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"

•

Now You Know

a1 y

. An estimated 450 persons
·died in the-collapse of the St.
Francis Dam, Santa Paula,·
Calif., March 13, 1928.

..1:·
I '

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXIV NO. 40

OH, HERE'~­
JUST THE S1P~E;

. AMANPA.

WHA1 ARE YOU
GotNG \0 DO

WITH THP\T?

...

f('Nov/ PQ.'lou

BENDiHI

.MAKtN6

KNOW W\10 \T

I.PE &lt;,LEANER
'· so l~ !looKS

. ·lS~
..

\KE A SOW.
'

FRO·MstoNES ·ts:
A LOT 'OF
. 'FUN
'
,.~0
.

j

i

···"

,. oo. ·I THIN~' ILL
, T¢'f TO MAKE .
I

SoMETHING;roo.
'

.

'

'
I,

*

Soc/ett;

SAIGON (UPI)-South Vietnamese annored columns and
truckloads of supplies broke
through today to An Loc and all
oot lifted the siege of the
~ovincial capital 60 miles
north of Saigon-\he fourth
major town to be liberated
since the Communist offensive
began on March 30.
A few snipers remained in
the town and Highway 13 from
Saigon was not considered
"safe," 'Jut most of the North
Vietnamese attackers were
reported to have withdrawn to
Cambodia and the remaining
7th and 9th Communist Divisions were described as "decimated" or so badly cut up they
had lost their combat effectiveness.
Mimy of the North Vietnamese "attackers were killed by
massive ·B52 strikes and by
fighter-bombers . The emphasis on the air war today was
North VIetnam were B52s
struck for the fifth consecutive
·day while fighter-bombers
hitting the Saigon-Haiphong
, areas played havoc with North
Vietnam's war transportation.
The Saigon command in
reporting 280 strikes in North
VIetnam during the 24 hours
ending at 5 p.m. Sunday aloo
reported that F4 Phantoms
from the carrier Coral Sea shot
down two MIG17s Sunday 25

miles south of Hanoi with
missiles and without suffering
any losses themselves.
U.S. planes using "smart
bombs" guided by laser beams
and television have knocked
out scores Of railway bridges
leading from China to the
Hanoi area. And in doing so
they left about 600 heavily
laden railcars stranded in the
open like sitting ducks.
Many of those have been
prime targets and the U.S.
Command reported that 60
cars wer~ hit during the last 24
hours. Pilots on one bombing
raids against railroad cars 60
miles northeast of Hanoi near
the China border caused large
secondary explosions with a
bright orange fireball500 yards
in diameter-a sure sign that
ammunition had exploded.
U.S. 7th Fleet ships also have
joined the bombardment of
North Vietnam, shelling the
coastal road and canal network. The command said the
destroyer USS Bausell, while
shelling the Than Hoa region 80
miles southwest of Hanoi, was
hit by shrapnel on June 10 and
slightly damaged. No injuries
were reported.
Air losses were mounting.
The U.S. command said one
American was killed and six
missing in four separate air
crashes today and Sunday,

Fc:His ~g~~7~n ....
LOS·ANGELES- 'l11E 550,000-MEMBER Communications
Workers of America is considering a possible merger with the
more than 300,000-member American Postal Workers Union.
Del~atea to the CWA's 34th animal convention , which opened
here today, will discuss a resolution authorizing CW Aofficials to
work out a formal merger agreement. Approvails expected this
wee~.

Asimilar resolution will be considered by the APWU at its
national convention In August. If approved, the merged government and ~lvate communications union will be one of the largest
in the country.
LAKESIDE, OHIO - BISIIOP F. GERALD ENSLEY of the
West Ohio Area of the United Methodist Church said Sunday
night the church's troubles stemmed from a lack of faith . Ensley,
opening the West Ohio annual conference here, said if the church
Is to return to the fonner glory, It must recapture the faith of the
fathers from St. Paul down through the Wesleys.
'Some 3,000 persons attended the opening session in Hoover
Auditorium where Dr. Oswald Hoffmann of St. Louis, speaker of
the Missouri Synod ·sponsored Lutheran Hour radio program
speaks tonight and Tuesday night. The conference will continue
thrOij§h Friday. Delegates will battle with a $7.2 million budget
for the conference year 1973.

WASHINGTON -PRESIDENT NIXON PRESIDED today
over the swearing in of three new Cabinet-rank officials, including Richard G. Kleindienst whose battle for Senate confinnation as attorney general was one of the longest ever involving a ~esldenllal aJlllllinlment.
At a ceremony in the East Room of the White House, Chief
'
Justice Warren E. Burger administered oaths to Kleindienst; to
George P. Shultz as secretary of the Treasury ; and Casper W.
Weinberger as director of the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB).
.

'

by Crook" &amp; Lawrence

CAPTAIN EAS'¥
I JLJ5T 'I"Al-KI:D
TO HIML . HI:. 5AII&gt;
l-IE' WA5' CA~L.INS
FROM IN~IDe •

THe e;roR&amp; ~

At Same Place on Road

l~ LOO~E

AGAir-.1!

LOOKING LIJ&lt;E

ON P•PAYI!

TOKYO -PRESIDENTIAL ADVISER HENRY KISSINGER
said today he had established a new "emotional relationship"
with the leaders of Japan during his three-day visit and had
passed along an invitation from President Nixon for Emperor
Hlrohito to visit the United States.
"Before I c.ame here, my relationship with Japan was
JX'lmarily. an intellectual one," Kissinger told newsmen just
before his departure. "I can say now that on the basis of the
courtesy I have received here, it is an emotional one as weU."

Two Drivers Go Sleepy

. GAYLORP
GOOTZ, THe''8J./TZ 80M8Ef~"

Yc~! •• IT .LOOK~ : LIJ&lt;I!;' .

THING~ ARe ·~ISOI,Ir: tO

START POPPINS

AROUND HeRe'

including two men lost in the
north. An F4 Phantom was shot
down by a missile but the twoman crew parachuted into the
South China Sea a\1(1 were
rescued.
The other crashes ·and
helicopter losses were in South
Vietnam. Four men were
reported missing in two chopper crashes. A U.S. Anny OH6
Loach chopper was shot down
today near Hue and a crewman
was reported killed- the third
Loach shot down near Hue in
the last two days.

.

A small South Vietnamese
unit broke through to An Loc
last Thursday but today's
breakthrough was in force.
Supplies began going into the
destroyed city and the thousands of refugees trapped
there by Communist encirclement began fleeing
south.
The siege, which ,egan April
6, was 13 days longer than the
siege of Dien Bien Phu whose
loss marked the end of the
French effort in Indochina . But
An Loc held despite thousands

PHONE 992-2156

Partly cloudy today with the
high iii the mid 70s north to the
low 80s south. Partly cloudy
tonight with a chance of
thundershowers north and over
the stale Tuesday. Low tonight
in the mid to ·upper 50s. High
Tuesday in thP. unner 70!; onrl

TEN CENTS

80s.

of rounds of Communist artillery, mortar and rocket fire.
Three other cities have been
freed after coming under
Communist siege-Phu My in
the Coastal Highlands, Oat Do,
45 miles southeast of Saigon,
and Kontum in the Central
Highlands.
The Communist ·offensive
was active elsewhere. The
Communists tightened their
siege of the lightly defended
town of Xuyen Moe, 55 miles
east of Saigon. And the Com-

mWlisl sappers infiltrated the
former big U.S. Air Base at
Cam Ranh Bay and destroyed
four million gaUons of gasoline
and oil Sunday night.
In the Hue region, government spokesmen said a 3,500man South Vietnamese Marine
force had withdrawn from a
prohe into captured Quang Tri
Province. South Vietnamese ·
reported killing 12 N'orth
Vietnamese in a skinnish 12
miles south of Hue and said
they had found 265 Communists
killed by B52 strikes there.

Raids Said Justifiable
WASHINGTON (UPI) D. Lavelle
acknowledged today that he
ordered the bombing last
winter of mililary targets in
North Vietnam, probably
beyond rules laid down by the
Pentagon, but he testified he
felt his action was justifiable.
Lavelle, relieved of his
command and then retired by
the Air Force at three-star
~ank instead of his full four
stars, said he ordered raids
because of an enemy buildup
·going on that he considered a
danger to his crews.
Lavelle was recalled in
March from Vietnam where he
Gen : · John

was commander of the 7th U.S.
Air Force and was soon
ushered out of the service .
A House Armed Services
Investigating subcommittee
called him as part of an inquiry
of the affair, producing the
first detailed public comment
from Lavelle and the Air Force
on his case.
The first two witnesses,
Lavelle and Gen. John D.
Ryan, Air Force chief of staff,
told essentially the same story:
Lavelle had directed.attacks on
military targets in North
Vietnam and reported them to
his superiors as "protective
reaction" strikes, the Penta-

2 Drivers Are Cited
By United Press International

OMIIHII .EliCH

MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1972

Weather

Supplies Moved into An Loc

5MOOi...C, ,-follf't .
A~ t:&gt; . J'~A1' ;\ .

... He fiiiAY

ent1ne

Devoted To The lnter~tl! Of The Meigs-Mason Area

AM:ANDA PANDA

HAVe FRUMP'S ·

•

Two drivers were cited to
Mayor's Court, both for failing
to yield right of way after two
accidents investigated by
Middleport police over the
weekend.
At 11:25 a.m . Saturday a car
driven by Clyde H:' Wines,
Middleport, pulled from a
curbing on South Second Ave. ,
into the path of a car driven by
Chester Wigal, Jr., Middleport.

Both cars had light damage
and Wines was cited to Mayor's
Court.
At 12:50 p.m. Saturday at the
corner of Fgurth and Palmer, a
car driven by Belva Slone,
Pomeroy Route 2, pulled into
the path of a vehicle "driven by
David G. Dodson, Middleport.
Damages to the Slone vehicle
were set at $150 and $400 to the
Dodson car. Mrs. Slone was
cited.

gon's phrasing for one-time
raids designed to protect U.S.
aircraft against enemy missile
and antiaircraft fire.
Under the so-called "rules of
engagement" in effect before
the recent Communist offensive, American planes were not
permitted to engage in standard bombing of North Vietnam. The rules flowed from the
so-called 1968 understanding
hetween the United Slates and
North Vietnam that led to a
hall in U.S. bombing in the
North.
Lavelle testified that he felt
the rules required some interpretation aod judgment. He
cited a North Vietnamese air
defense buildup, "increased
aggressiveness of the North
Vietnamese" and a marked
step up of infiltration into the
South by regular North Vietnamese Army units across the
demilitarized zone . These
developments prompted him
·he said, "to make a very
liberal interpretation of the
rules of engagement" .
"In certain instances,
against high priority military
targets, I made interpretations
that were probably beyond the
literal interpretation of the
rules, " Lavelle said.
"I did this since the crews

No Honor among Thieves

Murders, Beatings Follow

Hollow Chip Cup Rake Offs
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI)Casino workers may have been
terrorized ' by beatings and
murders into cooperating with
a ring of gambling cheats that
has bilked casinos of at least
$300,000 using a clever "hoUow
chip stack."
"We are trying to identify the
people involved, to find out who
organized the ring and how
they recruit some of the participants ," Phil Hannifin,
chairman of the Nevada
Gan\ing Control Board, said
Sunday.

Some sources said that the
ring had siphoned off as much
as $3 million from the gambling tables, and that as many
as 150 casino workers may be
involved.
Hannifin said that was an
exaggeration, that about 25-30
persons were involved. In the
past month the ring has victimized. at least hall a dozen
casinos, defrauding them of
$300,000 to $400,1100, Hannifin
said.
"The Murphy case turned us
on to it," said Chief Deputy

Man Says He Was
Robbed, ·Beat Up
Gallia County Sheriff's
deputies Sunday investigated
the alleged robbery and
beating of a Gallipolis man,
James Sands, 43, of 42512
Second Ave.
Sands told officers two
women and a man agreed to
drive him to his liome from the
Blue Willow Tavern but insread
took him across the Silver
Memorial Bridge into Point
Pleasant, they beat him about
the face and head. Sands said
he was also robbed of $75 cash
and a wrist watch before being

There was medium damage
Two accidents occurr~ · 15
to
Hall's car. The Nilz vehicle
minutes apart .:... apparently at
was
demolished. The first
a sleep-Inducing section of
rural road in Meigs County - acCident occurred at 4:45a.m.,
in the same place early Sunday the second at 5 a.m. There
on State Route 338, the Meigs ,were no injuries or arrests.
Saturday at 9:30 p:m. the
County Sheriff's
Dept.
department
Investigated a
reported.
three-car accident on US 33 in
Bedford
Township near the
When Woodrow W. Hall,
Sam
Williams
driveway.
Racine, Rt. 2, driving south,
W.
Pierce,
Jimmie
went to sleep at the wheel of his
Nelsonville,
driving
north,
lost
auto, his vehicle went off the
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
clfntrol
of
his
car
which
highway to the left, traveled
Ohio E~teaded Outlook 120 fee~ and came to a stop skidded 51 feet, then struck a ·Wednesday throu&amp;b Friday;
against a roadside utility pole. car owned by Carol D. Jones,
. A chance of'showers early
000 Ray Nllz, Pomeroy, told Shade Rt. 1, that was parked in
Wednesday and agaia late
. lllficers he was driving south the Williams . driveway. .Tbunday and Friday. Hlgb
along the lllflle stretch of road, Pierce's car then veered left of Ia the 1101 Wedneaday and in
also went asleep, drove off the center to hit a car traveling the 1101 Wednesday III!IIID the
road, and rammed Hall's south driven by Phyllis Ann . mid 7h Ia mid IIOI'lliunday
vehicle tllat was wrecked there Klein, Marion, Ohio. Pierce aud Friday. Lows Ia the
15 minutes earlier. Nitz, 32, was al'l"!sted on charges . of upper 5h and lOs.
lives on Lincoln
H.ts., reckless operation. There were
no Injuries.
Pomeroy.

.' f

thrown out at the Esso Service
Station in Point Pleasant. He
was treated and released at
Pleasant Valley Hospilal.
A spokesman for the Gallia
County sheriff's department
today declined to name any
suspects. Since the i:ase involved an interstate boundary's kidnaping Is involved
but officials denied preparing
such charges.
Deputy Derry Hemphill and
dispatcher Jay Cremeens
extinguished a fire in an auto
early Sunday on Holcomb
Hollow Rd. Ashort in electrical
wiring of the 1964 . Corvair
owned by Carl Shelllln apparently caused the fire. ·A
carbon dioxide extinguisher
was used to put it out. There
was heavy damage to the
motor and J)ainl.
Paul Siders of New Haven
V{: Va., reported the theft of ~
tape player Saturday night
from his car parked on the
Federal-Mogul Plant parking
lot. Entry was made by prying
3 wing OIJfln.

Sheriff Ray Gubser, referring
to . the death of Robert Lee
Murphy, who was shot in a
brawl with a casino executive
last month . One of the "hollow
chip cups" used by the ring
was found in Murphy's home
after his death .
An unusual number of
assault and strong-arm incidents have ocurred since
then, with many of the victims
being casino or hotel workers.
Several have mysteriously
disappeared, and a rash of
killings broke out the week
after Murphy was slain.
Gubser said crimes of violence were being investigated
for possible links to the
cheating ring- which could
only operate with the help of
casino workers on the gambling floors. Authorities said
some of the violence may have
been the work of the cheating
ring, and som was not, oot
would not give details.
A hotel source speculated
that casino workers could have
been forced to cooperate with
the ring ey means of threats of
violence, and ·through pressure
from shylock loan operators if
they needed money .
The ·key to the operation is
the "cup," a hollow aluminum
tube, fashioned to look like a
stack of three chips, with the .
aid of a real $S chip glued on
top. Because it is hoUow, two
real chips can be hidden inside.
A casino dealer, slipping the
$100chips lniD Into the cup, can
JIUike what casino security
personnel . and . observers ·
believe ill a $15 payoff-whUe
actually siphoning off $200.
"With the cooperation of the
pit boas (who oversees the
gambling floor for casino
owners) they could steal a
tremendous amount," said one
gambling authority. The ring
has concentrated 011 crap
games, and may also have
extended the operation to
blackjack, sources sa1d.

were operating in an environment of optimum enemy
defense. II was these isolated
instances
reported
as
protective reaction strikes that
resulted in General Ryan's
recalling me and questioning
me on .what we were doing,
" From his vie wpoint in

Washington, I had exceeded
my authority. I can sit here
(Continued on page 8)

Convicts
Save Girl
LOGAN, Ohio (UP!) - A 38-

year-old convict serving a life
sentence for first-degree
murder, rescued a 12-year-old
girl trapped on a ledge above a
river here during the weekend.
Loyd White, sentenced from
Buller County, Ohio, was lowered by rope by three inmates
of the Hocking Honor Prison
C!tmp.- aftelw~irlr..oebble
Smith, Centerville, Ohio, fell
onto the ledge above the river .
The girl had been camping.
with friends in the Conkles Hollow section of the Hocking Hills
Slate Park, about 15 miles west
of here, Campers in the area
heard her cries for help and
alerted officials at the prison
honor camp who asked for volunteers to help rescue the
child.
Volunteering were White and
James Hall, 38, Marion County,
serving a term for anned robbery; Clarence Gahan, 49, Scioto County, serving a tenn for
robbery; and Robert Rhodus,
52, Warren County, sentenced
for breaking and entering.
The girl was treated for
shock and abrasions at an area
hospital and released.
AUTOS DAMAGED
Two cars were· heavily
damaged in an accident on
East Main St. at 1:43 p.m.
Sunday, Pomeroy police said.
One, driven by James Ahles,
19, Minersville, struck a
parked car owned by Tracy
Simpkins, 26, Point Pleasant,
near the L. and Z. Dress Shop.
Ables did not stop following the
accident, police said, but was
later apprehended and cited
for leaving the scene of an
accident.
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy E-R squad was
called to the Hayes home on
Horner Hill, SR 143, at 4:25
p.m. Sunday for Myrtle Hayes,
who was ill. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and admitted. AI 5:25 p.m.
Saturday the squad went to the
residence of Freda Laudermilt, 840E. Main St. She was ill
and was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and admitted as a medical patient.

.

LEANNE SEBO, HONORED QUEEN -Theme of her
reign : Prayer; her motto, Prayer is the Key to Heaven, but
Faith Unlocks tbe door; her emblem, the white dove ; her
colors, purple and white, and her flower, the white rose.

Qu~en; - e-,Y,wned-

By Bethel62
Stanley, senior custodian ;
Jackie
Crasey,
JUniOr
custodian; Trudy Roach, inner
guard, and Paula Eichinger,
outer guard.
Choir members installed
were Kim Sebo, Angie Sisson,
Mary Ault, Viki Kelly, Cathy
Harris, Rayanna Cole, Mary
Sue Durst, and Cindy Reedy.
Carla Crisp, Ann Colwell and
Vanessa Folmer will be installed as choir members later.
The inslalling officer was
Milisa Rizer, retiring honored
queen of the Bethel. Assisting
her were Irene Barne&amp;, guide;
Brenda Taylor, marshall;
Becky Anderson , chaplain;
Twila Clatworlhy , senior
custodiao ; Jennifer Sheets,
Jumor custodian; Ca rol
Domigan, recorder; Kath y·
Thomas, thi rd messenger; Kin g, musician, and Annette
Sandi
Curtis,
fourth Warne r, flag bearer.
Soloist for the installation
messenger; Patti Warner, fifth
messenger ; Debbie Har- attended by approximately 140
tenba ch, librarian; Brenda
(Continued on Page 5) ·

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Leanne Sebo, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. John Sebo, 142
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, was
installed honored queen of
Bethel 62, Jnrernational Order
of Job's Daughters in formal
ceremonies Saturday night at
the Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Other elected officers installed were Liz Blaettnar,
senior princess; Diane Carsey,
JUniOr princess;
Cathy
Rayburn, guide, and Debbie
Taylor, marshall .
Appointed officers installed
were
Jill
Houdashelt,
chaplain; Becky Thomas,
recorder; Mary Blaellnar,
treasurer ; Barbara Fultz,
musician; Beverly Wilcox,
first messenger; Tammy
Sayre, second messenger; Lisa

Alloca n·on Up to Board
The Slate Board of
Education was asked to consider allocation of $2,457.60 for
work-study funds in federaL
monies for the Meigs Local
Schools today by the 24member group in Columbus.
Other allocation considered
were for Jefferson Area Local
Schools, $2,304, Troy City
Schools, $2,560; Waterloo Local
Schools, $1,434.10; Deerfield •
Union Local Schools, $1,670.40,
and Franklin City Schools ,

Autos wllide On Twp. Road
James A. Williams, 25, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, was charged with
driving left of center following
a traffic accident at 6:25 p.m.
Sunday on twp. road 444 in
Meigs County.
· The Gallia - Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol said WiUiams'
car collided in a curve with an
auto driven by Linda Beal, 19,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy. There was
moderate damage to hoth cars.
No one was injured.
. A Gallia County mishap
occurred at 3 p.m. Sunday on
Rt. 233, five and seven tenths
miles . west of Rt. 141 where
Frederick J . Newson, 17, Rt. 4, \

Oak Hill, lost control of his car
which ran off the left side of the
highway and struck a lence.
There was heavy damage lb his
car. He was not injured.

HAS NOSEBLEED
The Middleport E-R squad
was called to 400 Rutland St., at
11:10 p.m. Sunday for Carl
Still, Jr., age 6, who was suffering a severe nose bleed. He
was taken to 'Veterans
Memorial Hosplta' and admitted.

$2,048.
Federal funds amount to 80
pet. of the total amount; the
individual school dislrlcts will
supply the remaining 20 pel.
The board was also asked to
consider the reimbursement on
contracts with nine statesupported univ~ rsilies for
preparation and superVision of
vocational education teachers
Under the proposed reimbursement plan, Ohi~ State
University would receive
$1,031,515.66, Kent State
University $330,180.98, the
University of Cincinnati
$153,471.66, Bowling Green
State University $99,852.4t ,
Ohio University f84,225.92, the
University of Toledo _£'t9,921.19,
Cleveland &amp;,tale Un.iversity
$21,424.72, Miami University
$14,281.91, and the University
of Akron $10,940.30.
The Board was also asked to
consider contracts of $43,900
each with the Northwest Ohio
Educa Ilona! Television
Foundation at Bowling Green;
Northeaalern Educational
Television of Ohio at Younp.
town ; and the EducaUOIIIII
Television lor .SoutheasterD
Ohio at Athens.

�3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., June 12, 1972

WIN AT BRIDGE

• I

Meigs LegionWinsThree of Four Over Weekend

'Eight .Ever,
Nine Never'

BY KEITH WISECUP
The Me~gs American Leg1on
baseballers split 3-2 and ().2
with Portsmouth Saturday at
Syracuse and look both ends of
a doubleheader, 4-1 and ~2 at
Logan SWJday
The three wms and a loss m
which no more than three
defensive errors were com111ltted, brought Coach George
Nesselroad's Me~gs team
record to 5-3 on the year. ThiS
powerful club now looks loose
enough to play sound"baseball.
Meigs Vs. Portsmouth
Rick Van Maire hurled hts

12

NORTH (D)

. AK4
• K 103 2
+AJ 654
. 2
WEST

EAST

.JI0 976
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+108 2
.A9 5

. Q852
.6 5
• Q93
.8764

SOUTH

.3
.AJ914
+ K7

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I.

Both vulnerable
West North Eo.st South

I+
3.

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Openm~ lead- • J

Pass
Pass

s•

Jtm How about some articles on odds m fa v or or
agamst vartous plays After
all, you are the top bndge
mathemattctan "
Oswald 'Let's start w1th
a very co mmon exa mple
FAST PITCH SOFTBALL TEAM - The only fast-pitch softball team in the MGM district Is
You h appe n to be m SIX
bemg
sponsored by Bob Marchi, FallB City beer distributor. Making up the squad, which has a
hea rts, but the prmc1ple JS
~record, are, front row 1-r, Bob Sylvester, Darrell Dugan, Jun Spangler, coach; Bill Rice,
the same at any level You
\\ant to g1ve )Ourself the
Larry Lavendar, David Lipscomb, and Ken RIZer; back row, Wally Davidson, David Fox, Dr.
best chance to p1ck up the
Ha ·old Brown, Buddy Cundiff, Gil Tucker, Dick Dugan, Jerry Grueser and Sandy Clooch. , ,
queen of hearts "
COLUMBUS ( UPJ) - Ohio's who buy food sblmps - either value for cash
caleodar year.
J1m " fh e J e Js an old !Ion because that 1s all 11 IS
economy was boosted by more welfa re or non -welfare
blldge
1hyme, e1ght ever, We Will expla m th1s further
Canary sa1d food stamp
The ac bng director said a
than $102 m1lllon by the food rec1p1ents - rece ived ad- purchasers spent more than monthly average of 599,530 nme never,' wh1ch mea ns '" tomorrow's arllcle "
sblmr pro~ram durmg 1971, ditiOnal bonus stamps wh1ch $973 nulllon m public people rece1ved food stamps. that you should finesse fOJ
{NEWSPAPER ENTUPRIS.E ASSN)
the queen when you have
sa1d Robe. 1 B. Canary, acting aiso adds to Ohio's economy assistance funds or the1r own Of those, 400,869 were welfare eig
ht and play fo r a drop
state welfare director.
since the federal government money to earn the more than rec1p1ents, and 195,661 were "hen you have mne Ac
Canary explamed that people redeems all stamps at face $102 million bonus m the 1971 not
lually, the play with mnc JS
close enough so that 1f you The b1dd mg has been
East
South
have mlormatJOn !rom the West North
I•
Pass
b1ddmg that md1cates un- Pass 2 "P&lt;1ss
By BERNARD BRENNER
Many of the specific proposeven d 1s t r1 b u t 1o n m the P.:l ss 3 NT
Pass
UP!
Farm
Editor
'
als
in the statement, hawever,
enemy hands you may play
You South, hold
WASHINGTON
(UP!
)
run counter to the liasic elefor a 3 1 break and take a jfoKJ 54 ¥K 8763 + 5 .Q10 7
Leadmg contenders for the ments of President Nllon's
second ro und finesse w1th
Wha t do you do now ?
nme '
farm policies AB a 11Sull, the
on fann fronts
A-Pass Even \uth a sina-lecoalition 18 likely to find li!Ue
Os wald · Today there JS ton diamond you pre fe r to tn
sopport
for Its key pianJ In the
no 1 n d 1 ca t 10 n of uneven f01 the nme tr1ck game
Democratic presidential
national
GOP campglan lhlll
breaks The opponents have
TODAY S QUESTION
nommat10n Will have no
not b1d and the lead g1ves Inetead of b1ddmg th1ee no- trouble
supporting
a fall
mte1 est all ou1 management represent ative of the fm· w1se to use bottled dJS!Jiled little
Bv Lawrence Lamb, M D
mformallon "
ll
ump
your
partner
has
b1
d
personnel and sales people wa 1 d t h 1n k 1n g policy of wate1 unless yo u know for
"statement of principles"
Dea r . Dr. Lamb-! read w the unpo1 lance of 1 per much of the modern dau y certam from you1 c1ty water
J1m 'It also does n t ma t· th 1ce heat ts Wha t do yoll do adopted last week by the NaThe statement was adopted
yo ur column sh essmg the cent low fat m1lk m the d1et mdustry The proviSion of departm ent what the sodiUm ter 1f South plays the kmg of now '
by
representatives for 27
tional Farm Coahllon, farm
1mpo1 lance of 1 pel cent low As a result, we are m the low fat p1 oducts such as conten t of yo ur water IS and hearts or a small heart to
An!oiwcr to mm ro\\
groups
gathered Wider the Nasources predict
fa t m1lk to provide calcwm m1dst of a b1g p10motion of fortified sk1111 m1lk and the your doctor ass ures you that start w1th Both opponents
tional Farm Coalition banner. .
the body needs and that we low fat m1lk I want to th ank 1 per cent low.fal m1lk , plus 1! 1s acce ptable for your dJet follow and he plays h1gh on
The
groups, Including many
do not need the ammal fa t In you fo r your support fm low· the un c 1 e a m e d cottage
the second round and p1cks
Indivi
du
als
who
have
h1gh
which
have been frequent critOUJ p1 esent·day diets I am fat da1ry prod ucts
c he ese has provided the blood pressure are usually up the queen "
A
thought
for
today
Greek
the VICe· preSident of a dau y
ICS of administration !ann acDear Rend er- ! am put Amen ca n public w1lh an op- well adv•sed not to use ex·
Oswald "There 1s a super.
company Hav mg had open tmg your n•ce letter Jn the pol tu mty to have essen!J al cess
philosopher
Plato
sa1d,
"No
evil
tiona, Included both national
amounts of salt
slltwn that 1f you have sm·
Ma1or League Results
hea1t SUI gery at the Mayo column because 1! IS a fme nutntJOus food v a I u e s ob
can
happen
to
a
good
man,
organizations
such as the
(NEWSPAPER ENTE 'I" RISE ASSN )
gletons you should pla y for
By United Press International
Clime a year and a half ago
tamed from m1lk Without the
National
League
e1ther
m
hfe
or
after
death
"
a 3·1 break I say supersll·
National Farmer• Union,
to alleviate blocked a•te••es example of pOSitive leadeJ· problems associated w1th
Atlan ta
000 000 IQO- 1 8 0
National
Grange and National
Phlla
000 210 OOx- 3 5 I
tp~~e h~a ••t ca us~d by eat- ShiP . A~ "v•uerfll'l!lildent~ of a sat-urated fat
Farmers
Organization; a'ffil
Reed McQueen (7) and
'P 1.9iJdS~biiiJ1 J~ ~1\o)est~rol large , IJa•~Y; CPJNl•ny m Mm· ' Such 'rorwaJ d-thwkmg as
Casanova
,
Carllon
(7
6)
and
regional greR1pJ1 1rapg fnin
~ ~t . ~,'have,ll.tte.ropted to n e sot a you are Ce! tamly you exemplify also lnsm es
Mc Carver LP- Reed (4 7)
the big Midcontinent Farmen
MIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIII,.•IIIili18111l811118illllllilltliRilltliRilltliRWS!illtliR811118118111li!f the probab1h ty that the da1ry
Association
to the small
mdustry Will be able to m·
Clnclnnah 302 022 101- 11 16 0
Montreal
000
000
IQO1
3
2
crease the market and help
Webster County (Neb ) FarNolan 18·11 and Bench, mers Organization.
to Improve the health of the
By JACK O'BRIAN
NIXon's Presidenhal yacht "Julie", sold m '70 Plummer (7) , Renko, Gilbert
Amen can public Satisfied
THIS
ISN'T
THE
FIRST:
NOEL
for
$125,1100, agam IS for sale at $85,1100 Not the !4). Stroh mayer (6), Walker 191
customers prom o t e good
The list also Included comHumphrey LP- Renko ( I
NEW
YORK
(KFS
)
Rex
Hamson's
son
one hairdo mllbona•re Julius Caruso bought and and
busmess The proviSIOn of
4) HR- Smgleton (3rd)
modity
groups Including the
all these products by lor· Noel's honeymoonmg with bride Margaret renamed "Pres1dent Aurora /' for his wife,
Nabonal
Milk Producers Fed001 000 3QO- 4 8 1
ward-thmkmg da1ry leaders Benson while starnng In his dad's old "My Fait Auro~a Ruffalo, one of 7th Ave 's best des1gners. Houslon
By Helen Hottel
New York 001 100 ooo- 2 10 0 eration, National Wool
such as yourself 1s certamly Lady" star-role. They were wed 1n London a
Roberts, Gladdmg (9) and Growers Aasociatlon, Soybean
good busmess, smce 11 re week after the1r son arr1ved, makmg Rex a no
Edwards
, McAndrew, Taylor
suits m a lot of satisfied cus· doubt sex1er grandpa. Noel divorced model
The MISS World folks want to srage their (8) and Dyer WP- Roberls !5 Growers of America, National
tomers who may h ve longer
Corn Growers Aasociatlon, and
WRITING ONWALLJNVISffiLE
3) LP- McAndrew (5 21 HRsSara
Tufnel
to
hasten
h1s~econd lime around .. next beauty contest aboard the QE2 durmg a
use
mo
re
low·fat
milk
and
the National Association of
Dyer
(Jrd
)
Cedeno
(6th)
Dear Helen
N J Gov Cahill's
John Gavm and Corm1e Towers were the Caribbean crutse
Dear
Dr
Lamb!
am
hav
Wheat Growers.
Before we were mamed, I heard a lot about my fiance's exprettiest couple m the Umcorn Because of daughter, RegUla, IS now an mk.perfumed t 10 mnmgsl
mg
a
wate1
softener
m·
Wife, all bad Everything was her fault. I beheved h1m.
St LOUIS 000 201 000 o- 3 6 2 AB usual, however, the coaiJ.
stalled m my moblle horn e, prettiest Connie of course
The Duke of Newark Star-Ledger newshen . The Mexican San
D1ego 000 000 01 2 1- 4 9 1 lion's list of signers did not InSince we've been mamed everythmg has become MY fault. but first I would l1ke to have
Windsor's ob1ts lacked a doubly romantic gov't pobtely turns back VISiting d1rty h1pp1e
W
ISe,
Grzenda !10) , and clude the nation 'a biggest farm
My husband has a loose mouth and tells everybody all about your opmwn The dnnkm g
McNertney . Norman, Ross (6), organization, the American
types.
Good
.
Henry
Ford
's
ex,
Anne
Johnson,
margmal
note
his
abdication
speech
contamed
everything I do wrong He's sarcastic and mean and tembly water would be f 11t ere d
Cor km s (7), Acosta (9), Schaer
the words "at long last love," and the next day finds 11 cheaper by the dozen . bought that many fer
(9), Arl1n !10) and Kendall Farm Bureau Federation,
critical where before he was as nice as he now pretends to be to !hi oug h salt pellets Would
thiS water be hal mful m any Cole Porter tWJed m on it superbly; It's a de rum shirts &amp; pants out11t at Venez~ano on Mad WP- Arl in (5 6) LP- W1se (5 which has opposed the txllllitlon
others Naturally people thmk I'm to blame for our problems way to a person's health'' I
HRs-Stahl (3rd) , Colbert on most farm policy Issues.
splendid standard from "You Never Know," Ave.lr Author Mane Loucheun (former U.S 6)
I I 2 I h I
because he can lay 11 on th1ck Why d1dn't I read the wntmg on have had h1 gh blood presAmbassador to UNESCO and steeped m d
Also absent were such group~~
sure m the pas t and I am 64 which d1dn't run tho several of 1ts songs are
the wall'
politics)
completed
the
Uberetto
for
a
muslcal
among Porter's prettiest) .. The 28-year-&lt;J!d
as the American National
Should I start telling the truth about him - that he even yea1s old and drmk fo ur to
Plltsbrgh
000 031 201- 7 13 0 Cattlemen's Association and
about
"a
real
sex
symbol"
...
Who•
U
Than!'
..
"geruus"
blx
consultant
to
Joe
DiMagg~o
and
five glasses of water a day
002 011 001- 5 10 0
Los Ang
beals me sometimes' - D AM
and would app1 ec1ate learn Zsa Zsa, Bnan Lew1s, qwt double-entrymg for J Edgar Hoover's Washington home w1ll
Kison , Hernandez 181. Giusti the National Council of Farmer
Dear D ·
mg 1f drmkmg water from a
become a publlc musewn. W1th a vast collechon !9) and Sangu•lien, Downing, Cooperatives.
When will married couples learn that the only persons they softe ner would ca use any an mventive moment to create somethmg called
Mikkelsen lS I, RIChert 181 and
of
memorabilia
After the Angela DaviS S1ms,
The policy statement,
"m1cro-bondmg", an adnaced hair-fusing
D1etz (91 WP- KISon (1
should tell their troubles to are each other, a counselor or, when trouble
acquittal, educational TV chaMell3 here hung OJ LP~M ikke lsen 11 21 HRs- drafted for presenbltlon to the
all else falls, a lawyer?
Dear Reader- For people technique that makes hair weavmg, he hopes,
obsolete
up even more Angela posters Very neutral, eh Mota (3rd). Davis (llh) , platform committees of both
Too bad the writing on the wall was m mvlSlble mk - until m normal health, w a t e r
. Have a portentous quote from Nina van Buckner (lsi) , Clemente Wh l parties, Includes a demand
Bob
Hope
plays
no
mil!tary
favontes
adpassmg
through
the
type
of
after your weddinv. - H
Amencan League
that farm price support levels
water softener you are de- dresses West Pomt grads Wed , Fri stars at the Pallandt's UUed ex-husband when here for the
Mmnesola
001 011 02o- s 10 1 should be raised to not leu
+++
scnbm g would not be harm- Marme Corps Leatherneck Ball at the Hilton Como TV shows years ago: "I am savmg my Cleveland 020
000 1oo- 3 6 1
Dear Helen·
ful. They can be harmful for here The Dr. of Hununanities Bob rec'd at earnings and livmg Simply Diplomatic U!&gt;'
Kaat, Granger (8) and Roof. than 90 per cent of parity when
An mvislble man IS becommg an Impossible problem to me md•v•d uals who have any
R;ddleberger (8), Hen accompanied by "effective"
brmglng was hardly the best trairung ground for CoiiJert,
mgan !81. Farmer (9) and production control programs.
At first be just spied on me. Then he got hiS whole family to tendency toward retention of Wilberforce U was his 20th ... Alam Delon was
sumval In the commercial world of show Moses WP- Kaat 17·1) LPsnoop They were everywhere, aU over the house They'd tell bes flmd or need to restncl the tw1ce at Unicorn w1th Ursula Undress. InColbert 10·41. HRs-Kaat (2nd), The statement charged the
salt m the~r d1et for th iS rea- terestmg, because she's presumably Jean Paul business where sharpo&lt;~Ided, fast-talking gen- G
about me and get my friends to hate me.
ettles (2nd) , J Nettles current farm program, which
so n or for h1gh blood pres Belmondo's b1rd, and Jean &amp;Alam are abeyant Uemen have been known to pull the carpet from (lsi)N
, Darwin (7th)
But th1s wasn't enough The InviSible man fell In love w1th me sure
administration officials en.
under one's feet u
fnends.
w1th great passiOn Every time I'm alone, he attacks me - In my
New York 000 000 ooo- 0 50 dorse, "has failed to meet
Water IS often a hidden
No
delicate
geopolitical
problems
exiSt
betcar, at home, at the laundromat. It's getting to be a terrible source of excess salt or soKan City
000 000 lOx- I 5 I these objectives."
ween Pres NIXon and Mex1co Pres Echeverrw,
Kl1ne, Lyle 181 and Munson , Also, the statement calla for
nuisance.
diUm Most commercial waCh . 5's news director m seriOus mien t'otber Drago
14 4) and Klrkpatpck. bulldlng a government-&lt;Jwned
I can't ever be alone any more and, if I found another gen- ter supplies have a mm1mal who's due for all the whole White House honors rught looked much like his raffish "Masked LP- Kilne (4 2)
"strategic reserve" of surplus
Ueman friend, I'm sure thiS fellow would scare h1m away. It's amount of salt or sodiUm m next week The termendously popular Mexican Gourmet", which might explain why that
them. but some have more President will a'-llpend one day m New York.
list
Gamel
farm
commodities and pu.s1ng
very difficult to deal with a man you can't see, so please, what than desu able for mdlvldgustatory bore's not banished . . The TV news MII W
001 100 2()()-, 4 10 0 a law to ban bls non.farm corWelcome!
.
In
all
the
COWl tries we 've visited,
would you suggest' - HONOR BRIGHT
uals w1th med1ca! problems we've foWJd the citizens of Menco and Iblly by shows highlight endless banks of phones m all Ch1cago
004 010 01 x- 6 12 0
Lonborg, Stephenson !3), poratlot18 from farming. The
Dear H.B
For the person who has to
the Instant-primary storefronts; how come the
Colborn 16) and Ratliff, Bahn- administration has opposed
E1ther a psychlali'ISt or a job as ghost writer on "Night severely 1estnct h1s sodiUm far the friendliest, no phony obseqwousness, ordlll8ry mugg who pays his bills can't get a sen.
Forster (7} and Herr mann.
pure
cordiality
.
Shirley
Mac
Laine's
affecting
or
salt
mtake,
it
m•ght
be
Gallery " ~ H
phone, while the pols (notably slow or no pay) WP- Bahnsen 18 61 LP- Lon- legislation on both polnta lhlll
year.
a Bowery Boys denun cap B1t patronizing to the
just beckon and they're rushed r1ght m .. It's borg {3 3) HRs-Scott (61h),
+++
Alvarado {1st). Andrews (4th), On price supports, atlmiDIJ..
working
clawss,
eh'
..
Bobby
Baker's
lordly
Dear Helen
political muscle because tinkle-execs are Herrmann (2nd ), D May (5th),
!ration officials 'generally contolerance of reporters was a revelation Into the
frightened
of all politicians, m office or due to Alien 2 (loth &amp; lith)
An elderly fnend of mine had a ser1ous heart attack. She
tend that IUppolt levels should
ego of a convicted fraud who still thinks he's
!2nd Game)
run for same.
lived alone and it was lucky for her that her son called each day.
be
set at levela geared to pro.
Milw
040
000
ooo4
7
1
unportant. Worse, they let the ex-&lt;:on get away
When he couldn't get an answer on the phone, he asked a neighHere's
our
summer
doldrum
·
the
stately
Chicago
000
021
1015
11
2
mote mtiXImwn export ulal
With It
Slaton, Linzy (6), Sanders on the theory this would yield
bor to cheek immediately, and they got her to the hospital on
and beautiful Plaza Hotel's legendary Oak
Actress Magg1e Hayes (who's wr1tten a
(81, and Rodriguez ; Lemonds,
time.
Mr and Mrs V1rgll Wood, how-to book about making your own jewelry) IS ' Room will close after lunch and entirely every Regan (4), Romo (6), Gossage more flmllncome than a high
Sat. &amp; Sun ; the otber chic rooms are cutting 17 ), Forster 17 ), Acosta 191 and support level.
I too live alone, am In my late 60s, but unfortunately my · Sprmgfield, were weekend
teaching the handicapped at tbe Goodwill Inchildren only contact me about once a month, though they live m guests of Mrs Letha Wood.
back variously ; the flavorful Ptilm Court also Herr mann. WP- Acosta 12·0). A spoke1111an for the
dustries, whose gems will be sold to raise fWJds
LP- Sanders (1 5) HR- Kelly
the same town They forget to send a card for Mother's Day, but
Mrs. Mabel VanMeter, Mrs for that estimable organization . Monmouth folds Its opel' palms Sun.-Mon .. Chaleau Madrid (2nd).
National Farmers Unloa l8ld
they'll be home for ChriStmas- the traditional big dlrmer
Tom Nice and Mrs Opal
will be almost the only major rughtclub
today
he could not predict
Racetrack
has
its
own
buslllng
helcopter
pad.
Oakland
000
020
ooo2
4
0
operating all summer as usual.
We were a clG:l,e and lovmg family, but somehow people drift Eichinger VISited Sunday With
Detroit
001 000 011- 3 4 0 whether the Democratic
Used by nag owners and track execs, seldom by
away from each other. I've never asked them to check up on me Eldon Kraeuter and Leda Mae,
Hollzman (9 4) and Dtmcan, platform committee would
the suckers . Africa's now so safe, Bill
Racme
Coleman, Seelbach t91 and embrace
the
coalition
- my pndewouldn't allow that. And I'm not a "lonely old lady"
Ninth Ave from43rdto46thnowisknown to Freehan ~P-Seelbock (3 2). statement. But, he added, maMr and Mrs. John Benson, Holden's broken his safari camp for more
I havemanyfrlendsanda f..,ly act1ve life - but 11\ere are times
HRs- Epsteln (8thl. Freehan
Mr. Darrell Cleland and Mrs. d8ngerous geography..Checks Into the Sherry- cops and denizens as Drag ~een Boulevard ... !3rd).
jor prwideatlal COIItenden iJI.
when I am feeling IU that I wish the phone would rmg.
Nether
land
next
week
and
Central
Park's
right
New
character
actor
making his performing
Carpenter,
Colwnbus,
called
eluding SeJII. GeGrge ,S. McPerhaps, Helen, you might mention to grown children that
acriiSS 5th Ave.
do!
but
(as
a
Mafl8 godfather) m the "Slaughter" California 100 300 ooo- 4 10 1 GoYern, S.D., !Jubert H. Humon
Denz1l
Cleland,
Wednesday
frequent callB - just a mmute or two out of their dayo - would
120 011 30x- 8 12 0
Sh1rley Chisholm In a New Jersey high fibn Is Nonnan Alfie, furniture manufacturer Boston
afternoon.
make elderly parents much more secure. - NOT ABURDEN
Ryan,
Rose
(2), Fisher (4) , phrey, Minn., IIIII EdiiJIIId S.
school during a question perlud pomt~ and and Dallas-Mexico City je!.«tter. He'd rather Barber (7) and
Mr
and
Mrs.
Vernon
Stephenson, Mulkle, llblne, Ill blve "100
Dear Not :
said, "The Young WOJnan in the red blouse." act than upholster ... The MUSBOllnia keep Siebert, Lee t7J and Fisk WP- p11r cent VDIInl ncordl" on
Cleland,
Columbus,
were
Duly mentioned. Elderly parents living alone prefer the1r
Red shirt replied, "I'm a young man." All he making headlines but in smaller type than Siebert (6-21. LP-Fisher 12·41. farm policy ~ llldouecl by
HR- Fisk 15th).
Independence and abhor being considered a "burden, " but tbey overnight guests of Mr and
Mrs Ross Cleland, havmg wanted to know was Shirley's opinion of his long Benito : DDuce's Widow, Racbele's pleading for
the Iannen wdcln.
can be terribly hurt when thell' children ignore them. A telephone
been called here by the death of hair • The Sick Age: Brltlsh.fllmlng flick another pension boost, son Romano, the jazz Baltimore 000 11110 102- 3 1 o A GOP b1a
call takes only a few minutes a day, and those weekly VISits are his grandfather, Vern Cleland.
11110 010 ooo- 1 4 o party'a pWiform addecl
"Group Marriage " joins In unholy deadlock pianist, divorced Sophia Loren's slater Marla, Texas
oa
farm
Palmer 17 3) and O.tn,
so much appreciated . They make an older person feel he or she IS
Miss Lucille Smith spent four couples who thereupon swing like a pen- and thla week, son VIttorio divorced his wife of Bosman, Plna (9) and Billings. policy "Jirobably wiD beelceUy
still psrt of the family. - H.
Friday m New Lexington
LP- Pina (0 2) HR- Johnson reflect lbeprogriiD n haw Ill.
dulum do
34 ye11rs, Orsola
!131)
effect now."
Hemsley, IIIllliCot. Second row, Jerry Davenport, Dennis
Ault, Bob Burdette, Greg Gibbs, Bunny Arthur, Gary Clark
Back row, Don Swisher, Sam VanMatre, Dennis Gilkey,
Steve Halstead, Tom Grueser, Ray VanMatre, Man -player
Junmy Joe Hemsley and Bus Mgr Bob Wmgett.

SJNl'1o!:!!!Jlde

Food Stamps Put In $102 .Million

Farm Coalition
Counters
GOP
13..

Taking Positive Leadership

Dairy Man Backs Lowfat Milk

Linescores

Helen Help

Us.

••

.. .

. Chester

News Notes

\

scormg w1th a :Wlead m the
top of third when Sparks led off
with a walk. Rase grounded
back to Van Maire who threw
the ball mto centerfield trymg
to get Sparks at second
Jay Welch smgled m the f1rst
run The second came on an
mheld out
With two out m the M~lgs
half of the th1rd, Tom Cooke
walked, Rick Ash tapped to
welch who threw wildly to
first Cooke came around to
score on the play and Ash
stopped at second.
Roger D1xon thereupon !Jed

Second Game
Jay Welch came m to put out
a bases loaded (am m the
seventh frame and protect
Portsmouth's 2.{) lead m the
second game Saturday
In the Me1gs seventh, D1xon
led off w1th a walk VanMatre
hned out to second R Ash
smg\ed, but McKmney fl~ed to
center Cooke walked to jom
the bases. These five batters
were pmchhltters.
Welch then fanned pitcher
Skipper Johnson to end the
game!
Steve Lee, who started for

11 up w1th a smgle, h1s first of
two run,prnducmg h1ts.
Me1gs got the go-ahead and
wmmng run m the f1fth when
Mick Ash doubled leadmg off
Van Maire walked before
Dearfleld replaced the tmng
Welch on the mound. HIS first
p1tch h1t Cooke
W1th one out and the bases
jammed, D1xon's second single
made 11 3-2 Dearfleld put down
the next two batters to end the
bases-loaded threat
The only other h1tter for
Me1gs was Lou McKmney's
fourth mmng double

Me1gs, hurled s1x fme mnmgs,
g1vmg up only four h1ts He
fanned SIX and walked 1\\o m
bemg charged w1th the loss.
Johnson hurled the seventh and
fa nned one, walked 1\\o, and
gave up no h1ts.
Gary Hanes fanned e1ght and
walked none m s1x and a third
inmngs Welch walked one and
fanned one
The only other h1t beSides
Ash's was Mark Kiesling 's
th1rd mmng SJngle In the
second
game,
Coach
Nesselroad started e1ght new
players All but one athlete

played at least s1x mmngs
Saturday
Meigs Vs. Logan
Stan Perry shook off some
early w1ldness to settle down
and pitch a three-hitter lor h1s
second wm of the season m the
f1rst game at Logan. Me1gs
won, 4-1
Perry struck out 13 to g1ve
h1m 29 10 14 and a th1rd mmngs
thiS year, an average of better
than two an mrung. The blondeheaded r~ghty walked nine
(five 10 the first 1\\o mmngs )
but pennitted Logan only three
mf1eld hils
Randy NorriS worked all the
way on the mound for the hosts ,
allowmg nme h1ts, fannmg 1\\Q,
and lssumg f1ve base on balis
Me1gs scored two runs in the
first when Cooke led off w1th a
walk, R Ash smgled, Van
Maire smgled in Cooke, and
Kevm &lt;Sheets walked wtth the
bases loaded to score R. Ash.
Me~gs' second mnlng rWJ
came when Cooke smgled and
came around on R. Ash's
tr1ple
McKmney scored the fourth
Me1gs run m the Sixth when he
tripled w1th 1\\o gone and
scored on Cooke's single
(Cooke IS h1tting a phenomenal
583.
All told, Meigs hitters were

Reds End Road Trip With 11-1 Mark

6¥

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

second wm m three decisions in
the first game w1th Portsmouth The bill nghthander
allowed only fiVe h1ts m the
Meigs 3-2 win
Van Maire fanned seven,
walked five, and was polSon to
Portsmouth batters 1n the
clutches; Lowell Welch started
for the v1s1tors and was
reheved by Dearf1eld m the
f1fth Welch, m taking the loss,
fanned four and walked four while Dearfleld, a flreballing
lefthander, fanned f1ve and
walked none m two mnmgs
Portsmouth opened the
'

4 N T.

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

QUAKER STATE TOURNEY WINNERS - The Fruth
Pbarmacy Slo-Pitch softball team IS shown here after wmrung the tournament on Memor18l Day. Pictured are front
row, from left, Jeff Grueser, mascot ; Bob Whaley, Ed Baer,
Ed VanMatre, Danny R1zer, Ron Q)llllen and Joe Bob

"

UP! Sports Writer

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (UPI )-For my money Jack Nicklaus
Is the best around today and I think he can do anythmg lie ever
sets his mind to do on a golf course--except!or one thmg.
I don't thmk be can put together The Grand Slam.
He'll be halfway there If he wins the U.S. Open which begins
here Thursday and that In Itself would be a tremendous morale
booster for Jack The Great, because 1t would be his 13th major
title conquest equalling Bobby Jones' all-time record. But even
should he wm ~re this week, and he certainly can, I can't see
him winning both the BritiSh Open and PGA titles later this

MONTREAL ( UPI) -A
highly successful road tnp
vulated the Cmcinnati Reds
from third place to sole
possess10n of first place m the
National League West.
The Reds, wummg 11 of 12
games on the road, depended
upon the bat of Johnny Bench
to put them one full game out m
front. But the Reds had some
help from Pittsburgh which
defeated Los Angeles to give
Cincmnatl first place
Cincmnati, which · stomped
Montreal Il-l Sunday, plays an
exhibition game in Cleveland
tomght, then open.s at home
Tuesday With a twi-nlght doubleheader
aga1nst

sununer

Why not '
Because The Slam isn 'I reaUy a compulsion w1th him He's not
blotting everything and everyone else out of his nund the way
Gary Player d1d when he did everythmg but become a TrappiSt
monk to wm the 1965 US. Open.
Otbertl More Intrigued
Nicklaus will tell you himself that others seem more Intrigued
with the possibility of his accompllBhlng the Slam than he is.
"! think primarily that's been a press ambition," says Nicklaus, aware many writers are pulling for hun to do 11 because it
would make a good story for one thing and It would g1ve them
something else to wr1te about him for another
"&amp;Ire I'd love to win the Grand Slam," says Nicklaus "Who
wouldn't? I don't think 1t's an Impossible thing to do, but I thmk
It's very Improbable. Slams happen They're not planned. If you
win the first one, the Masters, which I have, you go on to the U.S.
Open, and If you happen to win that one, then you porn! for the
British Open, and if you win that one, then there's a chance to
talk about The Sliun. Now though, I think it's somewhat premature. ~~ . q.

u. ~ 1f)

" Nicklaus is rigllt abut that and that's still another reason I
don't think he'll make The Slam. The closer he gets to 1t, the
more it's liable to bug hun
Bobby Jones, only golfer ever to achieve The Slam, had a big
advantage over Nicklaus.
Nobody had ever done It before so when Jones was on the way
to doing so m 1930, he wasn't bugged every day by people asking
him "Do you think you can dolt? Do you think you can dolt?"
Ask Marla or Aaron
If you don't think questions like that can turn you around a
little, go ask Roger MarlS. Or Hank ,\aron
There's stil another factor weighing against Nicklaus completing The Slam, and that's his pace on the golf course.
He's slow, no matter what he says, and he's sensitive about It,
no matter what he says
A few years ago Jimmy Demaret, Ben Hogan's old partner,
came out and said Nicklaus would be finished by 35 because he
played so slow.
Nicklaus Is 32 now and nowhere near finished, but everytime
somebody brings up that statement by Demaret it still rubs him
the wrong way.
"I've played this way all my life," he says. "I stand over the
ball a long time, I walk fast, but that's my makeup. That's my
game. You go back through history and you look at the players
who were really good players You look at the Jones, the Hagens,
the Hogans Every one of them was a slow player It's pretty
difficult to criticize Hogan and Jones. They were probably two of
,theslower players we ever had, and two cl th• hA•t "
Jack Nicklaus loses me there.
I don't know which ball game be was watching but Walter
Hagen was famO\lS for his carefree "miss 'em quick" style of
· play and Hogan, while no speed merchant, certsinly never
dawdled.
AB for Bobby Jones, he played so fast he made everybody else
seem slow motion by comparison. Shortly after he completed his
Slam In 19~The Slam was different In those daY" comprising
the U.S. and British Open and the U.S. and British amateur
tltles--J. Francia Marks, a British golf writer, commented In the
London Morning Post about how fast Jones was.
"He Is quick and wastes no time," said Marks. "He takes his
stance aod immediately from the moment he sets his club behind
the ball to when he strikes It I count three seconds. If I time him
from when he stoops to tee up the ball to when he actually hits lt,
the ball already Is on lis way as I whisper siX."
At. a golfer, few aroWIII today can Clmlpare with Jack
Nicklaus. AB a reporter, he 'utill a great golfer.

East Wins Final Tilt
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Randy
Shade of Reynoldsburg High
School may he just what the
Cleveland Indians want
He was tapped last week by
the Tribe In the free - agent
draft, and reigns as the most
valuable player for the West In
the Ohio AU-Star baseball series.
He drove in three tuns, with
two homers In Friday's game
as the West P-Icked up a 1().9
win, they won Saturday's game
11-t With a four-hit perform·
ance In five Innings. In San·
day's 13-2 !011 he was hitless
In three &lt;tflcial trips to the
plate, but waa able to acore
one ol the J'UIII,
The West picked up 1\\o of
the three gtunealn the weekend
ser\ejl which sllnda at 24 winll
for the West and Z4 for the

East.

Taking the spotlight S!lllday
was Kip YoWlg from Whiteoak
on the East squad He twiriQd
seven and two thirds Innings of
no-hit ball before Cincinnati
Moeller's shortstop Len Matuszek rapped a single to fight
YoWJg became one of the
few pitchers tq go the distance
In the 17-year History of the
Ohio JayceHpot18ored clallic.
He allowed four hits, struck out
eitht, walked three and allowed
only one earned run.
He got all the S\IPPOI'I he
needed In the Iiiith and seventh
innings when his all•tar teammalel erupted for 11 runs on
IIIII hila, ts!Ung advantage of
several of the 10 errors by the
West.
John Langdon of Euclld,
three for four SUnday for the
East, -was named the Moet
Valuable Player for hla team.

MAJOR
LEAGUE

McRae doubled with the
bases loaded m the third mrung, then h1t mto a ground out
m the seventh to allow Tony
Perez to score to g1ve the Reds
a 7.{) wm
Bench smgled home runs m
the f1rst and seventh innmgs
and drove m another With a
fielder's choice ground out m
the runth .
Nolan lost his bid for a shutout when Ken Singleton homeredin the seventh Inning . Nolan,

who walked two and struck out
four, upped hiS record to 8-1
CincllU18ti and San D1ego
traded catchers Sunday, with
the Reds sending backup
catcher Pat Corrales to the
Padres who gave Cmcmnati
Bob Barton.
The Reds assigned Barton to
the1r Indianapolis farm club.
Barton was batting 193 this
season, after he lost his startIng pos1tion when he spilt a
fmger and nussed two weeks

Payne Holding

Oleshire Tigers

Out For Better
Offer From Reds

STANDINGS Win 3rd Straight

National League

New York
P1tlsburgh

Philadelphia
Bench, who last week earned
the honor of player of the week
for hiS seven home runs m five
games, drove In three runs
w1th four h1ts SWJday.
Second-stringer Hal McRae
knocked m three runs, while
Gary Nolan twitted a three hitter.
Bench's three RBI's now
gives him 44 for this year
Cincinnati swept the Houston
and Phlladelph1a ser1es on this
road tnp, took two of three
from New York and two from
Montreal. Saturday's game
with the Expos was ramed out
and no make up date has been
scheduled

East
wlpctgb
33 17 660

32 17 653
I2
Ch1cag o
27 21 563
5
Sf LOU IS 22 29 431 11 I 2
Montreal
20 28 417 12
Philadelph ia 20 30 400 13
West
w. t. pet g.b
Cmcmnat1
31 19 620
Los Angeles 31 21 596
1
Houslon 29 22 569
2I2
Atlanta
23 26 469
7 1·2
San D1ego 17 34 333 14 I 2

Amen can League
East
w. I pel
Detro1t
26 21 553
Bail1more
25 22 532
Cleveland
22 23 489
Boston
20 24 455
New York
20 28 41 7
Mil wauk ee
16 29 326
West
w. I pet
Oakland
33 14 702
Chicago
30 18 625
Minnesota
26 19 578
Ca liforn ia
23 27 460
Kansas C1ty
21 27 438
Texas
20 30 400

gb
1
3
::;:
9

b
3'''

9

6

11112
12111

1w,

San Franc1sco

18 39 316 16 I 2
Sunday's Results
Sunday's Results
Kan C1ty 1 New York 0
C1nclnnat• 1 ~Montreai 1
Ch1c8gO 6 Mllw I, lsi
Houston 4 New York 2
Chicago 4 Mllw 4, 2nd
Ph1ia 3 Atlan ta 1
Detrol1 3 Oakland 2
Pi ltsburgh 7 Los ling 5
M1nnesota 5 Cleveland 3
San DiegO 4 Sf Louis 3, 10 Inns Boston 8 Cal1forn1a .A
Chicago 4 San Fran 0, lsi
Bal timore 3 Texas l
San Fran 3 Chicago I, 2nd
Today's Probable Pitchers
Today's Probable p1tchers
I All T1mes EDTI
tAll T1mes EDTI
Los Angeles !Si nger 3 6) at
St Lou iS (Cleveland 54!, 9 Baltimore !Dobson 6 6)
Oakland (Blue 0 2), 11 p m
pm
New York (Gentry 3 4) at Detro1t (N!Ckro 1 11
Mmnesota 1Perry 4 51 , 8
Allan Ia !N1ekro 7 5), 8 p m
Montreal !Stoneman 5 51 at p m
Houston !Dierker 53 ), 8 30 Milwaukee t Parsons 6 21
Texas !Paul 02), 8 30 pm
pm
!Only games scheduled 1
!Only games scheduled)
Tuesday's Games
Tuesday's Games
San Fran al Pitts, night
Bait at Oakland, night
Cleveland at Calif, night
San Diego at Chicago
Delro1t at Mmn, n1ght
Los Ang at Sl Louis, night
M1iw
at Texas, n1ght
New York at Atlanta, night
ChiCago al New York, mghl
Pitts ,at Clnc1 2. twl mghf
Montreal at Houston. mght
Kan City at Boston, night

at
at
IS
at

J. C. Snead
Claims Title
PmLADELPHIA (uPI)-lt
just drips with Irony .
How many guys who once
were paid only $200 a mooth by
their old boss get a chance to
clip hun for $13,000? And on a
golf course yet!
And not only that, but J. C.
Snead was perched right there
at the 18th green of the
suburban Whitemarsh Valley
CoWJtry Club Sunday watching
Chi Chi Rodriguez blow a
chance to tie him and force a
sudden death playoff In the
$150,000 IVB Philadelphia Golf
Clall8ic.
Snead, who worked 1\D(ler
Rodriguez as an asalatant pro
in the winter of 1967 at the
Dorado Beach Country Club in
PUerto Rico, shot an even-par
72 to capture the $30,000 first
prize by one stroke over his
former employer, who had to
settle for secondiJiace money
of $17,000.
Snead, nephew of golfing
great Sam Snead, set the stage
for the final hole dramatics
when, leading by a stroke, he
bogeyed the 18th alter b!I'Ying
his tee llhot In the bunker off
the fairway.
Rodriguez, the third-round
leader, followed Saead's lead
With a lir1ile onlhe 17th to stay
oo the heels of hil opponent,
who was playing In front of
him, and hit hil drive on the
18th right clown the fairway. He
now needed only to get home in
lhe replaUon par folD' to force
the playoff.
But Rodriguez sent hla
aecond llhot aalling over the
green into gallery aeats,

chipped back and then missed
a 1l).foot putt, which sbd to the
right of the hole. He fmlshed
With a bog~e f1ve .
"Chi Ch1 gave me the
tournament," Snead said later.
"When I saw his putt roll past,
it felt great. I sure dldn 't want
a playoff."
Snead's 72-hole total of 282,
six WJder par, was the highest
winning figure In the !().year
history of the tourney as the
pros had trouble with the 6, 700yard couree the last two dayo
because of gusts on Salw-day
and hardened fairways and
greens on Sunday.
Rodriguez finished with a
tw!Hlver par 74 for a 283 IDtal.
Dick Rhyan, only one of eight
pros In the final-day field of 73
to break par, had a two-under
70 to tie for third with Jim
Jamieson at 285.
Dave Hill, aliO with a 70, was
alone at 218 while Hubert
Green, Romero Blancas ancl
Bob Murphy ,were deadlocked
at 'JJfl. At eveniJIIr Z88 were Art
Wall and Gay Brewer.

Thursday evemng at RIO
Grande, the Cheshire T1gers
contmued on the1r wmmng
ways w1th an 8.(1 wm over R10
Grande, the third consecutive
shut-out wm by the T1gers
Th1s t1me the p1tchmg laureis
belonged to Claude Corneijus
who m h1s first outmg of the
season allowed an opemng
game smgle to C Ramey and
then proceeded to pitch no-h1l
ball for the remamder of the
game The strong nght hand
hurler of Coach Dale Allensworth's T1gers struck out 14
ami, walked four m his opeqmg
mound debut as he continually
threw hiS fast ball by the Rm
Grande h1tters
The Tigers drew first blond
m the game as after two were
out m the flfSt mmng, Steve
Ba1rd hit a long homerun to
nght centerfield Cornelius
then tr1pled to center and
Kelley Wmebrenner smgled to
score Cornelius
In the second mnmg the
T1gers scored four more runs
as Rusty Lucas led off with a
towenng homerun to left field
'
Dallas Sayre then tripled and
scored on a smgle by R1ck
Wmebrenner. Steve Baird then
hit his second homerun of the
evemng to score Wmebrenner
ahead of him
Cheshire scored two more
rWJs m the fifth mnmg and one
10 the SIXth as Dallas Sayre h1t
the Tigers' fourth ho01erun of
the game, another long dr1ve to
nght f1eld, m the s1xth mmng
The Tigers m posting their
third consecutiVe shutout wm
were led m hitting by Steve
Baird w1 th 1\\o homeruns and a
triple, Rusty Lucas with a
homerun and double , Dallas
Sayre w1th a homerun and

double, Dallas Sayre w1th a
homerun and triple, and Kelley
Wmebrenner w1th two smgles
Cheshire next plays Vmton
Thursday evening at Cheshire

Major League Leaders
By United Press lnlerna!Jonal
Lead1ng Ba«ers
National gleague
ab r h pet.
Stenet, Pll
3310717 38 355
Sngu1ln, Pll 48 186 21 63 JJ9
Torre,St L
4919127 64 335
Alou, St L
46176 22 59 335
Cedno, Hou
45 171 29 56 327
Bck ner, LA
33113 15 37 327
Toln, C&gt;n
49 19439 63 .325
Ollvr, P1t
48 20518 66 .3'U
Carty, Atl
41128 25 41 .320
Cimnte, P1t 44 179 31 57 3l8
Amer1can League
g ab r h pet.
Pn~ela, KC
48 189 32 62 328
Allen, Ch1
481713056 327
Rud1 , Oak
46 185 32 60 324
AI mar,Cal
50 206 24 65 316
May, Chi
46 112 30 54 314
Braun , M&gt;n
34 115 9 35 304
P1nsn Cal
451592348 302
Freehn, Det 33 116 20 35 302
Kelly. Chi
39 137 23 41 299
Ol1vr, Cal
49 197 25 58 .294

~""
DEVOTEDTOTHI

MEI~l.~~~~1~u&amp;

CHESTER L TANNIHILL,
Euc u
ROI£RT HOEFLICH,
City Edllor
Publ•shed dilly ucopt
Saturday by Tho Oh1o vallay

,1\,"..W.m:'(

o~~~~·

AS769 Bus lnen Office Phone•'
997 IIS6 Edolorlal Phont 992

2157
second class poSiaQt paid II
Pomeroy Oh10
Not1ona1 odvertlSing
roprnenlal•v• Bot!lnelli
GallaQhtr Inc 12 Easl 4lnd
51 , New York Clly , Now York
Subscrlpllon rates Dt
Iovered by carrltr wnart
available so cenls per week ,
By Molor Route where corrltr
service not ava111b lt
One
monlh S1 75 By moll In Ohio
and w va , one year Sl4 00
S1x months S7 15 Tnreo
months u so Subscription
price Includes Sunday Tlmts
sonMel
1

8

Runs Baffed tn
Nahonal League Bench, Cin
and Stargell, P1 tt 44 , Kingman,
SF 38, Oliver, P1tt 37,
S1mmons, St L 35
American League: Allen, Chi
40, Jackson, Oak 35, May Chi

30, Ol1ver, Cal and Duncan,

Oak 28

Pitching
. National League. Nolan, Cin
and Sulton, LA 8· 1, Seaver, NY
8 3; Ray, Hou and Blass, Pitt 7·
1, Osleen, LA 7·3, Niekro,Atl
and Jenkins. Ch1 7 5, Carlton,
Phil 7-6
American League · Perry,
Ciev 10 4, Wood, Chi, Lollch,
Del and Holtzman, Oak 9·4.
Bahnsen, Ch1 8 6

r-------UIHtltlll _______i

I Feed the Whole I
I

I
I
I
I
II
I
I
I
I
tnternativnat League
I
Sleildings
United Pross tnlornoti0111l I
W. L. Pet. G.B.

I
I
I
I
I1
I
I
I
I
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2
4
5112

The Daily Sentu..J

In astronomy, ma~mtude ·
15. Stargell. P1!1and Kingm8n , is the measure of the rightSF 14 Colbert, so 12. Aaron, ness of a star or any lumiAllAmertcan
and Watson,
Hou 10Ja ckson, ·r1n~o~u~s~b~od~y~m~th:e~he~a~v~e~ns~-==========
League:
Oak 12, Allen, Ch1 11, Cash,
Del and Duncan, Dak 10,
Harper, 8os and Epstein, Oak

I

2

l1elder from Palm Springs,
Calli., who played at Desert
JWJlor College, picked In the
14th roWJd , Peter Savute, 18,
second baseman from Wichita,
Kan , picked 1n the 20th roWJd
and Ron Van Saders, 18, catcherfromMonachie,NJ.,plcked
10 the Z5th round

National League : Bench, Cin

I

112
2

HYDROPLANE RACE
OWENSBORO, Ky. (UPI)-Atlas Van Unes, driven by Bill
MWJcey at a record average
speed of 106.523 miles per holD',
beat Pay-N-Pak Swtday In a
championship heat of the
$25,000 Governor's Cup race for
wtllmited hydroplanes.

roun&amp;;~ Pat' Syfvester;''\'~ 11'1~' ~~~1l)ij\~

Home Runs

1 Family for only

Richmond
28 24 .538
Louisville
29 25 .537
Syracuse
27 24 .529
Charleston
25 25 .500
!,Toledo
26 26 .500
Tidewater
27 21 .500
Rochester
,26 30 .464
Peninsula
23 30 4JA
Sundoy's Resuth
Peninsula • Louisville 1
Richmond 6 Toledo 0
Tidewater 5 Rochester 3
Syracuse 20 Charleston 2
•

CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Cmcmnall Reds, frontrunners
m the National League West,
Signed SIX of last week's draft
cho1ces Sunday. Top chotce
Larry Payne says he " holding
out for a better offer
'
Assigned to the Reds rookie
camp at St. Petersburg, Fla.,
unmedwtely were ·
Dav1dMoore, 17, r1ghthanded
PI tcher from LeX!'ngton • Ky.,
picked In the seventh roWJd;
Bob Cwn1111ngs, 18, third baseman from PhoeniX, picked m
the eighth roWJd; Mike Westerman, 17, shortstop from Freeport, Pa. picked In the tenth

R. Ash, a single and tripl,e ~
DIXon and Cooke two singles
each, McKmney a triple, and
Dave Boyd a single
Second Game
W1th mne new starters,
Me1gs pounded out 12 hits and
won ~2 behmd Johnson's routegomg e1ght.-hltter
Johnson struck out fiVe and
gave up only one walk m
posting hts first wm m two
deciSions
Leading the Me1gs atblck
we~ B1ll Chaney and Steve
Lee w1th three singles each.
Johnny Baird added two
s10gles wlule Kiesling, M Ash,
and Jon Buck each doubled and
Dave Wolfe added a Single.
Others who contributed
Sunday were How1e Taylor,
Johnny Roush, and Chuck
Perroud, each with several !me
defensive plays m the infield
Portsmouth Is now 2-3 on the
year and Logan is 2-7 Meigs
w11l play at Syracuse this
Wednesday at 5 30 agal!lllt PI
Pleasant in a single game.
&lt;Saturday (First Gomel
Ports
002 11110 Q-2 5 I
Meigs
002 010 x--3 5 2
L Weich lwpl. Dearfleld tSl.
and Hanes Van Metre and
Di xon
t Second G. mal
Ports
000 200 o-2 4 4
Meigs
000 000 ~ 2 0
Hanes twp) , J. Welch (7),
and McGlone Lee (I pl.
Johnson !71, and M Ash, Dixon
!6)
Sunday (First Go mel
Meigs
210 001 Q-4 9 o
Logan
010 000 o-1 3 0
Perry and Dixon Norris and
Corby
!Second Gomel
Meigs
051 201 0--9 12 1
Logan
200 000 Q-2 8 s
Johnson and M. Ash Wright
and Myers

I s .25 I
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday

TH_RIFT BOX9pieces
regularly •2.65
Offer good thru June 29, 1972

.. . can be many thingswildlife shelters, picnic tables,
soil protectors, newspapers,
air conditioners, shade,
variety, and beauty.
Let's not waste them.

II Why cook? Visit the Colonel II
I1 ~
frW
Dkiek•~ I ..only you can prevent forest fires. '&amp; Q
Crow'• Steak House
I
C.OLONEL SANDER~· RECIPE

I

POMEROY, OHIO'

I

·----------------~

~ub!Jshtd as

o public seN•te in cooperohon with 1he Mvtrl111,. CIIIIIIC11,
Sthlcts, the No!IONII Auoclttlon ol Stile Foruttfl
and Tilt lnlernahOIIII NewiPIPI!I MvtJt•s••l Erttut1.es
•

the US

fore~!

•,

�3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., June 12, 1972

WIN AT BRIDGE

• I

Meigs LegionWinsThree of Four Over Weekend

'Eight .Ever,
Nine Never'

BY KEITH WISECUP
The Me~gs American Leg1on
baseballers split 3-2 and ().2
with Portsmouth Saturday at
Syracuse and look both ends of
a doubleheader, 4-1 and ~2 at
Logan SWJday
The three wms and a loss m
which no more than three
defensive errors were com111ltted, brought Coach George
Nesselroad's Me~gs team
record to 5-3 on the year. ThiS
powerful club now looks loose
enough to play sound"baseball.
Meigs Vs. Portsmouth
Rick Van Maire hurled hts

12

NORTH (D)

. AK4
• K 103 2
+AJ 654
. 2
WEST

EAST

.JI0 976
•Q s
+108 2
.A9 5

. Q852
.6 5
• Q93
.8764

SOUTH

.3
.AJ914
+ K7

. KQJ103

I.

Both vulnerable
West North Eo.st South

I+
3.

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Openm~ lead- • J

Pass
Pass

s•

Jtm How about some articles on odds m fa v or or
agamst vartous plays After
all, you are the top bndge
mathemattctan "
Oswald 'Let's start w1th
a very co mmon exa mple
FAST PITCH SOFTBALL TEAM - The only fast-pitch softball team in the MGM district Is
You h appe n to be m SIX
bemg
sponsored by Bob Marchi, FallB City beer distributor. Making up the squad, which has a
hea rts, but the prmc1ple JS
~record, are, front row 1-r, Bob Sylvester, Darrell Dugan, Jun Spangler, coach; Bill Rice,
the same at any level You
\\ant to g1ve )Ourself the
Larry Lavendar, David Lipscomb, and Ken RIZer; back row, Wally Davidson, David Fox, Dr.
best chance to p1ck up the
Ha ·old Brown, Buddy Cundiff, Gil Tucker, Dick Dugan, Jerry Grueser and Sandy Clooch. , ,
queen of hearts "
COLUMBUS ( UPJ) - Ohio's who buy food sblmps - either value for cash
caleodar year.
J1m " fh e J e Js an old !Ion because that 1s all 11 IS
economy was boosted by more welfa re or non -welfare
blldge
1hyme, e1ght ever, We Will expla m th1s further
Canary sa1d food stamp
The ac bng director said a
than $102 m1lllon by the food rec1p1ents - rece ived ad- purchasers spent more than monthly average of 599,530 nme never,' wh1ch mea ns '" tomorrow's arllcle "
sblmr pro~ram durmg 1971, ditiOnal bonus stamps wh1ch $973 nulllon m public people rece1ved food stamps. that you should finesse fOJ
{NEWSPAPER ENTUPRIS.E ASSN)
the queen when you have
sa1d Robe. 1 B. Canary, acting aiso adds to Ohio's economy assistance funds or the1r own Of those, 400,869 were welfare eig
ht and play fo r a drop
state welfare director.
since the federal government money to earn the more than rec1p1ents, and 195,661 were "hen you have mne Ac
Canary explamed that people redeems all stamps at face $102 million bonus m the 1971 not
lually, the play with mnc JS
close enough so that 1f you The b1dd mg has been
East
South
have mlormatJOn !rom the West North
I•
Pass
b1ddmg that md1cates un- Pass 2 "P&lt;1ss
By BERNARD BRENNER
Many of the specific proposeven d 1s t r1 b u t 1o n m the P.:l ss 3 NT
Pass
UP!
Farm
Editor
'
als
in the statement, hawever,
enemy hands you may play
You South, hold
WASHINGTON
(UP!
)
run counter to the liasic elefor a 3 1 break and take a jfoKJ 54 ¥K 8763 + 5 .Q10 7
Leadmg contenders for the ments of President Nllon's
second ro und finesse w1th
Wha t do you do now ?
nme '
farm policies AB a 11Sull, the
on fann fronts
A-Pass Even \uth a sina-lecoalition 18 likely to find li!Ue
Os wald · Today there JS ton diamond you pre fe r to tn
sopport
for Its key pianJ In the
no 1 n d 1 ca t 10 n of uneven f01 the nme tr1ck game
Democratic presidential
national
GOP campglan lhlll
breaks The opponents have
TODAY S QUESTION
nommat10n Will have no
not b1d and the lead g1ves Inetead of b1ddmg th1ee no- trouble
supporting
a fall
mte1 est all ou1 management represent ative of the fm· w1se to use bottled dJS!Jiled little
Bv Lawrence Lamb, M D
mformallon "
ll
ump
your
partner
has
b1
d
personnel and sales people wa 1 d t h 1n k 1n g policy of wate1 unless yo u know for
"statement of principles"
Dea r . Dr. Lamb-! read w the unpo1 lance of 1 per much of the modern dau y certam from you1 c1ty water
J1m 'It also does n t ma t· th 1ce heat ts Wha t do yoll do adopted last week by the NaThe statement was adopted
yo ur column sh essmg the cent low fat m1lk m the d1et mdustry The proviSion of departm ent what the sodiUm ter 1f South plays the kmg of now '
by
representatives for 27
tional Farm Coahllon, farm
1mpo1 lance of 1 pel cent low As a result, we are m the low fat p1 oducts such as conten t of yo ur water IS and hearts or a small heart to
An!oiwcr to mm ro\\
groups
gathered Wider the Nasources predict
fa t m1lk to provide calcwm m1dst of a b1g p10motion of fortified sk1111 m1lk and the your doctor ass ures you that start w1th Both opponents
tional Farm Coalition banner. .
the body needs and that we low fat m1lk I want to th ank 1 per cent low.fal m1lk , plus 1! 1s acce ptable for your dJet follow and he plays h1gh on
The
groups, Including many
do not need the ammal fa t In you fo r your support fm low· the un c 1 e a m e d cottage
the second round and p1cks
Indivi
du
als
who
have
h1gh
which
have been frequent critOUJ p1 esent·day diets I am fat da1ry prod ucts
c he ese has provided the blood pressure are usually up the queen "
A
thought
for
today
Greek
the VICe· preSident of a dau y
ICS of administration !ann acDear Rend er- ! am put Amen ca n public w1lh an op- well adv•sed not to use ex·
Oswald "There 1s a super.
company Hav mg had open tmg your n•ce letter Jn the pol tu mty to have essen!J al cess
philosopher
Plato
sa1d,
"No
evil
tiona, Included both national
amounts of salt
slltwn that 1f you have sm·
Ma1or League Results
hea1t SUI gery at the Mayo column because 1! IS a fme nutntJOus food v a I u e s ob
can
happen
to
a
good
man,
organizations
such as the
(NEWSPAPER ENTE 'I" RISE ASSN )
gletons you should pla y for
By United Press International
Clime a year and a half ago
tamed from m1lk Without the
National
League
e1ther
m
hfe
or
after
death
"
a 3·1 break I say supersll·
National Farmer• Union,
to alleviate blocked a•te••es example of pOSitive leadeJ· problems associated w1th
Atlan ta
000 000 IQO- 1 8 0
National
Grange and National
Phlla
000 210 OOx- 3 5 I
tp~~e h~a ••t ca us~d by eat- ShiP . A~ "v•uerfll'l!lildent~ of a sat-urated fat
Farmers
Organization; a'ffil
Reed McQueen (7) and
'P 1.9iJdS~biiiJ1 J~ ~1\o)est~rol large , IJa•~Y; CPJNl•ny m Mm· ' Such 'rorwaJ d-thwkmg as
Casanova
,
Carllon
(7
6)
and
regional greR1pJ1 1rapg fnin
~ ~t . ~,'have,ll.tte.ropted to n e sot a you are Ce! tamly you exemplify also lnsm es
Mc Carver LP- Reed (4 7)
the big Midcontinent Farmen
MIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIII,.•IIIili18111l811118illllllilltliRilltliRilltliRWS!illtliR811118118111li!f the probab1h ty that the da1ry
Association
to the small
mdustry Will be able to m·
Clnclnnah 302 022 101- 11 16 0
Montreal
000
000
IQO1
3
2
crease the market and help
Webster County (Neb ) FarNolan 18·11 and Bench, mers Organization.
to Improve the health of the
By JACK O'BRIAN
NIXon's Presidenhal yacht "Julie", sold m '70 Plummer (7) , Renko, Gilbert
Amen can public Satisfied
THIS
ISN'T
THE
FIRST:
NOEL
for
$125,1100, agam IS for sale at $85,1100 Not the !4). Stroh mayer (6), Walker 191
customers prom o t e good
The list also Included comHumphrey LP- Renko ( I
NEW
YORK
(KFS
)
Rex
Hamson's
son
one hairdo mllbona•re Julius Caruso bought and and
busmess The proviSIOn of
4) HR- Smgleton (3rd)
modity
groups Including the
all these products by lor· Noel's honeymoonmg with bride Margaret renamed "Pres1dent Aurora /' for his wife,
Nabonal
Milk Producers Fed001 000 3QO- 4 8 1
ward-thmkmg da1ry leaders Benson while starnng In his dad's old "My Fait Auro~a Ruffalo, one of 7th Ave 's best des1gners. Houslon
By Helen Hottel
New York 001 100 ooo- 2 10 0 eration, National Wool
such as yourself 1s certamly Lady" star-role. They were wed 1n London a
Roberts, Gladdmg (9) and Growers Aasociatlon, Soybean
good busmess, smce 11 re week after the1r son arr1ved, makmg Rex a no
Edwards
, McAndrew, Taylor
suits m a lot of satisfied cus· doubt sex1er grandpa. Noel divorced model
The MISS World folks want to srage their (8) and Dyer WP- Roberls !5 Growers of America, National
tomers who may h ve longer
Corn Growers Aasociatlon, and
WRITING ONWALLJNVISffiLE
3) LP- McAndrew (5 21 HRsSara
Tufnel
to
hasten
h1s~econd lime around .. next beauty contest aboard the QE2 durmg a
use
mo
re
low·fat
milk
and
the National Association of
Dyer
(Jrd
)
Cedeno
(6th)
Dear Helen
N J Gov Cahill's
John Gavm and Corm1e Towers were the Caribbean crutse
Dear
Dr
Lamb!
am
hav
Wheat Growers.
Before we were mamed, I heard a lot about my fiance's exprettiest couple m the Umcorn Because of daughter, RegUla, IS now an mk.perfumed t 10 mnmgsl
mg
a
wate1
softener
m·
Wife, all bad Everything was her fault. I beheved h1m.
St LOUIS 000 201 000 o- 3 6 2 AB usual, however, the coaiJ.
stalled m my moblle horn e, prettiest Connie of course
The Duke of Newark Star-Ledger newshen . The Mexican San
D1ego 000 000 01 2 1- 4 9 1 lion's list of signers did not InSince we've been mamed everythmg has become MY fault. but first I would l1ke to have
Windsor's ob1ts lacked a doubly romantic gov't pobtely turns back VISiting d1rty h1pp1e
W
ISe,
Grzenda !10) , and clude the nation 'a biggest farm
My husband has a loose mouth and tells everybody all about your opmwn The dnnkm g
McNertney . Norman, Ross (6), organization, the American
types.
Good
.
Henry
Ford
's
ex,
Anne
Johnson,
margmal
note
his
abdication
speech
contamed
everything I do wrong He's sarcastic and mean and tembly water would be f 11t ere d
Cor km s (7), Acosta (9), Schaer
the words "at long last love," and the next day finds 11 cheaper by the dozen . bought that many fer
(9), Arl1n !10) and Kendall Farm Bureau Federation,
critical where before he was as nice as he now pretends to be to !hi oug h salt pellets Would
thiS water be hal mful m any Cole Porter tWJed m on it superbly; It's a de rum shirts &amp; pants out11t at Venez~ano on Mad WP- Arl in (5 6) LP- W1se (5 which has opposed the txllllitlon
others Naturally people thmk I'm to blame for our problems way to a person's health'' I
HRs-Stahl (3rd) , Colbert on most farm policy Issues.
splendid standard from "You Never Know," Ave.lr Author Mane Loucheun (former U.S 6)
I I 2 I h I
because he can lay 11 on th1ck Why d1dn't I read the wntmg on have had h1 gh blood presAmbassador to UNESCO and steeped m d
Also absent were such group~~
sure m the pas t and I am 64 which d1dn't run tho several of 1ts songs are
the wall'
politics)
completed
the
Uberetto
for
a
muslcal
among Porter's prettiest) .. The 28-year-&lt;J!d
as the American National
Should I start telling the truth about him - that he even yea1s old and drmk fo ur to
Plltsbrgh
000 031 201- 7 13 0 Cattlemen's Association and
about
"a
real
sex
symbol"
...
Who•
U
Than!'
..
"geruus"
blx
consultant
to
Joe
DiMagg~o
and
five glasses of water a day
002 011 001- 5 10 0
Los Ang
beals me sometimes' - D AM
and would app1 ec1ate learn Zsa Zsa, Bnan Lew1s, qwt double-entrymg for J Edgar Hoover's Washington home w1ll
Kison , Hernandez 181. Giusti the National Council of Farmer
Dear D ·
mg 1f drmkmg water from a
become a publlc musewn. W1th a vast collechon !9) and Sangu•lien, Downing, Cooperatives.
When will married couples learn that the only persons they softe ner would ca use any an mventive moment to create somethmg called
Mikkelsen lS I, RIChert 181 and
of
memorabilia
After the Angela DaviS S1ms,
The policy statement,
"m1cro-bondmg", an adnaced hair-fusing
D1etz (91 WP- KISon (1
should tell their troubles to are each other, a counselor or, when trouble
acquittal, educational TV chaMell3 here hung OJ LP~M ikke lsen 11 21 HRs- drafted for presenbltlon to the
all else falls, a lawyer?
Dear Reader- For people technique that makes hair weavmg, he hopes,
obsolete
up even more Angela posters Very neutral, eh Mota (3rd). Davis (llh) , platform committees of both
Too bad the writing on the wall was m mvlSlble mk - until m normal health, w a t e r
. Have a portentous quote from Nina van Buckner (lsi) , Clemente Wh l parties, Includes a demand
Bob
Hope
plays
no
mil!tary
favontes
adpassmg
through
the
type
of
after your weddinv. - H
Amencan League
that farm price support levels
water softener you are de- dresses West Pomt grads Wed , Fri stars at the Pallandt's UUed ex-husband when here for the
Mmnesola
001 011 02o- s 10 1 should be raised to not leu
+++
scnbm g would not be harm- Marme Corps Leatherneck Ball at the Hilton Como TV shows years ago: "I am savmg my Cleveland 020
000 1oo- 3 6 1
Dear Helen·
ful. They can be harmful for here The Dr. of Hununanities Bob rec'd at earnings and livmg Simply Diplomatic U!&gt;'
Kaat, Granger (8) and Roof. than 90 per cent of parity when
An mvislble man IS becommg an Impossible problem to me md•v•d uals who have any
R;ddleberger (8), Hen accompanied by "effective"
brmglng was hardly the best trairung ground for CoiiJert,
mgan !81. Farmer (9) and production control programs.
At first be just spied on me. Then he got hiS whole family to tendency toward retention of Wilberforce U was his 20th ... Alam Delon was
sumval In the commercial world of show Moses WP- Kaat 17·1) LPsnoop They were everywhere, aU over the house They'd tell bes flmd or need to restncl the tw1ce at Unicorn w1th Ursula Undress. InColbert 10·41. HRs-Kaat (2nd), The statement charged the
salt m the~r d1et for th iS rea- terestmg, because she's presumably Jean Paul business where sharpo&lt;~Ided, fast-talking gen- G
about me and get my friends to hate me.
ettles (2nd) , J Nettles current farm program, which
so n or for h1gh blood pres Belmondo's b1rd, and Jean &amp;Alam are abeyant Uemen have been known to pull the carpet from (lsi)N
, Darwin (7th)
But th1s wasn't enough The InviSible man fell In love w1th me sure
administration officials en.
under one's feet u
fnends.
w1th great passiOn Every time I'm alone, he attacks me - In my
New York 000 000 ooo- 0 50 dorse, "has failed to meet
Water IS often a hidden
No
delicate
geopolitical
problems
exiSt
betcar, at home, at the laundromat. It's getting to be a terrible source of excess salt or soKan City
000 000 lOx- I 5 I these objectives."
ween Pres NIXon and Mex1co Pres Echeverrw,
Kl1ne, Lyle 181 and Munson , Also, the statement calla for
nuisance.
diUm Most commercial waCh . 5's news director m seriOus mien t'otber Drago
14 4) and Klrkpatpck. bulldlng a government-&lt;Jwned
I can't ever be alone any more and, if I found another gen- ter supplies have a mm1mal who's due for all the whole White House honors rught looked much like his raffish "Masked LP- Kilne (4 2)
"strategic reserve" of surplus
Ueman friend, I'm sure thiS fellow would scare h1m away. It's amount of salt or sodiUm m next week The termendously popular Mexican Gourmet", which might explain why that
them. but some have more President will a'-llpend one day m New York.
list
Gamel
farm
commodities and pu.s1ng
very difficult to deal with a man you can't see, so please, what than desu able for mdlvldgustatory bore's not banished . . The TV news MII W
001 100 2()()-, 4 10 0 a law to ban bls non.farm corWelcome!
.
In
all
the
COWl tries we 've visited,
would you suggest' - HONOR BRIGHT
uals w1th med1ca! problems we've foWJd the citizens of Menco and Iblly by shows highlight endless banks of phones m all Ch1cago
004 010 01 x- 6 12 0
Lonborg, Stephenson !3), poratlot18 from farming. The
Dear H.B
For the person who has to
the Instant-primary storefronts; how come the
Colborn 16) and Ratliff, Bahn- administration has opposed
E1ther a psychlali'ISt or a job as ghost writer on "Night severely 1estnct h1s sodiUm far the friendliest, no phony obseqwousness, ordlll8ry mugg who pays his bills can't get a sen.
Forster (7} and Herr mann.
pure
cordiality
.
Shirley
Mac
Laine's
affecting
or
salt
mtake,
it
m•ght
be
Gallery " ~ H
phone, while the pols (notably slow or no pay) WP- Bahnsen 18 61 LP- Lon- legislation on both polnta lhlll
year.
a Bowery Boys denun cap B1t patronizing to the
just beckon and they're rushed r1ght m .. It's borg {3 3) HRs-Scott (61h),
+++
Alvarado {1st). Andrews (4th), On price supports, atlmiDIJ..
working
clawss,
eh'
..
Bobby
Baker's
lordly
Dear Helen
political muscle because tinkle-execs are Herrmann (2nd ), D May (5th),
!ration officials 'generally contolerance of reporters was a revelation Into the
frightened
of all politicians, m office or due to Alien 2 (loth &amp; lith)
An elderly fnend of mine had a ser1ous heart attack. She
tend that IUppolt levels should
ego of a convicted fraud who still thinks he's
!2nd Game)
run for same.
lived alone and it was lucky for her that her son called each day.
be
set at levela geared to pro.
Milw
040
000
ooo4
7
1
unportant. Worse, they let the ex-&lt;:on get away
When he couldn't get an answer on the phone, he asked a neighHere's
our
summer
doldrum
·
the
stately
Chicago
000
021
1015
11
2
mote mtiXImwn export ulal
With It
Slaton, Linzy (6), Sanders on the theory this would yield
bor to cheek immediately, and they got her to the hospital on
and beautiful Plaza Hotel's legendary Oak
Actress Magg1e Hayes (who's wr1tten a
(81, and Rodriguez ; Lemonds,
time.
Mr and Mrs V1rgll Wood, how-to book about making your own jewelry) IS ' Room will close after lunch and entirely every Regan (4), Romo (6), Gossage more flmllncome than a high
Sat. &amp; Sun ; the otber chic rooms are cutting 17 ), Forster 17 ), Acosta 191 and support level.
I too live alone, am In my late 60s, but unfortunately my · Sprmgfield, were weekend
teaching the handicapped at tbe Goodwill Inchildren only contact me about once a month, though they live m guests of Mrs Letha Wood.
back variously ; the flavorful Ptilm Court also Herr mann. WP- Acosta 12·0). A spoke1111an for the
dustries, whose gems will be sold to raise fWJds
LP- Sanders (1 5) HR- Kelly
the same town They forget to send a card for Mother's Day, but
Mrs. Mabel VanMeter, Mrs for that estimable organization . Monmouth folds Its opel' palms Sun.-Mon .. Chaleau Madrid (2nd).
National Farmers Unloa l8ld
they'll be home for ChriStmas- the traditional big dlrmer
Tom Nice and Mrs Opal
will be almost the only major rughtclub
today
he could not predict
Racetrack
has
its
own
buslllng
helcopter
pad.
Oakland
000
020
ooo2
4
0
operating all summer as usual.
We were a clG:l,e and lovmg family, but somehow people drift Eichinger VISited Sunday With
Detroit
001 000 011- 3 4 0 whether the Democratic
Used by nag owners and track execs, seldom by
away from each other. I've never asked them to check up on me Eldon Kraeuter and Leda Mae,
Hollzman (9 4) and Dtmcan, platform committee would
the suckers . Africa's now so safe, Bill
Racme
Coleman, Seelbach t91 and embrace
the
coalition
- my pndewouldn't allow that. And I'm not a "lonely old lady"
Ninth Ave from43rdto46thnowisknown to Freehan ~P-Seelbock (3 2). statement. But, he added, maMr and Mrs. John Benson, Holden's broken his safari camp for more
I havemanyfrlendsanda f..,ly act1ve life - but 11\ere are times
HRs- Epsteln (8thl. Freehan
Mr. Darrell Cleland and Mrs. d8ngerous geography..Checks Into the Sherry- cops and denizens as Drag ~een Boulevard ... !3rd).
jor prwideatlal COIItenden iJI.
when I am feeling IU that I wish the phone would rmg.
Nether
land
next
week
and
Central
Park's
right
New
character
actor
making his performing
Carpenter,
Colwnbus,
called
eluding SeJII. GeGrge ,S. McPerhaps, Helen, you might mention to grown children that
acriiSS 5th Ave.
do!
but
(as
a
Mafl8 godfather) m the "Slaughter" California 100 300 ooo- 4 10 1 GoYern, S.D., !Jubert H. Humon
Denz1l
Cleland,
Wednesday
frequent callB - just a mmute or two out of their dayo - would
120 011 30x- 8 12 0
Sh1rley Chisholm In a New Jersey high fibn Is Nonnan Alfie, furniture manufacturer Boston
afternoon.
make elderly parents much more secure. - NOT ABURDEN
Ryan,
Rose
(2), Fisher (4) , phrey, Minn., IIIII EdiiJIIId S.
school during a question perlud pomt~ and and Dallas-Mexico City je!.«tter. He'd rather Barber (7) and
Mr
and
Mrs.
Vernon
Stephenson, Mulkle, llblne, Ill blve "100
Dear Not :
said, "The Young WOJnan in the red blouse." act than upholster ... The MUSBOllnia keep Siebert, Lee t7J and Fisk WP- p11r cent VDIInl ncordl" on
Cleland,
Columbus,
were
Duly mentioned. Elderly parents living alone prefer the1r
Red shirt replied, "I'm a young man." All he making headlines but in smaller type than Siebert (6-21. LP-Fisher 12·41. farm policy ~ llldouecl by
HR- Fisk 15th).
Independence and abhor being considered a "burden, " but tbey overnight guests of Mr and
Mrs Ross Cleland, havmg wanted to know was Shirley's opinion of his long Benito : DDuce's Widow, Racbele's pleading for
the Iannen wdcln.
can be terribly hurt when thell' children ignore them. A telephone
been called here by the death of hair • The Sick Age: Brltlsh.fllmlng flick another pension boost, son Romano, the jazz Baltimore 000 11110 102- 3 1 o A GOP b1a
call takes only a few minutes a day, and those weekly VISits are his grandfather, Vern Cleland.
11110 010 ooo- 1 4 o party'a pWiform addecl
"Group Marriage " joins In unholy deadlock pianist, divorced Sophia Loren's slater Marla, Texas
oa
farm
Palmer 17 3) and O.tn,
so much appreciated . They make an older person feel he or she IS
Miss Lucille Smith spent four couples who thereupon swing like a pen- and thla week, son VIttorio divorced his wife of Bosman, Plna (9) and Billings. policy "Jirobably wiD beelceUy
still psrt of the family. - H.
Friday m New Lexington
LP- Pina (0 2) HR- Johnson reflect lbeprogriiD n haw Ill.
dulum do
34 ye11rs, Orsola
!131)
effect now."
Hemsley, IIIllliCot. Second row, Jerry Davenport, Dennis
Ault, Bob Burdette, Greg Gibbs, Bunny Arthur, Gary Clark
Back row, Don Swisher, Sam VanMatre, Dennis Gilkey,
Steve Halstead, Tom Grueser, Ray VanMatre, Man -player
Junmy Joe Hemsley and Bus Mgr Bob Wmgett.

SJNl'1o!:!!!Jlde

Food Stamps Put In $102 .Million

Farm Coalition
Counters
GOP
13..

Taking Positive Leadership

Dairy Man Backs Lowfat Milk

Linescores

Helen Help

Us.

••

.. .

. Chester

News Notes

\

scormg w1th a :Wlead m the
top of third when Sparks led off
with a walk. Rase grounded
back to Van Maire who threw
the ball mto centerfield trymg
to get Sparks at second
Jay Welch smgled m the f1rst
run The second came on an
mheld out
With two out m the M~lgs
half of the th1rd, Tom Cooke
walked, Rick Ash tapped to
welch who threw wildly to
first Cooke came around to
score on the play and Ash
stopped at second.
Roger D1xon thereupon !Jed

Second Game
Jay Welch came m to put out
a bases loaded (am m the
seventh frame and protect
Portsmouth's 2.{) lead m the
second game Saturday
In the Me1gs seventh, D1xon
led off w1th a walk VanMatre
hned out to second R Ash
smg\ed, but McKmney fl~ed to
center Cooke walked to jom
the bases. These five batters
were pmchhltters.
Welch then fanned pitcher
Skipper Johnson to end the
game!
Steve Lee, who started for

11 up w1th a smgle, h1s first of
two run,prnducmg h1ts.
Me1gs got the go-ahead and
wmmng run m the f1fth when
Mick Ash doubled leadmg off
Van Maire walked before
Dearfleld replaced the tmng
Welch on the mound. HIS first
p1tch h1t Cooke
W1th one out and the bases
jammed, D1xon's second single
made 11 3-2 Dearfleld put down
the next two batters to end the
bases-loaded threat
The only other h1tter for
Me1gs was Lou McKmney's
fourth mmng double

Me1gs, hurled s1x fme mnmgs,
g1vmg up only four h1ts He
fanned SIX and walked 1\\o m
bemg charged w1th the loss.
Johnson hurled the seventh and
fa nned one, walked 1\\o, and
gave up no h1ts.
Gary Hanes fanned e1ght and
walked none m s1x and a third
inmngs Welch walked one and
fanned one
The only other h1t beSides
Ash's was Mark Kiesling 's
th1rd mmng SJngle In the
second
game,
Coach
Nesselroad started e1ght new
players All but one athlete

played at least s1x mmngs
Saturday
Meigs Vs. Logan
Stan Perry shook off some
early w1ldness to settle down
and pitch a three-hitter lor h1s
second wm of the season m the
f1rst game at Logan. Me1gs
won, 4-1
Perry struck out 13 to g1ve
h1m 29 10 14 and a th1rd mmngs
thiS year, an average of better
than two an mrung. The blondeheaded r~ghty walked nine
(five 10 the first 1\\o mmngs )
but pennitted Logan only three
mf1eld hils
Randy NorriS worked all the
way on the mound for the hosts ,
allowmg nme h1ts, fannmg 1\\Q,
and lssumg f1ve base on balis
Me1gs scored two runs in the
first when Cooke led off w1th a
walk, R Ash smgled, Van
Maire smgled in Cooke, and
Kevm &lt;Sheets walked wtth the
bases loaded to score R. Ash.
Me~gs' second mnlng rWJ
came when Cooke smgled and
came around on R. Ash's
tr1ple
McKmney scored the fourth
Me1gs run m the Sixth when he
tripled w1th 1\\o gone and
scored on Cooke's single
(Cooke IS h1tting a phenomenal
583.
All told, Meigs hitters were

Reds End Road Trip With 11-1 Mark

6¥

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

second wm m three decisions in
the first game w1th Portsmouth The bill nghthander
allowed only fiVe h1ts m the
Meigs 3-2 win
Van Maire fanned seven,
walked five, and was polSon to
Portsmouth batters 1n the
clutches; Lowell Welch started
for the v1s1tors and was
reheved by Dearf1eld m the
f1fth Welch, m taking the loss,
fanned four and walked four while Dearfleld, a flreballing
lefthander, fanned f1ve and
walked none m two mnmgs
Portsmouth opened the
'

4 N T.

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

QUAKER STATE TOURNEY WINNERS - The Fruth
Pbarmacy Slo-Pitch softball team IS shown here after wmrung the tournament on Memor18l Day. Pictured are front
row, from left, Jeff Grueser, mascot ; Bob Whaley, Ed Baer,
Ed VanMatre, Danny R1zer, Ron Q)llllen and Joe Bob

"

UP! Sports Writer

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (UPI )-For my money Jack Nicklaus
Is the best around today and I think he can do anythmg lie ever
sets his mind to do on a golf course--except!or one thmg.
I don't thmk be can put together The Grand Slam.
He'll be halfway there If he wins the U.S. Open which begins
here Thursday and that In Itself would be a tremendous morale
booster for Jack The Great, because 1t would be his 13th major
title conquest equalling Bobby Jones' all-time record. But even
should he wm ~re this week, and he certainly can, I can't see
him winning both the BritiSh Open and PGA titles later this

MONTREAL ( UPI) -A
highly successful road tnp
vulated the Cmcinnati Reds
from third place to sole
possess10n of first place m the
National League West.
The Reds, wummg 11 of 12
games on the road, depended
upon the bat of Johnny Bench
to put them one full game out m
front. But the Reds had some
help from Pittsburgh which
defeated Los Angeles to give
Cincmnatl first place
Cincmnati, which · stomped
Montreal Il-l Sunday, plays an
exhibition game in Cleveland
tomght, then open.s at home
Tuesday With a twi-nlght doubleheader
aga1nst

sununer

Why not '
Because The Slam isn 'I reaUy a compulsion w1th him He's not
blotting everything and everyone else out of his nund the way
Gary Player d1d when he did everythmg but become a TrappiSt
monk to wm the 1965 US. Open.
Otbertl More Intrigued
Nicklaus will tell you himself that others seem more Intrigued
with the possibility of his accompllBhlng the Slam than he is.
"! think primarily that's been a press ambition," says Nicklaus, aware many writers are pulling for hun to do 11 because it
would make a good story for one thing and It would g1ve them
something else to wr1te about him for another
"&amp;Ire I'd love to win the Grand Slam," says Nicklaus "Who
wouldn't? I don't think 1t's an Impossible thing to do, but I thmk
It's very Improbable. Slams happen They're not planned. If you
win the first one, the Masters, which I have, you go on to the U.S.
Open, and If you happen to win that one, then you porn! for the
British Open, and if you win that one, then there's a chance to
talk about The Sliun. Now though, I think it's somewhat premature. ~~ . q.

u. ~ 1f)

" Nicklaus is rigllt abut that and that's still another reason I
don't think he'll make The Slam. The closer he gets to 1t, the
more it's liable to bug hun
Bobby Jones, only golfer ever to achieve The Slam, had a big
advantage over Nicklaus.
Nobody had ever done It before so when Jones was on the way
to doing so m 1930, he wasn't bugged every day by people asking
him "Do you think you can dolt? Do you think you can dolt?"
Ask Marla or Aaron
If you don't think questions like that can turn you around a
little, go ask Roger MarlS. Or Hank ,\aron
There's stil another factor weighing against Nicklaus completing The Slam, and that's his pace on the golf course.
He's slow, no matter what he says, and he's sensitive about It,
no matter what he says
A few years ago Jimmy Demaret, Ben Hogan's old partner,
came out and said Nicklaus would be finished by 35 because he
played so slow.
Nicklaus Is 32 now and nowhere near finished, but everytime
somebody brings up that statement by Demaret it still rubs him
the wrong way.
"I've played this way all my life," he says. "I stand over the
ball a long time, I walk fast, but that's my makeup. That's my
game. You go back through history and you look at the players
who were really good players You look at the Jones, the Hagens,
the Hogans Every one of them was a slow player It's pretty
difficult to criticize Hogan and Jones. They were probably two of
,theslower players we ever had, and two cl th• hA•t "
Jack Nicklaus loses me there.
I don't know which ball game be was watching but Walter
Hagen was famO\lS for his carefree "miss 'em quick" style of
· play and Hogan, while no speed merchant, certsinly never
dawdled.
AB for Bobby Jones, he played so fast he made everybody else
seem slow motion by comparison. Shortly after he completed his
Slam In 19~The Slam was different In those daY" comprising
the U.S. and British Open and the U.S. and British amateur
tltles--J. Francia Marks, a British golf writer, commented In the
London Morning Post about how fast Jones was.
"He Is quick and wastes no time," said Marks. "He takes his
stance aod immediately from the moment he sets his club behind
the ball to when he strikes It I count three seconds. If I time him
from when he stoops to tee up the ball to when he actually hits lt,
the ball already Is on lis way as I whisper siX."
At. a golfer, few aroWIII today can Clmlpare with Jack
Nicklaus. AB a reporter, he 'utill a great golfer.

East Wins Final Tilt
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Randy
Shade of Reynoldsburg High
School may he just what the
Cleveland Indians want
He was tapped last week by
the Tribe In the free - agent
draft, and reigns as the most
valuable player for the West In
the Ohio AU-Star baseball series.
He drove in three tuns, with
two homers In Friday's game
as the West P-Icked up a 1().9
win, they won Saturday's game
11-t With a four-hit perform·
ance In five Innings. In San·
day's 13-2 !011 he was hitless
In three &lt;tflcial trips to the
plate, but waa able to acore
one ol the J'UIII,
The West picked up 1\\o of
the three gtunealn the weekend
ser\ejl which sllnda at 24 winll
for the West and Z4 for the

East.

Taking the spotlight S!lllday
was Kip YoWlg from Whiteoak
on the East squad He twiriQd
seven and two thirds Innings of
no-hit ball before Cincinnati
Moeller's shortstop Len Matuszek rapped a single to fight
YoWJg became one of the
few pitchers tq go the distance
In the 17-year History of the
Ohio JayceHpot18ored clallic.
He allowed four hits, struck out
eitht, walked three and allowed
only one earned run.
He got all the S\IPPOI'I he
needed In the Iiiith and seventh
innings when his all•tar teammalel erupted for 11 runs on
IIIII hila, ts!Ung advantage of
several of the 10 errors by the
West.
John Langdon of Euclld,
three for four SUnday for the
East, -was named the Moet
Valuable Player for hla team.

MAJOR
LEAGUE

McRae doubled with the
bases loaded m the third mrung, then h1t mto a ground out
m the seventh to allow Tony
Perez to score to g1ve the Reds
a 7.{) wm
Bench smgled home runs m
the f1rst and seventh innmgs
and drove m another With a
fielder's choice ground out m
the runth .
Nolan lost his bid for a shutout when Ken Singleton homeredin the seventh Inning . Nolan,

who walked two and struck out
four, upped hiS record to 8-1
CincllU18ti and San D1ego
traded catchers Sunday, with
the Reds sending backup
catcher Pat Corrales to the
Padres who gave Cmcmnati
Bob Barton.
The Reds assigned Barton to
the1r Indianapolis farm club.
Barton was batting 193 this
season, after he lost his startIng pos1tion when he spilt a
fmger and nussed two weeks

Payne Holding

Oleshire Tigers

Out For Better
Offer From Reds

STANDINGS Win 3rd Straight

National League

New York
P1tlsburgh

Philadelphia
Bench, who last week earned
the honor of player of the week
for hiS seven home runs m five
games, drove In three runs
w1th four h1ts SWJday.
Second-stringer Hal McRae
knocked m three runs, while
Gary Nolan twitted a three hitter.
Bench's three RBI's now
gives him 44 for this year
Cincinnati swept the Houston
and Phlladelph1a ser1es on this
road tnp, took two of three
from New York and two from
Montreal. Saturday's game
with the Expos was ramed out
and no make up date has been
scheduled

East
wlpctgb
33 17 660

32 17 653
I2
Ch1cag o
27 21 563
5
Sf LOU IS 22 29 431 11 I 2
Montreal
20 28 417 12
Philadelph ia 20 30 400 13
West
w. t. pet g.b
Cmcmnat1
31 19 620
Los Angeles 31 21 596
1
Houslon 29 22 569
2I2
Atlanta
23 26 469
7 1·2
San D1ego 17 34 333 14 I 2

Amen can League
East
w. I pel
Detro1t
26 21 553
Bail1more
25 22 532
Cleveland
22 23 489
Boston
20 24 455
New York
20 28 41 7
Mil wauk ee
16 29 326
West
w. I pet
Oakland
33 14 702
Chicago
30 18 625
Minnesota
26 19 578
Ca liforn ia
23 27 460
Kansas C1ty
21 27 438
Texas
20 30 400

gb
1
3
::;:
9

b
3'''

9

6

11112
12111

1w,

San Franc1sco

18 39 316 16 I 2
Sunday's Results
Sunday's Results
Kan C1ty 1 New York 0
C1nclnnat• 1 ~Montreai 1
Ch1c8gO 6 Mllw I, lsi
Houston 4 New York 2
Chicago 4 Mllw 4, 2nd
Ph1ia 3 Atlan ta 1
Detrol1 3 Oakland 2
Pi ltsburgh 7 Los ling 5
M1nnesota 5 Cleveland 3
San DiegO 4 Sf Louis 3, 10 Inns Boston 8 Cal1forn1a .A
Chicago 4 San Fran 0, lsi
Bal timore 3 Texas l
San Fran 3 Chicago I, 2nd
Today's Probable Pitchers
Today's Probable p1tchers
I All T1mes EDTI
tAll T1mes EDTI
Los Angeles !Si nger 3 6) at
St Lou iS (Cleveland 54!, 9 Baltimore !Dobson 6 6)
Oakland (Blue 0 2), 11 p m
pm
New York (Gentry 3 4) at Detro1t (N!Ckro 1 11
Mmnesota 1Perry 4 51 , 8
Allan Ia !N1ekro 7 5), 8 p m
Montreal !Stoneman 5 51 at p m
Houston !Dierker 53 ), 8 30 Milwaukee t Parsons 6 21
Texas !Paul 02), 8 30 pm
pm
!Only games scheduled 1
!Only games scheduled)
Tuesday's Games
Tuesday's Games
San Fran al Pitts, night
Bait at Oakland, night
Cleveland at Calif, night
San Diego at Chicago
Delro1t at Mmn, n1ght
Los Ang at Sl Louis, night
M1iw
at Texas, n1ght
New York at Atlanta, night
ChiCago al New York, mghl
Pitts ,at Clnc1 2. twl mghf
Montreal at Houston. mght
Kan City at Boston, night

at
at
IS
at

J. C. Snead
Claims Title
PmLADELPHIA (uPI)-lt
just drips with Irony .
How many guys who once
were paid only $200 a mooth by
their old boss get a chance to
clip hun for $13,000? And on a
golf course yet!
And not only that, but J. C.
Snead was perched right there
at the 18th green of the
suburban Whitemarsh Valley
CoWJtry Club Sunday watching
Chi Chi Rodriguez blow a
chance to tie him and force a
sudden death playoff In the
$150,000 IVB Philadelphia Golf
Clall8ic.
Snead, who worked 1\D(ler
Rodriguez as an asalatant pro
in the winter of 1967 at the
Dorado Beach Country Club in
PUerto Rico, shot an even-par
72 to capture the $30,000 first
prize by one stroke over his
former employer, who had to
settle for secondiJiace money
of $17,000.
Snead, nephew of golfing
great Sam Snead, set the stage
for the final hole dramatics
when, leading by a stroke, he
bogeyed the 18th alter b!I'Ying
his tee llhot In the bunker off
the fairway.
Rodriguez, the third-round
leader, followed Saead's lead
With a lir1ile onlhe 17th to stay
oo the heels of hil opponent,
who was playing In front of
him, and hit hil drive on the
18th right clown the fairway. He
now needed only to get home in
lhe replaUon par folD' to force
the playoff.
But Rodriguez sent hla
aecond llhot aalling over the
green into gallery aeats,

chipped back and then missed
a 1l).foot putt, which sbd to the
right of the hole. He fmlshed
With a bog~e f1ve .
"Chi Ch1 gave me the
tournament," Snead said later.
"When I saw his putt roll past,
it felt great. I sure dldn 't want
a playoff."
Snead's 72-hole total of 282,
six WJder par, was the highest
winning figure In the !().year
history of the tourney as the
pros had trouble with the 6, 700yard couree the last two dayo
because of gusts on Salw-day
and hardened fairways and
greens on Sunday.
Rodriguez finished with a
tw!Hlver par 74 for a 283 IDtal.
Dick Rhyan, only one of eight
pros In the final-day field of 73
to break par, had a two-under
70 to tie for third with Jim
Jamieson at 285.
Dave Hill, aliO with a 70, was
alone at 218 while Hubert
Green, Romero Blancas ancl
Bob Murphy ,were deadlocked
at 'JJfl. At eveniJIIr Z88 were Art
Wall and Gay Brewer.

Thursday evemng at RIO
Grande, the Cheshire T1gers
contmued on the1r wmmng
ways w1th an 8.(1 wm over R10
Grande, the third consecutive
shut-out wm by the T1gers
Th1s t1me the p1tchmg laureis
belonged to Claude Corneijus
who m h1s first outmg of the
season allowed an opemng
game smgle to C Ramey and
then proceeded to pitch no-h1l
ball for the remamder of the
game The strong nght hand
hurler of Coach Dale Allensworth's T1gers struck out 14
ami, walked four m his opeqmg
mound debut as he continually
threw hiS fast ball by the Rm
Grande h1tters
The Tigers drew first blond
m the game as after two were
out m the flfSt mmng, Steve
Ba1rd hit a long homerun to
nght centerfield Cornelius
then tr1pled to center and
Kelley Wmebrenner smgled to
score Cornelius
In the second mnmg the
T1gers scored four more runs
as Rusty Lucas led off with a
towenng homerun to left field
'
Dallas Sayre then tripled and
scored on a smgle by R1ck
Wmebrenner. Steve Baird then
hit his second homerun of the
evemng to score Wmebrenner
ahead of him
Cheshire scored two more
rWJs m the fifth mnmg and one
10 the SIXth as Dallas Sayre h1t
the Tigers' fourth ho01erun of
the game, another long dr1ve to
nght f1eld, m the s1xth mmng
The Tigers m posting their
third consecutiVe shutout wm
were led m hitting by Steve
Baird w1 th 1\\o homeruns and a
triple, Rusty Lucas with a
homerun and double , Dallas
Sayre w1th a homerun and

double, Dallas Sayre w1th a
homerun and triple, and Kelley
Wmebrenner w1th two smgles
Cheshire next plays Vmton
Thursday evening at Cheshire

Major League Leaders
By United Press lnlerna!Jonal
Lead1ng Ba«ers
National gleague
ab r h pet.
Stenet, Pll
3310717 38 355
Sngu1ln, Pll 48 186 21 63 JJ9
Torre,St L
4919127 64 335
Alou, St L
46176 22 59 335
Cedno, Hou
45 171 29 56 327
Bck ner, LA
33113 15 37 327
Toln, C&gt;n
49 19439 63 .325
Ollvr, P1t
48 20518 66 .3'U
Carty, Atl
41128 25 41 .320
Cimnte, P1t 44 179 31 57 3l8
Amer1can League
g ab r h pet.
Pn~ela, KC
48 189 32 62 328
Allen, Ch1
481713056 327
Rud1 , Oak
46 185 32 60 324
AI mar,Cal
50 206 24 65 316
May, Chi
46 112 30 54 314
Braun , M&gt;n
34 115 9 35 304
P1nsn Cal
451592348 302
Freehn, Det 33 116 20 35 302
Kelly. Chi
39 137 23 41 299
Ol1vr, Cal
49 197 25 58 .294

~""
DEVOTEDTOTHI

MEI~l.~~~~1~u&amp;

CHESTER L TANNIHILL,
Euc u
ROI£RT HOEFLICH,
City Edllor
Publ•shed dilly ucopt
Saturday by Tho Oh1o vallay

,1\,"..W.m:'(

o~~~~·

AS769 Bus lnen Office Phone•'
997 IIS6 Edolorlal Phont 992

2157
second class poSiaQt paid II
Pomeroy Oh10
Not1ona1 odvertlSing
roprnenlal•v• Bot!lnelli
GallaQhtr Inc 12 Easl 4lnd
51 , New York Clly , Now York
Subscrlpllon rates Dt
Iovered by carrltr wnart
available so cenls per week ,
By Molor Route where corrltr
service not ava111b lt
One
monlh S1 75 By moll In Ohio
and w va , one year Sl4 00
S1x months S7 15 Tnreo
months u so Subscription
price Includes Sunday Tlmts
sonMel
1

8

Runs Baffed tn
Nahonal League Bench, Cin
and Stargell, P1 tt 44 , Kingman,
SF 38, Oliver, P1tt 37,
S1mmons, St L 35
American League: Allen, Chi
40, Jackson, Oak 35, May Chi

30, Ol1ver, Cal and Duncan,

Oak 28

Pitching
. National League. Nolan, Cin
and Sulton, LA 8· 1, Seaver, NY
8 3; Ray, Hou and Blass, Pitt 7·
1, Osleen, LA 7·3, Niekro,Atl
and Jenkins. Ch1 7 5, Carlton,
Phil 7-6
American League · Perry,
Ciev 10 4, Wood, Chi, Lollch,
Del and Holtzman, Oak 9·4.
Bahnsen, Ch1 8 6

r-------UIHtltlll _______i

I Feed the Whole I
I

I
I
I
I
II
I
I
I
I
tnternativnat League
I
Sleildings
United Pross tnlornoti0111l I
W. L. Pet. G.B.

I
I
I
I
I1
I
I
I
I
I
I

2
4
5112

The Daily Sentu..J

In astronomy, ma~mtude ·
15. Stargell. P1!1and Kingm8n , is the measure of the rightSF 14 Colbert, so 12. Aaron, ness of a star or any lumiAllAmertcan
and Watson,
Hou 10Ja ckson, ·r1n~o~u~s~b~od~y~m~th:e~he~a~v~e~ns~-==========
League:
Oak 12, Allen, Ch1 11, Cash,
Del and Duncan, Dak 10,
Harper, 8os and Epstein, Oak

I

2

l1elder from Palm Springs,
Calli., who played at Desert
JWJlor College, picked In the
14th roWJd , Peter Savute, 18,
second baseman from Wichita,
Kan , picked 1n the 20th roWJd
and Ron Van Saders, 18, catcherfromMonachie,NJ.,plcked
10 the Z5th round

National League : Bench, Cin

I

112
2

HYDROPLANE RACE
OWENSBORO, Ky. (UPI)-Atlas Van Unes, driven by Bill
MWJcey at a record average
speed of 106.523 miles per holD',
beat Pay-N-Pak Swtday In a
championship heat of the
$25,000 Governor's Cup race for
wtllmited hydroplanes.

roun&amp;;~ Pat' Syfvester;''\'~ 11'1~' ~~~1l)ij\~

Home Runs

1 Family for only

Richmond
28 24 .538
Louisville
29 25 .537
Syracuse
27 24 .529
Charleston
25 25 .500
!,Toledo
26 26 .500
Tidewater
27 21 .500
Rochester
,26 30 .464
Peninsula
23 30 4JA
Sundoy's Resuth
Peninsula • Louisville 1
Richmond 6 Toledo 0
Tidewater 5 Rochester 3
Syracuse 20 Charleston 2
•

CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Cmcmnall Reds, frontrunners
m the National League West,
Signed SIX of last week's draft
cho1ces Sunday. Top chotce
Larry Payne says he " holding
out for a better offer
'
Assigned to the Reds rookie
camp at St. Petersburg, Fla.,
unmedwtely were ·
Dav1dMoore, 17, r1ghthanded
PI tcher from LeX!'ngton • Ky.,
picked In the seventh roWJd;
Bob Cwn1111ngs, 18, third baseman from PhoeniX, picked m
the eighth roWJd; Mike Westerman, 17, shortstop from Freeport, Pa. picked In the tenth

R. Ash, a single and tripl,e ~
DIXon and Cooke two singles
each, McKmney a triple, and
Dave Boyd a single
Second Game
W1th mne new starters,
Me1gs pounded out 12 hits and
won ~2 behmd Johnson's routegomg e1ght.-hltter
Johnson struck out fiVe and
gave up only one walk m
posting hts first wm m two
deciSions
Leading the Me1gs atblck
we~ B1ll Chaney and Steve
Lee w1th three singles each.
Johnny Baird added two
s10gles wlule Kiesling, M Ash,
and Jon Buck each doubled and
Dave Wolfe added a Single.
Others who contributed
Sunday were How1e Taylor,
Johnny Roush, and Chuck
Perroud, each with several !me
defensive plays m the infield
Portsmouth Is now 2-3 on the
year and Logan is 2-7 Meigs
w11l play at Syracuse this
Wednesday at 5 30 agal!lllt PI
Pleasant in a single game.
&lt;Saturday (First Gomel
Ports
002 11110 Q-2 5 I
Meigs
002 010 x--3 5 2
L Weich lwpl. Dearfleld tSl.
and Hanes Van Metre and
Di xon
t Second G. mal
Ports
000 200 o-2 4 4
Meigs
000 000 ~ 2 0
Hanes twp) , J. Welch (7),
and McGlone Lee (I pl.
Johnson !71, and M Ash, Dixon
!6)
Sunday (First Go mel
Meigs
210 001 Q-4 9 o
Logan
010 000 o-1 3 0
Perry and Dixon Norris and
Corby
!Second Gomel
Meigs
051 201 0--9 12 1
Logan
200 000 Q-2 8 s
Johnson and M. Ash Wright
and Myers

I s .25 I
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday

TH_RIFT BOX9pieces
regularly •2.65
Offer good thru June 29, 1972

.. . can be many thingswildlife shelters, picnic tables,
soil protectors, newspapers,
air conditioners, shade,
variety, and beauty.
Let's not waste them.

II Why cook? Visit the Colonel II
I1 ~
frW
Dkiek•~ I ..only you can prevent forest fires. '&amp; Q
Crow'• Steak House
I
C.OLONEL SANDER~· RECIPE

I

POMEROY, OHIO'

I

·----------------~

~ub!Jshtd as

o public seN•te in cooperohon with 1he Mvtrl111,. CIIIIIIC11,
Sthlcts, the No!IONII Auoclttlon ol Stile Foruttfl
and Tilt lnlernahOIIII NewiPIPI!I MvtJt•s••l Erttut1.es
•

the US

fore~!

•,

�4- The Dally Sertlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Junel2, 11172

Dave Roberts
Posts 5th Win
By GREG GAU.O
UPI 8plrll Writer
The two dlvlllonll raceJ In
lhe Nat!onal League ilghtened
OOIIIlderllbly SundaY and the
borne-run ball played · a
cleclllve Jlllrt• .
In the East, the Pittsburgh
Plratea dreW within a half·
game of. the llrst'!llace New
York Meta ail old-reliable
Roberto C!!!llleille poled a twoout, twool'\11 homer In . the
leV1IIth lnnlng to lead the Buell
to a 7~ victory over the Los
Angeles Dodgers.
· lnllde tbeiJIII'lt homers by
Manny MoLl al1il WUile Davia
~ the Dodgers were wasted 81
1M Angelel fell a full pme
behind the alzzilng CinclnnaU
Reda In the Western Dlvlalon
race.
The Reds · clobbered the
Montreal Expos, 11-1, wblle the
Houston A,ltroa, who are jult
2111ame1 out ollirst place In
the West, knocked off the Mets,
~2. with the help of a tw~
homer and run«::ring triple
by Celar Cedeno.
Oilier NL Action
In other National League
action, Pblladelphla defeated
Atlanta, :1-1, San Diego edged
St. Lou!~. f. .~, In 10 Innings, and
the Chicago Cubs spilt with the
Giant/!, taking tbe opener, 4-0,
and loolng the nightcap, $-1.
The AstrOI remained In the
thick of it In the West; beating
the' Mets for tbe aecond time in
the three-game series. Cedeno
tagged, IOier Jlm McAndrew,
now f&gt;..2,1or a triple in the third

inninK and unloaded a lone.
two-run homer Into the Astra
bullpen in left field with two wt
in the seventh lo break a 2-2 Ue.
Duffy Oyer homered lor tlkl
Meta off Dave Roberts, who
went the distance lor Houston
and picked up ~ ~h victorY
ll(!ainat three defeate.
Cal'iton Wlnllltc:CIIId
·steve Carlton acattered eight
hits to win hill second ~lght
game as the Phli.s downed the
Braves. OaCar Gamble ilcored
one run and drove home
another with a sacrifice Dy lo
help Carlton 1o ~ aeventh
victory olthe seaaon. Ron Reed
took the loa, ,~ seventh
ll(!alnst loUr victorlea.
The Padres broke a I~
losing streak when i.:lerrell
Thurnas singled Ill the winning
run with none out In the loth.
Back-to-back home runs bY"
Nate Colbert and Larry Sl8hl
In tbe ninth sent the game Into
extra innings.
Rick Wise, who had a shutout
lor tbe Cards until the eighth
inning, contributed lo his own
defeat by commitilng a costly
throwing error that let . the
winning run advance to third
base in the last Inning .
The Giants napped an eight
game losing streak as Ron
Bryant pitched a live-hitter in
the second game win over the
Cubs. Two unearned runs In the
sixth Inning helped Bryant
even his record at a.::l.
In the first game, Bill lllinds
hurled a live-bit shutout In
outpltching hard-luck Juan
Marichal, who BUffered his loth
l!&gt;ss in 12 decisions.

tooatsFUNHY

~~~~~~~~~~~'
::J Sl.ob '"

;:

·~~ :,.s:,t~;
44111.

TRADES MADE

CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
Cleveland Indiana Sunday
traded utiliiy Infielder Fred
Stanley to the San Diego
Padres for left-handed pitcher

Mike Kilkenny.

Tlie Padres alao di!ilt away
catcher Bob Barton 1o the
Clnclhn8ti Reda In exchange ·
for catcher Pat Corrales in a
separate trade.

S- The DaUy Sertinel, Middleport-POmeroy, 0 ., June 12, 1m ·

White- So"x Sweep DOlJ,ble Bill
By M.UITiN LADER
probably the best all-around to acore Pat KeUy with the
UPI Spw11 Writet
club I've ever been on."
. winning run as, 11\e White Soz
Chuck Tanner, who was
Oakland contributed ita woo tbe nightcap. The Brewers
expected to be spending most share to Chicago's big day by ·had scored all foil' of tbeir runs
of hia time this season dropping a 3-2 . declalon 1o in tbe second lnnlng, but Kelly
apologizing for the Chicll(!o Detroit and the Baltimore got two of those back wlth · a
White Sox, finds himself Oriole; remained a game · two-run horner In the fifth.
having to apply reverse behind the 'llg~ In Ute ~
Bill Freehan slammed the
psychology jult so . ~ players by beating tbe Ter.as ~ers. first pitch of the ninth inning
don'i go walking around with :1-1. Elsewhere, tbe Ka!)1811 from Ken Holtzman for his
"a lot of big heeds."
City Royaljl edged the New third ~omer o( Ute year to give
Dick ADen delivered a big York Yankees 1~ tbe Min· Detrmttherunthatsnappedlta
vote of conftdence late Sunday nesota Twi~s beat the lour.game lolling streak.'
after Chicago had completed a Cleveland Indians, 1&gt;3, and the
Dave Johnson's Orst homer
6-4 and 5.-4 double sweeJ) of the Boston Red Sox beat the of the year gave BaiUmore a I·
Milwaukee Brewers that California Angels, 6-4. .
I tie In the seventh innir)g at
moved tbe atreaklng White Sox
In the National League, Texas and then be doubled
to within 3% games of Orst- PhUadeipltia beat AUanta, $-I, . home the Orioles' final run In
place Oakland in the American Cincinnati beat Montreal, 11·1, the ninth. The winning run,
League Wellt.
Houston beatthe Meta, 4-2, San though, came home minutes
"f was glad to see liS hit so Diego nipped St. Louis 4-3 In before Johnson's double on \.
many home runs today," said 10 innings, Pittsburgh beat
wild pitch by.J eliever Horacio
Allen, who slugged two ·of Angeles, 7~, and San Fran- Pina.
Olicago's five homers in the cisco' beat Ollcago, J.l, In the - -- - - -- - - opener. "This · club may not sPCOnd game of a doubleheader
Ordinary brooms play an
have a reputation for hitting a after the Cubs had taken the important part in the sport
lot of homers, but they're going opener, 4-0.
'
of curling.
to be heard from beciiiiSt Carloli May, who had singled
they're not jUst swinging lor , holl\e the tying run In the
In the United States, a
the fences. They've learned to' seventh Inning, · delivered a land lea8ue equals three
walt for the good pitch. This is · bases-loaded single In the ninth statute miles.

k

Foll'-hit pitching by Dick
Drago and a run4COI'Inl single
by Amcia 0t1a In tbe seventh
inning gave l(a!llll City lie
llOCIInd 1.0 triumplt over the
Yankees in three games. Steve
Kline, who ha4 a one-hitter
going Into the seventh, was the

Degree is.Given
, For Inspection

hard-luck loaer.

Bobby Danrtn, Jim Kaat and
Jim Nettlea all homel'ed .In
Mlnneaota 'a victory over
Cleveland and Carlton, FlU .

~puty Master Virgil Atkins

·provided Boston wltb Ita
decllive run by !lonlerlnll.ln the
aiJ:th Inning qalnlt California.

and Mrs. Atkins conducted
inspection of Rock Springs
Grange Thursday night at the

hall.
WINS FIRST

EVENt

NEWPORT, R.I. ("UP I)Equation, a 68-foot ketch out ol
Plainville, N.Y., was declared
the wimer of the Astor CUP
yacht race Sunday In the lirst
event of the prestigious OniQn·
patch series.
·
Saga, a Brazilian craft, and
Charisma, another American
craft, came In second and third
in the 175 mile race which
began Friday at Oyater S.Y,
N.Y.
.

The third de11ree was
presenled lor the inspection.
Mrs . Atkins gave several
reporta on gra 0ge · activities.
The · program presented by
Mra. W. A. Morgan carried out
the theme of the IOOth anniversary ol the Ohio State
Grange.
'
Re'dlngs, Included on the
program
were , "Early
Thoughts
About
Farm
Organization" by Mrs. "·Affias
; . Le.Dil!lrcl; "100 Years to Go" by
Mrs. · Ethel
Grueser ·
"Choosing a Name" by Mrs.'

2.1f0UR.

.CL.EANING

(Upon Requ.-)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS.
ia'E.lnd

• ., ·. Pomero'

~m·14Jt

.,.••"'!!!IIIII!~•

OPTOMETRIST .

Qtteen

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 17,2 TO 'S (CLOSE'
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EASTtOURT ST.,

Arizona State Remains

In 'Rwming For Crown
By CHARLES WIESER
OMAHA, Neb. (UPI)- Tem·
pie and Connecticut were set to
.battle lor survival in the
college baseball world series
this afternoon, and Texas and
Oklahoma were to do the same
thing in tbe first game on
tonight's schedule.
All have l01t one game in the
.
·~~~y_.and
1_.n9therdeleat will mean they'll
be sent pack in~ .
At 9 a.m. EDT, top-ranked
Arizona ·State wtll clash with
third-ranked Southern Cullfornla wlth the winner emerging
· as the only unbeaten team left
in the playoffs.
Both " had tough games
Sunday night, Southern Callfor·
nla RolOI 11 innings before
winning S-4 over a tough
Connecticut team, and Arizona
State nipping Oklahoma !~, in
a test which saw sophomore
lefthander Ed Bane establish a
Coilese World Series strikeout
record for a nine-inning game
with 17.
Bane gave up only three hils,
lasued juat two walks and
allowedonly two runners to get
as far as second base. Arizona
State Coach Jlm Brock said

Bane ''gave us his best effort of
the year and tha t covers a lot
or fine games.n Bane's record
is 14.0.
The loss, his fifth in 13
decisions, went to Gary Weese,
who pitched a stout eight-hitter.
The only run came in
the sixth inning when Gary
Atwell doubled and Rick Valley
alngled. Sou\hernQ.I\Iornla go\

baseHmpty home runs from
Roy Smalley and Daryl Aren·
stein in ils win over Connecti·
cut but the winning run came
on a three-base etror by Keith
Kraham on a long Oy to left
center field by Tim Steele,
followed by a single to center
by Arenstein.

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Frenchman Henri Peacarolo
Britain's Graham Hlll cocrove . their Matra.sbnca· a
clatance of 2,914.1 miles at an
avwage speed ol 121.1 m.p.h.
to leclft the first French
victory at Le Mana alnce 1950.
It was the first major
triwqJh for l'elcarolo, 29, and
the duhlng Hlll'allrst I.e Mans
win In 10 trietl.
A Matra.stmca guided by
Fr8ncoll Cevart of France and
Howden Ganley of New
Zea11n4 fbUbed aecond. ·
In other events Sunday,
D1n11 Hulme of N.,.- Zealand
~ olf a late chaUqe by
lndlanapolla "SOO" winner
lflrk Donabue to win the
, . . . apeninl milt of the
Clr Cub of America's
a~d

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The first game Sunday saw
Iowa lose out 13-9 to Temple in
a loosely-playejl contest in
which 23 hils were sprayed into
about all corners of the park.
Iowa's Jim Sundberg and Bill
Heckroth slammed home rUM
as did Temple's Ernie Wright.
The loss eliminated Iowa from
the tourney .
Both teams used a parade of
pitchers with the win going to
Randy Modela and the last to
Mark Ewell.

Chip Woodall of Hurst, Tex.,
captured his Initial NHRA
national Utle in the Top Fuel
Ellmlnator eategory with a
Ume of 6.81 seconds; Ed McCulloch ol Clovis, Calif., added
to his Wlntemationals and
Gatomatlonala UUes with a
victory In the Funny Car Class;
Bill " Grumpy" Jenkins of
Malvern, Pa., t~rned In a 8.67 ·
run to seize the Pro Stock
. crown and Wayne McMurtry of
Pueblo, Colo ., took Competition Eliminator honor••
Also, · Joe Wllllamaon of
Lousivllle, K.y., established ln
NHRA ella record of 9.114
seconds en route to the
ModiOed Ellmlnalor title In Ilia
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CanadianAmerlcan Challenge
Cup series at Bowmanville,
Ontario; Emerson Flttlpaldl of
Brazil, winner of the Belgian
GP last week;~captured the
Jochen Rindt Memorial race
lor Formula Two cars .in the
cold and rain at Hockenheim,
Germany ; and David Pearson
reglatered hill third super·
speedway win of the season
with a lkecond victory in the
Motor State 400 lor NASCAR
Grand National stocks at
Cam!ridge JuncUon, Mich .
The National Hot Rod
Association conducted a
national championship In Ohio
lor the 0rst Ume Sunday. The
$200,000 Springnatlonals
produced the following
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Fatality Mars Race
By BOB DIPIETRO
UPI Sports Writer
Joachim Bonnier of Sweden
aped to ~ death at 3:15 a.m.
EDT Sunday In a sjlectacular,
griJly, dlslnteRraling wreck
that acarred and made memorable the French Matrasdominated 40th running ol the
24 ,lloun of I.e Mans.
Bonnier, 42, wu kllled
lhorlly alter a cold and misty
dawn broke over lhe rainpelted course. His Lola 1'280
wu whirling at 180 miles per
. hour between the Mu!Janne
and Anlage curves when it
struck the back of a slower
Ferrari driven by Swiss
Florian Vetacb.
The Lola Dew Into a thouaand
fragments and Bonnlercrivlntln the Le Mans classic
for the 13th Ume-dled in-

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Green Thumb
Notes • ...

Rules to Follow in
Home Canning Food

Are home canned foods safe
James Conkle;
" Early
to
eat? It depends on severa l
A weekly feature of Meigs
Meetings" by Mrs. WiUiam
essentia l factors, says Jennifer
County Garden Club members.
Grueser and "The First Slste
Sheets, Meigs County Ex·
Grange" by Mrs. Lucille •
tension
Agent,
Home .
Leifheit.
Economics. Spoilage can occur
Mrs. Conkle commented on
in any can ned food, producing
"What Grange Means to Me"
off.fla vo r , color changes,
and Mrs. Fred Goeglein gave a
softness-foaming. Worst of all ,
history of the Rock Springs
BY LETHA MORRIS
some spoilage makes no· apGran ge. " Don 't Mix the
Bend·'o-the-River Garden Club
pare nt change.
Cleaners" was read by Mrs.
A:; we look around us, Folliott S. Pierpoint's heaullful hymn, · Any spoiled food is unfit to
Leonard, ·and Mrs. William "For the Beauty of the Earth," must course joyously through our eat, but eertain spoiled foods
Grueser had . the closing minds as we view the cool, tender, green grass covering what are deadly. These are foods
prayer.
· '
was so recently horizon.to-horizon bare, brown earth carpeting. that contain a deadly toxin
During the meeting it was
The fresh, new grass makes a very appropriate setting for produced by an organism,
noted that Byron Fredericks, a
the myriads of colorful spring flowers, tulips, fragrant hyacin· Clostridiwn Botulinum. This
past master of the Ohio State
spoilage
is
especia lly
Grange, is 'quite ·iii. Refresh- ths, daffodila, violets, and many others. We niust also include the treacherous because it cannot
)
menls of pie and ice cream early wild flowers.
Then
our
eyes
were
lifted
le-llie
very colorful bloom of the be detected. The to•in is
were served by the home .
flowering shrubs and picturesque lawn trees, forsythia, odo rless, taste less, and
economics conunittee.
flowering quince, spirea, magnolia, dogwood, crabs, and redbud. colorless.
But - this kind of deadly
The trees that bear fruit lliter in summer and autwnn first are
beaullful houqueta of bloom in the springUme : I'm thinking of food spoilage occurs only under
ce rtain conditi ons. The
plum, apple, pear, cherry and peach trees.
organism produces toxin in a
But these beauties will quickly pass, and as the blossoms
vacuum - a fully sealed
., .
give way to the miracleofleaves on the trees, there's work for us conUiiner lacking air. Canned
Masonic DistriCt deputy.
to do in our gardens that we may continue to enjoy flowers during foods provide a vacuum. The
The gavel was presented to the warm summer months ~head.
organism produces toxin only
the new honored queen by her
Remove Dowers as soon as they fade to maintain the vigor of in low acid foods. Most
father. Miss Rizer, retiring tulips and other spring.flowerlng bulbs ; otherwise, energy vegetables are low acid. The
honored queen, presented a pin needed to revitalize the bulb will be used to produce seed. This is organism is commonly present
to her mother, Mrs. Franklin also a good time to plant marigolds, zinnias, petunias, and other as an inactive spore in many
Rizer, and a tie lac to her rather shallow-rooted annuals among the bulbs to produce foods. It will survi ve the
·father. She also presented gills flowers after the bulb foliage has dried down.
temperature or ord inary
to Mrs. Finlaw, guardian, and
Plant dahlias, cannas, gladiolus and other tender bulbs In a boiling water.
Tom Edwards, associate sunny, well-drained location. We should make successive
The only way to prevent
guardian.
plantings of gladloi\IS bulbs until late June for continuous bloom botulism poisoning in low acid
Miss Sebo presente&lt;l a gift to until frost. Set plants of linnuals in the garden, and sow seeds of foods is to use a steam pressure .
canner. The canner prov ides
Miss Rizer on behalf of the "· fast growing varieties in open ground .
Bethel and also to Brenda
This Is also the season to set plants and seed our vegetable the high temperatu.res needed
Taylor,
Grand · Bethel gardens.! Uke to slip in a few flowers among the vegetables for to kill the organism so toxin
repre.sentallve .to South !right spota and, too, certain flowering plants placed among can not be produced. Foods that
conta in acid
fruits,
Carohna . MISS Sebo also gave vegetables attract or discourage some insect pests.
tomatoes,
and
pi
ckled
gills to the lnstallln~ officers.
Happy gardening, and have fun !
Several personal g1fts were
vegeUi bles - can be safely
processed by the hot water
FUNERAL HELO
given Miss Sebo including a
TO STUDY IN MEXICO
ba
th method .
ceramic statuette of an
CHESTER _ The funeral
POMEROY - John R. Eich,
To
be sure your home canned
honored queen made by Mrs . service for Vern 0. Cleland 140 Mulberry Ave., recently
Carolyn Thomas.
was held Wednesday, June 1, at elected to membership in Phi foods are safe, use proper
Mrs. Sebo wore a corsage of the Ewing Funeral home with BeUI Kappa at Ohio University, canning methods and equip·
white roses, the gilt of her Rev. Robert Card officiating. is leaving June 16 to study with
daughter, who also presented Relatives from out of town The Ohio . University Study
purple aster corsages to her attending were Mr. and Mrs. Abroad Program at Univertwo grandmothers, Mrs. Paul Vernon Cleland, Mr. and Mrs, sidad, Vera Cruzana in Jalada,
Sebo, and Mrs, Carl Redinger, J ohn Benson , Mr . Darrell Mexico. John is the son of Paul
both of Logan, W. Va . Other Cleland and Mrs. Cecelia G. Eich of Tripoli, Libya, and
relatives attending were Mrs. Carpenter, all of Columbus, the late Kathleen Safford Eich,
Albert Hedinger, Logan, W,
Va ., and Mr. and Mrs. John and Mrs. R. K. Rowan, Tup- formerly of Gallipolis, and
Harmon, Brooklyn, Ind .
pers Plains. Pallbearers were great newphew of Miss Lillian
Clayton Allen, Henry Beaver, Safforjl of Gallipolis.
Followln~ her installation, Bruce Myers, John Hayes,
Miss Sebo ln~roduced her Delmar Baum and Buel
&gt; •
par~nls,
~rolheJ, · . ~Ohll(&lt; Riae~our. Burial' was in the
Wyoming's Nickname
Dav1d, a past master counctlor -c hester Cemetery.
Wyoming is nicknamed the
of DeMolay, and her s1sler,
"Equality State" beca use it
Kim.
gave women the right to vote
The Bethel colors, purple and
in 1869, one year alter it was
white, were carried out in the
It is estimated that 3.75 organized as a territory and
table decorations for a million Americans are af· 51 years before women could
reception honoring Miss flicted by coronary heart vote generally in the United
Taylor, the grand represen- disease.
States.
tative to South Carolina, and

Days in the Garden

C~owne.d

(ec- ··,ued from Page l)
perso&amp; ·as Miss Margi Ehman, a past honored queen of
Bethel 65. Her selection was
"You'll Never Walk Alone."
Guests were registered by Mrs,
Dorothy Woodard, worthy
matron of Pomeroy Chapter,
Order of the Eastern Star, and
Mrs. Lois Pa"uley, worthy
matron of Harrisonville
Chapter.
Past honored
queens
recognized were Miss Ehman,
Gallipolis Bethel 73 ; Joan
Wetz, Marietta, Bethel 40, and
a past Grand Bethel librarian ;
Virginia Vaughan, Belpre,
Bethel 65; Donna Bauman,
Belpre, Bethel 6~, and
presently serving as guardian
of that Bethel; Terri Freda and
Cindy Kline , Westerville,
Bethel 52, and Irene Barnes,
Kathy King, Becky Anderson,
Annette Warner , Brenda
Taylor, Jennifer Sheet., Twlla
Clatworthy , and Debbie
Finlaw, all of Bethel 62.
Kathy King alao is a past
Grand Bethel honored queen,
and Mrs. Flnlaw is the present
guardian of Bethel 62.
Distinguished guests introduced were Mrs. Margaret
Elunan, GaWpolla, guar~lan of
Bethel7. and Grand Chaplath;
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Chesher,
worthy matron and worthy
patron of Middleport Chapter,
O.E.S.; Mrs. Pauley. worthy
matron, Harrisonville Chapter; Ralph Graves, Knight of
the York Cross'of Honor; Vicki
McCracken, honored queen of
Bethel40, Martella ; Roy Wetz,
aaoclate guardian of. Bethel
40, Marietta ; Jesse Brinker,
dlatlnguished Ma.&gt;on; Sheryl
Miesse, honored queen of
Bethel 52, Westerville; W. M.
Wagner, associate guardian,
Bethel 52, Westerville; Beverly
Kelby, guardian of Bethel 79;
Debbie Kelby, senior princess
of Bethel 79; Mrs. Emma Kay
Clatworthy, pas! guardlsn of
Bethel 62; Paul M. Darneil,
usoclste Grand Guardian and
a JIIISt associate guardian of
Bethel 62; James Buchanan,
worshipful master of the
Middleport Lodge 363; Bill
Ballman,
grand
senior
custodian and associate
guardian of Bethel 62, Belpre,
and Ben Pbllson, 12th Ohio

Quality prescription service and savings go hand·in-hand at your Family
Independent Pharmacy. Rely on us to
fill your doctor's prescrip·
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with the best quality, freshest pharmaceuticals.

SAFETY DEPENDS ON
.

ment, suggests Mrs. Sheets.
Start by checking your
canning equipment. Have the
pressure gauge on the steam
pressure canner tested at least
once a year, (Agent, insert
information on where this can
be done. )
'
Check jars and cans; discard
any that have nicks, cracks,
dents or rust. Clean all the
canning equipment thoroughly.
Review canning methods to
be sure you understand them
completely. Use a rclerence
written since 19ti5. Earlier
references are out-dated.
Follow directions exac tly.
Some point.&lt;; you'll want to
check arc: The exhausting
process - this pre-heats the
containers and drives out air.
Sealing - follow di rections for
the type of lid you are using.
Timing - this is viUIL For
pressw·c ca nning, start timing
when gauges reac hes the
proper pressure (this is usually
10 pounds or 240 degrees F).
For hot water bath canning,
sUirt timing when the water
reaches a full boiL
With either method, process
for the full time required for
your product and contai.ner
size. Cool the co ntainer•
throughiy after canning. Check
the seaL Store sealed containers in a cool dry place.
Inspect your canned foods
peri odica lly. If you find conta iners that leak or have a lid
or end bulge, disca rd them.
Discard foods that spur t on
opening or that have an off.
odor and.()r mold .
Boil home canned low acid
vege ta bles before tas tin g ·
unless you are absolutely sure
of pressure gauge and canning
methods. The deadly botulism
toxin is destroyed by heat.

-· will he provided. Women atMONDAY
IZAAK WALTO N League tending take own table service
directors meeting, 1 p. m. and covered dish.
Monday, at clubhouse near
GIRLS Softball practice,
Chester.
Monday, 10 a.m. at diamond I
MRS . EARL THOMA, at Middleport Community
Winding Trail Garden Club; Park.
Mrs. Reed Young , Chester
TUESDAY
Garden Club, c&lt;H:hairman of
WORK IN EA degree when
the Regatta Flower Show, over Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;AM,
WMPO Monday, 9:15 a. m. meets at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
listing rules and categories for temple. All Master Masons
participants in the RegatUI invited.
Flower Show.
MEIGS County Alcoholism
VACAT!ON BIBLE School and Drug Abuse Committee,
Mason Christian Bre thren 1:30 p.m . Tuesday, upstairs at
Church Monday through June Pomeroy United Methodis t
23 from 9 a. m. to II a. m. Church.
Delores Stewart, director. For
NIFTY STITCHERS, 7: 30
additional information call 882Tuesday
night at the home of
3208.
.
Mrs. Carl Moore.
INSTALLATION of officers
LEWIS MANLEY POST No.
Monday, 1:30 p.m. when Meigs 363,
American
Legion
Chapter 53, DAV meets at Auxiliary, 1 p.m. Tuesday at
chapter home on Butternut the home of Mrs. Arnold
Ave. All members and wives Richards, Middleport. Officers
urged to attend. Refreshments. will be installed by Mrs.
MEIGS Coun ty Democratic Charles Kessinger.
Women's Assn., Monday, 7:30
p.m.,
Tr in ity
Chur ch
WEDNESDAY
basement.
POMEROY · MIDDLEPORT
POMEROY Chamb er of Lions Club, noon Wednesday at
Commerce Monday at noon at the Meigs Inn .
Meigs Inn.
POMEROY CHAPTER 60,
SO UTH E RN At hle ti c Roya l Arc h Masons, 1: 30
Boosters Monday, 8 p.m , at Wednesday evening at the
high schooL
Pomeroy Masonic Temple .
ANNUAL Picnic of WSCS Election of officers.
and Class 12 will be held at 6 POMEROY
MASONIC
p.m. Monday in Heath Temple Assn., 1 p.m. WedMethodist Church basemen t. nesday at the Masonic Temple.
All women of the church inTHURSDAY
vited. Mea t, dessert and drink
WILLING WORKERS Class,
Ente rprise United Methodist
Bring the foods toa rolling boil, Church, 1:30Thursday night at
then cover. Boil spinach and the home of Mrs. Carl Moore,
corn for 20 minutes; other
ROCK SPRINGS Better
vegetables for 10. If the food Health Club, Thursday at the
looks spoiled, foa ms or has an home of Mrs. James Conkle,
off.odo r during hea tin g, near Cheshire. Members are to
destroy it.
meet at the Rock Springs
Burn or bur y spoiled Church at 12:30 p.m. Program
vegetables! To protect others by Mrs. Harold Blackston ;
and animals, don't discard contes t by Mrs. Arlie Abbott;
spoiled vegetables in garbage du es are pa yabl e at the
or sewage svstems.
meeting.

Now famous

M.

past honored queen of Bethel . .-------------------It~
62. White roses and purple
tapers with dove accents
decorated the tables . The cake
decorated in the Bethel colors
was centered with a dove. Mrs.
Woodard and Mrs. Chesher
presided at the punch bowls
and Mrs. Rizer served the
cake.
Theme ol the new honored
queen's reign is 11 Prayer,'' and
her motto Is "Prayer is the Key
lo Heaven, but Faith Unlocks
Ute Door." Her emblem is the
white dove, her colors are
purple and white, and her
Dower Is the white rose .
Members of the guardian
council are Mrs. Flnlaw,
guardian ; Edwards, associate
guardian ; Joan Rayburn,
secretary; Mrs. Thomas, ·
treasurer, and Mrs. Sebo,
directress of music. The
associate guardian council is
composed of Florence Well,
.· .
promoter of sociability; Mrs.
~R _ The Ladles Rizer,
promoter
of
A~ of the Volunteer fire paraphernalia; Peggy Taylor,
deP~dnei Wt~Utesday .evening · promoter of hospitality, and
at the fire .~· New officers Dale Smith, director of
for tbe ~ei!UinstaUed ' were lmance.
Grace Glimj!t; president; Inzy
The program book was
Newell, vice president; dedicated to Paul M. Darnell, .
Margaret Christy secretary Mrs. Finlaw, and Edwards,
and Oplll Wickh~, treasurer: and was i~ memocy of Harry P.
Conunltteea appointed were Smith, first associate guardian
ways and means, Erma of Bethel 62, and Elsie Smith
Cleland, Clarice Allen, Grace Blackburn, first guardian of
GwnplandSina Bailey, good of Bethel 62.
tbe order, Jean Sexson, Esther
Ridenour, Margaret Chrtsty,
VISITORS HERE
Opal Wickham, and Judy
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Bailey
Elldna; community service, and son, Chad, Jackllonville,
Ethel Orr, Virginia Burke, Fla. are here vlaiUng Mrs.
Opel Eichinger, and Marie Bailey's stater and brother-In·
Koblenll, and flre and rescue, law, Mr. and Mrs. Claude
Opal Hollan, lnzy Newell, Husted .
. Belt~ Newell. and Dorothy
My....
Allead GncllJitlon
The allllilary voted thanks to
Mr.
and .Mra. WUbur Ashley
all who don.lted plea and cates
What looks good for Dad are
were
in Char!Nton Monday
and lhelr'belp althe Gaul sale;
sportlvt shirts of a differallo to all who made donations evening to attend the
ent color. Or geometric, Or
and helptd for the Memorial grad~J~~tlon of their grandson,
George
William
Sluimblin,
Jr.,
striped. A winning selection.
Day. barbecue, and to tbe
son
&lt;i
Mr.
and
Mra.
Geqe
Eullm lfllh School band and
formerly
of
mtry 11M that pUtlclpated In Shamblin,
lhl Nemarlal Dar par1de. • Cbeahlre. On Wednelday nlgllt
Member~ ptellllt fOr the they at~ ~ment
1111elblll were C11r1ct Allen, eaerciaea for their grand·
Grace Gumpl, Margaret daughter, Myra Aah1ey, who
Clll'lllJ, Clpll Wickham, Etbel graduate!l from Lanc11ter ·
Orr, VlrJinla Burke, Betty High School. Myra is the
N...U, Clpll Hollan and !nay daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
POMEROY, 0 •
James Aahley.
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�4- The Dally Sertlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Junel2, 11172

Dave Roberts
Posts 5th Win
By GREG GAU.O
UPI 8plrll Writer
The two dlvlllonll raceJ In
lhe Nat!onal League ilghtened
OOIIIlderllbly SundaY and the
borne-run ball played · a
cleclllve Jlllrt• .
In the East, the Pittsburgh
Plratea dreW within a half·
game of. the llrst'!llace New
York Meta ail old-reliable
Roberto C!!!llleille poled a twoout, twool'\11 homer In . the
leV1IIth lnnlng to lead the Buell
to a 7~ victory over the Los
Angeles Dodgers.
· lnllde tbeiJIII'lt homers by
Manny MoLl al1il WUile Davia
~ the Dodgers were wasted 81
1M Angelel fell a full pme
behind the alzzilng CinclnnaU
Reda In the Western Dlvlalon
race.
The Reds · clobbered the
Montreal Expos, 11-1, wblle the
Houston A,ltroa, who are jult
2111ame1 out ollirst place In
the West, knocked off the Mets,
~2. with the help of a tw~
homer and run«::ring triple
by Celar Cedeno.
Oilier NL Action
In other National League
action, Pblladelphla defeated
Atlanta, :1-1, San Diego edged
St. Lou!~. f. .~, In 10 Innings, and
the Chicago Cubs spilt with the
Giant/!, taking tbe opener, 4-0,
and loolng the nightcap, $-1.
The AstrOI remained In the
thick of it In the West; beating
the' Mets for tbe aecond time in
the three-game series. Cedeno
tagged, IOier Jlm McAndrew,
now f&gt;..2,1or a triple in the third

inninK and unloaded a lone.
two-run homer Into the Astra
bullpen in left field with two wt
in the seventh lo break a 2-2 Ue.
Duffy Oyer homered lor tlkl
Meta off Dave Roberts, who
went the distance lor Houston
and picked up ~ ~h victorY
ll(!ainat three defeate.
Cal'iton Wlnllltc:CIIId
·steve Carlton acattered eight
hits to win hill second ~lght
game as the Phli.s downed the
Braves. OaCar Gamble ilcored
one run and drove home
another with a sacrifice Dy lo
help Carlton 1o ~ aeventh
victory olthe seaaon. Ron Reed
took the loa, ,~ seventh
ll(!alnst loUr victorlea.
The Padres broke a I~
losing streak when i.:lerrell
Thurnas singled Ill the winning
run with none out In the loth.
Back-to-back home runs bY"
Nate Colbert and Larry Sl8hl
In tbe ninth sent the game Into
extra innings.
Rick Wise, who had a shutout
lor tbe Cards until the eighth
inning, contributed lo his own
defeat by commitilng a costly
throwing error that let . the
winning run advance to third
base in the last Inning .
The Giants napped an eight
game losing streak as Ron
Bryant pitched a live-hitter in
the second game win over the
Cubs. Two unearned runs In the
sixth Inning helped Bryant
even his record at a.::l.
In the first game, Bill lllinds
hurled a live-bit shutout In
outpltching hard-luck Juan
Marichal, who BUffered his loth
l!&gt;ss in 12 decisions.

tooatsFUNHY

~~~~~~~~~~~'
::J Sl.ob '"

;:

·~~ :,.s:,t~;
44111.

TRADES MADE

CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
Cleveland Indiana Sunday
traded utiliiy Infielder Fred
Stanley to the San Diego
Padres for left-handed pitcher

Mike Kilkenny.

Tlie Padres alao di!ilt away
catcher Bob Barton 1o the
Clnclhn8ti Reda In exchange ·
for catcher Pat Corrales in a
separate trade.

S- The DaUy Sertinel, Middleport-POmeroy, 0 ., June 12, 1m ·

White- So"x Sweep DOlJ,ble Bill
By M.UITiN LADER
probably the best all-around to acore Pat KeUy with the
UPI Spw11 Writet
club I've ever been on."
. winning run as, 11\e White Soz
Chuck Tanner, who was
Oakland contributed ita woo tbe nightcap. The Brewers
expected to be spending most share to Chicago's big day by ·had scored all foil' of tbeir runs
of hia time this season dropping a 3-2 . declalon 1o in tbe second lnnlng, but Kelly
apologizing for the Chicll(!o Detroit and the Baltimore got two of those back wlth · a
White Sox, finds himself Oriole; remained a game · two-run horner In the fifth.
having to apply reverse behind the 'llg~ In Ute ~
Bill Freehan slammed the
psychology jult so . ~ players by beating tbe Ter.as ~ers. first pitch of the ninth inning
don'i go walking around with :1-1. Elsewhere, tbe Ka!)1811 from Ken Holtzman for his
"a lot of big heeds."
City Royaljl edged the New third ~omer o( Ute year to give
Dick ADen delivered a big York Yankees 1~ tbe Min· Detrmttherunthatsnappedlta
vote of conftdence late Sunday nesota Twi~s beat the lour.game lolling streak.'
after Chicago had completed a Cleveland Indians, 1&gt;3, and the
Dave Johnson's Orst homer
6-4 and 5.-4 double sweeJ) of the Boston Red Sox beat the of the year gave BaiUmore a I·
Milwaukee Brewers that California Angels, 6-4. .
I tie In the seventh innir)g at
moved tbe atreaklng White Sox
In the National League, Texas and then be doubled
to within 3% games of Orst- PhUadeipltia beat AUanta, $-I, . home the Orioles' final run In
place Oakland in the American Cincinnati beat Montreal, 11·1, the ninth. The winning run,
League Wellt.
Houston beatthe Meta, 4-2, San though, came home minutes
"f was glad to see liS hit so Diego nipped St. Louis 4-3 In before Johnson's double on \.
many home runs today," said 10 innings, Pittsburgh beat
wild pitch by.J eliever Horacio
Allen, who slugged two ·of Angeles, 7~, and San Fran- Pina.
Olicago's five homers in the cisco' beat Ollcago, J.l, In the - -- - - -- - - opener. "This · club may not sPCOnd game of a doubleheader
Ordinary brooms play an
have a reputation for hitting a after the Cubs had taken the important part in the sport
lot of homers, but they're going opener, 4-0.
'
of curling.
to be heard from beciiiiSt Carloli May, who had singled
they're not jUst swinging lor , holl\e the tying run In the
In the United States, a
the fences. They've learned to' seventh Inning, · delivered a land lea8ue equals three
walt for the good pitch. This is · bases-loaded single In the ninth statute miles.

k

Foll'-hit pitching by Dick
Drago and a run4COI'Inl single
by Amcia 0t1a In tbe seventh
inning gave l(a!llll City lie
llOCIInd 1.0 triumplt over the
Yankees in three games. Steve
Kline, who ha4 a one-hitter
going Into the seventh, was the

Degree is.Given
, For Inspection

hard-luck loaer.

Bobby Danrtn, Jim Kaat and
Jim Nettlea all homel'ed .In
Mlnneaota 'a victory over
Cleveland and Carlton, FlU .

~puty Master Virgil Atkins

·provided Boston wltb Ita
decllive run by !lonlerlnll.ln the
aiJ:th Inning qalnlt California.

and Mrs. Atkins conducted
inspection of Rock Springs
Grange Thursday night at the

hall.
WINS FIRST

EVENt

NEWPORT, R.I. ("UP I)Equation, a 68-foot ketch out ol
Plainville, N.Y., was declared
the wimer of the Astor CUP
yacht race Sunday In the lirst
event of the prestigious OniQn·
patch series.
·
Saga, a Brazilian craft, and
Charisma, another American
craft, came In second and third
in the 175 mile race which
began Friday at Oyater S.Y,
N.Y.
.

The third de11ree was
presenled lor the inspection.
Mrs . Atkins gave several
reporta on gra 0ge · activities.
The · program presented by
Mra. W. A. Morgan carried out
the theme of the IOOth anniversary ol the Ohio State
Grange.
'
Re'dlngs, Included on the
program
were , "Early
Thoughts
About
Farm
Organization" by Mrs. "·Affias
; . Le.Dil!lrcl; "100 Years to Go" by
Mrs. · Ethel
Grueser ·
"Choosing a Name" by Mrs.'

2.1f0UR.

.CL.EANING

(Upon Requ.-)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS.
ia'E.lnd

• ., ·. Pomero'

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OPTOMETRIST .

Qtteen

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 17,2 TO 'S (CLOSE'
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EASTtOURT ST.,

Arizona State Remains

In 'Rwming For Crown
By CHARLES WIESER
OMAHA, Neb. (UPI)- Tem·
pie and Connecticut were set to
.battle lor survival in the
college baseball world series
this afternoon, and Texas and
Oklahoma were to do the same
thing in tbe first game on
tonight's schedule.
All have l01t one game in the
.
·~~~y_.and
1_.n9therdeleat will mean they'll
be sent pack in~ .
At 9 a.m. EDT, top-ranked
Arizona ·State wtll clash with
third-ranked Southern Cullfornla wlth the winner emerging
· as the only unbeaten team left
in the playoffs.
Both " had tough games
Sunday night, Southern Callfor·
nla RolOI 11 innings before
winning S-4 over a tough
Connecticut team, and Arizona
State nipping Oklahoma !~, in
a test which saw sophomore
lefthander Ed Bane establish a
Coilese World Series strikeout
record for a nine-inning game
with 17.
Bane gave up only three hils,
lasued juat two walks and
allowedonly two runners to get
as far as second base. Arizona
State Coach Jlm Brock said

Bane ''gave us his best effort of
the year and tha t covers a lot
or fine games.n Bane's record
is 14.0.
The loss, his fifth in 13
decisions, went to Gary Weese,
who pitched a stout eight-hitter.
The only run came in
the sixth inning when Gary
Atwell doubled and Rick Valley
alngled. Sou\hernQ.I\Iornla go\

baseHmpty home runs from
Roy Smalley and Daryl Aren·
stein in ils win over Connecti·
cut but the winning run came
on a three-base etror by Keith
Kraham on a long Oy to left
center field by Tim Steele,
followed by a single to center
by Arenstein.

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Frenchman Henri Peacarolo
Britain's Graham Hlll cocrove . their Matra.sbnca· a
clatance of 2,914.1 miles at an
avwage speed ol 121.1 m.p.h.
to leclft the first French
victory at Le Mana alnce 1950.
It was the first major
triwqJh for l'elcarolo, 29, and
the duhlng Hlll'allrst I.e Mans
win In 10 trietl.
A Matra.stmca guided by
Fr8ncoll Cevart of France and
Howden Ganley of New
Zea11n4 fbUbed aecond. ·
In other events Sunday,
D1n11 Hulme of N.,.- Zealand
~ olf a late chaUqe by
lndlanapolla "SOO" winner
lflrk Donabue to win the
, . . . apeninl milt of the
Clr Cub of America's
a~d

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The first game Sunday saw
Iowa lose out 13-9 to Temple in
a loosely-playejl contest in
which 23 hils were sprayed into
about all corners of the park.
Iowa's Jim Sundberg and Bill
Heckroth slammed home rUM
as did Temple's Ernie Wright.
The loss eliminated Iowa from
the tourney .
Both teams used a parade of
pitchers with the win going to
Randy Modela and the last to
Mark Ewell.

Chip Woodall of Hurst, Tex.,
captured his Initial NHRA
national Utle in the Top Fuel
Ellmlnator eategory with a
Ume of 6.81 seconds; Ed McCulloch ol Clovis, Calif., added
to his Wlntemationals and
Gatomatlonala UUes with a
victory In the Funny Car Class;
Bill " Grumpy" Jenkins of
Malvern, Pa., t~rned In a 8.67 ·
run to seize the Pro Stock
. crown and Wayne McMurtry of
Pueblo, Colo ., took Competition Eliminator honor••
Also, · Joe Wllllamaon of
Lousivllle, K.y., established ln
NHRA ella record of 9.114
seconds en route to the
ModiOed Ellmlnalor title In Ilia
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CanadianAmerlcan Challenge
Cup series at Bowmanville,
Ontario; Emerson Flttlpaldl of
Brazil, winner of the Belgian
GP last week;~captured the
Jochen Rindt Memorial race
lor Formula Two cars .in the
cold and rain at Hockenheim,
Germany ; and David Pearson
reglatered hill third super·
speedway win of the season
with a lkecond victory in the
Motor State 400 lor NASCAR
Grand National stocks at
Cam!ridge JuncUon, Mich .
The National Hot Rod
Association conducted a
national championship In Ohio
lor the 0rst Ume Sunday. The
$200,000 Springnatlonals
produced the following
resulta:

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Fatality Mars Race
By BOB DIPIETRO
UPI Sports Writer
Joachim Bonnier of Sweden
aped to ~ death at 3:15 a.m.
EDT Sunday In a sjlectacular,
griJly, dlslnteRraling wreck
that acarred and made memorable the French Matrasdominated 40th running ol the
24 ,lloun of I.e Mans.
Bonnier, 42, wu kllled
lhorlly alter a cold and misty
dawn broke over lhe rainpelted course. His Lola 1'280
wu whirling at 180 miles per
. hour between the Mu!Janne
and Anlage curves when it
struck the back of a slower
Ferrari driven by Swiss
Florian Vetacb.
The Lola Dew Into a thouaand
fragments and Bonnlercrivlntln the Le Mans classic
for the 13th Ume-dled in-

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Green Thumb
Notes • ...

Rules to Follow in
Home Canning Food

Are home canned foods safe
James Conkle;
" Early
to
eat? It depends on severa l
A weekly feature of Meigs
Meetings" by Mrs. WiUiam
essentia l factors, says Jennifer
County Garden Club members.
Grueser and "The First Slste
Sheets, Meigs County Ex·
Grange" by Mrs. Lucille •
tension
Agent,
Home .
Leifheit.
Economics. Spoilage can occur
Mrs. Conkle commented on
in any can ned food, producing
"What Grange Means to Me"
off.fla vo r , color changes,
and Mrs. Fred Goeglein gave a
softness-foaming. Worst of all ,
history of the Rock Springs
BY LETHA MORRIS
some spoilage makes no· apGran ge. " Don 't Mix the
Bend·'o-the-River Garden Club
pare nt change.
Cleaners" was read by Mrs.
A:; we look around us, Folliott S. Pierpoint's heaullful hymn, · Any spoiled food is unfit to
Leonard, ·and Mrs. William "For the Beauty of the Earth," must course joyously through our eat, but eertain spoiled foods
Grueser had . the closing minds as we view the cool, tender, green grass covering what are deadly. These are foods
prayer.
· '
was so recently horizon.to-horizon bare, brown earth carpeting. that contain a deadly toxin
During the meeting it was
The fresh, new grass makes a very appropriate setting for produced by an organism,
noted that Byron Fredericks, a
the myriads of colorful spring flowers, tulips, fragrant hyacin· Clostridiwn Botulinum. This
past master of the Ohio State
spoilage
is
especia lly
Grange, is 'quite ·iii. Refresh- ths, daffodila, violets, and many others. We niust also include the treacherous because it cannot
)
menls of pie and ice cream early wild flowers.
Then
our
eyes
were
lifted
le-llie
very colorful bloom of the be detected. The to•in is
were served by the home .
flowering shrubs and picturesque lawn trees, forsythia, odo rless, taste less, and
economics conunittee.
flowering quince, spirea, magnolia, dogwood, crabs, and redbud. colorless.
But - this kind of deadly
The trees that bear fruit lliter in summer and autwnn first are
beaullful houqueta of bloom in the springUme : I'm thinking of food spoilage occurs only under
ce rtain conditi ons. The
plum, apple, pear, cherry and peach trees.
organism produces toxin in a
But these beauties will quickly pass, and as the blossoms
vacuum - a fully sealed
., .
give way to the miracleofleaves on the trees, there's work for us conUiiner lacking air. Canned
Masonic DistriCt deputy.
to do in our gardens that we may continue to enjoy flowers during foods provide a vacuum. The
The gavel was presented to the warm summer months ~head.
organism produces toxin only
the new honored queen by her
Remove Dowers as soon as they fade to maintain the vigor of in low acid foods. Most
father. Miss Rizer, retiring tulips and other spring.flowerlng bulbs ; otherwise, energy vegetables are low acid. The
honored queen, presented a pin needed to revitalize the bulb will be used to produce seed. This is organism is commonly present
to her mother, Mrs. Franklin also a good time to plant marigolds, zinnias, petunias, and other as an inactive spore in many
Rizer, and a tie lac to her rather shallow-rooted annuals among the bulbs to produce foods. It will survi ve the
·father. She also presented gills flowers after the bulb foliage has dried down.
temperature or ord inary
to Mrs. Finlaw, guardian, and
Plant dahlias, cannas, gladiolus and other tender bulbs In a boiling water.
Tom Edwards, associate sunny, well-drained location. We should make successive
The only way to prevent
guardian.
plantings of gladloi\IS bulbs until late June for continuous bloom botulism poisoning in low acid
Miss Sebo presente&lt;l a gift to until frost. Set plants of linnuals in the garden, and sow seeds of foods is to use a steam pressure .
canner. The canner prov ides
Miss Rizer on behalf of the "· fast growing varieties in open ground .
Bethel and also to Brenda
This Is also the season to set plants and seed our vegetable the high temperatu.res needed
Taylor,
Grand · Bethel gardens.! Uke to slip in a few flowers among the vegetables for to kill the organism so toxin
repre.sentallve .to South !right spota and, too, certain flowering plants placed among can not be produced. Foods that
conta in acid
fruits,
Carohna . MISS Sebo also gave vegetables attract or discourage some insect pests.
tomatoes,
and
pi
ckled
gills to the lnstallln~ officers.
Happy gardening, and have fun !
Several personal g1fts were
vegeUi bles - can be safely
processed by the hot water
FUNERAL HELO
given Miss Sebo including a
TO STUDY IN MEXICO
ba
th method .
ceramic statuette of an
CHESTER _ The funeral
POMEROY - John R. Eich,
To
be sure your home canned
honored queen made by Mrs . service for Vern 0. Cleland 140 Mulberry Ave., recently
Carolyn Thomas.
was held Wednesday, June 1, at elected to membership in Phi foods are safe, use proper
Mrs. Sebo wore a corsage of the Ewing Funeral home with BeUI Kappa at Ohio University, canning methods and equip·
white roses, the gilt of her Rev. Robert Card officiating. is leaving June 16 to study with
daughter, who also presented Relatives from out of town The Ohio . University Study
purple aster corsages to her attending were Mr. and Mrs. Abroad Program at Univertwo grandmothers, Mrs. Paul Vernon Cleland, Mr. and Mrs, sidad, Vera Cruzana in Jalada,
Sebo, and Mrs, Carl Redinger, J ohn Benson , Mr . Darrell Mexico. John is the son of Paul
both of Logan, W. Va . Other Cleland and Mrs. Cecelia G. Eich of Tripoli, Libya, and
relatives attending were Mrs. Carpenter, all of Columbus, the late Kathleen Safford Eich,
Albert Hedinger, Logan, W,
Va ., and Mr. and Mrs. John and Mrs. R. K. Rowan, Tup- formerly of Gallipolis, and
Harmon, Brooklyn, Ind .
pers Plains. Pallbearers were great newphew of Miss Lillian
Clayton Allen, Henry Beaver, Safforjl of Gallipolis.
Followln~ her installation, Bruce Myers, John Hayes,
Miss Sebo ln~roduced her Delmar Baum and Buel
&gt; •
par~nls,
~rolheJ, · . ~Ohll(&lt; Riae~our. Burial' was in the
Wyoming's Nickname
Dav1d, a past master counctlor -c hester Cemetery.
Wyoming is nicknamed the
of DeMolay, and her s1sler,
"Equality State" beca use it
Kim.
gave women the right to vote
The Bethel colors, purple and
in 1869, one year alter it was
white, were carried out in the
It is estimated that 3.75 organized as a territory and
table decorations for a million Americans are af· 51 years before women could
reception honoring Miss flicted by coronary heart vote generally in the United
Taylor, the grand represen- disease.
States.
tative to South Carolina, and

Days in the Garden

C~owne.d

(ec- ··,ued from Page l)
perso&amp; ·as Miss Margi Ehman, a past honored queen of
Bethel 65. Her selection was
"You'll Never Walk Alone."
Guests were registered by Mrs,
Dorothy Woodard, worthy
matron of Pomeroy Chapter,
Order of the Eastern Star, and
Mrs. Lois Pa"uley, worthy
matron of Harrisonville
Chapter.
Past honored
queens
recognized were Miss Ehman,
Gallipolis Bethel 73 ; Joan
Wetz, Marietta, Bethel 40, and
a past Grand Bethel librarian ;
Virginia Vaughan, Belpre,
Bethel 65; Donna Bauman,
Belpre, Bethel 6~, and
presently serving as guardian
of that Bethel; Terri Freda and
Cindy Kline , Westerville,
Bethel 52, and Irene Barnes,
Kathy King, Becky Anderson,
Annette Warner , Brenda
Taylor, Jennifer Sheet., Twlla
Clatworthy , and Debbie
Finlaw, all of Bethel 62.
Kathy King alao is a past
Grand Bethel honored queen,
and Mrs. Flnlaw is the present
guardian of Bethel 62.
Distinguished guests introduced were Mrs. Margaret
Elunan, GaWpolla, guar~lan of
Bethel7. and Grand Chaplath;
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Chesher,
worthy matron and worthy
patron of Middleport Chapter,
O.E.S.; Mrs. Pauley. worthy
matron, Harrisonville Chapter; Ralph Graves, Knight of
the York Cross'of Honor; Vicki
McCracken, honored queen of
Bethel40, Martella ; Roy Wetz,
aaoclate guardian of. Bethel
40, Marietta ; Jesse Brinker,
dlatlnguished Ma.&gt;on; Sheryl
Miesse, honored queen of
Bethel 52, Westerville; W. M.
Wagner, associate guardian,
Bethel 52, Westerville; Beverly
Kelby, guardian of Bethel 79;
Debbie Kelby, senior princess
of Bethel 79; Mrs. Emma Kay
Clatworthy, pas! guardlsn of
Bethel 62; Paul M. Darneil,
usoclste Grand Guardian and
a JIIISt associate guardian of
Bethel 62; James Buchanan,
worshipful master of the
Middleport Lodge 363; Bill
Ballman,
grand
senior
custodian and associate
guardian of Bethel 62, Belpre,
and Ben Pbllson, 12th Ohio

Quality prescription service and savings go hand·in-hand at your Family
Independent Pharmacy. Rely on us to
fill your doctor's prescrip·
tions accurately, promptly
with the best quality, freshest pharmaceuticals.

SAFETY DEPENDS ON
.

ment, suggests Mrs. Sheets.
Start by checking your
canning equipment. Have the
pressure gauge on the steam
pressure canner tested at least
once a year, (Agent, insert
information on where this can
be done. )
'
Check jars and cans; discard
any that have nicks, cracks,
dents or rust. Clean all the
canning equipment thoroughly.
Review canning methods to
be sure you understand them
completely. Use a rclerence
written since 19ti5. Earlier
references are out-dated.
Follow directions exac tly.
Some point.&lt;; you'll want to
check arc: The exhausting
process - this pre-heats the
containers and drives out air.
Sealing - follow di rections for
the type of lid you are using.
Timing - this is viUIL For
pressw·c ca nning, start timing
when gauges reac hes the
proper pressure (this is usually
10 pounds or 240 degrees F).
For hot water bath canning,
sUirt timing when the water
reaches a full boiL
With either method, process
for the full time required for
your product and contai.ner
size. Cool the co ntainer•
throughiy after canning. Check
the seaL Store sealed containers in a cool dry place.
Inspect your canned foods
peri odica lly. If you find conta iners that leak or have a lid
or end bulge, disca rd them.
Discard foods that spur t on
opening or that have an off.
odor and.()r mold .
Boil home canned low acid
vege ta bles before tas tin g ·
unless you are absolutely sure
of pressure gauge and canning
methods. The deadly botulism
toxin is destroyed by heat.

-· will he provided. Women atMONDAY
IZAAK WALTO N League tending take own table service
directors meeting, 1 p. m. and covered dish.
Monday, at clubhouse near
GIRLS Softball practice,
Chester.
Monday, 10 a.m. at diamond I
MRS . EARL THOMA, at Middleport Community
Winding Trail Garden Club; Park.
Mrs. Reed Young , Chester
TUESDAY
Garden Club, c&lt;H:hairman of
WORK IN EA degree when
the Regatta Flower Show, over Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;AM,
WMPO Monday, 9:15 a. m. meets at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
listing rules and categories for temple. All Master Masons
participants in the RegatUI invited.
Flower Show.
MEIGS County Alcoholism
VACAT!ON BIBLE School and Drug Abuse Committee,
Mason Christian Bre thren 1:30 p.m . Tuesday, upstairs at
Church Monday through June Pomeroy United Methodis t
23 from 9 a. m. to II a. m. Church.
Delores Stewart, director. For
NIFTY STITCHERS, 7: 30
additional information call 882Tuesday
night at the home of
3208.
.
Mrs. Carl Moore.
INSTALLATION of officers
LEWIS MANLEY POST No.
Monday, 1:30 p.m. when Meigs 363,
American
Legion
Chapter 53, DAV meets at Auxiliary, 1 p.m. Tuesday at
chapter home on Butternut the home of Mrs. Arnold
Ave. All members and wives Richards, Middleport. Officers
urged to attend. Refreshments. will be installed by Mrs.
MEIGS Coun ty Democratic Charles Kessinger.
Women's Assn., Monday, 7:30
p.m.,
Tr in ity
Chur ch
WEDNESDAY
basement.
POMEROY · MIDDLEPORT
POMEROY Chamb er of Lions Club, noon Wednesday at
Commerce Monday at noon at the Meigs Inn .
Meigs Inn.
POMEROY CHAPTER 60,
SO UTH E RN At hle ti c Roya l Arc h Masons, 1: 30
Boosters Monday, 8 p.m , at Wednesday evening at the
high schooL
Pomeroy Masonic Temple .
ANNUAL Picnic of WSCS Election of officers.
and Class 12 will be held at 6 POMEROY
MASONIC
p.m. Monday in Heath Temple Assn., 1 p.m. WedMethodist Church basemen t. nesday at the Masonic Temple.
All women of the church inTHURSDAY
vited. Mea t, dessert and drink
WILLING WORKERS Class,
Ente rprise United Methodist
Bring the foods toa rolling boil, Church, 1:30Thursday night at
then cover. Boil spinach and the home of Mrs. Carl Moore,
corn for 20 minutes; other
ROCK SPRINGS Better
vegetables for 10. If the food Health Club, Thursday at the
looks spoiled, foa ms or has an home of Mrs. James Conkle,
off.odo r during hea tin g, near Cheshire. Members are to
destroy it.
meet at the Rock Springs
Burn or bur y spoiled Church at 12:30 p.m. Program
vegetables! To protect others by Mrs. Harold Blackston ;
and animals, don't discard contes t by Mrs. Arlie Abbott;
spoiled vegetables in garbage du es are pa yabl e at the
or sewage svstems.
meeting.

Now famous

M.

past honored queen of Bethel . .-------------------It~
62. White roses and purple
tapers with dove accents
decorated the tables . The cake
decorated in the Bethel colors
was centered with a dove. Mrs.
Woodard and Mrs. Chesher
presided at the punch bowls
and Mrs. Rizer served the
cake.
Theme ol the new honored
queen's reign is 11 Prayer,'' and
her motto Is "Prayer is the Key
lo Heaven, but Faith Unlocks
Ute Door." Her emblem is the
white dove, her colors are
purple and white, and her
Dower Is the white rose .
Members of the guardian
council are Mrs. Flnlaw,
guardian ; Edwards, associate
guardian ; Joan Rayburn,
secretary; Mrs. Thomas, ·
treasurer, and Mrs. Sebo,
directress of music. The
associate guardian council is
composed of Florence Well,
.· .
promoter of sociability; Mrs.
~R _ The Ladles Rizer,
promoter
of
A~ of the Volunteer fire paraphernalia; Peggy Taylor,
deP~dnei Wt~Utesday .evening · promoter of hospitality, and
at the fire .~· New officers Dale Smith, director of
for tbe ~ei!UinstaUed ' were lmance.
Grace Glimj!t; president; Inzy
The program book was
Newell, vice president; dedicated to Paul M. Darnell, .
Margaret Christy secretary Mrs. Finlaw, and Edwards,
and Oplll Wickh~, treasurer: and was i~ memocy of Harry P.
Conunltteea appointed were Smith, first associate guardian
ways and means, Erma of Bethel 62, and Elsie Smith
Cleland, Clarice Allen, Grace Blackburn, first guardian of
GwnplandSina Bailey, good of Bethel 62.
tbe order, Jean Sexson, Esther
Ridenour, Margaret Chrtsty,
VISITORS HERE
Opal Wickham, and Judy
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Bailey
Elldna; community service, and son, Chad, Jackllonville,
Ethel Orr, Virginia Burke, Fla. are here vlaiUng Mrs.
Opel Eichinger, and Marie Bailey's stater and brother-In·
Koblenll, and flre and rescue, law, Mr. and Mrs. Claude
Opal Hollan, lnzy Newell, Husted .
. Belt~ Newell. and Dorothy
My....
Allead GncllJitlon
The allllilary voted thanks to
Mr.
and .Mra. WUbur Ashley
all who don.lted plea and cates
What looks good for Dad are
were
in Char!Nton Monday
and lhelr'belp althe Gaul sale;
sportlvt shirts of a differallo to all who made donations evening to attend the
ent color. Or geometric, Or
and helptd for the Memorial grad~J~~tlon of their grandson,
George
William
Sluimblin,
Jr.,
striped. A winning selection.
Day. barbecue, and to tbe
son
&lt;i
Mr.
and
Mra.
Geqe
Eullm lfllh School band and
formerly
of
mtry 11M that pUtlclpated In Shamblin,
lhl Nemarlal Dar par1de. • Cbeahlre. On Wednelday nlgllt
Member~ ptellllt fOr the they at~ ~ment
1111elblll were C11r1ct Allen, eaerciaea for their grand·
Grace Gumpl, Margaret daughter, Myra Aah1ey, who
Clll'lllJ, Clpll Wickham, Etbel graduate!l from Lanc11ter ·
Orr, VlrJinla Burke, Betty High School. Myra is the
N...U, Clpll Hollan and !nay daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
POMEROY, 0 •
James Aahley.
NneU.

UaNT FOR'OET
DnDSDnY!

for a limited tim~ only!
DELUXE

25"

Auxiliary &amp;ys

Thanks to Many .

h

DIAL ANTI-PERSPIRANT SPRAY

OLD SPICE
AFTER SHAVE
LOTION

Time·release formula for 'round·the-clock
protection.
' .

Wake up to the
freshness of the
open sea .
JJo

CEPACOL®

KIWI .

Soothing, refresh·
ing mouthwash
, and gargle.

4% oz. $1.75 value

99¢

4oz.
29~
$1.00 value
._.

BOOT POLISH
Black or brown paste polish.

Shatterproof travel bottle.

7oz.
85¢ value

Him

39¢ value

49~
...

1'9¢
••
•
••

'

1.,

.PRESCRIPTIONS ARE OUR MAIN BUSINESS
N. 2nd AVE.

'

Solve Gift Problems At Kerm's Komer

(

New York Clothing House

'MIDDLEPORT, 0.
·.
i

C4722W
The FLORENTINE • C4721
Moorish-inspired, thia richly clttailed

refl ects fine deta iling through out .

from the tiered overh ang ing top
to base rail and tape red legs.

cabinet is accented with tiered

overhanging toP and a massive, ·
contoured base. With hidden casters.

• Chromacolor 100 Picture Tube
•. Glare-Ban Picture Face
• Customizea Tuning
• Titan tOO Hance rafted Chassis
• Super Gold Vlaeo Guara Tuner
• Automatic Fine-tuning Control
• 5' Rouna Twin-Cone..Speaker

ONH15BACK

••

D

The

This handsome lowboy console

THESH1RT

•

I

WAS "689.95
SALE

~·

The MILFORD· C4724M
Cabinet features tiered overhanging top.
decorative pilasters, simulated dowel plugs,

authentic period hardware and the traditional
Colo nial styled full baoe, with casters.

ONlY ZENITH HAS IT!

INGELS FURNITURE

992-2635

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

MIDDUPOIT

...

�I

~

'

...

I

6- The llaUy Sentinel, Middleport-l&gt;omeroy, 0., June 12, 1972

Po~~troy

Motor Co.

QUALITY

mo
CHEVROLET
Impala Sport Cpupe,

;: ..
52l95
350 cu. ln .. V-S engfne, turbo

'hydramatic, power steering &amp; brakes, radio, red vinyl

Interior, block finish . Whlte-woll tires . like new.
1970 DODGE POLARA
$2295
Factory ali conditioning, V-8 engine, auto. trans ., P.S.,
P. B., good w-s-w tires. many more extras. White finish ,
blk . vinyl roof. Priced to move.
1970 FORD
Gaiaxle 500 Hordtop Coupe, V-S engine, outomollc
mlsslon, power steering &amp; brakes, white finish,
vinyl top. vlnyllnlerior . Whlte-woll tires, ll~e new.

$1995

lransblock
radio.

Po-..eroy Motw Co.
OPlH IYIS. 1:00 P.M.
. 1'PfoiiiOY, OHIO

Backslairs Columns

WANT ADS
INFORMATION

His Top Form

Memoir."

r rI I

WI&lt; I-lAD THE

gtve them VE-Day .' Here was
the gesture that everybody
regarded as almost boly, yet
Ike knew It for what it was -ll
very effective dramatic technique."
One of President Roosevelt's
great talents was his ability to
put over sheer, unadulterated
hokum. 'Ibis ablllty made it
possible for him literally to
charm people he detested.
"'Brlng In the old bore and
let's get It over with,"' he
would say to his secretary just
before an appointment. The
secretary would then usher In
the person In question.
"'Well, well,' Roosevelt
would boom, 'how In Ute world
are you, Bill? And why has It
been so long since you came to

wan t eu• T0 BUY

. HOLD ON THAR, WOMAN !I
WHO TOLD 'IOU TO GO OFF
I SWIMMIN' Jt;ST AFORE
SUPPER TIME ? .

Business Services

The Publisher reserves the
J. f6.tfc
r loh t to edit or reject any ads - - - - - - , - - - - de em ed obiectlonal.
The
publisher wru not be responsible
for more f fl&amp;n on e incorrect liel~ Wanted
insertion .

----------EARLY American Stereo, AMFM radio;

4

Dozer &amp; End loader vlork, .
$73 .56. Use our ponds, basement, londWAITRESSEs-din ing room &amp; ' budget lerms. Call 992-70S5. scaping. We have 2 Silt
RATES
6-8-6tc do11rs, 2 size loaders. Work
For Want Ad se,.vlce
cocktail, must be over 21 .
5 cents per word .:ne instrtion
Apply at Meigs Inn office.
!lone by hour or contract.
Mln l ~ui'n Charge 75c
6-11-3tc Rf MNANT SALE : 1500 yds. of Free Estimates. ·we also·
12 cents per word three
,, ypholstery &amp;drapery fabrics; haul till dirt, top_soil. Dump
consecutive lnstrtlorls.
Mowr"J's
Upholslerlng ;
18 cents per·· word si x ~ on ­ SUMMER Employment, car
locate at Mason County trucks and low-boy ·tor hire.
secutlve ln!llertlons .
necessary ; for detai ls write
Fairgrounds, Pl . Pleasant; See Bob or Roger J•fters,
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
Mi-s. Libman , 34 Wesl Car-- phone
ads and ·t~ds paid w ithin 10 days .
675-4154.
- Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
penter Street, Athens, Ohio
CARD OF THANKS
6-9-6tc
after 7 p.m. or phone 99245701.
&amp; OBITUARY
5232.
6·11 -6fc PALOMINO &amp; Quarter Horse
$1.50 for SO word minimum .
Eacf1 'adCijtional word 2c.
mare, gentle; phone 742-5730. L----:__-~_ __;
BLIND ADS
6·9·3tc
A'ddltional 2Sc Charge per
Advertisement .
.
O' DELL W-HEEL alig-nment
ELECTROLUX Sweeper delyx
OFFICE HOURS '
located at Crossroads, Rl. 124.
8 :30' a.m. to 5 :00p .m , Daily ,
model. Complete with oil
Complete front end service, •
B: 3G a .m. to 12 : 00 Noon
cleaning attachments and
tune up and brake service.
Saturday .
uses paper bags. Slightly used
Wheels
balanced elec~"out cleans and looks like new.
tronically .
All
work
Will sell for $37.25 cash or
guaranteed.
Reasonable
Notice
terms available. Phone 992't
rates. Phone 992-3213.
5641.
7-27-tfc
6-S-6tc -~--~
r-----..
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
,...._ _ _.:.:___
_ - -- - · j cancelled?
Lost
yoyr
~alance'

COOUNG

Window
Air Conditioners
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992-2448

PHONE 992·2156
For

36" X 23" X .009

4 ROOM unfurnished upstairs

apartment ; phone 992·3056.

· 6-9-3tc
UNFURNISHED apartment,
134 Mulberry Ave. , phone 992 3962. •
6-11 -tfc

for your

boat , for
your
motor .
Available at Simon 's Pick·A·

Pai r Shoe Store, 108 W. Ma in,

over l ookln~_

phone Mason, 773-5750.
.
5 - 11 - 30!~
TRAILER space, Riverview
Trailer Park, Hartford, W.
Va ..

con c:rete

patio ,

all

utililies; phone 304-882-2006.
5-28-12tp

Pomeroy , Oh io, Phone W2·

3830.

5-16-301c

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAV!;.
MANY USES

Pomeroy . Velma G. Zuspan

Pomeroy, 0.
BOAT- LICENSE -

Aluminum
Sheets

Rent

TRAILER spaces

Sale

8 for 51.00

The
,DaUy Sentinel

3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
unfurnished

111 Court St.
Pomeroy. Ohi?

apartments.

Phone 992-5434.

'5~55

TO

OHIO .
PALLET CO.

'

On Most American Cars .

o.

SMOGGY AT L.A. ANC&gt;
IRVINE, OVERCAST AT
SANTA BARBARA ,
WINC&gt;V AT {)AVIS -

C4LtFOI&lt;NtA . l'M
CHECKING F~'IING

CONDITIONS

·TA~K

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

ABOUT

BRADLEY

-

'? ·

BIG...

,y

•

-GUARANT·E·Eo-;
Phone 992-2094

Pomeroy

2966

HOflle·

&amp; Auto

Opens Til s
Mond•y thru Soturdly
606 E. Main, PorMroy, Q.

.
6-15-tfc
:·:SEWING
-::~---==--:--~
MACHIN-ES .. Repa ir

From the .t"rgest

Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core .

·N•fh•n Biggs
Rodie)or lpeclolist

PSST.~'-&amp;HIND THAT
STONE ~LL T-'&lt;4~~
A GENNULMAN

SMITH NELSON
MOlORS. INC.
Ph.9tl-21i4

WAITIN ' TO KILl.. '&gt;0:-?"

• .WfleRe...t
· ~ARNY!..

A GEN 1-JULMAN

NAMED .

"HAPPY
JACK"?

service, all makes. 992·2284.

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
and back hoe work,
Aylhorlzed Singer Sales and SEE US FOR : Awnings, Storm DOZER
ponds
and
sepllc tanks ; B&amp; K
doors
and
wl
ndows,
carports,
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
Excavating, Phone 9'12-5367,
marqt~ees,
aluminum
siding
3-29-tfc
Dick Karr, Jr.
and railing. A. Jacob, sales
5-21-lfc
representative
.
For
free.
READY -MIX
CONCRETE
·es
timates,
phone
Chartes.
delivered right to your
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V. SEWING MACHINE service,
project. Fast and eosy. Free
Johnson and Son, Inc.
clean. oil. set lenslon $4.99.
estimates. Phone 992-3284.'
3-2·11•
Special Electro -Grande
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co .,,
Company . Phone 992-6517. .
Middleport, Ohio.
;
5-21-lfc
6-30-tfc SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Mille•
Sanltallon, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
662-3035.
'
Septic tanks Installed. George
2-12-lfc CALL 949·2789 for outo body and
polnl work. Also repair fiber
I Bill) Pullins. Phone 992·247S.
glass
boats, plus eleclrlc and
4-25-tfc HARRISON' S TV and Antenna
gas welding. Stanley's
Service. Phone 992-2522.
Custom Body Shop
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
5-19-JOtc
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446- ------------ 6-10-Hc'
47S2, Gallipolis, John Russ_ell,

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

. __.,.---__,.._--"'

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

....... ,,

J.IOWEVcR1 I NOTICE

GOODNe:SS
I
MEAT PRICES A&lt;lE

..

ABSO~UT6'~Y

J " " ....... .,...,,
...... ..

ON6 THING TI-IAT
HASN'T

OUT

SIGI-IT!

WINKLE

WINNIE

ONner &amp; Operator .

5-12-lfc

Real Estate For Sale

--::---c:-::--c-::---__:_:

C. BRADFORD, Aucl1oneer
Complete Service

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

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
REAL INVESTMENT
CORNER LAND - Large building, 40x70, ld'"l for con·

en [oy life summer or winter . -4 bedroom home with 2

1:00 P.M.

CI.E.Afl AT SAN /&gt;!EGO, CLOVDY
AT RIVIiR$t!&gt;E, SHOWERS
A'T SA~A Cl?tiZ • •

YOU ASKED ME 1P
SI-IOW VOU Tile:
{)NtVEI&lt;S!TY OP

ABOUT WHAT'S INSIDE!
I 1.6ED A MIX . ,__·-1

Wh.eel Aliprilent'

MOWERS
&amp; TILLERS

on

PLEASA~T HE!Ul' AT BERKELEY,

I V.OOLDN'T OOW I&gt;.N'fll-iiNG

WHAT W,VE )OU 10
SAY ABOUT 1l-l16 1
MR&gt;. MACHINEGUN

'

tractor on Route 143 . Has a J bedroom residence, 1'h acres
"
of level land.

DISPERSAL
SALE

&amp;
&amp;

Pl. PfHSinf

SPECIAL

40

s6.00 Per Ton ·

furnitun

424 Main St.

EXPERT·

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

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

CAr-JDIDr\TE
A QUfSTIOI-J

Q.J6STIOIJ

PHONE 675-3628

Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992-3795
or Mason 773-5535

Smith's In-depth coverage of
six administrations, from
Franklin D. Roosevelt to
Richard M. Nixon, gave him an
underlltandlng of the '1onellest
Job In the world" which see me?"'
hlllorians would envy.
'70 Bonneville, 2 dr. 'HT, blue
Sunday each month.
with black vinyl top. laclqry
When John F. Kemedy spied
6-11-61p
air
; vinyl interior ; 25,000
Slillth walling with other
actual
miles, phone 992·5934 .
Real Estate For Sale
REGISTERED Appaloosa Stud
reporters at the Hyannis Ar·
after 5 p.m.
Service, $50 Reg. mares, $40
6- ll-6tp
mory In November, 1960, he
Tuesdoy
Grade , Franc is Benedum ,
Friendship
Le1gue
Phone
~67
3856
.
said: "If you're here Smitty, I
_, S·17.JOtp
-W.O. .}'~., r~ally be.n e\~~;- Alley' Bumpers
·' ,\ .
' w.
E'cooomy Tiller, 3'17 h.p. B&amp;S
34 1,..6 ' ,',~ ·•.'!"'"•···
Marine Sales
.engine. Reg . 159.95
, 14US
Screw Bolls
28 12
Under Dogs
14 26
32
FT.
Hoyseboat,
40
h.p.
out
Excerpts from the book:
WHEN YOU JOIN THE
Turf Trim Mower, B&amp; S 3112
Goff Offs
4 34
board motor and trailer ; wi l l
AIR FORCE, YOU'RE
Job Killed Hanllall
h.p.
engine. In carton
70.15
High Team 13 gomesl
sell
reasonable.
Phone
992ALRE~DY 5T~RT1NG
"It Is hard to understand why Screw Balls 1463. Alley
7157 or see at 28A River St.,
A BETTER LlFE
POMEROY
a man will deUberately seek Bumpers 1334.
Middleport .
You get : 1111 a month to
Contact Associate
'9._
JackW.
Carsey,Mgr.
High Tum Gomo - Screw
start, room and board,
6-7-61c
the toughelll Job In the land. Balls
Ail
Phone992·21SI
554, Alley Bumpers 503.
guo~rinteed
promotian,
VERA EBLEN
Mrs. Warren G. Harding cried
High Ind. 13 games) - Jan
worldwide
travel
op.
_
~2 -3iiio out against her husband Jenkins 512, Mory Gillilan 485.
~rtunilits, your choice of
160
C'oa
I
St.
Midd lePOrl
Mobile Homes For Sale
VACUUM CLEANER, ComHigh Ind. Gome - Jan
JOb ... guarantttd. training
running for President, expact, A·l cond ition , with att .
Jenkins 193, Floss ie Maxson
in skills tho! you ""n use
CASH paid for all makes ond
992-3020
pressing the belief that it would 192.
anywhere.
models ol mobile homes . and carpel shampooer. $33.20 160 Coal St.
Middleport
For more inform1tton on all
kill hlm. n did. Franklin o.
Phone area code 614-423-9531 . cash or terms available .
Phone 992-6517.
you can get from fM Air
4-13-tfc
Rooaevelllt the end of his third
FHA APPROVED!! Just
6-8-tfc
Force , CALL-592 · 4591
term Slid everytldng that was
S700 down buys lhls lovely 3
(Athens).
MOB IL E HOMES FOR SALE SWEEPER , Hoover with alt. b.r ., 1112 bath home. Call me
li1 his soul ye1111ed to return to
Q- By what name is the
Runs like new $17.40. Phone todoy
on
lh ls
one .
the famUy home en the Hudson Big Dipper known in mod· KOSCOT KOSMETICS ; s·everal 1965 50x10 mobile home r phone 992-65
17.
new
productsspecials
ea
ch
247-2161.
Everything can be com ·
ern
F:ngland?
river. But he ran for the fourth
6-8-ffc pleted in my off ice.
month ; ~tso sa les personnel - - - - - - - : - - - -6-·6_:_·6tC
A- The Plow . The handle
term ln wblch he died. Harry s
needed . Phone 992·511 3.
l
SEWING MACHINE .
Truman aid repeatedly that of the Dipper Is the handle
6-6-lfc
r---------·- NEW
POMEROY - Very nice 3
of the plow and the Dipper's
I Left in lay-away) Zig Zag
he did not want to be President, bowl is the plowshare.
•b.r.
home, full balh up, LR &amp;
Model.
Dial
contr
ols
to
fancy
-.Air Conditioners
SAVEuploonehalf. Brlngyoor
DR,
kllchen with all buill-in
sew
stretch
material
,
stitch
,
that bis happiest yean were In
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
•Awnings
Q- What is the ext ent of
bultonhole and etc. $39.20 features. Full basement ,
the Senate. Yet he fought for a
lSl Butternut Ave., Pomeroy .
cash or terms ava i lable .
the pardoning power of a
• Underpinning
new gas furnace, garage on
second term.
Phone 992-6517.
-------------~
4-~tfc
U.S. pr esident?
lwo lols- $15,500.
"The lure of being President
6-8-lfc
Complete mobile home
A- The president can
knows no equal In this country. grant reprieves and pardons For Sale or Trade
service - plus gigantic
Gl ' s - come In and talk to
Men suffer extreme lndlgnlties for o f Ce n s e s against the 1967 FORD Goiaxle ; sell or 'display of mobile homes POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
me aboul VA loans. I have
Park view Kennels , Phone 992·
trade for molorcycle ; phone always available at ...
FHA
and
VA
lhe
and even .Ute threat of poverty United States except in cases
5&gt;143 .
992-3530.
representative in my office
and a888881natlon to seek the of impeachment.
S-15-tfc
MILLER
6-9-6tp
oncP a week.
------!' b. nie main attraction, of
CL70 Honda . Good con: 160 Coal Slreet - Also
MOBILE HOMES 1970
course, Is prestige, the lm·
dillon
. Also mixed hay, 985Wanted
location of fhe Middleport C
1220 Washington Blvd.
petWI, a love of power."
3816.
,of C off ice.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0.
6·1l-3tc
LEGAL NOTICE
Recounting numberoWI huNOTICE ON
morous sidelights on jl'elliden·
THREE bedroom house with
FILING OF INVENTORY
For Sal e
tlal campaigns, Smith recalled
bath, lf2-acre lot, on public
AND APPRAISEMENT
water system, l/• -mlle from
Truman on the whistlestop tour The Shte of Ohio, Meigs
REGATTA WEEK SPECIALS·
County .
Chesler on County Rd . 25.
ln 1948 lltandlng at the rear of
Vinyl floor covering , lovelY
Probllt Court
Phone 985-4262.
To the Adm in istrator of the
the train, shouting "Stop this
colors &amp; patterns, 9x 12' s
6-11 -6tc
Poles
; to s. u.ch of th&amp; following
$14.95; elect. clolhes dr~ers,
damned train, I've got some- estate
as are residents of the Stat e ot
your choice 530 . !Free
HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
Ohio, viz : the surviving
Maximum
body's baby."
ceramic
frog with every. rug
985-3529.
spouse , the next of kin , the
Of FOR, Smith wrote : beneficiaries under the will ;
PONIES
&amp;
HORSES
or dryer purchase thru
6-11 -tfc
Diameter
Regatta Week! l All -metal
"Franklin Roosevelt would and to the •Horney or attornevs
lawn chairs; go.c.!llrt motor ;
any of
the
2-story home with iull
10"
have been a wonderful actor. representing
aforementioned persons :
SATURDAY, JUNE 17th NICE
used white work trousers,
basement,
2 lots, new forced
Alfred
W.
Sc t1roath ,
He probably would have been a
shirts, 85c each, great for
air
furnace.
Near Pomeroy .
Largest
End
Deceased ,
No .
20 , 6S 2.
painters! Also, see our usual
S!ake11pearean star who 'wore Clarksburg
ilementary School .. Phone
, West Virglri" i a ,
good selection of clean
992-7384 lo see.
·
fur-collared overcoats, carried Harrison County .
household goods, appliances.
You are hereby notified that
11 -7-lfc
a gold-headed cane and lorded the ln~entory and Ap KUHL' S BARGAIN CEN ESKEY
HILL
: -L
: -O:::S: :S::--::
0-:-:
U:::
T- on
-19-71--,fu-11- slze
C
TER, Rt. 7 "al the caution
It over Ute relll of the troupe. praisement of the est ate of ttu~
DEUVERED
aforementioned
,
deceased
,
late
light",
Tuppers
Plains,
Ohio.
Flatwoods
Rd.,
Rt.
3
ztg
.zag
sewing
mach
ine. For
He was a hopeleu cripple, but of sa id County , wa s flied in th is
Open to 6 p.m.; closed
sew
ing
stretch
fabrics
,
Pomeroy,
the publlc at large did not Courf. Said Inventory and
Mondays. Phone : 667-3858.
buttonholes, fancy designs ,
App
r
a
i
sement
wil
l
be
for
realize It until his death. Not ln hearing before this Court on the
6-11-6tc
elc. Paint slightly bleml•~ed .
Pulling type ponies
Choice of carrying case or
his entire Ume In the White 29th Clay of Jun e, 1972, at 10 :00
o'clock
A.M.
sewing
stond. $49.80 cash or
includes:
miniature
1970 YAMAHA. 250 Enduro,
House could he stand unsup- Any person desiring to file
terms
available.
Phone 992condlllon
;
phone
excellent
ponies,
niules
&amp;
ported.
eKcepllons thereto must file
5641
.
992-6432.
at least f ive days prior to
"When appearlng in public, them
6-8-61c
6.11 .Jtc registered 1!2 Arabian
On Old Rl 33
the date set for hear ing
colts &amp; fillies. New &amp;
he wu the · champion, the
Glv'en under my harid and
l of sa l d Court, I his 9th day of
ANTIQUE dining room suite
d t · k 'd
ddl
Phone 992-2689
LOTS ON Wrlghl Si., Pomero• ,
colorful leader with his chin sea
June, 1972 .
with round table ; 1969 16 ft . L_u_se__a_c_·_S_I_e_sa_ _e...J,
phone 742-5937.
arched upward and his big
- Pomerov, Ohio
.
John C. Bacon
Pennant Camping Trailer;
6·6·121c .
Acting Judoe and ex ·
phone 992-7133.
hand In Ute air. He knew he off lc ior Cierk
.
I
MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE
of sa id Court
6-11-3tc 2 BEDROOM mobile heme, IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCHO '
could thrill a crowded sladllDD By Anl1 B. Watson
Loke Conchas, New Mexico
10x45, priced to sell; 'ocross
by lUll this simple wave of a Deputy Clerk
(6) 12, 19 For Sale
CAMPER. 16 Jt. sl ..ps 6, good
$2,875. No Down. No lnlerest::
street
from
M&amp;R
hand, or a brown felt hat.
cond ition , $1.000. Phone 992·
$25 mo. Vacatloo Paradise.
Bargalnland . 570 Peorl
6329.
Die Ccllllldered Nllve
Money
Maker .
Free
Street ; phone 992-5213.
Brochure. Ranchos : Box
6-9-3tp
"President Eisenhower was NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT 196S APPLEBY fold -down -----~--.:.5·_:_12- tlc
2001 DO, Alameda, Callfornlo
camper,
$150.
l ·room
considered by many to be naive
cue No. 20,.90
9~501.
McGraw
-Edison
air
con
COAL,
Limestone,
Excelsior
·
Estate ot Race D. Hill,
about IIUch matters, a political
6-7·141~
dltloner, like new, 560. Phone
Sail works , E. Moin st., Real Estate For Sale
Deceutd.
.nateur but he had a great
before 4 p.m. 992-3668.
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891.
Notice Is hereby given that
12-61c - - -- -,--- - -4-12-tfc RACINE - 6 room house, bath, RACINE - 10 room house,
deal more 10pbisllcatlon than Edna Hi ll ol Route 1, - _ _ _ _ _ _ ___:_6__:utillly room, garage, $10,000; · bath, basement, garage, two
Langsville, Ohio, hes been duty
came through . He knew appoi nted as EKecutr ix of the
lois. Phone 949-4313.
MARK
IV
car
alr-condllloner,
phone
949-4195.
euctly what he waa doing Estate of Race D. Hi lL 197?, 12 x 60 MOBILE home,
~od
condition,
963
Locust
St.,
3-31-tlc
·
·
4-5-tfp'
deceased. late of Meigs County ,
when he went out to turn on the Ohio .
two-bedroom, lotol electric,
lddleport, phone ~~i~~~ 5 ROOM ~ouse, lol on rover, S ROOM hoYse, Jlh bath, bulit-ln '
shog carpet. Priced to sell.
Credlton ere required to file
a-owda: In attn America, their
back porch, Iorge screened-In
Railroad St., Middleport .
claims with said fiduciary
Located near new mine.
IIOillebody came iri and said: within four months .
WHISPERING
PINES
Nile
$4,000;
phone
992-3265.
,
fronl
porch, garage, running
Phone i~2-5o\41 otter S p.m.
Dated thiS 9th day of June,
'Mr. Pruldent, the a-owd is 1972.
Club ,' 1 mlte norlh of
6-6-12tc
woter; 1'4 acre of ground; for
Also, 1H8 SS396 Chevelle,
--------qylck sole, must be_, to be
jUil about ready for you.'
J'omeroy, Ohio on Rt. 7. Have JOHN C. BACON SLOOO. Con be seen at Rullond
5 ROOM &amp; both house in
arpreclated ; 10 miles North
Auto
Soles
or
call
number
Judge
"He took a deep breath and
2:30 nl~ht club license, phone Syracuse; phone otter 5 p.m.
o Pomeroy on Rt. 33; call992·
above.
Court of common Ple1s,
992-994
,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
992-5162.
67&lt;48.
.
uld, tlltlnl bll arms Into the
6-12-3tc
Probtle Division
6·7-6tp
6-9-3tc
6-9-4tc,
16112, 19,26 - - - - - - - - tamw.r po~e: 'Okay let's .go

iiF .

ASK T He

A.S k

suppllts. Typewriter
Adding Machine R-ir.
Pick-up &amp; Delivery

304 E. Main St.

operator's license? Call 992-

Phone 949-3821
CLOSED for vacation, fill July
4-12-tfc L-------~---- --Racine , Ohio
1st. Cliff's Shoe Repa ir,
·crllf
Bradford
Middleport.
FURNISHED 4 rovru ap!. ALUMINUM boats, on county
5-1-tfc
6-11 -3fc
Adults only, Middl eporl,
road 18, 150 yar~s west of Rt.
phone 992-3874.
33. Call 992-6256.
orenzo SUPERIOR WINDOW Cleaning
OLD-FASHION Trading Ring ;
6·4·1fc Davis.
Co. &amp; Building Maintenance;
Horses, ponies, guns or - - - - - - ----,commer ci al i profess ional
anylhing lotrade ; 1 mile back
men for professional jobs; :
of West Columbia, W . Va. on Auto Sa!es
phone 614-446-9202.
the Lakin· Road ; 1st and 3rd
6-6-121p

Local Bowling

ALECK ?

Complete line of otllct
equipmen1,

Specializing ln.
Small Businesses

CARRIER
WANTED
IN
SYRACUSE

fOf

SWIMMIN',
MR . S MART

POINT OfFICE
SUfPLY

KESLER'S
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

.( speake_r sound system .

THE DAILY SENTINEL

I WUZ \lUIIl\1

AJJD1DATE.

EARTH MOVING

speed changer,

KITCI-\EIJ R6DOIJE I

, WHO SAID

For Sale
sfereo-combinatlon,
-~ P . M . o!'ve:.~~r'eN~!bllcatlon . 'OLD FURNITURE', dishes, · WALNUT
4
speaker
sound system, 4
Mondi'f Deadline 9 a.m.
clocks, brass beds, silver
speed
dual
volume control.
Canc~llat lon - corrections
dollars
or ·
complete
Balance $6S.32 . Use our
Will be a c ce:;:~ted unt!l9 a.m. for. households. Write M. ·D.
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
oevor Publication
Miller, Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
6-S-61c ,.....--------....,
REGULATIONS .
. C.ll 992-6271.

"HEll"
Shows Reporter in
HEATING &amp;
WASH''IIGTON (U!'I)
Backatah·s at the White House :
Few rep•.,rters have ever
understood or chronicled the
human 1lde of the Presidency
with more Insight or accuracy
than UPI's late White House
correspondent Merriman
Smith, In this writer's view.
So there Is captivating
reading In a new compUaUon of
his colorful writings, unpublished notes and selected
"Backstairs:• columns, a
forum he created. The book is
by his son, 1lmolhy G. Smith,
and Is titled "A White House

.. , l'

.

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Clll.ssifieds Get Results!
~

r' f" , ~ ,.. ..... ,

•

.c

ljj)' 2 .,

t:,.. r T r "' . .

r

1.'. '

SCENIC
SYRACUSE - Watch the river boals go _by, relox, ond

baths, nice kllchen, full basement.
WILD BUT CAN BE DEVELOPED
OVER 7 AC.RES - Want'to buii&lt;I:M~illoln~for re$lll ii: '. ,
Then you oughtto see·lhis. Your fortune could be here.
.,.,
PRIME LOCATION
.
RT. 124 WEST - Compact home for lhe working class.
Yet ills re'al nice. All paneled and carpeted . Room for •
garden or play ground.

HANDY
MIDDLEPORT - You can walk fo lhe stores, and lhe
children lo school. Level lol with 3 bedroom home. Only
$8,500.00.
FREEDOM
142 ACRES - Enjoy the fresh air of lhe country. Make
money with cattle wh-ile you work at your regular lob.
Meigs school district. Large form pond and a very good
spr ing . 3,or 4 bedroom home. 2 barns. ntce outbuildings.
$32,500 .00.

UTrLE ORPHAN ANNIE

We need ni ce and neat 2 bedroom homes, reasonably
priced . Big lhlngs are In the moklng, •walch lhls ad and
you may be a llltle wiser. Real estate Is a solid- Investment . Come In to see what we have to offer.

HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE

~-Wtt
by THOMAS JOSEPH

992-3325 NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS PLEASE . 992-2371
37 ACRE farm, modern house,

CLELAND
REALTY
608 E. Motn St.

paneled,

drilled well , 7 acres river

bottom, on good road ; coli ,
afler 1 p.m. 992-6133.
,
6-6-12tc 1

Pomaray

NEW HOME
POMEROY - ·1 story, 3
bedrooms, double closets,
modern built-In kitchen, 2
baths, dining room, all
carpeted, basement, lot
115x220, (electric heat) .
115&gt;&lt;200, (electric heot).
4 BEDROOMS
MIDDLEPORT - Modern
kitchen , large TV room.
dining room, balh, cor pet,
ut i lity

room,

garage and Iorge storage
building, 2 lots. SIUOO.OO.
A FARM
WITH A F\lTURE
This may be "just the spot"
you've been looking for. Call

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Cue No. 20470

Estate of Mar/orle J . ~oush
Deceased .
Not ice Is hertby given that
Walter D. Roush of Mid&lt;lleport
Ohlo , nu been dul·y appointed
Executor of tne Estate of
Marjorie J . Roush , deceased,
lale of M !ddl!port, Mtlga

County, Oh lo.

1
~

IT WAS P.t.RT or: MV
SELF'·TRAINING IN
ELEC.TRONICS.

'

:
1

t

J
1
j'

18. Caviar,
basically

1972 ,

Jonn C. Bacon

Probaf! Judge
of sa ld County
1_61 S, :2, 19, 3t

19. Web
20. Gnawed
22. Well
(Latin )
23. Favoring

I

·j

We talk to JOU
like l~
•'

•

15LANI&gt;, ~NIE

NTeR ll(l!
Will(
ttE1I: )((J!IM liP
IN ~Oil

JU~e

711f-t

l

"T'-'----'-'--'-1 _,
•11 CIHCI/Y '
Mlytlt
..... '"•tie&amp;
)2 SPH&lt;f operotlon . ,

,Choice of Wlltr

Filler

Auto
•u•

-~

-=---

$WOitP.

1

Powtt
_FI~gJt•tor . .

.

.
.
RUTlAND FURNITURF

'42-4211

...lit...
. "'
w~~~.~~IJ
~'"''
•...,lc.

~W_nolcl Grete

Ol\e

2. Timorese
coin

3. Dante's

magnum
opus

Ye1terday'1

(2 wds.)
4. 3.600 seconds till
midnight

9. Chemical
suffix

5. Japanese

wild dog
6. Fry a bit
7. Dogpatch
name
8. Jewish
temple
chamber
(3 wds. l

10; Porter
15. Sward
21. John and
Jane 22. Quagmi re
24. Coercion
25. Relaxin g
(2 wds.)
26. Earthy
pigment

An~wu

I

27. 1,440
minutes
28. Rhinal
29. "Beau

OCCIL

KYKIN

I

01
III
(A.w•N le.On't!W)

I

Jumblu• IIRCH GLAND OUTCRY llAGLAN

Salurtby'•

Anawerz Thia ;., alae lecur rou can do/- ~INCI

SHE 5AID 5HE

~ED1160 .10

111M ...

v~ ~~fl}r,~~~- ..
...

•,

'

..

7~~~!t~ ~=-:-

-._.,. . .

AXYDLIIAAXI!
II LONGFELLOW
i~E TltXl61RLS
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
DOttlN
1\IERE .:mE'/
used for the three L'i, X for the two O's, elc. Single letters.
WKtN6
ap01trophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dillerent.
f"1 ,, .---'I AROUND lHE LAKE ..

wm

''

---.r--""ll

CI!YPTOQUOTES

.,••,

'1.

V XLRVLQL

•

XLKWBHL
CD

._ullt....
· ,
· •, _O.
'""

j, ·.

I(

VS
VC

XLRVLQL

ELHCLG

~----------~---=~~

LET'S 60 MCK..

I lt.AATTOHAVE
5CHOOI. WITH A"W.K Wffil HER ..

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's bow to work It:~"'""'

Mtyt•t
HIIO/If "ell
Dry... ·
Surround · .etottr\i ~
~lh •~......
"""· :l
t:t hot spot,·,
no
Ytrdrylhl . · ,,
F.lne
II Lilli
'

.

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
letter to each oquare, to
form four ordinary worda.

place

0 ,-

~.,.llll: l';u;

.

JJ&amp;MIDl!J£;-~!::!!::! -He

DOWN
I. Hiding

in Barcelona
Sl. Average
SZ. Actress
Murray of
L early
· movies
!!.Seafood
Item
st. Aldous
Huxley's
"-in
Gaza"
S6. Singer,
-Bryant
S8. Egyptian
president
Sl. S.:oft

ON Tl(~ AICIFIC

JO fii!FU51!5 TO

ON YOUR DIAL

ttmpf.

40. Fashion
41. Picasso's
support

30. '~Uncle ''

.WMP0/1390

."ti!'
.•P•r
confr"OT."'"

(0 1972 Kinr Featuru: S)'ndi~~:de, Inc.)

24. "Gunsmoke"
role
25. Tennis
headliner
27. Sea cow

us for an appointment to see

HENRY E. CLELAND, Sr.
REALTOR
Phone 992-2259
If no onswer 992-2561

ACROSS
I. Future
officer .
6. White
hunter's
title
11. Spanish
province
12. Dwelling'
13. 13 witches
in BS·
sembly
14. Set loose
16. Marsh •
elder
17. Whodunit
author,
Josephine

Creditors are requ ired lo file 1
their claims wltn said flduclary · J
within four months .
1
Dated th Is 31st day of May '

II. Opportunity knocks!
3BEDROOMS
MIDDLEPORT- l'h balhs,
Iorge double garage, slorm
doors ond windows, nice
porches , EXCELLENT
NEIGHBORHOOD.
$12,900.00.

Saturday's Cryptoquote: FORMERLY A MAN WONDERED
IF HE COULD AFFORD TO MARRY, NOW HE WONDERS
IF HE CAN GET ALONG WITHOUT A WORKING WIFE.CARL ELLSTAM

.

HDKVW'R
LFBWRVCA
.
VH VYZDHHVXRL

WSACNVSM

LJ\HL . -N
"

I

�I

~

'

...

I

6- The llaUy Sentinel, Middleport-l&gt;omeroy, 0., June 12, 1972

Po~~troy

Motor Co.

QUALITY

mo
CHEVROLET
Impala Sport Cpupe,

;: ..
52l95
350 cu. ln .. V-S engfne, turbo

'hydramatic, power steering &amp; brakes, radio, red vinyl

Interior, block finish . Whlte-woll tires . like new.
1970 DODGE POLARA
$2295
Factory ali conditioning, V-8 engine, auto. trans ., P.S.,
P. B., good w-s-w tires. many more extras. White finish ,
blk . vinyl roof. Priced to move.
1970 FORD
Gaiaxle 500 Hordtop Coupe, V-S engine, outomollc
mlsslon, power steering &amp; brakes, white finish,
vinyl top. vlnyllnlerior . Whlte-woll tires, ll~e new.

$1995

lransblock
radio.

Po-..eroy Motw Co.
OPlH IYIS. 1:00 P.M.
. 1'PfoiiiOY, OHIO

Backslairs Columns

WANT ADS
INFORMATION

His Top Form

Memoir."

r rI I

WI&lt; I-lAD THE

gtve them VE-Day .' Here was
the gesture that everybody
regarded as almost boly, yet
Ike knew It for what it was -ll
very effective dramatic technique."
One of President Roosevelt's
great talents was his ability to
put over sheer, unadulterated
hokum. 'Ibis ablllty made it
possible for him literally to
charm people he detested.
"'Brlng In the old bore and
let's get It over with,"' he
would say to his secretary just
before an appointment. The
secretary would then usher In
the person In question.
"'Well, well,' Roosevelt
would boom, 'how In Ute world
are you, Bill? And why has It
been so long since you came to

wan t eu• T0 BUY

. HOLD ON THAR, WOMAN !I
WHO TOLD 'IOU TO GO OFF
I SWIMMIN' Jt;ST AFORE
SUPPER TIME ? .

Business Services

The Publisher reserves the
J. f6.tfc
r loh t to edit or reject any ads - - - - - - , - - - - de em ed obiectlonal.
The
publisher wru not be responsible
for more f fl&amp;n on e incorrect liel~ Wanted
insertion .

----------EARLY American Stereo, AMFM radio;

4

Dozer &amp; End loader vlork, .
$73 .56. Use our ponds, basement, londWAITRESSEs-din ing room &amp; ' budget lerms. Call 992-70S5. scaping. We have 2 Silt
RATES
6-8-6tc do11rs, 2 size loaders. Work
For Want Ad se,.vlce
cocktail, must be over 21 .
5 cents per word .:ne instrtion
Apply at Meigs Inn office.
!lone by hour or contract.
Mln l ~ui'n Charge 75c
6-11-3tc Rf MNANT SALE : 1500 yds. of Free Estimates. ·we also·
12 cents per word three
,, ypholstery &amp;drapery fabrics; haul till dirt, top_soil. Dump
consecutive lnstrtlorls.
Mowr"J's
Upholslerlng ;
18 cents per·· word si x ~ on ­ SUMMER Employment, car
locate at Mason County trucks and low-boy ·tor hire.
secutlve ln!llertlons .
necessary ; for detai ls write
Fairgrounds, Pl . Pleasant; See Bob or Roger J•fters,
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
Mi-s. Libman , 34 Wesl Car-- phone
ads and ·t~ds paid w ithin 10 days .
675-4154.
- Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
penter Street, Athens, Ohio
CARD OF THANKS
6-9-6tc
after 7 p.m. or phone 99245701.
&amp; OBITUARY
5232.
6·11 -6fc PALOMINO &amp; Quarter Horse
$1.50 for SO word minimum .
Eacf1 'adCijtional word 2c.
mare, gentle; phone 742-5730. L----:__-~_ __;
BLIND ADS
6·9·3tc
A'ddltional 2Sc Charge per
Advertisement .
.
O' DELL W-HEEL alig-nment
ELECTROLUX Sweeper delyx
OFFICE HOURS '
located at Crossroads, Rl. 124.
8 :30' a.m. to 5 :00p .m , Daily ,
model. Complete with oil
Complete front end service, •
B: 3G a .m. to 12 : 00 Noon
cleaning attachments and
tune up and brake service.
Saturday .
uses paper bags. Slightly used
Wheels
balanced elec~"out cleans and looks like new.
tronically .
All
work
Will sell for $37.25 cash or
guaranteed.
Reasonable
Notice
terms available. Phone 992't
rates. Phone 992-3213.
5641.
7-27-tfc
6-S-6tc -~--~
r-----..
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
,...._ _ _.:.:___
_ - -- - · j cancelled?
Lost
yoyr
~alance'

COOUNG

Window
Air Conditioners
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992-2448

PHONE 992·2156
For

36" X 23" X .009

4 ROOM unfurnished upstairs

apartment ; phone 992·3056.

· 6-9-3tc
UNFURNISHED apartment,
134 Mulberry Ave. , phone 992 3962. •
6-11 -tfc

for your

boat , for
your
motor .
Available at Simon 's Pick·A·

Pai r Shoe Store, 108 W. Ma in,

over l ookln~_

phone Mason, 773-5750.
.
5 - 11 - 30!~
TRAILER space, Riverview
Trailer Park, Hartford, W.
Va ..

con c:rete

patio ,

all

utililies; phone 304-882-2006.
5-28-12tp

Pomeroy , Oh io, Phone W2·

3830.

5-16-301c

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAV!;.
MANY USES

Pomeroy . Velma G. Zuspan

Pomeroy, 0.
BOAT- LICENSE -

Aluminum
Sheets

Rent

TRAILER spaces

Sale

8 for 51.00

The
,DaUy Sentinel

3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
unfurnished

111 Court St.
Pomeroy. Ohi?

apartments.

Phone 992-5434.

'5~55

TO

OHIO .
PALLET CO.

'

On Most American Cars .

o.

SMOGGY AT L.A. ANC&gt;
IRVINE, OVERCAST AT
SANTA BARBARA ,
WINC&gt;V AT {)AVIS -

C4LtFOI&lt;NtA . l'M
CHECKING F~'IING

CONDITIONS

·TA~K

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

ABOUT

BRADLEY

-

'? ·

BIG...

,y

•

-GUARANT·E·Eo-;
Phone 992-2094

Pomeroy

2966

HOflle·

&amp; Auto

Opens Til s
Mond•y thru Soturdly
606 E. Main, PorMroy, Q.

.
6-15-tfc
:·:SEWING
-::~---==--:--~
MACHIN-ES .. Repa ir

From the .t"rgest

Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core .

·N•fh•n Biggs
Rodie)or lpeclolist

PSST.~'-&amp;HIND THAT
STONE ~LL T-'&lt;4~~
A GENNULMAN

SMITH NELSON
MOlORS. INC.
Ph.9tl-21i4

WAITIN ' TO KILl.. '&gt;0:-?"

• .WfleRe...t
· ~ARNY!..

A GEN 1-JULMAN

NAMED .

"HAPPY
JACK"?

service, all makes. 992·2284.

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
and back hoe work,
Aylhorlzed Singer Sales and SEE US FOR : Awnings, Storm DOZER
ponds
and
sepllc tanks ; B&amp; K
doors
and
wl
ndows,
carports,
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
Excavating, Phone 9'12-5367,
marqt~ees,
aluminum
siding
3-29-tfc
Dick Karr, Jr.
and railing. A. Jacob, sales
5-21-lfc
representative
.
For
free.
READY -MIX
CONCRETE
·es
timates,
phone
Chartes.
delivered right to your
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V. SEWING MACHINE service,
project. Fast and eosy. Free
Johnson and Son, Inc.
clean. oil. set lenslon $4.99.
estimates. Phone 992-3284.'
3-2·11•
Special Electro -Grande
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co .,,
Company . Phone 992-6517. .
Middleport, Ohio.
;
5-21-lfc
6-30-tfc SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Mille•
Sanltallon, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
662-3035.
'
Septic tanks Installed. George
2-12-lfc CALL 949·2789 for outo body and
polnl work. Also repair fiber
I Bill) Pullins. Phone 992·247S.
glass
boats, plus eleclrlc and
4-25-tfc HARRISON' S TV and Antenna
gas welding. Stanley's
Service. Phone 992-2522.
Custom Body Shop
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
5-19-JOtc
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446- ------------ 6-10-Hc'
47S2, Gallipolis, John Russ_ell,

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

. __.,.---__,.._--"'

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

....... ,,

J.IOWEVcR1 I NOTICE

GOODNe:SS
I
MEAT PRICES A&lt;lE

..

ABSO~UT6'~Y

J " " ....... .,...,,
...... ..

ON6 THING TI-IAT
HASN'T

OUT

SIGI-IT!

WINKLE

WINNIE

ONner &amp; Operator .

5-12-lfc

Real Estate For Sale

--::---c:-::--c-::---__:_:

C. BRADFORD, Aucl1oneer
Complete Service

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

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
REAL INVESTMENT
CORNER LAND - Large building, 40x70, ld'"l for con·

en [oy life summer or winter . -4 bedroom home with 2

1:00 P.M.

CI.E.Afl AT SAN /&gt;!EGO, CLOVDY
AT RIVIiR$t!&gt;E, SHOWERS
A'T SA~A Cl?tiZ • •

YOU ASKED ME 1P
SI-IOW VOU Tile:
{)NtVEI&lt;S!TY OP

ABOUT WHAT'S INSIDE!
I 1.6ED A MIX . ,__·-1

Wh.eel Aliprilent'

MOWERS
&amp; TILLERS

on

PLEASA~T HE!Ul' AT BERKELEY,

I V.OOLDN'T OOW I&gt;.N'fll-iiNG

WHAT W,VE )OU 10
SAY ABOUT 1l-l16 1
MR&gt;. MACHINEGUN

'

tractor on Route 143 . Has a J bedroom residence, 1'h acres
"
of level land.

DISPERSAL
SALE

&amp;
&amp;

Pl. PfHSinf

SPECIAL

40

s6.00 Per Ton ·

furnitun

424 Main St.

EXPERT·

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

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

CAr-JDIDr\TE
A QUfSTIOI-J

Q.J6STIOIJ

PHONE 675-3628

Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992-3795
or Mason 773-5535

Smith's In-depth coverage of
six administrations, from
Franklin D. Roosevelt to
Richard M. Nixon, gave him an
underlltandlng of the '1onellest
Job In the world" which see me?"'
hlllorians would envy.
'70 Bonneville, 2 dr. 'HT, blue
Sunday each month.
with black vinyl top. laclqry
When John F. Kemedy spied
6-11-61p
air
; vinyl interior ; 25,000
Slillth walling with other
actual
miles, phone 992·5934 .
Real Estate For Sale
REGISTERED Appaloosa Stud
reporters at the Hyannis Ar·
after 5 p.m.
Service, $50 Reg. mares, $40
6- ll-6tp
mory In November, 1960, he
Tuesdoy
Grade , Franc is Benedum ,
Friendship
Le1gue
Phone
~67
3856
.
said: "If you're here Smitty, I
_, S·17.JOtp
-W.O. .}'~., r~ally be.n e\~~;- Alley' Bumpers
·' ,\ .
' w.
E'cooomy Tiller, 3'17 h.p. B&amp;S
34 1,..6 ' ,',~ ·•.'!"'"•···
Marine Sales
.engine. Reg . 159.95
, 14US
Screw Bolls
28 12
Under Dogs
14 26
32
FT.
Hoyseboat,
40
h.p.
out
Excerpts from the book:
WHEN YOU JOIN THE
Turf Trim Mower, B&amp; S 3112
Goff Offs
4 34
board motor and trailer ; wi l l
AIR FORCE, YOU'RE
Job Killed Hanllall
h.p.
engine. In carton
70.15
High Team 13 gomesl
sell
reasonable.
Phone
992ALRE~DY 5T~RT1NG
"It Is hard to understand why Screw Balls 1463. Alley
7157 or see at 28A River St.,
A BETTER LlFE
POMEROY
a man will deUberately seek Bumpers 1334.
Middleport .
You get : 1111 a month to
Contact Associate
'9._
JackW.
Carsey,Mgr.
High Tum Gomo - Screw
start, room and board,
6-7-61c
the toughelll Job In the land. Balls
Ail
Phone992·21SI
554, Alley Bumpers 503.
guo~rinteed
promotian,
VERA EBLEN
Mrs. Warren G. Harding cried
High Ind. 13 games) - Jan
worldwide
travel
op.
_
~2 -3iiio out against her husband Jenkins 512, Mory Gillilan 485.
~rtunilits, your choice of
160
C'oa
I
St.
Midd lePOrl
Mobile Homes For Sale
VACUUM CLEANER, ComHigh Ind. Gome - Jan
JOb ... guarantttd. training
running for President, expact, A·l cond ition , with att .
Jenkins 193, Floss ie Maxson
in skills tho! you ""n use
CASH paid for all makes ond
992-3020
pressing the belief that it would 192.
anywhere.
models ol mobile homes . and carpel shampooer. $33.20 160 Coal St.
Middleport
For more inform1tton on all
kill hlm. n did. Franklin o.
Phone area code 614-423-9531 . cash or terms available .
Phone 992-6517.
you can get from fM Air
4-13-tfc
Rooaevelllt the end of his third
FHA APPROVED!! Just
6-8-tfc
Force , CALL-592 · 4591
term Slid everytldng that was
S700 down buys lhls lovely 3
(Athens).
MOB IL E HOMES FOR SALE SWEEPER , Hoover with alt. b.r ., 1112 bath home. Call me
li1 his soul ye1111ed to return to
Q- By what name is the
Runs like new $17.40. Phone todoy
on
lh ls
one .
the famUy home en the Hudson Big Dipper known in mod· KOSCOT KOSMETICS ; s·everal 1965 50x10 mobile home r phone 992-65
17.
new
productsspecials
ea
ch
247-2161.
Everything can be com ·
ern
F:ngland?
river. But he ran for the fourth
6-8-ffc pleted in my off ice.
month ; ~tso sa les personnel - - - - - - - : - - - -6-·6_:_·6tC
A- The Plow . The handle
term ln wblch he died. Harry s
needed . Phone 992·511 3.
l
SEWING MACHINE .
Truman aid repeatedly that of the Dipper Is the handle
6-6-lfc
r---------·- NEW
POMEROY - Very nice 3
of the plow and the Dipper's
I Left in lay-away) Zig Zag
he did not want to be President, bowl is the plowshare.
•b.r.
home, full balh up, LR &amp;
Model.
Dial
contr
ols
to
fancy
-.Air Conditioners
SAVEuploonehalf. Brlngyoor
DR,
kllchen with all buill-in
sew
stretch
material
,
stitch
,
that bis happiest yean were In
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
•Awnings
Q- What is the ext ent of
bultonhole and etc. $39.20 features. Full basement ,
the Senate. Yet he fought for a
lSl Butternut Ave., Pomeroy .
cash or terms ava i lable .
the pardoning power of a
• Underpinning
new gas furnace, garage on
second term.
Phone 992-6517.
-------------~
4-~tfc
U.S. pr esident?
lwo lols- $15,500.
"The lure of being President
6-8-lfc
Complete mobile home
A- The president can
knows no equal In this country. grant reprieves and pardons For Sale or Trade
service - plus gigantic
Gl ' s - come In and talk to
Men suffer extreme lndlgnlties for o f Ce n s e s against the 1967 FORD Goiaxle ; sell or 'display of mobile homes POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
me aboul VA loans. I have
Park view Kennels , Phone 992·
trade for molorcycle ; phone always available at ...
FHA
and
VA
lhe
and even .Ute threat of poverty United States except in cases
5&gt;143 .
992-3530.
representative in my office
and a888881natlon to seek the of impeachment.
S-15-tfc
MILLER
6-9-6tp
oncP a week.
------!' b. nie main attraction, of
CL70 Honda . Good con: 160 Coal Slreet - Also
MOBILE HOMES 1970
course, Is prestige, the lm·
dillon
. Also mixed hay, 985Wanted
location of fhe Middleport C
1220 Washington Blvd.
petWI, a love of power."
3816.
,of C off ice.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0.
6·1l-3tc
LEGAL NOTICE
Recounting numberoWI huNOTICE ON
morous sidelights on jl'elliden·
THREE bedroom house with
FILING OF INVENTORY
For Sal e
tlal campaigns, Smith recalled
bath, lf2-acre lot, on public
AND APPRAISEMENT
water system, l/• -mlle from
Truman on the whistlestop tour The Shte of Ohio, Meigs
REGATTA WEEK SPECIALS·
County .
Chesler on County Rd . 25.
ln 1948 lltandlng at the rear of
Vinyl floor covering , lovelY
Probllt Court
Phone 985-4262.
To the Adm in istrator of the
the train, shouting "Stop this
colors &amp; patterns, 9x 12' s
6-11 -6tc
Poles
; to s. u.ch of th&amp; following
$14.95; elect. clolhes dr~ers,
damned train, I've got some- estate
as are residents of the Stat e ot
your choice 530 . !Free
HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
Ohio, viz : the surviving
Maximum
body's baby."
ceramic
frog with every. rug
985-3529.
spouse , the next of kin , the
Of FOR, Smith wrote : beneficiaries under the will ;
PONIES
&amp;
HORSES
or dryer purchase thru
6-11 -tfc
Diameter
Regatta Week! l All -metal
"Franklin Roosevelt would and to the •Horney or attornevs
lawn chairs; go.c.!llrt motor ;
any of
the
2-story home with iull
10"
have been a wonderful actor. representing
aforementioned persons :
SATURDAY, JUNE 17th NICE
used white work trousers,
basement,
2 lots, new forced
Alfred
W.
Sc t1roath ,
He probably would have been a
shirts, 85c each, great for
air
furnace.
Near Pomeroy .
Largest
End
Deceased ,
No .
20 , 6S 2.
painters! Also, see our usual
S!ake11pearean star who 'wore Clarksburg
ilementary School .. Phone
, West Virglri" i a ,
good selection of clean
992-7384 lo see.
·
fur-collared overcoats, carried Harrison County .
household goods, appliances.
You are hereby notified that
11 -7-lfc
a gold-headed cane and lorded the ln~entory and Ap KUHL' S BARGAIN CEN ESKEY
HILL
: -L
: -O:::S: :S::--::
0-:-:
U:::
T- on
-19-71--,fu-11- slze
C
TER, Rt. 7 "al the caution
It over Ute relll of the troupe. praisement of the est ate of ttu~
DEUVERED
aforementioned
,
deceased
,
late
light",
Tuppers
Plains,
Ohio.
Flatwoods
Rd.,
Rt.
3
ztg
.zag
sewing
mach
ine. For
He was a hopeleu cripple, but of sa id County , wa s flied in th is
Open to 6 p.m.; closed
sew
ing
stretch
fabrics
,
Pomeroy,
the publlc at large did not Courf. Said Inventory and
Mondays. Phone : 667-3858.
buttonholes, fancy designs ,
App
r
a
i
sement
wil
l
be
for
realize It until his death. Not ln hearing before this Court on the
6-11-6tc
elc. Paint slightly bleml•~ed .
Pulling type ponies
Choice of carrying case or
his entire Ume In the White 29th Clay of Jun e, 1972, at 10 :00
o'clock
A.M.
sewing
stond. $49.80 cash or
includes:
miniature
1970 YAMAHA. 250 Enduro,
House could he stand unsup- Any person desiring to file
terms
available.
Phone 992condlllon
;
phone
excellent
ponies,
niules
&amp;
ported.
eKcepllons thereto must file
5641
.
992-6432.
at least f ive days prior to
"When appearlng in public, them
6-8-61c
6.11 .Jtc registered 1!2 Arabian
On Old Rl 33
the date set for hear ing
colts &amp; fillies. New &amp;
he wu the · champion, the
Glv'en under my harid and
l of sa l d Court, I his 9th day of
ANTIQUE dining room suite
d t · k 'd
ddl
Phone 992-2689
LOTS ON Wrlghl Si., Pomero• ,
colorful leader with his chin sea
June, 1972 .
with round table ; 1969 16 ft . L_u_se__a_c_·_S_I_e_sa_ _e...J,
phone 742-5937.
arched upward and his big
- Pomerov, Ohio
.
John C. Bacon
Pennant Camping Trailer;
6·6·121c .
Acting Judoe and ex ·
phone 992-7133.
hand In Ute air. He knew he off lc ior Cierk
.
I
MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE
of sa id Court
6-11-3tc 2 BEDROOM mobile heme, IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCHO '
could thrill a crowded sladllDD By Anl1 B. Watson
Loke Conchas, New Mexico
10x45, priced to sell; 'ocross
by lUll this simple wave of a Deputy Clerk
(6) 12, 19 For Sale
CAMPER. 16 Jt. sl ..ps 6, good
$2,875. No Down. No lnlerest::
street
from
M&amp;R
hand, or a brown felt hat.
cond ition , $1.000. Phone 992·
$25 mo. Vacatloo Paradise.
Bargalnland . 570 Peorl
6329.
Die Ccllllldered Nllve
Money
Maker .
Free
Street ; phone 992-5213.
Brochure. Ranchos : Box
6-9-3tp
"President Eisenhower was NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT 196S APPLEBY fold -down -----~--.:.5·_:_12- tlc
2001 DO, Alameda, Callfornlo
camper,
$150.
l ·room
considered by many to be naive
cue No. 20,.90
9~501.
McGraw
-Edison
air
con
COAL,
Limestone,
Excelsior
·
Estate ot Race D. Hill,
about IIUch matters, a political
6-7·141~
dltloner, like new, 560. Phone
Sail works , E. Moin st., Real Estate For Sale
Deceutd.
.nateur but he had a great
before 4 p.m. 992-3668.
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891.
Notice Is hereby given that
12-61c - - -- -,--- - -4-12-tfc RACINE - 6 room house, bath, RACINE - 10 room house,
deal more 10pbisllcatlon than Edna Hi ll ol Route 1, - _ _ _ _ _ _ ___:_6__:utillly room, garage, $10,000; · bath, basement, garage, two
Langsville, Ohio, hes been duty
came through . He knew appoi nted as EKecutr ix of the
lois. Phone 949-4313.
MARK
IV
car
alr-condllloner,
phone
949-4195.
euctly what he waa doing Estate of Race D. Hi lL 197?, 12 x 60 MOBILE home,
~od
condition,
963
Locust
St.,
3-31-tlc
·
·
4-5-tfp'
deceased. late of Meigs County ,
when he went out to turn on the Ohio .
two-bedroom, lotol electric,
lddleport, phone ~~i~~~ 5 ROOM ~ouse, lol on rover, S ROOM hoYse, Jlh bath, bulit-ln '
shog carpet. Priced to sell.
Credlton ere required to file
a-owda: In attn America, their
back porch, Iorge screened-In
Railroad St., Middleport .
claims with said fiduciary
Located near new mine.
IIOillebody came iri and said: within four months .
WHISPERING
PINES
Nile
$4,000;
phone
992-3265.
,
fronl
porch, garage, running
Phone i~2-5o\41 otter S p.m.
Dated thiS 9th day of June,
'Mr. Pruldent, the a-owd is 1972.
Club ,' 1 mlte norlh of
6-6-12tc
woter; 1'4 acre of ground; for
Also, 1H8 SS396 Chevelle,
--------qylck sole, must be_, to be
jUil about ready for you.'
J'omeroy, Ohio on Rt. 7. Have JOHN C. BACON SLOOO. Con be seen at Rullond
5 ROOM &amp; both house in
arpreclated ; 10 miles North
Auto
Soles
or
call
number
Judge
"He took a deep breath and
2:30 nl~ht club license, phone Syracuse; phone otter 5 p.m.
o Pomeroy on Rt. 33; call992·
above.
Court of common Ple1s,
992-994
,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
992-5162.
67&lt;48.
.
uld, tlltlnl bll arms Into the
6-12-3tc
Probtle Division
6·7-6tp
6-9-3tc
6-9-4tc,
16112, 19,26 - - - - - - - - tamw.r po~e: 'Okay let's .go

iiF .

ASK T He

A.S k

suppllts. Typewriter
Adding Machine R-ir.
Pick-up &amp; Delivery

304 E. Main St.

operator's license? Call 992-

Phone 949-3821
CLOSED for vacation, fill July
4-12-tfc L-------~---- --Racine , Ohio
1st. Cliff's Shoe Repa ir,
·crllf
Bradford
Middleport.
FURNISHED 4 rovru ap!. ALUMINUM boats, on county
5-1-tfc
6-11 -3fc
Adults only, Middl eporl,
road 18, 150 yar~s west of Rt.
phone 992-3874.
33. Call 992-6256.
orenzo SUPERIOR WINDOW Cleaning
OLD-FASHION Trading Ring ;
6·4·1fc Davis.
Co. &amp; Building Maintenance;
Horses, ponies, guns or - - - - - - ----,commer ci al i profess ional
anylhing lotrade ; 1 mile back
men for professional jobs; :
of West Columbia, W . Va. on Auto Sa!es
phone 614-446-9202.
the Lakin· Road ; 1st and 3rd
6-6-121p

Local Bowling

ALECK ?

Complete line of otllct
equipmen1,

Specializing ln.
Small Businesses

CARRIER
WANTED
IN
SYRACUSE

fOf

SWIMMIN',
MR . S MART

POINT OfFICE
SUfPLY

KESLER'S
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

.( speake_r sound system .

THE DAILY SENTINEL

I WUZ \lUIIl\1

AJJD1DATE.

EARTH MOVING

speed changer,

KITCI-\EIJ R6DOIJE I

, WHO SAID

For Sale
sfereo-combinatlon,
-~ P . M . o!'ve:.~~r'eN~!bllcatlon . 'OLD FURNITURE', dishes, · WALNUT
4
speaker
sound system, 4
Mondi'f Deadline 9 a.m.
clocks, brass beds, silver
speed
dual
volume control.
Canc~llat lon - corrections
dollars
or ·
complete
Balance $6S.32 . Use our
Will be a c ce:;:~ted unt!l9 a.m. for. households. Write M. ·D.
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
oevor Publication
Miller, Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
6-S-61c ,.....--------....,
REGULATIONS .
. C.ll 992-6271.

"HEll"
Shows Reporter in
HEATING &amp;
WASH''IIGTON (U!'I)
Backatah·s at the White House :
Few rep•.,rters have ever
understood or chronicled the
human 1lde of the Presidency
with more Insight or accuracy
than UPI's late White House
correspondent Merriman
Smith, In this writer's view.
So there Is captivating
reading In a new compUaUon of
his colorful writings, unpublished notes and selected
"Backstairs:• columns, a
forum he created. The book is
by his son, 1lmolhy G. Smith,
and Is titled "A White House

.. , l'

.

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Clll.ssifieds Get Results!
~

r' f" , ~ ,.. ..... ,

•

.c

ljj)' 2 .,

t:,.. r T r "' . .

r

1.'. '

SCENIC
SYRACUSE - Watch the river boals go _by, relox, ond

baths, nice kllchen, full basement.
WILD BUT CAN BE DEVELOPED
OVER 7 AC.RES - Want'to buii&lt;I:M~illoln~for re$lll ii: '. ,
Then you oughtto see·lhis. Your fortune could be here.
.,.,
PRIME LOCATION
.
RT. 124 WEST - Compact home for lhe working class.
Yet ills re'al nice. All paneled and carpeted . Room for •
garden or play ground.

HANDY
MIDDLEPORT - You can walk fo lhe stores, and lhe
children lo school. Level lol with 3 bedroom home. Only
$8,500.00.
FREEDOM
142 ACRES - Enjoy the fresh air of lhe country. Make
money with cattle wh-ile you work at your regular lob.
Meigs school district. Large form pond and a very good
spr ing . 3,or 4 bedroom home. 2 barns. ntce outbuildings.
$32,500 .00.

UTrLE ORPHAN ANNIE

We need ni ce and neat 2 bedroom homes, reasonably
priced . Big lhlngs are In the moklng, •walch lhls ad and
you may be a llltle wiser. Real estate Is a solid- Investment . Come In to see what we have to offer.

HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE

~-Wtt
by THOMAS JOSEPH

992-3325 NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS PLEASE . 992-2371
37 ACRE farm, modern house,

CLELAND
REALTY
608 E. Motn St.

paneled,

drilled well , 7 acres river

bottom, on good road ; coli ,
afler 1 p.m. 992-6133.
,
6-6-12tc 1

Pomaray

NEW HOME
POMEROY - ·1 story, 3
bedrooms, double closets,
modern built-In kitchen, 2
baths, dining room, all
carpeted, basement, lot
115x220, (electric heat) .
115&gt;&lt;200, (electric heot).
4 BEDROOMS
MIDDLEPORT - Modern
kitchen , large TV room.
dining room, balh, cor pet,
ut i lity

room,

garage and Iorge storage
building, 2 lots. SIUOO.OO.
A FARM
WITH A F\lTURE
This may be "just the spot"
you've been looking for. Call

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Cue No. 20470

Estate of Mar/orle J . ~oush
Deceased .
Not ice Is hertby given that
Walter D. Roush of Mid&lt;lleport
Ohlo , nu been dul·y appointed
Executor of tne Estate of
Marjorie J . Roush , deceased,
lale of M !ddl!port, Mtlga

County, Oh lo.

1
~

IT WAS P.t.RT or: MV
SELF'·TRAINING IN
ELEC.TRONICS.

'

:
1

t

J
1
j'

18. Caviar,
basically

1972 ,

Jonn C. Bacon

Probaf! Judge
of sa ld County
1_61 S, :2, 19, 3t

19. Web
20. Gnawed
22. Well
(Latin )
23. Favoring

I

·j

We talk to JOU
like l~
•'

•

15LANI&gt;, ~NIE

NTeR ll(l!
Will(
ttE1I: )((J!IM liP
IN ~Oil

JU~e

711f-t

l

"T'-'----'-'--'-1 _,
•11 CIHCI/Y '
Mlytlt
..... '"•tie&amp;
)2 SPH&lt;f operotlon . ,

,Choice of Wlltr

Filler

Auto
•u•

-~

-=---

$WOitP.

1

Powtt
_FI~gJt•tor . .

.

.
.
RUTlAND FURNITURF

'42-4211

...lit...
. "'
w~~~.~~IJ
~'"''
•...,lc.

~W_nolcl Grete

Ol\e

2. Timorese
coin

3. Dante's

magnum
opus

Ye1terday'1

(2 wds.)
4. 3.600 seconds till
midnight

9. Chemical
suffix

5. Japanese

wild dog
6. Fry a bit
7. Dogpatch
name
8. Jewish
temple
chamber
(3 wds. l

10; Porter
15. Sward
21. John and
Jane 22. Quagmi re
24. Coercion
25. Relaxin g
(2 wds.)
26. Earthy
pigment

An~wu

I

27. 1,440
minutes
28. Rhinal
29. "Beau

OCCIL

KYKIN

I

01
III
(A.w•N le.On't!W)

I

Jumblu• IIRCH GLAND OUTCRY llAGLAN

Salurtby'•

Anawerz Thia ;., alae lecur rou can do/- ~INCI

SHE 5AID 5HE

~ED1160 .10

111M ...

v~ ~~fl}r,~~~- ..
...

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7~~~!t~ ~=-:-

-._.,. . .

AXYDLIIAAXI!
II LONGFELLOW
i~E TltXl61RLS
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
DOttlN
1\IERE .:mE'/
used for the three L'i, X for the two O's, elc. Single letters.
WKtN6
ap01trophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dillerent.
f"1 ,, .---'I AROUND lHE LAKE ..

wm

''

---.r--""ll

CI!YPTOQUOTES

.,••,

'1.

V XLRVLQL

•

XLKWBHL
CD

._ullt....
· ,
· •, _O.
'""

j, ·.

I(

VS
VC

XLRVLQL

ELHCLG

~----------~---=~~

LET'S 60 MCK..

I lt.AATTOHAVE
5CHOOI. WITH A"W.K Wffil HER ..

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's bow to work It:~"'""'

Mtyt•t
HIIO/If "ell
Dry... ·
Surround · .etottr\i ~
~lh •~......
"""· :l
t:t hot spot,·,
no
Ytrdrylhl . · ,,
F.lne
II Lilli
'

.

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
letter to each oquare, to
form four ordinary worda.

place

0 ,-

~.,.llll: l';u;

.

JJ&amp;MIDl!J£;-~!::!!::! -He

DOWN
I. Hiding

in Barcelona
Sl. Average
SZ. Actress
Murray of
L early
· movies
!!.Seafood
Item
st. Aldous
Huxley's
"-in
Gaza"
S6. Singer,
-Bryant
S8. Egyptian
president
Sl. S.:oft

ON Tl(~ AICIFIC

JO fii!FU51!5 TO

ON YOUR DIAL

ttmpf.

40. Fashion
41. Picasso's
support

30. '~Uncle ''

.WMP0/1390

."ti!'
.•P•r
confr"OT."'"

(0 1972 Kinr Featuru: S)'ndi~~:de, Inc.)

24. "Gunsmoke"
role
25. Tennis
headliner
27. Sea cow

us for an appointment to see

HENRY E. CLELAND, Sr.
REALTOR
Phone 992-2259
If no onswer 992-2561

ACROSS
I. Future
officer .
6. White
hunter's
title
11. Spanish
province
12. Dwelling'
13. 13 witches
in BS·
sembly
14. Set loose
16. Marsh •
elder
17. Whodunit
author,
Josephine

Creditors are requ ired lo file 1
their claims wltn said flduclary · J
within four months .
1
Dated th Is 31st day of May '

II. Opportunity knocks!
3BEDROOMS
MIDDLEPORT- l'h balhs,
Iorge double garage, slorm
doors ond windows, nice
porches , EXCELLENT
NEIGHBORHOOD.
$12,900.00.

Saturday's Cryptoquote: FORMERLY A MAN WONDERED
IF HE COULD AFFORD TO MARRY, NOW HE WONDERS
IF HE CAN GET ALONG WITHOUT A WORKING WIFE.CARL ELLSTAM

.

HDKVW'R
LFBWRVCA
.
VH VYZDHHVXRL

WSACNVSM

LJ\HL . -N
"

I

�.
a- The O.Uy Sentillel, Mlddleport·Pcimeroy, 0., June 1:, tm

Small Guy In Trouble
CLEVELAJ'ID . (UPI)-The
nation seems to be doing just
about everything it can to
make survival difficult for
l!lllall marrufacturers, Industry
Week magazine reported
!Dday.
''We pralae small manufacturers and love the rhetoric
about competition, but pass tax
laws
that favor
the
large firms," the magazine
said.
" We
tell
.,treprenl!l!rs they're a vital
part of our business system
and then adopt safety and pol·
lution codes that drive many of
them put of that system.
''We blast big busines.S for its
armies of nameless numbers
pushing paper through endless
channela, but flood the small
manufacturer with
meaningless forms that
demand an army of accountints. Add to this the small
manufacturer's traditional
problems, compounded by the
growing complexities . of
managing today, and you begin
to wonder just how long the
small manufacturer will survive.' ~

Large firrils have internal

safety staffs, but small firrils
caMot afford them. The small
firms could u~ consultants,
but their fees could eat up the
year's profits. The simplest answer to their plight would he a
department of labor technical
assistance pr~gram, but it
doesn't look as though that will
come about for some time, In·
dustry Week said.
Another problem, paper pollution, is hurting the small
businessman. The flood of pa·
perwork - one senal!&gt;r esti·
mated It costs businesses $18
billion a year to fill out and re·
tum federal forms - hits the
small finn harder than the
large company simply because
the larger company probably
has a staff of accountants who
can handle the forms.

M-M Slo-Pitch
Play Schedule
Revised Now
If the Wahama Big Bend

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES:
Mrs .
Theodore Melrose, Point
Pleasan •; Margaret Thomas,
Letart; 1\onald Trimble,
Bidwell; Shirley Stover,
daughter, Gallipolis Ferry;
Mrs. Homer Bonecutter, Dell
Plants, Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
John McCloud, Mason; John
Cheesebrew, Point Pleasant;
Catherine Beaver, Leon; Mrs.
Kenneth Williams , Point
Pleasant; Detner Roush, Jr.,
Clifton ; Mary Carpenter,
Albany, Ohio.
Birth: Adaughter to Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Gillispie, . Henderson, June 10.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight&amp; Tuesday
June 12·1J
STRAW DOGS
(T echnlcotor I
Dustin Holfmao
Susan George
ALSO SHORTS
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
I•

MASON DRIVE-IN

·.

'

Tonight. Tue.
Junetl.IJ•
Double Feature Program
"LE MANS"

I Color I ·
Steve McQueen
PLUS
THE LIGHT AT
THE EDGE OF
THE WORLD

Kirk Douglas
Yul Brynner
iGP)

Softball Tournament proceeds
as scheduled, without any
nights rained out, and ends
Wednesday , the following
revised schedule of the M-M
Men's Slow·Pitch Softball
League will ile played.
THURSDA V, JUNE IS
Game 51 - Foote Mineral vs.
Danville at Syracuse 6 p.m.; 52
- Reedsvillevs. Jim's Camper
at Syracuse 7 p.m. ; 53 - Fruth
Pharmacy vs. Farmer's Bank
at Wahama 6 p.m.; 54 Randolph's 76 vs. K &amp; K Mobile
at Wahama 7 p.m. ; 55 - Royal
Crown vs, Meadowgreen at
Eastern High 6:30 p.m.
TUESDAY, JUNE 20
56 - Jim's Camper vs.
Meadowgre~n at Syracuse. 6
p.m.; 57 - Danville vs. Fruth
Pharmacy at Syracuse 7 p.m.;
58 - Farmer's Bank vs. K. &amp;
K. Mobile at Wahama at 6
p.m.; 59 - Reedsville vs. Foote
Mineral at Wahama 7 p.m.; 60
- Randolph 's 76 vs. Royal
Crown at Minersville 6:30p.m.
THURSDAY, JUNE 22
61 - K. &amp; K. Mobile vs.
Royal Crown at Syracuse 6
p.m.; 62 - Foote Mineral vs.
Farmer's Bank at Syracuse 7
p.m.; 6J - Fruth Phannacy
vs. Rahdo1p)1's 76 ·at Wahama 6
p.m.; 64 - Jim's Camper vs.
Danville at Wahama 7 p.m.; 65
- Reedsville vs. Meadowgreen
at Eastern High 6:30 p.m.
Managers of all teams which
have had league games rained
out in the first half should
make every effort to make ·
these games up by Sunday,
June~ .

Aleague meeting will be held
at Syracuse field on Tuesday,
June 20, at the conclusion of the
second g~me played there that
evening. All managers are
asked to attend to plan the
leag ue tournament and
complete the schedule for the
second half.

By United Press International
U Sen. George S. McGovern
fails to win a first ballot victory
at the Democratic National
Convention next month he will
be denied the presidential
nomination, says Rep. Wilbur
D. Mills. The party then may
tur;p to Sen. Edward M. Ken-

nedy.

.

Weltha Oark

Dies on Monday
Mrs. Weltha M. Clark, 62,
Albany Route 2, died early
Monday morning at the
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital
in Athens.
A member of the Downington
Methodist Church, Mrs. Clark
is survived by four children,
James, of Downington;
Robert, of Harrisonville; Mrs.
Frederick (Louise) Dixon, of
Athens, and Mark, of Albany;
10 grandchildren, 16 greatgrandchildren, one great great - grandchild; a sister,
Mrs. Maude Duvall of
Pasadena, Calif., and several
nieces and nephews.
Mrs . Clark was preceded in
death by her husband, John L.
Clark, and three sisters.
Arrangements are being
completed at the Ewing
Funeral Home.

Mr. Barnhart
Of Racine Dies
RACINE - Samuel Barney
Barnhart, 49, Racine, died
Sunday evening at the
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
He was the son of the late John
and Anna Beetler Barnhart,
and besides his parents, was

in death by a sister,
Mrs. Wilma Brooks.
A veteran of World War II, he
is survived by his wife , Helen
Hayman Barnhart, Racine ;
four children, Mrs . Vicky
Smith, Pomeroy ; Mrs. Randy
(Denise) Williams, Rutland,
and Debbie and Tom, at home;
a grandson, Charles Warren
Smith, Pomeroy; five sisters,
Mrs. Nial (Virginia) Salser,
Syracuse; Mrs. .Willard
(Eulah ) Wagner, Waterford;
Mrs. John (Erma) Hill, Letart
Falls; Mrs. William (Betty)
Urban, Los Angeles, Calif., and
Mrs .
Charles
(Jeane)
Mugrage , New Matamoras ,
Ohio; two brothers, Harold, of
Tuppers Plains, and Thomas,
of Coolville, and several nieces
and nephews.
Mr. Barnhart was employed
by the Midland Ross Corp.,
Cleveland.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
Racine First Baptist Church
with the Rev. Charles Norris
officiating. Burial will be in the
Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home any time after 7
this evening.
·
pr~eded

Raids
(Continued from page I)
now and understand his
position, but at that time as the
conunander on the spot concerned with the safety of the
crews and, at the same time
trying to stop the buildup that
was going on, I felt that these
were justifiable actions."
Ryan testified that after
meeting with Lavelle, he offered him the choice of a new
assignment or retirement. He
said he discussed the case and
his recommendations with his
superiors, all the way up to
Defense Secretary Melvin R.
Laird.
· Both he and Lavelle said that
Lavelle decided that in view of
medical problems he was
having he had decided to take
retirement. On April 7 he was
officially retired.
This means we've go! the know-how and the people to care for all your personal and business
financial needs. Like your Checking Account,
Savings Account, Christmas Club, Aulo Loan and
Mortgage lo name just a. few. So try one-stop Full
·Service banking. We think you 'll li nd illops.

The ·Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.

"I think he must win on the
first ballot..'' Mills said. " ...U a
person with as much support as
he has at the convention can't
muster a few more bandwagon
riders and get that 1,509 votes
on the first ballot, I just don't
;;ee him being nominated, and
if he isn't nominated, then the
Democrats will be looking
toward someone else .:. and I
would think that most of those
there would loo~ with favor on
Senator Kennedy, if he would
accept the nomination."
Mills on TV
Mills ou TV
Mills made his remarks on
NBC's "Meet the Press."
SALES REPORT
McGovern said in an interOhio Valley Uvestock Co.
view with UP! ~unday that he
Gallipolis, Ohio
expects next week's New York
Saturday, Junel0,1972
primary to put him withirr 300
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 26.25 delegates of a first ballot
to 26.75, 220 to 250 lbs. 26.80 to nomination. But he said he
27, Light 24.50 to 27, Fat Sows believed he would have to fight
22 to 24, Stags 20.50 down, for additional votes one-by-one.
Boars 20 to 22.50, Pigs 15 to 27, He said be did not see "any big
Shoats 18 to 32.50.
blocs coming to us."
CATTLE - Steers 32.50 to
McGovern said he would not
37.75, Heifers 28 to 36.50, Baby soften his stands on tax reform,
Beef 35 to 48.50, Fat Cows 18 to welfa'fe reform and ending the
~.Canners 20 to 27.60, Bulls Z8
war.
to 32.50, Milk Cows 185 to 400.
The South Dakota senator
VEAL CALVES - Tops 55, gained 30 more delegates at
Seconds 53 to 54, Medium 50 to state party conventions over
53, Com. &amp; Hvs. 45 to 55, Cutis the weekend, giving him close
45 down, Baby •Calves 35 to 70. to 1,000 delegates.
His best showing came in
Virginia
where he won 25
THREE FINED
RACINE - Three defen- delegates, 16 from the state's
dants were fined in Racine '''''''''='''''';;;:;:;:;~::::~=~;::~:;:::m::~::;:::;:''''"'';:::;
Mayor' Charles Payles court
OVER 2110 DEAD
Friday night. Marshall Alfred
RAPID CITY, S.D. (UP!)
Lyons, who filed the charges,
said Jimmy W. Johnson, 19, - Search crews using dogs
Racine, James H. Sellers, 29, worked through the night to
Racine, and Thomas I. Arnott, uncover bodies from the
18, Racine, Rt. 2, each were muddy ruins of the nation's
worst flood In 3S years.
fined $13.70 for speeding.
Authorities said today
more than 2110 were known
dead from the Dood Friday
NUMBER GROWS
WASHINGTON (UP!)- The night and Saturday caused
U. S. Census Bureau reports when a raln·swollen dam
the nwnber of first and second burst and bllllons of gallons
generation Cubans in the of water cascaded Into Rapid
United States grew from City and other communities
124,416 in 1960 to 560,628 in 1970. in South Dakota's Black
The agency said 45 pet. of the Hills.
Pat Dixon, coordinating
total in 1970 - or ~2,520 lived in Florida . There were .disaster informatlom, said
98,479 in New York, 71,233 in there may have been
New Jersey, 47,699 in duplications in ,• the death
California, and 19,649 in count. "We know It's over
200," he said. "It could be 29
Illinois.
over or 30 over. No one.
Mills, il'lfluential chairman of
the House Ways and Means
Committee and himself .a
Democratic presidential
candidate,
made
the
asse~sment Sunday. The
Arkahsas Democrat also said
that if the clinvention were to
draft Kennedy, he would
ci&gt;nsider accepting the vice
presidential nomination.
Mills said he did not believe
McGovern, the Democratic
front-runner, will have enough
delegates to win on the lir!tballot.

YAWES

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DEMOCRATIC

BAKER

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,-

would have to direct traffic.
Harless insisted. that no committment
on the part of Mason Ci ty Council could be
made Wltil the West Virginia State
Department of Highways is contacted and
village council meets to decide whether to
approve the ferry service.
Harless is to contact Jack Kerr, C of C
president, when a decision is reached.
Sold Today
Larry Coler of the Ohio State
Department of Highways disclosed that

10 congressional districts and
nine of the 12 at-large
delegates. Virginia also is
sending 20 uncommitted
delegates to the party convention.
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey
added three delegates, while
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of
Maine and former North
Carolina Gov. Terry Sanford
won one delegate each.

man Lawrence F. O'Brien said
Back to Washington
McGovern returned to Wash- ·Sunday that former President
ington late Sunday after a one- Lyndon .. B. Johnson has
day Dying trip to his home declined an invitation to attend
state to view the Rapid City, the party nominating conS.D., flood damage. He was vention in Miami Beach.
scheduled to campaign in New O'Brien did not give any
York City today.
reason, but said Johnson stated
Humphrey scheduled cam- his position in a letter.
John N. Mitchell, President
paign stops in San Antonio,
Nixon's campaign manager,
Tex.
Democratic National Chair· said 90,000 to 100,000 persons
contributed more than $10
million to Nixon's campaign
before the new federal election
financing and disclosure law
East Side home to Mrs. Brown took effect two months ago.
to pay off a mortgage on a Mitchell said he was under no
condominium which she obligation to state who the
currently occupies.
contributors were.
~S HONORS
TWO ARRESTED
Stephen Massar, son of Mr.
Gary
Simpson, 41, Pomeroy,
and Mrs. George D. Massar of
Columbus graduated cum Rt. 3, and David Simpson, 26,
laude
from
Columbus New Haven, have been
Academy Friday morning. Hill arrested by the Meigs County
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Sheriff's Dept. and charged
Clarence Massar of Mulberry with entering upon land with
Ave., p omeroy, attended the intent to steal. The two were
commencement held on the found inside the premises of
sc hoo 1 cour t yard. After the the Baird Brothers Auto Parts
exercises, the parents en- place on SR 7 Sunday. David
tertained with a luncheon at Simpson was released under
the Scioto Country Club for $50 bond . Gary Simpson
· ds.
remained in custody.
re1a t'JVes an d 1rten

Jim Brown told To Pa Alimon
y

CLEVELAND (UP! ) - A
domestic relations judge
Monday granted alimony of
$2,500 a month to Sue Brown,
the divorced wife of former
Cleveland Browns fullback Jim
Brown .
Cuyahoga County Judge
John L. Maxwell also ordered
that Brown, now a movie actor,
payh$lf00tha wtheek suhpplodrt for .
eac o etr ree c ' . reo.
Mrs. Brown. had
ed testified shet
had not rece tv
any suppor
from
Brown
.
. J smce they were
dtvorced
m anuary.
Besides the alimony and
ch tld support, Brown was
ordered to transfer tttle of an

y

Wembley®TIEs FOR MEN
The per.fect Father's Day Gift is a Wembley Tie and you'll like the fine
selection of these fine ties in the men 's department on the lsi floor . Solid
colors · stripes · neat pattern fancies - in the popular new width - all
arranged for your easy selection- and there's plenty of solid white for
you to buy.

Devoted To 1'lw lnteresl$ Of The Meigs-Mason Area
,..

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TIIESDAY, JUNE 13, .1972

Howard Goins was employed
as the new band director for
the 1972-73 school year by the
Meigs Local School Board
Monday night.
Goins, a graduate of Eastern
Kentucky University has taken
graduate work toward his
master degree at Miami and

Xavier Universities. Goins has
had five years experience,
having taught at Deerfield
Union local schools at Kings
Mills in Southwestern Ohio.
Meigs Local Supt. George
Hargraves said Goins has
"excellent qualifications. "
Also hired was Mrs. Karen

Goins, the new board director s
wife, as home economics
teacher. Mrs. Goins is a
graduate of Berea College,
Kentucky .
Board members expressed
concern over the passage of the
five mill levy which will be
voted on in a special election on
1

June 20. Frank Porter,
president, urged the members
to "do everything possible to
pass the levy." The levy must
pass m order for the Meigs
Local School Board to continue
its
requir ed
minimum
program.
Following recommendations

PHONE 992·2156

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.,.. .

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..

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Green .Hill Homes w~s

~

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TEN CENTS

Under Title I, summer school
staff, were Robert Morris,
director; Jennifer Butc her ,

Mary Francis, Helen Dais,
Dorothy Chaney, Katherine
Jacobs, Marjorie Goett, Anna
Turner, Margaret Lewis,
Roberta Wilson, Marjorie
Gibbs, Eric Hart, Greg McCall,
Ed Bartels, Robert Meier, Don
Stivers, Teachers; John Lisle,
coordinator ; Joyce Vance,
secretary; Ernest Wood, Ralph
Macomber, and Marvin
Wilson, bus drivers; George
Hawley and Roger Dixon, part

time custodians; L. W. McComas and Don Wolfe, clerk
and clerk's helper.
Rick VanMatre was ap·
pointed a substitute custodian,
Phyllis English, cook at the
high school effective Oct. 1;
Eleanor Well, cook at
Salisbury effective at the
beginning of the school year ;
Kenneth Little, custodian at
the junior high building ; Phil
Moon, Gary Warner, Floyd
Burney, and Charles Diehl,
custodians, pending approval
of the work-study program by

the sta te department of
education .
In other business the board
accepted the resignation of 13€n
Slawter as varsi ty assista nt
football coach ; Linda Aikman,
Kim Neal and Suzanne Wolfe
as elementary teachers, and
Susie Heines as speech
therapist under Title I; Melva
Turner as cook effective Oct. 1;
Dan Cotterill, Harris onville
custodian, effective June 16,
and Rebecca Hargraves, as
(Continued on page 8)

aC.

Votes. Voting in favor were
Mrs. Roger Morgan, William
Waiters, Clarence Stewart and
David Ohlinger.
Council also voted to take
legal action against Floyd G.
Brown and Associates, the
engineering firm retained in
the sewerage project, to secure
some $17,000 used to repair lift
stations. Defective parts were
used in the lilt stations, it is
alleged. Brown &amp; Assoc. has

equipment.
Solicitor Bernard Fultz will
be asked to proceed on the
court action.
In another action, following a
check with members of the
village recreation commission,
Ches ter L. Tannehill, Guy
Cowan and Harold Chase,
Council voted to permil an ice
cream stand to operate on a 3()..
day trial basis in the Middleport Community Park.

encouraged the village to ltle

PI Men~ te&amp;i\aliOM: {1110!1'-

...

ROAD INSPECTED - Bill Grueser, left, general
chainnan of the Big Bend Regatta and Jack Carsey, co. chairman, inspected the road below the upper parking lot
wall that is used by boaters who participate in the Regatta
boat races. Large rocks were moved to clear the roadway

over the weekend. Several loads of gravel will also be placed
on the roadway. Heading the project to move the large
houldet;s were Pomeroy Mayor William Baronick, county
engineer, Theodore Beegle, and'lhe county commissioners. A
parade Fri&lt;fay evening will officially open Regatta activities
which will be held Saturday and Sunday.

Miller at
Regatta

ELBERFELDS IN. POMEROY

Showers and thundershowers
likely north and a chance of
thundershowers south today.
High in the 80s. Variable
cloudiness tonight and Wed :
nesday with a chance of
thundershowers. Low tonight
in the 60s, High Wednesday in
the 80s.

cepted on the split vote, with the action, it is reported, and it that no concession stand can be .
Councilmen Fred Hoffman and in turn will file against the operated with the exception of •
Dick Vaughan cas ting the nay supplier of the allegedly faulty.
(Continued on page 3)

Improved Readmg
•

FREE Gin BOXES .WilH EVERY nE

by Supt. Hargraves, Stephanie
Niemies, speclal education
teac her, was appointed high
school cheerleader coach;
Judy Martin, a graduate of
Ohio Un iversity and a resident
of Athe ns, was hired as speech
therapist under the Title 1
program and Greg McCall was
appointed Title I coordinator.
McCall is assistant principal at
Harrisonville .
Judith Gannaway was appointed kindergarten teacher
and Cecila Golden, Spanish
teac her. Other appointments:

Middleport Village Council
voted 4-2in favor of selling a lot
at the corner of Elm and
Broadway Sts., when it met in
regular session Monday night.
Mayor John Zerkle said that
the pie-shaped lot is not needed
by the village and bids had
been invited on the property.
The two bidders were Green
Hill Homes, Inc., with a bid of
$350 and John H. Thomas with
a bid of $301.10. The bid of

By United Press International
LOGAN,OHIO-EIGHTPERSONSWEREINJURED,two
of them seriously, in an explosion and fire at the Goodyear Tire &amp;
Rubber Co. plant here where auto parts are made .
One hundred and three pupils
The two most seriously injured were ·identified as Leonard at Pomeroy Elementary
Bums, 31, lA&gt;gan, and Mark Mechem, 23, Nelsonville. They were School have exceeded normal
hospitalized at University Hospital in Columbus with bums. growt h in . the project
Officials said the explosion occurred in a heating oven lp the "Reading," Robert Morris,
principal, told the Meigs Local
plant which produced auto dashboard sections .
School Board Monday night.
Morris explained the ob·
COLUMBUS -OHIO FARMERS ARE ADVISED to wait for
a lew days before deciding whether the wee~end frost did killing jectives of the project and the
damage to their com fields. Dale T. Friday, Ohio State
University agronomist and. manager of the OSU Farm Science
Review, said the fields may recover since only the tips of leaves
of many stalks were nipped;
When the temperatures went as low as 30 degrees Sunday
morning, many gardens having weather sensitive plants as
tomatoes were badly hit by the cold, especially in the northern
two-thirds of Ohio.

'

Weather

Lot Sold ·on 4-2 Vote

.:··;-· . . .

Be sure
very
Wembley nes - Solid colors.
- neat patterns - stripes- In the new popular width. E-Z·(ln &lt;~nd E- Z·Off
makes this tie a particularly line one to giv" ~ . · ...
' 'Y nexl
Sunday .

use the bridge during repairs. Howev~r,
pedistrian traffic will be maintained . ·
Also meeting with the chamber were
Dorsy McCoy and Deb Harmon, who will
furnish the ferry service if approved .
McCoy said there would be two barges
each able to handle 192 cars per hour in six
round trips.
"We have experienced men. Heavy
traffic will not be a-problem," McCoy said.
''If it is necessary, we will service the area
(Continued from page I)

enttne

jN..--~-~-·;·~-- n-.. B~;z~fs. I 03 Pupils Show

READY TIES

Ire

Goins is New Marauder Band Director

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
ARE HEADQUARTERS FOR

the bid to repair the bridge will be sold
today. The sta te is allowing the contractor
seven days to complete the project instead
of two weeks as was announced earlier.
The contractor has the period July 5 to
Aug. 31 in which to complete the project,
Coler said. When the seven days are used
will be entirely up to the contractor, Coler
noted. He also said it was entirely possible
that the bid would not be sold, due to the
light restrictions.
No licensed vehicle will 1&gt;1' allowed to

•

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GIVING THE BOY A GREAT BIG HAND, Chicago Mayor Daley leads the welcome at a fund-raising dinner for speaker Sen. Edward Kennedy, reported still the
mayor's top choice for .the Democratic ·presidential nomination.

DEPUTY EMPLOYED
Edith Sisson has been a!&gt;'
pointed deputy clerk of courts
to take recognizance bonds by
Meigs County Common Pleas
Judge John C. Bacon.

PACK TO WORK
Pomeroy CUb Scout Pack 249
will meet at 4:JO p.m. Tuesday
on the lower parking lot in
Pomeroy to help clean up the
area fqr Regatta weekend. All
scouts are asked to wear, old
clothing and parents are asked
to help supervise.

•

VOL. XXIV NO. 41

session.

POMEROY, OHIO
fze.• Mulmam lllluraace

,.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
Clifford
Jenkinson ,
Pomeroy ; Dexter Clark,
Racine ; Garnet Bachner ,
Rutland ; Claude Roy, Racine;
Evelyn Montgomery, Langs·
vi lle; Ethel
Sizemore,
Cheshire; Freda Laudermilt,
Pomeroy.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Lela Easterday, Pauline
WEAK EARTHQUAKE
Jones, Samuel McKinney,
TOKYO (UPI) - A weak Kandi Sayre, Lisa Smith,
earthquake was felt in nor- Kenneth Blankenship.
thern Japan early today, but
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS there were no reports of Joseph Fritz, Greenup, Ky.;
damage or injury.
Coy Starcher, Jr., Pomeroy;
Sandra Yates, Middleport;
HE FIGHTS BACK
Miles Childress, Racine;
ROSEMEAD, Calif. (UP!) - Gregory Grimm, Middleport;
John Van, 58, is blind. A thief Garfield Sizemore, Rutland;
snatched his wallet containing Myrtle Hayes, Columbus;
$300 during the weekend, but Larry Hill, Long Bottom; Carl
Van put up a stiff fight, Still, Jr., Middleport.
grabbing the man and beating
SUNDAY DISCHARGES him with his white cane. Orpha Hussell , Freda Grate,
William Steele, 18, driving by, Albert Jackson, Howard
saw the battle. He stopped his Largent, Paul Milhoan ,
car, chased Van's assailant Elizabeth Conde, Louise
and held him for police.
Bartels.
Donal'd Aurelio, 27, was
arrested on suspicion of robbery.
MR. HITE ILL
Mr. and Mrs, John C. Hite,
Middleport, have been called to
LOCAL TEMPS
Zanesville due to the serious
Temperature in downtown
illness of his father, Rufus
Pomeroy Monday at II a.m.
Hite, formerly of Rutland, who
was 70 degrees under sunny
underwent surgery Saturday.
skies.
Cards may be sent to R. E.
Good
Samaritan
Hite,
Hospital, Room 621, Third
Marriage License
Floor, Zanesville.
David Lloyd Sheets , 24,
Reedsville ,
and
Mary
Margaret Carleton, 1,9,
REHEARSAL SET "
Pomeroy.
The Eastern High School
marching band will rehearse
from 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday at ·
the high school, according to
Charles Wills , director .
Students should bring all musjjo
issued for the rehearsal

"IT'S TRUE"- -.

streets.
H• also stipulated that there would be
a !().ton load limit. There could be no
the idea .''
He pointed out that paving of town heavy trucks or tractor trailer rigs perstreets is to get underway in Mason City in mitted on Mason village streets.
the next two weeks. Therefore, if the
He said: "Mason Village CoWlcil has
bridge is closed before paving is com- enough· problems now, with com plaints
pleted, water or oil will have to be put on from residents about the dust from the
"Pomeroy " and "Horton1 ' Sts.
streets, without adding to its problems ."
Harless felt that it should be the
Harless also noted that signs would
responsibility of the Ohio Department of have to be placed in the traffic area
Highways to ~-~ter down, or oil. those leading from the levee, and that someone

Jericho, where the biblical
Joshua fought the battle
celebrated in the spiritual
song, Is the oldest town in tl1e
world, dated by arcbeologists
back to about 8,000 B.C.

ems

ro

ferry service Is approved. Mason City
Council members are not very receptive to

Now You Know

knows righl now."

GIRLS STATE OPENS
COLUMBUS (UP!) ~pita!
University once again becomes
the center of government for a
week when 1,200 girls put government into action at the 26th
annual Buckeye Girls State.
The American Legion Auxiliary sponsored event opens Saturday. Lieutenant (lov. John
W. Brown will address the girls
at their annual workshop in
government opening night.

erry _ervice
BY KATIE CROW
Whether or not Meigs-Mason has ferry
service while the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
is closed for repairs depends entirely on
Mason City, W.Va., Town Council and the
West Virginia State Highway Department,
it was disClosed Monday at a meeting of
the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce.
Meeting with the chamber Monday at·
the Meigs Inn was Mason City Mayor Roy
T. Harless who stated, "There are.several
problems that have to be resolved before

I .
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Jt Early, Says Mills

McGovern Has to Make

'

WASHINGTON - SEEKING ECONOMIES, the Senate
Finance Committee has cut by hall the 10 pet. Social Security
benefits increase it approved last week .
By an unrecorded voice vote Mo"nday, the panel decided to
make the increase only 5 pet. 'for the several million retired
persons who draw the minimum benefits. They are people with
low lifetime earnings or people who worked for only a few years
under Social Security payroll taxation.
WASHINGTON -DR. HENRY A. KISSINGER allowed a
Persian belly dancer to perch on his lap during the trip home
from the Moscow summit, did his fondness for frolicking detract
from the dignity of his office? Rep. William J . Scherle, R·Iowa,
posed the question Monday about Kissinger, the White House
"swinger" who is President ~ilion's chief adviser on foreign
policy. Scherie, a grain and livestock farmer before he was
elected to Congress in 1966, provided his own answer.
· "I'm no prude," Scherle said, "and I'm no Puritan, but I
think a certain amount of dignity ought to correspond to his role.
There's a time and a place. Business Is business, and pleasure is
pleasure. If happy Henry continues on his Don Juan party pass,''
he Sjlid, ''the next picture of the distil)guished ex-Harvard
professor may ·very well appear in the center folds spread of
Cosmopolitan magaZine- with a staple in his navel."
JiELFAST - THE IRISH REPUBLICAN Army (IRA)
stepped up ttihomb campaign today amid growing sigtls that a
Roman catholic women's peace effort has started to spread to
Protestant neighborhoods.
In the British Parllamllllt, William Whitelaw, secretary of
&amp;tate lor Ulster, re;~cted to !he escalating violenCll by pledging a
(Continued on page 8~
•

Congressman Clarence
Miller returns to Southeastern
Ohio for the second successive
weekend this Friday .
On Friday morning, June 16,
the Congressman will hold
scheduled appointments at his
district office in Lancaster.
That afternoon ' Miller will
travel to Columbus to meet
with officials of the Department of Housing and Urban
Development in regard to
pendilig housing projecls for
Ohio's lOth District.''
On Saturday afternoon the
Congressman will be in Meigs
County to participate in
ceremonies surrounding the
annual Big Bend RegatQI at
Pomeroy.
BOOK REPORT
The
Middleport
and
Pomeroy Public Libraries and
the bookmobile circulated
10,464 books during the month
of May, Mrs. Wanda Eblin,
clerk, reports. . Donating
magazines for the month were
Mrs. Leland Sisson, Miss Ruby
Diehl, Mrs. Dan White, Mrs.
Orin Smith and Mrs. Tom Rue.

end results, stating that the
programoverthepastyear has
been "most successful" and
that he felt that the same type
of program should be extended
into other learning areas.
Morris expressed gratitude
to the "fine efforts" of the
' administration and teaching
staff of the Pomeroy and
Middleport Elementary
Schools for giving their time
and talent to provide the
youngsters of their schools an
improved reading program.
Morris also exprassed
thanks to the 13 parents who
helped make the program a
success.
He explained that seven
percent of the pupils showed a
negative growth, two percent
no gain, 24 pet. showed gain,
but less than nine months, and
65 pet. showed gains of nine
months.
The testing given covered
two major areas, vocabulary
and comprehension.
Morris used a series of
charts to explain the program
which the board thought was
excellent. Hargraves complimented Morris upon his fine
interest and determination to
succeed.
Hargraves . and board
members noted that it was
"very satisfying" to hear such
a fine report with such excellent results.

KEYNOTER NOTED
COLUMBUS (UP!~
Howard P. Chester, executive
director' of a job-finding AFL- ·
ClO Task Force, wljl ~e~note
the Governor's Advisory
CoWldl on International Trade
here Wednesday .

!f;;:~:=·~~:;''' l Caches Pounded
bn $1,170 to m
I
By Arthur Higbee
SAIGON
(UP!) - American
mMUhlleporl
@ B52s pounded
Communist SUI&gt;'
~

" Parking meter receipts in;
Middleport for May totaled
$1 ,170, according to the monthly report of Police Chief J. J.
Cremeans submitted to Middlepor t Village Council
Monday night.
The police department made
34 arrests during the month
including 18 for intoxica tion ;
four for driving while intoxicated; two each for
speeding ; failing to yield the
right of way; disturbing the
peace; petty larceny; two
juveniles and one each for
running a stop sign, no license
tags.
Mrs. Susan Beechler served
123 meals to prisoners during
the month. The police cruiser
was driven 4,515 miles, and
seven accidents were investigated.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Warm with highs In the 8Gs
and lows In the lOs. A chance
of showers Thursday and
Saturday and south Friday.

ply caches today in a sixth
consecutive day of raids inside
North Vietnam and Navy jets
from the carrier Midway set
off blossoming fireballs as they
blew up ao oil storage complex
near the port of Vinh. In the
continuing heavy pace of the
air war, U.S. planes flew 290

CAPACITY INCREASED
LONG BEACH, Calif. (UP!)
- Airlines will be allowed to
load up to 381l passengers in the
DCIO jumbo jetliner, the
McDonnell Douglas Corp.
announced Monday . The
Federal
Avia tion
Administration increased the
plane's maximum allowable
capacity from 345 when the
firm proved in tests that all 380
passengers
and
11
crewmembers could get out in
the 90-second limit specified by
the FAA.

tactical bombing missions and
B52s carried out six raids inside North Vietnam in the 24
hours ended at noon. Another
21 B52 strikes were Down in
South Vietnam along with 284
tactical bombing missions.
Pilots from the Midway hit
the petroleum storage· area
three miles north-northwest of
Vinh , 137 miles above the
Demilitarized Zone (DMZ).
"An extremely large
secondary explosion with a
huge orange fireball," was
reported by pilots leaving the '
Yen Dai area, the U.S. command said.
BS:&gt;s also hanunered supply
areas 19 to 22 miles north of the
upper corner of the DMZ and 15
miles north of Dong Hoi, a
major city 38 miles north of the
buffer zone.
At An Loc 60 miles north of
Saigon, Communist forces
stubbornly fought the South
Vietnamese troops who closed
in on the long besieged city and
kept Highway 13 from being
opened as a relief road into the
nearly leveled provincial
capital.

$10 Million Challenged
By United Preas lntematloaal
Sen. George S. McGovern's
chief strategist Is challenging
President Nixon to name the
contributors of $10 million to
his re-election campaign . .
"Sen. McGovern has named
his supporters, down to the last
dollar, from the very first, and
he is proud to claim them all,"
Frank Mankiewicz said
Monday in Washington.
"Either · Richard Nixon is
ashamed of the sources of his
support or they are ashamed to
be connected with him."
The President's r~lection
committee filed papers Saturday that. revealed contributors
after April 7. Under .!he new
federal campaign spending
law, Nixon was n~t liable lor
Identifying the source of
contributions received before
April 7.

From April 7 to May 31, the
President's campaign chest
reported $1.1 million including
contributions of $15,000 ·from
the Effective Government
Association of Merrill Lynch,
Pierce Fenner &amp; Smith ; $5,000
from Interior Secretary and
Mrs. Rogers C.B. Morton;
$3,000 from General Motors
chairman James M. ·Roche;
and $12,000 each from Donald
M. Kendall of the Pepsi Co.,
Paul C. Sehorr Jr. of Commonwealth Electric, Uncoln,
Neb., mining helresa Kate S.
Ireland of Cleveland and Mary
W. Wiley of The Plalna, Va.
In other developments, Martin Luther King's widow Corel·
ta stumped with McGovern
through New York; Texas
Democrats decided to appcrtion some delegates to
McGovern and Alabama Gov.
George C. Wallace, and the

Collllllunications Workers of
America opened their con·
vention with a call for Nixon's
defeat in November.
Arkansas Democrats cast
ballots today In a runoff
election for the Senate seat of
J6.year veteran John L. McClellan . Rep. David Pryor, 37,
and McClellan, 76, were forced
into a runoff when a lour-man
field last month prevented any
' candidate from getting · the
required majority for nomination.
The Texas convention begins .
today, but in arrangements
made Monday it was reported
that Wallace would probably
get 40 and McGove111 30 of 132
vo\es. It has been felired*by
McGovern workers that the
South Dakotan would lie shut
out in lavoc of Sen. Hubert H.
Humphrey and uncommitted
delegates.

TOM CASSELL
Tom Cassell, Middleport,
was presented a 25-year
Veterans award from tbe
Boy Scouts of America by
Bill Knight, chairman of the
MGM District, at a recent
round table. Cassell who
already holds the Silver
Beaver award, received a

letter of congratulations
from A. Barber, chief Scout
Executive.

Star.r·Wash
Otarter is
Revoked
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
State Board of Education
revoked the charter of the
Starr-Washington Local School
District for failure to comply
with state standards, and held
public hearings on proposals
for driver education and pupil
transportation reimbursement.
The board revoked the
charter effective June 30 for
the school's violation of 26
specific standards. The high
school had been cited for
providing JJI'. units of classes,
while 45 are required by the
state as minimum standards.
The school district has only 575
students in the 12 grades, 155 of ·'
them on the high school !eve •.
Other deficlencles were cited
In science education, library
services, industrial arts
courses· and teachers Instructing courses lor which
they are not certified.
Hearings were held on
proposals for driver education
and pupil transportation
reimbursement, but action was
deferred.
The board also allocated
$2,304 In federal funds for the
Jefferson Area Local Schools,
AShtabula COWtty ; $2,457.60 for
the Meigs County Local
Schools; $2,560 lor the Troy
City Schools, Miami County;
,1,~.101or the Waterloo Local
Schools, Portage County;
$167.40 for the Deerfield-Union
Local Schools, Warren County;
and f2,048 for the Franklin City
Schools, Warren County.

•

�</text>
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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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    <name>Text</name>
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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <text>Newspaper</text>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="53144">
              <text>June 12, 1972</text>
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      <name>barnhart</name>
    </tag>
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      <name>clark</name>
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