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McGovernMaylnsur.eParty NQmination Tonight
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A ·M ANDA PANDA

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MAX

SA'l5 .
(p$'.~;

MIAMI BEACH IUPI) George S. McGovern invaded
the camps of his enemies
today, seeking a kel: victory at
tomght's opening session of the
Democratic National Convention which could make his
nomination almost certa in and
almost bloodless.
His rivals stilt lacked - and
still sought - the cohesio n
necessary for an effective stopMcGovern coalition in Wednesday's
presidential
balloting.
They also lacked a unity
candidate all could agree upon,
and no new name surfaced.
Edward M. Kennedy's wife
Joan . here to help raise money

for the party, said Kennedy's
decision neither to seek nor
accep t the nomination was
''final." From Hyannis Port,
Mass ., ' where he went
yachting, Kennedy said there
WllS "no way" he could be
convinced to take second place
on the ~icket. ·
Maine's EdmundS. Muskie,
once the fron t-runner, took on
kingmaker powers at this least
orthodox 36th quadrennial
assembly of disar rayed
Democrats. But Muskie was
undecided whether to use those
powers to coronate McGovern
or to keep alive his own hopes
of becoming a compromise
choice .

Aides promised a quick
decision after Muskie 's
" sol idari ty
sc hed uled
meeting" thi~ morning with his
esti.ru.ted 2()()-plus delegates .
In the same flat , dry prairie
voice with which he announced
his candidacy 18 montjls ago when he was unknown to most
Americans - McGovern expressed boundless confidence
of reac hing his goal. He
reflected none of the tensions
swirlin g around him in this
steamy resort strip, trapped in
its own traffic.
He claimed enoug h support
in tOnight's voting to reverse'
the Credentials1 Committee
vote which took from him 151 bf

ARE
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VOL. XXV NO. 59

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SEEDS.

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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Claimed Possible

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8usAbout?
AN' SOME GLASS FO'

D-\' WINDOWS.'.'

AFRAID

HERE-READ
TI-lE
CONDITIOI-!ING ·
CLAUSE

TRIVIA-•·

·&amp;ETTER

THE MILLION Mt..l5T &amp; SPENT TO
Pf&gt;,OVIDE. 'lOUR CHILDREN WITH A

WE WILL.

PARIS (UPI)- Norlh Vietnam's chief peace negotiator,
Xuan Thuy, flew in today to
resume the Vietnam peace
talks and said a quick settlement could be reached if the
United States showed goodwill.
Thuy told newsmen at I.e
Bourget airfield that' North
Vietnam stands by its past
negotiating proposals, but was

pledges of a serious attitude,
Thuy said he had no precise
new peace plan to submit to
conl&lt;!fence whi ch resumes
Thursday after a two-month
break .
"We come to the negotiating
table with a serious attitude
and goodwill. We are sure that
if the American side shows the
same attitude we can rapidly
ready to examine any " new" reach a peaceful sehlement,"
offers by the United States.
he said .
Mixing tough talk and
Thuy returned after both

f&gt;LuSH!-GULP !-

NONEO'USON
TH'SO-\OOL
BOARD BRUNG
OUP. GLASSES---

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LIKE.WISE? .
NONEO'US
KIN
&lt;1,

CHILD

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EDUCATIONAL EXPE.Rl!':NCE-

Ord Employed
As Head Coach

RJ:AD-

soME

MEANINGFUL, RE..WARDII-.JG

RACINE - Robert Ord,
principal
and
reserve
basketball
coach
at
Eastern
SOUNDINGS FROM SOUTHEASTERN OHIO - The response to Rt presentative Clarence
High
School,
has
been
hired
as
E. Miller's district-wide public opinion survey has been exceptionally heavy. The survey was
head basketball coach at
directed to individual residences throughout the 13 co unties of the lOth District, and th e
Southern High School here by
Congressman's daily incoming mail consistently includes a large volume of completed
the board or education.
questionnaires. To date, about 15,000 replies have been received in Washington. Assisting
Ralph Sayre, superintendent
Representative Miller with the unpa cking is staff secretary, Trisha DeGroot. Miller said
said Ord fills the post vacated
Soulbeaslern Ohio residents returning the questiormaire would receive the results of the poll
by Asa Bradbury who resigned
just as soon as the tabulations have been completed. Any person not receiving a copy of the poll
to accept a reserve coaching
and desiring same, can write to Representative Miller at 128 Cannon Bldg ., Washington, D. C.
position at Logan Elm High
20515 lor th eir copy.
School in Pickaway County.
In other business, the board
hired Ralph Wigal as athletic
director for the 72-73 school
year. Wigal who was the junior
high basketball
coach,
resigned that post to accept the
athletic directorship. He wlll
continue as assistant football
By United Press International
coach, Sayre said.
Applications for future
MIAMI BEACH -SEN. GEORGES. McGOVERN spent 25
teaching positions w.ere
minutes today at a breakfast meeting with Ohio's !53-member
MIAMI BEACH (UP!) received from Marlys K.
delegation of the Democratic National Convention in hopes of
persuading some of the delegates to join him in his fight to seat Gov. John J. Gilligan coun- Pearson and William L. Buck·
his entire 271-member California delegation when the convention seled Sen. Edmund Muskie ley.
Sunday to defect as a tacit
Sayre said the painting of the
opens tonight.
member
of
the
stop-McGovern
interior
of the Syracuse
McGovern won a prolonged standing round of applause as he
coalition
to
avoid
a
Democratic
Elemental')'
building has been
entered the room for the breakfast, despite the fact that a
par ty bloodlettin g, sour ces
majority of the Ohio delegates - 79 - are pledged to his major
reported.
opponent, Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey. McGovern told the
Gilligan met Muskie, who he
delegates he respected the views of those who favor Humphrey, still nominally supports for the
MR. FRENCH DIES
but be urged them to support him on the credentials issue, ap- presidential nomination, at
Morgan French, Nye Ave.,
pealing to their "sense offairness and rule of law."
breakfast. Sources said he told Pom~roy, died Sunday afthe Maine senator he stood no ternoon at the Arcadia Nursing
BANGKOK -TWO U. S. PILOTS WERE KIIJ..ED when chance of wmnmg the Home in Coolville. Funeral
their F4 Phantom jet crasbed last Friday at Ubon Ratchalhani nomination for himself, no services will be held WedRoyal Thai Air Force base about 200 miles northeast of Bangkok, matter what the outcome of nesday at 1 p.m. at Ewing
a U. S. embassy spokesman said today.
Funeral Home. Burial will be
tonight's credentials battle.
The two pilots were Maj. Harland M. Davis Jr., 37, of BridgeIn
Beech Grove Cemetel')'.
In a mid-day television inton, N. J., and lsi Lt. Frederick Koss , 26, of Bridgeport, Ohio.
terview, Muskie said, he still Friends may call at the funeral
had the question "under ad- home Tuesday afternoon.
STILLWATER, MINN. - TEN INMATES engineered the visement" and, "I'm trying to
two largest escapes in the histol')' of 511-yearoOld Stillwater State find some way of acPrison during the weeken'd, and Acting Warden Donald Tomsche commodating both sides ."
blamed it on inadequate staffing and poor facilities. Seven - e Gilligan was here for a
ten, all considered dangerous, still were at large today. Three Democratic governors caucus
and was scheduled to depart
The Meigs County Sheriff's
had been apprehended.
for
Ohio
Saturday,
but
was
Dept.
investigated two acSix of the Inmates sawed their way out of the maximwn
asked
to
stay
over
until
Sunday
cidents Sunday .
security area Saturday night - an act which Tomsche said "is
with
several
other
governors
to
At 12:55 a.m. on SR 7,
IUlheard of until now" at Stillwater. Three of them were picked
try
to
work
out
a
compromise
Salisbury Township, Harold
up by SWJday afternoon. Four others cut through the bal'li of a
on
the
credentials
issues.
Eugene Hood, Pomeroy,
window and fled Sunday night, sometime during a dinner In·
Gilligan
told
reporters
little
traveling south on 7, slowed
volvtng 75 members of an Inmate ecology group and 75 gUests
·
had
been
accomplisbed
by
him
down to make a left turn into a
from outside.
and the four other governors. driveway . However, Jack
"But we got some of the Edward Lowe, 21, Middleport,
BELFAST- IRISH REPUBLICAN ARMY (IRA) gunmen
principals talking about a
returned to the attack today, tbeir !3-day cease-fire abandoned.
compromise and improved the
GunbaiUes SjD'ead across BeUast and Londonderl')' and 10
atmosphere,'' Gilligan said.
persons died in the fighting or through "execlitions." In the first "As a group we've gone about
Asa
Bradbury,
head
bours after tile IRA Provisional wing called off their truce as far as we can go."
basketball
coach
the
past
year
Sunday night, six civilians died In Bejflist, Including a 14-yearoOid
4
for Southern Local High
girl and a Roman Catholic priest shot as he administered last
School, has accepted the
rllea to another victim.
·
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reserve coach job at Logan
Earlier SWiday, while the cease-fire still was in effect, police
Clear and warm .tonight. Elm High Sc:hool In Plckaway
foWid the bodies or lour men who apparently had been executed.
Lows
in the mid 60s northeast County, nol the head coach job
The deaths raised the toll for Northern Ireland's three years of
to
low
70s in the south. Sunny
bloodshed to 418. "We are vel')' cloee to civU war," a spokesman
at Circleville High School, as
and quite warm Tuesday, highs
for the Proteltant Va~ Movement said.
was reported earlier.
in the mid 80s to low 90s.

Party Harmony

CAPTAIN EASY

bF Crooks &amp; Lawrence

AH, AT LA?n A ?LJITA13LE; ?POT'TO

JETTI50N

THE: ll'IJI'Eli:=;~AL. DSVIC~!

TEN CENTS

TERRY OHLINGER

What's All The
YOU OOt-J'T UNDERSTAND
THE PORPOSEOF THE
GRANT. IT'S NOT FOR

PHONE 992·2156

THA~J&lt;.

HSAVfiiJ?
rrHA711J'i

J:li.PL.OPEP

· Yen.

completed by Oris Hubbard,
work on the Racine Elementary is being done by Dwayne
Wolfe, and Lindley Hart was
awarded a contract to put a
new roof on the Letart
Elementary building. Septic
tanks at Syracuse Elementary
also are being thoroughly
checked , and Bill Hoback was
awarded a contract to work on
the furnaces at Syracuse and
Racine elementary ~nd the
junior high buildings.
Board members have been
viewing classroom seats
placed on exhibit by several
companies.
Mrs. Erma McClurg was
given permission to supervise
adult education classes in
sewing this fall. Cost of the
class will be partially paid by
the State Department of
Education, Sayre said.

Hanoi and Washington late last
month agreed to restart the
31h-year-&lt;J ld talks, suspended
May 4 by the United Stales.
Thuy said Nixon was forced
to resume the conference
under pressure of American
and world public opinion.
"We consider that the sevenpoint plan of the (VietCong's)
Revol utionary Provisional
Government is the correct
basis for a settlement
"But we will gladly examine
any new American proposals
that may be made to us in a few
days", he said.
Thuy , in his airport statement, served notice the Vietnamese Communists still want
the United States to pull out
their
remaining
troops
quickly.
He was less explicit,
however, when he commented
on the second Communist
requirement co ncerning his
side's standing demand for the
overthrow of South Vietnamese
President Nguyen Van Thieu.
"President Nixon, in his
June 29 news conference, made
it clear he obalinately sticks to
his warmongering policies.
Such action is not likely to
favor negotiations," Thuy said.
Speaking before a battery of
microphones, he shook his
finger and said "The Vietnamese people are determined
not to give in to any threat and
to face up to co ntinued
American aggression.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook Wednesday through Friday :
A ehance of showers
Wednesday and Thursday.
Partly cloudy Friday. Warm
with highs In the mid to
upper 80s. Lows In the mld
60s to low 70..

ONG OFFICER KILLED
BATAVIA, Ohio (UP!) - A
jeep in an Ohi o National Guard
convoy plunged off a rural road
LOCAL TEMPS
about two miles east of here
Temperature in downtown
Saturday, killing ONG Sgt. Pomeroy Monday at II a. m.
Carleton Rice, 23, Hamilton, was 80 degrees under partly
and injuring two other men.
cloudy skies.
NOW YOU KNOW
The Democrats held the
longest American political
convention in 1924 when they
took 14 days and 103 ballots to
nominate John W. Davis . The
Whigs held the shortest convention in 1844, nominating
Henl')' Clay in one day .

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy E-R unit an swered a call to the Roy Curtis
home near Pomeroy at 3:58 a.
m. Monday . Mrs . Curtis,
believed to be suffering a heart
ailment, was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was admitted.

3 Cars, Truck Damaged

UH-ER-T.::;K, T::;K~ , A
TH·TH·THQUGHTLE~~ OVER"
?16HT. OFFICfR~ I A77URE

YOI.ll WE:'LL GLAD)-'/ p.p. PAY!
•

to Hood's rear, was unable to
stop when he realized Hood
was making the lurn, and
attempting to pass, struck, ..
Hood's car in the left front end,
continued leftward to hit a
parked car owned by George
Franklin Stewart, Middleport.
The Stewart car, in turn,
rammed a parked pickup

Bradbury Going To Logan Ehn

~H!:JT Uf' AND
GET MOVIt\J£3!
THE'I'RE PUTTING

ALL 'THRE~ OF U:7 ·
11\J ~Ol:JTARY!

issue. Later he dangled the
vice presidential nomination
before Muskie as a lure , but
Muskie said he wasn't vel')'
in!J!rested .
Adding to McGovern's optimism was latent support
from delegates who would vole
for him on a second or third
ballot but were bound by slate
law or state convention to vote
for others on earlier ballots.
Such commitments did not
bind them on proced ural issue,
such as the California
credentials fi ght.
Obstacles
still
faced
McGovern . One of them was an
attempt by b1acks to UJ)ite all ·
[Continued on page 8)

Major
"Fight
Near

Quick Settlement

' I

,

WE KIN GIT A NEW

win his party's gubernatorial
nomination, was thought to be
leaning toward Humphrey. "!
came here uncommitted," he
said, "and I'm still uncommitted ."
McGovern made a "fair
· play"• pitch , arguing that
takin g Ca lifor nia delegates
away from him after- all
candidates had agreed to the
· winner-take-all rules would be
unjust.
Muskle for Veep?
Ohio Gov . John Gilligan, a
red-haired liberal, bre.akfasted
Sunday with Muskie, whom he
had supported ori ginally, and
urged him to support
McGovern in the Califomia

enttne

MONDAy, JULY 10, 1972

I

II

The UPI tabulation gave
Humphrey a3l.aa, plus 58
leaning. The umcommitted
bloc numbered 311 .4.
McGovern, well aware that
victory on tonigh t's procedural
votes over the ground rules of
the convention could yield
victory Wednesday, wooed
delegates for support in that
crucial rolt call.
He sc heduled visits to the big
and largely unfriendl y
delegations from Ohio, where
Humphrey is strongest; and
Texas, where George C.
Wallace held the lion's share of
delegates .
Texas rancher Dolph
Briscoe, who beat a liberal to

Devoted To The Inter(!jfs Of The Meigs-Mason Area

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delegates except those whose
right to vote is under challenge
could ballot on whether to seal
a challenged delegation .
Even if he loges all
challenges, they said, he would
have a bare minimum of 1,331.5
votes and would pick up the
•·est toward the 1,509 needed as
'the roll was called. He claimed
well over twice as many
delegates as his nearest rival,
l:lubert H. Hwnphrey.
UPI 's co unt, reflecting
McGovern's loss of 151
California votes and his Illinois
loss, showed him with 1,31a.95
votes plus 42 leaning his way,
putting him 152.05 short of the
nomination.

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LEAVES~

the 271delegates won June 6 in
Ca lifor nia's winner-take-all
primary. He also sought an
Illinois compromise which
would . put Chicago Mayor
Richa rd J . Daley in a
delegate's seat with one half a
vote - and a inore kindly
feeling toward McGovern.
With that accomplished ,
McGovern's delegates counters said, he would have 1,541.5
votes Wednesday night at the
nominating session - 32.5
more than necessary.
A parliamentary ruling
Sunday from Lawrence F.
O'Brien, the party chairman,
strengthened McGovern's
hand. O'Brien decreed that all

Weather

I,

Coach BradbUI')' had a 9-10
record with the Tornadoes last
year, his first coaching job.
BradbuO', ex-Middleport High
School aU-&amp;ll!theastern Ohio
eager and starting quarterback on the Yellow Jacket
grid squad, was e starter in his
senior year at Marietta College
on the hardwoods.

truck.
Lowe was cited to court on
charges of assured clear
distance. There were no injuries.
At 6:20p.m. on COWity road
13, Rutland Township, Frank
Jr. Gilkey, 26, Langsville, was
traveling north aroWJd a blind
curve when his car collided
almost headon with a car
driven by Edwin Keith Cleland,
Langsville, Rl. I.
Passengers In the Gilkey car,
Connie Sue Gilkey, 25, Wendy
Ann Gilkey, four months, and
Jeffrey T. Gilkey, age 6, suf·
fered apparent minor injuries.
They were not immediately
treated.
..
There was damage to the
Iron I end 9f both vehicles.
There was no arrest.

Ohlinger is
Philo High

Principal
Terry Wayne Ohlinger has
bee n employed as principal of
Philo High School for the
coming school year.
Agraduate of Pomeroy High
School, Ohlinger received his
B. S. degree in 1966 and his
master's degree in 1970, both
from Ohio University .
Ohlinger had three years of
teac hin g and coaching experience and one year as
feder.al coo rdinator in the
Meigs Local School District.
Last year he was assistant
principal at Philo High School
. which has an enrollment of 750
in grades nine through twelve.
He is a member of the Ohio
Education Assocla.Uon, the
Ohio Association of Secondary
School Principals , the Franklin
Local Teachers Association,
and the Fellowship of Christian
Athletes.
Mr . and Mrs. Ohlinger are
the parents of two sons·, Jay
and Jon. He is the son of Mr.
and Mrs . Herman Ohlinger, 112
Condor St., Pomeroy.

Swimming
Classes at
Pool Open
Registrations for new
swimming classes which began
today at the Middleport
Community Pool, are still
being accepted, Mrs. Ruby
Vaughan , park manager, said
today.
A com plete course of
swi mmin g
lessons
for
Beginners 1 through 4, Advanced
Beginners~
Intermediates and Swimmers is
being given at the pool and
registrations will be accepted
until classes are filled. Classes
start al9 :45 a.m. and conclude
at 12:45. Those interested in
registering may do so at the
pool or at the Vaughan home on
South Third Ave.
Tenni ~ lessons are also
starting at the Middleport
park. Lessons of one hour each
will be conducted (rom 8 a.m.
to 1p.m. each Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday by Bill
Vaughan. The maximum
number in each class will be
lour persons. Racquets and
balls will be provided.
Organized girls' softball
teams are also playing at the
park. Betty Smith and Patty
Carson are coaching older girls
of Group I, Mrs. Vaughan is
coaching the older girls or
Group II. Karen Johnson and
Mary Boggs are in charge of
girls under II in Group I and
Beth Vaughan and Kathy
Harris have charge of girls
under 11 In Group II. Girls
wishing to take part may
contact one of the above
coacbes .
MEtriNG CAlLED
Directors of the Ken Am.bary Chapter of the Izaak
Walton League of Amerioa wlU
meet at 7 p. m. tonight at the
clubhouae near Chesler.

SAIGON ( UP! )-A 1,000man South Vietnamese task
force that moved into battered
Quang Tri city last week withdrew to the edge of town today
and allied officers said they
expect a major fight before
recapturing the provincial
capital from· th e Communists.
The South Vietnamese said
last Friday that goverruunent
troops had occupied two-thirds
of the city and the only major
obstacle was the capture of the
walled, 19th century citadel
near the center of the. city .
However, allied officers said
today the North Vietnamese
defenders have received reinforcements and are prepared
to fight for the city
"Quang Tri is going to be
vel')' hard to take. The bll11/&lt;er
complexes are unbelieveable, "
a U.S. adviser told UP!
correspondent Barney Seibert.
"They are detennined to hold
Quang Tri. There Is at least a
battalion (about 500 men) in
there.''
Far ·to the ear U.8. Brl&amp;.
Gen. Richard J . Tallman and
three otber Americans were
killed by a North Vletamese
artillery shell. near An !.«:, a
provincial capital 6o miles
north of Saigon that has been
under siege since soon after the
current Communist offensive
started on March 30. Two other
Americans were injured.
Tallman, 47, of Honesdale,
Pa ., and his party had just
stepped out of their helicopter
when a shell hit nearby. They
jumped Into a bunker, · then
climbed out again and were
running for a command post
100 yards away when a second
shell exploded in their midst.
President Nguyen Van Thieu
landed in the same spot two
days ago during an•lnspection
tour but no artillel')' shells
came within 400 yards of the
Thieu party .
Tallman was deputy commander of the 3rd Regional
Assistance Command
operating in the An !.«: area.
He was the father of seven
children and had been
stationed in Vietnam for one
year.
At least nine U. S. generals,
one admiral and five SouthVietnamese generals have
been killed in the Vietnam war.

Biggest
Was Best
LONG POND, Pa . (UP! ) It was the biggest and most

peaceful rock festival since
Woodstock. More than 200,000
people braved the rains, mud,
lack of toilet facilities and
chea p wine at Pocono International Raceway over the
weekend .
Despite massive traffic jams
and several minor accidents,
state police reported the rock
fans were well controlled.
Marijuana and hard drugs
were available, but pollee said
use was not extensive.
By SWiday afternoon, only a
few stragglers remained to
pick up broken glass and r&amp;Q._
up garbage on the 600-acre
track. The festival was to Jut
only, one day, but waa expanded when rain forced
performers from the open
stage Saturday night.
"On a scale of .10, I'd hive to
give them a 9.9," said racew17
manager Bill Marvel. "A lot of
·people hear about other cailcerts, but this wu the flnt I've
been involved with and we'ft
vel')' happy about It."

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2-The Dilly Sentinel, Mlddleport·PumeroY, 0., July 10, 11172

WIN AT BRIDGE '

A Face in the Crowd

EDirORIAL

Koreans Mellow
In -Political Tide
The decision of the two Koreas to starttalk1ng w1th each
other after two decades of shoutm g may have taken the
world by surprise, but 1t d1d not come totally without
warning
'
The two regimes already had made gmge rly public contact through Red Cross repre,&lt;;entalJ vcs. a very safe and
politically noncommittal first step Those m power m
Seoul and Pyongyang may have known there was something more to those civil but stiff mJtlal meetmgs last
year on the Panmunjon neutral ground, but any outside
observer who had taken thiS as the shape of somethmg
else to come -so rapidly would likely have lost h1s pund1t
accreditatiOn on grounds of foolish optimism
Numerous developments , not all of a Korean nature.
produced the changed atmosphere wh1ch makes rapprochment posSible
President Nixon's summit diplomacy has imtiated dra·
malic changes m the great power relalionships wh1ch set
the tone, and usually determme the mtensity in the case
of chen! states such as the Koreas, for the confrontations
of smaller countnes.
Korea has been largely on the Sidelines during the years
of the V1etnam conflict and assorted other flash cnses
around the globe, benefjciary of a bemgn neglect wh1ch
has given the Kor~ans a somewhat freer hand m workmg
out their own future than IS the case w1lh most such small
states on the East-West Ideological front lme.
Both North and South Korea have made ImpresSive
recoveries from the war that devastated both Both are
able to talk about reuniOcatJOn from posit10ns of conSiderable internal strength, an equality wh1ch removes an
element of stram from negohatwns
Events may have created the atmosphere for contact
but in the end it was men who made •t posSible-men m
Seoul and Pyongyang who dec1ded the t1me had come to
begin , at least, to talk to each other .
Somethmg similarly has been developing, although
much m e hesitantly and less dramatically , m anothe1
divided le cy of World War 11- Germany And then there
is V!etnam
Not much ess surprising than the decision of the
Koreans to t k reunification would have been at one
time, the wei orne 1t has received m Washington Such
do-lt-themselves diplomacy, which is openly bemg v1ewed
as presag1~g a scalmg down 1f not phasmg out of Slgmficant U.S. mvolvement, would have been v1ewed as an
alarming weakening of the anti-Communist front not so
very long ago
Even today, Korean developments are likely to appear
more ommous than ophmJShc to some who discern little
baSic change in the world Sltuatwn dunng the past two
decades. Desp1te summ1try, mellowmg regimes and
travel and trade re laxations. the Cummumst enemy IS as
inimical as ever
Neyertheless, times change, even m power poht•cs
President Park's Seoul reg1me, actmg largely on 1ts own
would ap~ear to be very much in step w1th President
Nixon's diplomacy of reconc1hat10n on the global scale
The reumfieatwn gesture, whatever its eventual result
at least has the virtue of allied consiStency
·
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRI SE ASSN l

VA Aim: Get More
Vets in Schools
By DON GRAFF

~
:··
If war can be said to have fnnge benefits, certainly
among the most valuable to the mdiv1duals mvolved
and to the natiOnal welfare to which they contnbute have
been educational a1d programs for veterans.
Under various "GI bills" datmg back to World War
II , millions of former servicemen have acqmred educations they otherwise could not have afforded, or only
w•th greatest difficulty
·
In the Vietnam era, almost 40 per cent of veteran s are
takmg advantage of educatiOnal programs Nevertheless.
the Veterans Admm1Slrat10n IS co ncerned because those
who could most benefit from educational aid, the eco~omically and soc ially diSadvantaged veterans, are passmg up the opportumty
Accordmg to Defense Department statistics, 1n 1971
almost 45 per cent of returnmg servicemen w1th some
previous college expenence re turned to school Only 13 4
per cent at the h• gh school level chose to go on w1lh
VA aid
There is also a rac1al colonng to the figures. Of the
hi~h school graduates, 14 per cent of white veterans enrolled in college programs, but only 9 4 per cent of the
black returnees did
The VA, m cooperatiOn w1th federal agencies and other
oragnizations, includmg churches, is trymg to correct
the imbalance throu~h an informatiOn program A project
financed by the Office of Economic Opportunity and operated by the National League of C11les and the Co nference of Mayors is seekmg out new veterans m low·lncome areas of a number of maJor cit1es gettin g the
word around of the opportunihes open to them and encouraging many more of them to complete or continue
their educations
Until they do, the GI educational program s will be
nowhere near a.s valuable as they could be.

HEARl'S WORLD

at the Democratic Convention

"'

"Why don't you people check into the Fontainebleau
like ererybody else?"

\

Helen Help

•

·us. • •

By Helen Bonel

DON'T RAIN ON HER PARADE

Dear Helen :
I tell my wife about her shortcomings for her own gQOd. Now
I find shehsswritten to you trying to get national sympathy.
1want you to know that I operate in tune with Fraok Clark's
words: "Criticism, like rain, should be gentle enough to nourish a
man's growth without destroying his roots." - CONSTRUCTIVE
CRITH:;
Dear Critic:
Either you come on like a cloudburst or your wife has very
shallow roots. Try compllments, - lf.

+++

Dear Helen:
!laughed last year when I read that a psychiatrist believes
TV sports are a subslltute for sex - that is, men become less
"!overly" the more involved they are in spectator sports.
Lastyear,you see, I was a newlywed, aod teleVISion came in
a poor second, except for the Rose Bowl Game.
Nowadays I'm beginning to believe the shrink was fight. I
tried kiSsing my husband Sunday afternoon and be growled, "Get
out of the
you're blocking my VIew ... On game days, forget

war.

it!

,..

What's baselillll got that I haven't got? -STRIKING_OUT
Dear S.O. :
Willie McCovey ,., Vida Blue ,,. Willie Mays ...
l.ook little wile, you aren't cancelled - just postponed. - H.

+++
Dear Helen:
I am bugged (lilerally) by a disc jockey at a radio station in
San Francisco. Two years ago I wrote him a fan letter and, ever
smce, he has said things oo his program that make me know he
can bear everything In my apartment. Like when I dropped a
glass and be said, "Now I want complete quiet for this record."
~IMIMMM~~·~·~·~•::~.~~~~u~.:~
.. ~;u~.~~~u~~~~~~~~w~·~~~~~-·~..·~··~~~~~~·~•~.:~wa&amp;~l
He not only has sneaked in and bugged my room, but he's
wired It for sound. I hear music and talking that doesn't come
from my radio, and then there's something like insects buzzing.
He doesn't leave me alone fora minute. He'son thealr about four
hours a day, and when be Isn't saying terrible things to me, then
he's piping them in from some other place at all hoW'S oflbe day
BY JACK O'BRIAN
1t's mme and I'm entertaining fnends.
aod night.
I have wr1tten to the FCC but they say they can't handle
SHE KNOWS WHICH SIDE
"One mght, I was thnlled to death when personal problems. The ·district attorney aod police will do
HER BREAD IS PARTHENON
Kate Srruth herself called to say she'd like a
NEW YORK (KFS) - We've been calhng large table to entertain herself and fnends at a nothing for me, and even my grown children won't listen pretend not to hear what's all around me .
'71-'72 the Year of the Greeks because of the
b1rthday party. I mlroduced her from the floor
It's some kind of plot to drive me crazy. Please believe me,
Onassis craze and the sudden blossommg of not knowing 1t was her own birthday aod
aod
tell me what to do to get rid of this alUlOuncer.- BUGGED
Hellenic cafes m NY , Among whiCh , Dwnysos everyone was coaxing her to smg 'God Bless
is one of the Greekest .. And a g1ft that no one AmerJca .' It ended w1th me, mstead, singing TO DEATil
Dear Bugged:
should beware of IS Georgia SambaZJs, co- 'Happy Birthday.' "
First : turn off your radio and leave it off! (Or at least
owner, who delights in relating the star-studded
We asked Georgia at what hour Dionysos beamed AWAY from San Fraoclsco l )
events .. Here's just a taste from the other starts swmging.
Second: see a doctor or a dentist. There's a possibility that
night :
"Paul Newman and wife Joanne came m one of your dentalfilllngs has ~me a radio signal detector and
"When you, Jack , told me that the Greeks one rught with the1r two young teenage children
were finally jet set champions with a little help for dinner at about 6p.m., and sa1d they 'd heard is picking up sounds from a nearby station. Unexplained voices
from Jackie 0., I knew that my deciSion to go how entertaining and delightful the restaurant aod music cao push the bearer into all sorts of weird suspicions
mto the nightclub • restaurant busmess was was, and I tried to explain that the ambience of - aod you've latched on to ao innocent armouncer probably
nght," said Georgia. "I'd spent most of my life the room didn 't happen by itself, that 11 took because you hear hun so many hours a day he has become an
dancmg at somebody's party or restaurant or people to make it alive, and that until 8 o'clock obsession wlth you .
So much for my logical ploy. If you are still "bugged,"
charity affarrs and I got•the 1dea when two dear or so, there would be no activity. They seemed
fnerids, who are my partners now , said they 'd so disappointed and of course, didn't want the psychiatric counseling is your best hope. - H.
ta~kll! the idea with me One of them is Taki
children to stay up too late, so I called the or·
Stamolis, who ism that native Greek sport, the chestra in ear her and Paul and Joanne and the
shipping business, but with every free mmute, ch1ldren danced w1th me and the w&amp;ters and we
Ha.{mon~r:. J:t's
he also was out dancing.
all had .a. fine time,
.
"Richard Harris has been With us every
He loved the 1dea. The other was Paul
What's m a second?
lime he's in town, and for almost two years
Sapounakis, who lent not only hiS charm to the
Enough to bring all th e nations of the world mto agreement
for a change, wh•ch is a very great deal mdeed
'Sleuth'
star
Keith
Baxter
was
a
regular.
Yoko
restauraot, but an exceptional talent as an
The agreement was on a 61-second minute . the first
architect. The lucky three of us from that f~rst and John Lennon sat in the bar one night for
such
in all of recorded tim e. In case you miSsed 1!. the
hours
unlll
someone
recogniZed
them
aod
asked
openmg night have been teachmg the town, aod
long
count
occurred Simultaneously around the world at
the entire country, how to dance, Greek-style, for an autograph, wh1ch made them leave.
times
ranging
from 2 p m June 30 in Hawaii to 1 a m
"Just the other mght, Bobby Short aod I July I 111 London
side by s1de, arms entwmed and spirits free.
and was necessary to bring th e earth
"Taki was actually the one who set the pace were talking about my first cocktail party for back i\l to the same time frequency as the um verse.
for us when he told us that we would hire nothing him when Bill Blass and Donald Brooks and all
Earth time is based on the revolution of the planet
but Greek sailors from the vessels, for as he welcomed hun back from his first visit to the which. has a tendency to wobble a bit. Universal t1me:
said, there isn 't a Greek sailor that can't dance, White House. Bobby was overjoyed that the · for scientific purposes, IS based on the radiat•on of an
serve food , and who IS not also the handsomest Nixons had asked him to come and play for their atom of cesmm, wh1ch never, never vanes-9 192 631 770
guests who were the Duke and Duchess of OSCillations per second The discrepancy COmpound ed
man you've ever seen
over the years could have had inconveni ent conseq uences
"He was right, we've had several of them Wmdsor. Both were great fans of Bobby's, aod such as sunsets at noon
'
whisked out of our restaurant by romance, aod he remembers that the Duke particularly liked
Thus the worldwide decision to add an extra second
we've even lost some of them to f1bns In fa ct, the song 'Bye Bye Blackbird.' Bobby had to ordinary earth hme won' t have any effect on \he boilone of our steady customers, Anthony Quinn, always said (m the two years we've been open) mg hme of an egg or make anyone any earlier or later
'
'
who delights our patrons every time he comes m that the Duke would have loved the dancing and 111 gettin g to the off1ce.
But it IS at least comfortmg to know that such reallv
to daoce the S~rtak• , 1s screen testmg one of our that next tune around New York, he'd brmg
C?SIIll_c
. matters can. be settled by the nat10ns w1th suc h
them in as his guests. We of course fought about
boys right now to play h1s son m a new f1bn
Simplicity
and that we earthlin gs, with all our mundane
"I try very hard each evenmg to imag1ne whose guests they 'd be, but I guess now we've problems of
war, poverly and pollution are once aga in
J
that the cafe IS a great big living room, and that both lost."
synchroni zed with the universe.

I Voice along Br'Way

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By Oswald &amp; James .Jacoby

Oswald "AI Sobel, chief
tourgament (~~rec to r of the
Amencan Contract Bridge
League, was one of my old
and very dear friend s Although he was a year Qlder
than I am, I remember when
he first started to assist Lt.
Gen Gruenther in tournament direction. Then, when
the general's increasing milItary responsibilihes t ook
' h•m away from bridge, AI
became th e top d~rector."
J1m " ! re member the
first tim e I heard and saw
h1m at a tournament There
w11l never be a direcl or ·like
h1m "

Oswald · "This is no re flecIJO n on Ihe new breed of
tournament directors. 'j'hey
all are extraordmarily competent, but not one of them
will ever really take Sobel's
place ••
Jim : "He loved to play
br~dge Here's a hanli he
played m R10 at the 1969
World 's championships."
Oswald : "It was a ~reilm­
mary game and, While the
b1ddmg by AI and his partner may not be elegant, they
got to the right contract."
J1m: "AI was very proud
of his pI a y. He carefull y
called for a low diamond
from dumm y at trick one.
He ruffed the second diamond , played ace-kmg and
SIX of h e a r t s to rulf m
dummy Then he ran trumps
and eventua lly used dummy's ace of diamonds to diScard his losinl( club."
Oswald "Not too complica ted, but if he had played
the ace di amonds at trick
one ,h~~hJ 1 R/hve b~e~ 1 ~el,'~
'"'w\r~r." JII~' ""S! '41(' 1•
Th e b1ddm g has beyn
WeSI North
East Soulh
P ass
1•
l•
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Pass
J "Pa ss
You, South, h old
.AJ543 ¥K9763 hoid "'Q107
What do you do now?
A-Bul fou r flubs. Establish
dubs as the suit rig-ht now
TOOAY'S QUESTION
Yout pa r tner continues to fiVe

clu bs What do you do now?

Answer

t omorrow

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

(NEWSPA PER ENTUPRISE ASSN )

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
Salt Reduction May Help

Almost Alike
The chemical formula of
chlorophyll is the same as
The 34th All-American
• that of blood- with one tiny Soap Box Derby at Akron,
difference. Instead of the Ohio, was won by Larry
atom of magnesium, blood Blair, 13, of Oroville , Calif..
has
an atom of iron.
Aug . 14, 1971, The World
mediCal status. I have freAlmanac says. He captured
quently observed that with
first place in a record. 272
d1et and adequate we1ght reduchon many people de- would do well to at least cut finalists from 47 states,
velop normal press ure. Of down and preferably elimin- Canada and other areas,
course, if the person is al- ate the use of added salt in and received a $7,500 colready skinny, he'll have to thei~ d1et. This means not lege scholarship. The field
use a different approach In addmg salt during cooking mc;luded five girls, the first
general, individuals who have preparation and not adding to enter in Derby history.
,
CovYr l'!,hl IV 11172 ,
elevated b I o o d pressure salt at the table

Hypertension Is a Symptom
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb-Is hypertension and high blood pressure the sam e thmg'' Is II a
symptom or a diSease'! How
high 1s too hi gh' Wha t
could be the consequences of
car rymg a readm g of 200/ 105
untreated for several
months '
Dear Reader- Yes, hypertenswn and h•gh blood pressure are the same thing
Tenswn refers to pressure
and hyper, of course, means
mcreased, hence increased
pressure or h•gh blood pressure.
A single elevated blood
pressure reading should not
be conSidered as a disease
It is a symptom Single off1ce readings hke thiS may
often represent merely the
apprehensiOn of the patient
about hiS med1cal exammat10n Befor e it IS assumed
that a person has true hypertens10n, a number of
1eadmgs need to be taken
on different occas10ns. Somelimes the patient's blood
pressure w 111 subside to
normal levels after he IS m
the doctor 's off1ce for 30
minutes or an hour Often
doctors take the blood pres-·
sure at the beginning of the
examinatiOn and at the end
to find out 1f the patient's
pressure has dropped.
As · these remarks would
suggest, elevated pressure 1s
a symptom . Sometimes 1t•s

caused by a problem m elfculallon to 1 he k•dney s
(these are rare cases) Some
authont•es have amassed a
Ia• ge number of cases that
are associated w1th endocnne problems involvmg
the adrenal glands that rest
over the kidneys
Many cases of elevated
blood pressure will return to
normal values 1f the person
Simply loses any excess body
fat that he may have For
this reason many good heart
r t
h
specla •s s 1n s 1s 1 1 at pa·
bents with moderately elevated blood pressure should
l?se fat before takin g medi·
cme I agree with this conce pt. This has an added bonus smce most of the comPllc a tions Of hl£h blood
sure, Including strokes and
heart attacks, are re lated to
the fatty depoSits m the artenes These deposits are
mcreased in the presence of
persistently elevated blood
pressure
We1ght reduction decreases th e amount of blood
fat. and prevents fatty depoSits m the arteries and
h ~lps to prevent the comphcatwns of high blood pressure. Women , durmg their
ch1ldbearmg yea rs, are Jess
prone to hav e fatty deposits
m their artenes than men
and usually tolerate elevated
blood press ure better than
men Th~re is no absolute
level of norm_al for blood
pressur~ but, Ill general, it
shouldn t be more than

\

140/ 90 on repeated examinatwns over a penod of lime.
There is some evidence to
suggest that the lower the
blood pressure the less bkely there will be fatty deposits in the arlenes and the
less likely that strokes and
heart attacks will occur
I can't tell you what kind
of problem will result from
not treatmg a blood pressure of 200/ 105. It depends
on what causes it and whether that's the perSistent level
of the blood pressure and
the rest of the individual's

The

Dai~

They'll Do It Every Time
SWEET·TALK ~IS WAYPI&gt;.ST
STONEWALl., 81JT
" 1'1:1 15-"DGIE-SWIM.EE!"

CINCINNATI (UP!) - W1th Reds attempt to forget
today an off-day on the baseball games m Clncmnati,
schedule, the Cincinnati Reds the
Re&lt;ls
dropped
a
will stage what they hope will doubleheader to the Chicago
become their first annual golf Cubs.
tournament.
The Cubs, who came mto
Johnny Bench 1and Joe Cincmnati last Friday losers of
Morgao, each with an 8 han- 13 of their last 17 games, wound
dicap, are co-favorites on a up with a 3-1 edge m the fournorthern Kentucky course.
game weekend set. The Reds
And perhaps al\er what won Saturday, 3-2, making
happened Sunday, it's best the pitcher Gary Nolan 12-2.

Fergie Jenkins blanked the
Reds !HI m the first game
Sunday, gaining his 11th VIC·
tory against seven losses. The
Cubs, pounding out IS hits,
made it a sweep to take the
second game, li).,'i, as Mill
Pappas won his sixth game
against five losses.
The two defeats narrowed
the Reds' lead to one game
over second.place HOI!ston m

the National League West. On
Tuesday night, the Reds will be
back at Riverfront Stadmm
where they will meet the Pittsburgh Pirates m the opener of a
thr""ilame ser1es that con,
eludes the current homestand.
The Cubs now hold a 7·2 edge
over the Reds m therr serJC$
this season.
"We can't beat humpty dumpty pttchers," said Cubs

Manager Leo Durocher, "then
mto Cincmnati and
beat three good ones "
Tommy Davis, a 33-year-old
c~stoff of the Oakland Athletics
who was activated last Friday
alter bemg s1gned by the Cubs
as a free agent, had a hand '"
both the Sunda y Chicago
VJctones
Davis Cut By A's
The fo rmer two-llme

we come

Na tiona l Leagu e battmg
champ smgied home the Cubs'
first run 1n the first game and
drove home three more with a
pair of singles 1n the second
gam e DaviS batted .324 for
Oakland but still wound up
being released before the end
of spring tra1rung thiS season.
The explanalion .,
"The fact that I mtroduced
Vida Blue to my lawyer m1ght
have had somethmg to do w1th

But Split Two at Chillicothe
Me•gs American Leg1on 's
brilhant 1·2 pitching combination of Rick Van Maire and
Stan Perry held Chillicothe to
only three hits in two games
Sunday at Chillicothe but the
MeigsCountlans managed only
a split, winning the first 4-j)
behind Van Maire and losing
the second I~ with Perry on
the mound.
Steve Dunfee's tw~ut line
double to left driving m Rich
Ash who had singled and Roger

Dixon who walked in the first
mnmg of the first game was all
Van Maire needed.
Meigs scored two more in the
third when Van Matre singled
with one out, Dixon followed
with'&amp; triple to centerfield, and
Dunfee drove in Dixon.
Other hitters for Meigs were
smgles by Kevin Sheets and
Jon Buck.
The only hits Chillicothe
managed were a second inning
single by Roger Ragland and a

Ryan Fans 8 In

fourth mning smgle by Tom
Taylor.
Van Matre, 7-1, rolled
through the Chillicothe lmeup,
farming six and walkmg two,
disposing of the losers through
seven innings on 96 pitches.
Greg Weaver went the distance
lor Chilhcolhe . He fanned e1ghl
and walked two.
In the second game R1ch
Beverly's speed was the difference as the slick-fieldmg
shortstop, who looks and plays
like Dave ConcepciOn, walked
w1th one out, stole second, and
scored on a soft liner to left by
Howie Reed.

Meigs' M1ck Ash scooped the
ball up on the second hop m
leftijeld and fired home but his
near rei-feet peg barely was too
late.
The only two hits Me1gs
managed were back-to-back
singles w1th two out m the th1rd
frame by M. Ash and Dave
Wolfe .
Randy Hill, a curve-ball
arl1st, fanned e1ght Me1gs
batters in gomg the distan ce
and issued only two free
passes.
Perry, on the other hand ,
fanned 11 and walked four

California scored all three of
Uulted Press International
Its
runs in the fourth inning off
Nolan Ryan allowed only one
Sonny
Siebert. Vada Pmson,
hit, struck out 16 batters including a league record e1ght Bob Oliver, Ken McMullen and
in a row - and retired the last Leo Cardenas each smgled and
26 Boston hitters 1n successiOn Boston threw 111 an error.
Tom Haller, who had tripled
as the Callforma Angels beat
and
doubled earlier, hit a twothe Red Sox, ~. Sunday
run
homer
m the mnth mmng to
evening.
An inconsistent performer g1ve Lolich hiS v1ctory and the
durmg his earher career w1th T1gers their split Ch1cago had
the New York Mels, Ryan, a taken the opener when R1ck
fast-balling righthander, has Reichardt smgled over a
suddenly developed into the pulled-in outfield with the
new pitching sensation of the bases loaded in the nmth
American League with five Joe Lovltto, who had lr1pled
straight complete game vic· home the tying run in the
tortes, two consecutive e1ghth mning, doubled home
shutouts, and 16·slrikeouts Toby Harrah w1th two out in
performances In two of his last the lOth as Texas surpnsed the
Orioles once again. Baltimore
three games.
Ryan, who said he threw fast had taken a 2-1 lead m the
ball!l 70 to 80 pet. of the hme, seventh on Boog Powell's
opened the game at Anaheun pmch--h1t smgle.
Amos Otis drove in !Ive runs
by walking Tommy Harper on
four pitches. He then struck out w1th f1ve hits, including a twoDoug Griffin before Carl run homer in the first game
Yastnemskl slngled to right and a solo blast in the second,
Ryao proceeded to strike out and Riehle Scheinblum
the next eight men to set an knocked 111 four runs in the
American League record , mghtcap with a bases-loaded
whiffmg the side m the second double and a sacrifice fly as
Kansas City beat Cleveland
inning on mne pitches.
While Ryan has boosted his tw1ce. Scheinblum raised h1s
record to 11~, Vida Blue, last league-leading battmg average
year's sensation with Oakland, to 327.
John Odom retired 22
is struggling along at 2-5.
Milwaukee
batters in order be·
Mickey Lolich became the
tween
the
second and mnth
first 14--game wmner in the
major leagues as Detroit beat mnings, but still needed mnth·
the White Sox, 4-2, in the inning rebel from Rollie
second game of a doubleheader Fmgers to gain his seventh
alter Chicago had taken the victory. Joe Rudi doubled
opener, S--4. The split enabled home two runs for Oakland and
:the Tigers to move into a first Dave Duncan delivered the
place tie in the East Division other with h1s third homer in
with the Baltimore Orioles, three days.
Rich Reese tied a major
who dropped their fourth
league
record with the third
straight game to the Texas
pinch-hit grand slam homer of
Royals, 3-2, in 10 Innings.
Elsewhere, the Kansas City his career, but it wasn't enough
Royals swept a doubleheader for Minnesota as the Yankees
from the Cleveland Indians, 6--4 had erupted lor five runs in the
and 11-5, the Oakland Athletics first two Innings and picked up
beat the Milwaukee Brewers, three more In the seventh.
3-1, aod the New York Yankees Sparky Lyle gamed his 19th
beat the Minnesota Twins, 9-6. save for New York.

Stewart to score the eventual
wmmng run and the Astros
pushed across four more
unearned runs in the e1ghth
along with Johnny Edwards'
leadoff homer to break open a
close game.
Dave Kmgman's three-run
homer in the fifth inmng off
loser Carl Morton, earned the

Ctty Ed1 tor

St . Pomerov , Oh io.

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566

38 37

35 42 .455 14
33 43 4)4 15112
Sunday ' s Results
K C 6 Cleve 4 ll sll

Cal1f or n ta
Texa s

De tro ll

Oark at

at

Wizard Air Conditioner
Quiol 2-opoed fan pluo +way ad
(uslable air direction
• Washobl• Sconfoam filter
• Eaay-to-uH inttallation kit with

$19995

99

345

71 27 4 34 93 339
Mota, LA 57 176 2B 57 324
Alou , St L
68 260 31 84 323
)4 305 47 98 321
76 309 49 99 320
Lee, SO 66 24B 35 79 31 9

Tuesday's Games
Ch1cag o at Cleve land
K C at Balt 1more
Mdwa at M1nn
Texa s at Detro1t
Boston at Oak land

New York at Ca l 1f

I nternaflonal League
Standmg s
Un1ted Press International

Ga rr . Atl

321 39 102

Wllam s, Ch •

76 303 48 94

Clmn te P1l

62 252 46 7B

Am encan Lea gu e

g
Sh nblum , KL

ab

r h

31 8

56 1'112

38

57

W. L Pet. G. B.

Cha r leston

46

LOUISVIlle

45 36

556 3

T1dewater

42

40

512

39
39

42
42

31

49

481 9
481 9
388 !61/2

pel

31

507

Penmsu \a

Sunday's Resulls

Lou• svllle 10 Rochester 3
Toledo 4 Syracuse 0
Pen1nsula 3 T1dewater 0
Charleston 4 Rtchm ond 2

297

Maybry , KC
Blue-Sky Law
74 243 24 72 296
Kansas. m 1911, was the
Epl1n. Oa k
73 240 38 7l 296 fu st state to adopt a blueCarew , Mmn
sky law regula tin g securJty
73 274 26 BO
292 dealm gs that "had no more
Ol 1ver. Cal 75 299 33 B7 291 basiS than so many feet of
Home Run s
blue sky,'' acco rdm ~ to EnNaf1onal Jeague Bench, Cm
and Kmgman , SF 21 , Aaron, Atl cvclopaedJa Bntanmca
lB . Slargel l. P1ll and Colbert ,
so 17
Amencan League : Allen, Cht

17, Jackson, Oak 15 , Cash , Del
and Epste m , Oak 14 , Duncan,

Oak 13
Runs Batted In
National League: Bench, 63,

K1ngman, SF 58 , Sta rgell , P1ll
56 , Ol 1ver, P1tt 55, R ader, Hou

and Colbert, SO 53.

Amer1can League. Allen, Chi
57 , Ma yberry, KC 46 , Ol1ver ,

Cal. May, Ch1and Sando, Oak
44
P1lchmg
National League : Nolan , Cl n
12 2 , Seaver, NY 11 5, Car lton ,
Phd 11 6, J enkms . Ch1 11 7,

Your
Agent

Blass, P1 tt 10 2. Sulton , LA and
Cleveland, S1. L 10 4
Amencan league

Lo l tch,

Del 14-6 , Perry , Ctev 13-7 ;
Wood . Chi 12- ~ . Palmer. Ball 11 4, Ryan , Cal 11 5; Ho ltzman ,
Oak ll -6, Bahnsen, Ch1 1l 9

2-HOUR
CLEANING
(Upon Request)

DALE

WARNER
Our Polley Is

Entire Cover11ge
Rest assu.-ed when you
1:,:;,•~:~• wtlh us thai your
-I
1s covered for f1re,
liab1i1ty. Come 1n and
soothing facts .

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
2nd·
Pomeroy

~-111E

· ·

Phone 992-5428

Consult Us Soon

Davis-Warner Ins.
"' Phone "2·2966
Court St
Pomeroy

COMPARE THESE LOW
LOW PRICES ANYWHERE
PRICES GOOD THIS WEEK ONLY
JULY lOth THRU JULY 15th!
5,000 BTU
6,000 BTU
8,000 BTU
•
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0

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0
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~ Green~ Black . i~~~~o 12 Converse All Stars Tennis Shoes '995 ~~

Nat1onal advert1s1ng
represental•ve
Bott 1ntlli
Gallagher , Inc , 12 East A2nd
St , New York Ci ty , New York
Subscr1pt10n rat~s
De
l1vered by carrier where
ava1lable SO cents per week,
Bv Motor Rout e where carr1er
serv• ce not avai lable ' One
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Western Auto Associate Sture ,_,.,:

su 00

months $7 25 . Thru
months U SO Subscription

'

pr1ce mcludes Sundly T1m1U ·
Sent.nel
·

'

61h

39 40 m B
39 40 .494 8

R1chmond
310 Tole&lt;to
Ro chester
310 Syracuse

6I 202 27 66 327
Pnll a. KC 73 280 44 90 321
Rud1,0ak 71 2B9 47 90 311
OilS. KC 72 272 33 B4 309
May, Ch1 74 262 45 78 29B
F •sk , Bos

M1 lwaukee I Steoh~nson 2 tl

M innesota ( Perry 6·8l. 2 15
pm

Ol tv er Pil

15

af

pm

287 56

St L

I 1)

Kansas C1ty ( Drago 7 9) a t

Sngullen P1 t

Brock,

(Lemonds

Bal hmore (Cuellar 7 6). 7 30

Umt ed Press Internationa l
Lead1ng Batters
Nat1ona l League
g ab r h pet.

L.eaen o Hou
72

10 7), 8 IS

Clevelan d IPerry 13 71. 7.30
pm

Mator League Leade rs

14,000 BTU, 2-SPEED
0

Ch• cago

L A al Ph il

P 1tt a t Cmc1
Atl anta at St Lou

It Again

\Coleman

pm

Tuesday 's Games
Houston at Ch1 cago, 2

~-

Pomeroy , Oh ro

l lf2

486 4
425 8112
.WJ 10

W L.

Oa kland
Cht cago

1

541

40 34
35 36

427 16
342 2 11 1
592
577

Sa n Fran CISC O 34 48
Sa n D1cgo
29 48

Easl
~O ~ 4 P~J41 G. B.

,

New York
Boston
Cle11ela nd

Pet

W L

Amencan League

5B7 4
533 B
532 B

San Fran at New Yor k
San D1ego at M ontr eal

Game)
202 000 0--4 7 2
Me1gs
After battling each other
000 000 0---1) 2 I
Chilhcothe
three
years th rough h1gh
Van Matre and D1xon
school,
Eastern's Denms
Wea ver and Ragland
E1chmger and North Galha's
(Second Game)
Arthur Clark were at 1t once
000
000
0---1)
2
0
Me1gs
agam
m the Middleport In001 000 x- 1 1 0
Chillicothe
Perry and D1xon Hill and depe nd en t Basketball League
Sunday The two stars played
Chester .
to a stand-&lt;lff
E1ch1nger sco red 17 and
Clark 16 but E1chmger's team,
The D31ly Scntmel, prevailed,
87-78, over Clark and the
Middleport De partment Store
In other actwn, Mark V got
G1ants to v1ctory over Mon - past the Pomeroy National
treal Bobby Bonds hJl hiS t2th Bank 73-02 and the Fnendly
homer off Morgon to lead off Tavern ga med a forfeit wm
over Adolph's Da1ry Valley.
the game
Balanced scormg for the
The Padres scored th1 ee
unearned runs m the third Sentmel, wluch had Bob Ritmmng and Clarence Gaston chie w1th 16, E1chin ger with 17,
drove in smgle runs m the fifth and Mick Childs, R1chard
and seve nth as San D1ego Douglas, and Rod Fer guson all
With 18, offset Steve Barlrum 's
defeated Philadelphia
30 for the Middleport Depart·
ment Store.
Ron Ferguson 's 22 and Dox1e
Walters' 21led Mark V to their
wm Gene WISe paced the
Mr and Mrs Jay Scott and Bankers w1th 16 wh1le Don
fanuly of Columbus, 0. VISited Nelson added 15 and Bill
Mrs. Sylv1a Carpenter.
Vaughan 14 .
Steve Donaldson of Fmdlay,
Box scores:
0 IS spendmg the summer
(F1rst Game )
w1th h1s grandmother, Mr and
POMEROY NATION AL
Mrs. Charles Ca rro ll and BANK (62) - Smlth4-1-9, WISe
fam1ly .
8-0-16, Nelson 6-3-15, Vaughan
Mr and Mrs George 6-2-14, Hill 3-2-ll Totals 27-ll-B2
Roberts of Bashan. Mrs Sylvia
MARK V 173 ) - Rn
Ca rpenter , loca l, attended Ferguson Jl}-2-22, Walters 9-3meetmg at Un10n Gospel 21, M Howard 5-1-11 , Boggs 2MISSIOn Church , and VISilerl tl-4, M. Sayre 1-2-4, R. Sayre 5Mr and Mrs. Olie McKmney at 1-11. Totals 32-8-73
Charles ton , W. Va
(Second Game)
Those vis1ting Mr: and MIS
DAILY SENTINEL (87) Michael Evans and fam 1ly Eichmger fl.l-17, R1tch1e fl.l}-16,
were Mr and Mrs Charl es Childs 9.().18, Douglas 7--4-18,
Warth aod sons, Mr. aod Mrs. Rd. Ferguson fi.Z.18 Totals 4{).
Donald Hunnel and son, Mrs. 7-ll7.
Hermce Evans, Mr Terry
MIDDLEPORT DEP'T
Evans, and friend, all of STORE ( 78) - Clark 6-4-16,
Pomeroy, 0., Mrs. Ada Van Bartrum 13-4-30, Mitchell 4.().l!,
Me!Aer, Leota B1rch, E(a me F1fe 7-0-14 , Hawley 1·0·2,
Lehew, Kimberley, D1ane, and Johnson 4.().l!. Totals 35-3-78.
Troy Ward They all helped
Standings
celebrate Ryan Evans' first Team
w. L.
b~rthda} .
7 0
D. Sentinel
MarkV
5 2
Adolph's
4 3
The heart beats 100,000
Mid
Dep't
hmes a day, according to
2 5
the Amencan Heart Associ a· Porn. Nat Banil
2 5
lion.
Fr. Tavern
1 6
(F~r st

'ftCIIhor-Hght vinyl Mal

Phone your nearby City Loan Office ...
then stop by for your
vacation funds .

45769 Busi ness Offr ce Phone
99 2 2156, Edrtorial Pnone 992

Eichinger,

Bald Knobs News Notes
Sunday School attendance at
Freedom Gospel M•ss1on July 2
was 46. The offermg was $14.52.
Mr. and Mrs. Cart Autherson, local, Mrs. Elva Dalley of
Syracuse VISited Mr. and Mrs.
Burl LaRue at Parkersburg,
W Va .
Mrs. Elva Dailey and Mrs
Judy Pape and KrJSlen of
Syracuse VISited Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Autherson.
Mr . and Mrs Wilham Clonch
of Harnsonville, 0., Mr and
Mrs Roy Clonch and family of
Akron , 0. visited Mrs Nona
Long, and Sm1th
Mrs . Bert1e McMurray IS a
patient at Veterans Memor~al
HospitaL
Miss Lorrame McMurray,
M1ss Sue McMurray of Athens,
0 visited Loms McMurra y and
Marie Beaver.
Mrs Rea tha Clonch and
fam1Iy of Rutland . 0 , Mr and
Mrs . Hayes McMurray,
Portland Rt., and Leota B1rch,
local, visited Mr. and Mrs.
George Hupp.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Lane of
Hebron, 0. is visiting Mr and
Mrs. Harry Richard and
fam1ly aod Floyd Richard.
Mr . Clint Birch and
daughter, Leota , vis1ted Mr.
aod Mrs. Ernest Brewer and
family .
Mr . and Mrs . Theodore
Willford and daughters viSited
her parents, Mr and Mrs.
James Anderson and family at
Keno.

w
48

Pi tt sburgh
New Yor k

( Reyno lds 0 4) , 5 35 p m

-

while bemg charged with Ius
f1rst loss in SIX decis10ns
Coach George Nesselroad's
local nine will trave l to New
Haven th1s Wednesday. Me1gs
IS now 14-9·1 on the year and
Ch1lhcothe IS 12-13.

Row In 3-0 Win Pirates Rout McLa_in, 7-4
United Press International
The Pittsburgh P~rate s
routed, ~nny McLain with an
early home run barrage
Sunday and went on to defea t
the Atlanta Braves 7-4
Willie Stargell led off the
second inmng w1lh h1s 17th
homer of the season and Bob
Robertson hit a two-run homer
that same mmng.
When AI Oliver hit a threerun homer m the th1rd, the
P~rates had a IH&gt; lead and that
was 1t for McLam, who made
h1s Atlanta debut last Tuesday
m a 3-3 tie ruth Ch1c~go . •
The Pitale6, · dl vl!libh' •.
leaders m the National League
East, handed Mclam h1s first
Nallonal League defeat.
Mclain was obtained by the
Braves from the Oakland
Athletics' Birmmgham farm
club m the Southern League
two weeks ago.
McLam ,
a
colorful
nghlhander, was shelled for
s1x earned runs and five hils m
the 2 1·3 mnings he worked.
Hank Aaron slammed h1s
657th career homer and a runscormg double for the Braves.
In other Nat10nal League
action, Los Angeles blanked
New York, 2-0, Chicago swept a
doubleheader from Cincinnati,
:Hl and 10-5, Houston npped St.
Louis, 12-6, San Francisco
defeated Montreal, 5-1, and San
D1ego edged Philadelphia, S--4 .
Claude Osteen pitched a sixhit shutout as the Dodgers
defeated New York . Lee
Lacey, Los Angeles' rookie
second baseman, led the
Dodger attack against Tom
Seaver with three hits, scoring
one run and driving in another
run .
Three St. Louis errors in the
last three mnings opened the
door to five unearned runs and
enabled Houston to defeat the
Cardinals.
Catcher Ted Simmons'
throwing error in the seventh
enabled pinch-runner Jimmy

Untied Press International
Nat1ona I league
East
l. Pel G B.

Attorney Bob Gerst prompSu nday 's Res ults
K C 8 Cleve 5 (2nd )
ted Blue to demand a $110,1100 San Fran 5 Montreal I
L A 7 New Yor k 0
Ch 1cago 5 Oet 4 (1st )
contract for 1972 after bemg San Otego 5 Phil 4
De t . : h1Cago 2 (2nd)
' Oakla
the hottest property m baseball Pll 7 Atlanta 4
nd 3 M1lw I
Tex as 3 Ball 2 110 mnmgs l
around m1d-season last year Chtc ag o 5 Cm et 0 ( 1st ga me )
go 10 Ctnc t 5 ( 2nd game) Cal1 f 3 Bost on 0
Carmen Fanzone, a 31}-year- Chtca
Houston I? Sl Lou 6
Today's Probable P1tchers
old rookie, drove home f1ve of
Today' s Probable P1tche.-s
I All Times EDT)
I AII Tomes EDT)
the ten Cub runs m the second
New York ( Kekich (B-6) at
San D1 ego IArlm 7 B) at Mont Calif (Wnght 8 4). II p .m .
game w1th a home run and a
IMoore 0 31. 8 05 p m
Boston (M c Glothen 1 l) at
bases-loaded double.
San Fran ( Barr 2 2) at New Oa kla nd (Holtzman l1 ·6L 11
York IGe nlry 3 61 , B 05 p m
pm
LA IDown•ng 5 51 al Ph il
Texa s (Stanhouse 0 0) at

Van Matre, Dixon Brilliant

... only take a minute"

Publrs.hed daily eKcepl
Saturday by The Otlio Valley
Publ rshing Company, 111

S1x

;

Cub HeX Continues 5-0 and 10-5

"Just one stop at

VellM!N SI-IEAKE~ TR'IIN'

Sentinel

and W Va, One year

'

3- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport·Pom..-oy, o., July 10, 1972

Nt&gt;w s pnpe r En t e n •rllle Al!sn

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Euc Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH,

Court

.

1t, " satd Davis

• A84

Pass

..

DON &amp; EDNA WILSON

•

MI~:~:~ORT,O,

�;

2-The Dilly Sentinel, Mlddleport·PumeroY, 0., July 10, 11172

WIN AT BRIDGE '

A Face in the Crowd

EDirORIAL

Koreans Mellow
In -Political Tide
The decision of the two Koreas to starttalk1ng w1th each
other after two decades of shoutm g may have taken the
world by surprise, but 1t d1d not come totally without
warning
'
The two regimes already had made gmge rly public contact through Red Cross repre,&lt;;entalJ vcs. a very safe and
politically noncommittal first step Those m power m
Seoul and Pyongyang may have known there was something more to those civil but stiff mJtlal meetmgs last
year on the Panmunjon neutral ground, but any outside
observer who had taken thiS as the shape of somethmg
else to come -so rapidly would likely have lost h1s pund1t
accreditatiOn on grounds of foolish optimism
Numerous developments , not all of a Korean nature.
produced the changed atmosphere wh1ch makes rapprochment posSible
President Nixon's summit diplomacy has imtiated dra·
malic changes m the great power relalionships wh1ch set
the tone, and usually determme the mtensity in the case
of chen! states such as the Koreas, for the confrontations
of smaller countnes.
Korea has been largely on the Sidelines during the years
of the V1etnam conflict and assorted other flash cnses
around the globe, benefjciary of a bemgn neglect wh1ch
has given the Kor~ans a somewhat freer hand m workmg
out their own future than IS the case w1lh most such small
states on the East-West Ideological front lme.
Both North and South Korea have made ImpresSive
recoveries from the war that devastated both Both are
able to talk about reuniOcatJOn from posit10ns of conSiderable internal strength, an equality wh1ch removes an
element of stram from negohatwns
Events may have created the atmosphere for contact
but in the end it was men who made •t posSible-men m
Seoul and Pyongyang who dec1ded the t1me had come to
begin , at least, to talk to each other .
Somethmg similarly has been developing, although
much m e hesitantly and less dramatically , m anothe1
divided le cy of World War 11- Germany And then there
is V!etnam
Not much ess surprising than the decision of the
Koreans to t k reunification would have been at one
time, the wei orne 1t has received m Washington Such
do-lt-themselves diplomacy, which is openly bemg v1ewed
as presag1~g a scalmg down 1f not phasmg out of Slgmficant U.S. mvolvement, would have been v1ewed as an
alarming weakening of the anti-Communist front not so
very long ago
Even today, Korean developments are likely to appear
more ommous than ophmJShc to some who discern little
baSic change in the world Sltuatwn dunng the past two
decades. Desp1te summ1try, mellowmg regimes and
travel and trade re laxations. the Cummumst enemy IS as
inimical as ever
Neyertheless, times change, even m power poht•cs
President Park's Seoul reg1me, actmg largely on 1ts own
would ap~ear to be very much in step w1th President
Nixon's diplomacy of reconc1hat10n on the global scale
The reumfieatwn gesture, whatever its eventual result
at least has the virtue of allied consiStency
·
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRI SE ASSN l

VA Aim: Get More
Vets in Schools
By DON GRAFF

~
:··
If war can be said to have fnnge benefits, certainly
among the most valuable to the mdiv1duals mvolved
and to the natiOnal welfare to which they contnbute have
been educational a1d programs for veterans.
Under various "GI bills" datmg back to World War
II , millions of former servicemen have acqmred educations they otherwise could not have afforded, or only
w•th greatest difficulty
·
In the Vietnam era, almost 40 per cent of veteran s are
takmg advantage of educatiOnal programs Nevertheless.
the Veterans Admm1Slrat10n IS co ncerned because those
who could most benefit from educational aid, the eco~omically and soc ially diSadvantaged veterans, are passmg up the opportumty
Accordmg to Defense Department statistics, 1n 1971
almost 45 per cent of returnmg servicemen w1th some
previous college expenence re turned to school Only 13 4
per cent at the h• gh school level chose to go on w1lh
VA aid
There is also a rac1al colonng to the figures. Of the
hi~h school graduates, 14 per cent of white veterans enrolled in college programs, but only 9 4 per cent of the
black returnees did
The VA, m cooperatiOn w1th federal agencies and other
oragnizations, includmg churches, is trymg to correct
the imbalance throu~h an informatiOn program A project
financed by the Office of Economic Opportunity and operated by the National League of C11les and the Co nference of Mayors is seekmg out new veterans m low·lncome areas of a number of maJor cit1es gettin g the
word around of the opportunihes open to them and encouraging many more of them to complete or continue
their educations
Until they do, the GI educational program s will be
nowhere near a.s valuable as they could be.

HEARl'S WORLD

at the Democratic Convention

"'

"Why don't you people check into the Fontainebleau
like ererybody else?"

\

Helen Help

•

·us. • •

By Helen Bonel

DON'T RAIN ON HER PARADE

Dear Helen :
I tell my wife about her shortcomings for her own gQOd. Now
I find shehsswritten to you trying to get national sympathy.
1want you to know that I operate in tune with Fraok Clark's
words: "Criticism, like rain, should be gentle enough to nourish a
man's growth without destroying his roots." - CONSTRUCTIVE
CRITH:;
Dear Critic:
Either you come on like a cloudburst or your wife has very
shallow roots. Try compllments, - lf.

+++

Dear Helen:
!laughed last year when I read that a psychiatrist believes
TV sports are a subslltute for sex - that is, men become less
"!overly" the more involved they are in spectator sports.
Lastyear,you see, I was a newlywed, aod teleVISion came in
a poor second, except for the Rose Bowl Game.
Nowadays I'm beginning to believe the shrink was fight. I
tried kiSsing my husband Sunday afternoon and be growled, "Get
out of the
you're blocking my VIew ... On game days, forget

war.

it!

,..

What's baselillll got that I haven't got? -STRIKING_OUT
Dear S.O. :
Willie McCovey ,., Vida Blue ,,. Willie Mays ...
l.ook little wile, you aren't cancelled - just postponed. - H.

+++
Dear Helen:
I am bugged (lilerally) by a disc jockey at a radio station in
San Francisco. Two years ago I wrote him a fan letter and, ever
smce, he has said things oo his program that make me know he
can bear everything In my apartment. Like when I dropped a
glass and be said, "Now I want complete quiet for this record."
~IMIMMM~~·~·~·~•::~.~~~~u~.:~
.. ~;u~.~~~u~~~~~~~~w~·~~~~~-·~..·~··~~~~~~·~•~.:~wa&amp;~l
He not only has sneaked in and bugged my room, but he's
wired It for sound. I hear music and talking that doesn't come
from my radio, and then there's something like insects buzzing.
He doesn't leave me alone fora minute. He'son thealr about four
hours a day, and when be Isn't saying terrible things to me, then
he's piping them in from some other place at all hoW'S oflbe day
BY JACK O'BRIAN
1t's mme and I'm entertaining fnends.
aod night.
I have wr1tten to the FCC but they say they can't handle
SHE KNOWS WHICH SIDE
"One mght, I was thnlled to death when personal problems. The ·district attorney aod police will do
HER BREAD IS PARTHENON
Kate Srruth herself called to say she'd like a
NEW YORK (KFS) - We've been calhng large table to entertain herself and fnends at a nothing for me, and even my grown children won't listen pretend not to hear what's all around me .
'71-'72 the Year of the Greeks because of the
b1rthday party. I mlroduced her from the floor
It's some kind of plot to drive me crazy. Please believe me,
Onassis craze and the sudden blossommg of not knowing 1t was her own birthday aod
aod
tell me what to do to get rid of this alUlOuncer.- BUGGED
Hellenic cafes m NY , Among whiCh , Dwnysos everyone was coaxing her to smg 'God Bless
is one of the Greekest .. And a g1ft that no one AmerJca .' It ended w1th me, mstead, singing TO DEATil
Dear Bugged:
should beware of IS Georgia SambaZJs, co- 'Happy Birthday.' "
First : turn off your radio and leave it off! (Or at least
owner, who delights in relating the star-studded
We asked Georgia at what hour Dionysos beamed AWAY from San Fraoclsco l )
events .. Here's just a taste from the other starts swmging.
Second: see a doctor or a dentist. There's a possibility that
night :
"Paul Newman and wife Joanne came m one of your dentalfilllngs has ~me a radio signal detector and
"When you, Jack , told me that the Greeks one rught with the1r two young teenage children
were finally jet set champions with a little help for dinner at about 6p.m., and sa1d they 'd heard is picking up sounds from a nearby station. Unexplained voices
from Jackie 0., I knew that my deciSion to go how entertaining and delightful the restaurant aod music cao push the bearer into all sorts of weird suspicions
mto the nightclub • restaurant busmess was was, and I tried to explain that the ambience of - aod you've latched on to ao innocent armouncer probably
nght," said Georgia. "I'd spent most of my life the room didn 't happen by itself, that 11 took because you hear hun so many hours a day he has become an
dancmg at somebody's party or restaurant or people to make it alive, and that until 8 o'clock obsession wlth you .
So much for my logical ploy. If you are still "bugged,"
charity affarrs and I got•the 1dea when two dear or so, there would be no activity. They seemed
fnerids, who are my partners now , said they 'd so disappointed and of course, didn't want the psychiatric counseling is your best hope. - H.
ta~kll! the idea with me One of them is Taki
children to stay up too late, so I called the or·
Stamolis, who ism that native Greek sport, the chestra in ear her and Paul and Joanne and the
shipping business, but with every free mmute, ch1ldren danced w1th me and the w&amp;ters and we
Ha.{mon~r:. J:t's
he also was out dancing.
all had .a. fine time,
.
"Richard Harris has been With us every
He loved the 1dea. The other was Paul
What's m a second?
lime he's in town, and for almost two years
Sapounakis, who lent not only hiS charm to the
Enough to bring all th e nations of the world mto agreement
for a change, wh•ch is a very great deal mdeed
'Sleuth'
star
Keith
Baxter
was
a
regular.
Yoko
restauraot, but an exceptional talent as an
The agreement was on a 61-second minute . the first
architect. The lucky three of us from that f~rst and John Lennon sat in the bar one night for
such
in all of recorded tim e. In case you miSsed 1!. the
hours
unlll
someone
recogniZed
them
aod
asked
openmg night have been teachmg the town, aod
long
count
occurred Simultaneously around the world at
the entire country, how to dance, Greek-style, for an autograph, wh1ch made them leave.
times
ranging
from 2 p m June 30 in Hawaii to 1 a m
"Just the other mght, Bobby Short aod I July I 111 London
side by s1de, arms entwmed and spirits free.
and was necessary to bring th e earth
"Taki was actually the one who set the pace were talking about my first cocktail party for back i\l to the same time frequency as the um verse.
for us when he told us that we would hire nothing him when Bill Blass and Donald Brooks and all
Earth time is based on the revolution of the planet
but Greek sailors from the vessels, for as he welcomed hun back from his first visit to the which. has a tendency to wobble a bit. Universal t1me:
said, there isn 't a Greek sailor that can't dance, White House. Bobby was overjoyed that the · for scientific purposes, IS based on the radiat•on of an
serve food , and who IS not also the handsomest Nixons had asked him to come and play for their atom of cesmm, wh1ch never, never vanes-9 192 631 770
guests who were the Duke and Duchess of OSCillations per second The discrepancy COmpound ed
man you've ever seen
over the years could have had inconveni ent conseq uences
"He was right, we've had several of them Wmdsor. Both were great fans of Bobby's, aod such as sunsets at noon
'
whisked out of our restaurant by romance, aod he remembers that the Duke particularly liked
Thus the worldwide decision to add an extra second
we've even lost some of them to f1bns In fa ct, the song 'Bye Bye Blackbird.' Bobby had to ordinary earth hme won' t have any effect on \he boilone of our steady customers, Anthony Quinn, always said (m the two years we've been open) mg hme of an egg or make anyone any earlier or later
'
'
who delights our patrons every time he comes m that the Duke would have loved the dancing and 111 gettin g to the off1ce.
But it IS at least comfortmg to know that such reallv
to daoce the S~rtak• , 1s screen testmg one of our that next tune around New York, he'd brmg
C?SIIll_c
. matters can. be settled by the nat10ns w1th suc h
them in as his guests. We of course fought about
boys right now to play h1s son m a new f1bn
Simplicity
and that we earthlin gs, with all our mundane
"I try very hard each evenmg to imag1ne whose guests they 'd be, but I guess now we've problems of
war, poverly and pollution are once aga in
J
that the cafe IS a great big living room, and that both lost."
synchroni zed with the universe.

I Voice along Br'Way

About Time

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Opemng lead- + K

By Oswald &amp; James .Jacoby

Oswald "AI Sobel, chief
tourgament (~~rec to r of the
Amencan Contract Bridge
League, was one of my old
and very dear friend s Although he was a year Qlder
than I am, I remember when
he first started to assist Lt.
Gen Gruenther in tournament direction. Then, when
the general's increasing milItary responsibilihes t ook
' h•m away from bridge, AI
became th e top d~rector."
J1m " ! re member the
first tim e I heard and saw
h1m at a tournament There
w11l never be a direcl or ·like
h1m "

Oswald · "This is no re flecIJO n on Ihe new breed of
tournament directors. 'j'hey
all are extraordmarily competent, but not one of them
will ever really take Sobel's
place ••
Jim : "He loved to play
br~dge Here's a hanli he
played m R10 at the 1969
World 's championships."
Oswald : "It was a ~reilm­
mary game and, While the
b1ddmg by AI and his partner may not be elegant, they
got to the right contract."
J1m: "AI was very proud
of his pI a y. He carefull y
called for a low diamond
from dumm y at trick one.
He ruffed the second diamond , played ace-kmg and
SIX of h e a r t s to rulf m
dummy Then he ran trumps
and eventua lly used dummy's ace of diamonds to diScard his losinl( club."
Oswald "Not too complica ted, but if he had played
the ace di amonds at trick
one ,h~~hJ 1 R/hve b~e~ 1 ~el,'~
'"'w\r~r." JII~' ""S! '41(' 1•
Th e b1ddm g has beyn
WeSI North
East Soulh
P ass
1•
l•
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Pass
J "Pa ss
You, South, h old
.AJ543 ¥K9763 hoid "'Q107
What do you do now?
A-Bul fou r flubs. Establish
dubs as the suit rig-ht now
TOOAY'S QUESTION
Yout pa r tner continues to fiVe

clu bs What do you do now?

Answer

t omorrow

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

(NEWSPA PER ENTUPRISE ASSN )

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
Salt Reduction May Help

Almost Alike
The chemical formula of
chlorophyll is the same as
The 34th All-American
• that of blood- with one tiny Soap Box Derby at Akron,
difference. Instead of the Ohio, was won by Larry
atom of magnesium, blood Blair, 13, of Oroville , Calif..
has
an atom of iron.
Aug . 14, 1971, The World
mediCal status. I have freAlmanac says. He captured
quently observed that with
first place in a record. 272
d1et and adequate we1ght reduchon many people de- would do well to at least cut finalists from 47 states,
velop normal press ure. Of down and preferably elimin- Canada and other areas,
course, if the person is al- ate the use of added salt in and received a $7,500 colready skinny, he'll have to thei~ d1et. This means not lege scholarship. The field
use a different approach In addmg salt during cooking mc;luded five girls, the first
general, individuals who have preparation and not adding to enter in Derby history.
,
CovYr l'!,hl IV 11172 ,
elevated b I o o d pressure salt at the table

Hypertension Is a Symptom
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb-Is hypertension and high blood pressure the sam e thmg'' Is II a
symptom or a diSease'! How
high 1s too hi gh' Wha t
could be the consequences of
car rymg a readm g of 200/ 105
untreated for several
months '
Dear Reader- Yes, hypertenswn and h•gh blood pressure are the same thing
Tenswn refers to pressure
and hyper, of course, means
mcreased, hence increased
pressure or h•gh blood pressure.
A single elevated blood
pressure reading should not
be conSidered as a disease
It is a symptom Single off1ce readings hke thiS may
often represent merely the
apprehensiOn of the patient
about hiS med1cal exammat10n Befor e it IS assumed
that a person has true hypertens10n, a number of
1eadmgs need to be taken
on different occas10ns. Somelimes the patient's blood
pressure w 111 subside to
normal levels after he IS m
the doctor 's off1ce for 30
minutes or an hour Often
doctors take the blood pres-·
sure at the beginning of the
examinatiOn and at the end
to find out 1f the patient's
pressure has dropped.
As · these remarks would
suggest, elevated pressure 1s
a symptom . Sometimes 1t•s

caused by a problem m elfculallon to 1 he k•dney s
(these are rare cases) Some
authont•es have amassed a
Ia• ge number of cases that
are associated w1th endocnne problems involvmg
the adrenal glands that rest
over the kidneys
Many cases of elevated
blood pressure will return to
normal values 1f the person
Simply loses any excess body
fat that he may have For
this reason many good heart
r t
h
specla •s s 1n s 1s 1 1 at pa·
bents with moderately elevated blood pressure should
l?se fat before takin g medi·
cme I agree with this conce pt. This has an added bonus smce most of the comPllc a tions Of hl£h blood
sure, Including strokes and
heart attacks, are re lated to
the fatty depoSits m the artenes These deposits are
mcreased in the presence of
persistently elevated blood
pressure
We1ght reduction decreases th e amount of blood
fat. and prevents fatty depoSits m the arteries and
h ~lps to prevent the comphcatwns of high blood pressure. Women , durmg their
ch1ldbearmg yea rs, are Jess
prone to hav e fatty deposits
m their artenes than men
and usually tolerate elevated
blood press ure better than
men Th~re is no absolute
level of norm_al for blood
pressur~ but, Ill general, it
shouldn t be more than

\

140/ 90 on repeated examinatwns over a penod of lime.
There is some evidence to
suggest that the lower the
blood pressure the less bkely there will be fatty deposits in the arlenes and the
less likely that strokes and
heart attacks will occur
I can't tell you what kind
of problem will result from
not treatmg a blood pressure of 200/ 105. It depends
on what causes it and whether that's the perSistent level
of the blood pressure and
the rest of the individual's

The

Dai~

They'll Do It Every Time
SWEET·TALK ~IS WAYPI&gt;.ST
STONEWALl., 81JT
" 1'1:1 15-"DGIE-SWIM.EE!"

CINCINNATI (UP!) - W1th Reds attempt to forget
today an off-day on the baseball games m Clncmnati,
schedule, the Cincinnati Reds the
Re&lt;ls
dropped
a
will stage what they hope will doubleheader to the Chicago
become their first annual golf Cubs.
tournament.
The Cubs, who came mto
Johnny Bench 1and Joe Cincmnati last Friday losers of
Morgao, each with an 8 han- 13 of their last 17 games, wound
dicap, are co-favorites on a up with a 3-1 edge m the fournorthern Kentucky course.
game weekend set. The Reds
And perhaps al\er what won Saturday, 3-2, making
happened Sunday, it's best the pitcher Gary Nolan 12-2.

Fergie Jenkins blanked the
Reds !HI m the first game
Sunday, gaining his 11th VIC·
tory against seven losses. The
Cubs, pounding out IS hits,
made it a sweep to take the
second game, li).,'i, as Mill
Pappas won his sixth game
against five losses.
The two defeats narrowed
the Reds' lead to one game
over second.place HOI!ston m

the National League West. On
Tuesday night, the Reds will be
back at Riverfront Stadmm
where they will meet the Pittsburgh Pirates m the opener of a
thr""ilame ser1es that con,
eludes the current homestand.
The Cubs now hold a 7·2 edge
over the Reds m therr serJC$
this season.
"We can't beat humpty dumpty pttchers," said Cubs

Manager Leo Durocher, "then
mto Cincmnati and
beat three good ones "
Tommy Davis, a 33-year-old
c~stoff of the Oakland Athletics
who was activated last Friday
alter bemg s1gned by the Cubs
as a free agent, had a hand '"
both the Sunda y Chicago
VJctones
Davis Cut By A's
The fo rmer two-llme

we come

Na tiona l Leagu e battmg
champ smgied home the Cubs'
first run 1n the first game and
drove home three more with a
pair of singles 1n the second
gam e DaviS batted .324 for
Oakland but still wound up
being released before the end
of spring tra1rung thiS season.
The explanalion .,
"The fact that I mtroduced
Vida Blue to my lawyer m1ght
have had somethmg to do w1th

But Split Two at Chillicothe
Me•gs American Leg1on 's
brilhant 1·2 pitching combination of Rick Van Maire and
Stan Perry held Chillicothe to
only three hits in two games
Sunday at Chillicothe but the
MeigsCountlans managed only
a split, winning the first 4-j)
behind Van Maire and losing
the second I~ with Perry on
the mound.
Steve Dunfee's tw~ut line
double to left driving m Rich
Ash who had singled and Roger

Dixon who walked in the first
mnmg of the first game was all
Van Maire needed.
Meigs scored two more in the
third when Van Matre singled
with one out, Dixon followed
with'&amp; triple to centerfield, and
Dunfee drove in Dixon.
Other hitters for Meigs were
smgles by Kevin Sheets and
Jon Buck.
The only hits Chillicothe
managed were a second inning
single by Roger Ragland and a

Ryan Fans 8 In

fourth mning smgle by Tom
Taylor.
Van Matre, 7-1, rolled
through the Chillicothe lmeup,
farming six and walkmg two,
disposing of the losers through
seven innings on 96 pitches.
Greg Weaver went the distance
lor Chilhcolhe . He fanned e1ghl
and walked two.
In the second game R1ch
Beverly's speed was the difference as the slick-fieldmg
shortstop, who looks and plays
like Dave ConcepciOn, walked
w1th one out, stole second, and
scored on a soft liner to left by
Howie Reed.

Meigs' M1ck Ash scooped the
ball up on the second hop m
leftijeld and fired home but his
near rei-feet peg barely was too
late.
The only two hits Me1gs
managed were back-to-back
singles w1th two out m the th1rd
frame by M. Ash and Dave
Wolfe .
Randy Hill, a curve-ball
arl1st, fanned e1ght Me1gs
batters in gomg the distan ce
and issued only two free
passes.
Perry, on the other hand ,
fanned 11 and walked four

California scored all three of
Uulted Press International
Its
runs in the fourth inning off
Nolan Ryan allowed only one
Sonny
Siebert. Vada Pmson,
hit, struck out 16 batters including a league record e1ght Bob Oliver, Ken McMullen and
in a row - and retired the last Leo Cardenas each smgled and
26 Boston hitters 1n successiOn Boston threw 111 an error.
Tom Haller, who had tripled
as the Callforma Angels beat
and
doubled earlier, hit a twothe Red Sox, ~. Sunday
run
homer
m the mnth mmng to
evening.
An inconsistent performer g1ve Lolich hiS v1ctory and the
durmg his earher career w1th T1gers their split Ch1cago had
the New York Mels, Ryan, a taken the opener when R1ck
fast-balling righthander, has Reichardt smgled over a
suddenly developed into the pulled-in outfield with the
new pitching sensation of the bases loaded in the nmth
American League with five Joe Lovltto, who had lr1pled
straight complete game vic· home the tying run in the
tortes, two consecutive e1ghth mning, doubled home
shutouts, and 16·slrikeouts Toby Harrah w1th two out in
performances In two of his last the lOth as Texas surpnsed the
Orioles once again. Baltimore
three games.
Ryan, who said he threw fast had taken a 2-1 lead m the
ball!l 70 to 80 pet. of the hme, seventh on Boog Powell's
opened the game at Anaheun pmch--h1t smgle.
Amos Otis drove in !Ive runs
by walking Tommy Harper on
four pitches. He then struck out w1th f1ve hits, including a twoDoug Griffin before Carl run homer in the first game
Yastnemskl slngled to right and a solo blast in the second,
Ryao proceeded to strike out and Riehle Scheinblum
the next eight men to set an knocked 111 four runs in the
American League record , mghtcap with a bases-loaded
whiffmg the side m the second double and a sacrifice fly as
Kansas City beat Cleveland
inning on mne pitches.
While Ryan has boosted his tw1ce. Scheinblum raised h1s
record to 11~, Vida Blue, last league-leading battmg average
year's sensation with Oakland, to 327.
John Odom retired 22
is struggling along at 2-5.
Milwaukee
batters in order be·
Mickey Lolich became the
tween
the
second and mnth
first 14--game wmner in the
major leagues as Detroit beat mnings, but still needed mnth·
the White Sox, 4-2, in the inning rebel from Rollie
second game of a doubleheader Fmgers to gain his seventh
alter Chicago had taken the victory. Joe Rudi doubled
opener, S--4. The split enabled home two runs for Oakland and
:the Tigers to move into a first Dave Duncan delivered the
place tie in the East Division other with h1s third homer in
with the Baltimore Orioles, three days.
Rich Reese tied a major
who dropped their fourth
league
record with the third
straight game to the Texas
pinch-hit grand slam homer of
Royals, 3-2, in 10 Innings.
Elsewhere, the Kansas City his career, but it wasn't enough
Royals swept a doubleheader for Minnesota as the Yankees
from the Cleveland Indians, 6--4 had erupted lor five runs in the
and 11-5, the Oakland Athletics first two Innings and picked up
beat the Milwaukee Brewers, three more In the seventh.
3-1, aod the New York Yankees Sparky Lyle gamed his 19th
beat the Minnesota Twins, 9-6. save for New York.

Stewart to score the eventual
wmmng run and the Astros
pushed across four more
unearned runs in the e1ghth
along with Johnny Edwards'
leadoff homer to break open a
close game.
Dave Kmgman's three-run
homer in the fifth inmng off
loser Carl Morton, earned the

Ctty Ed1 tor

St . Pomerov , Oh io.

2151

Second da" postage pard at

27
44 31

St L OU IS
Ch1cago

6 4U

40 35
4 1 36
32 43

M ontreal

Philadelphia

26 50
Wesl

C1 nc1nnat1

45 31
45 33

H ouston

Los Aog eles
Atlanta

Bai t•more
Detr oit

M ilwaukee

GB

40 36 .526 5
36 42 462 10
41 5 14
377 16 1 1

493

34 36
Jl

29
Wesl

42

43

Pet. G.B.
640

48 27
43

33

M•nneapol 1s • 37

36

Kansas Clly

5111
507 10
.507 10
566

38 37

35 42 .455 14
33 43 4)4 15112
Sunday ' s Results
K C 6 Cleve 4 ll sll

Cal1f or n ta
Texa s

De tro ll

Oark at

at

Wizard Air Conditioner
Quiol 2-opoed fan pluo +way ad
(uslable air direction
• Washobl• Sconfoam filter
• Eaay-to-uH inttallation kit with

$19995

99

345

71 27 4 34 93 339
Mota, LA 57 176 2B 57 324
Alou , St L
68 260 31 84 323
)4 305 47 98 321
76 309 49 99 320
Lee, SO 66 24B 35 79 31 9

Tuesday's Games
Ch1cag o at Cleve land
K C at Balt 1more
Mdwa at M1nn
Texa s at Detro1t
Boston at Oak land

New York at Ca l 1f

I nternaflonal League
Standmg s
Un1ted Press International

Ga rr . Atl

321 39 102

Wllam s, Ch •

76 303 48 94

Clmn te P1l

62 252 46 7B

Am encan Lea gu e

g
Sh nblum , KL

ab

r h

31 8

56 1'112

38

57

W. L Pet. G. B.

Cha r leston

46

LOUISVIlle

45 36

556 3

T1dewater

42

40

512

39
39

42
42

31

49

481 9
481 9
388 !61/2

pel

31

507

Penmsu \a

Sunday's Resulls

Lou• svllle 10 Rochester 3
Toledo 4 Syracuse 0
Pen1nsula 3 T1dewater 0
Charleston 4 Rtchm ond 2

297

Maybry , KC
Blue-Sky Law
74 243 24 72 296
Kansas. m 1911, was the
Epl1n. Oa k
73 240 38 7l 296 fu st state to adopt a blueCarew , Mmn
sky law regula tin g securJty
73 274 26 BO
292 dealm gs that "had no more
Ol 1ver. Cal 75 299 33 B7 291 basiS than so many feet of
Home Run s
blue sky,'' acco rdm ~ to EnNaf1onal Jeague Bench, Cm
and Kmgman , SF 21 , Aaron, Atl cvclopaedJa Bntanmca
lB . Slargel l. P1ll and Colbert ,
so 17
Amencan League : Allen, Cht

17, Jackson, Oak 15 , Cash , Del
and Epste m , Oak 14 , Duncan,

Oak 13
Runs Batted In
National League: Bench, 63,

K1ngman, SF 58 , Sta rgell , P1ll
56 , Ol 1ver, P1tt 55, R ader, Hou

and Colbert, SO 53.

Amer1can League. Allen, Chi
57 , Ma yberry, KC 46 , Ol1ver ,

Cal. May, Ch1and Sando, Oak
44
P1lchmg
National League : Nolan , Cl n
12 2 , Seaver, NY 11 5, Car lton ,
Phd 11 6, J enkms . Ch1 11 7,

Your
Agent

Blass, P1 tt 10 2. Sulton , LA and
Cleveland, S1. L 10 4
Amencan league

Lo l tch,

Del 14-6 , Perry , Ctev 13-7 ;
Wood . Chi 12- ~ . Palmer. Ball 11 4, Ryan , Cal 11 5; Ho ltzman ,
Oak ll -6, Bahnsen, Ch1 1l 9

2-HOUR
CLEANING
(Upon Request)

DALE

WARNER
Our Polley Is

Entire Cover11ge
Rest assu.-ed when you
1:,:;,•~:~• wtlh us thai your
-I
1s covered for f1re,
liab1i1ty. Come 1n and
soothing facts .

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
2nd·
Pomeroy

~-111E

· ·

Phone 992-5428

Consult Us Soon

Davis-Warner Ins.
"' Phone "2·2966
Court St
Pomeroy

COMPARE THESE LOW
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PRICES GOOD THIS WEEK ONLY
JULY lOth THRU JULY 15th!
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39 40 m B
39 40 .494 8

R1chmond
310 Tole&lt;to
Ro chester
310 Syracuse

6I 202 27 66 327
Pnll a. KC 73 280 44 90 321
Rud1,0ak 71 2B9 47 90 311
OilS. KC 72 272 33 B4 309
May, Ch1 74 262 45 78 29B
F •sk , Bos

M1 lwaukee I Steoh~nson 2 tl

M innesota ( Perry 6·8l. 2 15
pm

Ol tv er Pil

15

af

pm

287 56

St L

I 1)

Kansas C1ty ( Drago 7 9) a t

Sngullen P1 t

Brock,

(Lemonds

Bal hmore (Cuellar 7 6). 7 30

Umt ed Press Internationa l
Lead1ng Batters
Nat1ona l League
g ab r h pet.

L.eaen o Hou
72

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Clevelan d IPerry 13 71. 7.30
pm

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Atl anta at St Lou

It Again

\Coleman

pm

Tuesday 's Games
Houston at Ch1 cago, 2

~-

Pomeroy , Oh ro

l lf2

486 4
425 8112
.WJ 10

W L.

Oa kland
Cht cago

1

541

40 34
35 36

427 16
342 2 11 1
592
577

Sa n Fran CISC O 34 48
Sa n D1cgo
29 48

Easl
~O ~ 4 P~J41 G. B.

,

New York
Boston
Cle11ela nd

Pet

W L

Amencan League

5B7 4
533 B
532 B

San Fran at New Yor k
San D1ego at M ontr eal

Game)
202 000 0--4 7 2
Me1gs
After battling each other
000 000 0---1) 2 I
Chilhcothe
three
years th rough h1gh
Van Matre and D1xon
school,
Eastern's Denms
Wea ver and Ragland
E1chmger and North Galha's
(Second Game)
Arthur Clark were at 1t once
000
000
0---1)
2
0
Me1gs
agam
m the Middleport In001 000 x- 1 1 0
Chillicothe
Perry and D1xon Hill and depe nd en t Basketball League
Sunday The two stars played
Chester .
to a stand-&lt;lff
E1ch1nger sco red 17 and
Clark 16 but E1chmger's team,
The D31ly Scntmel, prevailed,
87-78, over Clark and the
Middleport De partment Store
In other actwn, Mark V got
G1ants to v1ctory over Mon - past the Pomeroy National
treal Bobby Bonds hJl hiS t2th Bank 73-02 and the Fnendly
homer off Morgon to lead off Tavern ga med a forfeit wm
over Adolph's Da1ry Valley.
the game
Balanced scormg for the
The Padres scored th1 ee
unearned runs m the third Sentmel, wluch had Bob Ritmmng and Clarence Gaston chie w1th 16, E1chin ger with 17,
drove in smgle runs m the fifth and Mick Childs, R1chard
and seve nth as San D1ego Douglas, and Rod Fer guson all
With 18, offset Steve Barlrum 's
defeated Philadelphia
30 for the Middleport Depart·
ment Store.
Ron Ferguson 's 22 and Dox1e
Walters' 21led Mark V to their
wm Gene WISe paced the
Mr and Mrs Jay Scott and Bankers w1th 16 wh1le Don
fanuly of Columbus, 0. VISited Nelson added 15 and Bill
Mrs. Sylv1a Carpenter.
Vaughan 14 .
Steve Donaldson of Fmdlay,
Box scores:
0 IS spendmg the summer
(F1rst Game )
w1th h1s grandmother, Mr and
POMEROY NATION AL
Mrs. Charles Ca rro ll and BANK (62) - Smlth4-1-9, WISe
fam1ly .
8-0-16, Nelson 6-3-15, Vaughan
Mr and Mrs George 6-2-14, Hill 3-2-ll Totals 27-ll-B2
Roberts of Bashan. Mrs Sylvia
MARK V 173 ) - Rn
Ca rpenter , loca l, attended Ferguson Jl}-2-22, Walters 9-3meetmg at Un10n Gospel 21, M Howard 5-1-11 , Boggs 2MISSIOn Church , and VISilerl tl-4, M. Sayre 1-2-4, R. Sayre 5Mr and Mrs. Olie McKmney at 1-11. Totals 32-8-73
Charles ton , W. Va
(Second Game)
Those vis1ting Mr: and MIS
DAILY SENTINEL (87) Michael Evans and fam 1ly Eichmger fl.l-17, R1tch1e fl.l}-16,
were Mr and Mrs Charl es Childs 9.().18, Douglas 7--4-18,
Warth aod sons, Mr. aod Mrs. Rd. Ferguson fi.Z.18 Totals 4{).
Donald Hunnel and son, Mrs. 7-ll7.
Hermce Evans, Mr Terry
MIDDLEPORT DEP'T
Evans, and friend, all of STORE ( 78) - Clark 6-4-16,
Pomeroy, 0., Mrs. Ada Van Bartrum 13-4-30, Mitchell 4.().l!,
Me!Aer, Leota B1rch, E(a me F1fe 7-0-14 , Hawley 1·0·2,
Lehew, Kimberley, D1ane, and Johnson 4.().l!. Totals 35-3-78.
Troy Ward They all helped
Standings
celebrate Ryan Evans' first Team
w. L.
b~rthda} .
7 0
D. Sentinel
MarkV
5 2
Adolph's
4 3
The heart beats 100,000
Mid
Dep't
hmes a day, according to
2 5
the Amencan Heart Associ a· Porn. Nat Banil
2 5
lion.
Fr. Tavern
1 6
(F~r st

'ftCIIhor-Hght vinyl Mal

Phone your nearby City Loan Office ...
then stop by for your
vacation funds .

45769 Busi ness Offr ce Phone
99 2 2156, Edrtorial Pnone 992

Eichinger,

Bald Knobs News Notes
Sunday School attendance at
Freedom Gospel M•ss1on July 2
was 46. The offermg was $14.52.
Mr. and Mrs. Cart Autherson, local, Mrs. Elva Dalley of
Syracuse VISited Mr. and Mrs.
Burl LaRue at Parkersburg,
W Va .
Mrs. Elva Dailey and Mrs
Judy Pape and KrJSlen of
Syracuse VISited Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Autherson.
Mr . and Mrs Wilham Clonch
of Harnsonville, 0., Mr and
Mrs Roy Clonch and family of
Akron , 0. visited Mrs Nona
Long, and Sm1th
Mrs . Bert1e McMurray IS a
patient at Veterans Memor~al
HospitaL
Miss Lorrame McMurray,
M1ss Sue McMurray of Athens,
0 visited Loms McMurra y and
Marie Beaver.
Mrs Rea tha Clonch and
fam1Iy of Rutland . 0 , Mr and
Mrs . Hayes McMurray,
Portland Rt., and Leota B1rch,
local, visited Mr. and Mrs.
George Hupp.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Lane of
Hebron, 0. is visiting Mr and
Mrs. Harry Richard and
fam1ly aod Floyd Richard.
Mr . Clint Birch and
daughter, Leota , vis1ted Mr.
aod Mrs. Ernest Brewer and
family .
Mr . and Mrs . Theodore
Willford and daughters viSited
her parents, Mr and Mrs.
James Anderson and family at
Keno.

w
48

Pi tt sburgh
New Yor k

( Reyno lds 0 4) , 5 35 p m

-

while bemg charged with Ius
f1rst loss in SIX decis10ns
Coach George Nesselroad's
local nine will trave l to New
Haven th1s Wednesday. Me1gs
IS now 14-9·1 on the year and
Ch1lhcothe IS 12-13.

Row In 3-0 Win Pirates Rout McLa_in, 7-4
United Press International
The Pittsburgh P~rate s
routed, ~nny McLain with an
early home run barrage
Sunday and went on to defea t
the Atlanta Braves 7-4
Willie Stargell led off the
second inmng w1lh h1s 17th
homer of the season and Bob
Robertson hit a two-run homer
that same mmng.
When AI Oliver hit a threerun homer m the th1rd, the
P~rates had a IH&gt; lead and that
was 1t for McLam, who made
h1s Atlanta debut last Tuesday
m a 3-3 tie ruth Ch1c~go . •
The Pitale6, · dl vl!libh' •.
leaders m the National League
East, handed Mclam h1s first
Nallonal League defeat.
Mclain was obtained by the
Braves from the Oakland
Athletics' Birmmgham farm
club m the Southern League
two weeks ago.
McLam ,
a
colorful
nghlhander, was shelled for
s1x earned runs and five hils m
the 2 1·3 mnings he worked.
Hank Aaron slammed h1s
657th career homer and a runscormg double for the Braves.
In other Nat10nal League
action, Los Angeles blanked
New York, 2-0, Chicago swept a
doubleheader from Cincinnati,
:Hl and 10-5, Houston npped St.
Louis, 12-6, San Francisco
defeated Montreal, 5-1, and San
D1ego edged Philadelphia, S--4 .
Claude Osteen pitched a sixhit shutout as the Dodgers
defeated New York . Lee
Lacey, Los Angeles' rookie
second baseman, led the
Dodger attack against Tom
Seaver with three hits, scoring
one run and driving in another
run .
Three St. Louis errors in the
last three mnings opened the
door to five unearned runs and
enabled Houston to defeat the
Cardinals.
Catcher Ted Simmons'
throwing error in the seventh
enabled pinch-runner Jimmy

Untied Press International
Nat1ona I league
East
l. Pel G B.

Attorney Bob Gerst prompSu nday 's Res ults
K C 8 Cleve 5 (2nd )
ted Blue to demand a $110,1100 San Fran 5 Montreal I
L A 7 New Yor k 0
Ch 1cago 5 Oet 4 (1st )
contract for 1972 after bemg San Otego 5 Phil 4
De t . : h1Cago 2 (2nd)
' Oakla
the hottest property m baseball Pll 7 Atlanta 4
nd 3 M1lw I
Tex as 3 Ball 2 110 mnmgs l
around m1d-season last year Chtc ag o 5 Cm et 0 ( 1st ga me )
go 10 Ctnc t 5 ( 2nd game) Cal1 f 3 Bost on 0
Carmen Fanzone, a 31}-year- Chtca
Houston I? Sl Lou 6
Today's Probable P1tchers
old rookie, drove home f1ve of
Today' s Probable P1tche.-s
I All Times EDT)
I AII Tomes EDT)
the ten Cub runs m the second
New York ( Kekich (B-6) at
San D1 ego IArlm 7 B) at Mont Calif (Wnght 8 4). II p .m .
game w1th a home run and a
IMoore 0 31. 8 05 p m
Boston (M c Glothen 1 l) at
bases-loaded double.
San Fran ( Barr 2 2) at New Oa kla nd (Holtzman l1 ·6L 11
York IGe nlry 3 61 , B 05 p m
pm
LA IDown•ng 5 51 al Ph il
Texa s (Stanhouse 0 0) at

Van Matre, Dixon Brilliant

... only take a minute"

Publrs.hed daily eKcepl
Saturday by The Otlio Valley
Publ rshing Company, 111

S1x

;

Cub HeX Continues 5-0 and 10-5

"Just one stop at

VellM!N SI-IEAKE~ TR'IIN'

Sentinel

and W Va, One year

'

3- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport·Pom..-oy, o., July 10, 1972

Nt&gt;w s pnpe r En t e n •rllle Al!sn

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Euc Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH,

Court

.

1t, " satd Davis

• A84

Pass

..

DON &amp; EDNA WILSON

•

MI~:~:~ORT,O,

�-- ....... .;.

5- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 10, 19'12

SJX!rt Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI SJIOi1s. Writer

NEW YORK (UPI) - Walt Alston feels 20 is a nice round
rumber.
When he finishes .managing the Los Angeles Dodgers next
season, October of 1973, it will be 20 years he had the club, and
that will be enough, he has confided to a few of those close to him.
The Dodgers will be hard-pressro to find another Wall
Alston, a man who has guided them to six National League
pennants and four world championships and who certainly ranks
as the finest manager in baseball today .
Fortunately for the Dodgers, they have plenty of managerial
randidates among them. More perhaps than any other major
league club.
PotenUal Managers
For starters, lheji've got Frank Robinson and Maury Wills.
They also have Darmy Ozark and Jim Gilliam in their
coaching ranks along with Tom Lasorda, managing for them at
Albuquerque.
There's no doubt in my mind about the ability of any of these
men to manage in the majors, and when the day comes that Walt
Alston tells the Dodgers he's going back to his farm in Darrtown,
Ohio for good, there's equally little doubt in my mind they will
ask him for his recommendation as to who should succeed him.
Walt Alston isn't the type to toss names around at a time like
this, primarily because he doesn't care to gloss over anyone and
cause hard feelings, but I'd have to say when the Dodgers do ask
him whom he'd recommend as his successor, he'll say either
Maury Wills or Danny Ozark.
There always is that chance, of course, that one of these two
men or both may be tapped for a managerial job before the e'!d of
next season.
One major league club I know of already is talking about
Ozark as its next managerial possibility.
Which brings up the case of Maury Wills.
This is his 14th season in the majors and unquestionably his
poerest one.
Some say he's all through as a player. They cite his .117
average, the fact he has stolen only one base this season and his
age, which is the same as Jack Benny's - 39.
Wills Thinks Otherwise
Maury Wills doesn't believe he is through.
"My statistics are very poor," he says. "I know that, but
that's because I haven't played regularly. When I'm through, I'll
know it. I won't kid anybody. Certainly not myself."
Wills has a lot of pride. He has so much, it sticks out all over
him.
"I've always earned my keep," he says, "and I always will.
Some players will gladly sit back and draw their salaries. I can't
do that. I want to earn mine. I still think I can salvage this year, if
I play, and I feel I can come back and have a good year next year.
Stan Musial came back and had a good year after a poor one. He
came back and hit .330 I believe and then quit. I don 't want to quit
on a year like this on~ ."
Maury Wills isn't playing coy. Ask him whether he 'd like to
manage a major league club and he says sure, why not"!
But he doesn't go around stumping for a manager's job.
Neither does Frank Robinson, whom I'd hire in a minute if it was
my big league club.
The old order changeth and that augw-s well for men like
Robinson, Wills, Lasorda, Ozark and Gilliam. Perhaps it
changeth not as quickly as they would like, but the fact that
people like Frank Quilici, Don Zimmer, Chuck Tanner, Frank
Lucchesi, Sparky Anderson and Earl Weaver ""Were given a
chance to manage in the majors means that tl1ere will be othor

new ones, too.
One day soon there also will be the first black major league
manager, and after him there will be others until nobody will
ever give anymore thought to a black manager than is given to a
black ballplayer now.
That's real,ly the way it should have been same time ago.
But you krtow baseball.
It's so slow.

Smith Captures Crown
WIMBLEDON , England
(UP!) - The excitement at
Wimbledon '72 belonged to the
women until two footsoldiers
stale the show with one of the
most exciting men's finals in
the last 40 years.
In a 2 hour 40 minute center
court thriller Sunday, top
seeded Stan Smith of
Pasadena,
Calif.
beat
Romanian touch artist llie
Nastase, 4-&lt;l, 6-3, 6-3, 4-&lt;1, 7.,';.
Old timers at the club, who've
seen all the finals back to the
1930s, said the match was the
best since Australia's Jack
Crawford beat Ellsworth Vines
of America, 6-4 in the fifth, to
win ln 1933.
Certainly the capacity crowd
of 15,000 fans, who hung on
every shot, was satisfied with
the feast of strokes and fighting
tennis served up by the
finalists. It more than made up

for the disappointment of
Saturday's washout which
caused the finals to be postponed 24 hours for only the
fourth time in the 110-year
history of the tournament.
Smith, who has won a host of
admirers for his court manners
and charm off it was perfectly
frank afterwa~ds when he
said: "eighty per cent guts and
luck got me through," by way
of tribute to Nastase, who
made the strokes which had the
crowd on the edge of their
seats.
Guts and a refusal to quit
finally got Smith horne and
helped give the U. S. its first
double victory since 1955 when
Tony Trabert and Louise
Brough were successful. Billie
Jean King of Long Beach,
Calif. won her fourth ladies
title on Friday.

National Leagua
(151 game!
Chicago
000 230 000--5 11

1
Cinci .
000 000 000-0 I 0
·Jenkins (ll-71 and Hundley ;
Gullett, Borbon (5), and
McGioihlin 161. Sprague 191 and
Bench. LP - Gullett (3'5) .
!2nd game!
Chi .
000 460 000--10 15 o
Cincl.
000 001 022- 5 9 o
Pappas (6-5) and ·Rudolph ;
Grimsley, Borboo (5), Sprague
(6), McGlothl in (9) and
Plummer . LP -

Grimsley (6-

3) . HR - Fanzooe ISihl.

.

Robertson (6th) , Ol iver C81hl ..
Aaron (18th) , Brown (3rdl.
Sanguillen (5th) .

About 200 cens were
decorated Sunday afternoon as
firecracker replicas to be filled
with candy and cookies for the
veterans at the Chillicothe
Veterans Hospital.
The fllled cans will be taken
to Chillicothe Thursday by
Mrs . Charles Kessinger,
Eighth District president of the
American Legion Auxiliary,
and others who wiU attend the
veterans' birthday party.
Wednesday, beginning at 5:15
p." rn., auxiliary members and
other volunteers are to meet at
the Middleport Legion hall to

H p

S.F.
101 030 OD0-5 7 1
Montreal
010 000 OQ0--1 5 1
Stone, Mollitt (6) and Rader;
Morton, Walker (6) , Marshall
181 and Boccabella. WP - Stone
"14·71 . LP - Morton (4-8) . HR Bonds (12th), Fairly (7th).
Kingman (2)st) .
·
Hous.
100 230 15o--12 16 0
S.L.
001 140 000-- 7 11 3
Dierker, Ray (5) and Ed.
ward, Howard (8) ; Wise, Segui
(7), Drabowsky (8}, Cum .
berland (8) , Grzenda (9) and
Simmons. WB - Ray (8-31. LP
- Wise (9-8) . HR - Rader
(14th), Maxvill (lsi), May
(16th), Aiou (Jrd), Carbo (2nd) ,
Edwards (41hl.

San Diego 003 010 lll0-5 14 1
Phil .
000 002 11o--4 11 2
Grief. Norman (7) and
Kendall ; Brandon, Lersch (8)
and Bateman. WP - Grief (4American League
11) . LP - Brandon (4·2) . HR (lsi game)
Lis (2nd), Gamble (1st),
K.C.
001 200 031!-&lt;1 12 0
Jackson (4th).
Cleve.
003 000 001- 4 10 4
(8) ,
L.A .
100 000 001- 2 9 0 Splillorlf, Wright
N.Y.
000 000 000-0 6 1 Burgme ier {9) and Kirk Osteen 19-61 and Sims, patrick; Colbert, Riddleberger
Can ilzaro (9) ; Seaver (11 -5) 1.71 and Moses. WP - Splillorff
19-4). LP- Riddleberger (] . 1) .
and Oyer .
HR - Nettles (7th). Otis (5th) .
Pitts.
033 000 OIQ-7 11 1
(2nd game}
All .
000 130 000--4 7 2
230 )02 ()()()--ll 11 1
Briles (7-31 and Sanguillen ; K.C.
020 002 IOQ--5 7 0
McLa in, Jarvis 131. Upshaw (81 Cleve.
Hedlund, Abernathy (6},
and Williams. LP - McLain (O.
11 . HR - Stargell (17th). Bur~meier (7) and Kirk ·

6 DAYS AWEEK
9 'TIL~

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

MON. THRU
SATURDAY

Col Rolkr,
Family Here

MIDDLEPORT

Prices Good Thru Tues. July lith.

Winners Noted
FORT ERIE , Onl. IUPI) Final scores and money
winnihg s in the Canad ian Open

Wood, Ramo (9) and Herrmann,
Egan (7), C. Br inkman (9) . WP
Golf Classic :
(2-0) . LP - Niekro (2·
Gay Brewer $3(),000 67-70-68-70· 2). Ramo
HR - Stanley 17th). An275
Dave Hill $13,875 70-66-73-67-276 drews (llhl .
Sam Adams $13,875 67-72-71-61,.
l2nd game)
276
Del.
002 000 002- 4 11 0
Phil Rodgers $7,050 72-68-68-69· Chi.
100 100 OD0-2 8 1
277
Lolich
(
14-6)
and Hailer ;
Lou Graham $6,150 67-69-12-70· Bradley , Kealey (9)
and Egan.
278
LP
Bradley
(10-6)
. HR George Knudso·n 15.100 70-70· Stanley (8th), Hailer (2nd
).
69-67-279
Chi Chi Rodriguez $5,100 70-69- N.Y.
230 010 30Q--9 15 0
73-67-279
Minn.
000 001 401--6 9 2
Bunky Henry $4,238 65·74-71-71Kline, McDa niel (7) , Lyle 181
281
and Munson; Corbin, Strickland
Gr ier Jones $4,238 70-72-70-69- (2), Gebhard (71, LaRoche (8)
281
and Mitterwa id. WP - Kline (8·
Br ian AI fin $3,075 70-73-67-72- 3). LP - Corbin (4·21 . HR 282
Reese (Jrd).
Lee Trevino 13.075 69 -73-70-70·
282
Bas ton
000 000 ooo--o 1 2
Deane Beman 13,075 69-70-73· Calif.
000 300 OOx-3 8 0
70-282
Sierberl (2-5) and Fisk; Ryan
Sam Snead $3,075 67-74-72-69- ( 11 -l l and Slephenson .
282
Gary Player $3,015 71 ·69 -73·69· Milwa .
000 000 001- 1 50
282
Oakland
002 010 OO x-3 4 0
Bruce Crampton 13.075 68-70·
Lonborg , Linzy (8 ) and
70-14-282
Rodriguez ; Odom , Fingers (9)
Robert Panasiuk 12,250 70·70· and Duncan . WP - Odom (7-2).
73-70-282
LP - Lon borg (7-4). HR Dunca n (13th) .

I

.'

Super

12-oz.
.pkg._

Right!

(10 innings)
Mud Baths
Texas
010 000 010 1-3 11 1
Iranian health seekers
Bait.
000 100 100 o--2 6 o
cake their bodies with black
Paul , Pina 171. Shellenback
mud from Lake Urmia to re- 191 and Billings ; McNally, Watt
lieve arthritis, rheumatism (9), )ackson (IQl an~ Et .
and other aches and pains. chebarren, Oates (10 ). WP After lyi ng in the thick. mal- Shellenback (2- 4) . LP - Wall"
odorous mud for hou rs, they (0· 1).
bathe in ·the waters of the
VISITING MARTINS
lake.
Mrs. Reva Cihla of Shiloh is
the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Osby
The Declaration of Inde- Martin.
pendence, the Constitution
and the Bill or Rights are
VACATION ENDED
enshrined .in the National
Mr . and Mrs. Joe Struble and
Archives Exhibition Hall in son, Michael, and Mr. and Mrs.
Washington, D.C. The
World Almanac notes that John Terrell have returned
these documents are sealed · from a vacation at Anna Marie
in glass-and-bronze cases Island, Fla., with Mr. and Mrs.
filled with inert helium gas. Charles Spencer. At Silver
and can be lowered at a Springs, Fla., they visited Mr.
moment's notice into a and Mrs. Gene Hester and
large shockproof and fire - family, former residents, and
proof safe.
at Bradenton, Mrs. Terrell
visited Mrs. John Bowen .
Highlights of their trip inAmericans consumed an cluded visits to the London
· average of 118.6 pounds of Wax Museum at St. Peterfresh and processed potatoes sburg, Stone Mountain in
per capita in 1970.
Georgia, and the Ringling
Museum in Sarasota.

0, .AT
V)!f:"

00

Jane
Parker

3-lb.

1

)

can

- *' ,

I

'

m• Polly's Problem l'liii!I"!IIW&lt;illiii!t-~M•~

'

New Morning

[_:!.[·,~.:'

.•

~~

IIJT'S TRUE" - • -

:;:;
{:"
:;::

::i:
~

~

:;:;:::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::·:·::::;.::::::;:;:;::::*:i:i:::·:::::·:::::::-::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::\:'

Family Together At Roush Home
A family gathering was held
Sunday at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Roush , with all of
their children aqd grandchildren present.
Attending were Mr. alld Mrs.
Larry Flowers, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Roush and Doug,
Columbus; Mr . and Mrs. Dale
Roush, Sherrie and David, St.
Albans, W. Va.; Mr. illld Mrs,
Charles Kessinger, Pomeroy
R.D.; Mrs. Donald Matheny,

,

George Odister
Died in Dayton
Mrs. William L. Smith, 272
West ~ain St., Pomeroy, has
returned from Dayton where
she was called by the death of a
nephew, George Lee Odister,
36, son of Mrs. Azealee Odister.
Mr. Odister, whose Wife
passed away six months ago,
died of a heart attack. He carne
to Pomeroy on June 18 for his
rnother"who planned to spend
the summer in Dayton visiting
her son, six grandchildren and
one great~randdaughter. Mrs.
Odister has been in Pomeroy
the past year with her sister,
Mrs. Smith, due to poor health.
Mrs. Smith, a practical nurse
the past 12 years, terminated
employment outside her horne
to care for Mrs. Odister, who
returned to Pomeroy this
weekend with her sister.

WEIGHT @.WATCHERS.

14 FOOT ROUND RUNG

EXTENSION
LADDER

I

.

FURNITU•

BAKER

MIDOI.£POIT, 0.

REGUlAR 18.99

t
~

CHECK THESE FEATURES!

I

l ( ' -\

1

77 ;-,, :-1.

13

Free·lwmging sole·

ly $hoes. Moxim"m
working he igh I II fl.

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REGU l AR 17.49

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• 10UTY RA TING
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200LB

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Ruggedly cons tr ucted -.. irh exlrud·
ed olumonum rop1, •o•h ond step s.

MAX IMUM
TO IA.l
ENGTH OF WORKING
SECTIONS
LENGTH

•

24ft. 21ft.. 3244
28ft. 25ft. 3971
TYPE Ill
OUT'!" RA.l iNG
200 LB .

Co ns tr ucted lor h( e hme 5tre ng th ond saletv . 6' er1d !podng for gre oler strenglh.
Ul· l · ~ le d.

2'49

REGULAR

4.09

16 OZ.

CAN

MASTERSET

INTERIOR/EXTERIOR

Wooden handles, nvlon bnslles.

SPRAY ENAMEL
WOOD LIFE
;;; .,_,.,.. i

PLASTIC
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PRESERVATIVE

ASSORTE D COLORS

REGULAR 4.49

toys ! Non-loxic. 12 3/4 Ot.JriCe fill.

Use rndaor s. ot.Jtdoors - £! ..-en on ch ildren's

,

CLOTH

GAllON

DAP

CAULKING
GUN

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CAULKING
CARTRIDGES

BU UT-USE

l'mi:tCt!i!ijtW

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4/99~

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GASOLINE CAN

REGUlAR ~9&lt;

12 INCH • 12 1N CH

CEILING
TILE
15~

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Conwed

SCREEN DOOR
REGUlAR_I 8.~5

CHAIN DOOR GUARD

NEW DElPHOS

Fle•lble neoprene pour spo~J t .
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211

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SA.LE PR ICE

BRUSH SET

HAS SURGERYE. M. Blake, Sr. of Mid·
dleport underwent surgery
Saturday at the Holzer Medical
Center, Gallipolis.

WEDNESDAY
PAST PRESIDENTS,
American Legion Auxiliary,
Dre)V Webster Post 39, 6:30
p.m. annual picnic at the Ohio
River campsite on the Owen
Watson farm at Racine.

ALUMINUM

WERNER •

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entrance

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from slo ndord

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POMEROY, OHIO

.Member Federal Re8ene System
011 Fridays oar Drlve-Ju Wllldow Ia
()pell8 a.m. to 7 P'f·• (CoiiUn110111ly).

f20.000 Mulmllllllusurance
For Each Depotltor

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OFFICE HOURS 9t30 TO 1r. 2 TO 5 !CLOSE'
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST,

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TOLL FREE 800-582·7026

VAWD

Jeff , Cw-tis and Cindy, Camp
LeJeune, N. C., and Mrs.
Kathern Smith, Kevin and
Christi, and Becky and Kenny
Roush .
The Matheny children here
visiting for severa l weeks
returned Sunday to North
Carolina with their mother.
BeckyRoushishornenowafter
spending two weeks in
Columbus with Mr. and Mrs.
Flowers and Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Roush.

For wood or metal slonn, glau

'

Saturday night at 1:30 p.m. at
the United Faith Church
located"" on the Middleport Pomeroy Route 1 by-pass .
Singers are invtted to participate and the public · is
welcome.

I

(NIWSPA"l IHTilPll$1 ASSH.)

Additional morning and evening classes meet
weekl'l' in Gallipolis, also.
For information call

A hymn sing wiU be held

:.:.:._,·.i·:·.:
:__

heu rr

DEAR· POLLY- [ have two Pet Peeves. The first is
with people who ask you ·to dD something for them because they do not know how to do it and then stand over
you telling you how to do it. The seconil is wltli the clerks
who do not return change to your offered hand but throw
it on the counter, causing the money to go helter-skelter
and sometimes even fall on the floor.-Nii:WELL

SINGERS INVITED

'•'•

Obseroance Rescheduled

l.il

make uur t•ommunft y

"DEAR POLLY- I have a double-bed-size , downfilled, satin quilt, corded around the edges, that was
a gift about 30 years ago. It is still beautiful but
some of the down filling has shifted, even though
It is quilted, so there Is very little left at one end.
I r treasure this quilt and want to have It cleaned
properly but would first like to know if anyone has
any ideas as to what I could do with the shifting
down problem.-CATHERINE

I

\

ATI'END COUNCIL
Clarence Struble, Mrs.
Eleanw Thomas, Mrs. Shirley
'
jjjj Custer, Miss Lucille Smith, and
Mrs. Geneva Yates were at Rio
The
51st
anniversary
'l&gt;bservance
of
the
Forrest
Run
.
.
Grande
Friday to attend the
Baptist Church was postponed -from Sunday,July 9, to July
Council
on Aging. The
District
23 because of au out.;,f-town death wbleb made necessary
the absence of several members.
:;:: five represented the Meigs
County Council.
The July 23 eelebratiun will begin with Suoday school at
9:30a.m., followed by worship service at 10:45 a.m., In·
eluding devotions by the deacuus and a sermon by the Rev.
Eddie Buffington, pastor. A guest speaker may also be on
the morning prograiU.
Following the luncheon the afternoon program will
begin atl :15 p.m. There will be devotions by the deacons,
and a program which will include the church history, ·;;;
seleetions by guest choirs, and a talk at~ p.m. by the Rev. I. .[~
Butler uf Columbus, wbu will be accompanied here by his ~~
church choir. The public is invited.
;:[

~

u mutter of l'(lmmumt ~
DEAR CAMPERS-Another Jean suggested concern
about protecting chlldren against S!'n and mosquitoes.
A baby's skln may sunburn on even an overcast day so )Re&gt;n"onbec. 11 '-o nununit y
she takes plenty of lotion and uses it. She also says one
li lfe n h om e, with n eglect
of the moSt Important things to take Is patience and- If
you are going with the Idea that baby Is going to be a It 's u grc~Jt communit ~
problem, forget the whole thing. She also suggested that
SU ~ I)(lrtS thc 1r
If baby Is to be changed to powdered mllk for the trip
I""''"'""''""·
An\.! ynur
do It before leaving home.-POLLY
l•urppu•'' Kuuntntees th e)

,!

\

~::::::::;:;:;.:~~;,.m:3.a::~:::::::::::::::_:::::::::::::~:::::::::::::~:~:::!:::::~:.-=::::::::(,::::::::::::~==~=::::::;:;

'

DEAR POLLY and
Jean- We camped our way
aro und Lake Superior with six children, ages 12 years to
10 months, and had a wonderful time. Do try to maintain
your established schedule for naps, baths, meals, etc., or
takes a great
as much as possible. Napping can be done while driving
but do not plan on covering too many miles in one day.
Children get restless, so allow breaks for stretching ~ommunity to make
cv,eryone's legs. We tried to have our lunch at a roadside pa rk near ·a stream. Our baby slept in a mesh playgood community beHer
pen but could have slept in a sleeping bag. Do go prepared for cold nights and I recommend hooded sweat
shirts. for all for sleeping and a blanket sleeper for the
little one. Keep meals simple so as to have time to explore with the children. If you do not, they will do it on
their own and the results could be tragic. Have a safe
trip and do not forget your camera as the scenery is
spectacular and the parks are great.- MRS. D. A. J .
· suu:ess is pur s uc ~: ess .

15t\VAILPBLE

pkg.
of
8

Nicole Lynn Bradbury,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ass
Bradbury, an~ Tricia Carleen
Wolfe, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs . Carl Wolfe, were
christened SUnday morning at
the Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport.
The infants, first cousins,
were in matching christening
dresses for the rites performed
by the Rev. Robert Bumgarner.
Relatives attending were
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe , Apple
Grove; Mrs. Harry Wright.
Mrs. Gene Wright, Jeannie
and Terry , Morristown :
Mrs .
James
Kitchen ,
Debbie and Denise, Chillicothe; Miss Mary Bradbury, Gallipolis; Mr. and
Mrs. C. P. Bradbury, Mr . and
Mrs. Charles Bradbury, and
Mr. and Mrs. Wolfe'sdaughter,
Wendy.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Bradbury entertained with a
buffet dinner following the
christenings .

" J

' •' ...:

WATCHERS
PFOS-PNA

MONDAYS, 7:30 PM ·

Calendar!! Heath Church

::l
:B

Baby

WE10+-1T

Opening Tuesday, iuly 11,9: 30 AM
St. Paul Lutheran Church ·
231 E. 2nd St.
Evening class also meets atthe same location ..

il Christened at

MEIGS COUNTY Women's
Democratic Club, 7:30p.m. 242
Mulberry Ave., Tuesday.
Hints on Taking
EASTERN
Athletic
Boosters;·.:Ji,lly 11, 8 p.m .
Tuesday at Eastern High
On a Camping Trip
School.
WEDNESDAY
By POLLY CRAMER
REVIVAL, United Faith
DEAR POLLY - I th ink Jean can take her 15-monthsold baby on a camping trip. Last summer we took a Chur ch, Pomeroy • Middleport
month-long trip to Canada and with a HI-months-old baby By-pass, Rev . Worley Haley ,
and every night camped out in a tent, so I have a few evangelist, Wednesday
suggestions Jean might find useful. Have a small play- through July 23. All singers
pen you can fit on the back seat of the car and put some welcome, 7:30 each evening .
of his favorite toys in it. Buy plenty of heavy" disposable
WHITE ROSE Lodge, 1:30
diapers to use at night. Those wash-and-dry towelettes p.m. Wednesday, American
are also invaluable. Carry along enough baby food for the Legion Hall, Middleport.
entire trip. Have sleepers of different sizes. (Polly's note
- 1 feel our reader meant to •ay all weights.) Take along
a backpack in which you
carry baby when hiking or
'"zo
sight-seeing. We only aver.(' .....
I
I 16.- •'4I" ., ~·"
aged about 200 miles a day
I
·t ·\
as chilaren get· bored and
. ' ' I • ••..r ..'1 ' [!
cranky . They will get dirty
riJl ~ '{\1 ~ ·H '• Ill
-1
., 11 ~-~-~·u
and love it that way so I
0 .,. .
1,.
. •"
made little effort to keep
o~
_.,o
CO N.,them spotless. Have a nice
lime as Canada is so beauHIELf" aUILO
lifui .- SUSAN
O~PO"TUNITV

11-IENEW

POMEROY

.

POLLY'S POINTERS

TiiATSNO
EXCUSE.

\.

:-··
-:::

Honored

Sessions is Underway
Four Rivers Girl Scout progress, is filled. Session II
Council opened "resident (July 16-22) has openings in
camping" at Camp Sandy aquatics only. Fee is $25 for
Bend, Elizabeth, W. Va., on Scouts, $30 for non-Scouts.
July 9, open to . aU girls
Session III (July 23-Aug. 5)
regardless of Girl Scout has openings in genera I
membership. The four sessions camping and aquatics. Basic
of resident camping offered Canoeing and Counselor-inare divided into Session I and II Training are filled. Session IV
of one-week each and Ill and has openings in genera l
IV, each two weeks.
camping, aquatics, and in
Camp program offers beginn1ng and advanced
general camping, aquatics canoein~. which include river
(waterfront skills and ac- trips. Fee for Session III and
tlvities), basic canoeing, ad- IV is $50 for Scouts, $5ti for nonvanced canoeing, and Coun- Scouts.
selor-in-Training. Prerequisite
To register, contact the Four
for aquatics and basic Rivers Girl Scout Cooncll of·
canoeing Is an American Red . fice, 1922 Seventh Street,
Cross Intermediate Swim- Parkersburg, W. Va., 422.,')474.
mer's Certificate or Girl Scout
Cadette Swimmer's badge. ·
Required for advanced
ONTV
canoeing is an American Red
The Southern Ohio Crusade
Cross Small Craft Certificate
will
be on Cable TV, Channel 5,
or Cadette Swimmer's badge.
SeS!ion I, which is now in !Qnight at 8:30 p.m.

....
•.•,

Three

Timmerman (9) and Freehan;

First of Four Camping

cookies and candy are needed
to complete the project and
may be brought to the hall
Wednesday evening.
Assisting with decorating the
cans Sunday were Mrs .
Margaret Yost and Mrs .
Frances . Roberts, of Ita cine
Unit 602; Mrs. Genuna Casci,
Pomeroy Unit 39; Mrs. Ullian
Reltmlre, ' Mrs. Kathleen
Manley, Mrs. Emma Wayland,
Mrs. Etta Will, Mrs. Edith
Spencer, Mrs. Janie Roush,
Mrs . Judy Flowers, Mrs,
Bonnie Dailey, Becky Roush,
Debbie McGuffin, Judy Gilkey,
Paula Cunningham, Melinda
Thomas, Angela Dailey, and
Mrs . Kessinger, Middleport
Unit 128. The lids of the 200
cans were decorated by Cindy
Matheny and Christi Smith.

·z:
.·:·:

Birthdays of

Lamb (6), Wilcox !81 and
Fosse. WP - Hedlund (2-5). LP
-Farmer (1 ·11 . HR - Plnlella
(7th, Nettles (8th), Bell (2nd),
Otis (6th) .
(lsi game)
Del.
020 002 000--4 8 1
Chi.
100 102 001- 5 11 1
Scherman. Zachary (61.
Perranoskl (81. Niekro (91.

L

flll the cans. Homemade

::;:;.

MONDAY
WEEK-LONG revival
beginning Sunday, Old Dexte~
Church, services, 8 p.m. each
evening, Rev. Willard Dutcher,
evangelist, special singing.
Public welcome.
MEIGS CHAPTER 53, DAV,
Monday, 7:30 at hal\ on Butternut Ave., with officers for
1972-73to be installed. Refreshments; members urged to
attend.
WOMEN'S SOCIETY of
Christian Service, Heath
United Methodist Church .
Meeting will be held at 7:30
Monday night in the parsonage. Mrs. Beulah Hayes
will give devotions with Mrs.
Nan
Moore to present the
It. Col. and Mrs. James M.
lesson . Hostesses will be Mrs.
Roller, Kathy, Jimmy and
L. W. McComas, Mrs. Alma
Johnnie, will return to RanMiller,
Mrs. Mary Reinhart,
dolph Air Force Base, San
and Mrs. C. M. Hennesy.
Antonio, Texas, tomorrow
after having spent the past 10
GAMES COMMITTEE,
days here visiting Mrs .
Middleport Feeney Bennett
Dorothy F. Roller and Mrs.
Post 128, will meet Monday
Eva Hartley and other
7:30 p.m. at post horne. All
relatives.
interested members w-ged to
A week after the family gets
attend.
tol San Antonio, Lt. Col. Roller
POMEROY CHAMBER of
w II leave for Saigon for a
Commerce Monday at noon at
year's tour of duty. The family
Mrs. Denver Weber and Mrs. Meigs Inn.
will remain on the Air Force Harold Sauer entertained
ANNUAL
PICNIC of
Base.
recently with a party at the Pomeroy Garden Club, 6:30
Friday night Mr . and Mrs. home of Mr. and Mrs. Weber in p.m. Monday, home of Mrs.
Richard Gress entertained Reedsville honoring Joy Sauer, Walter Grueser.
with a family party . Besides 14 in May, David Weber, 16 in
MEIGS SALON 710, 8 and 40,
the James Roller family, June, and Mary Ruth Sauer, 16 Monday, 7:30 p.m. at Racine
others attending were Mr. and this month, on their birthday American Legion Hall; inMrs. Richard Roller, Lori and anniversaries.
stallation of officers, members
Brad, Belpre; Mike Gress of
A dinner was held at noon, take housewares order.
Charleston, W. Va .; Miss th e afternogn was spent
TUESDAY
Brenda Van Meter of Pomeroy, playing games and opening
PINS TO 25 year members
Mrs. Malcobn Roller, and the gifts, and daring the evening when Middleport Lodge 363,
hosts ' son, Pat. Mrs. Malcobn sandwiches, a decorated cake, F&amp;AM, meets at 7:30 p.m.
Roller had a dinner for the ice cream and punch were Tuesday at temple . Master
same group last Wednesday. served.
Masons invited.
Following
the
CrowAttending the party were Mr .
MEIGS
COUNTY
Neutzling wedding on July, 1, and Mrs. William Meredith and Alcoholism and Drug Abuse
Mrs . Malcolm Roller . en- son, Roger, of Beverly; Mr . Committee meeling 7:30p.m.
tertained with a supper. Her and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead, Tuesday at St. Paul Lutheran
guests were Lt. Col. and Mrs. Jean, Jane and Juli and. Mr. Church, Pomeroy, with Roger
Roller and children: Mr. and and Mrs. Warren Pickens and Hooker speaking on "Today's
Mrs . Roger Quisenberry, nice, Kay Balderson, Reeds- Drug Scene" and a fibn will be
Jennie, Joy and Jeff, Athens; ville; Mr. and Mrs. Weber, shown .
Mr. and Mrs . Robert Gebler, Mark and David, and Mr. ana
GOLDEN RULE Class of
Delsey Park, N. J.., and Mr. Mrs. Sauer, Joy and Mary Pomeroy Church of Christ
and Mrs. George Freeland.
Ruth.
picnic 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at
Route 33 Roadside Park.

patnck; Farmer , Mingori (2),

Canadian Open

Soci~-~J Infant Cousins

Re·member .Veterans [

Linescore8
United Press lnlernotlonal

. .·:·:···-:.-.·.-.·:-.-..-.

··---

POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO.
"The Department Store of Building Since 1915"

�-- ....... .;.

5- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 10, 19'12

SJX!rt Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI SJIOi1s. Writer

NEW YORK (UPI) - Walt Alston feels 20 is a nice round
rumber.
When he finishes .managing the Los Angeles Dodgers next
season, October of 1973, it will be 20 years he had the club, and
that will be enough, he has confided to a few of those close to him.
The Dodgers will be hard-pressro to find another Wall
Alston, a man who has guided them to six National League
pennants and four world championships and who certainly ranks
as the finest manager in baseball today .
Fortunately for the Dodgers, they have plenty of managerial
randidates among them. More perhaps than any other major
league club.
PotenUal Managers
For starters, lheji've got Frank Robinson and Maury Wills.
They also have Darmy Ozark and Jim Gilliam in their
coaching ranks along with Tom Lasorda, managing for them at
Albuquerque.
There's no doubt in my mind about the ability of any of these
men to manage in the majors, and when the day comes that Walt
Alston tells the Dodgers he's going back to his farm in Darrtown,
Ohio for good, there's equally little doubt in my mind they will
ask him for his recommendation as to who should succeed him.
Walt Alston isn't the type to toss names around at a time like
this, primarily because he doesn't care to gloss over anyone and
cause hard feelings, but I'd have to say when the Dodgers do ask
him whom he'd recommend as his successor, he'll say either
Maury Wills or Danny Ozark.
There always is that chance, of course, that one of these two
men or both may be tapped for a managerial job before the e'!d of
next season.
One major league club I know of already is talking about
Ozark as its next managerial possibility.
Which brings up the case of Maury Wills.
This is his 14th season in the majors and unquestionably his
poerest one.
Some say he's all through as a player. They cite his .117
average, the fact he has stolen only one base this season and his
age, which is the same as Jack Benny's - 39.
Wills Thinks Otherwise
Maury Wills doesn't believe he is through.
"My statistics are very poor," he says. "I know that, but
that's because I haven't played regularly. When I'm through, I'll
know it. I won't kid anybody. Certainly not myself."
Wills has a lot of pride. He has so much, it sticks out all over
him.
"I've always earned my keep," he says, "and I always will.
Some players will gladly sit back and draw their salaries. I can't
do that. I want to earn mine. I still think I can salvage this year, if
I play, and I feel I can come back and have a good year next year.
Stan Musial came back and had a good year after a poor one. He
came back and hit .330 I believe and then quit. I don 't want to quit
on a year like this on~ ."
Maury Wills isn't playing coy. Ask him whether he 'd like to
manage a major league club and he says sure, why not"!
But he doesn't go around stumping for a manager's job.
Neither does Frank Robinson, whom I'd hire in a minute if it was
my big league club.
The old order changeth and that augw-s well for men like
Robinson, Wills, Lasorda, Ozark and Gilliam. Perhaps it
changeth not as quickly as they would like, but the fact that
people like Frank Quilici, Don Zimmer, Chuck Tanner, Frank
Lucchesi, Sparky Anderson and Earl Weaver ""Were given a
chance to manage in the majors means that tl1ere will be othor

new ones, too.
One day soon there also will be the first black major league
manager, and after him there will be others until nobody will
ever give anymore thought to a black manager than is given to a
black ballplayer now.
That's real,ly the way it should have been same time ago.
But you krtow baseball.
It's so slow.

Smith Captures Crown
WIMBLEDON , England
(UP!) - The excitement at
Wimbledon '72 belonged to the
women until two footsoldiers
stale the show with one of the
most exciting men's finals in
the last 40 years.
In a 2 hour 40 minute center
court thriller Sunday, top
seeded Stan Smith of
Pasadena,
Calif.
beat
Romanian touch artist llie
Nastase, 4-&lt;l, 6-3, 6-3, 4-&lt;1, 7.,';.
Old timers at the club, who've
seen all the finals back to the
1930s, said the match was the
best since Australia's Jack
Crawford beat Ellsworth Vines
of America, 6-4 in the fifth, to
win ln 1933.
Certainly the capacity crowd
of 15,000 fans, who hung on
every shot, was satisfied with
the feast of strokes and fighting
tennis served up by the
finalists. It more than made up

for the disappointment of
Saturday's washout which
caused the finals to be postponed 24 hours for only the
fourth time in the 110-year
history of the tournament.
Smith, who has won a host of
admirers for his court manners
and charm off it was perfectly
frank afterwa~ds when he
said: "eighty per cent guts and
luck got me through," by way
of tribute to Nastase, who
made the strokes which had the
crowd on the edge of their
seats.
Guts and a refusal to quit
finally got Smith horne and
helped give the U. S. its first
double victory since 1955 when
Tony Trabert and Louise
Brough were successful. Billie
Jean King of Long Beach,
Calif. won her fourth ladies
title on Friday.

National Leagua
(151 game!
Chicago
000 230 000--5 11

1
Cinci .
000 000 000-0 I 0
·Jenkins (ll-71 and Hundley ;
Gullett, Borbon (5), and
McGioihlin 161. Sprague 191 and
Bench. LP - Gullett (3'5) .
!2nd game!
Chi .
000 460 000--10 15 o
Cincl.
000 001 022- 5 9 o
Pappas (6-5) and ·Rudolph ;
Grimsley, Borboo (5), Sprague
(6), McGlothl in (9) and
Plummer . LP -

Grimsley (6-

3) . HR - Fanzooe ISihl.

.

Robertson (6th) , Ol iver C81hl ..
Aaron (18th) , Brown (3rdl.
Sanguillen (5th) .

About 200 cens were
decorated Sunday afternoon as
firecracker replicas to be filled
with candy and cookies for the
veterans at the Chillicothe
Veterans Hospital.
The fllled cans will be taken
to Chillicothe Thursday by
Mrs . Charles Kessinger,
Eighth District president of the
American Legion Auxiliary,
and others who wiU attend the
veterans' birthday party.
Wednesday, beginning at 5:15
p." rn., auxiliary members and
other volunteers are to meet at
the Middleport Legion hall to

H p

S.F.
101 030 OD0-5 7 1
Montreal
010 000 OQ0--1 5 1
Stone, Mollitt (6) and Rader;
Morton, Walker (6) , Marshall
181 and Boccabella. WP - Stone
"14·71 . LP - Morton (4-8) . HR Bonds (12th), Fairly (7th).
Kingman (2)st) .
·
Hous.
100 230 15o--12 16 0
S.L.
001 140 000-- 7 11 3
Dierker, Ray (5) and Ed.
ward, Howard (8) ; Wise, Segui
(7), Drabowsky (8}, Cum .
berland (8) , Grzenda (9) and
Simmons. WB - Ray (8-31. LP
- Wise (9-8) . HR - Rader
(14th), Maxvill (lsi), May
(16th), Aiou (Jrd), Carbo (2nd) ,
Edwards (41hl.

San Diego 003 010 lll0-5 14 1
Phil .
000 002 11o--4 11 2
Grief. Norman (7) and
Kendall ; Brandon, Lersch (8)
and Bateman. WP - Grief (4American League
11) . LP - Brandon (4·2) . HR (lsi game)
Lis (2nd), Gamble (1st),
K.C.
001 200 031!-&lt;1 12 0
Jackson (4th).
Cleve.
003 000 001- 4 10 4
(8) ,
L.A .
100 000 001- 2 9 0 Splillorlf, Wright
N.Y.
000 000 000-0 6 1 Burgme ier {9) and Kirk Osteen 19-61 and Sims, patrick; Colbert, Riddleberger
Can ilzaro (9) ; Seaver (11 -5) 1.71 and Moses. WP - Splillorff
19-4). LP- Riddleberger (] . 1) .
and Oyer .
HR - Nettles (7th). Otis (5th) .
Pitts.
033 000 OIQ-7 11 1
(2nd game}
All .
000 130 000--4 7 2
230 )02 ()()()--ll 11 1
Briles (7-31 and Sanguillen ; K.C.
020 002 IOQ--5 7 0
McLa in, Jarvis 131. Upshaw (81 Cleve.
Hedlund, Abernathy (6},
and Williams. LP - McLain (O.
11 . HR - Stargell (17th). Bur~meier (7) and Kirk ·

6 DAYS AWEEK
9 'TIL~

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

MON. THRU
SATURDAY

Col Rolkr,
Family Here

MIDDLEPORT

Prices Good Thru Tues. July lith.

Winners Noted
FORT ERIE , Onl. IUPI) Final scores and money
winnihg s in the Canad ian Open

Wood, Ramo (9) and Herrmann,
Egan (7), C. Br inkman (9) . WP
Golf Classic :
(2-0) . LP - Niekro (2·
Gay Brewer $3(),000 67-70-68-70· 2). Ramo
HR - Stanley 17th). An275
Dave Hill $13,875 70-66-73-67-276 drews (llhl .
Sam Adams $13,875 67-72-71-61,.
l2nd game)
276
Del.
002 000 002- 4 11 0
Phil Rodgers $7,050 72-68-68-69· Chi.
100 100 OD0-2 8 1
277
Lolich
(
14-6)
and Hailer ;
Lou Graham $6,150 67-69-12-70· Bradley , Kealey (9)
and Egan.
278
LP
Bradley
(10-6)
. HR George Knudso·n 15.100 70-70· Stanley (8th), Hailer (2nd
).
69-67-279
Chi Chi Rodriguez $5,100 70-69- N.Y.
230 010 30Q--9 15 0
73-67-279
Minn.
000 001 401--6 9 2
Bunky Henry $4,238 65·74-71-71Kline, McDa niel (7) , Lyle 181
281
and Munson; Corbin, Strickland
Gr ier Jones $4,238 70-72-70-69- (2), Gebhard (71, LaRoche (8)
281
and Mitterwa id. WP - Kline (8·
Br ian AI fin $3,075 70-73-67-72- 3). LP - Corbin (4·21 . HR 282
Reese (Jrd).
Lee Trevino 13.075 69 -73-70-70·
282
Bas ton
000 000 ooo--o 1 2
Deane Beman 13,075 69-70-73· Calif.
000 300 OOx-3 8 0
70-282
Sierberl (2-5) and Fisk; Ryan
Sam Snead $3,075 67-74-72-69- ( 11 -l l and Slephenson .
282
Gary Player $3,015 71 ·69 -73·69· Milwa .
000 000 001- 1 50
282
Oakland
002 010 OO x-3 4 0
Bruce Crampton 13.075 68-70·
Lonborg , Linzy (8 ) and
70-14-282
Rodriguez ; Odom , Fingers (9)
Robert Panasiuk 12,250 70·70· and Duncan . WP - Odom (7-2).
73-70-282
LP - Lon borg (7-4). HR Dunca n (13th) .

I

.'

Super

12-oz.
.pkg._

Right!

(10 innings)
Mud Baths
Texas
010 000 010 1-3 11 1
Iranian health seekers
Bait.
000 100 100 o--2 6 o
cake their bodies with black
Paul , Pina 171. Shellenback
mud from Lake Urmia to re- 191 and Billings ; McNally, Watt
lieve arthritis, rheumatism (9), )ackson (IQl an~ Et .
and other aches and pains. chebarren, Oates (10 ). WP After lyi ng in the thick. mal- Shellenback (2- 4) . LP - Wall"
odorous mud for hou rs, they (0· 1).
bathe in ·the waters of the
VISITING MARTINS
lake.
Mrs. Reva Cihla of Shiloh is
the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Osby
The Declaration of Inde- Martin.
pendence, the Constitution
and the Bill or Rights are
VACATION ENDED
enshrined .in the National
Mr . and Mrs. Joe Struble and
Archives Exhibition Hall in son, Michael, and Mr. and Mrs.
Washington, D.C. The
World Almanac notes that John Terrell have returned
these documents are sealed · from a vacation at Anna Marie
in glass-and-bronze cases Island, Fla., with Mr. and Mrs.
filled with inert helium gas. Charles Spencer. At Silver
and can be lowered at a Springs, Fla., they visited Mr.
moment's notice into a and Mrs. Gene Hester and
large shockproof and fire - family, former residents, and
proof safe.
at Bradenton, Mrs. Terrell
visited Mrs. John Bowen .
Highlights of their trip inAmericans consumed an cluded visits to the London
· average of 118.6 pounds of Wax Museum at St. Peterfresh and processed potatoes sburg, Stone Mountain in
per capita in 1970.
Georgia, and the Ringling
Museum in Sarasota.

0, .AT
V)!f:"

00

Jane
Parker

3-lb.

1

)

can

- *' ,

I

'

m• Polly's Problem l'liii!I"!IIW&lt;illiii!t-~M•~

'

New Morning

[_:!.[·,~.:'

.•

~~

IIJT'S TRUE" - • -

:;:;
{:"
:;::

::i:
~

~

:;:;:::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::·:·::::;.::::::;:;:;::::*:i:i:::·:::::·:::::::-::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::\:'

Family Together At Roush Home
A family gathering was held
Sunday at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Roush , with all of
their children aqd grandchildren present.
Attending were Mr. alld Mrs.
Larry Flowers, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Roush and Doug,
Columbus; Mr . and Mrs. Dale
Roush, Sherrie and David, St.
Albans, W. Va.; Mr. illld Mrs,
Charles Kessinger, Pomeroy
R.D.; Mrs. Donald Matheny,

,

George Odister
Died in Dayton
Mrs. William L. Smith, 272
West ~ain St., Pomeroy, has
returned from Dayton where
she was called by the death of a
nephew, George Lee Odister,
36, son of Mrs. Azealee Odister.
Mr. Odister, whose Wife
passed away six months ago,
died of a heart attack. He carne
to Pomeroy on June 18 for his
rnother"who planned to spend
the summer in Dayton visiting
her son, six grandchildren and
one great~randdaughter. Mrs.
Odister has been in Pomeroy
the past year with her sister,
Mrs. Smith, due to poor health.
Mrs. Smith, a practical nurse
the past 12 years, terminated
employment outside her horne
to care for Mrs. Odister, who
returned to Pomeroy this
weekend with her sister.

WEIGHT @.WATCHERS.

14 FOOT ROUND RUNG

EXTENSION
LADDER

I

.

FURNITU•

BAKER

MIDOI.£POIT, 0.

REGUlAR 18.99

t
~

CHECK THESE FEATURES!

I

l ( ' -\

1

77 ;-,, :-1.

13

Free·lwmging sole·

ly $hoes. Moxim"m
working he igh I II fl.

)
1

= ..._--1

EXTENSION LADDER

.f:.&gt;,{ 1 .,.

.r--,

REGU l AR 17.49

• •
.,.

I
~

'· ( ' TYPE Ill
• 10UTY RA TING
~ ,
200LB

t

Ruggedly cons tr ucted -.. irh exlrud·
ed olumonum rop1, •o•h ond step s.

MAX IMUM
TO IA.l
ENGTH OF WORKING
SECTIONS
LENGTH

•

24ft. 21ft.. 3244
28ft. 25ft. 3971
TYPE Ill
OUT'!" RA.l iNG
200 LB .

Co ns tr ucted lor h( e hme 5tre ng th ond saletv . 6' er1d !podng for gre oler strenglh.
Ul· l · ~ le d.

2'49

REGULAR

4.09

16 OZ.

CAN

MASTERSET

INTERIOR/EXTERIOR

Wooden handles, nvlon bnslles.

SPRAY ENAMEL
WOOD LIFE
;;; .,_,.,.. i

PLASTIC
ORO P

_,"'-

REGULAR 591

i ,0 ::-o.-:

39~

• FOOh 12FOOI

.=~- z"-"·t2~

:!! -···-····

' u.r -~ - .. ··- -•

WoodUte

--

77~

REGU LAR

1.29

WOOD
PRESERVATIVE

ASSORTE D COLORS

REGULAR 4.49

toys ! Non-loxic. 12 3/4 Ot.JriCe fill.

Use rndaor s. ot.Jtdoors - £! ..-en on ch ildren's

,

CLOTH

GAllON

DAP

CAULKING
GUN

RELV-ON

CAULKING
CARTRIDGES

BU UT-USE

l'mi:tCt!i!ijtW

'

4/99~

87~

1 GALLON

GASOLINE CAN

REGUlAR ~9&lt;

12 INCH • 12 1N CH

CEILING
TILE
15~

aa~

' '-"

&lt;C

Conwed

SCREEN DOOR
REGUlAR_I 8.~5

CHAIN DOOR GUARD

NEW DElPHOS

Fle•lble neoprene pour spo~J t .
Steel body. Safely red.
ADDITIONAL OR

~AJAX

1.09

WITHOUT COUPON

$1335
...!-- SCH UMACHER

.

Natura l or walnut·

REGULAR 99•

ENTRANCE
DOOR

lone

PASSAGE LOCKSET

77~

'

DOOR CLOSER

rt

--"-

-

•

PRIVATE LOCKSET

lmisk.
NATURAL

K.W II(S ET

WRIGHT

SAlE PRICE

shcll'es lor

any room . R,ady lo·

cr~~
' ';GU2;·;

HYDRAULIC

2'8" - ~'8 " • I 3 /~ "

CHR .- BiS .

ENTRY SET

REG. 3.79

REGULAR 5.99

211

l

..

SA.LE PR ICE

BRUSH SET

HAS SURGERYE. M. Blake, Sr. of Mid·
dleport underwent surgery
Saturday at the Holzer Medical
Center, Gallipolis.

WEDNESDAY
PAST PRESIDENTS,
American Legion Auxiliary,
Dre)V Webster Post 39, 6:30
p.m. annual picnic at the Ohio
River campsite on the Owen
Watson farm at Racine.

ALUMINUM

WERNER •

'~

STEPLADDER

-c:!fE fiN E_Eit

4

DELUXE 3 PIECE

The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.

2'8" I 1!1'8"

S.tlE

_.

I

I

J.JJ8"

PANEl &amp; SASH DOOR
SALE PlllrF

P~ICE

D
Charming Cros1

Buck

entrance

d oor , ma de
from selec t ed
ver tical g roin fir
and heml ock.
Sr. REGIS '

Consl ru c ted
from slo ndord

[!
It

218

KW I"EI

~====~
SLIDING GLASS

PATIO-oDORS
WITH SCREEN
6 FOOh UOOT. 8 INCHES
REGUlAR 159 .95

grade kiln -

dried Hemlock

u

527

BRASS
REG . 3.49

for worp·re,isl·

ante f lat panell. G lozed
and bed ded.
ST RE GIS

I
AHO ERS ON

$14695
-

__._

Aluminum glou. llidlng doou
(w!th tcretn) glaud wllh lam·

ptrtd tof tty glau.

POMEROY, OHIO

.Member Federal Re8ene System
011 Fridays oar Drlve-Ju Wllldow Ia
()pell8 a.m. to 7 P'f·• (CoiiUn110111ly).

f20.000 Mulmllllllusurance
For Each Depotltor

II

AT

w.. c \&gt;&lt;'

6FOOT
ALUMINUM

fYPEIII
DUTY RATING · 200 LB.
MA.X. W ORK IN G HGI. 11 r!

COIIIMUIIIC&amp;T• CONPID.NCil, SHOr AT HOM•

••

FOUND

t}

2'1 " l6 '1" , l.JI""

OFFICE HOURS 9t30 TO 1r. 2 TO 5 !CLOSE'
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST,

'.

••

ENTRANCE DOOR

OPTOMETRIST ·

No charge to the c,aller.

AB

FRIENDLY WALL-TO-WALL

IOlr_.ered and inter oor doors Alum·
mum flni1h .
•

TOLL FREE 800-582·7026

VAWD

Jeff , Cw-tis and Cindy, Camp
LeJeune, N. C., and Mrs.
Kathern Smith, Kevin and
Christi, and Becky and Kenny
Roush .
The Matheny children here
visiting for severa l weeks
returned Sunday to North
Carolina with their mother.
BeckyRoushishornenowafter
spending two weeks in
Columbus with Mr. and Mrs.
Flowers and Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Roush.

For wood or metal slonn, glau

'

Saturday night at 1:30 p.m. at
the United Faith Church
located"" on the Middleport Pomeroy Route 1 by-pass .
Singers are invtted to participate and the public · is
welcome.

I

(NIWSPA"l IHTilPll$1 ASSH.)

Additional morning and evening classes meet
weekl'l' in Gallipolis, also.
For information call

A hymn sing wiU be held

:.:.:._,·.i·:·.:
:__

heu rr

DEAR· POLLY- [ have two Pet Peeves. The first is
with people who ask you ·to dD something for them because they do not know how to do it and then stand over
you telling you how to do it. The seconil is wltli the clerks
who do not return change to your offered hand but throw
it on the counter, causing the money to go helter-skelter
and sometimes even fall on the floor.-Nii:WELL

SINGERS INVITED

'•'•

Obseroance Rescheduled

l.il

make uur t•ommunft y

"DEAR POLLY- I have a double-bed-size , downfilled, satin quilt, corded around the edges, that was
a gift about 30 years ago. It is still beautiful but
some of the down filling has shifted, even though
It is quilted, so there Is very little left at one end.
I r treasure this quilt and want to have It cleaned
properly but would first like to know if anyone has
any ideas as to what I could do with the shifting
down problem.-CATHERINE

I

\

ATI'END COUNCIL
Clarence Struble, Mrs.
Eleanw Thomas, Mrs. Shirley
'
jjjj Custer, Miss Lucille Smith, and
Mrs. Geneva Yates were at Rio
The
51st
anniversary
'l&gt;bservance
of
the
Forrest
Run
.
.
Grande
Friday to attend the
Baptist Church was postponed -from Sunday,July 9, to July
Council
on Aging. The
District
23 because of au out.;,f-town death wbleb made necessary
the absence of several members.
:;:: five represented the Meigs
County Council.
The July 23 eelebratiun will begin with Suoday school at
9:30a.m., followed by worship service at 10:45 a.m., In·
eluding devotions by the deacuus and a sermon by the Rev.
Eddie Buffington, pastor. A guest speaker may also be on
the morning prograiU.
Following the luncheon the afternoon program will
begin atl :15 p.m. There will be devotions by the deacons,
and a program which will include the church history, ·;;;
seleetions by guest choirs, and a talk at~ p.m. by the Rev. I. .[~
Butler uf Columbus, wbu will be accompanied here by his ~~
church choir. The public is invited.
;:[

~

u mutter of l'(lmmumt ~
DEAR CAMPERS-Another Jean suggested concern
about protecting chlldren against S!'n and mosquitoes.
A baby's skln may sunburn on even an overcast day so )Re&gt;n"onbec. 11 '-o nununit y
she takes plenty of lotion and uses it. She also says one
li lfe n h om e, with n eglect
of the moSt Important things to take Is patience and- If
you are going with the Idea that baby Is going to be a It 's u grc~Jt communit ~
problem, forget the whole thing. She also suggested that
SU ~ I)(lrtS thc 1r
If baby Is to be changed to powdered mllk for the trip
I""''"'""''""·
An\.! ynur
do It before leaving home.-POLLY
l•urppu•'' Kuuntntees th e)

,!

\

~::::::::;:;:;.:~~;,.m:3.a::~:::::::::::::::_:::::::::::::~:::::::::::::~:~:::!:::::~:.-=::::::::(,::::::::::::~==~=::::::;:;

'

DEAR POLLY and
Jean- We camped our way
aro und Lake Superior with six children, ages 12 years to
10 months, and had a wonderful time. Do try to maintain
your established schedule for naps, baths, meals, etc., or
takes a great
as much as possible. Napping can be done while driving
but do not plan on covering too many miles in one day.
Children get restless, so allow breaks for stretching ~ommunity to make
cv,eryone's legs. We tried to have our lunch at a roadside pa rk near ·a stream. Our baby slept in a mesh playgood community beHer
pen but could have slept in a sleeping bag. Do go prepared for cold nights and I recommend hooded sweat
shirts. for all for sleeping and a blanket sleeper for the
little one. Keep meals simple so as to have time to explore with the children. If you do not, they will do it on
their own and the results could be tragic. Have a safe
trip and do not forget your camera as the scenery is
spectacular and the parks are great.- MRS. D. A. J .
· suu:ess is pur s uc ~: ess .

15t\VAILPBLE

pkg.
of
8

Nicole Lynn Bradbury,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ass
Bradbury, an~ Tricia Carleen
Wolfe, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs . Carl Wolfe, were
christened SUnday morning at
the Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport.
The infants, first cousins,
were in matching christening
dresses for the rites performed
by the Rev. Robert Bumgarner.
Relatives attending were
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe , Apple
Grove; Mrs. Harry Wright.
Mrs. Gene Wright, Jeannie
and Terry , Morristown :
Mrs .
James
Kitchen ,
Debbie and Denise, Chillicothe; Miss Mary Bradbury, Gallipolis; Mr. and
Mrs. C. P. Bradbury, Mr . and
Mrs. Charles Bradbury, and
Mr. and Mrs. Wolfe'sdaughter,
Wendy.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Bradbury entertained with a
buffet dinner following the
christenings .

" J

' •' ...:

WATCHERS
PFOS-PNA

MONDAYS, 7:30 PM ·

Calendar!! Heath Church

::l
:B

Baby

WE10+-1T

Opening Tuesday, iuly 11,9: 30 AM
St. Paul Lutheran Church ·
231 E. 2nd St.
Evening class also meets atthe same location ..

il Christened at

MEIGS COUNTY Women's
Democratic Club, 7:30p.m. 242
Mulberry Ave., Tuesday.
Hints on Taking
EASTERN
Athletic
Boosters;·.:Ji,lly 11, 8 p.m .
Tuesday at Eastern High
On a Camping Trip
School.
WEDNESDAY
By POLLY CRAMER
REVIVAL, United Faith
DEAR POLLY - I th ink Jean can take her 15-monthsold baby on a camping trip. Last summer we took a Chur ch, Pomeroy • Middleport
month-long trip to Canada and with a HI-months-old baby By-pass, Rev . Worley Haley ,
and every night camped out in a tent, so I have a few evangelist, Wednesday
suggestions Jean might find useful. Have a small play- through July 23. All singers
pen you can fit on the back seat of the car and put some welcome, 7:30 each evening .
of his favorite toys in it. Buy plenty of heavy" disposable
WHITE ROSE Lodge, 1:30
diapers to use at night. Those wash-and-dry towelettes p.m. Wednesday, American
are also invaluable. Carry along enough baby food for the Legion Hall, Middleport.
entire trip. Have sleepers of different sizes. (Polly's note
- 1 feel our reader meant to •ay all weights.) Take along
a backpack in which you
carry baby when hiking or
'"zo
sight-seeing. We only aver.(' .....
I
I 16.- •'4I" ., ~·"
aged about 200 miles a day
I
·t ·\
as chilaren get· bored and
. ' ' I • ••..r ..'1 ' [!
cranky . They will get dirty
riJl ~ '{\1 ~ ·H '• Ill
-1
., 11 ~-~-~·u
and love it that way so I
0 .,. .
1,.
. •"
made little effort to keep
o~
_.,o
CO N.,them spotless. Have a nice
lime as Canada is so beauHIELf" aUILO
lifui .- SUSAN
O~PO"TUNITV

11-IENEW

POMEROY

.

POLLY'S POINTERS

TiiATSNO
EXCUSE.

\.

:-··
-:::

Honored

Sessions is Underway
Four Rivers Girl Scout progress, is filled. Session II
Council opened "resident (July 16-22) has openings in
camping" at Camp Sandy aquatics only. Fee is $25 for
Bend, Elizabeth, W. Va., on Scouts, $30 for non-Scouts.
July 9, open to . aU girls
Session III (July 23-Aug. 5)
regardless of Girl Scout has openings in genera I
membership. The four sessions camping and aquatics. Basic
of resident camping offered Canoeing and Counselor-inare divided into Session I and II Training are filled. Session IV
of one-week each and Ill and has openings in genera l
IV, each two weeks.
camping, aquatics, and in
Camp program offers beginn1ng and advanced
general camping, aquatics canoein~. which include river
(waterfront skills and ac- trips. Fee for Session III and
tlvities), basic canoeing, ad- IV is $50 for Scouts, $5ti for nonvanced canoeing, and Coun- Scouts.
selor-in-Training. Prerequisite
To register, contact the Four
for aquatics and basic Rivers Girl Scout Cooncll of·
canoeing Is an American Red . fice, 1922 Seventh Street,
Cross Intermediate Swim- Parkersburg, W. Va., 422.,')474.
mer's Certificate or Girl Scout
Cadette Swimmer's badge. ·
Required for advanced
ONTV
canoeing is an American Red
The Southern Ohio Crusade
Cross Small Craft Certificate
will
be on Cable TV, Channel 5,
or Cadette Swimmer's badge.
SeS!ion I, which is now in !Qnight at 8:30 p.m.

....
•.•,

Three

Timmerman (9) and Freehan;

First of Four Camping

cookies and candy are needed
to complete the project and
may be brought to the hall
Wednesday evening.
Assisting with decorating the
cans Sunday were Mrs .
Margaret Yost and Mrs .
Frances . Roberts, of Ita cine
Unit 602; Mrs. Genuna Casci,
Pomeroy Unit 39; Mrs. Ullian
Reltmlre, ' Mrs. Kathleen
Manley, Mrs. Emma Wayland,
Mrs. Etta Will, Mrs. Edith
Spencer, Mrs. Janie Roush,
Mrs . Judy Flowers, Mrs,
Bonnie Dailey, Becky Roush,
Debbie McGuffin, Judy Gilkey,
Paula Cunningham, Melinda
Thomas, Angela Dailey, and
Mrs . Kessinger, Middleport
Unit 128. The lids of the 200
cans were decorated by Cindy
Matheny and Christi Smith.

·z:
.·:·:

Birthdays of

Lamb (6), Wilcox !81 and
Fosse. WP - Hedlund (2-5). LP
-Farmer (1 ·11 . HR - Plnlella
(7th, Nettles (8th), Bell (2nd),
Otis (6th) .
(lsi game)
Del.
020 002 000--4 8 1
Chi.
100 102 001- 5 11 1
Scherman. Zachary (61.
Perranoskl (81. Niekro (91.

L

flll the cans. Homemade

::;:;.

MONDAY
WEEK-LONG revival
beginning Sunday, Old Dexte~
Church, services, 8 p.m. each
evening, Rev. Willard Dutcher,
evangelist, special singing.
Public welcome.
MEIGS CHAPTER 53, DAV,
Monday, 7:30 at hal\ on Butternut Ave., with officers for
1972-73to be installed. Refreshments; members urged to
attend.
WOMEN'S SOCIETY of
Christian Service, Heath
United Methodist Church .
Meeting will be held at 7:30
Monday night in the parsonage. Mrs. Beulah Hayes
will give devotions with Mrs.
Nan
Moore to present the
It. Col. and Mrs. James M.
lesson . Hostesses will be Mrs.
Roller, Kathy, Jimmy and
L. W. McComas, Mrs. Alma
Johnnie, will return to RanMiller,
Mrs. Mary Reinhart,
dolph Air Force Base, San
and Mrs. C. M. Hennesy.
Antonio, Texas, tomorrow
after having spent the past 10
GAMES COMMITTEE,
days here visiting Mrs .
Middleport Feeney Bennett
Dorothy F. Roller and Mrs.
Post 128, will meet Monday
Eva Hartley and other
7:30 p.m. at post horne. All
relatives.
interested members w-ged to
A week after the family gets
attend.
tol San Antonio, Lt. Col. Roller
POMEROY CHAMBER of
w II leave for Saigon for a
Commerce Monday at noon at
year's tour of duty. The family
Mrs. Denver Weber and Mrs. Meigs Inn.
will remain on the Air Force Harold Sauer entertained
ANNUAL
PICNIC of
Base.
recently with a party at the Pomeroy Garden Club, 6:30
Friday night Mr . and Mrs. home of Mr. and Mrs. Weber in p.m. Monday, home of Mrs.
Richard Gress entertained Reedsville honoring Joy Sauer, Walter Grueser.
with a family party . Besides 14 in May, David Weber, 16 in
MEIGS SALON 710, 8 and 40,
the James Roller family, June, and Mary Ruth Sauer, 16 Monday, 7:30 p.m. at Racine
others attending were Mr. and this month, on their birthday American Legion Hall; inMrs. Richard Roller, Lori and anniversaries.
stallation of officers, members
Brad, Belpre; Mike Gress of
A dinner was held at noon, take housewares order.
Charleston, W. Va .; Miss th e afternogn was spent
TUESDAY
Brenda Van Meter of Pomeroy, playing games and opening
PINS TO 25 year members
Mrs. Malcobn Roller, and the gifts, and daring the evening when Middleport Lodge 363,
hosts ' son, Pat. Mrs. Malcobn sandwiches, a decorated cake, F&amp;AM, meets at 7:30 p.m.
Roller had a dinner for the ice cream and punch were Tuesday at temple . Master
same group last Wednesday. served.
Masons invited.
Following
the
CrowAttending the party were Mr .
MEIGS
COUNTY
Neutzling wedding on July, 1, and Mrs. William Meredith and Alcoholism and Drug Abuse
Mrs . Malcolm Roller . en- son, Roger, of Beverly; Mr . Committee meeling 7:30p.m.
tertained with a supper. Her and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead, Tuesday at St. Paul Lutheran
guests were Lt. Col. and Mrs. Jean, Jane and Juli and. Mr. Church, Pomeroy, with Roger
Roller and children: Mr. and and Mrs. Warren Pickens and Hooker speaking on "Today's
Mrs . Roger Quisenberry, nice, Kay Balderson, Reeds- Drug Scene" and a fibn will be
Jennie, Joy and Jeff, Athens; ville; Mr. and Mrs. Weber, shown .
Mr. and Mrs . Robert Gebler, Mark and David, and Mr. ana
GOLDEN RULE Class of
Delsey Park, N. J.., and Mr. Mrs. Sauer, Joy and Mary Pomeroy Church of Christ
and Mrs. George Freeland.
Ruth.
picnic 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at
Route 33 Roadside Park.

patnck; Farmer , Mingori (2),

Canadian Open

Soci~-~J Infant Cousins

Re·member .Veterans [

Linescore8
United Press lnlernotlonal

. .·:·:···-:.-.·.-.·:-.-..-.

··---

POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO.
"The Department Store of Building Since 1915"

�.

6 -'l'he Oally Sentinel, Mlddleuort-Pomeroy, 0., July 10, 1972

•

.

ff

-S entinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Clitssifieds Gei Resu~tsl
r

RAY CROMLEY

Z SIGNS

Of

. IUALITY

By RAY CROMLEY
WASHINGTON (NEAl
President Nixon's aides count on the unfortunate results
of Leo nid Brezhnev's latest economic experiments to push
the Soviet Union into g1·cater accommod ati on with the
United States :these next five years .
If thes~urrent boggles become increasingly serious,
and Nix 's experts predict they will, Brezhnev's eco·
nomic pr blems co uld be a strong force for an effective
follow -on agre ement coveri ng all major strategic arms
and hopefully calling for cutbacks as well a s ceilings .
Brezhnev's immediate problems began as the result of a
decision he made about two years ago, in part to solidify
his position as first secretary through increasin g party
control over the economy and in part to remedy the growing productivity problems that plague Sov iet industry,
agriculture and mining.
The Communist party has always b·ee n supreme in overan economic direction-setting quotas , prices and priori·
hes. Th1s has been bad enough for economic effic iency .
Brezhnev has gone a step further . give n the party committees in l'ach local factory strong direct say in day-today operahons.
The word now comi ng out of the Soviet Un ion is th a t
this shift is not wor king well. Factory managers com·
plain their authority is being und ermined. They strenu·
ously object to party interference in the selection of fore·
men, superintendents and department heads, in work
assignments a nd in training methods. Party workers in
e.ach plant find themselves required to police t heir supe·
rwrs on tec hnical matters out side their competence. Party
mterference, even when It succeeds in forcing an inefficient m ana~er to resign or to change his methods , has
had unsettlmg effects among the workers. Professional
relationships have been destroyed . Production is suffering. Each side blames the other.
Despite a ll this, local party' comm ittees a re reported
working on ways to intensify their supervision.
Nixon's economic analysts see a basic unsolvable con·
flict here. They are certain that these difficulties will
deepen and that increasing party interference in the deta ils of local factory production will lead to greater inefficiencies, regardless of what br illia nt technological breakthroughs Soviet scientists achieve.
This will make the Russians increas ingly conscious of
their arm s burden and (if analysis here is correct) of
the1r need for U.S. management and development skills.
Growing dependence on the United States should make
the Sov1et Umon more cooperative if U.S. negotiators are
hard nosed, th.e theory here runs . But the Soviet representatives are gomg to be tough bargainers , wh ether talkin g
about arms , economics or political settlements in suc h
places as the Midd le East and Asia .
The theo~y here is that the gr owing Soviet economic
problems will not make Russian diplomats easier to negotiate with . Talks that should take two years ma y take five.
. But the Soviet di fficultie s may make agreements more
likely 111 the end, If we argue from military and political
strength as well as economic.
l

!

1972 CHEVELLE MALIBU
$3795
4-door, 350 V-8, factory air, turbo hydramatic, power
steering, power brakes, gulf green color, with green vi nyl
roof, vinyl interior trim ; radio, whi te wa ll tires, full wheel
covers. bumper guards, and all the extras. low milea ge,
factory sticker, 241.
'
1971 CHEVELLE MALIBU H.T. CPE.
S2t95 '"
Color red, blk. vinyl top, blk. vinyl interior, less than
20,000 miles by local careful lady owner. 307 eng ine with
Turbo Hydramatic, power steering , P. B., radio, w-w tires,
spare never used, rall y wheels. bumper guards. Your
inspection·of this car will tell you it's the nicest.
1970 CHEVROLET IMPALA SPT. CPE.
$2395
J50cu. in. V-8engine, turbo-hydramatic, power steer ing &amp;
brakes. radio. red vinvl interior. black finish . Whit e wall
tires, like new.
-· ·

992-5592

AmiiiOI

Address
Cit

Blg Eater

~---------------

I

~.~---------------- ~-- ----j
Mv•rtlslnt eon!rlbultd lor lht Pvbllc aood Jn cooptr•llon with
Tht Advtrtlslnt Councii •MI ttlt lnttrnllloul NtWSIIJPtr Aclmtlllna f 1ecullwu

GET

'

AST'IOU!!

Pomeroy
Phone 992-2156

I

Help Wanted Female
EXTRA INCOME : We need
ladle&gt; as parttlme Persona l
Shoppers. Average S3 per
hour . Flexible hours. Write
Personal Shopper Department, Box 10, Watkins
Products, In c. , Winona ,
Minnesota 5598 7.
7·_:
10· 3fc
_ _ __ _ _ _ _ _

The elephant is a strict
vegetarian. Its daily require·
ments are about a quarterton of green fodder-or
about 150 pounds of hayand 50 gallons of water.

-EXPERT'
'Willet &gt;Aiigruflent

. $5.55
. On Most American

ACT NOW Join t he
oldest
Toy
&amp; , Gift
Party Plan In the Country
- our 25th year! Com missions up to 30 pet. Fantast ;c Hostess Awards. Call or
wrtle "SA NTA's PARTIES"
Avon , Conn . 06001. Telephone
I (2031 673-3455 . ALSO
BOOKING PARTIES.
7-2·30tC

- - - -- - -

BUONGDETTICHEEAO~ING
"
Noltce Is hereby given that on
the18thda yofJuly , 1972at7 :00
P.M.. o public hear ing will be
held on the budg et of Lebanon
Township , Me igs county, Oh io
for the next flscot year ending
December 31 , 1973.
Hearing will bo hold at tho
Townsh;p garago. .
Lebanon Township Trustees
(7J 1 D,C II~rtnce Lawrence, Clerk

c:ar.o

- GUI\RANTEE[).-o
Pho'ne 992-2094

Pom erov H!llllt &amp;· Auto .
Opeii8Ti15.
Mondav thru Safurdly
606 E. Main, Pomtroy,Q. ·
,L

.

'

197 1 YELLOWSTO NE truck

camper, ,like new ; cal l 9495424 after 7 p.m .
6-29-7tc
- - - -- - - -STEREO, Ear ly Amer ican
style , AM-FM radio com binatlon, 4 speed automatic
changer, 4 speaker sound
system . Balance $78 .69. Use
our time payment plan . Call
992-7085.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Pll. m -211•
Pomeroy

3 Bedroom home, with
brick front , 1 car
9arage. carpeting .
Priced at ..
ONL,Y S1·3,750
We specialize In aluminum,
vinyl a~~d steel siding ;
fiberglas, brick and' stonei'
"complete line of reslde"lllil
and commercl~l -roofing;
remodeling,
building,
suspended ceilings, Interior
and exterior painting ;
complete line of Masonry
work. All work guaranteed to
customer satisfaction. We
are fully Insured for your
protectloo . 32 N. 2nd. 9923918.
•
ALLSIOE BUILDERS &amp;

USED building supplies &amp; SEE US FOR : Awnings, slorir ·
salvage yard ; wilt wreck
doors and windows , c~rports ,
houses, buildings, etc. Covert
marquees, aluminum siding
&amp; Martin Wreckage &amp;
and ratting . "A. Jacob, sale! ,
Salvage Co., Laurel Cliff
representative. For free.
I
across
from
Highland
estimates, . phone Charles
Church ; phone 992·5946.
Lisle. Syracuse, V. v.;
I
7-9-12tc
Johnson and Son, tn c.
--------_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __3_-2-lfl] L~,.:....=.:..;_-==:=:=--~
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller "
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph . SEWING MACHINE service . -------,.---f1
66noos.
clean , o;l. set tension $4.99 r
2-12-tfc
Special Etectro , Grande
EARTH
;--~-----Company. Phone 992 -6517.
5-21 -tl,&lt;
CALL Guy Ne igler for Building
Dozer &amp; End Ioder work, . ,
Houses.
ponds, basement, land~"
OOZE
R
and
back
hoe
work,
6-28-tt c
ponds and septic tanks; B &amp; K scaping. We have 2 size
- - -- - Excavating, Phone 992 -5367, dozers, 2 size Joaders. Work
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Di ck Karr , Jr.
done by . hour or contract.~
lEASONABLE rate&gt;. Ph. ~
5-2 1-tfc Fru · Estimates. We also :
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell.
haul fill dirt, top,soil. Dump .
O..ner &amp; Operator.
5-12-ttc AUTOMOBILE insurance been trucks and low-boy for hire.
cancelled?
Lo st
your See Bob or Roger Jtfft11,
-----'- - - operator's li cense? Call 992· Pomeroy. Phone "2· 3525
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
2966. .
Complete Service
"aiter 7 p.m. or phone . 992:·
6-15-tfc
Phone 949·3821
:sm.
------Racine, Ohio
t'Crltt Bradford
BACKHOE AND DOZER work:
5·1-tfc
Septic tanks installed. George
(8Htl Pullins. Phone 992·2478. ~E WING MACHINES. Repair
,,----,---...,.-~
. """'
- :--·
4-2s-u &lt;
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
ser ~lce, all makes. 992 -228~.
located at Crossroads, Rt . 124.
The Fabric Shop, PomerOy.
Complete front end service,
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. we Sharpen Scissors.
tvne up and brake service . HARR !SON 'S TV Serv;ce,_ open
3-29-tfc
Wheels balanced elec - 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; free pickup
and delivery ; phone 99i-2522. ·- - - - - - - - tronically .
All
work
guaranteed .
RP.ill"-nnP~hiP
_ _ _ _ _ _ _6·_13-·tfC REA.OY -MIX
CONCRETE
rates . Phone 742 -3232 or delivered right to your ,
992-3213.
I · U · nC
projec'l. Fast and easy. Free
PLAS TER lNG &amp; refin ishing old ·estimates . Phone 992· 328*.,
chimneys : ph one 992 -2368 ,
Goegle ln Ready -Mix Co .•,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Middlepor t, Ohio.
,
Real Estate For Sal e
7-Htp
6·30-tfc
- - - - -- IDEAL 5- ACR E RANCHO .
Lake Conchas, New Mexico.
$2,875. No Down . No interest.
Real Estate For SaiP.
S25 mo . Vacation Parad ise.
Money
Maker .
Free
Brochur e. Ran chos: Bo x
2001 0D, Alameda , California
94501.
.6·7-JOtp
110 Mechanic Street

MOVING

Virgil B. Teaford} Sr. -Broker

RACINE - 6 room house. bath,
uti li ty room , garage. $10,000 ;
nhone 949, '195."
•
_ _ _ _ _ __ _.:_3·_:_
31-tfc
·
HOU!:»t m Long Bottom , phone
985-3529.
r.:'T.1'
.

6· 11 -tfc

For Sale

July Price Buster!
PANTS &amp; JEANS

SALE I
Buy 2 Pairs and
GET 1 PAIR FREE
All ki nds, all sizes for men,
women , young men, boys
and girls. Hurry to ...

7-7-6fc
POMEROY
-::- -- - -- _
'I'._ JackW. Carsey, Mgr .
BEAUTIFUL Walnut finish
..,.
Phone 992·2181
stereo, -4 speaker sound
system, 4 speed automatic
changer . Use our budg et 1 - 3414 INTERNATIONAL
terms . Balance S69. 15. Use
Tractor with front end loader
our time payment plan. Call
and 3120 backhoe ; Earl R.
992-7085.
Werner, Middleport ; phooe
__:_:.
992-2769 at Bradbury .
7-7·6fc

______

7·9·6fp
NEW 19n Zig . z·ag sewi ng ~--------

ma chine In original fa ctory COAL, Limestone, Excelsior
car ton . Zig -zag to make
Salt Works, E. Ma in St.,
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891 .
buttonhol es, sew on buttons,
monograms, and make fancy
.4-12-ffc
__:__
designs with just the twtst of a
single-dia l. Left in lay -away
and never been used . Will sell '71 CONSOLE model, 23" black
and white TV , $75, New 3-pc.
for on ly $47 cash, or credit
bedroom suite, $75. Phone 992te rms available. Phone 992·
6021.
5641.
7-9-3tc
1·1·6tc

__________

- -- - --

ELECTROLUX Vacuum
, Cleaner complete with at .
Homes for
tachments, cordw lnder and .
· · · ·'
pa int spray. Used but In like CAStj paid for all maltes anil
new 'cond ition . Pay $34.45 models of mobile homes .
cash or budget plan available. PhOfle area code 614·4~,J- 9J.53 1_;.
Phone 992·5641.
~ 1 11 ~
7-7-6tc ·. ~.- - - - - - - 50 X 10, 2 bedroom, priced
G. E. REFRIGERATOR :
reasonably, phone Chester
wrlnger -tyr,e
Maytag
washer, excel ent condition ; 2 _
_ _ _ __ _ 7_-9·6fp
porcelain top cabinets; gas - 985-3379.
cool&lt; stove ; '1'etal table and
four chairs; Bissell hand.
sweeper: full -size metal bed ;
·Air Conditioners
Free Westinghou se sewing
machine In cabinet; phone
•Awnings
992-6247.
.I
• Underpinning
_ _ __ _,__ _ _7_·7-3tp
'Complete
.
.
mobile home
TOMATOES, Cucumbers, serv.tce ~ plus gigantic
green peppers; Geraldlnu · 'display of mobile homes
Cleland, Ractne, Olllo.
always available at ...
7-6-tfc

Mobile

POOOL.E pupptis, Silver Toy,
Park view Ken nets, Phone 992·
5-443
'
'
_8-15-tfc

From the largest
Bulld.,zer RadiCUor to
Smallest Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

&lt;

NEW TOTAL electric
apartment, 2 bedroom, walk 7791 after 5 p.m.
7-7-Jtc
in closets, large living room ,
-----~--ki tchen and dinin g area .
AUt0 Sales
Phooe 992-7384 or 992-7133.
7-9-Jtc
---1971 TOYOTA l.orolla , 2 ar. - sedan . low mileage, excellent FA BRIC INN , Polyester
condit ion; phone 992·7024.
Dou.bleknits for less. Hun ,
7-9-6tc
dreds of Yards . From Tup- - -- - -- - - - pers Plains, pass school, go 4
1968 FORO Fa 1r 1ane ; a 1r- miles, turn left onto County
condit ioning ; phone 742-5361 . Rd. so, sign. Between
Hockingport and Reedsville,
7-9-3tc
turn onto County Rd. SO near
- - - - - -- - Eden Church, sign . Phone 378·
For Sale
6276.
7-9-6tp
5 FT. BUSH Hog . Phone 9492783.
~-----=------7_:
·5 ·6tc

A'Sk THt:
A":J...

Sale

CNJDIDP..TE

DO 'IOU T~ I NK III/8£Rr
LL 8E TJ.IE I&gt;EMOCRilTIC
NOMINEE AGAIN, RIA«)~

·

TOM !&gt;EWE Y,
TJ.IE 'cRIMEBU'5TER'~
RAN TWICE

608 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

BUILDERS
OPPORTUNITY
Close In, 30 acres , good
dra inage, Chester water ,
good roads. IDEAL for
homesltes. $26,800.00.
WHAT A KITCHEN I
It your Mrs. likes to cook,
then her Mr . ought to see this
new modernized kitchen . J
large bedrooms , walk · ln
closets, 1'12 baths, utility/
room , lull basement, grea
rec . room . 1 acre ground, In
town . $28,500.00.
S1 ,000.00 DOWN
VIEW OF TH E RIVER , 3
bed r ooms , bath, porches ,
part basement, metal roof.
storage building, garage ,
SMOO.OO .
.
BATTLE OF THE
BULGE?
If you are lighting to prov ide
enough roam for a growing
family ... Here's a place
ldeall v suited. 4 bedrooms,
1'1-z naths, call for par·
tlcutars . $12,800.00.
LET US SELL YOUR
J BEDROOM HOME
HENRY E. CLELANO SR.
REALTOR
PHON€ 992-2259
88 ACRES, tow S20's, farmhouse
and other buildings, Over 200
ft. frootoge. Must see to
appreciate .
Rosemary
Withem, 1239-0647, GRANOSTAFF, INC ., REALTOR,
471 -2112 .
7-9-tfc

BUi, I'M NOT SURE
WE CAN STAN~ ANOT~ER
•FILIBUSTER."l .

I PONT
KNOW

ll1EoRE WILL BE
VIOLENCE AND
NAME CALLING
LIKE YOU'VE
NEVER SEEN!

~

~

i

Jl'L ABNER
- WT MAH FEMININE
INSTITUTIO N f'IE EP5
A ·TEl~ I N' ME SHE GOT
SUMPTHIN' E~SE IN

AH I"IXED TH'
LUNCH FO' TH'
WOLF ·GAt:S
SCHOOL PiCNiC

WHATEVER
LU NCH ISWILL BE
WE.LL

MIND FO' ~U NCH -

LOTS In Meigs School Distri ct :
phone 992-6329.
7-7-6tp

- - -- - - -

4 BEDROOM home, tult
basement. gas fur nace, 200ft.
river fr ontage. Also 5 room
house ~N i th bath, baSement,
gas furnace on ad lolning lot.
Sam Arnold, Syracuse, Oh io;
phooe 11'12·2360.
n -6tc
TWO homes for sale : 1 m.lte
North of Eastern High
Schoo l; both have bath and a
hall ; 4 bedrooms : built-In
kitchens and wall -to -walt
carpet: call 985-3598.
6-28-12tc

WHAT
DO YA
THINK
O' OUR
DANC ING.
HORSE

WORSE,

BUT I
DO~• T

KNOW
WHERe ~

f'IJFF-"
WHEezE:.' ,. ,

1

GASOUNE ALLEY

trouble 4erself! I'll jest
""'·"·II back into th' jump seat!

,

'll-\l!l/.o 111AT
0\D~'T ~e:
...~

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE
ALL I CAH HEAR
AR c DUMB BI ROS

RELEASEDA
MIUHAT!t«l
L!OI! TO PREY

OH 111[]!D£l.L

WARBUCKS

At; SOON AS WE
HEAR THE~

SCREAM OF THAT
CINDER IN TI1E EYE OF
PROGRESS .. ·IIIEHDELL
'-IJ~RBUCKS

SIN GING.. • AND ..•

QUIET IDIOT! "' IT'S
THE tALM 61:FORE
THE \l10R M!

AND SOMEBODY -"lJ--~

LAUGHING ....

NOL&lt;/ THAT WE'RE
BUOOIE S .... WHAT'RE
WE GO&lt;NI\ CALL HIM,
UNCLE l&lt;IENDELL?

WTRWHD _yl&lt;

by THOMAS JOSEPH

IMMENSELY VALUABLE
( !IHD AHHIE')
' 'PUBLtC" lANO \S ALL
B. ~M l RC H
GLE eFtJl.LY

AWAITS

Mlrif. '" &amp;L~! !

business
4. Nigerian
city
5. Objective
6. 0 - 0f
the
Kingdom"

mou se~

7. Prosciutto,
for one
IO. Daughter

of Minos ,
king of
Crete
12. Functi on

DICK TRACY

13
Across
8. Gentle lamb

also-ran ?
U . Foot·
wiper
15. "East of
"
16. Ninny
18. Turmoil
21. Anglo·
Irish play·
wright
24. Enemy
27. Overeat
29. Singular
30. Trouble
31. Epoch
32. Love ·
affair
34. Tibetan
ox
35. - onthe
market
36. Snakelike
fish
38. Be dating
regularly
40, Bacteriologist's
wire
44. Mooselike
deer
46. See 13

WH ILE, NEARB Y...

1 MU5T A171111TTHAT
N~TIJ~AL

HABITAT

P W U C J W V .- W V A Z P V

Sl DE GLANCES

(2

wds.)

9. Convened
II. Karenina
17. Kyushu's
volcanic .
mountain
19. College
VIP
20. Ci nched
(2 wd s. l
22. Taj
Mahal
site
23. Adulte·
rated

24. Detroit
name
25. Redolence
26. A 1972
also-ran?
(2 wds.)
28. Merri·
ment
33. Turn
gray
37. Rich mining find
39. Frau Lo·
hengrin
U . Catch
sight of

'

48. Saul's
uncle

"I haven't time for the paper. Just read me the

headlines so I'll know what to worry about!"

L(OU'D llE MUCH COOLER
OVER THERE
UNDERf'iEATH IAAT TREE

~cross

MIYflt'

Autometlct
2 t peed operation.
Choice of water
temps ,
Auto .
water
ievtl
control .
L lnt
Filter or Power
Fin Agitator.

feature

SLEEPING

1

51. Woods·

man's
weapon
52. Swiss

river
53. Righto!

Ptrma. Prtll
Maytog
Hofo of Hut

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how

Drvers

· Surround clottln
wltn a•ntle, even
heat . No hot spots,
ovtrdrylng ,

Mesh Lint
F ltttr .
Ylo Spoctotlltiil
MAYT.-Gj

RUTLAND FURNITURE R~:f:.~:· '

to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LO, NGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In thi s sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dif!erent

11
1f
,I

CRYPTOQUOTES

!I

YWZCDB
r

AEF r

SF YYX Q

by Gill Fox

42. Market
activity
43. "Mine have
seen . , ."
H . Old musical
note
45. Actor
Barker
47. Give chance
(2 wds.l

49. Souvenir
of Oahu
50. Church

Big Copoctty

DX AEX N FD EZJ

7.See

13. A 1972

....__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _---""

Rutlanct

I. Earn
2. Incensed
3. One's

(abbr.)
4. It's a

RESlllTII!

DEXJW

Saturday's Cryploquote: A FANATIC IS ONE WHO CAN'T
CHANGE HIS MIND AND WON'T CHANGE THE SUBJECT.WlNSTON CHURCHILL
(e 1972 King Featu res Syndicate, l n~ . )

DOWN

ACROSS
I. Armed
force

ON YOUR DIAL

~lnt

YWW Q

.. , THI£1

THf MASTER 1001(5
QtJtTe AT HOME IH HIS

WMP0/1390.

WITH 1-\ER. ~

·-

.We talk to JOU
like{,....

~or FeE'CitJ(, .... · ' '
W6Lt. ... t WIIJK .. " '

..

SHE'AT6'~­

1 ACRE lan d, new 2 room
cabin'; 9 acres pasture land
barn and outbu ildings; can~
bought on land contra ct
Phone 949-3073.
·
7-.S.6tc

Arnold Grate

I'VE SEEN

ACT?

i
-::::::::=~~====--~====;====
'·

741-4211 -

'll(t}N TUMMY TA'/Ef?r-1.1
1'-----.. r----1

~

RAC INE - 10 room house ;
bath, basement, garage, two
lots . PJ1one U9-4313.
_ _ __ _ _ _..:.4:..::
'·5-tfp'

_no

OF' THE

~

- .= -- -- - --

1220 Washington Blvd,
'423-7521
BEL PRE, 0 .

CCMF'Uv\~NTS

fi

SHORE

IDMORf&gt;DW
MAWNIN '··

JiiAVJ){G

.ALTY

ANP MOST' OF fT WILL~ (W
TI!E CONVENTION FLOOii' II

WE EXPECT A LOT OF PR06LEMG AT
JHJ; FUWTlCAL. CONI/ENTlONS, MEN .

TIER

'

COUNTRY HOME
NEAR POMEROY - One floor, 3 bedrooms bath fu rnace. Nice bu ilt-in kitchen with cook unit;, and ' bar.
Recreation room and carport . $17,500.00.
NEW
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, nice kitchen with stove and
refrig~rator -freezer. Full basem ent with garage . All
electrtc. Less than S25,000.00.
LOT
SYRACUSE - Level corner lot with small frame
building . $2500.00 .
COMMERCIAL·
CHES HIR E - Business lot with block building on Rt . 7.
BUILDING LOTS
WE have severa l location s. All sizes and priceS.
COUNTRY HOME
ON ROUTE 7 - 2 bedrooms, bath, Pla ins water. Nice
kitchen with stove . Some paneling . 4 acres of land . Only
$9,500. 00.
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
992-3325

CULAND

A &lt;;:x.kSTIOI\1

A OUE.Slla\l

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

60 ALL ~ROP harvester, Alii$.
Chalmers ; phone 742·3656.
7·9-'tp 1911 MOBilE home, 12 x 60, 3
--------bedroom; must sell. loavlng
1.72 A~ RE lot; 5 guns ; phooe
ar~a ; phone 742-5125 for In·
742-3656.
format ion.
-&lt; '
6-29-9t(
- - - - - - -7- 9··21!)

m~

('AAJDIDAT£

,. ,_~,.-------;

In

7-9-tfc
- - - - - - - - - - - -:----- - - - REDUCE sa fe and fast with
LEGAL NOTICE
GoBese Tablets &amp; E-Vap
Sea led bids will be rece ived
"wa ter pil ls, " Nelson Drug .
by the Me igs Local Schoo l
Dist ri ct Boa rd of Edu cat ion at
6·29-30tp
their off ice tn the Me igs Junior
Hig h School Bulld ;ng , M;d . CLIFF'S Shoe Repa ir, Middleport, wi ll be open from 12
dleport , Ohio, tor pa ssenger
sc hool buses unti l 12:00 o'c lock
noon to 5 p.m. until further
on
August 7, 1972, according 1o
notice Closed on Mond
spe-cificalions of said Boa rd of
·
ays.
Educat ion . separate and in7-7-6tc
dependent bids will be re ce ived ___ _ _ _ _ __ _:
with respect to the chassis and WANTED
Customers at
body type , and will sta te that
Showa lter's Wet Pet Shop
th e buses , when assembled and
Chester, Ohio. No e x perienc~
prior to delivery , comply wi th necessary .
all
school
dis tri ct
7_9_201 p
specificatlons, and all safetv _ _ _ _ __ _ ___:__
regulat ion s and current Oh io
Mln;m um Slandard s for School Wanteo' To Buy
Sus Construct ion of th e
Department of Education
adopt!dby and with til e consent OLD Furniture, oak ta bles
of the Director of Highway
organ s. dishes, clocks, bras~
Safety pursuant to Se ction
b~ s , or compl ete household s.
A5ll .76 of the Revised Code and
Write M. D. Miller , Rt . 4,
all oth er per tinent provis io ns of
Pomeroy, Oh io . ·Call 992-6271.
laS'Pecifications
and
in 6-28-tfc
st ruction s to bidders may be - - -- - - -- obta ;ned from
Assistan l Employment Wanted
Su pe rin tendenl Mo r r ison ,
M;dd leport, Oh io.
WILL DO daytime babys itting
Til e Board of Edu cati on
m my home for 1 or 2 ch ildren.
reser ves the r ight to rej ec t any
Rates reasonable. Can gl"e
and a II bids.
Byorderoft he
references . Phone 992-396• 0
Boardot Education
after 5 p.m.
L . w. McComas
7-9-6tc
Clerk -Treasurer ;;-;:.,----,...---,- - ( 7l 10. 17. 24. 31. 4t
WILL paint roofs or houses,
trim and cut trees ; clean
att ics ; basements. etc .
Phone 949-3221.
6-14-30tc
LEGAL NOTICE
The Boa rd of Comm issioners,
Meigs Countv of Ohio, wil l Instruct'
rece;ve bids untn 9:00 o'clock
IOn
A.M. the 181h day of July, 1972, TRACTOR
T RAt L E R
for th e p~Jr c hase of a New Motor
Grad~;.c
TRAINEES NEEDED. You
With minimum specifica tion s
can now tra in to become an
as fol lows : 743 Cu . ln . Diese l ov~r the road driver or city
dnver . E&gt;ecellent earni ng s
Engine. 135 H .P ., Sca rifier",
Power Steer ing , 13 )( 24 Tires
after short tralnln~ on our
Front &amp; Rear . 10 ply ; Cab ,
t k5 ' th
ligh ls, Heater , De froster, Foo t
rue
WI
our river InAcce lerator . De ce lera to r , struc;tors to help you . For
Flasher Lig hts , 12 foot Power
appl icatio n an d Interview,
Shift MOldboard .
call 304-34-4-8843, or write
Offered as Trade -In - 44 0
Schoo l Safety Divis ion
Adam! Motor Grader .
Un 1'ted Sys tems, 1nc., c-o'
Bid der to su bm it delalled
Termina l Bldg., 55 17 Midland
~ft:;~~ -calions of equipment
Drive, Charleston. West
Virginia , 25306. Approved for
T,he Board ot Commissioners
reserve the right to reject any
V.A. Benef its . Placement
or all bids .
assistance available. Over 700
By order of th e Board of
transportation companies
Commissioners, Meigs Co1.1n ty, have hired our graduates .
Oh io .
Martha Chamber s, Cler k ______ _ ___:_7·_10-2fc
:
{7, 10, 17, 2t

GEr

Name

W.

Phone Faye Manley

Help Wanted

I

NOBODY

'

MIDDLEPORT

WANT- ADS
Notice
INFORMATION
. DEAO'I.INES
) P.M. Da y Before Publication .
Monday D!ad line 9 a.m.
Can-cel lation - Correct ions
HAGNOY MANforgrocerystore.
t Will be accepted until9a .m. lor
ood position for reliable
Oa~ Of Publica tion
person . Apply at Racine Food
REGULATIONS
Market.
Th.Q Pub ll!her reser\l es the
7-9-31c
r ight to edi t or re ject an~ ads
----c;--deemed Objectio nal . The'
publi s h ~r wi ll not be responsible
For Rent
for mor'e than one . incorrect
insertion.
.3 AND 4 ROOM furnished ~ri~
Window
RATES
unfurr~ished.
apartments.
' For Wan, Ad Ser\ll ce
,Air
Conditioners
Phone 992-5434.
.
5 cen fs per Word one insertion
Minimum Charg e 75c '"'
Hot
Water
Heaters
----~---4--·12-tfc
12 cents per word th ree
Plumbing
consecutive in serfioris.
UNFURNI SHED apartment,
16 cents pe r ·word Si)( con
Electrical Work
134 Mulberry Ave ., phone 9'12,
secutive insertions. 1
3962.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
6&lt;11 -tlc
ads and ad s paid within 10 days. ·
CARD OF THANKS
-&amp; OBITUARY
ONE bedroom trailer apartSl.SO lor 50 word minimu m
ments , Ideal for couples.
Each addjt ional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Cootact McClure's Dairy tsle.
Additional 25c Charge per
992-2448
992-S248 or 992,3436.
Adver tisement.
7-9-6tc
Pomeroy, 0.
OFFICE HDU'R$ ,
--,· 8:30a .m_. to S: OO.p.m: Dai ly,
ONE DUPLEX apartment, 5
8 : 30 a.m. to 12: 00 Noon
OL D FASHIONED Trading Day rooms and bath, small yard ,
Saturday.
eve ry Sunday on the Bill excellent location. Phone 992 Cionch fa rm, approximately 2 2780 or 992-3432 .
miles up Hyse ll Run off Route
7-9-tfc
124. Horses, gu ns, dogs or - - -- - - - - what have you. Come one and FURNISHED sleep;ng room
I WI LL NOT be responsible for
all.
any debt s contracted b{.
with refrigerator and stove.
a~yone other than mysel .
_ __ __ _ _ _7_:'5-6tp Phone 992,2780 or 992-3432 .
S1g ned, John T . Fisc her , 6-30-tfc
Address, Racine . Rt. 1.
ANNOUNCING
an
Old · - - - , - - - - - - Fashioned Rev ival, Ju ly 6
_ _ _ _ __ __ 7._:
10-3tp
TRAILER , coun try
thru July 16 at the Pom eroy 8x35
location. Phone 992 ·395-4 .
Lower Light Church, Rt. 143, 1
7-7-6tc
m ile fr om Route 7 By-Pa ss .
For Rent
Rev .
Dewey
King ,
NE W ,,. Total electric apartEvangelist. Spec;at singi ng . PASTORE, phone 992-6329.
ment, 2 bedroom , walk ·in
Starts each evening at 7:30 p. __ _ _ _ __ __ 7_-7-6tp
closets. Large living room,
m. Everyon e welcome.
kitchen and dining area ,
Pastor , Rev . Roy Tay lor.
CO UNTRY home , close to
Forked R n Lak f
7·6- Stc
phone 992 .7384 or 992.7133 · ·
u
e : ree gas,
7-10-6tc
partly furnished . Reasonable
- - -- - - - - WHY not try cosmetics that are
re nt; prefer retired couple ;
truly
different
and
references ; phone 378-6298.
LEGAL NOTICE
refreshing? The famou s mink
7-7-lfc
A public hearing will be held
on Ollve Town sh ip Bu~g e t at th e oil base and now we have the
lemC!(l grove . Just think, 14 HOUSE , ideal for couple or
office of the ..;r_r ustees July 11 ,
spett'als this mon th, some for
gentleman ; bath and shower,
19 72 at a o'c loc'k p:m.
Ada Bi ssell
men as well as women. If's
comp le te privacy; ga s heat.
Clerk
KOSCOT of course . Phone
close to Middleport ; com (7) 10 , It
992-5113.
pletety furn ished; phone 992-

I~-------------------- ---I To: Careers, Washington, D.C. 20202

z;

@)

IN

NOTICE

For more information about technical
schools and technical careers, write for this
free guide from the government. Fill out
this ad and mail it today.

'

E LECTED . ..

_B_.u s_in
_ es-_s_Se_rv
_ ic.. ,. .e._s_j

I

SENTINEL
CARRIERS WANTED

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Get a year or two
of technical training.
There are thousands o£ job s for
technicians in every
scientific field from
'
'
engtneenng
to
medicine to computers to.ecology. Jobs that pay as much ~s
some college graduates earn. But don't take
four years to prepare for.

~.!!"

------

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

How to make twice ,
as much as a typical
high school graduate
without going to
college for 4 years.

I

1·9·6tc

''HElL"

t

I
I
I
I
I
1

BEAUTICIAN, must have
manager's license ; Helen's
Beauty Shop ; phooe 992-2890.

Motor Co~

"PMEROY, OHIO

The Almanac ·
In 1953 Lavrenti Beria, Soviet'
By United Press International chief of internal sec w-ity forces,
Today is Monday, July 10, the was executed on charges of
19:',/1.1LQ~l'.. of J 972 with 174 to criminal anti-state activities.
!low.
.,,
In 1962 the Telstar- satellite
The moon is new.
first relayed television pictures
The morning stars are Venus between the United States and
and Satw-n.
Ew-ope .
The evening stars are MerIn 1970 China released 79-year
cury, Mars and Jupiter.
-()\d Roman Catholic Bishop
Those born on this date are James Edward Walsh after
under the sign of Cancet.
holding him prisone r for 12
American painter Jame s years.
Whistler was born July 10, 1834.
A thought for the day :
On this date In history :
.
h
Ca
In 1938 American industrialist
na dtan P ysician Sir William
Howard Hughes and a crew of Osler said, "Tact is the savi'ng
four flew around the world in 91 virtue without which no woman
can be a success."
hOW'S.
- - -- - - - -- -- -- -......:....:...::.:.__ __ ~

I

Po•e~oy

:Po-::~~!s.~~r Co.

(N EWSP4PER ENTEIIPRISE ASSN.)

..

• I

Help Wanted

r

We Could Profit
From Soviet Snags ·

..

LUKI:V!! ARE li E
60 tN ' TO TH ' CARD
6AME TON IG HT?

&lt;,(:&lt;)

...

~

li'J

FJ

ZQ

XCDAZPV

JWOVXN

I NEVER SLEE.f'
A TREE ..

UNDERN~TH

SFUD"

VWJHFJWV

~··~·l:::::==~~:i~·~-~~

�.

6 -'l'he Oally Sentinel, Mlddleuort-Pomeroy, 0., July 10, 1972

•

.

ff

-S entinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Clitssifieds Gei Resu~tsl
r

RAY CROMLEY

Z SIGNS

Of

. IUALITY

By RAY CROMLEY
WASHINGTON (NEAl
President Nixon's aides count on the unfortunate results
of Leo nid Brezhnev's latest economic experiments to push
the Soviet Union into g1·cater accommod ati on with the
United States :these next five years .
If thes~urrent boggles become increasingly serious,
and Nix 's experts predict they will, Brezhnev's eco·
nomic pr blems co uld be a strong force for an effective
follow -on agre ement coveri ng all major strategic arms
and hopefully calling for cutbacks as well a s ceilings .
Brezhnev's immediate problems began as the result of a
decision he made about two years ago, in part to solidify
his position as first secretary through increasin g party
control over the economy and in part to remedy the growing productivity problems that plague Sov iet industry,
agriculture and mining.
The Communist party has always b·ee n supreme in overan economic direction-setting quotas , prices and priori·
hes. Th1s has been bad enough for economic effic iency .
Brezhnev has gone a step further . give n the party committees in l'ach local factory strong direct say in day-today operahons.
The word now comi ng out of the Soviet Un ion is th a t
this shift is not wor king well. Factory managers com·
plain their authority is being und ermined. They strenu·
ously object to party interference in the selection of fore·
men, superintendents and department heads, in work
assignments a nd in training methods. Party workers in
e.ach plant find themselves required to police t heir supe·
rwrs on tec hnical matters out side their competence. Party
mterference, even when It succeeds in forcing an inefficient m ana~er to resign or to change his methods , has
had unsettlmg effects among the workers. Professional
relationships have been destroyed . Production is suffering. Each side blames the other.
Despite a ll this, local party' comm ittees a re reported
working on ways to intensify their supervision.
Nixon's economic analysts see a basic unsolvable con·
flict here. They are certain that these difficulties will
deepen and that increasing party interference in the deta ils of local factory production will lead to greater inefficiencies, regardless of what br illia nt technological breakthroughs Soviet scientists achieve.
This will make the Russians increas ingly conscious of
their arm s burden and (if analysis here is correct) of
the1r need for U.S. management and development skills.
Growing dependence on the United States should make
the Sov1et Umon more cooperative if U.S. negotiators are
hard nosed, th.e theory here runs . But the Soviet representatives are gomg to be tough bargainers , wh ether talkin g
about arms , economics or political settlements in suc h
places as the Midd le East and Asia .
The theo~y here is that the gr owing Soviet economic
problems will not make Russian diplomats easier to negotiate with . Talks that should take two years ma y take five.
. But the Soviet di fficultie s may make agreements more
likely 111 the end, If we argue from military and political
strength as well as economic.
l

!

1972 CHEVELLE MALIBU
$3795
4-door, 350 V-8, factory air, turbo hydramatic, power
steering, power brakes, gulf green color, with green vi nyl
roof, vinyl interior trim ; radio, whi te wa ll tires, full wheel
covers. bumper guards, and all the extras. low milea ge,
factory sticker, 241.
'
1971 CHEVELLE MALIBU H.T. CPE.
S2t95 '"
Color red, blk. vinyl top, blk. vinyl interior, less than
20,000 miles by local careful lady owner. 307 eng ine with
Turbo Hydramatic, power steering , P. B., radio, w-w tires,
spare never used, rall y wheels. bumper guards. Your
inspection·of this car will tell you it's the nicest.
1970 CHEVROLET IMPALA SPT. CPE.
$2395
J50cu. in. V-8engine, turbo-hydramatic, power steer ing &amp;
brakes. radio. red vinvl interior. black finish . Whit e wall
tires, like new.
-· ·

992-5592

AmiiiOI

Address
Cit

Blg Eater

~---------------

I

~.~---------------- ~-- ----j
Mv•rtlslnt eon!rlbultd lor lht Pvbllc aood Jn cooptr•llon with
Tht Advtrtlslnt Councii •MI ttlt lnttrnllloul NtWSIIJPtr Aclmtlllna f 1ecullwu

GET

'

AST'IOU!!

Pomeroy
Phone 992-2156

I

Help Wanted Female
EXTRA INCOME : We need
ladle&gt; as parttlme Persona l
Shoppers. Average S3 per
hour . Flexible hours. Write
Personal Shopper Department, Box 10, Watkins
Products, In c. , Winona ,
Minnesota 5598 7.
7·_:
10· 3fc
_ _ __ _ _ _ _ _

The elephant is a strict
vegetarian. Its daily require·
ments are about a quarterton of green fodder-or
about 150 pounds of hayand 50 gallons of water.

-EXPERT'
'Willet &gt;Aiigruflent

. $5.55
. On Most American

ACT NOW Join t he
oldest
Toy
&amp; , Gift
Party Plan In the Country
- our 25th year! Com missions up to 30 pet. Fantast ;c Hostess Awards. Call or
wrtle "SA NTA's PARTIES"
Avon , Conn . 06001. Telephone
I (2031 673-3455 . ALSO
BOOKING PARTIES.
7-2·30tC

- - - -- - -

BUONGDETTICHEEAO~ING
"
Noltce Is hereby given that on
the18thda yofJuly , 1972at7 :00
P.M.. o public hear ing will be
held on the budg et of Lebanon
Township , Me igs county, Oh io
for the next flscot year ending
December 31 , 1973.
Hearing will bo hold at tho
Townsh;p garago. .
Lebanon Township Trustees
(7J 1 D,C II~rtnce Lawrence, Clerk

c:ar.o

- GUI\RANTEE[).-o
Pho'ne 992-2094

Pom erov H!llllt &amp;· Auto .
Opeii8Ti15.
Mondav thru Safurdly
606 E. Main, Pomtroy,Q. ·
,L

.

'

197 1 YELLOWSTO NE truck

camper, ,like new ; cal l 9495424 after 7 p.m .
6-29-7tc
- - - -- - - -STEREO, Ear ly Amer ican
style , AM-FM radio com binatlon, 4 speed automatic
changer, 4 speaker sound
system . Balance $78 .69. Use
our time payment plan . Call
992-7085.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Pll. m -211•
Pomeroy

3 Bedroom home, with
brick front , 1 car
9arage. carpeting .
Priced at ..
ONL,Y S1·3,750
We specialize In aluminum,
vinyl a~~d steel siding ;
fiberglas, brick and' stonei'
"complete line of reslde"lllil
and commercl~l -roofing;
remodeling,
building,
suspended ceilings, Interior
and exterior painting ;
complete line of Masonry
work. All work guaranteed to
customer satisfaction. We
are fully Insured for your
protectloo . 32 N. 2nd. 9923918.
•
ALLSIOE BUILDERS &amp;

USED building supplies &amp; SEE US FOR : Awnings, slorir ·
salvage yard ; wilt wreck
doors and windows , c~rports ,
houses, buildings, etc. Covert
marquees, aluminum siding
&amp; Martin Wreckage &amp;
and ratting . "A. Jacob, sale! ,
Salvage Co., Laurel Cliff
representative. For free.
I
across
from
Highland
estimates, . phone Charles
Church ; phone 992·5946.
Lisle. Syracuse, V. v.;
I
7-9-12tc
Johnson and Son, tn c.
--------_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __3_-2-lfl] L~,.:....=.:..;_-==:=:=--~
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller "
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph . SEWING MACHINE service . -------,.---f1
66noos.
clean , o;l. set tension $4.99 r
2-12-tfc
Special Etectro , Grande
EARTH
;--~-----Company. Phone 992 -6517.
5-21 -tl,&lt;
CALL Guy Ne igler for Building
Dozer &amp; End Ioder work, . ,
Houses.
ponds, basement, land~"
OOZE
R
and
back
hoe
work,
6-28-tt c
ponds and septic tanks; B &amp; K scaping. We have 2 size
- - -- - Excavating, Phone 992 -5367, dozers, 2 size Joaders. Work
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Di ck Karr , Jr.
done by . hour or contract.~
lEASONABLE rate&gt;. Ph. ~
5-2 1-tfc Fru · Estimates. We also :
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell.
haul fill dirt, top,soil. Dump .
O..ner &amp; Operator.
5-12-ttc AUTOMOBILE insurance been trucks and low-boy for hire.
cancelled?
Lo st
your See Bob or Roger Jtfft11,
-----'- - - operator's li cense? Call 992· Pomeroy. Phone "2· 3525
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
2966. .
Complete Service
"aiter 7 p.m. or phone . 992:·
6-15-tfc
Phone 949·3821
:sm.
------Racine, Ohio
t'Crltt Bradford
BACKHOE AND DOZER work:
5·1-tfc
Septic tanks installed. George
(8Htl Pullins. Phone 992·2478. ~E WING MACHINES. Repair
,,----,---...,.-~
. """'
- :--·
4-2s-u &lt;
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
ser ~lce, all makes. 992 -228~.
located at Crossroads, Rt . 124.
The Fabric Shop, PomerOy.
Complete front end service,
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. we Sharpen Scissors.
tvne up and brake service . HARR !SON 'S TV Serv;ce,_ open
3-29-tfc
Wheels balanced elec - 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; free pickup
and delivery ; phone 99i-2522. ·- - - - - - - - tronically .
All
work
guaranteed .
RP.ill"-nnP~hiP
_ _ _ _ _ _ _6·_13-·tfC REA.OY -MIX
CONCRETE
rates . Phone 742 -3232 or delivered right to your ,
992-3213.
I · U · nC
projec'l. Fast and easy. Free
PLAS TER lNG &amp; refin ishing old ·estimates . Phone 992· 328*.,
chimneys : ph one 992 -2368 ,
Goegle ln Ready -Mix Co .•,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Middlepor t, Ohio.
,
Real Estate For Sal e
7-Htp
6·30-tfc
- - - - -- IDEAL 5- ACR E RANCHO .
Lake Conchas, New Mexico.
$2,875. No Down . No interest.
Real Estate For SaiP.
S25 mo . Vacation Parad ise.
Money
Maker .
Free
Brochur e. Ran chos: Bo x
2001 0D, Alameda , California
94501.
.6·7-JOtp
110 Mechanic Street

MOVING

Virgil B. Teaford} Sr. -Broker

RACINE - 6 room house. bath,
uti li ty room , garage. $10,000 ;
nhone 949, '195."
•
_ _ _ _ _ __ _.:_3·_:_
31-tfc
·
HOU!:»t m Long Bottom , phone
985-3529.
r.:'T.1'
.

6· 11 -tfc

For Sale

July Price Buster!
PANTS &amp; JEANS

SALE I
Buy 2 Pairs and
GET 1 PAIR FREE
All ki nds, all sizes for men,
women , young men, boys
and girls. Hurry to ...

7-7-6fc
POMEROY
-::- -- - -- _
'I'._ JackW. Carsey, Mgr .
BEAUTIFUL Walnut finish
..,.
Phone 992·2181
stereo, -4 speaker sound
system, 4 speed automatic
changer . Use our budg et 1 - 3414 INTERNATIONAL
terms . Balance S69. 15. Use
Tractor with front end loader
our time payment plan. Call
and 3120 backhoe ; Earl R.
992-7085.
Werner, Middleport ; phooe
__:_:.
992-2769 at Bradbury .
7-7·6fc

______

7·9·6fp
NEW 19n Zig . z·ag sewi ng ~--------

ma chine In original fa ctory COAL, Limestone, Excelsior
car ton . Zig -zag to make
Salt Works, E. Ma in St.,
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891 .
buttonhol es, sew on buttons,
monograms, and make fancy
.4-12-ffc
__:__
designs with just the twtst of a
single-dia l. Left in lay -away
and never been used . Will sell '71 CONSOLE model, 23" black
and white TV , $75, New 3-pc.
for on ly $47 cash, or credit
bedroom suite, $75. Phone 992te rms available. Phone 992·
6021.
5641.
7-9-3tc
1·1·6tc

__________

- -- - --

ELECTROLUX Vacuum
, Cleaner complete with at .
Homes for
tachments, cordw lnder and .
· · · ·'
pa int spray. Used but In like CAStj paid for all maltes anil
new 'cond ition . Pay $34.45 models of mobile homes .
cash or budget plan available. PhOfle area code 614·4~,J- 9J.53 1_;.
Phone 992·5641.
~ 1 11 ~
7-7-6tc ·. ~.- - - - - - - 50 X 10, 2 bedroom, priced
G. E. REFRIGERATOR :
reasonably, phone Chester
wrlnger -tyr,e
Maytag
washer, excel ent condition ; 2 _
_ _ _ __ _ 7_-9·6fp
porcelain top cabinets; gas - 985-3379.
cool&lt; stove ; '1'etal table and
four chairs; Bissell hand.
sweeper: full -size metal bed ;
·Air Conditioners
Free Westinghou se sewing
machine In cabinet; phone
•Awnings
992-6247.
.I
• Underpinning
_ _ __ _,__ _ _7_·7-3tp
'Complete
.
.
mobile home
TOMATOES, Cucumbers, serv.tce ~ plus gigantic
green peppers; Geraldlnu · 'display of mobile homes
Cleland, Ractne, Olllo.
always available at ...
7-6-tfc

Mobile

POOOL.E pupptis, Silver Toy,
Park view Ken nets, Phone 992·
5-443
'
'
_8-15-tfc

From the largest
Bulld.,zer RadiCUor to
Smallest Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

&lt;

NEW TOTAL electric
apartment, 2 bedroom, walk 7791 after 5 p.m.
7-7-Jtc
in closets, large living room ,
-----~--ki tchen and dinin g area .
AUt0 Sales
Phooe 992-7384 or 992-7133.
7-9-Jtc
---1971 TOYOTA l.orolla , 2 ar. - sedan . low mileage, excellent FA BRIC INN , Polyester
condit ion; phone 992·7024.
Dou.bleknits for less. Hun ,
7-9-6tc
dreds of Yards . From Tup- - -- - -- - - - pers Plains, pass school, go 4
1968 FORO Fa 1r 1ane ; a 1r- miles, turn left onto County
condit ioning ; phone 742-5361 . Rd. so, sign. Between
Hockingport and Reedsville,
7-9-3tc
turn onto County Rd. SO near
- - - - - -- - Eden Church, sign . Phone 378·
For Sale
6276.
7-9-6tp
5 FT. BUSH Hog . Phone 9492783.
~-----=------7_:
·5 ·6tc

A'Sk THt:
A":J...

Sale

CNJDIDP..TE

DO 'IOU T~ I NK III/8£Rr
LL 8E TJ.IE I&gt;EMOCRilTIC
NOMINEE AGAIN, RIA«)~

·

TOM !&gt;EWE Y,
TJ.IE 'cRIMEBU'5TER'~
RAN TWICE

608 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

BUILDERS
OPPORTUNITY
Close In, 30 acres , good
dra inage, Chester water ,
good roads. IDEAL for
homesltes. $26,800.00.
WHAT A KITCHEN I
It your Mrs. likes to cook,
then her Mr . ought to see this
new modernized kitchen . J
large bedrooms , walk · ln
closets, 1'12 baths, utility/
room , lull basement, grea
rec . room . 1 acre ground, In
town . $28,500.00.
S1 ,000.00 DOWN
VIEW OF TH E RIVER , 3
bed r ooms , bath, porches ,
part basement, metal roof.
storage building, garage ,
SMOO.OO .
.
BATTLE OF THE
BULGE?
If you are lighting to prov ide
enough roam for a growing
family ... Here's a place
ldeall v suited. 4 bedrooms,
1'1-z naths, call for par·
tlcutars . $12,800.00.
LET US SELL YOUR
J BEDROOM HOME
HENRY E. CLELANO SR.
REALTOR
PHON€ 992-2259
88 ACRES, tow S20's, farmhouse
and other buildings, Over 200
ft. frootoge. Must see to
appreciate .
Rosemary
Withem, 1239-0647, GRANOSTAFF, INC ., REALTOR,
471 -2112 .
7-9-tfc

BUi, I'M NOT SURE
WE CAN STAN~ ANOT~ER
•FILIBUSTER."l .

I PONT
KNOW

ll1EoRE WILL BE
VIOLENCE AND
NAME CALLING
LIKE YOU'VE
NEVER SEEN!

~

~

i

Jl'L ABNER
- WT MAH FEMININE
INSTITUTIO N f'IE EP5
A ·TEl~ I N' ME SHE GOT
SUMPTHIN' E~SE IN

AH I"IXED TH'
LUNCH FO' TH'
WOLF ·GAt:S
SCHOOL PiCNiC

WHATEVER
LU NCH ISWILL BE
WE.LL

MIND FO' ~U NCH -

LOTS In Meigs School Distri ct :
phone 992-6329.
7-7-6tp

- - -- - - -

4 BEDROOM home, tult
basement. gas fur nace, 200ft.
river fr ontage. Also 5 room
house ~N i th bath, baSement,
gas furnace on ad lolning lot.
Sam Arnold, Syracuse, Oh io;
phooe 11'12·2360.
n -6tc
TWO homes for sale : 1 m.lte
North of Eastern High
Schoo l; both have bath and a
hall ; 4 bedrooms : built-In
kitchens and wall -to -walt
carpet: call 985-3598.
6-28-12tc

WHAT
DO YA
THINK
O' OUR
DANC ING.
HORSE

WORSE,

BUT I
DO~• T

KNOW
WHERe ~

f'IJFF-"
WHEezE:.' ,. ,

1

GASOUNE ALLEY

trouble 4erself! I'll jest
""'·"·II back into th' jump seat!

,

'll-\l!l/.o 111AT
0\D~'T ~e:
...~

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE
ALL I CAH HEAR
AR c DUMB BI ROS

RELEASEDA
MIUHAT!t«l
L!OI! TO PREY

OH 111[]!D£l.L

WARBUCKS

At; SOON AS WE
HEAR THE~

SCREAM OF THAT
CINDER IN TI1E EYE OF
PROGRESS .. ·IIIEHDELL
'-IJ~RBUCKS

SIN GING.. • AND ..•

QUIET IDIOT! "' IT'S
THE tALM 61:FORE
THE \l10R M!

AND SOMEBODY -"lJ--~

LAUGHING ....

NOL&lt;/ THAT WE'RE
BUOOIE S .... WHAT'RE
WE GO&lt;NI\ CALL HIM,
UNCLE l&lt;IENDELL?

WTRWHD _yl&lt;

by THOMAS JOSEPH

IMMENSELY VALUABLE
( !IHD AHHIE')
' 'PUBLtC" lANO \S ALL
B. ~M l RC H
GLE eFtJl.LY

AWAITS

Mlrif. '" &amp;L~! !

business
4. Nigerian
city
5. Objective
6. 0 - 0f
the
Kingdom"

mou se~

7. Prosciutto,
for one
IO. Daughter

of Minos ,
king of
Crete
12. Functi on

DICK TRACY

13
Across
8. Gentle lamb

also-ran ?
U . Foot·
wiper
15. "East of
"
16. Ninny
18. Turmoil
21. Anglo·
Irish play·
wright
24. Enemy
27. Overeat
29. Singular
30. Trouble
31. Epoch
32. Love ·
affair
34. Tibetan
ox
35. - onthe
market
36. Snakelike
fish
38. Be dating
regularly
40, Bacteriologist's
wire
44. Mooselike
deer
46. See 13

WH ILE, NEARB Y...

1 MU5T A171111TTHAT
N~TIJ~AL

HABITAT

P W U C J W V .- W V A Z P V

Sl DE GLANCES

(2

wds.)

9. Convened
II. Karenina
17. Kyushu's
volcanic .
mountain
19. College
VIP
20. Ci nched
(2 wd s. l
22. Taj
Mahal
site
23. Adulte·
rated

24. Detroit
name
25. Redolence
26. A 1972
also-ran?
(2 wds.)
28. Merri·
ment
33. Turn
gray
37. Rich mining find
39. Frau Lo·
hengrin
U . Catch
sight of

'

48. Saul's
uncle

"I haven't time for the paper. Just read me the

headlines so I'll know what to worry about!"

L(OU'D llE MUCH COOLER
OVER THERE
UNDERf'iEATH IAAT TREE

~cross

MIYflt'

Autometlct
2 t peed operation.
Choice of water
temps ,
Auto .
water
ievtl
control .
L lnt
Filter or Power
Fin Agitator.

feature

SLEEPING

1

51. Woods·

man's
weapon
52. Swiss

river
53. Righto!

Ptrma. Prtll
Maytog
Hofo of Hut

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how

Drvers

· Surround clottln
wltn a•ntle, even
heat . No hot spots,
ovtrdrylng ,

Mesh Lint
F ltttr .
Ylo Spoctotlltiil
MAYT.-Gj

RUTLAND FURNITURE R~:f:.~:· '

to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LO, NGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In thi s sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dif!erent

11
1f
,I

CRYPTOQUOTES

!I

YWZCDB
r

AEF r

SF YYX Q

by Gill Fox

42. Market
activity
43. "Mine have
seen . , ."
H . Old musical
note
45. Actor
Barker
47. Give chance
(2 wds.l

49. Souvenir
of Oahu
50. Church

Big Copoctty

DX AEX N FD EZJ

7.See

13. A 1972

....__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _---""

Rutlanct

I. Earn
2. Incensed
3. One's

(abbr.)
4. It's a

RESlllTII!

DEXJW

Saturday's Cryploquote: A FANATIC IS ONE WHO CAN'T
CHANGE HIS MIND AND WON'T CHANGE THE SUBJECT.WlNSTON CHURCHILL
(e 1972 King Featu res Syndicate, l n~ . )

DOWN

ACROSS
I. Armed
force

ON YOUR DIAL

~lnt

YWW Q

.. , THI£1

THf MASTER 1001(5
QtJtTe AT HOME IH HIS

WMP0/1390.

WITH 1-\ER. ~

·-

.We talk to JOU
like{,....

~or FeE'CitJ(, .... · ' '
W6Lt. ... t WIIJK .. " '

..

SHE'AT6'~­

1 ACRE lan d, new 2 room
cabin'; 9 acres pasture land
barn and outbu ildings; can~
bought on land contra ct
Phone 949-3073.
·
7-.S.6tc

Arnold Grate

I'VE SEEN

ACT?

i
-::::::::=~~====--~====;====
'·

741-4211 -

'll(t}N TUMMY TA'/Ef?r-1.1
1'-----.. r----1

~

RAC INE - 10 room house ;
bath, basement, garage, two
lots . PJ1one U9-4313.
_ _ __ _ _ _..:.4:..::
'·5-tfp'

_no

OF' THE

~

- .= -- -- - --

1220 Washington Blvd,
'423-7521
BEL PRE, 0 .

CCMF'Uv\~NTS

fi

SHORE

IDMORf&gt;DW
MAWNIN '··

JiiAVJ){G

.ALTY

ANP MOST' OF fT WILL~ (W
TI!E CONVENTION FLOOii' II

WE EXPECT A LOT OF PR06LEMG AT
JHJ; FUWTlCAL. CONI/ENTlONS, MEN .

TIER

'

COUNTRY HOME
NEAR POMEROY - One floor, 3 bedrooms bath fu rnace. Nice bu ilt-in kitchen with cook unit;, and ' bar.
Recreation room and carport . $17,500.00.
NEW
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, nice kitchen with stove and
refrig~rator -freezer. Full basem ent with garage . All
electrtc. Less than S25,000.00.
LOT
SYRACUSE - Level corner lot with small frame
building . $2500.00 .
COMMERCIAL·
CHES HIR E - Business lot with block building on Rt . 7.
BUILDING LOTS
WE have severa l location s. All sizes and priceS.
COUNTRY HOME
ON ROUTE 7 - 2 bedrooms, bath, Pla ins water. Nice
kitchen with stove . Some paneling . 4 acres of land . Only
$9,500. 00.
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
992-3325

CULAND

A &lt;;:x.kSTIOI\1

A OUE.Slla\l

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

60 ALL ~ROP harvester, Alii$.
Chalmers ; phone 742·3656.
7·9-'tp 1911 MOBilE home, 12 x 60, 3
--------bedroom; must sell. loavlng
1.72 A~ RE lot; 5 guns ; phooe
ar~a ; phone 742-5125 for In·
742-3656.
format ion.
-&lt; '
6-29-9t(
- - - - - - -7- 9··21!)

m~

('AAJDIDAT£

,. ,_~,.-------;

In

7-9-tfc
- - - - - - - - - - - -:----- - - - REDUCE sa fe and fast with
LEGAL NOTICE
GoBese Tablets &amp; E-Vap
Sea led bids will be rece ived
"wa ter pil ls, " Nelson Drug .
by the Me igs Local Schoo l
Dist ri ct Boa rd of Edu cat ion at
6·29-30tp
their off ice tn the Me igs Junior
Hig h School Bulld ;ng , M;d . CLIFF'S Shoe Repa ir, Middleport, wi ll be open from 12
dleport , Ohio, tor pa ssenger
sc hool buses unti l 12:00 o'c lock
noon to 5 p.m. until further
on
August 7, 1972, according 1o
notice Closed on Mond
spe-cificalions of said Boa rd of
·
ays.
Educat ion . separate and in7-7-6tc
dependent bids will be re ce ived ___ _ _ _ _ __ _:
with respect to the chassis and WANTED
Customers at
body type , and will sta te that
Showa lter's Wet Pet Shop
th e buses , when assembled and
Chester, Ohio. No e x perienc~
prior to delivery , comply wi th necessary .
all
school
dis tri ct
7_9_201 p
specificatlons, and all safetv _ _ _ _ __ _ ___:__
regulat ion s and current Oh io
Mln;m um Slandard s for School Wanteo' To Buy
Sus Construct ion of th e
Department of Education
adopt!dby and with til e consent OLD Furniture, oak ta bles
of the Director of Highway
organ s. dishes, clocks, bras~
Safety pursuant to Se ction
b~ s , or compl ete household s.
A5ll .76 of the Revised Code and
Write M. D. Miller , Rt . 4,
all oth er per tinent provis io ns of
Pomeroy, Oh io . ·Call 992-6271.
laS'Pecifications
and
in 6-28-tfc
st ruction s to bidders may be - - -- - - -- obta ;ned from
Assistan l Employment Wanted
Su pe rin tendenl Mo r r ison ,
M;dd leport, Oh io.
WILL DO daytime babys itting
Til e Board of Edu cati on
m my home for 1 or 2 ch ildren.
reser ves the r ight to rej ec t any
Rates reasonable. Can gl"e
and a II bids.
Byorderoft he
references . Phone 992-396• 0
Boardot Education
after 5 p.m.
L . w. McComas
7-9-6tc
Clerk -Treasurer ;;-;:.,----,...---,- - ( 7l 10. 17. 24. 31. 4t
WILL paint roofs or houses,
trim and cut trees ; clean
att ics ; basements. etc .
Phone 949-3221.
6-14-30tc
LEGAL NOTICE
The Boa rd of Comm issioners,
Meigs Countv of Ohio, wil l Instruct'
rece;ve bids untn 9:00 o'clock
IOn
A.M. the 181h day of July, 1972, TRACTOR
T RAt L E R
for th e p~Jr c hase of a New Motor
Grad~;.c
TRAINEES NEEDED. You
With minimum specifica tion s
can now tra in to become an
as fol lows : 743 Cu . ln . Diese l ov~r the road driver or city
dnver . E&gt;ecellent earni ng s
Engine. 135 H .P ., Sca rifier",
Power Steer ing , 13 )( 24 Tires
after short tralnln~ on our
Front &amp; Rear . 10 ply ; Cab ,
t k5 ' th
ligh ls, Heater , De froster, Foo t
rue
WI
our river InAcce lerator . De ce lera to r , struc;tors to help you . For
Flasher Lig hts , 12 foot Power
appl icatio n an d Interview,
Shift MOldboard .
call 304-34-4-8843, or write
Offered as Trade -In - 44 0
Schoo l Safety Divis ion
Adam! Motor Grader .
Un 1'ted Sys tems, 1nc., c-o'
Bid der to su bm it delalled
Termina l Bldg., 55 17 Midland
~ft:;~~ -calions of equipment
Drive, Charleston. West
Virginia , 25306. Approved for
T,he Board ot Commissioners
reserve the right to reject any
V.A. Benef its . Placement
or all bids .
assistance available. Over 700
By order of th e Board of
transportation companies
Commissioners, Meigs Co1.1n ty, have hired our graduates .
Oh io .
Martha Chamber s, Cler k ______ _ ___:_7·_10-2fc
:
{7, 10, 17, 2t

GEr

Name

W.

Phone Faye Manley

Help Wanted

I

NOBODY

'

MIDDLEPORT

WANT- ADS
Notice
INFORMATION
. DEAO'I.INES
) P.M. Da y Before Publication .
Monday D!ad line 9 a.m.
Can-cel lation - Correct ions
HAGNOY MANforgrocerystore.
t Will be accepted until9a .m. lor
ood position for reliable
Oa~ Of Publica tion
person . Apply at Racine Food
REGULATIONS
Market.
Th.Q Pub ll!her reser\l es the
7-9-31c
r ight to edi t or re ject an~ ads
----c;--deemed Objectio nal . The'
publi s h ~r wi ll not be responsible
For Rent
for mor'e than one . incorrect
insertion.
.3 AND 4 ROOM furnished ~ri~
Window
RATES
unfurr~ished.
apartments.
' For Wan, Ad Ser\ll ce
,Air
Conditioners
Phone 992-5434.
.
5 cen fs per Word one insertion
Minimum Charg e 75c '"'
Hot
Water
Heaters
----~---4--·12-tfc
12 cents per word th ree
Plumbing
consecutive in serfioris.
UNFURNI SHED apartment,
16 cents pe r ·word Si)( con
Electrical Work
134 Mulberry Ave ., phone 9'12,
secutive insertions. 1
3962.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
6&lt;11 -tlc
ads and ad s paid within 10 days. ·
CARD OF THANKS
-&amp; OBITUARY
ONE bedroom trailer apartSl.SO lor 50 word minimu m
ments , Ideal for couples.
Each addjt ional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Cootact McClure's Dairy tsle.
Additional 25c Charge per
992-2448
992-S248 or 992,3436.
Adver tisement.
7-9-6tc
Pomeroy, 0.
OFFICE HDU'R$ ,
--,· 8:30a .m_. to S: OO.p.m: Dai ly,
ONE DUPLEX apartment, 5
8 : 30 a.m. to 12: 00 Noon
OL D FASHIONED Trading Day rooms and bath, small yard ,
Saturday.
eve ry Sunday on the Bill excellent location. Phone 992 Cionch fa rm, approximately 2 2780 or 992-3432 .
miles up Hyse ll Run off Route
7-9-tfc
124. Horses, gu ns, dogs or - - -- - - - - what have you. Come one and FURNISHED sleep;ng room
I WI LL NOT be responsible for
all.
any debt s contracted b{.
with refrigerator and stove.
a~yone other than mysel .
_ __ __ _ _ _7_:'5-6tp Phone 992,2780 or 992-3432 .
S1g ned, John T . Fisc her , 6-30-tfc
Address, Racine . Rt. 1.
ANNOUNCING
an
Old · - - - , - - - - - - Fashioned Rev ival, Ju ly 6
_ _ _ _ __ __ 7._:
10-3tp
TRAILER , coun try
thru July 16 at the Pom eroy 8x35
location. Phone 992 ·395-4 .
Lower Light Church, Rt. 143, 1
7-7-6tc
m ile fr om Route 7 By-Pa ss .
For Rent
Rev .
Dewey
King ,
NE W ,,. Total electric apartEvangelist. Spec;at singi ng . PASTORE, phone 992-6329.
ment, 2 bedroom , walk ·in
Starts each evening at 7:30 p. __ _ _ _ __ __ 7_-7-6tp
closets. Large living room,
m. Everyon e welcome.
kitchen and dining area ,
Pastor , Rev . Roy Tay lor.
CO UNTRY home , close to
Forked R n Lak f
7·6- Stc
phone 992 .7384 or 992.7133 · ·
u
e : ree gas,
7-10-6tc
partly furnished . Reasonable
- - -- - - - - WHY not try cosmetics that are
re nt; prefer retired couple ;
truly
different
and
references ; phone 378-6298.
LEGAL NOTICE
refreshing? The famou s mink
7-7-lfc
A public hearing will be held
on Ollve Town sh ip Bu~g e t at th e oil base and now we have the
lemC!(l grove . Just think, 14 HOUSE , ideal for couple or
office of the ..;r_r ustees July 11 ,
spett'als this mon th, some for
gentleman ; bath and shower,
19 72 at a o'c loc'k p:m.
Ada Bi ssell
men as well as women. If's
comp le te privacy; ga s heat.
Clerk
KOSCOT of course . Phone
close to Middleport ; com (7) 10 , It
992-5113.
pletety furn ished; phone 992-

I~-------------------- ---I To: Careers, Washington, D.C. 20202

z;

@)

IN

NOTICE

For more information about technical
schools and technical careers, write for this
free guide from the government. Fill out
this ad and mail it today.

'

E LECTED . ..

_B_.u s_in
_ es-_s_Se_rv
_ ic.. ,. .e._s_j

I

SENTINEL
CARRIERS WANTED

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Get a year or two
of technical training.
There are thousands o£ job s for
technicians in every
scientific field from
'
'
engtneenng
to
medicine to computers to.ecology. Jobs that pay as much ~s
some college graduates earn. But don't take
four years to prepare for.

~.!!"

------

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

How to make twice ,
as much as a typical
high school graduate
without going to
college for 4 years.

I

1·9·6tc

''HElL"

t

I
I
I
I
I
1

BEAUTICIAN, must have
manager's license ; Helen's
Beauty Shop ; phooe 992-2890.

Motor Co~

"PMEROY, OHIO

The Almanac ·
In 1953 Lavrenti Beria, Soviet'
By United Press International chief of internal sec w-ity forces,
Today is Monday, July 10, the was executed on charges of
19:',/1.1LQ~l'.. of J 972 with 174 to criminal anti-state activities.
!low.
.,,
In 1962 the Telstar- satellite
The moon is new.
first relayed television pictures
The morning stars are Venus between the United States and
and Satw-n.
Ew-ope .
The evening stars are MerIn 1970 China released 79-year
cury, Mars and Jupiter.
-()\d Roman Catholic Bishop
Those born on this date are James Edward Walsh after
under the sign of Cancet.
holding him prisone r for 12
American painter Jame s years.
Whistler was born July 10, 1834.
A thought for the day :
On this date In history :
.
h
Ca
In 1938 American industrialist
na dtan P ysician Sir William
Howard Hughes and a crew of Osler said, "Tact is the savi'ng
four flew around the world in 91 virtue without which no woman
can be a success."
hOW'S.
- - -- - - - -- -- -- -......:....:...::.:.__ __ ~

I

Po•e~oy

:Po-::~~!s.~~r Co.

(N EWSP4PER ENTEIIPRISE ASSN.)

..

• I

Help Wanted

r

We Could Profit
From Soviet Snags ·

..

LUKI:V!! ARE li E
60 tN ' TO TH ' CARD
6AME TON IG HT?

&lt;,(:&lt;)

...

~

li'J

FJ

ZQ

XCDAZPV

JWOVXN

I NEVER SLEE.f'
A TREE ..

UNDERN~TH

SFUD"

VWJHFJWV

~··~·l:::::==~~:i~·~-~~

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., July 10, 1972

-

Market Report

Ohio .in Driver's Seat
MIAMI BEACH (UP! ) Ohio's 1&gt;3-member delegation
.prepared today to play an
impor tant. pe rh aps ptvo tal,
r ole

in

the

Dem ocrati c

Na tional Conventio" whtch
opens toni_ght.
Th e delegatto n. vo ting
third on the roll call call of
states, will be the ftrst of the
major sU&gt;tes to cast a ba llot on
ihe cructal tsslle of seatt ng the
Callforrua
a nd
Illin Ois
delega tions, se ttmg the tone for
the convention
On paper, the Buckeye
delega tton is split almost down

MASON DRIVE-IN
M.1 •til '{',' Vd
A. (.11 loon NIQtlTI,

Tonrght &amp; Tuesday
Julyl0-11

lite middl e between Sens.
George S. McGovern and
Humber t H. Humphrey.
McGovern hns 61 delegates
plus etght ultder the guidance
of Rep. Loui s Stoke s of
Cleveland
Humphrey forces control the
delegatton with 79 delegates
and are expected to pick up the
five delegates pledged to Rep.
Wayne I. Hays of Flushin g on
lhe credentials tssue.
Delegates pledged to the two
ma jor candidates plus Stokes
and Hays have met privately to
dtscuss procedures and recetve
then· credentials . A caucus of
the full delegahon was expected to follow an 8:30 a.m.
" social" breakfast at the
SonesU&gt; Hotel,,headquarters of
the Humphrey forces, directed
by Frank W Ktng, president of
Ute Ohio AFL-CIO.

Double Feature ProQram

1,000 CONVICTS AND
A WOMAN !

(Color )

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Lucille Lambert, Rutland;

Al exan dr a Ha y

Sand or Eles
(R)

Dori s

Plus
" KILL THEM ALL
and

COME BACK ALONE "
Chuck Connor s

Fra nk Wall
( RI

" If's

much

easter

Adams,

Rae me ;

Franklin E. Lemley, Portland,
and
Ernes t t'icholson,
Ru tland .
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Woodrow Hall, Ktmberly
Duga n, Drema Sawyers,
Thomas Hawley, William Bush
and Naomt Thompson.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Kent Yonker, Mason ; Vena
Marcinko, Minersville; Paula
Phtlhps, Pomeroy, and Pauline
Wolfe, Racme.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Howard Largent, Ethel Boyd
and Paulme Darst.

to

memorize the Golden Rule

than it is to practice it." .. .

, BANK AUDITED
DELAWARE , Ohto (UPI )An auditing firm is checking
Ute records of the Farmers
Savmgs Bank Co. in nearby
Ashley to,determine the extent
of a shortage, estimated at
$70 ,000 by state Banks
Supermtendent Louis A.
Ka stelic. Kastehc said the
mtssmg funds were recovered
from an employe. No charges
were filed ,

Our " FRIENDLY ONE S"
make It a pract rce to treat
every customer lrke they
would want to be treated, rf

MEIGS THEATRE

they were the customer

Tonight &amp; Tuesday
July 10· 11

But then , that' s why
they ' re known as t he

" FRIENDLY

ONE S"

(Technicolor)

POMEROY CfMENT
BLOCK CO.

Renee Taylor
Joseph Bologna

tGP I

Cartoons

The Dept. Store of Building
Sinct 1915.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Saturday, July 8,1972
SALES REPORT OF
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 28 to
28.35 ; 220 to 250 lbs. moro·
28.60; Ltght 25.&gt;0 to 27.60; Fat
Sows 22 to 23.&gt;0 ; Stags 18 to
21.25 ; Boars 20 to 22.35; Pigs 8
to 22.&gt;0; Shoats 15 to 32.&gt;0.
CATI'LE - Steers 30 to
36.!i0; Heifers 26.50 to 34 ; Baby
Beef 35 !iO to 48 75; Fat Cows 20
to 24.50 ; Canners 18 to 27; Bulls
27.50 to 31.90; Milk Cows 2jlO to
340.
VEAL CALVES - Tops
53.!i0; Seconds 50 to 52.35;
Medium 46.!i0 to 49; Com. &amp;
Hvs. 44 to 50; Culls 44 Down,
BABY CALVES - 35 to 77.
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
Steers - choice, 36.25-3'1j
good, 35-36; standard, 33.80ACCEPTING TROPHY - Jack Fruth, owner of Fruth
34.90.
Pharmacy,
accepts the sponsors trophy from Tournament
Hetfers - choice, 35-35 .80;
Manager Jim Carpenter after the Fruth Pharmacy Slo-Pitch
good, 31.0(1.34.
Softball Team won the 16-team Point Pleasant Invitational
Cows - commercial, 24.11&gt;26.60; utility, 22.60-24; canner
tourney Sunday afternoon. Several of the area's top slo-pitch
and cutter, 18.50-21.!i0.
teams competed in Ute three day tourney. Fruth Pharmacy
Bulls - commercial, 29·
.nipped Rich's of Charleston 10-9 in the final game to win the
34.35.
championship.
Stockers and feeders- steer
calves, 38.&gt;0-46; heifer calves,
30.50-40; yearlings, 28.50-39.75
Veal calves - choice, 57;
good, 47.50-53.
Hogs, 200-230, 28.75; No. I, ,RACINE - Morgan L. w1£e , Clara; £our sons, Jerry of
29; 230-240, 28.50; boars, 22.80; Powell, 64, Ractne, Rt. 2, was Racine ; Wtlham, Mtddleport ;
sows, 23-23.90; stock hogs, 25- dead on arnval at Veterans Larry, Racme, and John, of the
Memorial Hospital Sunday U S. Navy, Mayport, Fla .; a
29.50 ; pigs BH, 13 25-20.50.
daughter, Kathryn Htll,
evening.
Mr. Powell wao the son of the Racine; two brothers, Curlts
late Wilham and Elizabeth Ivan Powell, Racme, and Hoyt
Bertie McMurray
Roush Powell .. He was also Powell, St. Albans, W.Va., and
preceded in death by three 14 grandchtldren
Died on Sunday
stslers, Fannie Blackamore,
Funeral servt ces will be
Vesta Powell and Maggie Wednesday at 3 p m . at the
LONG BOTI'OM - Bertte Parsons and four brothers, Ewmg Funeral Home. Bunal
McMurray, 80, Long Bottom, Martm, Clarence, Fred and wtll be in LeU&gt;rt Cemetery .
Rt. I, died Sunday morning at Alvar .
Fnends may call at the funeral
Veter'Ans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Powell is survived by his home an ytime .
She was the daughter of the
late Daniel and Suste Haddox
Brewer.
Mrs. McMurray was a
member of the Methodist
DOWNINGTON - Jam es Pomeroy ; Pa tsy Perktns 1
Church.
Clark, 61, Downmgton, dted Marion, and Weltha Garraway,
She is survived by her Sunday evening at O'Bieness Clinton, Md .; three stephusband, Louis A. McMurray; Memorial Hospital in Athens. daughters. Lucille Dilcher,
a daughter, Marie Beaver,
Mr. Clark was preceded tn Columbus; Allee Russell,
Long Bottom; two grand- death by hts parents, John L. Pomeroy, and Jean Norri s,
daughters, and several nieces and Wellha Nelson Clark, and Albany; nine grandc htldren,
and nephews.
hts ftrst wife, Mary Esther one grea t-gra ndchtld ; two
Gravestde services w1ll be Clark.
br oth ers . Robert Clark ,
held Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the
He is survived by his wife. Harrisonville, and Mark Clark ,
Sttversville Cemetery . The Ethel ; four children, Jack, of Albany, and a stster, Loutse
Rev. Frank Cheesebrew will Mtddlepor t; Coelle Hudson, Dixon, Athens .
offictate. Friends may call at
Funeral servtces wtll he
Ewing Funeral Home any
Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. at
time .
Ewmg Funeral Home Burial
wtll be m Wells Cemetery.
LODGE TO MEET
Fnends may call at the fun eral
CHESTER - Work to be tn
home after 7 p.m. today
the master mason degree at a
regular meetmg of Shade
River Lodge 453, at the hall at 8
HOME FROM AKRON
p.m. Thursday. All master
Mr.
and Mrs V. C. Tuttl e,
masons are invited.
Mtddle port , have returned
home after bemg called to
Kyger Creek School Board
Akr on due to Ute tllness and
Prestden t Dale Rothgeb , Jr ,
hospitalizati on of her stsler,
today learned that Rtchard
Mrs. Harry Hurlbert, the
(Dick) Adams, Kyger Creek
former Hallie Summerfield .
football and baseball coach,
Cards may be addressed to
plans to suhmit his resignahon
Mrs. Hurlbert at Akron City
to the board later this week .
Hos pttal, Room &gt;44 West,
Rothgeb , in a telephone
Akr on.
conversation with Coach
Adams' wtfe, Linda, learned
that the KC mentor wtll restg n
in order to permit the board to
hire a coach for the 1972-73
campaign.
Adams ts trying for a
position on the Ottawa Rough
Riders football squad in the
Canadian Professional
Football League.
The former Athens and
Mtami star has survived all
cuts to date, and ts presently
playing m CFL exhtbition '.
games.
&lt;
Should Adams, playing at the .
strong safety, be cut by the
CFL learn m August, and KC is ,,.
still searching·for a grid coach,
Adams will apparently be
rehired by the board. However, lli
should the board find a coach ~::
·.·~
before Adams' grid future is ~~
determined, he will not return :~
to Kyger Creek Utis fall .
~

Morgan Powell Died on Stu1day

James Oark Dies in Athens

Adams Will

MADE FOR
EACH OTHER

;

Fischer's Chair
Flown to Iceland

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

Resign as
KC Coach

REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UP! )
- The Boris Spassky-Bobby
Fischer world chess match can
begin ~ Fischer's favorite
chair has arrived. The swtvel
chair in metal and black
leather was flown from New
' York to Iceland and put on the
stage in the Reykjavtk chess
hall Sunday,
·
Spassky's Russian advisers
arrived shortly after the much
talked about chair and studied
It suspiciously. Then they left
without comment. Now the
Icelandic organizers face a
new problem: Where to find a
similar chair in Iceland' "It
would look better if both
Spassky and Fischer had the
same chairs," satd "Gudmundur Thorarin ss on,

president of the Icelandic
·chess Federation.
Fischer took one look at the
dozen different chairs the
Icelanders' had assembled
from Rekjavik's furniture
stores the other day, sat down
in some of them and then gave
his verdict: "Fly in my own
chair."
Spassky, the 35-year-old
world champion, did not seem
to worry much about details of
the $250,000 match.
Before leaving for a salmon
fishing tour of northern Iceland
the defending champion said,
"!am not going to argue about
chairs, chess boards and sets. I
will leave that .to Bobby. It
makes no difference to me."

Tentative Schedule of
Events at Convention
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (UP!)- Here is the tentative schedule
for the Democratic National Convention, subject to change at
any tune with the posstbility of additional afternoon sessions if
bus mess cannot be completed within tbe planned four days :
MONDAY
- 7:30p.m. EDT: call to order and invocation.
- Welcoming addresses by Sen. Lawton B. Chil!!S of Florida,
Rep. Claude D. Pepp~r of Florida and Mayor Chuck Hall of
Miami Beach.
-,Speech by Democratic National Chairman Lawrence F.
O'Bnen.
- Report of the Credentials Committee.
- Debate and vote on the Credentials Committee report.
TUESDAY
- 7 p. m.: Election of permanent convention chairman.
Constderation of Rules Committee report.
- Keynote address by Gov. Reubm Askew of Florida.
- Platform Committee report, debate and votes .
WEDNESDAY
-7 p. m.: Nominations and balloting for the Presidential

nommee.
THURSDAY
- 7 p. m.: Consideration of new charter for Democratic
party.
- Nommations and balloting for the vice presidential
nominee.
- Acceptance speec hes.
- Adj ournment.

Floris Pullin Died on Stu1day
Mrs. Flons S. Pulltn , 87,
formerly of Mtddleport, dted
Sunday at the home of a
Henry
daughter,
Mrs.
(Frances) Killmer, Lewiston,
· NY.
Mrs Pullin was born Sept.
27, 1884, the daughte r of the
!a te Emm ons S
and
Charlesanna Mtller Bnght. She
and her hu sba nd, the late
Wtlham P. Pulhn, who dted tn
195&gt;, were restdents of South
Third Ave. m Midd lepor t many
years.
Besides her daughter, Mrs.
Pullin ts survived by a brother,
Walter E. Jones of Xema , and
two grand children .
Funeral servi ces will be held
at 2 p. m. Wednesday at Ute

Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev . Robert
Bumgarner
officia tlng.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4and from 7 to 8
p. m. Tuesday and until time of
services Wednesday. Burial
will be In the Suncrest
Cemetery at Point Pleasant.
NOW IN COLUMBUS
Mrs . James Rees, Sr .,
Racine, has been transferred
from the Holzer Medical
Center to St.. Anthony Hospital
in Columbus where she is
undergoing observation, C..rds
may be sent to her at the
hospital, 1450 Hawthorne ,
Room 591, Columbus, Ohio,
43203.

McGovern
458 black delegates as a bloc, .
perhaps supporting Rep,
Shirley Chisholm of New Y&lt;Jrk
on the first ballot.
But a rowdy meeting SUnday
of blacks to map out a united
strategy ended in disunity- and
frustration. A second attempt
was scheduled today.
Disunity also was evident in
the endorsement of McGovern
Sunday by Rep. Ronald V.
Dellums of C8llfornia, a black
from Berkeley. ·He had been a
Chisholm supporter, though
not a delegate. He denounced
the stop-McGovern movement
as "a fYnlcal effort to stop the
coalftl·on of the heretofore
powerless."
George C. Wallace displayed
far less influence so far than
his aides had- predicted,
remaining secluded in his 20th
floor presidential suite of the
luxurious Sheraton Four
Ambassadors in downtown
Miami. His staff discontinued
medical reports on his condition,
fearing
misin terpretations. They conceded
that his face sometimes
unexpectedly contorted with
pain from his abdomen
wounds. But they satd Wallace
would DU!ke an appearance in
his wheelchair "at least onre"
at the convention, perhaps to
denounce the platform's
"asinine" endorsement of
compulsory school busing as a
useful tool toward integration.
Humphrey, meantime,
seemed to want to serve as the.
Democrats' peacemaker if he
is denied the nomination,
hopeful of diverting the
disunity which dogged his 1963
campaign against President
Nixon. ·
But at the same time
Humphrey sent dozens of
young supporters into convention hotels to sUp 30,000'
mimeographed leaflets lli•der
the doors of sleeping delegates.
The literature denounced
McGoVern's "attempt to bully
you for your votes" with a
threat to stalk out of a convention he found unfair. He
criticized McGovern's 1948
endorsement of Henry A.
Wallace on the Progressive
party ticket - an endorsement
McGovern renounced Ia ter
that year.
No conciliatory talk came
from hawkish Sen. Henry M.
Jackson ol Washington state,
~~~!!!!'~ IJII4Mdate. llj!, di!lz!'tl
~quae friiiii lils wamlnas Uta
Democrats are "scared to
death" that McGovern's
nomination would spell party
ruin everywhere.
TWO ASK DIVORCE
Two suits for divorce have
been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court. Ancil
Cross, Mlddlepor~ flied suit
against Gloria Cross, Middleport, and Donald W..
Manuel, Racine, against Joyce
E. Manuel, Racine, each
charging grosS neglect of duty
and extreme cruelty.

.

j

..
::::~·:•

SAVE

SAVE

$60
On~~~

Kong S 11c
l r'l'llC".ll l ; r•r r

1

$50
On ~~~

Queen S1 t e 51crep~ c!•e
lmp c •nl (2·poecc ~nsem!JI~)

S 1 nerr ~:
r ~•r "

•

259.90

'169.90

fO ,, onJ IIr

N~l onally Jdvul · ~Cd 11 ;3 1~ ~J

~d wlrhltd o~l

$219 90

TA·VEI\N FIRE
:.,
CANTON, Ohio (UP!)
Extenstve damage was casued .~::,,
Sunday wh en ftre swept ~
through King Richards
Lounge, after witnesses
reported hearing an explosion
~
in the rear of the tavern .
::::

j

SAVE

'*

$40

'•'•

'•'•
'•'•
....

On t he Full or Twtn S o nS ~~ rcpod 1C
l mpero~ l l~ ~ ·Ctl' c~se m b l e l

'119.90
NJh o n;~ll~

udvc •lrsed ,11 5159 90

rs on nghr now And th&lt;ll means specral savmgs on the

mallre!'.s ot your dreams
Bemco ma ~es the Sac10pedrc tmperoal wdh l1rm Unt1usec:l '
Cons tr uc!lon lor ~ ~ 1ra supporr So you anc:l you r ba clo: bOih
r e1fe ~hed

Strei ch ou t on a Sacrooed1C lmper1al mattress set now
And enJOY healthy sav1ngs on a healthy nrghl s rest

\llt Prtlll frm&lt;c Ou•luH~ml' , ,..,•• )"
, ~, &gt;Yurld's c;,..,,.Jr SI"'P"''

''"1"

INGELS FURNITURE
992-2635

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

II

I

Bemco·s once.a.year Sacroped tc 1mpe11al matlress sale

wak. e up

Pleasant Valley Hospital
:-::
Discharges : Mrs . Harold ~:·
\•:
Lawson, Letart; Frank Bauer,
~~=
Grimms Landing; Mrs. Robert ,.;
Salyers
and
daughter,
Pomeroy ; Larry Darst, Cot- ::~
tageville , daughter , Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Olin Snyder,
Jr., daughter, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Harry· Farle1 and ::::
daughter, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
James Lilly, James Lilly, Sr.,
Point
Pleasant;
Mrs , ::::
Lawrence Rayburn, Mllton . ~
Births-July 8, a son to Mr.
and Mrs. · Norman Vincent,
Southside; July 8, a son to Mr.
and Mrs . James Schull ,
Southside; July 10, a son to Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Taylor, Kenna ,
W. Va .; July 10, a son to Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Thomas,
Point Ple&amp;sant.
'k«·*:~mnnS:!m!'$"....-r.;.~~

MIDDLEPORT

~

100 Per cent cotton wash 'n wear
corded combed chambray - shoulder
button and side button opeping . roomy
skirt pockets .

·COLOR: RED AND WHITE STRIPE.
SIZES: 6 to 20
\

See our complete line of womens white
uniforms and uniform pants suits. A
~Yide selection of styles and fabrics In
long and short sleeves ,... styled by
"White Swan" and "Crest". Styles
suitable for nurses. beauticians
'
.
'
waitresses, dieticians, and nurses
aides.

JUNIOR SIZES
MISSES
SIZES
I
HALF SIZES

~e ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

I

Students

(Continued from page I)

Don't Forget the Carpet and Linoleuln Sale
At Elberfelds Warehouse on Mechanic Street.
! ! .!!!
a.:n motr.:-·... . ·~'""WIIIIIIIIIIIM••••~-~~~~~.!M••••i· .i••

'OD

. Students in the Metgs Local sc hool proper ty , revtewed the
&amp;hool distn ct fowt d to be proposed budge t for 1972-73 and
using illegal drugs wtll be annexa tion of territories, and
e~pelled.
adopted a proposed policy of
This was part of a two- early graduation.
pronged polt cy adopted by the
The boa rd adopt ed the
Meigs Local Boa rd of following policy on students
Education Monday mght whtch and drugs, subject to review by
moved to combat the drug the prosecuttng attorney :
problem here wht ch Boa rd
Any stud ent who inPresident Frank w. Porter .tentionally sells, gives,
said is a "horrible st tuation." possesses, uses, or is under the
The board a !so refused to mfluence of illicit drugs,
accept a bid on Ute old Coalport narcotics or alcohol in or on

Drugs Will be Expelled

school property , includtng
buses, shall be expelled from
sc hool for the maximum time
permitted by law and reported
to the appropriate law en£orcement age ncies for
possible legal actton .
Board Prestdent Fra nk W.
Porter called the drug problem
a "horrible situation. " He satd
of 30 children "picked up" for
using drugs only one was a
Meigs Htgh School student. It
was not disclosed whether the

I

others were Meigs Jr. High
puptls, or elementary puptls
from other districts best des the
Meigs district.' Porter mainU&gt;tned some youngsters are
obtatmng drugs in their home~.
The board refused a btd on
the old Coalport school
property of $-1,200 made by
Leonard Lentz . Member Don
Mullen moved to accept the bid
but Utere was no second .
Member Carroll Pterce
belteved the property should be

kept but the bmld tng should be
torn down . The property was
purcha sed tn 1875 for $2,000.
On a motwn by Mullen, the
board voted to adverttse for
btds for tearing down and
salvagmg the buildtng and
remov mg debns. The matter
will be re ferred to the
prosecuting attorney.
It was noted that in the future
if anyune as in terested in
purcha stn g any proper ty
belongmg to the Met gs Local

Board they are requested to
co ntac t ass~(Supt. Larry
Morrison ,.... ' •
The propo
budge t to be
subm ttted to the county budget
commtsston for the 1972-73
sc hool yea r was dtscussed It
will be studied furth er and
voted on next Monday, Jul y 17,
at 8 p m
In dtscussmg the budget, tt
was noted that without the
pa ssage of the five mills the
sc hool board could stay m

busmess thts next school yea r
The Meigs Local Board voted
but would not he able to con- to accept the county board's
ttnue operatton the following proposal to transfer the
yea r The iss ue was voted on property tn questton.
May 2and June 20 and defeated
Bowen said a new set of
bo th ttmes It was the general gutdelines has been adopted by
feehng of the boa rd that the the s tate depar tment of
tssue may never pass
educa tion for kindergarten and
Mee tmg wtth the board was fi rst gra de puptls. The
Robert
Bo wen,
co un ty gutdelines .allots to IQ, social,
superm tendent, m regard to emottona l and physical
the transfer of property from development of the chtltl.
Eas tern Dtstn ct to Metgs
In other business the board
Local.
t Continued on page 8)

I

Rev. Dr. Lewis in Home Church Sunday

The Rev. Dr. Edward W. W.
Lewts, formerly of Middleport
and now senior mimster of the
Untied Church of Chnst,
Congregaltonal, at Canton ,
Mass , a suburb of Boston, will
be guest speaker at the Middleport First Baptist Church
Sunday.
The Middleport First Baptist
Church ts the home church of
Dr. Lewis who ts a graduate of
Middleport High School and ts
one of the few, if not the only

former Meigs Countian , to hold
four college degrees, hts being
one bachelor , two masters, and
one doctorate . He is a br~ ther
of the late Art "Pappy" Lewis,
all-American football player
and former coach at West
Vtrgima University.
Dr. Lewts, who has preached
m England, Scotland, Wales,
Portugal , Italy, France,
Germany , Rhodesta, the Umon
of South Afnca and other
countnes, IS well known in his

denommatmn not on ly as a
ministe r but also as a misswn
wi tness. He has spoken in 14
sU&gt;tes on the "Etghty Days
Around the Misston World ," a
trip he and his wtfe took to
vistt, study and encourage
mi SS IOnaries
of
ma ny
denominattons.
While here, Dr. Lewis will be
Ute gues t of hts aun t, Mrs.
Charles E (Garnet) Clark,
wh o was the ftrst in the fanuly
hnc to attend college. After

studytng at Ohio Universtty,
she taught school in Metgs
County . She ts credtted with
savmg the life of Dr. Lewis in
1922 when she rescued htm
from a burnin g house in
MiddleP,ort
Acco mpan ytng Dr . Le11i s
here will be his daughter,
Judtth Lee Lewts, who
r ec ently r e c e t v e d
her Master 's Degree from
lh e . Unive rs ity of WisconStn They will attend a

famtly reun ton tn Middleport

sports edt tor of the New Haven
Reg ister in Connecticut, and
Dr. Lewis has not seen for Matthew French Lewis who
yea rs because of his serving m graduated magna cum laude
dtstant locations
from Boston College and has
Bes ides Judtth, Dr and Mrs. been accepted by the college of
Lewts have three sons, Dr
veterinary medicine at Ohio
Edward Turner Lewts, wh o State Umversity.
recetved h1s doctorate m June,
The public is invited to at1967, now hves in Wakcfteld , te nd the 10·15 a.m. service at
Mass., and operates his own which Dr. Lewis will speak. Dr.
yete nnary chmc, Mark An- Lewis' toptc will be "The
dress Lewts, who graduated Healing Influence of a Man's
from Hope College and is now Life ."
and vtsit with relatt ves whom

en tin e
Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area
VOL. XXV

NO. 60

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1972

PHONE 992·2156

TEN CENTS

Bridge to Close July 24-30
The Pomeroy· Mason Bndge
will be closed one week
begmnmg July 24 at 9 a.m., it
was disclosed Monday at a
meeting of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce by
Charles Gloeckher of the State
Department of Highways. The
Shelly Compan y, contractor ,
set the date.

· REV. DR. LEWIS

Ferry Service will begm
operation the same day , according to Doc McCoy, who
satd cost per vehicle will be 7&gt;
cents.
The service can handle 192
cars per hour , us1ng tw o
barges. McCoy earher announ ced the firm could offe r
ferry service over a 24-hour

penod tf necessary.
In oth er business Btll
Grueser submttted na mes of
candi dates for the se ven
dtrectors to be elected for a two
year term . Ballots wtth the list
of candtdates will be sent to the
members with bills for dues
next ye ar Direc to rs are
elected every two years, stx

on e year and seven on the
alter nate year .
Candtdates listed were Jack
Ker r , Bob J aco bs, Donald
Dte ner , Ralph Gra ves, Fred
Mor r ow, Fr ed Crow, Tom
Cassell, N. W. Compton, Ted
Reed , Do n Pearch, Dennis
Keney, Dale Warner, Btll
And erson and Lewts Osborne.
Carry over directors from
last year are Jack Carsey, Bill

Repaving Work
OpensThursday Middleport's 1973 ~~

Grueser , Marge Hoffner ,
Wendell Hoover, Ada Nease
and Earl Ingels. Servtng on the
comnuttee with Grueser to
comptle the list of candidates
was Denms Keney
Upon a suggestion to raise
membership dues, Carsey
argued that since the chamber
needed to increase its membership raising its dues would
defeat that objective.

~:;:;:;:;:;;;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::!;!;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;::::::::::::::!;:::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::;:::::::::::~;:::::·

The Shelly Company will
begi n repav ing Rout e 124
helween Pomeroy and Racine
Thursday, J ames Ba ile y,
superin tend ent of the Meigs
County Hi ghw ay Department,
satd today.
On Thursday, the company
will be putttng down a tack
coat, foll owed by new pa vmg
starting Friday The work
should be completed m five
days if weather is satisfa ctory,
Bailey satd .
Bailey pmnted out that th e
local highway de partment on
Wednesday wtll remove mix
from along the railroad tracks
whtch cross East Main St.
above the Whi te House tave rn .
This will ma ke conditi ons at
the crossing rough "lor a
couple of days," Batl ey said .
However 1 correc tions will be
made when the resurfacmg is
completed.
Bailey also said a gas line on
Ute bridge leadi ng from Route
7into Chester is being replaced
by the Columbia Gas Co. The
old line created a hazard ,
particularly tn wtnter, when tt
might have been struck by
snow removal equipment.
The supermtendent also
advised tha t maJ Or Improvements are being made at
Ute railroad crossing on Route

124 at Langsvtlle by tlte Penn
Cen tral Ra il roa d . When
comp leted , there will he only a
St ngle track at !he crossmg, a
spur into Lan gsv ille being
removed The improvements
are expected to be completed
tht s wee k. The Langsvtlle
An approximate $29,000 deficit budget for
cross mg has been the localton 1973 was approved by Middleport V11lage
of num erous traffi c acctdents Council Monday night.
over the years,
The budget provtdes for anti cipated
receipts in 1973 of $276,520 and expenditures of
J/j
$305,186. Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate and
council agreed , however' that expected
balances in the ,several funds this year will
MIAMI BEACH I UP! ) cover
the "apparent deftcit " in the budget. The
How Ohio voted on the vanous
challenges at the Democratic council authorized Clerk-Treasurer Grate to
present the budget to the county auditor.
nati onal convention:
Fire Chief Bob Byer discussed a suggested
- Wh ether · to
sustain
Chairman Lawrence F . contract to provide fire protection for Addison
O'Bnen's rultn g that 120 Township in Gallia County. Byer said he had
McGovern Caltfornta delegates not been approached officially on the matter by
could vote on the contested Addison Township officials but indicated that
challenge. Ohio: Yes, 78, No, Ute fire deparlment had discussed the
75.
.
possibility and had decided against such a
contract.
-D n seating the full 271
Mc G ove rn California
Byer said that 20' minutes would be the
Delega tion. Ohio: Yes, 75. No, minimum time the department could reach a
78.
fire in Addison Township. His opinton was that
-Dn a motion to approve a such a situation would be unfair to Middleport
compromise Ilhnois delegation in that it could take firemen out of the comseating proposal. Ohio : Yes, munity when they might be needed. The
69. No, 84.
Middleport department is not equipped with
-Dn the mtnority report to
seat 59 Illinois delegates led by

Budget Approved

How Ohio

d

ote

g~~~g;!,•~r;!~~~~dDaley.

~·~~~~·~···~··~·"·;·~--~·~........~----~~~~~~~~~

fl ,.

ln Brl~fs

By United Press International
SAN CLEMENTE, CALIF. -PRESIDENT NIXON watched
part of the opening session of the Democratic National Convention last night but went to bed before it ended. Press
secretary Ronald Ziegler said the President would watch the
proceedings "as time pennits." Today Ni~on scheduled a
meeting with his budget manager .
' '
BELFAST- ANGRY PROTESTANT MR.ITANTS warned
today that civil war would break out unless British troops take
the offensive against the Irish Republican Army. The mster
'i:lefense Association said it would not engage in fighting the IRA
if Britain imposed martial law. An IRA spokesman said the
Protestant move was not unexpected.

SAIGON - GOVERNMENT FORCES REGROUPED
outside Quang Tri City today, leaving It in control of North
Vietnamese troops. Earlier the South Vietnamese repulsed an
attack east of Quang Trl and destroyed six Communist tanks. U.
852 'bombers dropped about 750 tons of bombs on suspected
Communist positions southwest of the old capital of Hue.

s.

UPPER MARLBORO, ' MD. - PSYCHIATRISTS at a
Maryland mental institution told Circuit Court Judge Ralph W.
Powers yesterday that Arthur H. Bremer, accused of trying to
assassinate Alabama Gov. George. C. Wallace, refused to
cooperate with them. Dr. John M. Hamilton said he saw no
reuon 'tor attemptiag to continue examination of Brem~.

Old P

MIAMI BEACH (UP!) George S. McGovern all but
assured himself of the Democratic presidential nomination
today in a surefooted rout of
the old pros at their own game.
With a bottle of beer, a long,
thin cigar, his shoes kicked off
and his tie discarded, MeGovern watched on television
in his penthouse suite as all his
· 1s-un1t edin their!ervor
'
r1va
to
stop him-fell to the power of
his tightly disc
· lpllned Ioya lists
. fl
he
on t conventton
oor.
The supremely confident
· · Sta te senator p1anned
Pra1r1e
to seclude himself today,
possibly on a boat, to go over
trafts of the acceptance speech
he fully expected to deliver
before the convention Thursday night following Wednesday's
presidential
balloting,
There was no word from him
about a c~lce 'of a runningmate.
TrfqmpbOverwhelmlllg
So overwhehnlng was Me.Govern's noor triumph that his

::!.~,

Boy Home from Hospital

!!)
RACINE- Eleven-year old John Holman, son of Mr. .:,:~.:,

and Mrs . Jacob Holman, Racine, Rl, I, admitted to Holzer
Medical Center Saturdsy evening alter being bitten and
clawed about the face by a cat thought to be a paother bas
heeo released and Is at home.
The child was in the yard of the famlly home when the
animal appeared, John, attempting to pat the animal,
accidentally fell. The cat bit him on the top of his head and
clawed him about the face. John's father fought the
animal off the child.
There have been reports by several persons they saw
an animal or animals around and near the Racine area on
several occasions resembling a panther ln appearance.

vehicles and manpower to handle the situation ,
Byer told council.
Byer also reported that a fence and steps
hetween village owned property where a new
fire department headquarters is being constructed and the Jacob Turner property are on
village property and must be torn out for the :·:·:::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:.;·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:•:·:·::::;:;::::::::::::::::::~:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::;:;:;:;;g;;;;.;.;::::::·:::::::~
new facility . Council agreed that this will be
taken care of.
Former pollee officer Ray Manley advised
council that speeding ts a hazard in the lower
end of town near the community park and pool.
The Meigs County Sheriff's entenng of the Mattie Sprouse
Manley said that he had a dog worth $75 killed Dept. assisted a motorist to home, Middleport, RD.
Memorial
Hospital at
A window was found open,
by a speeder SUI;IIIay. He warned that he would Veterans
tod
. 30
1
but upon investigation nothing
tak
I ·
to h
t 1 1 if
· a.m.
ay.
e camp runts
t e coun Y eve .
Admitted to the hospital was was determined missing. The
necessary, and that he would get aclton agatnSt -&lt;:annie Corcen Mash, Midincident was reported Monday
offenders.
.
.
dll!port, Rt. 1, who had been evening.
It was agreed that Pollee Chief J. J , using Purina cow spray and it
Cremeans will install signs in the section to was belteved coffee she dra~k
warn speeders. Signs used previously have after ustng ' the spray had
!teen effective, Chief Cremeans said .
become conU&gt;minated with the
Mostly sunny and very warm
Mrs. James Brewer complained of an spray. Hospital official today and Wednesday. Highs
ineffective catch basin near her home on Vine reported her condition as both days in Ute mid 80s to low
St. Mayor Zerkle sa1d he and Harold Chase, satisfactory.
90s. Clear and warm tonight.
The shenff's Dept. is m- Lows in the upper 60s to lower
IContinu~ on page 2)
vestigating a breaking and 70s.

Motorist is Given Help

Weather

.R t d t

old friend and cloSest rival,
Huhert H. Humphrey, bowing
lo
the
inevitable,
acknowledged to reporters
today that he was thinking
about quitting Ute battle in an
act of conciliation- the finish .
to his 1Z.year pursuit of Ute
presidency.
"The strategy was all right,"
a relaxed Humphrey said after
the McGovern steamroller
flattened him . "We just lacked
a few votes."
Humphrey in the roll of
healer could serve McGovern
as a bridge to Olicago Mayor
Richard J. Daley, who was
unseated by Ute convention
against McGovern's will, and
as the man who might bring
McGovern the support of
alienated labor leaders.
McGovern's claim of victory
was cautious : "It would now
seem that the nomination
victory we have anticipated is
within our grasp."
UPI's
tally
showed
McGovern only 43 votes short
of the 1,509 needed for

nomination, with 311 delegates
still uncommttted.
A sweet victory for many of
McGovern 's young supporters
seeking to revenge the
bloodshed of Chicago in 1968
came In th e convention 's
tfecision at 4:35 a.m. EDT

today to unseat Daley and
replace him with a more
representative delega'uon.
ASetback
The challenge to the nation's
most powerful old~ine political
leader was a setback 1for
McGovern, who had hoped to
work out a compromise which
would have avoided antagonizlng Daley.
VeteransMemorlaiHospltal
The action shifted tonight to
ADMITTED - James D.
the party 's platform , with
Durbin, Mason ; Nora Curtis, Alabama Gov . George C.
Pomeroy ·, Richard Bearhs, Wallace hoping to make a
Sr., Pomeroy ; Sharon- Cun- personal appearance at the
ningham, Syracuse; Opal convention-but probably not
Priddy, Pomeroy and Bonnie from its roslrumYo lead the
Miller, Racine.
DISCHARGED - Willlam :,;,~::::::::::::-.;::::&gt;·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;
Buchanan, Paula Phlllips,
George Bates, George Deem,
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Christine Haley, Raymond
Ohio Exteoded Outloo~ Hartley and Ernest Nicholson.
Thursday through Saturday.
Warm and humid. Partly
cloudy Thursday. A chance
LOCAL TEMPS
of showers Friday and
The temperature in down- Saturday, Highs in lbe mid to
town Pomeroy at II a.m . upper 80s, Lows In the upper
Tuesday was 80 degrees under 60s to lower 70s,
sunny skies.

Thirty-nine arrests were
fight for his own philosophy. made during June by the
The Wallace forces hoped to MiddlefXtrl Pollee Department
purge from the platform according to the report of
liberal planks on busing, Pulice Chief J . J . Cremeans
welfare and national defense submitted to Middleport
which reflect McGovern's Village Councll Monday night.
viewpoint.
During JIDle six persons
This time the McGovern were arrested for drivin~ while
forces planned to join with Intoxicated and 12 others on
liberal supporters of Hum- intoxication charges, There
phrey , Muskie and Rep . were two persons arrested on
Shirley Chisholm to ward off charges of dlsturbJng the
the Wallace attack,
peace, abusive language,
By a vote of 1,618.28 to failure to yield the right of way,
1,238.22, with 8.5 abstaining, running a red light, no driver's
the 2,865 delegates ruled li~ense and three were
eligible to participate gave arrested on speeding charges.
McGovern the full 271-vote There was one arrest on each
slate he had won in the June 6 of the following charges,
winner-take-all California riDlning a stop sign, assured
primary . The credentials clear distance, reckless
committee, in a deoislon operation, illegallicelll!e tags,
denounced by McGovern as · stolen car, resisting arrest and
evil , had voted to divide the assault and battery. The
delegation in proportion to the charge was dropped In one
popular vote won by all the instance. ·
contenders-a declslon which
Parking meter receipts tor
cost McGovern 151 votes.
the month totaled 1987 il'lld 13
The first convention session accidents were investigated.
lasted nine hours, adjourning The pollee a-uiser was driven
at 4:53a.m. EDT.
4,175 miles during the month.
' I

•

.

·~

Police Make
39 Arrests

I .' I

"

It was pointed out that
membership is $25 per year
and there are approximately 40
me mber s. Middleport
Chamber charges $20 and has
60 to 70 memhers while Pt.
Pleasant charges $100 per
year.
Dale Warner disclosed the
frog jump events during
Regatta took ~n $1,600. The
Frog Association anticipates a
profit of approximately $600.
Members voted to sponsor
the Regatta again nexl year, on
dates to be announced.
The " fr og membership"
drawmg was held, the winning
ticket going to Jack Carsey.
The membership carried a
prize of a $.'00 bond which will
be donated to the Meigs County
Cancer Society.
It was announced that the
chamber secretary has listings
for rental houses and apartments and houses for sale. The
phone numher, at the new
chamber office located on the
ground floor of the courthouse,
is 992-5005. Joyce Bunch is the
secretary.
It was suggested that the
secretary be given a key to the
post office box so she may pick
up the chamber's mail, The
chamber also approved the
purchase of a sign for the
chamber offi ce.
Attendtng were Jack Kerr ,
president, Jack Kane, Dean
Lutz, Earl Ingels, Wendell
Hoover, Ted Reed, Richard
Chambers , Bill Grueser,
Warn er , Bob Jacobs , Tim
Kerr, Dennis Keney, Fred
Crow, Tom Cassell, and
Carsey ,

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