<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16646" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/16646?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-05T06:27:31+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49793">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/f5fb6d7477b2132b462e2e118aa332a2.pdf</src>
      <authentication>11f676eeca31e4d8fd5cf1e8cb122d9a</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="53183">
                  <text>Massive Cleanup
Operation
Begun
Along
River
.
.
.

.A MANDA
'

.

'

.

BELLAIRE, Ohio (UP!) Residents along the Ohio River
nca~ the brunt of flooding
during the weekend but prepared to begin
massive
cleanup operation today.
Hundreds of Ohioans were
forced from their homes as the
river swelled to as much as It).
13 feet above flood stage. Most
of them, however, viewed the

PANDA '··~

a

.

.

flooding as a. more-or-less think this was pretty bad, but
we don't."
routine occurrance.
"This Oood really doesn't
bother us too much because the ' The river crest~ at 48.7 feet
people in this town ... are aU here Sunday and nooded a city
used to it," seld Jim Degen· water supply pumping station.
hardt, 33, Civil Defense direc- Several pumps were short cirtor in Brilliant, a town of about cuited,leaving the city without
2,174 perlK&gt;nS.
a water supply for several
"Someone who hsd not gone hours.
through a llood hefor~ would
"The situation wasn't really

too serious," said Mayor Castri Brilliant, East Liverpool,
Cone. "We hooked up with the 'Shadyside, Powhatan Point ,
county water supply and unless Martins .Ferry and Hannib;ll.
we have a major fll'e, we Roads and highways near the
should be In good shape until river were closed by the high
we get the pumps all . back water. They were expected to
working sometime today or remain closed to traffic even
after the water recedes, until
Tuesday."
mud and debris is removed.
The river was expected to
Persons were ordered from
crest
at Cincinnati Thursday,
their homes in Clarington,

•

NQw You Know

Devoted To

VOL XXIV

:' ••

·J .,.

.,

•

~ ·

:t..

..

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.'

Ladc.,; W/th
..a Past

WASHINGTON (UPI)- 1mmediate U.S. withdrawal from
Southeast Asia, postwar
amnesty for draft dodgers and
delerf.ers, and abolition of the
draft were proposed today as
major planks In the 1972 Democratll presidential campaign
plalfonn.
The platform proposed to the
l5CJ.rnember Democratic Platform Committee by a If&gt;.
member
drafting
subcommittee also endorsed
·limited school busing to
achieve quaUty education and
ta11payer financing of most
election campaign costs.
The subeorrunlttee split, 7-to7 - with Chairman Kenneth
GibBon not voting -on the
defense plank.
One version backed by
supporters of Sen. George S.'
McGovern, O.S.D., the frontrunner for the party 's

presaaenllaJ nomanatwn, called
for less military spending.
The other, backed by supporters of Gov. George C. Wallace
of Alabama and Sen. Henry
Jackson, D-Wash., called for
''a program of national defense
·which Is both prudent and
responsible , which will retain
the confidence of our allies,
and which wiUhe a deterrent to
potential aggressors".
Even before the platform
committee began two days of
debate on it, the proposed
platform was under sharp
attack from two sides.
Wallace supporters vowed to
push for an antibusing plank
and for planks to promise tax
relief for middle income
Americans and cuts in foreign
aid.
Some McGovern supporters
said the subcommittee compromised McGovern's liberal

'

By United Pre.a Iniernallonal
nut WORST FLO()D~G In 'U. S. history was receding
·today and the tropical storm that caused It hsd died out. But
hundreds of thouaands of Eastern residents still waited to learn
• when they could return home.
Tropical storm Agnes left at least 122 persons dead, most of
them from flooding in northeastern states, and damage approaching f2 bllllon.
'111e hardest hit state from the flooding was Pennsylvania,
with al.least 47 dead and up to 250,000 persons forced to 'flee their
bomes. In New York 21 persons died, in Virginia, 17, and in
Maryland, 15.
Agne8 left a few squalls Sunday before dying out over
canada where It caused no serious damage.

MAH

F'OL.KS.~~

SU.VERSPRINGS, MD.- FOR 111E f1RST TIME since he
waa llhot In a Laurel, Md., shopping Center May )5, Alabama
Gov. George C. Wallace has some feellng in his thighs.
Aides reported the development Sunday and seid they
It with "cautlolll optimiBm."
PreaaldeElvinStauntonsaid, "Hehassensatlonnowlnthe
thi&amp;ha that wu not present one week ago. This should be
with cautiolll opttmtam for continued neurological
improvement in the month&amp; ahead."
Eight daya ago Wallace underwent surgery for a bullet
lodged near his !!pine.

recll'ded

reclll'ded

I

CAPTAIN EASY
•

'

by Crooks ~ Lawrence

WE DUJ\JNO WOf

'·~"·-·

THE: NUT lOOK.? LIKe!
OUI't 01-JL.'i CLUE I~ He·;.
CARJl,YIIIJ~

A CONCEALEP

ORANGE G~ENAPEl

programs too much for the
seke of unity, glossing over
some of the South Dakota
senator's controversial prO)lOsals in favor of what they said
was bland, general language.
An Alabama state Senator,
Ierre Pelham, Wallace 's
nonvoting representative on
the drafting subcommittee,
contended that McGovern 's
supporters ignored Wallace's
constituency of disenchallted
middle income Americans.
"This McGovern crowd ex!'
hlbits no interest whatever In
the problems · and needs of
these people," Pelham told

. ,.. . . . . . . . . . ~- ....

..

..

. . ... 1"" . . . . . . . .

· -

......

, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..

"It's still shutdown ," said a
police officer Sunday night. "I
guess the sewage will just have
to back up till they get it going
again.''

Generally clear tonight wiU1
lows mainly in the 50s. Mostly
sunny and warmer Tuesday
highs In the upper 70s to lower
80s.

Of The Meig&amp;· Mason Area

MONDAY JUNE '26, 1972

TEN CENTS .

PHONE 992-2156

'.

newsmen.
"They're more interested in
the exotic, " Pelham said.
"They're more interested in
deserters than POWs. They
talk about the right of
homosexuals to marry. That's
nonsense."
Pelham's latter reference
was to. a proposed platform
plank seying Americans should
hsv~ the right to conduct their
private Jives as they wish .
Gibson seid it was aimed at
homosexual rights.
.
Ted Van Dyk, McGovern's
representative to the Platform
(Continued on Page 8)

Abortion Issue
Is Reset Again
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Supreme Court today ordered
reargument next term In two
ca•es challenging whethe~
state laws against abortion are
an unconstitutional invasion of
privacy.
In a brief order without
comment, the justices set new
arguments in abortion cases
from Georgia and Texas to be
heard sometime next fall or
winter.
In a separate action, the
Court also called for reargument in three cases where
new obscenity rules and standards were at issue.
In the Texas abortion case,
the state law makes abortion a
crime unless necessary to save
the mother's life. Thirty other
states have slrnifar laws.
Georgia'slaw allowing aborlions for some reasons, such as

Nixon Returns
T Whi H
0 .
te OllSe

pregnancybecauseofrapeand
the possibility of a physical or
mental defect in the child, is
, oimllar to that of , 16 other
states. ·
The general argument
against anti-abortion laws has
been that they are unconstitutional interference
with a woman's right to hear a
child or not as she chooses and
with a doctor 's right to counsel
hlspatients.
In the Texas case started by
an unmarried pregnant woman
and a childless married couple
-all of whose names were
withheld -a special threejudge federal court In Dallas
ruled on June 17, 1970, the state
laws so vague that they
violated the constitutional
guarantee of due process of
law.
In the Georgia case, a threejudge federal panel in Atlanta
on July 31, 1971, found a large
group of persons had the legal
right to bring suit against the
law and that one woman .who
was refused an abortion had
suffered a deprivation .
Abortion bills were Introduced In 36 states in 1971.
Some were aimed at making
abortion easier, others at
making it hsrder. None was
enacted.
•
1

THIS WAS THE way the swollen Ohio River looked in
Pomeroy Sunday evening . There were many sightseers
watching the ris~ river which moved into the diP. between
ti\e lwo'"pa"r'k1ni\otS'atilng' !lie 'river ani! tnen along lhe 'edges
of the lots. By Monday morning both lots were out of use as
the water spread across them . The river stood at 44.8 at 9
a.m. Monday. Flood stage is considered 46.5. According to
.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:::::::::,:,:,:,~:::::;:,:;:;:;:;:;:

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio -Extended OutlookWednesdaythroughFriday:
Fair and warm. Highs In
the 80s and lows In the 60s.

Legion

Players Hurt
In Collisi•OD

17 Dze 0
R • hW8VS

information received at the Pomeroy VWage Hall the river
was to rise six more Inches cresting before noon today.
James Bailey, auperintendent of the highway department,
reported Routes 338, 124, junction of 338 and junction with 881
at Reedsville, 248 between Keno and Long Bottom, Route 7,
Dark Hollow, Forest Run area, and Route 124 Racine to
Pomeroy, at Minersville, closed.

M cGovern R as
.

BallEno

Tom Cooke, the second
baseman and "Mr. Hustle" on
the Meigs Legion baseball
team, suffered mouth Injuries
WASHINGTON(UPI)-Presand
a concussion in the New
CINCINNATI - 11IE CINCINNATI SUMMER opera not
Haven-Meigs game Sunday.
only hu lix new productions for Ita 5:/nd year but also a new ident Nixon was back In the
White
House
today
preparing
Cooke met head-on with New
home.
for
a
busy
week
that
will
see
Haven's
Robbie Lambert in a
During Its first 51 years here, the swmner opera was
spectacular collision near
preaenled at the Cincinnati Zoo with some of lhe slnt!ers at the him annO\Ulce a new troop
withdrawal
from
Vietnam.
'
second base. Cooke was atopen..tr pavWon almost drowned out by the roar of the Ilona and
Nixon spent the weekend at
tempting to steal second with
cries o.f the wandering peacocks.
camp
David,
flying
back
to
the
Lambert
covering the bag. As
The variable weather and the shortage of parklnt! and seats
White
House
by
helicopter
RLambert
caught the ball
finally forced the nation's second oldest opera company to seek
Sunday
evening
with
his
wife,
·
.
around
five
feet on the first
other quarters.
Pet, and their daughter, JuUe,
.
base side of second, the two
and
son-in-law,
David
Elsencrashed.
Both immediately
CLEVELAND- ELEVEN ATI'ORNEYS flled suit today
JU
dropped to the ground and lay
againlt Blue Closs of Northeastern Ohio, claiming the insurance hower.
Some_
t
ime
this
week,
Nixon
.
.l
'
there
for around ten minutes.
company ol(ercharged subacribers.
..
will
annO\Ulce
the
next
U.S.
'
Lambert
suffered a deep cut
'111e suit said Blue Croas falled to pinpoint industrial • relilted
boapltal ca1es and receive reimOO!'sement from the state. The troop wlthdr~wal from Viet- United Prell Intemational under one of his eyes caused by
Seventeen persons, 10 of Cooke's front tooth.
,
attorneys said that by faUing to screen out these lndustrisi ca1es, · nam. The force level will he
them under 30 years of age,
Cooke knocked the ball out of
· Blue Clola ·hu overcharged its subacribers as much as $10 reduced to 49,000 by July I.
Informed
sources
seld
Nixon
were
killed
during
the
first
Lambert's
glove and crawled
mllllon a year.
wa~ expected to malntaln,-a weekend of swnmer in Ohio as to second safely. Cooke was
to
Veterans
WASIIINGTON - IJTI'ON INDUSTRIES, which holda resadual force. in Vietnam until the result of traffic . related admitted
the
C~unl8ta
agree
to
a
accidenta.
Memorial
Hospital.
He was
major lhlp conatructloo contracta with the Navy, Ia on the brink
Twenty-three · persons were transferred there after the
of financial dLiuter, Sen. Wllllam Prollllire, D-Wii., said today. cease.fll'e and the release of
killed In Ohio traffic accldenta accident by Ted Perry, father
He aaid the firm ill pressing the Navy for payment Df f450 U.S: prisoners of war.
-NIXon alllo plans to hold durin.fl the first summer of the Meigs pitcher Stan
mllllon In "an attempt tolhlfttbecostaoflts own Inadequacies to
another news conference-pro- weekend period last year and Perry.
the American taxpayer."
'lbe f460 million demand Is a claim made by UUon on bably Thursday. It Is expected 24 during !he senie period In
)11'01111111 that the NaVY. changed Its contracta after they hsd been • to deal both with,domestic and 1970, the Ohio Highway Patrol
llfaned, Pr011nire said Navy officiata have testified that only a foreign policy. A news confer- said. Thirteen persons lost
LOCAL TEMPS
ence held last week wu ' their lives In traffic mtsliapa
llllall fraction of the clalm could he justified.
The temperature In downrestricted lo , domestic policy. last weekend.
BELFAST- NORTHERN IRELAND was hit today with
The President scheduled a
The cOWlt included three town Pomeroy at 11:30 a.m:
new of violence before a mldnl&amp;ht ceue-tire goes into morn inti meellnt! today with double • death accldenta · two Monday was 70 degrees under
tlfec:t, ~ and lhoolinCs were on a far Jeaser acale than Ambauador Henry Cabot of them occurring Sa~y sunny skies.
the weellencl violence that killed Iii more penona.
Lodge, hia apecial repmenta- and the other Friday nlcht
'111tlnlce •• propoeed by the mWtant Provillonal Wing of live to the VaUcan. Early In the ahortly after the weekend
11M lrllb Republican, Army (IRA) and accepted by Britain. afternoon he planned to p-eet period began ate p.m.
Miiiiii'IIIJ_. ialcl their troopa had arden to kHp a ''low Gen. WUllam C. Westmoreland,
Two petlonl died Friday
WATER OFI' TUESDAY
proftle" with 1t1rt of the -.fire lrougbt largely by Catholic theretirlngArmychiefolslaff, evenlng, ·l2Saturday and three
Water service of the
prollltl illlnlt IRMnlplred violence,
and hll family.
on Suiaday.·
,
Pomeroy village water
•
Friday, Nixon will fly to the · The weekend !raffle Yictiml department wW be turned off
I'BIUJ, ~- - A IIUACUR who balled out of a jeilja:ler _ Callfornli White HOUle at San were all ridlllc 1n velllclea and Tueaday at 12 noon on Route 33
wllb • • r11111t1111 nmalned tbe object ol an lntenllve a-Die. He will ala)' there the toll did not Include any from the Fred Clark residence
~-t todQ&gt;, -lhoulh llltborltl• did not know If he wu for perhapa u 1«*~1 u thne padestrllna. One penon wu to the fairgrounds due to work
11111111 tbe 11111'1117 populated area.
neb while the Democrata are ·ldlled 1n 1 Oile-cJr cruh 011 the being done in the prea. The
8la'dl 1e1m1 on foot, on boneback and In bolla and lloldiDc their national conven- Ohio Turnpike near Younp- amount of time the water will
(Contlnued an Pqe I)
lion in Mt.ml Beach.
town.
be off has not been determined.

-e '

'

down at the sewage treabnent
plant in Steubenville, a city Df
34,000, and officials were uncertain when the plant could be
re-&lt;&gt;pened .

Weather

enttne

Major Planks for 1972
Dem CampaignApproved

~..

, I I.

NO. 51

1'he· lntere~l3

1

Ferry police officer , said about .
200 famllies along the route
were evacuated. "Most of them
were in the bottoms (along the
river bank) but it just seems
like a routine thing to them."
In East Uverpool about 40
families were evacuated, but
most had returned home early
today.
High water forced a shut-

•

at y

The "Savannah," which left
Savannah, Ga., May 22, 1819,
waa the first steamship to cross
the Atlantic.

about eight feet below Oood
stage . Most larger Ohio cities
suffered little or no flood damage since they are protected by
flood walls and high groll!ld.
Ohio 7, a heavily-traveled
sta te route between Martins
Ferry and East Liverpool was
one of the highways closed by
the high water.
Boyd Carpino, a Martins

h Votes

WASHING.TON (UP!) -Sen. first-ballot nomination for us over on the first ballot In
George S. McGovern claimed President at the Democratic Miami,'' McGovern said.
McGovern said he was
1,510.5 delegate votes today National Convention.
convinced
that within a week
which he said assured him a
McGovern made the claim
after a group" of previously additional names would be
uhcommltted delegates threw added to his delegate total. '111e
him 96% votes. He said that put convention begins July 10.
"What Is most significant is
him over the 1,509 votes
that
this is another major step
necessery to nominate.
.in
uniting
all Americans in the
Congressional delegate
Walter E. Fauntroy of political process," McGovern
the Dlstrtct of Colum- seid.
In response to • question,
bia, who is black, an·
said that he assured
aiiiS nounced at a news conference McGovern
the
blacks
that biB administraattended by McGovern that the
tion
would
Include
blacks on the
By United Presa International delegates were made up of both
As tropical storm Agnes died blacks and whites from 12 Supreme Court, the Cabinet,
to a few drizzles today, scat- states.
.., the regulatory agencies "and at
tered thundershowers fell in
"There is no question that the all levels of government in
the south Atlantic states and 96% delegates who represent reasonable propo!ltion to their
sizzllnt! temperatures hit the new additions are enough to put percentage of the population".
McGovern and the members
southo()Ontral states.
of the congressional black
A · weak and diffused low
caucus held the news cooferpressure area over New York
ence shortly before McGovern
was all that remained of floodembarked
on a pre-convention
producing Agnes and a few
swing
through
the south and
shqwers were associated with
southwest, where his support is
the system from eastern
Michigan and Ohio to New CLEVELAND (UPI) - The considered weak.
England.
rains that sent five-loot waves
Most rivers and streams In from swollen Big Creek through
the flood-ravaged Eastern the main road of the Cleveland
States were slowly receeding, Z9ll Friday did an estimated Tractor Pull
but the disestea: was still $25,000 damage to zoo buUdings
widespresd.
and kil\ed two animals. ·
Slated July 1
Scattered · thundershowers
A rare goat from the . Red
feU from Arkanses and nor- Sea area, a two - month - old t The annual Harrisonville
thern Louisiana to Kansas and nubian Ibex, drowned In the Community Tractor Pull will
flood and a Himalayan tahr, he held at the Harrisonville
the Dakotas.
Hail the size of golfballs feU another type of goat, died of School Saturday at 2:30 p.m.
under the sponsorship of the
at Danbury, Neb., and smaller exp&lt;~~ure .
HarrlsonviUe
PTO.
'hall pelted Hays, Kan., late
Chief Z!lologlst Richard W.
Weigh-in of the garden
Sunday. A funnel cloud was Merrtu, 29, worried that the
tractors
willatart at 1 p.m. and
sighted near McLaughlin, S.D., toll mlflhl mount.
but no damage or Injuries were
"There Ia a chance we wW five classes wlll be Included reported.
lose some from pneumonia," up to 500 poundl, ~1 10 700
Temperatures in west and Merrill said. "We're watchlnt! pounds, 701 to 900 pounds, 901 to
central Texas, eastern l'!ew every 'one carefully. At the first 1100 pounds and free for all.
Afarm tractor pull wlllatart
Mexico and southwest and sign of a cold, we'll bit them
.
at
7:30 p.m. with a' wellb-IA
·south-central Oklahoma were . with antibiotics and try to
bealnntng at 8 p.m. 0... Ill
ezpected til reach the 10(). knock It out of them."
degree mark today.
The zoo, which hu a collec- the farm tractor caleiDI'J
Temperatures early today Uon of 1,200 animall, SUIIalned Include 4,500 pounda, ......
ranged fro~ at Dallas, Tex., a far greater loss In a 1101· . 1,100 and 8,1100. Troplllet 11111 be
to 41 at RiiCk Spring&amp; and Oood when the entire repUie ..-nted In all c~ llld tilt
CGIIIpltiUon Ia Clptll to
EVI!Iston, Wyo.
collection fled. •

Agnes Dies
Following
Heavy R •

Rains Cause
S
$2 ,000 D8Dlage

IIIJ-.

�•

•

..... A[LJ_..,

"We .Can't All Be Perfect!"

EDITORIAl.
Learn to Swim

The Amertcan Red Cross has been teaching swimming
and Ufesaving since 1914. So, tf you shit don't know how
to IWtm, It's not because there hasn't been an opportunUy to learn.
Actually, everyone should learn how to swim. First. of
all, it is good exerctse and recreation Even more Important, however, Is the safety aspect of this water sport.
This summer more than 100 million Americans have
already taken to the water for swimming, salllng, canoeing, skiing or pleasure boating.
These acbvitles will be more fun if all aquatic sportsmen follow recommended safety precautions This appUes not only to those in the water but those near it as
welt, "because 110 per cent of the people who drown ea~h
year fall into the water accidentally," according to
Charles Russell, acting national director of Red Cross
Safety Programs
Most of those lndtviduals could have saved themselves,
Russell says "if they had been able to swim, because
almost invariably safety-in the form of a dock, a· boat
or the shore-was nearby ."
Some 7,300 persons drown in this country each year.
The drowning rate is 3.6 persons drowned per 100,000
population Nearly 110 years ago, when the Red Cross
began Its program of Instruction, the number of persons
drowned per 100,000 was 10 2
So, the drowning rate has dropped to nearly one-third
of Its former level while the total population of the country has more than doubled and partlctpanls in water
aports have multiplied more than 10 times .
It's a pretty good record, but it isn't quite good enough
and with normal cautions, accordlng to the Red Cross,
the number of drownlngs could be reduced even more
drastically.
Here are a tew of the precautions you can take to help
Insure swimming and water safety for your family and
yourself·
,
• Learn to swim Contact your local Red Cross for the
time and place of the next avallable lessons.
• Watch small children carefully around the watereven in supervised areas, and even In shallow wading

and Saturn. The evening stars are Mereu· ·
ry, Mars and Jupiter.
'!bose born on this date are
under the sign of Cancer.
~rican novella! Pearl S
Buck was born on June 26, 1892.
On this day In history:
In 1900 Dr. Walter Reed led a
medical team in a campaign tc
wipe out yellow fever In the
Panama Canal Zone.
In 1917 the first tr(lopS of the
American Expeditionary Force
reached France In World War
I.
In 1944 the third largest
French port, Cherbourg, was
liberated from the Nazis by the
Allies In World War II.
In 1948 the United States
began operation-of the "Berlin
Airlift" to bypass a Soviet road
and rail blockade of the divided
German capital city.
A thought for the day:
French critic and novelist
Anatole France said, "We have
medicines to make women
speak; we have none to make
them keep silent."

L 5bib5 ; e .

u :u

• em:: ue

•bJ

b.UU b

ti

Voice along Br'Way

I

classtcal-modern thunder.
Cabs are expensive; from airports, take the
pools.
Carey Buses at a fraction of the recenUy
OF CAB FARES AND
• Always swim with a buddy.
escalated
cabfares, for a couple of dollars (as
CHOW
MEIN
• Swim in a safe place.
NEW YORK (KFS)- We were mentioning compared wtth $13 to $15 from Kennedy Airport,
• Before diving, make sure the water is deep enough
a
few
of the places and characters that a New $1 average from LaGuardta) you'D be dropped
and there are no hidden objects under the water.
York vtsilor mtght enjoy thts summer . There off at a strategtcally midtcwn temunal where
• Wall at least an hour after eating before swtmmmg
are
a few additions along with lips (no, not the cabs for the shorter trtps tc hotels etc. are in
• Don't swim if you are overtu-ed or overheated
• Be sure the proper lifesaving equipment is avatl· gratultous kmd) that a veteran a! the Big Town abundance
thtnkS' might be helpful .
On 5th Ave., the constabulary ill specially
able in your swimming ares.
Chinese food• Try King Dragon at 3rd Ave. tramed and brtefed on locations a! hotels,
• Don't depend solely on an inflated toy or inner tube
to keep you afloat It may slip away from you
near 73rd St., fine Cantonese cuiSine, not too stores, subways, buses, restaurants; for a long
• Get out of the water when storms approach , water
expensive and worth II. Bill Chan's Gold Coin on time, the Irish had New York's pollee force
Is a good conductor of Ughtnmg
2nd Ave at 45th St. is another of the tastebud- rtgh t tn the famtly and sometimes it seems not
(NIWSPAPIR ENTIU11lSI ASSN I
titillatlng sam~ . lf you're in Chmatown, it's Wah too dtllerent today. PU. Matt Feeley, for inKee on Doyers St , one flight stratght down to stance, commutes from Queens dally to his
happiness.
executive seat m the sub-police station in the
Hot dogs? Lots of drooling votes for basement of the handsome General Motors
Nathan 's on Times Square; we prefer the Building at 59th and 5th Ave. Lost, strayed,
original Nathan's at Coney Island, but if tl's too mystified, feel famt? Go tc Officer Feeley and
far , our next votes go tc the Inldtown Howard he'll befrtend you. A 5th Ave. traffic cop may
Johnsons and Nedick's; frankly (note the pun) just be our old fnend Offtcer Ray Connelly, who
it's more because of ftne fresh rolli and relishes has a rare sense of humor even when
as well as mustard; Nathan's jars of mustard discourqgmg tllegal peddlers or panhandlers.
an&lt;j relish are recommended for taking home to Officer Tongue-Twtster (his nickname)
your own gnlled puppies
McHugh ts m the !lladison Ave. London Shop
By Helen BO~el
Atmosp~er~1
The
ghosts
of
the
old
Round
area, another sturdy traditional Gael. There's E
"
Table still quip at the Algooqum and tf that handsome trafftc cop whose natural habitat Is
I .~
renowned Round Table now ts full of squares, spang m the Inlddle of 5th Ave &amp; 57th St , object
lawyers and less celebrated wtts, the upstatrs or all the female/ he tgnores while deploymg
MATEQUEU.S BELLE'S YEW
rooms and suites and the delightful lobby w1th endlessly the tcrtured tralftc The girls say he's
Dear Helen:
tts comfortable, commodious chatrS and movte-star stuff
My husband and I are from a small Southern town where IQilllges are as hkely to contain a producer, star
There are dozens, hundreds actually,
women are women and men treat them Uke "belles." We ended or writer m them as a vtsltor from outer exurbs. maybe a thousand such lme folk who have giVen
up In New York where a female lends for herself. I've been Jimmy Weston's has good man-stzed steaks, us much personal pleasure and service and
CUlled and yelled at while driving to and from work and chops and classical jazz (Max Kaminsky or mmt-emergency aid over our more than a
Mturally I learned to yell back - but my husband dldn 't know Tyree Glenn or somesuch old lime 52nd St. hoie- quarter-cenlury of making Manhattan our
IIlla.
.
m-the-wall-ol-fame star Btg sports crowd 1.
Home Town It's like every new home town, a
'!be other day he was With me and a man driver blocked me
The Rainbow Grill will star Duke Ellin)!!c~. trifle dtsmaymg at first encounter, bigger, more
ln. I honked several Urnes and he just sat there, so I got out and Uonel Hampton and such greats aU summer; excttmg tHan all and we 've been m most of the
aatd a few choice words.
the St. Regis Roof has hired Count Baste, Woody world's Big Cities It's a great place tc Vtstl, and
My husband was 10 shocked he turned white. He said he had Herman and Buddy Rtch for a season of for us, to live m. We swea~
alwaya prided hlmlelf on my being soft and sweet and acting Uke
a lady no matter what, and he KNEW thla would happen If he
allowed me to work.
'
He 18ys he won~ hsve me turn hard like northern working
wom111,10 I hsve to quit my job.llove my job!
How ean I show him that going to work hssn 1 changed me •
lt'a jUil that men don~ e~pect you to be genUe In New York, and
If lam, (whether I'm working or JUII going to the market), I'd
probably never get there. - HARDENED SOFTIE
Dear H.S.:
Seems to me a GENTI.E New York driver Is whst that city
needl. Courtesy often gets ~ou there Iuter lhan yelling - and By Lawrence Lamb, M.D
ear. The canalt!seif ts really
When you go to altitude,
not juat on the highway. Score onefor your husband.
a
blmd tube closed wtlh the the thm atr creates less presDear
Dr
Lamb-What
Bur: A job does not turn a woman ''hard." Keeping her causes the blocking of the whtle, gilstenmg membrane sure at the external ear, the
of the eardrum
home again Ill her will MIG HI'. Score one for you.
atr m the hollow middle ear
ear such as what o c c u r s
Now that you're even, try compromise: tell him you'D be his when descendmg from altt·
The middle ear ts the next ts under greater pressure
UtUe Southern comfort, if he'll knock olf hla chauvinistic Ideas of tude? In my case, this oc- compartment lnstde the ear- and can push your eardrums
out The ear ts protected
"mrthern working women." - H.
curs several times a day It drum ts a great hollow cham- agamst thiS by leaking air
ts very tmtating when talk- ber, the mtddle ear At the frQm the middle ear cham+++
of thiS hollow chammg because I suddenly feel bottom
Dear Helen :
ber ts a tube that passes ber through the tube to the
Regarding the jealoua wife who wouldn ~ let her husband that I am talking too loudly downwsrd and opens m the mouth
or unclearly, then I fmd myWhen descendmg from aldance with any of the other women, whUe she had a goodltlme self concentratmg on lhts back of the throat (eustaas the air pressure
lltude,
chtan
tube)
Through
this
dancing with their husbands - you suggested the husbands slop rather than on what I am
mcreases, the external pres·
chamtube
the
middle
ear
liking her to dance and leave them to the "boredom" of their saymg
ber commumcates with the sure against the eardrum
m~tea . Why muat It be ''boredom"?
I have gone to two doc- atr m mouth When air pres- pushes inward Too mucb
My huaband and I dance well together, enjoy being In each tors and they told me this sure builds up In the m1ddle pushmg In and out of the
other's anna, and will not dance with anyone else. He also stays was likely due to ear Infec- chamber, au- lS forced out ear d'r u m causes irritation
called barotrauma.
with me when we go out, and we never go out sepuately. We tions I had as a child One the tube and mto the mouth.
Overgrowth of t Is s u e In
stated that I may eventually U the pressure m the chameven enjoy grocery shopping together.
ber falls, air Is sucked up the throat near the tube
an
operallon
and
the
need
l1Uppoee you wonder what kind of marriage this can be.
gave me pills which mto the chamber through opening may make It lmpos·
Welt, It's beaullful. We never fl8ht or argue. We are too busy other
didn't help any I have had this same tube. Thts way, tfie
llnding new way• to show each other our mutual love. Here are a this problem approximately pressure can be changed in slble for air to pass freely In
In ways: I Qll the gr111whlle hela at work 10 we'D have m&lt;n seven years, but the block- the mtddle ear chamber.
lime on weebndllto do the thlnss we like to do. I aLto put notealn ing' seems to be happening
111
hillunch each day, teJUns him I love him or enclose some Iunny more regularly as time proWhat do you think
lltUe cartoon. He always washes the diEes while I dry ,10 that we gresses
I should do?
The Daily Sentinel
can talk together. He never turns the TV on unle111 we are both
DEVOTED
TO THE
Den Reader- You should
INTEREST OF
able to lit down. Our chairs are cloee10 we can hold hands.
make arrangements to see
MEIGS-MASON AREA
We enjoy hobblea and share them. We have a large famUy an ear, nose and throat speCHESTER L TANNEHILL,
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Thoma
Euc. Ed
with only one left at horne. We still sleep close (in the nude) and cialist Your famtly doctor
ROIERT
HOEFLICH.
were Sunday evening visitors
are auctlvelylovlngaslnourflntyean of marriage - no ''old- can refer you to one or you
C•tr Editor
of
Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Published
dlll'1
ucept
can obtain the names of sl":file slowdown" here!
Saturday
bv
The
Oh
io
Vlllty
Johnson.
All thla and my wonderful huaband will be on Medicare next ctallsts for this problem wtth Publlshtng Com pan r. 111
a telephone call to the near- Court St , Pomerov Ohio,
Mr. Guy RusseU of Columbus
ye.-. And we are never bored! My ""81ation to those wives who est
county medical society. -45769 Bustness Off•ce Phone was weekend visitor of Mr. and
110 tot dance to m!J: with other husbands - try our way. -WE You may also write to your 992 2156, Edltor 111 Phone 992
2157
Mrs. Uncoln RusseU. Terry
lJKE IT!
state medical association to
Second class posteot paid at Lynn of Pomeroy also visited
Dear Helen:
ask for the name and loca- Pomtrov . Ot}•O
Sunday.
Netiontl IChtrlt&amp;lng
My luband and bla former wife st111 own a bualnesalollether tion of ear doctors who are repreuntetlvt
Bollintlll
Mi. and Mrs. WIUiam Boyce
GIIIIQhtr , Inc;, l2 East .. 2nd
anchee eechothereveryday. '!bey divorced ftve yesrugo. (Not closest to your home
St. Ntw York Ctty , New York . of Columbus was weekend
over me). Follflbt all the lime back then. Now they get along
The ear is affected by
Subscription retts . Ot
vial tor of Mr. and Mrs. Howard
pe1 l'eciiJ.·He 18ys they were meant lo be frlendl, not Ioven. changes In alt\t~de because llvtrtd by cerrltr Vthtrt RusseU.
50 cents per Wttk,
of the difference in pressure lvlillblt
0111 I believe him? :I'he bllllneas thrives, but I worry. Bv Motor Routt where cerrltr
Mr. and Mn. Guy Tuckeracrou the eardrum between serv1ce not IJ'IIIIble : Ont
BUDITLY JEALOUS
the external ear and middle month 11 7S av me11 In Ohio man ol Springfield ~pe~~ta few
n.S.J.: .
w VI , One ynr 11• 00 days with hil brother, Mr. and
ear chamber. The external •nd
$11( months 11 25
Thrtt
~~~- mala allen beeGDe friends - after cjlvcrca taltea ear 1s the ear 11 the side of month S4 50 Subscription Mrs. Fred Tuckerman and Mr.
lhe rw,. 0111 of bllnt dole.
love 111Ually rema1na dead. 'lbey the held, plus the canal prltt Includes Sund•y TlmtJ . and Mn Eugene Haning and
that funnels sound Into the Senllnel .
Wlr tech other too well. Slop worrying. -H.
famtly.
BY JACK O'BRIAN

Helen Help

Us. • •

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Fairview
.
News Notes
B Mra H rbert Ro b
Y
• e
ua

Mr and Mrs. Russell Roush
and children, Sharon, Cindy,
David and Edward, Mr. and
Mrs. Isaac Lewis, Mr. and
Mrs. Ronnte . Russell and
daughter, Mandy, were
Father's Day guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Dana Lewis.
•
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
and Mrs. Dorothy Glenn viaited
at University Hospital in
Columbus Saturday with David
Sayre. U ever~""''" goes well,
Mr. Sayre will be returning
home sooner than expecled
after havmg heart surgery.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lawson
nd
J ol Leta t w
a son, C. ·•
r' ·
Va • spent Saturday IVlth Mr
and Mrs . Charles Lawson and
family.
Mrs Ada Rowe was a dinner
guest Sunday of Mr. and Mrs.
Don Hupp and vistted tn the
afternoon with Mrs. Anna
Wines at Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush
ahd children viSited Frldiiy
evening · with Mr. and Mrs
Dana Lewis at Clifton.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronrue RUIISOU
and dallflhter, Mandy, Jre
viaitlng his psrenta; Mr. and
Mrs . Bob Russell at
Harrisonville.
• Exprenlon's Source
The expression, "pte m the
sky," came into usage from
a song adopted for the
l.W W. movement. Originally a hobo song, 1t promises
the downtrodden that, after
a life of eating hay, they
will have their "pie m the
sky"

Pressure Makes the Differepce

What Causes Ear Blockages?

Wo l£pen

News, Notes

•t

.

-

and out of the middle ear
chamber. Sometimes, surgical removal of the overgrown tissue is needed.
I doubt your problem is
barotrauma, since it occurs
several limes a day .without
c h a n g I n g altitude. More
likely it is related to ear ·
damage that ampUfies some
sounds but not others. This
occurs most often wltll Increasing age.
Your ean are exceptionally important, and anyone
who Is having hearing problems certainly deserves a
c a r e f u I examination by a
specialist.

Three well..played games by
the Meigs Leg10n baseball
team followed a lackluster
performance m Saturday's
openlr!g game at Portsmouth
Meigs lost the fu-st game
Saturday 13-7, tied the second
1-1, and won both ends of a

By DON OAKLEY
Apart f~om doubts about the ~isd~~ oj phasing ou~
the draft and creating a "professtonal Armyboth~ q~e~
tlon most frequently asked ll!• h~w do you go a u es a ·
hshmg an aU-volunteer service
.
In
th
The answer most frequently hea~d ts to crea~ e
pay. Other Incentives to attract enlistees are mentioned,
such as better Jiving conditions and better care erbopportunlties wilhm the Army, but most of the talk 1s a ou1
better
pay. study by the Universit)' of M"tc hi gan •s Insti•
A recent
tute for Social Research (ISR) lndtcates that another In·
centive may have greater appeal than money to roung
men pondering mllltary servtce-the guarantee o four
years of paid schooling In return for four years of service.
"Perhaps most important are the differences In th~
kinds of young men attracted by the two Incentives,,
say Jerome Johnson and Jerald Bachman, the study s
d~rectors.
ti
They report that when higher ~ay as an lncen ve was
contrasted wtth paid schooling, • those attracted by paid
schoohng averaged higher In intelligen~~· verbal sklils,
occupational ambitions and self-esteem.
,,
The IRS study Is part of a larger "Youth In Trlll!sttion
research effort begun in 1966, which has been mvestigatlng young men's attitudes, plans and behaviors, Pill"·
tlcularly those related to 'educational and occupatlotlal
choices
und hiug1h
According to the latest survey data, college-bo
school graduates "are not strongly motivated by immedl·
ate monetary needs in the way that the job-bound are ...
Of greater mterest to the college-bound are those aspects
of self-development which are as~oclated with advanc~d
education and the opportunities tt opens up for the .mdlvidual "
. Johnsion and Bachman thus conclude that to attract
the college-bound, the military must offer either more in
the way of educational alternatives or more assiStance to
indivtduals to pursue education on their own.
An all-volunteer force concentrating entirely on the 'Pay
Incentive, they believe, "might tend to attract those
slightly lower in abillty and aspirations than the men
Presently ser¥1ng."
The use of an educational incentive, on the other hand,
would not only have advantages for the m!Utary but
"would have almost entirely positive by-products through·
out the civilian society."
They propose an approach which involves bulb an enJarged GI bill and the use of savings from military pay,
made possible by the recent pay mcreases In the armed
services
Under the plan, a young man could serve four years
and receive up to $16,000 to cover tuition and l_lvlng expenses during four years of college . Alternatively, he
could (after formally enbstmg) take his four years of
paid education first and then serve four years of active
duz for the fear that an aU-volunteer Army might make
it easter for the nation to become Involved In more "Vletnams " the authors note that as the Vietnam war went
on It 'became a more and more negative factor In enlist·
ment decisions-a disincentive.
They consider it more Jl.kely that the supply of volunleers would be threatened by other military mvolvements
resembling the one in Vietnam and cautiously suggest
that "It thus seems at least a posslbUity that reliance on
an all-volunteer force would actually tend to discourage
large-scale military adventures In the future."
iHEWSPAPIO EHTERPkiSI ASSN 1

WIN AT BRIDGE

,,

,,. .

1

The Coon Coup, It's Called
JIm : "No. II couldn't
Charley had a perfect count
.QJ975
of the distribution He saw
¥1097
that if East held the club
+A&amp;
queen
any club play would
.K83
beat the contract. If South
WEST
EAST
held the queen and 10 there
was no hope lor the defense
¥QJ54
.K63
whUe if South held the queen
+ K107 5
+QJ9832
and East the 10 the jack play
.AJ74
.1065
would give declarer a chance
to go wrong."
SOUTH
.AK10832
Oswald: "! take It South
¥A82 )
did go wrong."
Jim: "He sure did. It
.Q92
never occurred to him that
Both vulnenble
Charley held the ace. His
Weot North Eut Soalh whole
problem was where
Paso
Pus 1•
the
10
could
be found and he
Pass 4•
Pass Pasa
decided
to
play
Charley for
Pasa
it.
He
let
the
club
ride tp his
Opening lead-• 4
queen. Charley ducked the
club return as a matter of
By 01wald &amp; Jameo Jacoby course and East made his
10." .
Jim: "How about showing
(HIWSPAPEI INTIIP.ISI ASSN. )
some reaur unusual plays
this week?'
Oswald · "I bet you have
one In mind."
Jim: "That I do. It lS
sometimes caUed the Coon ·The biadlnl hu bMn:
coup because II was played Wool Nottll Eut
14
Paas
by Charles Coon of Boston a
Pus
few years ago South won the PIA 2•
first trick with his ace of
You, South, hold:r--hearts; drew trumps with •..uu ¥K81U U 4QIOT
one lead; cashed dummy's
What do you do now'
ace of diamonds; ruffed
two.,....._ It looks u
dummy's last diamond and If A-d
your
II
polnll are
played a heart. Charley took roinl to bohlrh·tanl
rllt·odpd.
his two heart tricks and led
TODAY'S QUES110N
the jack of clubs!"
Oswald: "The only play to
Your partner continues to two
give the defense a chance no-trump W hat do, you do
and one that could net pos- now?
•
stbly hurt him."
l
Aluwer tomonow
NOBTH(D)

.,

.6

.,

Do It Every Time
J-;;;;:;:;:;;:;:7;:;:;~;;:==ll~~~::=i;~!;~~~~~

I TrrEw,t.,~.~ET '"AS ,._ n-mo1e ~T

CIJTTII-ol&amp; DOWN ON Tl-tE !ELECTRIC
!IL~5 lo.T HOME!
~-----

Legion. 2-1-1 In Weekend Action

Education Offer
Makes Difference

'!be moon is full.
'!be mornmg stars are Venus

Happiness Is
Safety in Water

3- '!be DaUy~Sentinel,Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0., June 26, 1972

Volu,.teer Army:

By Uillledl'raiiMenatllul
Today Ia Monday, June ' 21,
the 176th day oi 11172 with 188 to
follow.

lJur J.J " ~JCre:L

HOW Ltel-ir·81L.L·
COioiSCIOOS 15
QUR. HERO'?

ARE 'tOU
OON TO TllRN

OUT &gt;lOME
CS' TH!i,
~IOHT5.

Drawings for the Athens
American Legion District
baseball touraameQI baa
Melp playing Lancaster at
11 a.m. on Saturday, July ZZ,
on Traulweln fitld and
Logan playing Athens al 11
a.m. the same day at the
Fairgrounds field.
Tbe wlnnen will play at 3
p.m. the same day at
Trautwein field and losen at
the same time on lbe
Fairgrounds.
'!be championship game
will be , played on the
following Saturday at
Trautwein field. Meigs is the
defending champion of the
double • ellmtoatlon !clll"·
oament. The winner wiD
advance to the state touroameat Ia Ashland, Ohio.
----twm-blll Sunday at New
Haven, 7-3 and 7-1 m nine innings.
Portsmouth Vs. Meigs
In the first slugfest, Metgs
ace Stan Perry couldn't find his
control and was forced off the
mound in the second mning

•

None of the five hurlers used m
the game was very effective
due to the very cold weather
Nme walks, stx errors, and
ten Portsmouth hits accounted
lor lhetr runs Metgs got etght
htts but walked only ltve times
while the hometcwn mne made
only two mtstakes.
In an inmng and two-thtrds,
Perry fanned omi and walked
ftve. Johnny Baird, the loser,
walked two and fanned one,
and BtU Chaney struck out two
and walked two. Hanes, the
starter for the wmners, struck
out four and walked three while
Dearfield, the winner, fanned
six and walked two
Getting hits for Meigs was
Roger Dtxon wtth two smgles
and a double while Tom Cooke,
Rtck Ash, Jon Buck, Kevm
Sheets, and Perry all had a
smgle. Rase paced Portsmouth
wtth a smgle and double and
McGlone had two singles
Second Game
Sktpper Johnson pttched
from deep trouble m the
seventhmmngwith the score II. Portsmouth had the bases
loaded and no outs when
Johnson, who went all the way,
fanned the ftrst batter, got the
second to pop up, and forced
the final to ground "to short.
The game was called after
seven lnalngs due to a 6 p.m.
curfew that states an inalng
eann:ot start after that time
because other games to be
played follow and the field

East Crushes
West, 42 .To 20
LUBBOCK, Tex. (UPI)FootbaU, m the form of the
Coaches All-Amertca game,
mtght have once been on un·
steady ground, But no longer.
'!be sertes started m 1961 in
Buffalo, N. Y., and had some
ho-hum years there and m
Atlanta. But for the pssl three
Junes the game has drawn
more than 40,000 persons in
Lubbock and' the American
Football Coaches Association
voted once again Ia~ weekend
to return to the Texas Tech
campus next year.
The official temperature at
game time was 95 degrees, the
bhnking sign at the bank
around the comer from Jones
Stadium read 101 degrees and a
thermometer placed on the
Astroturf just before kickoff
soared to 120 degrees.
Yet there were 42,314 persons
m the stands, the second
largest crowd ever to see one of
the series.
Bear Bryant of Alabama,
president of the Coaches
Association who guided the
EP.st team to an upset 42-lll win
over the West to even the series
at !Hi, ill delighted the game
has found a profitable home
"People here have proven
during the past three years
that there can be an mterest In
the game and that It will work
If played in a college town
Instead of one competing with
the pros.
"Televlalon Is giving it more
and more each year, and smce
moving tc Lubbock we have
been In the black wtth the

game:"
The game Itself was something less than a classic.
The heavily favored West

corrunitted three major mJs.
takes tn the first half- a
blocked punt, a lumbie and an
mtercepted pass-and all three
led to East touchdowns
The first one was scored by
Bill Taylor of Michigan, who
wound up gaining 92yards in 17
carrtes and wmmng the game's
most valuable player award.
From then on, in successton,
the East got scores on a !$-yard
pass from quarterback Paul
Miller to North Carolina.
teammate Lewis Jolley; on a
one-yard plunge by Alabama's
Johnny Musso; a 25-yard run
by Curt Watson of Tennessee,
another one-yarder by Taylor

Cincinnati Hero

the-.

-~

h1s fourth wm m four dec1s10ns

He fanned 13 and walked five
whtle allowtng only three htls,
ail tn the ftrst three mmngs
Camp fanned four, walked
lhree, htt one, gave up II htls,
and seven runs
The Metgs mnth had M Ash,
Perry, Deunfee, and Buck all
smgle, Dtxon hit a double wtth
bases loaded, Perroud and Van
Maire walked, and Boyd was
htt by a pttch for the stx runs
Others who took part m the
Metgs sweep Sunday were
Johnny Roush, Howte Taylor,
and Dave Wolfe:
A casualty 0 ccurred in the
seventh Inning when two
stars, Meigs' Tom Cooke and
New Raven's Robbte
' Lambert colbded head-on

Western
NORTHBROOK, Ill (UPI)Jtm Jamieson, havmg finally
won a golf tournament, told tt
bke tt was
.
"I really felt the pressure,"
'dmttted Jamteson, wtio was
on the verge of blowing an
etghtstroke lead before he
straightened out Sunday and
won the $30,000 top prize in the

Perry, Batrd ILPI ( 2) ,
Chaney 14) and Dtxon Hanes,
Dearheld i WP J 141, and
McGlone.
1Sctond Game 1
Metgs
IIIII 000 0-1 J 2
Ports
OliO 010 0-1 6 I
Johnson and M Ash J
Welch and Sturgtil
Sunday Wirst Game)
Metgs
040 000 2--7 12 0
N H.
210 11110 0-3 7 2
· Van Maire and Dtxon
Kayser and Lewts
(Secopd Game 1
Metgs
000 010 1106-7 II 3
010 OliO 0011-1 3 4
NH
Perry and Dtxon, M Ash (9)
Camp and R Clark, Lewts (5I

Pomeroy BlankS

p 0
0

•

M.a

p~

•

e:J

•

Tilt
By VITO STELLINO
UPI Sports Writer
The ofhc tal
baseball
rulebook ts qutte spectftc
Under Rule No
8 02,
Paragraph C, 11 states "The
pttcher shall not mtenttonally
ptlch at the batter "
But on the fteld m the heat of
compettllon, the players follow
a dtflerent set of rules
11

Jamieson
Captures

ncar the sctond base bag on
Cooke's attempted steal.
Cooke Jammed a front toolh
deep Into Lambert's cheekbone, causing both to he
mJured on the field for over
ten mmutes. Both were
transported by private
to
Veterans
vehiele
Memortal Hospttal.
Metgs, now 111-6-1 on the
year, will play at Athens
Wednesday in a battle of two
ftne teams Athens has been
touted as one of toughest
LegiOn teams m the area
Saturday 1First Game 1
Metgs
212 OliO 2-- 7 8 6
Ports
230 620 x- 13 10 2

B wl Cheshire, 3-0

The Expos have to reahze

that every pttcher ts gmng to
come back and get" thetr man,
those are the rules of the
game," Steve Carlton of the
Phtladelphta Phtlhes satd Sunday after he beaned Montreal's
Ttm Fob to tgmte a wtld brawl
"Foh has tc reahze I was
trymg to htt him m the rtbs but,
unfortunately, he got his head
m the way. Of course, I would
never try (Q,throw at any body's
head "

Evening the Score
Carltcn felt he was JUSt
evening the score because
Errue McAnally of the Expos
hit Joe Lts. But when Carlton
beaned Foh m the fourth mrung, Montreal ma nager Gene
Mauch led a charge to the
mound. Mauch, who suffered
some scrapes and cuts on his
face before the fracas was
brought under control, was
tossed out ol the game. Foli
was taken to a hospttal for Xrays but they proved negative
Carlton stayed m the game
and pitched a lour-httter to
gtve the Philhes a I~ vtctory
over the Expos. When Carlton
came up to the plate in the ftfth
mmng, McAnally trted to even
the score agam but this time he
was banished lor throwmg at
Carlton
CarltOil didn 't throw at any
other hitters and managed tc
pttch a shutout, getting the wm
on the strength of John
Bateman's homer
The fracas overshadowed
some of the pennant race ac·
lion m the National League as
Pittsburgh took command of
the NL East race while the
West remamed a scramble as
Cincmnati and Houston split
their lour-game sertes and Los
Angeles kept in hot pursult. In
the other scores, Pttlsburgh
downed Chicago, 9-2, Cmcmnati edged Houston, 5--t, m
10 mnings, Los Angeles
blanked Atlanta, 5-0, St Louis
topped New York lwtce, 7·1and
2--1, and San Francisco downed
San Diego, 6-5, In 14 Innings
In the American League,
Baltimore beat Detroit, 2--1,
Cleveland d,owned New York
twtce, 4-3 and l'&gt;-1, Boston beat
Milwaukee; 8-1 but lost the
second game, 2-0, Oakland beat
California twice, 6-1 and 5-0,
Minnesota beat Kansas City, r.3, but lost the second game, 8-3,
and Chicago routed Texas, 10-

and finally a 15-yard toss from
Miller to John McMakin of
Clemson.
Western Open
"I'll be honest w1UJ you,''
Not only dtd the West bobble Jamteson satd "l dtdn't feel tt
-'the hall more times than it
could afford, but the attempt sleeping last night or anythmg,
and I dtdn't feel tt on the
by Coach Chuck Fairbanks of driving range, but when I got to
Oklahoma to put m the Wishbone-T offense proved to be a the practice putting green and
when I got up on the ftrst tee, I
bu~e needed timing for the felt the pressure."
Wishbone attack was not there,
Jamteson, duck-hooktng
drives hke a liHlandicapper,
and a triple option play seldom bogeyed two of the ftrst three
gamed any yardage.
n-.e West stayed In the game holes m Sunday's fmal round,
then turned around, shot a twothrough the first two a.nd a half under-par 69 lor a 72-hole total
quarters on a six-yard touch- of 271 nd won b six strokesdown pass from quarterback
'a
. Y
. f
Jack Mlldren of Oklahoma to the biggest VICtory margm 0
the year on the PGA tour.
of • 'lb iH00t-IO 21"""'•nd JaBernard
Jackson
Washmgton Sta~ and on a 21·
e
. •, "~""'
yard throw from Mlldren to mleson, strtktng a blow for
Skip Thomas of Southern c~ubby folks everywhere, blrCalif i
died the short, par-5, fourth
Fr:: ~en on, however, it hole,_and even though Labron
was almost all East wtth the HarriS was out on the course
West getting only six more threatening the record, there
fulile points on a six-yard run was never a question about the
by Houston's Tom MOZlSek.
WiMer a~r that. .
.
It was the most one-elded
Horns finished wtth a SIX·
margin In the !2-i!ke sertes under-par 65, matching the
competitive course record, and
placed second w1th 277.
'!be vtctory was the first for
Jamteson since he joined the
PGA !cur four years ago and
raised his earnings for the year
to 8'17 ,603. He donated $2,000 of
his purse to the Chick Evans
Caddy Scholarship Fund, beneficiary of the tournament, and
used some of the rest to buy
Pete Rose got a leadoff single champagne for thewriten, a Ia
in the seventh, foUowed by the the late Tony Lema.
ninth homer of the season by
Hale Irwin, Jim Wiechers
Joe Morgan which Ued up the and Bob Lunn finished In a
game. '!bat set the stage for threew~y tie lor third place, a
Menke's game-winning blow. distant nine strokes behind
'!be Reds needed the victory Jamieson, at 2M, and live more
since they had lost 4-1 to Hous- players were at 281- Bobby 5.
Manny Sa~ulilen's grand
ton Seturday night.
,
Nichols, Tommy Aaron, David
slam
homer In the eighth m'!be two teams split the four· Graham, Tom Welakopl and J.
nlng lifted Pittsburgh to the
game aeries, but Cincinnati, on C. Snead.
victory
over Chicago and
top of the Wild National League
Jamlt.ton flllared or held the
'
droWad
the
third place Cuba
Weal when the series began? lead after every round of the
cloeed out a horneatand leading tournament, shooting ea.87-87- five games behind the Pirates.
the dlvlaion .
69 over the short but tight '!be two New York !oases to St.
'!be Reds left Immediately SunSet Ridge Country Club Louis left the second place
after the game Sunday evening course. The cloeest he ever had Mets three games behind the
fortheWestC01IIandtheatart come lo wlnnln&amp; before this world champions.
of a seven-came road tralp. were tlelllor third place In the,
They open a two,game series Florida Citrus Invitational and
Th• •;&gt;ostle Paul was the
tonight In Lol Angelel as two
weeks
ago,
at first of the great Chrtslian
missionaries.
righthander Gary Nolan witt P11lladelphia.
his &amp;-2 mark on the line •
!-~!"'""'~!!!
agalnllt Claude Olteen who hal
a 4-7 record.
Cincinnati will play two
OPTOMETRIST
pmea In Lol Angelea, two In
OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12', 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
San Franclaco and three In San
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,
Diego before returning home
July 3.

Menke .Is Latest
CINCINNATI (UPI) -Denis
Menke II a hero today.
Not only did the righthander
chalk up a fourth-Inning homer
against hla former teanunates
on the Houlton Astros, oot he
aoclted a !Otb Inning double to
give Ctnclmatl a 5-4 victory
SUqday over the Aatr01 ~ and
shove the Reds back into the
flrat-9llce liot In the National
League West.
• Allo alngllng In the eighth,
Menb hit the game-w!Ming
ball o1f Fred Gladding with lhe
score tied 4--4 and drove hQIIle
Tony Perez.
The AatrOI had taken a 3-1
lead on Tommy Helms' fourthinning homer with two on olf
C1nCJ starter Jim ,M~lothUn.
The Reds came tiack ill the
bottom oi lhe fourth to pull
within one run of the Aatrol on
Meslb'l homer - hla fourth ol
I
'l1len the Altrol Welt alleld
4-2 in lhe top af the ftflh on 1
double by c-r Cedeno and a
~ by Jimmy Wym.

must be cleared. The Portsmonlh se•enth Inning
started a lew minutes till 6.
Metgs' run came tn the
thtrd when R. Ash smgled and Buck btl a
long double to left. Portsmoulh scored tn the ftfth when
Sparks, brother to the all-MAC
shorlstcp at Ohto Umverslty,
smgted, went to th1rd on a wild
pttch and scored on McCoullogh's single
The other Meigs htt was a
second smgle by R. Ash.
Sparks led Portsmouth wtth
two singles Johnson fanned
three and walked two whtle J.
Welch of Portsmouth fanned
ten and walked ftve Both
pttchers went aU the way.
New H&amp;ven Vs. Meigs
Rtck Van Matre struggled
through the ftrst two mnmgs
then setUed down to hurl a !me
seven-htlter for his ftfth win of
the season against one defeat.
He fanned seven and walked
only three
Coach George Nesselroad's
mne came through wtth 12 hils.
Metgs scored four m the second
and three msurance runs m the
seventh New Haven had two m
the ftrst and one m the second.
Httters for Metgs were
Cooke, R. Ash, Dtxon, and
Steve Dunfee ali with two
smgles each and Dave Boyd,
Buck, Lou McKmney, and
Chuck "Chic" Perroud all had
one smgle each M1ke Lewts led
New Haven wtth two stngles.
Second Game
New Raven's Kevin Camp
and Perry were locked up for
etght mmngs at 1-1 tn a hght
pitcher's duel when m the mnth
Meigs rapped the t1nng Camp
wtlh stx runs on ftve htts.
Perry went the dtstance For

Rtghthander Jeff McKmney
flred a ftve-httter tn leadmg
Pomeroy's Phtlhes to a 3~
v1ctory over Cheshu-e Sunday
afternoon tn a Gaiha-Metgs
Pony League contest played at
Cheshtre
The wtn moved Pomeroy mtc
second place tG the loop
standmgs behind the unbeaten
Btdwell Ptrates and Southwestern Highlanders The loss
left Cheshtre, the defendmg
1971 champs wtth a 1-2 record
Sunday's game was a makeup of Frtday's contest whtch
was ramed out at Pomeroy.
Cheshtre 's southpaw and lostng
hurler Jeff Blazer ytelded only
three htls but all came w1th
men on base
Pomeroy scored tis ftrst run
tn the fourth mmng on a walk tc
Burney and a hne double to left
by Greg McKljjJley. Two more
runs came across m the ftfth on
two walks, a smgle by Woody
Call and a sacnftce fly by

ptnchhttter Stan Moon
Cheshtre 's two sconng opportuntltes were m the ftrst and
fourth mnm.!ls but runners
were cutdown on the base
paths. In the ftrst, Bruce Arnett, Redleg third baseman,
was tagged out attempllpg to
steal tliird
In the fourth, catcher Jerry
Btas was nipped at the plate on
a perfect peg from first
baseman B. Marshall.
Mtke Nesseiroad I~ the
wmners with two smgles tn
three trips to the pia te
Btas led Cheshtre with two
smgles. Tim Lucas, Jun Ward
and Arnett had the other htts.
Pomeroy travels to Btdwell
Tuesday whtle Cheshtre vtsils
Vmtcn.
By Innmgs
Pomeroy
000 120 0-3 3 0
Cheshtre
11110 OliO 0-0 5 0
McKinney (W1 and Call
Blazer I L I and Bias

Marietta
Champ
Martetta nudged defendmg Southeastern Ohio
Golf Association champion Lancaster one stroke,
903-904, to capture the 47th annual SEOGA team
championship Sunday on the Hocking Hills Country
Club course at Loe;m
It was Manetta's 15th SEOGA crown, and first
since 1968. The Pioneer city won prev10us titles m
1926,34, 35, 42, 49, 54, 58, 59, 60, 61, 63, 64, a_nd 65.
Lancaster's Lowell LeCiear
IFaptured tndtvldual honors by
edgmg GalltpollS' George Pope
one stroke, 143-144.
Dave Evans, Chillicothe,
captured the putlmg contest,
and Galhpohs' Ron Eilts
captured the longest drtve
contest.
Galhpohs golfers hnished
seventh m the mne-team, twoday 30-hole tournament wtth a
946 effort
Galhpohs was paced by
Pope's 145. Ron Eilts had a 151l,
John Shtnn 159, Dirk Jackson
163, Jtm O'Brten ,164, Bill
Thomas 165, C Kiesling 171,
Clark Hager 173, Vtc Hager 174
Moddleport Independent
Basketball League
1F~rst Gamel
MIDDLEPORT OEPARTMENT STORE ISOl- Bobbs 02 2. Clark 10 2 22. File 13 0-26.
Werner l 2 16, Conde 5 0-10.
McCoy 1 o 2, Hawley 1 0-2
Tolals 37 6 80
POMEROY
NATIONA~
BANK 1661 - H•ll 3 0 6, B
Vaughan 7 2-16. Nelson 4 0 8,
Dotson 3 0 6, S M•lchell 3 0 6,
Au II 3-0-6. Garnes 9 0 18 Totals
32 2 66
Second Game
THE DAILY SENTINE~
1791 - E•ch1nger 8 4 20. R•t
ch•e 52 12. Rod Ferguson 6 1
13, Bailey 9 0 18, Douglas 3 0 6,
Ch•lds 50 10 Totals 36 7 79
ADOLPH'S DAIRY
VALLEY 1561- Dunlee 9 2 20,

and R D. White 175
Fmtshmg third m team play
was Athens, 919 Others were
Circleville, defending team
champton, 929; Chtllicothe,
934; Logan, 943; Gallipohs,
946 , Cambrtdge, 947 and
Jackson, 958
Here's the Gallipolis scores
and 1972 team standmgs:
GA~LtPOLIS SCORES
G Pope
73 72-145
R Ellos
SO 7D-150
J Shmn
77 82- 159
D Jackson
81 -81-163
J 0 "Brien
86-78-16A
B Thomas
80 85-165
c Keisling
85 86-171
C Hager
82-91- 173
V Hager
89-85-174
R D. Wh•le
89-86-175
1972 TEAM STANDINGS

Team

Scor•

Manetta
Lancaster

Athens

903

r

904

919
929

Ctrclev1lle

Chillicothe
Logan
Gallipolis
Cambridge
Jackson

934
943
946
947
958

Haggerty 4·5 13, Morns 7 0 14,

S Pme 4 0-8, Ebersbach 0 1 1

Total s

24 8 56

Your

Third Game
MARK V (65)- Walters 10 1
21. M Sayre 4 0 8, R Sayre 4 2

lnsur•nct

1 1-3,Cra •gOOO Totals27965
FRIEND~ Y TAVERN (61)
- Blanton 4-0 8, Harris 6 1-13,
Van Matre 7-2-16. Pnce 5-0-10.
J•m Hubbard 28 5 61
Ton1ght 's gamu
6 Middleport Dept · Store vs.

DALE
WARNER

Agenl

10, Ron Ferguson 9 S 23, Slaven

By United Press lnternat•onal
Nat•onal League

Amen can League
East
w I pet

East

w
P1ttsburgh

1. pel

39 21
37 25
34 26

New York
Ch1cago
Sf LOU IS

Mont rea l
Philade lphia

9 b

650
Baltimore
591 3
New York
567 5
Cleveland
47 5 10112 · Bos ton
44 3 12 l;, Mi lwaukee

29 32
27 34
22 38

367

17

West

w

Cmc 1nnat 1
Hou sto n
Los Ange les
Atlanta

I
38 25
38 26

pet. 9 b
60 3

594
556

1f2
3
475 9
)48 17
339 161!~

35 28
29 32

San Franc1sco 24 45

San D1ego
21 41
Sunday' s Results
Sl LOuiS 7 New York 1, 1st
51 LOu1s 2 New York l , 2nd
Ph 1laGelph1a 1 Montreal 0
C1n c1 5 Hou ston 4, 10 1nns
P1tfsburgh 9 Ch1cago 2
Los Angeles 5 At lanla 0
San Fran 6 San Dgo 5, U 1ns

Today 's Probable Pilchers
I All T1mes EDT)
Philadelphia IChamp1on 4 S )
at Chicago (P appas 55 or
Reuse he ! 1 OL 2 15 P m
Atlanta I Reed 4 n at San
Fran c1sco {Stone 3 7), 4 p m
C1nc.nna11 (Nolan 9 2) at Los
Angeles {Os teen 1 4), 11 P m
P1tlsburgh (Moose 5 31 at
New York (Koosman 4 3). 9 IS

pm

Montreal (Moore 0 0) at St
LOUIS (G ibson 5 5), 9 p m
Houston (Gnff n 2 2) at Sa n
D1ego ( K1rby 56), 10 30 p m

Tuesday ' s Games
Cine• at Los Ano , n1ghl
P1ttsburgh at New York
Philadelphia at Ch1cago, 2
Mont at St Louis, 2, tw1 n1te
Houston at San 01ego , n 1ght
Atlanta at San Fran , ntght

W L Pet G B
36 27 511

Syrac use

37
J_.
32
32

Tidewater

31 3_.

Roches ter

31

36

463

Pen insula

27

39

409 10112

Tote~o

29 • 561
30 531
32 500
33 A92

33 16

26 31
26 31
25 32

21
West

37

~b.

559
559

m 6
456 6
439 7
362 1P12

w 1 pet g b
Oakland
40 20 667
Ch 1cago
36 24 600 4
M 1nnesota
32 26 552 7
Cal 1tor n 1a
29 34 460 121!1
Ka nsas Ctty
27 32 458 12111
Texi!S
26 35 426 U IJ-1
Sunday's Restdfs
M.nn 5 Kansas City "j, 1st
Kan City s Minnesota 3, 2nd
Cleve land 4 New York 3 1st
Cleve land s New York 1. 2nd
Boston 9 Mdw 1 lsi
M 11w 2 Boston o. 2nd
Oakland 6 Calif 1, 1st
Oakland 6 Cal 1f IJ, 2nd
cn1cago 10 Texas 5
Baltimore 2 Detroi t 1
Today's Probable Pitchers
cAll Times E DTl
Cal ifornia
(Rose
1 1l
at
M 1nnesota (Corbin 2 0), 8 30
p m
Chicago
(Wood
11 6l
at
Kansas c 1ty (Hedlund 0 51, 8 30
Pm
Oakland (Holtzman 10 5) 1t
Texn (Goglewsk l 3 6), 8 15
pm

New

you 1 re well protected.

Consult Us Soon

Davis-Wamer Ins.
Phone 992-2966
Pomeroy

14 Court St.

York IKeklch 6 51 ol

SHIRt
FINISHING

_.,,2

7

SAME DAY
SERVIt:E
In At 9-0ul At 5
U~e Our

Fret P•rlung LOI,

Robinson's aeaners
216

E. 2nd, Pomeroy

Syracuse
Peninsula
1 (2nd · - - - - - - - - - ·
oame . 7 3lnn1ngs
l

NOTICE
PRODUCTION
CREDIT OFFICE
IN POMEROY
WILL BE
CLOSED
•
JUNE 27th
AND

JULY 4th
I

A yellow f I a g llymg on
board sh tp ts the quarantine
flag of all nahons

work for YOUR besl interests Let us see liNt

Oakland at Texas, night
Boston a t Cleve , nlgttt
New York al Detroit , nfght
Mllw at Baltimore , night

5
A17 6

I

Experts on Sno~s
Experts on snowshoes can
walk for hours at the rate
of flve or stx mtles an hour ,
many can run on them m a
sort of dogtrot at lO miles
an hour

INSURANCE for your

homa , your car, your
personal properlY . Wt

De troll (Niekro 2 1I e 15 P m.
Boston (Culp 4 6) at Cleve
land (Lamb 1·0) , 7 30 P m l .
Milwaukee (Lockwood 3 8) at
Baltimore (Dobson 8e), 730
pm

112
2112

Sunday's Results
lOUISVIlle 6 ToledO A
Charleston 6 Tidewater 2
Rochester A R1chmond 3 (lsi
game. 1 mnlngs)
R:ocheste r 4 Richmond 0 (2nd
game , 7 1nnmgsl
Penmsuht 3 Syracuse 2 (1st
game , 7 inn1ngsJ

•

Fnendly Tavern , 7 - Mark vs.
8 - Dally Senl vs
Pomeroy National Bank

Adolph 's,

Ch1caoo at Kan C1ty, nig ht

Standings
United Press lnterniiiOnll
LOUISVIlle
Richmond

33 26

lfutsdiY'I Gamet
Calltorn~ at Mlnn • nlgl'lt

tnternationil League

Chorleslon

Detro•t

... are willing workers.
They give us fiber for
newsprint and clothing,
wood panels for beauty,
beechnuts and pecans,
maple syrup and turpentine.
Don't cut short a tree's career!

\••ol1.11y"y4)U can preventforest fires.

eQ

Published "a publiC serY&gt;ce in cooperat•on ••lh The Achtrtlsufl Council,
!hi! US Forest SeHv•cts I he Nal •onal ~ssGc tat1on of Statt Foresters

and The

lnle~ "'tlollo11

Newspaper Adverl!!!Ol £ltCI4l•vts

•

�•

•

..... A[LJ_..,

"We .Can't All Be Perfect!"

EDITORIAl.
Learn to Swim

The Amertcan Red Cross has been teaching swimming
and Ufesaving since 1914. So, tf you shit don't know how
to IWtm, It's not because there hasn't been an opportunUy to learn.
Actually, everyone should learn how to swim. First. of
all, it is good exerctse and recreation Even more Important, however, Is the safety aspect of this water sport.
This summer more than 100 million Americans have
already taken to the water for swimming, salllng, canoeing, skiing or pleasure boating.
These acbvitles will be more fun if all aquatic sportsmen follow recommended safety precautions This appUes not only to those in the water but those near it as
welt, "because 110 per cent of the people who drown ea~h
year fall into the water accidentally," according to
Charles Russell, acting national director of Red Cross
Safety Programs
Most of those lndtviduals could have saved themselves,
Russell says "if they had been able to swim, because
almost invariably safety-in the form of a dock, a· boat
or the shore-was nearby ."
Some 7,300 persons drown in this country each year.
The drowning rate is 3.6 persons drowned per 100,000
population Nearly 110 years ago, when the Red Cross
began Its program of Instruction, the number of persons
drowned per 100,000 was 10 2
So, the drowning rate has dropped to nearly one-third
of Its former level while the total population of the country has more than doubled and partlctpanls in water
aports have multiplied more than 10 times .
It's a pretty good record, but it isn't quite good enough
and with normal cautions, accordlng to the Red Cross,
the number of drownlngs could be reduced even more
drastically.
Here are a tew of the precautions you can take to help
Insure swimming and water safety for your family and
yourself·
,
• Learn to swim Contact your local Red Cross for the
time and place of the next avallable lessons.
• Watch small children carefully around the watereven in supervised areas, and even In shallow wading

and Saturn. The evening stars are Mereu· ·
ry, Mars and Jupiter.
'!bose born on this date are
under the sign of Cancer.
~rican novella! Pearl S
Buck was born on June 26, 1892.
On this day In history:
In 1900 Dr. Walter Reed led a
medical team in a campaign tc
wipe out yellow fever In the
Panama Canal Zone.
In 1917 the first tr(lopS of the
American Expeditionary Force
reached France In World War
I.
In 1944 the third largest
French port, Cherbourg, was
liberated from the Nazis by the
Allies In World War II.
In 1948 the United States
began operation-of the "Berlin
Airlift" to bypass a Soviet road
and rail blockade of the divided
German capital city.
A thought for the day:
French critic and novelist
Anatole France said, "We have
medicines to make women
speak; we have none to make
them keep silent."

L 5bib5 ; e .

u :u

• em:: ue

•bJ

b.UU b

ti

Voice along Br'Way

I

classtcal-modern thunder.
Cabs are expensive; from airports, take the
pools.
Carey Buses at a fraction of the recenUy
OF CAB FARES AND
• Always swim with a buddy.
escalated
cabfares, for a couple of dollars (as
CHOW
MEIN
• Swim in a safe place.
NEW YORK (KFS)- We were mentioning compared wtth $13 to $15 from Kennedy Airport,
• Before diving, make sure the water is deep enough
a
few
of the places and characters that a New $1 average from LaGuardta) you'D be dropped
and there are no hidden objects under the water.
York vtsilor mtght enjoy thts summer . There off at a strategtcally midtcwn temunal where
• Wall at least an hour after eating before swtmmmg
are
a few additions along with lips (no, not the cabs for the shorter trtps tc hotels etc. are in
• Don't swim if you are overtu-ed or overheated
• Be sure the proper lifesaving equipment is avatl· gratultous kmd) that a veteran a! the Big Town abundance
thtnkS' might be helpful .
On 5th Ave., the constabulary ill specially
able in your swimming ares.
Chinese food• Try King Dragon at 3rd Ave. tramed and brtefed on locations a! hotels,
• Don't depend solely on an inflated toy or inner tube
to keep you afloat It may slip away from you
near 73rd St., fine Cantonese cuiSine, not too stores, subways, buses, restaurants; for a long
• Get out of the water when storms approach , water
expensive and worth II. Bill Chan's Gold Coin on time, the Irish had New York's pollee force
Is a good conductor of Ughtnmg
2nd Ave at 45th St. is another of the tastebud- rtgh t tn the famtly and sometimes it seems not
(NIWSPAPIR ENTIU11lSI ASSN I
titillatlng sam~ . lf you're in Chmatown, it's Wah too dtllerent today. PU. Matt Feeley, for inKee on Doyers St , one flight stratght down to stance, commutes from Queens dally to his
happiness.
executive seat m the sub-police station in the
Hot dogs? Lots of drooling votes for basement of the handsome General Motors
Nathan 's on Times Square; we prefer the Building at 59th and 5th Ave. Lost, strayed,
original Nathan's at Coney Island, but if tl's too mystified, feel famt? Go tc Officer Feeley and
far , our next votes go tc the Inldtown Howard he'll befrtend you. A 5th Ave. traffic cop may
Johnsons and Nedick's; frankly (note the pun) just be our old fnend Offtcer Ray Connelly, who
it's more because of ftne fresh rolli and relishes has a rare sense of humor even when
as well as mustard; Nathan's jars of mustard discourqgmg tllegal peddlers or panhandlers.
an&lt;j relish are recommended for taking home to Officer Tongue-Twtster (his nickname)
your own gnlled puppies
McHugh ts m the !lladison Ave. London Shop
By Helen BO~el
Atmosp~er~1
The
ghosts
of
the
old
Round
area, another sturdy traditional Gael. There's E
"
Table still quip at the Algooqum and tf that handsome trafftc cop whose natural habitat Is
I .~
renowned Round Table now ts full of squares, spang m the Inlddle of 5th Ave &amp; 57th St , object
lawyers and less celebrated wtts, the upstatrs or all the female/ he tgnores while deploymg
MATEQUEU.S BELLE'S YEW
rooms and suites and the delightful lobby w1th endlessly the tcrtured tralftc The girls say he's
Dear Helen:
tts comfortable, commodious chatrS and movte-star stuff
My husband and I are from a small Southern town where IQilllges are as hkely to contain a producer, star
There are dozens, hundreds actually,
women are women and men treat them Uke "belles." We ended or writer m them as a vtsltor from outer exurbs. maybe a thousand such lme folk who have giVen
up In New York where a female lends for herself. I've been Jimmy Weston's has good man-stzed steaks, us much personal pleasure and service and
CUlled and yelled at while driving to and from work and chops and classical jazz (Max Kaminsky or mmt-emergency aid over our more than a
Mturally I learned to yell back - but my husband dldn 't know Tyree Glenn or somesuch old lime 52nd St. hoie- quarter-cenlury of making Manhattan our
IIlla.
.
m-the-wall-ol-fame star Btg sports crowd 1.
Home Town It's like every new home town, a
'!be other day he was With me and a man driver blocked me
The Rainbow Grill will star Duke Ellin)!!c~. trifle dtsmaymg at first encounter, bigger, more
ln. I honked several Urnes and he just sat there, so I got out and Uonel Hampton and such greats aU summer; excttmg tHan all and we 've been m most of the
aatd a few choice words.
the St. Regis Roof has hired Count Baste, Woody world's Big Cities It's a great place tc Vtstl, and
My husband was 10 shocked he turned white. He said he had Herman and Buddy Rtch for a season of for us, to live m. We swea~
alwaya prided hlmlelf on my being soft and sweet and acting Uke
a lady no matter what, and he KNEW thla would happen If he
allowed me to work.
'
He 18ys he won~ hsve me turn hard like northern working
wom111,10 I hsve to quit my job.llove my job!
How ean I show him that going to work hssn 1 changed me •
lt'a jUil that men don~ e~pect you to be genUe In New York, and
If lam, (whether I'm working or JUII going to the market), I'd
probably never get there. - HARDENED SOFTIE
Dear H.S.:
Seems to me a GENTI.E New York driver Is whst that city
needl. Courtesy often gets ~ou there Iuter lhan yelling - and By Lawrence Lamb, M.D
ear. The canalt!seif ts really
When you go to altitude,
not juat on the highway. Score onefor your husband.
a
blmd tube closed wtlh the the thm atr creates less presDear
Dr
Lamb-What
Bur: A job does not turn a woman ''hard." Keeping her causes the blocking of the whtle, gilstenmg membrane sure at the external ear, the
of the eardrum
home again Ill her will MIG HI'. Score one for you.
atr m the hollow middle ear
ear such as what o c c u r s
Now that you're even, try compromise: tell him you'D be his when descendmg from altt·
The middle ear ts the next ts under greater pressure
UtUe Southern comfort, if he'll knock olf hla chauvinistic Ideas of tude? In my case, this oc- compartment lnstde the ear- and can push your eardrums
out The ear ts protected
"mrthern working women." - H.
curs several times a day It drum ts a great hollow cham- agamst thiS by leaking air
ts very tmtating when talk- ber, the mtddle ear At the frQm the middle ear cham+++
of thiS hollow chammg because I suddenly feel bottom
Dear Helen :
ber ts a tube that passes ber through the tube to the
Regarding the jealoua wife who wouldn ~ let her husband that I am talking too loudly downwsrd and opens m the mouth
or unclearly, then I fmd myWhen descendmg from aldance with any of the other women, whUe she had a goodltlme self concentratmg on lhts back of the throat (eustaas the air pressure
lltude,
chtan
tube)
Through
this
dancing with their husbands - you suggested the husbands slop rather than on what I am
mcreases, the external pres·
chamtube
the
middle
ear
liking her to dance and leave them to the "boredom" of their saymg
ber commumcates with the sure against the eardrum
m~tea . Why muat It be ''boredom"?
I have gone to two doc- atr m mouth When air pres- pushes inward Too mucb
My huaband and I dance well together, enjoy being In each tors and they told me this sure builds up In the m1ddle pushmg In and out of the
other's anna, and will not dance with anyone else. He also stays was likely due to ear Infec- chamber, au- lS forced out ear d'r u m causes irritation
called barotrauma.
with me when we go out, and we never go out sepuately. We tions I had as a child One the tube and mto the mouth.
Overgrowth of t Is s u e In
stated that I may eventually U the pressure m the chameven enjoy grocery shopping together.
ber falls, air Is sucked up the throat near the tube
an
operallon
and
the
need
l1Uppoee you wonder what kind of marriage this can be.
gave me pills which mto the chamber through opening may make It lmpos·
Welt, It's beaullful. We never fl8ht or argue. We are too busy other
didn't help any I have had this same tube. Thts way, tfie
llnding new way• to show each other our mutual love. Here are a this problem approximately pressure can be changed in slble for air to pass freely In
In ways: I Qll the gr111whlle hela at work 10 we'D have m&lt;n seven years, but the block- the mtddle ear chamber.
lime on weebndllto do the thlnss we like to do. I aLto put notealn ing' seems to be happening
111
hillunch each day, teJUns him I love him or enclose some Iunny more regularly as time proWhat do you think
lltUe cartoon. He always washes the diEes while I dry ,10 that we gresses
I should do?
The Daily Sentinel
can talk together. He never turns the TV on unle111 we are both
DEVOTED
TO THE
Den Reader- You should
INTEREST OF
able to lit down. Our chairs are cloee10 we can hold hands.
make arrangements to see
MEIGS-MASON AREA
We enjoy hobblea and share them. We have a large famUy an ear, nose and throat speCHESTER L TANNEHILL,
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Thoma
Euc. Ed
with only one left at horne. We still sleep close (in the nude) and cialist Your famtly doctor
ROIERT
HOEFLICH.
were Sunday evening visitors
are auctlvelylovlngaslnourflntyean of marriage - no ''old- can refer you to one or you
C•tr Editor
of
Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Published
dlll'1
ucept
can obtain the names of sl":file slowdown" here!
Saturday
bv
The
Oh
io
Vlllty
Johnson.
All thla and my wonderful huaband will be on Medicare next ctallsts for this problem wtth Publlshtng Com pan r. 111
a telephone call to the near- Court St , Pomerov Ohio,
Mr. Guy RusseU of Columbus
ye.-. And we are never bored! My ""81ation to those wives who est
county medical society. -45769 Bustness Off•ce Phone was weekend visitor of Mr. and
110 tot dance to m!J: with other husbands - try our way. -WE You may also write to your 992 2156, Edltor 111 Phone 992
2157
Mrs. Uncoln RusseU. Terry
lJKE IT!
state medical association to
Second class posteot paid at Lynn of Pomeroy also visited
Dear Helen:
ask for the name and loca- Pomtrov . Ot}•O
Sunday.
Netiontl IChtrlt&amp;lng
My luband and bla former wife st111 own a bualnesalollether tion of ear doctors who are repreuntetlvt
Bollintlll
Mi. and Mrs. WIUiam Boyce
GIIIIQhtr , Inc;, l2 East .. 2nd
anchee eechothereveryday. '!bey divorced ftve yesrugo. (Not closest to your home
St. Ntw York Ctty , New York . of Columbus was weekend
over me). Follflbt all the lime back then. Now they get along
The ear is affected by
Subscription retts . Ot
vial tor of Mr. and Mrs. Howard
pe1 l'eciiJ.·He 18ys they were meant lo be frlendl, not Ioven. changes In alt\t~de because llvtrtd by cerrltr Vthtrt RusseU.
50 cents per Wttk,
of the difference in pressure lvlillblt
0111 I believe him? :I'he bllllneas thrives, but I worry. Bv Motor Routt where cerrltr
Mr. and Mn. Guy Tuckeracrou the eardrum between serv1ce not IJ'IIIIble : Ont
BUDITLY JEALOUS
the external ear and middle month 11 7S av me11 In Ohio man ol Springfield ~pe~~ta few
n.S.J.: .
w VI , One ynr 11• 00 days with hil brother, Mr. and
ear chamber. The external •nd
$11( months 11 25
Thrtt
~~~- mala allen beeGDe friends - after cjlvcrca taltea ear 1s the ear 11 the side of month S4 50 Subscription Mrs. Fred Tuckerman and Mr.
lhe rw,. 0111 of bllnt dole.
love 111Ually rema1na dead. 'lbey the held, plus the canal prltt Includes Sund•y TlmtJ . and Mn Eugene Haning and
that funnels sound Into the Senllnel .
Wlr tech other too well. Slop worrying. -H.
famtly.
BY JACK O'BRIAN

Helen Help

Us. • •

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Fairview
.
News Notes
B Mra H rbert Ro b
Y
• e
ua

Mr and Mrs. Russell Roush
and children, Sharon, Cindy,
David and Edward, Mr. and
Mrs. Isaac Lewis, Mr. and
Mrs. Ronnte . Russell and
daughter, Mandy, were
Father's Day guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Dana Lewis.
•
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
and Mrs. Dorothy Glenn viaited
at University Hospital in
Columbus Saturday with David
Sayre. U ever~""''" goes well,
Mr. Sayre will be returning
home sooner than expecled
after havmg heart surgery.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lawson
nd
J ol Leta t w
a son, C. ·•
r' ·
Va • spent Saturday IVlth Mr
and Mrs . Charles Lawson and
family.
Mrs Ada Rowe was a dinner
guest Sunday of Mr. and Mrs.
Don Hupp and vistted tn the
afternoon with Mrs. Anna
Wines at Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush
ahd children viSited Frldiiy
evening · with Mr. and Mrs
Dana Lewis at Clifton.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronrue RUIISOU
and dallflhter, Mandy, Jre
viaitlng his psrenta; Mr. and
Mrs . Bob Russell at
Harrisonville.
• Exprenlon's Source
The expression, "pte m the
sky," came into usage from
a song adopted for the
l.W W. movement. Originally a hobo song, 1t promises
the downtrodden that, after
a life of eating hay, they
will have their "pie m the
sky"

Pressure Makes the Differepce

What Causes Ear Blockages?

Wo l£pen

News, Notes

•t

.

-

and out of the middle ear
chamber. Sometimes, surgical removal of the overgrown tissue is needed.
I doubt your problem is
barotrauma, since it occurs
several limes a day .without
c h a n g I n g altitude. More
likely it is related to ear ·
damage that ampUfies some
sounds but not others. This
occurs most often wltll Increasing age.
Your ean are exceptionally important, and anyone
who Is having hearing problems certainly deserves a
c a r e f u I examination by a
specialist.

Three well..played games by
the Meigs Leg10n baseball
team followed a lackluster
performance m Saturday's
openlr!g game at Portsmouth
Meigs lost the fu-st game
Saturday 13-7, tied the second
1-1, and won both ends of a

By DON OAKLEY
Apart f~om doubts about the ~isd~~ oj phasing ou~
the draft and creating a "professtonal Armyboth~ q~e~
tlon most frequently asked ll!• h~w do you go a u es a ·
hshmg an aU-volunteer service
.
In
th
The answer most frequently hea~d ts to crea~ e
pay. Other Incentives to attract enlistees are mentioned,
such as better Jiving conditions and better care erbopportunlties wilhm the Army, but most of the talk 1s a ou1
better
pay. study by the Universit)' of M"tc hi gan •s Insti•
A recent
tute for Social Research (ISR) lndtcates that another In·
centive may have greater appeal than money to roung
men pondering mllltary servtce-the guarantee o four
years of paid schooling In return for four years of service.
"Perhaps most important are the differences In th~
kinds of young men attracted by the two Incentives,,
say Jerome Johnson and Jerald Bachman, the study s
d~rectors.
ti
They report that when higher ~ay as an lncen ve was
contrasted wtth paid schooling, • those attracted by paid
schoohng averaged higher In intelligen~~· verbal sklils,
occupational ambitions and self-esteem.
,,
The IRS study Is part of a larger "Youth In Trlll!sttion
research effort begun in 1966, which has been mvestigatlng young men's attitudes, plans and behaviors, Pill"·
tlcularly those related to 'educational and occupatlotlal
choices
und hiug1h
According to the latest survey data, college-bo
school graduates "are not strongly motivated by immedl·
ate monetary needs in the way that the job-bound are ...
Of greater mterest to the college-bound are those aspects
of self-development which are as~oclated with advanc~d
education and the opportunities tt opens up for the .mdlvidual "
. Johnsion and Bachman thus conclude that to attract
the college-bound, the military must offer either more in
the way of educational alternatives or more assiStance to
indivtduals to pursue education on their own.
An all-volunteer force concentrating entirely on the 'Pay
Incentive, they believe, "might tend to attract those
slightly lower in abillty and aspirations than the men
Presently ser¥1ng."
The use of an educational incentive, on the other hand,
would not only have advantages for the m!Utary but
"would have almost entirely positive by-products through·
out the civilian society."
They propose an approach which involves bulb an enJarged GI bill and the use of savings from military pay,
made possible by the recent pay mcreases In the armed
services
Under the plan, a young man could serve four years
and receive up to $16,000 to cover tuition and l_lvlng expenses during four years of college . Alternatively, he
could (after formally enbstmg) take his four years of
paid education first and then serve four years of active
duz for the fear that an aU-volunteer Army might make
it easter for the nation to become Involved In more "Vletnams " the authors note that as the Vietnam war went
on It 'became a more and more negative factor In enlist·
ment decisions-a disincentive.
They consider it more Jl.kely that the supply of volunleers would be threatened by other military mvolvements
resembling the one in Vietnam and cautiously suggest
that "It thus seems at least a posslbUity that reliance on
an all-volunteer force would actually tend to discourage
large-scale military adventures In the future."
iHEWSPAPIO EHTERPkiSI ASSN 1

WIN AT BRIDGE

,,

,,. .

1

The Coon Coup, It's Called
JIm : "No. II couldn't
Charley had a perfect count
.QJ975
of the distribution He saw
¥1097
that if East held the club
+A&amp;
queen
any club play would
.K83
beat the contract. If South
WEST
EAST
held the queen and 10 there
was no hope lor the defense
¥QJ54
.K63
whUe if South held the queen
+ K107 5
+QJ9832
and East the 10 the jack play
.AJ74
.1065
would give declarer a chance
to go wrong."
SOUTH
.AK10832
Oswald: "! take It South
¥A82 )
did go wrong."
Jim: "He sure did. It
.Q92
never occurred to him that
Both vulnenble
Charley held the ace. His
Weot North Eut Soalh whole
problem was where
Paso
Pus 1•
the
10
could
be found and he
Pass 4•
Pass Pasa
decided
to
play
Charley for
Pasa
it.
He
let
the
club
ride tp his
Opening lead-• 4
queen. Charley ducked the
club return as a matter of
By 01wald &amp; Jameo Jacoby course and East made his
10." .
Jim: "How about showing
(HIWSPAPEI INTIIP.ISI ASSN. )
some reaur unusual plays
this week?'
Oswald · "I bet you have
one In mind."
Jim: "That I do. It lS
sometimes caUed the Coon ·The biadlnl hu bMn:
coup because II was played Wool Nottll Eut
14
Paas
by Charles Coon of Boston a
Pus
few years ago South won the PIA 2•
first trick with his ace of
You, South, hold:r--hearts; drew trumps with •..uu ¥K81U U 4QIOT
one lead; cashed dummy's
What do you do now'
ace of diamonds; ruffed
two.,....._ It looks u
dummy's last diamond and If A-d
your
II
polnll are
played a heart. Charley took roinl to bohlrh·tanl
rllt·odpd.
his two heart tricks and led
TODAY'S QUES110N
the jack of clubs!"
Oswald: "The only play to
Your partner continues to two
give the defense a chance no-trump W hat do, you do
and one that could net pos- now?
•
stbly hurt him."
l
Aluwer tomonow
NOBTH(D)

.,

.6

.,

Do It Every Time
J-;;;;:;:;:;;:;:7;:;:;~;;:==ll~~~::=i;~!;~~~~~

I TrrEw,t.,~.~ET '"AS ,._ n-mo1e ~T

CIJTTII-ol&amp; DOWN ON Tl-tE !ELECTRIC
!IL~5 lo.T HOME!
~-----

Legion. 2-1-1 In Weekend Action

Education Offer
Makes Difference

'!be moon is full.
'!be mornmg stars are Venus

Happiness Is
Safety in Water

3- '!be DaUy~Sentinel,Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0., June 26, 1972

Volu,.teer Army:

By Uillledl'raiiMenatllul
Today Ia Monday, June ' 21,
the 176th day oi 11172 with 188 to
follow.

lJur J.J " ~JCre:L

HOW Ltel-ir·81L.L·
COioiSCIOOS 15
QUR. HERO'?

ARE 'tOU
OON TO TllRN

OUT &gt;lOME
CS' TH!i,
~IOHT5.

Drawings for the Athens
American Legion District
baseball touraameQI baa
Melp playing Lancaster at
11 a.m. on Saturday, July ZZ,
on Traulweln fitld and
Logan playing Athens al 11
a.m. the same day at the
Fairgrounds field.
Tbe wlnnen will play at 3
p.m. the same day at
Trautwein field and losen at
the same time on lbe
Fairgrounds.
'!be championship game
will be , played on the
following Saturday at
Trautwein field. Meigs is the
defending champion of the
double • ellmtoatlon !clll"·
oament. The winner wiD
advance to the state touroameat Ia Ashland, Ohio.
----twm-blll Sunday at New
Haven, 7-3 and 7-1 m nine innings.
Portsmouth Vs. Meigs
In the first slugfest, Metgs
ace Stan Perry couldn't find his
control and was forced off the
mound in the second mning

•

None of the five hurlers used m
the game was very effective
due to the very cold weather
Nme walks, stx errors, and
ten Portsmouth hits accounted
lor lhetr runs Metgs got etght
htts but walked only ltve times
while the hometcwn mne made
only two mtstakes.
In an inmng and two-thtrds,
Perry fanned omi and walked
ftve. Johnny Baird, the loser,
walked two and fanned one,
and BtU Chaney struck out two
and walked two. Hanes, the
starter for the wmners, struck
out four and walked three while
Dearfield, the winner, fanned
six and walked two
Getting hits for Meigs was
Roger Dtxon wtth two smgles
and a double while Tom Cooke,
Rtck Ash, Jon Buck, Kevm
Sheets, and Perry all had a
smgle. Rase paced Portsmouth
wtth a smgle and double and
McGlone had two singles
Second Game
Sktpper Johnson pttched
from deep trouble m the
seventhmmngwith the score II. Portsmouth had the bases
loaded and no outs when
Johnson, who went all the way,
fanned the ftrst batter, got the
second to pop up, and forced
the final to ground "to short.
The game was called after
seven lnalngs due to a 6 p.m.
curfew that states an inalng
eann:ot start after that time
because other games to be
played follow and the field

East Crushes
West, 42 .To 20
LUBBOCK, Tex. (UPI)FootbaU, m the form of the
Coaches All-Amertca game,
mtght have once been on un·
steady ground, But no longer.
'!be sertes started m 1961 in
Buffalo, N. Y., and had some
ho-hum years there and m
Atlanta. But for the pssl three
Junes the game has drawn
more than 40,000 persons in
Lubbock and' the American
Football Coaches Association
voted once again Ia~ weekend
to return to the Texas Tech
campus next year.
The official temperature at
game time was 95 degrees, the
bhnking sign at the bank
around the comer from Jones
Stadium read 101 degrees and a
thermometer placed on the
Astroturf just before kickoff
soared to 120 degrees.
Yet there were 42,314 persons
m the stands, the second
largest crowd ever to see one of
the series.
Bear Bryant of Alabama,
president of the Coaches
Association who guided the
EP.st team to an upset 42-lll win
over the West to even the series
at !Hi, ill delighted the game
has found a profitable home
"People here have proven
during the past three years
that there can be an mterest In
the game and that It will work
If played in a college town
Instead of one competing with
the pros.
"Televlalon Is giving it more
and more each year, and smce
moving tc Lubbock we have
been In the black wtth the

game:"
The game Itself was something less than a classic.
The heavily favored West

corrunitted three major mJs.
takes tn the first half- a
blocked punt, a lumbie and an
mtercepted pass-and all three
led to East touchdowns
The first one was scored by
Bill Taylor of Michigan, who
wound up gaining 92yards in 17
carrtes and wmmng the game's
most valuable player award.
From then on, in successton,
the East got scores on a !$-yard
pass from quarterback Paul
Miller to North Carolina.
teammate Lewis Jolley; on a
one-yard plunge by Alabama's
Johnny Musso; a 25-yard run
by Curt Watson of Tennessee,
another one-yarder by Taylor

Cincinnati Hero

the-.

-~

h1s fourth wm m four dec1s10ns

He fanned 13 and walked five
whtle allowtng only three htls,
ail tn the ftrst three mmngs
Camp fanned four, walked
lhree, htt one, gave up II htls,
and seven runs
The Metgs mnth had M Ash,
Perry, Deunfee, and Buck all
smgle, Dtxon hit a double wtth
bases loaded, Perroud and Van
Maire walked, and Boyd was
htt by a pttch for the stx runs
Others who took part m the
Metgs sweep Sunday were
Johnny Roush, Howte Taylor,
and Dave Wolfe:
A casualty 0 ccurred in the
seventh Inning when two
stars, Meigs' Tom Cooke and
New Raven's Robbte
' Lambert colbded head-on

Western
NORTHBROOK, Ill (UPI)Jtm Jamieson, havmg finally
won a golf tournament, told tt
bke tt was
.
"I really felt the pressure,"
'dmttted Jamteson, wtio was
on the verge of blowing an
etghtstroke lead before he
straightened out Sunday and
won the $30,000 top prize in the

Perry, Batrd ILPI ( 2) ,
Chaney 14) and Dtxon Hanes,
Dearheld i WP J 141, and
McGlone.
1Sctond Game 1
Metgs
IIIII 000 0-1 J 2
Ports
OliO 010 0-1 6 I
Johnson and M Ash J
Welch and Sturgtil
Sunday Wirst Game)
Metgs
040 000 2--7 12 0
N H.
210 11110 0-3 7 2
· Van Maire and Dtxon
Kayser and Lewts
(Secopd Game 1
Metgs
000 010 1106-7 II 3
010 OliO 0011-1 3 4
NH
Perry and Dtxon, M Ash (9)
Camp and R Clark, Lewts (5I

Pomeroy BlankS

p 0
0

•

M.a

p~

•

e:J

•

Tilt
By VITO STELLINO
UPI Sports Writer
The ofhc tal
baseball
rulebook ts qutte spectftc
Under Rule No
8 02,
Paragraph C, 11 states "The
pttcher shall not mtenttonally
ptlch at the batter "
But on the fteld m the heat of
compettllon, the players follow
a dtflerent set of rules
11

Jamieson
Captures

ncar the sctond base bag on
Cooke's attempted steal.
Cooke Jammed a front toolh
deep Into Lambert's cheekbone, causing both to he
mJured on the field for over
ten mmutes. Both were
transported by private
to
Veterans
vehiele
Memortal Hospttal.
Metgs, now 111-6-1 on the
year, will play at Athens
Wednesday in a battle of two
ftne teams Athens has been
touted as one of toughest
LegiOn teams m the area
Saturday 1First Game 1
Metgs
212 OliO 2-- 7 8 6
Ports
230 620 x- 13 10 2

B wl Cheshire, 3-0

The Expos have to reahze

that every pttcher ts gmng to
come back and get" thetr man,
those are the rules of the
game," Steve Carlton of the
Phtladelphta Phtlhes satd Sunday after he beaned Montreal's
Ttm Fob to tgmte a wtld brawl
"Foh has tc reahze I was
trymg to htt him m the rtbs but,
unfortunately, he got his head
m the way. Of course, I would
never try (Q,throw at any body's
head "

Evening the Score
Carltcn felt he was JUSt
evening the score because
Errue McAnally of the Expos
hit Joe Lts. But when Carlton
beaned Foh m the fourth mrung, Montreal ma nager Gene
Mauch led a charge to the
mound. Mauch, who suffered
some scrapes and cuts on his
face before the fracas was
brought under control, was
tossed out ol the game. Foli
was taken to a hospttal for Xrays but they proved negative
Carlton stayed m the game
and pitched a lour-httter to
gtve the Philhes a I~ vtctory
over the Expos. When Carlton
came up to the plate in the ftfth
mmng, McAnally trted to even
the score agam but this time he
was banished lor throwmg at
Carlton
CarltOil didn 't throw at any
other hitters and managed tc
pttch a shutout, getting the wm
on the strength of John
Bateman's homer
The fracas overshadowed
some of the pennant race ac·
lion m the National League as
Pittsburgh took command of
the NL East race while the
West remamed a scramble as
Cincmnati and Houston split
their lour-game sertes and Los
Angeles kept in hot pursult. In
the other scores, Pttlsburgh
downed Chicago, 9-2, Cmcmnati edged Houston, 5--t, m
10 mnings, Los Angeles
blanked Atlanta, 5-0, St Louis
topped New York lwtce, 7·1and
2--1, and San Francisco downed
San Diego, 6-5, In 14 Innings
In the American League,
Baltimore beat Detroit, 2--1,
Cleveland d,owned New York
twtce, 4-3 and l'&gt;-1, Boston beat
Milwaukee; 8-1 but lost the
second game, 2-0, Oakland beat
California twice, 6-1 and 5-0,
Minnesota beat Kansas City, r.3, but lost the second game, 8-3,
and Chicago routed Texas, 10-

and finally a 15-yard toss from
Miller to John McMakin of
Clemson.
Western Open
"I'll be honest w1UJ you,''
Not only dtd the West bobble Jamteson satd "l dtdn't feel tt
-'the hall more times than it
could afford, but the attempt sleeping last night or anythmg,
and I dtdn't feel tt on the
by Coach Chuck Fairbanks of driving range, but when I got to
Oklahoma to put m the Wishbone-T offense proved to be a the practice putting green and
when I got up on the ftrst tee, I
bu~e needed timing for the felt the pressure."
Wishbone attack was not there,
Jamteson, duck-hooktng
drives hke a liHlandicapper,
and a triple option play seldom bogeyed two of the ftrst three
gamed any yardage.
n-.e West stayed In the game holes m Sunday's fmal round,
then turned around, shot a twothrough the first two a.nd a half under-par 69 lor a 72-hole total
quarters on a six-yard touch- of 271 nd won b six strokesdown pass from quarterback
'a
. Y
. f
Jack Mlldren of Oklahoma to the biggest VICtory margm 0
the year on the PGA tour.
of • 'lb iH00t-IO 21"""'•nd JaBernard
Jackson
Washmgton Sta~ and on a 21·
e
. •, "~""'
yard throw from Mlldren to mleson, strtktng a blow for
Skip Thomas of Southern c~ubby folks everywhere, blrCalif i
died the short, par-5, fourth
Fr:: ~en on, however, it hole,_and even though Labron
was almost all East wtth the HarriS was out on the course
West getting only six more threatening the record, there
fulile points on a six-yard run was never a question about the
by Houston's Tom MOZlSek.
WiMer a~r that. .
.
It was the most one-elded
Horns finished wtth a SIX·
margin In the !2-i!ke sertes under-par 65, matching the
competitive course record, and
placed second w1th 277.
'!be vtctory was the first for
Jamteson since he joined the
PGA !cur four years ago and
raised his earnings for the year
to 8'17 ,603. He donated $2,000 of
his purse to the Chick Evans
Caddy Scholarship Fund, beneficiary of the tournament, and
used some of the rest to buy
Pete Rose got a leadoff single champagne for thewriten, a Ia
in the seventh, foUowed by the the late Tony Lema.
ninth homer of the season by
Hale Irwin, Jim Wiechers
Joe Morgan which Ued up the and Bob Lunn finished In a
game. '!bat set the stage for threew~y tie lor third place, a
Menke's game-winning blow. distant nine strokes behind
'!be Reds needed the victory Jamieson, at 2M, and live more
since they had lost 4-1 to Hous- players were at 281- Bobby 5.
Manny Sa~ulilen's grand
ton Seturday night.
,
Nichols, Tommy Aaron, David
slam
homer In the eighth m'!be two teams split the four· Graham, Tom Welakopl and J.
nlng lifted Pittsburgh to the
game aeries, but Cincinnati, on C. Snead.
victory
over Chicago and
top of the Wild National League
Jamlt.ton flllared or held the
'
droWad
the
third place Cuba
Weal when the series began? lead after every round of the
cloeed out a horneatand leading tournament, shooting ea.87-87- five games behind the Pirates.
the dlvlaion .
69 over the short but tight '!be two New York !oases to St.
'!be Reds left Immediately SunSet Ridge Country Club Louis left the second place
after the game Sunday evening course. The cloeest he ever had Mets three games behind the
fortheWestC01IIandtheatart come lo wlnnln&amp; before this world champions.
of a seven-came road tralp. were tlelllor third place In the,
They open a two,game series Florida Citrus Invitational and
Th• •;&gt;ostle Paul was the
tonight In Lol Angelel as two
weeks
ago,
at first of the great Chrtslian
missionaries.
righthander Gary Nolan witt P11lladelphia.
his &amp;-2 mark on the line •
!-~!"'""'~!!!
agalnllt Claude Olteen who hal
a 4-7 record.
Cincinnati will play two
OPTOMETRIST
pmea In Lol Angelea, two In
OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12', 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
San Franclaco and three In San
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,
Diego before returning home
July 3.

Menke .Is Latest
CINCINNATI (UPI) -Denis
Menke II a hero today.
Not only did the righthander
chalk up a fourth-Inning homer
against hla former teanunates
on the Houlton Astros, oot he
aoclted a !Otb Inning double to
give Ctnclmatl a 5-4 victory
SUqday over the Aatr01 ~ and
shove the Reds back into the
flrat-9llce liot In the National
League West.
• Allo alngllng In the eighth,
Menb hit the game-w!Ming
ball o1f Fred Gladding with lhe
score tied 4--4 and drove hQIIle
Tony Perez.
The AatrOI had taken a 3-1
lead on Tommy Helms' fourthinning homer with two on olf
C1nCJ starter Jim ,M~lothUn.
The Reds came tiack ill the
bottom oi lhe fourth to pull
within one run of the Aatrol on
Meslb'l homer - hla fourth ol
I
'l1len the Altrol Welt alleld
4-2 in lhe top af the ftflh on 1
double by c-r Cedeno and a
~ by Jimmy Wym.

must be cleared. The Portsmonlh se•enth Inning
started a lew minutes till 6.
Metgs' run came tn the
thtrd when R. Ash smgled and Buck btl a
long double to left. Portsmoulh scored tn the ftfth when
Sparks, brother to the all-MAC
shorlstcp at Ohto Umverslty,
smgted, went to th1rd on a wild
pttch and scored on McCoullogh's single
The other Meigs htt was a
second smgle by R. Ash.
Sparks led Portsmouth wtth
two singles Johnson fanned
three and walked two whtle J.
Welch of Portsmouth fanned
ten and walked ftve Both
pttchers went aU the way.
New H&amp;ven Vs. Meigs
Rtck Van Matre struggled
through the ftrst two mnmgs
then setUed down to hurl a !me
seven-htlter for his ftfth win of
the season against one defeat.
He fanned seven and walked
only three
Coach George Nesselroad's
mne came through wtth 12 hils.
Metgs scored four m the second
and three msurance runs m the
seventh New Haven had two m
the ftrst and one m the second.
Httters for Metgs were
Cooke, R. Ash, Dtxon, and
Steve Dunfee ali with two
smgles each and Dave Boyd,
Buck, Lou McKmney, and
Chuck "Chic" Perroud all had
one smgle each M1ke Lewts led
New Haven wtth two stngles.
Second Game
New Raven's Kevin Camp
and Perry were locked up for
etght mmngs at 1-1 tn a hght
pitcher's duel when m the mnth
Meigs rapped the t1nng Camp
wtlh stx runs on ftve htts.
Perry went the dtstance For

Rtghthander Jeff McKmney
flred a ftve-httter tn leadmg
Pomeroy's Phtlhes to a 3~
v1ctory over Cheshu-e Sunday
afternoon tn a Gaiha-Metgs
Pony League contest played at
Cheshtre
The wtn moved Pomeroy mtc
second place tG the loop
standmgs behind the unbeaten
Btdwell Ptrates and Southwestern Highlanders The loss
left Cheshtre, the defendmg
1971 champs wtth a 1-2 record
Sunday's game was a makeup of Frtday's contest whtch
was ramed out at Pomeroy.
Cheshtre 's southpaw and lostng
hurler Jeff Blazer ytelded only
three htls but all came w1th
men on base
Pomeroy scored tis ftrst run
tn the fourth mmng on a walk tc
Burney and a hne double to left
by Greg McKljjJley. Two more
runs came across m the ftfth on
two walks, a smgle by Woody
Call and a sacnftce fly by

ptnchhttter Stan Moon
Cheshtre 's two sconng opportuntltes were m the ftrst and
fourth mnm.!ls but runners
were cutdown on the base
paths. In the ftrst, Bruce Arnett, Redleg third baseman,
was tagged out attempllpg to
steal tliird
In the fourth, catcher Jerry
Btas was nipped at the plate on
a perfect peg from first
baseman B. Marshall.
Mtke Nesseiroad I~ the
wmners with two smgles tn
three trips to the pia te
Btas led Cheshtre with two
smgles. Tim Lucas, Jun Ward
and Arnett had the other htts.
Pomeroy travels to Btdwell
Tuesday whtle Cheshtre vtsils
Vmtcn.
By Innmgs
Pomeroy
000 120 0-3 3 0
Cheshtre
11110 OliO 0-0 5 0
McKinney (W1 and Call
Blazer I L I and Bias

Marietta
Champ
Martetta nudged defendmg Southeastern Ohio
Golf Association champion Lancaster one stroke,
903-904, to capture the 47th annual SEOGA team
championship Sunday on the Hocking Hills Country
Club course at Loe;m
It was Manetta's 15th SEOGA crown, and first
since 1968. The Pioneer city won prev10us titles m
1926,34, 35, 42, 49, 54, 58, 59, 60, 61, 63, 64, a_nd 65.
Lancaster's Lowell LeCiear
IFaptured tndtvldual honors by
edgmg GalltpollS' George Pope
one stroke, 143-144.
Dave Evans, Chillicothe,
captured the putlmg contest,
and Galhpohs' Ron Eilts
captured the longest drtve
contest.
Galhpohs golfers hnished
seventh m the mne-team, twoday 30-hole tournament wtth a
946 effort
Galhpohs was paced by
Pope's 145. Ron Eilts had a 151l,
John Shtnn 159, Dirk Jackson
163, Jtm O'Brten ,164, Bill
Thomas 165, C Kiesling 171,
Clark Hager 173, Vtc Hager 174
Moddleport Independent
Basketball League
1F~rst Gamel
MIDDLEPORT OEPARTMENT STORE ISOl- Bobbs 02 2. Clark 10 2 22. File 13 0-26.
Werner l 2 16, Conde 5 0-10.
McCoy 1 o 2, Hawley 1 0-2
Tolals 37 6 80
POMEROY
NATIONA~
BANK 1661 - H•ll 3 0 6, B
Vaughan 7 2-16. Nelson 4 0 8,
Dotson 3 0 6, S M•lchell 3 0 6,
Au II 3-0-6. Garnes 9 0 18 Totals
32 2 66
Second Game
THE DAILY SENTINE~
1791 - E•ch1nger 8 4 20. R•t
ch•e 52 12. Rod Ferguson 6 1
13, Bailey 9 0 18, Douglas 3 0 6,
Ch•lds 50 10 Totals 36 7 79
ADOLPH'S DAIRY
VALLEY 1561- Dunlee 9 2 20,

and R D. White 175
Fmtshmg third m team play
was Athens, 919 Others were
Circleville, defending team
champton, 929; Chtllicothe,
934; Logan, 943; Gallipohs,
946 , Cambrtdge, 947 and
Jackson, 958
Here's the Gallipolis scores
and 1972 team standmgs:
GA~LtPOLIS SCORES
G Pope
73 72-145
R Ellos
SO 7D-150
J Shmn
77 82- 159
D Jackson
81 -81-163
J 0 "Brien
86-78-16A
B Thomas
80 85-165
c Keisling
85 86-171
C Hager
82-91- 173
V Hager
89-85-174
R D. Wh•le
89-86-175
1972 TEAM STANDINGS

Team

Scor•

Manetta
Lancaster

Athens

903

r

904

919
929

Ctrclev1lle

Chillicothe
Logan
Gallipolis
Cambridge
Jackson

934
943
946
947
958

Haggerty 4·5 13, Morns 7 0 14,

S Pme 4 0-8, Ebersbach 0 1 1

Total s

24 8 56

Your

Third Game
MARK V (65)- Walters 10 1
21. M Sayre 4 0 8, R Sayre 4 2

lnsur•nct

1 1-3,Cra •gOOO Totals27965
FRIEND~ Y TAVERN (61)
- Blanton 4-0 8, Harris 6 1-13,
Van Matre 7-2-16. Pnce 5-0-10.
J•m Hubbard 28 5 61
Ton1ght 's gamu
6 Middleport Dept · Store vs.

DALE
WARNER

Agenl

10, Ron Ferguson 9 S 23, Slaven

By United Press lnternat•onal
Nat•onal League

Amen can League
East
w I pet

East

w
P1ttsburgh

1. pel

39 21
37 25
34 26

New York
Ch1cago
Sf LOU IS

Mont rea l
Philade lphia

9 b

650
Baltimore
591 3
New York
567 5
Cleveland
47 5 10112 · Bos ton
44 3 12 l;, Mi lwaukee

29 32
27 34
22 38

367

17

West

w

Cmc 1nnat 1
Hou sto n
Los Ange les
Atlanta

I
38 25
38 26

pet. 9 b
60 3

594
556

1f2
3
475 9
)48 17
339 161!~

35 28
29 32

San Franc1sco 24 45

San D1ego
21 41
Sunday' s Results
Sl LOuiS 7 New York 1, 1st
51 LOu1s 2 New York l , 2nd
Ph 1laGelph1a 1 Montreal 0
C1n c1 5 Hou ston 4, 10 1nns
P1tfsburgh 9 Ch1cago 2
Los Angeles 5 At lanla 0
San Fran 6 San Dgo 5, U 1ns

Today 's Probable Pilchers
I All T1mes EDT)
Philadelphia IChamp1on 4 S )
at Chicago (P appas 55 or
Reuse he ! 1 OL 2 15 P m
Atlanta I Reed 4 n at San
Fran c1sco {Stone 3 7), 4 p m
C1nc.nna11 (Nolan 9 2) at Los
Angeles {Os teen 1 4), 11 P m
P1tlsburgh (Moose 5 31 at
New York (Koosman 4 3). 9 IS

pm

Montreal (Moore 0 0) at St
LOUIS (G ibson 5 5), 9 p m
Houston (Gnff n 2 2) at Sa n
D1ego ( K1rby 56), 10 30 p m

Tuesday ' s Games
Cine• at Los Ano , n1ghl
P1ttsburgh at New York
Philadelphia at Ch1cago, 2
Mont at St Louis, 2, tw1 n1te
Houston at San 01ego , n 1ght
Atlanta at San Fran , ntght

W L Pet G B
36 27 511

Syrac use

37
J_.
32
32

Tidewater

31 3_.

Roches ter

31

36

463

Pen insula

27

39

409 10112

Tote~o

29 • 561
30 531
32 500
33 A92

33 16

26 31
26 31
25 32

21
West

37

~b.

559
559

m 6
456 6
439 7
362 1P12

w 1 pet g b
Oakland
40 20 667
Ch 1cago
36 24 600 4
M 1nnesota
32 26 552 7
Cal 1tor n 1a
29 34 460 121!1
Ka nsas Ctty
27 32 458 12111
Texi!S
26 35 426 U IJ-1
Sunday's Restdfs
M.nn 5 Kansas City "j, 1st
Kan City s Minnesota 3, 2nd
Cleve land 4 New York 3 1st
Cleve land s New York 1. 2nd
Boston 9 Mdw 1 lsi
M 11w 2 Boston o. 2nd
Oakland 6 Calif 1, 1st
Oakland 6 Cal 1f IJ, 2nd
cn1cago 10 Texas 5
Baltimore 2 Detroi t 1
Today's Probable Pitchers
cAll Times E DTl
Cal ifornia
(Rose
1 1l
at
M 1nnesota (Corbin 2 0), 8 30
p m
Chicago
(Wood
11 6l
at
Kansas c 1ty (Hedlund 0 51, 8 30
Pm
Oakland (Holtzman 10 5) 1t
Texn (Goglewsk l 3 6), 8 15
pm

New

you 1 re well protected.

Consult Us Soon

Davis-Wamer Ins.
Phone 992-2966
Pomeroy

14 Court St.

York IKeklch 6 51 ol

SHIRt
FINISHING

_.,,2

7

SAME DAY
SERVIt:E
In At 9-0ul At 5
U~e Our

Fret P•rlung LOI,

Robinson's aeaners
216

E. 2nd, Pomeroy

Syracuse
Peninsula
1 (2nd · - - - - - - - - - ·
oame . 7 3lnn1ngs
l

NOTICE
PRODUCTION
CREDIT OFFICE
IN POMEROY
WILL BE
CLOSED
•
JUNE 27th
AND

JULY 4th
I

A yellow f I a g llymg on
board sh tp ts the quarantine
flag of all nahons

work for YOUR besl interests Let us see liNt

Oakland at Texas, night
Boston a t Cleve , nlgttt
New York al Detroit , nfght
Mllw at Baltimore , night

5
A17 6

I

Experts on Sno~s
Experts on snowshoes can
walk for hours at the rate
of flve or stx mtles an hour ,
many can run on them m a
sort of dogtrot at lO miles
an hour

INSURANCE for your

homa , your car, your
personal properlY . Wt

De troll (Niekro 2 1I e 15 P m.
Boston (Culp 4 6) at Cleve
land (Lamb 1·0) , 7 30 P m l .
Milwaukee (Lockwood 3 8) at
Baltimore (Dobson 8e), 730
pm

112
2112

Sunday's Results
lOUISVIlle 6 ToledO A
Charleston 6 Tidewater 2
Rochester A R1chmond 3 (lsi
game. 1 mnlngs)
R:ocheste r 4 Richmond 0 (2nd
game , 7 1nnmgsl
Penmsuht 3 Syracuse 2 (1st
game , 7 inn1ngsJ

•

Fnendly Tavern , 7 - Mark vs.
8 - Dally Senl vs
Pomeroy National Bank

Adolph 's,

Ch1caoo at Kan C1ty, nig ht

Standings
United Press lnterniiiOnll
LOUISVIlle
Richmond

33 26

lfutsdiY'I Gamet
Calltorn~ at Mlnn • nlgl'lt

tnternationil League

Chorleslon

Detro•t

... are willing workers.
They give us fiber for
newsprint and clothing,
wood panels for beauty,
beechnuts and pecans,
maple syrup and turpentine.
Don't cut short a tree's career!

\••ol1.11y"y4)U can preventforest fires.

eQ

Published "a publiC serY&gt;ce in cooperat•on ••lh The Achtrtlsufl Council,
!hi! US Forest SeHv•cts I he Nal •onal ~ssGc tat1on of Statt Foresters

and The

lnle~ "'tlollo11

Newspaper Adverl!!!Ol £ltCI4l•vts

•

�'

.

" .... w

..

•
1- 'nit Deily Seilllnel, Middleport·PomtToy, 0 ., June 26. 1!1'12

Most"Senior Citizens ln ..Ohio
Near,. .Or Below Poverty -· Level
.
.

BARGES RETURNED - The Queen City is pictured

here returning several coal barges to the Kyger Creek plant
after they broke loose there early Sunday.
"

River Over Flood
Stage At Point
According to the Hwlllngton
, Weather Bureau, the Ohio
Rl~er waa expected to crest at
noon today at Point Pleasant at
40.5 feet, one hail foot above
flOod atage.
Reviled crest figures were
alJo iuued thill morning for the
Calllpolill Locks and Dam.
Aspokesman at the dam said
the river ohould crest at I a.m.
Tuesday at ~. 7 feet. AI 9 a.m.
today, the .water stood at ~.1
feel. It wu riling at the rate of
ane tenth of a foot per hour.
In Pomeroy, the river stood
at ~.I feel ~~ 9 a.m. today.
Flood •taae 18 c01181dered 40.u
feet.
According to the weather
bureau, the river was to rille
· II~ more Inches before cresting
at noon today.
n.e Gallia-Meigs Post State
lliChway Patrol reported five
area lilghwaya were closed due
to high water. They are the
Bulavllle-Addlaon Rd., west of
Rt. 7; Rt. 124 at Long Bottom;
Rt. 3311 at Antiquity; Rl. 248 at
Long Bottom, and Rl. 7 at
Forest Run Rd.
. Meanwhile, _ most
of
9•Uipo~is' recreau.on facilities

Ot)enHouse
Continues
Tonight
PT. PLE;ASANT - Mason
Counlians, and people from the
surroundina areas, are
reminded of tonight's Open
Houae to be held at the Maaon
Ccu!ty Adult Learning Center,
localed In the new Vocational
Cent.~' on Ohio River Road In
Point' Plaaaant. Open Houae
acUviU• began at 9 a.m.

today.
Rn. Charles L. Frum,
Rlcrulter for the Adult Basic
Education program in Mason
County aaid that the Open
Houae II being planned so that
peciple may see for themselves
the facltlli• and materials
t.hlt are available to the people
of the area, aU at no cost to the
ttudent.
Rev. Frwn invites ·each and
every Interested person In
Muon County to attend the
Open Houae at the Center. The
hours are Da.m. through 3:30
p.m., and again this evening, 6
p.m. through 9:30 p.m.
Individuals having questions
reaarding the Center are In·
viled to call 875-3039,, and ask
for Rev. Frum, or Mrs. Ann
Harreld who ill ~erving as the
teacher • coordinator of the
Learning Center.
The Center ill open for study
each week, Monday through
Thursday, 8:30 a.m. through
3:30 p.m. and on Monday,
Wednesday and Thursday
nights, 6 p.m. until 9:30 p.m.
Veterau Memorial H01pllal
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Vlrslnia Thomas, Mid·
dieport; Cheater VanMeter,
Ractne; Paul Lambert,
Rutland,
and
Roberta
Barrowo, Pomeroy.
· SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Henrietta Robinson, Marge
Reuter, Laura Rice, Ricky
Llltlford and Homer Smith.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Raymond Searles, RuUand;
ayc~e Balea, Middleport; Rea
Jay Autherson, Racine; Adrian
Hubbard, · Syracuse; Dorsey
Roath, New Haven, and
'l1anu Cook, Mldtlleporl.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES &lt;llarlta Clrroll, Louille Pari·
low, Paul Lambert and
Roberta BarrQWI.

was inundated lodQy as a result included logs, trees, cans,
of the .early summer flooding. paper, boards and at least one
Approximately 30 boats tied observer saw a dog stranded on
up at the Gallipolis Boat Club a huge tree as it traveled down
were "up to street level" this · stream.
morning. No damage has been
Some
visitors
from
reported thus far BB the Columbus and other parts of
floating dock is holding firm. Ohio who came down for a ride
The Upstream PubUc Use on the Ohio turned around and
Area was covered by the le!lfor home as a result or the
rampaging Ohio Sunday swollen river. Sunday 's
morning, and all activities rehearsal for the July 2 boat
along the park front have been show being held in connection
cancelled.
with the River Recreation
Hundreds of sightseers lined Festival was cancelled, an~ it
the river bank opposite the appears lhe 1972 boat show
park all day, Sunday to watch may be curtailed or even
the rare swnmer flood. Debris . postponed as a result of the late

flooding.
The Gallipolis Swimming
Pool is closed. School main·
tenance officials late Saturday
cleared the pwnp rooms of
equipment. By Sunday morning, water was in the pump
rooms, but not in the tank itself. Vandals threw-bags or dirt
in the pool, and it may have to
be drained and refilled before
reopening.
All summer league baseball
games have been postponed as
a result or the nooding or
Memorial Field. Water was up
to the gridiron level early this
morning.

46 Coal Barges

Create Problems

The swollen Ohio River was near the Raven Coal Company,
the scene of heavy traffic two near the former Marietta
Sunday evening after 46 coal- Manufacturing plant, one
loaded barges broke loose from across from the Addison Post
their moorings at the Kyger
Creek Power Plant.
Louis R. F.ord, Jr., OVEC
plant manager, said the head
MASON - Hattie ' K. Lake,
cable on a land barge pulled 81, Mason, ~ied Sunday
apart due to the pressure evening. Sbe was taken to
caused by high water.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
The barges were rounded up Sunday evening by the Mason
by local towboats operating in Rescue Squad where she was
the area with the assistance or dead on arrival.
the U. S. Coast Guard. One
She was born Oct. 31, 1890 in
barge sank approximately 100 Mason County, the daughter of
feet from the Silver Memorial the late Brent and Sarah
Bridge.
Hoffman Clark. Her husband,
Accofding to officials, at Lewis Morgan Lake, preceded
. least one barge struck the Ohio her in death in 1964.
pier to the new bridge while
Mrs. Lake was a member of
three. others struck the Penn the Christian Brethren Church.
Central Railroad pier at
Surviving are two daughters,
Kanaugae.
Mrs. Ruth Lyons and Mrs.
Nine barges were lied up
along the Kanawha Rlv~r, 23
toward Georges Creek Rd., two

Office and the rest along the
riverbank.
The last barge was coralled
at 10:30 p.m.

Mrs. Lake, 81, Oaimed

DIVORCES GRANTED
Two divorces have been
granted in the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court, both on
charges of gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty.
Jean Burnside, Middleport,
was gran ted a divorce from
Thomas Burnside of Mid·
dleport, and Ann Baker of
Harrisonvllle, was granted a
divorce from David R. Baker,
Athens.
A'M'END PARTY
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Roush of
Syracuse attended a farewell
party Saturday evening at the
Holiday Inn at Marietta
honoring Jerry Miller, who
completed 37 years of service
for the Fanners Home Ad·
ministration in the Marietta
office. Mrs. Rousll took the
nora! arrangements for the
dining table and Mr. Roush
was master of ceremonies.
About 100 couples afflllated
with the Fanners Home Ad·
ministration from over Ohio
were presenlhl_long with
people who had"Jbrked with
Miller through the years.
Meigs Marriage UceDies
Jerry Yeauger, 25, Cheshire
Route 2, and Donna Jean
Polcyen, 26, Middleport.
Ronald David Butcher, 19,
and Sharon Ruth -MfCoy, 21,
both of Pomeroy Roli!LJ.
MEETING CANCELLED
Ameeting of Put Matrons of
Pomeroy Chapter, OES,
scheduled for 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the home of Mrs.
Dwight Parker has bee~
cancelled due to fiood waters.

TV.

•

.rn

Erma Yoho, both or near
Pomeroy; four sons, Gene,
Mason; Virgil of Sullivan,
Ohio; Floyd of Marana, Ariz.,
and Russell of california, I~
grandchildren and 13 great·
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at I :30 p.m. Wednesday at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev. James Lewis of·
ficiating. Burial will be in the
Broad Run Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home at
anytime after noon on
Tuesday.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - A ministration -of Aging. "Yet
report on Ohio's senior citizens only one in six older people has
who live on social security earnings and assets to provide
alone - and they are by far the significant income to only
mujority - show they have · about five per cent of the older
numerous problems that can population .
only be . solved with more
"This means that social
money. Most live near or below security is by far the most
the povert~ .level.
'prelevant ·and important in·
"Income for older Ohioans come source for older Ohioans
comes mainly from earnings, and' as a result most retired
assets and Social Security," Ohioans encounter economic
said the report compiled for the difficulties," the ,report said.
Ohio Division of Ad"At best the retired in·
dividualf~ces an adjustment to

On Farm Front

an income substantially lowet lion for Research in Popufauon
than his previous earnings - a Problems.
painful adjustment, perhaps,
The report said the major
but a pOSSible one," the report unmet · needs of the state's I
'said. "At worst he must make million senior citizen• are In·
do with an Income below what come, health, housing,
the Federal Government has nutrition and transportation.
determined to be 'minimal'."
The report Included 47 rec. The report recommended ommeridations to ,imiJroYe the
that Social Security benefits be · lot or the state's elderly and
increased substantially and they include:
more earnings be allowed
- Allowable Aid for the Aged
without penalty.
should be increased In Ohio to
The m page report was pre· "at least the poverty line."
pared by the Scripps Founda·
- Medicare coverage should
be increased to cover items
such as long-tenn care, eye·glasses, dental care, outpatient services, podiatry and
prescription drugs.
, - More housing for the
eldarlY should be buill for all
income levels.
- Programs offering meals
to older people should ile ex·
pan de d.
Agriculture Department -Older people should be enmagazine Farm Index." couraged to use the food stamp
Later data for April and May program if theY are eligible for
were calculated by department participating. • .
economist Lawrence A. Duew- Development of mass
er in re sponse to a UPI request. transit systems an~ other
public carriers for older
people.
Never Moves
The north star is directly The report also recom·
over the axis on which the mended that more federal and
earth spins, so rotation of state fllnds be channelled Into
the earth does not affect its long range programs to aid the
position as it is seen !rom elderly because most of these
the earth .
,._
funds now come from non.gov.
ernment services such as
Copper is th e oldest metal United Appeal and tliey are not
known to man.
enough .

Cattle Feeders' Returns
Up Sharply During May
By BERNARD BRENNER
UPI Fann Editor
. WASHINGTON (UP! ) Cattle feeders' returns In May
were sharply above the
average for the previous 21
months, an Agriculture
Department study based on
Texas and' Iowa records shows.
But the average was - for
some feeders, at least - low
enough to draw a cautiously
bureaucratic· comment that
"the feeders are not netting
enormous returns."
The report showed a typical
Texas feedlot operator, whose
beef usually goes to Los An·
geles, averaged a net return-of
only 99.4 cents per head on cat·
tie fattened during the 20
months ending In March this
year. In II of th~ 20 months,
data on costs of feeder. steers,
feed and other costs, and prices
or finished cattle showedthe
feeder lost money on each ani·
mal he sold.
The hypothetical Texas feedlot, according to the report,
had estimated net returns of
$11.69 per head last December,
$28.53a head last January, and
$33.97 In February . But for
March, calculations showed a
shoss of $6.16 per head sold and
for April a·loss of $5.33 a head.
Profit Actually Less
In May, however, with
slaughter cattle prices up
again, data showed a profit of
$9.21 a head compared with the
20-month average of 99 cents.
The ''net return " profit fig.
ures given in the study do not
actually represent full profit,

experts explain. The caicuia·
tions take into account most
variable costs, including feed,
veterinary bills, electricity,
and insurance - but they do
oot cover fixed costs including
depreciation of feedlot
property.
These fixed costs would have
to be subtracted from the re·
ported 'net returns " to
produce an accurate "profit"
figure.
Another calculation based on
a typical but hypothetical corn
bell feedlot in Oiowa also showed sharp ups and downs over
the past two years, but
generally higher levels of
returns. Economists said this
was partly due to use of a six·
month feeding period - which
means turnover of fewer head
per year - in the Iowa
example. The Texas study was
based on a four-month tur·
nover.
Net Varies
The.typical Iowa feedlot, according to the study, shQwed an
average net return of $5.34 per
head in the 20months ending in
March, 1972.
For May the report showed a
net return of $35.26 per head,
about seven times the 2lkrionth
average, The ·feeder .had done
even better earlier this year,
however, with net per-head ~..
turns of $47.30 in January,
$56.14 in February, $46.72 in
March and $37.60 in April , experts indicated.
The figures through March
for both TelOls and Iowa feed·
lots were published here In an
1

11

Demonstration Given On Flower Affanging

Going to do some canning
this year? Don't wait until the
laat minute to get your canning
equipment checked and ready,
• 111ggests Mrs. Jennifer Sheets,
Meigs County Extension
Agent, Home Economics. Mrs.
Sheets offers this check-list:
Canners. You'll need a
canner or deep ketUe for hotwater bath processing of fruits,

Mrs. Tom Stewart gave a Homeste•d Garden Club held
demonstration on mak ing at the Fellowship Hall .
Tips · on
making
C1ower arrctn gemenls a t a
re cent meeting of the arnn gemenfl; for flower shows

Plano pupils of Mrs. Clara
Henry Lochary presented a
recital Friday afternoon at 3
p.m. in the Bethany Chapel of
Trinity Church.
Guest performers for the
recital were Karen Kriffith
who played "Sonata No. 8 lor
Trwnpel" by Carelli with Mrs.
Lochary accompanying her,
and Mrs . Jennifer Lohse
Sh~ts, whcise · selection was
"Sallade'' by Chopin. · Both
Miss Griffith and Mrs. Sheets
are former piano pupils of Mrs.
Lochary. Also playing in the
recital was Kristen Anderson,
student of Mts. Sheets, who
presented "Swans on the
Lake."
.
Students playing and their
selections were as !allows:
Cathy Blaettnar, "Minuet in
G" by M02art; Jayne Hoeflich,
"The Gypsy Camp," a
Hungarian folk tune, and
"Hide and Seek" by Thompson;
Jenny
Chapman,
" Pastorale from Christmas
Oratorio" by Bach, and "Color

~·

'?

' "' "'

p.., 0:: ...._::.(

1 Social

i

ICalendad

MONDAY
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce Monday at Meigs
Inn at noon.
RUTLAND Garden Club, 8
p.m. Monday at the home of
Mts. Robert Canaday with
Mts. Roy Snowden, co.Jlosless.
STAFF and Officers, Meigs
Temple, home or Mrs. Betty
Spencer, Monday ot 7:30 p.m.
MEIGS lzaak Walton League
Chapter, regular meeting, 7 p.
m. Monday.
JUNIOR GARDEN Club of
Winding Trail Garden Club will
meet Menday at home of Maria
Legar.

PAST MATRONS, Pomeroy
Chapter 172, OES, 7:30 p.m.
Tueaday, hOII)i! of Mrs. Norma
Par'ker.
RACINE American Legion
Auxlljal'f Tuesday 8 p.m. at
poat home. Installation of of.
ficers1

•

sa~e. And m~re important, he wants to see you safe,
whether you re behrnd the wheel or just a passencer.
So loin the battle apinst careless
talkers. Help them face their
tremendous responsibiiities-tnd
the road ahead-and all their stories
will wind up with a happy endtns.
llooiM -ying ~~~~~- . . . . . . 101110 NAI)ot.

Code of Butlnell Precticii.Acklr-001, r: :dlcwtoConlumtr
- " ' " ' -. :1000 ... .. ~·~ N.W.. ,.rWNi;gloo, D.C. 10001

NlltiMII Automobla Dealers Aa1oclltlon

OfllcW__,.IM M___,,.._.._.... _.,..tholl-.t, ............ DC

One in .• series presented by N.A.D.A., The. O..ity Sonlintl•nd The Tri-County Automob'
f ...__, __
.
1 t .... ...,., Assoc.

.
My World" by Ranko!; Peggy
Girolami "The Ski Slope" by
Warfel ~nd "March of the
Dwarfs" by Grief· ·Charles
Follroad, "Toreador' Song" by
Bizet, and "A Place In the Sun"
by Miller Wells.
Marcia Dillard "Serenade"
by Schubert; N;ncy Stanley, ,
"Berceuse" by Godard· Mary
Biaettnar, "The Skyla;k" by
Tschaikowsky, and "Waltz
Semtimentale" by Schubert;
Kim Jones, "Dawn" by
Eckstein and "Theme Song
from Ldve Story" · Stephen
Stanley, "Fantasie No. 3'' by
Mozart; and "Another Day" by
McCartney . Elizabeth
Biaettnar, "J:me" from "the
Seasons" by TschaikowSky·
Deanna Blackwood "Wall;
Brilliante" by Durani and Jo
Ellen Diehl "Prelude from
Well Tempe;ed Clavichord" by
Bach· and "Venetian Love
Story'" from Day in Venice by
Nevin.
A girt was presented to Mrs.
Lochary by her students.

Yard Sale Discussed

BEND 0' The River Garden
Club, annual picnic, 6:30
Monday night, home of Mrs.
Chloris Grimm, Letart. Mts.
Charles Lewill to talk on the
Meigs County Fair · Flower
Show.
1
TUESDAY
MEIGS County Alco~olism
and Drug Abuse Committee,
7:30 p.m. St. Paul Lutheran
Church in Pomeroy.
JUNIOR American Legion
Auzlliary, 7 p.m. Tueaday at
the Middleport Hall of FeeneyBennett Post 1211,
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
39, 7:30Tuesday, Installation of
officers.

Drivers who insist on facing their audience while
they talk-instead of the r01d ahead-can be deadly
bores. Even their funny stories can turn tr~t~ic in a
hurry. A punch line can be killed instantly by a car
that stops suddenly, an intersection; a curve in the
road. By anything that gets in I he way. ;
No one Is safe with drivers like this. Neither passengers or people in other cars ... nor pedestrians. H
you know 10meone who has this deadly habit. think
about the consequences.
Straighten him out or refuse to ride with him.
Your new car dealer wants to see our highways

tomatoes.
and
pickled
vegetables . The canner should
be deep eno~~h to allow 2 to •
inches of water above the
largest jars used. The canner
needs a tigh~!ilting cover and
a wire or wood rack lor jars.
A steam pressure canner is
required lor all other
vegetables. Safety of these
foods depends on the accurate

('vtudents Gtve
. rtano
n. '
.
Recrtal

Several money making
projects were discussed in·
eluding a yard sale on the
church lawn July 7 and 8 at a
meeting of the Eagles Class of
the Asbury United Methodist
Church, Syracuse.
. During the meeting held at
the church, plans were made
for a picnic for members and
famllles next month at the
camp of Mr. and Mrs. Millard
Van Meter. Blll Winebrenner,
president, was in .charge of ihe

Review

By RICK DU BROW .
theories, when the work is
HOLLYWOOD (UP!) - Re- standardized. But now the
sponding to public criticism, beneficiaries of this mass
television is paying increased production have become so
attention to middle class apparently·. comforiable and
America, and Tuesday night secure that they can think
NBC-1V will offer an hour on about saUsfaetlon from their
what it describes as "a new jobs, and a standardized job
breed" of young blue collar that requires n&lt;Hhought is not
workers.
satisfying. No one knows the
Peviously lillled mder the answer. But It is one of the
tltle "The Blue Collar Worker" crucial questions of this de·
In a network publicity release, cade."
the documentary will be
broadcast with the name "The
Tuesday night's, hour,
mue Collar Trap-An NBC reported by Alvin Davll and
News White Paper." And, of directed by Darold Murray,
those workers researched for will focus on four men who
the bour, producar·writer Fred work in an auto plant In
Freed says tha,t although they Mlllpltas, Calif., and examine
ca1111ot be called typical, ''what their life Styles and views on .
they think, the way they look at such matteraas the generation
life and tlteir society, the way gap. The men range in J18e
they act, is the same as many from 22 to 30.
of their contemporaries.
Tel~viewen tonight, mean"They are," he adds 1n a while, will be offered another
network summary of the hour documentaJt, UU. one,
program's !berne, ''not . at all "The Youns Convicts: Prison
Uke tbeir fathers In many In the Streets," airing on ABC.
ways. They are better educal· 1V, and concernillg new ap.
ed, more affiuenl, have more , proachee to rehabilitating
leillure than their fathers ever lawbreakers outside the
dreamed of. They are also less , traditional penal system.
.
satisfied . They no longer aee
The focus ·of tonight's hour
the job aa an end in iteelf. They are. chiefly youth-aimed
want aatllfaction, fulfillment, correction programi in
a meaninsful job and a MMAehUI!ttll and California
meaningful life."
that Include hllfwM" houses,
Freed alJo feela a nwnber of foster homes and "Intensive
them "find the usembly line care" parole and probation
boring and unrelvarding," and measures, Sayil producerhe says:
writer-director Stephen
"Thll !. lbe essenUal dllem- Fleilchman, l'hoae hour will
rna we and the 111111 produc· be narrated by Frank
Uon lndllltrles face. On the one Reynolds: "The Road lo San
hand, they haw created mass QuenUO, or Attica, or Folaom,
f(fluence by mus prodUction. or Sinti Sinti begins in the
And mua productjon workl juvenile halls across the
but, ICXlOI'CMnll to the old country."

'Canning SuggeStions Told

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT
tiona Qub, Wednesday noon,
Meiaa Inn. Officers will be
tnatalled by Uon Joe Hanning,
junior diatrlct deputy of Lions
13-K District.
OHIO VALLEY .Com·
mandery 24, Kn!Chls Templar,
regular conclave, Masonic
Temple. Election and in·
ataliation of officera. Plana will
be made for the annual picnic
In July. All Sir Knlahts

welcome.
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
Wttl-uday, I p.m., home of
- Mn. v.aan N - wtlh Mn.

Dwl&amp;bt MJ!t.n U eo-llcil....

AMERICA~
Leelon
Auillary, Feeney-&amp;enn•tt
Plitt 1., 7:110p.m. Wednesday.

use of a properly operating
steam-pressure canner. Clean
tbe petcock and surety valve
opening by drawing string or a
narrow strip of cloth through
them. Repeat this cleaning
often during the canning
season.
The pressure gauge should
be clean and accurate.
Containers. Use glass jars
designed lor canning - don't
use jars from prOCe!jSed foods
~uch as mayonnaise. These
Jars aren't surtabie for borne
canning. Be sure the j~rs have
no cracks and ch1ps, aents or
rust. The lids must be perfect.
Use new porcelain • line
vacuum ~eal . lid~ or new
rubbers w1th zmc hds.
Tin cans without dents or
rust may also be used. Use C·
ena~el cans. for com and
hommy; R-&lt;!namel cans lor
beets, _red berries, red or bla_ck
chemes, plums, pumpkm ,
rhubarb, and wmter squash.
Plam tm cans can be used for
all other commonly canned
fruits and vegetables .
Other Aids. You'll need racks
lor coohng hot 1ars; eqwpment, such as strong tongs. for
handling hot jars and cans;
labels; and an up-to-date
canning reference. Be sure
your canning reference has
been written since 1965. Earlier
bulletins are. out.&lt;J!-dat~.
Two cannmg bulletms are
available at the Meigs County
Extenswn Office. Call 992-3895
or come In at Mulberry Heights
o!frce for your copy of L-170,
Canning Tomatoes in the Home
and USDA 's HG-8, Home
Canning of Fruits and
Vegetables.

were given by Mrs. Stewart
wh o explained the mechanics
of arranging and the material•
needed. Several or the members exhibited in the recent Big
Bend Rega tta flower show.
Mrs. Larry Barr, hostess,
opened the meeting by reciting
Psalm 23 and th e group
repeated the Lord 's Prayer.
Minutes of a previous meeting
were read by Mrs. Bernard
Ledlie and Mrs. Adria Wilcox
.gave U1e treasurer's r ~port.
Recipe cards were distributed
Jimmy Evans and Mrs. James and will be sold by th e me m·
Richmond, junior girls.
bers.
The beginners class, comThe refreshment table was
posed of Jjsa and Scott Pullins,
Angie and Timmy Sloan ,
Kimberly and Tammi Eblin ,
Neal Richmond, Sally Ann
Radford and Sue Ellen Fry ,
ga.ue_ memory verses and sang
several action songs to open
the program . Also doing
memory work were the
primary girls, Joy and Johnda
Gillespie, Paula, Judy and
Connie Glaze, Ruth Ann Fry,
Dixie Eblin and Angie Triplett.
James Smith and Jimmy
Snider of the primary boys
class presented a puppet show
and the junior girls gave
memory verses and sang three
songs. In that group were Pam
and Christ{ Evans, Billie
Addison, Tina Randolph, Linda
Partlow, Shari Colmer and
Tammy Snider .
Taking the offering were
Brent Sisson, Randy Randolph,
James Smith and Jay Evans.
Amos Johnson gave th e
benediction ·following the
closing song
" Onward
Chris tian Soldiers" and a
prayer response by the boys
and girls.

VBS Offering Given
To Meigs Infirmary
The offering taken during the
two-week Daily Vacation Bible
School at the Rock Springs
United Methodist Church was
used for the purchase of gifts
for the residents of the Meigs
County Infirmary .
·
The items purchased. a hair
dryer for the women and .a
radio for the men, were on
display at the closing program
of the Bible School Friday
-''IOBII.E T\' antenow ·: ,\ night at the church. Mrs.
st•lr·JirllfH'IIt•d sup•· rm a r h t William Radford was director
('Hrt '! Tht• ht•atlj.t"l'i.lr un .\rl
StandiiTs ~ mat wuuld ill'· of the school and it was by vote
JU•ar lu ht• H JUIZZh•r bul or the children that the money
at'tualh lli.IS a \ 'l'r\' st&gt;riuns was spent on the infirmary
,, u r Jl i, s t'. Th( ·artirkial
residents.
anth·rs un.· lu ·,:.: i r l' ild Friday night's program
\illl'-'l' \\ ilrnin~ \\ht•n tht• began with the processional
gn:at ,lWlS tuo l'lnst• to llu•
and theme song, "We Worship
t"lt•ttriri&lt;'cl h'IH'l' surroundGod ." The Rev .. Loris Pullins
in~ StmH."IiiTs ~: 1 P a s u .
gave
prayer, and the children
Tt•\ ., pa~tun• .
gave .the pledge to the
American flag, the Christian
flag and the Bible .
Certificates were presented
to the teachers, Mrs. Robert
Sloan, Mrs. Richard Eblin,
Mrs. Levi Partlow and Connie
Radford of the beginner
department; Mrs . Ray Pullins,
Judy Radford, primary girls;
Mrs. Opha Offutt, Mrs. Ed·
ward Ball, primary boys: Mrs.
The June meeting of the
Young Wives Club was held at
the home of Carolyn Tripp.
Resui ts of the May bake sale
revealed a great success and
Mrs. Mary Martin, Pomeroy,
members made tentative plans departementai chapeau, Eight
for another bake sale later in and Forty, and Mrs. Myrtle
the summer.
Walker, Racin e, deparIt was decided that members t~mental le secretaire ·
would escort some of the older cassiere were guests at a
people to and from the Meigs meeting of the Tuscarawas
County Fair lor Senior Citizens Coun ty Salon 641 Wednesday
Da y.
nigbt.
Definite plans were made for
the August picnic at Forked Mrs. Marlin spoke to the
Run State Park . Members Salon on projects of the Eight
decided to include their and Forty. She displayed the
families.
plaque pre..nted to her at the
Refreshments were served National Jewish Hospital in
and the door p~ize was won by Denver for the endowment of
Shelly Mankin.
Ohio's 22nd bed. Mrs . Martin

HEAVY-DUTY

18 LB• .

AUTOMATIC WASHER

Results Of
Bake Sale
Given

meeting and o;Helen Teaford
conducted devotions. Prayer
was by Mrs. Opal Kloes.
Attending were Marcia Karr,
teacher, and Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Winebrenner, Mrs . Carroll
Jeff , Curt and Cindy
Norris, Mr. and Mrs. Karl
Matheny,
children of Mr. and
Kloes, Mrs. Martha Moore, Mr.
Mrs.
Don
Matheny of c;:amp
and Mrs. Charles Hoback,
Robert Flanagan, Mt. and LeJeune, N. C., are here for a
Mrs. Van Meter, Tony Van .summer visit with their
Meter, Mrs. Teaford, Mrs. grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Lisle and Eleanor Albert Roush. Other recent
visitors at the Roush home
Robson.
have been Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Roush, David and Sherrie, St.
Albans ; Mr. and Mrs . Roger
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
.Mr~.
Ron Wright and Flowers, Columbus, and Mr.
cllttd'ren, Daniel and Debbie, of and Mrs. John Miller, Timothy
Dublin, Va. spent a week and Scott, Evansville, Ind. ·
Jimmy Jo Arnold of Carroll
visiting her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Bruce Morris and Larry . spent the past week here
Visitors at the Alpha Barr visiting Mr. and Mrs. Charles
h"nre over the Father's Day Kessinger.
Mr . and Mrs . Patrick
weekend were Mr . and Mrs.
The annual Baptist Youth
Blair Cadwallader and boys, Lochary spent Sunday at
Retreat will be held at Cedar
Brian, Chris and Brent of Amesville with her brother and
Lakes July 7-9, the ~v.
Winchester, 0 . Mr. and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Simon!! pastor of'the
Mrs. Duane Barr and Harry Henry .
Middleport 1 irs! Baptist
son, Shawn, of _Oak Hill, 0.,
Church announc~s.
Registration will begin at I
Mr . and Mrs. Ronald Bail of
p.m. July 7 and the first hour
Hanoden, 0 ., Mr . and Mrs.
Larry Barr and children ,
will he given to cabin selection
David and Michelle, and Miss
and preparing sleeping
"Can God Understand Our arrangements. The program
Marge Riggs of Pomeroy.
Temptations" was the topic of will begin at 2 p.m. and all
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr and
the book study presented by activities of the retreat will
children spent a weekend
Mrs. Joe Bailey at a meeting of conclude at 1:30 p.m. Sunday,
re cently camping at Forked
Group II of the Women's .July 9.
Run Lake .
Association of the Middleport
Emma Ledlie is visiting her
Featured on the program
First United Presbyterian will he a lull length feature
daughter, Mrs. Richard RickRussell Quillen, Velma Church Tuesday night at the film, "Youth Interrobang,"
man of Fayetteville, N. C.
Quillen
to Elwood Bachus, home of Mrs. Richard Karr. Bible study, recreation,
Mrs. Sharon Barr and Mrs.
Mrs. Paul Haptonstall had singing, optional discussion of
Alpha Barr attended a Tup- Gi,ria Bachus, 2 Acres, Letart.
Carl
0.
Gilmore,
Mildred
E.
charge
of the meeting with serious Christian questions,
perware party at the home of
Gilnwre
tu
Dennis
E.
Saelens,
Mrs.
Lewis
Sauer giving con tests and campfire.
Mrs. Iva Johnson of Pomeroy
Carla
S.
Saelens,
Lots
37
and
devotions. Her topic was
Tuesday evening. ·
The registration fee is $12 per
38, Jones Estate, Middleport. '"Prescription When Low in person and $2 should be sent
Virginia K. Schroath to Clyde Spirit" by Norman Vincent with the registration to the
J . Morlan , Ethel · Marie Peale. Mrs. Haptonstall gave
Baptist Youth Retreat,· Box
Morlan, Parcels, Orange.
the closing prayer and the 226, Rio Grande, Ohio. The
Manning D. Webster, an- hostess served refreshments. balance is payable when the
cillary adm., Alfred W.
Schroath-, dec.' to Clyde J.
Mrs. P. R. Randolph is a Morlan, Ethel Marie Morlan,
I
.
patient at the St. Joseph Parcels, Orange.
Hospital in Parkersburg, W. . Union Nal 'l. Bank or Clarks·
burg, Trus. to Clyde J. Morlan,
Va.
Mrs. Hazel Barton visited the Elhei Marie Morlan, Minerals,
Cl1arles Donaldson family at
D. Webster, A.
Logan Thursday and her
grandchildren returned home Adnr., Alfred W. Schroath, dec.
with her to spend the week.
111 Leonard McGill, Estella ·
Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Md}ill, Life Estate, Sec. 5,
Cowdery visited the ·Charles Orange .
.
Donaldson family at Logan
Stanley E. Cozart, Ollie Mae
Thursday. They also visited Cozart to Gary Keith Willford,
·
Me and Mrs. Ralph Miller, Jo Ann Willford, Lots 298 No.
Baltimore; Mr. and · Mrs. 30, Weldon's Add., Racine.
Robert. Miller and family, of
Berthe Bourlard to State of
Baltimore ; Mr. and Mrs. Dale Ohio, Parcel, Salisbury.
Miller and family, Canal
Mildred Carson to Martin R.
Winchester, and Mr. and Mrs. Carson, Lots 5, 6,,Jones Add. ,
William Miller and family of Middleport .
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee to
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday; Thursday
Bremen.
Mr. and · Mrs. Rodger Larry B. Haynes, Paula J.
Phillips, Lancaster, visited Mr . Haynes, 100 Acres, Lot 295, .35
and MrJ. Harold E. Cowdery Acre, Sutton-Syracuse .
THRirT BO~
Saturday and enjoyed a bar·
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee to
9 ·p ieces
~
becue and picnic lunch.
Donald B. Harden, Angela D.
Visitors at the horne of Mr. Harden, .24 Acre, Suttonregularly 1 2.65
and Mrs. Edward Chevallj!r Syracuse.
Stinday were Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Spencer of Tuppers Plains, Mr.
Offer 9ood lhru June 29, 1972
Babcock
ol
Ti!ppers
Plains,
and Mrs. Lowell Chevalier and
famlly, and Garrel Chevalier · Mr. and Mrs. Bill Durst and
of Mansfield, and Mrs.' Zenith farHily and Mrs. Bess Larkins
vislled Sunday at the Richard
Chevalier bf Belpre. ~
Coleman
hom• fur a family
Recent visll.onl of Mfa. Bess
Larkins
were
Richard dinner.
Coleman of Keno, Mrs. Lena 'Mr. and Mrs. Jap Reed and
Srndgrass of Palcentia, Calif., sm• of Utah visited with Wayne
and Mrs . Zelda Wells, or anrl Mrs . Emma Chevalier
rcc-en1ly.
POMEROY, OHIO
Huntin~tim, W. Vu.
.
Mr. und Mrs . Thurman
- Mrs. I,, Baidersun

covered irl yellow with a pink
ne t overSkirt and was centered
with a rose arrangement and
pink candles in cry stal holders.
Fink punch and cupcakes were
§erved by the hostess.
Members attending were
Mrs. Da na Hoffm an, Mrs.
Larry Barr, Mrs. Bernard
I.edlie, Mrs. Alpha Barr, Mrs.
Frances Wilcox, Mrs. Delbert
Mitchell, Mrs. Lee Fetty and
Teresa Mitchell .
Gues ts were Mrs. Stewart,
Mrs. Howard Thoma, Mrs.
George Miller and Sheila
Fetty. Mrs. Mitchell will host
the Jul y 20 meeting.

Eight And Forty Elects Officers

Langsville

Meigs

Book
Study
Presented

also announced the pre-marche
pouvior and the departemental
le marche to be held at the
Sheraton Gibson Hotel in
Cincinnati, July 23 and 24. Gilts
were presented to both Mrs.
Martin and Mrs . Walker .
During the meeting the Salon
. elected of!icers for the 1972·73
year including Jane Steele,
chapeau; Mary Baker, le demi
chapeau premiere ; Mary
Bender, le ·demi chapeau
duexieme; Frances Jarvis, ie
. s.e~.r.~W ~~:R ~~sL~r.e; .. J;~~P.I'
Yackey, l'aumonier, ~ nd Ruby
Vance, Ia concierge .

I

.,.

. ...
~-

Youth Retreat To Be Held]uly 7-9

Properly

youth registers at Cedar
Lakes.
The progran\ is designed for
youth from grade nine through
age 25.
.Fined President
President Andrew Jackson
was fined $1 ,000 for contempt in declaring martial·
law in 1815, during the de·
!ense of New Orleans. In
1844 , Congress voted to re·
turn the fine .

E~C

LWAI6 1SA

1 ,.,., a t aOm~ 1hyer avallable

TURBOSWEEP
LUSIVE . 202
LINT FILTER AGITATOR
Gets clothes really clean I

Ingels Furniture
Bank Rate Financing
Ph. 992 -2635

Middleport

Transfers

Reedsville

r------···KIIISII-------·
'I Feed the who·le
II

News, Notes

I

Or~~~~·ing

Fa •• f
I
I1 ml ., or on y
I

I

1· ·

I
I·
1 "
I
I
I
·1
1
I

1I

•

25

I

II

I

I

I
I
I
I
I
I
1
I

I.
I

I
I
I
I
I Why cook? Visit the Colonel I
~~~il4-~ I
I . Crow's Steak Hou..
I,_______________ _

..

If you keep your important papers and valuables at home, ihe.re' s al·
ways the chance they'll be lost, stolen or destroved by fire. Why ris k
it? .For only penni es a day, you can get max imum protection with a
S,11le Deposi t Box. Come in today- lomorrow may be loa late.

The.Farmers -sank &amp; Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Reserve System
On Fridays Our Drive- In Window is Open 9
a.m . to '7 p.m., (Continuously).
$20,000 Maximum Insurance

For Each Depositor

�'

.

" .... w

..

•
1- 'nit Deily Seilllnel, Middleport·PomtToy, 0 ., June 26. 1!1'12

Most"Senior Citizens ln ..Ohio
Near,. .Or Below Poverty -· Level
.
.

BARGES RETURNED - The Queen City is pictured

here returning several coal barges to the Kyger Creek plant
after they broke loose there early Sunday.
"

River Over Flood
Stage At Point
According to the Hwlllngton
, Weather Bureau, the Ohio
Rl~er waa expected to crest at
noon today at Point Pleasant at
40.5 feet, one hail foot above
flOod atage.
Reviled crest figures were
alJo iuued thill morning for the
Calllpolill Locks and Dam.
Aspokesman at the dam said
the river ohould crest at I a.m.
Tuesday at ~. 7 feet. AI 9 a.m.
today, the .water stood at ~.1
feel. It wu riling at the rate of
ane tenth of a foot per hour.
In Pomeroy, the river stood
at ~.I feel ~~ 9 a.m. today.
Flood •taae 18 c01181dered 40.u
feet.
According to the weather
bureau, the river was to rille
· II~ more Inches before cresting
at noon today.
n.e Gallia-Meigs Post State
lliChway Patrol reported five
area lilghwaya were closed due
to high water. They are the
Bulavllle-Addlaon Rd., west of
Rt. 7; Rt. 124 at Long Bottom;
Rt. 3311 at Antiquity; Rl. 248 at
Long Bottom, and Rl. 7 at
Forest Run Rd.
. Meanwhile, _ most
of
9•Uipo~is' recreau.on facilities

Ot)enHouse
Continues
Tonight
PT. PLE;ASANT - Mason
Counlians, and people from the
surroundina areas, are
reminded of tonight's Open
Houae to be held at the Maaon
Ccu!ty Adult Learning Center,
localed In the new Vocational
Cent.~' on Ohio River Road In
Point' Plaaaant. Open Houae
acUviU• began at 9 a.m.

today.
Rn. Charles L. Frum,
Rlcrulter for the Adult Basic
Education program in Mason
County aaid that the Open
Houae II being planned so that
peciple may see for themselves
the facltlli• and materials
t.hlt are available to the people
of the area, aU at no cost to the
ttudent.
Rev. Frwn invites ·each and
every Interested person In
Muon County to attend the
Open Houae at the Center. The
hours are Da.m. through 3:30
p.m., and again this evening, 6
p.m. through 9:30 p.m.
Individuals having questions
reaarding the Center are In·
viled to call 875-3039,, and ask
for Rev. Frum, or Mrs. Ann
Harreld who ill ~erving as the
teacher • coordinator of the
Learning Center.
The Center ill open for study
each week, Monday through
Thursday, 8:30 a.m. through
3:30 p.m. and on Monday,
Wednesday and Thursday
nights, 6 p.m. until 9:30 p.m.
Veterau Memorial H01pllal
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Vlrslnia Thomas, Mid·
dieport; Cheater VanMeter,
Ractne; Paul Lambert,
Rutland,
and
Roberta
Barrowo, Pomeroy.
· SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Henrietta Robinson, Marge
Reuter, Laura Rice, Ricky
Llltlford and Homer Smith.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Raymond Searles, RuUand;
ayc~e Balea, Middleport; Rea
Jay Autherson, Racine; Adrian
Hubbard, · Syracuse; Dorsey
Roath, New Haven, and
'l1anu Cook, Mldtlleporl.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES &lt;llarlta Clrroll, Louille Pari·
low, Paul Lambert and
Roberta BarrQWI.

was inundated lodQy as a result included logs, trees, cans,
of the .early summer flooding. paper, boards and at least one
Approximately 30 boats tied observer saw a dog stranded on
up at the Gallipolis Boat Club a huge tree as it traveled down
were "up to street level" this · stream.
morning. No damage has been
Some
visitors
from
reported thus far BB the Columbus and other parts of
floating dock is holding firm. Ohio who came down for a ride
The Upstream PubUc Use on the Ohio turned around and
Area was covered by the le!lfor home as a result or the
rampaging Ohio Sunday swollen river. Sunday 's
morning, and all activities rehearsal for the July 2 boat
along the park front have been show being held in connection
cancelled.
with the River Recreation
Hundreds of sightseers lined Festival was cancelled, an~ it
the river bank opposite the appears lhe 1972 boat show
park all day, Sunday to watch may be curtailed or even
the rare swnmer flood. Debris . postponed as a result of the late

flooding.
The Gallipolis Swimming
Pool is closed. School main·
tenance officials late Saturday
cleared the pwnp rooms of
equipment. By Sunday morning, water was in the pump
rooms, but not in the tank itself. Vandals threw-bags or dirt
in the pool, and it may have to
be drained and refilled before
reopening.
All summer league baseball
games have been postponed as
a result or the nooding or
Memorial Field. Water was up
to the gridiron level early this
morning.

46 Coal Barges

Create Problems

The swollen Ohio River was near the Raven Coal Company,
the scene of heavy traffic two near the former Marietta
Sunday evening after 46 coal- Manufacturing plant, one
loaded barges broke loose from across from the Addison Post
their moorings at the Kyger
Creek Power Plant.
Louis R. F.ord, Jr., OVEC
plant manager, said the head
MASON - Hattie ' K. Lake,
cable on a land barge pulled 81, Mason, ~ied Sunday
apart due to the pressure evening. Sbe was taken to
caused by high water.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
The barges were rounded up Sunday evening by the Mason
by local towboats operating in Rescue Squad where she was
the area with the assistance or dead on arrival.
the U. S. Coast Guard. One
She was born Oct. 31, 1890 in
barge sank approximately 100 Mason County, the daughter of
feet from the Silver Memorial the late Brent and Sarah
Bridge.
Hoffman Clark. Her husband,
Accofding to officials, at Lewis Morgan Lake, preceded
. least one barge struck the Ohio her in death in 1964.
pier to the new bridge while
Mrs. Lake was a member of
three. others struck the Penn the Christian Brethren Church.
Central Railroad pier at
Surviving are two daughters,
Kanaugae.
Mrs. Ruth Lyons and Mrs.
Nine barges were lied up
along the Kanawha Rlv~r, 23
toward Georges Creek Rd., two

Office and the rest along the
riverbank.
The last barge was coralled
at 10:30 p.m.

Mrs. Lake, 81, Oaimed

DIVORCES GRANTED
Two divorces have been
granted in the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court, both on
charges of gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty.
Jean Burnside, Middleport,
was gran ted a divorce from
Thomas Burnside of Mid·
dleport, and Ann Baker of
Harrisonvllle, was granted a
divorce from David R. Baker,
Athens.
A'M'END PARTY
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Roush of
Syracuse attended a farewell
party Saturday evening at the
Holiday Inn at Marietta
honoring Jerry Miller, who
completed 37 years of service
for the Fanners Home Ad·
ministration in the Marietta
office. Mrs. Rousll took the
nora! arrangements for the
dining table and Mr. Roush
was master of ceremonies.
About 100 couples afflllated
with the Fanners Home Ad·
ministration from over Ohio
were presenlhl_long with
people who had"Jbrked with
Miller through the years.
Meigs Marriage UceDies
Jerry Yeauger, 25, Cheshire
Route 2, and Donna Jean
Polcyen, 26, Middleport.
Ronald David Butcher, 19,
and Sharon Ruth -MfCoy, 21,
both of Pomeroy Roli!LJ.
MEETING CANCELLED
Ameeting of Put Matrons of
Pomeroy Chapter, OES,
scheduled for 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the home of Mrs.
Dwight Parker has bee~
cancelled due to fiood waters.

TV.

•

.rn

Erma Yoho, both or near
Pomeroy; four sons, Gene,
Mason; Virgil of Sullivan,
Ohio; Floyd of Marana, Ariz.,
and Russell of california, I~
grandchildren and 13 great·
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at I :30 p.m. Wednesday at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev. James Lewis of·
ficiating. Burial will be in the
Broad Run Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home at
anytime after noon on
Tuesday.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - A ministration -of Aging. "Yet
report on Ohio's senior citizens only one in six older people has
who live on social security earnings and assets to provide
alone - and they are by far the significant income to only
mujority - show they have · about five per cent of the older
numerous problems that can population .
only be . solved with more
"This means that social
money. Most live near or below security is by far the most
the povert~ .level.
'prelevant ·and important in·
"Income for older Ohioans come source for older Ohioans
comes mainly from earnings, and' as a result most retired
assets and Social Security," Ohioans encounter economic
said the report compiled for the difficulties," the ,report said.
Ohio Division of Ad"At best the retired in·
dividualf~ces an adjustment to

On Farm Front

an income substantially lowet lion for Research in Popufauon
than his previous earnings - a Problems.
painful adjustment, perhaps,
The report said the major
but a pOSSible one," the report unmet · needs of the state's I
'said. "At worst he must make million senior citizen• are In·
do with an Income below what come, health, housing,
the Federal Government has nutrition and transportation.
determined to be 'minimal'."
The report Included 47 rec. The report recommended ommeridations to ,imiJroYe the
that Social Security benefits be · lot or the state's elderly and
increased substantially and they include:
more earnings be allowed
- Allowable Aid for the Aged
without penalty.
should be increased In Ohio to
The m page report was pre· "at least the poverty line."
pared by the Scripps Founda·
- Medicare coverage should
be increased to cover items
such as long-tenn care, eye·glasses, dental care, outpatient services, podiatry and
prescription drugs.
, - More housing for the
eldarlY should be buill for all
income levels.
- Programs offering meals
to older people should ile ex·
pan de d.
Agriculture Department -Older people should be enmagazine Farm Index." couraged to use the food stamp
Later data for April and May program if theY are eligible for
were calculated by department participating. • .
economist Lawrence A. Duew- Development of mass
er in re sponse to a UPI request. transit systems an~ other
public carriers for older
people.
Never Moves
The north star is directly The report also recom·
over the axis on which the mended that more federal and
earth spins, so rotation of state fllnds be channelled Into
the earth does not affect its long range programs to aid the
position as it is seen !rom elderly because most of these
the earth .
,._
funds now come from non.gov.
ernment services such as
Copper is th e oldest metal United Appeal and tliey are not
known to man.
enough .

Cattle Feeders' Returns
Up Sharply During May
By BERNARD BRENNER
UPI Fann Editor
. WASHINGTON (UP! ) Cattle feeders' returns In May
were sharply above the
average for the previous 21
months, an Agriculture
Department study based on
Texas and' Iowa records shows.
But the average was - for
some feeders, at least - low
enough to draw a cautiously
bureaucratic· comment that
"the feeders are not netting
enormous returns."
The report showed a typical
Texas feedlot operator, whose
beef usually goes to Los An·
geles, averaged a net return-of
only 99.4 cents per head on cat·
tie fattened during the 20
months ending In March this
year. In II of th~ 20 months,
data on costs of feeder. steers,
feed and other costs, and prices
or finished cattle showedthe
feeder lost money on each ani·
mal he sold.
The hypothetical Texas feedlot, according to the report,
had estimated net returns of
$11.69 per head last December,
$28.53a head last January, and
$33.97 In February . But for
March, calculations showed a
shoss of $6.16 per head sold and
for April a·loss of $5.33 a head.
Profit Actually Less
In May, however, with
slaughter cattle prices up
again, data showed a profit of
$9.21 a head compared with the
20-month average of 99 cents.
The ''net return " profit fig.
ures given in the study do not
actually represent full profit,

experts explain. The caicuia·
tions take into account most
variable costs, including feed,
veterinary bills, electricity,
and insurance - but they do
oot cover fixed costs including
depreciation of feedlot
property.
These fixed costs would have
to be subtracted from the re·
ported 'net returns " to
produce an accurate "profit"
figure.
Another calculation based on
a typical but hypothetical corn
bell feedlot in Oiowa also showed sharp ups and downs over
the past two years, but
generally higher levels of
returns. Economists said this
was partly due to use of a six·
month feeding period - which
means turnover of fewer head
per year - in the Iowa
example. The Texas study was
based on a four-month tur·
nover.
Net Varies
The.typical Iowa feedlot, according to the study, shQwed an
average net return of $5.34 per
head in the 20months ending in
March, 1972.
For May the report showed a
net return of $35.26 per head,
about seven times the 2lkrionth
average, The ·feeder .had done
even better earlier this year,
however, with net per-head ~..
turns of $47.30 in January,
$56.14 in February, $46.72 in
March and $37.60 in April , experts indicated.
The figures through March
for both TelOls and Iowa feed·
lots were published here In an
1

11

Demonstration Given On Flower Affanging

Going to do some canning
this year? Don't wait until the
laat minute to get your canning
equipment checked and ready,
• 111ggests Mrs. Jennifer Sheets,
Meigs County Extension
Agent, Home Economics. Mrs.
Sheets offers this check-list:
Canners. You'll need a
canner or deep ketUe for hotwater bath processing of fruits,

Mrs. Tom Stewart gave a Homeste•d Garden Club held
demonstration on mak ing at the Fellowship Hall .
Tips · on
making
C1ower arrctn gemenls a t a
re cent meeting of the arnn gemenfl; for flower shows

Plano pupils of Mrs. Clara
Henry Lochary presented a
recital Friday afternoon at 3
p.m. in the Bethany Chapel of
Trinity Church.
Guest performers for the
recital were Karen Kriffith
who played "Sonata No. 8 lor
Trwnpel" by Carelli with Mrs.
Lochary accompanying her,
and Mrs . Jennifer Lohse
Sh~ts, whcise · selection was
"Sallade'' by Chopin. · Both
Miss Griffith and Mrs. Sheets
are former piano pupils of Mrs.
Lochary. Also playing in the
recital was Kristen Anderson,
student of Mts. Sheets, who
presented "Swans on the
Lake."
.
Students playing and their
selections were as !allows:
Cathy Blaettnar, "Minuet in
G" by M02art; Jayne Hoeflich,
"The Gypsy Camp," a
Hungarian folk tune, and
"Hide and Seek" by Thompson;
Jenny
Chapman,
" Pastorale from Christmas
Oratorio" by Bach, and "Color

~·

'?

' "' "'

p.., 0:: ...._::.(

1 Social

i

ICalendad

MONDAY
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce Monday at Meigs
Inn at noon.
RUTLAND Garden Club, 8
p.m. Monday at the home of
Mts. Robert Canaday with
Mts. Roy Snowden, co.Jlosless.
STAFF and Officers, Meigs
Temple, home or Mrs. Betty
Spencer, Monday ot 7:30 p.m.
MEIGS lzaak Walton League
Chapter, regular meeting, 7 p.
m. Monday.
JUNIOR GARDEN Club of
Winding Trail Garden Club will
meet Menday at home of Maria
Legar.

PAST MATRONS, Pomeroy
Chapter 172, OES, 7:30 p.m.
Tueaday, hOII)i! of Mrs. Norma
Par'ker.
RACINE American Legion
Auxlljal'f Tuesday 8 p.m. at
poat home. Installation of of.
ficers1

•

sa~e. And m~re important, he wants to see you safe,
whether you re behrnd the wheel or just a passencer.
So loin the battle apinst careless
talkers. Help them face their
tremendous responsibiiities-tnd
the road ahead-and all their stories
will wind up with a happy endtns.
llooiM -ying ~~~~~- . . . . . . 101110 NAI)ot.

Code of Butlnell Precticii.Acklr-001, r: :dlcwtoConlumtr
- " ' " ' -. :1000 ... .. ~·~ N.W.. ,.rWNi;gloo, D.C. 10001

NlltiMII Automobla Dealers Aa1oclltlon

OfllcW__,.IM M___,,.._.._.... _.,..tholl-.t, ............ DC

One in .• series presented by N.A.D.A., The. O..ity Sonlintl•nd The Tri-County Automob'
f ...__, __
.
1 t .... ...,., Assoc.

.
My World" by Ranko!; Peggy
Girolami "The Ski Slope" by
Warfel ~nd "March of the
Dwarfs" by Grief· ·Charles
Follroad, "Toreador' Song" by
Bizet, and "A Place In the Sun"
by Miller Wells.
Marcia Dillard "Serenade"
by Schubert; N;ncy Stanley, ,
"Berceuse" by Godard· Mary
Biaettnar, "The Skyla;k" by
Tschaikowsky, and "Waltz
Semtimentale" by Schubert;
Kim Jones, "Dawn" by
Eckstein and "Theme Song
from Ldve Story" · Stephen
Stanley, "Fantasie No. 3'' by
Mozart; and "Another Day" by
McCartney . Elizabeth
Biaettnar, "J:me" from "the
Seasons" by TschaikowSky·
Deanna Blackwood "Wall;
Brilliante" by Durani and Jo
Ellen Diehl "Prelude from
Well Tempe;ed Clavichord" by
Bach· and "Venetian Love
Story'" from Day in Venice by
Nevin.
A girt was presented to Mrs.
Lochary by her students.

Yard Sale Discussed

BEND 0' The River Garden
Club, annual picnic, 6:30
Monday night, home of Mrs.
Chloris Grimm, Letart. Mts.
Charles Lewill to talk on the
Meigs County Fair · Flower
Show.
1
TUESDAY
MEIGS County Alco~olism
and Drug Abuse Committee,
7:30 p.m. St. Paul Lutheran
Church in Pomeroy.
JUNIOR American Legion
Auzlliary, 7 p.m. Tueaday at
the Middleport Hall of FeeneyBennett Post 1211,
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
39, 7:30Tuesday, Installation of
officers.

Drivers who insist on facing their audience while
they talk-instead of the r01d ahead-can be deadly
bores. Even their funny stories can turn tr~t~ic in a
hurry. A punch line can be killed instantly by a car
that stops suddenly, an intersection; a curve in the
road. By anything that gets in I he way. ;
No one Is safe with drivers like this. Neither passengers or people in other cars ... nor pedestrians. H
you know 10meone who has this deadly habit. think
about the consequences.
Straighten him out or refuse to ride with him.
Your new car dealer wants to see our highways

tomatoes.
and
pickled
vegetables . The canner should
be deep eno~~h to allow 2 to •
inches of water above the
largest jars used. The canner
needs a tigh~!ilting cover and
a wire or wood rack lor jars.
A steam pressure canner is
required lor all other
vegetables. Safety of these
foods depends on the accurate

('vtudents Gtve
. rtano
n. '
.
Recrtal

Several money making
projects were discussed in·
eluding a yard sale on the
church lawn July 7 and 8 at a
meeting of the Eagles Class of
the Asbury United Methodist
Church, Syracuse.
. During the meeting held at
the church, plans were made
for a picnic for members and
famllles next month at the
camp of Mr. and Mrs. Millard
Van Meter. Blll Winebrenner,
president, was in .charge of ihe

Review

By RICK DU BROW .
theories, when the work is
HOLLYWOOD (UP!) - Re- standardized. But now the
sponding to public criticism, beneficiaries of this mass
television is paying increased production have become so
attention to middle class apparently·. comforiable and
America, and Tuesday night secure that they can think
NBC-1V will offer an hour on about saUsfaetlon from their
what it describes as "a new jobs, and a standardized job
breed" of young blue collar that requires n&lt;Hhought is not
workers.
satisfying. No one knows the
Peviously lillled mder the answer. But It is one of the
tltle "The Blue Collar Worker" crucial questions of this de·
In a network publicity release, cade."
the documentary will be
broadcast with the name "The
Tuesday night's, hour,
mue Collar Trap-An NBC reported by Alvin Davll and
News White Paper." And, of directed by Darold Murray,
those workers researched for will focus on four men who
the bour, producar·writer Fred work in an auto plant In
Freed says tha,t although they Mlllpltas, Calif., and examine
ca1111ot be called typical, ''what their life Styles and views on .
they think, the way they look at such matteraas the generation
life and tlteir society, the way gap. The men range in J18e
they act, is the same as many from 22 to 30.
of their contemporaries.
Tel~viewen tonight, mean"They are," he adds 1n a while, will be offered another
network summary of the hour documentaJt, UU. one,
program's !berne, ''not . at all "The Youns Convicts: Prison
Uke tbeir fathers In many In the Streets," airing on ABC.
ways. They are better educal· 1V, and concernillg new ap.
ed, more affiuenl, have more , proachee to rehabilitating
leillure than their fathers ever lawbreakers outside the
dreamed of. They are also less , traditional penal system.
.
satisfied . They no longer aee
The focus ·of tonight's hour
the job aa an end in iteelf. They are. chiefly youth-aimed
want aatllfaction, fulfillment, correction programi in
a meaninsful job and a MMAehUI!ttll and California
meaningful life."
that Include hllfwM" houses,
Freed alJo feela a nwnber of foster homes and "Intensive
them "find the usembly line care" parole and probation
boring and unrelvarding," and measures, Sayil producerhe says:
writer-director Stephen
"Thll !. lbe essenUal dllem- Fleilchman, l'hoae hour will
rna we and the 111111 produc· be narrated by Frank
Uon lndllltrles face. On the one Reynolds: "The Road lo San
hand, they haw created mass QuenUO, or Attica, or Folaom,
f(fluence by mus prodUction. or Sinti Sinti begins in the
And mua productjon workl juvenile halls across the
but, ICXlOI'CMnll to the old country."

'Canning SuggeStions Told

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT
tiona Qub, Wednesday noon,
Meiaa Inn. Officers will be
tnatalled by Uon Joe Hanning,
junior diatrlct deputy of Lions
13-K District.
OHIO VALLEY .Com·
mandery 24, Kn!Chls Templar,
regular conclave, Masonic
Temple. Election and in·
ataliation of officera. Plana will
be made for the annual picnic
In July. All Sir Knlahts

welcome.
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
Wttl-uday, I p.m., home of
- Mn. v.aan N - wtlh Mn.

Dwl&amp;bt MJ!t.n U eo-llcil....

AMERICA~
Leelon
Auillary, Feeney-&amp;enn•tt
Plitt 1., 7:110p.m. Wednesday.

use of a properly operating
steam-pressure canner. Clean
tbe petcock and surety valve
opening by drawing string or a
narrow strip of cloth through
them. Repeat this cleaning
often during the canning
season.
The pressure gauge should
be clean and accurate.
Containers. Use glass jars
designed lor canning - don't
use jars from prOCe!jSed foods
~uch as mayonnaise. These
Jars aren't surtabie for borne
canning. Be sure the j~rs have
no cracks and ch1ps, aents or
rust. The lids must be perfect.
Use new porcelain • line
vacuum ~eal . lid~ or new
rubbers w1th zmc hds.
Tin cans without dents or
rust may also be used. Use C·
ena~el cans. for com and
hommy; R-&lt;!namel cans lor
beets, _red berries, red or bla_ck
chemes, plums, pumpkm ,
rhubarb, and wmter squash.
Plam tm cans can be used for
all other commonly canned
fruits and vegetables .
Other Aids. You'll need racks
lor coohng hot 1ars; eqwpment, such as strong tongs. for
handling hot jars and cans;
labels; and an up-to-date
canning reference. Be sure
your canning reference has
been written since 1965. Earlier
bulletins are. out.&lt;J!-dat~.
Two cannmg bulletms are
available at the Meigs County
Extenswn Office. Call 992-3895
or come In at Mulberry Heights
o!frce for your copy of L-170,
Canning Tomatoes in the Home
and USDA 's HG-8, Home
Canning of Fruits and
Vegetables.

were given by Mrs. Stewart
wh o explained the mechanics
of arranging and the material•
needed. Several or the members exhibited in the recent Big
Bend Rega tta flower show.
Mrs. Larry Barr, hostess,
opened the meeting by reciting
Psalm 23 and th e group
repeated the Lord 's Prayer.
Minutes of a previous meeting
were read by Mrs. Bernard
Ledlie and Mrs. Adria Wilcox
.gave U1e treasurer's r ~port.
Recipe cards were distributed
Jimmy Evans and Mrs. James and will be sold by th e me m·
Richmond, junior girls.
bers.
The beginners class, comThe refreshment table was
posed of Jjsa and Scott Pullins,
Angie and Timmy Sloan ,
Kimberly and Tammi Eblin ,
Neal Richmond, Sally Ann
Radford and Sue Ellen Fry ,
ga.ue_ memory verses and sang
several action songs to open
the program . Also doing
memory work were the
primary girls, Joy and Johnda
Gillespie, Paula, Judy and
Connie Glaze, Ruth Ann Fry,
Dixie Eblin and Angie Triplett.
James Smith and Jimmy
Snider of the primary boys
class presented a puppet show
and the junior girls gave
memory verses and sang three
songs. In that group were Pam
and Christ{ Evans, Billie
Addison, Tina Randolph, Linda
Partlow, Shari Colmer and
Tammy Snider .
Taking the offering were
Brent Sisson, Randy Randolph,
James Smith and Jay Evans.
Amos Johnson gave th e
benediction ·following the
closing song
" Onward
Chris tian Soldiers" and a
prayer response by the boys
and girls.

VBS Offering Given
To Meigs Infirmary
The offering taken during the
two-week Daily Vacation Bible
School at the Rock Springs
United Methodist Church was
used for the purchase of gifts
for the residents of the Meigs
County Infirmary .
·
The items purchased. a hair
dryer for the women and .a
radio for the men, were on
display at the closing program
of the Bible School Friday
-''IOBII.E T\' antenow ·: ,\ night at the church. Mrs.
st•lr·JirllfH'IIt•d sup•· rm a r h t William Radford was director
('Hrt '! Tht• ht•atlj.t"l'i.lr un .\rl
StandiiTs ~ mat wuuld ill'· of the school and it was by vote
JU•ar lu ht• H JUIZZh•r bul or the children that the money
at'tualh lli.IS a \ 'l'r\' st&gt;riuns was spent on the infirmary
,, u r Jl i, s t'. Th( ·artirkial
residents.
anth·rs un.· lu ·,:.: i r l' ild Friday night's program
\illl'-'l' \\ ilrnin~ \\ht•n tht• began with the processional
gn:at ,lWlS tuo l'lnst• to llu•
and theme song, "We Worship
t"lt•ttriri&lt;'cl h'IH'l' surroundGod ." The Rev .. Loris Pullins
in~ StmH."IiiTs ~: 1 P a s u .
gave
prayer, and the children
Tt•\ ., pa~tun• .
gave .the pledge to the
American flag, the Christian
flag and the Bible .
Certificates were presented
to the teachers, Mrs. Robert
Sloan, Mrs. Richard Eblin,
Mrs. Levi Partlow and Connie
Radford of the beginner
department; Mrs . Ray Pullins,
Judy Radford, primary girls;
Mrs. Opha Offutt, Mrs. Ed·
ward Ball, primary boys: Mrs.
The June meeting of the
Young Wives Club was held at
the home of Carolyn Tripp.
Resui ts of the May bake sale
revealed a great success and
Mrs. Mary Martin, Pomeroy,
members made tentative plans departementai chapeau, Eight
for another bake sale later in and Forty, and Mrs. Myrtle
the summer.
Walker, Racin e, deparIt was decided that members t~mental le secretaire ·
would escort some of the older cassiere were guests at a
people to and from the Meigs meeting of the Tuscarawas
County Fair lor Senior Citizens Coun ty Salon 641 Wednesday
Da y.
nigbt.
Definite plans were made for
the August picnic at Forked Mrs. Marlin spoke to the
Run State Park . Members Salon on projects of the Eight
decided to include their and Forty. She displayed the
families.
plaque pre..nted to her at the
Refreshments were served National Jewish Hospital in
and the door p~ize was won by Denver for the endowment of
Shelly Mankin.
Ohio's 22nd bed. Mrs . Martin

HEAVY-DUTY

18 LB• .

AUTOMATIC WASHER

Results Of
Bake Sale
Given

meeting and o;Helen Teaford
conducted devotions. Prayer
was by Mrs. Opal Kloes.
Attending were Marcia Karr,
teacher, and Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Winebrenner, Mrs . Carroll
Jeff , Curt and Cindy
Norris, Mr. and Mrs. Karl
Matheny,
children of Mr. and
Kloes, Mrs. Martha Moore, Mr.
Mrs.
Don
Matheny of c;:amp
and Mrs. Charles Hoback,
Robert Flanagan, Mt. and LeJeune, N. C., are here for a
Mrs. Van Meter, Tony Van .summer visit with their
Meter, Mrs. Teaford, Mrs. grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Lisle and Eleanor Albert Roush. Other recent
visitors at the Roush home
Robson.
have been Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Roush, David and Sherrie, St.
Albans ; Mr. and Mrs . Roger
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
.Mr~.
Ron Wright and Flowers, Columbus, and Mr.
cllttd'ren, Daniel and Debbie, of and Mrs. John Miller, Timothy
Dublin, Va. spent a week and Scott, Evansville, Ind. ·
Jimmy Jo Arnold of Carroll
visiting her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Bruce Morris and Larry . spent the past week here
Visitors at the Alpha Barr visiting Mr. and Mrs. Charles
h"nre over the Father's Day Kessinger.
Mr . and Mrs . Patrick
weekend were Mr . and Mrs.
The annual Baptist Youth
Blair Cadwallader and boys, Lochary spent Sunday at
Retreat will be held at Cedar
Brian, Chris and Brent of Amesville with her brother and
Lakes July 7-9, the ~v.
Winchester, 0 . Mr. and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Simon!! pastor of'the
Mrs. Duane Barr and Harry Henry .
Middleport 1 irs! Baptist
son, Shawn, of _Oak Hill, 0.,
Church announc~s.
Registration will begin at I
Mr . and Mrs. Ronald Bail of
p.m. July 7 and the first hour
Hanoden, 0 ., Mr . and Mrs.
Larry Barr and children ,
will he given to cabin selection
David and Michelle, and Miss
and preparing sleeping
"Can God Understand Our arrangements. The program
Marge Riggs of Pomeroy.
Temptations" was the topic of will begin at 2 p.m. and all
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr and
the book study presented by activities of the retreat will
children spent a weekend
Mrs. Joe Bailey at a meeting of conclude at 1:30 p.m. Sunday,
re cently camping at Forked
Group II of the Women's .July 9.
Run Lake .
Association of the Middleport
Emma Ledlie is visiting her
Featured on the program
First United Presbyterian will he a lull length feature
daughter, Mrs. Richard RickRussell Quillen, Velma Church Tuesday night at the film, "Youth Interrobang,"
man of Fayetteville, N. C.
Quillen
to Elwood Bachus, home of Mrs. Richard Karr. Bible study, recreation,
Mrs. Sharon Barr and Mrs.
Mrs. Paul Haptonstall had singing, optional discussion of
Alpha Barr attended a Tup- Gi,ria Bachus, 2 Acres, Letart.
Carl
0.
Gilmore,
Mildred
E.
charge
of the meeting with serious Christian questions,
perware party at the home of
Gilnwre
tu
Dennis
E.
Saelens,
Mrs.
Lewis
Sauer giving con tests and campfire.
Mrs. Iva Johnson of Pomeroy
Carla
S.
Saelens,
Lots
37
and
devotions. Her topic was
Tuesday evening. ·
The registration fee is $12 per
38, Jones Estate, Middleport. '"Prescription When Low in person and $2 should be sent
Virginia K. Schroath to Clyde Spirit" by Norman Vincent with the registration to the
J . Morlan , Ethel · Marie Peale. Mrs. Haptonstall gave
Baptist Youth Retreat,· Box
Morlan, Parcels, Orange.
the closing prayer and the 226, Rio Grande, Ohio. The
Manning D. Webster, an- hostess served refreshments. balance is payable when the
cillary adm., Alfred W.
Schroath-, dec.' to Clyde J.
Mrs. P. R. Randolph is a Morlan, Ethel Marie Morlan,
I
.
patient at the St. Joseph Parcels, Orange.
Hospital in Parkersburg, W. . Union Nal 'l. Bank or Clarks·
burg, Trus. to Clyde J. Morlan,
Va.
Mrs. Hazel Barton visited the Elhei Marie Morlan, Minerals,
Cl1arles Donaldson family at
D. Webster, A.
Logan Thursday and her
grandchildren returned home Adnr., Alfred W. Schroath, dec.
with her to spend the week.
111 Leonard McGill, Estella ·
Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Md}ill, Life Estate, Sec. 5,
Cowdery visited the ·Charles Orange .
.
Donaldson family at Logan
Stanley E. Cozart, Ollie Mae
Thursday. They also visited Cozart to Gary Keith Willford,
·
Me and Mrs. Ralph Miller, Jo Ann Willford, Lots 298 No.
Baltimore; Mr. and · Mrs. 30, Weldon's Add., Racine.
Robert. Miller and family, of
Berthe Bourlard to State of
Baltimore ; Mr. and Mrs. Dale Ohio, Parcel, Salisbury.
Miller and family, Canal
Mildred Carson to Martin R.
Winchester, and Mr. and Mrs. Carson, Lots 5, 6,,Jones Add. ,
William Miller and family of Middleport .
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee to
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday; Thursday
Bremen.
Mr. and · Mrs. Rodger Larry B. Haynes, Paula J.
Phillips, Lancaster, visited Mr . Haynes, 100 Acres, Lot 295, .35
and MrJ. Harold E. Cowdery Acre, Sutton-Syracuse .
THRirT BO~
Saturday and enjoyed a bar·
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee to
9 ·p ieces
~
becue and picnic lunch.
Donald B. Harden, Angela D.
Visitors at the horne of Mr. Harden, .24 Acre, Suttonregularly 1 2.65
and Mrs. Edward Chevallj!r Syracuse.
Stinday were Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Spencer of Tuppers Plains, Mr.
Offer 9ood lhru June 29, 1972
Babcock
ol
Ti!ppers
Plains,
and Mrs. Lowell Chevalier and
famlly, and Garrel Chevalier · Mr. and Mrs. Bill Durst and
of Mansfield, and Mrs.' Zenith farHily and Mrs. Bess Larkins
vislled Sunday at the Richard
Chevalier bf Belpre. ~
Coleman
hom• fur a family
Recent visll.onl of Mfa. Bess
Larkins
were
Richard dinner.
Coleman of Keno, Mrs. Lena 'Mr. and Mrs. Jap Reed and
Srndgrass of Palcentia, Calif., sm• of Utah visited with Wayne
and Mrs . Zelda Wells, or anrl Mrs . Emma Chevalier
rcc-en1ly.
POMEROY, OHIO
Huntin~tim, W. Vu.
.
Mr. und Mrs . Thurman
- Mrs. I,, Baidersun

covered irl yellow with a pink
ne t overSkirt and was centered
with a rose arrangement and
pink candles in cry stal holders.
Fink punch and cupcakes were
§erved by the hostess.
Members attending were
Mrs. Da na Hoffm an, Mrs.
Larry Barr, Mrs. Bernard
I.edlie, Mrs. Alpha Barr, Mrs.
Frances Wilcox, Mrs. Delbert
Mitchell, Mrs. Lee Fetty and
Teresa Mitchell .
Gues ts were Mrs. Stewart,
Mrs. Howard Thoma, Mrs.
George Miller and Sheila
Fetty. Mrs. Mitchell will host
the Jul y 20 meeting.

Eight And Forty Elects Officers

Langsville

Meigs

Book
Study
Presented

also announced the pre-marche
pouvior and the departemental
le marche to be held at the
Sheraton Gibson Hotel in
Cincinnati, July 23 and 24. Gilts
were presented to both Mrs.
Martin and Mrs . Walker .
During the meeting the Salon
. elected of!icers for the 1972·73
year including Jane Steele,
chapeau; Mary Baker, le demi
chapeau premiere ; Mary
Bender, le ·demi chapeau
duexieme; Frances Jarvis, ie
. s.e~.r.~W ~~:R ~~sL~r.e; .. J;~~P.I'
Yackey, l'aumonier, ~ nd Ruby
Vance, Ia concierge .

I

.,.

. ...
~-

Youth Retreat To Be Held]uly 7-9

Properly

youth registers at Cedar
Lakes.
The progran\ is designed for
youth from grade nine through
age 25.
.Fined President
President Andrew Jackson
was fined $1 ,000 for contempt in declaring martial·
law in 1815, during the de·
!ense of New Orleans. In
1844 , Congress voted to re·
turn the fine .

E~C

LWAI6 1SA

1 ,.,., a t aOm~ 1hyer avallable

TURBOSWEEP
LUSIVE . 202
LINT FILTER AGITATOR
Gets clothes really clean I

Ingels Furniture
Bank Rate Financing
Ph. 992 -2635

Middleport

Transfers

Reedsville

r------···KIIISII-------·
'I Feed the who·le
II

News, Notes

I

Or~~~~·ing

Fa •• f
I
I1 ml ., or on y
I

I

1· ·

I
I·
1 "
I
I
I
·1
1
I

1I

•

25

I

II

I

I

I
I
I
I
I
I
1
I

I.
I

I
I
I
I
I Why cook? Visit the Colonel I
~~~il4-~ I
I . Crow's Steak Hou..
I,_______________ _

..

If you keep your important papers and valuables at home, ihe.re' s al·
ways the chance they'll be lost, stolen or destroved by fire. Why ris k
it? .For only penni es a day, you can get max imum protection with a
S,11le Deposi t Box. Come in today- lomorrow may be loa late.

The.Farmers -sank &amp; Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Reserve System
On Fridays Our Drive- In Window is Open 9
a.m . to '7 p.m., (Continuously).
$20,000 Maximum Insurance

For Each Depositor

�r

. , _... ,j, ..,....
J' 1 .. •

F

•

l--o' .,, .,_ ..,.

,., 1· , .

,

..- .lt il" to-

,"" "

f ,/

" · · ··~ '" .....
• -

rl ' - ... "''

~

..

..

. . ..

~

...

'

..

,;:-

'

' ',...

I - Thdlaily Sentinel. Middleport·Ponll'l'llY, 0., June 26, 11172 ~

Sentinel Classifieds ·Get Action! Sentinel.C~ssifieds Get Results!
NEW -

WANTED - Woman to work af
.,. Midway Market immediately.
Call 992-2565&gt;or come In person.
6-26-3tc

•
\.

BY ADA SLACK
SYRACUSE
Brenda
Lawrence of ·Portland spent
.two days with Elva Dailey.
Mrs. Fred Boyd and Mandy,
uf Parkersburg spent from
Wednesday until SWlday wiU1
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
William Eichinger and John .
Mr. and Mrs. Roy-Icenhower
and son, Eddie, of East
Uverpoolspenta week with his
sister and brother-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Jeffers.
Mr . and Mrs . Richard
Weaver, son Phil, and her
uncle, C. T. Norris, of l.A!Iart
Fallsspenta weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. L. T. Nonis at Rome,
Ind. While there the 50th
wedding anniversary of the
latter, Mr. and Mrs·. Norris,
~d• celebrated. The Mr.
Norrises are twin brothers.
Mrs. Albert Mumaw and
granddaughter, Mary Ann
Sterr of Mingo JuncU~n. and
Mr. and Mrs. James Mumaw
and daughter, Debra, of
Monroe, Mich. spent a Thursday with their aunt, Frankie
Mumaw.
·
Mrs. Agnes White spent four
days with her son and
daughter-In-law, Mr. 11/ld Mrs.
James ft. White and Mary lleth
of Dunbar, W.Va.
Mrs. Thelma Reitmire of
New Haven, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Grueser of Five Points
were Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. George Grueser.
Visiting a weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Ross Norris were Mr.
and Mrs. l.A!ster Howard of
Akron.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Pickens,
Cheryl and Randy, of Toledo
visited her P-'•nts, Howard
Largent, a patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital and Mrs .
Howard Largent.
James Gulnsler of Lancaster
visited with Mr. Richard Duck·
worth and sister, Mrs . Agnes
While.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Duckworth spent four days with his
son and daughter-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Max Duckworth and
family at Alliance.
Mrs. Doyle Gibbs and Doyle,
Jr. and Randy of Parkersburg
spent Sunday with her parents,
Mr . and Mrs. William
Eichinger and John .
Mr. and Mrs. William Brown
spent a weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Rood of Wes~rvUie .
The Rev. Ralph Hudson of
Portsmouth spent Saturday
with his mother, Mrs. Myla
Hudson.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Autherson
of Long Bottom Route and Mrs.
Judy Pape and Kristen spent
Father's Day with Mrs. Elva
Dailey.
Richard Duckworth and
sister, _Agnes While, accumpanied Mr. and Mrs. Emil
Eynun and Mr . and Mrs.
Danny. Eynon of Nease Settlement to Holzer Hospital
where they visited Mr. Reed
Eynon. They went on to the
fairgrounds to attend the
Citizens Band Radi~ Club
jamboree.
Mrs. Clinton Pierce and Tina
and Mrs . Thelma Grueser
visited Sunday wllh Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Pierce and Mr. and
Mrs . Jack Grueser and
families of Mason .
• Mr. Don Cottrill has returned
1&lt;1 his home after a Sl!iy in
Veterans Memorial Hospilal.
Glfto to lncilaftl
Long before the first of·
flclal inaugural medal was
Issued to commemorate a
' president, the U.S. Mint
struck Indian Peace Medals,
now known as the Presi·
dentlal Series, and early
presidents gave these medals
to Indian chiefs as tokens of
friendship.

We bA to JOU
lilletpeiSOO.

WMP0/1390
011 ·YOUI DIAL

· EITiployP'It"&lt; '' .
WILL paint roots or houses,
tri!"t'' and cut tree~ : clean

attics ;

·•

WAITRESS, apply in person,

,.

Crow ' ~ Steak

· white wall 1\res. radio.

·t'PMI!IOY, OHIO

WITH

OZ.ITE
CARPET TILES
Shags, Patterns, Plain
IN STOCK AT

Carpet-Land, Inc.
116W. ~Min

Pome-roy

992-7590
lEGAL NOTICE
Sall3bury Township Trustees
offer ror sale one 1962 Inti.
Truck with Dum1:1 bed and holst .
True~ may be Inspected at
Town,hlp
Building , Rock
Oh io.

Bids will be received until
Thursday, July 13. 1972 at 7:30
p.m . at Township Bldg ., Rock
Springs, Oh io.
Terms of Sale : Cash a t tlrne
of ule.
Richard Bailey
Clerk of Salisbury Twp .
I6J a . u., 01 J , Jt

style ,

budget terms . Call 992-7085.
6-22-6/c

battery pack; phone 992-2792.
6·22-6tc
REGISTERED

Tennessee

Walking Horse. mares and
fillies; Charles King, between
Harrison and Dexter; phone

In

'142·5870.

Syracuse
Ph. 992·2156

INFORMATION
. DEADLINES
5 P .M . Day Before Publication .
Monday Deadline 9 a .m .
Cancellation - Correc t ions
Will be accepted until 9 a .m . for
Day of Publication
R EClUlATIONS
The ~ Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed
objectional .
The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect
insertion .
RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one Insertion
Minimum Charge 7Sc
12 cents per word three
consecut ive Insertions .
18 cents per word Sill con secutive insertions .
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days .
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S1 .SO tor SO word minimum .
Each additionlll word 2c .
BLIND ADS
Additional 1Sc Charge per
Advertisement .
.
'OFFICE HOURS
8:30a .m . to 5:00p .m . Daily ,
8 ; 30 a .m . to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday .

Modern

hand set, solid state , 23
channels, 5 watts, with extra

Sentinel Carrier

WANT ADS

budget lerms. C..if 992-711115.
6·22-61c

GMC pickup, 8 ft . bed ; 1
6-20-&amp;tc 1963
Demeo-Revelle 23 channel CB
radio. 1 Courier Clipper 23

Wanted!

®

~~~,.i ~!' Co.

Do It Yourself

House.

$1995

LTO Coupe, 390 v-8 engine, J-speed, automatic, power
steering, power brakH, factory air. grey finish. Good

speaker sound system. 4
speed automatic changer ,
Balance $76 .39 : Use our

stereo-radio, 4 speaker sound
sy_s tem. 4 speed ·automatic
changer. separate contr"ots.
Balance $62.34. Us.e our

Help Wanted

$1995

American style. stereo-radio

comblnailon. AM· FM radio, A

efc . WALNUT ,

SALE PRICED - AREAL BUY!

Hardtop coupe , V-8 ef'\9lne. autOmatic transmission,
power steering &amp; brakes, white finish,. black vinyl top.
vinyl Interior, white wall tires , like ne~ , radio.

Springs,

basements.

Phone 9'49 322 1.

guards. go~d finish with bl_ack vinyl roof, covert vinyl
interior. Used less tha11S.OOO miles. as Driver' s Fd car .

1969 FORO

News, Society

6·25 31&lt;

brakes, Turbahydramatic, radio, wheel covers. bumper

mo FORD GALAXIESOO

Syracuse

RewMd , Ed Bak er , phone 99'1

3301 or 99'1-2642.

1971 CHEYROLH BELAIR
$3950
A door sedan, factory air 1 V-8 engine, power steering &amp;

·.

.
6-25-3tc

2 L-60-14 MICKEY Thompson
t i res,

The Daily Sentinel

pr-iced

rea sonable:

phone 949-4989.

6·25-Jtp

'-----------'

DELIVERY
DRIVER SALES

1952 CHEVY 112 ton pickup ; all

12 YOUNG men and women
needed immediately for
salary position . $3.50 per
house .
No
experience
necessary. must be neat and

new tires, $120; good work
horse. weighs about 1.200 lbs.,

$150 ; phone Chester 985.-4180
after 5 p.m.
5-25-4tp

Anna M . Ryther ,

Adm inistratr ix of the
Estate or George w. Moore ,

Deceased .
Crow. Crow &amp; Porter ,
Attorneys for Admin istratrix

161 26 171 3, 21

KOSCOT KOSMETICS: Several
new products - specials each
month ; also sales personnel

needed. Phone 992-5113 .
6-6-ttc

p.m .; closed Mondays . Phone

Wanteti To Buy

667-Jll58.

OLD FURNITURE, dishes,
6·25-6tc
clocks, brass beds, silver . .- - - - - - - - dollars
or
comp\ele TWO wheel utility lraller 5· 11 .
households. Write M. D. racks. $70; Coleman lhree
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.

Call 99'1-6271.

burner camp stove, like new,

----~----

$15; Coleman fiame\ess camp
heater. 5,000 BTU. new $15 ; I
L.P. gas lank· for travel

USED

water

trailer, newS 10; phone 985-

pump, phone 742-3263.
6·26-3tp

6·15-41p

J-16-llc

submersib l e

4140 ·

Social Notes

1966 CHEVROLET. 1,

lon

pickup, 61 1 tt . bed, standard ;

phone 992-6547.
6-23-31c

Turf Trim· Mower, B&amp;S 31/'.1
h.p . engine . In carton
70.25

POMEROY

wc Marine Sales

6 ._
1
_______

3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and 16 FT. FIBERGLAS boat with
unfurnished

apartments .

Phone 992-5&lt;134.
A-12-llc

40 h.p.-outboard motor ; with
com plete accessories ; phone

992-350'1.

6-25-3\c
2 BEDROOM trailer. adults
only, Bob's Mobile Court. 32 FT. HOUSEBOAT, &lt;10 h.p.
phone 992-2951.
outboard motor and trailer;
6-13-lfc wi ll sell reasonable . Phone
- -- - - - 992-7157 or see at 28A Railroad
UNFURNISHED apartment, 51 .• Middleport.
6·20-6tc
134 Mulberr.v Ave ., phone 9"'2 ·
3962 .
6-11 -ttc

Air Conditioners
Hot Water Heaters
Electrical Work

ARNOLD ·
BROTHERS

- ------

Pomeroy, 0 .
---'

12 X 40, 2 BEDROOM mobile 1970 MERCURY Monterey,
home. located In Rutland, power steering, power
phone 742·5641.
brakes, air shocks and new
6·2S-6tc

this area

to

service and collect from

automatic dispensers . No
experience needed .
We

v.

Fodd Market.

6·23-3tp.

Phone 1-30•-773:5365, Mason,
W. Va. , belwelin 4 p.m . and 7
p.m.
6·25-2tp

terview, write : (lnct.ude
telephone nomber) EAGLE
INDUSTRIES, Dept. BV, 3938
Meadowbrook Road, St. Louis
Park, Minn. 55A26.
4·24·2tp

Furnished sleeping room with $150. Phone 992-7204.
bath ; phone 992·2780 or 992· _________6_ ·_
23-6tp
3432.
6-22-6tc 1971 THJiNOERBtRO, 2 door
Landau, at\ power, AM·FM·
BE DRDOM
furnished Stereo radio, air·condltloned.
man)l edras, 9,000 actual
apartment between Pomeroy
miles ; call 773-5323, John
&amp; Athens, 580 per month ;
McMurray, Mason .
phone 675-1684; also trailer
space .
6·21 -6\p
6-20-61p

NOTIC~

remodeled, wall -to -wall
carpeting , rooms and bath ;

s

cylinde r , automatic , good
running condition, good fires,

Mobile·Homes For Sale

Fnt Sol•.

BALL5 .0' FIRE~!

..

I WU2. THAR .

Tt-1REE TIMES
LAST MONTH!!

remodeling,
building ,
suspended ceilings, interior
and

exterior

painting;

complete line of Masonry
work. All work guaranteed to

customer s:atisfacllon. We
are fully Insured for your

protection. 32 N. 2nd. 9923918.
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR. CO.
.~.::...

tft! ' "C.'
I, ,,I

Free Eslimates. We also
haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump
trucks and low-boy for hire.

See Bob or Roger Jtlfers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525 .
aller 7 p.m. or phone 992·
5l32.

Owner &amp; Operator .

.

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
t I J
, t- -~~...J
Phone 949·3821
Racine, Ohio
.
Crill
Bradford
DOZER and back hoe work .
pondsand septic tanks ; B &amp; K _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _5_
· 1-tfc
Excavating, Phone 992- ~367 ,
Dick Karr, Jr.

5-21 -lfc

Real Estate For Sale

HARRISON'S TV Service, open
9 a.m. to 9 p.m. ; free pickup
and delivery ; phone 992-2522.
6·13-tfc

Re~l

Estate For Sale

CLELAND

REALTY

POMEROY
FOR THE FAMILY
Near shopping, playground,
and swimming pool, 5
bedrooms, Jlh baths, dining
room, nice kitchen, garage

and carport. $12,800.00.
A·l CONDITION
Immediate possession on
th is home , 2 bedrooms, nice
kitchen and dining area ,
fireplace, hardwood floors ,
basement,

2 car

garage .

room , carpeted, paneled ,

tiled, slorage building , THIS
HOME IS IN FIRST CLASS
CONDITION. YOU MUST
SEE IT. $4.950.011.
t AIN'T
GOT NOBODY
Here's a house that' s not
new, needs paint inside. Has
new .s iding , new roof, new

carp ort. ·in good neigh borhood. and a steal at iust
$5,500 .011.

~&amp;A~,% WONI&gt;ER ~OW
HE'S MAI&lt;tNS OUT AS
ACTING ·PRES.II&gt;ENT

0

·Wheel Alignment·

$5.55

I

On Most Amori~.l!...~
-GUARANTEE~

Phone 992-2094

~
eE

ON HER WAY TO HER
f'"IRST.!&gt;AY AT SCHOOL

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

THE STUDENT
'WHO'S R\J\1-JED

Open Hill
Monday thru S.turdoy
606 E. M&lt;ltn, Pomoroy, Q. _

SRE !IEARO THE CALL

OF THE WOLF·PACK-

OUR PERFECT

ATTEND.ANCE.
RECORDRJR'

y

IO'l'EAAS··

clean , oil , set ten sion $4.99.

A

Special Electro -Grande
Company. Phone 99'1-6517.
S-21 -lfc

Con~t Jssociale

VERA EBLEN
w2.'J020
..
160 Coat St,
Middleport
2 · B. R.

RUTLAND
modern home,·

comp lete ly furnished on
large fenced lot, !":~~rage ,

SIB,OOO.
3 B. R. home, re cenfly
completed refi nished inside
on lf• acres, Sll.SOO.

2112 MILES from Rutland, 1
room , 1 floor plan home,
bath, furnace on 111• acre

ground $10,000.

1 MILE from Bypass. 3 b.r.
all-electric home on 3 acres.

Sl8,900.
MIDDLEPORT
S. SE &lt;;,OND Avenue, 3 b.r ..
b&lt;lth, full basement, gas
furnace, carport, very nice

$21,01)(1,

7 ROOMS. bath. garage on
la1,e private lot, S7,95Q.

160 Coal Street - Also
location of the Middleport C
of C office .

SEPTIC tanks cte•ned. Mttler
Sanltailon, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-tfc

J.&lt;AVe YOU seeN
THAT DEADBeAT
SYLVESTER?
WHIORE1D Hii 60?

COMPLETE Mobile Home
Service; also roof seal , underpinning &amp; awnings,
Richard A. Shuler, phone 949·
4567.
4·22-61c

.MEliN· ITS 1HAT ~E nlf'l' AGAIN 1
YVHII.E- WARDEN.• THE~ IN CEI.L
__,.._,
OLOCK 'C' ARE: REFUS/Ne 10 GO
'TO DINNER . IT LOOKS LIKE A

HIIN6£R .?TRIKE!

SEWING MA&lt;.HtNES. Repair
service, all makes. 992·2~.
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-tfc.
READY -MIX
CONCRETE \
delivered right to your
pro/eel. Fast and easy . Free
esl mates. Phone 992·3284
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.
Middleport, Ohto.
.
6·30-tfc

.

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

'

O' DELL WHEEL alignment
located al Crossroads, Rt. 12A.
Complete front end service,'
tune up and brake service.
Wheels balanced etec·
Ironically .
All
work
guaranteed.
Reasonable
rates. Phone 992-3213.
7-27-tfc
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?

Lost

your

operator's" license? C..tt 992·
2966.
.• 6·15-tfc
3-BEDROOM frame with E1sE"'E!!"T0715~FO"'R~r.:•A:::w=nr.:lng=•;-· i torm .
WATCH THIS SPACE FOR
garage and 112 ba'sementl
doors and windows, carports,
REALTY VALUES.
Weatherman
Addition ,
marqueesj aluminum siding
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
Tuppers Plains. Ohio; phone and railing. A. Jacob, sales
REALTOR
667-3643; pri ced on Inspection . represenlallve . For free .
PHONE 992-221!
6·23·31p estlmales, phone Char les
----'
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V
Johnson and Son, Inc.
3·2-lfc ,

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

LEGAL NOTICE
lEADING CREEK
CONSERVANCY DISTRICT

110 Mechanic Street

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
NEW LISTING
RUTLAND - S rooms . bath. gas heat. some paneling.

furnace, and · semi-modern kitchen . 40 acre.s of hay. All

minerals. $21,000.00.
NEW LISTING
POMEROY - 3 bedroom slucco home, balh, targel;ving
with fireplace and book shelves . Nice front porch. Futt
basement. New gas forced airfurnace. Large side yard . 2
car garage and l -ear space In basement. Close-in for

$21,000.011.

BIG THINGS ARE GOING TO HAPPEN HERE SOON.
BUY NOW WHILE THINGS ARE REASONABLE . WE
HAVE SOME GOOD PROPERTIES FOR YOU TO SEE.

PROPOSED OFFICIAL
LEClAL NOTICE
TO All PER SONS, PUBLIC
COR PORAT\ONS
AND
AGENCIES OF THE STATE
GOVERNMENT
IN ·
TERESTED :
Public notice Is hertby given :
( H On the lOitL day of
December, 1966, there was
created a public body known as
the Lead ing Cretk Conservlncy
District by virtue of an Entry of
the Common Pleu Court of
Meigs County, Oh ioj Case No.
14,004: which said Conservancy
District was created pursuant
to the prov isions and authority
of Title 6101 Ohio Revised Code .
U) Pursuant to the provisions
of Section 6101 of the Ohio
Revised Code and specifically
Secllon 6101 . 13 thereof notluls
hereby GIVen of lhe completion
of the proposed official plan. 1
copy of Which plan Is· In the
Office of the Clerk of the
Common Pleas court ol Meigs
County, Oh io.
A copy ·of ·Uid plan is
avalleble lor Inspection by all
persons. public corporallons
and agenc ies of the state
government Interested.
The Board of the L..tldlng
Creek Conservancy District will
provide copies of the plan to any
Interested party at ttle cost

ACROSS
I. Divan
5. Yarn for
embroi·

manner

L,..----~------~ 14. Throw or

shoot
(poetic )
15. Confeder·
ate soldier
16. Account·
ant's
abbre·
viation
17. Women's

-.

.-.... ' •.. : ..... _

..

.Jo. _. . ..

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

u:My

Sister

Eileen"

group
(abbr.)
18. Servant's
uniform
' 20. Spire

(2.wds.)
9. Prisoner
on the run

. J&amp;WOO~;-IJ.J ··-•t.I-J,_
Unoeramble theH four Jumbles,
one lelltr to eath ICiuan, to
form four ordlnorr wordo.

j
·=-=c.::1K I 0

I RUYLB
10. More
cautious

16. Curve
19. Swerve
22. Prehis·

to ric

25. Greek
township
27. Stuffed
29. Screen
30. Devoured
34. "A Doll'ii

mound

I EGGOR

I I

House"

m

heroine
23. Islands In
the West 36. Girl's.
nickname
Indies
37. Ceylonese
24. Ham
export
it up

'IOU CAN FeEl.. 'Tl-itS

M

NOT GE.T rT!

ornament

21. Cozy

rooms

22. Corner ·
%3. Fore·
shadowed
:15. Postpone
· 2&amp;. Anever· .
ate
27. Llama
land
28. Biddy
Z9. Try
~!. Jeann e

d' 32. Cyprinoid
fish
33. Dress
leather
35. Posted
37. Caesar's
II

1'1 ' ' ' 1"'1

all''

38. At work
39. Pitcher
40. Fashioned

41. -

Christie

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

r

.

..

~

version of

patriotic

thereof .

RUTlAND FURNITU~E.

DOWN
1. Headline
2. Bay
window
3. A Nixon
tourist
stop In
Peking
(2 wds.)
4. Classifteds
5. Reaitzes a
profit
6. Get better
7. Last
Spanish
queen
B. Musical

dery
11. Trampled
12. Woolly
13. Affected

------

..

..
.

PLAN

Aluminum

The
Daly Sentinel

FJ.(}()REP ff!

'it

For Sale

21r

COlT

EXPERT

SEWING MACHINE service.

gas forced air heat, full
S14,900&gt;.oo.
TAKES HONORS
FOR SNUGNESS .
2 bedrooms. bath, dining

ARtI&gt;,

1'11 . 992 ·;:.21;:.7•....:......;......:~..c:•_m..c:•_ro:..:y_.

5-12-ftc

...

LIT'S ~OP IN
Ali l'llOFE$SOR.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

.,
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates . Ph. 446·
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,

I

Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallesl Heater Core.
'Nolhon li91s
Rodlotar Spt•iott•t

I Clor;EP MY EYE'5 ANt:&gt;

K~ wHAT WENT WRONG.
1 .MERGED 'MTH lHE FRE£\\I&lt;l\Y
~IC UKE I /li.WA'IS 001 .0FFtCER.

From the largest

(3) Hearing on the objections
50 x 10 MOBILE home ; priced
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
to said plan will be held at 10 rOO
PUREBRED Hereford bull, 3 reasonably; call Chester 985A.M. on l~t 2Bih . day of Julv.
years old ; also 1960 Dodge ; 3379.
1972, In ·the Common Pleas
6-21 -6tp
phone 992-2307 .
RACINE - 10 room house, Court Room at the Court House
2
BEDROOM
house
at
313
6-23-3tp
bath, basement, garage, lwp In Pomeroy , Oh1o.
Condor Sl., full basement.
School . Phone 985 -3329.
All oblectlons to said plan
CASH
paid
for
all
makes
and
lois.
Phone 9&lt;49-4.113.
forced air furnace; phone 992·
C. 0 . Newland , SMALL inare pony with fitly
Sh8111 be In writing and flied wltll
models
of
mobile
homes
.
4-5-lfp the Secretary of tht Leading
2792 .
Clerk
colt ; phone 99'1·2990 or 992· Phone area code 41~·&lt;123 ·9531.
--....C..161 19, 26 171 3, 31
6-25-Jtc
Creek Conservancy District at'
2759.
~ · 13 · tfc
MUST sett al once, 383 N. 3rd his office In Rutland, Oh1o, not
6·23-3tc ---~--·
St ., Mlddleporl ; 2 story more than lwenty dtys after the
HOUSE, s rooms and bath, 3
frame , 3 bedrooms, 1'12 baths, last publlcaflon ot this notice .
bedrooms, attached Q_arage,
new double garage, new
POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy;
storm wlhdows and doors,
.
LEADING CREEK
Park view Kennels, Phone 992·
storm windows and doors; 2
forced air furnace on tot 7S x
• Air Conditioners
CONSERVANCY DISTRICT
porches
,
·
Ideal
location
;
5443.
100, located on Stale Route 7
-·Awnings
asking $12,900 - make us an
8-15·tfC
at Cheshire, Ohio. Price
BY JACK W. CRISP ,
offer . Cleland Rea tty, phone
• Underpinning .
reduced for quick sale, owner
PRESIDENT
36" X 23" X .009
992-2259.
161 19, 26 171 5, 3t
leaving slate. Catt 367-7A28
1965 CHEVROLET Supersporl.
6·2Hic
white with black Inferior, b. Complete mobile home
after 4 p.m.
~ '
6-26-2tc
seats, 283 4 bbl .. auto., tlkt service - plus gigantic
new tires. Ph. 992-5997:·
'display ol mobile homes -----..:lo~
RAC/NE -'- 6room house, bath,
6-21 -6 always available al ...
utittty room . garage, $10,000;
COAL. Limestone, Excetslilr ·
phone 94HI9S.
":iio~o· operotlor
MILLER
,....
•
of wttor,
Salt Works. E. Main St.,
3-31-lfc
t1mps,
A.Utll.
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891 .
MOBILE
HOMES
water
11ve.1
USED OFFSET PLATES
4-12-lfc
cont'r'ol . " Unl
HAY&amp;.
•1220 WuhlngtGn Blvd.
·FIIttr o" Powe,
·MANY USES
BELPRE, 0.
.F!n ,logllalor.
TWIN Needle sewing machine 423-7521
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
· ,..,.olli-l'rui
1971 model tn walnut sl,nd. ~--------.....J
Coso No. lG.6'0
Moyt11
All features buftt.\n to make
Eslltt al Rae• D. Hill ,
Hlllol Hill
fancy designs and do stretch Real Estal.t ( .
Dtctued.
Dryers
· ·
Notice Is hereby glveh that
sewing . Also bullonhotes,
Surround clothta
8 lor Sl.OO
blind hems etc. $-13.35 cash IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCHO. Edno Hill ol Route 1,
1rlth eontlt, t'hn
Langsville, Ohio, nas be•n duly
price or terms available. Lake Conchas, New Mextco. appointed
hRt; No hot 111011
u
EJ~.ecutrlx of the
$2,875. No Down . No Interest. Estate of Race o . Hill ,
•• ovordrylng
·Phone 992 · 56~1.
Flnt -..h Lint
6-22·6tc S25 mo. Vacation Paradise. dectased , 11te of Meigs County,
l'llltr.
Money
Maker .
Free OhiO.
.
we~llft .. to
VACUUM CLEANER . Eledro Brochure. Ranchos: Box
Crta1tors ere required to file
MA'I"I'A• ·
Hygiene New Otmonstralor 1001DD. Alamejla. California their claims With said fiduciary
llt141.
Clr"'
,' .
wl,hln four months .
.
has all cleaning attachments 94501 .
.
• .....c.
Deled
this
ftti
day
ol
June,
ptus the new Electro Suds for
6-7·30tp 1972.
ohampoolng cerpel . Only
Ill Court St.
JOHN C. BACON
$27.50 cash price. or terms HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
Judge
Pomeroy,
,
Ohio
985
·
35~.
available. Phone "Z.S6A1.
.
Court of Common Pteu.
;742-4211
Arnold Gr Itt
Rutland.
. ·.·· ' "
PrDbllt Dlvlslor
4·22-6tc -----~-....:..6·.:..11:..::·tfc
\6) 12. 19.26

Sheets

.,

End loader work,

MIDDLEPORT
RENOVIITED - 3 bedrooms, bath, charming breakfast
• nook . utility room. nice kitchen. Lovely front porch .
Q)tbulldlng for storage.
15 ACRES
INDUSTRIAL SITE - Located on two rail tines. Access to
the Ottio River and Route 7.
97 ACRES
EASTERN SCHOOL DISTRICT - Hill larm for beef
cattle. 8 room modest home. Has modern bath, coat

HOUSE , unfurnished , 1 rooms
wllh bath and laundry room ;
1., duplex. att
newly 1963 PONTIAC Tempest, A

LEGAl

and co'i nmel"clal . roofing;

&amp;

6·2l-2tp

Car, references, and $995 to
cash capital neceuary .
4 to 12 hours weekly could nel
good part time income. Full
time more. For local in -

The Eastern Local Board of
Education will receive bids, lor
Dairy
Products,
Bakery
Products. Gasoline &amp; Fuel OiL
School Bus Tires , and School
Bus Insurance .
Bldswillbeopenedon July 11 ,
1972. at 8:00P .M . at the Eutern
H lgh School.
For any further Information,
contact the Eastern High

We specialize In alumlnom ,
vinyl and steel siding;
fiberglas, brick and stoiiei
complete line of residential

Dozer

ponds, baJement, landscaping. we have 2 size
dozers, 2 siie toaclers. Work
done .by hour or contract."

Front porch, util ity building, garage, and garden . Near
grade school.

bath ; 2 bedroom mobile
ton pickup , runs
home: trailer space : store 1962 CHEV.
good, SIOII ; 2 1957 Chev. - 2
room 30 )( 60 : 3 miles south
Middleport on Rl . 7, M &amp; G dr. and 4 dr ., S50 for both ;

establish accounts for you .
$1 ,~.5

Mtc;iHT DO 'IE A WORLD
0'600D IF IIE'D START
COMiN'TO
PAW

EARTH MOVING

tires, in excellent condition ;

UNFURNISHED 4 rooms &amp;

MAN OR WOMAN . Reliable

ONLY $13,750

Auto Sales

phone 773-5119.

Ow.-.' ,

person from

Economy Tiller, 31 2 h.p. B&amp;S
engine. Reg . 159.95
144.95

'·• • - Juk W. Carsey , Mgr.
Syracuse , nice location,
...
Phone 992 -7181
furnished , phone 992 -244 1 ' - - - -- - - - ---'
after 5 p.m .

HEATING &amp;
COOLING
Window

Busine~s

MOWERS
&amp; TILLERS

1 BEDROOM modular home ln

992 -2448

The Friendly Neighbor Club
mel at the home of Mrs. Ray
Midkiff this month with 11
members present.
A potluck lunch was served
at noop . All had a nice time
visiting. They also had a short
program . The next meeting
will be with Mrs . Carl
Shenefield.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Tompson of
Medina, Ohio were overnight
guests al the home or her
sister, Mr. and Mrs. ·Marvin
Wilson and her mother, Mrs.
Effie Hoosier.
The sale or ~r . and Mrs.
Harry F. Erh!wine was well
allended . The Erlewines had
b&lt;mght property in Marion:
Ohio and moved that day as
soon as sale was over and they
could get away .
Miss Clemma Vale Cardington was visiting her
cousin, Mrs. John Holliday,
recently. She was also a guest
wilh Mr. and Mrs. Lauren
Huffman, also attended the
Colun1bia banquet which is
nuw held at Albany .
Mr •. and Mrs. Jack Nelson
have·been spending a few days
at the farm here. They were
supper guesls one evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Wilson.
Mrs . Frank Rinehart . is
visiting her brother and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Howard
(Junior) Pond.
Mr . and Mrs . Robert
McKinney of Helena, Ohio and
his sister, Mrs. Clyde Pritt of
Akron were calling at the
Blanche Nelson home recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Corin Smith
and Cathy and Susan of
Columbus were visiting her
parents, Mr. and Ml'!l. Marvin
Wilson. Cathy and Susan
st.yed for a week's visit with
their grandparents.
Mrs . Anna Ogdin has
returned from a tour through
Europe. Mr. and Mra. Ralph
Ward or Columbua returnee!'
home with her fOr a short visit.

For Sale or Trade

~

For Reni

Plumbing

Old Salem

SPECIAL

SAVE up to one half. Bring yoor QUARTER horse ; phone 742·
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
3418.
151 Butternut Ave .• Pomeroy.
6·21-6tc
4-4-tfc

"HEll"

3 Bedroom home, with
brick front, 1 car
garage, carpeting.
Priced at ..

dependable. Call 446-ll&lt;!77, 9 EVERY day is Bargain Day for BACKHOE AND OOZER work.
a.m. to 5:30 p.m., Monday, clean, used furniture, ar.Seplic tanks installed. George
Tuesday and Wednesday .
pllances
at
KUHL S
(Bill I Pullins. Phone 992·2478.
6-25-3tc BARGAIN CENTER, Rt. 7
4-25-tfc
"at lhe caution light," Tup.
pers Plains, Ohio. Qpen to 6
r'

OLD tobacco cans and tobacco CAMPER. 16 fl . sleeps 6, good
Notice
tabs ; watch fobs ; political cond&lt;llon. $1.000. Phone 992·
items
(badges. etc .), phone 6329.
TWIN CITY CAB CO. - This is
~7 - 7433 or write John Veith,
S-12-tfc
a non -profit organization. we
Cheshire, Ohio .
didn't
plan
it
lhat
way.
but
It
NOTICE OF SALE
6·25-3tp
is ,
The real estate or the late
George W. Moore and Ruth E .
6-25-2tp

Moore, both deceased , situate In
the Village of Middleport , In 100
Acre Lot No 309. and being
located on the Bradbury Road
11 the top of the hill near the
R81dlo Station , the property
belno
more
particularly
described In Vol. 117 , Page 20, of
the Deed Records of Meigs
County, Oh io, will be offered for
sal~ attn~ pfflces of C,row , Crow
&amp; Porter, Attorn~y s at Law ,
Pomeroy , Ohio. at 1:00 P.M . on
Friday, July 7th ., 1972. This
property Is tppralsed at
13,100.00 and cannot be sold for
len tn.an tne appr.alsed Value .
Terms of sale are cash , and the
property will be SOld sublect to
the l ien for real estate ta xes for
1972.

HE JEST THOLJGHT IT

Business Services

E YEGLASSB in Middi•Porl. BEAUTIFUL Maple Early

.,,,eo.

Of
IUALITY

kitchen and dining area . Phone
992-738• or m .7133.
6-26-31c

For Rent

Pomeroy

2

total electric apart·

ment, 1 bedroom, walk · in
closets, large living room .

I NEED AT

LeAST FOUR\

f" IU $· ;; l ~ -

Lost

Help Wanted

k)?W

AXYDLBAAXR
.
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply st1ncfo for 1n(\lher. In this umple A it
used for the three L's, X for the two O'a, etc. Sin1le !etten,
opostropbes, the Jen&amp;th and formation of th~ words are all
bmts. Each day the cD4e !etten 1re different.
ctYPTOQUOTB8 ,
SLVJV

·c

ALVJV

TD

WP

.the lazy dof.
1

KTDTPW 1
HVPHRV ' HVJTDL.-JCRHL SCRZP

VBVJDPW
SllurdQ'a Crypteqaele: VIRTUE MUsT BE VALUABU:,.
IF MEN AND WOMEN OF ALL DE&amp;REES PRETEND TO .
HAVE lT.-ED HOWE
·

o.

Now is the tlme for all
-foxes to jump over

·

---f===:;:::;L_.J

(0 li72ltinr Feat•1nt S7•dieate, lnc.)

•

•
\

I

..

�r

. , _... ,j, ..,....
J' 1 .. •

F

•

l--o' .,, .,_ ..,.

,., 1· , .

,

..- .lt il" to-

,"" "

f ,/

" · · ··~ '" .....
• -

rl ' - ... "''

~

..

..

. . ..

~

...

'

..

,;:-

'

' ',...

I - Thdlaily Sentinel. Middleport·Ponll'l'llY, 0., June 26, 11172 ~

Sentinel Classifieds ·Get Action! Sentinel.C~ssifieds Get Results!
NEW -

WANTED - Woman to work af
.,. Midway Market immediately.
Call 992-2565&gt;or come In person.
6-26-3tc

•
\.

BY ADA SLACK
SYRACUSE
Brenda
Lawrence of ·Portland spent
.two days with Elva Dailey.
Mrs. Fred Boyd and Mandy,
uf Parkersburg spent from
Wednesday until SWlday wiU1
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
William Eichinger and John .
Mr. and Mrs. Roy-Icenhower
and son, Eddie, of East
Uverpoolspenta week with his
sister and brother-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Jeffers.
Mr . and Mrs . Richard
Weaver, son Phil, and her
uncle, C. T. Norris, of l.A!Iart
Fallsspenta weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. L. T. Nonis at Rome,
Ind. While there the 50th
wedding anniversary of the
latter, Mr. and Mrs·. Norris,
~d• celebrated. The Mr.
Norrises are twin brothers.
Mrs. Albert Mumaw and
granddaughter, Mary Ann
Sterr of Mingo JuncU~n. and
Mr. and Mrs. James Mumaw
and daughter, Debra, of
Monroe, Mich. spent a Thursday with their aunt, Frankie
Mumaw.
·
Mrs. Agnes White spent four
days with her son and
daughter-In-law, Mr. 11/ld Mrs.
James ft. White and Mary lleth
of Dunbar, W.Va.
Mrs. Thelma Reitmire of
New Haven, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Grueser of Five Points
were Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. George Grueser.
Visiting a weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Ross Norris were Mr.
and Mrs. l.A!ster Howard of
Akron.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Pickens,
Cheryl and Randy, of Toledo
visited her P-'•nts, Howard
Largent, a patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital and Mrs .
Howard Largent.
James Gulnsler of Lancaster
visited with Mr. Richard Duck·
worth and sister, Mrs . Agnes
While.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Duckworth spent four days with his
son and daughter-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Max Duckworth and
family at Alliance.
Mrs. Doyle Gibbs and Doyle,
Jr. and Randy of Parkersburg
spent Sunday with her parents,
Mr . and Mrs. William
Eichinger and John .
Mr. and Mrs. William Brown
spent a weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Rood of Wes~rvUie .
The Rev. Ralph Hudson of
Portsmouth spent Saturday
with his mother, Mrs. Myla
Hudson.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Autherson
of Long Bottom Route and Mrs.
Judy Pape and Kristen spent
Father's Day with Mrs. Elva
Dailey.
Richard Duckworth and
sister, _Agnes While, accumpanied Mr. and Mrs. Emil
Eynun and Mr . and Mrs.
Danny. Eynon of Nease Settlement to Holzer Hospital
where they visited Mr. Reed
Eynon. They went on to the
fairgrounds to attend the
Citizens Band Radi~ Club
jamboree.
Mrs. Clinton Pierce and Tina
and Mrs . Thelma Grueser
visited Sunday wllh Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Pierce and Mr. and
Mrs . Jack Grueser and
families of Mason .
• Mr. Don Cottrill has returned
1&lt;1 his home after a Sl!iy in
Veterans Memorial Hospilal.
Glfto to lncilaftl
Long before the first of·
flclal inaugural medal was
Issued to commemorate a
' president, the U.S. Mint
struck Indian Peace Medals,
now known as the Presi·
dentlal Series, and early
presidents gave these medals
to Indian chiefs as tokens of
friendship.

We bA to JOU
lilletpeiSOO.

WMP0/1390
011 ·YOUI DIAL

· EITiployP'It"&lt; '' .
WILL paint roots or houses,
tri!"t'' and cut tree~ : clean

attics ;

·•

WAITRESS, apply in person,

,.

Crow ' ~ Steak

· white wall 1\res. radio.

·t'PMI!IOY, OHIO

WITH

OZ.ITE
CARPET TILES
Shags, Patterns, Plain
IN STOCK AT

Carpet-Land, Inc.
116W. ~Min

Pome-roy

992-7590
lEGAL NOTICE
Sall3bury Township Trustees
offer ror sale one 1962 Inti.
Truck with Dum1:1 bed and holst .
True~ may be Inspected at
Town,hlp
Building , Rock
Oh io.

Bids will be received until
Thursday, July 13. 1972 at 7:30
p.m . at Township Bldg ., Rock
Springs, Oh io.
Terms of Sale : Cash a t tlrne
of ule.
Richard Bailey
Clerk of Salisbury Twp .
I6J a . u., 01 J , Jt

style ,

budget terms . Call 992-7085.
6-22-6/c

battery pack; phone 992-2792.
6·22-6tc
REGISTERED

Tennessee

Walking Horse. mares and
fillies; Charles King, between
Harrison and Dexter; phone

In

'142·5870.

Syracuse
Ph. 992·2156

INFORMATION
. DEADLINES
5 P .M . Day Before Publication .
Monday Deadline 9 a .m .
Cancellation - Correc t ions
Will be accepted until 9 a .m . for
Day of Publication
R EClUlATIONS
The ~ Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed
objectional .
The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect
insertion .
RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one Insertion
Minimum Charge 7Sc
12 cents per word three
consecut ive Insertions .
18 cents per word Sill con secutive insertions .
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days .
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S1 .SO tor SO word minimum .
Each additionlll word 2c .
BLIND ADS
Additional 1Sc Charge per
Advertisement .
.
'OFFICE HOURS
8:30a .m . to 5:00p .m . Daily ,
8 ; 30 a .m . to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday .

Modern

hand set, solid state , 23
channels, 5 watts, with extra

Sentinel Carrier

WANT ADS

budget lerms. C..if 992-711115.
6·22-61c

GMC pickup, 8 ft . bed ; 1
6-20-&amp;tc 1963
Demeo-Revelle 23 channel CB
radio. 1 Courier Clipper 23

Wanted!

®

~~~,.i ~!' Co.

Do It Yourself

House.

$1995

LTO Coupe, 390 v-8 engine, J-speed, automatic, power
steering, power brakH, factory air. grey finish. Good

speaker sound system. 4
speed automatic changer ,
Balance $76 .39 : Use our

stereo-radio, 4 speaker sound
sy_s tem. 4 speed ·automatic
changer. separate contr"ots.
Balance $62.34. Us.e our

Help Wanted

$1995

American style. stereo-radio

comblnailon. AM· FM radio, A

efc . WALNUT ,

SALE PRICED - AREAL BUY!

Hardtop coupe , V-8 ef'\9lne. autOmatic transmission,
power steering &amp; brakes, white finish,. black vinyl top.
vinyl Interior, white wall tires , like ne~ , radio.

Springs,

basements.

Phone 9'49 322 1.

guards. go~d finish with bl_ack vinyl roof, covert vinyl
interior. Used less tha11S.OOO miles. as Driver' s Fd car .

1969 FORO

News, Society

6·25 31&lt;

brakes, Turbahydramatic, radio, wheel covers. bumper

mo FORD GALAXIESOO

Syracuse

RewMd , Ed Bak er , phone 99'1

3301 or 99'1-2642.

1971 CHEYROLH BELAIR
$3950
A door sedan, factory air 1 V-8 engine, power steering &amp;

·.

.
6-25-3tc

2 L-60-14 MICKEY Thompson
t i res,

The Daily Sentinel

pr-iced

rea sonable:

phone 949-4989.

6·25-Jtp

'-----------'

DELIVERY
DRIVER SALES

1952 CHEVY 112 ton pickup ; all

12 YOUNG men and women
needed immediately for
salary position . $3.50 per
house .
No
experience
necessary. must be neat and

new tires, $120; good work
horse. weighs about 1.200 lbs.,

$150 ; phone Chester 985.-4180
after 5 p.m.
5-25-4tp

Anna M . Ryther ,

Adm inistratr ix of the
Estate or George w. Moore ,

Deceased .
Crow. Crow &amp; Porter ,
Attorneys for Admin istratrix

161 26 171 3, 21

KOSCOT KOSMETICS: Several
new products - specials each
month ; also sales personnel

needed. Phone 992-5113 .
6-6-ttc

p.m .; closed Mondays . Phone

Wanteti To Buy

667-Jll58.

OLD FURNITURE, dishes,
6·25-6tc
clocks, brass beds, silver . .- - - - - - - - dollars
or
comp\ele TWO wheel utility lraller 5· 11 .
households. Write M. D. racks. $70; Coleman lhree
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.

Call 99'1-6271.

burner camp stove, like new,

----~----

$15; Coleman fiame\ess camp
heater. 5,000 BTU. new $15 ; I
L.P. gas lank· for travel

USED

water

trailer, newS 10; phone 985-

pump, phone 742-3263.
6·26-3tp

6·15-41p

J-16-llc

submersib l e

4140 ·

Social Notes

1966 CHEVROLET. 1,

lon

pickup, 61 1 tt . bed, standard ;

phone 992-6547.
6-23-31c

Turf Trim· Mower, B&amp;S 31/'.1
h.p . engine . In carton
70.25

POMEROY

wc Marine Sales

6 ._
1
_______

3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and 16 FT. FIBERGLAS boat with
unfurnished

apartments .

Phone 992-5&lt;134.
A-12-llc

40 h.p.-outboard motor ; with
com plete accessories ; phone

992-350'1.

6-25-3\c
2 BEDROOM trailer. adults
only, Bob's Mobile Court. 32 FT. HOUSEBOAT, &lt;10 h.p.
phone 992-2951.
outboard motor and trailer;
6-13-lfc wi ll sell reasonable . Phone
- -- - - - 992-7157 or see at 28A Railroad
UNFURNISHED apartment, 51 .• Middleport.
6·20-6tc
134 Mulberr.v Ave ., phone 9"'2 ·
3962 .
6-11 -ttc

Air Conditioners
Hot Water Heaters
Electrical Work

ARNOLD ·
BROTHERS

- ------

Pomeroy, 0 .
---'

12 X 40, 2 BEDROOM mobile 1970 MERCURY Monterey,
home. located In Rutland, power steering, power
phone 742·5641.
brakes, air shocks and new
6·2S-6tc

this area

to

service and collect from

automatic dispensers . No
experience needed .
We

v.

Fodd Market.

6·23-3tp.

Phone 1-30•-773:5365, Mason,
W. Va. , belwelin 4 p.m . and 7
p.m.
6·25-2tp

terview, write : (lnct.ude
telephone nomber) EAGLE
INDUSTRIES, Dept. BV, 3938
Meadowbrook Road, St. Louis
Park, Minn. 55A26.
4·24·2tp

Furnished sleeping room with $150. Phone 992-7204.
bath ; phone 992·2780 or 992· _________6_ ·_
23-6tp
3432.
6-22-6tc 1971 THJiNOERBtRO, 2 door
Landau, at\ power, AM·FM·
BE DRDOM
furnished Stereo radio, air·condltloned.
man)l edras, 9,000 actual
apartment between Pomeroy
miles ; call 773-5323, John
&amp; Athens, 580 per month ;
McMurray, Mason .
phone 675-1684; also trailer
space .
6·21 -6\p
6-20-61p

NOTIC~

remodeled, wall -to -wall
carpeting , rooms and bath ;

s

cylinde r , automatic , good
running condition, good fires,

Mobile·Homes For Sale

Fnt Sol•.

BALL5 .0' FIRE~!

..

I WU2. THAR .

Tt-1REE TIMES
LAST MONTH!!

remodeling,
building ,
suspended ceilings, interior
and

exterior

painting;

complete line of Masonry
work. All work guaranteed to

customer s:atisfacllon. We
are fully Insured for your

protection. 32 N. 2nd. 9923918.
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR. CO.
.~.::...

tft! ' "C.'
I, ,,I

Free Eslimates. We also
haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump
trucks and low-boy for hire.

See Bob or Roger Jtlfers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525 .
aller 7 p.m. or phone 992·
5l32.

Owner &amp; Operator .

.

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
t I J
, t- -~~...J
Phone 949·3821
Racine, Ohio
.
Crill
Bradford
DOZER and back hoe work .
pondsand septic tanks ; B &amp; K _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _5_
· 1-tfc
Excavating, Phone 992- ~367 ,
Dick Karr, Jr.

5-21 -lfc

Real Estate For Sale

HARRISON'S TV Service, open
9 a.m. to 9 p.m. ; free pickup
and delivery ; phone 992-2522.
6·13-tfc

Re~l

Estate For Sale

CLELAND

REALTY

POMEROY
FOR THE FAMILY
Near shopping, playground,
and swimming pool, 5
bedrooms, Jlh baths, dining
room, nice kitchen, garage

and carport. $12,800.00.
A·l CONDITION
Immediate possession on
th is home , 2 bedrooms, nice
kitchen and dining area ,
fireplace, hardwood floors ,
basement,

2 car

garage .

room , carpeted, paneled ,

tiled, slorage building , THIS
HOME IS IN FIRST CLASS
CONDITION. YOU MUST
SEE IT. $4.950.011.
t AIN'T
GOT NOBODY
Here's a house that' s not
new, needs paint inside. Has
new .s iding , new roof, new

carp ort. ·in good neigh borhood. and a steal at iust
$5,500 .011.

~&amp;A~,% WONI&gt;ER ~OW
HE'S MAI&lt;tNS OUT AS
ACTING ·PRES.II&gt;ENT

0

·Wheel Alignment·

$5.55

I

On Most Amori~.l!...~
-GUARANTEE~

Phone 992-2094

~
eE

ON HER WAY TO HER
f'"IRST.!&gt;AY AT SCHOOL

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

THE STUDENT
'WHO'S R\J\1-JED

Open Hill
Monday thru S.turdoy
606 E. M&lt;ltn, Pomoroy, Q. _

SRE !IEARO THE CALL

OF THE WOLF·PACK-

OUR PERFECT

ATTEND.ANCE.
RECORDRJR'

y

IO'l'EAAS··

clean , oil , set ten sion $4.99.

A

Special Electro -Grande
Company. Phone 99'1-6517.
S-21 -lfc

Con~t Jssociale

VERA EBLEN
w2.'J020
..
160 Coat St,
Middleport
2 · B. R.

RUTLAND
modern home,·

comp lete ly furnished on
large fenced lot, !":~~rage ,

SIB,OOO.
3 B. R. home, re cenfly
completed refi nished inside
on lf• acres, Sll.SOO.

2112 MILES from Rutland, 1
room , 1 floor plan home,
bath, furnace on 111• acre

ground $10,000.

1 MILE from Bypass. 3 b.r.
all-electric home on 3 acres.

Sl8,900.
MIDDLEPORT
S. SE &lt;;,OND Avenue, 3 b.r ..
b&lt;lth, full basement, gas
furnace, carport, very nice

$21,01)(1,

7 ROOMS. bath. garage on
la1,e private lot, S7,95Q.

160 Coal Street - Also
location of the Middleport C
of C office .

SEPTIC tanks cte•ned. Mttler
Sanltailon, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-tfc

J.&lt;AVe YOU seeN
THAT DEADBeAT
SYLVESTER?
WHIORE1D Hii 60?

COMPLETE Mobile Home
Service; also roof seal , underpinning &amp; awnings,
Richard A. Shuler, phone 949·
4567.
4·22-61c

.MEliN· ITS 1HAT ~E nlf'l' AGAIN 1
YVHII.E- WARDEN.• THE~ IN CEI.L
__,.._,
OLOCK 'C' ARE: REFUS/Ne 10 GO
'TO DINNER . IT LOOKS LIKE A

HIIN6£R .?TRIKE!

SEWING MA&lt;.HtNES. Repair
service, all makes. 992·2~.
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-tfc.
READY -MIX
CONCRETE \
delivered right to your
pro/eel. Fast and easy . Free
esl mates. Phone 992·3284
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.
Middleport, Ohto.
.
6·30-tfc

.

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

'

O' DELL WHEEL alignment
located al Crossroads, Rt. 12A.
Complete front end service,'
tune up and brake service.
Wheels balanced etec·
Ironically .
All
work
guaranteed.
Reasonable
rates. Phone 992-3213.
7-27-tfc
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?

Lost

your

operator's" license? C..tt 992·
2966.
.• 6·15-tfc
3-BEDROOM frame with E1sE"'E!!"T0715~FO"'R~r.:•A:::w=nr.:lng=•;-· i torm .
WATCH THIS SPACE FOR
garage and 112 ba'sementl
doors and windows, carports,
REALTY VALUES.
Weatherman
Addition ,
marqueesj aluminum siding
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
Tuppers Plains. Ohio; phone and railing. A. Jacob, sales
REALTOR
667-3643; pri ced on Inspection . represenlallve . For free .
PHONE 992-221!
6·23·31p estlmales, phone Char les
----'
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V
Johnson and Son, Inc.
3·2-lfc ,

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

LEGAL NOTICE
lEADING CREEK
CONSERVANCY DISTRICT

110 Mechanic Street

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
NEW LISTING
RUTLAND - S rooms . bath. gas heat. some paneling.

furnace, and · semi-modern kitchen . 40 acre.s of hay. All

minerals. $21,000.00.
NEW LISTING
POMEROY - 3 bedroom slucco home, balh, targel;ving
with fireplace and book shelves . Nice front porch. Futt
basement. New gas forced airfurnace. Large side yard . 2
car garage and l -ear space In basement. Close-in for

$21,000.011.

BIG THINGS ARE GOING TO HAPPEN HERE SOON.
BUY NOW WHILE THINGS ARE REASONABLE . WE
HAVE SOME GOOD PROPERTIES FOR YOU TO SEE.

PROPOSED OFFICIAL
LEClAL NOTICE
TO All PER SONS, PUBLIC
COR PORAT\ONS
AND
AGENCIES OF THE STATE
GOVERNMENT
IN ·
TERESTED :
Public notice Is hertby given :
( H On the lOitL day of
December, 1966, there was
created a public body known as
the Lead ing Cretk Conservlncy
District by virtue of an Entry of
the Common Pleu Court of
Meigs County, Oh ioj Case No.
14,004: which said Conservancy
District was created pursuant
to the prov isions and authority
of Title 6101 Ohio Revised Code .
U) Pursuant to the provisions
of Section 6101 of the Ohio
Revised Code and specifically
Secllon 6101 . 13 thereof notluls
hereby GIVen of lhe completion
of the proposed official plan. 1
copy of Which plan Is· In the
Office of the Clerk of the
Common Pleas court ol Meigs
County, Oh io.
A copy ·of ·Uid plan is
avalleble lor Inspection by all
persons. public corporallons
and agenc ies of the state
government Interested.
The Board of the L..tldlng
Creek Conservancy District will
provide copies of the plan to any
Interested party at ttle cost

ACROSS
I. Divan
5. Yarn for
embroi·

manner

L,..----~------~ 14. Throw or

shoot
(poetic )
15. Confeder·
ate soldier
16. Account·
ant's
abbre·
viation
17. Women's

-.

.-.... ' •.. : ..... _

..

.Jo. _. . ..

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

u:My

Sister

Eileen"

group
(abbr.)
18. Servant's
uniform
' 20. Spire

(2.wds.)
9. Prisoner
on the run

. J&amp;WOO~;-IJ.J ··-•t.I-J,_
Unoeramble theH four Jumbles,
one lelltr to eath ICiuan, to
form four ordlnorr wordo.

j
·=-=c.::1K I 0

I RUYLB
10. More
cautious

16. Curve
19. Swerve
22. Prehis·

to ric

25. Greek
township
27. Stuffed
29. Screen
30. Devoured
34. "A Doll'ii

mound

I EGGOR

I I

House"

m

heroine
23. Islands In
the West 36. Girl's.
nickname
Indies
37. Ceylonese
24. Ham
export
it up

'IOU CAN FeEl.. 'Tl-itS

M

NOT GE.T rT!

ornament

21. Cozy

rooms

22. Corner ·
%3. Fore·
shadowed
:15. Postpone
· 2&amp;. Anever· .
ate
27. Llama
land
28. Biddy
Z9. Try
~!. Jeann e

d' 32. Cyprinoid
fish
33. Dress
leather
35. Posted
37. Caesar's
II

1'1 ' ' ' 1"'1

all''

38. At work
39. Pitcher
40. Fashioned

41. -

Christie

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

r

.

..

~

version of

patriotic

thereof .

RUTlAND FURNITU~E.

DOWN
1. Headline
2. Bay
window
3. A Nixon
tourist
stop In
Peking
(2 wds.)
4. Classifteds
5. Reaitzes a
profit
6. Get better
7. Last
Spanish
queen
B. Musical

dery
11. Trampled
12. Woolly
13. Affected

------

..

..
.

PLAN

Aluminum

The
Daly Sentinel

FJ.(}()REP ff!

'it

For Sale

21r

COlT

EXPERT

SEWING MACHINE service.

gas forced air heat, full
S14,900&gt;.oo.
TAKES HONORS
FOR SNUGNESS .
2 bedrooms. bath, dining

ARtI&gt;,

1'11 . 992 ·;:.21;:.7•....:......;......:~..c:•_m..c:•_ro:..:y_.

5-12-ftc

...

LIT'S ~OP IN
Ali l'llOFE$SOR.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

.,
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates . Ph. 446·
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,

I

Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallesl Heater Core.
'Nolhon li91s
Rodlotar Spt•iott•t

I Clor;EP MY EYE'5 ANt:&gt;

K~ wHAT WENT WRONG.
1 .MERGED 'MTH lHE FRE£\\I&lt;l\Y
~IC UKE I /li.WA'IS 001 .0FFtCER.

From the largest

(3) Hearing on the objections
50 x 10 MOBILE home ; priced
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
to said plan will be held at 10 rOO
PUREBRED Hereford bull, 3 reasonably; call Chester 985A.M. on l~t 2Bih . day of Julv.
years old ; also 1960 Dodge ; 3379.
1972, In ·the Common Pleas
6-21 -6tp
phone 992-2307 .
RACINE - 10 room house, Court Room at the Court House
2
BEDROOM
house
at
313
6-23-3tp
bath, basement, garage, lwp In Pomeroy , Oh1o.
Condor Sl., full basement.
School . Phone 985 -3329.
All oblectlons to said plan
CASH
paid
for
all
makes
and
lois.
Phone 9&lt;49-4.113.
forced air furnace; phone 992·
C. 0 . Newland , SMALL inare pony with fitly
Sh8111 be In writing and flied wltll
models
of
mobile
homes
.
4-5-lfp the Secretary of tht Leading
2792 .
Clerk
colt ; phone 99'1·2990 or 992· Phone area code 41~·&lt;123 ·9531.
--....C..161 19, 26 171 3, 31
6-25-Jtc
Creek Conservancy District at'
2759.
~ · 13 · tfc
MUST sett al once, 383 N. 3rd his office In Rutland, Oh1o, not
6·23-3tc ---~--·
St ., Mlddleporl ; 2 story more than lwenty dtys after the
HOUSE, s rooms and bath, 3
frame , 3 bedrooms, 1'12 baths, last publlcaflon ot this notice .
bedrooms, attached Q_arage,
new double garage, new
POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy;
storm wlhdows and doors,
.
LEADING CREEK
Park view Kennels, Phone 992·
storm windows and doors; 2
forced air furnace on tot 7S x
• Air Conditioners
CONSERVANCY DISTRICT
porches
,
·
Ideal
location
;
5443.
100, located on Stale Route 7
-·Awnings
asking $12,900 - make us an
8-15·tfC
at Cheshire, Ohio. Price
BY JACK W. CRISP ,
offer . Cleland Rea tty, phone
• Underpinning .
reduced for quick sale, owner
PRESIDENT
36" X 23" X .009
992-2259.
161 19, 26 171 5, 3t
leaving slate. Catt 367-7A28
1965 CHEVROLET Supersporl.
6·2Hic
white with black Inferior, b. Complete mobile home
after 4 p.m.
~ '
6-26-2tc
seats, 283 4 bbl .. auto., tlkt service - plus gigantic
new tires. Ph. 992-5997:·
'display ol mobile homes -----..:lo~
RAC/NE -'- 6room house, bath,
6-21 -6 always available al ...
utittty room . garage, $10,000;
COAL. Limestone, Excetslilr ·
phone 94HI9S.
":iio~o· operotlor
MILLER
,....
•
of wttor,
Salt Works. E. Main St.,
3-31-lfc
t1mps,
A.Utll.
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891 .
MOBILE
HOMES
water
11ve.1
USED OFFSET PLATES
4-12-lfc
cont'r'ol . " Unl
HAY&amp;.
•1220 WuhlngtGn Blvd.
·FIIttr o" Powe,
·MANY USES
BELPRE, 0.
.F!n ,logllalor.
TWIN Needle sewing machine 423-7521
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
· ,..,.olli-l'rui
1971 model tn walnut sl,nd. ~--------.....J
Coso No. lG.6'0
Moyt11
All features buftt.\n to make
Eslltt al Rae• D. Hill ,
Hlllol Hill
fancy designs and do stretch Real Estal.t ( .
Dtctued.
Dryers
· ·
Notice Is hereby glveh that
sewing . Also bullonhotes,
Surround clothta
8 lor Sl.OO
blind hems etc. $-13.35 cash IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCHO. Edno Hill ol Route 1,
1rlth eontlt, t'hn
Langsville, Ohio, nas be•n duly
price or terms available. Lake Conchas, New Mextco. appointed
hRt; No hot 111011
u
EJ~.ecutrlx of the
$2,875. No Down . No Interest. Estate of Race o . Hill ,
•• ovordrylng
·Phone 992 · 56~1.
Flnt -..h Lint
6-22·6tc S25 mo. Vacation Paradise. dectased , 11te of Meigs County,
l'llltr.
Money
Maker .
Free OhiO.
.
we~llft .. to
VACUUM CLEANER . Eledro Brochure. Ranchos: Box
Crta1tors ere required to file
MA'I"I'A• ·
Hygiene New Otmonstralor 1001DD. Alamejla. California their claims With said fiduciary
llt141.
Clr"'
,' .
wl,hln four months .
.
has all cleaning attachments 94501 .
.
• .....c.
Deled
this
ftti
day
ol
June,
ptus the new Electro Suds for
6-7·30tp 1972.
ohampoolng cerpel . Only
Ill Court St.
JOHN C. BACON
$27.50 cash price. or terms HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
Judge
Pomeroy,
,
Ohio
985
·
35~.
available. Phone "Z.S6A1.
.
Court of Common Pteu.
;742-4211
Arnold Gr Itt
Rutland.
. ·.·· ' "
PrDbllt Dlvlslor
4·22-6tc -----~-....:..6·.:..11:..::·tfc
\6) 12. 19.26

Sheets

.,

End loader work,

MIDDLEPORT
RENOVIITED - 3 bedrooms, bath, charming breakfast
• nook . utility room. nice kitchen. Lovely front porch .
Q)tbulldlng for storage.
15 ACRES
INDUSTRIAL SITE - Located on two rail tines. Access to
the Ottio River and Route 7.
97 ACRES
EASTERN SCHOOL DISTRICT - Hill larm for beef
cattle. 8 room modest home. Has modern bath, coat

HOUSE , unfurnished , 1 rooms
wllh bath and laundry room ;
1., duplex. att
newly 1963 PONTIAC Tempest, A

LEGAl

and co'i nmel"clal . roofing;

&amp;

6·2l-2tp

Car, references, and $995 to
cash capital neceuary .
4 to 12 hours weekly could nel
good part time income. Full
time more. For local in -

The Eastern Local Board of
Education will receive bids, lor
Dairy
Products,
Bakery
Products. Gasoline &amp; Fuel OiL
School Bus Tires , and School
Bus Insurance .
Bldswillbeopenedon July 11 ,
1972. at 8:00P .M . at the Eutern
H lgh School.
For any further Information,
contact the Eastern High

We specialize In alumlnom ,
vinyl and steel siding;
fiberglas, brick and stoiiei
complete line of residential

Dozer

ponds, baJement, landscaping. we have 2 size
dozers, 2 siie toaclers. Work
done .by hour or contract."

Front porch, util ity building, garage, and garden . Near
grade school.

bath ; 2 bedroom mobile
ton pickup , runs
home: trailer space : store 1962 CHEV.
good, SIOII ; 2 1957 Chev. - 2
room 30 )( 60 : 3 miles south
Middleport on Rl . 7, M &amp; G dr. and 4 dr ., S50 for both ;

establish accounts for you .
$1 ,~.5

Mtc;iHT DO 'IE A WORLD
0'600D IF IIE'D START
COMiN'TO
PAW

EARTH MOVING

tires, in excellent condition ;

UNFURNISHED 4 rooms &amp;

MAN OR WOMAN . Reliable

ONLY $13,750

Auto Sales

phone 773-5119.

Ow.-.' ,

person from

Economy Tiller, 31 2 h.p. B&amp;S
engine. Reg . 159.95
144.95

'·• • - Juk W. Carsey , Mgr.
Syracuse , nice location,
...
Phone 992 -7181
furnished , phone 992 -244 1 ' - - - -- - - - ---'
after 5 p.m .

HEATING &amp;
COOLING
Window

Busine~s

MOWERS
&amp; TILLERS

1 BEDROOM modular home ln

992 -2448

The Friendly Neighbor Club
mel at the home of Mrs. Ray
Midkiff this month with 11
members present.
A potluck lunch was served
at noop . All had a nice time
visiting. They also had a short
program . The next meeting
will be with Mrs . Carl
Shenefield.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Tompson of
Medina, Ohio were overnight
guests al the home or her
sister, Mr. and Mrs. ·Marvin
Wilson and her mother, Mrs.
Effie Hoosier.
The sale or ~r . and Mrs.
Harry F. Erh!wine was well
allended . The Erlewines had
b&lt;mght property in Marion:
Ohio and moved that day as
soon as sale was over and they
could get away .
Miss Clemma Vale Cardington was visiting her
cousin, Mrs. John Holliday,
recently. She was also a guest
wilh Mr. and Mrs. Lauren
Huffman, also attended the
Colun1bia banquet which is
nuw held at Albany .
Mr •. and Mrs. Jack Nelson
have·been spending a few days
at the farm here. They were
supper guesls one evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Wilson.
Mrs . Frank Rinehart . is
visiting her brother and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Howard
(Junior) Pond.
Mr . and Mrs . Robert
McKinney of Helena, Ohio and
his sister, Mrs. Clyde Pritt of
Akron were calling at the
Blanche Nelson home recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Corin Smith
and Cathy and Susan of
Columbus were visiting her
parents, Mr. and Ml'!l. Marvin
Wilson. Cathy and Susan
st.yed for a week's visit with
their grandparents.
Mrs . Anna Ogdin has
returned from a tour through
Europe. Mr. and Mra. Ralph
Ward or Columbua returnee!'
home with her fOr a short visit.

For Sale or Trade

~

For Reni

Plumbing

Old Salem

SPECIAL

SAVE up to one half. Bring yoor QUARTER horse ; phone 742·
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
3418.
151 Butternut Ave .• Pomeroy.
6·21-6tc
4-4-tfc

"HEll"

3 Bedroom home, with
brick front, 1 car
garage, carpeting.
Priced at ..

dependable. Call 446-ll&lt;!77, 9 EVERY day is Bargain Day for BACKHOE AND OOZER work.
a.m. to 5:30 p.m., Monday, clean, used furniture, ar.Seplic tanks installed. George
Tuesday and Wednesday .
pllances
at
KUHL S
(Bill I Pullins. Phone 992·2478.
6-25-3tc BARGAIN CENTER, Rt. 7
4-25-tfc
"at lhe caution light," Tup.
pers Plains, Ohio. Qpen to 6
r'

OLD tobacco cans and tobacco CAMPER. 16 fl . sleeps 6, good
Notice
tabs ; watch fobs ; political cond&lt;llon. $1.000. Phone 992·
items
(badges. etc .), phone 6329.
TWIN CITY CAB CO. - This is
~7 - 7433 or write John Veith,
S-12-tfc
a non -profit organization. we
Cheshire, Ohio .
didn't
plan
it
lhat
way.
but
It
NOTICE OF SALE
6·25-3tp
is ,
The real estate or the late
George W. Moore and Ruth E .
6-25-2tp

Moore, both deceased , situate In
the Village of Middleport , In 100
Acre Lot No 309. and being
located on the Bradbury Road
11 the top of the hill near the
R81dlo Station , the property
belno
more
particularly
described In Vol. 117 , Page 20, of
the Deed Records of Meigs
County, Oh io, will be offered for
sal~ attn~ pfflces of C,row , Crow
&amp; Porter, Attorn~y s at Law ,
Pomeroy , Ohio. at 1:00 P.M . on
Friday, July 7th ., 1972. This
property Is tppralsed at
13,100.00 and cannot be sold for
len tn.an tne appr.alsed Value .
Terms of sale are cash , and the
property will be SOld sublect to
the l ien for real estate ta xes for
1972.

HE JEST THOLJGHT IT

Business Services

E YEGLASSB in Middi•Porl. BEAUTIFUL Maple Early

.,,,eo.

Of
IUALITY

kitchen and dining area . Phone
992-738• or m .7133.
6-26-31c

For Rent

Pomeroy

2

total electric apart·

ment, 1 bedroom, walk · in
closets, large living room .

I NEED AT

LeAST FOUR\

f" IU $· ;; l ~ -

Lost

Help Wanted

k)?W

AXYDLBAAXR
.
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply st1ncfo for 1n(\lher. In this umple A it
used for the three L's, X for the two O'a, etc. Sin1le !etten,
opostropbes, the Jen&amp;th and formation of th~ words are all
bmts. Each day the cD4e !etten 1re different.
ctYPTOQUOTB8 ,
SLVJV

·c

ALVJV

TD

WP

.the lazy dof.
1

KTDTPW 1
HVPHRV ' HVJTDL.-JCRHL SCRZP

VBVJDPW
SllurdQ'a Crypteqaele: VIRTUE MUsT BE VALUABU:,.
IF MEN AND WOMEN OF ALL DE&amp;REES PRETEND TO .
HAVE lT.-ED HOWE
·

o.

Now is the tlme for all
-foxes to jump over

·

---f===:;:::;L_.J

(0 li72ltinr Feat•1nt S7•dieate, lnc.)

•

•
\

I

..

�)i&gt; . - ... ,.. "

... ..

~ j,. .... ~ •

..- ....

, ~ ..

'

,..· .-:'".

"'

...

•

~

.~·

. ~,

P t •

..

•

-i-

•

'
,.

•

8 -- 'J'bo Daily Sentinel, Mi~rt-POII'eroy, 0., June 21, tm

Milieu's
Proposals
Considered
•

COLUMBUS. (UPI) - Dr.
John D. Millett, chancellor of
the Ohio Board of Regents,
tQday
recommended
a
reduction Iii student fee
charges at Ohlo"s two-year
public colleges to a maximum
$)50 per quarter.
At the same time, Millett
recommended that fee charges
at four -year public institutions
be boosted from a maximum
r,!IO per quarter to $400 per
quarter.
The chancellor also proposed
an ·•educational opportunity
loan program" under which
public and private ~ouege.
students would be eligible for a
$600 .annual loan, repayable
beginning five years after
graduation or when income
. exceeds $12,000 a year ,
whichever is first.
Millett said his prOposals
were
personal
recommendations, and that they are
under collBideralion by the full
board. He is leaving the board
July I to· become a national
edJicationai consultant.
The chancellor said the
purpose of his recom·
mendations is to encourage
enrollment at two-year
campuses and to provide
immediate Income to colleges
faced with curtailing programs
•::less they receive more
funds .

Miss Sigman . Di~ Sunday
Miss Ethel M. Sigman, 77,
Cheshire Route 2, died early
Sunday morning at -Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Miaa '$igman wu born May
10, 11195 at Fort Thomas, Ky.,
the daughter of the late Rufus
and Blanche Lovejoy Sigman.
Slle was also preceded In death
by a brother and a sister.
Miss Sigman was a member
of the Cheshire Baptist Church
for over 50 years and a
member of the National
Council of American Baptist
women.
She is survived by four
sister!, Mrs. Charles (Mina)
Ramsey, Rittman; Mrs. John
(Syivis) Prosser, Elyria : Mrs.
,

Albert (Della! Harnack St.
Albans , W. Va.; Mrs. Victor
(Lids) Swain, Raci,ne; a
· brother, Elmer ~igman,
Cheshire : a sister-in-law, Mrs.
Leora Sigman, Middleport, and
several nieces, nephews and
coualns.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m, Tu~sday at the
Cheshire Baptist Church with
the Rev. William Uber officiating, Burial will be in
Gravel Hill Cemetery · at
Cheshire. Friends may call at
the ltawlings.Coats Funeral
Home in Middleport untlll2:30
p.m. Tuesday when the body
will be taken to the church.

.

Five Autos lnoolved In Accident
.
Five cars were damaged in
an accident on Route 124 near
Evelyn's Grocery at 11:01 p.m .
Saturday, according to Meigs
Sheriff Robert Harten bach's
department.
A car headed northwest
driven by Elmer R. Searls,
Rutland, stopped to make a left
turn into Evelyn 'a Grocery
when a car driven by Gary F.
Hysell, Pomeroy, Route 4, also
headed nortl!west, struck the
rear of, the Searls car. The
Searls car was then thrown Into
a vehicle approaching from the
opposl te direction, driven by
Herman Lee Staats, New
Haven. A northwe!ll bound car
driven by Kenneth C. McCune,

l CooUnued

E. S. Bailey,
77, Succwnbs

Foreign Policy

Changes
Expected

MEIGS THEATRE

News .• . in Briefs

f~om

Page 1)
Coinn,u~. said the So)lth
' Dakotan's supporters would
seek "severe changes" in the
Jlefense plank. if they fail to gl!l
th~ change~ at tl)e full com~ttee sess10ns, he sald, they
will take the fight to the convenllon floor. . .
As for the busing 1ssue. Van
Dyk S81d that whereas Wallace
wanted an antlbuslflg plank,
the language proposed for the
platform "should be ac·
ceptable to most Democrats."Under the new Oemocratic
reform rules, If 10 per cent -or 0
15 members - of the 150
platform committee members
voted for a plank in opposition
to one adopted by the majority,
that minority plank is also
submitted to the national
convention for a vote.
Pelham sald Wallace could
muster the 10 per cent for
minority planks on welfare, tax
relief, foreign aid, busing and
perhaps other Issues. •
The busing plank adopted by
the drafting subcommittee
states:
"We support the goal of
desegregation as a means to
achieve equal access to quality
education for all our children.
Quality education is the issue
-busing is not. Transportation
of students is one.of many tools
available to achieve quality
education. Where it serves that
goal, we endorse it; where it
does not serve that goal, we do
not."
Pelham said Wallace supporters would push for a plank
opposing busing to achieve
racial balance.
On Vietnam, the proposed
platform sald:
"The majority of the Democratic senators have called for
full U.S. withdrawal by Oct. 1,
1972. We support that position.
IF the war is not ended before
the next Democratic administration takes office, we pledge,
as the first order of business,
an immediate and complete
withdrawal of all U.S . forces in
Indochina.
"All U.S. military action in
Southeast Asia will cease.
Mter the end of U.S. direct
combat participation, military
aid to the Saigon government
and elsewhere in Indochina
will be terminated.
·• ...To those who for reasons
of conscience refuse to serve in
' this war, and were prosecuted
or sought refuge alroad, we
state our firm intention to
declare an amnesty, on an
appropriate basis, when the
fighting has ceased and our
troops and prisoners of war
have returned."

Rutland Rt. 1, hit the Hysell
car in the rear and then a fifth
cat parked on Evelyn's lot and
owned by Charles W. Roush of
' Haven.
New
Damages ranged from
moderate to heavy on the five
cars. Elmer R. Searls and
Vicky Starcher, a passenger in
the McCune car, were taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Mlas Slsrcher by the Mid·
dleport emergency unit. Searls
·was hospitalized an&lt;l Miss
Starcher treated and released.
" Hysell and McCune will be
charged with assured clear
distance and Searls with lrn·
proper registration of a motor
vehicle, officials report.
The Sheriff's Department
also reported moderate
damages in a collision on Smith
Ridge Road in · Lebanon
Township at ~: 10 p.m.
Richard L. Soulsby, 70, 1344 City, Mich.
Saturday
when a car driven by
Acacia St. , Pittsburg, Call!.,
Services will be held at
Sharon
D.
Gilbert, Vienna, W.
formerly of Meigs County, died Pittsburg.
VH., skidded on the gravel road
Sunday evening at a Pittsburg
and
struck on a curve a car
hospital.
'
driven
by Roy R. Smith, PortMr. 'Soulsby was a former
land Route I. There were no
employe of the old Pittsburgh
injuries and no charges were
Store and of the Parkersburg
filed
.
Rig and Reel in Pomeroy. He is
Eimer S. Bailey, 77,
survived by his wife, Blanche,
a son, Richard, Jr., San Jose, Pomeroy Route 2, died
Calif., several grandchildren, Saturday afternoon at the
and brothers and sisters in· Holzer Medical Center.
A member of the Rock
eluding Pomeroy Postmaster
James Soulsby, Glenna Souls- Springs United Methodist
by, Syracuse; B~he Gibbs, Church, Mr. Bailey was the son
Tuppers Plains; Lawrence, of the late Henry and Maggie
WASHINGTON (UP!) _ If
and Mrs. Thelma Crouse, both Becker Bailey.
President
Nixon is re-elected,
Surviving
are
his
wife,
Eva,
of Columbus, and Bill of Bay
a daughter, Mrs. Iris Collins, he may decide to order a major
Middleport, three sons, shakeup
in
the
adDonald, Pomeroy Route 2, ministration's foreign policy
Myron, Middleport, and Larry machinery because of the
of Minersville; two sisters, increasingly heavy burdens
Tonlghllhru Tuesdoy
Mrs. Ada Zeisler, Youngstown, which have fallen on his
June 25-27
a·nd Mrs. Homer Radford, national security adviser, Dr.
Pomeroy Route 2; a brother, Henry A. Kissinger.
THE FRENCH
CONNECTION
William R: Bailey, of Mid·
That, at least, is the opinion
ITechnicolorl
dleporl, seven grandchildren of a number of high ranking
Gene Hockman
and three great · grand- officials who are curren Uy
Fernondo Rey
children.
engaged In the conduct of U. S.
" R"
'
ALSO CARTOONS
Funeral services will be held diplomacy .
"at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Rock
Since the start of the Nixon
SHOWSTARTS7 P.M.
Springs United Methodist administration in January ,
Chw-ch with the Rev. C. J. 1969, Kissinger has worked
Lemley and the Rev. Stan ten quietly but consistently at
Smith officiating. Burial will gathering into his hands major
MASON DRIVE IN
be in Rock Springs Cemetery. influence over forelgu policy
Friends may call at the . issues of top priority. To this ·
. '.
Ewing Funeral Home until end, he sklllfully used his
noon Tuesday when the body position as head of the staff of
Tonight and Tu11.
will be taken to the church.
lhe National Security Council
June26·27
snd chairman of the council's
Double Feature
various commit~s .
LOVE MACHINE
Worklng with a President
The Finns call their counRobert Ryan
try Suomi , w hi c h comes who 1!1, himself, extremely
Oyan Cannon
from a Finnish word mean· interested in international
I Rl
ing swamp.
PLUS
affairs, Kissinger has been
B. S. I LOVE YOU
able to operate in a climate
Peter Kastner
favorable
to his ambitions.
Joanna Cameron
• (RI

Mr. Soulsby, 70, Oaimed

THURMONT, MD.- MARTIIA MITCHElL says she loves
. her huaband "very much" but is ·~eaving him until he decides to
leave" President Nixon's re-election organization .
Mrs. Mitchell told of her decision SUnday in a tearful
telephone call to a reporter. She made the call from the Westchester Country Club at Rye, N.Y., her former home.
She complained that she had become "a political prisoner"
and "can'tstand" anymore of the life she has been leading since
her husband, John, left his job as attorney general to direct
Nl1&lt;0n 's campaign .

"One way to fnsure r1in Is to
water· your lawn or gar·
den" ...

To Insure every bll of
building or remodeling you
do , slort with Qualify
Building Maierlals ..... The
kind you find al the home ot
the "FRIENDLY ONES" al
The Pomeroy Cement Block
Co . Remember, qualify
doesn't cost - It pays!

SAIGON -TWENTY U. S. FfPHANTOM fighter • bombers
streaked to wltl!in sight of Hanoi and bombarded North VIet·
nam's only modern steel mill, the U. S. command said Sunday.
An official ccmmunlque from the U. S. command said the
Phantoms battered the two-equare-rnUe Thai Nguyen steel works
30 miles north of Hanoi Saturday With 2,000ilound laser-guided
"Smart" bomba, knocking out numeroua warehouses and the
plant's open heartb furnaces for making steel. The mlli turns out
mlinly mortars and spare paris for vehicles.

-ELBERFELDS

SHOP WEEK DAYS 9:30 TO 5 P.M.

Heavy damages were in·
clll'red to two. cars and one
pe~son was injured in an acelden! on East Main St. about 4
p.m. Sunday.
Pomeroy police said a westbound car driven by Michael
Codner, 16, Racine, struck the
rear of a second westbound car
driven by Arthur Rumfieid. 37.
Pomeroy. Codner was cited to
juvenile court on an assured
clear distance charge.
Evelyn Napper, a passenger
in the Rumlield car, received
back and neck injuries. She
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Pomeroy emergency squad.
She was treated and released.
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES : Mrs. Helen
Bonecutter. Point Pleasant;
Wilbur Imboden, Virgil Plants,
Point Pleasant ; John Gullett,
Vinton; David Perry, Point
Pleasant; George 'spurlock,
Robertsburg; Betty King,
Leon: Resor Tarbell, Henderson ; Randy Bonecutter,
Claude Thornton, !,eon;
Oakley Willett, Henderson;·
Mrs. Roy Woomer, Jr., Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Clyde Bowles,
Robertsburg ; Arley Dillard,
Point Pleasant; Nelson Bush,
Gallipolis Ferry; Inez Smith,
Mark Bennett, Sr., Larry
Stevens, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Robert McNeil, Pomeroy;
Rudy O'Dell, Point Pleasant;
and Dell Plants, Cheshire.
BIRTHS: June 25, a son to
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Stanley,
Southside .

Maiar League Lndtrs
By United Prtu International.
National League
g, ab r . h . pet.
Cdrno, Hou
58 225 &lt;9 71 .3A2

Alou , St.L

Carty, Atl

ELBERFELOS IN POMEROY

----

because of the open manholes,
broken glass and caved-in
pa_vements.

Mora , LA
Brock , St .L
Oliver, Pit
Santo, Cn l
Clmente; Pit

Bck.ner , LA

55 209 27 70 .335
SB 226 2&lt; 15 .332
53 173 27 56 .324

A1 142 2A .. 6 .32A
61 265 3215·. 321
59 2&lt;6 3779 .321
41 14 7 26 41 .320
SJ 215 &lt;1 68 .316
.u 156 18 A8 .308

...

Civil defense officials .banned
smoking beca use of the
possibility of flash fires from
ruptured oil tanks and gas
lines. They cautioned that rain
swollen doors would not close
after tJeing opened.
All those who returned, of-

'

July."
Gov. Milton J . Shapp said his
earlier damage estima te.
"well over $1 billion," was far
t()(J low. He said he now thinks
the damage will be '"well over
$1.5 billion."
Overall damage in 10 states
hit by tropical storm Agnes
was expected to surpass $2
billion and deaths to rise from

ficials said, should leave before
nightf~ll after throwin g ruined
furniture int o the streets for
pickup and scouring their sinks
with quicklime. '
Gen. Frank Townsend. civil
defe ri"se co-o rdinator, was
asked when the people would
he able to move back.
11
Some of them, never," he
replied. "Most by the middle of

tile 130 reported· so far when
communications improved in
rural areas.
In Pennsylvania, 49 persons

perished and-2:i0.000 fled their
homes . Among the victims

were three television newsmen
and a pilot who were killed in a
helicopter crash near Harris-

burg. But three other persons,
listed as '"missing and pre-

at y

Ninety ... ven per cent of the
world's total water supply is
salt water.

Devoted To The

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXIV NO. 51

Interest~

sume'd drowned" after their
capsized boat was found,
turned up alive, having waited
out lhe floods on high grounds
on an island.
·
Deaths totalled 24 in New
York , · 19 in, Maryland, 17 in
Virginia.
In New York State, more
than half the 100,000 persons
who were evacuated returned

to their ' homes. Officials • filed for bankruptcy in Cleve:
calculated damage at $100 land, Ohio.
million.
Virginia Gov . Linwood .
A hospital in Corning, N.Y., Holton calculated the official
said its first floor was wiped damage figure there would
out and its laboratory suffered pass $300 million . Water began
$4 million in damage. The flowing through lhe taps of
Erie-Lackawanna Railroad, Richmond, where two story
claiming that 130 miles of track buildings were submerged
were flooded in the state and Saturday, but it was not
(Continued on page 8)
the repair costs were too much.

•

•

Now You Know

enttne

Weather
Mostly clear tonight, lows in
the upper.50s to the middle 60s.
Wednesday partly cloudy with
a chance of showers highs in
the 80s.

Of The Meigs-Mmon Area

TUESDAY, JUNE 27, 1972

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

Appro•lmately 1,100
employes returned to their
jobs this morning at the $488
million James M. Gavin
Plant under construction
near Cheshire. Agreement
was reached late Monday
afternoon ending a thre~ay
work stoppage.
A spokesman for Ohio
Power said Local 32 of the
Brick, Mason and Plasterers
International Union signed a
new two-year contract with
Contractors' Association.
'

iaiNOW
WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES
TYPICAL SCENE -Area boaters have been buay lately fortif)'illg their crafts from the
high water. The photo above was taken near the Railroad St. entrance to the Ohio River al
Middleport. The boats are owned by Jack Welsh , Harold Hubbard and Cash Bahr.

See Addresses Below

Approve
Project
ltl1lS1\C
a-flGE C\t\CUl

~EO\

WASHINGTON - The Department of
Health, Education and Welfare, the Appalachia
Regional Commission and Cong. Clarence Miller
at 12 noon today jointly announced the awarding
of federal funds to establish a national health
demonstration project for the delivery of
emergency medical services in southeastern
Ohio.
The funding is awarded to the Ohio Valley
Health Services Foundation, which is based in
Athens.
HEW's portion totals $1,529,821, the Appalachia Regional Commission's total includes
two grants totaling $698,805 .
The funds will establish a "pilot project to
provide ambulances and a regionalized ambulance service in the 7-county Ohio Valley
Health Services area.
The project is one of only five such health
·
projects In the United States. ·
Under the ARC funds, the project will be
able to purchase I8 ambulances and set up II
ambulance stations · throughout the 7-county
area, including Gallia and Meigs Counties. The
funds will also help set up a dispatch center in
Athens, and will also create an area wide
hospital emergency network.
Ideally the emergency system will have the
capacity to respond to an accident within the
seven county region in a maximum of 20
minutes. In most cases, however, it would take
much less time to respond to an accident with the
new system.

,Cyclist
Injured
Monday

Dry Weather
.Predicted
By United Press International
Mostly fair and dry weather
prevailed across the nation
today except for lingering
showers and· thundershowers
from · the Southeast to the
north-central states.
Late Monday, a tornado was
reported between Oakley and
Co lby, Kan ., and another
twister was sighted west of
Roger, Ark. A few funnel
clouds also were sighted near
Valentine, Neb., and Goodland,
Kan. No injuries or damage
were reported.
Warm temperatures were
the rule in the South and
temperatures were expected to
reach the JOikiegree mark
again today in west Texas and
eastern New Mexico and southwest and central Oklahoma .
Temperatures early today
ranged from 42 at Bradford,
Pa., to 88 at Needles, Calif.

A Syracuse man was in
satisfactory condition at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
this morning after being injured on East Main St.,
Pomeroy,at 3:·08 p.m. Monday
when his motorcycle struck the
rear of a village truck .
. Pomeroy police said the
motorcycle driven by William
Rizer, 22, Syracuse, skldded
for about 50 feet before
crashing into the rear of a
village truck, driven by Calvin
Lane, 62, Middleport, and
stopped on East Main St.
Rizer was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Pomeroy emergency squad.
He received severe facial
lacerations but was reported in
satisfactory condition this
morning . A passenger on the
motorcycle, Sharon Coger, 18,
Pomeroy, received a contusion
of the left arm. She was laken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
by private vehicle and was
treated and released.
Police said investigation of
the accident is continuing . The
motorcycle was heavily
damaged while there were no
damages to the truck,

Ohio Crests Below Flood Stage
The Ohio River has begun a
slow retreat into its banks after
cresting in Pomeroy about
noori Monday at 45.2 feet, 1.3
feet under the 46.5 flood stage.
Water was stili on the
parking lois along the river this
morning and parking was at a
premium from the loss of the
spaces on the lots caused by the
high water.
Ohio
Meantime,
the
Department of Highways in
Meigs County , reported that

Route 248 is now open and cars
were going through about six
inches of water on Route 7 near
the Forest Run intersection
although the route had not been
officially opened by the
deparlment.
Route 124 to Racine from
Pomeroy was opend, but,
between Racine and Portland
remained closed at 10 a.m. this
morning. Route :138 was also
still closed at 10 a.m.

Democrats End Long Marathon

RONNIE ANDERSON, meter patrolman, and Steve
Hartenbach were using a boat Monday afternoon to remove
heads from parking meters along the walls of the Pomeroy

CINCINNATI (UPI) Authorities today retrieved
75 of the 100 pleasure boats
which broke loose from the
Yacht Haven marina.
Another 12 were known sunk
and 13 more were unac·

'

parking lots. The water had still not reached the IT)eter heads
but it was believed that it might before cresting and so the
two men, using the boat of Henry Werry, removed the heads
just to play it safe.

Seven Directors Will
Be Elected at Pomeroy

Plans for electing seven new
directors for two-year terms
and collecting dues lor the 197172 fiscal year were made when
the Pomeroy Cliamber of
Commerce met for a luncheon
Monday at the Meigs Inn.
Bill Grueser and Dennis
Keney were named as a
io tow.
committee to compile a list of
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:&lt;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: candidates for the seven posts
to be filled . Ballots with the list
of candidates will be sent to the
members along with bills for
dues next year. Directors are
GETS CONTRIBUTION
elected every two years with
A $50 contribution towards six selected one year and se•en
the new headquarters of the on the alternate years.
Middleport Fire Department
During the meeting, Jack
has 15een received from Cotton Kerr, president, announced
Miller of the Twin City Cab Co. that ferry service will• be
in Middleport, Pete Kioes, a supplied during the seven days
member of the department's that the Pomeroy-Mason
building committee, said \ridge is to be closed. Two
today. Contributions may be barges will be brought in from
given to Kloos, Thomas Darst,rny, Ohio, to serve in transBob Ftsher or Bob Byer.
porting motorists across the

Ohio River during the closing
period. The Mason City town
council has agreed that the
ferry service can be operated
during the bridge closing.
Kerr also reported that John
Reece, public relations official
for Southern Mines and the
Gavin Power Plant, has asked
that a brochure be prepared
showing pertinent information
on churches, schools and
recreatimi facilities in both
Pomeroy and Middleport so
that it can be shown to new
workers coming into the area.
It will aid them in deciding
where they would like to live.
The Pdmeroy Chamber
agreed to cooperate with the
Middleport Chamber on such a
lrochure. Abrochure prepared
by Richard OWen of The Daily
Sentinel waa displayed. It was
thought that, perhaps, a blank
page now on the brochure could
be printed with the additional
information and the brochure
might be satisfactory. It was
also agreed, however, to include Information on Rutland,
Racine, Syracuse and other
communities of the county.
C. E. Blakeslee, Edison
Baker
and OWen will be con·
The Southeastern Ohio Elks COWitry Club on Thurstacted
to work out something
Regional Council will hold its day, July 6, it was announced
annual golf tournament and today by E. E. l)avis, president
members,hip meeting on of the organization .
The multi-county developtourism aJ the Portsmouth
ment organization, with
membership in twelve counties, will present the initial
showing of a color slide-aound
presentation of the "Ohio Hill
Country " which it has
Authorities identified the produced for. area., state and
weapon found by Miller as the out of state distribution, Davis
.machine gun carried by the said.
Middleport council, meeting
hijacker who took over an
The 20-minute production is in regular session Monday
American Airlines 7'!1 jetliner designed to create an night, voted to advertise for
near Si.Louis, Mo., Friday and awareness of the natural bids on a new police cruiser
bailed out over this north beauty of southeastern Ohio and reroofing of the village
central-Indiana community of and that the atiraction of the hail.
15,000 before dawn Saturday. Ohio Hill Country for pioneers
It was agreed that a 197I
The discovery of the pouch and Indians remain the same vehicle will be )raded in on the
where it apparently landed, as today for the vacationing USA new cruiser and maintenance
opposed to it being hidden, family . Carl Dahlberg, supervisor, Harold Chase, was
added support to the contention secretary of the SEROC, stated riamed to inspect reroofing
of the jetliner pilot that the that the program will be made processes if a bid is accepted·.
hijacker was killed.
Mr. and Mrs. James Brewer,
· available to all organizations
Leroy Berkebille, Palatine, desiring
a
slide-sound Vine St. residents, were
m., who piloted the Boeing 72'1, program.
present and suggested council
joined the manhunt Monday
The golf tournament will look into recent reports that
and said the bandit had ''no begin in the morning and Meigs County has been
chance of surviving the jump.' I . continue throughout the ' day. selected as a special area in
Co-pilot Arthur Koester, Pros- The hospitality hour will begin which government procedures
pect Heig~\s, Ill., also joined at 6 p.m. with dinner meeting are to be cut and federal funds
the search and said ''he's beginning at 6:30p.m. Tickets spent extensively to show what
dead.''
for the dinner or tickets for the can be done in the way of rural
The FBl said the identity of golf tournament and dinner development.
the hijacker was not knowm. may be purchased from the
Clerk-treasurer Gene Grate
He purchased a half.fare ticket Gallipolis Chamber of Corn- was asked to write a letter to
at St. Louis, using a fictitious merce, Roger Barron, or John determine what funds are
military identification card Alien, Gallipolis, and Bernard available
through
lhe
bearing the name "Robert Fultz or Jack Welsh, Mid- program. Mayor John Zerkle
Wilson. 11
dleport.
• and Chase aald that they would
counted for.

Rising water and swUI
currents in the Ohio River,
caused by heavy Hooding
upstream, apparently
caused the 150-foot long dock
at the marina to pull loose
from Its moorings and move
downstream with 100 boats

Portsmouth Will Host
SEORC Session July 6

Ransom Money Found

PERU, Ind. (UPI)-Seml· when he spotted the ·bag conretired , farmer Lowell F. taining the -money. The FBI
Elliott, 61, thought he found a said almost all the money
groundhog.
appeared to have been recovBy United P.ress International
To his surprise the "ground· ered.
WASHINGTON - W. A. ''TONY" BOYLE was sentenced
hog"
turned out to be tl!e half·
"! saw this over. the rise,"
today to five years Imprisonment and fined $130,000 on charges o.f
million-dollar ransom carried Elliot sald. "The first thing
conspiracy and Illegally diverting United Mine Workers union
by a hijacker who parachUted that came to my mind was a
funds to political campaigns.
from a jetliner four days ago. groiUidhog, •but when I ·got
Federal judge Charles R. Richey, who imposed the sentence, · Another farmer, Ronald E. closer I saw what It wail. I
ordered the mine union president jailed immediately.
Miller; 22, found a macl)ine gun figured it was . the money
Richey refused to ailow Boyle to remain free pending an in his field about three roUes because It said American
appeal, until he had paid the total fine to the court, or posted southwest of the soybean patch Airlines on it."
!llfficient bond to cover it.
where tbe money was found. At
'The area of the VetUe f~
The 76-year-old Boyle, hll face flushed, was led from the fll'st Miller thought he found a had been patrolled during tl!e
courtroom by aU. S. marshal despite pleas by Boyle's attorney, Ure iron. .
weekend by state police
Plato C&amp;cberis.
No trace of the hijacker . helicopters, but the ground
.
himself has been found and search had been concentrated
members of the crew who two roUes to the eall.
.,..
' .
.
visited the area Man\lay said
Elliott, who gave up fuUtime
journed at 3, 30 a.m. EDT and they believed he mu!rt have, farming after auffering a heart
WASHINGTON (UP!) died in his jump.
··· attack la8t fall, left the money
Democratic plaUorm writers
was to resume at 10 a.m. Jl:DT.
The FBI and state pollee in the field and went 1o his
wound. up an 18'&gt;it hour ·
The plaUorm was complete resumed
the
manhunt )lome nearby and told hla wife,
marathon drafting seasion
eacept
for
approval
of
the
southeallt
of
Peru
today
with Mildred; H, of hla dilcovery.
eat!Y today by rejecting
introduction
and
action
on
eniphasiJ
on
the
ar~
of
the
He then took hla son.m.law to
abortion aDd "gay liberation"
the field. "I wu afraid that
pJanU blttiUing • llrong pro- minority reporta. Delegates two Ianna.
Gov.
George
l!llloU
•••
Boelnl
somebody
might come and find
supporting
l!ulkll atance lhat aeemed to
Wallace
are
expected
to
have
Elliott
was
hoeing
with
a
it
while
I
was gone," Elliott
llpal a heated cooveni\Pn
at Jeaat three - busing foreign traetar Mmday on the farm of aaid later.
IIIMa' f18bt.
paUey
and -.lfm. '
· hll m-UI-Iaw, John VI!!Ue,
we.,. ldnllfle4
Till lelcdiY meeUD,t ac1-

.

Snguitn. Pit

.9:30 TO 9 P.M.

.

'

Wll,KES.BARRE, Pa. (UPI)
-Civil defense officials perm!tted .lhe 145,000 residents ol
this coal mining region who
fled their bomes before the
floods ·to return for a brief
cheerless homecoming today.
The flooded areas • were
. opened to. residents at 9 a.m.
Vehicles were barred from the
silt-covered, muddy streets

Woman Injured

Leading I attars

OPEN FRIDAYS AND SATURDAYS

'

Cars Damaged,

(Continued from Page I)
helicopters combed an area southeast of Peru but found no trace
of the man, money or parachute.

Flood Victims Are .P ermitted ·to Return Home

Major

satisfactory on the publication.
Kerr extended thanks to Ohio
Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority represen~d at the
meeting by Charlotte Taunton
for its work on several phases
of Big Bend Regatta Weekend.
He also thanked tl!e Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society which conducted a
successful heritage day
program In conjunction with
regatta weekend.
Regatta weekend was briefly
reviewed during which time it
was suggested that the nea
market location be Improved
as well as traffic condition&amp; for
getting racing boats in and out
of the water. Kerr said he
would ask the chamber
secretary, Joyce Bunch, to
contact Pomeroy businessmen
to determine their feelings on
regatta weekend with tl!e aim
of either discontinuing the
event or Improvement of its
features.
Attending were Kerr, Bob
Jacobs, Richard Chambers,
Wendell Hoover, Blll Grueser,
Dr. R. E. Boice, Jack Carsey,
Carson Crow, Dennis Keney,
Earl Ingels, Ted Reed and Mrs.
Tatmton.

Bids Sought

By

Co~cil
look into a catch basin problem
on Vine St. today.
Grate reported that the
employer's share of the police
retirement has been increased
to 12.85 percent and the
fireman's retirement to 13.41.
He was notified by the state of
the increase going into effect
next year.
Chase announced that the
Board of Public Mfalrs will .
meet on Monday, July 3, will!
representati-.;es
of
an
engineering firm to be present
to discuss sewer and w~ter
matters and the chlorination of
the lagoons.
He also reported that he has
been advised by the Ohio
Depsflment of Health on a
number of changes which must
be made in the village~
water 11ervice. Cha11e aaid the
latter advlaed that the changes
must be made by July 1 but
alao Indicated that the law
explaining the chan&amp;a to be
(CCIIIIiniMd on Pip I)

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="726">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11126">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="53185">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="53184">
              <text>June 26, 1972</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="272">
      <name>bailey</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2567">
      <name>sigman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2804">
      <name>soulsby</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
