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a- The Daily Sent::-el, Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, August 31,1971

One-Won-One Club
Plans Family .Affair
A fellowship dinner to be held
on Sept. 22 at the Pomeroy First
Baptist Church was planned
during Thursday night's
m""ting of the One-Won.()ne
Class. The dinner will be a
church-wide family affair.
Mrs . Audrey Young conoducted the meeting using as
scripture for devotions Matthew
4 with a commentary on the
scripture - "Man shall not live
by bread alone" . She concluded
with a prayer poem. The class
sang "He Keeps Me Singing"
and gave the Lord's Prayer in
unison.
The teacher's thought was
given by Mrs. Caryl Cook who
used scripture from John 16, 32·
33, and a meditation on com·
mWtication with God. The Sept.
14 meeting will be hosted by the

The Pratts Return
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Pratt
have returned following funeral
services for her father . T. N.
Sallee, 69, at Richmond, Ky.
Mr. Sallee died on Aug. 24 at
the Pattie A. Clay Hospital at
Richmond and funeral services
were conducted Thursday .
Besides .Mrs. Pratt, he is survived by his wife, two sons and
another daughter. Burial was in
the Richmond Cemetery .

MEIGS tHEATRE
,,
Tonight, Aug. 31
A NEW LEAF
(Technicolor)
Walter Matthau
Elaine May

" G"

Colorcortoon•: ·
Give Me Liberty
H- to Relax
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

WednesdaY &amp; TbursdaY

September 1-2
NOT OPEN

. M~\
. .0 ~

DRIVE· IN
.

'

Tonight, Aug. 3t
Double Feoture Program
THE WILD
BUNCH

R

(Color&gt;
William Holden
Ernest Borgn ine

-PiuoTHE SWEET BODY
OF DEBORAH
R

(Color I
Carroll Baker
Jean Sorel

Wed . Thu. &amp; Fri.
September 1-2-3
Double Feature Program
"BULLITT"

(Color)
Steve McQueen
-PtuoBONNIE&amp; CLYDE
(Color I
Warren Beatty
Faye Dunaway

II

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VOL XXIV

YOUR FULL SERVICE BANK

IS A PLEASURE TO HANDLE
BUT
IT'S SAFER IN
THE BANK···

dangerous to carry around than
a checkbook."

..
If

.llibens ~alional
_.t.,.f!NCIJo!i~All

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WINNERs OF THE annual hole4n-me contest held la8t week by the ~meroy-Middleport
Lions Club were presented their awards Moilday afternoon by Tom Cassell, left, contest
chaitman. First place winners Included from the left, Robert Sawyer, Mason, who received a
trophy and a set of golf clubs as men's champion, eight and one-quarter inches from the hole;
Miss Marlon Eberabach, Pomeroy, women's champion, a trophy, nine inches from the hole,
and David Reed, Mason, a trophy. winner of tile junior division being three feet and two inches
from the hole.

Eastern Announces
Free Lunch Policy

Golf Contest Winners Announced
Plans already are underway
for the annual golf hole-in~me
contest of the PomeroyMiddleport Lions Club next
summer, Tom Cassell, who
headed last week's successful
event at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds said today.
Next year the event will be
held in July rather than in
August and according to plans
already made the green and t""
will be lighted.
Daily winners were announced today by Cassell who
also awarded contest first place
winners their awards Monday

afternoon. They included men's
champion, Robert Sawyer.
Mason, who won a trophy and a
set of golf clubs; women's
champion, Miss Marion Ebersbach of Pomeroy, who received
a trophy award, and David
Reed, Mason, winner of the
junior division, 16 and under,
who won a trophy.
Daily winners follow. The
first place received a dozen golf
balls while second and third
place winners each received
golf caps. Daily winners and the
distance from the hole include:
August 23 - l. Ron Toler

lO'h", 2. Dennis Tulloh 2'-2", 3.
David Reed 9' -2".
August 24 -1. John Riebel 3',
2. David Reed 3'·2", 3. Earl
Johnson 5'-11".
August 26 - l. Bill Persinger
3'-lh", 2. Andy Persinger 3'-6".
August 26- I. Robert Sawyer
8¥4'', 2. Ron Toler I' -9'h' ', 3. Bill
Persinger 3'.
August 27 - I. Bill Persinger
1'-11%", 2. Harold Foul 3'-3\'.o'',
3. Robert Sawyer 3'-3'1&lt;".
August28 - 1. Max Folmer I'·
53/.,", 2. Robert Sawyer 2'-Ph 11 ,
3. U!ster Gibbs 2'-51'.".

MISS DEBRA ANN FITCH, center, a graduate of Eastern High School this spring, was
' Memorial Hospital. At the
IX"esenled a $500 nursing scholarship Monday afternoon at Veterans
left making the presentation is Mrs. Alex Wheeler, APPle Grove, president of the hospital's
Women's AUiillary which awards the scholarship. looking on is Donald Diener, administrator
of the hospital.

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, 0~10

NO. 98

WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER I, 1971

Miss Debra Ann Fitch, the past are U!nora Mitchell
daughter of Mrs. WUma Tillis of who is receiving her third
near POOteroy and a spring payment this faD and Rhonda
graduate of Eastern High Ervin who is to receive her
School, Monday was presented
a $500 'nursing scholarship byM
the Women's Auxiliary of
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Miss Fitch will leave Wed·
nesday (()begin her training as
a registered nurse at the Good
Samar~lan
Hospital
in
MASSILLON, Ohio (UPI) ZanesvtDe.
.
.
Educators should give top pri·
At Eastern High School, Miss orily in their jobs to restoring
Fitch was a. member of the the nation's confidence in
student council for two years as schooling, state Schools Supt.
well as a staff member of .the Martin Essex said here Mannewspaper for the same penod. day.
She was~ member of the LaUn
"The first and foremost goal
Club, Science Club, and of the of our time in education Is the
scholarship team. She took part
.
.
.
. tr 1 nd Ia
. th
restorauon of conftdence tn ed1
m eaooua mtnS e a tc. ss ucauon
. ,.. Essex 1old th e Mas,
pia y~. Sh e was a Cand
. ys rt~r sillon Teachers' Convocation.
~t v:rans Memortal Hosptlal
He blamed loss of confidence
or
ee years. . .
. on overselling education\ caOther scholarshtp wmners tn pacity to correct social ills.

(Continued from Page I)
taxes.
Maloney said the proposal provides for real properlY tax relief
The Eastern Local Board of may make a request either in the form of an income tax
Education today annoWtced a orally or in writing for a hearing credit if property tax paid exceeds I~ per cent of the homefree lunch policy for the to appeal the decision.
district's school children unable Robert Bowen, Meigs CoWtty owner's adjusted gross income.
There is no general real esto pay the full price of a meal. Superintendent of Schools,
Local ·school officials have Pomeroy, has been designated tate tax relief in the smaller
adopted the following family as hearing official. Hearing sales and ~orporate tax mea·
size and income scale to assist procedures are oullined in the sure, but both measures contain
them in determining eligibility policy. The policy also provides homesteadexemptionsfor homefor free lunches.
that there will be no iden· owners over 65 years old.
Family Size
Inc. Scale Ann. tification of or discrimination
Cigarette Tax Hike
1
$2670 against any student unable to
And
Maloney's plan would roll
2
$3310 pay the full cost of a lunch.
3
$3940 A complete copy of the policy back the tangible personal prop4
$4530 is on file in each school and in erty tax for business and indus5
$IiilO the office of the local try to 45 per cent instead of 40
$5640 superintendent where it rnay be per cent as In the version pass6 ·
7
$6170 reviewed by any interested ed by the House.
The income lax bill also in8
$6650 person.
cludes
a hike In the state ciga9
$7120
rette tax from 10 10 I~ cents per
pack. But since the legislation
::: 2 Take Part In
would exempt cigarettes from
12
$8560
sales, tax the net increase per
Families falling within this
Ohio S~te Fair
~ack would l&gt;e three cents.
scale or those suffering from
Lynn Baker, daughte· nf M1 .
unusual circumstances or
and Mrs. Paul Baker, Syracll!•
Included In both GOP lax
hardships may apply for free
and Edwin Cross, son of Mr. ana plans is an amendment providIWtches for their children. They
Mrs. Andrew Cross of Racine, ing indirect aid to non • public
may do so by filling in the apparticipated in activities at the schools. To skirt recent U. S.
plication forms sent home in a
Ohio State Fair last week.
Supreme Court ruling prohibitletter to parents. Additional
Lynn , a member of Meigs ing direct state aid 10 private
copies are available at th~
County pleasure riders 4-H club and parochial schools, the proprincipal's office in each school.
represented Meigs County in posal provides for a voWtcher
Applications may be submitted
the Junior Fair horse show and system, whereby parents of nonany time during the school year.
Edwin, a member of the U!tart public school children may apThe form itself is simple to
Farm Boys 4-H club _par· ply for an annual grant from
complete and ·requests in·
ticipated in the state tractor public school districts.
formation needed to determine
operalors contest.
The Income tax bill Includes
economic need based on the
Both did an outstanding job of a $100 per pupil grant each year.
income of persons in the family,
representing Meigs County.
Maloney estimated the cost of
number of children in school
this version at $65 million for
and any unusual circumstances
1971-73.
or hardships which affect the
REUNION SUNDAY
The sales and corporation tax
family 's ability to pay for school The annual Swartz family
lunches . The information reunion will be held Sunday in measure included a $90 per puprovided on the application will the Woode Grove at Alfred with pil per year grant at an estibe confidential and will be used a basket dinner at noon. En- mated two-year cost of $61 milonly for the purpose of deter· tertainment and games will be lion .
Maloney plans further hear·
mining eligibility.
held in the afternoon.
ings on the tax bills today, while
Under the provisions of the
the Senate Finance and Educapolicy the local superintendent
PLAN REUNION
will review applications and! The Ours family reunion will tion Committees prepare alterdetermine eligibility. If a be held Sunday at the Rock nate versions of general and edparent is dissatisfied with the Springs Fairgrounds. A basket ucation spending measures tailruling of the local official he dinner will be served at 1 p.m. ored to Maloney's tax proposals.

:~

second payment. The recipients
receive $200 for the first year
and $150 fer the. ~nd and
third years of therr training.

•

1ile Lexington, Ky. Veterans
Administration Hospital for the
past several weeks, underwent
surgery Wednesday. Spending
~evera l days there with him
were his wife and his mother,
Mrs. Hubert Pullins, Middleport.

SHIRT
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE

Robinson's Cleaners ·

.._________,
216 e. 2nd, Pomeroy

::•·•··,·1dipl~•llt&lt;L..

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COLUMBUS (UPI)- A gla~ce
at acttvtly Monday m the 0 to
General ~mbl~

,..,.,.,.,L

'·

11 dtnt, · .Jenw Blewbcbi, 111'1. Jcim Redovlan,
treasurer and Mrs.
Bailey, secretary. Absent was
George Mcrris, vice preSident.

Joe

Brewington
Heads
September
-.
Has Anived
Meigs Cancer Unit
••

James Brewington was receipts topped last year 's
elected president of the Meigs donations by $972.26.
CoWtty Unit of the American
Mrs. Theodore Reed, public
Cancer Society at its annual educ_ation chairman, gave a
m..,dng Tuesday night.
report on the activities of the
Brewington replaces Uoyd education program. Mrs. Reed
Blackwood who held the post observed that films on cancer
the past six years.
reached every elementary
Other officers elected were classroom in the county. The
George Morris, vice president, "Send a Mouse to College" was
Mrs. Joe Bailey, secretary, and also very successful Mrs. Reed
Mrs. John Redovian, treasurer. reported, as was the "Save a
. Also elected were 22 po;rsons Life Party." Cancer phamplets
to the board of directors for the will be distributed to doctors
1971-72 year. Named 10 the and dentists waiting rooms in
board were : Mrs. James the near future, Mrs. Reed said.
Brewington, · Mrs. George Mrs. Corrine Lund, executive
Morris, Ed King, Wendell secretary, gave a report on
Hoover, Uoyd Blackwood, Mrs. public information, service, and
Lloyd Blackwood, 111rs. Pat . the youth against cancer.
Lochary, Eldon Weeks, Paul . Mrs. Lund noted that the
Casci, ·Nan Moore, Kathtyn youth against cancer, (YACS )
Shavorinsky, Helen Hayes, Nell has made tremendous strides in
ierkle, Mrs. Ferman Moore, the fight against cancer. Mrs.
Mrs. Theodore Reed, Jr., Mrs. Lund reported that Mr. and
Eugene Harris, Nina Russell, Mrs. Bill Baer, teachers at
Mrs. Sibley Slack, Bernice Southern Local High sChool,
U!dley. Mrs. William Pullins, will assist with the YACS
Dr. Lewis Telle and Dr . Roger program.
Djmiels.
Mrs. Lund annOWtced that the
'!'he directors were elected district m""ting in Waverly will
following the recommendation be held on Sept. 16 at 6:30 p. m.
of the nominating committee and the annual m""ting, Ohio
with Mrs. Nan Moore making Division, will be held in
the report. Others on the Columbus on Oct. 9. Delegates
nominating committee were to the two meetings will be
Paul Casci and Mrs . Pat named at a later date.
Lochary.
Larry Miller, director of Field
In the absence of Wendall Service, Ohio Division, was the
Hoover, crusade chairman, guest speaker.
Mrs. Redovian reported that Miller in his remarks noted
$1;126.87 was received in the that the cancer society was
cancer fund drive. This year's originated in 1913. At that lime

l

Legislature
At A Glance

42 4

NEW \NICERS OF 1RE Melp Oarty Unit ct the
American Cancer Society were elected during the annual
meellllg of the society Tuesday night. Uoyd Blackwood, left,
president fer the past siJ: · years congratulates the new

: · 1 ~ews

He said the current genera·
lion of youths is the first in
history to be an economic lia·
bility to its parent• rather than
an asset. Because of this, he
said, they rarely have a chance
to be a part of the real work
world.

Bill ~::oduced
S B 424 Sh · ••7 5 .11 .
. . , aw,.., . mt ton
. . b d f Se 1 I-IO
mtenm u get or P ·
·
Bills Passed .
.
S. B. 3~2, Me~hel, Ex~ands tn·
sta~ces m .whtch a wtfe may
lesltfy agatnsl her husband to
mclude when he ts .betng prosecuted for cruelty to her. Vole:
21 -0.
All
S. B. 268, App 1ega1e, . ows
the seal of a notary pubh~ to
be constructed etther . to mkstamp or emboss document.
._. b d •
VosteB: 2~ 1 · Sh
. . , aw, 1n1enm u g
f
Se
$S? ~
1 10 f
"'. .""
pt. •
or
·
mtllwn . Vote: I~.
MEET THt:RSDAY
Bricklayers Local Union 32
will nleet Thursday evening at
1hc American Legion home in
l'nmcruy . Refreshments will be

In Damage
Suit Trial

r---------------------------,
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B . .~ I

Restore Confidence
Ln ducation Essex Say.
·s

" In the half-dozen preceeding
years, we developed a severe
,
,
f'd
case oflh e gaps -con 1 ence,
credibility and generation," he
said.
These gaps, he said, could be
bridged if educators recognized
"that children have varying tal·
ents and interests."
"We should move promptly to
the custom tailoring of educa·
tion to the learning rate of each
pupil," he said. "Education
should be individualized, hu·
manized and personalized...
Essex also advocated re. ed
k
.
qutr wor expenence 1o supplement classwork.
"Our society must include
w11rk-learning experience as an
educmional requirement," he
sHid. '''l'his expel'ience should
be indudedf as a requirement
frw ""' aw;mling of a high

Jury Seated

House .••

Miss Fitch Receives Scholarship

UseOur Free Parking Lot
·
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Membes' Federal Dep•lt Insurance CorporaUoq

'

Hospital on behalf of her group Monday afternoon presented Donald Diener, hospital admlnlstra~, with an ~examination table for the emergency room. In addition, this year the.
auxlllary hu piO'chased a projector and record player for the hospital at a cost of $1.00 and has
paid $150 on new draperies for the hospital.
·

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••• zn ne1 s :
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By Ualted Prea llllenutUcul
• WASHINPTON - THE ADMINISTRATION, respondiDg to
lfie first suit filed against tile wage freeze, said the workers will
tint have to prove damage, 111en sue their employer before attacking the government. Thefiratsuitwasfiledbyfour J&amp;oftSIIors
at Catholic University in Waahqton who contend lbe freeze is
unconstitutional. The Justice Department filed the govenment's
answer Tuesday.
FEW JNSTANCES OF MAJOR protest have been reported in
lbe Swlb since tile new scboo\, terms began Monday, and the
ND:on administration has commended Dixie for a "remmable
~gree" ol underslanding and leadership in carrying out new
school desegregation programs, many requiring forced btming.
• • SAN RAFAEL, CALIF. -A NATIONWIDEseach, aided by
FBI agents, iB underway f~ Stephen MitcheD Bingham, 1be
young radical attorney, grandson of a former Comlecllcut
governor, was charged Tueaday with five counts of murder
stemming fr(IJI hia visit to "Sciedad Brother" George Jackson in
$an QJenlll1 Prison 10 days ago. Jackson ,ck'ew a gun soon after
the visit, lrilll!ering an escape attempt in which he and five other
~1"8008 were kiUed. Authorities say Bingham smuggled the piStol
·
,.~Jackson.
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•

Airport Included In Ohio Projects
I

See Elbe~felds n~w Fall group of "Dotty Mann" sportswear
- beauttful bon~ed wool and rayon plaid groups . tricot
bonded doublekntt orion · washable polyester knits. A wide
selection of slacks, skirts, vests, sweaters, and pants suits.
·
Beautiful colors · sizes 8 to 20.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
'------------------~--------------,1

·".An improvement project for Meigs Regional Airport in
the Gallia-Meigs Regional Gallipolis Twp. The project is

Airport was included in 24
pfojects opened for bids
·'l'tiesday by the Ohio Highway
Oeparlment.
·
: :York · Construction Inc.,
.thaWtcey. was tue low bidder
'for an improved access road,
tlxmty Rd. 60 for the Gallia-

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Partly cloudy through
Thursday with a ~hance of a few
showers or thundershowers
mainly in !he afternoons or in
evenings. Highs today in the low
and mid 80s. Lows tonight in the
low and mid 60s.

To 1J.ae lntereaiA Q( 17u? Meigs· MalOn Area

MRS. ALEX WHEELER, president llf tile Wunen's Auzlliary of Veterans Memarlal

In At 9-0ut At 5

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

enttne
with caution Pomeroy Police

. ...

,•; H f N Y 0 U VI&lt;, 1T f' ARK FREE

~oted

at

Chief Jed Webster aonouaced
today. Webster also asks that
youagsters riding bicycles to
and from school to stay off the
sidewalks as much as
possible.

WHILE YOU PAY BY CHE~K.
"Cash is comforting but more

.

With the starting of school
motorists are asked 10 drive

t

THE LONG GREEN • • •

'

') Weather

PHONE 992-2156

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

Pomeroy....
Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Mora and ·
grandchildren, Mark and Mary,
and Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Wlldermuth have returned from
Myr~e Beach where they were
the guests last week of !'dr: and
Mrs. George Crary, Atlanta,
Ga. Also visiting at the beach
home of the Crarys were Dr.
and Mrs. Fred Reeser, Rick and
Rebecca of Potomic, Md. and
Patrick Dickson, Pala Alta,
Calif.
Mrs . Bertha Canaday
returned Saturday night from
Columbus where she spent
several days visiting Mrs .
Mildred Gamblin.
Mr. and Mrs. Truman Russell
joined their son and daughterin-law, Mr .. and Mrs. J. C.
Russell of Columbus, at Canton
for the Saturday wedding of
Miss Sharon Randels and Mr.
Steve Toomey at the First ·
Christian Church there.
Mr. and Mrs. William Scott of
Cheshire and their son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Steven Scott, Pomeroy, have
returned from a vacation at
Camp Boulder on Lake . Erie.
The couples spent a week
fishing and sightseeing.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
and daughter, Jayne, returned
Saturday from Columbus after
a several days' visit with Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Hammer and
daughters, Kim and Lou Ann.
Also visiting with Mr. and Mrs.
Hammer was Miss Mary
Dennis of East Liverpool,
formerly of Middleport.
Twila Clatworthy. Nancy
Thompson, Jeff Tyo and Mike
Custer, 1971 graduates of Meigs
High School, and Art Hill, 1971
graduate of Southern High
School, entered Rio Grande
College Monday.
Thomas Omar Russell of
Columbus, a former Middleport
area resident, is a patient at the
Doctors
Hospital
West,
Columbus, for treatment of a
heart condition. Visiting there
with him Sunday were his
sister, Mrs. Hubert Pullins,
Middleport, and Mrs. Edward
Stobart.
Edward Stobart, patient at

•

'

'::September was the seventh
oionth In the ancient Roman
~endar which began With
'March.

East Main St. members. Mrs.
Robert Kuhn gave prayer wiUt
potluck refreshments being
served to those named and Mrs.
J . Edward Foster, the Rev.
Robert Kuhn, Mrs. Ellen Couch,
Mrs. Burton Smith, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Watson, Mrs. Hariell
Sterrett, Mrs. Margaret Bailey,
Mrs. Phyllis Skinner, and Mrs.
Mary Shelton.
Thank-you cards for flowers
were read from Mrs. U!wis
Stanley and Mrs. Oliver
Michael, both hospitalized
recently.

Personal Notes

•

Now
.. You Know

•

.

.263 miles. The low bid was
f'-4,900.50 compared to the state
estimate of $26,500.
.
The latgest contract was $1.3
million for resurfacing of 12.67
mile section of Interstate 70 in
Clark and Montgomery COtl11·
lies . .

it was called the American
Society for Control of Cancer.
In 1956 eight million dollars
was donated for cancer
research, and in 1971 24 million
dollars was contribu~ed to
research Miller said.
One out of every three lives
are cured of cancer ! Miller
stated, and it could be orie out of
every two Miller said.
Miller presented Blackwood
who presided at the meeting, a
small plaque for the local
cancer office which l"as inscribed "We Bettered Our
Best." Blackwood w~s also
presented a past president pin
from Miller.
Blackwood was given a
standing ovation for his years of
service to the cancer society.
Framed citations fo~ helping
to strengthen the fight against
cancer were presenled to The
Daily Sentinel, the; Athens
Messenger and WMPO Radio
by Blackwood.
Refreshments were served
following the meeting. The
meeting was held in th~ meeting
room of the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Company.

Men Ordered
To Report
For Physicals
•

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Men
selected last month jor possible
induction into the armed forces
next year must begin reporting
today for their physical examin·
ations even though no authority
now exists to draft them.
A Selective SerVice spokes·
man said these men, whose
lottery numbers were drawn
Aug. 5 for next ·year's draft
calls, are ·being Dfllered to take
their physicals lr! anticipation
of the resumptiOI\ of the draft.
He said " not :very many,

perhaps hundreds" in this
category would report today to
the 70 armed forces entrance
and examining stations around
the nation.
Since JWte 30, when the old
draft law expired, only those
whose lottery qumbers were
drawn last year and those just
emerging from 5tudent deferments had been caUed for
physicals in preparation for the
tiJile when Congress may pass
a two-year extension of the
draft law.
;
But the spokElSffi8n said the
law authorized, the Selective
Service to begin . ordering
physicals Sept. ;I for men who
may be drafted during the
coming year.
Both houses · of Congress
agreed to exte~d the draft law
for two years. !lut the measure
has been stallf'd by disagreement over an l'Jlti-war amendment and draf,t opponents said
Utey would lajmch a filibuster
when Congress returns next
week.

i

Jurors were seated today in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court for a trial evolving from a
sui l for money.
Plaintiffs in the action are
Mr . and Mrs. Russell Bailey
•.who have filed suit in the
amount of $20,000 against Harry
G. Brown, Minersville .
Brown was the driver of a car
in which their daughter, Barbara, was killed on May 26, 1970.
The accident occurred o'l Rt. 7
following the de ceased's
graduation from Eastern High
School.

By United Press International
Violent change characterited
the passing of August in
portions of the Northwest and
the Gulf Coast while typical ,
late summer weather patterns
prevailed over most of the
remamder of the natton .
Cool air drifted over the
Northwest tod.ay on the h""ls of
Tuesdaymght sThunderstorms,
whtch brought htgh wmds and
locally heavy rams to much of
the area. No damage or
tn)urtes were attrtbuted to the
storms.
.
ThWtderstorms resulted. m
V:trnado l hreats as htg~ winds
and hatl lashed portions of
South Texas Tuesday. A lOrnado touched down near Port
Mansfteld, Tex .• but there were
no reports of damage or
injuries.
Hail and heavy rains pelted
portions of Houston and a
waterspout appeared over the
Gulf near Galveston, but
dissipated.
Showers and thunderstorms
were scattered over much of
the nation early today, through
the heaviest concentrations
were in the Gulf Coast Slates.
Cool weather was also
prevalent from the Dakolas 10
the Northern Atlantic States,
while warmer temperatures
reigned over much of the nation
~arly
today, through the
'heaviest concentrations were in
the Gulf Coast States.
Early morning temperatures
ranged from 94 at Phoenix,
Ariz., to 41 at Houlton, Maine.

f.

Saigon

.

TEN CENTS
.

'

it By

Demonstrators
SAIGON (UP!) - The government announced today that
presidential elections will be
held as scheduled Oct. 3 with
President Nguyen Van Thieu as
the sole candidate. Reversing
itself again, the Supreme Court
ruled Vice President Nguyen
Cao Ky off the ballot.
The announcement came as
combat police battled two
separate groups of students
taking to the streets in Saigon
in demonstrations against the
government, the war and
Americans. An American soldier was be a len and kicked by
the demonstrators.
Retired Gen . Duong Van
"Big" Minh already had
removed himself from the·
presidential race on the
grounds that Thieu had rigged
it. Minh issued a statement
today obviously aimed at u.s.
Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker

accusing him of slanderous and back in the race. Today it ruled

insolent colonialism in his
efforts to persuade Minh to
remain in the campaign.
A communique from the
prime minister's office said
that Thieu and his running
male, Sen . Tran Van Huang,
are now " the only ticket
running for the presidency and
vice presidency of the Republic
of Vietnam in the next Oct. 3,
1971, elections."
The communique said that
government agencies have been
ordered to make preparations
to carry out the elections on
schedule.
The Supreme Court ruling on
Ky was its second reversal. He
was first ruled off the ballot on
grounds that he did not have
enough valid nominating signa·
Lures under a new election law
pushed through by Thieu. Then
it reversed itself and put him

him off again.
Mtnh's office issued a statement blasting U.S. officials meaning Bunker --as slanderous, insolent colonialists. Minh
was angered by a slatement
attributed to U.S. diplomatic
sources that he had asked the
Americans to run the Oct. -3
elections.
The war action was quieter
after a series of w""kend
Communist attacks aimed at
disrupting the Sunday elections
but U.S. B~2.s and fighter·
bombers aided by ships of the
U.S. 7th Fleet bombarded
targets inside and just below
the Demilitarized Zope (DMZ)
today in the lOth day of the
airwar there . The Communists
attacked an ARVN armored
unit just below the DMZ but
inflicted little or no damage.

Darbydale Girl Is One Millionth
Ohio State Fair Visitor Tuesday

·3

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - When
Judy Francis 18 Darbydale
passed through th~ gates of th~
Ohio State Fair Tuesday, she
was handed a large stuffed animal and free ride tickets.
The reason was a milestone
in the 12-&lt;lay festival -arrival
of the one millionth visitor.
A total of 154,263 was drawn
to the fairgroWtds during its
sixth day tor a total thus far
of 1,128,552. Fair officials are
estimating close to the 2.2 million of last year will come to
Expohio •71 .
Today singer Tom Jones continued in the grandstand, with
4:30 and 8:30 p.m. perf ormances, while the Senior Fair
Dairy· cattle Show also was
held, along with the Senior Fair
Swine Show, Senior Fair Sheep
Show and auto thriU show.
The annual car drop demonstration for traffic safety was
scheduled at noon in front of
the grandstand.
An auto suspended from a
height of 125 feet is dropped on

Leo Childs,

Succumbs

Leo D. Childs, 72, Headley St.,
Middleport, a retired New York
Central railroad conductor,
died Tuesday at the Holzer
Medical Center_
• Mr. Childs was a member of
the Middleport Church of
Christ. He was a veteran of
COLUMBUS (UP)) - Cool WWI haying served in the
weather has delayed the spread Army and was a member of
of corn blight disease in Ohio Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
and significant damage to the American Legion. He was
crop will be limited, according employed by the New York
to an Ohio State University of- Central Railroad for 49 years
before his retirement and was a
ficial.
of the Brotherhood of
member
Dr. C. Wayne Ellett, director
of the OSU plant disease clinic, Railroad Trainmen .
said today the infecUcus disease Surviving Mr. Childs are hia
hasn't spread as rapidly during wife, Ida Bodkin Childs, a
uie past six weeks because the daughter, Mrs . 'Paul (Virginia)
dry, cool weather hasn't been Scott of Middleport, a foster
brother, Harry McGuffin of
favorable to the blight.
Middleport,
two grandEllett, however, said the
blight has been confirmed in 80 daughters, Mrs. Kenneth
( Barbara) Scites, Jr. , ot
of Ohio's 88 counties.
Dan C. Tucker, statistician of Pomeroy and Mrs. Forrest
the Ohio Agricultural Extension (Carol) Bachtel of Middleport,
Service, said two-thirds of the two great-grandsons, Timmy
corn crop was dented, but not and Eric Scites, and several
nieces and nephews. He was
hard.
·
This year's corn maturity is preceded in death by his
equal to last year, be said, but parents, the late Robert and
above the 1961&gt;-1969 average ma- Lillie McGuffin Childs and five
turity of 35 per cent corn dent- brothers. Mr. Childs was hom
ed, but not hard, on August 30. Jan. 21, 1899 at Ambrosia, W.
Fifteen percent of the 1971 corn Va .
crop in Ohio is mature and safe Funeral services will be held
at 3 p. m. Friday at the
from frost , he said.
Tucker also reported corn si· Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
!age .is 15 per cent harvesled. with the Rev. Eugene UnNinely.five per cent of Ohio's derwood officiating. jlurial will
soybean crop has pods set with be in Gravel Hill Cemtery at
green leaves, Tucker said. Pods Cheshire. Friends may call at
are still forming on the other 5 the funeral home at anytime
after 10 a. m. on Thursday.
per cent.
Of the total soybean acreage, Graveside military rites will be
25 per cent has leaves turning conducted by F""ney-Bennett
yellow"'" the same as last year. ~osl 128, American U!gion.

another car to simulate a headon collision at an esti.mated
speed of 62 miles per hour.
"The demonstration is designed to bring into sharp, dramatic focus the potential, yet real,
dangers that result from reckless driving," said state Highway Safety Director Eugene P.
O'Grady.
· Tuesday at the fair, an Adams CoWtty family swpt bon--~-------­

FORFEIT BONDS
Two defendants forfeited
bonds and a third was fined in
the court of Middleport Mayor
C. 0. Fisher Tuesday night.
Forfeiting $30 bonds were C.
A. Lawson, 41, Middleport
Route I, charged with fighting,
and William Reeves , 45,
Pomeroy. charged with into~icalion. Fined $li and costs on
a charge of fighting was
Sterling Neville, 30, Middleport.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Gregory
Satterfield , Racine; Linda
Baer, Minersville; William
· Connolly, Reedsville.
DISCHARGED Larry
Dugan.

ors in the Ayrshire dairy cattle
show.
Ronald, Rick and JoAnn Fenton of Winchester showed the
grand champion Ayrshire female, the reserve grand champion, senior champion, first and
second in cow classes, first and
second in junior yearling classes. first in heifer calf and won
both the senior and jUnior Ayrshire showmanship classea.
Also JoAnn won the junior
showmanship for exhibitors Wl·
der 15 and Rick, 16, won the
senior showmanship in the Ayrshire classes.
lit other judging:
-James Jagger, Mt. Gilead,
a 4-H member who has el&lt;hibited sheep for the past seven
years at the slate fair, closed
his 4-H career by showing the
champion ewe and ram of the
Corriedale breed, junior division.
- Pamela Rinehart,l8, Wapa,
koneta, won her third grand
championship in the junior division of the Brown Swiss dairy
caule show.
- Angela Blessing, Pleasantville, showed the grand champion and reserve champion in
the Toggenburg breed division
of the jWtior dairy goat show
and the grand champion in the
Saanen breed division.

-Cheryl Fielitz, West Unity,
showed the grand champion
barrow, a Hampshire.
- David Plummer, Carroll,
was named winner of the National Junior Horticulture As·
sociation show for his demonstration on "How to Grow
Beautiful Gladiolus in Your
Garden."
;
- Kathy Sherman, MI. Glle.ld,
was junior winner and Jim
Wolf, Carey, was senior. ~(1ft•·•
in sheep blocking and ll1llllljl"g
contest.
.:
-'A tolal of $131,247.82 was paid
for the 361 catUe sold in fhe
beef cattle roundup sale at !he
fair, averaging $36.35 per hundredweight;
In the junior division sale,
117 head sold for an average
of $35.07 per hundredweight,
and 244 cattle sold in the commercial cattle sale averaged
$37.30 per hundredweight.
In the daily senior citizens
activities, Mrs. Peg Ruffing and
Marlin Smith, both of Columbus, won the dance contest.
Cookie contest winners were
Mrs. Mason Jones of Bain·
bridge, Mrs. Grace RWtyan,
Mrs. Daisie Wilson and Mrs.
Erma Paul, all of Columbus.
Prominent senior citizen award
went 10 Mrs. George Dysart of
Columbus.

Blight Slowed
Down By Cool

Ohio Weather

r

I '

CO-CAPI'AINS- Chester Roush, left and Mike White, rlgltt have been named co-eapta1D1 of
the Wahama White Falcons football squad. center is head coach Don VanMeter. The Wabllul
squad will open their season on Fri~&lt;BY going &amp;gllinat Wirt County flt!!h pt Ellubeth.
'
'

�'.

-

t-'ftle o.q, lleatlnel,~, o.,Sept.l, um

IDnORIAI.$

.

See America First!
.

..

'•'

· .•. Significant Crack
In Berlin Wall

"It wa~ a slllllly, warm summer day. Many people were
out on pu:nics or excursions. It was a Sunday, the 13th
of Alll!ust, 1116l."
.
. Federal Republic ChanceUor Willy Brandt remihisces
In the West German magazine "siem." On August 13,
11161, l!randt was mayor of a place called West Berlin
. · "The .mind. did not want to accept what thli eyes beheld," pe.writes. "A big military task force of tlie (East
German) People's Army was sent into the eastern sector
of the city. On the sector boundary, concrete stakes were
rammed into the street, spiked . e~evaux-de,fri.Se were
•· m~talll!d, .~nd the whole thing was Jink:ed up with· barbed
~...
.
~.
In the. three days between the unrolling of the first
stretcb of wire and the laying of the first concrete block,
the West, In Brandt's opihion, mis$ed a chance to negotiate an agreement with the Soviet on the status of West
Berlin and of the rights of West Berliners.
Be that as It may, after 10 years of the existence of the
Wall and after recurring criaes, such an agreement has
at last been reached between the four one-time Allied
powers of the United States, the U.S.S.R., Britain and
France.
''N?, one should forget those who have died at. the
~all, says ~randt. "And no one shquld forget that there
IS. still shnoting at the Wall today. But protest against
this should not become a moral alibi for turning one's
back on responsll!illty for the much more difiicult task:
despite the Wall, of creating .conditions through which
the firing is ended."
,
The Wall Will not disappear by itseU, says Brandt, but
only when the division of Europe, of which the Wall is
tbe "absurd and unnatural" symbol, is ended.
The 'day when that division can end is still far distant
and Will be so Io11g as half the populatio11 of Europe has
no voice in deciding the kind of political system it Jives
under.
But the four-power accord on West Berlin, if only a
small step toward that day, is a major step away from
the threat of war that has hung. over Europe for many
more than 10 years.

Where We Stand on CO

•
· n

WILSTEIN
"
UPI
'WriRr
•
Tbe st. LOuis Cardinals bold
" lbeir ,b nittll every lime IIIey
play. It's not mougb far lbenrto
win. The Pltlsburgb Plra!es
~ also must lose.
"It's only natural to look at
, the SC«eboard to see what

•·

~/

That's good?
Not necessarily. The sink does not act quickly enough
to affect levels of carbon monoxide in such places as city
streets or jleavily traveled highways.
The scientists calculate, however, that the soil surface
,or ti!e continen~ United. States alone is capable of air
'sorbmg 5611 million metric tons of carbon mo11oxide a
year. This is more than 6.5 times the annual estimated
production of CO in the United States and almost three
· times the estimated worldwide production.
Now that's good. .

WIN AT BRIDGE

.Russ Enjoyed aWily Game
NOBTBQ
J
9
•

(D)

1

• K

+K JlO 98

WIST

•AQ?S

• 82
• Q 10 8 U
tA73
•u2

soum

EAST
• 16 3
• 976 3
tH
• K 10 8 3

•AKIOH
•AJ 5
t Q6 2
•H
Both vulnerable
Wool North Eost Solido
Pass 1 •
1•
Pass 3 •
Pass 4 N.T.
Pass 5 t
Pass 6 •
Pass Pass
Paso
()ponjng Ieod-fo 2
L
By O.WUI &amp; .James Jaeeby
From time to time we
have reported the death of a
dear friend but none ill the
world of bridge has saddened us more than that of
Russ Winterbotham.
Our column is 22 years old
and for the frrst 20 years
Russ checked every word. It
was part of his job, but be
treated it as a labor of love.
He retired a couple of years
ago but kept his interest in
the Jacoby column and
helped us develop JACOBY
MODERN.
Russ was an enthusiastic
bridge player and sent us
many hands but never let us
use his name. Now that he
can't stop us, here is one he
played about 10 years ago.

---------..1

.·.·

..

.

.·'·

.

iiiS use of Blackwood was
slightly unsound, but he expected North to hold a better hand. At that, the slam
would be a cinch without a
club . lead. However, West
·fed a club and Russ was in
trouble. He could take the
club finesse but Russ knew
his left-hand oppone11t was
a firm believer in the old
rule of never leading away
from a kil!g. Therefore,
Russ wasted no time with
that first trick. He just
hopped up with the ace of
clubs and Jed the six·spot
right back.
This put things squarely
up to East and East went
wrong. He played the three
of clubs. Russ cashed his
jack, drew trumps and eventually conceded a trick to
the ace of diamonds.
The play shouldn't have
worked but. as Russ poi11ted
out in. his letter, it was the
ollly way to brillg the slam
home.
11-

I.

The bidding has beerr
W011 North - • · Soulll

'
Pass
1t
Pass
You, South, hold:
•AK81.KQt4ti•KQ75
What do you do now?
A-Bid ooe spade. One beut
is just about os rood. but do
not hid in no-trump.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Your partner raises you to
two . spades. What do you do
now?

BARBS

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON-( NEAl
We haven' t done it yet, but we now have the capability
of storing a 12-page dossier on every man, woman and
child among the 210 million Americans on a single, 4,500foot reel of magnetic tape.
The kinds of electronic sensors dropped by U.S. aircraft over the Ho Chi Minh trail to detect North Vietnamese trucks and other vehicles can be adapted lor
what might be called "personal tracking."
Some are already being used in individual cases to
warn of impending be art attacks. They could as well
be employed to track our movements, locate us, measure
our emotions and thoughts.
We hear a lot about the perils of wire-tappi11g. But
the potential dan~er is much greater than most civil
libertarians ever discuss.
Today we can dispatch computerized information
almost instantaneously anywhere in the world. Millions
of bits of personal data travel over leased wire circuits.
These lines can be taped, and vast storehouses of information placed in unauthorized bands.
These realities and prospects give you some•idea how•
far the invasion of privacy has go11e in this countryand how much farther it may go.
A lot of people are stirr~d up about the matter, even
though its dimensions are only dimly perceived. And
one man who is laboring hard to put the public glare on
the issue is Prof. Arthur Miller of the celebrated Univer·
sity of Michigan Law School at Ann Arbor.
Miller has written an intricately woven book on the
subject, "The Assault on Privacy." He observes that
we Americans can bardiy move about .these days without
being taped.
File a tax return, apply for government benefits. seek
life i11surance or a credit card, try for a home mortgage.
fly on .a commercial airline. stay in a chain hotel . and
you most likely will be leaving your electronic tracks in
a computer's memory bank somewhere.
We have not reached the point where all our life records are packed onto one long reel of tape. But we seem
to be moving that way.
In most cases. our job, fina11cial, credit and perhaps
medical histories are on file. Depending on the ranee
of benefit and services we have sought, and the types
of jobs we have tried to qualify for, those histories may
be incredibly detailed.
What properly worries Professor Miller . for one thing,
_i~ this trend toward centralizing all this imme11se information in just a few key data banks.
Drawn to,:rether, this information may provide very
comulex profiles of tens of millions of Americans. Ob·
vious!y; highly useful purposes mav he served.
But there are severe handicaps. The danger of putting
confidential medical information in the wrong hands is
clear. Much financial and other personal data may be
subject to varying internretations. depending on who is
using it. The Internal Revenue Service has a right to
know your income. In the ha11ds of a business firm .
however. that figure can be used for a sales approach
you may not welcome.
•
.
..
.
The selling of personal data (even umvers1ties do ttl
has become a very common pr,actice todav. Confidences
about your personal attitudes J!iven to a job interviewer
or some other legitimate interrol!ator mav be used bv
•orne comnany to get at you subtlv. One firm comPiles
data on doctors so drue companies can promote their
nroducts on a personal ba,is. A lender worried about ,
renavment mav check on how you !l]lend your money.
The whole thin!! is close to "brain-watching." The
worst of it. says Miller. is that the people who eather
and weigh data make l!l'ave errors. They freeze injustice
in computer data banks imperVious to assault.

stars

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i

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'••
J

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By PIDL PASTORET
The guy who admires
most the colorful leaves of
autum!! has no trees in his
own yard.
•

• 1

-u.

•

An optimist is a fellow
owning a ski lodge wlw
hopes to make it big in
September.

• • •

No, Gwendolyn, smoking
pot isn't the way to "higher''
education.

• • •

"Crab" gra.ss usuallybelongs to the fanatic
wlw tweezer·tends a perfect lawn.

DR.. lAWRENCE
. E.I.AMB

Type of Arthritis
With Wide.Effects

I

·-

..
-.

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb-I am :r1
years old. Whel! I was about
12 years old, I was shot with
a "BB" gun above the eye.
I am quite certain the shot
(copper) remained ill the
skin because I used to be
able to feel what it felt like.
I have bad rheumatoid arthritis for over 14 years and
have had many medical examinations but never mentiol!ed the shot before. My
question is - could the copper in the shot in my system
be in any way related to ·the
rheumatoid arthritis or wbat
effect, if any, could the copper have 011 the system? My
health seems to be general·
ly poor.

thritis ~ec ei ve adequate
medical attention. Much can
be dooe. This includes measures to prevent deformities.
It is important to learn
the best way to try to maintain a full range of motion
for all the joints. In certain
cases w h e r e deformities
have ~ surgery can
be very Useful.
I would like to recommend
to you the services of The
Arthritis Foundation, a nonprofit organization formed
to help people with arthritis.
Tile organization works with
d o e t o r s and community
leaders. They help support
arthritis clinics that illtegrate all the differertt -:-:·
cialty ateas needed an?. "'"'"
home-care program~ Snr..e
family doctors like 1u ilave
their patients seen b)'. a specialized clinic, geared to
help with tbe complex problems of the arthritis patient
Such clinics Can oftel! provide services or have facil.
ities that the family doctor
may not be able to support
from his office facility. A
doctor woo wisbes to use
these services for his patients can do so by coDtacting his nearest Arthritis
Foundation C h a p t e r by
checking listings in the telephooe boob of larger cities
or tbe nearest chapter can
be located f!trough the services of the Arthritis FoUndation, 1212 Avenue of the
Americas, New York, N.Y.
10036. The . chapters also
have valuable literature for
patients who need to learn
more about arthritis.
INEWSPAPII INTlli'IIK AUN.)

Helen Bottel--

Dmrllelm:
'lllisilulilli£dt to write, for lfeiiiM!Ct W&lt;me~~. But lately IIley
.dall'l mait. u.m mprd.
lf I • WB~i&amp;Jtllmd, 1 can re-learn, b!t let's haft an unclonlaldial! 1lle CCI.. blr is 8 JJIIII'S meeting place.
~,._los, jEillipl wroagly, are COIIIlidered fair game.
Jllley -'lea tbe llllb,.lbey should slay the beck out, ar OlDie
wilb
1lllD cm stay C111111JU8Uvely lOber.
I...,.. llle will:ll111lD SICGQts lbe old Dllll at the blr, then
a ' I Me a lilhwife if bt "!coull" back. Too often llhe In·
lti•-Ms a
*illk, ailll ber shrewislmess can-foul .., a
wbale deot.
Abo, if • . 1 • ..-e gcmg IIJ. we• hotpants (we called 'em
DrWiai1ll illiDJ' day ), for cryln' 11111 loud, can't they wear
~tits
lbem! If IIley daa't, there's no real r em for
p:ipilc to tile IDeal F" wa~ if JlUill"' are made. MOll males
..., prtdaiDIJ, • are- femeJes. If they can't play for the
sla' llftbepme,lbeyoltaild slay lllltofit!
'Ill pat it iilill'e 111i1111J, bow many wWltD ~ days lmo'ir
how to bt a nwlllllJ', to keep frun emuculaling a man; to be a
'l'ileal ' lislniJJRDdof? -JOOEPH
Dell' Joe:
II t4' .x•aaJmQ!jon I!Qt lbe ''WIIcbes" get~ atlentim,

a-

-a

,a!

..

(ADd ,.-letl!rwill ietslatie ll'om the liberatillll fnllt!)H.
Delrllelm:
· I'm iiiiDR willlu Elinlpe;n man, but he says all Ameriean
wW&amp; are ._, I•
we'Ye 00s! IIJ)Oiled by wilily-washy
Alnllri&amp;i-. wliDiet IISnm lbe bou3e ailll bank accomt, then
caD llllm "'DD)e I t • • b "
How raw I p:llft I nal a ohniuting man? He tb1nb I'm
JlllllillB em a .,.to trap bim ajdbrr "U. S. female cbaracltii lie"- AIIDUCAN 1IOJIAN
DelrWcma:
A dwacfaillie G ,_- Ellnlpean male is apparenlly nimtl
Nata rclllllriqe,eqniek.tbiokerlaystheblamem
II

•
_..,al.."
thli&amp;m£

MI*DBa:opeaa~.eall

Malor ~gue StondiJ!PS
By Un1ted Press International
American League
East
W. L. Pel. GB
Baltimore
81 48 .628
O..troit
£ 72 61 .S41 11
70 63 .526 13
Boston
New york
66 68 .493 17'h
Washington 56 76 .4U 26'12
Cleveland
53 81 .396 301h
West

,.

W L Pel. GB

Oakland

_,
•
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,
"
,,
"

87

~

.649 ....

1be field."
Reuss.. who made his 30th
start of the year, was very
concerned about wluit was
go~ 011 UIIUI !lUgs started
JlOA!i!lg in the bOtkm of the
ninth. Nola!! Ryan st&amp;rted the
~fer New Yen and UIIUI be
was lifted fer a pincb-bitter in
.
llieSemltli;''ReUSs had~ reason til be cllllceflled.
The Cardinals who I!DW have
CINCINNATI (UPI) -They
wllll eight of their last Dil!e
games, jumped to a 1-G lesd in pinned the Dickname, "Tbe Vulthe first when Lou Brock lure," oo Phil Regan, now witll
.tjle Chicago Cubs, after · he
picked up 14 victcries for the
Los Angeles Dodgers a few
years back while pitching in relief.
. .
Wayne Granger doesn't think
he has earned a similar mooiker even thoogh he has gained
Natioil..l LNgue
a couple of victories that one
L. Pd. GB might refer to as lucky while
Pittsburgh
81 56 .591
turning ill relief stints ill five of
St. Louis
11 60 .556 s
the Cincinnati Reds' last six
~~~~k
~ ~ : : l~lf, games.
Philadelphia &gt;1 76 .429 22
''Heck," said WaYQe Tuesday
Nlontreal
56 75 .427 22
night, "Regan won those 14 in
West
ooe year to earn his nickname.
L. Pel.
San Francisco W
79. 56
.SBS ,GB
... It'-~
.....es me a boutthre e years to
Los Angeles 71 64 .526 B win that many."
~~~~~~~all
: ~ :~~ :~:~
Wocking in five of the Reds'
Houston
64 71 .474 15
last six games, Granger has
San Diego
51 85 .375 28'h won two, lost two and picked up
Tuesday's Resuns
a save.
Chi 7 Montrl 6 llst, 10 innings)
x-Mnlrl 8 Chicago 1 (2nd)
Pittsburgh 7 Philadelphia s
St. Louis 2 New York 1
Cincinnati 2 San Diego 1
011

E:/.1

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,

4

•
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·

riChl to date b!t you wouldn't

-ttowJ --ml1114bebe'lldllngehistune. -H.

Dlrllelm:
Ow- a · g 111e 1o1m'·em a "biD of diwrcement," this man's
J1b1e i&amp;liwG diNClt1118J slillsalisfy both God and our pl" II rt
CGWlaJ , "
]f tile ....... is frieDdr, Md 1111 p1Iperty battles lli'll inwll'llll, bt 1111.J line Jli .... lyl.draa .., the easily _otto!neble
ll!pltl helflGrlllllilllpbpjt lbem to lbe COirl witlllllt the lid
Ill. In,a-.
.
II)' piiilt is, Gad'llnr, eben umctly introduced, abould
bring romp!ete stoppage of bald liP ill _, jlilll mm. - FRANK
plant operations. This is • Dell' lind::
throwback to the antiquated
Dlll'l a.t• it!
escape IOJlte of "IIIIOke
Flir'llleSIR Ill •&amp;•t*"l, bow llbaat this: "When a man is
means jobs"; it is environ- aewlJIIM•itd,btlilllllliltp..twllllllte _ , ar be cltlrged
=~ a c k m a II of the wi.lb Mlf
; lit m.u bt free at bame lllle year to be lllppy
-1. W. Ab(l, prui&lt;Unt of wi.lb llis n. - " (llnl. Jl:$)
Unlttd $ttei1D07'Mrl of
lhft' ds; 'l'UeDille! -B.
A.merica.
· ·
Dell' llelew:
.
. look though
A aft fir ;s • .......,." When that '\eltanied
It hegmsto
as
rr' ".._a 'IDbciiOW '-;.toDeJDGre''oflerbimiiQ'
wben we d011't lrnaw "what
· 1 li
Get
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else to do, and we wmt w 1P"'L CIIIW 2 • .,
·,
un: ,..-J a
.
create~ lllitRon of adioD chclbft...AflliJa
0 af....,tolbeclgarellellp,erpt
arid co11cern, we create a alraceillllebl&lt;' tfllle1 I ... Beaeitdosl'lllbow. Tbe
new ~t in .t!Je While House IIIIIIIe
llilr a pelf • two, • lllat enn lbe lllCIIt al a
~~mtingn tt ,tbe~~co- dp&amp;!1 a I 'Disis..-ftwx•peaple111lDwutto.Pt
0
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p·
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solution to tbe prob'
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-Sen. AbrCII!al!l A.. R~biooff, Dill....., • .....,....._ .. ' I ._........_belp• YOU ..__..also
D-C01111., 011 Preudenl ·
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........
NU....'s piQ for colnbat- wl
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Add! .nBeli!IIBattelln '
t~ dl'tlfl abue.
ff 1111 a I 5 •

TIMElY .QUOTES.:

a:J

ra•

'C.•-.••ca •

.

I ' '

-

'

"A pretty eventual week,"
was the way Granger put it
after he evened his won.Jossr
mark at 6;111 when Pete Rose
singled borne Tommy Helms
with ooe out in the ninth inning
tn give the Reds a 2-1 victory
over the San Diego P'!dre~,.,.
Stmpsoo Takel! Out
Granger had inherited a 1-0
lesd after taking over for Red
starter Wayne Simpson when
the latter bowed out for a pinch
hitter after seven innings.
Simpson was a little disappointecl,butnotsurprised, when
manager Sparky Anderson
gave him the hook.
That is because Sparky had
lold Simpson a few weeks ago
lhat he didn't plan to pitch
Wayne more than seven innings
'in any game remaining on the
schedule.

WILMlNGTON, Del. (UPI)An array of 1AJp goHers, some of
1hem hoping for a springboard
into pro golf and others interested only in hooor, glory
and a gold medal, tee off today
in the 7lst U.S. Amateur Golf
Championship at the plush
Wilmington CoWltry Club in
nearby Greenville.
The field .or 150 entered into
the prestigious U.S.G.A.~sored event incIuded two
veteran former champions and
a pack of youthful contenders
who have dominated the
·
't -L-- ed fr
lourney smce
I uwurg
om
match to medal play in 11165.
The veteran titlists were
William c. Campbell, 48,. a
W V •
·
Hunting•.... , . a. msurance
IJrokerwhowcn in 1964, the last
lime lbe . toomey was match
play; . an_cf' ~canadals G-ary
Cowan, 32• wh0 caplured the
eventinaplayoffin1966atthe
Merioo Golf Cl b · Ardm
ore,
u lD
Pa
The "youngsters" considered
o•n Crenfa vorites included oc
shaw, l9, of the University of

NCAA title tliis year, and Jim
Simons, 21, &lt;i Butler, Pa., who
astmishingly took a two-slloke
leadgolngintothefinalroundti
the U.S. Open last June, only to
faU back.
Other youthful contenders
were Tom Kite Jr., 21, also of
the Uhiversity of Texas, who
lost by one stroke last year to
La110y Wadkins, and Vinnie
Giles, of Richmond, Va., an
"oldster~· at 28, who was runnerup in 1967, 1968 and 1969.
Auniquefeatureofthisyear's
tournament . was a family
threesome with veteran
amateur Bill HYQdman III, of
Huntingdon Valley, Pa., runnerup in the British Amateur in

Los Angls 300 010 101- 6 10 o
Housloo 000 100 llOO- 1 9 1
Alexander (6-~l and Fergu.
son;. Cook, Ray (7), H~rrls (1),
t.emasler (9) and Edwards. LP
-Cook (0-4). HR-Parker (6th).

'

Phlla
022 010 llOO- 5 11 1
Pltlsbrgh 000 021 40x- 7 B 3
Lersch, Hoerner (7) and .
• McCarver; Moose, Veale '(3),
, Kticln 16), Miller (8) and May.
· WP-Kison (4-4). LP-Hoerner
~ (.t-4).

••

San Diego 000 000 001- I 6 0

Ontlnnall 010 000 001- 2 7 0
Norman, Severi~sen (9) and
" Barton; Simpson. Granger (81
,, and Bench. WP-:-Granger (~) .
Li&gt;--Severinsen (2-S).
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I

1

"I missed a 46-yarder at Mi. he rememhers.
anu,"
His theory of trying hard is:
"I think if I can make 'em
now,! make 'em in !he regular
season too."
Brown plans to start rookie
"M hall d f
Ol
Eu ars
an ormer ympic sprinter Tonunie Smith as
wide receivers Saturday night
against the Green Bay Packers
to see how !hey perform as the
club nears tlle deadline for cutling the squad to 44 players.
That cut must be made by
next Monday and the team
must be down to 40 by Sept.
13. The Bengals have 49 play~rs with .!he placing of the . inJured ·Chtp 1·Myers
on the IDJur·
ed
t
waover IS •
Brown said Virgil Carter will
he !he starting quarterback
when !he Bengals open thetr

season against Philadelphia
SeP.l 19, Wl'th rook'te Kenny An derson in the backup position.
"Virgil will be the starter,"
Brown said. "We'll go with the
h k .
th' th
guy w o nows every mg at
goes with it. Ken could move
. to 't
ti
'f v· 'I ts
m t some me 1 1rg1 ge
an injury, or in time Ken could
be good enough to take over.
"But against Philadelphia, it'
will probably be Virgil," Brown
said. "We've never really discussed it. We sort of assumed
it would be as it is now."

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KEITH GOBLE FORD
Locust St.
.·

'

Saturday night against the New
York Giants.
International League Standings "Nelson will play the first half
By United Press International Saturday," said Skorich.
W L Pet. GB "Mike Phipps will start !he
x-Rochesler
84 S4 ./111 Charleston
78 60 .565 6 second half. I also hope lo use
Tidewaler
77 61 .558 7 Don Gault some. We're now in
Syracuse
73 65 .529 il tlle process of shaking down for
, ~~~~~~~:
:: :: : : :~ the regular season."
Toledo
Sll 80 .420 26
Winnipeg
44 94 .319 40
•·clinched pennant

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No Otller Complny Dlrts To otter lbls

although "I haven't been hittil!g
the ball too good."
Simons, runnerup in the
British Amateur this year, has
been plagued by ligament
problems in his left thumb,
"which hasn't come around"
and was doubtful Tuesday of his
playing status and chances.
The Wake Forest star said the
thumb hurt when he swung and
he has been taking "lots of
aspirin" for the pain after
getting a shot from a physician
last week.
The tow-headed youth said he
had debated withdrawing from
tlle tournament but said Tuesday "I guess I'm going to play."

doubleheader 6-3 after losing · • - - - - - -..
the first game to Delloit 6-1.
Ken Henderson drove in three
runs witll his 1Mh homer and
Gaylocd Perry pitched a seven
hit shutout as the Giants piled
up 11 hits off three Braves
pitchers and kept their eightgame lead in the Western
Division.
Perry (14-10) struck out five
and walked only one man as the

Muhlman.n 'B·est In Busmess . re;:e s e n1!~ive~ ~ ;;.Jn;~n ~

For Season

4) .

1969 and 1970, entered along
with his sons, William HYQd·
man IV, 31, and Thomas, 26.
Kite,ooeofthosescheduledlo
tee off early in today's opening
round of the par 71, 6,872-yard
course, thought more of
Crenshaw's chances than of his
own.
"I'D tell you one thing," Kite
said while playing in a practice
round Tuesday, "Crenshaw
wasn't a factor last year but I
guarantee he will be this year."
Crenshaw, who won tlle
recent Eastern amateilr and
also captured the Southern
amateur, said he fell his
chances here were "good"

tllem fastballs," Reuss said. clinching magic number. They
"It's easier when you throw have '1:1 games left to.play.
fewer pitches, but when you ' Wes Parker slammed a .two·
win, it doesn't make any dif- run homer and rookie rtght.
bander Doyle Alexander. spaced
ference."
It didn't make any difference nine hits to lead the Dodgers
because Alou Jed off the ninth over Houslon. Parker's home
witll a single and then Torre run, a three-run blast, gav.e the .
singled. Tug McGraw csme in 20-year.old Alexander e~ough
to relieve Frisella and Ted runs to win his fifth game m hiS
Sinunons greeted him wilh a last six decisions.
single tllat scored Alou from
Pete Rose's one.out single in
second.
tlle ninth inning off reliever AI
The Cardinals were able to Severinsen scored Tommy
catch their breath but not the Helms to give the Reds the
Pirates, who beat the Phillies victory over San Diego.
and kept tlleir five-game lead in
A double by Leron Lee and a
!he National League East.
single by pinc)l.hitter Larry
'In other NL action, San Stahl tied the scoce at I · I in the
Francisco blitzed Atlanta 9-0, top of the ninth.
MBI!ny Sanguillen hit a twO·
1M! Angelex whipped Houston 6run
single, the third pinch·hit of
1, Cincinnati nipped San Diego
2-1, PlttsbW'gh downed Phi- the four-run seventll, as. the
Pirates overcame a five-ru,n
ladelphia .7·5 and Chicago
deficit to heat Philadelphia.
edged Montreal 7-6 in tlle first
The Expos set a club record
game of a doubleheader. The
for most nms in one inning,
second game was suspended
scoring eight in the sixth to grab
after six innings because of
darkness with the Expos an 8-1lead over the Cubs in the
second game after the Cubs won
leading 11-1.
the opener on Donn Kessinger's
In the American League Bos10\h-inning, bases loaded single
ton clipped Baltimore 4-3,
that went lhrough a five·man
Oakland beat California 4-1 ,
Washingtontopl&gt;!!d New York 6- infield.
Kessinger., who had seven
5, Kansas City downed Mil·
singles in nine limes at bat in
waukee 6-4, Minnesota overthe two games, scored the Cubs'
hauled Chicago 4-3 in 10 innings
only
run of the nigiJtcap after
and Clevelal!d came back to
reaching base on an error.
take the nightcap of a

2111

Out

•

was out in the top of the ninth
when Leron Lee doubled off
Granger. One out later pinch
hi Iter Larry Stahl singled home
Lee to tie the score.
Hebna' infield single touched
off the RedS' Dinth Inning. One
out later Padre relief pitcher AI
Severinsen walked pinch hitter
Jimmy Stewart and Rose
followed with his game-winning
hit.
The hit was Pete's second of
the game and going into tonight's game with San Diego he
needed 40 more lo reach his
annual goal of 200..
He admits his chances don't
look too good right now.
The game will match the
Reds' Gary Nolan against the
Padres' Dave Roberts and
winds up the current homestand
at Riverfront Stadium.

A ma,eur
.,
,..,
t
·.l ournamen Un derway

BUC k

•

"I haled to come out," admilled Simpson. "But after all
tlley're looking out for my inleresis."
"Do you wish they had started
doing tllat a little earlier?"
someone asked.
"I won't say that,:• answered
Simpson, who pitched around
500 innings over a 12-montll
span before hemorrhaging det
veloped in his right shoulder
last season after he had won 14
of 17 decisions.
$mPson yielded only four
hits, wallted three Bl!d struck
out three while blanking the
Padres the first seven innings.
"It's the best I've got all
season," he said. "I was hoping
I'd go nine, hoping they'd make
an exception about the seven
inning limil"
Rose Hllll 1&amp;0th
With the Reds leading 1~. one

"I threw 148 pitches, 128 of Giants reduced to 20 their !itle-

.

Millar L.qgue R....IIJ •
•tun11H Prftl~llo,. •
~ '
~
Am..-icJlft League
list GaJMl .
WILMINGTON, Ohio (UP!)Cleveland 100' 000 llOO- 1 4 1
Kicker
Horst Muhlmann conO..trolt
100 030 20x- 6 10 0
. t as
. Farmer. Ballinger (S), Hennicenlra te5 on his trade JUS
gan (8) and Fosse; Coleman
much in exhibition season as
(15-8) and Freehan. LP- By Uniied Preis International
dur.
mg !he regular. season and
Farm..- (5.2). HRs-Fosler
LeHi1111 Bailers
his boss te h
I
(13th), Cash l271h), McAuliffe
ra s liD as one o
National LNgue
(17th).
the best
G. AB R. H. Pel.
of the
Torre, St.L 136 528 79 191 .362 Texas, who became the first ''Ri ht. tod h ,
(2nd Game)
g
ay, e ~one
Bckrt, Chi 127 515 79 179 .348 college freshman to win the
Cleveland 003 300 llOO- 6 10 1 Clmnt, Pit 113 4S4 73 1S4 .339
best in the business," CincinO..lroil
001 010 too- 3 12 1 Garr,AII
131 437 87 179 .333
nati Bengals coacl\ Paul Brown
Colbert, Foster (7), McDowell Snglln, Pit 120 441 S4 152 .330
said Tuesday.
(8) and Suarez; Niekro, Denehy Jones, NY 115 4J.4 S4 143 .329
_ (S), Perranoski (6), Scher- H.Arn, All 119 416 80 134 .322
Muhbnann was deserving of
rmann (91 and Price. WP- Brock, St.L 131 529 101 110 .321
the praise.
eVPS
' Colbert (.t-~). LP- Niekro (6-7) . Davis. LA 131 528 68 166 .31~
.l ~·
He made good on field goals
HRs~hambliss (7th), Nettles Alou, St.L
126 517 68 162 .313
from 41, 18, 9, 32 and 24 yards
(23rdl.
.
American League
G. AB R. H. Pd. 11.1
last Saturday night and also
• Baltimore 000 120 llOO- 3 9 2 Oliva, Min 109 427 67 tst .354 lUBSOR
kicked
in the decidil!g extra
, Boston
300 000 001- ~ 9 1 Murcer, NY 130 ~73 82 152 .321
point as tbe Bengals eked out
Palmer (16-7) and Etchebar- Rllnd, Bit 114 392 69120 .306
• ren; Peters, Tiant (7) and Otis, KC
123 476 70 144 .303
~2~;:~?ls. over !he St.
Montgomery. WP-Tianl (1-7) . Tovar, Min 128 537 80161 .300
HR-"Etchebarren (7th l.
Rojas, KC 11S ~14 56 J24 .300
·
Muhlma nn ha s booted mne
'
Rchrdt, Chi 11~ ~18 44 125 .299
Washngln 000 005 001- 6 6 1 Care, Min 123 484 73 142 .293 OOLUMBUS (UPI) - Glen consecutive field goals in !he
New York 000 010 040- S 11 1 Horton, 0..1 11S ol36 62 127 .291 Mason, a sehior friiD Colmia, four games the Bengals have
Bosman, Pena (8), Grzenda Smith, Bos 132 518 72 149 .288
N.J., wbo played baclrup man to played !his summer and only
(8), Cox (BJ. Lindblad (8) and
Homes Runs
Casanova; Keklch, Hambright .National Logue: Stargell, All·AmeriCBI! middle guard ,Jim missed one of his 11 attempts.
16), Aker (8), McDaniel (9) and Ptt142; H. Aaron, All 39; May,
last year, broke his
Gibbs. WP-Lindblad 11-31. LP Cin 37; Williams, All and Stillwagon
.m Ohio Slate's football
ankle
-McDaniel (S-10) . HR-Minch- Johnson. Phil 28.
er (11th).
American League:· Smith, Jl'IICtice Tuesday and will miss
Bos, Mellon, Chi and Cash, Del tile entire se&amp;SOI!.
Kan City 010 011 216- 6 13 0 27; Jackson, Oak 25; Nettles,
"He'D be in a cast for six RECORDS BROKEN
Mllwakee 100 003 llOO- ~ 11 0 Clev and Murcer, NY 23.
weeks," Coach Woody Hayes
ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI)-SaraFitzmorris, Burgmeier (6),
Runs Batt..t In
York (6), Clemons (7), Aber- National LNgue: Torre, St.L said after consulting with tesm toga Itaeetrack's recent 24&lt;1ay
nathy (9) and May; Lockwood, 113; Slargell, Pill 112; H.
flat season broke aU records for
Weaver (7), Sanders (8) and Aaron, All 100; May. Cin 85; doctors.
Mason is !he third Buckeye to att.endanee and betting, it was
Rodriguez. WP-Burgmeler (6- Montanez, Phil 84.
6). LP-Lockwood {8-12). HRs-.
American LNgue: Killebrew, be lost. John Hughes and announced Tuesday by the New
Keough (2nd), Clemens llstl. · Mlnn 95; Bando, Oak · 84;
-· Murcer, NY 81; Smith, 8os 79; fullback Lou Camerllll both are York Slate Tax Commission.
AtlendaJjce reached 472,112 and
110 Innings J
B. Robinson and F. Robinson, out with knee injuries.
Chi
020 000 100 o- 3 13 1 Ball 77.
Mason m;=ed all spring drills the average daily handle was
·· Minn
000 100 002 1- ~ 9 1
because of knee surgery he $1,515,492.
Pitclli1111
•
Bradley, Johnson (9), Hinton
N•ti-1 LNgue: Jenkins, underwent prier to the Rose
ooL Keale( (101 and Egan. Chi 20-11; Ellis, Pl.tt and
Herrmann 10), Kaat, Haydel Carlton, SI.L 111-7; Downing, LA Bowl. He lost several days this
• . (7), Gebhard (9) and Miller- 16-8; Pappas, Chi 16-11.
fall because of a bead bump, but
' wald. WP--Gebhard (1 -1). LPAnierlc.~n League: Blue, Oak
Johnson (7-10). HR-Hershber- 23-6; Lollch, Del 21-10; Wood, sllll made enough prCII!feSS to
ger l2nd) .
Chi 111-10; Dobson. Ball 17-6; move into the No. 2 spot at
Hunter, Dak 17-11.
middle' guard behind junior
• Oakland 100 000 ~ 4 6 1
Kevin
Fletcher.
•· California 100 000 llOO- 1 ' 2
Two offensive regulars were
Odom, Knowles (8) and
.• Duncan; Murphy, Queen 18),
bobbled Tuesday. &lt;lluck Bonica
Allen (8) and Stephenson . .WPsufftored
a bruised knee and will
Odom (10-9). LP-Murphy (6- Chicago 200 300 100 1- 7 14 3
Morton, McGinn W, Mar- be out two ar three days and
• 1~) ... --- . .
shall (7), Reed (9), McAnally wingback TIDI campana !lllf(10) and Bateman; Pappas, fered a groin itljury. He 1r.u .
Natloi!al League
Regan ( 10) and Cannizzaro. WP
New York 000 000 OlD- 1 9 0 - Regan CS-3). LP-Reed (2-3). expected to workout today.
St. LouiS 100 000 001- 2 7 0
Ryan, Frisella (7), McGraw
(9) and Grote; Reuss (13·12l
and Simmons. LP-Frlsella (6-

•

Danny Frisella relieved Ryan
and tlle Mets tied the game on
Jerry Grote's single Ulat scored
Clean Jooes from tllird.
Reuss held tlle Mets scoreless

in !he nil!lh, and alter having
scattered nine hits and struck
out 10 batters, the "Southpaw
probably would not have gone to
tlle mound again.

Rnv b
.
e.
....
· .. . - :l-=1.s. On H~l Tonight

Kansas .City 70 62 .530 16
Chicago
63 10 .~74 23Y2
California
63 72 .447 24'h
Minnesota
6Q 71 .458 25'h
Milwaukee 56 76 .424 30
Tuesday's Resuns
O..trolt 6 Cleve 1 (1st)
Oeve 6 O..troll 3 (2nd)
Minn 4 Chicago 3 (10 innings)
Kansas City 6 Milwaukee 4
Washington 6 New York 5
o
Boston 4 Baltimore 3
x·suspended,
6
innings,
dark·
Oakland 4 California 1
ness
Todoty's Problble Pitchers
Today's Prollable Pitchers
Washington (Gogolewski 3-31 Nlonlreal
(Britton 0-2) at
at New York IKline 10-12l.
Chicago
(Jenkins
20-111 .
Oakland (Dobson 14-3) at Atlanta (McQueen
4-11 at San
California (Messersmith U-12), Francisco( Cum berland
7-3).
night.
Philadelphia
(Fryman
9-SJ at
Chicago (Bradley 13-11) at Pittsburgh (Ellis 18-7), night.
Minnesota (Blyleven 11-151. New York (Seaver 15-8) at St.
night.
(Gibson 13-11), night.
Kansas City (Splittorff 7-6) at Louis
San
Diego (Roberts 11 -141 at
Milwaukee (Krausse 6. 11), Cincinnati
(Nolan 11-13), night.
night.
Los
Angeles
(Sulton 12-11) at
Oeveland .!Foster 7-11 or Houston (Billingham
6- J3),
Paul 2-41 at O..troit (Cain HI. night.
night.
Baltimore ICuellar 16-7) at
Tuesday's Games
Boston (Culp 14.12), night.
New York at Phila, night
Montreal at Chicago
Thursday's Games
Los Angls at Houston, night
Kansas City at Milwaukee
(Only games scheduled)
Baltimore at Boston
Cleveland at Detroit, night
/
Washington at New York, night
(Only games Sfheduled l

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walked, stole his 52nd base or door. His fastball look off and he
the season, wmt to tllird em a struck out 12 batters iJ1 the six
~le by Matty Alou and scored innlnll.! he pitched and gave up
no more walks aild ~Illy two
on a single by Joe Torre.
more
hits.
But then Ryan slanuned the

Linesoores
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HELEN-HEllUS!

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Dear Reader-All the people who wear copper bracelets to "c u r e arthritis"
would be very distressed at
your suggestion. I doubt the
small shot has any siJlnifi·
cant effect on your body or
your health.
Yes, I understand that you
probably feel in poor health
in general and .that isn't too
SU!Jl!ising. Rheumatoid . arthritis fs more than just a
disease of the joints. It does
cause fatigue and in many
people a feeling of general·
ized illness. It affects the
whole body. A low-grade
fever is commo11. It is a serious disease and deserves
careful attention to preve11t
The Almuac
deformities and to belp a
By Unltecl Press lnlemalional person lead as normal a life
Today is Wednesday, Sept. I, as possible.
!he 244\h day pf 1971. . .
It is important that the
'---..l~'l!
The moon IS between Its first person with rheumatoid ariM~Ejrfcji
quarter and full phase.
The morning stars are
Mercury and Saturn.
The evening
are Venus,
Mars and Jupiter:
I don't pay much atte11tioo
Those born on this day 31'e to the secretary. If you have
under the sign of Virgo.
a proble,m '!'th th~ la'!diord,
American author ReX Beach ro~ don t diSCUSS It With the
Janttor
was
born
on
Sept.
I,
18'17.
AFL.,
"IO pre •-'~G
On this da · histor .
....,nt eor,ge
Y.m
Y·
Meany, retorting to Labor
In 1878 Mtss Emma . Null Secretary Hodgson's criti'
became !he first-- telephone cism of Meany's .attitude
operator when she took over a t o ward the wage-price
switchboard in Boston.
freeze.
~~ In 1939 World War II broke The No. 1 stu11t of the No.
out as Germany invaded 1 stunt man of Jlut time.
Poland.
· -George Meany, president
In 1969 famed Washington
of the AFL-CIO, on Prericolumnist Drew Pearson died of
dent Nixon's planntd trip
a heart attack.
to Red China . .
We are increasillgly being
A !hough! lor today: British confronted by claims from
writ.er Hector Hugh Monro said, industry that tbe demands
made on it by citizens and
":·::··... • "Women and elephants never government
will .not control
fe&gt;rget an injury."
po II ti I ion but nther will

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Brain-Watching: .
This Is Your Life!

They'll Do It Every Time

Ni(bk:bD? TlllllllY Lecmetti of the Bit
IWI!de's final TV • • a poUed, gifted, at.
bdhe liJI&amp;Ier, is at lbi. Olpaeablaa ... Rotmey
Dqerfield apects llCill! of your l'eiiiM!Ct. just
,_. plfaws, allis own Dangel'field's .pot llll
Jllnt Aw. in lbe low 1111 ;.. New teeu&amp;e Cl'1lllb
~.mt~q.OO is hollclay calolp at the
Blillllllr Grill, etpedally fir the girls.
.ialiiJT Wesflla's llll E. 5ttb St. ._ good
p!tile. jaHDck, oewr too noily, 1llilally jamlllllll ... Far ~4bow biz afidoaadal, the
Ol*n lbdrld has 'lbe Kids Frml Splln (Los
a.-lade F,lpllla ), aJ.tlln longplay d;volmlte
eqilllliGl ; hula girls wriggle at Hawaii Kat atop
llle Winler Gardea 'lbeater where you alao c.m
haft a llduYII acitq earlier-evening
llle smllb "Follies" musical ... 'lbe hotels
(Americalla,Hiltm,&amp;muniletc.) have intimate
~ in lbeir public l'OOIJl8 ... 'lbe llrUe
llalel's..-rn's is lbe finest di8cotek In town
willllift CJilliPI behn!en the I.Btest rocktnliDBJ.
l'laally, tbe Broedway lbeeter: u you'll take
.......t, a- are lbe best ... ''Sieulb," at the
lfm;ie 1m, • dazzlingly deligb1ful wbocbllt,
na.r, ~~. with Allthooy Quayle and
Daaal Dllm8lly; "No, No, Nanette" at tbe 4llb
SL 'lllrah ( two IDagbelt ticteta in !Own, tho);
'"Pillliah·atlbe Winter Garden, "Ompllly" at
llleAlriD, " Applau.le" at lbe Palace, "F'iddler llll
tbe Raul" at lbe Broadway, ''Promlaea,
~at the Shubert, "177&amp;" at lbe Majl!lltic
- .n - emineDtly wartb the price ... The
...,.._ "Biltterflies Are Free" Is an eoclianting
dallllf a cmtedy, lllllgbty but not offensively;
..S wlcame to &amp;own, folta -It's a Great Place
.., Visil

~..... --~-

Assault on Privacy

gas.

luels."

By .STEVE

~.. - ~ -t'lttsburgb'rdolng;..-~Jerry
• Reuss said after pllchlng the
Cardinals to a 2-1 victory over
the New Yen Meta Tuesday
Dighl "But you have to be tmn
cmcemed about what's goil!g

BRUCE BIOSSAT

Three scientists with the Stanford Research II!Stitute
believe the explanation may lie in the metabolism of
micro-organisms in the soU. They conducted experiments
in which sterile soU fail~ to take up earllon monoxide,
w~ most normal soils absorbed it at an average
.
rate of 8.« mlligrams per bo'!l' per square meter.
Soil, they conclude, "must now be considered as a
major I!Btural sink for CO that is relt!ased into the atmosphere by natural emitters or by the burning of fossil

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Human activitie:;,. chiefly the driving of al!IOmobiles,
spew some 3JO million metr1c tons of carbon monoxide
(CO) into the atmosphere every year.
That's bad?
Not Decessarily. Forlul!a~ly, and through no fault of
mantlnd's, there has been 11,0 detectable build-up of CO
. in the. world's atmosphere is a whole. There seems to
be some kind of "sink" ill nature which absorbs the deadly

s _Remain -Hot

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G.E. Dishwn
Portable

Bfk. &amp; White

G

WASHER

W-Minl basket

$25900

H&amp;R ·fiRESTON.E
202 N. 2nd

Nil

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t-'ftle o.q, lleatlnel,~, o.,Sept.l, um

IDnORIAI.$

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See America First!
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· .•. Significant Crack
In Berlin Wall

"It wa~ a slllllly, warm summer day. Many people were
out on pu:nics or excursions. It was a Sunday, the 13th
of Alll!ust, 1116l."
.
. Federal Republic ChanceUor Willy Brandt remihisces
In the West German magazine "siem." On August 13,
11161, l!randt was mayor of a place called West Berlin
. · "The .mind. did not want to accept what thli eyes beheld," pe.writes. "A big military task force of tlie (East
German) People's Army was sent into the eastern sector
of the city. On the sector boundary, concrete stakes were
rammed into the street, spiked . e~evaux-de,fri.Se were
•· m~talll!d, .~nd the whole thing was Jink:ed up with· barbed
~...
.
~.
In the. three days between the unrolling of the first
stretcb of wire and the laying of the first concrete block,
the West, In Brandt's opihion, mis$ed a chance to negotiate an agreement with the Soviet on the status of West
Berlin and of the rights of West Berliners.
Be that as It may, after 10 years of the existence of the
Wall and after recurring criaes, such an agreement has
at last been reached between the four one-time Allied
powers of the United States, the U.S.S.R., Britain and
France.
''N?, one should forget those who have died at. the
~all, says ~randt. "And no one shquld forget that there
IS. still shnoting at the Wall today. But protest against
this should not become a moral alibi for turning one's
back on responsll!illty for the much more difiicult task:
despite the Wall, of creating .conditions through which
the firing is ended."
,
The Wall Will not disappear by itseU, says Brandt, but
only when the division of Europe, of which the Wall is
tbe "absurd and unnatural" symbol, is ended.
The 'day when that division can end is still far distant
and Will be so Io11g as half the populatio11 of Europe has
no voice in deciding the kind of political system it Jives
under.
But the four-power accord on West Berlin, if only a
small step toward that day, is a major step away from
the threat of war that has hung. over Europe for many
more than 10 years.

Where We Stand on CO

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WILSTEIN
"
UPI
'WriRr
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Tbe st. LOuis Cardinals bold
" lbeir ,b nittll every lime IIIey
play. It's not mougb far lbenrto
win. The Pltlsburgb Plra!es
~ also must lose.
"It's only natural to look at
, the SC«eboard to see what

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That's good?
Not necessarily. The sink does not act quickly enough
to affect levels of carbon monoxide in such places as city
streets or jleavily traveled highways.
The scientists calculate, however, that the soil surface
,or ti!e continen~ United. States alone is capable of air
'sorbmg 5611 million metric tons of carbon mo11oxide a
year. This is more than 6.5 times the annual estimated
production of CO in the United States and almost three
· times the estimated worldwide production.
Now that's good. .

WIN AT BRIDGE

.Russ Enjoyed aWily Game
NOBTBQ
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+K JlO 98

WIST

•AQ?S

• 82
• Q 10 8 U
tA73
•u2

soum

EAST
• 16 3
• 976 3
tH
• K 10 8 3

•AKIOH
•AJ 5
t Q6 2
•H
Both vulnerable
Wool North Eost Solido
Pass 1 •
1•
Pass 3 •
Pass 4 N.T.
Pass 5 t
Pass 6 •
Pass Pass
Paso
()ponjng Ieod-fo 2
L
By O.WUI &amp; .James Jaeeby
From time to time we
have reported the death of a
dear friend but none ill the
world of bridge has saddened us more than that of
Russ Winterbotham.
Our column is 22 years old
and for the frrst 20 years
Russ checked every word. It
was part of his job, but be
treated it as a labor of love.
He retired a couple of years
ago but kept his interest in
the Jacoby column and
helped us develop JACOBY
MODERN.
Russ was an enthusiastic
bridge player and sent us
many hands but never let us
use his name. Now that he
can't stop us, here is one he
played about 10 years ago.

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iiiS use of Blackwood was
slightly unsound, but he expected North to hold a better hand. At that, the slam
would be a cinch without a
club . lead. However, West
·fed a club and Russ was in
trouble. He could take the
club finesse but Russ knew
his left-hand oppone11t was
a firm believer in the old
rule of never leading away
from a kil!g. Therefore,
Russ wasted no time with
that first trick. He just
hopped up with the ace of
clubs and Jed the six·spot
right back.
This put things squarely
up to East and East went
wrong. He played the three
of clubs. Russ cashed his
jack, drew trumps and eventually conceded a trick to
the ace of diamonds.
The play shouldn't have
worked but. as Russ poi11ted
out in. his letter, it was the
ollly way to brillg the slam
home.
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The bidding has beerr
W011 North - • · Soulll

'
Pass
1t
Pass
You, South, hold:
•AK81.KQt4ti•KQ75
What do you do now?
A-Bid ooe spade. One beut
is just about os rood. but do
not hid in no-trump.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Your partner raises you to
two . spades. What do you do
now?

BARBS

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON-( NEAl
We haven' t done it yet, but we now have the capability
of storing a 12-page dossier on every man, woman and
child among the 210 million Americans on a single, 4,500foot reel of magnetic tape.
The kinds of electronic sensors dropped by U.S. aircraft over the Ho Chi Minh trail to detect North Vietnamese trucks and other vehicles can be adapted lor
what might be called "personal tracking."
Some are already being used in individual cases to
warn of impending be art attacks. They could as well
be employed to track our movements, locate us, measure
our emotions and thoughts.
We hear a lot about the perils of wire-tappi11g. But
the potential dan~er is much greater than most civil
libertarians ever discuss.
Today we can dispatch computerized information
almost instantaneously anywhere in the world. Millions
of bits of personal data travel over leased wire circuits.
These lines can be taped, and vast storehouses of information placed in unauthorized bands.
These realities and prospects give you some•idea how•
far the invasion of privacy has go11e in this countryand how much farther it may go.
A lot of people are stirr~d up about the matter, even
though its dimensions are only dimly perceived. And
one man who is laboring hard to put the public glare on
the issue is Prof. Arthur Miller of the celebrated Univer·
sity of Michigan Law School at Ann Arbor.
Miller has written an intricately woven book on the
subject, "The Assault on Privacy." He observes that
we Americans can bardiy move about .these days without
being taped.
File a tax return, apply for government benefits. seek
life i11surance or a credit card, try for a home mortgage.
fly on .a commercial airline. stay in a chain hotel . and
you most likely will be leaving your electronic tracks in
a computer's memory bank somewhere.
We have not reached the point where all our life records are packed onto one long reel of tape. But we seem
to be moving that way.
In most cases. our job, fina11cial, credit and perhaps
medical histories are on file. Depending on the ranee
of benefit and services we have sought, and the types
of jobs we have tried to qualify for, those histories may
be incredibly detailed.
What properly worries Professor Miller . for one thing,
_i~ this trend toward centralizing all this imme11se information in just a few key data banks.
Drawn to,:rether, this information may provide very
comulex profiles of tens of millions of Americans. Ob·
vious!y; highly useful purposes mav he served.
But there are severe handicaps. The danger of putting
confidential medical information in the wrong hands is
clear. Much financial and other personal data may be
subject to varying internretations. depending on who is
using it. The Internal Revenue Service has a right to
know your income. In the ha11ds of a business firm .
however. that figure can be used for a sales approach
you may not welcome.
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The selling of personal data (even umvers1ties do ttl
has become a very common pr,actice todav. Confidences
about your personal attitudes J!iven to a job interviewer
or some other legitimate interrol!ator mav be used bv
•orne comnany to get at you subtlv. One firm comPiles
data on doctors so drue companies can promote their
nroducts on a personal ba,is. A lender worried about ,
renavment mav check on how you !l]lend your money.
The whole thin!! is close to "brain-watching." The
worst of it. says Miller. is that the people who eather
and weigh data make l!l'ave errors. They freeze injustice
in computer data banks imperVious to assault.

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By PIDL PASTORET
The guy who admires
most the colorful leaves of
autum!! has no trees in his
own yard.
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An optimist is a fellow
owning a ski lodge wlw
hopes to make it big in
September.

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No, Gwendolyn, smoking
pot isn't the way to "higher''
education.

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"Crab" gra.ss usuallybelongs to the fanatic
wlw tweezer·tends a perfect lawn.

DR.. lAWRENCE
. E.I.AMB

Type of Arthritis
With Wide.Effects

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By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb-I am :r1
years old. Whel! I was about
12 years old, I was shot with
a "BB" gun above the eye.
I am quite certain the shot
(copper) remained ill the
skin because I used to be
able to feel what it felt like.
I have bad rheumatoid arthritis for over 14 years and
have had many medical examinations but never mentiol!ed the shot before. My
question is - could the copper in the shot in my system
be in any way related to ·the
rheumatoid arthritis or wbat
effect, if any, could the copper have 011 the system? My
health seems to be general·
ly poor.

thritis ~ec ei ve adequate
medical attention. Much can
be dooe. This includes measures to prevent deformities.
It is important to learn
the best way to try to maintain a full range of motion
for all the joints. In certain
cases w h e r e deformities
have ~ surgery can
be very Useful.
I would like to recommend
to you the services of The
Arthritis Foundation, a nonprofit organization formed
to help people with arthritis.
Tile organization works with
d o e t o r s and community
leaders. They help support
arthritis clinics that illtegrate all the differertt -:-:·
cialty ateas needed an?. "'"'"
home-care program~ Snr..e
family doctors like 1u ilave
their patients seen b)'. a specialized clinic, geared to
help with tbe complex problems of the arthritis patient
Such clinics Can oftel! provide services or have facil.
ities that the family doctor
may not be able to support
from his office facility. A
doctor woo wisbes to use
these services for his patients can do so by coDtacting his nearest Arthritis
Foundation C h a p t e r by
checking listings in the telephooe boob of larger cities
or tbe nearest chapter can
be located f!trough the services of the Arthritis FoUndation, 1212 Avenue of the
Americas, New York, N.Y.
10036. The . chapters also
have valuable literature for
patients who need to learn
more about arthritis.
INEWSPAPII INTlli'IIK AUN.)

Helen Bottel--

Dmrllelm:
'lllisilulilli£dt to write, for lfeiiiM!Ct W&lt;me~~. But lately IIley
.dall'l mait. u.m mprd.
lf I • WB~i&amp;Jtllmd, 1 can re-learn, b!t let's haft an unclonlaldial! 1lle CCI.. blr is 8 JJIIII'S meeting place.
~,._los, jEillipl wroagly, are COIIIlidered fair game.
Jllley -'lea tbe llllb,.lbey should slay the beck out, ar OlDie
wilb
1lllD cm stay C111111JU8Uvely lOber.
I...,.. llle will:ll111lD SICGQts lbe old Dllll at the blr, then
a ' I Me a lilhwife if bt "!coull" back. Too often llhe In·
lti•-Ms a
*illk, ailll ber shrewislmess can-foul .., a
wbale deot.
Abo, if • . 1 • ..-e gcmg IIJ. we• hotpants (we called 'em
DrWiai1ll illiDJ' day ), for cryln' 11111 loud, can't they wear
~tits
lbem! If IIley daa't, there's no real r em for
p:ipilc to tile IDeal F" wa~ if JlUill"' are made. MOll males
..., prtdaiDIJ, • are- femeJes. If they can't play for the
sla' llftbepme,lbeyoltaild slay lllltofit!
'Ill pat it iilill'e 111i1111J, bow many wWltD ~ days lmo'ir
how to bt a nwlllllJ', to keep frun emuculaling a man; to be a
'l'ileal ' lislniJJRDdof? -JOOEPH
Dell' Joe:
II t4' .x•aaJmQ!jon I!Qt lbe ''WIIcbes" get~ atlentim,

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(ADd ,.-letl!rwill ietslatie ll'om the liberatillll fnllt!)H.
Delrllelm:
· I'm iiiiDR willlu Elinlpe;n man, but he says all Ameriean
wW&amp; are ._, I•
we'Ye 00s! IIJ)Oiled by wilily-washy
Alnllri&amp;i-. wliDiet IISnm lbe bou3e ailll bank accomt, then
caD llllm "'DD)e I t • • b "
How raw I p:llft I nal a ohniuting man? He tb1nb I'm
JlllllillB em a .,.to trap bim ajdbrr "U. S. female cbaracltii lie"- AIIDUCAN 1IOJIAN
DelrWcma:
A dwacfaillie G ,_- Ellnlpean male is apparenlly nimtl
Nata rclllllriqe,eqniek.tbiokerlaystheblamem
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thli&amp;m£

MI*DBa:opeaa~.eall

Malor ~gue StondiJ!PS
By Un1ted Press International
American League
East
W. L. Pel. GB
Baltimore
81 48 .628
O..troit
£ 72 61 .S41 11
70 63 .526 13
Boston
New york
66 68 .493 17'h
Washington 56 76 .4U 26'12
Cleveland
53 81 .396 301h
West

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Oakland

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1be field."
Reuss.. who made his 30th
start of the year, was very
concerned about wluit was
go~ 011 UIIUI !lUgs started
JlOA!i!lg in the bOtkm of the
ninth. Nola!! Ryan st&amp;rted the
~fer New Yen and UIIUI be
was lifted fer a pincb-bitter in
.
llieSemltli;''ReUSs had~ reason til be cllllceflled.
The Cardinals who I!DW have
CINCINNATI (UPI) -They
wllll eight of their last Dil!e
games, jumped to a 1-G lesd in pinned the Dickname, "Tbe Vulthe first when Lou Brock lure," oo Phil Regan, now witll
.tjle Chicago Cubs, after · he
picked up 14 victcries for the
Los Angeles Dodgers a few
years back while pitching in relief.
. .
Wayne Granger doesn't think
he has earned a similar mooiker even thoogh he has gained
Natioil..l LNgue
a couple of victories that one
L. Pd. GB might refer to as lucky while
Pittsburgh
81 56 .591
turning ill relief stints ill five of
St. Louis
11 60 .556 s
the Cincinnati Reds' last six
~~~~k
~ ~ : : l~lf, games.
Philadelphia &gt;1 76 .429 22
''Heck," said WaYQe Tuesday
Nlontreal
56 75 .427 22
night, "Regan won those 14 in
West
ooe year to earn his nickname.
L. Pel.
San Francisco W
79. 56
.SBS ,GB
... It'-~
.....es me a boutthre e years to
Los Angeles 71 64 .526 B win that many."
~~~~~~~all
: ~ :~~ :~:~
Wocking in five of the Reds'
Houston
64 71 .474 15
last six games, Granger has
San Diego
51 85 .375 28'h won two, lost two and picked up
Tuesday's Resuns
a save.
Chi 7 Montrl 6 llst, 10 innings)
x-Mnlrl 8 Chicago 1 (2nd)
Pittsburgh 7 Philadelphia s
St. Louis 2 New York 1
Cincinnati 2 San Diego 1
011

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ka~~r~~~s~Hr~:r.nla

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riChl to date b!t you wouldn't

-ttowJ --ml1114bebe'lldllngehistune. -H.

Dlrllelm:
Ow- a · g 111e 1o1m'·em a "biD of diwrcement," this man's
J1b1e i&amp;liwG diNClt1118J slillsalisfy both God and our pl" II rt
CGWlaJ , "
]f tile ....... is frieDdr, Md 1111 p1Iperty battles lli'll inwll'llll, bt 1111.J line Jli .... lyl.draa .., the easily _otto!neble
ll!pltl helflGrlllllilllpbpjt lbem to lbe COirl witlllllt the lid
Ill. In,a-.
.
II)' piiilt is, Gad'llnr, eben umctly introduced, abould
bring romp!ete stoppage of bald liP ill _, jlilll mm. - FRANK
plant operations. This is • Dell' lind::
throwback to the antiquated
Dlll'l a.t• it!
escape IOJlte of "IIIIOke
Flir'llleSIR Ill •&amp;•t*"l, bow llbaat this: "When a man is
means jobs"; it is environ- aewlJIIM•itd,btlilllllliltp..twllllllte _ , ar be cltlrged
=~ a c k m a II of the wi.lb Mlf
; lit m.u bt free at bame lllle year to be lllppy
-1. W. Ab(l, prui&lt;Unt of wi.lb llis n. - " (llnl. Jl:$)
Unlttd $ttei1D07'Mrl of
lhft' ds; 'l'UeDille! -B.
A.merica.
· ·
Dell' llelew:
.
. look though
A aft fir ;s • .......,." When that '\eltanied
It hegmsto
as
rr' ".._a 'IDbciiOW '-;.toDeJDGre''oflerbimiiQ'
wben we d011't lrnaw "what
· 1 li
Get
• (.._' _..,_ t the
else to do, and we wmt w 1P"'L CIIIW 2 • .,
·,
un: ,..-J a
.
create~ lllitRon of adioD chclbft...AflliJa
0 af....,tolbeclgarellellp,erpt
arid co11cern, we create a alraceillllebl&lt;' tfllle1 I ... Beaeitdosl'lllbow. Tbe
new ~t in .t!Je While House IIIIIIIe
llilr a pelf • two, • lllat enn lbe lllCIIt al a
~~mtingn tt ,tbe~~co- dp&amp;!1 a I 'Disis..-ftwx•peaple111lDwutto.Pt
0
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5 some uuauOWil
p·
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solution to tbe prob'
..
c L a.. W.A.
··~· ·
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-Sen. AbrCII!al!l A.. R~biooff, Dill....., • .....,....._ .. ' I ._........_belp• YOU ..__..also
D-C01111., 011 Preudenl ·
-'", ... .....,.
........
NU....'s piQ for colnbat- wl
,..._
Add! .nBeli!IIBattelln '
t~ dl'tlfl abue.
ff 1111 a I 5 •

TIMElY .QUOTES.:

a:J

ra•

'C.•-.••ca •

.

I ' '

-

'

"A pretty eventual week,"
was the way Granger put it
after he evened his won.Jossr
mark at 6;111 when Pete Rose
singled borne Tommy Helms
with ooe out in the ninth inning
tn give the Reds a 2-1 victory
over the San Diego P'!dre~,.,.
Stmpsoo Takel! Out
Granger had inherited a 1-0
lesd after taking over for Red
starter Wayne Simpson when
the latter bowed out for a pinch
hitter after seven innings.
Simpson was a little disappointecl,butnotsurprised, when
manager Sparky Anderson
gave him the hook.
That is because Sparky had
lold Simpson a few weeks ago
lhat he didn't plan to pitch
Wayne more than seven innings
'in any game remaining on the
schedule.

WILMlNGTON, Del. (UPI)An array of 1AJp goHers, some of
1hem hoping for a springboard
into pro golf and others interested only in hooor, glory
and a gold medal, tee off today
in the 7lst U.S. Amateur Golf
Championship at the plush
Wilmington CoWltry Club in
nearby Greenville.
The field .or 150 entered into
the prestigious U.S.G.A.~sored event incIuded two
veteran former champions and
a pack of youthful contenders
who have dominated the
·
't -L-- ed fr
lourney smce
I uwurg
om
match to medal play in 11165.
The veteran titlists were
William c. Campbell, 48,. a
W V •
·
Hunting•.... , . a. msurance
IJrokerwhowcn in 1964, the last
lime lbe . toomey was match
play; . an_cf' ~canadals G-ary
Cowan, 32• wh0 caplured the
eventinaplayoffin1966atthe
Merioo Golf Cl b · Ardm
ore,
u lD
Pa
The "youngsters" considered
o•n Crenfa vorites included oc
shaw, l9, of the University of

NCAA title tliis year, and Jim
Simons, 21, &lt;i Butler, Pa., who
astmishingly took a two-slloke
leadgolngintothefinalroundti
the U.S. Open last June, only to
faU back.
Other youthful contenders
were Tom Kite Jr., 21, also of
the Uhiversity of Texas, who
lost by one stroke last year to
La110y Wadkins, and Vinnie
Giles, of Richmond, Va., an
"oldster~· at 28, who was runnerup in 1967, 1968 and 1969.
Auniquefeatureofthisyear's
tournament . was a family
threesome with veteran
amateur Bill HYQdman III, of
Huntingdon Valley, Pa., runnerup in the British Amateur in

Los Angls 300 010 101- 6 10 o
Housloo 000 100 llOO- 1 9 1
Alexander (6-~l and Fergu.
son;. Cook, Ray (7), H~rrls (1),
t.emasler (9) and Edwards. LP
-Cook (0-4). HR-Parker (6th).

'

Phlla
022 010 llOO- 5 11 1
Pltlsbrgh 000 021 40x- 7 B 3
Lersch, Hoerner (7) and .
• McCarver; Moose, Veale '(3),
, Kticln 16), Miller (8) and May.
· WP-Kison (4-4). LP-Hoerner
~ (.t-4).

••

San Diego 000 000 001- I 6 0

Ontlnnall 010 000 001- 2 7 0
Norman, Severi~sen (9) and
" Barton; Simpson. Granger (81
,, and Bench. WP-:-Granger (~) .
Li&gt;--Severinsen (2-S).
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45769. Business Office Phone
992-2156, Editorial Phone 992 ·

I

1

"I missed a 46-yarder at Mi. he rememhers.
anu,"
His theory of trying hard is:
"I think if I can make 'em
now,! make 'em in !he regular
season too."
Brown plans to start rookie
"M hall d f
Ol
Eu ars
an ormer ympic sprinter Tonunie Smith as
wide receivers Saturday night
against the Green Bay Packers
to see how !hey perform as the
club nears tlle deadline for cutling the squad to 44 players.
That cut must be made by
next Monday and the team
must be down to 40 by Sept.
13. The Bengals have 49 play~rs with .!he placing of the . inJured ·Chtp 1·Myers
on the IDJur·
ed
t
waover IS •
Brown said Virgil Carter will
he !he starting quarterback
when !he Bengals open thetr

season against Philadelphia
SeP.l 19, Wl'th rook'te Kenny An derson in the backup position.
"Virgil will be the starter,"
Brown said. "We'll go with the
h k .
th' th
guy w o nows every mg at
goes with it. Ken could move
. to 't
ti
'f v· 'I ts
m t some me 1 1rg1 ge
an injury, or in time Ken could
be good enough to take over.
"But against Philadelphia, it'
will probably be Virgil," Brown
said. "We've never really discussed it. We sort of assumed
it would be as it is now."

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KEITH GOBLE FORD
Locust St.
.·

'

Saturday night against the New
York Giants.
International League Standings "Nelson will play the first half
By United Press International Saturday," said Skorich.
W L Pet. GB "Mike Phipps will start !he
x-Rochesler
84 S4 ./111 Charleston
78 60 .565 6 second half. I also hope lo use
Tidewaler
77 61 .558 7 Don Gault some. We're now in
Syracuse
73 65 .529 il tlle process of shaking down for
, ~~~~~~~:
:: :: : : :~ the regular season."
Toledo
Sll 80 .420 26
Winnipeg
44 94 .319 40
•·clinched pennant

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•

Second class poSiage paid a1 •· ·Meigs· County · llranc~he
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No Otller Complny Dlrts To otter lbls

although "I haven't been hittil!g
the ball too good."
Simons, runnerup in the
British Amateur this year, has
been plagued by ligament
problems in his left thumb,
"which hasn't come around"
and was doubtful Tuesday of his
playing status and chances.
The Wake Forest star said the
thumb hurt when he swung and
he has been taking "lots of
aspirin" for the pain after
getting a shot from a physician
last week.
The tow-headed youth said he
had debated withdrawing from
tlle tournament but said Tuesday "I guess I'm going to play."

doubleheader 6-3 after losing · • - - - - - -..
the first game to Delloit 6-1.
Ken Henderson drove in three
runs witll his 1Mh homer and
Gaylocd Perry pitched a seven
hit shutout as the Giants piled
up 11 hits off three Braves
pitchers and kept their eightgame lead in the Western
Division.
Perry (14-10) struck out five
and walked only one man as the

Muhlman.n 'B·est In Busmess . re;:e s e n1!~ive~ ~ ;;.Jn;~n ~

For Season

4) .

1969 and 1970, entered along
with his sons, William HYQd·
man IV, 31, and Thomas, 26.
Kite,ooeofthosescheduledlo
tee off early in today's opening
round of the par 71, 6,872-yard
course, thought more of
Crenshaw's chances than of his
own.
"I'D tell you one thing," Kite
said while playing in a practice
round Tuesday, "Crenshaw
wasn't a factor last year but I
guarantee he will be this year."
Crenshaw, who won tlle
recent Eastern amateilr and
also captured the Southern
amateur, said he fell his
chances here were "good"

tllem fastballs," Reuss said. clinching magic number. They
"It's easier when you throw have '1:1 games left to.play.
fewer pitches, but when you ' Wes Parker slammed a .two·
win, it doesn't make any dif- run homer and rookie rtght.
bander Doyle Alexander. spaced
ference."
It didn't make any difference nine hits to lead the Dodgers
because Alou Jed off the ninth over Houslon. Parker's home
witll a single and then Torre run, a three-run blast, gav.e the .
singled. Tug McGraw csme in 20-year.old Alexander e~ough
to relieve Frisella and Ted runs to win his fifth game m hiS
Sinunons greeted him wilh a last six decisions.
single tllat scored Alou from
Pete Rose's one.out single in
second.
tlle ninth inning off reliever AI
The Cardinals were able to Severinsen scored Tommy
catch their breath but not the Helms to give the Reds the
Pirates, who beat the Phillies victory over San Diego.
and kept tlleir five-game lead in
A double by Leron Lee and a
!he National League East.
single by pinc)l.hitter Larry
'In other NL action, San Stahl tied the scoce at I · I in the
Francisco blitzed Atlanta 9-0, top of the ninth.
MBI!ny Sanguillen hit a twO·
1M! Angelex whipped Houston 6run
single, the third pinch·hit of
1, Cincinnati nipped San Diego
2-1, PlttsbW'gh downed Phi- the four-run seventll, as. the
Pirates overcame a five-ru,n
ladelphia .7·5 and Chicago
deficit to heat Philadelphia.
edged Montreal 7-6 in tlle first
The Expos set a club record
game of a doubleheader. The
for most nms in one inning,
second game was suspended
scoring eight in the sixth to grab
after six innings because of
darkness with the Expos an 8-1lead over the Cubs in the
second game after the Cubs won
leading 11-1.
the opener on Donn Kessinger's
In the American League Bos10\h-inning, bases loaded single
ton clipped Baltimore 4-3,
that went lhrough a five·man
Oakland beat California 4-1 ,
Washingtontopl&gt;!!d New York 6- infield.
Kessinger., who had seven
5, Kansas City downed Mil·
singles in nine limes at bat in
waukee 6-4, Minnesota overthe two games, scored the Cubs'
hauled Chicago 4-3 in 10 innings
only
run of the nigiJtcap after
and Clevelal!d came back to
reaching base on an error.
take the nightcap of a

2111

Out

•

was out in the top of the ninth
when Leron Lee doubled off
Granger. One out later pinch
hi Iter Larry Stahl singled home
Lee to tie the score.
Hebna' infield single touched
off the RedS' Dinth Inning. One
out later Padre relief pitcher AI
Severinsen walked pinch hitter
Jimmy Stewart and Rose
followed with his game-winning
hit.
The hit was Pete's second of
the game and going into tonight's game with San Diego he
needed 40 more lo reach his
annual goal of 200..
He admits his chances don't
look too good right now.
The game will match the
Reds' Gary Nolan against the
Padres' Dave Roberts and
winds up the current homestand
at Riverfront Stadium.

A ma,eur
.,
,..,
t
·.l ournamen Un derway

BUC k

•

"I haled to come out," admilled Simpson. "But after all
tlley're looking out for my inleresis."
"Do you wish they had started
doing tllat a little earlier?"
someone asked.
"I won't say that,:• answered
Simpson, who pitched around
500 innings over a 12-montll
span before hemorrhaging det
veloped in his right shoulder
last season after he had won 14
of 17 decisions.
$mPson yielded only four
hits, wallted three Bl!d struck
out three while blanking the
Padres the first seven innings.
"It's the best I've got all
season," he said. "I was hoping
I'd go nine, hoping they'd make
an exception about the seven
inning limil"
Rose Hllll 1&amp;0th
With the Reds leading 1~. one

"I threw 148 pitches, 128 of Giants reduced to 20 their !itle-

.

Millar L.qgue R....IIJ •
•tun11H Prftl~llo,. •
~ '
~
Am..-icJlft League
list GaJMl .
WILMINGTON, Ohio (UP!)Cleveland 100' 000 llOO- 1 4 1
Kicker
Horst Muhlmann conO..trolt
100 030 20x- 6 10 0
. t as
. Farmer. Ballinger (S), Hennicenlra te5 on his trade JUS
gan (8) and Fosse; Coleman
much in exhibition season as
(15-8) and Freehan. LP- By Uniied Preis International
dur.
mg !he regular. season and
Farm..- (5.2). HRs-Fosler
LeHi1111 Bailers
his boss te h
I
(13th), Cash l271h), McAuliffe
ra s liD as one o
National LNgue
(17th).
the best
G. AB R. H. Pel.
of the
Torre, St.L 136 528 79 191 .362 Texas, who became the first ''Ri ht. tod h ,
(2nd Game)
g
ay, e ~one
Bckrt, Chi 127 515 79 179 .348 college freshman to win the
Cleveland 003 300 llOO- 6 10 1 Clmnt, Pit 113 4S4 73 1S4 .339
best in the business," CincinO..lroil
001 010 too- 3 12 1 Garr,AII
131 437 87 179 .333
nati Bengals coacl\ Paul Brown
Colbert, Foster (7), McDowell Snglln, Pit 120 441 S4 152 .330
said Tuesday.
(8) and Suarez; Niekro, Denehy Jones, NY 115 4J.4 S4 143 .329
_ (S), Perranoski (6), Scher- H.Arn, All 119 416 80 134 .322
Muhbnann was deserving of
rmann (91 and Price. WP- Brock, St.L 131 529 101 110 .321
the praise.
eVPS
' Colbert (.t-~). LP- Niekro (6-7) . Davis. LA 131 528 68 166 .31~
.l ~·
He made good on field goals
HRs~hambliss (7th), Nettles Alou, St.L
126 517 68 162 .313
from 41, 18, 9, 32 and 24 yards
(23rdl.
.
American League
G. AB R. H. Pd. 11.1
last Saturday night and also
• Baltimore 000 120 llOO- 3 9 2 Oliva, Min 109 427 67 tst .354 lUBSOR
kicked
in the decidil!g extra
, Boston
300 000 001- ~ 9 1 Murcer, NY 130 ~73 82 152 .321
point as tbe Bengals eked out
Palmer (16-7) and Etchebar- Rllnd, Bit 114 392 69120 .306
• ren; Peters, Tiant (7) and Otis, KC
123 476 70 144 .303
~2~;:~?ls. over !he St.
Montgomery. WP-Tianl (1-7) . Tovar, Min 128 537 80161 .300
HR-"Etchebarren (7th l.
Rojas, KC 11S ~14 56 J24 .300
·
Muhlma nn ha s booted mne
'
Rchrdt, Chi 11~ ~18 44 125 .299
Washngln 000 005 001- 6 6 1 Care, Min 123 484 73 142 .293 OOLUMBUS (UPI) - Glen consecutive field goals in !he
New York 000 010 040- S 11 1 Horton, 0..1 11S ol36 62 127 .291 Mason, a sehior friiD Colmia, four games the Bengals have
Bosman, Pena (8), Grzenda Smith, Bos 132 518 72 149 .288
N.J., wbo played baclrup man to played !his summer and only
(8), Cox (BJ. Lindblad (8) and
Homes Runs
Casanova; Keklch, Hambright .National Logue: Stargell, All·AmeriCBI! middle guard ,Jim missed one of his 11 attempts.
16), Aker (8), McDaniel (9) and Ptt142; H. Aaron, All 39; May,
last year, broke his
Gibbs. WP-Lindblad 11-31. LP Cin 37; Williams, All and Stillwagon
.m Ohio Slate's football
ankle
-McDaniel (S-10) . HR-Minch- Johnson. Phil 28.
er (11th).
American League:· Smith, Jl'IICtice Tuesday and will miss
Bos, Mellon, Chi and Cash, Del tile entire se&amp;SOI!.
Kan City 010 011 216- 6 13 0 27; Jackson, Oak 25; Nettles,
"He'D be in a cast for six RECORDS BROKEN
Mllwakee 100 003 llOO- ~ 11 0 Clev and Murcer, NY 23.
weeks," Coach Woody Hayes
ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI)-SaraFitzmorris, Burgmeier (6),
Runs Batt..t In
York (6), Clemons (7), Aber- National LNgue: Torre, St.L said after consulting with tesm toga Itaeetrack's recent 24&lt;1ay
nathy (9) and May; Lockwood, 113; Slargell, Pill 112; H.
flat season broke aU records for
Weaver (7), Sanders (8) and Aaron, All 100; May. Cin 85; doctors.
Mason is !he third Buckeye to att.endanee and betting, it was
Rodriguez. WP-Burgmeler (6- Montanez, Phil 84.
6). LP-Lockwood {8-12). HRs-.
American LNgue: Killebrew, be lost. John Hughes and announced Tuesday by the New
Keough (2nd), Clemens llstl. · Mlnn 95; Bando, Oak · 84;
-· Murcer, NY 81; Smith, 8os 79; fullback Lou Camerllll both are York Slate Tax Commission.
AtlendaJjce reached 472,112 and
110 Innings J
B. Robinson and F. Robinson, out with knee injuries.
Chi
020 000 100 o- 3 13 1 Ball 77.
Mason m;=ed all spring drills the average daily handle was
·· Minn
000 100 002 1- ~ 9 1
because of knee surgery he $1,515,492.
Pitclli1111
•
Bradley, Johnson (9), Hinton
N•ti-1 LNgue: Jenkins, underwent prier to the Rose
ooL Keale( (101 and Egan. Chi 20-11; Ellis, Pl.tt and
Herrmann 10), Kaat, Haydel Carlton, SI.L 111-7; Downing, LA Bowl. He lost several days this
• . (7), Gebhard (9) and Miller- 16-8; Pappas, Chi 16-11.
fall because of a bead bump, but
' wald. WP--Gebhard (1 -1). LPAnierlc.~n League: Blue, Oak
Johnson (7-10). HR-Hershber- 23-6; Lollch, Del 21-10; Wood, sllll made enough prCII!feSS to
ger l2nd) .
Chi 111-10; Dobson. Ball 17-6; move into the No. 2 spot at
Hunter, Dak 17-11.
middle' guard behind junior
• Oakland 100 000 ~ 4 6 1
Kevin
Fletcher.
•· California 100 000 llOO- 1 ' 2
Two offensive regulars were
Odom, Knowles (8) and
.• Duncan; Murphy, Queen 18),
bobbled Tuesday. &lt;lluck Bonica
Allen (8) and Stephenson . .WPsufftored
a bruised knee and will
Odom (10-9). LP-Murphy (6- Chicago 200 300 100 1- 7 14 3
Morton, McGinn W, Mar- be out two ar three days and
• 1~) ... --- . .
shall (7), Reed (9), McAnally wingback TIDI campana !lllf(10) and Bateman; Pappas, fered a groin itljury. He 1r.u .
Natloi!al League
Regan ( 10) and Cannizzaro. WP
New York 000 000 OlD- 1 9 0 - Regan CS-3). LP-Reed (2-3). expected to workout today.
St. LouiS 100 000 001- 2 7 0
Ryan, Frisella (7), McGraw
(9) and Grote; Reuss (13·12l
and Simmons. LP-Frlsella (6-

•

Danny Frisella relieved Ryan
and tlle Mets tied the game on
Jerry Grote's single Ulat scored
Clean Jooes from tllird.
Reuss held tlle Mets scoreless

in !he nil!lh, and alter having
scattered nine hits and struck
out 10 batters, the "Southpaw
probably would not have gone to
tlle mound again.

Rnv b
.
e.
....
· .. . - :l-=1.s. On H~l Tonight

Kansas .City 70 62 .530 16
Chicago
63 10 .~74 23Y2
California
63 72 .447 24'h
Minnesota
6Q 71 .458 25'h
Milwaukee 56 76 .424 30
Tuesday's Resuns
O..trolt 6 Cleve 1 (1st)
Oeve 6 O..troll 3 (2nd)
Minn 4 Chicago 3 (10 innings)
Kansas City 6 Milwaukee 4
Washington 6 New York 5
o
Boston 4 Baltimore 3
x·suspended,
6
innings,
dark·
Oakland 4 California 1
ness
Todoty's Problble Pitchers
Today's Prollable Pitchers
Washington (Gogolewski 3-31 Nlonlreal
(Britton 0-2) at
at New York IKline 10-12l.
Chicago
(Jenkins
20-111 .
Oakland (Dobson 14-3) at Atlanta (McQueen
4-11 at San
California (Messersmith U-12), Francisco( Cum berland
7-3).
night.
Philadelphia
(Fryman
9-SJ at
Chicago (Bradley 13-11) at Pittsburgh (Ellis 18-7), night.
Minnesota (Blyleven 11-151. New York (Seaver 15-8) at St.
night.
(Gibson 13-11), night.
Kansas City (Splittorff 7-6) at Louis
San
Diego (Roberts 11 -141 at
Milwaukee (Krausse 6. 11), Cincinnati
(Nolan 11-13), night.
night.
Los
Angeles
(Sulton 12-11) at
Oeveland .!Foster 7-11 or Houston (Billingham
6- J3),
Paul 2-41 at O..troit (Cain HI. night.
night.
Baltimore ICuellar 16-7) at
Tuesday's Games
Boston (Culp 14.12), night.
New York at Phila, night
Montreal at Chicago
Thursday's Games
Los Angls at Houston, night
Kansas City at Milwaukee
(Only games scheduled)
Baltimore at Boston
Cleveland at Detroit, night
/
Washington at New York, night
(Only games Sfheduled l

~

•

.

..
....

em

walked, stole his 52nd base or door. His fastball look off and he
the season, wmt to tllird em a struck out 12 batters iJ1 the six
~le by Matty Alou and scored innlnll.! he pitched and gave up
no more walks aild ~Illy two
on a single by Joe Torre.
more
hits.
But then Ryan slanuned the

Linesoores
·- ----

HELEN-HEllUS!

'

Dear Reader-All the people who wear copper bracelets to "c u r e arthritis"
would be very distressed at
your suggestion. I doubt the
small shot has any siJlnifi·
cant effect on your body or
your health.
Yes, I understand that you
probably feel in poor health
in general and .that isn't too
SU!Jl!ising. Rheumatoid . arthritis fs more than just a
disease of the joints. It does
cause fatigue and in many
people a feeling of general·
ized illness. It affects the
whole body. A low-grade
fever is commo11. It is a serious disease and deserves
careful attention to preve11t
The Almuac
deformities and to belp a
By Unltecl Press lnlemalional person lead as normal a life
Today is Wednesday, Sept. I, as possible.
!he 244\h day pf 1971. . .
It is important that the
'---..l~'l!
The moon IS between Its first person with rheumatoid ariM~Ejrfcji
quarter and full phase.
The morning stars are
Mercury and Saturn.
The evening
are Venus,
Mars and Jupiter:
I don't pay much atte11tioo
Those born on this day 31'e to the secretary. If you have
under the sign of Virgo.
a proble,m '!'th th~ la'!diord,
American author ReX Beach ro~ don t diSCUSS It With the
Janttor
was
born
on
Sept.
I,
18'17.
AFL.,
"IO pre •-'~G
On this da · histor .
....,nt eor,ge
Y.m
Y·
Meany, retorting to Labor
In 1878 Mtss Emma . Null Secretary Hodgson's criti'
became !he first-- telephone cism of Meany's .attitude
operator when she took over a t o ward the wage-price
switchboard in Boston.
freeze.
~~ In 1939 World War II broke The No. 1 stu11t of the No.
out as Germany invaded 1 stunt man of Jlut time.
Poland.
· -George Meany, president
In 1969 famed Washington
of the AFL-CIO, on Prericolumnist Drew Pearson died of
dent Nixon's planntd trip
a heart attack.
to Red China . .
We are increasillgly being
A !hough! lor today: British confronted by claims from
writ.er Hector Hugh Monro said, industry that tbe demands
made on it by citizens and
":·::··... • "Women and elephants never government
will .not control
fe&gt;rget an injury."
po II ti I ion but nther will

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Brain-Watching: .
This Is Your Life!

They'll Do It Every Time

Ni(bk:bD? TlllllllY Lecmetti of the Bit
IWI!de's final TV • • a poUed, gifted, at.
bdhe liJI&amp;Ier, is at lbi. Olpaeablaa ... Rotmey
Dqerfield apects llCill! of your l'eiiiM!Ct. just
,_. plfaws, allis own Dangel'field's .pot llll
Jllnt Aw. in lbe low 1111 ;.. New teeu&amp;e Cl'1lllb
~.mt~q.OO is hollclay calolp at the
Blillllllr Grill, etpedally fir the girls.
.ialiiJT Wesflla's llll E. 5ttb St. ._ good
p!tile. jaHDck, oewr too noily, 1llilally jamlllllll ... Far ~4bow biz afidoaadal, the
Ol*n lbdrld has 'lbe Kids Frml Splln (Los
a.-lade F,lpllla ), aJ.tlln longplay d;volmlte
eqilllliGl ; hula girls wriggle at Hawaii Kat atop
llle Winler Gardea 'lbeater where you alao c.m
haft a llduYII acitq earlier-evening
llle smllb "Follies" musical ... 'lbe hotels
(Americalla,Hiltm,&amp;muniletc.) have intimate
~ in lbeir public l'OOIJl8 ... 'lbe llrUe
llalel's..-rn's is lbe finest di8cotek In town
willllift CJilliPI behn!en the I.Btest rocktnliDBJ.
l'laally, tbe Broedway lbeeter: u you'll take
.......t, a- are lbe best ... ''Sieulb," at the
lfm;ie 1m, • dazzlingly deligb1ful wbocbllt,
na.r, ~~. with Allthooy Quayle and
Daaal Dllm8lly; "No, No, Nanette" at tbe 4llb
SL 'lllrah ( two IDagbelt ticteta in !Own, tho);
'"Pillliah·atlbe Winter Garden, "Ompllly" at
llleAlriD, " Applau.le" at lbe Palace, "F'iddler llll
tbe Raul" at lbe Broadway, ''Promlaea,
~at the Shubert, "177&amp;" at lbe Majl!lltic
- .n - emineDtly wartb the price ... The
...,.._ "Biltterflies Are Free" Is an eoclianting
dallllf a cmtedy, lllllgbty but not offensively;
..S wlcame to &amp;own, folta -It's a Great Place
.., Visil

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Assault on Privacy

gas.

luels."

By .STEVE

~.. - ~ -t'lttsburgb'rdolng;..-~Jerry
• Reuss said after pllchlng the
Cardinals to a 2-1 victory over
the New Yen Meta Tuesday
Dighl "But you have to be tmn
cmcemed about what's goil!g

BRUCE BIOSSAT

Three scientists with the Stanford Research II!Stitute
believe the explanation may lie in the metabolism of
micro-organisms in the soU. They conducted experiments
in which sterile soU fail~ to take up earllon monoxide,
w~ most normal soils absorbed it at an average
.
rate of 8.« mlligrams per bo'!l' per square meter.
Soil, they conclude, "must now be considered as a
major I!Btural sink for CO that is relt!ased into the atmosphere by natural emitters or by the burning of fossil

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Human activitie:;,. chiefly the driving of al!IOmobiles,
spew some 3JO million metr1c tons of carbon monoxide
(CO) into the atmosphere every year.
That's bad?
Not Decessarily. Forlul!a~ly, and through no fault of
mantlnd's, there has been 11,0 detectable build-up of CO
. in the. world's atmosphere is a whole. There seems to
be some kind of "sink" ill nature which absorbs the deadly

s _Remain -Hot

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G.E. Dishwn
Portable

Bfk. &amp; White

G

WASHER

W-Minl basket

$25900

H&amp;R ·fiRESTON.E
202 N. 2nd

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Elardo-Bowman'. Exchange • Vows

Miss Sharon Kay Elardo and with pink mums and greenery.
Mr. John Evart Bowman ex. John Edward Elardo, the
changed wedding vows at the seven•year old brother of the
Middleport Olurch of Christ, bride, was ring bearer. He wore
Middleport, Ohio on Saturday, a white linen suit and carried a
AUgust 14 at 4 : ~ pin. The white satin, lace trimmedReverend Raullin Moyer of- pillow bearing the rings of the
ftciated at the double ring bride and groom.
ceremony with Mr. Kenneth Serving as best man was the
Scites; church Elder, aSsisting. groom's brother, Mr. Stephan
The bride is the daughter of Bowman
of
'columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. John J . Elardo of Groomsmen were Mr. Michael
,GaJlipolis, Ohio and the Callahan of Worthington, Mr.
bridegroom is the son of Mr. Michael Rose and Mr. Frank
and Mrs. Olarles Bowman, Souders, Jackson, all cousins of
Jackson, Ohio.
the groom. Mr. Fred Alverson
The selling for the wedding of Gallipolis was head usher. All
~mony. was of one, fifteen the men wore black, satin
arched candlelabra in back of trimmed tuxe4os. .,
the communion table with two, . Mrs. Elardo, mother of the
seven branch can~bras on bride, wore a pink dress of.
either lide. Potted palms lined Georgette over pink polyester
the front railings on both sides with matching accessories.
of the altar. Eight single aisle Mrs. Bowman, mother of the
candelabras trimmed with groom, chose an aqua dress of
greenery and white satin bows chiffon over aqua polyester with
lined the bridal aisle. The matching accessories. Both the
traditional white hlnner was mothers carried a single long
\,
used.
stemmed while rose tied with a
Mrs. Chester Erwin of white satin ribbon.
Middleport presented the Program hostess was Mrs.
following 1H'gan selections prior Stephan Bowman of Columbus
'\
to the ceremony: "La Olanson and at the guest register were
Nuptiale", "Clair de Luhe", the Misses Lisa and Lori
"Panis j\ngelieus", "Theme CaiJahan. of ailllicothe. They
from Love Story", and "A Time were dressed in pink dotted
for Us". Mr. and Mrs. Richard swiss Door length dresses acMoyer sang "Whither Thou cenled with brown lace ribbon.
Goest" and "One Hand, One The reception was held in the
Heart". "The Wedding Prayer" social room of the church imand "Let Us Break Bread '· mediately following
the .
Together" was sung during the ceremony. A four-tiered cake
ceremony.
served as centerpiece of a table
The bride, given in marriage decorated with two, three ar•
by her father, wore a Door ched silver candelabras and
length gown of white polyester crystal pooch bowl.. Atop the
crepe designed with a scooped cake was a gold cross with
neckline and an empire waist. entwining wedding bands.
The puffed chiffon long sleeves Presiding at the cake and
were accented by bands of punch table were Miss Peggy
French embroidered lace McKinney of Middleport, Mrs .
trimmed with seed pearls. The Chuck Malone, Jackson; Miss
matching lace was repealed Lou Anne Perry of Ironton ;
again aroooclthe empire waist Mrs. Carl Elardo of St. Joseph, bouquet.
Force. He attended Ohio
Branch
of the dress and aroood her Missouri and Mrs. Ursula
in
The bride is a 1967 graduate of University
chapel length silk illusion Ogden from Chillicothe.
Jackson High School and is Chillicothe and is presently
mantilla. She carried a colonial Miss T
M
·h
presently employed at the First employed as a city policeman in
styled bouquet of while carammy owery anded
Jackson.
the guests thank-you note National Bank in Jackson.
lions
mlnlatur
The groom is a 1965 graduate The couple are residing in
na
and bab• sb th e porn pons parehmen't scroUs ti'ed wt'th a of Jackson High School and
Jackson, Ohio.
Mrs. Y ~: · Shambaugh, gold cord. Miss .Kim. Mow~ry served four years in the Air
Latoinia, Kentucky was matron gave ~e guests P.mk n~e wht~h
of honor. Maid of honor was w"'! lied with pink rtbbon m
Sa
J
J
f white net.
.
Mtss
ra
ane
ones
o
·Th e Je1 Cad et Y ou,'h Group,
B 'desmaids
th
J ac....
.....n. n
were e of hich the bridal
Misses SUsan and Cathy Elardo
w
coup1e were
of St J
h Misso ·
. leaders, were "special" guests
Holzer Medical Center, First and daughter, Mrs . Dana
.
b~dp
The'
Ufl, COUSlliSl at the wedding and each wore a
of the n e.
0ower gtr was white
Ave. and Cedar St. General Hanin~. Mrs. John W. Hipes,
.
,.1,., ,
carnatton.
Miss An geIa Elardo, -r-;r:;:
visiting hours Z-4 and 7-8 p. m. Ely Le~ Kreger, Mrs. Edwin ·F.
a,
,
.
cousin. They were ali dresieil in Mfs , Kenneth Scttes of Maternity visiting hours 2: 30 to Neutzling and daughter, Mrs.
noor length brown dotted ftiss Pomeroy , was the wedding 4:30 p. m. Parents only on Carl A. Perry, Mrs. Edith Mae
dresses. The bishop sleeves consultant · and the Philalhea Pediatrics Ward.
Sayre, Mrs. Okey H. VanMeter,
were accented with bands of Society was in charge of the
DISCHARGES
Sr., William T. Washam, Sr.,
white lace trinuned with pink reception.
Charles R. Alkire, Mack R. Mrs. Harry E. Williams, Miss
seed J)eafls and repeated again For their wedding trip the Bennett, Mrs. William Keith Erma Barnett, Ronald E.
arounathe empire waist. They bride wore a white polyester Brown and son, Loaell F. Bostic, Mrs. William Marshall,
wore while wide brimmed hair knit dress '!rimmed in yellow Collins, Fred A. Eatman , Mrs. Eloda Webb, Mrs. Anna E.
braid hats with matching inm. with matching accessories and Mrs. Allen Emerson, Robert L. Sims, Miss Reba Beale, and
They carried fireside baskets the corsage from her wedding Ford, Mrs. Roger F. French Jane M. Ervin .

!J

Mr.r. john Evart Bowman

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HOSPITAL NEWS

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Fer Quality•

Whole
or Half

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Qlbitious meal it's Jean Zahl Smith. The triplets - Sam, Betty
and Barbara - are first graders IIlla year. Kenny graduated from
ligh school and is currently workiq! at tbe Esser W'1re Co. at
Berrien Sp~s. Mich., where tbe family moved last liiGIIth. Leo
Is at the nuclear plant at Bentoo HarbGur. So for Jean there is
never a dull mcment.
,
Jent use her recipe for Vegelable-&amp;rger Soup which she
describes as a "great quick method of making soup tllat really
tastes like hmlemade vegetable soup tbat blci:aD day".
VEGETAJILE..IIURGERSOUP
~ poond ground beef
1 can (2 cups) stewi!d tomatoes
1 cup (8 ounce can) tlmalo sauce
2 cups water
1 - 10 oonce package fro1.en mixed vegelables
'% envelope ( ¥• cup) dried ooioo .soup mix
1 leaspooo sugar
Brown the ground beef and drain om the fat Add aU the other
Ingredients and bring to a boil; Reduce beat, C0¥1!1' and simJOe!' II
minutes. (6 lo 8 ~)

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With. A

Vase Arranrleinent
l)esigMd By

Ducley's Floiist

BACON
Sliced

lb. 39. ~

French City Brand

20 Count
pkg.

I .CHER ~

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BOMB

DRINK
I GAL

Hot Dog or Hamburger

8pak 29~

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MARSHMALLOW
KRAFT

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Peggy Russea
Speakr At laura/

Mrs. Cora Pullen and Miss
Jerry Pullen entertained
Monday evening with a layette
shower honoring Mrs. Uoyd
Blackwood of Sumner .
A stork motif was carried out
in the decorations with a pink
and blue color scheme. A stork·
replica centered the gift table
which was covered in pink and
featured blue streamers .
Ga mes were played with
prizes going to Mrs. F. H.
O'Brien, Miss Nina Russell, and
Miss Rhoda Hall. Miss Bernice
Ann Durst won the door prize.
The hostesses served tresh
apple rake with whipped cream
and coffee. Favors were stork
nutcups.
Other guests were Mrs. Don
Mullen, Mrs. Helena Brickles,
Mrs. Agnes Brown, Mrs. Henry
Ewing, Mrs. Howard Dailey,
Miss Bronwyn Dailey, and Miss
Martha Howell. Also presenting,
gifts were Mrs. George Hackett,
Mrs: John Goett, Mrs. John
Redovian, Mrs. Guy Cowan and
dat1ghters, Miss Hallie Zerkle
and Miss Nellie Zerkle.

Peggy Russell, daughter of

Mr. and Mrs. Guy Russell of
Bradbury, will speak at 7:30
this evening at the Laurel !lifl
· Free Methodist Olurcb.
Miss Russell is a missiooary
on furlough ftun Mexico. She ·
will show slides of Mexico. The
public is invited.

-. Sailboat Race
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HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN

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MATERIALS CO.
773-5554

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---

We Deliwr

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A sailboat regatta will be beJd
at the Athens Boat llub in
Hockingport a t I :30 p. m. oo
Sept. 18. The race is spoos&lt;nd
by Sea . Explorer Ship "'Ii d.
Coolville and will be a handicap
eventmiiking it possible for any
boat there to win
Trophies will~ awarded for
first to finish [Irs sero&gt;d and
third places.'~ will be a

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ALL

$3.50 entrance fee.

Completes Plans
Plans

have been cuupleted
for the open clmrch wedding of
Miss Patti Jeffers, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jeffers of
Syracuse, to Mr. Mike Van
Matre, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wilbur Van Maire, West
Colmnbia.
The wedding will be an event
of Saturday at 2 p. m. at the
West
Columbia
United
Methodist Church. A half.bour
program It pnmuptial music
will

the

"'-wm t E-..
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5 wa-

k.ara Lamb coat with f~x
mllar and cuffs ts from 0.r:ar de Ia Renta.

tel dllOIIJ'.

.SHIRT.
FIIISHING_
SAI!lE DAY
SE~VICE

-~~15 .,

Francis
Hosts
Party

TUPPERS PLAINS

Mrs. Eulah Francis of Middleport entertained Monda)'
...-ening witb a ~· party. Jean
HaU was the demonstrator.
Games were piayed with
lri= going to the winners.
Mr.;, • Edith Spencer '1&lt;00 the
door prize. Cooties, coffee, jello
and soil drinks were sen'ed.
Othefs attending orere Kay
Avis, Coolville, l\lrs. FTancis
Whittington and children,
Leslie, Jeffrey, Teresa, and
Lisa, ~ Run ; Darin Roach,
Mrs. Marie Francis, Trudy
ROIIch, and llrs. Carl Roach,
PlotlldO)'; Anna Yeauger, Mrs.
Gertrude Miller, Mrs. Nellie
Dunn. Mr,;. Flora Bailey. Mrs.
Gerlrnde Kloes and Ke ith
Black, Middleport.

CONCERNED NEIGHBOR,
Premier John Lyac:h of Ute
Irisll Re)lllblic bas ~ed
Britain. to ,o slow oa mmtary measures to q D e II
N e r t II e r • lrelalld's rell-

P-

eolllllld. Alll!ked lit!·
tivilies by the oatlawed
Irish Republica Army In
the IIOl1h from bases Ill Ute
soath bave d ouded DubliDLoiHioa excbaages on tbe
crisis.

HOllE GIIOWII

. . Rnsset Bakers '

GROUND ·
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DART
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POTATOES

COLONIAL

SUGAR.
5 :; 59~
WITH A $5.00 PURCHASE

for

CHUCK
h89~
SLICED ·
BACON

' ·'1"

WATERMELON

SKINLESS

-..

WIENERS
~.,,

•

890

AlliiEAT

SLICED
,BOLOGNA

LEMONS
~· 60°

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OR MORE

2'100

·lb.

99~
3 lb. can

79'

SHORTENING
FAWillE

BREAD

5bMS $} 00
31b.

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pl.

MIS. TUCKER PURE
VEGETABLE

AlliiEAT

79~

89~

Cold
lllo 22 h

MILK

Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence
Balser spent the weekend with
her brother, Mr. and Mrs.
Dennard Blake and family of
Mansfield . They were ac·
companied home by their
daughter, Pamela Balser, who
had spent the week with the
Blake family.

Nursing Aides
Get Certificates

llor 79c

MUSTARD......~~-~~~..........................~~·.19'
STUFFED OLIVES..~~-~~~......,... ~..~~:. 49'
TABLE NAPKINS .. ~~~~...........~~.~!:.1 0'
SALAD DRESSING.;;;.~:..........~~:. 59'
PAPER PLATES ..~~-..~~:~ .........~~-~~: 59'
.
.
10 lb.
CHARCOAL ................................~~~ ... 69'
DRY MILK.~.~~~~~......................~~-~~:-'1" PORK &amp; BEANS
...
~~~~~
....
&amp;
16 oz. •1
.
'
TOPP POP............................12 ~!:sz. •1

visor-intern. Or . Char lea
Nichols, professor and chairman of the department 0(
voca tional education at Kent,
directed the program.

Personal Notes

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GRAPEFRUIT

Holsum ·

BUNS

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a.osm SUNDAYS.

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and Robert Morris. The ...,_
missiooers also paid standing
bills .
Attending the meeting ftf'e
lOObert . &lt;::brl, Olarles Karr' .

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10 lb. bag

Mon. Tues., WecL--9 to 7
lh~, Fri, Sat. --~9 to 9

Rutland Garden

Virginia Car.ron Attendd Kent

SONGFEST
The Gospel Messenger~ ol
Kent, 'Ohio, will make an appeara nce a t the Pomeroy
Na&gt;arene Church with dale and
Lime to be announced.

Two U.S . presidents are
buried in Arlington National
Cemetery- William Howard
PLUS DEPOSIT
Taft and John F . Kennedy.
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You, WE LIKE"

FAIRMONT

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IN EACH 8-PACK

WIENERS

Prices Effediw Sept 1-4

eam.

Social
Calendar

Middleport

missiooers.
· The two new members are ·
Mrs. Russell Brown of~Wduy
and Tom KeDy d. M"wlc!Jrprt.
They . replace Kfl1llit Walton

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1 cup plus three tablespoons vegetable shortening
6 tab~ water.
.
Usrng a paslry culler, cut tbe vegetable llbortemng mlo the
Dour until mix1ure is a~t the size of peas. Add Z table&amp;JOO(IIS
waterata Ume. Toss with a fork. Do not stir. Work dougb to form
a smooth ball.

5th ..d PEARL STS., RACINE ·
''The Store With A Heart,
Right reserved to limtt quantities
We Gladly Accept Fed. FGod Stamps

Meigs County Board of

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1 teaspo(m salt

Total circulation for Middleport and Pomeroy libraries
and the bookmobile for the
month of July was 9,253, it was
reported today. Magazine
donations for the hospital cart
at Veterans MemoriaJ .Hospital
were provided by Mrs. Clair
Karr, Mrs. Homer E. Cooper,
Mrs. Dan White and .~
Barbara White.

Two new members were Sr~ aJXI WardeD Ows, nmappointed to.the Dislrict.Board ~ and Clert Martha
It Relardati... Tllesday by the Otambers.

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AN ERROR APPEARED in the recipe for tbe crust of Mrs.
Ralph McKenzie's apple honey pie which was in yesterday's
paper. It read "2 ooe-tbird CUJII presifted aD purpGIIe flour" and
should have rea~ "two and CJJe.tlard cups".
We repeal the crust recipe to avoid any question as to
ingredienta:
2 and one-third CUJII presifted aU-purpose foot

BOOK CIRCULATION

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Serving:

lf.Pwwsu),O.. &amp;pl..lslm

·- Board Elects New Members·

•

4 eggs, beaten
1% cups sugar
~ cup seH-l'ising flour
3¥• cups sweet milk
~ stick butter or margarine, melted
1 teaspooo vanilla 7 ounce package OOed coconut.
Beat the eggs, add sugar and Dour and mix. Add milk and
melted butter, then vanilla and cocmut.
Pour into a greased and floured skillet. Bake in 350 degree
over for 40 minutes. Let cool in the skillet before removing.

Kahn's

LB.

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Happy AnnikiSaly

IMP(ISSJBfl: PIE

lb.

HOME MADE

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HAM SALAD

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having · spent
the past several
weeks
in Huntington
for
medical treaqnent. She was
confined to the St. Mary's
Hospital there and for the past
two weeks has been with her
sister, Marlin, and her family.
Mrs. John Weeks and
children, Tommy and Mary
Beth , Reynoldsburg, spent
Wednesday and -Thursday here
visiting Mr. llDd Mrs. Eldon
Weeks, The two families
at
recently
vacationed
Wrightsville, N. C. for two
weeks.

'I1IJS "IMPOSSIBlE PIE" recipe was sent to us by Mrs.
Willie Collins. It Peach Ford Road, Ptmeroy. llle says tbat is
makes it own cruslu it bakes in a 10 incbskillet.

4'

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l~'.}i

II ever anyone needed a quick and easy way of preparing a

HAMS

U. S. Golemment Inspected

Pomeroy....
Personal Notes

by Charlene Hoeftich

SUPERIOR
SEMI BONELESS

You'll EnioJ Our USDA
Dtoice Meats. ~

ROUSH REUNION
The descendants of George
and Susanna Roush will hold
their annual reunioo at the ·
Union Camp Grounds, back of
Mrs. Willard Wilson· was New Hayen, Sunday with a
returned home Saturday after basket dinner at noon.

Fun ·with Foods

Phebe Comments:

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. ~ - ft.ellliiJ'

;r,

4- 111e Dolil)' $enlinei,Mi.Heport-I'Gmeloy, o.,Sept.1, 1971

.

COFFEE
SMAll

EGGS
lARGESI SWCOON OF

TABLE WINE
IN TOWN

Lakin Slate Hospital willhoo- Choir. Mrs. Lena stroor, Maor the 13 members d. its tetXh sm Coomy Gidem Society will
gradua~ class ol Psychiatric make the preseltatioo aJJJ Mrs.
Nursiq: Aides in a Certificate Lillian !iluler of the DepartPresematloo Pnwam Friday mert of Emplo,yment Security
at 2 p.m., in·room 109.
will give a rew remarks perPoint Pleasant's Mayor Joo lainiq: to the pnvam. Doris
Leighty will be guest speaker McDaniel is scheduled to serve
while educators and lihers will as mlstrem; ol ceremooies.
participate in the brief cere- The program theme is
m011Y and atteodthesocialhour, "You'll Never Walk Alone",
A. E. Sommer Jr., Mason Instructors include: Mrs. Sue
Coumy Vocati&lt;QI Center Di- Dulin, RN; Miss Joyce Bn.brector, will talk brlell,y aJJJ ham, student aide; Mrs. Doris
Actiq: &amp;hool ~ McDaniel, RN and Mrs. Freeda
Michael Whalen will present Jordan, ABE Instructor.
certificates.
Graduating Class members
The Rev. Kenneth 91011' will· include: Joyce M. Blal1l and
olfer the invocatiOIL Miss Helen Helen K. Wheeler both ol West
Culmer, · RN Director ol Nur- Columbia; Eleaoor L. Edwards,
sO.: at Lakin stole Hospital llartfonl; Ulliao S. ~es,
will give the welc:ane and Vlo-~ Virginia E. Jeffers,
let liltoo, the student respou- Glenwood; L. Ernestine Davis,
se.
Carolyn B. Kinney, Eulah M.
Mrs. Sue Dulin, RN lostruc- Kaoll, Marilee Lalhey, Violet
tor will make introduction ol Litton, Dooald L. Martin, Pbyl"
the class. James H~s, is to lis A. MwllhY aod Denise ll
direct the Lakin Slate Hospital Ritchie all ol Point PleaS&amp;rL

SO YOU WANr

Computer, Business
MQchine Fielil Booms
By ERNIE HOOD
The business machine and
computer manufacturing. in·
dustry is described as one of
the front
0 f Amerrunners
.
ind trial
growth
: b Irvin
.
no1
Y
g
ps
m lh,e U.S. ~bor Department s Occupation~ O~k
Quarterly, t h e md~ s
empl~ym~t has multiplied
stea~y smce World '!far II,
growmg from app!fl:mnately
133,000 workers m 1958 to
mo~ ~ a quarter of a
milli?o. m 1.9'10.
•
Pbillips says expectations
are !b3t the east growth of
the industry IS prol~gue to
a .~linued ezpaiiSion reqwnng thousands of new
workers annually during the
19'/Us.
The industry makes products r a o gin g from ultrasophisticated electronic computers at the heart of Ute
s p a c e program to typewriters, caleulators, time·
clocks, dictating and duplicating machines, and weighing devices.
Collectively, of co u r s e,
t h e s e products symbolize
the extent of technological
advances in the industry
since first efforts toward
• - - - - - - - -. .

JC:

Philli

c-,.~

"'JJII,.U'J

fJowiiS

The Gentle Touch
That Means So Much

446-tm

can Us FOr

• To r.ty·Out

• Priced-

ro BE

.

tt2-55M

Y-Fie_.Neods

5ei '""' Gilllipelis
........
,,Mirrld .......

&amp;--c... w.v•.

commercial production of
r u d i m e n t. a r y calcula·
tors, ca~ registers and typewnters m the latter half of
the 19th century.
In 1970 the ID
· dUSu
'-·'
~ S 280,•
000 employes worked in '100
plants, and two thirds of
these workers were employed in the manufacture
of com p u t e r equipment.
which accounted for more
than half of the industry's
production. The other thirdminus a small percentage
making scales and weighing
devices - produced conventiona! office machines.
In addition to manufacturing computers and peripbera1 equipment, the plants in
this industry also Curnisb the
"software," computer programs and operating systerns needed by customers
for the effective use of com·
puters. Thousands of addi·
tional people are employed
by software firms, computer
leasing companies and re- ·
lated computer service establishments. One out of
every 10 workers in the in·
dustry is a lecbn!cian, m.ost
of them electrorucs Special·
ists.
Administrative personnel
also account for about one
.out
of every and
10 workers
in
inclode top
the industry
executives who make man·
agement p o li c y decisions
and middle managers wbo
direct departments. Sa I e s
personnel hold about one of
every 25 jobs in the industry.
Nearly one in every silt employes holds a clerical job,
including secretaries, clerk·
typists, bookkeepers, bUSJ·
ness machine operators, keypunch operators and console .
operators .

WoH Pen
Miss Naomi · Jo Smith, Concord College, Athens, W. Va., is
spending a few days with her

"IT'S TRUE" . -.

parents, Mr. and Mrs. Qlorley
Smith before starling fall term
d studies.
ployes are plant (blue collar)
workers.
It's a career field that's
wide open in a number of
occupations.
More information can be
obtained f r o m Business
Equipment Manufacturers Association, 1828 L St.
NW, Washington, D.C. :m:lll,
or Organization Resources
Counselors Inc., Rockefeller
Center, lZ10 Avenue of the
Americas, New York, N.Y.
lim!.

VALUES

ARE
FOUND

AT

• • •

If you h a v e a question
about a career field, write to
SO YOU WANT TO BE, in
care of Newspaper Enterprise Association, Suite 410,
230 Park Avenue, New York,
N.Y. 10017.

BAKER

•

'·

MIIIOI.IPORT, 0.

IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT

TO

.,.

OHIO POWER CUSTOMERS!
A Planned Service Interruption Will Ia

NaceSICiry on Thursday, September 2,
'

1971 From 5 AM until 6 AM -

Weather Permitting

The Areas Affected Are As Follows:

Pomeror - Mine1sville - Syracuse • Racine
This Planned Interruption Is Naeaswry to
Improve Service In lhasa Alwasl:

·Thank You
---------------~~--11!!---'!11-IJI!II•Illl!

Half of the industry's em·' . .
II

FURNITU'-

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Elardo-Bowman'. Exchange • Vows

Miss Sharon Kay Elardo and with pink mums and greenery.
Mr. John Evart Bowman ex. John Edward Elardo, the
changed wedding vows at the seven•year old brother of the
Middleport Olurch of Christ, bride, was ring bearer. He wore
Middleport, Ohio on Saturday, a white linen suit and carried a
AUgust 14 at 4 : ~ pin. The white satin, lace trimmedReverend Raullin Moyer of- pillow bearing the rings of the
ftciated at the double ring bride and groom.
ceremony with Mr. Kenneth Serving as best man was the
Scites; church Elder, aSsisting. groom's brother, Mr. Stephan
The bride is the daughter of Bowman
of
'columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. John J . Elardo of Groomsmen were Mr. Michael
,GaJlipolis, Ohio and the Callahan of Worthington, Mr.
bridegroom is the son of Mr. Michael Rose and Mr. Frank
and Mrs. Olarles Bowman, Souders, Jackson, all cousins of
Jackson, Ohio.
the groom. Mr. Fred Alverson
The selling for the wedding of Gallipolis was head usher. All
~mony. was of one, fifteen the men wore black, satin
arched candlelabra in back of trimmed tuxe4os. .,
the communion table with two, . Mrs. Elardo, mother of the
seven branch can~bras on bride, wore a pink dress of.
either lide. Potted palms lined Georgette over pink polyester
the front railings on both sides with matching accessories.
of the altar. Eight single aisle Mrs. Bowman, mother of the
candelabras trimmed with groom, chose an aqua dress of
greenery and white satin bows chiffon over aqua polyester with
lined the bridal aisle. The matching accessories. Both the
traditional white hlnner was mothers carried a single long
\,
used.
stemmed while rose tied with a
Mrs. Chester Erwin of white satin ribbon.
Middleport presented the Program hostess was Mrs.
following 1H'gan selections prior Stephan Bowman of Columbus
'\
to the ceremony: "La Olanson and at the guest register were
Nuptiale", "Clair de Luhe", the Misses Lisa and Lori
"Panis j\ngelieus", "Theme CaiJahan. of ailllicothe. They
from Love Story", and "A Time were dressed in pink dotted
for Us". Mr. and Mrs. Richard swiss Door length dresses acMoyer sang "Whither Thou cenled with brown lace ribbon.
Goest" and "One Hand, One The reception was held in the
Heart". "The Wedding Prayer" social room of the church imand "Let Us Break Bread '· mediately following
the .
Together" was sung during the ceremony. A four-tiered cake
ceremony.
served as centerpiece of a table
The bride, given in marriage decorated with two, three ar•
by her father, wore a Door ched silver candelabras and
length gown of white polyester crystal pooch bowl.. Atop the
crepe designed with a scooped cake was a gold cross with
neckline and an empire waist. entwining wedding bands.
The puffed chiffon long sleeves Presiding at the cake and
were accented by bands of punch table were Miss Peggy
French embroidered lace McKinney of Middleport, Mrs .
trimmed with seed pearls. The Chuck Malone, Jackson; Miss
matching lace was repealed Lou Anne Perry of Ironton ;
again aroooclthe empire waist Mrs. Carl Elardo of St. Joseph, bouquet.
Force. He attended Ohio
Branch
of the dress and aroood her Missouri and Mrs. Ursula
in
The bride is a 1967 graduate of University
chapel length silk illusion Ogden from Chillicothe.
Jackson High School and is Chillicothe and is presently
mantilla. She carried a colonial Miss T
M
·h
presently employed at the First employed as a city policeman in
styled bouquet of while carammy owery anded
Jackson.
the guests thank-you note National Bank in Jackson.
lions
mlnlatur
The groom is a 1965 graduate The couple are residing in
na
and bab• sb th e porn pons parehmen't scroUs ti'ed wt'th a of Jackson High School and
Jackson, Ohio.
Mrs. Y ~: · Shambaugh, gold cord. Miss .Kim. Mow~ry served four years in the Air
Latoinia, Kentucky was matron gave ~e guests P.mk n~e wht~h
of honor. Maid of honor was w"'! lied with pink rtbbon m
Sa
J
J
f white net.
.
Mtss
ra
ane
ones
o
·Th e Je1 Cad et Y ou,'h Group,
B 'desmaids
th
J ac....
.....n. n
were e of hich the bridal
Misses SUsan and Cathy Elardo
w
coup1e were
of St J
h Misso ·
. leaders, were "special" guests
Holzer Medical Center, First and daughter, Mrs . Dana
.
b~dp
The'
Ufl, COUSlliSl at the wedding and each wore a
of the n e.
0ower gtr was white
Ave. and Cedar St. General Hanin~. Mrs. John W. Hipes,
.
,.1,., ,
carnatton.
Miss An geIa Elardo, -r-;r:;:
visiting hours Z-4 and 7-8 p. m. Ely Le~ Kreger, Mrs. Edwin ·F.
a,
,
.
cousin. They were ali dresieil in Mfs , Kenneth Scttes of Maternity visiting hours 2: 30 to Neutzling and daughter, Mrs.
noor length brown dotted ftiss Pomeroy , was the wedding 4:30 p. m. Parents only on Carl A. Perry, Mrs. Edith Mae
dresses. The bishop sleeves consultant · and the Philalhea Pediatrics Ward.
Sayre, Mrs. Okey H. VanMeter,
were accented with bands of Society was in charge of the
DISCHARGES
Sr., William T. Washam, Sr.,
white lace trinuned with pink reception.
Charles R. Alkire, Mack R. Mrs. Harry E. Williams, Miss
seed J)eafls and repeated again For their wedding trip the Bennett, Mrs. William Keith Erma Barnett, Ronald E.
arounathe empire waist. They bride wore a white polyester Brown and son, Loaell F. Bostic, Mrs. William Marshall,
wore while wide brimmed hair knit dress '!rimmed in yellow Collins, Fred A. Eatman , Mrs. Eloda Webb, Mrs. Anna E.
braid hats with matching inm. with matching accessories and Mrs. Allen Emerson, Robert L. Sims, Miss Reba Beale, and
They carried fireside baskets the corsage from her wedding Ford, Mrs. Roger F. French Jane M. Ervin .

!J

Mr.r. john Evart Bowman

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

HOSPITAL NEWS

!

l

iii

....
•
...

Fer Quality•

Whole
or Half

~.

..
..•

Qlbitious meal it's Jean Zahl Smith. The triplets - Sam, Betty
and Barbara - are first graders IIlla year. Kenny graduated from
ligh school and is currently workiq! at tbe Esser W'1re Co. at
Berrien Sp~s. Mich., where tbe family moved last liiGIIth. Leo
Is at the nuclear plant at Bentoo HarbGur. So for Jean there is
never a dull mcment.
,
Jent use her recipe for Vegelable-&amp;rger Soup which she
describes as a "great quick method of making soup tllat really
tastes like hmlemade vegetable soup tbat blci:aD day".
VEGETAJILE..IIURGERSOUP
~ poond ground beef
1 can (2 cups) stewi!d tomatoes
1 cup (8 ounce can) tlmalo sauce
2 cups water
1 - 10 oonce package fro1.en mixed vegelables
'% envelope ( ¥• cup) dried ooioo .soup mix
1 leaspooo sugar
Brown the ground beef and drain om the fat Add aU the other
Ingredients and bring to a boil; Reduce beat, C0¥1!1' and simJOe!' II
minutes. (6 lo 8 ~)

i:.

..•

i....

.
i.
•
-..
•

II

With. A

Vase Arranrleinent
l)esigMd By

Ducley's Floiist

BACON
Sliced

lb. 39. ~

French City Brand

20 Count
pkg.

I .CHER ~

----..
'

..•

BOMB

DRINK
I GAL

Hot Dog or Hamburger

8pak 29~

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

MARSHMALLOW
KRAFT

1

~ 19~

Peggy Russea
Speakr At laura/

Mrs. Cora Pullen and Miss
Jerry Pullen entertained
Monday evening with a layette
shower honoring Mrs. Uoyd
Blackwood of Sumner .
A stork motif was carried out
in the decorations with a pink
and blue color scheme. A stork·
replica centered the gift table
which was covered in pink and
featured blue streamers .
Ga mes were played with
prizes going to Mrs. F. H.
O'Brien, Miss Nina Russell, and
Miss Rhoda Hall. Miss Bernice
Ann Durst won the door prize.
The hostesses served tresh
apple rake with whipped cream
and coffee. Favors were stork
nutcups.
Other guests were Mrs. Don
Mullen, Mrs. Helena Brickles,
Mrs. Agnes Brown, Mrs. Henry
Ewing, Mrs. Howard Dailey,
Miss Bronwyn Dailey, and Miss
Martha Howell. Also presenting,
gifts were Mrs. George Hackett,
Mrs: John Goett, Mrs. John
Redovian, Mrs. Guy Cowan and
dat1ghters, Miss Hallie Zerkle
and Miss Nellie Zerkle.

Peggy Russell, daughter of

Mr. and Mrs. Guy Russell of
Bradbury, will speak at 7:30
this evening at the Laurel !lifl
· Free Methodist Olurcb.
Miss Russell is a missiooary
on furlough ftun Mexico. She ·
will show slides of Mexico. The
public is invited.

-. Sailboat Race
----.--.
--•

~

•

•

Pre-Cut

•

-----.-.
--------.
-~

•

~

STUDS

~

HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN

•

MATERIALS CO.
773-5554

--.
---

We Deliwr

r--------:=-------------:=--:

A sailboat regatta will be beJd
at the Athens Boat llub in
Hockingport a t I :30 p. m. oo
Sept. 18. The race is spoos&lt;nd
by Sea . Explorer Ship "'Ii d.
Coolville and will be a handicap
eventmiiking it possible for any
boat there to win
Trophies will~ awarded for
first to finish [Irs sero&gt;d and
third places.'~ will be a

·

ALL

$3.50 entrance fee.

Completes Plans
Plans

have been cuupleted
for the open clmrch wedding of
Miss Patti Jeffers, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jeffers of
Syracuse, to Mr. Mike Van
Matre, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wilbur Van Maire, West
Colmnbia.
The wedding will be an event
of Saturday at 2 p. m. at the
West
Columbia
United
Methodist Church. A half.bour
program It pnmuptial music
will

the

"'-wm t E-..
..,

5 wa-

k.ara Lamb coat with f~x
mllar and cuffs ts from 0.r:ar de Ia Renta.

tel dllOIIJ'.

.SHIRT.
FIIISHING_
SAI!lE DAY
SE~VICE

-~~15 .,

Francis
Hosts
Party

TUPPERS PLAINS

Mrs. Eulah Francis of Middleport entertained Monda)'
...-ening witb a ~· party. Jean
HaU was the demonstrator.
Games were piayed with
lri= going to the winners.
Mr.;, • Edith Spencer '1&lt;00 the
door prize. Cooties, coffee, jello
and soil drinks were sen'ed.
Othefs attending orere Kay
Avis, Coolville, l\lrs. FTancis
Whittington and children,
Leslie, Jeffrey, Teresa, and
Lisa, ~ Run ; Darin Roach,
Mrs. Marie Francis, Trudy
ROIIch, and llrs. Carl Roach,
PlotlldO)'; Anna Yeauger, Mrs.
Gertrude Miller, Mrs. Nellie
Dunn. Mr,;. Flora Bailey. Mrs.
Gerlrnde Kloes and Ke ith
Black, Middleport.

CONCERNED NEIGHBOR,
Premier John Lyac:h of Ute
Irisll Re)lllblic bas ~ed
Britain. to ,o slow oa mmtary measures to q D e II
N e r t II e r • lrelalld's rell-

P-

eolllllld. Alll!ked lit!·
tivilies by the oatlawed
Irish Republica Army In
the IIOl1h from bases Ill Ute
soath bave d ouded DubliDLoiHioa excbaages on tbe
crisis.

HOllE GIIOWII

. . Rnsset Bakers '

GROUND ·
••

&gt;

•

DART
•

•

.
•

•

••
•

.

POTATOES

COLONIAL

SUGAR.
5 :; 59~
WITH A $5.00 PURCHASE

for

CHUCK
h89~
SLICED ·
BACON

' ·'1"

WATERMELON

SKINLESS

-..

WIENERS
~.,,

•

890

AlliiEAT

SLICED
,BOLOGNA

LEMONS
~· 60°

,

•

OR MORE

2'100

·lb.

99~
3 lb. can

79'

SHORTENING
FAWillE

BREAD

5bMS $} 00
31b.

."•

•.

pl.

MIS. TUCKER PURE
VEGETABLE

AlliiEAT

79~

89~

Cold
lllo 22 h

MILK

Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence
Balser spent the weekend with
her brother, Mr. and Mrs.
Dennard Blake and family of
Mansfield . They were ac·
companied home by their
daughter, Pamela Balser, who
had spent the week with the
Blake family.

Nursing Aides
Get Certificates

llor 79c

MUSTARD......~~-~~~..........................~~·.19'
STUFFED OLIVES..~~-~~~......,... ~..~~:. 49'
TABLE NAPKINS .. ~~~~...........~~.~!:.1 0'
SALAD DRESSING.;;;.~:..........~~:. 59'
PAPER PLATES ..~~-..~~:~ .........~~-~~: 59'
.
.
10 lb.
CHARCOAL ................................~~~ ... 69'
DRY MILK.~.~~~~~......................~~-~~:-'1" PORK &amp; BEANS
...
~~~~~
....
&amp;
16 oz. •1
.
'
TOPP POP............................12 ~!:sz. •1

visor-intern. Or . Char lea
Nichols, professor and chairman of the department 0(
voca tional education at Kent,
directed the program.

Personal Notes

••

GRAPEFRUIT

Holsum ·

BUNS

.,

••
••

•

a.osm SUNDAYS.

'

and Robert Morris. The ...,_
missiooers also paid standing
bills .
Attending the meeting ftf'e
lOObert . &lt;::brl, Olarles Karr' .

••
•••
•
••
••

~

10 lb. bag

Mon. Tues., WecL--9 to 7
lh~, Fri, Sat. --~9 to 9

Rutland Garden

Virginia Car.ron Attendd Kent

SONGFEST
The Gospel Messenger~ ol
Kent, 'Ohio, will make an appeara nce a t the Pomeroy
Na&gt;arene Church with dale and
Lime to be announced.

Two U.S . presidents are
buried in Arlington National
Cemetery- William Howard
PLUS DEPOSIT
Taft and John F . Kennedy.
~-----------------------------------~

You, WE LIKE"

FAIRMONT

•••
•
••
•

IN EACH 8-PACK

WIENERS

Prices Effediw Sept 1-4

eam.

Social
Calendar

Middleport

missiooers.
· The two new members are ·
Mrs. Russell Brown of~Wduy
and Tom KeDy d. M"wlc!Jrprt.
They . replace Kfl1llit Walton

...•

~

1 cup plus three tablespoons vegetable shortening
6 tab~ water.
.
Usrng a paslry culler, cut tbe vegetable llbortemng mlo the
Dour until mix1ure is a~t the size of peas. Add Z table&amp;JOO(IIS
waterata Ume. Toss with a fork. Do not stir. Work dougb to form
a smooth ball.

5th ..d PEARL STS., RACINE ·
''The Store With A Heart,
Right reserved to limtt quantities
We Gladly Accept Fed. FGod Stamps

Meigs County Board of

:
•
:
:

1 teaspo(m salt

Total circulation for Middleport and Pomeroy libraries
and the bookmobile for the
month of July was 9,253, it was
reported today. Magazine
donations for the hospital cart
at Veterans MemoriaJ .Hospital
were provided by Mrs. Clair
Karr, Mrs. Homer E. Cooper,
Mrs. Dan White and .~
Barbara White.

Two new members were Sr~ aJXI WardeD Ows, nmappointed to.the Dislrict.Board ~ and Clert Martha
It Relardati... Tllesday by the Otambers.

•
"

AN ERROR APPEARED in the recipe for tbe crust of Mrs.
Ralph McKenzie's apple honey pie which was in yesterday's
paper. It read "2 ooe-tbird CUJII presifted aD purpGIIe flour" and
should have rea~ "two and CJJe.tlard cups".
We repeal the crust recipe to avoid any question as to
ingredienta:
2 and one-third CUJII presifted aU-purpose foot

BOOK CIRCULATION

•

••

Serving:

lf.Pwwsu),O.. &amp;pl..lslm

·- Board Elects New Members·

•

4 eggs, beaten
1% cups sugar
~ cup seH-l'ising flour
3¥• cups sweet milk
~ stick butter or margarine, melted
1 teaspooo vanilla 7 ounce package OOed coconut.
Beat the eggs, add sugar and Dour and mix. Add milk and
melted butter, then vanilla and cocmut.
Pour into a greased and floured skillet. Bake in 350 degree
over for 40 minutes. Let cool in the skillet before removing.

Kahn's

LB.

•

I....

Happy AnnikiSaly

IMP(ISSJBfl: PIE

lb.

HOME MADE

•

•

or

z

l, ut?'

..

HAM SALAD

....

••

·---"'!!11..---..

.

l•..

••

having · spent
the past several
weeks
in Huntington
for
medical treaqnent. She was
confined to the St. Mary's
Hospital there and for the past
two weeks has been with her
sister, Marlin, and her family.
Mrs. John Weeks and
children, Tommy and Mary
Beth , Reynoldsburg, spent
Wednesday and -Thursday here
visiting Mr. llDd Mrs. Eldon
Weeks, The two families
at
recently
vacationed
Wrightsville, N. C. for two
weeks.

'I1IJS "IMPOSSIBlE PIE" recipe was sent to us by Mrs.
Willie Collins. It Peach Ford Road, Ptmeroy. llle says tbat is
makes it own cruslu it bakes in a 10 incbskillet.

4'

....•
..i.

l~'.}i

II ever anyone needed a quick and easy way of preparing a

HAMS

U. S. Golemment Inspected

Pomeroy....
Personal Notes

by Charlene Hoeftich

SUPERIOR
SEMI BONELESS

You'll EnioJ Our USDA
Dtoice Meats. ~

ROUSH REUNION
The descendants of George
and Susanna Roush will hold
their annual reunioo at the ·
Union Camp Grounds, back of
Mrs. Willard Wilson· was New Hayen, Sunday with a
returned home Saturday after basket dinner at noon.

Fun ·with Foods

Phebe Comments:

•.
••

. ~ - ft.ellliiJ'

;r,

4- 111e Dolil)' $enlinei,Mi.Heport-I'Gmeloy, o.,Sept.1, 1971

.

COFFEE
SMAll

EGGS
lARGESI SWCOON OF

TABLE WINE
IN TOWN

Lakin Slate Hospital willhoo- Choir. Mrs. Lena stroor, Maor the 13 members d. its tetXh sm Coomy Gidem Society will
gradua~ class ol Psychiatric make the preseltatioo aJJJ Mrs.
Nursiq: Aides in a Certificate Lillian !iluler of the DepartPresematloo Pnwam Friday mert of Emplo,yment Security
at 2 p.m., in·room 109.
will give a rew remarks perPoint Pleasant's Mayor Joo lainiq: to the pnvam. Doris
Leighty will be guest speaker McDaniel is scheduled to serve
while educators and lihers will as mlstrem; ol ceremooies.
participate in the brief cere- The program theme is
m011Y and atteodthesocialhour, "You'll Never Walk Alone",
A. E. Sommer Jr., Mason Instructors include: Mrs. Sue
Coumy Vocati&lt;QI Center Di- Dulin, RN; Miss Joyce Bn.brector, will talk brlell,y aJJJ ham, student aide; Mrs. Doris
Actiq: &amp;hool ~ McDaniel, RN and Mrs. Freeda
Michael Whalen will present Jordan, ABE Instructor.
certificates.
Graduating Class members
The Rev. Kenneth 91011' will· include: Joyce M. Blal1l and
olfer the invocatiOIL Miss Helen Helen K. Wheeler both ol West
Culmer, · RN Director ol Nur- Columbia; Eleaoor L. Edwards,
sO.: at Lakin stole Hospital llartfonl; Ulliao S. ~es,
will give the welc:ane and Vlo-~ Virginia E. Jeffers,
let liltoo, the student respou- Glenwood; L. Ernestine Davis,
se.
Carolyn B. Kinney, Eulah M.
Mrs. Sue Dulin, RN lostruc- Kaoll, Marilee Lalhey, Violet
tor will make introduction ol Litton, Dooald L. Martin, Pbyl"
the class. James H~s, is to lis A. MwllhY aod Denise ll
direct the Lakin Slate Hospital Ritchie all ol Point PleaS&amp;rL

SO YOU WANr

Computer, Business
MQchine Fielil Booms
By ERNIE HOOD
The business machine and
computer manufacturing. in·
dustry is described as one of
the front
0 f Amerrunners
.
ind trial
growth
: b Irvin
.
no1
Y
g
ps
m lh,e U.S. ~bor Department s Occupation~ O~k
Quarterly, t h e md~ s
empl~ym~t has multiplied
stea~y smce World '!far II,
growmg from app!fl:mnately
133,000 workers m 1958 to
mo~ ~ a quarter of a
milli?o. m 1.9'10.
•
Pbillips says expectations
are !b3t the east growth of
the industry IS prol~gue to
a .~linued ezpaiiSion reqwnng thousands of new
workers annually during the
19'/Us.
The industry makes products r a o gin g from ultrasophisticated electronic computers at the heart of Ute
s p a c e program to typewriters, caleulators, time·
clocks, dictating and duplicating machines, and weighing devices.
Collectively, of co u r s e,
t h e s e products symbolize
the extent of technological
advances in the industry
since first efforts toward
• - - - - - - - -. .

JC:

Philli

c-,.~

"'JJII,.U'J

fJowiiS

The Gentle Touch
That Means So Much

446-tm

can Us FOr

• To r.ty·Out

• Priced-

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.

tt2-55M

Y-Fie_.Neods

5ei '""' Gilllipelis
........
,,Mirrld .......

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commercial production of
r u d i m e n t. a r y calcula·
tors, ca~ registers and typewnters m the latter half of
the 19th century.
In 1970 the ID
· dUSu
'-·'
~ S 280,•
000 employes worked in '100
plants, and two thirds of
these workers were employed in the manufacture
of com p u t e r equipment.
which accounted for more
than half of the industry's
production. The other thirdminus a small percentage
making scales and weighing
devices - produced conventiona! office machines.
In addition to manufacturing computers and peripbera1 equipment, the plants in
this industry also Curnisb the
"software," computer programs and operating systerns needed by customers
for the effective use of com·
puters. Thousands of addi·
tional people are employed
by software firms, computer
leasing companies and re- ·
lated computer service establishments. One out of
every 10 workers in the in·
dustry is a lecbn!cian, m.ost
of them electrorucs Special·
ists.
Administrative personnel
also account for about one
.out
of every and
10 workers
in
inclode top
the industry
executives who make man·
agement p o li c y decisions
and middle managers wbo
direct departments. Sa I e s
personnel hold about one of
every 25 jobs in the industry.
Nearly one in every silt employes holds a clerical job,
including secretaries, clerk·
typists, bookkeepers, bUSJ·
ness machine operators, keypunch operators and console .
operators .

WoH Pen
Miss Naomi · Jo Smith, Concord College, Athens, W. Va., is
spending a few days with her

"IT'S TRUE" . -.

parents, Mr. and Mrs. Qlorley
Smith before starling fall term
d studies.
ployes are plant (blue collar)
workers.
It's a career field that's
wide open in a number of
occupations.
More information can be
obtained f r o m Business
Equipment Manufacturers Association, 1828 L St.
NW, Washington, D.C. :m:lll,
or Organization Resources
Counselors Inc., Rockefeller
Center, lZ10 Avenue of the
Americas, New York, N.Y.
lim!.

VALUES

ARE
FOUND

AT

• • •

If you h a v e a question
about a career field, write to
SO YOU WANT TO BE, in
care of Newspaper Enterprise Association, Suite 410,
230 Park Avenue, New York,
N.Y. 10017.

BAKER

•

'·

MIIIOI.IPORT, 0.

IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT

TO

.,.

OHIO POWER CUSTOMERS!
A Planned Service Interruption Will Ia

NaceSICiry on Thursday, September 2,
'

1971 From 5 AM until 6 AM -

Weather Permitting

The Areas Affected Are As Follows:

Pomeror - Mine1sville - Syracuse • Racine
This Planned Interruption Is Naeaswry to
Improve Service In lhasa Alwasl:

·Thank You
---------------~~--11!!---'!11-IJI!II•Illl!

Half of the industry's em·' . .
II

FURNITU'-

..

�f~ 'l1le Dlllv SenliDeL MiddJeoort..l'ly, O., Sept. I, 1m

Mason Area News, Notes
ByEDITHFOX
about Indian corn (the
COMPANYCOMMANDER
decorative kind ) and they
Captaui Jack Stewart, with U. thought it would be plentiful this
S. Anny, formerly of Mason, year. When cooking all these
and ·a graduate of Wahama goodies· 1 seldom use ricb
High ~hool, has graduated sauces (which I Uke) but use
&amp;om University of Nebraka, perhaps a little butler, salt and
Omaha. Capt. Stewart has been pepper for seasoning. I believe
promoted to Company Com- by simply cooking with water
mander at Fori Lewis, and add light seasoning the
W~~Shington .
vegetables retain their natural
Capt. Stewart, wife, Elayne, flavor. Each tittle roadside
and two children Julie and Kim, market is small in size but thinlt
htve been visiting his mother, of all the long and hard hours or
Mrs. Evelyn Stewa.rt and labor that has go ne into
brother, Rober! and family, preparation of those "goodies"
Mason . Captain and Mrs. , that we take so much for
Stewart recently motored to gran led as products of summer.
_ geveland, Ohio to visit with So, ladies, dig out 'your jars
Mrs. Slewart'sparents, Mr. and your canner and go to work
Mrs. Chester Velzer:
when company arrives at
PEI!SONAI$
Christmas - "Ywn, yum!"
Mrs. Ann Davis and son,
ASTUDENT'S PRAYER
Chuckle, ~lumbus, spent the · While visiting in Holzer
weekend wtth her parents, Mr. ·Hospital, 1 foimd a prayer
and Mrs. John McDaniel, written in back or one of the
Clifton.
Gideon Bibles made available
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Velzer, for the patients. It was inCleveland, Ohio, visited scribed Jennie Howell 90 years
recently with Mrs. Evelyn old.- August.l96.'1, and titled "A
Stewart, ~n.
Student's Prayer." "I believe in
Miss Elizabeth Mcintosh and God without reservation I
Mrs. Ray Fox attended the believe that all things sci~n­
~eral of Mr. Russell, Sunday tifically true is of God - I
believe in Jesus &lt;luisl as the
m Pomt Pleasant.
Mrs. · Jessie Cartwright ReveJation of God to Man - I
visited her daughte~, Evelyn believe His interpretation of
Ntcholson, ·and Hallie Zerkle, God as our Father and comwho are patients al Holzer pletely trust Him with my life
Hospital.
and all I possess both in the
ROADSIDE MARKETS
present ari'd in the Ufe to come
AU you cooks, take note! - - 1believe His will for me is to
~ roadsid~ markets are in full live in health, in peace and in
SWJDg. Slop at any or all of them material sufficiency and in
and feast your eyes on all Ute harmony with His law and love
delicious looking vegetables - 1 believe that 1 can best find
and fruit which aclually make God in quietness, in prayer and
your ''moulh water." - green in the service of others."
beans,
tom_!ltoes,
corn,
CQMBINEDPICNIC
watermelon, ca·nlaloupes
A combined picnic of Mm;on
(mush mellon), apples and Homemakers and Sunshine
many, many more. I asked Class of Mason United

and

h
•
·
as zn."'on

r---------------:---;-------1
JF/.
O .,,

MeOMJdisl Church was held at House Anne~. V'lckie Keeler,
O&gt;e beautiful home of Mr. and Virginia Voight, Kathy Olson I
I'
Mrs. ·
Landon
Shith, and Faye Cook were the :
"· ' •
:I
Harrisonville, Ohio. E, Fox ·hostesses.
presided in the ab;ence of the
(:;ames were played and
1
president and vice president, winners were Vurl Randolph, 1
Clare
I
Ahna Marshall and Laverne Irene Sayre, Audrey Hoffman I
By
nee 1:
Lewis. The Homemakers voted and ll!ary Phillips.
I
Miller
to send a gift. to Unda Dunham
"Ohs" and " Ahs" were heard I
at her pre-bridal shower and as Unda opened her many :
:
Joyce Carson and Hazel Smith beautiful gifts from the Mason
were appointed to make the " County Homemakers, 4-fHlubs
WASHINGTON - In in· The bill calls for: (I) repeal of
selection. Joyce Carson gave and Leaders and the "Gang'' troducing his new eeonomic the pn!Senl 1 percent excise lax
devotions a11d . Rev. Parker from the County Clerk's office. policy, the President outlined on automobile sales retroactive
Hinzman offered grace lor the Gifts were received from 4 the role Congress will play in to Aug. 15,19'11; (2) arteler.lled
sumpuom picnic served to :
Corners . 4-H, Faye Cook, the overall iroplementation of lax cuts presently scheduled for
JoyCe Carson, Matilda Noble, Pocahontas, Lion, Pioneer, ' the p'oglam. Needless to say, Jan. 1,1973, by ooe year to Jan.
Lorena Weiss, Hazel So\ith, Ilahee,
Phododendron , Congressionalacceplanceof the 1, 1972, penllitling an~ $50
Evelyn Profitt, Alice Faye Sassafras, Upland, Pleasant, President's proposal is vital to personal exemption from
Gardner, Edith Fox, Nancy Van Ann Bailey and Mason the success of Mr. N'IXOII's federal intome taxes; (3)
Meter, Bessie Hudson, Cheryl Homemal!;ers, Inez 'Newman, staled goals or reduced in· provide an investment tax
Hudson, Clara Williams, Hilda Jean Henderson, Carolyn flation, increased employment creditofiOpercentforooeyear,
Weiss, SaraW"tllis, Rev. Parker Winkler, Kathy Olson, Vtrginia and productivity and renewed wilh a drop to 5 per c:enl the
Hinzman and Mr. and Mrs. Voight, Shirley Cline, V'trginia consumer alllfidence.
foUowing year.
Landon Smith.
W"tlliamson, Audrey Hoffman, Three days after the The President, acting on
HONORED Wl11l SHOWER Maud Dyke, All American 4-11 Presideot's surprising shift in authOrity previously granted
The camera was ready and Club, Betty Fowler, Mrs. Cline, ecooomic policy, Congressional him by Congress, has already
Linda [)pnham was a surprised Edith Fox, Vurl Randolph, leaders of bolh parties met willl irnpose&lt;l a !MM!ay wage, price,
young lady as she stepped in- Jeanie Miller, Marguerite President Nixon and pledged and rent freeze and imp«'S"!' a
side lhe Krodel Park Club Ingle, Hill Billy HI Ouh, MI. prompt consideration of the 10 percent surcharge on 1mHouse and everyone yelled Climbers 4-11 Club, Ann McCoy, President's tax cut proposals., ports.
"Surprise!" The occasion was a Marguerite Can trill, Vicky The House Ways arid Means Automobile excise lax - H
pre-Iridal · shower for Linda, Keefer, Jean Doolittle and Committee will begin hearings Congress moves to repeal the
secretary in the West Virginia "Crew" from Mason Cotlllty Sept. a on a three-pari lax bill auto excise tax, the actim will
Extension Office in Court Clerk's office. .
the President has requested. result in lower ear prices. The

I

R eport

average reduction would be
approximately $200 per new
aui.Oillobiie. i)'Qpping this tax
will stimulate new ear sales and
consequently provide a shot in
the ann for the broad range. of
industry supporting U. S.
automobile prixluctim.

fBeat...

7- 'llle D.iiJ SeMiuel MV.._ t.PI'cmo!I'D
.""- :;.•------~ . '*)MCIDtloy,O.,Sept 1,1rn

peneut of lhe eost ol machinery and equipment
prodiiC'ed in the u.s. and plared
in Sl!l'Yi&lt;e on or 8fler Augasll6,
t9'1l. This credit will drop to 5
pat..nt fiJI' the same items
placed , in service .011 or after
AugUst 15, 19'12.
In an elf&lt;rt lo sfumtlate the
buying of American goods, it is
re&lt;,illlnl(!l111ed that no lax credit
be allowed f..- machinery and
equipment predominately
prodiiC'ed abroad so loog as the
10 peu:eut import surcbarge
remains in elfed This credit is
termed job deveklpment and is
OIJIOCied to encourage greater
invesbJ1efll in industrial plant
rer.ovatim and npansioo and
thereby stimulate employment
and also make U. S. goods more
tuupelilive in world markets.

lrM:oole 11tx exemptions -

Congress will also be asked to
advance to January 1; 19'12, lhe
increase of personal ineome tax
exemptions scheduled to take
effect on January l, 19'1l. Under
the Tax RefOI'lll Acl of 1!169; the
personal
exem,ption
is
scheduled to increase from t650
to $700 on January · I, 1972 and
then to $750 on January 1, 19'13.
But the Presideol's request
calls for a one-year speed up,
making the $750 personal
exemption effective the fir.st
day of ne:a:t year, To the average
laxpaper, this will result in a
smaller withholding of taxes
from paycbecks. This lax acceleration will put $4.8 billion in
the pockets of taxpayers and
thereby add more purcbasing
stimulus lo a struggling
economy.
lnveslment lax credit - The
Administration is recom·
mending a lax credit equal to 10

YII% Geiis Wmning Hit

f: As

I

t
I

,

.

.

By vrro STELUNO

Tiel! are, of lVW se, o~
aspect important to the
eeonomie policy announced by
the PresideoL But the success
.or failure of lhe new economic
plan is greatly .tq&gt;er&gt;ient upcm
the .action of Congress '"' the
(JI•ip('Sed lax decrease and the
cooperation of lbe general
public m the wageiJrice freeze
measures wtlined bere.

I

I

'

:her

.

;:J;':nk

Cooked Hams • •

Celt• Cut Ham Roast

• • •

Chuck :.--~ • • •

Swift Premium :: • •
Chuck Steaks ~ • • •
Sliced Bacol ~ • • •

• •

• •
• • •

ns

3to5
Pound

lastaat Coffee . ~~- • .10 ~
ScoH Viva lapkins c!:.. • • .3 '! 51
Bagies Food Wrap lacs cw:~
White Bread .:. • • • • •4-:: 9t
Gi•t Cheer I~
c 7t

• •

•

Pillll Oli•

.3=$1

COFFEE SAUl

__ _

Fie lin

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IIEYNOI.DS

ll••i••• Fiil

• •

ANN PAGE

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....... W..¥411o

...... W.¥411o

UooiiO..c:-

UooiiO..c:-

oz. cans

Golden lsPe

•••

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VanCamp

. -7t
lhoL

.• • .. :: 71'

••••

Ilk Off lAIB.

..,_,. lllloc:..,.
~~~~­..

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Kraft Whipped

~

• • • • •

Ilk Off lAIB.

nlctU11 lj

;;;ted Meat. . . .:. 83 ouansgse
van camp
4.
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Beanie Wienie ................ ~.
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Sweet Pickles ........~..

Food
Stamps

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Aaapt
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Maxwel House

We

MARYB. VAIIUA

Alii CCIIFIIIII

TITLE BOUT SET
MIAMI BEACH, F1a. (UPI)-Ughlbeavyweight champion
Vinente Rondon of Caraeas,
Venezuela has agreed to meet
third-ranked GoJ:neo Brennan ol
Fort Lauderdale, F1a. in an
Oet. 16 Iitle ftght here, it wu
announced Tuesday by boling
promoter Chris Dundee.

•

-

. . '==5t

--

•

....
•

l,.11r's Tnet •
•

SPECIAL

•

MAHOVLICH SIGNS
MONTREAL (UPI)-Frank
Mahovlich, 33-year-&lt;&gt;ld left winger, Tuesday signed a one-year
contract with the Montreal
Canadiens of the National
Hockey League. Mahovlicb
scored 31 goals last season and
14 in the NHL playoffs.

Smoked Picnic

Prices Effective Thru Sept. 4

59:

Avwega

•

third with 2.4 million ounces,
and the U.S. follows with 1.7
million ounces per year.
One would think thai Russia
is in a good position to
accum ulate reserves by selling
gold on the open market. But
the Soviets have a productivity
problem that makes this
impossible unless gold com·
mands a high price.
H has' big deposits around
Magada, an icy section of
Siberia. Just to house and feed
one worker there costs about
$18,000 per year. They can't
make a profit unless gold is in
the high 40's.

•

Spare Ribs

•

'

Few Humans Understand The Mystique Of Gold

FRESH MEAlY

... 3=SJOO
lir-,.Awlke . 3=SJOO
lltel'ldillll ::. . . 2=8t

·left llfllriH

Business Today

• •

Chuck

&amp;~

.....

HARRIS ASSUMES DUTIES
GOTEBORG, Sweden (UP!)
- Billy Harris, a 14-year
ve teran of the National Hockey
League, arrived hen Monday
to asllwne his duties as
manager of the Swedish National Ice Hockey Team.

• •

Cut
from

Split·Fryers

29

COACH STAYS ON
MEXICO CITY (UPI )-National Swimming Coach Ronald
Johnson of Austin, Tex. has
agreed to stay on as ~ch of
the Mexican swinuners, it was
announced Tuesday by .the
Mexico Olympic Conunittee.
Johnson has held the post since
1967.

Beef Roast

sgc
c

"under the cireuthsiances, I
suppose it would have to be a
satisfying hit."
Yaz's hit ruined Palmer's bid
for his 17th victory. The
Orioles, attempting to become
the first team in 51 years to
boost four 26-game winners,
have Pat Dobson at 17 and
Palmer, Mike·Cuellar and Dave
McNally at 16. Palmer was
tagged for three runs in the
firsl but then blanked the Red
Sox un Ul the ninth when Mike
Fiore walked and Doug Griffin
singled to sel the stage for Vaz .
In other American League
games, Oakland downed California 4-1, Minnesota nipped 1
THE DUNCAN FAMILY - The Duncan Family, former residents of Mason County, will be
Chicago 4-3 in 10 innings,
alllle
Cliftoo United Methodist Church Stmday, Sept. 5, 7::W pm. to briitg God 's message in
Kansas City topped Milwaukee
music and song. This is a talented family and we are acquainted with their talents and llleir
64, Washington edged New
sincere efforts to serve God. Their home is in Tampa, Florida , but during the summer months
York 6&lt;i and Detroit heat
they spend lime at their calin al Racine, Ohio with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Van Buren
Cleveland 6-1 before losing the
Duncan. Come out and enjoy this talented group and renew old friendships. 1hey are fo~er
second game IN.
residents of Cliftoo.
In the National League,
Pittsburgh outlasted Philadel·
phia 7..1, Sl. Louis topped New
York 2-1, Los Angeles drubbed
Houston 6-1, Cincinnati edged
San Diego 2-1, San Francisco
blanked Atlanta 9-0 and Chicago
heat Montreal 7·1 in 10 innings
but Montreal led 8-1 when the
By DEAN C. MILLER , an mlellectual exercise.
Marke t underscore lhat ·theory.
" It ·s just not going to Before Nixon 's bombshell
second game was suspended
UP! Business Editor '
after six innings because of NEW YORK (UP[) - Men happen," he said . "The l'ree speech London fixed · an ounce
darkness.
have killed for it, slaved for it, World wouldn't let it happen. of gold at $43.30. In the
Reggie Jackson slugged a betrayed their countries for it. There's too much at stake."
following two weeks it dropped
Banks Hold $40 Billion
run-scoring double in the eighlh Few, however, have under$2.17 per ounce.
inning to snap a 1-1 deadlock stood the mystique of gold, that
He noted that Central Banks
South Africa and Russia, the
and 'tead Oakland over Califor- precious commodity that has in the Free World trade bloc world's two largest producers,
nia. The A's added two more kept world trade in balance for hold about $40 billion in gold . would suffer by any sharp drop
runs in the inning on a triple by centuries, that Frenchmen hide "They'd fight with their last in the gold price. Latest
Rick Monday.
under their mattresses as a breaths any move to drop gold available figures show that
Frank Baker's error with two security blanket, that Indian as a basis of credit and trade. South Africa mines about 31.3
out in the ninth enabled the families horde to guarantee They stock gold ; they don't million ounces per year. Russia
deciding run to score as their daughters will get. hus· stock silver or platinum. And is a distant second with 6.2
they're not about to give up on million ounces. Canada ranks
Washington edged New York. bands.
Baker entered the game al When on Aug. 15 President gold."
But suppose it did happen?
shortstop in place of Gene Nixon cul the golden tie to the
"In that event," sighed the
Michael, who was Ufted for dollar-, lhe inevitable question
world
banker, "our whole
pinch-hitter Thurman Munson was: What happens if everyone
in the eighth. It looked like a "demonetizes" gold and it trading structure would go
good move when Munson's twn- becomes strictly a commercial through a wrenching such as .
run single capped a four-run product, something used only in you can't imagine. We're
rally and tied the game 5-5. jewelry and a person's bridge· talking about $300 billion
annually in exports, or imports,
Don Mincher had a pinch-hit work?
grand slam homer for the Every gold expert, economist however you want to express
Senators,
and banker asked that question that figure . It would be chaos.
Graig NetUes and Chris dismissed it as " unthinkable." There has to be a recognized
Chambliss each Momered to One banker with international base on which trade credits and
power Cleveland past Detroit in credentials and reputation was fluidity rest."
He likened such a situation to
the second game of a double- willing to discuss it purely as
the
person without credit
header. Sam McDow eO made
The word fan, referring
his third relief appearance of Steve Braun tripled in a run references or assets other than lo an enthusiast over sports
the season and went the final and scored on Jim Nettles a job going into an auto or other entertainment is
showroom and trying to buy a believed to be a contrac·
two innings to save Vince single.
lion of the word fanatic, ac·
Colbert's victory. In the first Paul Schaal's sacrifice fly car on the installment plan.
cording
to The World AI·
Price
Would
Be
Lowered
game, Joe COleman pitched a snapped a 4-4 lie in the seventh
manac.
Be
f o r e 1900 the
Along with most economists,
four-hitter to give the Tigers and paced Kansas City past
old St. Louis
owner
of
lbe
the triwnph.
Milwaukee. Gail Hopkins, who the banker said that any such Browns refmed to a man
Harmon Killebrew's sacrifice had three hils, walked and went demonetization of gold probably as a baseball fan a ti c.
fly in the lOth led Minnesota to third on Lou Piniella 's single would lower its price on. the Newspaper headline writ·
over Chicago. The Twins tied il before scoring on Schaal's commercial market. Recent ers shortened lhe term to
price fixings on the London fan.
with two in the ninth when drive .

gland's Virginia Wade was
forced to withdraw Monday
from the U.S. Open Tennis
championships starting Wednesday al Fotesl Hills because of a
broken left ankle.
Miss Wade sustained the
in jury in the middle of her\
match Saturday with Winnie
Shaw in the . Eastern Open
Tennis Championships at South
Orange, N.J .

LEAN, lENDER lOtS ESS

HOUDAYPRODUCESAU!

Skinless Wieners

s:t

• •

......···33•

PORK and
BEANS .
...•

a~-:.,,$

3.:.. '1·

~irySpecial

ICE MILK

·.

~-

...... W..SooL•

.

Uooll a.

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•
ll

69$r

PARKAY
lb
MARGARINE ..............:..
a:ECIER

45

~

.

SOFT DRINK

10

1
:;

-·

VIRGINIA WADE HURT .
NEW YORK fUPlt - En·

Bo~ton Wins~ 4-3

UPI Sports Writer
It's a good bet that Carl
Yastrzemski will be playing for
If crowds are tbe meaS!ve It the ~ of a fair lbeu this the Boston !led Sox as long as
,ear's edilioll olthe Ohio State Fair, now WJ![enray, is a dandy. Tom Yawkey owns the team.
Yaz showed one of the
As Dlllal, tbe Uvestoct, vegetables and otber rural [a'(Wcl.s
reasons
Tuesday night why he's
aming into lbe fair from acroes ObioarellUislanding.
a.lftl Lea Sebaefer, the current Miss Ohio wbo is remem- such a personal favorite of
llen!d by many in tbe Big Bend area silx!e being crowned Miss Yawkey's. Mter a pre-game
meeting with Yawkey when the
Solllberu Ohio .in Ptataoy way back in 1911, made her first appwance at the State Fair Saturday aDd was ltept busy making owner assured him he's unlike·
ly to be traded, Yastrzemski
tbe rWIMis to various htildings for in1roductl0118 and assisting in
came up with the game-Winning
(II
•ting awards.
hit with two out in the ninth
a.lrie-assbe Is known bere- will be leaving this ()'llling inning.
...teild!or AllanticCilywberesbewillrejuznt the slate in tbe
Booed every time he came lo
Miss America Pageant. Unllustei-ed by audienees, Laurie is able the plate, he turned the boos to
Ill make lmjromplu talb whicb reveal her as genuine cheers when he rapped Jim
• b• erne, slncere and interest in other peq&gt;le. If judges of the Palmer for a single off the
Miss America Pageant are lotting for these qualities, they've got centerlield wall to drive in the
ageminMissSacbeferwho,lnaddition, is "easy on the eyes".
deciding run as the Red Sox
eged the Baltimore Orioles 4-3.
DO YOU BELIEVE Ill mlraeles?
The controversy exploded
Neilbt!r do I. However, I might if a silver dollar carried by Monday in Boston when YawICoM!eprt's Fire Olief Tcm Darst is ever returned. Tcm lost the key was quoted as saying he'd
1113llilva'dollarfrcmhis pocltetat the amual Meigs County Fair " trade anybody" to help the
lfteDtly andbe'ssiclt aboulil. He bas carried the pocket piece for club. "anybody," presumably,
I&amp; years having adopted it as a good ludt: chann at the blr111 of his even included Yaz.
But then the 11Ciarifications"
SID, Jeff. If anyone fOUIId the coin, Tom would be more than
started. In a prepared slate·
• happy tolleorfrcmyou.He's listed in tbe book.
ment issued by the club,
:
l'OMEIIOY'S KIND AND beloved Norma Goodwin escaped Yawkey said, "I can't say we
: - " - injmy when she felllaal week near her bome. Sbe has won't trade anybody if it'll help
~ bemdiw liMtgedfnmVelerali!IMemoria!Hospital where abe was the ball club. However, in the
· • •wtllioed for a few days for observation. She's now atlhe home of two cases where I talked
personally with the writers, I
IIIli and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. David Goodwin, 129
immediately added that I
• ~ St in Punerol)'.
thought Vaz is certainly the
most complete player the Red
•
lf WAS WI'DI regret thai Mrs. F. D. Groff, the former Hazel Sox have and surely one of the
: lllllor, l!tt Pomeroy Monday to nturn to her borne in Slalter most complete players in
• Bei&amp;bta after baYing been bere since May for an ""tended visit baseball. J:herefore, il would
' will! her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Edison lAb- take one helluva deal for any
: littler.llueiiiUits Pomeroy is a IPIJ'(Ien spot. By the way, sbe other club to acquire him."
~ - -w~pri'ldasfaru Columbus by Mr. aDd Mrs. Hobstetter. . Yawkey then had a private
'
talk with Yaz before the game.
•
:
1101!3 ANYONE REMEMBER the late John D. (Jack) The owner said Yaz was
: Ginett!
"good" about il aild added,
:
Mr.GarneUslarled in the newspaper business In Pomeroy at "he's a pro."
Yaz said after the game,
: llrstdaiagaJaudaandfinaDy branching into the wrilirtg field. He
· left Pomeroy to go to Oncinnati wbere be joined the Enquirer "Mr. Yawkey explained about
• stalf. Aller~ in Aberdeen, Ky., be went to New York City how no one is an untouchable.
~ wbere he IJfo an• a ..., flight reporter on major stories. Growing If lhe right deal presents itself,
: -rr cithecily,Mr. Garnett went Ill W"mter Haven, Fla., where he'd have to make it. I'd
: he •IIKRd • column '"lbe Citrus Industry" for a m•mber of always known that. It's ridicu,eara1llllil his deatb three yean 1180. His column is carried on by lous to think you can 'I be
IU daughter, Nancy Harvey, assisted by Mr. Gurnell's widow. traded. Suppose somebody of·
fered two starling pitchers. If a
good
deal came along, · I'd be
~
expendable. I know that. It's
SCIOTO RESULTS
produced a 3-5 combination part of the game."
1
But the odds are overwhelm·
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Sweet worth $135.
.
Lud WOD lhe featured ninth The I~ quinella paid $41.40. ing that no one wiD ever offer
race Tuesday ~ight at Seioto Attendance was 7,7JJI willl a Yawkey a deal good enough to
convince him to part with his
~ -· • P'* Hte, and handle of ~.261.
· favorite star. And Yaz admits,
n!llitMIIll •· P,&amp;O ind ~.'
"baseball to me has always
The winner loured the one STAR HALFBACK IlL
mile in 2:05. Second place SYRACUSE, N.Y. (UPI)- been the Boston Red Sox and
~
.. Rick paid $12..31 and Greg Allen, a senior halfback, " Mr. Yawkey."
$1.110. Third place Mr. Val will be lost for the entire 19'11
Boston manager Eddie Kasko
aeason to the Syracuse Univer- said, " that hit was timely for
reblmed ~In the nightly double, Three sity football team after con· everyone. The stage was set
Sisters won lhe fusl race and lracting infectious hepatitis, il and I think everyone was
pulling lor him." Yaz said,
Peggy Wayne loolt the second, wasannouncedTuesday.

HOLlOAY HAM SALB

By NEWSPAPER
While people often don't
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
realize it, a will no longer
to the luxury it
NEW YoRK - ( NEA) - amounts
seemed back in tbe horse·
Where there's a will, there's and-buggy era. Whether a
a-well, where there's a
will there's 8 very prudent man bas a cons i d ~ ra b I e
·
· amount of the world s goods
family
·
.
to band along to his survi_Yet too man~ Amencans vors 01;, 110 , !IIOre than lbe
shll Mv.~. out therr.one-never· . fellow next door, a will Is
knows lifesp~n Without ever essential in the opinion of .
havllllllbe sunple legal do_c· lawyers, family counselors,
u men t known as a will bankers and other authori·
drawn up for the protection ties.
· ·
of thetr surviVors. People
can't help but be aware of
Fo!"unate!y, the will ts a
their own mortality After aU relall-:eiy Slmr.Ie docume!lt
lbe 0 e w spa per · obituary mvolvmg only $25 or $50 m
pages are speckled with no- legal ~ees for most: .people.
tices day after day after day. ffv."sss~r; r ~~
~
Despite that awareness, eounts, investments, real esSUPER-RIGHT QUALITY
however, the number of indi· tale automobiles personal
viduals who go to the trou· eff.,;,ts salary du~ and other
ble ~f. h~ving wills drawn is property. It names an execudiJllintsbing. The d~rease _is tor and co-executors such as
all'tbe more surprtsmg m familv members or trusted
view of the fact that, with friends and the deceased's
higher annual income fig· banker: who can best attend
ores, people generally have to such technical matters as
llol!Only
..
more to leave their sur- tax r e t u r n s investments
,
debts and other liquid .;.
vivors.
In I959, a survey of a sets.
FRESH, U.S. GOV'T. INSPECTED
number of sample counties
In 0 the r words, where
by Trusts and Estates maga. there's a will there's very
zine revealed that three out definitely a way. Only, surof five Americans with some prisingly, the latest survey
sort of estates had, in fact, shows that not e n o u g h
Bec1:
filed wills.
Americans happen to be
S...t
Four years later, a survey traveling that way.
far
of Columbia University
Broiling!
graduates scattered through
.. Atteehtd
the nation and the occupa·
A special unit, known as
tiona! scales showed that the pearl grain, is used for
only half the 44,000 respond· weighing pearls ; each weighs
ents had wills.
~-carat.
Today, a brand new sur·
vey of eight representative
counties, chosen on the ba·
sis of their geographical and
sociological diversity, ex·
posed a dwindling trend.
Out of a total of 8,703
deaths recorded in those
counties in 1969, 5,091 in·
dividuals, or some 60 per
cent of the total, died with·
out leaving wills.
of
. The reasons why so many
men and women fail to have
wills properly drawn vary
considerably. Some find it
psychologicanr dif¥cult to
face up to the reality of
their own mortality. Others
have only a hazy awareness
of the importance of wills,
or think their property isn't
FROZEN
worth the trouble, or simply ·
procrastinate.
More people ought to con·
•liDS m FlOliN
sider the facts. A husband
earning $15,000 a year, for
example, might leave an esslate of more than $125,000
NU MAID-IOWI. PACIC
on his death, with insurance
coverage, savings, real es·
tate and other assets.
4$0FFI.AE.
While the survey results
are surprising, the advantage of having a will is plain
to see. In the absence of a
document which specifically EvtRYTHING is getting IBICELY
ass~gns an estate, property up-to-dale on tile equal·
normally 'oes through the opportunities front In Ja,
•
co.urts, whtch are by nature pan, when women tradl·
; ,, AI# CCM'OII
impersonal. In many states tlonally have beea . rele·
AI# COUPON
••
the surviving wife receives gated to a subordinate role. •
I 1~1• •
only one-third or one-half the Polke women, onn prl. •
~slate and, if lhere are chi!· martly s c h o o I crossiag
~5.:,51" •I"
dren surviving, she may re· gaards, have now been ad·
Coloo- W"eceive even less. B e s i d e s. vanced lo IGugher posla, •
;I
. . . . . . Sot.$oot.4tlo
what property an individual sueb as the busy Tokyo ia· • ....... W..¥411o •
leaves can go to lbe wrong lersection where tills traf·
UooiiO..c:•
UooiiO..e- .
people or be eaten away by flc officer· k H p s cri~p •
•
'control.
'
expenses and taxes.

.

~-~-------~

•t Of the Bend
i Bv Bob H. fl" h
f,. ~·
oe IC

Wills Still Have
Their Ways

I

.

99t

Fresh_ Bakery Buys
HoiiUIII
Hamburger and Hot Dog

UNS ~--------29t

Fro:en Foods

Chefs Choice·

FRENCH FRIES

·2

21b.
tiap

AT RACI!~

CROSS
AT'

LYONs·
tj

•

AT IIUTLAIID

RUTLAND

~.,,..,.,

-

• wl
Te
.lililt _
Q 1711

..
'

�f~ 'l1le Dlllv SenliDeL MiddJeoort..l'ly, O., Sept. I, 1m

Mason Area News, Notes
ByEDITHFOX
about Indian corn (the
COMPANYCOMMANDER
decorative kind ) and they
Captaui Jack Stewart, with U. thought it would be plentiful this
S. Anny, formerly of Mason, year. When cooking all these
and ·a graduate of Wahama goodies· 1 seldom use ricb
High ~hool, has graduated sauces (which I Uke) but use
&amp;om University of Nebraka, perhaps a little butler, salt and
Omaha. Capt. Stewart has been pepper for seasoning. I believe
promoted to Company Com- by simply cooking with water
mander at Fori Lewis, and add light seasoning the
W~~Shington .
vegetables retain their natural
Capt. Stewart, wife, Elayne, flavor. Each tittle roadside
and two children Julie and Kim, market is small in size but thinlt
htve been visiting his mother, of all the long and hard hours or
Mrs. Evelyn Stewa.rt and labor that has go ne into
brother, Rober! and family, preparation of those "goodies"
Mason . Captain and Mrs. , that we take so much for
Stewart recently motored to gran led as products of summer.
_ geveland, Ohio to visit with So, ladies, dig out 'your jars
Mrs. Slewart'sparents, Mr. and your canner and go to work
Mrs. Chester Velzer:
when company arrives at
PEI!SONAI$
Christmas - "Ywn, yum!"
Mrs. Ann Davis and son,
ASTUDENT'S PRAYER
Chuckle, ~lumbus, spent the · While visiting in Holzer
weekend wtth her parents, Mr. ·Hospital, 1 foimd a prayer
and Mrs. John McDaniel, written in back or one of the
Clifton.
Gideon Bibles made available
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Velzer, for the patients. It was inCleveland, Ohio, visited scribed Jennie Howell 90 years
recently with Mrs. Evelyn old.- August.l96.'1, and titled "A
Stewart, ~n.
Student's Prayer." "I believe in
Miss Elizabeth Mcintosh and God without reservation I
Mrs. Ray Fox attended the believe that all things sci~n­
~eral of Mr. Russell, Sunday tifically true is of God - I
believe in Jesus &lt;luisl as the
m Pomt Pleasant.
Mrs. · Jessie Cartwright ReveJation of God to Man - I
visited her daughte~, Evelyn believe His interpretation of
Ntcholson, ·and Hallie Zerkle, God as our Father and comwho are patients al Holzer pletely trust Him with my life
Hospital.
and all I possess both in the
ROADSIDE MARKETS
present ari'd in the Ufe to come
AU you cooks, take note! - - 1believe His will for me is to
~ roadsid~ markets are in full live in health, in peace and in
SWJDg. Slop at any or all of them material sufficiency and in
and feast your eyes on all Ute harmony with His law and love
delicious looking vegetables - 1 believe that 1 can best find
and fruit which aclually make God in quietness, in prayer and
your ''moulh water." - green in the service of others."
beans,
tom_!ltoes,
corn,
CQMBINEDPICNIC
watermelon, ca·nlaloupes
A combined picnic of Mm;on
(mush mellon), apples and Homemakers and Sunshine
many, many more. I asked Class of Mason United

and

h
•
·
as zn."'on

r---------------:---;-------1
JF/.
O .,,

MeOMJdisl Church was held at House Anne~. V'lckie Keeler,
O&gt;e beautiful home of Mr. and Virginia Voight, Kathy Olson I
I'
Mrs. ·
Landon
Shith, and Faye Cook were the :
"· ' •
:I
Harrisonville, Ohio. E, Fox ·hostesses.
presided in the ab;ence of the
(:;ames were played and
1
president and vice president, winners were Vurl Randolph, 1
Clare
I
Ahna Marshall and Laverne Irene Sayre, Audrey Hoffman I
By
nee 1:
Lewis. The Homemakers voted and ll!ary Phillips.
I
Miller
to send a gift. to Unda Dunham
"Ohs" and " Ahs" were heard I
at her pre-bridal shower and as Unda opened her many :
:
Joyce Carson and Hazel Smith beautiful gifts from the Mason
were appointed to make the " County Homemakers, 4-fHlubs
WASHINGTON - In in· The bill calls for: (I) repeal of
selection. Joyce Carson gave and Leaders and the "Gang'' troducing his new eeonomic the pn!Senl 1 percent excise lax
devotions a11d . Rev. Parker from the County Clerk's office. policy, the President outlined on automobile sales retroactive
Hinzman offered grace lor the Gifts were received from 4 the role Congress will play in to Aug. 15,19'11; (2) arteler.lled
sumpuom picnic served to :
Corners . 4-H, Faye Cook, the overall iroplementation of lax cuts presently scheduled for
JoyCe Carson, Matilda Noble, Pocahontas, Lion, Pioneer, ' the p'oglam. Needless to say, Jan. 1,1973, by ooe year to Jan.
Lorena Weiss, Hazel So\ith, Ilahee,
Phododendron , Congressionalacceplanceof the 1, 1972, penllitling an~ $50
Evelyn Profitt, Alice Faye Sassafras, Upland, Pleasant, President's proposal is vital to personal exemption from
Gardner, Edith Fox, Nancy Van Ann Bailey and Mason the success of Mr. N'IXOII's federal intome taxes; (3)
Meter, Bessie Hudson, Cheryl Homemal!;ers, Inez 'Newman, staled goals or reduced in· provide an investment tax
Hudson, Clara Williams, Hilda Jean Henderson, Carolyn flation, increased employment creditofiOpercentforooeyear,
Weiss, SaraW"tllis, Rev. Parker Winkler, Kathy Olson, Vtrginia and productivity and renewed wilh a drop to 5 per c:enl the
Hinzman and Mr. and Mrs. Voight, Shirley Cline, V'trginia consumer alllfidence.
foUowing year.
Landon Smith.
W"tlliamson, Audrey Hoffman, Three days after the The President, acting on
HONORED Wl11l SHOWER Maud Dyke, All American 4-11 Presideot's surprising shift in authOrity previously granted
The camera was ready and Club, Betty Fowler, Mrs. Cline, ecooomic policy, Congressional him by Congress, has already
Linda [)pnham was a surprised Edith Fox, Vurl Randolph, leaders of bolh parties met willl irnpose&lt;l a !MM!ay wage, price,
young lady as she stepped in- Jeanie Miller, Marguerite President Nixon and pledged and rent freeze and imp«'S"!' a
side lhe Krodel Park Club Ingle, Hill Billy HI Ouh, MI. prompt consideration of the 10 percent surcharge on 1mHouse and everyone yelled Climbers 4-11 Club, Ann McCoy, President's tax cut proposals., ports.
"Surprise!" The occasion was a Marguerite Can trill, Vicky The House Ways arid Means Automobile excise lax - H
pre-Iridal · shower for Linda, Keefer, Jean Doolittle and Committee will begin hearings Congress moves to repeal the
secretary in the West Virginia "Crew" from Mason Cotlllty Sept. a on a three-pari lax bill auto excise tax, the actim will
Extension Office in Court Clerk's office. .
the President has requested. result in lower ear prices. The

I

R eport

average reduction would be
approximately $200 per new
aui.Oillobiie. i)'Qpping this tax
will stimulate new ear sales and
consequently provide a shot in
the ann for the broad range. of
industry supporting U. S.
automobile prixluctim.

fBeat...

7- 'llle D.iiJ SeMiuel MV.._ t.PI'cmo!I'D
.""- :;.•------~ . '*)MCIDtloy,O.,Sept 1,1rn

peneut of lhe eost ol machinery and equipment
prodiiC'ed in the u.s. and plared
in Sl!l'Yi&lt;e on or 8fler Augasll6,
t9'1l. This credit will drop to 5
pat..nt fiJI' the same items
placed , in service .011 or after
AugUst 15, 19'12.
In an elf&lt;rt lo sfumtlate the
buying of American goods, it is
re&lt;,illlnl(!l111ed that no lax credit
be allowed f..- machinery and
equipment predominately
prodiiC'ed abroad so loog as the
10 peu:eut import surcbarge
remains in elfed This credit is
termed job deveklpment and is
OIJIOCied to encourage greater
invesbJ1efll in industrial plant
rer.ovatim and npansioo and
thereby stimulate employment
and also make U. S. goods more
tuupelilive in world markets.

lrM:oole 11tx exemptions -

Congress will also be asked to
advance to January 1; 19'12, lhe
increase of personal ineome tax
exemptions scheduled to take
effect on January l, 19'1l. Under
the Tax RefOI'lll Acl of 1!169; the
personal
exem,ption
is
scheduled to increase from t650
to $700 on January · I, 1972 and
then to $750 on January 1, 19'13.
But the Presideol's request
calls for a one-year speed up,
making the $750 personal
exemption effective the fir.st
day of ne:a:t year, To the average
laxpaper, this will result in a
smaller withholding of taxes
from paycbecks. This lax acceleration will put $4.8 billion in
the pockets of taxpayers and
thereby add more purcbasing
stimulus lo a struggling
economy.
lnveslment lax credit - The
Administration is recom·
mending a lax credit equal to 10

YII% Geiis Wmning Hit

f: As

I

t
I

,

.

.

By vrro STELUNO

Tiel! are, of lVW se, o~
aspect important to the
eeonomie policy announced by
the PresideoL But the success
.or failure of lhe new economic
plan is greatly .tq&gt;er&gt;ient upcm
the .action of Congress '"' the
(JI•ip('Sed lax decrease and the
cooperation of lbe general
public m the wageiJrice freeze
measures wtlined bere.

I

I

'

:her

.

;:J;':nk

Cooked Hams • •

Celt• Cut Ham Roast

• • •

Chuck :.--~ • • •

Swift Premium :: • •
Chuck Steaks ~ • • •
Sliced Bacol ~ • • •

• •

• •
• • •

ns

3to5
Pound

lastaat Coffee . ~~- • .10 ~
ScoH Viva lapkins c!:.. • • .3 '! 51
Bagies Food Wrap lacs cw:~
White Bread .:. • • • • •4-:: 9t
Gi•t Cheer I~
c 7t

• •

•

Pillll Oli•

.3=$1

COFFEE SAUl

__ _

Fie lin

. ,.

J

• •

••

lillller.

.3=SJ•

li11IOxyHI
IIEYNOI.DS

ll••i••• Fiil

• •

ANN PAGE

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.....
'

.... ,, ......... ...a::SJ•
-·-·
.ur

co••

~·

....... W..¥411o

...... W.¥411o

UooiiO..c:-

UooiiO..c:-

oz. cans

Golden lsPe

•••

•

VanCamp

. -7t
lhoL

.• • .. :: 71'

••••

Ilk Off lAIB.

..,_,. lllloc:..,.
~~~~­..

8

Kraft Whipped

~

• • • • •

Ilk Off lAIB.

nlctU11 lj

;;;ted Meat. . . .:. 83 ouansgse
van camp
4.
·
.
gge
Beanie Wienie ................ ~.
49e
Sweet Pickles ........~..

Food
Stamps

!Is
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.....Ef&amp;ldD'CIIIII

COFFEE

Aaapt
Fallaral

lee lilk

AlP CD lUll

lb.

Maxwel House

We

MARYB. VAIIUA

Alii CCIIFIIIII

TITLE BOUT SET
MIAMI BEACH, F1a. (UPI)-Ughlbeavyweight champion
Vinente Rondon of Caraeas,
Venezuela has agreed to meet
third-ranked GoJ:neo Brennan ol
Fort Lauderdale, F1a. in an
Oet. 16 Iitle ftght here, it wu
announced Tuesday by boling
promoter Chris Dundee.

•

-

. . '==5t

--

•

....
•

l,.11r's Tnet •
•

SPECIAL

•

MAHOVLICH SIGNS
MONTREAL (UPI)-Frank
Mahovlich, 33-year-&lt;&gt;ld left winger, Tuesday signed a one-year
contract with the Montreal
Canadiens of the National
Hockey League. Mahovlicb
scored 31 goals last season and
14 in the NHL playoffs.

Smoked Picnic

Prices Effective Thru Sept. 4

59:

Avwega

•

third with 2.4 million ounces,
and the U.S. follows with 1.7
million ounces per year.
One would think thai Russia
is in a good position to
accum ulate reserves by selling
gold on the open market. But
the Soviets have a productivity
problem that makes this
impossible unless gold com·
mands a high price.
H has' big deposits around
Magada, an icy section of
Siberia. Just to house and feed
one worker there costs about
$18,000 per year. They can't
make a profit unless gold is in
the high 40's.

•

Spare Ribs

•

'

Few Humans Understand The Mystique Of Gold

FRESH MEAlY

... 3=SJOO
lir-,.Awlke . 3=SJOO
lltel'ldillll ::. . . 2=8t

·left llfllriH

Business Today

• •

Chuck

&amp;~

.....

HARRIS ASSUMES DUTIES
GOTEBORG, Sweden (UP!)
- Billy Harris, a 14-year
ve teran of the National Hockey
League, arrived hen Monday
to asllwne his duties as
manager of the Swedish National Ice Hockey Team.

• •

Cut
from

Split·Fryers

29

COACH STAYS ON
MEXICO CITY (UPI )-National Swimming Coach Ronald
Johnson of Austin, Tex. has
agreed to stay on as ~ch of
the Mexican swinuners, it was
announced Tuesday by .the
Mexico Olympic Conunittee.
Johnson has held the post since
1967.

Beef Roast

sgc
c

"under the cireuthsiances, I
suppose it would have to be a
satisfying hit."
Yaz's hit ruined Palmer's bid
for his 17th victory. The
Orioles, attempting to become
the first team in 51 years to
boost four 26-game winners,
have Pat Dobson at 17 and
Palmer, Mike·Cuellar and Dave
McNally at 16. Palmer was
tagged for three runs in the
firsl but then blanked the Red
Sox un Ul the ninth when Mike
Fiore walked and Doug Griffin
singled to sel the stage for Vaz .
In other American League
games, Oakland downed California 4-1, Minnesota nipped 1
THE DUNCAN FAMILY - The Duncan Family, former residents of Mason County, will be
Chicago 4-3 in 10 innings,
alllle
Cliftoo United Methodist Church Stmday, Sept. 5, 7::W pm. to briitg God 's message in
Kansas City topped Milwaukee
music and song. This is a talented family and we are acquainted with their talents and llleir
64, Washington edged New
sincere efforts to serve God. Their home is in Tampa, Florida , but during the summer months
York 6&lt;i and Detroit heat
they spend lime at their calin al Racine, Ohio with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Van Buren
Cleveland 6-1 before losing the
Duncan. Come out and enjoy this talented group and renew old friendships. 1hey are fo~er
second game IN.
residents of Cliftoo.
In the National League,
Pittsburgh outlasted Philadel·
phia 7..1, Sl. Louis topped New
York 2-1, Los Angeles drubbed
Houston 6-1, Cincinnati edged
San Diego 2-1, San Francisco
blanked Atlanta 9-0 and Chicago
heat Montreal 7·1 in 10 innings
but Montreal led 8-1 when the
By DEAN C. MILLER , an mlellectual exercise.
Marke t underscore lhat ·theory.
" It ·s just not going to Before Nixon 's bombshell
second game was suspended
UP! Business Editor '
after six innings because of NEW YORK (UP[) - Men happen," he said . "The l'ree speech London fixed · an ounce
darkness.
have killed for it, slaved for it, World wouldn't let it happen. of gold at $43.30. In the
Reggie Jackson slugged a betrayed their countries for it. There's too much at stake."
following two weeks it dropped
Banks Hold $40 Billion
run-scoring double in the eighlh Few, however, have under$2.17 per ounce.
inning to snap a 1-1 deadlock stood the mystique of gold, that
He noted that Central Banks
South Africa and Russia, the
and 'tead Oakland over Califor- precious commodity that has in the Free World trade bloc world's two largest producers,
nia. The A's added two more kept world trade in balance for hold about $40 billion in gold . would suffer by any sharp drop
runs in the inning on a triple by centuries, that Frenchmen hide "They'd fight with their last in the gold price. Latest
Rick Monday.
under their mattresses as a breaths any move to drop gold available figures show that
Frank Baker's error with two security blanket, that Indian as a basis of credit and trade. South Africa mines about 31.3
out in the ninth enabled the families horde to guarantee They stock gold ; they don't million ounces per year. Russia
deciding run to score as their daughters will get. hus· stock silver or platinum. And is a distant second with 6.2
they're not about to give up on million ounces. Canada ranks
Washington edged New York. bands.
Baker entered the game al When on Aug. 15 President gold."
But suppose it did happen?
shortstop in place of Gene Nixon cul the golden tie to the
"In that event," sighed the
Michael, who was Ufted for dollar-, lhe inevitable question
world
banker, "our whole
pinch-hitter Thurman Munson was: What happens if everyone
in the eighth. It looked like a "demonetizes" gold and it trading structure would go
good move when Munson's twn- becomes strictly a commercial through a wrenching such as .
run single capped a four-run product, something used only in you can't imagine. We're
rally and tied the game 5-5. jewelry and a person's bridge· talking about $300 billion
annually in exports, or imports,
Don Mincher had a pinch-hit work?
grand slam homer for the Every gold expert, economist however you want to express
Senators,
and banker asked that question that figure . It would be chaos.
Graig NetUes and Chris dismissed it as " unthinkable." There has to be a recognized
Chambliss each Momered to One banker with international base on which trade credits and
power Cleveland past Detroit in credentials and reputation was fluidity rest."
He likened such a situation to
the second game of a double- willing to discuss it purely as
the
person without credit
header. Sam McDow eO made
The word fan, referring
his third relief appearance of Steve Braun tripled in a run references or assets other than lo an enthusiast over sports
the season and went the final and scored on Jim Nettles a job going into an auto or other entertainment is
showroom and trying to buy a believed to be a contrac·
two innings to save Vince single.
lion of the word fanatic, ac·
Colbert's victory. In the first Paul Schaal's sacrifice fly car on the installment plan.
cording
to The World AI·
Price
Would
Be
Lowered
game, Joe COleman pitched a snapped a 4-4 lie in the seventh
manac.
Be
f o r e 1900 the
Along with most economists,
four-hitter to give the Tigers and paced Kansas City past
old St. Louis
owner
of
lbe
the triwnph.
Milwaukee. Gail Hopkins, who the banker said that any such Browns refmed to a man
Harmon Killebrew's sacrifice had three hils, walked and went demonetization of gold probably as a baseball fan a ti c.
fly in the lOth led Minnesota to third on Lou Piniella 's single would lower its price on. the Newspaper headline writ·
over Chicago. The Twins tied il before scoring on Schaal's commercial market. Recent ers shortened lhe term to
price fixings on the London fan.
with two in the ninth when drive .

gland's Virginia Wade was
forced to withdraw Monday
from the U.S. Open Tennis
championships starting Wednesday al Fotesl Hills because of a
broken left ankle.
Miss Wade sustained the
in jury in the middle of her\
match Saturday with Winnie
Shaw in the . Eastern Open
Tennis Championships at South
Orange, N.J .

LEAN, lENDER lOtS ESS

HOUDAYPRODUCESAU!

Skinless Wieners

s:t

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VIRGINIA WADE HURT .
NEW YORK fUPlt - En·

Bo~ton Wins~ 4-3

UPI Sports Writer
It's a good bet that Carl
Yastrzemski will be playing for
If crowds are tbe meaS!ve It the ~ of a fair lbeu this the Boston !led Sox as long as
,ear's edilioll olthe Ohio State Fair, now WJ![enray, is a dandy. Tom Yawkey owns the team.
Yaz showed one of the
As Dlllal, tbe Uvestoct, vegetables and otber rural [a'(Wcl.s
reasons
Tuesday night why he's
aming into lbe fair from acroes ObioarellUislanding.
a.lftl Lea Sebaefer, the current Miss Ohio wbo is remem- such a personal favorite of
llen!d by many in tbe Big Bend area silx!e being crowned Miss Yawkey's. Mter a pre-game
meeting with Yawkey when the
Solllberu Ohio .in Ptataoy way back in 1911, made her first appwance at the State Fair Saturday aDd was ltept busy making owner assured him he's unlike·
ly to be traded, Yastrzemski
tbe rWIMis to various htildings for in1roductl0118 and assisting in
came up with the game-Winning
(II
•ting awards.
hit with two out in the ninth
a.lrie-assbe Is known bere- will be leaving this ()'llling inning.
...teild!or AllanticCilywberesbewillrejuznt the slate in tbe
Booed every time he came lo
Miss America Pageant. Unllustei-ed by audienees, Laurie is able the plate, he turned the boos to
Ill make lmjromplu talb whicb reveal her as genuine cheers when he rapped Jim
• b• erne, slncere and interest in other peq&gt;le. If judges of the Palmer for a single off the
Miss America Pageant are lotting for these qualities, they've got centerlield wall to drive in the
ageminMissSacbeferwho,lnaddition, is "easy on the eyes".
deciding run as the Red Sox
eged the Baltimore Orioles 4-3.
DO YOU BELIEVE Ill mlraeles?
The controversy exploded
Neilbt!r do I. However, I might if a silver dollar carried by Monday in Boston when YawICoM!eprt's Fire Olief Tcm Darst is ever returned. Tcm lost the key was quoted as saying he'd
1113llilva'dollarfrcmhis pocltetat the amual Meigs County Fair " trade anybody" to help the
lfteDtly andbe'ssiclt aboulil. He bas carried the pocket piece for club. "anybody," presumably,
I&amp; years having adopted it as a good ludt: chann at the blr111 of his even included Yaz.
But then the 11Ciarifications"
SID, Jeff. If anyone fOUIId the coin, Tom would be more than
started. In a prepared slate·
• happy tolleorfrcmyou.He's listed in tbe book.
ment issued by the club,
:
l'OMEIIOY'S KIND AND beloved Norma Goodwin escaped Yawkey said, "I can't say we
: - " - injmy when she felllaal week near her bome. Sbe has won't trade anybody if it'll help
~ bemdiw liMtgedfnmVelerali!IMemoria!Hospital where abe was the ball club. However, in the
· • •wtllioed for a few days for observation. She's now atlhe home of two cases where I talked
personally with the writers, I
IIIli and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. David Goodwin, 129
immediately added that I
• ~ St in Punerol)'.
thought Vaz is certainly the
most complete player the Red
•
lf WAS WI'DI regret thai Mrs. F. D. Groff, the former Hazel Sox have and surely one of the
: lllllor, l!tt Pomeroy Monday to nturn to her borne in Slalter most complete players in
• Bei&amp;bta after baYing been bere since May for an ""tended visit baseball. J:herefore, il would
' will! her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Edison lAb- take one helluva deal for any
: littler.llueiiiUits Pomeroy is a IPIJ'(Ien spot. By the way, sbe other club to acquire him."
~ - -w~pri'ldasfaru Columbus by Mr. aDd Mrs. Hobstetter. . Yawkey then had a private
'
talk with Yaz before the game.
•
:
1101!3 ANYONE REMEMBER the late John D. (Jack) The owner said Yaz was
: Ginett!
"good" about il aild added,
:
Mr.GarneUslarled in the newspaper business In Pomeroy at "he's a pro."
Yaz said after the game,
: llrstdaiagaJaudaandfinaDy branching into the wrilirtg field. He
· left Pomeroy to go to Oncinnati wbere be joined the Enquirer "Mr. Yawkey explained about
• stalf. Aller~ in Aberdeen, Ky., be went to New York City how no one is an untouchable.
~ wbere he IJfo an• a ..., flight reporter on major stories. Growing If lhe right deal presents itself,
: -rr cithecily,Mr. Garnett went Ill W"mter Haven, Fla., where he'd have to make it. I'd
: he •IIKRd • column '"lbe Citrus Industry" for a m•mber of always known that. It's ridicu,eara1llllil his deatb three yean 1180. His column is carried on by lous to think you can 'I be
IU daughter, Nancy Harvey, assisted by Mr. Gurnell's widow. traded. Suppose somebody of·
fered two starling pitchers. If a
good
deal came along, · I'd be
~
expendable. I know that. It's
SCIOTO RESULTS
produced a 3-5 combination part of the game."
1
But the odds are overwhelm·
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Sweet worth $135.
.
Lud WOD lhe featured ninth The I~ quinella paid $41.40. ing that no one wiD ever offer
race Tuesday ~ight at Seioto Attendance was 7,7JJI willl a Yawkey a deal good enough to
convince him to part with his
~ -· • P'* Hte, and handle of ~.261.
· favorite star. And Yaz admits,
n!llitMIIll •· P,&amp;O ind ~.'
"baseball to me has always
The winner loured the one STAR HALFBACK IlL
mile in 2:05. Second place SYRACUSE, N.Y. (UPI)- been the Boston Red Sox and
~
.. Rick paid $12..31 and Greg Allen, a senior halfback, " Mr. Yawkey."
$1.110. Third place Mr. Val will be lost for the entire 19'11
Boston manager Eddie Kasko
aeason to the Syracuse Univer- said, " that hit was timely for
reblmed ~In the nightly double, Three sity football team after con· everyone. The stage was set
Sisters won lhe fusl race and lracting infectious hepatitis, il and I think everyone was
pulling lor him." Yaz said,
Peggy Wayne loolt the second, wasannouncedTuesday.

HOLlOAY HAM SALB

By NEWSPAPER
While people often don't
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
realize it, a will no longer
to the luxury it
NEW YoRK - ( NEA) - amounts
seemed back in tbe horse·
Where there's a will, there's and-buggy era. Whether a
a-well, where there's a
will there's 8 very prudent man bas a cons i d ~ ra b I e
·
· amount of the world s goods
family
·
.
to band along to his survi_Yet too man~ Amencans vors 01;, 110 , !IIOre than lbe
shll Mv.~. out therr.one-never· . fellow next door, a will Is
knows lifesp~n Without ever essential in the opinion of .
havllllllbe sunple legal do_c· lawyers, family counselors,
u men t known as a will bankers and other authori·
drawn up for the protection ties.
· ·
of thetr surviVors. People
can't help but be aware of
Fo!"unate!y, the will ts a
their own mortality After aU relall-:eiy Slmr.Ie docume!lt
lbe 0 e w spa per · obituary mvolvmg only $25 or $50 m
pages are speckled with no- legal ~ees for most: .people.
tices day after day after day. ffv."sss~r; r ~~
~
Despite that awareness, eounts, investments, real esSUPER-RIGHT QUALITY
however, the number of indi· tale automobiles personal
viduals who go to the trou· eff.,;,ts salary du~ and other
ble ~f. h~ving wills drawn is property. It names an execudiJllintsbing. The d~rease _is tor and co-executors such as
all'tbe more surprtsmg m familv members or trusted
view of the fact that, with friends and the deceased's
higher annual income fig· banker: who can best attend
ores, people generally have to such technical matters as
llol!Only
..
more to leave their sur- tax r e t u r n s investments
,
debts and other liquid .;.
vivors.
In I959, a survey of a sets.
FRESH, U.S. GOV'T. INSPECTED
number of sample counties
In 0 the r words, where
by Trusts and Estates maga. there's a will there's very
zine revealed that three out definitely a way. Only, surof five Americans with some prisingly, the latest survey
sort of estates had, in fact, shows that not e n o u g h
Bec1:
filed wills.
Americans happen to be
S...t
Four years later, a survey traveling that way.
far
of Columbia University
Broiling!
graduates scattered through
.. Atteehtd
the nation and the occupa·
A special unit, known as
tiona! scales showed that the pearl grain, is used for
only half the 44,000 respond· weighing pearls ; each weighs
ents had wills.
~-carat.
Today, a brand new sur·
vey of eight representative
counties, chosen on the ba·
sis of their geographical and
sociological diversity, ex·
posed a dwindling trend.
Out of a total of 8,703
deaths recorded in those
counties in 1969, 5,091 in·
dividuals, or some 60 per
cent of the total, died with·
out leaving wills.
of
. The reasons why so many
men and women fail to have
wills properly drawn vary
considerably. Some find it
psychologicanr dif¥cult to
face up to the reality of
their own mortality. Others
have only a hazy awareness
of the importance of wills,
or think their property isn't
FROZEN
worth the trouble, or simply ·
procrastinate.
More people ought to con·
•liDS m FlOliN
sider the facts. A husband
earning $15,000 a year, for
example, might leave an esslate of more than $125,000
NU MAID-IOWI. PACIC
on his death, with insurance
coverage, savings, real es·
tate and other assets.
4$0FFI.AE.
While the survey results
are surprising, the advantage of having a will is plain
to see. In the absence of a
document which specifically EvtRYTHING is getting IBICELY
ass~gns an estate, property up-to-dale on tile equal·
normally 'oes through the opportunities front In Ja,
•
co.urts, whtch are by nature pan, when women tradl·
; ,, AI# CCM'OII
impersonal. In many states tlonally have beea . rele·
AI# COUPON
••
the surviving wife receives gated to a subordinate role. •
I 1~1• •
only one-third or one-half the Polke women, onn prl. •
~slate and, if lhere are chi!· martly s c h o o I crossiag
~5.:,51" •I"
dren surviving, she may re· gaards, have now been ad·
Coloo- W"eceive even less. B e s i d e s. vanced lo IGugher posla, •
;I
. . . . . . Sot.$oot.4tlo
what property an individual sueb as the busy Tokyo ia· • ....... W..¥411o •
leaves can go to lbe wrong lersection where tills traf·
UooiiO..c:•
UooiiO..e- .
people or be eaten away by flc officer· k H p s cri~p •
•
'control.
'
expenses and taxes.

.

~-~-------~

•t Of the Bend
i Bv Bob H. fl" h
f,. ~·
oe IC

Wills Still Have
Their Ways

I

.

99t

Fresh_ Bakery Buys
HoiiUIII
Hamburger and Hot Dog

UNS ~--------29t

Fro:en Foods

Chefs Choice·

FRENCH FRIES

·2

21b.
tiap

AT RACI!~

CROSS
AT'

LYONs·
tj

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RUTLAND

~.,,..,.,

-

• wl
Te
.lililt _
Q 1711

..
'

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..

· -'llle lllliiJ' Srn!n.l, ~t-Ptmeroy, 0 ., Sept. 1,1911

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept.l,lm

-.E :.......................... ········.··· ......................................
I I '; )."&gt;

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Van·Camps

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Apple .Bast,.

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SAUCE

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MRS. SMITH

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22 oz.

WITH

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BEEF
STEW

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In The Piece

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GROUND
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Boneless

Extra Lean .

French City
15• COUPON

CAKE
MIXES
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OHIO

I.G.A~ FOODLINER' and M &amp; R BARGAIN LAND
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~----------------~------~.~~---~-----~--~~~~

�.11-

The* Sentinel, MidcleparW'aauwoy,O.,Sept.l,lt'll

'

·

·

... .

.

·

··

·

·.

.

.

.

·.

Sentinel .Classifieds Get Action ! sentinel Class-ifi,eds Get Resul~s!
.

'

....
,"
Motor co.-

· LEGAL NOTICE

IN THE MATTER OF SET·
TLEMENT OF . ACCOUNTS,
PROlATE COURT, MEIGS ,
COUNTY, OHIO.

-

Accounts lnd vouchers of thtt
follow i ng named fiduc i ar i es
have been filed in the Probate
Court. MelDs.. County, Ohio, for
approval 111d settlement :
'
CASE NO . 20,181 First ond
Final Account of Jean· Sum - ,
merfleld, Adm in istratrix ot the
·estate of Guy E . Summerfield ,
Deceased
CASE NO . 20.247 First ond
Final Account of Jean Zirkle,
Administratrix of. the Estate of
Chester Zirkle, Decea$ed
CASE . NO . 20,.. 09 . Final A,c count of Joyce A. Davis, Ad ministratrix of the Estate of
Delilah Mays, Deceased .
Unless exceptions are filed

.

thereto. said accounts will be
for hearing before said Court on
th!!h day of september, 1971 ,
atw ·ch time said accounts will
be
nsidered and contin.ued
trom day to day unm nnany
disposed of.
Any person Interested mH
file written exceptions to sold
accounts or to molters per .
taining to the execution of the
trust, not less than five days
prior to the date set for hearing.
F. H. O'BRIEN
PROBATE JUOGE
MEIGS COUNTY.OHIO
Sept . 1

I f« ~le

« Tradt

fOR sMALLER hauoe. a~
hau5e (2 ~15.) CUII6 of
Pearl &amp; Pad Sis.. Mid·
~-

.l-29-6lc

Busi.il_
e
ss
.;.:=
, ======;fiiiiii---~~

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME-IN RACINE·
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
}
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
JOO PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
)A 3 bedroom 516,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low a~ $65,00 lor a family wltha base
salary ot
and three children. 7'1• Pd. annual

EXPERIENCED

Male or fe111le ·
Heljl ....

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Polftlray· ......-:
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PCIMER~. OHIO
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WILL' PAY well lor yow spare
"""' working at I'!" us.
Anr-can
-or.,alily.
- .......
wrlle
Weekly
salary. FIW delails write,
James Bliss Co., P. 0. Box
324. 0opt. K 419. l..evlttGwn.
Pa., 19053.
.
l-21-6lc

F« Sale or Lease
GENERAL STORE-and service
sliltion aa.s fn1m !Wiland
Park "'-10-2-WI
-

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'
From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

IUrnNARS
Pomeroy

Ph. 992-2143

BILL . NELSON
992-3657 •

G.E.lO" PORTABLE COLOR TV

a.77-6tc

---------

EXPERT

WANT AD
PcJMEROY
Sale
INFoRMATION
Nolice
DEADLINES
PERMANENT r~~ered
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
.HOME &amp; AU10
Appaloosa mare.
992·
LEGAL NOTICE
SAVE UP to """ hall. BriliQ 3111.
Monday Deadllne9a.m.
Sealed bids will be _received .. -~~llatlon._ Correcti!!ll$
your sick TV to Chuc:k's TV
992-2094
1-:IU!p
by the Meigs Local School
NEW &amp; OLD WORK
5h0p, 151 BuHernut Ave.,
Will
be
~cepled
ooHft'a.m.
fOr'
-GUARANTEEDDistrict at their office in the
606
E.
Main
Pomeroy
All
Weather !looting &amp;
Da~ of Publication
I'Gmeroy.
:, 11 COAL, limestone. Excelsto
Middleport Junior High School
Phone
992·2094
Construdion
Co~ and An·.
REGULATIONS
Building , Middleport. Ohio, for
.._, c · ~.all Works. E. Main St.
OffiCE
SUPPUES
thony
Plumbing
&amp; HHfing.
The Publisher · reserves the - - - , . , - - - - - - .. Pometoy. PhCJne 992-31191.
coal bids until 12 :00 o'clock
noon eastern Daylight Savings right to edit or reject any ads
Complete
Plumbing,
Pomemy Home &amp;
And
...,_..,
Time on September 29, 1971, at .deemed , objectional~_ The· PLEASE REQUEST your
Heating and "'!r Con·
ta-lte disc jockey to plal'which time bids will be opened. publisher will nat be responsible
OpeniTiiS
FuRNITURE
ditioning.
uGod an::t I" - 8-W- "The POODLE puppies. Sil- Toy,
The coal bids are for fur- for more than one Incorrect,
Monday llwv Saturday
240 lincoln 51., Middleport
nishing the coal. hauling the
Glory of The Angels," Acti111
Parkview Kennels. " ' - 992- Stop In and See Our
606
E. Molin, Pomeroy, 0 .
coal, and putting coal into insertion.
Records
No.
AC
1014A,
~'
RATES
storage bins at the following
published by Souvenir Songs
I-1S.Ifc Floor Display. ,
Phone 992-2550
For WOJI!t Ad Service
schools :
Harrisonville
(A$CAPI, free recording lo ---=---'-==
. 1 . . - - - - - - - - - l . l to+.=-~~-.:......,:,....._,
Elementary ai'ld Salem Center
5 cents per Word one insertion .
Insured.
Experienced
Address, John Mahler, CANNING kMnatoos. already
Elementary.
lnLIIIU\N
ua!Nbo..y ·
Minimum Charge75c:
i DJS.
These bids are fOi' lump coal
OVI II~
JIIIQURI'( ·
picked. $1.25 bu., bring
Work Guaranteed . _
12 ·cen1s per word th,..... Rt. I, Box 210, Middleport,
for the school year 1971-12.
Olio .sl~. phone 992~.
consecutive
insertions.
;
containers
.
Geraldine
Auto
Sales
Com•n_
lete
See us tor , Free
The Board of Education
l-25-12tp
Oeland, East Main. Racine.
T.
18 cen1s per word six con.
reserves the right to reiect any
Estimate on Furnace
7-11-tlr 1959 FORD 'h ton pickup, very
secutive insertions.
and all bids.
Remodeling
KOSCOT
Kosmetics.
Sep25 Per Cent Discount on Jllilid
Meigs Local School District
lnstalation.
good condition. $500. Phone
tember Sales Special:
Board of Education ads and ads paid within 10 days.
992-7311.
Kitc~W~s, Battis
NICE
pigs - $10 to
Kreamy
Lip
Kote
S2
oow
L. W. McComas, Clerk
CARD OF THANKS
$12. County Rolof 311. Phone
8-31-Jtc
Room Additions
$1.50, Frosllucent Lip Kote
191 1, a. u, 22
&amp;OBITUARY '
9#1-2115.
-And Patios
52.50
oow
$2, 23 delicious
Have Your Seasonal
$1.50 for 50 word mlnlm~m- · col..-s. Call 992-5113 or came
l-31-3fp 1970 VOLKSWAGEN,
Backhoe And
iach additional word 2c.
aulomatlc
stick
shift,
radio,
Elldlooder Work
see at 161'h j\1 &lt;th Ave., - - - - - - \ NOTICE OF
BLIND ADS
.
10x25 HOUSE TRAILER. set up
electric defroster, dark blue
Air Con~itioning ·
Middlepilrt,
a.
•.
APPOINTMENT
Additional 25c Charge per
on large lal in Harrisonville.
and white lnl!!rior. Phone 67S.
1-29-tic
Septic
Tonks
Cost No. 20540 Advertise,..!.
5203.
Will sell fnliler ... balfL Phone
And LNch Beds.
lnsplctiln and
Estate of Ed s. Grant,
OFfiCE HOURS
742.Q81.
8-31-6tc
Deceased.
8
30
to
5
00
Da
1
N ti
.
: a.m.
: p.m.
i y,
Wanted
1-31-lk - ' - - - -- -- o ce os hereby given that 8: 30 a .m. to 12: 00 ·Noon
R~rge
Anna M. Ryther of p . o. Box Saturday .
1967 CHEVE lLE Malibu,
EXPERIENCED limber culler. uuSisEEiDl:s511NGNGEEiR~...
;;;;.;
.......
i;i;_;;;rlng
130, Pomeroy, Ohio, has been . .
·....
standard, phone 992-&lt;5978.
Phone 992-56-U.
machine with zig-zagger.
Construction. For ,
duly •ppolnted Administratrix · I
Special
Plus
S.ll-5tp
·
9-1 -Jtc NEIGLER
Of the Estate of Ed S. Grant,
n Memory
blind hem. Fashion designed,
building or r~modeling your
At
Pirls
etc. $31.15. Phone 992·111S.
home . Call Guy Nelgler,
&amp;~~:~sed, iote of Meigs County, IN ' MEMORY ol Charles E.
Racine, Ohio.
Wanted To Buy
1-31-4\k
Creditors ore required to file
Massar who ~rted this
Real Estate Fcir Sa.le
life, September 1, i967.
their. claims wllll said fiduciary
GINSENG. Clean bone dry. S38 .fr' HOT POINT l'llnge. 111ille, 2
wlfh1n four months
._._
nd
h da
PHONE 992-2143
lb. Snake Root, S5 lb. Bill years aid, exaellont CUIIdltlon ~IX ROOM house, bath; luli SEWING MACHINES. Repair
Dated this 16th diu of A
t ,.,..,..e a, more eac
y we
1971 .
'
ugus
miss you.
.133
Buttemut
Ave.,
basement,
Bailey, Reedsville, Ohio, . SISO.CII. Can be seen a.ter 5
just walking distance from· service, all makes, 992-2284, SEPT!~ 1anks cleaned. Miller
F. H. O'Brien Friends may think the would
SeCUiKI St. Pl!one 371-6208.
p.m. at 105 Union A·. - The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
down1own Pomeroy. Contact
Probate Judge of seid County , has healed.
1-31-lotc Phone 992,J291
Authorized Singer Sales and , Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
::d Hedrick, 2137 WadswOr tl\
.
11111.25 (911, 3t But they IIHie know the sorrow ~::-:--=::-::---:---:-1-31-lk
662-3035.
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
Orive, Columbus~ Ohio, phonei
Lies within our hearts CCIII· ONE BOTTLE gas heater wltll ~;;;-;;~;;;;:;;~;;;;;;;;
2-12-tfc
3-29-Hc
237-&lt;IJ:U, Columbus.
'
--------cealed.
blower and thermostat, 50.000 MAKE beaten doom ""pet nap
__. .... ._ _
. ·- --~9-119
to ~.00:0 BTU. Phone 992-411.0 at dool wars brighl and fluffy
Mrs. Foit and Minnie McGrath. Sadly missed by wife, Leota,
QUEEN AND Shamblin ~nst . HARRISON'S TV AND AN
son Starling and family,
aHer 5. 30 P. m .
1-31 _
-In with Blue Lustre. Baker
Recent visilllrs of Ava Gilkey
Roofing, remodel•ng .. TENNA SERVICE . Phoftl
3 BEDROOM home. Electric
________
Jtp Fumltun! Campany.
and
friends.
relatives
aluminum siding. Phone 992· 992-2522.
heat,
remodeled
recently
were Sharon Jewell, Mr. and
9-1-Jfp
6-10-tfo
9-l..!k
' S.2S.IIc ..;...._ _ _ _ _ _ _
__
inside, 7th street, New Haven. 732~ or 1~-#119 .
OLD F umit..-e, dishes, docl&lt;s,
Mrs. M. A. Epple, Harold
Chrner transferred. Phone
and-&lt;&gt;r
complele
households.
Graham,
MeGralh, Mr. IN LOVING memory of Terry
SEWING MACHINE service In
Write M.D. Miller, Pomeroy, REFRIG_ERATOR.slove, lieu.
112-2263. .
Lee Wolle, Jr., born Sepyour home. Clean, oil and.
l-29-61c BACKHOE AND DOZER work~
and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey and
Dlio. Call 992-6271.
ft. upnght freeur. &lt;IIUCh. 2
Septic tanks Installed. George
adjust, s-1. Phone 992-1085.
tember
·
1,
1969
and
died
1-25-tfc
clwlirs.
sot.
of
....,
t.llln
Tad of Albany and Mr. and Mrs.
(Bill) Pullins, Phone 992-WI.
Twin City Sewing Machine
September 2, 19~9. Sadly
t.ble. 2 table limps. 1 HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
Carl Sampson.
4-25-lfc
Company.
missed by paren1s. Mr. 100 TO 300 ACRES, old farm, floor lamp. uHiily stand. 1 Call Danny Thompson, 9928-31-6tc
Mrs. Betty Graham and two
Mrs. Terry Lee Wolle, abandooled farm or vacant used c..,_, hillr dr}ef', 1 2196.
sons spent a day with Sue grandparents and great- la.nd with all righ1s. Will pay to kitchen cabinet, all In good ,
7-18-ttc Real Estate For Sale
grandparents, aunts and SS.OOO cash. Write to John
condition, PhCJne 20-2135.
_
_
11.16 ACRES loeateci ·T-79 at O' DELL WHEEL •••wumeAr
Payne.
uncles.
located at Crossroads•.Rt. 12-4.
Huffman,
1500
Semlnola,
ll"'!!-~'!'!!"!"___![!1!1!'11 3 BEDROOM brick home. Rock Springs, close to Meigs
Mrs. John Stout and Eliza Like a ship that left lis mcxiring, Akron. Ohio ol4305.
Complete tronl end ser-vice.
Choice location In Middleport. · High School. Contact Bill
8-21-4\tp
tune
up and brake service .
Powell made a business trip to And sails bravely out to sea,
Seen by appointment only.
Wille - lor L. Flelds-aller 5
Wheels
b4lanced elecSo
IIHie
Terry
has
sailed
-ay
Pomeroy.
Phone 992-5523 aHer 4 p.m. p.m. or on weekends 992-41887.
tronically. · All
work
in
calm
serenity,
.
5-7-Hc
S.27-1otc
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Heitger But there's promise ol greater Wanted To Rent
Reasonable
guaranteed.
rates. Phone 992·3213.
moved to the Saxton place
ATHENS business couple
joy
'!:ONVENIENT but secluded
7-27·11C
.,
transferring
to
Pomero.
y
.
below town. ·
building
lois
on
T79
at
Rock
Than earth could have in store~
like house or apartSprings. Within walking
Robert Alkire purchased a For God has plamed a richer Would
READY -MIX
CONLi&lt;i:: o c
ment in PGmeroy or Middistance of Meigs High
life
trailer from Harold Graham.
14'
Z4'
WIDE
delivered
right
to your
dleport.
No
children.
ExSchool, a 5 minute drive from
Beyond the ooseen shore.
pro/eel.
Fast
and
easy.
Free
Ed King Is very Ill in Holzer
cellent
refer"""".
Phone
Vera
Pameroy.
Call
or
see
Bill
9-1-ltc
est
motes
.
Phone
992-3214.
Eblen
at
593-1183
or
593-:1110.
Wille
weekends
or
aHer
5.
HoSpital.
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co,
1-29-4\lc
.
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992Mrs. Lovie Watson is still a
601
E•st
Molin
Middleport, Ohio.
··
6117.
·· PO~EROY
patient at Veterans Memorial
6-30-Hc.&lt;
7-11-tlc
Help Wanted
'imwa•· ·.,_·.o-•.
Hospital. Mrs. Lola Clark Card of Thanks
= d=
ro""
o-m-,-ho"'in:::-.-e In MIDDLEPORT- HERE IS A )ci&gt;TIC TANK&gt; CL~ANEu
=
NE"'w"',=3=o·be
lie""Ollie
visited ber recently.
WE WISH to thank everyone CAR HOP and waitress. Apply
BUY FOR YOU - Ph story Reasonable rates. Ph. 446-~782,
Middleport
.
.
Built-in
kitchen,
in person. Crow' s Steak ~~~--~llllllllllio____
who was so kind and
Will Clonch brought his
brick, llvlll!l room, dining
Cllfilmic tile bath, all-electric
Gallipolis. John Russell ,
House.
TWO 55" ~ 5 - 1 yeen heat. good neighborhood. can room, CARPETED, nice Owner &amp; Operator.
thoughHul ~ring the Illness
trailer from Horner Hill to his
1-31-&lt;llc
old, pony saddle. Karen
and alter the death ot our
kitchen, bath, 2 bedrooms,
arrange FHA financing.
5-13-Hc :
lot here In the vllla&amp;e.
husband and father, John STANLEY Home Products Griffith. phone 992-51112Telephone 992·36110 or 992- storage building. JUST $6,950.
Busch. We especially wish to
2186.
AWNINGS, storm doors and•
needs 5 fall and Christmas
9-1-3fp
thank all of our friends lor
7-lS-!Ic RACINE - 1 slory frame, 3
windows. carports ,
representali ves .
Car LEAR Jet 1 trad&lt; tape player
large bedrooms with closets,
their kindness, those sending
marquees,
aluminum siding
necessary. Write INs. Lib- with 2 speakers- 2 !ape$. LARGE 2 apartment home. bafh, nice kitchen. large
flowers, docfors and nurses at
and
railing.
Call A. Jacob,
man, 34 W. Carpenter St., ~-- 992 •m
Furnished, beautiful river living room, CARPETED,
Holzer Medical Center,
sales representative. For free
Athens or call 593-t854.
~.....,
~large garage with shop, .75
view . Rental trailer on
1.Jic
estimates, phone Charles
Ewing Funeral Home, 1-31-&lt;ltc _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,._
premises. Inquire at Dairy acre, LIKE NEW. $20,500.
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
Rev. and INs. W. E. Curl·
Corner, Letart, W. va. Phone
Johnson and Son, l~c .
man, and any one else who soMEONE needed to stay· ..;ith VOLKSWAGEN camper. !100d
POMEROY - 1'12 story frame,
19&gt;3357.
helped in any way. INs. John
&gt;27-Hc
invalid 5 days a week, some condition. Less than 20.000
3 bedrooms, bath, living
8-31-4\tc
Busch and sons.
nights. Phone 992-7155.
miles. 439 linaJin St., MicJ.
room,
dining
room,
--~-=-=-~9-1-ltp
8-29-&lt;ltc dleport, Paul Smtt.
1,70 RICHARDSON mobile basement, porch, large lot.
C. BRADFORD, Auctloneei"
I-:IS-He
home with washer and dryer,
Storm doors, windows. All
Complete Service
EA~N AT hoine acldO'i!SSing
fully carpeted, also 5 room
IN GOOD CONDITION.
Phone949-3821
envelopes.
Rush
stamped
quality protein," he adds.
BEAGlE, 5 months ald. ilK. C.
house with basement, both
BARGAIN AT JUST$7,900
Racine, Olio
sell--addressed
envelope.
The
regislered. Has had all shots
located on two lots In
"A diet comp)etely of brown Notice
Bradford
Crill
•
Ambrose Co., ms Lakeborn,
$.tO. Phone 992-35194 aflor 5
Syracuse. Phone 992-7019.
PLACE THE SALE OF
rice can cause a person's
5-1-Hc
Davisburg,
Mich.
-48019.
p.m.
I WOULD like to do typing In
1-31-4\lc
YOUR PROPERTY IN
death."
1-1-JO!p
my home. Reasonable rates.
CAPABLE HANDS
Soybean diets are also be· Phone 992-3497. ·
HENRY E. ClELAND
coming popular w i t h the
1-29-&lt;ltc LADY to do housework. 1 day a WALNUT stereo-radio com.
REALTOR
AUTOMOBILElnsurance·beeii
week, 152 BUtternut, Phone binallon. Four speed in·Office m-2259
Cincelled?
Lost
your
youlhful vegetarian enthusi.
992-5CJIO.
lermixed changer. Four
operator's license? Call 992Residence 991-2561
asts. Many scientists rate TRYING TO locale, l•rst na~e
S.26-61c speaker sound SYS1em, *'at
this enthusiasm as another unknown, last name, Moms
- ..
volume controf. Balance
_: 2966_
.
fad to. hit our well-financed 2nd Lt., H Co., 109!f' Infantry,
167.«&lt;. Use .... budget terms.
vouthful rebel
28th Keystone D1v. Contact
Call 992-1015.
•
s.
Warren Lynd, ' 1717 7th St., For Rent
l-29-6fc
Soy • products m u s t be Por1smouth, Olio &lt;15662.
k d
91 31 2 BEDROOM house on Lincoln -:-:~-:-::-----coo e or treated to get rid
•• c
Heights. Phone 992.5121 aller BEAUTIFUL Cllfonial maple
Broker
of injurious material in raw
4
stereo, AM &amp; FM radio. raw
Ill ModiMic Slreet
soybeans. Boiling or fer· GUN SHOOT, Forked Run
p.m.
1-31-Hc speakers, 4 speed""""""""
.......... y.OIIio
rnentillg are two methods of Sportsman Club. Sunday, -,.,.:-:-:----:,..._____
changer, separate Uiiitrols.
treating the beans. In the September 5• 12 noon. 9.J.Jtc 12x~ TRAILER, 2 bedroom, Balance $10.99. Use our SYRACUSE-~ rooms, nice lot.
nicely furnished, all new, 5 budget Jerms_ Call 992.11115..
Orient, where soybeans are
$1.100.00.
'aJ
f h
miles above Pomeroy, own
1-29-&lt;lfc
ft
o en an essentJ part o t e RUMMAGE SALE sponsored
--------RUTLAND - 6 rooms, bath,
protein diet, (hey are no I by Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
lot, city water. electric range.
Good location lor school U' COAL lumace - SSO. 6119
basement, nice lot. $3,500.00.
used wilhout processing. Sigma Phi Friday and
teachers. Call 98&gt;~14
F'l!arl st. "'- m .z....
They are qot eaten alone. Salurday, .September 3 and 4
I-2Utc
9-1-41&lt;: CHESTER AREA
2
either.
at Coats Building In Mid-----· ---dleport next to Firestone. TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mot.!;~- HALF RUNNER beans, S2
· Soybeans are a good food Start~ at 9 a.m.
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse, bushel, watermelons, canwhen properly prepared.
9·1-Jtc
992-2951.
taloupes, · sweet _ corn.
Olio.
But l ' don 't regard them as --~-----­
4-2-lfc potatoes. 0ai'1IICI! P111ffill.
necess~ry to Americans. Be- YARD SALE, collectors' items,
·992-7161
~- PhCJne 110-2254.
cause we are rich enough to antiques, carnival glass raise cattle and poultry in other Items at Dora Hysells FURNISHED and oolumlshod =:::====:::::::==9-=1·:,1fc
apartmen1s. Oose to ~ - . r
large amounts we don't have on Eagle Ridge and Boshan
to rely on other foods for our Road on September ~· Phone 992-5.&amp;.
10-11-llc BEAT tile COLD WIIITER
protein. That is why I am
9-1.Jtp
a ltd IT'S . COST WITH
inclined to regard t h o s e
3 ROOM ooiurnlshed aJ)ili'l· HEATING OIL FROM
people who make a fetish of
ment. Pbone 992-2211.
LANDM ..RK.
·
1-29-Hc We hilve the finest Budget
eating soybeans, peas and
beans, instead of meats and
-troller lolln Chesler Pay Plan, Dei'-V Sell vices.
PRIVATE
Automatic Degree Day
poultry, eggs and cheese. as ITEM: JacK Kane:
with utility building. Phone
more or less faddists. That You somehow get the
Oetl--r Duet Ooll.wy
'185-.1106.
SJS:iili"llownis unless tbey are vegetari·
E..,ipment.
1-21-4\tc
eling he has thought
We also hilvea CUll pteloel•
ans for olher than macrobi·
11elanc;:e•On
bout wha.t · he'
otic reasons," Dr. King says.
1 BEDROOM trailer apart- of Siegle• Fuel 'Oil Heaters
Convenient
haring
with
you.
Your
ment, ideal lor couples. and FUI'IJIIaS.
Terms.
He notes lhat peas; beans.
Contact McOure's Dairy Isle,
\. - POMEROY
eling is right.
soybeans and brown rice an
992-52G or 992-34:16.
I
J•cltw.c......,.~~p.
have their places as accept·
1-29-&lt;ltc . •
-992·2111
able foods in large areas n(
:e;p;;;;;;:~~
~. ROOM apartment, all utilities · ~
A'PPLES~a loes. Fiflpatrid
the world. But s el e c.ti o n
paid,
furnished
SIO.OO
OrchardsState Route ..,,
based on nutritional facls is
month. Phorie 992-3975.
· phone Wilkesvil~. Mt-l11S.
necessary, he says.
M;iscin, Va.
1-31-Hc
1-15-llc

For

WheeiM&amp;nment

'5.55 .

e

STRIKING CONTRAST Is

by I08rlng vertical eoiDDIDI of a work of

ma.-New York's LlneGID
Center-ucl a work of DB·
lure, a leafy tree. A metb·
er 8lld Infant out for alr
UDwiUbl&amp;ly add lbe flniJb.
IDe tollela to a pbotqraphlc

work of art.

Harrisonville
Society News
The gue~ts of Mr. and Mrs.
Hie! French were Mrs. Helen
Jones and daughler, Sandra, of
Cincinnati, who visited a week.
Mrs. Jones and Mrs. French are

SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING

sislers.
Reeves of
auwcothe was buried Friday.
He was a former local resident
and served as trustee. The
grandson of Jerry Reeves, son
of WQm Reeves and brother of
our former sheriff, Wilbur
Reeves, he leaves a wife, one
daughter,' one granddaughter,
and
several
great·
grandchildren. Mr. and Mrs.
Clinton Gilkey attended the
funeral!•• Miss Eunice Bradfield is ill at
her farm home here. She is
suffering from low blood
pressw-e.
Mrs. Dwight Mutcher,
•\thens, and Mrs. Myrtle Sin·
clair of Miami, Fla. visited the
Heil Frencbs recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Alkire
visited his brother, Oulrles
Alkire, who Is a medical patient
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Ernest Carr hauled dirt for
Robert Alkire, Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Richardson
have moved their trailer to the
lot which they recently pur·
chased from Mrs. Foil, better
known as the Duncan lot.
Friday evening caUers of M.
A. Epple were Frank Epple,
Mr.

Gerald

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Macrobiotic Food:

A~ltNoul
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....

An Ancient Cult
By

GAYNOR MADDOX

Just what ar~ macrobiotic
foods?
Act u a II y, "macrobio·
sis" me an s longevity, de·
rived from Greek. Thus macrobiotic foods mean foods
that insure longevity- ac·
cording to the dictionary at
least.
The word g o e s back to
primitive t i m e s, denoting
mental heallh and hallucinatory effects. It started in
the mystical East.
"Then during the middle
ages it .took root in Germany. If is still strong in
Western Gerinany today. It
combines the mysticism of
the East and its brown rice
with a supplemental diet of
fruits and vegetables," ex·
plains Dr. Charles G I e n n
King, biochemist and nutrition aulhority.
Dr. King, past president of
the International Union of
Nutrition Sciences, continues: " I understan&lt;). that the
person who goes on a macrobiotic diet begins with brown
rice, fruits and vegetables.
But he may cut back using
fewer and fewer fruits and
vegetables and eating only
brown rice. The more closely
one sticks to lhe brown rice
diet lhe more spiritual he
becomes, we are told. Brown
rice, it is explained, ap· ·
proaches the ideal food."
But unfortunately . people
fall to real~e thar brown
rice is not a perfect food . No
one food is complete in it:

self.
"It is deficient in vitamin
A, vitamin C and in hi~h r

\._~~

·~~~
. ~~'
·c.----g. - ~ F · ·
I\:··---._

• B.
Virgil

:TEAFORD•~~;;;;;;;;;;;S.29;...,
-6tc

-~

Tires

----,.---=----

SEE US BERlRE YOU BUY - •

GENERAL TIRE SALES \

MV-2

VACUUN\
CLEAN~~b

·.:,:

•.)-use
rk
camera (on y
u
• Corries ' eo ' • 22 foot cord lets yo,
it where you cant cOr or workshop • Its
use it in the goto~e\-sucks in over 4 ~ol·
moll bul powerlu d • ON-OFF sw•1ch
~ons ~t oir eoch s_econ_.vst like o mixer •
linger llp- 1

~;~$'j'f77 .
HECK'S
REG.
$25·S6

V69B

$5.99

pORT AILE

SR.

General

HECK'S
REG •

~·~__..,._.

HECK'S
REG.
$14.88

' \ 015

'
/

,,

AIRQUIPT

AIRQUIPT
AUTOMATIC

·SLIDE VIEWER

SLIDE VIEWER

JEWILI-Y DEPT.

HAMIL1o• aEACH
DELUXE 51 AIID

MIXER I• Positive
• \ O-posi1ion speed ~t~ntr~urntoble • l
. cf e 2-poSI oon
• 150
beo1er e1e or
"
tomOticoUy
.
wls turn ou
e "''xer
bo
I
3
d
an
q·
!I d molor
"·"
watt governor co"1rO eb'l.ly
or1o 11 •
detoches. for easy P .

$166
HECK'S REG.
$2.19

'

HECK'S REG.
$8.76

~.2277

JEWElRY DEPT.

H~CK'S REG. $27 .9~6..-""

3 RQOMS

NEW

FURNITURE

.'349.95

WMP0/1390

----

I

MASON'
FURNITURE.
w.

,, ._,

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

I'

•

,

�.11-

The* Sentinel, MidcleparW'aauwoy,O.,Sept.l,lt'll

'

·

·

... .

.

·

··

·

·.

.

.

.

·.

Sentinel .Classifieds Get Action ! sentinel Class-ifi,eds Get Resul~s!
.

'

....
,"
Motor co.-

· LEGAL NOTICE

IN THE MATTER OF SET·
TLEMENT OF . ACCOUNTS,
PROlATE COURT, MEIGS ,
COUNTY, OHIO.

-

Accounts lnd vouchers of thtt
follow i ng named fiduc i ar i es
have been filed in the Probate
Court. MelDs.. County, Ohio, for
approval 111d settlement :
'
CASE NO . 20,181 First ond
Final Account of Jean· Sum - ,
merfleld, Adm in istratrix ot the
·estate of Guy E . Summerfield ,
Deceased
CASE NO . 20.247 First ond
Final Account of Jean Zirkle,
Administratrix of. the Estate of
Chester Zirkle, Decea$ed
CASE . NO . 20,.. 09 . Final A,c count of Joyce A. Davis, Ad ministratrix of the Estate of
Delilah Mays, Deceased .
Unless exceptions are filed

.

thereto. said accounts will be
for hearing before said Court on
th!!h day of september, 1971 ,
atw ·ch time said accounts will
be
nsidered and contin.ued
trom day to day unm nnany
disposed of.
Any person Interested mH
file written exceptions to sold
accounts or to molters per .
taining to the execution of the
trust, not less than five days
prior to the date set for hearing.
F. H. O'BRIEN
PROBATE JUOGE
MEIGS COUNTY.OHIO
Sept . 1

I f« ~le

« Tradt

fOR sMALLER hauoe. a~
hau5e (2 ~15.) CUII6 of
Pearl &amp; Pad Sis.. Mid·
~-

.l-29-6lc

Busi.il_
e
ss
.;.:=
, ======;fiiiiii---~~

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME-IN RACINE·
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
}
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
JOO PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
)A 3 bedroom 516,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low a~ $65,00 lor a family wltha base
salary ot
and three children. 7'1• Pd. annual

EXPERIENCED

Male or fe111le ·
Heljl ....

@.
Polftlray· ......-:
.......__. - -\.Ve
#J
.
a.

.

~

.

OP'EM
. ;.;y
· ·E- ·5..· ......
. p· .M.

1:
;uv
PCIMER~. OHIO
L---.,.-------------'-------'

WILL' PAY well lor yow spare
"""' working at I'!" us.
Anr-can
-or.,alily.
- .......
wrlle
Weekly
salary. FIW delails write,
James Bliss Co., P. 0. Box
324. 0opt. K 419. l..evlttGwn.
Pa., 19053.
.
l-21-6lc

F« Sale or Lease
GENERAL STORE-and service
sliltion aa.s fn1m !Wiland
Park "'-10-2-WI
-

•

.....

•

'
From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

IUrnNARS
Pomeroy

Ph. 992-2143

BILL . NELSON
992-3657 •

G.E.lO" PORTABLE COLOR TV

a.77-6tc

---------

EXPERT

WANT AD
PcJMEROY
Sale
INFoRMATION
Nolice
DEADLINES
PERMANENT r~~ered
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
.HOME &amp; AU10
Appaloosa mare.
992·
LEGAL NOTICE
SAVE UP to """ hall. BriliQ 3111.
Monday Deadllne9a.m.
Sealed bids will be _received .. -~~llatlon._ Correcti!!ll$
your sick TV to Chuc:k's TV
992-2094
1-:IU!p
by the Meigs Local School
NEW &amp; OLD WORK
5h0p, 151 BuHernut Ave.,
Will
be
~cepled
ooHft'a.m.
fOr'
-GUARANTEEDDistrict at their office in the
606
E.
Main
Pomeroy
All
Weather !looting &amp;
Da~ of Publication
I'Gmeroy.
:, 11 COAL, limestone. Excelsto
Middleport Junior High School
Phone
992·2094
Construdion
Co~ and An·.
REGULATIONS
Building , Middleport. Ohio, for
.._, c · ~.all Works. E. Main St.
OffiCE
SUPPUES
thony
Plumbing
&amp; HHfing.
The Publisher · reserves the - - - , . , - - - - - - .. Pometoy. PhCJne 992-31191.
coal bids until 12 :00 o'clock
noon eastern Daylight Savings right to edit or reject any ads
Complete
Plumbing,
Pomemy Home &amp;
And
...,_..,
Time on September 29, 1971, at .deemed , objectional~_ The· PLEASE REQUEST your
Heating and "'!r Con·
ta-lte disc jockey to plal'which time bids will be opened. publisher will nat be responsible
OpeniTiiS
FuRNITURE
ditioning.
uGod an::t I" - 8-W- "The POODLE puppies. Sil- Toy,
The coal bids are for fur- for more than one Incorrect,
Monday llwv Saturday
240 lincoln 51., Middleport
nishing the coal. hauling the
Glory of The Angels," Acti111
Parkview Kennels. " ' - 992- Stop In and See Our
606
E. Molin, Pomeroy, 0 .
coal, and putting coal into insertion.
Records
No.
AC
1014A,
~'
RATES
storage bins at the following
published by Souvenir Songs
I-1S.Ifc Floor Display. ,
Phone 992-2550
For WOJI!t Ad Service
schools :
Harrisonville
(A$CAPI, free recording lo ---=---'-==
. 1 . . - - - - - - - - - l . l to+.=-~~-.:......,:,....._,
Elementary ai'ld Salem Center
5 cents per Word one insertion .
Insured.
Experienced
Address, John Mahler, CANNING kMnatoos. already
Elementary.
lnLIIIU\N
ua!Nbo..y ·
Minimum Charge75c:
i DJS.
These bids are fOi' lump coal
OVI II~
JIIIQURI'( ·
picked. $1.25 bu., bring
Work Guaranteed . _
12 ·cen1s per word th,..... Rt. I, Box 210, Middleport,
for the school year 1971-12.
Olio .sl~. phone 992~.
consecutive
insertions.
;
containers
.
Geraldine
Auto
Sales
Com•n_
lete
See us tor , Free
The Board of Education
l-25-12tp
Oeland, East Main. Racine.
T.
18 cen1s per word six con.
reserves the right to reiect any
Estimate on Furnace
7-11-tlr 1959 FORD 'h ton pickup, very
secutive insertions.
and all bids.
Remodeling
KOSCOT
Kosmetics.
Sep25 Per Cent Discount on Jllilid
Meigs Local School District
lnstalation.
good condition. $500. Phone
tember Sales Special:
Board of Education ads and ads paid within 10 days.
992-7311.
Kitc~W~s, Battis
NICE
pigs - $10 to
Kreamy
Lip
Kote
S2
oow
L. W. McComas, Clerk
CARD OF THANKS
$12. County Rolof 311. Phone
8-31-Jtc
Room Additions
$1.50, Frosllucent Lip Kote
191 1, a. u, 22
&amp;OBITUARY '
9#1-2115.
-And Patios
52.50
oow
$2, 23 delicious
Have Your Seasonal
$1.50 for 50 word mlnlm~m- · col..-s. Call 992-5113 or came
l-31-3fp 1970 VOLKSWAGEN,
Backhoe And
iach additional word 2c.
aulomatlc
stick
shift,
radio,
Elldlooder Work
see at 161'h j\1 &lt;th Ave., - - - - - - \ NOTICE OF
BLIND ADS
.
10x25 HOUSE TRAILER. set up
electric defroster, dark blue
Air Con~itioning ·
Middlepilrt,
a.
•.
APPOINTMENT
Additional 25c Charge per
on large lal in Harrisonville.
and white lnl!!rior. Phone 67S.
1-29-tic
Septic
Tonks
Cost No. 20540 Advertise,..!.
5203.
Will sell fnliler ... balfL Phone
And LNch Beds.
lnsplctiln and
Estate of Ed s. Grant,
OFfiCE HOURS
742.Q81.
8-31-6tc
Deceased.
8
30
to
5
00
Da
1
N ti
.
: a.m.
: p.m.
i y,
Wanted
1-31-lk - ' - - - -- -- o ce os hereby given that 8: 30 a .m. to 12: 00 ·Noon
R~rge
Anna M. Ryther of p . o. Box Saturday .
1967 CHEVE lLE Malibu,
EXPERIENCED limber culler. uuSisEEiDl:s511NGNGEEiR~...
;;;;.;
.......
i;i;_;;;rlng
130, Pomeroy, Ohio, has been . .
·....
standard, phone 992-&lt;5978.
Phone 992-56-U.
machine with zig-zagger.
Construction. For ,
duly •ppolnted Administratrix · I
Special
Plus
S.ll-5tp
·
9-1 -Jtc NEIGLER
Of the Estate of Ed S. Grant,
n Memory
blind hem. Fashion designed,
building or r~modeling your
At
Pirls
etc. $31.15. Phone 992·111S.
home . Call Guy Nelgler,
&amp;~~:~sed, iote of Meigs County, IN ' MEMORY ol Charles E.
Racine, Ohio.
Wanted To Buy
1-31-4\k
Creditors ore required to file
Massar who ~rted this
Real Estate Fcir Sa.le
life, September 1, i967.
their. claims wllll said fiduciary
GINSENG. Clean bone dry. S38 .fr' HOT POINT l'llnge. 111ille, 2
wlfh1n four months
._._
nd
h da
PHONE 992-2143
lb. Snake Root, S5 lb. Bill years aid, exaellont CUIIdltlon ~IX ROOM house, bath; luli SEWING MACHINES. Repair
Dated this 16th diu of A
t ,.,..,..e a, more eac
y we
1971 .
'
ugus
miss you.
.133
Buttemut
Ave.,
basement,
Bailey, Reedsville, Ohio, . SISO.CII. Can be seen a.ter 5
just walking distance from· service, all makes, 992-2284, SEPT!~ 1anks cleaned. Miller
F. H. O'Brien Friends may think the would
SeCUiKI St. Pl!one 371-6208.
p.m. at 105 Union A·. - The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
down1own Pomeroy. Contact
Probate Judge of seid County , has healed.
1-31-lotc Phone 992,J291
Authorized Singer Sales and , Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
::d Hedrick, 2137 WadswOr tl\
.
11111.25 (911, 3t But they IIHie know the sorrow ~::-:--=::-::---:---:-1-31-lk
662-3035.
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
Orive, Columbus~ Ohio, phonei
Lies within our hearts CCIII· ONE BOTTLE gas heater wltll ~;;;-;;~;;;;:;;~;;;;;;;;
2-12-tfc
3-29-Hc
237-&lt;IJ:U, Columbus.
'
--------cealed.
blower and thermostat, 50.000 MAKE beaten doom ""pet nap
__. .... ._ _
. ·- --~9-119
to ~.00:0 BTU. Phone 992-411.0 at dool wars brighl and fluffy
Mrs. Foit and Minnie McGrath. Sadly missed by wife, Leota,
QUEEN AND Shamblin ~nst . HARRISON'S TV AND AN
son Starling and family,
aHer 5. 30 P. m .
1-31 _
-In with Blue Lustre. Baker
Recent visilllrs of Ava Gilkey
Roofing, remodel•ng .. TENNA SERVICE . Phoftl
3 BEDROOM home. Electric
________
Jtp Fumltun! Campany.
and
friends.
relatives
aluminum siding. Phone 992· 992-2522.
heat,
remodeled
recently
were Sharon Jewell, Mr. and
9-1-Jfp
6-10-tfo
9-l..!k
' S.2S.IIc ..;...._ _ _ _ _ _ _
__
inside, 7th street, New Haven. 732~ or 1~-#119 .
OLD F umit..-e, dishes, docl&lt;s,
Mrs. M. A. Epple, Harold
Chrner transferred. Phone
and-&lt;&gt;r
complele
households.
Graham,
MeGralh, Mr. IN LOVING memory of Terry
SEWING MACHINE service In
Write M.D. Miller, Pomeroy, REFRIG_ERATOR.slove, lieu.
112-2263. .
Lee Wolle, Jr., born Sepyour home. Clean, oil and.
l-29-61c BACKHOE AND DOZER work~
and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey and
Dlio. Call 992-6271.
ft. upnght freeur. &lt;IIUCh. 2
Septic tanks Installed. George
adjust, s-1. Phone 992-1085.
tember
·
1,
1969
and
died
1-25-tfc
clwlirs.
sot.
of
....,
t.llln
Tad of Albany and Mr. and Mrs.
(Bill) Pullins, Phone 992-WI.
Twin City Sewing Machine
September 2, 19~9. Sadly
t.ble. 2 table limps. 1 HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
Carl Sampson.
4-25-lfc
Company.
missed by paren1s. Mr. 100 TO 300 ACRES, old farm, floor lamp. uHiily stand. 1 Call Danny Thompson, 9928-31-6tc
Mrs. Betty Graham and two
Mrs. Terry Lee Wolle, abandooled farm or vacant used c..,_, hillr dr}ef', 1 2196.
sons spent a day with Sue grandparents and great- la.nd with all righ1s. Will pay to kitchen cabinet, all In good ,
7-18-ttc Real Estate For Sale
grandparents, aunts and SS.OOO cash. Write to John
condition, PhCJne 20-2135.
_
_
11.16 ACRES loeateci ·T-79 at O' DELL WHEEL •••wumeAr
Payne.
uncles.
located at Crossroads•.Rt. 12-4.
Huffman,
1500
Semlnola,
ll"'!!-~'!'!!"!"___![!1!1!'11 3 BEDROOM brick home. Rock Springs, close to Meigs
Mrs. John Stout and Eliza Like a ship that left lis mcxiring, Akron. Ohio ol4305.
Complete tronl end ser-vice.
Choice location In Middleport. · High School. Contact Bill
8-21-4\tp
tune
up and brake service .
Powell made a business trip to And sails bravely out to sea,
Seen by appointment only.
Wille - lor L. Flelds-aller 5
Wheels
b4lanced elecSo
IIHie
Terry
has
sailed
-ay
Pomeroy.
Phone 992-5523 aHer 4 p.m. p.m. or on weekends 992-41887.
tronically. · All
work
in
calm
serenity,
.
5-7-Hc
S.27-1otc
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Heitger But there's promise ol greater Wanted To Rent
Reasonable
guaranteed.
rates. Phone 992·3213.
moved to the Saxton place
ATHENS business couple
joy
'!:ONVENIENT but secluded
7-27·11C
.,
transferring
to
Pomero.
y
.
below town. ·
building
lois
on
T79
at
Rock
Than earth could have in store~
like house or apartSprings. Within walking
Robert Alkire purchased a For God has plamed a richer Would
READY -MIX
CONLi&lt;i:: o c
ment in PGmeroy or Middistance of Meigs High
life
trailer from Harold Graham.
14'
Z4'
WIDE
delivered
right
to your
dleport.
No
children.
ExSchool, a 5 minute drive from
Beyond the ooseen shore.
pro/eel.
Fast
and
easy.
Free
Ed King Is very Ill in Holzer
cellent
refer"""".
Phone
Vera
Pameroy.
Call
or
see
Bill
9-1-ltc
est
motes
.
Phone
992-3214.
Eblen
at
593-1183
or
593-:1110.
Wille
weekends
or
aHer
5.
HoSpital.
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co,
1-29-4\lc
.
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992Mrs. Lovie Watson is still a
601
E•st
Molin
Middleport, Ohio.
··
6117.
·· PO~EROY
patient at Veterans Memorial
6-30-Hc.&lt;
7-11-tlc
Help Wanted
'imwa•· ·.,_·.o-•.
Hospital. Mrs. Lola Clark Card of Thanks
= d=
ro""
o-m-,-ho"'in:::-.-e In MIDDLEPORT- HERE IS A )ci&gt;TIC TANK&gt; CL~ANEu
=
NE"'w"',=3=o·be
lie""Ollie
visited ber recently.
WE WISH to thank everyone CAR HOP and waitress. Apply
BUY FOR YOU - Ph story Reasonable rates. Ph. 446-~782,
Middleport
.
.
Built-in
kitchen,
in person. Crow' s Steak ~~~--~llllllllllio____
who was so kind and
Will Clonch brought his
brick, llvlll!l room, dining
Cllfilmic tile bath, all-electric
Gallipolis. John Russell ,
House.
TWO 55" ~ 5 - 1 yeen heat. good neighborhood. can room, CARPETED, nice Owner &amp; Operator.
thoughHul ~ring the Illness
trailer from Horner Hill to his
1-31-&lt;llc
old, pony saddle. Karen
and alter the death ot our
kitchen, bath, 2 bedrooms,
arrange FHA financing.
5-13-Hc :
lot here In the vllla&amp;e.
husband and father, John STANLEY Home Products Griffith. phone 992-51112Telephone 992·36110 or 992- storage building. JUST $6,950.
Busch. We especially wish to
2186.
AWNINGS, storm doors and•
needs 5 fall and Christmas
9-1-3fp
thank all of our friends lor
7-lS-!Ic RACINE - 1 slory frame, 3
windows. carports ,
representali ves .
Car LEAR Jet 1 trad&lt; tape player
large bedrooms with closets,
their kindness, those sending
marquees,
aluminum siding
necessary. Write INs. Lib- with 2 speakers- 2 !ape$. LARGE 2 apartment home. bafh, nice kitchen. large
flowers, docfors and nurses at
and
railing.
Call A. Jacob,
man, 34 W. Carpenter St., ~-- 992 •m
Furnished, beautiful river living room, CARPETED,
Holzer Medical Center,
sales representative. For free
Athens or call 593-t854.
~.....,
~large garage with shop, .75
view . Rental trailer on
1.Jic
estimates, phone Charles
Ewing Funeral Home, 1-31-&lt;ltc _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,._
premises. Inquire at Dairy acre, LIKE NEW. $20,500.
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
Rev. and INs. W. E. Curl·
Corner, Letart, W. va. Phone
Johnson and Son, l~c .
man, and any one else who soMEONE needed to stay· ..;ith VOLKSWAGEN camper. !100d
POMEROY - 1'12 story frame,
19&gt;3357.
helped in any way. INs. John
&gt;27-Hc
invalid 5 days a week, some condition. Less than 20.000
3 bedrooms, bath, living
8-31-4\tc
Busch and sons.
nights. Phone 992-7155.
miles. 439 linaJin St., MicJ.
room,
dining
room,
--~-=-=-~9-1-ltp
8-29-&lt;ltc dleport, Paul Smtt.
1,70 RICHARDSON mobile basement, porch, large lot.
C. BRADFORD, Auctloneei"
I-:IS-He
home with washer and dryer,
Storm doors, windows. All
Complete Service
EA~N AT hoine acldO'i!SSing
fully carpeted, also 5 room
IN GOOD CONDITION.
Phone949-3821
envelopes.
Rush
stamped
quality protein," he adds.
BEAGlE, 5 months ald. ilK. C.
house with basement, both
BARGAIN AT JUST$7,900
Racine, Olio
sell--addressed
envelope.
The
regislered. Has had all shots
located on two lots In
"A diet comp)etely of brown Notice
Bradford
Crill
•
Ambrose Co., ms Lakeborn,
$.tO. Phone 992-35194 aflor 5
Syracuse. Phone 992-7019.
PLACE THE SALE OF
rice can cause a person's
5-1-Hc
Davisburg,
Mich.
-48019.
p.m.
I WOULD like to do typing In
1-31-4\lc
YOUR PROPERTY IN
death."
1-1-JO!p
my home. Reasonable rates.
CAPABLE HANDS
Soybean diets are also be· Phone 992-3497. ·
HENRY E. ClELAND
coming popular w i t h the
1-29-&lt;ltc LADY to do housework. 1 day a WALNUT stereo-radio com.
REALTOR
AUTOMOBILElnsurance·beeii
week, 152 BUtternut, Phone binallon. Four speed in·Office m-2259
Cincelled?
Lost
your
youlhful vegetarian enthusi.
992-5CJIO.
lermixed changer. Four
operator's license? Call 992Residence 991-2561
asts. Many scientists rate TRYING TO locale, l•rst na~e
S.26-61c speaker sound SYS1em, *'at
this enthusiasm as another unknown, last name, Moms
- ..
volume controf. Balance
_: 2966_
.
fad to. hit our well-financed 2nd Lt., H Co., 109!f' Infantry,
167.«&lt;. Use .... budget terms.
vouthful rebel
28th Keystone D1v. Contact
Call 992-1015.
•
s.
Warren Lynd, ' 1717 7th St., For Rent
l-29-6fc
Soy • products m u s t be Por1smouth, Olio &lt;15662.
k d
91 31 2 BEDROOM house on Lincoln -:-:~-:-::-----coo e or treated to get rid
•• c
Heights. Phone 992.5121 aller BEAUTIFUL Cllfonial maple
Broker
of injurious material in raw
4
stereo, AM &amp; FM radio. raw
Ill ModiMic Slreet
soybeans. Boiling or fer· GUN SHOOT, Forked Run
p.m.
1-31-Hc speakers, 4 speed""""""""
.......... y.OIIio
rnentillg are two methods of Sportsman Club. Sunday, -,.,.:-:-:----:,..._____
changer, separate Uiiitrols.
treating the beans. In the September 5• 12 noon. 9.J.Jtc 12x~ TRAILER, 2 bedroom, Balance $10.99. Use our SYRACUSE-~ rooms, nice lot.
nicely furnished, all new, 5 budget Jerms_ Call 992.11115..
Orient, where soybeans are
$1.100.00.
'aJ
f h
miles above Pomeroy, own
1-29-&lt;lfc
ft
o en an essentJ part o t e RUMMAGE SALE sponsored
--------RUTLAND - 6 rooms, bath,
protein diet, (hey are no I by Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
lot, city water. electric range.
Good location lor school U' COAL lumace - SSO. 6119
basement, nice lot. $3,500.00.
used wilhout processing. Sigma Phi Friday and
teachers. Call 98&gt;~14
F'l!arl st. "'- m .z....
They are qot eaten alone. Salurday, .September 3 and 4
I-2Utc
9-1-41&lt;: CHESTER AREA
2
either.
at Coats Building In Mid-----· ---dleport next to Firestone. TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mot.!;~- HALF RUNNER beans, S2
· Soybeans are a good food Start~ at 9 a.m.
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse, bushel, watermelons, canwhen properly prepared.
9·1-Jtc
992-2951.
taloupes, · sweet _ corn.
Olio.
But l ' don 't regard them as --~-----­
4-2-lfc potatoes. 0ai'1IICI! P111ffill.
necess~ry to Americans. Be- YARD SALE, collectors' items,
·992-7161
~- PhCJne 110-2254.
cause we are rich enough to antiques, carnival glass raise cattle and poultry in other Items at Dora Hysells FURNISHED and oolumlshod =:::====:::::::==9-=1·:,1fc
apartmen1s. Oose to ~ - . r
large amounts we don't have on Eagle Ridge and Boshan
to rely on other foods for our Road on September ~· Phone 992-5.&amp;.
10-11-llc BEAT tile COLD WIIITER
protein. That is why I am
9-1.Jtp
a ltd IT'S . COST WITH
inclined to regard t h o s e
3 ROOM ooiurnlshed aJ)ili'l· HEATING OIL FROM
people who make a fetish of
ment. Pbone 992-2211.
LANDM ..RK.
·
1-29-Hc We hilve the finest Budget
eating soybeans, peas and
beans, instead of meats and
-troller lolln Chesler Pay Plan, Dei'-V Sell vices.
PRIVATE
Automatic Degree Day
poultry, eggs and cheese. as ITEM: JacK Kane:
with utility building. Phone
more or less faddists. That You somehow get the
Oetl--r Duet Ooll.wy
'185-.1106.
SJS:iili"llownis unless tbey are vegetari·
E..,ipment.
1-21-4\tc
eling he has thought
We also hilvea CUll pteloel•
ans for olher than macrobi·
11elanc;:e•On
bout wha.t · he'
otic reasons," Dr. King says.
1 BEDROOM trailer apart- of Siegle• Fuel 'Oil Heaters
Convenient
haring
with
you.
Your
ment, ideal lor couples. and FUI'IJIIaS.
Terms.
He notes lhat peas; beans.
Contact McOure's Dairy Isle,
\. - POMEROY
eling is right.
soybeans and brown rice an
992-52G or 992-34:16.
I
J•cltw.c......,.~~p.
have their places as accept·
1-29-&lt;ltc . •
-992·2111
able foods in large areas n(
:e;p;;;;;;:~~
~. ROOM apartment, all utilities · ~
A'PPLES~a loes. Fiflpatrid
the world. But s el e c.ti o n
paid,
furnished
SIO.OO
OrchardsState Route ..,,
based on nutritional facls is
month. Phorie 992-3975.
· phone Wilkesvil~. Mt-l11S.
necessary, he says.
M;iscin, Va.
1-31-Hc
1-15-llc

For

WheeiM&amp;nment

'5.55 .

e

STRIKING CONTRAST Is

by I08rlng vertical eoiDDIDI of a work of

ma.-New York's LlneGID
Center-ucl a work of DB·
lure, a leafy tree. A metb·
er 8lld Infant out for alr
UDwiUbl&amp;ly add lbe flniJb.
IDe tollela to a pbotqraphlc

work of art.

Harrisonville
Society News
The gue~ts of Mr. and Mrs.
Hie! French were Mrs. Helen
Jones and daughler, Sandra, of
Cincinnati, who visited a week.
Mrs. Jones and Mrs. French are

SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING

sislers.
Reeves of
auwcothe was buried Friday.
He was a former local resident
and served as trustee. The
grandson of Jerry Reeves, son
of WQm Reeves and brother of
our former sheriff, Wilbur
Reeves, he leaves a wife, one
daughter,' one granddaughter,
and
several
great·
grandchildren. Mr. and Mrs.
Clinton Gilkey attended the
funeral!•• Miss Eunice Bradfield is ill at
her farm home here. She is
suffering from low blood
pressw-e.
Mrs. Dwight Mutcher,
•\thens, and Mrs. Myrtle Sin·
clair of Miami, Fla. visited the
Heil Frencbs recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Alkire
visited his brother, Oulrles
Alkire, who Is a medical patient
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Ernest Carr hauled dirt for
Robert Alkire, Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Richardson
have moved their trailer to the
lot which they recently pur·
chased from Mrs. Foil, better
known as the Duncan lot.
Friday evening caUers of M.
A. Epple were Frank Epple,
Mr.

Gerald

POLAROID
BIG SHOT

G. E.
WALKIE· TALKIES

COLOR CAMERA

T2215

Only two con trols: on·off to re.:eive , ond push

Beoufifu l parlraih with o ~ lud ic quality.
All you need i5 the Polorotd "Big Shot"
lond camera . Simple Ia u!oe . Eos)llooding
and " picture perfect" adiusting .

button to transmit. On~ hand does it! Sensil i '&lt;~'e
~upe r regenerative recf!iver, 3 transistors, !&gt;01·
id 1tate circ~itry, for crisp recept ion, on the
~om transmiu io fl up to 14 mile.

G.E.
FM-AM TABLE

..

RADIO

ALLIN OUR
JEWELRY

Solid state design, big 4" frontfired dynamic speaker, built-in
AFC for free FM reception , and
automatic volume control on AM

PAIR

bond.

HECK'S
REG.
$15.88

DfPARrMENr

$1577
$17.88

LM·II
' '

MAKE-UP MIRROR

portable r ad io des ign . lh fun-loving
~phe ricol styling, uniqve eoty-grip con·
trois and excit ing new carrying chain
comb i n~ to make up a rad io that 's " just
slightly ahead of its time."

Realty

......,

•,,

KODAK
INSTAMATIC
CAMERA

LIGHTED

This model is another step forward in

Cleland.

.'

CLAIKUL

PORTABLE RADIO

True to light , lighte-d malte·up mirror. 4 ligh t

positions . . , day , office, evening and home .
lor perfect make ·up appl ication .

• Knob -type Film Advance • Film Ad vance Signal • Wrist Strop e Sharp, pre·
set len~. no fo cusing.

$699

$988
HECK'S REG.

MOBI£.11JMES

HECK'S REG.

$11.88

$8.88

G.E.
PORTABLE

ASSORTED

8-TRACK STEREO

- RADIO

TAPES .

MADDOX

Slide-rule type dial, me-tal lront and o big
$Ound moke thi5 GE miniature a vloume
seller . 8 ~tot'ldard fvnction tranliltars, 2
diode~ and I boltery saver diode, 2 W."
dynamic 1peoker . 6ui11·in A.FC lor drill·
free li$terting .

Ta!) a rti oh a ~d lc1!) l u ~ • •I

llad•. Cou" ' ' r &amp; Wnt••"
a ~d Show Twneo . C~oo ••
t.o,. o !or99 oo--r ... enl of

Macrobiotic Food:

A~ltNoul
JfWflRY
DEPA~MfNr

HECK'S
REG.
$17.88

HECK'S REG.

------=-----

MI"FR
.

88

$

Blaettnar'•

ll·

UHF Solid State Tuner • VHF ':Pre·Set" Fine

e Telescoping Dipole Antennae Die-CoSt Metal Handles
• 10" Diclgonal, 60 sq . in . viewing area

6.98.

Minnie

e

Tuning Controle Push Button Color Purifier e Keyed AGC

I--

. 742-4902

PORTA-COLOR Chassis e GE "In/ line" Piclure Tube

System

Auto

p~.ented

Q~

r.ca.rdift9 ol'li"'· PrllduOtd
by tt..leoding _....,ro,tu•·

....

An Ancient Cult
By

GAYNOR MADDOX

Just what ar~ macrobiotic
foods?
Act u a II y, "macrobio·
sis" me an s longevity, de·
rived from Greek. Thus macrobiotic foods mean foods
that insure longevity- ac·
cording to the dictionary at
least.
The word g o e s back to
primitive t i m e s, denoting
mental heallh and hallucinatory effects. It started in
the mystical East.
"Then during the middle
ages it .took root in Germany. If is still strong in
Western Gerinany today. It
combines the mysticism of
the East and its brown rice
with a supplemental diet of
fruits and vegetables," ex·
plains Dr. Charles G I e n n
King, biochemist and nutrition aulhority.
Dr. King, past president of
the International Union of
Nutrition Sciences, continues: " I understan&lt;). that the
person who goes on a macrobiotic diet begins with brown
rice, fruits and vegetables.
But he may cut back using
fewer and fewer fruits and
vegetables and eating only
brown rice. The more closely
one sticks to lhe brown rice
diet lhe more spiritual he
becomes, we are told. Brown
rice, it is explained, ap· ·
proaches the ideal food."
But unfortunately . people
fall to real~e thar brown
rice is not a perfect food . No
one food is complete in it:

self.
"It is deficient in vitamin
A, vitamin C and in hi~h r

\._~~

·~~~
. ~~'
·c.----g. - ~ F · ·
I\:··---._

• B.
Virgil

:TEAFORD•~~;;;;;;;;;;;S.29;...,
-6tc

-~

Tires

----,.---=----

SEE US BERlRE YOU BUY - •

GENERAL TIRE SALES \

MV-2

VACUUN\
CLEAN~~b

·.:,:

•.)-use
rk
camera (on y
u
• Corries ' eo ' • 22 foot cord lets yo,
it where you cant cOr or workshop • Its
use it in the goto~e\-sucks in over 4 ~ol·
moll bul powerlu d • ON-OFF sw•1ch
~ons ~t oir eoch s_econ_.vst like o mixer •
linger llp- 1

~;~$'j'f77 .
HECK'S
REG.
$25·S6

V69B

$5.99

pORT AILE

SR.

General

HECK'S
REG •

~·~__..,._.

HECK'S
REG.
$14.88

' \ 015

'
/

,,

AIRQUIPT

AIRQUIPT
AUTOMATIC

·SLIDE VIEWER

SLIDE VIEWER

JEWILI-Y DEPT.

HAMIL1o• aEACH
DELUXE 51 AIID

MIXER I• Positive
• \ O-posi1ion speed ~t~ntr~urntoble • l
. cf e 2-poSI oon
• 150
beo1er e1e or
"
tomOticoUy
.
wls turn ou
e "''xer
bo
I
3
d
an
q·
!I d molor
"·"
watt governor co"1rO eb'l.ly
or1o 11 •
detoches. for easy P .

$166
HECK'S REG.
$2.19

'

HECK'S REG.
$8.76

~.2277

JEWElRY DEPT.

H~CK'S REG. $27 .9~6..-""

3 RQOMS

NEW

FURNITURE

.'349.95

WMP0/1390

----

I

MASON'
FURNITURE.
w.

,, ._,

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

I'

•

,

�OPIIIIAK.Y

OFEI"AaY

10TO 9

10 TO 9 1

PRICES

EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY, SEPT.·s,' WHILE.QUAITITIES LAST
.

LADIES' -·

FALL SKIRTS

$544
HECK'S .
REG.

.

~ .-j

!

All new fall fashions . Roll
sleeves. Many styles to choose
from . Solid and print$. Sizes
32-38.

$6.88

••·s

RAIN

SUIT

Two -piece waterproof rain
suit feotures full zipper icJcket
with attached hood: trouu:rs
ore full cut. Snaps on cuffs
andsleeves fo rsnugfi t. AII
~ms reinforced and cemented. S-M·l -Xl.

Choose from llripe1 and solids in
I~ double knit shifts for women.
ftotures include : zip front, solid
c:olor collar ond short sleeves. Sit H : 10-20.

INSULATED
UNDERWEAR

.·&lt;."

90/1 0 ~rylic c:ompoWtion.
6 oz. pigment taffeta shell
a nd lining . Available in
Brown. k.sorted ~Zfi.

·.
·
:·-::..·.::

• ••
• •

•

$699

$277

$299

'

KNIT
SHIF;TS .

SHIRTS.

Perfed for the woman .
of yo u r household.
Woltz length with lace
trim in blue, pin k, mint
and moit:e in si zes S·
M·L

10T09

LADlE$'

. LADIES'

NYLON
GOWNS

· All new Fall styles and colors .
Se..,erol Styles to ·choose from
Sizes 5· 13 and 8-20.

OPEl lAlLY
IOTO ,9

OPEIIAaY

HECK'S REG.

To $3.66

HECK'S REG.

$8.94

$3.44

CI.QTI/11/G DEPT.

Feat ures practical and economical
quilt-through. design with 3 lb. worm
fi ll .

HECK'S
REG.
$11.99

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.
SPORTS DEPT.
$5.99

10.99

SPORTS
DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

.Boys
Long Sleeve

WORK SETS
Heavy service weight twill work pants and shirts. The

polyester and cotton blend garments come in Charcool, Olive and Spruce Green. Pants sizes: 29-42. Shirt
sizes: S-M-l-XL.

SHIRTS

]66

CLOTHING
DEPT.

LADIES'
HANDBAGS
Choose from o large assortment of casual style handbogs. Colors include: Golden Ton , Ahtique, Brown and
Fall Ton.

$

22

Choose from Card igan, Crew or U-neck ~ty1es in'these
Wool and Orion sweaters. Sizes: 5-M-l-Xl.

,.

HECK'S REG.
T0$1.99

1l

lomps. Model No. 2_.- 20 Watts each. Model No .
48- oiO Watts each • General Electric Bollost • 4
Foot, 3 Prong Cord • Hongin'ij Hooks and Ceiling

Chains . Just plug cord into l'fttplode.

HECK'S REG. $13.99

MEN'S WOOL

1
DAYTIME 15's . .............79

NEWBORN 30's .... .........

1

OVERNUiHT 12's • • • • • • • • • • • •

79 .

ClOTNINC DEPT.

a~sorted

VINYL TOP &amp;SEAT CLEANER
FABRIC UPIIOI.STERY &amp;CARPET CLEANER
LIQUID CARNU.CLEANER/ POLISH

HECK'S
REG •
$8.99
AIITDMDTWE DEPT.

CHOICE

styles, lobrics and color\. Sizes:

&lt;
•
HECK'S REG.
$16.99

HECK'S
REG.
$3.99
HECK'S REG. 48'

19 PIECE SOCKET SET .
Codoniu"' Pla~ht 12 paint 10dtll ,.,~
drive. 7f16", ~". 9/ 1 6~. In;", 11 /1 6". ,..,
~... IS/1 6", 0M tiKh olt hDnd~. dthotr b ~.
rorM! handle l'lul t hnndle ..itl\7 hill IOd·

$188

1/ARIWAft
DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.

$2.50

-"· )lr."drioN.

JOHNSON'S

CLOT/111/G
DEPT.

CLOTHING DEPT.

5 PC. COMBIIATIOI
WRENCHSET .
·HI\(K'S REG.
$2.60

4.5 OUNCE

BRYCREEM

GEL:USIL
LIQUID

ONE·A·DAY

VITAMINS
$186

97t

HECK'S REG . $2.44

HECK' S REG. $1.59

lOO's

COSMETIC IJIPT.

1

VASELINE
IN JAR

24(·
· HECK'S REG. 36'

.

COSMETIC DEPT.

. , ..

I

DRISTAN
TABS
24's

78t
HECK'S REG. $1.18

COSMETIC DEPT.

OLD SPICE

LAWI &amp; LEAF BAGS
7 IUSHELSIZE

CHROME
CLEANER

!l:~~:.~~~:~.
;~:~,:~:~;~:
"'"d
HECK'SREG.
$1.99

$1.14

HECK'S REG. $1.44

COSMETIC IIEII.

cos.flt119T.

CO-IK/IEII.

• I

10" PIPE WRENCH

DEODORANT

HECK'S REG. 14'

SPORTS
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

$3.99

1f1"x18" 20~ FT.

J

56&lt;

-"&lt;li&lt;;J~nl

.,t in

BY THE FOOT

..
"''H'IRSI'IIII'

HECK'S lEG.

s299

GUN CASE

HARDWARE
DEPT.

.... ' '"''"

DIAL

4 OUNCE

15 BAGS
PER ROLL

FOAM

90UNCE

MANPOWER
DEODORANT

SPORTS
DEPT.

·

AUTOMOTIIIE DEPT.

'$ 188

dial 1

S]33

544

With 52 inch
folding handle .

---·- -

12 OUNCE

$

gal.

SCISSORS JACK
3000LB.CAPACITY $

90Z.

Jlf• OUNCE

each

6-VOLT
LANTERN WITH
BATTERY

4· 14 .

CLOTHJNC
DEPT:

99~

Point Pleasant Slore On~

8

$

PANTIES
Available in

Full size 36" long hardwood frame ,
top quality plywood bed and fully
podded heodres1.

Rugged mode CPO jockets styled lor the mon
of oction. Sizes S-M· l-Xl. Pile-lined.

GIRLS'

29

CAR CREEPER

Reg.

NAVICUAR
VISION WITH
liVE
ACTION
WIPII.lADE
REFillS.

PLAID CPO SHIRT

I

~\\
'
.

DAYTIMElO's ......... .... 5 59

1/AIDWARE /JEPT.

Pkg.
Of
2

•ESAFE ...
1101 SORRY ••

$566

5999

CLOTHING DEPT.

.PAMPERS

WINDSHIELD
WASHER
·- SOLVENT

Mode of finest natural rubber and stain·
less steel molded to fit all con1ours. Si zes to
fit most cars.

HECK'S REG. $14.99

CLOTHINC DEPT.

I

SPORTS
DEPT.

WIPER BLADE
REFILLS

24" FLUORESCENT

Point Pleasant Store Only

DISPOSABLE
DIAPERS

SPORTS
DEPT.

oz.

A great combination! Polyester knit and flare leg trousers. Just the thing for fall casual wea r. Colors: Brown
and Navy. Sizes: 29·40.
..
~·

Complete W ith : • Two Gene_rol Ele ctrk Ra pid Start

CLOTHING DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.
$3.99

PACKAGE OF TWO

LIGHT
HECK'S REG. $5.99

HECK'S REG.
$5.99

PANTS

18

•

Excellent qual ity klin dried selected hardwood, hand rubbed to beautiful finish.
Grooves are felt lined for gun protection.

• Cordless • Battery opera ted • Per~cl companion
for camper~ . borbeques, boat ond be oc.h • Move it
anywhere in the house ... no win!i ... priceles~ a t
home du,ing power loilures • All rac tive ba ttery jack·
et blends with oil fUrniture it}olu.

',·.' 99

MEN'S
POLYESTER KNIT

Size 4-8 8-12 .6-16
Heck's Reg. sl.44

MEN'S
SWEATERS
HECK'S
REG.
TO
$4 .59

HUNTING
CAP

HECK'S REG.
$9.99
SPORTS DEPT.

$299
PANTS

GUN RACK

::_ .:. :
. -::

$7'9 .

.·

SPORTS DEPT.

6-VOLTCAMP LAMP

Hunting hot, melton lined. Assorted colors
and sizes .

, .,.#

Point Pleasant Store On~

HECK'S REG.
$7.77

HIPWELL

HUNTING PANTS

Go threveh .. ,.., , h wilheYI a
t crat,h! fltttt lruth Pa ~ l • art
IIICid. of 11 011~ Ntlo'f Ovcl ,.,..,.. ·.,
te'd color. F..,~, of trouMn ftom '
hip fa balto111 loa,. """"""' reinfwo.· \
;
Ill tnt of "'r' leweh "RINO ·TE It"
\
·
. . 'tiny] &lt;oGled l acing fobr ic. Two
·
. · :.
fron1 tlash p.c~c~lll . t. inforced • \
.-~
rubl.t..i..d Yat. 1.... bcld pa&lt;~ett .
.,
leh loopi-WO!rll pod"·Vpp.r fl,.
.
. .·· ::
ftont .

tJ44

Heck's Reg,
1

HETTRICK
MEN'S PERMANENT PRESS

Co
n
Cooler

HECK'S REG.
$2.50

$188 ,

1/AIDWAIE DEPT.

'

0 .PLASTIC

: 1"x18"
30~ FT.
: 2"x18"
70~ FT.

1/AIIIWAIE

TARP
HECK'S REG .

$2.99

SPORTS DEPT.

'

.

'

$266

�OPIIIIAK.Y

OFEI"AaY

10TO 9

10 TO 9 1

PRICES

EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY, SEPT.·s,' WHILE.QUAITITIES LAST
.

LADIES' -·

FALL SKIRTS

$544
HECK'S .
REG.

.

~ .-j

!

All new fall fashions . Roll
sleeves. Many styles to choose
from . Solid and print$. Sizes
32-38.

$6.88

••·s

RAIN

SUIT

Two -piece waterproof rain
suit feotures full zipper icJcket
with attached hood: trouu:rs
ore full cut. Snaps on cuffs
andsleeves fo rsnugfi t. AII
~ms reinforced and cemented. S-M·l -Xl.

Choose from llripe1 and solids in
I~ double knit shifts for women.
ftotures include : zip front, solid
c:olor collar ond short sleeves. Sit H : 10-20.

INSULATED
UNDERWEAR

.·&lt;."

90/1 0 ~rylic c:ompoWtion.
6 oz. pigment taffeta shell
a nd lining . Available in
Brown. k.sorted ~Zfi.

·.
·
:·-::..·.::

• ••
• •

•

$699

$277

$299

'

KNIT
SHIF;TS .

SHIRTS.

Perfed for the woman .
of yo u r household.
Woltz length with lace
trim in blue, pin k, mint
and moit:e in si zes S·
M·L

10T09

LADlE$'

. LADIES'

NYLON
GOWNS

· All new Fall styles and colors .
Se..,erol Styles to ·choose from
Sizes 5· 13 and 8-20.

OPEl lAlLY
IOTO ,9

OPEIIAaY

HECK'S REG.

To $3.66

HECK'S REG.

$8.94

$3.44

CI.QTI/11/G DEPT.

Feat ures practical and economical
quilt-through. design with 3 lb. worm
fi ll .

HECK'S
REG.
$11.99

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.
SPORTS DEPT.
$5.99

10.99

SPORTS
DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

.Boys
Long Sleeve

WORK SETS
Heavy service weight twill work pants and shirts. The

polyester and cotton blend garments come in Charcool, Olive and Spruce Green. Pants sizes: 29-42. Shirt
sizes: S-M-l-XL.

SHIRTS

]66

CLOTHING
DEPT.

LADIES'
HANDBAGS
Choose from o large assortment of casual style handbogs. Colors include: Golden Ton , Ahtique, Brown and
Fall Ton.

$

22

Choose from Card igan, Crew or U-neck ~ty1es in'these
Wool and Orion sweaters. Sizes: 5-M-l-Xl.

,.

HECK'S REG.
T0$1.99

1l

lomps. Model No. 2_.- 20 Watts each. Model No .
48- oiO Watts each • General Electric Bollost • 4
Foot, 3 Prong Cord • Hongin'ij Hooks and Ceiling

Chains . Just plug cord into l'fttplode.

HECK'S REG. $13.99

MEN'S WOOL

1
DAYTIME 15's . .............79

NEWBORN 30's .... .........

1

OVERNUiHT 12's • • • • • • • • • • • •

79 .

ClOTNINC DEPT.

a~sorted

VINYL TOP &amp;SEAT CLEANER
FABRIC UPIIOI.STERY &amp;CARPET CLEANER
LIQUID CARNU.CLEANER/ POLISH

HECK'S
REG •
$8.99
AIITDMDTWE DEPT.

CHOICE

styles, lobrics and color\. Sizes:

&lt;
•
HECK'S REG.
$16.99

HECK'S
REG.
$3.99
HECK'S REG. 48'

19 PIECE SOCKET SET .
Codoniu"' Pla~ht 12 paint 10dtll ,.,~
drive. 7f16", ~". 9/ 1 6~. In;", 11 /1 6". ,..,
~... IS/1 6", 0M tiKh olt hDnd~. dthotr b ~.
rorM! handle l'lul t hnndle ..itl\7 hill IOd·

$188

1/ARIWAft
DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.

$2.50

-"· )lr."drioN.

JOHNSON'S

CLOT/111/G
DEPT.

CLOTHING DEPT.

5 PC. COMBIIATIOI
WRENCHSET .
·HI\(K'S REG.
$2.60

4.5 OUNCE

BRYCREEM

GEL:USIL
LIQUID

ONE·A·DAY

VITAMINS
$186

97t

HECK'S REG . $2.44

HECK' S REG. $1.59

lOO's

COSMETIC IJIPT.

1

VASELINE
IN JAR

24(·
· HECK'S REG. 36'

.

COSMETIC DEPT.

. , ..

I

DRISTAN
TABS
24's

78t
HECK'S REG. $1.18

COSMETIC DEPT.

OLD SPICE

LAWI &amp; LEAF BAGS
7 IUSHELSIZE

CHROME
CLEANER

!l:~~:.~~~:~.
;~:~,:~:~;~:
"'"d
HECK'SREG.
$1.99

$1.14

HECK'S REG. $1.44

COSMETIC IIEII.

cos.flt119T.

CO-IK/IEII.

• I

10" PIPE WRENCH

DEODORANT

HECK'S REG. 14'

SPORTS
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

$3.99

1f1"x18" 20~ FT.

J

56&lt;

-"&lt;li&lt;;J~nl

.,t in

BY THE FOOT

..
"''H'IRSI'IIII'

HECK'S lEG.

s299

GUN CASE

HARDWARE
DEPT.

.... ' '"''"

DIAL

4 OUNCE

15 BAGS
PER ROLL

FOAM

90UNCE

MANPOWER
DEODORANT

SPORTS
DEPT.

·

AUTOMOTIIIE DEPT.

'$ 188

dial 1

S]33

544

With 52 inch
folding handle .

---·- -

12 OUNCE

$

gal.

SCISSORS JACK
3000LB.CAPACITY $

90Z.

Jlf• OUNCE

each

6-VOLT
LANTERN WITH
BATTERY

4· 14 .

CLOTHJNC
DEPT:

99~

Point Pleasant Slore On~

8

$

PANTIES
Available in

Full size 36" long hardwood frame ,
top quality plywood bed and fully
podded heodres1.

Rugged mode CPO jockets styled lor the mon
of oction. Sizes S-M· l-Xl. Pile-lined.

GIRLS'

29

CAR CREEPER

Reg.

NAVICUAR
VISION WITH
liVE
ACTION
WIPII.lADE
REFillS.

PLAID CPO SHIRT

I

~\\
'
.

DAYTIMElO's ......... .... 5 59

1/AIDWARE /JEPT.

Pkg.
Of
2

•ESAFE ...
1101 SORRY ••

$566

5999

CLOTHING DEPT.

.PAMPERS

WINDSHIELD
WASHER
·- SOLVENT

Mode of finest natural rubber and stain·
less steel molded to fit all con1ours. Si zes to
fit most cars.

HECK'S REG. $14.99

CLOTHINC DEPT.

I

SPORTS
DEPT.

WIPER BLADE
REFILLS

24" FLUORESCENT

Point Pleasant Store Only

DISPOSABLE
DIAPERS

SPORTS
DEPT.

oz.

A great combination! Polyester knit and flare leg trousers. Just the thing for fall casual wea r. Colors: Brown
and Navy. Sizes: 29·40.
..
~·

Complete W ith : • Two Gene_rol Ele ctrk Ra pid Start

CLOTHING DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.
$3.99

PACKAGE OF TWO

LIGHT
HECK'S REG. $5.99

HECK'S REG.
$5.99

PANTS

18

•

Excellent qual ity klin dried selected hardwood, hand rubbed to beautiful finish.
Grooves are felt lined for gun protection.

• Cordless • Battery opera ted • Per~cl companion
for camper~ . borbeques, boat ond be oc.h • Move it
anywhere in the house ... no win!i ... priceles~ a t
home du,ing power loilures • All rac tive ba ttery jack·
et blends with oil fUrniture it}olu.

',·.' 99

MEN'S
POLYESTER KNIT

Size 4-8 8-12 .6-16
Heck's Reg. sl.44

MEN'S
SWEATERS
HECK'S
REG.
TO
$4 .59

HUNTING
CAP

HECK'S REG.
$9.99
SPORTS DEPT.

$299
PANTS

GUN RACK

::_ .:. :
. -::

$7'9 .

.·

SPORTS DEPT.

6-VOLTCAMP LAMP

Hunting hot, melton lined. Assorted colors
and sizes .

, .,.#

Point Pleasant Store On~

HECK'S REG.
$7.77

HIPWELL

HUNTING PANTS

Go threveh .. ,.., , h wilheYI a
t crat,h! fltttt lruth Pa ~ l • art
IIICid. of 11 011~ Ntlo'f Ovcl ,.,..,.. ·.,
te'd color. F..,~, of trouMn ftom '
hip fa balto111 loa,. """"""' reinfwo.· \
;
Ill tnt of "'r' leweh "RINO ·TE It"
\
·
. . 'tiny] &lt;oGled l acing fobr ic. Two
·
. · :.
fron1 tlash p.c~c~lll . t. inforced • \
.-~
rubl.t..i..d Yat. 1.... bcld pa&lt;~ett .
.,
leh loopi-WO!rll pod"·Vpp.r fl,.
.
. .·· ::
ftont .

tJ44

Heck's Reg,
1

HETTRICK
MEN'S PERMANENT PRESS

Co
n
Cooler

HECK'S REG.
$2.50

$188 ,

1/AIDWAIE DEPT.

'

0 .PLASTIC

: 1"x18"
30~ FT.
: 2"x18"
70~ FT.

1/AIIIWAIE

TARP
HECK'S REG .

$2.99

SPORTS DEPT.

'

.

'

$266

�I

•

EEK ANOMEEK
lOOK AT MV
THREE. FELLERS
SWELTERIN ' OUT
'fONDER INTH'HOT
SUN

.

GLORY BE!!
BET THEV'D
I,OVE SOME
REFRASHMENTS
I

OPEIIAill
• IOTO 9 ·

OPEl lAlLY
10109

SUIDAY
.I T07

UNEEDA

TRASH
CAN

Top qual ity and comfort as low·low pricing , Fo lding steel table
f!alures 30"x30" vinyl covered mo~oni te· top for long wea r and
qu ick cleaning. Choirs ore "x" fr ame tvblo r- conStruction wi th
matc hing thic k podded , vinyl covered sea ts a nd conlqured com•
for t ba(ks. All I ol d flot for E·Z storage. Beautiful baked ena mel

$]99
HECK'S REG.
$5 .99

10 o \houltnolll ooM....,ticallro

r

1HOtiGHT

88&lt;

\

1'/

"~'

1/fEY Klf'N
@YING

5CR££N
/ES/ 5/

HECK'S REG.
$1.18

88

$

AIR. 81/RNS 'I

' 'lilt·likt"

finish on all ma tching pieces.

101/SEWAif
DEPT.

. IM AN ACIOR:,
llk)T A CROOK f

LETTER SWEATER
YOU'RE 11/EAR.ING, ·

Sh.'1 lhe 1110ll odO&lt;obl. ~¥1 ~ ploynwo"' with t..r
.olt Howi"''J hOi• rh ml &lt;an !. 1trllid ii'l
clortnl of long or-1horl hgir-d01.. Jw•l pwllller ponv
kl~ out far IDnQ l11rir. RNow a!ld her bair ••tracts

FOLDING TABLE
CHAIRS

•

IS THAT A•D•

KIM DOLL

FESCO
PLASTIC
20GALLON

I

TOY DEPT.

HaveY90J'
broai:ls
had any

FESCO PLASTIC

ellperienc:e

THIMBLE WASTE CAN

with

crime?

OH -LOADS!!

WE SlOLE "101111

WHEElS Fm.l

OUR

NEWSBO'I'S
&amp;IC'ICI-E -

lHOSE
aAATS

ARE

h\UCH

QOIETER

NOW-

That:s

JUST

little 'lrl WHAT

ttuff't rneen
bit

DO

'IOU

MEAN,

stuff!! MASTER?

DAISY

DOUBLE BARilEL
TOY RIFLE
HECK'S REG.
$1.09

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

WORLD GLOBES
Similar To

e :::;.:OOTING

54 OUNCE

SPI'CAND SPAN

lllt~stratiotl

91&lt;

FESCO PLASTIC

SWIN' TIP WASTE BIN

HECK'S REG.
$1.09 .

Heck's Reg. 'P

REG.
96'

(
68

~

1111 NOM,IV!:OOT 10 CHECK
11-IOeE:

TOY DEPT.

OUT

RUMOR&amp;

'THAT EIONNAZ MAY

liE FOR SALE:!

VISUAL COIN

. YOU K:NOW I'M 1\JOT ONE;;
TO G'I0'6SIP, E.LSI&amp;., 8UT r

l THOUGHT ABOUT 'THAT NEI'/6
610RY ALL NIGI!T I.DI\k7 AND
I. RMLIZE THAT 60NNAZ

~UST

HAVE

11:)

.,.ELL YOU
IS.•• YAIC-

5TILL MEAN5 A GREAT
DEAL 10 ME!

81-A

STACK BANK
OR ROLL-A·COIN STACK lANK

HOUSEWAII
DEPT.

Point Pleasant .Store On~
HECK'S REG.
$3.99

HECK'S REG. $1.77

HOI/SEWAII
DEPT.

TOY DEPT.
14" IAIY

FESCO PLASTIC

SKILLET SET

MINI LAUNDRY BASKET
'

.~

.

9&lt;

•

HECK'S RE.G.
$1.49

HOUSEWAIE
DEPT.

DOLL WITH TOTE SEAT

~ll&amp;t)on
3Piece

eCASliRON
e ANSWERS All FRYING NEEDS
• AS S6RT~D. SIZES .

e DRINKS AND WETS
e ROOTED HAIR

S!9let

$1}6''

set.,.

$]55

9·1

TilE B0.RN l.DSER

,. .......

~'-:_tooo~
~~~

..... ._::-

HECK'S REG.

··-

c:-..... ~1 10' ;· Iil.alll

HECK'S REG.
$4.99

~

Ft?0.1 1011 011, DON'T t.EA-..o

Llt.Hl&gt; 81lRNIIIIo! OIJ~

ELECTJQC llllJ.IS ~j

$3.48

111 1'1' ~

.... ___,..
---.. ~lr.lrr~

TOY DEPT.

HDUSEWAIE DEPT.

PUFF

FESCO PLASTIC

BASKETBALL

BOWL AND BRUSH

' HOLDER

eiNCLUDES ,
PUff BALL, BASKET &amp; NET

DAILY CROSSWORD
DOWN
1. Spanl.oh
article

ACBOS8

·-

1. Tennis
stroke

4 decorator co lou and designs from
which to chaost. All are constructed

over furniture fr ame with ventilated
P19board back and vinyl ca....d lid.

HECK'S REG. $1 .39

HOUSEWARI
DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.

OVER DOOR
HAN,ER

REYNOLDS WRAP
18"x25 FT.

$ 99

2

'11.44

$100

IINSIWAIEJgT..

Iorge ~""'il'' fooiM kHp gcnn~nt1 ptoper .
ly IP&lt;Htd Of' ll•dy ha~•• bor. Tht bodr

IT. ''lUke

"

18. Swisll

C811!on

L.-A._ _ __,........_

HECK'S
REG.
$2.94

HECK'S REG.
$1.04

HOUSEWAIE
DEPT.

RUBBER

SNYDER

POLE LAMP
This pole lom p with three: ottro {fi "e
llreomlined lhadn in de corator color!
will dre~~ up OO)' orta in home or office.
Black or bro'Wn pole.

f

HOUSEWAIE
DEPT.

HECK'S
REGULAR
$6.99

BOOT
CADDY

32. Rl8k

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

city
37. Falsehood

40.Unclose.
poetically

c. cat -

b-+-+-

III

IL4NSID t I I

1 -1

\t'OLEEP!
Now,..._lheeheWW'I •
I I _ I K ) ~..:::..·bJ
I rn. .... IISIII-. I (II I I l

o:::.t:u::·•

I

(A-wen I

IIi. New
Guinea

Jo..W.., HINCI

Ye..erday'•

port
KENNER

SCOUR THIIYI

I'IMCil

n.o-

\ bAwer1 Tl., y Jupport lltr lri.ft6 a nd 4""e~- IMI:DIID

38.Aslan

river
. 39. Likewise

GOOFUS
FOOTBALL

n . Hw

feeUngs
43. Rebutf
U . Lady

I

I

!Il

(1 .

Sbalott
45. Parchod
46. Neclrtle
fabric

BATH &amp; SHOWER MAT

66(

US )

IIi. Oper&amp; -

.

RUBBER
HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

32. EJe.
gance
33. Gennan

b-+-++++-

29. croaspatch
31. Spilt

ALSO:
HECK'S REG.
99'

Ye~'•Aa•w.

wood

TOY DEPT.

..
/
•

18. Adroit
21.Debacle
21. Japanese
city
2t.Be
_.,
subsequent
26. Fragrant

( 2 wds. )
16. Legis·
laUve
group

--r=

.. I (tab)

M.Cistem

RUBBER

WELCOME ¥AT

symbol

Ulll&lt;r&amp;nlbleth&lt;H four Jumble~,
- letter to each "'~""""· to
form four ordinary words.

play

5. Vlctorlaus 20. Son of
statement
MUed
by lODown 22. Revo(3 wds.)
lullon
6. Ellclt
25. Apiece
7. Gunpowder 27. Sfn&amp;:er
Ingredient
Frankie
8. Fall due,
28. Depu':
as a note
30. Satarl
9. 'l'ltania's
memhuaband
ber

lS.Problem
14. Such (Fr. )
15. Btrd's
beak

$199

10\t,., dOM I \J)OU Holdt 10 0 0111\.n l&lt;.

4. Lodge

I .':1\..IVJ1 12. """
lllatreated

SET

HECK'S REG~ 671

''"'""obit

plotlt ;, 1111ily
l o r o~ i dl door
oTtodwntM. ~ ...ing1 down when ""' in uw

fixture
3. Ornament

deoert
ll. Jacob's

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

TOY DEPT.

FOR

2. BoUkery

S tephen
s. California

~lYMIDM®~r:n,

10. Sbakespearean

I Ill
I I I

DAILY CRl'PTOQUOTE- Here's how to wort It:

HECK'S REG.
99•

t.

AXYDLBAAX&amp;
LONGFELLOW

0116 letter limply etsncla for anotller. In t1111 I&amp;IJillle A ..
· UMd for tile tllrte L'a, X for the two O'a, etc, SIDJie lotten,
apoatropbea, tile loDgth and formation of tile wordo are all

TOYIEPT.

hlnll. ICach do.y the o;odo letlml ..... cllffoftnt.
A CrJptopun Q a e -

DCNUFD WH FDC FDWAO FDNF
TNMCH ZXQ ICCU FDNF AXp WH
FDC LCHF FWTC XI FDC ZCNK.
- IKlfAMUWA V. NBNTH
.
Y-.,.a &lt;JQptJIIIICiel ~ IB BII:RICOrrARY:
YOU CAN Girl' rr llt\OM yOUR alJU)RIIIII. IAJI Llll¥'·

IINION

J.

.

'
•

..

,_
\

.

�I

•

EEK ANOMEEK
lOOK AT MV
THREE. FELLERS
SWELTERIN ' OUT
'fONDER INTH'HOT
SUN

.

GLORY BE!!
BET THEV'D
I,OVE SOME
REFRASHMENTS
I

OPEIIAill
• IOTO 9 ·

OPEl lAlLY
10109

SUIDAY
.I T07

UNEEDA

TRASH
CAN

Top qual ity and comfort as low·low pricing , Fo lding steel table
f!alures 30"x30" vinyl covered mo~oni te· top for long wea r and
qu ick cleaning. Choirs ore "x" fr ame tvblo r- conStruction wi th
matc hing thic k podded , vinyl covered sea ts a nd conlqured com•
for t ba(ks. All I ol d flot for E·Z storage. Beautiful baked ena mel

$]99
HECK'S REG.
$5 .99

10 o \houltnolll ooM....,ticallro

r

1HOtiGHT

88&lt;

\

1'/

"~'

1/fEY Klf'N
@YING

5CR££N
/ES/ 5/

HECK'S REG.
$1.18

88

$

AIR. 81/RNS 'I

' 'lilt·likt"

finish on all ma tching pieces.

101/SEWAif
DEPT.

. IM AN ACIOR:,
llk)T A CROOK f

LETTER SWEATER
YOU'RE 11/EAR.ING, ·

Sh.'1 lhe 1110ll odO&lt;obl. ~¥1 ~ ploynwo"' with t..r
.olt Howi"''J hOi• rh ml &lt;an !. 1trllid ii'l
clortnl of long or-1horl hgir-d01.. Jw•l pwllller ponv
kl~ out far IDnQ l11rir. RNow a!ld her bair ••tracts

FOLDING TABLE
CHAIRS

•

IS THAT A•D•

KIM DOLL

FESCO
PLASTIC
20GALLON

I

TOY DEPT.

HaveY90J'
broai:ls
had any

FESCO PLASTIC

ellperienc:e

THIMBLE WASTE CAN

with

crime?

OH -LOADS!!

WE SlOLE "101111

WHEElS Fm.l

OUR

NEWSBO'I'S
&amp;IC'ICI-E -

lHOSE
aAATS

ARE

h\UCH

QOIETER

NOW-

That:s

JUST

little 'lrl WHAT

ttuff't rneen
bit

DO

'IOU

MEAN,

stuff!! MASTER?

DAISY

DOUBLE BARilEL
TOY RIFLE
HECK'S REG.
$1.09

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

WORLD GLOBES
Similar To

e :::;.:OOTING

54 OUNCE

SPI'CAND SPAN

lllt~stratiotl

91&lt;

FESCO PLASTIC

SWIN' TIP WASTE BIN

HECK'S REG.
$1.09 .

Heck's Reg. 'P

REG.
96'

(
68

~

1111 NOM,IV!:OOT 10 CHECK
11-IOeE:

TOY DEPT.

OUT

RUMOR&amp;

'THAT EIONNAZ MAY

liE FOR SALE:!

VISUAL COIN

. YOU K:NOW I'M 1\JOT ONE;;
TO G'I0'6SIP, E.LSI&amp;., 8UT r

l THOUGHT ABOUT 'THAT NEI'/6
610RY ALL NIGI!T I.DI\k7 AND
I. RMLIZE THAT 60NNAZ

~UST

HAVE

11:)

.,.ELL YOU
IS.•• YAIC-

5TILL MEAN5 A GREAT
DEAL 10 ME!

81-A

STACK BANK
OR ROLL-A·COIN STACK lANK

HOUSEWAII
DEPT.

Point Pleasant .Store On~
HECK'S REG.
$3.99

HECK'S REG. $1.77

HOI/SEWAII
DEPT.

TOY DEPT.
14" IAIY

FESCO PLASTIC

SKILLET SET

MINI LAUNDRY BASKET
'

.~

.

9&lt;

•

HECK'S RE.G.
$1.49

HOUSEWAIE
DEPT.

DOLL WITH TOTE SEAT

~ll&amp;t)on
3Piece

eCASliRON
e ANSWERS All FRYING NEEDS
• AS S6RT~D. SIZES .

e DRINKS AND WETS
e ROOTED HAIR

S!9let

$1}6''

set.,.

$]55

9·1

TilE B0.RN l.DSER

,. .......

~'-:_tooo~
~~~

..... ._::-

HECK'S REG.

··-

c:-..... ~1 10' ;· Iil.alll

HECK'S REG.
$4.99

~

Ft?0.1 1011 011, DON'T t.EA-..o

Llt.Hl&gt; 81lRNIIIIo! OIJ~

ELECTJQC llllJ.IS ~j

$3.48

111 1'1' ~

.... ___,..
---.. ~lr.lrr~

TOY DEPT.

HDUSEWAIE DEPT.

PUFF

FESCO PLASTIC

BASKETBALL

BOWL AND BRUSH

' HOLDER

eiNCLUDES ,
PUff BALL, BASKET &amp; NET

DAILY CROSSWORD
DOWN
1. Spanl.oh
article

ACBOS8

·-

1. Tennis
stroke

4 decorator co lou and designs from
which to chaost. All are constructed

over furniture fr ame with ventilated
P19board back and vinyl ca....d lid.

HECK'S REG. $1 .39

HOUSEWARI
DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.

OVER DOOR
HAN,ER

REYNOLDS WRAP
18"x25 FT.

$ 99

2

'11.44

$100

IINSIWAIEJgT..

Iorge ~""'il'' fooiM kHp gcnn~nt1 ptoper .
ly IP&lt;Htd Of' ll•dy ha~•• bor. Tht bodr

IT. ''lUke

"

18. Swisll

C811!on

L.-A._ _ __,........_

HECK'S
REG.
$2.94

HECK'S REG.
$1.04

HOUSEWAIE
DEPT.

RUBBER

SNYDER

POLE LAMP
This pole lom p with three: ottro {fi "e
llreomlined lhadn in de corator color!
will dre~~ up OO)' orta in home or office.
Black or bro'Wn pole.

f

HOUSEWAIE
DEPT.

HECK'S
REGULAR
$6.99

BOOT
CADDY

32. Rl8k

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

city
37. Falsehood

40.Unclose.
poetically

c. cat -

b-+-+-

III

IL4NSID t I I

1 -1

\t'OLEEP!
Now,..._lheeheWW'I •
I I _ I K ) ~..:::..·bJ
I rn. .... IISIII-. I (II I I l

o:::.t:u::·•

I

(A-wen I

IIi. New
Guinea

Jo..W.., HINCI

Ye..erday'•

port
KENNER

SCOUR THIIYI

I'IMCil

n.o-

\ bAwer1 Tl., y Jupport lltr lri.ft6 a nd 4""e~- IMI:DIID

38.Aslan

river
. 39. Likewise

GOOFUS
FOOTBALL

n . Hw

feeUngs
43. Rebutf
U . Lady

I

I

!Il

(1 .

Sbalott
45. Parchod
46. Neclrtle
fabric

BATH &amp; SHOWER MAT

66(

US )

IIi. Oper&amp; -

.

RUBBER
HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

32. EJe.
gance
33. Gennan

b-+-++++-

29. croaspatch
31. Spilt

ALSO:
HECK'S REG.
99'

Ye~'•Aa•w.

wood

TOY DEPT.

..
/
•

18. Adroit
21.Debacle
21. Japanese
city
2t.Be
_.,
subsequent
26. Fragrant

( 2 wds. )
16. Legis·
laUve
group

--r=

.. I (tab)

M.Cistem

RUBBER

WELCOME ¥AT

symbol

Ulll&lt;r&amp;nlbleth&lt;H four Jumble~,
- letter to each "'~""""· to
form four ordinary words.

play

5. Vlctorlaus 20. Son of
statement
MUed
by lODown 22. Revo(3 wds.)
lullon
6. Ellclt
25. Apiece
7. Gunpowder 27. Sfn&amp;:er
Ingredient
Frankie
8. Fall due,
28. Depu':
as a note
30. Satarl
9. 'l'ltania's
memhuaband
ber

lS.Problem
14. Such (Fr. )
15. Btrd's
beak

$199

10\t,., dOM I \J)OU Holdt 10 0 0111\.n l&lt;.

4. Lodge

I .':1\..IVJ1 12. """
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SET

HECK'S REG~ 671

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plotlt ;, 1111ily
l o r o~ i dl door
oTtodwntM. ~ ...ing1 down when ""' in uw

fixture
3. Ornament

deoert
ll. Jacob's

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

TOY DEPT.

FOR

2. BoUkery

S tephen
s. California

~lYMIDM®~r:n,

10. Sbakespearean

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DAILY CRl'PTOQUOTE- Here's how to wort It:

HECK'S REG.
99•

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· UMd for tile tllrte L'a, X for the two O'a, etc, SIDJie lotten,
apoatropbea, tile loDgth and formation of tile wordo are all

TOYIEPT.

hlnll. ICach do.y the o;odo letlml ..... cllffoftnt.
A CrJptopun Q a e -

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YOU CAN Girl' rr llt\OM yOUR alJU)RIIIII. IAJI Llll¥'·

IINION

J.

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Now YoUi Know
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UPI)
(UPI) ~· Mayor .Jack Hunter
said today this highly · industrialized area doesn't need advice
·•from some "smart aleck little
at~ey from Columbus, Ohio"
on ·how to solve its pollution
problems an\1 said even recom,. mendations of federal officials

made him "a litUe sick."
The state has proposed cre~Hunter addressed a Cham\ler tion of a 400 millio.n gallon !aci Commerce Industrial Appre- . goon where the river runs into
elation Breakfast here and com- Pennsylvania where the water
men ted on testimony presented would he cleaned. The EnvironTuesday at a . hearing by the mental Protection Agency said
Ohio Water Pollution Control this proposed solution would
Board here on cleaning UP the still leave the river "an open
Mahoning River.
. sewer" in this area.

Assistant Ohio Attorney Gen- federal government and the
era! Maynard ThDn)pson said . guys in the Environmental Prl)during the hearing !hat on the tection·Agency making complete
basis of testimony the best way' fools of themselves," said Huntto clean up the river would be er. "I was ashamed to see the
for the area steel mills to move Ohio attorney general's office
elsewhere.
suggest the so1ution to our prl)"1 as Jllayor of this city, was blem would be to move steel
a litUe sick yesterday to see the out of the Mahoning Valley.
"So I think the timing of this

:New Budget'·Covers lODays
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
went into the month of September today operating on another
interim budget
But unlike the past two month• long stopgap measures, the new
budget covers ooly 10 days.
The House TUesday passed the
:,interim budget, 60-10, and im::mediately sent it to Gov. John
• J . Giltigan for signing. The
· measure calls for $57.5 million
dollars to be spent during the
firSt 10 days of the month.
Senate leaders said they felt

10 days was enough time to
bring a twl)-year budget bill -to
the floor for a vote.
Meantime TUesday, the Senate Ways and Means Committee heard testimony' on two alternative tax bills drawn by the
Republican leadership.
One called for a 1 to 3 per
cent graduated personal income
tax, shaved from the I to 4 per
cent in a House-passed bill. The
new measure also calls for a 3
to 6 per cent tax on corporate
net income, down from the 4 to
8 per cent in the House-passed
measure.

The other bill considered TUesday would hike the state sales
tax rate by 1.5 per cent from
the corrent 4 per cent and include the corporate income tax,
but no personal income tax.
A two car accident occurred
Senate Majority Whip Michael
today at 8:42a. m. on SR 7 the
Meigs County
Sheriff's
Department reported.
Cancer Society
Paul A. Duff, Dexter, was
~t !A!mpting to make a left turn
off of SR 7 onto Union Ave., Holds Meeting
;.hen his car was struck in the
The Meigs County American
len side by a vehicle driven by Cancer
Society Chapter
E laine , Duckett, 14, South
totaling
Carolina. The Buckett car was received funds
$1,786.72.
traveling in the same direction
;md had passed another vehicle Expenditures of the Meigs
County American Cancer
when it struck the Duff car.
Peggy Smith, a passenger in Society Chapter for the past
the Bucket! car, complained of year totaled $1,188.92 according
·an injury to her right arm but to the annual report presented
was not immediately treated. when the chapter met TUesday
')"here was heavy damage to the night in Middleport. Balance in
Duff car , medium to the the chapter. treasury as of Aug'.
Duckett vehicle. The accident is 31 totals $597.80.
under investigation.
RUMMAGE SALE
The Ladies Auxiliary of the
Middleport Pentecostal Church
will hold a rummage sale
beginning at 10 "· m. Thursday,
Tonight, Tllu. &amp; Fri.
Friday and Saturday at the Fry
September l·l·l ·
building on Mill St. in Mid·
Double Feature Progr•m
_dleport.

:Two Car Wreck
Investigated

J . Maloney, R-Cincinnati, who
chairs the Ways and Means
Committee, said the income tax
plan would raise some $1.06 billion in new revenues during the
next 22 months, while the sales
tax proposal would raise about
$733 million.
OpJIIISes Provisions
Douglas Trail of the Ohio
Manufacturers Association told
committee members he opposed
the corporate tax provisions of
both bills on grounds "the total
tax burden on business is Pfl)portionaUy higher in Ohio !han
in other industrialized states."
Frank King, president of the
Ohio AFL-CIO, said he opposed
the personal income tax provision of the larger bill, maintaining it placed an "unfair burden"
on the individual taxpayer.
In other legislative activity
TUesday, the Senate passed, 290, a measure increasing workmen's compensation benefits
based on increases in the consumer price index.
The bill, sponsored by Sen.
Paul R. Malia, R-WesUake, is
designed to maintain the value
of compensation to injured work-

·:::::::::::::::t::--::::=:::-::x:::::!!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~=::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::.-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

MARRIAGE UCENSE
Charles Smedley,
45,
Columbus, and Ida Hysell, 34,
Middleport.

Steve·McQueen

-PtuoBONNIE &amp; CLYDE
(Color)

warren Beatty
=Fay=eDun=away==:All

MEIGS lHEAJRE

Pomeroy Mayor Charles Legar.
Forfeiting bonds totaling $100
was James Van Meter of
Clifton. He forfeited bonds of $25
each on charges of disturbing
the peace and intoxication and a
$50 bond on a charge of resisting
arrest. Forfeiting $25 tonds
were David Camp, charged
with disturbing the peace and
Marjorie Speakman, charged
with intoxication. Addresses
were not listed on the records.
Richard Martin of Middleport
was fined $1110 and costs and
given a three day jail sentence
on a charge of driving while
intoxicated.
.
Others fined were Keith
Phalin, Pomeroy, $5 and costs,
failure to have vehicle under
control, Alva Tulloh, Mason, $5
and costs, passing on a double
'yellow line, and Unda Reeves,
Pomeroy, $5 and costs, assured
clear distance charge.

Steelworkers
•Go &lt;&gt;n. strik.e
,'
PORTSMOlfrH, Ohio (UPI)
- About . 2,0110 steelworkers
went on strtke early today after
an extensiOn of thetr local
contract with Empire-Detroit
Steel Corp. expired.
The strike began at midnight
as a ~ay extension of the pact
ended, but workers stayed on
several hours to shut down
furnaces and facilities. Pickets
appeared at all gates.
Despite
the
walkout,
negotiators for Local2116 of the
United steelworkers Union and
Empire-Detroit Steel continued
bargaining into the morning.
They reportedly were hung up
on rule changes after resolving

ik!:~:::: : : : : ::.:::~:;:&gt;~:,&gt;;::;:;_.._,._w;:~~:;::::::::::;,:,;,::::=:::: : : : : : : : : : : : : : :!fl!:: m~~i' i:.:~:~·

Set For Labor Day Event
•

agreed to the
contract extension in July,
which took effect Aug. I and
ended Aug. 31, after the national
contract was successfully
negotiated .

junior high school in time to throughout the day.
Tonight &amp; Tllundily
In the evening a teen dance
move out at the 10:45 starting
Sepltmber 1-l
time. All groups are invited to will he held in the former junior Exclusive Men's
NOT OPEN
take part in the annual parad~ . ~igh school auditorium with the
The chicken barbecue to he Jays emceeing.
Friday &amp; S.lllrdoY
Shop Robbed
served from the roofed pits on
Sepl.l-4
the upper parking lot will get
VANISHING ~INT
NEW YORK (UPI) - Four
underway at 11:15 a. m. and
!Tecllnico!orl
well-dressed holdup men, their
Barry Newman
dinners will be available
faces covered with stocking
Jagger Cleaver Utile
masks, walked into an exclusive
"G"
-PIU&gt;'T'_.J _ Manhattan men's club Tuesday
" CELEBRATIDN
Pleasant Valley Hospital
.l
night and robbed some 30
AT BIG SUR"
ADMISSIONS - Charles
-patrons at gunpoint, police said.
(Technicolorl
Wesimoreland, Cottageville;
COLUMBUS (UPI)-:- A sub- Detectives said about $18,000
Joan Boez
Mrs
.
Harold
Supple,
Point
commtttee
of the Ohw House in cash and jewelry was taken.
, Crosby Stills
Pleasant; Robert Errett, Point Envtronment ~nd Natural Re- The bandits were not apNash&amp; Young
Pleasant; Mrs. Richard Ben- sources Co~ttee was schedul- prehended.
nett Point Pleasant· Charles ed to take fmal testunony today The four men strolled
C(;:=:=:===:::::::=:;:=:::::~::::::===::::=::::::::::;J Wright, Leon ; Mrs: George on a compre~nsiv~ strip mine through the unlocked front door
Clendenin, Point Pleasant; Ben and reclamalton bill and was of the Town Club, at about 1:20
Kesterson , Pomeroy ; Mrs. Arl expected to send the measure p. m., police said. They went to
Allen, Rand.
to the ·full commtttee.
the fourth floor, where some
DISCHARGES - John Olive,
Rep. Ken~eth Creasy • R-Del- members were playing cards,
-Mrs. Donna Wilson, Mrs. H. B. aware, chatrman of both the and robbed them at gunpoint,
Chadwick , Mrs .
Elmus subcornrmttee and full co~t- police said.
DeVault, Mrs. Addis Wiltis, tee, _satd the leglSlatlDn was 10 There were no injuries to club
Brenda Jones, Carrie Taylor, tis ftnal stage Monday, but th~ members, police said, but one
Catherine Darst.
hearmg would allow fmal IA!slt· employe was slightly injured
mony before it goes to the full when he was struck by one of
committee.
the robbers.
Creasy expected the full comA 'l'HOUGHT lt mittee to begin consideration of
*
lt thecomprehensivemeasure Fri~ FOR TODAY : day. He would not predict, how- NUNS ENLIST
* ever, how long it would take the BOSI'ON (UPI)- Two nuns
* Those who spend too * 19 members to push t.he bill on- are to be sworn in today as
It much time on trifling ~ to the floor for a vote. . . mem.bers of th.e state_ Air
* things generally become ,..
. .
. .
.
lt incapable of great ones. * The leg1Slat10n,a combmalton Nattonal Guard m the offtce of
lt
La R h f
uld * ·of se veral bills introduced Gov. Francis W. Sargent.
...
oceouca
. k . of
...
* earher thts year, would toughen S'ts te r Shet.la MG
c utr
~
strip mine license applications South Grafton, a nurse's atde,
HIGHER-WIQER
~
lt and, require complete land rec- and Sister Judith Rosen!hal of
·BIGGER. ..
~ lalnation.
· Northampton, a licensed practi·
lt lfS Quick! Easy
cal nurse, wiU be attached to
llf 111101!1!1
*
the 10-lth Tactical Fighter
*
MEETFRIDAY
Group, Westover, AFB.
:
:
The Meigs County Pomona The two sisters will head for
1
5
Tile VENTURA
PEUFPIFEORt
*
* Grange will meet in regular Lacklanll AFB, Fla., for
C:Z003J
~
session at 8 p. 'Jl· Friday at the training this week.
20,000 Volts of Picture
Gracefully slim.
Power!
..Fn_
d
ays
On~y
;;:
Rock Springs Grange Hall with
cabinet in Med ium
Brown color . DeluJ.e
~The Dnve- ln Wtndow
the Rock Springs Grange as
. Video Range Tuning
SUPEA DEPENDABILITY!
tS Open
~ host group. The national an~
System ..Dipole
HANDCRAFTED!
*
9
A.
M.
to.z,
P.M.
state grange sewing and baking·
Antenna. Super Value
longer TV lile and fewer
:
I Continuously) ·
contests will he held at this
DANCE PUNNED
$ervice problems.
only
Jt 011,.r Banking Hours 9 10 l meeung and all subordmate · The Rutland Fire Department
lt
and 5 to 1 as usual on : winners are to compete. The will ~ponsor a public square
SUPER FEATURES
• CutkHft "htma·Set" YHF FiM Tuning
:Fridays.
tl- prince a'nd princess nominees dance beginning at 8:30 p. m.
. AMERICJI:S "1TV
• 3 ·5~ I.F. Atltlllifior • Aulomolic
are to be turned in to the Deputy Friday in the Rutland gym"Frl"'e-l.oc;:k'' C:lrc;ult
Master, Virgil Atkins.
.nasiull). Admission will be $1for
The q!Mfity goes m
~lore · IIJenatrK.' ~son·
adults, 50 cents for those up to
18, and those under /12 will be
:
POMEROY, OHIO
lt
LOCAL TEMPS .
admitted free. Prdceeds will be
ItMember FDIC
lt Temperature in downtown used forthe new fire truck fund.
ItMember Federa l . lt Pomeroy Wednesday at 11 a.·m. Providing music for dancing
OPEN . FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
Reserve System
was 70 degrees under suqny will be The Hill toppers. The
992-263S
Middleport
skies.
public is invited.
Aparade, a chicken barbecue
and a teen dance will highlight
the annual Labor Day
celebration of the Pomeroy Fire
Oeparunent.
The parade will move at 10:45
a. m. Monday from the former
Pomeroy Junior High School,
down Main St., out Butternut
Ave., and up Second St. Moving
out Mechanic St. the parade will
disband at the village-owned
parking lot on Mechanic St. Joe
Struble, representative of the
deparunent, asks all bands and
parade units to he at the former

Final Testimony

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DRIVE-IN
BANKING

~MANCI~

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S}49S5

7J!'""

I

Furniture

state gotiemment got into -the
act
"We are going to do it but we
have to do it with the thought
of economics in our minds," he
said.
Hunter said it would be done
without bankrupting the people
who own thernlllsand the people
who work· in them.
"We are going to do it but we
are going to do it the right
way," said Hunter. "We are gl)ing to do it the way the greater
·Youngstown area and the
Mahoning Valley can live with
it. "

'

VOL XXIV

** fARMERS BANK :,.
*
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: and SAVINGS 00.:
*

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Devoted .To The lnler'e$,. Of The Me~·MIJI/On Area

NO. 99

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
.

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

By United Press Iotentational
More !han 10 million Egyptians, Syrians and Ubyans
voted today in a referendum
seeking approval for a loose
three-nation federation de·
scribed by their leaders as the
"Arab answer to Israeli aggression."
:rtJe Sudan is expected next
year to join the Federation of
Arab Republics, first agreed to
by the leaders of Egypt, Syria
and Libya at a conference in
Benghazi, Ubya, April17 in the
first serious attempt at Arab
unity in eight years.
&lt; In
Jerusalem, government
sources said Israel was reviewing its policy toward the Soviet
Union, with which diplomatic

relations were severed during
the 1967 Middle East War . A
government communique denied that a possible revision of
Israel's Soviet policy was
imminent. ·
The sources said Prime
Minister Golda Meir asked
former diplomat Dr. Benyamin
Eliav to evaluate the Soviet
policy toward the Middle East
and specifically Israel. There
have been rumors of a SovietIsraeli rapproachment since
May.
A military spokesman in Tel
Aviv said Israeli occupation
troops patrolling the turbulent
Gaza Strip killed an Arab
guerrilla who had thrown a
grenade at them near Shifa

1V In Review

Interesting Specials
Scheduled .For Viewers .
By RICK DUBROW
HOLLYWOOD (UPI )- Notes
to watch television by:
The programs : acupuncture,
the ancient Chinese treatment
to core disease or relieve pain
by puncturing the body with
needles, is the subject of NBC·
TV's "First TUesday" next
wee.~ ... S~me ~etwo_rk's " To·
day sertes wtll ortgmate tis
broadcasts from . Japan the
week of Oct. 4, taping
programs in Kyoto and Hiroshima as well as Tokyo ... V10bmst
Yehudi Menuhin will conduct
the New York Philharmonic
Young People's Concert on
CBS-TV Sept. 26.
.

at~:~!~ g~~~r~~~· v~~~ 0~~~

TV's Dinah Shore show Sept.
14 ... Mrs .Mitchell will reportedly make spoon bread, offer
"her views on the Vietnam War
and Democratic presidential
candidates," show how she uses
hair pieces in doing her own
coiffeur and sing "Bye Bye'
Blackbird" ... "Strangers
in
Their Own Land- The Chicanos, " a half-hour documentary
about the daily life of MexicanAmericans will he shown on
ABC-TV Thursday.
Charles Kuralt, whose "On

The Road" vignet!A!s of Americana have added charming
moments to CBS-TV's nightly
Walter Cronkite News, will
have some of his travels across
the country n;corded in an hour
special on the network next
Tuesday "in prime time ...The
name of the broadcast will, of
course, be "On The Road. "
Personnel Dept. : Longtime
actor Darryl Hickman, who
succeeded Robert Morse in the
starring role of the Broadway
musical "How to Succeed in
Business Without Really Trying," has been named a general
program execotive by CBSTV... Associate producer of the
soap opera "Love of Life;, for
the. past four months, he will
specialize in the daytime
program area.

1

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Dayton Daily News filed suit in
the Ohio Supreme Court Wednesday in an attempt to force
the Lawrence County auditor to
make pubtic the tax records of
Sen. Oakley Collins, R-Jronton
who has been charged with u.
legal strip mining in a national
forest
The Daily News said County
Auditor Ray G. Waller refused
to give two of its reporters a

Hospital in Gaza City.
He said other soldiers shot
and wounded an Arab woman
who had broken the corfew in
Khan Yunis, the strip's second
largest community.
In Beirut, the anti-Iraq
newspaper AI Moharrer said
Iraqi President Ahmed Hassan
AI Bakr was wounded twice in
an assassination attempt Aug.
26 during a ceremony at his
palace for graduating army
officers. It said the unidentified
would-be assassin later was
found dead and !hat 200 officers
subsequently were arrested.
AI Moharrer said an army
officer fired several shots,
hitting Bakr in the shoulder and
left arm. The official Iraqi
News Agency recenUy reported
that Bakr, who · heads the
nation's military regime, briefly was admitted to a Baghdad
hospital for treaunent of an
undisclosed illness.
Bakr recently headed a purge
after expelling three British
Embassy staff memberS from
the country on grounds they
were behind a plot to overthrow
him.
The tripartite federation will
merge more !han 40 million
persons in IJ million square
miles of land, one-third the size
of the United States.
The constitution provides for
a presidential council, a federal
cabinet, national assembly and
constiutional court. Crucial
decisions wiD have to · be
adopted unanimously by the
presidential council, but each
nation will maintain a high
degree of independence.
The last effort at Arab unity,
made by Egypt, Syria and Iraq
in 1963, never enJ!lrged. The
Egyptian.Syrian union of 1958
which created the United Arab
Republic collapsed in 1961.

TIUS ATTRACTIVE MODERN home at the edge of
Shade River State Forest in Meigs County is being occupied
this week by Mr. and Mrs. Victor Bahr. Built by the Denver
Weber Construction Co. of Reedsville for Obio's Department

ESCAPE NABBED
NEW YORK (UPI ) - The
second of two Tennessee
penitentiay honor farm inmates
who escaped June 13, taking a
hostage along with them to
Ohio, was arrested by the FBI
here Tuesday .
James Allen Byrd was
charged with kidnaping and if
convicted faces life imprisonment.
Byrd, 27, a native of Dayton,
Tenn., escaped with John Veslj
21, from the Brushy Mountain
State Penitentiary Hormr Farm
in Petros, Tenn. on.June 13. An
employe was taken along at
knifepoint in the prison truck,
but released unharmed later
just outside Bowling· Green,
Ohio.

Atlanla
000 000 ooo- 0 1 1
San Fran 013 050 OOx- 9 11 0
Stone, Herbel (5). Priddy (7)
and Williams ; Perry {14-10)
and Deilz . LP-Stone (6-51. HR
- He~derson ( t5thl.

of Natural Resources, Division of Forestry and Reclamation,
the house, white with accents of green, will be the residence
of Bahr who is division fire \\'Orden. The Bahrs reide in a
relatively new home between Chester and TUppers Plains at
the present time.

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

! News ••• in Briefs

! Senate Education

By United Press IDteraatloaal

COLUMBUS - A HOUSE SUBCOMMlTI'EE firming up
legislation that would toughen state laws on strip rnlnlng
scheduled a morning hearing today to conclude the consideration
ci amendments, including one that would give state inspectors
arrect powers.
The EnviriiiDlent and Na lura! Resources Subconunittee
Wednesday received from the Department of Natural Resources
a proposed change in the comprebelllive bill's enforcement
jl"ovisions. A quorem of the special panel, however, was lacking
so no official action could be taken.
·

Attorney
COLUMBUS (UP)) - A The big change is the remov- M
Senate subcommittee on educa- a1 of the ceilings on state aid
ay
Have
lion Wednesday put final touch· increases which the House im-

list of tangible personal property holders and a list of delinquent tax payers, stating they
were not a matter uf public
record.
The newspapers contended the
records are a matter of public
record and asked the Supreme
Court for a writ of mandamus
to force WaUer to give them to
the reporters.
The Daily News said the tax

list would show taxable equipment owned by a business such
as trucksand heavy eequipment
Waller contends he has not
pubtished a list of delinquent
tax payers, as required by state
law, because he has been un·
able to keep the list current
Collins, chainnan of the Senate Conunittee on Education
and Health, is the owner of the
Collins Mining Co. which was

BERLIN -A DISPUTE OVER THE German text of the Big
Four agreement m Berlin today forced postponement of the
signing of the accord by the ambassad~rs in West Bertin. ·
The ambassadors did not appear for the 1 p.m. (8 a.m. EDT)
ceremony at the former Allled Cmtrol Authority-}uilding in the
American sector because last minute meetings of four power
working ~riles still had not agreed m the German text ci the
acc«d.
'

Fumitura and Carpet Deparbnent

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio Department of Education
said today it did not know if
Ohio IA!achers would receive increment increases this fall during the President's wage-price
freeze because there has been
no official clarification from
Washington.
It was ruled earlier that

worked on the new schedule by
Roger Lulow, administrative Aug. 15.
assistant to the superintendent, "But, the whole question of insaid be hoped to receive clari· crements is one we do not have
fication from federal officials clarification on," he • said.
"We're in no position to officsoon.
ially interpret, either."
"We just don't have anything Lulow said the education deto go on," said Lulow. "There's partment has sent several quersome confusion about the incre- ies to Washington asking for an
ment increases and we don't official interpretation of the
know how to interpret the wage-price freeze's effects on
teachers. He said the departfreeze.''
Lui ow said it appeared earlier ment has not received any clarthis week !hat teachers on new ification, yet.
salary schedules would receive "We kind of concluded there
increases if there was one per- must be a freeze on the mail,"
son in the district who had he said.

ify for the raises.

teachers would receive pay in·
creases if their schedules had
been.signed before Aug. 15. A
posed. The House lirnlts were
Treasury official said Wednes$7$905 pe
, r pup.il in fiscal 1972 and
day, however, that most of the
10 1973
nation's 2.1 million public
The lifting of the restrictions
has the effect of funneling more SAN FRANCISCO' (UPI)- school teachers would not qualmoney into poorer districts. Fugitive Stephen Mitchell BingThe Senate knocked out of the ham, thl radical attorney
House bill, however, language linked with San Quentin's
authorizing regional resource escape attempt 11 days ago,
centers which would have re-. held a valid passport and may
placed county boards of educa- have fled the country, accordWS ANGELES (UPI) - we could dono wrong," be said.
.lion.
ing to federal officials.
Charles "Tex" Watson, on trial The former high school star
The bill also included:
Although the FBI said only it for the Tate-LaBianca murders, athlete and scholar told of
-A raise in teacher salary if " no confirmed reports" has confessed on the witness coming to Los Angeles. in 1968
minimumsfrom$5,200to$5,700. lh8t Bingham had left the sland, pleading that he heard se kins "adventure." He had
-The superintendent and United States, ASsislant U.S. "Chartie's voice saying ldl1 never been away from his tiny
.president of the school board Attorney James Buren sai( everyone in the place."
hometown of Copeville, Tex.,
would have to certify !hat mon' "there is probable cause to
Watson, 25, who has entered acept for three yeara in
ey is available for leacher pay believe he has fled the state of a defense of not guilty by college in Denton, 50 mUes
raises before they are granted. California."
reason of insanity, told a jury away.
A federal fngutive warrant Wednesday he was so brain- On the day before the Aug. 8,
. _
was issued Wednesday for washed by drugs, ·· women, 1969, slayings, Watson said, he
B" ham and B
·told music and Olarles Manson's took belladonna and "speed"
n:~n tbl!.t atra~.: would philosophy !hat "I had no and that nlghl Manson took him
he sought immediately if the identity of my own."
aside and gave him a ltnife and
attorney was located outside
With his mother listening a gun.
the country.
from the rear of the courtroom, "Charlie told me to go to the
Bingham, 28, scion of a the neatly dressed Watson place where Terry Melcher
politically prominent Connecti- ..rela~ calmly~ in de~_the (son of Doris Day) used to live
cot family, was charged with/ slaymgs and satd the vtctims and kill everyone in the place,"
William B. Nye that the parks five counts of murder for were just " blobs without faces Watson said. "He told me to
would be closed in an austerity allegedly smuggling a gun to or. expressions."
malte it as gruesome as you
move previously announced by Soledad brother George Jack- Watson denied be had told can."
the governor.
son inside San Quentin prison, actress Sharon Tate a_nd the Watson said he had been at
Welker said that vandalism precipitating an escape attempt . others !hat "we are devils here the residence three times
and the expense of shutting in which Jackson, three guards to do the devil's work."
previously and thai Manson had
down the parks could cost more and two white tier-tenders were
"Charlie had taught us that told him some ''movie star"
than the state would save in
killed.
laying off park personnel.
Meanwhile, it was revealed
"Vandalism is always a that a possible material witness
problem at the state parks even to the Ia ·
· the · •
with a full complement of
s ymgs 10
pnso_n s
personnel," Welker said. "It adjustment cente~ . was. bemg
A traditim of 11118 standing barrow at the Ohio State Junior
will become an increasingly held by auth~ties at an
was followed Monday afternom Fair.
costly problem with reduced undiSClosed location.
at The Ohio Slate Fair, and two Evans also purchaaed the
staffs to police the parks."
young Ohioans struck it rich. Res ve Outmpion Hampshire
Welker said that the austerity
Bob Evans, president of 8Gb barrow fnm Tam! Jackson of
program ''was made necessary
TO MEET TUESDAY
Evans
Farms, ·Inc., purchased Powell, Ohio. Evans' succe.uful
by the less than prudent Mrs. Charles Goeglein has
managing of funds available to called a meeting of the program the Grand Champim !lamp- lid was $5.55 per pound - a
shire barrow frcm Michael world record price fiX' areserw
·the ,adrnJntstratlon.
conunittee of the Chester PTA Smith of Jamestown, Ohio for champim.
"The administration simply for 7 p. m. TUesday at the
encombered more money than school. This will be followed by $15 per pound, 1r $2925 - a new When ber prize barrow was
was coming in. It's as sit)lple as a meeting of .the executive record price for the Junior Fair. sold, tears filled the eyes of
This was the 12th time in the twelve-year-&lt;~ld Tami. Evans
that," Welker said.
'
committee at 7:30 p. m., Mrs. last 13 years, that Evans has dfered to pay her fer the hog,
Goeglein, PTA president, said. puichased the Grand Champim and let her keep it. Tami

Fled U.S.

Watson Confesses Killings

WASHINGTON - THE NATION'S LARGEST teachers
organization bas attacked as a "great disservice" a Treasury
Department undersecretary's assertion that the wage-price
freeze will bar pay increases for most teachers this fall.
Undersecretary Charles E. Walker Wednesday branded as
''not correct" press interpretations that perhaps 80 per cent of the
na lion's 2.1 million public school teachers would qualify for raises
despite the freeze ordered by President Nixon. "I believe when all
the facta are in, most teacher pay increases will not be permitted," Walker told a briefing for Congressmen and their employes.

Baler
Will Be Displayed
'
'

A new round hay baler which
produces450poundbaleswillbe
exhibited Sept. 8, 9, and 10, at
the Southeastern Branch of the
Obio Agricultural Research and
Development Center at Car:
penter.
This machine, manufactured
in Australia, was brought to this
count;y to determine its
suitability for use in yeararound grazing systems for beef
cattle and sheep under Ohio
conditions.

Prompt Delivery To Your Home
Dependable Service
Sensible Credit

ELBERFELD$

IN
POMEROY

- Round balers making·smaller
411-50 pound bales have been
successfully used for this
purpose,_jut no new units have
been manufactured here for
many years. ,
Interested penons are invited
to visit the reasearch station
located just' east of Carpenter
on State Route 143, to inspect
the new baler. Those who want
to see the unit in field operation
should contact the farm
manager, Robert Lich, 614-6984521 for expected times of use.

Democrats Hit
Campaign Trail

WE ARE HAVIMG A

By United Preis Ioteraatloul
J

STARTI"G SATURDAY, SEPT. 4
WATOi THIS PAPER FOR OUR SALE· AD
'

I';

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

At ·Jeas! two high-ranking
Democrats will be in Obio for
Labor Day speeches.
U. S. Sen. Hubert Humphrey,
O.Mlnn., will speak at the 25th
annual Barberton Joint Labor
.._gue's picnic. It wm. be his
second appearance at _that
funcllon. He was there fJrst in
111M aa vice president.
u.s. ·Sen• George McGovern,
O.S.D., will attend the Labor
Day plcnlc at~ Lake in
MedliJa County.
.
That picnic Is sponsored by
the .united Auto Workers
CGmmunlty Action Program
Council,

'•

Dedication ·Will
Last 45 Minutes
DAYTON (UPI) - Pre~ldent
Nixon's dedication of the U. S.
· Air Force Flight Museum at
Wright-Patterson (AFB) near
here Friday will last a spare 45
minutes, according to the White
House.
A schedule releaaed WedneSday said Nixon would depart
E1 Toro Marine Air Base, Calif.
shorUy after noon Pacific Coast
Time, and arrive at Wright
Field at 6:50 p. m. ~DT.
Nixon plans tO speak 11t 7 P'
m., review a display ;of parked
aircraft with Museum Director
Col. Bernie S. BBss and depart
at 7:35 p. m. for Chieago.

At Administration
COLUMBU~
State
Representative Ralph E.
Welker, Pomeroy, today
claimed that the closing of
Forked Run and Strouds Lake
State Parks "could cost more
money that the state administration anticipates
saving.~~

The lawmaker's charge came
in the wake of announcements
by Natural Resources Director

Meigs 4-Hers

Rate At Fair
Five Meigs County 4-H
members receiving ratings of
outstanding of the day on their
food interviews at the state fair
Tuesday.
They were Juli Whitehead,
Food Preservation; Jane
Whitehead, Quick Meals; Ingrid
Hawley, Tasty Meals; Niese!
Duvall, Breads, and Jenny
Chapman, Teenagers Entertain. Also participating was
Debbie Boatwright with otlldoor
cookery.
Demonstrations were given
by Deitise Pulllns, Magic of
Milk; Mandie Rose, Bread,
Basic of Every Meal; Jane
Holter, Flower Arrangements;
Crystal Erwin, Miraculous
Mulches, and Lola Walker,
'
Tuna Casserole.
The girls were judge&lt;j.s
professional judges on 'tli'e1r
poise, .appearance, knowledge
of subject matter, neatness and
presentation.
·

charged with willful lrespass
and illegal strip rnlnlng on 32.6
acres of national forest land.
Investigators for -the Department of Agriculture have asked
that Collins and the company
be prosecuted.
Collins is also a member. of
the Senate Committee on Highways and Urban Affairs which
is considering strip mine legislation.

Pay Increase Doubtful

Welker Takes P0 k•e

3rd Floor

THE ·sHOE BOX

Bill Fm·alized

rep«&lt;ed;

VISIT ELBERFELDS

F·IRE. SALE

Ohio Extended Outlook Saturday tbrougli MODday:
Warm
and
humid
throughout the period with a
chance uf showers or thundershowers each day. Highs
in the mid and upper 80s.
Lows in the 60s and low 70s.

'

es on ap elementary~condary
education spending package
which increases state aid to
public schools by a record $431
million and removes the ceilings
on state aid increases.
WASHINGTON -THE LATEST GOVERNMENT report on
The bill, which was to go to
the corn blight situation indicates that dry weather has helped the full committee, was inkeep the sp-ead of the disease to a virtual standstill in most areas. creased by $27 million over the
The Agricolture Department said Its observations sbowed House-passed package of $404
blight present in Tl per cent of 1,500 sample cornfields located in million for the 1972-73 school
operating budget
seven slates.
The appropriation is geared to
imposition
of a state income
WASHINGTON - HOG CHOLERA continued a heartening
decline in August with only three cues
the Agriculture tax and if an income tax Is not
enacted the subcommittee will
.
Department said today.
The department said cholera was diagnosed iD PUerto Rican resubmit a blll increasing alii)cations by $306 million which
swine herds on Aug. 2, :16 and 30, and aU animals involved were
would
be funded by a sales tax
(l'ornptly destroyed.
·
Qut, officials added, the three cases compar~ with 67 in- increase.
fected u . s. henm in August,l970, and 168in August, 1969.
For the first elgbt months ·of 1971, the report said, only 106
infected herds bave been reported compared with 500 In the same
period last year. ·

•
I

Warm and humid through
Friday with a chance of
showers or thundershowers
today
becoming
more
numerous tonight and Friday.
Highs today In the Mls. Lows
tonight mid 60s to low 71111. Highs
Friday in the rnld and upper 80s.

Lawrence Auditor

Scheduled uuuy

.*,. ,..,.,.,.,.**********

,

Henry L Stimson serv'ld in
the cabinets of four presidents
..,. Taft, Hoover, Franklin D.
Roosevelt and Trwnan -either
as secretary pf state or
secretary\of war.

0 o· lls
~~~~;::!:~~~:~::~~~ 1·· 0 Mz.llz·on Go ""o
.l ~ r

. RENSSELEAR, IDd. &lt;UP() - Four Ohioans
were arrested near here Tuesday after police
said they found 500 pounds of marijuana when an
officer stopped a car because the license plate
.
.
hght had burned ou_t.
.
Held here for illegal possession of drugs
were William Westcott, 22, Ravenna, his wife,
Terry, 22; Pamela Moore, 19, Kent, and John
Donavan 27 Raveuna.
Polic~ si\id as the officer approached their
car, one of the women tossed out a plastic bag.
·
.
•
•
About the same hm~, pollee said, the two men
were • spotted walkmg toward ~e au!? and
carrymg bags later found to contam mariJUana.
Police reported confiscating along with the
marijuana, some hashish, a smoking device and
a quantity of pills which were sent to state police
labs for examin~tion.

stili

''BULLITT"
!Color)

men in the face of inflation.
Increases for temporary total
disability, which proponenets of
the measure said accounts for
90 per cent.of claims, are from
$63 to $84 for the first 12 weeks
of disability and from $56 to $77
for subsequent weeks.
The bill, passed by the House
in July, must be returned to the
lower chamber for concorrence
in technical amendments before
going to Gilligan for his signature.
Also passed and returned to
the House was a bill requiring
reflectorized license plates for
all motor vehicles beginning in
1973. The measure was amended in the Senate to set a 50
cent increase in license plate
fees to cover the extra cost of
producing reflectorized plates.
The House passed, 56-22, leg·
islation requiring the state personnel director to repare and
supervise an accident prevention program for aU state deparunents.
The House also approved, 63-5,
a biD requiring a rear stop tight
activated by the brake pedal on
aU motor vehicles.

Four Fined In
Mayor's Court

breakfast is extremely apprl)- Mahoning River !han the people
priatefotthepeoplewhohavein- here do.
·
vested in this valley," he said, "We put up a lot of private
'\the succession of managers capital. We put up a lot of public
over the years who have run money in improving the quality
this lndusry, the workers, 'gen- of the ... Mahonlng River,"
eration after generation who said Hunter. "I don't particoworked in these mills. This is Iarly care to swim in Uie Mawhat has made America great honing River. 1don't particularnot a smart aleck litUe attorney ly care tQ [ish in the Mahoning
from. Columbus, Ohio that prl)- River. 1 don't particularly care
bably has a brand new law de- to picnic on the h&lt;inks of the
gree and wants to show it off to . Mahoning River.
some equally wise ... person "We will clean it up," said
from Chicago or Washington Hunter. "This is something we
that thinks they know more have done on our own before
I about the Mahonlng Valley and the federal government and the

Weather

was living there now, ·
Accompanied by Linda Kasabian (who turlled stale's
witness), Susan Atkins and
Patricia Krenwinkel, Watson
said· he went to the home and
entered the ground,s after
cutting the telephone wires.
Manson, Miss Krenwlnkel and
Miss Atkins already have been
sente~ to death for the
murders.
Watson said he went Into the
home and confessed to stabbing
or shooting Jay Sebring,
Voityck Frykowsky and Abigail
Folger. Miss Atltins has confessed it was she who killed
Sharon Tate.
He slept all that day, Watson
said, and the nat night Manson
gave him another knife and
drove the car to the home of
grocer Leno LaBianca.
The trial was recessed before
Watson got into the details of
the LaBianca killings.

Tradition Continues At Ohio State Fair
gratefully accepted.
Bob
Evans
Farms
Restaurants, for whom the
champions lfere purchased,
operate
famUy
style
restauranla ·in Rio Gtande and
Oliiiicothe, and in COiwnbua at
1-71 and Route 161, (II Hamlltm
Road and I-70, and in the
WesUand Shopping Center.
Opening d. a sixth unit Is
scheduled fer mid-January In
Oncinnatl.

Volunteer
Help
Not Needed Yet
.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Robert
Marsh, decked out In patriotic
rell, white and blue overalla,
tried to do his part to keep the
"AU America City" tidy.
·But Marsh, 56, found out his
help was not wanted. After
mowing the statehouse lawn for
about 45 minutes Wednesday a
grounds supervisor halted his
project.
The lawn will not be trimmed
as frequently as before under an
austerity program !hat went
into effect Wednesday.
"I got rumors that Gov. John .•
J . Giltigan was going to cut aU
labor off, so I got the.notion in
FIRE DESTROYS AUTO
my head to put overalls on and
The Meigs Cotmty Sheriff's help out," he said.
Department reported that a
)958 Pontiac belonging to Dale
CLINIC SCHEDULED ·
Estep was destroyed by fire Girls of Meigs County -six
Wedneatlay night.
years old 1r older - with
A call was received at 10:07 asplratlons to be cheerleaders
p.m. from Bill Kennedy, are invited to a cheerleader
Pomeroy, Rl 4, reporling the clinic to be held Saturday from
incident. Kennedy Informed the lOa. m. to 3 p. m. at Meigs High
sheriff's department that the School. Conductlng the clinic
car had been found by its owner will be the high school varsity
in the middle of Route 143. The cbeerleaden. The particlpallon
incident is . still under in- fee Is $2 and girls 'taking part
-vesUgation.
are I!' take a 118Ck lunch.

11fiS LARGE C"emenl bled 1tuildln8 just olf Route 881 at
the edge of the Shade River State Forest in Meigs County will
be the new 3efVice center for the Dlvlsioo of F~ and
Reclam$tlon, Department of Natural a-rces. Ecptipment
of the illvisim.will be hOUied and serviced In litis structure
which was .bUilt by the Weber Cmstruction Co. of Reedsville.

Heir lhi6Witkeatructure Ia the- bame built by !be 11.te
far Dlvlalm Fire Warden VlciiJr Bahr and his family. Bqlb
lbe II!I'Vic;e cen'- and the bame are )•I Iff Rclute 881. Onr
lbe put ,an, Balr Iw provided 1111 aVIIIable ltontp aria
at hlar It'"" oe for !be dlWioo 'a operall1111. ClllttnlctloD of
bo~ the hD\a and the aervlce tenter started last IJPI'inB,

.·

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