<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16634" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/16634?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-09T10:27:50+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49780">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/ff072ad6a817d0fdcdb60002b8de936f.pdf</src>
      <authentication>55d6c151e6eb55d3ccfe68c949b880e5</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="53146">
                  <text>.
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

Member Federal Reserve System
011 Frldaya 0111' Drive-In Window Is
()peat 1.111. to 7 p.m., (Continuously~.
Jl'or Elcl Depolltot

'

DEMOCRATIC

BAKER

FURNITUII
MIDIIl£1'011, 0.

,-

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

·•'

""'

'

.

..

....

.,.. .

.

..

.

Green .Hill Homes w~s

~

I

',..

.-

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

•

•

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 .
t·'..

·'

•

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.

•

�•

•

. . .. .....

•

r

Married ]u~e 5

Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Russell Celebrating Today

65 Happy Years
IJY BOB HOEFLICH •
Sixty.five years of married
Ufe and never a fight!
That's the record of Mr and
Mrs. Howard C. Russell who
are observing their 65th
wedding anniversary today at
their home on the Wolf Pen
Road, near Pomeroy
Theit' report of a smooth
marriage tndicates that Mr
and Mt·s. Russell are by nature
very peace-loving indtviduals.
On the other hand, there were
nine children; perhaps that
would tend to keep a couple too
busy to allow much time for
petty differences.
At any rate, the Russells,
both hale and hearty, have
marked thetr 65th year of
married Ufe- an event which
has even been noted by Ohio's
House of Representatives.
Through Representative Ralph
Welker, Mr. and Mrs Rusaell
have been presented with a
framed
certificate
Ln
recognition of their long years
of marriage. Signed by Charles
F. Kurfese, speaker of the
House, the certtftcate was
presented to the couple Sunday ~
when some 80 friends and
relatives gathered at the
Russell home for a pre·
anniversary celebration.
Mrs. Russell Is Ute daughter
of the late Mr. and Mrs.
Harvey Woodar~ ot RuUand
Township and later of
Pomeroy. Mr. Rusaell is the
son of the late Mr. and Mrs.

James Russell of Wolf Pen. Ths
couple was mamed m Pomt
Pleasant 65 years ago today
mstead of going on a church
ptcnic as planned.
Of their nine children, six are
still llvmg They include Earl
of Pilgnm, Ky.; Marguerite
Boyce and Carl, both of
Columbus; Jed of Powers,
Oregon; Wilham of Mmersville; Bob of Wolf Pen.
Deceased are Steven, Eileen
Venoy and an Infant son
Mr. and Mrs. Russell have 25
grandchildren , 15 great ·
grandchildren and IS great •
great • grandchildren. They
reared three of thetr grand·
chtldren, Wtlham Venoy,
Columbus; Maurice Venoy of
Chester, and Robert Venoy of
Wolf Pen
Mrs Russell, who ts 84, has a
sister, Mrs Ltllte Hauck,
Pomeroy, and two brothers,
William Woodard, Langsville,
and Albert Woodard, Pomeroy,
still living Mr. Russell, now 85,
has a stater, Mrs Harley
Johnson, and a brother, John
Uncoln Russell, living
Both Mr and Mrs. Russell
are members of the Zton
Church of Christ. Mr Russell
was a farmer and a coal miner
durmg hiS work career. They
have restded in Meigs County
64 of their 65 llUirned years
"We've had a pretty happy
life," Mrs Russell commented.

\

Attend CCL
Conference
Five members of Ute Middleport Child Conserut10n
League were at Rio Grande
Saturday for the South Central
District spring conference of
the Ohio CCL.
Going from Ute Middleport
league were Mrs Louis
Osborne, Mrs. Patrick Duffy,
Mrs. Eugene Houdashelt, Mrs
Arthur Arnold, and Mrs. John
Blaker
The Rio Grande Mothers'
League hosted the conference
which carried out Ute theme
"Hats Off to America " The
Rev. Paul Hawks of Gallipolts
was Ute guest speaker and
special music was provided by
Ute Saunders Trio. A workshop
on "Sewing WiUt Kmts" was
conducted by Mrs. Charlene
Batey, and Mrs. Beatrtce Clark
talked on Ute loptc "Crosses of
the World."
The Middleport League
received an honorable mention
on handbook wtth the Rio
Grande League laking ftral
place in Ute judgmg.
Mrs. Arthur Rupe, Jr. was
elected president of the South
Central District and Mrs. Jesse
Merry was elected nominating
chairman. Named to Mrs.
Merry's conuruttee were Mrs.
Oiborne of the Middleport
League, Mrs. Larry Betz, Mrs
Mike Hardway, and Mrs .
Lester Plymale.
Mrs. Walter Clark, Jr., the
OCCL state
president,
reminded Utoae attending of
the 1tate convepUon to be held
In Cincinnati on Oct. 11 and 12.
The Rev. Edward Wallen of the
SlmpiOR Method11t Church
pve the lnvac:ation and Rio
Grande 11lrl ICOIIIII led in the
pledge. There was group
linliRI of "America the

· Beautiful." •

jacket and white accessories
Her flowers were candy striped
carnations.
Serving as best man for the
bridegroom was Mr. Paul
SISSon
A reception was held
honoring the couple at the
Grate home. The bride's table
featured a three tiered cake,
baked by Mrs. Grate, and
topped wiUt the traditional
mmiature brtde and groom.
Orange punch was served with
the cake.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Clark and children, Paul
Allan, Sandra and Gary of St.
Albans, W. Va ; Mr. and Mrs.
George Hurd of Hendersonville, Tenn.; Mr and
Mrs Charles Russell of
Chtlhcothe; Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Carson and Jeff of
Middleport, Route 1; Mr. and
Mrs. Paul SISSon, Pomeroy,
Route 4, Mrs Larry Parsons,
Pomeroy, Route 4, and the
hosts, Mr. and Mrs. Grate and
daughter, Jenny
The new Mrs. Carson Is
employed at Dutton's Drug
Store Mr Carson works at Ute
Royal Crown BotUing Co. The
couple resides at 222~ North
Third St., Mtddleport

Officers are Elected
Election
of
offtcers
htghltghted a meeting of the
Star Garden Club recently at
the home of Mrs. Orton Nelson.
Elected were MISS Ruby Dte~l,
president, Mrs Henry Turner,
vtce-prestdent; Mrs G. A.
Radekm,
second
vtce
president, and Mrs. Pearley
Nelson, secretary • treasurer.
Mrs James Nicholson
prestdmg at the meeting asked
club members to partictpate m
the Btg Bend Regatta flower
show An mvttation was read
from the Rutland Friendly
Gardeners for thetr open
meeting to be held on June 28 at
the Rutland Church of Chmt
A cornmumcabon was read
from Mrs Mabfl Reed
regardmg the 42nd Annual
ConventiOn of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs to
he held at Demson Umverstty,
Aug 8-10.
The members responded to
roll call by nammg thetr
favorite tree or shrub Mrs.
Raymond Chapman and Mrs.
Eugene Atkins were guests.
Member reported tll was Miss
Hazel Hensen, a patient at the
O'Bleness Hospital m Athens.
The exh1b1t, "Arrangement
m a Basket," was judged wtth
Mrs Norman Will placmg first
with lemon liltes and daiSies;
Mrs G A. Radekin, second,
with pmk roses; and Mrs

Nicholson, third, With red
roses The July meeting will be
a p1cmc at Forest Acres Park
w1th the Wtlkesville Garden
Club members as guests.
Mrs Nelson reVIewed an
article en tilled "Something Old
and Somethmg New."
Mrs. Nicholson presented
reasons and methods for
prumng shrubs after they
bloom. She also reported the
completion of the civic project.
Petumas, donated by Cleland's
Greenhouse, were planted
around the ..Dexter Church.
Mrs Nicholson thanked the
club members for the
arrangements placed Ill the
post olltce and the church at
Dexter
The hostess served refreshments

1
•

T'l ,.117

4;

NIECE GRADUATEI

Mn. Rtlt Slllta ~­
relarJieli from Clevelaid
wbere 1be •lilted ller
brotber-la-law aad allier,
Mr • • aad Mn. Georce
weal •
Aaceltlli. Sbe
eopeclally to altead ~~~­
IJ'IIduaU. tf her ~~lett, ~
Mary MeClellaad, frtm
Baldwla-Wall•ce wit~
boaera. Sbe reeelved · i
bacbeler of al'tl depee.
Mra. McCiellaa•, a

each type, 11 to yolt•o• and
P"'"' will bt aupplled to •
contumer ""der thl&amp; Schedule
11 one contract Location .
Whtrt two or mort str'IICIIIrl
auppllld to 1 consumer at ont
Gontr~ct Location ttld ur
vlcts, within the limltatlonJi
ebovtltlted, may be combined
In one •ervlce contract under
thll Schedule, or may be served
under separett contracts u"der
this or other applicable
Schedults, at the consumtr'l
option

IOIDINAIIC'I!.fl!l,
FG~ ·NOTICE
IIS·Il

AN ORDINANCI!f'IXING THE
RATES WHICI+ COLUMBUS
AND SOUTH.IRN OHIO
ELECTRIC COMPANY, ITS
SUCCESSORS oloND ASSIGNS,
MAY CHARGII' FOR STAN ·
DARD SECONDARY ELEC
TR IC ' SERVI~E TO CON ·
SUMERS IN TI'IE Vl\.LAGE
OF MIODLEI'ORT, MIUGS
COUNTY,
OHIO,
AND Tl\11 Schedule Is generally
ESTABLISHING A FORMU\.A IPPIItable to consumers with
FOR VARYING SUCH RATES Ml)tlmum capacity
r&amp;qulrements of less than 20
8&amp; IT ORDAINED IIY THE kllowetts, althOI.IQh larger
COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE con1umers may, from tlmtt to
OF MIDDLEPQAT,STATE OF time, be served under Its
OHIO
provisions However, when a
con&amp;umer•s Maximum Capacity
SECTION I. fhot .lht rattl excetdt 50 kllow1tts or tht total
reglllered · - · wBI lie
employed ID tbe cardiae aalt' and prices which Cotumbutlnd energy utlllutlon exceed&amp;
SOIIIhlfn Ohio Eloctrl~ Corn - 20,000 kilowatt hours In any
of tbe Parma CemmiiiJti; ~ony,
(htrtlnofltr ~oiled month. this Schedule Shill not
Hupltal. Oilier relatlvet
'(:ompeny"}, Its IUCCIIIOrl be avail1blt for a minimum
assigns, shall be tntllltd to period of twelve ( 12) months
atteadtac lbe &amp;radutloa 1ne1
chtrot tor standard secondary
were Mn. 011• Mattbewa, tlettr:lc Hrvfce furnlshtd to TERM OF CONTRACT
In the Village of
Tilt term of the contract tor
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; Mr. contumtrl
Mldc:lltport, Ohio, (htrelnafttr service under thll Schedule
call~ "Municipality") for the shaH be as provided In the In ·
IUid Mn. Fred su- "
set forth in Stctlon 5 of dlvldual CQf'ltnc:t with nch
G.UO.; Mr. ud Mn. Ilia period
this Ordlnance1re hereby fixed consumer, but In no case shall
Crow, Camlll; Mr. aDd Mn. It not to exceed the following the contract term be less than
or Rotn ·
one year
Joba Klpf, CpJwwdw; Slater Schtllul'
RESIDENCE SERVICE
~ Regll, C&lt;llumbel; ud
Avllllblt ~r ~ residence
SECTION 2 Thol the rote&amp;
to consumtrs using for electr ic service set forth In
several from PltllbarJb, PL serviCI
single phase, 60 eye/H. 120·240 Section 1 ol this Ordinance shall

01 :or W P?0?? ":C: 5 ! U. OJ ! ; 8:!'.6&gt;' Wi volts. elternatlng c.urrent, be celculaled as follows.

At Graduation
Mrs. Florence Custer was In
Hilliard Wednesday ror the
graduation of her grandson,
Mike Sayre, son of Mr. 1nd
Mrs. Dale Sayre, the fonner
Jane Custer.
Accompanying Mrs. Custer
to Htlliard was another
grandson, Wesley SmlUt of
Pomeroy. Joining them at the
Sayre home on Saturday for a
reunton were Mr. and Mrs.
James Custer, Dala and Jackie
Sue, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Custer, Mr and Mrs. Joe
Custer and daughter, Jody,
Jean Custer and daughter,
Barbara, Melinda Custer,
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Smith and daughter,
Kelly, Jon Dillard, Pomeroy;
Miss Esther Joseph, Mlnersvtlle, and Pam Scoville of
Hilliard

Degree Received

Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Car·
penter attended the graduation
of thetr son·tn·law, Dennis
Carroll, from Ohio State
Umvemty Friday. Carroll
recetved his bachelor's degree
tn mechanical englneermg. He
has accepted employment wiUt
Proctor and Gamble in CJn.
cmnstl and the couple will be
moving there tn the near
future.
On Friday evening Mr. IJid
SON IS BORN
Mrs Carpenter Joined Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Bourne, Mrs. Carroll, Mr. and Mrs. Jiit
the former Jane Baer of Russell and Mr. ' and Jlih.
Pomeroy, Fort Denens, Mass , Larry Smith for a graduation
are announcmg the birth of party The Carpenters were
their first child, a SIX pound, 15 Fnday overntght gueats of Mr.
ounce son, Carl Andrew. and Mrs. John Young and
Grandparents are Mr. and family at Lancaster and Oil
Mrs Edward Baer, Pomeroy, Saturday attended the DltW:
and Mrs. M,rgaret Bourne, Rutherford wedding ~d
Fostona. Great-grandparents reception in Columbus.
Mrs. Edna Reibel prestded at
are Mrs. C L Heaton,
the business session during
Pomeroy, Walter Baer,
whtch time the reception for
Mmersvtlle, and Mr and Mrs
Ann Holter was planned and
Arthur Ward of Fostorta.
committees named It was
Preparation jars for • t
dectded to purchase stx crystal
collecting were made artd
cake plates to be used at
d!Splay boards were giv,n 1o
receptions and parties, and
each member when IJie
Mrs. Ben Neutzling and Mrs
Naylors Run Jets 4-H Club !Det
Roy Seyfned were appointed to
By Helen and Sue Bottel
Monday at the home of ~
buy them
Earl Thoma, adviaor.
Mrs Retbel explamed a
NO PLACE TO TURN?
Mark Norton presided at tbe
redemption program offered Dear Helen and Sue:
meeting which opened w!Ut the
by Kroger's and it was dectded
don't
know
what
to
do.
It
seems
Uke
Utere's
no
way
out.
4-H
pledge and the American
1
to save pnce tags from foods
flag
pledge. It was noted that
which reportedly can be
I'm 17, have a four-month-old daughter, Angie, and llove her
redeemed for kttchen 1tems A so much I can't give her up. My parents wouldn't let me marry David Lewis is on vacation.
basket will be placed m the her father (Phil), but we're living together attheir home- if you Present for the meeting wu a
guest, Steve Norton of ¥inefll.
vestibule so that all members can make any sense out of that!
ville. A demonstratiort' on in·
of the church can participate m
My folks are both alocholles, They're dead drunk every sect collecting and diaplaying
the project
night. Asmuchasl tell myself I hate them, I don't really -but I
was planned for next week's
Mrs Gladys Cuckler gave can't talk to them or to P!ti1 so I keep everything bottled up in- meeting. A trip to the wooda
devotions using Psalms 121and side. I'm shaking so bad right now I can't write, and this page is will be taken later this monUt.
a commentary on David's already tear-etalned. I don't smoke, drink or take drugs, I'm just
words of praise to God for all tied In knots.
His wonderful works She also
About Phll· He's 18, makes good money in two joba, but
SOCIAL PLANNED
read the 23rd Psalm which was doesn't want the responsibility ct. marriage and a home of his
BASHAN
- Plana for an Ice
composed by David while he own. He spends his spare time with Ute guys and racing cars. He
cream soetal were made
was a young shepherd boy won't even lake Angle and me for a rtde 91" to the store. The only durmg a meeting of the Ladlea
attending his father's flock .
money he gives me is for Angle's food
Auxiliary of the Buhan
Presentln~ the program was
We were supposed 1o move mto our own apartment on my Volunteer Fire Department
Mrs Clarence Massar She birthday last month. Instead, he spent Ute day with his friends, Thursday night. The social will
read an article entitled and didn't even send me a card.
be held on July 1 at the fann.
"Memories - Ltfe's Best
1know he feela trapped, and I don't want lo admit to myself hOUJe with serving to belin
Garden," and gave a prayer, he doesn'tloveme.Butnow I have to face facts: I gueas maybe I at 6 p.m. In addition to Ice
"0 Lord Bless Everyone "
Games were played wtth had Angie instead of an abortion becai.Lse I wanted to keep Phil cream, sandwiches, cake, 111\d
andgetoutofthis hoi.Lse.Howwrongcana girl be?
pie will be served. There Will
prizes gomg to Mrs Massar,
Wheth he 1
ta I' stl11 "nolhin " 1
1 to also be special muaic and other
Mr Philip Meinhart Mrs
er eaves or s ys, m
a
g. wan
Ne:tzhng and Mrs 'Lout~ finish high school but can't trust my drunken mother to baby-ell talent durmg the evening.
Reibel. The birthday an- · Angle. At 17, I can't get a job, or even move out on my own- at
mversarles of Mrs. Carrie least anywhere I could take Angle. I know I sh!Jilld let P!ti1 go and
Metnhart MISS Ernia Smith give my baby up for adoption, but Uten I wouldn't want to Uve,
SCHOOL PLANNED
and Mrs' Freda Duffy wer~ especially without Angle. Last year I Utought I was ''mature,"
Vacation
Bible School wiD be
observed
but now I'm faced with all these responsibilities, I don't want to
held at the Eagle Rldae
' Mrs Dale Smitli, Mrs. John grow up!
Community
Church beglnnlnc
Terrell, and Miss Sybil EbersThere just ISn't any place to turn. Or IS there, Helen? June
19
through
the 23 rrom
bach served refreshments of SUSAN
9.30
to
11
a.m.
All
children besandwiches and dessert.
Dear Susan :
Attending bestdes those
, There ARE places to turn: The Child Welfare Agency In your tween the age of I and 18 are
named were Mrs. Hom~r city might place you and your baby in a foster home until you tnvlted to attend.
Holter, Mrs Lawrence Lan- have finilhed school and can be on your own. Also a minialer
nlng, Mrs. Ethel Wlll18mson, could refer you to a church ~p which might help. Or, perhaJIII,
Mrs. Clara Karr, Mrs. Lillie a friend?
ljOTICE 01'
Hauck, Mrs. Fred Dessauer,
Above all, don't feel that you are locked Into a non-marriage.
APPOINTMENT ' • •
Ca&amp;tNo"A.o611
and guests, Mrs Bertha IfPhllwon'tbeahusband-manapartmentheprovidesforyou
estote
of
EfHEL
Martin of Lancaster, and Lisa andAngie-tellhlmlobeonhlsway!-HEIEN
CHEVALIER , DteNitd.
Notice Is hlriOy glvtll IIIII
Jo Hendricks, St. Albans, W.
+++
B.,.n.rd V. Fultz, ,of Pomtroy
Va.
Ohlo, hU bftn duly IPIIOintfli
Dear Suaan:
Admlnlotrotor or tho Eliott of
There's stl11 a chance that Phll might shape up, If you'd move Ethtl Chevalier, deceutd, lltt
SALE DAYS SET
Of Meigs Count~, Ohio.
The Ash Street Freewill away fromyourflpnlly and lntoanaparbnent whe're he'dfeelu
CrodifOI'1 ore roqulr!Jj! to flit
their cltlmo with llild fld~c!trr
Baptist Church will holclo;a If he had a real wife and daughter. Guys change, when they wlfhln
four m!)Jithl
•
rummage sale Thursday, acquire responsibilities Sometimes, anyway.
Dated
this
2Ath
dor
of Mor
Put it to him straight: marriage (your folks will surely give 1972
Friday and Saturday In the
John C. l•l:on
Reynolds Bwlding begmnmg at their consent now), a place of your own, and a lot more love, or
~Udge
('lk)
30
(6)
6,
13,
31
good-bye. - SUE
9 am.

Class Plans Picnic
Apicnic wao planned for July
14 at the Route ~' roadside
park on the lefl traveling
towards Athens when the
Happy Harvesters Class met
Friday night at the Trinity
Church

In a ceremony at the home of
Mr. and Mrs Wendell Grate of
Rutland, on June 5 at 7-30 p.m.
Mrs Hildred Clark and Mr.
Kenneth Carson exchanged
weddmg vows Mrs Grate Is
the daughter of
the
bridegroom.
The bnde is the daughter of
Mr Charley Nelson and the
late Mrs. Nelson, and the
bridegroom the son of the late
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Carson.
Mr Charles Russell, Jr. of
Chilhcothe Church of Christ
offtciated the double rmg
ceremony Nuptial music was
presented by Miss Jenny
Grate, granddaughter of Ute
groom, at the organ, with Mrs.
Polly Russell, soloist, smgmg
"0 Prectous Love" and
''Always.''
Given m marriage by her
son, the brtde was attired tn a
pink polyester dress with pmk
and whtte beaded trun She
wore pmk and white flowers m
her hatr, and her bouquet was
of white carnations lipped in
pink
Mrs. Paul Stsson of
Pomeroy, Route 4, served as
matron of honor for her stster
She wore a whtte polyester
dress w1th a blue and while

Jdddut:Ublbdbbi ' !l

jars Prepared

Generation Rap

1

'

..

supplied through overhead
(1) Each month during the
distribution facllltltt
term ot this Ordinance the
Flrst20 kwh or less per month Company will calculate bills tor
for n 00
standard secondtrY electric
Ntld 10 kwh per month, 3 60c 11rvlce In the Munlcipallly at
per kwh
tht rates set forth In Section l of
NtMI 100 kwh per month, 3 05c thll Ordinance
per kwh
(2) Each month the company
NOKI6110 kwh per month, 2.10c will render a bill tor street
per lll;wh
lighting
service
in
the
• - all over 1110 kwh per Municipality In accordance
month, 115C per kwh
wltt't the provisions Of the then
x - During the period ex - etttcllvt street lighting or
tending from tht customers dlntnce of the Municipality,
first regullrly scheduled
(3} Each month during the
monthly
m•ttr
rtedlna term of this Ordinance, the
following september 10th and Companr, will recalculate bills
Including alght consecutive tor rtt dtnllal and general
regularly scheduled monthly service - small - secondary
meter reedings 111 kilowatt - service at the rates set forttl tn
hour&amp; ovtr IJOO will bt billed ot Secllon 1 of this Ordlnence
1 20c per kilowatt hour
amended In tile manner set
forth In Section 6 of this Or
FUEL COST ADJUSTMENT dinance
The energy charge applicable
Ul The difference between
to oil kUowell hQon of energy the
calculations
1.1nder
consumed shall be Increased or Paregreph IH hereinabove
decreaaed oossc per KWH per referred to In this Section 2 and
each full one.half cent ( kJ the calculations n provided in
Increase or dtcr1111 ebove or Paragraph (3) hereinabove
below twenty-three cents C23CJ referred to In thiS Section 2 shall
In the avertue cost per million be epplled to the payment of the
(1,000,000) BTU of fUll con current bills to the Municlptllty
sumed at the company'&amp; for service rendered under the
gtneratlng stations during the then efltctlve Street Lighting
celendar
month Ordinance Including any unpaid
second
preceding fho billing dele
bllance from previous periods
Any such difference not
MINIMUM CHARGE
required tor the r•yment of the
Minimum monthly charge current bill shal be applied to
$2 00 per meter per month
subHquent bills tor said ser
vleet

GENIRAL SUVICESMALL- SICONDARY
AVAILABILITY
Avolloblt for unorol light

and power servlct to consumers
vslng the Comp1ny'1 stendard
service tor purposts othtr than
realdentill use and establllhing
Maxlml.lm Capacities generally
less than 20 kllowerts

CHARACTER OF SERVICE

Alternating current,
60
cyct•• · d11tvered from the
company's
stcondlry
distribution systems 1t nominal

voltages or 120,120 2oDor 12D 2DI
YOits, single ph111, 1nd 120 201.
120 240, 201. 240 tnd AIO volls.
thru phue Service of at ltlll
ant of tht foregoing cherac ·

ttrlstlcs shall bt
made
av1llable to a customer, the
Plrtlcutar service charac ·
terlstlcl to be at ttte option of
tne Comptny -

SCHEDULE OF CHARGES
t=: IP"sUO kwh or te&amp;l per month
for $2 65
Next 10 kwh por month. 043

SECTION

3. Thol, In tho
event the term of any contnct
for st1ndard secondary electric
service hereafter made with
consumers In the Municipality
punutnt to tht provisions of
this Ordinance shall extend
beyond the term Ination date of
this Ordinance, the rates. in·
eluding the Minimum Monthly
Charge, chargeebte thereunder
1h1ll be the rates In eftecl
within the Munlclpolllr 11 the
time such change Is made

SECTION .C That the Rules
and Regulations contained In
the company's P u c o No 1
on file with The Public Utilities
Commltslon of Ohio Cas the
samt may , from time to time,
be amtndtd or supplemented)
as are not In conflict with the
exprtss provisions of this Or·
dlnance ere applicable to all
service rendertd under and
pursuant to this Ordinance
Nothing contllf'ed within this
Ordlnlnce shall prevent any
consumer from liking ad
vantage, within the effective

per kwh
_..
Next 500 kwPI per month, plus period or lhll Ordlnan~o. or •nr
100 kwh per l(w of Mtxlmum appllceble rule, regulalion ,
Capacity In eJtctla of 6.0 kw, aupplement or optional rete
.ooo .~ kwh
which the Company may make
B'lartce to 5000 kwh per IVIllOblo In Its P U C 0 No I
month •. 020 por kwh
on flit with The Public Utilities

AIf ovtr 5000 kW~ per monlh, Commission of Ohio for tho
017 per kwh
class of &amp;trvlce involved
FUEL COST ADJUSTMENT SECTION 5 The rates con

The energy charge appllcabl•
to 111 kllowett hours of energy
con"'mtd shalt be lncreaud or
dtcrtJMd 0055c per KWH per
tach f¥11 one I'll if cent ( 5cl
lnereu• or decrtast above or

talntd herein st'tall be effective

wllh roopocl to bills based on
regular meter readings made
on or otter July 2S, 1972. ond

lhlll remain In effect tor bills
baud on regular meter
below twtnty.iftrot ctnts l23cl rUdlnga made prior to July 25,
in the average cost per million 1t7.C, or prior to the termination
(1,000.0001 BTU of fuel con- of thil Ordinance 11 provided In
tunHtd et " " comp1ny's Section I of this Ordinance
aeneratlng atatlona during the
ucond
Clltndar
month
SECTION 6 That, If at any
Prt~tdlng
• .. :..f

lht billing dalt

lime within the period fixed by

this Ordinance the Municipality
should authorize an alternative

... .

DET~RMINATION OF

MAXIMUM CAPACITY
mtlhlld tor the paymonl ol the
The Maximum CIP~JCity Shill then current bills of the
bt tho oum of lht Individual Munlclptllly ror otroet lighting

Demands ol each mtttrtd 1t the rates and In accordance
service, supfllect under the w ith the terms and provisions ot
provisions o this Schedule, the then effective sfreet llghllng
ucept 11 modified hereinafter , ordinance of the Mun icipality,
The lndlvldutt Demand of theri the rarea and prices lor
11ch metered service 1h11t be standard secondary electric
dttermlt'led aeparattlr The service, hereinabOve set forth,
Individual Oemtnd shal be the .. shall be maneded as follows

LEGAL NOTICE
I
IN THE
COMMO!I 1'\.EAS COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY,OHIO
FUD W. CROW, JR •
Syrecusl, Oltft,
I'IIIOIIII,
C~~RLES RICHARD CROW,
IUTH CROW,
1U Edword N.w .,
W1rren, Ohio,
Et 11.,

Defe~tdant1. .

No. 1J,OU

NOTICE IY
I'UB\.ICATION

The oetendants, the unknown
heirs, devisees. legatees ,
dlltrlbutell, tdm lnlttrators
and executors, If 1ny, of Jennie
owen. oecuud, the unknown
heirs
de\littes. legatees,
distr!'buten, adm lnlstrator~
end executors. if any, of
owen
Jihnlgen.
Uda
oeceeud,
the
unknown
heln, devtutl, legetees,
dlttributees. adm ln~strators
and executors, If eny, of Arthur
Jahnlgen,
Dece~tstd.
th'
unknown heirs,
deVISees ,
tegetees, distributee's', ad ·
mlnlstraton end executors, If
any, of Richard Jahnlgen ,
oeceued ; Ruth Jahnlgen.
whose place ol residence is
unknown, the unknown htlrs.
dtvlsees,legatHs. distrlbutees,
administrators and executors,
If any, ot Ernest James Owen,
Deceased , the unknown heirs,
dtvlsets,legetees, dlstributees ,
administrators and executors ,
If any. of Florence Owen.
Deceased. tht unknown heirs,
devlstes.legatees, dlstributees .
administrators and executors,
If any, of Harry Stauffer ,
Deceased, the unknown heirs,
devisees, legetees. dlstributees,
administrators and executors,
If any, of Estella Stauffer ,
Deceesed; the unknown heirs ,
devisees, legatets. dlstrlbutees,
adm lnlstrators and executors ,
If any, of Elmer Stauffer ,
Deceased; the unknown heirs ,
devl&amp;ees.legatees, dlstributees,
administrators and executors ,
If any , of Bertha Staufler,
Deceased , Otto Stauffer, whose
place of residence Is unknown,
the unknown heirs, devisees ,
legetus, dlstributeu, ad
mlnistrators end executors, If
any, of Herbtrt Stauffer ,
oeceued, Hettie Stauffer ,
whose place of residence 1s
unknown. the unknown heirs,
dev lsees, legatees. d lstrlbutees,
admlnlstretors and e~ecutors ,
11 any , of Guy Stauffer ,
Deceued ; Clyde Stauffer ,
whose place of residence Is
unknown, Robert Stauffer .
whose place of residence is
unknown, the unknown heirs,
dev IItts. legatees, dlstrlbutees,
adm lnlstrators and executors,
If eny, of Mary Gerber ,
Deceased. the unknown heirs,
devisees, legatees, dtstrlbutees,
administrators and executors,
If any, of Fred ~Gerber .
Dettlltd. the unknown heirs,
dev tsees, legatees. d lstrlbutees.
administrators end txecutors,
If any of Uda Sarah Owen ,
Deceased; the unknown heirs,
dev lsees, legatees, d lstrlbutees,
adminlttrators and eucutors ,
If any, of Thomas Spencer
Owen , Deceased and the
unknown heirs,
devisees ,
legatees , dlstributees , ad
m lnlstrators and eucvtors, If
any, of William Richard Owen ,
Deceased , will take not ice that
on lilt 19th day or April , 1972, a
Complaint was filed In the
ComMon Pleas Court of Meigs
County , Ohio, case No 15055,
wherein you have been named
det•nctants In the praver of the
Complaint, Plaintiff demands
that his Interest In said rea l
estate may be set off to him In
severalfy end for partition of
Slid real estate, according to
the respective rights of the
parties hereto, and In case
pertltlon of said reel estate
cannot be made without
manifest lnlury to the value
thtreof , then that sa id real
estate may be ad fudged to one
or more of the parties to this
suit upon electron ~s provided
by law . and In case said real
estate Is not adludged IO one or
more parties to this su it upon
election , u provided by law ,
thtn that Slid real estete mav
be sold according to taw, tree
and clear from ell the claims ,
rights and Interests of all the
parties to this suit Plaintiff
further demands that each of
said defendants may be
required to ut up whatever
c111m or clelms, right or rights,
Interest or Interests, tach of
them has In and to seld real
estate, or be forever barred
from asserting same, and for
other proper relief. The real
estate Is described as follows

The lollowlng described reo/

estal-' In the Village of Pomeroy
end bounded and described as
follows Commencing on Front
Street at tile Eastern corner of
Ffont and Sycamore Streets In
said Vllltge of Pomeroy, thence
fifty (SO) feet along Front Street
to Lot Number J:lghty .seven

(871, lhtnct fifty (501 feet
parallel with Syt:am ore Street ,
thence West fifty (SOl feet

parallel with Front Street to
Sye~more Street. thence along
Sycamore Street fifty (50) feet

Mtnured Demond where lht
RESIDENCE SERVICE
tho place of beginning
connected loed IS twenty (20)
The Minimum Charge and the to R:eterence
Vol 77 ,
kllowotto or loll. ffie Individual Charge for the first 20 kwh or Page 604, Deedoe-.d
Records , Meigs
Demand may bt determined, at
the Company's option , 11 the
M111urH Demand tstabllsl'led
by continuous measurement or

by period/~ tnt, or I I tho
Esllmaltd Dtmond derlvtd

from the connecttd loed.
Measured Demands, ellher
by permenent lnatalletlon of a
demand meter or by periOdic
test, Shall bt ilfetMrmlnec:t In
eccordtncl wlttllhe Comp1ny'1
standud prectlcts and, except
In unusual CIHI, ahall be the
maximum 30 minuttlntegratld
kilowatt demand recording of
an lntttratlna dtmtnd meter,
or the highest reglsttatlon ot a

less of electric energy con
sum eel per month shall be 11.60
Otherwlae the schedule remains
unchanged

GENERAL SERVICESMALL- SECONDARY

The charge tor the first 20
kwh or tess of electric energy
consumed
month shall be
11 65 an
the aggregete
Minimum Monthly Charge shell
be reduced 11 DO per month
Otherwltt the schedule remains
oochanged .

J"

SECTION 7: Thai lhll Or

County, Ohio
You are required to answer
the Complaint within twenty
tlgtlt days after lt'te last
publlcttlon of this notice,
namely , by not later than the

28th dar ol July, 1972, or
fudgment by default will be
rendered against /ou.
' ll'.ilt W Crow, Jr
cose,Ohlo
Plolntlff

·m..

.'

Crow, Crow &amp; Porl\r ,
Attorneys tor Plaintiffs

dlnlnce shall teke effect from (5) 16, 23, 30 (61 6, llr20..l1, 710after the earllut periOd
thormol typo demond moter, and
allowed by law and Its written
during the billing periOd In ecceptanc;:e by Columbus and
lnsttncn of highlY fluctulllng SOuthern Ohio Electric Com
IOadt, or demandS of ahort ptny
NOTICE OF E\.ECTION
duration,
ttte
Measured
ON TAX LEVY
Demand may be dtterm tned by
IN EXCESS OF
SECTION
1·
Tho
I
the
Vllloge
epproprlate mtlerlno equip . by ltgl&amp;letlvt action, or the
THE TEN MILL
ment dtslgned 10 mtuure tully Company shall heve the right to
LIMITATION
the Impact Of 1uch dtmends. ltrmlnatt thil Ordinance It any
NOTICE Is hereby given that
Whtrt Metlurtd Demands trt time, upon written notiCI filed in pursuance of a R:esolutlon of
dtttrmlntcl by periodic test, a with the other p1~ty hereto at the Board of Education ot the
Measured Dtmlnd 10 deter least 60 days prior to such Meigs Local School District,
mined shall continue In effect tervln1tlon d•te
Melgl county, Ohio, paased on

,jtnlll IU,trltded by I IUb·
ooquent HI

the llh doy of Moy, 1972, there
SECT ION 9
11 In the will be subm ltted to a vote of the
Ettlmattd Demandashall bt opinion Of ttte•Munlclpatrty and people of said School District ot
determined from tht conntctld the Company, the rafts con. a Special ELECTION to bt htld
IOid on ooch lndlvlduel moterod tlntd In this Ordinance mftl tho In the Melos Local School

Hrvict, I I follows:
First 5,000 w•ts at •o pet.

criteria end guldellnts covering
rate Increases tor public

NOKt 5,1100 Willi tl 10 pet.
utllllln sot forth In Socllon
Over 111,1100 walla If 70 pet 300.16 or tho Economic
Tht Mulmum Ctpa~lly In Stoblllzetlon Act of 1970
any month lhlll not be Ieos then
1ht minimum billing demand, If SECTION 10: Thtl the terms
any. apteiflad In the sendee and provlslonsofthls Ordlnence
contr1ct.
are joint end severet and the

ulNiuUM CHARGE
~
Tho /1\lnlmum Monthly
Chlr81 lhlll bt (I) 11 00 plus
Oil 12.05 per kilowatt per
month 1ppllld 10 a Maxlmvm
Ctpeclty oqulvtltnt lo 50 pel of
tte grtllor Iff !U lilt hlgh"tll
It/ ••tmum Cojlolclly PrtYIOUIIy
Hllblllhld during lilt lttm of
•~• ~MVIct contro~t or !bl tho
ClfNICIIY rocjulrtmonll Of tho
consumor u IPtellled In lht
~

'""Ice contrect.

Sl!RYlC! AND
CONTRACT I'ROVISIONS
Eech uperalt point of
dtllvlfr Of Mrvlct b~ ono or
mott Mellftli&gt;Strvlc.. lhtll bt
conlld!!fld ) ~l(act Lo~ollon
•~•II bt rnlend end blllld

'""
under

contract
0111~

•

ttl)-lratt

ten·lce

ono Mltlftcl Strvlco

Of

lnvolldlly of one sholl not offocl
lht validity Of tht other
Passed by tho Coun~ll of 'tha
VIIIIU Of Mlddleporl, this 22nd
dly of Mty, 1972
ATTEST •
Gene Grito
Clork
Approved thll 22nd doy ot
Moy, 1972.
John W Zerkle
Meyor
(6) 6, 13, 2t

IIOOSTER8 TO MEET

The Ea1tern Athleti~
lloolten wiU meet lhll millnl
at I p.m. al_llle hilb IICbool

District, Ohio, at the regular
pieces of voting therein, on
Tuesday, the 20th dav of June,
1972, the question of levying, In
exce&amp;l Of the ten rrtlll 1imitation,
for the benofll of Meigs Lo~al
SchOOl District tor the purpose
of Current expenses of the
SUbdiVIIion

Seld lox being. on additional
lox of 5 0 m.llls 1• run for e

contlnulnor,trlod, at a rete not1
excttdln_g .Q mills for each one

CfoThr of- vofuallon, which

emounta to Fifty ctnts tor eactl
one hundred
doll•rs of
vtluation, for • continuing
period,

Tht Polls lor oltld Eltetlon
Will be open 116::10 O'ClOCk A M
lnd rtmtln opon until 6'30
o'clock P M . 11111rn Stendard
Tlmo of Hid doy.
a, order or fht Boord or
Eltttlone, of M'lgo ¢ounfy,
OhiO
I
Doled Mly 19, 19 21
I
Edwfn S, CO!Ifl
Chairman
Doroth~ M. Johnllo~
Clork
lSI 23, :10 (6) 6, 13, 41~

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport..Pomeroy, 0., June 13, 1972

Pomeroy ...
Personal Notes

I

The Rev. and Mrs Harold
Hess of Fort Wayne, Ind were
VISitors m Pomeroy Sunday.
They attended mormng worship servtces at the Pomeroy
Trtmly Church The Rev Mr
Hess ts a former pastor of the
church .
The
couple,
vacatlomng m Columbus.
came here espectally for the
church service. Mrs Hess
recently underwent surgery
and
is
recuperatmg
satisfactorily
Mrs Ray Rtggs returned
from Ocala, Fla. Saturday
after havmg time there wtth
her son-m-law and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Hester,
lhe1r three-year old daughter,
Jill, and the1r mfant daughter,
He1d1 Lynn
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Chapman
and daughter, Jenmfer, and
son, Mitchell, returned Sunday
after a week's vacation at
Anna Marte lslimd, Fla
Mr. and Mrs Ted Dow me
and son , Allen, returned from
Weston, Conn Sunday after
bemg there for the weddtng of
the1r son; Chuck, to Miss
Donna Smtth
Mr. and Mrs Ketth Curtis of
Syracuse and Mr and Mrs
Phtlltp King of Mason, W Va
are vacatlonmg thiS week at
Myrtle Beach, S. C The
Curtlses' young daughter,
Gayla Lee, ts staymg wtth her
grandparents, Mr and Mrs
John Beaver, Nye Ave, durmg
her parents' absence

r n ..... :em::~::·~

i~ SOCia
. I f~
1
I
~

I Calendar![

TUESDAY
WORK IN EA degree when
Ractne Lodge 461, F&amp;AM ,
meets at 7 30 p.m. Tuesday at
temple, All Master Masons
InVIted
MEIGS County Alcohohsm
and Drug Abuse Commtttee,
7 30 p m Tuesday, upslatrs at
Pomeroy Umted Methodtst
Church
NIFTY STITCHERS, 7·30
Tuesday mght at the home of
Mrs. Carl Moore
LEWIS MANLEY, POST N.o.
363,
Amertcan
Legion
Auxiliary, 7 p.m Tuesday at
the home of Mrs Arnold
Richards, Middleport Officers
wtll be mslalled by Mrs
Charles Kessinger.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, noon Wednesday at
the Meigs Inn.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7 30
Wednesday evemng at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple .
Election of offtcers
POMEROY
MASONIC
Temple Assn., 7 p m Wednesday at the Masomc Temple
WHITE Rose Lodge Wednesday, 1.30 p m at Mtd·
dleport Legton Hall.
. MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, guest mght observance , 7:30 Wednesday,
home of Mtss Bernice Ann
•Durst, 344 S Thtrd Sl , Mtd·
die port.
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT Chtld
,Conservation League, annual
' ptcnic, 6:30 p m Thursday at
Fort Meigs.
EASTERN Htgh School
marching ba~d rehearsal, 7-9
p m., Thursday at htgh school
Students lake all mus1c whtch
has been ISSUed
WILLING WORKERS Class,
Enterpnse United Methodist
Church, 7:30 Thursday night at
the home of Mrs. Carl Moore.
ROCK SPRINGS Bett&lt;lr
Health Club, Thursdsy at the
home ct. Mrs James Conkle,
near Cheshire. Members are to
meet at the Rock Springs
Church at 12 30 p m. Program
by Mrs. Harold Blackston;
contest by Mrs. Arlie Abbott;
dues ~re payable at the
meeUng.
IN MARIETTA
Mrs. Henry' Reibel, Mrs.
Nettie Hayes, Mrs. Eva
Dressa uer , and Mrs EdiUt
Betzlng were In Mar~etta
Saturday to attend a meeting of
'the Daughters of America. ·
1

~~ed~~~l)

one tnstde the pool area
Operatmg the new stand will
be Robert Lebovitz. He wtll pay
the village 10 pel. of hts gross
and this 1s to be earmarked for
recreat-onal Improvements.
Lebovitz w1U be responsible for
some pohcmg of the Mtd·
dleport Park and wtll be
charged fees for hts water,
elec tncal and sewage service.
The del.atls wtll be worked out.
Council approved the reporl
of Mayor John Zerkle for May
showmg recetpls of $1,091.25 1n
fm es and fees and $175 m
merchant poltce collectwns.
The totaits $1,266.25
The Cthzens Nallonal Bank
was awarded the contract to
purchase the bonds for the
con stru chon of the new
headquarters of the Mtddleporl
Ftre Department at a rate of
four and one-half percent The
hank of Mtddleport had the
lowest btds Ftrms m Cincmnah, Cleveland
and
Columbus also submttted b1ds
on the purchase
Mayor John Zerkle urged
counc1l members to wnte to
Congressman Clarence Mtiler
1n regard to the government's
actwns m not permttling gas
compames to do exploratory
work 1n localton of new sources
of supply The mayor also
repor te d that new guard
ralim g can he constructed on
M•ddleporl Htll at the rate of
$2 25 a fool He asked counctl to
constder such a proJect from
the top of the htll down toward
Middleport The matter wtll be
further dtscussed al the next
meetmg

The mayor also reported that
the roof on village hallts m bad
conditiOn afld Will have to be
re placed He asked counctl to
remember that when they
constder th e next year 's
budge t A meellng was set for
June 19 to constder the next
year 's budget w1lh coun cil , the
board of pubhc affmrs and the
cemetery trustees bemg mvt ted to attend
Mrs James Brewer and Mrs
Lowell Pnce appea red before
council to complain abcJ\ll the
la ck of d1 tc hm g and th e
presence of sewer gas on lhe
street Allen Lee Ktn g also
spoke lo coun cil on the need of
a new

~~snow

fence11 at the end

of the pee wee held a l the
Middleport park , the need of
~\Uinging the one way _!ra.!Ju;
regulahons on Plum and
Broadway Sts , wbtch now both
go 1n the same direction , wtth
the matter referred to the
safely commtitee , the need for
more Improvements m the
dramage from the street near
hts home on Pearl, and the
need for restroom fac1ltttes lor
youngsters playing ball at the
Middleport park
Others attending the meeting
were Clerk· Treasurer Gene
Grate; Harold Chase, maintenance supervisor, and Pollee
Chtef J J Cremeans

PRICES IN EFFECT
A 01SCOUNT
Ot:PA RT M f. NT STOltI

MINATURE

Pt. Pleasant or Mason
l

GLASS
BOTTLES

Piece Set

Luggage
Womens Short Sets

$1-987

$594T $694

Jamaica or Short Shorts
MATCHING TOPS!

0

SET

IT'S PORTABLE!

JAMAICA or
SHORT SHORTS

SAFETY GUARDS!

$

SIZED

METAL
Batteries
25c

Value

llt

SWIM
SUITS
to

Womens and Teens

COMPARE AT$15.95

WINDOWS
OR
ON
FLOOR

FOR YOUR GffiLS

NOW- - FOR THE HOT DAYS!

20"" Electric Fan
~~E

~

Vamty Ca s e, 21 11
case , 24 "
ca~e.
Avacado or Charcoal
olor

Size 3

14

A WIDE SELECTION -

BIG VARIJ:TY

SERVICE FOR 4

WOMENS OR CHILDS

WOODEN

WOMENS COTTON

SWIM
RINGS

PICNIC
SET

CANVAS
OXFORDS

BALL
BATS

SPORT
SOCKS

INFLATABLE
VINYL

71¢

47¢

20PIECES
PLATES ,
TUMBLERS ETC.

SET

$1 ~R.

MADE
IN U.S.A.

FOR SOFfBALL
OR BASEBALL!

,~OPPERS

BE THRIFTY! VISIT YOUR

$}44

Package of 250

14 Qt. Preserving Kettle . .. . ~s2.99

MART! SAVE CASH

Fruit Jar FunneJ ..... . ...... 2~
Pint Size Aluminum Dipper 39'
12 Qt. Covered Sauce Pot ... s2.99
7,Jar ~oi~J,~ck ~anner .... .sug
''"l&lt;err" Milson J'ars .12 for 'D7''
'
2 Cup Measuring Cup ........ 29'

GIRLS TOPS

PAPER
NAPKINS
¢

Terry, cotton, nylon m short

sle~veless

or tank lop style Siles

sleeve,
3 to 14

GIRLS SHORTS
•

FOR

•

E~~RYDAY7 7 ¢ T ,$
0

CLEANUP!
PRINTED TERRY CLOTH

BEACH
TOWELS

JOQUARTSIZE

$ 57

FULL
SIZE!

SECONDS OF
$2 .98 VALUE!

$1.00 value

STYROFOAM

COOLER
CHEST

EA.

The Dai~ Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
Exec E~
ROJERT HOEFLICH.

Warrled

Plastic Ice Cube Trays
EASY TWIST OUT!
4
DAY
SALE!

MULTI-COLOR! 6 PANEL

BEACH
BALLS
LARGE
16" SIZE

Coming Loose?
Afraid !aloe

teeth will drop at the
wrooa; t1me" A de~ture adheaive can
help. FASTEETH• Powder awes
denturee a longer, firmer, stead1er
hold Why be embarruaed? For more
aecurlty and oomfod : use FA S·
TEETH Denture Adhrunve Powder
Dentum that fit are euent1al to
health See your dentlat re~:ularly

EA.

GIF1' Y()[JR FATHER WITH
'

EA.

SPORT SHIRTS
Permanent Press cotton blends or easy care

SHORT
SETS
$224TO $394

FALSE TEETH

gg~

DON'T FORGET
DAD!

GIRLS TWO PIECE

About

------.

PR.

TANK TOP or SLEEVELESS

·21X36 Braided Rug

Ctty Edtt9r
Published datly t Kcept
Saturday by The Ohto Valley
t:Jubt, shtng Company , 111
Court St
Pomeroy. Oh io
45769 Bu si ness Offt ce Phone
992 2156. Ed ltortal Phone 992
2157
Second class postage patd el
Pomeroy , On lo
Nat 1ona1 ad v ert 1s 1ng
representative
Bott•nell t
GaiiiOher . Inc, 12 Eas t 42nd
St , New York C1tv , New York
Subscr 1ptton rates
De
liv ered by carr 1er where
ava 1lable SO cenfs per week
Bv Motor Route where carr 1er
service not available One
month 11 15 By ma ll 1n Ohio
and W Va One year s1• 00
Snc months 17 2S Thr~e
months $4 SO Subscrlpt ron
prt ce 1ncludes Sunday Times
Senttnel

77t

WITH
POM·POM

kmls. A shirt for ~very Dad, regardl~ss of his
age or needs.

TO

$ 94

MEN'S GIFTS!

ALUMINUM

LAWN
CHAIRS
•

BLUELIME-

AVACA-$3

NUTMEGTANGERINE-

"DERBY"
T-SHIRTS
or

BRIEFS
WHITE COTTON ALL SIZES!

42
3.0~2

-

YOUTHS, BOYS, MENS

MENS OR LON

MENS VINYL

SUMMER
SANDALS

DRESS
SOCKS

DRESS
BELTS

•

ONE SIZE FITS 10-13

Boys Sizes$
Stol
MtDI Sizeti
7to12

77
PAIR

em:...

I
I

&amp;z~ ,.... 97.~
P•IR

' Brown·
Black

U..

Shoppers Mart - - - Mason, W. Va. or Pt. Pleasant

�•

•

. . .. .....

•

r

Married ]u~e 5

Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Russell Celebrating Today

65 Happy Years
IJY BOB HOEFLICH •
Sixty.five years of married
Ufe and never a fight!
That's the record of Mr and
Mrs. Howard C. Russell who
are observing their 65th
wedding anniversary today at
their home on the Wolf Pen
Road, near Pomeroy
Theit' report of a smooth
marriage tndicates that Mr
and Mt·s. Russell are by nature
very peace-loving indtviduals.
On the other hand, there were
nine children; perhaps that
would tend to keep a couple too
busy to allow much time for
petty differences.
At any rate, the Russells,
both hale and hearty, have
marked thetr 65th year of
married Ufe- an event which
has even been noted by Ohio's
House of Representatives.
Through Representative Ralph
Welker, Mr. and Mrs Rusaell
have been presented with a
framed
certificate
Ln
recognition of their long years
of marriage. Signed by Charles
F. Kurfese, speaker of the
House, the certtftcate was
presented to the couple Sunday ~
when some 80 friends and
relatives gathered at the
Russell home for a pre·
anniversary celebration.
Mrs. Russell Is Ute daughter
of the late Mr. and Mrs.
Harvey Woodar~ ot RuUand
Township and later of
Pomeroy. Mr. Rusaell is the
son of the late Mr. and Mrs.

James Russell of Wolf Pen. Ths
couple was mamed m Pomt
Pleasant 65 years ago today
mstead of going on a church
ptcnic as planned.
Of their nine children, six are
still llvmg They include Earl
of Pilgnm, Ky.; Marguerite
Boyce and Carl, both of
Columbus; Jed of Powers,
Oregon; Wilham of Mmersville; Bob of Wolf Pen.
Deceased are Steven, Eileen
Venoy and an Infant son
Mr. and Mrs. Russell have 25
grandchildren , 15 great ·
grandchildren and IS great •
great • grandchildren. They
reared three of thetr grand·
chtldren, Wtlham Venoy,
Columbus; Maurice Venoy of
Chester, and Robert Venoy of
Wolf Pen
Mrs Russell, who ts 84, has a
sister, Mrs Ltllte Hauck,
Pomeroy, and two brothers,
William Woodard, Langsville,
and Albert Woodard, Pomeroy,
still living Mr. Russell, now 85,
has a stater, Mrs Harley
Johnson, and a brother, John
Uncoln Russell, living
Both Mr and Mrs. Russell
are members of the Zton
Church of Christ. Mr Russell
was a farmer and a coal miner
durmg hiS work career. They
have restded in Meigs County
64 of their 65 llUirned years
"We've had a pretty happy
life," Mrs Russell commented.

\

Attend CCL
Conference
Five members of Ute Middleport Child Conserut10n
League were at Rio Grande
Saturday for the South Central
District spring conference of
the Ohio CCL.
Going from Ute Middleport
league were Mrs Louis
Osborne, Mrs. Patrick Duffy,
Mrs. Eugene Houdashelt, Mrs
Arthur Arnold, and Mrs. John
Blaker
The Rio Grande Mothers'
League hosted the conference
which carried out Ute theme
"Hats Off to America " The
Rev. Paul Hawks of Gallipolts
was Ute guest speaker and
special music was provided by
Ute Saunders Trio. A workshop
on "Sewing WiUt Kmts" was
conducted by Mrs. Charlene
Batey, and Mrs. Beatrtce Clark
talked on Ute loptc "Crosses of
the World."
The Middleport League
received an honorable mention
on handbook wtth the Rio
Grande League laking ftral
place in Ute judgmg.
Mrs. Arthur Rupe, Jr. was
elected president of the South
Central District and Mrs. Jesse
Merry was elected nominating
chairman. Named to Mrs.
Merry's conuruttee were Mrs.
Oiborne of the Middleport
League, Mrs. Larry Betz, Mrs
Mike Hardway, and Mrs .
Lester Plymale.
Mrs. Walter Clark, Jr., the
OCCL state
president,
reminded Utoae attending of
the 1tate convepUon to be held
In Cincinnati on Oct. 11 and 12.
The Rev. Edward Wallen of the
SlmpiOR Method11t Church
pve the lnvac:ation and Rio
Grande 11lrl ICOIIIII led in the
pledge. There was group
linliRI of "America the

· Beautiful." •

jacket and white accessories
Her flowers were candy striped
carnations.
Serving as best man for the
bridegroom was Mr. Paul
SISSon
A reception was held
honoring the couple at the
Grate home. The bride's table
featured a three tiered cake,
baked by Mrs. Grate, and
topped wiUt the traditional
mmiature brtde and groom.
Orange punch was served with
the cake.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Clark and children, Paul
Allan, Sandra and Gary of St.
Albans, W. Va ; Mr. and Mrs.
George Hurd of Hendersonville, Tenn.; Mr and
Mrs Charles Russell of
Chtlhcothe; Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Carson and Jeff of
Middleport, Route 1; Mr. and
Mrs. Paul SISSon, Pomeroy,
Route 4, Mrs Larry Parsons,
Pomeroy, Route 4, and the
hosts, Mr. and Mrs. Grate and
daughter, Jenny
The new Mrs. Carson Is
employed at Dutton's Drug
Store Mr Carson works at Ute
Royal Crown BotUing Co. The
couple resides at 222~ North
Third St., Mtddleport

Officers are Elected
Election
of
offtcers
htghltghted a meeting of the
Star Garden Club recently at
the home of Mrs. Orton Nelson.
Elected were MISS Ruby Dte~l,
president, Mrs Henry Turner,
vtce-prestdent; Mrs G. A.
Radekm,
second
vtce
president, and Mrs. Pearley
Nelson, secretary • treasurer.
Mrs James Nicholson
prestdmg at the meeting asked
club members to partictpate m
the Btg Bend Regatta flower
show An mvttation was read
from the Rutland Friendly
Gardeners for thetr open
meeting to be held on June 28 at
the Rutland Church of Chmt
A cornmumcabon was read
from Mrs Mabfl Reed
regardmg the 42nd Annual
ConventiOn of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs to
he held at Demson Umverstty,
Aug 8-10.
The members responded to
roll call by nammg thetr
favorite tree or shrub Mrs.
Raymond Chapman and Mrs.
Eugene Atkins were guests.
Member reported tll was Miss
Hazel Hensen, a patient at the
O'Bleness Hospital m Athens.
The exh1b1t, "Arrangement
m a Basket," was judged wtth
Mrs Norman Will placmg first
with lemon liltes and daiSies;
Mrs G A. Radekin, second,
with pmk roses; and Mrs

Nicholson, third, With red
roses The July meeting will be
a p1cmc at Forest Acres Park
w1th the Wtlkesville Garden
Club members as guests.
Mrs Nelson reVIewed an
article en tilled "Something Old
and Somethmg New."
Mrs. Nicholson presented
reasons and methods for
prumng shrubs after they
bloom. She also reported the
completion of the civic project.
Petumas, donated by Cleland's
Greenhouse, were planted
around the ..Dexter Church.
Mrs Nicholson thanked the
club members for the
arrangements placed Ill the
post olltce and the church at
Dexter
The hostess served refreshments

1
•

T'l ,.117

4;

NIECE GRADUATEI

Mn. Rtlt Slllta ~­
relarJieli from Clevelaid
wbere 1be •lilted ller
brotber-la-law aad allier,
Mr • • aad Mn. Georce
weal •
Aaceltlli. Sbe
eopeclally to altead ~~~­
IJ'IIduaU. tf her ~~lett, ~
Mary MeClellaad, frtm
Baldwla-Wall•ce wit~
boaera. Sbe reeelved · i
bacbeler of al'tl depee.
Mra. McCiellaa•, a

each type, 11 to yolt•o• and
P"'"' will bt aupplled to •
contumer ""der thl&amp; Schedule
11 one contract Location .
Whtrt two or mort str'IICIIIrl
auppllld to 1 consumer at ont
Gontr~ct Location ttld ur
vlcts, within the limltatlonJi
ebovtltlted, may be combined
In one •ervlce contract under
thll Schedule, or may be served
under separett contracts u"der
this or other applicable
Schedults, at the consumtr'l
option

IOIDINAIIC'I!.fl!l,
FG~ ·NOTICE
IIS·Il

AN ORDINANCI!f'IXING THE
RATES WHICI+ COLUMBUS
AND SOUTH.IRN OHIO
ELECTRIC COMPANY, ITS
SUCCESSORS oloND ASSIGNS,
MAY CHARGII' FOR STAN ·
DARD SECONDARY ELEC
TR IC ' SERVI~E TO CON ·
SUMERS IN TI'IE Vl\.LAGE
OF MIODLEI'ORT, MIUGS
COUNTY,
OHIO,
AND Tl\11 Schedule Is generally
ESTABLISHING A FORMU\.A IPPIItable to consumers with
FOR VARYING SUCH RATES Ml)tlmum capacity
r&amp;qulrements of less than 20
8&amp; IT ORDAINED IIY THE kllowetts, althOI.IQh larger
COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE con1umers may, from tlmtt to
OF MIDDLEPQAT,STATE OF time, be served under Its
OHIO
provisions However, when a
con&amp;umer•s Maximum Capacity
SECTION I. fhot .lht rattl excetdt 50 kllow1tts or tht total
reglllered · - · wBI lie
employed ID tbe cardiae aalt' and prices which Cotumbutlnd energy utlllutlon exceed&amp;
SOIIIhlfn Ohio Eloctrl~ Corn - 20,000 kilowatt hours In any
of tbe Parma CemmiiiJti; ~ony,
(htrtlnofltr ~oiled month. this Schedule Shill not
Hupltal. Oilier relatlvet
'(:ompeny"}, Its IUCCIIIOrl be avail1blt for a minimum
assigns, shall be tntllltd to period of twelve ( 12) months
atteadtac lbe &amp;radutloa 1ne1
chtrot tor standard secondary
were Mn. 011• Mattbewa, tlettr:lc Hrvfce furnlshtd to TERM OF CONTRACT
In the Village of
Tilt term of the contract tor
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; Mr. contumtrl
Mldc:lltport, Ohio, (htrelnafttr service under thll Schedule
call~ "Municipality") for the shaH be as provided In the In ·
IUid Mn. Fred su- "
set forth in Stctlon 5 of dlvldual CQf'ltnc:t with nch
G.UO.; Mr. ud Mn. Ilia period
this Ordlnance1re hereby fixed consumer, but In no case shall
Crow, Camlll; Mr. aDd Mn. It not to exceed the following the contract term be less than
or Rotn ·
one year
Joba Klpf, CpJwwdw; Slater Schtllul'
RESIDENCE SERVICE
~ Regll, C&lt;llumbel; ud
Avllllblt ~r ~ residence
SECTION 2 Thol the rote&amp;
to consumtrs using for electr ic service set forth In
several from PltllbarJb, PL serviCI
single phase, 60 eye/H. 120·240 Section 1 ol this Ordinance shall

01 :or W P?0?? ":C: 5 ! U. OJ ! ; 8:!'.6&gt;' Wi volts. elternatlng c.urrent, be celculaled as follows.

At Graduation
Mrs. Florence Custer was In
Hilliard Wednesday ror the
graduation of her grandson,
Mike Sayre, son of Mr. 1nd
Mrs. Dale Sayre, the fonner
Jane Custer.
Accompanying Mrs. Custer
to Htlliard was another
grandson, Wesley SmlUt of
Pomeroy. Joining them at the
Sayre home on Saturday for a
reunton were Mr. and Mrs.
James Custer, Dala and Jackie
Sue, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Custer, Mr and Mrs. Joe
Custer and daughter, Jody,
Jean Custer and daughter,
Barbara, Melinda Custer,
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Smith and daughter,
Kelly, Jon Dillard, Pomeroy;
Miss Esther Joseph, Mlnersvtlle, and Pam Scoville of
Hilliard

Degree Received

Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Car·
penter attended the graduation
of thetr son·tn·law, Dennis
Carroll, from Ohio State
Umvemty Friday. Carroll
recetved his bachelor's degree
tn mechanical englneermg. He
has accepted employment wiUt
Proctor and Gamble in CJn.
cmnstl and the couple will be
moving there tn the near
future.
On Friday evening Mr. IJid
SON IS BORN
Mrs Carpenter Joined Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Bourne, Mrs. Carroll, Mr. and Mrs. Jiit
the former Jane Baer of Russell and Mr. ' and Jlih.
Pomeroy, Fort Denens, Mass , Larry Smith for a graduation
are announcmg the birth of party The Carpenters were
their first child, a SIX pound, 15 Fnday overntght gueats of Mr.
ounce son, Carl Andrew. and Mrs. John Young and
Grandparents are Mr. and family at Lancaster and Oil
Mrs Edward Baer, Pomeroy, Saturday attended the DltW:
and Mrs. M,rgaret Bourne, Rutherford wedding ~d
Fostona. Great-grandparents reception in Columbus.
Mrs. Edna Reibel prestded at
are Mrs. C L Heaton,
the business session during
Pomeroy, Walter Baer,
whtch time the reception for
Mmersvtlle, and Mr and Mrs
Ann Holter was planned and
Arthur Ward of Fostorta.
committees named It was
Preparation jars for • t
dectded to purchase stx crystal
collecting were made artd
cake plates to be used at
d!Splay boards were giv,n 1o
receptions and parties, and
each member when IJie
Mrs. Ben Neutzling and Mrs
Naylors Run Jets 4-H Club !Det
Roy Seyfned were appointed to
By Helen and Sue Bottel
Monday at the home of ~
buy them
Earl Thoma, adviaor.
Mrs Retbel explamed a
NO PLACE TO TURN?
Mark Norton presided at tbe
redemption program offered Dear Helen and Sue:
meeting which opened w!Ut the
by Kroger's and it was dectded
don't
know
what
to
do.
It
seems
Uke
Utere's
no
way
out.
4-H
pledge and the American
1
to save pnce tags from foods
flag
pledge. It was noted that
which reportedly can be
I'm 17, have a four-month-old daughter, Angie, and llove her
redeemed for kttchen 1tems A so much I can't give her up. My parents wouldn't let me marry David Lewis is on vacation.
basket will be placed m the her father (Phil), but we're living together attheir home- if you Present for the meeting wu a
guest, Steve Norton of ¥inefll.
vestibule so that all members can make any sense out of that!
ville. A demonstratiort' on in·
of the church can participate m
My folks are both alocholles, They're dead drunk every sect collecting and diaplaying
the project
night. Asmuchasl tell myself I hate them, I don't really -but I
was planned for next week's
Mrs Gladys Cuckler gave can't talk to them or to P!ti1 so I keep everything bottled up in- meeting. A trip to the wooda
devotions using Psalms 121and side. I'm shaking so bad right now I can't write, and this page is will be taken later this monUt.
a commentary on David's already tear-etalned. I don't smoke, drink or take drugs, I'm just
words of praise to God for all tied In knots.
His wonderful works She also
About Phll· He's 18, makes good money in two joba, but
SOCIAL PLANNED
read the 23rd Psalm which was doesn't want the responsibility ct. marriage and a home of his
BASHAN
- Plana for an Ice
composed by David while he own. He spends his spare time with Ute guys and racing cars. He
cream soetal were made
was a young shepherd boy won't even lake Angle and me for a rtde 91" to the store. The only durmg a meeting of the Ladlea
attending his father's flock .
money he gives me is for Angle's food
Auxiliary of the Buhan
Presentln~ the program was
We were supposed 1o move mto our own apartment on my Volunteer Fire Department
Mrs Clarence Massar She birthday last month. Instead, he spent Ute day with his friends, Thursday night. The social will
read an article entitled and didn't even send me a card.
be held on July 1 at the fann.
"Memories - Ltfe's Best
1know he feela trapped, and I don't want lo admit to myself hOUJe with serving to belin
Garden," and gave a prayer, he doesn'tloveme.Butnow I have to face facts: I gueas maybe I at 6 p.m. In addition to Ice
"0 Lord Bless Everyone "
Games were played wtth had Angie instead of an abortion becai.Lse I wanted to keep Phil cream, sandwiches, cake, 111\d
andgetoutofthis hoi.Lse.Howwrongcana girl be?
pie will be served. There Will
prizes gomg to Mrs Massar,
Wheth he 1
ta I' stl11 "nolhin " 1
1 to also be special muaic and other
Mr Philip Meinhart Mrs
er eaves or s ys, m
a
g. wan
Ne:tzhng and Mrs 'Lout~ finish high school but can't trust my drunken mother to baby-ell talent durmg the evening.
Reibel. The birthday an- · Angle. At 17, I can't get a job, or even move out on my own- at
mversarles of Mrs. Carrie least anywhere I could take Angle. I know I sh!Jilld let P!ti1 go and
Metnhart MISS Ernia Smith give my baby up for adoption, but Uten I wouldn't want to Uve,
SCHOOL PLANNED
and Mrs' Freda Duffy wer~ especially without Angle. Last year I Utought I was ''mature,"
Vacation
Bible School wiD be
observed
but now I'm faced with all these responsibilities, I don't want to
held at the Eagle Rldae
' Mrs Dale Smitli, Mrs. John grow up!
Community
Church beglnnlnc
Terrell, and Miss Sybil EbersThere just ISn't any place to turn. Or IS there, Helen? June
19
through
the 23 rrom
bach served refreshments of SUSAN
9.30
to
11
a.m.
All
children besandwiches and dessert.
Dear Susan :
Attending bestdes those
, There ARE places to turn: The Child Welfare Agency In your tween the age of I and 18 are
named were Mrs. Hom~r city might place you and your baby in a foster home until you tnvlted to attend.
Holter, Mrs Lawrence Lan- have finilhed school and can be on your own. Also a minialer
nlng, Mrs. Ethel Wlll18mson, could refer you to a church ~p which might help. Or, perhaJIII,
Mrs. Clara Karr, Mrs. Lillie a friend?
ljOTICE 01'
Hauck, Mrs. Fred Dessauer,
Above all, don't feel that you are locked Into a non-marriage.
APPOINTMENT ' • •
Ca&amp;tNo"A.o611
and guests, Mrs Bertha IfPhllwon'tbeahusband-manapartmentheprovidesforyou
estote
of
EfHEL
Martin of Lancaster, and Lisa andAngie-tellhlmlobeonhlsway!-HEIEN
CHEVALIER , DteNitd.
Notice Is hlriOy glvtll IIIII
Jo Hendricks, St. Albans, W.
+++
B.,.n.rd V. Fultz, ,of Pomtroy
Va.
Ohlo, hU bftn duly IPIIOintfli
Dear Suaan:
Admlnlotrotor or tho Eliott of
There's stl11 a chance that Phll might shape up, If you'd move Ethtl Chevalier, deceutd, lltt
SALE DAYS SET
Of Meigs Count~, Ohio.
The Ash Street Freewill away fromyourflpnlly and lntoanaparbnent whe're he'dfeelu
CrodifOI'1 ore roqulr!Jj! to flit
their cltlmo with llild fld~c!trr
Baptist Church will holclo;a If he had a real wife and daughter. Guys change, when they wlfhln
four m!)Jithl
•
rummage sale Thursday, acquire responsibilities Sometimes, anyway.
Dated
this
2Ath
dor
of Mor
Put it to him straight: marriage (your folks will surely give 1972
Friday and Saturday In the
John C. l•l:on
Reynolds Bwlding begmnmg at their consent now), a place of your own, and a lot more love, or
~Udge
('lk)
30
(6)
6,
13,
31
good-bye. - SUE
9 am.

Class Plans Picnic
Apicnic wao planned for July
14 at the Route ~' roadside
park on the lefl traveling
towards Athens when the
Happy Harvesters Class met
Friday night at the Trinity
Church

In a ceremony at the home of
Mr. and Mrs Wendell Grate of
Rutland, on June 5 at 7-30 p.m.
Mrs Hildred Clark and Mr.
Kenneth Carson exchanged
weddmg vows Mrs Grate Is
the daughter of
the
bridegroom.
The bnde is the daughter of
Mr Charley Nelson and the
late Mrs. Nelson, and the
bridegroom the son of the late
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Carson.
Mr Charles Russell, Jr. of
Chilhcothe Church of Christ
offtciated the double rmg
ceremony Nuptial music was
presented by Miss Jenny
Grate, granddaughter of Ute
groom, at the organ, with Mrs.
Polly Russell, soloist, smgmg
"0 Prectous Love" and
''Always.''
Given m marriage by her
son, the brtde was attired tn a
pink polyester dress with pmk
and whtte beaded trun She
wore pmk and white flowers m
her hatr, and her bouquet was
of white carnations lipped in
pink
Mrs. Paul Stsson of
Pomeroy, Route 4, served as
matron of honor for her stster
She wore a whtte polyester
dress w1th a blue and while

Jdddut:Ublbdbbi ' !l

jars Prepared

Generation Rap

1

'

..

supplied through overhead
(1) Each month during the
distribution facllltltt
term ot this Ordinance the
Flrst20 kwh or less per month Company will calculate bills tor
for n 00
standard secondtrY electric
Ntld 10 kwh per month, 3 60c 11rvlce In the Munlcipallly at
per kwh
tht rates set forth In Section l of
NtMI 100 kwh per month, 3 05c thll Ordinance
per kwh
(2) Each month the company
NOKI6110 kwh per month, 2.10c will render a bill tor street
per lll;wh
lighting
service
in
the
• - all over 1110 kwh per Municipality In accordance
month, 115C per kwh
wltt't the provisions Of the then
x - During the period ex - etttcllvt street lighting or
tending from tht customers dlntnce of the Municipality,
first regullrly scheduled
(3} Each month during the
monthly
m•ttr
rtedlna term of this Ordinance, the
following september 10th and Companr, will recalculate bills
Including alght consecutive tor rtt dtnllal and general
regularly scheduled monthly service - small - secondary
meter reedings 111 kilowatt - service at the rates set forttl tn
hour&amp; ovtr IJOO will bt billed ot Secllon 1 of this Ordlnence
1 20c per kilowatt hour
amended In tile manner set
forth In Section 6 of this Or
FUEL COST ADJUSTMENT dinance
The energy charge applicable
Ul The difference between
to oil kUowell hQon of energy the
calculations
1.1nder
consumed shall be Increased or Paregreph IH hereinabove
decreaaed oossc per KWH per referred to In this Section 2 and
each full one.half cent ( kJ the calculations n provided in
Increase or dtcr1111 ebove or Paragraph (3) hereinabove
below twenty-three cents C23CJ referred to In thiS Section 2 shall
In the avertue cost per million be epplled to the payment of the
(1,000,000) BTU of fUll con current bills to the Municlptllty
sumed at the company'&amp; for service rendered under the
gtneratlng stations during the then efltctlve Street Lighting
celendar
month Ordinance Including any unpaid
second
preceding fho billing dele
bllance from previous periods
Any such difference not
MINIMUM CHARGE
required tor the r•yment of the
Minimum monthly charge current bill shal be applied to
$2 00 per meter per month
subHquent bills tor said ser
vleet

GENIRAL SUVICESMALL- SICONDARY
AVAILABILITY
Avolloblt for unorol light

and power servlct to consumers
vslng the Comp1ny'1 stendard
service tor purposts othtr than
realdentill use and establllhing
Maxlml.lm Capacities generally
less than 20 kllowerts

CHARACTER OF SERVICE

Alternating current,
60
cyct•• · d11tvered from the
company's
stcondlry
distribution systems 1t nominal

voltages or 120,120 2oDor 12D 2DI
YOits, single ph111, 1nd 120 201.
120 240, 201. 240 tnd AIO volls.
thru phue Service of at ltlll
ant of tht foregoing cherac ·

ttrlstlcs shall bt
made
av1llable to a customer, the
Plrtlcutar service charac ·
terlstlcl to be at ttte option of
tne Comptny -

SCHEDULE OF CHARGES
t=: IP"sUO kwh or te&amp;l per month
for $2 65
Next 10 kwh por month. 043

SECTION

3. Thol, In tho
event the term of any contnct
for st1ndard secondary electric
service hereafter made with
consumers In the Municipality
punutnt to tht provisions of
this Ordinance shall extend
beyond the term Ination date of
this Ordinance, the rates. in·
eluding the Minimum Monthly
Charge, chargeebte thereunder
1h1ll be the rates In eftecl
within the Munlclpolllr 11 the
time such change Is made

SECTION .C That the Rules
and Regulations contained In
the company's P u c o No 1
on file with The Public Utilities
Commltslon of Ohio Cas the
samt may , from time to time,
be amtndtd or supplemented)
as are not In conflict with the
exprtss provisions of this Or·
dlnance ere applicable to all
service rendertd under and
pursuant to this Ordinance
Nothing contllf'ed within this
Ordlnlnce shall prevent any
consumer from liking ad
vantage, within the effective

per kwh
_..
Next 500 kwPI per month, plus period or lhll Ordlnan~o. or •nr
100 kwh per l(w of Mtxlmum appllceble rule, regulalion ,
Capacity In eJtctla of 6.0 kw, aupplement or optional rete
.ooo .~ kwh
which the Company may make
B'lartce to 5000 kwh per IVIllOblo In Its P U C 0 No I
month •. 020 por kwh
on flit with The Public Utilities

AIf ovtr 5000 kW~ per monlh, Commission of Ohio for tho
017 per kwh
class of &amp;trvlce involved
FUEL COST ADJUSTMENT SECTION 5 The rates con

The energy charge appllcabl•
to 111 kllowett hours of energy
con"'mtd shalt be lncreaud or
dtcrtJMd 0055c per KWH per
tach f¥11 one I'll if cent ( 5cl
lnereu• or decrtast above or

talntd herein st'tall be effective

wllh roopocl to bills based on
regular meter readings made
on or otter July 2S, 1972. ond

lhlll remain In effect tor bills
baud on regular meter
below twtnty.iftrot ctnts l23cl rUdlnga made prior to July 25,
in the average cost per million 1t7.C, or prior to the termination
(1,000.0001 BTU of fuel con- of thil Ordinance 11 provided In
tunHtd et " " comp1ny's Section I of this Ordinance
aeneratlng atatlona during the
ucond
Clltndar
month
SECTION 6 That, If at any
Prt~tdlng
• .. :..f

lht billing dalt

lime within the period fixed by

this Ordinance the Municipality
should authorize an alternative

... .

DET~RMINATION OF

MAXIMUM CAPACITY
mtlhlld tor the paymonl ol the
The Maximum CIP~JCity Shill then current bills of the
bt tho oum of lht Individual Munlclptllly ror otroet lighting

Demands ol each mtttrtd 1t the rates and In accordance
service, supfllect under the w ith the terms and provisions ot
provisions o this Schedule, the then effective sfreet llghllng
ucept 11 modified hereinafter , ordinance of the Mun icipality,
The lndlvldutt Demand of theri the rarea and prices lor
11ch metered service 1h11t be standard secondary electric
dttermlt'led aeparattlr The service, hereinabOve set forth,
Individual Oemtnd shal be the .. shall be maneded as follows

LEGAL NOTICE
I
IN THE
COMMO!I 1'\.EAS COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY,OHIO
FUD W. CROW, JR •
Syrecusl, Oltft,
I'IIIOIIII,
C~~RLES RICHARD CROW,
IUTH CROW,
1U Edword N.w .,
W1rren, Ohio,
Et 11.,

Defe~tdant1. .

No. 1J,OU

NOTICE IY
I'UB\.ICATION

The oetendants, the unknown
heirs, devisees. legatees ,
dlltrlbutell, tdm lnlttrators
and executors, If 1ny, of Jennie
owen. oecuud, the unknown
heirs
de\littes. legatees,
distr!'buten, adm lnlstrator~
end executors. if any, of
owen
Jihnlgen.
Uda
oeceeud,
the
unknown
heln, devtutl, legetees,
dlttributees. adm ln~strators
and executors, If eny, of Arthur
Jahnlgen,
Dece~tstd.
th'
unknown heirs,
deVISees ,
tegetees, distributee's', ad ·
mlnlstraton end executors, If
any, of Richard Jahnlgen ,
oeceued ; Ruth Jahnlgen.
whose place ol residence is
unknown, the unknown htlrs.
dtvlsees,legatHs. distrlbutees,
administrators and executors,
If any, ot Ernest James Owen,
Deceased , the unknown heirs,
dtvlsets,legetees, dlstributees ,
administrators and executors ,
If any. of Florence Owen.
Deceased. tht unknown heirs,
devlstes.legatees, dlstributees .
administrators and executors,
If any, of Harry Stauffer ,
Deceased, the unknown heirs,
devisees, legetees. dlstributees,
administrators and executors,
If any, of Estella Stauffer ,
Deceesed; the unknown heirs ,
devisees, legatets. dlstrlbutees,
adm lnlstrators and executors ,
If any, of Elmer Stauffer ,
Deceased; the unknown heirs ,
devl&amp;ees.legatees, dlstributees,
administrators and executors ,
If any , of Bertha Staufler,
Deceased , Otto Stauffer, whose
place of residence Is unknown,
the unknown heirs, devisees ,
legetus, dlstributeu, ad
mlnistrators end executors, If
any, of Herbtrt Stauffer ,
oeceued, Hettie Stauffer ,
whose place of residence 1s
unknown. the unknown heirs,
dev lsees, legatees. d lstrlbutees,
admlnlstretors and e~ecutors ,
11 any , of Guy Stauffer ,
Deceued ; Clyde Stauffer ,
whose place of residence Is
unknown, Robert Stauffer .
whose place of residence is
unknown, the unknown heirs,
dev IItts. legatees, dlstrlbutees,
adm lnlstrators and executors,
If eny, of Mary Gerber ,
Deceased. the unknown heirs,
devisees, legatees, dtstrlbutees,
administrators and executors,
If any, of Fred ~Gerber .
Dettlltd. the unknown heirs,
dev tsees, legatees. d lstrlbutees.
administrators end txecutors,
If any of Uda Sarah Owen ,
Deceased; the unknown heirs,
dev lsees, legatees, d lstrlbutees,
adminlttrators and eucutors ,
If any, of Thomas Spencer
Owen , Deceased and the
unknown heirs,
devisees ,
legatees , dlstributees , ad
m lnlstrators and eucvtors, If
any, of William Richard Owen ,
Deceased , will take not ice that
on lilt 19th day or April , 1972, a
Complaint was filed In the
ComMon Pleas Court of Meigs
County , Ohio, case No 15055,
wherein you have been named
det•nctants In the praver of the
Complaint, Plaintiff demands
that his Interest In said rea l
estate may be set off to him In
severalfy end for partition of
Slid real estate, according to
the respective rights of the
parties hereto, and In case
pertltlon of said reel estate
cannot be made without
manifest lnlury to the value
thtreof , then that sa id real
estate may be ad fudged to one
or more of the parties to this
suit upon electron ~s provided
by law . and In case said real
estate Is not adludged IO one or
more parties to this su it upon
election , u provided by law ,
thtn that Slid real estete mav
be sold according to taw, tree
and clear from ell the claims ,
rights and Interests of all the
parties to this suit Plaintiff
further demands that each of
said defendants may be
required to ut up whatever
c111m or clelms, right or rights,
Interest or Interests, tach of
them has In and to seld real
estate, or be forever barred
from asserting same, and for
other proper relief. The real
estate Is described as follows

The lollowlng described reo/

estal-' In the Village of Pomeroy
end bounded and described as
follows Commencing on Front
Street at tile Eastern corner of
Ffont and Sycamore Streets In
said Vllltge of Pomeroy, thence
fifty (SO) feet along Front Street
to Lot Number J:lghty .seven

(871, lhtnct fifty (501 feet
parallel with Syt:am ore Street ,
thence West fifty (SOl feet

parallel with Front Street to
Sye~more Street. thence along
Sycamore Street fifty (50) feet

Mtnured Demond where lht
RESIDENCE SERVICE
tho place of beginning
connected loed IS twenty (20)
The Minimum Charge and the to R:eterence
Vol 77 ,
kllowotto or loll. ffie Individual Charge for the first 20 kwh or Page 604, Deedoe-.d
Records , Meigs
Demand may bt determined, at
the Company's option , 11 the
M111urH Demand tstabllsl'led
by continuous measurement or

by period/~ tnt, or I I tho
Esllmaltd Dtmond derlvtd

from the connecttd loed.
Measured Demands, ellher
by permenent lnatalletlon of a
demand meter or by periOdic
test, Shall bt ilfetMrmlnec:t In
eccordtncl wlttllhe Comp1ny'1
standud prectlcts and, except
In unusual CIHI, ahall be the
maximum 30 minuttlntegratld
kilowatt demand recording of
an lntttratlna dtmtnd meter,
or the highest reglsttatlon ot a

less of electric energy con
sum eel per month shall be 11.60
Otherwlae the schedule remains
unchanged

GENERAL SERVICESMALL- SECONDARY

The charge tor the first 20
kwh or tess of electric energy
consumed
month shall be
11 65 an
the aggregete
Minimum Monthly Charge shell
be reduced 11 DO per month
Otherwltt the schedule remains
oochanged .

J"

SECTION 7: Thai lhll Or

County, Ohio
You are required to answer
the Complaint within twenty
tlgtlt days after lt'te last
publlcttlon of this notice,
namely , by not later than the

28th dar ol July, 1972, or
fudgment by default will be
rendered against /ou.
' ll'.ilt W Crow, Jr
cose,Ohlo
Plolntlff

·m..

.'

Crow, Crow &amp; Porl\r ,
Attorneys tor Plaintiffs

dlnlnce shall teke effect from (5) 16, 23, 30 (61 6, llr20..l1, 710after the earllut periOd
thormol typo demond moter, and
allowed by law and Its written
during the billing periOd In ecceptanc;:e by Columbus and
lnsttncn of highlY fluctulllng SOuthern Ohio Electric Com
IOadt, or demandS of ahort ptny
NOTICE OF E\.ECTION
duration,
ttte
Measured
ON TAX LEVY
Demand may be dtterm tned by
IN EXCESS OF
SECTION
1·
Tho
I
the
Vllloge
epproprlate mtlerlno equip . by ltgl&amp;letlvt action, or the
THE TEN MILL
ment dtslgned 10 mtuure tully Company shall heve the right to
LIMITATION
the Impact Of 1uch dtmends. ltrmlnatt thil Ordinance It any
NOTICE Is hereby given that
Whtrt Metlurtd Demands trt time, upon written notiCI filed in pursuance of a R:esolutlon of
dtttrmlntcl by periodic test, a with the other p1~ty hereto at the Board of Education ot the
Measured Dtmlnd 10 deter least 60 days prior to such Meigs Local School District,
mined shall continue In effect tervln1tlon d•te
Melgl county, Ohio, paased on

,jtnlll IU,trltded by I IUb·
ooquent HI

the llh doy of Moy, 1972, there
SECT ION 9
11 In the will be subm ltted to a vote of the
Ettlmattd Demandashall bt opinion Of ttte•Munlclpatrty and people of said School District ot
determined from tht conntctld the Company, the rafts con. a Special ELECTION to bt htld
IOid on ooch lndlvlduel moterod tlntd In this Ordinance mftl tho In the Melos Local School

Hrvict, I I follows:
First 5,000 w•ts at •o pet.

criteria end guldellnts covering
rate Increases tor public

NOKt 5,1100 Willi tl 10 pet.
utllllln sot forth In Socllon
Over 111,1100 walla If 70 pet 300.16 or tho Economic
Tht Mulmum Ctpa~lly In Stoblllzetlon Act of 1970
any month lhlll not be Ieos then
1ht minimum billing demand, If SECTION 10: Thtl the terms
any. apteiflad In the sendee and provlslonsofthls Ordlnence
contr1ct.
are joint end severet and the

ulNiuUM CHARGE
~
Tho /1\lnlmum Monthly
Chlr81 lhlll bt (I) 11 00 plus
Oil 12.05 per kilowatt per
month 1ppllld 10 a Maxlmvm
Ctpeclty oqulvtltnt lo 50 pel of
tte grtllor Iff !U lilt hlgh"tll
It/ ••tmum Cojlolclly PrtYIOUIIy
Hllblllhld during lilt lttm of
•~• ~MVIct contro~t or !bl tho
ClfNICIIY rocjulrtmonll Of tho
consumor u IPtellled In lht
~

'""Ice contrect.

Sl!RYlC! AND
CONTRACT I'ROVISIONS
Eech uperalt point of
dtllvlfr Of Mrvlct b~ ono or
mott Mellftli&gt;Strvlc.. lhtll bt
conlld!!fld ) ~l(act Lo~ollon
•~•II bt rnlend end blllld

'""
under

contract
0111~

•

ttl)-lratt

ten·lce

ono Mltlftcl Strvlco

Of

lnvolldlly of one sholl not offocl
lht validity Of tht other
Passed by tho Coun~ll of 'tha
VIIIIU Of Mlddleporl, this 22nd
dly of Mty, 1972
ATTEST •
Gene Grito
Clork
Approved thll 22nd doy ot
Moy, 1972.
John W Zerkle
Meyor
(6) 6, 13, 2t

IIOOSTER8 TO MEET

The Ea1tern Athleti~
lloolten wiU meet lhll millnl
at I p.m. al_llle hilb IICbool

District, Ohio, at the regular
pieces of voting therein, on
Tuesday, the 20th dav of June,
1972, the question of levying, In
exce&amp;l Of the ten rrtlll 1imitation,
for the benofll of Meigs Lo~al
SchOOl District tor the purpose
of Current expenses of the
SUbdiVIIion

Seld lox being. on additional
lox of 5 0 m.llls 1• run for e

contlnulnor,trlod, at a rete not1
excttdln_g .Q mills for each one

CfoThr of- vofuallon, which

emounta to Fifty ctnts tor eactl
one hundred
doll•rs of
vtluation, for • continuing
period,

Tht Polls lor oltld Eltetlon
Will be open 116::10 O'ClOCk A M
lnd rtmtln opon until 6'30
o'clock P M . 11111rn Stendard
Tlmo of Hid doy.
a, order or fht Boord or
Eltttlone, of M'lgo ¢ounfy,
OhiO
I
Doled Mly 19, 19 21
I
Edwfn S, CO!Ifl
Chairman
Doroth~ M. Johnllo~
Clork
lSI 23, :10 (6) 6, 13, 41~

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport..Pomeroy, 0., June 13, 1972

Pomeroy ...
Personal Notes

I

The Rev. and Mrs Harold
Hess of Fort Wayne, Ind were
VISitors m Pomeroy Sunday.
They attended mormng worship servtces at the Pomeroy
Trtmly Church The Rev Mr
Hess ts a former pastor of the
church .
The
couple,
vacatlomng m Columbus.
came here espectally for the
church service. Mrs Hess
recently underwent surgery
and
is
recuperatmg
satisfactorily
Mrs Ray Rtggs returned
from Ocala, Fla. Saturday
after havmg time there wtth
her son-m-law and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Hester,
lhe1r three-year old daughter,
Jill, and the1r mfant daughter,
He1d1 Lynn
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Chapman
and daughter, Jenmfer, and
son, Mitchell, returned Sunday
after a week's vacation at
Anna Marte lslimd, Fla
Mr. and Mrs Ted Dow me
and son , Allen, returned from
Weston, Conn Sunday after
bemg there for the weddtng of
the1r son; Chuck, to Miss
Donna Smtth
Mr. and Mrs Ketth Curtis of
Syracuse and Mr and Mrs
Phtlltp King of Mason, W Va
are vacatlonmg thiS week at
Myrtle Beach, S. C The
Curtlses' young daughter,
Gayla Lee, ts staymg wtth her
grandparents, Mr and Mrs
John Beaver, Nye Ave, durmg
her parents' absence

r n ..... :em::~::·~

i~ SOCia
. I f~
1
I
~

I Calendar![

TUESDAY
WORK IN EA degree when
Ractne Lodge 461, F&amp;AM ,
meets at 7 30 p.m. Tuesday at
temple, All Master Masons
InVIted
MEIGS County Alcohohsm
and Drug Abuse Commtttee,
7 30 p m Tuesday, upslatrs at
Pomeroy Umted Methodtst
Church
NIFTY STITCHERS, 7·30
Tuesday mght at the home of
Mrs. Carl Moore
LEWIS MANLEY, POST N.o.
363,
Amertcan
Legion
Auxiliary, 7 p.m Tuesday at
the home of Mrs Arnold
Richards, Middleport Officers
wtll be mslalled by Mrs
Charles Kessinger.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, noon Wednesday at
the Meigs Inn.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7 30
Wednesday evemng at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple .
Election of offtcers
POMEROY
MASONIC
Temple Assn., 7 p m Wednesday at the Masomc Temple
WHITE Rose Lodge Wednesday, 1.30 p m at Mtd·
dleport Legton Hall.
. MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, guest mght observance , 7:30 Wednesday,
home of Mtss Bernice Ann
•Durst, 344 S Thtrd Sl , Mtd·
die port.
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT Chtld
,Conservation League, annual
' ptcnic, 6:30 p m Thursday at
Fort Meigs.
EASTERN Htgh School
marching ba~d rehearsal, 7-9
p m., Thursday at htgh school
Students lake all mus1c whtch
has been ISSUed
WILLING WORKERS Class,
Enterpnse United Methodist
Church, 7:30 Thursday night at
the home of Mrs. Carl Moore.
ROCK SPRINGS Bett&lt;lr
Health Club, Thursdsy at the
home ct. Mrs James Conkle,
near Cheshire. Members are to
meet at the Rock Springs
Church at 12 30 p m. Program
by Mrs. Harold Blackston;
contest by Mrs. Arlie Abbott;
dues ~re payable at the
meeUng.
IN MARIETTA
Mrs. Henry' Reibel, Mrs.
Nettie Hayes, Mrs. Eva
Dressa uer , and Mrs EdiUt
Betzlng were In Mar~etta
Saturday to attend a meeting of
'the Daughters of America. ·
1

~~ed~~~l)

one tnstde the pool area
Operatmg the new stand will
be Robert Lebovitz. He wtll pay
the village 10 pel. of hts gross
and this 1s to be earmarked for
recreat-onal Improvements.
Lebovitz w1U be responsible for
some pohcmg of the Mtd·
dleport Park and wtll be
charged fees for hts water,
elec tncal and sewage service.
The del.atls wtll be worked out.
Council approved the reporl
of Mayor John Zerkle for May
showmg recetpls of $1,091.25 1n
fm es and fees and $175 m
merchant poltce collectwns.
The totaits $1,266.25
The Cthzens Nallonal Bank
was awarded the contract to
purchase the bonds for the
con stru chon of the new
headquarters of the Mtddleporl
Ftre Department at a rate of
four and one-half percent The
hank of Mtddleport had the
lowest btds Ftrms m Cincmnah, Cleveland
and
Columbus also submttted b1ds
on the purchase
Mayor John Zerkle urged
counc1l members to wnte to
Congressman Clarence Mtiler
1n regard to the government's
actwns m not permttling gas
compames to do exploratory
work 1n localton of new sources
of supply The mayor also
repor te d that new guard
ralim g can he constructed on
M•ddleporl Htll at the rate of
$2 25 a fool He asked counctl to
constder such a proJect from
the top of the htll down toward
Middleport The matter wtll be
further dtscussed al the next
meetmg

The mayor also reported that
the roof on village hallts m bad
conditiOn afld Will have to be
re placed He asked counctl to
remember that when they
constder th e next year 's
budge t A meellng was set for
June 19 to constder the next
year 's budget w1lh coun cil , the
board of pubhc affmrs and the
cemetery trustees bemg mvt ted to attend
Mrs James Brewer and Mrs
Lowell Pnce appea red before
council to complain abcJ\ll the
la ck of d1 tc hm g and th e
presence of sewer gas on lhe
street Allen Lee Ktn g also
spoke lo coun cil on the need of
a new

~~snow

fence11 at the end

of the pee wee held a l the
Middleport park , the need of
~\Uinging the one way _!ra.!Ju;
regulahons on Plum and
Broadway Sts , wbtch now both
go 1n the same direction , wtth
the matter referred to the
safely commtitee , the need for
more Improvements m the
dramage from the street near
hts home on Pearl, and the
need for restroom fac1ltttes lor
youngsters playing ball at the
Middleport park
Others attending the meeting
were Clerk· Treasurer Gene
Grate; Harold Chase, maintenance supervisor, and Pollee
Chtef J J Cremeans

PRICES IN EFFECT
A 01SCOUNT
Ot:PA RT M f. NT STOltI

MINATURE

Pt. Pleasant or Mason
l

GLASS
BOTTLES

Piece Set

Luggage
Womens Short Sets

$1-987

$594T $694

Jamaica or Short Shorts
MATCHING TOPS!

0

SET

IT'S PORTABLE!

JAMAICA or
SHORT SHORTS

SAFETY GUARDS!

$

SIZED

METAL
Batteries
25c

Value

llt

SWIM
SUITS
to

Womens and Teens

COMPARE AT$15.95

WINDOWS
OR
ON
FLOOR

FOR YOUR GffiLS

NOW- - FOR THE HOT DAYS!

20"" Electric Fan
~~E

~

Vamty Ca s e, 21 11
case , 24 "
ca~e.
Avacado or Charcoal
olor

Size 3

14

A WIDE SELECTION -

BIG VARIJ:TY

SERVICE FOR 4

WOMENS OR CHILDS

WOODEN

WOMENS COTTON

SWIM
RINGS

PICNIC
SET

CANVAS
OXFORDS

BALL
BATS

SPORT
SOCKS

INFLATABLE
VINYL

71¢

47¢

20PIECES
PLATES ,
TUMBLERS ETC.

SET

$1 ~R.

MADE
IN U.S.A.

FOR SOFfBALL
OR BASEBALL!

,~OPPERS

BE THRIFTY! VISIT YOUR

$}44

Package of 250

14 Qt. Preserving Kettle . .. . ~s2.99

MART! SAVE CASH

Fruit Jar FunneJ ..... . ...... 2~
Pint Size Aluminum Dipper 39'
12 Qt. Covered Sauce Pot ... s2.99
7,Jar ~oi~J,~ck ~anner .... .sug
''"l&lt;err" Milson J'ars .12 for 'D7''
'
2 Cup Measuring Cup ........ 29'

GIRLS TOPS

PAPER
NAPKINS
¢

Terry, cotton, nylon m short

sle~veless

or tank lop style Siles

sleeve,
3 to 14

GIRLS SHORTS
•

FOR

•

E~~RYDAY7 7 ¢ T ,$
0

CLEANUP!
PRINTED TERRY CLOTH

BEACH
TOWELS

JOQUARTSIZE

$ 57

FULL
SIZE!

SECONDS OF
$2 .98 VALUE!

$1.00 value

STYROFOAM

COOLER
CHEST

EA.

The Dai~ Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
Exec E~
ROJERT HOEFLICH.

Warrled

Plastic Ice Cube Trays
EASY TWIST OUT!
4
DAY
SALE!

MULTI-COLOR! 6 PANEL

BEACH
BALLS
LARGE
16" SIZE

Coming Loose?
Afraid !aloe

teeth will drop at the
wrooa; t1me" A de~ture adheaive can
help. FASTEETH• Powder awes
denturee a longer, firmer, stead1er
hold Why be embarruaed? For more
aecurlty and oomfod : use FA S·
TEETH Denture Adhrunve Powder
Dentum that fit are euent1al to
health See your dentlat re~:ularly

EA.

GIF1' Y()[JR FATHER WITH
'

EA.

SPORT SHIRTS
Permanent Press cotton blends or easy care

SHORT
SETS
$224TO $394

FALSE TEETH

gg~

DON'T FORGET
DAD!

GIRLS TWO PIECE

About

------.

PR.

TANK TOP or SLEEVELESS

·21X36 Braided Rug

Ctty Edtt9r
Published datly t Kcept
Saturday by The Ohto Valley
t:Jubt, shtng Company , 111
Court St
Pomeroy. Oh io
45769 Bu si ness Offt ce Phone
992 2156. Ed ltortal Phone 992
2157
Second class postage patd el
Pomeroy , On lo
Nat 1ona1 ad v ert 1s 1ng
representative
Bott•nell t
GaiiiOher . Inc, 12 Eas t 42nd
St , New York C1tv , New York
Subscr 1ptton rates
De
liv ered by carr 1er where
ava 1lable SO cenfs per week
Bv Motor Route where carr 1er
service not available One
month 11 15 By ma ll 1n Ohio
and W Va One year s1• 00
Snc months 17 2S Thr~e
months $4 SO Subscrlpt ron
prt ce 1ncludes Sunday Times
Senttnel

77t

WITH
POM·POM

kmls. A shirt for ~very Dad, regardl~ss of his
age or needs.

TO

$ 94

MEN'S GIFTS!

ALUMINUM

LAWN
CHAIRS
•

BLUELIME-

AVACA-$3

NUTMEGTANGERINE-

"DERBY"
T-SHIRTS
or

BRIEFS
WHITE COTTON ALL SIZES!

42
3.0~2

-

YOUTHS, BOYS, MENS

MENS OR LON

MENS VINYL

SUMMER
SANDALS

DRESS
SOCKS

DRESS
BELTS

•

ONE SIZE FITS 10-13

Boys Sizes$
Stol
MtDI Sizeti
7to12

77
PAIR

em:...

I
I

&amp;z~ ,.... 97.~
P•IR

' Brown·
Black

U..

Shoppers Mart - - - Mason, W. Va. or Pt. Pleasant

�"·• '

'

•
t

4-The Dally ~ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., June 13, 1m

to post his first success of 1m
after five appearances.
Blue ran into more hard luck
Monday night when the Balli·
more Orioles touched him for
three ground hall singles in the
eighth inning to produce the

1- The Dlll1y Sentinel, Middeport-Potneroy, 0., June 13, urn

~

· game's

. .,

victoryatteronlygivlngljp~ .

,

:m

the·Sports

Desk

*Today's

s

'/]Q
.

::r::

rt ·

de : : : :

T1ger
• · S Gr ah Lead

lndza• ns

czncy
•

Indians Win ·12-11

Father's Day Gift Guide

LEADING
BAITERS

QUALITY

_ _ _ _ _ _ _...,_,
By United Pross lnternatlonol:.
ludin• IIIHtrs
~~
Natlonii
league - ~
g. a~ r. h. P&lt;li&lt;
Stenet, Pit 33 107 17 38 .:15.{
Sngulln,St.L
Pit 48 11141
63 .JlS
.33(
Torre,
y4 21
27 65
1
50
Alou, St.L 47 l80 23 ~ .333:
Cedno,Hou 46 175 29 58 .331
Toln.Cin
.32.1•
Bck ner, LA 3494 194
117 39
15 63
38 .32t
Ollvr, Pit -48 205 , 28 66 .322,
Clmele, Pit 44 179 31 s7 . 31 ~
Carty, All 42 132 25 ~2 .31
American leoguo:
.
ab r. h. pc:t:
Pnlela, KC
189 32 ' 62 .328
Alln,Chl 48 171 30 56 .327
Rudi,oak 47 189 32 60 .317
AI mar, Cal 50 206 24 65 .316
May, Ch i 46 172 30 54 .314
Freehn, Del
34 119 20 36 .303
Pinsn,Cal AS 159 23 4ll .302
Braun,
Min 35
120 9 36 .300
Kelly,Chl
39 137 23 41 .399
Ollvr,Cal 49 197 25 58 .294
Home Runs
National league: Bench, Cin
15 , Stargell, Pill and . Kingman, ,
~~~ W~~:~~·. ~~u ~&gt;,aron, •
American League: Jackson, _
oak 12; Allen, Chi and Cash,
Del H: Duncan, oak 10;
Harper. Bos and Epstein. Oak
8'
Runs Battod In
National luguel Bench, Cln
and Stargell, ·Pitt ~ Kfngman,
SF 38; Oliver, Pill 37;
Simmons, St.l 36.
American league: Allen, Chi
40 ; Jackson, oak 35; May, Chi
30: OINer. Cal and Duncan,
Ook 28.
Pitching
National leoguo: Nolan, Cin
and Sutton.lA B-11 Seaver, NY
8-3; Ray, Hou and Blass, Pill 71; Osteen, LA 7-3; Nlekro, Atl
and Jenkins, Chi 7-S; Carlton,
Phil 1-6. ·
,

Back Scratchers
Clothes Brushes
Slipper Socks
Shoe Horns
Mustache Com
Shoe BuHs
ltnll1e Mitts

HERITAGE HOUSE
225 N. 2nd

Middleport, 0.

•
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Cincinnati Reds, one of the
hottest teams In the majors
today, open a 13-game home
stand, starting with a twl-night
doubleheader against
Philadelphia.
Bill Champion and Ken
Reynolds are slated to work for
the . Phlls against Jim
McGlothlin and Ross Grimsley.
The Phils are in for three
games, followed by N~w York
for three, then Montreal for

:-

..

Thursday Only!

RC COLA
8oz.

l~rance A&amp;ency .

Friday Only!

"

,.

s

~
·.

,

'

If_ '-~

REG.

I

doz.

SCOT LAD

lalrted

Banquet

Krlnkle

SPLITS

Apple and

-:.1

¢

59'
BAG

Cherry

DREAM
SICLES

Potatoes
2 lb. bag

12 pack

'29~

59~

PIES

BOX

TOMATO PASTE
6 oz.
6 cans '1.00

NORTHERN

HUNT'S

MILK
. ' . BALLS
"'

. "200' tl "
pkg.

49¢

¢

39e

CONTADINA

PORK &amp; BEANS
5-15¥2 oz. •1.00
cans

Whopper's Maned

Banquet.

ea.

PIZZA MIX

"''. ,

'• · · ~ ~··

69e

PRINGLE

FAYGO

POTATO
CHIPS

DIET
POP

::.n69¢

COFFEE-MATE
" ll Oz. ja[ ,,,,61)~.,

.

SCOT LAD

FRISKitS

CAT
SALTINE
CRACKERS :FOOD

8cans $1 3~!~ $1

.

.

REGULAR 11.0!1

.4 lb. bag &amp;r
20c Coupon off on

Ned purchase:

•

19
MUSTANG

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY A 10 OZ. JAR OF

6 cyl., 3 speed.

lutalt
IXIELL HOllE•
. ·coFFEE

'595
I
.
,Karr &amp;Van landt

"Yqu'll Like Our Qual/~·
Way of Doing Business. '
GMAC FINANCING
992-5342
lomoroy
ppen Evenlnn'TI/1:110 .
. I ,.
. T,I!.!_P.M. Sat.
. .•

l!~~al.

APPIAN WAY

FACIAL TISSUES
4 200
boxesct. '1 •00,

ICE MILK

lb.

LARGE EGGS
3 doz. •·1.00

SCOT LAD

and

Kut

JACK STilJ.. LEADS
J!.
NEW YORK (UPI)-Despl
sitting out the last ,two wur
naments , Jack •Nlcklau
continues to lead the PG
money winners llst for 1
with earnings of *1511,001.
Lee Trevino is second wit
*118,572 and Jerry Heard
third with $113,311. r

USED CARS ,

SLICED
BOLOGNA lb.

UNCLASSIFIED

MARK V FROZE1V FOOD FEATURES' '

3

6'

SUPE.RIORS

·viENNA SAUSAGE ·
IT'S
3cans~~
NEW!

lnterrwtlonal le~guo
Standings
United Press International ;.

2

PORK
NECK BONES

~ SMOKED OR BAR

POTATO
CHIPS

Large Unclassified

69~

1~
I I'

69e

SUPERIORS

89~

MR. BEE

EGGS

BOTS.

W. l. Pet. G.B~
30 25 .545 ·i•

lb.

FARM
SAUSAGE

16-

Det and Holtzman, oak 9-4;
Bahnsen, Chi 8·6.

2)

79e

is necessary..

Clev 10-4; Wood, Chi, Lollch,

24 .538
28 25 .528
26 25 ,510
27 26 .509
27 28 .491
26 31 .~
Penl~sula
23 31 .426
Mondoy's
ResultsI
Louisville 6 Richmond
Toledo 6 Peninsula 3
Charleston 3 Rochester 0
Syracuse 4 Tidewater 3

lb.

BALLARD'S

Perry,

28

..

"' No purchase

W

Louisville
Syracuse
Richmond
Charleston
Toli!&lt;Jo
TlcJewater
Rochester ·'

.

r

AT.

..New Home Grown. .

OFFFR FXPIRES

ON

6·17-72 -

LIMIT UNt
COUPON PER

CABBAGE ... .!~;.

FAMILY.

MARK v STORE

()IH

I

1 OIU,.)AR ONLY $1191

. !'
'I

('(1\JJ&gt;I,\:

,·Fresh Red Ripe

MaQic s1nng
49

PIA® RU~BER, GLOVES

..

TOMATOES

20 oz.

1&gt; . WITH

THIS
COUPON

lb.
bsk.

-

I
I

with I' FrH, Extro Right Hond
GlOve Froo.
_.
Rill
Wlllt
.1.4f
.
Coupon

·at$

4T MARK V

!

GOOD ONLY AT

MARK

..

vSTORE

OFFER-EXPIRES'· 6-11 LIMIT ONE COUPON PER PURCHASE

I

_

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

:·t,
'•

CONVEIIIEIT TEllS - flEE DIUYEIY

..•

BAKERIIOI!luon,
FURNITURE
0.
) . ·.

'•

..
'

'

:•
I'

~~:\

•

~

''

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY A. -8 OZ. 'J'AR OF

I

1.19

5

•. ,I

'
:

·'

I

I

'

.I

IIR!IZE·DRIED COFFEE
AT

I

MARK vSTORE

:

OZ. JAR ONLY

!

.~ 8·
l.

',•,

'

I

MAXI Me

I

I

•

•

I

\~-.t

79e

r -~-------~--------------J
- . :.; - - -:. . - - - - REcouP'ON'- - - - - _..,

STORE

,1 CoujMft Ptr Customor-E•plres •·17-72

.•

•

lb.

GROUND CHUCK

Ml DDLEPORT, 0.

Meia County's Oldest and 1.atgest

· 89e

· Store NowiJ

lb.

I

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS

Blank At Our

CHOPPED SIRLOIN

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
PHON I; 992-2342

pkg. ,

'

.

COOKOUT SPECIALS!

~Duffy.

three and Houston for four.
These are the same four · ~
clubs' which the Reds met on a
recently ·completed road trip,
losing only once In 12 games,
with that loss coming to New
York.
That road trip put the Reds
into.first place in the National
League West. They currently
stand I 1,) games ahead of
second place Los Angeles, with
'Houston two games back.
Montreal and New York are In
the Eastern Division.

Get Free Entry

.~

J·

Le1gue :

Hb.

SUPERIORS .
BONELESS PORK Superiors Assorted
CUTLETS STEAK LUNCH MEATS POLISH
SAUSAGE
.

PARIS, AMSTERDAM,
MADRID, BRUSSEl-S, LONDON, LISBON
.

f'-----------------,..j

edsOpenLong
Stand At Home

2 lb. 98e

-ALL MEAT

'

American

SLICED BACON

OUR
KEENER
WIENER

\

·- -

Superiors Budget

FRANKIE$

blast starter Paul H~• fr
·
Temple rallied In the Jut
the fourth to go ahead
however. The only oth_
. Connecticut scan came ln· .
eighth when · CharUe 1f«a !
.,;alked and wu doubled In b \
''Tolin lhlenburg.
·
i

MEAT MONEY-SAVERS

SUPERIORS

the mound.

:w: lit

1.:.

Operated)

"

A •
St t
~B·lna.znoknsa UTT~~e3
o·
ir:~a?~~i
=
..:J \..J
•

only run ·in a JoG ran for him. Andy Etchebarren By United Press Intern• tiona I
.
'
conquest of the Oakland Athie. then beat out a hit to deep ahort
· National leogue
tics. It was Blue's thin! IIJO!S, and after winning pitcher Pat
East
By CHARLES WIESER
Devils was the fourth when
and In the 2$ innings he has Dobson struck out trying to Pittsburgh
;;· 1 ~ pet. g.b.
OMAHA, Neb. (UPI)-The Gary Atwell beat out a bunt
worked this season his UBUally bunt, Don Buford stroked his New York
33 18
four survivors of the NCAA .single~~ was tripled home by
productive teanunates have game-winning hit just beyood Chicago
27 21 .~3 4'12 College World · Series- AI BaMister and. Cli!!t Myers
provided him wlt'l only a single the reach of shorlatop Bert ~on~~!~
~ ·~ ·442 J~v, including · unbeaien and then singled hOII!e Bannister.
!'~•--------------~~~~ run."I'm pleased with the way 1 Campaneris.
Philadelphia 20 30 ::
l2'l2 favored Ari2ona Slate"&lt;&lt;llide
The victory went to ·jim
Norm Cash and Mickey
W.St
here
tonight as
the Crawford, now 13-1, while
· ·'
pitched tonight," said the Stanley hit home r!lns to
Mark Sogge picked up his
3~· 1 ~ pet. g.b. eUminations continue.
composed youngster, who provide all the scoring for ~~~c~~~ae\~s 31 22 :~~ w, SoTethxas Ca(lif2·l) . takes on second loss of the season
missed more than a mooth of Detroit and Joe Nlekfo and Hooston
30 22 .577 2
u ern
. orma (2-1), with against five triumphs.
24
the season 88 a holdout. "T.his Fred Scherman combined on Atlanta
26 .480 7
the loser to bow out; while
T~s and Oklahoma fought
Diego co 17
34
.333
14'1&gt; Ar'
Slate ('""'") Iackles evenly until. the six th whe n
lias been the first time I put my an 11-hltter against Minnesota. San
San Franci
18
39
.316
16'12
tzona
5
fastball where 1 wanted to
Don Mincher drove In four
Monday'sResuHs
Temple (2-1).
MikeMarklbrokeal·1tiewith
By Chet Tannehill
throughout. the complete runs with &amp;'homer, double and Atlanta 8 New York 7
In action Monday, the Sun a bases loaded single. Two
Hou5ton
Devils from Ari.' zona State more runs came for th e
game."
.
ground ou t a nd Milte Pa ul • St.
Lollis 33Montreal
los Ang I2,
The game a~ Oakland was starting only his second game
(Only games scheduled)
blanked a tough Southern · Longhorns in the seventh.
Loyal members of the Ohio Association for the Promotion of wltn~ by a crowd o£.50,182, of the year, pitched seven
Today's Probable Pitchers
California club 34l, Temple
i!ane Grubbs who left in the
·
th
d
1
·
to.
th
1a
~
·
the
Calif
innings
of
two-hit
hall
as
Texas
I
All
Jlmes
EDT)
eliminated
Connecticut
7-4
and
seventh,
gained credit for the
Bullfrogs Inc. numbering m e ozens, no ess, are preparmg
e rge_. m nor rn
orSan Diego 1Kirby J.6) at T
ted Oklaho
roll out a red . carpet Friday in Pomeroy for Mr. Assalam nia's 1keason ma/or league beat Milwaukee in a battle of Chicago (Jenkins 7-Sl. 2:30p.m. exas ous
rna 7-1. victory to boost his season
AleilpunofTripoli,LibyanArabllepubllc.lhaveitstralghtfrom history. In addition to the at- division cellar~wellers.
San FranciscoiMcDowell·6·4)
EUiot "Bump" Wills, son of mark to 3·0. Stan Meek,
21 8: OS Los Angeles infielder Maury finishing the season at 4-2, lost
·
of
Bl
th
f
•-Tommie
Agree
dropped
a
at
Pittsburgh
(Moose
3·
the Frog's mouth (better here the frog's mouth than the horse's) traction
ue, e ans a...,
pm
lis
that Aleikum indeed will be on hand with his jumping frog which, were enticed by "Family routine fly ball, allowing ·los ·Angeles (John 5-3) at St. Wi • was a big gun in Arizona
Ernie Wright was the hero in
as advertised, will have been julted up 011 8 steady regimen of Night," for . which they were Darrell Evans to score the Louis (Spinks 3-21. 9 p.m.
State's attack with his solid Temple's triumph over Con8,-31 , g~ hitting. He tripled in the fifth necticut, slamming three ' hils
ills.
These
pills,
Alelkum
claimed
in
an
earlier,
notorious
letter,
admitted
at
baH
price.
winning
run
in
the
eighth
inAt~a"n~a
Yfs~hu~~::ver_
)
1 8
P
. 18ed
ning as Atlanta ra!Ued for four
and singled in the eighth.
and drlvmg· in four runs.
Game Telev
rids the critter of halitosis and makes him jump higher and
p.m.
lri
a
nationally
televised
runs
to
beat
the
Mets.
As
a
HMo
ntreai
Dnkorrez
5)·3)
at
The
big
inning
for
the
Sun
GeraldKerrigan,whohurled
farther.
1on 1 ler er 5-J • 8:30
result,
the
Mets
wasted
home
ous
Sports Desk is totally convinced the Aleikum letters- first game, th e Detro It Tigers
· Pm
one askjng about the jumps and warning of the pill; now one . maintained their ·one-game runs by John Milner, Wayne . Philadelphia (Champion 43 ·:·&gt;:·~·:·ir:·:·&gt;:-&gt;:·:·:&lt;·&gt;:·:·:·:&lt;•·::•·•·:·:·:·;;;·:·&lt;:·:·:&lt;·:·:·:·:·&gt;:·:·:·:·:···:·:·:·::;,;·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:&lt;·:·:·:·:·:::i'
. g' to my formal tongue~n-eheek invitation to the local first place lead over Baltimore Garrett, Rusty Staub and Ken and Reynolds J. l) at Cincinnati =~K ;:;«:l:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::~:!i~~::;:;:~;:;:;:;:;:,:;~:~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:;:;:;:;~;:;:;:::;l:;:::;:;:;:~;:;:::;:?-;:?.1:~-;;l
replytl1
in the East Division by edging Boswell and fell into second !McGlothlin 3-4and Grimsley 2· &lt;:::~
.
,,.,.,.,
5'e30
jumps- is a low caliber hoax of the most clumsy variety. the Minnesota Twins, 2-1, and place in the National League 11. 2·w
d p.m. , Ga
· us, thoug h• whiChis that Atty • in ·the only other American
· East, six percentage points San Di~oliesday
s mes
':·.:::•
::::;:;:
There •s one thin g that ts· bu ggmg
at Chicago-·;:;:;::;
:&gt;
••:.: .: .
....
Fr
J
Fred Crow, the mastermind behind the Regatta og umps, League game the Texas flim- behind idle ~ttsburgh.
Phila at inci., night
::::::\
~
probably Is the world champion practical joker. Being so clever gers beat the Milwaukee
Lou Brock singled home Da1 SNanFYrankat tPAit1t,s., n, ight
:;:;:;3
o PO :::::::;
.
ull
ew or a
an a, ntght
::::::~
.
0. U
·:·:·:·;
l
- and unprincipled - he wou d not be caught dead trymg toP
Brewers, 7-1.
Maxvill from second hase with Montreal at Houston, night
;:;;:;:;
B MII.:""'N RICIIMA
· :;:;:;:,
off sueh a ridiculous stunt.
In an abbreviated National the winning run for St. Louis in Los Ang at St. Louis, night
::::::::
Y
'1 v
N
::::::::
T:lat being so, are there any circumstances that could hsve League schedule, the Atlanta ~:v!~~d lnn(~g) =t:~:
American league
.:-.r.:
UPI Sports Writer
driven him to such machinations as to foist this nebulous ap- Braves overcame the New
paril'•Jn of Assalam Aleikumarrlving by Boeing 107 from Tripoli York Mets, 11-7, the St. Louis Dodgers to four hits. Cleveland
East
PEBBLE BEACH, Ca!H. (UPI)- That's what I like ahout the
onto theGallia-Meigslandingstrlp toting a frog who, for lack of a Cardinals edged the Los An· allowed three of the hits in the. Detroit
2~' 21i ~~j g. b. U.S. Open. All the warmth and sentiment it has.
better name, we herewith ahall dub Mohammed XLII?
geles Dodgers, 3-2, and the third inning w~en Los Angeles ' Baltimore
26 22 .542 1
Like nothing.
22
23
489
1
3
No Immediate answer is forthcoming to that question. The Houston Astros beat the Mon- scored both of its runs. . tw Cleveland
'
Or as Scrooge said when they asked him what he thought about
Boston
20 24 .455
5' '
Tommy Helms ilrove m 0 New
York
20 28 .m 7
Christmas-bah, humbug.
Frog Jumps this Friday and Saturday on the old Pomeroy High !real Expos, 3-1.
16 JO .348 lO
Schoolfootball field In connection with the Pomeroy-Middleport
Dave Johnson started Balli- runs with a single and a Milwa ukee
The truth is that all the entrants in the U.S. Open want to wjn it
·
•
in
·
11
·
t
sacrifice
fly
and
Jerry
Reuss
West
Regatta Weekend have excellent pros.,.,.ts. Competition will be more s w mng ra Y agams
1 1
b for the same reason, and that is to be rich and famous . For those
keen. The entry list is long. Dark fr~~ (read as horses) are Blue with a ground single to pitched a five-hitter as Houston oakland
J~· 1i ~8 g. · whomayhavewon the U.S. Open beforeandalready are rich and
30
18 ·625 3 famous, the reason they 'd like to win it again is to become even
numerous. For the first time the Grand Croaker in charge is left field and Mark Belanger beat Montreal.
CMhicagot
.
~nneso a
26 20 .565 6
considering seedings. Contesting frogs, leaned down to jumping
California
23 27 .460 11
more rich and famous .
trim on a number of secret ponds out in the county betwixt our
Kansas City 21 27 .438 12
Billy Casper is one of those who has won it before. Twice, in
Texas
21
30 .412 13'1&gt;
hills are raring to go. Even the jockeys are In training. I had one
Monday's Results
fact.
report that 275 lb . 6-4 Crow himseU was detected jogging
Texas 7 Milwaukee I .
The last time he did was six years ago just up the road from
surreptitiously around the perimeter of his estate in Syracuse
Detroit 2 Minnesota 1
here in San Francisco.
The Tigers took over first single, double, and triple; Baltimore I Oakland 0
late one night last week.
Bl .
Q 11
J'
(Only games scheduled)
Everybody remembers that U.S. Open victory by Billy Casper
What then is the reality of Mr. Assalam Alelkum? Judge for place in Pomeroy BDys'
a me
ua s · and
tm
Today's Probable Pitchers
because he came from way hack to beat Arnold Palmer who had
f 'k , League action Monday with a Rosenbaum a double each, and
I All Times EDT)
yourself, perhaps \ from this verhstim production o A1et urns 5-2 win over the Yankees and Jimmer Soulsby and Jeff
Baltimore (Cuellar 3-5) at the thing all wrapped up.
second and last letter :
Couch each a single
· Oakland !Odom 3-ll. 11 p.m.
So you'd think Billy Casper would have some mellow memories
Arabic Letters(????) the Giants won theirfirst game
. .
·
Cleveland I Perry 10-4) at about coming back to this particular neck of the woods. You'd
of the season, defeating the
Williams went all the way on California (May 1-4), 11 p.m.
June 6• 1972 winless Pirates, 17-14.
the hill for the Giants to fan
Detroit (Timmerman 4-4) at think he 'd be thinking how happy he had been to beat Palmer in
Dear M. Tannehill, Editor:
The 3-G Tigers were led at the nine and walked three. For the Minnesota IBlyleven 7-4). 8: JO the 1966 Open, and eventually everybody else that year, to finish
Me pleased with your letter. I need interruvter and not quite plate by Randy Marshall with Pirates, Mike Triplett and P-;:;ilwaukee Lockwood 2-6) at first in money winnings.
1
understand what you say.
two singles and a double. Dale Bt;owning combined to strike Texas (Broberg 4-4) , 8:30 p.m.
What Was He Tblnklng?
Anyhow me pleased that you Invite ine to Frog Jump. I will Browning added two singles out nine and walk seven.
Chica~o (Wood 9-4) at New
So what was Billy Casper thinking as he came back to this part
bring !rog with pills. From what you writ pill help you. Me plan to and Bob McClure had a single.
In a Boys' League game ;,\';;k 1 tottlemyre S-7), 7:lO of the country?
lJe In Pomeroy, J\11\0 \1\h. Me later WTlte when c:omln&amp;. Will be In ,.. For the Yankees, Hood had a played last Thursdijy , the
Kansas City I Spllltorff 4-4) at
"Nothing," he says. ,"Really nothing." .
Pomeroy day before Frog Jump.
home run and Smith and Little Tigers defeated the Giants 19- Boston IPattin 2·7), 7:30 p.m.
"You mean yoo weren't thinking about that U.S. Open in;San
'
Wednesday's Games
.
ll
Yours Truly, Assalam Aleikum. each contributed a single.
9·
Kan City af Boston, night
Franctscoata ?" oneofthelocatwritersproddedhim.
(I appreciate being told something even my best friend won 'I
Browning went the full six
The hitters lor the Tigers Chicago at New York, night
"That was San Francisco, this is Monterey," he said about the
disclose. Do bring the pill, AsSBiam.)
innings on the mound for the were Browning, two doubles Milwaukee at Texas, night
two places which are only 126 mlles apart. "Besides, that was a
at Minn., night
See what I mean? Ridicuious, of course, beyond all Ti gers an d fanned 17 whi! e and a single·, Dave ·Blake, Detroit
Bait at oakland, night
num~r of years ago."
reasonable doubt.
.
walking none . Greg Smith three singles; Marshall, single Cleveland at Cal if., night
Billy Casper, who hasn't won anything lately, isnt particularly
Nevertheless, Crow being Crow, I'm going to be ready. A hurled the distance for the and home run; Rich Johnson ,
lookingforwardtothisOpenwhichbegilishereThursday.
• camera and team of interviewers will be poised for Assalam's Yankees and struck out 12 and two home runs ; McClure,
"If you're playing well, you look forward to something like
a•rlval Friday. Managements of UPI, AP, Sports lliustra!A!d, walked three.
single and double; Kelly Hawk,
this, but if you don't have a good swing going, you don't," says
Sporting News, and the Frog Bulletin (a weekly) will be alerted.
In the Giant-Pirate slugfest single and triple; Donnie
Casper. "I'm not enthused."
He looks it, too.
Come on Assalam! We're ready. And for Gosh Sakes don't Brian Hamilton Jed the ·vic· Eisenhower, two singles, and
torious Giants with two singles Danny Morris, a double.
~O'JJ.rple
forget the pills!
"How badly have you been playing?" someone else asked
.
For th e Gtants,
Hamilton had
A CERTAIN L'ONTENDER for jumping honors will be the and two home runs, one roundtripper a grand slam. David a double and home run,
Casper..
frog, "Blue Devil" jockeyed Saturday oo the Marauder football Harris added a single and Williams, two singles, and
"I played very well for the firsl32 holes at Charlotte," he said,
green by Bob Marchi of GaUipolis, a sports fan of the most im· double, Jeff Grueser and AI Grueser, Cleland, and Harris,
"and .Uke a spastic over the last 40."
peccable credentials.
· 1e.
"What's the trouble•"
Seth each had two singles, and eac h a smg
There are reports that at least two old Pomeroy High grads Steve Dienier and Scott
McClure and Mar1hall CLEVELAND (UPI) _
Billy Casper sighed.
will enter Frogs, one to be named Panther I, the other Panther II. William had a single apiece. comb10
. ed to fan II an d wa lk Those pesky Cleveland In"Old ag~," he S81'd.
What a three-way race that'll make, Blue Devil vs a couple of
For the Pirates, Doug eight for the Tigers while dians, holding down third spot
"How old are you?"
Pal)thers!
'
Browning had two singles and Grueser fanned five and in the American League East,
"Forty ... one," he answered.
Meanwhile, the Ethics Committee of the Ohio Association for a home run , Randy Roach a walked ten for the Giants.
stopped the high.flying Cin.
He'sRuablngThlngs
the Promotion of Bullfrogs Is looking into charges that Marchi's
cinnati Reds, leading the wild
Casper won't be 41 for another two weeks so actually he's
actual mission this Saturday is something other than any success
National League West.
rushing things a little, but he knows he isn't playing well and like
of Blue Devil in the jumping pits.
But Cleveland's 5-I win Mon· he says, when you're playing that way it's hard to get excited
Marchi, it is widely known, moonlights as scout for Coach C.
day night was only in fun, and about your chances.
The Indians remained un- and Roger "Carson each a
L. (Johnny) Ecker's Blue Devil football team. Could It be that
not for the official standings.
"Maybe it's this," a guy who knew him said, pointing to
defeated
in three games with a single .
Bob is using the big Frog Jumps as a mere screen for an opPitcher
Ray
Lamb
singled
Casper's
middle which isn't as flat as it was some ~e ago.
For the Braves, Dave Smith
portunity to test Mr. Charley Chancey's grldtrun turf, looking thrilling 12-11 win over the
home Frank Duffy with the "That isn't it," said Casper. "I was much heavier when I was
forward to that momenwus date, Nov. 3 next, when two great Braves in seven Innings and had two triples, Steve Fife a winning run in the bottom of playing much better."
the Reds won their first game, triple, and Dodson had a single.
grid elevens will battle in Marauder Stadium?
Over in another corner of the lncker room, Chi Chi Rodriguez
6-5, over the Mets in MidIn the Reds-Mets battle, the the ninth in the game the two
dleporl Boys' League play Reds rallied for four runs in the teams played for the·benefit of · talked about Jack NicklaUB as he put his clubs Into his bag.
"He's tough to beat on any course but put him on a course like
Monday.
sixth inning to lake their first sandlot baseball.
About the only thing it proves this, with the rough the way it is, and he's Invincible," Rodriguez
The brothers Tony and Mark win. Gum and Casey hurled for
is
that the ball players- from said.
.
Venoy, along with Keith Lynch the Reds with Gum getting the
Chi Chi's locker here is situated only a few feet off the men's
For : Ta II Daddies , Short hurled for the Indians with win. Together, they fanned 10 different leagues and opposite
Daddies and Fat Daddies.
Mark Venoy getting the win. and walked eight. Kevin ends of the state -care about room and from there he commands an unobstructed view into the
Together, they fanned seven Yauger pitched all the way for the youngsters. Proceeds of the john.
game go to help youngsters
and walked eight. Tim Ebers· the Mels, striking out 10 and lay on better diamonds with
"It doesn't bother you, your locker being here~" he was asked.
P
bach and Brett Dodson toed the issuing one free ticket.
'
Nab,"
be said. "It could be worse."
equipment.
mound for the Braves and
Hitters for the Reds were better
The win was the second time
That's what you have to like about the U.S. Open.
Dodson was charged with the Stewart and Gum each with a this year the Tribe has beaten
All that warmth and sentiment.
loss. Comblned,they struck out home run, Carmichael a triple,
seven and walked 12.
and Casey a double. The Met Cincinnati in exhibition games
this season.
/
Hitters for the Indians were hitters were Doss with a single
Ray Fosse pinch singled in
Crlnson Pratt with a triple and and double while . Mowery,
the
fifth inning to drive it) two
two singles, Rich Hovatter a Becker, and Yauger all had one
runs to give Cleveland a 4-1 SANCHEZ TO YANKS
triple, Kelvin Lee a double, and · sing.le.
NEW YORK (UPI )-Thin!
lead.
Terry
Gardner,
Roy
Bareswilt,
MeAn Shoes &amp;
George Foster belted a two- baseman Celertno Sanchez, a
~oots28-year-old r90kie, was due to .
run homer in the seventh, and
join the New York Yankees
Hal McRae tied It In the top of
Boat Shoes
tonight for their game against
the ninth with a home run.
Tennis Shoes
the
Ollcago White Sox.
Duffy opened the ninth with a
House Slippers
Sanchez, a .368 hitter with
single to center, and scooted to
Men's Hose
third when Cesar Geronimo the Mexico. City Tigers last
lost the ball 'ln center, and was year, was batting .329 at
.Novelty Gifts
charged with a two-base error. SyraCf!se of the International
Shoe Shine Kits
Lamp promptly singled to League this season )l'ior to his
( Electri : &amp; Battery
·call froiD the Yanketlll.

,.. .

'·

the l.ut $ ~..s lnnlnp, took the:

Blue Drops 1-0 Battle
BY MARTIN LADER
UPI Sports Writer
Vida Blue, who couldn't
seem to Jose last year when he
won 24 games and the Cy
Young award as the American
League's best pitcher, has yet

-

.

.

.

$}39' ~~T~PON

L- -O!~U!Ofi_PII_f!I~·.!.Ff!!fHI!SJ·l:l

~

-- ---'

..
.

.

iUPER MA.8.~ET.. We• 9pen_
~ ·' .to .10 • Sun.
Accept Federal FOOd Stamps . .
PHONE: M2·3480

. P
Comer Mill and Sec~..Jts. "W~ li1esme The Right To Lim.it Ouantities" "'tDDLE, ORT, o.

f

�"·• '

'

•
t

4-The Dally ~ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., June 13, 1m

to post his first success of 1m
after five appearances.
Blue ran into more hard luck
Monday night when the Balli·
more Orioles touched him for
three ground hall singles in the
eighth inning to produce the

1- The Dlll1y Sentinel, Middeport-Potneroy, 0., June 13, urn

~

· game's

. .,

victoryatteronlygivlngljp~ .

,

:m

the·Sports

Desk

*Today's

s

'/]Q
.

::r::

rt ·

de : : : :

T1ger
• · S Gr ah Lead

lndza• ns

czncy
•

Indians Win ·12-11

Father's Day Gift Guide

LEADING
BAITERS

QUALITY

_ _ _ _ _ _ _...,_,
By United Pross lnternatlonol:.
ludin• IIIHtrs
~~
Natlonii
league - ~
g. a~ r. h. P&lt;li&lt;
Stenet, Pit 33 107 17 38 .:15.{
Sngulln,St.L
Pit 48 11141
63 .JlS
.33(
Torre,
y4 21
27 65
1
50
Alou, St.L 47 l80 23 ~ .333:
Cedno,Hou 46 175 29 58 .331
Toln.Cin
.32.1•
Bck ner, LA 3494 194
117 39
15 63
38 .32t
Ollvr, Pit -48 205 , 28 66 .322,
Clmele, Pit 44 179 31 s7 . 31 ~
Carty, All 42 132 25 ~2 .31
American leoguo:
.
ab r. h. pc:t:
Pnlela, KC
189 32 ' 62 .328
Alln,Chl 48 171 30 56 .327
Rudi,oak 47 189 32 60 .317
AI mar, Cal 50 206 24 65 .316
May, Ch i 46 172 30 54 .314
Freehn, Del
34 119 20 36 .303
Pinsn,Cal AS 159 23 4ll .302
Braun,
Min 35
120 9 36 .300
Kelly,Chl
39 137 23 41 .399
Ollvr,Cal 49 197 25 58 .294
Home Runs
National league: Bench, Cin
15 , Stargell, Pill and . Kingman, ,
~~~ W~~:~~·. ~~u ~&gt;,aron, •
American League: Jackson, _
oak 12; Allen, Chi and Cash,
Del H: Duncan, oak 10;
Harper. Bos and Epstein. Oak
8'
Runs Battod In
National luguel Bench, Cln
and Stargell, ·Pitt ~ Kfngman,
SF 38; Oliver, Pill 37;
Simmons, St.l 36.
American league: Allen, Chi
40 ; Jackson, oak 35; May, Chi
30: OINer. Cal and Duncan,
Ook 28.
Pitching
National leoguo: Nolan, Cin
and Sutton.lA B-11 Seaver, NY
8-3; Ray, Hou and Blass, Pill 71; Osteen, LA 7-3; Nlekro, Atl
and Jenkins, Chi 7-S; Carlton,
Phil 1-6. ·
,

Back Scratchers
Clothes Brushes
Slipper Socks
Shoe Horns
Mustache Com
Shoe BuHs
ltnll1e Mitts

HERITAGE HOUSE
225 N. 2nd

Middleport, 0.

•
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Cincinnati Reds, one of the
hottest teams In the majors
today, open a 13-game home
stand, starting with a twl-night
doubleheader against
Philadelphia.
Bill Champion and Ken
Reynolds are slated to work for
the . Phlls against Jim
McGlothlin and Ross Grimsley.
The Phils are in for three
games, followed by N~w York
for three, then Montreal for

:-

..

Thursday Only!

RC COLA
8oz.

l~rance A&amp;ency .

Friday Only!

"

,.

s

~
·.

,

'

If_ '-~

REG.

I

doz.

SCOT LAD

lalrted

Banquet

Krlnkle

SPLITS

Apple and

-:.1

¢

59'
BAG

Cherry

DREAM
SICLES

Potatoes
2 lb. bag

12 pack

'29~

59~

PIES

BOX

TOMATO PASTE
6 oz.
6 cans '1.00

NORTHERN

HUNT'S

MILK
. ' . BALLS
"'

. "200' tl "
pkg.

49¢

¢

39e

CONTADINA

PORK &amp; BEANS
5-15¥2 oz. •1.00
cans

Whopper's Maned

Banquet.

ea.

PIZZA MIX

"''. ,

'• · · ~ ~··

69e

PRINGLE

FAYGO

POTATO
CHIPS

DIET
POP

::.n69¢

COFFEE-MATE
" ll Oz. ja[ ,,,,61)~.,

.

SCOT LAD

FRISKitS

CAT
SALTINE
CRACKERS :FOOD

8cans $1 3~!~ $1

.

.

REGULAR 11.0!1

.4 lb. bag &amp;r
20c Coupon off on

Ned purchase:

•

19
MUSTANG

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY A 10 OZ. JAR OF

6 cyl., 3 speed.

lutalt
IXIELL HOllE•
. ·coFFEE

'595
I
.
,Karr &amp;Van landt

"Yqu'll Like Our Qual/~·
Way of Doing Business. '
GMAC FINANCING
992-5342
lomoroy
ppen Evenlnn'TI/1:110 .
. I ,.
. T,I!.!_P.M. Sat.
. .•

l!~~al.

APPIAN WAY

FACIAL TISSUES
4 200
boxesct. '1 •00,

ICE MILK

lb.

LARGE EGGS
3 doz. •·1.00

SCOT LAD

and

Kut

JACK STilJ.. LEADS
J!.
NEW YORK (UPI)-Despl
sitting out the last ,two wur
naments , Jack •Nlcklau
continues to lead the PG
money winners llst for 1
with earnings of *1511,001.
Lee Trevino is second wit
*118,572 and Jerry Heard
third with $113,311. r

USED CARS ,

SLICED
BOLOGNA lb.

UNCLASSIFIED

MARK V FROZE1V FOOD FEATURES' '

3

6'

SUPE.RIORS

·viENNA SAUSAGE ·
IT'S
3cans~~
NEW!

lnterrwtlonal le~guo
Standings
United Press International ;.

2

PORK
NECK BONES

~ SMOKED OR BAR

POTATO
CHIPS

Large Unclassified

69~

1~
I I'

69e

SUPERIORS

89~

MR. BEE

EGGS

BOTS.

W. l. Pet. G.B~
30 25 .545 ·i•

lb.

FARM
SAUSAGE

16-

Det and Holtzman, oak 9-4;
Bahnsen, Chi 8·6.

2)

79e

is necessary..

Clev 10-4; Wood, Chi, Lollch,

24 .538
28 25 .528
26 25 ,510
27 26 .509
27 28 .491
26 31 .~
Penl~sula
23 31 .426
Mondoy's
ResultsI
Louisville 6 Richmond
Toledo 6 Peninsula 3
Charleston 3 Rochester 0
Syracuse 4 Tidewater 3

lb.

BALLARD'S

Perry,

28

..

"' No purchase

W

Louisville
Syracuse
Richmond
Charleston
Toli!&lt;Jo
TlcJewater
Rochester ·'

.

r

AT.

..New Home Grown. .

OFFFR FXPIRES

ON

6·17-72 -

LIMIT UNt
COUPON PER

CABBAGE ... .!~;.

FAMILY.

MARK v STORE

()IH

I

1 OIU,.)AR ONLY $1191

. !'
'I

('(1\JJ&gt;I,\:

,·Fresh Red Ripe

MaQic s1nng
49

PIA® RU~BER, GLOVES

..

TOMATOES

20 oz.

1&gt; . WITH

THIS
COUPON

lb.
bsk.

-

I
I

with I' FrH, Extro Right Hond
GlOve Froo.
_.
Rill
Wlllt
.1.4f
.
Coupon

·at$

4T MARK V

!

GOOD ONLY AT

MARK

..

vSTORE

OFFER-EXPIRES'· 6-11 LIMIT ONE COUPON PER PURCHASE

I

_

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

:·t,
'•

CONVEIIIEIT TEllS - flEE DIUYEIY

..•

BAKERIIOI!luon,
FURNITURE
0.
) . ·.

'•

..
'

'

:•
I'

~~:\

•

~

''

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY A. -8 OZ. 'J'AR OF

I

1.19

5

•. ,I

'
:

·'

I

I

'

.I

IIR!IZE·DRIED COFFEE
AT

I

MARK vSTORE

:

OZ. JAR ONLY

!

.~ 8·
l.

',•,

'

I

MAXI Me

I

I

•

•

I

\~-.t

79e

r -~-------~--------------J
- . :.; - - -:. . - - - - REcouP'ON'- - - - - _..,

STORE

,1 CoujMft Ptr Customor-E•plres •·17-72

.•

•

lb.

GROUND CHUCK

Ml DDLEPORT, 0.

Meia County's Oldest and 1.atgest

· 89e

· Store NowiJ

lb.

I

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS

Blank At Our

CHOPPED SIRLOIN

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
PHON I; 992-2342

pkg. ,

'

.

COOKOUT SPECIALS!

~Duffy.

three and Houston for four.
These are the same four · ~
clubs' which the Reds met on a
recently ·completed road trip,
losing only once In 12 games,
with that loss coming to New
York.
That road trip put the Reds
into.first place in the National
League West. They currently
stand I 1,) games ahead of
second place Los Angeles, with
'Houston two games back.
Montreal and New York are In
the Eastern Division.

Get Free Entry

.~

J·

Le1gue :

Hb.

SUPERIORS .
BONELESS PORK Superiors Assorted
CUTLETS STEAK LUNCH MEATS POLISH
SAUSAGE
.

PARIS, AMSTERDAM,
MADRID, BRUSSEl-S, LONDON, LISBON
.

f'-----------------,..j

edsOpenLong
Stand At Home

2 lb. 98e

-ALL MEAT

'

American

SLICED BACON

OUR
KEENER
WIENER

\

·- -

Superiors Budget

FRANKIE$

blast starter Paul H~• fr
·
Temple rallied In the Jut
the fourth to go ahead
however. The only oth_
. Connecticut scan came ln· .
eighth when · CharUe 1f«a !
.,;alked and wu doubled In b \
''Tolin lhlenburg.
·
i

MEAT MONEY-SAVERS

SUPERIORS

the mound.

:w: lit

1.:.

Operated)

"

A •
St t
~B·lna.znoknsa UTT~~e3
o·
ir:~a?~~i
=
..:J \..J
•

only run ·in a JoG ran for him. Andy Etchebarren By United Press Intern• tiona I
.
'
conquest of the Oakland Athie. then beat out a hit to deep ahort
· National leogue
tics. It was Blue's thin! IIJO!S, and after winning pitcher Pat
East
By CHARLES WIESER
Devils was the fourth when
and In the 2$ innings he has Dobson struck out trying to Pittsburgh
;;· 1 ~ pet. g.b.
OMAHA, Neb. (UPI)-The Gary Atwell beat out a bunt
worked this season his UBUally bunt, Don Buford stroked his New York
33 18
four survivors of the NCAA .single~~ was tripled home by
productive teanunates have game-winning hit just beyood Chicago
27 21 .~3 4'12 College World · Series- AI BaMister and. Cli!!t Myers
provided him wlt'l only a single the reach of shorlatop Bert ~on~~!~
~ ·~ ·442 J~v, including · unbeaien and then singled hOII!e Bannister.
!'~•--------------~~~~ run."I'm pleased with the way 1 Campaneris.
Philadelphia 20 30 ::
l2'l2 favored Ari2ona Slate"&lt;&lt;llide
The victory went to ·jim
Norm Cash and Mickey
W.St
here
tonight as
the Crawford, now 13-1, while
· ·'
pitched tonight," said the Stanley hit home r!lns to
Mark Sogge picked up his
3~· 1 ~ pet. g.b. eUminations continue.
composed youngster, who provide all the scoring for ~~~c~~~ae\~s 31 22 :~~ w, SoTethxas Ca(lif2·l) . takes on second loss of the season
missed more than a mooth of Detroit and Joe Nlekfo and Hooston
30 22 .577 2
u ern
. orma (2-1), with against five triumphs.
24
the season 88 a holdout. "T.his Fred Scherman combined on Atlanta
26 .480 7
the loser to bow out; while
T~s and Oklahoma fought
Diego co 17
34
.333
14'1&gt; Ar'
Slate ('""'") Iackles evenly until. the six th whe n
lias been the first time I put my an 11-hltter against Minnesota. San
San Franci
18
39
.316
16'12
tzona
5
fastball where 1 wanted to
Don Mincher drove In four
Monday'sResuHs
Temple (2-1).
MikeMarklbrokeal·1tiewith
By Chet Tannehill
throughout. the complete runs with &amp;'homer, double and Atlanta 8 New York 7
In action Monday, the Sun a bases loaded single. Two
Hou5ton
Devils from Ari.' zona State more runs came for th e
game."
.
ground ou t a nd Milte Pa ul • St.
Lollis 33Montreal
los Ang I2,
The game a~ Oakland was starting only his second game
(Only games scheduled)
blanked a tough Southern · Longhorns in the seventh.
Loyal members of the Ohio Association for the Promotion of wltn~ by a crowd o£.50,182, of the year, pitched seven
Today's Probable Pitchers
California club 34l, Temple
i!ane Grubbs who left in the
·
th
d
1
·
to.
th
1a
~
·
the
Calif
innings
of
two-hit
hall
as
Texas
I
All
Jlmes
EDT)
eliminated
Connecticut
7-4
and
seventh,
gained credit for the
Bullfrogs Inc. numbering m e ozens, no ess, are preparmg
e rge_. m nor rn
orSan Diego 1Kirby J.6) at T
ted Oklaho
roll out a red . carpet Friday in Pomeroy for Mr. Assalam nia's 1keason ma/or league beat Milwaukee in a battle of Chicago (Jenkins 7-Sl. 2:30p.m. exas ous
rna 7-1. victory to boost his season
AleilpunofTripoli,LibyanArabllepubllc.lhaveitstralghtfrom history. In addition to the at- division cellar~wellers.
San FranciscoiMcDowell·6·4)
EUiot "Bump" Wills, son of mark to 3·0. Stan Meek,
21 8: OS Los Angeles infielder Maury finishing the season at 4-2, lost
·
of
Bl
th
f
•-Tommie
Agree
dropped
a
at
Pittsburgh
(Moose
3·
the Frog's mouth (better here the frog's mouth than the horse's) traction
ue, e ans a...,
pm
lis
that Aleikum indeed will be on hand with his jumping frog which, were enticed by "Family routine fly ball, allowing ·los ·Angeles (John 5-3) at St. Wi • was a big gun in Arizona
Ernie Wright was the hero in
as advertised, will have been julted up 011 8 steady regimen of Night," for . which they were Darrell Evans to score the Louis (Spinks 3-21. 9 p.m.
State's attack with his solid Temple's triumph over Con8,-31 , g~ hitting. He tripled in the fifth necticut, slamming three ' hils
ills.
These
pills,
Alelkum
claimed
in
an
earlier,
notorious
letter,
admitted
at
baH
price.
winning
run
in
the
eighth
inAt~a"n~a
Yfs~hu~~::ver_
)
1 8
P
. 18ed
ning as Atlanta ra!Ued for four
and singled in the eighth.
and drlvmg· in four runs.
Game Telev
rids the critter of halitosis and makes him jump higher and
p.m.
lri
a
nationally
televised
runs
to
beat
the
Mets.
As
a
HMo
ntreai
Dnkorrez
5)·3)
at
The
big
inning
for
the
Sun
GeraldKerrigan,whohurled
farther.
1on 1 ler er 5-J • 8:30
result,
the
Mets
wasted
home
ous
Sports Desk is totally convinced the Aleikum letters- first game, th e Detro It Tigers
· Pm
one askjng about the jumps and warning of the pill; now one . maintained their ·one-game runs by John Milner, Wayne . Philadelphia (Champion 43 ·:·&gt;:·~·:·ir:·:·&gt;:-&gt;:·:·:&lt;·&gt;:·:·:·:&lt;•·::•·•·:·:·:·;;;·:·&lt;:·:·:&lt;·:·:·:·:·&gt;:·:·:·:·:···:·:·:·::;,;·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:&lt;·:·:·:·:·:::i'
. g' to my formal tongue~n-eheek invitation to the local first place lead over Baltimore Garrett, Rusty Staub and Ken and Reynolds J. l) at Cincinnati =~K ;:;«:l:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::~:!i~~::;:;:~;:;:;:;:;:,:;~:~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:;:;:;:;~;:;:;:::;l:;:::;:;:;:~;:;:::;:?-;:?.1:~-;;l
replytl1
in the East Division by edging Boswell and fell into second !McGlothlin 3-4and Grimsley 2· &lt;:::~
.
,,.,.,.,
5'e30
jumps- is a low caliber hoax of the most clumsy variety. the Minnesota Twins, 2-1, and place in the National League 11. 2·w
d p.m. , Ga
· us, thoug h• whiChis that Atty • in ·the only other American
· East, six percentage points San Di~oliesday
s mes
':·.:::•
::::;:;:
There •s one thin g that ts· bu ggmg
at Chicago-·;:;:;::;
:&gt;
••:.: .: .
....
Fr
J
Fred Crow, the mastermind behind the Regatta og umps, League game the Texas flim- behind idle ~ttsburgh.
Phila at inci., night
::::::\
~
probably Is the world champion practical joker. Being so clever gers beat the Milwaukee
Lou Brock singled home Da1 SNanFYrankat tPAit1t,s., n, ight
:;:;:;3
o PO :::::::;
.
ull
ew or a
an a, ntght
::::::~
.
0. U
·:·:·:·;
l
- and unprincipled - he wou d not be caught dead trymg toP
Brewers, 7-1.
Maxvill from second hase with Montreal at Houston, night
;:;;:;:;
B MII.:""'N RICIIMA
· :;:;:;:,
off sueh a ridiculous stunt.
In an abbreviated National the winning run for St. Louis in Los Ang at St. Louis, night
::::::::
Y
'1 v
N
::::::::
T:lat being so, are there any circumstances that could hsve League schedule, the Atlanta ~:v!~~d lnn(~g) =t:~:
American league
.:-.r.:
UPI Sports Writer
driven him to such machinations as to foist this nebulous ap- Braves overcame the New
paril'•Jn of Assalam Aleikumarrlving by Boeing 107 from Tripoli York Mets, 11-7, the St. Louis Dodgers to four hits. Cleveland
East
PEBBLE BEACH, Ca!H. (UPI)- That's what I like ahout the
onto theGallia-Meigslandingstrlp toting a frog who, for lack of a Cardinals edged the Los An· allowed three of the hits in the. Detroit
2~' 21i ~~j g. b. U.S. Open. All the warmth and sentiment it has.
better name, we herewith ahall dub Mohammed XLII?
geles Dodgers, 3-2, and the third inning w~en Los Angeles ' Baltimore
26 22 .542 1
Like nothing.
22
23
489
1
3
No Immediate answer is forthcoming to that question. The Houston Astros beat the Mon- scored both of its runs. . tw Cleveland
'
Or as Scrooge said when they asked him what he thought about
Boston
20 24 .455
5' '
Tommy Helms ilrove m 0 New
York
20 28 .m 7
Christmas-bah, humbug.
Frog Jumps this Friday and Saturday on the old Pomeroy High !real Expos, 3-1.
16 JO .348 lO
Schoolfootball field In connection with the Pomeroy-Middleport
Dave Johnson started Balli- runs with a single and a Milwa ukee
The truth is that all the entrants in the U.S. Open want to wjn it
·
•
in
·
11
·
t
sacrifice
fly
and
Jerry
Reuss
West
Regatta Weekend have excellent pros.,.,.ts. Competition will be more s w mng ra Y agams
1 1
b for the same reason, and that is to be rich and famous . For those
keen. The entry list is long. Dark fr~~ (read as horses) are Blue with a ground single to pitched a five-hitter as Houston oakland
J~· 1i ~8 g. · whomayhavewon the U.S. Open beforeandalready are rich and
30
18 ·625 3 famous, the reason they 'd like to win it again is to become even
numerous. For the first time the Grand Croaker in charge is left field and Mark Belanger beat Montreal.
CMhicagot
.
~nneso a
26 20 .565 6
considering seedings. Contesting frogs, leaned down to jumping
California
23 27 .460 11
more rich and famous .
trim on a number of secret ponds out in the county betwixt our
Kansas City 21 27 .438 12
Billy Casper is one of those who has won it before. Twice, in
Texas
21
30 .412 13'1&gt;
hills are raring to go. Even the jockeys are In training. I had one
Monday's Results
fact.
report that 275 lb . 6-4 Crow himseU was detected jogging
Texas 7 Milwaukee I .
The last time he did was six years ago just up the road from
surreptitiously around the perimeter of his estate in Syracuse
Detroit 2 Minnesota 1
here in San Francisco.
The Tigers took over first single, double, and triple; Baltimore I Oakland 0
late one night last week.
Bl .
Q 11
J'
(Only games scheduled)
Everybody remembers that U.S. Open victory by Billy Casper
What then is the reality of Mr. Assalam Alelkum? Judge for place in Pomeroy BDys'
a me
ua s · and
tm
Today's Probable Pitchers
because he came from way hack to beat Arnold Palmer who had
f 'k , League action Monday with a Rosenbaum a double each, and
I All Times EDT)
yourself, perhaps \ from this verhstim production o A1et urns 5-2 win over the Yankees and Jimmer Soulsby and Jeff
Baltimore (Cuellar 3-5) at the thing all wrapped up.
second and last letter :
Couch each a single
· Oakland !Odom 3-ll. 11 p.m.
So you'd think Billy Casper would have some mellow memories
Arabic Letters(????) the Giants won theirfirst game
. .
·
Cleveland I Perry 10-4) at about coming back to this particular neck of the woods. You'd
of the season, defeating the
Williams went all the way on California (May 1-4), 11 p.m.
June 6• 1972 winless Pirates, 17-14.
the hill for the Giants to fan
Detroit (Timmerman 4-4) at think he 'd be thinking how happy he had been to beat Palmer in
Dear M. Tannehill, Editor:
The 3-G Tigers were led at the nine and walked three. For the Minnesota IBlyleven 7-4). 8: JO the 1966 Open, and eventually everybody else that year, to finish
Me pleased with your letter. I need interruvter and not quite plate by Randy Marshall with Pirates, Mike Triplett and P-;:;ilwaukee Lockwood 2-6) at first in money winnings.
1
understand what you say.
two singles and a double. Dale Bt;owning combined to strike Texas (Broberg 4-4) , 8:30 p.m.
What Was He Tblnklng?
Anyhow me pleased that you Invite ine to Frog Jump. I will Browning added two singles out nine and walk seven.
Chica~o (Wood 9-4) at New
So what was Billy Casper thinking as he came back to this part
bring !rog with pills. From what you writ pill help you. Me plan to and Bob McClure had a single.
In a Boys' League game ;,\';;k 1 tottlemyre S-7), 7:lO of the country?
lJe In Pomeroy, J\11\0 \1\h. Me later WTlte when c:omln&amp;. Will be In ,.. For the Yankees, Hood had a played last Thursdijy , the
Kansas City I Spllltorff 4-4) at
"Nothing," he says. ,"Really nothing." .
Pomeroy day before Frog Jump.
home run and Smith and Little Tigers defeated the Giants 19- Boston IPattin 2·7), 7:30 p.m.
"You mean yoo weren't thinking about that U.S. Open in;San
'
Wednesday's Games
.
ll
Yours Truly, Assalam Aleikum. each contributed a single.
9·
Kan City af Boston, night
Franctscoata ?" oneofthelocatwritersproddedhim.
(I appreciate being told something even my best friend won 'I
Browning went the full six
The hitters lor the Tigers Chicago at New York, night
"That was San Francisco, this is Monterey," he said about the
disclose. Do bring the pill, AsSBiam.)
innings on the mound for the were Browning, two doubles Milwaukee at Texas, night
two places which are only 126 mlles apart. "Besides, that was a
at Minn., night
See what I mean? Ridicuious, of course, beyond all Ti gers an d fanned 17 whi! e and a single·, Dave ·Blake, Detroit
Bait at oakland, night
num~r of years ago."
reasonable doubt.
.
walking none . Greg Smith three singles; Marshall, single Cleveland at Cal if., night
Billy Casper, who hasn't won anything lately, isnt particularly
Nevertheless, Crow being Crow, I'm going to be ready. A hurled the distance for the and home run; Rich Johnson ,
lookingforwardtothisOpenwhichbegilishereThursday.
• camera and team of interviewers will be poised for Assalam's Yankees and struck out 12 and two home runs ; McClure,
"If you're playing well, you look forward to something like
a•rlval Friday. Managements of UPI, AP, Sports lliustra!A!d, walked three.
single and double; Kelly Hawk,
this, but if you don't have a good swing going, you don't," says
Sporting News, and the Frog Bulletin (a weekly) will be alerted.
In the Giant-Pirate slugfest single and triple; Donnie
Casper. "I'm not enthused."
He looks it, too.
Come on Assalam! We're ready. And for Gosh Sakes don't Brian Hamilton Jed the ·vic· Eisenhower, two singles, and
torious Giants with two singles Danny Morris, a double.
~O'JJ.rple
forget the pills!
"How badly have you been playing?" someone else asked
.
For th e Gtants,
Hamilton had
A CERTAIN L'ONTENDER for jumping honors will be the and two home runs, one roundtripper a grand slam. David a double and home run,
Casper..
frog, "Blue Devil" jockeyed Saturday oo the Marauder football Harris added a single and Williams, two singles, and
"I played very well for the firsl32 holes at Charlotte," he said,
green by Bob Marchi of GaUipolis, a sports fan of the most im· double, Jeff Grueser and AI Grueser, Cleland, and Harris,
"and .Uke a spastic over the last 40."
peccable credentials.
· 1e.
"What's the trouble•"
Seth each had two singles, and eac h a smg
There are reports that at least two old Pomeroy High grads Steve Dienier and Scott
McClure and Mar1hall CLEVELAND (UPI) _
Billy Casper sighed.
will enter Frogs, one to be named Panther I, the other Panther II. William had a single apiece. comb10
. ed to fan II an d wa lk Those pesky Cleveland In"Old ag~," he S81'd.
What a three-way race that'll make, Blue Devil vs a couple of
For the Pirates, Doug eight for the Tigers while dians, holding down third spot
"How old are you?"
Pal)thers!
'
Browning had two singles and Grueser fanned five and in the American League East,
"Forty ... one," he answered.
Meanwhile, the Ethics Committee of the Ohio Association for a home run , Randy Roach a walked ten for the Giants.
stopped the high.flying Cin.
He'sRuablngThlngs
the Promotion of Bullfrogs Is looking into charges that Marchi's
cinnati Reds, leading the wild
Casper won't be 41 for another two weeks so actually he's
actual mission this Saturday is something other than any success
National League West.
rushing things a little, but he knows he isn't playing well and like
of Blue Devil in the jumping pits.
But Cleveland's 5-I win Mon· he says, when you're playing that way it's hard to get excited
Marchi, it is widely known, moonlights as scout for Coach C.
day night was only in fun, and about your chances.
The Indians remained un- and Roger "Carson each a
L. (Johnny) Ecker's Blue Devil football team. Could It be that
not for the official standings.
"Maybe it's this," a guy who knew him said, pointing to
defeated
in three games with a single .
Bob is using the big Frog Jumps as a mere screen for an opPitcher
Ray
Lamb
singled
Casper's
middle which isn't as flat as it was some ~e ago.
For the Braves, Dave Smith
portunity to test Mr. Charley Chancey's grldtrun turf, looking thrilling 12-11 win over the
home Frank Duffy with the "That isn't it," said Casper. "I was much heavier when I was
forward to that momenwus date, Nov. 3 next, when two great Braves in seven Innings and had two triples, Steve Fife a winning run in the bottom of playing much better."
the Reds won their first game, triple, and Dodson had a single.
grid elevens will battle in Marauder Stadium?
Over in another corner of the lncker room, Chi Chi Rodriguez
6-5, over the Mets in MidIn the Reds-Mets battle, the the ninth in the game the two
dleporl Boys' League play Reds rallied for four runs in the teams played for the·benefit of · talked about Jack NicklaUB as he put his clubs Into his bag.
"He's tough to beat on any course but put him on a course like
Monday.
sixth inning to lake their first sandlot baseball.
About the only thing it proves this, with the rough the way it is, and he's Invincible," Rodriguez
The brothers Tony and Mark win. Gum and Casey hurled for
is
that the ball players- from said.
.
Venoy, along with Keith Lynch the Reds with Gum getting the
Chi Chi's locker here is situated only a few feet off the men's
For : Ta II Daddies , Short hurled for the Indians with win. Together, they fanned 10 different leagues and opposite
Daddies and Fat Daddies.
Mark Venoy getting the win. and walked eight. Kevin ends of the state -care about room and from there he commands an unobstructed view into the
Together, they fanned seven Yauger pitched all the way for the youngsters. Proceeds of the john.
game go to help youngsters
and walked eight. Tim Ebers· the Mels, striking out 10 and lay on better diamonds with
"It doesn't bother you, your locker being here~" he was asked.
P
bach and Brett Dodson toed the issuing one free ticket.
'
Nab,"
be said. "It could be worse."
equipment.
mound for the Braves and
Hitters for the Reds were better
The win was the second time
That's what you have to like about the U.S. Open.
Dodson was charged with the Stewart and Gum each with a this year the Tribe has beaten
All that warmth and sentiment.
loss. Comblned,they struck out home run, Carmichael a triple,
seven and walked 12.
and Casey a double. The Met Cincinnati in exhibition games
this season.
/
Hitters for the Indians were hitters were Doss with a single
Ray Fosse pinch singled in
Crlnson Pratt with a triple and and double while . Mowery,
the
fifth inning to drive it) two
two singles, Rich Hovatter a Becker, and Yauger all had one
runs to give Cleveland a 4-1 SANCHEZ TO YANKS
triple, Kelvin Lee a double, and · sing.le.
NEW YORK (UPI )-Thin!
lead.
Terry
Gardner,
Roy
Bareswilt,
MeAn Shoes &amp;
George Foster belted a two- baseman Celertno Sanchez, a
~oots28-year-old r90kie, was due to .
run homer in the seventh, and
join the New York Yankees
Hal McRae tied It In the top of
Boat Shoes
tonight for their game against
the ninth with a home run.
Tennis Shoes
the
Ollcago White Sox.
Duffy opened the ninth with a
House Slippers
Sanchez, a .368 hitter with
single to center, and scooted to
Men's Hose
third when Cesar Geronimo the Mexico. City Tigers last
lost the ball 'ln center, and was year, was batting .329 at
.Novelty Gifts
charged with a two-base error. SyraCf!se of the International
Shoe Shine Kits
Lamp promptly singled to League this season )l'ior to his
( Electri : &amp; Battery
·call froiD the Yanketlll.

,.. .

'·

the l.ut $ ~..s lnnlnp, took the:

Blue Drops 1-0 Battle
BY MARTIN LADER
UPI Sports Writer
Vida Blue, who couldn't
seem to Jose last year when he
won 24 games and the Cy
Young award as the American
League's best pitcher, has yet

-

.

.

.

$}39' ~~T~PON

L- -O!~U!Ofi_PII_f!I~·.!.Ff!!fHI!SJ·l:l

~

-- ---'

..
.

.

iUPER MA.8.~ET.. We• 9pen_
~ ·' .to .10 • Sun.
Accept Federal FOOd Stamps . .
PHONE: M2·3480

. P
Comer Mill and Sec~..Jts. "W~ li1esme The Right To Lim.it Ouantities" "'tDDLE, ORT, o.

f

�.

-

.

,S entinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Clllssifieds G~t Results!
t- 'J'ho DallySentlnoi.Mid&lt;III'Mrt.Puneroy, 0 ., June 13, 197?.

OIIDINANCI NO . tt1:12
AN
ORDINANCE
REPEALING ORDINANCE
NO. 965·70 ANO
CON ·
TRI,CTING WITH COLUMBUS
AND
SOUTHERN
OHIO
nECTRIC COMPANY, ITS
IUCCESSOU AND ASSIGNS,
TO LIGHT THE STREETS.
ALLEAYS. LANES AND
. PUBLIC PLACES IN THE
VILLAGE OF MIDDLEPORT,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO ,
FIXING OR PROVIDING FOR
THE FIXING OF THE RATES
TO BE CHARGED FOR ' SUCH
SERVICES, AND PROVIDING
. fOR THE MANNER . OF
. I'AYMENT THEREFORE .

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
. OIAOLINES
.5 P.M . Day B.t fore Publication.

Mondly Deadline 9 1.m .
Cancellation - Corrections
Will be accepted untll9 a.m . for.
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS i.
Tht Publlshtr reserves the~
rlgnt to edit or reject any ads.
deemed
obtectlonal.
The
publlaher will not be responsible
for mort than one Incorrect
Insertion.
-

RATES

For wan·t Ad Service
,
5 ctnh per Word one InsertiOn'
Minimum Charge 75c
12 c&amp;nts per WOrd three

BE IT ORDAINeD BY THE consecutive lnaertloris .
18 cents per ·· word six con .·
. COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE
OF MIDDLEPORT, STATE OF secutlve insert ions .
25 Per Cent DiscoUnt on paid
OHIO:
SECTION 1: That Columbus ads and eds paid within 10 days. ·
CARO OF THANKS
and Southern OhiO Electric
· Compeny, Its iuccenorl and
&amp; OBITUARY
lor 50 word--minimUm .
Each addjtlon•l word 2c .

"Company") II· hereby. vested

lints and otner public places In
the Vllltge of Middleport, Ohio,
(hereinafter
Cl llt.d
the
" Municipality " ) and
the
Company shall he-.,e the rlotlt to
tt'!1rge and receive from the
M~nlclpalltv payment for u ld
llfVICII In ICCOrdlnCl' with Ihe
schedule of ntes set forth
below . All fixtures shall be
mounttd on wood poles, unless
·· ·, O!tltrwlse stated, and &amp;nerOind
by over'htld distr ibution
f1c~11111.

Number, Silt in Lumens,
Typ,, and Rate Per Lo~~mp Per
Ytlr, In order :
119, 1000, Mercury Vapor,
OBS. on wood poles or eJCisllng
. sttel ltandards (16). $37.50
Silt 1000 Mercury Vapor, OBS
. on ntw sleel. standardS, sso.oo
u, 25000, Mercury Vapor,
Glus enclostd on wood poles or
existing ateel itandards, $72.50
Silt 25000, Mtrcury Vapor.
GIUS EnC:IOIICf On new lttel

111ndord1, 195.00
SECTION 2: Tht amOunt of
energy us!d b1 each lamf 10
CIICUIIttcJ 01\ tnt basis o all
night burning every day of the
vtar, or approximately 4000
houri per year (an average of
333 .3 houri ·per month). In
addition to the charges set forth
In Stctlon labove. the Company
will, teCh month, apply the

..,

·

Pollllroy .
Motor Co•.-

2 SillS
Of
QUALITY

197l CHEVELLE MALIBU 4 DOOR
$3795
Gulf green with green vinyl roof, vinyl lrlm, factory air,
tinted. glass, F&amp;R floor mats. body side mldg .. 350 cu. in.

engine, Tu~bo · Hydramatlc. JX)wer steering, power
brakes. wh. covers, Frt . &amp; rear bumper guards. Retail

1969 CHEV. IMPALA CPE.

$1995

v .s englne 1 automatic trans. , p. steering, factory air
conditioned, good W·W tires, radio, dark green finish with .
spotless Interior.

BLIND AOS

Additional 25c
Advertisement .

Charge per

OFFICE HOURS '
1:30' a.m . to 5:00p.m, Dally,
8:30 a.m. lo 12 :00 Noon

MARK . IV car air·condllloner,
good condition. 96J Locusl St.,
Middleport, phone 992·7368.
6·11·3tc
1970 YAMAHA , 250 Enduro.
exc e llent condition; phone
992·6432.
6·11 ·31c
ANTIQUE dining room sulle
with round !able; 1969 16 fl .
Pennant Camping Trailer ;
phone 992·7133.

6·11 ·3fc -..

WHISPERING PINES Nlte
Club. 1 mile north of
Pomeroy, Ohio on Rt. 7. Have
2:30 night dub license. phone
992·9943, Pomeroy. Ohio.
6-7·61p

lawn chairs ; go-cart motor ;
used white ~ork trousers,

In Memory

For Sale.

Harrison's
T.V. Service

992·2525

==========~

"HEll"

..

~

'

·'

.

,.

. ·.

'

:

'

WHAR HE
IT FROM, I'LL
\'lEVER I&lt;NOW

••

1

I GUESS TIIAT
ENDS MV 1/CLA
SURVF.V. HE'I.J
'WHAT'S .~APPENING
OVER TWER~ ~

Smallest Heater Core.

•N1thon Biggs
· Radlotor SpKillill

Pho'ne 992-2094

Pomeroy Ho~e· ,, Auto :

SMITH .NELSON

MOTORS. IN~
Pomeroy

Open BTIIS

'!Hi$ G 'THE SILLIEST
1HING ! EVER +!EARP OF.

!lAVING U6 \\1?1&lt;'1&lt;
A SPEED 'TRAP...

OH,!~O~T

JUST SOME
OF TWE STUDENTS
GETTING Tllil~ .
EXERCISE

JIIA'i8E

no'¥ WERE

~IGII·SCIIOOt.

SENIORS

-TAKING
AN ENTRANCE
EXAM

Pll. 992·2174

· 606 E•
SEWING MACHINES. Repal"
service, all makes. 992·228.1.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized SIIIIJer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.·
.
J.29.1fc ·

oavls .

' CLATrER
CAMPUS

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to the

-GUARANfEEI&gt;

t304 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992cJi95
or Mason 773-5535

5·19·30tc

~

On Most Americo.!!.9U

Specializing In
Small Businesses

EARlll MOVING

~- 13

{f) lt7.1.

Dozer &amp; End loodtr work, .
ponds ,

basement,

commercial;

~. 1..:~ liJ.e...
Nll.,

land·

scaping. We hiVI 2 1111
dorers, 2 sire looders. Work
READY· MIX
CONCRETE '' done by hour or eontrod ..•
delivered right to .yovrl Free · Estimates. Wo olso :
pro/eel. Fast and easy. Free . haulllll dlr1, top.soll. Dump
esl maier. Phone 992·3284, 1.- trucks and low.boy lor hire.
Goegleln Ready·Mix Co.,1
Middleport, Ohio.
I See Bob or Roger Joflen,
6·30·HC: Pomerop . Phone '992-3525
alter 7 p.m. or phone ,.,.
--..,.---BACKHO~ AND DOZER work.
' 5232.
Sepl)c tanks Installed . George
IBill) Pullins. Phone 992·2478. SUPERIOR WINDOW Cleaning ·
.
4·25·HC
Co. &amp; Building Maintenance;

s~E?. w~w

TOMORR/
)'()' {)()IIJN

l7JWIJ

AN ~·

WHAT IF

FIJb DAY.. I WANT TO
SEt cto aeRY A.:r!Nib

LOIIE-STRUCK
OLE COOTS IS
SHOOT IN ' .IT OUT
OllER A GAL
THE.Y HAIN'T
SEEI-J FO'
sov~~!!

AH'LL TAKE

s

THeRS

.. NO

ISNTN&lt;'( ~!

WINDP
.

HI&amp;H AND Pl('b.JO.

professional

men for prolesslonal jobo;
phone 614-446·9202.
6-6·121p
.

'

.

.-~

I.

'.;

O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroods, Rt. 12~ .
Complete front end service,
tune up and brak~ service.
Wheels balanced elec·
All
work
Ironically .
guaranteed.
Reasonable
roles. Phone 992·3213.
7·27·HC

SII~E. I THINK I
SIIOULP Be
AllOWEP

•
WINNIE WINKLE

------

- - -- - -

20'

CARRIER
WANTED
IN
SYRACUSE

~

.• .

1972. 12 x 60 MOBILE home,
two-bedroom, total electric,
Guy Neigler, Racine , Olio.
shag carpet . Priced to sell.
6.J3.31c
36" X 23" X .009
Located near new min e .
'
Phone 742·5641 after 5 p.m. LOTS ON Wright St., Pomeroy : AUTOMOBILE Insurance bee'
WAITRESSE5-dinlng
room
&amp;
following fiJel ·adlullment to the
Also.
1968 SS396 Chevelle,
cancelled?
Losl
Y.OUI
phone 742·5937.
·cocktail. must be over 21.
total average KWH ptr month
$1,000.
Can
be seen at Rutland
6-6·121c
operator's license? Call 992
for ell the f1mp1 billed during July 2l. 19n or IUblect to prior
Apply
al
Meigs
Inn
office
.
Lost
Auto Sales or call number
2966.
lhl ptrlod .
6·11·31c
termination as provided in
above.
Tht energy charge applicable Section 10 of this Ordinance ;
6·15-HI
37 ACRE farm , modern house,
BLOND
Pekingese
on
6·12·31c
to all kllowatt.hours of energy provided It shall have been
drilled
well
,
7
acres
river
Harrisonville Rd ., Reward; SUMMER Employment, car
consumed shill bt rncreued or accepted by the Company by
bottom , on good road; call SEE US FOR : Awnln~•· "'""'
ca ll 843·2287 or 992·5897.
necessary ; lor details write
dtcrtased .oossc per KWH per written acc;:eptance flied In the
1968 APPLEBY fold ·down
USED OFFSET PLATES
doors and windows, carports,!
afler 1 p.m. 992-6133.
6·13·31p Mrs. Libman, 34 West Car·
each full ont ·half cent (.5c) Office of tne Clerk of the
ca mper ,
$150,
l · room
HAVE.
.
6·6·121c
marquees, aluminum sldlng i.lncr:tllt ar dtcreue above or Mun icipal ltv .
- - - - - -- -- penter Street, Athens, Ohio
McGraw -Edison air con .
'MANY USES
below twenty .three cents (23c)
and
railing. A. Jacob, soles
SECTION 10: That the VIllage
45701.
dltioner, like new, $60. Phone
In t~e avtriSit cost p&amp;r million by legislative action, or the
representative.
· ~or free~
6·11
·6tc
before 4 p.m. 992·3668.
!1;000,000) BTU Of lUll COn · Company 11'1all have the rigtlt to Notice
·esflmates, phone · Charles
6·1Hic
•umed 11 the Company's term inate this Ordinance at any
· Lisle, Syracuse, V. V..
gtntratlng atations during the time, upon written notice flied
Johnson and Sori, · lnc.
ucond
calendar
month with the other party hereto at
1968· HONDA CB·350, gooa
3·2·«•
preceding the billing date.
least 60 days pr ior to such
8 for $1.00
1 condition, low i'nlles, $495 ;
SECTION 3: SU~Iect 'to tht term ination date .
·
-~----,•
phone 992·5213 .
provl&amp;lons of Stctlon 6 of th is
SECTION 11 : The terms and
Pomeroy SEPil~ tanks Cleaned . Miller .
601 E. Main 51.
•
6·1J.6tp
Ordinance, payments for the prov isions of this Ordinance are
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
- -- - -atrtet lighting Hrvice furnlsllecl /Oint and several and the In ·
662·3035.
NEW
HOME
hereunder by the Company to velldlty of one shall not affect
TWO SERVICE MEN
2·12·tfC ·
Real Estate For Sale
the Mun icipality shall be made the validity of the others.
POMEROY - 1 story. 3
monthly In accordance with
Passed by the Counc il of the
bedrooms, double closets,
RACINE -6 room hOuse, bath,
bills rendtrtd thtrefor by the VIIIIQI of M iddleport. Ohio, this
Free Pickup &amp; Delivery
modern bulll·ln kitchen, 2 HARRISON' S TV Service, open
ut ility room, garage, $10,000:
Compeny, such payments to be 22nd day of May, 1971.
9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; freeJ&gt;Ickup
baths, dining room, all
phone 949·4195.
made on or btfort the lOth dll'
and delivery ; phone 992·2522.
3·31 ·1fc carpeled, basel"enl, lot
of the month nut a~ccetdlng ATTEST :
111 Court St.
CALL
6-13.tfc
that In wh lch the 11rY let was Gene Grate
115x220,
(electric
heat).
Pomeroy, Ohio
furnished. •nd In tht event that Clerk
THE
DAILY
SENTINEL
For Service Information
i ROOM house, lot on river. 115&gt;&lt;200, (electric heal) . DOZER and back hoe work,
the Municipality shall fall to
Approved thiS 2~ day of
Railroad St ., Middleport .
4 BEDROOMS
make 11ld montnly payment Moy, 1972 . ~-..
ponds and septic tanks; B &amp; K
O
$4,000 ; phone 992·3265.
MIDDLEPORT - Modern
rwhtn due was provided herein,
.
JohnW . Zerkle
pen9a .m.-9p.m.
WALNU
T
slereo.combl
natlon
•
Excavating, Phone 992-5367,
PHONE
6·6-12k kitchen , large TV room ,
.aald dtltrred payments shall
4 speaker sound system, 4
Dick Karr . Jr.
•ur lnt""' •' t~• ratt"of 6 pet . t•l •· \3, 2t . 'ft '
dining room, bat1'1, carpet,
Speed dual volume control .
:Mayor
"
5·21·HC.
·r
ptr annum ·from ttte date of
Balance $68 .3 2. Use our HOUSI: in Lonsfl!offiiin , phone ' paneled. ullllly room,
maturity until the dltt paid ,
985·3529.
For
Rent
garage and large storage
budget . terms. Call 992·7085.
and should the Municipality
6·1J.tk
NOTICE OF ELECTION
6·8·6tc
building, 2 lots. $14,900.00. SEWING MACHINE service,
default In making any such
UNFURNISHED
apartment,
clean, oil , set tension $4.99. .
ON ISSUE
peyment&amp; for a period of four
A FARM
134 Mulberry Ave ., phone 992··
OF BONDS
THREE
bedroom
house
with
Special Electro · Grande
(4) months, then and In that
EARLY American Stereo, AM·
WITH A FUTURE
3962.
NOT ICE Is hereby given 1ha1
bath, lf2·acre lot , on public
Company. Phone 992-6517.
~ event the Company may at any
F
M
radio,
4
speed
changer.
6·11 ·1fC
This may be "jusl the spot"
water system , a;• .mile from
5-21·HC
tlmt thereafter discontinue said In pursuance of a Resolut ion· of
4 speaker sound system .
you 've been looking for . Call
street lighting urvlce without the Board or Educat ion or the
Chester
on
County
Rd.
25.
UNFURNISHED hous e, 4 ~alance s73 .S6. Use our
notice; and lhtrtafler until Eastern Local School Distri ct,
us for an appolntmenl to see
Phone 985-4262.
CALL 949·2789foreufo body and
budget term s. Call 992·7085.
such time 11 tht full amount due Meigs Covnty, Oh io, passed on
rooms,
bath and utility room ,
II.
Opportunity knocl&lt;s!
·6fc
6·11
paint work. Also ropalr fiber
6·8-61c
to tht company under the terms the 9th day of May , 1972, there
garage
,
Lincoln
Hgts
.,
phone
3BEDROOMS
glass
boats. plus electric and
Ofthls OrdlnencthiS bun paid, will be subm ltted to a vote of the
992·3874.
NICE ·2·slory home w{th full
MIDDlEPORT -1'12 baths.
Window
the Com pony, 1t 111 option, may people of said School District at
gas
welding . Stanley's
6·13·31c
. basement, 2 lots. new forced large double garage, storm
or may not rtaume said street tho Special ELECTION to be
Custom
Body Shop
·
Air
Conditioners
air furnace. Near Pomeroy .
lighting llrvlce, provided, held In the Eastern Locel School
doors and windows, nfce
5·19·301C
District,
Ohio,
at
th
e
regular
..
however, that no charges shall
ilementary School. . Phone porches , EXCELLENT
2 BEDROOM tra iler. adults
Hot Water Healers
bt mact:t bV tt;e (llr"f)lny for place&amp; of voting therein, on
992-7384
to see.
only,
Bob's
Mobile
Court
,
NEIGHBORHOOD.
Plumbing
atrttt lighting ltrV ·I.e during Tuesday, the 15th day of
11·7·tfC $12,900.00.
phone 992·2951.
any such ptrlod In which aald August, 19?2, the question of
Electrical Work
6·13·tfc
aervlc•ll discontinued asln th is ls.sulno bonds of said Two
CLOSE OUT .on 1971 full size
Section l provided.
· Hundred F lfty Thousand
zig-zag sewing machine. For
HENRY E. CLELAND, Sr.
ONE bedroom trailer apartSECTION • : Th1 Company Dollars !S250.000.00J lor the
sewing
stretch
fabrics,
REALTOR
tgrna during the term hereof purpose of constructing ad ·
ments, ideal tor coupl es.
Economy Tiller, 31/, h.p·. B&amp;S
dltlons and Improvements to the
buttonholes, fancy designs,
to 1n11111 oddlllonolotrtolllohto ew.lstlng
Phona
992·2259
Contact
McCIDre's
Dairy
Isle,
h lgh school building,
engine. Reg . 159.95
144.95
of lht type and slzt speclflti:t
etc . Palnl slightly blemished.
Uno answer 992·2568
992·5248
or
992·3436.
acquir
ing
fu
'
r
nlture
end
above. whtn author lied to do so
Choice of carrying case or
6·13·5tc
by rttolutton Of the Council. equipment for school purposes ,
Turf Trim Mower, B&amp;S 3117
sew ing sland. $49.80 cash or
and
maklno
schOOl
site
im
·
Provldtd, however, that the
992 -2448
terms available. Phone 992·
new ltrtol IIQh 11 1hall be rovements , as provided by
'
3
AND 4 ROOM furn ished and h.p . engine. In carton 70.25
ow
.
5641.
Pomeroy, 0.
located within 250 feet of a
unfurnished
apartments
.
POMEROY
The maximum number of
6-8·61c
JOHN
dl1trl~u11on circuit of lho
Phone 992·54l4.
·:90 _ Jack W. Carsey,Mgr.
Company ; and, provided tur - years during wh1ch such bonds
4-12-lfc
Aill
Phone99l·2181
thtr ,that not more than ten {10) are to run Is 2• years .
IDEAL 5·ACRE RANCHO .
The estimated average ad · BOAT' LICENSE - fo r your - - - - . . , . -.,-lddltlonal llghh may be
boat,
for
your
motor
.
Lake Conchas. New Mexico.
tax
rate
amounts
to
dltlonal
~- room apt .
requlrtd during the last veer of
Available at Simon's Pl ck ·A· FURNISHED
Q
ON YOUR DIAL
$2,875. No Down. No Interest.
rwentl .seven and ont halt
Adults
only,
Middleport
,
the period of this Ordinance.
VACUUM
CLEANER,
Com
·
Pair
Shoe
Store.
108
W.
Main
,
c:ents
or
each
one
hundred
$25
mo.
Vacation
Paradise.
Tho Company lhlll not ~•
phone 992-3874.
pact, A-I condition. wllh atf.
R EALTYf
Pomeroy, Ohio, Phone 992Money
Maker .
Free
required to make any
ex . dollars of valuation, which Is
6·4·1fc
and
carpel shampooer. SJ3.20
2.75
mills
lor
each
one
dollar
of
383().
ftnslonl or renewals In the
BroChure.
Ranchos:
Box
cas h or terms available .
5-16·301C - - - - - - tv'!nt that the Municipality 11 in valuation, outside of the
200100, Alameda, California
Contact
Phone 992-6517.
1r1 ear a in payment for services lim itation imposed by Arl!cle
94501.
Auto
Sales
XII,
Sec
t
ion
2
of
the
con
.
6·8·1fC
rtndtred .
··
.· VERA EBlEN ,
6-7·14tp
The minimum number of stltutlon, as certified by the CLOSED for vacation , 1111 July BLUE 1966 Mu&lt;fang , V.8, - -- - - -- - --:
County
Auditor
.
.
.. t'lf3tm .
.
strtet lights shall be not less
lsi . Cliff's Shoe Repair ,
bucket
seats,
lealher SWEE PER. Hoover with all . RACINE · - 10 room hou5e;
He Polls for said Election
than tht sum of the total
'iiOraaiSt.
MiddlePOrt
Middleport.
upholstering. phone 882-2161 8 Runs like new $17.40. Phone
.
.
bath, basement, garage, two
nurQbtr lptcltltd lbove, and will open at 6:30 O'ClOCk A.M.
6·11 ·31c
a.m.
to
5
p.m.
or
984-3806,
992·6517.
tnd
rema
in
open
until
6:
30
lots. Phooe 949-4313.
whenever additional lights lrt
6·8-lfc
Be\lerly, after 6 p.m .
Installed, tht minimum number o'clock P .M . Eastern Standar.d
4-5·1fP
Time
of
said
day
.
RUMMAGE
Sa
le.
Reyno1as
6-13-2tc
Of llgh11 Shall bt. lncreesed
-:
:
FHA APPROVED!! Just
Palls
By order of the Board of
NEW SEWING MACHINE .
Building , Middleport by Ash
accordingly .
5
ROOM
house,
l'h
balh,
buill·
In
Elections,
of
Melos
County
,
$700
down buys this lovely 3'
(
Lell
in
lay:dway)
Zig
Zag
· II 11 further IQrttd that the
Street. Freewill Baptist ' 70 Bonneville, 2 dr . HT, blue
back porch, large screet\ed· ln b.r .. l'h bath home . Call me
Muinum.
Company,, Shill move street OhiO .
Model. Dial controls lo fancy
Church. Jvne IS, 16 and 17, 9 with black vinyl top, factory
front
porch,
garage.
running
llghta to, new locations. or
stitch, sew stretch material /
today
6n
this
one.
a.m.
Edwin S. Cozart
air ; vinyl interior i 25,000
Chtnge tht type of fixtures to
Diamelel:
6·J3.3fc
buttonhole and etc. $39.20 water; l:J;,. acre of ground ; for
Everything
can
·
be
com·
Chairman
another typeaptclflfd above , as
actual miles, phone 992·5934
quick
sale,
must
be
seen
to
be
cash or terms available .
rtqutsttd by resolution of the
. after S p.m.
011
appreciated; 10 miles North pleled In my office.
Dorothy M . Johnston OLD-FASHION Trading Ring ;
Phone 992-6S17.
Council ; provided, however ,
6·11
-6tp
of
Pomeroy
qn
Rt.
33;
call992·
Clerk
6·B·ffC
that the actual cost to tl'1e
Horses, ponies , guns or
lMiestEnd
6748.
.
POMEROY - Very nice 3
Company In mtklng such Dllted May 19 , 1972 .
anything to trade; 1 mile back
6-9·61c lb.r . home, full blllh up, LR &amp;
rttoc:atlon, or change In flx of West Columbia, W. Va . on Marine Sales
Real Estate For Sale
turtt, sh•ll be ptld for by tht {)) 23. 30 (61 6, 13, ••c
DR, kltchen with all bullt.ln
the Lakin Road : lsi and 3rd 32 FT. Houseboat, 40 h.p . out·
MuniCIP!allty.
features.
Full basement,
Sunday each month.
SIECTION 5: The Comp1ny
board motor and trailer: will
LEGAL NOTICE
new gas furnace, garage on
6·11
·61p
DELIVERED
Shill tndetvor to turn Ish auf .
sell reasonable. Phone 992ADVERTISEMENT
two
lols-$15,500.
flelen1 electric energy to keep
FOR BIDS
7157 or see at 28A River 51. ,
nld street ~ llohtlng. lamps
Sealed proposals ~ill bt .REGISTERED Appaloosa Stud
Middleport.
burning continuously during the received
Service, 550 Reg . mares. $40
G l's - come In and talk to
the Meigs County
6·7-61c
night seuon each and ever(. Bollrd of by
Mental
Retardation
,
Gi-ade,
Francis
Benedum
.
me aboul VA loans. I have
night during the term hereof . 1 , until 12 o'clock noon eastern
110 Mechanic Street
Phone 667·3856.
tor any reason , ·there Is a failure standard
FHA
and
VA
the
, June U , 1912,
S·17·301P
to furnish ~tid energy for more and at thattime
representative
In
my
office
t
ime
opened
by
the
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
thin tn aggregate of four (•)
n prov ided by law tor a
on&lt;e a week .
hours In eny one month and board
U
pautnger
school bus , KOSCOT KOSMET ICS: Several CASii paid for all mo • .,. and
upon written notice of such specifications as follows
models
ol
mobile
homes
.
REAL
INVESTMENT
:
new produCts - specials each
tggr~gate outage furnished to
Phone area code 614-423·9531.
CORNER LAND - Large building, 40x70, Ideal for con·
Minimum Sptclllcatlons lor
month ; also sales personnel
lho
complny
~y
lhe
160 Coal Slreet - Also
•·ll·lfc
" · Penengtr Sc:hool Ius ·
tra ctor on Route 143. Has a 3 bedroom residence, 11h acres
needed. Phone 992·5113.
Munlclpollly within ttn !IOl
Cargo
Va
n
E
.JAQ.Ford.
123.5
locallon of the Mlddlepor1 C
of
level
land
.
days after receipt of bill tor
H ·lk
W.B.
,of
C offl~e .
·
au~h ltrvlee. there shall be •
SCENIC
Chev,y .. Vt!in
GE · 31305
pro raft reduction from the bill
SYRACUSE - Watch the river boats go by, relax, and
SA
\i
E
up
to
one
half.
Bring
yolli'
Chevrolet
.
125"
W.B.
'Air Conditioners
~or said month to cover such
enjoy life summer or winter. 4 bedroom home with 2
Tradesman 8300. Dodge 127"
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
OUtiDfl. No lloblllty Shall al · W.fl
•
Awnings
151
Butlernul
Ave.,
Pomeroy.·
balM. nlc~ 1~1tchen , full basement.
tach to the Company tor anv
GMC CE 3630l GMC 125" ' .
wiLD BUT CAN BE DEVELOPED ·
H ·lfC
cllscontlnuances of service .
·Underpinning
SECTION 6 : Unlll such time W.B.
OVER 7 ACRES - Wantto build several homes for resale
GVW
7600
lbs.
••
tht
eltc:ton
of
the
Then you ought to see this. Your lortune &lt;ould be here.
Front Axle JJOO lbs .
Complete mobile home
For Sale or Trade
Munlclplllty oulhorlzt an
Rear
AJCie
5000
lbs
.
PRIME LOCATION
service
plus
gigantic
alternative method for the
Front Spring W5 lbs.
RT. 124 WEST - Compact home for the working &lt;lass.
1967 FORD Galaxle; sell or · 'display of mobile homes .
l.'heck Uur
.,.,mont ol thf then currtnl
Rtar Spring 2250 lbs .
trade for motorcycle; phone always avalloble at ...
Yet Ills real nice. All paneled and carpeted. Room for a
blftl Of thl Mun clplllty for the
Engine
,
300
Cu
.
In
VI
Price Tud.y
atrett lighting servlct' provided
992·3530.
garden or play ground .
Horn - Oual Electric ,
In lhll Ord inance, collection tor
6·9-6lp
HANDY
Mirrors - Western Type s X
MILLER
such aervlct 1h1tl be made as
palntod
MIDDLEPORT - You can walk to the stores, and the
provided In A:att Ordlnanct No . 10 Alternator
so amp , hOurs
'65 MUSTANG· ·convertible.
children to school. Level lot with 3 bedroom home. Ohly
MOBILE HOMES .
915.72 of lho Municipality, tlxlnu
Batttry
10
amp
hours
.
immaculate condillon, 6
$8,500.00.
ratn wf'lfeh the Compeny may
Gauges. OII ·Temperature
1220 W1ohlngton Blvd.
cylinder, standard floor shift:
chart• for standard secondary Amp
FREEDOM
.
·
· sfereo tape deck ; beautiful 423·7521
BELPRE, D.
electric service to consumers In
142 ACRES- Enjoy the fresh air of the cduntry. Make
Tires. Front &amp; rear , 8.00 X
'
tho
Munlclpollty
1nd 16.5
metallic maroon finish; must
rH. 77J.SSt2
X 10 ply. M·S Rear
money with cattle while you work at your regular job.
eataDIIthlng 1 formula for
to
appreciate
;
phone
949·
see
Transmission Automat ic
Meigs school district. large farm pond and a very good
vuylng auch rattl. or such
MASON, W.VA.
Front Heeter (fresh air with
5953 .
For
Sale
.ordlftlnceor ordtnancH 11 mav Defroster
spring.
3 or 4 bedroom home. 2 barns, nice oufbulldi"'JS.
H lgh ·output l
6·13·610
• hn~ . 1'001 fO"ii 'UIIT ~ ,~ 1 .
• 1
frem lime to flmo be In tffocl
$32,500.00.
Power Steering
r, .., ' '2'1' ''' ··~ •••m ft '" "'~"' · ,,~:~, ...nr r,r ...., lltllind hlor90
COAL, Llmesto~e. Ex.celslor
~----lOt oueft putftOIH followlno lht
Power Brakes CoptlonaD
• TO'fAL 111011 WIDe! C.'OOll ~'1 I
•
Sail Works, E. Main St.,
'67 JEEP Wagoneer, 4 wheel
fl&lt;Piratltn 01 Slid Ordln1nce
.lf\~' 1 a.. l """~~ ~~ ~~~ .
'
• IIIH·W'•y ooij11011 bl~ b""ll
R11r Doors fixed Gins (2)
We ~eed nice and neaf 2 bedroom homes, reasonably
Phone
992·3891.
Pomeroy
,
No. tU·71 ond during lht ltrm
drive,
327
v.a,
air
con
·
81dl m1y be malted to Mr .
• ~=·~~~~~·~~~~g:~: ~~~L * ,~~:... ,..~, rdr~fllftt to ~TIIq eft~.
priW!II- Big lhlngs oro In the making, welch this ad and
of lhll Ordlnlnct.
dilloned ; automaflc trans ·
··12·1fc
Edwerd
Kennedy , Rock Springs
SECTION 7: Tho Comp1ny Rd .. Pomeroy.
you
may
be
a
little
wiser.
Real
estate
Is
a
solid
In·
• ,tr,LL WI' Amt:~ G-ILL • ololklwo
mission,
power
steerin9
,
Oh io.
l&lt;~· t• unllln~m "'~llfl.et,
1"'11111-1 1!101-ae...: ~
lhlll IIYI lhl MUniCIP.IliiY
The bOard will reserve the
power brakes. automattc CAMPER. 16.tt.' sleeps 6, good , vest_ment. Come In Iosee who! we haveloo«er.
htrmlnl from eny and 111 right to ·11ccept or relect -·any or
• ~liD FA,I'I - l'lr&lt;'llilk'l lit ...,llh 0&lt; .-ltllo.o ~ 0
condition. Sl.OOO. Phone 992·
HELE'N L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
front h~bs, excellent con·
,.... lH' luw ~·
·~·.
lloblllty occulonld ~Y tho sole oil bldl.
dllion
;
phone
949·5953.
6329
.
"'
•
I
naullt-• of lht Company In
5·12·HC
6·13·61c
992-3325 NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS PLEASE. 992·2371
the conatructlon, mllnttntn~;t {5) 23, 30 !6) 6. 13. &lt;tc
ond oporollon of Its strttl IIDh·

Aluminum
Sheets

..

4.- 1"

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

HOUSE Carpenter·finlsher, ca ll

.

'

! - ·-

$5;55

shirts, 85c each, great for
·Wanteli To Buy
IN LOVING memory of James Card of Thanks
painters! Also, see our usual ELECTROLUX Sweeper delux
F. Dolley, who passed away
good selection of clea n
' Marie Mill s
model. Complete with all
THE FAMILY of
three years ago, June 13.
household goods, appliances.
c leaning ' attachments and
USED
waterski
equipment,
call
wishes
to
extend
their
many
Many a silent heartache, and
KUHl'S BARGAIN CEN·
uses paper bags. Slightly used
thanks for the wonderful care
992·2392.
often a hidden lear ;
TER. Rt. 7 "at the caution
but cleans and looks like new .
6·13·31p
and
treatment
that
was
given
Buf always a beaullful memory
light", Tuppers Plains. Ohio.
Will sell for ·$37.25 cash or
lo their mother during her
of one we loved so dear .
Open to 6 p.m. ; closed
term s available. Phone 992·
hospitali
zation
and
death
at
'OLD FURNITURE •. dishes, Mondays. Phone : 667-3858.
Sadly missed by wife and
5641.
the
Veterans Memorial
6·11·61c
clocks. brass beds, silver
children .
6·8·61c
Hospital
;
to
Dr.
Pickens,
Dr.
6·1 ~ · 11C
dollars
or
complete - - - -- - - -- Telle, nurses and aides ; also
households . Write M. D. REMNANT SALE : 1500 yds. of
pupp1es, Silver Toy,
to Rev . Simons, Rawlings.
Miller . Rl . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. upholstery &amp; drapery fabrics; POODLE
Parkview Kennels, Phone 992·
lno 'vstem In said Mun icipality . Coats Funeral Home and . Call 992-6271.
Mowre'l's
Upholsteri ng ;
5443.
SECTION 8: All fiKtures sha ll
pallbearers. We also want to
3·16.1fc locate at Mason County
S.lS·Ifc '
be ma intained In as good order
thank all of our relatives,
F~irgrounds, Pt. Pleasant;
and condition as pract icable at
friends and neighbors for the
the expense of the Company .
phone 675-415•:
1970 CL70 Honda. Good conTille to all wires, poles. lamps
beautiful flowers and for the lielp Wanted
6·9·61c
dition. Also mixed hay, 985·
and appurtenances used by the
food that was sent ln. Many
3816.
Company In furnishing the
thanks to the Baptist and NEED yard mowed; phone 992·
6-11-31c
2021.
r
service contemplated In this
Christian Churches . These
6·13.3tc
Ordinance Is and shall be In the
things will not be forgotten.

Cos"E~a;,'8N 9: This' Ordinance
Son, daughter and families,
shall cancel and supersede
Mr . and Mrs. Russell Mill s,
Ordinance No. 965·10 pi!Jssed
Mr . and Mrs. Nlax Lambert .
Jun~r 22, 1970, anc:t sha ll take,
6· 13 -ltp
effect and be In force from and - - - - -- - -- after thirty days from its
passage, and tha ll terminate on

.

!
i

EXPERT·
Vf1,et ....
AI'If!ment
. .

KEBLERfS
.BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

Vinyl floor covering, lovely

Saturday.

'

;

colors &amp; patterns, 9x12's
$14.95; elect. clothes dr~ers , For Sale
your choice $30. (Free
.
ceramic frog with every rug ALUMINUM boats, on county
or dryer purchase lhru ' road 18, 150 yards west of Rt.
Regatta Week! I All ·melal
33. Call 992·6256. lorenzo

OPEM EVES. 1:00 P.M.
fj)MEROY, OHIO

TO TELL '-IE
PURE TRUTH, LOWEEzlf ..
HE SPENT MOST OF' HIS
TIME JEST A-SETTIN'
fiN' STARIN' OUT TH'
I('......-. •
DAD BORN
WINDER

~

Business Services

REGATTA WEEK SPECIALS :

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Wj1V DG 'IE RECKON
JUGHAID DONE 50
PORELV 1!11 SCHOOL
THIS 'lEAR, MISS
PRUNELLV?
.

•

Sticker 54241.75 Driver Education car. SpeclaHy Priced .

suo

. Alllons, (hereinafter called the

wllh lh1 rlohl lo lluhl ¥t)lh
tltctrlcl 'I tht streets, alleys,

.

,. ..

c.

1

CLELAND
REALTY

The
DaUy Sentinel

------

992-2156

------

'

HEATING &amp;
COOUNG

UTl'LE ORPHAN ANNIE
l080! WE ~RE OlD

SPECIAL

MOWERS
&amp; TILLER!

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

FRfMD5, LOBO
AHD I!

We talk ._JOU

ACROSS

lilie a. .~

r.

:WMP0/1390

WHITE

Associate

MY CURBSTONE
SITTERS,
WATCi-IING

WANTED

THE

CHIPWOOD.

- -- - --

DIET SMITN
rro-.,;),F. ACTOR'I!

10"

$6.00 Per Ton

Virgil B. Teafo'rd, Sr.- Broker

TERRY

TO
OHIO
PMJ.fT 00.·

..

:5f'UR, HOllE'( IIEFOI!E lW

lO Flf{l!
:'""""II FYFFf, i!EMEMIII:R 1011'11 llfVEll: FINP )OUR
WAY MCK 10 OVLIZATIOH WITHO!IT HIM 10
AA\'IISioTe T1I'IT FI.YIN6 «!Jill!

----,~--

to

24,000 BTU

-

j
1 K_

nation

selection.
(3 wds.)
9. Youngster
10. Wandering
16. Felled
19. Whig's
opponent

22. Egyptian
Christian
24. Solicitude
25. Became
tastele&lt;S
26. Lifer's
only hope
27. Coupled
28. Melodious

ROAPE
30. " - Foollsil
things ... "

31. Penetrate
36. Tiny
bird
37. Dale
Evans'

husband

II I ~)
USSIA

I ....... ___
Ye11~rd.7'•

I

coin

·Unger
1'1. Warden's
headache
Yorkshire
river
U. Ukesome
fenders
fl. Belgian
river

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE ..:. Here'a how to work it:
.
II

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter almply stancb for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sintle letters,
•l"'strophes, the lencth and formation of the worcb ore oil
hmtJ. E~tb doy the code letters are different:

CJIYPTOQUOTES

TLMGERT

FTJMZ}'TC
UFTERTF

E

GIZDL

BTFWTGRDQ

BFYW· YIIHLTF . ftJYKUIR,

OZCLYP,

CRERT.-0.

T.

R\EH

RY

UYATFH

GlEHHZHU

. Ylilterdv'l Crn*4lllele: I BELIEVE IN SOCIAL EQUALITY BECAUSI!: IT IS lllPOSSIB.LE TO BElJEVB AMY·
THING ELIIE.-JL.DSTER
!C 1972 Kfn~ Falun~ 8JII41clt., Int.) .

II

HON

~LL.

THE ISEeiNNINGo
OF A ROMANCe.

III
WITH AN
(Mo..n

J.....lno COLIC ICINICY UNSAID PLAQUI
A.•en

13. Hasten
H. Japanese

E

I (XJ

()

ao. Fish
sauce
·sz. Cunning

RY

II

I II

IGOEMAH!

name

'Jt

letter to each l411&amp;ft, to

I SCAMK ·='CI,=-

6. Hostile

8. "Hair"

11

form four ordlnarr warda.

_..

7. Stood for
eleclion

lflol\

U-=ramble lheH raur Juinblet,

2. Proverbs
3. Today's
youth
(2wds.)
t. Wholly
5. "Madame

FURNITURE

6,000

'""''''""""·"'''

country

II. Girl's

On01dltt.33
Phone 9!2·2&amp;89
Pameror, Oltil .

MASON

THI!!AT~H

JI&amp;Q~®'"'-~~:~:~!~-'c

DOWN
1. Asian

1. Ethiopian
Jake
5. Scold
11. False god
12; Wild a&lt;S
13. Cry
14. Mere out·
side show
15. Instigate
1&amp;. Overwrought
thespian
17. Threematch
(2 wds.)
18. Unstable
20. Marsh
21. Pure;
spotless
22. Word
with push
or go
13. Eagle
U.-auvin
%6. Nimble
Z'l. New
Guinea's
original
name
Chinese
pagoda

·

''J""¥'• ..U." -SKIP

~·-wtroeowwt

.

�.

-

.

,S entinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Clllssifieds G~t Results!
t- 'J'ho DallySentlnoi.Mid&lt;III'Mrt.Puneroy, 0 ., June 13, 197?.

OIIDINANCI NO . tt1:12
AN
ORDINANCE
REPEALING ORDINANCE
NO. 965·70 ANO
CON ·
TRI,CTING WITH COLUMBUS
AND
SOUTHERN
OHIO
nECTRIC COMPANY, ITS
IUCCESSOU AND ASSIGNS,
TO LIGHT THE STREETS.
ALLEAYS. LANES AND
. PUBLIC PLACES IN THE
VILLAGE OF MIDDLEPORT,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO ,
FIXING OR PROVIDING FOR
THE FIXING OF THE RATES
TO BE CHARGED FOR ' SUCH
SERVICES, AND PROVIDING
. fOR THE MANNER . OF
. I'AYMENT THEREFORE .

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
. OIAOLINES
.5 P.M . Day B.t fore Publication.

Mondly Deadline 9 1.m .
Cancellation - Corrections
Will be accepted untll9 a.m . for.
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS i.
Tht Publlshtr reserves the~
rlgnt to edit or reject any ads.
deemed
obtectlonal.
The
publlaher will not be responsible
for mort than one Incorrect
Insertion.
-

RATES

For wan·t Ad Service
,
5 ctnh per Word one InsertiOn'
Minimum Charge 75c
12 c&amp;nts per WOrd three

BE IT ORDAINeD BY THE consecutive lnaertloris .
18 cents per ·· word six con .·
. COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE
OF MIDDLEPORT, STATE OF secutlve insert ions .
25 Per Cent DiscoUnt on paid
OHIO:
SECTION 1: That Columbus ads and eds paid within 10 days. ·
CARO OF THANKS
and Southern OhiO Electric
· Compeny, Its iuccenorl and
&amp; OBITUARY
lor 50 word--minimUm .
Each addjtlon•l word 2c .

"Company") II· hereby. vested

lints and otner public places In
the Vllltge of Middleport, Ohio,
(hereinafter
Cl llt.d
the
" Municipality " ) and
the
Company shall he-.,e the rlotlt to
tt'!1rge and receive from the
M~nlclpalltv payment for u ld
llfVICII In ICCOrdlnCl' with Ihe
schedule of ntes set forth
below . All fixtures shall be
mounttd on wood poles, unless
·· ·, O!tltrwlse stated, and &amp;nerOind
by over'htld distr ibution
f1c~11111.

Number, Silt in Lumens,
Typ,, and Rate Per Lo~~mp Per
Ytlr, In order :
119, 1000, Mercury Vapor,
OBS. on wood poles or eJCisllng
. sttel ltandards (16). $37.50
Silt 1000 Mercury Vapor, OBS
. on ntw sleel. standardS, sso.oo
u, 25000, Mercury Vapor,
Glus enclostd on wood poles or
existing ateel itandards, $72.50
Silt 25000, Mtrcury Vapor.
GIUS EnC:IOIICf On new lttel

111ndord1, 195.00
SECTION 2: Tht amOunt of
energy us!d b1 each lamf 10
CIICUIIttcJ 01\ tnt basis o all
night burning every day of the
vtar, or approximately 4000
houri per year (an average of
333 .3 houri ·per month). In
addition to the charges set forth
In Stctlon labove. the Company
will, teCh month, apply the

..,

·

Pollllroy .
Motor Co•.-

2 SillS
Of
QUALITY

197l CHEVELLE MALIBU 4 DOOR
$3795
Gulf green with green vinyl roof, vinyl lrlm, factory air,
tinted. glass, F&amp;R floor mats. body side mldg .. 350 cu. in.

engine, Tu~bo · Hydramatlc. JX)wer steering, power
brakes. wh. covers, Frt . &amp; rear bumper guards. Retail

1969 CHEV. IMPALA CPE.

$1995

v .s englne 1 automatic trans. , p. steering, factory air
conditioned, good W·W tires, radio, dark green finish with .
spotless Interior.

BLIND AOS

Additional 25c
Advertisement .

Charge per

OFFICE HOURS '
1:30' a.m . to 5:00p.m, Dally,
8:30 a.m. lo 12 :00 Noon

MARK . IV car air·condllloner,
good condition. 96J Locusl St.,
Middleport, phone 992·7368.
6·11·3tc
1970 YAMAHA , 250 Enduro.
exc e llent condition; phone
992·6432.
6·11 ·31c
ANTIQUE dining room sulle
with round !able; 1969 16 fl .
Pennant Camping Trailer ;
phone 992·7133.

6·11 ·3fc -..

WHISPERING PINES Nlte
Club. 1 mile north of
Pomeroy, Ohio on Rt. 7. Have
2:30 night dub license. phone
992·9943, Pomeroy. Ohio.
6-7·61p

lawn chairs ; go-cart motor ;
used white ~ork trousers,

In Memory

For Sale.

Harrison's
T.V. Service

992·2525

==========~

"HEll"

..

~

'

·'

.

,.

. ·.

'

:

'

WHAR HE
IT FROM, I'LL
\'lEVER I&lt;NOW

••

1

I GUESS TIIAT
ENDS MV 1/CLA
SURVF.V. HE'I.J
'WHAT'S .~APPENING
OVER TWER~ ~

Smallest Heater Core.

•N1thon Biggs
· Radlotor SpKillill

Pho'ne 992-2094

Pomeroy Ho~e· ,, Auto :

SMITH .NELSON

MOTORS. IN~
Pomeroy

Open BTIIS

'!Hi$ G 'THE SILLIEST
1HING ! EVER +!EARP OF.

!lAVING U6 \\1?1&lt;'1&lt;
A SPEED 'TRAP...

OH,!~O~T

JUST SOME
OF TWE STUDENTS
GETTING Tllil~ .
EXERCISE

JIIA'i8E

no'¥ WERE

~IGII·SCIIOOt.

SENIORS

-TAKING
AN ENTRANCE
EXAM

Pll. 992·2174

· 606 E•
SEWING MACHINES. Repal"
service, all makes. 992·228.1.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized SIIIIJer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.·
.
J.29.1fc ·

oavls .

' CLATrER
CAMPUS

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to the

-GUARANfEEI&gt;

t304 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992cJi95
or Mason 773-5535

5·19·30tc

~

On Most Americo.!!.9U

Specializing In
Small Businesses

EARlll MOVING

~- 13

{f) lt7.1.

Dozer &amp; End loodtr work, .
ponds ,

basement,

commercial;

~. 1..:~ liJ.e...
Nll.,

land·

scaping. We hiVI 2 1111
dorers, 2 sire looders. Work
READY· MIX
CONCRETE '' done by hour or eontrod ..•
delivered right to .yovrl Free · Estimates. Wo olso :
pro/eel. Fast and easy. Free . haulllll dlr1, top.soll. Dump
esl maier. Phone 992·3284, 1.- trucks and low.boy lor hire.
Goegleln Ready·Mix Co.,1
Middleport, Ohio.
I See Bob or Roger Joflen,
6·30·HC: Pomerop . Phone '992-3525
alter 7 p.m. or phone ,.,.
--..,.---BACKHO~ AND DOZER work.
' 5232.
Sepl)c tanks Installed . George
IBill) Pullins. Phone 992·2478. SUPERIOR WINDOW Cleaning ·
.
4·25·HC
Co. &amp; Building Maintenance;

s~E?. w~w

TOMORR/
)'()' {)()IIJN

l7JWIJ

AN ~·

WHAT IF

FIJb DAY.. I WANT TO
SEt cto aeRY A.:r!Nib

LOIIE-STRUCK
OLE COOTS IS
SHOOT IN ' .IT OUT
OllER A GAL
THE.Y HAIN'T
SEEI-J FO'
sov~~!!

AH'LL TAKE

s

THeRS

.. NO

ISNTN&lt;'( ~!

WINDP
.

HI&amp;H AND Pl('b.JO.

professional

men for prolesslonal jobo;
phone 614-446·9202.
6-6·121p
.

'

.

.-~

I.

'.;

O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroods, Rt. 12~ .
Complete front end service,
tune up and brak~ service.
Wheels balanced elec·
All
work
Ironically .
guaranteed.
Reasonable
roles. Phone 992·3213.
7·27·HC

SII~E. I THINK I
SIIOULP Be
AllOWEP

•
WINNIE WINKLE

------

- - -- - -

20'

CARRIER
WANTED
IN
SYRACUSE

~

.• .

1972. 12 x 60 MOBILE home,
two-bedroom, total electric,
Guy Neigler, Racine , Olio.
shag carpet . Priced to sell.
6.J3.31c
36" X 23" X .009
Located near new min e .
'
Phone 742·5641 after 5 p.m. LOTS ON Wright St., Pomeroy : AUTOMOBILE Insurance bee'
WAITRESSE5-dinlng
room
&amp;
following fiJel ·adlullment to the
Also.
1968 SS396 Chevelle,
cancelled?
Losl
Y.OUI
phone 742·5937.
·cocktail. must be over 21.
total average KWH ptr month
$1,000.
Can
be seen at Rutland
6-6·121c
operator's license? Call 992
for ell the f1mp1 billed during July 2l. 19n or IUblect to prior
Apply
al
Meigs
Inn
office
.
Lost
Auto Sales or call number
2966.
lhl ptrlod .
6·11·31c
termination as provided in
above.
Tht energy charge applicable Section 10 of this Ordinance ;
6·15-HI
37 ACRE farm , modern house,
BLOND
Pekingese
on
6·12·31c
to all kllowatt.hours of energy provided It shall have been
drilled
well
,
7
acres
river
Harrisonville Rd ., Reward; SUMMER Employment, car
consumed shill bt rncreued or accepted by the Company by
bottom , on good road; call SEE US FOR : Awnln~•· "'""'
ca ll 843·2287 or 992·5897.
necessary ; lor details write
dtcrtased .oossc per KWH per written acc;:eptance flied In the
1968 APPLEBY fold ·down
USED OFFSET PLATES
doors and windows, carports,!
afler 1 p.m. 992-6133.
6·13·31p Mrs. Libman, 34 West Car·
each full ont ·half cent (.5c) Office of tne Clerk of the
ca mper ,
$150,
l · room
HAVE.
.
6·6·121c
marquees, aluminum sldlng i.lncr:tllt ar dtcreue above or Mun icipal ltv .
- - - - - -- -- penter Street, Athens, Ohio
McGraw -Edison air con .
'MANY USES
below twenty .three cents (23c)
and
railing. A. Jacob, soles
SECTION 10: That the VIllage
45701.
dltioner, like new, $60. Phone
In t~e avtriSit cost p&amp;r million by legislative action, or the
representative.
· ~or free~
6·11
·6tc
before 4 p.m. 992·3668.
!1;000,000) BTU Of lUll COn · Company 11'1all have the rigtlt to Notice
·esflmates, phone · Charles
6·1Hic
•umed 11 the Company's term inate this Ordinance at any
· Lisle, Syracuse, V. V..
gtntratlng atations during the time, upon written notice flied
Johnson and Sori, · lnc.
ucond
calendar
month with the other party hereto at
1968· HONDA CB·350, gooa
3·2·«•
preceding the billing date.
least 60 days pr ior to such
8 for $1.00
1 condition, low i'nlles, $495 ;
SECTION 3: SU~Iect 'to tht term ination date .
·
-~----,•
phone 992·5213 .
provl&amp;lons of Stctlon 6 of th is
SECTION 11 : The terms and
Pomeroy SEPil~ tanks Cleaned . Miller .
601 E. Main 51.
•
6·1J.6tp
Ordinance, payments for the prov isions of this Ordinance are
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
- -- - -atrtet lighting Hrvice furnlsllecl /Oint and several and the In ·
662·3035.
NEW
HOME
hereunder by the Company to velldlty of one shall not affect
TWO SERVICE MEN
2·12·tfC ·
Real Estate For Sale
the Mun icipality shall be made the validity of the others.
POMEROY - 1 story. 3
monthly In accordance with
Passed by the Counc il of the
bedrooms, double closets,
RACINE -6 room hOuse, bath,
bills rendtrtd thtrefor by the VIIIIQI of M iddleport. Ohio, this
Free Pickup &amp; Delivery
modern bulll·ln kitchen, 2 HARRISON' S TV Service, open
ut ility room, garage, $10,000:
Compeny, such payments to be 22nd day of May, 1971.
9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; freeJ&gt;Ickup
baths, dining room, all
phone 949·4195.
made on or btfort the lOth dll'
and delivery ; phone 992·2522.
3·31 ·1fc carpeled, basel"enl, lot
of the month nut a~ccetdlng ATTEST :
111 Court St.
CALL
6-13.tfc
that In wh lch the 11rY let was Gene Grate
115x220,
(electric
heat).
Pomeroy, Ohio
furnished. •nd In tht event that Clerk
THE
DAILY
SENTINEL
For Service Information
i ROOM house, lot on river. 115&gt;&lt;200, (electric heal) . DOZER and back hoe work,
the Municipality shall fall to
Approved thiS 2~ day of
Railroad St ., Middleport .
4 BEDROOMS
make 11ld montnly payment Moy, 1972 . ~-..
ponds and septic tanks; B &amp; K
O
$4,000 ; phone 992·3265.
MIDDLEPORT - Modern
rwhtn due was provided herein,
.
JohnW . Zerkle
pen9a .m.-9p.m.
WALNU
T
slereo.combl
natlon
•
Excavating, Phone 992-5367,
PHONE
6·6-12k kitchen , large TV room ,
.aald dtltrred payments shall
4 speaker sound system, 4
Dick Karr . Jr.
•ur lnt""' •' t~• ratt"of 6 pet . t•l •· \3, 2t . 'ft '
dining room, bat1'1, carpet,
Speed dual volume control .
:Mayor
"
5·21·HC.
·r
ptr annum ·from ttte date of
Balance $68 .3 2. Use our HOUSI: in Lonsfl!offiiin , phone ' paneled. ullllly room,
maturity until the dltt paid ,
985·3529.
For
Rent
garage and large storage
budget . terms. Call 992·7085.
and should the Municipality
6·1J.tk
NOTICE OF ELECTION
6·8·6tc
building, 2 lots. $14,900.00. SEWING MACHINE service,
default In making any such
UNFURNISHED
apartment,
clean, oil , set tension $4.99. .
ON ISSUE
peyment&amp; for a period of four
A FARM
134 Mulberry Ave ., phone 992··
OF BONDS
THREE
bedroom
house
with
Special Electro · Grande
(4) months, then and In that
EARLY American Stereo, AM·
WITH A FUTURE
3962.
NOT ICE Is hereby given 1ha1
bath, lf2·acre lot , on public
Company. Phone 992-6517.
~ event the Company may at any
F
M
radio,
4
speed
changer.
6·11 ·1fC
This may be "jusl the spot"
water system , a;• .mile from
5-21·HC
tlmt thereafter discontinue said In pursuance of a Resolut ion· of
4 speaker sound system .
you 've been looking for . Call
street lighting urvlce without the Board or Educat ion or the
Chester
on
County
Rd.
25.
UNFURNISHED hous e, 4 ~alance s73 .S6. Use our
notice; and lhtrtafler until Eastern Local School Distri ct,
us for an appolntmenl to see
Phone 985-4262.
CALL 949·2789foreufo body and
budget term s. Call 992·7085.
such time 11 tht full amount due Meigs Covnty, Oh io, passed on
rooms,
bath and utility room ,
II.
Opportunity knocl&lt;s!
·6fc
6·11
paint work. Also ropalr fiber
6·8-61c
to tht company under the terms the 9th day of May , 1972, there
garage
,
Lincoln
Hgts
.,
phone
3BEDROOMS
glass
boats. plus electric and
Ofthls OrdlnencthiS bun paid, will be subm ltted to a vote of the
992·3874.
NICE ·2·slory home w{th full
MIDDlEPORT -1'12 baths.
Window
the Com pony, 1t 111 option, may people of said School District at
gas
welding . Stanley's
6·13·31c
. basement, 2 lots. new forced large double garage, storm
or may not rtaume said street tho Special ELECTION to be
Custom
Body Shop
·
Air
Conditioners
air furnace. Near Pomeroy .
lighting llrvlce, provided, held In the Eastern Locel School
doors and windows, nfce
5·19·301C
District,
Ohio,
at
th
e
regular
..
however, that no charges shall
ilementary School. . Phone porches , EXCELLENT
2 BEDROOM tra iler. adults
Hot Water Healers
bt mact:t bV tt;e (llr"f)lny for place&amp; of voting therein, on
992-7384
to see.
only,
Bob's
Mobile
Court
,
NEIGHBORHOOD.
Plumbing
atrttt lighting ltrV ·I.e during Tuesday, the 15th day of
11·7·tfC $12,900.00.
phone 992·2951.
any such ptrlod In which aald August, 19?2, the question of
Electrical Work
6·13·tfc
aervlc•ll discontinued asln th is ls.sulno bonds of said Two
CLOSE OUT .on 1971 full size
Section l provided.
· Hundred F lfty Thousand
zig-zag sewing machine. For
HENRY E. CLELAND, Sr.
ONE bedroom trailer apartSECTION • : Th1 Company Dollars !S250.000.00J lor the
sewing
stretch
fabrics,
REALTOR
tgrna during the term hereof purpose of constructing ad ·
ments, ideal tor coupl es.
Economy Tiller, 31/, h.p·. B&amp;S
dltlons and Improvements to the
buttonholes, fancy designs,
to 1n11111 oddlllonolotrtolllohto ew.lstlng
Phona
992·2259
Contact
McCIDre's
Dairy
Isle,
h lgh school building,
engine. Reg . 159.95
144.95
of lht type and slzt speclflti:t
etc . Palnl slightly blemished.
Uno answer 992·2568
992·5248
or
992·3436.
acquir
ing
fu
'
r
nlture
end
above. whtn author lied to do so
Choice of carrying case or
6·13·5tc
by rttolutton Of the Council. equipment for school purposes ,
Turf Trim Mower, B&amp;S 3117
sew ing sland. $49.80 cash or
and
maklno
schOOl
site
im
·
Provldtd, however, that the
992 -2448
terms available. Phone 992·
new ltrtol IIQh 11 1hall be rovements , as provided by
'
3
AND 4 ROOM furn ished and h.p . engine. In carton 70.25
ow
.
5641.
Pomeroy, 0.
located within 250 feet of a
unfurnished
apartments
.
POMEROY
The maximum number of
6-8·61c
JOHN
dl1trl~u11on circuit of lho
Phone 992·54l4.
·:90 _ Jack W. Carsey,Mgr.
Company ; and, provided tur - years during wh1ch such bonds
4-12-lfc
Aill
Phone99l·2181
thtr ,that not more than ten {10) are to run Is 2• years .
IDEAL 5·ACRE RANCHO .
The estimated average ad · BOAT' LICENSE - fo r your - - - - . . , . -.,-lddltlonal llghh may be
boat,
for
your
motor
.
Lake Conchas. New Mexico.
tax
rate
amounts
to
dltlonal
~- room apt .
requlrtd during the last veer of
Available at Simon's Pl ck ·A· FURNISHED
Q
ON YOUR DIAL
$2,875. No Down. No Interest.
rwentl .seven and ont halt
Adults
only,
Middleport
,
the period of this Ordinance.
VACUUM
CLEANER,
Com
·
Pair
Shoe
Store.
108
W.
Main
,
c:ents
or
each
one
hundred
$25
mo.
Vacation
Paradise.
Tho Company lhlll not ~•
phone 992-3874.
pact, A-I condition. wllh atf.
R EALTYf
Pomeroy, Ohio, Phone 992Money
Maker .
Free
required to make any
ex . dollars of valuation, which Is
6·4·1fc
and
carpel shampooer. SJ3.20
2.75
mills
lor
each
one
dollar
of
383().
ftnslonl or renewals In the
BroChure.
Ranchos:
Box
cas h or terms available .
5-16·301C - - - - - - tv'!nt that the Municipality 11 in valuation, outside of the
200100, Alameda, California
Contact
Phone 992-6517.
1r1 ear a in payment for services lim itation imposed by Arl!cle
94501.
Auto
Sales
XII,
Sec
t
ion
2
of
the
con
.
6·8·1fC
rtndtred .
··
.· VERA EBlEN ,
6-7·14tp
The minimum number of stltutlon, as certified by the CLOSED for vacation , 1111 July BLUE 1966 Mu&lt;fang , V.8, - -- - - -- - --:
County
Auditor
.
.
.. t'lf3tm .
.
strtet lights shall be not less
lsi . Cliff's Shoe Repair ,
bucket
seats,
lealher SWEE PER. Hoover with all . RACINE · - 10 room hou5e;
He Polls for said Election
than tht sum of the total
'iiOraaiSt.
MiddlePOrt
Middleport.
upholstering. phone 882-2161 8 Runs like new $17.40. Phone
.
.
bath, basement, garage, two
nurQbtr lptcltltd lbove, and will open at 6:30 O'ClOCk A.M.
6·11 ·31c
a.m.
to
5
p.m.
or
984-3806,
992·6517.
tnd
rema
in
open
until
6:
30
lots. Phooe 949-4313.
whenever additional lights lrt
6·8-lfc
Be\lerly, after 6 p.m .
Installed, tht minimum number o'clock P .M . Eastern Standar.d
4-5·1fP
Time
of
said
day
.
RUMMAGE
Sa
le.
Reyno1as
6-13-2tc
Of llgh11 Shall bt. lncreesed
-:
:
FHA APPROVED!! Just
Palls
By order of the Board of
NEW SEWING MACHINE .
Building , Middleport by Ash
accordingly .
5
ROOM
house,
l'h
balh,
buill·
In
Elections,
of
Melos
County
,
$700
down buys this lovely 3'
(
Lell
in
lay:dway)
Zig
Zag
· II 11 further IQrttd that the
Street. Freewill Baptist ' 70 Bonneville, 2 dr . HT, blue
back porch, large screet\ed· ln b.r .. l'h bath home . Call me
Muinum.
Company,, Shill move street OhiO .
Model. Dial controls lo fancy
Church. Jvne IS, 16 and 17, 9 with black vinyl top, factory
front
porch,
garage.
running
llghta to, new locations. or
stitch, sew stretch material /
today
6n
this
one.
a.m.
Edwin S. Cozart
air ; vinyl interior i 25,000
Chtnge tht type of fixtures to
Diamelel:
6·J3.3fc
buttonhole and etc. $39.20 water; l:J;,. acre of ground ; for
Everything
can
·
be
com·
Chairman
another typeaptclflfd above , as
actual miles, phone 992·5934
quick
sale,
must
be
seen
to
be
cash or terms available .
rtqutsttd by resolution of the
. after S p.m.
011
appreciated; 10 miles North pleled In my office.
Dorothy M . Johnston OLD-FASHION Trading Ring ;
Phone 992-6S17.
Council ; provided, however ,
6·11
-6tp
of
Pomeroy
qn
Rt.
33;
call992·
Clerk
6·B·ffC
that the actual cost to tl'1e
Horses, ponies , guns or
lMiestEnd
6748.
.
POMEROY - Very nice 3
Company In mtklng such Dllted May 19 , 1972 .
anything to trade; 1 mile back
6-9·61c lb.r . home, full blllh up, LR &amp;
rttoc:atlon, or change In flx of West Columbia, W. Va . on Marine Sales
Real Estate For Sale
turtt, sh•ll be ptld for by tht {)) 23. 30 (61 6, 13, ••c
DR, kltchen with all bullt.ln
the Lakin Road : lsi and 3rd 32 FT. Houseboat, 40 h.p . out·
MuniCIP!allty.
features.
Full basement,
Sunday each month.
SIECTION 5: The Comp1ny
board motor and trailer: will
LEGAL NOTICE
new gas furnace, garage on
6·11
·61p
DELIVERED
Shill tndetvor to turn Ish auf .
sell reasonable. Phone 992ADVERTISEMENT
two
lols-$15,500.
flelen1 electric energy to keep
FOR BIDS
7157 or see at 28A River 51. ,
nld street ~ llohtlng. lamps
Sealed proposals ~ill bt .REGISTERED Appaloosa Stud
Middleport.
burning continuously during the received
Service, 550 Reg . mares. $40
G l's - come In and talk to
the Meigs County
6·7-61c
night seuon each and ever(. Bollrd of by
Mental
Retardation
,
Gi-ade,
Francis
Benedum
.
me aboul VA loans. I have
night during the term hereof . 1 , until 12 o'clock noon eastern
110 Mechanic Street
Phone 667·3856.
tor any reason , ·there Is a failure standard
FHA
and
VA
the
, June U , 1912,
S·17·301P
to furnish ~tid energy for more and at thattime
representative
In
my
office
t
ime
opened
by
the
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
thin tn aggregate of four (•)
n prov ided by law tor a
on&lt;e a week .
hours In eny one month and board
U
pautnger
school bus , KOSCOT KOSMET ICS: Several CASii paid for all mo • .,. and
upon written notice of such specifications as follows
models
ol
mobile
homes
.
REAL
INVESTMENT
:
new produCts - specials each
tggr~gate outage furnished to
Phone area code 614-423·9531.
CORNER LAND - Large building, 40x70, Ideal for con·
Minimum Sptclllcatlons lor
month ; also sales personnel
lho
complny
~y
lhe
160 Coal Slreet - Also
•·ll·lfc
" · Penengtr Sc:hool Ius ·
tra ctor on Route 143. Has a 3 bedroom residence, 11h acres
needed. Phone 992·5113.
Munlclpollly within ttn !IOl
Cargo
Va
n
E
.JAQ.Ford.
123.5
locallon of the Mlddlepor1 C
of
level
land
.
days after receipt of bill tor
H ·lk
W.B.
,of
C offl~e .
·
au~h ltrvlee. there shall be •
SCENIC
Chev,y .. Vt!in
GE · 31305
pro raft reduction from the bill
SYRACUSE - Watch the river boats go by, relax, and
SA
\i
E
up
to
one
half.
Bring
yolli'
Chevrolet
.
125"
W.B.
'Air Conditioners
~or said month to cover such
enjoy life summer or winter. 4 bedroom home with 2
Tradesman 8300. Dodge 127"
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
OUtiDfl. No lloblllty Shall al · W.fl
•
Awnings
151
Butlernul
Ave.,
Pomeroy.·
balM. nlc~ 1~1tchen , full basement.
tach to the Company tor anv
GMC CE 3630l GMC 125" ' .
wiLD BUT CAN BE DEVELOPED ·
H ·lfC
cllscontlnuances of service .
·Underpinning
SECTION 6 : Unlll such time W.B.
OVER 7 ACRES - Wantto build several homes for resale
GVW
7600
lbs.
••
tht
eltc:ton
of
the
Then you ought to see this. Your lortune &lt;ould be here.
Front Axle JJOO lbs .
Complete mobile home
For Sale or Trade
Munlclplllty oulhorlzt an
Rear
AJCie
5000
lbs
.
PRIME LOCATION
service
plus
gigantic
alternative method for the
Front Spring W5 lbs.
RT. 124 WEST - Compact home for the working &lt;lass.
1967 FORD Galaxle; sell or · 'display of mobile homes .
l.'heck Uur
.,.,mont ol thf then currtnl
Rtar Spring 2250 lbs .
trade for motorcycle; phone always avalloble at ...
Yet Ills real nice. All paneled and carpeted. Room for a
blftl Of thl Mun clplllty for the
Engine
,
300
Cu
.
In
VI
Price Tud.y
atrett lighting servlct' provided
992·3530.
garden or play ground .
Horn - Oual Electric ,
In lhll Ord inance, collection tor
6·9-6lp
HANDY
Mirrors - Western Type s X
MILLER
such aervlct 1h1tl be made as
palntod
MIDDLEPORT - You can walk to the stores, and the
provided In A:att Ordlnanct No . 10 Alternator
so amp , hOurs
'65 MUSTANG· ·convertible.
children to school. Level lot with 3 bedroom home. Ohly
MOBILE HOMES .
915.72 of lho Municipality, tlxlnu
Batttry
10
amp
hours
.
immaculate condillon, 6
$8,500.00.
ratn wf'lfeh the Compeny may
Gauges. OII ·Temperature
1220 W1ohlngton Blvd.
cylinder, standard floor shift:
chart• for standard secondary Amp
FREEDOM
.
·
· sfereo tape deck ; beautiful 423·7521
BELPRE, D.
electric service to consumers In
142 ACRES- Enjoy the fresh air of the cduntry. Make
Tires. Front &amp; rear , 8.00 X
'
tho
Munlclpollty
1nd 16.5
metallic maroon finish; must
rH. 77J.SSt2
X 10 ply. M·S Rear
money with cattle while you work at your regular job.
eataDIIthlng 1 formula for
to
appreciate
;
phone
949·
see
Transmission Automat ic
Meigs school district. large farm pond and a very good
vuylng auch rattl. or such
MASON, W.VA.
Front Heeter (fresh air with
5953 .
For
Sale
.ordlftlnceor ordtnancH 11 mav Defroster
spring.
3 or 4 bedroom home. 2 barns, nice oufbulldi"'JS.
H lgh ·output l
6·13·610
• hn~ . 1'001 fO"ii 'UIIT ~ ,~ 1 .
• 1
frem lime to flmo be In tffocl
$32,500.00.
Power Steering
r, .., ' '2'1' ''' ··~ •••m ft '" "'~"' · ,,~:~, ...nr r,r ...., lltllind hlor90
COAL, Llmesto~e. Ex.celslor
~----lOt oueft putftOIH followlno lht
Power Brakes CoptlonaD
• TO'fAL 111011 WIDe! C.'OOll ~'1 I
•
Sail Works, E. Main St.,
'67 JEEP Wagoneer, 4 wheel
fl&lt;Piratltn 01 Slid Ordln1nce
.lf\~' 1 a.. l """~~ ~~ ~~~ .
'
• IIIH·W'•y ooij11011 bl~ b""ll
R11r Doors fixed Gins (2)
We ~eed nice and neaf 2 bedroom homes, reasonably
Phone
992·3891.
Pomeroy
,
No. tU·71 ond during lht ltrm
drive,
327
v.a,
air
con
·
81dl m1y be malted to Mr .
• ~=·~~~~~·~~~~g:~: ~~~L * ,~~:... ,..~, rdr~fllftt to ~TIIq eft~.
priW!II- Big lhlngs oro In the making, welch this ad and
of lhll Ordlnlnct.
dilloned ; automaflc trans ·
··12·1fc
Edwerd
Kennedy , Rock Springs
SECTION 7: Tho Comp1ny Rd .. Pomeroy.
you
may
be
a
little
wiser.
Real
estate
Is
a
solid
In·
• ,tr,LL WI' Amt:~ G-ILL • ololklwo
mission,
power
steerin9
,
Oh io.
l&lt;~· t• unllln~m "'~llfl.et,
1"'11111-1 1!101-ae...: ~
lhlll IIYI lhl MUniCIP.IliiY
The bOard will reserve the
power brakes. automattc CAMPER. 16.tt.' sleeps 6, good , vest_ment. Come In Iosee who! we haveloo«er.
htrmlnl from eny and 111 right to ·11ccept or relect -·any or
• ~liD FA,I'I - l'lr&lt;'llilk'l lit ...,llh 0&lt; .-ltllo.o ~ 0
condition. Sl.OOO. Phone 992·
HELE'N L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
front h~bs, excellent con·
,.... lH' luw ~·
·~·.
lloblllty occulonld ~Y tho sole oil bldl.
dllion
;
phone
949·5953.
6329
.
"'
•
I
naullt-• of lht Company In
5·12·HC
6·13·61c
992-3325 NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS PLEASE. 992·2371
the conatructlon, mllnttntn~;t {5) 23, 30 !6) 6. 13. &lt;tc
ond oporollon of Its strttl IIDh·

Aluminum
Sheets

..

4.- 1"

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

HOUSE Carpenter·finlsher, ca ll

.

'

! - ·-

$5;55

shirts, 85c each, great for
·Wanteli To Buy
IN LOVING memory of James Card of Thanks
painters! Also, see our usual ELECTROLUX Sweeper delux
F. Dolley, who passed away
good selection of clea n
' Marie Mill s
model. Complete with all
THE FAMILY of
three years ago, June 13.
household goods, appliances.
c leaning ' attachments and
USED
waterski
equipment,
call
wishes
to
extend
their
many
Many a silent heartache, and
KUHl'S BARGAIN CEN·
uses paper bags. Slightly used
thanks for the wonderful care
992·2392.
often a hidden lear ;
TER. Rt. 7 "at the caution
but cleans and looks like new .
6·13·31p
and
treatment
that
was
given
Buf always a beaullful memory
light", Tuppers Plains. Ohio.
Will sell for ·$37.25 cash or
lo their mother during her
of one we loved so dear .
Open to 6 p.m. ; closed
term s available. Phone 992·
hospitali
zation
and
death
at
'OLD FURNITURE •. dishes, Mondays. Phone : 667-3858.
Sadly missed by wife and
5641.
the
Veterans Memorial
6·11·61c
clocks. brass beds, silver
children .
6·8·61c
Hospital
;
to
Dr.
Pickens,
Dr.
6·1 ~ · 11C
dollars
or
complete - - - -- - - -- Telle, nurses and aides ; also
households . Write M. D. REMNANT SALE : 1500 yds. of
pupp1es, Silver Toy,
to Rev . Simons, Rawlings.
Miller . Rl . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. upholstery &amp; drapery fabrics; POODLE
Parkview Kennels, Phone 992·
lno 'vstem In said Mun icipality . Coats Funeral Home and . Call 992-6271.
Mowre'l's
Upholsteri ng ;
5443.
SECTION 8: All fiKtures sha ll
pallbearers. We also want to
3·16.1fc locate at Mason County
S.lS·Ifc '
be ma intained In as good order
thank all of our relatives,
F~irgrounds, Pt. Pleasant;
and condition as pract icable at
friends and neighbors for the
the expense of the Company .
phone 675-415•:
1970 CL70 Honda. Good conTille to all wires, poles. lamps
beautiful flowers and for the lielp Wanted
6·9·61c
dition. Also mixed hay, 985·
and appurtenances used by the
food that was sent ln. Many
3816.
Company In furnishing the
thanks to the Baptist and NEED yard mowed; phone 992·
6-11-31c
2021.
r
service contemplated In this
Christian Churches . These
6·13.3tc
Ordinance Is and shall be In the
things will not be forgotten.

Cos"E~a;,'8N 9: This' Ordinance
Son, daughter and families,
shall cancel and supersede
Mr . and Mrs. Russell Mill s,
Ordinance No. 965·10 pi!Jssed
Mr . and Mrs. Nlax Lambert .
Jun~r 22, 1970, anc:t sha ll take,
6· 13 -ltp
effect and be In force from and - - - - -- - -- after thirty days from its
passage, and tha ll terminate on

.

!
i

EXPERT·
Vf1,et ....
AI'If!ment
. .

KEBLERfS
.BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

Vinyl floor covering, lovely

Saturday.

'

;

colors &amp; patterns, 9x12's
$14.95; elect. clothes dr~ers , For Sale
your choice $30. (Free
.
ceramic frog with every rug ALUMINUM boats, on county
or dryer purchase lhru ' road 18, 150 yards west of Rt.
Regatta Week! I All ·melal
33. Call 992·6256. lorenzo

OPEM EVES. 1:00 P.M.
fj)MEROY, OHIO

TO TELL '-IE
PURE TRUTH, LOWEEzlf ..
HE SPENT MOST OF' HIS
TIME JEST A-SETTIN'
fiN' STARIN' OUT TH'
I('......-. •
DAD BORN
WINDER

~

Business Services

REGATTA WEEK SPECIALS :

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Wj1V DG 'IE RECKON
JUGHAID DONE 50
PORELV 1!11 SCHOOL
THIS 'lEAR, MISS
PRUNELLV?
.

•

Sticker 54241.75 Driver Education car. SpeclaHy Priced .

suo

. Alllons, (hereinafter called the

wllh lh1 rlohl lo lluhl ¥t)lh
tltctrlcl 'I tht streets, alleys,

.

,. ..

c.

1

CLELAND
REALTY

The
DaUy Sentinel

------

992-2156

------

'

HEATING &amp;
COOUNG

UTl'LE ORPHAN ANNIE
l080! WE ~RE OlD

SPECIAL

MOWERS
&amp; TILLER!

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

FRfMD5, LOBO
AHD I!

We talk ._JOU

ACROSS

lilie a. .~

r.

:WMP0/1390

WHITE

Associate

MY CURBSTONE
SITTERS,
WATCi-IING

WANTED

THE

CHIPWOOD.

- -- - --

DIET SMITN
rro-.,;),F. ACTOR'I!

10"

$6.00 Per Ton

Virgil B. Teafo'rd, Sr.- Broker

TERRY

TO
OHIO
PMJ.fT 00.·

..

:5f'UR, HOllE'( IIEFOI!E lW

lO Flf{l!
:'""""II FYFFf, i!EMEMIII:R 1011'11 llfVEll: FINP )OUR
WAY MCK 10 OVLIZATIOH WITHO!IT HIM 10
AA\'IISioTe T1I'IT FI.YIN6 «!Jill!

----,~--

to

24,000 BTU

-

j
1 K_

nation

selection.
(3 wds.)
9. Youngster
10. Wandering
16. Felled
19. Whig's
opponent

22. Egyptian
Christian
24. Solicitude
25. Became
tastele&lt;S
26. Lifer's
only hope
27. Coupled
28. Melodious

ROAPE
30. " - Foollsil
things ... "

31. Penetrate
36. Tiny
bird
37. Dale
Evans'

husband

II I ~)
USSIA

I ....... ___
Ye11~rd.7'•

I

coin

·Unger
1'1. Warden's
headache
Yorkshire
river
U. Ukesome
fenders
fl. Belgian
river

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE ..:. Here'a how to work it:
.
II

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter almply stancb for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sintle letters,
•l"'strophes, the lencth and formation of the worcb ore oil
hmtJ. E~tb doy the code letters are different:

CJIYPTOQUOTES

TLMGERT

FTJMZ}'TC
UFTERTF

E

GIZDL

BTFWTGRDQ

BFYW· YIIHLTF . ftJYKUIR,

OZCLYP,

CRERT.-0.

T.

R\EH

RY

UYATFH

GlEHHZHU

. Ylilterdv'l Crn*4lllele: I BELIEVE IN SOCIAL EQUALITY BECAUSI!: IT IS lllPOSSIB.LE TO BElJEVB AMY·
THING ELIIE.-JL.DSTER
!C 1972 Kfn~ Falun~ 8JII41clt., Int.) .

II

HON

~LL.

THE ISEeiNNINGo
OF A ROMANCe.

III
WITH AN
(Mo..n

J.....lno COLIC ICINICY UNSAID PLAQUI
A.•en

13. Hasten
H. Japanese

E

I (XJ

()

ao. Fish
sauce
·sz. Cunning

RY

II

I II

IGOEMAH!

name

'Jt

letter to each l411&amp;ft, to

I SCAMK ·='CI,=-

6. Hostile

8. "Hair"

11

form four ordlnarr warda.

_..

7. Stood for
eleclion

lflol\

U-=ramble lheH raur Juinblet,

2. Proverbs
3. Today's
youth
(2wds.)
t. Wholly
5. "Madame

FURNITURE

6,000

'""''''""""·"'''

country

II. Girl's

On01dltt.33
Phone 9!2·2&amp;89
Pameror, Oltil .

MASON

THI!!AT~H

JI&amp;Q~®'"'-~~:~:~!~-'c

DOWN
1. Asian

1. Ethiopian
Jake
5. Scold
11. False god
12; Wild a&lt;S
13. Cry
14. Mere out·
side show
15. Instigate
1&amp;. Overwrought
thespian
17. Threematch
(2 wds.)
18. Unstable
20. Marsh
21. Pure;
spotless
22. Word
with push
or go
13. Eagle
U.-auvin
%6. Nimble
Z'l. New
Guinea's
original
name
Chinese
pagoda

·

''J""¥'• ..U." -SKIP

~·-wtroeowwt

.

�1-The O.I17Sentinei,Maddleport..fams'oy,
0 ., June 13,11'12
-.
.

67 Passengers Safe · by~ Miracle

proximately 25 centa a pe.-.on. .
Saturday night will not.be served. Tjckets .
In ofi~er bulineu, theae reports on the aft! $5 a couple and $3 a single.
up-coming Regatta were made :
President Kerr extended his thanks to
(Continued on page 8)
- Three drum and bugle corps from pomeroy Mayor William Baronick, county
DETROiT . (UP! ) - An dipped into the grass by the
around the clock", he added .
Akron will participate In the Friday night ·engineer Theodore Beegle and the Meigs
American
Airlines pilot safely , side of the landing strip. A
Surveys show tbai from the Meigs parade. A drum and bugle corps from · Coonly Conunissioners for work comarea 2fi8 persons are employed at Kaiser, Columbus will a!BQ participate as well as pl~ted on the road below the upper parking landed his crippled jetliner . normal Iandin~. mrport ofcarrying 67 persons at ficials said, takes one-third the
67 at Foote Mineral ahd 32 at Philip Spron, several banda from th.e Meigs area.
lot wall.
.
.
and that approximately 9,900 cars travel
-Unda Riffle reported that seven
Rocks on- the road were moved, Detroit's Metropolitan Airport distance.
FBI agents and Under~eriff
the bridge daiiy.
entries for the Regatta Queen con teat have clearing the way for boat traffic. Gravel is Monday night, just moments
after
a
"decompression
exLauren
Pittman said the ex·
McCoy said trucks up to 20-ton gross been received and two judgeo have been also to be placed in the area.
plosion;'
ruined
his
landing
.
plosion
came from a bomb
weight car. use the ferry service, and that named, John Reece and Sol Smith, with
Regatta program advertisers were gear l\lld steering mechanisms implanted in the jet's baggage
regular delivery trucks are no problem. the third Judge yet to be named. Judging
"We can handle any average size truck will be done from the balcony at the Meigs asked to send in their money at once to and left him without radio compartment.
contact. Mrline officials declined to
plus four cars at one time "McCoy said. ~·
K~
.
th
d
Ten persons, two of them conflrlll the reports. Allan
· - Earl Ingels reported on the boat
Attending in addition to ose name
Cost of the ferry service would be
stewardesses,
were taken to . Aikin, zone sales manager for
determined by Mason Council and the parade. As of Monday six entries had been were Donald Diener, Tom Cassell, N. W.
nearby
Wayne
County
General ' American Mrlines, said there
ferry operators. "Waiting time would received. Owners ivho wiah to take parlin Compton, Bill Reed, AI uinpscomb, Roger
HospitaL
They
received
minor were no mechanical devices in
ayerage approximately four minutes," he the parade and who do not wllh to decorate Hysell, Edison Baker. Richard Chambers.
said.
_
their crafta may do so. They will not be Jack Kane, Dean Ll!lz, Bob Jacobs, Bill injuries during an emergency the baggage compartment that
Grueser, Jack Carsey.- Linda Riffle and evacuation of the plane after it could ~ave possibly caused the
Pedestrian traffic will be ac- judged however.
landed.
explosion .
-Tables at the annual Frog Ball on Fred Crow.
commodated by the ferry service at ap·
Officials said the bomb
The explosion happened just
10 minutes after the plane had which ripped off the four-by ..six
taken off from the same airport foot left rear cargo door ex·
and was gaining altitude over ploded as the plane was still in
Ontario. II was first reported its climb over Windsor, Ont., at
(Continued from page I)
that a bomb exploded in a rear 7:29 p.m. The pilot, Bryce E.
lougher stand against both Protestant and CathoDe gunmen. The
baggage compartment of the McCor;nick, brought it to a
first step in thia direction, he said Monday, would be the imhuge DCIO, but airline officials succesful but jolting stop 15
mediate dispatch of another 550-man battalion of_British 10ldiers
MOSCOW
(UP!)
"His rich intuition enables this morning said a cargo door minutes later.
1o Northern Ireland, boosting troop strength there lo more than American chess champion ~IIBkY to effect sharp tactical opened at 12,000 feel, causing
A coffin containing .a body
15,000.
Bobby Fiacher Ia "egocentric, turns in a fiuid involved the decompression explosion. dropped out of the plane and
capricious, ohltinate and hot- · position," Rok1tlln said.
fell 12,000 feet to the ground.
The strategic concepts of
WA!IHINGTON- AN AIR FORCE GENERAL abruptly tempered" but has an '.'ap"God must blfve been flying Police said the coffin, which
removed fr0111 his conunand in Vietnam, demoted and retired, prolllmalely equal" chance lo Fischer are much different.
as his COililot," said a sheriff's was boarded in Detroit, the
defeat
Soviet
world
champion
"Rapid
appraisal
and
ac·
deputy after the emergency body and some baggage landed
testified Monday that Gen. Creighton Abrams knew he ordered
in a field near an old highway
'Faids on North Vietnam which at least technically violated long· Boris Spaaaky in their tiUe curate calculation of variations landing .
.
match
next
month,
Tass
said
are
'
his
(Fischer's)
strong
four
miles east of the Windsor
The
plane,
a
DCIO
with
its
standing U. S. pollcy, "I believe General Abrams knew what I
today.
point,"
he
said,
adding,
"his
side blown out and a main city limits.
was doing," said former four..star Gen. JOhn D. Lavelle.
A
commentary
by
the
news
Achilles
heel
is
the
The plane was American's
engine shut down, wadcUed
But Lavelle told congressional investigators Monday he waa
agency's
cheaa
corrunentator,
psychological
and
emotional
F1ight
97, en route from Los
back
and
forth,
,on
and
off
the
"positlv_e"that Abrams, the commander of all U.S. forceo in the
Yakov
Rolthlin,
said
the
match
aspect
of
the
struggle."
runway for a lialf mile before it Angeles to New York's
war zone, did not know that the strikes were being inaccurately
for the world champi11111hip
They have "approximately came to rest with its right wing LaGuardia Airport with a brief
reported lo the public,
that beginl in Reykjavik, July equal chances" in the match,
2, may depend on "who will be he said. ·
,.,., .,,,.....·m.·.-.,..,•.•..••.•.•v,.wp.•.·.w·:·:&lt;·
COLUMMUS -THE STATE A'ITORNEY general's office firllt to seize the Initiative."
and sll.te Coffi!Jlerce Department have run Into a roadblock In
Tau called spassky, 35, "a
attempting to get a new consumer protection law off the ground. \UllveriiBI chell8 player."
~ 1~
The two Delilocratic • controlled agencies were turned clown
(Continued from page I)
Monday by the Republican • dominated Controlling Board in
;u:rs·
I''
1'~'
secretary, enective July 7.
their request for $659,000to oversee the new law,
SAIGON (UP!) - U. S.
The . board approved a
But the attorney general'soffice and Conunerce Department
All Middleport Village funds
B52s,
taking advantage of
revision of Dorset Smith 's
are expected to return to the board next month with a similar
summer employment from two new electronic developments as of May 31 totaled $tn,777.98,
request before the law takes effect July 14.
'months to six weeks, a that protect them against Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate
resolution supporting the missiles, hombed targets In rep orted Monday to town
concept of volunteers in North Vietnam today for the counciL
The Middleport Fire educational
The receipts and disbur·
service, .a sixth consecutive day.
Deparlmen
I
and
Emergency
sements,'
respectively, each
Tonight, June 13
resolution endorsing and en· Fighter-bombers hit bridges
Squad answered 25 calls during couraging youth organizations 25 miles from China despite fund and the May 31 balances
May according to the report of
include:
STRAW DOGS
Mrs. John Compton, disaster Fire Chief Bob E. Byer sulr in vocational education, ad- Peking warnings the raids
!Technicolorl
General, $4,288 . ~3, $3,399.10,
chairman for the Meigs County milled to Middleport Council vertising for gasoline, oil and threatened China's security. $35,977.25; cemetery, $706.20,
Dustin Hoffman
The Pentagon said the
grease bids, advertising for
Susan George
Chapter of the American Red Monday night.
B52s,_
conlined mostly to $527.58, $404.13 ; fire equip·
motor
vehicle
insurance,
and
ALSO SHORTS
Cross, announced today Meigs
There
were
four
fire
calls
ment, $50, $118.73, $733.,75 ;
SHOW STARTS I P.M.
County has been asked for a answered in the village during the erection of a school sign at South Vietnam In the past swimming pool , $1,447 .80,
because of the missile
donation of $256 for the sur· the month two of which were Salisbury.
were now bombing $602. 32, $2,676.55; planning
threats,
Milk
bids
were
awarded
to
vivors of the Rapid City, S. D. false alarms.
Tonight &amp; Thurscloy
Valley Bell Milk Company and the North on an almost daily commission, no re ceipts ,
disaster.
Twenlyo{)ne
calls
were
an·
$102.50, $971.20; street main·
Juntt4-17
Money has to be raised by swered by the first aid squad, Broughton's. The bid from basis. The Uniled States has tenance, $8,137.88; $2,979.11 ,
NOT OPEN
donations, Mrs. Compton 11 in town and 10 out of town. Betsy Ross for bread .and buns increased the number of $12 ,872.90 ; sani tary sewer ,
explained, and cannot be taken Sixteen were calls for help in was accepted, providing B52s in Southeast Asia $3,877.88, $2,979.11, $12,872.90;
from the treasury, Containers cases of illness or injury and Heiner's Bakery was notified fourfold since the start of the sanitary sewer, $3,877.97 ,
will be placed in area business five were for accidents in· and if so, did not want to bid . Communist offensive on $3, 213.82, $22,105.73 ; water ,
The
board
approved March 10 ..
places, and contributions may volving motoMehicles.
$6,304.58, $5,652.61, $22,293.91 ;
payment of Disadvantaged
be '"'nt to. Mro. John Werner,
Total miles traveled by all
water meter deposit trusts,
treasurer, 1110 Norlli Second fire department vehicles Pupil Program Fund Ad·
$200 , $141.08, $6,052.23 ;
ministrative Funds of $312.30
Ave
.,
Middleport,
for
that
amounted
to
454.7
and
total
sanitary sewer escrow, no
Tonight, Junol3
on the basis of one-fourth to the
purpose.
man
hours,
fires
on!)',
were
re ceipts, no disbursements,
Double Featuro Program
following, L. W. McComas,
15.5. There was an average of Lela Curtis, Donald Wolfe and
$58,003 .78; general bond
"LE MANS,.
nine men on fire calls only.
(Color)
retirement, no receipts, no
Rebecca Hargraves.
TO MEET AT INN
Steve McQueen
disbursements, $15,686.55.
The board agreed to let the
Vi sion testing of pre·
Mayors of several Ohio and
PLUS
Receipts for the month
trainable mentally retarded schoolers in the Meigs Local'
THE LIGHT AT
West Virginia communities
DIVORCES AS~ED
totaled
$25 ,013 .36 while
THE EDGE OF
classes have additional space School district is underway.
with representatives of the
Two
suits
for
divorce
filed
in
disbur sements totaled
THE WORLD
highway departments of the Meigs County Common Pleas at Rutland Elementary for
Any child not attendin g $16,736.85.
Kirk Douglas
two slates will meet at 7 p.m. Court are by Betty Ferguson, another class until the board Head Start this summer, or
Yul Brynner
Wednesday at the Meigs Inn in Pearl St., Middleport, vs. Jerry hears from the building in- who will be attending kin·
!GPI
Pomeroy to discuss con· Ferguson, Middleport, and spector as to the cost of fixing dergar ten this fall, may have
IN CAROLINA
solidation of West Virginia Donna D. Phillips, Pomeroy the Rutland High School the free vision testing .
Pvt.
Kenneth
Hoffman, son
Route 2 and US Route 33 en. RD vs. Virgil Phillips, APO building for all classes of the Residents can go to any of the of Mr. and Mrs. Perry Hoff.
Wed.· Thur.. Fri.
Junet4-15-16
following locations during the man , Middleport, is currently
tering Ripley and the San Francisco, each charging TMR.
Double Featuro Program
possibilities of. a new bridge gross neglect of duty and ex· The requests for early designated hours: Salem taking special infantry training
WUTHERING HEIGHTS
graduation (six students nad Center, June 19; Rutland
across the Ohio River.
treme cruelly.
!Color)
submitted requests ) was Elementary, June 20; Mid· at Camp Le Jeune, N. C. After
Everyone interested is in·
Anna Calder-Marshall
completing his training there
tabled till the next meeting .
dleporl Elementary, June 14, he will go to Paris Island for
vi ted.
Timothy Dalton
There will be a special public 15 and 23 ; Harrisonville
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
PLUS
board
meeting in August at Elementary, June 16 and 21, specialized training. His ad·
The Middleport E-R squad
"THE HUNTING
HAS SURGERY
dress is Pvt. Kenneth Hoffman,
PARTY"
Mrs . Marshal\ (Marie ) answered a call to the John 7:45 in the auditorium at Meigs and Salisbury Elementary, 28"..525991 L Co. Second Infantry
!Color I
Larrimore , Syracuse , une U.vendar home, 444 Beech St., and Junior High in Middleport June 22 and 26 .
Training Belallion, First In·
Oliver Reed
Hours of all of.!he testing are lantry Training Regiment,
derwent major surgery at 12:13 a.m. Tuesday from to which the board urges all
Candice Bergen
Monday at Holzer Medical where Mrs. Lavendar was interested persons to attend. from 9 a.m. to 12 noon.
Gene Hackman
Camp Geiger, N. C. 28542.
Attending were Porter ,
Center . Cards may be sent to taken to Veterans Memorial
( Rl
her in care of the hospital, Hospital. She was treated for Hargraves, Don Mullen, Joe
Sayre, Virgil King, and Carroll
an illness and discharged.
Room 221.
Pierce, board members, and L.
W. McComas, clerk .
MILLER HAS DEGREE
The board recessed until
James MUler, son of Mr. and next Monday night when it will
Mrs. Myron Miller of Mid· meet at the Coal Port school for
dleport, graduated Saturday the sale of thaI properly.
from Ohio University . He
Head Start appointments as
received a bacbelor of science follows were approved :
degree
in
electrical
TEACHERS
Donna
(4 CAeiNETS SHOWN HERE- SEE OTHER BlUE TAO SAVINGS TOOl)
engineering. Mlller and his Theiss, Marcia Shultz, Sylvia
Miller and Mary Skinner, all to
wife, Linda, reside in Middleport; John Arnolt and
Nel!onvllle. They spent the Vlnus Lee to Salisbury ; Pen nee
weekend in Middleport with his Williams and Betty Wilson to
Rutland; Olive Page to Salem
parents.
' .
Center, and Nancy Kirby lo

Ferry Service

News : •.. in Briefs

Tass Sees Fischer and
Spassky about Equals

Goins New

25 Responses
Made in May
To Fire, Aid

MEIGS THEATRE

;~:·.w;;:::;;;;:·:·Report
vrom

sz'les

On Balances

Pre-Schoolers
Being Tested

Harrisonville .

Early AAI&amp;rlcan
M M•IIfrtll'llll'l

tl avcr In lhe

Malaga conaole

- ....

~~~, ConltmPOrlf)'
..=.;; n~aln~-

the Ballertflald

on this Golden Touch
&amp; Sew"
sewing machine in a cabinet
Comesa11e 160 Dlf reg. price·
on the Golden Touch &amp; Sew •
sewing mact1 1ne In a cabinet.

Mrs . Avanell

·.(Upon Request)

Save on this machine In the
Credll Plan to lit your budget.

The Fabric Shop
SINGE I SA.LI!SI SERVICE

MeCALLS'SI SIMPLICITY PATTERN$
115W. Secoad .
ttt·UN
P•e,..y.O,
·~ 11.,...... ,. t4 TMI *'I!Ql~ ((IN.II -"!Y

RQBINSON'S
CLEANERS.
flt"d"E. 2nd .

,,

Pomeroy

Phone m-5421

.

·-

Bass , Mrs .

Johnnie Quails, Sylvia Neece,
Shirley Mae Bush; Ella D.
Roush, Martha Hicks, Donna
Kunath, Mrs. Jerry Black,
Mrs .
Patterson.
Mark
Williams.
PAID AIDES - Sylvia
Neece, Mary Frorler, Madolyn
Meece, Shirley Herman. May
Morrison, Sue Vance, Donna
Kunath, Lola Proffitt, Barbara
Phillips, Lynn Lynas,
CUSTODIANS - Joseplllne
Tyree, Sandy Tyree, Mrs. Coy,
Doris Zelqler, Evelyn Davis.
Marvin Althouse.

CLEANING-

cabinet you like. We have a

SOCIAL WORKERS
Harold Sauer and Pam
Neutzllng (aide).
SPEECH THERAPIST Pat Lowe. Linda Baer (aldel
no salary, and Betty Gilmore
(aide I no salary.
NURSE - Jennifer Menchin!.
DIRECTOR - J. Fenton
Taylor .
BOOKKEEPER - L. W.
McComas.
SECRETARY - Marilyn

Marria1e UceDSel
Sam Dominick Dorado, 23,
MI. HOJll!, W. Va., and Harriett Meier.
COOKS - Maxine Arnold,
Ann Walsh, 23, Middleport; Maxine Thornton, Helen
Dale Stephen Machir, 23, · Harper, May Romine, Phyllis
Iva See.
Pomeroy RD, and Jennifer Lou English,
' DRIVERS - Betty VanDean, 21, Pomeroy, Rt. 3.
Meter, Joan Greathouse, Doris
Zeigler, Marlorle Manuel, Mr.
- .
B. Souder, Mrs. Riggs, Mrs.
Owen Wears, Eileen Hally ,
'

2-HOUR

Thismachine Is sew-easy- jus\
pu!h Ihe dial to switch stllch es.
GetSinger stretch sti tches
...._ for knlls. Sew buttonholes with
the bulll·ln buttonholer. And
the e~~:c luslve Slngti • Push·
Button Bobbin winds Itself.

~Cl ll NGIA (l(.Aj LR

VACATION ENDED
Mr, and Mrs. William King,
Kathy, Sherry and Kevin, have
returned from Florida where
they vacationed two weeks. A
highlight of their vacation was
a visit to Oisneyworld.

and

and save$60 ~~~.

·""

Armywortns Threaten
Farmers are reminded that
they should check their fields
for armyworms.
Recent inspections of corn in
Jackson, Lawrence, Vinton,
Morgan, Muskingum, Monroe,
Guernsey, and Harrison
Counties showed some ar·

Great Man of
Letters Dies
TALCOTTVILLE, N. Y.
(UPI) - In 1963 Edmund
Wilson, one of America's great
men of letters, said death was
not far away and· "my mind
and emotions and vitality will
disappear like a_ puff of
smoke."

But Wilson outlived his
prediction by almost a decade
and his mind remained very
active as he won a ntlnlber of
awards in the interim and only
last year produced a book
which was nominated for a
national award.
The eminent critic, novelist

mywotms in nearly every field
but still below numbers to
justify insecticide application.
Armyworms population and
damage were so heavy at
demonstration sites in Morgan,
. Muskingum, Monroe, and
Harrison Counties that
· arrangements were made for
immediate spray applications
of Sevin to save these fields.
Recommendations are found
in bulletin 545, "Insect Pests of
Field Crops." There are two
materials recommended.
These are carbaryl (S.vin) o~
toxaphene, Armyworms may
be found from May through
September.

.

. VOL

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

XXV · NO. 42

'

-

SAIGON (UPI) - American
jets dropping laser-guided
bombs wrecked railroad
bridges outside of North
Vietnam's major cities
Tuesday, the U. S. command
announced today.
Four bridges were destroyed
on the northwest rail line that
runs from Hanoi to China and a
bridge 27 miles west of
Haiphong · was
heavily
damaged by the bombs that
ride beams of light to their
targets.
Heavy fighting continued
around An Lllc, 60 miles north
of Saigon. Witnesses arriving
from the ruined city said
hundred&amp; of wounded civilians
and soldiers still await

WOMAN INJURED-{ilorla Kay Brown, 25, Cheshire,
Rt. I, suffered possible head and neck injuries in a two-car
accident on·sR 7 at'lts intersection with cOunty road 5 (in
Bradbury) at 8 a.m. today. Meigs County Sheriff's Deputy
David Sheets said Mrs·. Brown was traveling on SR 7 toward
Pomeroy in the car above when another, driven by Robert
Leroy Rice, 21, Vinton, Rt. I, pulled from the county road into

THE WORLDS FIRST and ONLY
"MINI~-siZE" CHAIN SAW
WITH BUILT-IN SHOCK ABSORBERS!
• AUTOMATIC CHAIN OILING

• "LIFETIMr CYLINDER
A good selection of pi.ain
weaves · corded ·weaves.
Sizes 29 to 42. · In the new
fashion colors.

Elbenelds In Pomeroy

evacuation. They said that the
skeletons of North Vietnamese
lank c~ewmen killed ·in the
opening phase of the siege two
months ago remain inside their
wrecked vehicles.

United Press International half-paralyzed from a bullet
Alabama Gov. George C. . near his spine, was told
Wallace, an inactive cam· "unequivocally" by his doctors
paigner since an asssssination Tuesday that he could attend
attempt four weeks ago, and the Miami Beach convention,
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, a his aides reported.
victim of the primaries, are
Texas also allocated 34
returning to the Democratic delegates to Sen. George S.
field to try to head off Sen. McGovern, who was camGeorge S. McGovern.
paigning in New York lo try to
Wallace, buoyed by winning put a virtual lock on the
a plurality at tl)e Texas con- nomination, and 21 to Sen.
ventlon in San Antonio Hubert H. Humphrey.
Tuesday, said through his
Humphrey appealed to South
aides in Silver Springs, Md., Carolina's uncommitted
Tuesday in
that he soon would ask fellow delegation
governors for their support at Columbia, declaring that
the Democratic National ·4there is quite a good chance
Convention July 10.
that a southerner will be on the
Wallace, hospitalized and Democratic ticket." He

By

One American and one
Vietnamese heUcopter were
shot down south of An Ll1c
Tuesday by Communist troopa.
One U. S. crewman was
wounded when his UHl Huey
crashed six miles south of An
Loc. Six Vietnamese crewmen
died in the crash of their big
Ch47 Chinook troop carrying
helicopter seven mlles south·
west of An Lllc. A third
helicopter was shot down near
Hue.

.

(CGntlnueCI• ..... 12)

crats in Illinois clMmed iObave
enough votes to oust Chicago
Mayor Richard J . Daley as
chairman of the convention
delegation.
Sen. John J. Sparkman, DAla., urged the ,Democratic
National Conunlttee to make
certain that Wallace receives
the 360 delegate voles he has
won so far. Sparkman complained of "persistent reports
that in some states delegalea
will be sent to Miami Beach
with the avowed Intention of
subverting the Wallace
..-!mary votes."

Rutland Will Buy
Radar Controller

1i::

ioPc:t.

COWMBUS -GOV. JOHN J. GWJGAN announced today
he would M the help of the Oblo Bar ASioclatlon and local bar
tiiiOCiatianllD makin£1 J1tdlclal appointment&amp; In order that ''me!!
of the ~ 1ep1 and pa IOiial reputation" can be aelected.
•GUIIpn 1n rtlllll'kl prepll'ed far a nen conference here, an, Wteed the creation of a _ . of 10\lemor's Co111dll Qn
Seleetion wlllch wu de; I pel In cooperallon wl~ the _
Qlio Ba' AJIOCI*tlon.
.

discounted Wallace.
A northern possibility for the
vice presidential nomina lion
revealed by the Boston Globe
today was Sen. Edward M.
.Kennedy. Quoted in a
copyright interview, Kennedy
said, "I don't want to exclude
all the possibilities because it
would be presumptuous of me
to turn down something that
nobody has offered."
In other developments, Sen.
John L. McClellan narrowly
won nomination in a runoff to
seek a sixth term from
Arkansas and insurgent Demo-

(EDA)
in
RUTLAND Rutland Association
Columbus,
reported
on
how
to
council Tuesday nfghl agreed
to purchase a radar unit to apply for EDA assistance.
corilrol. speedlrig inside the Snowden attended the meeting
vlllage, Vernon Weber, clerk, . for Mayor Eugene Thompson,
The town house will be
reported. In other business,
painted
and cleaned by em·
councillls~n~ to complaints
ployes
of
CAP it was reported.
against the Rutland Fuel
Attending were Mayor
Company in regard to lines not
Thompson,
Harvey Erlewine,
being buried.
Rutland township trustees, Jim Fry, William Brown,
Nicholson
and
having a surplus of funds in the Ernest
Snowden,
council
members,
fire levy fund, turned $1,278
over to the village. Robert Weber, and Bruce Davis,
Snowden of council, who at· village marshall and . street
tended a meeting of the conunlssioner.
Economic Development

:
By Ualted Prell liatematlooal
WASHINGTON -EVEN 1F rrMEANSHIGHER taxes next
year ·abig majority of the Senate Is ready to approve an election·
year' increase in Social Security benefits far larger than what ·
Pellldent Nixon proposed or a Senate committee approved.
.. The number of senators backing a 20 pet. increase in beneflll
received by one .eighth the nation- 21 mllllon retired or disabled
worltera and their lllii'Vivors - haa reached 81. In cootrast,
Prealdent Ntxon proposed an increase of 5 pet.
The cost-conaclo.. Senate Finance Committee gave tentative approval Tuesday to a WI which provides an lncr- of I
1 for thole wbo receive m1DlDwm Social Security beneflta and
for those who t1mr above the benefit,

•::dldal

her path, After Impact, her car traveled 125 feet on the left
side of the !Dghway, striking an embankment. Site was tsken
to Veterans Men10rlal Hospital by the Mldtlleport E·R unit
and admitted. Rice's auto was demolished and there was
heavy damage to t.~rs. Brown's vehicle. Riceowas cited to
court for !allure to yield right of way.

Wallace, Muskie Running Again

ews•• zn
020AV

PHONE 992·215.6

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 14. 1972

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

lEN CENIS

Teachers
Hired at
Eastern

Bridges Bashed

Nothing's more comfortable .
and NOW than our 100% teK·
turized polyester' knit and random
cord slacks that stay fresh
and pressed. Travel in it I It keeps
its shape no matter what.
Casually styled with "L" shaped
front pockets and gentlemen's
flare legs.
'

enttne

To Youngsters
By BOB HOEFLICH
"Summertime and the learnin' is easy".
Well, not eaay, perhaps, but at least it is "easier" under the
"catch up" sununer school being conducted at the Pomeroy
Elementary School for the next sl:l weeks.
Some 90 pupils of the Meigs Local School District - on a
voluntary basis - are reporting to the school three hours each
morning to catch up on subjects in which they have been having
difficulty in major areas of the curriculum, especially arithmetic
and reading.
The teacher..student ratio Ia great for youngsters catching
up. There is one teacher for each sl:l students. There is a lot of
sell-direction involved, pennltting pupils to self-plot their own
program, their own scores imd, better than that, m~ving right
shead with their own work which frees the teacher to gtve special
help to someone having a more difficult ttme.
Involved in the program are chased as needed.
54 first, second and third
In order for the staff to
graders, 18 from each grade function at top efficiency for
level and 36 fourth, fifth and the six weeks pe.riod, in..ser'vice
sixth graders, 12 from each of meetings were held daily for a
the levels.
week prior to the first day of
A pre-lest was given to each classes. Records and past
•tudent to determine the moat progress of each student were
aatisfactbrjlevel of instruction studied and ·"rooms ahd
on •n individual basis and materials were set up on the
materials were provided for basis of the study.
eacll student accordingly.
One marked situation at the
The program produces ex- school is the quietness that
cellent results.
prevails .
Although
90
"We never get the same youngsters are taking part in
youngsters back for the second the summer program, it is so
year," a teacher in the quiet that it is hard to believe
program said Tuesday.
that classes are taking place .
Following completion of the Obviously, pupils are giving
six weeks of work, a post-test the staff and their lessons
will be given for evidence of plenty of attention.
achievement or lack of it.
The only break in the three
Instructional materials from hours comes each · mid·
all past . programs were morning when the youngsters
gathered together in the school enjoy a milk break. All the
district for the summer school pupils were recommended by
and new materials are pur· teachers of the district.

•

Devoted To The Interesll Of The Meiga-Mcuon Area

•

THE
ALL NEW

'

IN AN INFO~L1ATMOSPHERE, pupils select color-coded reading material in a class
taught by Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis. Students self.plot their own progress and scores.

at y

Proving Worth

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED Gladys
Dillon , Reedsville; Donald
Jones, Sr ., Reedsville; Eber
Gillilan, Chester; Enoch
Marcum, Kanawha, W. Va.;
Sharon McCune, Rutland.
DISCHARGED - Carl Still,
Jr., Millon Dale Bailey,
SURGERY PLANNED
Ronanne McDaniel, 7, Marjorie Ferguson.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bill
McDaniel, Pomeroy, is a
SERVICE SET
patient at the Lancaster ·
Funeral services lor Mrs.
Fairfield County HospitaL She Weltha M. Clark, 62, Albany
will undergo major surgery Route 2, who died Monday
Wednesday, Cards may be sent morning at the O'Bleness
to room 322, ~01 North Ewing, Memorial Hospital, have been
Lancaster, Ohio.
set for 10:30 a.m. Wednesday
at the Ewing Funeral Home
with the Rev. Dear! Porter
CLUB TO MEET
officiating. Burial will be in the
The Tenth District Democrat Wells
Cemetery .
at
Action Club will meet at 8 p.m. Downington.
Wednesday at The Sportsman
in Athens. There will be
ROUTINE WORK
election of officers. All area
Routine business was condemocrats are invited.
dueled by the Meigs County
Commissioners Monrlay in a
regular session .. 1llending
LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown were Charles R. Karr, Bob
Pomeroy Tuesday at 11 a.m. Clark and Warden Ours,
was 69 degrees, under cloudy conunlssioners, and Martha
Chambers, clerk.
skies.

SIJPER LIGHTWEIGHT

-

•

Catch up Study

a heart at lack. He was 77. The
houseanditsresistanceaswell
as its spiritual and physical
surrender to the ravages of
time was the inspiration· of
Wilson's last book, "Upstate,"
published in 1971.

Take advantage of the special sale of men5
Knit Slacks on the 1st floor. An excellent
Father's Day gift and a good time to buy the
knit slacks you need for yourself.

DON STIVERS , left, of the staff, and Bob Morris, director; confer as pupils work at their
own speed. Extraordinary results are being achieved in motivating youngsters to learn _baste
reading and arithmetic skills in which, for one reason or another, they have falle~ behmd in
their regular classes. Stivers and Morris, native Meigs Countians, may have thetr hearts_ m
catchup guidance because both came late to the teaching profession, themselves expenencmg
the Impact of motivation in learning.

CLASSES BEING SMAIL, ratio of one teacher to six
students, pupils receive extensive individual help. Alone,
Mrs. Jennifer B~eslee Butcher helps with word iden·
tification.

RUMMAGE FOR SALE
A rummage sale ,will be
staged at the Regatta flea
market in the Pomeroy Junior
High School auditorium by
Theodorus
Council
17,
Daughters of America, Friday
and Saturday . Residents with
items to contribute to the sale
are asked to take them to the
school Frid~y morning.

THE PERFECT

...

._

"How the hell he tnught It
In, 1 don't llnow.'' uld Deputy
Robert Ruelle. Ruelle Slid the
pilot !nughl the plane clown
''with no !rakes, no rudder, no
ground steering and no radio
contact at the end."
.

A Great Gift For
V.I.P.'s - Very Important
Pops - June 18th -

Take your pick of
14 SinQtr*sewing cabinets

. ,., -

Officials credited pilot Me·
Cormick, a 2&amp;-year American
Mrlines flying veteran, with
saving the passengers and
crew's lives.

Made ~~dg!~~~~:ehe~te~:%da~~i

Contributions
Are Requested

atyling in lhtt
Saratoga
con &amp;al e

stop at Detroit and . another
scheduled at Buffalo, N.Y.

READY roR FROG JUMPS - Amy LIIIDJdoo, IJ.
lllllllth-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roser lAiclteydoo of
Mldtlleport, Ia all set for the fNI juJIIpq events of the Big
Bend Replll. Amy Ia ~an O!llfllmade by her mother,
COO!piete wttb bonnet and done In a fro&amp; prim. The lltufftd
frol ne~~rby waa a gift from relative~.
.•

· .,.,-:e .... u: ::"~w::::s;::&lt;a

FLAG DAY
COLUMBUS (UP!) Everybody ill the nelghbortlood will lmow today,
which is FlaB Day
utlonally, that Harold E.
Rowe loves Ida coaatry. He
baa placed 175 auorted flags
oa tile Jan in front of his
btme.
The collection Includes
fi111 repruenll•l every
ltale ..ill tile Datloll, and
replica of aa 1871 flag and 13
IIIII 1ktar flap.
"Yon may tblaiii'm cruy
but !love IIIII coulry," ssld
the U.yeaMid Rowe, who
baa aerved wttil tile Army In
IH Saatlt Pacific dnrlllg
World War D.
lW ..MJX .111'1!1.:!llol!l.!t'."'.MJX .!; 11! I

Resignations of three
teachers were accept~!~! and
new teachers were employed
Tuesday night by the Eastern
Lllcal School District Board of
Education .
Resignations accepted were
those of Diane McClure_, who
has been leaching at Chesler
Elementary ; Kathryn Baum,
kindergarten teacher, and
Marion Parker, Tuppers
Plains elementary.
Hired were Archie Rose,
Tuppers Plains, seventh and
eighth grades; Joe Bailey, high
school English, and Mrs.
Howard. Parker, lor !he
Chester school. All three are
local.
Others employed were Mrs.
Ray Douglas, Athens, for
Tuppers Plains, Miss Nancy
Kjrby, a recent graduate of
Ohio University, for the
Chester school, and Mark
Vennis, a recent Fairmont
Stale graduate, for the Chester
school. Roger Kirkhart, who
has been teaching at Tuppers
Plains, was appointed head
teacher at that school next
term.
The board adopted the
second phase of the stale's
teacher salary schedule which
goes into effect July I, and the
Ohio Valley Office Equipment
Co. at Marietta was given the
contract to clean and repair
typewriters .
Bids will be accepted at the
office of the clerk, C. 0 .
Newland, until8 p.m. Tuesday,
July II, for dairy products,
baked goods, gasoline and fuel
oil, bus tires, and insurance.
The district is also in need of a
school bus driver next year.
Those interested should notify
Newland or John Riebel,
superintendent.
Bills were approved for
payment and suggestions to
advance the reading program
in the district were discussed
at length with several
teachers. No formal action was
taken.
·
The meeting was recessed
until 8:30p.m, Friday when the
board will discuss a sununer
repair program to buildings.
Attending were board members I. 0. McCoy, Oris Smith,
Roger Epple, Howard CaJd.
well, Jr., Clyde Kuhn, ·
Newland, Reibel and Principal
Bob Ord.

Defendant Wins Damage Action

A Meigs County petit jury,
following a two-day trial in
common pleas court· Tuesday
evening returned a verdict In
favor of the defendant in a suit
for money filed by Marie Bich·
man against the Henry Miller
Construction Company .
Miss Blchman asked compensation for alleged damages
to her property located on
Butternut Ave., in the amount
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Oblo Eiteaded Outlook
Friday through Suday.
Fair Friday aad Saturday
and a cbanee of lbowers
Sunday. HlPt In tile npper
'lOll and ...... IoWa Ill tile
upper 511 end ...

of $13,015 after a sewer line ....
laid in Pomeroy in 1970. ~
plaintiff was awarded nothing.
Serv!nk on the Jury were
Woodrow T. Zwilling, Gordon
Collins, George A. Hill, Harry
N. Lodwick, Avanell George,
Annie Qu!vey, Freda Davis,
Glenna Felly, David W. Fox
and Jesse E. Brinker.
•

Weather

OOPS! Eight-year-old
Troy McDaniel, IIGn of Mr.
and Mrs. Walter McDaniel,
Front St., Middleport,
brought In this eel whUe
fishing 011 a dock near bls
home Monday nigbt. Young
McDaniel was usiug a rod
and reel when be made the
unusual catch.

Most DDT

Is Banned
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
government today banned vir·
tually all uses of DDT on the
growtd that the pesticide is
uncontrollable and poses ha·
zards to man and his environment. ·
,
The ban, announced by the
Environmental Protection
AgencY' (EPA), is effeetive
next Dec. 31. It does not affect
exports of DDT m_ _Lo_~lgn
nations, many of which use the
chemical for malaria con·
trol.
The only DDT uses permitted
in the United States under the
ban are for sweet potatoes in
storage, green peppers and
onions. Together, they account
for less than me per cent of the
approllimately 14 million
pounds of DDT sold annually in·
the United States.
The aetion climaxed a long
controveny that began witt.
pubUcatim of Rachel Carson's
"Silent Spring." In that booll
Mlaa Canon called DDT I an
"elixir of death."
The' controversy pitted enviro'm entallsts against
agricultural interests, with
sclentiltl on both sides of the
issue.
"l am convinced by a
preponderance of the evidence
that, mce Uletl, DDT is an
uncontrollable, mrable cheQlical that penlatl aquatic and
lirrelllrlal envircmnent," EPA
administrator WOllam D
RuCkelsbaua ssld In a to-page
decision '
.

Variable clou~ through
Thuraday with lbowera and
thun~ershowers litely north
and a cliance lOUth today
becoming litely over the staie'
LOCAL TEMPS
tonight and Thursday. Hllh
TeiiiJ*'Iture in downtown
today and Thuracla;rln the 8011. P - 0)' Wednesday at lla.m.
Low tonight In the UJiper 1101 W18 10 dep-eea, \Uldef SUIIIl)'
and 7~.
*lea.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="726">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11126">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="53148">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="53147">
              <text>June 13, 1972</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="246">
      <name>wilson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
