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'

- 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

•

�-.

a-.Dll.r

a

11

I

II 5' I -t-P

*' D). 0., A;;gu::t :5,1971 ;

1

WIN AT BRIDGE

IIUCI .IOSSAT

South Plays
with Finesse

Agnew Gets Cold Shoulder

Nixon Pointedly Ignores Spiro

NOKTB
.AK103

.7

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON (NEAl
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew is more distressed than
.ever these days over the fact ~t President Ni&gt;:on ~nd
his advisers !!!live bim out of JUSt about everything 1m·
portant they do.
. .
Agnew is not a man of 1mmense ego, but be does have
his pride. And peop?e who know him say he has ~en
continuoiiSiy offended by the President's neglect of him.
Says a friend: ·
.
·· "Wiu!o he isn't told in advance of decisions llke the
President going to China, the Vice President takes it as
proof that Nixon and his top men ,PUt him down as a
clown who isn't worth telling. anythmg to."
.
· That's the core of it, right thert!-'Agnew's feelmg that
they think he is some kind of dumbbell.
There is a practical side to it, of course. It might be
considered vital for the Vice President to be warped
into lr.ej,;!~.fons in the event something should happen
to the
· enl It might also be thou~ht sim~ly useful
for a man representing Nixon !J1 fo~etg~ capttals and
around the national speech-making. CITCWt. . .
.
· The President's announcement of mtent to vtstt Peking
came while Agnew was on his recent trip around the
world. Airborne the morning after Nixon spoke, the V~e
President was in visibie anguish. Reporters saw htm
JN!Cing in his cabin.
·
· lie also bad been kept in the dark on some of the
President's earner overtures to Peking.
lrritaled over these repeated aa:ronts, AjllleW has ~e·
veloped a "don't give a damn" attitude which leads him
to spout .his own view ~f things wherever he pleases.

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

Obviously, he finds ample opportunity, since he often dis·
agrees with Nixon's policies and action_s.
.
.
What it amounts to, agam, •s the Vtce President m
effect saying to h}mself that i! they ,in the Wllite House
are not going to care about htm, he s not gomg to care
about them.
One friend adds; incidentally, that he doubts Nixon.
and Agnew ever have any substantial ·pri_vate conver~a·
· tions, though they cr-oss paths at offictal and social
gatherings.
.
Given this terrible estrangement, and 1t can't be de·
scribed as anything less, the question of Agnew's future
.
takes on new force.
There are some informed private judgments that the '
President would like to have Agnew off the Republican
ticket in 1972. When soundings show quite generally
around the nation (even in conservative places like
Texas) that he is viewed as a drag, Nixon's course would,
seem clear.
The trouble is, there is no nice way to do it. Dumping
vice presidents is not a coll!mon practice. si~ce for a
president it represents a kmd of ~elf-crtbctsm. The
easier thing, naturally, is to have Agnew say he doesn't
want the job another time. But that's been talked of
openly so much, it will inevitably be treated merely as
a "dumping device."
Yet the odds do favor separation of the estranged
parties in 1972. To get Nixon and Agnew pack in the
warm shoulder-clasp of mid·1968 would tax the skill of
the most ingenious political marriage counsellor.

-------------------.
.
I
'

BY .JACK: O'BIUAN
LEST I BEY BE JI'ORG01TEN...

automatically into the Dems like trained
Muskietoes Is far frmn a sure pop,
NEWYORK MEMOS TO MYSELF ... Ask
ateckthestrongnunorJaneFondswillwed
Vinceld Sanli Jr. if it's true he bas a multi· actor Dmald Sutherland (they're never apart)
mliHm.doJ!. oiler far his famed W. 4th St. and soonassheunloadsRogerVadim .... Get some of
!h.b.rt Alley Den CJl F4Jily .... Write down the the fresh tuna toes and new corn at Louise's E.
fint fill oii-Bdwy. q,ering SePt. 9, "Out of 58th St. spot- they're grown sans chemicals at
CCJntrol," by Martin Qoafl, Louisville native .... pop Dick Jlrio's upstate farm .... Rib Mort
Ommlterale with Melba :Moore, Lena Horse, Downey about gling to Louise's twice In a week
C!!ical'! BamiliGn and otbei- black recording -hepretendsnevertotakeyourrestauranttips,
stan who are toiaDy accepted In the white world but his Anne loved It .... Check the North Door
..:. bat are not getting a "play" Cll black radio Singers, and see if the act's Sheri Lee isn't the
deejay sbOII8 .... A8lt Vincent Price if It's true daughter It Booa l.A!e, who once sang with
!Je''a gtt1ing a $50,11011 guarantee-plus (depending Tmuny DOrsey .... Get to the Rainbow Grill to
oo bolr mach It's ued oo TV) far lis 4li secnnd . see Duke Ellingtoo before he takes the A-Train.
Birds Eye CIIIIIID!I'Ci81 .... Gel Louise Campbell ·
Tell Rainbow Room prop. Jerry Brody
-MrVaJm'a lllkb a fnm the Catholic Acton you're sad Fred Astaire 1urned him down for a
Guild and write a s)mpalby note re husband ooce.a.night apPearance foc a week or two (at
Horace :MeMabm's e:apected bat nonetheless fabulous money) in that most beautiful nightclub
leave b'ing: 1110 many funerals lately, not anywhere .... Scrape a smut.rnark against the
enaagll -•liJIIP' and cllrtsteninp .... Ask Peter Sellers ruck in which the action gets to the
bukelblll s1ar ~ Ha)ward If bls acting groin again by having actor Rick Lenz cir·
1
•111 mean an early so.lmg to pro ball.
cumsized foc guffaws; ·ouch!!!
01ect if Prillcel8 Kelly and Rainier haven 'I
You don't believe In credit cards, but it's no
hetin able fiDd suilabl,y serene big N. Y. satisfaction they're taking such fil'a~iallumps
lpll'tnwsll; Ui!:he biiiillooking ftr ~, .... • all over the cOurltry ... Ask that ~ss agent pal of
IJ!!e If acllr'(llaywrigbt Robert Shaw has found a the Crazy Joey Gallo gang If Joey's ready to
lldwy:-P,Ocha.-er yet ftr the Dew Pinter plliy, retaliate-UI.advance for the price on Gallo's life;
''Old Times," in whlch Shaw wants to star this Joey'll talk to news people any time .... Might
- .... Clllgralulate Diet Cavett for the mini- even go on TV 8after aU, cavettetc. gave time to
i'1 11 n,ol!ln Kp
Qty- the :Merv Griffin Show Joe Coi(ll'lbo without bothering him with em. . &amp;oppedbyaVHFTVoatleltbereandaUH· barrassing queries about the Mafia etc.
Fstatloopcileditslislellerstoaeeiftheywanted
ateck if the buge Phillips fum is buying
Min ar Diet: and Cavett 'WCII almost two to me MGM Rec&lt;rds .... Learned "Fiddler on the
.... FindootwbatMe!Broobis doq; be's been Roof" is selling out almost completely these
qidel too lmg.
perf&lt;rmances but the gross doesn't indicate how
tie z~lethe top boss atRadioOty Music Hall weD- they're on tw!ters (two tickets for one);
_ w11o lllmght that ht«-all-movie m011ques and they're great if thrifty audiences, Hal Prince
ope11ed CJri8jnally with a fi!DHmd-lltage show says.
policy; he there and yru weren't, but
Ask the recocd people if Bing Crosby or Elvis
pnehow yoo tnew It was a stage-ebow-4&gt;nly Presley sold the most hotcakes over the years ....
(Mirtba Gnham headlined) bat hardly anyooe Usten to Patti Page's "Words" record spinning
showed up, and the ~~~&lt;Me policy started the next up the charts and decide if that smash is what
...S .... Olect the rest CJl that 1!132'(1remiere suddenly made her potent box office bait again ...
liD, scads of big names.
For your "trivia" collection: the Jones oc Smith
See If you can gel a Mr. Big at the Dem's name in Germany is Muller- more than 600,000
..111111111 ollice to teD yru far the column as he Muliers in W. Germany .... Saw Louis Sobol, now
confided to a friend that he's frightened of the 111- 75, and we swear he looks the same as the first
year-old vole in '12: That half the 18 to 21 set are day we mel him 30 years ago .... If you see the
marriedandCCIIIICiOUt of more serious concerns new film "Sapho," harken to Seda Aznavour,
lban picketing, another half at least are loyal whose pop, Charles wrote the words and uncle
progeu.y of cmservative types, and the surface George Gavarentz the music.
psycbolOI!)' that kids will fling themselves

'f

By Ulllted Prealatoraatlol181
;l'oday is Wednesday, Aug. 25,
the 237th day of 1971.
The moon is between its new
phase and first quarter.
The IIIOl'1ling stars are Saturn
and Venus.
The evening stars are Mars,
Jupiter and Mercury.
ThoiJe born oo Ibis day are
under the 'lgn of Vll'gO.

-

Z5

EAST

•Void

.KQ1032
.AJ63
&lt;fo9862

.98
.Q972
&lt;fo3
East· West vulnerable
west North East South
1• · Dble
4. 4.
Dble .. · Pass
5•
Pass
Dble Pass
Pass 5 •
Pass Pass
Opening lead-.fo K

By Oswald &amp; Jame• Jacoby
For our final band from
"Tiger Bridge" we go to a
tough team of four game,
South wa!;D't proud of his
four spade bid, but be was
not going to let East shut
bim out. Ailyway, South
wasn't vulnerable. '
Mter West doubled and
East ran to five hearts,
South passed in the hope that
his partner would he able to
take three tricks against
West. Then South suddenly
,-----~---------------------1 found himself playing five

EDITORIALS

H
I
H
I
·
u
l e .en e p s 1 U:a~~il;oo~ ~~~ =~lt
I spades doubled.

I

Business Methods
In U.S. Bureaus?

ILOVE THY NEIGHBOR?By Helen
~ttel
NEVER!

!

five bearts to keep my part·
ner from bidding on." Then
he thought a little more and
decided that maybe every·
one or almost everyone,
knew what be was doing.
That East had bid five
hearts because he thought
his partner would make it
and that East's analysis bad
been correct. In that case
East would be void of spades.
·
So~~c~m~n to tf:~;
ruffing a club, led a small
spade and called for dum·

them and didn't care for the
designation of senile). They
are more frequent in middle
age and beyond.
Very often the scab appears where the skin has
been injured, such as from a
razor nick. Exposure of the
skin to sun and wind con·
tributes to the development
of keratosis. That is why
they are most frequently
noted on the hands and face.
Yes, if not treated they
can bee om e malignant.
They will not go a)oVay with·
out treatmen t, .but they are
easily removed. T! ere 8!'"
a number of salves that r ~
rriove the spots by a "chem·
ical burn." · I think all of
these should be seen by a
doctor and removed. If it is
already malignant then it
must be treated like a skin
tancer and may require
surgical excision.
Dear Dr. Lamb - I read
your article which said tha (
acne scars can be removed.
I went to a plastic surgeon
and he told me he could not
h e l p me llecause I have
dark skin and if he sanded

'

Thursday's Games

lllursday's Games

schedul ~d

Chicago at Balli, night
Milwaukee at Cleve, night
Boston at K.C., night
Wash at Calif .. night
CONTRACI'S SIGNED
CORVALLIS, Ore. (UPI)Foolball conlracts for 1979 and
1983 have been signed by the
University of North Carolina
and Oregon State University, it
was announced Tuesday.

Vida Blue says good lord
By MILTON RICHMAN
almighty he has had more than
UPI Sporls Writer
enough
publicity.
NEW YORK (UPI)- Vida
Ferguson Jenkins, on the
Blue and Ferguson Jenkins both
other hand, doesn't say any.
the Sport Parade thing like that at all.
The explanation is pretty
are beautiful and blessed with simple.
what can only be described as a
Vida Blue, Oaldand's phen·
pair of unbelievable arms. They omena! 22-year..()ld lefthander,
are also the top two pitchers in has been interviewed, photobaseball.
graphed and lionized more for
But from that point on they winning 22 games in five
split in a hurry.
months than rlght.handed '!/year-old Ferguson Jenkins has
for winning 20 or more games
_J
five years in a row for the
Chicago Cubs.
Jenkins isn' I complaining
about any lack of ink though.
He's shooting for something
more important-100,000 big
I
,I
\
ones next year-and which
~iii::iEii::::::::)
would you rather have, the ink
1
]
01'
or the money?
Besides, he understands how
these
things happen, how you
By United Press International
can go out there and do a job
le•ding Batters
National League
and then not see your name in
G. AB R. H. Pel.
Torre. St.L 130 506 76 180 .356 the papers too much because
Bckrt, Chi 121 ol86 76 172 .354 after while the writers tend 19
Grr. At!
126 516 83 170 .329 take you for granted and there
Clmnt, Pit 107 426 68 140 .329 always are some other guys are
Jns, NY . 109 416 48 136 .327
Brck, St. L 125 505 100 164 .325 doing a job, too.
Sng!n, PI
115 443 52 144 .325
"When I first became a
H. Arn. All 114 398 76 128 .322 starting pitcher In 1967,"
Ovs. LA
125 503 65 160 .318
Alou St.L
121 494 65 154 .312 Jenkins says, "Mike McCor·

I

I ·~ ...

American

L~gue

G. AB R. H. Pet .
Olva, Mlnn 105 409 61 144 .352
Mrcr, NY 125 545 79 146 .322
Oils, KC
117 456 68 140 .307
Tvr, Minn 123 515 79 157 .305
Rtmd Bit
107 368 67 112 .304
Rojs, KC
115 ~14 56 124 .300
Rchdl Chi 108 395 44 117 .296
Hrtn, Del 113 432 61 126 .m
Bird, 811
103 381 86 111 .291
May Chi
108 389 47 113 .290

· . BY KEI'I1I WISECUP
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
defending Southern Valley
Athletic Conference champion,
the Eastern Eagles, have 15
lettermen, a new coach, and
apparenUy a good shot at
repeating foc first place honors
in the svAC.
The Eagles new head mentor,
Roger Kirkhart, is in his first
year as a head coach. The

nativeMeigsCountianhasthree
years of assistant coaching
under bls belt at Perry County.
Kirkhart replaces the late
Larry Ritchie.
Eastern ended attN last year
and went undefeated in SVAC
play with six wins. The Eagles
were0-31n the now defunct Mid·
Ohio Valley Conference last
season.
Coach Kirkharlhas37 players
of h
7
·
14
w om 1 are seruors, are

juniors,
and
six
are ·problems.
sophomoces.
,At ends, the leading canBut to witness one of the dictates are seniocs Bob Cald·
Eagle pr;~ctices, one would weU, 150 lb., and Rick Williams,
have to think thai there were at 173 lb. Fighting for the tactle
least 60. The cracking of pads jobs are 175 lb. junior, Dick
was near deafening and the Stettler ; 175 lb. junior, Alan
blocking sled looked more like a Duvall, 182 lb. junioc, George
runaway t,ruck.
Moca, and 201 lb. senior Alan
Holter.
Kirkhart said, "We're looking Three seniors wanting to be
forward to a good season, nol the guards are 155 lb. John
only in football, but in all Cline, ISO lb. Doug Carr, and 175
sports." He is assisted by head lb. Rick Hauber, along with 170
basketball coach Bill Phillips, lb. junior, Roger Karr. Tim
Carl Doderill and Dave Gumpf, 140 lb. senior, and Karr,
•
Chadwell. Phillips will head the who is listed as both a guard and
reserves Doderill the Junior center, are the leading can·
•
High, and Chadwell the fresh· didates for center.
men.
In the backfield, 165lb. senior
Looking down the Eagle Jim Amsbary will begin his
roster, there appears to be second year as first team
strength at each position. With quarterback. Dennis Eichinger,
31 juniors and seniors, depth 190 lb. senior, is listed as the No.
should not create many 1 fullback where he started last

,

Home R.uns

8[RRfS

'

jumped to a ~lead after three
By VITO STEU.INO
innings and pounded the Pirates
UP! Sports Writer
The Pittsburgh Pirates are 1~.
The Pirates still have a five
still bouncing up and down like
game lead in the NL East, but
a runaway roller coaster.
they have now lost nine.of their
The National League East last 14 games and that's not
leaders blasted theit way out of exactly the way to drive to the
a slwnp Monday night when pennant. In seven of those nine
they swept a doubleheader iosses, the Pirate pitching staff
from the Atlanta Braves, has allowed six or more runs.
coasting In a lf&gt;-4 victory in the
Bob Johnson and Bob Veale
second game.
were the main victims Tuesday
But the tables were turned night. Johnson lasted two
Tuesday night when the Braves innings and gave up five runs

mick had a fme year with San
Francisco. Bob Gibson had one
the following year and then
't
Tom Seaver did . Last
. year, I
was Gibson again and Ibis year
· ' all V'da
Blue and Dock
II s
I
Ellis. But I know I have the
respect of the other ballplayers
on the opposing clubs and the
respect of tlle players on my
own club as well as that of the
£ron t off.tee and the manager. "
Leo Durocher, the Cubs'
manager, has experienced almosl every kind of thrill and
disappointment during his 45
· the game but even he
years m
had a few goose pimples when
Jenkins beat Houston, 3-2, Iast
Friday for his lifth straight 20game season.
"Fine ball game Fergey ...
fine ball game," said Durocher,
one of the first to rush up and
offer congratulations right after
the contest.
When Jenkins drove back
home from tlle ball park with
his wife and family after that
game he did a great deal of
thinking.
"What 1 thought was llinally
proved to myself it wasn't a
fluke, " he says.
Imagine that? Here's a man
who goes out and wins 20
games five consecutive years,
an accomplishment which eluded such Hall of Famers as
Dizzy Dean, Ted Lyons, Waite
Hoyt and. Rube Marquard, not
In mention Sandy Koufax, who
is pretty sure to be a Hall of
Farner himseH soon, and
Ferguson Jenkins has to sit
there in his car and reassure
himself he was no fluke.
The characteristic I particularly like about the Canadian-

while Veale pitched the third
and lasted four batters into the
fourth and was charged with
six runs. Luke Walker gave up
the other four.
Mike Lum and Darrell Evans
each had four hits to pace the
attack tllat Included three-run
homers by Lum and Marty
Perez.
Hank Aaron added three hits
including his 37th homer of the
season and 629th of his career.
Aaron should have little trouble
passing Babe Ruth's 714 mark
before his career is over.
In the other games, San

g:~~:~c:~~:a~:~:

St. LoUIS edged Houston Z.l,
. .
.
Los Angeles topped Montreal S.
born Jenkins IS that unlike a lot 4 and ·San Diego blanked
of o~ers who make 11, he Philadelphia 2-0.
doesn t forget any of those who St Lo .
ed · to
'ded h. a1
th
.
ms mov
m
a
at" Jm ong e way.
second-place tie with Chicago
Robm Roberts was among r·
behind Pittsb h
th ose ~.ho heIped me, " Jenki ns by
tveedging
games
urg
Houston. AI Santorini
says. He told me I had to
r ed R · Cl eland ·th
throw strikes with the curve re Jev
ewe ev . WI
ball· Cal McLish taught me runners on first ";'ld third and
•
.
. one out m the nmth and got
how to throw the slider m Do Rad to hit · to
winter ball 'and how to gel
ug
er
m a gamet
f
ball
ending
double
play.
d
d Lou
momen wn on my as 1
;· 1
thirdBrock
Andy Seminick, one of my first sloe secon .
d
on
coaches in D ball with Miami, successtve pltc es an camwile
on John Edwards
d
he aIs 0 h_elped • and '!'hen I go t home
throw to score the decisive run
to the b1g leagues 11 was Joe
St Lo · 10
· th fifth · ·
Becker who sat'd 'if you don •t 1orFerguson
· UlSJenkins,
e in bls
llllllllg.
first
go out there every fourth day I ta 1 .
. . 20
games
can ,t rna ke a milli'on dolla rs for 1s rth smce
!ifth wmnmg
lr . ht
you,' and now that we have Mel or e
s a•g year, was

::0

Ron Johnson Out for While

the

TOI' QUALITY FEATURES•••
LOW, LOW #'RICE I
.
;,

,_ .., .., ""
lUI,.,,..._,

•• _.. ••• lllllold
st!Ottcll lower •idew•U

"On the other llaiNI, if tile food and Drug Administroticlll
erponds ~s food inspection nl"'•",';nn•, they'll p10bably
·
lrnd """ MORF '
• 't eot!"

and Carl Thomas, :i20 lb. tackle.
Sopholnores are Mike Bing,
120lb. halfback; Tim Bawn, 1:.0
lb. quarlerback ; Randy Orr, I~
lb. tackle; John Sheets, 170 lb.
end; Dan Chaffee, 1~0 lb.
fullback, and Larry Harper, 1:.0
lb. halfback.
The Eagles will scrimmage
tlle number one fated "AA"
school In the state lasl season,
New Lex.inglon, next Saturday
night al New Lexington .
Eastern will also scrimmage
Nelsonville-York on the
following SaiW'day at Eastern.
The Eastern E:igle schedule
is as follows:
Sept. II R••••n Tra~ (34-t),

year. And the halfback slots
should be played by a pair of
speedsters, 140 lb. junior Randy
Boring; and H5 lb. senior Rick
Sanders.
Completing lhe rosters
working for starling nods are
seniors, Rick Blake, 130 lb.
halfback; Warren Calaway, H9
lb. guard; Ralph P~rker,125lb .
halfback; Harvey Roseberry,
148 lb. guard; Marvin Taylor,
178lb. tackle ; Randy Young, 154
lb. end, and Sam Brown, I'!/ lb.
halfback.
The juniors are Bobby Ed·
wards, 110 lb. end ; !.All! Hysell,
150 lb. end; Vincent LaComb,
167 lb. center; Steve Millhon,
150 lb. guard; Bill Osborne,'140
lb. end and halfback; Steve
Reed, 210 lb. tackle ; Mike
Sanders, 125 lb. quarterback;
David Griffith , 145 lb . guard,

A.way.

Sept. 11 North GaDia ClMI,

Hom~.

.
Sept. !4 Froatler Loeal
IDNP), Home.
-QtL 1 Glouster 1141. Heme
(HomROmlDil·
Oct. I Kyger Creek IZI-81,
Away.

••

,.•'
•'
::

..•

,

'

. Oct. 15 FederaJ..Hockilll (..

21), Home.
O&lt;L 2% Mlller 11-51), Home
(Dad's Nlgbl).
O&lt;L Z9 Southwtslel'll ('IM),
A'O-ay.
Nov. I Radne (sa.f), A-J'·
All games start at I p.m.
(Last year's re~ulla Ill puettthesls) .

H&amp;R FIRESTONE
992·2238

LOANS

in

seven

innings

as

Cincinnati blasted Chicago.
Pete Rose led the assault with
three doubles as he scored
three runs and batted in
another.
Montreal's eight-game win·
ning streak, the longest in the
club's history, finally came to
an end. A five-run sixth inning
gave Los Angeles tlle win over
the Expos. Willie Davis went~
for-5 and collected a three-run
triple in the big inning.
Juan Marichal pitched a livehitler to boost his record to 13-9
as San Francisco edged New
York. Alan Gallagher scored
the deciding run in the fifth on
Tito Fuentes' infield for ce out
to beat Ray Sadecki.
Ed Acosta pitched an eight.
hitter in his first major league
start to hand San Diego the
triumph over Philadelphia.
Nate Colbert's 24th homer gave
Acosta all the help he needed.

OOMPLEIE UNE OF • • •
GUNS, HUNTING C.OTHES
AMMUNmON, All THE

SUPPUES FOR THE HUNTIR.
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;

..

SEPTEMBER
lOth•

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NEW 1972
HUNTING UCENSE
ON SALE NOW.

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'

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World's Greatest Array of Star
Entertainment presented ... FREE!

MAC DAVIS

CARPENTERS

Aur. 26, Z7

Au,. 26, Z7

YES!.. At

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_ M~ Co. Bra~

·'
•,

Meigs County Branch of The
Athens County S.avlngs &amp;.
Loan Co.
296 Second 51. ·
Pomeroy, Ohio
Member Federal Home loan

Bank.

••

Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp. All
accounts insured up to

$20,000.00.

•.'

IUDWEISEl O.'fDFSNI FS

KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT

RIZER OIL 00.

pounded for 12 hils and five
runs

Ho(lle lmpro~ement

See Goble
For The
Best In Used Cars

99f.3422

Locust St.
(

Squad

Pirates Beheaded

c.ooofiEAR
"HERC" ALLEN DIES
· NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI)Vanderbilt University track
coach Ernest "Here" Alley died
Tuesday at the age ,of 67 after
suffering a heart attack. Alley
Was associated with Vanderbilt
for over 30 years.

Easte~

. N. 2nd Ave.

Wright as pitching coach he has
the same philosophy as Joe
Becker."
Ferguson Jenkins also had
some "outside" help.
"I just thank the Almighty
!hall stayed healthy," he says.
" If I wasn't healthy, I couldn't
have done what I did."
It is Jenkins' belief the Cubs
will catch .the Pirates and then
go on to beat them for the NL
East division liUe. He feels the
Cubs have a number of things
going for them against the
Pirates-including those daytime games at Wrigley Field.
"Everytime they play a night
game they gotta look up at the
OUT OF HOSPITAL
scoceboard and see where the
PITISBURG~ (UPI)-Quar·
Cubs did it again,'' says
terback Terry Bradshaw of the
Jenkins.
Pittsburgh Steelers, who was
They didn't do it Tuesday in
shaken up In an exhibition
Chicago where the Reds beat
game against the Cincinnati
them, f&gt;-4.
Bengals Monday night was
Ferguson Jenkins went seven
released ·from the hospital
innings, was reached more than
Tuesday after being detained
usual, giving up 12 hits, and his
for observation.
recocd now is 20-10. He wasn't
at all happy about losing,
naturally, but even the best of
them do.
It's like .he says though.
"I think I've shown I'm no
NEW YORK (UPI) - As if remove fluid from under the nash in
pan ...
losing ballly to the cross-town thigh bone. The 23-year.old
rival New York Jets wasn't a Johnson will be sidelined until
bitter enough pill, the New York the Giants' opening game on
Giants now wiD do without star Sept. 19.
running back Ron Johnson for
Dr . Anthony Pisani will
the remainder of the exhibition perform the operation on ·
season.
Johnson, who has been bothered
Johnson, who gained 1,027· by a charley hOl'Se under the
yards last season - tops on the right thigh for the past two
club and among the leaders in months. He suffered the injury
the National Football League - in an off-season basketball
will undergo surgery today to game with some friends.
~--..-..-----------------"1

National League : Stargell,
Pitt 41 ; H. Aaron. All 37 ; May,
Cln 34; Johnson. Phil 28 ;
Williams, All 26.
American League: Mellon,
Chi 27; cash, Del 26; Smilh,
Bos 25; Jackson, Qak 23;
Petrocelli, Bos, Horton. Del and
Murcer, NY 22.
Runs Batted In
National League : Stargell;
Pitt 109; Torre, St. t 107 ; H.
Aoron. All 96; Montanez, Phil
83; Williams, Chl79.
American League: Killebrew.
Minn 87; F. Robinson. Ball and
Bando, Oak 77 ; Petrocelli, Bos
and Murcer. NY 16.
Pitching
National League: Jenkins.
Chi 20-10.; Ellis, Pitt 17-7;
carlton, St. L 16·7; Downing.
LA 15:8; Pappas, Chi 15·11 .
American League: Blue, Clak
-22-6; Lolich, Del 20·9; Wood.
Chi 17-9; Cuellar and Palmer.
Ball16·6; Hunter. Oak 16-10.
r

'

my face it would I e a v e
marks on my face. Can you
help me? I just don't feel
right this way.
Dear Reader - I h a v e
answered · your letter be·
cause it points u• an impor·
rant problem
removing
•cars from al·.
The pro·
cess w o r k s bost in very
lighl·skinned people, The re·
moval of a layer of skin
gives it a lighter pink color
which makes it very notice·
able in individuals with any
appreciable amount of pig·
ment in their skin. A good
plasUc surgeon can tell you
on an individual basis if you
~an get improvement or not.
I suspect t!Jt d o c t o r you
have seen knew what be was
talking ~bout and gave YO!I
good advice.

ampion

Jenkins Prefers Money to Ink

U: ·

Scaly Skin Spots Should Be Treated

American League
East
w. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
77 ~5 .631
Detroit
· 68 59 .535 11'1&gt;
Boston
67 61 .523 13
New York
64 65 .~96 16'1&gt;
Washington 53 73 .421 26
Cleveland
50 77 .39~ 29'h
We&amp;l
w. L. Pel. GB
Clakland
82 46 .641 ... .
Kansas City 66 60 .52~ 15
Chicago
62 65 .488 19'h
california · 61 68 .~ 73 21 ,h
Minnesota
57 69 .452 24
Milwaukee
53 72 .424 27'12
Tuesday'• Result.
Milw 6 C!eveld 5, night
Baltimore 1 Chi 0, night
K.C. 5 Boston •· 13 inns, n.
Minn 3 Detroit 1, night
New York 1 Clak!d o. night
calif 2 Wash 1. night
Today's Probable Pitc!lers
Chicago ( Horlen 7-9) at
Baltimore (Dobson 15-6). night.
Milwaukee (Parsons 10-lS)·at
Cleveland (Colbert 3·4) , night.
Minnesota (Kaat 10-10) at
Detroit (Lollch 20-9!. night.
Boston (Peters 12-9) at
Kansas City (Fitzmorris S.2l.
night.
Washington {Mclain 8-16) at
·California (May 8.9), night.
New York (Kline 9-12) at
Clakland (Hunter 16.10), night.

LEMAIRE SIGNS
MONTREAL (UPI)-Right..
winger Jacques LeMaire of the
Monlreal Canadiens Tuesday
signed a two-year contract with
the I:~ational Hockey League
club, it was announced by
Canadiens' general manager
Sam Pollack.

Can business management techniques he applied to
the -social sector, where the goal is not the most efficient Dear Helen:
Our neighbors ....
production of a certain piece of hardware but the further·
1. Let their little kids call us dirty names.
ance of that vague and intangible thing called the " pub·
2.
Accuse my husband CJl being a peeping TCIIl. (How could he
lie welfare"?
When a private company finds that a product isn't sell· whenhewmtwojobs,andbesides,wbywouldbehaveto,wben
ing, it stops making it or drastically redesigns it. But this dame parades around In her undies in front of an open winwhen a government program fails to achiev,e results, the
response is usually to pour even more money down the dow?)
3. Break off our plants.
same rathole (agency, department, bureau).
4. Steal fruit from our tree that hangs in their yard, and throw
" It is a regrettable fact, but many administrators of
our governmental and social institutions do not know the pits back in our yard.
what they are supposed to be doing," charges David F.
5. Knock over the makeshift fence we put up to protect ourLinowes. "And when they do know, they rarely have the ~~~.
~m~he~~
management skills to make their programs successful."
bik
·
rest
of the trwnps, roffed
6. Try to run down my daughter whe n she drlves her e m . another club and led a dia·
Linowes is national partner in an accounting firm,
mond toward dummy's king.
chairman of a food products company, author, university their driveway.
7.
Tlrow
their
garbage
into
our
yard.
He bad come to the con·
lecturer and former consultant to the U.S. State Depart·
B. Splash black grease oo the side of our bouse.
elusion that West bad a sin·
ment and the United Nations.
9.
Go
on
about
how
rich
they
are.
Business organizations effectively use management,
control and evaluative principles which evolved over the
10. Start something the minute I go out to do my yard work. .bwricd'J top experts e1plain thit.
decades as the industrial complex was growing. Govern·
What can I do about these miserabie creatures? .- DOWN toumomet~~t- winnirtt tecl111iqws irl a
- 121·- bool: on J .&lt;1 CO I Y
ment and social institutions could be using these same UNDER
MODERN. f« ,.., con ••I Sl
principles, but do not, says Linowes.
P. S. They're of the yoWJger generatioo. I suppose that ac- Wifll ,OW IKIIM, atlflreu Gild zip
"The public sector has never been concerned with the
cv4e fo: ~in ot &amp;ridge," (c/o tltis
bot!om line of a profit·and·loss statement. It can no counts for a lot It it.
newJpope&lt;), P.O. ••• 419, R&lt;Hiio Cily
Dear D.U.:
longer afford this luxury."
Srorion,
Nn YOlk, N.Y. IOOJP.
May we hear it fr(ll'l your neighbors? It wouldn't he fair to
We need a totally new discipline, he says. He ca.Us it
"Socio.Economic Management" and offers this hypo· comment imUl both sides are presented. 'And ewn then the ....-. gleton diamond and be hoped
sioos might be highly exaggerated .
thetical example of how it might work :
that it would be the 10 or the
1s it any wooder the world Is never without war -when two jack.
School districts A, B and C in Center City are in equiva·
lent social and economic environments . But in fiscal families so oftencan'tlive side by side without fighting? - H. •
It turned out to he the 10
1971·72, A received an appropriation of $1,400 a student, Dear Helen:
and
after this start it was a
B was granted $1,200 a student and C was given $1,600.
I look my husband for better or for wOl'Se, but the worse is simple matter to finesse
Why the differences? A survey showed that graduating
against East's jack and
getting
the better It me.
'
students from District A last June had on the average
make
his doubled contract.
He thinks nothing of stealing -and is only repentant if he gets
achieved a Fair Level in reading, writing and arithmetic.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
District B graduates achieved only a Poor Level, whereas caught. He barely escaped prison by making ·restilutim for
District C graduates reached Excellent Level.
embezzling from his company. This isn't the first time. I try to
Thus in administering its funds for education, Center make things right by returning what he lifts, but I'm so em·
City took into account not only numbers of students but
their learning achievements. Qualitative as well as quan· barrassed because people know what he's like, and that he never
The bidding has been:
tells the truth.
titative standards were applied.
South
West
North
Eost
I have also caught him in four affairs. Each time he's ''so
A lot of people will immediately object that it doesn't
1 ..
make sense to penalize School ' Districts A and B and sorry." He'D never do it again."
Pass
1•
Pass 2N.T.
?
3 &lt;fo
Pass
make it even more difficult for them to hire good teachers
H it weren't foc the children, I'd leave bim, as we fight CCII· Pass
You,
South,
hold:
and initiate programs to raise their levels. By the same
token, more money for District C is no guarantee that stanUy. Don't suggest courmeling. He goes to church every .AKB1.A2 .KQ! .. KI43
SUnday so figures he's perfect. - NERVOUS WRECK
its Excellent Level will be raised even higher.
f What do you do now?
What needs to be done is to find out what District C Dear Wreck:
A-Bid tbret: spAdes. Your
is doing right and how A and B can start doing it, too.
Your lllsband's "w(l'se" may gel the better of the children, partner just might have four
And anyway, the national problem is that the social and too, if itisas had as you picture: Thiskindofeducalioncould head spocles.
economic environments of our best and worst schools them toward juvenile hall. I'd suggest you slop covering up for
TODAY'S QtmiTION
are NOT equivalent.
You
bid three spades and
But few will argue with Linowes' contention that too him, and start aiming toward an honest life Cll your own. -H.
your partner goes to Jour
often government plays the old nwnbers game. An ex· Dear Helen :
spades. What do you do now?
ample is welfare programs, where allocations are mostly
This is an open letter to business men and women who use the
Answer Tomonow
based on the number of people fed, ,clothed and housed. telephone a lot.
" A poverty program should seek to put 'itself out of
My boss is a busy man. I try to save him time.:when he's out, I
business," says Linowes, "to be left without clients .. .
Oldest DoD
Handing out food, clothing and shelter is important, but ask callers to leave their names and messages. Please, I'm not
prying
-I'd
just
like
to
have
the
proper
infarmation
on
his
desk.
"Letitia
Penn" is probably
only as emergency, temporary measures, not as an ob.
So next time I ask "What is this in reference to?" dm't say, the oldest doll in America. It ·
jective of the poverty program itself. The objective must
be to make people employable and employed."
"He'll know," oc act as if it's none of my business. - was brought from England
to Philadelphia by William
He recommends regular "socio·economic audits" to SECRETARY
Penn
in 1699. Made of wooll,
liberated
Paris
in
World
War
Pianisf..conductor Leonard
check whether the resources put into a program are being
NOTE FROM H: And if yru insist on giving ONLY your name it is dressed in a gown of
Bernstein was born Aug. 25, II.
directed towards the true objectives of the program.
and phone number, don't expect a return call-unless you're well velvet like a lady of the Eng:
In
1950
President
Harry
S
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
1918, I
lish court.
knowri by the boss. - H.
Trwnan seized the nation's
On this day in history :
In 17iB the city of New railroads to prevent a general • :-:·:······· . ·.·:·:-:-:-:-.·:-:-:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·.·=····-·.·.·.·.·.·.·.....·.·.·.·:-:-.-:····:···:·.···:·:·:-.·:··.··:···:············· ....·-:-:-:-:-:-: .·:·.-:·::·.·:···:·:·:·.···:-:-:-:···:···:···:····... •.·.·.· ......
strike.
Orelans was founded.
In 1921 the United States
A thought for today : Pres·
signed a peace treaty with
Germany, officially ending ident James Monroe said,
"National honor is national
World War I.
In 1944 American troops property of the highest value."

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

By United Press International
National League
East
W. L Pet. gb
'Pittsburgh
76 55 .580 ...
Chicago
69 58 .543 5
St. Louis
10 59 .543 5
New York
62 64 .492 11V2
Phl!adell&gt;hla 56 71 .441 18
Montreal
54 72 .429 19'h
West
W. L. Pet. GB
San Francisco 76 54 .585 ...
Los Angeles 68 61 .527 7'h
Atlanta
68 65 .511 9'h
Cincinnati
64 67 .489 12'12
Houston
63 66 .488 12 112
San Diego
48 82 .369 28
Tuesday's Results
Clncl 5 Chicago 4
S.D. 2 Phlla 0, night
Los Ang 6 Mil 4, night
Atlanta 15 Pitts 5, night
St. L 2 Houston 1, night
SF 3 N.Y . 2. night
Today•s Probable Pitc!lers
San Francisco IPerry 13-9) at
New York IKoosman 4·8) .
Cincinnati (Grimsley 8-S) at
Chicago (Hands 10-15).
Los Angeles (Singer 7-15) at
Montreal (Renko 12-12), night.
San Diego (Kirby 11·10) at
Philadelphia {Short 7-14). night.
Pittsburgh IKison 3-4) at
Atlanta (Jarvis 5-lll. night.
St. Louis {Carlton 16-1) at
Houston (Cook 0-2), night.
No qames

1
I was, "I should have doubled

1

•,

15 Lettermen Back on

6987~42 .

{HEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

lVoice along Broadway l
I

.K854
&lt;foAl 54
WIST (D)
6QJ6
.• AJ654
•10
&lt;foKQ107
SOlJTII

1--ftellallySenlinel,~y,0., ~~. 1971

••

Middleport, o.

. ''

OHIO Fout FES? IVAL

••

l·Uf' IAU.OON IW:t

••

TIACTOil PllJ.INC
DAVE MEIIIf'IFJ.J)
HORSE PW.Ni
MIDWAY
C1ICU5

HURRICANE
HELL
DRIVERS

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Stpt I, 3, 5

......

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,

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State

.
Liv..toc:k Exhibition, H - Show,

Jr. Fair, Seato Foir Att st..
Adu!to .$1.50 Child..n unMr 1%, 2Sc: Child,....

WORLD'S LARGEST :

admitted fn:e until noon dai1y ncepl. S.t.lt Su ...

Midway rides up to

%off until noon dai!y euept S.t. Ac Sun.

OFF 1·71 AT lido AVE.. C"l..uM8US

�-.

a-.Dll.r

a

11

I

II 5' I -t-P

*' D). 0., A;;gu::t :5,1971 ;

1

WIN AT BRIDGE

IIUCI .IOSSAT

South Plays
with Finesse

Agnew Gets Cold Shoulder

Nixon Pointedly Ignores Spiro

NOKTB
.AK103

.7

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON (NEAl
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew is more distressed than
.ever these days over the fact ~t President Ni&gt;:on ~nd
his advisers !!!live bim out of JUSt about everything 1m·
portant they do.
. .
Agnew is not a man of 1mmense ego, but be does have
his pride. And peop?e who know him say he has ~en
continuoiiSiy offended by the President's neglect of him.
Says a friend: ·
.
·· "Wiu!o he isn't told in advance of decisions llke the
President going to China, the Vice President takes it as
proof that Nixon and his top men ,PUt him down as a
clown who isn't worth telling. anythmg to."
.
· That's the core of it, right thert!-'Agnew's feelmg that
they think he is some kind of dumbbell.
There is a practical side to it, of course. It might be
considered vital for the Vice President to be warped
into lr.ej,;!~.fons in the event something should happen
to the
· enl It might also be thou~ht sim~ly useful
for a man representing Nixon !J1 fo~etg~ capttals and
around the national speech-making. CITCWt. . .
.
· The President's announcement of mtent to vtstt Peking
came while Agnew was on his recent trip around the
world. Airborne the morning after Nixon spoke, the V~e
President was in visibie anguish. Reporters saw htm
JN!Cing in his cabin.
·
· lie also bad been kept in the dark on some of the
President's earner overtures to Peking.
lrritaled over these repeated aa:ronts, AjllleW has ~e·
veloped a "don't give a damn" attitude which leads him
to spout .his own view ~f things wherever he pleases.

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

Obviously, he finds ample opportunity, since he often dis·
agrees with Nixon's policies and action_s.
.
.
What it amounts to, agam, •s the Vtce President m
effect saying to h}mself that i! they ,in the Wllite House
are not going to care about htm, he s not gomg to care
about them.
One friend adds; incidentally, that he doubts Nixon.
and Agnew ever have any substantial ·pri_vate conver~a·
· tions, though they cr-oss paths at offictal and social
gatherings.
.
Given this terrible estrangement, and 1t can't be de·
scribed as anything less, the question of Agnew's future
.
takes on new force.
There are some informed private judgments that the '
President would like to have Agnew off the Republican
ticket in 1972. When soundings show quite generally
around the nation (even in conservative places like
Texas) that he is viewed as a drag, Nixon's course would,
seem clear.
The trouble is, there is no nice way to do it. Dumping
vice presidents is not a coll!mon practice. si~ce for a
president it represents a kmd of ~elf-crtbctsm. The
easier thing, naturally, is to have Agnew say he doesn't
want the job another time. But that's been talked of
openly so much, it will inevitably be treated merely as
a "dumping device."
Yet the odds do favor separation of the estranged
parties in 1972. To get Nixon and Agnew pack in the
warm shoulder-clasp of mid·1968 would tax the skill of
the most ingenious political marriage counsellor.

-------------------.
.
I
'

BY .JACK: O'BIUAN
LEST I BEY BE JI'ORG01TEN...

automatically into the Dems like trained
Muskietoes Is far frmn a sure pop,
NEWYORK MEMOS TO MYSELF ... Ask
ateckthestrongnunorJaneFondswillwed
Vinceld Sanli Jr. if it's true he bas a multi· actor Dmald Sutherland (they're never apart)
mliHm.doJ!. oiler far his famed W. 4th St. and soonassheunloadsRogerVadim .... Get some of
!h.b.rt Alley Den CJl F4Jily .... Write down the the fresh tuna toes and new corn at Louise's E.
fint fill oii-Bdwy. q,ering SePt. 9, "Out of 58th St. spot- they're grown sans chemicals at
CCJntrol," by Martin Qoafl, Louisville native .... pop Dick Jlrio's upstate farm .... Rib Mort
Ommlterale with Melba :Moore, Lena Horse, Downey about gling to Louise's twice In a week
C!!ical'! BamiliGn and otbei- black recording -hepretendsnevertotakeyourrestauranttips,
stan who are toiaDy accepted In the white world but his Anne loved It .... Check the North Door
..:. bat are not getting a "play" Cll black radio Singers, and see if the act's Sheri Lee isn't the
deejay sbOII8 .... A8lt Vincent Price if It's true daughter It Booa l.A!e, who once sang with
!Je''a gtt1ing a $50,11011 guarantee-plus (depending Tmuny DOrsey .... Get to the Rainbow Grill to
oo bolr mach It's ued oo TV) far lis 4li secnnd . see Duke Ellingtoo before he takes the A-Train.
Birds Eye CIIIIIID!I'Ci81 .... Gel Louise Campbell ·
Tell Rainbow Room prop. Jerry Brody
-MrVaJm'a lllkb a fnm the Catholic Acton you're sad Fred Astaire 1urned him down for a
Guild and write a s)mpalby note re husband ooce.a.night apPearance foc a week or two (at
Horace :MeMabm's e:apected bat nonetheless fabulous money) in that most beautiful nightclub
leave b'ing: 1110 many funerals lately, not anywhere .... Scrape a smut.rnark against the
enaagll -•liJIIP' and cllrtsteninp .... Ask Peter Sellers ruck in which the action gets to the
bukelblll s1ar ~ Ha)ward If bls acting groin again by having actor Rick Lenz cir·
1
•111 mean an early so.lmg to pro ball.
cumsized foc guffaws; ·ouch!!!
01ect if Prillcel8 Kelly and Rainier haven 'I
You don't believe In credit cards, but it's no
hetin able fiDd suilabl,y serene big N. Y. satisfaction they're taking such fil'a~iallumps
lpll'tnwsll; Ui!:he biiiillooking ftr ~, .... • all over the cOurltry ... Ask that ~ss agent pal of
IJ!!e If acllr'(llaywrigbt Robert Shaw has found a the Crazy Joey Gallo gang If Joey's ready to
lldwy:-P,Ocha.-er yet ftr the Dew Pinter plliy, retaliate-UI.advance for the price on Gallo's life;
''Old Times," in whlch Shaw wants to star this Joey'll talk to news people any time .... Might
- .... Clllgralulate Diet Cavett for the mini- even go on TV 8after aU, cavettetc. gave time to
i'1 11 n,ol!ln Kp
Qty- the :Merv Griffin Show Joe Coi(ll'lbo without bothering him with em. . &amp;oppedbyaVHFTVoatleltbereandaUH· barrassing queries about the Mafia etc.
Fstatloopcileditslislellerstoaeeiftheywanted
ateck if the buge Phillips fum is buying
Min ar Diet: and Cavett 'WCII almost two to me MGM Rec&lt;rds .... Learned "Fiddler on the
.... FindootwbatMe!Broobis doq; be's been Roof" is selling out almost completely these
qidel too lmg.
perf&lt;rmances but the gross doesn't indicate how
tie z~lethe top boss atRadioOty Music Hall weD- they're on tw!ters (two tickets for one);
_ w11o lllmght that ht«-all-movie m011ques and they're great if thrifty audiences, Hal Prince
ope11ed CJri8jnally with a fi!DHmd-lltage show says.
policy; he there and yru weren't, but
Ask the recocd people if Bing Crosby or Elvis
pnehow yoo tnew It was a stage-ebow-4&gt;nly Presley sold the most hotcakes over the years ....
(Mirtba Gnham headlined) bat hardly anyooe Usten to Patti Page's "Words" record spinning
showed up, and the ~~~&lt;Me policy started the next up the charts and decide if that smash is what
...S .... Olect the rest CJl that 1!132'(1remiere suddenly made her potent box office bait again ...
liD, scads of big names.
For your "trivia" collection: the Jones oc Smith
See If you can gel a Mr. Big at the Dem's name in Germany is Muller- more than 600,000
..111111111 ollice to teD yru far the column as he Muliers in W. Germany .... Saw Louis Sobol, now
confided to a friend that he's frightened of the 111- 75, and we swear he looks the same as the first
year-old vole in '12: That half the 18 to 21 set are day we mel him 30 years ago .... If you see the
marriedandCCIIIICiOUt of more serious concerns new film "Sapho," harken to Seda Aznavour,
lban picketing, another half at least are loyal whose pop, Charles wrote the words and uncle
progeu.y of cmservative types, and the surface George Gavarentz the music.
psycbolOI!)' that kids will fling themselves

'f

By Ulllted Prealatoraatlol181
;l'oday is Wednesday, Aug. 25,
the 237th day of 1971.
The moon is between its new
phase and first quarter.
The IIIOl'1ling stars are Saturn
and Venus.
The evening stars are Mars,
Jupiter and Mercury.
ThoiJe born oo Ibis day are
under the 'lgn of Vll'gO.

-

Z5

EAST

•Void

.KQ1032
.AJ63
&lt;fo9862

.98
.Q972
&lt;fo3
East· West vulnerable
west North East South
1• · Dble
4. 4.
Dble .. · Pass
5•
Pass
Dble Pass
Pass 5 •
Pass Pass
Opening lead-.fo K

By Oswald &amp; Jame• Jacoby
For our final band from
"Tiger Bridge" we go to a
tough team of four game,
South wa!;D't proud of his
four spade bid, but be was
not going to let East shut
bim out. Ailyway, South
wasn't vulnerable. '
Mter West doubled and
East ran to five hearts,
South passed in the hope that
his partner would he able to
take three tricks against
West. Then South suddenly
,-----~---------------------1 found himself playing five

EDITORIALS

H
I
H
I
·
u
l e .en e p s 1 U:a~~il;oo~ ~~~ =~lt
I spades doubled.

I

Business Methods
In U.S. Bureaus?

ILOVE THY NEIGHBOR?By Helen
~ttel
NEVER!

!

five bearts to keep my part·
ner from bidding on." Then
he thought a little more and
decided that maybe every·
one or almost everyone,
knew what be was doing.
That East had bid five
hearts because he thought
his partner would make it
and that East's analysis bad
been correct. In that case
East would be void of spades.
·
So~~c~m~n to tf:~;
ruffing a club, led a small
spade and called for dum·

them and didn't care for the
designation of senile). They
are more frequent in middle
age and beyond.
Very often the scab appears where the skin has
been injured, such as from a
razor nick. Exposure of the
skin to sun and wind con·
tributes to the development
of keratosis. That is why
they are most frequently
noted on the hands and face.
Yes, if not treated they
can bee om e malignant.
They will not go a)oVay with·
out treatmen t, .but they are
easily removed. T! ere 8!'"
a number of salves that r ~
rriove the spots by a "chem·
ical burn." · I think all of
these should be seen by a
doctor and removed. If it is
already malignant then it
must be treated like a skin
tancer and may require
surgical excision.
Dear Dr. Lamb - I read
your article which said tha (
acne scars can be removed.
I went to a plastic surgeon
and he told me he could not
h e l p me llecause I have
dark skin and if he sanded

'

Thursday's Games

lllursday's Games

schedul ~d

Chicago at Balli, night
Milwaukee at Cleve, night
Boston at K.C., night
Wash at Calif .. night
CONTRACI'S SIGNED
CORVALLIS, Ore. (UPI)Foolball conlracts for 1979 and
1983 have been signed by the
University of North Carolina
and Oregon State University, it
was announced Tuesday.

Vida Blue says good lord
By MILTON RICHMAN
almighty he has had more than
UPI Sporls Writer
enough
publicity.
NEW YORK (UPI)- Vida
Ferguson Jenkins, on the
Blue and Ferguson Jenkins both
other hand, doesn't say any.
the Sport Parade thing like that at all.
The explanation is pretty
are beautiful and blessed with simple.
what can only be described as a
Vida Blue, Oaldand's phen·
pair of unbelievable arms. They omena! 22-year..()ld lefthander,
are also the top two pitchers in has been interviewed, photobaseball.
graphed and lionized more for
But from that point on they winning 22 games in five
split in a hurry.
months than rlght.handed '!/year-old Ferguson Jenkins has
for winning 20 or more games
_J
five years in a row for the
Chicago Cubs.
Jenkins isn' I complaining
about any lack of ink though.
He's shooting for something
more important-100,000 big
I
,I
\
ones next year-and which
~iii::iEii::::::::)
would you rather have, the ink
1
]
01'
or the money?
Besides, he understands how
these
things happen, how you
By United Press International
can go out there and do a job
le•ding Batters
National League
and then not see your name in
G. AB R. H. Pel.
Torre. St.L 130 506 76 180 .356 the papers too much because
Bckrt, Chi 121 ol86 76 172 .354 after while the writers tend 19
Grr. At!
126 516 83 170 .329 take you for granted and there
Clmnt, Pit 107 426 68 140 .329 always are some other guys are
Jns, NY . 109 416 48 136 .327
Brck, St. L 125 505 100 164 .325 doing a job, too.
Sng!n, PI
115 443 52 144 .325
"When I first became a
H. Arn. All 114 398 76 128 .322 starting pitcher In 1967,"
Ovs. LA
125 503 65 160 .318
Alou St.L
121 494 65 154 .312 Jenkins says, "Mike McCor·

I

I ·~ ...

American

L~gue

G. AB R. H. Pet .
Olva, Mlnn 105 409 61 144 .352
Mrcr, NY 125 545 79 146 .322
Oils, KC
117 456 68 140 .307
Tvr, Minn 123 515 79 157 .305
Rtmd Bit
107 368 67 112 .304
Rojs, KC
115 ~14 56 124 .300
Rchdl Chi 108 395 44 117 .296
Hrtn, Del 113 432 61 126 .m
Bird, 811
103 381 86 111 .291
May Chi
108 389 47 113 .290

· . BY KEI'I1I WISECUP
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
defending Southern Valley
Athletic Conference champion,
the Eastern Eagles, have 15
lettermen, a new coach, and
apparenUy a good shot at
repeating foc first place honors
in the svAC.
The Eagles new head mentor,
Roger Kirkhart, is in his first
year as a head coach. The

nativeMeigsCountianhasthree
years of assistant coaching
under bls belt at Perry County.
Kirkhart replaces the late
Larry Ritchie.
Eastern ended attN last year
and went undefeated in SVAC
play with six wins. The Eagles
were0-31n the now defunct Mid·
Ohio Valley Conference last
season.
Coach Kirkharlhas37 players
of h
7
·
14
w om 1 are seruors, are

juniors,
and
six
are ·problems.
sophomoces.
,At ends, the leading canBut to witness one of the dictates are seniocs Bob Cald·
Eagle pr;~ctices, one would weU, 150 lb., and Rick Williams,
have to think thai there were at 173 lb. Fighting for the tactle
least 60. The cracking of pads jobs are 175 lb. junior, Dick
was near deafening and the Stettler ; 175 lb. junior, Alan
blocking sled looked more like a Duvall, 182 lb. junioc, George
runaway t,ruck.
Moca, and 201 lb. senior Alan
Holter.
Kirkhart said, "We're looking Three seniors wanting to be
forward to a good season, nol the guards are 155 lb. John
only in football, but in all Cline, ISO lb. Doug Carr, and 175
sports." He is assisted by head lb. Rick Hauber, along with 170
basketball coach Bill Phillips, lb. junior, Roger Karr. Tim
Carl Doderill and Dave Gumpf, 140 lb. senior, and Karr,
•
Chadwell. Phillips will head the who is listed as both a guard and
reserves Doderill the Junior center, are the leading can·
•
High, and Chadwell the fresh· didates for center.
men.
In the backfield, 165lb. senior
Looking down the Eagle Jim Amsbary will begin his
roster, there appears to be second year as first team
strength at each position. With quarterback. Dennis Eichinger,
31 juniors and seniors, depth 190 lb. senior, is listed as the No.
should not create many 1 fullback where he started last

,

Home R.uns

8[RRfS

'

jumped to a ~lead after three
By VITO STEU.INO
innings and pounded the Pirates
UP! Sports Writer
The Pittsburgh Pirates are 1~.
The Pirates still have a five
still bouncing up and down like
game lead in the NL East, but
a runaway roller coaster.
they have now lost nine.of their
The National League East last 14 games and that's not
leaders blasted theit way out of exactly the way to drive to the
a slwnp Monday night when pennant. In seven of those nine
they swept a doubleheader iosses, the Pirate pitching staff
from the Atlanta Braves, has allowed six or more runs.
coasting In a lf&gt;-4 victory in the
Bob Johnson and Bob Veale
second game.
were the main victims Tuesday
But the tables were turned night. Johnson lasted two
Tuesday night when the Braves innings and gave up five runs

mick had a fme year with San
Francisco. Bob Gibson had one
the following year and then
't
Tom Seaver did . Last
. year, I
was Gibson again and Ibis year
· ' all V'da
Blue and Dock
II s
I
Ellis. But I know I have the
respect of the other ballplayers
on the opposing clubs and the
respect of tlle players on my
own club as well as that of the
£ron t off.tee and the manager. "
Leo Durocher, the Cubs'
manager, has experienced almosl every kind of thrill and
disappointment during his 45
· the game but even he
years m
had a few goose pimples when
Jenkins beat Houston, 3-2, Iast
Friday for his lifth straight 20game season.
"Fine ball game Fergey ...
fine ball game," said Durocher,
one of the first to rush up and
offer congratulations right after
the contest.
When Jenkins drove back
home from tlle ball park with
his wife and family after that
game he did a great deal of
thinking.
"What 1 thought was llinally
proved to myself it wasn't a
fluke, " he says.
Imagine that? Here's a man
who goes out and wins 20
games five consecutive years,
an accomplishment which eluded such Hall of Famers as
Dizzy Dean, Ted Lyons, Waite
Hoyt and. Rube Marquard, not
In mention Sandy Koufax, who
is pretty sure to be a Hall of
Farner himseH soon, and
Ferguson Jenkins has to sit
there in his car and reassure
himself he was no fluke.
The characteristic I particularly like about the Canadian-

while Veale pitched the third
and lasted four batters into the
fourth and was charged with
six runs. Luke Walker gave up
the other four.
Mike Lum and Darrell Evans
each had four hits to pace the
attack tllat Included three-run
homers by Lum and Marty
Perez.
Hank Aaron added three hits
including his 37th homer of the
season and 629th of his career.
Aaron should have little trouble
passing Babe Ruth's 714 mark
before his career is over.
In the other games, San

g:~~:~c:~~:a~:~:

St. LoUIS edged Houston Z.l,
. .
.
Los Angeles topped Montreal S.
born Jenkins IS that unlike a lot 4 and ·San Diego blanked
of o~ers who make 11, he Philadelphia 2-0.
doesn t forget any of those who St Lo .
ed · to
'ded h. a1
th
.
ms mov
m
a
at" Jm ong e way.
second-place tie with Chicago
Robm Roberts was among r·
behind Pittsb h
th ose ~.ho heIped me, " Jenki ns by
tveedging
games
urg
Houston. AI Santorini
says. He told me I had to
r ed R · Cl eland ·th
throw strikes with the curve re Jev
ewe ev . WI
ball· Cal McLish taught me runners on first ";'ld third and
•
.
. one out m the nmth and got
how to throw the slider m Do Rad to hit · to
winter ball 'and how to gel
ug
er
m a gamet
f
ball
ending
double
play.
d
d Lou
momen wn on my as 1
;· 1
thirdBrock
Andy Seminick, one of my first sloe secon .
d
on
coaches in D ball with Miami, successtve pltc es an camwile
on John Edwards
d
he aIs 0 h_elped • and '!'hen I go t home
throw to score the decisive run
to the b1g leagues 11 was Joe
St Lo · 10
· th fifth · ·
Becker who sat'd 'if you don •t 1orFerguson
· UlSJenkins,
e in bls
llllllllg.
first
go out there every fourth day I ta 1 .
. . 20
games
can ,t rna ke a milli'on dolla rs for 1s rth smce
!ifth wmnmg
lr . ht
you,' and now that we have Mel or e
s a•g year, was

::0

Ron Johnson Out for While

the

TOI' QUALITY FEATURES•••
LOW, LOW #'RICE I
.
;,

,_ .., .., ""
lUI,.,,..._,

•• _.. ••• lllllold
st!Ottcll lower •idew•U

"On the other llaiNI, if tile food and Drug Administroticlll
erponds ~s food inspection nl"'•",';nn•, they'll p10bably
·
lrnd """ MORF '
• 't eot!"

and Carl Thomas, :i20 lb. tackle.
Sopholnores are Mike Bing,
120lb. halfback; Tim Bawn, 1:.0
lb. quarlerback ; Randy Orr, I~
lb. tackle; John Sheets, 170 lb.
end; Dan Chaffee, 1~0 lb.
fullback, and Larry Harper, 1:.0
lb. halfback.
The Eagles will scrimmage
tlle number one fated "AA"
school In the state lasl season,
New Lex.inglon, next Saturday
night al New Lexington .
Eastern will also scrimmage
Nelsonville-York on the
following SaiW'day at Eastern.
The Eastern E:igle schedule
is as follows:
Sept. II R••••n Tra~ (34-t),

year. And the halfback slots
should be played by a pair of
speedsters, 140 lb. junior Randy
Boring; and H5 lb. senior Rick
Sanders.
Completing lhe rosters
working for starling nods are
seniors, Rick Blake, 130 lb.
halfback; Warren Calaway, H9
lb. guard; Ralph P~rker,125lb .
halfback; Harvey Roseberry,
148 lb. guard; Marvin Taylor,
178lb. tackle ; Randy Young, 154
lb. end, and Sam Brown, I'!/ lb.
halfback.
The juniors are Bobby Ed·
wards, 110 lb. end ; !.All! Hysell,
150 lb. end; Vincent LaComb,
167 lb. center; Steve Millhon,
150 lb. guard; Bill Osborne,'140
lb. end and halfback; Steve
Reed, 210 lb. tackle ; Mike
Sanders, 125 lb. quarterback;
David Griffith , 145 lb . guard,

A.way.

Sept. 11 North GaDia ClMI,

Hom~.

.
Sept. !4 Froatler Loeal
IDNP), Home.
-QtL 1 Glouster 1141. Heme
(HomROmlDil·
Oct. I Kyger Creek IZI-81,
Away.

••

,.•'
•'
::

..•

,

'

. Oct. 15 FederaJ..Hockilll (..

21), Home.
O&lt;L 2% Mlller 11-51), Home
(Dad's Nlgbl).
O&lt;L Z9 Southwtslel'll ('IM),
A'O-ay.
Nov. I Radne (sa.f), A-J'·
All games start at I p.m.
(Last year's re~ulla Ill puettthesls) .

H&amp;R FIRESTONE
992·2238

LOANS

in

seven

innings

as

Cincinnati blasted Chicago.
Pete Rose led the assault with
three doubles as he scored
three runs and batted in
another.
Montreal's eight-game win·
ning streak, the longest in the
club's history, finally came to
an end. A five-run sixth inning
gave Los Angeles tlle win over
the Expos. Willie Davis went~
for-5 and collected a three-run
triple in the big inning.
Juan Marichal pitched a livehitler to boost his record to 13-9
as San Francisco edged New
York. Alan Gallagher scored
the deciding run in the fifth on
Tito Fuentes' infield for ce out
to beat Ray Sadecki.
Ed Acosta pitched an eight.
hitter in his first major league
start to hand San Diego the
triumph over Philadelphia.
Nate Colbert's 24th homer gave
Acosta all the help he needed.

OOMPLEIE UNE OF • • •
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AMMUNmON, All THE

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SEPTEMBER
lOth•

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MAC DAVIS

CARPENTERS

Aur. 26, Z7

Au,. 26, Z7

YES!.. At

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•,

Meigs County Branch of The
Athens County S.avlngs &amp;.
Loan Co.
296 Second 51. ·
Pomeroy, Ohio
Member Federal Home loan

Bank.

••

Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp. All
accounts insured up to

$20,000.00.

•.'

IUDWEISEl O.'fDFSNI FS

KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT

RIZER OIL 00.

pounded for 12 hils and five
runs

Ho(lle lmpro~ement

See Goble
For The
Best In Used Cars

99f.3422

Locust St.
(

Squad

Pirates Beheaded

c.ooofiEAR
"HERC" ALLEN DIES
· NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI)Vanderbilt University track
coach Ernest "Here" Alley died
Tuesday at the age ,of 67 after
suffering a heart attack. Alley
Was associated with Vanderbilt
for over 30 years.

Easte~

. N. 2nd Ave.

Wright as pitching coach he has
the same philosophy as Joe
Becker."
Ferguson Jenkins also had
some "outside" help.
"I just thank the Almighty
!hall stayed healthy," he says.
" If I wasn't healthy, I couldn't
have done what I did."
It is Jenkins' belief the Cubs
will catch .the Pirates and then
go on to beat them for the NL
East division liUe. He feels the
Cubs have a number of things
going for them against the
Pirates-including those daytime games at Wrigley Field.
"Everytime they play a night
game they gotta look up at the
OUT OF HOSPITAL
scoceboard and see where the
PITISBURG~ (UPI)-Quar·
Cubs did it again,'' says
terback Terry Bradshaw of the
Jenkins.
Pittsburgh Steelers, who was
They didn't do it Tuesday in
shaken up In an exhibition
Chicago where the Reds beat
game against the Cincinnati
them, f&gt;-4.
Bengals Monday night was
Ferguson Jenkins went seven
released ·from the hospital
innings, was reached more than
Tuesday after being detained
usual, giving up 12 hits, and his
for observation.
recocd now is 20-10. He wasn't
at all happy about losing,
naturally, but even the best of
them do.
It's like .he says though.
"I think I've shown I'm no
NEW YORK (UPI) - As if remove fluid from under the nash in
pan ...
losing ballly to the cross-town thigh bone. The 23-year.old
rival New York Jets wasn't a Johnson will be sidelined until
bitter enough pill, the New York the Giants' opening game on
Giants now wiD do without star Sept. 19.
running back Ron Johnson for
Dr . Anthony Pisani will
the remainder of the exhibition perform the operation on ·
season.
Johnson, who has been bothered
Johnson, who gained 1,027· by a charley hOl'Se under the
yards last season - tops on the right thigh for the past two
club and among the leaders in months. He suffered the injury
the National Football League - in an off-season basketball
will undergo surgery today to game with some friends.
~--..-..-----------------"1

National League : Stargell,
Pitt 41 ; H. Aaron. All 37 ; May,
Cln 34; Johnson. Phil 28 ;
Williams, All 26.
American League: Mellon,
Chi 27; cash, Del 26; Smilh,
Bos 25; Jackson, Qak 23;
Petrocelli, Bos, Horton. Del and
Murcer, NY 22.
Runs Batted In
National League : Stargell;
Pitt 109; Torre, St. t 107 ; H.
Aoron. All 96; Montanez, Phil
83; Williams, Chl79.
American League: Killebrew.
Minn 87; F. Robinson. Ball and
Bando, Oak 77 ; Petrocelli, Bos
and Murcer. NY 16.
Pitching
National League: Jenkins.
Chi 20-10.; Ellis, Pitt 17-7;
carlton, St. L 16·7; Downing.
LA 15:8; Pappas, Chi 15·11 .
American League: Blue, Clak
-22-6; Lolich, Del 20·9; Wood.
Chi 17-9; Cuellar and Palmer.
Ball16·6; Hunter. Oak 16-10.
r

'

my face it would I e a v e
marks on my face. Can you
help me? I just don't feel
right this way.
Dear Reader - I h a v e
answered · your letter be·
cause it points u• an impor·
rant problem
removing
•cars from al·.
The pro·
cess w o r k s bost in very
lighl·skinned people, The re·
moval of a layer of skin
gives it a lighter pink color
which makes it very notice·
able in individuals with any
appreciable amount of pig·
ment in their skin. A good
plasUc surgeon can tell you
on an individual basis if you
~an get improvement or not.
I suspect t!Jt d o c t o r you
have seen knew what be was
talking ~bout and gave YO!I
good advice.

ampion

Jenkins Prefers Money to Ink

U: ·

Scaly Skin Spots Should Be Treated

American League
East
w. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
77 ~5 .631
Detroit
· 68 59 .535 11'1&gt;
Boston
67 61 .523 13
New York
64 65 .~96 16'1&gt;
Washington 53 73 .421 26
Cleveland
50 77 .39~ 29'h
We&amp;l
w. L. Pel. GB
Clakland
82 46 .641 ... .
Kansas City 66 60 .52~ 15
Chicago
62 65 .488 19'h
california · 61 68 .~ 73 21 ,h
Minnesota
57 69 .452 24
Milwaukee
53 72 .424 27'12
Tuesday'• Result.
Milw 6 C!eveld 5, night
Baltimore 1 Chi 0, night
K.C. 5 Boston •· 13 inns, n.
Minn 3 Detroit 1, night
New York 1 Clak!d o. night
calif 2 Wash 1. night
Today's Probable Pitc!lers
Chicago ( Horlen 7-9) at
Baltimore (Dobson 15-6). night.
Milwaukee (Parsons 10-lS)·at
Cleveland (Colbert 3·4) , night.
Minnesota (Kaat 10-10) at
Detroit (Lollch 20-9!. night.
Boston (Peters 12-9) at
Kansas City (Fitzmorris S.2l.
night.
Washington {Mclain 8-16) at
·California (May 8.9), night.
New York (Kline 9-12) at
Clakland (Hunter 16.10), night.

LEMAIRE SIGNS
MONTREAL (UPI)-Right..
winger Jacques LeMaire of the
Monlreal Canadiens Tuesday
signed a two-year contract with
the I:~ational Hockey League
club, it was announced by
Canadiens' general manager
Sam Pollack.

Can business management techniques he applied to
the -social sector, where the goal is not the most efficient Dear Helen:
Our neighbors ....
production of a certain piece of hardware but the further·
1. Let their little kids call us dirty names.
ance of that vague and intangible thing called the " pub·
2.
Accuse my husband CJl being a peeping TCIIl. (How could he
lie welfare"?
When a private company finds that a product isn't sell· whenhewmtwojobs,andbesides,wbywouldbehaveto,wben
ing, it stops making it or drastically redesigns it. But this dame parades around In her undies in front of an open winwhen a government program fails to achiev,e results, the
response is usually to pour even more money down the dow?)
3. Break off our plants.
same rathole (agency, department, bureau).
4. Steal fruit from our tree that hangs in their yard, and throw
" It is a regrettable fact, but many administrators of
our governmental and social institutions do not know the pits back in our yard.
what they are supposed to be doing," charges David F.
5. Knock over the makeshift fence we put up to protect ourLinowes. "And when they do know, they rarely have the ~~~.
~m~he~~
management skills to make their programs successful."
bik
·
rest
of the trwnps, roffed
6. Try to run down my daughter whe n she drlves her e m . another club and led a dia·
Linowes is national partner in an accounting firm,
mond toward dummy's king.
chairman of a food products company, author, university their driveway.
7.
Tlrow
their
garbage
into
our
yard.
He bad come to the con·
lecturer and former consultant to the U.S. State Depart·
B. Splash black grease oo the side of our bouse.
elusion that West bad a sin·
ment and the United Nations.
9.
Go
on
about
how
rich
they
are.
Business organizations effectively use management,
control and evaluative principles which evolved over the
10. Start something the minute I go out to do my yard work. .bwricd'J top experts e1plain thit.
decades as the industrial complex was growing. Govern·
What can I do about these miserabie creatures? .- DOWN toumomet~~t- winnirtt tecl111iqws irl a
- 121·- bool: on J .&lt;1 CO I Y
ment and social institutions could be using these same UNDER
MODERN. f« ,.., con ••I Sl
principles, but do not, says Linowes.
P. S. They're of the yoWJger generatioo. I suppose that ac- Wifll ,OW IKIIM, atlflreu Gild zip
"The public sector has never been concerned with the
cv4e fo: ~in ot &amp;ridge," (c/o tltis
bot!om line of a profit·and·loss statement. It can no counts for a lot It it.
newJpope&lt;), P.O. ••• 419, R&lt;Hiio Cily
Dear D.U.:
longer afford this luxury."
Srorion,
Nn YOlk, N.Y. IOOJP.
May we hear it fr(ll'l your neighbors? It wouldn't he fair to
We need a totally new discipline, he says. He ca.Us it
"Socio.Economic Management" and offers this hypo· comment imUl both sides are presented. 'And ewn then the ....-. gleton diamond and be hoped
sioos might be highly exaggerated .
thetical example of how it might work :
that it would be the 10 or the
1s it any wooder the world Is never without war -when two jack.
School districts A, B and C in Center City are in equiva·
lent social and economic environments . But in fiscal families so oftencan'tlive side by side without fighting? - H. •
It turned out to he the 10
1971·72, A received an appropriation of $1,400 a student, Dear Helen:
and
after this start it was a
B was granted $1,200 a student and C was given $1,600.
I look my husband for better or for wOl'Se, but the worse is simple matter to finesse
Why the differences? A survey showed that graduating
against East's jack and
getting
the better It me.
'
students from District A last June had on the average
make
his doubled contract.
He thinks nothing of stealing -and is only repentant if he gets
achieved a Fair Level in reading, writing and arithmetic.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
District B graduates achieved only a Poor Level, whereas caught. He barely escaped prison by making ·restilutim for
District C graduates reached Excellent Level.
embezzling from his company. This isn't the first time. I try to
Thus in administering its funds for education, Center make things right by returning what he lifts, but I'm so em·
City took into account not only numbers of students but
their learning achievements. Qualitative as well as quan· barrassed because people know what he's like, and that he never
The bidding has been:
tells the truth.
titative standards were applied.
South
West
North
Eost
I have also caught him in four affairs. Each time he's ''so
A lot of people will immediately object that it doesn't
1 ..
make sense to penalize School ' Districts A and B and sorry." He'D never do it again."
Pass
1•
Pass 2N.T.
?
3 &lt;fo
Pass
make it even more difficult for them to hire good teachers
H it weren't foc the children, I'd leave bim, as we fight CCII· Pass
You,
South,
hold:
and initiate programs to raise their levels. By the same
token, more money for District C is no guarantee that stanUy. Don't suggest courmeling. He goes to church every .AKB1.A2 .KQ! .. KI43
SUnday so figures he's perfect. - NERVOUS WRECK
its Excellent Level will be raised even higher.
f What do you do now?
What needs to be done is to find out what District C Dear Wreck:
A-Bid tbret: spAdes. Your
is doing right and how A and B can start doing it, too.
Your lllsband's "w(l'se" may gel the better of the children, partner just might have four
And anyway, the national problem is that the social and too, if itisas had as you picture: Thiskindofeducalioncould head spocles.
economic environments of our best and worst schools them toward juvenile hall. I'd suggest you slop covering up for
TODAY'S QtmiTION
are NOT equivalent.
You
bid three spades and
But few will argue with Linowes' contention that too him, and start aiming toward an honest life Cll your own. -H.
your partner goes to Jour
often government plays the old nwnbers game. An ex· Dear Helen :
spades. What do you do now?
ample is welfare programs, where allocations are mostly
This is an open letter to business men and women who use the
Answer Tomonow
based on the number of people fed, ,clothed and housed. telephone a lot.
" A poverty program should seek to put 'itself out of
My boss is a busy man. I try to save him time.:when he's out, I
business," says Linowes, "to be left without clients .. .
Oldest DoD
Handing out food, clothing and shelter is important, but ask callers to leave their names and messages. Please, I'm not
prying
-I'd
just
like
to
have
the
proper
infarmation
on
his
desk.
"Letitia
Penn" is probably
only as emergency, temporary measures, not as an ob.
So next time I ask "What is this in reference to?" dm't say, the oldest doll in America. It ·
jective of the poverty program itself. The objective must
be to make people employable and employed."
"He'll know," oc act as if it's none of my business. - was brought from England
to Philadelphia by William
He recommends regular "socio·economic audits" to SECRETARY
Penn
in 1699. Made of wooll,
liberated
Paris
in
World
War
Pianisf..conductor Leonard
check whether the resources put into a program are being
NOTE FROM H: And if yru insist on giving ONLY your name it is dressed in a gown of
Bernstein was born Aug. 25, II.
directed towards the true objectives of the program.
and phone number, don't expect a return call-unless you're well velvet like a lady of the Eng:
In
1950
President
Harry
S
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
1918, I
lish court.
knowri by the boss. - H.
Trwnan seized the nation's
On this day in history :
In 17iB the city of New railroads to prevent a general • :-:·:······· . ·.·:·:-:-:-:-.·:-:-:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·.·=····-·.·.·.·.·.·.·.....·.·.·.·:-:-.-:····:···:·.···:·:·:-.·:··.··:···:············· ....·-:-:-:-:-:-: .·:·.-:·::·.·:···:·:·:·.···:-:-:-:···:···:···:····... •.·.·.· ......
strike.
Orelans was founded.
In 1921 the United States
A thought for today : Pres·
signed a peace treaty with
Germany, officially ending ident James Monroe said,
"National honor is national
World War I.
In 1944 American troops property of the highest value."

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

By United Press International
National League
East
W. L Pet. gb
'Pittsburgh
76 55 .580 ...
Chicago
69 58 .543 5
St. Louis
10 59 .543 5
New York
62 64 .492 11V2
Phl!adell&gt;hla 56 71 .441 18
Montreal
54 72 .429 19'h
West
W. L. Pet. GB
San Francisco 76 54 .585 ...
Los Angeles 68 61 .527 7'h
Atlanta
68 65 .511 9'h
Cincinnati
64 67 .489 12'12
Houston
63 66 .488 12 112
San Diego
48 82 .369 28
Tuesday's Results
Clncl 5 Chicago 4
S.D. 2 Phlla 0, night
Los Ang 6 Mil 4, night
Atlanta 15 Pitts 5, night
St. L 2 Houston 1, night
SF 3 N.Y . 2. night
Today•s Probable Pitc!lers
San Francisco IPerry 13-9) at
New York IKoosman 4·8) .
Cincinnati (Grimsley 8-S) at
Chicago (Hands 10-15).
Los Angeles (Singer 7-15) at
Montreal (Renko 12-12), night.
San Diego (Kirby 11·10) at
Philadelphia {Short 7-14). night.
Pittsburgh IKison 3-4) at
Atlanta (Jarvis 5-lll. night.
St. Louis {Carlton 16-1) at
Houston (Cook 0-2), night.
No qames

1
I was, "I should have doubled

1

•,

15 Lettermen Back on

6987~42 .

{HEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

lVoice along Broadway l
I

.K854
&lt;foAl 54
WIST (D)
6QJ6
.• AJ654
•10
&lt;foKQ107
SOlJTII

1--ftellallySenlinel,~y,0., ~~. 1971

••

Middleport, o.

. ''

OHIO Fout FES? IVAL

••

l·Uf' IAU.OON IW:t

••

TIACTOil PllJ.INC
DAVE MEIIIf'IFJ.J)
HORSE PW.Ni
MIDWAY
C1ICU5

HURRICANE
HELL
DRIVERS

.*!•

~
!'&gt;;

.~.
,•

•',,

Stpt I, 3, 5

......

,.··'
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State

.
Liv..toc:k Exhibition, H - Show,

Jr. Fair, Seato Foir Att st..
Adu!to .$1.50 Child..n unMr 1%, 2Sc: Child,....

WORLD'S LARGEST :

admitted fn:e until noon dai1y ncepl. S.t.lt Su ...

Midway rides up to

%off until noon dai!y euept S.t. Ac Sun.

OFF 1·71 AT lido AVE.. C"l..uM8US

�I

..._.,_.....,.._)IlK S It-J'WO), 0 .,:.;;.-:5,1971
•·......1
4-fte.....,.,........,
.
-

Ap-ple Gr1 've News
Events
·
'

and Patty Clark, Mr. and Mrs.
0
Harold Young, Cbester and
Susie; Mr. and Mr$. Dick
·
Young, Richard Lee llfld Mike, Thursday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Larry HargraVfll, Mr. and Mrs.'Gerald lfayman and Keith
Mary Jewell McDaniel, Sarah . schools held throughout the Mrs, Glenn Schneider,-Mr. ancl. were Mrs. Glorill Whltlach and
Grimm, Tommy Zirkle, Bobbie county during school vacation. Mrs. Densil Welsh and children, baby, Steve and Kenny ·young
Rogers, Angela Belcher, Jesus said. "A little child shall · Mr. and Mrs. John Bradham, of Mason, W. Va., and Mrs.
Charlie Sullivan and David lead them."
· Mrs. Ches~r 11-oush: :Miss Mindy Davis who recently
Ball.
RECEPTION
Becky Bums, Miss Kimberly returned from Hawaii.
·Other helpers throughout the
Fields, Miss Eileen Fields, Miss Mrs. Hazel Fox and Mrs.
week ._w_e__re . Mrs. Doroth}' _ A receptio~ was held at home Kathy Moore, Mr. Lester Tocie Haynuin called on Mrs.
Blessing and Miss Roxann of Mr. and Mrs. Alburtis Young, Ohlinger, Mr. Donnie _Woods, Carroll White Sunday afternoon
Wallis. The Bible School ended Clifton, honorillg Mr. and~·- Mr. and Mrs. C. A. PUllins,~- to see the new baby, Kevin Jay
Friday with a picnic.
Gary Clark, following their and Mrs. Ralph Ross, Miss White. ·
The pastor of the Sl. Mark's wedding. in the Clifton United Joyce Bra~ham, Mr. Ray Van Mr.andMrs. OonaldParsons
Lulh~ran Church· is Rev. · Methodist Church.
Meter.
and friends of Albany called on
George C: Wierick.
Registering for the recwtion
Mrs. Ralph Ross, Mrs; C. A. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Dolloheor
· This concludes the Bible were Mrs. Estel Clark, Randy Ppll.iDs and Mrs. Dick Young . Sunday af~oon. Mr. and Mrs.

llomemaker Club Holds Family Picnic
BY 'ED1'111 FOX
relatives and friends in Cliitoo. assisling.
The Primary class was Mary
BOMEMAXERS PICNIC
BmLE SCHOOL
nie Saasafras Hcimemakers Bible School was held at st. Ann Elias, Carl Grimm, Johnny
heid their family picitic a.t the Mark's Lutheran Church, Norville, Eddie Roush, Timmy

New Haven Park recently. Upper Flats, Letart, on August Lyons and Scott McDermitt
'l'hllse attending were Mr. and 9 through 13th. The theme for taught by Mrs, Janet Me·
Mrs. Darell Wallace, Jeanine, the week was "Talking With Dermitt with Emma Rogers,
assistant.
God."
Muon Area News . The Junior Class - Gregg Mrs. Catharine Newberry
Darrell and Kim, Mr. and Mrs. Biessing, Bobby Elias, Tommy assisted by Mrs. Clara Zirkle,
Marcus Weaver and Juanita, Lyons, Tim Newberry, Debbie Mrs. Elaine Ball ·and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Norville, Jeff Fields and Dannie Shirley Sullivan, taught the
'Newberry,Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Elias was taught by Mrs. Nursery and Kindergarten.
Newberry and Tim, Mr. and Kathryn Rood with 8arah Eljas They were Angie Blessing,
Mrs. Chesle~ Rose, Mrs.
........., ..........................................••m.ted
. .M
. th•
. ,th•e••rece
..
..tarvin ~. Beckie and Phil, ..............
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Me!lenniIt,
Teresa and -Brad, Randie and
Olarlene Lyons.
MR. AND MRS. ELMER
Newberry are visiling with
their son and daugbter-in-hlw,
Sgl and Mrs. Sleven Newberry
ofFt Walton Beach, Florida for
a week.
TilE MASON Homemakers
will journey to home of Mr. and
Mrs. Landon Smith, Harrisonville, f_Qr their annual
picnic Tuesday evening. Well,
girls, let's not jlanic and gel lost
on the way as we have in
previous years. Happy eating!
REG. 79'
TilE LESSON for September
for Mason County Homemakers
will be very llmely, "What's in
Reg . 79c value
boys asst. orion
Your Shopping Bag?" With the
ass I. colors backhigh cost of living today, I'm
to-school stretch
sure we're all interested in
p ·R
socks. Stop up
now,
9
to
11
.
'
saving as much as poSsible.
Every lesson leader should plan
to alieni\ thiS training session or
~OYS FALL
send a representative. This
SECOND FLOOR - READY TO WEAR
lesson will be taught August 23
Values To $4.99
at 10:30 am. in the Courthouse
Annex.
The annual Appalachian Art
and Crall Festival will be held
Values to 4.99 In this
in Beckley at the Raleigh
group of boys' backCounty Armory, August 2:&gt;-29.
to-school sweaters,
sll p-over sly les .
There will be an art and craft
Special priced. Asst.
hobby show, _ Folk Art Day,
colors.
Wide selection of new styles
which will include tatting,
and fall colors in Bobbie
quilling, cui work, crewel
embroidery, hairpin lace, rug
Brooks, Russ Togs and Aileen
hooking and many other insportswear. Slacks, jamaica
teresling old arts.
shorts, knit tops, blouses.
Announcing, a weekly TV
Smart styles.
program for Senior Citizens
every Monday night from 7:30-8
PARADE OFFALL V.nLt~nJ
p.m. on WMWL-TV, Channel33.
The show features news, health,
Boys' while gym shorts.
food, sharing, recreation, in·
Famous Fruit-of-loom
PAIR
spiralion, gardening., nature
brand. Sizes 22 to «and fun. The program is

~!!~~

~

~pti~·o~n-

of

· ·

.
Letart Fallll ipellt T M1
evening witb lbe J)iMM..
l(r•
and Mrs. Bill Fn ~
'lbursdaJ eoEIIiiC g!Bia.
· Mrs. lterbert Rolllh aad
Roger and ~- Iva C)T nre
shopping m Parkersbars
Satiny.
Lewis Oars,.. • palimt at

..L

iloiZI!I' lledleal Oeuta- Sllldl:r
lhru Wedlluday for oltoervatlon.
JeffDonobew,SIIllofllr.and

Mrs. liD)' Dlmobo:;w, illlllllalled
in San Agllelo, 1'aas, wllere be
is enrolled in the SdMM!I ill

Radio~-~=-~!

I - .,........,,
a-v

u

I II"
I

Pro ·Scouter Career Ended
&gt;

M-G-M Notes :

••era!

59

AWE

!Jiiversi~(

tJF

irainia

Corqsnission ,qn
A8ili&amp; and WMWL Educational

''f\1. -

...

. .

~

Anna Huffman is home for a

:
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•
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I
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'

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:
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~.·
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.

few days. Mrs. Huffman visits
with each of her children during
the summer months. Her niece,
Ada Vickers, New Haven, is
with her for awhile.
DVRST REUNION
The Durst clan gathered at
the Krodel Park bOating area,
pt, Pleasant, for their family
reunion. Good food and
fellowship was the order of the
day. 1belM! family reunions are
a joy to our hearts -everyone a
year older but oh! so happy to
see each other and spend a few
happy hours together. Each
year we wonder who will he
missing - thiS year it was Bob
Lee- so we write thiS article in
his memory. We always
depended on Bob for so many
thing;_ He was president
several times.
The youngest present was
John Joseph Oliver, Masseyville, 0 . ; oldest, Mae·
Thomas; 'traveled the farthest,
Rowdy
Oliver
family,
Masseyville, Ohio; most
children present, Rowdy Oliver,
Jr.'s family; door prize, Gail
Durst.
· Those enjoying the day, the
bubble gum chewing and the
rolling pin throwing contest, the
watermelon lime and various
other activities were Mr. and
Mrs. Dwight Baker, Charles
and Kenny, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Durst, Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Fox, Clifton; Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Durst and Gail, Holly, and
Beth Stutler, Mae Thomas,
Lethia Bryan , Elsie Durst,
Peter Durst, Ravenswood;
Edith Click, Clarice E. Durst,
Angie Durst, Eydie Durst,
Donald Click, MI. Alto; Roy
Ankrum, Evans; Mrs. Robert
Lee, Mala and Kyla; Jack Durst
and Susan; Mrs. Barto Durst,
Jr., Sherry and Dean, Mr. and
Mrs . Barto Durst, Sr. and Chris
Swann ; Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Durst; Sharon Lynn Swann,
Keith Durst, Mr. and Mrs.
Rowdy Oliver, Sr., Mr. and Mrs.
Rowdy Oliver, Jr . of
Masseyville, 0 .; Patricia
Oliver, Shirley Oliver, Bobby
Oliver, Michael oliver, Joey
Oliver, Everett Swarlz, Homer
Swartz, Earl Durst, Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Ridenhour and

Diana Schwartz.
JEFF AND CINDY Williams
'
'
who enjoyed their summer
vaca.Uon in Cliftoo with their
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Uoyd Williams have returned
10 their h11111e in Indian Head,
·· ' Ky. Their parents, Mr. and Mrs..
Thomas WiUiams, _came for
them and spenl• rew days with -

REG: '2.49
. BOYS' 13% WESTERN

JEANS.
Boys Reg. 2.49 western cut

13'1!. oz. Jeans. Sizes 6 to 16.
Sanforized, well made.

'

99

,,

.,

,.

~-·

.

,. I'"

.REG. 7f AND 89'

·36 INOIES WIDE

.SPORT
FABRICS

33!~

Reg. 79c value of big 22x« size
bath towels, in plaids, plain
and floral patterns.

VAlUES

eSPORT TOPS
EASY
.eSPORT SLACKS LAY-AWAY
.eCOORDINATES · PlAN
eJAMAICA SHORTS
eBLOUSES

FOR ANY AGE
64 COUNT

·64~BX.

lV• OZ. BOTTLE!
REG. 59c

57!ach

'1.79

RUG RIOT
VISCOSE LOOP
DECORATOR ASST.

AREA
RUGS

~
EA.

500-COliNT 5 HOLE

NOTEBOOK
- PAPER
Reg. 9Bc Value

USE
OUR
EASY
LAY-AWAY
PLAN

'1

EAD~

00

Mfg. close-outs, of Viscose
Rayon loop or shag rugs.
Values to 89c.

74

BED PILLOWS
Non-Allergenic
Big Size
Reg . $1.59
Printed Cover

$1~cb
-FAMOUS 36 INDI -

· HOPE MUSLIN
Famous Snowy while 36 inch hope
muslin. Reg. 3Sc yard.

REG. 19c VALUE

BIC
BALL POINT PEN
· Writes First Everytime
Asst. Colors
Reg. 19c Value

94

PKG. OF 12

WOOD PENCILS

25C

$

shirts.

XL

10

BRIEFS

LADIES S-6-7

Asst. Styles

FA"CY UNDIES

.
3
3
-

#

,.

~e.~r:. 9ftO:

39c and ~9c
fancy
undies.
Asst. . colors.
Sizes 5·6-7.

•

29t.

.

OTHERS AT

1

FOR
YOUR
BOYS

NOW!

--~14~5~~~. .~~. .~==:::::::;:::::::

FABRIC CASUAL SUMMERETTES
long-wearing,

washable footwear by Ball Band.
Flat and wedge heel styles In

DIOOSE FROM MANY mLES

'

PAIR

MUSLIN SHEETS
·

Five count while cotton
muslin sheets by
Pepperell. They last
lonQer.

721108 • 81199
lWIN FITTED

$ '79"

AND

99

EACH

REG. SJ.l9
LADIES • OIILDREN

SUMMER
SANDALS

$1!

RNE PEPPEREU.

MUSLIN SHEETS
MATatiNG MUSLIN

68~AIR

lh

REGUlAR

PRICE

REG. '1.99 VAlUE
lADIES' FANCY

SHOP STIFFLER
SHOE. DEPT.

)

Boys or girls styles.

Select them from our
array of oxfords or

COITON SLIPS

slipons. Come see-

you'll buy!

Girls Budget Priced permanent

$ 99

press cotton slips. Sizes 4 to 14.

Asst. st,yles. Stop up now lor
back-to-school.

'1"

PAIR
TO

llh' by llW SIZE REG. '14.99
SERGED ALL 4 SIDES

BOYS'
FRUIT OF LOOM
.

SAVE
BIG I

$}QOO

.

WHITE

:~~·

BRIEFS

'1 ~K!

WHITE
PKG.
OF 3

T-5HIRTS

•-1 ~K!

69c Each

BOYS' FAMOUS HANES
BRIEFS
T-SHIRTS

ACK·JO-ScHoa
DRESSES·SHE WILL
LIKE/

PKG. of 3

PIG. OF3

BEDROOM SLIPPERS
Reg. 1.99 lodles'
fancy bedroom
slippers. Sizes5 to 10,
asst. .colors.

See

$ 59
PR.

· these In our Shoe
Dept.

MEN'S
CASUALORRARES
PERMANENT
- PRESS
-

SPORT PANTS
FAMOUS MAVERICK
Wide asst. of men's flare and '
casual slacks: Asst. stripes and
fancy patterns and plain colors,
all budget priced. Sizes 29 to 40.
See these for top value.

.

99t
AND

PAIR

FAMOUS BRANDS IN
STIFFLER'S SHOE DEPT.

MEN'S DRESS ·SHOES

(MOM 100)

POMEROY, OHIO

summer patterns and colors.
Save during our July Clearance.

PAIR OUTsiZE
FAMOUS BRANDS SPRING AND SUMMER

cLosEoUT GROUP!

Visit us now!

a.£ARANCE! FAMOUS BAll BAND

styles. BONE-WHITE AND
· FASHION COLORS

EACH

are .-..lly knocllouls.
PerlftMint press cot·
tons, bonded orlolls, etc.

AND

$399PAIR .

$ 00

Save one-half now on your summer
footwear wardrobe - buy two pairs for
the price·of one during this big August
Footwear Clearance. Big choice of

'2 4 7

of sc-I dresses llwll

$299

Comfortable,

IN MEDIUM AND DRESS HEELS

Ctearanceot Men's Top Brand Name Sport Shirts from
our better summer lines. Choose from tailored styles In
button-down and regular collars. Fancy k11its in
assorted colors and patterns. Reg. values to SJ.99 each.

Reg. 1~.99 value, 8'h'xlllll' size. 90 per
cent Viscose rayon, 10 per cent nylon.
Serged all 4 sides. No pad needed.
'

Ieg-are basic equipment for your boys.
He'll need lots of them, so shop Stiffler's
Store. You' ll save!

LOUNGE
PIU.OW

FOOTWEAR
DRESS AND CASUAL STYLES

PERMANENT PRESS FABRICS
PLAIN COLORS, PRINlS, plaids

ROOM SIZE RUGS

re::.'s1e0n"t!:iv~advs•:.H:;n~

'

$299

*139
•

SUMMER SHIRTS

TO

r:V156.

Bonded acrylic plaids with the
look of modern today. Sizes 3

BEST NEW FALL SHADES

~========---.

49C

........

MliOS·MASOII ARU
'
CtiESTI?R L. TAIIIIINILL',
R081RT NO.I'I,I(H,
Cily ldil6~
.
PubliShed dOll~ OJCOpl
Saturday by Tho o io volley j
Publishing· «;ompony , Jll
Court St., Pomeroy. Ohio.
•ll69. Business Office Phone
Ed itori~t Phone "2Second closs postooo poid ot
, Pof11eroy, Ohio.
. .

" Kissbtg Disease"
Infectious mononucleosis, By MotOr Route where carrier
also known as the kissing dis- •erv lco not available : One
month $1.1l . By mall In Ohio
ease, occurs most often in land w . Ve ., one y:eer $o14·.oo. ·
persons between 10 and 35 SIK months $1 .2$ . Three
years of age, according to ;rf~'~~c~~~::·s~~:::rir~':S.~
Encyclopaedia Britannica.
sen!lnet.
"

GIRLS'
PANTS
to 1-4.

BROADCLOTH SHORTS PKG. OF 3 '2.95 -

GIRlS PERM. PRESS
SIZES 4 to 14

D~~~~:~lfJ',!'•

i

'

Gallagher, Inc,,_12 Eocft •2nd
·St.. Now York City, NOW York.
Subscr•Pf•on rates.: De li vered by tarrier whoro
available lO cents per week ;

NEWEST FAll PATTERNS!

PETITE - AVERAGE - TALL SIZES

PKG.

Short SleM StJies
· fer Sporls
'

r II

SAVE AT STIFFLER'S

EA.

PANTY HOSE

•265

·2~!.

$2.~

SEAMLESS STRETCH

PKG. OF 3

PKG. of 3

BX.

REG. 3Sc VALUE
145 SHEET

TABLET

.

FAMOUS MAY QUEEN

l·SHIRTS

A"bell-rining colloclion

GOLDEN ROD

$599

SJ

IIIIJ ....,

PEPPEREll BRAND "'tilE

'MEN'S FRUIT OF LOOM
,UNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEED

Shop At Stiffler's

SHOP
STIFFL£R'S
FIRST

No-iron stripes, fancy

plaids and plain colors. S-M-L-

LAY-AWAY PLAN

-oa DREss WEAR-

REG. 354 YARD

4
.. ""·•

500 Count
.
'

Campus brand long sleeve sport

a.£ARANCE OF MEN'S

SHREDDED FOAM

33

Launders Out
In Soap and Water!
SHOP
AT STIFFLER'S

New arrivals men 's famous

tumlfler wardrobe. Buy
twO pair lor the pric. of

REG. 1.59 VALUE

ELMER'S GLUE

No.-2
REG. 49c
VALUE

iJres&amp; ai.d c.. uol styles In
modlum and dress heels.
Savi "h no* on your·

BATH TOWELS

PR.

• misses . children.

REG. SJ..59
AMERICAN

FOOTWEA

~

ft.,

Dress-up jeans-In flare leg or straight

Buy now lor back-to-school ladies

SAVE

:'

PERMANENT PRESS! !

Reg. 1.59 value American made
molded sole, white, blue. red .

REG. 79' VALUE
22 X 44 SIZE

USE OUR

CRAYOLA CRAYONS

· Mi~~·r,
Ziba Mi"""' Sylv~a
ww
H
Midkiff
' E 1
· ..n ..: u
omer
• ve yn Miww•
to Bert Romine, EUa May
Romine, Parcels, Bedford.
Ella May Romine, Bert
Romine, Homer Midkiff,
Evelyn Midltiff to Ziba Midkiff,
Sylvia Midkiff Cecil Mi-'~u
•
WWJ ,
Emi'lia Midkiff Parcels
Bedford
'
'
·
Alpha A. Smith Lucille Smith
1o Reed Crary 'u · Cr
' nme ary,
Lot No. 51, McDole-Torrence
Add., Reedsville.
Paul H. Montgomery, Daisy

SNEAKERS $ 00

WINDOW SHADES
$ 00,

Famous Brands.
styles.

'

REG. 98' 64 COUNT

.

r
Trans.ers
-"-'",

lADIES • MISSES - DIILDREN
MOlDED SOLE FABRIC SPORT

VYNOta 36"x6'

.FROM

sponsored by West V~~~';~.

Property

Evelyn
Montgomery
to
Franklin Real Estate, Parcels,
Salem.
·
Dwight E. Spencer, Mlu'y
Ella .Spencer to Russell
.
Spencer, Juanita L. Spencer,
29.n"' ACfeS, Chester. '
R. L. Soulsby, Blanche
SouJSbyGiennaSoulsbytoOhio
' .
Power Co., Ease., Sulton.
Elmer L. Proffitt, Edra
Proffill to Elmer J . Proffitt,
Mary B Proffitt 8 Acres
Letart. ·
'
'

•
SIZES 3 to 18

Save Now/

eBOBBIE BROOKS
eRUSS TOGS
eAILEEN

$

Meigs

t

SPORTSWEAR

SWEATERS

" I'm certain the . new
executive will receive the ~
fine cooperation !hat l did
during my four years," HaD
said. "l leave the wodt Mth
nothing but good feeling about
the sincerity of the adult
scouters. here in wan ling to
advance the Boy Seoul
movement as a vebicle to help
boys," Hall said,
•
He mates a standing offer to
.help out when needl!d as a
volunteer.
The Halls have two children,
Ward, recovering satisfactorily
from a fractured jaw suffered
last week, and Eric, 7.

EXPWRING the Tri-State churches frO!D purely religious
and spiritual values Ill political
Area:
America's youth - what's involvement.
troubling some of them? The B.S.A,, through EIThey're uncertain, in~cure , p1oring, for botit young men and
rebellious. What does it mean women, 14-21 years of ·age,
for socie\Y? FO.. Exploring! provides an opportunity for
What can we as individuals do teenagers to develop . an acceptable sense of values.
about it?
Tom Grubb of the area
The Tri-State Council says
professional
siaff, will _he
these are just some of the
concerns provoked in in· working Mth the council EIterviews Mth young people all ploring Division which will
ovor the country: permissive encompass all districts. The
parents, social, moral and intent is lo provide Eiploring
political pollution, raw sex in opportunities to an increased
movies, IJ)agazines and best- number of youth.
sellers, growing market of
pornographic materials, drug
abuse, Vietnam, Biafra, in- Sallie Chapman Law is
nuence of Dower children, the known as the "mother of the
changing emphasis of some Confederacy_"

IE 5...

NEW FALL-SMART

C

.

_flladds Hall, 3e Garfield St. partllme while · Chadds· conc;.mpoJIII, Iince 1987 the M-G-Jri linued as a professiooal scouter,
Scopt EzecuUve, bas resigned but Chadds determined to
resignlhe M-G-M post when the
opportunity with Greater Ohio
, .to tum to a profession be bas opened. They are presenUy
been preparing himself for · s!ressi"g a unique type of 20years.
year pay Ufe policy. "Working
A native of Barnesville, with the adult scouters in
Chadds and wife Evelyn don't Meigs..Gallia-Mason bas been a
apect to leave Gallipolis. "We rewarding expercerice," Hall
ail here," said Hall Mondjy. said.- " I've enjoyed every
Chadds and Evelyn are busy minute of it."
as agen!l! of the Greater Ohio· Hall said Tri-State Area
· ,~ance Co: Both are licensed Council. Executive Bryon
-to · sell ,insurance. They bad McNeeley is doing the M-G-M
planned to go into insurance work until a replacement is
employed.

FAMOUS BRANDS

ORLON SOCKS

·

I ....... Oj,O.,Aug111t25,1171

REG. •1.99 VAWE '

99
Each
TO 15.94

Styles lor the fashion lllinded, the price
comparers, the comfort seekers. Bucllles,
•IIJ&gt;OIIS. o&gt;&lt;forcts. boots etc. Size 611&gt; to 11 .

99

SIZES5to 10
LADIES SPORT

CASUAL OXFORDS
Plaids
Whites

Asst. Colors

S} 59 PAIR
•

TO

$

�I

..._.,_.....,.._)IlK S It-J'WO), 0 .,:.;;.-:5,1971
•·......1
4-fte.....,.,........,
.
-

Ap-ple Gr1 've News
Events
·
'

and Patty Clark, Mr. and Mrs.
0
Harold Young, Cbester and
Susie; Mr. and Mr$. Dick
·
Young, Richard Lee llfld Mike, Thursday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Larry HargraVfll, Mr. and Mrs.'Gerald lfayman and Keith
Mary Jewell McDaniel, Sarah . schools held throughout the Mrs, Glenn Schneider,-Mr. ancl. were Mrs. Glorill Whltlach and
Grimm, Tommy Zirkle, Bobbie county during school vacation. Mrs. Densil Welsh and children, baby, Steve and Kenny ·young
Rogers, Angela Belcher, Jesus said. "A little child shall · Mr. and Mrs. John Bradham, of Mason, W. Va., and Mrs.
Charlie Sullivan and David lead them."
· Mrs. Ches~r 11-oush: :Miss Mindy Davis who recently
Ball.
RECEPTION
Becky Bums, Miss Kimberly returned from Hawaii.
·Other helpers throughout the
Fields, Miss Eileen Fields, Miss Mrs. Hazel Fox and Mrs.
week ._w_e__re . Mrs. Doroth}' _ A receptio~ was held at home Kathy Moore, Mr. Lester Tocie Haynuin called on Mrs.
Blessing and Miss Roxann of Mr. and Mrs. Alburtis Young, Ohlinger, Mr. Donnie _Woods, Carroll White Sunday afternoon
Wallis. The Bible School ended Clifton, honorillg Mr. and~·- Mr. and Mrs. C. A. PUllins,~- to see the new baby, Kevin Jay
Friday with a picnic.
Gary Clark, following their and Mrs. Ralph Ross, Miss White. ·
The pastor of the Sl. Mark's wedding. in the Clifton United Joyce Bra~ham, Mr. Ray Van Mr.andMrs. OonaldParsons
Lulh~ran Church· is Rev. · Methodist Church.
Meter.
and friends of Albany called on
George C: Wierick.
Registering for the recwtion
Mrs. Ralph Ross, Mrs; C. A. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Dolloheor
· This concludes the Bible were Mrs. Estel Clark, Randy Ppll.iDs and Mrs. Dick Young . Sunday af~oon. Mr. and Mrs.

llomemaker Club Holds Family Picnic
BY 'ED1'111 FOX
relatives and friends in Cliitoo. assisling.
The Primary class was Mary
BOMEMAXERS PICNIC
BmLE SCHOOL
nie Saasafras Hcimemakers Bible School was held at st. Ann Elias, Carl Grimm, Johnny
heid their family picitic a.t the Mark's Lutheran Church, Norville, Eddie Roush, Timmy

New Haven Park recently. Upper Flats, Letart, on August Lyons and Scott McDermitt
'l'hllse attending were Mr. and 9 through 13th. The theme for taught by Mrs, Janet Me·
Mrs. Darell Wallace, Jeanine, the week was "Talking With Dermitt with Emma Rogers,
assistant.
God."
Muon Area News . The Junior Class - Gregg Mrs. Catharine Newberry
Darrell and Kim, Mr. and Mrs. Biessing, Bobby Elias, Tommy assisted by Mrs. Clara Zirkle,
Marcus Weaver and Juanita, Lyons, Tim Newberry, Debbie Mrs. Elaine Ball ·and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Norville, Jeff Fields and Dannie Shirley Sullivan, taught the
'Newberry,Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Elias was taught by Mrs. Nursery and Kindergarten.
Newberry and Tim, Mr. and Kathryn Rood with 8arah Eljas They were Angie Blessing,
Mrs. Chesle~ Rose, Mrs.
........., ..........................................••m.ted
. .M
. th•
. ,th•e••rece
..
..tarvin ~. Beckie and Phil, ..............
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Me!lenniIt,
Teresa and -Brad, Randie and
Olarlene Lyons.
MR. AND MRS. ELMER
Newberry are visiling with
their son and daugbter-in-hlw,
Sgl and Mrs. Sleven Newberry
ofFt Walton Beach, Florida for
a week.
TilE MASON Homemakers
will journey to home of Mr. and
Mrs. Landon Smith, Harrisonville, f_Qr their annual
picnic Tuesday evening. Well,
girls, let's not jlanic and gel lost
on the way as we have in
previous years. Happy eating!
REG. 79'
TilE LESSON for September
for Mason County Homemakers
will be very llmely, "What's in
Reg . 79c value
boys asst. orion
Your Shopping Bag?" With the
ass I. colors backhigh cost of living today, I'm
to-school stretch
sure we're all interested in
p ·R
socks. Stop up
now,
9
to
11
.
'
saving as much as poSsible.
Every lesson leader should plan
to alieni\ thiS training session or
~OYS FALL
send a representative. This
SECOND FLOOR - READY TO WEAR
lesson will be taught August 23
Values To $4.99
at 10:30 am. in the Courthouse
Annex.
The annual Appalachian Art
and Crall Festival will be held
Values to 4.99 In this
in Beckley at the Raleigh
group of boys' backCounty Armory, August 2:&gt;-29.
to-school sweaters,
sll p-over sly les .
There will be an art and craft
Special priced. Asst.
hobby show, _ Folk Art Day,
colors.
Wide selection of new styles
which will include tatting,
and fall colors in Bobbie
quilling, cui work, crewel
embroidery, hairpin lace, rug
Brooks, Russ Togs and Aileen
hooking and many other insportswear. Slacks, jamaica
teresling old arts.
shorts, knit tops, blouses.
Announcing, a weekly TV
Smart styles.
program for Senior Citizens
every Monday night from 7:30-8
PARADE OFFALL V.nLt~nJ
p.m. on WMWL-TV, Channel33.
The show features news, health,
Boys' while gym shorts.
food, sharing, recreation, in·
Famous Fruit-of-loom
PAIR
spiralion, gardening., nature
brand. Sizes 22 to «and fun. The program is

~!!~~

~

~pti~·o~n-

of

· ·

.
Letart Fallll ipellt T M1
evening witb lbe J)iMM..
l(r•
and Mrs. Bill Fn ~
'lbursdaJ eoEIIiiC g!Bia.
· Mrs. lterbert Rolllh aad
Roger and ~- Iva C)T nre
shopping m Parkersbars
Satiny.
Lewis Oars,.. • palimt at

..L

iloiZI!I' lledleal Oeuta- Sllldl:r
lhru Wedlluday for oltoervatlon.
JeffDonobew,SIIllofllr.and

Mrs. liD)' Dlmobo:;w, illlllllalled
in San Agllelo, 1'aas, wllere be
is enrolled in the SdMM!I ill

Radio~-~=-~!

I - .,........,,
a-v

u

I II"
I

Pro ·Scouter Career Ended
&gt;

M-G-M Notes :

••era!

59

AWE

!Jiiversi~(

tJF

irainia

Corqsnission ,qn
A8ili&amp; and WMWL Educational

''f\1. -

...

. .

~

Anna Huffman is home for a

:
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•
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'

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!
:
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r

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.

few days. Mrs. Huffman visits
with each of her children during
the summer months. Her niece,
Ada Vickers, New Haven, is
with her for awhile.
DVRST REUNION
The Durst clan gathered at
the Krodel Park bOating area,
pt, Pleasant, for their family
reunion. Good food and
fellowship was the order of the
day. 1belM! family reunions are
a joy to our hearts -everyone a
year older but oh! so happy to
see each other and spend a few
happy hours together. Each
year we wonder who will he
missing - thiS year it was Bob
Lee- so we write thiS article in
his memory. We always
depended on Bob for so many
thing;_ He was president
several times.
The youngest present was
John Joseph Oliver, Masseyville, 0 . ; oldest, Mae·
Thomas; 'traveled the farthest,
Rowdy
Oliver
family,
Masseyville, Ohio; most
children present, Rowdy Oliver,
Jr.'s family; door prize, Gail
Durst.
· Those enjoying the day, the
bubble gum chewing and the
rolling pin throwing contest, the
watermelon lime and various
other activities were Mr. and
Mrs. Dwight Baker, Charles
and Kenny, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Durst, Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Fox, Clifton; Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Durst and Gail, Holly, and
Beth Stutler, Mae Thomas,
Lethia Bryan , Elsie Durst,
Peter Durst, Ravenswood;
Edith Click, Clarice E. Durst,
Angie Durst, Eydie Durst,
Donald Click, MI. Alto; Roy
Ankrum, Evans; Mrs. Robert
Lee, Mala and Kyla; Jack Durst
and Susan; Mrs. Barto Durst,
Jr., Sherry and Dean, Mr. and
Mrs . Barto Durst, Sr. and Chris
Swann ; Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Durst; Sharon Lynn Swann,
Keith Durst, Mr. and Mrs.
Rowdy Oliver, Sr., Mr. and Mrs.
Rowdy Oliver, Jr . of
Masseyville, 0 .; Patricia
Oliver, Shirley Oliver, Bobby
Oliver, Michael oliver, Joey
Oliver, Everett Swarlz, Homer
Swartz, Earl Durst, Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Ridenhour and

Diana Schwartz.
JEFF AND CINDY Williams
'
'
who enjoyed their summer
vaca.Uon in Cliftoo with their
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Uoyd Williams have returned
10 their h11111e in Indian Head,
·· ' Ky. Their parents, Mr. and Mrs..
Thomas WiUiams, _came for
them and spenl• rew days with -

REG: '2.49
. BOYS' 13% WESTERN

JEANS.
Boys Reg. 2.49 western cut

13'1!. oz. Jeans. Sizes 6 to 16.
Sanforized, well made.

'

99

,,

.,

,.

~-·

.

,. I'"

.REG. 7f AND 89'

·36 INOIES WIDE

.SPORT
FABRICS

33!~

Reg. 79c value of big 22x« size
bath towels, in plaids, plain
and floral patterns.

VAlUES

eSPORT TOPS
EASY
.eSPORT SLACKS LAY-AWAY
.eCOORDINATES · PlAN
eJAMAICA SHORTS
eBLOUSES

FOR ANY AGE
64 COUNT

·64~BX.

lV• OZ. BOTTLE!
REG. 59c

57!ach

'1.79

RUG RIOT
VISCOSE LOOP
DECORATOR ASST.

AREA
RUGS

~
EA.

500-COliNT 5 HOLE

NOTEBOOK
- PAPER
Reg. 9Bc Value

USE
OUR
EASY
LAY-AWAY
PLAN

'1

EAD~

00

Mfg. close-outs, of Viscose
Rayon loop or shag rugs.
Values to 89c.

74

BED PILLOWS
Non-Allergenic
Big Size
Reg . $1.59
Printed Cover

$1~cb
-FAMOUS 36 INDI -

· HOPE MUSLIN
Famous Snowy while 36 inch hope
muslin. Reg. 3Sc yard.

REG. 19c VALUE

BIC
BALL POINT PEN
· Writes First Everytime
Asst. Colors
Reg. 19c Value

94

PKG. OF 12

WOOD PENCILS

25C

$

shirts.

XL

10

BRIEFS

LADIES S-6-7

Asst. Styles

FA"CY UNDIES

.
3
3
-

#

,.

~e.~r:. 9ftO:

39c and ~9c
fancy
undies.
Asst. . colors.
Sizes 5·6-7.

•

29t.

.

OTHERS AT

1

FOR
YOUR
BOYS

NOW!

--~14~5~~~. .~~. .~==:::::::;:::::::

FABRIC CASUAL SUMMERETTES
long-wearing,

washable footwear by Ball Band.
Flat and wedge heel styles In

DIOOSE FROM MANY mLES

'

PAIR

MUSLIN SHEETS
·

Five count while cotton
muslin sheets by
Pepperell. They last
lonQer.

721108 • 81199
lWIN FITTED

$ '79"

AND

99

EACH

REG. SJ.l9
LADIES • OIILDREN

SUMMER
SANDALS

$1!

RNE PEPPEREU.

MUSLIN SHEETS
MATatiNG MUSLIN

68~AIR

lh

REGUlAR

PRICE

REG. '1.99 VAlUE
lADIES' FANCY

SHOP STIFFLER
SHOE. DEPT.

)

Boys or girls styles.

Select them from our
array of oxfords or

COITON SLIPS

slipons. Come see-

you'll buy!

Girls Budget Priced permanent

$ 99

press cotton slips. Sizes 4 to 14.

Asst. st,yles. Stop up now lor
back-to-school.

'1"

PAIR
TO

llh' by llW SIZE REG. '14.99
SERGED ALL 4 SIDES

BOYS'
FRUIT OF LOOM
.

SAVE
BIG I

$}QOO

.

WHITE

:~~·

BRIEFS

'1 ~K!

WHITE
PKG.
OF 3

T-5HIRTS

•-1 ~K!

69c Each

BOYS' FAMOUS HANES
BRIEFS
T-SHIRTS

ACK·JO-ScHoa
DRESSES·SHE WILL
LIKE/

PKG. of 3

PIG. OF3

BEDROOM SLIPPERS
Reg. 1.99 lodles'
fancy bedroom
slippers. Sizes5 to 10,
asst. .colors.

See

$ 59
PR.

· these In our Shoe
Dept.

MEN'S
CASUALORRARES
PERMANENT
- PRESS
-

SPORT PANTS
FAMOUS MAVERICK
Wide asst. of men's flare and '
casual slacks: Asst. stripes and
fancy patterns and plain colors,
all budget priced. Sizes 29 to 40.
See these for top value.

.

99t
AND

PAIR

FAMOUS BRANDS IN
STIFFLER'S SHOE DEPT.

MEN'S DRESS ·SHOES

(MOM 100)

POMEROY, OHIO

summer patterns and colors.
Save during our July Clearance.

PAIR OUTsiZE
FAMOUS BRANDS SPRING AND SUMMER

cLosEoUT GROUP!

Visit us now!

a.£ARANCE! FAMOUS BAll BAND

styles. BONE-WHITE AND
· FASHION COLORS

EACH

are .-..lly knocllouls.
PerlftMint press cot·
tons, bonded orlolls, etc.

AND

$399PAIR .

$ 00

Save one-half now on your summer
footwear wardrobe - buy two pairs for
the price·of one during this big August
Footwear Clearance. Big choice of

'2 4 7

of sc-I dresses llwll

$299

Comfortable,

IN MEDIUM AND DRESS HEELS

Ctearanceot Men's Top Brand Name Sport Shirts from
our better summer lines. Choose from tailored styles In
button-down and regular collars. Fancy k11its in
assorted colors and patterns. Reg. values to SJ.99 each.

Reg. 1~.99 value, 8'h'xlllll' size. 90 per
cent Viscose rayon, 10 per cent nylon.
Serged all 4 sides. No pad needed.
'

Ieg-are basic equipment for your boys.
He'll need lots of them, so shop Stiffler's
Store. You' ll save!

LOUNGE
PIU.OW

FOOTWEAR
DRESS AND CASUAL STYLES

PERMANENT PRESS FABRICS
PLAIN COLORS, PRINlS, plaids

ROOM SIZE RUGS

re::.'s1e0n"t!:iv~advs•:.H:;n~

'

$299

*139
•

SUMMER SHIRTS

TO

r:V156.

Bonded acrylic plaids with the
look of modern today. Sizes 3

BEST NEW FALL SHADES

~========---.

49C

........

MliOS·MASOII ARU
'
CtiESTI?R L. TAIIIIINILL',
R081RT NO.I'I,I(H,
Cily ldil6~
.
PubliShed dOll~ OJCOpl
Saturday by Tho o io volley j
Publishing· «;ompony , Jll
Court St., Pomeroy. Ohio.
•ll69. Business Office Phone
Ed itori~t Phone "2Second closs postooo poid ot
, Pof11eroy, Ohio.
. .

" Kissbtg Disease"
Infectious mononucleosis, By MotOr Route where carrier
also known as the kissing dis- •erv lco not available : One
month $1.1l . By mall In Ohio
ease, occurs most often in land w . Ve ., one y:eer $o14·.oo. ·
persons between 10 and 35 SIK months $1 .2$ . Three
years of age, according to ;rf~'~~c~~~::·s~~:::rir~':S.~
Encyclopaedia Britannica.
sen!lnet.
"

GIRLS'
PANTS
to 1-4.

BROADCLOTH SHORTS PKG. OF 3 '2.95 -

GIRlS PERM. PRESS
SIZES 4 to 14

D~~~~:~lfJ',!'•

i

'

Gallagher, Inc,,_12 Eocft •2nd
·St.. Now York City, NOW York.
Subscr•Pf•on rates.: De li vered by tarrier whoro
available lO cents per week ;

NEWEST FAll PATTERNS!

PETITE - AVERAGE - TALL SIZES

PKG.

Short SleM StJies
· fer Sporls
'

r II

SAVE AT STIFFLER'S

EA.

PANTY HOSE

•265

·2~!.

$2.~

SEAMLESS STRETCH

PKG. OF 3

PKG. of 3

BX.

REG. 3Sc VALUE
145 SHEET

TABLET

.

FAMOUS MAY QUEEN

l·SHIRTS

A"bell-rining colloclion

GOLDEN ROD

$599

SJ

IIIIJ ....,

PEPPEREll BRAND "'tilE

'MEN'S FRUIT OF LOOM
,UNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEED

Shop At Stiffler's

SHOP
STIFFL£R'S
FIRST

No-iron stripes, fancy

plaids and plain colors. S-M-L-

LAY-AWAY PLAN

-oa DREss WEAR-

REG. 354 YARD

4
.. ""·•

500 Count
.
'

Campus brand long sleeve sport

a.£ARANCE OF MEN'S

SHREDDED FOAM

33

Launders Out
In Soap and Water!
SHOP
AT STIFFLER'S

New arrivals men 's famous

tumlfler wardrobe. Buy
twO pair lor the pric. of

REG. 1.59 VALUE

ELMER'S GLUE

No.-2
REG. 49c
VALUE

iJres&amp; ai.d c.. uol styles In
modlum and dress heels.
Savi "h no* on your·

BATH TOWELS

PR.

• misses . children.

REG. SJ..59
AMERICAN

FOOTWEA

~

ft.,

Dress-up jeans-In flare leg or straight

Buy now lor back-to-school ladies

SAVE

:'

PERMANENT PRESS! !

Reg. 1.59 value American made
molded sole, white, blue. red .

REG. 79' VALUE
22 X 44 SIZE

USE OUR

CRAYOLA CRAYONS

· Mi~~·r,
Ziba Mi"""' Sylv~a
ww
H
Midkiff
' E 1
· ..n ..: u
omer
• ve yn Miww•
to Bert Romine, EUa May
Romine, Parcels, Bedford.
Ella May Romine, Bert
Romine, Homer Midkiff,
Evelyn Midltiff to Ziba Midkiff,
Sylvia Midkiff Cecil Mi-'~u
•
WWJ ,
Emi'lia Midkiff Parcels
Bedford
'
'
·
Alpha A. Smith Lucille Smith
1o Reed Crary 'u · Cr
' nme ary,
Lot No. 51, McDole-Torrence
Add., Reedsville.
Paul H. Montgomery, Daisy

SNEAKERS $ 00

WINDOW SHADES
$ 00,

Famous Brands.
styles.

'

REG. 98' 64 COUNT

.

r
Trans.ers
-"-'",

lADIES • MISSES - DIILDREN
MOlDED SOLE FABRIC SPORT

VYNOta 36"x6'

.FROM

sponsored by West V~~~';~.

Property

Evelyn
Montgomery
to
Franklin Real Estate, Parcels,
Salem.
·
Dwight E. Spencer, Mlu'y
Ella .Spencer to Russell
.
Spencer, Juanita L. Spencer,
29.n"' ACfeS, Chester. '
R. L. Soulsby, Blanche
SouJSbyGiennaSoulsbytoOhio
' .
Power Co., Ease., Sulton.
Elmer L. Proffitt, Edra
Proffill to Elmer J . Proffitt,
Mary B Proffitt 8 Acres
Letart. ·
'
'

•
SIZES 3 to 18

Save Now/

eBOBBIE BROOKS
eRUSS TOGS
eAILEEN

$

Meigs

t

SPORTSWEAR

SWEATERS

" I'm certain the . new
executive will receive the ~
fine cooperation !hat l did
during my four years," HaD
said. "l leave the wodt Mth
nothing but good feeling about
the sincerity of the adult
scouters. here in wan ling to
advance the Boy Seoul
movement as a vebicle to help
boys," Hall said,
•
He mates a standing offer to
.help out when needl!d as a
volunteer.
The Halls have two children,
Ward, recovering satisfactorily
from a fractured jaw suffered
last week, and Eric, 7.

EXPWRING the Tri-State churches frO!D purely religious
and spiritual values Ill political
Area:
America's youth - what's involvement.
troubling some of them? The B.S.A,, through EIThey're uncertain, in~cure , p1oring, for botit young men and
rebellious. What does it mean women, 14-21 years of ·age,
for socie\Y? FO.. Exploring! provides an opportunity for
What can we as individuals do teenagers to develop . an acceptable sense of values.
about it?
Tom Grubb of the area
The Tri-State Council says
professional
siaff, will _he
these are just some of the
concerns provoked in in· working Mth the council EIterviews Mth young people all ploring Division which will
ovor the country: permissive encompass all districts. The
parents, social, moral and intent is lo provide Eiploring
political pollution, raw sex in opportunities to an increased
movies, IJ)agazines and best- number of youth.
sellers, growing market of
pornographic materials, drug
abuse, Vietnam, Biafra, in- Sallie Chapman Law is
nuence of Dower children, the known as the "mother of the
changing emphasis of some Confederacy_"

IE 5...

NEW FALL-SMART

C

.

_flladds Hall, 3e Garfield St. partllme while · Chadds· conc;.mpoJIII, Iince 1987 the M-G-Jri linued as a professiooal scouter,
Scopt EzecuUve, bas resigned but Chadds determined to
resignlhe M-G-M post when the
opportunity with Greater Ohio
, .to tum to a profession be bas opened. They are presenUy
been preparing himself for · s!ressi"g a unique type of 20years.
year pay Ufe policy. "Working
A native of Barnesville, with the adult scouters in
Chadds and wife Evelyn don't Meigs..Gallia-Mason bas been a
apect to leave Gallipolis. "We rewarding expercerice," Hall
ail here," said Hall Mondjy. said.- " I've enjoyed every
Chadds and Evelyn are busy minute of it."
as agen!l! of the Greater Ohio· Hall said Tri-State Area
· ,~ance Co: Both are licensed Council. Executive Bryon
-to · sell ,insurance. They bad McNeeley is doing the M-G-M
planned to go into insurance work until a replacement is
employed.

FAMOUS BRANDS

ORLON SOCKS

·

I ....... Oj,O.,Aug111t25,1171

REG. •1.99 VAWE '

99
Each
TO 15.94

Styles lor the fashion lllinded, the price
comparers, the comfort seekers. Bucllles,
•IIJ&gt;OIIS. o&gt;&lt;forcts. boots etc. Size 611&gt; to 11 .

99

SIZES5to 10
LADIES SPORT

CASUAL OXFORDS
Plaids
Whites

Asst. Colors

S} 59 PAIR
•

TO

$

�'.

'

Chester Council Met
CHESTER- Olesler Council
m, Dl!llhters of America, met
~' :- t l y with Vice Councillor
lcf.Letba Wood presU!i11g Dorothy
11Jen was reported borne from
tbe balpilal.
llavin3 birthdays in August
we-e Jean SUmmerfield and
fllatlie Frederick, who after
~~ being escorted to the altar by
~ tbe flag bearers, received birthday cards from the Depnty·
Slate Conncilor, Erma Cleland.
Dorothy Ritchie and Esther
l: Ridenour will attend State
. !'&gt;, aession which will be held in
: .:olumblls A!lll- 30 and 31.

i

.,.
i
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I.
,.
•
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:

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•
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:

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SON IS BORN

Mr. and Mrs.llimald.Smith of
~ntnbus announce the birth of

The next meeting will be Sept.
7 when the cbarler will be
draped for Callie Werner. All
members are asked to wear
while.
Present were Mabel VanMeter, Helen Wolf, Thelma
While, Ada Nentzling, Zelda
Weber, Ada VanMeter, Ethel
Orr, Margaret Tutue, Mary K.
Holler, Ada Morris, Elizabeth
Wickham, Dorothy Lawson, and
Zona Biggs. Refreshments were
served.
·
.
,
GUESTs HERE
Spec. 4 and Mrs. Glenn McDonald, Clarksville, Tenn .,
Miss Marilyn Bryan, Frankfort,
Ky. , and John Marshall,
Louisville, Ky. are guests of
Mrs. Russ Watson and Mrs.
Olan Genheimer.

a son, Donald Raymond,
weighing 6 lb. ~"' oz., at
Rivenide Methodist Hospilal
Aug. 22. Grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond J. Smith,
VISITS GRANDMOTHER
;Pomeroy, R.D. 4; Mrs. Eileen
Bawtlns ol Columbus. Great- Bruce Gotthardt of C&lt;Jlumbus
grandmother is Mrs. Ullie was fair week guest of his
Smith &lt;i RnUand. They have ~;~:other, Mrs. w. A.
another child Tona Diane.

I
~

t

Church Plans
Col~ge Day

Middleport

Personal Notes
.
Miss Merri Ault was the guest
last week of Mr. and Mrs. C. H.
Wise at Waverly.
Mrs. TaylocThomasofRipley ·
· spendin this
k ·th Mr
LS
g
wee WI
•
and Mrs. Dan Thomas and
famil
Missy. Hall1'e Zerkle is'
recuperating from surgery at
Holzer Hospital. Her room
number is 224 _
Miss Koss Hysell of Miners-

·~m·~Rl'FSII•_A':_oy ~
. ~·~

Snnday, An•. 29, will be a
""
llllUIILI&gt;rv
.........
special day at the Middlepor1. lions Dub. We\bk&amp;lay noon,
Church of the Nazarene, called -United · Melhodisl Chnrcb
" Mount Vernon Nazarene l'lmaoy.
'
College Day," when si:t
.
prospective students from this. WEEKEND meetmg at
. Chis · Olris ·
area wiU be honored and 01~ o( · 1 m
. tian
presented a gift.
.
, UIIIOII, Pearl Sl, Middleportc'·
Rev . W1'll'1am Bn'dges, .Wedn esda'/ throu gh· Sun d ay,·
professor of Speech of lbe 7' 30 p.m. The ' Rev. George
college wi)l take part in' lbe ScoU; C&lt;lhnn~ will be guest
recognition _service at l.be &lt;p'•ker.
Snnday School hour and will WJIJ&gt;WOOD Ganlen Onb,
ville visited her great-aunt,
Mrs. L. D. Ervin while her speak at the morning worship W.,b lay, I :p.m. h&lt;me of
mother, Mrs. Victor Hysell, serviCe.
Mrs. Alfred Yeauger with Mrs.
visited her da!lllhler Grace, a
The students are Lorri Clilford Phillips assisting. .
me.dical patient at Holzer Grindley, daughter of Rev. and
HospitaL
Mrs. Ed Grin_dley of~ HAND'%U:::~y CLUB
and
Mrs
c
H
w;~
of
ville ; Mary King, dan•bler of
.
Book.
r
M
Mr. and .Mrs. viriJ/. tung, meeting 'j1Jur$day at
. ·
· · · Waverly attended fnneral Kingsbury Road Pomeroy · mobile 10 a.m, to 2 p.m. Bring
services for the late Robert Gary Ellis, son ol
and Mrs: paint brnsbes, paint and
Harris, and those of Asa Custer.
Ia
Lewis Ellis; Kathy Moore, cqner.
da!lllhter of Mr. and Mrs. H. J.
Denison; Gene Powell, son of ru,11o.
..., 111
· Mrs. Delores Powell, and Ricky
VanMatre, son ol Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Waller CrOOks
IJ/dNorman VanMatre, all of entertained Sunday wilh a
11e
Middleport.
family picnic at their h&lt;me.
On Friday, Sept. ~. a party Pr 11 were Mrs. H. E. Fruth,
will be given for these young Mr. and Mrs.. Jact Frntb,
CHESTER -Ri Theheldesceth
d
n- pepPie at the home of Mr. and Michael. Jobn, Joan, Carol and
dan ts of J ohn ce
err. Mrs. Ed Findley, Mulberry Lynn,Mr.andMrs. LouisRC8Si,
rennion and picnic at the Tillie Ave., Pomeroy at 6 p.m.
Henry David and James of
Baum farm near Chesler. Mrs.
Point Pleasant, Mr. and Mrs.
Baum gave a brief history of
HOSPitAL NEWS
Edward a-oots, Jndy, Pammy
the .family.
and andy, and Mr. and Mrs.
Forty-two persons present
Holzer Medical center, First Danny 'lbmlas, Danny and
~re~~.r:-::.~ ~ Ave. and Cedar St. General Ka~ ~win be a
Rice and Bob, Mr. and Mrs. visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m. sophlmGre and Joan a freshByron Rice and Marica, aU of Maternity visiting hours 2' 30 to man at West Virginia
Mansfield; Mr. and Mrs. Fred 4:30 p.m. Parents only on University at M..-gantown this
Scott, Belleville; Mr. and Mrs. Pediatrics w;~
Fall, and Henry David Rossi
Finley ~tton, Dan, Ron, Jeff
Mr . and Mrs. Edwin F. will be JUJ!ior at West Vll'ginia
~d Dav1d of Marion; Morton Neutzling, Syracuse,ada!lllhler Wesleyan at Buchanan.
Rice and Mr. and Mrs. Tom and Mr. an d Mrs. Th omas E.
d
Keaton Cbarl to Mr
Mrs. Iby BeW:, ~- and
Bane, Jackson, twin da!lllhlers.
Norman Baiun, Debbie, Nancy,
Discharges
DINNER GIVEN
Tami Darlene and Susan
Mrs . Calvin Davis, Mrs. SYRACUSE - Mrs. Freda
' .
' Hershel Hayes, Larry Hoffman, Ferguson was hostess at a
Pomeroy • Mr · and Mrs. John Okey Jordan, Mrs. Clarence Sonday evenmg
· dinner to Mrs.
C;unpbeU and granddaughter
s8ndra, Walter Campbell and McCoy and daughter, Melissa D. H. Shahan and daughter
Darlene C&lt;Jlumbus· David and Mourning, Edward Myers, Mrs. Melody of Gallipolis, Mr. and
Brian
of Cle.:eland Mrs Michael Smith and son, Mrs. Mrs. Ralph Jolmsoo of Racine,
.
'
· Kenneth Vance, Mrs. Ronnie Bill Allen,. Chesler, and 'ier·
~::. Urlamc, Jeff, Lynne, Waugh and daughter, Mrs. T. cedes Coodon &lt;i Pomeroy. .diss
Prizes were given to the one Henry Gerty, Jerry Wayne Shahan sang at the evening
traveling longest distance, Miller , Edward Strauss, service at the Reorganized
youngest present and couple Thomas Bumgarner, Lu ther Owrcb of Jesus Olrist, Latter
married the longest.
Cochran and Mrs. Gordon Day Saints, a&lt;r&lt;mpanied at the
Teaford.
piano by Bill Allen.
BIR'l11DAY OBSERVED
Mr. and Mrs. James HubDAUGirmR BORN
bard, E;Jic and Tara Jayne of
HOME ON LEAVE
Mr. and Mrs. Loren J .
Lancaster, cameSnnday to help Radioman S~cond Class C&lt;Jieman of Pomeloy announce
celebrate the birthday of Mrs. Rodney Karr, son &lt;i Mr. and thebirlhofada!lllhlerA!III.ht
WUma Davis. Eric remained ·Mrs. C. R. Karr, Jr., is home on Holzer Medical Center
fo:- a visit, while retnrning with a 20 day leave from the Navy. Gallipolis, weighing S lb., 14
his parents was Chris who had Karr spent the past six months named Barbara Am( Grandspent the past two weeks with aboard the S. S. lwo Jima and parenls are Mrs. Wilda
his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. was in the Philippines, · C&lt;Jleman of New Haven, w. va.
Carl Hubbard of Syracuse and Okinawa, Singapore, Hawaii and lbe late Orville COleman
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stover in and Vietnam . His leave ends and Mr. and Mrs. Charles E:
Middleport.
Sept. 7.
Arnold, R.D. 4, Pomeroy.

Mr.

ll:-zc· ;,. UeJd

Rice Family
Reunion

0

:S.

&amp;urn

-

The creative genius of Olga is w,ell known. Now she
has come up with pantyhose tll"at incorporates its
own boots or knee socks . The hose are shee r stretch
nylon, the 'panty nylon and spandex for ge ntle control. And the boots? The same indestructible n ylon
and spandex fabric os the panty. One-piece Paisley
(left) combines Paisley pants with navy mist bodyhose and Paisley bodybaots. Navy bodyboot (right)
has navy mist bodyhose.

New Hym:nals Will

Social Calendar .
... YAL

..._......

-

=Be Bo.uuht b wscs
1J.

.

J

6 '

meet Tlusday bome of Ills.
Oscar Roosb, High Slreef. 7:»

·

·

AROUND

_
THE SIX&gt;AL.
will~ Settles, !be llllct junior quarterback rl Wellsloa Hlgb
llhcire liP an alnady loaded Jackaon football team this

ALFRED - The Women's
Nine sick and shut-in calls
p.m..
Society&lt;i!llrislianServicemet were repOCied.
nuDAY
• A
the
It
0 ·-• to purchase 13
MIDDLE""",_W c;T· U _., . 'J')Iesday~, ug. 17,_a1 .
was v u:u
cb
cvn• • - ww 1DD1; &lt;i Nellie Parker With an new hymn books for the cbur
hold its annual pimic Friday at ltenL
of 10 The meeting as part of a summer proje!:t,
6 p.m. at Legioo Put. Mill ~
N. IIi Parker' ·-• to buy plates, aJI)S, and
m
~,.e
"'
e
StreeliD event of ram at lbe
esident, openede with
''The• iUtu
napkins for the annnaJ ·Churcb
Baptist qmrdlhneileJL
~· Pra " led b Osie Homecoming tobeheldSept.19.
PAST
MATRON
of
yerd the slln~ "He
New program books for the
Evangeline Olapter meeting Unden~ · snng '
Societyaretobeorderedforthe
Friday 7:311 p.m.. at M"oddleprl
·
·
' was
·
next meelin'g.
Masonic~- fit"~,....- W.'C'I'"'C' n:~ .' . .
A)leW shipment_of gelatin to
members wiiJ tie honored.
..JlAJ rl{,T/.IC ZS
sell haS been rece~ved.
Everyone urged ID atleDL
Mrs. Parker gave a Missions
SA'IUBDAY
report from Pictorial News
SQUARE; DAN~ Sa~y
Dn
Magazineonthew~andlife
at the RadDe Ameritan Le&amp;iGD
· of a m1'ssionary from
Hall 9 p.m. to u midnight
featuring Olive Weber at the
RACINE- The annnal picnic Harrisollville, . Meigs C&lt;lunty,
piano. Benefit &lt;i the U.S.O.
of lbe W.S.C.S. of the United Albert Sylves~r Arnold.
Wesley811 Methodist Chnrcb
Isola Taylor led the progpm
BACK TO SCHOOL
daDce wasbeldMonday evening at the 011 "Risks 10
- Reiati---~•- in
·
.........,
Saturday Pomeroy TeDnis summer home of Mrs. the Local Church," consisting of
Coort &amp;:30 to 11:30 p.m. Jays Margaret West. A · mmmage a poem, ''Do You Know'."
will emcee. 'ISe per (MSl!ILsale was planned for Sept. 11 Readings and prayer by all and
SUNDAY
aadl2at lbe parsmage garage. the hymn, "Have Thine Own
SDNDAY SCHOOL at Racine
Two guests were Mrs. Owen Way."
.
.
Wesleyan United Methodist Watsoo and daughter, Mrs.
The hostess served delicious
OnJrcb atll a.m. ¥ead of 10 Rollert Rwsh. The September homemade ice cream and
a.m. due to cmnmmim ...-- meeting wiD be beld on regular cookies.
vices.
rneeiing night 'in the church
The next meeting will he held
' MONDAY
.
onTuesdayevening,Sept.2l,at
ANNUAL MEETING &lt;i the anna.
lhe home of Isola Taylor, with
Meigs County Unit of !he
I.EIFIIEIT V1SITS
Alma Swartz leading the
American Cancer Society
Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
Richard . Leifheit
of program.
C&lt;Jlumbus and Soulbenl Ohio ~spent the '"'~"?"
Electric Coropany meeting :lb.:·accom~':'?omeV::y
1'0001.
Mrs.leifbeitwbospentthepast
.....t at the Davis h&lt;me.

fa11. .

....::e "'·

Guests at Picnic

RACINE _ Mr. aad Mrs.
Roman J. ~and daUghter

Rhoda of~
Obio,
..~~...

":ere guests of honor ala picnir

gtven at the !ann h&lt;me;! Mr.
and Mrs. Roger L. B lb and
family Sonday.
Guests were Me and Mrs..
lime.
·
·
Cliffor_d Beegle, also of
,F'rederitbburg, Mr. and Mrs..
RObert B•egle and family, Mr.
and Mrs Rlmald B p and
family, .Keith Lisle, Hal~
Pow~ and Addie POwell, all ..
Racme, Mr. ~ Mrs.. Gerald
Powell and family of Pumaoy.

az.:

SummerS*
.Oli11inues
Spring&amp;s-_,.
PemYIWitArnrJI tellh

mDff
Dulley's Fbid

r~o, Jrantoa and Jackaon to be plenty toogh this fall. Maybe

be jalt f1qot to add Waverly and Athens, which leaves only po'
'Ill Wellstcln lbat nobody fears.
·
Don at Waverly Coach Mllre Sboemaker baa 23letteimen
~ flf Jut year's bard luek ~ wblcb took really palnfnl
~ Cllly fnm tile Manuders 00 the Friday night f!Jllowing tile
llida41f- &lt;ilia popular (llltnotaregular) players. Waverly's
GGier_malebea agatnat the SIX&gt;AL powers generally were cl!a!.
FlequeutiJ u!M'm!fartably cl!a!. certainly, no team dared lake
m Wanrly last year In a relaxed mood.
B:r the time lbe Tigers come ID Melgaland the evening of Oct.
15 IIley could be slrmg.
·
.
.
IF FEMAlE WAVERLY FANS appear to be in over•m•nt ~ IIU fall, It wm't bave just happened that way.
Tllere -..l!lld Is human lab4r and planning beblnd II.
Lady Tic« faJII had a special day on Aug. 20 when only ihey
10t a flntt.hand loot at the boys m lbe squad. The first annual
Tlgerette (llDic was lleld lbe same evening In the blgh school
wileD mrmbers of tile roaching staff answered distaff questions
about what football Is all about.
.
AD e,es will be m Athens this year wbere Don Eskey no
Imler reigDJ, being replaced by his assistant Gerald Inbody.
Wbalner .tbe causes, Athens' football bas been on a downward
CIIIW lbe past two s WIB !bough the suspicion Is widely held
lbat !here bas been u much lalent as ever Ill the male populatioo
&lt;i Athens HIP School.
· In py case,~ has a bard core of good football players
IIMl from Ellkey's aecmd divlsioo club plus runner Stu Smith,
a ll!ll!cr, who sat out last year. He was an outslandlng
poepect u a llqlbom~.
Upfnllltlnliody has 1breereturning senlcrs, Jim Scott at left
l!lld and Jim ~en and Jeff_Spelft at guards. He is loaded
lD the Jwlrfield, botrever, with returning regulars Mlke Gret'fl at

(Upon Request) .

ROBINSOfCS

·wms.

21(E. 2nd

l'ltmtnl
l'hone
. 992-5421.

FREE

•nd~SGR

Co., W. V;o.

CIDCAGO (UPI) - Ernie
lllnU &lt;i the Chicago Cubs
reached tJeventh place on the
aJI-Ume heme run hitting list
Tuellday night, but otherwise it
• was· Cincinnati Reds' day.
The Reds pounded out 13
hila, three each by Pete Rose
and Woody Woodward, to post
a 5-4 win over the Cubs in the
tJeeond of a three-«Bme series
here.
Bill Hands (11).15) of the

"Your O.soline Purchase Free" If We f•ll To
Oean ~our Windsllield. Weather, Permitting.
No Other Company Dares To Offer Tills

'

Certified Gas Stations
992-9981

PVmeroy, Ohio

IWe Honor BankAmericard and Master Olarge)

4 SoPh S

.IJFIAMAIN/1

To Start

FRESH PRODCE
'

USDA CHOICE

SPECIALS
U.S. No. 1 Gcw. Inspected
MICHIGAN

POTATOES
10 lb. BAG 59~

BUllERMILK *GaL

BONELESS

PKG.

_

p

FOR TODAY
1

*
*

****'*

Fridays Only
~The Drive-In Window
isOpen
It 9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
(Continuously l

$

*

POST
BOX
TOASTIES

BLOCK DEOORATED
UNDERPINNING
28" X 5'

NEW

Great For
Underpinning

FURNITURE

'349.95

---------

"8aaa nee 'On
Convenient
Terms.

NEAR $iii,OOO
AKRON, Ohio (UPI) -Don
Johnson's win in the $40,000
Waukegan Open hiked his official earnings in the
Professional Bowlers
Association to $57,959, but he
still trails Johnny Petraglia by
nearly $20,000 in the standings.

95

'

Trailets &amp; Ho11ses

$35.00"'Down-

EACH

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
773-5554

We Deliver

MASON

You are cordial~ invited
to visit our station during

/

Thursday • Friday • Saturday - August 26-27-28

i

*
**

Jack's Ashland Service
Beech &amp; Locust St

Middleport, Olio
Jack lDngenette, Dealer .

*
!
***'

:LrOJ

~

...

,.-

.,

../

1'

' .

,..

,..

.-J

';

..

,..

~

...

.....

r-'

...,

,..1

~ ~ ~

D~

~

....

...

-

-;-

D

.

FREE GASOLINE
5 ·FREE

Bakery Department

12oz.

UNDERPINNING

.

Beef Stew MeaL .........~:.. 79~

;~CH BREAD

his 15th donble with. two ont in lOth straight 1inJe this sea- In fifth victory against ·u I.-a
the opening frame after Don 13 innings. Louis nant was the with 3. _1-3 1nn1np of one-hit
Buford walked and moved loser and Bnrsmeier gained his ball.
around to third base on a
Brooks Robinson single and
gave Mike Cuellar his 16th
victory on a ·fonr.hltler as
Baltimore blanked Tom Bradley and the While Sox.
Roy Fosler di'opped Ellie
Rodriguez' bases loaded fly ball
in the sixth inning to give
Milwaukee three unearned runs
and the Brewers added three
more In the seventh enroule to
their victory over the Indians.
Gail Hopkins singled over
second baseman John Kennedy's head to score Tom
Burgmeier as Kansas City
defeated the lied Sox for. the
---

3 ROOMS

"*"'· *"'_AI\"'THOUGHT
*"'*""***** *U u **

Cube Steak.....~:!1. 29

89~

has also lost 20 in a season,
might very well have won 30
somewhere along the way had
he been lucky enough to be
pitching for an offensively
productive team.
.
.
Jim Spencer crashed a tworun homer in the bottom of the
ninth to resolve a fine pitching
duel between Calilornia's Clyde
Wright (12-13) and Washington's rookie Pete Broberg to
give the Angels the decision.
Jim Perry, last year's Cy
Young winner in the American
League with a 24-12 record,
pucflea a !our-hitler to lead the
Twins past Detroit and even his
record at 14-14.
Mery Retlerunund, the Orioles' leading batter, cracked
·

after they had scored twice in
the third and once in the
fonrth.
Clay Carroll rushed in and
got Cleo James to fly out, preserving the victory and picking
up his 13tb save of the season.
The losing pitcher was Ferguson Jenkins, who worked seven
innings and gave up 12 of the
13 hits. It was his lOth loss
against 20 wins.

There ar~two days In the ·
wee~ aboUt which I D!!Ver
ond Inning for his l,OOOth major
have'fear. One of these Is
league hit.
It- yesterday and the other is ~
Jim McGlothlin got the win,
tomorrow.
his seventh against 10 losses,
-RObert Burdette
but Wayne Granger relieved
him in the sixth l'lld in the bottom of the ninth Joe Gibbon
came on with men on first and
lfs Quick! Easy
second and two ont.
Gibbon Issued two walks,
forcing in the Cubs' fourth run

Round Steak.~: .. l.09

45'

Double Dolen

POPS

_

p

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

Round Steak.......~.99~

DAIRY

the game, the first eomlng in
the first inning. He scored on
George Fosler's fielder's choice.
Rose doubled again in the
second, scoring Woodward who
had singled, and then scoring
himseU on Hal McRae's single.
His third donble came in the
sixth and he came home on a
McRae single.
The only home run of the
game was Banks', "Mr. Cub,"
his 512th of a long career. He

Oiba will go against the Reds' lied Eddie Matthews for sev~ Grimsley · (&amp;4) in the enth place on the all-time homwindup game today.
er hitting list.
RGee clubbed three donbles in Tony Perez of the Reds also
reached a milestone, beating
out an infield single in the sec-

'AIIAD
Prices Effective
Aug. 25 Thru 28

Hsu (Jdn-mu

the good fortune to be playing
with a strong team, he ~s not
had that added ~e~on of
good Inc~ and good timing that
are crucial to a 30-wln season.
. Blue lost his second co~live 1.(1 ballgame Tuesday mght
and probably his bid for 30. as
the Oakland A's feU victim to
the New York Yankees and a
man named Mel StotUemyre.
In other America~ League
games the Califorrua Angels
beat the Washillgton Senators,
2-1, Minnesota defe!lted Detroit,
3-1, Kansas ?tty sw~t by
Boston 1&gt;4, m 13 mnmgs,
Baltimore blanked Chicago, 1-0,
and Milwaukee trinuned aeveland, 6-5.
StotUemyre, who beat Blue
and Oakland Is the solid man
the stopper' who can qniet
things down when the Yankees
seem to be yielding to chaos.
StotUemyre whose current
record reacb 13-11 but who has
three times won ~ games and

Ancient Ernie up a Notch

Serving: Gotlipolis
Pomeroy &amp; Mdllepart, 0.

By STEVE WltSTEIN
UPI S,ort. Writer
Winning 30games takes more
'.'Jari a great ann. II takes
. lucky bounces and well-placed
~Is: It takes, above all, good
timing.
Vida Blue, unquestionably,
has a great ann. Moreover, he
has the poise and concentration
ol far more experienced
pitchers. But thqh he has bad

.L' BRS .1:' Ourfeen
.
~PORT, Pa. (UP!)
-llsu Chin-mu struck out 14
butlers and allowed only two
hits as Taiwan. defeated Caguas, Pnerlo Rico, 7-0, Tuesday, while Wahiawa, Hawaii,
beat Brockville, Ont., 3-2, in the
opening round of the Utile
League World Series.
On this afternoon's schedule,
Augusta, Maine, meets Torrejon (Spain) Air Force Base,
and Lexington, Ky., meets
Gary, Ind.
Cenlerfielder Lee Win-znei
drove in four ol Taiwan's runs.
He hit a two-run homer in the
third inning. Luis Arimtendi
and Carado Curet of Caguas hit
singles for the only hits off
llsu.
Wahiawa scored three runs in
the first inning on singles by
Jack ToD)ita, winning pitcher
Aaron Lorenzo, Blane Quin and
Randy Kato and a wild pitch by
Brockville pitcher Dan Collission.
First baseman Gerald Crooke
hit a 226-foot homer in the
second and ius cousin, Larry
Crooke, doubled in Brockvllle's
~.andl..eiCbamptinatrighthalfandDonWoodatleft other run in the fifth.
The Hawaiians face Taiwan
bal. A top p011peet up from lbe soph&lt;m~s Is lbe youngest
HindJeyboy, like the others, all foolbaJJ player. And Stu Smith. on Thursday in a semi-final
game and Ontario drops into
Yup. Let's add Athens to Charley's list.
the loser's bracket.

2-HOUR_
.CLEANING_

SliW. Main

·

. MARAUDER COACH CHARLEY CHANCEY expects Logan,

At Your Ceilifoai.Oil Company*

PVIicy.

·

-thmpallutreportaWellsloabaanot totlis time appointed
a held foolball coach. The 111JU8d Is w&lt;rking out under assistant
coarJies
·

cnuuJJ

FREE

•

O.Iruytowbalwaiwidely predicted, and In many quarters

M--.1.;

IN COWMBUS
. Me. and Mrs. Raymond Smith
and daughter Janice were in
Columbus Sunday to visit their
son, Donald and family,
...,.;ally to see their new
grandsm, Donald Raymond.
Miss Tooa Diane is a guest of
tbe Raymond Smiths at this

· ..

hrJ' u::d a fact, SeWa will be Ill a Rockel unifcnn this autumn,

JletM:,

Held

_Blue ·Loses Second Straight; 1-0

tile Sports Desk

GALLONS

We have the finest gasoline and service in this
area and we want to prove it! Drive in ... fill up
with powerfull Ashland Gasoline and we'll give
you a coupon good for 5 FREE GALLONS
on your next visit!
·

plus

We'll also give you five additional coupons,
each good for one, free gallon on future visits
to our station.

s ·MORE

Altogether, you get 10 FREE GALLONS!

with fill up of
l 0 gallons or more

29C

GOOD AT BIG 3
EXPiRES 8-28-71

GALLONS

CHARM IN
.BATHROOM TISSUE
(ASSORTED)

4 R0US 39~
WITJf COUPON

EXPIRES 8-28-71

Frozen

FOOD BUYS

MORTON DINNERS
ASSORTED

Once they·.. learned to tell limo,
they d-rve a roal watch.
Cara.. llo by Bulova.
Caravollo'o "Siudent" It a great
first watch tor bOy or girl. It has a
proelalon lowaled movement
Unbreekablo mainspring. Full
numeral dill. A youlh-sizod strap.
lt'a a watCh a kid can read. And
can't OY4Itwind. A vtry grown-up
watch at a youngller price.

VIETTI
BEEf or PORK

B.B.Q. Sauce ~

TEEN QUEEN

Tomato
Juice

5ge
. Ript

LIONS CLUB, HOLE IN ONE
TOURNAMENT, AUG. 23-28
S P.M. to 9 P.M., Meigs Co. Fairtrounds

Rnl;tl
Te
Lillt -

•

J

•

Visit Jack L.ongenette, your Ashland Dealer

'

in Middleport for quality products, expert senice!

.

HURRY! HURRY! LIMITED TIME TO
ENJOY THIS VERY SPECIAL OFFER!

�'.

'

Chester Council Met
CHESTER- Olesler Council
m, Dl!llhters of America, met
~' :- t l y with Vice Councillor
lcf.Letba Wood presU!i11g Dorothy
11Jen was reported borne from
tbe balpilal.
llavin3 birthdays in August
we-e Jean SUmmerfield and
fllatlie Frederick, who after
~~ being escorted to the altar by
~ tbe flag bearers, received birthday cards from the Depnty·
Slate Conncilor, Erma Cleland.
Dorothy Ritchie and Esther
l: Ridenour will attend State
. !'&gt;, aession which will be held in
: .:olumblls A!lll- 30 and 31.

i

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•
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SON IS BORN

Mr. and Mrs.llimald.Smith of
~ntnbus announce the birth of

The next meeting will be Sept.
7 when the cbarler will be
draped for Callie Werner. All
members are asked to wear
while.
Present were Mabel VanMeter, Helen Wolf, Thelma
While, Ada Nentzling, Zelda
Weber, Ada VanMeter, Ethel
Orr, Margaret Tutue, Mary K.
Holler, Ada Morris, Elizabeth
Wickham, Dorothy Lawson, and
Zona Biggs. Refreshments were
served.
·
.
,
GUESTs HERE
Spec. 4 and Mrs. Glenn McDonald, Clarksville, Tenn .,
Miss Marilyn Bryan, Frankfort,
Ky. , and John Marshall,
Louisville, Ky. are guests of
Mrs. Russ Watson and Mrs.
Olan Genheimer.

a son, Donald Raymond,
weighing 6 lb. ~"' oz., at
Rivenide Methodist Hospilal
Aug. 22. Grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond J. Smith,
VISITS GRANDMOTHER
;Pomeroy, R.D. 4; Mrs. Eileen
Bawtlns ol Columbus. Great- Bruce Gotthardt of C&lt;Jlumbus
grandmother is Mrs. Ullie was fair week guest of his
Smith &lt;i RnUand. They have ~;~:other, Mrs. w. A.
another child Tona Diane.

I
~

t

Church Plans
Col~ge Day

Middleport

Personal Notes
.
Miss Merri Ault was the guest
last week of Mr. and Mrs. C. H.
Wise at Waverly.
Mrs. TaylocThomasofRipley ·
· spendin this
k ·th Mr
LS
g
wee WI
•
and Mrs. Dan Thomas and
famil
Missy. Hall1'e Zerkle is'
recuperating from surgery at
Holzer Hospital. Her room
number is 224 _
Miss Koss Hysell of Miners-

·~m·~Rl'FSII•_A':_oy ~
. ~·~

Snnday, An•. 29, will be a
""
llllUIILI&gt;rv
.........
special day at the Middlepor1. lions Dub. We\bk&amp;lay noon,
Church of the Nazarene, called -United · Melhodisl Chnrcb
" Mount Vernon Nazarene l'lmaoy.
'
College Day," when si:t
.
prospective students from this. WEEKEND meetmg at
. Chis · Olris ·
area wiU be honored and 01~ o( · 1 m
. tian
presented a gift.
.
, UIIIOII, Pearl Sl, Middleportc'·
Rev . W1'll'1am Bn'dges, .Wedn esda'/ throu gh· Sun d ay,·
professor of Speech of lbe 7' 30 p.m. The ' Rev. George
college wi)l take part in' lbe ScoU; C&lt;lhnn~ will be guest
recognition _service at l.be &lt;p'•ker.
Snnday School hour and will WJIJ&gt;WOOD Ganlen Onb,
ville visited her great-aunt,
Mrs. L. D. Ervin while her speak at the morning worship W.,b lay, I :p.m. h&lt;me of
mother, Mrs. Victor Hysell, serviCe.
Mrs. Alfred Yeauger with Mrs.
visited her da!lllhler Grace, a
The students are Lorri Clilford Phillips assisting. .
me.dical patient at Holzer Grindley, daughter of Rev. and
HospitaL
Mrs. Ed Grin_dley of~ HAND'%U:::~y CLUB
and
Mrs
c
H
w;~
of
ville ; Mary King, dan•bler of
.
Book.
r
M
Mr. and .Mrs. viriJ/. tung, meeting 'j1Jur$day at
. ·
· · · Waverly attended fnneral Kingsbury Road Pomeroy · mobile 10 a.m, to 2 p.m. Bring
services for the late Robert Gary Ellis, son ol
and Mrs: paint brnsbes, paint and
Harris, and those of Asa Custer.
Ia
Lewis Ellis; Kathy Moore, cqner.
da!lllhter of Mr. and Mrs. H. J.
Denison; Gene Powell, son of ru,11o.
..., 111
· Mrs. Delores Powell, and Ricky
VanMatre, son ol Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Waller CrOOks
IJ/dNorman VanMatre, all of entertained Sunday wilh a
11e
Middleport.
family picnic at their h&lt;me.
On Friday, Sept. ~. a party Pr 11 were Mrs. H. E. Fruth,
will be given for these young Mr. and Mrs.. Jact Frntb,
CHESTER -Ri Theheldesceth
d
n- pepPie at the home of Mr. and Michael. Jobn, Joan, Carol and
dan ts of J ohn ce
err. Mrs. Ed Findley, Mulberry Lynn,Mr.andMrs. LouisRC8Si,
rennion and picnic at the Tillie Ave., Pomeroy at 6 p.m.
Henry David and James of
Baum farm near Chesler. Mrs.
Point Pleasant, Mr. and Mrs.
Baum gave a brief history of
HOSPitAL NEWS
Edward a-oots, Jndy, Pammy
the .family.
and andy, and Mr. and Mrs.
Forty-two persons present
Holzer Medical center, First Danny 'lbmlas, Danny and
~re~~.r:-::.~ ~ Ave. and Cedar St. General Ka~ ~win be a
Rice and Bob, Mr. and Mrs. visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m. sophlmGre and Joan a freshByron Rice and Marica, aU of Maternity visiting hours 2' 30 to man at West Virginia
Mansfield; Mr. and Mrs. Fred 4:30 p.m. Parents only on University at M..-gantown this
Scott, Belleville; Mr. and Mrs. Pediatrics w;~
Fall, and Henry David Rossi
Finley ~tton, Dan, Ron, Jeff
Mr . and Mrs. Edwin F. will be JUJ!ior at West Vll'ginia
~d Dav1d of Marion; Morton Neutzling, Syracuse,ada!lllhler Wesleyan at Buchanan.
Rice and Mr. and Mrs. Tom and Mr. an d Mrs. Th omas E.
d
Keaton Cbarl to Mr
Mrs. Iby BeW:, ~- and
Bane, Jackson, twin da!lllhlers.
Norman Baiun, Debbie, Nancy,
Discharges
DINNER GIVEN
Tami Darlene and Susan
Mrs . Calvin Davis, Mrs. SYRACUSE - Mrs. Freda
' .
' Hershel Hayes, Larry Hoffman, Ferguson was hostess at a
Pomeroy • Mr · and Mrs. John Okey Jordan, Mrs. Clarence Sonday evenmg
· dinner to Mrs.
C;unpbeU and granddaughter
s8ndra, Walter Campbell and McCoy and daughter, Melissa D. H. Shahan and daughter
Darlene C&lt;Jlumbus· David and Mourning, Edward Myers, Mrs. Melody of Gallipolis, Mr. and
Brian
of Cle.:eland Mrs Michael Smith and son, Mrs. Mrs. Ralph Jolmsoo of Racine,
.
'
· Kenneth Vance, Mrs. Ronnie Bill Allen,. Chesler, and 'ier·
~::. Urlamc, Jeff, Lynne, Waugh and daughter, Mrs. T. cedes Coodon &lt;i Pomeroy. .diss
Prizes were given to the one Henry Gerty, Jerry Wayne Shahan sang at the evening
traveling longest distance, Miller , Edward Strauss, service at the Reorganized
youngest present and couple Thomas Bumgarner, Lu ther Owrcb of Jesus Olrist, Latter
married the longest.
Cochran and Mrs. Gordon Day Saints, a&lt;r&lt;mpanied at the
Teaford.
piano by Bill Allen.
BIR'l11DAY OBSERVED
Mr. and Mrs. James HubDAUGirmR BORN
bard, E;Jic and Tara Jayne of
HOME ON LEAVE
Mr. and Mrs. Loren J .
Lancaster, cameSnnday to help Radioman S~cond Class C&lt;Jieman of Pomeloy announce
celebrate the birthday of Mrs. Rodney Karr, son &lt;i Mr. and thebirlhofada!lllhlerA!III.ht
WUma Davis. Eric remained ·Mrs. C. R. Karr, Jr., is home on Holzer Medical Center
fo:- a visit, while retnrning with a 20 day leave from the Navy. Gallipolis, weighing S lb., 14
his parents was Chris who had Karr spent the past six months named Barbara Am( Grandspent the past two weeks with aboard the S. S. lwo Jima and parenls are Mrs. Wilda
his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. was in the Philippines, · C&lt;Jleman of New Haven, w. va.
Carl Hubbard of Syracuse and Okinawa, Singapore, Hawaii and lbe late Orville COleman
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stover in and Vietnam . His leave ends and Mr. and Mrs. Charles E:
Middleport.
Sept. 7.
Arnold, R.D. 4, Pomeroy.

Mr.

ll:-zc· ;,. UeJd

Rice Family
Reunion

0

:S.

&amp;urn

-

The creative genius of Olga is w,ell known. Now she
has come up with pantyhose tll"at incorporates its
own boots or knee socks . The hose are shee r stretch
nylon, the 'panty nylon and spandex for ge ntle control. And the boots? The same indestructible n ylon
and spandex fabric os the panty. One-piece Paisley
(left) combines Paisley pants with navy mist bodyhose and Paisley bodybaots. Navy bodyboot (right)
has navy mist bodyhose.

New Hym:nals Will

Social Calendar .
... YAL

..._......

-

=Be Bo.uuht b wscs
1J.

.

J

6 '

meet Tlusday bome of Ills.
Oscar Roosb, High Slreef. 7:»

·

·

AROUND

_
THE SIX&gt;AL.
will~ Settles, !be llllct junior quarterback rl Wellsloa Hlgb
llhcire liP an alnady loaded Jackaon football team this

ALFRED - The Women's
Nine sick and shut-in calls
p.m..
Society&lt;i!llrislianServicemet were repOCied.
nuDAY
• A
the
It
0 ·-• to purchase 13
MIDDLE""",_W c;T· U _., . 'J')Iesday~, ug. 17,_a1 .
was v u:u
cb
cvn• • - ww 1DD1; &lt;i Nellie Parker With an new hymn books for the cbur
hold its annual pimic Friday at ltenL
of 10 The meeting as part of a summer proje!:t,
6 p.m. at Legioo Put. Mill ~
N. IIi Parker' ·-• to buy plates, aJI)S, and
m
~,.e
"'
e
StreeliD event of ram at lbe
esident, openede with
''The• iUtu
napkins for the annnaJ ·Churcb
Baptist qmrdlhneileJL
~· Pra " led b Osie Homecoming tobeheldSept.19.
PAST
MATRON
of
yerd the slln~ "He
New program books for the
Evangeline Olapter meeting Unden~ · snng '
Societyaretobeorderedforthe
Friday 7:311 p.m.. at M"oddleprl
·
·
' was
·
next meelin'g.
Masonic~- fit"~,....- W.'C'I'"'C' n:~ .' . .
A)leW shipment_of gelatin to
members wiiJ tie honored.
..JlAJ rl{,T/.IC ZS
sell haS been rece~ved.
Everyone urged ID atleDL
Mrs. Parker gave a Missions
SA'IUBDAY
report from Pictorial News
SQUARE; DAN~ Sa~y
Dn
Magazineonthew~andlife
at the RadDe Ameritan Le&amp;iGD
· of a m1'ssionary from
Hall 9 p.m. to u midnight
featuring Olive Weber at the
RACINE- The annnal picnic Harrisollville, . Meigs C&lt;lunty,
piano. Benefit &lt;i the U.S.O.
of lbe W.S.C.S. of the United Albert Sylves~r Arnold.
Wesley811 Methodist Chnrcb
Isola Taylor led the progpm
BACK TO SCHOOL
daDce wasbeldMonday evening at the 011 "Risks 10
- Reiati---~•- in
·
.........,
Saturday Pomeroy TeDnis summer home of Mrs. the Local Church," consisting of
Coort &amp;:30 to 11:30 p.m. Jays Margaret West. A · mmmage a poem, ''Do You Know'."
will emcee. 'ISe per (MSl!ILsale was planned for Sept. 11 Readings and prayer by all and
SUNDAY
aadl2at lbe parsmage garage. the hymn, "Have Thine Own
SDNDAY SCHOOL at Racine
Two guests were Mrs. Owen Way."
.
.
Wesleyan United Methodist Watsoo and daughter, Mrs.
The hostess served delicious
OnJrcb atll a.m. ¥ead of 10 Rollert Rwsh. The September homemade ice cream and
a.m. due to cmnmmim ...-- meeting wiD be beld on regular cookies.
vices.
rneeiing night 'in the church
The next meeting will he held
' MONDAY
.
onTuesdayevening,Sept.2l,at
ANNUAL MEETING &lt;i the anna.
lhe home of Isola Taylor, with
Meigs County Unit of !he
I.EIFIIEIT V1SITS
Alma Swartz leading the
American Cancer Society
Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
Richard . Leifheit
of program.
C&lt;Jlumbus and Soulbenl Ohio ~spent the '"'~"?"
Electric Coropany meeting :lb.:·accom~':'?omeV::y
1'0001.
Mrs.leifbeitwbospentthepast
.....t at the Davis h&lt;me.

fa11. .

....::e "'·

Guests at Picnic

RACINE _ Mr. aad Mrs.
Roman J. ~and daUghter

Rhoda of~
Obio,
..~~...

":ere guests of honor ala picnir

gtven at the !ann h&lt;me;! Mr.
and Mrs. Roger L. B lb and
family Sonday.
Guests were Me and Mrs..
lime.
·
·
Cliffor_d Beegle, also of
,F'rederitbburg, Mr. and Mrs..
RObert B•egle and family, Mr.
and Mrs Rlmald B p and
family, .Keith Lisle, Hal~
Pow~ and Addie POwell, all ..
Racme, Mr. ~ Mrs.. Gerald
Powell and family of Pumaoy.

az.:

SummerS*
.Oli11inues
Spring&amp;s-_,.
PemYIWitArnrJI tellh

mDff
Dulley's Fbid

r~o, Jrantoa and Jackaon to be plenty toogh this fall. Maybe

be jalt f1qot to add Waverly and Athens, which leaves only po'
'Ill Wellstcln lbat nobody fears.
·
Don at Waverly Coach Mllre Sboemaker baa 23letteimen
~ flf Jut year's bard luek ~ wblcb took really palnfnl
~ Cllly fnm tile Manuders 00 the Friday night f!Jllowing tile
llida41f- &lt;ilia popular (llltnotaregular) players. Waverly's
GGier_malebea agatnat the SIX&gt;AL powers generally were cl!a!.
FlequeutiJ u!M'm!fartably cl!a!. certainly, no team dared lake
m Wanrly last year In a relaxed mood.
B:r the time lbe Tigers come ID Melgaland the evening of Oct.
15 IIley could be slrmg.
·
.
.
IF FEMAlE WAVERLY FANS appear to be in over•m•nt ~ IIU fall, It wm't bave just happened that way.
Tllere -..l!lld Is human lab4r and planning beblnd II.
Lady Tic« faJII had a special day on Aug. 20 when only ihey
10t a flntt.hand loot at the boys m lbe squad. The first annual
Tlgerette (llDic was lleld lbe same evening In the blgh school
wileD mrmbers of tile roaching staff answered distaff questions
about what football Is all about.
.
AD e,es will be m Athens this year wbere Don Eskey no
Imler reigDJ, being replaced by his assistant Gerald Inbody.
Wbalner .tbe causes, Athens' football bas been on a downward
CIIIW lbe past two s WIB !bough the suspicion Is widely held
lbat !here bas been u much lalent as ever Ill the male populatioo
&lt;i Athens HIP School.
· In py case,~ has a bard core of good football players
IIMl from Ellkey's aecmd divlsioo club plus runner Stu Smith,
a ll!ll!cr, who sat out last year. He was an outslandlng
poepect u a llqlbom~.
Upfnllltlnliody has 1breereturning senlcrs, Jim Scott at left
l!lld and Jim ~en and Jeff_Spelft at guards. He is loaded
lD the Jwlrfield, botrever, with returning regulars Mlke Gret'fl at

(Upon Request) .

ROBINSOfCS

·wms.

21(E. 2nd

l'ltmtnl
l'hone
. 992-5421.

FREE

•nd~SGR

Co., W. V;o.

CIDCAGO (UPI) - Ernie
lllnU &lt;i the Chicago Cubs
reached tJeventh place on the
aJI-Ume heme run hitting list
Tuellday night, but otherwise it
• was· Cincinnati Reds' day.
The Reds pounded out 13
hila, three each by Pete Rose
and Woody Woodward, to post
a 5-4 win over the Cubs in the
tJeeond of a three-«Bme series
here.
Bill Hands (11).15) of the

"Your O.soline Purchase Free" If We f•ll To
Oean ~our Windsllield. Weather, Permitting.
No Other Company Dares To Offer Tills

'

Certified Gas Stations
992-9981

PVmeroy, Ohio

IWe Honor BankAmericard and Master Olarge)

4 SoPh S

.IJFIAMAIN/1

To Start

FRESH PRODCE
'

USDA CHOICE

SPECIALS
U.S. No. 1 Gcw. Inspected
MICHIGAN

POTATOES
10 lb. BAG 59~

BUllERMILK *GaL

BONELESS

PKG.

_

p

FOR TODAY
1

*
*

****'*

Fridays Only
~The Drive-In Window
isOpen
It 9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
(Continuously l

$

*

POST
BOX
TOASTIES

BLOCK DEOORATED
UNDERPINNING
28" X 5'

NEW

Great For
Underpinning

FURNITURE

'349.95

---------

"8aaa nee 'On
Convenient
Terms.

NEAR $iii,OOO
AKRON, Ohio (UPI) -Don
Johnson's win in the $40,000
Waukegan Open hiked his official earnings in the
Professional Bowlers
Association to $57,959, but he
still trails Johnny Petraglia by
nearly $20,000 in the standings.

95

'

Trailets &amp; Ho11ses

$35.00"'Down-

EACH

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
773-5554

We Deliver

MASON

You are cordial~ invited
to visit our station during

/

Thursday • Friday • Saturday - August 26-27-28

i

*
**

Jack's Ashland Service
Beech &amp; Locust St

Middleport, Olio
Jack lDngenette, Dealer .

*
!
***'

:LrOJ

~

...

,.-

.,

../

1'

' .

,..

,..

.-J

';

..

,..

~

...

.....

r-'

...,

,..1

~ ~ ~

D~

~

....

...

-

-;-

D

.

FREE GASOLINE
5 ·FREE

Bakery Department

12oz.

UNDERPINNING

.

Beef Stew MeaL .........~:.. 79~

;~CH BREAD

his 15th donble with. two ont in lOth straight 1inJe this sea- In fifth victory against ·u I.-a
the opening frame after Don 13 innings. Louis nant was the with 3. _1-3 1nn1np of one-hit
Buford walked and moved loser and Bnrsmeier gained his ball.
around to third base on a
Brooks Robinson single and
gave Mike Cuellar his 16th
victory on a ·fonr.hltler as
Baltimore blanked Tom Bradley and the While Sox.
Roy Fosler di'opped Ellie
Rodriguez' bases loaded fly ball
in the sixth inning to give
Milwaukee three unearned runs
and the Brewers added three
more In the seventh enroule to
their victory over the Indians.
Gail Hopkins singled over
second baseman John Kennedy's head to score Tom
Burgmeier as Kansas City
defeated the lied Sox for. the
---

3 ROOMS

"*"'· *"'_AI\"'THOUGHT
*"'*""***** *U u **

Cube Steak.....~:!1. 29

89~

has also lost 20 in a season,
might very well have won 30
somewhere along the way had
he been lucky enough to be
pitching for an offensively
productive team.
.
.
Jim Spencer crashed a tworun homer in the bottom of the
ninth to resolve a fine pitching
duel between Calilornia's Clyde
Wright (12-13) and Washington's rookie Pete Broberg to
give the Angels the decision.
Jim Perry, last year's Cy
Young winner in the American
League with a 24-12 record,
pucflea a !our-hitler to lead the
Twins past Detroit and even his
record at 14-14.
Mery Retlerunund, the Orioles' leading batter, cracked
·

after they had scored twice in
the third and once in the
fonrth.
Clay Carroll rushed in and
got Cleo James to fly out, preserving the victory and picking
up his 13tb save of the season.
The losing pitcher was Ferguson Jenkins, who worked seven
innings and gave up 12 of the
13 hits. It was his lOth loss
against 20 wins.

There ar~two days In the ·
wee~ aboUt which I D!!Ver
ond Inning for his l,OOOth major
have'fear. One of these Is
league hit.
It- yesterday and the other is ~
Jim McGlothlin got the win,
tomorrow.
his seventh against 10 losses,
-RObert Burdette
but Wayne Granger relieved
him in the sixth l'lld in the bottom of the ninth Joe Gibbon
came on with men on first and
lfs Quick! Easy
second and two ont.
Gibbon Issued two walks,
forcing in the Cubs' fourth run

Round Steak.~: .. l.09

45'

Double Dolen

POPS

_

p

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

Round Steak.......~.99~

DAIRY

the game, the first eomlng in
the first inning. He scored on
George Fosler's fielder's choice.
Rose doubled again in the
second, scoring Woodward who
had singled, and then scoring
himseU on Hal McRae's single.
His third donble came in the
sixth and he came home on a
McRae single.
The only home run of the
game was Banks', "Mr. Cub,"
his 512th of a long career. He

Oiba will go against the Reds' lied Eddie Matthews for sev~ Grimsley · (&amp;4) in the enth place on the all-time homwindup game today.
er hitting list.
RGee clubbed three donbles in Tony Perez of the Reds also
reached a milestone, beating
out an infield single in the sec-

'AIIAD
Prices Effective
Aug. 25 Thru 28

Hsu (Jdn-mu

the good fortune to be playing
with a strong team, he ~s not
had that added ~e~on of
good Inc~ and good timing that
are crucial to a 30-wln season.
. Blue lost his second co~live 1.(1 ballgame Tuesday mght
and probably his bid for 30. as
the Oakland A's feU victim to
the New York Yankees and a
man named Mel StotUemyre.
In other America~ League
games the Califorrua Angels
beat the Washillgton Senators,
2-1, Minnesota defe!lted Detroit,
3-1, Kansas ?tty sw~t by
Boston 1&gt;4, m 13 mnmgs,
Baltimore blanked Chicago, 1-0,
and Milwaukee trinuned aeveland, 6-5.
StotUemyre, who beat Blue
and Oakland Is the solid man
the stopper' who can qniet
things down when the Yankees
seem to be yielding to chaos.
StotUemyre whose current
record reacb 13-11 but who has
three times won ~ games and

Ancient Ernie up a Notch

Serving: Gotlipolis
Pomeroy &amp; Mdllepart, 0.

By STEVE WltSTEIN
UPI S,ort. Writer
Winning 30games takes more
'.'Jari a great ann. II takes
. lucky bounces and well-placed
~Is: It takes, above all, good
timing.
Vida Blue, unquestionably,
has a great ann. Moreover, he
has the poise and concentration
ol far more experienced
pitchers. But thqh he has bad

.L' BRS .1:' Ourfeen
.
~PORT, Pa. (UP!)
-llsu Chin-mu struck out 14
butlers and allowed only two
hits as Taiwan. defeated Caguas, Pnerlo Rico, 7-0, Tuesday, while Wahiawa, Hawaii,
beat Brockville, Ont., 3-2, in the
opening round of the Utile
League World Series.
On this afternoon's schedule,
Augusta, Maine, meets Torrejon (Spain) Air Force Base,
and Lexington, Ky., meets
Gary, Ind.
Cenlerfielder Lee Win-znei
drove in four ol Taiwan's runs.
He hit a two-run homer in the
third inning. Luis Arimtendi
and Carado Curet of Caguas hit
singles for the only hits off
llsu.
Wahiawa scored three runs in
the first inning on singles by
Jack ToD)ita, winning pitcher
Aaron Lorenzo, Blane Quin and
Randy Kato and a wild pitch by
Brockville pitcher Dan Collission.
First baseman Gerald Crooke
hit a 226-foot homer in the
second and ius cousin, Larry
Crooke, doubled in Brockvllle's
~.andl..eiCbamptinatrighthalfandDonWoodatleft other run in the fifth.
The Hawaiians face Taiwan
bal. A top p011peet up from lbe soph&lt;m~s Is lbe youngest
HindJeyboy, like the others, all foolbaJJ player. And Stu Smith. on Thursday in a semi-final
game and Ontario drops into
Yup. Let's add Athens to Charley's list.
the loser's bracket.

2-HOUR_
.CLEANING_

SliW. Main

·

. MARAUDER COACH CHARLEY CHANCEY expects Logan,

At Your Ceilifoai.Oil Company*

PVIicy.

·

-thmpallutreportaWellsloabaanot totlis time appointed
a held foolball coach. The 111JU8d Is w&lt;rking out under assistant
coarJies
·

cnuuJJ

FREE

•

O.Iruytowbalwaiwidely predicted, and In many quarters

M--.1.;

IN COWMBUS
. Me. and Mrs. Raymond Smith
and daughter Janice were in
Columbus Sunday to visit their
son, Donald and family,
...,.;ally to see their new
grandsm, Donald Raymond.
Miss Tooa Diane is a guest of
tbe Raymond Smiths at this

· ..

hrJ' u::d a fact, SeWa will be Ill a Rockel unifcnn this autumn,

JletM:,

Held

_Blue ·Loses Second Straight; 1-0

tile Sports Desk

GALLONS

We have the finest gasoline and service in this
area and we want to prove it! Drive in ... fill up
with powerfull Ashland Gasoline and we'll give
you a coupon good for 5 FREE GALLONS
on your next visit!
·

plus

We'll also give you five additional coupons,
each good for one, free gallon on future visits
to our station.

s ·MORE

Altogether, you get 10 FREE GALLONS!

with fill up of
l 0 gallons or more

29C

GOOD AT BIG 3
EXPiRES 8-28-71

GALLONS

CHARM IN
.BATHROOM TISSUE
(ASSORTED)

4 R0US 39~
WITJf COUPON

EXPIRES 8-28-71

Frozen

FOOD BUYS

MORTON DINNERS
ASSORTED

Once they·.. learned to tell limo,
they d-rve a roal watch.
Cara.. llo by Bulova.
Caravollo'o "Siudent" It a great
first watch tor bOy or girl. It has a
proelalon lowaled movement
Unbreekablo mainspring. Full
numeral dill. A youlh-sizod strap.
lt'a a watCh a kid can read. And
can't OY4Itwind. A vtry grown-up
watch at a youngller price.

VIETTI
BEEf or PORK

B.B.Q. Sauce ~

TEEN QUEEN

Tomato
Juice

5ge
. Ript

LIONS CLUB, HOLE IN ONE
TOURNAMENT, AUG. 23-28
S P.M. to 9 P.M., Meigs Co. Fairtrounds

Rnl;tl
Te
Lillt -

•

J

•

Visit Jack L.ongenette, your Ashland Dealer

'

in Middleport for quality products, expert senice!

.

HURRY! HURRY! LIMITED TIME TO
ENJOY THIS VERY SPECIAL OFFER!

�'

•

J

'I

..

'·

.

-~~ri~'.IIG'6''
. .; ~•p•--.~
..
h...,o,,o~ :A gw4Zi,Wl1 ,
'

·.

.

.
1-'l'lle.-llfi"iiiMI,MidCiepooi-PGawooy,C., .~f'!!t25, 19'11 ·

Sacrifices Wide and Deep l.

Ilardin Prevued ·Price Freezes
.BRENNER Federation. They were there.
. UPI farm Editor
. So, too, were representatives
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Ac· of such groups as the National
~ to the. formal protocol SoybeanProceSSOf8AsSociation,
. of Waablngton "background . the American Cotton Shippers
~eflllgs," . ahnosl nobody is Association, the National C:in·
•tppillledto know thatSecr:et.ary ners Association; the Aniinal
of Agriculture .Cilfford M. Har· · Health Institute, the National
din · lasl Thursday privately Grange, National Farmers Un·
l!rie(ed a roomf)il ol .lrade and ion, and the U.S. Chamber of
· farmorganizationofficialsonthe Commerce.
acknin.i stration'sprice freeze
Also present, among others,
I*OiPaJIIwere representatives of Cargill,
Representatives of the Nation- Inc., the Giant Grain and Comal ,Association of Food Chains rilodity firm, and officials of the
!Uldthe!llternational~ociation NatjonaiTtirkeyFederation,Na·
of Ice Cream Manufacturers tiona! Grain Trade Council, Nalatow ail aboul it, however, So tiona! Milk Prod!lcers Federa·
do officials of the American Na-· lion, American Meat Instituie,
tiona! CatUemen's Association National Cotton Council, Tobac·
and the AmeriCan Farm Bureau co Associates, Great Plains
B)' NERNAJU)

r---~----------------------,

! Washington
By Clarence
! Report Miller
I

Wheat, ·Inc., a local law firm,
ec6nomicconsultantMartinSor·
liin, and the American Foreslty
AsSociation.
Newsmen, who learned of the
meei!ng rrorri pitrticipants before it was held at the. Agricultore Department, were told it
was a "backgroUnd" session
with the .press barred. The rules
for such a session, o(ficials said
require that nobody present dis·
close who addressed them and
answered questions.
But, according to one_participant in the meeting, the organizations and business firms who
had men on hand will know it
was the agriculture secretary
who spoke.
"Why certainly, the men who
were there will have to tell their
people what happened," the
source said.
"Of course, if they're smart
they'll do it on the phone so
there won't be any writtenrec·
ords to embarrass anybody,"
th
'dded
e source a
.
.
In theory, the general public

would llot be 11llowed to !mow
that Hardin. was the source of
whatever was said at the .meeting;
"Bul when you get such a.
roomful (about 75} of people,
how are you going to keep it
quiet"oneparticipantasked.As
usual in such cases, rewts of
what was said, and by whom,
quickly leaked. Har&lt;!ill reivewed
A krill is a two-ineb·long
some price .freeze decisions ai, shrimplike crustacean
ready made by lhe Office o_f abUll&lt;!ant in ~!arctic waEmergency Preparedness ters . The World Almanac
(OEP) which is running the says that scientists believe
the krill could become an
price program. He said, partiimportant source of animal
cipants agreed, almost nothing protein
for millions o£ ~·
on specifics. that had not ai· -pie. It is estimate&lt;fthafa
yearly harvest of 70 milready been reporled.
lion
tons of krill . would
The day before Hardin's
meeting with the farm and in- yield 20 grams of animal
duslry groups was held, a simi- protein per day for a tbird
world's population.
Jar "backgrounder" was con- of the Copyr_
i ght© 1911,
dueled for the news media to .Newspaper Ente rpri!Je Assn.
clarify OEP actions affecting
food and agriculture. It was
conducled· by a high govern· Kentucky's nickname
mentofficialwhoseidentity un· comes from the B;bll!ldance
•
of bluegrass found m Jts cender the rules, cannot be re- tral area; according to Envealed.
cyclopaedia Britannica.

By DiCI WJi.SI .
No 101D!r bad lbe Pt . idenl "" ,.,i-4 tile
WASHINGTON (ijl'() -To me, llie most ~ fn!ele iban MJs. ltllaaett,. I ed
beau.llful- about the cumnt oi:aJDomic crisis she was goq to buY a new car and baft !IS'
is the.way everyone hl!s l'ellp(illded II! President kildlen remodeled.
·
Nixon's cailf~r ''sacrifices."
· Mfm,inpartk:ullr,waslmjl
'bJMIS.
Vh'lually every s grrenl fl. lbe &lt;CCIJCIDy bas KDa-'snaqJie, She immedjately be H f.,
exiibiledaWiliingrm tosacrifice$metlUgf« a.ha'llilure sllft tomab a sacrillclali*U•t X
lbe C(Jil)Jlon weal &amp;± ess leaders, f« fl a couple lll!lf.cbairs. .·
example, arewilliDg tollaCrifice labor, and labor
,Uibougb it bas been mly a - since NlJall
leaden are wiUiDg to sacrifice Wiess.
erumciaW i j s - libMHmic policy, lbe eliire
II truly wamis the bear! to ~ so owch cowilry ~ il awash iun ever~ tide of
altruism.
sacrifidai llclivity. In _acme CIXII· Dllft tblll
._,.
the
w.... Slteet's reaction ID wag&amp;¢ce freeze awash.
.
.. ,
11
typifiedlbesaerifi~spiritabroadintbeland.
AC~ SW '4
Malting li the stoct mart.:et a .sacrjfidal altar,
Govaililil!llt 8gencies that bave ~ of
investors pedorined so rilaDy aefs of self. adminislel'ing lbe wage-price fr~Je ·l l'J
- deprivatioo they Pushed the Dow Jooes iJdJs... 'W!!rilably S'II'IIJIIIIed witb pelitt0111 fir .-.lficial
trial average to a rec!K'd one-day gain. '
Iiliis
·
·
.._____ ....~ 0 . . _ . , _
semp
•
_...,_
;~
818 ..,.._......, - · 'l1le new 10 per cent ... ~,.e oo ......Then came the ~tem•nJfte reactioo of goods also bas inl!iJ'ed an 011threat fl.. ~.
AFUIO PresideD' Geclrge Meany, wbo urged . F« instance, Scoldl driakln, Po l1'e
tlJe 13 million union ~ be aep mts to oobiously public-llirited, ·aaoii;MIIIy
sacrifice any labor coolracfs containing frozen bn~ up jual abwl evsy bottle in .sight tbat
.._
·wage intteases.
W8S impc:l'ted before tiE DeW impcwt WU 'w r
And should further self-ilenial be needed, ~·
Meany suggesled that the workers engage in
Current supplies of otller lnyllll!d iloods
sacrificial slrikes.
IJ'Gbablywm'lbe oo the sheiWs lqeitber.So if
Setting a palt!!m fir sacrifiCeS by consnllli"'S you fancy 8llch merchalllise, I'd ad9i8e you to
acrOIIS the nation was Mrs. Varglnla
make a quiet trip ID JCIIII' dealer beflre lbe
Nixon's special asaislanl for ~111"'1" affairs. SB!rlicus gel it all.

.

'

.29 02.
, CAN

STOKELY

UIT.

Del Monte

SOLID HEAD

\

PINEAPPLE

Lettuce

c

GRAPEFRUIT
OR

460l

ORA

lARGE

'

Kna-.

I
I

Babe Ruth. Edward R.
Murrow. Humphrey Bogart.
John Foster Dulles. Vince
Lombardi. Nat "King" Cole.
They all lost their lives to
cancer.
These well-known personalities are but a few of the
millions of Americans wbo have
died of cancer thr0118h the
years. According to the
American Cancer Society, an
estimaled 3.5 million deaths
atlribuled to cancer will be
reCGI'ded during the !leventies.
The Cancer Society estimates
that 18,100 Ohioans will die of
cancer during 1971 alone.
· If detected early enough,
however, many cancers can be
cured by swgery or radiation
treatment. Some cancers can be
. prevenled, but not au. The key
Is in recogJiizing the early
·symptoms of the disease or in
avoiding the latown abettors of
. cancer.
Recent
sciel)tific
hreatthroughs in the campaign
to isolate the elements of the
disease
and
eventually
eradicate it have renewed
public optimism that a reliable
cure ..W be forthcoming. But
the colitinually high number of
new cases of cancer reported
aMuaily should -served to also
remind us thlit optimism must
be guarded, at most, and that
the struggle to cooquer cancer
once and for au is far from
finished.
Congress has played a part in
the prolonged endeavor to
defeat cancer, the most
noteworthy action coming only

recently when the Senate acled
to establish a new agency within
the National Institutes of Health
labeled the Conquest of Cancer
Agency. Under the bill, the
director of the new agency
would have direct access to the
White Hotise. The new agency
will work in cooperation with
other cancer-reialed research
components of the vast National
Institutes of Health. The Senate
legislation -which passed by a
vote of 79 • I - represented a
compro~se between the Ad·
ministration and proponents of
an entirely independent agency.
The legislation included
authorization for the ex·
penditure Of $332 million for
cancer programs in fiscal year
1972.
The bill has since moved to
the House Interstate and
Foreign Commerce Committee.
Hopefully the final version
be sent to the President for his
signature by the end of the
calendar year.
As the President . so
poignantly stated in h'is
message on a national cancer
program: "Success will test the
very limits of our iinagination
and our_resourcefulness. It will
require·a high sense of purpose
and a strong sense of
discipline."
I'm confident that the
Congress shares the President's
sense of purpose in this drive to
conquer one of mankind's most
elusive enemies.

Pineapple

OR

SLICED
CRUSHED
CHUNKS

PORK

Prices Good Thru Aug. 28th, 1971

MA
BROWN

·MAXWELL
HOUSE

APPLE
BUTTER

COFFEE

STOKELY'S

VIEnl
BEEF

BAR-B-QUE

'

REGULAR, DRIP
ELECTRA PERK

will

•

19 oz.

10Jh oz.
ALLGOOD

Sliced Bacon
SMOKED RIB
Pork Chops • •
OSCAR MAYER
All Meat Franks
•

.eftc:

BUTT STYLE

......
• pkc.

Pork Steaks • • .....,

3 lb.
CAN

CAN
ROUND lONE SHOULDER

SwiaS1eab •.
3-l.A. I'KG. OR LGR.
FR.OZEN-7 VARIETIES
2
89
Mortons Dianen .. ' Grn•4 C.1ck •
FRESH
C:nn leef lo1na..7f Perk Roast • •

'J"I!J') •
~~~ J

PICtiC

Kingsbury
News, Notes

WHAT BIG EYES you
have, Vladimir. Which may
or may not be . the real
11ame of this lad captured
by the camera for a winnlag photo in an nhlbillon
of more than 3110 shots by
the Novosli Press Agency
Ia Moscow. All were taken
duriDg the past year by
ageacy cameramen.

Market Report
PI'. PLEASANT
LIVES~K

SALES CO.

PI'. PLEASANT, W. VA.

Sall!rday, Ailg. 21,1971
HOGS -: 175 to 22017 to 20.25 ;
Heavies 16.75to 17.90; Lights 15
to 17.25; Fat Sows 13 to 17;
Baars 12.5o to 13,75; Pigs 6 to 12;
,, .Stock Shoats 1o to 18.
·; CATrLE - Steers 24.70 to
·': · :Jil.76; Heifers 19 to 25; Fat Cows
;~; IUO to 22.~; Canners 14 to
; ;11.7&amp;; Bulls 21 to 26.25; Milk
·:: ·Ciiws lOll to 175; Stock Cows and
, :.Calves 160 to 270; Stock Steers
; • :M to 32.50; Stock Heifers 21 to
i · 21.25; Stock Steer Cillves 27 to
;.:•.so; Stock Heifer Calves 23 to
;·~ao.
..
::: VEALCALVES -Tops43.25;
;,: ~ec..,!da 41; Medlwn 3S.25lo :J!!;
:;.CJ ,-., I!, Heltiea M to 43,

.

.

The C:irle!on Church had its
annual Sunday School picnic at
the Fort Meigs Park near
Rutland. Sunday School was
held at 10 a.m. followed by a
picnic dinner at noon. The af·
ternoon was enjoyed by several
dlfferent games.
Visiting with Mr. and Mrs.
John Pedras and daughter at
the Beai home were Mr. and
Mrs. Danny Brickles and sons,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hall and son,
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Pedras and
son of Portsmouth, Elizabeth
Murray, Coiloe Hudson and Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Young.
Kenny Hariley, who is em·
ployed in Florida, was home
over the weekend to visit his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Hartley.
Mr. and Mrs. Loreri Coleman
1Mary Arnold} are announcing
.the arrival of a baby girl who
will answer to !he name of
Barbara Ann . Grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ar.
nold.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean, Mrs.
Kenneth Imboden and Peggy of
Middleport, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Markins, Racine ,
Richard and John Walter Dean
were in Pataskala Saturday to
attend the wedding of Miss
Vickie Kendall and Edward .
Weekly who were married at
the Columbia Center Church
with the Rev. Lowell Lewis the
minister.
Mrs . Winnie While and
Sherman visited with her
mother, Mrs. Jennie Hollie,
who is a patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she is
iinproving.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl and
Rodney visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Harrison recently.
Miss Martha Arnold and
Daniel Cu nningham Were
1narried al the Zion Church.
Attending-from here were Mrs.
Hazel Arnold and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Arnold , Also attending
were Mr, · an~ Mrs. Lester
Arno!ki '!f Columbus;

·'

· BAKING or STEWING HENS

BUCKET of
CHICKEN.
16 BEST PIECES
4
4 WINGS,

9C

Chees1e p·
· • -· - 4 ·
. 1zza
·JENO~
5ausage
· DOUILE p•. 1zzc:- ••Ub.
95'
i....
JENO'S SIN GU ·

JEt~O'S DOUilE

. We Red"lll Federal Faod Stamps
J

. ,,,,...

.

:

FA"ILY IOWl " 0 5. Fl' ·~rs

......-.. ue

- · - · - ---

.
·
JANE PAilEI

-

•

Fr •t RCo?lls •

10 .....
... &amp;7~

~Ailt"PAIIH

1•"• .

Ice Crean •

~~

Ft eacll Fries • :

.39'

~· P~tl!pp!ie=.r:on:i,rP.:izz:a=._!:~:..9!5~'....!~S!•!!..!!Wl!lcii:!!.!Ro~lls~8~ti~2fc!:_.-'--~99 Noodles 3 :: '1•
•

I

4THIGHS
'4 DRUMSnCKS

M &amp; I ' SHOPPING CENTER
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
.

.lkol6fc

AlP

ANN PAR

atUNK STYLE

lB.

· · -;· '...... • •2....oOft&lt;:
Margar1ne
r
~

6 LB. AVG.

'•

'~

'
•

�'

•

J

'I

..

'·

.

-~~ri~'.IIG'6''
. .; ~•p•--.~
..
h...,o,,o~ :A gw4Zi,Wl1 ,
'

·.

.

.
1-'l'lle.-llfi"iiiMI,MidCiepooi-PGawooy,C., .~f'!!t25, 19'11 ·

Sacrifices Wide and Deep l.

Ilardin Prevued ·Price Freezes
.BRENNER Federation. They were there.
. UPI farm Editor
. So, too, were representatives
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Ac· of such groups as the National
~ to the. formal protocol SoybeanProceSSOf8AsSociation,
. of Waablngton "background . the American Cotton Shippers
~eflllgs," . ahnosl nobody is Association, the National C:in·
•tppillledto know thatSecr:et.ary ners Association; the Aniinal
of Agriculture .Cilfford M. Har· · Health Institute, the National
din · lasl Thursday privately Grange, National Farmers Un·
l!rie(ed a roomf)il ol .lrade and ion, and the U.S. Chamber of
· farmorganizationofficialsonthe Commerce.
acknin.i stration'sprice freeze
Also present, among others,
I*OiPaJIIwere representatives of Cargill,
Representatives of the Nation- Inc., the Giant Grain and Comal ,Association of Food Chains rilodity firm, and officials of the
!Uldthe!llternational~ociation NatjonaiTtirkeyFederation,Na·
of Ice Cream Manufacturers tiona! Grain Trade Council, Nalatow ail aboul it, however, So tiona! Milk Prod!lcers Federa·
do officials of the American Na-· lion, American Meat Instituie,
tiona! CatUemen's Association National Cotton Council, Tobac·
and the AmeriCan Farm Bureau co Associates, Great Plains
B)' NERNAJU)

r---~----------------------,

! Washington
By Clarence
! Report Miller
I

Wheat, ·Inc., a local law firm,
ec6nomicconsultantMartinSor·
liin, and the American Foreslty
AsSociation.
Newsmen, who learned of the
meei!ng rrorri pitrticipants before it was held at the. Agricultore Department, were told it
was a "backgroUnd" session
with the .press barred. The rules
for such a session, o(ficials said
require that nobody present dis·
close who addressed them and
answered questions.
But, according to one_participant in the meeting, the organizations and business firms who
had men on hand will know it
was the agriculture secretary
who spoke.
"Why certainly, the men who
were there will have to tell their
people what happened," the
source said.
"Of course, if they're smart
they'll do it on the phone so
there won't be any writtenrec·
ords to embarrass anybody,"
th
'dded
e source a
.
.
In theory, the general public

would llot be 11llowed to !mow
that Hardin. was the source of
whatever was said at the .meeting;
"Bul when you get such a.
roomful (about 75} of people,
how are you going to keep it
quiet"oneparticipantasked.As
usual in such cases, rewts of
what was said, and by whom,
quickly leaked. Har&lt;!ill reivewed
A krill is a two-ineb·long
some price .freeze decisions ai, shrimplike crustacean
ready made by lhe Office o_f abUll&lt;!ant in ~!arctic waEmergency Preparedness ters . The World Almanac
(OEP) which is running the says that scientists believe
the krill could become an
price program. He said, partiimportant source of animal
cipants agreed, almost nothing protein
for millions o£ ~·
on specifics. that had not ai· -pie. It is estimate&lt;fthafa
yearly harvest of 70 milready been reporled.
lion
tons of krill . would
The day before Hardin's
meeting with the farm and in- yield 20 grams of animal
duslry groups was held, a simi- protein per day for a tbird
world's population.
Jar "backgrounder" was con- of the Copyr_
i ght© 1911,
dueled for the news media to .Newspaper Ente rpri!Je Assn.
clarify OEP actions affecting
food and agriculture. It was
conducled· by a high govern· Kentucky's nickname
mentofficialwhoseidentity un· comes from the B;bll!ldance
•
of bluegrass found m Jts cender the rules, cannot be re- tral area; according to Envealed.
cyclopaedia Britannica.

By DiCI WJi.SI .
No 101D!r bad lbe Pt . idenl "" ,.,i-4 tile
WASHINGTON (ijl'() -To me, llie most ~ fn!ele iban MJs. ltllaaett,. I ed
beau.llful- about the cumnt oi:aJDomic crisis she was goq to buY a new car and baft !IS'
is the.way everyone hl!s l'ellp(illded II! President kildlen remodeled.
·
Nixon's cailf~r ''sacrifices."
· Mfm,inpartk:ullr,waslmjl
'bJMIS.
Vh'lually every s grrenl fl. lbe &lt;CCIJCIDy bas KDa-'snaqJie, She immedjately be H f.,
exiibiledaWiliingrm tosacrifice$metlUgf« a.ha'llilure sllft tomab a sacrillclali*U•t X
lbe C(Jil)Jlon weal &amp;± ess leaders, f« fl a couple lll!lf.cbairs. .·
example, arewilliDg tollaCrifice labor, and labor
,Uibougb it bas been mly a - since NlJall
leaden are wiUiDg to sacrifice Wiess.
erumciaW i j s - libMHmic policy, lbe eliire
II truly wamis the bear! to ~ so owch cowilry ~ il awash iun ever~ tide of
altruism.
sacrifidai llclivity. In _acme CIXII· Dllft tblll
._,.
the
w.... Slteet's reaction ID wag&amp;¢ce freeze awash.
.
.. ,
11
typifiedlbesaerifi~spiritabroadintbeland.
AC~ SW '4
Malting li the stoct mart.:et a .sacrjfidal altar,
Govaililil!llt 8gencies that bave ~ of
investors pedorined so rilaDy aefs of self. adminislel'ing lbe wage-price fr~Je ·l l'J
- deprivatioo they Pushed the Dow Jooes iJdJs... 'W!!rilably S'II'IIJIIIIed witb pelitt0111 fir .-.lficial
trial average to a rec!K'd one-day gain. '
Iiliis
·
·
.._____ ....~ 0 . . _ . , _
semp
•
_...,_
;~
818 ..,.._......, - · 'l1le new 10 per cent ... ~,.e oo ......Then came the ~tem•nJfte reactioo of goods also bas inl!iJ'ed an 011threat fl.. ~.
AFUIO PresideD' Geclrge Meany, wbo urged . F« instance, Scoldl driakln, Po l1'e
tlJe 13 million union ~ be aep mts to oobiously public-llirited, ·aaoii;MIIIy
sacrifice any labor coolracfs containing frozen bn~ up jual abwl evsy bottle in .sight tbat
.._
·wage intteases.
W8S impc:l'ted before tiE DeW impcwt WU 'w r
And should further self-ilenial be needed, ~·
Meany suggesled that the workers engage in
Current supplies of otller lnyllll!d iloods
sacrificial slrikes.
IJ'Gbablywm'lbe oo the sheiWs lqeitber.So if
Setting a palt!!m fir sacrifiCeS by consnllli"'S you fancy 8llch merchalllise, I'd ad9i8e you to
acrOIIS the nation was Mrs. Varglnla
make a quiet trip ID JCIIII' dealer beflre lbe
Nixon's special asaislanl for ~111"'1" affairs. SB!rlicus gel it all.

.

'

.29 02.
, CAN

STOKELY

UIT.

Del Monte

SOLID HEAD

\

PINEAPPLE

Lettuce

c

GRAPEFRUIT
OR

460l

ORA

lARGE

'

Kna-.

I
I

Babe Ruth. Edward R.
Murrow. Humphrey Bogart.
John Foster Dulles. Vince
Lombardi. Nat "King" Cole.
They all lost their lives to
cancer.
These well-known personalities are but a few of the
millions of Americans wbo have
died of cancer thr0118h the
years. According to the
American Cancer Society, an
estimaled 3.5 million deaths
atlribuled to cancer will be
reCGI'ded during the !leventies.
The Cancer Society estimates
that 18,100 Ohioans will die of
cancer during 1971 alone.
· If detected early enough,
however, many cancers can be
cured by swgery or radiation
treatment. Some cancers can be
. prevenled, but not au. The key
Is in recogJiizing the early
·symptoms of the disease or in
avoiding the latown abettors of
. cancer.
Recent
sciel)tific
hreatthroughs in the campaign
to isolate the elements of the
disease
and
eventually
eradicate it have renewed
public optimism that a reliable
cure ..W be forthcoming. But
the colitinually high number of
new cases of cancer reported
aMuaily should -served to also
remind us thlit optimism must
be guarded, at most, and that
the struggle to cooquer cancer
once and for au is far from
finished.
Congress has played a part in
the prolonged endeavor to
defeat cancer, the most
noteworthy action coming only

recently when the Senate acled
to establish a new agency within
the National Institutes of Health
labeled the Conquest of Cancer
Agency. Under the bill, the
director of the new agency
would have direct access to the
White Hotise. The new agency
will work in cooperation with
other cancer-reialed research
components of the vast National
Institutes of Health. The Senate
legislation -which passed by a
vote of 79 • I - represented a
compro~se between the Ad·
ministration and proponents of
an entirely independent agency.
The legislation included
authorization for the ex·
penditure Of $332 million for
cancer programs in fiscal year
1972.
The bill has since moved to
the House Interstate and
Foreign Commerce Committee.
Hopefully the final version
be sent to the President for his
signature by the end of the
calendar year.
As the President . so
poignantly stated in h'is
message on a national cancer
program: "Success will test the
very limits of our iinagination
and our_resourcefulness. It will
require·a high sense of purpose
and a strong sense of
discipline."
I'm confident that the
Congress shares the President's
sense of purpose in this drive to
conquer one of mankind's most
elusive enemies.

Pineapple

OR

SLICED
CRUSHED
CHUNKS

PORK

Prices Good Thru Aug. 28th, 1971

MA
BROWN

·MAXWELL
HOUSE

APPLE
BUTTER

COFFEE

STOKELY'S

VIEnl
BEEF

BAR-B-QUE

'

REGULAR, DRIP
ELECTRA PERK

will

•

19 oz.

10Jh oz.
ALLGOOD

Sliced Bacon
SMOKED RIB
Pork Chops • •
OSCAR MAYER
All Meat Franks
•

.eftc:

BUTT STYLE

......
• pkc.

Pork Steaks • • .....,

3 lb.
CAN

CAN
ROUND lONE SHOULDER

SwiaS1eab •.
3-l.A. I'KG. OR LGR.
FR.OZEN-7 VARIETIES
2
89
Mortons Dianen .. ' Grn•4 C.1ck •
FRESH
C:nn leef lo1na..7f Perk Roast • •

'J"I!J') •
~~~ J

PICtiC

Kingsbury
News, Notes

WHAT BIG EYES you
have, Vladimir. Which may
or may not be . the real
11ame of this lad captured
by the camera for a winnlag photo in an nhlbillon
of more than 3110 shots by
the Novosli Press Agency
Ia Moscow. All were taken
duriDg the past year by
ageacy cameramen.

Market Report
PI'. PLEASANT
LIVES~K

SALES CO.

PI'. PLEASANT, W. VA.

Sall!rday, Ailg. 21,1971
HOGS -: 175 to 22017 to 20.25 ;
Heavies 16.75to 17.90; Lights 15
to 17.25; Fat Sows 13 to 17;
Baars 12.5o to 13,75; Pigs 6 to 12;
,, .Stock Shoats 1o to 18.
·; CATrLE - Steers 24.70 to
·': · :Jil.76; Heifers 19 to 25; Fat Cows
;~; IUO to 22.~; Canners 14 to
; ;11.7&amp;; Bulls 21 to 26.25; Milk
·:: ·Ciiws lOll to 175; Stock Cows and
, :.Calves 160 to 270; Stock Steers
; • :M to 32.50; Stock Heifers 21 to
i · 21.25; Stock Steer Cillves 27 to
;.:•.so; Stock Heifer Calves 23 to
;·~ao.
..
::: VEALCALVES -Tops43.25;
;,: ~ec..,!da 41; Medlwn 3S.25lo :J!!;
:;.CJ ,-., I!, Heltiea M to 43,

.

.

The C:irle!on Church had its
annual Sunday School picnic at
the Fort Meigs Park near
Rutland. Sunday School was
held at 10 a.m. followed by a
picnic dinner at noon. The af·
ternoon was enjoyed by several
dlfferent games.
Visiting with Mr. and Mrs.
John Pedras and daughter at
the Beai home were Mr. and
Mrs. Danny Brickles and sons,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hall and son,
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Pedras and
son of Portsmouth, Elizabeth
Murray, Coiloe Hudson and Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Young.
Kenny Hariley, who is em·
ployed in Florida, was home
over the weekend to visit his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Hartley.
Mr. and Mrs. Loreri Coleman
1Mary Arnold} are announcing
.the arrival of a baby girl who
will answer to !he name of
Barbara Ann . Grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ar.
nold.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean, Mrs.
Kenneth Imboden and Peggy of
Middleport, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Markins, Racine ,
Richard and John Walter Dean
were in Pataskala Saturday to
attend the wedding of Miss
Vickie Kendall and Edward .
Weekly who were married at
the Columbia Center Church
with the Rev. Lowell Lewis the
minister.
Mrs . Winnie While and
Sherman visited with her
mother, Mrs. Jennie Hollie,
who is a patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she is
iinproving.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl and
Rodney visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Harrison recently.
Miss Martha Arnold and
Daniel Cu nningham Were
1narried al the Zion Church.
Attending-from here were Mrs.
Hazel Arnold and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Arnold , Also attending
were Mr, · an~ Mrs. Lester
Arno!ki '!f Columbus;

·'

· BAKING or STEWING HENS

BUCKET of
CHICKEN.
16 BEST PIECES
4
4 WINGS,

9C

Chees1e p·
· • -· - 4 ·
. 1zza
·JENO~
5ausage
· DOUILE p•. 1zzc:- ••Ub.
95'
i....
JENO'S SIN GU ·

JEt~O'S DOUilE

. We Red"lll Federal Faod Stamps
J

. ,,,,...

.

:

FA"ILY IOWl " 0 5. Fl' ·~rs

......-.. ue

- · - · - ---

.
·
JANE PAilEI

-

•

Fr •t RCo?lls •

10 .....
... &amp;7~

~Ailt"PAIIH

1•"• .

Ice Crean •

~~

Ft eacll Fries • :

.39'

~· P~tl!pp!ie=.r:on:i,rP.:izz:a=._!:~:..9!5~'....!~S!•!!..!!Wl!lcii:!!.!Ro~lls~8~ti~2fc!:_.-'--~99 Noodles 3 :: '1•
•

I

4THIGHS
'4 DRUMSnCKS

M &amp; I ' SHOPPING CENTER
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
.

.lkol6fc

AlP

ANN PAR

atUNK STYLE

lB.

· · -;· '...... • •2....oOft&lt;:
Margar1ne
r
~

6 LB. AVG.

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'
•

�: 11-ftlll ._,
-a..ar••.aarl'lll'lllll-""',._.,,
-~'
I
-,, o.. - -·•

'

New Haven
Soeial Events

el, McMullen Coming

•

To Point Pleasant Tonight'

' The annuli picnic dillller Gl
the New Ha'i'I!D Garden Uub
was held cn the lawn rJ MrS. W.

.

'

T.SOOne. ~y.~t~

with Mrs. N. 0. Wein, and Mrs.
James Macltnight as cohostesses.
Members and guests attending were Mrs. Herman
Layne, Mrs. Harry Layne, Mrs.
Howard Wagenbals, Mrs.
Donald Smith, Mrs. Ray
Proffitt, Mrs. Ray Fox, Mrs.
Ottie Roush, Mrs. F. A. Batey,
Lelah Jane PoweU, members,
and Mrs. Cameron .Casto, Mrs.
Emil Knight, Mrs. Dorothy
J!IDI&lt;S and family, A. K. McClung and W. T. Stone, guests.
FRY ENJOYED
Members of the live· Wue
Class of lhe United Methodist
Church held a hamburger fry in
the social room of the churcb
with Mrs. Howard Burris
serving as hostess. The invocation was given by the
.
pastor, Rev. William DeMoss.
WORKING
IN 'IHE mtJTE -Bruce Wallace, new heal
of a Dneman at.practice 1' tis;. Wallace, 118tift of MidThe scripture and a reading
footbaD
~
at
Southern
111gb
ScOOol,
grades
the
Noct!•
dleport,
wu a Yellow Jadletaollllnhall Utthersily star.
were given by Mrs. Howard
Burris, followed with a prayer _ _ _ _ _ _.....;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __
by Mrs. Otha Lieving. The
meeting closed with the Lord's
Prayer in unison.
· :...;;;.;.:;:;..;=.:.;..=....;;.==.;.;..:..;:::.=.
Attending were Mrs. Thelma
Capehart, Mrs. Howard Burris,
Mrs. Otha Ueving, Mrs. Ber·
nard Ueving, Mrs. Ray
Mrs.
Edith
Weaver,
Bumgarner, Mrs. Letha Kelly,
Mrs. F. A. Batey, Mrs. llarry
Capehart, Mrs. 0. 0. Sayre and
By mCHARD PUTNAM PRATT
Rev. William DeMoss. ·,
COOKOUT ENJOYED
Mr. and Mrs. Otha tiering
entertained with a cookout in SelliDg one house and buy- to retrieve your iovestment
You'll need professional $1,250 to $3,000, depending
later.
More
modest
improvehcnor of !heir son Mr, and Mrs. ing another, just to get more
help in the design of im- on size, and wbether a new
'
room or more modern quar- ments, bowever, will only provements, but it is possi- dormer is needled. Price es, -~· . .
- · , lievmg ll!ld daughters Gl ters, is probably one of the enbance the value of your ble to get a quick look at timate iJICittdes Door, walls.
Wooster, Mass ., who were poorest reasons for moving property.
ceiling, wiring, insulation
some typical costs.
visiting ~m. Other guests at It's expensive. It's
In his book called "The and heat.
As a general rule, if you
the affmr were Mrs. Thelma live. It straiJI&amp;-.aDd some- .have a sound. borne io a Homeowner's Survival Kit,"
New rwm dllllw. About
Capehart, Mr .. and Mrs. times breJIIrn ties with good stable neighborhood, bave it Art Watkins devotes consid- $12 to flO per square foot for
Lawrence Ltevmg and son friends. And it requires mas- well landscaped, and need erable space to this subject frame construction, up to $25
David, Of Winfield, Mrs. Estyl sive amounts of time and relatively simple improve- Cost estimates for almost for lllllSODi'Y· The price inClark, and the host and hostess. energy on the part of all con- ments or additions to make every conceivable alteration cludes the new foundation,
$1e.ll3 COu.ECI'ED
cerned.
it fit your needs, you'll prob- or addition are iocluded. 1be walls, roof, heat and wiring.
are from a 19'10 sur- Alwm)w.. Iidia(. ~ to
Members of the New Haven Many people who make ably be money ahead if you figures
vey
of
contractors io all $110 per 100 square feet, inWoman'sClub conducted a fund such moves dread every remodel rather than trade parts of the country.
staiied. 1be typical bouse
drive for the Red Cross Jninute of it, from beginning up.
Here are a few samples will cost between $7511 and
Even if the prices of the based
BloodmObile last week. A total to end;,"But wh~t else can
$1,51»,
on Watkins' book:
old and new homes are not
of $169.93 was realized from the we do. they wail.
New .-fla(. $25 to $40 per
Remodeled kltdlea. $1,750
drive. They also helped to man One answer is: Stay wbere too far apart, other costs can to $4,000 iostaiied. Figure 100 square f e e t, installed
the Red Cross Booth at the you &amp;!'"· and alter your !HJ!De spoil your dream. Closing $100 per foot for cabinets. over existing roofing. This
Mason Cowt\y Fair
to swt your_needs. Existing costs on ·a new mortgage countertop and appliances. assumes standard weight,
·
homes can be expanded, (probably at a higher rate) , New Doors, walls, wiodows asphalt shingles. Other maCWB MEEI'S
contracted, j a c ked up, moving charges, landscap- or structural cbanges will terials, such as c e d a r
Mrs. J. W. McMurray was stretched out, and e v e n ing expense, and the endless
shakes, can raise the cost
hostess at lhe Tuesday meeting turned around. They can be outlays for screens, curtains, raise the cost.
N e w half-bath. $750 to considerably.
of lhe Julia T. Bryant Sewini given a totally new appear- carpets, drapes and other
INFWSI'APIII ENTOPIISl ASSN. I
Club at her home in Mason.
ance, . or left exactly the whatnot can give you finan- $1,500. The cheapest way is
to instaii.it in existing space,
Members attending were SB!"e from tl!e outside, wbile cial cramps.
like
a large closet, if propTwo major reasons people
Mrs. N. o. Wein, Mrs. James JM:mJ exlenstvely done over
erly
located. Hall the cost
hesitate to remodel are that
MacKnight, Mrs. Donald Smith, wtthin.
Proceedings of the UnitEd
·
True, you can spend they can't visualize the fin- will be in materials and fixMrs. Ollie Roush, Mrs. Jobn C. c110ugh on a modest bome to ished product, and they have tures ; the rest in labor.
Nations are translated into
Fry and Mrs. Uayd Roush. 1be make it impossible for you no idea what it will cost.
New attlr room. A b o u t live ullicial languages- Chinext meeting will be be1d oo
nese, Englisb, French, RusAugust 31 at the borne of Mrs.
sian and Spanish.

PERSONAL FINANCE

. ..

PT. PLEASANT - New
Man1WI Foott-D c-:h Jld;
Lengyel and Albletic Ilirectar
Joe Mcilollen will be 8peftns
at a Big Gr1"91 Boosters
meeting in Point Pleasut
tooight at lhe Moaoe Lodge'
dining hall here.
James Farley lind Cltarlos
I.anham, members of the baud
of dlrectcn Gl the Bill erUub . I !pi 'ling the Point
p!egpn\ Bnla,

art'8lllled

the

session. Films of ,pring
practice will be :s00wn aod a
review Gl · the new llarsltall
football offense - the TeDa
Wtshbooe - will be 1eviewed.
Lengyel, a prwea .. tikler Gl
foothall teams during his It
years of C!JIIdting, comes to ·
Marshall for bis first.,_ from .
the College of Wooster. During
his five-,- tenure at Wooster,
he built the Figbliq! Scol8 from
a 1-8 team to an 1-1 team and reuad during the last four
. winner of lhe Ohio Olnfeieate years.
tiUe in 1970. Lengyel, in his five McMulieD, wbo has dedicated
years at Wooster, posted a 2Hl his adult life to athletics and lhe
record, including a fine 23-13 service of his country, is a

ICES IN EFFECT
LOIIG SLEEVE

·

.

•

tJoyd

~Ic IfELD

lnslead of a regular meeting,
members of the Rbododeildroo

Homemakers' Club held a
picnic at !heir clubhouse on
their regtilar meeting day. Miss
Mary Phillips presided at the
· business meeting following
. dinner. They discussed the
· Mason County Fair and the
booth and also decided to sell
rain bats as a money-making
project. ''Get Well" cards were
signed and sent to Mrs. T. Bert
Roush and Mrs. Martin
Ohlinger, members who are ill.
,Members and guests attending were Mrs. Velma
Roush, Mrs. o . o . Sayre, Mrs.
Robert Hoffman, Mrs. Charles
Jewell, Miss Mary Phillips,
Mrs. Albert Roush, Mrs.
Clarence Thomas, Mrs. Johnny
Roush, Mrs. William Chisler;
Kay and LouEllen Roush and
Alice Roush.
COUPLE ENTERTAINS
Mr. and Mrs. Max Eichinter
entertainedwithapicnicsupper
at their home near Pomeroy
Thursday evening, Games were
played following the supper.
Present were Mr. and Mrs.

~:~:~.

Vir:::.h Rev.fr:n~

GABS Dress
Code
Adopted
,

The Gallipolis Cil): Board of
Education, in ..,..;.I session
this mmting, woved a dress
code fur Gallipolis High School.
The code was worked out by
localadministra!Grs,Jobn Day,
1971-72 sludent body president,
and members Gl lhe 1971).71
sludent council. The recommenclatioos, mosUy give and
take propositions, were approved by members of lhe
student council and school
administrators, before being
presentedtotheboard.
Thecodesaysallscboolattire

Choo ud rom reg ular collar
mod• I Spo rts Sh irts or Cre w
Netk 100% Acri lan knit shirts.
All permanent press in l a~h ion
colon. Sitei; 3·7 :

JOE MeMUU.EN

.

.

'J•

$5,000.Asked In Judgment
A suit for money and an ac- in the am(lwtt of $5,000 against
ticn for divorce bas been filed in Nicholas Morey, Jr., dba,
Meigs County Common Pleas Morey Construction EquipCourl
ment, Plrtersburg.
Judy M. Sloter, Reedsville,
charging gross neglect Gl duty, The judgment sought is for
filed suit for divorce against alleged damages caused to
Edward D. Sloter, Reedsville. llindy's ptOpetty in Middleport
David M. and Patricia Hittdy, when lhe sanitary sewer lines
Middleport, flied suit for money were laid.

plans for his trip to PSing
which may take place late this
year.
A high While House official
w~ earlier had indical.t'd that
Ntxon's "journey for. peace"
would be ~taken . m early
1m . now . tS sa~ lhe
President will ll'?~el 'sooner
rather than later.
1be only deadline lhe White
House has given is " before
May" to keep it wt of lhe
reabn of partisan polities
during an eleclioo year.
Nixon said at his news
conference Aug 4 that there
would be extensi~e negotiations
for the historic visit to the
Chinese mainland within lhe
-t
·~ two or three months. _
onButhet
there are no~ hints
preparations. Press

Bound Over

Jn Obio Out Bowles,
Charles Herdman,
co_unty
'
Kepneth Morris, Harriett feoted

'

secretary Ronald I... Ziegler
tUd newSiiltn, in response to a
questioo Monday that neither
lhe President nor Henry A.
Kissinger, his naticnal security
affairs adviser, has been in
touch with representatives . of
lhe Peoples Republic of China.

Unemnll&gt;&amp;-~t
rAI'~"H::II
., T.rp
lJJ

h.
Ml'

•

5. 7lJfo
7(

,•

MEN'S SLACKS

HECK'S REG.

. '3.99

, .,

move . Fashions that set the pace
We ' ve got 'em here . Choose from

ll. •..:... .,.

Robert Jeffers, Frances
Yeager, Melissia Russell, Ruth
Ann Fry. -

·.- ... "were
'""' Uyde
_....,
· .. """. m
''
Fined
Taylor
· tow'caticn. • ....,
~
Middleport, $100 and • ...
ts .-Barbara
Be,.;nn Pomeroy
~
•
- -.;,
~~ys~t, drivmg 00 two counts of assault anci
while tntoxtcated; Jackson battery, had a fme and costs
Kaylor, 18, Letart, W.Va., $10 suspended.
and costS, drivinll in an uosafe

News ·n
• Br•e
• ifis

NOT SOLD
• • • lr
lr
Jtwasrepcrtedinthe&amp;lnday
(Continued from page I)
Times-Sentinel
in
the attiiOWtCed last week by Gov. John J. G'"'-· that will go into
Harrlsonviile corre~ effect Sept L
..._.,
that Thor ~ had sold Jtis . · .
.
properly. Howt!ver, tJU waa not Lanaater Plead. Innocence
lrue, but the propel It Is for
MAl IIIU, CALIF. _ v-- ••~ , ·--'-r pie"":=! •·

sale

"'"""' ....... ,_......, _...,. .....

1
•
NOW YOU KNOW
Stephen Foster, whose songs
are familiar to millions of
persons around lhe world, died
penniless in a Bowery
Ropbouse.

._t'l'uelldltytoubuserldrWellclrivqaod- «dered to
relttnl loctlUI'ISepl I4 far the aettiltg Gl• trial date. IM'Cilster
waaateslaiAug.lwltiledlivbccnthePidllcCoistiJiCbwiiJ'in

-'rille-

this weallby bea:lt "' 11"Mdly. .

.
A CalifartU IJi&amp;lnray Pllralman said Janca'l'f:r'l car wu
the Ct!IIerliDe, be had the smell rJ ~on hla
lftalb, be td II~ to 1Ue ab1to1 detecting IIIII aod be cld DGl
haft ~ * ' -'s 1icen1e wlllt blm.

•

press fabric . So update with smart
designs that steer you into now!

YOUR HECK'S
CHARGE ·A-CARD

BOYS'

PERMANENT PRESS

sarles were given Ill U.S.
civilian government personnel
in South Vietnam.
Thieu was meeting with the
delegates from Vietnam's 44
provinces to exchange views on
the next step in the campaign,
which he apparently is going
ahead with despite lack of
opposition at lhe ballot box.
Reports circulated by Thieu's
aides indicated he had decided
to reject a suggestion made by
Ky tha.t !hey both resign from
office and reorganize the
election, holding it In 90 days.
The withdrawal by Ky and
Minh has left lhe naticn in the
worst political crisis since 1966,
when lhe Buddhists trleil to
topple !hen Prime Minister Ky.
The United States officially
has adopted a hands-off policy
in lhe elections, but the
Americans hjove made no
secret of their ccncern that the
entire U.S. aid and Vietnamization program may be jeopardized.
Ambassador Bunker has held
a series of meetings wiUt Thieu,
Ky and Minh, apparently In an
effort to work out some
compromise where the contest
will involve more than one
man.

solids, Sizes 29 to 42 . Ali permanent

USE

ClOTIIIIIG IIUT.

FLARE PANTS
A great savings on trou sers for

· "Back-to-School". Flare leg
trousers a vailable in a ssorted
colors.

GIRLS'

Brushed Tricot

GIRLS'

PAJAMAS

DRESSES
Two· pockets, and a
fa shion
collar

HECK'S REG . TO $4.99 EACH

ac cents these double

ClOTIII"' IIEPT.

knit shifts for girls.
Sizes ; 7- 14 . Color s
include ; Navy , Red ,
Br o wn , Royal and
Green.

BOYS'
WOOLPUID

CPO
SHIRT

Gils Acetate

Bold color plaid CPO
1h irh far b oys . Si.us ;
S·M· L . Cl\oose from
assorted color,,

HECK'S REG. $3.48

JUMPERS

CliiTIIIIIG DIPT.

Sizes 7-14
HECK'S REG.
$6.99

HECK'S REG.
$3.99

. ·.t.

'-· . "&gt;.:
•

·'.1'

•

I'

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Start the ''hool rea r with
these fl a re jea ns by
Wra ngle r. Cho ose I rom

' ..
:l
,.

•.

regulars or ~ l irM . The a ll
pe rman ent pren Ia brie is
mode of pol yester a nd
cotton . Alto a va ilable ,
other models of Wrongler5
in reg ulars . slims ond
huskies.

and

Chester E&amp;st

\

l

\

I

I

'\

DEPT.

'i ',

.(

Rib kn it, 100% co tto n

fo ps. Choos&amp;from turtle
o nd moc k turtle neds .
Sizes: 7· 14. Colors; Berry,
Oyuer an d Gold.

(

(

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l

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'.-/
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cotton flares for

girls. Avoiloble in
Berry, Blue , and
Gold. Sizes; 7-14.

•\

KNIT
TOPS

I

l ;' \ \ \

SLACKS
Polyester

I
' l

n 11

FLARE LEG

GIRLS'

.. ( ") //1..
1 I /•'''~--" ' \

\! {i·r \."~\-:-·

GIRLS'

ClDTHIIIG

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$899

:(

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FLARE
JEANS

_.,

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BOYS'

Ziegler also ~ld flatly ''no
conditions" have been set by
either side on the visit or the
agenda. Arkansas Rep. Wilbur
Mills, a possible Democratic
Presidenwil candidate, had
suggested that some conditions
may have been placed 00 the
trip which would put 8 crimp In
Nixon's travel plans

HECK'S REG.

~· 'K! ·,·~

I

I

; .
\- ··.
'~·

BRUSHED IYLOI

News Notes

TuJy

...,... N"i!) tl •
COLUMBUS (UP!) _ Ohio's
unempl""""'nl. rate ~a to 5.7
·•·per_cent of the total work force
during July but still remained
behindlhenalionalaverage the
sta~ Bureau of Emplo~ent
Services reported today.
The bureau said lhe U.S. rate
was 6.l per cent of lhe civilian
labor forte with 5,330,000 per-

grand jury, three for- clear distance, and· Ray Lan- sons idle 118tionwide.
bcndsand four were fined ders, $Sand costa, intoncalklt. Persoosunemployedooeweek
Hannun and Benjamin Headley. by Pomeroy Mayor Utarles Forfeiting bonds were or tmre, claiming benefits wtLegar Tuesday night
William Johnson, 55, Pootewy, c1er the state's unemplayment
Veterau Memorial HOipilal
Bound over was John $200 bond 'posted, driving while ampensatioolaw,averagedBO,ADMISSIONS _ Pamela Krawsczyn, Jr., 211, Middleport, intoxicated; Franz Love, U, 000 last month which is about
Theiss, Racine·, Charles Yost, w~o. plea~ed: not. guilty to . Lancaster, .$2S, left rJ Cl!llter, 30 per c;ent of the stale's total
dri.. no -'-"- m'~ted
and· Wi.illiam Reeves -nerou joblm. the "·--u saJ'd.

Portland; Maureen Hennessy,
Pomeroy·• Millard Ball • Long
Bottom;
Mary
Armes,
Minersville.
DISCHARGES _
Buchanan, Kevin ;:::~~se,

·' Hamdsome dress slacks or jeans for the guys on the

GIRLS'

Mrs.

·

.

ClOTNIB
DEPT.

President Boning Up on China

Rate .IJ..IAeS

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio said today all
rates increases scheduled by
between 400 and 500 motor
•
earners,
ra ilroads and buslines
are froren in accordance with
the Pres'd
·
1 ent Ntxon's wageprice control program.
Henry W. Eckhart, PUCO
chainnan,sajd lhe order covers
all 2,500 motor carriers,
railroadsandbuslineswlderthe
commission's jurisdictioo but
ooly between 400 and 5I» have
rate increases scheduled to go
into effect during the 90 day
period from Aug. 14-Nov. 12.
Eckhart said lhe commission
order allows lhe carriers and
railroads to revert back to !heir
previous rates on file with joe
commissionwithonlyoneday's
notice, waiting the usual
commission rule which requires
30 days notice.
Eckhart said the order was
issued after thecootmlssion had
a chance to study the executive
order calling for the price wage
free:ze and all its ramifications.

IIJO'I'. Acri1aoo knit .ftim in &lt;e~lid &lt;ola.•.

ClOTH/"' /IEPT.

r!!

~:~~ra;;~~~wi:!"

_ . .t pGnll_, pfftl fcoboia. Sizt f; 6- 16 .

'•

without socks permissible.
-Boy's hair must be out of
the eyes; length not to exceed
bue of neck. Sideburns not SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
below jaw. Pork chop (UPI)-President Nixon is stu- .
sideburns, beards or mustaches dying books oo 01ina and
willnotbepermitted. Hairmust keeping a lql seuet label on
be clean, neatly trinuned and
groomed.

-

former coach and an engineer
and
mathematician
by
profession.
Lanham and Farley invite the
public.

SAIGON (UP!) - Pt 'dent said following the gathering
Nguyen Van ~ said today that 1bieu " told us election day
the presidential elections will will still be fixed as before, on
go oo as !!CbedttlP.d Oct. 3 Ocl 3, despite the fact he will
despite the withdrawal of his be Ill!! cnly candidate In lhe
only two oppooents-Vtce Pt1!S- race. He will run alone."
ident Nguyen Cao Ky and The delegates said lhe
Duong Van "Big" Minh.
President told them "we should
Thieu in announcing plans to go lt«tte and wort for his recontinue lhe electicn indirectly electicn."
rejected Ky's pt!iJ•AI that Before lhe meeting, Thieu
both the President .and vice talked with U.S. Ambassador
president resi&amp;n and set a new Ellsworth Bunker for an hour
date for lhe balloting. Both Ky but they made 110 cmtment on ·
and Minh charged 1bieu with their discussions of South
rigging the eleclioo.
Vtetnam's worst political crisis
In a closed meeting with . since 1966.
delegates from South Vtetnam's Tension has been mounting
44 provinces, Thieu mentioned and the U.S. command ordered
the withdrawal from ·the race all American. soldiers to stay
of Minh and Ky but did not inside !heir bases except on
criticize either man. Delegates lllficiai business. Similar advi·

- Head bands pemut~ m Minor Accithnt
~ class but at no other time
dunng school hours.
. . On North Seeoml
- Hats must be off while m A .
ccident
permitted.
lhe school building.
~,...:: a 112 57 was
- Shortsorbermudasarenot Sil:thgradelevelandbelow - repor .
y a .' p.m.
permitted.
Bermuda shorts are acceptable. by lhe ~t ~dept.
- Coulottes may be worn as Short shorts or hot pants 110t ~:?'~~~
offMiddleport,Ra
long as !hey are pleated and do acceptable at any level.
.......,.....,
ce 81·
not resemble shorts, and have
onto North_ ~und, cut too
lhe appearance of skirts.
sharply, striking a parked car
BOYS
PLEASANT VAU.EY
belonging 111 Betty Jean Hawt,
...,. Washpants or slacks with E ~M~OSNS: MMrs. RE~ ~Bottom. .
ru.
to
belt, shirt, sweater or (shirt) T n tco • r ·• rs. 0 r
was mmor mage
Holley, Mrs. Virgil Plants, lheRiley vehicleandmedium to
shirts acteptable; dress shirt Point Phiasant; Burtpn Banks, the Hawt's. Miss Riley was
tails must be tuclted in.
Cullodon, W. Va.; Mrs. Arthur cited to court for improper turn.
- Shoes, without cleats ; Hi . botham Robertsbui-g·
socks must be worn. Sandals c::astar~,Gallipolis;Mrs: De•~e-..::1-nt
EhnusDeVault,PointPleasant,
lHilJ
.
U!l_
and Mrs. Luther Miller;
Columbus.
One defendant was bound manner ; Victor :shumway' 61,
DL'OIARGES: Mrs. Cliftoo over to lhe September term Belpre, $5 and costs, assured

Gai,nes were played, horseshoes
and swimming were parlicipated in by both adults and
children. Mrs. Fred Roush,
Auxiliary President, would like
·
to receive 1m dues and anyone
wishing to pay lhe dues may
payMrs.RoushorMrs.Thelma
Capehart.
CLASS HAS PICNIC
The Mary-Rutb Sunday
School Junior Girls class held a
picnicintheNewHavenGarden

as hos~. ·
Mrs. John H. Barringer and
Stephen from Burtonsville, Others attending were Kim
Maryland, Mr. and Mrs. Bill g:::e~ar~ ? iane Capehart,
Roush, fonnerly of Lexington,
ry
c e, Kathy Curry,
Ky., but noW residing in New MrsDianeH AbelCa
, Belinda Zerkle,
--- Haven, Mr. and Mrs. Jobn C.
. arry pehart and Miss
· Games were
Fry, Mr. an d ' Mrs. John F. Becky Burns.
·
Roush an d da ughters, Ka thy PIaYed and pru.es
woo by
Dia
M
d
Belinda
Zerkl
and Dian Abel
d
an
na, r. an Mrs. Uoyd
e
e
.
Roush, allo!NewHaven, Denny ATTEND INVITATIONAL
KthellyhfromHollywood,Fla.,and GeorMrs. Rln. Gls. Greene, Mrs.
e ost and hostess, Mr. and
ge ge and Mrs. HerMrs. Max Eichinger and man Layne attended lhe Golf
children, Becky and Max, Jr. Invitational Luncheon and Golf
ROTARY MET
matches at the Green Hills
The New Haven Rotary Club Country Club at Ravenswood,
held its regular dinner-meeting W. Va. on Tuesday.
Thursday eveningfollowedwith
PERSONALS
a short business session. At- Myra Roush, who is employed
tending were James N. Roush, in Huntington, spent lhe past
: Uoyd Roush, Herman Layne, week vacationing at her home
Dick Ord, John Thorne, Russell here.
. Capehart, Rome Williamson Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hoffman
;:, • and Karl Wiles.
and son and Mrs. F.. A. Batey
, .',
LEGION PICNIC HEI.J)
spent several days in the
. The Sm i lh -Capeh ar t mountains this week.
,
,•. : American Legion Post 140 held Miss Vicki Grimes ol
: '. : its annual picnic at Maplewood Charleston wits the weekend
, : : Lake near Syracuse, Ohio. guest of Miss Jane Roush.
, :: Approximately 220 mem~rs of Mrs. T. Bert Roush is a
,:; ·tlte Post and Auxiliary and medical patieht at Pleasant
';: ' : families were In attendance. Valley Hospital.

'

must be in good taste. Here's
the girls' dress code:
- Skirts and slacks with
sweaters or blouses, dresses or
pantsuits acceptable. Extremely tight-fitting or see
through materials not acceptable.
-Shoes, loafers, bucks, flats,
saddle shoes or sandals acceptable.
- Ordinary, actepted hair
styles; hair curlers are not

, _ -......... be-d iot. "'-long ~'PO"
tloirh lar ~ n. ....... solid Ol'ld flfioll IIIOdeh

flares or straight leg styles in fancies or

disr,;

·

SPORT SHIRTS

KNIT SHIRT

,
S
II
y
H
.
-R
.
d
Thieu
Going
It
Alone
Don 1 e our ome emo e1

:

LONG SLEEVE

uru""
1be bureau
said lhe rest of

HECK'S REG.
~99

Attendance at Nazarene
&amp;mday School Aug. 22 was 61.
Collection was te.l9.
&amp;le Otaffin and clildren Gl
Columbus spent the weekend
wtthherparenta,Mr. andMrs.
Paul Hoffman. Reba ftinained
fer the week.
Several frcm here attended
theMeigaCountyFairthispast

ClOTN/M DEPT.

o u orted styles in these
brushed Nylon gowns for girls. Availa ble
in va rious colon.

HECK'S REG.
$1.28

JR. BOYS'

FLARE LEG

ClOTHIB
DEPT.

PANTS

CJ,OTHIIIC DEPT.

For the "little fella" . . . Hare
leg trousers with full boxer

wais t. Available in assorted
colors. Size$;.4·6.

GIRLS'

KNIT TOPS

HANES

W::attdMrs. Earl Thoma and

PLAYBOY
SWEAT brand

son and daughter called on hla
mother, Mrs. Georgie ThiiDil.
Mr. and· Mrs. G~orge
Genhelmer attended the Roae
reunion at the home of.
Rosemary Keller at Pine
Grove.
Mrs . Le tha Wood spent
SalurdaYat•..,. ..oon and. eYeling
with her staten, Freda Miller
anChad
LenloreBBellzlnglls.
.
r es sae
received
word that their aoo, Oav;ld rJ
Columbua had an a(J!Jendlx
operation and their daughter,
Naomi, lsln Veterans Memcrial
Hoapilal. Also Viola Moon Ia In
Veterans Memcrlal Hoaplllll.
Vernon Neue. and wife and
son, Stanley, of Neue Settlement called on Mr. and Mrs.
George Genhehner Sunday
evening.
Mrs. Maline Hoffman called
on . her Biller, Mra. Doria

Famous HANES

rag lan

sleeves.

long sleeve stripe knit turtle
neck tops . Assorted colors .

Sizes; 7-12.

with
Assorted

MEN'S

colors. The afficiul PLAYBOY
Sweat Shirt , Sizes; 5-M-L.Xl.

tho&amp;eunemplnved.;..-recently
., ~~
•
released veterans,
former
federa1 emplayes and railroad
worlt!"'Sclaimingbenelitsunder
federal programs
Some had exhausted !heir
benefitsandotherswerenoteligible, such as sludents looking
for summer jobs.
Muimomdurationofbenefits
for th4ae eligible ttaler Obi
0
law is li weeb ·
The bureausaid over the past
seven weeks the· volume of
rlaimants has risen from 72 000
at the end o( Jwte to 116 ooo' by
mid-August.
'
1be increue has been in part
due to lhe changeover for new ~r Sunday.
models in the auto ind try
The Nuanne are ltoldiD8 a
plus indefinite hoyoffs ; ~ rec.!pUon for Uteir paslcr and
sleel industry where production famllyFrldayennq,Au8. rt.
was curtailed because of hea
There wiD be a JXOIII'BDiat the
slldpiling in anticipati ofvy church, Ewryooe Ia welc:cmo! ·
steel str111e thalnner ~· 1be PBII~«" Ia ' Rev. Herbert

. Gnl"'.

GOWNS
Chaose from

DERBY UNDERWEAR

BOYS'

DERBY UNDERWEAR

Derby brand cotton underwear . Sanfori zed

HECK'S REG $3.99

'

''

cotto n kn it, Sizes; 2 to 16. Pochd 3 " T"
shirts Of 3 poir of briefs in package.

Boxer shorts, whit~. prinb and colors. Sizes; 30-.t..C.
Briefs and 11T" shirts, white only, in sizes; S,M,l ,Xl.
Pocked 3 "T" shirts, or 3 briefs, or 3 boxer shorts in
each package.

3 FOR

�: 11-ftlll ._,
-a..ar••.aarl'lll'lllll-""',._.,,
-~'
I
-,, o.. - -·•

'

New Haven
Soeial Events

el, McMullen Coming

•

To Point Pleasant Tonight'

' The annuli picnic dillller Gl
the New Ha'i'I!D Garden Uub
was held cn the lawn rJ MrS. W.

.

'

T.SOOne. ~y.~t~

with Mrs. N. 0. Wein, and Mrs.
James Macltnight as cohostesses.
Members and guests attending were Mrs. Herman
Layne, Mrs. Harry Layne, Mrs.
Howard Wagenbals, Mrs.
Donald Smith, Mrs. Ray
Proffitt, Mrs. Ray Fox, Mrs.
Ottie Roush, Mrs. F. A. Batey,
Lelah Jane PoweU, members,
and Mrs. Cameron .Casto, Mrs.
Emil Knight, Mrs. Dorothy
J!IDI&lt;S and family, A. K. McClung and W. T. Stone, guests.
FRY ENJOYED
Members of the live· Wue
Class of lhe United Methodist
Church held a hamburger fry in
the social room of the churcb
with Mrs. Howard Burris
serving as hostess. The invocation was given by the
.
pastor, Rev. William DeMoss.
WORKING
IN 'IHE mtJTE -Bruce Wallace, new heal
of a Dneman at.practice 1' tis;. Wallace, 118tift of MidThe scripture and a reading
footbaD
~
at
Southern
111gb
ScOOol,
grades
the
Noct!•
dleport,
wu a Yellow Jadletaollllnhall Utthersily star.
were given by Mrs. Howard
Burris, followed with a prayer _ _ _ _ _ _.....;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __
by Mrs. Otha Lieving. The
meeting closed with the Lord's
Prayer in unison.
· :...;;;.;.:;:;..;=.:.;..=....;;.==.;.;..:..;:::.=.
Attending were Mrs. Thelma
Capehart, Mrs. Howard Burris,
Mrs. Otha Ueving, Mrs. Ber·
nard Ueving, Mrs. Ray
Mrs.
Edith
Weaver,
Bumgarner, Mrs. Letha Kelly,
Mrs. F. A. Batey, Mrs. llarry
Capehart, Mrs. 0. 0. Sayre and
By mCHARD PUTNAM PRATT
Rev. William DeMoss. ·,
COOKOUT ENJOYED
Mr. and Mrs. Otha tiering
entertained with a cookout in SelliDg one house and buy- to retrieve your iovestment
You'll need professional $1,250 to $3,000, depending
later.
More
modest
improvehcnor of !heir son Mr, and Mrs. ing another, just to get more
help in the design of im- on size, and wbether a new
'
room or more modern quar- ments, bowever, will only provements, but it is possi- dormer is needled. Price es, -~· . .
- · , lievmg ll!ld daughters Gl ters, is probably one of the enbance the value of your ble to get a quick look at timate iJICittdes Door, walls.
Wooster, Mass ., who were poorest reasons for moving property.
ceiling, wiring, insulation
some typical costs.
visiting ~m. Other guests at It's expensive. It's
In his book called "The and heat.
As a general rule, if you
the affmr were Mrs. Thelma live. It straiJI&amp;-.aDd some- .have a sound. borne io a Homeowner's Survival Kit,"
New rwm dllllw. About
Capehart, Mr .. and Mrs. times breJIIrn ties with good stable neighborhood, bave it Art Watkins devotes consid- $12 to flO per square foot for
Lawrence Ltevmg and son friends. And it requires mas- well landscaped, and need erable space to this subject frame construction, up to $25
David, Of Winfield, Mrs. Estyl sive amounts of time and relatively simple improve- Cost estimates for almost for lllllSODi'Y· The price inClark, and the host and hostess. energy on the part of all con- ments or additions to make every conceivable alteration cludes the new foundation,
$1e.ll3 COu.ECI'ED
cerned.
it fit your needs, you'll prob- or addition are iocluded. 1be walls, roof, heat and wiring.
are from a 19'10 sur- Alwm)w.. Iidia(. ~ to
Members of the New Haven Many people who make ably be money ahead if you figures
vey
of
contractors io all $110 per 100 square feet, inWoman'sClub conducted a fund such moves dread every remodel rather than trade parts of the country.
staiied. 1be typical bouse
drive for the Red Cross Jninute of it, from beginning up.
Here are a few samples will cost between $7511 and
Even if the prices of the based
BloodmObile last week. A total to end;,"But wh~t else can
$1,51»,
on Watkins' book:
old and new homes are not
of $169.93 was realized from the we do. they wail.
New .-fla(. $25 to $40 per
Remodeled kltdlea. $1,750
drive. They also helped to man One answer is: Stay wbere too far apart, other costs can to $4,000 iostaiied. Figure 100 square f e e t, installed
the Red Cross Booth at the you &amp;!'"· and alter your !HJ!De spoil your dream. Closing $100 per foot for cabinets. over existing roofing. This
Mason Cowt\y Fair
to swt your_needs. Existing costs on ·a new mortgage countertop and appliances. assumes standard weight,
·
homes can be expanded, (probably at a higher rate) , New Doors, walls, wiodows asphalt shingles. Other maCWB MEEI'S
contracted, j a c ked up, moving charges, landscap- or structural cbanges will terials, such as c e d a r
Mrs. J. W. McMurray was stretched out, and e v e n ing expense, and the endless
shakes, can raise the cost
hostess at lhe Tuesday meeting turned around. They can be outlays for screens, curtains, raise the cost.
N e w half-bath. $750 to considerably.
of lhe Julia T. Bryant Sewini given a totally new appear- carpets, drapes and other
INFWSI'APIII ENTOPIISl ASSN. I
Club at her home in Mason.
ance, . or left exactly the whatnot can give you finan- $1,500. The cheapest way is
to instaii.it in existing space,
Members attending were SB!"e from tl!e outside, wbile cial cramps.
like
a large closet, if propTwo major reasons people
Mrs. N. o. Wein, Mrs. James JM:mJ exlenstvely done over
erly
located. Hall the cost
hesitate to remodel are that
MacKnight, Mrs. Donald Smith, wtthin.
Proceedings of the UnitEd
·
True, you can spend they can't visualize the fin- will be in materials and fixMrs. Ollie Roush, Mrs. Jobn C. c110ugh on a modest bome to ished product, and they have tures ; the rest in labor.
Nations are translated into
Fry and Mrs. Uayd Roush. 1be make it impossible for you no idea what it will cost.
New attlr room. A b o u t live ullicial languages- Chinext meeting will be be1d oo
nese, Englisb, French, RusAugust 31 at the borne of Mrs.
sian and Spanish.

PERSONAL FINANCE

. ..

PT. PLEASANT - New
Man1WI Foott-D c-:h Jld;
Lengyel and Albletic Ilirectar
Joe Mcilollen will be 8peftns
at a Big Gr1"91 Boosters
meeting in Point Pleasut
tooight at lhe Moaoe Lodge'
dining hall here.
James Farley lind Cltarlos
I.anham, members of the baud
of dlrectcn Gl the Bill erUub . I !pi 'ling the Point
p!egpn\ Bnla,

art'8lllled

the

session. Films of ,pring
practice will be :s00wn aod a
review Gl · the new llarsltall
football offense - the TeDa
Wtshbooe - will be 1eviewed.
Lengyel, a prwea .. tikler Gl
foothall teams during his It
years of C!JIIdting, comes to ·
Marshall for bis first.,_ from .
the College of Wooster. During
his five-,- tenure at Wooster,
he built the Figbliq! Scol8 from
a 1-8 team to an 1-1 team and reuad during the last four
. winner of lhe Ohio Olnfeieate years.
tiUe in 1970. Lengyel, in his five McMulieD, wbo has dedicated
years at Wooster, posted a 2Hl his adult life to athletics and lhe
record, including a fine 23-13 service of his country, is a

ICES IN EFFECT
LOIIG SLEEVE

·

.

•

tJoyd

~Ic IfELD

lnslead of a regular meeting,
members of the Rbododeildroo

Homemakers' Club held a
picnic at !heir clubhouse on
their regtilar meeting day. Miss
Mary Phillips presided at the
· business meeting following
. dinner. They discussed the
· Mason County Fair and the
booth and also decided to sell
rain bats as a money-making
project. ''Get Well" cards were
signed and sent to Mrs. T. Bert
Roush and Mrs. Martin
Ohlinger, members who are ill.
,Members and guests attending were Mrs. Velma
Roush, Mrs. o . o . Sayre, Mrs.
Robert Hoffman, Mrs. Charles
Jewell, Miss Mary Phillips,
Mrs. Albert Roush, Mrs.
Clarence Thomas, Mrs. Johnny
Roush, Mrs. William Chisler;
Kay and LouEllen Roush and
Alice Roush.
COUPLE ENTERTAINS
Mr. and Mrs. Max Eichinter
entertainedwithapicnicsupper
at their home near Pomeroy
Thursday evening, Games were
played following the supper.
Present were Mr. and Mrs.

~:~:~.

Vir:::.h Rev.fr:n~

GABS Dress
Code
Adopted
,

The Gallipolis Cil): Board of
Education, in ..,..;.I session
this mmting, woved a dress
code fur Gallipolis High School.
The code was worked out by
localadministra!Grs,Jobn Day,
1971-72 sludent body president,
and members Gl lhe 1971).71
sludent council. The recommenclatioos, mosUy give and
take propositions, were approved by members of lhe
student council and school
administrators, before being
presentedtotheboard.
Thecodesaysallscboolattire

Choo ud rom reg ular collar
mod• I Spo rts Sh irts or Cre w
Netk 100% Acri lan knit shirts.
All permanent press in l a~h ion
colon. Sitei; 3·7 :

JOE MeMUU.EN

.

.

'J•

$5,000.Asked In Judgment
A suit for money and an ac- in the am(lwtt of $5,000 against
ticn for divorce bas been filed in Nicholas Morey, Jr., dba,
Meigs County Common Pleas Morey Construction EquipCourl
ment, Plrtersburg.
Judy M. Sloter, Reedsville,
charging gross neglect Gl duty, The judgment sought is for
filed suit for divorce against alleged damages caused to
Edward D. Sloter, Reedsville. llindy's ptOpetty in Middleport
David M. and Patricia Hittdy, when lhe sanitary sewer lines
Middleport, flied suit for money were laid.

plans for his trip to PSing
which may take place late this
year.
A high While House official
w~ earlier had indical.t'd that
Ntxon's "journey for. peace"
would be ~taken . m early
1m . now . tS sa~ lhe
President will ll'?~el 'sooner
rather than later.
1be only deadline lhe White
House has given is " before
May" to keep it wt of lhe
reabn of partisan polities
during an eleclioo year.
Nixon said at his news
conference Aug 4 that there
would be extensi~e negotiations
for the historic visit to the
Chinese mainland within lhe
-t
·~ two or three months. _
onButhet
there are no~ hints
preparations. Press

Bound Over

Jn Obio Out Bowles,
Charles Herdman,
co_unty
'
Kepneth Morris, Harriett feoted

'

secretary Ronald I... Ziegler
tUd newSiiltn, in response to a
questioo Monday that neither
lhe President nor Henry A.
Kissinger, his naticnal security
affairs adviser, has been in
touch with representatives . of
lhe Peoples Republic of China.

Unemnll&gt;&amp;-~t
rAI'~"H::II
., T.rp
lJJ

h.
Ml'

•

5. 7lJfo
7(

,•

MEN'S SLACKS

HECK'S REG.

. '3.99

, .,

move . Fashions that set the pace
We ' ve got 'em here . Choose from

ll. •..:... .,.

Robert Jeffers, Frances
Yeager, Melissia Russell, Ruth
Ann Fry. -

·.- ... "were
'""' Uyde
_....,
· .. """. m
''
Fined
Taylor
· tow'caticn. • ....,
~
Middleport, $100 and • ...
ts .-Barbara
Be,.;nn Pomeroy
~
•
- -.;,
~~ys~t, drivmg 00 two counts of assault anci
while tntoxtcated; Jackson battery, had a fme and costs
Kaylor, 18, Letart, W.Va., $10 suspended.
and costS, drivinll in an uosafe

News ·n
• Br•e
• ifis

NOT SOLD
• • • lr
lr
Jtwasrepcrtedinthe&amp;lnday
(Continued from page I)
Times-Sentinel
in
the attiiOWtCed last week by Gov. John J. G'"'-· that will go into
Harrlsonviile corre~ effect Sept L
..._.,
that Thor ~ had sold Jtis . · .
.
properly. Howt!ver, tJU waa not Lanaater Plead. Innocence
lrue, but the propel It Is for
MAl IIIU, CALIF. _ v-- ••~ , ·--'-r pie"":=! •·

sale

"'"""' ....... ,_......, _...,. .....

1
•
NOW YOU KNOW
Stephen Foster, whose songs
are familiar to millions of
persons around lhe world, died
penniless in a Bowery
Ropbouse.

._t'l'uelldltytoubuserldrWellclrivqaod- «dered to
relttnl loctlUI'ISepl I4 far the aettiltg Gl• trial date. IM'Cilster
waaateslaiAug.lwltiledlivbccnthePidllcCoistiJiCbwiiJ'in

-'rille-

this weallby bea:lt "' 11"Mdly. .

.
A CalifartU IJi&amp;lnray Pllralman said Janca'l'f:r'l car wu
the Ct!IIerliDe, be had the smell rJ ~on hla
lftalb, be td II~ to 1Ue ab1to1 detecting IIIII aod be cld DGl
haft ~ * ' -'s 1icen1e wlllt blm.

•

press fabric . So update with smart
designs that steer you into now!

YOUR HECK'S
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BOYS'

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sarles were given Ill U.S.
civilian government personnel
in South Vietnam.
Thieu was meeting with the
delegates from Vietnam's 44
provinces to exchange views on
the next step in the campaign,
which he apparently is going
ahead with despite lack of
opposition at lhe ballot box.
Reports circulated by Thieu's
aides indicated he had decided
to reject a suggestion made by
Ky tha.t !hey both resign from
office and reorganize the
election, holding it In 90 days.
The withdrawal by Ky and
Minh has left lhe naticn in the
worst political crisis since 1966,
when lhe Buddhists trleil to
topple !hen Prime Minister Ky.
The United States officially
has adopted a hands-off policy
in lhe elections, but the
Americans hjove made no
secret of their ccncern that the
entire U.S. aid and Vietnamization program may be jeopardized.
Ambassador Bunker has held
a series of meetings wiUt Thieu,
Ky and Minh, apparently In an
effort to work out some
compromise where the contest
will involve more than one
man.

solids, Sizes 29 to 42 . Ali permanent

USE

ClOTIIIIIG IIUT.

FLARE PANTS
A great savings on trou sers for

· "Back-to-School". Flare leg
trousers a vailable in a ssorted
colors.

GIRLS'

Brushed Tricot

GIRLS'

PAJAMAS

DRESSES
Two· pockets, and a
fa shion
collar

HECK'S REG . TO $4.99 EACH

ac cents these double

ClOTIII"' IIEPT.

knit shifts for girls.
Sizes ; 7- 14 . Color s
include ; Navy , Red ,
Br o wn , Royal and
Green.

BOYS'
WOOLPUID

CPO
SHIRT

Gils Acetate

Bold color plaid CPO
1h irh far b oys . Si.us ;
S·M· L . Cl\oose from
assorted color,,

HECK'S REG. $3.48

JUMPERS

CliiTIIIIIG DIPT.

Sizes 7-14
HECK'S REG.
$6.99

HECK'S REG.
$3.99

. ·.t.

'-· . "&gt;.:
•

·'.1'

•

I'

..
f

\

\.

,.·(\

Start the ''hool rea r with
these fl a re jea ns by
Wra ngle r. Cho ose I rom

' ..
:l
,.

•.

regulars or ~ l irM . The a ll
pe rman ent pren Ia brie is
mode of pol yester a nd
cotton . Alto a va ilable ,
other models of Wrongler5
in reg ulars . slims ond
huskies.

and

Chester E&amp;st

\

l

\

I

I

'\

DEPT.

'i ',

.(

Rib kn it, 100% co tto n

fo ps. Choos&amp;from turtle
o nd moc k turtle neds .
Sizes: 7· 14. Colors; Berry,
Oyuer an d Gold.

(

(

\'

.'\l I\ \\\\
l

''

\

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(

{
.
'.-/
- ~--

(

·

\\

\ , \·

' . '

I

cotton flares for

girls. Avoiloble in
Berry, Blue , and
Gold. Sizes; 7-14.

•\

KNIT
TOPS

I

l ;' \ \ \

SLACKS
Polyester

I
' l

n 11

FLARE LEG

GIRLS'

.. ( ") //1..
1 I /•'''~--" ' \

\! {i·r \."~\-:-·

GIRLS'

ClDTHIIIG

'

; .•

,. ·""' .,

J t\
I I

$899

:(

/' ~ -:-

FLARE
JEANS

_.,

J '..,_/ . 1~
,. . ', • \...

BOYS'

Ziegler also ~ld flatly ''no
conditions" have been set by
either side on the visit or the
agenda. Arkansas Rep. Wilbur
Mills, a possible Democratic
Presidenwil candidate, had
suggested that some conditions
may have been placed 00 the
trip which would put 8 crimp In
Nixon's travel plans

HECK'S REG.

~· 'K! ·,·~

I

I

; .
\- ··.
'~·

BRUSHED IYLOI

News Notes

TuJy

...,... N"i!) tl •
COLUMBUS (UP!) _ Ohio's
unempl""""'nl. rate ~a to 5.7
·•·per_cent of the total work force
during July but still remained
behindlhenalionalaverage the
sta~ Bureau of Emplo~ent
Services reported today.
The bureau said lhe U.S. rate
was 6.l per cent of lhe civilian
labor forte with 5,330,000 per-

grand jury, three for- clear distance, and· Ray Lan- sons idle 118tionwide.
bcndsand four were fined ders, $Sand costa, intoncalklt. Persoosunemployedooeweek
Hannun and Benjamin Headley. by Pomeroy Mayor Utarles Forfeiting bonds were or tmre, claiming benefits wtLegar Tuesday night
William Johnson, 55, Pootewy, c1er the state's unemplayment
Veterau Memorial HOipilal
Bound over was John $200 bond 'posted, driving while ampensatioolaw,averagedBO,ADMISSIONS _ Pamela Krawsczyn, Jr., 211, Middleport, intoxicated; Franz Love, U, 000 last month which is about
Theiss, Racine·, Charles Yost, w~o. plea~ed: not. guilty to . Lancaster, .$2S, left rJ Cl!llter, 30 per c;ent of the stale's total
dri.. no -'-"- m'~ted
and· Wi.illiam Reeves -nerou joblm. the "·--u saJ'd.

Portland; Maureen Hennessy,
Pomeroy·• Millard Ball • Long
Bottom;
Mary
Armes,
Minersville.
DISCHARGES _
Buchanan, Kevin ;:::~~se,

·' Hamdsome dress slacks or jeans for the guys on the

GIRLS'

Mrs.

·

.

ClOTNIB
DEPT.

President Boning Up on China

Rate .IJ..IAeS

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio said today all
rates increases scheduled by
between 400 and 500 motor
•
earners,
ra ilroads and buslines
are froren in accordance with
the Pres'd
·
1 ent Ntxon's wageprice control program.
Henry W. Eckhart, PUCO
chainnan,sajd lhe order covers
all 2,500 motor carriers,
railroadsandbuslineswlderthe
commission's jurisdictioo but
ooly between 400 and 5I» have
rate increases scheduled to go
into effect during the 90 day
period from Aug. 14-Nov. 12.
Eckhart said lhe commission
order allows lhe carriers and
railroads to revert back to !heir
previous rates on file with joe
commissionwithonlyoneday's
notice, waiting the usual
commission rule which requires
30 days notice.
Eckhart said the order was
issued after thecootmlssion had
a chance to study the executive
order calling for the price wage
free:ze and all its ramifications.

IIJO'I'. Acri1aoo knit .ftim in &lt;e~lid &lt;ola.•.

ClOTH/"' /IEPT.

r!!

~:~~ra;;~~~wi:!"

_ . .t pGnll_, pfftl fcoboia. Sizt f; 6- 16 .

'•

without socks permissible.
-Boy's hair must be out of
the eyes; length not to exceed
bue of neck. Sideburns not SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
below jaw. Pork chop (UPI)-President Nixon is stu- .
sideburns, beards or mustaches dying books oo 01ina and
willnotbepermitted. Hairmust keeping a lql seuet label on
be clean, neatly trinuned and
groomed.

-

former coach and an engineer
and
mathematician
by
profession.
Lanham and Farley invite the
public.

SAIGON (UP!) - Pt 'dent said following the gathering
Nguyen Van ~ said today that 1bieu " told us election day
the presidential elections will will still be fixed as before, on
go oo as !!CbedttlP.d Oct. 3 Ocl 3, despite the fact he will
despite the withdrawal of his be Ill!! cnly candidate In lhe
only two oppooents-Vtce Pt1!S- race. He will run alone."
ident Nguyen Cao Ky and The delegates said lhe
Duong Van "Big" Minh.
President told them "we should
Thieu in announcing plans to go lt«tte and wort for his recontinue lhe electicn indirectly electicn."
rejected Ky's pt!iJ•AI that Before lhe meeting, Thieu
both the President .and vice talked with U.S. Ambassador
president resi&amp;n and set a new Ellsworth Bunker for an hour
date for lhe balloting. Both Ky but they made 110 cmtment on ·
and Minh charged 1bieu with their discussions of South
rigging the eleclioo.
Vtetnam's worst political crisis
In a closed meeting with . since 1966.
delegates from South Vtetnam's Tension has been mounting
44 provinces, Thieu mentioned and the U.S. command ordered
the withdrawal from ·the race all American. soldiers to stay
of Minh and Ky but did not inside !heir bases except on
criticize either man. Delegates lllficiai business. Similar advi·

- Head bands pemut~ m Minor Accithnt
~ class but at no other time
dunng school hours.
. . On North Seeoml
- Hats must be off while m A .
ccident
permitted.
lhe school building.
~,...:: a 112 57 was
- Shortsorbermudasarenot Sil:thgradelevelandbelow - repor .
y a .' p.m.
permitted.
Bermuda shorts are acceptable. by lhe ~t ~dept.
- Coulottes may be worn as Short shorts or hot pants 110t ~:?'~~~
offMiddleport,Ra
long as !hey are pleated and do acceptable at any level.
.......,.....,
ce 81·
not resemble shorts, and have
onto North_ ~und, cut too
lhe appearance of skirts.
sharply, striking a parked car
BOYS
PLEASANT VAU.EY
belonging 111 Betty Jean Hawt,
...,. Washpants or slacks with E ~M~OSNS: MMrs. RE~ ~Bottom. .
ru.
to
belt, shirt, sweater or (shirt) T n tco • r ·• rs. 0 r
was mmor mage
Holley, Mrs. Virgil Plants, lheRiley vehicleandmedium to
shirts acteptable; dress shirt Point Phiasant; Burtpn Banks, the Hawt's. Miss Riley was
tails must be tuclted in.
Cullodon, W. Va.; Mrs. Arthur cited to court for improper turn.
- Shoes, without cleats ; Hi . botham Robertsbui-g·
socks must be worn. Sandals c::astar~,Gallipolis;Mrs: De•~e-..::1-nt
EhnusDeVault,PointPleasant,
lHilJ
.
U!l_
and Mrs. Luther Miller;
Columbus.
One defendant was bound manner ; Victor :shumway' 61,
DL'OIARGES: Mrs. Cliftoo over to lhe September term Belpre, $5 and costs, assured

Gai,nes were played, horseshoes
and swimming were parlicipated in by both adults and
children. Mrs. Fred Roush,
Auxiliary President, would like
·
to receive 1m dues and anyone
wishing to pay lhe dues may
payMrs.RoushorMrs.Thelma
Capehart.
CLASS HAS PICNIC
The Mary-Rutb Sunday
School Junior Girls class held a
picnicintheNewHavenGarden

as hos~. ·
Mrs. John H. Barringer and
Stephen from Burtonsville, Others attending were Kim
Maryland, Mr. and Mrs. Bill g:::e~ar~ ? iane Capehart,
Roush, fonnerly of Lexington,
ry
c e, Kathy Curry,
Ky., but noW residing in New MrsDianeH AbelCa
, Belinda Zerkle,
--- Haven, Mr. and Mrs. Jobn C.
. arry pehart and Miss
· Games were
Fry, Mr. an d ' Mrs. John F. Becky Burns.
·
Roush an d da ughters, Ka thy PIaYed and pru.es
woo by
Dia
M
d
Belinda
Zerkl
and Dian Abel
d
an
na, r. an Mrs. Uoyd
e
e
.
Roush, allo!NewHaven, Denny ATTEND INVITATIONAL
KthellyhfromHollywood,Fla.,and GeorMrs. Rln. Gls. Greene, Mrs.
e ost and hostess, Mr. and
ge ge and Mrs. HerMrs. Max Eichinger and man Layne attended lhe Golf
children, Becky and Max, Jr. Invitational Luncheon and Golf
ROTARY MET
matches at the Green Hills
The New Haven Rotary Club Country Club at Ravenswood,
held its regular dinner-meeting W. Va. on Tuesday.
Thursday eveningfollowedwith
PERSONALS
a short business session. At- Myra Roush, who is employed
tending were James N. Roush, in Huntington, spent lhe past
: Uoyd Roush, Herman Layne, week vacationing at her home
Dick Ord, John Thorne, Russell here.
. Capehart, Rome Williamson Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hoffman
;:, • and Karl Wiles.
and son and Mrs. F.. A. Batey
, .',
LEGION PICNIC HEI.J)
spent several days in the
. The Sm i lh -Capeh ar t mountains this week.
,
,•. : American Legion Post 140 held Miss Vicki Grimes ol
: '. : its annual picnic at Maplewood Charleston wits the weekend
, : : Lake near Syracuse, Ohio. guest of Miss Jane Roush.
, :: Approximately 220 mem~rs of Mrs. T. Bert Roush is a
,:; ·tlte Post and Auxiliary and medical patieht at Pleasant
';: ' : families were In attendance. Valley Hospital.

'

must be in good taste. Here's
the girls' dress code:
- Skirts and slacks with
sweaters or blouses, dresses or
pantsuits acceptable. Extremely tight-fitting or see
through materials not acceptable.
-Shoes, loafers, bucks, flats,
saddle shoes or sandals acceptable.
- Ordinary, actepted hair
styles; hair curlers are not

, _ -......... be-d iot. "'-long ~'PO"
tloirh lar ~ n. ....... solid Ol'ld flfioll IIIOdeh

flares or straight leg styles in fancies or

disr,;

·

SPORT SHIRTS

KNIT SHIRT

,
S
II
y
H
.
-R
.
d
Thieu
Going
It
Alone
Don 1 e our ome emo e1

:

LONG SLEEVE

uru""
1be bureau
said lhe rest of

HECK'S REG.
~99

Attendance at Nazarene
&amp;mday School Aug. 22 was 61.
Collection was te.l9.
&amp;le Otaffin and clildren Gl
Columbus spent the weekend
wtthherparenta,Mr. andMrs.
Paul Hoffman. Reba ftinained
fer the week.
Several frcm here attended
theMeigaCountyFairthispast

ClOTN/M DEPT.

o u orted styles in these
brushed Nylon gowns for girls. Availa ble
in va rious colon.

HECK'S REG.
$1.28

JR. BOYS'

FLARE LEG

ClOTHIB
DEPT.

PANTS

CJ,OTHIIIC DEPT.

For the "little fella" . . . Hare
leg trousers with full boxer

wais t. Available in assorted
colors. Size$;.4·6.

GIRLS'

KNIT TOPS

HANES

W::attdMrs. Earl Thoma and

PLAYBOY
SWEAT brand

son and daughter called on hla
mother, Mrs. Georgie ThiiDil.
Mr. and· Mrs. G~orge
Genhelmer attended the Roae
reunion at the home of.
Rosemary Keller at Pine
Grove.
Mrs . Le tha Wood spent
SalurdaYat•..,. ..oon and. eYeling
with her staten, Freda Miller
anChad
LenloreBBellzlnglls.
.
r es sae
received
word that their aoo, Oav;ld rJ
Columbua had an a(J!Jendlx
operation and their daughter,
Naomi, lsln Veterans Memcrial
Hoapilal. Also Viola Moon Ia In
Veterans Memcrlal Hoaplllll.
Vernon Neue. and wife and
son, Stanley, of Neue Settlement called on Mr. and Mrs.
George Genhehner Sunday
evening.
Mrs. Maline Hoffman called
on . her Biller, Mra. Doria

Famous HANES

rag lan

sleeves.

long sleeve stripe knit turtle
neck tops . Assorted colors .

Sizes; 7-12.

with
Assorted

MEN'S

colors. The afficiul PLAYBOY
Sweat Shirt , Sizes; 5-M-L.Xl.

tho&amp;eunemplnved.;..-recently
., ~~
•
released veterans,
former
federa1 emplayes and railroad
worlt!"'Sclaimingbenelitsunder
federal programs
Some had exhausted !heir
benefitsandotherswerenoteligible, such as sludents looking
for summer jobs.
Muimomdurationofbenefits
for th4ae eligible ttaler Obi
0
law is li weeb ·
The bureausaid over the past
seven weeks the· volume of
rlaimants has risen from 72 000
at the end o( Jwte to 116 ooo' by
mid-August.
'
1be increue has been in part
due to lhe changeover for new ~r Sunday.
models in the auto ind try
The Nuanne are ltoldiD8 a
plus indefinite hoyoffs ; ~ rec.!pUon for Uteir paslcr and
sleel industry where production famllyFrldayennq,Au8. rt.
was curtailed because of hea
There wiD be a JXOIII'BDiat the
slldpiling in anticipati ofvy church, Ewryooe Ia welc:cmo! ·
steel str111e thalnner ~· 1be PBII~«" Ia ' Rev. Herbert

. Gnl"'.

GOWNS
Chaose from

DERBY UNDERWEAR

BOYS'

DERBY UNDERWEAR

Derby brand cotton underwear . Sanfori zed

HECK'S REG $3.99

'

''

cotto n kn it, Sizes; 2 to 16. Pochd 3 " T"
shirts Of 3 poir of briefs in package.

Boxer shorts, whit~. prinb and colors. Sizes; 30-.t..C.
Briefs and 11T" shirts, white only, in sizes; S,M,l ,Xl.
Pocked 3 "T" shirts, or 3 briefs, or 3 boxer shorts in
each package.

3 FOR

�"

•

.

..

..

,,

'

.... ,, .....

,

·-~

.. ..

~

......

.. .............. -··

.

.. .. "".. .

-·-·~--~

.,.

'

'

•

-IAI.Y
IITO.t ·

.

· OPEUAI.J.

1010 fJ( ·.
'

.· PRICES

EFFECT THROUGH'

'ALL
'· TENTS .

QUAinDES LAST

%
OFF

..
· · . FOOTBALL
OUTFIT ' .

·HECK'S
DISCOUNT

PRICE

$2988

....
•r.

E:::.=J

$12.99

IIDIISEWAII
IJIPT.

/

3 PACKS ( 12 ROLLS)

HECK'S
REG.

41cEACH

POLYESTER

IIDISIWA., BII'T.

Choo•e lrom a wide, wonderful selec·

s

HECK'S REG.

T·leg de5ign of 1 Yo " round tubular 5teel provide•
the sturdiness and stability women want. Non-slip

rubber-ijpped feet hold table firmly in place. Single

SALE

Spring Stop activates control levers at lowest posi-

Pill

BUBBLE LAMPS

EACH

Choose from Mod or Beaded style in
assorted sizes and colors.

HECK'S REG. TO
$1.44

at_.,

PDFICnON

LADIES'

unLm
lUTER
....................
......................
...............
................
.,.......... -·=..........
...........
. .,,..,. ............
.. .........,.....

NYLON KNIT

$1]88

$ 00

HKIC'SIIG.

$17.11

JPIIJJJI T.

l'h QT~IOUIDCASSEIOLE
I t!J QT. OVAL CASSEROLE
Sz9 DEEP LOAF DISI
. 8" CAKE DISH
'tf2 QT. UTILIR IAIIIG DISH.
HECK'S REG. TO $1.59
IIDISEWAIIIJIPT.

ClO,.._

REEL

IJ9T.

IIWn•r.

3

HECK'SREG. TO 67c EACH

$J77

BOUSIWA•l DIPT.

BATITOWELS

O.uerb and ' DinMr

Plalfl.

HICK'S
110.
'$5;99

On·theRocb, 812 OunceS.....rage and 8150unc.k11 Teo.

.,

A. 24 QT. HAMPEl
I. 6 GAL TIASII CAl
C.l2 QT. WASTE lASlO
D. 28 QT. WASTE lASlO
E. IS'h QT. PAl.
F. 28 QT. WASTE 1•
G. 1'11 IUSIEL LAUIDIY lASlO

Hard wearing shirt that
provides extra wormth and
protection with freedom of

SLEEPING

POCKET KNIFE ·
.11KEI1S11 c.tlllltilll'tcblllfUPICIII.IIIQIC!

·BAGS
·Heck's, .

Imported llabr- b&lt;ond qoot;ty. Altiootlo- knife. """"'
""""" ""' b!Odos. Q p - ..... k ~- - . ! .
Socond la•oo blado iOr "'""'"". Slog handlos. GorMno IHou
~ni..,. Slu«&lt;y ilid&lt;ol·"'- bolooon. n,;, ;, o rugood. hoovy d""
·knifa.ideal for ol s.portsMen.
·

.HEC.K'S
REG.

ss••

$8.99
S/11111$

•r.

CHOICE

Pl

'

'

..

....

28" LONG...

'

••

•

SPONGE MOP

$222

$744

HECK'S REG. $2.98

36" LONG . ..
·
1101/SIWAII llli'T.

~~
- ~~
· ·~

~n·*'~X·:t :'~• ~·.'*~ .7'~.····rL··.,
o:cE6itl ·
&gt;

y

..•,..

SJ.22
HICK'S REG.
T0$1.99

0-CEDAR.

$444
.

WET MOP

'
'

FORK&amp;SPOON

RAYON

· , Re~ ·
-?.77

'

$ 99.

NOUSEWAIIIJIPT.

WOOD

HUlliNG

ae,..;

HECK'S REG.
$8.99

HOUSIWA•t ·
/JIPT.

SIWTS,.T.

HANDTOWEL741
W~SH CLOTH 31'

·

377

DRIIIWARE SO

$1.99

Heavy-weight Velour towel•. All ht
qua~ty. Solid• or prinh.
•

DINNERWARE
$

.

-:~;.~;.:.~

Goldon Sholl •'•'"'
set. Conmts of, '
CuDs. ' Souc•rs. '

HECK'S REG.

BOKD

.

;.;, ..

. 16 PIECESTARTEI

Choic• of 3 co~n. Set consists. of: 87 Ovnc. Juic., I 9\i "'ChH.c.·

' ,.IS•m.

.

.

.. '

PIECEANC

HKK'S REG. $5.66

$6.99 '

~
f.'' ~
" .....
.
.i;:

CANNON

IJIOITSIIIIT.

H:::s $497

t

FOR

RIUZ. . . fiOIT.

movement.

GALLOIJUG

B.

$ 00

SUIT

s-r

COLEMAN

EACH

A. II OUICE PITCHER
B. II" SlACK PLA IE
C.IU ITER DISH .
D. CAIDY JAR WITH COVER

CLUR

Known the ·world over as tho finest
NOiofitstype. With line.

COLLECTOR'S
ITEM.

CHOICE

PRESCOT GLASSWARE

$100
ZEBC033

HDUSIWARE

ANCHOR HOCKING BAKEWARE

IIICI'S IIC. $5.H

Ribbed, mock turtle
neck knit top• for wom··
en. Colon: Navy, Gold,
Green, Plum and Wh~e.

HECK'S REG.
$4.99

ANCHOR HOCKING
.

TOPS

,.....fll6t~

$299

/IDISIWAIE DEPT.

$497

$1.11PA.

tion of Ironing Table.

CHOICE

&amp;'

$6.88

$7.88

IRONING BOARD

fixm

HECK'S lEG. TO

CLDT•K
/IIPT.

feel of leather, Available in

HOI/SEWAII

A hard-wearing coat, pro~des-. _...., and , ...
doon of ........... """-9h ;,
well bolanc•d defign . Fealure• large corduroy collar,
ono ~ wntwd cufh, hood·
~ ed- poclet, pocloll with
i~
.
""'II loops, ..bboriud.
~it'&gt;&amp;&lt;~( )¢i-~.;
"'"""""'•-,:*'

All FIRST QUAUTYI .One sin

54c

vinyl with the

and

$499

~

HECK'S REG.
$3.38

your home. All

assorted decorator styles.

SI'MTSIIJIT.

fih aM. Colon ;ncWe. Bo;gf,

~eauty to
wipe ~ cleon

that odd new
covered in

look

Comfort and •tyle are big ·
feature• in the50 polyeoter
pants for women. Pull·on
waist. Colon: Na.y, Green
and lfown. Sizes, 8-16.

Cinnomon, Toupe and Brown.
Americon mode:.

:s:C~:ox $J.· 00

HDIISIWAII
IJIPT.

tion of foam-topped hassocks in colors

HICK'S REG. $41.99

PANTS

•tyle• an9 coloro. Size"
32·38 and 40-44.

$1 00

HECK'S REG
5.1' PACK•

.OISIWA.,

4 BOXES

HECK'S

HASSOCKS

$3488

LADIES'

Choose from several

200COUNT

4 ROLLS IN PACK

.

SINGLE SHOT
AUTOMATIC EJECTOR
FINE WOOD STOCKS
FULL CHOKE

All new fall fa•hions.

I

HECK'S REG.

FACIAL TISSUE

HECK'S REG. TO

WIIOIESTER

SHIRTS

$11.97

$JOO

FESCO PLASTIC

LADIES'
LONG SLEEVE

IIG.

59cEACH

55cEACH

:.con
TOILET TISSUE

SPORTS DEPT.

ti.DTRIM IE/IT.

HKK'S

HECK'S REG.

3•cP~CJ(

.has 2 pockets. Sizeo: 34-40.

*· -

3 FOR

'T0$8~88

$222

~:';.,o,~tl~h=~~;~!o~

f'lifldM ........ ~. IJDI-.
t.
12-17........................__

Choose ftom 6 dtstind
fragrances.; French
lou1ique, fh)rol. lav·
ender, Pine , Powder
Room and Bouquet .

•

dyle• In ' a55orted prints. Each

~

~REIUZIT

87C

HECK'S lEG • .

HECK'S REG.

.

70UNCE

2FOR

89(

$JOO

41c

HECK'S REG.

CORDANA DUSTER

------

WIIDEX

2FOR

!liCK'S
RIG.

·· LADIES'

.52"JC80,H

15.0UNCl

'

VANISH

FOR

With Pllllies

matching carrying povch.

I

4 decorator tolon and d-.igns from
whith to tho&lt;&gt;••· All are con•tructed
over furniture frame With ventilated
pegboard back and vinyl covered lid.

SHIRTS

SI.IIJJ-1.

4
$100

'

DORM

'

. 160COUNT

LIIIT418US

•ttOTHES

lADIES
BRUSHED
OOIION

~4 OUNCE

·NAPKINS

Complete 4-pijlce u~iform fo~
the fut11re "All American."
Shoulder Pads, Jersey, · Pants
and Helmet, complete with
face guard. Small, Ages 4-622" Waist. Medium, Ages 6'8-27" waist. ~arge Ages B~ .
10-30" Waist.

· Draw weights at 28''. Recommended draw for
perfect perform!lnat: 26" to 30". Semi-pistol
grip Anow shelf: Bi-radial. Arrow rest: Leath.,. tobbed Teflon true flight Umbs: Full working recurw. Peanonite fiberglass. Light win·
dow: Center shot.

HECK'S IIG. $39.99

PRICES
scon

··~ HUTCH

HUNTING BOW

Men's Wllfelproof oinyl poncho.
Heat_...... hoa.y gouge vinyl ••
..-y hood ••• snop closUres .

..

.

'

OIEIIAI.Y
IOTO . 9

HECK'S REG. $1 .59

HDUSIWA.l /JIPT.
()-CEDAR

DUST MOPS
IYLOI

0-CEDAR

ANGLER

BROOM

$144

�.•

...

.... ll!

...

'

•

•

.......,.
10 T09

'

.

· PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY, AUG. 29, WHILE QUAITITIES LAST

PRICES • &amp;FEU lOW THROUGH
HAVOLIN£

IYLOI' FOAM SEAT COVERS

"""""'....,_ -,....
....,_--fit"'
. ,._·-populo&lt;--·
o;lftho-~and-

...... , .

........... _

MOTOR OIL

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

builtrigllf ............. , . . - . . , . .
of ........ _, . . . .. Fa.

oplt... ddboxk.

TIGER MUFFLER

AU TIMI'EIATUII

$

. 10W-40

.

•

c·

HECK'S
REG.
594

$

~!.l~!.~.~~~.fi~!~J9.9LS I 3 OFF HECK'S LOW PRICE

First quality mufflers from the makers of .
Lee oil filters. Available for most Ameri·
~n makes of cars.

•

Unequalled performance in on economy antenna

,.,.,,........,.
•M

•

•

-

. ABDIIOTWI_,T. .

TONKA
''T'' CARS .
lo~n
.....ka

t'ertect tor those under-the-&lt;or jobs, '
Full size, 36" long hardwood frame,

2 Piece
Rubber

Pllllt Pleasant-Stale On~

19

$

' " llllft'MtT.

1 LI.D&amp;L

FOI

~---;.......f

lEG.

sa•
EACH

DUMP
TRUCK

loz.IUIUE

. .CI-TOP

15 PIECE

HICK'S ·

IIG.

$1A8

........

CHAUCTEIS
.._

TURTLE
WAX

2 FGI$100

SbnOnly

,.,..,

LIQUID

$100

64'1ACH

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

78C

$2.44

TIY/191.

TIYIJ9T.

$1.48

71..

AUTOMORVI

DIPr.

$100

.15.50UNCE

STUD

......

OIL TREATMENT

&lt;=="

- ..

it1 ."": , "" -; .
-'

rorDEPr. ·

-

AITIP~RSPIUIT

---

.. . ,r

..·'f!

M
--

HECK'S REG.
$1.12

t'
,,,
•

tOSMET/t

DEPT.

J...

$ 26

•48&lt;

HECK'S REG.
...; $1.88

HECK'S REG.

tOSIIET/t

sac

$122
HECK'S REG •
$1.41

ror•r.

~'4

TOOL BOX

-' :

• Piano hinge • Plated handle • Pad·
lock cafch • Lift out lr'ay

,( ·
·

~

$133

..,

ABDIIIITirE

HECK'SREG.

:~;:. .1.

...

HAIIDWARI DEPT.

· SUPER STAIIILESS

160UNCE

BLADES

68'

15's

PHISOHEX

$128

$166

HECK'S REG.
99c

HECK'S REG. $1 .99

HECK'S REG. $2.48

CIISilmt

1191.

COSIIITIC . .T.

Good for most model cars.

BAYER

'

WATER WAND'-Water Wand simplifies dozens of
time-consuming: iobi around every homi. Pieferred by users
because of ~. lightness and good
balance. Easily handles all types
of difficuh cleaning jobs requir·
ing a powerful spray. New fla•ed
han&lt;lle pro-.ides easy grip.

HECK'S REG.
611 Each

51NCH
FORCE CUP

HECK'S REG. $4.99

AITOIIOTWIDEPT.

CARBURETOR
CLEANER

TURTU
BUG&amp; TAR
REMOVER

SNAP

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

38(

48(

,.,..,.,,

· HECK'SIEG. 69'

HECK'S REG. 77'..

,.,..,,,.,_

(

WHISKBROOM

8&lt;

\'\

SJ48
HECK'S lEG. $2.33

------ ~-=-="'~"·~~----

· ASPIRIN 100's

2 FOis

160UNCE

277 .

NOXZEMA

COSMETIC DEPT.

91NCH

$

60UNCE

JACK

781

_9112" PLAY BALL

160UNCE

IUGIULUI

~..:..~....;. ,..,__..,~

DEPT.

PORCH LIGHT

BUMPER

-lilllll!

HECK'S REG. 99 1

'( ..~

COSMETIC

DEPT.
•

.$ 133

RAID
HOUSI&amp; GAIDIN

961

GILLETTE

RIG.

33' 1ACH

son&amp;DRY

13'hOUNCI

MITAL

HECK'S

HECK'S lEG.

48(

PROTEIN29

""""

22

IIABWAft_,T.

PACQUIN
EXTRA DRY
SKIN LOTION

PLAY-DOH

...lho·•;,

Dftd .oon .wdes. THEY lf.AU.Y WOK Each p Jap ~
mt wb
Iii 1fM1C1 unifonn.

12 OUNCE

SQUARE LIGHT FIXTURE

HECK'S REG.
$2.66

DEPT.

70UNCE

DRINKANDWD

48&lt;

HIECI['S UG.

12~ ..... -

HECK'S REG.
66c
COSMETIC

NIGHT
LIGHT

WITH MAIIifSS

$177

APOLLO MOOI
TOYS
.,....,......,of_

HICK'S lEG.

'BABY DOLL ~TIRE

'$177

"

IIAIIDWAII DEPT.

12"

·TEA SET

1IOUNCE

Quality conslrvded wooden
handled screw drivers. Set includes several sizes.

tOSIIET/t

HECK'S i'EG.
62c

BIG BOY

PLAsnc

s 88

$100

'

DEPT.

GIANT
PlASTIC

SCREW DRIVER
SET

IECIIII ....THill, . . DIY 01 TilTED HAIR.

HECK'S REG.
84c

Pl Pleasant
sm um1

Uni..,...,l Hypalon ignition cable sots • ..
complete rewiring km for 6 and 8 cyfiiule; engines.

WOOD HANDLE

HAIR SPRAY

48( -

Point Pleasant Store

REWIRING KIT

SJOO
HECK'S

All1tiiiOTWI,.T.

NAIIJWAII D"T.

CHOICE

Heck's Reg. $J..19

I CYLINDER

rorD•r.

HAIDCUAB

Thermometer

'2"'
Heel's Reg. '3.99

HECK'S REG. $21.88

SUAVE

SHAMPOO
OR
CREME RINSE

4 Season

$1899

13 OUNCE

SUAVE

HARDWARE DEPT.

..

HECK'S REG.
$2.99

16 OUNCE

HICKS'S REG. $1 7.66

CAR_ MATS.:

top quality plywood bed, and fully
padded headrest.

Makes straight, curved and scroll
cuts in wood, ,metal, plastics and
other materials. Tilting shoe for
bevel cuts. One blade included .

$11~ 8

NO. 2310

Toyo !'II feature lifetime
tires, tough steel axles,
fun decols, moQ wheels,
and authentically proportioned details

,...ilwri...

HECIC'SUG.
~.99

3

series! The ' Color Master difference shows in color
and black and whije. Ruggedly built to' serve for
years to cOme, the Color Master Series has unique
fea1ures to boost gain wkere it's most needed for
peak reception on all channel~.

$6.99

HECK'S REG.
$4.99

·~·

BLACK&amp;.
JIGSAW

T.V. ANTENNA
HECK'S REG.

~566

1

CAULKING
GUN

77(

HECK'S REG. $1.19
110UNCE

11 OUNCE

CROWN SEAl,.

RALLY
CREAM WAX

OLD ANCHOR..
BASEMENT

PAINT
2GALLOICAI
$]33

HECK'S REG.
991

,.,.,,,.,

HECK:S REG. $4.97

IAIDWAIE DIPT.

•

.,
• -.'1

HOUSEPAINT

HECK'S
REG.
54c

WHITE ONLY

6-PIECE IOWR PAIIT

$199

KIT

GALLON ·
HECK'S REG, $2.99

HECK'S
REG.
$2.88

NARDW41E DEPT.

$188

HECK' S
REG.

•

99'

.,...,.,..r.

•

•

..

NAHWAII

IIIPT.

CAULKING

COMPOUND

22(

�•

•
17-,_ tlllh-Ao 'l•el,Wthp 111 t.PauaOJ&gt;, 0., Aqguit 25, D'11

'

Teenag~rs Hip

_...,

HOLLYWOOD (VPI) field little-&lt;xt thucreen was newer it. Neiiber Jeff (her hnolumd)
ail, thole X and . R rated sbockiDg to 1be girls.
nor 1be lddo «
were

10f09

pictures may not be as
~ to your lee!Hge
. ddldrenuyoumlgbtlbint.
, • Toclay'slllipbiatk:aledadolese'ceula are almGet u bip lo
nudity, III!X .and olber lli!QI8n
frailties u lbe late King

111oro1a u.. H)fitlloy
And lberein lies lbe llypocrisy
of the film rating system.
·Eva Ma'rie Saint bas a 1011,
Darrell, 16, and a da~ter.
Laurie, 13. She lakes them to .

1be other I!Velling a pair II
·u.,--o1c1 girls appoached a
1iDe d. movie-goers awaiting a
cbtble bill sltowing '"lbe
:Siatue" and "Klute." Both are
adult fare and failed to receive
G or GP ratings.
. Obviously, lite girls weren't
.,..., ees from a CCilvent Tbey
looted u if they'd been around.
Eventually a married couple
agreed 1o allow lbem 1o
acccmpany them inlo the
tbeater.
Nothing-or at least very

to digest lbe film's cootenl.
"H a picture is done well
enough with taste and style,
yourteen-agecbildrensbouldn't
be too young 1o attend many of
these H-eated pictures," she
.;nd.
"Kids these days have a
different perspective on subjects such as h&lt;mosemality.
There is more UJK~er&gt;;landing
and tolerance. In my opiDioo
the more children are exposed
1o the realliies of life the less
morbid curiosity lbey'll have
about the werld around them.
"It's lbe forbidden subject
that is enticing."
Eva Marie is starring with
Bob Hope in " Cancel My
Reservation," a romaniic comedy which will be rated G. Tbis
Naho Produclion marks Eva's
second picture with the comedian. The first was "That
Certain FeeUng"-released a
decade before the rating code
was written.
Bolb Kids See "Klute"
"I took both Darrell and
Laurie to see 'Klute," ' lbe
blonde Oscar-winner (best ~
porting actress 1954 in ''Waterfront") said. ''We all enjoyed

,_,.._

LADIES' SHAVER
Slyl;,h purse size port·
ability. Molded plastic
case. large cap and
collapsible hose store
inside. 4 posi1ion heat
control. Fost drying.

· Micro-twin shaYing head • .. one
sic» far.undero ......, the other side
for legs. Foot, sole and smooth.

-

feminine groomfng action.

. $699

HECK'S
REGULAR
$21.96

HECK'S lEG. $8.99
HECK'S lEG.

IIWRIY

•r.

$12.44"

$3333
HECK'S REG.

Pt. 1'laluDt Slcire ODI7 -

HAMILTON BEACH

DELUD PORTABLE MIXER

'

PORTABLE

UDIO

or o¥ocado with bright
dvometop.

s
11
&amp;:wr.,._

SD-361

SUNBEAM

!!cK'SIEG.

haiWII gold.

$14.97

ort

$23

FM

. lo&lt; FM, h&lt;rito .... foo. AM

w.

HECK'S REG. $29.96

• """ ..... 130 ..... . .
4 "AA" ponioo

boo..,..__

636

$1 5

c la.wWt.•ridt

,

88

I

Two ont•nnas. 21" whip

SHOTO'
S'IEAM IRON

VICtor W"tpple aka Jobn Victor
· W"tpple lo Larry Dugan, MaDne
Dugan, .76 Acre. Otester.
Joseph Fields, Pauline Fields
lo Clyde H. Wines, Gladys M.
W"Uiell, Lot42 and !'II Lot 43, c.
W. Dabney's Add., Pouleroy.
Larry
Scarbrough, Mary
Ann Scarbrough, J. w. Scarbrough, Ella Mae Scarbrough to
Mooid I. Good, Geraldine Good,
Pareel, Lebanon.
Edward Voss, Mary Lou Voss
1o James Henry Morlon, Betty
Morton, Josephine Morton,
James Henry Morton, Jr .,
Pan:el, Pomeroy.
Anna M. Ryther, Comm.,
William H. Byers, dec'd. to
Sallie A. Byers, 10 Acres,
Salisluii"YDale Lawson. Nancy Lawson
to Delbert Ours, I Acre,
Lebanon.
·Paul L. Pattenon, adm.,
Edward s. Mills, dec'd., to
Olarles E. &lt;ltancey, Mary Ann
Olancey, Lots 5 and 6, Buf.
fington's Add., Syracuse.
George Kelly, Jewell Kelley
to Berline Mills, 33.91 Acres,

(IDIIIIftlw . . . . . . . .

WfZ!To...._C 'iMf.• A'IDiWaltilla ........

• Swild t' NC

llfiEUr•r.

G.E.

77HECK'SREG. $18.96

HECK'S lEG. $29.96

VACOUM

IBIIUr•r.

SWEEPER

Pl M ra.d Sbe Only

C.E.

~

c..., w;th 42-poge ............ " Tho Sloador

. . • ~ • .,. dmHt
• 3 ~ . dyn Dillie tpeoler
• s·
sfnlp induc*t
I

Transfers

••=

pod
acids the pn' • 1
el touch to coolinv. URiqM co(d storage will
.............. ,..

• hilr~in cord, two-way
pow.,. • Solid-state d•·

U. AlrOIIAIIC

FlY PAl

PHONOGRAPH

-T2210

$2388
HECK'S
lEG.
$29.88

Sllem.
C. 0. RAlgers, Nan F. RAlgers
to Letts A. Spencer, Parcels,

TIMEX

ELECIIIC

WRISTWATCH

aAIROL
ELECI'RIC

MUNSEY

Ne- Noiocfs· Winding ••.
on Your Wrilf Or Off Energy Cell Ecnily R.ploced t,
The_Conwmor Guaranteed
far One ·Yeor . .. Joiuelod

MAKE.UP

POPCORN
POPPER

P..asion Mo..ment Jump
Sweep Second · Hand
Waterproof• Dvstpraof•
Shodt Rtsistont.

MIRROR

$}688

3 qyart m: MI., plug in any
11 D-120voltoutlet. Heat
residant glass ..,_._ Handle .toys cool. Card iud ocJ.

od.

$27.96

$11 88

HECK'S
IIG.

$15.11

••

HECK'S REG.

G.E. FM-AM
TABLE RADIO

Heck's

$277

Reg . $21.96

JEJilUr•r.

J.M-2

PI. Pleasant Store Only

9-VOLT

PANASONIC
AM PORTABLE

RADIO BAnERY

RADIO

2 FOR 88t

.,.,.,._

..

=~t

HECK'S lEG.

JIJIIUr•r.

HECK'S REG. 59' Each

HECK'S IIG. $3.79

$22.56

I-TUCK

STE_
REO
TAPES

PAIIIASONIC

PANASONIC AM

CASSEnE

TAPE RECORDER
SM!:P'e

PORTABLE RADIO

77

Western and Show
lUML Choose from a
Iorge onarl,.ent of

_ , . , .....0"9 ~... -

:K»C45111Q artim.. Pntduud by th leading

tral. ....... ""'""" "" d!ongo.
Vertical or horinwltol operotion. Micro-phone and ncr- riu..

HECK'S
REG. 111.88

Not Exactly as Pictured

'-"Rod. c;...,my &amp;

trm-

..... , ope: ofled c.ouettr..
-

'

lop artilh ond tap

-..factwon.

HECKSIEG.
$33.88

..,

IIIIEUY

R,ll59

G.l

2-SUCE TOASTER

TERON
GRIU

kitchen decor. r...,..utu...
dial allows yov to solocl tho
dorltnessof ,...., _
_

$1099

HICI{'S REG. $I 2.91

iJACK TO SCHOOL Ill tbe
latest turn Alabama Gov.
Geor&amp;e Wallace's rannln&amp;
confrentatlon wlth Wash·
ID~n
bas laken. The
governor, wbo came to national prominence w 1 t b
vows to otand In the IC!baolbon~e door to block lnteg:ratlon, b a s countered
court - o r d e r e d scllool
cloabtl(s.

You'll

'10

PI. Pleasant Store Only

HICK'S lEG.
$2.77

_,.,..,

Twenty-five Years Ago

The board, which sharply criticized the teehniques used by
the Coast Guard for its investigations, issued a series of reconunendations to beef up the
studies and to help prevent _future accidents.
The board, noting that ';he
Coast Guard only followed wtth
"on-scene"investigationsin half
U __
its cases encouraged more in~
depthpr~bes.
•
"It is doubtful whether Coast
Guard and state efforts to improve boating safety can be
f
successful without more onUl5
. scene in-depth investigations,"
the board said.
It noted the Coast Guard genNew Baveo•s Town Council erally decided on one prime
at
a in
re~
meeting
nigbt
city hall
gave Mondo,y
AwaJachian l'llwer Comlfl!IY authorization for the installation or
two street lil!hts and appointed
a representative [or that comm~ on !be Mason County
Action Inc.
Mayor Charles Zerkle presided when council gave Its approval for the two lights, which
were gr.onted on a motion by
Marion ~.in the MaeLou-Wan Addition on Ma,yo Drive.
These will be installed onpedestals nnnber 131 and 133.
Councilman Donald Embelton
was appointed to' Mayor Zerkle
as representative for the town
or New Baven on 1M Mason
CIUity Action Group ilc. It
was DOled !bat lbese meetings
are beld the _fourth 'l'lllrsday
of each month m the courtlloose
In additim to those prevl~s1¥ named olber town :mcials

FRESH LfAN BEEF

$499

.....

Mon. Tues., ~:..;.9 " 7
'rhuri., Fri., Sit ~--;9 to 9
a.DSm SUNDAYS-

BRAND

FAIRMONT
. NICE 'It' U1E

DAI~Y

FAIR

ICE
MILK MILK
4
4 ~:
2~89

49

Serving : Golllpotls,
Pomer&lt;&gt;y &amp; Middleport, 0 .
ond Mason Co. W. Yo.

FOR

ADMIRAL
• Radii

• Air

-~

.

e·Duplex Refrigerators • Stereos
e Color T.V.

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDL£PORT

lb.

c
79

20

ct.

pkg.

9

aiOic:e Rte.

BANANAS

.. 10~

JIICK'SIIG.

...., ..r.

BEEF STEW
MEAT

FRENat

CITY

Dudley's florist

l ..
.303

cans

instant Coffee io o~.

WIENERS

Prices Efftcliw: Aug. 25-31

$].00 up

YOUR HEADQUARTERS

Whitney Lite

han

Greenhouse Fresh
Foliage Gardens

$1
"t
Co
kt
"I
4
Fru1 c a1 ........................
Peaches ...~.'. ~~~~. ~~~~~~............... 4 ~:!s $1
Preserves . ~:~~~.~~~~~~~~.: ............ 3~:r~~-$ $1
Chase &amp; Sanborn...............~~~ ....! 49
Nestle's Ouik . ~:~.'~t.~...........~.;: ... 79~
Chunk Tuna ..........................~~.;. .39~
Grapefruit Juice.~;~~~;~;~~~.~;.~-.45'
A-1 Bleach . ~~~.~~-~:~:~........... ~!!... 3-9~
White Eggs ...~~~~~.~~~...............3 :r'· $1
Distilled Water......................~~~ . 49~ ·

~

3 3.29

-

SEE BAKER • • •

present far Uoe meeting were
Councilman Cecil llmcau and
Jane Russell, recorder.

CHOICE

·HAMS

-- - -

-

;a~use;o:f~the:rrus:·ha:p,~w;h:il:e~in~========;

ameJ:.

USDA

CANNED

quantities

many instances, there may be a
dozen or more taclors reievani
1o the accident.
The effectiveness of safety
precautions cannot be determined unless all causal fa~tors
are included, ·the board said.

New uaven Town
CoontiJ GtVt.C;
;,.:hfs Approval

,RATH'S

lim~

tive Sept. 1, nursing homes are
faced with the most serious fin·
ancial crisis the industry has
ever deall with," Mitchell !!Sid.
"Some homes wiU face bankruptcy." he continued. "Some
undoubtedly will have to transfer patients out and refuse to
accept new Medicaid patients."
MiLcheU said the association
has developed a program to assist in the replacement of pa·
tients inlo quality facilities.
"It is unthinkable that these
once-productive, hard working
people, your mother and father

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
National Transportation Safety
Board recommended Tuesday
the Coast Guard create an investigator training program in
an effort to strengthen its "sup-erficial" investigations of fatal
boat accidents.

lb.

,5th anct PEARL SIS.. RACINE

"With the reduction of rates
of $1 per patient per d;ly effec-

and mine, could become pollll·
cal footbails , and have their
lives placed In such jeopardy,"
he said.
Other redlictions announced
by Hansan Included a 1.5 per
cent cut in payments to rectp.. ·
ients under Aid 1o Dependent
Children, Aid for the Aged, Aid
for the Blind, and programs; a
reduction of 5 per cent In grant
for those receiving general relief; and lighter restrictions on
authorizations for &lt;Jrugs, medi·
cal equipment, dentures and optometric services provided under MediCaid.
Gilligan's austerity program,
announced last weelt. included
spending cuts of 10 per cent In
each department, the layoff of
nearly 3,000 state employes, and
other measures d~ to
place state spertdlng in line
with revenues under the interim budget.

Del Monte

Sli:ed

Ideal for travel, home, aftice. Four cvp capacity. Will
hoot prepared loads ot the
table. Cord included.

SJ77

Mr. and Mr.r. Charles Hepfer

oi

U. S. GMmmenl Inspected
For ~ily.

88

shop by November, 1972," Hansan said.
Cecil MUchell, president of
the Ohio Nursing Home Associ·
aLion, said the proposed reductions would pose a serious
threat to nursing homes.

CG Advised To Sharpen Probe Work

Mr.andMrs.OtarlesHepfer,RD4,Dixon, ID.,willcelelnle
their silver wedding amtiversary Sunday at the Llgblbouse
Churcbfrom 2pm. to 5p.m. Ow-les and Edith have been active
· farming Otarl ·
· his 16111 ..... as supervisor for the
10
. ,_
.
• • es IS ser_vmll
Taylor low!l'lhip_ commUDity and be IS a famed coon bUDter 10 lee
and Ogle Counties.
EdithislhefmnerEdithBelleKarr,da~ter~ theFredJ.
Karrs, formerly of Middlepcrt. She enjoys domg oil and Pumlivered on Oo:lllioer 12, 1966
aDd $100 for 200 bales of bay sylvania Dutch pain~ and restoring antiques. Their children
are a son, Charles Dwight, Oregon, m.. and three daughters, Mrs.
sold and delivered June2,1967.
Lyle (Joan) Hayes, Kings, ID.; Mrs. Keith (Bev ) Nesemeier,
Ashton, m.• and Mrs. Richard (Deanna) Carter, Rochelle, m.
CRAN!n'ON A GOOD VEEP
1bey have 11 grandchildren. Ev~one is welcome 1o belp share
SACRAMEN'IU. Calif. (UPI) the day . Omit gifts.
- Fonner California Gov. Edmund h. Brown believes U.S. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Sen. Alan Cranston could help
elect a Democratic President in
1972 by being the vice
presidential candidate.
Mrs. Neva King, Mr . Ralph field spent 1M weekend with
"I'd like to see Alan Cranston Carr of Virginia and Mr. and Miss Unda Beal, member.!
nominated fer vice pRsdent," Mrs. Virgil King visited with the All Ohio Slate Youth Oloir
Brown said. "l think be could Mr. and Mrs. James Cummins and sang at the Bean Dinner at
carry California and make the at Reynoldsburg recently.
the Bob Evans Farm Saturday.
difference between winning and Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean
losing."
Mrs. Nev White and sons were visited with Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Mr. and Mrs. John Swearinger, Paynter at Carpenter. Other
Mr. and Mrs.
Robert visitors were Mr. and Mrs. Clair
Peal Accidents
Swearinger and Bobby, all of Waggoner of Harrisonville and
Industrial accident rates West Milton, Ohio, Mr. Warnie Mr. and Mrs. Sanford Well of
reached lbeir peak in the
United States from 1007 to White of Bem, W. Va., Bfd Albany.
Mrs. Branch Miller of Belpre
19m, wben 4,534 workers ·Meloney and Dwayne of Mason,
w.
va.
visited
her father, Mr. Elijah
were killed in railroading
Miss Judy King of Kankakee, Micheal recently.
and 2.534 men died in coal
mines, according to Ency- Illinois was home recently to
clopaedia Britannica.
visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. APPLE GROVE
Vtrgil King and family.
Mr. andMrs.Steve Shulerare
Visiting with Mr. and Mrs. stationed at Denver, Colo., with
Ji'loyd Ross and family was Mrs. the air force.
REUNION SET
Ross' mother from Virginia.
Mrs. Sally Savage was a
1be annual Turner " reunion, .Mr. and Mrs. Eddie King and dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs.
will be beld at lbe American Mr. Charles King visited with Jim Roush Saturday. Miss
Legion Hall, Middleport Sun- thelrDad,Mr. EdKing,whoisa Brenda Hawkins of Salem
day. Sept. 5, beginning at 10 patient at Holzer Hospital.
Ohio, was a weekend guest
a.m .
Miss Linda Young of Mans- thf! RmL"""-'.

Fresh

HOT POT

Heck's .
Reg. '24.96

1be sale of BOO bales Cll bay
is the bul&amp; far a new clvU
actioa ft1ec1 1n Mum Count;y
Circuit Clerk Sl11trday mornilll
records ill !be allice of lloward
Schultz, Cln:uit Clerl&lt;, discl ose.
llu&amp;b Forlb rued suit again!t
Metrin Holley, Jem's Run
Rood and in it is asking judgment far tile SIDII of $618
wilb interest and costs.
1be p!o!nt!tJ contends the
clefeDdutl ..es blm $518 for
700 bales of h31 sold and de-

QJOice Meats.

PROCTOR
SILEX
GlASS
PEROOLATOR

ALUMIIIIUM

G-44J

Suit Basis

Eniof Our USDA

We Gladly kcept Fed. rood Stamps

WAFFU
BAKER

Hay Sale Is

Phebe Comments:

_Right reserved tD

Clld

1!1J1barra-.1 by wbat we saw.
'"'IIe lddo brill&amp; tbelr friends
home and I lind lbem much
more bol!e&amp;t than we used to
be. 1bey 1a1t about more
meeniro&amp;fol things and don't
gigglearoundabautsex.
"And I don't believe promis.
cuity is as rampant as peq»le
have been led to believe."
~ lbere will be
notbiDg in ''Cancel MY Reservaiioo" to send lbem borne
agog. Despite her -liberal
atiitnde- toward IDOYies, Eva
siill dtfclrs lbe reviews before
-laking her brood to the flicks.

Kingsbury News, Notes

'The StDre Wrth A·Heart,
You. WE LIKE"

GENERAL RECIIIC
Handsome styling on this

~R(restrlcted)moviesifsbe
thinks lbey are mature enoug!l

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Pay·
ments fer lbe care II welfare
~Is in nursing homes will
be reduced by $1 per day per
patient effective Sept. I to bring
the Welfare Deparlment in Une
wilh Gov. John J. Gilligan's austerity program, Director John
E. Kansan annOWJced Tuesday.
Hansan said in1Jatient hospital days would be reduced from
!III Io 30; 1M out-patient hospital
rate would drop from $10 to $9
per visit ; and 37 employes
would be laid off under the aus·
terity program.
Hansan, who blamed 1M cuts
on the Ohio General Assembly's failw-e to pass a budget,
said the reductions would not
have to be enacted if a budget
were approved by Sept. I. .
"Without an increase in taxes
or a reduction in the level of
service, Ohio will run out of
money and have to close up

myself

PORK STEAK

Pl ..... Sbe On~

toadei wiD CO&lt;IIf'liment Oil)'

•

Salisbury.
Letts A. Spencer 1o C. 0.
Rogers, Nan F. RAlgers, Parcels, Pomeroy .
Sydney P. Harless, Mary F.
Harless 1o Franklin Real Estate
Estate Co., 415.50Acres, Salem.
Roy B. Stooe, OOI'othy B.
Stone lo Frantlin Real Estate
Co., 34 Acres, Salem.

$J777

sgn

HICK'S

Meigs

Property

tof ii.We4color~afll'l

wall hang. Dotochoble
!Dnl. ln white, harvest gold

79

.14-SPEED

FM-AM

formance • . Three·speed
- I; non-splaoh beo1on;
positi-.le beo1er ejector. Designed to s!ond on end or

••

. .1.

HAMILTON BEACH

Gl.

s-11 in scale, big on per·

$36.11
llrtiUr

Nursing Homes in Trouble

to X&amp;R Pies

tAM$. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~.19'
3
3'
9
'
ONIONS.......... .~
NEW YEl.l.OW

I .

HOME GROWN ..CANTELOPES
'

6'h oz.

�•

•
17-,_ tlllh-Ao 'l•el,Wthp 111 t.PauaOJ&gt;, 0., Aqguit 25, D'11

'

Teenag~rs Hip

_...,

HOLLYWOOD (VPI) field little-&lt;xt thucreen was newer it. Neiiber Jeff (her hnolumd)
ail, thole X and . R rated sbockiDg to 1be girls.
nor 1be lddo «
were

10f09

pictures may not be as
~ to your lee!Hge
. ddldrenuyoumlgbtlbint.
, • Toclay'slllipbiatk:aledadolese'ceula are almGet u bip lo
nudity, III!X .and olber lli!QI8n
frailties u lbe late King

111oro1a u.. H)fitlloy
And lberein lies lbe llypocrisy
of the film rating system.
·Eva Ma'rie Saint bas a 1011,
Darrell, 16, and a da~ter.
Laurie, 13. She lakes them to .

1be other I!Velling a pair II
·u.,--o1c1 girls appoached a
1iDe d. movie-goers awaiting a
cbtble bill sltowing '"lbe
:Siatue" and "Klute." Both are
adult fare and failed to receive
G or GP ratings.
. Obviously, lite girls weren't
.,..., ees from a CCilvent Tbey
looted u if they'd been around.
Eventually a married couple
agreed 1o allow lbem 1o
acccmpany them inlo the
tbeater.
Nothing-or at least very

to digest lbe film's cootenl.
"H a picture is done well
enough with taste and style,
yourteen-agecbildrensbouldn't
be too young 1o attend many of
these H-eated pictures," she
.;nd.
"Kids these days have a
different perspective on subjects such as h&lt;mosemality.
There is more UJK~er&gt;;landing
and tolerance. In my opiDioo
the more children are exposed
1o the realliies of life the less
morbid curiosity lbey'll have
about the werld around them.
"It's lbe forbidden subject
that is enticing."
Eva Marie is starring with
Bob Hope in " Cancel My
Reservation," a romaniic comedy which will be rated G. Tbis
Naho Produclion marks Eva's
second picture with the comedian. The first was "That
Certain FeeUng"-released a
decade before the rating code
was written.
Bolb Kids See "Klute"
"I took both Darrell and
Laurie to see 'Klute," ' lbe
blonde Oscar-winner (best ~
porting actress 1954 in ''Waterfront") said. ''We all enjoyed

,_,.._

LADIES' SHAVER
Slyl;,h purse size port·
ability. Molded plastic
case. large cap and
collapsible hose store
inside. 4 posi1ion heat
control. Fost drying.

· Micro-twin shaYing head • .. one
sic» far.undero ......, the other side
for legs. Foot, sole and smooth.

-

feminine groomfng action.

. $699

HECK'S
REGULAR
$21.96

HECK'S lEG. $8.99
HECK'S lEG.

IIWRIY

•r.

$12.44"

$3333
HECK'S REG.

Pt. 1'laluDt Slcire ODI7 -

HAMILTON BEACH

DELUD PORTABLE MIXER

'

PORTABLE

UDIO

or o¥ocado with bright
dvometop.

s
11
&amp;:wr.,._

SD-361

SUNBEAM

!!cK'SIEG.

haiWII gold.

$14.97

ort

$23

FM

. lo&lt; FM, h&lt;rito .... foo. AM

w.

HECK'S REG. $29.96

• """ ..... 130 ..... . .
4 "AA" ponioo

boo..,..__

636

$1 5

c la.wWt.•ridt

,

88

I

Two ont•nnas. 21" whip

SHOTO'
S'IEAM IRON

VICtor W"tpple aka Jobn Victor
· W"tpple lo Larry Dugan, MaDne
Dugan, .76 Acre. Otester.
Joseph Fields, Pauline Fields
lo Clyde H. Wines, Gladys M.
W"Uiell, Lot42 and !'II Lot 43, c.
W. Dabney's Add., Pouleroy.
Larry
Scarbrough, Mary
Ann Scarbrough, J. w. Scarbrough, Ella Mae Scarbrough to
Mooid I. Good, Geraldine Good,
Pareel, Lebanon.
Edward Voss, Mary Lou Voss
1o James Henry Morlon, Betty
Morton, Josephine Morton,
James Henry Morton, Jr .,
Pan:el, Pomeroy.
Anna M. Ryther, Comm.,
William H. Byers, dec'd. to
Sallie A. Byers, 10 Acres,
Salisluii"YDale Lawson. Nancy Lawson
to Delbert Ours, I Acre,
Lebanon.
·Paul L. Pattenon, adm.,
Edward s. Mills, dec'd., to
Olarles E. &lt;ltancey, Mary Ann
Olancey, Lots 5 and 6, Buf.
fington's Add., Syracuse.
George Kelly, Jewell Kelley
to Berline Mills, 33.91 Acres,

(IDIIIIftlw . . . . . . . .

WfZ!To...._C 'iMf.• A'IDiWaltilla ........

• Swild t' NC

llfiEUr•r.

G.E.

77HECK'SREG. $18.96

HECK'S lEG. $29.96

VACOUM

IBIIUr•r.

SWEEPER

Pl M ra.d Sbe Only

C.E.

~

c..., w;th 42-poge ............ " Tho Sloador

. . • ~ • .,. dmHt
• 3 ~ . dyn Dillie tpeoler
• s·
sfnlp induc*t
I

Transfers

••=

pod
acids the pn' • 1
el touch to coolinv. URiqM co(d storage will
.............. ,..

• hilr~in cord, two-way
pow.,. • Solid-state d•·

U. AlrOIIAIIC

FlY PAl

PHONOGRAPH

-T2210

$2388
HECK'S
lEG.
$29.88

Sllem.
C. 0. RAlgers, Nan F. RAlgers
to Letts A. Spencer, Parcels,

TIMEX

ELECIIIC

WRISTWATCH

aAIROL
ELECI'RIC

MUNSEY

Ne- Noiocfs· Winding ••.
on Your Wrilf Or Off Energy Cell Ecnily R.ploced t,
The_Conwmor Guaranteed
far One ·Yeor . .. Joiuelod

MAKE.UP

POPCORN
POPPER

P..asion Mo..ment Jump
Sweep Second · Hand
Waterproof• Dvstpraof•
Shodt Rtsistont.

MIRROR

$}688

3 qyart m: MI., plug in any
11 D-120voltoutlet. Heat
residant glass ..,_._ Handle .toys cool. Card iud ocJ.

od.

$27.96

$11 88

HECK'S
IIG.

$15.11

••

HECK'S REG.

G.E. FM-AM
TABLE RADIO

Heck's

$277

Reg . $21.96

JEJilUr•r.

J.M-2

PI. Pleasant Store Only

9-VOLT

PANASONIC
AM PORTABLE

RADIO BAnERY

RADIO

2 FOR 88t

.,.,.,._

..

=~t

HECK'S lEG.

JIJIIUr•r.

HECK'S REG. 59' Each

HECK'S IIG. $3.79

$22.56

I-TUCK

STE_
REO
TAPES

PAIIIASONIC

PANASONIC AM

CASSEnE

TAPE RECORDER
SM!:P'e

PORTABLE RADIO

77

Western and Show
lUML Choose from a
Iorge onarl,.ent of

_ , . , .....0"9 ~... -

:K»C45111Q artim.. Pntduud by th leading

tral. ....... ""'""" "" d!ongo.
Vertical or horinwltol operotion. Micro-phone and ncr- riu..

HECK'S
REG. 111.88

Not Exactly as Pictured

'-"Rod. c;...,my &amp;

trm-

..... , ope: ofled c.ouettr..
-

'

lop artilh ond tap

-..factwon.

HECKSIEG.
$33.88

..,

IIIIEUY

R,ll59

G.l

2-SUCE TOASTER

TERON
GRIU

kitchen decor. r...,..utu...
dial allows yov to solocl tho
dorltnessof ,...., _
_

$1099

HICI{'S REG. $I 2.91

iJACK TO SCHOOL Ill tbe
latest turn Alabama Gov.
Geor&amp;e Wallace's rannln&amp;
confrentatlon wlth Wash·
ID~n
bas laken. The
governor, wbo came to national prominence w 1 t b
vows to otand In the IC!baolbon~e door to block lnteg:ratlon, b a s countered
court - o r d e r e d scllool
cloabtl(s.

You'll

'10

PI. Pleasant Store Only

HICK'S lEG.
$2.77

_,.,..,

Twenty-five Years Ago

The board, which sharply criticized the teehniques used by
the Coast Guard for its investigations, issued a series of reconunendations to beef up the
studies and to help prevent _future accidents.
The board, noting that ';he
Coast Guard only followed wtth
"on-scene"investigationsin half
U __
its cases encouraged more in~
depthpr~bes.
•
"It is doubtful whether Coast
Guard and state efforts to improve boating safety can be
f
successful without more onUl5
. scene in-depth investigations,"
the board said.
It noted the Coast Guard genNew Baveo•s Town Council erally decided on one prime
at
a in
re~
meeting
nigbt
city hall
gave Mondo,y
AwaJachian l'llwer Comlfl!IY authorization for the installation or
two street lil!hts and appointed
a representative [or that comm~ on !be Mason County
Action Inc.
Mayor Charles Zerkle presided when council gave Its approval for the two lights, which
were gr.onted on a motion by
Marion ~.in the MaeLou-Wan Addition on Ma,yo Drive.
These will be installed onpedestals nnnber 131 and 133.
Councilman Donald Embelton
was appointed to' Mayor Zerkle
as representative for the town
or New Baven on 1M Mason
CIUity Action Group ilc. It
was DOled !bat lbese meetings
are beld the _fourth 'l'lllrsday
of each month m the courtlloose
In additim to those prevl~s1¥ named olber town :mcials

FRESH LfAN BEEF

$499

.....

Mon. Tues., ~:..;.9 " 7
'rhuri., Fri., Sit ~--;9 to 9
a.DSm SUNDAYS-

BRAND

FAIRMONT
. NICE 'It' U1E

DAI~Y

FAIR

ICE
MILK MILK
4
4 ~:
2~89

49

Serving : Golllpotls,
Pomer&lt;&gt;y &amp; Middleport, 0 .
ond Mason Co. W. Yo.

FOR

ADMIRAL
• Radii

• Air

-~

.

e·Duplex Refrigerators • Stereos
e Color T.V.

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDL£PORT

lb.

c
79

20

ct.

pkg.

9

aiOic:e Rte.

BANANAS

.. 10~

JIICK'SIIG.

...., ..r.

BEEF STEW
MEAT

FRENat

CITY

Dudley's florist

l ..
.303

cans

instant Coffee io o~.

WIENERS

Prices Efftcliw: Aug. 25-31

$].00 up

YOUR HEADQUARTERS

Whitney Lite

han

Greenhouse Fresh
Foliage Gardens

$1
"t
Co
kt
"I
4
Fru1 c a1 ........................
Peaches ...~.'. ~~~~. ~~~~~~............... 4 ~:!s $1
Preserves . ~:~~~.~~~~~~~~.: ............ 3~:r~~-$ $1
Chase &amp; Sanborn...............~~~ ....! 49
Nestle's Ouik . ~:~.'~t.~...........~.;: ... 79~
Chunk Tuna ..........................~~.;. .39~
Grapefruit Juice.~;~~~;~;~~~.~;.~-.45'
A-1 Bleach . ~~~.~~-~:~:~........... ~!!... 3-9~
White Eggs ...~~~~~.~~~...............3 :r'· $1
Distilled Water......................~~~ . 49~ ·

~

3 3.29

-

SEE BAKER • • •

present far Uoe meeting were
Councilman Cecil llmcau and
Jane Russell, recorder.

CHOICE

·HAMS

-- - -

-

;a~use;o:f~the:rrus:·ha:p,~w;h:il:e~in~========;

ameJ:.

USDA

CANNED

quantities

many instances, there may be a
dozen or more taclors reievani
1o the accident.
The effectiveness of safety
precautions cannot be determined unless all causal fa~tors
are included, ·the board said.

New uaven Town
CoontiJ GtVt.C;
;,.:hfs Approval

,RATH'S

lim~

tive Sept. 1, nursing homes are
faced with the most serious fin·
ancial crisis the industry has
ever deall with," Mitchell !!Sid.
"Some homes wiU face bankruptcy." he continued. "Some
undoubtedly will have to transfer patients out and refuse to
accept new Medicaid patients."
MiLcheU said the association
has developed a program to assist in the replacement of pa·
tients inlo quality facilities.
"It is unthinkable that these
once-productive, hard working
people, your mother and father

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
National Transportation Safety
Board recommended Tuesday
the Coast Guard create an investigator training program in
an effort to strengthen its "sup-erficial" investigations of fatal
boat accidents.

lb.

,5th anct PEARL SIS.. RACINE

"With the reduction of rates
of $1 per patient per d;ly effec-

and mine, could become pollll·
cal footbails , and have their
lives placed In such jeopardy,"
he said.
Other redlictions announced
by Hansan Included a 1.5 per
cent cut in payments to rectp.. ·
ients under Aid 1o Dependent
Children, Aid for the Aged, Aid
for the Blind, and programs; a
reduction of 5 per cent In grant
for those receiving general relief; and lighter restrictions on
authorizations for &lt;Jrugs, medi·
cal equipment, dentures and optometric services provided under MediCaid.
Gilligan's austerity program,
announced last weelt. included
spending cuts of 10 per cent In
each department, the layoff of
nearly 3,000 state employes, and
other measures d~ to
place state spertdlng in line
with revenues under the interim budget.

Del Monte

Sli:ed

Ideal for travel, home, aftice. Four cvp capacity. Will
hoot prepared loads ot the
table. Cord included.

SJ77

Mr. and Mr.r. Charles Hepfer

oi

U. S. GMmmenl Inspected
For ~ily.

88

shop by November, 1972," Hansan said.
Cecil MUchell, president of
the Ohio Nursing Home Associ·
aLion, said the proposed reductions would pose a serious
threat to nursing homes.

CG Advised To Sharpen Probe Work

Mr.andMrs.OtarlesHepfer,RD4,Dixon, ID.,willcelelnle
their silver wedding amtiversary Sunday at the Llgblbouse
Churcbfrom 2pm. to 5p.m. Ow-les and Edith have been active
· farming Otarl ·
· his 16111 ..... as supervisor for the
10
. ,_
.
• • es IS ser_vmll
Taylor low!l'lhip_ commUDity and be IS a famed coon bUDter 10 lee
and Ogle Counties.
EdithislhefmnerEdithBelleKarr,da~ter~ theFredJ.
Karrs, formerly of Middlepcrt. She enjoys domg oil and Pumlivered on Oo:lllioer 12, 1966
aDd $100 for 200 bales of bay sylvania Dutch pain~ and restoring antiques. Their children
are a son, Charles Dwight, Oregon, m.. and three daughters, Mrs.
sold and delivered June2,1967.
Lyle (Joan) Hayes, Kings, ID.; Mrs. Keith (Bev ) Nesemeier,
Ashton, m.• and Mrs. Richard (Deanna) Carter, Rochelle, m.
CRAN!n'ON A GOOD VEEP
1bey have 11 grandchildren. Ev~one is welcome 1o belp share
SACRAMEN'IU. Calif. (UPI) the day . Omit gifts.
- Fonner California Gov. Edmund h. Brown believes U.S. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Sen. Alan Cranston could help
elect a Democratic President in
1972 by being the vice
presidential candidate.
Mrs. Neva King, Mr . Ralph field spent 1M weekend with
"I'd like to see Alan Cranston Carr of Virginia and Mr. and Miss Unda Beal, member.!
nominated fer vice pRsdent," Mrs. Virgil King visited with the All Ohio Slate Youth Oloir
Brown said. "l think be could Mr. and Mrs. James Cummins and sang at the Bean Dinner at
carry California and make the at Reynoldsburg recently.
the Bob Evans Farm Saturday.
difference between winning and Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean
losing."
Mrs. Nev White and sons were visited with Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Mr. and Mrs. John Swearinger, Paynter at Carpenter. Other
Mr. and Mrs.
Robert visitors were Mr. and Mrs. Clair
Peal Accidents
Swearinger and Bobby, all of Waggoner of Harrisonville and
Industrial accident rates West Milton, Ohio, Mr. Warnie Mr. and Mrs. Sanford Well of
reached lbeir peak in the
United States from 1007 to White of Bem, W. Va., Bfd Albany.
Mrs. Branch Miller of Belpre
19m, wben 4,534 workers ·Meloney and Dwayne of Mason,
w.
va.
visited
her father, Mr. Elijah
were killed in railroading
Miss Judy King of Kankakee, Micheal recently.
and 2.534 men died in coal
mines, according to Ency- Illinois was home recently to
clopaedia Britannica.
visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. APPLE GROVE
Vtrgil King and family.
Mr. andMrs.Steve Shulerare
Visiting with Mr. and Mrs. stationed at Denver, Colo., with
Ji'loyd Ross and family was Mrs. the air force.
REUNION SET
Ross' mother from Virginia.
Mrs. Sally Savage was a
1be annual Turner " reunion, .Mr. and Mrs. Eddie King and dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs.
will be beld at lbe American Mr. Charles King visited with Jim Roush Saturday. Miss
Legion Hall, Middleport Sun- thelrDad,Mr. EdKing,whoisa Brenda Hawkins of Salem
day. Sept. 5, beginning at 10 patient at Holzer Hospital.
Ohio, was a weekend guest
a.m .
Miss Linda Young of Mans- thf! RmL"""-'.

Fresh

HOT POT

Heck's .
Reg. '24.96

1be sale of BOO bales Cll bay
is the bul&amp; far a new clvU
actioa ft1ec1 1n Mum Count;y
Circuit Clerk Sl11trday mornilll
records ill !be allice of lloward
Schultz, Cln:uit Clerl&lt;, discl ose.
llu&amp;b Forlb rued suit again!t
Metrin Holley, Jem's Run
Rood and in it is asking judgment far tile SIDII of $618
wilb interest and costs.
1be p!o!nt!tJ contends the
clefeDdutl ..es blm $518 for
700 bales of h31 sold and de-

QJOice Meats.

PROCTOR
SILEX
GlASS
PEROOLATOR

ALUMIIIIUM

G-44J

Suit Basis

Eniof Our USDA

We Gladly kcept Fed. rood Stamps

WAFFU
BAKER

Hay Sale Is

Phebe Comments:

_Right reserved tD

Clld

1!1J1barra-.1 by wbat we saw.
'"'IIe lddo brill&amp; tbelr friends
home and I lind lbem much
more bol!e&amp;t than we used to
be. 1bey 1a1t about more
meeniro&amp;fol things and don't
gigglearoundabautsex.
"And I don't believe promis.
cuity is as rampant as peq»le
have been led to believe."
~ lbere will be
notbiDg in ''Cancel MY Reservaiioo" to send lbem borne
agog. Despite her -liberal
atiitnde- toward IDOYies, Eva
siill dtfclrs lbe reviews before
-laking her brood to the flicks.

Kingsbury News, Notes

'The StDre Wrth A·Heart,
You. WE LIKE"

GENERAL RECIIIC
Handsome styling on this

~R(restrlcted)moviesifsbe
thinks lbey are mature enoug!l

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Pay·
ments fer lbe care II welfare
~Is in nursing homes will
be reduced by $1 per day per
patient effective Sept. I to bring
the Welfare Deparlment in Une
wilh Gov. John J. Gilligan's austerity program, Director John
E. Kansan annOWJced Tuesday.
Hansan said in1Jatient hospital days would be reduced from
!III Io 30; 1M out-patient hospital
rate would drop from $10 to $9
per visit ; and 37 employes
would be laid off under the aus·
terity program.
Hansan, who blamed 1M cuts
on the Ohio General Assembly's failw-e to pass a budget,
said the reductions would not
have to be enacted if a budget
were approved by Sept. I. .
"Without an increase in taxes
or a reduction in the level of
service, Ohio will run out of
money and have to close up

myself

PORK STEAK

Pl ..... Sbe On~

toadei wiD CO&lt;IIf'liment Oil)'

•

Salisbury.
Letts A. Spencer 1o C. 0.
Rogers, Nan F. RAlgers, Parcels, Pomeroy .
Sydney P. Harless, Mary F.
Harless 1o Franklin Real Estate
Estate Co., 415.50Acres, Salem.
Roy B. Stooe, OOI'othy B.
Stone lo Frantlin Real Estate
Co., 34 Acres, Salem.

$J777

sgn

HICK'S

Meigs

Property

tof ii.We4color~afll'l

wall hang. Dotochoble
!Dnl. ln white, harvest gold

79

.14-SPEED

FM-AM

formance • . Three·speed
- I; non-splaoh beo1on;
positi-.le beo1er ejector. Designed to s!ond on end or

••

. .1.

HAMILTON BEACH

Gl.

s-11 in scale, big on per·

$36.11
llrtiUr

Nursing Homes in Trouble

to X&amp;R Pies

tAM$. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~.19'
3
3'
9
'
ONIONS.......... .~
NEW YEl.l.OW

I .

HOME GROWN ..CANTELOPES
'

6'h oz.

�..... . .....

·-·--

i

l&amp;-L;...uqlllntblel.~ 0 .• Aullll1125,l!l'il

Hargains, Bargains and More Bargains
II Aft 11 S

_B.;;::y;..;Pm:.:..:L:.::PA:..:sro:....n=E...~
•

@

Want to get that old water
heater out of the yard• Ten
the neighborhood urchins
not to touch it.
* * *
Friend with a -nag for a
wife says he's working for

a leaving.

• • •

School bussing begins in

l

Pomero,·.
Motor (t.y .

SIGNs·
· ·Of

QUALITY

.

Special.

• • •

, ••..., ·'Mot• Co.

PERMANENT SPECIAL
TiiRU AUGUST
•15~ ......U2

50

•12~ ..... ~10

00

Kay's Beauty Salon
PHONE 992-2125
60PERATORS

169 N. Second Ave.

Appointment Not Necessary

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
S P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadllne9a .m.
.. C;r~ellallon ~ Corr~ions

Will bea~cepted unfil9a .m. for

Day of Publication
REGULA:rtONS
The Publisher reserves 1he
r ight to edit or reject any ads

deemed objectional
The
publisher will not be resP'bnsible
for more than one incorrect

insertion.

RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 cents pe:r Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c

· 12

cents

per word three

consec1Jtive insertions.

18 cents per word siX con·
secutive insertions.
25 P~r Cent Discount on paid

DAVID POLING, D.O.

ads and ads paid with in 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp;OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word minimum .

Good Books vs.
Bad Television

liach additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 2Sc Charge per
Advertisem.ent.
.
OFF ICE HOURS
8:30a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Daily,
8:30 a.m . to 12 : DO Noon
Saturday.

By REV. DAVID POLING

The reason that I know television is so bad and the programs in sharp decline Is the fact that our young people
no longer ask if we can take a portable.television on vacation. Five years ago all kids cried for their favorite program and just could not live through two weeks at the
-shore or three weeks in the mountains without the glow
in the dark. Now the shift is to books, and the glow is in
the mind, not the set.
For some weeks we have gathered a selection of new
titles that represent the broad problems and perils of
man. Some of these are in paperback, others must be
found only in the hard-cover and even chased through
university book stores. The topics deal with drugs, sex,
abortion, war, theology, underground churches and man's
fear 9f death. They are chosen bec~use they touch upon
difficult and perplexing problems iii understandable, concise ways.
"You, Your Child and Drugs" (The Child Study Press,
9 E. 89th St., New York, $1.50). This well-prepared paperback takes much of the hysteria out of the "drug problem" and discusses carefully the difficulties that each
type of ·drug and addiction present.
"Everytblug You Need to Know About AborUon" by
David Hendin (Pinnacle Books, New York, $1.50) is im·
portant in presenting all sides in this moral-medical
topic. Religious dimensions are carefully surveyed. Perhaps most helpful is the listing of where to get help, state
by state, as well as the specific laws of each state. Hendin has written a popular book, sorting out the issues and
compiling essential information for those who want and
need prompt medical advice.
"Dance iD Steps of Change" by John Schramm and
David Anderson (Thomas Nelson, Inc., Camden, N.J ..
$2.50) is a lively narrative about a religious fellowship in
Washington, D.C., called the Community of Christ.
Started five years ago with Lutheran pastor John
Schramm, the community has operated out of homes,
apartments and its own bookstore, The Sign of Jonah.
Newspaperman Anderson was an original member and
joins Pastor Schramm in describing a church that has
blended age groups, cut racial barriers and produced an
exciting, more than experimental Christian fellowship.
"AfflrmaUon and Dissent" by William Summerscales
(Teachers College Press, Columbia U., New York, $7.25).
This book is almost in the style and thrust of the Pentagon papers, for it reveals the mood and l~adership of a
major university, preparing its faculty and students for
World War I. The story of Columbia U. is the saga of
many schools lr,Ying to balance hot-blooded patriotism
with cool-headed perspective.
"Overcoming the Fear of Death" by David Cole Gordon (MacMillan, New York, $3.95) . A very difficult problem for believers and nonbelievers. Author Gordon com·
bines his many talents (clinical psychologist, attorney,
and film producer) to match the perplexity of this univer·
sal topic. "Man is not reassured by the knowledge that
new fruit will grow and there will be others born after
him. His main concern is that HE will die and not live
again in the form he now knows, and his self or 'I' will
perish for all time ... This is why the resurrection of
Jesus ... was ~o aU-important to the growth of Christianity."

For those who have to have theology-and in a readable, popular style-pick up "The Third Peacock" by
Robert Farrar Capon (Doubleday, New York, $4.95) . You
will be entertain .d and enlightened, something few theologians can pull 0!0.
(N£WSPA.PER

ENTERP RI~[

ASSOC IATION )

Card of Thanks
WE WISH to thank the entire
slaft at Holz~r- Hospital. the
nurses, nurses aides, Dr .
Schmidt and especially
Dr. Walker. for t heir
kindnesses

20'
The
'Daily" Sentinel

NEED lady for houseclean ing 1'
or 2 days a week. Reply c-o
Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _:__
8·_:_
19-61p '
111 Court St.
CAR HOP and waitress. Apply
Pomeroy, Ohio
. in person. Craw's Steak House. 1,-,- - -- - -- - - '
POODLE puppies, Si lver Toy,
8-24-61c
Park view Kennels . Phone 992·
5443.
WOMAN TO live in, light
8-lS-tfc

and

care

of

housework and cooking. Call

A. K.C. Miniature dachshu nd.
Phone 992-5473.
8-22-61c
EARN AT home addressing

8-24-31c

envelopes. Rush stamped
self·addressed envelope. The 1968 250 CC BULTACO. Mark
Ambrose Co. , 432S Lakeborn,
Ill , 5 speed transmission, low
Davisburg. Mich. 48019.
mileage, phone 992 -7017.

8-l -301p

HOUSEWIVES -

Feeney Bennett Unit 128
Aux i liary, adopted senior
citizen 1971. Feeney Bennett

Jr. Auxiliary, and O.A. V.
Auxiliary Pomeroy. No. 53; to
all our friends •..md neiQhbors

for their kindness and for
the flowers and fOQ&lt;; . It was

deeply appreciated. To the
organist, Mr. and Mrs. James
Simpson, f.meral directors,
for the flowers and kindness .

We will always be thankful for
fhe love shown our beloved

mother. May God bless all of
you. Son Donald Manley and
family, daughter Neva
Bolyard and family .
8-2S-llp

Notice
REVIVAL ,
Eagle
Ridge
Community Church, August
25, 26, 27, 28. Rev . Roy Deeter,
Evangelist.

8-13·61p
- - - - - - -- KOSCOT Kosmelic s, July·
Augusf special, Kare Kondition oil SS. Value now only

12.50. Distributors, Brown's,
phone 992·5113.
7-4-lfc
----=---=-=--=~=
- ~~-

SAVE UP to one hall . Bring
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
Shop, lSI Butternut Ave. ,
Pomeroy.

•·

4-23-lfc
PLEASE REQUEST your
favorite disc Iockey to play "God and I" - B-W - " The
Glory of The Angels," Action
Records No. AC 1014A,
published by Souvenir Songs

(ASCA P) , free recording to
DJs. Address, John Mohler.
Rl. 1, Box 210, Middleport.
Ohio 45760, phone 992-6903.
8-25-121p
GUN SHOOT, Forked Run
Sportsman Club, Sunday,
Aug. 29, at noon.
8-25-31c

evenings

plan. Compare our program
and color catalog before
making any other com mitments. No experience. No
investment. Car necessary .

Smallest Heater Core.

BlAETTNARS
... --···.

Ph. 992·2143

-

.IOHNSON
MASONRY
.
.
R e."!_o_t!i!_ling
Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endloader Work

PdMEROY

EXPERT

ROOFiNG &amp;CARPENTER

HOME &amp; AUTO

Wheel Alignment

SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING

992-2094
606 E. Main

FURNITURE

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display .

Open 8TII5
Monday lhru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

1 BEDROOM trailer apar! - VACUUM CLEANER brand
new 1971 model. Complele
ment, ideal for couples.
with all cleaning tools. Small
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
paint damage in shipping.
992-S248 or 992-3436.
Will
lake S27 cash or budget
8-20-6!c
plan available. Phone 9925641.
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
8-2S-61c
Court, Rt . 124, Syracuse,

Ohio. 992-2951.
4-2-lfc

VOLKSWAGEN camper, good
condition. Less than 20,000
miles. 439 Lincoln St., Mid -

dleport, Paul Scott.

For Sale

8-2S-Ifc

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Real Estate For Sale

Virgil B.

TEAFORD
SR.

Br"oker
110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, '?hio

ELECTR JC guilar and am pl i!ier - 560. Gas healing HI , NEIGHBOR! Tr ied Blue
Lustre for cleaning carpets?
s!ove - SlO. Zenith , black and
NEW LISTINGS
. It's super . Rent electric
while television - SIS. Call
shampooer, $1 , Baker Fur- MIDDLE PORT -10 acres with
992-5083 after 4 p.m.
a 6 room house and garage.
niture Company.
8-25-3tp
DEXTER6 room house with
8-2S-61c
2 lois. $3,500.00.
120 acr~s of building Jots.
GRAVELY
TRACTOR CANN lNG lomatoes, already
Chester water .
DE-MONSTRATOR CLEAR- pi cke d, Sl.2S bu. . bring
GOOD BUYS
1
demon - containers. Geraldine so ACRES- 60 or more tractor
ANCE
strator super C-1 w-mower,

$650; 1 demonstrator super C-8

Cleland, East Main, Racine . · tillable .

7-18-l!r

w-mower and dual . wheels,
$750; 1 demonstrator Model 40S
riding trador , W 3.4" mower,
$750 ; 1 new 10 h.p. riding
tractor with 40" mower, Sl, 190.
Gravely
Tractor
Sales,

room

6

$2S,OOO.OO.
POMEROY -

house.

7 rooms , bath.

furnace , basement. $7,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT - RURAL- 6
rooms, bath, garage. Garden .

$7,000.00.
SYRACUSE -

Pomeroy. 992-2975.

ba~emenl

8-14-5tc

$6,000.00.
LETART -

S rooms, balh,
on 124. Only

O'DELL WHEEL allgnmen!
localed at Crossroads. Rt. 124.
Complete front end ser.vlce,
tune up and brake service.

Wheels
bi\lanced
lronlcally. · All
guaranteed .

elecwork

Reasonable

rales. Phone 992-3213.

.

------

~.all

Works,

E. Main St .,

Pomer-oy. Phone 992-3891.
&lt;~-9 - tfc

6 ROOM house, large bath, full

basement, wall to wall car-

peting , forced air heal, double
carport. Phone 992-3612.
8-24-41c

12'. - 14' - 24' - WIDE

record

changer .

Balance

MODERN walnul stereo. AMFM radio fealures 4 speed
record changer, 4 speakers,
separa te controls. Balance

$67.89. Call 992-708S.

We also have a complete line
ol Siegler Fuel Oil Heaters
and Furnaces·.
I

. POM~ROY

•

Jack W. CarJty, Mgr.
Phone 992-lltl

_...J

AN' I HAVEN'T BEE-N
WA&amp;TIIoJG ANY -nMI!!.
LOCI&lt;:! NG AT Tei.EVIS ION

WHAT ON

EARTH

COULD
SESO
IMFORTANT?

ditioning.

240 Lincoln St., Middleport

Phone 992-2550
Insured- Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See us for t-ree
Estimate on Furnace
lnstalation.

7-17-tlc

. BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanks Installed. George
READY-MIX
CONCRETE
(BiU) Pullins, Phone 992-2478.
delivered right to your
4-25-lfc . ·
project. Fast and easy. Free
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co .,
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Middleport, Ohio.
Reasonable rates. Ph. -146-4782•
6-30-lft'
Gallipolis. John Russell,
Owner &amp; Operator.
C. BRADFORD,- A"c ..oneer
5-13-lfc
Complele Service
Phone 949-3821
NOTICE OF
Racine, Ohio
APPOINTMENT
Crill Bradford
No. 20540
S-l-Ife Estate of Ed Case
S. Grant,
Deceased .
SEWING machine service in
Notice Is hereby glvtn that
your home. Clean, oil and Anno M. Ryther of P. 0 . Box
adj_ust, $4. Phone 992-7085. 130, Pomeroy. Oh io. has been
Twtn City Sewing Machine duly appointed Administratrix
of lhe Eslate of Ed S. Grant,
Company.
deceased. late of Meigs County,
8-24·61c Ohio
.
Creditors ' are required to file
SEWING MACHINES. Repair their claims with said fiduciary
service, all makes, 992-228~ within four months.

s

--

THE BORN LOSER
~;-

~

1111S fOJ%~
HA-AA-AA ...

AND YOU ACCl'PT MY

···11'5 THE KINDNESS IN YOUR HfART
liiAT COUNTS, CHILD---- I AM HOMER'S
MASTER AND I THANK YOU FOR HIM ···
AND FOR ME I MY NAME
1\!. JOHNNY JOYSOWER'

ODD APPEARAHCf AND

RATHER PECULIAR

BEHAVIOR IIIITHOUT
QUESTioN~

.

MILLER

MOBILE-HOMES

picnic tab le, 20' x 30' tent, 4
bicycles, 2 power lawn
mowers, 24' Int. ladder, step
ladder, 2 bag s insulation
(new), · metal fence posts,
Senator gard,en tiller, Wizzard
chai n
saw,
'64

Dodge Dart S!alion Wagon,
'64 2-dr . Rambler Classic, 2
young heifers, (1 Holstein).

'Oeland

Realty

Lisle

John~n

Real Estate For Sale

I MUST
SURE

10 :00 o'clock A.M.
O'BRIEN ELECTRIC SERAny person desiring Ill file
VICE . Phone 949-4551.
excepllon• therelo musr llle

5-30-tfc
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:_:_:..;_

been

::,asement , 133 Bulteri'lul Ave,
jusl walking ; distance from
downtown Pomeroy. Contact

Hedrick, 2137 Wadswollh

Orive, Columbus, Ohio, phone

· 137 4334, Co lumbus.
·9-llc

NEW, 3 - b~drooni hv.... . ..
Middleport. Buill-In kllchen,
ceramic Ill" bath, all-electric
heat, good neighborhood. Can
arrange FHA financing.
Telephone 992-3600 or 9922186.·

UA.VF'

-:---------~

General

••

TERRY
_....., "'" •

By Ann B. Watson
Deputy Clerk

(81 18, 25,21

.j

We talk to yotr

suHix

10. Underhand

00\VN
1. Till now
12wds.l
2. Sopnuto.
Lucine

dealing
16. Level
22. June

lftcn

-

beetle

.. '

rround

:sz.Pay

33. Jalopy
36. ~

dous

prtnts,
far example

language
mol7. Swiss river
lusk
8. Suggesting 26. For( 3 wds. )
UC.eallon

38. UJJI!ressed

Jdrlo

WMP0/1390

I

.... _

•

YNWUSHSWEZ WM H
WZF

N' WPUHUR

)IANOEL

·GENERAL TIRE SALES
N. 2nd Ave.

992-7161

•

MHL.A

.,

Now arranp the dn:W

~

I~ ~~~,~~

HMQ

,

·~

(A.Iwen II

XWUXTNBS ·

WZ

VKWXK

SVWXA

'
CENT.LA
. - X.

z.

YEU
PECAA

VA
SK,\

----

n•w)

QUAKE PYJIION MYO'IC

.,.,.!' 1u.w. . . r~~ erOMltl H
. . . f""-..........

._.,,._ • L•·••V ...._,.._,

A Crn&gt;loJnlll Q a a -

SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY ••

[J

l 'u•k ...,.• -..... ~r-

A.XYDLBAAX&amp;
L. ONGFELLOW
One Jetter simply stands Cor another. In Ill!&amp; oample A is
used for the three L's. X for the two O's, •"'- SincJe Jetton.
apostrophes. the length and formation Of the words are :aU
hints. Eacll day the code letters are different.

-

L

J-"'"' fAJAl

II,

Tires

r1

l~l'lil!i~t~~~51 D ( I 1111 l

DAILY CRl'P'.l'OQUOTE- Henl'&amp; bow to work It:

.....

1

I. tJ

42. Be:come
profound

..•...

[)

1"-HfU\1-:

Denmark
35. One of nine 1 ,.+--1-37. Wet to
"
the skin
39. Peruvian
city
tO. Turbine
u . standard
quantity

.

r

IRRtH:

r)

23. School
subj.
2t. Runyon
26. 28, 30 or 311
27. Son of
Mlled
28. Interminable
29. - -relier
JO.Large
amount
31. Clr&lt;le
segment
34. Island off

like a person.

JoUor ID - " squan, lo

28. Beavy
30. Bacl&lt;-

ofthe
at.ed
Philistines 25. Dell·
6. Ordinary

ul tJoosrfourJumbles,

fo,.. four onliaarJ words:.

23. Tenn
3. Understand
of
(3wds.l
en~ - Russian
dearcity
ment
$. No friend
24:. ViU-

country

~-·-~

SIX ROOM 110use, balh, ful l

~d

WELL

THIS NEUTRON
TEST, C.UNS~OT RESIDUE
WEICiHINC. J1'ooo OF A.
MILLIONTl-1 OF AN

-llp4lcalo.
~lg~~;lloJ :::!'!.-J c

9. Least
trying

43.Commol1

ACROSS
I. Starchy
substance
5. Heart' s
com·
pan ions
t 1. Hebrew
measure
12. Biblical
mountain
13. Destiny
H . Sullen
15. Natural
·n . lngrid's
daughter
18. Ch.. ring
sound
19. Orkneys
inlet
20- Fencing
dummy
21. Genesis

v v

AND
NEED
MORE
LISTINGS. FARMS, HOMES, LOTS, ANYTHING IN THE ~uTOMOBILE Insurance
cancelled?
Los!
your
REAL ESTATE LINE: WE
operator's li cense? Call 992HAVE
BUYERS WITH
2966.
CASH, LET US SELL YOUR
6· 15-lfc
PROPERTY FOR YOU. NO
CHARGE UNLESS WE DO
SELL YOUR PROPERTY.
HENRY E. CLELAND,
Real Estate For Sale
REALTOR
193 ACRE stock farm, well
Office 992-2259
fenced. farm pond, plenty of
Residence 992-2568
timber and pasture~ large
8-2S-31c
1970 DATSUN pick-up, good
barn, Implement shed and
conaltion , new Tires, never
other buildings . Recently
·wrecked . $1 ,575. Phone 992- 3 BEDROOM ranch style house
remodeled. 4 bedroom farm
2 baths, air conditioned, double'
SlSJ.
home, with wall to waif
8-18-121c garage, 5 years old, Pomeroy.
carpeting, ceramic lile bath,
Call 992-264S.
fu II basement. Shown by
8-24-Jic
appoinlmenl only. Phone 992SPECIAL lhis week al Tom Ru.
6S46.
HOUsE. 1642 Lincoln Heights.
Motors. 1963 Ford Pickup.
8-12-121c
Call Danny Thompson, 9928-lS -Ifc
1196.
7-18-lfc

T _ _ , . . Or$#111 to: 'l'IJERE'S SOXEBODY AT EV·
.IIRY DINNBR PARTY WHO EATS AIL THIC CJ:LI!lRY.- -ICIH auee••n
(OJIIlJDoc
JM.)

DAILY CROSSWORD

Syracuse
Court . Said Inventory and
and Son. inc. ·
· ~fa'!-~~~ 5be7o~~tthl~g~ur~~n ;~~
5-27-tfc .4th day of September, 1971 at

them at lent five days prior to
the date set for hearing.
Given under nw hand and
QUEEN AND Shamblin Const. seal of said Cour1, this 16th day
608 East Main
Roofing,
remodeling, of August 1971.
PO~EROY
aluminum siding. Phone 992F . H. O'Brlen
Judge and ex -officio
7324 or 742-4979.
·
WE ARE SOLD DOWN AGAIN
Clerk of said Court
8-25-lfc

8-22-61c Pets For Sale
,------------,REGISTERED. beautiful Ml DOLE PORT - 5 room brick
home with bath, paneling and
Chinese pug puppies. Fawn or
BEAT the COLD WINTER
wall
to wall carpeting. Phone
black, also Cairu brood and
and IT'S COST WITH
992-1S40
or 992-3465.
·
s!ud dog . 312 John, Belpre,
HEATING OIL F-ROM
8-20-121c
Ohio, 423-7261.
LANDMARK.
8-22-61c
6 ROOM house and balh located
We have the finest Budget ,
just outside Chester. Phone
Pay Plan, Delivery Services.
985·4262.
Automatic Degree Day
8-12-121c
Delivery and Duel Delivery
l:qutpment.

~--

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co. and Anthony Plumbing &amp; Holing.'
Complete
Plumbing,
Healing and A.i r Con-

Doled lhls 161h day of August
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy:
rooms, bath,
1971 .
Authorized
Singer
Sales
and
furnace. Basement. $7,000.00.
F. H. O'Brien
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
SEE US, NEAR KROGER,
Pro
bale
Judge
of
sold County
3-29-llc
(81 18. 25 !91 1. Jl
WE MAY HAVE IT.
992-3325
SEPTiC tanks cleaned. Miller
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
ASSOCIATE,
RIDING horses. Phone 949-3196.
662-303S.
992-2378
8-22-6tc
1220 Washington Blvd.
NOTICE ON FI~ING
2-12-lfc
8-22-61c
OF INVENTORY
Belpre. Ohio
AND APPRAISEMENT
16- FT. FIBERGLASS boat
HARRISON'S TV AND .AN - The Stole of Olrlo, Mdill
runabout, SO h.p. Johnson
CONVENIENT but secluded
TENNA SERVICE . Phone County. Probate Court
AUCTION
outboard and ·(railer. Good EVENING
building lots on T79 at Rock
992-2S22.
To the Administratrix of the
Starling at 6 p.m., Friday,
condition. $685 . Phone 992Springs . Within walking
6-10-lfc
estale;
lo such of the following
August 271h on the Rutland .
1881 .
distance of Meigs High --~--=----:_..:.:..;_·
as are residents of the State of
Harrisonv
ille
Road,
having
8-12-61c
School, a 5 minute drive from
5
sold my home will se ll the
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill NEI~L.E R Cons1ructi~n. For . ~:~~;e,vr~~e ;exth~f ~fri.'v~~~
following :
Hardwick Gas
bu1ldmg or remodeling your beneficiaries under the will ;
Witte weekends or after 5
HALF RUNNER beans, $2
home . Call Guy Nelgler, and to the attorney or attorneys
Range,
Frigidaire
bushel, · pick your own.
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992Racine , Oh io.
representing any of 1he
Relrigeralor,
Lg.
Siegler
oil
6887.
.
Cucumbers and tomatoes.
-tfc
persons:
7-31
heater,
Ward's
elec.
sewing
7-11 -lfc _ __ _ _ __ _:...:_:..:_· aforementioned
Watermelons,
cantaloupes,
Charles W. Radford, Jr .,
machine, glass door china
corn,
potatoes .
sweet
Deceued, Pomeroy, Ohio,
cabinet, upright piano, 2 pc. 3 BEDROO-M brick home . AW Nl
. NGS, storm doors and( Meigs County, No. 20532.
Clarence. Proffitt, Portland,
living room suite, 7 pc. dinette
w 1 n dow s, carports,
You are hereby notified that
Phone 843-2254.
Choicelocallon In Middleport.
12 x 5 wool rug, pressure
set,
marquees, aluminum siding the
Inventory
and
Ap 8-17-lfc
Seen by appointment only.
canner,
student's
desk,
and
railing
.
Call
A.
Jacob,
pralsement
of
the
estate
of
the
- - -- - Phone 9?2-SS23 after 4 p.m.
guitar, Maytag wringer
sales
rer.resentatlve.
for
free
aforementioned,
deceased,
late
S-7-lfc
·COAL. l i meslon~ . Exce ls ior
estima es , phone Charles of said Count_y, was flied In this
washer, 2 rinse tubs with legs,
APPLES-Peaches. Fitzpalrick
Orchards, Slate Roule 689,
phone Wilkesville, 669-378S.
8-IS-lie

SLINGERLAND snare drum , Stone jars, garden tools, some
SPECIAL. Starling August23to less than a year old. Phone 992- antiques. toys, clothing and
Sept. 4 permanents will be as 2301.
many items tao numerous fo
follows : 112.50 reduced to SlO,
8-24-31c menti On.
Refreshments .
SIS reduced to $11.50, S20
ONner : Amos Tillis, Aucreduced lo SIS. Frosting 1971 ZIG ZAG sewing machine,
tioneer: I. 0 . " Mac" McCoy .
reduced to $12.50. Operators buttonholes. fancy designs ,
8-22- 61p
are Lynda , Sharon and
etc. Full price 127.30. Phone
Dorolhy. Dorothy's Beauty 992-708S. '
.
Salon, phone 992-3981.
8-24-61c Auto Sales
8-1S-3tc
CH ICKEN house al Syracuse 196S MU STANG, 289 3-speed.
Contact Butch Grover. Bailey
with 2.61 acres. phone 843·
Run Rd .
2684.
8-2S-31c
8-l2 -61p

lortk frnm ·
· the knee
South :\Jriran niirleh r~alhM-A.

15.55

Pomeroy

castand fancy stitch. Pay just

179.19. Use our budgel terms.
Call 992-708S.
8-22-61c

·~n, lfl,•r)lnrr•d

WORK

S48.75
cash
or
terms
available. Trade -ins ac -

10-18-lfc

SEAT?---

• .

FURNISHED and unfurnished

cepted. Phone 992-5641.
8-25-61c

I'D OISGUISE.
IIIVSELF!!

IT COULD

PHONE 992-2143

And

Phone 992 -S434.

I DO? .- J/'1--??-

- BUT AS WHAT?-

B&lt;: ANV
. A MORRIS CHAIR?
CHAJRA ROCKER?- A
AN'fWI-\ERE!!
-&amp;usi-1!- LOVE

Blaettnar'$

built-in to buttonhole, over-

apartments. Close to school.

-WI-\AT \NOULD

6.9·8··Plus
Parts

For Rent

COLONIAL style stereo, AMFM radio, 4 speakers. 4 speed

;r "''"

I WERE A ,.----'

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

------

' II ,

Air Conditioning ·
Inspection and
Special
AI

742-4902

8-2S-61c
Call 949-3233 or write Toy
Ladies Party Plan, Johnstown.
1971 DIAL 'N SEW zig-zag
Pa. 1S91J2.
sewing machine lett in
8-14-3tp
layaway . Beautiful pastel
color. full size model. All

I WILL SAV!. TI-\IS
CIT'/ FROM ITS
CRIMINALS!'- t-lOW

Have Your Seasonal

Re-Charge

Racine. phone 949-1963.
8-2S-61c

Mason Bridge; turn right and
follow signs.

.

Complet~

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

S2 to $4.50. One mile above

BILL NELSON
992-3657

Pomeroy

furnace,
comple1e,
reasonable. Wm . H. Cleland,

yellow peaches at Mason
Peach Orchard . Priced from

NO... MY FAVOiliTE
THUMBING SPOT IS
JUST A~5AI&gt;

.

. From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the

with the highest paying party TREE RIPENED while and

our mother. Mrs. Eleazady
Clark, during her illness and death ; Rev . D. H.
cart for his kind visits and
consoling words ; pallbearers,
flower girls, Feeney Bennett
Legion ,
Post American

8-2S-31p

22" LENNOX forced air coal

free? Earn 25 per cent
demonstrating toys and gi'fts

Radiator Service

'

992-3507 or 992-5397.

Female Help Wanted

FOR NEW HOMES .
OPEN FOR INSPECTIO-N
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME It! MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low a·s $65.00 forlll~mlly with a base
salary of ss.ooo.oo and three children. n. Pet. annual
per·certtag}e rate.
.
.

8 for n.oo

I

OPEN EvES. 8:00 P.M.
POMERO'(. OHIO

mouth shut.
(HIWSPArlO EHT£RPOISE ASSN.}

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE ,
MAltY USES

.'

Business S.ervices

l

EXPERIENCED

Sheets

ANYONE desiring a home,
food, and sheller in exchange
for light housekeeping, no
. laundry, please call 992-5700
or 992-7269.
·
8·2S-31c

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

One of the greatest ex·
ercises conducive to good
health is keeping the

u.mmun.

clocks.

Help Wanted

Automatic trans., power steering &amp; brakes. good w-w
tires, radio, heater, whi1e finish, clean Interior. Reg . price

~ 009
• .

36" x 23"

A
'' I

write M. o. Miller, Pomeroy.
Ohio. Call 992-6271.
8-25-lfc

$1395.00. Spacial.
1967 FORD LTD
$1595
4 Door Sedan, pt;~wer Steering &amp; brakes, vinyl interior;, blk. ·

about the eighth grade,
these days.

For Sale

- S· &lt;

W~t .: T0 B
an eu
uy
OLD Furoillure, dishes.

$1195

..

r-------~

and-or complete households.

healer. Reg . Price $1095.00. Special.
lf66 BUICK WILDCAT CPE.

.

Fill' Sale

GuN sHooT. Aug. 29, sunday.
1 p..m. at Racine Gun Club..
8 2 41

1966 CHEVROLET IMPALA tPE.
$799
_. Cyl., s1and. trans., local 1 owner car, good tires, radio,

Sentinel Classifieds
.

'

r - - - - - - ' - - - - - - -----ni Notice
.

In The

••lftlti•! -''Of.ntr'

'
'

.

�..... . .....

·-·--

i

l&amp;-L;...uqlllntblel.~ 0 .• Aullll1125,l!l'il

Hargains, Bargains and More Bargains
II Aft 11 S

_B.;;::y;..;Pm:.:..:L:.::PA:..:sro:....n=E...~
•

@

Want to get that old water
heater out of the yard• Ten
the neighborhood urchins
not to touch it.
* * *
Friend with a -nag for a
wife says he's working for

a leaving.

• • •

School bussing begins in

l

Pomero,·.
Motor (t.y .

SIGNs·
· ·Of

QUALITY

.

Special.

• • •

, ••..., ·'Mot• Co.

PERMANENT SPECIAL
TiiRU AUGUST
•15~ ......U2

50

•12~ ..... ~10

00

Kay's Beauty Salon
PHONE 992-2125
60PERATORS

169 N. Second Ave.

Appointment Not Necessary

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
S P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadllne9a .m.
.. C;r~ellallon ~ Corr~ions

Will bea~cepted unfil9a .m. for

Day of Publication
REGULA:rtONS
The Publisher reserves 1he
r ight to edit or reject any ads

deemed objectional
The
publisher will not be resP'bnsible
for more than one incorrect

insertion.

RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 cents pe:r Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c

· 12

cents

per word three

consec1Jtive insertions.

18 cents per word siX con·
secutive insertions.
25 P~r Cent Discount on paid

DAVID POLING, D.O.

ads and ads paid with in 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp;OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word minimum .

Good Books vs.
Bad Television

liach additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 2Sc Charge per
Advertisem.ent.
.
OFF ICE HOURS
8:30a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Daily,
8:30 a.m . to 12 : DO Noon
Saturday.

By REV. DAVID POLING

The reason that I know television is so bad and the programs in sharp decline Is the fact that our young people
no longer ask if we can take a portable.television on vacation. Five years ago all kids cried for their favorite program and just could not live through two weeks at the
-shore or three weeks in the mountains without the glow
in the dark. Now the shift is to books, and the glow is in
the mind, not the set.
For some weeks we have gathered a selection of new
titles that represent the broad problems and perils of
man. Some of these are in paperback, others must be
found only in the hard-cover and even chased through
university book stores. The topics deal with drugs, sex,
abortion, war, theology, underground churches and man's
fear 9f death. They are chosen bec~use they touch upon
difficult and perplexing problems iii understandable, concise ways.
"You, Your Child and Drugs" (The Child Study Press,
9 E. 89th St., New York, $1.50). This well-prepared paperback takes much of the hysteria out of the "drug problem" and discusses carefully the difficulties that each
type of ·drug and addiction present.
"Everytblug You Need to Know About AborUon" by
David Hendin (Pinnacle Books, New York, $1.50) is im·
portant in presenting all sides in this moral-medical
topic. Religious dimensions are carefully surveyed. Perhaps most helpful is the listing of where to get help, state
by state, as well as the specific laws of each state. Hendin has written a popular book, sorting out the issues and
compiling essential information for those who want and
need prompt medical advice.
"Dance iD Steps of Change" by John Schramm and
David Anderson (Thomas Nelson, Inc., Camden, N.J ..
$2.50) is a lively narrative about a religious fellowship in
Washington, D.C., called the Community of Christ.
Started five years ago with Lutheran pastor John
Schramm, the community has operated out of homes,
apartments and its own bookstore, The Sign of Jonah.
Newspaperman Anderson was an original member and
joins Pastor Schramm in describing a church that has
blended age groups, cut racial barriers and produced an
exciting, more than experimental Christian fellowship.
"AfflrmaUon and Dissent" by William Summerscales
(Teachers College Press, Columbia U., New York, $7.25).
This book is almost in the style and thrust of the Pentagon papers, for it reveals the mood and l~adership of a
major university, preparing its faculty and students for
World War I. The story of Columbia U. is the saga of
many schools lr,Ying to balance hot-blooded patriotism
with cool-headed perspective.
"Overcoming the Fear of Death" by David Cole Gordon (MacMillan, New York, $3.95) . A very difficult problem for believers and nonbelievers. Author Gordon com·
bines his many talents (clinical psychologist, attorney,
and film producer) to match the perplexity of this univer·
sal topic. "Man is not reassured by the knowledge that
new fruit will grow and there will be others born after
him. His main concern is that HE will die and not live
again in the form he now knows, and his self or 'I' will
perish for all time ... This is why the resurrection of
Jesus ... was ~o aU-important to the growth of Christianity."

For those who have to have theology-and in a readable, popular style-pick up "The Third Peacock" by
Robert Farrar Capon (Doubleday, New York, $4.95) . You
will be entertain .d and enlightened, something few theologians can pull 0!0.
(N£WSPA.PER

ENTERP RI~[

ASSOC IATION )

Card of Thanks
WE WISH to thank the entire
slaft at Holz~r- Hospital. the
nurses, nurses aides, Dr .
Schmidt and especially
Dr. Walker. for t heir
kindnesses

20'
The
'Daily" Sentinel

NEED lady for houseclean ing 1'
or 2 days a week. Reply c-o
Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _:__
8·_:_
19-61p '
111 Court St.
CAR HOP and waitress. Apply
Pomeroy, Ohio
. in person. Craw's Steak House. 1,-,- - -- - -- - - '
POODLE puppies, Si lver Toy,
8-24-61c
Park view Kennels . Phone 992·
5443.
WOMAN TO live in, light
8-lS-tfc

and

care

of

housework and cooking. Call

A. K.C. Miniature dachshu nd.
Phone 992-5473.
8-22-61c
EARN AT home addressing

8-24-31c

envelopes. Rush stamped
self·addressed envelope. The 1968 250 CC BULTACO. Mark
Ambrose Co. , 432S Lakeborn,
Ill , 5 speed transmission, low
Davisburg. Mich. 48019.
mileage, phone 992 -7017.

8-l -301p

HOUSEWIVES -

Feeney Bennett Unit 128
Aux i liary, adopted senior
citizen 1971. Feeney Bennett

Jr. Auxiliary, and O.A. V.
Auxiliary Pomeroy. No. 53; to
all our friends •..md neiQhbors

for their kindness and for
the flowers and fOQ&lt;; . It was

deeply appreciated. To the
organist, Mr. and Mrs. James
Simpson, f.meral directors,
for the flowers and kindness .

We will always be thankful for
fhe love shown our beloved

mother. May God bless all of
you. Son Donald Manley and
family, daughter Neva
Bolyard and family .
8-2S-llp

Notice
REVIVAL ,
Eagle
Ridge
Community Church, August
25, 26, 27, 28. Rev . Roy Deeter,
Evangelist.

8-13·61p
- - - - - - -- KOSCOT Kosmelic s, July·
Augusf special, Kare Kondition oil SS. Value now only

12.50. Distributors, Brown's,
phone 992·5113.
7-4-lfc
----=---=-=--=~=
- ~~-

SAVE UP to one hall . Bring
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
Shop, lSI Butternut Ave. ,
Pomeroy.

•·

4-23-lfc
PLEASE REQUEST your
favorite disc Iockey to play "God and I" - B-W - " The
Glory of The Angels," Action
Records No. AC 1014A,
published by Souvenir Songs

(ASCA P) , free recording to
DJs. Address, John Mohler.
Rl. 1, Box 210, Middleport.
Ohio 45760, phone 992-6903.
8-25-121p
GUN SHOOT, Forked Run
Sportsman Club, Sunday,
Aug. 29, at noon.
8-25-31c

evenings

plan. Compare our program
and color catalog before
making any other com mitments. No experience. No
investment. Car necessary .

Smallest Heater Core.

BlAETTNARS
... --···.

Ph. 992·2143

-

.IOHNSON
MASONRY
.
.
R e."!_o_t!i!_ling
Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endloader Work

PdMEROY

EXPERT

ROOFiNG &amp;CARPENTER

HOME &amp; AUTO

Wheel Alignment

SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING

992-2094
606 E. Main

FURNITURE

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display .

Open 8TII5
Monday lhru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

1 BEDROOM trailer apar! - VACUUM CLEANER brand
new 1971 model. Complele
ment, ideal for couples.
with all cleaning tools. Small
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
paint damage in shipping.
992-S248 or 992-3436.
Will
lake S27 cash or budget
8-20-6!c
plan available. Phone 9925641.
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
8-2S-61c
Court, Rt . 124, Syracuse,

Ohio. 992-2951.
4-2-lfc

VOLKSWAGEN camper, good
condition. Less than 20,000
miles. 439 Lincoln St., Mid -

dleport, Paul Scott.

For Sale

8-2S-Ifc

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Real Estate For Sale

Virgil B.

TEAFORD
SR.

Br"oker
110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, '?hio

ELECTR JC guilar and am pl i!ier - 560. Gas healing HI , NEIGHBOR! Tr ied Blue
Lustre for cleaning carpets?
s!ove - SlO. Zenith , black and
NEW LISTINGS
. It's super . Rent electric
while television - SIS. Call
shampooer, $1 , Baker Fur- MIDDLE PORT -10 acres with
992-5083 after 4 p.m.
a 6 room house and garage.
niture Company.
8-25-3tp
DEXTER6 room house with
8-2S-61c
2 lois. $3,500.00.
120 acr~s of building Jots.
GRAVELY
TRACTOR CANN lNG lomatoes, already
Chester water .
DE-MONSTRATOR CLEAR- pi cke d, Sl.2S bu. . bring
GOOD BUYS
1
demon - containers. Geraldine so ACRES- 60 or more tractor
ANCE
strator super C-1 w-mower,

$650; 1 demonstrator super C-8

Cleland, East Main, Racine . · tillable .

7-18-l!r

w-mower and dual . wheels,
$750; 1 demonstrator Model 40S
riding trador , W 3.4" mower,
$750 ; 1 new 10 h.p. riding
tractor with 40" mower, Sl, 190.
Gravely
Tractor
Sales,

room

6

$2S,OOO.OO.
POMEROY -

house.

7 rooms , bath.

furnace , basement. $7,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT - RURAL- 6
rooms, bath, garage. Garden .

$7,000.00.
SYRACUSE -

Pomeroy. 992-2975.

ba~emenl

8-14-5tc

$6,000.00.
LETART -

S rooms, balh,
on 124. Only

O'DELL WHEEL allgnmen!
localed at Crossroads. Rt. 124.
Complete front end ser.vlce,
tune up and brake service.

Wheels
bi\lanced
lronlcally. · All
guaranteed .

elecwork

Reasonable

rales. Phone 992-3213.

.

------

~.all

Works,

E. Main St .,

Pomer-oy. Phone 992-3891.
&lt;~-9 - tfc

6 ROOM house, large bath, full

basement, wall to wall car-

peting , forced air heal, double
carport. Phone 992-3612.
8-24-41c

12'. - 14' - 24' - WIDE

record

changer .

Balance

MODERN walnul stereo. AMFM radio fealures 4 speed
record changer, 4 speakers,
separa te controls. Balance

$67.89. Call 992-708S.

We also have a complete line
ol Siegler Fuel Oil Heaters
and Furnaces·.
I

. POM~ROY

•

Jack W. CarJty, Mgr.
Phone 992-lltl

_...J

AN' I HAVEN'T BEE-N
WA&amp;TIIoJG ANY -nMI!!.
LOCI&lt;:! NG AT Tei.EVIS ION

WHAT ON

EARTH

COULD
SESO
IMFORTANT?

ditioning.

240 Lincoln St., Middleport

Phone 992-2550
Insured- Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See us for t-ree
Estimate on Furnace
lnstalation.

7-17-tlc

. BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanks Installed. George
READY-MIX
CONCRETE
(BiU) Pullins, Phone 992-2478.
delivered right to your
4-25-lfc . ·
project. Fast and easy. Free
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co .,
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Middleport, Ohio.
Reasonable rates. Ph. -146-4782•
6-30-lft'
Gallipolis. John Russell,
Owner &amp; Operator.
C. BRADFORD,- A"c ..oneer
5-13-lfc
Complele Service
Phone 949-3821
NOTICE OF
Racine, Ohio
APPOINTMENT
Crill Bradford
No. 20540
S-l-Ife Estate of Ed Case
S. Grant,
Deceased .
SEWING machine service in
Notice Is hereby glvtn that
your home. Clean, oil and Anno M. Ryther of P. 0 . Box
adj_ust, $4. Phone 992-7085. 130, Pomeroy. Oh io. has been
Twtn City Sewing Machine duly appointed Administratrix
of lhe Eslate of Ed S. Grant,
Company.
deceased. late of Meigs County,
8-24·61c Ohio
.
Creditors ' are required to file
SEWING MACHINES. Repair their claims with said fiduciary
service, all makes, 992-228~ within four months.

s

--

THE BORN LOSER
~;-

~

1111S fOJ%~
HA-AA-AA ...

AND YOU ACCl'PT MY

···11'5 THE KINDNESS IN YOUR HfART
liiAT COUNTS, CHILD---- I AM HOMER'S
MASTER AND I THANK YOU FOR HIM ···
AND FOR ME I MY NAME
1\!. JOHNNY JOYSOWER'

ODD APPEARAHCf AND

RATHER PECULIAR

BEHAVIOR IIIITHOUT
QUESTioN~

.

MILLER

MOBILE-HOMES

picnic tab le, 20' x 30' tent, 4
bicycles, 2 power lawn
mowers, 24' Int. ladder, step
ladder, 2 bag s insulation
(new), · metal fence posts,
Senator gard,en tiller, Wizzard
chai n
saw,
'64

Dodge Dart S!alion Wagon,
'64 2-dr . Rambler Classic, 2
young heifers, (1 Holstein).

'Oeland

Realty

Lisle

John~n

Real Estate For Sale

I MUST
SURE

10 :00 o'clock A.M.
O'BRIEN ELECTRIC SERAny person desiring Ill file
VICE . Phone 949-4551.
excepllon• therelo musr llle

5-30-tfc
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:_:_:..;_

been

::,asement , 133 Bulteri'lul Ave,
jusl walking ; distance from
downtown Pomeroy. Contact

Hedrick, 2137 Wadswollh

Orive, Columbus, Ohio, phone

· 137 4334, Co lumbus.
·9-llc

NEW, 3 - b~drooni hv.... . ..
Middleport. Buill-In kllchen,
ceramic Ill" bath, all-electric
heat, good neighborhood. Can
arrange FHA financing.
Telephone 992-3600 or 9922186.·

UA.VF'

-:---------~

General

••

TERRY
_....., "'" •

By Ann B. Watson
Deputy Clerk

(81 18, 25,21

.j

We talk to yotr

suHix

10. Underhand

00\VN
1. Till now
12wds.l
2. Sopnuto.
Lucine

dealing
16. Level
22. June

lftcn

-

beetle

.. '

rround

:sz.Pay

33. Jalopy
36. ~

dous

prtnts,
far example

language
mol7. Swiss river
lusk
8. Suggesting 26. For( 3 wds. )
UC.eallon

38. UJJI!ressed

Jdrlo

WMP0/1390

I

.... _

•

YNWUSHSWEZ WM H
WZF

N' WPUHUR

)IANOEL

·GENERAL TIRE SALES
N. 2nd Ave.

992-7161

•

MHL.A

.,

Now arranp the dn:W

~

I~ ~~~,~~

HMQ

,

·~

(A.Iwen II

XWUXTNBS ·

WZ

VKWXK

SVWXA

'
CENT.LA
. - X.

z.

YEU
PECAA

VA
SK,\

----

n•w)

QUAKE PYJIION MYO'IC

.,.,.!' 1u.w. . . r~~ erOMltl H
. . . f""-..........

._.,,._ • L•·••V ...._,.._,

A Crn&gt;loJnlll Q a a -

SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY ••

[J

l 'u•k ...,.• -..... ~r-

A.XYDLBAAX&amp;
L. ONGFELLOW
One Jetter simply stands Cor another. In Ill!&amp; oample A is
used for the three L's. X for the two O's, •"'- SincJe Jetton.
apostrophes. the length and formation Of the words are :aU
hints. Eacll day the code letters are different.

-

L

J-"'"' fAJAl

II,

Tires

r1

l~l'lil!i~t~~~51 D ( I 1111 l

DAILY CRl'P'.l'OQUOTE- Henl'&amp; bow to work It:

.....

1

I. tJ

42. Be:come
profound

..•...

[)

1"-HfU\1-:

Denmark
35. One of nine 1 ,.+--1-37. Wet to
"
the skin
39. Peruvian
city
tO. Turbine
u . standard
quantity

.

r

IRRtH:

r)

23. School
subj.
2t. Runyon
26. 28, 30 or 311
27. Son of
Mlled
28. Interminable
29. - -relier
JO.Large
amount
31. Clr&lt;le
segment
34. Island off

like a person.

JoUor ID - " squan, lo

28. Beavy
30. Bacl&lt;-

ofthe
at.ed
Philistines 25. Dell·
6. Ordinary

ul tJoosrfourJumbles,

fo,.. four onliaarJ words:.

23. Tenn
3. Understand
of
(3wds.l
en~ - Russian
dearcity
ment
$. No friend
24:. ViU-

country

~-·-~

SIX ROOM 110use, balh, ful l

~d

WELL

THIS NEUTRON
TEST, C.UNS~OT RESIDUE
WEICiHINC. J1'ooo OF A.
MILLIONTl-1 OF AN

-llp4lcalo.
~lg~~;lloJ :::!'!.-J c

9. Least
trying

43.Commol1

ACROSS
I. Starchy
substance
5. Heart' s
com·
pan ions
t 1. Hebrew
measure
12. Biblical
mountain
13. Destiny
H . Sullen
15. Natural
·n . lngrid's
daughter
18. Ch.. ring
sound
19. Orkneys
inlet
20- Fencing
dummy
21. Genesis

v v

AND
NEED
MORE
LISTINGS. FARMS, HOMES, LOTS, ANYTHING IN THE ~uTOMOBILE Insurance
cancelled?
Los!
your
REAL ESTATE LINE: WE
operator's li cense? Call 992HAVE
BUYERS WITH
2966.
CASH, LET US SELL YOUR
6· 15-lfc
PROPERTY FOR YOU. NO
CHARGE UNLESS WE DO
SELL YOUR PROPERTY.
HENRY E. CLELAND,
Real Estate For Sale
REALTOR
193 ACRE stock farm, well
Office 992-2259
fenced. farm pond, plenty of
Residence 992-2568
timber and pasture~ large
8-2S-31c
1970 DATSUN pick-up, good
barn, Implement shed and
conaltion , new Tires, never
other buildings . Recently
·wrecked . $1 ,575. Phone 992- 3 BEDROOM ranch style house
remodeled. 4 bedroom farm
2 baths, air conditioned, double'
SlSJ.
home, with wall to waif
8-18-121c garage, 5 years old, Pomeroy.
carpeting, ceramic lile bath,
Call 992-264S.
fu II basement. Shown by
8-24-Jic
appoinlmenl only. Phone 992SPECIAL lhis week al Tom Ru.
6S46.
HOUsE. 1642 Lincoln Heights.
Motors. 1963 Ford Pickup.
8-12-121c
Call Danny Thompson, 9928-lS -Ifc
1196.
7-18-lfc

T _ _ , . . Or$#111 to: 'l'IJERE'S SOXEBODY AT EV·
.IIRY DINNBR PARTY WHO EATS AIL THIC CJ:LI!lRY.- -ICIH auee••n
(OJIIlJDoc
JM.)

DAILY CROSSWORD

Syracuse
Court . Said Inventory and
and Son. inc. ·
· ~fa'!-~~~ 5be7o~~tthl~g~ur~~n ;~~
5-27-tfc .4th day of September, 1971 at

them at lent five days prior to
the date set for hearing.
Given under nw hand and
QUEEN AND Shamblin Const. seal of said Cour1, this 16th day
608 East Main
Roofing,
remodeling, of August 1971.
PO~EROY
aluminum siding. Phone 992F . H. O'Brlen
Judge and ex -officio
7324 or 742-4979.
·
WE ARE SOLD DOWN AGAIN
Clerk of said Court
8-25-lfc

8-22-61c Pets For Sale
,------------,REGISTERED. beautiful Ml DOLE PORT - 5 room brick
home with bath, paneling and
Chinese pug puppies. Fawn or
BEAT the COLD WINTER
wall
to wall carpeting. Phone
black, also Cairu brood and
and IT'S COST WITH
992-1S40
or 992-3465.
·
s!ud dog . 312 John, Belpre,
HEATING OIL F-ROM
8-20-121c
Ohio, 423-7261.
LANDMARK.
8-22-61c
6 ROOM house and balh located
We have the finest Budget ,
just outside Chester. Phone
Pay Plan, Delivery Services.
985·4262.
Automatic Degree Day
8-12-121c
Delivery and Duel Delivery
l:qutpment.

~--

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co. and Anthony Plumbing &amp; Holing.'
Complete
Plumbing,
Healing and A.i r Con-

Doled lhls 161h day of August
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy:
rooms, bath,
1971 .
Authorized
Singer
Sales
and
furnace. Basement. $7,000.00.
F. H. O'Brien
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
SEE US, NEAR KROGER,
Pro
bale
Judge
of
sold County
3-29-llc
(81 18. 25 !91 1. Jl
WE MAY HAVE IT.
992-3325
SEPTiC tanks cleaned. Miller
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
ASSOCIATE,
RIDING horses. Phone 949-3196.
662-303S.
992-2378
8-22-6tc
1220 Washington Blvd.
NOTICE ON FI~ING
2-12-lfc
8-22-61c
OF INVENTORY
Belpre. Ohio
AND APPRAISEMENT
16- FT. FIBERGLASS boat
HARRISON'S TV AND .AN - The Stole of Olrlo, Mdill
runabout, SO h.p. Johnson
CONVENIENT but secluded
TENNA SERVICE . Phone County. Probate Court
AUCTION
outboard and ·(railer. Good EVENING
building lots on T79 at Rock
992-2S22.
To the Administratrix of the
Starling at 6 p.m., Friday,
condition. $685 . Phone 992Springs . Within walking
6-10-lfc
estale;
lo such of the following
August 271h on the Rutland .
1881 .
distance of Meigs High --~--=----:_..:.:..;_·
as are residents of the State of
Harrisonv
ille
Road,
having
8-12-61c
School, a 5 minute drive from
5
sold my home will se ll the
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill NEI~L.E R Cons1ructi~n. For . ~:~~;e,vr~~e ;exth~f ~fri.'v~~~
following :
Hardwick Gas
bu1ldmg or remodeling your beneficiaries under the will ;
Witte weekends or after 5
HALF RUNNER beans, $2
home . Call Guy Nelgler, and to the attorney or attorneys
Range,
Frigidaire
bushel, · pick your own.
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992Racine , Oh io.
representing any of 1he
Relrigeralor,
Lg.
Siegler
oil
6887.
.
Cucumbers and tomatoes.
-tfc
persons:
7-31
heater,
Ward's
elec.
sewing
7-11 -lfc _ __ _ _ __ _:...:_:..:_· aforementioned
Watermelons,
cantaloupes,
Charles W. Radford, Jr .,
machine, glass door china
corn,
potatoes .
sweet
Deceued, Pomeroy, Ohio,
cabinet, upright piano, 2 pc. 3 BEDROO-M brick home . AW Nl
. NGS, storm doors and( Meigs County, No. 20532.
Clarence. Proffitt, Portland,
living room suite, 7 pc. dinette
w 1 n dow s, carports,
You are hereby notified that
Phone 843-2254.
Choicelocallon In Middleport.
12 x 5 wool rug, pressure
set,
marquees, aluminum siding the
Inventory
and
Ap 8-17-lfc
Seen by appointment only.
canner,
student's
desk,
and
railing
.
Call
A.
Jacob,
pralsement
of
the
estate
of
the
- - -- - Phone 9?2-SS23 after 4 p.m.
guitar, Maytag wringer
sales
rer.resentatlve.
for
free
aforementioned,
deceased,
late
S-7-lfc
·COAL. l i meslon~ . Exce ls ior
estima es , phone Charles of said Count_y, was flied In this
washer, 2 rinse tubs with legs,
APPLES-Peaches. Fitzpalrick
Orchards, Slate Roule 689,
phone Wilkesville, 669-378S.
8-IS-lie

SLINGERLAND snare drum , Stone jars, garden tools, some
SPECIAL. Starling August23to less than a year old. Phone 992- antiques. toys, clothing and
Sept. 4 permanents will be as 2301.
many items tao numerous fo
follows : 112.50 reduced to SlO,
8-24-31c menti On.
Refreshments .
SIS reduced to $11.50, S20
ONner : Amos Tillis, Aucreduced lo SIS. Frosting 1971 ZIG ZAG sewing machine,
tioneer: I. 0 . " Mac" McCoy .
reduced to $12.50. Operators buttonholes. fancy designs ,
8-22- 61p
are Lynda , Sharon and
etc. Full price 127.30. Phone
Dorolhy. Dorothy's Beauty 992-708S. '
.
Salon, phone 992-3981.
8-24-61c Auto Sales
8-1S-3tc
CH ICKEN house al Syracuse 196S MU STANG, 289 3-speed.
Contact Butch Grover. Bailey
with 2.61 acres. phone 843·
Run Rd .
2684.
8-2S-31c
8-l2 -61p

lortk frnm ·
· the knee
South :\Jriran niirleh r~alhM-A.

15.55

Pomeroy

castand fancy stitch. Pay just

179.19. Use our budgel terms.
Call 992-708S.
8-22-61c

·~n, lfl,•r)lnrr•d

WORK

S48.75
cash
or
terms
available. Trade -ins ac -

10-18-lfc

SEAT?---

• .

FURNISHED and unfurnished

cepted. Phone 992-5641.
8-25-61c

I'D OISGUISE.
IIIVSELF!!

IT COULD

PHONE 992-2143

And

Phone 992 -S434.

I DO? .- J/'1--??-

- BUT AS WHAT?-

B&lt;: ANV
. A MORRIS CHAIR?
CHAJRA ROCKER?- A
AN'fWI-\ERE!!
-&amp;usi-1!- LOVE

Blaettnar'$

built-in to buttonhole, over-

apartments. Close to school.

-WI-\AT \NOULD

6.9·8··Plus
Parts

For Rent

COLONIAL style stereo, AMFM radio, 4 speakers. 4 speed

;r "''"

I WERE A ,.----'

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

------

' II ,

Air Conditioning ·
Inspection and
Special
AI

742-4902

8-2S-61c
Call 949-3233 or write Toy
Ladies Party Plan, Johnstown.
1971 DIAL 'N SEW zig-zag
Pa. 1S91J2.
sewing machine lett in
8-14-3tp
layaway . Beautiful pastel
color. full size model. All

I WILL SAV!. TI-\IS
CIT'/ FROM ITS
CRIMINALS!'- t-lOW

Have Your Seasonal

Re-Charge

Racine. phone 949-1963.
8-2S-61c

Mason Bridge; turn right and
follow signs.

.

Complet~

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

S2 to $4.50. One mile above

BILL NELSON
992-3657

Pomeroy

furnace,
comple1e,
reasonable. Wm . H. Cleland,

yellow peaches at Mason
Peach Orchard . Priced from

NO... MY FAVOiliTE
THUMBING SPOT IS
JUST A~5AI&gt;

.

. From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the

with the highest paying party TREE RIPENED while and

our mother. Mrs. Eleazady
Clark, during her illness and death ; Rev . D. H.
cart for his kind visits and
consoling words ; pallbearers,
flower girls, Feeney Bennett
Legion ,
Post American

8-2S-31p

22" LENNOX forced air coal

free? Earn 25 per cent
demonstrating toys and gi'fts

Radiator Service

'

992-3507 or 992-5397.

Female Help Wanted

FOR NEW HOMES .
OPEN FOR INSPECTIO-N
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME It! MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low a·s $65.00 forlll~mlly with a base
salary of ss.ooo.oo and three children. n. Pet. annual
per·certtag}e rate.
.
.

8 for n.oo

I

OPEN EvES. 8:00 P.M.
POMERO'(. OHIO

mouth shut.
(HIWSPArlO EHT£RPOISE ASSN.}

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE ,
MAltY USES

.'

Business S.ervices

l

EXPERIENCED

Sheets

ANYONE desiring a home,
food, and sheller in exchange
for light housekeeping, no
. laundry, please call 992-5700
or 992-7269.
·
8·2S-31c

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

One of the greatest ex·
ercises conducive to good
health is keeping the

u.mmun.

clocks.

Help Wanted

Automatic trans., power steering &amp; brakes. good w-w
tires, radio, heater, whi1e finish, clean Interior. Reg . price

~ 009
• .

36" x 23"

A
'' I

write M. o. Miller, Pomeroy.
Ohio. Call 992-6271.
8-25-lfc

$1395.00. Spacial.
1967 FORD LTD
$1595
4 Door Sedan, pt;~wer Steering &amp; brakes, vinyl interior;, blk. ·

about the eighth grade,
these days.

For Sale

- S· &lt;

W~t .: T0 B
an eu
uy
OLD Furoillure, dishes.

$1195

..

r-------~

and-or complete households.

healer. Reg . Price $1095.00. Special.
lf66 BUICK WILDCAT CPE.

.

Fill' Sale

GuN sHooT. Aug. 29, sunday.
1 p..m. at Racine Gun Club..
8 2 41

1966 CHEVROLET IMPALA tPE.
$799
_. Cyl., s1and. trans., local 1 owner car, good tires, radio,

Sentinel Classifieds
.

'

r - - - - - - ' - - - - - - -----ni Notice
.

In The

••lftlti•! -''Of.ntr'

'
'

.

�.,_....

.

~··&gt;llqlt

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

1

~~···

~-'I'IIID11179eDIINI,MI- n.p •oy,o.• .-.ili,lt'/1

Republicans Will Offer ·Another T&amp;:X _P ackage

'

Too Much Packaging
Is Too Much for Her
By POLLY CRAMER

DEAR POLLY-I hope my P~t P~eve is constructive

criticism We read that the cost of living has gone up so
much and ·are certainly conscious of this each time we
go to the grocery or shopping. We also hear about I?OI·
lotion on every side but still manufacturers keep commg
up with more elaborate packagmg of the products we are
using. I am not advocating that we return to the old
cracker barrel where we are told the cat often slept,. but
11 so much wrapping necessary? There are ~appmgs
, Inside of wrappings, not only O';l sol':le food 1tems but
on other commodities, such as lingen~, s~ationery, .etc.
When buyinfi only a loaf, of bread which IS sealed m a
wued bag, IS it necessary for the grocer to the!! place
this In a brown bag? I feel our expenses m1ght be
·ressenE!d with less wrar,ping, and this would . also help
with the pollution prob em. Thanks for allowmg me to
sound off.- MRS. H. G.
·

IIJIIIIIII!Iillll--1111 Polly's Problem - - - m:a;mt

By LEE LEONARD
ed to the sales tax'on cigarettes Ctimvent an open · committee
UPI stslelloue Reporter
or the current sales tax would choice on a tax program and
COLUMBUS (UPl) -Senate be eliminated and. tbe 1().cent to d!!clde in private which packRepublican leaders are prepar· excise tax would be boosted to age reaches the boor,
·tog to introduce a brand new 15 cents.
One senator said the plan calls
tax bill ealling for a 1'&gt;2 per
Efleet'l'lleSame
for Republicans to push the in·
. cent
in the state sales The effect of either would be come tax bill and the new bill
tax, a minimum 3 per cent in· the _. same, according to the calling for a sales tax increase
come tax on all corporations source, who pointed out. more into the Senate Rules Commitand a two-cent Increase in the than one penny of the increase tee, which will advance one to
cigarette tax.
probably would be diverted to the noor if party caucus sain·
. The proposal designed to raise the general fund to help finance plings show it has thti required
$728 million a year, is to be sent state appropriatiO!fS.
17 votes !.or passage.
to a Ways and Means subcom· The Ways and Means subcom· There is a possibility neither
mittee as a possible allernative mittee already is considering a would draw sufficient votes. In
to a state personal incom~ tax. 1 to 3 per cent personal in· . that case, the tax-budget staleASenate source explained the come tax, coupled with a 3 i&gt;e&lt;- mate would be dragged out even
cigarette tax increase, part of cent net income tax on all further despite Gov. John J.
. which would be earmarked for c01porationa;8percenton those Gilligan's austerity program
policemen's and fu-emen's pel!· earning $25,000 or more per threatened for Sept. I.
sions, would be done in one of year.
Plan ~ To Push
two ways.
Senate GOP leaders proceed· If the plan to push the alter·
Either twocentswould be add· _ed Tuesday wi!h plans to cir· natives into the Rules Commit-

DEAR POLLY-I hope someone has suggestions
for uses for worn-&lt;&gt;ut hair rollers. I cannot use them
after the brushes begin to wear out but hate to
throw them away. They are perfectly good other·
wise.-D. G. W.
DEAR POLLY-My
Pointer is for those who
have loved ones in nursing
homes. I work in one and
have found that one way
folks could add to a pa·
tient's comfort as well as
. help the employes is to split
dresses and gowns down
the back, bind with bias "";:!:~
tape and add snaps or ties. "'
Tbey are much easier to
put on and easier for the
patient too, so the little time and effort is well worth
anybody's time. I would certainly do this for any loved
one I had in a nursing home.-MRS. H. D.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.}

You wiD receive a dollar If PoDy uses your favorite
bomemakiDg Idea, Pet Peeve, PoDy's. Preblem or solution
to a problem. Write PoDy In eare of tbts newspaper.

Low Key On.War Tune
WASHINGWN (UP!) -Sen. sent against the VIetnam War,
Gecrge McGovern, a ll8Die bas decided to sllln the illaue for
almost synC111)'111ous with dil· the remainder of his
Jftsldentlal campaign.
Sll'11gglq to divest himself of
the "ollHssue" label that bas
stalled
his
campaign,
McGovern told newsmen Tuesday:
Tonitht, Thu. &amp; Fri.
"I will have very lillie
August2H6·27
cumnent on the war from here
.
'
m out. ..
Double Feature Progrom
COTTON COMES TO
I ezpect to aay very little about
HARLEM
.
Indochina In the next year."
(Color)
The SOUth Dakota democrat
Godfrey Cambridge
said'
he would focus his camRaymond St. Jacques
paign Instead on the economy
R
and othef d&lt;*nestlc illaues, "on
-Pius"THE HAWAIIANS"
wblch 'l'ie 19'12 election will
Geraldine Choplin
turn."
(Color)
While he said ending the war
GP
was still the natlm's No. 1
priority, be had to face the fact
lllat ''POCketbook Issues" were
the ones that would win voles,
"I am a political realist and I
Tonithl &amp; Thursday
belleve the stale of the ecmomy
Apgust 25-26
... II more decisive politically,"
NOT OPEN
he told a luncheon gathering for
wasbiDgtm financial wrtlers.
Fridoy &amp; S.lv,..y
. AUDI!St27-l8
TASTE THE BLOOO
OF DRACULA
Sound CoUeetion
!Tedlnlcalorl
Christopher Lee
Cornell University's LaboGeoffrey Keen
ratory of Ornithology houses
GP one of the world's largest
TROG
collections of natural sounds.
!Technicalor)
The collection has about
Joan Crawford
30,000 recorded sounds, rangMichael Gough
ing from that of squeaking
GP oak trees to the love call of
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
a bull alligator.

.MEIGS THEATRE

•PEl KIEHl Ftll·11i2

increase

tee is followed through, Ways record on a aingle bill at the. lri.mmed from tbe ..0 mllliOD
and Means subconunittee and C&lt;lllllllittee level.
.
as p• ed by the Houae, but that
committee action would be
Sen. Robert R. Shaw, R.col-' cuts would not approach tbe
meaningless and the deCiaion on . urnbus, chairman of .the House $2110 mlllim w«th requested by
which bill to take to the Door Finance Committee wbo also Senate President Pro 'feiDilOR
wouldbemadeattbelea~ hilsbeenmeetingprfvatelywith TbeodoreM.Gray,R·PICJ~·
level.
his Republican members, said II II expected that a p&amp;lf of
·. Tuesday he hopes to hold a pub- educatloo subsidy bills drawn
NormaUy, the cymmittee sys- llc committee meeting to offer up by a Senale Educatlm subtern allows for the minority about 30 GOP amendments to .. ccmmlltee will also be shifted
party to at least attempt to aJ. cuttheapProprllitionsbillclear· into Shaw's committee for~
tet · a siJlgle bill before It ed by the House.
atJI)roval before one of them ls
is passed on .to the Rules Comlinked with tbe tax bill in Rules
mittee and then to the Door.
·The Finance Committee II Committee. ·
House Republican leaders expected to come up with a aiD- .Grolips representing the Ohio
were criticized earlier Ibis sum- gle appropriations bill despite Nursing Home Association and
mer for making tax decisions in the fact Republican members state school employes roamed
private and minimizing the have been working with a pair the Senate c«ridots Tuesday,
cbancesforininorityDemocrats .of alternatives cillling for f!trl buttonholing their respective
to offer amendments for record milllon in new spending and senators for support of an in·
votes. '
f650 million, respectively.
come tax and more money for
However, House Democrats
BID To Be Trlnuned
their inlerests.
were given a chance to go oil · Shaw said the bill would be
Generally, they were told tbe
leadership and the committees
will determine what bill reaches
the Senate floor.
•
In other legislative action
Tuesday:
- Tbe Senate wumimously
agreed
to HOuse amendments
It said Hanrahan, 00, aile d Hanrahan aides Sheldon
the top men in Mayor Richard SoroskY and James Meltreger, and sent the governor a bill
J. Daley's Democratic organ!- and pollee invesUPtors Harry tightening provisions of the law
against the fraudulent use of
zatlon, made "false and Jnflam. Ervanlan and Earl Holt.
matory" statements whDe ob- Power opened the Indictment credit cards.
- The-House approved, ~.
talnlng an attempted murder Tuesday at the «dec of the
indictment against seven _Pan· IDinois Supreme Court, whlcb and sent tbe goverJJor a bill per·
!hers wbo survived the raid. - met in emergency session milling game protectors to enter
The charges were later Munday to consider the case. private property to enforce
dropped for lack of evidence. Hanrahan stood in the court- state litter and watercraft laws.
- TheHousepassed,79-7, and
Besides Hanrahan, the indict- room with his 8l1lll! folded
ment names Assistant State's while the judge opened the sent to the governor legislation
Attorney Richard Jalovec, wbo envelope. He left quietly af. exempting motor vehicles ftom
planned the raid; Pollee Sgt. terwards, but told repcrters, '1 the sales tax if they are purDaniel Groth, who led the raid, have dille absolutely nothing chased by oul-&lt;lf-6tate residents
and police raiders Ray Brode· wrung. I want a full a~ tp!ll and used outside Ohio.
Both chambers scheduled
rick, Edward Carmody, James hearing as som as possible so
Ciszewski, William Corbett, the publlc can have that 1:30 p.m. Door sessions for today.
James Davil, Joseph Gorman, demiiiStrated In court."
and George Jones.
It Includes former Deputy
·Pollee Superlnlendent John
Mulclrone, wbo led the pollee
Investigation of ttie raid and
was later demoted; and John
Meade, John Sadunas and .
Charles Koludrovtc who worked
111 tbe pollee investigation.
Not indicted but named as coconspirators were Conllsk;

Chicago Prosecutor, 13 More /~dieted
room of · Judge Joseph A.
Power chief of criminal courts
in Cook County, wbo had sup. pressed the indictment since
Jurie 25 and refused to accept II
when it was first voted last
April.
The indictment stems from a
raid authorized by Hanrahan
and made by pollee assigned to
his office m Dec. 4, 1969. Black
Panther leaders Mark Clark
and Fred Hampton were killed
by gunfire. A federal grand jury
later said the Panthers had
fired only one shot.
Tbe county grand jury which
returned the indictment was
empaneled by Power last
December at the urging of
several civic grou)lll which said
SAN QUENTIN, Calif. (UPI) confines and south to Marin the federal investigation left
-An elaborate escape map, City, a distance of 10 miles, many questims unanSwered.
plastic explosives and bullets according to sources quoted
The county grand jury
were found hidden in San Tuesday by the San Rafael charged the 14 indicted men
Quentin Prison's High Security Independent Journal. Marin with "destroying, altering, cooAdjustment Center where an City is a predominantly black cealing and dlsgu1alng physical
escape attempt brought death community in wealthy Marin evidence .. . planting false
tO six persons, prison sources County.
evidence and ... furnishing false
Associate Warden James informatim."
say.
The sources-quoted in San Park of San Quentin said an
Francisco and San Rafael afro-6tyle wig was found in a
newspaper~id a zip gun and toilet in one of the lldjusiment
the barrel of a .22-caliber center cells, but refused to
revolver were found in the cell comment on the map and
of "Soledad Brother" George shells.
The new information was
Jackson, who pulled a 9-mm
pistol from !)is .afro-6tyle hair disclosed as state officials
Saturday in an attempted blamed outside agitation and
breakout during which he was leniency in the prisons for the
outbreak and announced a WASHINGTON (UPI) -The counts to encourage retailers to
killed.
A detailed map traced an sweepL1g crackdown on "revo- latest questions and answers, carry a particular Item. When
issued by the Cost of Living such discounts were offered in
escape route through the prison lutionary type "lninates.
Sources also outlined the Council, on how the wag011rice the month prior to Aug. IS, must
they be continued through the
following circumstances sur- freeze will work :
entire freeze period?
General
rounding the fatal stabbings of
Linescores
John Lynn and Ronald Spain, Q: Are welfare payments A: The answer depends on
By United Press International two white inmate tier-lenders covered by the wagei)rice lhe price at which substantial
Nationa I League
transactions were made in the
freeze?
Cinci
t20 011 ooo- 5 13 0 whose throats were slit:
A: No. Welfare payments are firm's normal marketing area
Chicago 002 100 001- 4 6 o M!er Jackson pulled his gun
McGlothlin, Granger (6), on guard Frank Deleon, one of not payments for services during the base period. If an
Gibbon (9) , Carroll (9) and
rendered and therefore are not item was discounted to certain
Bench. Jenkins, Regan (8) and three prison officers killed, he
retailers within a marketing
Marlin. WP- McGiofhlln (7-10) . used a master key to open the wages.
area who had not previously
Wages
LP - Jenkins (20·10). HR - first tier cellblock holding TlBanks (3).
Q: Are teachers who were carried the item while substan·
hard-ease criminals.
San Diego 010 010 ooo- 2 8 1 The inmates then asked the eligible to be paid over a 12- tial transactions were also
Ph!la
000 ooo ooo- o 8 1 two tier-tenders, who were month period but in !act are being made to other retailers in
Acosta (1 -0) and Barton ; preparing lunch in the adjust- being paid over a 10-month the same marketing area at
Lersch, Selma (91 and McCarver. LP-Lersch (4·12) . HR- ment center kitchen , if they period eligible for a pay raise regular prices, the price can be
Colberf (24th) .
were "wiUt US 11 and they which was in effect in the increased to the non-discounted
school district before Aug. IS? rate. Otherwise, the discounts
Los Ang 001 005 ooo- 6 11 1 replied they wanted no part of A; Yes.
must be offered throughout the
Montreal 001 100 020- 4 9 1 any trouble.
Q: Can a company institute a freeze.
Downing, Suffon (8) and
"U you're not with us, you're
Hailer, Sims (6); Stoneman, against us. You're going to profit sharing program, for Q: Will increases in rentals
McGinn (6). Reed (6) , Ray.
mond (81 and Bateman. WP- die," the sources quoted the which it had previously tied to family incomes at rates
established prior to Aug. IS,
Down!ng (15-8). LP- Stoneman convicts as saying. Both white planned, during the freeze?
(14-11) . HR- Falr!y (13th) .
inmates and two guards were A: No.Fringebenefitscannot 1971, be pennitled? State-aided
and federal low-rent housing
San Fran 000 210 ooo- 3 6 0 then slain wiUt razor blades. A be increased !rom the base
New York 010 000 100- 2 5 1 third guard was shot to death. period level during .the freeze? programs mandate that rents
Maricha (13·9) and Dietz;
raise according to the income
Prices
.v
A prison guard reportedly
Sadecki, McGraw (B) and
of
the individual.
Grote. LP- Sadecki (55) . HRs revealed that investigators Q: Are the prices of school
- Bonds l25fhl. Agee (12th) .
know the identities of the lunches which are supported by A: Yes, as long as rates per
convicts who murdered the two lhe Department of Agriculture given amount of family Income
PttsbQh 000 110 300- 5 10 1
are not raised.
Atlanfa 324 220 20x- 15 21 1 inmates and three correctional covered by the freeze?
Q: If a tenant's lease expires,
Johnson, Veale (3), Walker officers and the information has A: Yes.
(4), Miller (7) and Sanguil!en; been passed on to Marin County
can
his rent be raised to the
Q: The food industry relies
McQueen, UP,haw (71 and
heavily on promotional dis- level which is being paid by
King . WP- McQueen (4.1). LP District Attorney Bruce Bales
- Johnson (8·9). HRs-Lum to determine the charges that "'ggli:i:IJi:li:i:IJi:ll!liSIIl8888888i:i:IJi:IM~ new tenants in similar units?
A: No.
(10th). Perez (3rd). Aaron· should be filed.
"
(37th).
Jackson was shot down by a DRAGSTERS AT MARION
MARION, Oblo (UPI) fire
from a gun tower as he
St. Louis 100 010 ooo- 2 6 0
Houston 000 000 001- 1 8 1 dashed out of the building The ntuth race of the Grand
.
Cleveland. Santorini (9) and toward a 2().foot prison wall. American
Series
of
Simmons; Forsch, Gladding (91
and Edwards. WP- Cieveland The other inmates surrendered Professional Drag Racing
01 ·10) . LP- Forsch (7-6) .
shorUy afterwardS when shot- wlll be held at Marton County
American League
guns and machine gull bullets Jnternatlousl Raceway thll
Minn
000 200 IOQ- 3 9 I were sprayed .into the adjust- weekend with more than 500
Detroit
100 000 ooo- 1 4 I
U. S. dragsters competing.
Perry t 14-141 and M!fferwald; ment center.
Niel&lt;ro, Schermann (7). TimAmong tbe favorites ex·
merman (9) and Freehan. LPpeeled
to compete were Jim
N!ekro (6 .6) . HR- Ka!ine International League Standings
By United Pross International Hayter of LaHarpe, lll., and
(12th).
W L Pet. GB Bob Lambeck of Vaa· Nuys,
Rochester
79 52 .603 13 innings
Calif.
74 57 .565 5
Bos 111 001 000 000 0- 4 12 0 Tidewater
Time trials, record runs
71 57 .555 6'12
KC 004 000 000 000 1- 5 16 3 Charleston
69 62 .527 iO'/' and quaiUytug sessions will
Lonborg. Lee (6) , T!ant (10), Syracuse
67 64 .511 12
Lyle (13) and Montgomery ; Richmond
be held Friday. The special
64 67 .489 15
Drago, York (8), Burgme!er Louisville
AA·fuel dragster and funny
55 76 .420 24
(10) and Kirkpatrick, Martinez Toledo
42 86 .328 35'12 car program will hlgbllght
(8). WP- Burgmeier (5..S) . LP Winnipeg
Tuesday's Results
- Tlanf I0·7l .
·
Saturday's events. Final
Charleston 3 Toledo 2 (lsi, 10
eUmlnatlons are Sundsy,
Chicago 000 000 ooo- o 4 o innings)
Balli
100 ooo oox- 1 6 o Toledo 1 Charleston 0 (2nd, 7 .·.·.- -·· ··.··.-.·. ·..· - . . . . .
Bradley, O'Ri!ey (8) and innings)
Egan ; Cuellar (16-6) and Tidewater 5 Rochester 0
Hendricks. LP- Bradley (13·11 I. Winnipeg 5 Louisville 2
Syracus~ 8 Richmond 7
M!!wau
000 oo3 30Q- 6 12 1
C!eveld
000 203 ooo- 5 6 2 ZOO ANIMALS SLAIN
SKY SHOW BOOKED
Slaton, Krausse (6) , Sanders
HARRISON, N.Y. (UPI)- LOS ANGELES (UPI)
(7) and RodrigueZ; Foster,
Intruders,
believed to be Frank Sinalra Jr., a piano
Farmer (7). Ballinger (8) .•nd
Fosse. WP- Sanders (6·81. Lo'- "malicious young boys" broke player and his piano and six
Farmr 14·1). H R7 Fosse (6th) .
into a small children's zoo other musicians are booked on
New York 100 000 ooo- 1 4 I Tuesday and slaughtered nearly American Airlines 747 Flight 10
to i'!ew York Thursday night
()ak !d
000 000 ooo- 0 3 1 ..n of its animals.
Sfoft!emyre (13.11) and Mun·
In what was described as a bul they won't be watching tbe
son ; Blue (22-6) and Duncan.
ritual-like slaying, 11 rabbits, latest movie.
They will be playing the late
Wash
000 000 001- 1 2 0 three pigeons and a chicken
Calif
000 000 002- 2 3 0 ripped apart while still alive show in the coach lounge -in
Broberg (5·4) and ,Casanova ;
Wright !12·13) and Stephenson. and their blood ~meared over what is called the first such
windows, police said.
entertainment event on a 747.
HR- Spencer (17th) .

CHICAGO (UPI)-State's Attorney Edward Hanrahan, the
city's top prosecutor, bas been
indicted with 13 other law of.
ficlals en charges of conspiring
to obstruct justice in a 1969
pollee raid in which two Black
Panthers were killed.

Chicago Police Superiiltendent James B. Coolisk was not
Indicted but was ll8Died a coconspirator · as were two of his
police inve;tigators and two of
Hanrahan's assistants.
The charges were made
public Tuesday in the court-

Map, Weapons
Found in Cell

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Middleporl

Freeze Will,
Or Should, Work

,

ll)eeting of AFL-CIO legal
counsels that would discuss
possible court ae1ion and
wbether other actions such as
strikes might be undertaken
legally.
Auto Workers President Leonard Woodcock met separately
:Wednesday with AJ'L.CIO Presidenl Ge&lt;rge Meany and Frank
·E. · Fitzsimmons, Teamsters
union president.
Woodcock branded the NiXon
prograin,announcedAug.l5, as
unfair to workers but said that
"as a practical matter we will
cooperate with the wage-price
freeze during the 90 days."
But Woodcock said the
uncwlainty of what would
happen after the 90 days Is over
was ''most dilturbing.''
The AFLCIO's council said
last week It would not
cooperate with the freeze, while
the Teamsters union said it

lions "our practical positions . over Nixon's propoolls to end
are the SIIDle."
the 7 per cent excise tax on
''The diffeleoce is in the automobiles and provide a )0
rb~tciric and the way our per cent income tu credit for
slatemenishave been phrased," busine:!s investment.
an AFL-CIO ~ added.
The Montana Democrat preV'ICe Presillent Sptro T. dieted efforts would be made
Agnew, in .a S(l eetil at Miami "which will seek to bring about
Beaeh, took Woodcock to last better equilibrium between the
for GppOSing the progrim.
tax reHef granted business and
''It's almost incmceivable tax teHef for the individual."
that the head o1 the auto
One comp!'OII)isie, Mansfield
workers' union, Leonai-d Wood- suggested, would be to make an
cock, sbouJd find fault with Ibis additional $50 personal income
policy," Agnew said. ''You tax exemption retroactive to
would think that a program Jan. I, 1971, so average wqe
that makes 11 easy for l'Bl"ers would get the same
conswners to buy cars, especi- immediate relief as business.
ally Amerlean-made cars, and The President bas proposed
provides more job opportunities moving the added exemption up
for auto workers, would he one year, from Jan. I, 1973, to
enthusiastically supported by
(Cbntinued on page 12)

By Congressional order the
inscription "In God We Trust"
must appear on all United
States coins and paper money.

•

ELBERFELD$

VOL. XXIV INO. 94.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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

! News ...in Briefs !Dollar
-

.

By Ulllled Prell b1ilrulkul

Communi.t Attach Sharpen
SAIGON -AU lED SPOKESMAN REPORTED today :be
sharpest wave ol OJnunmrisl aUacb in tine IIIUltbs across
South VIetnam. Military 9Pf'R"DM said at leilsl 38 separate
inctdenll had been reported. Meanwhile, the U. S. comi!I8D((
repcrted today 10 Americans had died in IDdocbina fighting last
week- the lowest battle toBin sb; years.

Armstrorijr tO UC

WNooN (UPI)-The value
of the dollar suffered new
setbacks in Europe today and
money dealers in Frankfurt
said they saw no end In sight to
the Ameriean currency's runback. One said it would take
''some time" before it reached
its fmal level.
Tile pace of trading picked up
on the London exchange and
the new swifter pace sent the
pound climbing in relation to
tbe dollar. The devaluation of
the dollar amounted to 3 per
cent in London as it moved
toward President Nixon's goal
of a cheaper dollar around tbe
world.
Until today the movement
toward a dollar devaluatioo has
been slow since currency

THURSDAY, AUGUST 26, 1971

A Feeder Calf Ccmrnlttee,
COD1pl'ised of· fanners frcm Z2
southeastern Ohio COUillies bas
been formed by the Ohio Farm

for !he purpose of rromottng
southeaslem Ohio Feeder catlle
and to provide te.lersbip In the
cooperative marketing of
&amp;lreau Federatilll, according cattle. Named to the committee
to Ivan Cooper, director of frcm Meigs County was 'w. S.
livestock Programs.
Mlchael, Mlnersvllle Rl 3.
'!be committee was formed

T~unclay and Friday

August 26 • 27

ONLY

Ron Shoemaker; Waverly
High School Principal, will
preside over the :.outheastern
Ohio AlbleUc League during the
18'11·72 campaign.
Shoemaker was named
SEOAL president during
Wedneaday night's annual fall
· ll)eeiq held at the Coacbea
Inn in Wellston.
James Mains, lrODton, was
retained as tbe league's
aecretary-treuurer.
League officials approved a
mallm to discontinue North and
South Divlslm play in ~
haieball conference next
spring. InStead, the elgh!Jaam
CGilference will play a single

round robin as In football,
ellmtnalq the playoff contest
wNcb was the league policy for
the past 21 years.
Another major changie Ibis
winter wiD he a 1~ double
rODDd robin schedule for the
fres1n'nen butelballers. This
will eUmlnale the annnal fresb.
man toumunent, wbldl bas
been held each year since IIMII.
StartlnR time of the fresl•n•n
games wiD he 5:30 p. m. The
,earlings will play 111 a 'lbur·
lldiy (11 ececlng a varally gmne
and 111 Mfllldays preeedlnc a
varstiy gmne.
The 18'12 SEOAL track and

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

markets reopened Monday but
one dealer said ''we are now
taking up where we left off on
Friday the 13th," the last day
of trading before Nixon annomced the new U.S. economic
policies.
In Oslo the Norwegian
National Bank intervened to
support the falling doUar when
it fell past 6.89 kroner, a
devaluation of 3.5 per cent. Tbe
old rate was 7.14 kroner.
Swedilb banks reported a 2 per
cent devaluation. The dollar
was unchanged in Helsinki.
The Bank of France also
moved in today and bought
what it called "important
amounts" of dollars to prop up
the U.S. currency after the rate

opened at the dollar's old
official floor price of 5.5125. In
private deals between French
banks the dollar was off 3 per
cent as compared with 2.7 per
cent Wednesday.
In Frankfurt dealers set the
price at 3.3810 marks to the
dollar, a devaluation of 7.62
from the old official 3.66 rate in
force until the West German
government floated the mark
May 10. Trading was described
as "very light."

The 7.62 figure was the
lowest since May 10.
Joseph Wagner, a Frankfurt
money dealer, predicted "the
dollar will continue its slow
downburn " and he said "I
believe it may take some time"
before the dollar levels out. He
predicted difficult talks at the
forUtcoming meeting of the
In!ernational Monetary Fund
(IMF).
On the London market the
pound rose to $2.4667, its

highest value since the 1967
devaluation cut the value of the
poWld by 14.3 per cent. The
Bank of England decision today
not to lower its bank rate (the
key interest rate) boosted
trading volume.
In Italy the dollar bought
between 613.60 and 616 lira, a
1.6 devaluation. The dollar
slipped 1.6 lower in Lisbon to
28.087 escudos. In Spain the
dollar held unchanged at 69.41
pesetas.

ASCS in Pomeroy to
·

H.ave
Official Answers
DONALDP. CIIEVJ8TON

Evening Routes

WASHINGWN- THE FIRST MAN ro walk on the DlOOII,
Nell A. Armsbvl!g,ls leaviJw the space JRillam to become a
teacher and reaearcber at the University ol Cincinnati.
His decision appeared to hue been pnmpted by at least two
motives: Along&lt;~tandlng desire to begin an acldemlc career, and
the rractical fact that his chances of getting another trtp Into
All morning bus routes in the
S(lllce were minimal.
Meigs Local School District will
be run at tbe same time and the
Lo111est Fatality ToU in 6 Years
same way as during the last
SAIGON -THE U.S. COMMAND said today 10 Americans school year.
were ldlled in the Vletllam War )ast ftek, the lowest ccmbat All evening bus routes will be
run the same as last year except
death tolllnsixyears. Allolher78Gis were womded.
Military S(IOkesmen said 14 Americans died from IDness, the evening elementary routes
in Pomeroy.
·accldeiiiB and other nonccmhat caUieslUt week. Tile death loll
This year the Pomeroy
last week was three leu than the previous week and brougbt to Elementary School will start at
U,462thenumber of Amerieans ldlledsince Jan. I, 1961.
1:30 a. m. instead of 1:45 a.m.

22 SE Countiu Make Committee

60s.

Continues Fall

up their children in the a!ternoon at the Pomeroy
Elementary are asked to do so
at 3 p. m. to avoid traffic
congestion in front of the school
at dismissal time
At 2:45p.m., disrntsaaJ time,
. there will be six school buses
lined up outside the school.
Although the Pomeroy
Elementary students will be
picked up by the same bus In lh•

:.d:n~~;:~dp~~!.
k ~~~~ie~!'o~
Pomeroy Elementary students, a different bus. Outlined below
45

except tbose 011 Mrs. Vlrgil
King's bus, should be home by
3'y
15 p. mlers
.
Mrs King'
oungs
on
.
s
bus will be homea .little past
3:30.Allparentswlshingtoplck

field ll)eel will be held 111
Athens' ._ bigb school track
on
Saturday, May 4.
Prellmlnuies will slut at 4:30
p. m., with the flnala seheduled
to start at 6 p. m. PW Bobo,
Athellllrack COllch, will he the
meet JDanager. Rain dale for
this event Ia May 8.
Bob Shamp, new Athens
principal, Will appointed by the
1eque (11 !dent to 'bead a
league sporlanuinsblp confa:ence. Siw~ II to set up a
meetq unmg the student
bocly (11! Ill :len"a o1 each ldlool
for the )IU'IIOie Ill IJqlfOIIIng
rebltionshlps tbrougb011t the
CGnferenee. Each league of.

Residents of Meigs County
may obtain answers to
questions on operation and
lhe
interpretation
of
Presidential order of Aug. 15 on
prices, rents, wages and
salaries from tiMi Meigs County
Agricultural Stabilizati111 and
Conservation Service (ASCS)
Office.
Wayne H. Chase, Chairmsn of
~ County J.!lC Coounittee;
S&amp;ld ~ offices throughout
the Umted Stales _have been
chosen as iltormatlon centers
~ . answer questions from all
Cl~ on President Nixon's
Executive Order. .
All persons In MeigS County
wbo wants or needs preciSe

ficlal was presented sportsmanshlp I!Uldellnes.
League clles were increased
from $15 to $50 a year.
In other JDatters, the officials
tabled a (lloposed all-6J)OI'ts
til aphy project until the alllllal
winter meeting, to he held at the
O.cbes Inn in Wellston on Nov.
17, beglrning at 8:30 p, m.
Tile 1111ual AD.sEOAL grid
banquet will be beld m Thur·
sday, Dec. 2, In the community
wlloae team captures the league

inf&lt;rn~&amp;tion

Neither will inlerpretatiiiiS or
guesses by made by ASCI
county office people. They will
answer only those questiiiiS for
whicb they have been 8q)plled
answers. If they dCII't know the
answer to a specific questi111,
they will say so. If a member of
the puhllc wants the county
office to obtain an answer, the
question will go by pbone or
County ASCS
offices, mail to the nearest IRS diltrlct
bowever, are not to handle office.
ccmplaints or appeals. Tbey
will provide official infonnalion The normal function of ASCI
111ly. Persons with COII!Plalnts county offices ia to admlnillet
will register them with the most farm actiCII programs of the U.
convenient district or sub- S. Department of Agriculture Cll
district office of the Internal the local level. This service will
Revenue Service.
cootinue.
should get in touch
with the County Office, Chase
said. The office is located in the
Masonic Temple Building,
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. The
mailing address Is P. 0. Bo:x
391, Pomeroy. The telepbone
number, 992-3687. In charge of
Ule office is Herbert E. Shields,
County Executive Director. .

70 01
·
fo
( Favor War Policy

are the evening bus route
assignments out of the Pomeroy W A S H I N G T 0 N
Elementary Scbool.
U . Congressman Clarence E.
Faye Man1ey mon Miller today announced the
Avenue, _Shotgun HoUow and resul1softhepuhlicopinionpoll
(Continued on page 12)

Shoemaker New SEO·

.

Variable cloudiness with a
chance of thundershowers,
some heavy, today, tonight and
Friday. Highs today and Friday
in the upper 70s to low !ME. Lows
tonight in the upper 50s and low

Devoted To The lnterats Of The Meigs-Mown Area

Show Changes

Now On Sale At Elberfelds ·
Mechanic Street Warehouse

The Ttrnadoes b• for better lhqs tlis year in the
Southern Valley Conference won last aeasm by anOther

Weather

WASHING'ION -THECOMIO!:RCEDEPARTMENTissued
a report today preclctlng lllllt•lrled eonmfl: !llvtrtb for the rest
of tllil re- and into 1m. But the report was gloomy on reccrva-y
rrospeeiB before 1975 for the uggi"l! aeJ'OIII8Cf Industry. The
repcrt was prepared before President Nixon anmtmced his new
economic policy.

Big Selection of Patterns and
Colors in Sizes 12x12
Through 12x15

FIRST YEAR HEAD COACH BRUCE WALLACE at
Southern High, extreme right, calls signals for .line drills.

Now You Know

.Commeree People Happy

While They Last

would cooperate, but reluc;lant- the man wbo is S1l)IIIOied to
ly. Woodcock said despite tbe represent their interests." '
IJIIIIrelll conflict in the state- Mansfield said he believed
ments of the tbree organiza. there would be extended debale

Meigs A school, Eastern.

SAIGON - SOlll'll VIETNAMESE ARMY lroo)lll were
preparing 1D move Into the capital today, iD preparation lor
SUnday's Natlooal ,._mbly elecUm. Earller, police brvb up an
anti-American demOilllratllll by followers of Cllle candldale In the
eleclim. President Nguyen Van Tbleu, meanwblle, reaffirmed bts
attention to go ahead with the Cflllbvta'si41 baJWi'lg Oct. 3 for
Jftsldent, an elecli111 in wblcb 'l'llleu ia the only candidate.

McCLURE DAIR¥ ISLE
'

WASHINGTON (UPIHlrganlred labor called together Its
leta! advlaers today to dilcuss
POIS1hle court suits against
President Nixm's 9lklay wageprice freeze.
The move foUowed a pledge
Wednesday by the iDdependent
United Auto Workers (UAW)
and the AFL-CIO to ''work
cooper•tively" in opposing in
CGngress and ·elsewhere ibe
administration's new economic
plan.
Senate llemQcratic Leader
Mike Mansfield predicted the
portions of the plan requiring
Congressional action would face
"extended debate" after Congress returns frnm a summer
recess next month.
Mansfield's prediction cast
doubt on chances for speedy
enactment of the package.
The UAW announced it would
send representatives to a

Troop3 Ready 'to. Move in

McCLURE'S •
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Elberfelds In

Labor

.l
.
.
o b z zzzng

Prexy
Gallipolis, Waverly, Jackson
and Meigs will charge 75 cents
for student grid tickets, and
$1.25 for adults this fall.
AlhellS will hsve a 5().cent
pre..game sale for student
tickets. Students will JliiY 75
cen1sat the gate at Atllens, and
adul1s $1.25.

Wellston and Ironton will
have '15-eent pre-game sale of
tickets for students. All tickets
at the gates at these two schools
crown.
will be $1.25.
Tile amul Cross Coun1ry Buck Lockhar~ new Wellston
meet will be held at Jacksm 111 principal, was welcomed by
Oct. Jll,atartirw at 4 p. m.
league officials. All eight
It was pointed out that Logan, school, were re!l'esented.

Creviston

l.andmark's
Area Rep
DCIIald P. Creviston, Roule 2,
Waverly, bas accepted the
positilll Cll iept!&amp;!nlalhe
in the I atnnart ~ and
Feruu- Division.
Crevisflln, afteldmanwith the
Scioto County Landmart the
put year, cUing 15'1V was a
Landmark management
trainee at the Cal'!)' Q-op
Service. His new positl011 was
effeclhe July 19.
Crevistm will cover a ~
COUDty are. in soutb-eeltral
Ohio, Including Athelll,
Plckaway, Fairfield, Frai*lin,
Hocking, Ucking, Madison,
Meigs, Jacksm, Pmy, Rosa,
Scioto and Wasblngtm Oluntles. Be will w1rt with county
Landmarl&lt; penlllllel Ill aeed
and fertilizer products.
A native of Ridgeway,
Crevistm was grad11aled frGm
Ohio Stale Untnnlty with a
Bachelor of Sr~ degne. He
Is a Plf!Dher of the Plb Coallty ·
Upidary Society and the Chea
Oub of Saulhem Ohio.
In~· ww-..;....l

conducted at the Meigs County Do you favtr the admissi(l) of
Fair. The findings of the survey Red OUna to the U.N.? Yes 47,
follow :
No. 46, Und. 7.
Do you support the present Do you support the Ad·
Adrnlnlstrati111 polley of with· ministration's general revelllll!
drawing from Vi.etnam( (an- sharing plan in wbich $5 bllli111
swers in percentage) : Yes 70, in federal tu dollars would be
No Tl, Und. 3.
returned to the stales and local
Would you support a national govenments to use as they see
health insurance program fit? Yes U,'No 21, Und. 10.
which provides income tax Do you support a welfare
credits for the cost of pur· reform plan of providing a
chasing private healtb in- minimum inCOIIle for every
surance? Yes 49, No. 33, Und. 8. American family? Yes 39, No
Do you support federal in- 55, Und. 6.
volvement in the control and Should the federal governregulation of strip mining? Yes ment provide more support for
W"a1
80, No 14, Und. 6.
.education? Yes Tl, No 17, Und.
·
6.
Three persons were removed
- - - - - - -- Do you support stricter to St. Joseph Hospital in
STEEPLE HIT
Ieder~! law~ . to control Parkersburg following a twa
The steeple on · the Rutland poUution even if II may mean car accident m SR 7 Wem-Jay
Freewill Baptist Church was higher prices . for some · at 7 p. m., 11M; Meigs County
struck by lightning Wednesday )roducls? Yes 91, No 6, Und. 3. Sheriff's Dept. reported.
night, causing a por. lion of it to
.~ 1:1•
Mlchael T. Burtt, 2!1, Der·
fall on the roof. Damage to the
OJ £ U'e
mont, Ohio, was traveling -th
roof was minor. No other
whenacardrivenbyRichardT.
damage was reported following
Richardson, V'Jelllla, w. Va.,
Ute storm that hit the area last
crosaed the cenler line IIIII
n~ht. .
Meigs County 9leflff Robert struck Burke's vehicle. Barb
C. Harlmbacb •epated IDday swerved to the rlgbt to a'IOW
that!U ciepm'tment, with stale hitting the Ricbanblll car, bllt
Fire Marshall's office, Is could not get oat of Its pMh.
conducting a lbCI'ough In- BurkesufftiedaiMenllaniD
vestigatlon o.f a fire that hls back, Ric~ bad
destroyed a frame house aevere lacenllillls Ia 1111 two Uve in the·Columbus area, Wedibtlai morninc 011 Wellll and face and Bill Puhr,
3 lathe
Mlltm Friedman, 3019 Falr..v, Town Hill belangiils to Ther- Pomerty,Rt.:l,pa
and Max Friedman, 181 N. man Charles Yarbrough ol Burttecar,hadCUIIlnldalnllll&amp;
Barberton.
. finger Ill bis left hand ... 1111
MerkiH'd, Bexley.
He alao ls survived by his The boule . . ·• I) · 1w, etbow.
Tile injured wwe
wife, Adab, • former dancer, but
Tile hospital by the Dllhlll ...
and nieces, Mrs. Polly Callif, 21
s. Rooeevelt-ev, Bexley, llld
Ia · - IIlii. Rh
I
Mrs. Howard Schoenbaum, Jill
wu aD CjlQ['l on l.'tag•
of
Fair..v •
anhal of. of center. Balli 4Ift
illputlllllll. demolilhed.

3

Probe

Js' Underwa.Y

.Ted Lewis Home in Circleville for Last Time
arc:tevllle'sown Ted Uwi~IS
coming home for the last time.
• '!be llof--41d Ohioan, llile ol
the Jut of the great ¥11ude¥1lle
performers, ided in his sleep in
lhls New York City apartment
Wednesday of a heart attack.
Senles bave been 1el for II
a. m. Frldl.:r at Rodeph lldom
,Temple In New. York. '!be body
..m he brought to Clrde¥llle to

Maeder ·~ Heme. Burial
"Be was u proud Ill Cir· Theater In New York.
will be Mmday at the family deville as we were proud of '!be •lertalner introduced
plot In FOI'elt Cemetay.
!Un," Bald MQw Gerllardt.
''When My Baby &amp;niles At Me"
TbecltJ!heentertalnernever
Lewla, born Tbeedore in 1111. Anolher Ianing succesa
forgot began making pi.ns bile Leopold fr!edme 111 Jma 6, was ''Me IIIII My Slldow,"
Wet lay lo r"•lftlllher him. 1•1, ~Into ¥llllllniDe at a wl*b lAwla diineed and sang
Mqor Dick Gerllardt Aid lhealer In Ida bonae IGwa at the with Eddie O.Wier In 11125.
Crde'lille will have apecta1 age of U.
'
AI f bandlnder he gaw
recognition for the native
By the time he wull, he wu .Iunny Dor1ly, llemy GGod·
Plcbway Counliln.
~ at ·fllnm•z'ein'll 1M! and oa.. bell'Dinm tllelt

start.
He liked to ref!r to himself as
the ''blacksileep" of the family.
His father, a jeweler, sent three
sons to Ohio Stale U~versll)o.
Ted would have ome df I~ and
ran away from home
periodically to find work at
canivals and fairs,
1ltree ll'olhers survive, and

.._to..

t

·:.XU'

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