -.. BEOR.--u.Jo. .
ma&lt;ihine. .glass doar ~
......... ranch style house

1...----

studellf's

cles.k.

~~u;,Y' ,s ;

For Sale
.A..I um1•0.001
Sheets

For Trade

The
Dailv

,_..,.,Ollie

2......_ ai n ondlllonect. double
groge.. Sysrs.old. Pomer&lt;¥y.
Cal 992-:lkS.
, 2, 31
o- ..,. C
HOUSE.
..
·16(2 Lincoln Heights.
~.:. llilnny Thompson, 992.

gu ilar, M.ytag -~washer. 2rinse ...... willologs.
picnic labile. w x • Sad,. 4
bicycles, 2 poau - . ,
m.,...,., l t' .... laill , slop
7·1S.Ifc
ladder. 2 bags insulalian
(newt• ..-1 fonoe JD1s. MIDDLEPORT- s room brick
Senalor ganleoo tiller. ' 64 .....__ bath, paneli~

New office training kits have
Watermelons, cantaloupes.
young be'iltos. 11 1•1 5 ."o).
also been added as follows: In
sweet
corn,
potatoes . Stone 1·ar.5w :dea ~ _
~
-- · ~
the Gregg Adult Education
Clarence Proffitt, Portland, .antiques,, to,s.
&lt;Mi04 manr llems t o o - ID
Phone 8Q.22S4.
a. u .ttc
Series, Bookkeeping Funmen1Jon.
Refwcs.,na !nls_
damentals Kit ; Accounting - - - - - - - - Owner: ,.....,._ Tillis. Autfi oneer: I, o. - M;,C" McCoy.
Fundamentals Kit; Gregg 1:0A L, li mestone. Excelsio.I-2UIIp
Quick Filing Practice Kit.
~all Works, E. Main St ..
Pomeroy. Phone 992·3891. ·
"-9-tfc
These are all Individual kits,
Auto Sales
with the student working the
bl
· his
kit Gregg BE GENTLE, be kind, IG t1)at
1910 DATSUN pidr...... _ ,
pro ems 1ft
own ·
expensive carpel. clean with
c;;ondtfian. ~ t.es. . . . .
Shorthand wilh accompanying Blue Lustre. Rent electric
wredr.ed, $1,.515. ~ 9ft.
records is also available, as sham.,...,.., St. Baker Fur- 5153.
a.J&amp;.Dk:
11 a Sten
· t the ABC niture Company.
we
s
oscnp •
8 186tc
shorthand, which utilizes the
individual sllldent workbooks. t---------_,· 1970 DODGE l'blara,. eao•'' •
•lr awodilirwlil. .
Programmed Business Math,
so:ondlllon.
1;&amp;SO. l'ihane tiS.m&amp; .._
Booksi,II,andlll,arealsonew
Bottom, Ohio.
_lt" x ::U" x...JP.
_ _ _ _ _ _JI.ll..llp_
.
additions to the well1!quipped
Center. The complete set of
SPECIA1.1fhis-at T- IIIIo
Mathematics in Action, film..
Molar$, 1913 Ford ~
str:ips with captions, h8s also
1-J5.1k
been added since the opening of
USED OFFSET PLATES
the Center.
HAVE
Charles Frum, Adult Basic
MANY USES
1959 CliEV. jpiicbp .._
Education Recruiter and Public
t&amp;G
ora c;on
1
... - -- •
Relations Man for !be Mason
F&lt;lOIIM
W.Jsoulh of M' d lll 5 I .., S..
County Schools, urges everyone
I lor SI.DG
Route1.
to stop in the Center and see f~
themselves whal the Center has
to offer. U further information
Pfts
is desirl!d, you may call Mr.
R'EGISTER EO. lle;o•filt12
Frwn at the Vocational Center,
O i -puss:¢
675-3039, or speak with Mrs.
, , 1 UIOirt ». '
black.- Qliu ...... s tud dog.
• e.
. Jl! JahL 3 1
Morrison, Vocational Secretary
.~·
.. ,,a, Ql.Ja1.
for the county.
J,..:..--- - -- ----:J
..»ttc

fwSale

..... ___ ..._

---

IH4

WHY DIDN'T )OU
LETU5I&lt;NOW

..OU WERE ON 11-IE
WAY HOME?

WE DON'T KNON, I!UT
11-l!:RE$ AN ITEM IN 'THE
PAPf:R WE 11-lOUGHT

YOU'D WANT 10 SEE! .

:'.~'"!'·~~~~.ng.

S.20-l21t
SIX ROOM house, bath, full
'
1oJ3 Butternut Ave,,

"'""1,1,
iH t walki ng

distance from

- - - - - - --.._,

• fonllla laid Apptiatjo., to Aae= ·b'e

...0 (D dwia&lt;dlo ...-0111...0
sna1a:1 afleaiq the a.ame and to ruile
NE IGLER Conslruclion. For ID ~_!".:'!.Tarilll.ii'.c.o. No.3, its
building or remodeling your 'Ga;eni,_.n:Toil'i Taril! P.u.c.o. N~
.home. Call Guy Neigler, ru. cJ'.~"N!~ 7,Tn:rtt~'ti~

THE BORN LOSER

Racine. Cltio.

SCnitc Tui4 P.U.C.O. No. 1. ita frtvuc
7-31 ffc U. Senia Tarill' P.U.C.O. No. l, and
ill
Artl Ttlec:ommunlcatJcJDI Sa'rice
- - - - -- - - - --Tariff P.U.C.O.
No. t. to eftea IUCb to-

•Ide

DNA?...

..

storm

AWN INGS,
doors. and• :::'ruu~r::::'iou::e ~~ti:!:
w i n d o w s • c a r p o r t s • IUe wtt1t Ute Cottunillioa ddii"'U.C ea·
marquees, alunoimRII siding IUtib tbueto attadlod aad ...., a pon
and railing. Call A. Jacob ihcRol.
·
sales~ esenlative. For fr..;
nw ' " - r.,;oi- wUl ell"' Ja.
estimates phone Ch I crnta and adjustmeott Ia ratca aa:1
•
c:Mrtaaaddlaapt lat.bcnpJattca&amp;Dd
Lisle, Syracuse.
V.ar e5
V pnctica
al!lldlDJtbuamo.._the
Jo1onsan and Son, Inc.
· o.....n.., ito "'""'""' c......, _.....
nw,..,uoltteAppticaU..,_.
527 H
-:&gt;'=- - - -__,=,......:.
··&lt; "" com-oa oo t1o the foilowiao:
O' BRIEN ELECTR IC SER
l•l Applooe ,... propooed"""""'
VICE. Alone fol9.4551 .
• ~0::::
applio&lt;i tor Ia oald

LI.'rl'LE ORPHAN ANNIE
H0881.ED 'Ill MIJSTA STAYED

'

;
l

•"

.....,..,

5-».Hc

-

Estate For Sale

J

!C~.'.!r.".'i::,\'!'~u:;:,"f~ ~-=

i

10

!

w

•

A~tioll, mDCtifted to renoet

::!u~ ~::~-:;·...~

•

virgil· .B. 01
TEAFORD ..

_ ,.., duriJ\1 the larerim- the

lllitlo
the Applicailoa ..........
•-wbiclualdpropooed...,..wuheetJ
......,. elledtre·
l&lt; l Eooabll"' ia ellocti,.datefouald

DAILY CROSSWORD

pr-IIChcdule-·, aocl

ACROSS

...~. v•-•"""
~
other aad further '"'
. u. Appliam is reasonably cat.idcd

!.Theater

10 '" 1be ,........

SR •

· ·,i_['theor...=..~~~~=

*'

..
lluloor

1 IIICI'Uie
auL
_.. __or decreae la .::a:n

baron

8. Run

...._.,.,.,.1.._..,..,. ..,1...,.....,
••1

$7,000.GO.

SEE US. NEAR KROGER,
WE MAY HAVE IT.
In-DIS
HELEII L TEAFORD.
ASSOCIATE.
fn.2J11

1-22-&lt;llc

brick home.

letter
11. Join a

18. Rhodesian
dialect
19. Earthly
21. "The Un·

-., ,,_, r=

~llllMID~;~.!:

9. Golf

eries

1. Peas'
container
2. Bungling
3. More

succinct

(2wds.)
16. An. gered

20. Bookie

Y""*'nlar•• Aaawf't'

sub-

22. Ani·

principle

4. California
fort

25. USSR

5. Chatted

27. Vapnr·

river
lze

6. Girl's name 28. Happy
7. Planting
indiimpJement
vidual

Unsmomble these fwr Ju111biel,
one letter to each aquare, to
form four ordinary wordo.

29. Tooth

worry

mating

hero
23. Schoolbook

HliiWOQD

IC ll!llllll.- ...._ ~. late.;

stan~

31. Edible
oil
sourc&lt;

32. Diminished
34. Lyric poem
40. Nigerian
elty
42. Collee n's

step

I I
I [J

b-+-+-f--++-

I t)

IPIIYNOTI

touchable&amp;'

HW.IUif.~

1

rJ

IMI&gt;N TIME5 FIVE
WOULD I!5E HALF iHI~!

~etten

tor-tho--.-.•
I:====v"~======-~·~watlod
IIJthe.....,calo
una..
..rn-rxxr
I

24. Pronoun
26. Telegraph· b--1--1-ic sound

I

27. Convince
30.Arab
boat

WMP0/1390

1

33. Board

Now..._ lhe dreW

1 1

1

,... .. 1

("-wen.

a jet
35. One of
Guido's
notes

• . .,

Jo..bt.:, AOILI

Yr.tttr••f •

36.Cnobe

olc:e

temps.

water

control .

I

AM... r :

lAIII fONOI.T lllniN
'
Wlal tine~ a.pun!' tur. ia.-.IHII '--A

ftiANOU

for abort

,

water

37. Once
around

Auto .

level

LinT

I.

. Filter or Power
Fin Agitator .

Moytot
Halo of Heat

· herb

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work It:

Wfth gentle, even
liNt. No hotspoto,
no. ovtrdrylng .
Fine Mtlh Lin '

m~ 'lq • J.. BuJit.-fn• kitchen,
ca •wNc: file- bath:, all Mectr ic
....... goad neigli • hood. Can
iOR'ilnge FHA fiMIIcint .
Tckploe fr1:..JQII or ft2.
21a.

A X Y D LB.\ A X R
r~~~~=4~~=~ 'r=~~!:::=~==~=!
Ia L 0 N 0 Jl' E L L 0 W
One Jetter,aimply standi for another. In tht. sample A I• '!HE LMT llAIE 1lW iW'I'alfa
'CUU'Lli&gt;J w~ IE FIRST .
uoor! Cor the three L's, X rot· the two O's, etc. Single letters. WE 60T 5TOCK WITH THAT
E~gi: llt/l\lfi'Eit
apoatroploes, the length and formation of the word a are all
STUPID I!EA6LE..
~E!
.
hlnl.l. Each day the cnde letters are different.
l:;~(::f)~:;::~y-~t-C~
.\ CrJptopal!l ..........

r

Filter.

Wo Speciollzo In

....,..

MATTA ..

hrtCor"'

. RIITIMD Grati
FURNITURE
·
742-4211

Arnold

Rutland, o. '

OBCTC'V

:~

---- ~-~~--------~--~~--------~--~------~~----------------~--~
L·

'

the
lnck
38. Scand.
country
38.-einal

Dryers
Surround clothn

in

.

CAPTAIN EASY

Ptrmi-Prtss · ·

7·11·1fc

~\

matory

f3wds.)

union

.

2ChSpHd

..,_

----'

DOWN

president
12. Pantry
13. Cross out
14. Insurance
statlstlc
15. Greek

ENDS WAS STIGMATIZiiD AS A LIAR! BROUN

swelling

ofa.trip

Korean

ou somehow get the
ling he has tho!lllht
bout what · he's
h;~ring with you. Your
ling is right.
.

8. Inflam-

port,

'CONVENI ENT bul secluded
llul'ldiing !ols. on• T79 af Rock
Sjwings. Within walking ,·
dis1aace of Meigs Hlg~ ·
~ • • Sminvte drive from
PcaaiEJ..,. ut cr see am
Witte -.net$. or aflw '
PilL. • nP •ys. Phone 992~ .

--_....
...

46. Poruon

South

Y..ter&lt;la)"o CrJplo.-: WHAT A DUU. WOIIU) TBIB
WOUUI BE IF' EVERY QIAGINATIVE KAKER OF 1m-

publication
score
45. Gaelic
10. Bean-

along!

5-7-lfc

1

44. Ready for

11. Fonner

D1aiu klcittim In Middleport.·
Som by appointment only. r--,--~~­
Phane 992-552:1 after l p.m.

F_,..

desert
43. Watch
over

Rosenkavaller"

IIWfmefttlllowlDithe&amp;IIIOUDt

of ... '
cbaa8ld

u. california

4. ''Der

- " ' rau or_,., ...o a •• ,_..
IIIMetlt•ic~
..._"':."':,~:l:r,~·!.''!.::i
P uut. Oilie
Pill&gt;' at the om.. dC lhe Comml..on, 111
NEW LISTINGS
Norih Hip Street, Coiumblu Obio ...t
MIDDLEPORT - l Dacre with ••
publi c bu•lne u oriJce oi the
a 6 .._.. house an1 garC...paay.
DEXTER _ 6 ,._,house ;,jih
1lw form of thia .,.;~ hu bmi ...
.
Sl,SOO.IIIL
:l"o;lo':'
TiwPuhil&lt;UIIlit,..Commiuion
2 1015
120 acr es of building lot$.
TELTHEB OHIO BELL
Olester water.
PHONE COMPANY
GOOD BUYS
Bji1 C. K. ""''•
IOACPES-60or rhorefrador
"~'""''1
tillable. 6 room house.
. (81 2, , 31 (91 7, 31&lt;
m.oao.011.
POMEROY - 7 ,._,.. bath.
lurnac:e, bas ment. 11.500.00.
MIDDLEPORT-PURAL-6
bath.
,. __den
ITEM: Jack Kane ~
rooms,
gar-. ,_ ·

S.12·121c

~25-lfc

t

INlERRUPTEI&gt;.... ... M.V.

- -- -:. - - - --

N5"t2

---:-- -NEW. ·;J.-oom, 1\omt

.
'),...--..,

a:ni£c. iDCrutale pri't'lte llae lti'Yica ud
6-10-Hc iDuutate wide a.rca Wecom
, doa~

•ROOM- and bath loCated
jusl outside Chesler. Phone

B~DPOOM

10 llW' FISHING
HE AN' DINNY

HARR ISON'S TV 1\ND .J\N. ::"'111"f:;"!'aJ"=~::,~t: ,$
TENNA SERV ICE. Phone _ , . . . .ko,iatrattate-tolli&lt;Jo.
992-2522.
...-. i..,_o. mollllo IA:kot'"'

-~~~~~ Pomeroy. Contact SYRACUSE - 5 rooms, !lath,
!Od Hed'ricli;. 2137 Wadsworth
llasemenl on 124. On ly
llriw. Columbus, Ohio, ph'""'
$6,11011.110.
ZJ1-«DDI,. Ollumbus.
· LETART - 5 rooms. !lath,
59-tfc
lumaa!. Basement. $1.000.011.

l

... MEBBE f CAN GET

AUTOMOBILE IIISIKailce been
lqll NDIICI
cancelled?
Lost
your · Public-~-"'"" ihot Tho
operaZar's license? Call 992· Obio ldl To~ Compaar tu lllod
2'166.
- Tho Public Utititi,. Caallnillioo dC
~ 1 51fc ObioaaAoollc.adooowlqtllotdloCom_ , ;a Oliolil!cl, - - o1 "" , _

ty.

canner...

Mid-Summer salt
-:on-AiiMOdtls
SavOUPTo$200.00
Over 10 Percont
HAWK'S :I-DAY
CYCLE SALE
2 miltS 50Ulh of Athens, 0.
Rt.ll
Open Mon., Wed., Fri.
1U.m. IGip.m.

-

Re "Jtnu m -2561
·R ·
a.1utc
eal

"'=

- -- - - -

,

IBiUI Pullins. Phone992·2A71.

~'E. 6 rooms andDUPLEX """'
EVEiNING AUCTION
.
•
lla!h..Aparfment,
3 roomsIdeal
and
Starto1ng a o 6 p.lii.,. -.;J•
batiL Private entrances.
Augusl17ilhCIIIIIRP--. .
~~u- · .~le ....~
~
........
;ly with extra rental or
,..,tSonn,
_ 1W1i14
•
sold my home . . 511!!8 h
lft'\LUI'men t propee
Priced
fOllowing:
llai da"tk Gats
f..- qtlid sal10. Cal 992-2431
R a 1n,ge .
Fr i Ji~a i re aflerSp.m.
..
1
cabine!.. ,.,...iyll,l piionQ, 2 pc..
li ving ,..,5WIIe.Jpc.. ..oello!
t
S -~
se • 12 X -no;. PI
n

5 1·HC

Galli polis. Joh~ Russell ,
Owner &amp; Operator.
5 13-lf&lt;

COLONIAL 51t1e "'"'- AMFMI'ad'H&gt;..44 I s.4 ~
ELECTRIC guitar and am· record d:l;onger. a..laiiO!!
plifier - S60. Gas heal ing ~·,'!,;..~_. h lg I lonns..
C!-£LAND REALTY
stove - SIO. Zenith, black and ~ ~· ~
. . EHI Main
while television - $75.
I-2'Uk
POMEROY
82A.31p
1· - - • Lot 150x1011
ER
DEXT
.MGDERI\1
sZaEQ. AM- ~
'
FM lillalons 4 ~
:t slary frame, 4 bedrooms, 2
p&amp;Wchls ane enclosed, bam
GRAVELY
TRACTOR recor;d dlang!r. .. ... *rs.
2car spaces and another
DEMONSTRATOR CLEAR· separa1e cmlrds.. Pd ce
slcwage building . GREAT
ANC E
1 demon- $67.119. Ca' I - . - _
FOR THE KIDS. $8.900.
strator ._,. C-1 w.mower, --------~a.~22~611r:lc
$650; I deniouslral..- super C-1
W·m&lt;Mer and dual wheels, CANNING ilou '
... ...., POMEROY- FAMILY HOME
Q.OSE TO ELEMENTARY
S750rl demonstrator Model «18 pichi!, Sl ..25 bu.. ...illg
5CHOOL-2s~frame, l'h
riding tractor. W 34" mower, c o n t • i ners ~ Ger•ld ine
ballls.
4 nrce
oorus, gas
S750; 1 new 10 h.p. riding
Cleland. &amp;5I - . . p ....
faned·a
k
heat,
full
tractor with 40'' mower, Sl ,190.
7 - t , nl!ftl f.,. porch, garage with
· Gravely Trador Sa les,
re:nG"'tafed room oyer, fine for
Pomeroy. W2·2975.
alfice space or utility apart.

822·3fc
- -- - - - - - RIDING horses. Phone 9~196.
S.22.otc

CI\OOKED .

Deland
Realty

For Sale

-------

-6'1 SHOOTI"-1' f.V'ft:(
CHIPPENDALE CHAIR
HESEEN!."UNFORitHNUTL'f,

-FO' PROTECTIN' FO.KS

SE.TTIIo¥ IN
MOSfOF'EM!!

...2Sifc
and pasture, large
~· 593-1669
born. implerrient shed and
olher bui ldings. Recently SEWING machine service In
reu I ~d. l bedioom farm your hclllle. Clean. oil and O'DELL WHEEL alignment
h&lt;ne, with. wall to wall adjust, M. Pllane 992-lGBS.
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
orpe!ir.q , ceramic tile bath, Twin Oly Sewing Maclllne
Complete front end ser.vice,
full basement . Shown by Company.
tune up and brake service.
:.'!'!..oilllrrlenl only. Phone 992- __ __ _ __ __a._2U lc
Wheels b~lanced elec·
~
Ironically. · All
work
guaranteed .
Reasonable
8-22-12fc SEWING MACHINES. Repair
rates. Phone 992·3213.
serThevi&lt;eFabr
' a.ll e
•PI992·2214.
7·27·tiC
1 - - - -- IC .......,
VIItti oy. ___'.:_
Aufhori111!1d Singer Sales and .
Sonlia!. we Shai pen Sciss&lt;lro. READY·MIX
CONCRETE
:J.2f-Hc
delivered right to your
.. . .
prp/' ed. Fast and easy. Free
t$1 mates . Phone 9'12·3284.
SEPTIC tanks deaued. Mi ller
Goeglein
Ready.Mix Co.,
Sanllatial, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
Middleport, Ohio.
·
662·31135.
. . lbst Main
~JO.Ifc!
2-12·1fc
POI!IEROY

Sl43.

U'.·lf - Z.f-WIIE

FOSDICK GOT
Uf..IFAIRL'I
J:'IRED i"UM
'rn' i"ORCE --

PHONE 992·2143

SEPTIC.. I AtiiKS CLEANED

19J ACRE stock farm, well
fenad1 farm pond, plenty of

TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Court, Rl . 124, Syracuse,
Ohio. 992-2951.
CHICKEN ~ at $yncuR
. 4.2-lfc wilt! 1.61 ......,., ........ 10-

BEAG LE PUPS, s ired by
Pearson ~ stock, s15.
Keith Ridenour, Chester, Ohio
9tin4175.
8-22.31p

P~rts

Blaettnar'•

Reasonable rates, Ph• ....,_.Q12,

Real Estate For Sale

lft.D..

16 FT., 25 H.P. Sea·King &amp;
frailer. S2SO. Phone 1-667&lt;1031.
1J.22·31p

l8·2-J~~ ~~~~

6,98 ·Plus

CBRADFORD. Auct~
Complello Sonlia!

Plt.tn-2:143

r..,.

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

Special
At

FOLKS W/&gt;6

'IUEnltARS

8X 35 TRAILER , country
I'10CIDLE Poh ies. _ .
location. Phone 9'12-39S4.
822·llc
~~-K M I - -

-------

~

l

Re-OiaiJI

_.,.,.,, ..... S.tunlor
-E. Mlilt1 PaiNiGJ, 0 .

Smallest Huller Core.

;EqujpmenL
We alsoihaw.i!CGI 5' !t lire
af Sit :f" FUI!I 01 lbleu

POMEROY

~

.t

Ai Conslitioning .
lnspldion and

OpeaiTitS

Frum the largest Truck or
Bulldozl!l' Radiator to the

3 lg I

and Funwms..

~

1

Pbone9-49XZI

AmomaHc D ; oe Day
Oo!liwey- Duel 0 s ... ,

.J.il4

Palla., llanle &amp; AWl

,

lli&gt;r Plill. IW'.-y s.. •._

I:.

RdaD Senice

.._

'l.AfiQMIItl[,
We llalll! ll!e -

J

-GUARANTEEDPisone 992-20?4 ·

IHms

cndit

ANTIQUES, telephones, brass aVll! - - 9 f t . 5 W I .
beds, clocks, dishes. old
furniture, etc. Write M. D.
Miller, Rt. l , Pomeroy, Ohio. .
Call 992-6271.
. ·BEAT ae OILIJ' lllliTEit
J.9.1fc ... IT"S COST WITH
HEATIIIG OIL F ltOM
.r

EXPERIENCED

...,. 131..6

SPECIFIC~

HiVe Yoi.r s-..,.111 .

15.55

1!-----------.

l LIKE
TOBeMOU

'

I

742:490~

Display.

.........

Free
·
mate on urnace
J....:lns::::t:::a::la::fi::.o:.:n::.·_ __ _ ..J

DOWN

AND IUS FRIENDS

Septic Tanks
And Lum Beds.

EXPERT

see
u5 icirEs1i
F

FOREMAN JEST
TOtO ME ,..,...._,~

And Patios
S.cllhoeAnd
Endloader Work

Slap In and See Our

Work Gu;~ranteed

!

Kitchens, S.ths
Room Additions

Pameroy

fuRIIRURE

Phone 992-2550 ·
Insured . Experienced

GUESS WHAT
· TH' SAWMILL

Re.modelinK

And

f~

e.Ael(. ..

.f.o!'JP.~- . .

UifiCE SUPPUES

tlitioooillg.
. 241l.itoc81n 51 •• Midollopart

...,

.....

....,

606 E. Main

Or:AV.

~·Rf; I'J,.OIJE,

KilftSON MASONRY

992-2094

IIEW &amp; OLD WORK
All W'N I:Mr ilHfiq &amp;
·~eo . ...,. All_ ,. Plul!lllinlf &amp; HNiillg.
C10mplete Pllllll•int ,
Haaling ·and A.i r Con-

992~

Services ~.

POMEROY
.HOMi&amp; AU10

SPOUTJ"G,
ROOF PAIIITJNG

etc. Full pricem.1~

_ _ _ _ _ _ _a._22;31p

For Renl

.

·B usfuesS

elderly ~le. No laundry. IJliiGZAi~;;;i;;;;;;d,;,~
and need not . stay nights; .6 1m ZIG ZAG
il4 ....me,

@).

EVERYBODY

'

en•=•·

Mrs. Reed Jeffers. .
·
~~~HEVROLET IMPALA
SIJH
Mr. and Mrs. OiniDn (}ilkey,
Conv. cpe.. local owner &amp; low mileage. Vinyl Interior,
Albllny, c:alled on their son-in·
dark blue fin ish, while lop, air conditioned, v.a engine,
lawanddaughter, Mr. andMrs.
automatic trans., power steering. radio. A nice car.
Th
1965 CHEVROLET IMPALA CPE.
1195
·
Wa Iter Jordan.
eY were
396 cu. In, V·B engine, 3 speed, std. shill, clean Interior,
acampanied by Mrs. J!ll'dan's
nice blue finish, good tires, radio &amp; heater. A fine buy.
_......, ,.._ Mrs A Gilk
~.::=.
. ovillew
·"" '.
· va
ey,
._,_,
Anna Parker, Qeveland, and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Parker
and family, Middleport, were
guesla of their grandparents,
OP.EM EYES. S:OO P.M.
--~
Mrs
N
~"•-•ter
i'CIMEROY, OHIO
Mr • IIIIU
•
ey _,..... •
and aunt, Martha Mays. Others
who visiiA!d at the Carpenter
•-Chari
M linda
WANT AD
'""""' 1l1!l't!
es, e
'
INFORMATION
0
Donald and David Dailey,
DEADLINES
Berne, Indiana.
5 P.M. Qay Be/ore Publication.
· th E · k
h
Monday0eadline9a.m.
Kenne
ric son
as
.. .~~llatlon &amp; O&gt;rrectlans
returned from Missouri where
Wlllbeas:cepteilunlil9'a.in.for'
he was called by the death of his
Day of Publication
•
father
REGULATIONS
•
The Publisher · reserves the
Mrs. Goldie Gillogly returned Mr. and Mrs. Franklin right to edit or reject any ads
to her lHme hen! after spending Russell of Middleport were deemed objection~!). _ The.
two'llftb in CollUDbus with her Tuesday evening visitors of Mr. publisher will not be responsible
daughter, llemice McKnight and Mrs. Lincoln Russell. Also l~r'tJ:!;,~ than one incorrect;
and family. Mr. and Mrs. Roger visillng Mr. Walter Jordan and
RATES
McKnight and family brought Mrs. Clinton Gilkey.
5 ce_t;~;t;~~=i~:...ion
bisgrandmotberbomeandthen Mr. and Mrs. William Boyce
MinlmumCharge75c
spent the weekend with his of Colwnbus, Mr, and Mrs. · 12 cents per word three
iiJWodparenla, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell, Brenda Baggy consecutive Insertions.
'
~ll'nl«h
18
cents
per
word
six
COO·
M
Otbo ~u..,...t.
and Ronald Russell were recent seculive insertions.
Mr. and Mrs. !llester Price visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Howard
25 Per Cent Discount an paid
1l1!l't! visiting with their son-in· Russell.
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Howard Russell, Lillie ,
CA~~~~~:::Ks
Jolm 'l'bloctmortoo and Leslie, Houck and Nancy Jo Mayer $1.50 for 50 word minimum.
Osfcri; and also were guests of were Tuesday visitors of Mr. liach additional word 2c.
' I
d
BLIND ADS
ano th er
son-In· aw
an and Mrs. Harley Johnson.
Add itional 25c Charge per
dausbter, Mr. and Mrs. Ken- Mr. and Mrs. Bill Earnheart Adverlise11\1!111.
neth Hulcbinson and David, of Logan, Emma Norring, her
OFf ICE HOURS
Deyton.
daughter and granddaughters
8: 30a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Daily,
8:30 a .m. to 12 : 00 Noon
Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jardan of California, were Sunday Saturday.
spent several days vacation in visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Harley · ·
· ·
the Ft. Worlb-Dallas, Texas, Jolmson. .
Notice
area where lbey were guests of Kail Lee Knapp spent the I WILL oot be responsible lor
Mrs. Jordan's brother, Evans weekend with Mrs. Lena Knapp debts contracted bv any one
other than myself. Signed.
Rutherford and family, Plano, .of Langsville.
Jack Frederick.
and other relatives in !bat area.
= :-:-::-:-:-:-_:___ _a._22·31p
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
REVIVAL, Eagle
Ridge
spent a day with their son-inCommunity
Church,
August
law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
25, 26, 27. 28. Rev. Roy Oeeter,
Donald Jones and son,
Evangelist.
Nelsonville.
~=:::-::----:-~S.~23-61p
Reier end Lindley, Rutland•.
KOSCDT Kosmetics, J uly·
filled. in at preaching services at
August special, Kare Kon·
dillon oil $5. Value now only
· · !be Mt. Union Baptist Olurch,
$2.50. Oislrlbutors, Bn&gt;wn's,
willie !be regular,pastor and his
phone 992·5113.
wifli,_Mr. and Mrs, Cecil Cox, relativ~ in the Akron, Ohio,
11"1 vacationing in Canada.
area for ,several days lhis past ~7.?~======~7~~*
SAVE UP to one hal:. Bring
M=bersofthe Cooley family week. ''
your sick TV to OIUdr.'s TV
held their annual n!UIIi'oo at the Miss Judy McCallie and Mrs.
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.
...
Terq,le Olurcb Grove recently. Jerrie Wllson and cllildren of
TbGae preaent for a family the Ann Arbor, Michigan,
picnic'attheTGTClubHouseto vicinity were guests of their REWARD for any information
celebrate the birthdays of grandmother, Mrs. Faye
leadinA to the arrest of the
Walter Swett and his grandson, Jordan, and called on relatives
persons who shot a horse in
Michael u.....o..
Mr d · the
·1
the Middleport Hili Area
·~,.were
an 1ft
commuru y.
between noon and 4 p.m ..
Mrs. W. I. Swett, Middleport;
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Smith
Thursday, August 19. Contact
Mr.andMrs. ArthurReedyand and daughter, Nancy, have
James Brewer, 1275 Vine or
family, l'onleroy; and Mr. and returned from a vacation
call 99b 343.
22-Jtc
Mrs. Walter Swett, local.
during which they visited Mr. - _ _ _ _ _ __;_"-=
Mr. and Mrs. €ecil Gillogly and Mrs. Frank Hertling and H 1 Wnled
and family enjoyed a vacation family, Redwood Falls, Min·
p
trip wbieh took them to the nesota. The group also made a NEED lady lor housecleaning I
IMme of their brother-in-Jaw · sightseeing bip to )Iasca State
or 2 days a week. Reply c.o
Box 7'29, Pomeroy, Oh\o.
and slater, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Park, Minn.
8-19-6tp
Morning, Elyria; and they
Guests of Mrs. Murl Calaway
visited Cedar Point and other were Mr. and Mrs. Leon SALESMEN needed. Work lull
or parllime. No door to door
poinls of interest in the Lake Woodrwn, Kathy and Randy, sales. Advancement opErie area.
and Chuck Petty, McArthur;
portunlly. Call collect m
5079
The Busy Bee Society of the andMr; andMrs. CiydeMcVey,
·
a- 1utc
Carpenter Baptist Church met Alhens.
_ _ _ _ _ ___:_,::
at !be church with Mrs. Reed
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey CAR HOP and waitress. Apply
Jeffers leading the devotions. attended the golden wedding · in person. Crow's Steak House.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Stansbury celebration for Mr. and Mrs.
and cbildren have returned Amos Leonard, Rock Springs,
from a vacation bip !bat took recently. They also visited their
WOMAN TO live in. light
them to Florida. They visiiA!d granddaughter's family, Mr. housework and cooking. Call
many poinla of interest enroute. and Mrs. Larry Clark and 9'12-3507 or 992·5397.
~2., llc
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey J!ll'dan daughters, Tamra and Penny,
and family vacationed with Tuppers Plains.

News, Notes

Sentinel Classifieds

~

EAI!N 1\T horne -...sing ;IIRODM h
'-vellllllr.M
Rush slom~ ..........
b 1itillt. Wll ID .~... - · :
. self
essed envelope. .
_....,.. oed ......
-·
Ambrose Co •• .ms Lakelx&gt;m, carport. tft.3ll2.. ·
'"
Davisburg, Mich. 411119,
l-24-4k.
81-JDip
·St. NGERLMD ._
NEED SOMEONE to do 2301.
lessillall•_..ald.-fft.

1%6 CHEVROLET 2 TON
ONLY $1750
8.4'' ciib foaxle, good B25x20 tires, 2 speed rear axle, Int. &amp;
cab like new truck, 6 cyl. m cu. ln. eng. A real clean

w lfipen

.

fir Sale

Help lanled

Po•eroy
Motor Co.

iL.
II.:.... (
rulllero,·
IIIUftr .••

-

/

ELRRCT

___

·OBC

VNZCANES
DPTOS

UBN

JCQCTB. - GLR

1}
----~--------------------------------------_.~~----------

''

PO

CXCTS

CPdV

BKAAPTE

PQQ

�I
'

- n.n. lli""!','li'IRI,II .....IlK...,_...,......
. --

;

Gls Alerted

1 .,
IHWiWIO),O.,.Autia.t.Jt,19'11

Improved Toll
' Holler Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar Sl General
W!lilng houn z.t and 7-1 p.m.
)(lternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
llirllll
.Mr. and Mrs. Earl E. Phelps,
Rl1, Rutland, a SOD; Mr. and
Mrs. John R. McGinness,
Gallipolis, a daughter; Mr. and
Mn. IMry T. Jeffers, Mid!
dleport, a daughter; Mr.
. and
I
H
H
M
R
be
rs. 0 r Mr
· andersman,
"'-'-ll
Mrs
8
I&gt;N"•
•
son;
·
,...._, A ..._.,_.., Rt 4 ·.
"""""•
' ·a son·,
"~
· ~
llipolis,
Mr-and Mrs.
Ga- -Russell M. Hill, Rt. 4, Jacll:sm,
a son; Mr. and MrS. Mmball
M. Bland, West ~lmnbla, .W.
Va., a daughter; Mr. and Mrs.
Harold K. Bnnm, Gallipolis, a
son ; .Mr • and Mrs• John R•
MounIs, Bulla!o, asoo; Mr. and
Mn. Thomas E. LDwe, Radcliffe,adaughter; Mr. and Mrs.
SicmeyR. Hayman, Middleport,
a son, and .Mr. and &amp;m. Harold
V. Delillion, Jackson, a
daughter.
1
Dlldtarges
Mrs. Robert Bartm and son,
Mn. G. Roger Beatty, Mrs.
BiDy J. Butcher, Rose Renee
Chaffins, Rev. Earl V.
Oemeens,ShirlineGo!f,Walter
Lee Hughes, Gary W. Rusk,
Michelle L. Sbepberd, Mrs.
Ollrles R. Spa111 and Sill, Troy
Thcmas 'lbacter, Jr., Sbe1ia A.
Vance, Mcrgan Wolford, Mrs.

MEIGS THfJJRE
Tonltht,. Aupst 24

LITTLE MURDERS

ITtdlfticDiorI

E lllolt Gould
Donald Sutherland

lcotor·artaoM:

Royol Royolll'

K........ S"*-t
Rtw&amp;b It MlnhMI
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

R

(Coalinued _from-Page 1)
Ercell Day, Arnold Hayes, Leon
MASON - Residents here
Angles, and Mrs. Edith Mit- Stabru.ation Board cfurlng the Korean War.
may
not know it, bullhey will be
One by one, ihey were asked by Chairman William Prollllire getting
cbell.
better telephone service
D-Wls., "What happena next after the IICklay ·freeze i.s over''; shortly . to Clarksburg, FairVeterau Memorial Hospital They agreed lliat .., ''some formula must be foWid with view, Glen .Daniel, Glenville,
ADMISSIONS Betty leglalative authlrity granted, to deal with basic Industry ~nd big and Warwood.
Roach, Pl. Pleasant; Floyd Jab!l' Ullims. Once a determination i.s made to maintain wages
Robert G. Butcher, local
Cummins, Racine; Mildred and prices, ap)l'()Jiriale sanctinns should be available. A tri- business manager for C &amp; P
Roush, New Haven; Ruth Ann partite board should have the authority to administer them."
Fry, Pomeroy; Charles
Michael, Racine; Sarah Diddle,
Middleport; Delores Lyons,
Racine ·,
Sheila
Roach,
.Do -the citizens of Middleport
Cheshire; Marion Nicholson,
(Continued from page J)
need I)W". city coun
. cil?
Rutland; Leonard Lunsford,
Micha 1 d ""'•Dis · As residents of Middleport my
Pomeroy; Melissa Russell,
.
u:u!l'a Minersvlll
e an • .., · w11· e and I attended a COWicil
Lo
Mcintyre
rain;
Charles Klein ,
'
e. Barton, mee tin g_MondaY~ht,
·
Ponboy.
Ada Bissell,
Richard
Aug. 23,
DISCHARGES _ Rebecca
&amp;!san E. Pigott and Robert K. concernmg the dismissal of a
Soutll, Robert Ashley, Naomi
·
Lute, Long Bottom; Roger police oHicer.
Bissell Darrell Drake
Epple, Chester; Millard Roush, Why did tile council, when
'
·
WASHINGTON (UP!) _ If Nathan Roush, Donald F. asked the reason, pass the
.
li
H nd 1 k
dB b H U buck?Wbydidthepresidentof
thIS year's corn crop ·ves'up to
e r c s an
o
vse .
Pleuut Valley Hospital
s
G
All
p 1- COWl_cil evade all questioning?
currentrecord-highindications, yracuse; race
en, or
ADMlSSIONS: Mrs. Harry fanners face a rapid growth in land; Kei:meth L. Longstreth,
Layne, New Haven; Nellie surplus stocks and prices far Langsville; James Bumi!arner;
Zahrandt, Mason; Mrs. below last season's level, ac- Mason; Louella Taylor,
Garland Bostic, Gallipolis cording
to
Agriculture Cheshire; David MaltoJ:, West
(Continued troiz. Page 1)
F~; Sylvia Mullins, Mrs. Department economists.
Colwnbia; Warren Miller and state leveL ·
Julia
Roseberry,
Point The Crop Reporting Board Richard Pickens, Pl. Pleasant. The Pre "d 1
ported
Pleasant; Eva Jean Oliver, has estimated the 1971 corn
Doctors assisting
Dr
Sl en was re
Gallipolis Ferrycrop, on the basis of Aug. 1 TIJ(IIJ8s Mcrgan,
to ~dkeeping a close eye on the
DISCHARGES: Mrs. Norma conditions, at a record 5.345 Telle Dr EdmWid Butrimas wor money markets, where
Nicholson, Mrs. Robert Carr, billion bushels.
· and
Raymond Bnlce.
the dollar dec~ed slightly
Theodore Melrose, Charles
Economists, writing in a
Nurses were NaOOII Loodon, Monday, . the _first day of
Baker.
"feedsituation"swnmary,said LPN · Mary Armes LPN· trading smce NIXon untied the
today the crop estimate could Josephine Hargrave~. RN: dollar fro~ _its set gold base.
change later in the season. But Wilma Tillis, LPN; Vivian Theadministratiooreporledly
if it does not decline, they said: Jolmson LPN and Marilyn hopes that there 1118Y eventual-Feed crop prices should dip Davis,
ly be up to a 10 per cent drop
Ceo.tiaaed rr.m Page 1)
sharply below levels of the 1970- In charge of the canteen was m the dollar's value compared
available to your community."' 71 marketing season. Corn Feeney Bennett Post, American ~ the strongest world curren·on ......m.- MiddJ..vrt c1es, such as the West German
Marlin said hundreds of prices probably will dip below Leg!
~,,
.....- •
k Th
savings and Joan. associations · the $1.05 national average chairman.
with Mrs. Albert Roush as cHeaper
mar ·
edollar
theory is that a
will make
were "bmnping up" against the support price at harvest lime,
.
American-made products more
reserve req~nls, causing but would rise seasonally ~~
Loadllfg and unloading was competitive on world markets.
them lfl refrain from making m the year as large quantities done by Boy Scout Troop 249, The administr ti has also
additional mo.-tgage loans and move to market and into the' Tom &lt;;"•sell, scoutmaster·
let it be known ~~~t will
putting an additional pressure government support _program.
Clerical wcrkers were Mary the newly invoked 10 per
on interest rates
- A ''mnderate" gain in Nease, Jean Nease; Marybelle .
t
bar .
•
·
d
·
Warner Joyce H back J · ·unpor surcharge as a
gamHe said s.and-L's were omestic ...., of feed gram is
•
o
• aruce ·
hi
underwri!lng $3 billion worth of likely. H this happ!ns, it would Davis, Grace Drake, Juanita :~ha':t r~tesga:: ::c::ab!
DIOI"tgages a month, but the mean bigger meat, poultry and Sayre,
Beulah
Strau~s, the Ire: market does not .:Suit
growth of recent months had possibly milk supplies for Lulabelle Hampton, Eloise .
h d al I" . the
leveled off, threatening to conswner.
White, Becky Anderson, ~ ~~c a
ua 100 m

Co
_' m Pn'ce

Bloo
" d

Could b e

,·-

Interest

;erel.ewb

Dr.

Mortgage

RN. '

e.;;.

- The competitive position of
curlail a boom in the housing
'If - udly &amp; Tllursday
industry.
U. s. Feed grains In foreign
A-'2$-26markets
would improve. But
NOT OPEN
CLASS 10 MEET
the economists cautioned that
lbe Willing Workers Class of exports may not top present
the
Enterprise
United prospects of 19 million tons
Methodist Church will meet at , because supplies in other
the home of Mrs. Helen Milhoan counlrles are also heavy.
Thursday at 7 p.m.
_ carryover supplies of
Tonilllt, Aug. 24
1 feed
·
·n j
MARRIAGE
UCENSE
surp
us
gram
WI
ump
Double FuNrt Pnlgram
"MONTE WALSH"
Virgil Manning Dill, 21, ~a=:~~o:e =te!o'i:
lee-Morvin
Plaid o?' Rt. 3, and Pamela fall, The carryover in the fall of
Jade Palance
Jean
Walburn• 19• Oleshire • Rl · 1972 cou1d be up ~s much as 50
'
GP
2.
pet.
. -PiOS-_
ONCE YOU KISS
PARENnl ~ MEET
MJD..AM AGAIN?
A STRANGER
HUNTINGTON, w. Va .
Parents of kindergarten
(Coler)
Paul Burke
students .of . Southern Local (UP!) - Marshall University
Carol Lynley
GP
Schoolt. Distri~t are asked to · may seek to re-enter the Mid-----mee m the kindergarten room American Conference, school
oo Monday,~- 30, between 9 president Dr. John G. Barker
w.d., TIHo. &amp; Fri.
and 11 a.m..~n are not~ revealed Monday. During his
August 25-26-21
rep&lt;_rt at this time. Classes Will "state of the university" adDouble FNture Program
begin 00 Tuesday.
dress, the first-year president
COTTON COMES TO
DIVORCE GRANTED
said the MAC had infonned him
HARLEM
(Color)
Sherry D. Fridley was of its ''willingness to discuss"
Godlrey Cambridge
granted a divon:e from Delbert Marshall possible readmission.
Raymood St. Jacques
R
W. Gridley on charges of gross
neglect of duty and extreme
AID RECEIVED
-Piuscruelty, and restored her Slate Auditor Joseph T.
"THE HAWAIIANS"
Geraldine Chaplin
maiden name of Hutton , Ferguson reported today that
IColor I
GP
Monday in common Pleas Ohio's school districts received
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Court.
$22,987.642.22 in
direct
assistance for August Wider the
r-;~~;,~~~~~~~~~~~~~, State School Foundation
DAIIK
Program. MeigsCoWitySchools
IIIU1
.
received $128,915.29, broken
down to Eastern Local ,
$21 ,981.49 ; Meigs Local,
$84,193.64, Southern Local ,
$22,740.16, and a direct allotment to coWily board, $4,025.59.

I

How To Hold

FALSE TEETH

Securely

Do falae teeth embarrUI you by

THE LONG GREEN.•••
IS A-PLEASURE TO HANDLE
IrS SAFER IN
THE BANK-··
wttllf YOU PAY BY DiECK.
"Cash i3 comforting but more
dangerous to carry around than
a checkbook. "

lltbens ,.aliONII
.,A,~1NCIN~IATI

,

I

I

MIDDLEPORT, 01110
P 7 .. Dqtaalt . . . ._, c.p.nu.

Telephone of West Virginia,
said thee&lt;mpimy will be adding
equipment to tile communicalioos centers in those
commllllities.
''The e&lt;mpletioo of a long
distance call depends upon the
communications center

equipment, cable lacillti~, and
telephone at the temiinaUng
end of lhe call as well as the
origin.iting end here in MasonFor this reason we must mate
certain all points that we serve
in the MoWIIain State have high
quality communications

ag·
officer'
Is
When I asked the mayor and fa:ir way· of doing things?

council wlet the charges were,
nQ ooe seemed to know. Why
werethemayorandonlytwoof
the council members the only
ones who made the decWon to
dismi•stheolficer?Wbydidthe
olher· council IDPmbers ~ow
- - ..,
nothing about the issue?
'lbe majority of the council
dil!agl'eed with the handling of
the issue; after all, it isn't fair
to leave part of the council in
lhe dark.
Why were all council members not preSent at lhe muting?
Why was the recording
secretary either asleep or
simply sitting there with his
eyes closed, not laking notes,
during discussioo of this imperative issue?
Why does the Chief of Police
leve no say concerning the
dismi•sal of an officer? Why did
the members of council present
at the meeting
" ;....., the Chief
..,.,__

Doesn't· this officer deserve a
fairslell:e? HtheCbiefof Police
doesn't know his officers and
their behaVioral pattern wblle
"'I duty, then wilo does? H this
officerwasso_,..• lhenwhy
-·-.,.,
did the Chief of Police stand up
in the o!freer's behalf?
Why did councll state that
they are holding a special
muting next Monday, Aug. 30,
at 7:30 p.m. concerning this
issue of lhe officer's dismissal?
Why are .the doors closed to.the
residents of Middleport and the
press? Doesn't this concern all
of us as citizens of Middleport?
Does lhe mayor and council
handle all the town's Issues in
this same manner? Isn't it
about time we as residents of
Middleport begin to attend oor
City Council mwUngs, and get
to the truth of tlie matters?
- Mr. and Mrs. T. L. B.
·
P 0 Box 10 Middleport
· ·
'
·

New Haven E-R
flanning Course

=

:

BUT

Servi~es 'Near

Open Letter to Middleport Citizens
.
. et·without. of Pollee's..request to reinstate
Why was he disml
aninvestig"aliooofthe""~en the officer on another
accusatioos ainst the_...,....
probationary period?
this a
·
·

Depressed

YOUR Fti.L SERVICE

c

oominr looee when you eat, lauc:h,
or talk? A denture adhesive can belp.
F ASTEETIP civet dentures

1.

lonc

8

er, firmer, ateadier hold. MakM eatin&amp;" more enjo)'lble. For more IJ8Curity
and comfort, UM FASTEETH Denture Adbuive Powder. Dentures
that fit are _.ntial to health. See
your deatilt nplarly.

Dorothy Smith, Jeannette
Lawrence, Martha Lou Beegle,
Edith Sisson, Vernon Nease,
and Clara Mcintyre.
Dona lions were made by
QJality Print Shop, 'lbe Daily
Sentinel, Athens Messenger,
WMPO radio, Meigs Local
Schools, Veterans Memorial
Hospital, Ewing Funeral HOOle,
Pomeroy Slreet dept. and Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Dolll!las.
CALLED TWICE
The Pomeroy E-R squad was
called Monday at 4:02 p.m. to
the Klein residence on Vale St.
for Henry Klein who was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
and admitted. At 10:10 p.m.
they were called to the Leonard
LWisford residence on SR 33.
Mr. LWisford was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and admitted as a possible
heart patient.

CONFERENCE BEGAN
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
(UP!) - President Nixon
confers with new chief Vietnam
peace negotiator William J.
Porter today in an atmosphere
of public pessimism over
chances of breaking the
deadlock in Paris.
BARMAID SHOT
COLUMBUS (UP!) _
Deborah L. Richmond , 19,
Lebanon, was shot to death
Monday night outside a bar
near the Ohio State Fairgrom~ds
where she was to work on the
midway.
Her parents said the girl
dropped out of school to work
the "carnival circuit!'
Police said they were seeking
a 23-year-old co-worker of the
girls.

ANOTHER GREAT BUY FROM
BAKE=
· R'=S--__..__.

1

~4f-~

woont"
l\10'~"
Q\~\\\S

~.00 IKh

FURNITURE._
Midcleport, 0.

e; :~on 1 ·
n~ r.:;e ~."Is: lin ed
- e s · mar_e con u
to move ahead on .un!l".~ from
the new econOIDlc mitiatives.
The Dow Jones industrial
av~rag~ added :"'other !1.47
porn~ m Mondays Wall Street
trading.
.

-SoutbCarolina~v. J,'llmC.

Wesl_~ed the ~Ident s Cost

of Livmg Council to exempt
hteachetartes anfd puthblic emplfreezeoyesin
15 s
rom e wage
·
West said scheduled increases
were no more than cost of
living adjustments, without
which employes would be
subject to Wlduly harsh economic. conditions.
--Sen. Robert P. Griffin, RMich., said proposed repeal of
the 1 per cent automobile
excise tax would create as
many as 72,000 new jobs in the
state of Michigan alone. The
tax repeal must he decided on
by Congress when it returns to
work Sept. 3.
-The SS President Wilson,
the first American Dagship to
dock in Japan since the dollar
beganflnating,arrivedatKobe,
and more than 300 American
tourists made a run on lhe local
money exchange to convert
their dollars into yen.
- The Cost of Living Com~cil
ruled Monday that some
workers--but likely only a
relatively few-could gel wage
hikes during the 91klay freeze.
Those involved would be
workers, such as supervisors,
who usually get a raise when
others in their shop, such as
union workers, gel a contract
raise. The ruling appeared to
be aimed at the steel industry
whose m~ion workers got a pay
raiSe Aug . I.
- Three former wage-price
administrators told the Joint
Economic Committee Monday
the government should exert
some long-tenn controls on at
least basic industry and big
m~ions after the 91klay freeze
ends." The recommendations
came from Paul Porter, head
of the World War II Office of
Price Administration; Micleel
V. DiSalle, Korean War Price
Administrator; and George W.
Taylor, a member of the World
War II War Labor Board.
Tit STUDY CARCASSES
Members of the Meigs Com~ly
Belter Livestock Beef Club are
invited to GaUipolis Thursday to
study the carcasses of the steers
sold and slaughtered at the
Evans Packing Company.
Interested adults and club
members will meet at lhe exlension office at noon or at the
packing plant at I p.m.

PICNIC PLANNED
Feeney
Bennett Post,
American Legion, will hold a
picnic for Legion and auxiliary
members Wednesday at 6 p.m.
a l the Legion park. Those atlending are asked to bring a
covered dish and table service.
Officers of the American Legion
will be installed.

N~W HAVEN --: The first
sess•oo of thefirstaidcourse for
the New Haven EmergencyRescue Squad will be held
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the
basement of the New Haven
Library with Ralph Gibbs, Jr.
instructor. A short organizational meeting will
precede the training session.
The new ambulance for New
Haven and Mason are expected
to arrive some lime within lhe
next two weeks.
siace Masoo has completed
its training sessions, everyone
of Mason who did not take lhe
f;OilfSe is welcome to attend lhe

will not serve as officers of the
E.R squad.
Leadership of lhe E-R squad
is to come from other people in
the commm~ity rather than
from r.... department members.
There are several women
taking the course. Others are
\ll'ged to take the training, and
then join the New Haven E.R
Will.

The squad needs additional
men and women to take the
course in order to provide
enough personnel to insure that
someone will be available at all
times.
Those who want to take the
meetings at New llaven.
The New Haven Fire Dept. training but are unable to attend Thursday, may come to
has several of its members who
future
meetings to complete the
are also joining lhe E.R squad.
course.
Officers of lhe fire department

SAlOON (1Jl"')-tbe

uid today Ill an
0•1u1••W afftnoive
wilb lhe wcwh Ill J11 ""'~
lia1 :! 1i11iis. !be (QIIIIIII8IId
'said "-ielll Gls bold been
put em ~ b" O•nnu!l•i:sl
a!Ucb - ' Bill just in case of
polilical .......uk.
lbe ....W.:·CDDe as North
oommand ~

facilities," he said.
The commUnicaliOO. center
improvemen!S are part of an
additional outlay of ,1,475,MJO
by C &amp; P to further imprOVe Its
facilities in West-Virginia. The
new investment so far this year
totals abooi.t ps,ooo,ooo. Other
improvements Include additional cable facllltles at
Buckhannon, Fairmont,
Huntington, Pocatallco, a!ld
ShiJmljton, .
Additional telephooe circuits·
between Barboursville and
HWIIinglon, East Bank and
Belle,
Pocatalico
and
Charleston, as well as
Rivesville and Fairmont were
also programmed.

V"trbam • ;md\lietOIIIgUIIils
sbeiJed 1m Ameriall bases in

Is Celebrated

REVIVAL OPENS
The Meigs County Youth
Revival opened Monday
evel!ing at lhe Zion Church of
Christ. Theme Is "Youth
Happening!' Speaker is Dave
Lucas of K.enlucky Olrlstian
College, who will speak each
evening during this week,
beginning at 7:30p.m.

r---------------------------..
Elberfelds Custom Dr-opery Sole

~~tCtlon, are being instructed by Renee Burke, head majorette.

SPECIAL SALE I

20%

OFF

3 Weeb Only·
AUG. 20 TO SEPT. J J

Now
new draperies - At a savings of 20· % off the regu1.or
· enjoy stunning
·
p~ICe . Your 1ovely new drapenes will be tailored to any width -· any, lenoth
wtth deep headings and triple tacked pleats, double side and bottom llims.
I

•

Hundreds ollabrics and colors- Quality workmanship ond fabrics.
.·
Sove 20% on Mode·To-Measure Draperies - Bring ·your m
"
d
h
1
d
.
eosurements
(WI t o ro - end to end- destred length from top of rod down ).
Visit Elberlelds Drapery Dept. during this save 20% Sole and 1 ,k
· :~
d
·
eusmoe
your wm ...ow ecoratmg easy_

EtBERFELDS,IN POMEROY ·

*mmt~M%If~lllil&amp;titrffJliliti\l~­

&amp;ooled To The lnlerelll Of~ "9-JI=on Area
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1971
PHONE 992-2156

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

TEN CENTS

! News .•. in Briefs ! Stans

Dares Retaliation

lip

Nov. U. lhe clar before the
threatened rail waDwuL Stans
said TuesdaY, hoc coer, that
some flll1n of mandalm}

I

By Unlled Prell lnfernalllll&amp;l

to

I

Federal Government

Pli ISBURGH - AN OFFICIAL of the National Coal
Association (NCA) said today treatment of mine drainage was the
direct responsibility of the federal government and should be
financed through a !road-based federal tax. James G. Garvey,
NCA vice tnsident, made lhe statement to a federal-alate conference here which is meeting to seek ways to curb pollution oo
the Monoogabela River.
Garvey also said the coal indlllllry cmsidered the problem of
minedralnagefromabandoned mines a public responsibility, one
that represented an "envirorunental deferred debt of society." He
said neither lhe states nor Industry can finance treatment of mine
drainage.
Garvey also said the coal tndlllltry felt that present state
regulationa were adequate fll' conii'Olling acid mind drainage
which emanates from active cnal mines.

2-Day Old Had Heart Surgery
SYDNEY - SURGEONS SUCCE.'tiFULLY performed an
open./leart operation on a ~y-old boy last April, a medical
spokesman said today. 'lbe baby, known to the public by his
chrlatlan name, Hamish, was born at King Ge!l'ge V Hospital m
-'Pril 13.
Docl&lt;rs said they discovered Hamish was suffering severe
circulatory trouble within a few hours of birth. He was transferred to lhe cardiology Ullit of the Royal Aleundra HOspital.
When he was Z1 boors old, Hamish was subjected to a series of
tests, Including a cardiac calheterization, that took three hours.
During his second day of life, the boy underwent the critical fourhour operatim. He then weighed nine pounds. Today, at 17lbs.,
· llamisb was taken back to hospltalfor a checkup.

Ben Tom Has Best Fencing Bid

Mode-to-your Measure ,
DRAPERIES .

Mortar fire hit the Camp
Faulkner headquarters of lhe
!98th brigade of the U.S.
America! Division south of Da
Nang, causing light casualties.
A similar attack was directed
against a lsi Air Cavalry
division Will 4tl miles east of
Saigon, also causing light
casualties, as did a shelling of
the lsi Aviatioo Brigade camp
at Lai Khe, 30 miles north of
Saigon.
The other attack was minor,
and caused no injuries.
Besides heavy BS2 raids,
military sources said the
destroyer U.S.S. Shelton and
the Auslralian guided missile
destroyer H.M .S. Brisbane fired
their heavy guns from offshore
in lhe Gulf of Tonkin against
Communist targets inside the
southern half of the DMZ.

at
NO. XXIV NO. 93

WAl&gt;HINGTON (UP!) -Presidenl Nixon's economic program was beset by two new
perils today, a fresh threat
from organized labor at home
and a growing danger of
retaliation from industrial Europe.
But Commerce Secretary
Maurice H. Stans served notice
the administration does not
intend to back down and ''will
have no part of a fake
prosperity buill on the shifting
sandsofwar-inducedinBatioo."
"I am confident that Presidenl Nixoo has the full suppoct
of the American ~le in his
determiniatioo to build a strong
and healthy economy whose
foundation is an enduring
peace,'' Stans said today in
remarks prepared for a
meeting at the University of
Kentucky in Lexington.
Organized labor, however,
continued to withhold it.s
confidence from the new Nixon
policies, adding lhe threat of a
railroad strike to other patential labor disn!ptioos. C.L.
Dennis, president of lhe 190,0011member Brotherliood of Railway and Airline Clerks, said his
m~ion would consider its contracts void on Nov. 13 unless its
members gel scheduled raises
and Wiless conii'Ols are placed
oo corporate profits and
_dividends.
The 91klay wage-prictH'ent
freeze is scheduled to expire

is to blame for the U.S. balance cun:encies is concerned.

of payments problem and added
that Nixon should rescind
without delay the measures he
controls would be 1e
ry has taken or plans to take.
afler that dale.
11 warned of possible relalia!Jmnis said bis members tioo unless .such action was
were due Ill get a 5 per cml forthcoming. the statement as
raise Oct. 1., and would 5lriR particularly critical of the new
unless that raise came tt.uugb 10 per cent U.S. import tax,
wbell the l'n!leJie is s"llltil!d Ia and ol the decision to ''float"
end. 1be United Anlo Worters the dollar so far as its
Unioo bas iadirated 11, too, wiD exchange value with other
strike if lbe l'n!leJie isl'l euded
afler,.,da)'s,andlbeAFLOO

·has said lbere would be CIILW
to strike if qlwdn!rd ...,tract
in&lt;reases are delayed by lbe
freeze.
_
It was ~ llet more
than 1 _~ ~
workef:s m ~te l•mt!l•)
leve bad t11eir sl 1 ded Jl'IJ'

raises poslp wd by 1be freer.e.
. 'lbe ~Sbiws lllreat talbe
m~lional ~ of the
NIXOO plan arosr m Eiaope
Tuesday IIOill!re lbe Oa1m•m
Market -W151em EUrope's
econOOiie onion --aflac'ked lbe
. ''pi'Oteclimi", eftll p!llfi....-ing" lillie Ill Amelican elf1a1s
to seeure the dollar.

By Fisher
Fi.-e defendants were lined
and fi.-e Diles llri:iled laalds
in Mi&lt;klll'pmt - - c. 0.

78 of Ohio's Fisl~~o!..m:.~·:e.
88 Counties =~~·:.:-:::-;=-:
can-.
Have Blight

CHARLESTON, W. VA. - APPARENT WW bid of
$12,862,622 was sulmltted by Harry Miller E&gt;:cavating Co. of
48, Huntington, and Tom
Mogad&lt;n, Ohio,to build 3.1 miles of Appalachian Qrridor ''E" in
Mmongalla County from the Uffinglon In~e with InJ. Nicoll. tJ, Nardi
$11
terstate '19 to Decker's O'eek. More than $34 millioo worth of 17
and
cos'ls,
n•ming
a
red
ligbl;
road contracts had bids opened Tuesday.
Joyce L. Riley, II. M""'!fl"4nt.
Ben-Tom Corp. of Columbus, Ohio, submitted lhe low
$10 and tmls, ilqlluper lin;
estimate «_ $757,139 for fencing, guardrail and safety
modlflcaUons to 8.8 miles of I-70 from the Ohio-West VIrginia
COLUMBUS (UPI) - South- WiUiam T. Lanndar, 35.
border to the West VIrginia-Pennsylvania line. A median divider ern corn leaf blight has been Middleport. $11 and cests.
on Wheellng's fori Henry Bridge is Included in the project.
confirmed in 78 of Ohio's 811 assured dear dis'aooe.
F&lt;riciting balds were Ia
counties, Dr. C. Wayne Ellett,
Agnew Closer tha,a Ever, but. •.
director of the Ohio Stale Yoong, Wesl O•I•I•e, $Ill
MIAMI - VICE PRESIDENT Spiro T. Agnew said Tuesday University plant disease clinic, bond pnst.ed. two dlMges ..
assault and battery; Andy
he wants President Nlxm to leve the strongest possible running reported Tuesday.
Ellett said proper _spraying Sayre, &amp;2, f.aDipn!is, . . nord
mate in the 1972 campaign, whether ll' nolll's Agnew.
O!mmins, &amp;1, Jlarine. $31, and
Agnew said he probably is "closer" to Nixm than ever before, has reduced the infection in
w. R. Barnell,~ $31,
wilt would be up to the President to decide wbu hismnning mate many fields, but a few fields in all foc inlmicaliaa, and RGJ
will be. "I want the president to be reelected and I want anybody southern Ohio planted with T- Fildl, 110 .....
• nit
to run with him who can give llim the most help," Agnew told cytoplasm seed have been and battay.
·newsmen. :'Six months from now that might he someooe else." damaged as much as last year
at this lime.
Dan C. Tucker, statistician n
, _J u
Supers in Conference
for the Ohio Agricultural Ex- .oJWCCPpUD nouse
COLUMBUS -STATE SCHOOlS Superintendent Martin W.
tensioo Service, said 70 per cent
EsaeJ: caUed together all superintendents in the stale to a meeting
of the corn crop was in \he De.troyal Todq
here today to discuss recent federal and state economic actioos. dough stage. Resaid 30 per cent
Essex said topics to be discussed would include clarificalim was dented, but not hard.
An unoccupied lloaR oa
of President Nixon's wage-price freeze and the austerity program
Last year, at the same time, Welsh 1'o!m BiD 11a5 desbU)td
4ll per cent of the corn was by fire today at :1:35 a.m.
(Continued on page 10)
dented but not hard, be said.
Pl:metUf Fire O*f 81:Dr7
Tucker also reported 10 per Werry :soiol be w oaf lhe
centofOhiosoybeansbavepods )llqiEI~ is llll'llal by Clwla
set with leaves,green; 10 per Yl1111lrqh Ill ftullind 'Die
Beginning Tuesday, Sept. 7 cent has leaves turiung yellow; "housewasJII1!Ciicdyd U)td
Jane Bailey has been hired as the library will remain ....,o and 10 per cent has pods slill when firemen arrind. Its
aulstant librarian at Mid- Tuesday and
Thursday forming .
cause. and lhe •• _•t of ._
dleport Publlc Ubrary.
ev~ between &amp; and 8:30
·
llas not been delto,•wd
_ Miss Bailey, Grant St., p.m. Afternoon hours will
,f 'rBII•• ' MdLB
Middlepcrt, who attended Ohio remain the same.
Miss
Bailey
will
COillfuct
a
Chance
of
showers
and
FA
a
• f1iC11 f # '
University and Ohio State
reading
hour
Monday
af~
thundershowers
today
ond
ca
N
..,
Will...etat
lie liP
00
University, has taught five
at 1 (UIL •
years in the Columbus !ernoom beginning Sept 13 tonight, low tonight upper 50s ,.,.... .,..
• 1'He
EJementsry schools and ll!o from 2 to 3 p.m. for lbrw and and lower 60s. Thursday cbance pid&lt; • 1I o · ••
years tn Mason Elementary four-year old children of Meigs of showers east and south. ~h c.rdL tbetntp:sc'
Coonty.
. . lower D .
wiD be liSl T 7 Jschools.

Library Aide Employed

?'

.

.

QUANG TRI COMBAT while he went oH to call
BASE , Vietnam (UP! ) - American MPs, eyewitnesses
American GIs, outraged by a said.
While he was gone, the
series of thefts and burglaries in
their barracks here, shot the Vietnamese, an army private,
tires out from Wider a truckload broke away from the three Gls
of stolen goods and then beat and ran for his truck. The
and tarred the South Viet- Americans used their rifies to
shoot the tires of lhe vehicle,
namese driver .
.
Ever since the largest witnesses said.
They
dragged
the
Vietnamese
American unit "that occupied
this base, the First Brigade of private out of the truck, beat
the 5th Mechanized Division, him, stripped him to his Wlpulled out a month ago, South dershorts and painted him with
Vietnamese soldiers and tar. Afterward they smashed
civilians have been stripping the truck 's windshield and
headlights, slashed the canvas
and looting the base .
cover
over the bed and ripped
In addition to dismantling
abandoned barracks, they also out the ignition wiring.
have begun breaking into
buildings still occupied by other
When the MPs arrived, they
American units. They even took the Vietnamese off to the
have started rifling the personal U. S. 18th Surgical Hospital,
belongings of Gls.
where orderlies cleaned the tar
There has been increasing off him with gasoline, treated
anger among the Americans his bruises and put him In bed,
against the Vielnamese, and it although he was not seriously
apparently came to a head injured.
Monday when a U. S. officer
Vietnamese military sources
became suspicious of a Viet- said the soldier will be
namese army truck parked pm1ished, and U.S. spotesmen
near a U. S. barracks.
said the Americans involved
When the officer looked inside were being investigated. They
the weapons carrier he found it said "appropriate measures"
filled with what he believed will be taken against them if it
were stolen goods. He told three is foWid they committed a
Gls to hold the truck driver punishable offense.

The latter policy began to
show some signs of success on
the European currency exchanges Tuesday, where a rush of
do_llar sales pushed dollar's
exchange value downward. The
adminislratioo has indicated it
hopes for about a 10 per cent
devaluation so far as exchange
rates go to make American
products more competitive

overseas.

o

·
Meigll County ranked ninth in a field of nine soulbeaslern Ohio
COilllties in buying income per houaebold. aCCil'ding to an independent ''Sales Management" report re(e d June 10 1971.
Meigll' 6.6lboosam bousebolds bad a buying power of $&amp;,535,
while V'mton Coonty, the eighth ranted with 3.0 thousand
bousebolds, bad ••597.
Other coonties of 1be area Albells Gallia Hocking Jackaon
LaWI"1!IICI!, Pike and Scioto,~.;..eMei8,sand vm'ton.
'
Tile report, reproduced below:
POPIJLATION AND INOOME 1Nf0RMA1ION

1970
Buying
Income

12/31/70
County

Estimated
Population Households

Estimate

tooo)

$9,688

Athens

56.2

Galli a

24.9

7.6

7,822

Hocking

20 . 4

6.6

7,605

J ackson

26. 9

8.6

7,344

Lawrence

56. 8

17.7

7,713

Meigs

20 . 1

6. 6

6,535

5.8

7,096,

25 .3

7,925

Pike

Scioto

Area

Deaths Reported
•

BELFAST, Northern Ireland
(UPI )-An explosion ripped
through offices of the Norlhern
Ireland Electricity Board today,
spreading death and injury
among workers fleeing because
of a bomb alert, army and
police spokesmen said.
The bomb went off Wider a
crowded staircase, killing at
least one man and injuring 32
olhers-27 women and five men
-in the predominantly Roman
Catholic Malone Road, a
largely residential area of the
capital, police said.
The anny said another
m~exploded bomb was found in
lhe building.
"This is one of the heaviest
explooions BeHast has seen in
some time," an army spokesman said.
Harry McLeish, .a laborer
who saw the blast, said "the

director of the Meigs Unit, said
Larry Miller, Field Sa vltts
Director, frcm the Americltn
Cane..- Society, Ohio Dtvillcll
!iflce in aeveland, and Mn.
Bert Holt, area repreaentatift,
will attend.
Reports will be made by the
ccmmlttees serving lbe Melp
Coonty Unil Wendell Holmr,
O'usade Chairman, wiD mate
his repll't of the 1m cn..ade.
Awards will also be preaented lo
those who have given Rnlce to
the local Unit during lhe 1I'JO.
1971 fiscal year
All Meigs County reSdents
who have contributed- ®Dar
cr more to the American Clalcer
Society during tlda fllcaJ yeer,
as well as all membenl of .the
The Columbia National Corp., board of directors, are lll'led lo
Ohio based life insurance attend this meeting. All will be
holding company , had a eligible to vote.
statutory prom after taxes of
$118,073 during the first half of
1971, plus substantial gains in Rock tiroup Will
other areas.
·In 4~ years the corporation's
assets have increased to nearly . Come to Eastem
$15 million, Including a 15.4 pet.
lbe Mount Hermm Umted
increase during the first baH of Brethren Youth Fello!nblp wiD
1971. Between January I and sponsor 1 "Coffw H-" at
JWie 30, insurance in force in- Eastern High Sl!bOGI Salurdly
creased 16.8 pet. to $356,288,945, at 7:30 p.m., for all yonlb 13 or
and policy reserves blcreased older.
2:i.8 pel. io $6,299,438. These
Feallnd will be lbe SDtllll
facts ·were released at the of Rellectlon, a roct lriaP
corJlOI;alion's home office in singing folk music, rock lllld
Columbus by Leon Landon, hymns. A doaati~ IG Cldl
board chainnan.
will be uUcl to cunr ••1•
The cOrporation's principal ·lbere wiD be free 1116 •
affiliate, Columbia National meats. AIIMelp CotlliJ :r-b
Life Insurance Company, is are lavlted to attelld lbe
represented In this orea by II'OIInJD.
Andrew Toler, regional
LOCAL TI:IIP8
director, and Maurice A: Toler,
Temperature in downtown
James P. Unroe, BrYce Smith, Pomeroy W--'- 1
l
William Northup, Joe Barsotti
em diJ at laJII,
and John Sailu.
;_~.. 68 degtces under

Firm Reports

Profit, Assets

S.tate

3,318.8

10,712. T

.$10 ' 831

Source: Sales Management, Jun,; 10, 1971
Per Cent of Housebo1ds by

$9,999

&amp;ove-r

1t,4

23.9

13.5

19.6

17-3

23 .3

] 2.3

18.8

13 . 8

15.5

18.8

2'1 -5

1it.lt

1~ -3

17.5

22-2

14.5

15-5

20.5

]2,6

17."8

22.1

ll.9

15.5

3.0.2

15.T

22.~

1~.6

17 .0

2].6

. 14.3

23-3

15.9

22 .8

33.1

18.1

23-1

10.6

15.0

15. 6

24.3

13.8

18.~

26.6

...,

1~.6

21.1

IRA (the outlawed Irish Republi~an Army) have gotten very
hasty now. They used to blow
up buildings thai were empty.
Now it's people they are after."
Fifteen of the injured were
reported In critical condition at
a hospital. Many others,
inclulltng young wcmen in
blood-6[)8tteredminiskirts, W8ll'
dered dazed and shocked
through the rubble.
The blast of Danesforl Houoe,
headquarters of the city's
electricity offices occured
shortly after 11 a.m. There were
no immediate reporls of wwer
failures in the city.
The death brought IIi 33 the
nwnher of persons killed in
extremist violence in the
province since Aug. 9. The
figure Included ·27 civilians, flve
soldiers and nne member of the
Ulster Defense Regiment.

TWo representatives, one
fr(l]l the national office, the
other UJe state, will attend the
annual meeting of the Meigs
Coonty Unit, Anlerican Cancer
Society, Aug. 31 at 7:30p.m. In
the social room of the Colwnbus
and Southern Olio Electric Co.,
150 Mill St., Mi&amp;llepcrt.
corrine Lund, executive

95.9(Av. ) $7,592

311.9

Offices Ripped,

Cancer Unit Will Meet

'

6,597

Vinton

I

Weather

Stop Thievery

N•mth m F•IeJd. 0£ N•me

It said Amerial. not Enrape,

Five Fined

Outraged GIs
Find Way to

&lt;':aSI'Aities.

•

AMERICAN - ISRAELI RELATIONS SOURED TODAY
following a rare Israeli attack against its staunchest ally m
grounds the United States misintel")l'eted Israel's policy toward
occupied Arab territory.
The Israeli foreign ministry charged in a statement Tue3day
that the U.S. State Department's reactioos to events in Israel and
Damascus last week "do not create the proper impression" in
Jerusalem.

--

tioo kept exploding for 13 boors
f~res broke out.
The U.S. command said five
Wmm rockets hit Da Nang
airbase 360 miles north-northeast of Saigoo overnight,
causing neither damage nor

and

OPEN FIRM
NEW YOJIK tUPI) - 'l'be
al~~~g lhe buller - stock market opened firm Ill
V"Jet Olllg bmlll squads
moderately active trading
meamobilo stt off a series ol
W'edaetday.
tt tolnsious dial 1ocbd a giant
Sbortly after the opening,.
allied dUUU!I!jliaa dump at
lllkances led ...,lines of 55 to
Cam RaDh Bay ... lhe tentral
9:!, among tbe 3SO Issues
roast b" U bours today.
&lt;rOSSing the tape. 'l'be Dow
The U.S. • •ahl!w.. said the JoDH Industrial average was
aUies bawe ''iudicatioas the
steady at 904.13. Cbesapealle
enem, may be planning a bigb ..
Obio gained 'Iii to &amp;I'A. Ill the
point of adMI)' in lhe few rails. Southern Pacific,
days."
bowever, surrendered \!t to
Cambodian troops IDtallilbile
m..
killed lOll North V"IL'he!fHee
and Viet Olllg ill oiglll boars of
fighting mric:e paddies oartb ot l!i@i~J[:~r:;;f[:!:itJ:~t:t:i i:i:!i:W~EJ:~;:nittf~~

OOtrmERN IDGH SCHOOL band members were seen and beard TUellday as they opened
practice seSBims fll' the first footballgllllle of the aeason m Sept. 10. Jeannie Sellers, Denny
Hart, Miss Burke, Dave Smith and Brenda Lawrence, left to right above, part of the percussion

Relations Eastward Soured

..
·-

Plm&lt;m Penh Tuesday, lhe
(;ambodian command reported.
The U.S. ·command said
st.veral American Gls were
injured in the series of
explosions which military sources said were apparently
touched off by Communist
sappers who crept into lhe huge
military complex 185 miles
northeast of Saigon. AmmWii·

lbe llaw a L aid O•nn•mist
Ufensiw: a~anc 111e Denlifa..
rirJed Zane (DMZ) and American B52s Liept. ap tlleir raids

First Birthday
The first birthday anniversary of David Paul Smith
was celebrated Saturday
evening at lhe boine of his
parents, .Mr. and Mrs. Ernest L.
Smith, Lincoln Heights,
Pomeroy.
Guests were hi~ grandparents, .Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
Drake of Racine, and greatgrandmother, Mrs. Maud Smith
of Rutland; Mrs. George Scott,
Columbus; Naomi Bissell,
Lysa, Lori, Lynn, Robert E.
Smith Jr., Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. David Jividen, Mrs. Leta
Fetty, T~, Cindy; Mrs.
Betty Longstreth, Lanny,
Johnny and Melisa, Langsville;
Mrs. Arthur Musser, Greg
Musser, Mrs. Charles Musser,
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Smith,
Hysell RWI; Timmy Knapp, ·
Mrs. Helen Hill, Sbaroo and
Richard Brian, Sharon Drake,
Racine;
Mrs.
Clarice
Racine; Mrs. Clarice Longstreth, Gallipolis, and Rev.
Pomeroy.
David received many nice
gifts and cake, ice cream and
pWICh were served. Favors
were given each child present.
Door prize was awarded
Richard Brian Hill.

u:.s.

Attack

37.2

..

t

OJ Six Months

«

--r

•

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