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                  <text>Hanna
•.••
(Continued from Page I)

·Katie's Korner
By Katie Crow
Regatta weekend means a lot of things to a of people. To
this reporter it meant wock. However, it was VI!!')' satislying to
see the events so well attended. It seems fllat moce and more
people attend each year and each event increases in popularity.
Take flle Frog Jump, for example. There were 196 entries,
way above last year's event. The Flea Markel seemed to attract
a great deal of people and of course Nolan Am118ement attracted
many youngsters.
Heritage Sunda}' was very succesSful and well attended. It
was quite an addition to the Regatta program.
The parade, overall, was improved over previous parades. It
is very sad that a young lady lost her life when hit by a car during
ihe time the parade was moving up Pomeroy's Eailt Main Street,
And of course the Frog Ball seemed to be a success with a
large crowd in attendance.
The reception and dinner held at the home of Mr. and Mn.
Fred Crow was quite an event. Approximately 100 guests attended.
Mr.s . Eleanor Crow Is quite a lady and a wonderful hostess.
Nothing seems to ruffle Eleanor's feathers.
Those attending marveled at the Frog Room Eleanor and
Fred added to their attractive home.
·
The Frogmobile, niaklng Its first appearance in this year's
parade was an attraction no one could have put together except
Fred Crow. The huge bus rolled from side to side and those who
had the privilege of taking a ride say it was quite a thrill.
Providing a tape of calliope music for the Frogmobile was
Margaret Neuman.
And of course we mustn't forget the biggest ·pranksterll&gt;·in
Meigs County, Fred Crow and Ted Reed.
Two men supposedly from Tripoli, Ubyan Arab Republic,
claiming to be !sam K. Jaroushie, arrived in Pomeroy Saturday.
With tongue in cheek, both Crow and Reed denied haviog any
part in the hoax.
It was quite a weekend, to say the least.

r-M-EIG_S_Tlt_EA_TR_E.,. Get·Together
Tonighl, June 20
Is Enjoyed
SOMETIME:S
A GREAT NOTION
By Hoffmans
ITechnicolor)
Paul Newman
Henry Fonda
Colorcartoons:
Scuba Duba Do
Monster ~sler
SHOW STARTS 1 P.M.
Wedneoday &amp; Thursday

June21 ·22
NOT OPEN

MASON DRIVE-IN
I

'•

I '

•

Tonight, June2o
Double Feature P-,.'oaram

THE ANDERSON
TAPES
Sean Connery

Dyan Cannon

I Color I

-PLUSTHERE'S A'GIRL
IN MY SOUP
!Color)
Peter Sellers
Goldie Hawn ·

IG PJ

IRl

;

Wed.·Thur .• Fri.
June 21-22-23
Double Future Program
"EVEL KNIEVEL"
IMelrocolorl
·George Hamilton

Sue Lyon
IGPi

- PLUSWEREWOLVES ON
WHE"ELS
(Color)
Slephen Oliver

I RI

A reunion of the Hoffman
family. was held Sunday, June
18, at the roadside park on
Route 7 in Kanauga . 46 Peollle
attended the afternoon picnic.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Hoffman, Mike, Tami,
Beverly and David,,Mrs. Pearl
HoHman, Mr. and Mrs. Perry
Hoffman, Frank, Ronnie,·
Patty, Debbie and Frances,
Middleport ; Mr . and Mrs.
William Hoffnian, Kevin and
Bill, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Bernie- Murphy and Eric, Rio1
Grande ; Mr. and Mrs. Dan
White, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Bing, Sonny, Missie, Dwayne
and Tony, Kanauga; Mr. and
Mrs . Bill McLaughlin and
Jeffrey; Colillrtbils; Mr. ana
Mrs. Bob Hoffman, Kathy and
Cindy, Cottageville, W. Va.,
and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hoff·
man and Mr. and Mrs. Bill
HoHman, David and Vicky,
Dunbar, W.Va .
NO CHARGES FILED
No charges will he filed
against Paul R. Plank, Rt. I,
Deland, Fla., driver of a car
which struck Joseph Wilbur
Winer, 81, Route I, Cheshire.
Wines was killed, when he
stepped into the path of the
Plank car.
It was reported earlier that
Wines was blind but lhe
Sheriff's department reported
that Mr. Wines was not blind.

,\
II'

~ \

.!

\\

rl

AWARDED SCHOLAR·
SHIP.- John Gilliam, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Luther
Gilliam, Jr., Harrisonville,
has been awarded a $1,160
General Motors Scholarship
through Ohio University.
Gilliam graduated from
Meigs High School this
spring and was an
honocarian of the class. He
was a member of the
National Honor Society, the
Science Club and took part in
the senior class play. He is
presently employed First
Columbus Corpora lion in
Columbus for the summer
and plans to attend Ohio
University in the fall where
he will major in chemistry or
. physics and minor in
mathematics.

l ·

I

.,, .

ORLA
GEORGE
KIRKHAM, son of Mr. and
Mrs.
Reed Kirkham,
Rutland Rl. I, and a~tudent
at Meigs High School, is
attending Youth Conservation Camp at Wayne
National Forest in Monroe
County. Kirkham will be at
the camp for one month
during which time he will be
laughl about the natural
envi{onment including
natural resources , the
meaningful
use ,
management and protection
of the n,~~tura l resources, will
be engaged in conservation
work projects and will
participate in a recreation
program.

LETTERS to EDITOR

.

'Rufus Hite,
80, Cia imed

June 16 1972
Dear Sir ,
The Board of Education and
the administration of the Meigs
Local School District extend
their warm grahlude . to th~
- members of lhe Citizens
Committee who have worked
so diligently to promote
passage of the school levy.
Special ~oles of thanks go to
BtU Pernn, who has gtven
many hours and much energy
to lhis project during a lime
when he has been experiencing
some
perso nal
health
problems, and to The Farmers
Bank &amp; Savings Company,
Citizens National Bank,
Webster and Fultz, Crow, Crow
&amp; Porter and New York
Clothing House for financial
contributions.
Regard less of the outcome of
~he vote on June 20, these
warm wishes are publicly
expressed by the Board and
administration of Meigs Local.
Sincerely yours,
Frank W. Porter, Jr.
,
President
Meigs Local School Board

Rufus E. Hite, 80, Malta
Route 1, formerly of Rulland,
died Monday at the Good
Samaritan Hospital in Zanesville.
Mr. Hite, a farmer, is sur·
vived by his wife, Ethel, four
daughters , Jessie Zarlengo,
Canton; Betty Deitch and
Audls Herdman both of
Columbus· Loretta Hite of
Malta Rou'te 1; six sons, James
and Robert of Canton; John of
Middleport· Paul of Charlotte
N.C.; Lerdy of Malta Route 1:
and Earl of San Jose, Calif.; a
step-mother, Sally Hite,
Ravenswood; a half-sister,
Kathryn Hlte and a half.
brother, Delbert Hite, both of
Ravenswood, and 12 grandchildren.
Funeral services .will be held
at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the
Martin Funeral Home with the
Rev. Cecil Wise officiating.
B.urial will be in Miles
Cemetery. Friends may call al
the funeral home any time.
WORKSHOP TONIGHT
The fourth and final food
preservation workshop will be .
held at 7:30 this evening at the
Eastern High · school. The
Meigs County Extension
Service is sponsoring the series
of workshops.

News.

• •

w
(',ather
Mostly cloudy and not quite
as warm tonight with showers
and thundershowers likely .
Low in the upper 50s and the
lower 60s. Cooler Wednesday .
Mostly cloudy with chance of
showers northeast and east.

in Briefs

(Continued from Page I )
plane crashed during the weekend, killing him and four other
persons, a medical examiner's report revealed Monday. Police
said an apparent suicide note was found in the home of a woman
who died in the crash.
Four of those killed in the crash Sunday were members of
one family, including lwo small children. The fifth victim,
Eugene Davis, was the pilot.
The autopey showed he was shot twice in the back with a .22
caliber weapon.
LAKESIDE, OHIO - MORE THAN 100 United Methodist
clergymen in the East Ohio Conference were assigned to o~er
pastoral duties Monday night· during the annual meeting here.
· Bishop Francis E. !(earns announced the assignments of
more than 900 pastors in the nearly 300,000rnember conference
for the year starting Sunday, July 2.
The changes included appointment of three new district
superintendents.

YOU MEAN
YOUR MOM'S
GONE AGAIN?

SOI&amp;WNS, FRANCE - A DIESEL ENGINE loday began
clearing the wreckage from the Vierzy tunnel in France's worst
train wreck in nearly tO years. Officials abandoned hope of
finding any more survivors.
The 2,ooo.horsepower diesel pulled two mangled coaches
from the southern end of the tunnel and officials said no one was
found inside. The diesel will follow flle same procedure until the
tunnel is cleared.

Seems like she sure spends a lot of
time paying bills. And yet with a
Checking, Account it's so simple
just to pay by mail. Check stubs
make a good record of where the
money goes, and cancelled checks
are foolproof receipts. Why not
open your Checking Account now?

served th• people of Ohio in two
important ways today - by ,
enabling an tmportant industrY
to co ntin~e operating in
eastern Ohio," he said "thus
insuring the jobs of many
miners, and by making certain
that the natural beauty of .the
area is preserved for the future
of all of the people who live and
work there."
Hanna officials had said the .
only .ilternative to moving the
shovel across the interstate
route was to dismantle it at a
cost of $1 million .
The giant' shovel will be
moved across the interstate on
a huge mound of dirt to keep It
from crushing the pavement.
The Federal Highway Commission has already issued a
permit for the move.
John Geer, director of the
Ohio Public Interest Action
Group, a Ralph Nader back
organization, said his group
had been opposed to the move
for same time and asked u.s.
Tt:ansportation Department
Secretary John Volpe and
Gilligan to block the move.
Some legal experts had
maintained Ohio would not
only have to pay Hanna for the
highway land, but also for mineral rights because it could not
mine the coal on the oiher side
of the highway.
Geer, however, said the state
could have gained title to the
landanytimeduringthepas~lo

· years by a condemnallon
suiL."and 'could do it today."
Geer said the courts could
determine what Ohio would
have to pay for the land upon
which the superhighway was
built. He said he doubted the
state would be forced to pay for
mineral rights on Hanna land
south of 1-70 simply because
the Gem could not be used
there.

Two •••
(Continued from Page 1)
Hood, Glenn Evans, Robert
Schuck, Don Erwin and Sandra
K. Taylor. ·
Racine - Ralph Badgley,
Jack Teaford, Patly Shain,
Paul Marr, Edna Knopp,
Emma Adams, Aaron Wolfe,
Bryce Sayre, Martin Wilcoxen,
Martha Lou Beegle, Jess
Wood, Floyd Hendricks and
Jani ce and Ronald Salser.
Minersville - Stacie Arnold,
Clara Mcintyre, Phyllis
Mcintyre and Bert Mcintyre,
Jerry Harper and Harry
Krautter.
Syracuse - Sampson Hall,
Karen Clark, Oris Hubbard,
Michele and Sherman Cundiff
and Nathan Roush.
Cheshire - Mariog Darnell.
Dexter - Frances Nelson .
Letart Falls - David and
Margaret Gloeckner.
Clifton, W. Va. - "George
.Johnson.
Coolville - James Car·
penter.
West Columbia - Doris
Miller and Ronald Miller,
David Mattox.
Langsville - Michael Barr.
Long Bottom - Mary
Rose.

Mason Council
OK's Service
•

ATTENDING . BOYS
STATE - Nick !hie, son of
Mr.' and Mrs. John lhle,
Racine, and a senior at ·
Southern High School, is
attending Boys State at
Ashland College, Ashland,
Ohio. !hie and alternate to
Boys State, chosen .bY
Racine Legion Post 602, is
attending to the 'illness of
delegate Mike Nease.
RACINE ROMPS
· Racine defeated Salem 26 to
9 Monday night in Little
League play at Racine.
Big.stick for the winners was
Mike Huddleston with a h.omer,
two doubles and a single. Other
hitters for the winners were
Herb Ervin two singles; Mark
Sayre, Scott WoHe and Greg
Huffman each had a single.
On the mound for Racine was
Jimmy Powell who struck out
five. For Salem C. Nolan had a
double and Lester, Nolan and
Crouse, ea.ch had a single.

MASON - Mason's Council slate of Ohio makes majot'
gave Us approval for ' ferry repairs to the bend area bridge
aerv ice during the clOsing of which 11 expected to start 10011·.
n was pointed out that apthe Pomeroy - Mason Bridge,
proximately
2,000 automobiles
but this must still get • g~
a
day
are
upected
to Ule the
ahead sign from the "Public
Service ConuniSsion before It facility. Mayor Roy )Wiess
stated that the Town of MaSOIJ
becomes official.
Approval was given in a split · will issue i license for 25 centa
decision at a regular council per v.Wcle and Mr. •MCCoy
meeting Monday . eveninlf said he would agree to try tO.
following a lengthy diBcusslon. operate the ferry at a profit:
MayOr HarleiiS noted that the
Councilman Russell Barton
started the action with a Town of Mason would collect
motion which was secondell by the fees at 10 a.m. each moc;
Joe Jones to approve the ferry ning for the previous day and it
service providing the contract reserves the right to count
is granted approval by the . vehicles.
Public Service Commissioner.
Recorder Gary Gibbs voted
ATrEND SESSION
with Barton and Jones In apThree employees of Pomeroy
proving the ferry operations on
banks
attended th' 19th annual
a temporary basis, but
sessloh
,of the Ohio School of
councilmen Fred Samsel a~d
Richard Fowler voted against Banking held June 12 through
June 16 on the Ohio University
it.
Mr. McCoy, whose flut campull in Atheni.
Among ' the first year
name was not learned, was
students
was Jon P. Karschnik
present from the St. Mary's
ferry service to disciW the of the Farmer&amp; Bank and
operation.
Mr.
McCoy Savings Co. Second year
disclosed he has two eighkar studenll were Joan Harr!Jon
barges that could be used in and Richard J. Poulin, both ol
providing this means of trans- the Pomeroy National Bank.
portation during the time the
CALL ANSWERED
~
The Middleport Erilergency
Squad answered a call at 8:51
GRANTED DIVORCE
P.M. Monday to 2 Hill St.,
Eleanor Werry was
gran ted a divorce in Meigs Pomeroy, for Charles Unley.
Linley, suffering from an arm
County common pleas coUrt
laceration, was taken to
from Henry J. Werry on
charges of gross neglect of Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was treated and
duty and extreme cruelty .
released.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
HEADQUARTERS FOR REVLON PRODUCTS

-MOQN DROPS'
-INTIMATE
.- NATURAL WONDER
- COLORS ILK.

&gt;
'

-AQUAMijRINE
-NORELL
-TOUCH AND GLOW
- TOP BRASS AND PUB FOR MEN

RRVIDN~•
lflllt . •111111

The complete selection of Revlon
Cosmetics is now available in our
Main Floor Cosmetics Department.

Open Week Days 9:30 to s P.M.
Shop Friday and Saturday 9:30 to 9 P.M.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at II a.m.
Tuesday
71 degrees
with a .._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,
light rainwas
falling
.

QUALITY FACTORY FINISHED

PA ELI

Member F~deral Deposit Insurance Corporation

.·

•

HERITAGE HOUSE
225 N. 2nd

Middleport, 0.

VOL XXIV. ..NO.
47
..

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21, 1972

·•

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.

Russian ·'We're Disappointed,'
Tanks Are Says Supt. Hargraves
George
Hargraves,
superintendent of lhe Meigs
Local school district, today
commented "we are very
disappointed in the outcome of
the levy.'
"The measure cannot be
placed before voters until
November and that decision
will be up to the board of
education. Programs will have
to be curtailed so that the
district can live within its in·
come if the measure is not
passed by the end of 1972,"
Hargraves said.

Captured

By Uolted Press International
KANSAS CITY, MO.- A MURDER VICTIM'S husband and
two teenaged daughters spent more than two hours on the stand
Tuesday In the trial of Anthony Paul Damico, 26-year-old former
convict.
Lawrence Lucas, president of the Lucas Sheet Metal and
Furnace Co., described the last tiihe he saw his wife Sally, 36,
alive on the morning 'of Aug. 16,1971, how ·he became alarmed
OV!II' her iaUure to return home that evening, and of his search
lor her, driving across Missouri twice to check motels and
hoapltlls.

WASHINGTON - DEFENSE SECRETARY Melvin R.
'
Laird hu found It liard to sell costly new armament programs
to
a Senate eager to buy disarmament. So he is trying to make them
!Meparable.
He Is arguing Congress cannot afford to ratify the missile
accordl Prelldent Nixon signed in .Moscow May 26 unless it
ql't!tla to provide the bUllotls that wt)l be required for the B1
blmber and the Trident missUe-ean'ying submarine. ·
Laird faced five hours of hard questioning on that proposition
Tullday before tbe Senate Arnied Services Committee, which is
IIBUIIUy ~sed to give him what he asks.
WASHINGTON- GEN. CREIGHTON W. ABRANS, who
wonGen.GeorgeS.Patton'sadmiration as a tank commander in
World War II and rose to lead all allied forced in Vietnam, has
been nominated as the Army's new chief of staff.
President Nixon announced the appointment Tuesday.
Abrama, 67' must be confirmed by the Senate before he succeeds
Gov. WWlam C. Westmoreland, 68, wbo will retire June 30.

BELFAST - A CEASE-FffiE announcement from the
Provl&amp;lonal wing of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) could
come within tile next48 hours, Irish Republic sources said today.
They said any announcement involving a possible seve!Hiay
halt In hoiWities woUld come from the Dublin headquart"1's of
tile Provisional Sinn Fein , the political wlng of the IRA
movement, rather than from IRA leaders within Northern
Ireland.
The ahnost three years of civil violence, which began in
Augult, 191111, 110 far baa killed 382 persons.
UNri'ED NATIONS - TilE U. N. SECURITY Council's
unanimous call for .the world's governments to take "all at&gt;ll'O!l'ia~ measutres" against aerial hijackings drew mixed
reaction today .Israel said the effectiveness of the appeal would
depend largely on Arab governments.
U.S. Ambassador George Bush said his cotmtry hoped the
Security CouncU declaration and a resolution adopted in Montreal by the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICA)
''will lead to effective measures against hijacking and other acts
lnterfe"'-' with civil aviation."

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

~

THREE BIG BEND residents received U. S. Savings
Bonda totaling $225 Tuesday from Edison Hobstetter, left,
!l'esldent, of the Pomeroy National Bank. The bonds were
awarded as attendance prizes In conjunction with an open
· house held at the bank Saturday to ob6erve the institution's

Mostly cloudy with chance of
showers northeast tonight and
partial clearing southwest.
Cooler IOnighl with the lowest
uj!per 40s tn lower 50s. Thurs·
day partly_. cloudy and cool.
High in lhe 60s.

Meigs School Levy
Loses By 12 Votes

..

IOO!h birthday. Receiving the bonds from the left of Hob- ,
sletter were Debbie Stewart, Mason, W. Va., $100; Lori Ann
Wood, Pomeroy, $75 bond, and,Robert Eblin, Pomeroy, $50.
Not present for the picture was Tom Bowen, Pomeroy, who
won a $25 bond.

Cost Of Living
Up l1.3 Percent .
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
cost of living of Americans rose
0.3 per cent in May despite a
drop in food prices for the first
ttme in seven months, the
Labor Department said today.
The increase was caused
mainly by higher prices for
clothing, used cars, gasoline,
household services and nonfood
commodities,
the
department said in its regular
monthly report.
On Tuesday, Herbert Stein,
chairman of President Nixon's
Council of Economic Advisers,
warned that retail meat prices.
-and other food 'costs - which
shot up nearly 7.5 per cent in
the first four months of the
year, would be rising again.
Led by nearly a 1 per cent
decline in the price of meat,
poultry ·and fish, the depart·
ment's Bureau of Labor Statis·
tics (BLS) said, prices of food
on grocers' shelves went down
0.2 per cent.
But BLS officials pointed out
that these food prices were
checked during the first week
fn May, and did not refljlct
sh'arp wholesale food price
increases since then. The
higher retail prices inay not
show up in the price Index until
June report is released next
month.
Stein served notice that not
only beef and pork but other
food prices would show an
increase.
Even as the department
made its report, the Price
Commission was meeting to
consider whether io clamp
lighter government controls on
food prices.
The 0.3 per cent increase in
l:onsumer prices in May
pushed the consumer price
index to 124.7, 3.2 per cent
higher than a year ago. Goods

and services that cost $10 in
1967 cost $12.47 last month.
The BLS said the price index
(Continued on Page 16)

School Bus
Inspections
AnnQunced
The Gallia-Meigs State High·
way Patrol Post 'J:/ reported
today that It wlll inspect the
-schoql buses of Gallla and
Meigs Counties in mid.July.
All buses in Gallla Cowtty
will be inspected ,.on Wednesday, July 19.
At 7 a.m. the Gallipolis City
School buses will be checked at
Green Local. At 10 a.m. the
Hannan Trace Local School
District inspection will be held
at Hannan Trace High School,
al12:30 p.m. the.'Soulhwestern
Local School District buses will
be inspected at Southwestern
High School, at 2 p.m. the
North Gallia Local School
District has an inspection at
North Gallia High School, and
at 3:30 p.m. the Kyger Creek
·Local School District buses'
inspection will be al Kyger
Creek High School.
The Meigs County school
bqses will be inspected on
Wednesday, July 26. Work
begins at 7 a.m. when the
Meigs Local School District
buses will be checked at
Rutland. At li a.m . the
Sollthern Locii·School District
bus Inspection will be held at
Southern High School and a!
I :30 p.m. tl)e Eastern Local
School District buses wiU 'he
inspected at Eastern High
School.

SAIGON (UP! ) - - South
Vietnamese marines in their
four.&lt;Jay-old thrust into Communist-held Quang Tri
Province today captured two
Russian-built tanks intact. On
the central coast, government
forces abandoned an outpost
under relentless Communist
bombardment.
UPI reporter Chad Huntley,
reporting from Quang Tri 's
northern front, said one tank
was captured but its crew had
Oed. The other was heading
over a rise and flipped over,
trapping Its crew inside. ·
At lhe embattled provincial
capital of An Loc, 60 miles
north of Saigon, heavy fighting
broke oul today. Despite
reports that the Communist
siege of the city had been lifted,
fighting left 48 Communists
dead and 21 rounds of North
Vietnamese artillery and
mortar fire hit the capital
Tuesday.
·
South Vietnamese casualties
were described as "lighl" but,
according to field reports, one
battalion fighting outside An
Loc lost 200 men killed or
wounded - roughly half its
strength
in lite past two
weeks.

The superintendent par·
ticularly noted that in the
Salem precinct at the May
election, 65 persons voted in
favor of lhe election and 36
aga ins t. Yesterday, in the
same precinct the vote was 13
yes, and 40 no. In May Salem
precinct was the highest in the
district in favor of the five mill
lax levy while in yesterday's
special election it moved into
the lowest position as to votes
favoring the measure compared to those against it.

1,004
·Oppose
Issue

A new five mill lax w6nt
down to defeat by 12 votes the second time the operating
levy has failed - at a special
election held Tuesday in the
Meigs Local School District.
According to the official
coun ty of the .Meigs County
Board of Elections Tuesday
night, the vote was 1,004
against the levy and 992 for the
measure.
.,
Middleport voters supported
.)
the levy - not in ·every
pre~inct - but the total vote
for all five Middleport Village
precincts was 285 for and 206
against.
Pomeroy, as a whole, sup·
ported lhe measure also but
Helen Blackston, all of on\y by 10 votes. In the six
Pomeroy; Cong. Clarence E. voting precincts of Pomeroy,
Miller, Washington, D. C.; the total vote was 267 for the
Wayne Todd, Logan; George · issue and 'll7 against,
E. Hobstetter, Jr., Pomeroy;
The five mill levy which was
Kevin Coan, Cleveland; Wynn to bring lhe operating millage
Rosenberg, Cleveland, and up to the minimum reqUired
Rachel Downie, Pomeroy.
for full participation in state
funds was first turned do)Vn by
voters· of the Meigs Local
District al the May primaries.
AI that time 1,689 voters
disapproved the new lax while
1,388 voted in favor of it. There
The Meigs County Sheriff's were 3,267 voters of the district
Department Investigated a
voting in the May primaries.
single car accident Monday al The figures indicate · that in
5:15 p. Ill· on SR 7 In Orange May 190 voters did not vote
Twp.'
either for or against the
Norma J . Parrish, 29, Rt. 2, measure .
Coolville, was traveling north
Here's the way the voters of
on SR 7,lost control on flle rain the 24 precincts inyolved in the
slick highway, skidded
special election cast their
sideways off !fie highway, ballots in yesterday's special
struck and broke off a utility election :
pole.
.
Mrs. Parrish was arrested on
MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOl
charges of driving while inDISTRICT VOTI~G
toxicated. There was mediwn
PRECINCTS
damage to the car. No injuries
For Agalnsl
East Bedford
· 48
32
were reported.
West Bedford
32
32
illorlh Chester
9
5
Rutland Village 39
66
East Rutland
29
48
ACCEPTING BIDS
West Rutland
39
35
Gasoiine and diesel fuel bids Dexter
23
27
will be accepted by the Meigs Salem
13
40
28
County commissioners until Middleport First 41
Middleport Second
9:30a.m. on Tuesday, June 27.
76
36
Attending the Tuesday meeting Mlddleporl Third 86
54
61
were Charles R. Karr and Bob Mtddleporl Fourth 55
Fifth 27
27
Clark, commissionets, and Mtddteporl
Pomeroy First
27
27
Martha Cb8mbers, clerk.
Pomeroy Second 35
48
Pomeroy Three-A 58
56
Pomeroy Three-B 66
50
PAPERS FILED
Pomeroy Three-C 74
54
Articles of Incorporation Pomeroy Fourth 27
42
have been filed in Colwnbus Middleport Precinct
45
47
with Secretary of State Ted W.
Pomeroy
Precinct
24
63
Brown by Newell's Service Rock Springs
62
51
Station, Inc., Chester. Agent is Harrisonville
36
so
22
25
William G. Goudy, P. 0. Box Page ville
TOTALS
992
1004
36, Chester. '

26 New Grand Croakers
Initiated At Frog Ball
Twenty ..six persons were
initiated as grand croakers in
the Ohio Society for the
Promotion of Bull Frogs at the
Frog Ball held Saturday night
at the Pomeroy Junior High
School.
Named as Grand Croakers
were :
Sally Weed , Cincinnati ; C.
Mac McGinness, Gallipolis;
Dr .
Edward
Berkich,
Gallipolis; Frank Richey,
Athens; Brandon T. Grover ,

Athens ; Francis Shaeffer,
Columbus; Donna Reeve, Mt.
Gilead; Judge ·Herb Whiting,
Pepper Pike; Harry Darmour,
Parma;
Bill
Tomko,
Cleveland; Byron Roman,
Lewiston, N. Y.; G. Kenner
Bush, Athens; Judge Paul
Riley, Wilmington; Mike
Custer, Pomeroy; Ferman
Moore, Middleport; Vilma
Pikkoja, Mary Bell Warner,
Ralph Werry, Pat Holler,

Otesapeake
Man To Head
Advisory Board
"Two
Meigs · County
residents, Mrs. Arthur Lund, of
Pomeroy, an&lt;t-:. Mrs . Dale
Proffitt, of Portland, attended
the second quarterly meeting
of the regional Advisory Board
of FamilY Planning of
Southeast Ohio Monday.
Unable to attend the meeting
was Mrs. Bernard Fultz of
Middleport, another Meigs
County ~epresentalive. The
meeting was held in the
Riverboat · Room of O*ar's
Restaurant In Gallipolis. The
Rev. Mr . Arthur Lund attended '
as guest.
Elected for leadership of the
seven-eounty Advisory Board
were
Stewart
Kaiser,
Chesapliake, chairman; Mrs,
Tim Cornell, Gallipolis, vicechairman, and Mrs. Louis
Jindra, Oak Hill, secretary.
The
Meigs
County
represe~tatives serve as a
nucleus for a group interested
(Continued on Page 16)

Senate, Approves

Child Care Bill
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Mter taking · steps to insure
thai parents are not replaced
with government babysitters,
the Senate passed and sent a
$2.9 billion child care bill to the
House Tuesday.
President Nixon vetoed a
similar bill Dec. 10 on grounds
that child care centers could
lead to "communal" child·
rearing.
The bill cleared the Senale on
a 73-12 roll call after . conservatives sponsored language
that federal day care centers
would not usurp the traditional
parental role in child
development.

Woman Cited
After Mislulp

'
n

.

'

.

'

.

Food PreservatiOn 'Art
$349
.

Pomeroy Cement Block Co.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

en tine
Devoted To The lnlere&amp;u Of 'The Meigs-MW!On ArecJ

.

PRICES
START FROM

MIDDLEPORT
OHIO

Mother," also linown·as "Mrsc .
George Washington Whis\ler,"
was · titled .by the · artist
"Arrangement in Grey and
Black No. 1."

Weather
.
.
.

Clinics Help To Revive

by~""'-cAn..

-·C::INCINI~ATI

e

l'lle painting of "Whistler's

••

ties to the past

litbens /4ational

NQW You Know

The Department Store'of BuUding Since 1915 .
'

...

••
I

)

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH after meal all ready to thaw, temperatures are needed to pressure canner which js in
The appeal of a well-filled heat, or chlll 'and serve.
destroy different bacteria, and good working or~er, Mrs.
pantry. for the long, cold days
Butthere'sarij!hlwayanda cautioned that all homemakers Sheets said. She spoke of the
of winter has enticed hundreds wrong way to preserve foods, should be famil~r with the varieties of vegetables now on
of homel1)8k~rs everywhere to and the wrong way can be signs of food spoilage for the ·the market and of the pollution
return to the art of home food disastrous.
sake qt their fa~Uilles ' health in the soil which must be taken
preservation practiced by \heir
For thepastfew weeks, Mra. and ~afey.
into account in fruit and
mothers and grandmothers. Jennifer Sheets, Meigs County
The dangers of botulism vegetable processing, and of
A revival is on and the most Extension Agent, Home were particularly stressed by the necessity for handling food
modern, themost sophistlcated Economics, and Mrs. Ann the home extensl!'f1 agent who the right way.
·
of women today are enjoying · Boso, nutrition aide, have described botulism as a
She cautioned against trick
the satisfaction of preserving a conducted food presenatlon poisoning, almost always fatal methods of processing men·
j,art of, their family's food.
clinics arowid the county, The and reportedly on the Increase, tioning a fad for canning with
Home canning and freezing final one was held lut night at caUR4 by a toxin. The toxin is aspirin and oven canning, and
Is the great Inflation fighter - Eastern High School, but 1111 produced by the growtll of said that she knew no easy
buy in season at low price, and information Is atill available at spores
of· , Clostridium quick way of putting up fruita
eat out of season when the the Eldenslon 0111ct far thole botulinum in a Haled jar. and vegetables.
price has tripled,
who milled the eUnice.
tJ.e spores are prevalent In Planning before planting 1
Preaervlng your own food . At each of the ctinlca, Mrs. soil but grow only In a tlghUy garden on quantity needed for
c;an be a highly rewarding Sheela explained the caule of . IUied jar of any ,IOw.-cid food the year was !!llggested by the
experience .. economically, spoilage deacrlblllfl the ~uae they belong to a extension agent. She also
creatively and personnally orpnisnll, molds, ylllll, and apeelts of bacteria which suggested that high quality
aalilfying.
bacteria, which are always cannot 1row In, the preaenc:e of plants he selected a~d that ~o
When the jars of fresh fruits preaent In the air, water and a1r and which 11oM not nbr- malnta111 that quality 11 IS
· and vegetables you have "put- soil, creating c~111 in maJIJ thrive In ldd f~M!!~s,.
recommended that processin1
ap" during the seuon 11re aU . Davor, color and tatare of raw
111e spona are destroyed · be done fast In small quantities
lined up on the aheH, and the frulla and veptablel.
when low acid foods are -two hours from garden to Jar
freeaJ Ia Oiled, there Ia meal
She nplalned llutt dlffennt correctly ~oc
dIn a ateam(Ctalluued oa Page II)

APRESSURE CANND Ia a aece.tllllty for Clnnlng lowacid frulla llld "'flllilll. Mn. Ann Bolo, lllllritloll aide fw
the Melp County N
' 1111 ,~ ~ .t blr
cllnlcl tile • of tile f1
1 c - Ill food fl
.t.U.,

'

�2- The Daily lientilll.'l. Middlepon -Ponll'roy. June 21. 1972

New Haven
Personals
'

Ngw HAVEN - Mr. 'anu
Mrs. HatTy H11ffnian ul New
· Haven attcnde&lt;l the wedding ol
Miss Mary Carleton and Mr.
, David Sheets at Enterprise
United Mclhudist Church in

Tilt Postponed

.We're Selling Out
To The Bare Walls! ·

The Meigs American Legion baseball team lui~ cancelled
II~ .ganle wilh powerful Iroi1ton scheduled lor today at
Syracuse aj 5:30. Meigs will host the Ironton team, whose
. h
hog
school team was "AA" stale champions, in a
doubleheader at Syracuse later on in the season.
Business manager Don Hunpel has asked that all I.,egion
players lrom the Pomeroy-Middleport area meet at the
Middleport Park_ at. I0:30 Saturday morning lor their 1:00
ga me atPorIs mouth . After stopping in Cheshire another stop
will be made at tbe Skylboe Bowling Alley around 11:00 lor
the Gallipolis players.
In a previous meeting wi!h Portsmouth, Meigs split boa
doubleheader.
,

i

Pmueruy on Sunday . ·Miss

,

miSVERY old St. Joseph's Catholic Church which was located at Mason, W. Va . was one
of the oldest churches in the Ohio Valley. Construction began In 1857. Father Shinn and Father
·Parke were the first pa:;tors. Joseph Ryan was active in helping to raise f•mds lo build the
church. The Sacred Heart Cathc!ic Church at Pt. Pleasant was formerly a mission of St.
Joseph's Catholic Church. According to the Parkersburg News dated May 6, i956, Rev. Henry
Huppert and the Reverend Ted Wisniewski of Milwau)&lt;ee were recent pastors and at that time
. the pastor was lhe Rev . John' J . O'Reiily, nephew ofThe Very Rev. Jqhn B. O'Reilly of
Parkersburg. This old church has been torn down and replaced with a new orle on Pomeroy and
Third Streets, in Mason .

Annual Day Camp Held
NEW HAVEN -- St. Paul
Lutheran Church held its
annual Day Camp last week
with Mrs. Kenneth Vickers,
Mr.s. Gary Roush and Mrs.
Kenneth Thompson. serving as
dlreclors. Mrs. V1ckers also
serv~d as registrar . Each
mormng was begun w1th a
worship period, using the
theme. ·:~rlends in Other
Countrtes led by Pastor John
l Haeberle and with Mrs.
1
Haeberle as pianist. Film&amp;. a
[ display of articles depicting the
~ country studied that day and
[ songs were used in the worship
,, ~riod:
.
.
!' Pup;ls then , made. different
~ crafta of thett choostpg. Some
L of the crafts made were,
Candlemaking by Mrs. Charles
, Smith; Decoupage by Mrs.
. John F. Roush ; Woodworkmg
:1 (Clocks, bqok ends ) by Mr. a~d
Mrs. Kenneth Thompson,
1

l
l

t

•,,Boar.d l'.n
•
·
~

l
) Sll}t)CZll
~ '~'':'
0

fs

..:.!J ,

eSSJ()ft'

~

.
~ Pr. PLEASANT _ Mason
f County'~ Board of Education
, metforonly .afewminutesina
special rii'eeting Monday
. evening, transacting
budgetary transfers.
The board gave approval of a
recommendation by Supt .
Charles Withers on budgetary
transfers in a 3-1 vote. Charles
Elhenaur set lorlh the motion
.. which was seconded by Bill
Withers.
In discussion Harry Siders
aaltl he would like to have more
, lime lor study and when lhe
vote was taken by presiden~
Ted Stevens voted against the
action by casting a "no" vote.
Those approving it were
Withers, Eshenaur and
Stevens. Ray Fields was not
, present:
, Supt. Withers ' recom• mendation was submitted In
writing since he had not
, returned from a meeting bo
F1orlda. Stipt. Withers and Mr.
Stevens represented the local
· school system at the Southern
Educator's Conference held in
Daytona Beach, Fla. While
there Mr. Withers participated
on a committee dealing with
Early Childhood:
ANNOUNCE BIRTH
MASON - Mr. and Mrs .
Burton Hickman, Mason, are
announcing the birth of a
daughter on June 10 at Holzer
Medica l Ce nter. The infant
named Sherry Jill, weighed 10
pounds 9'.~ ounces.. km h
Mr. an d Mrs. HIC an ave
another daughter, Valerie Ann ,
age S. Grandparents are Mr .
and Mrs. Sterling Morris, Mr .
and Mrs. Harvey Hickman, all
of Dixie, W. Va . Mrs . Clara
Elliott, a great- grandmother,
. lives at Uzemore, W. Va.

Croche t beads and egg. ca rton
flowers by Mrs. Thomas
Grinstead Plaster of Paris
carvin g 'by Mrs . Charles
Humphreys and M•s. Dale
Humphreys, Popsicle stick
crafts and rock jewelry by
Mrs. John Fry, Painting by
Mrs. Samuel Goodson, Film
dipped flow ers by Mrs. Don
Baumgardner and helpers with
the different crafts we&lt;e Mrs.
William Powell, Mrs. Robert
Thomas, Mrs. A. L. Sprouse,
Marsha Sprouse Pastor John ·
Haeberle Mrs. ~Harold Knoll
Mrs. Ke~ne th Vickers, Mis;
Holly ,Layne.
A Nursery and Kindergarten
Class was held with Mrs ..Gary
Roush in charge and helpers
were Mrs. Carroll Adams, Jr.,
Mrs. Danny Rickard , Miss
Becky Paugh, Mrs. J ohn
Haeberle. Refreshments were
served each day with Mrs.
Robert Layne and Mrs. Otto
Grimm serving as chairmen.
On Wed nesday the group
motored to Camden Park lor a
picni c and a day of rides ·and
fun .
·
Those · atte;~~.i.P~, ,. ~e,re
Matthew nompson, Gape
Thomps~)1, ," F;en . Vi ~ke,rs.
Mitchell Roush, Allison Marks,
Charles Haeberle, Steve Gray,
Sherry Pomeroy, . Ken.t ·
Rt ckard, J eff Rose , Dale
Roush, Matthew Roush, T1m
Thompson, Jane Powell, Joe
Thompson, Brent La yne,

IS INJURED
Mrs. Harry I Nora 1 Staats,
Lewrt. has had more than her
~~are of bad luck. On Monday
an air compressor in the
ga rage at the SU!ats ' home
blew up and a flyin g object cu t
Mrs. Staats on the back of the
head. She was take n to the
Holzer Medi cal Center where
several stitches were required
to close the wound. All of the
windows Were broken out of the
ga rage and a hole was blown in
SO ll
f
tile ruof. She was trea ted and
released from the hospil&lt;ll on
Monday, an d on Tuesday, she
0
decided to go to the mail box
Mrs. Emma Ryan is barefooted and in the process
recuperating from eye surgery ran a piece of glass in her foot.
at the home of her son and
daughter-in-law ,' Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Ryan , in Mason.
Miss Eliza beth A. Ryan was
a patient at Holzer Medical all of Mason; Mrs. Larry King,
Center from Saturday until
MiltoQ; Mr. and Mrs. Leonard
Tuesday and has been returned
McDaniel; Mr. and Mrs. Tom
to the home of Miss Stella·
McDaniel and family. all of
Gress in Mason .
Cleveland.
· Mrs. Thurma Love, sister of
Mr. and Mrs . Johnnie Roush ,
Mrs. Emma Ryan , has been
New Haven, Mr. and Mrs.
visiting with Mrs. Ryan and
Edwin Roush , Charlestdn, and
wi th her daughter and son-inMrs. Carla Gibbs and children
law, Mr. and Mrs. Brookie
of Huntin gton, visited recently
Hen ry in Pt. Pleasant . .Also
with Mr. .and Mrs . Larry King
visiting with Mrs. Ryan was
and family at Milton, W. Va .
another sister, Mrs. Anna Avis.
Both Mrs. Avis and· Mrs. Love
have returned to their homes in
Roan oke.
Several area residents and
f ormer residents of t~e Bend - ·
area attended the Wears
reunion at Nitro on Sunday.
Prese nt were the following:
. Mrs. Boyd Wears, 89, mother of
Mrs. J ohnnie Roush, New
Haven ; Mrs. Ola McDaniel,
Hartford ; Mr. and Mrs. Eber
1-loush and Mary ·Dudding,
Mason, Mr. Johnnie Roush,
Lowena Roush, Karla Gibbs,
Damon and Misti, all of New
Haven ; Mr . and Mrs.)lernard
Hudson and family, Mr. and
Mrs . George Hudson a·nd
F78xl4-15
daughter, Cheryl, Mr. and Mrs.
Brooks Edwards and Shirley,

Ma

A ea

Ne ws, N t es

GAS FOR LESS
·roP QUALITY
You Can't buy better so
WHY PAY MORE? ·
•

Certified Gas Stations·
992-9981
538 W. Main .

Dwain Russell, Rodney
Vickers, Jackie Paugh, Tom
Thompson, Mark Thompson,
Kay Roush, Lou Ellen Roush,
Judy Young , Ty Roush, Jeff
Collier. Dee Dee Colljer, Eric
Bum gardn er, Brent Hart,
Linda Bumgardner , Jim
Powell, Bill Powell, Diana
Abel, AI Sprouse, J acki e
Ridgway , Matthew Ca rmichael, Bucey Rose , Yvonne
Grinstead, Nida Grinstead,
David Rose , Beth Layne, Brad
Layne, Judy Needs, Lisa
Dudding, Betty Wolfe, Todd
Grinstead, Jeannine Wallis,
Darnell Wallis, Scot Roush,
Dianna Roush , Randy Lyons,
Ca thy Roush, Kathy Gray, Phil
Powell , Lisa Thomas, Tim
Humphreys , Caro l Humphreys, Sheryl Roush, Chris
Humphreys, Matthew Scott,
Kevi n Scott , Andy Gurtis ,
Helen Gurtis, Eddie Gurtis,
Mike
Pomeroy,
Tom
Hayma ker, and Kim Javins.

POMEROY, 0.
We honor BankAmericard and Master Charge

Carlelun is the sister-in-Jaw of
Mrs. Greg Hoffman .
Beth Ann Layne, . David
Ruse , AI Sprouse, Harold Rose,
Brent Layne, Dwain Rus.""ll
and Pastor John Haeberle ar~
attending Camp Luther held at
Camp Caeser, Webster ·
. Springs.
Mr. and Mrs. James. N.
· Roush, Linda and Jeff, were in
Lincoln Park, Michigan last
weekend due to the illness ol
Mrs. Roush's brother-in-law.

· REG.
'1~59
. '
, LOUN~E

PILLOW

Richardson,

New

Bonanza.

'94!

Ha ve n,

sl&lt;orted t"school on Tuesday at
the Parkersburg Beauty
College. Mrs. Richardson ,
daughter of Ml\!. and Mrs. Hoy
R~ ush, is well ·known in the
area as an Av9n represen·
wtive.
Mrs.

Richa rds on

is

a

gr!lduate of Wahama High
Schcx•l and the mother of two
children, Crysl&lt;ll, age 10, and
Mike. age ·6.
RETURN HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Casto
and children, Kim and Shelly,
ha ve returned from a Florida
vacation. While there they
visited Mr. Casto's sister and
fam ily, Mr. and Mrs. Hobert
King and Delores at Pompano
Beach .

Whi le in Florida they visited
Disney World and other attractions.

COMES HOME
MASON - Mrs. Murl Megee
has return ed to her home in
Mason, after spending three
-weeks caring for her greatgranddaughter, Traci Lynn
Bird. Traci is the month-old
daughter of Reverend and Mrs.
Charles Bird of Sandusky ,
Ohi o.
Mrs . Megee also visited a
week with her daughter and
family, Mr. and rv,trs. A. R.
Coates. Jr., at Loud onville,
Ohio.

CALLED HERE ·
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Ault.of
Columbus were called here
because of the illness of Mrs.
Winnie Holland, mother of
Mrs . Aul l. Mrs. Holland is a
patient at Veterans Memorial

Hospil&lt;ll.
VISITS HERE
Mr . and Mrs. Lewis Harmes
of Toledo, Ohio, spent a week
visiting her sister ahd brotherin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Chet
Oliver at Clifton.

SHIRt
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9- 0ut At 5

Mauch Smiling After
Expos Triumph, 1-2

Reg. S\.59 Shredded Foam
Filled Printed Cover Bed
PiiiOI'(· Jllew· .low · price at

ATI'ENDS COLLEGE
Mrs.
David
(Etta 1

QUITTING BUSINESS SALE

QUITTING BUSINESS SALE

.QUilTING BUSIN.ESS SALE

REG. 89• VALUE

CLOSE OUT GROUP

REG. 99' BUCKn Of .

~

CINCINNATI (UP!)- Gene
· t d t he
ld
Mauch porn
e ou
cou
plead the fifth amendment
when the ques'tions were shol
his Way
·
"But," said the Montreal
manager, grinning, ~' I have
quit drlnkbog.
"An d• anyway," he added,
his grin widening, "! like
Sparky Anderson. I don't mind
· up h'ts t earn a ]'ttl1e wtth
·
Jazztng
-1Houston headed into here
Thursday."
Mauch was talking Tuesday
night alter the Expos had beat·
en the Reds 7-2, enabling Houston to take over first place in
the National League West by
one-half game.
How does Mauch compare
the Reds with the Astros'
"The clubs are dissimilar,"
said Mauch. "Houston might
be more apt to get more low
scoring games out of their
pitchers. And the Reds aren't
apt to need as many low

'

BATH TOWELS .Coloring Books SPONGES
Reg . 29c' Large Ass!. of
Children's Coloring Books .
Regrouped
For
· Final
Clearance on This Group. Shop
Early and Save on This Group .

Bit $22 x 44 Size Bath Towel
Plains . Stripes. Soft Bath
Towel. Reg . 89c Value. Large
·Group. Out They Go. Hurry .

5 e 1

WEQUIT

EA.

Reg . 99c Value. Large Bucket
of Sponges With Plastic Bucket .
Stoc.k Up Now . Many Uses.
Save Big Here.

EA.

QUITTING BUSINESS SALE
REG. 79'

QUITTING BUSINESS SALE

QUITTING BUSINESS SALE

5

W£QUIT

W£ QUIT

BAG OF
SPONGES SERVING TRAY PLASTIC .DRAP
REG. '1 00 VALUE

One Big Bag of Asst . Sponges For Cleaning House, Washing
Cars a nd Many Other Uses.
Buy Several Bag s At This Low
Price .

24e

WE QUIT
".

7!

WE QUIT

BAG

72 INCH WIDE FINE MESH

~ 1l I

••

NYLON NET

WEQUIT4

VALUES TO '5.99

,
I

to $5 .99
I . Large
out they

, Yes -

Values

$ 00

QUITTING BUSINESS SALE
REG. 11.79
CHILDREN'S-MISSES-GIRLS

Values to 53.99
Ladies' Spri ng

,.

walkstolead-&lt;JffbattersJulian
Javier and Denis Menke.
The chunky Montreal relief
ace induced Dave Concepcion
to hit into a double play and
then, after yielding a pinch single to Hal McRae, retired Pete
, !Wse on a fly to center to end

•••
' ~i

$

51h%
INTEREST

00

On 90-Day

PAIR

these.

Certificates
of Deposit
Sl/2 per cent per year
paid on 90 day Cer·
tificates of Deposit.
51,000.00 Minimum .
Interest
Payable
Quarter.y

Values To s6.99
Ladies1 Better

SEWIIG IOTIOIS
Big lot of sewing hair and general
household noiions. Ali at just ooe half price
durin_g our big Close.()ut Sale.

Reg . $1.79 value children. girls,

II

Summer
Footwear. Large
selection, redu ced
for quick sale. See

QUITIING BUSINESS
CLOSE-OUT LOT OCEAN OF

SPORT SNEAKERS

; '' '

and

Pair

SS .99, You save
and More .

:i~!~~~~:r~~E:;s:~:~~~~

LADIES' FOOTWEAR

Ladies Footwear
j. ~~~=~t~r;~~es

\

1
Values
Tq
3.99
" '

'

Sheer, line mesh nylon net
72-inches wide. In whitb
and a dozen prelty shades.
Regular 29c values.

Mauch smiled.
"Thai " he said "should tee
off a fe~ of thos; Reds pitchers. Is that what you want :"
Carl Morton picked up the
Expos victory Tuesday with
help from relief pitChers Joe

PAIR

- TN£ SHOPPER'S BONANZA QUITTING BUSINESSQUITTING BUSINESS
Quitting buSiness Sale
'
,. SALE

SHOPPER'S BONANZA QUITS!

scoring games."

Reg. 79c Value, Ready to Hang
Plastic Drapes - Asst . Colors
And Patterns. New Low Price.
Out They Go. We Have to Move
This Mdse . Shop Early.

Reg. B9c &amp; $1.00 Value on Lot of
Fancy Serving Trays . Out They
Go . New Low Price . Asst .
Colors .

FOOTWEAR
Valves
S6.99,
styles, 'flats,
to

(!)

save over 117 now at this low-low

00

REGULAR
PRICE

The Athens County

SaW~ings &amp;

loan Co.

296 Second 51.
Pomeroy, Ohio'

PAIR

Use Our Free Parking Lot

$20.000.00 by FSLtC.

216 E. 2nd. Pomeroy

TIRES

WIDE OVAL
Belted Fiberglass

REPEAT SALE-QUANTITY LIMITED

Quitting Business Sale

ELECTJIIC

Stock

j

GREETING
CARDS
OFF
REG.
PRICE

PERCOLATOR

Reg .
Elec tric

S3 . 99

Per ·

cola tor ,

Asst.

Business .

Close-

Colors. New Low
Price. Quilling

Out
Group
Remarked
For
Quick Sale. Out
They Go. Hurry.
First Come, First
Served .

OUR COMPLETE STOCK
AND

MILL ASSORTMENT

BEAUTY AIDS

H78xl4-15

UTILITY-RUGS

1/ OFF REG.

/2

J78x14·15
All Tires Plus Fed. &amp; Sales Tax

H&amp;R FIRESTONE
..
Middieport, 0.

PRICE

VALUES TO
MENS

1

1~.99

FOOTWEAR
One Group of
Men 's Better
Foo l wear . \Valves

to $12.99. Reduced
For Quick Sale.
Sl1op Early.

'7

Values To 59c One Large Group
Ot Asst . Utility Rugs. We Have
To· Move These. Save tf2 Now
And . More . ' Many Uses . Buy
Several.

Values to $9.9'1, Men's Oxfords Loafers And Work Shoes.
Remarked and Grouped For
Quick. Close Out. Broken Sizes.
Famous Brands . Out They Go
At This Low P~ice .

seventh inning Tuesday night. games in the American League
to protect a 4-2 triumph over East.
The Orioles climbed back
the Kansas City Royals. It was
the firth consecutive victory for into a tie lor first place by
New York, which now trails beating the California Angels,
Baltimore and Detroit by 5112 4-1, Tuesday night while the

Gn•d
Season Opens Saturdtty

~ : ~: ~::

New.York
Boston ·

25 20 .463 5';,
23 20 .442 6'h
~~~e~~~~e i~ ~~ : ;;~ 1;•;2
West
w. I. pet. g.b.
g~~~:~2
j~
:~ 5
Minnesota
30 23 .566 7
· Kan sas Ci ty 15 30 .455 13
Cal iforn ia
16 32 .448 13' '
Te xas
14 33 .411 15
Tuesday's Results
New York 4 Kan sas City 2
Minn 7 Cleve 3, 1st

g

Minn 3 Cleve 1. 2nd

Texas 5 Bos ton 2

,Milwaukee II Chicago 1
Baltimore 4 Calif 1
Oak 3 Detro it 2. 11 inns
Toclay's Probable P1tchers
(All Times EDTI
Kan sas City (Spl ittorff 5-41 at
New York (Peterson 5-81. 1
p.Bal timore (Dobson 8·61 at

Buchanon said. 'lrs a fun
game, but part of our job is
seeing to it that the East
doesn 't have too much fun.' 1
Imhof said in a game such as
Saturday's the players didn't
have enough time to do a lot of
planning, and there were
limitation s on what stunts
could be used by the defense .
"It's sort of a warmup game
for us, helping us get back into
the game before heading for
training camps for the pros,"
Imhof said . "After the game
Willie heads for Green Bay and
I'll be going to St. Louis. We
had to be in shape when we got
here, and the work this week
ha s helped us get back into the
frame of mind lor football ."
Buchanon will also play in

LUBBOCK , Te&lt;. IUPI )Martin Imhof is a defensive
lineman . Willie Buchanon is a
defensive back.
They played on different
teams while in junior college in
Galifornia . But they played two
years on the same team at San
Diego State .
Martin Imhof ha s been
drafted by the St. Louis Cardinals. Willie Buchanon by the
Green Bay Packers.
They are going to play one
last game together this Saturday . They 'll both be on the
West team in the 12th armual
Coaches All-America ga me.
"We're glad to be on the
same side, although we are
usually too far apart to do
much good for each other,"

1

the All.Star clash with the
World Champion Dallas
Cowboys in Chicago next
month. He said this game
would help him get ready for
that classic, too.
The main Ulsk facing the
West defense will be stopping
the passing of quarterbacks
Paul Miller of North Carolina
and Joe Gilliam of Tennessee
State , and the running of
Alabama's Johnny Musso,
Tennessee's Curl Watson and
North Carolina's Lewis Jolley.
"We don 't know too much
about them , but - we are
preparing for anything. I think
we'll be able to stop th~m and
let our offense lead the West to
victory," said Imhof .

1

JO .508 2112

Syracuse
Rochester
,Peninsul a

30 32 .484 4
29 36 _446 61h
26 37 .413 8,12

12 noon .

Peninsula at

Tuesday's Results

Peninsula 9 Rochester
game, 7 Innings)

list

4

Rochester

(2nd

game. ppd .. power failure )
Richmond 6 Syracuse 3 (lst
game. 7 Innings)
Syracuse 5 Richmond 1 (2nd

game, 7 innings
Toledo J Charleston
game, 7 innings)

2 (1st

Charleston 13 Toledo 5 (2nd
game. 7 Innings )
Louisville at Tidewa ter. ppd ..

Meius
Le!Yinn Baseball Statistics
"'e'
ew~

-l&gt;

Batting :
Name

b"ahvnen;(,~~!rd

R

5

1

~

Chuck Perroud
Mick Ash
Jon Buck
Bill Chaney
Steve ~ee
Johnny Rou sh
Skip Johnson
Tom Cooke
Rick Ash
Rick VanMatre
Dave Boyd
Roger Dixon .
Kev in Shee ts

8
7
5
6
5
11
12
9
11
12
7

11 •
11

Lou M c Kinl')ey

Brett Hart ·&gt;&lt;

Mark Kies ling · x
TOTALS

H .f Avg.
2 .105
I ,115
I .143
3
.1 58
3 .200
4
.286
4 .400
0 .000
0 .000
9 .391
12 .400
5 .115
4
.148
.310
9
.t50
3
.084
1
1
.084
.071
1

2
;

B
7

t9
15

4

14

3

9
5

0

t

tO

1
1
9

13
30

6
0

12

27
19
20
14

7 11
7 14
10 23
4
2
13
4 57
133

Stan Perry
Howie Taylor
Steve Dunfee

K -

G AB
19

I

4

1
1

0
l·

2

4

0

0

0

3

42

.17.4

.000
.230

72

.202

2B lB HR rbi KO W SAC SB
0

0

0

1

3

t

0

1

0

0

0

0

6

2

0

0

0

0

0

0

2

0

0

I

0

0

1

3

0

0

0

0
0
0

0014001
0 0 2 2 0 0 0
0 003 100

0

0

0

I

5

t

I

0

~0

0

1

1

3

t
1

0

1

0

1

100

1

11
1

0
0
I

1

0
0
0
0
2
9

351

1

t

1

104315 6
t0 2710
4
0 0 4 1 2 00
0 0 1 10
1 0 0
005 13
0 4
00t5 110
1 008000
0 0 1 1 t
1 I
~ ' .. 0

000100
0
0023000
3 0 30 78 29 4 22

No longer with team .

PITCHING :

G GS

CG C IP

2

2

0 o\0

5
3
3

2
2

4

1

2
13

0

Name
Johnny Baird
Rick VanMatre
Stan Perry
Skip Johnson

Steve Lee
Rick Ash
TOTALS

4

13

1-3
3 18 1-3
3 14 1-3
t
8 1·3
0 18 1-3

0
7

3
93

6.00

W L WPct
0 1 .000
4
1 .750
0 1.000
3
1
1 .500
.000
0 2
0 .000
0

1.93

B

R ER C Era

9
5

1

6
9
2

39

4
2
1

3.49
0.63
0.37

6
5

5.04
2.45

2
20

5

.615

H

1t

14
5
11
14
5
61

BB
8
lt
24
3
6
I
53

k

tO
35
49
6
17
3
120

wet grounds

Tuesday Night's Major League Linescores
National League
Phila at Atlanta , ppd ., rain .

Los Ang at Pitts, ppd .. rain
San Fran
Chicago

(81hl. Fairly (5th) .
New York 000 100 JOQ- 4 7 1
Houston
003 040 OOx- 7 13 1
McAndrew, Capra (51 , Taylor
171 and Dyer; Forsch. Ray 171

104 010 011)- B 12 1 and Howa rd . WP- For sch (4-2).
700 502 IOx- 15 18 3 LP- McAndrew (5-31. HR sCarrithers , .'v'cMahon (l), Milner 17th). Ma y (lllh) ,
Moll itt 141. Reberger 141 , and Kran epool {4th ).
Rader : Hooton. Reuschel 14)
and Hundley . WP- Reuschel . [10 innings)
( t.O) . LP- Carrithers 12·4) . San Diego 000 200 020 I)- 4 8 3
HRs-Hundley IJrdl , Maddox .St . Lou is 021 000 100 1- 5 9 0
15th!. Santo 191hl. Williams
Norman, Acosta (3) , Corkins
(1 3th).
15) , Caldwell (81. Ross (10) and
Corrales; Wise 16-71 and
Montreal
001 .220 011- 7 12 1 Simmons. LP·Catdwell (1 -31.
Cincinnati 101 000 ooo-- 2 9 0 HR .Morales f2ndi.
Morton . Gilbert (71, Marshall
191 and Humphrey. Boccabelta
(9) ; McGlothlin, Gullett (5)
American league
Sprague (6) , Borbon 181. Its! game)
Marshall (9) and Bench. WP- Cleveland 200 100 080- 3 6 2
Morlon (3·7) . LP- McGiothlln Minn
034 000 OOx- 7 8 2
13·51. HRs·Bailey (6th), Morgan Colbert. Tldrow (4). Hennigan

171 and Fosse ; Kaal (8·21 imd
Roof. LP- Colbert (1 ·51 . HRsKillebrew (8th ). Soderholm
(6th).
l2nd game!
Cleveland 000 000 001- 1 6 1
030 000 OOx- 3 7 0
Minn ·Lamb, Riddleberger 151. Kil k-

- Drago (5.51. Hr - Murcer
(8th).
Texas
001 010 2oo- 5 10 1
Boston
100 010 ooo-- 2 5 "
Hand, Lindblad (81, Pina (9)
and Billings; Pattin. Lee 171.
Newhau!:oer (8) and F.isk . WP-

Tigers were dropping a 3-2
de cision in II innings to the
Oakland A's. Elsewhere, the
Mirmesota Twins won a twinight doubleheader from the
Cleveland Indians, 7-3, and 3-1,
ihe Texas Rangers beat the
Boston Red Sox, 5-2, and the
Milwaukee Brewers beat the
Chicago White Sox, 7-l.
In the National League,
Houston beat the Mets, 7-4,
Montreal beat Cincinnati, 7-2,
the Cubs routed San Fraocisro,
15-ll, and St. Louis edged San
Diego, 5-4, in II innings.
Philadelphia at Atlanta and
Los Angeles at Pittsburgh were
postponed by rain.
Allows One Run
Kekich allowed Kansas City
only one run on six hits before
he was replaced by Lyle with
two men on and two out in the
seventh . Lyle retired Amos
Otis to end the inning, and
although he allowed a run in
the eighth inning he snuffed out
the Royals in the ninth.
"!\ wasn't one of my better
nights," said Lyle. "You know
you have luck going for you
when you escape on a night like
tllis. ! I
Bobby Murcer drove bo three
runs for New York with a
homer and a sacrifice fly.
Baltimore scored three runs
in th~ seventh inning to break a
I-I lie and enable Jim Palmer
to earn h is ninth victory
against three defeats. Rookie
catcher Johnny Oates drove in
the tie-breaking run with a
single, and two more runs
followed on a single by Brooks
Robinson and a wild pitch.
Rudi Homers
Joe Rudi hit reliever Chuck
Seelbach's first pitch in the
'bottom of the lith inning for a
home run as Oakland stretched
its winning streak to five
games. Jim Hunter (7-3) went
all the way for the A's, allowing
Detroit to score on homers by
Norm Cash and AI Kaline.
Jim Kaat and Dick Woodson
each pitchf\1 rqute-going sixhitters as Minnesota won two
games from Cleveland. Eric
Soderholm hit a three-run
homer and Hannon Killebrew
a solo blast lor the Twins in the
opener and Cesar Tovar
singled home two runs and
scored another in the nightcap.
Dalton Jones snapped a 1-1
tie in the fifth inning with a
two-run homer to give Texas
its winning margin against the
Red Sox. Toby Harrah stole
three bases and scored two
runs lor the winners.
Jim l.onborg scattered eight
hits and George Scott drove in
two runs to lead Milwaukee
over the White Sox. Lonborg
lllruck out eight batters and
walked only one in improving
his record to 4-3.

Hand (4-4) . LP- Pall ln 12·8) .
(5·5) and Dempsey . LP- Lamb HRs - Jones (2nd) , Harper
110ihl .
11 ·11 . HR- Lowenstein 11st).

DUAL WHITE

"XP78"
High PertOnnance
'

4.Ply, ~:·~
Polyester
Cord
H7~15
Replaces 855x15
ONLY

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Exc . Tax.
Mounted &amp; Wheel
Balance Free

General
Tire Sales
992-7161
N. 2nd
Middleport

enny (7) and Moses ; Woodson

MULTI-ROOM 18,000 BTU

000 000 001- I 9 2
Kan City
000 000 If()- 2 11 2 Chicago
110 001 04x- 7 It 0
N.Y.
Ot000210x- 4100 Milw
Wood , Kealey {7). Gossage
Drag o, Burgmeier (7) and
May ; Keklch, Lyle 171 and (B) and Herrmann r' Lon berg (4Munson . WP- Kekich 16·5) . LP 3) and Rodrlguj!z. LP- Wocd
(11 -51 .

FEDDERS
only

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NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC:
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• Triple-tempered nylon
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6.70 x15,

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• Long-wearing rib tread
design Ideally suited to
road and field

The ·Men W1to K110w Tm

POMEROY,OHtO

By MARTIN LADER
UPI Sports Writer
Sparky Lyle turned in his
14th save-two more than the
entire Yankee staff registered
in 1971- by coming to the aid of
starter Mike Keki ch-, in the

Bob Bailey and Ron Fairly
hit homers Ill power the Expos
Ill their secondstraight victory
over Cincinnati. Carl Morton,
with late inning relief help
from Joe Gilbert and Mike
Marshall. picked up his _third
victory . Morgan homered for
his eighth of the year and
scored twice in the losing effort.
~ounds Uke Football
The Chicago-San Francisco
score made it sound as if the
clubs were play ing football and
both went lor the two-point
conversions. The Cubs scored
seven runs in the first with
Randy J:lundley leading the
way with a grand slam. They
added five more in the fourth
when Hundley drove in his fifth
run. Ron Santo and Billy
Williams also homered for the
Cubs and Jim Hickman had
four hits.
San Francisco, getting a
three'!'un homer from Garry
Maddox in lhe third, trailed
just 7-ii before the Cubs got the
live runs in the lourlh. Chicago
has won seven straight .
Poor fielding by San Diego
cost the Padres the game
against St. Louis. Two errors
enabled the Cards to score a
run in the seventh to take a 4-2
lead. Jerry Morales, who made
one of the errors, lhen tied it 4-4
with a two-run homer in the
eighth. But Derrel Thomas'
error on Joe Torre's grounder
bo the lOth enabled Lou Brock
to score the deciding run.

•

95

!01 E. MAIN

~:;io~ore

Entry deadlin e is June 28.
For additional information ,
area managers should contact
the Redman Inn, 24o-oo95 after

RIZER OIL 00.
PAIR'

IAll Times EDT I
San Francisco I Bryan t 3·41 at
Chicago IP•ppas 5-41 .2: 30 p.m.
Los Angeles (Osteen 7-4) al
Pittsburgh I Blass a:11 . 8 P·f\1·
Sa n Diego I Kirby 5·61 at St.
Loui s (G ibson 4-5}, 9 p.m .
Montreal 1Renko 1-51 al
Cincinnati !Nolan 8·21. 8 p.m.
Phi l adelphia (Carlton 7-6) at
Atlanta !Reed 5-71. a p.m .
New York. ( Koosman 3-3) at
Houston (Griff in 2·11 . 7 p.m .
Thursday 's Games
St. Louis at New York , night
Houston at Cinci. night
!Only games scheduled)
·American League
East
w. L pet. g.b.

31

'

WE QUIT

Diego, 5-4, in 11 innings. The
Philadelphia at Atlanta and
Los Angeles at Pittsburgh
ga mes were rained out.
In the American League,
New York beat Kansas City, 42, Minnesota beat Cleveland
twice, 7-3 and 3-1, Texas
stopped Boston, 5-2, Milwaukee
routed Chicago, 7-1, Baltimore
beat Ca lifornia , 4-1, and Oakland bea t Detroit, 3-2, in 11
innings.

Yanks Win Fifth Straight, 4-2

10 inns

Tidewater

•.• opoclally lntltt lor· lonn wo1an md tmplomtol whetlo

•

4,

Montreal 7 Cincinnati 2
Houston 7 New York 4
Today's Probable Pitchers

tournament.

FARM
SERVICE
TIRE

FOOTWEAR

. Sl. L. 5 San Diego

Cleveland (Perry 106) at
The Redman Inn slow pitch Minnesota IBiyleven 7·71, 8:30
softball team will hos t its P ·r~xas (Gogolewski 3-61 at
seco~d annual tournament on
Boston (Culp 4-61. 1:30 p.m.
.July 1, 2, and 4 at the Ri o
De troit (Timmerman 5-5) at
Grande College Athletic Field . ~~land IHoltzman 10-41. 11
Entry fee lor the double
Thursday's Games
eli mination tournament is $25 . Chicago at Mi lwaukee
New York at Cleve ., ['light
Trophies will be presented to
!Only games schedul ed!
the first and second place
,,
. .,
International League
teams, and individual trophies _
Standings .
will be prese nted members of · United Press International
the championship team .
W. L. Pet. GB
Too, a trophy will be Charleston
33 27 .550
34 28 .548
Richmond
prese nted to the player who Lou isvi lle
34 28 .548
collects the most hits in the To ledo
31 30 .508 2,12

and
boys r
•a !ik etb al l shoe s. In
hite . and bla ck high I
1
c Ttd low cu~ . Reg. 52.99.,

QUITTING BUSINESS
· MENS COMFORTABLE
LONG WEARING

Houston held a 3-1lead when
Jim Wynn singled to open the
fifth and May followed with his
horner off loser Jim McAndrew. Buzz Capra relieved and
a walk to Doug Rader, Tommy
Helms' double and Roger
Metzger's· sbogle made it 7-1
and it was a rout.
The Other Two Games
In the other two ga mes,
Chicago routed San Francisco,
15-ll, and St. Louis edged San

Los Ang al Pitts. ppd ., ra in

4

Men 's

•

1 ;:;~

into first place in the National
Leag ue West. It move&lt;!' the
Astros one-half ga me ahead of
the Cincirmali Reds, who lost to
Montreal, 7-2.
Ironically, it was Cincinnati
which traded May to Housto n
in an eig ht-player swap to
obtain speedy second baseman
Joe Morgan.
The Astros feel May has
made them a permant contender.

July 1, 2, 4 . ~t~~£~ge'l~r~~~ ~r ~~Fa . ~~ :::::::::t:~::::::::::t:::::::::::::::::::t:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::t:::::::::::::::::: : ::::::=:::::::: ::::::::::::::::t::::::::::::::::::=::::t::::::::::::::::tt::::::::::::::::: : : :::::::~:

BASKETBALL
SHOES

QUITTING BUSINESS

•

HEALTH

G78xl4-15

REG. 12.99 VALUE
MENS AND BOYS

REG. '3.99 6 CUP

Our Complete

i: :~~~

Ph ila at Atlanta, ppd. , rain

Redman Inn
Tourney Set

END ACQUIRED
SAN DIEGO ( UPI ) - Cal
Snowden
. , a defensive end ' was
acqutred by the San Diego
Chargers Tuesday from the
Buffalo Bills for a conditional
dra It choice in 1973.

PAIR

Quitting Business

na e.

~~

VITO STELL! NO
UPI Spurts Writer
Houston Astro's Lee May hi t
an opposite field fl y ball
Tuesday night that would have
been a long out in the
Astrodome last year but it went
over the newly constructed
fence for a two-run homer that
started a four-run rally in the
fifth inning.
The result was a 7-4 Houston
victory over the New York
Mets that propellcri the Astn"

San Fr ancisco 21 44 .323 18
Tuesday's Results
Chicago 15 San Francisco a

By United Press International

All Accounts Insured To

Robinson's Deaners

th e game.
The save was the filth of the
season for Marshall, who had
nothing but bad luck in his last
three previous relief appearances.
" In fact," said Mauch, " he
didn'tgeta batterout .Theygot
six hits off him and honestly
not one of them was hit hard
enough SO-that you could hear
the ball come off the bat. "
Again Mauch smiled.
"They were all like that single McRae got in the ninth,"
said Gene. "That," he added,
"should make McRae mad at
me ."
The Reds. loss Tuesday night
was their fourth in their last
five games.
"Instead of. getting big hits,
we 've been hitting into double
plays," pointed out Anderson.
The Reds will send Gary
Nolan against the Expos' Steve
Renko tonight in the series n1

SNEAD IN GLASGOW
GLASGOW (UP!) - Sam
Snead, one of the legends of
American golf, arrived here
today for Saturday's World
Senior championships.
Snead said that this would be
his final visit to the United
Kingdom and that he does not
plan to play in the British
Open.

Meigs Co. Branch

smart

heels, dress and sport styles. Ladies

price.

misses molded . sole , Am erican
made. Red, white , navy. All sizes.
Stock up now for summer.

Mator League gtandongs
By United Press International
National League
East
w. I. pet. g.b.
~~~';('~rgkh
~: l~ :~? 1
Chicago
, 34 11 .607 1
St. Louis
15 3311 .439 11'''
Montreal
11 '·'
Philadelphia 15
20 36 .439
.357 16
West
w. I. pet. g.b.
Houston
36 " 23 .6 10
Cincinnati
35 1l .603 '"
Los Angeles 32 16 .552 3'•'

=~*::::::::::::::::~~~!:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::~::::::~:;-;i~::::::::::::::::~: ~~~a~i~go ·

_

Lead

Hl-2101

Free cable installation and free-trial
period will end in "Middleport and
Pomeroy at 5 p.m., Friday, June 23.
Persons wanting free cable TV trial
period must call PoinTView before
that .time. After Friday, June 23, installation will be $10, with no free trial.

POINTVIEW CABLE
TV SERVICE
Call 992-2505, tdl-tree

72 GRAN TORINO
. STATION WAGON
Auto., power steering, powe~
brakes, w-s -w tires, power
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miles . Like new. Real nice,
local owner, lt. green.

SAME LOW PRICE
AS LAST YEAR!

Powerful - will cool an entire open-glan
living dining area•
• Sound Barrier design for quietness ... Three cooling
speeds - Super Cool (for "hurry-up" cool ing), Normal
and Lo Cool.
·
• Adjustable automatic thermostat ... Air Exchanger to
exhaust stale or smoky air ... four-way air direction ...
dehumidifies as it cools.
• Important opt1on : Prewired to accept MedicAir• Electronic Air Cleaner which removes up to 95%of polluJant
particles and pollen from circulated air.
*S.I.c:r lon of model su bject to chong• 01 d•ttrm ined bv actual heat

goi n calculatial'l,

FORD
USED CAR LOT
lrd Ave.

Midd

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INGElS FURNITURE
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. OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
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MIDDLEPORT

\

�2- The Daily lientilll.'l. Middlepon -Ponll'roy. June 21. 1972

New Haven
Personals
'

Ngw HAVEN - Mr. 'anu
Mrs. HatTy H11ffnian ul New
· Haven attcnde&lt;l the wedding ol
Miss Mary Carleton and Mr.
, David Sheets at Enterprise
United Mclhudist Church in

Tilt Postponed

.We're Selling Out
To The Bare Walls! ·

The Meigs American Legion baseball team lui~ cancelled
II~ .ganle wilh powerful Iroi1ton scheduled lor today at
Syracuse aj 5:30. Meigs will host the Ironton team, whose
. h
hog
school team was "AA" stale champions, in a
doubleheader at Syracuse later on in the season.
Business manager Don Hunpel has asked that all I.,egion
players lrom the Pomeroy-Middleport area meet at the
Middleport Park_ at. I0:30 Saturday morning lor their 1:00
ga me atPorIs mouth . After stopping in Cheshire another stop
will be made at tbe Skylboe Bowling Alley around 11:00 lor
the Gallipolis players.
In a previous meeting wi!h Portsmouth, Meigs split boa
doubleheader.
,

i

Pmueruy on Sunday . ·Miss

,

miSVERY old St. Joseph's Catholic Church which was located at Mason, W. Va . was one
of the oldest churches in the Ohio Valley. Construction began In 1857. Father Shinn and Father
·Parke were the first pa:;tors. Joseph Ryan was active in helping to raise f•mds lo build the
church. The Sacred Heart Cathc!ic Church at Pt. Pleasant was formerly a mission of St.
Joseph's Catholic Church. According to the Parkersburg News dated May 6, i956, Rev. Henry
Huppert and the Reverend Ted Wisniewski of Milwau)&lt;ee were recent pastors and at that time
. the pastor was lhe Rev . John' J . O'Reiily, nephew ofThe Very Rev. Jqhn B. O'Reilly of
Parkersburg. This old church has been torn down and replaced with a new orle on Pomeroy and
Third Streets, in Mason .

Annual Day Camp Held
NEW HAVEN -- St. Paul
Lutheran Church held its
annual Day Camp last week
with Mrs. Kenneth Vickers,
Mr.s. Gary Roush and Mrs.
Kenneth Thompson. serving as
dlreclors. Mrs. V1ckers also
serv~d as registrar . Each
mormng was begun w1th a
worship period, using the
theme. ·:~rlends in Other
Countrtes led by Pastor John
l Haeberle and with Mrs.
1
Haeberle as pianist. Film&amp;. a
[ display of articles depicting the
~ country studied that day and
[ songs were used in the worship
,, ~riod:
.
.
!' Pup;ls then , made. different
~ crafta of thett choostpg. Some
L of the crafts made were,
Candlemaking by Mrs. Charles
, Smith; Decoupage by Mrs.
. John F. Roush ; Woodworkmg
:1 (Clocks, bqok ends ) by Mr. a~d
Mrs. Kenneth Thompson,
1

l
l

t

•,,Boar.d l'.n
•
·
~

l
) Sll}t)CZll
~ '~'':'
0

fs

..:.!J ,

eSSJ()ft'

~

.
~ Pr. PLEASANT _ Mason
f County'~ Board of Education
, metforonly .afewminutesina
special rii'eeting Monday
. evening, transacting
budgetary transfers.
The board gave approval of a
recommendation by Supt .
Charles Withers on budgetary
transfers in a 3-1 vote. Charles
Elhenaur set lorlh the motion
.. which was seconded by Bill
Withers.
In discussion Harry Siders
aaltl he would like to have more
, lime lor study and when lhe
vote was taken by presiden~
Ted Stevens voted against the
action by casting a "no" vote.
Those approving it were
Withers, Eshenaur and
Stevens. Ray Fields was not
, present:
, Supt. Withers ' recom• mendation was submitted In
writing since he had not
, returned from a meeting bo
F1orlda. Stipt. Withers and Mr.
Stevens represented the local
· school system at the Southern
Educator's Conference held in
Daytona Beach, Fla. While
there Mr. Withers participated
on a committee dealing with
Early Childhood:
ANNOUNCE BIRTH
MASON - Mr. and Mrs .
Burton Hickman, Mason, are
announcing the birth of a
daughter on June 10 at Holzer
Medica l Ce nter. The infant
named Sherry Jill, weighed 10
pounds 9'.~ ounces.. km h
Mr. an d Mrs. HIC an ave
another daughter, Valerie Ann ,
age S. Grandparents are Mr .
and Mrs. Sterling Morris, Mr .
and Mrs. Harvey Hickman, all
of Dixie, W. Va . Mrs . Clara
Elliott, a great- grandmother,
. lives at Uzemore, W. Va.

Croche t beads and egg. ca rton
flowers by Mrs. Thomas
Grinstead Plaster of Paris
carvin g 'by Mrs . Charles
Humphreys and M•s. Dale
Humphreys, Popsicle stick
crafts and rock jewelry by
Mrs. John Fry, Painting by
Mrs. Samuel Goodson, Film
dipped flow ers by Mrs. Don
Baumgardner and helpers with
the different crafts we&lt;e Mrs.
William Powell, Mrs. Robert
Thomas, Mrs. A. L. Sprouse,
Marsha Sprouse Pastor John ·
Haeberle Mrs. ~Harold Knoll
Mrs. Ke~ne th Vickers, Mis;
Holly ,Layne.
A Nursery and Kindergarten
Class was held with Mrs ..Gary
Roush in charge and helpers
were Mrs. Carroll Adams, Jr.,
Mrs. Danny Rickard , Miss
Becky Paugh, Mrs. J ohn
Haeberle. Refreshments were
served each day with Mrs.
Robert Layne and Mrs. Otto
Grimm serving as chairmen.
On Wed nesday the group
motored to Camden Park lor a
picni c and a day of rides ·and
fun .
·
Those · atte;~~.i.P~, ,. ~e,re
Matthew nompson, Gape
Thomps~)1, ," F;en . Vi ~ke,rs.
Mitchell Roush, Allison Marks,
Charles Haeberle, Steve Gray,
Sherry Pomeroy, . Ken.t ·
Rt ckard, J eff Rose , Dale
Roush, Matthew Roush, T1m
Thompson, Jane Powell, Joe
Thompson, Brent La yne,

IS INJURED
Mrs. Harry I Nora 1 Staats,
Lewrt. has had more than her
~~are of bad luck. On Monday
an air compressor in the
ga rage at the SU!ats ' home
blew up and a flyin g object cu t
Mrs. Staats on the back of the
head. She was take n to the
Holzer Medi cal Center where
several stitches were required
to close the wound. All of the
windows Were broken out of the
ga rage and a hole was blown in
SO ll
f
tile ruof. She was trea ted and
released from the hospil&lt;ll on
Monday, an d on Tuesday, she
0
decided to go to the mail box
Mrs. Emma Ryan is barefooted and in the process
recuperating from eye surgery ran a piece of glass in her foot.
at the home of her son and
daughter-in-law ,' Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Ryan , in Mason.
Miss Eliza beth A. Ryan was
a patient at Holzer Medical all of Mason; Mrs. Larry King,
Center from Saturday until
MiltoQ; Mr. and Mrs. Leonard
Tuesday and has been returned
McDaniel; Mr. and Mrs. Tom
to the home of Miss Stella·
McDaniel and family. all of
Gress in Mason .
Cleveland.
· Mrs. Thurma Love, sister of
Mr. and Mrs . Johnnie Roush ,
Mrs. Emma Ryan , has been
New Haven, Mr. and Mrs.
visiting with Mrs. Ryan and
Edwin Roush , Charlestdn, and
wi th her daughter and son-inMrs. Carla Gibbs and children
law, Mr. and Mrs. Brookie
of Huntin gton, visited recently
Hen ry in Pt. Pleasant . .Also
with Mr. .and Mrs . Larry King
visiting with Mrs. Ryan was
and family at Milton, W. Va .
another sister, Mrs. Anna Avis.
Both Mrs. Avis and· Mrs. Love
have returned to their homes in
Roan oke.
Several area residents and
f ormer residents of t~e Bend - ·
area attended the Wears
reunion at Nitro on Sunday.
Prese nt were the following:
. Mrs. Boyd Wears, 89, mother of
Mrs. J ohnnie Roush, New
Haven ; Mrs. Ola McDaniel,
Hartford ; Mr. and Mrs. Eber
1-loush and Mary ·Dudding,
Mason, Mr. Johnnie Roush,
Lowena Roush, Karla Gibbs,
Damon and Misti, all of New
Haven ; Mr . and Mrs.)lernard
Hudson and family, Mr. and
Mrs . George Hudson a·nd
F78xl4-15
daughter, Cheryl, Mr. and Mrs.
Brooks Edwards and Shirley,

Ma

A ea

Ne ws, N t es

GAS FOR LESS
·roP QUALITY
You Can't buy better so
WHY PAY MORE? ·
•

Certified Gas Stations·
992-9981
538 W. Main .

Dwain Russell, Rodney
Vickers, Jackie Paugh, Tom
Thompson, Mark Thompson,
Kay Roush, Lou Ellen Roush,
Judy Young , Ty Roush, Jeff
Collier. Dee Dee Colljer, Eric
Bum gardn er, Brent Hart,
Linda Bumgardner , Jim
Powell, Bill Powell, Diana
Abel, AI Sprouse, J acki e
Ridgway , Matthew Ca rmichael, Bucey Rose , Yvonne
Grinstead, Nida Grinstead,
David Rose , Beth Layne, Brad
Layne, Judy Needs, Lisa
Dudding, Betty Wolfe, Todd
Grinstead, Jeannine Wallis,
Darnell Wallis, Scot Roush,
Dianna Roush , Randy Lyons,
Ca thy Roush, Kathy Gray, Phil
Powell , Lisa Thomas, Tim
Humphreys , Caro l Humphreys, Sheryl Roush, Chris
Humphreys, Matthew Scott,
Kevi n Scott , Andy Gurtis ,
Helen Gurtis, Eddie Gurtis,
Mike
Pomeroy,
Tom
Hayma ker, and Kim Javins.

POMEROY, 0.
We honor BankAmericard and Master Charge

Carlelun is the sister-in-Jaw of
Mrs. Greg Hoffman .
Beth Ann Layne, . David
Ruse , AI Sprouse, Harold Rose,
Brent Layne, Dwain Rus.""ll
and Pastor John Haeberle ar~
attending Camp Luther held at
Camp Caeser, Webster ·
. Springs.
Mr. and Mrs. James. N.
· Roush, Linda and Jeff, were in
Lincoln Park, Michigan last
weekend due to the illness ol
Mrs. Roush's brother-in-law.

· REG.
'1~59
. '
, LOUN~E

PILLOW

Richardson,

New

Bonanza.

'94!

Ha ve n,

sl&lt;orted t"school on Tuesday at
the Parkersburg Beauty
College. Mrs. Richardson ,
daughter of Ml\!. and Mrs. Hoy
R~ ush, is well ·known in the
area as an Av9n represen·
wtive.
Mrs.

Richa rds on

is

a

gr!lduate of Wahama High
Schcx•l and the mother of two
children, Crysl&lt;ll, age 10, and
Mike. age ·6.
RETURN HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Casto
and children, Kim and Shelly,
ha ve returned from a Florida
vacation. While there they
visited Mr. Casto's sister and
fam ily, Mr. and Mrs. Hobert
King and Delores at Pompano
Beach .

Whi le in Florida they visited
Disney World and other attractions.

COMES HOME
MASON - Mrs. Murl Megee
has return ed to her home in
Mason, after spending three
-weeks caring for her greatgranddaughter, Traci Lynn
Bird. Traci is the month-old
daughter of Reverend and Mrs.
Charles Bird of Sandusky ,
Ohi o.
Mrs . Megee also visited a
week with her daughter and
family, Mr. and rv,trs. A. R.
Coates. Jr., at Loud onville,
Ohio.

CALLED HERE ·
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Ault.of
Columbus were called here
because of the illness of Mrs.
Winnie Holland, mother of
Mrs . Aul l. Mrs. Holland is a
patient at Veterans Memorial

Hospil&lt;ll.
VISITS HERE
Mr . and Mrs. Lewis Harmes
of Toledo, Ohio, spent a week
visiting her sister ahd brotherin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Chet
Oliver at Clifton.

SHIRt
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9- 0ut At 5

Mauch Smiling After
Expos Triumph, 1-2

Reg. S\.59 Shredded Foam
Filled Printed Cover Bed
PiiiOI'(· Jllew· .low · price at

ATI'ENDS COLLEGE
Mrs.
David
(Etta 1

QUITTING BUSINESS SALE

QUITTING BUSINESS SALE

.QUilTING BUSIN.ESS SALE

REG. 89• VALUE

CLOSE OUT GROUP

REG. 99' BUCKn Of .

~

CINCINNATI (UP!)- Gene
· t d t he
ld
Mauch porn
e ou
cou
plead the fifth amendment
when the ques'tions were shol
his Way
·
"But," said the Montreal
manager, grinning, ~' I have
quit drlnkbog.
"An d• anyway," he added,
his grin widening, "! like
Sparky Anderson. I don't mind
· up h'ts t earn a ]'ttl1e wtth
·
Jazztng
-1Houston headed into here
Thursday."
Mauch was talking Tuesday
night alter the Expos had beat·
en the Reds 7-2, enabling Houston to take over first place in
the National League West by
one-half game.
How does Mauch compare
the Reds with the Astros'
"The clubs are dissimilar,"
said Mauch. "Houston might
be more apt to get more low
scoring games out of their
pitchers. And the Reds aren't
apt to need as many low

'

BATH TOWELS .Coloring Books SPONGES
Reg . 29c' Large Ass!. of
Children's Coloring Books .
Regrouped
For
· Final
Clearance on This Group. Shop
Early and Save on This Group .

Bit $22 x 44 Size Bath Towel
Plains . Stripes. Soft Bath
Towel. Reg . 89c Value. Large
·Group. Out They Go. Hurry .

5 e 1

WEQUIT

EA.

Reg . 99c Value. Large Bucket
of Sponges With Plastic Bucket .
Stoc.k Up Now . Many Uses.
Save Big Here.

EA.

QUITTING BUSINESS SALE
REG. 79'

QUITTING BUSINESS SALE

QUITTING BUSINESS SALE

5

W£QUIT

W£ QUIT

BAG OF
SPONGES SERVING TRAY PLASTIC .DRAP
REG. '1 00 VALUE

One Big Bag of Asst . Sponges For Cleaning House, Washing
Cars a nd Many Other Uses.
Buy Several Bag s At This Low
Price .

24e

WE QUIT
".

7!

WE QUIT

BAG

72 INCH WIDE FINE MESH

~ 1l I

••

NYLON NET

WEQUIT4

VALUES TO '5.99

,
I

to $5 .99
I . Large
out they

, Yes -

Values

$ 00

QUITTING BUSINESS SALE
REG. 11.79
CHILDREN'S-MISSES-GIRLS

Values to 53.99
Ladies' Spri ng

,.

walkstolead-&lt;JffbattersJulian
Javier and Denis Menke.
The chunky Montreal relief
ace induced Dave Concepcion
to hit into a double play and
then, after yielding a pinch single to Hal McRae, retired Pete
, !Wse on a fly to center to end

•••
' ~i

$

51h%
INTEREST

00

On 90-Day

PAIR

these.

Certificates
of Deposit
Sl/2 per cent per year
paid on 90 day Cer·
tificates of Deposit.
51,000.00 Minimum .
Interest
Payable
Quarter.y

Values To s6.99
Ladies1 Better

SEWIIG IOTIOIS
Big lot of sewing hair and general
household noiions. Ali at just ooe half price
durin_g our big Close.()ut Sale.

Reg . $1.79 value children. girls,

II

Summer
Footwear. Large
selection, redu ced
for quick sale. See

QUITIING BUSINESS
CLOSE-OUT LOT OCEAN OF

SPORT SNEAKERS

; '' '

and

Pair

SS .99, You save
and More .

:i~!~~~~:r~~E:;s:~:~~~~

LADIES' FOOTWEAR

Ladies Footwear
j. ~~~=~t~r;~~es

\

1
Values
Tq
3.99
" '

'

Sheer, line mesh nylon net
72-inches wide. In whitb
and a dozen prelty shades.
Regular 29c values.

Mauch smiled.
"Thai " he said "should tee
off a fe~ of thos; Reds pitchers. Is that what you want :"
Carl Morton picked up the
Expos victory Tuesday with
help from relief pitChers Joe

PAIR

- TN£ SHOPPER'S BONANZA QUITTING BUSINESSQUITTING BUSINESS
Quitting buSiness Sale
'
,. SALE

SHOPPER'S BONANZA QUITS!

scoring games."

Reg. 79c Value, Ready to Hang
Plastic Drapes - Asst . Colors
And Patterns. New Low Price.
Out They Go. We Have to Move
This Mdse . Shop Early.

Reg. B9c &amp; $1.00 Value on Lot of
Fancy Serving Trays . Out They
Go . New Low Price . Asst .
Colors .

FOOTWEAR
Valves
S6.99,
styles, 'flats,
to

(!)

save over 117 now at this low-low

00

REGULAR
PRICE

The Athens County

SaW~ings &amp;

loan Co.

296 Second 51.
Pomeroy, Ohio'

PAIR

Use Our Free Parking Lot

$20.000.00 by FSLtC.

216 E. 2nd. Pomeroy

TIRES

WIDE OVAL
Belted Fiberglass

REPEAT SALE-QUANTITY LIMITED

Quitting Business Sale

ELECTJIIC

Stock

j

GREETING
CARDS
OFF
REG.
PRICE

PERCOLATOR

Reg .
Elec tric

S3 . 99

Per ·

cola tor ,

Asst.

Business .

Close-

Colors. New Low
Price. Quilling

Out
Group
Remarked
For
Quick Sale. Out
They Go. Hurry.
First Come, First
Served .

OUR COMPLETE STOCK
AND

MILL ASSORTMENT

BEAUTY AIDS

H78xl4-15

UTILITY-RUGS

1/ OFF REG.

/2

J78x14·15
All Tires Plus Fed. &amp; Sales Tax

H&amp;R FIRESTONE
..
Middieport, 0.

PRICE

VALUES TO
MENS

1

1~.99

FOOTWEAR
One Group of
Men 's Better
Foo l wear . \Valves

to $12.99. Reduced
For Quick Sale.
Sl1op Early.

'7

Values To 59c One Large Group
Ot Asst . Utility Rugs. We Have
To· Move These. Save tf2 Now
And . More . ' Many Uses . Buy
Several.

Values to $9.9'1, Men's Oxfords Loafers And Work Shoes.
Remarked and Grouped For
Quick. Close Out. Broken Sizes.
Famous Brands . Out They Go
At This Low P~ice .

seventh inning Tuesday night. games in the American League
to protect a 4-2 triumph over East.
The Orioles climbed back
the Kansas City Royals. It was
the firth consecutive victory for into a tie lor first place by
New York, which now trails beating the California Angels,
Baltimore and Detroit by 5112 4-1, Tuesday night while the

Gn•d
Season Opens Saturdtty

~ : ~: ~::

New.York
Boston ·

25 20 .463 5';,
23 20 .442 6'h
~~~e~~~~e i~ ~~ : ;;~ 1;•;2
West
w. I. pet. g.b.
g~~~:~2
j~
:~ 5
Minnesota
30 23 .566 7
· Kan sas Ci ty 15 30 .455 13
Cal iforn ia
16 32 .448 13' '
Te xas
14 33 .411 15
Tuesday's Results
New York 4 Kan sas City 2
Minn 7 Cleve 3, 1st

g

Minn 3 Cleve 1. 2nd

Texas 5 Bos ton 2

,Milwaukee II Chicago 1
Baltimore 4 Calif 1
Oak 3 Detro it 2. 11 inns
Toclay's Probable P1tchers
(All Times EDTI
Kan sas City (Spl ittorff 5-41 at
New York (Peterson 5-81. 1
p.Bal timore (Dobson 8·61 at

Buchanon said. 'lrs a fun
game, but part of our job is
seeing to it that the East
doesn 't have too much fun.' 1
Imhof said in a game such as
Saturday's the players didn't
have enough time to do a lot of
planning, and there were
limitation s on what stunts
could be used by the defense .
"It's sort of a warmup game
for us, helping us get back into
the game before heading for
training camps for the pros,"
Imhof said . "After the game
Willie heads for Green Bay and
I'll be going to St. Louis. We
had to be in shape when we got
here, and the work this week
ha s helped us get back into the
frame of mind lor football ."
Buchanon will also play in

LUBBOCK , Te&lt;. IUPI )Martin Imhof is a defensive
lineman . Willie Buchanon is a
defensive back.
They played on different
teams while in junior college in
Galifornia . But they played two
years on the same team at San
Diego State .
Martin Imhof ha s been
drafted by the St. Louis Cardinals. Willie Buchanon by the
Green Bay Packers.
They are going to play one
last game together this Saturday . They 'll both be on the
West team in the 12th armual
Coaches All-America ga me.
"We're glad to be on the
same side, although we are
usually too far apart to do
much good for each other,"

1

the All.Star clash with the
World Champion Dallas
Cowboys in Chicago next
month. He said this game
would help him get ready for
that classic, too.
The main Ulsk facing the
West defense will be stopping
the passing of quarterbacks
Paul Miller of North Carolina
and Joe Gilliam of Tennessee
State , and the running of
Alabama's Johnny Musso,
Tennessee's Curl Watson and
North Carolina's Lewis Jolley.
"We don 't know too much
about them , but - we are
preparing for anything. I think
we'll be able to stop th~m and
let our offense lead the West to
victory," said Imhof .

1

JO .508 2112

Syracuse
Rochester
,Peninsul a

30 32 .484 4
29 36 _446 61h
26 37 .413 8,12

12 noon .

Peninsula at

Tuesday's Results

Peninsula 9 Rochester
game, 7 Innings)

list

4

Rochester

(2nd

game. ppd .. power failure )
Richmond 6 Syracuse 3 (lst
game. 7 Innings)
Syracuse 5 Richmond 1 (2nd

game, 7 innings
Toledo J Charleston
game, 7 innings)

2 (1st

Charleston 13 Toledo 5 (2nd
game. 7 Innings )
Louisville at Tidewa ter. ppd ..

Meius
Le!Yinn Baseball Statistics
"'e'
ew~

-l&gt;

Batting :
Name

b"ahvnen;(,~~!rd

R

5

1

~

Chuck Perroud
Mick Ash
Jon Buck
Bill Chaney
Steve ~ee
Johnny Rou sh
Skip Johnson
Tom Cooke
Rick Ash
Rick VanMatre
Dave Boyd
Roger Dixon .
Kev in Shee ts

8
7
5
6
5
11
12
9
11
12
7

11 •
11

Lou M c Kinl')ey

Brett Hart ·&gt;&lt;

Mark Kies ling · x
TOTALS

H .f Avg.
2 .105
I ,115
I .143
3
.1 58
3 .200
4
.286
4 .400
0 .000
0 .000
9 .391
12 .400
5 .115
4
.148
.310
9
.t50
3
.084
1
1
.084
.071
1

2
;

B
7

t9
15

4

14

3

9
5

0

t

tO

1
1
9

13
30

6
0

12

27
19
20
14

7 11
7 14
10 23
4
2
13
4 57
133

Stan Perry
Howie Taylor
Steve Dunfee

K -

G AB
19

I

4

1
1

0
l·

2

4

0

0

0

3

42

.17.4

.000
.230

72

.202

2B lB HR rbi KO W SAC SB
0

0

0

1

3

t

0

1

0

0

0

0

6

2

0

0

0

0

0

0

2

0

0

I

0

0

1

3

0

0

0

0
0
0

0014001
0 0 2 2 0 0 0
0 003 100

0

0

0

I

5

t

I

0

~0

0

1

1

3

t
1

0

1

0

1

100

1

11
1

0
0
I

1

0
0
0
0
2
9

351

1

t

1

104315 6
t0 2710
4
0 0 4 1 2 00
0 0 1 10
1 0 0
005 13
0 4
00t5 110
1 008000
0 0 1 1 t
1 I
~ ' .. 0

000100
0
0023000
3 0 30 78 29 4 22

No longer with team .

PITCHING :

G GS

CG C IP

2

2

0 o\0

5
3
3

2
2

4

1

2
13

0

Name
Johnny Baird
Rick VanMatre
Stan Perry
Skip Johnson

Steve Lee
Rick Ash
TOTALS

4

13

1-3
3 18 1-3
3 14 1-3
t
8 1·3
0 18 1-3

0
7

3
93

6.00

W L WPct
0 1 .000
4
1 .750
0 1.000
3
1
1 .500
.000
0 2
0 .000
0

1.93

B

R ER C Era

9
5

1

6
9
2

39

4
2
1

3.49
0.63
0.37

6
5

5.04
2.45

2
20

5

.615

H

1t

14
5
11
14
5
61

BB
8
lt
24
3
6
I
53

k

tO
35
49
6
17
3
120

wet grounds

Tuesday Night's Major League Linescores
National League
Phila at Atlanta , ppd ., rain .

Los Ang at Pitts, ppd .. rain
San Fran
Chicago

(81hl. Fairly (5th) .
New York 000 100 JOQ- 4 7 1
Houston
003 040 OOx- 7 13 1
McAndrew, Capra (51 , Taylor
171 and Dyer; Forsch. Ray 171

104 010 011)- B 12 1 and Howa rd . WP- For sch (4-2).
700 502 IOx- 15 18 3 LP- McAndrew (5-31. HR sCarrithers , .'v'cMahon (l), Milner 17th). Ma y (lllh) ,
Moll itt 141. Reberger 141 , and Kran epool {4th ).
Rader : Hooton. Reuschel 14)
and Hundley . WP- Reuschel . [10 innings)
( t.O) . LP- Carrithers 12·4) . San Diego 000 200 020 I)- 4 8 3
HRs-Hundley IJrdl , Maddox .St . Lou is 021 000 100 1- 5 9 0
15th!. Santo 191hl. Williams
Norman, Acosta (3) , Corkins
(1 3th).
15) , Caldwell (81. Ross (10) and
Corrales; Wise 16-71 and
Montreal
001 .220 011- 7 12 1 Simmons. LP·Catdwell (1 -31.
Cincinnati 101 000 ooo-- 2 9 0 HR .Morales f2ndi.
Morton . Gilbert (71, Marshall
191 and Humphrey. Boccabelta
(9) ; McGlothlin, Gullett (5)
American league
Sprague (6) , Borbon 181. Its! game)
Marshall (9) and Bench. WP- Cleveland 200 100 080- 3 6 2
Morlon (3·7) . LP- McGiothlln Minn
034 000 OOx- 7 8 2
13·51. HRs·Bailey (6th), Morgan Colbert. Tldrow (4). Hennigan

171 and Fosse ; Kaal (8·21 imd
Roof. LP- Colbert (1 ·51 . HRsKillebrew (8th ). Soderholm
(6th).
l2nd game!
Cleveland 000 000 001- 1 6 1
030 000 OOx- 3 7 0
Minn ·Lamb, Riddleberger 151. Kil k-

- Drago (5.51. Hr - Murcer
(8th).
Texas
001 010 2oo- 5 10 1
Boston
100 010 ooo-- 2 5 "
Hand, Lindblad (81, Pina (9)
and Billings; Pattin. Lee 171.
Newhau!:oer (8) and F.isk . WP-

Tigers were dropping a 3-2
de cision in II innings to the
Oakland A's. Elsewhere, the
Mirmesota Twins won a twinight doubleheader from the
Cleveland Indians, 7-3, and 3-1,
ihe Texas Rangers beat the
Boston Red Sox, 5-2, and the
Milwaukee Brewers beat the
Chicago White Sox, 7-l.
In the National League,
Houston beat the Mets, 7-4,
Montreal beat Cincinnati, 7-2,
the Cubs routed San Fraocisro,
15-ll, and St. Louis edged San
Diego, 5-4, in II innings.
Philadelphia at Atlanta and
Los Angeles at Pittsburgh were
postponed by rain.
Allows One Run
Kekich allowed Kansas City
only one run on six hits before
he was replaced by Lyle with
two men on and two out in the
seventh . Lyle retired Amos
Otis to end the inning, and
although he allowed a run in
the eighth inning he snuffed out
the Royals in the ninth.
"!\ wasn't one of my better
nights," said Lyle. "You know
you have luck going for you
when you escape on a night like
tllis. ! I
Bobby Murcer drove bo three
runs for New York with a
homer and a sacrifice fly.
Baltimore scored three runs
in th~ seventh inning to break a
I-I lie and enable Jim Palmer
to earn h is ninth victory
against three defeats. Rookie
catcher Johnny Oates drove in
the tie-breaking run with a
single, and two more runs
followed on a single by Brooks
Robinson and a wild pitch.
Rudi Homers
Joe Rudi hit reliever Chuck
Seelbach's first pitch in the
'bottom of the lith inning for a
home run as Oakland stretched
its winning streak to five
games. Jim Hunter (7-3) went
all the way for the A's, allowing
Detroit to score on homers by
Norm Cash and AI Kaline.
Jim Kaat and Dick Woodson
each pitchf\1 rqute-going sixhitters as Minnesota won two
games from Cleveland. Eric
Soderholm hit a three-run
homer and Hannon Killebrew
a solo blast lor the Twins in the
opener and Cesar Tovar
singled home two runs and
scored another in the nightcap.
Dalton Jones snapped a 1-1
tie in the fifth inning with a
two-run homer to give Texas
its winning margin against the
Red Sox. Toby Harrah stole
three bases and scored two
runs lor the winners.
Jim l.onborg scattered eight
hits and George Scott drove in
two runs to lead Milwaukee
over the White Sox. Lonborg
lllruck out eight batters and
walked only one in improving
his record to 4-3.

Hand (4-4) . LP- Pall ln 12·8) .
(5·5) and Dempsey . LP- Lamb HRs - Jones (2nd) , Harper
110ihl .
11 ·11 . HR- Lowenstein 11st).

DUAL WHITE

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Mounted &amp; Wheel
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General
Tire Sales
992-7161
N. 2nd
Middleport

enny (7) and Moses ; Woodson

MULTI-ROOM 18,000 BTU

000 000 001- I 9 2
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000 000 If()- 2 11 2 Chicago
110 001 04x- 7 It 0
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Wood , Kealey {7). Gossage
Drag o, Burgmeier (7) and
May ; Keklch, Lyle 171 and (B) and Herrmann r' Lon berg (4Munson . WP- Kekich 16·5) . LP 3) and Rodrlguj!z. LP- Wocd
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NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC:
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• Long-wearing rib tread
design Ideally suited to
road and field

The ·Men W1to K110w Tm

POMEROY,OHtO

By MARTIN LADER
UPI Sports Writer
Sparky Lyle turned in his
14th save-two more than the
entire Yankee staff registered
in 1971- by coming to the aid of
starter Mike Keki ch-, in the

Bob Bailey and Ron Fairly
hit homers Ill power the Expos
Ill their secondstraight victory
over Cincinnati. Carl Morton,
with late inning relief help
from Joe Gilbert and Mike
Marshall. picked up his _third
victory . Morgan homered for
his eighth of the year and
scored twice in the losing effort.
~ounds Uke Football
The Chicago-San Francisco
score made it sound as if the
clubs were play ing football and
both went lor the two-point
conversions. The Cubs scored
seven runs in the first with
Randy J:lundley leading the
way with a grand slam. They
added five more in the fourth
when Hundley drove in his fifth
run. Ron Santo and Billy
Williams also homered for the
Cubs and Jim Hickman had
four hits.
San Francisco, getting a
three'!'un homer from Garry
Maddox in lhe third, trailed
just 7-ii before the Cubs got the
live runs in the lourlh. Chicago
has won seven straight .
Poor fielding by San Diego
cost the Padres the game
against St. Louis. Two errors
enabled the Cards to score a
run in the seventh to take a 4-2
lead. Jerry Morales, who made
one of the errors, lhen tied it 4-4
with a two-run homer in the
eighth. But Derrel Thomas'
error on Joe Torre's grounder
bo the lOth enabled Lou Brock
to score the deciding run.

•

95

!01 E. MAIN

~:;io~ore

Entry deadlin e is June 28.
For additional information ,
area managers should contact
the Redman Inn, 24o-oo95 after

RIZER OIL 00.
PAIR'

IAll Times EDT I
San Francisco I Bryan t 3·41 at
Chicago IP•ppas 5-41 .2: 30 p.m.
Los Angeles (Osteen 7-4) al
Pittsburgh I Blass a:11 . 8 P·f\1·
Sa n Diego I Kirby 5·61 at St.
Loui s (G ibson 4-5}, 9 p.m .
Montreal 1Renko 1-51 al
Cincinnati !Nolan 8·21. 8 p.m.
Phi l adelphia (Carlton 7-6) at
Atlanta !Reed 5-71. a p.m .
New York. ( Koosman 3-3) at
Houston (Griff in 2·11 . 7 p.m .
Thursday 's Games
St. Louis at New York , night
Houston at Cinci. night
!Only games scheduled)
·American League
East
w. L pet. g.b.

31

'

WE QUIT

Diego, 5-4, in 11 innings. The
Philadelphia at Atlanta and
Los Angeles at Pittsburgh
ga mes were rained out.
In the American League,
New York beat Kansas City, 42, Minnesota beat Cleveland
twice, 7-3 and 3-1, Texas
stopped Boston, 5-2, Milwaukee
routed Chicago, 7-1, Baltimore
beat Ca lifornia , 4-1, and Oakland bea t Detroit, 3-2, in 11
innings.

Yanks Win Fifth Straight, 4-2

10 inns

Tidewater

•.• opoclally lntltt lor· lonn wo1an md tmplomtol whetlo

•

4,

Montreal 7 Cincinnati 2
Houston 7 New York 4
Today's Probable Pitchers

tournament.

FARM
SERVICE
TIRE

FOOTWEAR

. Sl. L. 5 San Diego

Cleveland (Perry 106) at
The Redman Inn slow pitch Minnesota IBiyleven 7·71, 8:30
softball team will hos t its P ·r~xas (Gogolewski 3-61 at
seco~d annual tournament on
Boston (Culp 4-61. 1:30 p.m.
.July 1, 2, and 4 at the Ri o
De troit (Timmerman 5-5) at
Grande College Athletic Field . ~~land IHoltzman 10-41. 11
Entry fee lor the double
Thursday's Games
eli mination tournament is $25 . Chicago at Mi lwaukee
New York at Cleve ., ['light
Trophies will be presented to
!Only games schedul ed!
the first and second place
,,
. .,
International League
teams, and individual trophies _
Standings .
will be prese nted members of · United Press International
the championship team .
W. L. Pet. GB
Too, a trophy will be Charleston
33 27 .550
34 28 .548
Richmond
prese nted to the player who Lou isvi lle
34 28 .548
collects the most hits in the To ledo
31 30 .508 2,12

and
boys r
•a !ik etb al l shoe s. In
hite . and bla ck high I
1
c Ttd low cu~ . Reg. 52.99.,

QUITTING BUSINESS
· MENS COMFORTABLE
LONG WEARING

Houston held a 3-1lead when
Jim Wynn singled to open the
fifth and May followed with his
horner off loser Jim McAndrew. Buzz Capra relieved and
a walk to Doug Rader, Tommy
Helms' double and Roger
Metzger's· sbogle made it 7-1
and it was a rout.
The Other Two Games
In the other two ga mes,
Chicago routed San Francisco,
15-ll, and St. Louis edged San

Los Ang al Pitts. ppd ., ra in

4

Men 's

•

1 ;:;~

into first place in the National
Leag ue West. It move&lt;!' the
Astros one-half ga me ahead of
the Cincirmali Reds, who lost to
Montreal, 7-2.
Ironically, it was Cincinnati
which traded May to Housto n
in an eig ht-player swap to
obtain speedy second baseman
Joe Morgan.
The Astros feel May has
made them a permant contender.

July 1, 2, 4 . ~t~~£~ge'l~r~~~ ~r ~~Fa . ~~ :::::::::t:~::::::::::t:::::::::::::::::::t:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::t:::::::::::::::::: : ::::::=:::::::: ::::::::::::::::t::::::::::::::::::=::::t::::::::::::::::tt::::::::::::::::: : : :::::::~:

BASKETBALL
SHOES

QUITTING BUSINESS

•

HEALTH

G78xl4-15

REG. 12.99 VALUE
MENS AND BOYS

REG. '3.99 6 CUP

Our Complete

i: :~~~

Ph ila at Atlanta, ppd. , rain

Redman Inn
Tourney Set

END ACQUIRED
SAN DIEGO ( UPI ) - Cal
Snowden
. , a defensive end ' was
acqutred by the San Diego
Chargers Tuesday from the
Buffalo Bills for a conditional
dra It choice in 1973.

PAIR

Quitting Business

na e.

~~

VITO STELL! NO
UPI Spurts Writer
Houston Astro's Lee May hi t
an opposite field fl y ball
Tuesday night that would have
been a long out in the
Astrodome last year but it went
over the newly constructed
fence for a two-run homer that
started a four-run rally in the
fifth inning.
The result was a 7-4 Houston
victory over the New York
Mets that propellcri the Astn"

San Fr ancisco 21 44 .323 18
Tuesday's Results
Chicago 15 San Francisco a

By United Press International

All Accounts Insured To

Robinson's Deaners

th e game.
The save was the filth of the
season for Marshall, who had
nothing but bad luck in his last
three previous relief appearances.
" In fact," said Mauch, " he
didn'tgeta batterout .Theygot
six hits off him and honestly
not one of them was hit hard
enough SO-that you could hear
the ball come off the bat. "
Again Mauch smiled.
"They were all like that single McRae got in the ninth,"
said Gene. "That," he added,
"should make McRae mad at
me ."
The Reds. loss Tuesday night
was their fourth in their last
five games.
"Instead of. getting big hits,
we 've been hitting into double
plays," pointed out Anderson.
The Reds will send Gary
Nolan against the Expos' Steve
Renko tonight in the series n1

SNEAD IN GLASGOW
GLASGOW (UP!) - Sam
Snead, one of the legends of
American golf, arrived here
today for Saturday's World
Senior championships.
Snead said that this would be
his final visit to the United
Kingdom and that he does not
plan to play in the British
Open.

Meigs Co. Branch

smart

heels, dress and sport styles. Ladies

price.

misses molded . sole , Am erican
made. Red, white , navy. All sizes.
Stock up now for summer.

Mator League gtandongs
By United Press International
National League
East
w. I. pet. g.b.
~~~';('~rgkh
~: l~ :~? 1
Chicago
, 34 11 .607 1
St. Louis
15 3311 .439 11'''
Montreal
11 '·'
Philadelphia 15
20 36 .439
.357 16
West
w. I. pet. g.b.
Houston
36 " 23 .6 10
Cincinnati
35 1l .603 '"
Los Angeles 32 16 .552 3'•'

=~*::::::::::::::::~~~!:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::~::::::~:;-;i~::::::::::::::::~: ~~~a~i~go ·

_

Lead

Hl-2101

Free cable installation and free-trial
period will end in "Middleport and
Pomeroy at 5 p.m., Friday, June 23.
Persons wanting free cable TV trial
period must call PoinTView before
that .time. After Friday, June 23, installation will be $10, with no free trial.

POINTVIEW CABLE
TV SERVICE
Call 992-2505, tdl-tree

72 GRAN TORINO
. STATION WAGON
Auto., power steering, powe~
brakes, w-s -w tires, power
·seats, luggage rack. 2300 actual
miles . Like new. Real nice,
local owner, lt. green.

SAME LOW PRICE
AS LAST YEAR!

Powerful - will cool an entire open-glan
living dining area•
• Sound Barrier design for quietness ... Three cooling
speeds - Super Cool (for "hurry-up" cool ing), Normal
and Lo Cool.
·
• Adjustable automatic thermostat ... Air Exchanger to
exhaust stale or smoky air ... four-way air direction ...
dehumidifies as it cools.
• Important opt1on : Prewired to accept MedicAir• Electronic Air Cleaner which removes up to 95%of polluJant
particles and pollen from circulated air.
*S.I.c:r lon of model su bject to chong• 01 d•ttrm ined bv actual heat

goi n calculatial'l,

FORD
USED CAR LOT
lrd Ave.

Midd

-We do install in your home"

INGElS FURNITURE
•

. OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
992-2635
MIDDLEPORT

\

�u.. Junw ~1. !!In
~-Till'

Dotily Sentinel. Middll'IJOrt·l'••n•oruy, 0 .• June 21, 1972

Couple Wed Saturday .Relatives
Miss· .Genevieve Bird,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
Harold Bird, Antiquity, and
EN2 Michael Rush, son of Mr.
mid Mrs. Lonnie Rush; Rayne ,
Ll., were united in marriage
Siturday, June 17, altO a.m. in
tile Antiquity Baptist Church
with · Rev . Freeland · Norris
officiating.
Given in marriage by her
bro!her, EN2 William Bird, the
bride wore a whiw dress with
white . actessorles. Both the
bride's mother and tilt) groom's
mother wore blue dresses with
white accel&gt;'!ories.
The. bride's only attendant
was her sister-in-law. Mrs.
Judy Bird . Lonnie Rush, father
Of the groorij, served as best
man.
.
- A recepllon followed in the
· church social rooni with Mrs.
Mildred Spencer and Mrs.
Terry Shain serving as

Classrooms
To Be
'
·Repainted
.

hostesses with · Mrs. Opal
Diddl ~ and Freda Davis
assisting. The bride's table
euvered with a while linen
cloth featured • wedding rake'
lopped with a miniature bride
and groom .
Se11di11g gifts and attending
lhe ceremony were Mrs. Jack
Adams, Dorothy Wills, Sarah
Diddle, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Ruush and ' Roger , . Mr. and ·
Mrs. Ralph Shain, .Mr. and
Mrs. David Shain, Mrs.
Carolyn Adams. Freda Davis,
Grace Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Henry, Mr. and Mrs.
Dorsey Parsons. Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Fisher and sons, Mrs.
Mildred Spencer, Charles and
Patty Shain, Frances Johnson,
Pauline Brewer, Dr. and Mrs.
Tom Crow, Mrs. Vera Crow
and Donna , Peggy Statts; Mary
Spencer. Nancy Greenlee,
Mildred Tubbs, Lois Harris,
Custer,
Erma
Maymie
Cleland, Mrs. Sterrett, Beulah
Stobart, Iva Orr, Mr. and Mrs.
William Bird and son, Harold,
and Hope Bird.
Mr. and Mrs. Rush will be
stationed al Charleston, South
Carolina .
·:&lt;":•;.:···:· ................., ........ ,......,....... •

Meet At
Sauer 'Hom·e
Father's Day was observed
Sunday with a picnic at the
home &lt;d Mr. and Mrs. Charles
-Sauer, Middlepnrl. Also
celebt·ated was the bii·thday
anniversary of Mrs. D. W.
Welker of Gahanna, daughwr
of Mr. ana Mrs. Sauer.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
D. W.Welker. Linda and Debra
an d Mark Gilbert, Gahanna;
Mrs. D. W. Walker, Sr., and
daught~ r Eileen and Mrs .
Jennie Well , Pomeroy ;
Margaret Sauer, Madulyn ahd
Virginia Sauer, Dayton. and
Mr . and Mrs. Lewis Sauer and
Lois Ann. Mr. and Mrs. Sauer's
other
daughter,
Sally
Illingworth, telephoned from
California .
'

Piano Recital Coup/~.
S/aied Friday
~~lhcring wa~
Mrs . l'u lri&lt;"k Lod1ary,
Pmncruy, will present l~&lt;:r
piano pupils in a recital at 3 p.
111. ~'riday, June 23, in the
Bethany Chapel of Trinity
Church . The public is cordially
invited tu attend.
Playing at the recital in
addilino to Mrs. Lochary's
studenls will be Jennifer Lohse
Sheets, a former pupil, and her
student. Kristen Anderson.
Mrs. Sheets will conclude the
redial with Chopin's First
Ballad.
Students of Mrs. Lochary
playing will be Jayne Lee
Hoeflich, Cathy Blaetlnar,
Jennifer Chapman, Peggy
Girolami, Charles Follrod,
Marcia · Dillard, Nancy
Sta nley. Mary Blaetlnar,
Kimberly Jon es, Steven
Stanley, Elizabeth Blaettnar,
Deanna Blackwood and Jo
Ellen DiehL

Qbserves ·55th Anniversary

A fainily
held
Sunday at lhc Pomeroy home
uf Mr. and Mrs. w. 0 . Barnil.:l
in ubse•·vanee 'uf U1clr 55th
wedding annivcrsa1·y and
Father's Day .
All eight of lhe children of
Mr. and Mrs. Barnilz were
P,resenl fur U1e t"elebration.
Tl~&lt;:y are Mrs. W. R. Carpenter
and H; A. Barnil.:l, Pomeroy; ·
. Mrs. H. J. Yuung, GaliOn ; Mrs.
N. W. Kramec, Plainview,
Texas; Mrs. !.. W. Nelson,
Kalamazoo, Mich .; Mrs.

~

·HERE'S WHY THE THRIFTY SHOP HERE
We'll 'help you save a pretty penny with Bonnie Buys
that'll warm

I )~·t·p t•lf•&lt;J ns a~d hright•~ ns

·UNtl ./1/tv;tri&lt;: Shumpuucr
$1 per.. dt~y with [lltrcl~tne uf JJluc Lu.,rrc

Dudley's Florist

BAKER FURNITURE

Servipg :
Gallipolis,
Pomeroy , Middleport &amp;

Mason -County. W. Va.

Members of the Young Adult homemade ice cream "and pie.
Class of the Bradford Church of
Present for the wiener roast
Christ met .recently at Fort were Mr. and Mrs. Smith and
Meigs for a wiener roast.
Christi. Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Guy Hysell presided at the &lt; Hysell, Linda and Donna , Gary
meeting which opened with Hysell , Jr., Mrs. Nancy
prayer by Mrs. Clifford Smith. Morris. Carol and Danny, Mrs.
Mrs. Larry PH!kens presented Richard Gilkey and Mark and
devotions using scripture from Mrs. Larry Pickens and Scott.
First Corinthians, chapter 13.
The class purchased a wedding
gill for Mr. and Mrs. David
Reed and several projects
NAME OMITTED
were discussed. A clock will be
Mrs. Esta Wise served as
purchased for the church.
secretary-treasur er of lhe
The July 7 meeting willrbe Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
held at 7 p.in. at the home of Church Daily Vacalion Bible
Mr. and Mrs. Smith. Devotions School. Her name was not
will be by Mrs. Smith and included in an earlier listing of
refreshments will consist of officers and teachers:

INSTAIIT PLEASURE AND
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FOR INSTANT ·

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•

There's no better instant al any price.
That's why we unconditionally guarantee you'JIIove it
or you 11et your money back.

,· KENTILE i

Two Patterns
12" X 12"

Cubelteak • • • • ,.'b; ~,~~

English Roast

Enjoy its great taste and you'll discover
another delightful fact ... instant savings.

~················'

:•
•:
••
••
•: 45 ·Square Feet 968 •i
+ To ABox
•
(Adhesive Available)
:
I
•
·HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN •
••
•
+
w.;A..t

•••••

CUT FROM CHUCK

•

VALUAILE

10 oz. pkg.

ROUND BONE SHOULDER

And that's the secret behind one
memorable moment of instant pleasure.

LIJ'

·'"""'---

Charcoal Steak • •

100'1.. Brazilian Coffees. Nothin

..

'

BEEF

BONELESS

The thing that makes Eight O'Clock Instant Coffee
so superb is its special blend of
fine Brazilian Coffees.

INSTANT COFFEE

CORNED

lb.'l·at

CROSS RIB ROAST

There are instants and there are instants ...
and they're not all the same.

100% ElRAZILIAN

Variety
·Pak Cereal

1 LB.
STICKS

COFFEE DRINKERS!

6oz. JAR

ARMOUR

or ...

I

2-oz. JAA

KELLOGGS

plu i-ill f•:•·l lu •·ar pdin g! U!-it:_(i
in your 1:url'd ."ihampHcH:r,

••

fliT O'a.ll

heart, put a smile on your face.

,•ol unoi, lt• :s liJr!' S Lhat .ioiuft

::::
:::

Adult Class A1et For Weiner Roast

773-5554

•·

• ••.:•x·
·.:;,

·M-Iddleport
Personal Notes

,.

~·

cat:P_ew

Artificial
Baskets
From $1000

ALSO AT REUNION
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bing
and Sharon, and Terry Pickens
of Pomeroy· Rt. were also
aJIIUitf:l those who attended the
Hoffman Reunion at the
Kanauga Roadside Park on
Sur•Uay. Their names were
uninlcnlionally omitted from
Lhe story in Tuesday 's Sentinel.

. Calling oil ·the family
Saturday evening were Mrs.
Gary Barnilz, Carol, lylary,
Ellen and Ann Marg¥et.

~..:o:--. ···-;.·.-.·. ·o;.o········~.- :-;.:~;::w.:::•-:-:

General repairs and painting &lt;-:
of the Sunday School it:
''~·:.:
::~
classrooms was taken on as a ~::
:;~
project when the Adult Class of f:
~~:
-:-:
the Pomeroy Nazarene Church :·:·
met recently In the educational
Mrs. Charles McDaniels of
" building of the church.
Pacific
Grove, Calif., will
Glen McClung opened the
arrive
today
lo spend lhe
meeting
with
prayer.
Devotions were given by Mrs. swnmer with her sister, Mrs.
Frieda Mossman and Mrs. Crary Davis of Middleport.
. Barbara Colmer presented the Mrs. McDanie l was the
treasurer's report. The clal&gt;'! Tuesday night guest of Mrs.
approved the purchase of a Gordon Harris in Columbus,
blackboard lor lllra. William R. and will &amp;ccompany Mrs.
Stephenson's classroom. Plans Charl es Hennesy to Midwere made lor work sessions dleport. Mrs. Hennesy · has
on the classrooms every been in Colwnbus visiting her '
Monday night. William R. daughter.
F rancie Glaze, Lan caster,
. Stephenson . showed films of
was
th e Re gatta Weekend
class meetings. Refreshments
were served and prayer by Mr. guest of Mr. and Mrs. Micha el
McClung concluded the • Zirkle and family.
Mrs. William Houck, Lynn,
meeting.
,
On June 30 the group will Carol and Beth and Carrie
. meet at the church. It was Wright of Marion spent the
noted that . the Rev. Clyde Rega tta Weekend in Mid·
Henderson ;
pastor,
is dleporl with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Perry Mitch . Mr.
hoepttallzed.
Attending the meeting were· Houck was unable to attend
Mrs. freda Henderson, Mrs. due lo a business trip to
·M011111an, .Mr. and Mrs. Glen Chicago, IlL Mrs. Houck ca me
McClung, Mr. and Mrs. Fred especially for the .20th reunion
•!iullins and Sheila, Mrs . of her Middleport High School
Colmer, !\irs. Myrtle Durst, graduating class.
Pfc. Kenneth Hoffman, son
Mrs. Gladys Gibson, Betty
Brown, Paulette Leach, Jim of Mr. and Mrs. Perry Hoff.
Farley, Carol Lunsford and man, Middleport, has a new
Kenny, Mrs. Clyde Bigg, Mr. address. ' It is L Company,
and Mrs . William R. Second Infantry, Training Bn.,
.Stephenson and Mrs. Don 1st Inf. Training Regiment,
Camp Geiger, N.C. 211042.
Brlckles.

:
•

· tf&lt; &gt;bcrl Well~. War~w; Mrs. Mr . and Mrs . . John Young,
Melvin Hoelscher, Amarilla, Philip, '!tobin and Lisa, !.an·
T~xas, and Robert Barnilz, caster, ai1d Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Grie~o. Longmont, Colo.
Mason . W. Va.
Others al the observance
wel't~ Larry Nelson, Ghip, Sue
a11d David of Kalamazo&lt;&gt;; Rev .
Rube~·t Wells. t.y'nn, Kim ·and
Kay of Warsaw ; Billy, Steve
and Andy Hoelscher of
Amarilla, Texas; Bobb~ 1. ,
Ri cky and Jeffrey Barnilz, Mr.
and Mrs . Keith Barnitz,
Tommy an\1 Timmy, Kingston;

',

2~ .~~..

Jopps Canned Pop ...

1O· $1 oo

COLD POWER
SOAP
ONLY
POWDER Giant Size
COUPON PER CUSTOMER
M&amp;R LGA FOODLtNER
I

I

I
I
I
I
I

WITH

I
I

COUPON

I

_:J

MIDDLEPORT J

.

•.
' \.

.

..

�u.. Junw ~1. !!In
~-Till'

Dotily Sentinel. Middll'IJOrt·l'••n•oruy, 0 .• June 21, 1972

Couple Wed Saturday .Relatives
Miss· .Genevieve Bird,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
Harold Bird, Antiquity, and
EN2 Michael Rush, son of Mr.
mid Mrs. Lonnie Rush; Rayne ,
Ll., were united in marriage
Siturday, June 17, altO a.m. in
tile Antiquity Baptist Church
with · Rev . Freeland · Norris
officiating.
Given in marriage by her
bro!her, EN2 William Bird, the
bride wore a whiw dress with
white . actessorles. Both the
bride's mother and tilt) groom's
mother wore blue dresses with
white accel&gt;'!ories.
The. bride's only attendant
was her sister-in-law. Mrs.
Judy Bird . Lonnie Rush, father
Of the groorij, served as best
man.
.
- A recepllon followed in the
· church social rooni with Mrs.
Mildred Spencer and Mrs.
Terry Shain serving as

Classrooms
To Be
'
·Repainted
.

hostesses with · Mrs. Opal
Diddl ~ and Freda Davis
assisting. The bride's table
euvered with a while linen
cloth featured • wedding rake'
lopped with a miniature bride
and groom .
Se11di11g gifts and attending
lhe ceremony were Mrs. Jack
Adams, Dorothy Wills, Sarah
Diddle, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Ruush and ' Roger , . Mr. and ·
Mrs. Ralph Shain, .Mr. and
Mrs. David Shain, Mrs.
Carolyn Adams. Freda Davis,
Grace Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Henry, Mr. and Mrs.
Dorsey Parsons. Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Fisher and sons, Mrs.
Mildred Spencer, Charles and
Patty Shain, Frances Johnson,
Pauline Brewer, Dr. and Mrs.
Tom Crow, Mrs. Vera Crow
and Donna , Peggy Statts; Mary
Spencer. Nancy Greenlee,
Mildred Tubbs, Lois Harris,
Custer,
Erma
Maymie
Cleland, Mrs. Sterrett, Beulah
Stobart, Iva Orr, Mr. and Mrs.
William Bird and son, Harold,
and Hope Bird.
Mr. and Mrs. Rush will be
stationed al Charleston, South
Carolina .
·:&lt;":•;.:···:· ................., ........ ,......,....... •

Meet At
Sauer 'Hom·e
Father's Day was observed
Sunday with a picnic at the
home &lt;d Mr. and Mrs. Charles
-Sauer, Middlepnrl. Also
celebt·ated was the bii·thday
anniversary of Mrs. D. W.
Welker of Gahanna, daughwr
of Mr. ana Mrs. Sauer.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
D. W.Welker. Linda and Debra
an d Mark Gilbert, Gahanna;
Mrs. D. W. Walker, Sr., and
daught~ r Eileen and Mrs .
Jennie Well , Pomeroy ;
Margaret Sauer, Madulyn ahd
Virginia Sauer, Dayton. and
Mr . and Mrs. Lewis Sauer and
Lois Ann. Mr. and Mrs. Sauer's
other
daughter,
Sally
Illingworth, telephoned from
California .
'

Piano Recital Coup/~.
S/aied Friday
~~lhcring wa~
Mrs . l'u lri&lt;"k Lod1ary,
Pmncruy, will present l~&lt;:r
piano pupils in a recital at 3 p.
111. ~'riday, June 23, in the
Bethany Chapel of Trinity
Church . The public is cordially
invited tu attend.
Playing at the recital in
addilino to Mrs. Lochary's
studenls will be Jennifer Lohse
Sheets, a former pupil, and her
student. Kristen Anderson.
Mrs. Sheets will conclude the
redial with Chopin's First
Ballad.
Students of Mrs. Lochary
playing will be Jayne Lee
Hoeflich, Cathy Blaetlnar,
Jennifer Chapman, Peggy
Girolami, Charles Follrod,
Marcia · Dillard, Nancy
Sta nley. Mary Blaetlnar,
Kimberly Jon es, Steven
Stanley, Elizabeth Blaettnar,
Deanna Blackwood and Jo
Ellen DiehL

Qbserves ·55th Anniversary

A fainily
held
Sunday at lhc Pomeroy home
uf Mr. and Mrs. w. 0 . Barnil.:l
in ubse•·vanee 'uf U1clr 55th
wedding annivcrsa1·y and
Father's Day .
All eight of lhe children of
Mr. and Mrs. Barnilz were
P,resenl fur U1e t"elebration.
Tl~&lt;:y are Mrs. W. R. Carpenter
and H; A. Barnil.:l, Pomeroy; ·
. Mrs. H. J. Yuung, GaliOn ; Mrs.
N. W. Kramec, Plainview,
Texas; Mrs. !.. W. Nelson,
Kalamazoo, Mich .; Mrs.

~

·HERE'S WHY THE THRIFTY SHOP HERE
We'll 'help you save a pretty penny with Bonnie Buys
that'll warm

I )~·t·p t•lf•&lt;J ns a~d hright•~ ns

·UNtl ./1/tv;tri&lt;: Shumpuucr
$1 per.. dt~y with [lltrcl~tne uf JJluc Lu.,rrc

Dudley's Florist

BAKER FURNITURE

Servipg :
Gallipolis,
Pomeroy , Middleport &amp;

Mason -County. W. Va.

Members of the Young Adult homemade ice cream "and pie.
Class of the Bradford Church of
Present for the wiener roast
Christ met .recently at Fort were Mr. and Mrs. Smith and
Meigs for a wiener roast.
Christi. Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Guy Hysell presided at the &lt; Hysell, Linda and Donna , Gary
meeting which opened with Hysell , Jr., Mrs. Nancy
prayer by Mrs. Clifford Smith. Morris. Carol and Danny, Mrs.
Mrs. Larry PH!kens presented Richard Gilkey and Mark and
devotions using scripture from Mrs. Larry Pickens and Scott.
First Corinthians, chapter 13.
The class purchased a wedding
gill for Mr. and Mrs. David
Reed and several projects
NAME OMITTED
were discussed. A clock will be
Mrs. Esta Wise served as
purchased for the church.
secretary-treasur er of lhe
The July 7 meeting willrbe Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
held at 7 p.in. at the home of Church Daily Vacalion Bible
Mr. and Mrs. Smith. Devotions School. Her name was not
will be by Mrs. Smith and included in an earlier listing of
refreshments will consist of officers and teachers:

INSTAIIT PLEASURE AND
INSTANT SAVINGS
FOR INSTANT ·

Lonclon.Broll •••

KRAFT'S

Swisslteak

10-oz. JAR

·•

Bone·
leu

•

Grouncl Chuck

lb.

TREAT YOUR FAMILY
COUNTRY STYLE

MASON,

•••••••••••••

¢
BLUE, WHITE, GREEN

518.
JAR

2 lb. box

•

pkg.

,

•

pkg.

,-

WHEN YOU PURCHA$11 &amp;AL ."US.TIN'S
WITH
FAIIIC SOFTiNil AT RIG. PRICEI
cJ~~~N
.Good Tlwv S.Mdty, Juno 24th At All A&amp;P Storts
•
~~i!@ll1\: ONE PER FAMILY
~
. YALUAILE COUPON ~
.

..... n ...... MA:g:~INE

,,••, Produce Buys
,c.~··.

·msHFROl.l • •
· CALIFGO~NIA
'7 -lb.
'

............

....
, ....-3fC .

· Peache•
.

ate ...

REO. WHITE
SEEDLESS

cans

BRIGHT AND EARLY FROZEN

Orange Drink

eans

Potato

. . . .. .. . WITH .THIS
ef 4
~
COUPON .

&amp;ood Tlwv sat.~y•.1o1ft. M At AH A&amp;P S'- .

.
'

69
Chopped Ha111 - ::.L
c
WHITE BEAUTY

Shortening

e e

l·lb.
Cll

7

c.tn.

CENTERS &amp;
FIRST CUTS
MIXED

l

All

can

•

HEAD
LETTUCE

BANANA

Pot ·Pies

CREAM ·PIES

Beef, Chicken, Turkey

Juice

Top

q..uty

4.....
caw

35c ..,

l.roM

lraad

'•

t

3 LB.

,

BOX·

·RATION
CANNED

DOG

D

CAN·

.00
•

151fz' OZ. CANS

..

--r
I

19!o

Instant Potatoes .
~

ENDS &amp; 'PIECES

I

FOR

SIMplot

..

WAYNE SPECIAL

pk .

2Ac
1r.

BACON

5 oz. pkg.
STEAK
TURKEY
CHICKEN

FRESH JANE PARKER

i,IJ
16-oz.
Package

"

COOKIN BAGS

~ICE ....................... ~-~..~....3 9 ~

MORTON

'fl·gal.

4 Wings

39~

Banquet

·

ANGEL SOFT- JUMBO

roll

J

BEEF

79'

P u del1ngs Ftovo"•

4 Breasts

· 79~

A SLICED PORK LOI.N

••o" Chicken

16 BEST PIECES
4 legs
4 Thighs

1 lb. pkg.

1

ANN PAGE

A&amp;P CHARCOAL

•

Pork Sausage

'

Bucket

BACON

..

••

bag

. BATHROOM

WIENERS

ORANGE

A&amp;P HARDWOOD BR IQUETS

e

COUNTRY STYLE

9~.

SANTA ROSA • •
· L~IZE • .,. - ....

1

cans

$ 00
.•

·Armour Star

Hygrade All Beef

FROZEN

' DUBUQUE

SAUCE

.

LB.

Plu. .

,

'

ONLY

19•·10'
····39'
.
.....
10 lb.79'
i~;N Baga100 ::~89'
Charcoal.
69' lowell •• • 3 roii•89C
Lighter Fluid
89'
Apple Plea • .. .otch4ftc
I issue • • 10
. ,HEINTZ

•
ShoesI r1ng
sticks.

·.) RIB .PORK CHOPS
.

15 oz.
can

APPLE

CHOPS ·

CALIFORNIA • •
LAIGE Sill • .,.~Ill.

.ftc

5 16·•··•1
3 12·•··•1

Applesauce •

PORK

. Necttul....

Grapes

A&amp;P GRADE A

CENTER CUT

HEW CO_, • •
·
CAROLINA . . . ~(lilt ·

FRESH CALIFORNIA ·

... Plant

lucky Leaf

LOIN

JIFFY- ALL VARIETIES

COUPON ~

ONE PEl FAMILY ..

•

Delmonico
MACARONI

Frankies ••• IZ·••·SN~
Z·lb.,ftc
Entrees

Turkey Wlngettes

(FACTORY WAXED)

' · MATERIALS CO.

~ lb.at

• •

Free Gal. Austin Bleach

.

12 OZ. CAN

¢

PARKAY
OLEO

BOB WHITE

'

SUPERIOR

We call that "INSTANT SATISFACTION"!

SPECIAL

•

'129

FRESH &amp;ROUND l-LBS. OR MORE

•

There's no better instant al any price.
That's why we unconditionally guarantee you'JIIove it
or you 11et your money back.

,· KENTILE i

Two Patterns
12" X 12"

Cubelteak • • • • ,.'b; ~,~~

English Roast

Enjoy its great taste and you'll discover
another delightful fact ... instant savings.

~················'

:•
•:
••
••
•: 45 ·Square Feet 968 •i
+ To ABox
•
(Adhesive Available)
:
I
•
·HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN •
••
•
+
w.;A..t

•••••

CUT FROM CHUCK

•

VALUAILE

10 oz. pkg.

ROUND BONE SHOULDER

And that's the secret behind one
memorable moment of instant pleasure.

LIJ'

·'"""'---

Charcoal Steak • •

100'1.. Brazilian Coffees. Nothin

..

'

BEEF

BONELESS

The thing that makes Eight O'Clock Instant Coffee
so superb is its special blend of
fine Brazilian Coffees.

INSTANT COFFEE

CORNED

lb.'l·at

CROSS RIB ROAST

There are instants and there are instants ...
and they're not all the same.

100% ElRAZILIAN

Variety
·Pak Cereal

1 LB.
STICKS

COFFEE DRINKERS!

6oz. JAR

ARMOUR

or ...

I

2-oz. JAA

KELLOGGS

plu i-ill f•:•·l lu •·ar pdin g! U!-it:_(i
in your 1:url'd ."ihampHcH:r,

••

fliT O'a.ll

heart, put a smile on your face.

,•ol unoi, lt• :s liJr!' S Lhat .ioiuft

::::
:::

Adult Class A1et For Weiner Roast

773-5554

•·

• ••.:•x·
·.:;,

·M-Iddleport
Personal Notes

,.

~·

cat:P_ew

Artificial
Baskets
From $1000

ALSO AT REUNION
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bing
and Sharon, and Terry Pickens
of Pomeroy· Rt. were also
aJIIUitf:l those who attended the
Hoffman Reunion at the
Kanauga Roadside Park on
Sur•Uay. Their names were
uninlcnlionally omitted from
Lhe story in Tuesday 's Sentinel.

. Calling oil ·the family
Saturday evening were Mrs.
Gary Barnilz, Carol, lylary,
Ellen and Ann Marg¥et.

~..:o:--. ···-;.·.-.·. ·o;.o········~.- :-;.:~;::w.:::•-:-:

General repairs and painting &lt;-:
of the Sunday School it:
''~·:.:
::~
classrooms was taken on as a ~::
:;~
project when the Adult Class of f:
~~:
-:-:
the Pomeroy Nazarene Church :·:·
met recently In the educational
Mrs. Charles McDaniels of
" building of the church.
Pacific
Grove, Calif., will
Glen McClung opened the
arrive
today
lo spend lhe
meeting
with
prayer.
Devotions were given by Mrs. swnmer with her sister, Mrs.
Frieda Mossman and Mrs. Crary Davis of Middleport.
. Barbara Colmer presented the Mrs. McDanie l was the
treasurer's report. The clal&gt;'! Tuesday night guest of Mrs.
approved the purchase of a Gordon Harris in Columbus,
blackboard lor lllra. William R. and will &amp;ccompany Mrs.
Stephenson's classroom. Plans Charl es Hennesy to Midwere made lor work sessions dleport. Mrs. Hennesy · has
on the classrooms every been in Colwnbus visiting her '
Monday night. William R. daughter.
F rancie Glaze, Lan caster,
. Stephenson . showed films of
was
th e Re gatta Weekend
class meetings. Refreshments
were served and prayer by Mr. guest of Mr. and Mrs. Micha el
McClung concluded the • Zirkle and family.
Mrs. William Houck, Lynn,
meeting.
,
On June 30 the group will Carol and Beth and Carrie
. meet at the church. It was Wright of Marion spent the
noted that . the Rev. Clyde Rega tta Weekend in Mid·
Henderson ;
pastor,
is dleporl with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Perry Mitch . Mr.
hoepttallzed.
Attending the meeting were· Houck was unable to attend
Mrs. freda Henderson, Mrs. due lo a business trip to
·M011111an, .Mr. and Mrs. Glen Chicago, IlL Mrs. Houck ca me
McClung, Mr. and Mrs. Fred especially for the .20th reunion
•!iullins and Sheila, Mrs . of her Middleport High School
Colmer, !\irs. Myrtle Durst, graduating class.
Pfc. Kenneth Hoffman, son
Mrs. Gladys Gibson, Betty
Brown, Paulette Leach, Jim of Mr. and Mrs. Perry Hoff.
Farley, Carol Lunsford and man, Middleport, has a new
Kenny, Mrs. Clyde Bigg, Mr. address. ' It is L Company,
and Mrs . William R. Second Infantry, Training Bn.,
.Stephenson and Mrs. Don 1st Inf. Training Regiment,
Camp Geiger, N.C. 211042.
Brlckles.

:
•

· tf&lt; &gt;bcrl Well~. War~w; Mrs. Mr . and Mrs . . John Young,
Melvin Hoelscher, Amarilla, Philip, '!tobin and Lisa, !.an·
T~xas, and Robert Barnilz, caster, ai1d Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Grie~o. Longmont, Colo.
Mason . W. Va.
Others al the observance
wel't~ Larry Nelson, Ghip, Sue
a11d David of Kalamazo&lt;&gt;; Rev .
Rube~·t Wells. t.y'nn, Kim ·and
Kay of Warsaw ; Billy, Steve
and Andy Hoelscher of
Amarilla, Texas; Bobb~ 1. ,
Ri cky and Jeffrey Barnilz, Mr.
and Mrs . Keith Barnitz,
Tommy an\1 Timmy, Kingston;

',

2~ .~~..

Jopps Canned Pop ...

1O· $1 oo

COLD POWER
SOAP
ONLY
POWDER Giant Size
COUPON PER CUSTOMER
M&amp;R LGA FOODLtNER
I

I

I
I
I
I
I

WITH

I
I

COUPON

I

_:J

MIDDLEPORT J

.

•.
' \.

.

..

�'

G-

l

{j

The Poet's Corner

Families Observe
Birthdays Friday

Market Report

A FUTURE MEETING
arc building for me a mansion in the sky.
Where I can live with Jesus by and. bye
In that wonderful place there is no night,
For my Jesus is the light. ·

PT. PLEASANT
LIVESTOCK SALES CO.
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
Saturday, June 11,1972
HOGS - 175to 220 26.50 to 27;
Heavies 24:50 to 25.50; Ligh ts
25.75 to 26.50; Fat Sows 18.50 to
24; Boars 20.25 to 22.10; Pigs II
• to 25; Stock Shoats 25 to 3:1.
' CATILE - Steers 28.85 to
37; Heifers 2S to 29.25; ·Fat
Cows 24to 28;·canners 21 to 24;
'ilulls 28 to 45; Slljck Cows and
Calves 265 to 385 ; Stock Steers
:!4 to 38; Stock Heifers 30 to 35;
Stock Steer Calves 36 to 48;
Stock Heifer Calves 31.75 to
40.25.
.VEAL CALVES - Tops 52;
Seconds 50; Medium 48.75 to
49.10; Common &amp; Heavies 47 to
48.25; Culls 40 to 47.
BABY CALVES .- 56 to 72.

·n,~y

Mrs. Jilll King. Mike
. KinMr.g and
~nd Nanty : Debb ie ,

'I~

7
_ \

t1

!

.

"
Tlw Dailr St•ntint.'l , Midrllt•j)Ol't- Pt~ll lt'I'UY, 0 .. Jnnt' 21. 1 ~11·~

Ladies Group
·. e
C~~a· n.:g·/J.s'' 1 Tam

.

Mrs. Willi"'" J. Burlun anti
Ka lliy. Jo Ellen. llobby Jo, d;mgll lcr s, Li sa (lnd Eriku , of .
A sc hool uf missions to be Cuugra lula tiuns were extended Til auny and Pa mda IKJwrcnce Orlund&lt;J, Fla., arr ived by plane
held July 7-9 at Wesle1·ville was tu Mr.s. Sauvage who was uf Harri.sonville arc ~amping Sa turd;,y at the Co lumbus In that heavenly home there is room for all
an nounced by Mrs. Virgil obsL•rvin g a bir thda y a n- 11lis week at Fori M ei ~ ::; near · ilirpur t. They were met by Mr. And, as !listen to th e Saviour's gentle call,
Teafo1·d , president, when the mver sary.
Ru tland.
and Mrs. Floyd Chapman and SomedaY (and I know it won't be long)
Syra cuse United Methodist
Mrs. Donald Lisle prese nted
The birthday anr1ivcrsaries daugl1 ters, Shelley and Kim , I will be able to hear the angels sing a so.ng.
women mel recen tly at the the prugra 111 from the study of dim King, Mrs. Mildred Culu111bus, who accompanied ,~
.
..
home of Mrs. T. G. Hilldore. bnuk. "Lea p lnln Faith." Her ilrnold and Bruce Hysell were them tu Racine to celebrate I knmdes~ Will be watttng there for me,
A communication was read to pic wa s " Power in the t·clebratcd Friday night, June Fath er's DH)' with th eir AndHisglo~lousface lwlll getto see.
•at th.JI&gt; meeti ng fr om lhe Chris ti an Ex perience ," the 16. at tlieir ramp site wi th a paren ts, Mr . and Mrs. Kenne\h He Will w~lco~~ me With o~tstretch~?. hand,
District Office regarding the purpose being to take a very p~r t y . Mrs. King baked the ~u ssel l. The Bu r tons are And say , Th1s IS the promised land .
new name of the church- simple look at evidences of b1r lhday ea kc wh1 ch was · spending the week wi th the
women's group, a change power in personal lives and · .served w1lh h o m e m~d e 1ce Russells and will •·eturn lo "Tbis home is yours as well as mine,
from the Women's Society of experiences and to strive for cream. Others att.end.mg the Orlando Sunday by plane.
you are welcome now with me to dine;
Christian Service to United defin itions uf power, isolating celebration were Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Donald Lisle en- You have many loved ones that are here
Met h o di s t
Wo m e n . sources of power, and seeking Nunmm Hysell , Terry and tertained Monday night with a I know , to you, they are so dear.·Ackn owledged at the meeting to understand the use of power. Norma Jean. and Dares 1\r- cookout in observant'e or the
was a monetary gift given by Ernphas i.s was on using. power nold.
·
birthday anniversa ry of her "We have up here a heavenly choir,
Robert Flanagan in memory of for socia l cha nge and
On Sunday, Father's Day husband . Attending were Mr . Of singing hymns they never tire."
his mother, Mrs. Ambrose ackn owledging power roles in was observed wi th a fam ily a.r1d Mrs, John Lisle and son,
I heard a shout of greatest joy,
Flanagan .
daily life and work.
·
gathert ng at Fort Meigs. At- Todd , · Mr . and Mrs. Roy Someone called out, "There is pur boy!"
Plans were made for a picni c
Marci a Karr , spiritual tendin g wi th those • nam ed Jenk ins, Pomeroy, Mr. and
to be held on July 11 at the growth secretary, concluded above were Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Harry Potts and Keith
So I sat down with Mom and Dad,
Syracuse Roadside Park at 6 the meeting by reading a Rubert i\rn uld, i\ngela and !.isle, Syracuse.
They told me of the good times they had had,
p.m.
pamphl et wri tte n by Paul Teresa. Southside, W. Va., and
Mrs. Sharon As hley and Of all the loved ones they had met,
Mrs . Teaford gave the call to Harvey on his life and con- Mr. and Mrs. Roger .Jeffers
chi ldren. Bob and Paula and But had n t covered all of heaven yet.
worship and Mrs. John ve rsion. Refreshments were m1d Bobby, Pomeroy. Miss ing
0
Mrs. T. A. Ri ley of' Middleport
Sauvage had devotions taken served to th ose named and from the family group was
fr om the Upper Room with Mrs. William Eichinger, Mrs. Rhonda Jeffe rs wh o is al'companied Michael Maris, The things I saw were just like Jesus said
Los Altos. Calif. , to Columbus
scripture from Romans 17 and Herbert Parker, Mrs. William vaca ti oning in Florida. Terry
In the Holy Book that I had read.
for his r eturn home after
prayer. Sixteen shut-in calls Winebrenner and Mrs. Melvi n Hysell joined the King fami ly
v1siting here with his gra nd- I was so very happy to be there ,
were noted and a free
Grimm.
a nd La wrence ci1Hdren for a mother, Mrs. Lemma Li ghter For all of you on earth, I breathed a prayer.
offerin g
was
taken.
couple of days at Fort Meigs. and aunts, Miss Zelia Pullin,
Mrs. Riley and Mrs. Lowell This vision that I've written unto you,
Will come to pass (I know that it is true)
THURSDAY
Wi nge tt.
You will be saved, if you on the Lord believe,
Ei\GLE CLASS, Asbury
And
this home in heaven you shall receive.
United Meth odi st Church,
Syracuse, wiener roast, 6:.10
ByOttieT. Roush
p.m.-Syracuse Roadside Park.
WIN AT BRIDGE
Fairview
Bible Church
WOMEN 'S Associa ti on,
Letart, w.Va.
Middleport First Uni te d
1
1
Pres byterian Chur ch, 7: 30
p.m. Mrs. R M. Sherman will
WEDNESDAY
Tlw t all b t:.•c&lt;.~ m c i.ll' adt&gt;mi l'
:\01('1'11
WINDING TRAIL Garden have devotions. A film will be
!I
Wht'fl
r;:ast l'o ll OWt'd with Ill(•
4 i:') 4 2'
Club, 8 p.m. Wednesday, home shown on the Ame1·ican Indian .
nin
e
i\'ow
\·h •st !e(j hb se ven
¥ llH i :l
a Dispossessed People.
of Mrs. Clarence Heaton.
or
di
c
mwllds
and it wa8 up to
t K IOii 2
SYRACUSE Third Wed- Hostesses , Mrs. Will ia m
So
uth
to
pta,v
fr om du mm .\·.
' ... 10 7
nesday Homemakers Club, Morris, Mrs. Leo Kennedy Sr. ,
You t"a n s~e South's prob ·
WI-:S'f
EAST
meeting house at Municipal Mrs. Nora Ball. Mrs. Rodney
lem fi e needed th ree dia• A 10~ fl
• 9:1
• Q 92
mond tnc ks. If West llali
Park. Po tluck~ lunch at noon. Downin g and Mrs. Wilma
. KJi .'l
• J !) 5
• Q i'
!-. tar l!:'(l with queen-jack -7-4
Summer project to be decided Davis.
4- K .', ;I
Every Keepsa ke Diamond F:ting
4 Q J R·I
thl' wa~· to get them was tu
upon .
SUND!IY
co mes w ith a written
fin
esst:'
d
tt
mm.v\
10
S OUTII ( D &gt;
•
GROUP
1,
Women ·s .
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46,
gua
ra
ntee
of perfect quality,
oil K Q J
Thi :-:. s·itltalion wouldn 't hr
Royal and Select· Masters, Association, Middleport First
protection
against loss and
¥ AH -t
an.' · pr obl em to yo u read t• rs.
t A R:l
Hfetim
e
trade-in
privilege.
Pomeroy Masonic Temple, Uni ted Presbyterian Church,
Yu u ca n Stlt! j ust wh at llw
It A !H i :!
There is no finer diamo nd ring.
7:30p.m. Wednesday. Election family pic nic, 3 p.m. at Royal
diamond situ at i on was.
N" ritJ Vll lil~'ra hlt·
Oak Park. Fa mi ly aff air.
of officers.
Sou th tiH dcln ' t SL' e 11 an d
'ilr r·th
1- : a .~ r
Suu I h
Potluck.
t:'
V
{'Ill ua ll.Y South played IIH'
PAST PRESIDENTS, Drew
I NT
Ill.
Eas t took his jad ct nd
KeeP-sake •
· Webster Post 39, American
Pw;s
Pas:-.
l'l'llll'ned a spade and when
fi' E G I ST Efi'EO D I A M OND fi'IN GS
Legion , 7:30 p. m. Wednesday
Opl'lll ll &gt;! lvad -- · !i
tlw smoke ha d c!ea rcrl &lt;J wa r
at the hom,e of Mrs. Ernest
Sou th wa s down two at !1i'.~
Powell.
nor ma lly c inch cont ract.
B.' OS\\Uid &amp; .I:Jillt' S J at ob~
SOL II... OQU Y U oO
THURSDAY
(NfWS PAPER E ~TE R P N I S E A~S N ,
WEDD ING lUN G 7 ~
Appearant·t•s
(·c.rn
bl'
d~ ce p ·
REVIVAL, Rutland Church
SO NATA 14 00
li ve. Aft er We st' s low :-. pa dl'
qf God, through June 30, 7:30
Al.S (\t !IO T O 19n
openi
ng
it
look
~
&lt;:.~.s
il
Suuth
is
is U1e 1mfy poi11 t
WE DDING RI N G
p.m. each evening with 111 Q-theWhat.
sure of twu spades. IIH'H'
CO UI1t 1'y CIJ IIW /0 11 /11
A f'Ot.L..q J.1S O
T he bid d ing has hcc n:
Rll:b.Q!~ ,..Miyets, . Q~ ll!.Polis, fuur stat es?
dia monds and the o lh ~r tWo
ALSO TOlJO. OOO
En ~ l
Suauh
e ¥angelis~. R&lt;:.v. . Donald
' "I
..;..
A- Four Co mers. wh en:· ac es. but we watc hed a W c:-; t l\'ur!h
1 tft
Pas:;
1¥
'"-"!) ••
Combs, ·pastor, welcomes A r i zoo~ . Colorado. Ne w Nlex- pre!ty good dt• CIJI't'l' t ome
::! •
Pu~.s
away witll only live t r i ck ~ P&lt;t~.~
tco and Uta h rneet.
public.
P:t
:-.s
:J
¥
Pa~~
aft er l h t~ delt~ n s~~ t'in ishecl up·
WOMEN'S FELLOWSHIP.
Q- What is the &lt;l " I!J ('ra li ng on him
Y:o u . South. hold:
7:30 p.m. at Hemlock Grove mam mal Owt cu11 re(lfl !f fl~?
• •KJ 54 ¥ KH 7ti:l + a "-&lt;l 111 7
It start ed out tlormall\'
Church of Christ. A hymn sing
A- Mem bers of the ba t Pnough SOLrth won the spad't·
What do you dn now ".'
will be held wi th spe cial fa mily are true fl yi ng mam- am i pl ayed ace and anoth er
A- Bid fn ur h ca r 1... Thi ~
mals - !be · onlv ones in dia mond
singing groups welcomed.
-. lwuld he a \"CI',\" ~nud CHill nu·t.

wit

Tile Almanac
By United Pr~ss lntemat!opal '
Today is Wednesday, June 21 ,
the t7Jrd day of 1972 with 193 .!
to follow.
·
I
This is the first day of :
summer rbegins at 3:06 a.m . i
.

TELL TH' 1/1:\RMINT .
I'LL KETCH HIM
(IIEXT WEEK

SILL COLLECTER
WITH HIM

I

ED'l' ).
'ts I' t '
The moon is between I trs :
quarter and full phase.
~
The morning stars ar~ Venus, ·:
Sa turn and Jupiter .
.:
The evening stars are Mereu- :
ry and Mars.
• ;
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Cancer.
.
Boy Scouts of America leader _·
Dan Carter Beard was born '
Jun e 21, 1850.
On this date in history :
In 1945 Japanese defenders of;
Okinowa surrendered to Amert·:
can troops.
.
In 1965 President Lyndon B.:
Johnson signed a $4.1 billion
income tax bill .

r.~ / ·:;,~\ r oi)

TELL .HIM 'IORESELF ·HE'5 GOT A DADBURN

-·----- --·----'

... AN~ ... WE cL...

~

;z.' ''\W_~_

--

._,.._""'·--

b -·LI

• '"' k o;r~ . loo. r M . .. ~~ ~ rot 011

7,,

VEfit'l 9NC6f ..__.....
OF 'IUIR MAN, ClliEF

CAMPUS
CLATTER
.
,.

vov·~e NEW "E~E

·~

;

ll-!ATs

•
TRV .TO BE
~ATI. ENT FERG\'..

~ ' )/vJ;~

i.,

. AFTE~ AL L, T~•S
,5 THE t:lllST T•ME
1N ¥EARS ....~AV6E
EVER .. .

i)IFFE~ENT

sur nae$ JUsT

!Ill HUSBAND AND /'E
N' l-lOJVC. ..----"

REG. $4.99 YD.
60 Inch Wide
100% Polyester

~-

'GUINEA' IS MISSf'E{.lED!

~
~
VA' I..L t,.OVE WOR'KIN' ON

'THIS 'TALL BUILDING,
SYLVES'TEI't, ONCe VA
GET USED 'T''T~ ' HEIGH'TS!

•

Yard

When you know
it's for keeps

SF'!iLLtNb GLASS .. AND .

g

.88

Fooler Play Beats Cinch

IO Kt-bw' THIS WRfllNb
AN'r'I'JHS?E! 'ltiJ'f(t: SliNK'(
M'WJAM, I HAD 'lW IN MY

i:1 !i?EAD THI'S AND DELIVER ! ••
~ 1------n-r

DOUBLE
KNITS

•.

' · a ·- --~ -~,.,..,

'"LO~o
. . : ..:=
·' ~. . . '-'¥·····
R li'.::~. L
TtM::5 ...' W~AT5

711/S f' ' NEW

Values to $4.99 yard .
60 in ch wide , 100 per
cent polyester double
kni ts in plain and
fan cy patterns. at
Stifflers Main Floor,

AND IMPROVED

UN/FotrM$ ' ?

7HAT~ RIOHT t

COMMISH .AND IF
YDU DON'T '7HINK.
WE. MEliN 11U6/NE6S 1
'tOU AIN'T SEEN
NOTHIN&amp; YET!

rM GOING TO

PARTY YOU

Ml&amp;&amp; BIRDIE 1
JANIE .5:1E'$
AR~L GOOD

EGG !

r FOLJN[) MR.OCJP'S·
A'Y.. BACK lHERE,
..OU~

.. ,t THOUGHT HE

HIGHNESS ...

I

GASO!JNE AlLEY

f:J ·

QUICK QUIZ

BARNEY

~2. . !!10

,.

ex istence .

"\'

~-~r----_.:.._

·

At this pornt West camt'
up with a ra tht' l' unusual

_____::-:--::--::--"1
Big
Cap~city

MayUg

Automatics

'2 Sp E! ed op era t ion .
Choi ce of

t e mp s .
w at e r

wat er

Auto .
l eve l

c o ntr o l.

Lint

' F il le r o r- Power
F=in Ag i t a tor .

Perma- Press ·
May rag
Halo of Heat
Dryers
1
Surr ound c lot,h~!
w ith gentle, eVer
hea t . No h ot spots,
no ove r d r yi nQ.
'F ine Mesh Lint
F ilter .

We Speclttlte in
MAYTAG
Red Carpet
Service

RUTLAND FURNITURE .
;742-4211

Arnold Grate

Rutland, o.

I· Feed the Whole I

I Family for only

I

I

I

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

I
I
.I
I
I
I

THRirT BOX9 pieces
regulilrly '2.65 •

I
I
I
I
1I

I
I
I
I
I
I

I1 . Why. cook? Visit theColonel I1
I K~ fried(Ckiekta~ I
; o' oNEL sANDERs· Rsgt P£

1
I

C~w's

Steak House

I
I

'------1!111---------·1
.

POMEROY, OHIO .

lie

p l a ~· e ct his (j tU.:'t' ll u! dia m ond s_ He wa s go in g to loo k
might.v ~ il l y if it tu r ned out

36" &amp; 45 "Inch Wide

l 11 sI c ad of b Lcl d ing lh ret ·
ht'CII\:&gt;.

!H'l' l"

.vour p a r t n

~'Oll l'
t·

(\\"0

h~.: a r\S,

r h a ~ Jll rn ped Lo
Wha t do WHL

Mfg . Close Out of fancy
36 inch cotton fancy
print s. 500 yds. to sell.
Sto ck up now. Hurry,
thi s won 't last long .

thr~l' 110 - II'U ili !J

do

ILtJW'.)

.

lhat East had been dealt
onl.v jack and one di amond
hut West had fi gure(] ott! that

il So11th hd d lo11r

FANCY PRINTS
.

dia nwn d ~

to lll e ac e-nine hl' wou lll have
s t ~ r lcd hi s dia mond pl ay
wtth u low one to du mm v's
kin g.

TIMELY QUOTES

SEMI-ANNUAL

CLEARANCE-

OME DAY-· PROBABLY HE ESCAPED
FROfol A 100 OR A fRAI'ELWIG
CIRCUS! HE'S SORT OF M'(

-ICIIIL HOUSEKEEPER!

KNITS
Valu es to S2 .99 yard.
Mfg . close out of 60 inch
cotton knits . Plain and
fancy patterns . See this.
Stifflers Main Floor .

und erstood

someth ing that Muskie and
Hump hrey didn 't : That the
way you win co nven1i ons is
to win delegates.
- Joseph Napolitali . a P&lt;&gt;·
/ificaf

SALE STARTS

Weinberyer. not i ng that
fede ral spelld i &gt;J g on social
1J TOg r ams lias jum ped
fr om $30 billi o11 to $1 00
biflhm u .ucur.

Dai~

Sentinel

Subsc r ip tion

ra tes :

oe .

where
avai la ble SO ce nu. per week ;
8y M otor Rou te where car ri er
ser v 1ce no t a v a i labt ~ : One
mon th SUS . By ma i l in Oh io
an d w . Va., One yea r s u .oo.
Six m ont hs H .iS . Three
mo nth s \4 ", SO. Subsc r i pt i on
pr ice i nc ludes Sund ay Times Sen t in el.
l i \ler ed

by

ca rr ier

DICK TRACY
HE

OKAY, MR. n«•'-'v.
OUTNUMBERED.
GO 8ACKTO MY
ROOM.

H~D

HIS BACK
TO TWE MIRROR:'

ACROSS
1. Kadiddle·
hopper
5. Johnny
of song
11. Nomadize
12. Downright
13. Grand·
parental
14. Be poor
15. Go into
double
harness
16. King
(Fr.)

n. Distaff
hay

STIFFLERS MAIN FLOOR

THURS., JUNE 22

VALUES TO 11.00 YARD
44 INCH AND 45 INCH

SPORT FABRICS
Values to $1.00 yard . 5
yd . to 10 yd . pieces
Mfg . Close out of
better sport fabrics .
Wide asst . of colors
and patterns . 44. Inch·
and 45 inch wide .
Shop early.

Fashion Craft

MAIN nOOR

If your shoe wardrobe is begi nn1ng to look a bit willed here's
good new s! Now you ca n perk up those f ashions w ith several
sma rt new .pairs of shoes at clearance sale prices. You' ll find

• w ide ran ge of styles. So shop now whi le the choice is the

Yesterday's Crypt&lt;&gt;q11ote: THE BONDS OF MATRIMONY
ARE LIKE ANY OTHER BONDS-THEY MATURE SLOWLY
-PETER DE VRIES
'

by THOMAS JOSEPH

rabbit

II spendin g alone cou ld
solve the problems tu which
existing programs are ad·
dressed . there wo uld be no
problems. for spendm g has
bee n there.
-Budget D·irecto1· Caspar W.

The

~tUdM.Wd'

18. Hit the

CfH /S Ult ml.[

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS ·MASON AREA
CHESTER L . TANNEHILL.
E ~ ec . Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
City Editor
Published da i ly eHe pr
Sa turd ay bv The Oh io Va ll ey
Publish 1ng Com p any , 111
Cour t St , Pomeroy , Oh io,
45 169. Business Off ict&gt; Phone
992 71 56. Ed itor i al PhOne 99 2·
21S l'
Second class posfage- pa id at
Pom er oy , Ohio
Nat i o na l a dv e r tis i ng
repr! senta ti\le
Bo t ti nell l ·
Ga llagher , !nc , 12 East 42nd
Sr.• N ~ w Y or k Ci t y, New York .

MON~EY! I

COTTON

I've been here two yea rs
yea rs and I' m ju st learnin g
wheJie they hid e the money .
- A11 en Claxton . as sistant
budget dir ector of New
YuTk City, Oil /.he mus t. er·
i es uf b r1 I fl IU.: i H f! O~t•

Mc Govc r n

tii&lt;IRWIH I'$ A RHESUS

FOU~D HIM WANDfRING lltE FOREST

Mfg. Close Out
60 Inch

·

" lwrlf)el.

r-------IIIISfiiSAI _______i

I
I
I
I
1I

SN:ond ll aiHI hi gh play

'l'(HJ A \ " S QUEST!OX

VA LUES TO 49• YARD

Zt. Gratuity
21. Ethiopian
lake
ZZ. Vlva(orally)
U . Yeamed
Is. Mature ·
116. Cowud or
Harrison
27. Vocal
renditions
28.Sonof
Bela
29. Make

(0 1972 Kine Featureil Syndleate, Inc .. )

DOWN
1. Bird's
crop
2. Rodgers
and Hart
.song ·
3. Sidestep a
matter
(3 wds.)
t . Ferrer
5. Notes on
the Hebrew 0 .1':
1i.Edemal ZS. 11Arrive;
6. Shaw Is
covering
derci - "
one
1t. Weight of 27. Stringent
7. Singing
Eastern
syUable
29. Recipient
8. Avoiding
Alta
30.
Yak
ZZ. Infamous
ayes or
country
U. Believer
no (4
34.
-over
J.na
wds.)
(ex·
universal
9. Bill of
amine)
soul
lading
36. Herr's
24. Circles
10.Become
lament
about the
preciP37. Pasture
sun
Itous

BE11Y OHUNG£R

o •

'

UMcramble these four Jumbleo,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary wordo.

I

JJ"!)'J)IJO

• =~'Js:=

..

I I

r

I I

aJ

ENGAI,C

UJ&gt;UEN

Jo•bl"'' SHIIP

insane

31:Jan., Feb.,

Y""rrdaf'•

Mar., etc.
3Z.Eqs
Q.Drop in
price
S5.Non
compos
mentis
37. Timber
wolf
31. Flyin&amp;39. Water
pitcher
U.Giggle
(hyph.
wd.l
U.Prlce

II

ODIUM

NOODLI

a••)

PllACH

,
\ .b.wert It'• not di/Jktdt/or a polllir.uut. to
101 ele&lt;te~ 11tU ""1/.,.UNOPPOSID

I ACTIW.I.I{
fJWJ HER,
LINUS...

paid

~ ~ ~ g~ =~

$18.00

POMEROY

t::

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:

Values
to

Marguerite's Shoe Shop
.102 E. MAIN

''&gt;'"I""" ,,.....,. •1

(A.we'n •••

best.

'6'5 to '14'5

~&amp;WJMJ1)];~=~!:!- r=

POMEROY, OHIO
Open Fri. and Sal 9:30 to 9:00

11
One 1-tt~r simply stindo for' another. In this sample A Is
used for the tliree L's X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apo~trophes, the lenaih and formation of !he words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dtl!erent.
CltYPTOQ\JOTES

HUHCENMBKV

WMFDXG

JH

r--------, ,.....--.,.------,
1I •51000 Rl611T IN~
.Of HElL 1 FINAU.I{ THE
UTTU RED-AAIW 6IRI. 'THAT
CHUCK 15 AUIIIfr'§l'AU(IH6
ANO '«lt)illll1od WIIAT 1 DiD?

t..!' ......., ,r~--C:...-::::

r----,

SRGH

RW WBSOXH RW OFWWBJXH, JDN
KFN WBSOXHC .- RX .II!C,N HBKWNHBK ' - - - - ' . _ - - : - - - '

-

..

'

,,

�'

G-

l

{j

The Poet's Corner

Families Observe
Birthdays Friday

Market Report

A FUTURE MEETING
arc building for me a mansion in the sky.
Where I can live with Jesus by and. bye
In that wonderful place there is no night,
For my Jesus is the light. ·

PT. PLEASANT
LIVESTOCK SALES CO.
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
Saturday, June 11,1972
HOGS - 175to 220 26.50 to 27;
Heavies 24:50 to 25.50; Ligh ts
25.75 to 26.50; Fat Sows 18.50 to
24; Boars 20.25 to 22.10; Pigs II
• to 25; Stock Shoats 25 to 3:1.
' CATILE - Steers 28.85 to
37; Heifers 2S to 29.25; ·Fat
Cows 24to 28;·canners 21 to 24;
'ilulls 28 to 45; Slljck Cows and
Calves 265 to 385 ; Stock Steers
:!4 to 38; Stock Heifers 30 to 35;
Stock Steer Calves 36 to 48;
Stock Heifer Calves 31.75 to
40.25.
.VEAL CALVES - Tops 52;
Seconds 50; Medium 48.75 to
49.10; Common &amp; Heavies 47 to
48.25; Culls 40 to 47.
BABY CALVES .- 56 to 72.

·n,~y

Mrs. Jilll King. Mike
. KinMr.g and
~nd Nanty : Debb ie ,

'I~

7
_ \

t1

!

.

"
Tlw Dailr St•ntint.'l , Midrllt•j)Ol't- Pt~ll lt'I'UY, 0 .. Jnnt' 21. 1 ~11·~

Ladies Group
·. e
C~~a· n.:g·/J.s'' 1 Tam

.

Mrs. Willi"'" J. Burlun anti
Ka lliy. Jo Ellen. llobby Jo, d;mgll lcr s, Li sa (lnd Eriku , of .
A sc hool uf missions to be Cuugra lula tiuns were extended Til auny and Pa mda IKJwrcnce Orlund&lt;J, Fla., arr ived by plane
held July 7-9 at Wesle1·ville was tu Mr.s. Sauvage who was uf Harri.sonville arc ~amping Sa turd;,y at the Co lumbus In that heavenly home there is room for all
an nounced by Mrs. Virgil obsL•rvin g a bir thda y a n- 11lis week at Fori M ei ~ ::; near · ilirpur t. They were met by Mr. And, as !listen to th e Saviour's gentle call,
Teafo1·d , president, when the mver sary.
Ru tland.
and Mrs. Floyd Chapman and SomedaY (and I know it won't be long)
Syra cuse United Methodist
Mrs. Donald Lisle prese nted
The birthday anr1ivcrsaries daugl1 ters, Shelley and Kim , I will be able to hear the angels sing a so.ng.
women mel recen tly at the the prugra 111 from the study of dim King, Mrs. Mildred Culu111bus, who accompanied ,~
.
..
home of Mrs. T. G. Hilldore. bnuk. "Lea p lnln Faith." Her ilrnold and Bruce Hysell were them tu Racine to celebrate I knmdes~ Will be watttng there for me,
A communication was read to pic wa s " Power in the t·clebratcd Friday night, June Fath er's DH)' with th eir AndHisglo~lousface lwlll getto see.
•at th.JI&gt; meeti ng fr om lhe Chris ti an Ex perience ," the 16. at tlieir ramp site wi th a paren ts, Mr . and Mrs. Kenne\h He Will w~lco~~ me With o~tstretch~?. hand,
District Office regarding the purpose being to take a very p~r t y . Mrs. King baked the ~u ssel l. The Bu r tons are And say , Th1s IS the promised land .
new name of the church- simple look at evidences of b1r lhday ea kc wh1 ch was · spending the week wi th the
women's group, a change power in personal lives and · .served w1lh h o m e m~d e 1ce Russells and will •·eturn lo "Tbis home is yours as well as mine,
from the Women's Society of experiences and to strive for cream. Others att.end.mg the Orlando Sunday by plane.
you are welcome now with me to dine;
Christian Service to United defin itions uf power, isolating celebration were Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Donald Lisle en- You have many loved ones that are here
Met h o di s t
Wo m e n . sources of power, and seeking Nunmm Hysell , Terry and tertained Monday night with a I know , to you, they are so dear.·Ackn owledged at the meeting to understand the use of power. Norma Jean. and Dares 1\r- cookout in observant'e or the
was a monetary gift given by Ernphas i.s was on using. power nold.
·
birthday anniversa ry of her "We have up here a heavenly choir,
Robert Flanagan in memory of for socia l cha nge and
On Sunday, Father's Day husband . Attending were Mr . Of singing hymns they never tire."
his mother, Mrs. Ambrose ackn owledging power roles in was observed wi th a fam ily a.r1d Mrs, John Lisle and son,
I heard a shout of greatest joy,
Flanagan .
daily life and work.
·
gathert ng at Fort Meigs. At- Todd , · Mr . and Mrs. Roy Someone called out, "There is pur boy!"
Plans were made for a picni c
Marci a Karr , spiritual tendin g wi th those • nam ed Jenk ins, Pomeroy, Mr. and
to be held on July 11 at the growth secretary, concluded above were Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Harry Potts and Keith
So I sat down with Mom and Dad,
Syracuse Roadside Park at 6 the meeting by reading a Rubert i\rn uld, i\ngela and !.isle, Syracuse.
They told me of the good times they had had,
p.m.
pamphl et wri tte n by Paul Teresa. Southside, W. Va., and
Mrs. Sharon As hley and Of all the loved ones they had met,
Mrs . Teaford gave the call to Harvey on his life and con- Mr. and Mrs. Roger .Jeffers
chi ldren. Bob and Paula and But had n t covered all of heaven yet.
worship and Mrs. John ve rsion. Refreshments were m1d Bobby, Pomeroy. Miss ing
0
Mrs. T. A. Ri ley of' Middleport
Sauvage had devotions taken served to th ose named and from the family group was
fr om the Upper Room with Mrs. William Eichinger, Mrs. Rhonda Jeffe rs wh o is al'companied Michael Maris, The things I saw were just like Jesus said
Los Altos. Calif. , to Columbus
scripture from Romans 17 and Herbert Parker, Mrs. William vaca ti oning in Florida. Terry
In the Holy Book that I had read.
for his r eturn home after
prayer. Sixteen shut-in calls Winebrenner and Mrs. Melvi n Hysell joined the King fami ly
v1siting here with his gra nd- I was so very happy to be there ,
were noted and a free
Grimm.
a nd La wrence ci1Hdren for a mother, Mrs. Lemma Li ghter For all of you on earth, I breathed a prayer.
offerin g
was
taken.
couple of days at Fort Meigs. and aunts, Miss Zelia Pullin,
Mrs. Riley and Mrs. Lowell This vision that I've written unto you,
Will come to pass (I know that it is true)
THURSDAY
Wi nge tt.
You will be saved, if you on the Lord believe,
Ei\GLE CLASS, Asbury
And
this home in heaven you shall receive.
United Meth odi st Church,
Syracuse, wiener roast, 6:.10
ByOttieT. Roush
p.m.-Syracuse Roadside Park.
WIN AT BRIDGE
Fairview
Bible Church
WOMEN 'S Associa ti on,
Letart, w.Va.
Middleport First Uni te d
1
1
Pres byterian Chur ch, 7: 30
p.m. Mrs. R M. Sherman will
WEDNESDAY
Tlw t all b t:.•c&lt;.~ m c i.ll' adt&gt;mi l'
:\01('1'11
WINDING TRAIL Garden have devotions. A film will be
!I
Wht'fl
r;:ast l'o ll OWt'd with Ill(•
4 i:') 4 2'
Club, 8 p.m. Wednesday, home shown on the Ame1·ican Indian .
nin
e
i\'ow
\·h •st !e(j hb se ven
¥ llH i :l
a Dispossessed People.
of Mrs. Clarence Heaton.
or
di
c
mwllds
and it wa8 up to
t K IOii 2
SYRACUSE Third Wed- Hostesses , Mrs. Will ia m
So
uth
to
pta,v
fr om du mm .\·.
' ... 10 7
nesday Homemakers Club, Morris, Mrs. Leo Kennedy Sr. ,
You t"a n s~e South's prob ·
WI-:S'f
EAST
meeting house at Municipal Mrs. Nora Ball. Mrs. Rodney
lem fi e needed th ree dia• A 10~ fl
• 9:1
• Q 92
mond tnc ks. If West llali
Park. Po tluck~ lunch at noon. Downin g and Mrs. Wilma
. KJi .'l
• J !) 5
• Q i'
!-. tar l!:'(l with queen-jack -7-4
Summer project to be decided Davis.
4- K .', ;I
Every Keepsa ke Diamond F:ting
4 Q J R·I
thl' wa~· to get them was tu
upon .
SUND!IY
co mes w ith a written
fin
esst:'
d
tt
mm.v\
10
S OUTII ( D &gt;
•
GROUP
1,
Women ·s .
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46,
gua
ra
ntee
of perfect quality,
oil K Q J
Thi :-:. s·itltalion wouldn 't hr
Royal and Select· Masters, Association, Middleport First
protection
against loss and
¥ AH -t
an.' · pr obl em to yo u read t• rs.
t A R:l
Hfetim
e
trade-in
privilege.
Pomeroy Masonic Temple, Uni ted Presbyterian Church,
Yu u ca n Stlt! j ust wh at llw
It A !H i :!
There is no finer diamo nd ring.
7:30p.m. Wednesday. Election family pic nic, 3 p.m. at Royal
diamond situ at i on was.
N" ritJ Vll lil~'ra hlt·
Oak Park. Fa mi ly aff air.
of officers.
Sou th tiH dcln ' t SL' e 11 an d
'ilr r·th
1- : a .~ r
Suu I h
Potluck.
t:'
V
{'Ill ua ll.Y South played IIH'
PAST PRESIDENTS, Drew
I NT
Ill.
Eas t took his jad ct nd
KeeP-sake •
· Webster Post 39, American
Pw;s
Pas:-.
l'l'llll'ned a spade and when
fi' E G I ST Efi'EO D I A M OND fi'IN GS
Legion , 7:30 p. m. Wednesday
Opl'lll ll &gt;! lvad -- · !i
tlw smoke ha d c!ea rcrl &lt;J wa r
at the hom,e of Mrs. Ernest
Sou th wa s down two at !1i'.~
Powell.
nor ma lly c inch cont ract.
B.' OS\\Uid &amp; .I:Jillt' S J at ob~
SOL II... OQU Y U oO
THURSDAY
(NfWS PAPER E ~TE R P N I S E A~S N ,
WEDD ING lUN G 7 ~
Appearant·t•s
(·c.rn
bl'
d~ ce p ·
REVIVAL, Rutland Church
SO NATA 14 00
li ve. Aft er We st' s low :-. pa dl'
qf God, through June 30, 7:30
Al.S (\t !IO T O 19n
openi
ng
it
look
~
&lt;:.~.s
il
Suuth
is
is U1e 1mfy poi11 t
WE DDING RI N G
p.m. each evening with 111 Q-theWhat.
sure of twu spades. IIH'H'
CO UI1t 1'y CIJ IIW /0 11 /11
A f'Ot.L..q J.1S O
T he bid d ing has hcc n:
Rll:b.Q!~ ,..Miyets, . Q~ ll!.Polis, fuur stat es?
dia monds and the o lh ~r tWo
ALSO TOlJO. OOO
En ~ l
Suauh
e ¥angelis~. R&lt;:.v. . Donald
' "I
..;..
A- Four Co mers. wh en:· ac es. but we watc hed a W c:-; t l\'ur!h
1 tft
Pas:;
1¥
'"-"!) ••
Combs, ·pastor, welcomes A r i zoo~ . Colorado. Ne w Nlex- pre!ty good dt• CIJI't'l' t ome
::! •
Pu~.s
away witll only live t r i ck ~ P&lt;t~.~
tco and Uta h rneet.
public.
P:t
:-.s
:J
¥
Pa~~
aft er l h t~ delt~ n s~~ t'in ishecl up·
WOMEN'S FELLOWSHIP.
Q- What is the &lt;l " I!J ('ra li ng on him
Y:o u . South. hold:
7:30 p.m. at Hemlock Grove mam mal Owt cu11 re(lfl !f fl~?
• •KJ 54 ¥ KH 7ti:l + a "-&lt;l 111 7
It start ed out tlormall\'
Church of Christ. A hymn sing
A- Mem bers of the ba t Pnough SOLrth won the spad't·
What do you dn now ".'
will be held wi th spe cial fa mily are true fl yi ng mam- am i pl ayed ace and anoth er
A- Bid fn ur h ca r 1... Thi ~
mals - !be · onlv ones in dia mond
singing groups welcomed.
-. lwuld he a \"CI',\" ~nud CHill nu·t.

wit

Tile Almanac
By United Pr~ss lntemat!opal '
Today is Wednesday, June 21 ,
the t7Jrd day of 1972 with 193 .!
to follow.
·
I
This is the first day of :
summer rbegins at 3:06 a.m . i
.

TELL TH' 1/1:\RMINT .
I'LL KETCH HIM
(IIEXT WEEK

SILL COLLECTER
WITH HIM

I

ED'l' ).
'ts I' t '
The moon is between I trs :
quarter and full phase.
~
The morning stars ar~ Venus, ·:
Sa turn and Jupiter .
.:
The evening stars are Mereu- :
ry and Mars.
• ;
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Cancer.
.
Boy Scouts of America leader _·
Dan Carter Beard was born '
Jun e 21, 1850.
On this date in history :
In 1945 Japanese defenders of;
Okinowa surrendered to Amert·:
can troops.
.
In 1965 President Lyndon B.:
Johnson signed a $4.1 billion
income tax bill .

r.~ / ·:;,~\ r oi)

TELL .HIM 'IORESELF ·HE'5 GOT A DADBURN

-·----- --·----'

... AN~ ... WE cL...

~

;z.' ''\W_~_

--

._,.._""'·--

b -·LI

• '"' k o;r~ . loo. r M . .. ~~ ~ rot 011

7,,

VEfit'l 9NC6f ..__.....
OF 'IUIR MAN, ClliEF

CAMPUS
CLATTER
.
,.

vov·~e NEW "E~E

·~

;

ll-!ATs

•
TRV .TO BE
~ATI. ENT FERG\'..

~ ' )/vJ;~

i.,

. AFTE~ AL L, T~•S
,5 THE t:lllST T•ME
1N ¥EARS ....~AV6E
EVER .. .

i)IFFE~ENT

sur nae$ JUsT

!Ill HUSBAND AND /'E
N' l-lOJVC. ..----"

REG. $4.99 YD.
60 Inch Wide
100% Polyester

~-

'GUINEA' IS MISSf'E{.lED!

~
~
VA' I..L t,.OVE WOR'KIN' ON

'THIS 'TALL BUILDING,
SYLVES'TEI't, ONCe VA
GET USED 'T''T~ ' HEIGH'TS!

•

Yard

When you know
it's for keeps

SF'!iLLtNb GLASS .. AND .

g

.88

Fooler Play Beats Cinch

IO Kt-bw' THIS WRfllNb
AN'r'I'JHS?E! 'ltiJ'f(t: SliNK'(
M'WJAM, I HAD 'lW IN MY

i:1 !i?EAD THI'S AND DELIVER ! ••
~ 1------n-r

DOUBLE
KNITS

•.

' · a ·- --~ -~,.,..,

'"LO~o
. . : ..:=
·' ~. . . '-'¥·····
R li'.::~. L
TtM::5 ...' W~AT5

711/S f' ' NEW

Values to $4.99 yard .
60 in ch wide , 100 per
cent polyester double
kni ts in plain and
fan cy patterns. at
Stifflers Main Floor,

AND IMPROVED

UN/FotrM$ ' ?

7HAT~ RIOHT t

COMMISH .AND IF
YDU DON'T '7HINK.
WE. MEliN 11U6/NE6S 1
'tOU AIN'T SEEN
NOTHIN&amp; YET!

rM GOING TO

PARTY YOU

Ml&amp;&amp; BIRDIE 1
JANIE .5:1E'$
AR~L GOOD

EGG !

r FOLJN[) MR.OCJP'S·
A'Y.. BACK lHERE,
..OU~

.. ,t THOUGHT HE

HIGHNESS ...

I

GASO!JNE AlLEY

f:J ·

QUICK QUIZ

BARNEY

~2. . !!10

,.

ex istence .

"\'

~-~r----_.:.._

·

At this pornt West camt'
up with a ra tht' l' unusual

_____::-:--::--::--"1
Big
Cap~city

MayUg

Automatics

'2 Sp E! ed op era t ion .
Choi ce of

t e mp s .
w at e r

wat er

Auto .
l eve l

c o ntr o l.

Lint

' F il le r o r- Power
F=in Ag i t a tor .

Perma- Press ·
May rag
Halo of Heat
Dryers
1
Surr ound c lot,h~!
w ith gentle, eVer
hea t . No h ot spots,
no ove r d r yi nQ.
'F ine Mesh Lint
F ilter .

We Speclttlte in
MAYTAG
Red Carpet
Service

RUTLAND FURNITURE .
;742-4211

Arnold Grate

Rutland, o.

I· Feed the Whole I

I Family for only

I

I

I

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

I
I
.I
I
I
I

THRirT BOX9 pieces
regulilrly '2.65 •

I
I
I
I
1I

I
I
I
I
I
I

I1 . Why. cook? Visit theColonel I1
I K~ fried(Ckiekta~ I
; o' oNEL sANDERs· Rsgt P£

1
I

C~w's

Steak House

I
I

'------1!111---------·1
.

POMEROY, OHIO .

lie

p l a ~· e ct his (j tU.:'t' ll u! dia m ond s_ He wa s go in g to loo k
might.v ~ il l y if it tu r ned out

36" &amp; 45 "Inch Wide

l 11 sI c ad of b Lcl d ing lh ret ·
ht'CII\:&gt;.

!H'l' l"

.vour p a r t n

~'Oll l'
t·

(\\"0

h~.: a r\S,

r h a ~ Jll rn ped Lo
Wha t do WHL

Mfg . Close Out of fancy
36 inch cotton fancy
print s. 500 yds. to sell.
Sto ck up now. Hurry,
thi s won 't last long .

thr~l' 110 - II'U ili !J

do

ILtJW'.)

.

lhat East had been dealt
onl.v jack and one di amond
hut West had fi gure(] ott! that

il So11th hd d lo11r

FANCY PRINTS
.

dia nwn d ~

to lll e ac e-nine hl' wou lll have
s t ~ r lcd hi s dia mond pl ay
wtth u low one to du mm v's
kin g.

TIMELY QUOTES

SEMI-ANNUAL

CLEARANCE-

OME DAY-· PROBABLY HE ESCAPED
FROfol A 100 OR A fRAI'ELWIG
CIRCUS! HE'S SORT OF M'(

-ICIIIL HOUSEKEEPER!

KNITS
Valu es to S2 .99 yard.
Mfg . close out of 60 inch
cotton knits . Plain and
fancy patterns . See this.
Stifflers Main Floor .

und erstood

someth ing that Muskie and
Hump hrey didn 't : That the
way you win co nven1i ons is
to win delegates.
- Joseph Napolitali . a P&lt;&gt;·
/ificaf

SALE STARTS

Weinberyer. not i ng that
fede ral spelld i &gt;J g on social
1J TOg r ams lias jum ped
fr om $30 billi o11 to $1 00
biflhm u .ucur.

Dai~

Sentinel

Subsc r ip tion

ra tes :

oe .

where
avai la ble SO ce nu. per week ;
8y M otor Rou te where car ri er
ser v 1ce no t a v a i labt ~ : One
mon th SUS . By ma i l in Oh io
an d w . Va., One yea r s u .oo.
Six m ont hs H .iS . Three
mo nth s \4 ", SO. Subsc r i pt i on
pr ice i nc ludes Sund ay Times Sen t in el.
l i \ler ed

by

ca rr ier

DICK TRACY
HE

OKAY, MR. n«•'-'v.
OUTNUMBERED.
GO 8ACKTO MY
ROOM.

H~D

HIS BACK
TO TWE MIRROR:'

ACROSS
1. Kadiddle·
hopper
5. Johnny
of song
11. Nomadize
12. Downright
13. Grand·
parental
14. Be poor
15. Go into
double
harness
16. King
(Fr.)

n. Distaff
hay

STIFFLERS MAIN FLOOR

THURS., JUNE 22

VALUES TO 11.00 YARD
44 INCH AND 45 INCH

SPORT FABRICS
Values to $1.00 yard . 5
yd . to 10 yd . pieces
Mfg . Close out of
better sport fabrics .
Wide asst . of colors
and patterns . 44. Inch·
and 45 inch wide .
Shop early.

Fashion Craft

MAIN nOOR

If your shoe wardrobe is begi nn1ng to look a bit willed here's
good new s! Now you ca n perk up those f ashions w ith several
sma rt new .pairs of shoes at clearance sale prices. You' ll find

• w ide ran ge of styles. So shop now whi le the choice is the

Yesterday's Crypt&lt;&gt;q11ote: THE BONDS OF MATRIMONY
ARE LIKE ANY OTHER BONDS-THEY MATURE SLOWLY
-PETER DE VRIES
'

by THOMAS JOSEPH

rabbit

II spendin g alone cou ld
solve the problems tu which
existing programs are ad·
dressed . there wo uld be no
problems. for spendm g has
bee n there.
-Budget D·irecto1· Caspar W.

The

~tUdM.Wd'

18. Hit the

CfH /S Ult ml.[

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS ·MASON AREA
CHESTER L . TANNEHILL.
E ~ ec . Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
City Editor
Published da i ly eHe pr
Sa turd ay bv The Oh io Va ll ey
Publish 1ng Com p any , 111
Cour t St , Pomeroy , Oh io,
45 169. Business Off ict&gt; Phone
992 71 56. Ed itor i al PhOne 99 2·
21S l'
Second class posfage- pa id at
Pom er oy , Ohio
Nat i o na l a dv e r tis i ng
repr! senta ti\le
Bo t ti nell l ·
Ga llagher , !nc , 12 East 42nd
Sr.• N ~ w Y or k Ci t y, New York .

MON~EY! I

COTTON

I've been here two yea rs
yea rs and I' m ju st learnin g
wheJie they hid e the money .
- A11 en Claxton . as sistant
budget dir ector of New
YuTk City, Oil /.he mus t. er·
i es uf b r1 I fl IU.: i H f! O~t•

Mc Govc r n

tii&lt;IRWIH I'$ A RHESUS

FOU~D HIM WANDfRING lltE FOREST

Mfg. Close Out
60 Inch

·

" lwrlf)el.

r-------IIIISfiiSAI _______i

I
I
I
I
1I

SN:ond ll aiHI hi gh play

'l'(HJ A \ " S QUEST!OX

VA LUES TO 49• YARD

Zt. Gratuity
21. Ethiopian
lake
ZZ. Vlva(orally)
U . Yeamed
Is. Mature ·
116. Cowud or
Harrison
27. Vocal
renditions
28.Sonof
Bela
29. Make

(0 1972 Kine Featureil Syndleate, Inc .. )

DOWN
1. Bird's
crop
2. Rodgers
and Hart
.song ·
3. Sidestep a
matter
(3 wds.)
t . Ferrer
5. Notes on
the Hebrew 0 .1':
1i.Edemal ZS. 11Arrive;
6. Shaw Is
covering
derci - "
one
1t. Weight of 27. Stringent
7. Singing
Eastern
syUable
29. Recipient
8. Avoiding
Alta
30.
Yak
ZZ. Infamous
ayes or
country
U. Believer
no (4
34.
-over
J.na
wds.)
(ex·
universal
9. Bill of
amine)
soul
lading
36. Herr's
24. Circles
10.Become
lament
about the
preciP37. Pasture
sun
Itous

BE11Y OHUNG£R

o •

'

UMcramble these four Jumbleo,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary wordo.

I

JJ"!)'J)IJO

• =~'Js:=

..

I I

r

I I

aJ

ENGAI,C

UJ&gt;UEN

Jo•bl"'' SHIIP

insane

31:Jan., Feb.,

Y""rrdaf'•

Mar., etc.
3Z.Eqs
Q.Drop in
price
S5.Non
compos
mentis
37. Timber
wolf
31. Flyin&amp;39. Water
pitcher
U.Giggle
(hyph.
wd.l
U.Prlce

II

ODIUM

NOODLI

a••)

PllACH

,
\ .b.wert It'• not di/Jktdt/or a polllir.uut. to
101 ele&lt;te~ 11tU ""1/.,.UNOPPOSID

I ACTIW.I.I{
fJWJ HER,
LINUS...

paid

~ ~ ~ g~ =~

$18.00

POMEROY

t::

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:

Values
to

Marguerite's Shoe Shop
.102 E. MAIN

''&gt;'"I""" ,,.....,. •1

(A.we'n •••

best.

'6'5 to '14'5

~&amp;WJMJ1)];~=~!:!- r=

POMEROY, OHIO
Open Fri. and Sal 9:30 to 9:00

11
One 1-tt~r simply stindo for' another. In this sample A Is
used for the tliree L's X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apo~trophes, the lenaih and formation of !he words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dtl!erent.
CltYPTOQ\JOTES

HUHCENMBKV

WMFDXG

JH

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1I •51000 Rl611T IN~
.Of HElL 1 FINAU.I{ THE
UTTU RED-AAIW 6IRI. 'THAT
CHUCK 15 AUIIIfr'§l'AU(IH6
ANO '«lt)illll1od WIIAT 1 DiD?

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RW WBSOXH RW OFWWBJXH, JDN
KFN WBSOXHC .- RX .II!C,N HBKWNHBK ' - - - - ' . _ - - : - - - '

-

..

'

,,

�,I

• •

8- The DIUy Sentinel, MkldlePort·Porneroy, 0., ; une 21, 1972

-'~ Combined Vote

·

Swnmer Begin• Tonight

.

·

.. · ,

Sweeps New York StoJmsHitQ/:r,io Tues~ :
.

Shows 56.9 Pet.·
Favor PrQject

ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI)-Sen. and 18 unconunitted delegates Miami Beach/'
. George S. McGovern Tuesday alsQ won. It takes 1,509 for , With only Arhnsas' and ·
stormed within easy range of nomination.
Delaware left to select their
winning the Democratic presWhile McGovern ran \'ir- delegates to the convertion,
ldentlal nomination on the f~' 1 u a ll·y
u no p pose d , McGovern plans .to embark on
ballot after sweeping the New congressional Democrats an Intensive campaign to sway
York preoidenlial primary killed each other off in -ooe at a time-wcommi~
"beyond our: wildest e•· . fratlcidal · electiQilll resulting delegates and some of those
With Jackson CountY providing a 960 vote pectatlons."
redistricting ,by a who are hackinJI Muskie. Inplurality , the two-mill ~oint Gallia·Jackso!l McGovern's victory in New from
Republican legislature.
eluded Is a three-day , swing
Vocational School was approved during Tuesday's , York, the last and voter..-icbest ' Rep. Bella Abzllg, the flaril. ·through 'a hostile South beginspecial election.
•
of the 23 presidential boy,nt feminist, was ousted by ning Monday.
Final tabulation showed the issue was approved primaries, c'!JIP"d an ~zing veteran liberal Rep. WUI~m F.
surge whiCh carried him from Ryan on the weSt side of
bY 56.9 pet., 3,597 to 2,715 . . ' ·
Jackson Countians approved the levy by a large fringe candidate In March to Manhattan; Rep. Jonathan Slawter
Selected
.
margin. In all 2,284 voted for the levy while 1,324 the od~n favorile for the Bingham de(eated his old
nomination less than three friend and felloW ref01111er,
' opposed it.·
weeks before the Democratic Rep. JIUlles Scheuer, In the For Membership
Gallia County d~teated the North Gallia residents ap- National Convention opens.
Bronx; and veteran Reti. John
levy bf •78 votes. Final proved It by 34 votes, ' 17(),l38
McGovern ,said he was Rooney' turned back fonner
l&lt;lbulation shows1,313 Gallians and ·southwestern District "cotfvlnced" on the basis of the Rep. Allard Lowenstein, who
:m vote New York reiums that he started his 19611 drive to dump
vof.e&lt;\ in favor of the·lssue while patrons gave it
plurality,
149-114.
·
1,391 ·opposed it. The exaet
would win the nomination.
President Johnson.
opposite occurred in last It was defeated by 46 votes in
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey,
Rep. Emanuel Celler,
the Hannan Trace District and desperately seeking to stop elected to the House In 1922
. month's Primary Elec\ion.
Gallia County on May 2 lost , 2-1 at Kyger Creek. The McGovern and keep un- when Warren G. Harding was
approved the vocational school final vote there was 95 for and committed delegates from president and now its dean,lost
by 168 vo.tes while tile issue 233 against.
lreaklng loose and jumping on . to Elizabeth Holtzman by less
went down In Jackson County Tuesday's approval provides McGovern's bandwagon, than 600 votes.
the local stwe for the con- declined to make a statement
by 500 votes.
Nixon Assured of Wlulng
Three Gallia school districts struction arid' oparation of a Tuesday night. J:le Scheduled a
Already assured of winning
approved the levy by small vocational school for 750 high news conference In Atlanta renomination, President Nixon
margins. Galilpolls City Schpol school students. It will produce today;
picked up an additional 88
District patrons approved the $196,000 annually for th~
Picks Up ZlB Votes
delegate votes in New York as
measure by 40 votes, 831·791. school for a 10 year period
McGovern entered the he finished his triumphal
based upon the combined tax jl!'imary with \o(l6Ui delegate march through the primaries.
duplicate of Gallia and Jackson voteS and on the basis of nearly
Flying in from New Orleans
Counties. The state will complete returns picked up at to share the celebration with ·
provide $1,961,060.00 while least 218 more-more even his New ·York sup_po,rters,
$784,240 will be allocated than his goal of 200. He was jammed into a smalll9th:-floor
Federal-Appalachia Funds.
expected to pick up more than hotel ballroom, said it was
Mrs ; Emily Walden, 85, The two-mills wlll also add to 20 more Saturday when · the "probably not necessal-y for
Little Hocking, a resident of lhe 20 mills needed by State parllj selects 30 at-large me to' tell you that this brings
Coolville for many years, died Gallipolis City, North Gallla, delegate~. f
us one giant step closer to the
Tuesday morning at Camden- Hannan Trace and South·
Rep. Shtrley Chisholm won threshhold of ·a first ballot
Clark Memorial Hospital in western to qualify for tbe state four delegate votes to go with nomination."
Parkersburg following an foundation program.
her 24 picked up in other states
Flanked by his wife Eleanor,
• Baskets
extended Illness.
and
one
of
his daughters,
·'
• Sprays
Mrs:- Walden was the
Terry, McGovern said that on
•Vases
daughter of the late William
the basis of the results coming
and Rose Gunder Creesy and
in from all over New York state
besides her parents was
he was "convinced now that we
will win the nomination In Serving : Gallipolis,
) receded In death by her 'T'
Pomeroy, Middleport &amp;
husband, HarryM. Walden , in ~
C 00 S
Mason
County, W. Va.
1957, a daughter, and two
sisters.
·
She was a member of the
Michael Joseph Hargraves championship team.
During his four years at Ohio
Coolville United Methodist received his Bachelor's
Church, Marietta Chapter 59, Degree, summa cum laude, at University he was a General
Order of Eastern Star, and the the Ohio University Com- Motors Scholar. He was on the
daughters ,of the American mencement on June 10. His Dean's List all of the twelve
Revolution,
degree is in education and his quarters of his college career.
As A
Surviving are a daughter, teaching fields will be physics He is a member of the National
Mrs . Connie Mars, Little and mathematic~. He Is the son Council of Teachers of•
TIGER ~
Hocking, a brother; Clyde K. of Mr. and Mrs. George Mathematics. His honor
societies
are
Phi
Eta
Sigma
Creesy, Sarasota, Fla.; two Hargraves Jr. of 350 North 4th
grandchildren, Mrs. Jo Ann Avenue, Middleport. He was (freshman men ) and Pi Mu
PICKUP SOME GOOD
Brooks, Little Hocking, and married on April 8 to the for- Epsilon (mathematics).
He has ~tccepted emWilllam Mars, Akron, and • mer Rebecca Stivers of
FOOD AT
ployment
as a teacher of
eight great-grandchildren,
Pomeroy.
' ...
Funeral services wiD be held
He &amp;raduated from Pomeroy physics and mathematics in
at 2 p, m. Tuesday at the White illgh School with the Class of the Lorain City Schools. He will
Funeral Home in Coolville with , 1968. He was class president be teaching at Admiral King
•
the Rev. Roy W. Rose of· and valedictorian of his class , High School which has an
Phone
992-2556
•
enrollment
of
2100.
He
and
Mrs.
flciating. Friends may call at He received honorable mention
At The End Of Pomero¥ Bridge
the funeral home at anytime. All.SEOAL in 1967 In football. Hargraves will be residing in
Burial wlll be at Coolvllle.
He was a member of the 1967' Lorain.
'

.

'

,

'

a

CLOCK RADIO

co ~••n,.nu

HECK'S REG. $4.96

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t in,lanf;on circuitry e sliM-. line de iiljln •
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,,

""."'P"" " ~""

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rleonr'r"'""' rob'""' moke• ;,,.,, "' ho"" ;., ~ny

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Death &lt;laims

Michael J. Hargraves To
•, S h l
each l n Lorazn

G.E.

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rtHu ed, iiDioleti hom o ll ool.,...,l
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of 6
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can

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'5'' ·R~~49
Pt Pleasant Store On~

r

�,I

• •

8- The DIUy Sentinel, MkldlePort·Porneroy, 0., ; une 21, 1972

-'~ Combined Vote

·

Swnmer Begin• Tonight

.

·

.. · ,

Sweeps New York StoJmsHitQ/:r,io Tues~ :
.

Shows 56.9 Pet.·
Favor PrQject

ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI)-Sen. and 18 unconunitted delegates Miami Beach/'
. George S. McGovern Tuesday alsQ won. It takes 1,509 for , With only Arhnsas' and ·
stormed within easy range of nomination.
Delaware left to select their
winning the Democratic presWhile McGovern ran \'ir- delegates to the convertion,
ldentlal nomination on the f~' 1 u a ll·y
u no p pose d , McGovern plans .to embark on
ballot after sweeping the New congressional Democrats an Intensive campaign to sway
York preoidenlial primary killed each other off in -ooe at a time-wcommi~
"beyond our: wildest e•· . fratlcidal · electiQilll resulting delegates and some of those
With Jackson CountY providing a 960 vote pectatlons."
redistricting ,by a who are hackinJI Muskie. Inplurality , the two-mill ~oint Gallia·Jackso!l McGovern's victory in New from
Republican legislature.
eluded Is a three-day , swing
Vocational School was approved during Tuesday's , York, the last and voter..-icbest ' Rep. Bella Abzllg, the flaril. ·through 'a hostile South beginspecial election.
•
of the 23 presidential boy,nt feminist, was ousted by ning Monday.
Final tabulation showed the issue was approved primaries, c'!JIP"d an ~zing veteran liberal Rep. WUI~m F.
surge whiCh carried him from Ryan on the weSt side of
bY 56.9 pet., 3,597 to 2,715 . . ' ·
Jackson Countians approved the levy by a large fringe candidate In March to Manhattan; Rep. Jonathan Slawter
Selected
.
margin. In all 2,284 voted for the levy while 1,324 the od~n favorile for the Bingham de(eated his old
nomination less than three friend and felloW ref01111er,
' opposed it.·
weeks before the Democratic Rep. JIUlles Scheuer, In the For Membership
Gallia County d~teated the North Gallia residents ap- National Convention opens.
Bronx; and veteran Reti. John
levy bf •78 votes. Final proved It by 34 votes, ' 17(),l38
McGovern ,said he was Rooney' turned back fonner
l&lt;lbulation shows1,313 Gallians and ·southwestern District "cotfvlnced" on the basis of the Rep. Allard Lowenstein, who
:m vote New York reiums that he started his 19611 drive to dump
vof.e&lt;\ in favor of the·lssue while patrons gave it
plurality,
149-114.
·
1,391 ·opposed it. The exaet
would win the nomination.
President Johnson.
opposite occurred in last It was defeated by 46 votes in
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey,
Rep. Emanuel Celler,
the Hannan Trace District and desperately seeking to stop elected to the House In 1922
. month's Primary Elec\ion.
Gallia County on May 2 lost , 2-1 at Kyger Creek. The McGovern and keep un- when Warren G. Harding was
approved the vocational school final vote there was 95 for and committed delegates from president and now its dean,lost
by 168 vo.tes while tile issue 233 against.
lreaklng loose and jumping on . to Elizabeth Holtzman by less
went down In Jackson County Tuesday's approval provides McGovern's bandwagon, than 600 votes.
the local stwe for the con- declined to make a statement
by 500 votes.
Nixon Assured of Wlulng
Three Gallia school districts struction arid' oparation of a Tuesday night. J:le Scheduled a
Already assured of winning
approved the levy by small vocational school for 750 high news conference In Atlanta renomination, President Nixon
margins. Galilpolls City Schpol school students. It will produce today;
picked up an additional 88
District patrons approved the $196,000 annually for th~
Picks Up ZlB Votes
delegate votes in New York as
measure by 40 votes, 831·791. school for a 10 year period
McGovern entered the he finished his triumphal
based upon the combined tax jl!'imary with \o(l6Ui delegate march through the primaries.
duplicate of Gallia and Jackson voteS and on the basis of nearly
Flying in from New Orleans
Counties. The state will complete returns picked up at to share the celebration with ·
provide $1,961,060.00 while least 218 more-more even his New ·York sup_po,rters,
$784,240 will be allocated than his goal of 200. He was jammed into a smalll9th:-floor
Federal-Appalachia Funds.
expected to pick up more than hotel ballroom, said it was
Mrs ; Emily Walden, 85, The two-mills wlll also add to 20 more Saturday when · the "probably not necessal-y for
Little Hocking, a resident of lhe 20 mills needed by State parllj selects 30 at-large me to' tell you that this brings
Coolville for many years, died Gallipolis City, North Gallla, delegate~. f
us one giant step closer to the
Tuesday morning at Camden- Hannan Trace and South·
Rep. Shtrley Chisholm won threshhold of ·a first ballot
Clark Memorial Hospital in western to qualify for tbe state four delegate votes to go with nomination."
Parkersburg following an foundation program.
her 24 picked up in other states
Flanked by his wife Eleanor,
• Baskets
extended Illness.
and
one
of
his daughters,
·'
• Sprays
Mrs:- Walden was the
Terry, McGovern said that on
•Vases
daughter of the late William
the basis of the results coming
and Rose Gunder Creesy and
in from all over New York state
besides her parents was
he was "convinced now that we
will win the nomination In Serving : Gallipolis,
) receded In death by her 'T'
Pomeroy, Middleport &amp;
husband, HarryM. Walden , in ~
C 00 S
Mason
County, W. Va.
1957, a daughter, and two
sisters.
·
She was a member of the
Michael Joseph Hargraves championship team.
During his four years at Ohio
Coolville United Methodist received his Bachelor's
Church, Marietta Chapter 59, Degree, summa cum laude, at University he was a General
Order of Eastern Star, and the the Ohio University Com- Motors Scholar. He was on the
daughters ,of the American mencement on June 10. His Dean's List all of the twelve
Revolution,
degree is in education and his quarters of his college career.
As A
Surviving are a daughter, teaching fields will be physics He is a member of the National
Mrs . Connie Mars, Little and mathematic~. He Is the son Council of Teachers of•
TIGER ~
Hocking, a brother; Clyde K. of Mr. and Mrs. George Mathematics. His honor
societies
are
Phi
Eta
Sigma
Creesy, Sarasota, Fla.; two Hargraves Jr. of 350 North 4th
grandchildren, Mrs. Jo Ann Avenue, Middleport. He was (freshman men ) and Pi Mu
PICKUP SOME GOOD
Brooks, Little Hocking, and married on April 8 to the for- Epsilon (mathematics).
He has ~tccepted emWilllam Mars, Akron, and • mer Rebecca Stivers of
FOOD AT
ployment
as a teacher of
eight great-grandchildren,
Pomeroy.
' ...
Funeral services wiD be held
He &amp;raduated from Pomeroy physics and mathematics in
at 2 p, m. Tuesday at the White illgh School with the Class of the Lorain City Schools. He will
Funeral Home in Coolville with , 1968. He was class president be teaching at Admiral King
•
the Rev. Roy W. Rose of· and valedictorian of his class , High School which has an
Phone
992-2556
•
enrollment
of
2100.
He
and
Mrs.
flciating. Friends may call at He received honorable mention
At The End Of Pomero¥ Bridge
the funeral home at anytime. All.SEOAL in 1967 In football. Hargraves will be residing in
Burial wlll be at Coolvllle.
He was a member of the 1967' Lorain.
'

.

'

,

'

a

CLOCK RADIO

co ~••n,.nu

HECK'S REG. $4.96

WALKIE TALKIES

Sympathy
Flowers

I

: •.•

.J.

•'

Freezer

B lo pe p l u~ a bonui of AM · FM ro·
dlo. Plo y it o r~ ordinoy fla shlig ht bonerie5
ar plug II into ony convenienl 110 Volt AC
aut let . Au lomatic lope p rogram thonging
and lig hted program ind ico lor , AC power
cor d i1 co r~l o.i n ed in carwenient ~ f orage
~mp&lt;Him'' "' ol bock of unil .

3 WHOLE RYING CH'""I:"~
5 lb. CROUND CHUCK
"-'' ''tz SEMI-BONELESS HAM 6·7 lb.
Avg·. - · 5 lb. ROUND

If You're

-Hu nsrv
1

5 lb.
5 lb.
5 lb.
5 lb.
5 lb.

(73) 10
1

$

lb. G

TABLE
RADIO
In,_,

k;l~hen , ,.,, wo•k roo"'·· .onywht&lt;t .. you &lt;Un
11M fMf AM rodio . rb,, quol,t1 pc•lo,.,.., ho• a '
inc ~ lronl ·l\!ld dvfiCi mic "'M D\ tt, 10lici·I!O!t dtWgn . and
b..;h ·in AFC, lot droll lflt FM U1'-n;ng. Goodlookln;
!OG, ;,. •!tWI&lt;"IIJ llJI.d &lt;u mplld &lt;abO,.! hot o wolnul
groin IOnlth 0~ to•f ·lo •deon poi''' J•t ,..

,~ ,...in

51]88

JEWElRY

HECK'S REG.
$44 .96

JEWElRY
DEPT.
HECK'S REG.
$89.88

3

GROUND BEEF
CHUCK ROAST
SLICED BACON
PORK CHOPS

G.E. ,
FM-AM

$]788

~~

average
·
4 lb. ALL MEAT WIENERS
3 lb. ASSORTED LUNCH MEAT
5 lb. GROUND BEEF

The

SOUNDESIGN

AM DIGITAL
CLOCK RADIO

t in,lanf;on circuitry e sliM-. line de iiljln •
luni ng dial e bullt·ln onle'!,na • ,
clock with mv5ic and ~ u l'zer .Oiprm . 1
OY"''mic tplltQic tr
"! \ ~ "'"" ..' f"'!

BEEF

Phone Us ·, ~ ::: ·~~~~~ ~~:11
Your Ordtr!&gt;·: ::: ~~~K ~:~~~N

...

•

.

HECK'S R,EG. $19.88

• So lid Stote Perlo rman ce e 4·Speed
AiJt oma tic Reco rd Ch am;~er e Hold 5
Up To SiK Reco rd' e Posi t ive Site
Selection- 12 ", 10", 7" Di~cs aRe·
peot Plo y O ption • 45 RPM Ada pter
Incl uded e DiJo l Sy nthetic Scpph ire
Stylu s • Ste reopho nic Ceramic Car·
fr idg e • l wo Dyn a mic 6 " Ovo l
Spea kers • , Separa te Ba la nce , Vol·
ume a nd Tone Co ntrol\ • Hig h·lmpo cl ·
Polystyren e Ca ,e

WITIII-11 PI! Tilt( IAIIO

1/z SEMI-B'ONELESS..HAM 6-7 lb.

For

Dudley's Florist

Adolph's Dairy Valley

G.E•
PORTABLE . AUTOMATIC
8-TRACK TAPE
STEREO PHONOGRAPH
PLAYER V-935
,,,

Only two ccntroh ; on·o lf to receive, ond
pu1h ~utton to tron smit . One hond doe t it.
S.n1itive s ~per regenerat ive· rec eitttrl, 3
trontiltors, 'olid ttote ci rc&lt;~ i t ry, lor crisp
reception, o n t he beo m tronsmiulon up to
1
Y. mile .
•

a.,,.,

"'' $1688

. ' LEAR JET

JEWElRY

Mrs. Walden

,,

""."'P"" " ~""

f MJA,M cloo:ll •a lii~ l&gt;fltn ... ., •• .,.p
ol o ~••r •"'"'~.,.. P" Ct , fosil~ ' '" a t btd ·
lid1 lo r hoppy 9""'d ""''"'" II'·
colo&lt;. t o&gt;, ·!o
rleonr'r"'""' rob'""' moke• ;,,.,, "' ho"" ;., ~ny

n,;,

Death &lt;laims

Michael J. Hargraves To
•, S h l
each l n Lorazn

G.E.

C4SOO

IEALTONEAM .;.

CUBE
RADIO
e

EADSET

lgw ' ""· r ttiJiv" trn. " but ·~ " ' '"
I~• ho u•t " l uiOn g lo '''"" flo\
b....,drful . ri&lt;Or d or leapt. l ou •il

rtHu ed, iiDioleti hom o ll ool.,...,l
IOU« I I ol d "''"'''""· •uuoundod
lly cnlr the "'"9"'i«enl mu&gt; i&lt; co l
yalll" la ~!ilr lf&lt;Otd l 01 \!ereo I N! .
No mglftt wht~• yo~"'· ~ou '•t on
.... poo rhP&lt;I •pol to hooo utt ll1tnll1
Mp&lt;untod •lereo. l•th•• t•QIU - · ·
' ' " ' ' ond oo h loom plo&gt; lo&lt; oo r·
IIHtf h inUI0\1 yOu&lt; IOitonong CO m·
fort. lers you en,oy lon11 hou" a t '"
~nif,g wolhqul ""'""""·

~ ·b..nd Mi\ ·FM •o~c t &amp; S W. u .. , ' ' (" &lt;•II ho•·
,, ,,., or AC ""''"' 'u•h bu •«~n bond ...!tr ior

We Accept Federal FOOd Stamp~/ · ·

-nitt dlal lu nlnt
e wldt ro~ dyno011 ic opeo~tr

e b\lioll .ln lt rti.. bo• o nlt""Q

''""' •f&gt;O'II ••"· 1hdt &lt;ule tun ing, ,.,;,, I rod on!en ·
no "' du&lt;l~l bollt"" · Eolo•...,l antonno t ord . 1o1
pho"'
•

e AC OfN&lt;olion

G.l. FM-AM

PORTABLE RADIO

6 tron•i,lor. Carrying
handle .

BIG 3

SLAB BACON

&amp;-TRACK MULTIPLEX

R-476

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JUNE 24th
WE ACCEPT

BUCKEYE

. FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

POTATO CHIPS
9'lP~49e

~~·

J9C

ORANGE JUICE
· OR

Grapefruit Juice
Pkg.
of 6
,_

8oz.

~

6oz.

can

10~

WIENERS

2

CELERY

2 ~~ 79c _

cans

.,

MAXWEll HOUSE
'

CATSUP

9
!'1~ -

·CO.AftFFE.E

3 lb.

can

2

btls.

'

c

G. E.

SHOW AID IELL

. TAPE sloo
150FT. 3" . . . . 4F~R
·

Sot

cans

,79c

lot

put on rec:ord, turn switch and presto! •
It 's a 2·speed phono too . Plays even
12" LP's • Tough polystyrene cobinet •
Solid - stat~ design . GE qoality through ·
nut.

60 MIIUTE CASSEm

UAIJIT

RECORDING TAPE

811ACI

AUTOMOBILE STEREO

TAPE PLAYER
Iring

0

,', t,..,Jo;ng ,..,. u"'"''"'

··-tit
-

-:e'·

tt)'lifog .

JEWElRY DEPT.

G.l. AUTOMATIC · .

CASSETT~

.

HEAD CLEANER

99(

Sol·

~ d·$1oit d.sign • &amp;otfltfy saver circuit
e 3'" dynam ic speaker e Sho ulder
strap induded • Swit chable AFC ol"l
FM Two antennas, 28" whip lor FM ,
ferrite rod lor AM e Plcy1 up to 130
Mus on • " AA '1 per~litebatt.rin

JEWElRY
DEPT.

$2488

PMONOGRAPH

,

HECK'
REG.
$29.96
'

11 ,.~.,.

HECK'S REG. $1.49

JEWElRY DEPT.

HICK'S RIG. $49.88

$27.96

e luilt ·in cord , lwo· woy po,.,er •

&gt;

. toiOt ollllloo ~ nttl 9111ro1J, oM t Jtllll&lt; •t

S]t)88

. ':

s1.00

tf ~~Wt.icol

t n&lt;hon- 1 Into yD-111 COl ,.il h thil &lt;.,..,po&lt;t,
III W, low ...:G\1 l ·lfoc ~ '"'' •o topl cor tridgt
plartr . ... lltofl d ' IOit &lt;ltc u lt &lt;y, GYI.OII\OIIC
lrCKk &lt;ko "9t. ~ghlt d proo roll'l ind l«ttor,

$23~!K'SREG.
JEWEliYDEPT.

HWEliY DEPT.

JIW8Ir•r.

'VIENNA.SAUSAGE ,

RECORD PLAYER
e Simple 10 operate. Slide in show-film,

SUNSET RECORDING

HICK'SRIO. $1 , 1 ~ .

ARMOUR
14 oz.
.

PORK-LIVER
.
... .

BQUNTY TOWELS

No. 21h
•
Golden Isle

$37.96

SUPERIORS BRAND

~bch. 19~

'

. Golden Isle

HECK'S REG.

lb.

Buy
Frosty Acres
Frozen Concenbate

PEACHES
'

S]288

1

Golden Isle

Golden Isle

SHORTENING

11
'22
Reg. 29.96
•Pt. Pleasant

I

Frozen Food

Lemonade
Big 3 Goltkn Isle SpeciJJls

• O;/Hhanol hor~ ,,_, ... , . • Ao\u1k pa.. or.,f.
wo&lt;h. • 1. ' · ' · po .. ., Ja w'o tu •11'"0 au! liP•
•d olid• owlt d ia l • A w ! ~mol icfnta ~ ... al t honntl
Miotla• e To,., ¥01¥.,. onof lw&gt;lonu co ntr ol, e
T.. pt ooftpul ro&lt; O,e fM S•tte-o ond t han"'l "'do&lt;o·
"" ~ght.

Heck's

HtCK'S
REG.
$12.88

RMa &lt;d whert ¥1f \1011 Grt -~ ICIIIr OO "' , lt ehlfl ha ll, BuWntll
... ~ n g- tM ~ &lt;II i-. tl&gt;t top.. il nct wlliln you •tl urn to your
"""'' o• ollit• . Yuu'll t.. p•ovd to Ia~• lhi1 Co iMfft To"
hcordtr O"'f"'h.oo t . lh , l,.o•dnt 11jolifl9 .. ;,h ol: d.out '""'
hondle ond 1lid ing ..,.,.., con !&lt;olo I• ""' onl1 oth &lt;&gt;&lt;tl..., bu t
ea1y 10 (Ony ond ear y 10 opcralt .

TAPE PLAYER

. G.E. RADIOPHONOGRAPH

•

•

sgu

AM-FM

COmpatible monaural crystal car·
I ridge with dual synthetic sap·
phirt styli won't danJage stereo
rtcords.lmpQct Polystyrene case .
Four·spoed changer .. ,' 45 'RPM
' spindle included . Powerful 6"
oval dynamic speaker.

s2·4aa

~ECK'SREG. $29.88

. H-4141
- - --

Spartus
Elec.
Decoiator

WALL CLOCK

'5'' ·R~~49
Pt Pleasant Store On~

r

�...

.. .

~

.

.

......

~

. .....

.

"'

...

..,

...

~• • .-

'

.,

..

r

" ' o ,• ,. ,

'' •

o

•

o

~

.:"'-

.... .

"

• &gt; .

•

.....-

10 -The Daily Sentlnel,Middleport·P!Ifll'!roy, 0., June 21, l!m

........,

.......,.

10 TO 9

· 10 TO 9

PRICES II EFFECT,THROUGH SUIDAY,·JUIE 25, WHILE
QUAiilnES,LAST •
.
.

REMINGTON

Cool and c om for ta~ le double kn its in navy, blue,
green , and white . Sizes: 10 to 18.

SLIDE VIEWER

Close , con1i derate
1havino . Adju!.lable •
guard combs. Eow to
hand lt . Modern 1tyl ·
ing ,

4 ~ACK

Automatically controlled. Easy to .
operate.

$666

. $699,

$'147

· REG.

AX 15it

$8.76

JEWElRY
· DEPT.

C:L· 50

WINDOW (
SHADES
l7 1/•"ll6'

KER.OSENE
LAMPS

globe.

Short slee.,.e sty les with regt~ lor colInn. in stunning prints and solid s.
~izes : 14 Y2 to 17.

I he AX· \5 , ~mort, 'lig ht , compor.l, eow to cor·

ry . To ke1 beaut iful co lor \ nop~h ots, color
stidei, 'a nd block and white SrHlp ~ ho tt. No ~I ·
ting ....!.._drop in film , aim und shoal. Ge ts 'harp
clear pi(I\Jres lrom four feet on.

Magnificent styled utility stool il'\ ebony fin i\h. Accented in th e new ll igh color wet
look washable 'linyl . . . Seat measures 15"
raundx17" high .
'

DRESS SHIRTS

. SMOKER OR
MAGAZINE RACK

Fan.tostic Fruit -of-the -lo am
dren shirts that are also great
sports wear. Sizes : 14 V2 to 16

• CHOICE

$297

ClOTHING DEPT.

~l~o~~TS $177

Denims ,

ton pnnts . Z1p Side .

HECI('S
REG.
$3.99

Y:z ·

· PANTS

LADIES
DENIM JAMAICA

DEPT.

Modern double knit su r·
fer pants in Navy, Blue,
Green, and White . Sizes, 10to 18.

.

Sizes: 8 to 18.

HECK 1S

ClOTHING DEPT.

REG.
$2.88

HECK'S

· REG.
$3.48

HECK'S REG .
$4.48

ClOTH/IIG
DEPT.

Cl 0 THING'DEI'T.

·

$699

"1.44

HECK'S REG.

HOUSIWARE
' DEPT.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

•s.aa

Ea sy co re permanen t press material.
Flore leg sty ling . Ass-orted co lors .

HECK'S
REG.
10.88

SPORT SHIRTS

Sizes.: 6to 16.

$

HWEI.RY DEPl

IRONING
BOARD

• Fre l h, new home beo uty with
to&gt;y ·ca " mo nntu • Fully lined
lu• ury .~hc ifing colors,
•"""" lor any decor. • 2

• D••ortlklr &lt;olo!l ond

onro cto•e p11 n11 to

CHOICE

·

REFRESHMENT SET

plr»"&lt; ·

2''

Choose from Assort·
ed colors.

HECK'S REG.
$4.99
:1]

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

SPORT SHIRTS
,('lEVER NEEDS IRON ·
lNG . Short sleeve . Avail·
able in solids or stripes.
Sizes: 6 to 16.

REG.
, J{ r

$2.19

HOUSEWAREDEPT.

·LUSTRO WARE

LUSTROWARE
1 GAL.

SERVING PITCHER

HECK·'S

HECK'S 'REG •
$3.18

HOUSEWAIE
DEPl

Pt Pleasant Store On~

2 1/3 QUART

$222

DECANTER

WASTE - --:::::'i
BASKET

HECK'S REG.
$1.66

c

•

· JEANS
assorT·

lp

97

.,,' '·. \· II•
I I

I I. I'
i i ( I

HECK'S REG.
$4 .99

ClOTHING
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
$5.88

ed col ors. Sizes: 29 Ia 38.

s

LUSTROWARE

44 QT.

DELUXE DUST PAN

LADIES
KNIT
TOPS

MEN'S
DENIM PATCH POCKET

BOY'S PERMANENT PRESS

.. !

.. ..

'3.99
ClOTHING DEPT.

ClOTHING DEPT. .

•
7-PIECE

111~11

HECK' S
REG.
$1.99

HECK'S R.EG .
TO $3.99

DINNERWARE SET

t.;

l. g ~l ~o~r ba l~•oo m •
Soli , p looble , mo"'"'~ '
p r Q~ I

ladies' polyester, double
knit pant s with straight
leg sty ling and pull -on
waist. Co lor s: Black .
Gold, Na vy and light
Blue. Sizes 10 to 12 .

28-PIECE
PLASTIC

ARVIN

CURTAINS

el,, ea ch 36" lli4" plus match;••o l
't'olonce 36"x 10"

.88

.

SHOWER OR WINDOW

HECK'S REG.
69• .

MEN'S
PERMANENT PRESS

BOY'S

HECK'S REG.
$10.88

HECK'S REG. $19.88

'

.,jJiii,

MOON
•. SEAt.

$399

36" LINED DRAPES

DRESS SHIRTS

MEN'S

.. KODAK .
INSTAMATIC

SURFER

PERMANENT PRESS

HECK'S REG.
$2.40

CAMERA KIT

A touch of Americana! Ind ividua lly gift .
boxed lamps in assorted Co lorS. Available
in ruby and green- each with a milk white

HECK'S REG.

LADIES

HECK'S

HECK'S
$9.88

.

JAMAICA SHORTS

AIRQUIPT

LADIES.SHAVER

c

LADIES

.. I

If

.'

l

i.

!

I'

. '

'

&gt;

I

LADIES

Sho rt sleeve models with

PANTY
HOSE

contrasting collar and
solid placket by Famous

Maker. Sizos, 34 to 40.

O ne lilt f ifl a ll. AIIJirst
quality, Co lors 1 Beige ,
C in namon , Taupe, a nd
BrOwn.

sac

ClOTHING
DEPl

ClOTHING DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
$4.66

ClOTHING
DEPT.

~~

ClOTHING
DEPT• .

. LUSTRO WARE
HECK'S REG.
$1.18

LAUNDRY BASKET
HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

/IOUSEWAIE DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.
$1.20

'

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

HECK'S

HOUSEWAIE DEPl

RUIIEIMAID

NAPKINS PAPER PLATES'

BATHTUB MAT

\

I!\ .

100COUNT

APPLIQUES

.to.:.\

~;·'

"
''1

I [~~~ ·

"T" SHIRTS

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

9"

PAPER

NOVELTY PRINT

HECK'S REG.
$2.40

HECK'S
REG.
56'

I1 !\ ~

White Tee Sh irts with
navy trim on sleeve and
neck -band. Complete
with your fa vorite ex ·
pressions. on each sh irl .
Adult size~ os S-M ·L

p~gs.
Heck's

Reg. 49' pkg.t

Pt Pleasant Store On~

CLEAR ·
SUIT BAG
Thi~

bog j, mode to pr otect you r tuill a nd ot her leOIOn&lt;l l
ckltking .

~~,, ~ ~. . '" ~~,1

~, ~!%
- .J· f•!/
w,',

·;, .
~~~

H;~::s
77'

•· •

:.~ .. ....-

I

HO~S:,~ARE

CHQose from a n assortme-nt of colors. and
s i ze s.

Sizes ~

Inclu des ;

60" round .

$222

AND
NOIJSIWARE DEPl

Available in Poppy, avocado, and harvest.

MEN'S
WALK SHORTS

HDUSEWARE
IEPT.

~li p grips on back side.

'
HECK'S REG.
$2.98 .
'

.,,

iltiUSEWARE

REVERSIBLE

RAG
RUG
24x45 . Multi -co·
$100
HECK'S REG.
$1.66

I, . •
(

. · .ClOTHI/1&amp; DEIT.

SJ66

REG.
$2.88

TO PSi

Double thickness.
Three in pack·
age.

a

HECK'S REG.
$2.38

HECK'SREG. $1.48

Cl OTHIIIGDEI'T.

ClOTHII« DIPl

PANTIES
Assorted colors :
Sizes 6 to. 12.

Choose from assort·
ed styles and colo rs.
Sizes: 4 to 14.

sac

' GIRLS
ACETATE

HECK'S REG,
$1.29

HECK'S lEG,

31'

ClOTN/11' DIPT.

CI.IIT/1/IIf

••r.

PLASTIC

J&amp;J

·lAND AID II AND

WICKER
25"0VAL

LAUNDRY BASKET
IINSIWAIIIIR.

GIRLS
COTTON KNIT

FAMILYSIZI

6

lfECK'S REG. $2.66

TRAINING
PANTIES

1oz.CiEST TOOTHPASTE

HOUSEWAREDEI'T.

$188

Availab le in assorted

styles and colors.

lored .

wa lk 1horts by
Dickey . Avai lable in 1olid1 and
prinh. Sin :: 29to 36.

ClOTHING
DIIT.

GIRLS
SHORT
SHORTS

'

l

'

RUIIERMAID

BATHTUB MAT
HECK'SREG.
$1.33

HECK'S

•

I

2 FOR
HECK'S REG.
$2.29EACH

'

Complete wi;h n6n

HOUSEWAIE DEPT.

$299

MUGS
41N BOX

ALSO: DRESS lAGS

HECK'S REG.
$1.44

52" x72 " and

' ~

INFANTS

I

•

Auorled ttyle5 and colon To
choo5tlrom.

KITCHEN SINK SET ·

I: .
•I

.

o.'.'!

S·PIECE

t]

8 oz.

PLASTIC STRIPS

RIGHT GUARD

50's

"NATURAL SCINT"

HECK'S REG.
. $2.88

86'

HICK'S RIG. $1 •.34 ·

IIOUSIWARI

,T.

tO-TICI9T.

48(
HIC:K'S RIG. 7 3'

oz.

tOSMmt
JUT.

JERGENS

AU-PURPOSI

FACIAL CREAM

66(

HICK' S REG.

99'

.

9

100Z.

TOll L~OII-UP SHAMPOO
COSMETIC DEPT.

• · anon~
. 8H.i1FOO.~

·

oz.

MENNEN

2.5 oz.

BABY MAGIC

VESPRE

58'

MIS'I 01 POWDER

HICK'SIIG.
$1.09

40Z.
PROTEIN 21
COIDITIOiliHY 01 RIE

68(

HICK'IIIG. $1.2 I .

COSIIITIC , . , ·

'

.I

.

�.....

"

,............. " " " ' " " ' · .

.... . - _ _ ,..... ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ,.~·· ··

,• • _

·-F&lt;-l&gt;' ~ - . .. ,1 ................~ ...

·•. ~r·~-.-,,,- "•

··~

· •.·.. ~· . ,·•

r

.. . ., . . .
. . ·. .......

v. • • · • · · · · ·

'

13-The Daily Sentinel, MiddleP.,rt-Porn..:oy, 0., June 21, 1972

OPaHI.I

-tAl.I
10TO 9

10 TO 9

· 6~PAK

DYMO 3/8"

·E-IUILT

PRIZE P~NN

.SPARK PLUGS

MOTOR OIL

SIZES TO FIYMOSY (liS.

H.D. AND REG.

.m.

$177

Jl
-·· --·

RUG

PACKAGE
OFI

.SHAMPOOER

HECK'S
' REG.
TO $2.38

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

CAR ·
INNER TUBES

HOSE
NOZZLE

18

LEE

JEWElRY
DEPT.

66~

Mounds ol cruihed ice .. . fcnt os you con !ay
"lu:-0 -Molic"l Lilt hopper- motor whir-r-s into
octi o n. No button! 1o push , no swi t&lt;h lo turn .·
Stoinlesi steel blodu. Pull·out ice drower. Nonma r lee!. UL.

$1 ·1
.

HECK'S
REG.
$15.96

'HECK'S OUTSIDE

HOUSEPAINT
WHITE
ONLY

CLOTHES LINE

PROP

II
i '

HECK'S REG.

PET BASKETS

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT. .

· HARDWARE
HECK'S

SNAP CARBURETOR

CLEANER

VINYL -WALl PAINT

An all purpose siphon pump lhat
transfers liquid anywhere in the
home, shop, garage, etc .

c

'- ' btt!tf bllr ' &lt;&gt;I Hu• I .
• &lt;i'&gt;o&lt;&gt;M hom ltft m&lt;~d­
''" ,,,.,,, pl•n two "h"''
'" "''' '"~ l y o~ pl•od lo.
~• ""II pO•nl ... d~•o ·
bit , OII&lt;OC! t•t ., yo11r

48&lt;·

GALLON

$222"

HECK'S REG •.
77'

HECK'S
REG.
77'

HECK'S
REG.

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT. .

DEPT.

20"

$2.9,?

• HARDWARE DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.

$8.99

HARDWARE DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

5502

WIN~OW

SCREEN FAN

• Fih 101h windows , 22 to 37 Inche s widl e On -011
Swit ch I Ha nds o mely 1tyled , motchti ro om decor I
Frome llnd Ponel Sandalwood Finish I Al umi num Fon
Blade and Bright t ine finbhtd fa n Guard I Fing&amp;rtip
Adjudment to Window Width I Ont1 year gu arant ee I
Underw riters Lobo r otorie~ listed .

HICK'S REG.

$12.88

s1166

RAIN
SUIT

~A,
~: ~?,I
.rr
vf/' . . ·v
'"

..
1

·

.1

':

;_ ,.
·,

\.

,_

0

~

'":
.
• •

I

~

1
L

SNELLED HOOKS

Heo" y ou ter two p•e&lt;e
ro•n wit comple te with
hoo ded por ~ o . !vii z•pper
(001 . , plv\ po11h.

s399

...

. I'1.. l

. ·~
~
·- ... . . r .

· GRASS
HOOK

' SPORTS
DEPT.

. %"X 50'
P~ASTIC

HECK 's.
REG.
53 '

$}77

HECK 'S REG . $4.77

SPORTS DEPT.

SPOilS DEPT.

STYRO

FOAM

OAMJU

202

l:iutfo'h': \ ~ • \,

BERKLEY

JET CAST LINE

1.44

1

SPO/I.TS DEPT.

INFLATABLE

201NCH
BEACH BALL

39&lt;

GASSER CARS
3 STYLES

Reg,
$2.77

HECK'S
REG.

54'

Pt Pleasant Store Only

lht ' "hoi ol "• '•" " '•••
Huk "• Qvolo1 p 1
poin t o .. ooloblt '~
'-'-' '"'" ol dtco roto•
pi~• whoon , to 1101 o n rot~t ' l

Two styles to c~oose from .

lio•t

PLASTIC SPEED BOATS
Each ho s realistic markings , ·
engine , ~indskield and steering whee l. Molded in two col ors .

$ 99 '

.. 1)0&lt;111 in the 111o1ning, p111 lp
in ti&gt;t t •t ni nt . Com~olt
'HE CW'S P~E"'IUM' wh~ onr
ot~ ..ou ""''"' o r o~r p•k t .
YOU .. 111 bt p ltll l &lt;lnllp '"' "

SCRAMBLER .

CYCLE ·HELMET
A thrilling toy fo r an y young~ler thot 1eem1 to odd
new elCcitemtnl to every ploy activity. Each brilliant·
hued htlmtl of metol ·l1oke Plost ic leolu rtl an qdjutt·
able , tro Mp are nt, molded viW&gt;r that 1wings up aver
the_top ol tt1e helmet 111hen J'lot in uH 1 chin strop1;
~-cJdjultoble htod bonds o nd d•coroli ve potche 1 •
They're real slick looking! Availab le in two colors.
Blut and Purple.
'

TONKA

TODDLERS PULL
TOYS
Choose from Sc:ar«per Pumpkin Camper,

Plump Tomato Pumper, Merry Melon
Dumper, Silly Celery Wrecker, or Porky
Pear Mixer .

'

CHOICE

ptiMd.

. GALLON

. $]66

.•.•,,.
HICK'SRIG.

.

$4.9-9

HECK'S
REG.
$5.48

SPORTS DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

Pt Pleasant
Store Only

HECK'S REG. TO $1.48

Heck's

PLASTIC HORSE

10 110 lhi1 woH &lt;OOt. ng ~O •tn
&lt;'IIIII 1011"' wolh
Otlt &lt;001 ,

$248

99~
Heck's Reg.
$1.38

CHOICE

ZEBCO

Stainless steel sp inner·
head , nitrate hardened
for resi stan ce to line
wear . Thumb control

DICK TRACY
CAP GUN SETS
OR DETECTIV.ESETS

WATER HOSE

SPORTS
DEPT.

SPINCAST REEL

STYRO

HECK' S
RIG.
$1.39

On~

• DelliKI! !hr ome plated blade&gt; e BOked enamel
h andl e~ I Many o ther uses rntlud •ng ... lin!! &amp; leader
cu rt,ng, fo, tr im min g flies. repo iring Pl ugs ond lvres,

$5.99

REBEL
LURES

$266

•f!~~~~~~o~l~• §,~~-~~"'

HECK'S REG.

SPORTS DEPT.

3 FOR

PACKOF6

,. .

'&gt; , J' ... · \
· . 1· r
•

Pe rfec tly round, thin wolled liquid cen ter. 'l'ord s of
noturol rubber threo d wi n ding~. stretched ten timi'S
it's original le ngth or ovn d the cente r. Cadwell boloto
cover . Polyurethane linh h that ne~ er chips or yel·
low,- st oys White for tile.

.

EAGLE CLAW

EVEREADY
LANTERN BATTERY

WITH SADDLE
PORTABLE

SPORTS DEPT.

.... '

WALL PAINT

WRENCH

SPORTS DEPT.

'Y

GOLF BALLS

DOUGLAS

HECK'S PRE.MIUM

4 WAY LUG

SPORTS DEPT.

•

HECK'S REG. $4.66

Pl Pleasant Store

SIPHON PUMP

HECK'S REG. $23 .99

.&gt;.,~~ ·s ._~

$]66

$1688

$17 .99

' \~-- ...:

An assortment Of colors. to choose from .

Filled with acryf il insu lqtion . Oute r co..,er is
heavy -duty shee ting and the lining is
Kasho . Q uilt.1h rou gh design .

HECK 'S REG .

'·

Heck's Reg. s1.77

i7'

,•• d.

AUTOMOTIVE
• •T.

.M

GALLON

ICI&lt;IIOf!&lt;llll il Q ~OIO~ ·

HECK'S
REG.
$1.99

SPORTS DEPT.

·COLEMAN
SLEEPING BAG

$10.99

$8.99

.

WILSON
K-28

SJ388

HECK'S
RIG.

$144

'

0

ssss

FAUCET.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

3" compres!.ed hard ma ple ba lls, epoxy
finish . ~led hardwood lathe -tu rned molle l5 witff 6" heeds . Threaded ho, nd l e~ . Red
ename led ro ck w ith sil'~er tubula r ~ !e e l up right s a nd ca rr ying handle . Outdoor spar
varni sh finish . ·

.

World's finest insulation . Split·proof liners,
r us t · proot bases . E ~tclusi&gt;te FAST -FLO

HECK'S REG.
74' EACH

AUTOMATIC

FLY REEL

HECK 'S REG .

FOR

$ 00

HARDWARE DEPT.

PINT

12

fl •

CROQUET SET

SOUTH BEND

'

CAR WASH

$6. 99

HECK 's'REG.
$1.99

AI/TOMOTI'IIIIIPT.

fgf ptcil

SOUTH BEND

!.!'·

JUG

HECK'S
REG.

·s122

HECK'S REG.
85' EACH

wt&gt;." •I\ mod ""dtd

HARDWARE DEPT.

2

-

SPORTS DEPT.

0

:;1

COLEMAN

ULLOM

•

6 PIECE'

&amp;WINDOW
SEALER

.

The termis kit for beg inne rs with bvil t·
in Chemold perlormon~e Rugged Rod
Lover ha rdwood tocquel. F-.11 pointed
hi-lu~ter throat Md heod . Soh leother
grip . P&amp;rmoply nylo n 11 rvng . Three
Rod lo~e r !:ngli~h t•nni ~ bo l l ~ i11 p r e~ ·
lYre con. Wot•rpiool Rod Lov•• vinyl
cover ,

RALLY

.,..eo r.

AUTOMOTIVE
· DIPT.

Set Includes o 12 Q t . Bucket .

AIITOIIOT/'11 DEPT.

b ~&lt;l! 10 ltt • f f01 r t Or110 ICI!It , l~l CDIRI MDIII t Sttill ~G\

uniqut foolu&lt;l l lo boo11 ij!io
[tpl&lt;u n o~ all &lt;honn.lo.

HECK'S REG. $17.66

goes on so eo s11y

AUTO CLEANUPSET

HECK'S REG.
85' EACH

:

JEWElRY
DEPT.

weor ing
floor paint. .. il

HECK'S REG.
$1.48

-E·POX·EU
....._

u ... quQIIed ptdQ"nor&lt;t in an I(O~OMJ on'-nno a. tiel l lht (clor
Mout • a ;Uort nlt ol.ow• ;:., colo• ond blft cl ftnd .. hilt. l wgg.odly

$1188

long

SJOO

'E-POX-E CLUE
___
.
2 FOR

T.V. ANTENNA

77 "'·.,, .
,,

$39.95

SPORTS DEPT.

CHEMOLD
TENNIS SET

•

88

88

HECK'S REG. $23.99
5255

RIVAL

lo r such a long

AUTOMOTIVE
DIPT.

Pt Pleasant Store On~

s

-

HECK'S REG.

12

CAR WAX

HECK'S
REG.
99 '

Hetk's · ~
-­
1
Reg. 10.88~
F-63 L~~;:;;;:;;;.;:::::::=::;~~

Pt Pleasant Store

oz.

TURTLE WAX
_., _. LIQUID

OIL FILTER
WRENCH

88
HECK'S •
REG.
$29.96

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

On~

Reg. 2.39
1

.

$

HECK'S
REG.
$3.48

pt Pleasant Store

Heck's

ICE CRUSHER

99~ · ·
Heck's
Reg. 51.44

•

'

•

SIZES TO FIT MOST CIIS.

s

-

X'-"

A fine 2-Wood and 5-lron set to add to
your collection.

A co nven ient answer lo the great number of low pro file
storage spaces found in modern cars, boats, trailers
~nd cabins. Mointaim Iorge food storage. capaci ty,
mcorporates delu l(e feotvres of extra Io rge cooler.

IRON
..

GOlF SETS

COLEMAN COOlER

STEAM

$100 $888

Complete with;' Prefoaming, trigger
dispensing, , 120 oz . container. one
~ pa ir of shampoo brushes , one pair
of p~ lishing brushes , one pai r of
scrubb in g bru she s, reve rs ible felt
pods, steel w.ool pods, 8 pa ckeb of
vanishing foam shampoo rug cleaning unit , package of rug protectors,
one year guarantee .

HECK'S REG •.
$1.48

PISTOL GRIP

. LABEL .
MAKER

SHETLAND

'·

OPEl DAllY
~0 TO 9

OIIEIDAIL
.• .
10 TO 9

.

HECK'S REG • .
$2.66 •.-

=WARE

HICK'S
RIG.

'

.

~

$1.12

HICK'S REG.

84'

. £ ':-,\\\'... '-'-'\ ]

TOYD"T.

$3.14

HICK'S RIG.
HECK'S RIG. $3.66

TOY,t.

TOY

"''·

.

�.

'

.

.:

.

.

~

.

- .

- ..

·'

.

.D- The Dally Se.".tinel, Middleport-P&lt;KUt"ruy, ll., Ju.np 21. 1972

.Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel

......,

OPIIDAI.Y
10 TO 9

.. 10 TO 9

.

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
. DEADLINES

, P.M . Day B
. efore Publicatlop.
Monday OeadliAe 9 a.m .
' CarKellatlon - Corrections

Nlllbeaccepted' untH9a .m.for.
.
Day of Publication

REGULATIONS

Notice
SHOOTI'NG

Match

June. 24 h, _at

acme

I e

the Syracuse Fire Oepf.

The
~ubllsher will not be responsible YARD Sale , Avon Bottles.
Antiques on Larkin Street,
for more than one incorr&amp;ct
Rulland, Friday and Salur ·
Insertion .
RATES
day.
Far Wanl Ad Service
6·21·3tc

5 cents per Word one insert ion
I
Minlmui'n·Charge 7Sc
REDUCE
e~cess fluids with
12 ce nts · J)er word three
FllfiDEX, $1.69 - LOSE
· con•ecutlve inser'tiori's.
WEIGHT safely with Oex.A.
18 cents per · word s1x con Diet, 98c at Nelso.n Drugs.
secutive Insertions .
25 Per qnt Oisqtunt on ·paid _
. 6·21 -1tp

-

.THE IIBEST
·

Ids and ads paid within 10 days.

RECORDED

MUSIC
,

WEA TOP LINE STEREO

G • BREAD • ARETHA FRANKLIN
e AMERICA e ROBERTA FLACK AND

SPECIAL GROUP

DODDY HATHAWAY e JACKSON BROWNE
AND MORE.

News, Notes
Mrs. Opal Randolph, Mrs.
Rose Thorn&amp;
and Mrs.
Dorotha Riebel recently visited
with Mrs. Gladys Baughman at
,Gahanna and Mrs. Glad~s
Morgan of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Brooks
and family of Logan visited
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Dillon and sons.
Julia Whitehead spent a few
days with Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Meredith at Beverly.
Mrs. Steve Cowdery of
Parkersburg, W. Va., Mrs.
Walter Brown and Mrs. Denver
Weber attended the graduation
of Mrs. Sandra Martin from the
Holzer School of Nursing at
Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Williams of
Alhens, Ga. spent a weekend at
. the Williams-Balderson home.
Mr. and Mrs. 'Grant Jl(Jrlng
are spending a few days at
Alexandria, Va. with Mr. and
Mrs. Hugh Martin and son,
Michael.
A surprise ·birthday dinner
for Mrs. Warren Pickens was
held ~~ the WIIUams •
Balderson home. The dinner
was served.plcnic style on the
lawn. fo Itending were Mrs.
Kathryn Dietz and Bill of
Belpre, Mr. and Mrs. R. E.
Williams, Mr. and Mrs .
Warren Pickens, and Mr. and
Mrs . Lyle Balderson and Kay .
'Guests In the afternoon were
Mr. and Mrs. Btll Meredith of
Beverly.
David Brown was an overnight guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Cowdery ·of Parkers·
burg, W.Va .
Mrs. Wilma Wright of
Hockingport visited with Mrs.
Bill Congrove recenUy.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy · Cowdery
and daughters, Valerie and
Jenny, of Minneapolis, Minnesota visited and enjoyed
dinner with Mr. and Mrs.
Harold E. Cowdery Wednesday . Cowderys abo visited
at the H~tzer-Btse home.
Darrel Henderson visited
with his grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Henderson of Portland.
Recent visitors of Mrs. Bess
Larkins were Mrs. Bertha
Schreiber and Mrs. Bessie
Bowman of Mason, W. Va.
· - Mrs . L. Balderson

Contains the hit Single:
AHorse with No Name

CAPITOL TOP LINE ALBUMS

RCA TOP LINE ALBUMS
INClUDIIICi: CHARlEY PRIDE,
NilSSON StHMilSSON, DOLlY
PARJON, and OTHERS.

CARD OF THANKS
GUN Shoot. also rille matches
l · OBITUARY
- .open sites only, Forked
S1 .50 for SO word minimum.
Run Sportsman Club, Sunday ,
Each additional word 2c .
June 25, 12 noon.
BLIND ADS
6-21·31c
Addltiof1al 2Sc Charge per
Advertisement .
·,
OfFICE HOURS
8:30a.m . to 5:00 p.m 1 Daily, MEIGS COUNTY· Fish &amp; Game
Assn. annual fish try, June 22,
8:30 a .m. to 12:00 Noon
19.12, rain or shi ne af Meigs
Saturday , '
County fairgrounds (follow
the arrows). l p.m. to 11 p.m .
Dinner served at 5: 30 r·m ·
Employment Wa nt,,l
Advance tickets, $2.50; a the
WILL paint roofs or houses,
gate, S3. Stag- no minorstrim \ and cut trees ; clean
Stag.
altlc~;
basements, etc .
6·18·41c
Phone 949·3211 .
6·14·30tc YARD Sale, Thursday and
Friday , June ' 22 and 23
starting at 9 a.m. at bi9 white
house behind store 10 An ·
tiquity.
6·20·21c

Reedsville

AMERICA

TOP QUALITY
STEREO

oblectional.

FROM THREE OF AMERICA'S
GREAT RECORDING HOUSES
COMES THIS ARRAY
OF FAVORITE

TOP QUALITY
STEREO

INCLUDINCi BUCK OWENS,
SUSAN RAYE, SONNY
JAMES, CiOOSE CREEK
SYMPHONY AND OTHERS.

COUNTRYWESTERN
&amp;INSTRUMENTAL
TUNES
SAVE AT
HECK'S
SPECIAL

GROUP
Thafs Why I l ove You Lr kP I D.. I
SONNY JAMES r;: ·
·I

.. 1 ~ .

ALSO AVAILABLE ON 8TRACK

77

RETAIL
VALUE
$6.95

STEREO TOP LINE TAPES

1

Of
QUALITY

Planmg Mill at 6 p.m .
Assorted meats. Sponsor.ed by

·The · P;ublisher . reserves ' th e ·
·
6'· 2L-Jfp
~lght to edit or relec:t any ads. _ _ _ _ _ _ _;___

:leemep

2

every

, Saturday beglnnin~ Saiurday
· ·1
R · '

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1972 CHEVeLLE MALIBU
$3795
4·door. 350 v.s, factory air, turbo hy~ramatic: , . po~cr
steerln9, JX)Yter bi'~k~s, gulf.green. colo~ , w!th green v1~yi
roof, vinyl interior tnm, rad10, whtte wall t~res. full wheel
(overs , bumper guards, and all the extras. Low mileage,
factory sticker, 241.
1971 CHEVROLET MALIBU
_
n295
HT Cpe., tow mileage. new car title, sanda lwood finish
with brown ~;~inyl roof, vinyl saddle interior, 4 season air
condltioriing. Turbo Hadramatic,· power steer ing , w-w
tires, rally wheels, F &amp; R guards, P.B., radio.
1910FORDGALAXIE.500
11!&gt;95
Harotop coupe, .rV-8 engine. automatic transmission ,
power steering &amp;, br~es , white finish , black vi~yl top.
vi nyl interior . White ~1· Jires, like new. radio.

Po':!~!2s.~.!' Ci. ~
fi\
1'PftliiOY; OHIO

LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OH 10

Marine Sales
16 FT. FIBREGLAS boat, 78
h.P. Mercury motor and
trailer, $650 ; phone 882·2596.
6·21 -31c

COAL. Lirnesfone. E,x"celsior
Salt Works , E. Main St.,
Pomeroy , Phone 992-3891.
·
4·12-ltc
WURL-1TZ E=-R..,H.,.,O::-;M-,;E::--,0,-:R-GAN
Newesl model . loaded with
everything, likE! new! To be
·taken in trade in this area,
al'ld wi ll be sold at half the
original price . Write lor in ·
format ion : GRAVES PIANO
8. ORGAN COMPANY, 383 E.
Broad St., Columbus, Ohio .
6·1Htt
'
VACUUM Cleaner new 1972
model. Complete with all
cleaning tools . Small paint
damage in shipping . Will take
$27 cash or budget ptan
available . Phone 992-5641 .
6·1Hic
~------

MAPLE. Early American
Sterco .radio combination .
Beautiful maple cabinet, with
4 speed changer, 4 speakers,
dual volume con trol. Balance
$77 .43 . Use our budget terms .
Call 992.7085.
6·15-6tc

--=========--;
"HEll"

Wanted!

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Sentinel Carrier
In
Syracuse

~~m~ r;,~~~~y J~' t~e'~!~l ~st~~=

.SPECIAL

MOWERS
&amp; TILLERS

here inafter des cribed in · orde r
to pay the debts of the decedent ,
Economy Tiller, 311"2 h.p. B&amp;S
Rebecc" Hudnall, and th e costs
e ngin~ . g:eg_159 .95
144.95
of administration . The real
est11le Is descr ibed as follows :
The Dai~ Sentinel ·
Turf Trim Mower, B&amp;S Jlf2
Par ce l No . 1: The following
real estate situate in Bedford
h.p. engine. In carton · 70.25
Townsh ip, Meigs County , Oh io,
POMEROY
bounded ond descr;bed as Wanteti To Buy
follows : Beginning at the
·· · - Jack W. Carsey , Mgr.
southeast corner of ·sec tion 31, WANTE 0 - old upright pianos,
oAitl
Phone 99nl81
Town 3, Range 13 in Bedford grand pianos, old pump
992-2448
Townsh ip, thence West along
organs, any condition . Paying
the south line ot said Section 31 SlO each . Write giving
Pomeroy,
Sales
to t.he soulheast corner of directions. Witten Piano Co .•
Xavier Thoma 's 95 Bcre lract of
BoK 188 . Sardis. Ohio 43946. 1971 THUNDERBIRD, 1 door
KOSCOT KOSMET ICS: Several land in Section 31; thence North
6·18-61p
Landau , all power, AM·FM·
a1on9
the
east
line
of
said
pew products - specials each
Stereo radio, air .cand itioned,
month ; also sa les personn!l Xav1er Thoma 's 95 acre lract of
land lo the northeast corner of YOUNG Hereford bull, service
many extras, 9,000 actual
needed. P.hone 992.5113.
said xa.vler Thoma 's 95 acre
age
;
phone
667·3262,
Frank
call 773·5323, John
miles;
6·6·1fC tract of lind to the northeast
Dodderer, Box 162, Cool vi lie.
Mason .
McMurray,
corner of Thoma 's tract ; thence
6·21 .3tp
6·2Hip
Westa
long
the
norlh
line
of
said
lfelp Wanted
Thoma 's tract to the soulneasl 'OLD FURNITURE 1 dishes
•
corner of Em•lv Thoma's 13.17
1960 CHEVROLET 4 Do or
MA 'TUR E. experienced woman acre
tract
of
land
In
SAid
section
clocks,
brass
beds,
silver
Hardtop , I owner, im to work at D &amp; D Meats ; apply 31 ,-lhence north westerlv alonq
dollars ' or
complete maculate condition. - 55;000
In person .
.20-Jtc the elisterly line of tald E'mlly
hOuseholds . Write M. o·. or igina l miles. fully equipped .
- - - - - - - -6Thcma•s tract to a point wh ich
Miller, Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Must see . 992·2788 .
.
Is south 66 •1• degrees, west 5.5
Call 992 -6271
· · 6·15-6tc
WAITRESS, apply in person. rods and 10 lin ks from the read
·
3-16-tfc
Craw 's Steak House .
leading from Wolf Pen lo - - - - - -- - - 6·20·6tc Bunker Hili Church, 'th ence
1968 CHEVY Nova, V·8, 4 door.
Northllllinks
66'1• degrees
Eosl leading
55 rods
Re.nt
automatic, excel le nt con r
and
to th e road
dition ; phone 949-3462 or 949·
trom Wolf Pen to Bunker Hill 1;2 DOUBLE . 2 bedroom
Churc' h,
thence
in
a
1 after s p.m. or see
southeaster lv d irect ion with the · apartment. phone 992-27.49 213
Raymond
Hensler.
meanjer ings of said road to its
after 3 p.m .
SECRETARIAL
6·16·6tc
6-f9.1fc
Intersection wllh the ea'st line of
said Section 31 ; thence south
along the east line of said 2 BEDROOM modular home in 1964 CHEVROLET, V·8, phone
949·2981.
Sectfon 31 to the southeast
Syracuse . ni ce location ,
corner of said Section 31 , the
OPPORTUNil'Y
6·1Hip
furnished, phone 992 ·2441
place of beginning, containing
alter
5
p.m.
29.85 acrts. ore or less.
6·14·11C
Parcel No. 2: The following
Attractive opportunity for
described real estate slluated In
highly qualified secretary
Salisbury Township , Me igs 2 BEDROOM, 12 x 52 trailer . 50 x 10 MOBILE hom e ; priced
reasonably; call Chesler 985who is ex~Mrienced in the
Counly, and State of Ohio, and
air ·condilioned ; 9 miles North 3379.
in Sec lion 36, Town 2 and Range
skills and rosponsibllilfes
on Rl. 33; phone 696·1051 .
13. and bounded and described
required of secretartn to
6·21 ·3tp
as
follows
:
Beg
in
ning
at
the
manogemut. fevel
per.
northeast corner of Section 36,
CASH paid for all makes and
.
sonnel. SUbmit in conlidft1ce
Town 2, Range 1~. In Salisbury· 2 BEDROOM trailer, adults models of mobile homes.
Township, thence West along
a br ie f resume 1o Box 729.5,
only, Bob's Mobile Court, Phone acea code 614·423·9531.
the north line of said Section 36,
C·O The Daily Sentinel,
phone 992:2951.
4·13·11C
to the Northeast corner of
Pomeroy, Dllio 45769.
Jessie W. Slys 23 acre tract of _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __6·_
13.1fc
land In sald section 36, thence in
a Southeasterl'f' direction along NICE 4 room house with bath ,
·.Air Conditioners
WE AA E AN EQUAL OP · ·the eastern line of sold Jessie
double car garage, nice area ;
W_Slvs 23 acre 1ract to the north
PORTUNITY EMPLOYER .
phone 9'12·2502.
• Awnings
line ol Emma J . Slys 40.50 acre
6·20-2tc
tract of land In Section 36,
·Underpinning
thence eut along the north line
fu rni shed
BEDROOM
WAITRESS, no experlence of said Emma J. Slys •o.50 acre I
tract to the east ljne of sa id
apartment between Pomeroy Complete mobile · home
necessary; apply In person. Section
service - plus gigantic
36, thence North along
&amp; Athens , $80 per month ;
Blue Tartan, Middleport.
the east line of said Section 36 to
'display of ·mobile homes
phooe
675·1684;
also
troller
6·1Hic the northeast urner of said
always available at ...
Section 36 the point of begin· space.
6·20·6tp
nlng , containing 37 aci'es , more
MILLER
or less .
Reference Deed : Vol. 164, '3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
MOBILE HOMES .
NOTICE OF
Page 551, Deed Records Meigl
unfurnished apartments.
APPOINTMENT
County, Oh io.
Phooe '1'12·.5.134. '
1220 Washington Blvd.
cue No. 20702
You are required to answer
A·12·1fc 423-7521
BELPRE, 0 .
H
It
the
Pel111on
wHhln
tw•nty
elgh1
I
Estate o I Ch ares
ya · claysaflerthelaslpubllcatlonof
Deceased .
Notice Is hereby given that this notice, namely, by not later UNFURNISHED · apartment,
134 Mulberry Ave., phone 9"2·
Harriet Hyatt of R.O. 2, R.a.::lne. than the-20th . day of July, 1972,
3962.
UhiO , nas been duly appointed or judgment by deflult will be
Administratrix ot lhe I: Slate 01 rendered aglilnst you .
6·11-tfc HOUSE in Loog Bottom, phooe
~
d 1t 1
Myrtle Haning,
985-3529.
Admin istratrix of the ---------'-~
Charles Hva It , ... eceast • 1 eo
Meigs County, Ohio.
6·11 ·tfc
Creditors are required to . file
Estate of
their cla ims with said fiduciary
Rebecca Hudnall, Oeceued . For Safe
HOUSE in Rutland by Grade
within four months.
Crow, Crow &amp; Porter,
Date~ th is 3rd day of June , Attorneys for Plaintiff
School; 4 rooms with bath,
garden. large lot. carport;
1972 ·
John c . hco: • 15 1, 10. 17. 24, Jt 161 1, 1~. 21, 1t 1965 CHEVROLET Supersport, phone 742-3154.
.
Probate Judge ot said County
while with black Interior, b.
6·21 ·3tc
16) 7, ,., 21
Baptist missionary J . D. seats, 283 • bbl., auto., like - - ' - - -- - - -:Murrow, of Atoka, Okla, once
new fires. Ph. '1'12·5997.
FOR SALE - 29 acre farm, 4
performed a wedding for which _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _
6·21-6 bedroom home , completely
he .received ..... It was In
remodeled, aluminum siding
LEGA~ NOTICE
f'IA'V
and sform windows, free gas
Carl Moles, addren unknown , Confederate money, however, RECONDITION ED upright
well , all mineral rights. 1 mile
NOTICE OF
Evelyn
Moles,
address worth only 42.50.
plano,
$175,
466
S.
2nd
Ave..
from Harrisonville. Call '1'12·
APPOINTMaNT
unknown, the unknown heirs of
Middleport.
3640.
Cast No . 20671 E~;~elyn Moles. all of whose
6-18·6tc
6·15·71p
Estett of 8tss H. Sanbcrn. addresus are unknown and
Dec11ud .
cannot
with
reasonable
NoUct Is hereby given that dlllc;~ence be ncertalned. will
.C51 CHAIN Saw, $90; Oliver 70 RACINE - 6room house. bath,
P1u1 S. Smart, of Mlddltport , lake notice that on ttte 11th day
tractor, $225 ; phone 247·2.5.17 utility room , garage, $10,000;
Ohio, has b11n duly appointed of May, 1972, Plaintiff, Bernice
or
247·2543.
phone 949·4195.
Execu)or of the Estate of Bess Bowen flied her complaint
6·21 ·3tc
3·31·1fc
36" X 23" il
H. Slf'\bOrn, dtCIUtd, lilt of against them rn the Court of
Meigs County : Ohio.
common Pleas ot Meigs
WD.AC TRACTOR , good fires,
Creditor• ert required to file County, Ohio. the same belhO
lhelr claims With said fiduciary • case No . 15,0731n said court. for
otor overhauled, new paint,
within follr month1.
an action lo. quiet 1lfle in lht
D. Trtll type mower, side
50 ACRES
Dale~ this 3rd day of June, following datcrlbtd real ts1ttt,
rake ; phooe !&gt;92·2826.
1'12.
···~It:·
6-15·61p
John C. lacan
Situated in the Village ,of
Reduced!
Probate Judge of said C:ounty Mlddleport , M'lgs county,
ELECTROLUX Vacuum
161 7. 1&lt;, 21
Ohio.
land
USED OFf!SET PLATES
Cleaner . Lot' model on
Being Lot No. 10~ In Iehan's
ACidl11on to the said VIllage of
wheels, uses paper bajjs, A·1 t.ocattd s. al Athens '2 mi. on
HAV!io
Mlddltport. For more definite
with 7 att. plus shampooer. u.s . Rt. JJ. · Bordered on
-MANY ~tiES
dncrlptlon~ reference Is made
$28.40 Cllh or terms south ' by county Road,
IO the fllot of Mid VIllage.
avallabtt.
Phone.992-6517.
bOrdered on weat • nort!" by
The dtmend of the Complaln1
·
6-1S.6tc rLtr~nlng strtam, split dOwn
Is for fhe qulollnt of the title of
mlddlo by runnln9 op•tng.
the Otfen•onll bllod oil o
. '
1200 If , fronlage on bOth lidos
ZIG
ZAG
-lng
machine·
,
1972
c111tract Of purchiN dttill Juno
'·
• for
!
hithwoy. Hos old form
10, 1,57, w~tch woo aban•lllod
model, uNCI lust a lfN times . Of
hOme,
3 bedrooms. llvlno
b' lhli!o Det.,dants Cart MotH
· Fullsta. Dial contralto fancy room. tormel
dining room,
and vtlyn MotH, and
Olhor
stitch,
.
b"flonhole
etc.
kitche'n and outbuildings.
rtflef.
Reduced to only $36.20 Cath or
Said Defendants are rf&lt;lulrod
terms available. Trade·ln
to esnwtr said complaint within
CALL LEW LEITER
'
accepted. Phone 992-6517.
H doyo ofltr the 1111 dote of
1U.1761
puDtlcatlon, which dale 11 Juno
6·1s.6tc
21, 1912,
C~tumbul, Ohio
,._,
•
CAMPER, 16ft. sloepa 6, gocxf
••rn ....and
v . I'Vf I
. Wtlltltr
111 1~rt It,
condition, $1,000. Phone 992.
lerthl fllchordson
, ... O.haJ
a...
-y
-~
~
6329
IIIIIY
,_rtt,Ohlod7"
rvftMtv 1 -~
·
116·1"4
114·11M
All""ttttor ,tohiiiH
C5117,2UI 16H,14,l1,61 •
""--~------~ - - - - - - : - - 5--12·1fC

Ph. 992·2156

ARNOLD.
BROTHERS
o.

Auto

--========----,

For

Mobile Homes For Sale

;::========:......,

•

LEGAL NOTICE

Real Estate For Sale

~\'JOf!! ~BIBm

IGEClRGE BEVERLY .Jnr"'

RCA CAMDEN

l.et's

ALBUMS

!leds
F•ncn

ELVIS PRESLEY
~BOOTS RANDOLPH
• GEORGE BEVERLY SHEA
• EDDIE ARNOLD
AND MORE.
CHOICE
1

aim"''
In love

RCA 8TRACK STEREO TAPES
J

RETAIL VALUE $4.95

"(/)~

.W

~Jin.g_

?j.oLL JlclWL"

brick front.. 1 car
garage,
carpeting .
Priced at ..
From the largest Truck
ONLY $13,750
Bulldozer Radiator lo the
We specialize in aluminum.
Smalle5t Heater Core.
vinyl and stee l siding ;
Nathan Biggs
fiberglas , brick and Stoile i
R'adiator Specialist
complete line of resident1a1
and commerci'al roofing ;
remodeling ,
building,
suspended ceilings, lnfertor
and exterior painting;
Ph . 992:2114
Pomeroy
complete line of Masonry
work . All work guaranteed to
customer satisfaction. we
are futly ins ured for your
Real Estate For Sale
protectioo . 32 N. 2nd. 992·
IDEAL 5·ACRE RANCHO . 3918.
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
Lake Conchas, New Mexico.
CONSTR. CO.
$2,875. No Down. No interest.
$25 mo. Vacation ' Paradise.
Mon e y
Maker .
Free
• J - .. •. , ...
Brochure . Ranchos : Box
.. il'.__..
· 200 1DO, Alameda, California
'
' ll,. _I ........ ___
94501.
6·7-JOip

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

.' ..,. ·~
J.'
'
.' ___

CLELAND
REjlLTV

· Contact AssOciate
VERA EBLEN
'112·J020
160 Coal St, Middleport
RUTLAND
2 B. R. modern home. ·
co mpl ete ly fu r nished on
large fenced lot, garage,
$18,000.
I
3 B.R. home, recently
completed refinished Inside
on 3/.t acres, S11 ,SOO.
2'12 MILES from Rutland, 7
room, 1 floor plan home,
bath, furnace on \ •14 acre
ground $10,000.
1 Ml LE loom Bypass, 3 b .r.
all .e lectr ic home on 3 at;res,
$18 ,900.

MIDDLEPORT
S. SECOND Avenue, 3 b .r.,
bath, full basement, gas
rurnace, ca rport, very nice
$21,000.
7 ROOMS, bath, garage on

la1 ~e private lot, $7 ,950.
160 Coal Street - Also
location of the Middleport C
of C office .

EARTH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End loader Work,
ponds, basement, lind·
scaping. We~' have ~ sitt
dozers. 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract..
Free Eslimltes. We alsa
haul fill dirt. top soil. Dump
frucks and low.boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992·3525
after 7 p.m. or phone m..
52J2.

EXPERT

Wheel Alignment·
ss.55

On Most American C~J ..
-GUARANTEED• Phone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open8Til5
Monday thru Saturdly
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, Q.

608 E. Main St.
Pomeroy
IMMEDIATE
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
POSSESSION!
3 bedrooms, nice kitchen , 2 REASONABLE rates. Ph . ..446'
4782~ Galilj&gt;Oiis, John Ru,sell, •
baths, for ced·air gas fur ·
Owner &amp; Operator.
nace, full basement as living
5·12·1fC
quar ters. $1.9'15.00.
GETTING
C. BRADFORD, AuctiOMer
SOCIAL SECURITY?
Complete Service
Want a home and an in.
Phooe 949·3821
come? We have jusf the
Racine, Ohio
thing for you . Brick home, 2
·Cri ll Bradford
bedrooms, bath, utility,
5-1-lfc
dining , basement, porches
OOZE R and back hoe work,
for you , nice apartment
ponds and septic tanks; B &amp; K
over, and small house In tile
Excavating, Phone '1'12·5367,
rear .
Nic e
income.
Dick Karr, Jr .
$18.000.00.
5·21·1ft
GOOD NEIGHBORS .
LIVE HERE
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
2 story frame, 3 bedroom5,
Septic tanks Installed. George
bath, porches, storage
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 9'12·2471.
building, garage. view of the
•ts.lfc
river. $6,900.00.
AHDME AND
SEE OS FOR: Awni ngs, storm
A BUSINESS
doors and windows, carports,
marquees, alumlnutn siding
A nlce3 b~droom apartment,
and railing. A. Jacob, sales
bath, glassed front and rear
representative. For free .
porches, hardwood floors, a
estimates. phone Charles·
bu5lness to go with it. Great
Lis!e, Syracuse, ·v. V.
for retirement Call for In·
Johnson and Son, Inc.
formation .
•
3·2·110
- WATCH THIS SPACE
FOR REALTY VALUEsSEWING MACHINE ser~ke,
HENRY E. CLELANDSr.
clean, oil, set tensfcln s.t.99.
REALTOR
Special Electro-Grande
DIAl, 992·2259
Company. Phooe 9?2·6517. :
If no answer 992·2568
•
5·21-lfc
RACINE - 10 room house,
bath, ba sement, garage, two HARRISON'S TV Service, _ ,
9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; free pickup
lots. Phone 949·4313.
and delivery; phon~ '1'12·2522.
4·Hfp
6·13-tfc

~··

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

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
NEW LISTING
DOWN TOWN- 8 rooms, bath. nice kitchen, furnace . full
basement . Front and back porches . Old but ropmy and
handy . $7500.00.
REAL ESTATE HILL
POMEROY - Nice 2 bedrooms. bath, livi ng rm . car·
pefed. Gas forced air furnace. Basement. Asking
$10,500.00 .
BOON DOCK SPECIAL
SURPRISE - 2 bedrooms, 2 porches. 2 dug wells and
cellar. Kitchen has stove, sink and refrigerator. Asking
$4,000.00.
OLD-BUT
RURAL - Here's one you ought to enjoy liKing. Has .3
bedrooms, living, and kitchen . Cellar. Large garden spot.
l)'oly $5,000.00.
WANT TO FINISH THIS
NEW - 2 bedrooms, bath, garage, cistern and large lot on
good country road. Asking $8500.00.
NEW CAPRI
J BEDROOMS ..:. Lots of dose! space, large ones In each
bedroom. Gas forced air furr\ac! . Stove and refrigerator.
free zer furnished. Landscaped lot with utility building .
.i)'oly 516,000.00.
GRAZING FARM
165 ACRES- 2 houses, 4 farm ponds. 3 springs, 2 cisterns
and welL Plenty of good grass. Would llke$25.000.00.
ARE YOU THINKING OF MOVING. BUILDING. OR
BUYING. WE HAVE OVER 6D PROPERTIES NOW .
CHECK WITH US FOR A GOOD BUY.
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE

O'DELL Wt'IEE'l 'tlfgilnl'tnt
located af CrossrGadl, Rf::Y24•.
Complete front end ...-vleet 1
tune up and broke ser\llce.
Wheels
balanced el"'·
Ironically .
All
work
guaranteed.
Reasonable
rates. Phone m -3213• .
7·27-lfc
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost · your
operator's license? Call 992·
2966.
• 1
6-15·tft
SEWING MACHINES. Ropolr
service, all makes. 992·2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomlf'oy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scluon.
J.2f.lfc

CONCR~TE ·

READY . MIX
delivered right to your
project. Fast and easy. FrH:
eshmates. Phone 992.3214.'
Goegleln Ready·Mix Co.,,
Middleport, Ohio.
;
.
6-:JO.Ifc•
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Mlllor
Sanitation, St~art , Ohio. Ph.
662·31135.
2·12.1fc

For Sale or Trade
QUARTER horse ; phone 742·
3418. •
6-21-6tc

992-3325

.Open For Inspection in Lakeview Estates
By Appoinbnent '

Call 992-3975
or

992-2571

· · For Sale

.ocW

RETAIL
VALUE
$2.49

3 Bedroom · home, with

LEGAL NOTICE

• HIT COUNTRY • KINGS OF COUNTiY MUSIC
• QUEENS OF COUNTRY MUSIC e 8 GREAT
STARS AND MORE

Aluminum ..
Sheets

........
WMP0/1390.
01·· ···
We talk. JUU

.'

.....

- - - - -- T.

suo

tor

'··u

•

Contract

20*

The ·.
DaiiJ Sentinel

l---------'

I

...J

WALNUT Stereo .radio com bination, dual volume control.
4 speed intermixed changer, 4
speaker sound s ystem ,
Balance $62.57. Us e our
budget terms . catt 992.7085.
6-lHtc

•••

Get ·R ·esultsi

Business Services

POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
Park vieW Kennels, Phone 9925443.
8·15·11C

32 FT. HOUSEBOAT. 40 h.p.
- PROVATE DIVISION outboard motor and trailer ;
Myrtle Haning , Administralrl• ,
will sell reasonable . Phone
of the Esta1e of
Rebecca Hudnall,
992-7157 or see ai28A Ra ilroad
"Deceased,
St .. Middl eport .
Plaintiff.
6·2o.6tc
SAVE URIO one half. Bring yollr Clarence Hudnall , et al.,
sick TV to Ch uck's TV Shop,
Oelendonts.
Wanted
1972 ZIG·ZAG Sewing Machine
,
No . 20438
151 Butternut A~;~e., Pomeroy.
NOTICE BY
LEAD vocalist for rock group. left in layaway. Beautiful
4·4-lfc
PUBLICATION
Call Gallipolis 446·3829 or pastel color, full size model.
All built·in to buttonhole, do
The Defendants, Stan ley
Pomeroy 992-2289.
r
McCouly, Frankl in McCouly.
6·22 ·3k stretch sewi ng and fan cy
Harold Wilson and Mrs. Ha rold
stitching . Pay just $48.75 cash
Wilson, Marie New and Mr.
or term s available. Trade-ins
New. husband of Marie New,
accepteH. Phone 9'12·5641.
and the unknown heirs ,
6·15-61c
devisees , lega tees, executors.
administrators or assigns of
Lennie Wilson. Deceased, will
take notice that on the 8th . day
of May , 1972 , a Petition was
filed in the Probate Division or
the Common Pleas Court of
Meigs Coun ty , Ohio, wherein
Window
you have been named defen .
Air Conditioners
1
0
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

Cl~ssifieds

New3

room Homes·

lake froQtage on full acre lot, 20 year financing available.

LAKEVIEW EST AlES
ROUTE 7 af FIVE. POINTS

�.

'

.

.:

.

.

~

.

- .

- ..

·'

.

.D- The Dally Se.".tinel, Middleport-P&lt;KUt"ruy, ll., Ju.np 21. 1972

.Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel

......,

OPIIDAI.Y
10 TO 9

.. 10 TO 9

.

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
. DEADLINES

, P.M . Day B
. efore Publicatlop.
Monday OeadliAe 9 a.m .
' CarKellatlon - Corrections

Nlllbeaccepted' untH9a .m.for.
.
Day of Publication

REGULATIONS

Notice
SHOOTI'NG

Match

June. 24 h, _at

acme

I e

the Syracuse Fire Oepf.

The
~ubllsher will not be responsible YARD Sale , Avon Bottles.
Antiques on Larkin Street,
for more than one incorr&amp;ct
Rulland, Friday and Salur ·
Insertion .
RATES
day.
Far Wanl Ad Service
6·21·3tc

5 cents per Word one insert ion
I
Minlmui'n·Charge 7Sc
REDUCE
e~cess fluids with
12 ce nts · J)er word three
FllfiDEX, $1.69 - LOSE
· con•ecutlve inser'tiori's.
WEIGHT safely with Oex.A.
18 cents per · word s1x con Diet, 98c at Nelso.n Drugs.
secutive Insertions .
25 Per qnt Oisqtunt on ·paid _
. 6·21 -1tp

-

.THE IIBEST
·

Ids and ads paid within 10 days.

RECORDED

MUSIC
,

WEA TOP LINE STEREO

G • BREAD • ARETHA FRANKLIN
e AMERICA e ROBERTA FLACK AND

SPECIAL GROUP

DODDY HATHAWAY e JACKSON BROWNE
AND MORE.

News, Notes
Mrs. Opal Randolph, Mrs.
Rose Thorn&amp;
and Mrs.
Dorotha Riebel recently visited
with Mrs. Gladys Baughman at
,Gahanna and Mrs. Glad~s
Morgan of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Brooks
and family of Logan visited
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Dillon and sons.
Julia Whitehead spent a few
days with Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Meredith at Beverly.
Mrs. Steve Cowdery of
Parkersburg, W. Va., Mrs.
Walter Brown and Mrs. Denver
Weber attended the graduation
of Mrs. Sandra Martin from the
Holzer School of Nursing at
Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Williams of
Alhens, Ga. spent a weekend at
. the Williams-Balderson home.
Mr. and Mrs. 'Grant Jl(Jrlng
are spending a few days at
Alexandria, Va. with Mr. and
Mrs. Hugh Martin and son,
Michael.
A surprise ·birthday dinner
for Mrs. Warren Pickens was
held ~~ the WIIUams •
Balderson home. The dinner
was served.plcnic style on the
lawn. fo Itending were Mrs.
Kathryn Dietz and Bill of
Belpre, Mr. and Mrs. R. E.
Williams, Mr. and Mrs .
Warren Pickens, and Mr. and
Mrs . Lyle Balderson and Kay .
'Guests In the afternoon were
Mr. and Mrs. Btll Meredith of
Beverly.
David Brown was an overnight guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Cowdery ·of Parkers·
burg, W.Va .
Mrs. Wilma Wright of
Hockingport visited with Mrs.
Bill Congrove recenUy.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy · Cowdery
and daughters, Valerie and
Jenny, of Minneapolis, Minnesota visited and enjoyed
dinner with Mr. and Mrs.
Harold E. Cowdery Wednesday . Cowderys abo visited
at the H~tzer-Btse home.
Darrel Henderson visited
with his grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Henderson of Portland.
Recent visitors of Mrs. Bess
Larkins were Mrs. Bertha
Schreiber and Mrs. Bessie
Bowman of Mason, W. Va.
· - Mrs . L. Balderson

Contains the hit Single:
AHorse with No Name

CAPITOL TOP LINE ALBUMS

RCA TOP LINE ALBUMS
INClUDIIICi: CHARlEY PRIDE,
NilSSON StHMilSSON, DOLlY
PARJON, and OTHERS.

CARD OF THANKS
GUN Shoot. also rille matches
l · OBITUARY
- .open sites only, Forked
S1 .50 for SO word minimum.
Run Sportsman Club, Sunday ,
Each additional word 2c .
June 25, 12 noon.
BLIND ADS
6-21·31c
Addltiof1al 2Sc Charge per
Advertisement .
·,
OfFICE HOURS
8:30a.m . to 5:00 p.m 1 Daily, MEIGS COUNTY· Fish &amp; Game
Assn. annual fish try, June 22,
8:30 a .m. to 12:00 Noon
19.12, rain or shi ne af Meigs
Saturday , '
County fairgrounds (follow
the arrows). l p.m. to 11 p.m .
Dinner served at 5: 30 r·m ·
Employment Wa nt,,l
Advance tickets, $2.50; a the
WILL paint roofs or houses,
gate, S3. Stag- no minorstrim \ and cut trees ; clean
Stag.
altlc~;
basements, etc .
6·18·41c
Phone 949·3211 .
6·14·30tc YARD Sale, Thursday and
Friday , June ' 22 and 23
starting at 9 a.m. at bi9 white
house behind store 10 An ·
tiquity.
6·20·21c

Reedsville

AMERICA

TOP QUALITY
STEREO

oblectional.

FROM THREE OF AMERICA'S
GREAT RECORDING HOUSES
COMES THIS ARRAY
OF FAVORITE

TOP QUALITY
STEREO

INCLUDINCi BUCK OWENS,
SUSAN RAYE, SONNY
JAMES, CiOOSE CREEK
SYMPHONY AND OTHERS.

COUNTRYWESTERN
&amp;INSTRUMENTAL
TUNES
SAVE AT
HECK'S
SPECIAL

GROUP
Thafs Why I l ove You Lr kP I D.. I
SONNY JAMES r;: ·
·I

.. 1 ~ .

ALSO AVAILABLE ON 8TRACK

77

RETAIL
VALUE
$6.95

STEREO TOP LINE TAPES

1

Of
QUALITY

Planmg Mill at 6 p.m .
Assorted meats. Sponsor.ed by

·The · P;ublisher . reserves ' th e ·
·
6'· 2L-Jfp
~lght to edit or relec:t any ads. _ _ _ _ _ _ _;___

:leemep

2

every

, Saturday beglnnin~ Saiurday
· ·1
R · '

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1972 CHEVeLLE MALIBU
$3795
4·door. 350 v.s, factory air, turbo hy~ramatic: , . po~cr
steerln9, JX)Yter bi'~k~s, gulf.green. colo~ , w!th green v1~yi
roof, vinyl interior tnm, rad10, whtte wall t~res. full wheel
(overs , bumper guards, and all the extras. Low mileage,
factory sticker, 241.
1971 CHEVROLET MALIBU
_
n295
HT Cpe., tow mileage. new car title, sanda lwood finish
with brown ~;~inyl roof, vinyl saddle interior, 4 season air
condltioriing. Turbo Hadramatic,· power steer ing , w-w
tires, rally wheels, F &amp; R guards, P.B., radio.
1910FORDGALAXIE.500
11!&gt;95
Harotop coupe, .rV-8 engine. automatic transmission ,
power steering &amp;, br~es , white finish , black vi~yl top.
vi nyl interior . White ~1· Jires, like new. radio.

Po':!~!2s.~.!' Ci. ~
fi\
1'PftliiOY; OHIO

LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OH 10

Marine Sales
16 FT. FIBREGLAS boat, 78
h.P. Mercury motor and
trailer, $650 ; phone 882·2596.
6·21 -31c

COAL. Lirnesfone. E,x"celsior
Salt Works , E. Main St.,
Pomeroy , Phone 992-3891.
·
4·12-ltc
WURL-1TZ E=-R..,H.,.,O::-;M-,;E::--,0,-:R-GAN
Newesl model . loaded with
everything, likE! new! To be
·taken in trade in this area,
al'ld wi ll be sold at half the
original price . Write lor in ·
format ion : GRAVES PIANO
8. ORGAN COMPANY, 383 E.
Broad St., Columbus, Ohio .
6·1Htt
'
VACUUM Cleaner new 1972
model. Complete with all
cleaning tools . Small paint
damage in shipping . Will take
$27 cash or budget ptan
available . Phone 992-5641 .
6·1Hic
~------

MAPLE. Early American
Sterco .radio combination .
Beautiful maple cabinet, with
4 speed changer, 4 speakers,
dual volume con trol. Balance
$77 .43 . Use our budget terms .
Call 992.7085.
6·15-6tc

--=========--;
"HEll"

Wanted!

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Sentinel Carrier
In
Syracuse

~~m~ r;,~~~~y J~' t~e'~!~l ~st~~=

.SPECIAL

MOWERS
&amp; TILLERS

here inafter des cribed in · orde r
to pay the debts of the decedent ,
Economy Tiller, 311"2 h.p. B&amp;S
Rebecc" Hudnall, and th e costs
e ngin~ . g:eg_159 .95
144.95
of administration . The real
est11le Is descr ibed as follows :
The Dai~ Sentinel ·
Turf Trim Mower, B&amp;S Jlf2
Par ce l No . 1: The following
real estate situate in Bedford
h.p. engine. In carton · 70.25
Townsh ip, Meigs County , Oh io,
POMEROY
bounded ond descr;bed as Wanteti To Buy
follows : Beginning at the
·· · - Jack W. Carsey , Mgr.
southeast corner of ·sec tion 31, WANTE 0 - old upright pianos,
oAitl
Phone 99nl81
Town 3, Range 13 in Bedford grand pianos, old pump
992-2448
Townsh ip, thence West along
organs, any condition . Paying
the south line ot said Section 31 SlO each . Write giving
Pomeroy,
Sales
to t.he soulheast corner of directions. Witten Piano Co .•
Xavier Thoma 's 95 Bcre lract of
BoK 188 . Sardis. Ohio 43946. 1971 THUNDERBIRD, 1 door
KOSCOT KOSMET ICS: Several land in Section 31; thence North
6·18-61p
Landau , all power, AM·FM·
a1on9
the
east
line
of
said
pew products - specials each
Stereo radio, air .cand itioned,
month ; also sa les personn!l Xav1er Thoma 's 95 acre lract of
land lo the northeast corner of YOUNG Hereford bull, service
many extras, 9,000 actual
needed. P.hone 992.5113.
said xa.vler Thoma 's 95 acre
age
;
phone
667·3262,
Frank
call 773·5323, John
miles;
6·6·1fC tract of lind to the northeast
Dodderer, Box 162, Cool vi lie.
Mason .
McMurray,
corner of Thoma 's tract ; thence
6·21 .3tp
6·2Hip
Westa
long
the
norlh
line
of
said
lfelp Wanted
Thoma 's tract to the soulneasl 'OLD FURNITURE 1 dishes
•
corner of Em•lv Thoma's 13.17
1960 CHEVROLET 4 Do or
MA 'TUR E. experienced woman acre
tract
of
land
In
SAid
section
clocks,
brass
beds,
silver
Hardtop , I owner, im to work at D &amp; D Meats ; apply 31 ,-lhence north westerlv alonq
dollars ' or
complete maculate condition. - 55;000
In person .
.20-Jtc the elisterly line of tald E'mlly
hOuseholds . Write M. o·. or igina l miles. fully equipped .
- - - - - - - -6Thcma•s tract to a point wh ich
Miller, Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Must see . 992·2788 .
.
Is south 66 •1• degrees, west 5.5
Call 992 -6271
· · 6·15-6tc
WAITRESS, apply in person. rods and 10 lin ks from the read
·
3-16-tfc
Craw 's Steak House .
leading from Wolf Pen lo - - - - - -- - - 6·20·6tc Bunker Hili Church, 'th ence
1968 CHEVY Nova, V·8, 4 door.
Northllllinks
66'1• degrees
Eosl leading
55 rods
Re.nt
automatic, excel le nt con r
and
to th e road
dition ; phone 949-3462 or 949·
trom Wolf Pen to Bunker Hill 1;2 DOUBLE . 2 bedroom
Churc' h,
thence
in
a
1 after s p.m. or see
southeaster lv d irect ion with the · apartment. phone 992-27.49 213
Raymond
Hensler.
meanjer ings of said road to its
after 3 p.m .
SECRETARIAL
6·16·6tc
6-f9.1fc
Intersection wllh the ea'st line of
said Section 31 ; thence south
along the east line of said 2 BEDROOM modular home in 1964 CHEVROLET, V·8, phone
949·2981.
Sectfon 31 to the southeast
Syracuse . ni ce location ,
corner of said Section 31 , the
OPPORTUNil'Y
6·1Hip
furnished, phone 992 ·2441
place of beginning, containing
alter
5
p.m.
29.85 acrts. ore or less.
6·14·11C
Parcel No. 2: The following
Attractive opportunity for
described real estate slluated In
highly qualified secretary
Salisbury Township , Me igs 2 BEDROOM, 12 x 52 trailer . 50 x 10 MOBILE hom e ; priced
reasonably; call Chesler 985who is ex~Mrienced in the
Counly, and State of Ohio, and
air ·condilioned ; 9 miles North 3379.
in Sec lion 36, Town 2 and Range
skills and rosponsibllilfes
on Rl. 33; phone 696·1051 .
13. and bounded and described
required of secretartn to
6·21 ·3tp
as
follows
:
Beg
in
ning
at
the
manogemut. fevel
per.
northeast corner of Section 36,
CASH paid for all makes and
.
sonnel. SUbmit in conlidft1ce
Town 2, Range 1~. In Salisbury· 2 BEDROOM trailer, adults models of mobile homes.
Township, thence West along
a br ie f resume 1o Box 729.5,
only, Bob's Mobile Court, Phone acea code 614·423·9531.
the north line of said Section 36,
C·O The Daily Sentinel,
phone 992:2951.
4·13·11C
to the Northeast corner of
Pomeroy, Dllio 45769.
Jessie W. Slys 23 acre tract of _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __6·_
13.1fc
land In sald section 36, thence in
a Southeasterl'f' direction along NICE 4 room house with bath ,
·.Air Conditioners
WE AA E AN EQUAL OP · ·the eastern line of sold Jessie
double car garage, nice area ;
W_Slvs 23 acre 1ract to the north
PORTUNITY EMPLOYER .
phone 9'12·2502.
• Awnings
line ol Emma J . Slys 40.50 acre
6·20-2tc
tract of land In Section 36,
·Underpinning
thence eut along the north line
fu rni shed
BEDROOM
WAITRESS, no experlence of said Emma J. Slys •o.50 acre I
tract to the east ljne of sa id
apartment between Pomeroy Complete mobile · home
necessary; apply In person. Section
service - plus gigantic
36, thence North along
&amp; Athens , $80 per month ;
Blue Tartan, Middleport.
the east line of said Section 36 to
'display of ·mobile homes
phooe
675·1684;
also
troller
6·1Hic the northeast urner of said
always available at ...
Section 36 the point of begin· space.
6·20·6tp
nlng , containing 37 aci'es , more
MILLER
or less .
Reference Deed : Vol. 164, '3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
MOBILE HOMES .
NOTICE OF
Page 551, Deed Records Meigl
unfurnished apartments.
APPOINTMENT
County, Oh io.
Phooe '1'12·.5.134. '
1220 Washington Blvd.
cue No. 20702
You are required to answer
A·12·1fc 423-7521
BELPRE, 0 .
H
It
the
Pel111on
wHhln
tw•nty
elgh1
I
Estate o I Ch ares
ya · claysaflerthelaslpubllcatlonof
Deceased .
Notice Is hereby given that this notice, namely, by not later UNFURNISHED · apartment,
134 Mulberry Ave., phone 9"2·
Harriet Hyatt of R.O. 2, R.a.::lne. than the-20th . day of July, 1972,
3962.
UhiO , nas been duly appointed or judgment by deflult will be
Administratrix ot lhe I: Slate 01 rendered aglilnst you .
6·11-tfc HOUSE in Loog Bottom, phooe
~
d 1t 1
Myrtle Haning,
985-3529.
Admin istratrix of the ---------'-~
Charles Hva It , ... eceast • 1 eo
Meigs County, Ohio.
6·11 ·tfc
Creditors are required to . file
Estate of
their cla ims with said fiduciary
Rebecca Hudnall, Oeceued . For Safe
HOUSE in Rutland by Grade
within four months.
Crow, Crow &amp; Porter,
Date~ th is 3rd day of June , Attorneys for Plaintiff
School; 4 rooms with bath,
garden. large lot. carport;
1972 ·
John c . hco: • 15 1, 10. 17. 24, Jt 161 1, 1~. 21, 1t 1965 CHEVROLET Supersport, phone 742-3154.
.
Probate Judge ot said County
while with black Interior, b.
6·21 ·3tc
16) 7, ,., 21
Baptist missionary J . D. seats, 283 • bbl., auto., like - - ' - - -- - - -:Murrow, of Atoka, Okla, once
new fires. Ph. '1'12·5997.
FOR SALE - 29 acre farm, 4
performed a wedding for which _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _
6·21-6 bedroom home , completely
he .received ..... It was In
remodeled, aluminum siding
LEGA~ NOTICE
f'IA'V
and sform windows, free gas
Carl Moles, addren unknown , Confederate money, however, RECONDITION ED upright
well , all mineral rights. 1 mile
NOTICE OF
Evelyn
Moles,
address worth only 42.50.
plano,
$175,
466
S.
2nd
Ave..
from Harrisonville. Call '1'12·
APPOINTMaNT
unknown, the unknown heirs of
Middleport.
3640.
Cast No . 20671 E~;~elyn Moles. all of whose
6-18·6tc
6·15·71p
Estett of 8tss H. Sanbcrn. addresus are unknown and
Dec11ud .
cannot
with
reasonable
NoUct Is hereby given that dlllc;~ence be ncertalned. will
.C51 CHAIN Saw, $90; Oliver 70 RACINE - 6room house. bath,
P1u1 S. Smart, of Mlddltport , lake notice that on ttte 11th day
tractor, $225 ; phone 247·2.5.17 utility room , garage, $10,000;
Ohio, has b11n duly appointed of May, 1972, Plaintiff, Bernice
or
247·2543.
phone 949·4195.
Execu)or of the Estate of Bess Bowen flied her complaint
6·21 ·3tc
3·31·1fc
36" X 23" il
H. Slf'\bOrn, dtCIUtd, lilt of against them rn the Court of
Meigs County : Ohio.
common Pleas ot Meigs
WD.AC TRACTOR , good fires,
Creditor• ert required to file County, Ohio. the same belhO
lhelr claims With said fiduciary • case No . 15,0731n said court. for
otor overhauled, new paint,
within follr month1.
an action lo. quiet 1lfle in lht
D. Trtll type mower, side
50 ACRES
Dale~ this 3rd day of June, following datcrlbtd real ts1ttt,
rake ; phooe !&gt;92·2826.
1'12.
···~It:·
6-15·61p
John C. lacan
Situated in the Village ,of
Reduced!
Probate Judge of said C:ounty Mlddleport , M'lgs county,
ELECTROLUX Vacuum
161 7. 1&lt;, 21
Ohio.
land
USED OFf!SET PLATES
Cleaner . Lot' model on
Being Lot No. 10~ In Iehan's
ACidl11on to the said VIllage of
wheels, uses paper bajjs, A·1 t.ocattd s. al Athens '2 mi. on
HAV!io
Mlddltport. For more definite
with 7 att. plus shampooer. u.s . Rt. JJ. · Bordered on
-MANY ~tiES
dncrlptlon~ reference Is made
$28.40 Cllh or terms south ' by county Road,
IO the fllot of Mid VIllage.
avallabtt.
Phone.992-6517.
bOrdered on weat • nort!" by
The dtmend of the Complaln1
·
6-1S.6tc rLtr~nlng strtam, split dOwn
Is for fhe qulollnt of the title of
mlddlo by runnln9 op•tng.
the Otfen•onll bllod oil o
. '
1200 If , fronlage on bOth lidos
ZIG
ZAG
-lng
machine·
,
1972
c111tract Of purchiN dttill Juno
'·
• for
!
hithwoy. Hos old form
10, 1,57, w~tch woo aban•lllod
model, uNCI lust a lfN times . Of
hOme,
3 bedrooms. llvlno
b' lhli!o Det.,dants Cart MotH
· Fullsta. Dial contralto fancy room. tormel
dining room,
and vtlyn MotH, and
Olhor
stitch,
.
b"flonhole
etc.
kitche'n and outbuildings.
rtflef.
Reduced to only $36.20 Cath or
Said Defendants are rf&lt;lulrod
terms available. Trade·ln
to esnwtr said complaint within
CALL LEW LEITER
'
accepted. Phone 992-6517.
H doyo ofltr the 1111 dote of
1U.1761
puDtlcatlon, which dale 11 Juno
6·1s.6tc
21, 1912,
C~tumbul, Ohio
,._,
•
CAMPER, 16ft. sloepa 6, gocxf
••rn ....and
v . I'Vf I
. Wtlltltr
111 1~rt It,
condition, $1,000. Phone 992.
lerthl fllchordson
, ... O.haJ
a...
-y
-~
~
6329
IIIIIY
,_rtt,Ohlod7"
rvftMtv 1 -~
·
116·1"4
114·11M
All""ttttor ,tohiiiH
C5117,2UI 16H,14,l1,61 •
""--~------~ - - - - - - : - - 5--12·1fC

Ph. 992·2156

ARNOLD.
BROTHERS
o.

Auto

--========----,

For

Mobile Homes For Sale

;::========:......,

•

LEGAL NOTICE

Real Estate For Sale

~\'JOf!! ~BIBm

IGEClRGE BEVERLY .Jnr"'

RCA CAMDEN

l.et's

ALBUMS

!leds
F•ncn

ELVIS PRESLEY
~BOOTS RANDOLPH
• GEORGE BEVERLY SHEA
• EDDIE ARNOLD
AND MORE.
CHOICE
1

aim"''
In love

RCA 8TRACK STEREO TAPES
J

RETAIL VALUE $4.95

"(/)~

.W

~Jin.g_

?j.oLL JlclWL"

brick front.. 1 car
garage,
carpeting .
Priced at ..
From the largest Truck
ONLY $13,750
Bulldozer Radiator lo the
We specialize in aluminum.
Smalle5t Heater Core.
vinyl and stee l siding ;
Nathan Biggs
fiberglas , brick and Stoile i
R'adiator Specialist
complete line of resident1a1
and commerci'al roofing ;
remodeling ,
building,
suspended ceilings, lnfertor
and exterior painting;
Ph . 992:2114
Pomeroy
complete line of Masonry
work . All work guaranteed to
customer satisfaction. we
are futly ins ured for your
Real Estate For Sale
protectioo . 32 N. 2nd. 992·
IDEAL 5·ACRE RANCHO . 3918.
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
Lake Conchas, New Mexico.
CONSTR. CO.
$2,875. No Down. No interest.
$25 mo. Vacation ' Paradise.
Mon e y
Maker .
Free
• J - .. •. , ...
Brochure . Ranchos : Box
.. il'.__..
· 200 1DO, Alameda, California
'
' ll,. _I ........ ___
94501.
6·7-JOip

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

.' ..,. ·~
J.'
'
.' ___

CLELAND
REjlLTV

· Contact AssOciate
VERA EBLEN
'112·J020
160 Coal St, Middleport
RUTLAND
2 B. R. modern home. ·
co mpl ete ly fu r nished on
large fenced lot, garage,
$18,000.
I
3 B.R. home, recently
completed refinished Inside
on 3/.t acres, S11 ,SOO.
2'12 MILES from Rutland, 7
room, 1 floor plan home,
bath, furnace on \ •14 acre
ground $10,000.
1 Ml LE loom Bypass, 3 b .r.
all .e lectr ic home on 3 at;res,
$18 ,900.

MIDDLEPORT
S. SECOND Avenue, 3 b .r.,
bath, full basement, gas
rurnace, ca rport, very nice
$21,000.
7 ROOMS, bath, garage on

la1 ~e private lot, $7 ,950.
160 Coal Street - Also
location of the Middleport C
of C office .

EARTH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End loader Work,
ponds, basement, lind·
scaping. We~' have ~ sitt
dozers. 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract..
Free Eslimltes. We alsa
haul fill dirt. top soil. Dump
frucks and low.boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992·3525
after 7 p.m. or phone m..
52J2.

EXPERT

Wheel Alignment·
ss.55

On Most American C~J ..
-GUARANTEED• Phone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open8Til5
Monday thru Saturdly
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, Q.

608 E. Main St.
Pomeroy
IMMEDIATE
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
POSSESSION!
3 bedrooms, nice kitchen , 2 REASONABLE rates. Ph . ..446'
4782~ Galilj&gt;Oiis, John Ru,sell, •
baths, for ced·air gas fur ·
Owner &amp; Operator.
nace, full basement as living
5·12·1fC
quar ters. $1.9'15.00.
GETTING
C. BRADFORD, AuctiOMer
SOCIAL SECURITY?
Complete Service
Want a home and an in.
Phooe 949·3821
come? We have jusf the
Racine, Ohio
thing for you . Brick home, 2
·Cri ll Bradford
bedrooms, bath, utility,
5-1-lfc
dining , basement, porches
OOZE R and back hoe work,
for you , nice apartment
ponds and septic tanks; B &amp; K
over, and small house In tile
Excavating, Phone '1'12·5367,
rear .
Nic e
income.
Dick Karr, Jr .
$18.000.00.
5·21·1ft
GOOD NEIGHBORS .
LIVE HERE
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
2 story frame, 3 bedroom5,
Septic tanks Installed. George
bath, porches, storage
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 9'12·2471.
building, garage. view of the
•ts.lfc
river. $6,900.00.
AHDME AND
SEE OS FOR: Awni ngs, storm
A BUSINESS
doors and windows, carports,
marquees, alumlnutn siding
A nlce3 b~droom apartment,
and railing. A. Jacob, sales
bath, glassed front and rear
representative. For free .
porches, hardwood floors, a
estimates. phone Charles·
bu5lness to go with it. Great
Lis!e, Syracuse, ·v. V.
for retirement Call for In·
Johnson and Son, Inc.
formation .
•
3·2·110
- WATCH THIS SPACE
FOR REALTY VALUEsSEWING MACHINE ser~ke,
HENRY E. CLELANDSr.
clean, oil, set tensfcln s.t.99.
REALTOR
Special Electro-Grande
DIAl, 992·2259
Company. Phooe 9?2·6517. :
If no answer 992·2568
•
5·21-lfc
RACINE - 10 room house,
bath, ba sement, garage, two HARRISON'S TV Service, _ ,
9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; free pickup
lots. Phone 949·4313.
and delivery; phon~ '1'12·2522.
4·Hfp
6·13-tfc

~··

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

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
NEW LISTING
DOWN TOWN- 8 rooms, bath. nice kitchen, furnace . full
basement . Front and back porches . Old but ropmy and
handy . $7500.00.
REAL ESTATE HILL
POMEROY - Nice 2 bedrooms. bath, livi ng rm . car·
pefed. Gas forced air furnace. Basement. Asking
$10,500.00 .
BOON DOCK SPECIAL
SURPRISE - 2 bedrooms, 2 porches. 2 dug wells and
cellar. Kitchen has stove, sink and refrigerator. Asking
$4,000.00.
OLD-BUT
RURAL - Here's one you ought to enjoy liKing. Has .3
bedrooms, living, and kitchen . Cellar. Large garden spot.
l)'oly $5,000.00.
WANT TO FINISH THIS
NEW - 2 bedrooms, bath, garage, cistern and large lot on
good country road. Asking $8500.00.
NEW CAPRI
J BEDROOMS ..:. Lots of dose! space, large ones In each
bedroom. Gas forced air furr\ac! . Stove and refrigerator.
free zer furnished. Landscaped lot with utility building .
.i)'oly 516,000.00.
GRAZING FARM
165 ACRES- 2 houses, 4 farm ponds. 3 springs, 2 cisterns
and welL Plenty of good grass. Would llke$25.000.00.
ARE YOU THINKING OF MOVING. BUILDING. OR
BUYING. WE HAVE OVER 6D PROPERTIES NOW .
CHECK WITH US FOR A GOOD BUY.
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE

O'DELL Wt'IEE'l 'tlfgilnl'tnt
located af CrossrGadl, Rf::Y24•.
Complete front end ...-vleet 1
tune up and broke ser\llce.
Wheels
balanced el"'·
Ironically .
All
work
guaranteed.
Reasonable
rates. Phone m -3213• .
7·27-lfc
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost · your
operator's license? Call 992·
2966.
• 1
6-15·tft
SEWING MACHINES. Ropolr
service, all makes. 992·2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomlf'oy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scluon.
J.2f.lfc

CONCR~TE ·

READY . MIX
delivered right to your
project. Fast and easy. FrH:
eshmates. Phone 992.3214.'
Goegleln Ready·Mix Co.,,
Middleport, Ohio.
;
.
6-:JO.Ifc•
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Mlllor
Sanitation, St~art , Ohio. Ph.
662·31135.
2·12.1fc

For Sale or Trade
QUARTER horse ; phone 742·
3418. •
6-21-6tc

992-3325

.Open For Inspection in Lakeview Estates
By Appoinbnent '

Call 992-3975
or

992-2571

· · For Sale

.ocW

RETAIL
VALUE
$2.49

3 Bedroom · home, with

LEGAL NOTICE

• HIT COUNTRY • KINGS OF COUNTiY MUSIC
• QUEENS OF COUNTRY MUSIC e 8 GREAT
STARS AND MORE

Aluminum ..
Sheets

........
WMP0/1390.
01·· ···
We talk. JUU

.'

.....

- - - - -- T.

suo

tor

'··u

•

Contract

20*

The ·.
DaiiJ Sentinel

l---------'

I

...J

WALNUT Stereo .radio com bination, dual volume control.
4 speed intermixed changer, 4
speaker sound s ystem ,
Balance $62.57. Us e our
budget terms . catt 992.7085.
6-lHtc

•••

Get ·R ·esultsi

Business Services

POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
Park vieW Kennels, Phone 9925443.
8·15·11C

32 FT. HOUSEBOAT. 40 h.p.
- PROVATE DIVISION outboard motor and trailer ;
Myrtle Haning , Administralrl• ,
will sell reasonable . Phone
of the Esta1e of
Rebecca Hudnall,
992-7157 or see ai28A Ra ilroad
"Deceased,
St .. Middl eport .
Plaintiff.
6·2o.6tc
SAVE URIO one half. Bring yollr Clarence Hudnall , et al.,
sick TV to Ch uck's TV Shop,
Oelendonts.
Wanted
1972 ZIG·ZAG Sewing Machine
,
No . 20438
151 Butternut A~;~e., Pomeroy.
NOTICE BY
LEAD vocalist for rock group. left in layaway. Beautiful
4·4-lfc
PUBLICATION
Call Gallipolis 446·3829 or pastel color, full size model.
All built·in to buttonhole, do
The Defendants, Stan ley
Pomeroy 992-2289.
r
McCouly, Frankl in McCouly.
6·22 ·3k stretch sewi ng and fan cy
Harold Wilson and Mrs. Ha rold
stitching . Pay just $48.75 cash
Wilson, Marie New and Mr.
or term s available. Trade-ins
New. husband of Marie New,
accepteH. Phone 9'12·5641.
and the unknown heirs ,
6·15-61c
devisees , lega tees, executors.
administrators or assigns of
Lennie Wilson. Deceased, will
take notice that on the 8th . day
of May , 1972 , a Petition was
filed in the Probate Division or
the Common Pleas Court of
Meigs Coun ty , Ohio, wherein
Window
you have been named defen .
Air Conditioners
1
0
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

Cl~ssifieds

New3

room Homes·

lake froQtage on full acre lot, 20 year financing available.

LAKEVIEW EST AlES
ROUTE 7 af FIVE. POINTS

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III
Page I)
· • ( Coillllll!ed from Pa1e I)
or freezer.
·
rose at a ~e~~aonaliy adjulted
What canning does basically, annual rate of 3.5 per Cl!lt
s~e sa1d, IS ster~lize the ,food during the sl&amp; months of the
and seal it in conll'iners to Ftase 11 controls or lm than
avoid recontamination. ~he . the 4 per cent rati. of ina'eaae
cautwned al!out eatmg during the six months leading
vegetabl~ col~ lr~m the jar ~ to the wage.,.tce freeie
notmg U:e l&gt;Qtuhsm IS odorless, ·imposed in August,
tasteless and colorless. If there · The higher coat of Uvlng 1n
a~e any indications of spoila!;e, May outstripped the pur·
diScard the produCt, she sifll. ChaSing power . Of average
Mrs. Boso demonstrated the · weekly eirnings of rank-endproper technique of canning file workers. Th~ BLS.sald the
green beans using a pressure actual purchasing pow~ of the
canner. She also showed how to weekly earnings of the average
prepare cabbage for freezing worker with three dependents
noting that everything done to dropped 0,6 per cent from April
food for the freezer Js ·becaUSe of the higher prices.
" .Prepare
done to preserve quality and
'
·
·
taste, since there is little
concern for 8afety.with fr~ch
foods. She ·recommended that
whe'n selecting plants or seeds
a freezer variety is preferred.
Eleven defendants were
On diaplay at each of the . fined and a 12th forfeited a
clinics were a variety of tond Tuesday night in the court
bulletins on canning and of Middleport Mayor John
freezing which are nQw Zerkle. .
available at ihe Extension
Fined were Cecil H. Smith,
Office.
51, Middleport, ·$15 aqd costs,
Those attending the clinics intoxication ; John L.. Taylor,
brouk~ t thei~ pressure cooker 24, Middleport, $25 and costs,
lids so tl\at gauges could be intoxication and disturbing the
checked for accuraay . The peace; Donald H. Craig, 38,
gauge testing equipment is . Midilleport, $15 and costs,
available at the Extension Intoxication; Kenneth D.
Office and residents /nay have Mohler, 33, Middleport, $100
g_auges tested at any time.
and costs and three days in jail,
'
•· driving while intoxicated;
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Heney D. Ohlinger, 19, MidJames Wesley Casey, 35, dleport, illegal license tags, $25
Middleport, and Connie Ann and costs; Jljnmy Johnson, !9,
Snider, 34, Middleport.
Racine, $10 and · costs,
Douglas Rhett Courtney, 22, speeding ; Homer C. MilRacine, and Sandra Kay Sayre, 'Ier,
56.
Middleport,
18, Racine.
$10 .and costs, no driv;
er's license; Paul D.
Goodnite, 22, Let&amp;rt, W. Va., $5 .
and cost.J, stop sign· violation;
Harold K. Grate, 311, Mid·
Tonight &amp; Thurldoy
dleport, intoxication, $5 and
,NOT OPEN
costs; Jan Durst, 35, Mid·
Frlaay thru Tuesday
dleport, Intoxication, $10, and
June23-l7
costs; Robert L. Allman, 25,
THE FRENCH
Canton, $5 and costs, in·
CONNECTION
ITec:hnlcotorl
toxication.
Gene Hackman
. Forfeiting a taO bond posted
Fernando Rey
on intoxication charges, was
Also Cartoons
Burton T. Deweese, 48, Dexter.
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

MEIGS THEATRE.

Plesant Valley H01pltal
DISCHARGES - Evelyn
Rainey, Apple Grove; Donald
Kirtley, Huntington; Charles
Lively, Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
Charles McComas, daughter,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. John
Chick and son, Langsvllle, 0.;
Jan B. Buxton, Point Pleasant;
Barbara Snyder , Pomeroy ;'
Ida ·turner, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Clarence Polley, Huntington, and Wyatt Radford,
Pomeroy.

Tonight . Thursday
&amp; Friday

Juno 21 -22-23

Double Feature PrOgram
"EVEL KNIEVEL"
(Metrocoior)
George Hamilton
Sue Lyon
IGPJ

'

- PLUSWEREWOLVES ON ·
WHEELS
(Color)
Stephen Oliver
I Rl

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Wednesday was 71 degrees
under extremely cloudy skies.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Two
major governmental
rl!lll'g8llilaUon proposals of !he
admlnilltraUon of Gov. John J.
Gilligan have been shelved
..;til at 1eaat next month by the

U

nargraves
Receives
"
Masters

Ohio House, whlc:h has adJOUmed until J~ly 6.
.
Floor votes failed to
materialize for lack of support
Tu:esday on bills .to se! up a ·
cabinet~evel
Department of
Environmental Protectloo and
to merge the Department of
Development
and
the
Department of Urban .Affairs.
The House acted on a num·
ber of bills in its me.&amp;y scssioli, but a full day of political
maneuvering, milirlly on the
environmental protection

J. E. Johnson,
. 71, Succwnhs
'

WHEN YOU SlfOP AT

Phebe's

·. J.,(

MACARONI &amp; CHEDDAR

CHEESE DINNER ........

.
.
SOUP................................
BATH SIZE BARS

'

'

. You. WE Ll KE"
Right reserved -to

.

We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamos

'
Monday Thru Friday
•

MA.GIC

aunER MILK

I. 39'
DRINK
·val.

59'

t

.

•

'

POR.CH BLINDS , •

MWEN SPREADS

..

·B'allerina
Lamp$hade5

•n•

.

'

Elberfelds ·ln.·P. omeroy·
.

Semi-Boneless

c
Half or Whole
,.

..'•• BACON ENDS
•
• AND PIECES·
•
. I•

I

FRESH PORK

. ,

.

SHOULDER
ROAST
2¥2 to 5 lb. avg.

•••
•

I

'

'

Canning Supplies
KERR &amp; BALL JARS
AND

EVERYTHING IHAT GOES
WI1H·TH£M.

·'

:5 lb. for
'

1.•59

.:···································································· ' '
.

I
I

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FRENCH Clll. ·. _:~

LIVER :PUDDING ~-. :.

46 oz. can

~LEACH ..... )~:r.. 39~

'

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FRESH. ~ETART
•

,·

.

Cloudy with chance of
showers northeast and partial
clearin g elsewhere tonight.
Cooler-with the lowest 45 to 55.
A· few; showers northeasl
Friday and partly cloud y·
elsewhere. little change in
temperature. High upper 51f!
and 608
TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

Hue Braced For
North 0

RETURN FROM WASHINGTON - Area negotiators
attending a one.day conference in Washington were "all
smiles" upon their return home Wednesday evening. Pictured at the Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport shortly after their
arrival around 7:30 p. m. are, left to right, Jack E.
Farrington, executive director of the Ohio Valley Health
Services Foundation, Inc.; Roy Rankins, communications
consultant ; nr. Thomas W. Morgan, chainnan of the area's
Emergency Medical Services Advisory Council; Einon

m wc._.o,

b

mwma

ll'ews .. in
WASHING~~ Un~::~

::1.
BriefS~

Plummer, fiscal officer, and Gary R Short, observer, The
team was in Washington for tile purpose of obtaining a $4 .7
million, three-year federal contract to set up a national
demonstration project for the delivery of emergen~y medical
services in a seven..:ounty southeastern Ohio area . "We're
not at liberty to discuss today's activities at thts time,"
Farrington remarked, but added, "everything looks real
good thus far ." ·

::n:y

of a final vote,
with its outcome a foregQile conclusion, remained today before
the House sent President Nilan's revenue-6harlng blll to an
uncertain fate in the Senatt.
Opponents of the bill, which would funnel $30 billion in
federal funds to the states and localities over the next five years,
based their strategy on a procedural move Wednesday. They lost
when the House refused, on a 223-185rollcaU vote, to open the bill
to amendments which ita backerssaidwould kill it.
House leaders said tbey eljlected the bill to come to a final
vote latetoday after completion of debate. Observers felt the bUI
was certain to pass.
'
CHERRY Hll.L, N. J . - A PRIVATE GUARD described by

his neighhors as a quiet .churchgoer went berserk in ap office
building Wednesday and shot 12 men, six fatally, before woun·
· ding hlniSelf in the head .
The gunmen, identified as EdWln Grace, 32, a Pinkerton
guard from New York City, seemed deliberately to avoid firing
at the women he encountered during the !~inure shooting
spree which turned tbe normally quiet office building into a
slaughterhouse.
Grace, under beavy guard at Cherry Hill Hospital where his
condition was called "critical," entered the Heritage Building at
about2:30 p.m., carrying two sawed-off .22 caliber rifles.
Plllice said he roamed from office to office, shooting only
men. sOme were shot at their desks',' others were gunned down in
the hails.

WASHINGTON- U. 8. DISTRICT Court Judge Charles B.
Richey Wednesday postpooed until June 'll sentencing of United
Mine Workers Pres. W. A. "Tony". Boyle on his conviction on
13 counts of diverting union funds to political candidates.
Richey postponed the sentencing because Boyle is
hospitalized with a bad back according to his attorney, Plato
Cac:heris. Cacheris said Boyle haaa "cbrooic back disorder."
Casheris produced a letter from Dr. Milton Gusack saying
Boye, 67, was ''unable to ambulate at all."
Boyle faces up to $120,000 in fines and up to 32 years in prison.

SAIGON {UPI)- North Vietnamese troops crossed the My
Chimh River in regimental
strength and attacked South
Vietnamese paratroops today
In the heaviest drive across the
northern defense line since
Quang Tri Province feU May I.
One allied source said the
Communist attack, backed by
Soviet-built tanks and 130mm
caJUJons, might. be the start of·
the long awaited offensive
against Hue, 20 miles to the
south.
UP! reporter Chad Huntley
said 100 North Vietnamese
were killed by midafternoon.

'

·".

""~~ ......

NEW YORK - THE SWISS government presented its
demand for the extradition of Edith Irving for her part in her
husband's Howard Hughes ' autobiography hoax, at a hearing in
federal court Wednesday. ·
The hearing before U. S. Magistrate Gerard L. Goettel was
adtourned JlnUI today and Mrs. Irving was returned to Nassau
COunty Jail.
Bernard Reverdln, representing the Swiss government, read
the indictment charging her with embezzlement, counterfeiting,
forgery and theft. The charges stem' from ber alleged use of a
forged passport and forged signature to deposit McGraw-Hill
Publishing Co. checks made out to Hugbes in a Swiss bank. Each
charge carries a five-year jail tenn.

, j. ,,, •••••••••••
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•
"

DRESSING ................~~.'~· .' 49e

DAIRY DEPT. SPECIALS

ORANGE
GRAPE
LEMONADE

'

1

LAUNDRY BLEACH ,

,CLOSE'l SUNDAYS

Y2
..............

Valances to match t29

en tine

THURSDAY, JUNE 22, 1972

C.pe ·Cod Tter Curtains

for

. .
1

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Are Released

.

$1

VOL. XXlV 'NO. 4R

.

f

Weather

Devoted To 17ae lntere&amp;t&amp; OJ 17ae MeigJJ-Mdlon Area

BI.EAtttED. .

.

oz.
bots.

at y

The Bronz••
.Is the only one of
New York City's .five boroughs
1'"...:~~2~ on the U. S. maiolaQd.

-tO P.M.

bars

. 14

•

NQw You Know

9:al)·"

'

GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ... 45e

Saturday 9 to 9

,~...,

cans$
for

SEALDSWEET

9:00 to 7:11&amp;

vALLEY sELL

,

FABRiC SOFTENER ........~~.~-: .. 69e
KRAFT CATALINA

Prices Effective June 21·28

:?-J.:S.~
•1

BIG VALUE

limit quantt~Ies

Jtaeme t.lrahr~ ,

agency (EPA), came to EPA, IOUiht by llle ad' \ 'lb.-e wu major. ~ · Falivllill ~ at I Jl.lll.'
naught.
mlolstrallon to.,coiiiOIIdate ~ over ~..'!'!" lbe
·~ lj14nultllrGuiii11P&amp;. aeejlt
The proposed EPA, a •111)011u\kJn PNCJWI», IIIIW lholllll allow c1- to lib • •lalja'day W!llll llle • • open
priority item of the Gilligan lodged with several 111111 ~~ to COIWI , Ia poUnllm '
llebll ere
administratioo, was tbe prime agendei. ·
' . !!UN*-,wbe\ber they ~
at the pte, •
rea8011 the ~ ~'«urned for
An ad mini •·t r a i Ion 'prclllllt thrGucb~:.·~
·.·ln•lli•ioli•I•U•ve~;:.!~:;.-.~~~
a session this week. It will now spokeiQlan uld llwu bellewCI.
"
have to wait until tile House the meuure would han
and Senate reconvt!l)e tn July . .pasaed, bill the coUDI Wll too
to clean up major businetls for close for CGihrart.
' '
a summer recess.
· •&lt;Our ca- is quite divided
'
Report After Cauauea
as to whetl1er there ought to .,. .... ,1
Shop WllluiiJS'
5 P.M. ,,
!louse Speaker Charles F. an · EPA biB," said Kurfea .
Kurfess, R-Bowllng Green, and liter a full.dlly of heavy lobby.
Open Bolli FrWa, 111C1 , , .9:30 9
House Minority Leader A. 'G, lrljl by ~ and Industrial
Lancione, D-Bellaire, reported Interests ' in · the:. House
after separate party caucuses corridors.
that adecision had been made
-~Toweling
~
.
.
to postpone action.
ll(cfUCiod In this g,touP, ,are
It wa5 reported ohly 15 .He- 'I "'Lesawo..nonL.e ·
Alghans;1· Plllqw (:ups,
.
publicans were p(-ep&amp;red· to Ul
~
•l.rtw,el Pictures, Rug
Patterns, Sampl", Pr• '
-STEVENS P
supportthebillestablishingthe (Coalillued frem Pue 11
'
Cut
~ug W~.·. '•
J:'•
•
JJ1•
in the prb'gr&amp;nl" of Faii111y
·Blue-GrYellow Border
J' ITiaRCUJ J' ~ Planning of Southeast Ohio lnWill~ .Tiiey List
. Meigs County, A ,free family
planning clinic is beld twice
•
each month at Veterans
Pomeroy Village funds as of Memorial Hospital. Mrs. Lund
May 31 totaled $100,992.14 reported that.the Meigs County
according to the report of Clerk group will meet tO!iether later
Jane Walton submitted to this summer,
Members heard Mrs. Jane
Pomeroy Council Monday
·
WITH TIE ~ACKS f,
,
night. Receipts, disbursements Ergood, Project Director,
Permanent or"'' · 50 oer· cent Kodll Po.lvester and 50 oer
and clerk's balance, respec- · discuss the progr&amp;nl plans. for
cent Avril Rayon. No Ironing, mac:hlne washabli. Wrln~le
free. 68 Inches wide per pair.
tively in the active fund were: 1972-73. The agency, preseritly
General: $6,069.86, .$6,414, funded solely wiUi Appalachian
$2.49 54" length ·
' $3.29
24" length
$7,52!.52; boat docks, no Regional Commlasion Health
$3.59
63"
length
$2.49
Demonstration
Funds,
will
36"
length
receipts, no expendi lures,
$2.99
45"1ength
$702. 95 ; sewer, $5,063.97, seek additional support to
•
extend
its
services
in
F8mily
$2,953.98, $17,827 .71; fire
department, no . receipts, Planning and pre-natal care. ,..
5
The next meeting of the
$226.59, $2,276.58; cemetery
,
fund, $148.50, $751.51, $448.02; group wiD be Monday, 8ept.11, .
Beautiful colors-"Red, GOld, Whlte,.:. Greetl.
·
·
slreetdept., $9,211.64, $1,545.43, in Pomeroy.
Blue, Lilac: Melon,
$.10,603.67; state highway,
$746.88,$57.19, $2,825.02; utility
fund , no receipts, $856,76,
~EW SHIP_ME,.T JU_
St ARII.IVI!D
$16,410.36;
water
im- VeleraDB Memorial HtispiW
ADMITTED
Gregory
provement, no receipts, no
expenditures, $15,61; guaranty Grimm, Middleport; Wesley
meter , $175:oo, $111.42, Clark, Racine; Iva Howell, ·
'12'' flat slat 'roll-up blind for exterior use In
$4 ,277.24;· parking meter, Rutland ; Adrian Carson,
Porch and &amp;"zeways, eny e-xterior area.
$1,531.50, $2,350.00, $10,971.01; Middleport, and Doris Wolfe,,
COmplete
wit~ ~at'\lli.!l!i hardwar~ Just wipe
sanitary sewer construction, Racine.
clean, will not mildew. Will last for years.
DISCHARGED - Berland
no receipts, nO expenditures,
Fruitwood color.
$5 .58. Total receipts, disbur- Blake, Bessie Rudisill, John
Sizes
4ft,, sft., Ht., 7ft., aft., 10ft. All with, ..
Alvin · Barnett,
sements and the balance in the Kauff;
foot aroo.
'·
active fund respectively were, Christopher . Smith, Eber
$31,523 . 19,
$22,953 .99 , Gillilan, Charles ·McF.arland,
Earl Glass, George Riddle,
$78,499.85. '
Marvin
Warvell, ' Clifford
Receipts, disbursements and
clerk's balance respectively In Jenkinson, Ralph Parker and
~
the inactive fund include · Orpha Stalnaker.
N~ excellent •..ort"""'i ot
special street repair bond
high priced , wavon bed·
PEE WEE RESULTS • '
SJ!ilads. FriiiiJod, mac~lne
retirement, no receipts, no
Whitt and cotor~. Table
In pee wee play Syracuas · washable, lint free.· Good
expenditures, $1,595.64; bond
cotoo.
and
Floor Lamp •Jzes.
number
one
defeated
Syr~cuas
retirement, no receipts, nq
Twin ond Full Slrt
expenditures , $20;896.65 . niimber ,two !9 to 10. , :. , ••
~'' !I'!
For the 'irlilllel'lll. lt.- AnliaReceipts, disbursements and
·
Quton
ond King Sire
balances in all'funds respec· was on the mound allowing
lively totaled $31,523.19, 'only five hils. Arms 81)d Tony
Salser were the big bats for.
$221953.99, $i00,992.14.
Parking meter receipts for winners each collecting two
,
the month of May, street · homers.
Syracuse number one will
meters, $1,474.00, parking lot
play
at Lelart Thursday al6:30
meters, $1,531.50, making a
'
~ . m.
total of $3,005.50.

it-I; J\ ' -

6.

DIAl SOAP. ........:..... 5
KETCHUP, ..................4
HUNT'S :rOMATO

J

J5 ~~~-oz. s1

CAMPBELL'S CHICKEN NOODLE

'The Store With A Heart

•

~

-i L

I

•5tn and PEARL STS.. RACJNE

.

c.

Gilligan Proposals Shelved . ·

David George Hargraves
received · his Masters of
'
Business Administra lion
degree at the' Ohio University
Commencement on SatUr-day,
June 10. He is the son of Mr. . MASON - James Edward
and Mrs. George Hargraves Johnson, 71 , Mason, died
Jr: of 350 North 4th . Avenue, Tuesday at City Hospilai in
Middlei&gt;ort.
East liverpool.
David graduated from ' Mr. Johnson was born March
Pomeroy High School in 1967 15, 1901 at Letart, W. Va., the
where he was a co- son of the late William Edward
valedictorian of his class. He and Hannah ·Ellen Gibbs
received his B. Sc. degree In Johnson. Besides his parents,
Electrical Engineering with he was preceded in death by
high honors from Ohio two brothers, Harry and
University in June of 1971.
William Harold Johnson. Mr.
He held a President's .Honor Johnson was married to Eugia
Award Scholarship ~urlng his L. Roush on April 4, 1926.
four years under-graduate
Surviving are two daughters,
work. His honor societies in· Olga Stewart, Wellsville, Ohio;
eluded the following: Phi Eta and Mrs . Donna Gheen,
Sima (freshman men) , Pi Mu Racine; four sons, James E.,
Epsilon (matthematics), Eta Mason; William S., Carroll,
Kappa
Nu
(electrical Ohio; DallasM., Grayson, Ky.,
engineering), Tau Beta Pi and Robert E., Columbus; 26
(engineering), Phi Kappa Phi grandchildren, four great(top . 10 pet. of graduating grandchildren, a brother,
class) . He was on the bean's Dorsey W. Johf!Son, Letart, W.
list for all 12 quar!A!rs of his Va. , and two sisters; Mrs.
undergraduate work. He was a Freda Edwards, Middleport,
member of ·tbe Honors College and Mrs. Katie Hart, Letart,
for two years. He graduated W. Va .
summa cum laude,-·fourth in
Mr. Johnson was a carpenter
his class of 52 ln electrical and he was a member of
engine~ring, ·in June o( 1971. carpenlers Local1159 at Point
During his year of graduate Pleasant.
study he was a graduate
Funeral services will be held
assistant ·in the Office of the at 1:30 p. m. Thursday at the
Dean of the College of Business Foglesong Funeral Home with
Administration . In this position the Rev . Stan Craig and the
he did research on factors Rev. Audry Miller officiating.
influencing student evaluation Burial will be in Graham
.of faculty for the _College of 'teme!A!ry. Friends may call at
Business Administration.
the funeral home at any. time.
He has accepted a position
with Nallonal Cash Register in
Dayton. There he wlU serve as
INFORMATION NEEDED
l financial speclalisi in the Historical information is
corpgratJ financial policy needed pertaining to the Sutton
department. He will be living United Methodist Church
Jn Kettering.
which will observe its tOOth
.
anniversay in September.
The church was (ormerly
known as Lee's ChapeL It is
• PLAN TRAIL RIDE
loeated on the Racine-Bashan
The Meigs 4-H Pleasure Road . Anyone havin g any
Riders will have an overnight information is asked to call949trail ride on · Saturday. 2472 at the earliest possible
Members are to meet at the time. The · Rev. Frank
Rock Springs Fairgrounds at Cheesebrew is P.&amp;Stor of the
10 a. m. Saturday.
church.

Jl Fined, One
Bon.d Fo-'eited
'J'

MASON DRIVE IN

'

.

Clinics
.
•
•
(.ost • • •
1llMII d !rom

•

.,
•

·-

li - The Daily Sentinel,,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., June 21,1972

•

'

Flooding Hits
NortheS~St Area
~

By United Press Intemallonal
Flooding plagued sections of
the Northeast and West Coast
Wednesday night and today
and tornadoes ripped through
Colorado and Arizona, causing
property damage and injuries.
Torrential rains near
troplcai JIIllr,m Ago-.. resulted
in flooding in much of the mid
Atlantic seaboard, causing at
least seven deaths. ·
Heavy rains fell from north·
ern VIrginia to southeastern
New York and flash flood
warnings were in effect
through moat of the area, including portions from western
South Carolina to New
England.
Several thousand persons
fled their homes ahead of flssh
floods along the seaboard and
at least eight persons were

United Press international
Ohio extended outlook
Saturday through Monday.
Fair Saturday, cloudy
Sunday, ehance of showers
on Monday. Slow warming
wltb highs upper 60s to lower
70s Saturday rising to upper
70s and lower 80s Monday.
Nighttime lows 1D the 50s
Saturday, and upper 50s and
lower 60s Sunday and
Monday.

South Vietnamese officers said
their own casualties were light.
They claimed 16 Communist
tanks and annored vehicles
knocked out by tactical aircraft.
At the same time the North
Vietnamese attacked the western hill£ of the defense line, at
least four of the six South
Vietnamese battalions.advancing into Communist-held
Quang Tri Province on the
eastern half fell back south of
the river, which lonns the
province's southern boundary.
Huntley said the marine

sending floodwaters swirling
from creeks and rivers.
At least nine towns in rural
Frederick County,, Md., were
completely l!olated as heavy
rains il\undated tbe western
portion ol the state.
In Isleton, CaUl., residents
hoped sandbagging would halt
floodwaters that forced 1,500
persons to flee when an earthfilled levee ruptured. A dozen
persons suffered minor in·
juries Wednesday in the lush
farmland and recreation areas
of the San Joaquin delta wben
up to 15 feet of water inundated
most of two lsiJ!ldSin the area.
CroP' damage was estimated at
$11 million.

Local 32 of the Brick Masons and Plasterers In·
tematlonal Union of America, located ID Pomerey, bas
erected picket Does today at Ohio Electric Company's new
James M. Gavin Piant under cODStruction 'at Cheshlrt, The
union contends that tbey have uo uew cootract wllb' lbe
Coatractors Association located In Pomeroy. They had been
worklug without a contract slace tllelr old contract eljllrecl
May 31.
NegotlalloDB are eventually still In progress bot no
settlement bas been reached, The other craftll working on the
$488 mUllou preject have bonored . the picket llue. Approximately 1,1011 el!lployees have been Idled.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Natural Resources Depart!Jient, praising the enactment
of the ·state income tax,
Wednesday announced a
$150,000 expansion of the park
system which would provide
outdoor programs for the poor,
the handicapped and the
elderly,
Natural Resources Director
WUUam B. Nye said the expansion was the largest in the
history of Ohio's 57 state parks,
0
0
and came about because of
X l lti.on . funds reaped from the state income tas.
Nye said that without the
state income tax, tbe parks
An exhibition by members of would be back on the auaterlty
the Green County Sport program, which closed state
Parachute Club will be one of parks la&amp;t year.
-the highlights of the Seventh
One' of the programs will be
Annual River Recreational bus service from eight major
Festival, scheduled July 2, 3 cities to the nearest state park
and 4 in Gallipolis.
lor nature hikes, fishing, swimThe event, sponsored by the
Gallipolis Chamber of Commerce, features three days of
family fun featuring teen
dances, parades, water shows,
ar~
displays, concession
slands, queen's contest and
kids day.
The skydiving event is
scheduled for Tuesday, July 4,
at I p. m.
The first place national
competitive championship .
team is composed of · Ken
Three ol the Meigs County
Bright, rated expert and a girls attending Buckeye Girls'
veteran of 1,100 jumps, Jack Stale at Capital University this
Frltzwater with 700, Ed week were elected to offices of
Mosher with 500 and Jerry either the Federalist or
Nesll!lt with over 850 jumps. Nationalist Parties, the
The team will leave their mythical two party system set
aircraft, a Cessna-180 at an up on campus.
altitude of 7,000 feet, free .fall,
Miss Barbara Jo Archer of
perfonn various maneuvers, Middleport was elected to the
trailing colored smoke and City Board of Education, and
land on predetermined largets Miss Judi Ann Roberb of
along the Ohio River bank Racine was elected to city
adjacant to tile Gallipolis City ' council, as was Susanna Card
of Pomeroy.
· .,
Park.
Campaign slogans, songs
and promotion of all types have
been the scene on the campus.
By practical participation the
1250 girls are 'facing the functions and problems of govern. menl as well as the rights,
· daughter, Francine, and now duties, and responsibilities of
Uve at1246 Clark St., Holland, · American .citlzenship, The 1972
Gl}'ls' State session will end
Ohio.

Name Three
Local Girls

To Offices

C. W. (Bill) Perry Receives
Postmaster Of .Year State Award

Charles W. (Bill) Perry, son class of 1948. Before entering
of Mr. and Mrs. George A. the U. S. Navy in !951 he was
Perry, Dexter, was presented employed at the A&amp;P Grocery
the ''Postmaster of the Year · in Middleport.
Stale Award' ' recently In
He is married to Helen
WASHINGTON·-FUUR OF 11IE F1VE men arrested for
Chincinnati.
(Circle) Perry of Racine. They
allegedly attemping to electronically "bug" Democratic national
The award was presented have a son, Daniel, and
headquarters will try to get a bond rewctlon at a hearing today.
PeiTy in recognition and ap·
The four, held since their arrest early Saturday on $50,000 predation ·of his outstanding
hand each, have been linked with Florida groups opposing Cuban services in his post office, his
.
Premier Fidel' Castro. The fifth *'Iapect, James McCord Jr., is community
and
his
being held on $30,000 bond and hu not asked for a reduction.
organization,
thereby
District of Columbia police and the FBI were ~e~~rchlng for
reflecting credit upon himself,
four more perliOns in connection with the alleged wiretapping the entire postal service and
attempt. Police refused to divulge their names but said two live honoring the National League
HOUSTON {UP!) -Sharon
in New York City, one in Kansas and the fourth in Miami.
of Postmasters of which he is a
Ann
Paulsen told police
Loyal Member.
WASHINGTON- PERSONS WANTING to help the Rapid
Mr. Perry served as co- Wednesday she didn't~ to
City,S. c., floodvlctilruJ have~ent too much clothing. .
chalnnan of the Convention of kill her 18-day-old dll118hler by
The Office of Emergency Preparedness said Wednesday that Postmasters from the states of throwing her against the wall,
relief centers in Rapid City have mon than enough clothing to lndianla, Kentucky and Ohio ' but that the Infant's crying got
'
meet all needs and that any more would cause storage problems'. where this award was on he~ ne"ee,
presented.
He
served
as
state
Mrs.
Paulaen,
29,
who
wu
But the relief centeralllill need all khnds of bedding, Including
vice president from 19114 to 19119 charged with murder,llid she
sheeiB, blankets, pillows and pillow Clllel ,
when he was appointed state slapped the baby several timel
president. He wu reelected for· .Tueadiy morning to stlll her
Six Defendants Fined Wednesday
two consecutive terms and crying.
served
unUI June 16. Appointed
"Slie stlll would not quit
Six defendants were fined m:d COlltl on an aaault and
WednesdaY n)ght in the court of batt.ry charge; Mark Miller, Acling Postmaster at Holland crying so I picked her up and 1
Ohio, In 1960, he received
threw her IIJilnat !be bedroom
Pomeroy Mayor William Pomeroy,
an6 cosll, ~ u poelmallter 1n wall and lhe feU to lbe floor,"
Baronlck.
recldeu opera lion; James
They were : Jack McCielWI, Ablel, Mlnenville, $26 and 1963. His poei office is of the she said, ''But llhe wu IIIII
Gallipolis, U~ ·and coats, COlli, lelvtnc llle ane of an first class end aerves over crying.
,
"I went and plckad her up
permitting an unlicensed ICcldent; W1DJam Huffman,' 11,000 poslulation.
Known u Bill to bll many and threw her lgliDat llle do..dliver to operate bll motor l'uuieioJ ,, ~0 llld. costa, In·
frlendi
In Mete• ~ly he wu lilllle .,....,._ 81111 1be feU to
vehicle; George McDnlel, lllalcetlm, end Dona1ll Lovett,
MldJIIepll't; $21 on 1 Nllallq a.ctne, PO 81111 coelt, in· · born 1n Allleu 1111c1 amr up 1n the Door . . . . 111'1. Paulaen
Melp County IJidWa graduate said. '"11111 time When 1 picked
~;urea~ charge, $1081111 I!CII!I• IDIIcatim. '
.
o!RutlandHIIhllcboolwlth the her up she wu qalet,"
1111 lntoxiCIUOO chllrl• IIICIIJI

Huntley said.
U.S. jets supporting the
marines reported knocking out
three of tbe highly accurate
130mm guns with "smart
bombs" along the South China
Sea coast road that the French
during their earlier Indochina
war called the "Street without

Joy."
Far to the 'south government
defenders battled North
Vietnamese troops around An
lAc as the siege of the former
rubber plantation town became
the longest in the Indochina
war.

Expansion Annormced

Sky Dive
drowned and four others were E h 'b
missing.
A foot of rain fell at Big
Meadows, Va., and 10 lncbes on A
metropolitan Washington,
nnou;nced
.

pullback after five days of
fi ghting had been planned
before the Communist attack.
Even so, tbe pullback helped
consolidate the South Vietnamese positions.
Huntley was told the
marines, in their farthest
advance yet into Quang Trl
Province (up to six miles, but
never closer than 10 miles to
the city of Quang Tri) left
behind some small "combat
outposts" when they with·
drew.
'Heavy fighting which began
around midnight was continuing at mid-afternoon,

SUnday,

mlng, boating and campfire
programs.
Buses will leave Akron, Canton, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Colwnbus, Dayton, Toledo and
Youngstown. They will visit the
nearest parks - Portsmouth,
West Branch, Beaver Creek,
Hueston Woods, Punderson,
Burr Oak, Indian Lake, Hope,
Dillon, Mochican, East Harbor
and Salt Fork.
The buses will transport up
to 200 persons per day for 11
weeks. That adds up to about
ll,OOOsenlor citizens and young
people visiting the parks
during the summer.
Nyc said tbe bus service was
instituted because the parks

are for tile people and since it
was impossible ,to put the parks
wbere the people are, "we're
taking the people to where the
parks are."
Bus service from Akron,
Canton, Cincinnati, Cleveland,
Columbus, Dayton, Toledo and
Youngstown, will also provide
a ''fishmobile" program once a
week so elderly parsons can
fish at state parks.
· Free overnight and weekend
camping will be available for
groilps at tent sites accommodating 80 persons at Mohican
and Dlllon state parks.
Olber expansions In tbe program loclude :
- Modification of facilities
at Salt Fork State Park to allow
camping by the handlcapped.
- Addition of 14 naturalists
to tbe division/ of parks and
recreation star .
.
- Expansion of the adult
naturalist program tc. Hueston
Kenneth Harris was elected Woods, Mohican, Lake Hope
as new commander of Drew and Delaware parks.
Webster Post 39, American
Legion, Tuesday night.
Others elected for the new Need Additional
year are Don Whaley, first vice Boy Applicants
commander; Paul Case I,
Due to an mcreas.. 111 the
second vice commander; Dor
nwnber
of enrollees on Its
Coates; adjutant ; Charles
Swatzel, finance officer, and summer Neighborhood Youth
Corp program the Galtia-Meigs
Allen Downie, chaplain.
Swatzel reported on the CAP is in need of male apeighth district convention held plications. The applicanb must
at Crooksville Sunday. A be 14 or older and returning to
chicken barbecue was an- elementary or high school next
nounced for July 2 with fall. The program provides
members asking to volunteer summer employment for
young people In order to belp
to help.
them
remain in school. Ap.
A discussion was held on the
plicallo!IS
will be screened
post again helping with the
lrafflc control and policing at according to labor department
the Meigs County Fair Aug. 15- ' regulations and family income .•
Interested boys should pick up
19.
application blanks at the
C.A.P. office in Meigs County
Court House .
The Leading Creek Con·
servancy District, Is now
accepting appllcallou on
both Operation MaiD ~!ream
SQUAD CALLED
and Project H.O.P.E.
The ·Middleport E-R squad
programs. lodlvidaall In· answered a call at 12:41 p.m.
terested 1D applylnf lhould Wednesday for Ricky LWIS·
apply In person at &lt;Til~ ford , South Third Ave: Ricky,
Leading Creek CoDServaucy 10, received head injuries in a
District Offices, located at bicycle accident. He was taken
Rutland.
to Veterans Memoi-111,1 H6spital
wbere he was admitted.·
"§&amp;it·~·=-=·~:-::2:.·:

Harris Named

Co1DJ118Jider

~

'·

Mother Otarged
WI"th Murder

'o

lib

'

WJllk OONmtUCI'ION Ia tile Vlllqe of Syn:cuae II
Ulli an fiN ~ and IIIWIIdpa1 ~- the llle8l
llll'lldUrl, In addlllon 'to '""'"• !be lire truck and

....,...., Wblelt,dlllw• eoa::tlroa Ull a - fw
tilt 1ltllrd of PIIIIIc Allin. eanw and BY-. OOipnlta,
.... aWII'IIed tilt Olll(llllldlw CCiilrad. 1'lle halkllq II
hu' d • tilt tall'a
Pll'k I*¥ "·

••**''

'

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