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umm1t

Walked ~

Winner Talked, .Loser
'

OS COW

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Wo.dd Series ' of.Poker Won by Amarillo Slim
.

.

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP!)uwe's still buddies, ain't we1''
drawled Thomas "Amarillo
Slim" Preston as he shook
hands with Walter Clyde
"Pug" Pearson. Pearson
smiled and commented,
"Winners talk- losers walk."
He left for bed.
It was early in the morning
Friday at Binioo'~ Horseshoe
Casino and Preston and Pearson · had juSt ' concluded a
marathoo war of nerves in the
final duel of the World Series of
Poker. The two men squared
off for 22 hours, t&amp;-last eight
continuously.
·
Preston, a 4:!-year-old Stetson -wearing Texan , finally
drew a hidden king to win the
title and the $60,000 kitty that
went with it.
The game played was "hold
~em, II a form Of seven~ard
stud in which each player Is
dealt two cards face down and
complete their hand by choosing among five dealt face up in
the center of the table.
The final hand saw three
eights, king and a deuce face .
up. Preston paired his lting and
claimed tbe thre~ eights for a
fuU house. Pearson likewise
used the three eights but found
his two sixes outclassed for the
hand and the title.
Preston, who was never at a
loss for words throughout the
six days of competitlbn, said it
was sweat on the brow of' his
I

-

MEMBERS OF the Racine High Scbool Class of 1922 are
the annual
alwmi reunion iB held on Saturday, May 'll. The group includes: front row, I to r, Marcella Williams Scheiderer,
deceased; Margaret · Sayre Arnott, deceased; Laurine
Compton Lawson, Hazel McKenzie Voss, deceased; Gretta
HpweU Simpson, Dorothy Bentz Whiimer; second row, from
observ~ their 50th amlversary this spring when

the left, Esther ·Sayre Comstock, Dale Holler, deceased ;
Freda Wolfe Wyatt, Harold Hamm, Chloris Coe Grimm,
Stanley Roush, Audrey Mills Patterson ; hack row, from the
left, Wilbur Holter, Lawrence Rose, faculty members, Elm a
Oldham, Principal Davitl B. Williams, deceased; Bertha M.
Glancy, Orin J. Beard; Maurice Loti, Charles Gibbs, who
will be guest speaker at ijle alumni reunion, and Don Nease.

HOSPITAL NEWS

opponent from Nashville, but moll bankrolled llY Qthen.
Tenn., that told him it was
Five players 1oat their stakes
over . "When that there sweat . and the 'siith, Adrian "Tenspopped, I knew Puggy WliS · Dolly" Doyie, caahed in feeling
ready to oo ?r die and he done ill 'with fatigue.
it," the Texan said1 ·
By 'the rules, champion
The tournament attracte,d . Preston could' have laid claim
eight contestants, some sup- 1o Doyle's $10,0110, but he
plying their own $10,0110 stake didn't, "He'~ a good old hoy,"

GRADUATION
GIFT SUGGESTIONS ·.
.
.

.

.

from

•

I THE LAST ONE IS I
ON US' ' ' '

I

I

VACATION
CLUB
FOR 1973
NOW OPEN
YOUR LAST PAYMENT

eFREE

- Dresses
- Blouses
- Skirts
-Slacks
- Shorts
- Knit Tops
- Swim Suits
- Vests
- Jackets
- Culottes
-Scooter Skirts
- Luggage
- Record Players
- Record. Albums

- Tape Players /
- -rapes
- Radios
1
.
- Portable TV's
- Cedar Chests
- Timex Watches
-Alarm Clocks
-Sun Glasses
- Fanny Far.mer Candy
-Gowns
- Dusters
- Robes
- Pegnoir Sets
-Baby Doll Pajamas
- Slips
- Half Slips
-:- Bras
- Girdles
-Polaroid Cameras
- Kodak lnstamatic
- Film
- Umbrellas
- Costume. Jewelry
- Handbags
- Billfolds
- Cosmetics
- Pantyhose
-Gloves
-Scarves ·
- Jewelry Cases
- Belts
- Paper Mate PeM

Devoted To The
FASHION BANKERS - 01ncers and employes of the
Farmers Bank and Savings Company Saturday began
wearing stylish red, white and blue Angllca Career Apparel.
Lefllo right, are "The Madison," a jacket and dress cC)ordinate on Patty Young; "The Bradley," single breasted
jacket and slack combination on Theodore Reed, president,
and "Tile Hastings," an A-line dress featuring a cowl neck
and scarf-loop detail, worn by Joame Williams. See Page 2
picture of bank's staff in career apparel.

BOWS, RIBBON, FROM 10UR FINE SELECTION 1st ~

For The Yotmg Man
Cl Graduate.
·- Wembley Ties
- Paris Belts
-Socks
-Handkerchiefs
- Hanes T Shirts
- Hanes Briefs
- Knit Sport Shirts
- Knit Dress Slacks
·-'-Cut and Sewn Sport Shirts
- Knit Sport Shirts
- Luggage
- Record Albums
- 8 Track Stereo Tapes
- Walk Shorts
- Swim Trunks
- Pocket Knives
- Hunting Knives
- Hi· Karate
Cologne-After
Shave
- Faberge - Brut
Mens
Cosmetics
- Gillette Twin Track Razors
- Polaroid Square Shooter
Cameras
- Fanny Farmer Candy '
- Paper Mate Slim Pens
- Umbrellas
'
. - Flare Leg Jeans
• · - Fashion Sweat Shirts
- Sunbeam
Shavemaster
Razors
-Car Tape Players
- RCA Transistor Radios
- Tape . Carrying Cases
· - Guitars
- Panasonic Portable TV's
-Ca ssette Tape Recorders

•

Platle' Flips m
Field.of Wheat
puof •lid his passenger
-were injured 'in an airplane
Cl~Sh at !2:80p.m. Sunday In a
wheat field near the Greene
County Sport Parachute Center
located on the Bidwell-Rodney
Road.
According to the GalllaMeigs Post State Highway
Patrol, James R. Harrison, 25,
Dayton, attempted to land on a
1,200 foot cut-grass strip but
ran out of room. The plane
plowed into the wheat field, the
drag on the wheels apparently
causing the craft to flip over.
Harrison and a passenger,
Retia Sue Baldwin, 31, also of
Dayton, were treated and
released at the Holzer Medical
Center for minor injuries.
The first of two Meigs County
mishaps occurred at 4:22p.m.
on Rt. 7 at the junction to Rt.
681 where an auto driven by
Everett R. Coiaway, 82,
Coolville, made a left turn into

ELBERFELDS in POMEROY

Weather
Mostly sunny and warm
today and Tuesday with highs
both days mostly in the 80s
except cooler with upper 60s or
708 close ,to Lake Erie. Oear
tonight, low in the sn..

__
INSOWEEKS

I

I

FOR49WEEKS
DEPOSIT

RECEIVE

1'1.00 PER WEEK ·------------- 150.00
1'2.00 PER WEEK ------------·'100.00
1'100 ~ER WEE_K -----.;.------- 1150.00 .
'5.00 PER WEE«-------------'250.00
I I 00
.

I

MAN

I

TO CALL FOR THE BEST
BUY ON ·YOUR INSURANCE'

I
I

L-~~-!~-~!~::=:=::=::::~~~-j

.

Vall~y . .

CARROL K. SNOWDEN.:

.....·. .

the now bank that apprec1a,es your business"
Mtmbr:r : f'Dral Deposit lnNtllncc Cmpot'ltion

Park Central Hotol Bldg.
Seco!ld Ave. Ph. 446-4290
Home Ph. 446-4518

Galllacill•

Losses Light

sharp attacks near Kontum in
the Central Highlands, at An
Loc 60 miles north of Saigon,
and in the Mekong Delta. South
Vietnamese put Communist
losaes In those actions at 937
men, including 23 tanks on the
Hue defense perimeter.
Hanoi Radio reporied more
intense U.S. air strikes against
North Vietnam today and said
U.S. Navy planes on Sunday
reswned mining of Hsiphong
Harbor. There wM no confirmation of the reports by the
U.S. collli!Wld but the Pentagon has made II clear in public
statements it Is the U.S. intent
to keep Haiphong Harbor
inoperable.

Property loss was estimated
at $600 from a fire in an
apartment over Kay's Beauty
Shop, 169 North Second St.,
Middleport, Monday mo~ning.
Middleport firemen who
were called at 10 a. m. asked
Pomeroy firemen to assist a~­
IQ:07. Cause of the fire was not
immedi~tei Y, determined. II is
stili under investigation .
Damages were caused mostly
by smoke.
Occupants of the apartment,
unknown at this· time, were not
• at home. The building is owned
by Mr. and Mrs. Carl Platter.

One South Vietnamese
victory was reported- in Binh
Dinh Province in the coastal
highlands near Qui Nhon.
Government troops there
recaptured Combat Base
Salem on Sunday without
major opposition. It was the
southernmost Communist position in that province where
they control most of the northern portion.
Dispatches from Hue said
the Communists, using a large
number of the Soviet-built
PT76 tanks, crossed the My
Chanh River about a half mil~
south of the Van Trinh Bridge,
three miles in from the
seacoast. Allied sources said

Eichinger, R. Alan Holter and
Marjorie Marie Gillilan.
Delivering
the
commencement address was
Herbert :C. Qoughty, transmission and distribution
manager of The Ohio Power
Co., who gave "a formula for
Miss Holter, daughter of Mr. success" composed of three
and Mrs . David Holter, ingredients - integrity; ability
Pomeroy Route 3, and Karr, and drive.
son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Karr
The speaker stressed thai the
of Chester, were presented latter two of the three
trophies by Bob Ord, principal. ingredients "are no good
Ord also announced the 10 top • without integrity. " ·He urged
scholars of this year's class. the seniors to be true to
They were, In scholastic order . themselves so that they may.
following, Miss Holter and have self respect. He advised
Karr, Janice Marie Dixon, them to he "straight-forward
Kathryn M. Sanders, Mary Jo and hone~t with others" as the
Wolf, Randy Young, Michael only . way, only manner, in
Ray Benedum, Dennis Roland which to be honest with
Julia Ann Holter was named
v-aledictorian and Roger
William Karr sal uta tori an of
the Ea,tern High' School
graduating class of 57 seniors
at the annual commencement
held Sunday night.

To he Discussed
COLUMBUS - Officials of
the Administration of Justice
Division of the Ohio Department of Development wlll·meet
May 31 with local and county
government officials of
southeastern Ohlq to discuss
planning and application for
federal crime fighting iunds in
1973.
The meeting, which will
begin at 9:30 a. m. in the
Holiday ·rnn just nortb of
Chillicothe in Ross County, is

designed to better meet the
needs of local communities in
the areas of law enforcement,
courts, and corrections.
Local government officials
from Delaware, Union,
Madison, Fairfield, Pickaway,
Fayette, Clinton, Highland,
Hocking, Brown, Adams,
Scioto, Lawrence, Gallla,
Meigs, Jackson, Vinton, Ross,
and Pike counties have betn
invited to attend the day-long
meetings.
Nearly $1.5 million is
(Conilnued on page 8)

themselves.
Ability, Doughty said, rests
in the will to succeed. The
world's knowledge, he stated,
double,d in ' (lie 200 years
preceding 1!H8 and In the 20
years from 1948 to 1968 doubled
again . This stressed the
knowledge that man has
gained in tust the past 20 years.
Doughty advised graduates to
develop self confidence.
Commenting that the successful man- is not always the
most intelligent or the one with
the mOiit advan !ages, Doughty
brought the role of "drive" into
his formula. He told graduates
to set an ultimate goal and then
to break into phases. He advised them to accept help
to hei~ reach fulfillment.
John D. Riebel, Sr., Eastern
Local Dislrict, superintendent,
presen ted the class of 1972 for
conferring of diplomas by
(Continued on Page 2)

•

'

; '

f!f The Meii{J-Mcuon Area
PHONE 992-2156

there was heavy fighting at 5
p.m.
..
All of' the area-as was
Quang Tri to the north-is in
easy range of U.S. 7th Fleet
destroyer~ --- -,and cruisers
equipped with rttisslles and 5-,
6-and 8-lnch shells. The South
Vietnamese said the air, artillery' and naval bombardments had killed 300 North
Vietnamese of the 66th and
202nd North V.ietnamese re-

TEN CENTS

giments.
barrages used in previous
Allied officers said the assaults. They said only four to
known actual losses were much six rounds of 130MM artillery
smaller, but said they did not fell in that area today.
have exact figures .
Field reports said ComAllied officials said it seemed munist artillery did shoot down
possible the Communists were an American F4 Phantom jet
trying to ' e~tablish a but that the pilot and radar
bridgehead across the jiver in man aboard parachuted into
preparation for the assault on South Vietnamese marine
Hue but that today's strikes positions and were picked up
were not accompanied by the by a U.S. Air Force rescue
normal heavy artillery belicopter.

Special Ed Class Approved
will be started in the 1972-73 today .
Mrs. Nancy Carnahan, clerk
school year, if a teacher can be
of
the board, wa~ authorized in
secured, the Southern Local
Board of Education revealed the recent meeting to attend a
training clinic at Ohio
University on June 7 and
Grover's Studio was engaged
to do the photography
throughqut the district the next
school year. It was announced
that buses of the district will be
inspected by the Slate Highway
Patrol July 26 at the Cozart
Garage .
Ralph Sayre, superintendent, announced that '1800
has been granted the district
under Title I!' funds for the
purchase of books for the
libraries of the elementary
schools. Mrs. Dale McOurg
was authorized to purchase
three new sewing machines for
the
Home
Economics
Department. Two electric
sewing machines will be sold.
Residents Interested in purchasing them may send their
bids to Mrs. Carnahan, P. 0.
:Box 176, Racine by June 15.
· Those having questions may
also con !act Mrs. Carnahan .
Larry Wolfe was employed
as
coordinator of the diBlrict's
JULIA ANN HOLTER, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David
summer athletic program and
Holter, and Roger WiiUam Karr, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Duane Wolle was employed as
Karr, were named valedictorian and salutatoriBn respecreserve basketball coach for
tively of th~ Eastern High School's graduating class when the
the next year. Named Title I
15th annual commencement was held Sunday night.
(Conl(nued on Page 8)

RACINE - One special
education class has been approved for the Southern Local
School District and another

Parade

Entr~ies

Another big parade will open
another big Regatta Weekend
in Pomeroy the evening of June
16.
Parade c&lt;H:hairmen Wendell
Hoover and Jim Mees said
enlries for the parade, which
will begin in Middleport, are
being accepted for bands,
marching units, float.'!, civic
organizations, fire equipment,
and its crews _and other groups

and individuals.
stop as last year's parade did
More than 125 units took part to the old Pomeroy Jr. High
in last year's parade.
School building on East Main'
The chairmen said entrants St.
must be - registered before
There will be changes this
parade night which will year in the parade's formation
eliminate last _mi~ute con- procedures, and in traffic
fuston, and wtll msure a . routing which will be ansmoother operation.
nounced later.
The parade will be formed by . Entries for the parade must
.6 p.llh_'!_n So_~th Se.cond Ave.lD . be sent to Jim Mees, care of
Middleport and wiD run non- WMPO Radio, Box 71 Mid-

Being Accepted
dleport, or to WendeD Hoover,
care of Columbus and SOuthern
Ohio Electric Co., Mill St.,
Middleport, no later than June
14. Any received after that date
wiD not be accep!ed.

200 Shots
Are Given

For Rabies

1972 Graduating Class
J

enttne

MONDAY, MAY 22, 1972

Julia Holter, Roger Karr
Are EHS Leaders of 1972

Crime Fight Plan

{n Aparlment

er judged -· more eqUal (han
his equals on lite SOviet unon's
IIHnan ruling Politburo. He
had generally been expected to
be present. About :/!lll'Russian
workers, bused to the airport,
dutifully wa~ed U.S. Dags but
did not shout or smile.
The Nixons were to be
guests at a dinner in
the Grand Kremlin .palace In the evening. The first
. talks between Nixon and
· Brezhnev were planned at- 4
(Con tinned on page 8)

•

Era of Violence with
I

,-------=:~a~~~~~~-:_: ~,

the path of a car operated by
Gail L. McCain, 36, Rt. 2,
Coolville. Golaway·was cited to
Meigs County Court for failing
to yield the right of way.
The second Meigs County
accident occurred at 5:53p.m.
Sunday on Rt. 7, four-tenths of
a mile from Chester where an
ali to driven by Bernard Fultz,
44, Middleport, flipped a stone
breaking the windshield on a
car operated by Cheryl D.
Smith, 23, Washington, W. Va.

cance of this visit."
Moscow television devoted 25
minutes to the live arrival
ceremonies.
There were a few srii1les bot
no traditional bearhugs of
greeting for Nixon from KremUn leaders. Kos)ogin, hardly a
smiler at the best of times,
offered his hand to Nixon. Mrs.
Nixon took into both arms a
bouquet of red Dowers.
Diplomats noted the absence
at
the
airport of Brezhnev, the lead-

Tanks Strike Hue Perimeter

SAWON (UP!)--North Vietnamese troops using PT76
amphibious tanks swarmed
across the My Chanh River
defense line 22 miles north of
Hue today in an apparent effort
to establish a bridgehead.
By United Preu lntemallonal
Heavy
fighting was reported in
WASHINGTOfli -ANTI-WAR DISSIDENTS who skirmished
with pollee Sunday threatened to block roads leading to the the area at nightfall.
The North Vietnamese prob· Pentagon today to protest U. S. involvement in Vietnam.
ing
attack, the second in two
Dissidents told reporters that they would try to impede Pentagon
employes on the way to work three hours before a scheduled rally days, was believed halted by
and prayer service sponsored by the People's Coalition for Peace intense naval bombardment
from U.S. 7th Fleet ships off
and Jll8tice (PCPJ).
Police Chief Jerry V. Wilson ordered more than 100 members the coast; by Allied air strikes
that cost an F4 Phantom jet,
of the riot control squad on duty at 4:30a.m. today.
and by Allied artillery.
The North Vietnamese inPITrSBURGH -SEN. JOHN V, TUNNEY, D-Calif., feels a creased their pressure 12 miles
darkhorse candidate such as Ohio's Gov . John J . Gi!Ugan might west of Hue and carried out
be chosen should the Democratic convention deadlock in July.
The California senator said the compromise candidates also
might include Edmund Mus ide or Edward M. Kennedy, but
added he had advised Kennedy to avoid nomination atany cost
(Continued on Page 8)

A

- Clock Radios
- Banjo or Ukelele
- Western Denim Jackets
- Wrangler Blue Jeans
-Lightweight Jackets
-White Dress Shirts
-Duffle Bags
-Cut-off Jeans
-Timex Wrist Watches
-Wrist Watch Bands
-Flashlight
- Rolfs Leather Wallets
-Binqculars with Case
-Norelco Electric Razor
-Brief Cases
-Kodak lnstamatlc Cameras
-Bicycle
- Sun Glasses
- Robes
- Alarm Clocks
-Pajamas

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

fJV~';s.": in .Ji;.i~j~

SE.LECT HAU.MARK GRADUATION CARDS, GIFT WRAP

Gift Suggestions

VOL. XXV NO. 26

l~nl'll

eg1ns

•

at·y

J'f

..

the ta_lks might not produce the
immediate accord on arms'
control that had beell'expecled.
The Nixon arrival was seen
live on both American and
Soviet
television.
The
American television networks
picked up the Russian TV
pictures and interposed their
own couunentaries.
Tass, the official Soviet news
811ency, also gave unusually
fast treatment to the arrival.
Tass commented, "II is diffi. cult to overestimate the llignifi-

•

Gift Ideas :
· For TheJ;irl Graduate

.

55 Singers Comm·g Here

simply as a matter of protocol.
The President and .hiS party
rode by limousine. through 17
miles of bunting-decorated
streets lo the Kremlin fortress
in the heart of Moscow.
_ Nixon said before leav~
Salsburg, Austria, where he.
made a 36-hour rest stop in a
fairyland castle atmosphere,
that he ezpected the summit
talks to be "the most intensive
... I have ever participated in
on substantive matters."
But there were indications

ELBERFELDS.in POMEROY

a

Holzer Medical Center, First Henry, Edwin Hixson, Rosellen
Ave. and Cedar St. General Lee, Roy McGinnis, Bernard
v(siting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m. Osbourne, Weadell Roush,
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to Betty Sayre, William Harris,
4:30. p.m. Parents only on · Helen Hood, Jeffrey Lightfoot,
Pedtatms Ward.
Maude Ross and William G.
Births
Johnson, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Lee
Walburn, Jackson, a daughter;
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
ADMITTED - Raymond
Crusan, Oak Hill, a son; Mr. Hartley, Racine; Alma
and Mrs. Roy A,llen Carpenter, Robinson, Athens; Dwight
Wellston, a son ; Mr. and Mrs. Spencer, · Pomeroy ; Olive
Herbert Bragg, Vinton, a son; Lawson , Portland; Paul
Mr . and !ofrs. Gerald Eblin, . Johnson, Mason; Ray Byers,
Rutland, a daughter; Mr. and Racine.
Mrs. Melvin Tabor, Gallipolis,
DISCHARGED - Everett
a daughter ; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas, Mabel Winebrenner,
Ralph Besco, Gallipolis, a Norman Henry, Lena Markins,
daughter and Mr. and Mrs. Thelma Berry, Dorset Biggs,
Stephen Sanders, Paintsville, Mary
Evans,
Carole
Ky., a son.
Schroeder, James Hail, Jr.,
Doris Wolfe, Ruth Graham.'
Discharge•
TAKING PARTS - Front, I to r, Kay Oark as Julie
Ellen riffle, John Winkler,
Paula Binkly as Patty; back, S~tt Krumlauf as Chris, liob
Gertrude Pl-eston, Mrs. Frank
WRIGHT GRADUATES
Page as AI, and Vince ~ones as Joey.
BOBBY PEGG
Reynolds and daughter, Larry
RUTLAND - Gary Wright ,
NATIONAL WINNER
Winnings, Nola Lemings, son of Mr. and Mrs. David
.
Bobby Pegg, 17, son of Mr.
Laureen Cook, Eliza Sue Wright ol Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.,
and Mrs. William Pegg, 441
Bur\on, James Carr Rupert, formerly of Rutland, recently
Jackson Pike,~aoamed a
Mary E. Scott, Ella Mae wa:; graduated from the West
·
, national winner ~the 1972
Moore, Linda Sue Ousley, Lori Uberty University of West
POMEROY - The Meigs "One Way Out Singers" from
Propeller
lub Essay
Beav~r. Bessie Boyer, Edward
County Christian Women's the First Christian Church in Contest dur g Friday
Liberty, W. Va.
Fellowship will sponsor the -£anton , at the Meigs Local night's district dinner
_1 lligh School Auditoriwn on
meeting in Ashland, Ky.
IIi•••••••••••••••••••••••••-~ May
26 at 8 p.m.
Pegg, who will be among 166
This talented group will
GARS seniors graduallng at
present a contemporary the Lyne Center 1n Rio
,-----~----------------------~----,
religious musical entitled, Grande today, was one of 16
"Show Me". The 55 high school individuals to win a national
age youngsters are all amateur award In this year's contest.
musicians who sing for the love For his efforts, Pegg will
of it and to take th,eir unique re.-elve an 'all-expense paid
style of religion to their own steamboattrlp along the east
I
• • • •
I
age group. The Meigs County coast. He will he flown from
·---------------------------------~
Christian Women's Feilowship, Columbus to the point Where
which is comprised of women the trip is to begin. In ad,: -'
from many area churches, has dition, Pegg won a tape
donated its time and energy to recorder for winning on tbe
providing food and lodging to district Ie'vel. Eleven other
all of the young people and the GAHS students of Mrs. Ruth
five adult sponsors who ac- Gillingham who participated
company them. Admission to In the 1972 contest also
the concert is fre e. A freewill received awards at the
offering will be taken to defray district dinner Friday
the travel expenses of the evening, more than any
group .
other area school participating In the essay
contest.
PORTRAIT DONATED
'
PHILADELPHIA (UP! ) - A
little-known portrait of George
Washington, which shows the
first president with a genero-us portrait ,painted by Joseph
middle-age spread, has been Wright in 1783.
Washington said it' was the
donated to the Historical
best
likeness he ever saw of
Societ~ of Pennsylvania. "A
Join our Vacation Savings Club for 1973
good likeness but not flat- himself. But he said the
and start pl.anning your vacation . The
tering,'' was Washington's own painter's "forte seems to be in
more you save, the more you can plan,lj1 n
view of the nearly life~ized giving the distinguishing
characteristics with more
seeing next summer. It's like getting a
boldness than delicacy ... " The
pal.d vacation, and don't forget 0. V. B.
portrait was given to · the
makes the last' payment for you .
society by descendants of
Samuel Powell, the mayor of
Philadelphia during the
Revolutionary War .

He w.S greeted by band
lliUSic and · military honor
guat~ that marked the first
visit in peacetime by an
American chief executive to
Russia.
Heading the · welcoming :
party of 300 were Soviet
President Nikolai V. Podgorny,
Premier Alexei N. Kosygin and
Foreign Minister Andrei A.
Gromyko. Tbe Communist
Party secretary general
Leonid I. Brezhnev was not at
planeslde. this was described

MOS&lt;X&gt;W (UP!) -President
Nixon arrived in MO$Cow today
for the start of 11ttensive weeklong summit talks with SOviet
leaders oo arms control, space,
trade Bnd possibly Vietnam
and the Middle East.
American and sOviet flags
· Dapped under a gray sky arid
Moscow's warmest day of the
year -81 degrees -as Nixon
· descended
!roll!
his
presidential jet, The Spirit of
'76, at Moscow's Vnukovo II
. airport.

. ·-- said. "I ••-'t tali~;,•
Pr ~
...eke...,.
r''dldn't win".","
,...
Oddsmaker Jimmy '
Greek" Snyder, .wllo
the· series, couldn't\ ~:ifJ
more pleased that P
Pearson mel in the IUII~
had a piece of both
Snyder eiJIIalned.

••

.

' .

·. ·

'

•

"This graduating class has . the individual that counts."
our precious birthright," Dr.
known only violence, conflict
And, "Our generation is to ·Christensen said, and con- .
and war," said Dr. Alphus R. · blame for the drug problem eluded, "America is the
Otristensen, President of Rio today, not this generation greatest place in the world
Grande College, In his a&lt;fllress (veferring to the graduating , today."
to 70 graduating seniors of · class); This -'class 'is of the
The lnvocalion, given by Bill
Southern High School Sunday finest generations we've ever Cornell, preceded two selecnight in commencement turned out in the United tiona by the high school hand,
exercises.
States."
The,saJulatory address was
In a similar vein, Loretta
given by Candy Hoback and
Mlddleswarl, valedictorian,
An action plan outlined by .valendictory address by
reviewed the 12 schoOl years of · Dr. Christensen for- the 10 -Loretta Middleswart.
the graduating class. She seniorsinvolvect.fourstepa: (I)
recalled .the assa1111inaUon of Exercise your rig~t to vote, (2)
Dr. Christensen was inJohn F. Kennedy, Martin form an· objective approach to troduced by the Senior Clau
.Luther' King, Robert
.
Kennedy study all forms of government; .president, Doug Rees.
and two ww:s, in Korea and (3) work diUgenUy · and be · Ralpl) Sayre, superinVietnam:
judged by your ability, and ( 4) tendent, commended the
Dr, Christensen explained tO Both men aqd women, when ~cbers, parents and school ,
hl4 audience biB views ori long they 'at~in 'the age of 18, bOard members, and in·
hair, drela, and drugs .
determine to sene their troduced board memliets
"You cannot jl:-.',ge a person COUOIIJy' two·years in whatever David Nease, president;
by the le,.lb of hiB hair or the Cllpaclty they choose.
Denny Hill, vice pre~dent;
IJPI of clothing be wean. It's "We hiVe to pay a pi;ce for
(Coolinuecl on page 2)

~tmiERN . GRADUATING SENIORS - Moment~
befcte IIIey were handed their dlplomia, Beth '!bells, John
El~•, Cudy Hoback and Stan Klaer, 1-&lt;', look a few

.J

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'

A successful rabies ciihic in which 200 animals were
innoculated - was conducted
at the county garage Saturday
under sponsorship of the newly
formed ·Melgs County Hwnane
Soclety .Assisting the team conducting the clinic were Dorothy
Fisher, Rila Lewis, Dorothy
Will, Jean Will, Carolyn Smith,
Nonga Roberts, Lucy Amsbary, Meigs County Commissioner Warden Ours and
. Humane Officer Gary DIU.
The society expressed its
, thUks today for the excellent.
public response and to Dr. and
Mrs. Dan Notter, Martha
Oillders and Kay Conipl\ln who
conducted the clinic.
Another cUnlc wiD be held
later with the time and place to
be announced. The society will
meet at 7:30 June aat Meigs
mblltaa mninllclniJ the put four yean. Seventy lltudentl of
Inn wllll, Dr. Notter as guest
Soulbem IIlah School Sunday nlgnt received their dlplomu
speaker. All interested
at COIIUiliiiCIDlerl aerciBes.
residents are invited.

�.

.

..

Priceless Piela· Hammered by Madman
•

'

• if

"

Reds Home, 2 Games .O ut

•

VATIC AN CITY ( UPI )- traveled down IIIIo the buill~
It occupied a place ofiKWJcir York World•• Ji'alr.
[)(: Sqmour P'tlller, Los ·
Sliouting "I am JI!SWI Christ,"· Iii a printe elevator with a lnlhewcrld'ablggestOirlatjan
When ·It ~ ·tn 1986, Angeles, said he counted
a bearded, lon~-baired man gold satin tlJtone Ito IN the · churCh, ·in llie ~ chapel to Pope Paul aald It would ilevtr~ about sb: hammer biqws, most
leaped a bilrrler in' front Of ,damage lnfilcled on tile only the rlgl)l u vliltan entered lea~ apin,
ollhemalmedatthefaceoftbe ·
Michelangelo's Piela and piece of ar1 ever liped by the thnJu&amp;b the~~ main bronze
''It wu fantaatlc bOw If · Madonna.
.
hefcre the hotrlfied eYes of genius ·Mic he.l ange lo door8. N~ even' a Pcpe would happened," aald Franceaco
About sbt men leaped to pull :
Sunday tourists repeatedly Buonarroti.
UIIII'P Ita place. '
'l'ldnele, wjlo waa atandlng Totb down ind IOilll! witnesses
~mashed
the priceleaa
It waa there he heard the •only
(!nee
since with a P'OIIP o1 Dutdl 1oor111a -aald BOIIle of . ~ Dien
masterpiece witli a hainmer. name of the rusty-baired, Mlcl\elangelo . signed and In front of the atatue. ' .
women who aaw the attack
· The slunillng vandsllsm waa rusty-bearded man with the completed it I,D 1499 had the
"It wal ao quick," he aaid. wanted to lyncb him:
a crime without precedent at hammer -Laulo Toth, 33, .a Piela left Sl. Peter's- fer 19 "&amp;Jddenly that man waa'on the
"Everyone was stunned,"
the · Vatican and with ·few Hungarian born citizen ol month.B Ill the 'mld-116011 whlle atatue, just hitting away with a aaid Fllher. '1'Then I heard
precedents an)owhere in the Australia who . described it. waa, on abjbit1at the. New hammer.''
·
someone cryln!l- N~ .screams
modern world. The marble himaelf aa a geol~.
·
cr shouting or anything like
statue at St. Peter's BasWca of The Piela is a majellic thlllg,
,
· that. JUBt one person cry &amp;;g."
the Madonna cradling the a slightly larger-than-life
Vailcan guards and tourists
crucified' Jesus is one of the sculpture . weighing 8,700 .
(XIlled and~~ T!!\h away
world's;·most famous and pounds and portraying the
and placed him In a makeShift
·treasured works of art. ·
Medlinna cradtlng the body of
cell. TheVaticancloeed its tiny
Most of the blows found their Jesus after the &lt;;rucifbion.
priaon In 19115, "
' ,
Mcre than eight hours later,
mark. Successive swings
By Helen HOttel
knocked off the Madonna's
Vatican , authorities ha~dled
nose, smaahed her left eye,
Tolh over to It:allan officials,
clipped the left side of her
who aald be faced several
..,Ovided magistrates
charges,
marble veil and finally
FORSAKING ALL OTHERS ...
knocked off her left arm just
decide he 14 legany, se,ne.
Dear. Helen :
above the elbow.
Police said Toth 'bad been
Help! You~re my last resource.
Vatican officials called the
living
in Rome for ~ months,
I'm very much in love with my husband. Before we were
damage serious, but said 'they
Rev. Paul Sellers of Hamden married last June, my mother liked him, too - untU my old hoy since Jan. 6 at a Spailish nuns
hoped to restore the Piela called on Mr, and Mrs. Homer friend came back. Then II was showdown time. 9Ie told me I'd convent where he paid 34 cents
quickly. They conceded it Circle, Verna and Wavie, on have tO leave hime If I insisted on marrying Deke. So I did! 9Ie a day for food and lodging.
would never look the same Thursday.
couldn't believe I'd actually go against her.
again.
Similar Cltse
Douglas Johnson, Jun(or
I send her cards, flowers, gifts, for every holiday, but when I
CAREER APPAREL was donned Saturday the first time by officers and employes of the
The only slrnilar caae Inside Johnson of Racine, Clyde ' can her she says if I leave iny "so-called high society husband"
Fanners Bank and Savings Company. Its variety is evident in the dresses and suits. Front, 1-r,
st. Peter's in modern times Johnson of Hamden, Mr. and we can !le mother and daughter again. Until then, she has no
are Olga Pierotti, Joanne WUllams, PaJi Young, Mary Kunzelman, Ruth Cassell, Lois Burt,
Charles 'Randolph, Rock daughter by name.
.
.
Jean Werry, OJarlene Thomas, and Evelyn Lanning; in back, D&lt;lrothy Will, Roger Hysell,
OC curred in 1!189 when 8 Ger· Mrs.
·
lied Mr d M
· ·
..J
(Continiled from Page I)
Sp
man tourist, saying he wanted
nngs ca
on · an rs.
I have two sisters, One left her husband because Mom diun't
Thereon Johnson, and Theodore Reed. In the fall a sleeveless tunic top with tbe ever popular
to protest against nuclear Arthur ..Johnson and family and like him. The other Is almost In my shoes.
Howard Caldwell, a member of
pants for ladies called "Ther Haverford" will he worn. Absent were Paul Kloes, Jon Kararms,
smashed·
the
marble
Betty
Van
Meter
a
recent
Why
can't
my
mother
see
1
love
her
too,
and
need
both
her
the district's board of
schnik, Addle Norris and Kathy Fields.
fingers on the left hand of a Sunday.
and my husband? - YOUNG BRIDE
education. The band: under the
statue of Pcpe Pius VI beneath Mr. and Mrs.·George Circle Dear Bride:
direction of Charles Wills ,
the basilica's main altar.
and daughter, Mr · and Mrs.
Correction! Your husband is your last and best resource, not presented the processional and
Not even Pope Paul VI was James Circle of New Haven I! Ajld cerialnly not a mother who confuSes love jl'lth ownership. recessional and the invocation
told about the Piela until after visited Mary Circle on Sunday.
Keep the line open with remembrances and occaaional let- and benediction were by the
he appeared at noon at hiS . M~. and Mrs. Ro~t Lee and ters (they'D make YOU !eel better) butdon'tmourn a "loss" that Rev. Eldon Blake, pastor of the
By Mrs. L. jlalderson
Karen Humphrey, student of window overlooking st. Peter's famtly, Ralph Lee VISited Mrs. set you free. _H.
Eden United Brethren Church.
Gary
Reed,
son
of
Mr.
and
Ohio
State
.University,
spent
Square
to
bless
tourists
and·
Fern
Stansbury,
who
is
a
+++++
SeniorClassPresidentRichard
&amp;undsy School attendance on
~tient in an Athens ~ospltal. Dear Helen:
Marlin introduCed the, guest
May 14 was 58, the offering Mrs. Alvin Reed received his the week-end with her parents, pilgrims.
B.A.
Degree
in
Education
at
Mr.
and
Mrs.
C.
Ed
Humphrey,
·
When
he
heard
the
news
he
:Wavie
Circle
was
an
overtod
U4.76. Mothers (24) in number,
•
· ht
t of F
F te
In the restaurant ay, live people blew their noses while I speaker.
Rio
Grande
College.
Attending
and
Robin.
mg
gues
ranees
os
r
Sunday afternoon the annual
were honored with gilts loward the graduation were Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Humphrey at·
on Thursday night.
ate dinner. Would you give your opinion on nose-blowing Iii baccalaureate was held with
the c.lose of Sunday School and
American League
ON WES
restaurants' M
200 200 001- s 8 2
.
TERN TOUR
·- ·
the Rev. Eugene Underwood,
the song "Fait]! of Our Mrs. Ray Weaver of Beaver, tended the graduation of her Oakland
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Alvin
Reed,
grandson,
·
Rick
Stone
,.
at
Kan
Ci
ty
000 001 ID0-2 9 3 Mary Martin, Pomeroy, Dear M.:
pastor
of the TuPpers Plains
Mothers" was sung.·
D&lt;lhrman Reed and Mr. and Marietta. Also there to attend
Holtzman. Knowles (7), Lock· Rhoda Hackett, Middleport
Whenyou .gotla blow, you gotta blow. Better this than snif· Church of Christ, as speaker.
Worship services were held
er (7 l and Duncan; Hedlund, p
1 K
G 111 I' ' fling
H
napp,
a po ts,
·- ·
Members of the graduating
at 11, with the Rev. Lehman, Mrs. Robert Reed, ali from lhe graduation was his parents, Dalcanlon (6), Rooker (8) and ear
Reedsville.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Len
Stone
of
Paepke,
Kirkpatrick
(9).
WPMyrtle
Walker
and
Eunie
+++++
class,
who wore greM! and
with an altendance of 30.
Recent visitors at the Hetzer· Cleveland.
Holtzman (6 •21· LP- Hedlund Brinker, Racine, ali partners Dear Helen :
white caps and gowns for both
Readings "Mother's Creed,"
Sunday visitors at the home ~~~~2 ~~s;;,~a~t~l ~~~~in3~;:; off Mdeigs ~Ion 710 8&amp;441 spent a
H the letter from "Two Bachelors" was not a put~n. it is
the baccalaureate and comby Florence Spencer; "Only Bise home were Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur
Hetzer
and
Brenda
of
of
Mr,
and
Mrs.
Lawrence
I
2nd).
ew
ays
m
Denver,
Colo.
The
hard
to
-whytheywouldexpect
sympathy
from
a
columnist
in
mencement
carrying out the
One Mother," by Helen Woode;
~II,
W.Va.,
David
Robertson
Rose
were
Thomas
J.
Rose
and
spent
Friday
evening
and
this
day
and
age,
simply
because
their
tenant
brings
colored
school
colors,
included :
and "Tribute To a Mother" by
Sat~rday at. the ,Nation~! friends to their preptises. Your reply, however, proclaims a far · Graduates are Rulh Ellen
.Thelma Hendecson. Rev. Leh· of Charleston, W. Va. and sons of Akron and Mr. and Mrs. §~:~~~~ia · ~~~ ~~ ~H
Eddie
Hetzer
of
Belpre.
Dana
Van
Meter
and
family
of
May,
Rose
(31.
Barber
(SJ.
Jewtsh
Hosptl.al for Cystt~ greater prejudice of your own - or perhaps cynical ignorance _
Adams, James Kenneth
man•~ message was from 11 '
Fisher
(61.
Fosler
(9)
and
Fibrosis,
and
TB
children.
·
its
1
·
all
bac
Amsbary,
Mrs. Rose Th omas and Mrs. BeIpre .
T
Ul
SIII'Cast c weswnption that
helors (especially if they Michael
Ray Larry
Benedum.Baker,
Joyce
Timothy, I: 1-9 "Train Up a
71
Opal
Randolph
visited
with
Recent
visitors
of
Mrs.
Opal
orborg,
Kusnyer
&lt;
'
Bradley,
They
also
visited
Colorado
buyandlivelilahousetogether)arequeer.
Marlene
Bing,
Rickie
Lee
Child."
Gossage (4), Romo (7), Le· Sp .
Ad'
. their h
B
J
Mrs.
Pauline
Atkersion
and
Randolph
were
Mr.
and
Mrs.
&gt;
monds
(81.
Kealey
(91
and
nngs.
lllnenn
onor
There
are
many
reasons
a
respectable
man
might
remain
lake,
anlce
Marie
Boggs,
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Parker
was held at lh'l Air · Force lWil&amp;rried. Failure of people to recognize that fact drives many ~~1n~~ue g~~:~Y· s~~n~~~
and Randy of Plano, ru., spent Cindy at Columbus, also with Clyde Emrich of Little Hocking ~gar· &lt;Bri)k~~n F(7) . WP0;Jl · Academy and they altended a man of lnunature judgment into unhappy marriage PerMrs.
Gladys
Morgan
and
Mrs
.
and
Mrs.
Gladys
Morgan
and
Hk~
eyAII~~
(7th
I-PI~~~:
(~
Calaway, Warren H. Calaway,
Mother's Day weekend here
Gladys
Baughman
of
Gahanna
.
Debbie
of
Coiwnbus.
Kusnyer
(1st),
May
1
rdl.
'
the
chapel
there
for
Mother's
sonally
I
am
thankluJ
that
economic
pressures
of
·
uth
Robert Jewel Caldwell. Sue
3
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mr Ba h ·
'ed
D ld B ha t
f Mr
-Day services and visited the
'
my yo
Hayes · Caldwell, Charles
s. ug man accompam
ona
arn r • son
Cl 1
. , preventedaomesuchtragedyforme,andthatasaQonsequencel Douglas Carr. Terrence Lane
. WilberParker,and Bro. Eddie,
ll)eliJ , hel'l~.. llllQ . ~n\ ~,few and Mrs . Carl Barnhar\,,, O:t~~i~nd .... gg2 ~ ~ 1 ~ ~ Garden of the Gods and Pikes can now sign m If. _ UNDI\'ORCED
Carson, John Cline, Da vid
~ and •\tended church liere
•
days
with
·her,
-sister,
·Mrs.
•
Pecently
.
cot~.pleled··his
:oosic
Tidrow,
Riqd(~berger
Pll&amp;k
SI!!Pmlt
)'ljQj
al\~levation
•tle'arltJn.
·oY
~
,
!
·
,.
.
·
''
.
.,.,tfil~h•~·Oe~r~!lleano,
·M!l!lnle ,
161
1
. ....
1 1llw:tdaY,Inornmg: ·. ::
' 1'' •
1 · ·
L F t D'11 N J '' 'Lamb m" "'en · ' 'r~
d
of 141l0 feet the DWiaht
D
·
"
Marie
~"'
Kathy
Diane
Dill,
.,omas. "''
.. .. ....
.. Patmng a or
•• • .. ...F · .
'r' '-(ioeg~no a.• an ·
•
· • "
·0·'" '"·,,"'AI a clllumni81 •who•has consistently advised "Don't Jet Janie~ Mll'te Dixon, Barbara
~ ' " ""'ord ~was · r~ei ved' here of
8
Mr. and Mrs . Donald Donald spent Mothers' Day
osse, Lollch ·11 and aller . Eisenhower Ubrary, place of
'
Ann Ebersbach, Dennis Roland
the death of Mrs. Wlllard Coleman
and family, of week-end with his parents, Mr. ~ith)Tidrow (4.31 · HR- Cash meditation and final resting 89Ciety pressure y~u into ~ge, parenthood, any sort of Eichinger. Marjorie M•rl e
Bealer in Florida Friday Columbus were week-end and Mrs. Carl Barnhart.
place and the family home in conformity that isn I your bag, I resent your !Jilap judgment. Of Gillilan. Dian• Sue Grueser.
evening. Nlils Robinson went
uests
of
Mrs.
Helen
Arche
'
r.
Donald's
car
was
stolen
from
Baltimore
003
001
01o-S
6
I
Abiieene,
Kansas. AU enjoyed course I don't thlilk an bachelors are queer ... any more than I Joyce Lynn Grueser, l'imot~y
Mllw
000 000 ()()C}-11 4 2
think they would all be happier married
R. Gumpf, Nita Louise, Hams,
on Sunday to be with her g
Bill
and
D&lt;lra
Synder
and
him
at
Fort
Dix.
Dobson
(HI
and
Etchebar·
the
tour
very
much.
·
Rickie
Lee Hauber, R. Alan
grandchlldten, daughters of
8 aomewhat prisly "pot" (re-read his letter for
Milford
Cole
of
Maringo
visited
Mr.
and
Mrs.
D.
C.
Riebel
ren;
Brett,
Colborn
(91
and
.
But
when
Holler.
Mr.and Mrs. Robert Robinson,
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. were taken out to dinner by : ort ter. LP- Brett (2·41. HRsthosepetulmt pllrases)calls th~,ket~e black,hede.serves a bit of w~~~~ A~a~r.HoJJ:~~n R~~"u'i
·at Belpre, 0. · ·'
.
Grant Boring .
their son . John Riebel and
e 1enmund 12ndl . Baylor, 2
smearlng.Andwhenheasked, Cantyoujustimaglnewhatthe Kirkman, Ra~dy Steven
Oscar Dillinger , father of
family of Pomeroy Rd., on (2nd &amp; 3rd l
neighbors are whispering?" he led with his chin ! All I said was
Koehler. R1•;kle Lee Koenig,
Lloyd Dillinger, .of Alfred
(15t Game)
''Yes~"" _ H
'
'
Jennller Lynn Lawson, Charles
Mother's Day at 'a restaurant
Marcinko, David G. Marcinko,
OJurch, passed away Saturday
Boston
000 001
002-3 8 o
P.S· BeSldes, I fl gured the Ietter Ior "put~n with a Dennis G. Marcinko, Richard
at
Belpre.
The
families
also
N.Y.
0IOOOx-6ll
014
evening at the .Holzer Hospital
0
message." Am I right, Bachelors Two?- H.
Martin, Dave E. Mlllhone,
By United Press International visited with Mr. and Mrs. · Culp, Lee (3),Bolln (7) and (Continued from page I)
in Gallipolis.
National League
Robert Morton and fam1'Iy of Fisk; Peterson, Lyle (91 and
+++++
·
Lind• Lee P~ovence, Deborah
Lynn Pierce, Jean Newlun
Ttie children and grand· New York
000 002 020-4 6 I near Portfield.
Munson. WP.Peterson 11·61. Grover Salser, J r., C1arence Dear Helen:
Reynolds, Janice Robinson,
100 200 000-3 8 o
~hiidren of . Mr. · and Mrs. Phlla
Dinner guests of Mr. and ~indcu~~~:;4l .
Lawrence, Charles Pyles,
Those ''Two Bachelors" deserve an you handed them and Connie Jean Rockhold, Harvey
Seaver. Frisella (8) and
Garland GaldweU met at the Grote
s
d
Boston
000- 2 7 1 members, and Nancy carAa friend of_,_
id "Whe
lo
Roseberry, Kathryn M. San.k
; Carlton (S·41 and Mrs. Warren PtC
110
000
ens un ay
k
more 1.
a
. uwoe sa ,
n you c se your eyes, ders, Mnntle Richard S•nders,
Findllng-Caldweil home for a McCarver. WP.Seaver (7-1)
N.Y.
201
OOOOOx-310
1
nahan,
cler
.
..,.
Peters. Tlanl (71 and Mont. David Nease presented everything's black." The ''two" should close their ·eyes to the Larrv Lee Stalnaker, Marvin
family get-to-gether 6n HRs- Hullon (2nd) , Agee (Slh) , were Mrs. Kathryn Di etz an d
Mays (2nd).
Bill, and Bob Day of Belpre, gomer~· Keklch , Lyle (B) and
oo!oroftheirtenants'frlends,andmaybetheneighborswillclose E. Taylor, Connie Kay
Mother's Day.
'ili
Ell
'
p K kl h (4
p
diplomas
to
seniors:
J. ~ry
We lls,
M
M
E
W
d
R
r. an
rs. . . t ams
Is.
- e c ·21 . L THEm eyes to a gouipy ·housewlfey ·sounding male who says Wells,
Richard s.Donna
Williams,
Jo
Mr. Robert Robinson and Chicago
100 001 1D0-3 7 4 and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Lyhi
Peters
(J
.
J)
.
James
Keith
Ables,
Lawrence
he
"Just
can't
sleep
nights
worrying
about
what
his
neighbors
Wolf.
Marcella
Louise,
Wyers,
daughters of Belpre, and Mr. St. Louis
000 010 001- 2 8 0
Ables, Melanie Jane Allen, Pat. will say. "_ UNCONDEMNING
Rhea Pooler Yonker, Randy
Hands, McGi n~ (9) , Phoebus Balderson. and Kay.
and Mrs. Bill Follrod and Sue
(91
an
d
Hundley
;
Wise,
Hudson
at
the
Arnold,
Terri
Lynn
Ash,
Neil
Young.
Recent
visitors
Ann of Athens, ~pent Mother's (8) and Simmons. WP- Hands
I iii ililldi
rrrrr;;;w;;"gpp "1
Oiy with Nina Robinson and (3·1). LP- Wise (3·41. HR- Williams-Balderson home bi:~st ~'ti-~~eE~b=~~~ :~ J?wlgh,t_Baker, Christy Lynn
l'lara Follrotf. In the afternoon WIIIIams (3rd) .
we•e Mrs. Clara Hull, Mrs. was one released by Poland Beegle, Deborah Ann BosUck,
~
•
Josephine
Hull,
and
Junior
in
1961.
It
is
more
than
four
Kathy
·'
Lynn
Boyd,
Anthony
Mr. and Mrs. Carlelon Folirod Houston
000 002 000- 2 6 1 Bull of Waldo.
inches in length.
Gail Bradford, ' J\enee Burke,
&amp;,td Chuckle of Pomeroy Blld Los Ang
000 001 000- I S 1
Reuss (3-2) and Edwards; WIN AT BRIDGE
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Folirod,
Connie Mae Bush, William Lee
Sing~r.
Brewer
(8)
and
Canniz.
Cleland, Charles William
BY JACK O'BRIAN
Stevie and Kathy, local, called. zaro. LP- Singer (J.4). HRs• always, and be has a good 8l;ilt on himself: He
Mrs. Genevieve Guthrie Mota (2ndI, Watson (5th)
Cornell III, Sharon Lee
PURISTS IUVE NO
broke up the waiters, captains and folks at
went to Sugar Grove, 0., to
Cra~en, Edwin Yeager CrOBS,
"PORTNOY" COMPLAINT
surro111ding
tables when he ordered dinner
spend Mother's Day weekend (lSI game)
Davtd
Andrew
Crow,
Robert
NEW
YORK
(KFS)
_
"Portnoy's
Com·
from the French menu In the very plush Four
Montreal
000 000 ooo- 0 7 1
Lee 'Cummins, George Edward
with her son-in-law and Pitts
001 000 OOx- 1 S I
Seasons.
"Youse kin laff," Sir Rockwell stated,
trump. You have fixed it to Cummins', Joseph Edward plaint" is faithful to what Roth wrought lil .one
NORTII
22
da~ghter, Mr. and Mrs .
McAnally, Marshall (7) and
''but a Iotta bwna who kin pernounce It can't
give an expert a chance to Derouin, John William respect : full of feelthy dislogue ... Henry
.A74
Boccabella ; Walker. Miller (81.
Delbert Yost and famlly.
'
'IK9
4
go
after
an
overtrick.
Fonda's
wife,
!ltlrlee,
was
a
stewardess
when
afford
it." ... The man wlio haa.everything,like
Hernandez 191 and Sangulllen .
Mr. and Mrs. WilHam Carr WP- Walker (2·11. LP-McAn·
"He wins the first spade Eichinger, · Paul Eugene
• K62
Rocky, now may buY a aolid gold yo-yo ... Such
and knocks out the ace of Forbes, Ray Crittenden Frank, Hank met her, and she'D stew again for one
I ... Jl093
and daughters spent Mother's ally (0.41 .
as
the Laurance Rockelellers who dined at Quo
• Day with her parents, Mr. and (2nd gomel
clubs. West plays a second Teresa M. Gooch, William flight ; yean ago she waaone of the steward! on
EST
EAST
Vadis, sans Yo-Yo; where we alao noted the
100 010 011f-3 6 1 .QJ109
.652
1pade. South takes that also, David Graham, Brett Allen the fir8t N: Y. ·Washington jet flight whose
Mrs. Robert White at Keno and Montre•l
Pitts
100 020 02x- s 8 1 ¥872
¥QJ105
Fredric
Marches, most gracefully semi-retired.
cashes the rest of the clubs Hart, Bruce Edward Hart, original crew 14 being recycled lor the final
· called on his mother, Mary
Renko, Walker (S),(i,iblert
• J9 .
• Ql0'743
Michael Jackson will alng "Ben's Song" over
and leads a third spade."
Pamela Jo Hill, Candy carol flight to its' pannanent · display - in tbe
(7), Marshall (81 and Bateman;
carr' local.
.A76 5
Johnson,
the
opening credits of the "Ben" flick. Who's .
Jim:
"He
doesn't
risk
his
Hoback,
Jerry
Ray
Hubbard,
&amp;nitliaonian
...
Peter
Sellers'
ez,
Britt
Eklund,
Mr. ana Mrs. Clair Woode
soum (D)
Guistl (81 and May. Sangullcontract
If
W
est
started
J
L
Ji
H
bb
d
bea
tlfuJ
da
'
Ben? He's a dirty rat ... Here's claai : there's a
81 ever,
.K8 3
and Connie Sue of Circleville len (9) . WP- Guisli (1-31. LPwith five spades, he takes ames
es e
u ar • waa
u
nclng at the CasinQ
¥A63
"Bonnie • Cyde" bouUque in nearby SomerGilberl
(O·ll
.
HROIIver
(3rd)
.
visited his parents, Mr. and
three spade tricks, but west Charles Robert Hysell, Clay Russe with producer Lou Adler.
e
A85
v!Ue, N. J ... Preview wolves ten us Marcia
started with just four. When Timothy lhle, Stephen OUn
Stuart Whitman's a favorite for the
Mrs. Charles D. Woode, here ; (1st game I
oltKQ84
McBroom
of Godfrey Cambridge's lpunlnent
he
takes
the
last
spade
East
Jenkins,
Carroll
Joseph
"Lucky"
Luciano
gangster
flick
...
The
record
and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cincinnati
023 200 ooo-1 9 1
East~ West vulnerable
who will have had to dis: Johnson.
business baa .a alight p111ic an. The anca80
Robert White, Keno, on ~an Diego
000 000 101-2 7 1
film, ''Collle Back Charleston Blue,"haa one of
West North Elst South
Mother's Day.
Nolan (S·IIand Bench ; Greif,
card
three
times
on
clubs,
Also,
Johnnie
Gale
Johnson
lltudlo
RCA
equipped
for
a
million
jull wu
Ute great antime figures. Owes it to bed posture
(21, Ross (3), Kilken - Pass · 3 N.T. Pass 1 N.T. will be squeezed in lhe red • Ronnie
Dale
Johnson:
llhuttered
...
No
rec
too
Cor
fine
......,...,_.
Mr . and Mrs. Arthur Schaeffer
-her Dlllther enrolled her In ballet to
rid of
Pass
ny (9) and Barton . LP- Greil
sm\s. South throws a dla· Lawrence Grant Johnston
-....-•
Pass
Athetton visited Carrie Swartz (3·S) .
her
slouch.
mond from dummy and a
te
• Michel Legrand: he's~Ciirinc sbt fllml right
at the Elmwood Nursing Home (2nd game)
.
Opening lead-• Q
heart
from
his
hand
and
Stan
Y
Kiser,
Deborah
Lynn
now ... Finally a rock-croup. Itcked an' apOwner of a major league team gave his
Cincinnati 000 000 000- 0 s 4
makes the rest of the LaValley, John W. Manuel, proprlate name: "ApopleJy" 11 the' current
Sunday afternoon on Mother's San Diego 010 140 Ol x- 7 10 1
playboy yolllll!er brother a one-word opinion
Day.
Hall , Borbon (5), Sprague (6), By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby tricks."
Debra Joyce Meldau, Loretta nolle at Barney Goolle's.
·when the kid lhowed birD a !llir of new-bolJI(rt
Mr and Mrs Carleton Gullett (81 and Plummer ,·
Osw aid : "A lucky. squeeze Lynn Middleswart, Clarence
Sammy
.
Guc,cis'and opined, "Thil 14 tlie JliOill expenaive
·
Norman (4·21 and Kendall . LP
Oswald : "It might be a
Davia' take-home at Westbury
F oII ro· d an d Charles
of - Hall 12·11.
·good idea to devote a few and, of course, an alert West Ivan Norris, Nancy Jane Ours,
loafer in the world." Brothet dear str~tfaced
Pomeroy visited her parenls,
columns lo hands useil by can stop it by simply refus· Elmer B. Persona, Jr. Jennie Music Fair wu mote than flOO,ollo. At thil rate
him with, "Second.'' ... Bukelball 'iUr Wilt
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Henderson llst am. 10 inns.l
bridge leachers in their ing to cash the last spade." babel Potts, Don~a Rae ~'U be ott of deblthla year ... How touching:
affects the wide-brimmed, vert-mod
·
Frazier
100
002 020 l-6 14 0 classes."
IN&lt;wsPAm &lt;NmP~lSE ASSH.J
Proffitt, Mellsaa Jane Proffitt, l'latalle Wood and Bob Wagnernpect to re-wed
on Mother's Day.
Alia
San Fran 000 110 1io If- 4 7 o
hats. Bought aeven In one sweep at Lehman
Alan Lee Pugh, Randy Keith oext:lall-so !heir kids (they didn't have any
·
Scheuler, Nash (8), and
Jim : "These hands are
Saunders after he got hla cbalnplollllhlp pi&amp;yofl
Pyles, Douglas Clift Rees, together when they made It lint .time) can be
WISCONSIN RACE
Will iams, Marlohal. Barr (91 , usually very simple, but
check.
KAUKAUNA, Wis. (UPI)- Cumberland (101 . McMahon here is one that I have
Raymond Eugene Robinsoo, pre-1. Meanlrblle they're living together lit
Dave~ of Arden, N.C., (I~ ahnd RaderL,PHea 1y (9). WP jazzedup a little."
The bidding has been:
Sharon Elaine Roush, Barbara Lo!tdon ... JW St. John's latest Is another rich
Tammy Grimes wouldn't tan her !ella's
0 swald : "The basic lesson
drove hill 1972Nova to victory · - as 11·01·
- 8•rr (0.1) .
North l!ost South Ellen-· Sarson, Veleela Gall guy, onel.eonanl Rou, lnVellmenll. JW ml181
name at the Pen • 1Pnecll; dlmi 1188111
HRs- Arnold (lsi I. Goodson here is very good. South has West 1•
Pass
1•
811bamed, jull cartf1ll ... '!be Ga:r IIIII ipOt
In the 1lilknDe U.S. Auto Uub (1st), Kingman (8th) .
a classic no-trump and Pas.s a
p,..,
?
Shaffe~. Kenneth Edward "'•
-.Dun•Bradltrett ... NBC'sDickScbupllld
late ?DDdel stock car race Atlanta
&lt;2nd game) 010 000 000- 16 2 Norlh a proper rat'se to
You, South, hold:
Shuler, James Maion Smith, AIIC'I Jim Bauton are feudq, and ain't that ' sounds like the blithe 301 - With IDprUlo
&amp;tnday at the Wisconaln In- . San Fran
ooo ooo 02x- 2 4 o ga me. South can count lo .KJ51.K876eU.Ql07 ROy Ralph Smith, Rick W. theminl..,...oftheet~~tury ... TheT~Jonea
Dorothy Arml and birltone Hal Wllltlrd ~
ternational Raceway. The ·Reed (1-61 and Casanova; nin~ easy tricks provided he
like Jeanette MacDIJnlld llld Neilan Eddy
What do you do now?
Snider, Beth Ann Theiss, Fan Club of Japan chartered ri jet and, 242
triumPI walworth ~.101.
Bryant. Carrlther&amp; (9) and just knocks out the ace · of . A- Bid two no-trump. Whot Virginia Lee Turner, Terry Lee linin~&gt; flew to' see him at Cllllar!l P-ace In
rnldnightly ... El Avram's beiiJ cliDc:tr Tallba
Verlin Baker of Cedar Rader. WP- Bryant (2·3). HR- · clubs at his firs! opportun- else?
V811lCy, Connie Elaine War- Vegaa.
told her retil nllllll on TV, and It'• In the phone
Bonds (Sihl .
Uy." .
Raplds, Iowa, was secon d in a
TODAY'S
QUESTION
ner,
Debra
Kay
Weal,
William
Stlrley
MacLalne
bought
a
home
in
.
book Where obiHne canen PI'OIDPI1l plaped
Jim : "You see where l
1r10 Dodge Otarger and Sal
A thought for today: Ameri- have livened the hand up?" .Your partner continues to Ernest Wheeler, Roger Gene Majcrca, Far enough ... The Sat. Review book
her ... We knew a galwboae pboae ,.tmblr waa
Tovella of Edi.aon, In., w¥ can poet Ralph Waldo Emerson
Oswald ; •·of course. The jhree clubs. What do you do Willford, Jr., ·Sleven Donald · dlVIalonCCll6lllllaloneoneoncljlmpJoeLouis.' lDIIltianoitl on radio 'IIIMillbe Io.- 'btr dog, 111d
third lila 1m Ply'mouth Road said, "Happy is the house that teacher's hand would be set now?
. Wlnebrenner, ·Jackie· Sue Gerald AabJr wtn do it.
.
.
llhe IDl the tllrV etllll- pi• a oilp on the ea.
, .Ruaner.
shelters a friend ."
up to make just three no·
Answer tomorrow
Wines, Charles Edward Yost.
Roti7Grlllano'sverballyaaunpoli11Mdu
wilt pin III ........

By Unlled Press lnle&lt;nationat
National League
East
w. I. pel. g.b.
New York
25 ' 7 .781 Pittsburgh
18 12 .600 6
Chicago
15 15 .500 9
Phitadetrhia 15 16 .484 9'12
Montrea
13 19 .406 12
St. Lou is .· 12 21 .364 13'12

••

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
Chicago, Chicago, that toddlln' town has suddenly.
become two-team baseball city
again.
While the fans of summer
continued their vigil for the
norlhside Cubs' run at the
pennant In the National League
East, Chicago's souihsiders
rejoiced Sunday as the White
Sox crept quietly into first
place in the American League
West with a come.from-behlild
ninth . inning S-8 victory over
the California Angeles.
carlos May, the OJisox' half·
thumbed leftlleider delivered
the latesl win for manager
Otuck Tanner's forces when he
polled a three-i'1lll homer In the
1
•, ; •lllnth Inning with the ApgeiB
,, , cllilging to an ,ll-6lead.
In other American League
action, the New York Yankees
swept the fast-pacing Boston
Red Sox,-3 and 3-2, Detroit
blanked Cleveland, 5-0,
oakland topped Kansas City,!).
2, Baltimore shut out
Mnwaukee, 5-0, and Texas took
a doubleheader from Min·
nesota, ii-2 and 3-1.
The Detroit 76ers, another
team with serious pennant
thoughts if for no other reason
than
Mickey
Lolich's
workhorse left arm, moved to
within a game and a half of
Cleveland in the AL E~ with
their S-0 win over the Indians.
Not surprisingly, it was
i.Dlich supplying the win for the
Tigers. What was surprising
though was lhe fact it was the
Detroit ace's first shutout of
the seaaon.
"I think I've had about six
games which I've given up one
l'llll this year," i.Dlich said
afterward. "I kept wondering
if I'd ever get a shutout." The
win llfled Lollch's record tO S.l
tops in the majors for victories.

Commencement

I

.·

orce al ong B r 'W.ay
11

I

I

I

I

I

,k
vertnc
0
Wangling an N.T.

5

.346 7'12
.320 8

b
w. I. pct . g..

18
17
17
IS
12

Beach, calif., was the fastest a
year ago winning the pOle at an
average of 178.696 m.p.h.
Eight rookies managed to
land starting spots, fow- of
them Sunday, but for t11e first
1\me alnce 1962, no foreign
driver attempted to make the
field.

Roy White Reacts
Roy White, reacting to trade
rumors thai had him heading
to C1eveland in a multi-player
deal involving third baseman
Graig NetUes, snapped out of
his betting doldrums with three
hits in each game as the
Yan~ees swept the Red Sox.
Ex-Red Sox reliever Sparky
Lyle also picked up two save:!
against his old mates, giving
him six lor the season . Fritz
Peterson, who won the first
gsme, (his first victory of the
season) aided his own cause
with three runs batted in.
Dave Duncan drove in three
l'WIS with a pair of homers and
Sal Bando added a two-run
homer as Oakland heat Kansas
City. Ken Holtzman worked the
flrit six innings lor the A's,
allowing lour hits and one run,
to boost hl4 record to 6-2. ·
Rookie Don Baylor, the man
who the Baltimore Orioles hope
eventually will compensate for
the loss of Frank Robinson,
blasted a pair of home runs to
beck Pat D&lt;lbaon's four-hit
pitching the Birds' win over
Milwaukee. Merv Reltemnund
also homered for Baltimore:

Steubenville Central
The , surprising Meigs
· Marauders drew Steubenville
Central Catholic in the Newark
"AA" regional tournament to
be played this Friday and
Saturday.
Coach Don Wolfe and Roger
Birch's Marauders will kick off
the regionals this Friday at 4
p.m. on diamond No. 2 of
Edwards Field in Newark. On
diamond I the potent Ironton
Tigers will play Bellaire, also
at 4 p.m. The two winners will

meet at 2 Saturday on either
diamond I or 2 at Edwards
Field.
The Symmes Valley Vikings,
ihe only other area team in the
tournament, will play in the
Newark "A" regionals this
Thursday afternoon.
Coach
John
Nese 's
Steubenville Central Catholic
Crusaders defeated Philo in
their district, 7·5, to earn the
trip to the regionals. The

favorite of the tournament
would definitely appear to be
Ironton, who hais a 23-3 slate
and has yet to have been
pressed in tourQamenl play.
They defeated the Marauders
in their only meeting, 9.0.
The schedule this week for
Meigs will be at Kyger Creek
Monday and Waverly at home
on Wednesday. The Marauders
are 7-6 overall and 3-3 in
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League play.

saturday

Sporll S11mm•ry

By Ualled Prea IDierDatloual

BALTIMORE (UPI) - Bee
Bee Bee won the $187,800
Preakness Stakes as Riva
Ridge, loalng hill bid for the
Tiiple O'own, came in fourlh.
UNIONDAlE, N.Y. (UPI)The Indiana Pakers won the
American Basketball Aaaoclation crown for the second tlmr

•. ,
'" '

.....

...'"

The

DHJ S.ililtl

lf~

11th Win In Row, 4-3

By VITO STELLINO
seven hits and three runs Iii
UPI ~ria Writer
seven innings.
The New York Mets·• are .."~'m glad I've been able to
updating the-•old slogan that " help," Mays said, "but this is a
ctiarity begins at home.
2S-man roster and I'm just
The Mets were supposed to doing my jlart. Yogi (Berra)
be doing something nice for has used me wisely."
Willie Mays 10 dsys ago when
In other games, Pittsburgh
they picked up the 41-year~ld made it seven straight by
superstar and his huge salary downing Montreal, 1-0 and 5-3,
from the San Francisco Giants Oticago edged st. Louis, 3-2,
and promised him a job wben Houston nipped Los Angeles, 2his playing dsys are over.
1, Atlanta beat San Francisco,
But Mays, who was only 6-4,iii!Oinnings, but the Giants
expected to be valuable to the won the second game, 2-1,
FASTEST TIME
WILMINGTON, Del (UPI)- Mels as a drawing card, may Cincinnati beat San Diego, 7·2,
Sllent Majority won the feature be worlh every penny the Mets but the Padres took the second
mne at Brandywine Raceway are paying him for his play on ~arne, 7-0.
Ma~eroskl Starts Rally
Sunday in 1:59 2-5, the fastest the field.
Frank
Lucchesi.
Just
ask
Bill Mazeroski, who still is
time of the year for a 3-year~ld
The Philadelphia manager
_pacer.
The horse, owned by Irvfug said Sunday, "never seD a p
Uverman and Mrs. Roger supei'stai short, even if he ill .l'
41."
While of St. Laurent, Canada,
Lucchesi and a record crowd
returned ~.00, ~ .110 and $2.40
in Phlladelphia of 57,267-the
after clipping three-fiftha of a
second off tbe previous best set second largest National
by Strike Out at Pompano League ·regular season day
crowd ever -got a good look at
TOLEDO (UP!) - Bowling
Park, Fla.
Mays Sunday when he cracked Green won the Mid-American
a two-run homer in the eighth Conference golf and track
,to give the Mets their lith championships here Saturday
.straight win, a 4-3 triumph over and favored Miami captured
Kangaroo hides make fine
·the Phiis.
the tennis crown to end Tole·
glove and boot leather.
Four Games and Four Hill
do's dominance of the event the
Mays has played four games last six years.
for the MetsandwhUe he'shad
Miami won two singles and
just four hits lil14 at bets, he's two doubles matches Iii the
played a key role In the victory final round to score 17 points
in each of the four games and and nose out the Rockets by
in .the last three yeSrs by has scored six runs and batted two points in the 1lnal team
standings. Trailing were Bowldowning the New York Nets in in four more.
Steve
Carlton
had
a
3-0
lead
·
ing Green 9, Western Michigan
the sixth gmbe of their playoff
and
a
no-bitter
until
the
sixth
G, Ohio U. 4 and Kent State 3.
series, 108-105.
Inning Sunday when Mays
Dave Wattle won both the
doubled
for
the
Mets'
first
hit
mne
and half-mile runs as
INDIANAPOUS (UPI)-Peand
scored
on
Tommie
·
Agee's
Bowling
Green scored an up~
ter Revson and Mark Donohue
)!li.ned pole-sitter Bobby Unser homli?' . In the eighth, Jim team win by getting five firsts
in the first row Saturday for Beauchamp batted for Tom In Saturday's flnsl 16 events.
next week's Indianapolis 500 Seaver and singled arid Mays 'lhe Falcons nosed out favored
auto race aa the field was in- hit a two-run homer to beat Western Michigsn 138-132.
Kent State, Jed by Len Turncreased to 'll for the 33-car carlton. Seaver, now 7·1, got
thewlileventhoaghbegaveup
er
who look the 100 and 440race.
.
·
ysrd dashes and the triple
jump, tallied Ill~ polnls lor
80
(UPil- third place. Following were
Ohio U. at 91, Mia~!!~ 85 and
six events but South California The middlew~ight bout be· Toledo 53.
.
tiWzedoveralllltrengthto
'win tween De nny Moyer, Por I•
.
Steve Blowers took medalist
the, Pacific '·Eight Conference land, Ore., and · Com- honors with a 232,lncludlng his
track and field cham, monwealty champion Tony 74 Saturday, to pace Bowling
plonahip ·
MlDldine baa been put back
Green, with a 1,184 point lo\al.
threedaystoMay31becauseof to a !().point win over the Ml·
NEW YORK (UP!)- an attack of tnnu-••
suffer
' ed
.,.._
ami golfers.
Canonero II, making hll lint by the American.
The defending champion
ltart'alnce lalt year's Belmont
Moyer, the North American
Bobcats finished third in team
When he failed In hll Triple middleweight champ, became
"
- - bid, f'"'"'"ed
....._d
In W llhortly after dalendlilg his acorlng with a ll298- Tranme
1111011
U"uwn
-~·
were Kent state at' 1,213, Tolethe Carter Handicap beblnd C. , crowo 10 dlys aao and wasn't do 1,251llld Western Michigan
Oliver Goldsmith'aleemattat ·able to tr·•·.
""'
1,288:
• the ll8llle New York track.

l

8 COnS

C0p

Two Titles

o~~~~=~lNfl

"' ,.

MllGS·MASDNAUA
CHI ST. • L. TANNIHILL,
iuc . ld.

'"
""
'"

ROIUT HOIFLICH.
City Ultor
Published
dolly txttpl
···.• SllurdiY Dy Tht Ohio Volloy
· Court
PuDllthStlnv
com pony, 111
.• Pomeroy , Oh 1o.
•5769. Butlnon Dfflco Phono
Edlloriol Phone Hl·
,
Stcond e1111 poitaue pold ot
·, Pomeroy,
Ohio .od¥trllstna
Notional
. . ropruentoll•t aotllnollf·
' Ollllghor. Int .. 12 Eut •2nd
" Sl, Now York City, NIW York.
Subotrlpllon rot~• : Dt ·

mt56,

.., llvtrtd tir urrltr where

1''
r..

' •'
'•

·~!':Bft~~~~on

Jeter walked to load the bases
and Hall was replaced on the
moll)Ki by Pedro Borbon.
Nate Colbert lined Borhon's
first pitch to center for a double
tQ score two runs and then Ed
Spiezio doubled off the left field
wan to drive in another pair.
Cincinnati coupled seven hits
with nine walks in the opening
oontest and Gary Nolan, now :;..
I, turned Iii his first complete

looking for his first hit this
· year, hit a sacrifice fly in the
eighth. inning of ihe second
game to start a two-run rally
and give Pittsburgh its doubleheader sweep over Montreal.
In the opener, Dave Gash drove
in the only run and then made a
brilliant bases-loaded catch in
the eighth to preserve the
triumph.
Bob Watson hit a two-run
homer Iii the sixth and Jerry
Reuss pitched a seven-bitter as
Houston moved back into first
place in the Western Division
with the victory over I.Ds
Angeles. Bill Singer took the
loss.
Billy Williams drove in two
runs with a single and a homer
as Chicago downed St. I.Duis.
Bill Handa went eight Innings
to get the win and Rick Wise
suffered the Joss.
Bobby Bonds' two-run homer
with two out in the eighth lifted
San Francisco past Atlanta in
the second game. The homer
gave Ron Bryant the win and
beat Ron Reed. In the first
game, Darrell Evans of
Atlanta dro~e in \three runs,
including the tie-tceaker in the
loth with a single.

Veteran Gordon Johncock,
MI. Pleasant, Mich., dogged by
by engine problems the entire
month, was the first and fastest

game of the season after eight
lrles. ·
Nolan gave . up seven hits,
struck out five and walked
none.
Bill Greif started for the
Padres and took the loss but
left in the second inning after
giving up three hils and a walk.
Johnny Bench opened the
Cincinnati second with a single
and Joe Hague walked. Hal
McRae groUJ¥1ed a single to
short left to Iliad the bases and
Ted Uhlaender singled off the
right field wall : to drive in
Bench and keep the bases full.
Mark Schaeffer took over for
Greil, now 3-5, and walked
Darrel Chaney to force in
Hague with the inning's second
run.

runs in the third, two of them
on Otaney's single with the
bases loaded.
The Reds completed their
scoring in Ute lourlh, ·scoring
two runs on Pete Rose's
double, a walk to Joe Morgari,
an infield error and McRae's
sacrifice fly.
Back-to-back, doubles by
Morales and Leron Lee in lhe
sixth gave San Diego one Of its
runs and siQgies by Morales,
Colbert and Larry Stahl and an
error by George Foster Iii right
field produced the other Padre
run in the ninth.
The Padres open 1a lourgame home , stand · against
Houston tonight while Cincinnati took today off before
opening against Atlanta in

Cincinnati scored three more Cincinnati Tuesday.

Skone
• h Issues

qualifier Sunday at 188.511
m.p.h. in his British factory I
McLaren as the teammate of ~.
.
Revson, who emerged as the '
top speedster Saturday at.
192.886.
Mark Donohue , Newtown
Square, Pa., in another McLa·
CLEVELAND (UP!) ren, was second only to Revson
Cleveland Browns head coach
Salw-day at. 191.400, to round
Nick Skorich said he detected a
out the first row of starters for
lack of eagerness ''to be about
race day with Unser, Albuthe business of football" when .
querque, N.M., who had averteam veterans gathered for a a
aged just under 196 m.p.h. a
two-hour weekend workout,
week earlier.
their first of the year. 1
other successful qualifiers
"Everybody had better be
Saturday were Jerry Grant,
ready when training camp
Seattle, Wash., 189.294; Mike
opens in July," Skorich warned
Mosley , Clermont, Ind.,
his players. "Some of you reg189.145; A. J. Foyt, Houston,
ulars from last year may be
Tex., 188.996; Bill Vukovich,
Fresno, Calif.; 184,814 ; wondering about making the
squad, let alone being a regular
defending champion AI Unser,
again.''
Albuquerque, N.M., 183.617;
The session conslsled of a
Roger McCluskey, Tucson,
mile run, sprints and an agility
Ariz., 182.685 ; George Snider,
Bakersfield, Calif., 181;859; drW.
"I stepped on them pretty
Steve Krisiloff, Parsippany, hard," he said. "About 95 per
N.J., 181.433; Mel Kenyon,
cent of them have been work·
Lebanon., 181.388 ; Carl
ing out and seem Iii pretty good
Williams, Grandview, Mo ., shape. But there are a few who
180.469; Dick Simon, Salt Lake
didn't follow our guidelines on
City, 180.424; Sam Sessions,
conditioning."
NashvWe, Mich., 180.415; and
The coach reaffirmed the
Mike Hiss, Tustin , Calif., usual time requirements for
170.015.
the mlle run - 6:50 for hacks
· Besides Johncock, other qualifiers Sunday were Dave and ends, 7:00 for medium
men and 7:50 for lineriien.
"Salt" Walther, Dayton, Ohio, sized
" II shouldn't be necessary to
180.542; Denny Zimmerman, run it (the mlle) several times
Glastonbury, Conn., 1110.027; to meet the times," he said. "If
John Mahler, Bettendorf,
it is, we could find some means
Iowa, 178.497; Lee Kunzman,
of remedying the situation. I
Guttenberg, Iowa, 179.265;·Jim · want everybody to report in
Caruthers, Anaheim, Calllf., playing shape." ' ·
,
178.909; and Caie Yarborough,
Safety Ernie Kellerman
Timmonsville, S.C., 178.884.
turned in the best time for the
Yarborough came up with
mile at 5:50 and linebacker
the only successsful "bum- Otarlie Hall was second with
ping" Sunday when his car 6:06.
eliminated one qualified the
In the 4l).yard dash, h.alfback
week beforre by Wally
Ken Brown look the honors in
Dallenbach, East Brunswick,
4.65 seconds. He also led the •
N.J.
agWty drill at 12.8 seconds.
Kunzman, Caruthers,
Defensive end Joe Jones, who
Mahler and Walther were
specialized in dumping
Sunday's successful rookies. quarlerbacks last season, led
The other first-time "500"
pilqts are californians Mike
Hiss, John Martin, Sam Posey
and Swede Savage.

Stern Warning
I

the 20-yard dash for linemen
with a time of 2.85 seconds.
Running back Leroy Kelly
and defensive end Guy Homoly
came Iii near the top in the 4l).
yard dash with 4. 7-second
timings.
One player who elicited concern from Skorich was defensive tackle Joe Righetti. He
had the slowest mne time and
Is trying to make a comeback
following kidney surgery.

Your

lnsur1nc.

Agont

DALE
WARNER
I

I

I '

personal property . Wo
work for YOUR best In·
leresis. Let us see !hot
vou're well proteded.

Consult Us Soan

Davis-Warner Ins.
14

Phone m -2P64
Court S•
Pomoroy

···········~
GOOD WITHTHIS COUPON ONlY

~fried
•

••
••
••

ew-•.•

... work underground, too.
The network of their roots helps
hold the soil and protect our
watersheds.
You can help, too.

•

I

.

OPTOMETRIST

OFF IE£ HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 ((;LOSE
'AT NvuN ON THURS.! - EASrtOURT ST..

CROWS STEAK .HOUSE
992-5432

Pomere~y,O.

•
'r

'

•

;,)!H i

hqmt. , lyQur(l 1 Clf,roJI?Ur

. ·lf. .. COMPTON, 0.0.
.· .

L

INSURANCE . tor"i r"'»r

RIDERS sOUGHT
NEW YORK (UPI)-Riders
who took part in the six-day
bicycle races of 441 years ago in
the old Madison Square Garden
are being sought to act as official starters and hOllored
guests at the Pepsi -Cola
Bicycle Jamboree next
weekend in New York's Central Park.
· More than 10,000 bicycle
ride~ are expected . to attend,
with the highlight of the
Jamboree being a 200-mile, 24hour marathon.

~~0:. ~lllt~alla

_

••olllblo so ttnll por wook;
·
ly Motor Roufl whorocarrlor • MEMPHIS, .Tenn. (UPI)aarv leo not •••liable: One Hoetown bent Bert Wea,ver
month $1.75. IY m11l In OhiO
nd w. vo .. Ono yeor sl•.OO. lind a par 72 fer a ODI41i•~
Sl• month I 17.25. Thrtl lad with a 2l21t' theind of the
onthl suo. 5 .&gt;bttrlptlon ........,
rlu tncludll Sundey Tlmu- Ylllll round ol the f1,71,0110
onllntt.
D11u17 'lbomllplf daalie.

et s

J Jl

Mays Homer Gives

"

\

being "bumped" by a faster
racer and the 33-car lineup
checking in at an average
speed of 183.665 m.p.h.
It marked the first time in
Speedway history that all 33
starters recorded a faster
gualifying average than the
fastesl machine of the year
before. Peter Revson, Redondo

Weekend Summary

•2

.et

·.444

For 9-8 Win

0:

..

B

West

.sn m
.S36 2'12

Chisox Rally

)g

Linescores

9

.630 -

Meigs Opens Against

Reedsville News, Notes

At. Southern

16
15
12

10
12
13
15
17
17

won the opener, 7·2.
hurlers who gave up 10 hits
''I started the game very including seven doubles.
rough~" Norman said, "but it
The Padres scored once in
came arolDld good for me the second and again in the
about the fifth inning. I thought fourth and then put the game
I had great breaking stuff and away Iii the fifth when they
a good fast ball." '
collected three of their doubles.
Norman, now 4-2, dropped
Norman opened wiUi a single
his earned run average to 1.62 and was sacrificed to second by
with the 8eeond game win.
Garry Jestadt. Jerry Morales
The loss went. to Tom Hall, grounded a double to left,
the first of four Cincinnati sending Norman to third. John

Indy Has Fastest Field

Eastern

° ·

17

SAN DIEGO (UPI)-Fred
Norinan said he felt a litUe stiff
in the Opening innings against
CinclnnaU Sunday but you'd
never know it from the way he
W¥ pitching. .
The San Diego southpaw
blanked the Reds in the,.m.ond'
game of a doubleheader on five
hits whil~ striking out nine and
wlilklilg two for his third
consecutive shutout. Cincinnati

10 .643
Houston
19 12 .613 Oakland
10 .630 '12
Los Angeles 20 13 .606 1 Minnesota
11 .607 1
Cincinnati
18 15 .S4S 1 Texas
IS .500 4
San Diego
IS 18 .455 5 Kansas City
18 .400 7
Atlanta
IS 20 .429 6 California
11 19 .367 8
.San Francisco II 25 .306 IO'I2
Sunday's Results
Sunday'• Resulls
Oakland s Kansas City 2
New York 4 Phlla 3
Texas S Minn·-2, lsi
Chicago 3 St. Louis 2
Texas 3 Minn 1, 2nd
Pills 1 Montreal 0, 1st
Chicago 9 California 8
Pitts S Montreal 3, 2nd
Detroit 5 Cleveland 0
Houston 2 Los Angeles I
Baltimore 5 Mllw o
Cincl 7 San Diego 2. 1st
New York 6 Boston 3, lsi
San Diego 7 Cinci 0, 2nd
New York 3 Boston 2, 2nd ,
Alta 6 San Fran 4. lsi. 10 inns
Today's Probable Pitchers
San Fran 2 Atlanta I, 2nd
(All Tinies EDTI
INDIANAPOUS, Ind. (UP!)
Toclay's Probable Pitchers
California (•Vrlghl 2·21 at -A field nearly 12 miles per
(All Times EDT)
Oakland (Hunter 2·21. 11 p.m.
Philadelphia (Lersch 1.11 at
Chicago (Wood 7-21 al Texas hour faster than last . year's
Montreal (Torrez ~· II , 2: IS (Bosman 2·41. 8:30p.m.
was set today for Saturday's
p.m.
(On ly games scheduled I
million-dollar Indianapolis
San Francisco I Me powell S-11
Tuesday's Games
"500" a t 0
F
at Los Angeles (Jo~n 3-31. II Cleveland at New York night
u race. ormer
Baltimore at Boston , night
· wirmer Bobby Unser will hold
p.m.
Houston (Dierker 3-21 at San Chicago at Texas, night
the pole position.
Diego '(Acosla I-ll, 10:30 p.m. Minnesota atKan City, night
Twoweekendsoftrialsended
(Only games scheduled)
M1lw at Detro II. night
.
Tuesday's Games
. Calif at Oakland, night
late Sunday With one machine
Phil a al Montreat. night
New York at Chicago
The Lapps round up their
Pills at St. Louis, night
remdeer
under the midnight
Atlanta al Cinci, nighl
sun
since
summer's fierce
Houston at San Diego , night
mosquiloes
are Jess active
San Fran at Los Ang, night
then.

By the Day

Alfred
Social Notes

Cleveland
Delroll
Baltimore
New York
Boston
Milwaukee

w. I. pet. g. b. Chicago

1

Us.

1 pc.t g
b
w. .
..

~~

He'1e·n' He1p

Carmel News,

Amerltlln League
East

.. only you can prevent forest fires. •

Q

Published 111 public ser•ice In cooperation with The AdV!Irtislnr Council
the U.S. fo1est Services, the National Association of Stole Fortll&amp;rs '
and 1lit Inter notional Newspaper Adwlising Emulivts.

�.

.

..

Priceless Piela· Hammered by Madman
•

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• if

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Reds Home, 2 Games .O ut

•

VATIC AN CITY ( UPI )- traveled down IIIIo the buill~
It occupied a place ofiKWJcir York World•• Ji'alr.
[)(: Sqmour P'tlller, Los ·
Sliouting "I am JI!SWI Christ,"· Iii a printe elevator with a lnlhewcrld'ablggestOirlatjan
When ·It ~ ·tn 1986, Angeles, said he counted
a bearded, lon~-baired man gold satin tlJtone Ito IN the · churCh, ·in llie ~ chapel to Pope Paul aald It would ilevtr~ about sb: hammer biqws, most
leaped a bilrrler in' front Of ,damage lnfilcled on tile only the rlgl)l u vliltan entered lea~ apin,
ollhemalmedatthefaceoftbe ·
Michelangelo's Piela and piece of ar1 ever liped by the thnJu&amp;b the~~ main bronze
''It wu fantaatlc bOw If · Madonna.
.
hefcre the hotrlfied eYes of genius ·Mic he.l ange lo door8. N~ even' a Pcpe would happened," aald Franceaco
About sbt men leaped to pull :
Sunday tourists repeatedly Buonarroti.
UIIII'P Ita place. '
'l'ldnele, wjlo waa atandlng Totb down ind IOilll! witnesses
~mashed
the priceleaa
It waa there he heard the •only
(!nee
since with a P'OIIP o1 Dutdl 1oor111a -aald BOIIle of . ~ Dien
masterpiece witli a hainmer. name of the rusty-baired, Mlcl\elangelo . signed and In front of the atatue. ' .
women who aaw the attack
· The slunillng vandsllsm waa rusty-bearded man with the completed it I,D 1499 had the
"It wal ao quick," he aaid. wanted to lyncb him:
a crime without precedent at hammer -Laulo Toth, 33, .a Piela left Sl. Peter's- fer 19 "&amp;Jddenly that man waa'on the
"Everyone was stunned,"
the · Vatican and with ·few Hungarian born citizen ol month.B Ill the 'mld-116011 whlle atatue, just hitting away with a aaid Fllher. '1'Then I heard
precedents an)owhere in the Australia who . described it. waa, on abjbit1at the. New hammer.''
·
someone cryln!l- N~ .screams
modern world. The marble himaelf aa a geol~.
·
cr shouting or anything like
statue at St. Peter's BasWca of The Piela is a majellic thlllg,
,
· that. JUBt one person cry &amp;;g."
the Madonna cradling the a slightly larger-than-life
Vailcan guards and tourists
crucified' Jesus is one of the sculpture . weighing 8,700 .
(XIlled and~~ T!!\h away
world's;·most famous and pounds and portraying the
and placed him In a makeShift
·treasured works of art. ·
Medlinna cradtlng the body of
cell. TheVaticancloeed its tiny
Most of the blows found their Jesus after the &lt;;rucifbion.
priaon In 19115, "
' ,
Mcre than eight hours later,
mark. Successive swings
By Helen HOttel
knocked off the Madonna's
Vatican , authorities ha~dled
nose, smaahed her left eye,
Tolh over to It:allan officials,
clipped the left side of her
who aald be faced several
..,Ovided magistrates
charges,
marble veil and finally
FORSAKING ALL OTHERS ...
knocked off her left arm just
decide he 14 legany, se,ne.
Dear. Helen :
above the elbow.
Police said Toth 'bad been
Help! You~re my last resource.
Vatican officials called the
living
in Rome for ~ months,
I'm very much in love with my husband. Before we were
damage serious, but said 'they
Rev. Paul Sellers of Hamden married last June, my mother liked him, too - untU my old hoy since Jan. 6 at a Spailish nuns
hoped to restore the Piela called on Mr, and Mrs. Homer friend came back. Then II was showdown time. 9Ie told me I'd convent where he paid 34 cents
quickly. They conceded it Circle, Verna and Wavie, on have tO leave hime If I insisted on marrying Deke. So I did! 9Ie a day for food and lodging.
would never look the same Thursday.
couldn't believe I'd actually go against her.
again.
Similar Cltse
Douglas Johnson, Jun(or
I send her cards, flowers, gifts, for every holiday, but when I
CAREER APPAREL was donned Saturday the first time by officers and employes of the
The only slrnilar caae Inside Johnson of Racine, Clyde ' can her she says if I leave iny "so-called high society husband"
Fanners Bank and Savings Company. Its variety is evident in the dresses and suits. Front, 1-r,
st. Peter's in modern times Johnson of Hamden, Mr. and we can !le mother and daughter again. Until then, she has no
are Olga Pierotti, Joanne WUllams, PaJi Young, Mary Kunzelman, Ruth Cassell, Lois Burt,
Charles 'Randolph, Rock daughter by name.
.
.
Jean Werry, OJarlene Thomas, and Evelyn Lanning; in back, D&lt;lrothy Will, Roger Hysell,
OC curred in 1!189 when 8 Ger· Mrs.
·
lied Mr d M
· ·
..J
(Continiled from Page I)
Sp
man tourist, saying he wanted
nngs ca
on · an rs.
I have two sisters, One left her husband because Mom diun't
Thereon Johnson, and Theodore Reed. In the fall a sleeveless tunic top with tbe ever popular
to protest against nuclear Arthur ..Johnson and family and like him. The other Is almost In my shoes.
Howard Caldwell, a member of
pants for ladies called "Ther Haverford" will he worn. Absent were Paul Kloes, Jon Kararms,
smashed·
the
marble
Betty
Van
Meter
a
recent
Why
can't
my
mother
see
1
love
her
too,
and
need
both
her
the district's board of
schnik, Addle Norris and Kathy Fields.
fingers on the left hand of a Sunday.
and my husband? - YOUNG BRIDE
education. The band: under the
statue of Pcpe Pius VI beneath Mr. and Mrs.·George Circle Dear Bride:
direction of Charles Wills ,
the basilica's main altar.
and daughter, Mr · and Mrs.
Correction! Your husband is your last and best resource, not presented the processional and
Not even Pope Paul VI was James Circle of New Haven I! Ajld cerialnly not a mother who confuSes love jl'lth ownership. recessional and the invocation
told about the Piela until after visited Mary Circle on Sunday.
Keep the line open with remembrances and occaaional let- and benediction were by the
he appeared at noon at hiS . M~. and Mrs. Ro~t Lee and ters (they'D make YOU !eel better) butdon'tmourn a "loss" that Rev. Eldon Blake, pastor of the
By Mrs. L. jlalderson
Karen Humphrey, student of window overlooking st. Peter's famtly, Ralph Lee VISited Mrs. set you free. _H.
Eden United Brethren Church.
Gary
Reed,
son
of
Mr.
and
Ohio
State
.University,
spent
Square
to
bless
tourists
and·
Fern
Stansbury,
who
is
a
+++++
SeniorClassPresidentRichard
&amp;undsy School attendance on
~tient in an Athens ~ospltal. Dear Helen:
Marlin introduCed the, guest
May 14 was 58, the offering Mrs. Alvin Reed received his the week-end with her parents, pilgrims.
B.A.
Degree
in
Education
at
Mr.
and
Mrs.
C.
Ed
Humphrey,
·
When
he
heard
the
news
he
:Wavie
Circle
was
an
overtod
U4.76. Mothers (24) in number,
•
· ht
t of F
F te
In the restaurant ay, live people blew their noses while I speaker.
Rio
Grande
College.
Attending
and
Robin.
mg
gues
ranees
os
r
Sunday afternoon the annual
were honored with gilts loward the graduation were Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Humphrey at·
on Thursday night.
ate dinner. Would you give your opinion on nose-blowing Iii baccalaureate was held with
the c.lose of Sunday School and
American League
ON WES
restaurants' M
200 200 001- s 8 2
.
TERN TOUR
·- ·
the Rev. Eugene Underwood,
the song "Fait]! of Our Mrs. Ray Weaver of Beaver, tended the graduation of her Oakland
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Alvin
Reed,
grandson,
·
Rick
Stone
,.
at
Kan
Ci
ty
000 001 ID0-2 9 3 Mary Martin, Pomeroy, Dear M.:
pastor
of the TuPpers Plains
Mothers" was sung.·
D&lt;lhrman Reed and Mr. and Marietta. Also there to attend
Holtzman. Knowles (7), Lock· Rhoda Hackett, Middleport
Whenyou .gotla blow, you gotta blow. Better this than snif· Church of Christ, as speaker.
Worship services were held
er (7 l and Duncan; Hedlund, p
1 K
G 111 I' ' fling
H
napp,
a po ts,
·- ·
Members of the graduating
at 11, with the Rev. Lehman, Mrs. Robert Reed, ali from lhe graduation was his parents, Dalcanlon (6), Rooker (8) and ear
Reedsville.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Len
Stone
of
Paepke,
Kirkpatrick
(9).
WPMyrtle
Walker
and
Eunie
+++++
class,
who wore greM! and
with an altendance of 30.
Recent visitors at the Hetzer· Cleveland.
Holtzman (6 •21· LP- Hedlund Brinker, Racine, ali partners Dear Helen :
white caps and gowns for both
Readings "Mother's Creed,"
Sunday visitors at the home ~~~~2 ~~s;;,~a~t~l ~~~~in3~;:; off Mdeigs ~Ion 710 8&amp;441 spent a
H the letter from "Two Bachelors" was not a put~n. it is
the baccalaureate and comby Florence Spencer; "Only Bise home were Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur
Hetzer
and
Brenda
of
of
Mr,
and
Mrs.
Lawrence
I
2nd).
ew
ays
m
Denver,
Colo.
The
hard
to
-whytheywouldexpect
sympathy
from
a
columnist
in
mencement
carrying out the
One Mother," by Helen Woode;
~II,
W.Va.,
David
Robertson
Rose
were
Thomas
J.
Rose
and
spent
Friday
evening
and
this
day
and
age,
simply
because
their
tenant
brings
colored
school
colors,
included :
and "Tribute To a Mother" by
Sat~rday at. the ,Nation~! friends to their preptises. Your reply, however, proclaims a far · Graduates are Rulh Ellen
.Thelma Hendecson. Rev. Leh· of Charleston, W. Va. and sons of Akron and Mr. and Mrs. §~:~~~~ia · ~~~ ~~ ~H
Eddie
Hetzer
of
Belpre.
Dana
Van
Meter
and
family
of
May,
Rose
(31.
Barber
(SJ.
Jewtsh
Hosptl.al for Cystt~ greater prejudice of your own - or perhaps cynical ignorance _
Adams, James Kenneth
man•~ message was from 11 '
Fisher
(61.
Fosler
(9)
and
Fibrosis,
and
TB
children.
·
its
1
·
all
bac
Amsbary,
Mrs. Rose Th omas and Mrs. BeIpre .
T
Ul
SIII'Cast c weswnption that
helors (especially if they Michael
Ray Larry
Benedum.Baker,
Joyce
Timothy, I: 1-9 "Train Up a
71
Opal
Randolph
visited
with
Recent
visitors
of
Mrs.
Opal
orborg,
Kusnyer
&lt;
'
Bradley,
They
also
visited
Colorado
buyandlivelilahousetogether)arequeer.
Marlene
Bing,
Rickie
Lee
Child."
Gossage (4), Romo (7), Le· Sp .
Ad'
. their h
B
J
Mrs.
Pauline
Atkersion
and
Randolph
were
Mr.
and
Mrs.
&gt;
monds
(81.
Kealey
(91
and
nngs.
lllnenn
onor
There
are
many
reasons
a
respectable
man
might
remain
lake,
anlce
Marie
Boggs,
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Parker
was held at lh'l Air · Force lWil&amp;rried. Failure of people to recognize that fact drives many ~~1n~~ue g~~:~Y· s~~n~~~
and Randy of Plano, ru., spent Cindy at Columbus, also with Clyde Emrich of Little Hocking ~gar· &lt;Bri)k~~n F(7) . WP0;Jl · Academy and they altended a man of lnunature judgment into unhappy marriage PerMrs.
Gladys
Morgan
and
Mrs
.
and
Mrs.
Gladys
Morgan
and
Hk~
eyAII~~
(7th
I-PI~~~:
(~
Calaway, Warren H. Calaway,
Mother's Day weekend here
Gladys
Baughman
of
Gahanna
.
Debbie
of
Coiwnbus.
Kusnyer
(1st),
May
1
rdl.
'
the
chapel
there
for
Mother's
sonally
I
am
thankluJ
that
economic
pressures
of
·
uth
Robert Jewel Caldwell. Sue
3
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mr Ba h ·
'ed
D ld B ha t
f Mr
-Day services and visited the
'
my yo
Hayes · Caldwell, Charles
s. ug man accompam
ona
arn r • son
Cl 1
. , preventedaomesuchtragedyforme,andthatasaQonsequencel Douglas Carr. Terrence Lane
. WilberParker,and Bro. Eddie,
ll)eliJ , hel'l~.. llllQ . ~n\ ~,few and Mrs . Carl Barnhar\,,, O:t~~i~nd .... gg2 ~ ~ 1 ~ ~ Garden of the Gods and Pikes can now sign m If. _ UNDI\'ORCED
Carson, John Cline, Da vid
~ and •\tended church liere
•
days
with
·her,
-sister,
·Mrs.
•
Pecently
.
cot~.pleled··his
:oosic
Tidrow,
Riqd(~berger
Pll&amp;k
SI!!Pmlt
)'ljQj
al\~levation
•tle'arltJn.
·oY
~
,
!
·
,.
.
·
''
.
.,.,tfil~h•~·Oe~r~!lleano,
·M!l!lnle ,
161
1
. ....
1 1llw:tdaY,Inornmg: ·. ::
' 1'' •
1 · ·
L F t D'11 N J '' 'Lamb m" "'en · ' 'r~
d
of 141l0 feet the DWiaht
D
·
"
Marie
~"'
Kathy
Diane
Dill,
.,omas. "''
.. .. ....
.. Patmng a or
•• • .. ...F · .
'r' '-(ioeg~no a.• an ·
•
· • "
·0·'" '"·,,"'AI a clllumni81 •who•has consistently advised "Don't Jet Janie~ Mll'te Dixon, Barbara
~ ' " ""'ord ~was · r~ei ved' here of
8
Mr. and Mrs . Donald Donald spent Mothers' Day
osse, Lollch ·11 and aller . Eisenhower Ubrary, place of
'
Ann Ebersbach, Dennis Roland
the death of Mrs. Wlllard Coleman
and family, of week-end with his parents, Mr. ~ith)Tidrow (4.31 · HR- Cash meditation and final resting 89Ciety pressure y~u into ~ge, parenthood, any sort of Eichinger. Marjorie M•rl e
Bealer in Florida Friday Columbus were week-end and Mrs. Carl Barnhart.
place and the family home in conformity that isn I your bag, I resent your !Jilap judgment. Of Gillilan. Dian• Sue Grueser.
evening. Nlils Robinson went
uests
of
Mrs.
Helen
Arche
'
r.
Donald's
car
was
stolen
from
Baltimore
003
001
01o-S
6
I
Abiieene,
Kansas. AU enjoyed course I don't thlilk an bachelors are queer ... any more than I Joyce Lynn Grueser, l'imot~y
Mllw
000 000 ()()C}-11 4 2
think they would all be happier married
R. Gumpf, Nita Louise, Hams,
on Sunday to be with her g
Bill
and
D&lt;lra
Synder
and
him
at
Fort
Dix.
Dobson
(HI
and
Etchebar·
the
tour
very
much.
·
Rickie
Lee Hauber, R. Alan
grandchlldten, daughters of
8 aomewhat prisly "pot" (re-read his letter for
Milford
Cole
of
Maringo
visited
Mr.
and
Mrs.
D.
C.
Riebel
ren;
Brett,
Colborn
(91
and
.
But
when
Holler.
Mr.and Mrs. Robert Robinson,
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. were taken out to dinner by : ort ter. LP- Brett (2·41. HRsthosepetulmt pllrases)calls th~,ket~e black,hede.serves a bit of w~~~~ A~a~r.HoJJ:~~n R~~"u'i
·at Belpre, 0. · ·'
.
Grant Boring .
their son . John Riebel and
e 1enmund 12ndl . Baylor, 2
smearlng.Andwhenheasked, Cantyoujustimaglnewhatthe Kirkman, Ra~dy Steven
Oscar Dillinger , father of
family of Pomeroy Rd., on (2nd &amp; 3rd l
neighbors are whispering?" he led with his chin ! All I said was
Koehler. R1•;kle Lee Koenig,
Lloyd Dillinger, .of Alfred
(15t Game)
''Yes~"" _ H
'
'
Jennller Lynn Lawson, Charles
Mother's Day at 'a restaurant
Marcinko, David G. Marcinko,
OJurch, passed away Saturday
Boston
000 001
002-3 8 o
P.S· BeSldes, I fl gured the Ietter Ior "put~n with a Dennis G. Marcinko, Richard
at
Belpre.
The
families
also
N.Y.
0IOOOx-6ll
014
evening at the .Holzer Hospital
0
message." Am I right, Bachelors Two?- H.
Martin, Dave E. Mlllhone,
By United Press International visited with Mr. and Mrs. · Culp, Lee (3),Bolln (7) and (Continued from page I)
in Gallipolis.
National League
Robert Morton and fam1'Iy of Fisk; Peterson, Lyle (91 and
+++++
·
Lind• Lee P~ovence, Deborah
Lynn Pierce, Jean Newlun
Ttie children and grand· New York
000 002 020-4 6 I near Portfield.
Munson. WP.Peterson 11·61. Grover Salser, J r., C1arence Dear Helen:
Reynolds, Janice Robinson,
100 200 000-3 8 o
~hiidren of . Mr. · and Mrs. Phlla
Dinner guests of Mr. and ~indcu~~~:;4l .
Lawrence, Charles Pyles,
Those ''Two Bachelors" deserve an you handed them and Connie Jean Rockhold, Harvey
Seaver. Frisella (8) and
Garland GaldweU met at the Grote
s
d
Boston
000- 2 7 1 members, and Nancy carAa friend of_,_
id "Whe
lo
Roseberry, Kathryn M. San.k
; Carlton (S·41 and Mrs. Warren PtC
110
000
ens un ay
k
more 1.
a
. uwoe sa ,
n you c se your eyes, ders, Mnntle Richard S•nders,
Findllng-Caldweil home for a McCarver. WP.Seaver (7-1)
N.Y.
201
OOOOOx-310
1
nahan,
cler
.
..,.
Peters. Tlanl (71 and Mont. David Nease presented everything's black." The ''two" should close their ·eyes to the Larrv Lee Stalnaker, Marvin
family get-to-gether 6n HRs- Hullon (2nd) , Agee (Slh) , were Mrs. Kathryn Di etz an d
Mays (2nd).
Bill, and Bob Day of Belpre, gomer~· Keklch , Lyle (B) and
oo!oroftheirtenants'frlends,andmaybetheneighborswillclose E. Taylor, Connie Kay
Mother's Day.
'ili
Ell
'
p K kl h (4
p
diplomas
to
seniors:
J. ~ry
We lls,
M
M
E
W
d
R
r. an
rs. . . t ams
Is.
- e c ·21 . L THEm eyes to a gouipy ·housewlfey ·sounding male who says Wells,
Richard s.Donna
Williams,
Jo
Mr. Robert Robinson and Chicago
100 001 1D0-3 7 4 and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Lyhi
Peters
(J
.
J)
.
James
Keith
Ables,
Lawrence
he
"Just
can't
sleep
nights
worrying
about
what
his
neighbors
Wolf.
Marcella
Louise,
Wyers,
daughters of Belpre, and Mr. St. Louis
000 010 001- 2 8 0
Ables, Melanie Jane Allen, Pat. will say. "_ UNCONDEMNING
Rhea Pooler Yonker, Randy
Hands, McGi n~ (9) , Phoebus Balderson. and Kay.
and Mrs. Bill Follrod and Sue
(91
an
d
Hundley
;
Wise,
Hudson
at
the
Arnold,
Terri
Lynn
Ash,
Neil
Young.
Recent
visitors
Ann of Athens, ~pent Mother's (8) and Simmons. WP- Hands
I iii ililldi
rrrrr;;;w;;"gpp "1
Oiy with Nina Robinson and (3·1). LP- Wise (3·41. HR- Williams-Balderson home bi:~st ~'ti-~~eE~b=~~~ :~ J?wlgh,t_Baker, Christy Lynn
l'lara Follrotf. In the afternoon WIIIIams (3rd) .
we•e Mrs. Clara Hull, Mrs. was one released by Poland Beegle, Deborah Ann BosUck,
~
•
Josephine
Hull,
and
Junior
in
1961.
It
is
more
than
four
Kathy
·'
Lynn
Boyd,
Anthony
Mr. and Mrs. Carlelon Folirod Houston
000 002 000- 2 6 1 Bull of Waldo.
inches in length.
Gail Bradford, ' J\enee Burke,
&amp;,td Chuckle of Pomeroy Blld Los Ang
000 001 000- I S 1
Reuss (3-2) and Edwards; WIN AT BRIDGE
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Folirod,
Connie Mae Bush, William Lee
Sing~r.
Brewer
(8)
and
Canniz.
Cleland, Charles William
BY JACK O'BRIAN
Stevie and Kathy, local, called. zaro. LP- Singer (J.4). HRs• always, and be has a good 8l;ilt on himself: He
Mrs. Genevieve Guthrie Mota (2ndI, Watson (5th)
Cornell III, Sharon Lee
PURISTS IUVE NO
broke up the waiters, captains and folks at
went to Sugar Grove, 0., to
Cra~en, Edwin Yeager CrOBS,
"PORTNOY" COMPLAINT
surro111ding
tables when he ordered dinner
spend Mother's Day weekend (lSI game)
Davtd
Andrew
Crow,
Robert
NEW
YORK
(KFS)
_
"Portnoy's
Com·
from the French menu In the very plush Four
Montreal
000 000 ooo- 0 7 1
Lee 'Cummins, George Edward
with her son-in-law and Pitts
001 000 OOx- 1 S I
Seasons.
"Youse kin laff," Sir Rockwell stated,
trump. You have fixed it to Cummins', Joseph Edward plaint" is faithful to what Roth wrought lil .one
NORTII
22
da~ghter, Mr. and Mrs .
McAnally, Marshall (7) and
''but a Iotta bwna who kin pernounce It can't
give an expert a chance to Derouin, John William respect : full of feelthy dislogue ... Henry
.A74
Boccabella ; Walker. Miller (81.
Delbert Yost and famlly.
'
'IK9
4
go
after
an
overtrick.
Fonda's
wife,
!ltlrlee,
was
a
stewardess
when
afford
it." ... The man wlio haa.everything,like
Hernandez 191 and Sangulllen .
Mr. and Mrs. WilHam Carr WP- Walker (2·11. LP-McAn·
"He wins the first spade Eichinger, · Paul Eugene
• K62
Rocky, now may buY a aolid gold yo-yo ... Such
and knocks out the ace of Forbes, Ray Crittenden Frank, Hank met her, and she'D stew again for one
I ... Jl093
and daughters spent Mother's ally (0.41 .
as
the Laurance Rockelellers who dined at Quo
• Day with her parents, Mr. and (2nd gomel
clubs. West plays a second Teresa M. Gooch, William flight ; yean ago she waaone of the steward! on
EST
EAST
Vadis, sans Yo-Yo; where we alao noted the
100 010 011f-3 6 1 .QJ109
.652
1pade. South takes that also, David Graham, Brett Allen the fir8t N: Y. ·Washington jet flight whose
Mrs. Robert White at Keno and Montre•l
Pitts
100 020 02x- s 8 1 ¥872
¥QJ105
Fredric
Marches, most gracefully semi-retired.
cashes the rest of the clubs Hart, Bruce Edward Hart, original crew 14 being recycled lor the final
· called on his mother, Mary
Renko, Walker (S),(i,iblert
• J9 .
• Ql0'743
Michael Jackson will alng "Ben's Song" over
and leads a third spade."
Pamela Jo Hill, Candy carol flight to its' pannanent · display - in tbe
(7), Marshall (81 and Bateman;
carr' local.
.A76 5
Johnson,
the
opening credits of the "Ben" flick. Who's .
Jim:
"He
doesn't
risk
his
Hoback,
Jerry
Ray
Hubbard,
&amp;nitliaonian
...
Peter
Sellers'
ez,
Britt
Eklund,
Mr. ana Mrs. Clair Woode
soum (D)
Guistl (81 and May. Sangullcontract
If
W
est
started
J
L
Ji
H
bb
d
bea
tlfuJ
da
'
Ben? He's a dirty rat ... Here's claai : there's a
81 ever,
.K8 3
and Connie Sue of Circleville len (9) . WP- Guisli (1-31. LPwith five spades, he takes ames
es e
u ar • waa
u
nclng at the CasinQ
¥A63
"Bonnie • Cyde" bouUque in nearby SomerGilberl
(O·ll
.
HROIIver
(3rd)
.
visited his parents, Mr. and
three spade tricks, but west Charles Robert Hysell, Clay Russe with producer Lou Adler.
e
A85
v!Ue, N. J ... Preview wolves ten us Marcia
started with just four. When Timothy lhle, Stephen OUn
Stuart Whitman's a favorite for the
Mrs. Charles D. Woode, here ; (1st game I
oltKQ84
McBroom
of Godfrey Cambridge's lpunlnent
he
takes
the
last
spade
East
Jenkins,
Carroll
Joseph
"Lucky"
Luciano
gangster
flick
...
The
record
and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cincinnati
023 200 ooo-1 9 1
East~ West vulnerable
who will have had to dis: Johnson.
business baa .a alight p111ic an. The anca80
Robert White, Keno, on ~an Diego
000 000 101-2 7 1
film, ''Collle Back Charleston Blue,"haa one of
West North Elst South
Mother's Day.
Nolan (S·IIand Bench ; Greif,
card
three
times
on
clubs,
Also,
Johnnie
Gale
Johnson
lltudlo
RCA
equipped
for
a
million
jull wu
Ute great antime figures. Owes it to bed posture
(21, Ross (3), Kilken - Pass · 3 N.T. Pass 1 N.T. will be squeezed in lhe red • Ronnie
Dale
Johnson:
llhuttered
...
No
rec
too
Cor
fine
......,...,_.
Mr . and Mrs. Arthur Schaeffer
-her Dlllther enrolled her In ballet to
rid of
Pass
ny (9) and Barton . LP- Greil
sm\s. South throws a dla· Lawrence Grant Johnston
-....-•
Pass
Athetton visited Carrie Swartz (3·S) .
her
slouch.
mond from dummy and a
te
• Michel Legrand: he's~Ciirinc sbt fllml right
at the Elmwood Nursing Home (2nd game)
.
Opening lead-• Q
heart
from
his
hand
and
Stan
Y
Kiser,
Deborah
Lynn
now ... Finally a rock-croup. Itcked an' apOwner of a major league team gave his
Cincinnati 000 000 000- 0 s 4
makes the rest of the LaValley, John W. Manuel, proprlate name: "ApopleJy" 11 the' current
Sunday afternoon on Mother's San Diego 010 140 Ol x- 7 10 1
playboy yolllll!er brother a one-word opinion
Day.
Hall , Borbon (5), Sprague (6), By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby tricks."
Debra Joyce Meldau, Loretta nolle at Barney Goolle's.
·when the kid lhowed birD a !llir of new-bolJI(rt
Mr and Mrs Carleton Gullett (81 and Plummer ,·
Osw aid : "A lucky. squeeze Lynn Middleswart, Clarence
Sammy
.
Guc,cis'and opined, "Thil 14 tlie JliOill expenaive
·
Norman (4·21 and Kendall . LP
Oswald : "It might be a
Davia' take-home at Westbury
F oII ro· d an d Charles
of - Hall 12·11.
·good idea to devote a few and, of course, an alert West Ivan Norris, Nancy Jane Ours,
loafer in the world." Brothet dear str~tfaced
Pomeroy visited her parenls,
columns lo hands useil by can stop it by simply refus· Elmer B. Persona, Jr. Jennie Music Fair wu mote than flOO,ollo. At thil rate
him with, "Second.'' ... Bukelball 'iUr Wilt
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Henderson llst am. 10 inns.l
bridge leachers in their ing to cash the last spade." babel Potts, Don~a Rae ~'U be ott of deblthla year ... How touching:
affects the wide-brimmed, vert-mod
·
Frazier
100
002 020 l-6 14 0 classes."
IN&lt;wsPAm &lt;NmP~lSE ASSH.J
Proffitt, Mellsaa Jane Proffitt, l'latalle Wood and Bob Wagnernpect to re-wed
on Mother's Day.
Alia
San Fran 000 110 1io If- 4 7 o
hats. Bought aeven In one sweep at Lehman
Alan Lee Pugh, Randy Keith oext:lall-so !heir kids (they didn't have any
·
Scheuler, Nash (8), and
Jim : "These hands are
Saunders after he got hla cbalnplollllhlp pi&amp;yofl
Pyles, Douglas Clift Rees, together when they made It lint .time) can be
WISCONSIN RACE
Will iams, Marlohal. Barr (91 , usually very simple, but
check.
KAUKAUNA, Wis. (UPI)- Cumberland (101 . McMahon here is one that I have
Raymond Eugene Robinsoo, pre-1. Meanlrblle they're living together lit
Dave~ of Arden, N.C., (I~ ahnd RaderL,PHea 1y (9). WP jazzedup a little."
The bidding has been:
Sharon Elaine Roush, Barbara Lo!tdon ... JW St. John's latest Is another rich
Tammy Grimes wouldn't tan her !ella's
0 swald : "The basic lesson
drove hill 1972Nova to victory · - as 11·01·
- 8•rr (0.1) .
North l!ost South Ellen-· Sarson, Veleela Gall guy, onel.eonanl Rou, lnVellmenll. JW ml181
name at the Pen • 1Pnecll; dlmi 1188111
HRs- Arnold (lsi I. Goodson here is very good. South has West 1•
Pass
1•
811bamed, jull cartf1ll ... '!be Ga:r IIIII ipOt
In the 1lilknDe U.S. Auto Uub (1st), Kingman (8th) .
a classic no-trump and Pas.s a
p,..,
?
Shaffe~. Kenneth Edward "'•
-.Dun•Bradltrett ... NBC'sDickScbupllld
late ?DDdel stock car race Atlanta
&lt;2nd game) 010 000 000- 16 2 Norlh a proper rat'se to
You, South, hold:
Shuler, James Maion Smith, AIIC'I Jim Bauton are feudq, and ain't that ' sounds like the blithe 301 - With IDprUlo
&amp;tnday at the Wisconaln In- . San Fran
ooo ooo 02x- 2 4 o ga me. South can count lo .KJ51.K876eU.Ql07 ROy Ralph Smith, Rick W. theminl..,...oftheet~~tury ... TheT~Jonea
Dorothy Arml and birltone Hal Wllltlrd ~
ternational Raceway. The ·Reed (1-61 and Casanova; nin~ easy tricks provided he
like Jeanette MacDIJnlld llld Neilan Eddy
What do you do now?
Snider, Beth Ann Theiss, Fan Club of Japan chartered ri jet and, 242
triumPI walworth ~.101.
Bryant. Carrlther&amp; (9) and just knocks out the ace · of . A- Bid two no-trump. Whot Virginia Lee Turner, Terry Lee linin~&gt; flew to' see him at Cllllar!l P-ace In
rnldnightly ... El Avram's beiiJ cliDc:tr Tallba
Verlin Baker of Cedar Rader. WP- Bryant (2·3). HR- · clubs at his firs! opportun- else?
V811lCy, Connie Elaine War- Vegaa.
told her retil nllllll on TV, and It'• In the phone
Bonds (Sihl .
Uy." .
Raplds, Iowa, was secon d in a
TODAY'S
QUESTION
ner,
Debra
Kay
Weal,
William
Stlrley
MacLalne
bought
a
home
in
.
book Where obiHne canen PI'OIDPI1l plaped
Jim : "You see where l
1r10 Dodge Otarger and Sal
A thought for today: Ameri- have livened the hand up?" .Your partner continues to Ernest Wheeler, Roger Gene Majcrca, Far enough ... The Sat. Review book
her ... We knew a galwboae pboae ,.tmblr waa
Tovella of Edi.aon, In., w¥ can poet Ralph Waldo Emerson
Oswald ; •·of course. The jhree clubs. What do you do Willford, Jr., ·Sleven Donald · dlVIalonCCll6lllllaloneoneoncljlmpJoeLouis.' lDIIltianoitl on radio 'IIIMillbe Io.- 'btr dog, 111d
third lila 1m Ply'mouth Road said, "Happy is the house that teacher's hand would be set now?
. Wlnebrenner, ·Jackie· Sue Gerald AabJr wtn do it.
.
.
llhe IDl the tllrV etllll- pi• a oilp on the ea.
, .Ruaner.
shelters a friend ."
up to make just three no·
Answer tomorrow
Wines, Charles Edward Yost.
Roti7Grlllano'sverballyaaunpoli11Mdu
wilt pin III ........

By Unlled Press lnle&lt;nationat
National League
East
w. I. pel. g.b.
New York
25 ' 7 .781 Pittsburgh
18 12 .600 6
Chicago
15 15 .500 9
Phitadetrhia 15 16 .484 9'12
Montrea
13 19 .406 12
St. Lou is .· 12 21 .364 13'12

••

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
Chicago, Chicago, that toddlln' town has suddenly.
become two-team baseball city
again.
While the fans of summer
continued their vigil for the
norlhside Cubs' run at the
pennant In the National League
East, Chicago's souihsiders
rejoiced Sunday as the White
Sox crept quietly into first
place in the American League
West with a come.from-behlild
ninth . inning S-8 victory over
the California Angeles.
carlos May, the OJisox' half·
thumbed leftlleider delivered
the latesl win for manager
Otuck Tanner's forces when he
polled a three-i'1lll homer In the
1
•, ; •lllnth Inning with the ApgeiB
,, , cllilging to an ,ll-6lead.
In other American League
action, the New York Yankees
swept the fast-pacing Boston
Red Sox,-3 and 3-2, Detroit
blanked Cleveland, 5-0,
oakland topped Kansas City,!).
2, Baltimore shut out
Mnwaukee, 5-0, and Texas took
a doubleheader from Min·
nesota, ii-2 and 3-1.
The Detroit 76ers, another
team with serious pennant
thoughts if for no other reason
than
Mickey
Lolich's
workhorse left arm, moved to
within a game and a half of
Cleveland in the AL E~ with
their S-0 win over the Indians.
Not surprisingly, it was
i.Dlich supplying the win for the
Tigers. What was surprising
though was lhe fact it was the
Detroit ace's first shutout of
the seaaon.
"I think I've had about six
games which I've given up one
l'llll this year," i.Dlich said
afterward. "I kept wondering
if I'd ever get a shutout." The
win llfled Lollch's record tO S.l
tops in the majors for victories.

Commencement

I

.·

orce al ong B r 'W.ay
11

I

I

I

I

I

,k
vertnc
0
Wangling an N.T.

5

.346 7'12
.320 8

b
w. I. pct . g..

18
17
17
IS
12

Beach, calif., was the fastest a
year ago winning the pOle at an
average of 178.696 m.p.h.
Eight rookies managed to
land starting spots, fow- of
them Sunday, but for t11e first
1\me alnce 1962, no foreign
driver attempted to make the
field.

Roy White Reacts
Roy White, reacting to trade
rumors thai had him heading
to C1eveland in a multi-player
deal involving third baseman
Graig NetUes, snapped out of
his betting doldrums with three
hits in each game as the
Yan~ees swept the Red Sox.
Ex-Red Sox reliever Sparky
Lyle also picked up two save:!
against his old mates, giving
him six lor the season . Fritz
Peterson, who won the first
gsme, (his first victory of the
season) aided his own cause
with three runs batted in.
Dave Duncan drove in three
l'WIS with a pair of homers and
Sal Bando added a two-run
homer as Oakland heat Kansas
City. Ken Holtzman worked the
flrit six innings lor the A's,
allowing lour hits and one run,
to boost hl4 record to 6-2. ·
Rookie Don Baylor, the man
who the Baltimore Orioles hope
eventually will compensate for
the loss of Frank Robinson,
blasted a pair of home runs to
beck Pat D&lt;lbaon's four-hit
pitching the Birds' win over
Milwaukee. Merv Reltemnund
also homered for Baltimore:

Steubenville Central
The , surprising Meigs
· Marauders drew Steubenville
Central Catholic in the Newark
"AA" regional tournament to
be played this Friday and
Saturday.
Coach Don Wolfe and Roger
Birch's Marauders will kick off
the regionals this Friday at 4
p.m. on diamond No. 2 of
Edwards Field in Newark. On
diamond I the potent Ironton
Tigers will play Bellaire, also
at 4 p.m. The two winners will

meet at 2 Saturday on either
diamond I or 2 at Edwards
Field.
The Symmes Valley Vikings,
ihe only other area team in the
tournament, will play in the
Newark "A" regionals this
Thursday afternoon.
Coach
John
Nese 's
Steubenville Central Catholic
Crusaders defeated Philo in
their district, 7·5, to earn the
trip to the regionals. The

favorite of the tournament
would definitely appear to be
Ironton, who hais a 23-3 slate
and has yet to have been
pressed in tourQamenl play.
They defeated the Marauders
in their only meeting, 9.0.
The schedule this week for
Meigs will be at Kyger Creek
Monday and Waverly at home
on Wednesday. The Marauders
are 7-6 overall and 3-3 in
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League play.

saturday

Sporll S11mm•ry

By Ualled Prea IDierDatloual

BALTIMORE (UPI) - Bee
Bee Bee won the $187,800
Preakness Stakes as Riva
Ridge, loalng hill bid for the
Tiiple O'own, came in fourlh.
UNIONDAlE, N.Y. (UPI)The Indiana Pakers won the
American Basketball Aaaoclation crown for the second tlmr

•. ,
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.....

...'"

The

DHJ S.ililtl

lf~

11th Win In Row, 4-3

By VITO STELLINO
seven hits and three runs Iii
UPI ~ria Writer
seven innings.
The New York Mets·• are .."~'m glad I've been able to
updating the-•old slogan that " help," Mays said, "but this is a
ctiarity begins at home.
2S-man roster and I'm just
The Mets were supposed to doing my jlart. Yogi (Berra)
be doing something nice for has used me wisely."
Willie Mays 10 dsys ago when
In other games, Pittsburgh
they picked up the 41-year~ld made it seven straight by
superstar and his huge salary downing Montreal, 1-0 and 5-3,
from the San Francisco Giants Oticago edged st. Louis, 3-2,
and promised him a job wben Houston nipped Los Angeles, 2his playing dsys are over.
1, Atlanta beat San Francisco,
But Mays, who was only 6-4,iii!Oinnings, but the Giants
expected to be valuable to the won the second game, 2-1,
FASTEST TIME
WILMINGTON, Del (UPI)- Mels as a drawing card, may Cincinnati beat San Diego, 7·2,
Sllent Majority won the feature be worlh every penny the Mets but the Padres took the second
mne at Brandywine Raceway are paying him for his play on ~arne, 7-0.
Ma~eroskl Starts Rally
Sunday in 1:59 2-5, the fastest the field.
Frank
Lucchesi.
Just
ask
Bill Mazeroski, who still is
time of the year for a 3-year~ld
The Philadelphia manager
_pacer.
The horse, owned by Irvfug said Sunday, "never seD a p
Uverman and Mrs. Roger supei'stai short, even if he ill .l'
41."
While of St. Laurent, Canada,
Lucchesi and a record crowd
returned ~.00, ~ .110 and $2.40
in Phlladelphia of 57,267-the
after clipping three-fiftha of a
second off tbe previous best set second largest National
by Strike Out at Pompano League ·regular season day
crowd ever -got a good look at
TOLEDO (UP!) - Bowling
Park, Fla.
Mays Sunday when he cracked Green won the Mid-American
a two-run homer in the eighth Conference golf and track
,to give the Mets their lith championships here Saturday
.straight win, a 4-3 triumph over and favored Miami captured
Kangaroo hides make fine
·the Phiis.
the tennis crown to end Tole·
glove and boot leather.
Four Games and Four Hill
do's dominance of the event the
Mays has played four games last six years.
for the MetsandwhUe he'shad
Miami won two singles and
just four hits lil14 at bets, he's two doubles matches Iii the
played a key role In the victory final round to score 17 points
in each of the four games and and nose out the Rockets by
in .the last three yeSrs by has scored six runs and batted two points in the 1lnal team
standings. Trailing were Bowldowning the New York Nets in in four more.
Steve
Carlton
had
a
3-0
lead
·
ing Green 9, Western Michigan
the sixth gmbe of their playoff
and
a
no-bitter
until
the
sixth
G, Ohio U. 4 and Kent State 3.
series, 108-105.
Inning Sunday when Mays
Dave Wattle won both the
doubled
for
the
Mets'
first
hit
mne
and half-mile runs as
INDIANAPOUS (UPI)-Peand
scored
on
Tommie
·
Agee's
Bowling
Green scored an up~
ter Revson and Mark Donohue
)!li.ned pole-sitter Bobby Unser homli?' . In the eighth, Jim team win by getting five firsts
in the first row Saturday for Beauchamp batted for Tom In Saturday's flnsl 16 events.
next week's Indianapolis 500 Seaver and singled arid Mays 'lhe Falcons nosed out favored
auto race aa the field was in- hit a two-run homer to beat Western Michigsn 138-132.
Kent State, Jed by Len Turncreased to 'll for the 33-car carlton. Seaver, now 7·1, got
thewlileventhoaghbegaveup
er
who look the 100 and 440race.
.
·
ysrd dashes and the triple
jump, tallied Ill~ polnls lor
80
(UPil- third place. Following were
Ohio U. at 91, Mia~!!~ 85 and
six events but South California The middlew~ight bout be· Toledo 53.
.
tiWzedoveralllltrengthto
'win tween De nny Moyer, Por I•
.
Steve Blowers took medalist
the, Pacific '·Eight Conference land, Ore., and · Com- honors with a 232,lncludlng his
track and field cham, monwealty champion Tony 74 Saturday, to pace Bowling
plonahip ·
MlDldine baa been put back
Green, with a 1,184 point lo\al.
threedaystoMay31becauseof to a !().point win over the Ml·
NEW YORK (UP!)- an attack of tnnu-••
suffer
' ed
.,.._
ami golfers.
Canonero II, making hll lint by the American.
The defending champion
ltart'alnce lalt year's Belmont
Moyer, the North American
Bobcats finished third in team
When he failed In hll Triple middleweight champ, became
"
- - bid, f'"'"'"ed
....._d
In W llhortly after dalendlilg his acorlng with a ll298- Tranme
1111011
U"uwn
-~·
were Kent state at' 1,213, Tolethe Carter Handicap beblnd C. , crowo 10 dlys aao and wasn't do 1,251llld Western Michigan
Oliver Goldsmith'aleemattat ·able to tr·•·.
""'
1,288:
• the ll8llle New York track.

l

8 COnS

C0p

Two Titles

o~~~~=~lNfl

"' ,.

MllGS·MASDNAUA
CHI ST. • L. TANNIHILL,
iuc . ld.

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'"

ROIUT HOIFLICH.
City Ultor
Published
dolly txttpl
···.• SllurdiY Dy Tht Ohio Volloy
· Court
PuDllthStlnv
com pony, 111
.• Pomeroy , Oh 1o.
•5769. Butlnon Dfflco Phono
Edlloriol Phone Hl·
,
Stcond e1111 poitaue pold ot
·, Pomeroy,
Ohio .od¥trllstna
Notional
. . ropruentoll•t aotllnollf·
' Ollllghor. Int .. 12 Eut •2nd
" Sl, Now York City, NIW York.
Subotrlpllon rot~• : Dt ·

mt56,

.., llvtrtd tir urrltr where

1''
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'•

·~!':Bft~~~~on

Jeter walked to load the bases
and Hall was replaced on the
moll)Ki by Pedro Borbon.
Nate Colbert lined Borhon's
first pitch to center for a double
tQ score two runs and then Ed
Spiezio doubled off the left field
wan to drive in another pair.
Cincinnati coupled seven hits
with nine walks in the opening
oontest and Gary Nolan, now :;..
I, turned Iii his first complete

looking for his first hit this
· year, hit a sacrifice fly in the
eighth. inning of ihe second
game to start a two-run rally
and give Pittsburgh its doubleheader sweep over Montreal.
In the opener, Dave Gash drove
in the only run and then made a
brilliant bases-loaded catch in
the eighth to preserve the
triumph.
Bob Watson hit a two-run
homer Iii the sixth and Jerry
Reuss pitched a seven-bitter as
Houston moved back into first
place in the Western Division
with the victory over I.Ds
Angeles. Bill Singer took the
loss.
Billy Williams drove in two
runs with a single and a homer
as Chicago downed St. I.Duis.
Bill Handa went eight Innings
to get the win and Rick Wise
suffered the Joss.
Bobby Bonds' two-run homer
with two out in the eighth lifted
San Francisco past Atlanta in
the second game. The homer
gave Ron Bryant the win and
beat Ron Reed. In the first
game, Darrell Evans of
Atlanta dro~e in \three runs,
including the tie-tceaker in the
loth with a single.

Veteran Gordon Johncock,
MI. Pleasant, Mich., dogged by
by engine problems the entire
month, was the first and fastest

game of the season after eight
lrles. ·
Nolan gave . up seven hits,
struck out five and walked
none.
Bill Greif started for the
Padres and took the loss but
left in the second inning after
giving up three hils and a walk.
Johnny Bench opened the
Cincinnati second with a single
and Joe Hague walked. Hal
McRae groUJ¥1ed a single to
short left to Iliad the bases and
Ted Uhlaender singled off the
right field wall : to drive in
Bench and keep the bases full.
Mark Schaeffer took over for
Greil, now 3-5, and walked
Darrel Chaney to force in
Hague with the inning's second
run.

runs in the third, two of them
on Otaney's single with the
bases loaded.
The Reds completed their
scoring in Ute lourlh, ·scoring
two runs on Pete Rose's
double, a walk to Joe Morgari,
an infield error and McRae's
sacrifice fly.
Back-to-back, doubles by
Morales and Leron Lee in lhe
sixth gave San Diego one Of its
runs and siQgies by Morales,
Colbert and Larry Stahl and an
error by George Foster Iii right
field produced the other Padre
run in the ninth.
The Padres open 1a lourgame home , stand · against
Houston tonight while Cincinnati took today off before
opening against Atlanta in

Cincinnati scored three more Cincinnati Tuesday.

Skone
• h Issues

qualifier Sunday at 188.511
m.p.h. in his British factory I
McLaren as the teammate of ~.
.
Revson, who emerged as the '
top speedster Saturday at.
192.886.
Mark Donohue , Newtown
Square, Pa., in another McLa·
CLEVELAND (UP!) ren, was second only to Revson
Cleveland Browns head coach
Salw-day at. 191.400, to round
Nick Skorich said he detected a
out the first row of starters for
lack of eagerness ''to be about
race day with Unser, Albuthe business of football" when .
querque, N.M., who had averteam veterans gathered for a a
aged just under 196 m.p.h. a
two-hour weekend workout,
week earlier.
their first of the year. 1
other successful qualifiers
"Everybody had better be
Saturday were Jerry Grant,
ready when training camp
Seattle, Wash., 189.294; Mike
opens in July," Skorich warned
Mosley , Clermont, Ind.,
his players. "Some of you reg189.145; A. J. Foyt, Houston,
ulars from last year may be
Tex., 188.996; Bill Vukovich,
Fresno, Calif.; 184,814 ; wondering about making the
squad, let alone being a regular
defending champion AI Unser,
again.''
Albuquerque, N.M., 183.617;
The session conslsled of a
Roger McCluskey, Tucson,
mile run, sprints and an agility
Ariz., 182.685 ; George Snider,
Bakersfield, Calif., 181;859; drW.
"I stepped on them pretty
Steve Krisiloff, Parsippany, hard," he said. "About 95 per
N.J., 181.433; Mel Kenyon,
cent of them have been work·
Lebanon., 181.388 ; Carl
ing out and seem Iii pretty good
Williams, Grandview, Mo ., shape. But there are a few who
180.469; Dick Simon, Salt Lake
didn't follow our guidelines on
City, 180.424; Sam Sessions,
conditioning."
NashvWe, Mich., 180.415; and
The coach reaffirmed the
Mike Hiss, Tustin , Calif., usual time requirements for
170.015.
the mlle run - 6:50 for hacks
· Besides Johncock, other qualifiers Sunday were Dave and ends, 7:00 for medium
men and 7:50 for lineriien.
"Salt" Walther, Dayton, Ohio, sized
" II shouldn't be necessary to
180.542; Denny Zimmerman, run it (the mlle) several times
Glastonbury, Conn., 1110.027; to meet the times," he said. "If
John Mahler, Bettendorf,
it is, we could find some means
Iowa, 178.497; Lee Kunzman,
of remedying the situation. I
Guttenberg, Iowa, 179.265;·Jim · want everybody to report in
Caruthers, Anaheim, Calllf., playing shape." ' ·
,
178.909; and Caie Yarborough,
Safety Ernie Kellerman
Timmonsville, S.C., 178.884.
turned in the best time for the
Yarborough came up with
mile at 5:50 and linebacker
the only successsful "bum- Otarlie Hall was second with
ping" Sunday when his car 6:06.
eliminated one qualified the
In the 4l).yard dash, h.alfback
week beforre by Wally
Ken Brown look the honors in
Dallenbach, East Brunswick,
4.65 seconds. He also led the •
N.J.
agWty drill at 12.8 seconds.
Kunzman, Caruthers,
Defensive end Joe Jones, who
Mahler and Walther were
specialized in dumping
Sunday's successful rookies. quarlerbacks last season, led
The other first-time "500"
pilqts are californians Mike
Hiss, John Martin, Sam Posey
and Swede Savage.

Stern Warning
I

the 20-yard dash for linemen
with a time of 2.85 seconds.
Running back Leroy Kelly
and defensive end Guy Homoly
came Iii near the top in the 4l).
yard dash with 4. 7-second
timings.
One player who elicited concern from Skorich was defensive tackle Joe Righetti. He
had the slowest mne time and
Is trying to make a comeback
following kidney surgery.

Your

lnsur1nc.

Agont

DALE
WARNER
I

I

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personal property . Wo
work for YOUR best In·
leresis. Let us see !hot
vou're well proteded.

Consult Us Soan

Davis-Warner Ins.
14

Phone m -2P64
Court S•
Pomoroy

···········~
GOOD WITHTHIS COUPON ONlY

~fried
•

••
••
••

ew-•.•

... work underground, too.
The network of their roots helps
hold the soil and protect our
watersheds.
You can help, too.

•

I

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OPTOMETRIST

OFF IE£ HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 ((;LOSE
'AT NvuN ON THURS.! - EASrtOURT ST..

CROWS STEAK .HOUSE
992-5432

Pomere~y,O.

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'r

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;,)!H i

hqmt. , lyQur(l 1 Clf,roJI?Ur

. ·lf. .. COMPTON, 0.0.
.· .

L

INSURANCE . tor"i r"'»r

RIDERS sOUGHT
NEW YORK (UPI)-Riders
who took part in the six-day
bicycle races of 441 years ago in
the old Madison Square Garden
are being sought to act as official starters and hOllored
guests at the Pepsi -Cola
Bicycle Jamboree next
weekend in New York's Central Park.
· More than 10,000 bicycle
ride~ are expected . to attend,
with the highlight of the
Jamboree being a 200-mile, 24hour marathon.

~~0:. ~lllt~alla

_

••olllblo so ttnll por wook;
·
ly Motor Roufl whorocarrlor • MEMPHIS, .Tenn. (UPI)aarv leo not •••liable: One Hoetown bent Bert Wea,ver
month $1.75. IY m11l In OhiO
nd w. vo .. Ono yeor sl•.OO. lind a par 72 fer a ODI41i•~
Sl• month I 17.25. Thrtl lad with a 2l21t' theind of the
onthl suo. 5 .&gt;bttrlptlon ........,
rlu tncludll Sundey Tlmu- Ylllll round ol the f1,71,0110
onllntt.
D11u17 'lbomllplf daalie.

et s

J Jl

Mays Homer Gives

"

\

being "bumped" by a faster
racer and the 33-car lineup
checking in at an average
speed of 183.665 m.p.h.
It marked the first time in
Speedway history that all 33
starters recorded a faster
gualifying average than the
fastesl machine of the year
before. Peter Revson, Redondo

Weekend Summary

•2

.et

·.444

For 9-8 Win

0:

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B

West

.sn m
.S36 2'12

Chisox Rally

)g

Linescores

9

.630 -

Meigs Opens Against

Reedsville News, Notes

At. Southern

16
15
12

10
12
13
15
17
17

won the opener, 7·2.
hurlers who gave up 10 hits
''I started the game very including seven doubles.
rough~" Norman said, "but it
The Padres scored once in
came arolDld good for me the second and again in the
about the fifth inning. I thought fourth and then put the game
I had great breaking stuff and away Iii the fifth when they
a good fast ball." '
collected three of their doubles.
Norman, now 4-2, dropped
Norman opened wiUi a single
his earned run average to 1.62 and was sacrificed to second by
with the 8eeond game win.
Garry Jestadt. Jerry Morales
The loss went. to Tom Hall, grounded a double to left,
the first of four Cincinnati sending Norman to third. John

Indy Has Fastest Field

Eastern

° ·

17

SAN DIEGO (UPI)-Fred
Norinan said he felt a litUe stiff
in the Opening innings against
CinclnnaU Sunday but you'd
never know it from the way he
W¥ pitching. .
The San Diego southpaw
blanked the Reds in the,.m.ond'
game of a doubleheader on five
hits whil~ striking out nine and
wlilklilg two for his third
consecutive shutout. Cincinnati

10 .643
Houston
19 12 .613 Oakland
10 .630 '12
Los Angeles 20 13 .606 1 Minnesota
11 .607 1
Cincinnati
18 15 .S4S 1 Texas
IS .500 4
San Diego
IS 18 .455 5 Kansas City
18 .400 7
Atlanta
IS 20 .429 6 California
11 19 .367 8
.San Francisco II 25 .306 IO'I2
Sunday's Results
Sunday'• Resulls
Oakland s Kansas City 2
New York 4 Phlla 3
Texas S Minn·-2, lsi
Chicago 3 St. Louis 2
Texas 3 Minn 1, 2nd
Pills 1 Montreal 0, 1st
Chicago 9 California 8
Pitts S Montreal 3, 2nd
Detroit 5 Cleveland 0
Houston 2 Los Angeles I
Baltimore 5 Mllw o
Cincl 7 San Diego 2. 1st
New York 6 Boston 3, lsi
San Diego 7 Cinci 0, 2nd
New York 3 Boston 2, 2nd ,
Alta 6 San Fran 4. lsi. 10 inns
Today's Probable Pitchers
San Fran 2 Atlanta I, 2nd
(All Tinies EDTI
INDIANAPOUS, Ind. (UP!)
Toclay's Probable Pitchers
California (•Vrlghl 2·21 at -A field nearly 12 miles per
(All Times EDT)
Oakland (Hunter 2·21. 11 p.m.
Philadelphia (Lersch 1.11 at
Chicago (Wood 7-21 al Texas hour faster than last . year's
Montreal (Torrez ~· II , 2: IS (Bosman 2·41. 8:30p.m.
was set today for Saturday's
p.m.
(On ly games scheduled I
million-dollar Indianapolis
San Francisco I Me powell S-11
Tuesday's Games
"500" a t 0
F
at Los Angeles (Jo~n 3-31. II Cleveland at New York night
u race. ormer
Baltimore at Boston , night
· wirmer Bobby Unser will hold
p.m.
Houston (Dierker 3-21 at San Chicago at Texas, night
the pole position.
Diego '(Acosla I-ll, 10:30 p.m. Minnesota atKan City, night
Twoweekendsoftrialsended
(Only games scheduled)
M1lw at Detro II. night
.
Tuesday's Games
. Calif at Oakland, night
late Sunday With one machine
Phil a al Montreat. night
New York at Chicago
The Lapps round up their
Pills at St. Louis, night
remdeer
under the midnight
Atlanta al Cinci, nighl
sun
since
summer's fierce
Houston at San Diego , night
mosquiloes
are Jess active
San Fran at Los Ang, night
then.

By the Day

Alfred
Social Notes

Cleveland
Delroll
Baltimore
New York
Boston
Milwaukee

w. I. pet. g. b. Chicago

1

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1 pc.t g
b
w. .
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He'1e·n' He1p

Carmel News,

Amerltlln League
East

.. only you can prevent forest fires. •

Q

Published 111 public ser•ice In cooperation with The AdV!Irtislnr Council
the U.S. fo1est Services, the National Association of Stole Fortll&amp;rs '
and 1lit Inter notional Newspaper Adwlising Emulivts.

�•

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n.e Daily S!ll!ln!l, Mkkleport-Pomeroy, o., May 22, tm

-------------------------..
Ldtaa o1

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...... w. . . . . (• bealll¥ct to redtlelloll by tile eclltol'j I ' The Bill)' Bee Society of the
a..tbe ...... wllhlllealpee'ucldreu.NitaelllUYbe I Carpenter Baptlat Church mt
wldiiiiW ~ •JIWlet~llob, however, 'on ~oe•t. LeUen .I at he htBDe of Mrs. William
llllollldlle Ia soot11111e, llddmaloc luues, not pe11$1alllles. · .1 Q!eadle lor lheir-,May ~sslon.
· £) .. ..o. ~
Mrs. Reed Jeffers gave'
~ ·.
1 devoUons. Plans ·lftre ma«!e
~
1 for a · rummage ~ale the
•••
•
·
· ;
1 Townl\Ouse on June 17. Those
· 1 present were Emma Whil·
I lirlgton, Freda sinlth, Vivian
I Gaston, Anna Llch, ' Helen
•
.
I
Jeffers, Bann1e Cheadle, Mella
He Didn't, but he Agrees
Flibei' llld lba hoatesO, Mrs.
Mlddieport,,Ohlo Oleadle.
,
May16 1972
Mother's Day guesls at the
bear Edilor :
' .• home of Mr. and ·Mrs.' Rex
· InS\Iflday's paper,May 14,1972,1 read a piece on why wUng· .. Cheadle and family were Mr.
no on a schOol mill ~. Mr. Voter _property owneuritl.tax , !llld Mrs. Rex Cheadle, Mrs.
.payer.l'll go along with every word this party wrote. Allliroted· Metta Fisher, Mrs. Unda Ross
no on lhe IIBlDI! levy and Will say I'Ve voted agalnsl eill;h and and family, Mr. and )llrs. Reed
everything· that would ralae any taites upon the people. I've Jeffers, "fr· and Mrs. Gene
fought taxes and wW conUnllll to do so. But it gets pa·etty
Jeffers and family and Mrs.
sett'ft• when th Blam is Laid
h
did
·. h
Florence Staneart.
~
e.
upoo mew. en 1 not wng t to
Rudiger and Katrina
the paper. Or did I Have anything to do With it. And will ask the Bawngaertel have returned
~Ie who think I did to please take time out to call Some one \wine after ~ndlng SOllie time
~· These phone cajle are getting Boaring. And I am ~lng . at the Rex Cheadle home while'
paUents. Sci I am ask!Dg for this to stop. When I W~t a piece to their parents, Dr, and Mrs. w.
the paper I do Not pull any punches. And I also Sign my Name Baumgaertel . visited with
. c/."d address.! praise that piece In the paper. For just Scime time relatives in Europe.
. Back we ~dn't Have mouey enough to Hold a Primary Election.
Mrs. Dale Stansbury
And I believe in When a Man is Beaten By Votes Hes Beaten. And received greetings by phone on
1 also Believe in wben a Levy Is Voted down By over 300 Votes Mother 's Day from her
that its Beaten liadely. Sci Mr. Voter if you dontwanl this go out daughter, Mrs. Eileen Gryc·
in June the 20th and Vote it Down again. And tben in tbe Nov. tko, Annapolis, Md., and from
ElectionyoucangovotetheautoUcensestaxdown. That will be her son, Larry, of Rynolds·
on in November. Now lve stood By you in the past and will stand burg.
,
Byyouln the future ifyouasa Voter and tax payer Will StandBy' Mrs. Faye Jordan and Mrs.
me and give me Support to do so as a Property owner and lax · Ida Dennison were dinner
payer.
guests on Saturday at the home
I am Still in favor of No taxes.
of Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jor·
dan.
Slnc;erely Yours
of
Temple
Members
Vemer.H.See
.Women's Society of Christian
348 Grant St.
Service \'{ere entertained
Middleport, Ohio Satw:day in the home of Mr.

1

"fdl#t
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up.

BOWLING: Wednesday Late Night Mixed
. League at the Pomeroy Bowling Lanes crowned
their "stars" last week. Here they are, in the
acco'mpanying three pictures (left to riglit&gt; :

FIRST PLACE · ~n,
Roy Holter, Pat Holter1 Sara
Owen and Dlek Owen.

u"'

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Agrees with Mr. Casci
Pomeroy, Ohio
'May 16,1972

INDIVIDUAL TROPHY winners, Jack Carsey, high game; Joy Bentley ,.most improved
average; Dan Meadows, most improved average and high game; Sara Owen, high average;
Lola ·Rosenbaum, hlgjl game and high series; Dick Rosenbaum, high average, and Fred
M(ll'l'OII', high oeriea.

SECOND PLACE winners, Jack Carsey, Neacil Carsey, Ruth Cassell and Tom Cassell.
Major League Leaders

Local Bowling
Tuesdav Friendship League
Mav Q 107')

W. L.

Team No. 1
8 0
Team No. 4
4 4
Team "'o. 3
4 4
Team No. 2
o a
High Team Game - Team
No. 1 476: second high team
game ~ Team No. 3 472 .
High Team 3 games - Team
No. t 1345; Team No. 2 1294.
Ind. high 3 games - Flossie
Maxson 503 ; Delmar Karr 435.
High Ind. game - Flossie
Maxson 180 · 177; Delma Karr
169.
Tuesday League
May 16, 1971

w.

L.

Team No.1
16 o
Team No.4
10 6
Team No.3 ,
4 12
Team No.2
2 14
High Team 3 games - Team
No. I 1432; Team No. 4 1305.

,, . ,. , .• 1· ·•

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B
Ed
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.r or etter
ucatlon ut

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Bw United Press lnternatinnal

Near-Sweep

Loadina Batters
National League
g. ab r. h. pet.
Stenet, Pit
19 60 10 23 .383
Torre, St.L
31 118 13 44 .373
Snguiln, Pit
30 118 13 42 .356
Lee. SO
25 85 13 30 .353
Monday, Chi 29 89 19 31 .348
Cepeda, All
16 58 5 20 .345
Alou, St .L
30 109 12 37 .339 .
Oliver, Pit
30 125 20 42 .336
Tolan, Cin
32 122 23 40 .328
Ruse I, LA
28 U 7 24 .324
American League
COLUMBUS - John Tang. ab r., h. pet. nehill of Mid!lleport Ohio
Pniela, KC
30 116 20 40 .345
d
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McGraw,Cie 25 79 12 27 .342 · rna e a nea~·sweep of mens
Kelly, Chi
23 82 13 28 .3 41 table tenms events here
Pinson, Cal
27 100 12 32 .320 Saturday and Sunday in the
Allen , Chi
28 107 18 34 .318 29to Annual Midwest Table
Rudl. Oak
24 lOS 16 33 .314
.
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Cash, Det
28 92 14 28 .304 Tenms Tournament, Winning
Braun. Min 20 76 a 23 .303 the men's open singles, men's
Carew. Min JS 110 12 33 .300 AA o""'n ' singles and the
,Munson, NY 26 87 10 16 299 . edrd•. bl
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In Midwest ·
TT Event

Home Runs

·

National League: Colbert, so
9; Stargeil, Pitt and Kingman.
SF 8; Wynn, Hou 7; Aaron, All,
Perez, Cln, May , Hou and
Luzinskl, Phil 6.
American League: Cash, Del
8; Allen, Chi and Duncan, Oak
7; Darwin, Minn 6; Jackson,

mtx

ou es.

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It was the first championship

and Mrs. Howard Stanley in
Belpre. Those makin'g the trip
were Mrs. Carl Crabtree, Mrs\
F ern G'U
t og ly, Mrs. I T. M.
Gala way, Mrs. RoberT Mattox,
Mrs. Clarence Arbaught and
guests, Mrs. Tom Spurlock,
Mrs. Willlam Gillogly and Miss
OctaGillogly. The Stanleysare
former residents of this area.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
were ·Mother's Day dillner
guests at the home of their sonb)-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Jones and son,
Nelsonville.
Mr. and Mrs. Wes Mattox
and daughter who have spent
some time here with his uncles,
Ed and Bob Mattox, and Mrs.
Bob Mattox, have gone to
California where they will visit
his mother.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Stansbury ·
~ere guests of hiS brother and
SlSter-m-law, Mr. and Mrs. C.

To The Editor: .
.
. I want to congratulate Paul L. 6.sci on his excellent letter to
•
the Editor, "Memorial Day not a Holiday."No truer words were
ever written better. Things change over the years, and not
always for the better. This·is one not for the better tbat Is for.
1.6e. Speaking of cbange, our wars have even cbang~d, like the
, Korean War the newspapers called It war and our officials in
Washington, D. C. called It a pollee action, our present Vietnam
War Is called war th~ time, but lbere is no victory to be won in
these kinds of wars.
I'm like General MacArthur, it doesn't make sense.
I, aS well as the majority, want our boys and men to come
home from this war and to .slay home. At the same time we
should keep a strong defense at all times for our own 'u.S.A.
. safety.
Memorial Day this year should be spent not only in honoring
our brave SOldiers o!the past lhat,gave their lives to defend our
country and freedom, but a prayer by i11J for a quick end tO this
present conflict. .
Wlll close with a sincere hope that Memoriay Day 1972 will be
observed and spent by all our citizens like it should be anjl was in
days gone by.
tJoJ·'' ,. • .,. '••" , ..
Bertba c.~d~~ ; WMr
: ~taitsbd~. !~flanjl,
, _, ,. ,,~

.

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.,..Mil '"web~. '111ey llhould be leu 1 Carpente~ · . ews, E'te~t :

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· Pomeroy; Ohio
May16,1972
Another opinion on the Meigs Local School Levy voted down
in the recent election. When this consolidation of our schools was
promoled, one of the stories I beard was how It would be more
economical. ·Too, nothing was ever said. about consolidation of
our Jr. Highs that I ever heard. The first is now proven
misjudged and tbe second was evidently kepfrather quiet at the
time. We now have a Pomeroy Jr. HI. building fast going to pot.
With student and teacher desks, all kinds of books, various
manual tra.ining and science equipment, electric stoves,
refrigerators, bleechers, an!! lunch program equipment goirlg to
pot ,to say nothing of the extra expense of busing our Jr. m.
pupils. The floors are also buckli:ng in our JT. Hi. from lack of
heat.! may he wrong, but it seems to me some of this equipment
could have he en used in our new school instead of buying new.
I'm for good and better education, but I honeatiy believe
more money Is not tbe answer. To me it depends on the ones
running the scl)ool system, and how tbey manage tbe money for
the best results, and on what is really needed. Pomeroy Sr. and
Jr. HI. bad surplus money in its treasury when we consolidated.
We had good and well managed schools with plenty of activities
going on for the student.'J to keep busy. We never heard such a
thing as dope peddling gciing on In our Pomeroy HI. What we ~eed
is bett~r management and less dresa code for tbe pupils.
• Until I hear better things tban I have been hearing about our
Meigs Sr. and Jr. Hi. lwillconUnue to vote no on this school levy.
Adiscouraged taxpayer of Pomeroy. Name wilhheld on ret~uest.

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M;i:s,,Joe Turner of

Albat\y were visiting her
mother, Mrs. Ginevra Foster
on Motber's Day. Mrs. Foster
has returned to her home here
recenUy.
Mrs. Nellie Dye of Colwnbus

Social

Five Are Initiated

'

News, Events

Calendarl

..

Initiatory work for five
partners was conducted by
Mrs. Mary Martin of Pomeroy,
d~rtemental chapeau, Eight
and l'orly, Thursday night for
the Loraine Salon 334 in
Amherst.
Mrs. Martin and Mrs. Myrtle
Walker pf Racine, le secretaire
cassiere departmental, were
honored guests at the Salon
dinner. The two gave a report
on the recent trip to Denver,
Colo., for Chapeau Day at the
National Jewish Hospital and

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80

nusual Offer during r..., nnlul

'.

By Mrs. Francis Morris
Ralph McKenzie Is convalescing at home following
surgery at Holzer Medical
Center.
Garrett Circle is patient at
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Pt.
Pleasant.
The opening service of the
.Baptist Church School S1mday
morning was ~iven by Junior
BYF leaders Nondus Hendricks and Margie Grimm.
Attendance was 154. Flowers
donated to the Sunday School
by Cleland Greenhouse were
given to Mrs. Vazie Lee as the
oldest mother present and Mrs.
Doris Randolph, the youngest
mother, at the close of the
Sunday School hour by Ronnie
Salser, Supt.
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Simpson of
Pomeroy and Mrs. Lillian
Hayman, local, were Moiher's
Day dinner guests of their
mother, Mrs. Grella Simpson.
Others joining in the evening
were Mrs. Gerald Simpson,
local, Mrs . Ernest Shuler,
Letart Falls, 'and Mrs. Robert
Pierce, Nelsonville.
Mrs. Hazel Carnahan and
Miss Frances Foster went to
Elmwood Nursing Home
Sunday after Mrs . Lottie
Wilcoxen and Doris Brahan
who were dinner guests of Mrs.
Carnahan.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Gould of
Marietta and Mr . and Mrs. Bill
Lake, Lori and Sean , of

...

~:

us in May and save up to $48!
j '

I~

to $5000 wdrth of
Firat National City
Travelers Check•
for a fee of just $2 c~~~~~=~

l!

I 'I.
~

:(

Wherever you trav~l ... or even if you keep money at home
or at work ... the best way to protect your money il to u1e
First National City Travelers Checks.
If they're lost or stolen you caq get an on-the-spot refund

at over 32,000 refund points in the U.S. and oveneao
. .. thou1ands more places than any other travelen check.
They're honored worldwide ,in over a million placn.
Best time to buy them is during May. Offer ends May 3llt

The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.
" . . ... POMEDnY, riLIIn.
1 .

,l\~f-

. ~IW;H' J '

Meinoor Fetieraf!Wserve Syllellt II 1d'IU
On Fridays Onr' Drive-In Window Ia
Open 9 a.m. to 7l&gt;.m., (Coallaaotllly).

Consensus Delegat~s Appointed
'

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: J;

$21),000 Mulmam llllaraoce
For Eacb llepolitor

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Mrs. Roger Theiss at Dorcas
Friday.
Mrs. ~'Iorence Adams and
Mrs. Phyllis O'Brien were
shopping in Belpre Monday.
· Mr. and Mrs. Chrissie Powell
of Racine visited Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Adams.

e

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Mrs. Kennelh Harris and
the Eight and Forty's role in · Mrs. Chadene Arnold were
"the treatment and care of appOinl.t&gt;d as represen~tives
cystic fibrosis and tuberculosis
children there. A check for $92 ·
was presented to Mrs. Martin
to be· sent to the hospital.
A contribution of $75 to the
sc holarship program was
acknowledged by Mrs. Marlin.
The Salon endorsed Elizabeth
'
Kortveiy of Cuyahoga Collnty,
and Reva Cihlo of Richland
County, candidates for slate
offices. Gifts were presented to
. Mrs . Marlin and Mrs. Walker.
By Mrs. Herbert Rousb
Mother's Day guests of Mrs.
Bertha Robiru,;on were Mr. and
Mrs. Pete Shields , Molly
Fisher, Mr. and Mrs. Philip
Colwnbus spent Mother's Day Radford and daughter,
with Mr, and Mrs. Francis Stephanie, and Mrs. Clara Mae
Morris.
Sargent.
Dr. and Mrs. James Webb
Miss Ada Rowe was a Sunand sons of Colwnbus spent the day dinner guest of her sister,
weekend with his parents, Mr. Mrs. Anna Wines at Racine.
and . Mrs. ·Ralph Webb and
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush,
joining them Sunday were Mr. Sharon, Cindy, David. and
and Mrs . Gary Vickers and Edward, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac
daughter of Columbus.
Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Russell were Mother's Day
Simpson went to Colwnbus to dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
visit her sister, Mrs. Thomas Dana Lewis at Clifton.
Arthur, at a hospital there .
Lester Manuel of Logan
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Palmer spent the weekend with Mr.
Sr. and two daughters of and Mrs. Paul Manuel.
Pennsboro, W. Va ., were , Mr. and Mrs. Butch Wilson
guests of Mrs. Rob Palmer Jr. and children spent the weekend
and Mr . and Mrs. George with the latter's sister at
Neigler, Sunday .
Parkersburg .
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Cross
and Ray of Colwnbus. visited · Ronnie
Wilson
spent
Mother's Day weekend with his
Mrs. Howard Neigler for grandmother' Mrs . Erma
M~lher's Day.
Wilson.
Mr. and Mrs. James Kiser
and children and Mrs. Ben . Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Norris
visited Monday evening with
Shaffer spent a recent Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush.
with Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
Danny and Brice Sayre of
Swiney at Walton, W. Va.
Columbus visited Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cleland Herbert Sayre over Mother's
were recent guests of her Day weekend.
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Frank
Woods at Jacksonville.
I'
. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Smith of
VISIT IN SHELBY
Dayton. and Miss Ruth Ellis
Mrs. Mary Martin, Pomeroy,
and Mr.. Howard Bingman of imd Mrs. Myrtle Walker of
Columbus were guests of Miss Racine were Wednesday
Edith Hayman Saturday.
overnight guests of Mr . and
Melvin Riffle of Columbns Mrs. Reginald Fellows of
spent weekend with Mr. and Shelby.
Mrs. Roy Riffle.
• Mr. and Mrs. Fred Spencer
PARENTS VISITED
of Mason, W.Va., were guests · Mr. and Mrs. Dale Roush and
Saturday of Mr. and Mrs. children of St. Albans, W. Va.,
Frank Cleland.
spent the weekend with his
Mr. and Mrs. David Nease parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert
and son, David, of Baltimore Roush and family . .
were Mother's Day weekend
guests of his mother, Mrs.
carrie Nease.
Mrs. Marian knightsiep ~ · t• ·: ~. .
Columbus spent Mother's Day..."
weekend with ber mother, Mrs.
Lavinia Simpson .
Rev. Paul Sellers oi Hamden
called on Mr. and Mrs. Francis
Morris when he came after
Mrs. Sellers who had spent the
week with Mrs . Lavinia
Simpson.
Mother's Day was observed
with a cookout at Krodel Park,
Pt. Pleasant, by Mr. and Mrs.
Curtis Johnson and their
' '
guests, Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Cartwright and sons, Mrs. C. J.
Sauer and daughters and Mrs.
Bertba Spencer.

Fairview

News Notes

Racine Social Events

if your trip Is months away buy

from the Middleport Child
Conservation League to attend
the Search for Consensus
meeting at Meigs High School,
7 p.m. Wednesday , when the
League mel Thursday night.
The CCL also voted to make
a donation to \he Meigs
Community Classes to help
finance trips to Camden Park
and the Bob Evans Farm .. A
letter from the Sciuth Central
District president announced
the annual spring conference to
be held at Rio Grande on June
10. The Rev. Paul Hawk will be
the main speaker.
Arrangements were made to
lake the children of members
to Camden Park on July 12 and
for the annu~l picnic to be held
at Fort Meigs on June 15. A
card of thanks was received ·
from the Community Classes

thanking the League for card
tables purchased for the
classroom.
.
•
' The meeting was beld at the
home of Mrs. Don . Grueser
following a ceramic demon.
stration by Mrs. Alice Mllli at
her place of business. Mrs.
Mills demonstrated the steps
involved in cre@llng ceramics
from pouring the molds to the
final firing. She displayed
pieces in the vbrious.slages of
co mpletion . Mrs . .(lene
Houdashelt presided at the
business · meeting
with
members answering roJ\ cli)l
with !heir favorite hobby.
Guests were Mrs. Margaret
Bilderback and Mrs. Thomas ·
Grueser. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Dan White,
Mrs. Don Thomas and Mrs.
Harris.

TIME TO LET ROBINSON'S

Tender, loving care, that is. · We
pamper them each summer ...
cleaning , glazing and storing them so
they keep their cool.
1

------------------------WAR()ROBE
ASK ABOUT OUR

STORA~E

SERVIC·E

Free Storage
Fall &amp; Winter Garments
We'll store these for you til Fall . Fully insure!;~
against all hazards. Pick them up this F~ll ~nd
pay the drv cleaning charges only. (·This offer
does not include coin-op cleaning.)

a

ROBINSON'S
216 E. Second

992-5428

ISN'T HARD TO FIND
in the

Pomeroy

Yellow
Pages

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an
e.

Wolfpen · News, Notes

:L

Keno ~11ge
News· Notes

!lpllltadaywlth her U!lcle. Ney
Carpenter, 1114 ~ · ;Mn.
Dye Ia ataytng 'In Albany (or a
week with her tdater, Mildred
Carpenter who has returned !0
her horne after, s~yinR in a e Mr. and Mrs. · Jllalne
nursing home m· Albany Milhoan, Elaine, Mn. Glenna
following hospilallzation for a Mllhoan1 local, Mr. and Mrs.
broken hip.
William Rose of Collflllbua, Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan and Mrs. Wayne E. MilhQin of
811d Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Sbade atteQded the lwleral of
Jordan, Bry111 and Keith were lbeir uncli!, Mr· Lawrence
iJi Cincinnati on SUnday where Milhoan at Rutland, Satw:day.
they visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Friends an(! netghbora of
Walter Jordan .
Mrs. EdithOsbQrn~weresorry
RaclnfGrail&amp;eVislts
to hear · of her being
R~clne Grang~· members hospitalized at Holur Medical
were guests when Colll!llbla Center as the ~eault ol a stroke.
Grange ~o. ;!435 held their ~ay
Mrs. Henry . Thomas Is
,meeting Fr1day . evemng . ~~~; g ::'"u:::~.:=~
Emma Adams, Racme Grange
Lectur~r, presented an .m· Mrs. Blaine Mllhoan and Tony,,
teresttng program usmg
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Davis
mopler as the Jpeme. Mrs. 111d Mrs. Wrn.rd ·Taylor and
Mattie Circle gave musical three children were Monday
selections and others pa~, ev~!'ing g.~"'\ts of Mr. and Mrs.
ticipating were Mr. and Mrs. Lee itunl arM Mr. Taylor ..
Earl Cross, Miss Easterday,
Mrs. Blaine Milhoan, Elaine,
and Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Tony and William, and Mrs.
Morris.. Several grangers· Glenna Milhoan attended the .
modeled hats made by the wedding of Gary Moore and
lecturer. The Cohuilbia Grimge Peggy Milhoan at the EnWomen's Activities chalrinan terprlse Church Saturday
reported on kile of Grange evening.
history books and also that a . The 'lightening struck and did
box of glasses had been some ~damage to the home of
collected for the project, "New William Milhoan SUnday.
rE.;.y_es_f_or_th_e_N_eed...;.y_
..._ _ _ _ _ _ _-e_leDIUI
__s_._Milb_oa...;n

r---------------------~-----~

in the men's singles at the
M'd 1 . 10 tr' h .
I wes ern.tn
tes, avtng
competed the first time as a
novice at age 11 in 1!163 in
l;ligh Team game - Team
'd
.
. .
m1 get smg 1es and losmg 1n the
No. 1 511; Team No. 4 494.
opemng round to a IO.year-&lt;Jld
High Ind. 3 games - Louise Oak s.
Harr~son 487 ; Flossie Maxson
. Runs Batted In
Michigan bOf, Danny Ybena.
469 .
Nat1onal League: Kingman Tod h . th
ti ,
ay , e IS e na on s and
Hiqh Ind. 3 games - Louise SF 27 ; Stargeil, Pitt 25 , Tolan:
Harnson 487; Flossie Maxson Cin, Wynn, Hou. Colbert, so Canada s No.2 ranked player
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sayre
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Jeffers,
469.
.
and Bond&lt;, SF 23.
behind U. S. and Canadian
and
family
of
Chester,
Mr.
and
Ricky,
Mr. Harley E. Johnson
High Ind . Game- Fiossle
Ameroc~n League: Allen , Chi Open champion Dal June Lee
Ma xson 175 ,· Louise Harri sOn 2i ; Darw1n, mlnn 22; Cash and
.
Mrs . William Sayre qf and Mrs. Charley Smith and1Jo
Freehan, Det. Carew, Minn and of Cleveland.
172.
Columbus, Mr. and' Mrs. were Sunday afternoon visi~rs
'~ r----------D_u:._n.:_ca:._n:._,_:Da_:k.:. :._:l9..:_---~
·
Tannehill and 16-year-old M. Donald Sayre ?f Pomeroy, of Mr. and Mrs. Harley T.
Burkhart of Cincinnati,
were Sunday viSitors of Mr. Johnson.
defeated Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Miss Nancy Hamm, Audra
·Hicks of Indianapolis in lhe and Mrs. Charles Sayre.
Naomi
Jo
Smith,
student
of
Johnson
of Colwnbus, Jamie
mixed doubles: His victories in
Concord College, is spending Sue Johnson of Pomeroy ,
singles events were over D.
Seemiller, Philadelphia, the her vacation with her parents, ,Dorothy Boston of New Haven,
nation's No. 2 ranked in the. Mr. and Mrs. Charley D. Geneva· Shumate, Gina,
Famous U.S. Women Ski Team Diet
Smith.
Tahnee Jo, and Brady Johnson
under-18 division, ' and G.
During lhe non·snow off season the U.S. Women's Alpine
.
Mrs.
Eugene
Haning
enjoyed
were
Saturday evening visitors
Scheft o( Philadelphia, a 42bus
trip
and
tour
of
the
Avon
of Mrs. Helen Johnson.
a
Sk1 Team members go on the "Ski Team" diet to lose 20
year-old player who three
Sunday visitors of Mrs.
pounds .in two we~ks . That 's right - 20 pounds in 14 days!
times in the 50s and early 60s plant at Cincinl!llti with other
Avon
representatives
of
'the
Helen
Johnson were Mr. and
The baSIS of the d!el IS chemical food aclion and was devised
represented the .U. S. in· the
area.
Mrs.
Everett
Ray Johnson and
by a famous Colorado physician especially for the U.S. Ski
Ol.ympics triple long jwnp.'
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith . family, Mr. and Mrs. James
Team: Normal energy is mainiained (very important') while
Tannehill and Bill Hodge of
and
Jo enjoyed a .cook-out Johnson and family of
~educmg . You keep "ful!" - no starvalion - because the die! . Colwnbus lost in the finals of
recentiy
with Mr. and . Mrs. Pomeroy, Mr. and 'Mrs. Larry
IS deSigned that way. It 's a diet that is easy to follow whe ther
the men's doubles event to
Johnson and family and Mr.
you work, travel or stay at home.
Seemiller and Lesner of Doyle Knapp and family .
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Harley
Smith
Kenneth
Johnson.
Thi,s is honestly a fantast ically successful diet. If it
Chicago.
of Kanauga were recent
Mr, and Mrs. Harley Johnson
weren 1: ~he U.S. Women's Ski Team wouldn 't be permilted
visitors
of
Mr
.
and
Mrs
.
and
Mr. and Mrs. Cbarley
to use II . Right ? So , give yourse lf the same hreak the U.S.
GAINS 'THIRD ROUND
Charley Smith and Jo.
Smith, Jo, enjoyed homemade
Sk1 Te."m gets. Lose .weight the scientific, proven way . Even
PARIS
(UPI)-Spain
has
·
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Doyle
Knapp,
ice cream and calie Tuesday
1f you ve tned all the other diets, you owe il to yourself to
gained
the
third
round
of
Kail,
Charles,
and
Kevin
and
evel)ing
at the home of Mr. and,
try the U.S. Women's Ski Team Diet. That is, if you really do
European Zone B Davis Qap M~s . Lena · Knapp of Mrs. Doyle · Knapp In ob- ·
want to lost 20 ·pounds in two weeks. Order today. Tear this
competition
with a 3-2 victory Langsville, ai.Jt the wee~end · servance of Kail Knapp's
out as a reminder.
over Franee, and next meets with I'Mr. ;nd ·Mrs. Ralph eighth' birthday.
,
S~nd · only $2.00 ($2.25 for Rush Service)- Cash is
the wiruiei , of the Portug81· Knapp of Colwnbus.
O.K.-to: Information Resources Co., Dept. 19, P.O. Box'
Monaco series. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell
· .
·
173, Encinitas, Calif. 92024. Don't order unless you expect
·France, alter going down ~ have moved their traDer from . The compass. plant ls~oto lose 20 pounds in two weeks! Because that's what the Ski
. · ted, Middleport lo a part of the cballed because 11.'1 leaves
d
on Saturday to be e·limina
.
. ranches point in the dl •
Team Diet wiU do!
won both of Supday'S' conclud- former Howard Russell lion of the carcjlnal polrits of
lng singles matches.
property.
,
• the compass.
'
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LOSE 20 POUNDS
IN TWO WEEKS!

'

~.RAND
•

MONTGOMERY WARD
IN

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Model755

save ·a
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ohpe through your fingen before you pt '' nice n.t egg built up a bonkioll that'a
around to ataohing a little away .for the
really worth oomethinf.
future?
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Join the Payroll Sovinga. Plan. lt'a
Ever have a dream about a vacation,
helped a lot of people ... juat-llb yoli.

•..
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Tues. thru Saturday, May 23 to 27

then wake up ten years later jUit to find

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Packttl .,..rth ' power, low In JN~•· New Powt1
h~ cloaoiolg aysho~ . Now 1 Y, ''""' h.p: ·1111

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or a, cotta~e you wa.nt, or a college fund
you re gomg to build for ·your kids ...

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out you're no closer to making your
dream oome true than ·you were when
you firot had it?
You're not alone.
Everybody baa trouble oaving a buck
theae dayo. And, that'• why there'o a

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Payroll Savinp Plar.. Sign up whore you
work and an •mount you opecify will be
10t Blide from eech•peycheck llld 11-.d
to buy U.S. Savinp Bonde. Before you
can ret your hando on it. Before you can
opend it.
·

:::.992-3001

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
PH. 99U635

MIDDLEPORT
•

'I

BUY NOW' WITH
WARD CHARG-ALL ·

CREon PLAN

Wcally Otmed &amp; Operated By Charles &amp; Margaret Sheeta

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stock in America.
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·-

POMEROY

with new kind of power,
stow-away tools, too

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OPENING

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n.e Daily S!ll!ln!l, Mkkleport-Pomeroy, o., May 22, tm

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...... w. . . . . (• bealll¥ct to redtlelloll by tile eclltol'j I ' The Bill)' Bee Society of the
a..tbe ...... wllhlllealpee'ucldreu.NitaelllUYbe I Carpenter Baptlat Church mt
wldiiiiW ~ •JIWlet~llob, however, 'on ~oe•t. LeUen .I at he htBDe of Mrs. William
llllollldlle Ia soot11111e, llddmaloc luues, not pe11$1alllles. · .1 Q!eadle lor lheir-,May ~sslon.
· £) .. ..o. ~
Mrs. Reed Jeffers gave'
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1 devoUons. Plans ·lftre ma«!e
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1 for a · rummage ~ale the
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1 Townl\Ouse on June 17. Those
· 1 present were Emma Whil·
I lirlgton, Freda sinlth, Vivian
I Gaston, Anna Llch, ' Helen
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Jeffers, Bann1e Cheadle, Mella
He Didn't, but he Agrees
Flibei' llld lba hoatesO, Mrs.
Mlddieport,,Ohlo Oleadle.
,
May16 1972
Mother's Day guesls at the
bear Edilor :
' .• home of Mr. and ·Mrs.' Rex
· InS\Iflday's paper,May 14,1972,1 read a piece on why wUng· .. Cheadle and family were Mr.
no on a schOol mill ~. Mr. Voter _property owneuritl.tax , !llld Mrs. Rex Cheadle, Mrs.
.payer.l'll go along with every word this party wrote. Allliroted· Metta Fisher, Mrs. Unda Ross
no on lhe IIBlDI! levy and Will say I'Ve voted agalnsl eill;h and and family, Mr. and )llrs. Reed
everything· that would ralae any taites upon the people. I've Jeffers, "fr· and Mrs. Gene
fought taxes and wW conUnllll to do so. But it gets pa·etty
Jeffers and family and Mrs.
sett'ft• when th Blam is Laid
h
did
·. h
Florence Staneart.
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upoo mew. en 1 not wng t to
Rudiger and Katrina
the paper. Or did I Have anything to do With it. And will ask the Bawngaertel have returned
~Ie who think I did to please take time out to call Some one \wine after ~ndlng SOllie time
~· These phone cajle are getting Boaring. And I am ~lng . at the Rex Cheadle home while'
paUents. Sci I am ask!Dg for this to stop. When I W~t a piece to their parents, Dr, and Mrs. w.
the paper I do Not pull any punches. And I also Sign my Name Baumgaertel . visited with
. c/."d address.! praise that piece In the paper. For just Scime time relatives in Europe.
. Back we ~dn't Have mouey enough to Hold a Primary Election.
Mrs. Dale Stansbury
And I believe in When a Man is Beaten By Votes Hes Beaten. And received greetings by phone on
1 also Believe in wben a Levy Is Voted down By over 300 Votes Mother 's Day from her
that its Beaten liadely. Sci Mr. Voter if you dontwanl this go out daughter, Mrs. Eileen Gryc·
in June the 20th and Vote it Down again. And tben in tbe Nov. tko, Annapolis, Md., and from
ElectionyoucangovotetheautoUcensestaxdown. That will be her son, Larry, of Rynolds·
on in November. Now lve stood By you in the past and will stand burg.
,
Byyouln the future ifyouasa Voter and tax payer Will StandBy' Mrs. Faye Jordan and Mrs.
me and give me Support to do so as a Property owner and lax · Ida Dennison were dinner
payer.
guests on Saturday at the home
I am Still in favor of No taxes.
of Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jor·
dan.
Slnc;erely Yours
of
Temple
Members
Vemer.H.See
.Women's Society of Christian
348 Grant St.
Service \'{ere entertained
Middleport, Ohio Satw:day in the home of Mr.

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up.

BOWLING: Wednesday Late Night Mixed
. League at the Pomeroy Bowling Lanes crowned
their "stars" last week. Here they are, in the
acco'mpanying three pictures (left to riglit&gt; :

FIRST PLACE · ~n,
Roy Holter, Pat Holter1 Sara
Owen and Dlek Owen.

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Agrees with Mr. Casci
Pomeroy, Ohio
'May 16,1972

INDIVIDUAL TROPHY winners, Jack Carsey, high game; Joy Bentley ,.most improved
average; Dan Meadows, most improved average and high game; Sara Owen, high average;
Lola ·Rosenbaum, hlgjl game and high series; Dick Rosenbaum, high average, and Fred
M(ll'l'OII', high oeriea.

SECOND PLACE winners, Jack Carsey, Neacil Carsey, Ruth Cassell and Tom Cassell.
Major League Leaders

Local Bowling
Tuesdav Friendship League
Mav Q 107')

W. L.

Team No. 1
8 0
Team No. 4
4 4
Team "'o. 3
4 4
Team No. 2
o a
High Team Game - Team
No. 1 476: second high team
game ~ Team No. 3 472 .
High Team 3 games - Team
No. t 1345; Team No. 2 1294.
Ind. high 3 games - Flossie
Maxson 503 ; Delmar Karr 435.
High Ind. game - Flossie
Maxson 180 · 177; Delma Karr
169.
Tuesday League
May 16, 1971

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Team No.1
16 o
Team No.4
10 6
Team No.3 ,
4 12
Team No.2
2 14
High Team 3 games - Team
No. I 1432; Team No. 4 1305.

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Bw United Press lnternatinnal

Near-Sweep

Loadina Batters
National League
g. ab r. h. pet.
Stenet, Pit
19 60 10 23 .383
Torre, St.L
31 118 13 44 .373
Snguiln, Pit
30 118 13 42 .356
Lee. SO
25 85 13 30 .353
Monday, Chi 29 89 19 31 .348
Cepeda, All
16 58 5 20 .345
Alou, St .L
30 109 12 37 .339 .
Oliver, Pit
30 125 20 42 .336
Tolan, Cin
32 122 23 40 .328
Ruse I, LA
28 U 7 24 .324
American League
COLUMBUS - John Tang. ab r., h. pet. nehill of Mid!lleport Ohio
Pniela, KC
30 116 20 40 .345
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McGraw,Cie 25 79 12 27 .342 · rna e a nea~·sweep of mens
Kelly, Chi
23 82 13 28 .3 41 table tenms events here
Pinson, Cal
27 100 12 32 .320 Saturday and Sunday in the
Allen , Chi
28 107 18 34 .318 29to Annual Midwest Table
Rudl. Oak
24 lOS 16 33 .314
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Cash, Det
28 92 14 28 .304 Tenms Tournament, Winning
Braun. Min 20 76 a 23 .303 the men's open singles, men's
Carew. Min JS 110 12 33 .300 AA o""'n ' singles and the
,Munson, NY 26 87 10 16 299 . edrd•. bl
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In Midwest ·
TT Event

Home Runs

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National League: Colbert, so
9; Stargeil, Pitt and Kingman.
SF 8; Wynn, Hou 7; Aaron, All,
Perez, Cln, May , Hou and
Luzinskl, Phil 6.
American League: Cash, Del
8; Allen, Chi and Duncan, Oak
7; Darwin, Minn 6; Jackson,

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It was the first championship

and Mrs. Howard Stanley in
Belpre. Those makin'g the trip
were Mrs. Carl Crabtree, Mrs\
F ern G'U
t og ly, Mrs. I T. M.
Gala way, Mrs. RoberT Mattox,
Mrs. Clarence Arbaught and
guests, Mrs. Tom Spurlock,
Mrs. Willlam Gillogly and Miss
OctaGillogly. The Stanleysare
former residents of this area.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
were ·Mother's Day dillner
guests at the home of their sonb)-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Jones and son,
Nelsonville.
Mr. and Mrs. Wes Mattox
and daughter who have spent
some time here with his uncles,
Ed and Bob Mattox, and Mrs.
Bob Mattox, have gone to
California where they will visit
his mother.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Stansbury ·
~ere guests of hiS brother and
SlSter-m-law, Mr. and Mrs. C.

To The Editor: .
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. I want to congratulate Paul L. 6.sci on his excellent letter to
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the Editor, "Memorial Day not a Holiday."No truer words were
ever written better. Things change over the years, and not
always for the better. This·is one not for the better tbat Is for.
1.6e. Speaking of cbange, our wars have even cbang~d, like the
, Korean War the newspapers called It war and our officials in
Washington, D. C. called It a pollee action, our present Vietnam
War Is called war th~ time, but lbere is no victory to be won in
these kinds of wars.
I'm like General MacArthur, it doesn't make sense.
I, aS well as the majority, want our boys and men to come
home from this war and to .slay home. At the same time we
should keep a strong defense at all times for our own 'u.S.A.
. safety.
Memorial Day this year should be spent not only in honoring
our brave SOldiers o!the past lhat,gave their lives to defend our
country and freedom, but a prayer by i11J for a quick end tO this
present conflict. .
Wlll close with a sincere hope that Memoriay Day 1972 will be
observed and spent by all our citizens like it should be anjl was in
days gone by.
tJoJ·'' ,. • .,. '••" , ..
Bertba c.~d~~ ; WMr
: ~taitsbd~. !~flanjl,
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.,..Mil '"web~. '111ey llhould be leu 1 Carpente~ · . ews, E'te~t :

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· Pomeroy; Ohio
May16,1972
Another opinion on the Meigs Local School Levy voted down
in the recent election. When this consolidation of our schools was
promoled, one of the stories I beard was how It would be more
economical. ·Too, nothing was ever said. about consolidation of
our Jr. Highs that I ever heard. The first is now proven
misjudged and tbe second was evidently kepfrather quiet at the
time. We now have a Pomeroy Jr. HI. building fast going to pot.
With student and teacher desks, all kinds of books, various
manual tra.ining and science equipment, electric stoves,
refrigerators, bleechers, an!! lunch program equipment goirlg to
pot ,to say nothing of the extra expense of busing our Jr. m.
pupils. The floors are also buckli:ng in our JT. Hi. from lack of
heat.! may he wrong, but it seems to me some of this equipment
could have he en used in our new school instead of buying new.
I'm for good and better education, but I honeatiy believe
more money Is not tbe answer. To me it depends on the ones
running the scl)ool system, and how tbey manage tbe money for
the best results, and on what is really needed. Pomeroy Sr. and
Jr. HI. bad surplus money in its treasury when we consolidated.
We had good and well managed schools with plenty of activities
going on for the student.'J to keep busy. We never heard such a
thing as dope peddling gciing on In our Pomeroy HI. What we ~eed
is bett~r management and less dresa code for tbe pupils.
• Until I hear better things tban I have been hearing about our
Meigs Sr. and Jr. Hi. lwillconUnue to vote no on this school levy.
Adiscouraged taxpayer of Pomeroy. Name wilhheld on ret~uest.

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M;i:s,,Joe Turner of

Albat\y were visiting her
mother, Mrs. Ginevra Foster
on Motber's Day. Mrs. Foster
has returned to her home here
recenUy.
Mrs. Nellie Dye of Colwnbus

Social

Five Are Initiated

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News, Events

Calendarl

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Initiatory work for five
partners was conducted by
Mrs. Mary Martin of Pomeroy,
d~rtemental chapeau, Eight
and l'orly, Thursday night for
the Loraine Salon 334 in
Amherst.
Mrs. Martin and Mrs. Myrtle
Walker pf Racine, le secretaire
cassiere departmental, were
honored guests at the Salon
dinner. The two gave a report
on the recent trip to Denver,
Colo., for Chapeau Day at the
National Jewish Hospital and

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nusual Offer during r..., nnlul

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By Mrs. Francis Morris
Ralph McKenzie Is convalescing at home following
surgery at Holzer Medical
Center.
Garrett Circle is patient at
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Pt.
Pleasant.
The opening service of the
.Baptist Church School S1mday
morning was ~iven by Junior
BYF leaders Nondus Hendricks and Margie Grimm.
Attendance was 154. Flowers
donated to the Sunday School
by Cleland Greenhouse were
given to Mrs. Vazie Lee as the
oldest mother present and Mrs.
Doris Randolph, the youngest
mother, at the close of the
Sunday School hour by Ronnie
Salser, Supt.
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Simpson of
Pomeroy and Mrs. Lillian
Hayman, local, were Moiher's
Day dinner guests of their
mother, Mrs. Grella Simpson.
Others joining in the evening
were Mrs. Gerald Simpson,
local, Mrs . Ernest Shuler,
Letart Falls, 'and Mrs. Robert
Pierce, Nelsonville.
Mrs. Hazel Carnahan and
Miss Frances Foster went to
Elmwood Nursing Home
Sunday after Mrs . Lottie
Wilcoxen and Doris Brahan
who were dinner guests of Mrs.
Carnahan.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Gould of
Marietta and Mr . and Mrs. Bill
Lake, Lori and Sean , of

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us in May and save up to $48!
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to $5000 wdrth of
Firat National City
Travelers Check•
for a fee of just $2 c~~~~~=~

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Wherever you trav~l ... or even if you keep money at home
or at work ... the best way to protect your money il to u1e
First National City Travelers Checks.
If they're lost or stolen you caq get an on-the-spot refund

at over 32,000 refund points in the U.S. and oveneao
. .. thou1ands more places than any other travelen check.
They're honored worldwide ,in over a million placn.
Best time to buy them is during May. Offer ends May 3llt

The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.
" . . ... POMEDnY, riLIIn.
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Meinoor Fetieraf!Wserve Syllellt II 1d'IU
On Fridays Onr' Drive-In Window Ia
Open 9 a.m. to 7l&gt;.m., (Coallaaotllly).

Consensus Delegat~s Appointed
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$21),000 Mulmam llllaraoce
For Eacb llepolitor

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Mrs. Roger Theiss at Dorcas
Friday.
Mrs. ~'Iorence Adams and
Mrs. Phyllis O'Brien were
shopping in Belpre Monday.
· Mr. and Mrs. Chrissie Powell
of Racine visited Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Adams.

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Mrs. Kennelh Harris and
the Eight and Forty's role in · Mrs. Chadene Arnold were
"the treatment and care of appOinl.t&gt;d as represen~tives
cystic fibrosis and tuberculosis
children there. A check for $92 ·
was presented to Mrs. Martin
to be· sent to the hospital.
A contribution of $75 to the
sc holarship program was
acknowledged by Mrs. Marlin.
The Salon endorsed Elizabeth
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Kortveiy of Cuyahoga Collnty,
and Reva Cihlo of Richland
County, candidates for slate
offices. Gifts were presented to
. Mrs . Marlin and Mrs. Walker.
By Mrs. Herbert Rousb
Mother's Day guests of Mrs.
Bertha Robiru,;on were Mr. and
Mrs. Pete Shields , Molly
Fisher, Mr. and Mrs. Philip
Colwnbus spent Mother's Day Radford and daughter,
with Mr, and Mrs. Francis Stephanie, and Mrs. Clara Mae
Morris.
Sargent.
Dr. and Mrs. James Webb
Miss Ada Rowe was a Sunand sons of Colwnbus spent the day dinner guest of her sister,
weekend with his parents, Mr. Mrs. Anna Wines at Racine.
and . Mrs. ·Ralph Webb and
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush,
joining them Sunday were Mr. Sharon, Cindy, David. and
and Mrs . Gary Vickers and Edward, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac
daughter of Columbus.
Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Russell were Mother's Day
Simpson went to Colwnbus to dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
visit her sister, Mrs. Thomas Dana Lewis at Clifton.
Arthur, at a hospital there .
Lester Manuel of Logan
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Palmer spent the weekend with Mr.
Sr. and two daughters of and Mrs. Paul Manuel.
Pennsboro, W. Va ., were , Mr. and Mrs. Butch Wilson
guests of Mrs. Rob Palmer Jr. and children spent the weekend
and Mr . and Mrs. George with the latter's sister at
Neigler, Sunday .
Parkersburg .
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Cross
and Ray of Colwnbus. visited · Ronnie
Wilson
spent
Mother's Day weekend with his
Mrs. Howard Neigler for grandmother' Mrs . Erma
M~lher's Day.
Wilson.
Mr. and Mrs. James Kiser
and children and Mrs. Ben . Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Norris
visited Monday evening with
Shaffer spent a recent Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush.
with Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
Danny and Brice Sayre of
Swiney at Walton, W. Va.
Columbus visited Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cleland Herbert Sayre over Mother's
were recent guests of her Day weekend.
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Frank
Woods at Jacksonville.
I'
. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Smith of
VISIT IN SHELBY
Dayton. and Miss Ruth Ellis
Mrs. Mary Martin, Pomeroy,
and Mr.. Howard Bingman of imd Mrs. Myrtle Walker of
Columbus were guests of Miss Racine were Wednesday
Edith Hayman Saturday.
overnight guests of Mr . and
Melvin Riffle of Columbns Mrs. Reginald Fellows of
spent weekend with Mr. and Shelby.
Mrs. Roy Riffle.
• Mr. and Mrs. Fred Spencer
PARENTS VISITED
of Mason, W.Va., were guests · Mr. and Mrs. Dale Roush and
Saturday of Mr. and Mrs. children of St. Albans, W. Va.,
Frank Cleland.
spent the weekend with his
Mr. and Mrs. David Nease parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert
and son, David, of Baltimore Roush and family . .
were Mother's Day weekend
guests of his mother, Mrs.
carrie Nease.
Mrs. Marian knightsiep ~ · t• ·: ~. .
Columbus spent Mother's Day..."
weekend with ber mother, Mrs.
Lavinia Simpson .
Rev. Paul Sellers oi Hamden
called on Mr. and Mrs. Francis
Morris when he came after
Mrs. Sellers who had spent the
week with Mrs . Lavinia
Simpson.
Mother's Day was observed
with a cookout at Krodel Park,
Pt. Pleasant, by Mr. and Mrs.
Curtis Johnson and their
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guests, Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Cartwright and sons, Mrs. C. J.
Sauer and daughters and Mrs.
Bertba Spencer.

Fairview

News Notes

Racine Social Events

if your trip Is months away buy

from the Middleport Child
Conservation League to attend
the Search for Consensus
meeting at Meigs High School,
7 p.m. Wednesday , when the
League mel Thursday night.
The CCL also voted to make
a donation to \he Meigs
Community Classes to help
finance trips to Camden Park
and the Bob Evans Farm .. A
letter from the Sciuth Central
District president announced
the annual spring conference to
be held at Rio Grande on June
10. The Rev. Paul Hawk will be
the main speaker.
Arrangements were made to
lake the children of members
to Camden Park on July 12 and
for the annu~l picnic to be held
at Fort Meigs on June 15. A
card of thanks was received ·
from the Community Classes

thanking the League for card
tables purchased for the
classroom.
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home of Mrs. Don . Grueser
following a ceramic demon.
stration by Mrs. Alice Mllli at
her place of business. Mrs.
Mills demonstrated the steps
involved in cre@llng ceramics
from pouring the molds to the
final firing. She displayed
pieces in the vbrious.slages of
co mpletion . Mrs . .(lene
Houdashelt presided at the
business · meeting
with
members answering roJ\ cli)l
with !heir favorite hobby.
Guests were Mrs. Margaret
Bilderback and Mrs. Thomas ·
Grueser. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Dan White,
Mrs. Don Thomas and Mrs.
Harris.

TIME TO LET ROBINSON'S

Tender, loving care, that is. · We
pamper them each summer ...
cleaning , glazing and storing them so
they keep their cool.
1

------------------------WAR()ROBE
ASK ABOUT OUR

STORA~E

SERVIC·E

Free Storage
Fall &amp; Winter Garments
We'll store these for you til Fall . Fully insure!;~
against all hazards. Pick them up this F~ll ~nd
pay the drv cleaning charges only. (·This offer
does not include coin-op cleaning.)

a

ROBINSON'S
216 E. Second

992-5428

ISN'T HARD TO FIND
in the

Pomeroy

Yellow
Pages

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Wolfpen · News, Notes

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Keno ~11ge
News· Notes

!lpllltadaywlth her U!lcle. Ney
Carpenter, 1114 ~ · ;Mn.
Dye Ia ataytng 'In Albany (or a
week with her tdater, Mildred
Carpenter who has returned !0
her horne after, s~yinR in a e Mr. and Mrs. · Jllalne
nursing home m· Albany Milhoan, Elaine, Mn. Glenna
following hospilallzation for a Mllhoan1 local, Mr. and Mrs.
broken hip.
William Rose of Collflllbua, Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan and Mrs. Wayne E. MilhQin of
811d Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Sbade atteQded the lwleral of
Jordan, Bry111 and Keith were lbeir uncli!, Mr· Lawrence
iJi Cincinnati on SUnday where Milhoan at Rutland, Satw:day.
they visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Friends an(! netghbora of
Walter Jordan .
Mrs. EdithOsbQrn~weresorry
RaclnfGrail&amp;eVislts
to hear · of her being
R~clne Grang~· members hospitalized at Holur Medical
were guests when Colll!llbla Center as the ~eault ol a stroke.
Grange ~o. ;!435 held their ~ay
Mrs. Henry . Thomas Is
,meeting Fr1day . evemng . ~~~; g ::'"u:::~.:=~
Emma Adams, Racme Grange
Lectur~r, presented an .m· Mrs. Blaine Mllhoan and Tony,,
teresttng program usmg
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Davis
mopler as the Jpeme. Mrs. 111d Mrs. Wrn.rd ·Taylor and
Mattie Circle gave musical three children were Monday
selections and others pa~, ev~!'ing g.~"'\ts of Mr. and Mrs.
ticipating were Mr. and Mrs. Lee itunl arM Mr. Taylor ..
Earl Cross, Miss Easterday,
Mrs. Blaine Milhoan, Elaine,
and Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Tony and William, and Mrs.
Morris.. Several grangers· Glenna Milhoan attended the .
modeled hats made by the wedding of Gary Moore and
lecturer. The Cohuilbia Grimge Peggy Milhoan at the EnWomen's Activities chalrinan terprlse Church Saturday
reported on kile of Grange evening.
history books and also that a . The 'lightening struck and did
box of glasses had been some ~damage to the home of
collected for the project, "New William Milhoan SUnday.
rE.;.y_es_f_or_th_e_N_eed...;.y_
..._ _ _ _ _ _ _-e_leDIUI
__s_._Milb_oa...;n

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in the men's singles at the
M'd 1 . 10 tr' h .
I wes ern.tn
tes, avtng
competed the first time as a
novice at age 11 in 1!163 in
l;ligh Team game - Team
'd
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m1 get smg 1es and losmg 1n the
No. 1 511; Team No. 4 494.
opemng round to a IO.year-&lt;Jld
High Ind. 3 games - Louise Oak s.
Harr~son 487 ; Flossie Maxson
. Runs Batted In
Michigan bOf, Danny Ybena.
469 .
Nat1onal League: Kingman Tod h . th
ti ,
ay , e IS e na on s and
Hiqh Ind. 3 games - Louise SF 27 ; Stargeil, Pitt 25 , Tolan:
Harnson 487; Flossie Maxson Cin, Wynn, Hou. Colbert, so Canada s No.2 ranked player
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sayre
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Jeffers,
469.
.
and Bond&lt;, SF 23.
behind U. S. and Canadian
and
family
of
Chester,
Mr.
and
Ricky,
Mr. Harley E. Johnson
High Ind . Game- Fiossle
Ameroc~n League: Allen , Chi Open champion Dal June Lee
Ma xson 175 ,· Louise Harri sOn 2i ; Darw1n, mlnn 22; Cash and
.
Mrs . William Sayre qf and Mrs. Charley Smith and1Jo
Freehan, Det. Carew, Minn and of Cleveland.
172.
Columbus, Mr. and' Mrs. were Sunday afternoon visi~rs
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Tannehill and 16-year-old M. Donald Sayre ?f Pomeroy, of Mr. and Mrs. Harley T.
Burkhart of Cincinnati,
were Sunday viSitors of Mr. Johnson.
defeated Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Miss Nancy Hamm, Audra
·Hicks of Indianapolis in lhe and Mrs. Charles Sayre.
Naomi
Jo
Smith,
student
of
Johnson
of Colwnbus, Jamie
mixed doubles: His victories in
Concord College, is spending Sue Johnson of Pomeroy ,
singles events were over D.
Seemiller, Philadelphia, the her vacation with her parents, ,Dorothy Boston of New Haven,
nation's No. 2 ranked in the. Mr. and Mrs. Charley D. Geneva· Shumate, Gina,
Famous U.S. Women Ski Team Diet
Smith.
Tahnee Jo, and Brady Johnson
under-18 division, ' and G.
During lhe non·snow off season the U.S. Women's Alpine
.
Mrs.
Eugene
Haning
enjoyed
were
Saturday evening visitors
Scheft o( Philadelphia, a 42bus
trip
and
tour
of
the
Avon
of Mrs. Helen Johnson.
a
Sk1 Team members go on the "Ski Team" diet to lose 20
year-old player who three
Sunday visitors of Mrs.
pounds .in two we~ks . That 's right - 20 pounds in 14 days!
times in the 50s and early 60s plant at Cincinl!llti with other
Avon
representatives
of
'the
Helen
Johnson were Mr. and
The baSIS of the d!el IS chemical food aclion and was devised
represented the .U. S. in· the
area.
Mrs.
Everett
Ray Johnson and
by a famous Colorado physician especially for the U.S. Ski
Ol.ympics triple long jwnp.'
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith . family, Mr. and Mrs. James
Team: Normal energy is mainiained (very important') while
Tannehill and Bill Hodge of
and
Jo enjoyed a .cook-out Johnson and family of
~educmg . You keep "ful!" - no starvalion - because the die! . Colwnbus lost in the finals of
recentiy
with Mr. and . Mrs. Pomeroy, Mr. and 'Mrs. Larry
IS deSigned that way. It 's a diet that is easy to follow whe ther
the men's doubles event to
Johnson and family and Mr.
you work, travel or stay at home.
Seemiller and Lesner of Doyle Knapp and family .
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Harley
Smith
Kenneth
Johnson.
Thi,s is honestly a fantast ically successful diet. If it
Chicago.
of Kanauga were recent
Mr, and Mrs. Harley Johnson
weren 1: ~he U.S. Women's Ski Team wouldn 't be permilted
visitors
of
Mr
.
and
Mrs
.
and
Mr. and Mrs. Cbarley
to use II . Right ? So , give yourse lf the same hreak the U.S.
GAINS 'THIRD ROUND
Charley Smith and Jo.
Smith, Jo, enjoyed homemade
Sk1 Te."m gets. Lose .weight the scientific, proven way . Even
PARIS
(UPI)-Spain
has
·
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Doyle
Knapp,
ice cream and calie Tuesday
1f you ve tned all the other diets, you owe il to yourself to
gained
the
third
round
of
Kail,
Charles,
and
Kevin
and
evel)ing
at the home of Mr. and,
try the U.S. Women's Ski Team Diet. That is, if you really do
European Zone B Davis Qap M~s . Lena · Knapp of Mrs. Doyle · Knapp In ob- ·
want to lost 20 ·pounds in two weeks. Order today. Tear this
competition
with a 3-2 victory Langsville, ai.Jt the wee~end · servance of Kail Knapp's
out as a reminder.
over Franee, and next meets with I'Mr. ;nd ·Mrs. Ralph eighth' birthday.
,
S~nd · only $2.00 ($2.25 for Rush Service)- Cash is
the wiruiei , of the Portug81· Knapp of Colwnbus.
O.K.-to: Information Resources Co., Dept. 19, P.O. Box'
Monaco series. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell
· .
·
173, Encinitas, Calif. 92024. Don't order unless you expect
·France, alter going down ~ have moved their traDer from . The compass. plant ls~oto lose 20 pounds in two weeks! Because that's what the Ski
. · ted, Middleport lo a part of the cballed because 11.'1 leaves
d
on Saturday to be e·limina
.
. ranches point in the dl •
Team Diet wiU do!
won both of Supday'S' conclud- former Howard Russell lion of the carcjlnal polrits of
lng singles matches.
property.
,
• the compass.
'
•

LOSE 20 POUNDS
IN TWO WEEKS!

'

~.RAND
•

MONTGOMERY WARD
IN

•

Model755

save ·a
'

E~er notice how your paycheck

.

•

'

106 COURT STREET

.

•••'

i

•

It won't be too lonr before you h.ne 1
ohpe through your fingen before you pt '' nice n.t egg built up a bonkioll that'a
around to ataohing a little away .for the
really worth oomethinf.
future?
,
Join the Payroll Sovinga. Plan. lt'a
Ever have a dream about a vacation,
helped a lot of people ... juat-llb yoli.

•..
•
•

Tues. thru Saturday, May 23 to 27

then wake up ten years later jUit to find

••

•

H.. I \4 , •• -.,..,_

•.

Packttl .,..rth ' power, low In JN~•· New Powt1
h~ cloaoiolg aysho~ . Now 1 Y, ''""' h.p: ·1111

•

or a, cotta~e you wa.nt, or a college fund
you re gomg to build for ·your kids ...

Jtt ........ ·"''""

,.....

' " " ••• cleul~tf

ief ....., ,,..... ••Cif ".. ~leanh• ,ow..r•

..

lttW hot

FREE
CATALOGS

tlHveh *•I alt ..,.....,.,,diPS

"'fat. ...,,.,,,.,... ""'".rw,..
"""' ,_, ·-·Mt.......
.................
•e
,.. -"" -.
· a....- .....

•

out you're no closer to making your
dream oome true than ·you were when
you firot had it?
You're not alone.
Everybody baa trouble oaving a buck
theae dayo. And, that'• why there'o a

~- ""'· 11"1' ·-hl"f '"""" It oM!•...""'

IW,
"a 4wt
1M
awltdl. .... -11y. lochHI• ..,., kh tl ...

MMfl ....

Payroll Savinp Plar.. Sign up whore you
work and an •mount you opecify will be
10t Blide from eech•peycheck llld 11-.d
to buy U.S. Savinp Bonde. Before you
can ret your hando on it. Before you can
opend it.
·

:::.992-3001

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
PH. 99U635

MIDDLEPORT
•

'I

BUY NOW' WITH
WARD CHARG-ALL ·

CREon PLAN

Wcally Otmed &amp; Operated By Charles &amp; Margaret Sheeta

•

\

FREE
REFRESHMENTS

Od

Ingels Furniture

Take
stock in America.
. Join the Payroll Savings Plan.

)

·-

POMEROY

with new kind of power,
stow-away tools, too

~

iort of _.

OPENING

'.

�•

-

..'II
t-'lbeDIIJy__.,u~y,O.,MaJ2Z,1t'IS '

•

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! SentinelCltts~ifieds Get Results
Pomeroy
Motor eo~

2 SillS
.Of

MIALilY

,,

- · · Wanted To Buy.

1969 CHEVROLET
.' $899
Biscayne .t1 dr., V-B, automatic/ pgwer steer ing, good tires.
Priced to please.

•

19U CHEVROLET
Impala Cpe .. 6 cyl. std. trans. Plenty to save here.
•.

,~

c on~itlon.

$699

Pomeroy Motor Co:'

-•

' •' .

'

i

: :U" X23" X .009

'

Aluminum .
·Sheets

OPEN EVI!S. 1.00 P.M.
f'J*I!IOY, 01110

12' or 14' truck bed. Call 667- NEW SEWING machine, 1972,
3338.
Zig Zag ·model in w~lnul
5-21-Jip
table. minor paint damage,
USED OFF.SET PLATES
S34.60 cash. Sews buttonholes,
'
HAVE. .
fancy stitches .and all . Terms
·'
MANY
USES.
..
available .. Trade accepted.
USED chest type freezer, 15 cu.
Phone 992-6517.
fl . or larger . Bashan
5-21-lfc
Volunteer Fire Dept. Phone
949-4609 or 949-3833.
5-21 -3tc SEWING MACHINE service.
clean, oil,· set tension $.4.99.
8 for_~1.00
.\
Special Electro -Grande
'
'' '
For Rent or Sale
Company. Phone 992-6517.
5-2~ -tfc
HOUSE IN Long Bottom, phone --A-------985-3529.
.
5-21 -lfc 1970 HONDA 175, like new
------condition . Phone 742-4423.
S-19-3tc
'
For Rent
111
Court
St.
TRAILER , Brown 's Trailer ALUMINUM boais, on coonty
Pomeroy,
Ohio
Park , Minersville, Ohio .
road 18. 150 yards west ol Rt.
..
Phone 992-3324.
' 33. Call 992 -6256. Lorenzo
Davis.
.
5-11 -lfc
5-19-301c SMALLEY' S Gift
Snap, ·
TRAILER spaces overlooking
Chester, Ohio. Have large
Pomeroy . Velma G. Zuspan .
assortment of flowers for all
phone Mason. 773-5750.
WE HAVE a nice selection of
occasions. Arrangements for
flowers for Decoration. 97c to
5 - 11 - 301~
Mother's Day ; pots and
$5.50 tor baskets. wreaths.
baskets for Memorial Day,.
99c and up. Phone 985-3537 .
2 BEDROOM mobile home, crosses. sprays. hearts,
R 1
Bibles. We have a lot of high
4-28-12tc

... .

·

.s

wANT ADs
INFORMATION
. OEADLINES

P.M. Day

Before Publication .

Monday Oeaclllne 9 a.m .

Cancellation·- Corrections
Will be acctpted untll9 a.m. for .

Day of Publication
REGULATIONS

Notice
YOUNG ' s Casual Catering ,
Evelyn ,Young of Racine, has

a different phone number

from that which Is in the
phone directory. The new

number Is 949-5656.

Tt]e Publisher reserves the

5-2 1-Jtc

r:.latt! .to edit or reject any ads. - - - - - - -- deemed

.• '
'·

~

oblectlonal.
The WANT TO earn extra . money
publllhtr will not be responsible and still have time for your

for more than one Incorrect
lnsortlon.
.
.
RATES
For Want Ad Service

family? Flexible hours. Car
and phone nece.ssary. Call
992-5113 any time.

cents per Word one Insert ion

-5

·
S-21 -tfc

Minimum Charge 75c

cents per word three p
consecutive Insertions.
IANO and organ lessons .
18 cents per · word s!x con Gerald Hoffner . Phone 99212

tecutlve Insertions .
25 Per Cent Discount on paid

ads and ads paid within IOdays.

.

....

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...
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"

DF THANKS
I OBITUARY

CA~D

S1 .50 for SO word 'm inimum .
Etch additional word 2c .

BLIND ADS

Addltlonaj 25c
Advertisement .

Charge per

OFFICE HOURS
1:30 a.m. to ~ : 00 p.m. Da lly,

8 : 30 a. m .
Saturday .

tQ

12 : 00

Noon

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Tuppers Plains
Society News
By Mn. Evelyn'Brlckles

3825.

5-21 -12tc

GARDENING Season Is now In
full swing and Bob's Market
In Mason, W. V~ . can offer

you the best variety selection
and the finest of quality in
Garden Plants in the Tri County area. This season, Bob
Is featuring Two new won-

derful tomato Hybrids In
Beller Boy and Hybrid Beef
Easter (Beef Steak type) ;
along with 13 other tomato

.

ac ne area. 10 miles above
Pomeroy. Phone 992-6329.

class flowers for all of our old
customers at a reasonable

5-1 2-lfc
price . Reynolds Flower Shop,
3 AND • ROOM furnished ~nd
:::"t~~~~~Va ., up l ear Driveunfurnished apartments . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:_5_:·
16-61c
Phone 992-5434.
·
_ _ _ _ _ _ __::.4·.:_12-lfc LOST brighl carpet colors
restore them with Blue
UNFURNISHED apartment,
Lustre .
Rent
electric
phone 992-2780 or 992-3432.
shampocer Sl. Ben Franklin
Store. 200 Main St.. Pomeroy,
- _ __ _ _ _ ___:5:_:·4-lfc
Ohio.
5-16-61c
NEW, 12 x 60, two bedroom - - - - - mobile home across from 1957 CHEVROLET 2'h ton
Bradbury School. Call 992- truck, tandem axle ; 1965
Yamaha -YDS-3, phone 6985308 or see Charles Lewis , 2nd
3290, Warren Reeves .
house south from Bradbury
5-16-6tc
School. Pets welcome .
5-5-lfc
____:
'66
FOR D. 390 engine,

_____

cruismat ic.

selections , a full line of

cabbage and pepper plants SMALL double wide trailer,
furnished , util ities paid, and·
and almost every flowering
annual from Asters to Zinnew 2 bedroom, all electric
nias. We also sell Garden
apartment , paneled, has
electric range. Phone 992-7384
seeds, onion sets and seed
or 992 .7133 _
_potatoes, for best quality and
5-21-31c
selection buy direct from the

transmi ss ion,

$135. Phone '949-4843.
5-21 -6tp'
_ __ _ _ _ _ _::..:::_
COAL. Limestone, Excelsior
sa 11 warks, E. Main St..
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891 ,
4-12-lfc

Complete mobile home
service - plus gigantic
display of mobile homes
always avall~ble at ...

Sunday School attendance at
. MILLER
grower . more tlian 600,000
the United Methodist Church
7
YEAR
OLD
Tennessee
Walker
plants grown annualy In our
mare, palomino. gentle but
~
was 68. Offering was $20.76.
greenhouses. Bob's Markel ..
MOBILE HOMES
spirited,
neck reins . John
•· • Worship atllmdance was 48
and Plant Sales, Mason, w. Auto Sales
1220 Washington Blvd.
Sauvage. Syracuse Oh io,
Va. 773-5308, near the
:: : with $1~ ~idlng fund of.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0 .
phone
992-3272.
Pomeroy - Ma ~on Bridge.
1967 CHEVROLET Impa la, 2
5-10-121p .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...J
ferlng .
door hardtop. R &amp; H.
••
,·
Mrs. Effie Pyles has moved
automatic transmission . very
x 10 MOBILE home. Phone
good . condition.
power MODERN walnut style stereo- 50247-2161.
"' from Silver Ridge to the Carl REGISTERED Appaloosa Stud
r
adio
,
4
speaker
sound
steering, call 742-5943.
,.
Barnhill
t h
Service, $50 Reg. mares. $40
5-19-4tc
5-19-31c system, 4 speed automtlc
proper Y ere.
Grade. Francis Benedum ,
changer.
Balance
$67.59.
Use
Paul Guthrie of Orange and
Phone 667 -3856.
budget terms. Call 992- CASH paid for all makes and
Mr. and Mrs. Ve'rl Tuttle
5-17-3otp M DODGE Truck, 400, 14 fl . flat our
models of mobile homes .
7085 .
dump , good tires. $1,200. 949, visited their son, Bob Tuttle, at .
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
5-l7-61c
3835.
1 RlworRI~• M•thod'
SAVEuptoonehalf. Brlngyo"r
4-13-lfc
~ -'1 - ~&gt;r &lt;::: ml , !B.\ -~ljosplta! .. , sic~ TV. to Chuck's TV Shop,
5 21
: I~ ··G~~~JI!!I~ ~!lncfay., Mr.
151 .~ult~nul Ave:, Pomeroy .
' ·Jic TWIN needle sewing machine
..
4-4-lfc 1966 CHEVELLE. super sport
1971 model In walnut stand. Real Estate F r Sale
: Ttit!ll!ls 'tli~i-efor 'ob8ervatlon .
console. V8 automat! • trans- All features bu ill-in to make
0
Mr
d
Mr
8
' i•
·Wedn
an sd · Oscar
' real
di Babcock CLELAND'S GR. EENHOUS".
"
mission. air conditioned,
fancy designs and do stretch RACINE - 6 room hOuse. bath.
• were
e ay nner guests
Memor ial Day Potted Plants, good condition. Phone ' 992 .
sewing. Also buttonholes, utility room , garage, $10,000;
of their foster son, Mr. and
75c up, Pansies. Petunias;
3511.
blind ~ems , etc. $43 .35 cash . phone 949-4195 .
• Mrs. Ray Justis of Succt!ss,
number
of
bedding
plants;
5-19-61c
price or terms available.
3-31 -lfc
I•
Phone 992-5641.
.,---------vegetable plants. Geraldine -:-----:-c---:::..:.:
Mrs. BIaln Taylor was
•
Cleland. E. Main Sf., Racine. 1964 CHEV~OLET random
5-17-6tc 4 ROOM house. furnished , with
:· : rushed to Camden Clark
5-16-lfc
live axles. $995 . Harold - - - - - -- - bath and running water, 5
~-~ Hospital Saturday with a
Brewer. Long Bottom, phone VACUUM cleaner. Electro acres good land . Call 299-6538
severe nose bleed but was PIANO tuning. Lane Daniels,
985-3554.
Hyg iene. new demonstrator
or write Ed Noon, 912 Oxley
May lOth thru June 25th.
5-21 -lfc
has all cleaning attachments
Rd. , Columbus, Ohio.
Phone 992-2082. Reference ~=-=:--:-:~---.:.:.
plus the new Electro Suds for
· 5-21 -Jip
returned home after treatment.
Elberfelds.
' INTER'NATIDNAL
pickup
shampooing carpel . Only
A bridal shower was given
5-16-121c
truck, ,I 1qo D, Charles
$27.50 cash price or terms ' NICE 2-sfory home with full •
Sa d
Goegleln , Flatwoods Rd .
available. Phone 992-5641.
basement, 2 lots, new forced
tur ay evening at the home BOAT LICENSE - for your
Phone 992-6636.
· _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 5-17-61c
air furnace . Near Pomeroy.
• of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
boat, - for your motor .
5-21 -3tc
Elementary School. Phone
• Griffith In honor of her niece
Available at Simon's Pick-AEARLY American stereo-radio
992-7384 to see.
11 -7-ffc
W. Main : 1965 DODGE
Cor net , good
Pair
Shoe Store.
and husband, Mr. and Mrs.
Pomeroy.
Oh io, 108
Phone
.
comb'ona t·oon, AM· FM radio. 4
992
Mike Anthony, Pakersburg.
condollon. M. C. Larrimore,
speaker sound system. 4
3930 _
Bridgeman Rd.. Syracuse. speed au_tomatl c changer.
• There were 22 In attendance
5-16-3otc
5-19-3tp
Balance S78.34. Use our
:
and the honored couple CAL
-_ _ _ __ __ _.::._::
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
L for free facial ana ap5 17 61
recelved many lovely gifts.
pli cation of famous Mink 011 For Sale
·_:_ · c
, Mrs. Griffith's brother, Mr.
Kosmellcs. Ann Sau va ge, GUN
: CAM PER. 16 fl . sleeps 6. good
' and Mrs. William Corns of
Syracuse. Ohio 992-3272.
equipment of the late
con dition , Sl.OOO. Phone 9926INI E. Main, Pomeroy
, Canal Winchester attended the
5-I0-12tp
Albert Hartung may be seen
6329
at the home of Laura Mae
·
5-12-tic
TENANTS WILL
shower and were overnight lost and Found
Ntee, Rt . 3. Pomeroy,
BUY IT FOR YOU
guests of the Griffiths and her .
arytlme after 5 p.m. Phone POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy, This comfortable brick will
985-3863.
Parkvlew Kennels, Phone 992- actually cost you very little
t.her brother, Mr. and Mrs. LOST - Ohio license plate Z5-19-3IP
5443.
because your tenants will
Ri ha d
1 •·~d ill
462-F, between Chester and
8-15-lfc pay the bu lk ollhe bills. FOR
c r
orn~ 0 ''''" )'Y e,
Gavin Plant. If found call
GOLF carts and 0\Jmpslers,
, W. Va. were among those who
Hobart Newell 985-3344.
YOU - 2 large bedrooms,
gas and electric, for farm, BIG SALE, Reynolds' Flower
: attended ~ .shower.
____ _ _ _ _ _
s-_21 -Jtp
living
room, dining room ,
Shop In Mason , W. Va . has the
home and Industrial use. $100
•
Friends here have learned
biggest selection of flowers In utility , new gas forced air '
and up . Phone 1-875-2362 or 1: that James Watson who is LOST ON UPPER Leading
for Mother 's Day and also for furnace, nice yard, many
875-5118.
'
Creek Road. male black
Decoration Day . We can save other features. Your 2
5-19-61c
hospitalized In Indiana after
German Shepherd, name and
you money on your flowers. renters have nice apart· ·
falling 25 feet and severely
address plate on collar .
This Is our 20th year In the ments al so. $18,000.00.
• lnjured, Is slowly Improving.
~~";;~: Phone 742-3262 or HIDDEN Treasures Gift Shop. I business . You name it , we've Middleport
N. 3rd St.
am seeking hand -cratled
got II, 98c to.S6.50, any basket
ESPECIALLY
FOR YOU
lllr. and Mrs. Frank Dorst of - , - - -- - - - 5-.19-3tc
,.
Items of all kinds to be sold In
or spray as long as they last.
Long Bottom spent Mother 's ·
my gift shop on consignment
3
nice
bedrooms,
bath,
Elnora Reynolds, 773-5147.
dining
roorn
,
nice
front
porch
5-14-131p
Elnployment
Wanted
basis.
can
992-6710.
Day with her mother, Mrs.
5 1 9 31
overlooking river, garage,
Ethel Stout. '
·
WILL PAINT roots or houses, -~~-----:.·.:_: · P HOME grown tomato plants, nice neighborhood, storage
Earl McKenzie of Massillon
trim and cut trees: clean 2 HEAVY DUTY 6 hole
improved Mexican, Heinz building , good condition.
atti
cs; basements. etc. Phone Chevrolet rims . Phone 992and John Hayes of Chester
1350, large Su~rson lc and Just $6,900.00. Pomeroy.
949-3221.
2307.
Yellow
Jubilee:
als o ARE YOU 'LOOKING FOR
called on Mr. and Mrs. Fon
5-2-301c
5-19-31p
Mangoes
,
·Hot
Pep~rs and
Halsey.
Early Cabbage Plants. 500ft. Low upkeep, 2 bedrooms,
~~----~
nice
kitchen ,
WHIRLPOOL
gas
dryer.
will
'Spending Mother's Day with
above the Syracuse State bath,
Help Wanted
see
cheap
for
qu
ick
disposaL
basement,
large
lot. In
on
Rf
.
124,
Thomas
Park
1 Mr. and Mrs. Lindsey Lyons
Call
992-5631.
Pomeroy?
We
have
llaf
just
·
Hayman,
Syracuse,
Ohio.
and son, and Mrs. Eulah Swan ADULT housekeeper to live-in
5-19-61c
4-30-JOtc $6,995.00.
and care for 3 year old girl ;
were their chUdren, Mr, and
FOR LARGE FAMILY
modern home i n countrv ; . · .. .
Phone 992-3629, ask for Mary TWO early American cherry
Mrs. Lawrence Hasbargen and
MIDDLEPORT Near
beds, newly made wil h night
Shamblin.
pool
and
swimming
~
famUy and Mr. and Mrs.
5-16-61c
slands~7 gun rack cabinet.
playground,
5
bedrooms,
111-J
Phone 992 ~ 2936 .
~
Lindsey Lyons III and family _ _ _ _ _ __ ::_:
baths,
large
dining
room,
• of Parkersburg.
·
5-21 -Jtc
large living room , gerage
Mrs. Velma Cassidy went to
carport, PRICED AT
and
REGISTERED AKC While
the home of her daughter, Mr.
$12.800.00.
German
shepherd
pups,
7
and Mrs. Clem . Cooper of For Sale
IN REA~ ESTATE - YOUR
weeks old the lSI of June. 3
PLASTIC flowers. pols, sprays
Economy Tiller. 3'h h.p. B&amp;S
males. 3 females , closely
WISH IS OUR COMMAND.
PorUand.
and baskets . Across from
engine. Reg . 159.95
144,95
related to Rln Tin Tin.
WE WILL FIND WHAT YOU
" · Mr. and Mn. Everett
upper end of Syracuse Slate
Reserve yours now. John
WANT.
Calaway moved their trailer
Park. Mabel Pickens.
Sauvage, Syracu5e, 992-3272.
Turf Trim Mower. B&amp;S 3'h ·
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
S-22-61p
from Route 50 near Coolville to
5-21 -121c
h.p. engine. In carton 70.25 , ·
REALTOR
a lot they bought of Clifford
Dlal992-2259
. . PoMEROY
Longenett in the Arbaugh
If no onswer 992-2561
:9._ JackW. Corsey,Mgr.
LOTS or acreage on St. Rt\124,
_In Memory
·Addition.
I mi. South of Portland. Ileal
llirl
Phone 991-2111
calling on Gene Riggs who IN LOVING memory of Charles for trollers or building . Rich
second bottom ground. Call
W. Eblin, Jr., -who passed
ill convalescing from back
992-7330
or see Clem Cooper,
·away two years ago today,
Syracuse,
Ohio.
surgery were Phillip Boyles,
May 22. 1970: The month of
·
5-21 -61c
Mrs. Eulah Swan, Elizabeth
May Is here, And to us the
saddest of fhom all, and gr ief
Lyons and Lemar of Tuppers
and
shock to part with one we
pjalns, Mr. and Mrs. Lindsay
.loved so dear. Often to the
Lyo111 III and Mr. and Mrs.
grave we wander, with
.Lawrence Hasbargen of
flowers and tender care over
the one we loved so delirly
Parkersburg.
·
who sleeps so peaceful there .
Mr. and Mrs. Hobert Sadly missed by wife, Nellie
Whlletllde and granddaughter
Eblin ; children, Maxine
Dugan, Wendell Eblin,
of Parkersburg spent Mother's
Benton Eblin and Elizabeth
O.y with r.fn, Bessie Webster.
Osborn, and grandchildren.
5-22-llc
~

-=-------

t

------=-==-

424 Main St.

Spring •
Painting?

EARTH

SEE US
' EXPERIENCED IN
INTERIOR AND
EXTERIOR
.
PAINTING
Phone 742-5825
or 992-6576

R. I. OUBBELD
General Contractor

CLELAND
REALTY

c

-----=---

-------

SPECIAL
MOWERS

&amp; TILLERS

Real Estate For Sale
JOHN

WHITE

~EALTY

0
I

Contxt r"'_!Jilte
VERA EBWf·
tf2·J020

160 Coal Sf.

l

I ..

I

''

MOVING

.

EXPERT
.-

Wheel .A!i~ment· .
$5.55

On M,ost Ameri.~n

'l.J l tn ., lOlA,

C:ao.·

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Ho.!ne- &amp; Auto
Opon1Til5
Mondaythru Salurdly
· 606 E. Main, Pomeroy, Q.

2!0 Lincoln St.
Middleport, Qtio
Dba. Anthony Plumbing
Wt have a comptelt Homo
Mointenance Ser.vlce the
year oraund. No matter who!
. your need. Complete root or
spouting repair. hiltrlor or
exterior carpantry. Coiling
lilt ond Paneling and Siding.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Haallng.
•
Day Number 992-25!0
We have 24, hr. emorgency

YOU WANT ME TO SUSl'LL EVEN PA'i
CONTRACT MY COLLEGE YOU FOR LS.Tf!NG
AND UN IVI'RSITY
MS PO rTJ
Re55AitGfl
vou ~ f i __o--

lo. • TJol.

U . '-1 OH.

WE ro-J'r CAl&lt;£ 'M-lAT
111E SI!ON 6A'I6 ...

. '

•

Dozer &amp; ·End loader .tork,
ponds, basement, . land·
scaplng. We have 2 sill
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract.
Free Estimates. · We also
haul
fill dirt,· lop soil. Dump
!
trucks and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
aller 7 P-111· or phone 9925\ 32.

I

.J

&amp;·.PWMBING CO.

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabr)c Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. weshar~n s~-~~ft'.:
;;::-:-::::-::-::-::--::-::-_:.::
READY-MIX
CONCRETE
de II vered r lghl to your
pro/eel. Fast and easy. Free
est mates. Phone 992 _3284 ..
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co .,
Middleport, Ohio.

VOU'r.L PAV ME FOR
LETT&lt; NG- YOU PO MY
RESEARCH WORK 1

TAKE 'tOt.IR WIFE o..rr
OF '!Ho\T mASH CAN !

VASSAR, RA(&gt;CLIFF/:.1
· WELLESLEY, 8RVN
MAWR, BARNARD ...

1

service.

742-3947
99!-S803
' 898 742-4761
We an fully in•urO!!

,

--

From fhe largest
Bulldozer Radiator to the '
Smqllest Healer Core.
· · Nathan Biggs
· Radlotor Spoc:ialist
CA!t&amp; TO PU!tCHASE
ONii' OF THE'51i'

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS.. INC.
Ph. "2·2174

8EAU'TIFUL CIIAVA'TS,
COUU'NOII: ?

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

f' ,., •••• , .....,, ..

TERMITES · · TERMITES
/JIRPIEFINOS JfER PIET AGONIZWGLY
DIFFICULT 7D STICK 70.

Get Rid of Thlm
Will do any average si_n glt
dwelling for

I DREAMT I WA~
EATING A GIANT
MA~HMALLOW...

IF I DON'T 5NEAK
DOWN6TAIR6 FOR

'149.50

A SNACK

I'M

GOING TOGO
8ANANA5!

5-Year Written Guarantee.
Call 614-94t-3511, If no ancoli 614-452-3158.
·Y.Cill EXTERMINATION
l2l'fh lid St.
R
.__ _;.:•:;•:::ln::e:!.'.:Oh:::·'::
'o_ _ _..J
·
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
Service. Phone 992-2522.
_ _ _ _ _ _ __:_6_:
·10-lfc
swe~,

::-:-:::-:-:-:-:----....:.6_- 30·
:: tfc 0' DELL WHEE L all g nmen I'

Midc!teporf

PAGEVILLE
3
bedroom, bath , home,
garage.
large
l ·
shaped porch. home
has
paneling
and
carpet. located on 1112
acres 4 all , hr!lel / ' in
sere!le', rural com munity, . 1'0' minutes
from Rutland. Has
many varieties of fruit
trees - $7,950.

BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
located at Crossroads, Rl . 124..
Septic tanks Installed George
Compl.ele front end service,'
(Bill) Pullins . Phone
2478 _ tune up and brake service.
Wheels balanced elec4_25.tfc
';;;:-::~---,-:-:-:-:-.:.:::_
Iron Icall y.
AII
w or k
DOZER and back· hoe work, guaranteed .
Reasonable .
ponds and septic tanks; B &amp; K rates . Phone 992-3213.
Excavating, Phone 992-5367.
7-27-ttc
Dick Karr , Jr.
5-21-lfc AUTOMOBILE; Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
BACt&lt;HOE and dozer' work.
aperator;'l ncen .. ? Call 992Septlc tanks Installed. Call
2966. ·
Bob or Roger Jeffers 992-3525 - - - - - - - - -6·_:15-ttc
or 992-5232.
:
Tree
Service,
5-19-121c EXPERT
trimming and removal Richard Hayman , phone 667ROOF paint ing and minor
3041
.
repair. For estrmates call992-1-23-JO!p
2239.

m.

One of Pomeroy's
:---:-:-::---....:5·.:.:14-6fc SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
finest
homes ,
3
Sanitation. Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
WILL do ' noiuse root and barn
bedrooms, 1'12 baths,
662-3035. . '
pointing ; Interior painting ;
2·12-lfc
free estimates; phone 992full, dry basement,
7085.
every room including
SEPTIC TANKS- C
-:-:L-E-AN
- ED
5-9-JO!c REASONABLE rates . Ph. 446kitchen and both baths
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell ,
Re
-_a-:-c)E=-s-:ta::te-=
F,...or-:::
Silt
,;..:.:.
_
have carpeting; an · . '"
Owner &amp; operator .
lique Satin drapes ; air - HOUSE , 104 Spring Ave .•
5-12-ttc
Pomeroy. Reasonable. Can be
conditioning and many
seen on weekends only .
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
other items stay with
Robert Russell .
Complete Service
5-21-lfc
house - $17,000.
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford
- -- - - - - - = -5-1-lfc
-

-----...:...:.:

?.1

.I.. \ \

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker
110 Mechanic Street

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
NEW LISTING
POMEROY - Nice 2 bedrooms, bath, gas forced air
furnace . Basement, garage. Only $10,500.00.
NEW LISTING
MIDDLEPORT - 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, nice kitchen with
bar, cook units , and garbage disposal. Full basement with
gerage and den. Under $25,000.00.
·
NEW LISTING
.
TUPPERS PLAINS - New 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, nice
kitchen with stove and refrigerator-freezer . Full
basement with garage. All electric. Less than $25,000.00.
NEW LISTING
95 ACRES - On good gravel road In Orange township .
Nearly 40 acres of meadow. All. minerals. Good a· room
house with modern bath, and nlce kllchen. Basement with
furnace. Asking $21,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT
RT. 7 BY-PASS - 4 bedrooms. l'h baths, cook units.
Electric heat. Large den (paneled) . Lots of closets. 4
acres of land . Want $27,500.00.

WELCOME NEWCOMERS - WE HAVE TEN NEW
. HOMES AND 25 OTHER PROPERTIES. YOUR CALL
WILL BE CDURTEOUSL Y ANSWERED.
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
992-3325 OR 992·2371

instrument

~E T~REW

TO GO AFTER 01~
MONEV • .--"'-1

12. River
of ·
Hades
13. Invalidate.
as a
law
14. Caper
15. Lady's
blouse
style
(2 wds. )

mecca

[or one
9. Prehis-

toric
memorial
stone

17. Farmer's

11. Former

22. Memora.. able day

her attorney

case

star, Gibson

30. Subse. quently

31. Semi-

I

precious
stone

32. Swedish
girl's
name

33. Australian

VUMEA

rx

marsupial

34. Start of
Poe's
~~Raven"

111r~TittCiok- Tr-

- ·~·-

III

~-RUf'VTEj

35. Turned to
the right
36. Any
astronaut
37. Voyage
~0. Espy ·

I (
RYMJLG

.

J

,....

rJ

30. Lawyer
(abbr.)
31. Mod

I

S•••rd•f•

Jumbl•o: NIWLY

meaning
"far gone''

(3 wds. )
31. Industrial
complex
31. Swerves
41. Albee's
"Tiny-"
n. Like a
Poe tale
More

current

Inside
Info

IL Y CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

r

how to work It:
AXYDLBAI\XR
Is LONGFELLOW ,'
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each da y the code letters are dilrerent.
·
CRYPTOQUOTES ·
KO

XPV

U K,O 0 YAY T'R Y

·

XPV

'

I YC~ YYT

NTPS

C EY .

Z Q Y J M VA Y •

TP C. XYC

C P . QKGY. ,-C EPHJM

HYACPT

IYDVT

'

Salunlo(~ Crypt..juote:. CONVERSATION IS AN ART IN (
WHICH A mAN liAS ALL MANKIND FOR COMPETITION.EMERSON
(II) 191~

\

TPC

EJGY

'

UPX

UP

Ki ng Frnturell Syndln.te, lne.)

IA~ON

POLLIN AUTUMN

An•werz Malee nofhi~f!/ii!-ANNUL

· phrase

JTU·

Now arranp the elrcW !etten

(AMwen l....,.w)

house

JT U

THEY DO LIKE
EACH OTHER.

I
r-==~~~;[~J~ii~~i~~~~~~:=:~M~U:~
I Pritltua:aiiiSWIIm . I [I I I 1 I I )

course

IN r.lfi(·OFF "NGi\POI!f ...

I

rX

u..---"-..L.-...1..1 29. Chow-

Ftoro, belhg plaintiff. flied her

17' 24 (5) 1' 8. 15, 22. 6t

Yetterday•, An1 w6

meaning
"happy"
2l.Fido's
friend
22. One
who
(suffix )
23. Ruby or
Sandra
2~. Poetic
word
25. Firmament
27. Gram'mati cal

tennis

Unscramble then r...r Jumbleo,
one lttter to tlll'h aquare, lo
form rour ordlnarr wordo,

26. Chil dren's
game
(3 wd s.)
28. Dinner

day ot April. 1972 Sheila M

Plolntlff

JJ&amp;M&amp;~;~,:: ..:!;t-'c ·

in44 B.C.

LEGAL NOTICE

J . 8 . O'Br!tn,

ca ke

7. Aleutian
island
8. Millard
·Fillmore,

musical

tor divorce from Mid Donald L.
Floro on the grounds of oross
neglect of dutr and extreme
crueltv ; pla lntl t further prlys
tor restoration of malden name
and other proper relief. Safdt
cause will be for hearing on or
after the 19th day of June, 1972.
Shtlll M . Flor:o ,

unit

19. Stay
at
anchor
20. Girl's
name

4. Veer
5. Iri sh
coun ty
6. Gamblers'

tool
18. L-ionel
Bart

Donald L. F,loro, whose last
known plact of residence 11
Apple Grove, R.R., Racine ,
Ohio, and whose present
whereabouts Is unknown , Is ,
her,bv notified that on the 6th '

(A)

YOU AND

'lOUR SISTER AND YOUR
MOTI.fER TO T~E WOLIIeS

name

2. Envy
and
sloth
3. Com mcal

10. Stringed

(5) 21, 22, 23, 3tc

Ohio, cue No. 15,041, proylng

:,

·r

16. Wasps
18. Electrical

I. Girl's

lian-

2720.

·

DOWN

· ACROSS
I. Afri~iltl
cobrjlli
5. AustrJI\o

'

LEGAL NOJICE
FDR SALE
Albert Hartung real estate,
house an8 garage In Charter
Oak Hollow off State Route 33,
to be sold to the highest bidder
at the office of O'Brien &amp;
0'8rlen, Attorney at Law, IOO'h
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio at
10:00 a .m. Wednesday , May 24,
1972, for not less than the ap·
praised value of $2,200.00. For
further Information call 992-

complaint against him as
defendant In the Court of •
Common Pleas , Meigs county

.;

0

-------

•
I

'

BRAND')(')( X

NO

;

"304 E. Main st.

Pt. PINnnt

IT ?

TRY SOME

&amp; CONSTRUCTION ·

'.

Pomeroy, otiio
Phone 992·3795
or Mason 773-5535

THAT STUFF IS
WEAKER'N
WELL WATER

All WEATHER ROOFING

Small Businesses

_PHONE 675-3628

• SHUX··

wuz

COFF .REME01( 'I EST IDDY.
BUT IT AIN'T DONE ME
GOOD

...

.,·-

Speclall~ing In

BEAUTIFUL selection flowers, SEE US FOR: Awnings, storm
baskets . and wreaths for
doors and windows, carports,
Memorial Day, Ct &lt;ff's Shoe
marquees, aluminum siding
Repair, Middleport , Oh io.
and railing. A. Jacob. sales
Open evenings .
representative . For free
estimates, phone Charles ,
5-2-23tc
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
Marine Sales
,,
3-2-ttl
MEIGS Boat Shop, Pearl Street,
Middleport ; pontoon boats,
pick up covers ; one used 19ft. CALL 949-2789 for auto body and
1-0, Phone 992 -5367, Dick
paint work. Also repair fiber
Karr , Jr .
glass boats, plus electric and
S-21 -61c gas welding . Stanley's
Custom Body Shop
5-19-3otc
Mobile Homes For Sale
·Air Conditioners
•Awnings
• Underpinning

.,

KEBLER'S
· BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE
'·

Complele line of office
tiiUipment, furniture &amp;
supplies . Typewriter &amp;
Addi119 Machine Repair.
Pick-up &amp; Delivery

20'

.

.

,....

.

SUPPLY

The · . .
·DaDy Sentinel ,-

..

-

PoiNT ofFICE
'

HIICK HACK

DOC GIVE ME SOME

'

'

'

For ·Sale. .

-------

,.
'
,.
''

1

'

price .

.."

reasonable . .Also - - - - -- - - -

....

'

19U CHEVELLE
5695
HT Cpe.: V-8 engine, std. _3 speed. good wide oval 1tires.
rodlo, beige flnish •.a popular model priced below market

.
Business Servtces

For Sale

OLD FURNITURE, di shes, HOOVER swee~r, used,good
clocks, brass beds, silver
condition, has attachments
'
dollars
or . compiete
S15. Phone 992-6517 . .
households. Write M. D. -'-- -- - - - -5__::_·
21 -llc
Miller, Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Call992-6271 .
ELECTROLUX vacuum
- : - - - - , - - --=-3-_::16-lfc
cleaner, used, good condition
with attachments $16.88
Phone 992-6517.
292 FORD truck motor. Good
5-21 -lfc

'
•'

For Sale

WHAT
KIND

t::::::::=~~;;a.,"~

'"

�•

-

..'II
t-'lbeDIIJy__.,u~y,O.,MaJ2Z,1t'IS '

•

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! SentinelCltts~ifieds Get Results
Pomeroy
Motor eo~

2 SillS
.Of

MIALilY

,,

- · · Wanted To Buy.

1969 CHEVROLET
.' $899
Biscayne .t1 dr., V-B, automatic/ pgwer steer ing, good tires.
Priced to please.

•

19U CHEVROLET
Impala Cpe .. 6 cyl. std. trans. Plenty to save here.
•.

,~

c on~itlon.

$699

Pomeroy Motor Co:'

-•

' •' .

'

i

: :U" X23" X .009

'

Aluminum .
·Sheets

OPEN EVI!S. 1.00 P.M.
f'J*I!IOY, 01110

12' or 14' truck bed. Call 667- NEW SEWING machine, 1972,
3338.
Zig Zag ·model in w~lnul
5-21-Jip
table. minor paint damage,
USED OFF.SET PLATES
S34.60 cash. Sews buttonholes,
'
HAVE. .
fancy stitches .and all . Terms
·'
MANY
USES.
..
available .. Trade accepted.
USED chest type freezer, 15 cu.
Phone 992-6517.
fl . or larger . Bashan
5-21-lfc
Volunteer Fire Dept. Phone
949-4609 or 949-3833.
5-21 -3tc SEWING MACHINE service.
clean, oil,· set tension $.4.99.
8 for_~1.00
.\
Special Electro -Grande
'
'' '
For Rent or Sale
Company. Phone 992-6517.
5-2~ -tfc
HOUSE IN Long Bottom, phone --A-------985-3529.
.
5-21 -lfc 1970 HONDA 175, like new
------condition . Phone 742-4423.
S-19-3tc
'
For Rent
111
Court
St.
TRAILER , Brown 's Trailer ALUMINUM boais, on coonty
Pomeroy,
Ohio
Park , Minersville, Ohio .
road 18. 150 yards west ol Rt.
..
Phone 992-3324.
' 33. Call 992 -6256. Lorenzo
Davis.
.
5-11 -lfc
5-19-301c SMALLEY' S Gift
Snap, ·
TRAILER spaces overlooking
Chester, Ohio. Have large
Pomeroy . Velma G. Zuspan .
assortment of flowers for all
phone Mason. 773-5750.
WE HAVE a nice selection of
occasions. Arrangements for
flowers for Decoration. 97c to
5 - 11 - 301~
Mother's Day ; pots and
$5.50 tor baskets. wreaths.
baskets for Memorial Day,.
99c and up. Phone 985-3537 .
2 BEDROOM mobile home, crosses. sprays. hearts,
R 1
Bibles. We have a lot of high
4-28-12tc

... .

·

.s

wANT ADs
INFORMATION
. OEADLINES

P.M. Day

Before Publication .

Monday Oeaclllne 9 a.m .

Cancellation·- Corrections
Will be acctpted untll9 a.m. for .

Day of Publication
REGULATIONS

Notice
YOUNG ' s Casual Catering ,
Evelyn ,Young of Racine, has

a different phone number

from that which Is in the
phone directory. The new

number Is 949-5656.

Tt]e Publisher reserves the

5-2 1-Jtc

r:.latt! .to edit or reject any ads. - - - - - - -- deemed

.• '
'·

~

oblectlonal.
The WANT TO earn extra . money
publllhtr will not be responsible and still have time for your

for more than one Incorrect
lnsortlon.
.
.
RATES
For Want Ad Service

family? Flexible hours. Car
and phone nece.ssary. Call
992-5113 any time.

cents per Word one Insert ion

-5

·
S-21 -tfc

Minimum Charge 75c

cents per word three p
consecutive Insertions.
IANO and organ lessons .
18 cents per · word s!x con Gerald Hoffner . Phone 99212

tecutlve Insertions .
25 Per Cent Discount on paid

ads and ads paid within IOdays.

.

....

..••

...
'
"

DF THANKS
I OBITUARY

CA~D

S1 .50 for SO word 'm inimum .
Etch additional word 2c .

BLIND ADS

Addltlonaj 25c
Advertisement .

Charge per

OFFICE HOURS
1:30 a.m. to ~ : 00 p.m. Da lly,

8 : 30 a. m .
Saturday .

tQ

12 : 00

Noon

..
'
•' '
~

~

Tuppers Plains
Society News
By Mn. Evelyn'Brlckles

3825.

5-21 -12tc

GARDENING Season Is now In
full swing and Bob's Market
In Mason, W. V~ . can offer

you the best variety selection
and the finest of quality in
Garden Plants in the Tri County area. This season, Bob
Is featuring Two new won-

derful tomato Hybrids In
Beller Boy and Hybrid Beef
Easter (Beef Steak type) ;
along with 13 other tomato

.

ac ne area. 10 miles above
Pomeroy. Phone 992-6329.

class flowers for all of our old
customers at a reasonable

5-1 2-lfc
price . Reynolds Flower Shop,
3 AND • ROOM furnished ~nd
:::"t~~~~~Va ., up l ear Driveunfurnished apartments . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:_5_:·
16-61c
Phone 992-5434.
·
_ _ _ _ _ _ __::.4·.:_12-lfc LOST brighl carpet colors
restore them with Blue
UNFURNISHED apartment,
Lustre .
Rent
electric
phone 992-2780 or 992-3432.
shampocer Sl. Ben Franklin
Store. 200 Main St.. Pomeroy,
- _ __ _ _ _ ___:5:_:·4-lfc
Ohio.
5-16-61c
NEW, 12 x 60, two bedroom - - - - - mobile home across from 1957 CHEVROLET 2'h ton
Bradbury School. Call 992- truck, tandem axle ; 1965
Yamaha -YDS-3, phone 6985308 or see Charles Lewis , 2nd
3290, Warren Reeves .
house south from Bradbury
5-16-6tc
School. Pets welcome .
5-5-lfc
____:
'66
FOR D. 390 engine,

_____

cruismat ic.

selections , a full line of

cabbage and pepper plants SMALL double wide trailer,
furnished , util ities paid, and·
and almost every flowering
annual from Asters to Zinnew 2 bedroom, all electric
nias. We also sell Garden
apartment , paneled, has
electric range. Phone 992-7384
seeds, onion sets and seed
or 992 .7133 _
_potatoes, for best quality and
5-21-31c
selection buy direct from the

transmi ss ion,

$135. Phone '949-4843.
5-21 -6tp'
_ __ _ _ _ _ _::..:::_
COAL. Limestone, Excelsior
sa 11 warks, E. Main St..
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891 ,
4-12-lfc

Complete mobile home
service - plus gigantic
display of mobile homes
always avall~ble at ...

Sunday School attendance at
. MILLER
grower . more tlian 600,000
the United Methodist Church
7
YEAR
OLD
Tennessee
Walker
plants grown annualy In our
mare, palomino. gentle but
~
was 68. Offering was $20.76.
greenhouses. Bob's Markel ..
MOBILE HOMES
spirited,
neck reins . John
•· • Worship atllmdance was 48
and Plant Sales, Mason, w. Auto Sales
1220 Washington Blvd.
Sauvage. Syracuse Oh io,
Va. 773-5308, near the
:: : with $1~ ~idlng fund of.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0 .
phone
992-3272.
Pomeroy - Ma ~on Bridge.
1967 CHEVROLET Impa la, 2
5-10-121p .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...J
ferlng .
door hardtop. R &amp; H.
••
,·
Mrs. Effie Pyles has moved
automatic transmission . very
x 10 MOBILE home. Phone
good . condition.
power MODERN walnut style stereo- 50247-2161.
"' from Silver Ridge to the Carl REGISTERED Appaloosa Stud
r
adio
,
4
speaker
sound
steering, call 742-5943.
,.
Barnhill
t h
Service, $50 Reg. mares. $40
5-19-4tc
5-19-31c system, 4 speed automtlc
proper Y ere.
Grade. Francis Benedum ,
changer.
Balance
$67.59.
Use
Paul Guthrie of Orange and
Phone 667 -3856.
budget terms. Call 992- CASH paid for all makes and
Mr. and Mrs. Ve'rl Tuttle
5-17-3otp M DODGE Truck, 400, 14 fl . flat our
models of mobile homes .
7085 .
dump , good tires. $1,200. 949, visited their son, Bob Tuttle, at .
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
5-l7-61c
3835.
1 RlworRI~• M•thod'
SAVEuptoonehalf. Brlngyo"r
4-13-lfc
~ -'1 - ~&gt;r &lt;::: ml , !B.\ -~ljosplta! .. , sic~ TV. to Chuck's TV Shop,
5 21
: I~ ··G~~~JI!!I~ ~!lncfay., Mr.
151 .~ult~nul Ave:, Pomeroy .
' ·Jic TWIN needle sewing machine
..
4-4-lfc 1966 CHEVELLE. super sport
1971 model In walnut stand. Real Estate F r Sale
: Ttit!ll!ls 'tli~i-efor 'ob8ervatlon .
console. V8 automat! • trans- All features bu ill-in to make
0
Mr
d
Mr
8
' i•
·Wedn
an sd · Oscar
' real
di Babcock CLELAND'S GR. EENHOUS".
"
mission. air conditioned,
fancy designs and do stretch RACINE - 6 room hOuse. bath.
• were
e ay nner guests
Memor ial Day Potted Plants, good condition. Phone ' 992 .
sewing. Also buttonholes, utility room , garage, $10,000;
of their foster son, Mr. and
75c up, Pansies. Petunias;
3511.
blind ~ems , etc. $43 .35 cash . phone 949-4195 .
• Mrs. Ray Justis of Succt!ss,
number
of
bedding
plants;
5-19-61c
price or terms available.
3-31 -lfc
I•
Phone 992-5641.
.,---------vegetable plants. Geraldine -:-----:-c---:::..:.:
Mrs. BIaln Taylor was
•
Cleland. E. Main Sf., Racine. 1964 CHEV~OLET random
5-17-6tc 4 ROOM house. furnished , with
:· : rushed to Camden Clark
5-16-lfc
live axles. $995 . Harold - - - - - -- - bath and running water, 5
~-~ Hospital Saturday with a
Brewer. Long Bottom, phone VACUUM cleaner. Electro acres good land . Call 299-6538
severe nose bleed but was PIANO tuning. Lane Daniels,
985-3554.
Hyg iene. new demonstrator
or write Ed Noon, 912 Oxley
May lOth thru June 25th.
5-21 -lfc
has all cleaning attachments
Rd. , Columbus, Ohio.
Phone 992-2082. Reference ~=-=:--:-:~---.:.:.
plus the new Electro Suds for
· 5-21 -Jip
returned home after treatment.
Elberfelds.
' INTER'NATIDNAL
pickup
shampooing carpel . Only
A bridal shower was given
5-16-121c
truck, ,I 1qo D, Charles
$27.50 cash price or terms ' NICE 2-sfory home with full •
Sa d
Goegleln , Flatwoods Rd .
available. Phone 992-5641.
basement, 2 lots, new forced
tur ay evening at the home BOAT LICENSE - for your
Phone 992-6636.
· _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 5-17-61c
air furnace . Near Pomeroy.
• of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
boat, - for your motor .
5-21 -3tc
Elementary School. Phone
• Griffith In honor of her niece
Available at Simon's Pick-AEARLY American stereo-radio
992-7384 to see.
11 -7-ffc
W. Main : 1965 DODGE
Cor net , good
Pair
Shoe Store.
and husband, Mr. and Mrs.
Pomeroy.
Oh io, 108
Phone
.
comb'ona t·oon, AM· FM radio. 4
992
Mike Anthony, Pakersburg.
condollon. M. C. Larrimore,
speaker sound system. 4
3930 _
Bridgeman Rd.. Syracuse. speed au_tomatl c changer.
• There were 22 In attendance
5-16-3otc
5-19-3tp
Balance S78.34. Use our
:
and the honored couple CAL
-_ _ _ __ __ _.::._::
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
L for free facial ana ap5 17 61
recelved many lovely gifts.
pli cation of famous Mink 011 For Sale
·_:_ · c
, Mrs. Griffith's brother, Mr.
Kosmellcs. Ann Sau va ge, GUN
: CAM PER. 16 fl . sleeps 6. good
' and Mrs. William Corns of
Syracuse. Ohio 992-3272.
equipment of the late
con dition , Sl.OOO. Phone 9926INI E. Main, Pomeroy
, Canal Winchester attended the
5-I0-12tp
Albert Hartung may be seen
6329
at the home of Laura Mae
·
5-12-tic
TENANTS WILL
shower and were overnight lost and Found
Ntee, Rt . 3. Pomeroy,
BUY IT FOR YOU
guests of the Griffiths and her .
arytlme after 5 p.m. Phone POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy, This comfortable brick will
985-3863.
Parkvlew Kennels, Phone 992- actually cost you very little
t.her brother, Mr. and Mrs. LOST - Ohio license plate Z5-19-3IP
5443.
because your tenants will
Ri ha d
1 •·~d ill
462-F, between Chester and
8-15-lfc pay the bu lk ollhe bills. FOR
c r
orn~ 0 ''''" )'Y e,
Gavin Plant. If found call
GOLF carts and 0\Jmpslers,
, W. Va. were among those who
Hobart Newell 985-3344.
YOU - 2 large bedrooms,
gas and electric, for farm, BIG SALE, Reynolds' Flower
: attended ~ .shower.
____ _ _ _ _ _
s-_21 -Jtp
living
room, dining room ,
Shop In Mason , W. Va . has the
home and Industrial use. $100
•
Friends here have learned
biggest selection of flowers In utility , new gas forced air '
and up . Phone 1-875-2362 or 1: that James Watson who is LOST ON UPPER Leading
for Mother 's Day and also for furnace, nice yard, many
875-5118.
'
Creek Road. male black
Decoration Day . We can save other features. Your 2
5-19-61c
hospitalized In Indiana after
German Shepherd, name and
you money on your flowers. renters have nice apart· ·
falling 25 feet and severely
address plate on collar .
This Is our 20th year In the ments al so. $18,000.00.
• lnjured, Is slowly Improving.
~~";;~: Phone 742-3262 or HIDDEN Treasures Gift Shop. I business . You name it , we've Middleport
N. 3rd St.
am seeking hand -cratled
got II, 98c to.S6.50, any basket
ESPECIALLY
FOR YOU
lllr. and Mrs. Frank Dorst of - , - - -- - - - 5-.19-3tc
,.
Items of all kinds to be sold In
or spray as long as they last.
Long Bottom spent Mother 's ·
my gift shop on consignment
3
nice
bedrooms,
bath,
Elnora Reynolds, 773-5147.
dining
roorn
,
nice
front
porch
5-14-131p
Elnployment
Wanted
basis.
can
992-6710.
Day with her mother, Mrs.
5 1 9 31
overlooking river, garage,
Ethel Stout. '
·
WILL PAINT roots or houses, -~~-----:.·.:_: · P HOME grown tomato plants, nice neighborhood, storage
Earl McKenzie of Massillon
trim and cut trees: clean 2 HEAVY DUTY 6 hole
improved Mexican, Heinz building , good condition.
atti
cs; basements. etc. Phone Chevrolet rims . Phone 992and John Hayes of Chester
1350, large Su~rson lc and Just $6,900.00. Pomeroy.
949-3221.
2307.
Yellow
Jubilee:
als o ARE YOU 'LOOKING FOR
called on Mr. and Mrs. Fon
5-2-301c
5-19-31p
Mangoes
,
·Hot
Pep~rs and
Halsey.
Early Cabbage Plants. 500ft. Low upkeep, 2 bedrooms,
~~----~
nice
kitchen ,
WHIRLPOOL
gas
dryer.
will
'Spending Mother's Day with
above the Syracuse State bath,
Help Wanted
see
cheap
for
qu
ick
disposaL
basement,
large
lot. In
on
Rf
.
124,
Thomas
Park
1 Mr. and Mrs. Lindsey Lyons
Call
992-5631.
Pomeroy?
We
have
llaf
just
·
Hayman,
Syracuse,
Ohio.
and son, and Mrs. Eulah Swan ADULT housekeeper to live-in
5-19-61c
4-30-JOtc $6,995.00.
and care for 3 year old girl ;
were their chUdren, Mr, and
FOR LARGE FAMILY
modern home i n countrv ; . · .. .
Phone 992-3629, ask for Mary TWO early American cherry
Mrs. Lawrence Hasbargen and
MIDDLEPORT Near
beds, newly made wil h night
Shamblin.
pool
and
swimming
~
famUy and Mr. and Mrs.
5-16-61c
slands~7 gun rack cabinet.
playground,
5
bedrooms,
111-J
Phone 992 ~ 2936 .
~
Lindsey Lyons III and family _ _ _ _ _ __ ::_:
baths,
large
dining
room,
• of Parkersburg.
·
5-21 -Jtc
large living room , gerage
Mrs. Velma Cassidy went to
carport, PRICED AT
and
REGISTERED AKC While
the home of her daughter, Mr.
$12.800.00.
German
shepherd
pups,
7
and Mrs. Clem . Cooper of For Sale
IN REA~ ESTATE - YOUR
weeks old the lSI of June. 3
PLASTIC flowers. pols, sprays
Economy Tiller. 3'h h.p. B&amp;S
males. 3 females , closely
WISH IS OUR COMMAND.
PorUand.
and baskets . Across from
engine. Reg . 159.95
144,95
related to Rln Tin Tin.
WE WILL FIND WHAT YOU
" · Mr. and Mn. Everett
upper end of Syracuse Slate
Reserve yours now. John
WANT.
Calaway moved their trailer
Park. Mabel Pickens.
Sauvage, Syracu5e, 992-3272.
Turf Trim Mower. B&amp;S 3'h ·
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
S-22-61p
from Route 50 near Coolville to
5-21 -121c
h.p. engine. In carton 70.25 , ·
REALTOR
a lot they bought of Clifford
Dlal992-2259
. . PoMEROY
Longenett in the Arbaugh
If no onswer 992-2561
:9._ JackW. Corsey,Mgr.
LOTS or acreage on St. Rt\124,
_In Memory
·Addition.
I mi. South of Portland. Ileal
llirl
Phone 991-2111
calling on Gene Riggs who IN LOVING memory of Charles for trollers or building . Rich
second bottom ground. Call
W. Eblin, Jr., -who passed
ill convalescing from back
992-7330
or see Clem Cooper,
·away two years ago today,
Syracuse,
Ohio.
surgery were Phillip Boyles,
May 22. 1970: The month of
·
5-21 -61c
Mrs. Eulah Swan, Elizabeth
May Is here, And to us the
saddest of fhom all, and gr ief
Lyons and Lemar of Tuppers
and
shock to part with one we
pjalns, Mr. and Mrs. Lindsay
.loved so dear. Often to the
Lyo111 III and Mr. and Mrs.
grave we wander, with
.Lawrence Hasbargen of
flowers and tender care over
the one we loved so delirly
Parkersburg.
·
who sleeps so peaceful there .
Mr. and Mrs. Hobert Sadly missed by wife, Nellie
Whlletllde and granddaughter
Eblin ; children, Maxine
Dugan, Wendell Eblin,
of Parkersburg spent Mother's
Benton Eblin and Elizabeth
O.y with r.fn, Bessie Webster.
Osborn, and grandchildren.
5-22-llc
~

-=-------

t

------=-==-

424 Main St.

Spring •
Painting?

EARTH

SEE US
' EXPERIENCED IN
INTERIOR AND
EXTERIOR
.
PAINTING
Phone 742-5825
or 992-6576

R. I. OUBBELD
General Contractor

CLELAND
REALTY

c

-----=---

-------

SPECIAL
MOWERS

&amp; TILLERS

Real Estate For Sale
JOHN

WHITE

~EALTY

0
I

Contxt r"'_!Jilte
VERA EBWf·
tf2·J020

160 Coal Sf.

l

I ..

I

''

MOVING

.

EXPERT
.-

Wheel .A!i~ment· .
$5.55

On M,ost Ameri.~n

'l.J l tn ., lOlA,

C:ao.·

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Ho.!ne- &amp; Auto
Opon1Til5
Mondaythru Salurdly
· 606 E. Main, Pomeroy, Q.

2!0 Lincoln St.
Middleport, Qtio
Dba. Anthony Plumbing
Wt have a comptelt Homo
Mointenance Ser.vlce the
year oraund. No matter who!
. your need. Complete root or
spouting repair. hiltrlor or
exterior carpantry. Coiling
lilt ond Paneling and Siding.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Haallng.
•
Day Number 992-25!0
We have 24, hr. emorgency

YOU WANT ME TO SUSl'LL EVEN PA'i
CONTRACT MY COLLEGE YOU FOR LS.Tf!NG
AND UN IVI'RSITY
MS PO rTJ
Re55AitGfl
vou ~ f i __o--

lo. • TJol.

U . '-1 OH.

WE ro-J'r CAl&lt;£ 'M-lAT
111E SI!ON 6A'I6 ...

. '

•

Dozer &amp; ·End loader .tork,
ponds, basement, . land·
scaplng. We have 2 sill
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract.
Free Estimates. · We also
haul
fill dirt,· lop soil. Dump
!
trucks and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
aller 7 P-111· or phone 9925\ 32.

I

.J

&amp;·.PWMBING CO.

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabr)c Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. weshar~n s~-~~ft'.:
;;::-:-::::-::-::-::--::-::-_:.::
READY-MIX
CONCRETE
de II vered r lghl to your
pro/eel. Fast and easy. Free
est mates. Phone 992 _3284 ..
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co .,
Middleport, Ohio.

VOU'r.L PAV ME FOR
LETT&lt; NG- YOU PO MY
RESEARCH WORK 1

TAKE 'tOt.IR WIFE o..rr
OF '!Ho\T mASH CAN !

VASSAR, RA(&gt;CLIFF/:.1
· WELLESLEY, 8RVN
MAWR, BARNARD ...

1

service.

742-3947
99!-S803
' 898 742-4761
We an fully in•urO!!

,

--

From fhe largest
Bulldozer Radiator to the '
Smqllest Healer Core.
· · Nathan Biggs
· Radlotor Spoc:ialist
CA!t&amp; TO PU!tCHASE
ONii' OF THE'51i'

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS.. INC.
Ph. "2·2174

8EAU'TIFUL CIIAVA'TS,
COUU'NOII: ?

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

f' ,., •••• , .....,, ..

TERMITES · · TERMITES
/JIRPIEFINOS JfER PIET AGONIZWGLY
DIFFICULT 7D STICK 70.

Get Rid of Thlm
Will do any average si_n glt
dwelling for

I DREAMT I WA~
EATING A GIANT
MA~HMALLOW...

IF I DON'T 5NEAK
DOWN6TAIR6 FOR

'149.50

A SNACK

I'M

GOING TOGO
8ANANA5!

5-Year Written Guarantee.
Call 614-94t-3511, If no ancoli 614-452-3158.
·Y.Cill EXTERMINATION
l2l'fh lid St.
R
.__ _;.:•:;•:::ln::e:!.'.:Oh:::·'::
'o_ _ _..J
·
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
Service. Phone 992-2522.
_ _ _ _ _ _ __:_6_:
·10-lfc
swe~,

::-:-:::-:-:-:-:----....:.6_- 30·
:: tfc 0' DELL WHEE L all g nmen I'

Midc!teporf

PAGEVILLE
3
bedroom, bath , home,
garage.
large
l ·
shaped porch. home
has
paneling
and
carpet. located on 1112
acres 4 all , hr!lel / ' in
sere!le', rural com munity, . 1'0' minutes
from Rutland. Has
many varieties of fruit
trees - $7,950.

BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
located at Crossroads, Rl . 124..
Septic tanks Installed George
Compl.ele front end service,'
(Bill) Pullins . Phone
2478 _ tune up and brake service.
Wheels balanced elec4_25.tfc
';;;:-::~---,-:-:-:-:-.:.:::_
Iron Icall y.
AII
w or k
DOZER and back· hoe work, guaranteed .
Reasonable .
ponds and septic tanks; B &amp; K rates . Phone 992-3213.
Excavating, Phone 992-5367.
7-27-ttc
Dick Karr , Jr.
5-21-lfc AUTOMOBILE; Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
BACt&lt;HOE and dozer' work.
aperator;'l ncen .. ? Call 992Septlc tanks Installed. Call
2966. ·
Bob or Roger Jeffers 992-3525 - - - - - - - - -6·_:15-ttc
or 992-5232.
:
Tree
Service,
5-19-121c EXPERT
trimming and removal Richard Hayman , phone 667ROOF paint ing and minor
3041
.
repair. For estrmates call992-1-23-JO!p
2239.

m.

One of Pomeroy's
:---:-:-::---....:5·.:.:14-6fc SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
finest
homes ,
3
Sanitation. Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
WILL do ' noiuse root and barn
bedrooms, 1'12 baths,
662-3035. . '
pointing ; Interior painting ;
2·12-lfc
free estimates; phone 992full, dry basement,
7085.
every room including
SEPTIC TANKS- C
-:-:L-E-AN
- ED
5-9-JO!c REASONABLE rates . Ph. 446kitchen and both baths
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell ,
Re
-_a-:-c)E=-s-:ta::te-=
F,...or-:::
Silt
,;..:.:.
_
have carpeting; an · . '"
Owner &amp; operator .
lique Satin drapes ; air - HOUSE , 104 Spring Ave .•
5-12-ttc
Pomeroy. Reasonable. Can be
conditioning and many
seen on weekends only .
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
other items stay with
Robert Russell .
Complete Service
5-21-lfc
house - $17,000.
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford
- -- - - - - - = -5-1-lfc
-

-----...:...:.:

?.1

.I.. \ \

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker
110 Mechanic Street

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
NEW LISTING
POMEROY - Nice 2 bedrooms, bath, gas forced air
furnace . Basement, garage. Only $10,500.00.
NEW LISTING
MIDDLEPORT - 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, nice kitchen with
bar, cook units , and garbage disposal. Full basement with
gerage and den. Under $25,000.00.
·
NEW LISTING
.
TUPPERS PLAINS - New 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, nice
kitchen with stove and refrigerator-freezer . Full
basement with garage. All electric. Less than $25,000.00.
NEW LISTING
95 ACRES - On good gravel road In Orange township .
Nearly 40 acres of meadow. All. minerals. Good a· room
house with modern bath, and nlce kllchen. Basement with
furnace. Asking $21,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT
RT. 7 BY-PASS - 4 bedrooms. l'h baths, cook units.
Electric heat. Large den (paneled) . Lots of closets. 4
acres of land . Want $27,500.00.

WELCOME NEWCOMERS - WE HAVE TEN NEW
. HOMES AND 25 OTHER PROPERTIES. YOUR CALL
WILL BE CDURTEOUSL Y ANSWERED.
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
992-3325 OR 992·2371

instrument

~E T~REW

TO GO AFTER 01~
MONEV • .--"'-1

12. River
of ·
Hades
13. Invalidate.
as a
law
14. Caper
15. Lady's
blouse
style
(2 wds. )

mecca

[or one
9. Prehis-

toric
memorial
stone

17. Farmer's

11. Former

22. Memora.. able day

her attorney

case

star, Gibson

30. Subse. quently

31. Semi-

I

precious
stone

32. Swedish
girl's
name

33. Australian

VUMEA

rx

marsupial

34. Start of
Poe's
~~Raven"

111r~TittCiok- Tr-

- ·~·-

III

~-RUf'VTEj

35. Turned to
the right
36. Any
astronaut
37. Voyage
~0. Espy ·

I (
RYMJLG

.

J

,....

rJ

30. Lawyer
(abbr.)
31. Mod

I

S•••rd•f•

Jumbl•o: NIWLY

meaning
"far gone''

(3 wds. )
31. Industrial
complex
31. Swerves
41. Albee's
"Tiny-"
n. Like a
Poe tale
More

current

Inside
Info

IL Y CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

r

how to work It:
AXYDLBAI\XR
Is LONGFELLOW ,'
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each da y the code letters are dilrerent.
·
CRYPTOQUOTES ·
KO

XPV

U K,O 0 YAY T'R Y

·

XPV

'

I YC~ YYT

NTPS

C EY .

Z Q Y J M VA Y •

TP C. XYC

C P . QKGY. ,-C EPHJM

HYACPT

IYDVT

'

Salunlo(~ Crypt..juote:. CONVERSATION IS AN ART IN (
WHICH A mAN liAS ALL MANKIND FOR COMPETITION.EMERSON
(II) 191~

\

TPC

EJGY

'

UPX

UP

Ki ng Frnturell Syndln.te, lne.)

IA~ON

POLLIN AUTUMN

An•werz Malee nofhi~f!/ii!-ANNUL

· phrase

JTU·

Now arranp the elrcW !etten

(AMwen l....,.w)

house

JT U

THEY DO LIKE
EACH OTHER.

I
r-==~~~;[~J~ii~~i~~~~~~:=:~M~U:~
I Pritltua:aiiiSWIIm . I [I I I 1 I I )

course

IN r.lfi(·OFF "NGi\POI!f ...

I

rX

u..---"-..L.-...1..1 29. Chow-

Ftoro, belhg plaintiff. flied her

17' 24 (5) 1' 8. 15, 22. 6t

Yetterday•, An1 w6

meaning
"happy"
2l.Fido's
friend
22. One
who
(suffix )
23. Ruby or
Sandra
2~. Poetic
word
25. Firmament
27. Gram'mati cal

tennis

Unscramble then r...r Jumbleo,
one lttter to tlll'h aquare, lo
form rour ordlnarr wordo,

26. Chil dren's
game
(3 wd s.)
28. Dinner

day ot April. 1972 Sheila M

Plolntlff

JJ&amp;M&amp;~;~,:: ..:!;t-'c ·

in44 B.C.

LEGAL NOTICE

J . 8 . O'Br!tn,

ca ke

7. Aleutian
island
8. Millard
·Fillmore,

musical

tor divorce from Mid Donald L.
Floro on the grounds of oross
neglect of dutr and extreme
crueltv ; pla lntl t further prlys
tor restoration of malden name
and other proper relief. Safdt
cause will be for hearing on or
after the 19th day of June, 1972.
Shtlll M . Flor:o ,

unit

19. Stay
at
anchor
20. Girl's
name

4. Veer
5. Iri sh
coun ty
6. Gamblers'

tool
18. L-ionel
Bart

Donald L. F,loro, whose last
known plact of residence 11
Apple Grove, R.R., Racine ,
Ohio, and whose present
whereabouts Is unknown , Is ,
her,bv notified that on the 6th '

(A)

YOU AND

'lOUR SISTER AND YOUR
MOTI.fER TO T~E WOLIIeS

name

2. Envy
and
sloth
3. Com mcal

10. Stringed

(5) 21, 22, 23, 3tc

Ohio, cue No. 15,041, proylng

:,

·r

16. Wasps
18. Electrical

I. Girl's

lian-

2720.

·

DOWN

· ACROSS
I. Afri~iltl
cobrjlli
5. AustrJI\o

'

LEGAL NOJICE
FDR SALE
Albert Hartung real estate,
house an8 garage In Charter
Oak Hollow off State Route 33,
to be sold to the highest bidder
at the office of O'Brien &amp;
0'8rlen, Attorney at Law, IOO'h
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio at
10:00 a .m. Wednesday , May 24,
1972, for not less than the ap·
praised value of $2,200.00. For
further Information call 992-

complaint against him as
defendant In the Court of •
Common Pleas , Meigs county

.;

0

-------

•
I

'

BRAND')(')( X

NO

;

"304 E. Main st.

Pt. PINnnt

IT ?

TRY SOME

&amp; CONSTRUCTION ·

'.

Pomeroy, otiio
Phone 992·3795
or Mason 773-5535

THAT STUFF IS
WEAKER'N
WELL WATER

All WEATHER ROOFING

Small Businesses

_PHONE 675-3628

• SHUX··

wuz

COFF .REME01( 'I EST IDDY.
BUT IT AIN'T DONE ME
GOOD

...

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Speclall~ing In

BEAUTIFUL selection flowers, SEE US FOR: Awnings, storm
baskets . and wreaths for
doors and windows, carports,
Memorial Day, Ct &lt;ff's Shoe
marquees, aluminum siding
Repair, Middleport , Oh io.
and railing. A. Jacob. sales
Open evenings .
representative . For free
estimates, phone Charles ,
5-2-23tc
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
Marine Sales
,,
3-2-ttl
MEIGS Boat Shop, Pearl Street,
Middleport ; pontoon boats,
pick up covers ; one used 19ft. CALL 949-2789 for auto body and
1-0, Phone 992 -5367, Dick
paint work. Also repair fiber
Karr , Jr .
glass boats, plus electric and
S-21 -61c gas welding . Stanley's
Custom Body Shop
5-19-3otc
Mobile Homes For Sale
·Air Conditioners
•Awnings
• Underpinning

.,

KEBLER'S
· BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE
'·

Complele line of office
tiiUipment, furniture &amp;
supplies . Typewriter &amp;
Addi119 Machine Repair.
Pick-up &amp; Delivery

20'

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SUPPLY

The · . .
·DaDy Sentinel ,-

..

-

PoiNT ofFICE
'

HIICK HACK

DOC GIVE ME SOME

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For ·Sale. .

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,.
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1

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price .

.."

reasonable . .Also - - - - -- - - -

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19U CHEVELLE
5695
HT Cpe.: V-8 engine, std. _3 speed. good wide oval 1tires.
rodlo, beige flnish •.a popular model priced below market

.
Business Servtces

For Sale

OLD FURNITURE, di shes, HOOVER swee~r, used,good
clocks, brass beds, silver
condition, has attachments
'
dollars
or . compiete
S15. Phone 992-6517 . .
households. Write M. D. -'-- -- - - - -5__::_·
21 -llc
Miller, Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Call992-6271 .
ELECTROLUX vacuum
- : - - - - , - - --=-3-_::16-lfc
cleaner, used, good condition
with attachments $16.88
Phone 992-6517.
292 FORD truck motor. Good
5-21 -lfc

'
•'

For Sale

WHAT
KIND

t::::::::=~~;;a.,"~

'"

�-

8- n.e Daily Sentinel, Mldcleport-l'omllroy, 0.,- ~ tm

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Moscow

'l'be 141tol' ot lowa,.JMl"
la.el'01 Qbit W I Ae

. (Contin~ed from page 1)
a.m. EDT Tuesday. Mrs.
Nixon's Tuesday schedple ·
caUed for a visit to a secondary
school, a ride on the Moscow
subway and a tea.
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The Daily Sentinel
POMroy 1 Ob 1o .

Letter from Libya (it says) Asks Invitation To
Arabian Frogs to Participate in Annual Frog

California.
Through cultural osmosis
from homo sapiens our bullfrog
believes his s,wamp to be the
best blankety blank swamp
south of the Dayton •
Chiilicothe • Lancaster •
Wheeling, W. Va. line, give or
lake a bothersome water snake
or two.
Needless to say, such a closeknit frog society develops,
through many generations, a
wide variety of real or
imagined ailments. Arthritic
joints in the jumping legs,
nearsighledness (caused by too
much insect shooting); all the
ordinary frog neurosis such as
short' lemper, jealousy of the
frog under the next twig, the
pressure of maintaining food
on the leaf, the absolute

May 15, 1972 conducted along the Ohio River the Big Jumps here .
Abdul !sam K. Jaroushie
in Pomeroy, Ohio June 17-18
In brief, be has concluded it
next.
would amount to an unfair
Director, Halitosis Project
Reported Sunday
Tripoli, Libyan Arab Republic
Dr. Crow, whose credentials ·advantage to your frogs, which
go back to his early days when cannot he pennitted. I make
Pomeroy polic~ investigated
he gained recognition as ti my case:
two accidents Sunday, the first Dear Sir:
This
is
to
inform
you
that
we
frogoiist
with an In-depth study
A foreign frog is unschooled
at 4:45 p. m. on West Main St.
have
consulted
with
our
local
conducted
in
the
swamps
in
the Weslern Culture that has
when a ca r driven by Perry
Beebe, 20,,Cheshire, struck the eminent frog internist (Dr.)· centered in the Great Bend produced the pure strain now
rear of a car driven by Earl Fred W. Crow Jr. on the matter area of the magnificent Ohio populating every available
Phelps, 20, Pomeroy. Phelps of permitting frogs with· River Valley, has taken a marsh in Appalachia, U.S.A.,
was stopped in his lane of out halitosis to enter the sanguine view of your proposal and here and there in a far
traffic. Beebe was cited to International Frog Jumps to be to enter de-haiitosed frogs in western stale we call
Mayor 's Court on an assured
Services Sef for
clear distance charge .
Damages to both vehicles were
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Richard Davis .
medium.
Ohio Extended Outlook (Continued from Page 1) '
At 9:45p. m. Sundsy on East
Wednesdsy
through Friday:
Funeral services for Richard
Main St. medium damages and walt at least four more years when the atmosphere In F. (Rock) Davis, 59, Pomeroy
Warm Wednesday turning
were reported to a car driven America might have settled. "!don't want to see him (Kennedy) police department dispatcher
cooler with a chance of
by Cynthia Smith , 18, Pomeroy run," Tunney !IBid. "It's tdo dsngerous. He can afford to wait. who died at his Union Ave. ,
showers or thundershowers
when she pulled in to park and I'm speaking as a friend, not as a polltidan." Opponents can home Fridsy, will be held at 1 Thursday and Friday. Highs
struck a utility pole. She was count on help from another buUt.Jn delay - a recess for the p.m. Tuesdsy at the Ewing · from the upper 70s to middle
cited to Mayor's Court for campaign season.
80s Wednesday lowering to
Funeral Home. Mr. Davis was
driving without a license, and
The bargaining bill, sponsored by Rep. B. F. Silk, D.calif., preceded in death by his wife,
the upper &amp;Gs to middle 70s
Thomas Smith, Pomeroy, was draws most of Its support from the American Fann Bureau Neva, in 1967.
by Friday. Overnight lows
cited to court for permitting an Federation and a number of western fann co-op II'Oups. The
mostly
in the 60s.
Surviving are a son, Charles
unlicensed driver to operate legislation would require processors and other farm product R.
Davis,
Scottsburg,
his motor vehicle.
handlers to negotiate "in good faith" with associations Alabama; a brother, Harold, of
representing farm producers - but would not require the two Columbus, and. three grandsides to reach agreement.
children, Tammie, Lisa and
Nell Covert, 78
Totnril:•. f!lr. pavis was a
WASHINGTON - TIME MAY BE RUNNING out for veteran of World War' II.
Dies in Florida
Officiating at serv.ices will be
Congressional action this year on a controversial , bill to give
farmers more bargaining power In dealing with proce!IIOrs. The Mr. Hoyt Allen, pastor of the
Mrs. Nell Covert, 78, forTonight ·&amp; Tuesday
Pomeroy
Church
of'
Christ.
year
1sn
't
.half
over
yet.
But
sponsors
of
tbe
measure
may
not
be
merly of Middleport, of Fort
MaV22-23
able to shove it past its first big hurdle - a House Agriculture Burial will be in Beech Grove Myers, Fla., died Sundsy in
subcommittee - unW mid or late June at the earliest, and op- Cemetery. Friends may call at Battle Creek, Mich.
BILLY JACK
ponents can count on help from another built-In delay _:_ a recess tbe funeral home any time.
Mrs. Covert was born March
(Technicolor)
Tom Laughlin
15, 1894, in Huntington, W. Va.,
for the campaign season.
Delores Taylor
the daughler of the late Rev.
The bargaining bill, sponsored by Rep. B. F. Slsk, [).Calif.,
( GP)
Veterans Memorial Hospital Charle.s and Sian! Harrison
draws
niost
of
Its
support
from
the
American
Fann
Bureau
Feature and CartDons
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
SHOW STARTS I P.M.
Federation and a number of western farm co-op ll'oups. The - Ruth Hood, Middleport; Ramsey. She was preceded in
legilllatlon would require processors and other farm product Kenneth Turley, Mason; death also by her husband,
handlers to negotiate "In good faith" with associaliollll Dorothy Lawson, Minersville; Arthur W. Covert, in 54, who
owned and operated the Covert
representing farm producers - but would not require the two Willa Jacobs, Mason.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES Baking Co., in Middleport a
sides to reach agreement.
MASON DRIVE-IN
_ Thelma Fitzpatrick, Keith number of years. A daughter,
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Mattox, Mildred Gilkey, who died in infancy and a
WARNING
TAKEN TO HOLZER
Corbett Cleek, Vera Hayman. brother also preceded Mrs.
The final dsy for the pur·
The Middleport E-R unit
SUNDAY ADMISSIO~!S - Covert in death.
Tonig~l &amp; Tuesday
answered a call to Route 554 chase of tickets for the annual Retha McCoy, Racine; Gerald
Surviving are a daughter,
May 19·23
near Cheshire at 1:48 a.m. reunion of the Pomeroy High Swisher, Bidwell ; Dorsel Mrs . Kenneth (Mayme)
Sunday for Gerald Swisher who School Alumni Assn. is Thurs- Biggs, Pomeroy; Aries D. Boster, GaiUpolis; two sons,
Double Feature Program
was suffering chest pains. He dsy. Tickets may be purchased
Jack W. and Wayland F.
" HOUSE OF
was taken to Veterans 1 at ;hapman Shoes, Swisher Simpson, MiddlepOrt; Claude Covert, both of Battle Creek; a
MISSING GIRLS"
Roy, Racine; Shirley A. Wolfe, sister, Mrs. Mayme Rainey,
Memorial Hospital where he and Lohse Drug Store and the Racine;
- PLU5Fred Klein, Pomeroy;
was admitted, then dismissed New York Clothing House.
"PLAYMATES"
Mary Stevens, Middleport ; Fort Myers; a brother, Luther
later the same day.
Bernadine Yarnell, Parkers- Ramsey' Proctorville ; six
burg ; Phil Baldwin, Pomeroy; grandchildren, and seven
SPECIAL SCHEDULE
Fl oyd Hamp ton, Vl'nton ·, · great·grandchildren.
a1
·
'Ubeh ld
Supt. Ralph Sayre of the Janella
Oldaker, Hartford.
Funer services WI
e
Southern Local School District
SUNDAY DISCHARGES _ at 1 ~.m. Wednesday at the
has announced a special M
R B 1 . G ld Rawlings • Coats Funeral
ayo
· • a ~s ,
era
Home with the Rev. Eugene
schedule In the district on
Sw!sher,
John
Gmther,
Jean
Ramsey officiating . Burial will
Thursday. The morning
Da1ley,
Inez
Randolph,
Letha
be in Middleport Hill
schedule will be carried out as
Cemetery. Friends may call at
usual with sludenls eating Cowan ' Dorothy Lawson.
lunch at the usual time at their
the funeral home from 2 to 4
respective schools. Buses will
and from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.
MEETING NOTED
leave the Racine elementary
Past
Matrons of Evangeline
sclibol at 12:25 p.m. and the
CAU. ANSWERED
Chapter,
OES, will meet at 7:30
high school all2:30 p.m. From
The Pomeroy E·R squad
1 to 3 p.m. there will be a p.m. Fridsy at the home of answered a call to the home of
parent-leacher conference at Mrs. Jessie Houdashelt, 398 Atles D. Simpson on Bradbury
Grant St., Middleport.
each school.
road at ·10:05 a.m. Sunday.
Simpson was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was ~dmitted as a. medical

News • • • in Briefs

MEIGS THEATRE

necessity .of keeping the little
lady in the boudoir as sleek and
lovely as any in the cove, well,
these . suggest the torments
.borne courageously, if silently,
by the Appalachian Frog .
Yes, the universal breath of
the swamp known as halitosis,
perhaps is an ailment, too,
though unnoticed by Mr.
Average Frog because how
does one notice for good or iii
tha t which is so common to.all•
But now, Abdul Jaroushle,
you propose to pit a frog
without halitosis into a contest
with our frogs who accept
halitosis
as
a
trait
handed down from father
to son ad infinitum. You ask
our frogs to jump against a
frog that is different! This
mus t be had. Ail bad.

Obviously your bullfrogs, learn. He shoulJ be a hot
blessed with your pill would out prospect to purchase the pill in
jump ours as a simple reflex in quantlty. WbatJootball coach
getting as far away as possible, ":ouldn'l go the whole way for a
and as quickly as poSsible from · prU that keeps his boys Iron
his Appalachian Brothers. I kissing and ~pires them to
ask you, in the name of Allah, knock heads, mstead? By the
would that be fair?
•way, he already has on hand
With warmest regards, the required headgear.
The Editor .

REVIVAL OPENS
DANVILLE - A revival at
the Danviiie Wesleyan Church
will get underway this evening
and ·extend through May 28,
with the Rev. 0. H. Cart as
evangelist. Services wiii begin
at7 :30 each evening. The Rev.
Lawrence Sullivan, pastor,
extends an invitation to the
public.

Crinie

P.S. May I suggest that if
people in your land refuse to
lake the pill you leave your big
frog at home but come to our
Frog Jumps anyway with
several shiploads of the pills.
Hard nearby Pomeroy Is
Syracuse where lives one
Charles Chancey who is the
guiding genius of the beloved
Meigs Marauder Football

(Continued from page I)

available to these counties in
1972 under the Omnibus Crime
Control Act. These counties
comprise part of Ohio's Ad·
ministralive Planning District
(APD) IV, one of four APDs
which represent the nonmetropolitan areas of the state.
Conferences also are being
TO MEET AT CLUB
planned for officials in the
RACINE - The Racine other APDs.
Baseball Assn. will meet at 7
Participation
in
and
p.m. Wednesday at the Club registration for th{ meeting
Restaurant. The season's will be on a firskome, firal
schedule 'l'!i!l' be planned. serve basis due to limited
Volunteer coaches are needed facllites.
for the pee wee league.

patie~l.

Some call it wholesale
Some call it discount
We named it our Budget Shop
Come see - Compare You'll find the .best value8 at

Baker Furniture
MIDOLEPORT, 0.

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BOOSTERS TO MEET
RACINE - The Southern
Local High School Band
Booslers will meet at 7:30p.m.
Tuesday at the high school In
Ra.cine.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in down·
town Pomeroy at 11 a. m.
Monday was 79 degrees under
sunny skies.

'
INFANT KILLED
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (UP!)
- Angela Raynard, 2, of
nearby South Webster, was
killed Sunday night wben she
fell from a moving car in her
driveway and was run ·over.
Police said the girl had been
playing In the car with another
child and they apparlmtly
knocked the car out of gear.

WNDSTRUM OJ&amp;'!
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Allan
Lundstrom, reUred president
and chairman of the board of
Columbia Gas of Ohio, died in
Riverside Hospital here
Sun4ay . He was 70.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Names of persons admitted
are withheld from publication
by hospital authorities.
Discharges: Mrs. Don
Maynard, Ashton; .. Amy
Barnette, West Columbia;
Mrs. William Bonecutter,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Johri
Hayman, Leon ; Mrs. David
Cheese brew and ., daughter ;
Point Pleasant; Charles
Swisher, Jr., Point Pleasanti
Mrs. Roger Rymer, Leim i
Janice Smith, Apple Grove i
Mrs. Hershal Hunter, Mason i
Donnie Patterson, Henderson ;
Mrs. Charles Steams, Poinj
Plea!IBnl; Mrs. George Young!
GaUl polis; Darrel! Gabrilchi
Point Pleasanl; Mrs. Stephen
Cadle ~n· Brenda ~
'G' IIl¥6114;--Jelrei'Y
Point Pleasant, and Alvin
Stewart, Glenwood.

caniPlliin;

toahouse'
hot
.

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by the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio anyway .
Council concluded it had little
alternative.
The council also approved a
new ordinance to cover street
lighting charges for the ne~t
two years. It reflects an increase of three tenths of one
percent. Both new ordinances
will be effectiv~ !July 25.
Residents of Vme St: - Mrs.
Lowell Price and Mrs. Jame.s
Brewer - were again present

to complain about drainage, dispatcher at town hail, asked
odors an d inadequate water council to increase the price
pressure. The matters were paid for prisoners' meals from
discussed at length and it was 50 cents to $1.25 when the next
agreed that maintenance year's qudget is considered.
supervisor Harold Chase and She said it is Impossible to
some of his workers will clear a prepare nourishing meals lot
ditch after Memorial Day, prisoners at 50 cerits each with
Chase's department Is busy the high cost of food and meat.
preparing the cemeteries for She stressed that prisoners
Memorial I;&gt;ay and getting the going on work details should
community swimming pool have adequate food .
ready to open.
Mrs. Beechler also asked for
Mrs . Ter ry Beechler, an additional eight hours off
each week for a tolai of two ·in
the future. She also reported a
radio in her living quarters is
in need of repair.
Council Presi{ient David
Ohlinger, who presided in the
absence of Mayor John 1.erkle
who was out of town, said two
representatives
of
the
emergency squad will go to
Holzer Medical Center Wed·
highways, where travel is in nesday when they will be taken
opposing direction~ in adjacent on a tour of the new facility.
lanes will change from a three- They will be given instruction
line system to a two-line on how emergency procedures
syslem. The most noticeable are to work there .
Councilman Richard
difference will be the
elimination of the dash-line Vaughan said youngsters in
when so.lid yellow 00 passing" town are breaking into the
lines are applicable to both swimming pool area and are
directions of travel at the same swimming in tlie pool which
will open this coming weekend.
time.
Vaughan
urged Police to be
Elimination of the three-line
system will cut the overall especially watchful for ofwidth to 12 inches instead of 18 fenders in an attempt at
inches . The striping project preven ling some child from
will be done by the Division 10 drowning in the unguardtraffic crew and should be ed pool. Residents iiv, (Continued on page 10)
comple ted this year.

New Striping ·System Comes

Two Accidents

992-5432

Middleport council Monday
night approved three required
readings under enoergency
rules of an ordinance to petmit
a nine per cent electric rate
increase the next two years.
Some councilmen · indicated
their hesitancy in passing the
ordinance which allows, the
Increase by the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
However, discussion indicated
that the increase already has been approved
I

Jumps; and the Editor's Studied Reply

H

J

...

(Con tinued from Page 1)
coordinator next year was
Ralph Wigal. Jennings Beegle,
principal of the junior high
school, will purchase new desk
chairs for that building. The
board also agreed to
cooperate in the ''Volunteers
for Education Program"
through which ~are nts . and
others are recruited to assist in
various aspects of assisting ·
children in their school work.
Bills were approved for
payment . Atte nding the
mee ling were board members
Da vid Nease , Dennie Hill,
Charles Pyles, Clarence
Lawrence and Grover· Salser,
Jr.; Supt. Sayre, .Principals
James Adams, Jennings
Bee.gle, l..&lt;lrry Wolfe and
James Wickline, representatives of the Teachers
Association of the district, and
other visitors.

1

Electric ·Rate Hike
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Special

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l

with a

l·5Ptrd lan ..-tth IPt t•ll 1lumbe•
POI!IIon; tulh•t:l&lt;'l mounled lt n and

the Imperial
Cool I High. Wide 111~1
Oetp' Ulll(lue Alnerno
Aot .OIIUI g • ~llt you Rr&lt;ltlll&lt;l ·
llli·IOOm "511111!0" COO lill g.
Ad )IJII! wiiM lii!Qf!llip ttlll\o!.
10 Hl lltiSlllftl Mod(III-

6S00 tOra.ooo sru:s.

A ·c~ Ot~Oft to r Sl ~ting:

j l ·paliliiYI IIII! IInOIIIII '
l l ll l llliUI:oloOIIIOI' qt l&lt; t!l

Pt&lt;lo•mtrct.

Choos.e
·
Chrysler Airtemp
with Confidence
Come In ... take one homo wHit you

ELBERFELD$
'

The new highway striping
system which becomes
uniform throughout the Uniled
States this year began in the
Division Ten's nine..counties,
Monday, according to John
White, traffic supervisor,
The new system will be in
accordance with the Federal
Highways Administration's
new " Manual of Un iform
Traffic Control Devices." It '
wiii be the official standard for
traffic control devices applying
to streets, and highways
throughout the United Slates.
It will apply to ali slate,

county, and local jurisdictions.
Ohio motorists will nole a
renoarkable change in the
pavement markings. Yellow
dash lines (replacing while
dash lines) will . be used to
delineate the separation of
traffic flows in opposing
directiohs, such as a two-way
roadway where overtaking and
passing is permitted with due
care and caution. There will be
no change on the use of a white
dssh line on multiple lane highways where travel is permitted
in the same direction on both
sides of dash line.
The ce nterline on two-way

at y
Devote'4 To The lnlere.u

XXV NO. 27

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

-.'!~t:T.....

COLUMBUS-STARTINGTHISYEAR,Ohi~'sll,OOOschool
bUses wiU be inspected twice annually as requireH by standards

DOG BARGAINS - Dogs may cost much or little, but the
price is stable at $2 each at the Meigs County Dog Pound.
And, if you're a resident of Meigs County ,the $2 is usl!d to buy
the pup's license. Puppies such as the two at rlght are held at
the pound for "adoption." Volunteer workers of the Meigs
County Humane Society will be at the pound on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds from 6:30 to 8:30p.m. on Friday and
from 2 to 4 p.m. and from 6:30 to 8:30p.m. Sunday the next
few weeks to help persons who wish to arrange·an adoption.
Those who can't get there during the above hours may
contact Gary DUI, county humane officer. Dill also has asked
residents needing him to call him about dog between the
hours of 7 and 10 a.m. so that his route that day may be
scheduled so as to avoid waste of time .

11

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VOL.

AT TilE DOG POUND- Above are some of the dogs and
puppies confined to the Meigs County Dog Pound on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds Monday before a truck arrived .to extenninate them there. The Meigs County Humane Society
encourages the neutering and spaying of dogs to prevent
overi&gt;Dpulation and is encouraging residents to "adopt" pets
from the pound. The eventual objective of the societY is to
have its own shelter for dogs and cats.

•

enttne

Of The Meigs-Mawn Area

PHONE 992·2156

TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1972

TEN CENTS

S1Ul1P,J.it.()pto~:War, P.ea~e

MOSa:&gt;W {~l)-Pre&amp;dent. like."
_
.
Nixon and Leorud I. Brezbnev
Both reported the health and
adopted by the U. S. Department of Transportation. Before now, began formal summit t&amp;ks anti-pollution pacts. The Rustl!io inspected each bus once a summer and at random today, agreeing q~c~y on sian spokesman, Dire.ctor
througllout the school year.
health and antipollution pacts General Leonid I. Zamyatm of
Capt. Fred Piau! head of the Ohio Highway Patrol's bus and plunging on Into war and , the Soviet news agency Tass,
ln.spectlnn team, doubts the need for more Inspections. "We've . peace .Issues.
.
said more vital business .was
had ooly 10 In-bus fatalities in the last 20 years none in the last
Fac1ng each other first afoot.
m , andhowmuchcanyoulmprovethatrecordi"Pfauisald.
across. a '404oot table, flanke,d
"Th~peopleexpectaneaslng
by !herr wdes, m the Kremlin s of tens10n, not only between the
GEORGES. McGOVERN TODAY WENT AFI'ER an East Catherine Hall, the two leaders Soviet Union and the United
spent t~o h~urs and t":o . States but all over the world,"
Coast-West Coast double win In Rhode Island and Oregon,
minutes man mitlal session b! he told reporters."
presidential primaries marked by the presence of Edward M. the morrung. They broke for a
As Nixon was conducting
Kennedy on a ballot for the first, and only, time this year.
long lunch and then 1181 down talks as the first American·
McGovern was an overwhelming favorite to win in Oregon for an afternoon sess1on just President to visit Russia since
and add the state's 34 delegate votes to his leading and growing between themselves on world Franklin D. Roosevelt went to
collection despite the presence of Kennedy and nine other issues.
Yalta in 1945, Pat Nixon went
Democrats on tbe lists. McGovern also was given a slight edge In
The afternoon smaller sightseeing. With Brezhnev's
RhQde Island - where the winner picks up 22 delegate votes.
session began at 4 p.m., U.S. wife, she . moved about
officials said.
Moscow, a city she had seen
MOSCOW - PAT NIXON SAID SHE GLIMPSED a better,
The first fruits of the late with her husband during the
l:rlghter Moscow as she rode Into town Monday than she spring summit that brought a Nixons' trip here In 1959 while
remembered from her last visit In 1959. Todsy Moscow gave her U.S. President to Moscow fm: he was vice president. The
a chance to check that impression with an Inside look at two of the first time came In accor&lt;b
modern Russia's proudest achievements -the schools and the for jointly fighting cancer and
beart disease and combating
MOIICOw subway.
.
air and water pollution.
The First L&lt;ldy also planned an afternoon rjde on the subway
BuslneuUke Seuion
and tea In the Kremlin's old czarist family ap&amp;~'tments with Mrs.
Nixon's and Brezhnev's
Leonid I. Bjechnev and Mrs. Nlkolfl V. Podgorny.
spokesmen both described the
morning session In the white
WASHINGTON- J. EDGAR HOOVER willed virtually all of and red hall built by Peter the
(Contfriued on Page 10)
Great as "frank and business-

I_..,

wor$n went to a secondary
school, rode the famed Moscow
subway and sipped tea in an old
Czarist apartment.
Meeting Sets Pattern
DemonStrating in her own
way the peaceful cooperation
their husbands profess, Mrs.
Nixon took the hand of Mrs.
Brezhnev at one pomt.
Brezhnev's wife had appeared shocked and dismayed
-and possibly frightened by a
crush of photographers and
reporters surrounding the
ladies during the visit to the
school.
Mrs. Nixon, accustomed to
such crowds, patted her hos·
tess' hand, saying "I'm going
to take care of you." The
American first lady smiled. So
then did Russia's first lady.
The morning meeting be·

tween Nixon and Brezlmev set
the pattern, according Jo
conferees. It was reported that
aides and colleagues of the two
leaders might not gather In full
again until the summit ends at
week's end, and ;working
parties would thrash out issues
for submission to the two
leaders themselves.
Smiles and Handshakes
Whit~ in Moscow, Nixon had
hoped to sign a treaty on
limiting strategic nuclear wea_pqns, but as early as last
weekend administration offi·
dais began to suggest a hitch
had developed.
In Helsinki tqday, sources at
the Strategic Arms Limitation
talks (SALT) said there was
UWe possibility that an agreement could he reached before
1Qe end of the summit.

Memorial Services Mond~y ·

cumprn.or, t •l•a •ntult hon to
redu~;eoPtraiHlQ IOUild ''' ' '
Ceoryhl,)&lt;l'le 1 Steeper lodly •
1.100~1- 5.000 to 9J)'JO BTU s

32.000 BTU.

Those warm sultry
days are on the way .
To prevent those
musty . odors and
excess dampness Get a Dehumidifier
from our 3rd Floor
Depart·
Appliance
ment.

'

'.

Feeney-Bennett Post Plans

the Sleeper
Ov••t·Perlo•m•nce Ftalv•u-

Also see the fine
selection of Chrysler
Airtemp whole house
air ·conditioners up to

To Division Ten Highways

'\_

'

Visit Elberfelds Warehouse on Mechanic Str,~t in Pomeroy
.:.. Carpets · Linoleums - Ruas - L,.awn Mowers (Toro -and
Lawn-Boy. Porch, Lawn and Patio Furniture (Lloyd) • John
Hancock Redwood, (Telescope) and Lawnllte - All at sale
prices at the warehOuse.

Brown's Achievements
Recognize~. by College
I

Thomas Manning Brown, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Brown,
Browntown, was presented the
Atwood Achievement Award
for 19721n recent ceremonies at
Rio Grande Coliege.
The award was presented by
the Rio Grande College Alumni
~oclallon in recognitiOfl and
appreciation of _Brown's
professional and civic ac·
compllshments reflecting
credit oo the college. The
citation with the award cites
Browd lor :
Receiving his cadet cer·
tlflcatelnl96ZandhlsBachelor
of Science In .Eienoentary
Eclucai!oo from · Rio Grande
Collece in 1964, and coinpleUng
his Muler of Education degree
'at the Unlverslly of Toledo In
1919.
For hla outatanding work the
paat five y... at Port Clinton
JuniCI' High School, Mr. Brownwu alected from a .field of 400
applicant&amp; for one of 50
lellowshlpe in IJ'IIdUale atudy.
In· the General. Electric

J,

Schedule for Memorial Day
services to be held on May 29,
Monday, by Feeney-Bennett
Postl28, American Legion, has
been announced by Paul
Haptonatali, commander.
Legionnaires are &amp;a meet at
the hall at 8 a.m. and from
there wlll go to the Middleport
Gravel Hill Cemetery at 8:30
a.m., and to the Cheshire
Gravel Hili Cemetery at 9 a .m.
where two local ministers will

speak.
Services will be conducted at
9:30 at the Addison Cemetery,
10 a.m . at the Bradford
Cemetery, 10:15 at Middlep,ort
Hill,l0:30al Riverview, and at
10:45 on the Middleport river
levy.
A dinner will be served to
participating legionnaires at
the hall at 11 :45 a .m. The af·
~rnoon schedule will begin at
1:30 at the Burlingham
Cemelery, and at 2:30 the
legionnaires will return to
Middleport for a program at

Guidance Feflo\l'ship' Program
at the University of Louisville,
Ky., during the summer of
1971.
For his educational experience, which includes four
Veterau Memorial Hosplta.
years teaching at Plain Local
ADMlTTED - Faye Young,
Schools in Canton, three years
'""W~~~::m
Albany; Connie Manley; ~;~~:.:.:.~.~.U~.bbCbb
.. be
principal • teacher in the Port
Middleport; Irene Burris,
Clinton City Schools, and the
Mason; Leona Davis, Radcliff;
Tanks Repulsed
past two years as -guidance
Ada Cr.amlett, Racine; Hobart
SAIGON (UPI) - Soulh
counselor and director of pupV
•Riggs, Rutland; Jennie
persoonel servi~s at. Port
Williamson, Oatle\tsburg, Ky.; Vi·etaamese troops today
Clinton Jlmior High School.
Cuma Elkins, Albany; Joel turned·blck another tank-led
For his public service In local
Keith Jones, Mason; Ronald Nortb Vletluunite llllull on
and civic affainl, some cit
Jeffers, · Pomeroy ; Ronald the IIOrtbern delenae lllle
which ' are, elected in
!Thomas, Outer; Mary above ibe old Imperial
capital of Hue alld killed $0
November ' of 1971 88 a City
· Parker, Pomeroy.
Councilman for Port. Clinton ;
DISCHARGED - Jacquelyn Commllllllt ooldlen lit lbe
88 Pre~dent-Eiect of the .ot· a cily Republicans Club; ap- Starcher, Cloyd Brookover, Wrd oouecutlve day of
tawa County Mental Health pointed superintendenl of ~ La)lle, Gladya Taylor, 1beavy llchttnc In the area.
Aaaocilltion; .J911 Sight· youth, in Trinily United 'Kenneth Turley, William
Tile SaJcoa COIIIIIIIIId Hid
alleutPT7I ampblblou
Savb\g• Chairmiln for the ~~ Methodist Church in Port Jones.
..
· tank waa dealroyed aad
Clintor( LiOIII Club; ''Organizer Clinton; appointed to the
'
nf the Year" of Boy Scouta of Public Affairs Legislative ·.
reported Soadl v~e~~~am­
,.,. . . of three woaaded
Am~ca for Ottawa ·Counly; Commit!" for HoUSI! District
'SING ON SUNDAY
·
develqped in 1971 a Teen 13, and aalated in obtaining
A hymn sing wiU be held at In lite llllljle oa the IOUib
Cenler for Junior High Youth, two state unlll of OCcupational 1:30 p.m . Sunday at the bank of lite My Chaab River
recogl!iled 1~1 by lhe Work Adjualment · PrOgrams Stivllftille Church . The public , !I mnea aorlb of H!!!.
dty'a!JIIyor; ln'l87ldevelopecl for ' 14 and 15 year olda.
Is invited~
~:'''''i&gt;:':Nt; ; I.&amp;...m..i ..ihS.t

the Legion Memorial Park.
Joe Struble of Pomeroy wlii
be speaker for the service at
2:30 to which the public is in·
vited by Commander Hap·
tonstali. Haptonslall is asking
"family outings" be postponed
until after the service.
He urges everyone with a
feeling of gratitude to those
who have given their lives for
tl)eir country to gather at the
Mill St. Park for a "few
moments of tribute."

Celebration at
Chester Monday
'

CHESTER - The Chester
Volunteer Fire Department
wlll sponsor a Memorial Day
celebration Monday with
barbecued chicken and
sphareribsd, ~ked, beans, slaw,
omema e 1ce cream, pie and
cake available starting at 11
a1m..
A parade will leave for the
cemeter'y at I :30 p.m. Transportatlon will be provided for
anyone unable to walk to the
cemetery .
A tractor pull will follow the
cemetery services. The public
is invited. The department is
asking for pie and c•ke
donalions.

the Eastern Local District, "Is
an effort to obtain a consensus
of purpose for educ3tion,"
similar in eve ry way to
seminars
being
held
throughout Ohio and outlined in
detail earlier .
"Citizens will discuss Ideas
vi tal to the redesign and im·
provement of education noet~od s for improved ac·
co un tabiiity , curriculum
redesign, fiscal policies, in·
structionai methodology and
personnel
and
student
behavior, to list a few," Supt.
Riebel said.
Goals and recommendations
for the •schools will be
Pomeroy village has been presented at a statewide
direcled by the Ohio Depart· meeting later to be acted upon
ment of Health to add fluoride by the State Board of
to its water supply or to explain Education which in turn will
extenuating circumstances as present them to the legislature
to why it cannot.
as the ar.eas for which schools
In a letter from Dr. John w. may be held accountable.
Cashman, director of the Ohio
Discussion topics Thursday
Health Department , it is at Eastern and the leader,
poinled out that the natural resource person and recorder,
fluoridecontentofthe village's respectively, of each, are,
water supply is less than .8 · Personnel, Mrs. Maxine
milligrams per liter or water Goeglein , Bobby Ord, Mrs.
as required by law.
Dorothy Stout; School ComThe deparlment ·requested munity Relations, Mrs. Teresa
the village to add the fluoride Collins, Mrs. Betty Roush,
to maintain at least the .8 Mrs. Helen Caldwell and Mrs.
milligrams per Uter and no L&lt;lvina Brannon, both recormore than 1.3 milligrams per d e r s ;
E d u c a t Io n a I
liter in accordance with plans Organization, James Stout, I.
which must be approved by the 0 . McCoy, Howard Caldwell,
Ohio Department of Health. n"' both resource , and Mrs ..
has been Indicated here that Marilyn Hannum; Equal
the fluoride will be added, Educational Opportunity, Mrs.
although it had been hoPed lhat Margaret Brown , ' Herbert
the step would not be required. Matheny, Mrs. Alice Phillips ;
until planned new wells are Students ~
R1ght~
and
drilled.
Responsibilities, Garry Par·
Aiso 'ordered to add fluoride sons, Willoughby Hill and
was the Tuppers Plains Water Marion Parker, resource, and
District.
·
Mrs . · Doris Well; Ac·
counlabUity, Mrs. Pat Holter,
':S:lw·; ; ;!... ::.::::::::: .. ::: MrFI s. EleasnorncKnighF~· Mrs.
orence pe e; mance,
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Robert Bowen, C. o; Newland,
Ohio Extended Outlook Mrs :
Nellie
Parker;
]'bursday through Saturday: • Curriculum, Mrs . Donald
Mild wtlb a chan~ 'of Mora, Mrs. Grace Weber, Mrs.
abowtn or lbllllllenbowen Donna Chadwell ; Building
eac- day. Temjleralurel wlll !i'acilities, DukeJjuilens, Clyde
avenae a !H11e above DOl" Kuhn, , Mrs .
·Maxine
ll)al wllh d.Uy bWIIIIIIGitly Whitehead;
Instructional
751o 15. Early 711o 11. Early t,fethods, Mrs. Jane Headley,
monllna·lowl IS to 11.
O.vid Chadwell and Roger
Kirkhart, l'eiOIII'te, and Miss ihih Yrr:"P7??!"\ItWW$ Diane McCIUI't.
Citizens in the Eastern Local
School District are urged to
express their opinions and
re commendations concerning
their schools at a · local
"citizens seminar" at 8 p.m.
Thursday at the Eastern High
School auditorium .
School Superintendent John
p. Riebel, Sr. said ihe seminar,
sponsored by the Ohio
Department of Education and

Fluoride to
Be in water

'

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