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8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 17,1972
Market Report
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
Saturday, July 15,1972
SALES REPORT OF
Oblo Valley Livestock Co.
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 28 to
28.25; 220 to 250 lbs. 28.25 to
21' iO ; Ught Z4 to 27 50; Fat
Sows 21 to 24.75 ; Stags 20
Down ; Boars 19.50 to 21.75;
Pigs 7 to 21; Shoats 20 to 33.
CATTLE - Steers, 31 to
39.50; Heifers 24 to 32 50; Baby
Beef 38 to 46.75; Fat Cows 18 to
23.25; Canners 16 to 26.25; Bulls
28 to 32.10; Milk Cows 200 to
325.
VEAL CALVES - Tops
51.85 ; Seconds 48 to 50;
Mediwn 45 to 49; Com. & Hvs.
42 to 50; Culls 45 Down
BABY CALVES - 35 to 85.
LAMBS - Tops 30.45 ;
Seconds 27 to 30; Light Wts. 16
to 21 ; Common 21 Down .
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
Steers: Cho1ce, 36.40-37;
Good, 33.60.35.10; Standard, 31·
33.10.
Heifers : Cho1ce, 34-35 .60 ,
Good, 30 50-33.50.
Cows : Commercial, 25. 75;
Utility, 22-24; Canners and
Cutters, 18 75-20.
Bulls : Commercial, 25.7532.75.
Stockers and Feeders Steer
calves, 36.50-43.75; He1fer
Calves, 25.50-41.50; Yearlings
25.75-38.60.
Veal Calves : Chmce, 53.50;
Good, 44-50
Lambs: Choice, 32.
Hogs : 200.230, 29.25; No. 1,
29.50; 230.240, 29; Sows: 23.81124.50; Boars, 23.40.
·~i:~=~~*:®y..:-:-:<-:
Flies Take Over
City of Akron
AKRON, Ohio (UPII
City Health Director Or.
John Morley said today
" fileo are multiplying by the
teno of thousands" and
producing a serious health
problem In the wake ol a
garbage collector strl~e now
In Its sixth day.
"We also have serious
problem of rat control and
it's going to get worse/'
Morley said. " I'm afraid
we're going to have a lot
more rat biles." There has
been no garbage collection In
this northeastern Ohio city of
293,000 since last Tuesday,
when 800 members of the
State, County and Municipal
Employees Union relused to
work In a dispute with city
officials over Insurance.
e
No One Injured
In Collision
No mjuries were reported in
a two-car accident Saturday at
7:40p.m . at the mtersecllon of
Bndgman and Water Sts. m
Syracuse.
Police Chief Milton Vanan
said James R. Clevmger, 30,
Columbus, and James D.
Teaford, 66, Syracuse, collided.
Clevinger was c1ted for unsafe
operation of a motor vehicle .
There was moderate damage
to both vehicles
Pleasant Valley Hospital
The 1Ce-dese1t of Antal c·
tica susta ms less l1fe than
DISCHARGES - Helen
any other deserl area •n- Thacker, Phny; Charles
l'es tl ga ted on earth
Slonaker, Long Bottom, 0 .;
Mrs. A. L. Stewart, Pt.
Pleasant ;' Mrs . Delbert Smith
and son , Leon ; Mrs. Ernest
Casey , Apple Grove; Mrs.
.
Lester Leonard and twin sons,
,- , " ,,
H~nderson; Mrs . William
Thacker, Henderson; Mrs .
Tonight & Tuesday
Larry Miller , Gallipolis;
July 17-18
Virginia c;:arpenter, Pt.
Pleasant; Glen Adkins ,
Double Feature Program
Fraziers Bottom ; Mrs. Earl
" WITCHMAKER"
Gibson, Mason; Mrs. Charles
Plus
"GHOST"
Wheeler , West Colwnbia ; Mrs
Charles Fowler, Apple Grove;
Rebecca Glotfelty, Leon;
Donald Nott, Pt Pleasant;
Mrs . Harry VIckers, Mason ;
Mrs.
Wilhe Varney, Hen Tonight ond Tuesday
dersoli; Mimi Caldwell, Pt.
July t7-18
Pleasant, and Mrs. Thomas
Cecil 8. DeMille's
Whittington, Vinton.
THE TEN
COMMANDMENTS
SMOKY THE DRYER
ITechnicolarl
The
Middleport Fire Dept.
Charleston Heston
Anne Ba xter
answered a call to the home of
"G"
Mrs. Wanda Beck, 391 South
Runnmg T1 me 3 Hrs. 30
Second Ave, Middleport, at
min .
3:41 p. m. Sunday where a
Admission . Sl.SO Adults ; 7Sc
clothes dryer m the basement
Children
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
was throwing out smoke . There
was no blaze.
MASON DRIVE-IN
.
o
H
' '
'
Frank' Pauley
Died on Sunday
· DEXTER - Frank Pauley,
71, Dexter, Rt. I, was dead on
arnval at Holzer Medical
Center Sunday night. Mr .
Pauley was a retired farmer of
the Harrisonville-Dexter area.
He was a member of the Mt.
Union Baptist Church
He .s survived by h1s wife,
Mabel; a son, Paul , Pomeroy;
two grandchildren ; a stster,
Mrs. Anne Burton, Yewkey, W.
Va ., and three brothers, Ben ,
Tango, W.Va.; Emry, Sod, W.
Va ., and Oscar, St. Albans.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 2p. m. at the Mt.
Unwn Baptist Church with the
Rev. Cecil Cox officiating.
Burial w1ll be in M1l es
Cemetery Friends may call at
the Mar tin Funeral Home
anyhme Wednesday and unhl
noon Thursday when the body
w1ll be taken to the church.
Amanda Baer
Died Saturday
Amanda Baer, 88, formerly
of Forest Run, died Saturday in
o.: wnhu~ St'le IS survived by a
s1ster, Mrs . V.'lilard (Alda)
Faudree , Harriso nville , a
daughter-in-law, Mary Haer,
Columbus;
two
granddaughters, Mrs John Crago
and Karen Baer , both of
Columbus, and one greatgrandson, Joey
Crago,
Colwnbus.
Mrs. Baer was a charter
member of the Forest Run
Methodist Church and of the
Reynold sbur g Nazarene
Church. Funeral services will
be Tuesday at 2:30p. m. at the
Forest Run Methodist Church
Burial w1ll be in Gilmore
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytune.
I
~o .q nt l ,
MEIGS THEATRE
My folks
prepared
for my
education
many
years
ago ...
Grace Vaughan
Died Saturday
Grace
Vaughan ,
52,
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, d1ed
at her home Saturday morn mg.
Mrs Vaughan was the owner
and operator of an antique
shop, a member of the Pentecostal Church , Middleport,
and the Walk-In Garden Club,
of Bedford Twp.
She is survived by four sons,
Frank Acton, Dallas, Texas ;
J ohn Acton, Columbus;
Marcus Vaughan , Silver
Sprmgs, Md ., and Michael
Vaughan, Guysv1lle; one
daughter , Na ncy Colllns ,
Pomeroy, and a brother, Louis
Tenagha, Colwnbus.
Funeral serv1ces w1ll be held
Tuesday at 11 a. m. at the
Middleport Pentecostal Church
w1th the Rev. Wilham Knittel
officiating. Burial will be m
Sunset Cemetery, Colwnbus.
Friends may call at Ewing
Funeral Home anytime
at Rest
Today'~
FUNNY w1ll pay SI.OO for
rcteh Draganol "fun11y"uMII. Send 90111
tD
Today's FUNNY,
1200Wtstlh~r4
Sr., Cl•nloncl, Ohie .UIIl.
' - - - -- - - - -.....l
Hattie Abney
Dies Saturday
NEW HAVEN - Mrs. Hatt1e
M Abney, 72, New Haven , d1ed
Saturday at Grant Hospital in
Colwnbus
Born July 29, 1699, m Logan,
W.Va., Mrs. Abney was th~
daughter of the late Clarence
and Welthy Runyon Hinkle.
She was preceded m death by
her husband, William E., m
1956. Mrs Abney operated a
rooming house here a number
of years.
Survivin g are two sons,
William H. , of Barberton, Ohio,
and Harold P., of Roanoke,
Va ; two daughters, Mrs.
Wimfred M11Ier and Mrs. Ina
Jean W1ckhn, both of
Columbus; a step-sister, Mrs.
Maud1 e Cremeans, Hunt~n gto n ; a brother , James
Hinkle, of Florida; five grand·
children, and e1ght great .
grandchddren.
Funeral services will be held
at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the
New Haven Umted MethodiSt
Church with the Rev. Clarence
McCloud officiating Bunal
w1ll be 1n the Tnmty Cemetery
at Saugerlles, N. Y The body IS
at the Jerry Spears Funeral
Home m Columbus where
friends may call from 7 to 9
ton1ght.
The body w1ll be brought to
the Foglesong Funeral Home
m Mason where friends mav
call from 2 to 4 and from 7 to 9
p m. Tuesday. Following the
Wednesday serv1ce, the hody
will be flown to Saugerties.
IN HOSPITAL
Miss Katie Guth, well known
Pomeroy res1dent, IS confmed
to St. Joseph Hos pital,
Parkersburg, where she w11I
undergo eye surgery. Cards
may be sent to M1ss Guth at
Room 343, th1rd floor , in care of
the hosp1tal.
CLUB TO MEET
The Rock Springs Better
Health Club w1ll meet at ll ·30
am. Thursday at the roadside
park on Route 33, gomg north .
Members are to take articles
for the program , food, and
their own table service. In case
of ram , the meeting wll l be held
MRS. SMALL DIES
COOLVILLE - Mrs . Nellie at the Rock Sprmgs Grange
Smith Small, formerly of here, Hall .
<1/ed Sunday evemng in Mt
Memorial Hosp1tal, Mt. Vernon. Mrs. Small is survived by
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
her husband, Ben; two The Pomeroy E-R squad
daughters, Mrs. H1lma Reeder , answered a call at 7:41 p. m.
Denver, Colo., and Mrs. Hazel Sunday to the Ehzabeth Conde
Boudreau , Dayton , and a home, 60ak St., where she was
aduaghter-in-law, Mrs. Cleo expenencing diffi ~ulty 1n
Smith , Chester. Funeral breathmg. She was taken to
serv1ces w1ll be ann ounced by Veterans Memonal Hospital
Wh1te Funeral Home here.
and adm1tled for treatment
PICNIC PLANNED
- The Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi will hold a
couples picnic Thursday at 6:30
p.m. at Ft. Meigs . Those attendmg the potluck dmner are
to bring the1r own table service.
rhe day I was born, in fact. That's
when my Dad opened a savings
account in my name and started to
make regular deposits every week .
He and Mom added extra on birthdays and other occasions . Now I'm
all ready for college. And the money
is ready for me.
" No matter who you mv1te
WASHINGTON (UP! )-Sen.
George S. McGovern fli es
home to South Dakota today for
a two-week rest before he
starts his underdog effort to
unsea t Pres1dent NIXon.
· McGovern's Democratic
runmng mate, Sen. Thomas F.
Eagleton of Missouri, w1ll
remam m Washington for •an
attempt to persuade dissident
labor leaders to support the
Democrats' presidentlal ticket.
It was generally ·agreed that
the South Dakota senator was a
decided underdog at this early
stage of the 1972 campa1gn.
A Newsweek ma gazine survey Indicated that if the
elec twn were held today
McGovern could be certam of
only the four electoral votes of
his home state and the three of
the District of Columb1a. The
survey gave Nixon 236 certain
electoral votes at this stage.
Repubhcan National Chrurman Robert Dole warned his
party 's r egulars of 11 0ver
co nfide nce." He did say,
however, he felt Nii<oo was in
"a very strong position."
Dole was interviewed Sun·
day on the NBC program
"Meet the Press."
McGovern .spent
the
weekend at his Washington
home restmg from the gruehng
primary campaign that saw
him move from the rear of the
pack to capture his party's
nomination at Miami Beach
last week.
He planned to fly today to the
Black H1lls of South Dakota for
two weeks at the rustic Sylvan
l.ooge near Custer His sche·
dule called for nothing but rest
and recreation the first week,
but aides said staff meetings on
campaign strategy would
begin the second week.
·
Eagleton said Sunday he
hoped to meet this week with
AFL-CIO Pres1dent George
Meany in an effort to close the
rift between the lahor leader
and the McGovern ti cket
Eagleton sa1d he beheved he
could persuade Meany that the
McGovern-Eagleton ticket
would be preferable to that of
Nixon and hls running mate.
"He just has to write down
the two tickets and look at
them," Eagleton said.
The AFL-CIO will convene
1ts 35-member Executive
Council Wednesday to consider
the 13.5 million member
federation's campaign course.
Eagleton also predicted that
Ch1cago Mayor Richard J.
Do ley would not "take a walk"
and refuse to work for the
election of McGovern. But, he
added, "I've never posed as
Mandrake the Mag1cian."
Eagleton was interviewed on
CBS' Face the Nahan.
In Miami Sunday, a convention of People's Party members from e1ght southern states
voted to support McGovern
rather than People's Party
candidate Dr. Benjamin Spack.
Robert Kunst, a party spokesman, said the regional meetmg
took the action "because we
want to defeat Nixon. That ls
the maJor aim ."
Syracuse News, Society ,
By ADA SLACK
Mr. and Mrs. R. S Corson of
Morgantown, W. Va , spent a
weekend with the1r daughter
and son·m-law, Mr . and Mrs
Hugh McPhail and sons and
attended the r~c:~·rega lta
Mr. and Mrs. ~..on Ferrell
attended a retirement p1cmc
recently at Coonskin Park near
Charleston.
Mr. and Mrs. Esther Harden
and Debbie attended a h1gh
school graduatwn of th e1r
mece, Jayne Ellen Ke1ser, at
Iron ton recently.
Spendmg a week in Eyrw
recently were Mrs. Leona rd
Bass and Chern and Dav1d .
They also visited with Mr and
Mrs. Rudy Stewart and son,
Rodney, of Mount Vernon, Mr.
and Mrs Larry Brown of
Delaware and Mr. and Mrs
Carl W1cks of Lancaster
Mrs Chns tena Gnmm
v1s1ted her daughter and sonin-law, Mr and Mrs. Raymond
Teaford a nd fam il y of
Minersville Route for several
days.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul White and
sons, Joe and Ricky, of Oxnard, Calif , v1s1te d Mrs
Rachel McBride and brother,
David M1lls
Earl Harden and son, Dale,
of Canton spent a weekend with
Mr and Mrs. Robert Harden
and Debbie and other relatives
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Parker
spent 13days with th eir son and
daughter-m-law, Mr and Mrs
Howard Parker and family of
Gretna, La . On July II ,
Howard and family left for
Ventura, Cahf. , where he w1ll
be m a school studymg Thermal Recovery. He w1ll be there
four months
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Gumther
and children acc ompanied
their son and daughter-in-law,
Mr . and Mrs. W1ihe Gmnther of
Galhpolis Route, to Charleston
where they visited Mrs Elmo
Johnson and brother, Kermit
Wlihams. They all enjoyed a
picnic at the Daniel Boone
Park .
Mrs. Harold Weaver and son,
M1chael, spent several days
w1th her mother, Mrs Roy
Wmebrenner and her brother
and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
W1lham Gordon Winebrenner
and fam1ly.
Mr and Mrs. V1rgli Noms of
Mt. Vernon spent a weekend
with his parents , Mr. and Mrs.
Ross Norns.
Mr . and Mrs . Ri chard
Weaver and son, Ph1hp, and
grandson, Eddie Sayre, spent a
week m Ja cksonville, Fla.
Mrs Damen Ferrell , accompanied by daughter and
son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Tim
Cozart of Columbus vis1ted Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Stamper at
Some call it wholesale
Ca bm Creek, W. Va . Wh1ie
th ere the y vlSlted the
cemetery
Earl
Summerfie ld
of
Murrysvlile, Pa., and Edna
Summerfield of near Chester
spent an afternoon w1th Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Parker.
Mr and Mrs. Robert Harden
and Debbie spent a recent
weekend w1th the1r sons and
daughters-in-law, Mr and Mrs
Robert A. Harden and En c of
Manon and Mr. and Mrs
James Harden of London .
Cecil Duncan Jr, of New
Haven spent a week w1th h1s
mother, Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm
Guinther and fam1Iy
Jeffery Don Fn end of
Bashan spent a weekend with
his grandmother, Mrs. Ahce
Capehart.
Rev . Paul Hayman of
Westerville VISited w1th Mr .
an d Mrs. Ross Norns.
Mrs Chmtena Gnmm spent
a da y wi th Mr. and Mrs . Frank
Gnmm of Pomeroy . Mrs
Gri mm 1s 1mprovmg fr om an
eye InJury.
Dar lene Duncan spent
Wednesday mght and Thursday w1th her f;1ther , Mr . and
Mrs Cecil Duncan Sr . of New
Haven They spent Thursday at
Camden Park 1n Huntmgton.
Roush Birthday
Celebration Held
A
surpriSe
birthday
celebratiOn was held Sun day,
July 9, at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Brannon, OakMod Drive, for her mother,
Mrs. Melissa Roush m honor of
her 91st b1rthday. Mrs. Roush
IS formerly from the community of Eno.
All of her five ch1idren were
present at the b1rthday
celebratiOn, along with six
grandchildren and ten greatgrandchildren. Unable to attend were four grand ch1ldren
and 18 great-g randchildren.
The children attendmg were
Mrs Luther Goetting, Waco,
Texas; Mr. and Mrs. George
Roush, Marion; Mr. and Mrs .
Glenn Roush, Bidwell, and Mr .
and Mrs. William Frazier and
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Brannon
of Gallipolis. Her sister, Mrs.
Lelia Vollborn of Gallipolis,
was also present.
Grandchildren and great·
grandchildren attending were
Mr and Mrs . Richard Fowler,
Dav1d and Mark, Mason, W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Ed Norman,
ArlmgtonHe1ghts,!ll.; Mr. and
Mrs . Harry Roush, Sandra and
Marsha, Ashville, N. C.; Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Bolander and
Donna Jean, Marion ; Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Frazier, Susan and
Jerry , Gallipolis, and Mr. and
Mrs. Dean Fraz1er, Ricky,
April and Denise of Pt.
Pleasant, W. Va .
Blonde Beauty
Is Miss Ohio
SANDUSKY, Ohw (UP!) Karen Sue Sparka, a 21-year·
old blonde who measures 37·2535 and competed as Miss
Bowling
Green
State
University , was crowned M1ss
Ohw Saturday mght.
M1ss Sparka , who IS from
Penfield, N. Y., was declared
the wmner over a field of nine
other beauties 10 the pageant.
She wlil represent the Buckeye
State in the Miss Amencan
PageantmAUant1cC1ty, N. J .,
m September.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- M1ldred Phillips, Mmersv•lle; Clara Karr, Pomeroy,
and Phoebe Lee, Middleport.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Sarah Bush, Effie Black,
V1ncent Mossman , Hattie
Elam, Vena Marcmko, Cynthia
Zech, Ed1th Osborn, Gerald
Meranda and Nancy Johnson .
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Magg1e Ellis, Rutland ; Mabel
Wolfe, Pomeroy;
Irene
Russell , Middleport ; Grace
Ander son , Parker sburg;
Elizabe th Adkins, Ra cme ;
Juamta Conde , Reedsville;
W1Ima
Riggs,
Ra cme;
Ehzabeth Conde, Pomeroy;
Ke1th Mattox, Pomeroy, and
Robert Youn g, New Haven.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Carrie Roush, Frances Philson
and ·Ann Pierce.
The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Rese1·ve System
On Frldayo Our Drive-In Window Is
Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., (Continuously I.
$28,080 Maxlmmllnsurance
For Each 0.110sitor
Some call it discount
L picnic to start a rob
~nd "find .you haven 't the
We named it our Budget Shop
1
proper tools or materia Is to
hniSh 1t with. Don't let this
happen Ia you. Before you
start your
job, see
Transfers
Charles H. Cornell, Agnes
Cornell to George E . Mw'I'By,
Shelby Murray, parcel,
Chester.
Allen Dean Blackwood, dec.,
to Hazel M. Blackwood,
William Alan Blackwood,
Phihp • Owen Blackwood,
Deanna Blackwood, Cynthia
Darlene Blackwood, cert. of
lrans., Sc1pio.
Daniel C. Hensler, Patricia
D. Hensler to Clifford S.
Morris, Letha J . Morris, .595
Acre, Sutton ,
American Legion Rutland
Post No . 467 to Archie
McKinney, Eva McKinney, 10
acres, Rutland.
Archie McKinney, Eva
McKinney to Frank G. Mills,
Leona Mills, 10 acres, Rutland.
Marvin C. Walker, Mirna
Walker to Gould Riffle, Delor~s
Riffle , 104.85 Acres, Orange .
Mary Harris, Exlrx ., Clara
E. Garland, dec., to Ernest W.
Stewart, Iva May Stewart, .40
acre, Pomeroy.
Oren Wears, JoAnn Wears to
Meigs County, easement,
Salisbury.
Betty I. Pierce to Walter J.
Freeman, parcels, Olive .
Neva L. Bolyard, Clayton
Bolyard to James Casey,
Connie Casey, lots, Middleport.
Mary Wright to Waller
Robinson , 16 sq. rd ., Rutland.
Paul J. Bearhs, Hazel P.
Bearhs to Paul J . Bearhs,
Hazel P. Bearhs , 4 acres,
Sutton.
Jacob M. Gaul, Mildred L.
Gaul to lvor N. Farrar ,
Ehzabeth Farrar, .60 acre,
Orange.
Calvin B. Simpson, Lucetta
G. Simpson to James Neutzhng, Janice Neutzhng, lot,
Pomeroy
Norman G. Rose, Martha E.
Rose to Edward V. Frecker ,
119 acres, Chester.
J. Roger Epple, June Epple
to W11liam James Ritchie, Nita
Jean Ritchie, parcels, Orange .
W1lliam Hess Chapman ,
Patnc1a A. Chapman to Dale
w. Welsh, Marjorie E. Welsh,
lot, Orange.
Clyde F. Headley, Mamie V.
Headley to Leo C. Kennedy Jr. ,
Jlllla II.. Kennedy , 13.35S Berti~
Olive.
Dorothy Perry, Ephraim C.
Perry, Dorothy Perry (his
atty . in fact ) to Ephraim C.
Perry, Dorothy Perry, lots,
Dyesville.
Dorothy G. Perry, Ephraim
C. Perry to Donald E. King,
lots, Columbia, Dyesville.
John Victor Wippel to Larry
Dugan , Maxine Dugan, parcel,
Chester.
On the Main Floor - Special sale
prices on all Pocket Knives. Your
favorite brand. See the many hundreds to select from.
A 1973 budget prov 1dmg for t1v1t1es , $7 ,000;
e s tlmated
FOUR MEIGS COUNTY YOUNG PEOPLE have been oominated for
state-w1de recognition because of out.tanding accomphslunents in 4-H work.
The state-wide contest will have winners selected on the basis of reports. The
Meigs County youths will compete for state honors with wmners from nine
so uthern Ohw counties. From the left are Sharon Wilson, Meigs Saddle
Sitters, horses; Steven Stanley, Hamsonvllle Honor Boys, electricity and
American Inst1tute of Cooperation; Grant Johnson, Me1gs County Better
•
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
NO. 65
lberfelds In Pomeroy
Come see - Compare You 'II find the
~~
values at
Baker Furniture
ARE EASilY SPOil ED
In the
$74,357.60 , operatwn of school
plan t, $69,274; mamtenance,
$18,000, specia l serv~ces, $100;
supphes, $148,050, matenals
for maintenance, $24,600 ;
equtpment rep lacement ,
$40,000; contract and open
order serv1ce, $78,850 , f1xed
cha1·ges, $295,470 .14, and
cap1tal outlay, $15,500.
The anhc1pated balance as of
January I, 1974 was set at
$84,513 65
ReSigna ti ons accepted
Monday mght mcluded those of
Tmw Kelly, who has been
workwg in a student employe
Meig~-Mason
mathema hcs teacher in the
d1str1ct, was made basketball
coach for the seventh grade.
John Ruth , a graduate of Mt
Unwn College, was appomted
assistant band direc tor
replacmg Lew1s Shields Mrs
Continued on page B)
Weather
Chance of showers and
thundershowers
sou th ern
sectiOns today . Warm and
hunud tomght and Wednesday
w1th a chance of showers and
thundershowers. Lows tonight
m the upper 60s and low 70s
Area
TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1972
program at Me1gs H1gh School,
and who has been named
guidance counse lor at Eastern
H1gh School, Wendy Schm1dt,
and Marc1a Shultz, spec1al
educatiOn teac hers
Fenton Taylor was employed
as assiSta nt h1gh sc hoo l
pnnc1pal on a two year contract Da v1d Jenkms , who
ear her· was named a
TEN CENTS
PHONE 992-2156
Teamsters Favor Nixon
RAN CHO LA COSTA, Calif
( UP! )-The Teamsters ,
largest mdependent union m
th e country, broke w1th
traditional labor support for
the Democrats and endorsed
President N1xon Monday,
saying George McGover n
doesn't care ahout middle class
workers.
It was another blow at the
McGovern cand idacy by orga·
mzed labor, wh1ch fierc-e ly
resisted McGovern 's nomination.
The executive coun cil of the
AF'L-CIO-to wh1ch the Teamster s do not be long - ha s
scheduled a spec1al meetmg in
Wash mgton Wednesday to discuss what stand to take The
meetmg· was called by AF'LCIO PreSident George Meany,
a leading figur e in the bitter
preconventi on fi ght against
McGovern .
There have been reports the
g~ant labor orga mzatwn, tradi ti onally a ver y Importa nt
power base fo r the Democratic
candidate, m1ght opt to "sit
out" the campaign , refu sin g it.
suppor t to McGovern but not
gomg to so far as to work for
Nixon's re.election .
The Teamsters' decision was
announced by th e president of
the 2 million member umon ,
Frank E. F1tzs1mmons, who
said he realized such an action
IS "at odds w1th the traditional
and almost reflex support of
labor for th e DemocratiC
ticket."
The board had dec1ded to
back Nixon, he said, because
"the blue collar workers,
which compnsc the backbone
of Amen ca, seem to be of little
concern to the McGover n
ticket. "
Conversa tions with Teamster members convmced him
the N1xon endorsement reflect.
the wishes of the union rankand fil e, he sa1d.
He said the Demo cratic
nommee "has not earned the
support of Amenca's workmg
men and women . Our members
work hard for their wages.
They are entitled to what they
earn , and th ey figure the
government ought to get off of
vv:ews.~
. . . . . . . . . -..zn. . .Brzef~l
.,
·~
By Uolted Press International
WASHINGTON - THE HOUSE HAS APPROVED 351 to 3
and sent to the Senate a $1.5 bilhon, three-year program of aid for
th e elderly. Most of the money would go for grants to state and
city agencies to operate a1d programs for persons over 60. The
bill prov1des $335 m•lhon for the 1973 fiscal year, $510 million for
1974 and $683 1mlhon for 1975
SerVIces authonzed by th e bill would mclude suhs1d1zation of
low cost pubhc transportation, construction of Golden Age
centers for social activities, training programs for persons about
to enter retirement, provision of hot meals to shut-ins and
development of hbran es specializmg m the needs and wants of
the elderly .
CLEVELAND - MORE THAN 2,000 YOUNG people came
forward to be w1tnesses lor Christ Monday night on the fourth
mght of B1lly Graham Crusade here.
A crowd of 3o,OOO, mostly young people, assembled at
Municipal Stadium to hear Graham. Unoccupied seats in the
ri ght held stands of the 60,000 seat stadium were lipped to spell
out "Jesus" m huge letters. Monday night's attendance was less
than any night except Friday when the crusade opened.
However , the number of those who came forward, 2,175, was
greater than any other night.
Pocket Knives
and
Hu nil ng
Knives In the
Housew•res
Deportment on
the moin floor.
tr ansportatiOn,
enttne
Devoted To The Interests Of The
VOL. XXIV
agenctes ,
auxiliary
•
at y
The fir st workable ballpmnt
pen was patented m 1937 by
Laslo J . Biro, a Hunganan
hvmg m Argentma
exp e nditures
tota l1ng $2,121,471 20 was
approved Monda y mght by the
Me1gs Local• School D1stnc!
Board of Educatwn 10 a
recessed sess ton at Me1gs
Jumor H1gh School 10 Middleport
Anilc1paled revenue for 1973
tota ls $2,2U5 ,9B4 .85, wh ich
Incl udes an antiCi pated
lialance of $84,4i9 :!2 as of
JanuaJ y I, t9n.
Anticipated expend itures for
19i3 tota led $2,121,4i1 20, Inclu din g, admin istrat ion ,
$60,68 1 , 1nst r uct 1on,
$1,2l!9,588.4G , coord~na t e ac-
Uvestock Dub, sheep, and Margie Jeffers, Columbia Superstars,
achievement and home improvement Other area wmners from Me1gs are
Edwm Cross, Citizenship, beef, petrolewn power, and commod1ty marketing
conference delegate ; Janie Holter, dairy foods, home economics, consumer
education, safety, health, Oh10 4-H Teen Council, and Alan Holter, Natwnal
4-H Dairy Conference and Commod1ty Marketing Conference delega te.
Now You Know
WASHINGTON- THE NATION'S industnal output gamed a
moderate 0.3 pet. in June. It was the loth straight monthly increase. The Federal Reserve Board said in a report 1ssued
Monday that the index which measures the production of factories, mines and utilities now has surpassed the high of July,
1969, just before the economy entered its recession.
' The June mcrease, however, was considered less than
robust. Automobile production declined and steel output
remained stagnant. Only business equipment and materials
showed production gains. And the board revised downward from
0.5 to ,0.3 pet. the May index increase.
SAN CLEMENTE, CALIF. - PRESIDENT Nixon winds up
an 11klay workmg vacation at the Western White House today
and heads back to Washington to confront a Democratic
Congress he claims is feeding inflation by wild &(.lending.
White House aides said the President Is concerned about the
fate of his pending domestic programs and will call in
Republican congressional leaders some time tills week to discuss
them. Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler left open the possibility.
Nixon might address the nation on the subject of congressional
Irresponsibility if the Congress continues to make a shambles of
his budget.
our
" FRIENDLY ONES" tor
all the tools and materials
you may need ...
Property
.
.
.
Elberfelds For
Pocket Knives
to a p1cnic, you can most
usually depend on some
ants showing up" ...
School Budget
Is $2,121,471
MeJp
COLUMBUS - THE STATE LIQUOR Department has
expanded Its "remnant sale" to 73 retail stores around Ohio
because of the big hit it has made.
The department opened the sale on June 16 at 27 selected
stores where liquor buyers could save from $1 to $8 on discontinued or !jlow.moving items. "SQme of these items have been In
warehouses for several years,'' explained deputy director Hiram
Camon. "The sale will reduce our Inventory and mean our s+.ock
·will be up to dale."
our bac k and out of our
pockets "
He srud McGovern had cast
antilabor votes on a number of
1ssues, including nght-to-work
laws, and urged Teamster
members "to work and vote to
keep President Nixon m otrice
another four years.''
The Teamster endorsement
did not come as a surprise,
since F1tzsinunons has supported Nixon's pollc•es m the
past, and was th e only union
member to remain on the
federa l Pay Board when other
labor leadersqwt to protest the
adm1nistratwn 's wage co ntrols.
After the endorsement, the
17-member board travelled 40
miles up the coast to the
Western White House, where
they were warmly greeted by
Pres1dent Ntxon.
Presidential Press Secretary
Ronald Ziegler heatedly demed
specul ation linking the
pollti ca lly valuable en'
(Conilnued on page B)
Inspection Set
A re soiu llon a uth oriZing persons can be sealed. The
1n spect10n of the Portland
grade sc hool bUilding that
could lead to 1ts bemg reopened
was approved by the Southern
Loca l Boa rd of EducatiOn
Monday mght.
Ralph Sayre, sup ennl€nd ent, sa1d he and board
members will stud y the
possibility of opemng the
sc hool.
In other business the board
accepted a teacher apphcatwn
fr om Susan Wa1die1gh and
approved the purchase of 200
umts of de sk-c hairs fr om
Carter Craft Co. to be shipped
immediately
Sayre
reported
new
bleachers for the fo otball f1eld
have armed and are being
mslalled. Approximately 488
se pt1c ta nk at Syra cuse
elemen ta ry school has been
repaired and J1m Wi ckline has
been awarded a contract to
paint the mterior of the Letart
Elementary School
Paul Sellers was lured as a
bus dnver and Floyd Hendncks as custod1an at Letart
Elementary lor the 1972-73
school year .
Prin cipal s
and
head
custodians of the diS trict met
with the board in rega rd to
purc hasmg jamtonal supphes
Attendm g we re Sayre,
Charl es Pyles, Clarence
Lawrence , Denny H1ll, Da v1d
Nease and Jum or Salser, boa rd
members, and Nancy Carnahan, clerk
MRS. RUSSELL BROWN of Meigs County accepted
certifi cates of apprec1at10n for Mrs. Ralph Welker, Rev. Btll
Perrin, and Atty. F . W. Porter for the1r efforts in ge tting the
Tn-County Comm umt y Mental Health and Mental Retar-
dation Board off the ground and underway In Meigs County.
Making the presentation during Monday night's first annual
648 Board Meeting at Oscar's in Galli!Xflis is Dr. Bernard
Neilun, acting board chairman.
')
Tri-Co MH&MR Progress Praised
BY HOBART WILSON JR.
" I can't beheve it has really
happened," sa1d Jun Myers ,
Columbus. Coordmator, Oh10
Departmen t
of
Mental
Hygiene, Reg wn Nme, as he
rev1ewed flr st·jear actlvtties
of the Tn-Coun ty Community
Mental Health and Mental
RetardatiO n 'Board Mond ay
mght at Oscar's Restaurant in
Gal lip olis
Address mg approximately 60
perso11s attend 1ng the an nual
....
Gallla, Me1gs and Jackson
Cuun ty 648 Board Meetmg,
Myers pra1sed amb1ti ous tricounty residents who, m one
sho rt year, sta rt ed fr om
sc ratc h and made the Commumty Mental Health and
Menial Retardation project a
rea hty
Actually, 1t has been four
years (19681 s1n ce the 1mtial
steer mg comm1ttee meetmg
was held to get the program
unde rw ay The board wa s
formed in 1969, and 1t began
functwmng m 1970. Monday
mght completed the board's
first formal year of operation
w1th an execut1ve director .
''I ca n truthfully tell you now
that I was surprised that you
were able to accomplish so
much m such a short penod of
hme. ThiS area was one of the
last mOhio to orgamze, and yet
you have surpassed so me
counhes who orgamzed f1ve
years ago when the program
was first approved by the Ohio
Legislature,' Myers said .
My ers left one hasic thought
w1th h1s listeners last night that mental health programs
must be run on a community
bas1s, not from the state house
m Columbus.
Myers said local olllclals
have passed one big hurdle,
but the big task now Is to
convert available resow-ees
Into an efficient program.
The coordinator urged
Ci tizens be mvited to attend
open board meetings. "We
must know the needs of all the
people in order to develop and
improve
an
efficient
program ," Myers said.
docks are in place and all are
In \ concluding, Myers
paid for except two. Lane also disclosed he has been assigned
asked council for a street hght ano ther health position in the
oh Rutland St. Achon was state, and tha t Brenda Mougey
delayed.
has been named his successor
m Regwn Nine .
Dr.
Bernard
N1ehm ,
The mayor's report for June
showing rece1pts 10 the amount Gallipolis Sta te Institute
of $913 70 was accepted. ~t superintedentand acting board
tendmg were Mayor Baronick, chairman , was master of
Don Colhns, W1lliam Snouffer, ceremonies.
Dr. Niehm conducted a brief
Ralph Werry , Luc1en Pouhn,
Elma Ru ssell and Mees, board meeting prior to Myers'
council members; Chief message. It was announced
that Malcolm B. Orebaugh,
Webster, Lane and Struble;
Jane Walton, clerk, and Phylhs Gallipolis , board cha1rman,
has res1gned, eff ective June 19.
Hennessy, treasurer.
Orebaugh's res1gna t10n was
accepted witu regret. He will.
(Contmued on page 8)
Second Cruiser Proposed for Pomeroy
What to do about lmtering on
U1e two village-owned nver·
front parkmg lots and speeding
through town, and a request for
additional traffic hghts OC·
cup1ed Pomer oy co uncil
Monday mghl
Coun c1l di scus sed seve ral
suggestions mad~ on how to
control youths loitering on the
pa rking lots. It 1s common
kn owledge that the lots are
crowded with young people as
late as 3 a.m. Mayor W11liam
Baronick observed that there is
an ordinance for a curfew on
all persons under age 18. He
also suggested speeding on
Wes t and East Main Streets,
Mulberry Ave ., and Mulberry
Heights is "becoming qu1te a
problem."
Councilman Jim Mees
pointed out that Pomeroy's
single police cruiser is unable
to patrol the cnhre town . He
thereupon suggested counc1l
conSider buymg an additional
cru1ser and employmg another
offi cer to drive 1t.
The J ones Boys have
requested a traffic light at the
Intersection of East Main and
Liberty Ave., Mayor Baromck
disclosed. Police Chi ef Jed
Webster said a traffic engmeer
will be in Pomeroy next week
to give his opinion on traffic
hghts in the village, among
them one at the mtersection of
Butternut and West Main St
Wesbter pointed out tha t if the
answer to the problem of
spcedmg.
It was reca lled that the ferry
se rv1ce wh1le the PomeroyMason Bnd ge IS closed for
repmrs w1ll begm at 9 a. m on
July 24! Police are to use the1r
uwn JUdgmen t about hooding
meters and control of traffic
Joe Struble received council 's perm1ss10n for Jim Sisson
and h1mself to attend a fire
Webster mamtamed a drag 1nspecllon course for f•v e days
strip is needed He ~md he has 1n September in c'o!umbus
been promised superviSion by Cos t per man is $100.
Ca lv1n
Lane,
s tre et
officers on thear own tame He
sa1d
all
boat
superintendent,
belleves that a drag stn p 1s one
v11lage makes any changes in
1ts llghtmg syste m the sl<lte
requi res two-way hghts m each
lane
Webster disclosed tha t he
has ta lk ed to Meigs County
Engmeer The odore Beegle and
to the state highway department 1n rega rd to using
abandoned hi ghways for a drag
strip
New Swim Session
EXTENDED OULOOK
Ohio extended outlook
Thursday through Saturday : To Start Monday
Jo Wolfe, 37, Ra cme, Rt. 2,
Hot and humid through
when Wolfe had to go left to
A new session of sw1mmmg
Saturday with little chance
avmd workmen resurfa cmg the
of significant rainfall. lessons w11l begm Monday at
road. The truck went into a
Day!ime highs in upper 80s Royal Oak Park, Miss Linda
ditch, throwing Vonda out. Her
and lower 90s. Overnight Hackett, mstr uctor, announced
'
body struck the rea r bumper as
lows in upper '60s and lower today.
To
be
offered
for
the
two
she fell .
70s.
week period are swimmer, 9
She was taken to Veterans
a m to 10 a.m , mtermediate,
Memonal Hospi tal by th e
10 a m. to II a.m., advanced
Pomeroy E-R squad where she
beg mner, 11 a .m. unhl noon.
was admitted.
The fee 1s $>. Also to be offered
dunng the next two weeks is
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Oh10 the junior life savmg course
Univers1ty trustees have from 6 to Bp.m. w1th a fee of $6.
MECHANIC NOW
NEW HAVEN - Arm y tentatively approved leasmg
Pnvate Raym ond T. Mc- 28 6 acres of its former airport
Farland, 21, son of Mr. and near Athens to two Columbus
TIME ' TO FILE
Mrs . Dav1d McFarland, 4th developers for the construction
All 1973 budgels - those of
Street, New Haven , has of a motel, travel park and to wnshi~s . schools, villages
cbmpleted an eight-week wheel re gional shopp mg cen ter.
and county governmental
At the trustees ' meeting here department. - must be filed
vehicle mechanic course at the
U. S Army Training Center, Monda y, ac tion was deferred with Meigs County Auditor
Infantry, Ft. Ord, Calif. Pvt. on leasmg 4~ adjacent acres Gordon Caldwell by July 20 for
McFarland is a 1971 graduate pendin g presentation of a consideration by the county
development plan.
of Wahama High School.
budget corrunisslon.
Girl Injured In Accident
RACINE - A te n-yea r old
Racine girl suffered back and
chest injuries when she fell
from the back of a pickup truck
Monday at 1:30p.m onSR 124,
New TV Program ~ one. tenth of a mile northwest of
Syracuse, the Meigs County
Dept. repor ted.
Appearing Daily Sheriff's
Vonda Rene Wolfes, Racine,
Readers are advised that Rt. 2, was riding in the back of
the Friday TV section Is a pickup truck dmen by Bobby
being discontinued as of this
week and In Its place Is
BONOS FORFEITED
appearing a dally television
SYRACUSE - Two bonds
log covering programs on aU were forfeited m Syracuse
cable channels the evening Mayor Herman London's Court
of publication and the entire Monday nigh t. James R.
next day.
• Clevinger, . 30, Columbus,
A relaled feature ap· forfeited a $20 bond on charges
pearlng dally Is Paul of unsafe operation of a motor
Crabtree's "Tube Talk " vehicle and John D. Eynon , 40,
•
touching highlights of past Racine, $130, driving wh1le
and lulllre programs on Intoxicated, both on charges
PoinTVIew Cable.
brought by Police Chief M1lton
Vanan .
Fonner Airport
Up for Leasing
I
••
'
Two are Hurt
L.
In Collision
Two persons - one a fiveyear-old g1rl - ~uffered mmor
mjuries in a two-car mishap on
Route 7 two and seven tenths
m1Ies north of the Gallia
Co un ty line at 7:30 am .
Monday
According to the Gallia Meigs State Highway Patrol,
the injured were MlSSle L.
W1se, 5, who was a passenger
in an auto driven by Charles
W1se, 60, Middleport, and Guy
W. Finley, 43, Apple Grove.
Neither of the injured was
treated.
The accident occurred when
Wise turned left into the side of
the Finley auto. There was
mo1erate damage to both
vehicles. Wise was ci ted for
improper turn.
�2- The Datly Sent mel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , July 18, 1972
-~neration
Meigs
Rap
WliEN-•TASTE MAKES WASTE
Dear Helen and Sue
I have an older relattve who lS always glVmg me clothes for
btrlhday and Chrtstmas presents Somellmes they re okay bot
sometunes they aren't She says feel free to exchange them bot
my Momdoesn t want to hurt herfeebngs,so she makes me wear
them - espectally when we're aro\Uld A\Ult Amy (the relative)
which lS qwte a b1t Aunty THINKS her lllSte IS the greatest
Now tt comes to the latest present - a dress that looks
cruddy on me Mom says I have to wear 11 to a farmly reumon m
August, aild there s thts second rnusm who will be there and he s
a doll I don'twant to look and feel dumb around hun - MUST I'
Dear Must
Trouble With older relatives 1s they often rlon t reahze httle
rueces become b1g g~rls who like to p1ck out the>r own clothes
Trouble w1th your mother 15 she hasn t told Aunt Amy this
fact of hie
When Aunty s taste makes waste ' (or m1sery 11 you re
forced to wear the dress) I vote for an exchange You can soften
the blow by tellmg her the f1t 1sn t nght and won t she please
come along to help w1tha new seledwn ' - HELEN'
.'
·:,
..,
~
~•
,
.•,
,,
~
~
~
~
•
~
~
.•
'>l "'od
•·
ay's
~
Property
Oy Helen and Sue Hottel
,
~ ::«r~w.; ... -.,..*~....::-::~,;<~ S:$$ { ~!S$:0.""...\.':».:' ~ N*«i~ »-"'*'":\~~-::::.~:
~
Transfers
Robel t Fo1rest to Ed1th J
JIVIden Lot 311 Middleport
Cla1 a Mae Pyles ded d to
George E Pyles Charles
Pyles All of Trans Chester
Rodger T Shenefield to Cla1r
Shenefield Parcels Salem
A1 cl11e E Lee June P Lee to
P,, ul K Russell Max~ne M
Russell 100 Acre I ot No 29!i
2 0 Ac1es Syracuse
Wilham F Rogers Nancy A
Rogel s to H Gene Blocker
Lynn J Holmes 40 Acres 42
Aco es 40 Acre Columbw
Walla (:e B Damewood
Myrtle I Damewood to John L
Damewood Lmda Damewood
9 60 Acres Orange
Jo hn L Hage1 ty Ahce
Hager!) to Frank Gilkey Jr
Cui!He Gll kcy
Parcels
Rutland
Ann M Sandford dec to
Helen Sandf01 d Barth Manon
Sand! rd Casley Mwerals
Lel<!rt
R1cha1 d J
Chambers
Martha H Chambers to Ronald
Dale I hom as Karen Lee
Th IIH,Js Lot 131 Middle port
?atnua A Jrwetl to Pearhe
F Je~ell Jr 25 Acres
Rutland
Orville Johnson Velma
Johnson to Gary S Aspm
Karen Asp10 Parcels Salem
PAUL HI'ZGERALD
Horwrs Won in
Seminary Work
~
"~
·
~~Sport
Parade
~
By MILTON RICHMAN
liPI Sports Editor
;
NEW YORK (UPI)-Gale Sayers makes sure he keeps busy
It's Vllal
The way he does IS by throwing himself completely mto the
flv«unes~-week TV show he has In Chicago, "Gayle Sayers
Conunents, as well as some other outs1de mterests he has so
that he doesn I dwell on his football career too much
He knows 1f he does, he runs the nsk of being depressed, of
wondermg whether he has any football career left at 29 Sayers
has womed about that, and st1ll Is worrymg now
You know the old line "if-l'm not-there-&art wtthout-me '"
Well, there 's nothmg fWlny about 11 to Sayers
The Chicago Bears have started wtthout h1r0 They've begun
practice a~ their Rensselaer, lnd, trall1lllg camp and when all
the regulars showed up last Saturday, Gale Sayers did not
The Bears brtll>ant rwmmg back who has played only two
league games m each of the last two seasons, has been working
out regularly the past few months followmg a third knee
operatwn but Dr Theodore Fox who performed the surgery,
feels 1t s m Sayers best Interest if he delays testmg the knee m
actual workouts
Sayers has reached the ' cr11lcal phase' of his rehab1litatwn,
and the way thmgs stand now Abo G1bron, the Bears' new head
coach ,1sn t sure whether or not he can coWl! on hun this year
And 1f Gale Sayers doesn t make llthis year, that could bo the
end
Paul Darrel Fitzgerald son
law of Mrs Max10e Arnold
+++
a long hme res1dent of the
Dear Must I
Pomeroy area and husband of
Wh1ch w1ll e1ther be an eye-opener for her (to your taste)
U>e forme• Susanna Arnold
or an eyebrow ra1ser (that you should be so tasteless' )
has ach1eved h1gh scholashc
Anyway I'm sure Aunt Amy would much rather you have
honors upon the complellon of
presents you would use and enJOY than ones you'd hke to throw m
one year of study at Nazarene
Hank Stram, the rnach of the Kansas C1ty Ch1efs must be
a corner and forget After all she SAYS Feel free to exchange
Theological Senunary 1n
gettmg soft
them '-DUE
Kansas Cit) Mo
He gave h1s ball club the day off SWlday
+++
F1tzgerald graduated cum
Dear Rap
It was the f1rst rnmplete day off he has g1ven his players m 13
laude from Ohvet Nazarene
years
At 19, our daughter moved mto her own apartment after
College 10 Kankakee lit 1n
gettmg a fullllme Job
1970 and began studymg at the
Now she mtends to get marned and I d like to know When
sem1na1 y 1n 197 1 The
Dave Kmgman, San Franc1sco s s1x foot-siX slugger, says
she moved out agamst our w1shes should we pa) for her wed
Nazarene
lheolog!l'ai
physically, I'm not that strong,' and what makes 11 such a JOke
ding' - MOTHER OF MANY
Semu ary IS an mshtutwn of 1s he means 11 and says thiS all Wtlh a straight face
the Church of the Nazarene and
That s h1s problem he doesn t really know how strong he 1s '
IS reported to be lhe only says Charhe Fox, the Gl81lts' manager A week or so ago he
Dear Mother Of Many
Naza> ene mstitut!Dn offenng a took a half swmg agamst Carlton -that s all 11 was a half
How can you hold a grudge when your daughter only wanted
THISTLEDOWN RESULTS
course of stud) leadmg to the swmg-and he hits a hne dr1ve outta the Philadelplna ball park '
to be on her own'
Cl EVE I AND ( UPI) - Dare
U tl s the marnage you re agamst, then you have a r1ght to to Reason w1th leadmg JOCkey Master of Dt\lml) Degree
Kmgman, With 21 homers already wasn t too 1r0pressed With
quesllon 1f you're holdmg back to get even -well 11 s st1ll your Danny We1ter won the The F1tzgeralds are res1dmg that blow
right She probably wouldn't want her parents forkmg over featured allo11ance race at at943 1Cleveland Ave Kansas
The w10d was blowm~ out ' he says
City They areparentsofat~o
money for somethmg or someone they resent Stra1ghten out Tlnstledo11n Monday
)ear old son Jason Paul
your hassles f1rst and then diScuss the weddmg - SUE
The three year-Old f!IIy was
Joe Lou1s 11 turns out 1s rebred, but he's still f1ghtmg and to
timed m t 07 4 5 for the five
what extent 1s detailed m Barney Nagler s absorbmg book ' The
Dear Mother Of Many
and one-half furlongs and
Brown Bomber ' Also recommended Jerry Izenberg s 'How
Let's look at the 'many' m your stgnature It m1ght have returned $7 60
Many Miles to Camelot,' another provocallve book exarnmmg
something (or everything) to do w1th your daughters movmg
The dally double pamng of
those aspects of sports wh1ch do not turn out to bo all fun and
RIVERDOWNS RESULTS
out
Beau Hunk and Charming Lmk
CINCINNATI I UP,I) - Duro games
It also may mfluence your wornes about the weddmg H you was worth $36 60
can't afford the tab, then say so Don t h1de behmd excuses that
The 3 825 fans wagered T beat Anglo 10 the stretch to
Chi Chi Rodriguez says the trouble With most weekend golfers
wm the lea lured $2 400
make HER feel gutlty - HELEN
$323 707
1s
they worry too much about ho~ they look
allowance race ctt Rlver Downs
When you worry too much about how good you look out there,
Monday Golden Moomoo was
you
re m trouble, ' Rodr1guez says ' For example, they talk
Uurd
"''"
Duro T ~as olocked at about the way Doug Sanders looks when he swmgs AU I know 1s I
·u; "C:P
:emtm
1 12 I 5 over the muddy SIX never see the guy out of the fa~rway You can also 11orry too
much about how your clothes look I II g1ve you another example
furlongs
The dad) double pa1nng of I gotta wear loose pants Baggy So what' I don t go out there for
Maka M10t and Instan t a fashwn show
Dec1s10n pa1d $84 20
BY JACK O'BRIAN
usmg a frmtless banana stalk as the pseudo
Bobby f1scher took awhile, but he fmally got back m the ball
The 3 19I thoroughbred
skeleton for h1s anatomy lesson It was an 1ac10 g fans wagered $263 999 game
F1RST STAGE OF
hilarwus mterlude between ar1as and trapeze
I m not the least hit womed about them fmding a su1table
THE MUSIC HAU.
dazzhng and 1deal contrast to the histoncally
room m Reykjavik look they foWld a tablem Pam, didn I they'
NEW YORK tKFS) - We were recalling
too-early presentallon of Martha Graham and
Radto C1ty MusiC Hall and >Is history the other her artily styhzed troupe of postummg modern
DEDICATION HELD
' dkybutwedidn tgettotheopemng Not)ustone dancers
Marsha Beth Kmg daughter
SCIOTO RESULTS
$1t8 80 $26 80 and $It 40 B)e
theater was built - but two The Music Hall cost
Songwnters Dorothy Fields and Junmy of Mr and Mrs Arland K10g
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Our Bye Beau pa1d $5 40 and $3 60
$12,000 000, the smaller theater $4,000 000 The
McHugh, who couldn t g1ve you anything but Middleport, was ded1cated B1tler Sweet, a 50-1 selectiOn J W Song returned $-1 20
latter carne m at some $4 000 000 Wlder 1ts love baby gave their Immensely popular song recentl) at the Middleport nosed out Bye Bye Beau to wm
The 7 9 qmnella pa1d $223 70
budget , for It was planned 10 '29 and the collaborations Patnc1a Bowman was pr1111a F~rst Bapllst Church TheRe\ 111e featured e1ght race a $1 200 The 6-7 mghtly double pa1rmg
Depression-ravaged labor costs, as 10 a ballerma w1th the Corps de Ballet and wowed Charles S1mons ofll c1ated at pace at Sc10to Downs Monday of M1ss Patt>e Brooke and
captlahst s dream adjusted themselves
the assemblage, en pomte It was hke 100 Ed the sen1re 1111h Mrs Beulah mght J W Song was lh1rd
Alpme Ryal was worth $29 60
drastically downward And on Dec 21 1932 the Sulhvan Shows - 11 even had the Tuskegee Whtte smg10g the ded1eat10n
The time for the mile was
The • 730 harness racmg fan>
most resplendent Openmg N1ght 10 the history Cho1r the Berry Brothers, Jan Peerce ( m case song accompamed at the organ 2 03 2 5
"agered a total of $240 673
Our Bitter Sweet returned
of show busmess was held Everyone was there
you ve wondered how long that Met tenor's been by Mrs Gerald Anthony
from Mayor Junmy Walker soon to walk a around starnng), Taylor Holmes (ask Grand
plank to Europe m mumc1pal d1sgrace but then
pop who he was), plus another dozen acts suitr)
the most graceful man m the htstory of pohtics, songstress Gertrude N1esen was added, pius a
on down to the producer of the state show, Leon
celebrated vaudeville knockabout team, Barto
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - No 1 $25 000 Buckeye Tenms r1de to the second round when
Leorudoff, and the creator of The Rockettes
and MaiUl You remember Barto & Mann'
seeded Juruny Connors got off Champwnsh1ps, bot warmed h1s scheduled opponent
Russell Markert
You re old'
No mov1e was to be shown Strictly stage
But that all m-person opemng bill was to a cold start Monday m the up to Win h1s last e1ght games George Govan of France w1th
and tr1p fll'st-ro\Uld opponent drew because of lDJUr>es
shows, gtgantic m thell' technology and casts
Wllque All--stage shows as a Musil' Hall pohc)
Two
other
French
The Da1~ Sentinel V1]ay Amntre), 7-0, IHl
That Dec '1:1, 1932 Inaugural ProductiOn was a ended The pubhc d1d not cotton to them nor
DEVOTED TO THE
Doubles play begms today at rep resentatives Wanaro
blockbuster Its stars were Weber & Fields, tbe even s1lk Mov1es cellulmded mto the breach I
INTEREST OF
Buckeye
Boys Ranch m nearby N'Godrella and Jean Chan
MEIGS MASON AREA
Martm & LewiS or Rowan & Martm of their and success whammed mto the 6 250-seat
freau, !lllssed smgles matches
CHESTER
l
TANNEHILL
Grove City
I
constderably more arllsllcally successful day,
amphitheater never to be diverted
Euc Ed
Connors 19 of Belleville, m' They showed up late and wtll
ROBERT HOEFLICH
and Ray Bolger DeWoU Hopper rec1ted
The s1ze of the theater made 11 the cynosure
C•ly Edtlor
needed a service break m the play 10 the doubles com
'Casey at the Bat,' another wtldly popular of all Hollywood produchon plans 1ts standards
Publ she d daly except
12th game of the f>rst set to petition
by Th e Oh o vattey
performer now perhaps recognized as the fmal were then and remam the highest m the nation Satvroay
Publ :!.h ng Com pany
I ll beat Amrltrej of India and
Raul Ram>rez of MeXIco was
husband of the late Hedda Hopper tho we Its shows as a rule must be entertaU"Ung and Court S
Pomeroy
011 o
forced
to cancel on orders from
avmd
a
tie
breaker
457 69 Bu!. ness Ofhu P~one
suspect today's younger readers w1ll ask clean' Lately 1t's been forced to take a few PG 'il911156
his
phys1ctan
Ed••or al Pnon e 991
Second--seeded Bob Hewitt of
• Who's she'' So forget Hedda forget DeWolf rated mov1es but they re the ltd> est available at 1157
In another hrst round s1ngles
South
Afnca was forced to go
Second class postagP pad ill
Hopper, too, if not ' Casey at the Bat '
the>r moments of availability and the Mus1c Pome roy Qt1 0
three sets to beat Butch See- match Zan Guerry, of Lookout
Nat Dnal
adverts ng
There were The Wallendas a c1rcus star- Hall >ns>sts even w1th PG-raters that any ugi)
wagen of Bays1de NY 6-7, 6-4, Mo\Ullam, Tenn , ral11ed to
r epresentat ve
Boll nel!
act swmgmg proscenlum-lngh for the top- sequences or dialogue be blipped or chopped It Gal lagh er Inc 11 East 41nd 6-2
beat Anand AmrltreJ, V!Jay s
New York C ty New York
balrnny trade Tito Ruffo operat1c basso
brother, 6-7 6-1, 7-6
DICk
Stockton,
the
No
3
seed
still1s a theater to wh1ch you can send the k1ds 51Subscr
pi on r ates
De
rattled Alp1an rafters 'Doc Rockwell, one of
Gonzales will not make an
The Ill's! mo111e at the Mus1c Hall was an I ve r ed by carr er where here also won hts first match,
ava
lab
e
50
cen
l
s
per
Neek
the finest-ever, funmest vaudeVIlle solo acts early Frank Capra, ' The B1tter Tea of General Bv Motor Rou te wh ere carr er 6-7 6-2, 6-4, over Ivan Molina of appearance Wllil Wednesday
brought hlS Down East accent and allopomts Yen ' starrmg Barbara Stanwyck as the sugar serv ce not ava table One Colomb1a, Stockton, of Port when he meets Mtke Estep m a
montt \I 75 By ma n Oh o Washmgton, NY , Is nursing a second ro\Uld smgles match
1\Ulacy to that opemng bill Doc, and lS he sllll m the pot and Ntis Asther as the yenrung and
w va One year S\4 00
Also Wednesday Gonzales and
altve and clowrung up 10 his beloved Mame'
General Followed by the d1stmgmshed George S x months Sl 15 Three pulled stomach muscle
montn s i4 50 Subscr pi on
Connors
wtll oppose the Amrl
The
fourth
seed,
ageless
had personal tragedies not of his plannmg m h1s Arllss and D1ck Powe II m ' The Kmg s pr ce n cluct es Sunday T me s
tre)
brothers
10 doubles
Pancho Gonzales, got a free
Sent n e t
s\Ulset seasons He did a mock-professor turn Vacatwn' Then State Fa1r
,,.
.
m
Talk
~
By Paul Crabtree
TUESDAY, JULY 18
If you succeed m overthrowmg the Establishment, you
BECOME the Establishment
Which Is a way of mtroducmg a few conunents about two
subjects which have already been talked about far too much
Long hlW' for men and brassieres (or the lack of them) for
women
Both have now become Institutionalized, wh1ch means they
now are part of the Amencan social melange
And the fates have ordained that both will stay around - for
a good wht!e at least And maybe we can stop talltmg about them
-at last
+++
Why ' Because of televlS>on, for the most part
The 'youtll subculture,'' about whtch so much was heard m
the late Sixties and early Seventies, rejected a lot of !lllddltH:lass
values, and nowhere was this more evtdent that the rejecllon of
the crew-cut, buttoned-down, natural-shoulder Ivy League look
of the prev1ous decade Out came the love heads, bell bottoms,
leather vests, and heaven knows what else But most of all, out
came hair
Hllll' by the mch, the foot, the yard - spilling over shoulders
muscularly-developed as well as mtellectually..stooped
stdeburns sweepmg w1ldly toward the chin beards that make
kids of IB!ook like U S Grant or John Brown or one of the Smith
Brothers As a symbol of protest, tt was superb
The no-bra~t-all fervor had different ongms commg mostly
from the Women sUb fanattcs It caught on to a luntted degree
- mostly In the btg Cities, and mostly by the g>rl who could get
away with 11, Without lookmg as if she were melting
+++
Now comes telev>ston, that great equalizer and creator of
confor!lllty If a TV commercial 1s shot and makes a hit, the
sponsor may want to use 11 for several years UkewlSe, wtth a
character m a new senes He has to look pretty much the same
each season, or tt w1ll spml the reruns (Exceptions are eternal
ser1es people bke Little Joe Cartwright and D1ck Van Dyke )
The TV edicts Long ha1r on men would bo m- not too long
but not so short as to turn off the Pepst generation And
brass>eres would stay where they belong On ((Sally Struthers of
' All m the Falllliy started the senes w1th a Sh~rley Temple
ha1rcut and no bra She's wearmg a proper foundation these
days)
And so, teleVISIOn - that great purveyor of the vulgar and
the beautiful as well -has ordamed what probably w111 he for
mat for most of us for the next several years Wa1t and see if I'm
r1ght
+++
ON THE TV DIAL Joe Cocker heads a spec1al from London
m a rock concert 9 30p m on WSAZ TV Jerry Reed has one of
my favorite artists, Chet Atkms on his show at 7 30, WCHS.TV
Mov>es "N•ghtand Day ' !I 30 p m and 'Treasure of Lost
Canyon' 4 p m Wednesday both WBNS.TV
,
r,
0
li
~
M
'i
1,,
,
Top·SeededJim Connors Advances
I
OPCO Division Manager Higgins Will Retire
.t>dward A H> ggms will
retire Aug I as manager of the
Portsmouth DIVISIOn of Oh10
Power Company, whtch m
eludes Portsmouth Ironton
Chesapeake and Pomeroy
areas
'
'
1
,
After graduahng from Ports
mouth H1gh School m June of
1925, he Immediately started to
work for Oh10 Power Company
at the former Tenth and Off
nere Streets office 1n
preparation for entermg OhiO
State Umvers1ty m the fall to
study ele~=tr>cal engmeer10g
He worked four summers for
the company wh1le attendmg
Oh10 State and m June 1929, he
graduated w1th a degree m
electncal eng1neenng
mamed On a Wheeler, and
started working full hme for
Ohio Power Company He was
elected a member of honorary
fratemthes Tau Beta Pi Eta
Kappa Nu and S1gma X1
A year after he began h1s
employment at Portsmouth
H1ggms was promoted to JUnior
power engmeer at New
Philadelphia and Denmson
Oluo He became a power
eng10eer at Canton Oh10 10
1935 Steubenville DIVISIOn
commerc ial
mdustnal
manager 10 1940 and d1stnct
manager at East Liverpool 10
1954
He was returned to Ports
mouth as dlstr>cl manager 10
1958 after the death of J R
Thomas and was promoted to
Portsmouth DIVISIOn Manager
10 196J wh1ch pos1110n he now
holds In 1968 he served a year
on the board of directors of the
Amencan Electrtc Power
Serv1ce CorporatiOn of New
Y01 k City He IS a registered
ProfessiOnal Eng10eer and a
past president and member of
the Portsmouth Chapter of the
OhiO Society of ProfessiOnal
Engmeers
He has helped coal mmers
se ttle electncal problems deep
10s1de mmes he has played a
ma1ur role 10 gethng mdustnes
to halt the generatiOn of their
own power and purchase
e!ec tnc1ty flom OhiO Power
he has been a sta un ch advocate
of the electr1c he~t pump and
he has been on the scene dunng
tornadoes and fl oods
In service to h1s commumt)
H1ggms IS past president of the
Portsmouth Area Chamber ol
Commerce and a present
member of the boar~ of
d>rectors He IS a member of
U1e C1hzens Advisory Comm1ttee rast president and
member of the Portsmouth
Rotary Club past president
and member of the Portsmouth
Area Growth Foundahon, a
member of the board of
trustees of the Sc10to County
Umted Way the Salval!on
Armv Adv1s ory Board a
member of the Central OhiO
Valley Industrial Council, and
the
Sou theaste rn
Oh1o
Regwnal Counc1l
'
At the First Presbytcnan
Church he IS a member of the
sessiOn and a teacher m the
mens B1bie class He 1s a
memb€1 r the Scotl!sh R1te
Masumc 01 der the Elks Lodge
and Country Club, a supporter
of the YMCA a member of the
Mercy Hospttat Lay Adv1sory
Board and a former president
of OhiO Power Company s
State Veteran Employees
Assoc>atwn
My w1fe, Ona, and I have so
many lhtngs to do durmg
retirement that I don t know
how we II get everythmg
done, H1gg10s sa1d 1 do
expect to remam m close touch
w1th
CIVIC
acliv1ttes,
however he satd
H1ggms 1s a devoted
photography fan and 8
fisherman Both he and Mrs
H1ggms are hooked on golf
Both enJOY travehnR
'
An odd>ly 10 the hfe of
H1ggms 1s the fact that, while
he has worked m a number of
locatiOns m OhiO, he 15 retirmg
from a locatwn that 1s only
about 200 feet from his birthplace ( Re>tz Mustc Center
park10g lot) 'My birthplace
home ISn't there any longer,
but you m1ght say I've never
gotten far from home," the
manager sa>d
H1gg1ns' father, Hugh H
H1ggms, also was d1v1sion
manager of the same terntory
at the hme of hts death 10 1936
Mr and Mrs H1ggms reside
~~ 2860 C>rcle Dr1ve, Ports·
mouth They have a son,
Dav1d m Ch1cago, and a
granddaughter
ED HIGGINS
'
run s 111 the fJrst mnmg and
TUESDAY JULY 18 1971
News 3 4 8 10 15 CBS News 8 10 I Dream of Jeann1e
13 Truth or Conseo 6 SP111" me St 20 Hathayoqa 33
6 30 - New s 3 • 6 8 10 15 Grand Masters Chess 3
7 00 - New s 6 10 What s My Line 8 I: lee r..o 1U Green Acres
D 00 -
3 Farmers Daughter 13 Andy Gnrfllh 15 DICk Van Dyke 4
tnsogh l 33
7 30 - Masterpiece Theatre 33 Ponderosa 3 15 Mod Squad 6
13 Jerry Reed 8 A B1rthday Story 20 Masterp ece Theatre
33
8 00 - Magg•e and The Beautiful Machme 20
Advocates 2Cl 33
NB C Act on
Playhouse 3 4 Movte 6 13 Evemng al Pops 20 33
9 30 - Cannon 8 Dom It 20 Handful s or Ashes 33 Good
Vtbrahons From London 3 4 15
10 00 - New s Weather Sports 20 Marcus Welby 4 6 13 F trmg
Line 33
10 30 - WSAZ Comment 3 Arthur Smo lh 8 Probe The World
Around Us 4 Road Raclnq s Whtte Wa ve 15
II OO - News3 4 6 810 13 15
II 30 - Dick Cavett 6 Johnny Carson 3 4 15
Moth er s Hou se 8 Movte Night and Day
McCall 13
I 00 - Your Health
I 30 -
Movie
Our
Movie
Cash
4
News 4 13
WEDNESDAY JULY 19 t972
6 00 - Sunrtse Semmar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Farmttme 10 Farm Report 13 6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4 Btble Answer s 8 Urban League 13
6 45 - CorncobReportJ 6 ss - Rocky - Bullwlnkle I J
7 00 - Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 News6
7 30- Sleepy Jerrers 8 Romper Room 6 Underdog 13
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue 6 13 Sesame St JJ
8 30 Jack Lalanne 13 Tennessee Tuxedo 6
9 00 - Paul Otxon 4 Phil Donahue 15 Luct s Toyshop 10
Peyton Place 13 Romper Room B Mr Rogers 33 What
Every Woman Wants to Know 3 Ttmmy and Lassie 6
9 30 - Truth or Conseq 3 Phol Donahue 8 Etectm Co 33
Moke Douglas 6 One Lofe to L1ve 13
tO 00 - Donah Shore 3 15 LuCille Bait tO Dock V•n Dyke t3
Hathayoga 33
10 30- Concentrat on 3 15 Ph tl Donahue 4 Amateurs
II
CHICAGO (UP!) - Joe Mor
gan the speedy httle Cmcm
nat1 Reds sernnd baseman
couldn't beheve 11 when some
one told h1m he had been se
lected for the Natwnal League
All-Star team
You mean l won Morgan
sa1d 'That s 111e top to a per
feet day nght 111ere
Morgan s day had been domg
pretty well before the news He
rapped out three of the Reds 14
hits Monday mght as Cm
cmnall reeled off 1ts seventh
straight wm 7 2 over the Chicago Cubs
Morgan a >foot 7 150
poWlder obtamed from th e
Houston Astros last wmter
was p1cked for the All-Star
game by fans along "1th the
top vote-ge tter catcher Johnny
Bench
Morgan JUst beat out Glenn
Beckert of the Cubs for the
second base pos1twn, w1th 654,035 votes to Beckert s 640 748
I gave up hope earlier when
I was 20 votes behmd Beckert
Morgan sa1d referr10g to pro
gress reports released b) the
league headquart ers
Stuffing Ballot
Reds manager Sparky Anderson also had womes but
they were different
I was alra1d when the last
rnunt came out and Morgan
was leadmg Cub fans 11ould
stuff the ballot box Anderson
sa1d 'Th ey have such num
hers 10 Chicago I was afra1d
Joe wouldn t wm '
Morgan leads the league m
runs scored 176) walks 168)
and stolen bases (34)
Bench an All-Star selectwn
for the fourth strBlght year
called 1t a tremendous honor
I uppers Pla1ns
Pony
baseball team erupted lor four
and Tomorrow
Hawau Ftve 0 8 10
Reds Up Lead
To Six Games
Gut de to
Love 10 Sptof Second 13 Beverly H1llb illo es 8 My Three Sons
10 tn School lnstruct oon 33 F Troop 6
00 - Famoty Arra~r 8 10 Love Amer ican Style 13 Sale or
Century 3 15 Commun1que 6
11 30 - Hollywood Squares • 15 Love of Lote 8 tO Bew1tched 6
13 Sesame Street 20
t2 00 - Jeopardy 3 15 Password 6 Bob Brauns 50 50 Club 4
added mne more 10 the tlmd
and behind the on hit p1lclun g
of Don me E1clun ger ra1sed 1ts
record to 8-1
Coach Denms Newland s
powerful Tuppers Pla10s club
co npnsed of a few of th e
starters on the Eastern H1gh
Schoo l sec ll onal champs
ba se ball squad th1 s year
npped three Reedsville p1t
chers lor t> h1is Reedsville m
Uurd place fell to 6-3
E1ch10ger gave up only a
second 1nmng smgle a boun cer
that found 1ts way through th e
mf1cld to Reeds ville s S
Dillon E1chmgcr fanned two
walked four and Jut one batter
l.endwg E1chmger plenty of
support was Steve Goebel who
sla pped two s1n gles tw o
doubles and a tnple 10 a
perfect day at the plute Other
hitters for the wtnners were
M1ke La rk1ns w1th three
s1ngtes and a double T1m Kuhn
lhree
swgles
Greg
Wmebrenner two s10gles and
Phil Bowen had a double
Doug Adams who started
and was charged 111th the loss,
Steve Holter and Marlin
combmed to work the mound
for Reedsvtlle
Tuppers Platns wlll play
Reedsville th1s Fnday at
Tuppers Platns
and sa1d he felt better about 11
now than he d1d Jasl,yfllr when
he went through a batlmg
slump
Bench currently leads the
league m home runs (24) and
nms batted m (71)
The wm 10 the f1rst of three
games here w1th the Cubs put
Cmcmnat1 stx games ahead of
the Houston Astros m the Na
Ilona! League West race In the
second game of the senes
tomght, Gary Nolan, the lea
gue's wmnmgest pitcher wlll
try for his 14th Win aga1nst 1:\\0
losses
Cub Errors Hurt
Ferg1e Jenkms, the Cubs
powerful nghthander will try
for h1s 12th 11m m 2C decisiOns
Clay Carroll p1cked up his
21st save of the season Monday
mght after takmg over for
Wayne S~rnpson 10 the e1ghth
Simpson IS now 6-3
Morgan got Cmc1nna' 1s f rst
h1t 10 the fourth 10mng but was
ruled out when Bobby Tolan s
groWld ball htt hun on the
basepaths
After the bases were loaded
that mmng Tolan scored on a
sacnflc e ny and Cesar Gero
rumo smgled home Tony Perez
and Pete Rose
Rose homered m the next
1nnmg and the Reds concluded
the1r scormg m the Sixth when
Cub r eliever Dan McGinn
threw the ball away mto r>ght
field while tr y10g to na1t
S1mpson at f1rst
As Cub outfielders rounded
up the ball two r\Uls scored
and Sunpson came home when
Beckert thre" the ball mto the
dugout wh1ie trymg to throw
out Morgan at hrst
Th e defe ndm g c harnpwn
Ma tor League ~tandtngs
By Untfed Press International
National Leagu e
Ptlt
New York
St Lou
Chtcago
Mont rea
Ph Ia
C nco
Houston
L A
~tlanta
San Fran
San Ot ego
Tuppers Plains
409 010 1- 15 15
Reedsville
020 000 ll- 2 I
E1ch1nger and W10ebrenner
Adams IL P) Hotter ( IJ
Martin (31 and Harns
38 50
31 52
432 16
373 2
Monday s Results
Bench, Allen Are Top
C1nc 7 Ch1cago 2
P ti s 6 Atlanta 5
St Lou 3 Houston 2
Today s Probable Ptlchers
IAll T1mes EDTI
C1nc nnat
(Nolan
13 2)
at
ChiCago IJenk ns 11 81 1 30
pm
Atlan ta
(Reed
7 !O J
at
P1ttsburgh (Blass 10 JJ 8 p m
St Lou s (Cleveland 11 4) at
Hous ton (R euss 5 8) B 30 p m
New York (Ma tl ack 9 5) at
Los Angeles ( John 8 4J 11 p m
r-'ntladdpr.1-1 (Champ iOJl 4 9)
at San D~ego IArlin 7 101 10 30
pm
Montreal (Moore 1 3) at Sa n
sea (Bryant 7 4) 11 p m
Franc
Wednesday s Games
Atlant a at Pills
C nc at Ch1cago
St Lou at Houston
New York at L A
Ph1 a at San D ego
Montreal at San Fran
Amer can league
East
w I
Oakland
Ch•cago
gb
573
46
561 I
39
500 6
37
474 8
34
425 12
32
405 13 '
w I pel g b
5? 30 634
45 39 536 8
M nn
42 48
525
9
Ca l1!
Texas
38 47
447
417
15
8
De troll
47
Ball
Boston
New York
Cleve
M l wa
We st
KC
35
36
39
41
46
47
pet
41 Jl 500 1
35 49
2
Monday s Results
Ball 3
Te xas
1
DelrOtt 3 Ch1 cago 1
Oakland a t M twa ( ppd ra n J
Today s Probable Pttchers
Ch•cago (Lemon ds
Bahnsen
11 10)
at
13
or
Det r o1f
!Coleman 118 1 9 pm
Oakland IHorlen 2 1 and
Hun ter 11 4) at M !wauk ee
(Ste phenson 2 2 and Lon borg ( 7
4) 2 7 p m
Ca forn1a
( Ryan 11 6) at
Tex as { Hand 7 6) 8 30 p m
Clevel and (Perry 15 7 and
W lcox 6 11 ) at Kansas C ty
JSp liltorfl9 5 and Dal Canton 5
3) l 7 p m
Collapsed
M1nnes ota (Perry 7 8) at New
York ( K I1ne 8 4) 7 30 p m
All-Star Vote Getters
NEW YORK IUP! I-Catcher
Johnn) Bench of the Cmcmnal!
Reds who IS replaying h1s
MVP 1970 season after a
d1sappotntm g 197 1 per
formance was the lughest
vote getter fr om fans who
selected the Na twn al Leab'lle
All-Star team wh1ch meets the
Amencan Leaguers Ju ly 25 1n
Atlanta Ga
Bench who leads the NL m
homers and runs batted 1n
rece1ved 1 229 677 votes to beat
out Manny SangUitlen of the
11orld champwn Pittsburgh
Pirates for the startmg catch
mg berth Th1rd baseman Joe
Torre of the St Lou~> Car
dinals the NL s MVP m t971
ranked second 1n th e overall
volmg w1th I 180 613 followed
b}
outfielders
Roberto
Cleme nte and ll>llle SU!rgell of
the Ptrates w1th I 1191 623 and
717 597 votes respectively
Round1n g out the NL s
startin g team w1ll be f>rst
baseman Lee May of the
Houston Astros who had
688 581 votes second baseman
Jo e Morgan of the Reda .,.ho
had 654 0~ and shortstop Don
Kessmger of the Ch1cago Cubs
who had 61i5 921 votes
The pitchers and ullhl) men
w111 be selected by Danny
Murtaugh who ret1red for
health reasons last wmter after
leading the P1rates to their
world champwnslup Mur
taugh also led the P1rates to
their only other "orld cham
pwnsh1p m 1960
Murtaugh and h1s coachmg
staff Will also choose the
players other than regulars
They are expected but not
obhgated to lollow the votmg
pattern of the fans
NEW YORK (UP[)- D>ck
Allen a Natwnal I eag ue
castoff who has found a home
w1th the Ch1cago Wh1te Sox
polled o>e1 a m1ihon votes to
become
the
Amencan
League s top vote-getter m
ballot10g by fans for the All
Star Game Jul) 25 10 Atlanta
Allen a mulll talented slug
ger "ho had become a problem
ch1ld when he played w1th the
Phlladelplua Plulhes, St Loms
Cardinals and Los Angeles
Dodgers ol the Nallonat
I eague
recent
1n
yea 1s
rece1ved I 092 758 votes to
eas1ly wm the startmg first
base assignment for the 43rd
annual classic next week
Allen currently leads the
Amencan League m home runs
119 ) and runs batted 10 161 )
Th1s w11l be h1s fifth All-Star
appearance He represented
the Nallonal League four times
when w1th the Ph1lhes and the
Cardinal<
Brooks Rob10son , the Balli
more Onoles shck heldmg
th1rd baseman, was the only
other Amencan Leaguer to
recetve over a mtlhon votes
Although Robmson IS havmg
an off-year ~1th JUSt a 254
batt10g average he sllll polled
r, 1. mll I !u 1 sd n ,Jt fi
St t oud Gamt
II c Pome1 O\ l1gers Da te
B1t wmJg lHIIJlcd the defen
clmg lha n p10n NcY. Ha ve n
Cub s \Hth ( nh one hi! a thud
tnmng Slrt gle b-.,. D Ruu ~ h and
c r a<.:ku l !\\ smg lcs Lfl l\\ 0
K1wams w111 pta) the Pomeroy
T1gers fhursday at 7 15
I ead1ng !utters for the
winners were Smtth with a
home run and s1ng te Porter
had a smgle and double and
Spencer had two s1ngles
VA~E
RATED
b 1t s n P<H:tng ! IS
let~rn to thl \\HI D n: ush \\dS
Ute l ostng hurle1
JffJcJal
1t
USED CARS
Hanel) Ma1 shall h.od I\\ o
s mgles <111d H1ck Johnson had a
double f01 the 11gers who
scored three m the f1 rst two m
tl1e second ond SIX m the th>rd
fhe game ~a s called alter
three and a h,lil 1nmn gs
because of the te n 1un rule
lh1rd Game
1 he C>emng s th1rd stra1g ht
one httler \\ as pitc hed fn the
!mal ga me b) Pt Pleasant
K1wams Sm1th who 1 cnd(;t ed
1 041 128 votes and ~•II be but a fi fth 10n1ng smgle to the
makm g Ius e1ght11 All-Star Ga lhpohs While Sox s Saul
McG u1re
appea rance
In takm g the w1n the
Completmg the Amencan
1eague Infield are seco nd
baseman Rod Carew of the
Minnesota Twms and shortstop
l u1s Apancw of the Boston
Red Sox Both are 1epeaters
from last year alon g With
Robmson and outflCidc• Carl
Yastrzemsk1 of Boston
Carew rece1ved 812 055 votes
to eas1 ly boat out Cook1r RoJ as
of the Kansas Cit) Royals
wh1le lhe veteran Apari CIO
who may not he able to pia)
because of an InJury rece1ved
625 074 'utes well ahead of
Bert Campanens of the
Oakland Athlehcs
B11l Frechan won the sta1 t10 g
catchers JOb drawmg 767 538
votes to bea t out Rav Fosse of
the Cleveland lnd1ans
In the outfield along With
Yastrzemskt w•ll be Oakland s
Regg>e Jackson, who rece1ved
I fif N U~ Bl
NAlU ll
902 421 votes and Bobby
ADDITIONAL OR
Murcer of the Ne~ York
WITHOUT COUPON 1Q¢
Yankees who recetved 506 241
votes
Carlos May of the White Sox
and Lou Pimella and An1os Oils
of the Royals were the fourth
fifth and SIXth outfielders,
respectively accordmg to the
fans' vote
All Star manager Earl
Weaver of the Baltimore
Orwtes wlil name the pitchers
and sernnd str10gers later this
week
70 VOLKSWAGEN
2 DOOR
4 SPEED
'1595
Karr & Van Zandt
You II L ke Ou r Qua lity
WOJy at Dong Bus ness
GMAC FINANCING
991 5342
Open
Pomeroy
Ev('n1 ng s Ttl8 00
T1ISPMSat
SHOP
~.:
tl
RAND IMN A lY
Road 1\lla.s Ill
REGULAR 2 95
(U APJ\~ CD ~
ADDITIONAL OR
WITHOUT COUPON
144
LANTERN
BATTERY
REG 1 69
99~
Right Ltmg
LONG BEACH Cahf (UP I)
- Los Angeles Rams quarter
back Roman Gabnel suffered a
rnllapsed nght lung Mondav
and w111 be s1dehned for at
least one month
Gabnel was 1hro11 mg the
footballm a non-contact dnll at
the Rams Long Beach camp
on h>s first day of pract1ce,
when he compla med of feehng
111 He was taken to Long Beach
Commumty Hosp1tal where a
tube was Inserted mto h1s nght
lung through a smallmc•swn m
his back
Dr Jules Rasmsk1 Jr team
phys>c>an for the Rams, sa1d
that 11 was a conunon tllness
caused by a ruptur10g of a
small atr cyst at the top of the
!Wlg and that Gabr>el mtght be
released from the hospttal as
early as Wednesday
=
.- .. _.-...-,-------- ----:::o.&..- 'SU
______;;:;e:.u--~ - - ~
tbe
The Mark V Pol~r Bea rs onlv nm e pmnts m a grea t
Monday mght used a st1ckl defens1ve effm t Dave Iron
defense to post a 66-571110 over Hands F1fe added 16 for the
the Middleport Department lnsers
Store a11d rematn one ga me
R1ll Vaughan s 29 led the
beh1nd fr ont runmng Dally Banke!S wh!l e Gene W1se
Sent in el wh o edged the added 18 and Jon Garnes 15
Fnendly Tavern 9~2 In the Ch1p Ha ggerty paced Adolph s
other game the Pomeroy w1 th 20 and Jeff Morns added
Natwnal Bank team put away 15
Adolph s Da1ry Valley 74-63 10
R1 ch Ba1ley paced the Da1l)
the Middleport Independent Sentmel to the1r mnth wm 1n 10
Basketball League
games w1th 25 pOints and ex
J1mmy Boggs paced Mark V Eastern H1gh School team
mates and off-court budd1es
~•th 18 po1nts whlie Ron
Ferguson added 14 and Ralph Bob R1 !clue and Denms
Sayre contnbuted 12 The E1chmger scored 24 and 22
Department Stores Arthur respecuvel) Hack Hams led
Clark scored 24 and held h!gh- the Friendly Tave rn ~ 1th 22
sconng 6-6 DoXIe Walters to
wh!le Rand) Crawfmd and
Je11y Hubba1 d had 20 eac h
MARK V I68 I- Boggs 8-2-18
Walters 4 t 9 M Sayre 4 1-9 R
Sayre 52 12, Cra1g 0 I 1
Ron Ferguson 6-2 14 Howard :;.
t-Il
MID DEPT STORE (57 )M1tchell 51 II , Clark 9-6 24
J ohn son 3 I 7 F1fe 7 2 16
Ebersback 11-0-0 Archer 0 0-0
Second Game
ADOLPH S I63I - Ha ggerty
5 10 20 Morns 7 t 15 T
Walters 3 0-6 Hensler 5 I II, S
Pnce 6-IJ.I2
POM NAT BANK (74) Vaughan 12 5 29 W1sc 9-IJ.18
Garnes 6 3 15 Chafm 4 2 10
Dave Roberts, (8-5) was
tagged w1th tlie"'oss, allow10g
all three Cardinal runs m h1s
e1ght.10nmg performance
But the Cardmals remamed 9
\\ games 10 back of Pittsburgh
m the Nat10nal League East as
W1lhe Stargell batting on one
good ankle and one bad one
drove home four runs to hft the
Pirates to a 8-5 tnumph over
the Atlanta Braves It was the
f1fth VIctory m a row for the
Pirates
In the only other game
played m the Nat10nal League,
the Cincmnatt Reds stretched
their West DiVISion lead over
Houston to SIX games by
beatmg the Ch1cago Cubs 7 2
US FLAG
OUTFIT
FLAG POLE
& FLAG KIT
Chaney 2 0 4
Th1rd Game
DA ILY SENTINEl 1901 R1tch1e 12 0-24 Elclnngcl 10-2
22 Clulds 4-0-8 Douglas 4 3 II ,
Bmley II 3 25
FRIENDLY TAVERN (82)
- Harris 10-2 22 Crawlm d tOO20 Hubba1d tO 0 20 M01gan
8 0-16 Russell 1 0 2 Adams I 0-
RE GULAR
22 95
~1
s u ul
I I
2
Stand10gs
Name
5 FOOT OAK
w
Dally Senl!net
Ma1kV
Adolph s
M1d Dept
Porn Nat Bank
Fnendly favern
9
PORCH
I.
1
SWING
8 2
4
3
3
1
6
7
REGULAR 24 95
7
9
Bob Gibson Tops Roberts 3-2
Detrott remamed one game by Ed Crosby, a sac nf1ce and
m front of Balt1r0ore m the Lou Brock's smgle
Ameman League East as the
T1gers beat the ChiCago Wh1te
Sox, 3 I and the Orwles
trtpped the Texas Rangers by
an Identical 3-1 count The
Boston Red Sox beat the
Cahforma Angels 4 I and m
the on ly other game scheduled,
the A's and Brewers were
ramed out at Milwaukee
Don Clendenon's e1ghth
mnmg homer snapped a 1-1 he
for St Louts and the Cardmals
proVIded G1bson wuh what
IO' E 2nd
Pomeroy
proved to be the wmnmg run
Phone 992 5428
later 10 the mnmg on a smgle
BACKBOARD & GOAL 5 ET
e
2-HOUR
CLEANING
~A GNOL
(Upon Request)
ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
\
20 INCH
MEDICINE CABINET
Q
PROVINCIAL
VANITY
t4 • 9 1 2
-
SAlE PRI CE
Kelvinator Air Conditioners
'
l lu ( I; Our
Pru1
FURNITURE
SAVINGS I
PH
•
•
6488 • •
ftJtln)
MASON
700 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY
DI~OUNT
7 fOO T
Bears, Sentinel, Bankers in Wins
By MARTIN LADER
UPI Sports Writer
Even 1f Bob Gibson wms
every game he pttches the rest
of the season-and don't bot
everythmg you own agamst
11- 11 shll m1ght not be enough
for the St Loms Cardinals to
overcome the stmgmg bats of
Pittsburgh
G1bson struck out 13 batters
and ran up h1s loth consecutive
VIctory Monday mght as St
Lou1s edged the Houston
Astros 3-2 Followmg ftve
straight losses to open the
season, the 36-year-<Jid righthander has put together nme
complete games m h1s 10-game
wmnmg skem
FOR BIG
Jones an d M
Bl an ton teamed up to l1u1 l a
bt lll tt:~nt me l1 tte1 rhe losm~
pth.: he r \Ht s J Sit ne fr11 the
thud while D
2
Boston (S eberl 7 51 7 30 p m
Ball more tMcNa lly 10 7) at
Gabriel Has
down t< lG \\ tth three mote to
New Haven Cubs we1 e beate n lut the road tomg ht when the
by the Pume1oy Ti gers Jt.j) Pomet oy Yankees play /\d
Easl
wh1le Center VIII(' :;hutoul the da\ 11le 11 G R1p lcy gue>
w I pel g b G~ll!vuhs r1ge1 s 9 0 and the Pt
HJ.\d lnst lltdwcll at 7 b dnd the Galhpohs f1gc•s
53 30 639
47 34 580 5 Pleasant Kl\\oms dumped the unbea ten Mtddlcp" t litdtans
C I ew1s led all h!tlcJS fo•
43 39 524 9 2 Ga lhpol!s Wh1te Sox 14 2 to pta\ u •def< 1ted Pt Pleasa1 t Ce r ten til e w1th a deuble and
44 41 518 10
cump lete all fu st round actwn C1ty Ice and I uci m the tw J smgles m three trtp s wtu lc
36 45 444 16
1n t1 c Kyge1 C1eek little headlmc:t at 8 m
29 54 349 24
P Md\eal had two s> nglc> I
West
I eag ue fom namcnt Monday
F1rst Gam~:
II
11 den had the f1 ge1s onlv
wtpclgb li ght
Ce
nte1
vlllc
scored
tw
o
runs
Itt
c! double HI the thud frame
52 31 627
Tl e f~eld of 14 te,Jms 1s n o~ m the second and l<.:ed the Will
48 39 552 6
Ce r tc1 \ J! le s w11 CCII n(;d
43 40 51 8 9
w t th fl\c more ta l li es 10 the them the n ght t< pill R1o
38 47 447 15
Boston 4 Cal1f 1
News 13 Contact B News 10
12 30-3 WsGame 3 15 Spli1Second6 SearchtorTomorrow8
10 Electric Co 33
l 00 - News Wealher Soorts 3 All Mv Chlldre"' 13 Divorce
Court 8 Green Acres Walch Your Child IS French Chef 3j
1 20 - Lu cille R1vers 3
l 30 - Three on A Match 3 4 15 Lets Make A Deal 6 13 As
T)le World Turns 8 10 Sewong Skills 33
2 00 - Graham 6 Love Spiendored Thing 8 10 Bridge 33
2 30 - Dating Game t3 Guldong Light 8 10 Handruts of Ashes
33 Baseball 3 4 Doctors 15
3 00 - Another World 3 4 15 General Hosp ital 6 13 Secrel
Storm 8 10 Masterp1ece Thea Ire 33
3 30 - One Lofe to L1ve 6 Edge or Night 8 10 Jell s Collie 13
Return to Peyton Place 3 4 1s
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 4 IS Fllntsto nes 13 Sesame
St 33 Huckl eberry Hound 6 Batman 8 Movoe The
Treasure of Lost Canyon
4 25 - Sports Club 6
4 30 - Merv Grltrln 4 I Love Lucy 6 Virginian 8 Password 13
Andy Griffith IS
5 00 - Wagon Tra1n 3 Maverick 13 Mr Rogers 33 Dick Van
Dyke 1S Big Valley 6
5 30 - Marshall Dillon 15 Electric Co 33 Dragnet 4
6 00 - Truth or Conseq 6 News 3 4 8 10 15 I Dream ot
Jeann1e t3 Sesame Sr 20 Hathayoga 33
6 30 - News3 4 6 8101315 Brldge33
7 00 - Dock Van Dyke 4 News 6 10 What s My Line 8 Elec
Co 20 Wold Wild West 13 Death Valley Days 15 Milestones
ol Progress33 , Movie 'FamelstheNameoftheGame '
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6 Hollvwood Squores 3 Dragnet 8
The Judge 10 Episode Action 33 Mr Rogers 20 Lassie 15
Doctors on Call 4
8 00 - Adam 12 4 A Public AHalr 20 33 Green Acres 3 The
Super 6 13 Dav1d Stemberg 8 10
8 30 - Corner Bar 6 13 McCloud 3, 4 15 Movie Potemkin
20 33
9 00 - Medical Center 8 10 Vibrations 20 Marty Feldman
Comedy Machine 13 What's Your Housing JQ? 6
9 30 - Kopycal13 Movie' X The Unknown 6
10 OO ~ Mannlx8 10 News20 Sout33 NlghtGalleryJ 4
10 30 - Convention 72 6 13
11 00 - NewsJ 4 6 8 10 t3 15
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Dick CaveH 6 Movie
' Frankenstein Most Be Destroyed • Movie 'Sand~ of two
Jlma" tO Movie The Oork AI The Top Of The Stairs' 13
100 - News4
1 JO - News 13
7th Straight Win
• •
d
~sr=~ New Haven Cubs Are Elzm zna te
tAll T1mes EDT)
Programs for Tonight
8 30 -
Cops
Cincinnati
Eichinger Has 1-Hitter
Television Log
I Voice along Br'Way I
3-The Daily Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy, 0 July 18,1972
m~m
REGOLA·1BBB
24 95
WiliAMS
Wi ll AM S
1 y ene l y h! ~l ie l d
l glt ng (L i!ss b u lb~ )
18 x 20 • 3 hgh Gold trim
Sol d b O$S ho Jwu e Fvlly water
MASON W ~~
DUliNG SOON!
••
6,000
to
24,000 BTU
'
I
r
POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.
The Department Store
of Butldmg Smce I915
�2- The Datly Sent mel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , July 18, 1972
-~neration
Meigs
Rap
WliEN-•TASTE MAKES WASTE
Dear Helen and Sue
I have an older relattve who lS always glVmg me clothes for
btrlhday and Chrtstmas presents Somellmes they re okay bot
sometunes they aren't She says feel free to exchange them bot
my Momdoesn t want to hurt herfeebngs,so she makes me wear
them - espectally when we're aro\Uld A\Ult Amy (the relative)
which lS qwte a b1t Aunty THINKS her lllSte IS the greatest
Now tt comes to the latest present - a dress that looks
cruddy on me Mom says I have to wear 11 to a farmly reumon m
August, aild there s thts second rnusm who will be there and he s
a doll I don'twant to look and feel dumb around hun - MUST I'
Dear Must
Trouble With older relatives 1s they often rlon t reahze httle
rueces become b1g g~rls who like to p1ck out the>r own clothes
Trouble w1th your mother 15 she hasn t told Aunt Amy this
fact of hie
When Aunty s taste makes waste ' (or m1sery 11 you re
forced to wear the dress) I vote for an exchange You can soften
the blow by tellmg her the f1t 1sn t nght and won t she please
come along to help w1tha new seledwn ' - HELEN'
.'
·:,
..,
~
~•
,
.•,
,,
~
~
~
~
•
~
~
.•
'>l "'od
•·
ay's
~
Property
Oy Helen and Sue Hottel
,
~ ::«r~w.; ... -.,..*~....::-::~,;<~ S:$$ { ~!S$:0.""...\.':».:' ~ N*«i~ »-"'*'":\~~-::::.~:
~
Transfers
Robel t Fo1rest to Ed1th J
JIVIden Lot 311 Middleport
Cla1 a Mae Pyles ded d to
George E Pyles Charles
Pyles All of Trans Chester
Rodger T Shenefield to Cla1r
Shenefield Parcels Salem
A1 cl11e E Lee June P Lee to
P,, ul K Russell Max~ne M
Russell 100 Acre I ot No 29!i
2 0 Ac1es Syracuse
Wilham F Rogers Nancy A
Rogel s to H Gene Blocker
Lynn J Holmes 40 Acres 42
Aco es 40 Acre Columbw
Walla (:e B Damewood
Myrtle I Damewood to John L
Damewood Lmda Damewood
9 60 Acres Orange
Jo hn L Hage1 ty Ahce
Hager!) to Frank Gilkey Jr
Cui!He Gll kcy
Parcels
Rutland
Ann M Sandford dec to
Helen Sandf01 d Barth Manon
Sand! rd Casley Mwerals
Lel<!rt
R1cha1 d J
Chambers
Martha H Chambers to Ronald
Dale I hom as Karen Lee
Th IIH,Js Lot 131 Middle port
?atnua A Jrwetl to Pearhe
F Je~ell Jr 25 Acres
Rutland
Orville Johnson Velma
Johnson to Gary S Aspm
Karen Asp10 Parcels Salem
PAUL HI'ZGERALD
Horwrs Won in
Seminary Work
~
"~
·
~~Sport
Parade
~
By MILTON RICHMAN
liPI Sports Editor
;
NEW YORK (UPI)-Gale Sayers makes sure he keeps busy
It's Vllal
The way he does IS by throwing himself completely mto the
flv«unes~-week TV show he has In Chicago, "Gayle Sayers
Conunents, as well as some other outs1de mterests he has so
that he doesn I dwell on his football career too much
He knows 1f he does, he runs the nsk of being depressed, of
wondermg whether he has any football career left at 29 Sayers
has womed about that, and st1ll Is worrymg now
You know the old line "if-l'm not-there-&art wtthout-me '"
Well, there 's nothmg fWlny about 11 to Sayers
The Chicago Bears have started wtthout h1r0 They've begun
practice a~ their Rensselaer, lnd, trall1lllg camp and when all
the regulars showed up last Saturday, Gale Sayers did not
The Bears brtll>ant rwmmg back who has played only two
league games m each of the last two seasons, has been working
out regularly the past few months followmg a third knee
operatwn but Dr Theodore Fox who performed the surgery,
feels 1t s m Sayers best Interest if he delays testmg the knee m
actual workouts
Sayers has reached the ' cr11lcal phase' of his rehab1litatwn,
and the way thmgs stand now Abo G1bron, the Bears' new head
coach ,1sn t sure whether or not he can coWl! on hun this year
And 1f Gale Sayers doesn t make llthis year, that could bo the
end
Paul Darrel Fitzgerald son
law of Mrs Max10e Arnold
+++
a long hme res1dent of the
Dear Must I
Pomeroy area and husband of
Wh1ch w1ll e1ther be an eye-opener for her (to your taste)
U>e forme• Susanna Arnold
or an eyebrow ra1ser (that you should be so tasteless' )
has ach1eved h1gh scholashc
Anyway I'm sure Aunt Amy would much rather you have
honors upon the complellon of
presents you would use and enJOY than ones you'd hke to throw m
one year of study at Nazarene
Hank Stram, the rnach of the Kansas C1ty Ch1efs must be
a corner and forget After all she SAYS Feel free to exchange
Theological Senunary 1n
gettmg soft
them '-DUE
Kansas Cit) Mo
He gave h1s ball club the day off SWlday
+++
F1tzgerald graduated cum
Dear Rap
It was the f1rst rnmplete day off he has g1ven his players m 13
laude from Ohvet Nazarene
years
At 19, our daughter moved mto her own apartment after
College 10 Kankakee lit 1n
gettmg a fullllme Job
1970 and began studymg at the
Now she mtends to get marned and I d like to know When
sem1na1 y 1n 197 1 The
Dave Kmgman, San Franc1sco s s1x foot-siX slugger, says
she moved out agamst our w1shes should we pa) for her wed
Nazarene
lheolog!l'ai
physically, I'm not that strong,' and what makes 11 such a JOke
ding' - MOTHER OF MANY
Semu ary IS an mshtutwn of 1s he means 11 and says thiS all Wtlh a straight face
the Church of the Nazarene and
That s h1s problem he doesn t really know how strong he 1s '
IS reported to be lhe only says Charhe Fox, the Gl81lts' manager A week or so ago he
Dear Mother Of Many
Naza> ene mstitut!Dn offenng a took a half swmg agamst Carlton -that s all 11 was a half
How can you hold a grudge when your daughter only wanted
THISTLEDOWN RESULTS
course of stud) leadmg to the swmg-and he hits a hne dr1ve outta the Philadelplna ball park '
to be on her own'
Cl EVE I AND ( UPI) - Dare
U tl s the marnage you re agamst, then you have a r1ght to to Reason w1th leadmg JOCkey Master of Dt\lml) Degree
Kmgman, With 21 homers already wasn t too 1r0pressed With
quesllon 1f you're holdmg back to get even -well 11 s st1ll your Danny We1ter won the The F1tzgeralds are res1dmg that blow
right She probably wouldn't want her parents forkmg over featured allo11ance race at at943 1Cleveland Ave Kansas
The w10d was blowm~ out ' he says
City They areparentsofat~o
money for somethmg or someone they resent Stra1ghten out Tlnstledo11n Monday
)ear old son Jason Paul
your hassles f1rst and then diScuss the weddmg - SUE
The three year-Old f!IIy was
Joe Lou1s 11 turns out 1s rebred, but he's still f1ghtmg and to
timed m t 07 4 5 for the five
what extent 1s detailed m Barney Nagler s absorbmg book ' The
Dear Mother Of Many
and one-half furlongs and
Brown Bomber ' Also recommended Jerry Izenberg s 'How
Let's look at the 'many' m your stgnature It m1ght have returned $7 60
Many Miles to Camelot,' another provocallve book exarnmmg
something (or everything) to do w1th your daughters movmg
The dally double pamng of
those aspects of sports wh1ch do not turn out to bo all fun and
RIVERDOWNS RESULTS
out
Beau Hunk and Charming Lmk
CINCINNATI I UP,I) - Duro games
It also may mfluence your wornes about the weddmg H you was worth $36 60
can't afford the tab, then say so Don t h1de behmd excuses that
The 3 825 fans wagered T beat Anglo 10 the stretch to
Chi Chi Rodriguez says the trouble With most weekend golfers
wm the lea lured $2 400
make HER feel gutlty - HELEN
$323 707
1s
they worry too much about ho~ they look
allowance race ctt Rlver Downs
When you worry too much about how good you look out there,
Monday Golden Moomoo was
you
re m trouble, ' Rodr1guez says ' For example, they talk
Uurd
"''"
Duro T ~as olocked at about the way Doug Sanders looks when he swmgs AU I know 1s I
·u; "C:P
:emtm
1 12 I 5 over the muddy SIX never see the guy out of the fa~rway You can also 11orry too
much about how your clothes look I II g1ve you another example
furlongs
The dad) double pa1nng of I gotta wear loose pants Baggy So what' I don t go out there for
Maka M10t and Instan t a fashwn show
Dec1s10n pa1d $84 20
BY JACK O'BRIAN
usmg a frmtless banana stalk as the pseudo
Bobby f1scher took awhile, but he fmally got back m the ball
The 3 19I thoroughbred
skeleton for h1s anatomy lesson It was an 1ac10 g fans wagered $263 999 game
F1RST STAGE OF
hilarwus mterlude between ar1as and trapeze
I m not the least hit womed about them fmding a su1table
THE MUSIC HAU.
dazzhng and 1deal contrast to the histoncally
room m Reykjavik look they foWld a tablem Pam, didn I they'
NEW YORK tKFS) - We were recalling
too-early presentallon of Martha Graham and
Radto C1ty MusiC Hall and >Is history the other her artily styhzed troupe of postummg modern
DEDICATION HELD
' dkybutwedidn tgettotheopemng Not)ustone dancers
Marsha Beth Kmg daughter
SCIOTO RESULTS
$1t8 80 $26 80 and $It 40 B)e
theater was built - but two The Music Hall cost
Songwnters Dorothy Fields and Junmy of Mr and Mrs Arland K10g
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Our Bye Beau pa1d $5 40 and $3 60
$12,000 000, the smaller theater $4,000 000 The
McHugh, who couldn t g1ve you anything but Middleport, was ded1cated B1tler Sweet, a 50-1 selectiOn J W Song returned $-1 20
latter carne m at some $4 000 000 Wlder 1ts love baby gave their Immensely popular song recentl) at the Middleport nosed out Bye Bye Beau to wm
The 7 9 qmnella pa1d $223 70
budget , for It was planned 10 '29 and the collaborations Patnc1a Bowman was pr1111a F~rst Bapllst Church TheRe\ 111e featured e1ght race a $1 200 The 6-7 mghtly double pa1rmg
Depression-ravaged labor costs, as 10 a ballerma w1th the Corps de Ballet and wowed Charles S1mons ofll c1ated at pace at Sc10to Downs Monday of M1ss Patt>e Brooke and
captlahst s dream adjusted themselves
the assemblage, en pomte It was hke 100 Ed the sen1re 1111h Mrs Beulah mght J W Song was lh1rd
Alpme Ryal was worth $29 60
drastically downward And on Dec 21 1932 the Sulhvan Shows - 11 even had the Tuskegee Whtte smg10g the ded1eat10n
The time for the mile was
The • 730 harness racmg fan>
most resplendent Openmg N1ght 10 the history Cho1r the Berry Brothers, Jan Peerce ( m case song accompamed at the organ 2 03 2 5
"agered a total of $240 673
Our Bitter Sweet returned
of show busmess was held Everyone was there
you ve wondered how long that Met tenor's been by Mrs Gerald Anthony
from Mayor Junmy Walker soon to walk a around starnng), Taylor Holmes (ask Grand
plank to Europe m mumc1pal d1sgrace but then
pop who he was), plus another dozen acts suitr)
the most graceful man m the htstory of pohtics, songstress Gertrude N1esen was added, pius a
on down to the producer of the state show, Leon
celebrated vaudeville knockabout team, Barto
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - No 1 $25 000 Buckeye Tenms r1de to the second round when
Leorudoff, and the creator of The Rockettes
and MaiUl You remember Barto & Mann'
seeded Juruny Connors got off Champwnsh1ps, bot warmed h1s scheduled opponent
Russell Markert
You re old'
No mov1e was to be shown Strictly stage
But that all m-person opemng bill was to a cold start Monday m the up to Win h1s last e1ght games George Govan of France w1th
and tr1p fll'st-ro\Uld opponent drew because of lDJUr>es
shows, gtgantic m thell' technology and casts
Wllque All--stage shows as a Musil' Hall pohc)
Two
other
French
The Da1~ Sentinel V1]ay Amntre), 7-0, IHl
That Dec '1:1, 1932 Inaugural ProductiOn was a ended The pubhc d1d not cotton to them nor
DEVOTED TO THE
Doubles play begms today at rep resentatives Wanaro
blockbuster Its stars were Weber & Fields, tbe even s1lk Mov1es cellulmded mto the breach I
INTEREST OF
Buckeye
Boys Ranch m nearby N'Godrella and Jean Chan
MEIGS MASON AREA
Martm & LewiS or Rowan & Martm of their and success whammed mto the 6 250-seat
freau, !lllssed smgles matches
CHESTER
l
TANNEHILL
Grove City
I
constderably more arllsllcally successful day,
amphitheater never to be diverted
Euc Ed
Connors 19 of Belleville, m' They showed up late and wtll
ROBERT HOEFLICH
and Ray Bolger DeWoU Hopper rec1ted
The s1ze of the theater made 11 the cynosure
C•ly Edtlor
needed a service break m the play 10 the doubles com
'Casey at the Bat,' another wtldly popular of all Hollywood produchon plans 1ts standards
Publ she d daly except
12th game of the f>rst set to petition
by Th e Oh o vattey
performer now perhaps recognized as the fmal were then and remam the highest m the nation Satvroay
Publ :!.h ng Com pany
I ll beat Amrltrej of India and
Raul Ram>rez of MeXIco was
husband of the late Hedda Hopper tho we Its shows as a rule must be entertaU"Ung and Court S
Pomeroy
011 o
forced
to cancel on orders from
avmd
a
tie
breaker
457 69 Bu!. ness Ofhu P~one
suspect today's younger readers w1ll ask clean' Lately 1t's been forced to take a few PG 'il911156
his
phys1ctan
Ed••or al Pnon e 991
Second--seeded Bob Hewitt of
• Who's she'' So forget Hedda forget DeWolf rated mov1es but they re the ltd> est available at 1157
In another hrst round s1ngles
South
Afnca was forced to go
Second class postagP pad ill
Hopper, too, if not ' Casey at the Bat '
the>r moments of availability and the Mus1c Pome roy Qt1 0
three sets to beat Butch See- match Zan Guerry, of Lookout
Nat Dnal
adverts ng
There were The Wallendas a c1rcus star- Hall >ns>sts even w1th PG-raters that any ugi)
wagen of Bays1de NY 6-7, 6-4, Mo\Ullam, Tenn , ral11ed to
r epresentat ve
Boll nel!
act swmgmg proscenlum-lngh for the top- sequences or dialogue be blipped or chopped It Gal lagh er Inc 11 East 41nd 6-2
beat Anand AmrltreJ, V!Jay s
New York C ty New York
balrnny trade Tito Ruffo operat1c basso
brother, 6-7 6-1, 7-6
DICk
Stockton,
the
No
3
seed
still1s a theater to wh1ch you can send the k1ds 51Subscr
pi on r ates
De
rattled Alp1an rafters 'Doc Rockwell, one of
Gonzales will not make an
The Ill's! mo111e at the Mus1c Hall was an I ve r ed by carr er where here also won hts first match,
ava
lab
e
50
cen
l
s
per
Neek
the finest-ever, funmest vaudeVIlle solo acts early Frank Capra, ' The B1tter Tea of General Bv Motor Rou te wh ere carr er 6-7 6-2, 6-4, over Ivan Molina of appearance Wllil Wednesday
brought hlS Down East accent and allopomts Yen ' starrmg Barbara Stanwyck as the sugar serv ce not ava table One Colomb1a, Stockton, of Port when he meets Mtke Estep m a
montt \I 75 By ma n Oh o Washmgton, NY , Is nursing a second ro\Uld smgles match
1\Ulacy to that opemng bill Doc, and lS he sllll m the pot and Ntis Asther as the yenrung and
w va One year S\4 00
Also Wednesday Gonzales and
altve and clowrung up 10 his beloved Mame'
General Followed by the d1stmgmshed George S x months Sl 15 Three pulled stomach muscle
montn s i4 50 Subscr pi on
Connors
wtll oppose the Amrl
The
fourth
seed,
ageless
had personal tragedies not of his plannmg m h1s Arllss and D1ck Powe II m ' The Kmg s pr ce n cluct es Sunday T me s
tre)
brothers
10 doubles
Pancho Gonzales, got a free
Sent n e t
s\Ulset seasons He did a mock-professor turn Vacatwn' Then State Fa1r
,,.
.
m
Talk
~
By Paul Crabtree
TUESDAY, JULY 18
If you succeed m overthrowmg the Establishment, you
BECOME the Establishment
Which Is a way of mtroducmg a few conunents about two
subjects which have already been talked about far too much
Long hlW' for men and brassieres (or the lack of them) for
women
Both have now become Institutionalized, wh1ch means they
now are part of the Amencan social melange
And the fates have ordained that both will stay around - for
a good wht!e at least And maybe we can stop talltmg about them
-at last
+++
Why ' Because of televlS>on, for the most part
The 'youtll subculture,'' about whtch so much was heard m
the late Sixties and early Seventies, rejected a lot of !lllddltH:lass
values, and nowhere was this more evtdent that the rejecllon of
the crew-cut, buttoned-down, natural-shoulder Ivy League look
of the prev1ous decade Out came the love heads, bell bottoms,
leather vests, and heaven knows what else But most of all, out
came hair
Hllll' by the mch, the foot, the yard - spilling over shoulders
muscularly-developed as well as mtellectually..stooped
stdeburns sweepmg w1ldly toward the chin beards that make
kids of IB!ook like U S Grant or John Brown or one of the Smith
Brothers As a symbol of protest, tt was superb
The no-bra~t-all fervor had different ongms commg mostly
from the Women sUb fanattcs It caught on to a luntted degree
- mostly In the btg Cities, and mostly by the g>rl who could get
away with 11, Without lookmg as if she were melting
+++
Now comes telev>ston, that great equalizer and creator of
confor!lllty If a TV commercial 1s shot and makes a hit, the
sponsor may want to use 11 for several years UkewlSe, wtth a
character m a new senes He has to look pretty much the same
each season, or tt w1ll spml the reruns (Exceptions are eternal
ser1es people bke Little Joe Cartwright and D1ck Van Dyke )
The TV edicts Long ha1r on men would bo m- not too long
but not so short as to turn off the Pepst generation And
brass>eres would stay where they belong On ((Sally Struthers of
' All m the Falllliy started the senes w1th a Sh~rley Temple
ha1rcut and no bra She's wearmg a proper foundation these
days)
And so, teleVISIOn - that great purveyor of the vulgar and
the beautiful as well -has ordamed what probably w111 he for
mat for most of us for the next several years Wa1t and see if I'm
r1ght
+++
ON THE TV DIAL Joe Cocker heads a spec1al from London
m a rock concert 9 30p m on WSAZ TV Jerry Reed has one of
my favorite artists, Chet Atkms on his show at 7 30, WCHS.TV
Mov>es "N•ghtand Day ' !I 30 p m and 'Treasure of Lost
Canyon' 4 p m Wednesday both WBNS.TV
,
r,
0
li
~
M
'i
1,,
,
Top·SeededJim Connors Advances
I
OPCO Division Manager Higgins Will Retire
.t>dward A H> ggms will
retire Aug I as manager of the
Portsmouth DIVISIOn of Oh10
Power Company, whtch m
eludes Portsmouth Ironton
Chesapeake and Pomeroy
areas
'
'
1
,
After graduahng from Ports
mouth H1gh School m June of
1925, he Immediately started to
work for Oh10 Power Company
at the former Tenth and Off
nere Streets office 1n
preparation for entermg OhiO
State Umvers1ty m the fall to
study ele~=tr>cal engmeer10g
He worked four summers for
the company wh1le attendmg
Oh10 State and m June 1929, he
graduated w1th a degree m
electncal eng1neenng
mamed On a Wheeler, and
started working full hme for
Ohio Power Company He was
elected a member of honorary
fratemthes Tau Beta Pi Eta
Kappa Nu and S1gma X1
A year after he began h1s
employment at Portsmouth
H1ggms was promoted to JUnior
power engmeer at New
Philadelphia and Denmson
Oluo He became a power
eng10eer at Canton Oh10 10
1935 Steubenville DIVISIOn
commerc ial
mdustnal
manager 10 1940 and d1stnct
manager at East Liverpool 10
1954
He was returned to Ports
mouth as dlstr>cl manager 10
1958 after the death of J R
Thomas and was promoted to
Portsmouth DIVISIOn Manager
10 196J wh1ch pos1110n he now
holds In 1968 he served a year
on the board of directors of the
Amencan Electrtc Power
Serv1ce CorporatiOn of New
Y01 k City He IS a registered
ProfessiOnal Eng10eer and a
past president and member of
the Portsmouth Chapter of the
OhiO Society of ProfessiOnal
Engmeers
He has helped coal mmers
se ttle electncal problems deep
10s1de mmes he has played a
ma1ur role 10 gethng mdustnes
to halt the generatiOn of their
own power and purchase
e!ec tnc1ty flom OhiO Power
he has been a sta un ch advocate
of the electr1c he~t pump and
he has been on the scene dunng
tornadoes and fl oods
In service to h1s commumt)
H1ggms IS past president of the
Portsmouth Area Chamber ol
Commerce and a present
member of the boar~ of
d>rectors He IS a member of
U1e C1hzens Advisory Comm1ttee rast president and
member of the Portsmouth
Rotary Club past president
and member of the Portsmouth
Area Growth Foundahon, a
member of the board of
trustees of the Sc10to County
Umted Way the Salval!on
Armv Adv1s ory Board a
member of the Central OhiO
Valley Industrial Council, and
the
Sou theaste rn
Oh1o
Regwnal Counc1l
'
At the First Presbytcnan
Church he IS a member of the
sessiOn and a teacher m the
mens B1bie class He 1s a
memb€1 r the Scotl!sh R1te
Masumc 01 der the Elks Lodge
and Country Club, a supporter
of the YMCA a member of the
Mercy Hospttat Lay Adv1sory
Board and a former president
of OhiO Power Company s
State Veteran Employees
Assoc>atwn
My w1fe, Ona, and I have so
many lhtngs to do durmg
retirement that I don t know
how we II get everythmg
done, H1gg10s sa1d 1 do
expect to remam m close touch
w1th
CIVIC
acliv1ttes,
however he satd
H1ggms 1s a devoted
photography fan and 8
fisherman Both he and Mrs
H1ggms are hooked on golf
Both enJOY travehnR
'
An odd>ly 10 the hfe of
H1ggms 1s the fact that, while
he has worked m a number of
locatiOns m OhiO, he 15 retirmg
from a locatwn that 1s only
about 200 feet from his birthplace ( Re>tz Mustc Center
park10g lot) 'My birthplace
home ISn't there any longer,
but you m1ght say I've never
gotten far from home," the
manager sa>d
H1gg1ns' father, Hugh H
H1ggms, also was d1v1sion
manager of the same terntory
at the hme of hts death 10 1936
Mr and Mrs H1ggms reside
~~ 2860 C>rcle Dr1ve, Ports·
mouth They have a son,
Dav1d m Ch1cago, and a
granddaughter
ED HIGGINS
'
run s 111 the fJrst mnmg and
TUESDAY JULY 18 1971
News 3 4 8 10 15 CBS News 8 10 I Dream of Jeann1e
13 Truth or Conseo 6 SP111" me St 20 Hathayoqa 33
6 30 - New s 3 • 6 8 10 15 Grand Masters Chess 3
7 00 - New s 6 10 What s My Line 8 I: lee r..o 1U Green Acres
D 00 -
3 Farmers Daughter 13 Andy Gnrfllh 15 DICk Van Dyke 4
tnsogh l 33
7 30 - Masterpiece Theatre 33 Ponderosa 3 15 Mod Squad 6
13 Jerry Reed 8 A B1rthday Story 20 Masterp ece Theatre
33
8 00 - Magg•e and The Beautiful Machme 20
Advocates 2Cl 33
NB C Act on
Playhouse 3 4 Movte 6 13 Evemng al Pops 20 33
9 30 - Cannon 8 Dom It 20 Handful s or Ashes 33 Good
Vtbrahons From London 3 4 15
10 00 - New s Weather Sports 20 Marcus Welby 4 6 13 F trmg
Line 33
10 30 - WSAZ Comment 3 Arthur Smo lh 8 Probe The World
Around Us 4 Road Raclnq s Whtte Wa ve 15
II OO - News3 4 6 810 13 15
II 30 - Dick Cavett 6 Johnny Carson 3 4 15
Moth er s Hou se 8 Movte Night and Day
McCall 13
I 00 - Your Health
I 30 -
Movie
Our
Movie
Cash
4
News 4 13
WEDNESDAY JULY 19 t972
6 00 - Sunrtse Semmar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Farmttme 10 Farm Report 13 6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4 Btble Answer s 8 Urban League 13
6 45 - CorncobReportJ 6 ss - Rocky - Bullwlnkle I J
7 00 - Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 News6
7 30- Sleepy Jerrers 8 Romper Room 6 Underdog 13
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue 6 13 Sesame St JJ
8 30 Jack Lalanne 13 Tennessee Tuxedo 6
9 00 - Paul Otxon 4 Phil Donahue 15 Luct s Toyshop 10
Peyton Place 13 Romper Room B Mr Rogers 33 What
Every Woman Wants to Know 3 Ttmmy and Lassie 6
9 30 - Truth or Conseq 3 Phol Donahue 8 Etectm Co 33
Moke Douglas 6 One Lofe to L1ve 13
tO 00 - Donah Shore 3 15 LuCille Bait tO Dock V•n Dyke t3
Hathayoga 33
10 30- Concentrat on 3 15 Ph tl Donahue 4 Amateurs
II
CHICAGO (UP!) - Joe Mor
gan the speedy httle Cmcm
nat1 Reds sernnd baseman
couldn't beheve 11 when some
one told h1m he had been se
lected for the Natwnal League
All-Star team
You mean l won Morgan
sa1d 'That s 111e top to a per
feet day nght 111ere
Morgan s day had been domg
pretty well before the news He
rapped out three of the Reds 14
hits Monday mght as Cm
cmnall reeled off 1ts seventh
straight wm 7 2 over the Chicago Cubs
Morgan a >foot 7 150
poWlder obtamed from th e
Houston Astros last wmter
was p1cked for the All-Star
game by fans along "1th the
top vote-ge tter catcher Johnny
Bench
Morgan JUst beat out Glenn
Beckert of the Cubs for the
second base pos1twn, w1th 654,035 votes to Beckert s 640 748
I gave up hope earlier when
I was 20 votes behmd Beckert
Morgan sa1d referr10g to pro
gress reports released b) the
league headquart ers
Stuffing Ballot
Reds manager Sparky Anderson also had womes but
they were different
I was alra1d when the last
rnunt came out and Morgan
was leadmg Cub fans 11ould
stuff the ballot box Anderson
sa1d 'Th ey have such num
hers 10 Chicago I was afra1d
Joe wouldn t wm '
Morgan leads the league m
runs scored 176) walks 168)
and stolen bases (34)
Bench an All-Star selectwn
for the fourth strBlght year
called 1t a tremendous honor
I uppers Pla1ns
Pony
baseball team erupted lor four
and Tomorrow
Hawau Ftve 0 8 10
Reds Up Lead
To Six Games
Gut de to
Love 10 Sptof Second 13 Beverly H1llb illo es 8 My Three Sons
10 tn School lnstruct oon 33 F Troop 6
00 - Famoty Arra~r 8 10 Love Amer ican Style 13 Sale or
Century 3 15 Commun1que 6
11 30 - Hollywood Squares • 15 Love of Lote 8 tO Bew1tched 6
13 Sesame Street 20
t2 00 - Jeopardy 3 15 Password 6 Bob Brauns 50 50 Club 4
added mne more 10 the tlmd
and behind the on hit p1lclun g
of Don me E1clun ger ra1sed 1ts
record to 8-1
Coach Denms Newland s
powerful Tuppers Pla10s club
co npnsed of a few of th e
starters on the Eastern H1gh
Schoo l sec ll onal champs
ba se ball squad th1 s year
npped three Reedsville p1t
chers lor t> h1is Reedsville m
Uurd place fell to 6-3
E1ch10ger gave up only a
second 1nmng smgle a boun cer
that found 1ts way through th e
mf1cld to Reeds ville s S
Dillon E1chmgcr fanned two
walked four and Jut one batter
l.endwg E1chmger plenty of
support was Steve Goebel who
sla pped two s1n gles tw o
doubles and a tnple 10 a
perfect day at the plute Other
hitters for the wtnners were
M1ke La rk1ns w1th three
s1ngtes and a double T1m Kuhn
lhree
swgles
Greg
Wmebrenner two s10gles and
Phil Bowen had a double
Doug Adams who started
and was charged 111th the loss,
Steve Holter and Marlin
combmed to work the mound
for Reedsvtlle
Tuppers Platns wlll play
Reedsville th1s Fnday at
Tuppers Platns
and sa1d he felt better about 11
now than he d1d Jasl,yfllr when
he went through a batlmg
slump
Bench currently leads the
league m home runs (24) and
nms batted m (71)
The wm 10 the f1rst of three
games here w1th the Cubs put
Cmcmnat1 stx games ahead of
the Houston Astros m the Na
Ilona! League West race In the
second game of the senes
tomght, Gary Nolan, the lea
gue's wmnmgest pitcher wlll
try for his 14th Win aga1nst 1:\\0
losses
Cub Errors Hurt
Ferg1e Jenkms, the Cubs
powerful nghthander will try
for h1s 12th 11m m 2C decisiOns
Clay Carroll p1cked up his
21st save of the season Monday
mght after takmg over for
Wayne S~rnpson 10 the e1ghth
Simpson IS now 6-3
Morgan got Cmc1nna' 1s f rst
h1t 10 the fourth 10mng but was
ruled out when Bobby Tolan s
groWld ball htt hun on the
basepaths
After the bases were loaded
that mmng Tolan scored on a
sacnflc e ny and Cesar Gero
rumo smgled home Tony Perez
and Pete Rose
Rose homered m the next
1nnmg and the Reds concluded
the1r scormg m the Sixth when
Cub r eliever Dan McGinn
threw the ball away mto r>ght
field while tr y10g to na1t
S1mpson at f1rst
As Cub outfielders rounded
up the ball two r\Uls scored
and Sunpson came home when
Beckert thre" the ball mto the
dugout wh1ie trymg to throw
out Morgan at hrst
Th e defe ndm g c harnpwn
Ma tor League ~tandtngs
By Untfed Press International
National Leagu e
Ptlt
New York
St Lou
Chtcago
Mont rea
Ph Ia
C nco
Houston
L A
~tlanta
San Fran
San Ot ego
Tuppers Plains
409 010 1- 15 15
Reedsville
020 000 ll- 2 I
E1ch1nger and W10ebrenner
Adams IL P) Hotter ( IJ
Martin (31 and Harns
38 50
31 52
432 16
373 2
Monday s Results
Bench, Allen Are Top
C1nc 7 Ch1cago 2
P ti s 6 Atlanta 5
St Lou 3 Houston 2
Today s Probable Ptlchers
IAll T1mes EDTI
C1nc nnat
(Nolan
13 2)
at
ChiCago IJenk ns 11 81 1 30
pm
Atlan ta
(Reed
7 !O J
at
P1ttsburgh (Blass 10 JJ 8 p m
St Lou s (Cleveland 11 4) at
Hous ton (R euss 5 8) B 30 p m
New York (Ma tl ack 9 5) at
Los Angeles ( John 8 4J 11 p m
r-'ntladdpr.1-1 (Champ iOJl 4 9)
at San D~ego IArlin 7 101 10 30
pm
Montreal (Moore 1 3) at Sa n
sea (Bryant 7 4) 11 p m
Franc
Wednesday s Games
Atlant a at Pills
C nc at Ch1cago
St Lou at Houston
New York at L A
Ph1 a at San D ego
Montreal at San Fran
Amer can league
East
w I
Oakland
Ch•cago
gb
573
46
561 I
39
500 6
37
474 8
34
425 12
32
405 13 '
w I pel g b
5? 30 634
45 39 536 8
M nn
42 48
525
9
Ca l1!
Texas
38 47
447
417
15
8
De troll
47
Ball
Boston
New York
Cleve
M l wa
We st
KC
35
36
39
41
46
47
pet
41 Jl 500 1
35 49
2
Monday s Results
Ball 3
Te xas
1
DelrOtt 3 Ch1 cago 1
Oakland a t M twa ( ppd ra n J
Today s Probable Pttchers
Ch•cago (Lemon ds
Bahnsen
11 10)
at
13
or
Det r o1f
!Coleman 118 1 9 pm
Oakland IHorlen 2 1 and
Hun ter 11 4) at M !wauk ee
(Ste phenson 2 2 and Lon borg ( 7
4) 2 7 p m
Ca forn1a
( Ryan 11 6) at
Tex as { Hand 7 6) 8 30 p m
Clevel and (Perry 15 7 and
W lcox 6 11 ) at Kansas C ty
JSp liltorfl9 5 and Dal Canton 5
3) l 7 p m
Collapsed
M1nnes ota (Perry 7 8) at New
York ( K I1ne 8 4) 7 30 p m
All-Star Vote Getters
NEW YORK IUP! I-Catcher
Johnn) Bench of the Cmcmnal!
Reds who IS replaying h1s
MVP 1970 season after a
d1sappotntm g 197 1 per
formance was the lughest
vote getter fr om fans who
selected the Na twn al Leab'lle
All-Star team wh1ch meets the
Amencan Leaguers Ju ly 25 1n
Atlanta Ga
Bench who leads the NL m
homers and runs batted 1n
rece1ved 1 229 677 votes to beat
out Manny SangUitlen of the
11orld champwn Pittsburgh
Pirates for the startmg catch
mg berth Th1rd baseman Joe
Torre of the St Lou~> Car
dinals the NL s MVP m t971
ranked second 1n th e overall
volmg w1th I 180 613 followed
b}
outfielders
Roberto
Cleme nte and ll>llle SU!rgell of
the Ptrates w1th I 1191 623 and
717 597 votes respectively
Round1n g out the NL s
startin g team w1ll be f>rst
baseman Lee May of the
Houston Astros who had
688 581 votes second baseman
Jo e Morgan of the Reda .,.ho
had 654 0~ and shortstop Don
Kessmger of the Ch1cago Cubs
who had 61i5 921 votes
The pitchers and ullhl) men
w111 be selected by Danny
Murtaugh who ret1red for
health reasons last wmter after
leading the P1rates to their
world champwnslup Mur
taugh also led the P1rates to
their only other "orld cham
pwnsh1p m 1960
Murtaugh and h1s coachmg
staff Will also choose the
players other than regulars
They are expected but not
obhgated to lollow the votmg
pattern of the fans
NEW YORK (UP[)- D>ck
Allen a Natwnal I eag ue
castoff who has found a home
w1th the Ch1cago Wh1te Sox
polled o>e1 a m1ihon votes to
become
the
Amencan
League s top vote-getter m
ballot10g by fans for the All
Star Game Jul) 25 10 Atlanta
Allen a mulll talented slug
ger "ho had become a problem
ch1ld when he played w1th the
Phlladelplua Plulhes, St Loms
Cardinals and Los Angeles
Dodgers ol the Nallonat
I eague
recent
1n
yea 1s
rece1ved I 092 758 votes to
eas1ly wm the startmg first
base assignment for the 43rd
annual classic next week
Allen currently leads the
Amencan League m home runs
119 ) and runs batted 10 161 )
Th1s w11l be h1s fifth All-Star
appearance He represented
the Nallonal League four times
when w1th the Ph1lhes and the
Cardinal<
Brooks Rob10son , the Balli
more Onoles shck heldmg
th1rd baseman, was the only
other Amencan Leaguer to
recetve over a mtlhon votes
Although Robmson IS havmg
an off-year ~1th JUSt a 254
batt10g average he sllll polled
r, 1. mll I !u 1 sd n ,Jt fi
St t oud Gamt
II c Pome1 O\ l1gers Da te
B1t wmJg lHIIJlcd the defen
clmg lha n p10n NcY. Ha ve n
Cub s \Hth ( nh one hi! a thud
tnmng Slrt gle b-.,. D Ruu ~ h and
c r a<.:ku l !\\ smg lcs Lfl l\\ 0
K1wams w111 pta) the Pomeroy
T1gers fhursday at 7 15
I ead1ng !utters for the
winners were Smtth with a
home run and s1ng te Porter
had a smgle and double and
Spencer had two s1ngles
VA~E
RATED
b 1t s n P<H:tng ! IS
let~rn to thl \\HI D n: ush \\dS
Ute l ostng hurle1
JffJcJal
1t
USED CARS
Hanel) Ma1 shall h.od I\\ o
s mgles <111d H1ck Johnson had a
double f01 the 11gers who
scored three m the f1 rst two m
tl1e second ond SIX m the th>rd
fhe game ~a s called alter
three and a h,lil 1nmn gs
because of the te n 1un rule
lh1rd Game
1 he C>emng s th1rd stra1g ht
one httler \\ as pitc hed fn the
!mal ga me b) Pt Pleasant
K1wams Sm1th who 1 cnd(;t ed
1 041 128 votes and ~•II be but a fi fth 10n1ng smgle to the
makm g Ius e1ght11 All-Star Ga lhpohs While Sox s Saul
McG u1re
appea rance
In takm g the w1n the
Completmg the Amencan
1eague Infield are seco nd
baseman Rod Carew of the
Minnesota Twms and shortstop
l u1s Apancw of the Boston
Red Sox Both are 1epeaters
from last year alon g With
Robmson and outflCidc• Carl
Yastrzemsk1 of Boston
Carew rece1ved 812 055 votes
to eas1 ly boat out Cook1r RoJ as
of the Kansas Cit) Royals
wh1le lhe veteran Apari CIO
who may not he able to pia)
because of an InJury rece1ved
625 074 'utes well ahead of
Bert Campanens of the
Oakland Athlehcs
B11l Frechan won the sta1 t10 g
catchers JOb drawmg 767 538
votes to bea t out Rav Fosse of
the Cleveland lnd1ans
In the outfield along With
Yastrzemskt w•ll be Oakland s
Regg>e Jackson, who rece1ved
I fif N U~ Bl
NAlU ll
902 421 votes and Bobby
ADDITIONAL OR
Murcer of the Ne~ York
WITHOUT COUPON 1Q¢
Yankees who recetved 506 241
votes
Carlos May of the White Sox
and Lou Pimella and An1os Oils
of the Royals were the fourth
fifth and SIXth outfielders,
respectively accordmg to the
fans' vote
All Star manager Earl
Weaver of the Baltimore
Orwtes wlil name the pitchers
and sernnd str10gers later this
week
70 VOLKSWAGEN
2 DOOR
4 SPEED
'1595
Karr & Van Zandt
You II L ke Ou r Qua lity
WOJy at Dong Bus ness
GMAC FINANCING
991 5342
Open
Pomeroy
Ev('n1 ng s Ttl8 00
T1ISPMSat
SHOP
~.:
tl
RAND IMN A lY
Road 1\lla.s Ill
REGULAR 2 95
(U APJ\~ CD ~
ADDITIONAL OR
WITHOUT COUPON
144
LANTERN
BATTERY
REG 1 69
99~
Right Ltmg
LONG BEACH Cahf (UP I)
- Los Angeles Rams quarter
back Roman Gabnel suffered a
rnllapsed nght lung Mondav
and w111 be s1dehned for at
least one month
Gabnel was 1hro11 mg the
footballm a non-contact dnll at
the Rams Long Beach camp
on h>s first day of pract1ce,
when he compla med of feehng
111 He was taken to Long Beach
Commumty Hosp1tal where a
tube was Inserted mto h1s nght
lung through a smallmc•swn m
his back
Dr Jules Rasmsk1 Jr team
phys>c>an for the Rams, sa1d
that 11 was a conunon tllness
caused by a ruptur10g of a
small atr cyst at the top of the
!Wlg and that Gabr>el mtght be
released from the hospttal as
early as Wednesday
=
.- .. _.-...-,-------- ----:::o.&..- 'SU
______;;:;e:.u--~ - - ~
tbe
The Mark V Pol~r Bea rs onlv nm e pmnts m a grea t
Monday mght used a st1ckl defens1ve effm t Dave Iron
defense to post a 66-571110 over Hands F1fe added 16 for the
the Middleport Department lnsers
Store a11d rematn one ga me
R1ll Vaughan s 29 led the
beh1nd fr ont runmng Dally Banke!S wh!l e Gene W1se
Sent in el wh o edged the added 18 and Jon Garnes 15
Fnendly Tavern 9~2 In the Ch1p Ha ggerty paced Adolph s
other game the Pomeroy w1 th 20 and Jeff Morns added
Natwnal Bank team put away 15
Adolph s Da1ry Valley 74-63 10
R1 ch Ba1ley paced the Da1l)
the Middleport Independent Sentmel to the1r mnth wm 1n 10
Basketball League
games w1th 25 pOints and ex
J1mmy Boggs paced Mark V Eastern H1gh School team
mates and off-court budd1es
~•th 18 po1nts whlie Ron
Ferguson added 14 and Ralph Bob R1 !clue and Denms
Sayre contnbuted 12 The E1chmger scored 24 and 22
Department Stores Arthur respecuvel) Hack Hams led
Clark scored 24 and held h!gh- the Friendly Tave rn ~ 1th 22
sconng 6-6 DoXIe Walters to
wh!le Rand) Crawfmd and
Je11y Hubba1 d had 20 eac h
MARK V I68 I- Boggs 8-2-18
Walters 4 t 9 M Sayre 4 1-9 R
Sayre 52 12, Cra1g 0 I 1
Ron Ferguson 6-2 14 Howard :;.
t-Il
MID DEPT STORE (57 )M1tchell 51 II , Clark 9-6 24
J ohn son 3 I 7 F1fe 7 2 16
Ebersback 11-0-0 Archer 0 0-0
Second Game
ADOLPH S I63I - Ha ggerty
5 10 20 Morns 7 t 15 T
Walters 3 0-6 Hensler 5 I II, S
Pnce 6-IJ.I2
POM NAT BANK (74) Vaughan 12 5 29 W1sc 9-IJ.18
Garnes 6 3 15 Chafm 4 2 10
Dave Roberts, (8-5) was
tagged w1th tlie"'oss, allow10g
all three Cardinal runs m h1s
e1ght.10nmg performance
But the Cardmals remamed 9
\\ games 10 back of Pittsburgh
m the Nat10nal League East as
W1lhe Stargell batting on one
good ankle and one bad one
drove home four runs to hft the
Pirates to a 8-5 tnumph over
the Atlanta Braves It was the
f1fth VIctory m a row for the
Pirates
In the only other game
played m the Nat10nal League,
the Cincmnatt Reds stretched
their West DiVISion lead over
Houston to SIX games by
beatmg the Ch1cago Cubs 7 2
US FLAG
OUTFIT
FLAG POLE
& FLAG KIT
Chaney 2 0 4
Th1rd Game
DA ILY SENTINEl 1901 R1tch1e 12 0-24 Elclnngcl 10-2
22 Clulds 4-0-8 Douglas 4 3 II ,
Bmley II 3 25
FRIENDLY TAVERN (82)
- Harris 10-2 22 Crawlm d tOO20 Hubba1d tO 0 20 M01gan
8 0-16 Russell 1 0 2 Adams I 0-
RE GULAR
22 95
~1
s u ul
I I
2
Stand10gs
Name
5 FOOT OAK
w
Dally Senl!net
Ma1kV
Adolph s
M1d Dept
Porn Nat Bank
Fnendly favern
9
PORCH
I.
1
SWING
8 2
4
3
3
1
6
7
REGULAR 24 95
7
9
Bob Gibson Tops Roberts 3-2
Detrott remamed one game by Ed Crosby, a sac nf1ce and
m front of Balt1r0ore m the Lou Brock's smgle
Ameman League East as the
T1gers beat the ChiCago Wh1te
Sox, 3 I and the Orwles
trtpped the Texas Rangers by
an Identical 3-1 count The
Boston Red Sox beat the
Cahforma Angels 4 I and m
the on ly other game scheduled,
the A's and Brewers were
ramed out at Milwaukee
Don Clendenon's e1ghth
mnmg homer snapped a 1-1 he
for St Louts and the Cardmals
proVIded G1bson wuh what
IO' E 2nd
Pomeroy
proved to be the wmnmg run
Phone 992 5428
later 10 the mnmg on a smgle
BACKBOARD & GOAL 5 ET
e
2-HOUR
CLEANING
~A GNOL
(Upon Request)
ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
\
20 INCH
MEDICINE CABINET
Q
PROVINCIAL
VANITY
t4 • 9 1 2
-
SAlE PRI CE
Kelvinator Air Conditioners
'
l lu ( I; Our
Pru1
FURNITURE
SAVINGS I
PH
•
•
6488 • •
ftJtln)
MASON
700 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY
DI~OUNT
7 fOO T
Bears, Sentinel, Bankers in Wins
By MARTIN LADER
UPI Sports Writer
Even 1f Bob Gibson wms
every game he pttches the rest
of the season-and don't bot
everythmg you own agamst
11- 11 shll m1ght not be enough
for the St Loms Cardinals to
overcome the stmgmg bats of
Pittsburgh
G1bson struck out 13 batters
and ran up h1s loth consecutive
VIctory Monday mght as St
Lou1s edged the Houston
Astros 3-2 Followmg ftve
straight losses to open the
season, the 36-year-<Jid righthander has put together nme
complete games m h1s 10-game
wmnmg skem
FOR BIG
Jones an d M
Bl an ton teamed up to l1u1 l a
bt lll tt:~nt me l1 tte1 rhe losm~
pth.: he r \Ht s J Sit ne fr11 the
thud while D
2
Boston (S eberl 7 51 7 30 p m
Ball more tMcNa lly 10 7) at
Gabriel Has
down t< lG \\ tth three mote to
New Haven Cubs we1 e beate n lut the road tomg ht when the
by the Pume1oy Ti gers Jt.j) Pomet oy Yankees play /\d
Easl
wh1le Center VIII(' :;hutoul the da\ 11le 11 G R1p lcy gue>
w I pel g b G~ll!vuhs r1ge1 s 9 0 and the Pt
HJ.\d lnst lltdwcll at 7 b dnd the Galhpohs f1gc•s
53 30 639
47 34 580 5 Pleasant Kl\\oms dumped the unbea ten Mtddlcp" t litdtans
C I ew1s led all h!tlcJS fo•
43 39 524 9 2 Ga lhpol!s Wh1te Sox 14 2 to pta\ u •def< 1ted Pt Pleasa1 t Ce r ten til e w1th a deuble and
44 41 518 10
cump lete all fu st round actwn C1ty Ice and I uci m the tw J smgles m three trtp s wtu lc
36 45 444 16
1n t1 c Kyge1 C1eek little headlmc:t at 8 m
29 54 349 24
P Md\eal had two s> nglc> I
West
I eag ue fom namcnt Monday
F1rst Gam~:
II
11 den had the f1 ge1s onlv
wtpclgb li ght
Ce
nte1
vlllc
scored
tw
o
runs
Itt
c! double HI the thud frame
52 31 627
Tl e f~eld of 14 te,Jms 1s n o~ m the second and l<.:ed the Will
48 39 552 6
Ce r tc1 \ J! le s w11 CCII n(;d
43 40 51 8 9
w t th fl\c more ta l li es 10 the them the n ght t< pill R1o
38 47 447 15
Boston 4 Cal1f 1
News 13 Contact B News 10
12 30-3 WsGame 3 15 Spli1Second6 SearchtorTomorrow8
10 Electric Co 33
l 00 - News Wealher Soorts 3 All Mv Chlldre"' 13 Divorce
Court 8 Green Acres Walch Your Child IS French Chef 3j
1 20 - Lu cille R1vers 3
l 30 - Three on A Match 3 4 15 Lets Make A Deal 6 13 As
T)le World Turns 8 10 Sewong Skills 33
2 00 - Graham 6 Love Spiendored Thing 8 10 Bridge 33
2 30 - Dating Game t3 Guldong Light 8 10 Handruts of Ashes
33 Baseball 3 4 Doctors 15
3 00 - Another World 3 4 15 General Hosp ital 6 13 Secrel
Storm 8 10 Masterp1ece Thea Ire 33
3 30 - One Lofe to L1ve 6 Edge or Night 8 10 Jell s Collie 13
Return to Peyton Place 3 4 1s
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 4 IS Fllntsto nes 13 Sesame
St 33 Huckl eberry Hound 6 Batman 8 Movoe The
Treasure of Lost Canyon
4 25 - Sports Club 6
4 30 - Merv Grltrln 4 I Love Lucy 6 Virginian 8 Password 13
Andy Griffith IS
5 00 - Wagon Tra1n 3 Maverick 13 Mr Rogers 33 Dick Van
Dyke 1S Big Valley 6
5 30 - Marshall Dillon 15 Electric Co 33 Dragnet 4
6 00 - Truth or Conseq 6 News 3 4 8 10 15 I Dream ot
Jeann1e t3 Sesame Sr 20 Hathayoga 33
6 30 - News3 4 6 8101315 Brldge33
7 00 - Dock Van Dyke 4 News 6 10 What s My Line 8 Elec
Co 20 Wold Wild West 13 Death Valley Days 15 Milestones
ol Progress33 , Movie 'FamelstheNameoftheGame '
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6 Hollvwood Squores 3 Dragnet 8
The Judge 10 Episode Action 33 Mr Rogers 20 Lassie 15
Doctors on Call 4
8 00 - Adam 12 4 A Public AHalr 20 33 Green Acres 3 The
Super 6 13 Dav1d Stemberg 8 10
8 30 - Corner Bar 6 13 McCloud 3, 4 15 Movie Potemkin
20 33
9 00 - Medical Center 8 10 Vibrations 20 Marty Feldman
Comedy Machine 13 What's Your Housing JQ? 6
9 30 - Kopycal13 Movie' X The Unknown 6
10 OO ~ Mannlx8 10 News20 Sout33 NlghtGalleryJ 4
10 30 - Convention 72 6 13
11 00 - NewsJ 4 6 8 10 t3 15
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Dick CaveH 6 Movie
' Frankenstein Most Be Destroyed • Movie 'Sand~ of two
Jlma" tO Movie The Oork AI The Top Of The Stairs' 13
100 - News4
1 JO - News 13
7th Straight Win
• •
d
~sr=~ New Haven Cubs Are Elzm zna te
tAll T1mes EDT)
Programs for Tonight
8 30 -
Cops
Cincinnati
Eichinger Has 1-Hitter
Television Log
I Voice along Br'Way I
3-The Daily Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy, 0 July 18,1972
m~m
REGOLA·1BBB
24 95
WiliAMS
Wi ll AM S
1 y ene l y h! ~l ie l d
l glt ng (L i!ss b u lb~ )
18 x 20 • 3 hgh Gold trim
Sol d b O$S ho Jwu e Fvlly water
MASON W ~~
DUliNG SOON!
••
6,000
to
24,000 BTU
'
I
r
POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.
The Department Store
of Butldmg Smce I915
�5-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 11, 1972
· Best For The Grill ... Superiors USDA .Choice Beef
TO MARK VTO STRETCH ·YOUR FOOD
DOLLAR•.WE FEATURE SUPERIORS MEATS.
Shower Given
For Bride-to-be
Chopped Sirloin
lb.a9~
Ground Chuck
lb.99~
SUPERIORS PORK
.
5 $ 1 WIENERS..........'.~:..6 9
~
SUPERIORS ALL MEAT
·
e
e
9
SAUSAGE ........:............... !~: 6 9 FARM SAUSAGE .... ~.....'~:. 7 9
e
e
NECK .BONES.....
SUPERIORS ~ usH
lb.
BALlARD'S WHOLE HOG
.
SALT FISH .....................~~-. 69
NCH MEATS ........... !~:.8 5
RIGHT FROM THE BARREL
SUPERIORS ASSORTED
SEALTEST
ICE CREAM
CURITY
TAPE TABS
crt.
REG. 1.79
DISPOSABLE
DIAPERS
AMfRICA'S FAVORiff
1.59
DOG FOOD
10 lb.
bag
1.•1.
.,.
;
SEALTEST MILK
55~ gallon
lf2 gal.
DOG MEAL
bag
1·
'
.'
.
Purina High Protein
25 lb.
North Star Drumsticks
ORANGE JUICE, Queen of Scot.............~!:'· 39~ .,
BREADED SHRIMP. Ocean Breeze ........ ~~: '1.19
FISH FILLETS gr;::d'.'.'... ~~~-·:............................... ~t;.' 89~
BUFFET DINNERS Banquet....................... ~~;.' · 89~
LEMONADE, Scot Lad........................10 ~~·:; •1.00
5 cot
Pride
10 ° 69~
CHUCKWAGON STEAKSare•de<t
.................
Pk9 . . . ..
WHIPPED TOPPING, Rlch's._ ............. 3 ·~~;~r. •l.oo ·. !r1
DAIRY DEPT.
:·:•'•'
FAIRMONT
:~:
30 oz.
.SCOT LAD
=~::~
59¢
~..-::
PRODUCE DEPT.
MARGARINE
·:•'•'!:
11. $100
:ilj
pkgs.
,. ;,,,i';',JI
CRACKERS
for
FAVORITE
5
CHICKEN BROTH
5 · 1 00
·.•.
~ur~e®
Hamburger
DILL SLICES
'•'·
·:::.
.
QUART
Needs no refngera/ion!
ll'/2
ca ns
oz.
69~
CARN~TIO."
SLENDER
With
cpupon
Good .AI Mark V Only
EXPIRES : 7-22-72
Choc.,
Vanilla ,
Strawberry
and
Choc. Malt.
Gciod
II Mark V
69
.-
•
PHOTO SPECIAL
AN 8 x 10
4
COLOR
FOR ONLY
c
~
"
'
PLUS SOc HANDLING
DRESS MAKING
ALTERATIONS
NO AGE LIMIT
1 PER SUBJECT, 2 PE~ FAMILY
GROUPS TAKEN AT"c PER SUBJECT
TIDE.
fam:x Size $
.88
. NOW ISTHE TIME TO GET THAT
.MUCH WANTEDF~ILY PORTRAIT.
.
29
.
Comer Mill and Se.c_oncl ~ts.
"Wt Reserve The Right To Limit Ouontities "
ttwlLEPORT,
I
)
t
fioMiiOY, OHIO
>
The fifth ann ual Cole family
reunion was held Sunday at
Royal Oak Park .
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
William Mercer. Be lpre :
Kathryn Mercer, Coolville:
Deborah Mercer, Coolville ;
Mr . and Mrs. Billie F. Mercer,
Coolville; Mr. and ~rs. Roy
Betzing, Pomeroy: Mr. and
Mrs. Burl Crawford, North
Lawrence; Mr. and Mrs. Alvin
Depuy , Guysville; Mr. and
Mrs .
Avery
Goeglein,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Ruby M. Cole,
Enid and Pam Cole, ReedsVille: Mrs . An gie Craig,
Mineral , Va .; Mr . and Mrs.
Orv11le Cole, Bobby Cole and
Sco tt Cole, Dayton ; Freda
Miller, Lenore Betzing, Long
Bottom; Letha Wood, Chester.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Betzing,
Two Birthdays
Are Celebrated
Several friends and re latives
met recently at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Gera ld Morris,
Rutland, for a picnic in ob·
servance of the birthdays of
Mrs. Myrle Knopp of Dayton
and Gerald Morris .
Attending were Mr . and Mrs.
Don Sanders, Athens ; Mr. and
Mrs. Greg Sanders and
children, Carr ie, Brenda, Doug
and Shelly, of Rey noldsburg ;
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Morris of
New Marshfield: Mr. and Mrs.
Con rad Ator, Hazel Meeks, and
Myrtle Stanley, Albany ; Mr.
and Mrs . Richard Knopp,
Dayton ; Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Morris, Cathy and Steve,
Ru~land : Ida Bachner, Middleport : and Eliza Powell,
Pomeroy, the honored guests
and the hostess.
Anniversary No.
26 is Observed
Mr. and Mrs. Avery Logan of
Topsham, Maine, celebrated
their 26 th wedding anniversary
Sunday at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Elmer Bailey, Darwin .
Dinner guests for the observance were George Logan,
Miss Bernit'e King, Mr. and
Mrs. Dwight Logan, Mr. and
Mrs. Guy Sa rgen t, Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Milhoan, sons,
Scott and Garry of Topsham,
Maine . Joining the group in the
eveni ng were Mr . and Mrs.
Ca rroll Teaford of Charleston,
W.Va.
ARIZONIANS HERE
Mr. and Mrs. James Bethel
of Phoenix, Ariz. were Monday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Baughman and son, Jeffrey,
Middleport. The Baughmans
are former residents of
Phoenix and were friends with
the Bethel family. The three
Bethel children remained in
Blessing , Ohio with their
grandparents while their
parents came to Middleport.
Hemlock Grove; Mr. and Mrs.
Alfred Yeauger, Minersville;
Mrs. Josie Humphrey, Mrs.
Ola campbell, Colwnbus ; Mr.
and Mrs. Gordon Caldwell,
Nita Jean Ritchie, Cindy Jean
Ritchie, Tuppers Plains;
Ltnda, Jeff, and Randy Depoy,
·Guysville; ·Terry , Becky,
Kevin and Vicki Crawford,
North Lawrence; Mr. and Mrs.
R1chard
Wright,
Paul ,
Douglas, and Evelyn Wright,
Columbus.
The 1973Cole reunion was set
for the first Sunday in August.
:=:::::::::::~;.;;:~:~-:;;:;:~::>.=:~=~::::::::::::::::::::::::~-===::: :::
~\:
Pomeroy . . .
\ \\ Personal Notes
10 A. M.~
4:30 P.M.
r
!iii
a generous
conlr1butwn from Mrs. Holter
for serving her grand·
daughter's wedding reception
last month. Members sang
"Happy Birthday" to Mrs .
Clarence Massar . Two articles,
"The Claiming :'rayer" and
"The Early Life of Walter
Brannon" were read.
A potluck dinner preceded
the meetmg with members
being seated around a long
table . Homemade ice cream
was served for dessert. Mrs.
Louis Reibel , teacher of the
class, gave grace. Prayer fr om
the yearbook opened the
meeting .
Mrs. Ben Neutzhng gave
devotions opening with a hymn
and scripture from Isaiah 18.
TUESDAY
She told the story of "The
SPECIAL MEETING of Pheasant in the Fog " and then
Riverview PTA, 8 p. m. read Proverbs 2, 18, and
Samuel 3, 1, using " Vision" as
Tuesday at school in conjunction with meeting on bond her meditation topic. She
quoted from the scripture,
issue, public invited.
EA DEGREE on one can- "Look to the mountains and the
didate when Middleport Lodge beautiful things of life, and
363, F&AM meets at 7:30p.m. God's purpose for our lives will
at temple. Master Masons be revealed," and concluded
with a poem, "Open Our Eyes"
invited.
and prayer.
EASTERN High marching
band practice, 7 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday and Thursday at high
school. All members, including
alternates, must be present.
THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, 11:30 a.m. Thursday at roadside park, going
north on Route 33. Members to
take food, table service and
MATCH
MAKER
article for program.
WILUNG Workers Class,
Enterprise United Methodist
Church, 6:30p .m. Thursday at
the home of Mrs. James Will . A
pic nic with Mrs. Will to provide
barbecued chicken.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter of
Beta Sima Phi couples picnic
Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at Ft.
Meigs. Potluck dinner. Bring
table service.
LAST YEAR's seventh and
eighth graders will meet at
6:30p.m. Thursday at Southern
Junior High School to rehearse
latter 's daughter and son-in- for chorus work at the outdoor
law, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Potter Racine evangelistic crusade .
of Baltimore, Md., and Mrs .
Rosenbaum's granddaughter,
BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
Mrs. Lou Bracksick, and her
The
eighth birthday of Lisa
husband in Washington, D. C.
They also visited Annapolis, Roush was observed Saturday
Gettysburg, and Ocean City. night with a party at the
Mrs. Grace Crow Tolson of Bradbury home of her grandCanton is now at her home In parents, Mr. &nd ·Mrs. Allen
Roush. Ice cream and cake
Lelart Falls.
Mrs. R. L. Gotthardt and son, were served by Sharon Roush
Bruce, Columbus, were to Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
weekend guests of her mother, Wilcox, Beverly and Bryan,
June Ann Hutton, Roy Grueser,
Mrs. W. A. Morgan.
Karen and Nola Neigler, Allen Roush, and Laura Lee
daughters of Mr. and Mrs . Roush. Sunday Lisa and her
Carrol Neigler, Syracuse, were sister, LalU'a Lee, were taken
recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. to King's Island by Grueser
Clyde Davis, and Lisa, and Sharon Roush.
Columbus. While there they
enjoyed a day at King's Island
PATIENT IMPROVED
near Cincinnati .
Mrs. John Vroman, Mid·
VISITED HERE
dleport, a patient at Mt.
Mr . and Mrs. D. R. Grimes carmel Hll8pltal, Columbus, is
and Karen of Ellicott City, Md ., reported to be improved after
spent three days in Middleport suffering a coronary colusaion .
last week visiting Mr. and Mrs. Her sister, Mrs. Esther KlsseU,
Ea rl Davenport and Mrs. bas been with her the past
Mildred Zeigler. Visiting over week. Her room number Is 721.
the weekend were Mr. and
Mrs. H. C. Lilly and son of
Pineville, W.Va., and here for
the week are Mr. and Mrs. G.
B. Zeigler and daughter, Pam,
of Beltsville, Md. Mrs. Mildred
Zeigler will return to Maryland
with her son and family.
During her visit she expects to
have surgery for the removal
of a cataract.
22, at 5 p.m., till ? .
Soup, homemade ice cream, cake, pies, sandwiches will be
sold and if you knew these "gals" like I do, I'll say you'll enjoy
somereally good food. Bring your family and come out and enjoy
the evening.
MR. AND MRS. TED RILEY, Jr. and son, John Pat, Mrs.
Joyce Douglas, Bethany and Jill of Gallipolis, and Mr. and Mra.
Ted .Riley, Sr ., Clifton, spent Sunday at Cedar Lakes, in Ripley.
Your Mattress
Is lumpy Your Rug5 Are
Worn- Your
Living Room Su·
Is Faded and
Tom- The
Lamps Are Ding
And the Stole
Won't Cook.
MiddlePOrt, 0 .
Phone Aller4--99:1-7145
FOR THAT BRAND NEW LOOK!
h!Carved
WEODING
RINGS
Wben it comes to w~d\~· bands,
KrtCarved is a real matchmaker.
No matter what your choice . . .
traditional or contemporary,
sculp tured or tex turW,'d tamond
or plain ... we have just what
you've been looking for in a bea utifull y matched set or ArtC.rved
wedding ba nds. Each ArtCarved.
ring ia designed with a good deal
of tbough t, and crafted just as
carefully as the Arst ArtCarved
rings back in 1850. [(you've been
looking at wedding rings, come in
and see the match ArtCa.rved has
made for you.
CORTEZ SET, His $35.00 Htn $32. 50
GOESSLER'S
Jewelry Store
Court St .• Pomeroy
- Au!IIM_, ~Carved.......,_
. Today:
Make
Sim le
and
New For Fall
NEW SHIPIIENf
Ann Dressmaking
Corner Third & Main
il
Mr. and Mrs. Avery Logan
and sons, Scott and Garry of
Topsham, Maine are spendin g
a two week vacation here with
his father, George Logan and
other relatives. The Avery
Logan fami ly are former
residents .
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
an d daughter , Jay ne Lee,
visited over the weekend in
Columbus with Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Hammer and daughters .
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Knight
have returned from a week's
vacation at Sarasota, Fla . A
lughlight of their trip was a day
at Disneyworld.
Mrs. Fred Rosenbaum ,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Russ
Capehart, and Mrs . Lee
Richardson of Mason, W. Va .
have returned after visiting the
SEE BAKER'S IN MIDDlEPORT
Kath~m
'.
l.
of helpmg out fmanclally. now confmed to Veterans
During the b~iness meeting Memorial Hospital.
conducted by Mrs. Henry
Mrs. Ada Holter announced
Retbel, the illness of Mrs. that the August meeting will be
Clara Karr was noted and he ld at Royal Oak Park with
members signed a get well Mrs . Oris Ginther, Mrs. Arvilla
card for her. Mrs. John Terrell Frecker , Mrs . Clarence
and Mrs. Phil Meinhart were Headley, and Mrs. Eulah Swan .
appomted to purchase a basket to host the outing. Mrs. Terrell
uf fruit for Mrs. Karr who is and Miss Sybil Ebersbach will
have charge of recreation.
The class d1scussed selling
f<ui t ca kes and candy and
OPEN 10 A.M. Til 4 P.M. ·
WED,
JULY 19
We Accept Federal tood Stamps .
PHONE: ~92-3480
QUICK SERVICE
~ _DIY Only
·su.PER MARKET .~ Qpen_P8:ify 9.to _10 .• Sun.
Support of the Church
Council in a visitation program
toward increasing attendance
was pledged during the Friday
night meeting of the Happy
Harvesters Class of Trinity
Chu1·ch .
Members discussed ways to
enco ura ge iuteres t in the
church program and methods
Cole Reunion Held
Frank Family
Reunz'on Jd
50c OFF SALEI
10 lb., 11 oz.
\
Oniy
EXPIRES : 7·22 -72
160Z.
BOTS.
c
~ NON·DAIRY CREAMER
@nation .
6
Kent Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Brown, Mason,
who is a student at Technology Institute, Oeveland, Ohio was
listed on the dean's list the last semester with 3.05 point average.
Congratulations, Kent !
A RECEPTION WAS given Sunday afternoon at the Clifton
United Methodist Church, honoring and welcoming the Rev. and
Mrs. James Dempsey and family to our Cha rge. The Spilman,
West Columbia, Hartford and Oilton churches honored Rev.
Dempsey by presenting a money tree and food as a gift of love.
A program, "Pattern for Living" was presented with
members of the churches participating. Prayer was given by
Lester Foreman and grace by Jill Taylor. Helen Barker and
Frieda Henry registered the guests. Cookies, punch and coffee
were served and an afternoon of fe llowship was held.
Rev. Dempsey attends school at Delaware, Oh io and will be
with us each weekend. He will graduate in the spring of 1974.
MR. AND MRS. GLENN HOOKS, Shamokin Dam, Penn-.
sylvania, visited Mr. and Mrs. Helen Barker, Oilton . Mrs. Jessie
Cartwright , Mrs. Barker and Mr. and Mrs. Hooks enjoyed dinner
at the Red carpet Inn.
I'VE BEEN WONDERING! We have agencies, boards,
organ izations : every kind of operation coneeivable - well, here
goes! Why not have a "rumor station?" Now, don'tlaugh till you
read this to the fini sh .
Let's anal yze the situa hon :
John Doe had a wreck. The rumor begins and goes like wildlire the minute the siren blows. It says: "Hit a truck, wife killed,
driver of truck drunk and no driver's license - but you know,
John Doe always drove fast "- and on and on.
'!"his is a very mild case of rumor .
People are frightened by rumors. Frightened people see
threats in things they hear - and to a person who tends to be
paranoid, a terrifying rumor can definitely ltp the scales to
paranoid reaction.
Rumor grows and certainly changes. Take our ''big, big"
Mason County bird story a short time ago. The rumor became so
hot and heavy that people were afraid to venture out, and some of
us still look over our shoulder for the "big bird" while out
driving.
The Point Pleasant Bridge disaster brought enough rumors
for a life time.
We were all afra id to cross th e Pomeroy Bend Bridge
because rumor said, "It is weakened" and "I got it from a good
source.''
'The "rumor station" I am suggesting could "quash" rumors
as they come in. The only method that could possibly work is to
tell the "bald" truth, good or bad, to the inquirer.
The one factor in the field of rumor is "speed" of transmission. Rumors can break up homes, clubs, churches, fr iendship and ruin characters, and can cause riots and war. I find
"Nero didn't actua lly fiddle while Rome burned." It was a rumor
spread by enemies. You know, danger comes in whispers, and
rumors multiply during periods of tension or activity.
A caller may say to our imaginary "Rumor Station
operator" that he's absolutely certain of his facts. But the
operator. knowing they are untru e, asks where he heard the
rumor . A typical reply is "I have a brother-in-law who has a
neighbor who knows a policeman and the policeman swears it's
true ."
In fact, there's a "rumor abroad" th at there exists in many
governments a branch called "Disinformation offi ce." This
office is charged with orginating and spreading rumors. All our
Presidents have been victims of vicious rumors regarding their
private lives. There, I've done it again! ·
Apparently there is an inner com pulsion that forces most of
us to pass on a rumor. What is this mental quirk ' Rumors swarm
like bees around honey.
It is rumored that if I don't stop this nonsense real soon, the
man with the big net will be after me and Lakin 's only three
miles down the road 1
MARK GILKEY ATTENDS CAMP
Camps are exciting! All kinds of good things are always
~.;o·:•>C•>C..).;o~.;o.;oo~o.;o.;o.;o-:••>.;o-:o-J>>e..;•-J>-:o>l>•>>~>·:··:•>C•-:o-:o·>•:..>">>~>~->·:·>~><-->>1>·>-:o h
. . Mark Gilk ey, son oI Mr. and Mrs. R'1chard G'lk
appenmg
1 ey,
Mason, enjoyed it all . The purpose of the camp was to give young
people training that will develop the idea of helping the local
church which is th e Church of Christ, Bradbury, near Middleport. This interesting camp was the Ohio Assembly Youth
camp at Darwin in Meigs County.
Mark enjoyed Bible classes, recreation such as basketball,
softball and volleyball, camp fires, hiking, stunts, talent
assemblies and lots of good food. Mark delivers the Sentinel and
Point Pleasant Register to customers in Oilton . During his
absence, Cindy Workman did a very capable job. She was very
courteous. We enjoyed her very much.
HOMEij!AKERS MEET, MAKE PLANS
125 E. Main
Ph. 992-2171
The Mason County Homemakers met at the Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio
Annex Tuesday, with Mrs. Howard Garland, county president,
...:O~*~">t~+-+>~>tttt>H++t-:•">>~>+>~>>~>-:oo~>o~>>~>t+-:·>~-+">tt>~> presiding.
"Me and My Country" was the theme of devotionals given by
vice president, Mrs. Alberta Frye. She said, "America ~love it
or leave it. You don't love by being blind to faults. My criticism of
my country's weakness is a sign of my love."
It was decided during the business session, not to have a float
this year in the Mason County Fair parade.
Grace Brown gave the treasurer's and club committees
reported. Linda J ewell, safety committee chairman, suggested a
"safety jingle contest" for Mason County school children be held.
Edith Fox, fair committee chairman, stressed the importance of workers at the fair booth. The schedule was made
and will be sent to each member. Demonstrations will be given of
our club work. Paper back books, remnants, grab bags, old
records and crafts of all kinds will be sold.
A letter was sent to each member on our armual tour."l'his
year we will go to Morgantown, tour the University, visit glass
house and all the interesting places to be found there.
The club received a communication from Mrs. A. E. Thollllll1
on feasabillty of starting a club for Senior Citizens. A nominating
committee for new officers for coming year will be Mrs. Landon
Smith, Mrs. Glen Cunningham and Mrs. Wayne Hart.
SOME OF THIS, AND THAT:
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Lieving and daughter of Kingston, m.,
have returned to their home after spending a few days with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Roney of New Haven. They also
visited other relatives ·in the Bend Area. Mrs. Llevlng accompanied her son and famUy home to spend a few weeks.
THE HELPING HAND Homemakers Club and the Salem
Community Sewing Circle are having an old fashioned festival at
the Salem Community Building in West Columbia Saturday, July
Miss Tanna Marie Gardner, · Swindell, Mrs. Sharon Swin. brid~lect of Alan Swindell, dell, Mrs. Pat Kitchen, Mrs .
was honored with a bridal Helen Mulford, Mrs. Eileen
shower Friday evening at the Hawley, Robin and Julie
home of Mrs. Charlotte Han- Kitchen Mrs Gloria Mcintosh
ning, Middleport.
·
Mrs . Rita Fields, Joe and
A pink and white color Greg, and Susie Edwards.
scheme was car ried out .
Presenting gifts to the brideGames were played with prizes elect were Mrs. C. M. Hennesy,
going to Mrs. Betty Cline, Mrs. Mrs. Gloria Salisbury, Debra
June Thomas, Mrs. Kathy Efaw, Mrs. Carolyn SatSwlndell, and Miss Becky terfield, Mrs. Linda Mitchell,
Swindell. Favors of miniature Mrs. Milissa Gardner, Mrs.
bride dolls were given to the Marie Manley, Mrs . Rosemary
guests.
Hysell, Mrs. Carla Wiles, Mrs.
Refreshments of ca ke, Diana Davidson.
punch, mints and nuts were
served. A bride doll centered
the refreshment table which
carried out the color scheme
and the cake was inscribed
"Bes t Wishe s, Tanna and
U
Alan." Assistin.g Mrs. Hanning
11e
w1th the servmg were Mrs.
Kathryn Gardner, Mrs. Cline,
The 30th annua l Fran k
Mrs. Sharon Swindell, Miss
Becky Swindell, Paula and reunion was held at the Athens
Camille Swindell, and Mrs. County Fairgrounds Sunday.
Kathy Swindell.
Bill Lucas asked grace
the
dinn er .
Guests besides those named preceding
Re
cognized
as
the
Jldeot
above were Allison Mcintosh,
Mrs. Susie Stewart, Mrs. Elsie member of the fam ily atFolmer, Mrs. Edith Gardner, tending was Richard DuckMiss Linda Gardner, Mrs. worth of Syracuse . Hans Frank
Blanche Edwards , Cheri was the youngest member
Thomas, Miss Sandy Mulford, attendin g.
At the reun ion were Mr. and
Mrs. Roxie Oiler , Cheryl
Folmer, Lori Thomas, Mrs. Mrs. Henry Frank, Mr. and
Louella Taylor, Mrs. Howard Mrs. Alfred Frank , Leslie and
Donna, Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Frank, Chris and Hans, and
Mildred Frank, Nelsonville;
Mr. and Mrs. Harlis Frank,
George and Cathy Pickens,
Tom Spencer , Long Bottom;
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Frank,
John and Jeffrey Frank, and
Homecoming was held Richard Duckworth, Syracuse;
Sunday at the Shiloh E.U .B. Lonnie and Wilda Pigg, Reggie
Pigg, Bill and Betty Lucas,
Church near Leon, W. Va .
Attending were Bessie Hill, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs .
Kevin Hill, Arnold Runyan, Gilbert Meal, Berdie White,
Dora Rice, lcle Sines, Clarence Gallipolis; Eldon Frank ,
Sines , Bonnie Halley, Be a Ostrander .
Boles, Ruth Keefer, Harold
PICNIC PLANNED
Keefer , Otmer Miller, Bunnie
The annual family picnic or
Atkins, Greg Atkins, Elenea the Ken Amsbary Chapter of
Atkins, Mr. and Mrs. Cha rles the lzaak Walton League of
Fogelsong, Mrs . Anna Click, Amenca , will be held at 7 p.m.
Miss Clara Corfee, Mr. and Monday at the farm near
Mrs. Orville Cadle, Mr. and Chester. Those atte nding are to
Mrs. Porter Nicholls, Mr. and take a covered dish , dessert,
Mrs. Bill Riffle, Ne lle Sayre, beverage and table service .
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wood, The meat dish will be provided
Mrs. Jack Dra y, Vance and by the league.
Karen, Mr. and Mrs. David
Ja cques, Mr. and Mrs. Gus
SUPPER PLANNED
Stetle, Mr. and Mrs. Ear!
A'jitney supper will be held
Edwards, Mr. and Mrs. Henry at 4 p.m. Saturday in the
Matheny, John Jenkins, Mary basement of the Pomeroy First
Jenkins , and Mrs . Jacob
Baptist Church.
Turner .
i$ the all$wer
SPICIAI.llliM TJI' COWl!
FRISKIES
OOG FOOD
~:;;
·:·:
Worrisome bills a problem ?
1vs. . ,
for
RC COLA
8
::
tOffee~mate~
from
J
gg~
Thrusday Only!
15oz.
cans
··'·
lb.
BREAD
College Inn
.,.,
,
Every Day Low Price
1.00
bxs.
•
59~
32 oz.
bottle
Large, Golden ·Ripe
::::
r
IVORY
LIQUID
BANANAS
....
~
1
2(Y OFF SALE!
ROYAL SCOT
;.•.·: :
COTTAGE
CHEESE
2.59
1.00
,•r
BY EDITH FOX
Held at Church
6 ct. 49e
VETS' NUGGETTS
~~:
·:·:
Homecoming is
79e
lh gal.
r:::::Ne~l C/Qss Will Support Visitation Plan
:;
Notes.:;
·acknowl~dged
FALL FAIRia
I The Fabric ShopJ
SIN GER
~CALl.' $'
Beau11ful tabr lct for
back to school sewing
Come, browse now\
SALEUSE~'IICE
liMI'LICI•Y
IU W. Stcorut
PAllER~S
f92· 2114
PQmeroy ,
o.
•
�5-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 11, 1972
· Best For The Grill ... Superiors USDA .Choice Beef
TO MARK VTO STRETCH ·YOUR FOOD
DOLLAR•.WE FEATURE SUPERIORS MEATS.
Shower Given
For Bride-to-be
Chopped Sirloin
lb.a9~
Ground Chuck
lb.99~
SUPERIORS PORK
.
5 $ 1 WIENERS..........'.~:..6 9
~
SUPERIORS ALL MEAT
·
e
e
9
SAUSAGE ........:............... !~: 6 9 FARM SAUSAGE .... ~.....'~:. 7 9
e
e
NECK .BONES.....
SUPERIORS ~ usH
lb.
BALlARD'S WHOLE HOG
.
SALT FISH .....................~~-. 69
NCH MEATS ........... !~:.8 5
RIGHT FROM THE BARREL
SUPERIORS ASSORTED
SEALTEST
ICE CREAM
CURITY
TAPE TABS
crt.
REG. 1.79
DISPOSABLE
DIAPERS
AMfRICA'S FAVORiff
1.59
DOG FOOD
10 lb.
bag
1.•1.
.,.
;
SEALTEST MILK
55~ gallon
lf2 gal.
DOG MEAL
bag
1·
'
.'
.
Purina High Protein
25 lb.
North Star Drumsticks
ORANGE JUICE, Queen of Scot.............~!:'· 39~ .,
BREADED SHRIMP. Ocean Breeze ........ ~~: '1.19
FISH FILLETS gr;::d'.'.'... ~~~-·:............................... ~t;.' 89~
BUFFET DINNERS Banquet....................... ~~;.' · 89~
LEMONADE, Scot Lad........................10 ~~·:; •1.00
5 cot
Pride
10 ° 69~
CHUCKWAGON STEAKSare•de<t
.................
Pk9 . . . ..
WHIPPED TOPPING, Rlch's._ ............. 3 ·~~;~r. •l.oo ·. !r1
DAIRY DEPT.
:·:•'•'
FAIRMONT
:~:
30 oz.
.SCOT LAD
=~::~
59¢
~..-::
PRODUCE DEPT.
MARGARINE
·:•'•'!:
11. $100
:ilj
pkgs.
,. ;,,,i';',JI
CRACKERS
for
FAVORITE
5
CHICKEN BROTH
5 · 1 00
·.•.
~ur~e®
Hamburger
DILL SLICES
'•'·
·:::.
.
QUART
Needs no refngera/ion!
ll'/2
ca ns
oz.
69~
CARN~TIO."
SLENDER
With
cpupon
Good .AI Mark V Only
EXPIRES : 7-22-72
Choc.,
Vanilla ,
Strawberry
and
Choc. Malt.
Gciod
II Mark V
69
.-
•
PHOTO SPECIAL
AN 8 x 10
4
COLOR
FOR ONLY
c
~
"
'
PLUS SOc HANDLING
DRESS MAKING
ALTERATIONS
NO AGE LIMIT
1 PER SUBJECT, 2 PE~ FAMILY
GROUPS TAKEN AT"c PER SUBJECT
TIDE.
fam:x Size $
.88
. NOW ISTHE TIME TO GET THAT
.MUCH WANTEDF~ILY PORTRAIT.
.
29
.
Comer Mill and Se.c_oncl ~ts.
"Wt Reserve The Right To Limit Ouontities "
ttwlLEPORT,
I
)
t
fioMiiOY, OHIO
>
The fifth ann ual Cole family
reunion was held Sunday at
Royal Oak Park .
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
William Mercer. Be lpre :
Kathryn Mercer, Coolville:
Deborah Mercer, Coolville ;
Mr . and Mrs. Billie F. Mercer,
Coolville; Mr. and ~rs. Roy
Betzing, Pomeroy: Mr. and
Mrs. Burl Crawford, North
Lawrence; Mr. and Mrs. Alvin
Depuy , Guysville; Mr. and
Mrs .
Avery
Goeglein,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Ruby M. Cole,
Enid and Pam Cole, ReedsVille: Mrs . An gie Craig,
Mineral , Va .; Mr . and Mrs.
Orv11le Cole, Bobby Cole and
Sco tt Cole, Dayton ; Freda
Miller, Lenore Betzing, Long
Bottom; Letha Wood, Chester.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Betzing,
Two Birthdays
Are Celebrated
Several friends and re latives
met recently at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Gera ld Morris,
Rutland, for a picnic in ob·
servance of the birthdays of
Mrs. Myrle Knopp of Dayton
and Gerald Morris .
Attending were Mr . and Mrs.
Don Sanders, Athens ; Mr. and
Mrs. Greg Sanders and
children, Carr ie, Brenda, Doug
and Shelly, of Rey noldsburg ;
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Morris of
New Marshfield: Mr. and Mrs.
Con rad Ator, Hazel Meeks, and
Myrtle Stanley, Albany ; Mr.
and Mrs . Richard Knopp,
Dayton ; Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Morris, Cathy and Steve,
Ru~land : Ida Bachner, Middleport : and Eliza Powell,
Pomeroy, the honored guests
and the hostess.
Anniversary No.
26 is Observed
Mr. and Mrs. Avery Logan of
Topsham, Maine, celebrated
their 26 th wedding anniversary
Sunday at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Elmer Bailey, Darwin .
Dinner guests for the observance were George Logan,
Miss Bernit'e King, Mr. and
Mrs. Dwight Logan, Mr. and
Mrs. Guy Sa rgen t, Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Milhoan, sons,
Scott and Garry of Topsham,
Maine . Joining the group in the
eveni ng were Mr . and Mrs.
Ca rroll Teaford of Charleston,
W.Va.
ARIZONIANS HERE
Mr. and Mrs. James Bethel
of Phoenix, Ariz. were Monday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Baughman and son, Jeffrey,
Middleport. The Baughmans
are former residents of
Phoenix and were friends with
the Bethel family. The three
Bethel children remained in
Blessing , Ohio with their
grandparents while their
parents came to Middleport.
Hemlock Grove; Mr. and Mrs.
Alfred Yeauger, Minersville;
Mrs. Josie Humphrey, Mrs.
Ola campbell, Colwnbus ; Mr.
and Mrs. Gordon Caldwell,
Nita Jean Ritchie, Cindy Jean
Ritchie, Tuppers Plains;
Ltnda, Jeff, and Randy Depoy,
·Guysville; ·Terry , Becky,
Kevin and Vicki Crawford,
North Lawrence; Mr. and Mrs.
R1chard
Wright,
Paul ,
Douglas, and Evelyn Wright,
Columbus.
The 1973Cole reunion was set
for the first Sunday in August.
:=:::::::::::~;.;;:~:~-:;;:;:~::>.=:~=~::::::::::::::::::::::::~-===::: :::
~\:
Pomeroy . . .
\ \\ Personal Notes
10 A. M.~
4:30 P.M.
r
!iii
a generous
conlr1butwn from Mrs. Holter
for serving her grand·
daughter's wedding reception
last month. Members sang
"Happy Birthday" to Mrs .
Clarence Massar . Two articles,
"The Claiming :'rayer" and
"The Early Life of Walter
Brannon" were read.
A potluck dinner preceded
the meetmg with members
being seated around a long
table . Homemade ice cream
was served for dessert. Mrs.
Louis Reibel , teacher of the
class, gave grace. Prayer fr om
the yearbook opened the
meeting .
Mrs. Ben Neutzhng gave
devotions opening with a hymn
and scripture from Isaiah 18.
TUESDAY
She told the story of "The
SPECIAL MEETING of Pheasant in the Fog " and then
Riverview PTA, 8 p. m. read Proverbs 2, 18, and
Samuel 3, 1, using " Vision" as
Tuesday at school in conjunction with meeting on bond her meditation topic. She
quoted from the scripture,
issue, public invited.
EA DEGREE on one can- "Look to the mountains and the
didate when Middleport Lodge beautiful things of life, and
363, F&AM meets at 7:30p.m. God's purpose for our lives will
at temple. Master Masons be revealed," and concluded
with a poem, "Open Our Eyes"
invited.
and prayer.
EASTERN High marching
band practice, 7 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday and Thursday at high
school. All members, including
alternates, must be present.
THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, 11:30 a.m. Thursday at roadside park, going
north on Route 33. Members to
take food, table service and
MATCH
MAKER
article for program.
WILUNG Workers Class,
Enterprise United Methodist
Church, 6:30p .m. Thursday at
the home of Mrs. James Will . A
pic nic with Mrs. Will to provide
barbecued chicken.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter of
Beta Sima Phi couples picnic
Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at Ft.
Meigs. Potluck dinner. Bring
table service.
LAST YEAR's seventh and
eighth graders will meet at
6:30p.m. Thursday at Southern
Junior High School to rehearse
latter 's daughter and son-in- for chorus work at the outdoor
law, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Potter Racine evangelistic crusade .
of Baltimore, Md., and Mrs .
Rosenbaum's granddaughter,
BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
Mrs. Lou Bracksick, and her
The
eighth birthday of Lisa
husband in Washington, D. C.
They also visited Annapolis, Roush was observed Saturday
Gettysburg, and Ocean City. night with a party at the
Mrs. Grace Crow Tolson of Bradbury home of her grandCanton is now at her home In parents, Mr. &nd ·Mrs. Allen
Roush. Ice cream and cake
Lelart Falls.
Mrs. R. L. Gotthardt and son, were served by Sharon Roush
Bruce, Columbus, were to Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
weekend guests of her mother, Wilcox, Beverly and Bryan,
June Ann Hutton, Roy Grueser,
Mrs. W. A. Morgan.
Karen and Nola Neigler, Allen Roush, and Laura Lee
daughters of Mr. and Mrs . Roush. Sunday Lisa and her
Carrol Neigler, Syracuse, were sister, LalU'a Lee, were taken
recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. to King's Island by Grueser
Clyde Davis, and Lisa, and Sharon Roush.
Columbus. While there they
enjoyed a day at King's Island
PATIENT IMPROVED
near Cincinnati .
Mrs. John Vroman, Mid·
VISITED HERE
dleport, a patient at Mt.
Mr . and Mrs. D. R. Grimes carmel Hll8pltal, Columbus, is
and Karen of Ellicott City, Md ., reported to be improved after
spent three days in Middleport suffering a coronary colusaion .
last week visiting Mr. and Mrs. Her sister, Mrs. Esther KlsseU,
Ea rl Davenport and Mrs. bas been with her the past
Mildred Zeigler. Visiting over week. Her room number Is 721.
the weekend were Mr. and
Mrs. H. C. Lilly and son of
Pineville, W.Va., and here for
the week are Mr. and Mrs. G.
B. Zeigler and daughter, Pam,
of Beltsville, Md. Mrs. Mildred
Zeigler will return to Maryland
with her son and family.
During her visit she expects to
have surgery for the removal
of a cataract.
22, at 5 p.m., till ? .
Soup, homemade ice cream, cake, pies, sandwiches will be
sold and if you knew these "gals" like I do, I'll say you'll enjoy
somereally good food. Bring your family and come out and enjoy
the evening.
MR. AND MRS. TED RILEY, Jr. and son, John Pat, Mrs.
Joyce Douglas, Bethany and Jill of Gallipolis, and Mr. and Mra.
Ted .Riley, Sr ., Clifton, spent Sunday at Cedar Lakes, in Ripley.
Your Mattress
Is lumpy Your Rug5 Are
Worn- Your
Living Room Su·
Is Faded and
Tom- The
Lamps Are Ding
And the Stole
Won't Cook.
MiddlePOrt, 0 .
Phone Aller4--99:1-7145
FOR THAT BRAND NEW LOOK!
h!Carved
WEODING
RINGS
Wben it comes to w~d\~· bands,
KrtCarved is a real matchmaker.
No matter what your choice . . .
traditional or contemporary,
sculp tured or tex turW,'d tamond
or plain ... we have just what
you've been looking for in a bea utifull y matched set or ArtC.rved
wedding ba nds. Each ArtCarved.
ring ia designed with a good deal
of tbough t, and crafted just as
carefully as the Arst ArtCarved
rings back in 1850. [(you've been
looking at wedding rings, come in
and see the match ArtCa.rved has
made for you.
CORTEZ SET, His $35.00 Htn $32. 50
GOESSLER'S
Jewelry Store
Court St .• Pomeroy
- Au!IIM_, ~Carved.......,_
. Today:
Make
Sim le
and
New For Fall
NEW SHIPIIENf
Ann Dressmaking
Corner Third & Main
il
Mr. and Mrs. Avery Logan
and sons, Scott and Garry of
Topsham, Maine are spendin g
a two week vacation here with
his father, George Logan and
other relatives. The Avery
Logan fami ly are former
residents .
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
an d daughter , Jay ne Lee,
visited over the weekend in
Columbus with Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Hammer and daughters .
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Knight
have returned from a week's
vacation at Sarasota, Fla . A
lughlight of their trip was a day
at Disneyworld.
Mrs. Fred Rosenbaum ,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Russ
Capehart, and Mrs . Lee
Richardson of Mason, W. Va .
have returned after visiting the
SEE BAKER'S IN MIDDlEPORT
Kath~m
'.
l.
of helpmg out fmanclally. now confmed to Veterans
During the b~iness meeting Memorial Hospital.
conducted by Mrs. Henry
Mrs. Ada Holter announced
Retbel, the illness of Mrs. that the August meeting will be
Clara Karr was noted and he ld at Royal Oak Park with
members signed a get well Mrs . Oris Ginther, Mrs. Arvilla
card for her. Mrs. John Terrell Frecker , Mrs . Clarence
and Mrs. Phil Meinhart were Headley, and Mrs. Eulah Swan .
appomted to purchase a basket to host the outing. Mrs. Terrell
uf fruit for Mrs. Karr who is and Miss Sybil Ebersbach will
have charge of recreation.
The class d1scussed selling
f<ui t ca kes and candy and
OPEN 10 A.M. Til 4 P.M. ·
WED,
JULY 19
We Accept Federal tood Stamps .
PHONE: ~92-3480
QUICK SERVICE
~ _DIY Only
·su.PER MARKET .~ Qpen_P8:ify 9.to _10 .• Sun.
Support of the Church
Council in a visitation program
toward increasing attendance
was pledged during the Friday
night meeting of the Happy
Harvesters Class of Trinity
Chu1·ch .
Members discussed ways to
enco ura ge iuteres t in the
church program and methods
Cole Reunion Held
Frank Family
Reunz'on Jd
50c OFF SALEI
10 lb., 11 oz.
\
Oniy
EXPIRES : 7·22 -72
160Z.
BOTS.
c
~ NON·DAIRY CREAMER
@nation .
6
Kent Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Brown, Mason,
who is a student at Technology Institute, Oeveland, Ohio was
listed on the dean's list the last semester with 3.05 point average.
Congratulations, Kent !
A RECEPTION WAS given Sunday afternoon at the Clifton
United Methodist Church, honoring and welcoming the Rev. and
Mrs. James Dempsey and family to our Cha rge. The Spilman,
West Columbia, Hartford and Oilton churches honored Rev.
Dempsey by presenting a money tree and food as a gift of love.
A program, "Pattern for Living" was presented with
members of the churches participating. Prayer was given by
Lester Foreman and grace by Jill Taylor. Helen Barker and
Frieda Henry registered the guests. Cookies, punch and coffee
were served and an afternoon of fe llowship was held.
Rev. Dempsey attends school at Delaware, Oh io and will be
with us each weekend. He will graduate in the spring of 1974.
MR. AND MRS. GLENN HOOKS, Shamokin Dam, Penn-.
sylvania, visited Mr. and Mrs. Helen Barker, Oilton . Mrs. Jessie
Cartwright , Mrs. Barker and Mr. and Mrs. Hooks enjoyed dinner
at the Red carpet Inn.
I'VE BEEN WONDERING! We have agencies, boards,
organ izations : every kind of operation coneeivable - well, here
goes! Why not have a "rumor station?" Now, don'tlaugh till you
read this to the fini sh .
Let's anal yze the situa hon :
John Doe had a wreck. The rumor begins and goes like wildlire the minute the siren blows. It says: "Hit a truck, wife killed,
driver of truck drunk and no driver's license - but you know,
John Doe always drove fast "- and on and on.
'!"his is a very mild case of rumor .
People are frightened by rumors. Frightened people see
threats in things they hear - and to a person who tends to be
paranoid, a terrifying rumor can definitely ltp the scales to
paranoid reaction.
Rumor grows and certainly changes. Take our ''big, big"
Mason County bird story a short time ago. The rumor became so
hot and heavy that people were afraid to venture out, and some of
us still look over our shoulder for the "big bird" while out
driving.
The Point Pleasant Bridge disaster brought enough rumors
for a life time.
We were all afra id to cross th e Pomeroy Bend Bridge
because rumor said, "It is weakened" and "I got it from a good
source.''
'The "rumor station" I am suggesting could "quash" rumors
as they come in. The only method that could possibly work is to
tell the "bald" truth, good or bad, to the inquirer.
The one factor in the field of rumor is "speed" of transmission. Rumors can break up homes, clubs, churches, fr iendship and ruin characters, and can cause riots and war. I find
"Nero didn't actua lly fiddle while Rome burned." It was a rumor
spread by enemies. You know, danger comes in whispers, and
rumors multiply during periods of tension or activity.
A caller may say to our imaginary "Rumor Station
operator" that he's absolutely certain of his facts. But the
operator. knowing they are untru e, asks where he heard the
rumor . A typical reply is "I have a brother-in-law who has a
neighbor who knows a policeman and the policeman swears it's
true ."
In fact, there's a "rumor abroad" th at there exists in many
governments a branch called "Disinformation offi ce." This
office is charged with orginating and spreading rumors. All our
Presidents have been victims of vicious rumors regarding their
private lives. There, I've done it again! ·
Apparently there is an inner com pulsion that forces most of
us to pass on a rumor. What is this mental quirk ' Rumors swarm
like bees around honey.
It is rumored that if I don't stop this nonsense real soon, the
man with the big net will be after me and Lakin 's only three
miles down the road 1
MARK GILKEY ATTENDS CAMP
Camps are exciting! All kinds of good things are always
~.;o·:•>C•>C..).;o~.;o.;oo~o.;o.;o.;o-:••>.;o-:o-J>>e..;•-J>-:o>l>•>>~>·:··:•>C•-:o-:o·>•:..>">>~>~->·:·>~><-->>1>·>-:o h
. . Mark Gilk ey, son oI Mr. and Mrs. R'1chard G'lk
appenmg
1 ey,
Mason, enjoyed it all . The purpose of the camp was to give young
people training that will develop the idea of helping the local
church which is th e Church of Christ, Bradbury, near Middleport. This interesting camp was the Ohio Assembly Youth
camp at Darwin in Meigs County.
Mark enjoyed Bible classes, recreation such as basketball,
softball and volleyball, camp fires, hiking, stunts, talent
assemblies and lots of good food. Mark delivers the Sentinel and
Point Pleasant Register to customers in Oilton . During his
absence, Cindy Workman did a very capable job. She was very
courteous. We enjoyed her very much.
HOMEij!AKERS MEET, MAKE PLANS
125 E. Main
Ph. 992-2171
The Mason County Homemakers met at the Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio
Annex Tuesday, with Mrs. Howard Garland, county president,
...:O~*~">t~+-+>~>tttt>H++t-:•">>~>+>~>>~>-:oo~>o~>>~>t+-:·>~-+">tt>~> presiding.
"Me and My Country" was the theme of devotionals given by
vice president, Mrs. Alberta Frye. She said, "America ~love it
or leave it. You don't love by being blind to faults. My criticism of
my country's weakness is a sign of my love."
It was decided during the business session, not to have a float
this year in the Mason County Fair parade.
Grace Brown gave the treasurer's and club committees
reported. Linda J ewell, safety committee chairman, suggested a
"safety jingle contest" for Mason County school children be held.
Edith Fox, fair committee chairman, stressed the importance of workers at the fair booth. The schedule was made
and will be sent to each member. Demonstrations will be given of
our club work. Paper back books, remnants, grab bags, old
records and crafts of all kinds will be sold.
A letter was sent to each member on our armual tour."l'his
year we will go to Morgantown, tour the University, visit glass
house and all the interesting places to be found there.
The club received a communication from Mrs. A. E. Thollllll1
on feasabillty of starting a club for Senior Citizens. A nominating
committee for new officers for coming year will be Mrs. Landon
Smith, Mrs. Glen Cunningham and Mrs. Wayne Hart.
SOME OF THIS, AND THAT:
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Lieving and daughter of Kingston, m.,
have returned to their home after spending a few days with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Roney of New Haven. They also
visited other relatives ·in the Bend Area. Mrs. Llevlng accompanied her son and famUy home to spend a few weeks.
THE HELPING HAND Homemakers Club and the Salem
Community Sewing Circle are having an old fashioned festival at
the Salem Community Building in West Columbia Saturday, July
Miss Tanna Marie Gardner, · Swindell, Mrs. Sharon Swin. brid~lect of Alan Swindell, dell, Mrs. Pat Kitchen, Mrs .
was honored with a bridal Helen Mulford, Mrs. Eileen
shower Friday evening at the Hawley, Robin and Julie
home of Mrs. Charlotte Han- Kitchen Mrs Gloria Mcintosh
ning, Middleport.
·
Mrs . Rita Fields, Joe and
A pink and white color Greg, and Susie Edwards.
scheme was car ried out .
Presenting gifts to the brideGames were played with prizes elect were Mrs. C. M. Hennesy,
going to Mrs. Betty Cline, Mrs. Mrs. Gloria Salisbury, Debra
June Thomas, Mrs. Kathy Efaw, Mrs. Carolyn SatSwlndell, and Miss Becky terfield, Mrs. Linda Mitchell,
Swindell. Favors of miniature Mrs. Milissa Gardner, Mrs.
bride dolls were given to the Marie Manley, Mrs . Rosemary
guests.
Hysell, Mrs. Carla Wiles, Mrs.
Refreshments of ca ke, Diana Davidson.
punch, mints and nuts were
served. A bride doll centered
the refreshment table which
carried out the color scheme
and the cake was inscribed
"Bes t Wishe s, Tanna and
U
Alan." Assistin.g Mrs. Hanning
11e
w1th the servmg were Mrs.
Kathryn Gardner, Mrs. Cline,
The 30th annua l Fran k
Mrs. Sharon Swindell, Miss
Becky Swindell, Paula and reunion was held at the Athens
Camille Swindell, and Mrs. County Fairgrounds Sunday.
Kathy Swindell.
Bill Lucas asked grace
the
dinn er .
Guests besides those named preceding
Re
cognized
as
the
Jldeot
above were Allison Mcintosh,
Mrs. Susie Stewart, Mrs. Elsie member of the fam ily atFolmer, Mrs. Edith Gardner, tending was Richard DuckMiss Linda Gardner, Mrs. worth of Syracuse . Hans Frank
Blanche Edwards , Cheri was the youngest member
Thomas, Miss Sandy Mulford, attendin g.
At the reun ion were Mr. and
Mrs. Roxie Oiler , Cheryl
Folmer, Lori Thomas, Mrs. Mrs. Henry Frank, Mr. and
Louella Taylor, Mrs. Howard Mrs. Alfred Frank , Leslie and
Donna, Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Frank, Chris and Hans, and
Mildred Frank, Nelsonville;
Mr. and Mrs. Harlis Frank,
George and Cathy Pickens,
Tom Spencer , Long Bottom;
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Frank,
John and Jeffrey Frank, and
Homecoming was held Richard Duckworth, Syracuse;
Sunday at the Shiloh E.U .B. Lonnie and Wilda Pigg, Reggie
Pigg, Bill and Betty Lucas,
Church near Leon, W. Va .
Attending were Bessie Hill, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs .
Kevin Hill, Arnold Runyan, Gilbert Meal, Berdie White,
Dora Rice, lcle Sines, Clarence Gallipolis; Eldon Frank ,
Sines , Bonnie Halley, Be a Ostrander .
Boles, Ruth Keefer, Harold
PICNIC PLANNED
Keefer , Otmer Miller, Bunnie
The annual family picnic or
Atkins, Greg Atkins, Elenea the Ken Amsbary Chapter of
Atkins, Mr. and Mrs. Cha rles the lzaak Walton League of
Fogelsong, Mrs . Anna Click, Amenca , will be held at 7 p.m.
Miss Clara Corfee, Mr. and Monday at the farm near
Mrs. Orville Cadle, Mr. and Chester. Those atte nding are to
Mrs. Porter Nicholls, Mr. and take a covered dish , dessert,
Mrs. Bill Riffle, Ne lle Sayre, beverage and table service .
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wood, The meat dish will be provided
Mrs. Jack Dra y, Vance and by the league.
Karen, Mr. and Mrs. David
Ja cques, Mr. and Mrs. Gus
SUPPER PLANNED
Stetle, Mr. and Mrs. Ear!
A'jitney supper will be held
Edwards, Mr. and Mrs. Henry at 4 p.m. Saturday in the
Matheny, John Jenkins, Mary basement of the Pomeroy First
Jenkins , and Mrs . Jacob
Baptist Church.
Turner .
i$ the all$wer
SPICIAI.llliM TJI' COWl!
FRISKIES
OOG FOOD
~:;;
·:·:
Worrisome bills a problem ?
1vs. . ,
for
RC COLA
8
::
tOffee~mate~
from
J
gg~
Thrusday Only!
15oz.
cans
··'·
lb.
BREAD
College Inn
.,.,
,
Every Day Low Price
1.00
bxs.
•
59~
32 oz.
bottle
Large, Golden ·Ripe
::::
r
IVORY
LIQUID
BANANAS
....
~
1
2(Y OFF SALE!
ROYAL SCOT
;.•.·: :
COTTAGE
CHEESE
2.59
1.00
,•r
BY EDITH FOX
Held at Church
6 ct. 49e
VETS' NUGGETTS
~~:
·:·:
Homecoming is
79e
lh gal.
r:::::Ne~l C/Qss Will Support Visitation Plan
:;
Notes.:;
·acknowl~dged
FALL FAIRia
I The Fabric ShopJ
SIN GER
~CALl.' $'
Beau11ful tabr lct for
back to school sewing
Come, browse now\
SALEUSE~'IICE
liMI'LICI•Y
IU W. Stcorut
PAllER~S
f92· 2114
PQmeroy ,
o.
•
�6- The f1ailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerov, 0 ...July 18,1972
'
.
Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Cbtssifieds Get Results!
WANT ADS
Wanted To Buy
DEA01..1NES
OLD Furni ture , oak tables
5 P . ~. Day Befor-e Publ ication
organs, dishes, clocks, bras·.
Monday Oeildline 9 a .m .
bed s, or comp lete households .
C an..cellation - Correction s
Writ e M . 0 . Mil ler , Rl. 4
Wi be accepted until9 a .m . tor
Pomeroy . Ohi o. Call 992-6271.
Day Of Publ ica t ion
6 ~ 28 ~ IIc
REGULATIONS
INFORMATI'ON
OF
QUALITY
Tt\4 Publ i sher reserves the
right to edit or rei ect any ads.
deemed
obie c t i onal.
Th e
pubt ishfU" w i ll not be respons ible
for
mo~ ·
insertion
.= or
than one . incorrect
RATES
Wan"t Ad Ser vice
5 cents per Word one insertion
Min1mum Charge 75c "'
12 cents per word three
con secutive in sertioris .
18 cen ts per · woid si x con ·
secutive insertions . ,
25 Per Cen t Discount on pa id
.;.ds and ads pa i d within 10 days ,
CARD OF THANK S
& OBITUARY
Sl.50 for 50 word minimum .
Each addjtional word 2c .
BLIND ADS
Additional 2Sc Cha rge pet
Advert isement.
OFFICE HOlfR~ >
, e : JO a.m. to 5: 00p .m Daily,
8 : 30 a.m·. lo
1"2 : 00~ Noon
Saturday .
Instruct ion
TRA C TOR
TRAILER
TRAINEES NE EDED. You
can now train to become an
' over the road driver or city
driver . E)(ce llent earnings
a fter shor t training on our
trucks with our driver in s tructors to help you . For
application a nd interview,
' cal l 304-344-8843, or write
School · Safety Divis ion,
United Systems, In c., c-o
Te rm inal Bldg .. 55 17 Midland
Drive, Char leston , West
Virginia, 25306 . App roved for
V . A . Benefit s. Placement
ass is lance available. Over 70(
tran s portation c o mpanie ~
ha ve hired our graduates .
7- 17-2t{
Pomeroy
Motor Co.
2 SIGNS
1
For Sale
1963 FORD Fairlane 500. Y·8. 4
dr ., $300 ; DeWalt Rad ial
contractors saw 12", phone
992-7374.
7 ~ 12 ~ 6tc
JUST arrived ~ 1973 Starer aft
1970 CHEVROLET IMPALA SPT. CPE.
$2395
350 cu. in . V-8 engine, turbo -hydramati c, power steer ing &
brakes , radio, red vinyl interi or , black fin ish. White-wall
tires, lik e new .
DODGE POLARA
52295
Factory air conditioning, V-8 engine, automa tic tran smission, power steer ing, power brakes, good while sidewal ls, many more extras. White fin.ish, bla ck viny l roof .
Priced to movel
1970
1970 FORD GALAX IE 500
51995
Hard top coupe, V-8 eng ine, automat ic tran smission ,
power steer ing & brakes, white fini sh , black viny l top,
viny l interior . White·wn ll tires , like new , radio
Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEH EVES. I:OD P.M.
f'!)MEROY, OHIO
Campers - All 1972 un its al
huge di scoun t. We service
what we sell. ~amp Con ley
Starcrall Sales , Rl . 61. N. of
Pl. Pleasa nt behind Red
Carpet Inn.
7 ~ 1 2 ~ 7t c
15.FT. BOAT and trailer with 25
h.p. motor, also 1956 HarleyDavidson 74, phone 992 -527 1.
J . 18 ~ 121 p
30" ELECTRIC cook slove ; pop
coole r , used 2 summers ;
stone jars ; green mason jars;
quarts and pints wi th glass
lids ; wheat cradl e and ot her
an tiques ; Maytag washer ;
phooe 9 8 5 ~ 3811.
7 ~ 18 ~ 3t p
STUD pony colt , weaned, $20 ;
phone 667 -3V06.
3 Bedroom home, with
brick f'ront, 1 car
"arage. carpeting .
Priced at ..
ONLY $13,750
We specialize In aluminum ,
vinyl and steel siding;
fiberglas , bri ck and Ston·e;
complete line ot- r-esld1ent1a1
and com~erclal ;roofing;
remodel! ng ,
bu ild·ing,
suspended ceilings, interior
and exterior painting ;
complete line. of Masonry
work . All work guaranteed to
customer satisfact ion. We
are full y Insured for your
protection. 32 N. 2nd. 9923918.
ALLSTDE BUILDERS &
CONSTR. CO . .
EARTH MOVING
Dozer & End loader work·,.
ponds , basement, landscaping. We have 2 size
dozers/ 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or ~ntract .
Free · Estimates. We also-'~
haul fill .dirt, top,soif. Dump
truck s and low-bOy for hire .
See Bob or Roger Jeffers ,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
·a iter 7 p.m. or phone . 9925232.
EXPERT '
Wh~ Alignl11ent
$5.55
On Most America.!' C'lq_
1111 ~... ~ ~ - ~ ... . · ~ • • , 1.1~ ' •' (Il l
M€7 AN E')(HIBITIONIST?
I'M WEA~ING
CAMPUScrATTERr-~----------------~------------------------~
T~ IS
IS T~E
A VERY
CONSER'IATIVE. ~ESS !
FOU~T~ P~I'ES50~
Pho'ne 992-2094
Pomeroy Homl"&· Auto
Open 8Til5
Monday thru Salurda,
606
E. Main,. .Pomoroy,
.
. . ·-· --Q.
- ...
WE KNOVv', LAr:tY.
BUT DID 'r\JU HAVE
10 PUT li ON .. .
'
PAPER hanging ; irlier ior and
ex ter io r painting ; Arthur
Musser, phone 742 -5223.
7 ~ 18 ~ 30tp
.
.·
·..
u ~ •••
SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC. .
Razor Cut?
Lelal'l
"
WE'VE LOST T~IS Ti:Ritl TO A PAIR
OF HOT PANTS J
HARRISON'S TV Service, open
9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; free pickup
a nd delivery ; phone 992-2522.
For Sale,
~
HI DE
THAT f',IGG'I BANK OF 'IOR' N IF
'IE DON T WANT
UNK SNU FF'!
TO BUST IT
OPEN
- G4ARANTEto~
From the largest
Rent or Tfade 1 EXT RA nice, 3 year old,
Bull dozer Radia,jor to
Notice
6 · 1 3 ~tl c
Ho lstei n s pringing heifer ;
Smal lest Hea ter Core.
12 x 63 MOBILE home; 3 room
phone 949.2172.
~ Nathan Biggs
AUTOMOBI Lniisurance been
furni shed apartment ; 8 x 38
7-18·31c
Have Yo" Had A
Radiator
Specialist
cancelled?
Lost
yovr
mobile home; 30 x 50
---~____:
operator's license? Call 992·
storeroom ; trailer space. Sale JULY BRusH HDG sA LE s. 3 For Sale
Notice
2966 . .
or trade, 4 rooms, bath, ni ce
Lost
serr:ti load s of cu tters just 9 YEAR OLD bucksk in riding
6- 15 ~ tl c
level
lot
;
Sa
le,
good
milk
cow
;
Why
Not
SlOp
in
and
let
Mi
ck
ar~tved, 4-5·6 ft . cu tte rs, J
mare , Ben Bickers phone 949LARGE bla ck and white Coll ie. WHY not try cosme tics that are and Fred cut and style your
M
&
G
Food
Markel,
3
mi.
po mt and pu ll type, all types 4605
'
dillerent
and
Ph . 99l -2174
Reward . Herald Osborne, 985- truly
Pomeroy
hair for neater and better
south of Middlepor t on Rt . 7.
of
oth
er
farm
machinery
,
new
·
J. 16 .Jtc SEE US FOR : Awnings , storm
refresh
ing?
The
famous
mink
3915.
con troll ed hair .
7 ~ 12.6tp
doors and windows, carp.orts, SEWING MAt HINES . Repair
and used ; stop and see us -~~~~~~~~
oil base and now we have the
7·1Hip
marquees, alum in um_ siding
before
yo
u
buy
.
Jim's Farm
lemon grove . Just think, 14
serv ice, a ll makes. 992-2284
KARR'S
Shepherd pupp ies;
and rail ing . A Jacob, sales
Equi p. Center, s miles West GERMAN
specia ls th is month, some for
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
be
A.K
.C.
registered
;
can
Wanted · To Rent
represe ntati ve . For free
on Rt . 35, Ga llipol is, Ohio ;
BARBER
men as well as women. It's
Author ized Singer Sales and
males,
S35
;
females,
S25
;
also
phone 446-9777 or 4.46-3592 .
· estimates, phon e Charles
SHOP
KOSCOT of course . Phone
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
TRAILER spa ce for 12 x 60
1960
Mercury
Comet,
$100;
Li sle, Sy racu se, V. V.
7-18·31c
992.5113.
Lynn St .
3 ~ 29 ~ tfc
mobile home close to
see Bob Young on Success
.
Johnson
and Son, Inc .
7 ~ 9 ~ 1f c
Pomeroy
Ga llipoli s ; phone 992-5592 or BOAT, motor and trailer ; 1 ft.
Road near big water tower ;
I''\\,
5
- - - Customers
- - - at
992·3372.
---,-=----=-3~·2-tfa READY .MI X CONCRETE
~~~~ Ph. 992.2367
phone Reedsville 667-3512.
boa t of wooden construction,
WANTED
delivered right to y.aur
7 · 1 6~ 6 t c
Barbers'
Local
400-AFL
-CIO
DOZER and ba cK noe -.vorl<.,
Showa ller's Wei Pet Shop ,
project . Fast and easy. Free
65 h.p. Mercury motor: in top ~=========7~::1::.2·-61~
p
ponds and sept ic tanks; B & K
Chester. Ohio . No experience
shape; new battery, ski s,
es
timates . Phone 992 -3284-.
Excavating, Phone 992-5367,
necessary .
cushions, etc .; will sacri fice ;
For Rent
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
Di ck Karr, Jr.
7·9·20tp REDUCE sa le and last wi lh
phone 949 -5656.
Middleport. Ohio .
SMA
LL
3
room
furnished
5· 21-tlc
7
·
16
~
12t
c
GoBe se Tablets & E ~ Vap
6 ·30~ th
apartment with bath . Ideal
------,----:-" wa ter pi lls," Nelson Drug.
LETART, W.Va. - Mr. and LEGAL NOTICE
for one or two working men . WHEAT stra w, Edison Holl on ,
PANTS & JEANS
LA WN MOWER and sma ll SEWtNb MACH INI:: ser'liC£
6·29·30tp
Completely private. Uti li ties
Mrs . Henry Reitmire, Yvonna
phone
949
~4989
.
engi ne repair ; cal l Ethan 949NOTICE OF
clean , oi l. se t te nsion $4.99. 1
furnished. Phone 992-3881 or
7 · 16~ 3tp
SALE
I
2789.
and Tom, of Letart, W. Va.and
APPOINTMENT
Spec ia l Elec t ro -Grande
992 ~ 3134 alter 4 p.m.
7 ~ 13 ~ 61c
No . 207 17
Company . Ph one 992-6517.
Mrs. Lucille Laudermilt and Estat e Of MARY Ca~e
7 ~ 12.6tp AUCT ION . Saturday , July 22nd ,
Buy 2 Pairs and
L EMMI SH ,
5·21 ·!1>
---::-::----Carrie Reitmire, bo th of Dec ea sed .
GET 1 PAIR FREE
1 p .m., at the V. D. Cleland
SEPTIC tanks clean.ed . Miller .---=-~-Noti
ce
is
t1 ereby given th at
4
ROOM
fur
nished
new
apart
residence on Route 248 in All kinds, all sizes for men ,
Pomeroy 1 recently spent nine Will etta E Bougher of 1112 E ,
Sanitation , Stewart. Oh io. Pn . USED bui lding supp lies &
ment, everything new, on
Chester, Ohio. HOUSEH OLD: women , you ng men, b,:,ys
662·3035.
days on vacation visiting Mr . Cooke Rd ., Columbu s, Oh io, ha s
salvage yard ; wil l wreck
Main highway in Mason, W.
3p~ . li ving room suite : round
2~ 12~ tlc
been duly appoint ed Executrix
houses. buildings, etc. Covert
and
girls
.
Hurry
to
.
Va . Reynolds Flower Shop up
and Mrs. Harry Reitmire and of the Estate Of MARY L .
dmmg t~abl e, 2 sets dining
&
Marti n Wreckage &
near
drive-in
th
eater,
phone
chairs , iron bed complete, 2
Deborah of LQng Beach, N. C. EMM IS H. deceased , late o f
CA LL Guy Neigler for fju11a 1 n~
POMEROY
Sa lvag e Co .,, Laure l Clill
773 ·5147 .
Meigs
County
,
Ohio
.
half
beds,
3
dressers,
chest
of
Houses .
and Hartford, W. Va . While
~~~'•- Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
acro ss
from
Highland
Creditor s are required lo file
drawers , West inghouse .dtil'
~------~·_
1
2
·6tp
6·28cttc
Phone
992
-2181
Church ; phone 992.5946.
there they also visited Mr. and their claim s with said fiduciary
Window
refr
igerat
o
r
,
vacuum
-----H ~ 12tc
lour month s
ONE 4 room and bath furni shed
Mrs. T. J . Casto and Mr. and wilhin
sweeper, tr ead le sewing
Air Conditioners
Dated this 7111 day of July
apartment , Arnold Grate , machine, rug, large cedar
Mrs. Michael Reitmire and 1971 .
Rutland Furni t ure, phone 742- chest, odd cha irs, dishes , POODLE puppies, Silver To~, Real Estate For Sa le
BACKHOE AND DOZER wor.o
Hot
Water
Heaters
John
c.
Bacon
Park view Kennels, Phone 992family, both formerly of this
42
11
.
Septic tank s installed. George
RACIN E - 6 roam house, earn ,
c ooking
utensi Is ;
AN Judge
5443 .
Plumbing
LBill l Pull ins. Phone 992 · 241~8. ·
7· 18 31c TIQUE S: Secretar y, 2 stands,
area. They reswned their trip (7) 11 , 16, 25, 31
utilityroom
,
garage
,
$10,000
;
8 ~ 15·tfc
·
4· 25~ tfc'
------Electrical
Work
pic ture fr ames , gale leg
!Jhone 9.49-4195.
to Jacksonville, Fla. , to visit
3 AN D 4 ROOM lurn ished and table, 2 rockers, kerosene
3~ 31 · 11 ·
Mr. and Mrs. George Moore
un fu rn ished apar tments . lamp , 2 ice boxes , clocks, BOAT, motor and trai ler ; good
O' DELL WHEEL alignmenT
NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
cond ition , $425 ; ph one 992· RAC IN E - 10 ruum house ,
Phone 992-5434.
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
and family and Mr. a nd Mrs.
sideboard
,
stone
jar
s;
AND APPRAISEMENT
737 5 or 992.9981.
412·tfC MISCELLANEOUS : Power
Comple te front end s"'ervice,
bath, basement, garage, two
Reitmire and The St at e of Ohio, Meigs
Raymond
7·16·31c
tune up and brake service.
la wn mowe r, lawn chair s,
lots. Phone 949-4313 .
. Probal e Courl .
family . Points of interes t were Counly
Wh eels ba lanced elec To the Admin istrat r ix of the
THREE bedroom coun tr y pressure canner , canning
4·5·ttp
Bluestone Dam and Pipestem estate ; lo ,such of the fo llowin g
_2448
tron ically .
All
work
home , Bowman's
Run , jars, piston type water pump,
-992
as are residents of the State of
guaranteed .
RP.::..,.nno:.hiP
Racine, Oh io; Robert D. Rile, large amoun t of misc. i tems. Mobile Homes For Sale
State Park where they spent Ohio
2
NEW
HOMES,
all
electr
ic
,
3
, viz : ~ the surviving
Pom eroy, 0 .
phone 992-7494.
rates . Ph one 742 -3232 or
Ross Cleland, owner ; I. 0 .
bedrooms, full basement and
the night, Fort Caswell, N. C., spous e, the nex t of kin , the L~~~~~---~--'
14·61c
].
992-3213.
1-:u -n c
"Mac"
McCoy,
Auctioneer.
garage
,
with
lake
fron
tage
;
at
benefi ciari es und er the wil l:
·,Air Conditioners
Myrtle Beach,
S.
C., and
7 · 16 ~ 31 c
Five Poin ts area ; phone 992 lo th e allorney or a llorn eys Help Wanted
Okeefenokee Swamps in represen t ing any of the
. , - - - - -- PASTURE. phone 992 ~ 6329
·Awnings
2571 or 992·3975.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
) .J3 .tl c REASONABLE rates . Ph. 446·
aforement
ioned
persons
:
BAR
WAITRESSES,
apply
in
CHECK FIRST AT KUHL'S lor
7-18-6tc
Georgia; Treaty Oak 'free,
Underpinning
•
All en Dean Blackwood ,
R
clean
used
furniture ,
person , ed Carpet Inn, Pt.
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
Frlen'dship Fountain and Deceased , Rutland , Ohio, R.D
guaranteed
app
li ances .
2
BEDROOM
trai
ler.
adults
1, Scip io Township , No . 20 , 164 . Pleasant, W. Va . after 5 p.m.
LOTS
on
Wright
Str
eet
,
Owner
& Operator .
·
Museum and the Gator Bowl in
Upr igh t deep freezes now in 'compl ete mobile home ·
only ; phone IX1 2-5247.
5 ~ 1 2 ~ tlr
You are hereby not ified !hat
7-16-3tc
Pomeroy ; phone 7.42 - 5937~.
se
r
vice
......
plus
giganti
c
7-ll -121p slock! ! KUHL ' S BA RGAI N
Jacksonville . To complete the the
In ventory and
Ap ).18·12tc - - - - - CENTER . St . Rt . 7 " a l 'display of mobile homes
of
the
esta
te
of
!he
ACT
NOW
Join
the
prai
sement
" BRADFORD, Auctioneer
trip all of the families spent the aforementioned , deceased , lat e
T
caution light ," Tupper s always available at ...
0 ld t
Comple te Serv ice
es
oy
&
Gift CO UNTRY home . close lo Pla ins , Ohio . Phone : 667-3858 ;
evening at the ocean swim- of sa id County , was liled in th is
Forked Run Lake ; free gas,
Phone 949.3821
Court. Sa id Inventory and
Par ty Plan in the Coun tr y
MILLER
ming and having a wiener Appra isement will be for - ou r 25th year ! Compartly furni shed . Rea sonable open to 6 p .m .; closed Mon Racine , Ohio
rent ; prefer retired coupl e; day s.
"Critt
Bradford
roast. An unexpected part of hearing be for e this Court on the missions up to 30 pel. Fan CLELAND
MOBILE HOMES
7 · 16 ~ 6t c
27th day ot July , 1972, at 10:00 ta slic Hostess Awards. Call or
referenc es; phone 378-6298
5·1·tl c
the trip was an encoun ter with o'c
) . ) . lie
lock A .M
write "S ANTA 's PARTIES "
1220 Washington Blvd.
REALTY
INT DAMAGE . 1972 L 1 g ~ Lag
Hurricane Agnes in S. C. and
Any person desir ing to fi le A
c 06001 · Te1ep hone - - - - - - PAsewing
423-7521
BELPRE, 0 .
ex ceptions the reto mu st fi le
von , ann .
machines
.
Still
in
Ga., with 50 mile winds and them at least fi'l e days pr ior 10 1 (203) 673 -3455 . ALSO
ori g inal ca rt ons . No a tthe date set tor hearing .
BOOKING PART IES.
For Sale or Trace
four inches of rain per hour .
tachmen ts needed as our FOR THE BEST dea l in a new
Given under my hand and
7-2-JOtc 10FT. X 26 in . metal lathe ; 24"
controls are built·in . Sews
Mr. and Mrs. Richard seal of said Court , thi s 7th dayot -~~~~~~~~or used mobile home, try
WE
HAVE
THE
CON with 1 or 2 needl es , makes
metal sha per; 5 ft. metal
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
Turnbull of Mason were re~ent Ju ly 1972 .
MOTHERS - Are you looking
TACTS.
buttonholes,
monograms
and
planer
;
power
hack
saw
;
Kanauga, Ohio.
John C. Ba con , for somethi ng different? Sell
CA N YOU USE T HEM ?
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Buddy
blind hem stitch . Full cash
metal bender with many dies ;
Ac
ting
Judge
Toy s. Pi ay house Company ·IS
7 ~ 1 6 ~ 30tc
Chan ces are , we have
ex
-offi
ci
o
Clerk
and
pr ice , $38.50 or budget plan
Flowers, Tracy, J ody and
wil l trade above items for
prospects rigtlt now who
otsaid court now hiring for fall . Se ll
ava ilable. Phone 992-5641 .
almost anything of va lue, or
wovld be in terested in your
Michael, of Letar t, W. Va.
Augu st to De ce mber , no
CAS~ paid lor all ma1<es ana
7·14-6tc
wi ll se ll tor fir st reasonable
models of mobile homes . property . If no t, we have
By Ann B. watson deliveries and no collect ions .
Mr . and Mrs. Charles
many con ta cts - are helping
olfer.
Robert
D.
File.
711
S.
Phone area code 614· 423 ~9531.
Deputy Clerk Ca ll Mrs . Barbara Lambert
many people and companies
Re itmir e, Lois Mae and 171 11, 18, 21
3rd Ave .. Middleport , Phone COAL , Limestone, Ex cel sior
446-3411 or Mrs. Margaret
4·13·tfC with
the ir real estate
99U494
.
Charles, were guests of Mr .
Sa il Works , E. Main St..
Fortune 949~ 5414 . Earn Sa. H
problems . If you want to sell
7.12.6tc
Pom eroy , Phone 992-3891.
Green Stamps.
see vs today .
and Mrs. Henry Reitmire,
Real Estate For Sale
1.12. 12tc - - - - - 4- 1 2 ~ 11c
Y~onna and Tom, recently.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
THREE bedroom house wi th
Pets For Sale
l s tory frame , 2 larg e
Lois Mae and Charles spent the
197.1 Yellowstone truck camper, bath, 112-acre Jot , on publ ic
COOK and wa itress and
bedrooms witn walK -in
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Sayre
like new . Ca ll 843~ 2524 .
carhops , apply in per~QIJ , PUREBRED beegle pups;
night . Mr . Rei !mire is emwater sys tem, l4-mile from
closets , large liv ing room
7 ~ 1J.6tc
Craw
's
Steak
House
.
7-12-61c
phone
Chester
985·3565.
and
family
of
Che•ter
,
Mr.
and
Chester
on
Count
ry
Rd
.
25,
with
f irepla ce,
bath ,
ployed on the riverboat JaneT.
7.J6.3tp
Phone 985·4262.
floors
,
basement,
hardwood
Mrs
.
Donald
Sayre
of
Mrs . Ethel Moore spent two
1972 ZIG ZAG Sewing machine .
RETAIL Sa les Clerk , write Box - , - - - - - 2 car garage . AL L IN EX 7 ~ 16·6tc
This ma chi ne makes but - - - - - 729-0 , c-o Sen tine l, Pomeroy, Auto Sales
weeks in Huntington visiting Charleston and Mr . and Mrs .
CELLENT
CO ND ITION .
$14 ,900.00.
ton holes,
darns,
em - 88 ACRES, low $20's, farmhouse
Ohio , giving experience and
Mrs . Anna Phillips and family . William Sayre of Columbus
'64 BUICK Skylark. V.8,
bro ideries , all without at references.
and other bu ild ings, Over 200
IS MINUTES
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Clark were SWJday visitors of Mr .
automat ic, good tires ; must
tachments. Pay balance of
7·12.6tc
ft . frontage. Must see to
Regu~ny
FROM POMEROY
and
Mrs.
Charles
Sayre.
selL returning to ser vi ce;
$41.20 or pay $6 a month ;
and family of West Columbia
.,---,--.,---- appreciate.
Rosemary
3.05 acre estate, 1 story , 3
MARRIE
D
man
for
farm
work
,
phone
992-6716.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Frank
Sarver
Phone
992·5331.
Withem , 239~0647, GRAND.
WITH 12"BAR AND CHAIN.
entertained on Sunday with a
bedroom s with closets, bath ,
s tea dy work year round : no
7-18·31c
7 . 1J ~ 6tc
ut
ility
room,
own
wat
er
liridgeman
,
Mich.,
and
sons
of
STAFF,
IN
C.,
REAL
TOR,
AUTOMAllC OIUNG.
birthday dinner for Miss
la y-ott ; modern house ;
supp ly or Chester water .
471
·2112.
spent
a
few
days
with
Mr
.
and
wee kl y wag es and other '57 CHEVY , 2 dr ., V ~ 8 . 3 speed. 17'1, . CONTI NENTA L Travel
IJ1n~ Fas1 Slarllo;i ~
Yvonna Reitmire. Those atlarge garage and workshop
7·9-tfc
3b21, fruit bu ild ing , 2.5 fru it
1150 ; phone 949·4843.
bene fits ; mu st be e xtending were Mr . · and Mrs . Mrs. Howard Thoma.
Tra
iler
.
1971
model
,
self.
- -- -- Su)1!11y L1m11ed
trees, orapes , berrie s,
pe rienced and sober; write P.
7 · 18 ~ 4tp
Mr . and Mrs. Lar ry Barr and
contained ; awning , mirrors HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone' others , 4 years old .
Henry Reitmire, Tom and
0. Box 685. Cambridg e, Oh io - - - - - - and hitch ; phone IX12-5982.
985 ~ 3 529 .
GREATEST 8UY OF THE
POMEROY
Yvonna · and Mr . and Mrs . family had a cookout at the
43725.
YEAR . Sl8.900.
7-12·tfc
6·11·tfc
).18·61C
home
of
her
parents,
Mr
.
and
For Sale
SltO E. Main
Charles Clark , Les, Charles
-Ph , 992 -2181
Mrs
.
Howard
Thoma.
Others
and Yolanda .
H~NRY E. CLELANDSR
NEED ba rn built, phone 667- 22FT. Tagalong lravel tra iler TOMA TOE S. Cucumbe r s , 48 ACRE farm , 4 room house , .
W. Carsey,
en
joying
the
cookout
were
Mr
.
Rt
.
4,
Pom
eroy
,
Hysell
Run
;
1972
model.
sleeps
four,
sell
:
green
peppers;
Geraldin
e
REALTOR
6227 .
Guests at the home of Mr.
Mgr .
con tained, phone 992 -6960.
Cle land , Racine, Ohio.
phone 992-6009.
PHONE 992-22$9
7·1B6tp
and Mrs . Henry Reitmire, and Mrs. Harley Johnson, Mr .
7 - 1 2~ 6tc
7~ 14·61
7 ~ 6 ~ 11 c
_:_ c
Yvonna and Tom, on In- and Mrs. Frank Sarver , John
'
dependence Day were Mr. and and Eddie.
VACUUM Cleaner new 1972
SENTINEL
Monday
visitors
of
Mr
.
and
Mrs. A. G. Smith and Tim of
model. Com plete wilh all
cleaning tools . Small paint
Poca , Mr . Loyd Smith of Mrs . Harley Johnson were Mr .
CARRIERS
WANTED
damage in shipping . Will lake
Boston, Mass ., Mr . and Mrs. Raymond Chapman , da ughter
$27
. cash or budget plan
110 Mechanic Street
IN
C.1are,lce Ohlinger and family and grandchildren of Silver
available. Phone 992.564 1.
7 ~ 1Hi c
of Stoc kport, Mrs . Sylvia Springs, Maryland and Miss
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
MIDDLEPORT
Ohlinger of West Columbia, Ruby Dieh l of Harrisonville ,
TRAI LER lot in Ru tland ; phone
and Mrs. Ethel Moore. Ice Mr . and Mrs . Frank Sarver ,
742·4211.
NEW LISTING
Phone
Faye
Manley
7 · 1 8 ~ 31c
cream 1 cake, tea and coffee John and Eddie, of Bridgeman ,
NEW
HOME
2
bedroom s, electric heat, bath.
992 -SS92
basement. Chester water. Only $12,000.00.
were served to all in ob- Mich., Mrs. Howard Thoma .
16 FT . SWI SS Colony cam per,
In
CAPRI
servaoce of the birthdays of .Mrs . J. R. Murphy, Peggy,
sleeps six. 3-burner stove ;
Pomeroy
Barbara
and
Debbie
were
~EW
~
3
bedrooms,
nice
bath, stove and refrigerator In
phone 992~6329 .
Mrs. Ethel Moore, Yvonna
k1tchen
.
Lots
of
large
closets.
City water , gas heat.
Phone
992-2156
Sunday
evening
visitors.
7·1Htc
Reilmire and Tim Smith.
$.16,000.00.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Earnheart
Mr . and Mrs . Charles Clark
A LARGE HOUSE
MOB ILE
tra iler ,
air of
Logan and Mr. and Mrs.
were supper guests of Mr. and
conditioned and lot ; phone
4 BEDROOMS - 1'1' baths, modern kitchen with bar.
For Trade
992-5786 .
Dining room . Wall to wa ll carpeting. Outbuilding 40x70 for
Mrs. Henry Reitmir e and Clinton Gilkey of Albany were
PR
IN CESS s elf .con l al ned
) . 18~ 6tc
Sunday
afternoon
visitor
of
Mr
.
bu
sin ess or contractor. Plenty of parking space . Asking
family on Thursday.
camper wi ll trade for lC or 18 - - - - - only $25.000 .00.
.
and
Mrs.
Lincoln
Russell
.
Mr. and Mrs. Olin Reitmire
ft . camper on wheels ; will pay WALNUT ~ STEREO rad io
142
ACRES
Mr . and Mrs. Jack Elam, Bill
difference a ccording to
combination, four speed in and family , Mrs. Goldie
EXCELLE NT SPR IN G - Large farm pond. 4 bedroon:t
value ; phone 99H106.
and
Carolyn
,
were
Sunday
term ixed changer, 4 speaker
Reitmire, Carrie and Paul , all
house, 2 barns, severa l outbuildings on state route.
7·16·3tc
sound
system
,
dual
volume
of Pomeroy, were visitors at vi sitors of Mr . and Mrs. Fred
$32.500 .00 or will consider ofler .
control. Balance $68.42. Use
Tuckerman
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
16S ACRES
our budge! terms . Cal l 992·
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene
Haning,
Rhonda
and
2
houses ~ 4larm punds, 2 cisterns and well. Plenty of good
7085.
Henry Reibnire and family
7 ~ 1Htc
grass. Would li ke $25,000.00.
Ronald .
Thursday evening.
NEW LISTING
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
.BEAUTIFUL Colonial Maple
Mrs. Lois Ann Reitmire and
A REAL BUY - Block business building near A&P. and a
stereo, AM· FM radio, four
Yvonna of Letart and Mrs . Kail , Kevin and Charles, were
modern J bedroom paneled home. Bath, furna ce, and dlr
speakers , 4 speed automatic
.
conditiooed
. Concrete front porch and'large lot with pine
Martha Clark of West Sunday visitors of Mrs. Lena
changer , separate t:ontrols .
Knapp
of
Langsville.
trees
.
A
prime
loca tion for ooly $25,000 .00.
Columbia were in St. Albans on
Balan ce $79.56 . Use our
Michael
Knapp
of
Columbus
budget terms. Call 992 ~ 7085.
Monday . Mrs . Clar k and
7-1A~6t c
WHEN YOU ADVERTISE YOUR PLACE FOR SALE,
spent
Tuesday
throu
gh
Yvon na Reitmire shopped
YOU OPEN XDUR DOOR TO ANYONE. BE SAFE AND
while Mrs. Reitmire was at a Thursday with his uncle, Mr.
JUST TAKEN IN, 1972 8 track'
LI ST WITH US, 98 PCT. OF THE PROSPECTS ARE
stereo in lovely walnut conStanley Sales meeting. She is a and Mrs. Doyle Knapp , Kail,
LOOKERS, 2 PCT. ARE BUYERS . WE WILL SCREEN
Charles
and
Kevin
.
sole. Pay balance of $102.50 or
FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS.!
THEM AND TRY TO BRING ONLY THE BUYERS.
dealer for Stanley Home
pay S7.55 a month. Phone 992·
Christine
Bailey
spent
last
ON YOUI! DIAL
Products.
5331.
week
in
Columbus
with
h~r
- Mrs. Lois S. Reitmire
1.13_6tc ,__H_E_L_E N-~·-T_E_A_F_o_R_
D._A_s_so_c_T_A_TE-~---'-'12--3-32_5_1 ;;r·- · - aunt and uncle.
$
~;:;;::::;=TT~JT~LJGHAID -- 'IE BETTER
_B_u_s_in_es_s_S_e_rv_i_c_es___..J
7 ~ 18 ~ 3 tc
Employment Wanted
In Memory
L ~0 we ldmg alter 5 p.m.
1N MEMORY of Barbara Jean WIL
and
Vo(e ekends, il ny place;
Bailey on her 21st bi rthday.
phone
~92 - 5 77 1.
Dad and Mother
·'
7· 1B·121p
J.18.1tc
M EEK WHAT 'S
lllE iAJEATHER.
REI'ORT ·?
U'L ABNER
IF AH HAD
MAH
-AH DRUTHER
HE:D TR'I TO
LAND ME -·
- STEAD o·
THAT
MULE F IS H-
®
DRUTHERS ~·
- BUT BUYS HAS THAP.
[)f>-UTH ERS UNTIL THE'! GROWS
UP TO Blo HUSB INS THEN
THE'/ LAPJ-JS WHAT THE'I
KIN DO WIF THA R
DRUT H ERS.~'
,.
LOOK, CICE!'lO, ! WEIIJT ALONC>
WI,.H 'fER DOC'TOR GAME'O'
PLA'IIN' PSYCHIA,. RIST! C'N
GIIT UP
1· IP.
July Price Buster!
nHEIL"
® I...ER ... AGREE lHAT
S0\1E OF 'THE DEMANDS
MAY ~E: VALID AND
DESERVE 5ERIOJS
CONSilltllATION
POIN' TO A
FAVORABLE
IN,.ERESTING
CASE!
DIAGNOSIS!
~UT I lHINK DEMANDS SUCH A5- 'THE
RIGHT 10 SOCIALIZE WITH M'ILE:
PR150NER5 AND
fv\1\KE
OUl&IOE PHONE CALL5
m
AREABSURO ....
HEATING &
COOLING
ARNOLD
BROTHERS
ALL IIIJDICATIONS
YOUI<S IS A
MOST
MOO!
YOU MEAN YOU GOT
M! ALL THE WAY OUT
HfAE TO LOOK AT A
STUPIP COW'i'!!
GASOUNE AU..EY
I don't
think
!>he',; in
I could
find Mrs. Cream
a room .. but
t he bea r'
af!rli Jr
~our
basement. Chipper?
am1
,;hape
to be
hitch-
hikinq,
Gramps !
~~~·.~()l~~ ~c
~
Q,
--~---
~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
,\CROS S
for
knighl·
hood
5. Blazr
10. Spanish
provin cl'
t2. Ship
PSEUDO WRITERS,
KNOWN AS ''ARTY
SIDESADDLE" AND ''C HI C
COMPLAIN'',
special ly
(2wd s.l
15. Nest
16. Zola
novel
17. Venturr-
22. ~'amed
~iamc sc•
twin
23. Black
______
:; .: .; · :··--
Ytstt rday'5 Answer
23. Mis s
Ferber
24. London
subur b
cover
(3 wds. 1
IK. Remain·
de•·
19. Subside
20. Alias !\Irs.
North
Wallach
':
7. A n}l)del
for slug·
gards
S. Mr . Ott
9. Befon•
II. Window
14. Get tipsy
19. Mr.
....
24. Di spose
of
21. Chemical
endin,g
tS I. )
12 wds. 1
28. Redact
29. Co nvent
25. Weddin g
phra:;;e
26. Morta l
or
33. Big name
in co n·
sumerism
H. An Arab
lan d
36. English
rive r
37. Resinou .«
v~nial
s ubstance
2i. Power
failure
31. Imb ibe
32. Seeing
r~d
38. Building
extension
39. Fatima ':-;
hu sband
40. Flee ls l.l
-------'"'"'--J 30. Gained
dwe lle~·
:
31. Hold
in
custod>·
34. Venezuela
copper
center
35. Traitor
(sl. )
37. Theatr ical
per~onage
12 wds .)
U "Piav
It .
Aga in
Sam""
play·
wright
42. Consumed
43. Prison
Isl.)
44. Bare
DAILY l'RYPTOQUOTE- Het'e's how
to
work it :
AX\'DLBAAXR
Is LOl'I'GFELLOW
OnC' _let~<'l" s intpl~- stands (or another. ln this sam ple .-\ is
used for the three L's, X for lhe two O's. etc. Single le tlers,
apostro phes, the len gth and formati on of lho words are all
hints. Ea~h da)' tho code leiters are diiTPront.
the
CRYPTOQUOTES
K
WMP0/1390
R~SG
BAH\'
NLC.
VC
K
YUSN
W GCNH RGM
lKV
N lt
EGJHVJt:TG
TH ~ O
HS
AKEKMUCC. .- OHLKVV
RIITSYKVY
!'HV
LUI
YHt;~LG
s
),
with Major Hoople
6. ~lana~
soml'
~~;;,:oi;c'<E<>A
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
:!. Esr h<'w
3. Role for
Rila
Hayworth
l. Sprite
a. Throw
13, Sailor's
S14995
We talk to JOU
like ape.rson.
DOW:-i
I. Ch ess
piec('
1. Train<>C'
Wolfpen News
Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.. Broker
Yesterda~· ·s Cryptoquote: I HAVE LOST EVERYTHING
Al\'0 I AM SO POOR NOW THAT I REALLY CANNOT AF!
FORD TO LET A:-iYTHt~G WOR RY ME.- JOSE PH JEFFERSON
\' ·
••
NH
HOW CAN AN'IONE
6ET LOST IN
A iREE?
�6- The f1ailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerov, 0 ...July 18,1972
'
.
Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Cbtssifieds Get Results!
WANT ADS
Wanted To Buy
DEA01..1NES
OLD Furni ture , oak tables
5 P . ~. Day Befor-e Publ ication
organs, dishes, clocks, bras·.
Monday Oeildline 9 a .m .
bed s, or comp lete households .
C an..cellation - Correction s
Writ e M . 0 . Mil ler , Rl. 4
Wi be accepted until9 a .m . tor
Pomeroy . Ohi o. Call 992-6271.
Day Of Publ ica t ion
6 ~ 28 ~ IIc
REGULATIONS
INFORMATI'ON
OF
QUALITY
Tt\4 Publ i sher reserves the
right to edit or rei ect any ads.
deemed
obie c t i onal.
Th e
pubt ishfU" w i ll not be respons ible
for
mo~ ·
insertion
.= or
than one . incorrect
RATES
Wan"t Ad Ser vice
5 cents per Word one insertion
Min1mum Charge 75c "'
12 cents per word three
con secutive in sertioris .
18 cen ts per · woid si x con ·
secutive insertions . ,
25 Per Cen t Discount on pa id
.;.ds and ads pa i d within 10 days ,
CARD OF THANK S
& OBITUARY
Sl.50 for 50 word minimum .
Each addjtional word 2c .
BLIND ADS
Additional 2Sc Cha rge pet
Advert isement.
OFFICE HOlfR~ >
, e : JO a.m. to 5: 00p .m Daily,
8 : 30 a.m·. lo
1"2 : 00~ Noon
Saturday .
Instruct ion
TRA C TOR
TRAILER
TRAINEES NE EDED. You
can now train to become an
' over the road driver or city
driver . E)(ce llent earnings
a fter shor t training on our
trucks with our driver in s tructors to help you . For
application a nd interview,
' cal l 304-344-8843, or write
School · Safety Divis ion,
United Systems, In c., c-o
Te rm inal Bldg .. 55 17 Midland
Drive, Char leston , West
Virginia, 25306 . App roved for
V . A . Benefit s. Placement
ass is lance available. Over 70(
tran s portation c o mpanie ~
ha ve hired our graduates .
7- 17-2t{
Pomeroy
Motor Co.
2 SIGNS
1
For Sale
1963 FORD Fairlane 500. Y·8. 4
dr ., $300 ; DeWalt Rad ial
contractors saw 12", phone
992-7374.
7 ~ 12 ~ 6tc
JUST arrived ~ 1973 Starer aft
1970 CHEVROLET IMPALA SPT. CPE.
$2395
350 cu. in . V-8 engine, turbo -hydramati c, power steer ing &
brakes , radio, red vinyl interi or , black fin ish. White-wall
tires, lik e new .
DODGE POLARA
52295
Factory air conditioning, V-8 engine, automa tic tran smission, power steer ing, power brakes, good while sidewal ls, many more extras. White fin.ish, bla ck viny l roof .
Priced to movel
1970
1970 FORD GALAX IE 500
51995
Hard top coupe, V-8 eng ine, automat ic tran smission ,
power steer ing & brakes, white fini sh , black viny l top,
viny l interior . White·wn ll tires , like new , radio
Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEH EVES. I:OD P.M.
f'!)MEROY, OHIO
Campers - All 1972 un its al
huge di scoun t. We service
what we sell. ~amp Con ley
Starcrall Sales , Rl . 61. N. of
Pl. Pleasa nt behind Red
Carpet Inn.
7 ~ 1 2 ~ 7t c
15.FT. BOAT and trailer with 25
h.p. motor, also 1956 HarleyDavidson 74, phone 992 -527 1.
J . 18 ~ 121 p
30" ELECTRIC cook slove ; pop
coole r , used 2 summers ;
stone jars ; green mason jars;
quarts and pints wi th glass
lids ; wheat cradl e and ot her
an tiques ; Maytag washer ;
phooe 9 8 5 ~ 3811.
7 ~ 18 ~ 3t p
STUD pony colt , weaned, $20 ;
phone 667 -3V06.
3 Bedroom home, with
brick f'ront, 1 car
"arage. carpeting .
Priced at ..
ONLY $13,750
We specialize In aluminum ,
vinyl and steel siding;
fiberglas , bri ck and Ston·e;
complete line ot- r-esld1ent1a1
and com~erclal ;roofing;
remodel! ng ,
bu ild·ing,
suspended ceilings, interior
and exterior painting ;
complete line. of Masonry
work . All work guaranteed to
customer satisfact ion. We
are full y Insured for your
protection. 32 N. 2nd. 9923918.
ALLSTDE BUILDERS &
CONSTR. CO . .
EARTH MOVING
Dozer & End loader work·,.
ponds , basement, landscaping. We have 2 size
dozers/ 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or ~ntract .
Free · Estimates. We also-'~
haul fill .dirt, top,soif. Dump
truck s and low-bOy for hire .
See Bob or Roger Jeffers ,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
·a iter 7 p.m. or phone . 9925232.
EXPERT '
Wh~ Alignl11ent
$5.55
On Most America.!' C'lq_
1111 ~... ~ ~ - ~ ... . · ~ • • , 1.1~ ' •' (Il l
M€7 AN E')(HIBITIONIST?
I'M WEA~ING
CAMPUScrATTERr-~----------------~------------------------~
T~ IS
IS T~E
A VERY
CONSER'IATIVE. ~ESS !
FOU~T~ P~I'ES50~
Pho'ne 992-2094
Pomeroy Homl"&· Auto
Open 8Til5
Monday thru Salurda,
606
E. Main,. .Pomoroy,
.
. . ·-· --Q.
- ...
WE KNOVv', LAr:tY.
BUT DID 'r\JU HAVE
10 PUT li ON .. .
'
PAPER hanging ; irlier ior and
ex ter io r painting ; Arthur
Musser, phone 742 -5223.
7 ~ 18 ~ 30tp
.
.·
·..
u ~ •••
SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC. .
Razor Cut?
Lelal'l
"
WE'VE LOST T~IS Ti:Ritl TO A PAIR
OF HOT PANTS J
HARRISON'S TV Service, open
9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; free pickup
a nd delivery ; phone 992-2522.
For Sale,
~
HI DE
THAT f',IGG'I BANK OF 'IOR' N IF
'IE DON T WANT
UNK SNU FF'!
TO BUST IT
OPEN
- G4ARANTEto~
From the largest
Rent or Tfade 1 EXT RA nice, 3 year old,
Bull dozer Radia,jor to
Notice
6 · 1 3 ~tl c
Ho lstei n s pringing heifer ;
Smal lest Hea ter Core.
12 x 63 MOBILE home; 3 room
phone 949.2172.
~ Nathan Biggs
AUTOMOBI Lniisurance been
furni shed apartment ; 8 x 38
7-18·31c
Have Yo" Had A
Radiator
Specialist
cancelled?
Lost
yovr
mobile home; 30 x 50
---~____:
operator's license? Call 992·
storeroom ; trailer space. Sale JULY BRusH HDG sA LE s. 3 For Sale
Notice
2966 . .
or trade, 4 rooms, bath, ni ce
Lost
serr:ti load s of cu tters just 9 YEAR OLD bucksk in riding
6- 15 ~ tl c
level
lot
;
Sa
le,
good
milk
cow
;
Why
Not
SlOp
in
and
let
Mi
ck
ar~tved, 4-5·6 ft . cu tte rs, J
mare , Ben Bickers phone 949LARGE bla ck and white Coll ie. WHY not try cosme tics that are and Fred cut and style your
M
&
G
Food
Markel,
3
mi.
po mt and pu ll type, all types 4605
'
dillerent
and
Ph . 99l -2174
Reward . Herald Osborne, 985- truly
Pomeroy
hair for neater and better
south of Middlepor t on Rt . 7.
of
oth
er
farm
machinery
,
new
·
J. 16 .Jtc SEE US FOR : Awnings , storm
refresh
ing?
The
famous
mink
3915.
con troll ed hair .
7 ~ 12.6tp
doors and windows, carp.orts, SEWING MAt HINES . Repair
and used ; stop and see us -~~~~~~~~
oil base and now we have the
7·1Hip
marquees, alum in um_ siding
before
yo
u
buy
.
Jim's Farm
lemon grove . Just think, 14
serv ice, a ll makes. 992-2284
KARR'S
Shepherd pupp ies;
and rail ing . A Jacob, sales
Equi p. Center, s miles West GERMAN
specia ls th is month, some for
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
be
A.K
.C.
registered
;
can
Wanted · To Rent
represe ntati ve . For free
on Rt . 35, Ga llipol is, Ohio ;
BARBER
men as well as women. It's
Author ized Singer Sales and
males,
S35
;
females,
S25
;
also
phone 446-9777 or 4.46-3592 .
· estimates, phon e Charles
SHOP
KOSCOT of course . Phone
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
TRAILER spa ce for 12 x 60
1960
Mercury
Comet,
$100;
Li sle, Sy racu se, V. V.
7-18·31c
992.5113.
Lynn St .
3 ~ 29 ~ tfc
mobile home close to
see Bob Young on Success
.
Johnson
and Son, Inc .
7 ~ 9 ~ 1f c
Pomeroy
Ga llipoli s ; phone 992-5592 or BOAT, motor and trailer ; 1 ft.
Road near big water tower ;
I''\\,
5
- - - Customers
- - - at
992·3372.
---,-=----=-3~·2-tfa READY .MI X CONCRETE
~~~~ Ph. 992.2367
phone Reedsville 667-3512.
boa t of wooden construction,
WANTED
delivered right to y.aur
7 · 1 6~ 6 t c
Barbers'
Local
400-AFL
-CIO
DOZER and ba cK noe -.vorl<.,
Showa ller's Wei Pet Shop ,
project . Fast and easy. Free
65 h.p. Mercury motor: in top ~=========7~::1::.2·-61~
p
ponds and sept ic tanks; B & K
Chester. Ohio . No experience
shape; new battery, ski s,
es
timates . Phone 992 -3284-.
Excavating, Phone 992-5367,
necessary .
cushions, etc .; will sacri fice ;
For Rent
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
Di ck Karr, Jr.
7·9·20tp REDUCE sa le and last wi lh
phone 949 -5656.
Middleport. Ohio .
SMA
LL
3
room
furnished
5· 21-tlc
7
·
16
~
12t
c
GoBe se Tablets & E ~ Vap
6 ·30~ th
apartment with bath . Ideal
------,----:-" wa ter pi lls," Nelson Drug.
LETART, W.Va. - Mr. and LEGAL NOTICE
for one or two working men . WHEAT stra w, Edison Holl on ,
PANTS & JEANS
LA WN MOWER and sma ll SEWtNb MACH INI:: ser'liC£
6·29·30tp
Completely private. Uti li ties
Mrs . Henry Reitmire, Yvonna
phone
949
~4989
.
engi ne repair ; cal l Ethan 949NOTICE OF
clean , oi l. se t te nsion $4.99. 1
furnished. Phone 992-3881 or
7 · 16~ 3tp
SALE
I
2789.
and Tom, of Letart, W. Va.and
APPOINTMENT
Spec ia l Elec t ro -Grande
992 ~ 3134 alter 4 p.m.
7 ~ 13 ~ 61c
No . 207 17
Company . Ph one 992-6517.
Mrs. Lucille Laudermilt and Estat e Of MARY Ca~e
7 ~ 12.6tp AUCT ION . Saturday , July 22nd ,
Buy 2 Pairs and
L EMMI SH ,
5·21 ·!1>
---::-::----Carrie Reitmire, bo th of Dec ea sed .
GET 1 PAIR FREE
1 p .m., at the V. D. Cleland
SEPTIC tanks clean.ed . Miller .---=-~-Noti
ce
is
t1 ereby given th at
4
ROOM
fur
nished
new
apart
residence on Route 248 in All kinds, all sizes for men ,
Pomeroy 1 recently spent nine Will etta E Bougher of 1112 E ,
Sanitation , Stewart. Oh io. Pn . USED bui lding supp lies &
ment, everything new, on
Chester, Ohio. HOUSEH OLD: women , you ng men, b,:,ys
662·3035.
days on vacation visiting Mr . Cooke Rd ., Columbu s, Oh io, ha s
salvage yard ; wil l wreck
Main highway in Mason, W.
3p~ . li ving room suite : round
2~ 12~ tlc
been duly appoint ed Executrix
houses. buildings, etc. Covert
and
girls
.
Hurry
to
.
Va . Reynolds Flower Shop up
and Mrs. Harry Reitmire and of the Estate Of MARY L .
dmmg t~abl e, 2 sets dining
&
Marti n Wreckage &
near
drive-in
th
eater,
phone
chairs , iron bed complete, 2
Deborah of LQng Beach, N. C. EMM IS H. deceased , late o f
CA LL Guy Neigler for fju11a 1 n~
POMEROY
Sa lvag e Co .,, Laure l Clill
773 ·5147 .
Meigs
County
,
Ohio
.
half
beds,
3
dressers,
chest
of
Houses .
and Hartford, W. Va . While
~~~'•- Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
acro ss
from
Highland
Creditor s are required lo file
drawers , West inghouse .dtil'
~------~·_
1
2
·6tp
6·28cttc
Phone
992
-2181
Church ; phone 992.5946.
there they also visited Mr. and their claim s with said fiduciary
Window
refr
igerat
o
r
,
vacuum
-----H ~ 12tc
lour month s
ONE 4 room and bath furni shed
Mrs. T. J . Casto and Mr. and wilhin
sweeper, tr ead le sewing
Air Conditioners
Dated this 7111 day of July
apartment , Arnold Grate , machine, rug, large cedar
Mrs. Michael Reitmire and 1971 .
Rutland Furni t ure, phone 742- chest, odd cha irs, dishes , POODLE puppies, Silver To~, Real Estate For Sa le
BACKHOE AND DOZER wor.o
Hot
Water
Heaters
John
c.
Bacon
Park view Kennels, Phone 992family, both formerly of this
42
11
.
Septic tank s installed. George
RACIN E - 6 roam house, earn ,
c ooking
utensi Is ;
AN Judge
5443 .
Plumbing
LBill l Pull ins. Phone 992 · 241~8. ·
7· 18 31c TIQUE S: Secretar y, 2 stands,
area. They reswned their trip (7) 11 , 16, 25, 31
utilityroom
,
garage
,
$10,000
;
8 ~ 15·tfc
·
4· 25~ tfc'
------Electrical
Work
pic ture fr ames , gale leg
!Jhone 9.49-4195.
to Jacksonville, Fla. , to visit
3 AN D 4 ROOM lurn ished and table, 2 rockers, kerosene
3~ 31 · 11 ·
Mr. and Mrs. George Moore
un fu rn ished apar tments . lamp , 2 ice boxes , clocks, BOAT, motor and trai ler ; good
O' DELL WHEEL alignmenT
NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
cond ition , $425 ; ph one 992· RAC IN E - 10 ruum house ,
Phone 992-5434.
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
and family and Mr. a nd Mrs.
sideboard
,
stone
jar
s;
AND APPRAISEMENT
737 5 or 992.9981.
412·tfC MISCELLANEOUS : Power
Comple te front end s"'ervice,
bath, basement, garage, two
Reitmire and The St at e of Ohio, Meigs
Raymond
7·16·31c
tune up and brake service.
la wn mowe r, lawn chair s,
lots. Phone 949-4313 .
. Probal e Courl .
family . Points of interes t were Counly
Wh eels ba lanced elec To the Admin istrat r ix of the
THREE bedroom coun tr y pressure canner , canning
4·5·ttp
Bluestone Dam and Pipestem estate ; lo ,such of the fo llowin g
_2448
tron ically .
All
work
home , Bowman's
Run , jars, piston type water pump,
-992
as are residents of the State of
guaranteed .
RP.::..,.nno:.hiP
Racine, Oh io; Robert D. Rile, large amoun t of misc. i tems. Mobile Homes For Sale
State Park where they spent Ohio
2
NEW
HOMES,
all
electr
ic
,
3
, viz : ~ the surviving
Pom eroy, 0 .
phone 992-7494.
rates . Ph one 742 -3232 or
Ross Cleland, owner ; I. 0 .
bedrooms, full basement and
the night, Fort Caswell, N. C., spous e, the nex t of kin , the L~~~~~---~--'
14·61c
].
992-3213.
1-:u -n c
"Mac"
McCoy,
Auctioneer.
garage
,
with
lake
fron
tage
;
at
benefi ciari es und er the wil l:
·,Air Conditioners
Myrtle Beach,
S.
C., and
7 · 16 ~ 31 c
Five Poin ts area ; phone 992 lo th e allorney or a llorn eys Help Wanted
Okeefenokee Swamps in represen t ing any of the
. , - - - - -- PASTURE. phone 992 ~ 6329
·Awnings
2571 or 992·3975.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
) .J3 .tl c REASONABLE rates . Ph. 446·
aforement
ioned
persons
:
BAR
WAITRESSES,
apply
in
CHECK FIRST AT KUHL'S lor
7-18-6tc
Georgia; Treaty Oak 'free,
Underpinning
•
All en Dean Blackwood ,
R
clean
used
furniture ,
person , ed Carpet Inn, Pt.
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
Frlen'dship Fountain and Deceased , Rutland , Ohio, R.D
guaranteed
app
li ances .
2
BEDROOM
trai
ler.
adults
1, Scip io Township , No . 20 , 164 . Pleasant, W. Va . after 5 p.m.
LOTS
on
Wright
Str
eet
,
Owner
& Operator .
·
Museum and the Gator Bowl in
Upr igh t deep freezes now in 'compl ete mobile home ·
only ; phone IX1 2-5247.
5 ~ 1 2 ~ tlr
You are hereby not ified !hat
7-16-3tc
Pomeroy ; phone 7.42 - 5937~.
se
r
vice
......
plus
giganti
c
7-ll -121p slock! ! KUHL ' S BA RGAI N
Jacksonville . To complete the the
In ventory and
Ap ).18·12tc - - - - - CENTER . St . Rt . 7 " a l 'display of mobile homes
of
the
esta
te
of
!he
ACT
NOW
Join
the
prai
sement
" BRADFORD, Auctioneer
trip all of the families spent the aforementioned , deceased , lat e
T
caution light ," Tupper s always available at ...
0 ld t
Comple te Serv ice
es
oy
&
Gift CO UNTRY home . close lo Pla ins , Ohio . Phone : 667-3858 ;
evening at the ocean swim- of sa id County , was liled in th is
Forked Run Lake ; free gas,
Phone 949.3821
Court. Sa id Inventory and
Par ty Plan in the Coun tr y
MILLER
ming and having a wiener Appra isement will be for - ou r 25th year ! Compartly furni shed . Rea sonable open to 6 p .m .; closed Mon Racine , Ohio
rent ; prefer retired coupl e; day s.
"Critt
Bradford
roast. An unexpected part of hearing be for e this Court on the missions up to 30 pel. Fan CLELAND
MOBILE HOMES
7 · 16 ~ 6t c
27th day ot July , 1972, at 10:00 ta slic Hostess Awards. Call or
referenc es; phone 378-6298
5·1·tl c
the trip was an encoun ter with o'c
) . ) . lie
lock A .M
write "S ANTA 's PARTIES "
1220 Washington Blvd.
REALTY
INT DAMAGE . 1972 L 1 g ~ Lag
Hurricane Agnes in S. C. and
Any person desir ing to fi le A
c 06001 · Te1ep hone - - - - - - PAsewing
423-7521
BELPRE, 0 .
ex ceptions the reto mu st fi le
von , ann .
machines
.
Still
in
Ga., with 50 mile winds and them at least fi'l e days pr ior 10 1 (203) 673 -3455 . ALSO
ori g inal ca rt ons . No a tthe date set tor hearing .
BOOKING PART IES.
For Sale or Trace
four inches of rain per hour .
tachmen ts needed as our FOR THE BEST dea l in a new
Given under my hand and
7-2-JOtc 10FT. X 26 in . metal lathe ; 24"
controls are built·in . Sews
Mr. and Mrs. Richard seal of said Court , thi s 7th dayot -~~~~~~~~or used mobile home, try
WE
HAVE
THE
CON with 1 or 2 needl es , makes
metal sha per; 5 ft. metal
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
Turnbull of Mason were re~ent Ju ly 1972 .
MOTHERS - Are you looking
TACTS.
buttonholes,
monograms
and
planer
;
power
hack
saw
;
Kanauga, Ohio.
John C. Ba con , for somethi ng different? Sell
CA N YOU USE T HEM ?
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Buddy
blind hem stitch . Full cash
metal bender with many dies ;
Ac
ting
Judge
Toy s. Pi ay house Company ·IS
7 ~ 1 6 ~ 30tc
Chan ces are , we have
ex
-offi
ci
o
Clerk
and
pr ice , $38.50 or budget plan
Flowers, Tracy, J ody and
wil l trade above items for
prospects rigtlt now who
otsaid court now hiring for fall . Se ll
ava ilable. Phone 992-5641 .
almost anything of va lue, or
wovld be in terested in your
Michael, of Letar t, W. Va.
Augu st to De ce mber , no
CAS~ paid lor all ma1<es ana
7·14-6tc
wi ll se ll tor fir st reasonable
models of mobile homes . property . If no t, we have
By Ann B. watson deliveries and no collect ions .
Mr . and Mrs. Charles
many con ta cts - are helping
olfer.
Robert
D.
File.
711
S.
Phone area code 614· 423 ~9531.
Deputy Clerk Ca ll Mrs . Barbara Lambert
many people and companies
Re itmir e, Lois Mae and 171 11, 18, 21
3rd Ave .. Middleport , Phone COAL , Limestone, Ex cel sior
446-3411 or Mrs. Margaret
4·13·tfC with
the ir real estate
99U494
.
Charles, were guests of Mr .
Sa il Works , E. Main St..
Fortune 949~ 5414 . Earn Sa. H
problems . If you want to sell
7.12.6tc
Pom eroy , Phone 992-3891.
Green Stamps.
see vs today .
and Mrs. Henry Reitmire,
Real Estate For Sale
1.12. 12tc - - - - - 4- 1 2 ~ 11c
Y~onna and Tom, recently.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
THREE bedroom house wi th
Pets For Sale
l s tory frame , 2 larg e
Lois Mae and Charles spent the
197.1 Yellowstone truck camper, bath, 112-acre Jot , on publ ic
COOK and wa itress and
bedrooms witn walK -in
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Sayre
like new . Ca ll 843~ 2524 .
carhops , apply in per~QIJ , PUREBRED beegle pups;
night . Mr . Rei !mire is emwater sys tem, l4-mile from
closets , large liv ing room
7 ~ 1J.6tc
Craw
's
Steak
House
.
7-12-61c
phone
Chester
985·3565.
and
family
of
Che•ter
,
Mr.
and
Chester
on
Count
ry
Rd
.
25,
with
f irepla ce,
bath ,
ployed on the riverboat JaneT.
7.J6.3tp
Phone 985·4262.
floors
,
basement,
hardwood
Mrs
.
Donald
Sayre
of
Mrs . Ethel Moore spent two
1972 ZIG ZAG Sewing machine .
RETAIL Sa les Clerk , write Box - , - - - - - 2 car garage . AL L IN EX 7 ~ 16·6tc
This ma chi ne makes but - - - - - 729-0 , c-o Sen tine l, Pomeroy, Auto Sales
weeks in Huntington visiting Charleston and Mr . and Mrs .
CELLENT
CO ND ITION .
$14 ,900.00.
ton holes,
darns,
em - 88 ACRES, low $20's, farmhouse
Ohio , giving experience and
Mrs . Anna Phillips and family . William Sayre of Columbus
'64 BUICK Skylark. V.8,
bro ideries , all without at references.
and other bu ild ings, Over 200
IS MINUTES
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Clark were SWJday visitors of Mr .
automat ic, good tires ; must
tachments. Pay balance of
7·12.6tc
ft . frontage. Must see to
Regu~ny
FROM POMEROY
and
Mrs.
Charles
Sayre.
selL returning to ser vi ce;
$41.20 or pay $6 a month ;
and family of West Columbia
.,---,--.,---- appreciate.
Rosemary
3.05 acre estate, 1 story , 3
MARRIE
D
man
for
farm
work
,
phone
992-6716.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Frank
Sarver
Phone
992·5331.
Withem , 239~0647, GRAND.
WITH 12"BAR AND CHAIN.
entertained on Sunday with a
bedroom s with closets, bath ,
s tea dy work year round : no
7-18·31c
7 . 1J ~ 6tc
ut
ility
room,
own
wat
er
liridgeman
,
Mich.,
and
sons
of
STAFF,
IN
C.,
REAL
TOR,
AUTOMAllC OIUNG.
birthday dinner for Miss
la y-ott ; modern house ;
supp ly or Chester water .
471
·2112.
spent
a
few
days
with
Mr
.
and
wee kl y wag es and other '57 CHEVY , 2 dr ., V ~ 8 . 3 speed. 17'1, . CONTI NENTA L Travel
IJ1n~ Fas1 Slarllo;i ~
Yvonna Reitmire. Those atlarge garage and workshop
7·9-tfc
3b21, fruit bu ild ing , 2.5 fru it
1150 ; phone 949·4843.
bene fits ; mu st be e xtending were Mr . · and Mrs . Mrs. Howard Thoma.
Tra
iler
.
1971
model
,
self.
- -- -- Su)1!11y L1m11ed
trees, orapes , berrie s,
pe rienced and sober; write P.
7 · 18 ~ 4tp
Mr . and Mrs. Lar ry Barr and
contained ; awning , mirrors HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone' others , 4 years old .
Henry Reitmire, Tom and
0. Box 685. Cambridg e, Oh io - - - - - - and hitch ; phone IX12-5982.
985 ~ 3 529 .
GREATEST 8UY OF THE
POMEROY
Yvonna · and Mr . and Mrs . family had a cookout at the
43725.
YEAR . Sl8.900.
7-12·tfc
6·11·tfc
).18·61C
home
of
her
parents,
Mr
.
and
For Sale
SltO E. Main
Charles Clark , Les, Charles
-Ph , 992 -2181
Mrs
.
Howard
Thoma.
Others
and Yolanda .
H~NRY E. CLELANDSR
NEED ba rn built, phone 667- 22FT. Tagalong lravel tra iler TOMA TOE S. Cucumbe r s , 48 ACRE farm , 4 room house , .
W. Carsey,
en
joying
the
cookout
were
Mr
.
Rt
.
4,
Pom
eroy
,
Hysell
Run
;
1972
model.
sleeps
four,
sell
:
green
peppers;
Geraldin
e
REALTOR
6227 .
Guests at the home of Mr.
Mgr .
con tained, phone 992 -6960.
Cle land , Racine, Ohio.
phone 992-6009.
PHONE 992-22$9
7·1B6tp
and Mrs . Henry Reitmire, and Mrs. Harley Johnson, Mr .
7 - 1 2~ 6tc
7~ 14·61
7 ~ 6 ~ 11 c
_:_ c
Yvonna and Tom, on In- and Mrs. Frank Sarver , John
'
dependence Day were Mr. and and Eddie.
VACUUM Cleaner new 1972
SENTINEL
Monday
visitors
of
Mr
.
and
Mrs. A. G. Smith and Tim of
model. Com plete wilh all
cleaning tools . Small paint
Poca , Mr . Loyd Smith of Mrs . Harley Johnson were Mr .
CARRIERS
WANTED
damage in shipping . Will lake
Boston, Mass ., Mr . and Mrs. Raymond Chapman , da ughter
$27
. cash or budget plan
110 Mechanic Street
IN
C.1are,lce Ohlinger and family and grandchildren of Silver
available. Phone 992.564 1.
7 ~ 1Hi c
of Stoc kport, Mrs . Sylvia Springs, Maryland and Miss
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
MIDDLEPORT
Ohlinger of West Columbia, Ruby Dieh l of Harrisonville ,
TRAI LER lot in Ru tland ; phone
and Mrs. Ethel Moore. Ice Mr . and Mrs . Frank Sarver ,
742·4211.
NEW LISTING
Phone
Faye
Manley
7 · 1 8 ~ 31c
cream 1 cake, tea and coffee John and Eddie, of Bridgeman ,
NEW
HOME
2
bedroom s, electric heat, bath.
992 -SS92
basement. Chester water. Only $12,000.00.
were served to all in ob- Mich., Mrs. Howard Thoma .
16 FT . SWI SS Colony cam per,
In
CAPRI
servaoce of the birthdays of .Mrs . J. R. Murphy, Peggy,
sleeps six. 3-burner stove ;
Pomeroy
Barbara
and
Debbie
were
~EW
~
3
bedrooms,
nice
bath, stove and refrigerator In
phone 992~6329 .
Mrs. Ethel Moore, Yvonna
k1tchen
.
Lots
of
large
closets.
City water , gas heat.
Phone
992-2156
Sunday
evening
visitors.
7·1Htc
Reilmire and Tim Smith.
$.16,000.00.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Earnheart
Mr . and Mrs . Charles Clark
A LARGE HOUSE
MOB ILE
tra iler ,
air of
Logan and Mr. and Mrs.
were supper guests of Mr. and
conditioned and lot ; phone
4 BEDROOMS - 1'1' baths, modern kitchen with bar.
For Trade
992-5786 .
Dining room . Wall to wa ll carpeting. Outbuilding 40x70 for
Mrs. Henry Reitmir e and Clinton Gilkey of Albany were
PR
IN CESS s elf .con l al ned
) . 18~ 6tc
Sunday
afternoon
visitor
of
Mr
.
bu
sin ess or contractor. Plenty of parking space . Asking
family on Thursday.
camper wi ll trade for lC or 18 - - - - - only $25.000 .00.
.
and
Mrs.
Lincoln
Russell
.
Mr. and Mrs. Olin Reitmire
ft . camper on wheels ; will pay WALNUT ~ STEREO rad io
142
ACRES
Mr . and Mrs. Jack Elam, Bill
difference a ccording to
combination, four speed in and family , Mrs. Goldie
EXCELLE NT SPR IN G - Large farm pond. 4 bedroon:t
value ; phone 99H106.
and
Carolyn
,
were
Sunday
term ixed changer, 4 speaker
Reitmire, Carrie and Paul , all
house, 2 barns, severa l outbuildings on state route.
7·16·3tc
sound
system
,
dual
volume
of Pomeroy, were visitors at vi sitors of Mr . and Mrs. Fred
$32.500 .00 or will consider ofler .
control. Balance $68.42. Use
Tuckerman
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
16S ACRES
our budge! terms . Cal l 992·
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene
Haning,
Rhonda
and
2
houses ~ 4larm punds, 2 cisterns and well. Plenty of good
7085.
Henry Reibnire and family
7 ~ 1Htc
grass. Would li ke $25,000.00.
Ronald .
Thursday evening.
NEW LISTING
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
.BEAUTIFUL Colonial Maple
Mrs. Lois Ann Reitmire and
A REAL BUY - Block business building near A&P. and a
stereo, AM· FM radio, four
Yvonna of Letart and Mrs . Kail , Kevin and Charles, were
modern J bedroom paneled home. Bath, furna ce, and dlr
speakers , 4 speed automatic
.
conditiooed
. Concrete front porch and'large lot with pine
Martha Clark of West Sunday visitors of Mrs. Lena
changer , separate t:ontrols .
Knapp
of
Langsville.
trees
.
A
prime
loca tion for ooly $25,000 .00.
Columbia were in St. Albans on
Balan ce $79.56 . Use our
Michael
Knapp
of
Columbus
budget terms. Call 992 ~ 7085.
Monday . Mrs . Clar k and
7-1A~6t c
WHEN YOU ADVERTISE YOUR PLACE FOR SALE,
spent
Tuesday
throu
gh
Yvon na Reitmire shopped
YOU OPEN XDUR DOOR TO ANYONE. BE SAFE AND
while Mrs. Reitmire was at a Thursday with his uncle, Mr.
JUST TAKEN IN, 1972 8 track'
LI ST WITH US, 98 PCT. OF THE PROSPECTS ARE
stereo in lovely walnut conStanley Sales meeting. She is a and Mrs. Doyle Knapp , Kail,
LOOKERS, 2 PCT. ARE BUYERS . WE WILL SCREEN
Charles
and
Kevin
.
sole. Pay balance of $102.50 or
FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS.!
THEM AND TRY TO BRING ONLY THE BUYERS.
dealer for Stanley Home
pay S7.55 a month. Phone 992·
Christine
Bailey
spent
last
ON YOUI! DIAL
Products.
5331.
week
in
Columbus
with
h~r
- Mrs. Lois S. Reitmire
1.13_6tc ,__H_E_L_E N-~·-T_E_A_F_o_R_
D._A_s_so_c_T_A_TE-~---'-'12--3-32_5_1 ;;r·- · - aunt and uncle.
$
~;:;;::::;=TT~JT~LJGHAID -- 'IE BETTER
_B_u_s_in_es_s_S_e_rv_i_c_es___..J
7 ~ 18 ~ 3 tc
Employment Wanted
In Memory
L ~0 we ldmg alter 5 p.m.
1N MEMORY of Barbara Jean WIL
and
Vo(e ekends, il ny place;
Bailey on her 21st bi rthday.
phone
~92 - 5 77 1.
Dad and Mother
·'
7· 1B·121p
J.18.1tc
M EEK WHAT 'S
lllE iAJEATHER.
REI'ORT ·?
U'L ABNER
IF AH HAD
MAH
-AH DRUTHER
HE:D TR'I TO
LAND ME -·
- STEAD o·
THAT
MULE F IS H-
®
DRUTHERS ~·
- BUT BUYS HAS THAP.
[)f>-UTH ERS UNTIL THE'! GROWS
UP TO Blo HUSB INS THEN
THE'/ LAPJ-JS WHAT THE'I
KIN DO WIF THA R
DRUT H ERS.~'
,.
LOOK, CICE!'lO, ! WEIIJT ALONC>
WI,.H 'fER DOC'TOR GAME'O'
PLA'IIN' PSYCHIA,. RIST! C'N
GIIT UP
1· IP.
July Price Buster!
nHEIL"
® I...ER ... AGREE lHAT
S0\1E OF 'THE DEMANDS
MAY ~E: VALID AND
DESERVE 5ERIOJS
CONSilltllATION
POIN' TO A
FAVORABLE
IN,.ERESTING
CASE!
DIAGNOSIS!
~UT I lHINK DEMANDS SUCH A5- 'THE
RIGHT 10 SOCIALIZE WITH M'ILE:
PR150NER5 AND
fv\1\KE
OUl&IOE PHONE CALL5
m
AREABSURO ....
HEATING &
COOLING
ARNOLD
BROTHERS
ALL IIIJDICATIONS
YOUI<S IS A
MOST
MOO!
YOU MEAN YOU GOT
M! ALL THE WAY OUT
HfAE TO LOOK AT A
STUPIP COW'i'!!
GASOUNE AU..EY
I don't
think
!>he',; in
I could
find Mrs. Cream
a room .. but
t he bea r'
af!rli Jr
~our
basement. Chipper?
am1
,;hape
to be
hitch-
hikinq,
Gramps !
~~~·.~()l~~ ~c
~
Q,
--~---
~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
,\CROS S
for
knighl·
hood
5. Blazr
10. Spanish
provin cl'
t2. Ship
PSEUDO WRITERS,
KNOWN AS ''ARTY
SIDESADDLE" AND ''C HI C
COMPLAIN'',
special ly
(2wd s.l
15. Nest
16. Zola
novel
17. Venturr-
22. ~'amed
~iamc sc•
twin
23. Black
______
:; .: .; · :··--
Ytstt rday'5 Answer
23. Mis s
Ferber
24. London
subur b
cover
(3 wds. 1
IK. Remain·
de•·
19. Subside
20. Alias !\Irs.
North
Wallach
':
7. A n}l)del
for slug·
gards
S. Mr . Ott
9. Befon•
II. Window
14. Get tipsy
19. Mr.
....
24. Di spose
of
21. Chemical
endin,g
tS I. )
12 wds. 1
28. Redact
29. Co nvent
25. Weddin g
phra:;;e
26. Morta l
or
33. Big name
in co n·
sumerism
H. An Arab
lan d
36. English
rive r
37. Resinou .«
v~nial
s ubstance
2i. Power
failure
31. Imb ibe
32. Seeing
r~d
38. Building
extension
39. Fatima ':-;
hu sband
40. Flee ls l.l
-------'"'"'--J 30. Gained
dwe lle~·
:
31. Hold
in
custod>·
34. Venezuela
copper
center
35. Traitor
(sl. )
37. Theatr ical
per~onage
12 wds .)
U "Piav
It .
Aga in
Sam""
play·
wright
42. Consumed
43. Prison
Isl.)
44. Bare
DAILY l'RYPTOQUOTE- Het'e's how
to
work it :
AX\'DLBAAXR
Is LOl'I'GFELLOW
OnC' _let~<'l" s intpl~- stands (or another. ln this sam ple .-\ is
used for the three L's, X for lhe two O's. etc. Single le tlers,
apostro phes, the len gth and formati on of lho words are all
hints. Ea~h da)' tho code leiters are diiTPront.
the
CRYPTOQUOTES
K
WMP0/1390
R~SG
BAH\'
NLC.
VC
K
YUSN
W GCNH RGM
lKV
N lt
EGJHVJt:TG
TH ~ O
HS
AKEKMUCC. .- OHLKVV
RIITSYKVY
!'HV
LUI
YHt;~LG
s
),
with Major Hoople
6. ~lana~
soml'
~~;;,:oi;c'<E<>A
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
:!. Esr h<'w
3. Role for
Rila
Hayworth
l. Sprite
a. Throw
13, Sailor's
S14995
We talk to JOU
like ape.rson.
DOW:-i
I. Ch ess
piec('
1. Train<>C'
Wolfpen News
Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.. Broker
Yesterda~· ·s Cryptoquote: I HAVE LOST EVERYTHING
Al\'0 I AM SO POOR NOW THAT I REALLY CANNOT AF!
FORD TO LET A:-iYTHt~G WOR RY ME.- JOSE PH JEFFERSON
\' ·
••
NH
HOW CAN AN'IONE
6ET LOST IN
A iREE?
�8- The Daily Sent mel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0., July !1, 1872
Head Grid Coach Signed at .KC .
James E. Sprague. 25. of
Be·mly, Wasluhgton County,
asstslanl football coach for the
last three years at Class AA
Fc:t Ftye, was named head
football coach Monday mght at
Kyger Creek Htgh School.
The artton was Ulken after
the Kyger Creek Board of
Educalton accepted the
restgnalton of Rtchard E
"Dtck" Adams Adams. who
res1gned after one year, IS
playmg professtonal football
wtlh the Ottawa Rough Rtders
of the Canadian Football
teague He submtlted hts
resignation last week tu perm1t
the boat d to htre a coach for
the 1972-73 ca mpatgn
Sprague, a gradu ate of
Belpre Htgh Schoo l and
Glenvtlle State College tn West
Vug1n1a, was offens 1ve
coordtnatot for the Fot l Frye
Cadets last fall Prior to that,
he se n ed two years as
defenstve coord111ator for head
coach Robert Hill. The Cadets
posted an overall 9-1 record
last year.
Sprague was a West Vtrgtnia
Conference all-Defenstve Back
wtth Glenvtlle Slate tn 1969 and
received honorable mentwn tn
1968 He was the runnerup fo't
the Outstanding
Young
Educator tn Ohto Award tn
1970 Sprague wtll leach
drtver's educatwn, physical
educalton and health. He ts
worktng thts summer toward
Ius master degree in Guidance
at Ohw Umverstly
Two other mstructor:s emplo)ed durtng Monday's
spcc1al meehng were Joyce
Hawks of Galltpohs, wtfe of
Rev Paul Hawks, pastor of the
Grace Untied Melhodtsl
CIIU!Ch, a grailuate or Rtu
Gtande College, and Davtd
Preston, Rl. l, Oak Htll, also a
Rto Grande College graduate
Both wtll leach at Addavtlle
Elementary School.
Mrs Ha"ks fo rmetly taught
at Green ~:lemenlary School tn
th e Galltpolts Ctly Scnool
System wlule Preston taught
last fall at Sumnntl Slatton,
Oluu
Elementary teachers offenng resignations were Joyce
Jensen and Joyce Myers Mrs.
Myers had been employed
car her lhts month but accepted
a posilton tn the Mason County
Schools
In other action, the board
approved tts 1972-73 budget
tutahng $859,800.80. Included in
that figure was $779,600.80 in
the general fund, $26,300 in
bonds and $53,900 tn the lunchroom fund
Board clerk DoriS Roush was
authonzed to borro11 $32,000 on
Egypt Asks
Reds to Go
'"
CAIRO (UP!) - Prestdenl
Anwar Sadal has asked the
Sovtet Umon to wtlhdraw all of
tls mtlilary advisers and the
wtlhdrawal has altea<Oy
.started! official sources satd
today
The Mtddle East News
Agency satd earlier Sadat
made a maJOr policy announcement before the Central
Commtttee of the Arab
Soctaltst Umon, Egypt's only
pohltcal party.
The Sovtet Umon has been
the maJor imhlary and
econonuc backer of Egypt
stnce the 1967 Middle East
W•c The sources said an offtctal statement is expect.ld
momen lartly .
The exact nwnber of Soviet
military advtsers tn Egypt IS
not known but political sources
tn Betrut have put the number
at 20,000
Tomght, July 18
Ellen Wilson
Reds Lock Up
Peewee Title
Cecil B DeMille s
THE TEN
COMMANDMENTS
(Techmcolorl
Dies Tuesday
On 22-11 Win
Mrs Ellen M~ Wtlson, 73,
South Thtrd Ave., Middleport,
dted Tuesday morning at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs W1lson was born on
Aug. 17,1898 at West Columb'b.,
W Va., the daughter of the late
Everett and Mona Boothe,
Bestdes her parents, she was
preceded tn death by a brother
Survtving are her husband,
Joseph V. Wilson, Middleport;
two sons, Joe E. and Frankhn,
both of Middleport ; a
Mrs .
Austin
daughter,
( Maxme ) Phillips, Pomeroy;
three ststers, Mrs. Vtrgima
Russell, West Columbta; Mrs.
Lourte Hersey, Parkersburg,
and Mrs. Evelyn Hennesy,
Columbus: t"o brothers,
Ralph Boothe, Huntington, and
Hatry Boothe, Parkersburg;
mne grandchildren, and stx
great - grandchildren.
Mrs. Wtlson was a member
of the Mtddleport Ftrst Baptist
Church
Funeral
arrangements are bemg
completed at the RawlingsCoals Funeral Home.
The Pomeroy Reds clinched
the Pomeroy-Middleport
Peewee League tttle w1th a 22·
ll win over second place
finisher, the Middleport
Mustangs, last Friday at
Mtddleport.
Coach Btll Ohlinger's Reds
ltave zipped through the season
wtth five wins and no losses.
They have a ftnal game
tonight.
Steve Ohlinger led the Reds
both on the mound and at the
plate. Ohlinger fanned 17 and
walked 16 while blasting two
home runs over the fence and
also a single.
Other Pomeroy hitters were
J. R Wamsley with three
singles and Chrts McKinney
wtth three singles and a double.
Terry
Wayland,
Rod
Gleason, Ttm Justice, and
Denny Gleason all took turns
on the htll for lhe Mustangs,
coached by Jtmmy Butcher.
They combined for 23 walks
and 10 stnkeouts. Wayland
paced the Mustangs at the
plate wtth two doubles and a
stngle whtle Justice had two
stngles .
MEIGS THEATRE
Char leston Heston
Anne Baxter
" G"
3 Hrs 30
Runnmg Ttme
mm
Admtsston : Sl.SO Adults, 75c
Chtldren
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
Wednesday & Thursday
July 19 -20
NOT OPEN
MASON DRIVE-IN
',1 I
H
r, ( ,, r t
,',
Vd
)( 1 N1q r1!1 1
Tonight, July
t8
,Double Feature Program
"WITCHMAKER"
Plus
''GHOST 11
Wed.-Thur.- Fn.
July 19-20-21
Double Feature Program
WAR BETWEEN
THE PLANETS
Ja ck Stuart
Plus
"SUPER ARGOVS.
FACELESS GIANTS"
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Edna
Triplett, Pomeroy; Debra
Norm, Racme; Guy Gtllenwaler,
Rutland;
Cmdy
Crabtree, Albany ; Donna Hill,
New
Haven;
Clarence
W1ckhne, Racme; Vonda Rene
Wolfe, Racine; Willte Harris,
Middleport and Harley
Perktns, Jackson
DISCHARGED - Edward
Finley, Archte McKinney,
Mabel Swan, Leonard Stover,
Robert Young, Orville Jacob
Gaul and Wtlham Bush.
HOURS CORRECTED
Listing of calling hours at the
Martin Funeral Home for the
funeral of Frank Pauley as any
time Tuesday until noon Thursday was tn error. Instead,
calling .hours are any time
today until noon Wednesday
when lhe body will be laken to
the church.
ACHECKING ACCOUNT ~N
BUY YOU SOME BEAUTIFUL
THINGS•... LIKE TIME
Business Opportunities
SAVE MORE
OF KENTUCKY
1~
•
seekmg an operator for
Solo-Selt Servu;:e Gasoline
Station in New Haven, W.
"WE HELP IT HAPPEN"
Pay your bills by check and your days
of standing in line are over.
LET US OPEN A
CHECKING ACCOUNT FOR YOU.
W11EN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE
PITTSBURGH
l.ilbens .l'alional 8 ~
Va .
Guaranteed
commlulon.
Rent-free home for live
10.
Call collect 6t4-992-S221 or
write Save More of Kenlucky, P 0 . Bo• 427, Ru.,ell,
Ky . 41169
Racine Downs
Bidwell 10-5
Ractne downed Btdwell 10-5
Monday tn Peewee League
actwn.
Jonathan Rees and John
Pape spltl the mound chores
for the Ractne wtlh Rees
recetvmg cred1t ror the wm
Bibbs hurled for Btdweol.
Leadtng
h1tters
for
Ractne were Rees wtlh two
trtples, Bob Lee a stngle and
double, Kent Wolfe two stngles,
Kent Varney two stngles,
Denms two smgles, Bryan
Wolfe a lrtple, and Jay Rees a
single Collecltng htts for
Btdwell were Cordell with a
home run, Shaw had two
stngles, and Jones and Ptltsfteld each added a stngle
Destroyer
Is Rocked
SAIGON I UPI) - Two
unexplained underwater
explostons
rocked
the
destroyer USS Warrtnglon
Monday off North Vtelnam, the
U S. command satd today.
Mthlary sources said there was
no Commumst acttvtly tn the
area when the blasts occurred
One crewman was sltghlly
wounded, the command satd
He was gtve n first atd and
returned to duty
In South Vtetnam , the
government drtve to recapture
Quang Trt C1 ty entered tts lhtrd
week today wtth U1e North
Vtetnamese sttll tn con trol of
the ctty's walled Ctladel,
Satgon spokesmen said The U
S. command reported two
tnctdents tn the Quang Trt-Hue
area m whtch U S aircraft ftre
accidentally wounded ftve
South Vtelnamese soldters
Monday
CLUB TO MEET
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
Thtrd
Wednesday
Homemakers Club picnic wtll
be held Wedn esday at Fort
Metgs on the New Lima Road
near Rutland Members are to
take a covered dish. They are
to meet at the meettng house m
Syracuse at 10 a.m. to leave for
the fort.
IN HOSPITAL
Mrs Beatrtce Robson,
Mtddleport, whtle vtstltng tn
Ltma has suffered a heart
attatk. She is a patient at St .
Rtla's Hospttal, Uma , room
503.
LOCA,I,. TEMPS
The temperature m downtown Pomeroy at 11 am .
Tuesday was 82 degrees, under
sunny sktes.
MIDDLE PORT, O.
INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS
Meigs County's Oldest and largest
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurante Corporation
(Con ttnued from page I)
however, contmue to work wtth
anttctpated re~l estate la<es.
board members m the near
North Gallia lloard
A gUidante . cou nselor, future unttl a replacement ts
ltbrartan and elementary named :
Dr. Nethm announced tlie
teacher were employed
Munday ntght by the North board is now ready to submtt
tl' 1973 Commumty Plan to the
Gallta Board of Educalton.
Alfred A Scarberry , Jr , of stale for approval. Copies of
Thurman, a nattve of Mtd· the plan are available at the
dlepurt, and fot mer prtnctpal board's headquarters, located
at Mtddleporl and Ttpp Ctly, on the second floor of the
was employed as htgh school Chamber of Commerce
guidance counselor Scarberq Butldtng, 16 Slate Sl , fn
has been teachtng at th e Galltpolts
The Communtty Plan ts a
Jackson Manpowet School. He
compre
hensive outhne of
graduated from Rio Grande
College and Mtamt Umver- aclwns to be taken by the
board , and programs to be
stty.
developed
wtth communtly
Mrs I .ms I.. Bremer of Pmnl
Pleasant, a graduate of ln- agenctes dunng the eosumg
dtana Umverstly, was htred as year.
Dr Nethm satd, "We were
htglt school hbrarian whtle
Mtss Kay Vollborn of Rt 2, poor folks one year ago County
Btdwell, was employed tn the comm tsswners kept us alLve
until the levy was approved
upper elementary grades .
The board tabled the last sprm g. We're not nch now,
restgnalton of Davtd Ehrman, but we do have sufftctent fund s
htgh school band tnstructor. to begtn operattons, and we
The restgnalton of Roy Mef. must put that money to the
rot d, a bus dnver, was ac- rtgltt use "
It was also potnted out that
cepted .
Mrs . Ruth Evans, the between now and January, the
district's clerk, was authortzed board has been allocated two
tu advertiSe for bids on school appropnaltons by the Ohto
Valley Heallh Servtces
bus Insurance
F'oundatwn
for operatwns until
Overcrowded condt ltons tn
two grades at the Bidwell- state and local momes are
Porter Elementary Butldtng avat lable Local funds total
$50.000, and wtll be matched by
were discu ssed.
"fl
sta le funds on a $1 per captla
Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
PHONE 992-2342
Mental
Insurance Agency
basts.
The board 's contracted
psychtalmt. Dr Querteo
Dorontla, summartzed th e
orgamz.atwn's ch mc act1vittes
m the tn-county area The
cli me 1s located m .Jackson , but
serves persons m edt three
coun tles.
Dr Doromla pointed out the
many dtfftculltes whtch were
encountered tn gelltng cltmc
operatwns Wlderway , mamly
lransporlatton to and from the
ch mc. and follo"up vtstts by
the pattents, but added, "we're
ready to go all out now "
Dr Doromla proposed
var1ous programs 1n each
conunumty, mclud111g a netghborhood youth center , to help
provtde baste needs The chmc
ts presently servtng 94 paltenls
from the tn..county area
Overall, the board ts servtng
105 famthes tn the Gallta ,
Metgs. Jackson area
Mrs. Maxme S Plummer,
e.ecu tive dtreclor of the 648
Board, was pratsed for her
unltrtng efforts dunng the past
yea r
In turn, Mrs. Plummer, after
gtvtn g the annual report,
prese nted certtftcales of apprecm tton to tndlvlduals fr om
lite three counttes who were
largely responstble for gelling
the program off the ground
Rece1vmg ccrhflcates £rom
Galha County were Rev Glen
R Hueholl. who headed the
steenng comm1ttee when
1mtlal plans were made , Jake
Koebel, ass&stant chau man ,
ciltzens' commtltee for the
men tal health levy, Grace
Smeltzer, elechon phone
chatrman ; Mrs. Paul Wagner,
publtctly chatrman and Sandy
Stmm ons, Stude nt Nurse
Assuc1atwn.
Jackson Counltans recetvtng
awards were Henry Smtih, J o
Jtmdra and Belly Jo McCorkle
Mrs Russell Bro"n accepted
Metgs awards for Pearl
Welk~r. Rev. Btl! Perrtn and
Ally Frank W Porter.
Ohto Umversily officials who
asststed local tndtviduals tn the
program's orgamzatwn, Dr.
Jtm Webb and Dr Ed Dteltker,
Mason Getting. ·c ruiser
•
MASON, W Va - M?son
wtll ~et a new pohce crutser,
addttwnal street ltghts, and tts
town employes an tncrea se in
pay under acltons ta ken
Monday evemng
C:ounctl v?tcd to bu) a new
Chevrolet Btscayne crutscr for
tts police at a cost of $2,907
Arrangements fQii fmanctng
.
"
.
tile vehtcle wtll ~e made wtth
the Mason County Bank
Three addttional streetlights
wtll be tnslalled, at th e tntersect1on or Horton and B~oad
Alley' mtersectton of Pomeroy
St and Broad Alley , a_nd at the
s~uth end of Anderson St. at the
end of the blacktop
Town employes wtll be gtven
tncreases 10 pay and vacallons
on mottons made by coonethnen Joe Jones, and Rtchard
Fowler, town employes Will
rece1ve the mcreases wh1ch
become effecltve August 15·
These are to tnclude Charlotte
Jenks, water secretary, $25 per
month and Bernard Scarberry,
water supertntendenl, $2> pet·
month, Ercell Boyer, 25 cents
pe!
hour, John Kearns, 30
ce11ts per hoot. Also all employes wtlh three years of
contmous se rvice will rece &ve
one wee_k patd vacations. .
Counctl agreed,to study and
survey the need for placement
uf 15-mile plY h?ur stgns tn the
corporatiOn l~tts . Counctlrnan
Fowler . wtll tnvestlgate the
posstbtbty of obtammg stop
stgns from the Department of
iHighways for certatn areas.
Also the town offtctals will
. th eed f
survey and dectde en
or
one-way street stgns.
Roy Hendrtck reported to
counctl he had damaged hts
:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::::::x:x~;;::.:·:·:·:·:·;·:·:·:...::-.\:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:
A LOT OF BULL
CINCINNATI I UP!) - A
, 950-pound bull escaped as It
was being unloaded from a
truck at a packing company
here Monday and dented In
four pollee cars and knocked
one man down before 1t \\:as
capturad 20 minutes later.
After pollee managed lo
get a lasso around the hull 's
nec k, the excited creature
dropped dead, apparently of
• heart attack.
::::::::=:~~:;.-:::=:::::~:::::::~::::::::•::::~:·:·:·:·X·:·:-x·:·:::
Gilmore Begins
Job at Pichard
Marvm J Gilmore, son of
Mr and Mrs Ezra Gtlmore,
Jr , Lm~oln Heights, began
employment lhts week w1th the
Ptchard Chtna Co at Anttock,
Ill.
Gtlmore graduated wtth
COOLV II~ LE Funeral
honors
last month from the
set·vt ces for Mrs. Nellie Smtih
Small, 69, Ml Vernon, Ohio, Hocktng Techmcal College at
formerly of Coolvtlle, who dted Nelsonvtlle wtth a two year
Sunday at th e Marl111 assoctate degree in ceram1cs
Memottal Hosptlal at Mt engtneertn g technology
A graduate of Pomeroy H1gh
Vernon, wtll be held at 2 p.m
School,
class of 1965, Gtlmore
Tl!ursda} at the Whtlc Funeral
ente ted the Atr Force where he
Home
studted
electromcs and was an
Mrs Small, born tn Wood
Coun t), W Va , the daughter of tn structor at Btloxl, Mtss. He
the late Theodore and Fanme spent 18 months overseas tn
Barton Fox, was preceded tn Korea and Oktnawa and
death by her parents; her ftrst worked lhe summer followtng
husband. Francts Smtih; a son, Ius dtscharge for the Ohio
I.<iwrence, three brothers, and Department of Htghways
four s1sters
Nellie Small
Died Sunday
Surv1vmg are her husband,
Meredith Will
Quit Politics
a~to whtle attempting to cross
therailroadtrackswhichcross
Thtrd Alley at First Street. He
d the incident occurred June
~~~and damage to hts vehicle
was 111 the amount of $48.72.
Ma or Ro Harless, after
hea~m th/ complaint agreed
to
gla t the town's legal
adv~":. f~r advice and notify
dr k f h' d IStOn
Hen tc o ts ec
.
Vernon Roush asked about
f
fire hydrant 111
~ep::rof 0~is a roperty Council
s~ted the p!ts were ordered
and necessary repairs will be
made. Recorder Gary Gibbs
was authonzed to obtain prices
for the purchase of a desk and
chatr for the water departmenl. Town bills of $114.77
were paid and water department bills m the amount of
$ ",
393 7
. .
Logan High
HIreS
• Coach
Paul Adams, 32, a graduate
of Xavter Umversity, was
employed Monday night as
head football coach at Logan
Htgh School.
Adams held a stmtlar post
last year at Spencer, W Va.
Dunng hts two years at
Spencer, the club posted an
overall 7-ll mark. He has
formerly coached at Highland
H1gh School tn Sparta, Ohio;
Graham High School, St. PartS,
Ohto; Triad High School at
Woodstock, Ohto; Buckeye
Valley Htgh School and Kmgs
Mtll Htgh School A J!llidancc
counselor, he succeeds Dtck
Mtkes.
Logan's Board of Educatton
also accept.ld the restgnahon
of Dick Taylor, head basketball coac h. Taylor ts returmng
to hts hometown to coach the
Zanesvtlle High School cagers
Teamsters
1
Benrue Small, Mt. Vernon, two
{Continued from page l )
daughters, Mrs Htlma Reeder,
dorsement wtth President
Denver, Colo , and Mrs. Hazel
NIXon's action m releasing
Boudoura of Fairborn. a SISler.
fonner Teamsters union leader
Mrs Geneva Hatn es of
Jinuny Hoffa from prtson.
Hopewell. Va , stx grandThe President approved an
children and l l grealearly parole for Hoffa, who was
JACKSON, Mtss (UPI)
grandchtldren.
servmg a 13-year sentence on a
Offictattng at tile Thursday James Meredtlh. a veteran federal conviction for jury
funeral servtces "'ll be the ctvtl nghts activtst, gave up tampering and pension fund
Rev Roy W Rose Burtal wtll poltttcs Monday because of fraud.
be tn Rockland Cemetery poor support by other blacks
"That is untrue and ab"It has become obvtously so,lulely, ~~&urd," replied
Fnends may call at the White
Funeral Home here after noon clear that I'm not 111 tune or In Ziegler when asked If the enstep wtth either the black dorsement was part of a
Wednesday.
bourgeotste or the black bargain mvolving Hoffa 's
COURSE COMPLETED
masses," Meredtlh satd release.
PT PLEASANT - Army "Regardless of whether my
Pnvate Brarry A Cox, 18. son pos11ton ts nght or wrong, tt
of Mr and Mrs Ca rrel Cox, does not fit the prevatling
Route l, has completed an mood or the time
etghl-week wheel vehtcle
" l am wtlhdrawtng from
(Continued from page li
mechamc course at the U S poliltcs · because there ts
Emma
Ftnch, who holds a
Army Tratnmg Cen ter , In- perhaps nolhtng more futtle
fantry, Fl. Ord, Caltf He ts a than trying to project an tdea master degree was named a
Special Educatton instructor m
1971 graduate of Potnl Pleasant whose ttme ts not at hand."
Htgh Schhol
Meredtth, 38, whose ad- the distnct as was Mrs.
Roberta Rtchardson,
a
mtsston to the University of
graduate
of
Oh1o
Stale
BANTAM LEAGUE
M1ss1sstppt a decade ago
University wtth three years
STANDINGS
caused rt ottng that killed two
expenence.
Mrs. Joette
persons, was defeated last
w
·~
Webber, a 1972 graduate of
6 0 month in a btd for the
Portland
Ohio University, was named to
l 2 Republtcan senalorta l
Ractne No I
3 3 nomtnalton He said he wtll an elementary teachmg post.
Letart
The board will meet m
3 3 devote hts ltme now to his
Ractne No 2
regular
session at 7 p.m. on
2 4 farmly and to the educatton of
Syracuse No 2
Monday,
Aug. 7.
0 6 hts chtldren.
Syracuse No 1
After Defeat
Budget
ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
TIES
FOR
MEN
By l.'HARLENE HOEFLICH
There's something special about cooking and eating m the
dining room of God's great outdoors. The food tastes better,
appetites are keener, the mess IS less, and there ts a real appeal
for the young chef to give cookery a try.
The Middleport Marma was the sce ne Tuesday of a cookout
by the Mtddleport Merry Munchers, a new 4-H club thts year
composed or fourth and ftfth graders orgamzed by Mrs. Jennifer
Butcher.
But it was no ordinary cookout. Judgment day was at hand
and Mrs. Jennifer Sheets, Me1gs County extension agent, was
there to review the preparation, taste the products, and mterview the gu-ls on their accomplishments. Each club member
wiU receive a grade from Mrs. Sheets which wtll be averaged
with a project book grade and the advtsor's grade leadmg to a
ribbon award and Meigs County Junior Fatr premium
Judgtng ts a htgh pomt m the
4-H club year It began thiS course, lhetr guest for the
week in Me1gs County and the luncheon served on one or the
42 aettve clubs wtll be visited concrete tables in the ptemc
by an extens1on agent area of the Marina Park
sometime between now and
An ge la
Baker,
Pa tty
Fatr tune. On the Frtday of Cremeans,
and
Nan cy
Fatr week the food nutrtlton Wallace, absent at the JUdgtn g
show w11l be staged begmmng session, w1ll be requtred to
at~ a.m. and It Is there that the prepare food and take It to the
gtrls will compete for a chance Me1gs County Extension Office
to go to the State Fair wtlh for j1,1dgmg tn order to rece1ve
thetr proJects
a grade for thetr proJeCt work
The menu for yesterday's
Whtle the girls . will not
luncheon was plain and stmple exhlbtl prepared food at the
The gtr ls butlt a ftre between Metgs County Fatr, they will
two cemen t block , put a rack have an educaltonal dtsplay in
on top , and then scrambled the junior fair buildmg Thetr
eggs wtth bacon pteces, baked work tn the Outdoor Cookery l
buscutts and made hot project has tncluded a study of
chocolate To complete the nutntwn , menu planmng ,
meal , the gtrls had fresh shopptng for grocertes. food
peaches Mrs Sheets was, of preparation, and ftre safel)
IN:ews" ... in Briefs~
-.m:m:«=.'
.. <::ii'
.•l
.........<w
om .w
mo.mmo.o =
By United Press International
WASHINGTON - SEN. ROBERT A. TAFI' JR., Ohto's
junior Republican senator, has recommended Sen. Howard
Baker of Tennessee as a VIce presidential candidate should
President Nixon wtsh to drop Spiro Agnew as a runningmate
"He {Baker) has got youth, southern appeal, ts a fine
speaker and has those Dirksen connections," said Taft Tuesday.
Baker ts lhe son-in-law of the late Sen. Everet Dirksen of Dlinois.
OLBIA, SARDINIA - GOERAN GENTELE, director of lhe
New York Metropolitan Opera, and two of his daughters were
killed Tuesday when their car smashed Into a cement truck ~n a
road on the Italian island of Sardinia. His wife and another
daughter were injured, pollee said.
Gentele, SS, a Stockhoiffl native who has lived In New York
since asswnlng the directorship of the Met last monlh, was
vacatlordng at lhe Karim Aga Khan's Porto Cervo resort on lhe
Sardinian Emerald Coast. He rented a Fiat four-door sedan for a
day's trip to the Maddalena peninsula. On the way back to Porto
Cervo he tried to pass a slower car, and crashed mto an
_onrushing truck loaded wilh cement. .
SOVIET MU.JTARY ADVISERS POURED out of Egypt
today In a mass wllhdrawal which Cairo political sources '!"id
Stoo in lhe
intnldtplrlment-lsl floor
See the excellent
selection of Wembtey Tieo
1 nd buy whit you like
- four-ln-h1nchnd E-hn
President Anwar Sadat ordered because Russia failed to deliver
the weapons It promised.
As the Russians left they took with lhem gifts presented to
lhem by Egyptian comrades. Customs agents searched lhem to
make sure lhey were not carrying excess gold out of Egypt.
Sadat expeUed the Soviet military personnel - believed to total
some 20,000 - because Moscow never came up with lhe war
(Continued on page 16)
Wembley Rudy-Titcl Ties.
Sohd colors-white-stripes-nell patterns.
Open Monday Through
Thursday 'til 5 P.M. • Friday and Saturday Ni&hts 'til 9 P.M.
at y
Club Outdoors
In Cookery Try
l,
I
en tin e
Devoted To The lnterestJ OJ The Meigs-Mason Area
VOL. XXV NO. 66
POM EROY-MIDOLE PORT, OHIO
WEDNESDAY, JULY 19. 1972
PHONE 992-2156
TEN CENTS
•
Plant In eopardy
PT PLEASANT - Strtktng
entployees of the Goodyear
Ttre and Rubber Co., Plant
here have been told that an
mcrease tn th e company's
wage offer "could senously
threaten the future of th e plant
and your JOb 11
The slrtke by members of
local 644, Untied Rubber
Workers ts now in tls eighth
week Above >Oil employees are
tnvolved
The
ftr sl
unton-managemenl me eltng stnce
June 27 is schedl!led today wtlh
federal mediators
In letters to the homes of
emp loyees, Mtchael Bucct,
plant manager, explamed the petitors," Bucci satd tn the
"economtcs" of the company's tetter "Also these parltcular
proposal and urged the umon compames offer thetr emleadership to reappratse its ployees fewer hohdays, less
current pos1hon and brmg an vacatton, and a substanttally
end to the stnke
less liberal pension and mGoodyear has offered a 47- surance plan "
cents per hour wage increase
Pt. Pleasant employees also
over a three year period .
have received general mBucc1 said Goodyear's wages crcases during the last three
and benefits here are already years that averaged 12 cents
among the highest m the m- more per hour than its comduslry and are "substanltally pelttors.
greater than those of tiS Chtef
" Also these competitors
eompeh tors.''
have granted thetr employees
"A companson shows that increases averaging only 15
Goodyear's wage rates range cents m 1972 compared to
from 56 1 , to 831'.! cents per hour Goodyear's offer of 17 cents,"
htgher than thes e com- Bucct satd
11
As you can see, Goodyear's
offer ts reasonable constdermg
the current cosl-pnce squeeze
in the tndustry. Although the
company ts prepared to settle
alt ls last offer, tlts a fact that
empl oyes rctuement , less
the on ly way it can do so ~nd
$13.608 49
tn
tea cher
sti ll competitively meet
rettrement. less $2,061 36 as an market demands is to attain a
allotment to the county board, htgher rate of productivity. "
for a net of $121,221 93
The Southern Loca l Dtslncl
was allotted $50,235 50, less
$970 in school employes
retirement, less $3,548 08 tn
stale teacher reltrement, and
less $851 04 to the county board,
for a net or $44,866 38
The dtre cl allotment to the
county board totaled $3,720 65.
The tota l payment to the
distri cts and the county board
following the deducttons was
WASHINGTON (UP I) $209.948 86
Presidential advtser Henry A.
Ktssinger ts holding pnvate
talks tn Paris today wtth North
VIetnamese negotiators Le
Due Tho and Xuan Thuy, the
Whtte House announced.
mtles west of Route 7 The ftre
In a JOint announcement with
ortg tnated in the engtne, the North Vtetnamese, lhe
burmng the wtrtng and a hose. Whtte House said that the
Prestdent's national security
The Slate Patrol also tn- affairs advtser is expected to
vestigaled a two-truck mtshap return to Washmgton today. He
at 2 15 p.m. Tuesday on Route flew to Parts Tuesday for the
5>4 ftve and two tenths mtles private sessions tn an attempt
east of Route 160 when a state to get the PartS peace talks
truck drtven by Carl E. moving again.
Strahler, 26, Martella, and
Thts was the ftrst time that
another truck operated by Kissmger's private meetings
Wtlham M. Rece, 49, Route l with
the
Communist
Vtnlon, sideswiped stde-view negotiators have been anmtrrors. There were no m- nounced while the sessions
juries or arrests, and damage were under way. He last met in
was mtn or to both vehtcles
(Continued on page 16)
Subsidy Alloted
Met gs Coonty ·s school
dtstnc ts and the Metgs County
Boat d or Educatton have been
allotted $234,605 m slate substdies durtn~ June , accordtng
to the re~orl of State Audttor
Jose ph T. Ferguson
The F.aslern Local Dtslnct
recet ved $48,754 38, mmus $763
for
school
employes
reltrcmenl, less $3,322.57 for
sla te teachers rettrcment, and
less $808 26 as an allotment to
the County Board of Educatton,
for a net payment of $43,860 5>
The Metgs Lo ca l School
Dt s trtct
was
allotted
$139,335 77, less $2,444 tn school
Kiss' in
Private
Sessions
Semi-Rig Burned
A semi-tractor tra1ler rlg
dnven west on SR 124 by
Thomas V Lowery, 48, Route 2
Nelsonvtlle, caught ftre stx and
a half m1les east of Ractne at
10.10 am. Tuesday, according
to a report by the Gallta-Meigs
Slate Htghway Patrol Post.
The flame ongmated m the
wtrtng of the engtne. Damage
was heavy. There were no
tnjuries or arrests.
A second vehicular ftre
occurred at 4:15 p.m Tuesday
when Thomas D Daniels, 46,
Galhpohs, was travehng on U.
S. Route 35 one and stx tenths
Bucct satd the company has
mel more than 50 proposed
contract changes requested by
the union
"We hope you and the uruon
leadershtp wtll realize the
company simply cannot accept
higher wage mcreases wtthout
seetng a further deterioration
of tis competitive position.
Additional mcreases may
seriously threaten the future of
the plant and your JOb "
Bucct
disclosed
that
Goodyear management
reqmres lhal each plant stand
on tis own feet, and he is
conftdenl that no subsidtes wtll
be provtded at Pt. Pleasant.
Bucci also pointed out that in
the past five years, prices or
polyester resin, which Is
produced at the plant, has
steadily decreased.
"In just the last two years,
prtces m the tire cord and
staple market have declined 17
pet. and 21 pet , respeclively,"
he sa1d.
Accompanying the letters to
employees was a reprtnt of an
article from the Akron, Ohto
Beacon Journal concerning a
former B. F Goodrtch shoe
product plant in Clarksville,
Tenn ., that faded to remain
competitive in its industry.
Property Taxes
Due Tomorrow
Tomorrow, July 20, is the
fmal day that the tax books wtll
be open for the payment of real
estate taxes, Meigs County
Treasurer Howard Frank satd
today. Taxes being received
are for the last half of 1971.
However, Frank potnted out
that restdenls who did not, or
have not patd the ftrst half of
1971 taxes, will not be given the
10 pet. rollback in taxes being
allowed for the last half or 1971
taxes .
After loday,lhe books will be
closed for a lime to penntt the
coun ty auditors to apply
penalties whtch will be added
to the unpaid taxes. The tax
books will be returned to the
treasurer after thts work Is
complet.ld
RESURFACING OF SR 124 from Nye Ave, Pomeroy, to
Racme got underway last week. Equipment and crewmen
above apply a second layer of hotmix just heading into
Syracuse.
Sinatra Mad at
House Committee
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - It
looked hke a Hollywood sound
stage with aging singer and
mov1e star Frank Sinatra
beneath giant crystal chandeliers
castigating
a
congresstonal corrunlttee to the
delight of lhe standing..-oomonly a udtence.
But tt was for real and
Sinatra's cold blue eyes flashed
in anger as he tongue~ashed
the House Crime Committee
for allowing a hoodlum-he
spat out the word-to engage in
"character assassinallon" by
linktng hun to the Mafia .
"Thts bum went running off
wilh the mouth and I resent it,"
Sinatra said In a fingerwagging
lecture Tuesdav to the com-
Resolution
Fischer Draws in Fourth Game
Approved
REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI)
- Bobby Fischer all but danced
off 1he stage. Minutes earlier
the 29-year-old challengerhad
clasped Boris Spassky's hand
after accepting a draw on lhe
45th move of the fourth game
for the world chess championship.
Spassky appeared to have
lhe game won, bul a couple of
mistakes in the 2'11h and 29th
moves by the 35-year-old
titleholder aUowed Fischer to
escape from his grasp and
come oul or lhe game with a
draw rather than l\ loss.
With four games behind
them, Spasaky has won two,
Fischer one, and one was a
draw. That gives Spassky 2~
poinls to Fischer's Ilk, with
Fischer needing 121> points as
the challenger to win while
The Meigs County commissiOners :ruesday approved
a resolutwn to participate tn
the Unemployment Compensation Act which covers all
county employees.
In other busmess the commisston agreed, followtng a
hearing, to vacate a portion of
township road 431 tn Columbta
Tpw ., approved a transfer or
$7,919.86 from the Emergency
Fund to the Board of Elections
Fund and $300 to the Me1gs
County Children's Hbme
Med1cal Services Fund.
Effte Alfriend was appolnt.ld
a Clerk Typist I m the Meigs
County Welfare Office effective June l. Attendmg were
Charles R. Karr, Bob Clark
and Warden Ours , commiSSIOners, and Martha
Chambers, Clerk
i
t
-
GOOD EATING AND HAPPY DAYS have been enjoyed by the Middleport Merry Munchers 4-H Club members with their ftrst year advtsor, Mrs. Jennifer Blakeslee Butcher, center.
· Mrs. Butcher is not new to 4-H, however, havmg completed 11 years before decidmg to take or,
a club of her own. Two of the seven members of the club enjoytng her leadership are Juhe
Btron, left, and Janet Horky.
•
Munchers 4-H
SAIGON -SOUTH VIETNAMESE TROOPS Tuesday beat
back a tank-led North Vietnamese force 500 strong that tried to
cut Highway 1south ofQuangTri City, a U.S. adviser said today .
In the air war over North Vietnam, military spokesmen said a
U.S. F4 Phantom jet chasing a North Vietnamese MIG21 at 800
miles an hour only 50 feet off the ground shot the jet down into a
rtce padd~ 15 miles outside Hanm It was the !54th MIG downed
by U.S. planes in the air war. MIGs have brought down 63 U.S.
aircraft.
Capt. Gail Furrow, 32, or Urbana, Ohio, told UPI
Correspondent Donald A. Davis lhat 300 Corrununist artillery and
mortar rounds exploded In and around dug-in positions of the
government's 11th parachute battalion before the predawn attack began. Allied artillery fire was called In unmediately,
pinning down lhe North VIetnamese infantry and causing the
tanks to scatter and retreat, Furrow satd. Furrow told DaviS the
government troops killed 35 North Vietnamese at a cost of one
paratrooper dead and eight wounded.
also recetved certificates of
apprectalton.
Mrs Mary Lou Ktng,
secretary, read minutes of the
previous board meeting Annette Levme, treasurer, gave
the ftnanctal report. Rev.
Glenn Btddle, Jackson,
debvered mvocalton
Guests altendmg were Julie
Sutt on, Vtckey Caufman,
Morton Dtckey, Joe Stewart,
Clarence Johnson, Joe Mtller,
Deanme Wagner , Jo Jmdra,
Jtm Myers, Brenda Mougey,
John M. (Jake ) Koebel, Dr.
Quenco Doronila, Dr . Ed
Dtetlker, Dr. James Webb,
Henry L. Smith, Sandy Stmmons, Dr. Robert Dixon, Rev.
Glen R. Hueholl, Mr. and Mrs.
Btll Smeltzer, and Hobart
Wtlson, Jr.
Current members of the
board are Dr. Bernard Ntehm,
Dr Wilson Bowers, Dr.
Rtchard Simpson, Mrs Mary
Lou Ktng, all of Gallta County;
Warren Waters, Rev. Glenn
Btddle, Mrs Trula Zimmerly,
Mrs. Madebne Perkins, and
Mrs Annette Levtne, all of
Jackson County; Maxine
Wmgetl, Tom Kelly, and Mrs.
Nita Jane Brown, all of Me1gs
County.
Three new board members
are to be appotnt.ld In the near
future. one from Gallia and two
from Meigs.
The next board meeting will
be held Monday, Sept. 18.
THE INTERVIEW- In the outdoor cookery project of the Merry Munchers, preparing tile
food isn't the enlire basis for a grade. Each of lhe girls is required to prepare menus and have a
nutrition intervtew by the extension agent Here Mrs Jenrufer Sheets mterviews Joy Edwards.
SCRAMBLED EGGS, ANYONE? - Sheila Horky was
one of the cooks for the Mtddleport Merry Munchers 4-H Club
JUdging luncheon staged Tuesday at the Middleport Maritta.
Mrs. Jenmfer Sheets, Meigs County extenston agent, gave
everything prepared by the girls the "taste test" toward
arrtvmg at a proJect grade.
•
Spassky needs only 12 pomts to
retain his title.
The fifth game in the 24match champtonshtp is scheduled for Thursday at 5 p.m. (I
p.m. EDT).
Shortly before the 5 p.m.
Tuesday start Ftscher opened
a new round in his battle
against televlston cameras m
the 3,IJOO.eapacity hall. About
I,500 spectators wa1ted whtle
the temperamental American
arrived seven minutes late. In
fact neither player was present
when German referee Lothar
Schmid strolled up to the
delicately carved board and
started Fischer's clock.
Then Spassky walked in with
the dignity of a champion.
Finally Fischer appeared and
rushed straight to lhe board to
push forward his king pawn,
his favorite opening.
The end came on lhe 45th
move. Fischer, according to
experts, had played a dubious
19th move only to escape
through Spassky's blunders
later in the game .
Wtth the crowd noisy and
exctted, the "silence" sign
flashing off and on, Fischer
pushed forward a pawn and
looked up. Spassky, sitting
Yery erect in his simple wooden
chatr,' nodded and offered his
hand over tlie board. Fl.scher
accepted wilh an almost imperceptible nod, Indicating a
draw had been accepted.
During the match the organizers fought an hour-long
batlle to silence the crowd both
tnside lhe vast dark hall and in
lhe cafetaria on the first floor.
When Fischer played his 20th
move, yoWtgsters with oil cans
moved out to oil doors to the
hall. Shortly afterward the
closed circuit television giving
moves to lhe crowd was cut off
for 10 minutes. A howl of
d1smay went through the
cafeteria where scores of fans
munched ·hot dogs and
Icelandic cream cakes with
lheir eyes fixed on the screens.
"It was almost like a Yankee
Stadium during a baseball
match," said one U.S. ob-
server.
All worries might not be over
for · Fischer. The Icelandic
organizers said the television
cameras that caused Fischer
to walk out on the second
game, forfeiting it to Spassky,
might be back In the hall for
Thursday's match.
mi ttee, which in May was told
by Malta enforcer Joseph "The
Baron" Barbozil that he had
heard Sinatra held interests In
two hotels for New England
crime
boss
Raymond
Patriarca.
The 64-year-old Patriarca,
currenUy serving a 111-year
federal prison term for cc.r
splracy to corrunlt murder,
was called as the lead-off
wttness today as the committee
continued tis investigation of
underworld mfluence on
sports.
Sinatra denied ever meeting
Patriarca and held up a
newspaper clipping and read
its headlme: "Witness links
Sinatra to Reputed Mafia
Figure.''
"How do you repair the
(Continued on page 16)
FLUSH TONIGHT
The Poemroy Fire Dept.
will flush !Ire bydraata
tonight, Charles Legar of the
Board of Public Affairs said
tnday.
·The nusblog may Clltle
murkiness In lbe water,
Legar
advised,
and
recommends resldeals to
open their laps and let !be
water run until clear.
::::::::x::~::;:::::-:::;;·:·:·>&:·:9:·::-:~::.~·~~
Body FoUDd
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. was notified today at 9:32
a.m . that a body had been
found floating in the Ohio River
at the Reedsville Locks and
Dam on the Ohio side. Sheriff
Robert C. Hartenbach and
Metgs County COroner Dr. R.
R. Pickens went to the scttne.
�
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Title
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07. July
Text
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Newspaper
Dublin Core
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July 18, 1972
boothe
small
smith
wilson