<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16658" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/16658?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-25T00:26:46+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49805">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/e5ce721970a62688ea4096a8bdcf86bc.pdf</src>
      <authentication>e099e4f54e768e25bc697ac6dee9d3fc</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="53219">
                  <text>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 ,

�.
2-The Daily ~ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , July 11, 1!112

3- The Daily ~ntinel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, July 11,1972

King Defeated, Complains of Convention Rule
Generation Rap
Bv Helen and Sue Bottel

COOL DUDE'S SLANG OUTDATED

Dear Rap
I'd like adVIce about my Jackass boyfrtend Thts dude, mltead of askmg me to go to a show says, 'Let's cop a fltck ' He
"digs" me (Ugh')
He calls TV "the tube," and 1s hooked on 1t Instead of 'Yes,
dear," he whoops, "Rtght ON pussycat' " I d laugh except I'm
too embarrassed
He's a Chilhcothe country boy who came to the b1g c1ly and 1s
trymg to be w1th 11, but the words are we1rd, like about 10 years
out of date Should I tell thts )tvln' cowpoke to buzz off or try to
educatehlrn' I hkehunsortof otherwiSe -L I W
Dear L
Sounds like the Chillicothe Kid hasn 't got off h1s buckm'
bronco long enough to see where he's at Smce he embarrasses
you THAT much, you may not be the one to educate hun
He'll probably shake down m time, but if you re gomg to
laugh at hun, I thmk YOU should buzz off and let him fmd
someone who won t ~ SUE

+++
Dear L
Look who s callmg the kettle black' The poor guy, heartng all
your slang, may hope to unpress you w1th goodtes ' he probably
learned from 'the tube Can he help 1t 1f he ptcks outdated stuff
from old re-runs'
Or maybe he enjoys the way he talks
Seerus to me if you really hke th1s fellow, ydu'd see the
PERSON underneath and not be put off by a few un-rhotce
phrases - HELEN

+++

MIAMI BEACH (UPI) Frank W King the ftery leader
of the Oh1o AFL-CIO, pushed as
' Results
hard as he could early today
Ma 10r League
By Umted Press International
agamst the forces of Sen
Naftonal League
George S McGovern but his
(1st game 11 mns)
Los Ang 001 000 201 02- 6 15 0 last lme of defense was broken
Phtla
300 000 010 oo-- 4 10 0 King 1s chrurman of the 153Downtng Brewer (7) M1kkle member Oh10 delegatiOn,
sen {8) Rtchert ( 10) and Ot et z
Reynolds Selma (7) Sc~rce which was spilt down the
(8) Brandon IIll and Bateman mtddle between McGovern and
(8) WP- Rtchert I1 II LP- Sen Hubert H Humphrey
Scarce (0 I) HRs - Mon ey
King challenged the rulmg by
(8th) Dtelz (lsi) Dav s 191
Lawrence F O'Brien, tem(2nd Gamel
Los Ang
000 000 OlD-- I 6 3 porary chatrman of the
Phlla
102 042 OOx- 9 11 0 Democrallc Nat10nal conStrahler Pena 151 Wtlhelm
(7} and Canntlzaro Fryman (3 ventiOn, whtch permttted
9) and Bateman LP- Strahler McGovern's 121 unchallenged
(0 21 HRs- Monlanez (7 th ) Cahforma delegates to vote on
Mota 15th)
the question of seatmg the
San Fran
010 000 22o-- 5 7 I other 150
New York 000 003 too-- 4 7 0 O'Bnen was upheld by the
Barr Johnson (6) McMahon
IBI and Rader Gentry Me convenllon McGovern s full
Graw 181 and Dyer WP- delegatiOn was seated and the
McMahon 13 21 LP- McG raw South Dakota senator was well
151
13
41 HRsFregoso
(5th) McCover
Rader 4th) hl on hts way to a f1rst ballot
-VIctory
SanD ego 010 002 ooo-- 3 9 2
I thmk the nommatwn was
Montreal 002 101 02x- 6 5 I
Arlm 17 9) and Kendall

Linesoores

Corrales ( 1)

Moore

Wal ker

(6) Marshall (7) and McCar
ver Boccabella (7) 1/(PWalker (2 I)
HRs- Co lberl
(18th) Smgleton (5th) Jor
gensen IBihl
(Only games scheduled)
Amencan League

Helen and Sue
Is slang on the way out' For ktds , I mean
I hear more adults usmg 11 than we do Last year about everv
other teen word was 1COol, 1 'freaky, ' 'psyched out/
"groovy, 1 "wetrdo, ' "right on, 1 where 1t's ~t, ' etc Now I
hardly ever use any of these, and I haven 't heard any new words
lately What's happerung ' - MARION
Marton
What's happenmg (I think ) 1s that teens are puttmg off the
old overused words and makmg up the1r own ortgtnal stuff Like,
"Oh fudge and bananas " (mstead of dull old ' damn" etc ) or
"She's a strung-out peanut," mearung kmda freaky
It's fun, mventmg a new expressiOn Who wants to be a
follower' - SUE
Dear Marton
The drug culture and the hipp1e movement mtroduced most
of 1960's slang Now, wtth both dimm1Sh10g aod no new wave m
sight, young people aren't as apt to use those overdone words and
phrases, or seek out new ones
I truly hope you kids haven't gtven up slang It's a VItal and
exc1ting part of our language
Get busy, start mventing - and send us some samples,
please' - HELEN

+++
Dear Rap
I like to go barefoot m the house and outs1de My mother
refuses to let me Says 11 s too dtrty outdoors, and mstde I 11 get
sphnll!rs On rug-rovered floors' What s the harm m gomg
wlthont shoes once m a while • - BAREFOOTED NOT
DearB.N
By us- no harm at aU We think barefoot 1s the only way to
If~ vel - at least around home, and somellllles elsewhere too t!
:iilu can get away w1th 11
~. (Dee,r, B N.'s Mother Let up, and, ,concentrate on more
ilnportant "No-No s" 1) - HELEN AND SUE
" t ,.., , , , , , . , : , , , , , ..

Mtlw
010 000 000- 1 7 I
Mtnn
440 000 OOx- 8 12 0
Stephenson Parsons 121 San
ders (8) and Rodrtguez Perry
LaRoche (8) and Mtfterwal d

WP- Perry (7 8) LP- Siephcn
son (2 21 HR- Darwtn IIOih)
Kan Ctly
000 001 002- 3 6 1
Balltmore 000 020 ooo-- 2 50
Dal Canton Wrtghl (81 and
Ktrkpatnck

Cuellar (7 7) and

Hendrteks WP- Wr lghl II 01
HR- Ptnt el la (Bih l
Chtcago
Cleve

000 001 OOQ-- I 4 0
100 100 OOx- 2 50

Lem ond s
Herrmann

Kealey (7) and
Perry ( 14 7) and

Fosse LP Lemonds (1 2) HRLol tch (lsi)

Texas
Delroll
Slanhouse
Panther (8)
man

000 000 JOQ-- 3 10 0
214 000 Ol x- B11 0
Shell enba ck (61
and Ktng Cole

H1ller (9) and Freehan

WP- Coleman
Sianhouse 1011
(41hl Cash 2
Mtn cher (6th)
New York
Caltl
Kektch
~un son

Ku snyer

I11 71 LPHRs- Norlhrup
(15th &amp; 16t h)
Ktng (4th)

Benne
(7)
and
Wnght (9 II) and
LP- Kek1Ch (8 7)

HRs- McMullen (5th) Swoboda
I 1st)
Boston

100 000 021- 4 9 0

Oakland
100 010 000- 2 8 0
McGlothen Ttanl 191 and
FISk Holtzman Locker 191 and
Duncan WP- McGiothen (2 I)
LP- Hollzman (II 7) HRPetrocel l t (8th)

POP

ENCORE FORA
BEAtrrlFUL ACT
NEW YORK (KFS) - We have noted herem
our mtent1on to recogn1ze a few of the Beaubful
People, but not the so-ralled BP who populate
the places to which they go to get their names m
goSSip colWIUls such as this, to wheedle their
photos mto Women's Wear Druly and mdulge 1n
the strange, emptily aggrandtzmg world whose
reward, IS the same soc1al vacuum from which
they try to escape wtth the help of a press agent
and a symbobc golden alpenstock Instead, we'd
like to celebrate the truly Beautiful People, of
whom there are so few We shan't try to fill a
colwnn dally or weekly w1th nominations One
of these fmest of all really Beautiful People
toddled off this mortal co1l recently, and we
made fleeting mention of hiS !me decency and
marvelous contrtbullons to the theatriCal as
well as hiS personal world
HIS name was Thomas F Carey, a Paullst
prtest who for more than 40 years ran The
Blackfnars Gutld, the very first off-Broadway
theater m New York City Father Tom was a
modest, self~ffae1ug, highly mtelligent and
effective mm1ster to the most difftcult of arts,
the legltunate stage He was a cred1t to the race
of stage-struck cttizens who so often tam! the1r
careers w1th compromise and ego and pursuit of
"vanity" pubbctty
Father Tom sktpped all that He gave hiS
considerable energtes to the proper presentation of his plays w1th the constant search for
the best actors he could fmd Th1s was no mtnor
task constdermg hiS performers were pa1d
nothmg except m expenence Still he was able
through 4tHtome seasons to f1ll his stage at the
Blackfrlars on W 57th St w1th totally obscure
mummers who m tune lit up Broadway stage
and H'wood film marquees , some even hi up the
bigger sk1es of the whole showbiz world We'll
get to them herem
We'd been about to wr1te thts column 10
celebratiOn of Father Tom's remarkably
selfless and successful years when we recetved
a letter from Mrs Palrtcta Mastm Corbutt of
Highland Lakes, N J , whose memortes of
Father Tom Carey tell the tale of thiS
posthumously beautiful career splendidly What
prompted Mrs Corbutt to wr1te to us was the
combination of our decades-long friendship w1th
Father Carey and a N Y newspaper's
dlsmlss8l of his life's journey mto the dramatic
' arts with only passmg noltce that he • d1rected
the Blackfriars GUild of New York "
That was hardly enough to sallsfy Mrs
Corbutt, nor properly to salute Father Tom
''One bnef sentence hardly summed up a life of
dedicahon not only to hiS !ruth and his church
but to the Theater and to the struggling young
actors who gave him their time for nothing
more than a chance to he seen, and the 1deal of

'

stolen by a bad rule," King
fumed after O'Bnen was
upheld 'We lost a very crtttcal
vote tomght, and m a close
vote, 1t's 1rnposstble to play
agamsl a trumped-up deck like
that '
King contended that etther
all the Califorma delegates
should have been allowed to
vote, or none of them He satd if
the 121 McGovern delegates
had not been permitted to vote
on the question, the 150 m
quesllon would have fallen 11
votes short of 1,509--a maJonty
of the convention
• It's pretty tough to play a
ball game when they VIolate
the rule like that," declared the
dimmultve, 6().year-old Toledo
nahve King, one of the most
vtstble men to televtston
audtences Monday mght, controls 1 milhon Oh1o AFL-&lt;:10
members and 79 Oh1o Hum·
phrey votes, the largest bloc
for Humphrey m the nat10n

Today's

''It's mcredtble that a national convention could pernut
1tself to so desecrate 1ts own
rules / 1 h~ satd
Only Monday morning, King
had been the cordial host at an
Ohio caucus breakfast He
welcomed McGovern, smiled
and posed for ptct\D'es wtth
him, and kicked teleVIsiOn
cameramen off the front of the
speaker's platform so all the
delegates could see the prestdentlal candidate
But he also exerc1sed a firm
hand, telllng the senator m the
middle of his speech there
would be no questions from the
audtence
"When I wm thlS nomma·
t1on," McGovern told the Ohio
delegates, ' Frank King IS one
of the first people I'm gomg to
call I'm confident of hts
support"
King sat motionless and
unsmthng, starmg at hts
hands

M•ddl
I
eport' s 1973 Budget Approved
(Contmued from page 1)
mamtenance superVIsor , had mspected the
catch basm and achon will be taken perhaps
before fall
Mrs Brewer also mqUlred about the
avadabthly of feder al funds to help Middleport
Clerk-Treasurer Grate satd that he had wntten
m reference to what funds mtghl be avmlable
and had recetved a large book on the subject
but that he had not yet had tune to study 11
Councilman Fred Hoffman reported that he
had been ad\1Sed b) Congressman Clarence
Mtller that some $50 000 will be avrulable for
Metgs County for plannmg and that he w1ll
adv1se Mtddleport offtclals on the ehg1billly
of the town for any of the overall total
Counc1l approved the June report of Mayor
John Zerkle showmg rece1pts of $1 268 10 for
fmes, fees and merchant pollee collectiOnS
durmg the month
Mayor Zerkle appomted council members
Mrs Jean Morgan and Hoffman to serve on the
Volunteer F1remen Dependent Board
Representmg the ftre department on the board
IHll be Stdney T Russell and John Vroman
Manmng Kiocs has been named the ctllzen

member of the board
A hst of repairs needed at the commumty
pool submitted by Mrs Ruby Vaughan, park
manager, was reVIewed The matters were
referred to Chase for action
Agam conung up for discussiOn was ap·
parent confuSion of molomts upon reaching
the mtersection of Second Avenue and Mill St
Hoffman satd out-of-town people often become
lost at that pomt due to lack of s1gns Mayor
Zerkle referred the matter to the safety
committee which will work out a soluhon of
markmg the route to the brtdge and Pomeroy
Mayor Zerkle disclosed the town IS spending
crmstderable funds m a ptckup servtce for
reSidents Haulers, taking only garbage, leave
other sohd wastes Council was asked to conSider an ordinance to provtde a charge for the
ptckup serv1ce now bemg provtded by the
VIllage
Attendmg the meetmg were Mayor Zerkle,
Clerk Treasurer Grate, Chase, council
members, DaVId Oh!mger, Lawrence Stewart,
Wilham Walters, Mrs Morgan and Hoffman ,
Mrs Brewer, Manley, Byer and Pohce Chtef
Q-emeans

010 000 101 - 3 8 0
010 102 OOx- 4 12 2

JbJ

Voice along Br'Way
BY JACK O'BRIAN

.-

'

presenting wholesome entertamment w1th a
mearungful message, not JUst to Cathohcs, but
to all men, ' wrote Mrs Corbutt
The Blackfrters was perhaps the least
publicized of off-B'way theaters Some of 1ts
early actors like Howard Duff, Gerald10e Page
and Shelley Berman went on to stardom E1leen
Heckart, who starred m many Broadway plays,
most recently to hosannahs m Butterflies Are
Free" (she plays the same role m the new moVIe
starrmg Goldte Hawn ) and Steve McQueen f1rst
came to altenhon of talent scouts by way of
the1r first New York actmg at the Blackfrtars
Father Carey remamed contentedly 10 the
background puthng all his energtes mto the
production of these non-proftt plays
Back m the 40s, before 11 was the "In' thing
to be black, Father Carey presented a play
about the Life of Blessed Marlin de Porres the
Church's ftrst black samt In the early 40s he
also prasented 'Caulkte, ' a drama by a Father
McGlynn whose father 10 earlier turn had been
the prenuere actor of Abe Lincoln roles, whose
dedicallon to Lmcoln legends was so concentrated that the people m the theater
suggested he would never be satisfied unlll he
was shot m a box m Ford's Theater
Frank McGlynn 's pnest son wrote
"Caulkte" from a deeply felt pomt of reverse fantasy - that the domtnant race m the world
was black and the whites were the subserVIent
race, read' caullue" for 'mgger" and you have
the mstant mood of 1ts plot It started wtth
blacks patromzmgty comment10g on whites, or
caulk1es, reversmg all the ugly stereotyptcal
msults, heavy and subtle 'They're cute when
they're babtes, 'for openers, on up through the
most smfully degrading btgotrtes It was a
courageously hne dramatic 1dea And Father
Carey made 11 possible for such a thoughtful,
enhghtenmg nolton to be brought to a
predommantly wh1te theater It was healthy,
not VICious, ms1ghtful, not mcttmg
In the 50s he answered the slanderous ' The
Deputy" w1th a sympathetic portrayal of Ptus
XII
'In the 50s,' Mr Corbult pomted out,
'Father Carey presented th~ theme of aborllon
wtthout a tnle morahstlc denouement, and m
the 70s, he toyed wtth the occult and depleted
what life nught be like m the 90s HIS productions always were tunely, top1cal, albe1t to
smaller audiences 10 recent years, perhaps
because people no longer felt safe out at mghtm
theW 50s
"It seems a shame to let hiS passmg slip by
unnoticed, for w1th h1s posstng the Blackfrlars
Gwld may pass, too, and an era of a certam,
positive, ennobling, uplifting Judeo Christian
theater IS behmd us Please do not let hiS life 's
whole purpose and meanmg fade mto ob·
scurtty "
Mrs Corbutt -you haven 't

Buckeyes like Slowpokes
By LEE LEONARD
MIAMI BEACH (UP! )
The Democratic Nat10nal Con·
vent10n had barely opened
Monday n~ght when the Oh1o
delegation ftrml) estabhshed
1tself as the slowpoke' of
states
The Buckeye delegatiOn had
to ' pass' hve tunes while
members were polled before
finally castmg 118 vote on th e
questton of a challenge to the
South Carolma delegatiOn
The procedure brought back
memortes of two months ago,
when results of another OhiO
elect10n - the Democratic pn·
mary - were pam fully slow m
commg m
Frank W King , the chrur
man of the Oh1o delegahon,
repeatedly asked the secretary
for more tl!lle as the entire
convenllon groaned tis
disapproval at havmg to watt
for the stgmftcant 153 votes to
be cast
'I ve got some new people
who have never been to a
convention
before
It's
unposstble to get a vote,'
complamed King , becommg

trntated at the proddmg from
the rostrum
State Sen Oliver Ocasek of
Akron stood at King s stde his
shirt-tat! slicking out, wearily
lea!mg through the 20 pages of
ballots for the delegation
The Buckeye delegatiOn even
got a Jibe from CBS-TV, where
Walter Cronktle wryly ob
served that ' Ohto makes more
addmg machmes than any
place m the country The great
Nat10nal Cash Regtsler Co 1s
located there But apparently
no one from there ts m the
delegalion "
For a lime 1t appeared that
Kmg
was
dehberatel)
Withholding Oh10 s results unt1l
a readmg could be obtamed on
the full convenhon vote
' There were no shenarugans
or anylhmg/ Ocasek satd
We had a problem because of
sheer numbers, and we have
four different delegatiOns to be
polled "
Ocasek explamed that at
ftrst, only two people were
c~rculatmg the roll call hsts
among the 153 delegates Each
delegate had to check off on the

WIN AT BRIDGE

sheet
Soon, four people were ctrculatton, but that dido 'I help mat·
ters much
By 4 30 am , Ohto was still
at the tail end, w1th King askmg for more tl!lle and Cronkite
proclaunmg Ohio as the "state
which takes lon~est to count
1ts votes '

Market Report
PT PLEASANT
LIVESTOCK SALES CO
PT PLEASANT, W VA
Saturday, July 8, 1972
HOGS- t75to 220 28 to 28 70,
Heav1es 241o26 90 , Lights 26 50
to 28, Fat Sows 22 to 23 60,
Boars 22 to 22 70, Pigs 18 to
21 75, Stock Shoats 25 to 30
CATILE - Steers 31 to
38 25, Heifers 28 to 29 Fat
Cows 23 to 25, Canners 20 10 to
2280, Bulls 26 to 33, Stock
Cows and Calves 200 to 375,
Stock Steers 32 to 35 , Stock
Heifers 27 to 84 50, Stock Steer
Calves 36 to 42 50, Stock Hetfer
Calves 33 to 38 25
VEAL CALVES - Tops 53,
Seconds 52 70, Medium 51 75 to
51 90, Common &amp; Heav1es 48 to
49 30, Culls 45 tlr47

Phillies Split Twinbill With LA

S~r£o~!!Jltk

By NED..' HERSHBERG
UPI Sports Wnter
Paul Owens named to
replace Frank Lucchesi as
manager of the Phtladelphta
Plnll1es Monday saw hts club
drop the opener of a IWI-fllght
doubleheader 6-4 m 11 mnmgs,
to the Los Angeles Dodgers
The Phtlltes came back to wm
the nightcap, 9-1
Owens, also the club's gener
al manager became the ftrsl
double duty executive m the
National League smce the late
Branch Rtcke) He promises
the team a dose of sprmg
trauung m July We re gomg

UPI Sports Wrtler

NEW YORK (UPI)- Frank Lucchesi ptcked up the phone
He was still at home m Philadelphia and by glancing at his
watch, he noticed the t1rne was 9 20 a m
Paul owens, the general manager of the PhtWes, was on the
other end of the lme Owens and Lucchesi are a bout as close as
two baseball men can be It was Owens who suggested to Bob
Carpenter, the Phtllies' owner, that Lucchesi be given a chance
to manage the b1g club ongmally m 1970 after the warm,
congemalllttle ctgarsmoklng San Franciscan had piloted minor
league entr1es for 19stratghtyears, 14 of whtch were spent m the
Phtllles' cham
' Frank, can you get to the park by 10' Mr Carpenter and I
want to talk to you," wd Paul Owens over the pjlone to LuccheSI
'I'll be right there," was the reply
Frank Lucchesi did some thinking after he hung up
Owens had sa1d Carpenter wished to speak with hun, also
Maybe somethmg was up That was always a posstbllity because
theclubwasm last place and not doing well at all
Arrives al Rarl&lt;
Frank LuccheSI amved at the ball park a few minutes before
10 and he was m the designated off1ce by 10 on the button Car·
penter was talkmg on the phone, Owens was busy m his own
offlce, talking With Dallas Green, the Phils' farm director
Carpenter fmlshed hts conversation on the phone after Lucchesi and Owens joined hllll m hill off1ce, and he spoke firSt
• Frank, I got you m here to tell you we're just gomg to have to
make a managerial change," sa1d the PhUiles' owner, speakmg
slowly and w1th some difftculty
'Th1s IS a very difftcult thing for me to do I appreciate your
tremendous loyalty, all the thmgs you've done for the club and
the orgamzallon Paul, here, Ill gomg to take over the club for the
rest of the year Genl!fally, when we let go our managers, we
make a clean break But we want you to stay w1th us if you like
We'd 11~ you to work with Paul, evaluatmg players You know,
of course, you get your entire salary no matter whether you
dectde to stay w1th us or not We'd like you to remam on, but
that's entirely up to you "
Frank Lucchesi IS Italian and emoltonal Very emoltonal
Outside his fanuly, the Phllhes are his whole life
He thought about hiS wife, Cathy, his three chlldren, Fran,
Bnan and Karon, and about all the years he had given the
Phllltes, and he broke down and wept
There Is nothing In the world wrong w1th a 45-year-old man
weepmg but 1t can be a dJSturbmg sight, especially when there IS
no way to comfort h1rn
Stare at Floor
Bob Carpenter and Paul Owens stared at the floor What could
they say• What could they do'
Frank Lucchesi composed hllllSel! soon and addressed the
Phlllles' owner
"Look, Mr Carpenter, there are no hard feellngs," he sa1d
"I'm JUSt hurt I've worked for you people, and you're great to
work for There'll be no brtdges burnt behind me I tr1ed to do all
1 could Not one tune m three years dtd I ever come to you and
moan and groan about any of the material I had to work w1th Not
once d1d I ever complain about the ktds
Bob Carpenter nodded
I reahze that," he sa1d
The three of them, Carpenter, Owens and Lucchesi sat m the
offtce and talked for nearly 45 minutes Lucchesi sa1d he'd like to
constder Carpenter's offer to remam as 'a special assignment
man " Later, he accepted the job
,
Frank Lucchesi made 11 plain he'd like to manage somewhere
In the majors again Carpenter sa1d he understood and wouldn't
stand m the way any time an opporturuty opened up
Now, though, 11 was time for another meetmg With the news
med1a The change would have to be announced
Frank Lucchesi conducted himself superbly at the news
conference, although thmking about h1s wife and ktds at one pomt
after about20 mmutes mto the sess10n, he broke down agam and
the tears came back for everyone m the room to see
Trymg to be helpful to Lucchesi, Larry Shenk, the Phllltes
pubhc relations director, told the assembled news people that 11
was enough
Luccbesl Protests
No, no, " Lucchest protested 'I m gonna fmJSh tl I never
ducked a queshon from the press and I m not gonna start now
I'm gonna stay here and answer aU the questions "
He dtd Then he went down to his own offtce tn the clubhouse
and answered many more whtch came tn over the phone
Later, hours later he was leaVIng the ball park and a swarm of
kids gathered around him
' Can we have your autograph' Can we have your autograph ''
they pleaded
' You mean you still want 11 even though I'm not the manager
anymore'" Lucchesi asked
' More than ever now," sa1d one of the kids
Lucchesi stood there patiently and stgned for them all
Then he went home to see his wife and chtldren
He didn 't stay long, enough
•
The Phillies had a mght game w1th the Dodgers and some of ;
the Los Angeles wnters had satd they wanted to talk w1th him
He promised them lle'd be back
And he was
That's Frank Lucchesi for you

'-.J

to have to work more- w1th
some htltmg , ptlching and
some enthustasm we can have
some fun
Wllhe Montanez drove m f1ve
runs Wltll a smgle, tnple and
homer to lead Phtladelphta to
the1r first VICtory under Owens
after the Dodgers scored tw1ce
m the top of the lith to wm the
opener
A towermg sacrtftce fly to
center by Wes Parker brought
m Wtlhe Dav1s w1th the WlDnmg run m the first game and
pmchhttter BtU Buckner
delivered an msurance run
w1th a smgle
1

But Woody Fryman earned a
spht for Philadelphia m the
second game w1th a SlX-htl
effort, lostng h1s b1d for a
shutout m the e1ghth on Manny
Mota's fifth home run The
Vlclory was only the lhtrd for
Fryman agamst nme losses
In other Nattonal League
games," San Franctsco edged
New York, 5-4 and Montreal
defeated San Dtego, 6-3, m the
only games scheduled
In the Amencan League
Kansas City mpped Baltl!llore
3-2 Detrmt defeated Texas &amp;-3,
Mtnn esota
wht!}ped
Mtlwaukee 8 1 Cleveland

Cubs, Kiwanis, Yankees
Advance In KC Tournament
The 14th Annual Kyger C1 eek
Ltttle League tournament got
underway Monda) mght w1th
last year's wmner the New
Haven Cubs, defeatmg the
Galltpohs Yankees 10-3 the Pt
Pleasant KlWam s defeated
Green 51, and the Pomeroy
Yankees clobbered
the
Galhpohs Athlettcs 23 2

fa nn ed ten and \\alked etght
wh1le hlltmg two batters K
Jackson was the losmg hurler
C Zus~an led the Cubs at the
plate wtth a smgle and double
wh1le T Rtchard had two
smgles

Second Game
Pt Pleasa nt K1wums N1bert
"en! the dtstance and gave up
Ftrst Game
but two smg les both to Green's
R Buzza1 d of the Cubs Chuck Bu111S Mi ckey Graham
hurled a sparkhng one-hiller "as the lose r
allowmg only a first mnmg Por ter led PI Pleasant at the
tnple to the Gallt pol1s plate w1th th1 ee smgles 1n three
Yankees M Wea\C r He trips

1hlrd Game
G1 eg Sm1th contmued the
dommance of p1tch mg mto the
tlnrd game as he allowed on lv
one tu t a flrst mmng smgle to
the Galhpohs Athtellcs Jeff
Lew1s Lew1s wa s also the
los mg p1tcher
P Ph1lhps and Steve Ltltle
led lhe Yanks at the plate wtth
three smgles eac h
In tom ght s act10n Rac1ne
goes agamst Adda\llle at 6 the
Galhpol1s Cubs play R1plel
Dante! Boone at 7 15 and at
8 30 the Pomeroy G1ants go
agamst Btd~ ell

Indians Survive hut Barely
1he Reds gave the un
defeated lndtans the closes t
battle th1s year before losmg
10 9 wh en Rt ch Hovattor
smgted home Mark Venoy \\ho
had tr1pted m the SIXth frame
for the wmmng tally In other
Middlepor t Boys Leugue
aclton Monday the Mets
shutout the Braves 3-0
Mtke Hmdy p1tched the
dtslance for the Indtans
fanmng etghl and watkmg ftve

George Gun1 went all the way
for the Reds fanmng seve n and
watkmg three
H1tters fm the !nd1ans were
M Venoy wtth three smgles
and a tnple 1any Ven oy two
Singles Ketth Lynch, a trtple
Kevm Lee a double, and Hmdy
Crestn Pratt, Terry Gardner,
and Hovatter each had smgles
Coltecling sa fettes for the
Reds were Ronme Casc1 .,.tth
two smgles and a tnple Carl

Carm1chael \\llh two smgles,
T Kennedy and two smgles,
M1ke Ma gnotta had • double,
and Stewart and Gum each had
a smgle

In last Fnday s actwn 11 was
reported that T Venoy went
lhe distance 1n the lndtans
wm Instead he was relieved m
the second frame by Rtch
Hovattor who got the wm The
lnd1ans defeated Harnsonv tlle
13 7 last Saturday

LOSE 20 POUNDS
IN TWO WEEKS!

The Mets Greg Bec ker
hurled a hoe shutout allowmg
on!) two smgles whtle str1kmg
out 12and walkmg three Smith
pitched for the Braves and also
fanned 12 and walked three

Famous U S Women Skt Team Dtel

H1tters for Coac h Ed
Stobart s Mets were Ketth Doss
wtth a smgle and two tnples,
Terry Scott a double, and
Edd1e Stobart • a smgle
Wayland and Ebersbach each
had a smgle for the Braves

Dunng th e non snow off season the U S Women 5
Alp me Skt Team members go on the Skt Team d et to
lose 20 pound s tn two weeks That s rtght - 20 pounds tn 14
days 1 The basts of the dtef •s chemt cal food act ton and was
dev1sed by a fam ous Co lorado phys 1c 1an e~pec1ally t or the
U S Sk t Team Normal energy ts ma ntatned (very tm
portant 1 ) w htle redvc tng You keep full - no star vatton
- because the d tet ts des gned thai way It s a dtet that 1S
easy to follow w heth er you work travel or st ay at home
Th1s ts honestly a fanta stica lly succPsstul dtef If 1t
weren t the U S Women s Ski Team woul dn t be per
mttfed to use tfl RtghP So g tve yourself the same break
the U S Skt Team gets Lose wetg ht the sc enftflc proven
way Even tf you ve frted all the other d te fs you owe t to
yourself t o try th e U S Women s Ski Team 0 et That ts 1f
you rea ll y do want to lose 20 pounds tn two weeks Order
today Tear tht s out as a r emtnder
Send only SZ 00 ($2 25 for Ru sh Serv tcel -

0 K - to

Cash tS

Sk o Team Del P 0 Box 15493 San Otego

Caltfornta 92 l i S Don t order unless you expect to lose 20
pounds tn two weeks 1 Because tha t s what 1he Skt Team
0 et wtll dol

II

. K62

lead of the heart Jac k The
deuce was played from dum
mv and Helen took he1 ace

• K83
. KQJ976
WESf
EAST
. AJ 107
.Q8 &gt;2
. JI095l
+1 07
t 96542
. 82
... 1053

She studted awhile and de
c1ded that the contract could
only be defeated tf AI held
the rtght cards 1n spades
Then she led her queen of
spades
SOUTH (D)
South played tow and AI
• K64 3
dropped the 10 Helen con
• Qs 14
tmued w1th the etght and
+ AQJ
when
declarer ducked agam
. A4
AI
was
able to play hts seven
North South vulnerable
and leave Helen on lead for
West North East South another spade play The deI NT. fense had four spade tncks
Pass
3NT
Pass Pass
and declarer a headache
Pass
• Beautiful spade play
Jpcumg lead- ¥ J
AI ' sa td Helen
What spade play • ' re
Bl Osw,1ld &amp; Jam es Jacobv pl Jed AI l have to confess
I d1d not fmd the seven of
Dunn g 11e co urse of then spades unt1l triCk three "
shot I m ,, 1age the late AI (NEWSPAPER ENTfRPRISE ASSN )
and Helen Sobel dtd not play
much bndge together After
all Helen was wmmn g tour
naments and AI was dtrect- The h1ddmg has been
mg them Perhaps some peo West North East South
pie blame lhetr dtvorce on
.t.
Pass
the hands (hey dtd pla y to Pass 31 .._,
Pass
gether
?
Pass
5.
Pass
If so t h1s hand 1s not a You South hold
case m pmnt They defended • AJ543 • K9763 t VOid ... Ql07
11 as well as a hand can be What do you d o now'
defended
A-B1d hve d1amonds You
The game was r u b b e r have t rem e nd u us d1str1 but1on
,bndgc and AI and Helen held and want to be 1n s1x or maybe
the bad cards th at each one seven
cla tm ed to hold most of the
TODAY S QUESTION
ttme
Your partner contmues to f1 ve
AI got off to I he n orm al l tcatts What do you do •1ow?

.A

I.

4.

In~ Rio

Grande Summer '72

RIO GRANDE - Two
courses 10 early childhood
educatwn, a readmg-sktlls
development program and the
only Outdoor EducatiOn
Workshop of 1ls kind m Ohto,
htghhght the Summer '72
program for second term at
Rio Grande College

adults mcrease rate and
comprehensiOn 10 readmg Dr
Joavenell McNealy, the course
mstructor , has a Readmg
Spectallst certiftcat10n from
West V1rgm1a
• The program w1ll p1ck up
each person at hiS mdlvtdual
read10g level For a less-thanaverage
reader, the program
Second term reglStrallon IS
Monday, July 17, m the Paul R w1ll be remedial, whtle for the
Lyne cenll!r Courses"w1ll be betoor-than-average reader the
offered m a total of 14 areas program may be advance
, The
early
childhood
Each person wtll take a
educallon courses, the first sertes of tests at the start of the
offered by Rio Grande College program to measure a number
will enable elementary 8chooi of skills related to readmg
teachers to receiVe \n ad~ Tentatively, sessions will be
dttional certiftcation by the held Monday through ThursOh10 Deparbnent of Education day, w1th elementary sesswns
for the prllll8ry grades, kin- 10 the mornmg, secondary m
dergarten through third grade the afoomoon and adult In the
Shirley While, director of the evening
Snow White Nursery school,
The Outdoor Education
will teach the two courses, Worksh~, mcluding 10 days 10
which can be taken at the same the Quentico - Superior Canoe
time She holds a masoor's Country, runs August 10
degree m early childhood through 23 The program
education from Boston's stresses ecology and man's
Wheelock College
1mpact on his environment
The readtng-skllls
Courses will also be offered
development program is aimed In economics, education,
at helping elementary and English, history, math,
secondary school students and physical education, physics,

The unbeaten Ttgers edged
the upse l·mmded Gtants 2- J m
seven 1nn1ngs 1n Pomeroy
Boys League act10n Monday
The Ttgers scored the wm
mng run m the bottom of the
seventh when they had the
bases loaded w1th two out and a
ball h1t back to the pitcher was

)

FIRESTONE
AIR CONDITIONER

pohtlcal sctence, psychology,
soctal sc1ence and speech For
more mformation about the
second ll!rm of Summer '72,
contact the Admissions and
Records Off1ce

$119

SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Terry
Holton remed Mtghly Game 10
front near the finish to win the
featured $1,200 Pace at Sctoto'
Downs Monday n~ght by one
and one-half lengths over MISS
Shady Mont Bye Bye Beau
was third
Mtght Game was timed m
2 02 3-5 and returned $9 40,
$5 20 and $3 80. Miss Shady•
Mont paid $5 20 and $3 110, whlle:
Bye Bye Beau returned $5 40 :
The 1-9 ninth race qulnella
was worth f41 40
:
The 3-2 nightly double
pairing The Tourist and Guy.
Virtue paid $1110
' '
The 4,632 harness racing
wagered $243,772
•

The Mark V Polar Bears
ran over Adolph s Da1ry Valley
125 73 m the Middleport In
dependent Basketball League
Monday mght wh•te m other
ac t10n
th e
M1ddlepo1l
Department Store mopped up
the Fnendly Tavern 1116-56, and
The Dally Sentmel remamed
unbeaten tn e1ght games w1th a
83 81 edge over the PomerO)
National Bank
In the first game 6.(l Dox1e
Walters rtpped m 45 pomts and
tea mrna te Ron
Fer gus on
added 36 for Mark V Steve
Dunfee had 34 to lead Adolph s
wh1le Tommy little Doxte
Walters had 20
Arthur Clark led Mtddleport
Department wtth 34 while Dave
F1fe added 23 Hap Harrts led
th 16
h F dl T
t e nen Y avern Wl
Bob RitChie dnlled tn 31
whtle Denms E1chmger had 22
to lead the Senlmel over the
Bankers who were topped by
J1m Garnes \Hih 30 and Btll
Vaughan wtlh 25
BoxScores
MARK V (125 )-D Walters
22 1 45 Boggs 6-0·12, Rn
,n
Ferguson 16-4·36 M Sayre """
10, R Sayre 11-0 22
ADOLPH S I 73) T
Walters 9 2 20 Dunfee 17-0-34,
D T)ree 4 210 S Prtce 5-0-10,
Cra1g 4 2 10
Second Game

5,000 BTU &amp; UP

HUNTER &amp;GENERAL ELECTRIC
•

FROM

1

each

and fannmg nme

Mtke I.arkms and ftm Kuhn
paced 1 uppers Ptams w1th a
stngle and double each while

LEADING
BATTERS ~\I
MaJor League Leaders
By Untied Press International
leadmg Batters
Nat1onal League
g ab r h

pet
Cdno Hou 72 287 56 99 34S
Mota LA 59 18S 30 63 341
Sngu tln P1t 71 274 34 93 339
Alou St L 68 260 Jl 84 323
Oltver PI 74 305 47 98 321
Garr All 76 309 49 9'1 320
Brock Sl L 75 321 39 102 31 8
Lee SD
67 249 35 79 317
Wilms Ch 76 303 48 94 31 0
Cl mnte Ptf 62 252 46 78 310
Amencan League
g ab r h pel
Shnb lm KC
Pntela KC ~~ ~~~ ~~ ~~ ~~~
Rud t Oak 72 293 48 92 314
OttS KC
73 275 33 85 309
Berr y Cal 51 l76 22 54 307
May Cht 75 264 46 79 299
F sk 8os 57 195 38 58 297
Carew Mtn 74 278 28 82 295
Epstn Oak 74 244 38 72 295
Oliver Cal 76 302 33 88 291
Mabry KC 75 247 24 72 291
Home Runs
Naltonal League Bench Cm
and Kmgman SF 21 Aaron
AI and Colbert SD 18
Slargell Ptll 17
Amencan League Allen Ch1

17 Cash Del 16 Jackson Oak
15 Epstem Oak 14 Dun can
Oak 13
Runs Balled In
Nat10nal League Bench Ctn
63 Ktngman SF 58 Starg el l
Ptll 56 Ol11er Ptll 55 Colbert
SD S4
Amencan League Allen Ch
57 Mayberry. KC 46 OJtver
Cal May, Chi Banda and
Epste tn Dak 44
Nal1onat r!~c:~~g Nolan Ctn
12 2 Seaver NY 11 5 Carlton
Phtl 116 Jenktns Cht 117

Detro.t 8 Texas J

Nahonal League

East

w I

pet g b

48 27
44 32

640

40 35

S33 8
532 8

Pttlsburg h
New York
St Lou ts
Ch tcago

41

~ontreal

33 4J

Phdade!phta

36

1.7 51
West

579

41/:z

434 15 1 ?
211;1

346

Ca l tfornta 4 New York J
Bos ton 4 Oakland 2

Today's Probable P1lche1"1
(All T1mes EDT I

Boston ! Pattm 58) at Oak
land ! Horlen 2 OJ 1l p m
New York ( Peterson 7 10) at

Cal tlornta (May 2 61 11 p m

Mtlwaukee { Lockwood 4 9} at
Mmnesota (Woodson 5 8) 8 JO

w 1 pet g b pm
592
Texas

Cmc tnnatt
Houston
Los Angeles

45 31
45 33
41 37

Atlanta

577
526

I
5

Detro t

I Broberg

5 71

at

6 7)

(Ttmmerman

36 41 462 10

Ch cago 1Bahnsen II 9) at
z Cleveland ITtdrow 58) 7 30
San D ego
29 49 372 ' 17 pm
Mondays Results
Kansas Ctly I Drago 7 71 at
Sa n Fran c sea 35 A8

13

422

Los Angeles 6 Ph Ia 4 sf
Ph tla 9 L os Angeles 1 2nd
San Fran 5 New York 4
Montrea l 6 San D ego 3

Balf tmore ( Palmer 11 4) 7 30

pm

10t11y games scheduled)
McPherson led Coolville \\tlh
Today s Probable Ptlchers
two smgles and a double wh1le
IAll Ttmes EDT)
San
Franctsco
(8ryan l6 4) at
Clark had a home run and Reed
New York {Koosman 6 3) 8 05
and Ca r son each had a smg:le pm
In Saturdays game Larkms
Atlan ta INoekro 8 7) al Sf
Louts
[San fo rm 4 6) 9 p m
suu ted for Tuppers Plmns and
Pttt sbu rg l
lt s 7 4) at
\\as relieved by wmmng pit- (tnctnna t I Brl{Ei
l tngham
4 9)
cher Goebelm th1rd who was B 05 p m
San Otego ( Ktr by 6 7) at
~e lieved by E1chmger tn the
M ontreal (Torrez 9 SJ 8 05
fourth They combmed fo r 12 pm
\\luffs and 10 walks
Los Ange les (Sutton 10 4) a t
Greg Buller and Har t p1lched Phtladelph ta (Carlton II 6) 7 35
for Stewart and st1uck out mne pm
Hous ton ( Forsch 4 3 and
\\htle giVIng up seven walks Wtl son 55} at Chtcago ( Hands
Spencer led the \\mners at 6 6 and Hooton 7 7) 1 30 p m
Wednesday s Games
the plate w1th two doubles and Sa n Franct
sco at New York
a s1n gle, Goebel had t\\ o Houslon at Chtcago
doubles Bow en had one Sa n D1ego at Montreal ntght
double, and Kuhn l arkms and Los Angeles at Phda n tg ht
At lanta at St Lout s nt ght
E1chmger all had one smgle Pdtsbur gh at Ctn ct ntght
Tramer had a fourth mnmg
stn gle for Stewarts only hit
Afner1can League
East
CoaC!lDenms Newland 's
w I pet g b
Tuppers Plams club now 51
Detro1t
41 34 547
\\111 play Wedn esday at Balltmore
40 35 533
35 36 493 4
Stewart and Fnday agamst Boston
New York
35 37 486 4 1;:~
unbeaten Coolvtlle B ut Cleveland
J1 42 432 B 2
Tuppers Plmns
Milwaukee
19 44 397 II
West
w I pel g b
Oakland
48 28 632
TOP QUALIFIER
Ch cage
43 34 558
ST CLAIRSVILl E, Oh10 Mmnesota
38 36 514
( UPI) ~Helen Kirkland of
Kansas Ctly 39 37 513
36 42 462
Cadtz was top qualtfter today Ca ltfornta
Texas
33 44 429
for the start of the state
Monday s Results
Women s Amateur Golf M nnesota 8 Mt lwa ukee 1
Tournament at the Belmont Kan City 3 Ba lt1more 2
Htlls Country Club here
Mtss Ktrkland, runnerup m
the 1969 tourney held at Mans
fteld carded a 40-37 77 to take
meda hst honors over the field
PHONE 992 2342
of 80 en tnes vymg for slots m
match play whtch got un
derwa) today

Wedne5day s Games
Boston at Oakland

New York at Ca~tf ntght
Milwaukee at Mtnn n tght
Texas at Detrott ntght
Ch tcago at Cleve ntght

Kan Ctly at Ball, ntghl
International

League

Stand~ngs

By Untted Press lnternattonll
W L Pet GB

Char les ton
LOUISVIlle
Ttd ewater
Rtchmond

46
45
42
39

31
36

556 J

-4()

512 61!2

40

Toledo
Rochester
Syracuse

.494 8

39 40
39 42
39 42

494 8
481 9
481 9

507

Penmsula
31 49 388 16111
Monday's Games

I Exh1bol1on)
AI anla 3 IL All Stars I
( No
regu la r
scheduled)

games

re

BEGIN WORKOUTS
HIRAM Oh1o (UP!)- Some
50 rooktes and veterans begm
workouts at the Cleveland
Browns trammg camp here to
day wtth second-year coach
N1ck Skortch emphamzmg a
runnmg game
Mormng and afternoon
prachces are slated through
Fr~day for the early birds, who
reported Monday The rest of
the veterans are to show up
Sunday for the start of full-tlrne
dr11ls Monday

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.

Blass Ptll 10 2 Sutton LA and
Cleveland St L 10 4
American
Det

14 6

RESULTS In
Ohw Valley Little League
Results
Rto Grande 8 Vmton 5
Cenll!rville 5 B1dwell 2
Addavllle 12 Salem 6
Vmton 12 Salem 10 (July 7)

$18 95

I

Brussels, Bel~um, .Is the
headquarters of tbe Euro;
pean Common Martet

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL

Euc

Ed

ROBERT HOEFLICH
Ctty Ed•lor
Published dally excepf
Saturday by The Ohto Valley
Pub lt shmg Company
111
Courf St
Pomeroy , Oh o
"S 769 Bustnes.s Off ce Phone
992 ~156 Ed ttor1al Phone 992
21S7
Second class postage patd at
Pomeroy Oh io
National adverftstng
represenlaltve
Bottlnelh
Gallagher Inc 12 Eut .t2nd
St New York City New York
Subscription rates
De
livered by ¥carr•er where
al!lal lable SO cents per week
By Motor R:oute where carr1er
serv tc e not available One
month Sl 7S 8y matl In Oh10

League
lolrch
Perry Clev 14 7

Wood Ch 12 9 Palmer Ball
11 4 Ryan Cal 11 5 Coleman
Del and Holtzman Oak II 7
Bahnsen Ch 11 9

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

INSURANCE · BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS

Meigs County's Oldest and Largest
Insurance Agency

Weputalot• it.
You can pula lot in it.
What you can put in: over 60 cubic
feet. Put the rem seat down and lhere s
60 6 cub tc feet of corrymg space For com
portson VW Squarebo ck and Vega
Ka.~!!!'_bad both

g vc you a btl ove 1
50 cubtc feet

The basic $2265 * model.
Its the deal chotce far people
won t on economy

who

cor that cernes more

anci

w

va

And there s prectse rod and pmton
s!eeflng wh ch 15 10rma ly found only n

some o f the more expens ve sports cars

Some Detailo.
1 The ltfl gate swmgs
vp and out of the way
2 The rea r pa ssenger
w ndows Ilip ope n
3 The spare ltre doesn t
tol:.e up any load oom
b ecause 11 ha s tiS own well

2000cc Overhead Cam
Engine, II s rugged econam cal
peppy-and standard equ pment
A 4 speed floor mo unled all
synchromesh tronsm SS tOn 1s also

under the floor And be neath

standard

11 all the rear suspenston

Better 1deo for safety. . buckle up!

1s spec tally d estgned for

The Squ~re Option. Tho I dtSt ncttve wood s ded

• St cker Pr ce E~clude~ dealer
.oreporot on c h arge~ f any

dei1 ~a t on
and la~ es

ch arge~

1 tie

wagon look plus wheel covers spec•ol tnm and more
N o o ther economy wag on oilers anythmg ltke tl

p,
IS

FORD PINTO

ce w lh the Squtre Oplton $2479 ' The luggage rock
$45 53 exira The wh•le s dewoll lores $28 00

FORD DIVISION

See Your Ford Dealer.

One veer SH 00

Stx months S7 2S
Three
months $4 SO Subscr1Pf10n
prtce Includes Sunday Times
Sent me l

'

front DISc Brakes. Stondo•d

load carrymg

KEITH GOBLE FORD, INC. 461 s. Third st, Middleport, Ohio
\

8

pm

Wagon: $2265*

thrown wtld to ftrst
Bob McGlure hurled the f1rst
SIX mmngs for the Ttgers.
glvmg up three walks and
fanmng 12 Dale Browmng
came on to p1tch the seventh
fanmng one and walkmg none
Browmng also had the T1gers'
only two h1ts, both smgles
Brtan Hamtlton started on
the h1ll for the Gtants and
p1tched a brtlhant game before
havtng to leave m the seventh
due to the s1x~nmng per week
rule Jeff Grueser and
Wtlhams reheved 1n the
seventh They together fanned
16 and walked seven
Httt.ers for the G1ants was
Hamtlton w1th a tnple and
home run, whiCh went over the
newly erected fence , and
Grueser WIth two smgles

20" FANS
START

takmg Coolville A Fnday 9.()
and Stewart 14 2 Both games
were at Tuppers Platns
Steve Goebel hurled for
Tuppers Plams Frtday aga10st
Coolv1lle A fanned 15 and
walked SIX McPherson pttched
fo r Coolv11le allowmg one walk

MIDDLEPO RT DEPT
STORE (1061- Mltchell 5-0-10
Clark 17-0-34 Bartrum 8-3 19
", F B
3Cremeens 4~~
r urney 1•
5 Wern er 4..(h'l, Ftfe 11·1-23
FRIENDLY TAVERN (56)
_ H bb d 5-0-IO Hams 7•2.
U ar
16, Crawford 6-0-12, Adams 2 1
5 Eynon J-0-2, Morgan 5-1-11
Third Game
DAII Y SENTINEL (83) Rtlchte 13-5-31 Douglas 32-8
Rd Ferguson 6-2-14, Chtlds 4-08, Etchmger 9-4 22
POM NAT BANK (81 ) Garnes H 2 30 Vaughan 12 325 W1se 9-0-18 Chafm 2-0-4
Nelson 2 0-4
1

Greg Winebrenner boomed a
th ree run homer 1n the f1rst
tnmn g Greg Batley ftm
Spe ncer Don Etch mge ( and
Plul Bowen ull had one smgle

Tuppers Pla1ns won tw o
games over the weekend

Cleve land 2 Chtcago 1

lnt~rnattonal

-or a wagon that costs less The wrute

rw.
•'

I,

Big Dox
Pops in
'
45 Pts.

Ma1or League Standings

By Untied Press

stdewoll t res lshown here I are $28 00

95

PRICES

Tuppers Plains Wins 2

Giants Edged 2-l

Miscue Turns Out a Beaut!
Unique Workshop Planned
.9
NOKTH

the etghth and advanced on smgled off losmg p1tcher Steve
Gary Maddox sacn F1ce before Arhn who gave up only five
Spe1er s game-wmnmg h1t
h1ls m the contest as he
Jun Fatrey s stxth mmng dropped hts mnth game m 16
pmch·htl smgle drove home dccts1ons Tim Foh drew a
Bob Bailey w1th what proved to walk and Fa1rey's h1t went to
be lhe wmmng run as Montreal shallow cen ter field to break a
defeated San Dtego Ba1ley 3-3 l1e

edged Chtcago, 2-1 Boston
downed Oakland, 4-2, and
Ca hforma beat New York, 4-3
Chns Speter 's s1ngle to
center field 1n the etghth mnmg
drove m two runs to gtve San
Franctsco a wm over the
faltertng New York Mets
Pinch-/utter Jllll Howarth and
Bobby Bonds smgied to open

�.
2-The Daily ~ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , July 11, 1!112

3- The Daily ~ntinel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, July 11,1972

King Defeated, Complains of Convention Rule
Generation Rap
Bv Helen and Sue Bottel

COOL DUDE'S SLANG OUTDATED

Dear Rap
I'd like adVIce about my Jackass boyfrtend Thts dude, mltead of askmg me to go to a show says, 'Let's cop a fltck ' He
"digs" me (Ugh')
He calls TV "the tube," and 1s hooked on 1t Instead of 'Yes,
dear," he whoops, "Rtght ON pussycat' " I d laugh except I'm
too embarrassed
He's a Chilhcothe country boy who came to the b1g c1ly and 1s
trymg to be w1th 11, but the words are we1rd, like about 10 years
out of date Should I tell thts )tvln' cowpoke to buzz off or try to
educatehlrn' I hkehunsortof otherwiSe -L I W
Dear L
Sounds like the Chillicothe Kid hasn 't got off h1s buckm'
bronco long enough to see where he's at Smce he embarrasses
you THAT much, you may not be the one to educate hun
He'll probably shake down m time, but if you re gomg to
laugh at hun, I thmk YOU should buzz off and let him fmd
someone who won t ~ SUE

+++
Dear L
Look who s callmg the kettle black' The poor guy, heartng all
your slang, may hope to unpress you w1th goodtes ' he probably
learned from 'the tube Can he help 1t 1f he ptcks outdated stuff
from old re-runs'
Or maybe he enjoys the way he talks
Seerus to me if you really hke th1s fellow, ydu'd see the
PERSON underneath and not be put off by a few un-rhotce
phrases - HELEN

+++

MIAMI BEACH (UPI) Frank W King the ftery leader
of the Oh1o AFL-CIO, pushed as
' Results
hard as he could early today
Ma 10r League
By Umted Press International
agamst the forces of Sen
Naftonal League
George S McGovern but his
(1st game 11 mns)
Los Ang 001 000 201 02- 6 15 0 last lme of defense was broken
Phtla
300 000 010 oo-- 4 10 0 King 1s chrurman of the 153Downtng Brewer (7) M1kkle member Oh10 delegatiOn,
sen {8) Rtchert ( 10) and Ot et z
Reynolds Selma (7) Sc~rce which was spilt down the
(8) Brandon IIll and Bateman mtddle between McGovern and
(8) WP- Rtchert I1 II LP- Sen Hubert H Humphrey
Scarce (0 I) HRs - Mon ey
King challenged the rulmg by
(8th) Dtelz (lsi) Dav s 191
Lawrence F O'Brien, tem(2nd Gamel
Los Ang
000 000 OlD-- I 6 3 porary chatrman of the
Phlla
102 042 OOx- 9 11 0 Democrallc Nat10nal conStrahler Pena 151 Wtlhelm
(7} and Canntlzaro Fryman (3 ventiOn, whtch permttted
9) and Bateman LP- Strahler McGovern's 121 unchallenged
(0 21 HRs- Monlanez (7 th ) Cahforma delegates to vote on
Mota 15th)
the question of seatmg the
San Fran
010 000 22o-- 5 7 I other 150
New York 000 003 too-- 4 7 0 O'Bnen was upheld by the
Barr Johnson (6) McMahon
IBI and Rader Gentry Me convenllon McGovern s full
Graw 181 and Dyer WP- delegatiOn was seated and the
McMahon 13 21 LP- McG raw South Dakota senator was well
151
13
41 HRsFregoso
(5th) McCover
Rader 4th) hl on hts way to a f1rst ballot
-VIctory
SanD ego 010 002 ooo-- 3 9 2
I thmk the nommatwn was
Montreal 002 101 02x- 6 5 I
Arlm 17 9) and Kendall

Linesoores

Corrales ( 1)

Moore

Wal ker

(6) Marshall (7) and McCar
ver Boccabella (7) 1/(PWalker (2 I)
HRs- Co lberl
(18th) Smgleton (5th) Jor
gensen IBihl
(Only games scheduled)
Amencan League

Helen and Sue
Is slang on the way out' For ktds , I mean
I hear more adults usmg 11 than we do Last year about everv
other teen word was 1COol, 1 'freaky, ' 'psyched out/
"groovy, 1 "wetrdo, ' "right on, 1 where 1t's ~t, ' etc Now I
hardly ever use any of these, and I haven 't heard any new words
lately What's happerung ' - MARION
Marton
What's happenmg (I think ) 1s that teens are puttmg off the
old overused words and makmg up the1r own ortgtnal stuff Like,
"Oh fudge and bananas " (mstead of dull old ' damn" etc ) or
"She's a strung-out peanut," mearung kmda freaky
It's fun, mventmg a new expressiOn Who wants to be a
follower' - SUE
Dear Marton
The drug culture and the hipp1e movement mtroduced most
of 1960's slang Now, wtth both dimm1Sh10g aod no new wave m
sight, young people aren't as apt to use those overdone words and
phrases, or seek out new ones
I truly hope you kids haven't gtven up slang It's a VItal and
exc1ting part of our language
Get busy, start mventing - and send us some samples,
please' - HELEN

+++
Dear Rap
I like to go barefoot m the house and outs1de My mother
refuses to let me Says 11 s too dtrty outdoors, and mstde I 11 get
sphnll!rs On rug-rovered floors' What s the harm m gomg
wlthont shoes once m a while • - BAREFOOTED NOT
DearB.N
By us- no harm at aU We think barefoot 1s the only way to
If~ vel - at least around home, and somellllles elsewhere too t!
:iilu can get away w1th 11
~. (Dee,r, B N.'s Mother Let up, and, ,concentrate on more
ilnportant "No-No s" 1) - HELEN AND SUE
" t ,.., , , , , , . , : , , , , , ..

Mtlw
010 000 000- 1 7 I
Mtnn
440 000 OOx- 8 12 0
Stephenson Parsons 121 San
ders (8) and Rodrtguez Perry
LaRoche (8) and Mtfterwal d

WP- Perry (7 8) LP- Siephcn
son (2 21 HR- Darwtn IIOih)
Kan Ctly
000 001 002- 3 6 1
Balltmore 000 020 ooo-- 2 50
Dal Canton Wrtghl (81 and
Ktrkpatnck

Cuellar (7 7) and

Hendrteks WP- Wr lghl II 01
HR- Ptnt el la (Bih l
Chtcago
Cleve

000 001 OOQ-- I 4 0
100 100 OOx- 2 50

Lem ond s
Herrmann

Kealey (7) and
Perry ( 14 7) and

Fosse LP Lemonds (1 2) HRLol tch (lsi)

Texas
Delroll
Slanhouse
Panther (8)
man

000 000 JOQ-- 3 10 0
214 000 Ol x- B11 0
Shell enba ck (61
and Ktng Cole

H1ller (9) and Freehan

WP- Coleman
Sianhouse 1011
(41hl Cash 2
Mtn cher (6th)
New York
Caltl
Kektch
~un son

Ku snyer

I11 71 LPHRs- Norlhrup
(15th &amp; 16t h)
Ktng (4th)

Benne
(7)
and
Wnght (9 II) and
LP- Kek1Ch (8 7)

HRs- McMullen (5th) Swoboda
I 1st)
Boston

100 000 021- 4 9 0

Oakland
100 010 000- 2 8 0
McGlothen Ttanl 191 and
FISk Holtzman Locker 191 and
Duncan WP- McGiothen (2 I)
LP- Hollzman (II 7) HRPetrocel l t (8th)

POP

ENCORE FORA
BEAtrrlFUL ACT
NEW YORK (KFS) - We have noted herem
our mtent1on to recogn1ze a few of the Beaubful
People, but not the so-ralled BP who populate
the places to which they go to get their names m
goSSip colWIUls such as this, to wheedle their
photos mto Women's Wear Druly and mdulge 1n
the strange, emptily aggrandtzmg world whose
reward, IS the same soc1al vacuum from which
they try to escape wtth the help of a press agent
and a symbobc golden alpenstock Instead, we'd
like to celebrate the truly Beautiful People, of
whom there are so few We shan't try to fill a
colwnn dally or weekly w1th nominations One
of these fmest of all really Beautiful People
toddled off this mortal co1l recently, and we
made fleeting mention of hiS !me decency and
marvelous contrtbullons to the theatriCal as
well as hiS personal world
HIS name was Thomas F Carey, a Paullst
prtest who for more than 40 years ran The
Blackfnars Gutld, the very first off-Broadway
theater m New York City Father Tom was a
modest, self~ffae1ug, highly mtelligent and
effective mm1ster to the most difftcult of arts,
the legltunate stage He was a cred1t to the race
of stage-struck cttizens who so often tam! the1r
careers w1th compromise and ego and pursuit of
"vanity" pubbctty
Father Tom sktpped all that He gave hiS
considerable energtes to the proper presentation of his plays w1th the constant search for
the best actors he could fmd Th1s was no mtnor
task constdermg hiS performers were pa1d
nothmg except m expenence Still he was able
through 4tHtome seasons to f1ll his stage at the
Blackfrlars on W 57th St w1th totally obscure
mummers who m tune lit up Broadway stage
and H'wood film marquees , some even hi up the
bigger sk1es of the whole showbiz world We'll
get to them herem
We'd been about to wr1te thts column 10
celebratiOn of Father Tom's remarkably
selfless and successful years when we recetved
a letter from Mrs Palrtcta Mastm Corbutt of
Highland Lakes, N J , whose memortes of
Father Tom Carey tell the tale of thiS
posthumously beautiful career splendidly What
prompted Mrs Corbutt to wr1te to us was the
combination of our decades-long friendship w1th
Father Carey and a N Y newspaper's
dlsmlss8l of his life's journey mto the dramatic
' arts with only passmg noltce that he • d1rected
the Blackfriars GUild of New York "
That was hardly enough to sallsfy Mrs
Corbutt, nor properly to salute Father Tom
''One bnef sentence hardly summed up a life of
dedicahon not only to hiS !ruth and his church
but to the Theater and to the struggling young
actors who gave him their time for nothing
more than a chance to he seen, and the 1deal of

'

stolen by a bad rule," King
fumed after O'Bnen was
upheld 'We lost a very crtttcal
vote tomght, and m a close
vote, 1t's 1rnposstble to play
agamsl a trumped-up deck like
that '
King contended that etther
all the Califorma delegates
should have been allowed to
vote, or none of them He satd if
the 121 McGovern delegates
had not been permitted to vote
on the question, the 150 m
quesllon would have fallen 11
votes short of 1,509--a maJonty
of the convention
• It's pretty tough to play a
ball game when they VIolate
the rule like that," declared the
dimmultve, 6().year-old Toledo
nahve King, one of the most
vtstble men to televtston
audtences Monday mght, controls 1 milhon Oh1o AFL-&lt;:10
members and 79 Oh1o Hum·
phrey votes, the largest bloc
for Humphrey m the nat10n

Today's

''It's mcredtble that a national convention could pernut
1tself to so desecrate 1ts own
rules / 1 h~ satd
Only Monday morning, King
had been the cordial host at an
Ohio caucus breakfast He
welcomed McGovern, smiled
and posed for ptct\D'es wtth
him, and kicked teleVIsiOn
cameramen off the front of the
speaker's platform so all the
delegates could see the prestdentlal candidate
But he also exerc1sed a firm
hand, telllng the senator m the
middle of his speech there
would be no questions from the
audtence
"When I wm thlS nomma·
t1on," McGovern told the Ohio
delegates, ' Frank King IS one
of the first people I'm gomg to
call I'm confident of hts
support"
King sat motionless and
unsmthng, starmg at hts
hands

M•ddl
I
eport' s 1973 Budget Approved
(Contmued from page 1)
mamtenance superVIsor , had mspected the
catch basm and achon will be taken perhaps
before fall
Mrs Brewer also mqUlred about the
avadabthly of feder al funds to help Middleport
Clerk-Treasurer Grate satd that he had wntten
m reference to what funds mtghl be avmlable
and had recetved a large book on the subject
but that he had not yet had tune to study 11
Councilman Fred Hoffman reported that he
had been ad\1Sed b) Congressman Clarence
Mtller that some $50 000 will be avrulable for
Metgs County for plannmg and that he w1ll
adv1se Mtddleport offtclals on the ehg1billly
of the town for any of the overall total
Counc1l approved the June report of Mayor
John Zerkle showmg rece1pts of $1 268 10 for
fmes, fees and merchant pollee collectiOnS
durmg the month
Mayor Zerkle appomted council members
Mrs Jean Morgan and Hoffman to serve on the
Volunteer F1remen Dependent Board
Representmg the ftre department on the board
IHll be Stdney T Russell and John Vroman
Manmng Kiocs has been named the ctllzen

member of the board
A hst of repairs needed at the commumty
pool submitted by Mrs Ruby Vaughan, park
manager, was reVIewed The matters were
referred to Chase for action
Agam conung up for discussiOn was ap·
parent confuSion of molomts upon reaching
the mtersection of Second Avenue and Mill St
Hoffman satd out-of-town people often become
lost at that pomt due to lack of s1gns Mayor
Zerkle referred the matter to the safety
committee which will work out a soluhon of
markmg the route to the brtdge and Pomeroy
Mayor Zerkle disclosed the town IS spending
crmstderable funds m a ptckup servtce for
reSidents Haulers, taking only garbage, leave
other sohd wastes Council was asked to conSider an ordinance to provtde a charge for the
ptckup serv1ce now bemg provtded by the
VIllage
Attendmg the meetmg were Mayor Zerkle,
Clerk Treasurer Grate, Chase, council
members, DaVId Oh!mger, Lawrence Stewart,
Wilham Walters, Mrs Morgan and Hoffman ,
Mrs Brewer, Manley, Byer and Pohce Chtef
Q-emeans

010 000 101 - 3 8 0
010 102 OOx- 4 12 2

JbJ

Voice along Br'Way
BY JACK O'BRIAN

.-

'

presenting wholesome entertamment w1th a
mearungful message, not JUst to Cathohcs, but
to all men, ' wrote Mrs Corbutt
The Blackfrters was perhaps the least
publicized of off-B'way theaters Some of 1ts
early actors like Howard Duff, Gerald10e Page
and Shelley Berman went on to stardom E1leen
Heckart, who starred m many Broadway plays,
most recently to hosannahs m Butterflies Are
Free" (she plays the same role m the new moVIe
starrmg Goldte Hawn ) and Steve McQueen f1rst
came to altenhon of talent scouts by way of
the1r first New York actmg at the Blackfrtars
Father Carey remamed contentedly 10 the
background puthng all his energtes mto the
production of these non-proftt plays
Back m the 40s, before 11 was the "In' thing
to be black, Father Carey presented a play
about the Life of Blessed Marlin de Porres the
Church's ftrst black samt In the early 40s he
also prasented 'Caulkte, ' a drama by a Father
McGlynn whose father 10 earlier turn had been
the prenuere actor of Abe Lincoln roles, whose
dedicallon to Lmcoln legends was so concentrated that the people m the theater
suggested he would never be satisfied unlll he
was shot m a box m Ford's Theater
Frank McGlynn 's pnest son wrote
"Caulkte" from a deeply felt pomt of reverse fantasy - that the domtnant race m the world
was black and the whites were the subserVIent
race, read' caullue" for 'mgger" and you have
the mstant mood of 1ts plot It started wtth
blacks patromzmgty comment10g on whites, or
caulk1es, reversmg all the ugly stereotyptcal
msults, heavy and subtle 'They're cute when
they're babtes, 'for openers, on up through the
most smfully degrading btgotrtes It was a
courageously hne dramatic 1dea And Father
Carey made 11 possible for such a thoughtful,
enhghtenmg nolton to be brought to a
predommantly wh1te theater It was healthy,
not VICious, ms1ghtful, not mcttmg
In the 50s he answered the slanderous ' The
Deputy" w1th a sympathetic portrayal of Ptus
XII
'In the 50s,' Mr Corbult pomted out,
'Father Carey presented th~ theme of aborllon
wtthout a tnle morahstlc denouement, and m
the 70s, he toyed wtth the occult and depleted
what life nught be like m the 90s HIS productions always were tunely, top1cal, albe1t to
smaller audiences 10 recent years, perhaps
because people no longer felt safe out at mghtm
theW 50s
"It seems a shame to let hiS passmg slip by
unnoticed, for w1th h1s posstng the Blackfrlars
Gwld may pass, too, and an era of a certam,
positive, ennobling, uplifting Judeo Christian
theater IS behmd us Please do not let hiS life 's
whole purpose and meanmg fade mto ob·
scurtty "
Mrs Corbutt -you haven 't

Buckeyes like Slowpokes
By LEE LEONARD
MIAMI BEACH (UP! )
The Democratic Nat10nal Con·
vent10n had barely opened
Monday n~ght when the Oh1o
delegation ftrml) estabhshed
1tself as the slowpoke' of
states
The Buckeye delegatiOn had
to ' pass' hve tunes while
members were polled before
finally castmg 118 vote on th e
questton of a challenge to the
South Carolma delegatiOn
The procedure brought back
memortes of two months ago,
when results of another OhiO
elect10n - the Democratic pn·
mary - were pam fully slow m
commg m
Frank W King , the chrur
man of the Oh1o delegahon,
repeatedly asked the secretary
for more tl!lle as the entire
convenllon groaned tis
disapproval at havmg to watt
for the stgmftcant 153 votes to
be cast
'I ve got some new people
who have never been to a
convention
before
It's
unposstble to get a vote,'
complamed King , becommg

trntated at the proddmg from
the rostrum
State Sen Oliver Ocasek of
Akron stood at King s stde his
shirt-tat! slicking out, wearily
lea!mg through the 20 pages of
ballots for the delegation
The Buckeye delegatiOn even
got a Jibe from CBS-TV, where
Walter Cronktle wryly ob
served that ' Ohto makes more
addmg machmes than any
place m the country The great
Nat10nal Cash Regtsler Co 1s
located there But apparently
no one from there ts m the
delegalion "
For a lime 1t appeared that
Kmg
was
dehberatel)
Withholding Oh10 s results unt1l
a readmg could be obtamed on
the full convenhon vote
' There were no shenarugans
or anylhmg/ Ocasek satd
We had a problem because of
sheer numbers, and we have
four different delegatiOns to be
polled "
Ocasek explamed that at
ftrst, only two people were
c~rculatmg the roll call hsts
among the 153 delegates Each
delegate had to check off on the

WIN AT BRIDGE

sheet
Soon, four people were ctrculatton, but that dido 'I help mat·
ters much
By 4 30 am , Ohto was still
at the tail end, w1th King askmg for more tl!lle and Cronkite
proclaunmg Ohio as the "state
which takes lon~est to count
1ts votes '

Market Report
PT PLEASANT
LIVESTOCK SALES CO
PT PLEASANT, W VA
Saturday, July 8, 1972
HOGS- t75to 220 28 to 28 70,
Heav1es 241o26 90 , Lights 26 50
to 28, Fat Sows 22 to 23 60,
Boars 22 to 22 70, Pigs 18 to
21 75, Stock Shoats 25 to 30
CATILE - Steers 31 to
38 25, Heifers 28 to 29 Fat
Cows 23 to 25, Canners 20 10 to
2280, Bulls 26 to 33, Stock
Cows and Calves 200 to 375,
Stock Steers 32 to 35 , Stock
Heifers 27 to 84 50, Stock Steer
Calves 36 to 42 50, Stock Hetfer
Calves 33 to 38 25
VEAL CALVES - Tops 53,
Seconds 52 70, Medium 51 75 to
51 90, Common &amp; Heav1es 48 to
49 30, Culls 45 tlr47

Phillies Split Twinbill With LA

S~r£o~!!Jltk

By NED..' HERSHBERG
UPI Sports Wnter
Paul Owens named to
replace Frank Lucchesi as
manager of the Phtladelphta
Plnll1es Monday saw hts club
drop the opener of a IWI-fllght
doubleheader 6-4 m 11 mnmgs,
to the Los Angeles Dodgers
The Phtlltes came back to wm
the nightcap, 9-1
Owens, also the club's gener
al manager became the ftrsl
double duty executive m the
National League smce the late
Branch Rtcke) He promises
the team a dose of sprmg
trauung m July We re gomg

UPI Sports Wrtler

NEW YORK (UPI)- Frank Lucchesi ptcked up the phone
He was still at home m Philadelphia and by glancing at his
watch, he noticed the t1rne was 9 20 a m
Paul owens, the general manager of the PhtWes, was on the
other end of the lme Owens and Lucchesi are a bout as close as
two baseball men can be It was Owens who suggested to Bob
Carpenter, the Phtllies' owner, that Lucchesi be given a chance
to manage the b1g club ongmally m 1970 after the warm,
congemalllttle ctgarsmoklng San Franciscan had piloted minor
league entr1es for 19stratghtyears, 14 of whtch were spent m the
Phtllles' cham
' Frank, can you get to the park by 10' Mr Carpenter and I
want to talk to you," wd Paul Owens over the pjlone to LuccheSI
'I'll be right there," was the reply
Frank Lucchesi did some thinking after he hung up
Owens had sa1d Carpenter wished to speak with hun, also
Maybe somethmg was up That was always a posstbllity because
theclubwasm last place and not doing well at all
Arrives al Rarl&lt;
Frank LuccheSI amved at the ball park a few minutes before
10 and he was m the designated off1ce by 10 on the button Car·
penter was talkmg on the phone, Owens was busy m his own
offlce, talking With Dallas Green, the Phils' farm director
Carpenter fmlshed hts conversation on the phone after Lucchesi and Owens joined hllll m hill off1ce, and he spoke firSt
• Frank, I got you m here to tell you we're just gomg to have to
make a managerial change," sa1d the PhUiles' owner, speakmg
slowly and w1th some difftculty
'Th1s IS a very difftcult thing for me to do I appreciate your
tremendous loyalty, all the thmgs you've done for the club and
the orgamzallon Paul, here, Ill gomg to take over the club for the
rest of the year Genl!fally, when we let go our managers, we
make a clean break But we want you to stay w1th us if you like
We'd 11~ you to work with Paul, evaluatmg players You know,
of course, you get your entire salary no matter whether you
dectde to stay w1th us or not We'd like you to remam on, but
that's entirely up to you "
Frank Lucchesi IS Italian and emoltonal Very emoltonal
Outside his fanuly, the Phllhes are his whole life
He thought about hiS wife, Cathy, his three chlldren, Fran,
Bnan and Karon, and about all the years he had given the
Phllltes, and he broke down and wept
There Is nothing In the world wrong w1th a 45-year-old man
weepmg but 1t can be a dJSturbmg sight, especially when there IS
no way to comfort h1rn
Stare at Floor
Bob Carpenter and Paul Owens stared at the floor What could
they say• What could they do'
Frank Lucchesi composed hllllSel! soon and addressed the
Phlllles' owner
"Look, Mr Carpenter, there are no hard feellngs," he sa1d
"I'm JUSt hurt I've worked for you people, and you're great to
work for There'll be no brtdges burnt behind me I tr1ed to do all
1 could Not one tune m three years dtd I ever come to you and
moan and groan about any of the material I had to work w1th Not
once d1d I ever complain about the ktds
Bob Carpenter nodded
I reahze that," he sa1d
The three of them, Carpenter, Owens and Lucchesi sat m the
offtce and talked for nearly 45 minutes Lucchesi sa1d he'd like to
constder Carpenter's offer to remam as 'a special assignment
man " Later, he accepted the job
,
Frank Lucchesi made 11 plain he'd like to manage somewhere
In the majors again Carpenter sa1d he understood and wouldn't
stand m the way any time an opporturuty opened up
Now, though, 11 was time for another meetmg With the news
med1a The change would have to be announced
Frank Lucchesi conducted himself superbly at the news
conference, although thmking about h1s wife and ktds at one pomt
after about20 mmutes mto the sess10n, he broke down agam and
the tears came back for everyone m the room to see
Trymg to be helpful to Lucchesi, Larry Shenk, the Phllltes
pubhc relations director, told the assembled news people that 11
was enough
Luccbesl Protests
No, no, " Lucchest protested 'I m gonna fmJSh tl I never
ducked a queshon from the press and I m not gonna start now
I'm gonna stay here and answer aU the questions "
He dtd Then he went down to his own offtce tn the clubhouse
and answered many more whtch came tn over the phone
Later, hours later he was leaVIng the ball park and a swarm of
kids gathered around him
' Can we have your autograph' Can we have your autograph ''
they pleaded
' You mean you still want 11 even though I'm not the manager
anymore'" Lucchesi asked
' More than ever now," sa1d one of the kids
Lucchesi stood there patiently and stgned for them all
Then he went home to see his wife and chtldren
He didn 't stay long, enough
•
The Phillies had a mght game w1th the Dodgers and some of ;
the Los Angeles wnters had satd they wanted to talk w1th him
He promised them lle'd be back
And he was
That's Frank Lucchesi for you

'-.J

to have to work more- w1th
some htltmg , ptlching and
some enthustasm we can have
some fun
Wllhe Montanez drove m f1ve
runs Wltll a smgle, tnple and
homer to lead Phtladelphta to
the1r first VICtory under Owens
after the Dodgers scored tw1ce
m the top of the lith to wm the
opener
A towermg sacrtftce fly to
center by Wes Parker brought
m Wtlhe Dav1s w1th the WlDnmg run m the first game and
pmchhttter BtU Buckner
delivered an msurance run
w1th a smgle
1

But Woody Fryman earned a
spht for Philadelphia m the
second game w1th a SlX-htl
effort, lostng h1s b1d for a
shutout m the e1ghth on Manny
Mota's fifth home run The
Vlclory was only the lhtrd for
Fryman agamst nme losses
In other Nattonal League
games," San Franctsco edged
New York, 5-4 and Montreal
defeated San Dtego, 6-3, m the
only games scheduled
In the Amencan League
Kansas City mpped Baltl!llore
3-2 Detrmt defeated Texas &amp;-3,
Mtnn esota
wht!}ped
Mtlwaukee 8 1 Cleveland

Cubs, Kiwanis, Yankees
Advance In KC Tournament
The 14th Annual Kyger C1 eek
Ltttle League tournament got
underway Monda) mght w1th
last year's wmner the New
Haven Cubs, defeatmg the
Galltpohs Yankees 10-3 the Pt
Pleasant KlWam s defeated
Green 51, and the Pomeroy
Yankees clobbered
the
Galhpohs Athlettcs 23 2

fa nn ed ten and \\alked etght
wh1le hlltmg two batters K
Jackson was the losmg hurler
C Zus~an led the Cubs at the
plate wtth a smgle and double
wh1le T Rtchard had two
smgles

Second Game
Pt Pleasa nt K1wums N1bert
"en! the dtstance and gave up
Ftrst Game
but two smg les both to Green's
R Buzza1 d of the Cubs Chuck Bu111S Mi ckey Graham
hurled a sparkhng one-hiller "as the lose r
allowmg only a first mnmg Por ter led PI Pleasant at the
tnple to the Gallt pol1s plate w1th th1 ee smgles 1n three
Yankees M Wea\C r He trips

1hlrd Game
G1 eg Sm1th contmued the
dommance of p1tch mg mto the
tlnrd game as he allowed on lv
one tu t a flrst mmng smgle to
the Galhpohs Athtellcs Jeff
Lew1s Lew1s wa s also the
los mg p1tcher
P Ph1lhps and Steve Ltltle
led lhe Yanks at the plate wtth
three smgles eac h
In tom ght s act10n Rac1ne
goes agamst Adda\llle at 6 the
Galhpol1s Cubs play R1plel
Dante! Boone at 7 15 and at
8 30 the Pomeroy G1ants go
agamst Btd~ ell

Indians Survive hut Barely
1he Reds gave the un
defeated lndtans the closes t
battle th1s year before losmg
10 9 wh en Rt ch Hovattor
smgted home Mark Venoy \\ho
had tr1pted m the SIXth frame
for the wmmng tally In other
Middlepor t Boys Leugue
aclton Monday the Mets
shutout the Braves 3-0
Mtke Hmdy p1tched the
dtslance for the Indtans
fanmng etghl and watkmg ftve

George Gun1 went all the way
for the Reds fanmng seve n and
watkmg three
H1tters fm the !nd1ans were
M Venoy wtth three smgles
and a tnple 1any Ven oy two
Singles Ketth Lynch, a trtple
Kevm Lee a double, and Hmdy
Crestn Pratt, Terry Gardner,
and Hovatter each had smgles
Coltecling sa fettes for the
Reds were Ronme Casc1 .,.tth
two smgles and a tnple Carl

Carm1chael \\llh two smgles,
T Kennedy and two smgles,
M1ke Ma gnotta had • double,
and Stewart and Gum each had
a smgle

In last Fnday s actwn 11 was
reported that T Venoy went
lhe distance 1n the lndtans
wm Instead he was relieved m
the second frame by Rtch
Hovattor who got the wm The
lnd1ans defeated Harnsonv tlle
13 7 last Saturday

LOSE 20 POUNDS
IN TWO WEEKS!

The Mets Greg Bec ker
hurled a hoe shutout allowmg
on!) two smgles whtle str1kmg
out 12and walkmg three Smith
pitched for the Braves and also
fanned 12 and walked three

Famous U S Women Skt Team Dtel

H1tters for Coac h Ed
Stobart s Mets were Ketth Doss
wtth a smgle and two tnples,
Terry Scott a double, and
Edd1e Stobart • a smgle
Wayland and Ebersbach each
had a smgle for the Braves

Dunng th e non snow off season the U S Women 5
Alp me Skt Team members go on the Skt Team d et to
lose 20 pound s tn two weeks That s rtght - 20 pounds tn 14
days 1 The basts of the dtef •s chemt cal food act ton and was
dev1sed by a fam ous Co lorado phys 1c 1an e~pec1ally t or the
U S Sk t Team Normal energy ts ma ntatned (very tm
portant 1 ) w htle redvc tng You keep full - no star vatton
- because the d tet ts des gned thai way It s a dtet that 1S
easy to follow w heth er you work travel or st ay at home
Th1s ts honestly a fanta stica lly succPsstul dtef If 1t
weren t the U S Women s Ski Team woul dn t be per
mttfed to use tfl RtghP So g tve yourself the same break
the U S Skt Team gets Lose wetg ht the sc enftflc proven
way Even tf you ve frted all the other d te fs you owe t to
yourself t o try th e U S Women s Ski Team 0 et That ts 1f
you rea ll y do want to lose 20 pounds tn two weeks Order
today Tear tht s out as a r emtnder
Send only SZ 00 ($2 25 for Ru sh Serv tcel -

0 K - to

Cash tS

Sk o Team Del P 0 Box 15493 San Otego

Caltfornta 92 l i S Don t order unless you expect to lose 20
pounds tn two weeks 1 Because tha t s what 1he Skt Team
0 et wtll dol

II

. K62

lead of the heart Jac k The
deuce was played from dum
mv and Helen took he1 ace

• K83
. KQJ976
WESf
EAST
. AJ 107
.Q8 &gt;2
. JI095l
+1 07
t 96542
. 82
... 1053

She studted awhile and de
c1ded that the contract could
only be defeated tf AI held
the rtght cards 1n spades
Then she led her queen of
spades
SOUTH (D)
South played tow and AI
• K64 3
dropped the 10 Helen con
• Qs 14
tmued w1th the etght and
+ AQJ
when
declarer ducked agam
. A4
AI
was
able to play hts seven
North South vulnerable
and leave Helen on lead for
West North East South another spade play The deI NT. fense had four spade tncks
Pass
3NT
Pass Pass
and declarer a headache
Pass
• Beautiful spade play
Jpcumg lead- ¥ J
AI ' sa td Helen
What spade play • ' re
Bl Osw,1ld &amp; Jam es Jacobv pl Jed AI l have to confess
I d1d not fmd the seven of
Dunn g 11e co urse of then spades unt1l triCk three "
shot I m ,, 1age the late AI (NEWSPAPER ENTfRPRISE ASSN )
and Helen Sobel dtd not play
much bndge together After
all Helen was wmmn g tour
naments and AI was dtrect- The h1ddmg has been
mg them Perhaps some peo West North East South
pie blame lhetr dtvorce on
.t.
Pass
the hands (hey dtd pla y to Pass 31 .._,
Pass
gether
?
Pass
5.
Pass
If so t h1s hand 1s not a You South hold
case m pmnt They defended • AJ543 • K9763 t VOid ... Ql07
11 as well as a hand can be What do you d o now'
defended
A-B1d hve d1amonds You
The game was r u b b e r have t rem e nd u us d1str1 but1on
,bndgc and AI and Helen held and want to be 1n s1x or maybe
the bad cards th at each one seven
cla tm ed to hold most of the
TODAY S QUESTION
ttme
Your partner contmues to f1 ve
AI got off to I he n orm al l tcatts What do you do •1ow?

.A

I.

4.

In~ Rio

Grande Summer '72

RIO GRANDE - Two
courses 10 early childhood
educatwn, a readmg-sktlls
development program and the
only Outdoor EducatiOn
Workshop of 1ls kind m Ohto,
htghhght the Summer '72
program for second term at
Rio Grande College

adults mcrease rate and
comprehensiOn 10 readmg Dr
Joavenell McNealy, the course
mstructor , has a Readmg
Spectallst certiftcat10n from
West V1rgm1a
• The program w1ll p1ck up
each person at hiS mdlvtdual
read10g level For a less-thanaverage
reader, the program
Second term reglStrallon IS
Monday, July 17, m the Paul R w1ll be remedial, whtle for the
Lyne cenll!r Courses"w1ll be betoor-than-average reader the
offered m a total of 14 areas program may be advance
, The
early
childhood
Each person wtll take a
educallon courses, the first sertes of tests at the start of the
offered by Rio Grande College program to measure a number
will enable elementary 8chooi of skills related to readmg
teachers to receiVe \n ad~ Tentatively, sessions will be
dttional certiftcation by the held Monday through ThursOh10 Deparbnent of Education day, w1th elementary sesswns
for the prllll8ry grades, kin- 10 the mornmg, secondary m
dergarten through third grade the afoomoon and adult In the
Shirley While, director of the evening
Snow White Nursery school,
The Outdoor Education
will teach the two courses, Worksh~, mcluding 10 days 10
which can be taken at the same the Quentico - Superior Canoe
time She holds a masoor's Country, runs August 10
degree m early childhood through 23 The program
education from Boston's stresses ecology and man's
Wheelock College
1mpact on his environment
The readtng-skllls
Courses will also be offered
development program is aimed In economics, education,
at helping elementary and English, history, math,
secondary school students and physical education, physics,

The unbeaten Ttgers edged
the upse l·mmded Gtants 2- J m
seven 1nn1ngs 1n Pomeroy
Boys League act10n Monday
The Ttgers scored the wm
mng run m the bottom of the
seventh when they had the
bases loaded w1th two out and a
ball h1t back to the pitcher was

)

FIRESTONE
AIR CONDITIONER

pohtlcal sctence, psychology,
soctal sc1ence and speech For
more mformation about the
second ll!rm of Summer '72,
contact the Admissions and
Records Off1ce

$119

SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Terry
Holton remed Mtghly Game 10
front near the finish to win the
featured $1,200 Pace at Sctoto'
Downs Monday n~ght by one
and one-half lengths over MISS
Shady Mont Bye Bye Beau
was third
Mtght Game was timed m
2 02 3-5 and returned $9 40,
$5 20 and $3 80. Miss Shady•
Mont paid $5 20 and $3 110, whlle:
Bye Bye Beau returned $5 40 :
The 1-9 ninth race qulnella
was worth f41 40
:
The 3-2 nightly double
pairing The Tourist and Guy.
Virtue paid $1110
' '
The 4,632 harness racing
wagered $243,772
•

The Mark V Polar Bears
ran over Adolph s Da1ry Valley
125 73 m the Middleport In
dependent Basketball League
Monday mght wh•te m other
ac t10n
th e
M1ddlepo1l
Department Store mopped up
the Fnendly Tavern 1116-56, and
The Dally Sentmel remamed
unbeaten tn e1ght games w1th a
83 81 edge over the PomerO)
National Bank
In the first game 6.(l Dox1e
Walters rtpped m 45 pomts and
tea mrna te Ron
Fer gus on
added 36 for Mark V Steve
Dunfee had 34 to lead Adolph s
wh1le Tommy little Doxte
Walters had 20
Arthur Clark led Mtddleport
Department wtth 34 while Dave
F1fe added 23 Hap Harrts led
th 16
h F dl T
t e nen Y avern Wl
Bob RitChie dnlled tn 31
whtle Denms E1chmger had 22
to lead the Senlmel over the
Bankers who were topped by
J1m Garnes \Hih 30 and Btll
Vaughan wtlh 25
BoxScores
MARK V (125 )-D Walters
22 1 45 Boggs 6-0·12, Rn
,n
Ferguson 16-4·36 M Sayre """
10, R Sayre 11-0 22
ADOLPH S I 73) T
Walters 9 2 20 Dunfee 17-0-34,
D T)ree 4 210 S Prtce 5-0-10,
Cra1g 4 2 10
Second Game

5,000 BTU &amp; UP

HUNTER &amp;GENERAL ELECTRIC
•

FROM

1

each

and fannmg nme

Mtke I.arkms and ftm Kuhn
paced 1 uppers Ptams w1th a
stngle and double each while

LEADING
BATTERS ~\I
MaJor League Leaders
By Untied Press International
leadmg Batters
Nat1onal League
g ab r h

pet
Cdno Hou 72 287 56 99 34S
Mota LA 59 18S 30 63 341
Sngu tln P1t 71 274 34 93 339
Alou St L 68 260 Jl 84 323
Oltver PI 74 305 47 98 321
Garr All 76 309 49 9'1 320
Brock Sl L 75 321 39 102 31 8
Lee SD
67 249 35 79 317
Wilms Ch 76 303 48 94 31 0
Cl mnte Ptf 62 252 46 78 310
Amencan League
g ab r h pel
Shnb lm KC
Pntela KC ~~ ~~~ ~~ ~~ ~~~
Rud t Oak 72 293 48 92 314
OttS KC
73 275 33 85 309
Berr y Cal 51 l76 22 54 307
May Cht 75 264 46 79 299
F sk 8os 57 195 38 58 297
Carew Mtn 74 278 28 82 295
Epstn Oak 74 244 38 72 295
Oliver Cal 76 302 33 88 291
Mabry KC 75 247 24 72 291
Home Runs
Naltonal League Bench Cm
and Kmgman SF 21 Aaron
AI and Colbert SD 18
Slargell Ptll 17
Amencan League Allen Ch1

17 Cash Del 16 Jackson Oak
15 Epstem Oak 14 Dun can
Oak 13
Runs Balled In
Nat10nal League Bench Ctn
63 Ktngman SF 58 Starg el l
Ptll 56 Ol11er Ptll 55 Colbert
SD S4
Amencan League Allen Ch
57 Mayberry. KC 46 OJtver
Cal May, Chi Banda and
Epste tn Dak 44
Nal1onat r!~c:~~g Nolan Ctn
12 2 Seaver NY 11 5 Carlton
Phtl 116 Jenktns Cht 117

Detro.t 8 Texas J

Nahonal League

East

w I

pet g b

48 27
44 32

640

40 35

S33 8
532 8

Pttlsburg h
New York
St Lou ts
Ch tcago

41

~ontreal

33 4J

Phdade!phta

36

1.7 51
West

579

41/:z

434 15 1 ?
211;1

346

Ca l tfornta 4 New York J
Bos ton 4 Oakland 2

Today's Probable P1lche1"1
(All T1mes EDT I

Boston ! Pattm 58) at Oak
land ! Horlen 2 OJ 1l p m
New York ( Peterson 7 10) at

Cal tlornta (May 2 61 11 p m

Mtlwaukee { Lockwood 4 9} at
Mmnesota (Woodson 5 8) 8 JO

w 1 pet g b pm
592
Texas

Cmc tnnatt
Houston
Los Angeles

45 31
45 33
41 37

Atlanta

577
526

I
5

Detro t

I Broberg

5 71

at

6 7)

(Ttmmerman

36 41 462 10

Ch cago 1Bahnsen II 9) at
z Cleveland ITtdrow 58) 7 30
San D ego
29 49 372 ' 17 pm
Mondays Results
Kansas Ctly I Drago 7 71 at
Sa n Fran c sea 35 A8

13

422

Los Angeles 6 Ph Ia 4 sf
Ph tla 9 L os Angeles 1 2nd
San Fran 5 New York 4
Montrea l 6 San D ego 3

Balf tmore ( Palmer 11 4) 7 30

pm

10t11y games scheduled)
McPherson led Coolville \\tlh
Today s Probable Ptlchers
two smgles and a double wh1le
IAll Ttmes EDT)
San
Franctsco
(8ryan l6 4) at
Clark had a home run and Reed
New York {Koosman 6 3) 8 05
and Ca r son each had a smg:le pm
In Saturdays game Larkms
Atlan ta INoekro 8 7) al Sf
Louts
[San fo rm 4 6) 9 p m
suu ted for Tuppers Plmns and
Pttt sbu rg l
lt s 7 4) at
\\as relieved by wmmng pit- (tnctnna t I Brl{Ei
l tngham
4 9)
cher Goebelm th1rd who was B 05 p m
San Otego ( Ktr by 6 7) at
~e lieved by E1chmger tn the
M ontreal (Torrez 9 SJ 8 05
fourth They combmed fo r 12 pm
\\luffs and 10 walks
Los Ange les (Sutton 10 4) a t
Greg Buller and Har t p1lched Phtladelph ta (Carlton II 6) 7 35
for Stewart and st1uck out mne pm
Hous ton ( Forsch 4 3 and
\\htle giVIng up seven walks Wtl son 55} at Chtcago ( Hands
Spencer led the \\mners at 6 6 and Hooton 7 7) 1 30 p m
Wednesday s Games
the plate w1th two doubles and Sa n Franct
sco at New York
a s1n gle, Goebel had t\\ o Houslon at Chtcago
doubles Bow en had one Sa n D1ego at Montreal ntght
double, and Kuhn l arkms and Los Angeles at Phda n tg ht
At lanta at St Lout s nt ght
E1chmger all had one smgle Pdtsbur gh at Ctn ct ntght
Tramer had a fourth mnmg
stn gle for Stewarts only hit
Afner1can League
East
CoaC!lDenms Newland 's
w I pet g b
Tuppers Plams club now 51
Detro1t
41 34 547
\\111 play Wedn esday at Balltmore
40 35 533
35 36 493 4
Stewart and Fnday agamst Boston
New York
35 37 486 4 1;:~
unbeaten Coolvtlle B ut Cleveland
J1 42 432 B 2
Tuppers Plmns
Milwaukee
19 44 397 II
West
w I pel g b
Oakland
48 28 632
TOP QUALIFIER
Ch cage
43 34 558
ST CLAIRSVILl E, Oh10 Mmnesota
38 36 514
( UPI) ~Helen Kirkland of
Kansas Ctly 39 37 513
36 42 462
Cadtz was top qualtfter today Ca ltfornta
Texas
33 44 429
for the start of the state
Monday s Results
Women s Amateur Golf M nnesota 8 Mt lwa ukee 1
Tournament at the Belmont Kan City 3 Ba lt1more 2
Htlls Country Club here
Mtss Ktrkland, runnerup m
the 1969 tourney held at Mans
fteld carded a 40-37 77 to take
meda hst honors over the field
PHONE 992 2342
of 80 en tnes vymg for slots m
match play whtch got un
derwa) today

Wedne5day s Games
Boston at Oakland

New York at Ca~tf ntght
Milwaukee at Mtnn n tght
Texas at Detrott ntght
Ch tcago at Cleve ntght

Kan Ctly at Ball, ntghl
International

League

Stand~ngs

By Untted Press lnternattonll
W L Pet GB

Char les ton
LOUISVIlle
Ttd ewater
Rtchmond

46
45
42
39

31
36

556 J

-4()

512 61!2

40

Toledo
Rochester
Syracuse

.494 8

39 40
39 42
39 42

494 8
481 9
481 9

507

Penmsula
31 49 388 16111
Monday's Games

I Exh1bol1on)
AI anla 3 IL All Stars I
( No
regu la r
scheduled)

games

re

BEGIN WORKOUTS
HIRAM Oh1o (UP!)- Some
50 rooktes and veterans begm
workouts at the Cleveland
Browns trammg camp here to
day wtth second-year coach
N1ck Skortch emphamzmg a
runnmg game
Mormng and afternoon
prachces are slated through
Fr~day for the early birds, who
reported Monday The rest of
the veterans are to show up
Sunday for the start of full-tlrne
dr11ls Monday

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.

Blass Ptll 10 2 Sutton LA and
Cleveland St L 10 4
American
Det

14 6

RESULTS In
Ohw Valley Little League
Results
Rto Grande 8 Vmton 5
Cenll!rville 5 B1dwell 2
Addavllle 12 Salem 6
Vmton 12 Salem 10 (July 7)

$18 95

I

Brussels, Bel~um, .Is the
headquarters of tbe Euro;
pean Common Martet

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL

Euc

Ed

ROBERT HOEFLICH
Ctty Ed•lor
Published dally excepf
Saturday by The Ohto Valley
Pub lt shmg Company
111
Courf St
Pomeroy , Oh o
"S 769 Bustnes.s Off ce Phone
992 ~156 Ed ttor1al Phone 992
21S7
Second class postage patd at
Pomeroy Oh io
National adverftstng
represenlaltve
Bottlnelh
Gallagher Inc 12 Eut .t2nd
St New York City New York
Subscription rates
De
livered by ¥carr•er where
al!lal lable SO cents per week
By Motor R:oute where carr1er
serv tc e not available One
month Sl 7S 8y matl In Oh10

League
lolrch
Perry Clev 14 7

Wood Ch 12 9 Palmer Ball
11 4 Ryan Cal 11 5 Coleman
Del and Holtzman Oak II 7
Bahnsen Ch 11 9

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

INSURANCE · BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS

Meigs County's Oldest and Largest
Insurance Agency

Weputalot• it.
You can pula lot in it.
What you can put in: over 60 cubic
feet. Put the rem seat down and lhere s
60 6 cub tc feet of corrymg space For com
portson VW Squarebo ck and Vega
Ka.~!!!'_bad both

g vc you a btl ove 1
50 cubtc feet

The basic $2265 * model.
Its the deal chotce far people
won t on economy

who

cor that cernes more

anci

w

va

And there s prectse rod and pmton
s!eeflng wh ch 15 10rma ly found only n

some o f the more expens ve sports cars

Some Detailo.
1 The ltfl gate swmgs
vp and out of the way
2 The rea r pa ssenger
w ndows Ilip ope n
3 The spare ltre doesn t
tol:.e up any load oom
b ecause 11 ha s tiS own well

2000cc Overhead Cam
Engine, II s rugged econam cal
peppy-and standard equ pment
A 4 speed floor mo unled all
synchromesh tronsm SS tOn 1s also

under the floor And be neath

standard

11 all the rear suspenston

Better 1deo for safety. . buckle up!

1s spec tally d estgned for

The Squ~re Option. Tho I dtSt ncttve wood s ded

• St cker Pr ce E~clude~ dealer
.oreporot on c h arge~ f any

dei1 ~a t on
and la~ es

ch arge~

1 tie

wagon look plus wheel covers spec•ol tnm and more
N o o ther economy wag on oilers anythmg ltke tl

p,
IS

FORD PINTO

ce w lh the Squtre Oplton $2479 ' The luggage rock
$45 53 exira The wh•le s dewoll lores $28 00

FORD DIVISION

See Your Ford Dealer.

One veer SH 00

Stx months S7 2S
Three
months $4 SO Subscr1Pf10n
prtce Includes Sunday Times
Sent me l

'

front DISc Brakes. Stondo•d

load carrymg

KEITH GOBLE FORD, INC. 461 s. Third st, Middleport, Ohio
\

8

pm

Wagon: $2265*

thrown wtld to ftrst
Bob McGlure hurled the f1rst
SIX mmngs for the Ttgers.
glvmg up three walks and
fanmng 12 Dale Browmng
came on to p1tch the seventh
fanmng one and walkmg none
Browmng also had the T1gers'
only two h1ts, both smgles
Brtan Hamtlton started on
the h1ll for the Gtants and
p1tched a brtlhant game before
havtng to leave m the seventh
due to the s1x~nmng per week
rule Jeff Grueser and
Wtlhams reheved 1n the
seventh They together fanned
16 and walked seven
Httt.ers for the G1ants was
Hamtlton w1th a tnple and
home run, whiCh went over the
newly erected fence , and
Grueser WIth two smgles

20" FANS
START

takmg Coolville A Fnday 9.()
and Stewart 14 2 Both games
were at Tuppers Platns
Steve Goebel hurled for
Tuppers Plams Frtday aga10st
Coolv1lle A fanned 15 and
walked SIX McPherson pttched
fo r Coolv11le allowmg one walk

MIDDLEPO RT DEPT
STORE (1061- Mltchell 5-0-10
Clark 17-0-34 Bartrum 8-3 19
", F B
3Cremeens 4~~
r urney 1•
5 Wern er 4..(h'l, Ftfe 11·1-23
FRIENDLY TAVERN (56)
_ H bb d 5-0-IO Hams 7•2.
U ar
16, Crawford 6-0-12, Adams 2 1
5 Eynon J-0-2, Morgan 5-1-11
Third Game
DAII Y SENTINEL (83) Rtlchte 13-5-31 Douglas 32-8
Rd Ferguson 6-2-14, Chtlds 4-08, Etchmger 9-4 22
POM NAT BANK (81 ) Garnes H 2 30 Vaughan 12 325 W1se 9-0-18 Chafm 2-0-4
Nelson 2 0-4
1

Greg Winebrenner boomed a
th ree run homer 1n the f1rst
tnmn g Greg Batley ftm
Spe ncer Don Etch mge ( and
Plul Bowen ull had one smgle

Tuppers Pla1ns won tw o
games over the weekend

Cleve land 2 Chtcago 1

lnt~rnattonal

-or a wagon that costs less The wrute

rw.
•'

I,

Big Dox
Pops in
'
45 Pts.

Ma1or League Standings

By Untied Press

stdewoll t res lshown here I are $28 00

95

PRICES

Tuppers Plains Wins 2

Giants Edged 2-l

Miscue Turns Out a Beaut!
Unique Workshop Planned
.9
NOKTH

the etghth and advanced on smgled off losmg p1tcher Steve
Gary Maddox sacn F1ce before Arhn who gave up only five
Spe1er s game-wmnmg h1t
h1ls m the contest as he
Jun Fatrey s stxth mmng dropped hts mnth game m 16
pmch·htl smgle drove home dccts1ons Tim Foh drew a
Bob Bailey w1th what proved to walk and Fa1rey's h1t went to
be lhe wmmng run as Montreal shallow cen ter field to break a
defeated San Dtego Ba1ley 3-3 l1e

edged Chtcago, 2-1 Boston
downed Oakland, 4-2, and
Ca hforma beat New York, 4-3
Chns Speter 's s1ngle to
center field 1n the etghth mnmg
drove m two runs to gtve San
Franctsco a wm over the
faltertng New York Mets
Pinch-/utter Jllll Howarth and
Bobby Bonds smgied to open

�.

...~

..

..... "'

'

. "

.

•
•

I

,'

5- The DaUy Sentinel, Middl~port-Pomeroy, 0., July 11, 19'12
4- The Da!Jl' ~t!fl!!I,_Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Julv II. 1972

·.~..~~·~&gt;.-':•:o:t:·:·:&lt;·:·::::--x;·:·:&gt;.:~::;:::@:::·:·:·:&lt;:-:-:o:;:;:~::~:::::.~:.-::~=:--::::::s::~
••t~·l'l:l'~l

Dom·estic Arts .Schedule .
Of County Fair Revealed
.

.

USDA CHOICE MEATS

~~~~unity- , I
ICorner By Charlene Hoeflich!'\
.

'

. .

'

U. S•.GOVERNMENI INSPECTED

~

SAVE 21r

:3~

'·
years.
Rulesalsostatethata person
can make only one entry in
each class, but can enter as
many classes 'as desired.
Entries must be registered at
the Secretary's Office on the
Meigs County Fairgrounds by 4
p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 10. At ·
that time the books will close.
Ail articles for judging
should be on the ·fairgrounds
between 9 and 10:30 a.m. on
Tuesday, Aug. 15. Anything
been the practice in previous arriving after that time will be

'
I

\

I

25th Anniversary on july 15
Mr. and Mrs. David C. Vance of Pomeroy will celebrate
their 2.\lh wedding anniversary on July 15. The couple was
married on July 15, 1947 in Dunbar, W. Va. and are the
parents of four sons, Larry of Rutland, Buck of New Vinia,
Bobby, stationed with the U.S. Army in Germany and Rex,
at home. They have one grandson.
Mr. Vance is employed with the Sollitt Construction Co.
~..;::;··s:w~~······················:x··············

m · &lt;s· oc·-·- -~~·a·-·-·· -·,·

· =·I

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT CHILD
Conser'\'ation League suiiirrler
outing for members and their
ch ildren at Camden Park,
Huntington. Members are to
meet there at noon.
THURSDAY
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, annual picnic
Thursday at the Richa1·d
Chambers , country home.
Steak dinner to be prepared by
Tom Cassell and his committee. Serving at 6:30p.m. All
Lions invited.
THURSDAY
WORK IN Master Mason
degree when Shade River
Lodge 453 meets at 8 p.m.
Thursday at hall in Chester. All
Master Masons invited .

ICalendar!

TUESDAY
PINS TO 2.\ year members
when Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, meet.; at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at temple. Master
Masons invited.
MEIGS COUNTY
Alcoholism and Drug Abuse
Committee meeting 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at St. Paul Lutheran
Church, Pomeroy, with Roger
Hooker speaking on "Today's
Drug Scene" and a film will be
shown.
GOLDEN RULE Class of
Pomeroy Church of Christ
picnic 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at
Route 33 Roadside Park.
MEIGS COUNTY Women's
Democratic Club, 7:30p.m. 242
Mulberry Ave., Tuesday.
EASTERN
Athletic
Boosters, July 11, 8 ;.m.
Tuesday at Eastern High
School.
WEDNESDAY
REVIVAL, United Faith
Church, Pomeroy - Middleport
By-pass, Rev. Worley Haley,
evange li st, Wednesday
through July 23. All singers
welcome, 7:30 each evening .
WHITE ROSE Lodge, 1:30
p.m. Wednesday, American
Legion Hail, Middleport.
WEDNESDAY
PAST PRESIDENTS ,
American Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39, 6:30
p.m. annual picnic at the Ohio
River campsite on the Owen
Watson farm at Racine.

marked for .display only. Mrs.
Pete Burris of New Haven, W.
Va., home economics teacher
at Wahama Junior High
School, will judge the entries
beginning at !0:30a.m. on Aug.
15.
In children's clothing there
are classes for dresses, play
clothes, blouses, !-shirts, nitewear and. coats. The adult
clothing section has classes for
dresses, suits, coats, blouses
and nile-wear. There are
categories for all types of
aprons, pillowcases, cushions,
tablecloths, and pot holders, as
well as knitted · afghans:
sweaters, stoles, capes, ponchos1 hats and scarves.
Classes for crochet work
include afghans, bedspreads,

Schedule for the domestic
arts department of the Meigs
"County Fair has been announced by Mrs. Robert Lewis,
chairman.
·
As in previous years any
article awarded a premium in ·
the pas~ two years is not
eligible for entry, and new
work and new ideas will be
given preference for awards.
Premiums this year are higher
and will be given in three
places rather than two as has

Evans Graduates
From Ohio Tech
Ronald Lee Evans, a 1960
graduate of Middleport High
School employed by Industrial
Nucleonics in Columbus, has
graduated from the Ohio Institute of Technology with an
associate degree in electronic
engineering technology. He
graduated with a 3.95 average .
Evans and his wife, the
former Janis Hauck, and two
sons, _Jeffrey and Scott, reside
on Carolyn Ave., in Columbus.
·He.served four years in the U.
S. Navy after graduation and
worked for the Howard Hughes
Corporation while living in
California. He has been with
Industrial Nucleonics for two
years. Ronald is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Evans of
Middleport.

Athens Pomona
In Visitation
A program in keeping with
the centennial observance of
the Ohio State Grange was
presented fi'riday night by the
Athens County Pomona
Grange during the annual
visitation with the Meigs
County Pomona Grange at the
Rock Springs hail.
The Ohio Valley Grange was
host for the evening and two
candidates from that grange,
Mrs . Iva Orr and Mrs.
Florence
Smith,
were
obligated in the fifth degree.
Deputy Virgil Atkins announced that Racine, Hemlock,
Laurel and Ohio Valley
Granges will be exhibiting at
the Meigs County Fair this
year.
Worthy Master Norman Will
introduced and recognized the
Athens County deputy master,
Waldo Poston and his wife, and
the Pomona master, Mrs. Mae
Smith. Also recognized were
four Meigs County subordinate
masters and three visiting
subordinate masters.
Earl Starkey noted that he
had received word of the death
of Gus Umbach, Ohio State
Grange lecturer. Umbach died
while directing a grange tour
through Alaska.
Plans were announced for a
visit of the Meigs County
Pomona Grange this Thursday
night to the Athens Pomona
Grange at 8 p.m. at the Albany
Grange hall. Aprogram will be
presented under the direction
of Mrs. Elizabeth Jordan . The
subordinate contest and the
junior grange contest will be
judged at the September

"Put Your Hand in the Hand".
Poston gave gardening tips on
storing and spraying potatoes
to prevent sprouting and a
reading "Returning to You";
Peggy Gorby gave' "Sad State
of Things", and there was a
reading "Could You Afford It"
by Mrs. Mae Smith.
A humerous monologue on
safe driving was presented by
Mrs. Leona Burson, Joe Perry
and Clyde Smith gave jokes
and hwnerous stories, and
Pearl Smith read "What Kind
of Granger are You?". Miss
Francis sang '4Sixteen Tons 11 ,
and Mrs. Stout concluded the
program with a reading "If
You Don't Like Life".
Attending the meeting were
31 visitors and 43 members
from Meigs County Granges.

~~::::::::::::-;m:~-::~~:z::::~:::::::::i:::::~::::~:::::::

0

Law Requires 'Estimates of

FIVE IN CAMP
Becky Fultz, David Miller,
Angela Sisson, Cathy and
Mitchell Meadows are attending a 10-day camping
session at the Southwestern
MARIETTA - People who lost, a visit or phone call to any nings up to and including Episcopal Camp at Vinton.
are under 72 in any month of social security office can take $2,880. Above $2,880, an ad·
ditional $1 in payments is withthe year and who are getting ca re of the report.
social security payments and
If people earn less than their held for every $1 earned.
Regardless of how much his
SALE DAy SET
working should make sure original estimate, reporting
their earnings estimates for the change may permit ad-· yearly earnings are, however,
The Happy Hustlers Class of
this year are up-to-date.
di tiona! social security a beneficiary can still get a the Wesleyan United Methodist
Eugene Ermatinger, social payments during the year. On payment for any month in · Church in Racine will hold a
securilydistrict manager here, the other hand, if people earn which he neither earns over rummage sale from 9 a.m. to 4
said the report should be made more money during the year $140 in employment nor per- p.m. Friday and Saturday at
when the work begins and than they originally estimated, forms substantial services in the parsonage garage.
again when there is a change in they may get social security self-&lt;&gt;mployment, the district
either the work or estimated checks not due them and have manager said.
Any working social security
earnings.
to repay money at the end of
beneficiary in the Meigs
" Any changes in the the year.
estimate made earlier this
If a beneficiary 's earnings County area who has a question
A thought for the day :
year should be reported assoon don 'I go over $1.680 for the about his earnings estimate for American attorney John Calas possible to social security," year, his social security 1972 can call,' write or visit the houn said, "The surrender of
Ennatinger said. " It can be payments won 't be affected. If Marietta social security office, life is nothing, compared to
made on the postcard form • earnings exceed $1,680, $1 m Mr . Ermatinger said. The acknowledgement of inferiprovided to every beneficiary social security payments is phone number is 1-800-282-9711 ority."
who works. If the card has been withheld for every $2 of ear- ( toll free).

-Earnings Kept Up to Date

Donnie Folmer is still a patient at the Carleton Memorial
Hospital at Woodstock, New Brunswick, Canada and expects to
be confaned there anotber week or two.
.
.He underwent siD'gery a week ago Thursday for a ruptured
appendix. Donnie, a freshman at Meigs High this fall; his
·mother, Betty, and sisters, Shiels and Gwen,_were at Woodstock
visiting Mrs. Folmer's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John P~so'."',
when he took sick. Tbeir stay in Canada now seems rather mdefinite.
However Sheila has returned and yesterday began her
training in l~boratory technology at the Marietta Memorial
Hospital.
Donnie is lonely since his acquaintances at Woodstock are
limited to a few relatives and could certainly use a few cards
from classmates and friends just now.

related the story of Samson ,
from the book of Judges .
The camp meeting is from
July 26 through August 6. 1t will
welcome Rev . LaVerne
Rohrbaugh and Wayne and
Arlene Thomas again this
advance.
The Mason Parish co- year. The Gospel story will be
ordinator 1 Rev . William delivered by Rev. Rohrbaugh.
DeMoss is leading the singing; The one-time professional
Mrs. Harold Bumgardner is at night club singer, Wayne
the piano, and the ministers of Thomas, and his wife, Arlene,
the parish are bringing the will bring the Gospel in song .

NEW HAYEN- Thirly-&lt;&gt;ight
churches are cooperating in
the Union Camp Ground
revival this summer prior to
which Sunday night services
are conducted four weeks in

messages.

Rev. James Dempsey of the
Clifton Charge brought the
message Sunday evening. He

BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
Mrs. Paul Simpson, Jr. of
Middleport entertained
recently with a party in observance
of the fourth birthday
DAUGHTER BORN
NEW HAVEN - Mr. and on July 3 of her daughter,
Mrs. William Folmer of New Valerie Lynn . Gifts were
Haven, W. Va. are announcing presented to Valerie and
the birth of a daughter, June refreshments of cake, ice
2.\, at St. Joseph Hospital, cream, Kool-Aid and coffee
Parkersburg. The eight pound, were served. Attending were
Ia ounce infant has been named Mrs. Paul Chadwell and
Anita Marie. __Mr, and Mrs. daughters, Polly Anna and
Folmer have -a son, Michael. Kimberly, Middleport; Mrs.
(Grandparents are Mr. and Robert Shuster and Shean,
Mrs . Leland Kirby, New Miss Melanie Grueser and .
Haven; Mr. and Mrs. George Misty Dawn, Pomeroy ; and
Folmer, Pomeroy. Mr . and Valerie's younger sister, Joan
Mrs. Edgar Cunningham of Marie. Visiting later in the
Simpsonville, S. C. are great - evening were Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Simpson, Sr., Pomeroy,
grandparents.
Valerie's grandparents.

..

__ .

SUPERIORS USOA CHOICE

RIGHT FROM THE BARREL

BALlARD'S WHOLE HOG

to
24,000 BTU

'·

o IW I"I \ 1 lltllf'U • 1\.lll
l~'nd HI' h i Ill

•

.

l'r,

and grandson of Colerain, and
Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Welker of
Columbus spent the weekend
herewith Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Sauer.
Mrs. Paul Grueser, t&lt;Ccompanled by her sister, Mrs.
Mabel Wolfe of Pomeroy, was
in V1enna, W. Va. S•mday to
visit ber great-granddaughter,
Maureen Suzanne McCale.
infant daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Mitchell McCale . Also
visiting at the McCale home
was another of Mrs. Grueser's
granddaughters, Mrs. Stanley
Kiapkowski and her family of
Claysville, Pa.

\I I 111'1 I THill lo KII.L - ol ll~'"

,,., I•

~ n"

htlll&lt;&gt;h ·• •h··•

• T"tliU.SPU' D F41'i •
lo!flo •~ k- 'f'l\-.1,

( 'w o· ~l•l c,

1"'",....,, io •&lt; •IIO!MJft; pr\1'

&gt;II •olh uo • &gt;ll!w l •V&lt;lli"C 11
\

LUNCH MEATS

5h$1 °

0

sse

lb.

LB. BAG

WITH PURCHASE OF
4 LIGHT BULBS

BUSH'S SHOWBOAT

PORK &amp; BEANS

GRANGE CANCELLED
The regular meeting of the
Rock
Springs
Grange
scheduled for Thursday night
has been canceled . The next
meeting will be held on July 27.
..
-

2-HOUR
CLEANING
(Upon Request)

40 oz.
CANS

S.EALTEST MILK
gallon

•

CRACKERS

27 LB. AVERAGE

$

100

0·0
r,

lvs. for

WATERMELONS

lo 1

1

l·LB.

BXS.

-

Graham Crackers
I-LB.
BXS.

SCOT LAD SLICED

¥2 ·Gal.

BROWN SUGAR

79~

16 oz. pkg.

lifE. 2nd '
Pomeroy
Phone 992-1428

'100

NOW AT A LOW PRICE!

AMERICAN CHEESE

ROBINSON'S
..
CLEANERS

'1 oo·

. FIRESIDE
.. BRAN.D

'

EACH

HOME GROWN CABBAGE ....... lb. 1o~
FRESH RADISHES ..................... bag 10~
GOLDEN CARROTS ........... lb. bag 10~

'100

SCOT LAD SALTINES

.FAVORITE BREAD

49~ ·

lb.

LARGE SIZE
PEANUT BUnER

Today:
Make
g
Sim le
and

_

EGGS

..

BANQUO

CREAM PIES .............4
Ice Cream

'

$

BAGS

FOR
GAL CRT.

3
$1
CHOC. MILK......
QTS.
FOR

FAIRMONT

lO.PAK

DOZ.

1
79e

Assorted flavors '12
including cherrynut, black
walnut, etc.

REESE CUPS

$1

UNCLASSIFIED

FOR THAT SPECIAL SOMEONE

'100

11111111. .

=

69~1i

MARK V /
STORE WITH ' " " couoo•
WITHOUT

:;

PlAYTEX
RUJBER GLOVES
Wl111 1 FrH, Ex1ra Right . Hanel
Glovt Free.
Ret.

1.49

89$

Wi111
c..,·~·

99~

AT MARK V STORE

COUPOIIt

UMIT 1 CD-.tiR PURCHAII

CUSTOM
FASH IONED

BY

,
~etl'·

, NU·MAID MARGARINE

~etl'· Colored

Mugs

77~5592

''~ ' '' n·l"f'''"''' ho '"' "'"'"' rlfl.

SUGAR
5
49~

SUPERIORS ASSORTED

NECK BONES

lb ,

FAIRMONT

·New For Fall

MASON, W. VA.

'h"'" ..... "'· ~····· .,.

SUPERIORS PORK

Choice
Golden
Ripe

FURNITURE

6,000

.

HOMOGENIZED

'fotlt~~y

TO I I I 11&lt;111\1 "' lilt• ~ 001.1~4 , • I ''~•· • . II ""''"l~lllo• l~ ij"'"

9~

GRADE A

MASON

•

.

SUPERIORS POLISH

f :ht&gt;(_·k Our

PH.

89¢
99¢
59
69¢
79

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE

Kelvinator Air Conditioners
Prir••

BOILED HAM

.

JIM LOHSE AND HIS WIFE are off on a holiday and their
two daughters, Lori AM and Angie, are enjoying the two weeks
bere with tbeir grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lohse, Cave
St., Pomeroy.
The two are in Scotland now and will be making trips into
England and Wales before returning home.

Sunday evening guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Clifford Hayes were
Mr. and Mrs. Othei Cunningham, Karen and Allen of
Rochester, Mich., and Miss
Barbara Cunningham of
Buffalo, W. Va. Other recent
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Hayes
have been Miss Effie Price,
Mr. and Mrs. Everett J. Price
of St. Albans; Mrs. Lorene
Taylor, Mrs . Anna Logan,
Nitro, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
John E. Piatt, Sr., Columbus;
Mrs. 0 . M. Martin, Westerville; and the Rev. and Mrs.
Oria Bradford and Marty,
Chicago, Ill.
Gregory Hayes, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Clifford Hayes, spent
the weekend at Cedar Lake
attending the Rio Grande
Association Baptist Youth
retreat. He is a member of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church.
Mrs. Ronald Place and son,
Steve, of Groten, N. Y. visited
from Wednesday to Monday
with Mrs. Harry Houdashelt
and Miss Freddie Houdashelt.
Mr. and Mrs . John Waiters

lb.

WI EN ERS ........... ~b~
Chopped Sirloin ... ~b~
Ground Chuck ••••• :~ .
¢
SAUSAGE •••••••• ~ •• ~~ ·
SALT FISH •••••••~ •• :~ ·
¢
Farm Sausage ••••••·• .

.

The Evangelkrs Coming Again

38 Churches Cooperating

SUPE~IORS

BOLOGNA

&amp;·9¢

SUPERIORS ALL MEAT

ELOISE HAYES HOMEBOUND for quite a few years
. now,
has taken on the job of providing an answering serVIce fpr the
Rich Valley Ice Cream Co. She has an extension on the company
phone and takes orders and messages whenever tbey come in.
Doing this is a real morale booster for Eloise.

-

NEW HAVEN- Being welcomed again this year to the
Union Camp Grounds, Mason County, are "The
Evangeliers," Akron, Ohio. This group, who gave a great
spiritual uplift at the camp ground last year, comes as one of
America's most spiritual quartets through ministry in
churches, recordings and television. The time is 7:30p.m.,
the place is Union Camp Ground, three miles back of New
Haven.

4(r

SUPERIORS SLICED

ZUELELIA SMITH IS A WOMAN with a great faith in
people. But even she was amazed at just how considerate
strangers can be when they sense a problem.
Zuelella, called to Dayton by the death of a nephew last
week, traveled tbere by bus. Arriving at the Dayton bus station,
she tried repeatedly to telephone her relatives but for some
reason or other couldn't. A woman seated in the bus station
·sensed how disturbed Mrs. Smith was and with no hesitation
approached her and volunteered to take her to her relatives'
home, a distance of several miles.
The woman, her husband, and their youthful, blond daughter
delivered her to the door of her relatives. They declined payment
which Mrs. Smith offered, but before departing gave her their
statement of Christian faith and belief in the brotherhood of man.

I p:::N~~; I

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cook
returned Saturday following a
six -week visit in South Windsor, Conn. with their 'son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward J. Corcoran and
family. They went especially
for the graduation of their
grandson, Michael, from high
school. Bringing Mr. and Mrs.
Cook home were Mrs. Corcoran and son, James. They
returned to Connecticut
Monday.
Mrs. Charles Lochary,
Robert and Meg, who reside in
meeting.
a suburb of Chicago, Ili. are
Mrs. Genevieve Stout, lec- here for a summer visit with
turer from Athens, presented her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leo
the program carrying out the Story and Mr. and Mrs. Patrick
theme 0lden Times" . Joe Lochary. Charles Lochary will
Perry read "The Old Coal join his family here later this
Stove"; Mrs. Stout presented a month.
resume of the Grange and its
Mr. and Mrs. James Sheets
founding, and there was in- and son, Jared, have returned
strumental and vocal music by from a week 's vacation in
Kathryn
Francis
who Michigan where they visited
presented " Cruel War" and Mrs . Sheets' grandmother,
Mrs. Hennan Lohse.

tablecloths, vests, capes,
stoles, ponchos, hats, scarves,
dresses, pot holders, trimmed
pillow cases, handkerchiefs,
.doilies and miscellaneous.
There are sections for all
types of quilts and crocheted,
hooked, braided, loom woven
rugs.
One of the newer displays,
the hobby corner, will feature
this year shell craff, wood
carvi ngs, model cars, doll
clothes, embroidered, string
and J..D pictures, homemade
purses, tie dyed articles,
stuffed dolls or animals,
Chris tmas tree .ornaments,
gifts made from scrap
material, candles, ceramics
and special class for any other
hobbies.

SAVE

NEW SIIIPMENT
901Y - Yellow Gold Fil led

$14.95

toiS- Sterlin&amp; Silver ·

Goessler Jewelry Store

FALL FABRICS

I The Fabric Shop

·11

.'

s~c\3
i.&amp;\1

J

Slf~GEit

SALES&amp; SiltY ICE
•
Mc:CAt.l.' l&amp; SIMPliCI",.Y ,ATTERNS ·

Beautiful fabrics lor
back to school sewing .

Come, browse nawl

115 W. Second '

spec

ftM214

P\:1-mtroy,o.

;f

Court St, Pomeroy
')

I

'·

4

8 oz.

MUGS

Thursday Only!

RC COLA
8oz.

-

$}00

EASY MOND'AY
PINK QUART BOTILE
DETfRGENT
.
•

16
BOTS.

29~
.

69~

.

•

•

SUPER MARKET • Open ~ 9 to 10 • Sun.
· We Accept Federal. FOOd ~lamps .

Corner Mill and Secono Sts.

PHONE: 992-3480
"W• Reserve

The RiRht To Limil Ouan~itiu"

tiQDLEPOR~

0.

�.

...~

..

..... "'

'

. "

.

•
•

I

,'

5- The DaUy Sentinel, Middl~port-Pomeroy, 0., July 11, 19'12
4- The Da!Jl' ~t!fl!!I,_Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Julv II. 1972

·.~..~~·~&gt;.-':•:o:t:·:·:&lt;·:·::::--x;·:·:&gt;.:~::;:::@:::·:·:·:&lt;:-:-:o:;:;:~::~:::::.~:.-::~=:--::::::s::~
••t~·l'l:l'~l

Dom·estic Arts .Schedule .
Of County Fair Revealed
.

.

USDA CHOICE MEATS

~~~~unity- , I
ICorner By Charlene Hoeflich!'\
.

'

. .

'

U. S•.GOVERNMENI INSPECTED

~

SAVE 21r

:3~

'·
years.
Rulesalsostatethata person
can make only one entry in
each class, but can enter as
many classes 'as desired.
Entries must be registered at
the Secretary's Office on the
Meigs County Fairgrounds by 4
p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 10. At ·
that time the books will close.
Ail articles for judging
should be on the ·fairgrounds
between 9 and 10:30 a.m. on
Tuesday, Aug. 15. Anything
been the practice in previous arriving after that time will be

'
I

\

I

25th Anniversary on july 15
Mr. and Mrs. David C. Vance of Pomeroy will celebrate
their 2.\lh wedding anniversary on July 15. The couple was
married on July 15, 1947 in Dunbar, W. Va. and are the
parents of four sons, Larry of Rutland, Buck of New Vinia,
Bobby, stationed with the U.S. Army in Germany and Rex,
at home. They have one grandson.
Mr. Vance is employed with the Sollitt Construction Co.
~..;::;··s:w~~······················:x··············

m · &lt;s· oc·-·- -~~·a·-·-·· -·,·

· =·I

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT CHILD
Conser'\'ation League suiiirrler
outing for members and their
ch ildren at Camden Park,
Huntington. Members are to
meet there at noon.
THURSDAY
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, annual picnic
Thursday at the Richa1·d
Chambers , country home.
Steak dinner to be prepared by
Tom Cassell and his committee. Serving at 6:30p.m. All
Lions invited.
THURSDAY
WORK IN Master Mason
degree when Shade River
Lodge 453 meets at 8 p.m.
Thursday at hall in Chester. All
Master Masons invited .

ICalendar!

TUESDAY
PINS TO 2.\ year members
when Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, meet.; at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at temple. Master
Masons invited.
MEIGS COUNTY
Alcoholism and Drug Abuse
Committee meeting 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at St. Paul Lutheran
Church, Pomeroy, with Roger
Hooker speaking on "Today's
Drug Scene" and a film will be
shown.
GOLDEN RULE Class of
Pomeroy Church of Christ
picnic 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at
Route 33 Roadside Park.
MEIGS COUNTY Women's
Democratic Club, 7:30p.m. 242
Mulberry Ave., Tuesday.
EASTERN
Athletic
Boosters, July 11, 8 ;.m.
Tuesday at Eastern High
School.
WEDNESDAY
REVIVAL, United Faith
Church, Pomeroy - Middleport
By-pass, Rev. Worley Haley,
evange li st, Wednesday
through July 23. All singers
welcome, 7:30 each evening .
WHITE ROSE Lodge, 1:30
p.m. Wednesday, American
Legion Hail, Middleport.
WEDNESDAY
PAST PRESIDENTS ,
American Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39, 6:30
p.m. annual picnic at the Ohio
River campsite on the Owen
Watson farm at Racine.

marked for .display only. Mrs.
Pete Burris of New Haven, W.
Va., home economics teacher
at Wahama Junior High
School, will judge the entries
beginning at !0:30a.m. on Aug.
15.
In children's clothing there
are classes for dresses, play
clothes, blouses, !-shirts, nitewear and. coats. The adult
clothing section has classes for
dresses, suits, coats, blouses
and nile-wear. There are
categories for all types of
aprons, pillowcases, cushions,
tablecloths, and pot holders, as
well as knitted · afghans:
sweaters, stoles, capes, ponchos1 hats and scarves.
Classes for crochet work
include afghans, bedspreads,

Schedule for the domestic
arts department of the Meigs
"County Fair has been announced by Mrs. Robert Lewis,
chairman.
·
As in previous years any
article awarded a premium in ·
the pas~ two years is not
eligible for entry, and new
work and new ideas will be
given preference for awards.
Premiums this year are higher
and will be given in three
places rather than two as has

Evans Graduates
From Ohio Tech
Ronald Lee Evans, a 1960
graduate of Middleport High
School employed by Industrial
Nucleonics in Columbus, has
graduated from the Ohio Institute of Technology with an
associate degree in electronic
engineering technology. He
graduated with a 3.95 average .
Evans and his wife, the
former Janis Hauck, and two
sons, _Jeffrey and Scott, reside
on Carolyn Ave., in Columbus.
·He.served four years in the U.
S. Navy after graduation and
worked for the Howard Hughes
Corporation while living in
California. He has been with
Industrial Nucleonics for two
years. Ronald is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Evans of
Middleport.

Athens Pomona
In Visitation
A program in keeping with
the centennial observance of
the Ohio State Grange was
presented fi'riday night by the
Athens County Pomona
Grange during the annual
visitation with the Meigs
County Pomona Grange at the
Rock Springs hail.
The Ohio Valley Grange was
host for the evening and two
candidates from that grange,
Mrs . Iva Orr and Mrs.
Florence
Smith,
were
obligated in the fifth degree.
Deputy Virgil Atkins announced that Racine, Hemlock,
Laurel and Ohio Valley
Granges will be exhibiting at
the Meigs County Fair this
year.
Worthy Master Norman Will
introduced and recognized the
Athens County deputy master,
Waldo Poston and his wife, and
the Pomona master, Mrs. Mae
Smith. Also recognized were
four Meigs County subordinate
masters and three visiting
subordinate masters.
Earl Starkey noted that he
had received word of the death
of Gus Umbach, Ohio State
Grange lecturer. Umbach died
while directing a grange tour
through Alaska.
Plans were announced for a
visit of the Meigs County
Pomona Grange this Thursday
night to the Athens Pomona
Grange at 8 p.m. at the Albany
Grange hall. Aprogram will be
presented under the direction
of Mrs. Elizabeth Jordan . The
subordinate contest and the
junior grange contest will be
judged at the September

"Put Your Hand in the Hand".
Poston gave gardening tips on
storing and spraying potatoes
to prevent sprouting and a
reading "Returning to You";
Peggy Gorby gave' "Sad State
of Things", and there was a
reading "Could You Afford It"
by Mrs. Mae Smith.
A humerous monologue on
safe driving was presented by
Mrs. Leona Burson, Joe Perry
and Clyde Smith gave jokes
and hwnerous stories, and
Pearl Smith read "What Kind
of Granger are You?". Miss
Francis sang '4Sixteen Tons 11 ,
and Mrs. Stout concluded the
program with a reading "If
You Don't Like Life".
Attending the meeting were
31 visitors and 43 members
from Meigs County Granges.

~~::::::::::::-;m:~-::~~:z::::~:::::::::i:::::~::::~:::::::

0

Law Requires 'Estimates of

FIVE IN CAMP
Becky Fultz, David Miller,
Angela Sisson, Cathy and
Mitchell Meadows are attending a 10-day camping
session at the Southwestern
MARIETTA - People who lost, a visit or phone call to any nings up to and including Episcopal Camp at Vinton.
are under 72 in any month of social security office can take $2,880. Above $2,880, an ad·
ditional $1 in payments is withthe year and who are getting ca re of the report.
social security payments and
If people earn less than their held for every $1 earned.
Regardless of how much his
SALE DAy SET
working should make sure original estimate, reporting
their earnings estimates for the change may permit ad-· yearly earnings are, however,
The Happy Hustlers Class of
this year are up-to-date.
di tiona! social security a beneficiary can still get a the Wesleyan United Methodist
Eugene Ermatinger, social payments during the year. On payment for any month in · Church in Racine will hold a
securilydistrict manager here, the other hand, if people earn which he neither earns over rummage sale from 9 a.m. to 4
said the report should be made more money during the year $140 in employment nor per- p.m. Friday and Saturday at
when the work begins and than they originally estimated, forms substantial services in the parsonage garage.
again when there is a change in they may get social security self-&lt;&gt;mployment, the district
either the work or estimated checks not due them and have manager said.
Any working social security
earnings.
to repay money at the end of
beneficiary in the Meigs
" Any changes in the the year.
estimate made earlier this
If a beneficiary 's earnings County area who has a question
A thought for the day :
year should be reported assoon don 'I go over $1.680 for the about his earnings estimate for American attorney John Calas possible to social security," year, his social security 1972 can call,' write or visit the houn said, "The surrender of
Ennatinger said. " It can be payments won 't be affected. If Marietta social security office, life is nothing, compared to
made on the postcard form • earnings exceed $1,680, $1 m Mr . Ermatinger said. The acknowledgement of inferiprovided to every beneficiary social security payments is phone number is 1-800-282-9711 ority."
who works. If the card has been withheld for every $2 of ear- ( toll free).

-Earnings Kept Up to Date

Donnie Folmer is still a patient at the Carleton Memorial
Hospital at Woodstock, New Brunswick, Canada and expects to
be confaned there anotber week or two.
.
.He underwent siD'gery a week ago Thursday for a ruptured
appendix. Donnie, a freshman at Meigs High this fall; his
·mother, Betty, and sisters, Shiels and Gwen,_were at Woodstock
visiting Mrs. Folmer's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John P~so'."',
when he took sick. Tbeir stay in Canada now seems rather mdefinite.
However Sheila has returned and yesterday began her
training in l~boratory technology at the Marietta Memorial
Hospital.
Donnie is lonely since his acquaintances at Woodstock are
limited to a few relatives and could certainly use a few cards
from classmates and friends just now.

related the story of Samson ,
from the book of Judges .
The camp meeting is from
July 26 through August 6. 1t will
welcome Rev . LaVerne
Rohrbaugh and Wayne and
Arlene Thomas again this
advance.
The Mason Parish co- year. The Gospel story will be
ordinator 1 Rev . William delivered by Rev. Rohrbaugh.
DeMoss is leading the singing; The one-time professional
Mrs. Harold Bumgardner is at night club singer, Wayne
the piano, and the ministers of Thomas, and his wife, Arlene,
the parish are bringing the will bring the Gospel in song .

NEW HAYEN- Thirly-&lt;&gt;ight
churches are cooperating in
the Union Camp Ground
revival this summer prior to
which Sunday night services
are conducted four weeks in

messages.

Rev. James Dempsey of the
Clifton Charge brought the
message Sunday evening. He

BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
Mrs. Paul Simpson, Jr. of
Middleport entertained
recently with a party in observance
of the fourth birthday
DAUGHTER BORN
NEW HAVEN - Mr. and on July 3 of her daughter,
Mrs. William Folmer of New Valerie Lynn . Gifts were
Haven, W. Va. are announcing presented to Valerie and
the birth of a daughter, June refreshments of cake, ice
2.\, at St. Joseph Hospital, cream, Kool-Aid and coffee
Parkersburg. The eight pound, were served. Attending were
Ia ounce infant has been named Mrs. Paul Chadwell and
Anita Marie. __Mr, and Mrs. daughters, Polly Anna and
Folmer have -a son, Michael. Kimberly, Middleport; Mrs.
(Grandparents are Mr. and Robert Shuster and Shean,
Mrs . Leland Kirby, New Miss Melanie Grueser and .
Haven; Mr. and Mrs. George Misty Dawn, Pomeroy ; and
Folmer, Pomeroy. Mr . and Valerie's younger sister, Joan
Mrs. Edgar Cunningham of Marie. Visiting later in the
Simpsonville, S. C. are great - evening were Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Simpson, Sr., Pomeroy,
grandparents.
Valerie's grandparents.

..

__ .

SUPERIORS USOA CHOICE

RIGHT FROM THE BARREL

BALlARD'S WHOLE HOG

to
24,000 BTU

'·

o IW I"I \ 1 lltllf'U • 1\.lll
l~'nd HI' h i Ill

•

.

l'r,

and grandson of Colerain, and
Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Welker of
Columbus spent the weekend
herewith Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Sauer.
Mrs. Paul Grueser, t&lt;Ccompanled by her sister, Mrs.
Mabel Wolfe of Pomeroy, was
in V1enna, W. Va. S•mday to
visit ber great-granddaughter,
Maureen Suzanne McCale.
infant daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Mitchell McCale . Also
visiting at the McCale home
was another of Mrs. Grueser's
granddaughters, Mrs. Stanley
Kiapkowski and her family of
Claysville, Pa.

\I I 111'1 I THill lo KII.L - ol ll~'"

,,., I•

~ n"

htlll&lt;&gt;h ·• •h··•

• T"tliU.SPU' D F41'i •
lo!flo •~ k- 'f'l\-.1,

( 'w o· ~l•l c,

1"'",....,, io •&lt; •IIO!MJft; pr\1'

&gt;II •olh uo • &gt;ll!w l •V&lt;lli"C 11
\

LUNCH MEATS

5h$1 °

0

sse

lb.

LB. BAG

WITH PURCHASE OF
4 LIGHT BULBS

BUSH'S SHOWBOAT

PORK &amp; BEANS

GRANGE CANCELLED
The regular meeting of the
Rock
Springs
Grange
scheduled for Thursday night
has been canceled . The next
meeting will be held on July 27.
..
-

2-HOUR
CLEANING
(Upon Request)

40 oz.
CANS

S.EALTEST MILK
gallon

•

CRACKERS

27 LB. AVERAGE

$

100

0·0
r,

lvs. for

WATERMELONS

lo 1

1

l·LB.

BXS.

-

Graham Crackers
I-LB.
BXS.

SCOT LAD SLICED

¥2 ·Gal.

BROWN SUGAR

79~

16 oz. pkg.

lifE. 2nd '
Pomeroy
Phone 992-1428

'100

NOW AT A LOW PRICE!

AMERICAN CHEESE

ROBINSON'S
..
CLEANERS

'1 oo·

. FIRESIDE
.. BRAN.D

'

EACH

HOME GROWN CABBAGE ....... lb. 1o~
FRESH RADISHES ..................... bag 10~
GOLDEN CARROTS ........... lb. bag 10~

'100

SCOT LAD SALTINES

.FAVORITE BREAD

49~ ·

lb.

LARGE SIZE
PEANUT BUnER

Today:
Make
g
Sim le
and

_

EGGS

..

BANQUO

CREAM PIES .............4
Ice Cream

'

$

BAGS

FOR
GAL CRT.

3
$1
CHOC. MILK......
QTS.
FOR

FAIRMONT

lO.PAK

DOZ.

1
79e

Assorted flavors '12
including cherrynut, black
walnut, etc.

REESE CUPS

$1

UNCLASSIFIED

FOR THAT SPECIAL SOMEONE

'100

11111111. .

=

69~1i

MARK V /
STORE WITH ' " " couoo•
WITHOUT

:;

PlAYTEX
RUJBER GLOVES
Wl111 1 FrH, Ex1ra Right . Hanel
Glovt Free.
Ret.

1.49

89$

Wi111
c..,·~·

99~

AT MARK V STORE

COUPOIIt

UMIT 1 CD-.tiR PURCHAII

CUSTOM
FASH IONED

BY

,
~etl'·

, NU·MAID MARGARINE

~etl'· Colored

Mugs

77~5592

''~ ' '' n·l"f'''"''' ho '"' "'"'"' rlfl.

SUGAR
5
49~

SUPERIORS ASSORTED

NECK BONES

lb ,

FAIRMONT

·New For Fall

MASON, W. VA.

'h"'" ..... "'· ~····· .,.

SUPERIORS PORK

Choice
Golden
Ripe

FURNITURE

6,000

.

HOMOGENIZED

'fotlt~~y

TO I I I 11&lt;111\1 "' lilt• ~ 001.1~4 , • I ''~•· • . II ""''"l~lllo• l~ ij"'"

9~

GRADE A

MASON

•

.

SUPERIORS POLISH

f :ht&gt;(_·k Our

PH.

89¢
99¢
59
69¢
79

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE

Kelvinator Air Conditioners
Prir••

BOILED HAM

.

JIM LOHSE AND HIS WIFE are off on a holiday and their
two daughters, Lori AM and Angie, are enjoying the two weeks
bere with tbeir grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lohse, Cave
St., Pomeroy.
The two are in Scotland now and will be making trips into
England and Wales before returning home.

Sunday evening guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Clifford Hayes were
Mr. and Mrs. Othei Cunningham, Karen and Allen of
Rochester, Mich., and Miss
Barbara Cunningham of
Buffalo, W. Va. Other recent
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Hayes
have been Miss Effie Price,
Mr. and Mrs. Everett J. Price
of St. Albans; Mrs. Lorene
Taylor, Mrs . Anna Logan,
Nitro, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
John E. Piatt, Sr., Columbus;
Mrs. 0 . M. Martin, Westerville; and the Rev. and Mrs.
Oria Bradford and Marty,
Chicago, Ill.
Gregory Hayes, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Clifford Hayes, spent
the weekend at Cedar Lake
attending the Rio Grande
Association Baptist Youth
retreat. He is a member of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church.
Mrs. Ronald Place and son,
Steve, of Groten, N. Y. visited
from Wednesday to Monday
with Mrs. Harry Houdashelt
and Miss Freddie Houdashelt.
Mr. and Mrs . John Waiters

lb.

WI EN ERS ........... ~b~
Chopped Sirloin ... ~b~
Ground Chuck ••••• :~ .
¢
SAUSAGE •••••••• ~ •• ~~ ·
SALT FISH •••••••~ •• :~ ·
¢
Farm Sausage ••••••·• .

.

The Evangelkrs Coming Again

38 Churches Cooperating

SUPE~IORS

BOLOGNA

&amp;·9¢

SUPERIORS ALL MEAT

ELOISE HAYES HOMEBOUND for quite a few years
. now,
has taken on the job of providing an answering serVIce fpr the
Rich Valley Ice Cream Co. She has an extension on the company
phone and takes orders and messages whenever tbey come in.
Doing this is a real morale booster for Eloise.

-

NEW HAVEN- Being welcomed again this year to the
Union Camp Grounds, Mason County, are "The
Evangeliers," Akron, Ohio. This group, who gave a great
spiritual uplift at the camp ground last year, comes as one of
America's most spiritual quartets through ministry in
churches, recordings and television. The time is 7:30p.m.,
the place is Union Camp Ground, three miles back of New
Haven.

4(r

SUPERIORS SLICED

ZUELELIA SMITH IS A WOMAN with a great faith in
people. But even she was amazed at just how considerate
strangers can be when they sense a problem.
Zuelella, called to Dayton by the death of a nephew last
week, traveled tbere by bus. Arriving at the Dayton bus station,
she tried repeatedly to telephone her relatives but for some
reason or other couldn't. A woman seated in the bus station
·sensed how disturbed Mrs. Smith was and with no hesitation
approached her and volunteered to take her to her relatives'
home, a distance of several miles.
The woman, her husband, and their youthful, blond daughter
delivered her to the door of her relatives. They declined payment
which Mrs. Smith offered, but before departing gave her their
statement of Christian faith and belief in the brotherhood of man.

I p:::N~~; I

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cook
returned Saturday following a
six -week visit in South Windsor, Conn. with their 'son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward J. Corcoran and
family. They went especially
for the graduation of their
grandson, Michael, from high
school. Bringing Mr. and Mrs.
Cook home were Mrs. Corcoran and son, James. They
returned to Connecticut
Monday.
Mrs. Charles Lochary,
Robert and Meg, who reside in
meeting.
a suburb of Chicago, Ili. are
Mrs. Genevieve Stout, lec- here for a summer visit with
turer from Athens, presented her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leo
the program carrying out the Story and Mr. and Mrs. Patrick
theme 0lden Times" . Joe Lochary. Charles Lochary will
Perry read "The Old Coal join his family here later this
Stove"; Mrs. Stout presented a month.
resume of the Grange and its
Mr. and Mrs. James Sheets
founding, and there was in- and son, Jared, have returned
strumental and vocal music by from a week 's vacation in
Kathryn
Francis
who Michigan where they visited
presented " Cruel War" and Mrs . Sheets' grandmother,
Mrs. Hennan Lohse.

tablecloths, vests, capes,
stoles, ponchos, hats, scarves,
dresses, pot holders, trimmed
pillow cases, handkerchiefs,
.doilies and miscellaneous.
There are sections for all
types of quilts and crocheted,
hooked, braided, loom woven
rugs.
One of the newer displays,
the hobby corner, will feature
this year shell craff, wood
carvi ngs, model cars, doll
clothes, embroidered, string
and J..D pictures, homemade
purses, tie dyed articles,
stuffed dolls or animals,
Chris tmas tree .ornaments,
gifts made from scrap
material, candles, ceramics
and special class for any other
hobbies.

SAVE

NEW SIIIPMENT
901Y - Yellow Gold Fil led

$14.95

toiS- Sterlin&amp; Silver ·

Goessler Jewelry Store

FALL FABRICS

I The Fabric Shop

·11

.'

s~c\3
i.&amp;\1

J

Slf~GEit

SALES&amp; SiltY ICE
•
Mc:CAt.l.' l&amp; SIMPliCI",.Y ,ATTERNS ·

Beautiful fabrics lor
back to school sewing .

Come, browse nawl

115 W. Second '

spec

ftM214

P\:1-mtroy,o.

;f

Court St, Pomeroy
')

I

'·

4

8 oz.

MUGS

Thursday Only!

RC COLA
8oz.

-

$}00

EASY MOND'AY
PINK QUART BOTILE
DETfRGENT
.
•

16
BOTS.

29~
.

69~

.

•

•

SUPER MARKET • Open ~ 9 to 10 • Sun.
· We Accept Federal. FOOd ~lamps .

Corner Mill and Secono Sts.

PHONE: 992-3480
"W• Reserve

The RiRht To Limil Ouan~itiu"

tiQDLEPOR~

0.

�I ./

•

ti - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 11,1972

·'·••
•••.
...

. •l

"'"

"••
",,
"
"

.

~

..,,"

,,"
"

••

of

'·••

..,.
"

,.

•·

~

,."
••
,.,.

·:.,

..".
.....
••

•'
·I
~
.,

'
••
,.

.•

Sentinel Classifieds .Get
2 SIGNS
154 Golfers Set
OF
QUAliTY
For Tourney

Help Wanted
Good

WANT ADS

Notice

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Card c' Thanks
f r iends and neighbors who
kindly assisted us in any way
in the loss of our sister, Ethel.
Rev . William Uber for the
conso ling wordS, Vivian

Kirby and Odella Mack for

the beautiful music and
Rawlings and Coats for their
efficient service and al l who
se nt flowers .

By the fam ily of Ethel
Sigman

I WANT to thank all my fr iends .

:'We talk to )QI
liket~

WMP0/1390.
ON YOUR DIAL

The new law improves the
old law .by its broader
definition
of hazardous
operations.
Among new areas defi~ed as
legally hazardous are drilling,
grinding, buffeting, ail forms
of welding processes and
physical laboratories using
caustic or explosive ma~rials.
This new law requires all
~achers, students and visitors
in the above indica~d schools
to wear industrial eye safety
devices when participating or
vi siting in such hazardous

courses.
The new legislation says
such safety devices may be
furnished for all students and
~achers, purchased and sold
at costtostudents and ~achers
or made available for a
moderate r~ ntal fee, and shall
be furnished for all-visitors to
such shops and laboratories.
Ohio's primary and second.ary public schools have been
covered by eye safety
regulations since August of
1963. These schools have
proved statewide the value of
implementing eye pro~ction
programs "by the strict ob- ·
servance of eye safety

992 -2448

SENTINEL
·.:cARRIERS WANTED

NOTICE

washer, excellent condit1on; 2
porcelain top cabinets; gas
cook stove; metal table and
four chairs; Bissell nandsweeper; full -size metal bed ;
Free Westinghouse sewing
machine in cabinet ; phone

MIDDLEPORT
Phone Faye Manley
992 -5592
In

Pomeroy
Phone 992-2156
Help Wanted Female
EXTRA INCOME : We need

In closets, large living room,
kitchen and dining area.

Phone 992·7384 or 992-7133.
7-9-3fc

FABRIC

ladies as parttime Personal

Box

10, Walkins
Winona,

2 BEDROOM trailer. adults
7-ll -12tp
ROUM furnished and

SALE I

apartments .

Buy 2 Pairs and

GET I PAIR FREE

- , - - - -- -

mile from Rout e 7 By-Pass.
Rev .
Dewey
Ki ng , ONE b ~.: droom trailer apartEvangel ist. Special singing .
ments, ideal for co upl es.
Starts each even ing at 7: 30 p.
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle.
m.
Everyone
welcome .
992·5248 or 992-3436.
Pastor , Rev . Roy Taylor .
7-9-6tc

All kinds , all sizes for men ,
women, young men , b.::~ys
and girls. Hurry to .. .

9.-

.l!iill!
I -

------

REDUCE sate and fast wi lh
GoB ese Tab let s &amp; E-Vap
"water pil ls," Nelson Drug .
6-29·30tp

CLIFF'S Shoe Repair , Middleport, wil l be open f rom 12
noon to 5 p.m. until further
nofice. Closed on Mondays .
7. 7-6fc
-~=-=-----

WANTED - Cu s tomers at
Showaller's Wet Pet Shop,
Chester, Otlio. No experience
necessary .

RELAXING I
:rI ----·-·
.•
.

Forked Run Lake; free gas,
partly furnished . Reasonable
rent ; prefer retired couple ;
references ; phone 378-6298 .

{l.._.,;(,~12"

'

Do you h•'~~• curly or h1rd to
m1n1119e h1lr?
Stop . in and have M ick or
Fred relu your ha ir for a
more manageable hair .

KARR'S BARBER SHOP

Lynn 51 . 992·2367 Pomeroy
Barbers ' Lout 400-AFl ·CIO

,

Phone 992-2 181

3414 INTERNATIONAL

and 3120 backhoe ; Earl R.
Werner. Middleport; phone
992·2769 at Bradbury .
7-Htp
-:c:-:---- - COAL,

Limestone.

Excelsior

Salt Works. E. Main Sl .,

and white TV, S?S, New 3-pc .

bedroom suite. $75 . Phone 9'126021.
7-9·31c

Mobile Homes For Sale
CASrl paid for all makes ana
models of mobile homes.

Phone area code 614-423-9531.
4-13-lfc:

50 X 10. 2 bedroom , pr iced

1971 TOYOTA Corolla: 2 dr.
sedan, low mi leagd, excellent
condition ; phone 992-7024. ·

7-9·6fc
-~.,----1968 FORD Fairiane ; air 7-9-3tc
-1965-OLDS
-'88 , $580 ; 1967

Thunderbird, S875 ; 1970 Ford

Ranger Truck , $2,250 ; all in
good cond ition ; call 742-3431.

7-11 ·3fp

------

Sal ~
5 FT. BUSH Hog . Phone 9492783.
7-H tc

For

6-28-llc

DEMCO Satellile CB rad io with
D 104 microphone. S200 ;

phone '1'12·3364.

7-11 ·6fp

7·11
~E

6A'&gt;S lHE

1liE 60'1'5 ARE
GREAT. IT's ll-lE
PARENTS IN
1HE SfAND5.

ViOLENCE AND .

fOUL LANGUN;;E
AREN'T GCOD.

6URP! ...

THE 6(.V&gt;.RD! .. R?5T
NUMf362 Frui&lt;?! ...

..

'

CAIN'T SEE
A INCH
AHEAD IN
THIS FOG.~'

doors and windows, carp'orts.(
marquees, alum inum siding .

PLASTER lNG &amp; refinishing old
chimneys; phone 992 -2368 ,
Pomeroy, Ohio.

and railing. "A. Ja cob, sales,
representative. For free 1
•estimates, phone Charles[·

7-5·61p

Lisle,

Syracuse,

V.

V.

Real Estate For

water , J2 acres tillable , 20
acres timber , 5.4 fenced ,
rolling acres. Beautiful 4bedroom ranch home. all
carpeted and paneled , large

reasonably,

phone

Chester

985-3379. "=========7:·:
9-...;6t'fp

r

'complete mobile home
service ...... plus gigantic

'display of mobile homes
always awl/abl! at "'

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES .

6-29.9fc

Real Estate For Sale

YOtJ

DO

STUFF?

HAVE: ONE OF YOUR
MEN LOC'\TE: ALL
WATER PIPE~
LEADING IN

5-21 ·ftC

Excavating , Pl'lone 992 -5367 ,
Dick Karr , Jr .

5·21 -ttc
rights. Located 1 mile out of
Rutland on Happy Hollow AUTOMOBILE insurance been
Rd .. $28,500 . Phone 992-3020.
cancelle d?
Lost
your
7-11 -5fc
operator 's license? Call 992-·
2966. '
88 ACRES, low S20's, farmhouse
6· 15-tfc
and other buildings, Over 200
ft . frontage . Must see to
appreciate.
Rosemary SEWING MAlHINES. . Repalr:
service. all makes. 992·2284 .
Withem . 239-0647. GRANDThe Fabric Shop. Pomeroy .
STAFF, INC ., REAL TOR ,
Aulhor lzed Singer Sales and
471 -2112 .
7-9-lt c 1 Servi ce. We Sharpen Scissors.
3·29-tlc
LOTS in Meigs School Distr ic t; _R_E_A_D_Y--M
-IX-:--~C~O~N~C~R~ETE
phone 992-6329.
delivered r ight to y.our
7-7·6tp
-------,4 BEDROOM home. full
basement , gas furnace, 200ft .
r iver frontage . Also 5 room
house wilh bath, basement,
ga·s furna ce on adjoining lot.
Sam Arnold, Syracuse, Ohio ;

projec1 . Fast and easy . Free

est imates . Phone 992-328•:
Goeglein

4 bedrooms ;

Co .,

6-30-lf&lt;

----,~---

USED building suppile! &amp;
salvage

yard i

will

wreck

across

from

Ht:RE~ ~Ot.F. Pf;.~!
COil 1T:51'S~D fT

Highland

Church . phone 992-5946.
7-9-12tc

buill-in

Phone 949·3073 .
7-5-61c

UTTLE ORPHAN ~IE
'tOU'RE IH CHARC\E OF
SECURIT'(. AHD 'lOUR ARM~
OOH S,.TS Of SMOY, LOBO,
DARWIH AND AMICUS~
THIHK l'OU CAN HAH OI.E ITr

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rate•. Ph. 4464782. Galll~olls, John Russell ,

NOW All WE C.OTTA DO IS CIGURE OUT
WHO CAH DO WHAT BlS1 1 I'l l SllEPOH
IT AN' COM£ UP WITH A PlAN 0' ACTION
lti THE rvlORN I N '~ £!,?-~ !!

Owner &amp; Operator .
-:-~-:-::-:---

CLELAND
.REALTY
608 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

BUILDERS
OPPORTUNITY
Close in, 30 acres, good
drainag e, Chester water ,

closets, P/2 baths, utility
room, full basement, great'
rec. room, 1 acre ground, In'

town. 528,500.00. '
$1,000.00 DOWN
VIEW OF THE RIVER, 3

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker

by Dick Turner
by THOMAS JOSEPH

5-12·11&lt;

c.

ACROSS
1. Yucatan
Indian
5. Belgian

BRADFORD, Auclioneer
Complete Service

Phone 949·3821
Racine, Ohio

Crltt Bradford

DOWN

l. Billiard

shot

2. Zodiacal

resort

5-1-tfc
.S--EP.,T-1C
- ta_n_k_s_ci_e_an_e_o-..-M
- IIIer
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035 .
2-12-ttc ,

sign

8. Russian
lake
9. Mistaken
(2 wds.)
13. Locate
H. Femme

=------

BESIDES, I WANT
PAPER . I
SKETCW UFE

CALL Guy Neigler lor Building
Houses .

6-28.tfc

- -- - - -

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No . 20717
Estate of MARY L EMMISH ,
Deceased .
Not ice is hereby given tiHH
Willetta E . Bougher or 1112· e.
Cooke Rd .. Columbus , Ohio , has
been duly appointed Executrix
ot the · Estate of MARY L
EM.MISH , deceased , late oi
MtiOS County, Ohio .
CreditOr$ are required to tile
the ir claims with said fiduci&amp;ry
with in four months .
Dated this 7th day of July
1972 .
John C. Bll con
Judge
(7) II , 18, 25. 31
NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT
The State of Ohio , Meigs
County . ~robate Court,
To the Administratrix of the
estate ; to such of the following
as are residents ot the State of
Ohio, Vil : the surviving
spouse, the next &lt;If kin the
beneficiaries under the 'Will .
and to the attorney or attorney$
representing any Cit the
aforementioned persons ·
Allen
Dean
Blackwood
Deceased, Rutland , Oh io R o'
1, Scipio Township,· No .
1·6.4 :
You are hereby not lflfld that
the
lnventorv
and
Ap .
pralsement of the estate Of lhe
aforementioned , deceased. late
of said County , was flied In this
Court. Said lnventorv end
Apprelument will bt lor
hearing before this Court on the

iTONAMCWIE!

AU.. I~· 0~1::
PL,&amp;..c.€1

kilchens and walt -to -wall
carpel; call 985-3598.
O'DELL WHEEL al ignment
6-28-12tc
located at Crossroads. Rl. 124.
Complete front end service,
RACINE - 10 room house,
tune up and brake service .
bath , basement. garage, two
Wh eels balan ced elec ·
lots. Phone 949-4313.
All
work
Ironically.
4-s.lfp
guaranteed .
RP~~~;.nn~nt,.
rales . Phon e 742 ·3232 or
1 ACRE land, new 2 room
992·3213.
, ., .nc
cabin ; 9 acres pasture land,
barn and outbuildings ; can be
bought 'on land contract.

8!.0111 TilE R:5T

Qfl,~ORIJ,A.WU:,

houses. buildings, etc. Covert
&amp; Marlin Wreckage II.
Salvage Co .. Laurel Cliff

7-7-6tc

half ;

Ready -M ix

Middl epor t, Ohio .

phone 992-2360.

•

formation.

SPEOCIAL:

CALL
"THIS

bath and ut ility room, et. DOZER and back hoe worR.
ponds and septic tanks ; 8 &amp; K

."

·,Air Conditioners
• Awnings
·Underpinning ·

WHA"T

WINKLE

clean. oil, set tension $4 .99 ..
Special Electro -Grande
Company . Phone 992-6517 .

tached' garage , basement
with forced air furnace .
Fenced paddock for show ing
horses . Sold with all mineral

THERE YA ARE,

EOLMER 1 T'~V'S

Johnson ,.and Son , Inc.

-:------

.......

?

POLICE
ATHLETIC
LEAGUE

r..:&gt;
t.l

5EK'6EANT OF

· after 7 p.m. or phone . 992:

c:=-::c::-::-::--:---Want~d
5-ACRE RANCHO.
STEREO. Early American IDEAL
bedrooms, bath. porches,
Lake Conchas, New Mexico.
slyle. AM-FM radio com- 52,875,, No Down . No Interest. part basement , metal roof,
WILL DO daytime babysitting
bination , 4 speed automatic
in my home for 1or 2 children.
$25 mo. Vacation Paradise. storage building , garage,
changer, 4 speaker sound
Rates reasonable . Can give
legislation .
$&lt;1,900.00.
.
Money
Maker .
Free
references . Phone 992 -3960
system. Balance $78.69. Use
BATTLE OF THE
Brochure . Ranchos : Box
The Ohio Society for the
after 5 p.m.
our time payment plan . Call
BULGE?
2001 DO, Alameda, california
Prevention of Blindness, as a
992·7085.
7-9-6tc
If you are fighting to provide
94501 '
means of encouraging strict
7-7-6tc
6-7-30tp enough room for a growing
observance of eye safety WILL paint r oofs or houses, :B-::E:-:A-:U-:T:-:1-F_U_L_ W
_a
_
i_
n_
u
_
t
-f-inish
iR~Aiiic"itiiNfi:e
c
::'·:6-;r~oo;;;m;;-;:;h~ou
;;s:;;
e'l
, b'-a;;;;th,' family ... Here's a place
tr im and cut trees; cl ean
Ideally suited. 4 bedrooms,
procedures and the widespread
stereo. 4 spea ker sound
utility room , garage, $10.000; ·
attic s; basements ,
et c.
. 111-z baths, call for paruse of proper eye pro~ction
system
,
.4
speed
automatic
~hone
949-4195.
'
Ph one 949-322 1.
ticulars. $12,800.00.
3-31 -ffc
equipment, sponsors the Wise
6·14-30tc cha nger . Use our budget
LE,T US SELL YOUR
terms. Balance $69.15. Use
-----Owl Club of Anlerica in Ohio,
3 BEOROOM .HOME
our time payment plan. Call HOUSE. in Long Boftom. phone
HENRY
E. CLELAND SR.
an eye safety incentive Instruct ion
992-7085.
985·3529.
REALTOR
7-7.6tc
program for education and
6-11 -tfc
PHONE 992-2259
TRAILER
industry. Membership in the TRACTOR
TRAINEES NEEDED. You NEW 1972 Zig -zag sewing
organization is awarded to
machine in original factory
can now train to become an
carton . Zig -zag to make"
students who save their eye
over the road drl ver or city
buttonholes, sew on b~Jitons ,
driver . Excellent earnings
sight by wearing eye protection
monograms, and make laney
after short tra ining on our
at th€ time of a potentially
designs
with just the twist of a
trucks with our driver in110 Mechanic Street
blinding accident.
,structors to help you . For-· single-dial . Left In lay-away
and never been used . Will sell
appl i cation and interview ,
The Ohio Society for the
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
tor only $47 cash, or credit
call 304-344-8843. or wr ite
Prevention of Blindness
terms
avai
lable.
Phone
992School Safety Division ,
'
COUNTRY HOME
5641.
reminds citizens that too often,
United Systems, Inc., c-o
NEAR
POMEROY
- One floor , 3 bedrooms, bath, furvision impairment or blindness 1Termlnal Bldg ., 5517 Midland _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _7_-7-6fc
nace. N:ce buill-In kitchen with cook un its, and bar.
Drive,
Charleston,
West
does not "strike" but it is a
Recreation room and carport. Sl7,500.00.
Virginia, 25306. Approved for ELECTROLUX Vacuum
consequence of carelessness,
NEW
V.A. Benefits . Placement Cleaner complete with at3 bedrooms, 2 baths. nice kitchen with stove and
assistance available . Over 700
tachments, cordwi.nder and
ignorance or indifference
refrigerator-freezer. Full basement with garage. All
transportation companies
paint spray. Used but In like
regarding preventive
electric. Less than $25,000.00.
have hired our graduates .
new condition. Pay $34.45
measures and rules for eye
7-l0-2fc
cash or budget plan available.
LOT
Phone 992-5641.
safetr, which every institution
SYRACUSE - Level corner lot with small frame
7-7-6ft
building. 52500.00.
•
of earning should ob;:-:-----.
COMMERCIAL
ser,ve. Good eye safe - For Rent
TOMATOES. Cucumbers,
CHESHIRE -: Business lot with block building on Rt. 1.
ty practices are a vital
green peppers ; Geraldine
BUILDING LOTS
NEW
Total
electric
apartCleland, Racine. Ohio.
part of insuring their children's
WE
have
several
locations.
All sizes and prices.
ment, 2 bedroom. walk-In
7-6-lfc
lifetime of sight. All citizens
,COUNTRY HOME
closets . Large living room ,
ON ROUTE 7 - 2 bedrooms, bath. Plains water . Nice
should urge the full imkitchen and dining area , 60 ALL CROP harvester, Allis kitchen with stove. Some paneling. 4 acres of land. Only
phone 992-7384 or 992-7133.
Chalmers; phone 742-3656.
plementation of the new school
$9.500.00.
7-10-&amp;fc
' 7-9-6fp
eye safety law.
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
----~

Employment

'

Dozer &amp; End loader warlt, .
ponds, basement, landscaping . W,e have 2 size
do1ers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or con1ract. 11
Free · Estimales. We also

haul fill dirt, top,soit. Dump
BACKHOE AND DOZER work . trucks and low·bov for hire.
Septic tanks Installed . George See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
(BIIII Pullins. Phone 992·2478, _.
·
4-25-lfc Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525

good roads, I DEAL for
1220 Washington Blvd.
homesltes. $26,800 .00.
''
7·9-201p
423-7521
BELPRE, 0.
WHAT AKITCHEN!
------ - - - - -It
your
Mrs. likes lo cook ,
Wantet:i To Buy
1971 Y.ELLOWSTONE truck
then
her
Mr . ought to see this
camper , like new ; call 949- 1971 MOBILE home , 12 x 60, 3
OLD Furniture , oak tables ,
new modernized kltclien. 3
5.:124 after 7 p.m .
bedroom ; must sell, leaving
organs. dishes. clocks, brass
6·29-71c
area
; phone 742-5825 for In· large bedrooms , walk -in
beds , or complete households.
Wr ite M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pom eroy , Ohio . Ca ll 992-6271 .

EARTH MOVING

g

~
~I=====~

'

4-12-lfc TT;-;W-;;O"h"o:cmc:e:cs""f;"o-:-r-s:-:ac:-1e-:-;--;-1- miIe
North ol Eastern High
'71 CONSOLE model. 23" black
School ; bolh have bath and a

-'

Auto Sa!es

MONEY/

Open8Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main,
Pomeroy,~ ·
-· '
.
... -.

suspended ceilings, interior
and exterior painting ;
complete line· of Masonry
work . All work guaranteed to
customer satisfaction . We
arf? fully insured for your

Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891.

7-7·11C

condition ing ; phone 742-536 1.

'l' ·

POMEROY

Jack W. Canty, Mgr.;

Tractor with front emt loader

7; 11 ;6tp•

--------COUNTRY home . cl ose to

Between

July Price Buster!
PANTS &amp; JEANS

on ly ; phone 992 -5247 .

unfurnished

sign.

Eden Church. sign. Phone 3786276.
7-9-6tp

an

be di sposed of.
7 11 -31p
any debts contracted by
anyone other than myself.
Signed, John T. Fi sc her , A REVIVAL is in progress at
The Chur ch of God, Chester,
Address . Rac ine, Rt . 1.
Oh
io, 7: 30p .m . each evening
1· 10·3tp
thru July 16th . Evangel ist
--~---Rev . Mark Mun cie of Mt.
OLDFASHIONED Trading Day
Moriah Church of God .
e\lery Sunday on the Bi ll
Spec ial singing each evening .
Clonch farm, approximately 2
Everybody welcome .
miles up Hysell Run off Route
7·11 ·41 c
124. Hor ses, guns. dogs or
what have you . Come one and

50 ,

Hockingport and Reedsv ille,

al loltep tim e. mac hi nes will PASTURE. phone 992-6329.

7·5·61p

Polyester

less. Hun·

turn onto County Rd. 50 near

For Rent

4

INN ,

Doubleknits for

Rd.

7·10-3tc

3 AND

MONEY/THE KENNE~Y NAME .
MONEV/ AN ANTIWAR RECORD.
MONEY! PAATV LOYALTY.

PART'/
NEEDS

S J!t~
3-2-lfO)
dreds of Yards. From TupFARM
106-acre
ranch
type
.
,
.
pers Plains. r.ass school, go .4
farm . 2 barns, plenty of SE WING MACHINE service ,
mile~. turn eft onto County

hour . Flexible hours. Write
Personal Shopper Depart .
Products , In c.,
Minnesota 55987 .

HAS

~E

Po,mei!'Y Hopi'r·&amp;· Auto

building ,

- - - -- -

Shoppers . Average $3 per
ment,

~E

EVERY~ lNG

'IOU MEAN lHE
60'/5 ARE "IW.T MD

5232 ,
7-7·3tp HARRISON'S TV Service, open
9
a.m.
to
9
p.m.
;'
tree
pickup
- -- - - and delivery ; phone 992-2522.
NEW - TOTAL electric
6-13·1fC SEE US FOR : Awnings. storm ·
apartment, 2 bedroom, walk-

4-12- ltc '

I WILL NOT be responsible for

Phone 992-2094

992-6247.

Old - UNFURNISHED apartmen t,
134 Mulberry Ave., phone ~2Fashioned Rev ival, July 6
3962 .
1hru July 16 at the Pomeroy
Lower Light Church, Rt . 143, 1 __________6._11 lie

ANNOUNCING

fiberglas, brick and Ston·e;
complete line of resldent1a1
and commercial ·roofing ;

G. E. REFRIGERATOR :
wringer -type
Maytag

IN

Phone 992-5434.

Pomeroy , 0.

ror .~;'1 \.-

have

neighbors. ministers , Or .
7·6-5tc , - -- - - - - - PicKens , nurses, nurses aides .
ONE DUPLEX aparlment. 5
candystriper s and the ones I HAVE now in my possession
rooms and bath , small yard,
who sent prayers, flowers and
office machines which were
excellent locatton. Phone 992.
cards to me during my stay at
placed in the Arthur Ebers .
2780 or 992-3432.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
bach repair shop . Will the
7-9-ttc
May God bless each and
persons claiming same,
ever yone.
please come to th e Arthur FURNISHED sleep ing room
Na omi Bentley
Ebersbach residence at 342 S.
refrigerator and stove .
7·11 ·1fC 61h Ave .• Middle port . 0 . with
Phone 992 .2780 or 992-3432 .
with in the next 30 days and
·
6-30-ft c
pick them up? After the

School Eye Safety Law
Covers More Activities
On June 22 just passed, a new
school eye safety law became
effective throughout the slate
of Ohio. The new law enlarges
the scope of the previous Ohio
school eye safety law.
The mandatory use of industrial quality eye pro~ctive
devices Is now ex~nded to ail
schools~ private, parochial ,
~chnical, fine arts, as well as
all institulions of higher
learning, both public and
private, in their industrial,
vocational, fine arts, ~chnical,'
chemical, physical or combined physical educational
activities involving exposure to
certain hazards.

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

must

Pomeroy

&gt;

-GUt\RANTEED-:

remodel ing ,

CAPTAIN SA% WE IM'/
HAVE 1D DIS~AND 1\-IE
PAL. Uffi.E I.EA(i,UE TEAM.

~E

vinyl and steel siding;

protection . 32 N. 2nd. 992Beauty Shop ; phone 992-2890. POODLE puppies, Silver Toy·, 3918.
Park
view
Kennels,
Phone
992·
·
7-9-&lt;llc
ALLSIOE B\.fiLOERS &amp;
5443.
CONSTR. CO.
8-15-lfc ·

INFORMATION
. DEADLINES
5 P.M Day Before PIJblication WHY not try cosmetics that are
Monday Deadline 9 a.m .
truly
different
and
Can-c ellation - Corrections
refreshing?
The'famous
mink
Will be accepted until9a .m. for
oil base and now we have the
Day of Publication
lemon· grove. Just think , 14
REGULATIONS
specia ls this month , some for
Th.Q Pub lisher reserve s the
r ight to edit or reject any ads
men as well as women. It' s
deemed objectional.
The'
KOSCOT of course. Phone
publ isher will not be responsible
992·5113.
tor mor"e than one incorre ct
7·9-tfc
inse r ti on .
RATES
For Wanl Ad Service
5 cents per Word one in sert ion
Min imum Charge 75c "
12 cents per word three
consecutiv e insertioris .
18 cents per word siK con sec ut ive insertions . ,
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid with in 10·days.
CARD 01' THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
Sl.SO tor 50 word m inimum .
Each additional word 2c.
Window .
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Air Conditioners
Advertisement .
OFFICE HOURS c
Hot Water Healers
8:30a .m. to 5:00 ,p.m, Daily ,
Plumbing
8: 30 a .m
to 12 Oil Noon
Saturday .
Electrical Work

''HEll"

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 992-2174

manager's license ; Helen's

~

f'PMEROY, OHIO

Radiator Specialist

1 {2031 673 -3455. ALSO
BOOKING PARTIES.
· 7-2-:JOtc
BEAUTICIAN,

We specialize In aluminum,

Nathan Biggs

Avon, Conn. 06001. Telephone

'5.55
on Most America_n car.s

ONLY $13,7SO

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to
Smallest Heater Core .

wrile "SANTA's PARTIES"

Po~~!~!s. ~~r Co. .t;;i.'

all.

front. 1 car
garage,
carpeting .
Priced at

- our 25th year! Com-missions up to JO pet. Fantastic Hostess Awards. Call or

LTD Coupe, 390 v.s engine, 3-speed, automatic, power
steering, power brakes, fa ctory air, grey finish . Good
white wall tires. radio.

WE SINCERELY thank the

Los Angeles, !1-1, after the
Dodgers had l&lt;!ken the 11inning opener, 6-4, San
Francisco edged the Mets, _5-4,
and Montreal beat San Diego,
6-3. No other teams were
scheduled.
Norm Cqs!J bit two home
runs and Jim Northrup one as
the Tigers jumped off to a 7~
lead over Texas after three
innings. Joe Coleman, with
ninth-inning relief from John
Hiller, gained his lith triumph.
Perry tossed a four-l!itter
and rookie Ron Lolich belted'
his first major league home
run for the Indians . White Sox
Manager Chuck · Tanner
protested the game, complaining that Perry was
throwing an illegal pitcfi.
"! know Perry throws an
illegal pitch and there's no
question in my mind about it,"
Tanner explained. The league
has to come to a decision ... If
they don't do anything about it,
all the pitchers will start
tllrowing them."
Rico Petrocelli, who had
struck out twice and hit into a
double play earlier in the
game, stroked a two..-un homer
in the eighth inning to give
Boston its winning margin over
the A's. Rookie Lynn
McGlothen, with ninth-inning
relief from Luis Tiant, picked
up his second victory in three
decisions.

~rick

ACT, NOW
Join the
oldest
Toy
&amp;
Gift
Party Plan in the Country

$1995

EXPERT
Wheet_ -Aii&amp;tlment· .

3 BedfO&lt;?m home. with

child, 5 days a week, Mid dleport ; phone 992.58.44 or 9926716 .

7-11 -3tc

1969 FORD

said. "Jack has a big advanU.ge, he 's way out ahead. Two
days is just not enough time to
prepare for a completely
different type of golf on a
completely different type of
course.''
Muirfield, where the Open
ha s been sU.ged at intervals
since 1892, is not a particularly
scenic course. Its exposed,
undulating fairways are pockmarked with bunkers of all
shapes and sizes. There are 165
sand traps all told, some so
fastidiously designed with
walls made of turf "bricks"
that Nicklaus co mmented,
"You woulct, think a master
mason was called in to build
· them ."
The fairways and greens are
currenUy hard and fast-which
is nonnal since the prevailing
west wind dries the course very
quickly-and fringed with tall
rough, which this year has
been eased by "grading."
The wind is rarely absent at
Muirfield and has a particularly nasty habit of switching completely round to the
east and then back to the west,
all in the space of a single
round of golf.

.,.· , '~

1-9-31c

BABYSITTER in my home, I

1910 FORO GALAX IE 500
$1915
Hardtop coupe, V-8 engine, automatic transmission,
power steering &amp; brakes, white fini sh. black vinyl top,
vinyl interior . White wall tires, l ike new, radio.

"There's no question," ·he

AL Champs Drop
Another At Home
By MARTIN LADER
UP! Sportli Writer
With Monday's 3-2 loss to the
Kansas City Royals, Baltimore
now has dropped 14 of its last 18
games at home, including a
!pur-game sweep by the last.I!!~.~J·e~111J .Rapg{!l's OV!lf the
, lf"!!kend. Incredibly," the Orioles still are only one game
behind the front-:running
Detroit Tigers in the American
League East. The : '~ers
gained that edge by beating
Texas, 8-3.
"I don 't know what else to do
and what else I can say," said
Oriole Manager Earl Weaver
after Lou Piniella hit a two-run
homer with two out in the ninth
inning to give the Royalslheir
fourth success in six meetings
with Baltimore. "We work
extra every day U!king early
batting practice, but I think
we're past that stage. I don't
know if this is going to last all
year or if the guys can do
something different."
Elsewhere, Gaylord Perry
earned his 14th victory of the
year as the Cleveland Indians
tripped the Chicago White Sox,
Z-1, the Boston Red Sox beat
the Oakland A's, 4-2, the
Minnesota Twins routed the
Milwaukee Brewers, 8-1, and
the California Angels beat the
New York 'Yankees, 4-3.
In the National League, the
Philadelpllia PhWies trounced

$2295

Priced to move !

agreed wholeheartedly with
Player .
·

reliabl e ..;

r

walls, many more extra s. White finish , black vinyl roof.

route to his twin victories,

ror

Market .

Fact9ry air conditioning, V-8 engine, automatic transmi ssion, power steering. power brakes, good white side

"I'm playing better right
now than just before last year's
championship and I don 't aim
to give up my title, " he said,
Pahner, who had to play
through qualifying rounds en

position

person . Apply at Racine Food

1970 DODGE POLARA

.
MUIRFIELD, Scotland
(UP!) ~Ra in , wind, sunshine
and relative cairn-all on the
same day-with more of the
same forecast for today.
The 154 hopefuls in the JOist
British Open Golf Cbampionship which begins Wednesday know now- if they were
under any illusions beforewhat they have to contend with
at this famous and fabulous
course.
Jack Nicklaus, the 9-4 favorite to win his 14th major
championship, certainly
needed no reminding, and
already has stolen a march on
Ulree of his main rivals. _
He rates Muirfield as "certainly one of the best courses in
the world" and likes it. But the
Grand Slam~hasing 32-yearold made sure he won't go into
the
tough
meet
unprepared, showing fullest
respect by allotting a full week
for practice; and on the eve of
the tournament has reached a
finely tuned peak.
In contrast, defending champion Lee Trevino, 196!-62
winner Arnold Pahner and
Gary Player, who won here in
1959, arrived only Monday.
"I know this has cut down my
chances of winning," Player
said realistically. "For an open
champiooship you need to get
here a week early and prepare
solidly."
But Trevino was not pessimistic, despite leaving himself
less than two days to get to
know a course he had never
seen before.

·Business Services-

HANDY MAN for grocery store .

15. "The
Cruel - "

16. Convened
17. Chaney
18. Lover of
beauty
20. Tease
21. Ethereal
22.· Sagacious
23. Fashion
25. Merrimerit
26. Stuff
27. Cafe au ,

3. Monotonous chatter {sl .)
{2 wds.)
4. Brewery
creation

5. 2 points,
in football

Yesterday's Answer
16. Pure and
simple
19. Position

6. Denture
7. High

(mus.)
10. Type of

of
authority
22. Least bit
23. Quarrel
24. Clannish
25. Prop for
Chaplin

radio
(hyph.
wd.)
11. Girl's
name

12. Proffer

27. Bay tree
29. Division

of
a play
30. Earliest
31. Growing
outward
36. Bind
37. Notln
operation

28. Slower
(mus.)
29. New Mex111!JT 11$5. QiANTRf ANPTHERPilOT
AREA COMPLICATION ... STilL,

NO 516HAL5, NO SIGN THAT lltEY

I'MH MR. CHANTRY TO I&lt;NOW
~EY ARE AlSO PRESENT •••

OW 1Ni7EE~ BUT TKEY
SEEM TO 6£ KIDING
~ M~ . CAA ~TRY...

5HOIJLI' 1 NOT THEN
PRocEED AS

PlANNEDr

'

'

II.
Iull·

ico city
(2 wds.)

32. Arab
garment
33. Prompt
34. Waterfall
(Scot. )
. 35. Rapid-fire
chatter
37. Gumbo
38. Lily maid
of
Astolat
39. Boxer's
weapon
iO. Lamprey
41. Lavish
affair

•

1--+-t-t--i

2o,

27th dov of July, 1972, at 10 .00
O'Clock A .M.
'
Any ptrson desiring to file
txctptlons thereto 'must file
them It least flvt day1 prior to
the date set for he.rlng
Given under my hand ana
seal-of uld Court, this 7th day of

July 1972.

John C. &amp;aeon,

Acting Judge

and·tk-offlclo Clerk •
oflald Court
By Ann B. Wation
(7)

11, 18, 21

• Deputy Clerk

"Oh, come now, Martha! The woman wasn't a
member of the family ••• 1he was a character in ·

a soap opera!"

\

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work i t : . - - . ; . _ - - - - - - ,
"AXYD L B AA XR
Wf!E~ 1HfRE'5 A ~
11 L 0 N G F E L L 0 W
CI:Ei\1\IR£ IN 'lOUR NEST, IT'!i
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is ALMD5T AUJJ/11(5 A HEDGE ToAD..

I

LEAA~ED

used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, t-----crc::;;o~W''---1
apostrophes, the length and formation of the wdrds are all
hints. Eacjl day the code. letters are different.
·
CRYPTOQUOTES
k BFIQUFIA
QWI

ROI

QWUONA

XKZA
ROI

, ORQWUON. - KVDIYQ

FRAQ . GRY
NIQA

IUOAQIUO

·av

GRY~~----~==~

Yes~rday's Cryptoquole: BEAUTY IS AN OUTWARD GIFT
WHICH . IS SELDOM DESPISED, EXCEPT BY THOSE TO
WHOM IT HAS BEEN REFUSED.-EDWARD GIBBON
(0 1972 KinE FtMturu Syndicate. Inc.)

.,

THAT IN

"ANTI-IRO 1. N

I .

I '

�I ./

•

ti - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 11,1972

·'·••
•••.
...

. •l

"'"

"••
",,
"
"

.

~

..,,"

,,"
"

••

of

'·••

..,.
"

,.

•·

~

,."
••
,.,.

·:.,

..".
.....
••

•'
·I
~
.,

'
••
,.

.•

Sentinel Classifieds .Get
2 SIGNS
154 Golfers Set
OF
QUAliTY
For Tourney

Help Wanted
Good

WANT ADS

Notice

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Card c' Thanks
f r iends and neighbors who
kindly assisted us in any way
in the loss of our sister, Ethel.
Rev . William Uber for the
conso ling wordS, Vivian

Kirby and Odella Mack for

the beautiful music and
Rawlings and Coats for their
efficient service and al l who
se nt flowers .

By the fam ily of Ethel
Sigman

I WANT to thank all my fr iends .

:'We talk to )QI
liket~

WMP0/1390.
ON YOUR DIAL

The new law improves the
old law .by its broader
definition
of hazardous
operations.
Among new areas defi~ed as
legally hazardous are drilling,
grinding, buffeting, ail forms
of welding processes and
physical laboratories using
caustic or explosive ma~rials.
This new law requires all
~achers, students and visitors
in the above indica~d schools
to wear industrial eye safety
devices when participating or
vi siting in such hazardous

courses.
The new legislation says
such safety devices may be
furnished for all students and
~achers, purchased and sold
at costtostudents and ~achers
or made available for a
moderate r~ ntal fee, and shall
be furnished for all-visitors to
such shops and laboratories.
Ohio's primary and second.ary public schools have been
covered by eye safety
regulations since August of
1963. These schools have
proved statewide the value of
implementing eye pro~ction
programs "by the strict ob- ·
servance of eye safety

992 -2448

SENTINEL
·.:cARRIERS WANTED

NOTICE

washer, excellent condit1on; 2
porcelain top cabinets; gas
cook stove; metal table and
four chairs; Bissell nandsweeper; full -size metal bed ;
Free Westinghouse sewing
machine in cabinet ; phone

MIDDLEPORT
Phone Faye Manley
992 -5592
In

Pomeroy
Phone 992-2156
Help Wanted Female
EXTRA INCOME : We need

In closets, large living room,
kitchen and dining area.

Phone 992·7384 or 992-7133.
7-9-3fc

FABRIC

ladies as parttime Personal

Box

10, Walkins
Winona,

2 BEDROOM trailer. adults
7-ll -12tp
ROUM furnished and

SALE I

apartments .

Buy 2 Pairs and

GET I PAIR FREE

- , - - - -- -

mile from Rout e 7 By-Pass.
Rev .
Dewey
Ki ng , ONE b ~.: droom trailer apartEvangel ist. Special singing .
ments, ideal for co upl es.
Starts each even ing at 7: 30 p.
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle.
m.
Everyone
welcome .
992·5248 or 992-3436.
Pastor , Rev . Roy Taylor .
7-9-6tc

All kinds , all sizes for men ,
women, young men , b.::~ys
and girls. Hurry to .. .

9.-

.l!iill!
I -

------

REDUCE sate and fast wi lh
GoB ese Tab let s &amp; E-Vap
"water pil ls," Nelson Drug .
6-29·30tp

CLIFF'S Shoe Repair , Middleport, wil l be open f rom 12
noon to 5 p.m. until further
nofice. Closed on Mondays .
7. 7-6fc
-~=-=-----

WANTED - Cu s tomers at
Showaller's Wet Pet Shop,
Chester, Otlio. No experience
necessary .

RELAXING I
:rI ----·-·
.•
.

Forked Run Lake; free gas,
partly furnished . Reasonable
rent ; prefer retired couple ;
references ; phone 378-6298 .

{l.._.,;(,~12"

'

Do you h•'~~• curly or h1rd to
m1n1119e h1lr?
Stop . in and have M ick or
Fred relu your ha ir for a
more manageable hair .

KARR'S BARBER SHOP

Lynn 51 . 992·2367 Pomeroy
Barbers ' Lout 400-AFl ·CIO

,

Phone 992-2 181

3414 INTERNATIONAL

and 3120 backhoe ; Earl R.
Werner. Middleport; phone
992·2769 at Bradbury .
7-Htp
-:c:-:---- - COAL,

Limestone.

Excelsior

Salt Works. E. Main Sl .,

and white TV, S?S, New 3-pc .

bedroom suite. $75 . Phone 9'126021.
7-9·31c

Mobile Homes For Sale
CASrl paid for all makes ana
models of mobile homes.

Phone area code 614-423-9531.
4-13-lfc:

50 X 10. 2 bedroom , pr iced

1971 TOYOTA Corolla: 2 dr.
sedan, low mi leagd, excellent
condition ; phone 992-7024. ·

7-9·6fc
-~.,----1968 FORD Fairiane ; air 7-9-3tc
-1965-OLDS
-'88 , $580 ; 1967

Thunderbird, S875 ; 1970 Ford

Ranger Truck , $2,250 ; all in
good cond ition ; call 742-3431.

7-11 ·3fp

------

Sal ~
5 FT. BUSH Hog . Phone 9492783.
7-H tc

For

6-28-llc

DEMCO Satellile CB rad io with
D 104 microphone. S200 ;

phone '1'12·3364.

7-11 ·6fp

7·11
~E

6A'&gt;S lHE

1liE 60'1'5 ARE
GREAT. IT's ll-lE
PARENTS IN
1HE SfAND5.

ViOLENCE AND .

fOUL LANGUN;;E
AREN'T GCOD.

6URP! ...

THE 6(.V&gt;.RD! .. R?5T
NUMf362 Frui&lt;?! ...

..

'

CAIN'T SEE
A INCH
AHEAD IN
THIS FOG.~'

doors and windows, carp'orts.(
marquees, alum inum siding .

PLASTER lNG &amp; refinishing old
chimneys; phone 992 -2368 ,
Pomeroy, Ohio.

and railing. "A. Ja cob, sales,
representative. For free 1
•estimates, phone Charles[·

7-5·61p

Lisle,

Syracuse,

V.

V.

Real Estate For

water , J2 acres tillable , 20
acres timber , 5.4 fenced ,
rolling acres. Beautiful 4bedroom ranch home. all
carpeted and paneled , large

reasonably,

phone

Chester

985-3379. "=========7:·:
9-...;6t'fp

r

'complete mobile home
service ...... plus gigantic

'display of mobile homes
always awl/abl! at "'

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES .

6-29.9fc

Real Estate For Sale

YOtJ

DO

STUFF?

HAVE: ONE OF YOUR
MEN LOC'\TE: ALL
WATER PIPE~
LEADING IN

5-21 ·ftC

Excavating , Pl'lone 992 -5367 ,
Dick Karr , Jr .

5·21 -ttc
rights. Located 1 mile out of
Rutland on Happy Hollow AUTOMOBILE insurance been
Rd .. $28,500 . Phone 992-3020.
cancelle d?
Lost
your
7-11 -5fc
operator 's license? Call 992-·
2966. '
88 ACRES, low S20's, farmhouse
6· 15-tfc
and other buildings, Over 200
ft . frontage . Must see to
appreciate.
Rosemary SEWING MAlHINES. . Repalr:
service. all makes. 992·2284 .
Withem . 239-0647. GRANDThe Fabric Shop. Pomeroy .
STAFF, INC ., REAL TOR ,
Aulhor lzed Singer Sales and
471 -2112 .
7-9-lt c 1 Servi ce. We Sharpen Scissors.
3·29-tlc
LOTS in Meigs School Distr ic t; _R_E_A_D_Y--M
-IX-:--~C~O~N~C~R~ETE
phone 992-6329.
delivered r ight to y.our
7-7·6tp
-------,4 BEDROOM home. full
basement , gas furnace, 200ft .
r iver frontage . Also 5 room
house wilh bath, basement,
ga·s furna ce on adjoining lot.
Sam Arnold, Syracuse, Ohio ;

projec1 . Fast and easy . Free

est imates . Phone 992-328•:
Goeglein

4 bedrooms ;

Co .,

6-30-lf&lt;

----,~---

USED building suppile! &amp;
salvage

yard i

will

wreck

across

from

Ht:RE~ ~Ot.F. Pf;.~!
COil 1T:51'S~D fT

Highland

Church . phone 992-5946.
7-9-12tc

buill-in

Phone 949·3073 .
7-5-61c

UTTLE ORPHAN ~IE
'tOU'RE IH CHARC\E OF
SECURIT'(. AHD 'lOUR ARM~
OOH S,.TS Of SMOY, LOBO,
DARWIH AND AMICUS~
THIHK l'OU CAN HAH OI.E ITr

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rate•. Ph. 4464782. Galll~olls, John Russell ,

NOW All WE C.OTTA DO IS CIGURE OUT
WHO CAH DO WHAT BlS1 1 I'l l SllEPOH
IT AN' COM£ UP WITH A PlAN 0' ACTION
lti THE rvlORN I N '~ £!,?-~ !!

Owner &amp; Operator .
-:-~-:-::-:---

CLELAND
.REALTY
608 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

BUILDERS
OPPORTUNITY
Close in, 30 acres, good
drainag e, Chester water ,

closets, P/2 baths, utility
room, full basement, great'
rec. room, 1 acre ground, In'

town. 528,500.00. '
$1,000.00 DOWN
VIEW OF THE RIVER, 3

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker

by Dick Turner
by THOMAS JOSEPH

5-12·11&lt;

c.

ACROSS
1. Yucatan
Indian
5. Belgian

BRADFORD, Auclioneer
Complete Service

Phone 949·3821
Racine, Ohio

Crltt Bradford

DOWN

l. Billiard

shot

2. Zodiacal

resort

5-1-tfc
.S--EP.,T-1C
- ta_n_k_s_ci_e_an_e_o-..-M
- IIIer
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035 .
2-12-ttc ,

sign

8. Russian
lake
9. Mistaken
(2 wds.)
13. Locate
H. Femme

=------

BESIDES, I WANT
PAPER . I
SKETCW UFE

CALL Guy Neigler lor Building
Houses .

6-28.tfc

- -- - - -

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No . 20717
Estate of MARY L EMMISH ,
Deceased .
Not ice is hereby given tiHH
Willetta E . Bougher or 1112· e.
Cooke Rd .. Columbus , Ohio , has
been duly appointed Executrix
ot the · Estate of MARY L
EM.MISH , deceased , late oi
MtiOS County, Ohio .
CreditOr$ are required to tile
the ir claims with said fiduci&amp;ry
with in four months .
Dated this 7th day of July
1972 .
John C. Bll con
Judge
(7) II , 18, 25. 31
NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT
The State of Ohio , Meigs
County . ~robate Court,
To the Administratrix of the
estate ; to such of the following
as are residents ot the State of
Ohio, Vil : the surviving
spouse, the next &lt;If kin the
beneficiaries under the 'Will .
and to the attorney or attorney$
representing any Cit the
aforementioned persons ·
Allen
Dean
Blackwood
Deceased, Rutland , Oh io R o'
1, Scipio Township,· No .
1·6.4 :
You are hereby not lflfld that
the
lnventorv
and
Ap .
pralsement of the estate Of lhe
aforementioned , deceased. late
of said County , was flied In this
Court. Said lnventorv end
Apprelument will bt lor
hearing before this Court on the

iTONAMCWIE!

AU.. I~· 0~1::
PL,&amp;..c.€1

kilchens and walt -to -wall
carpel; call 985-3598.
O'DELL WHEEL al ignment
6-28-12tc
located at Crossroads. Rl. 124.
Complete front end service,
RACINE - 10 room house,
tune up and brake service .
bath , basement. garage, two
Wh eels balan ced elec ·
lots. Phone 949-4313.
All
work
Ironically.
4-s.lfp
guaranteed .
RP~~~;.nn~nt,.
rales . Phon e 742 ·3232 or
1 ACRE land, new 2 room
992·3213.
, ., .nc
cabin ; 9 acres pasture land,
barn and outbuildings ; can be
bought 'on land contract.

8!.0111 TilE R:5T

Qfl,~ORIJ,A.WU:,

houses. buildings, etc. Covert
&amp; Marlin Wreckage II.
Salvage Co .. Laurel Cliff

7-7-6tc

half ;

Ready -M ix

Middl epor t, Ohio .

phone 992-2360.

•

formation.

SPEOCIAL:

CALL
"THIS

bath and ut ility room, et. DOZER and back hoe worR.
ponds and septic tanks ; 8 &amp; K

."

·,Air Conditioners
• Awnings
·Underpinning ·

WHA"T

WINKLE

clean. oil, set tension $4 .99 ..
Special Electro -Grande
Company . Phone 992-6517 .

tached' garage , basement
with forced air furnace .
Fenced paddock for show ing
horses . Sold with all mineral

THERE YA ARE,

EOLMER 1 T'~V'S

Johnson ,.and Son , Inc.

-:------

.......

?

POLICE
ATHLETIC
LEAGUE

r..:&gt;
t.l

5EK'6EANT OF

· after 7 p.m. or phone . 992:

c:=-::c::-::-::--:---Want~d
5-ACRE RANCHO.
STEREO. Early American IDEAL
bedrooms, bath. porches,
Lake Conchas, New Mexico.
slyle. AM-FM radio com- 52,875,, No Down . No Interest. part basement , metal roof,
WILL DO daytime babysitting
bination , 4 speed automatic
in my home for 1or 2 children.
$25 mo. Vacation Paradise. storage building , garage,
changer, 4 speaker sound
Rates reasonable . Can give
legislation .
$&lt;1,900.00.
.
Money
Maker .
Free
references . Phone 992 -3960
system. Balance $78.69. Use
BATTLE OF THE
Brochure . Ranchos : Box
The Ohio Society for the
after 5 p.m.
our time payment plan . Call
BULGE?
2001 DO, Alameda, california
Prevention of Blindness, as a
992·7085.
7-9-6tc
If you are fighting to provide
94501 '
means of encouraging strict
7-7-6tc
6-7-30tp enough room for a growing
observance of eye safety WILL paint r oofs or houses, :B-::E:-:A-:U-:T:-:1-F_U_L_ W
_a
_
i_
n_
u
_
t
-f-inish
iR~Aiiic"itiiNfi:e
c
::'·:6-;r~oo;;;m;;-;:;h~ou
;;s:;;
e'l
, b'-a;;;;th,' family ... Here's a place
tr im and cut trees; cl ean
Ideally suited. 4 bedrooms,
procedures and the widespread
stereo. 4 spea ker sound
utility room , garage, $10.000; ·
attic s; basements ,
et c.
. 111-z baths, call for paruse of proper eye pro~ction
system
,
.4
speed
automatic
~hone
949-4195.
'
Ph one 949-322 1.
ticulars. $12,800.00.
3-31 -ffc
equipment, sponsors the Wise
6·14-30tc cha nger . Use our budget
LE,T US SELL YOUR
terms. Balance $69.15. Use
-----Owl Club of Anlerica in Ohio,
3 BEOROOM .HOME
our time payment plan. Call HOUSE. in Long Boftom. phone
HENRY
E. CLELAND SR.
an eye safety incentive Instruct ion
992-7085.
985·3529.
REALTOR
7-7.6tc
program for education and
6-11 -tfc
PHONE 992-2259
TRAILER
industry. Membership in the TRACTOR
TRAINEES NEEDED. You NEW 1972 Zig -zag sewing
organization is awarded to
machine in original factory
can now train to become an
carton . Zig -zag to make"
students who save their eye
over the road drl ver or city
buttonholes, sew on b~Jitons ,
driver . Excellent earnings
sight by wearing eye protection
monograms, and make laney
after short tra ining on our
at th€ time of a potentially
designs
with just the twist of a
trucks with our driver in110 Mechanic Street
blinding accident.
,structors to help you . For-· single-dial . Left In lay-away
and never been used . Will sell
appl i cation and interview ,
The Ohio Society for the
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
tor only $47 cash, or credit
call 304-344-8843. or wr ite
Prevention of Blindness
terms
avai
lable.
Phone
992School Safety Division ,
'
COUNTRY HOME
5641.
reminds citizens that too often,
United Systems, Inc., c-o
NEAR
POMEROY
- One floor , 3 bedrooms, bath, furvision impairment or blindness 1Termlnal Bldg ., 5517 Midland _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _7_-7-6fc
nace. N:ce buill-In kitchen with cook un its, and bar.
Drive,
Charleston,
West
does not "strike" but it is a
Recreation room and carport. Sl7,500.00.
Virginia, 25306. Approved for ELECTROLUX Vacuum
consequence of carelessness,
NEW
V.A. Benefits . Placement Cleaner complete with at3 bedrooms, 2 baths. nice kitchen with stove and
assistance available . Over 700
tachments, cordwi.nder and
ignorance or indifference
refrigerator-freezer. Full basement with garage. All
transportation companies
paint spray. Used but In like
regarding preventive
electric. Less than $25,000.00.
have hired our graduates .
new condition. Pay $34.45
measures and rules for eye
7-l0-2fc
cash or budget plan available.
LOT
Phone 992-5641.
safetr, which every institution
SYRACUSE - Level corner lot with small frame
7-7-6ft
building. 52500.00.
•
of earning should ob;:-:-----.
COMMERCIAL
ser,ve. Good eye safe - For Rent
TOMATOES. Cucumbers,
CHESHIRE -: Business lot with block building on Rt. 1.
ty practices are a vital
green peppers ; Geraldine
BUILDING LOTS
NEW
Total
electric
apartCleland, Racine. Ohio.
part of insuring their children's
WE
have
several
locations.
All sizes and prices.
ment, 2 bedroom. walk-In
7-6-lfc
lifetime of sight. All citizens
,COUNTRY HOME
closets . Large living room ,
ON ROUTE 7 - 2 bedrooms, bath. Plains water . Nice
should urge the full imkitchen and dining area , 60 ALL CROP harvester, Allis kitchen with stove. Some paneling. 4 acres of land. Only
phone 992-7384 or 992-7133.
Chalmers; phone 742-3656.
plementation of the new school
$9.500.00.
7-10-&amp;fc
' 7-9-6fp
eye safety law.
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
----~

Employment

'

Dozer &amp; End loader warlt, .
ponds, basement, landscaping . W,e have 2 size
do1ers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or con1ract. 11
Free · Estimales. We also

haul fill dirt, top,soit. Dump
BACKHOE AND DOZER work . trucks and low·bov for hire.
Septic tanks Installed . George See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
(BIIII Pullins. Phone 992·2478, _.
·
4-25-lfc Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525

good roads, I DEAL for
1220 Washington Blvd.
homesltes. $26,800 .00.
''
7·9-201p
423-7521
BELPRE, 0.
WHAT AKITCHEN!
------ - - - - -It
your
Mrs. likes lo cook ,
Wantet:i To Buy
1971 Y.ELLOWSTONE truck
then
her
Mr . ought to see this
camper , like new ; call 949- 1971 MOBILE home , 12 x 60, 3
OLD Furniture , oak tables ,
new modernized kltclien. 3
5.:124 after 7 p.m .
bedroom ; must sell, leaving
organs. dishes. clocks, brass
6·29-71c
area
; phone 742-5825 for In· large bedrooms , walk -in
beds , or complete households.
Wr ite M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pom eroy , Ohio . Ca ll 992-6271 .

EARTH MOVING

g

~
~I=====~

'

4-12-lfc TT;-;W-;;O"h"o:cmc:e:cs""f;"o-:-r-s:-:ac:-1e-:-;--;-1- miIe
North ol Eastern High
'71 CONSOLE model. 23" black
School ; bolh have bath and a

-'

Auto Sa!es

MONEY/

Open8Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main,
Pomeroy,~ ·
-· '
.
... -.

suspended ceilings, interior
and exterior painting ;
complete line· of Masonry
work . All work guaranteed to
customer satisfaction . We
arf? fully insured for your

Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891.

7-7·11C

condition ing ; phone 742-536 1.

'l' ·

POMEROY

Jack W. Canty, Mgr.;

Tractor with front emt loader

7; 11 ;6tp•

--------COUNTRY home . cl ose to

Between

July Price Buster!
PANTS &amp; JEANS

on ly ; phone 992 -5247 .

unfurnished

sign.

Eden Church. sign. Phone 3786276.
7-9-6tp

an

be di sposed of.
7 11 -31p
any debts contracted by
anyone other than myself.
Signed, John T. Fi sc her , A REVIVAL is in progress at
The Chur ch of God, Chester,
Address . Rac ine, Rt . 1.
Oh
io, 7: 30p .m . each evening
1· 10·3tp
thru July 16th . Evangel ist
--~---Rev . Mark Mun cie of Mt.
OLDFASHIONED Trading Day
Moriah Church of God .
e\lery Sunday on the Bi ll
Spec ial singing each evening .
Clonch farm, approximately 2
Everybody welcome .
miles up Hysell Run off Route
7·11 ·41 c
124. Hor ses, guns. dogs or
what have you . Come one and

50 ,

Hockingport and Reedsv ille,

al loltep tim e. mac hi nes will PASTURE. phone 992-6329.

7·5·61p

Polyester

less. Hun·

turn onto County Rd. 50 near

For Rent

4

INN ,

Doubleknits for

Rd.

7·10-3tc

3 AND

MONEY/THE KENNE~Y NAME .
MONEV/ AN ANTIWAR RECORD.
MONEY! PAATV LOYALTY.

PART'/
NEEDS

S J!t~
3-2-lfO)
dreds of Yards. From TupFARM
106-acre
ranch
type
.
,
.
pers Plains. r.ass school, go .4
farm . 2 barns, plenty of SE WING MACHINE service ,
mile~. turn eft onto County

hour . Flexible hours. Write
Personal Shopper Depart .
Products , In c.,
Minnesota 55987 .

HAS

~E

Po,mei!'Y Hopi'r·&amp;· Auto

building ,

- - - -- -

Shoppers . Average $3 per
ment,

~E

EVERY~ lNG

'IOU MEAN lHE
60'/5 ARE "IW.T MD

5232 ,
7-7·3tp HARRISON'S TV Service, open
9
a.m.
to
9
p.m.
;'
tree
pickup
- -- - - and delivery ; phone 992-2522.
NEW - TOTAL electric
6-13·1fC SEE US FOR : Awnings. storm ·
apartment, 2 bedroom, walk-

4-12- ltc '

I WILL NOT be responsible for

Phone 992-2094

992-6247.

Old - UNFURNISHED apartmen t,
134 Mulberry Ave., phone ~2Fashioned Rev ival, July 6
3962 .
1hru July 16 at the Pomeroy
Lower Light Church, Rt . 143, 1 __________6._11 lie

ANNOUNCING

fiberglas, brick and Ston·e;
complete line of resldent1a1
and commercial ·roofing ;

G. E. REFRIGERATOR :
wringer -type
Maytag

IN

Phone 992-5434.

Pomeroy , 0.

ror .~;'1 \.-

have

neighbors. ministers , Or .
7·6-5tc , - -- - - - - - PicKens , nurses, nurses aides .
ONE DUPLEX aparlment. 5
candystriper s and the ones I HAVE now in my possession
rooms and bath , small yard,
who sent prayers, flowers and
office machines which were
excellent locatton. Phone 992.
cards to me during my stay at
placed in the Arthur Ebers .
2780 or 992-3432.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
bach repair shop . Will the
7-9-ttc
May God bless each and
persons claiming same,
ever yone.
please come to th e Arthur FURNISHED sleep ing room
Na omi Bentley
Ebersbach residence at 342 S.
refrigerator and stove .
7·11 ·1fC 61h Ave .• Middle port . 0 . with
Phone 992 .2780 or 992-3432 .
with in the next 30 days and
·
6-30-ft c
pick them up? After the

School Eye Safety Law
Covers More Activities
On June 22 just passed, a new
school eye safety law became
effective throughout the slate
of Ohio. The new law enlarges
the scope of the previous Ohio
school eye safety law.
The mandatory use of industrial quality eye pro~ctive
devices Is now ex~nded to ail
schools~ private, parochial ,
~chnical, fine arts, as well as
all institulions of higher
learning, both public and
private, in their industrial,
vocational, fine arts, ~chnical,'
chemical, physical or combined physical educational
activities involving exposure to
certain hazards.

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

must

Pomeroy

&gt;

-GUt\RANTEED-:

remodel ing ,

CAPTAIN SA% WE IM'/
HAVE 1D DIS~AND 1\-IE
PAL. Uffi.E I.EA(i,UE TEAM.

~E

vinyl and steel siding;

protection . 32 N. 2nd. 992Beauty Shop ; phone 992-2890. POODLE puppies, Silver Toy·, 3918.
Park
view
Kennels,
Phone
992·
·
7-9-&lt;llc
ALLSIOE B\.fiLOERS &amp;
5443.
CONSTR. CO.
8-15-lfc ·

INFORMATION
. DEADLINES
5 P.M Day Before PIJblication WHY not try cosmetics that are
Monday Deadline 9 a.m .
truly
different
and
Can-c ellation - Corrections
refreshing?
The'famous
mink
Will be accepted until9a .m. for
oil base and now we have the
Day of Publication
lemon· grove. Just think , 14
REGULATIONS
specia ls this month , some for
Th.Q Pub lisher reserve s the
r ight to edit or reject any ads
men as well as women. It' s
deemed objectional.
The'
KOSCOT of course. Phone
publ isher will not be responsible
992·5113.
tor mor"e than one incorre ct
7·9-tfc
inse r ti on .
RATES
For Wanl Ad Service
5 cents per Word one in sert ion
Min imum Charge 75c "
12 cents per word three
consecutiv e insertioris .
18 cents per word siK con sec ut ive insertions . ,
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid with in 10·days.
CARD 01' THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
Sl.SO tor 50 word m inimum .
Each additional word 2c.
Window .
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Air Conditioners
Advertisement .
OFFICE HOURS c
Hot Water Healers
8:30a .m. to 5:00 ,p.m, Daily ,
Plumbing
8: 30 a .m
to 12 Oil Noon
Saturday .
Electrical Work

''HEll"

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 992-2174

manager's license ; Helen's

~

f'PMEROY, OHIO

Radiator Specialist

1 {2031 673 -3455. ALSO
BOOKING PARTIES.
· 7-2-:JOtc
BEAUTICIAN,

We specialize In aluminum,

Nathan Biggs

Avon, Conn. 06001. Telephone

'5.55
on Most America_n car.s

ONLY $13,7SO

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to
Smallest Heater Core .

wrile "SANTA's PARTIES"

Po~~!~!s. ~~r Co. .t;;i.'

all.

front. 1 car
garage,
carpeting .
Priced at

- our 25th year! Com-missions up to JO pet. Fantastic Hostess Awards. Call or

LTD Coupe, 390 v.s engine, 3-speed, automatic, power
steering, power brakes, fa ctory air, grey finish . Good
white wall tires. radio.

WE SINCERELY thank the

Los Angeles, !1-1, after the
Dodgers had l&lt;!ken the 11inning opener, 6-4, San
Francisco edged the Mets, _5-4,
and Montreal beat San Diego,
6-3. No other teams were
scheduled.
Norm Cqs!J bit two home
runs and Jim Northrup one as
the Tigers jumped off to a 7~
lead over Texas after three
innings. Joe Coleman, with
ninth-inning relief from John
Hiller, gained his lith triumph.
Perry tossed a four-l!itter
and rookie Ron Lolich belted'
his first major league home
run for the Indians . White Sox
Manager Chuck · Tanner
protested the game, complaining that Perry was
throwing an illegal pitcfi.
"! know Perry throws an
illegal pitch and there's no
question in my mind about it,"
Tanner explained. The league
has to come to a decision ... If
they don't do anything about it,
all the pitchers will start
tllrowing them."
Rico Petrocelli, who had
struck out twice and hit into a
double play earlier in the
game, stroked a two..-un homer
in the eighth inning to give
Boston its winning margin over
the A's. Rookie Lynn
McGlothen, with ninth-inning
relief from Luis Tiant, picked
up his second victory in three
decisions.

~rick

ACT, NOW
Join the
oldest
Toy
&amp;
Gift
Party Plan in the Country

$1995

EXPERT
Wheet_ -Aii&amp;tlment· .

3 BedfO&lt;?m home. with

child, 5 days a week, Mid dleport ; phone 992.58.44 or 9926716 .

7-11 -3tc

1969 FORD

said. "Jack has a big advanU.ge, he 's way out ahead. Two
days is just not enough time to
prepare for a completely
different type of golf on a
completely different type of
course.''
Muirfield, where the Open
ha s been sU.ged at intervals
since 1892, is not a particularly
scenic course. Its exposed,
undulating fairways are pockmarked with bunkers of all
shapes and sizes. There are 165
sand traps all told, some so
fastidiously designed with
walls made of turf "bricks"
that Nicklaus co mmented,
"You woulct, think a master
mason was called in to build
· them ."
The fairways and greens are
currenUy hard and fast-which
is nonnal since the prevailing
west wind dries the course very
quickly-and fringed with tall
rough, which this year has
been eased by "grading."
The wind is rarely absent at
Muirfield and has a particularly nasty habit of switching completely round to the
east and then back to the west,
all in the space of a single
round of golf.

.,.· , '~

1-9-31c

BABYSITTER in my home, I

1910 FORO GALAX IE 500
$1915
Hardtop coupe, V-8 engine, automatic transmission,
power steering &amp; brakes, white fini sh. black vinyl top,
vinyl interior . White wall tires, l ike new, radio.

"There's no question," ·he

AL Champs Drop
Another At Home
By MARTIN LADER
UP! Sportli Writer
With Monday's 3-2 loss to the
Kansas City Royals, Baltimore
now has dropped 14 of its last 18
games at home, including a
!pur-game sweep by the last.I!!~.~J·e~111J .Rapg{!l's OV!lf the
, lf"!!kend. Incredibly," the Orioles still are only one game
behind the front-:running
Detroit Tigers in the American
League East. The : '~ers
gained that edge by beating
Texas, 8-3.
"I don 't know what else to do
and what else I can say," said
Oriole Manager Earl Weaver
after Lou Piniella hit a two-run
homer with two out in the ninth
inning to give the Royalslheir
fourth success in six meetings
with Baltimore. "We work
extra every day U!king early
batting practice, but I think
we're past that stage. I don't
know if this is going to last all
year or if the guys can do
something different."
Elsewhere, Gaylord Perry
earned his 14th victory of the
year as the Cleveland Indians
tripped the Chicago White Sox,
Z-1, the Boston Red Sox beat
the Oakland A's, 4-2, the
Minnesota Twins routed the
Milwaukee Brewers, 8-1, and
the California Angels beat the
New York 'Yankees, 4-3.
In the National League, the
Philadelpllia PhWies trounced

$2295

Priced to move !

agreed wholeheartedly with
Player .
·

reliabl e ..;

r

walls, many more extra s. White finish , black vinyl roof.

route to his twin victories,

ror

Market .

Fact9ry air conditioning, V-8 engine, automatic transmi ssion, power steering. power brakes, good white side

"I'm playing better right
now than just before last year's
championship and I don 't aim
to give up my title, " he said,
Pahner, who had to play
through qualifying rounds en

position

person . Apply at Racine Food

1970 DODGE POLARA

.
MUIRFIELD, Scotland
(UP!) ~Ra in , wind, sunshine
and relative cairn-all on the
same day-with more of the
same forecast for today.
The 154 hopefuls in the JOist
British Open Golf Cbampionship which begins Wednesday know now- if they were
under any illusions beforewhat they have to contend with
at this famous and fabulous
course.
Jack Nicklaus, the 9-4 favorite to win his 14th major
championship, certainly
needed no reminding, and
already has stolen a march on
Ulree of his main rivals. _
He rates Muirfield as "certainly one of the best courses in
the world" and likes it. But the
Grand Slam~hasing 32-yearold made sure he won't go into
the
tough
meet
unprepared, showing fullest
respect by allotting a full week
for practice; and on the eve of
the tournament has reached a
finely tuned peak.
In contrast, defending champion Lee Trevino, 196!-62
winner Arnold Pahner and
Gary Player, who won here in
1959, arrived only Monday.
"I know this has cut down my
chances of winning," Player
said realistically. "For an open
champiooship you need to get
here a week early and prepare
solidly."
But Trevino was not pessimistic, despite leaving himself
less than two days to get to
know a course he had never
seen before.

·Business Services-

HANDY MAN for grocery store .

15. "The
Cruel - "

16. Convened
17. Chaney
18. Lover of
beauty
20. Tease
21. Ethereal
22.· Sagacious
23. Fashion
25. Merrimerit
26. Stuff
27. Cafe au ,

3. Monotonous chatter {sl .)
{2 wds.)
4. Brewery
creation

5. 2 points,
in football

Yesterday's Answer
16. Pure and
simple
19. Position

6. Denture
7. High

(mus.)
10. Type of

of
authority
22. Least bit
23. Quarrel
24. Clannish
25. Prop for
Chaplin

radio
(hyph.
wd.)
11. Girl's
name

12. Proffer

27. Bay tree
29. Division

of
a play
30. Earliest
31. Growing
outward
36. Bind
37. Notln
operation

28. Slower
(mus.)
29. New Mex111!JT 11$5. QiANTRf ANPTHERPilOT
AREA COMPLICATION ... STilL,

NO 516HAL5, NO SIGN THAT lltEY

I'MH MR. CHANTRY TO I&lt;NOW
~EY ARE AlSO PRESENT •••

OW 1Ni7EE~ BUT TKEY
SEEM TO 6£ KIDING
~ M~ . CAA ~TRY...

5HOIJLI' 1 NOT THEN
PRocEED AS

PlANNEDr

'

'

II.
Iull·

ico city
(2 wds.)

32. Arab
garment
33. Prompt
34. Waterfall
(Scot. )
. 35. Rapid-fire
chatter
37. Gumbo
38. Lily maid
of
Astolat
39. Boxer's
weapon
iO. Lamprey
41. Lavish
affair

•

1--+-t-t--i

2o,

27th dov of July, 1972, at 10 .00
O'Clock A .M.
'
Any ptrson desiring to file
txctptlons thereto 'must file
them It least flvt day1 prior to
the date set for he.rlng
Given under my hand ana
seal-of uld Court, this 7th day of

July 1972.

John C. &amp;aeon,

Acting Judge

and·tk-offlclo Clerk •
oflald Court
By Ann B. Wation
(7)

11, 18, 21

• Deputy Clerk

"Oh, come now, Martha! The woman wasn't a
member of the family ••• 1he was a character in ·

a soap opera!"

\

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work i t : . - - . ; . _ - - - - - - ,
"AXYD L B AA XR
Wf!E~ 1HfRE'5 A ~
11 L 0 N G F E L L 0 W
CI:Ei\1\IR£ IN 'lOUR NEST, IT'!i
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is ALMD5T AUJJ/11(5 A HEDGE ToAD..

I

LEAA~ED

used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, t-----crc::;;o~W''---1
apostrophes, the length and formation of the wdrds are all
hints. Eacjl day the code. letters are different.
·
CRYPTOQUOTES
k BFIQUFIA
QWI

ROI

QWUONA

XKZA
ROI

, ORQWUON. - KVDIYQ

FRAQ . GRY
NIQA

IUOAQIUO

·av

GRY~~----~==~

Yes~rday's Cryptoquole: BEAUTY IS AN OUTWARD GIFT
WHICH . IS SELDOM DESPISED, EXCEPT BY THOSE TO
WHOM IT HAS BEEN REFUSED.-EDWARD GIBBON
(0 1972 KinE FtMturu Syndicate. Inc.)

.,

THAT IN

"ANTI-IRO 1. N

I .

I '

�-.
8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 11,1912

Gilligan Plan Pointed·
At Deceptive
Insurance
.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
John J. GiUigan_ today announced a flve-pomt program
to eliminate de ceptive in surance practices in ·{)hio
which. he believes is the
" strongest and most elaborate
in the country."
"Our program is designed to
put to an end, once and for all,

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight. July 11
MADE FOR
EACH OTHER
(Technkolor)

Renee Taylor
Josep h Bologn a

IGP J
Carloons
Show Starts 7 p.m.

plaints.''

Wednesday &amp; Thursday
July 12-13
NOT OPEN

MASON DRIVE-IN
".~ ) ,t)r )

W

Vol

A (. 11 tnotl N1 qtlt l y

Tonight, July I1
Double Feature Proqram

I,ooo CONVICTS AND
A WOMAN!
I Color)
Al exandra Hay
Sandor Eles

IRJ
,Plus

"KILL THEM ALL
and
COME BACK ALONE"
Chuck Connor s
Frank Wolf

IRI
Wed., Thur., Fri.
July I2-13-14

Double Feature Program

Lillie Fauss
and BIG HALSY
Robert Redford
Mi chael J. Pollar d

IRI
Plus

"LAST MERCENARY"

to deceptive insw-ance advertising and deceptive selling
tactics, and to help Ohioans
better understand insw-ance
and get the most protection for
their money" the governor
'
said.
Two months ago Gilligan
launched an. attack on deceptive insw-ance' programs by
blasting advertisements
featuring nationally-known
personality Art Linkletter.
Gilligan's new five-point plan
was outlined today by KelUlelh
E. l,)eShetler, director of the
state Department of In·
sw-ance. The program:
- A 24-how- a day "hot line"
to the Department of lnsw-ance
1
• SO
Ohioans can obtain lnformation and register com- Distribution of brochures
"to help people understand insuance, avoid deceptive claims
and get the most protection for
their money."
- Proposal of rules to set
stronger guidelines for the solicitation of life insurance and
annuity ~on tracts and establish
guidelines for the advertising
of sickness and accident insurance
to
eliminate
misleading advertising.
- A public service campaign
in which Ohio newspapers, radio and television stations will
alert persons to the dangers of
deceptive insurance practices.
- A citizens' ''watchdog"
committee to work with the
Department of lnsw-ance. The
governor is to name nine
persons to the committee.
Gilligan said his May 12 attack on Linkletter has seen results.
"We've · put an end to the
highly
misleading
ads
featuring Art Linkleter," the
governor said. "We've stopped
the misleading advertising by
such companies as Union

Dct•p ('lrans and hri ght.en s

!'olo rR. ll•·s torr s thut 8oft

plush r(···l Ill carpeting! Use
in \'O Ur t' arpct shumpooer,
or ...

l&lt;mt FJectric Shampooer
S I per day 1cith purcha se uj Blue Lustre

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT

want
to be
sitting
on a cloud?

Fidelity Life and National
Home Life and they won't be
back until they comply with
Ohio's new standards."
Gilligan said he hoped inslp'ance companies in Ohio would
financially support his plans.
· "We've already received
help from a great many insw-ance companies and from
hundreds of dedicated and
honest agents," he said.
"Insurance in Ohio · is a $4
billion industry and 50,000
agents practiCj! in Ohio.
"Just a very small percentage of those involved in insw-ance cause problems, but so
far, ow- efforts to solve those
problems have met with substantial success," the governor
said.
Gilligan cited a letter he received after his May 12 statements from Kenneth B. Fowler, president of the Cincinnati
Association of Life Underwriters. The letter said:
"Members of our association
have stated that it is the first
time in their careers that the
Department of Insurance has
been effective. It is our hope
that you can go ever further in
deterring companies from
training thetr agents to use
misrepresentative sales
talks."

Services Will

Be in Ripley
WEST COLUMBIA
Funeral services for John W.
Freeman, 98, West Colwnbia,
W. Va., who died Sunday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
have been set for 2 p.m.
Wednesday at the Parsons
Funeral Home in Ripley.
Mr. Freeman was preceded
in death by his wile, Mollie,
and two sons, Auvil and
Russell.
Surviving are four sons,
Ramie of Cheshire;'Edward, of
Pomeroy; Elda, of New
Cumberland, W. Va., and
Gerlle of New Cumberland;
five daughters, Connie Casto,
Deerfield,
Ohio;
Eula
Brabham, Gay, W. Va.; Ruth
Rhodes , Weirton, W. Va.;
Erma Peitchard, Weirton, and
Mrs. Gaynell McAbee, West
Colwnbia; 57 grandchildren,
141 great-grandchildren and 10
great-great-grandchildren.
For the past several years
Mr. Freeman made his home
with his daughter, Mrs.
McAbee.
Officiating at the Wednesday
services will be the Rev. 0. H.
Carder. Burial will be in the
Calvary Cemetery at Ripley.
Friends may call at the funeral
home anytime.

...
Match Still G8llia-Meigs Program Has New Funding

On -Today

REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UP!)
- The $250,000 world championship. chess match between
American Bobby Fisrher and
Russia's Boris Spassky was
still to go today, but Fischer
made a last-minute demand to
stop televising the first of the
scheduled 24-game series.
"There will b(, no TV filming
MIAMI BEACH (UP[) tonight, but we hope some
Nelson
Lancione, the Franklin
other arrangements can be
made so they can film later County Democratic ch~irman,
dw-ing the match," said Fred once a supporter of Sen. Edmund Muskie of Maine for the
Cramer, vice' president of the
Democratic presidential
U. S. Chess Federation.
nomination,
said early today
Fischer said the television
Muskie
should
withdraw.
cameras, hidden behind clothLancione,
who
is at the concovered scaffolding above the
venti9n here as an assistant
stage where the players will
sergeant-at-arms, made no e£sit, would distract him.
fort to hide his bitterness·.

"He came into Ohio and be felt comfortable with the poOhioans raised money for tential candidacy of front run·
him," said Lanc.one. ''Then he ner Sen. Geol"ge McGovern.
pulls out, doesn't even put up a
"I think 1Vt! can sell him,"
fight in Ohio and what hap- Lancione said. "Take a look at
pened to the indney that was what he's done. He came from
raised for his Ohio campaign." nowhere, and now it looks like
Lancione sai~ there never he's going to be the nominee.
had been an accounting of how To do that, he must ha~e some· that money was used ..
thing. We can work with that
The Colwnbus attorney said kind of candidate."

'

Mine-to-Plarit Conveyor
Belt Longest in Nation

Each will work 231'.1 hours '
week, at $1.60 per hour, as
aides in libraries, day care.
centers, ~ospltals, legal ser·
vice offices, and Federal
agencies.
.
Each enrollee must agree to
go back to night school or Into a
vocational training program in
ocder to stay In the program,
Mrs. Beatrice Veneable, head
counselor of the Youngstown
program': said. Counselors
make weekly visits to work
sites to learn how the NYC
enrollee is faring, she added.
. Family income of enrollees
is a chief determinant of
eligibility in NYC and must be
below the poverty level. An
en"rollee may be enrolled for a
maximw-n of two years ln the
programs funded under the
Economic Opportunity Act.

Fisrcher's opponent, world

champion Boris Spassky, said
he was ready to play .
"Everything is fine with me,"
said the pop4lar Russian.
Cramer said earlier . that
Fischer was 'go, go, go."
The first game was
scheduled to start at 5 p.m.
with Fischer tlle experts'
SANDUSKY, Ohio (UP!) ~vorite but Spassky far ahead
Charges against all 28 emin the popularity poll.
ployes of the state Hospital for
the Criminally Insane at Lima
have been reduced to assault, a

Otarges at Lima Reduce~
To Assault, a Misdemeanor

1

State Acts to
Improve Safety

Of Children
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
state Board of Education has
adopted new standards for
reimbursement of driver
education and pupil transportation services in an effort
to improve safety of Ohio's
school pupils while riding in a
school bus or driving a car.

The board Monday at its
regular monthly meeting here
approved increasing the state

LODGE TO MEET
Work in the Fellowcraft
degree will be conducted when
Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;AM
meets at 7:30 tonight at the
temple. All master masons are
invited.

Tht:. neek·s Special

MASON - Mrs. Katherine
McGowan, 63, Mason, died
Monday evening at the Holzer
Medical Center where she was
taken earlier that evening by
the Mason E-R squad.
Mrs . McGowan, the daughter
of the late John and Katherine
Crehan Mannion, was born
Aug . 8, 1908, in Ireland. A
member of tlle St. Joseph
Catholic Church in Mason, she
attended the University of
Pennsylvania.
Mrs. McGowan is survived

'595
Karr &amp; Van .Zandt
"YQu ' lll'lke Our Quality.

GMAC FINANCING

Pomeroy

P.M. Sal.

Suzie Ann Cooper, sevenweek old daughter of Gary and
Marilyn Cooper, Middleport,
died Monday evening at
Children's Hospital, Columbus.
In addition to her parents the
infant is SW"Vived by a sister,
Tracie Lynn; her grandparents, Clarence Cooper,
Portland; Bessie Cooper,
Annamorial, W. Va. , and
Woodrow and Julie Engle,
Middleport. Graveside services will be held Thursday at 2
p.m . at Beech Grove Cemetery
with the Rev. William Knittel
offi ciating. Ewing Funeral
Home is in charge.

ou A·dopts
New FaJr
•
p 0 licy
----

ATHENS, Ohio (UP! ) Ohio University announced it
had adopted a

~' new

com-

prehensive policy" to provide
equal opportuni ty for all
women employes , job applicants and students.
PLEASANT VAUEY
OU President Claude Sowle
PICNIC AT NOON
DISCHARGES:
John
said lhe new policy was issued
A homeconing will be held Matheny, Stewart, 0.; Mrs.
in response to recom- Sunday at the Mt. Moriah Okey Jordan, Henderson;
mendations contained in a Church of God with a picnic at James Yotmg, Letart; Robert
report on the status of women noon. The public is invited.
Rlmmey, Southside .
at tbe university.
The new equal opportunity
•
policy requires the establishment of nwnerical goals for the
recruitment of women and
mrnority members in all
divisions of the university.
Sowle said the aim of this
por lion of the policy is to insure
equal consieration and a good
faith in recruitment.
Other sections Include :
- Increased university
financial support of women's
inter-collegiate athletics.
Encouragement of
On The First Floor See the Tremendous Selection of Wranglers in all
changes in curriculwn which
would focus on the role and
Sizes. Boys Sizes 6 to 18, Regulars or Slims or Huskies. Flare Leg or
status of women.
:... Review of the need for a
specific counselor to coorTaper Styles. And On the Second Floor You'll Find Wranglers
dinate counseling needs of
women among existing
Women and Girls in all Sizes For Girls 3 61 and 7 to 14 and For
university agencies.
- Increased consideration of
Women in Sizes 5 to 20.
needs and problems of matura
and married students.

ELBERFELDSIARE HEADQUARTERS
FOR WRANGLER

For Men, For Women, For Boys, For Girls

tor

Now Is A Perfect Time To Stock Up On Wrangler

Way of Doing Business."

Til s

Infant is Dead

Firemen Busy
In First Half
Ofthi&amp; Year

(Continued from page I)
hired the following teachers for
the 1972-73 school year: Joyce ·
E. Myers, Mary C. Divelbliss
and Kim C. Bruno, all
elementary teachers, and
Marcia L. Schultz, special
education. The board accepted
the resignations of Tara
Palmer, William Reed, Terry
Ohlinger and Elizabeth
GoOding.
The board approved the
appointment of Robert Meier
as an assistant varsity football
coach and as a reserve football
coach, granted a 30-day leave
of absenclfrom July 5 to Aug. 5
to Dwight Carl, mechanic;
approved the employrpent of
Buster Barrett, Richard
Coleman and John Scragg as
substitute mechanics; approved a request from Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Young for their son
to attend school in Meigs
Local; approved a request
from Mrs. Lela Curtis for her
dsughter to attend school in
Meigs Local, and gave the bid
on bread and buns to Betsy
Ross.
The board recommended
that school accident insw-ance
be purchased from Guarantee
Trust,
(Downing-Childs) ,
provided the date the policy is
in effect Is put In writing.
Bids on old buses were
granted Dwight Carl and
Gallion Chw-ch.
The board approved the
proposed policy on early
graduation which provides a
student may graduate from
high school prior to the time of
the expected graduation of his
class providing that all the
following conditions are met : a
written request for early
graduation must be submitted
to the principal, the student
must satisfy and complete all
local - and state graduation
requirements,
and
the
student's parent or guardian
must provide the principal a
written statement of approval
of the early graduation.
Porter announced the board
will meet with a group of
citizens to discuss problems of
the district on Aug . 7, and on
AQ8. 14 the board will hold a
pubt(c meeting for all residents
of tile district. It was emphasized that all school board
meetings are oi&gt;en to the
public.
Aaron Zahl was hired to
complete the summer drivers'
education cow-se.
Attending were Porter, Joe
Sayre, Mullen, Virgil King,
Carroll Pierce, board mem·
bers; George Hargr&amp; . cs,
superintendent; Larry
Morrison, assistant superintendent;.Robert Bowen, and L.
W. McComas, clerk.

to

KARMAN-GHIA
2 DOOR

Open Evenings 'Til8:00

MIAMI BEACH (UP!) George . S. McGovern clinched the Democratic
presidential nomination
today as Sen. Hubert H.
Humphrey quit the race.

1

Students

rrt

USED CARS

992-S342

misdemeanor, and employes Pleas Court here by counsel for
will be reinstated with back the
attendants
and
pay, it was announced today . representatives of the state of
The announcement was Ohio. .In return, all damage
made in Erie County Common suits filed by the attendants
will be dropped.
John W. Fiirris, assistant
execuive secretary of the Ohio
Civil Service Employes
by her husband, Dr. Thomas B. Association, which is paying
McGowan , widely known the legal defense costs of 14 of
physician; a son, Thomas; two the employes, said the
daughters, Katherine and agreement was reached with
Celine, all of Mason; three tlle Ohio Attorney General's
sisters, Mrs. Mary Nagle, Mrs. office.
Agnes Morley and Miss
Farris said back pay for the
Winifred Mannion of Brighton, employes has been estimated
Mass., and a brother, James at $150,000 . He said his
Mannion in Ireland.
association wa.s 'pleased" that
Funeral services will be held the state reduced the charges.
at 11 a.m . Thw-sday at tlle St.
Joseph Catholic Chw-ch witll
the Rev. Father H. A. Ryan
officiating. Burial will be in the
Sacred Heart Cemetery,
Pomeroy. Friends may call at
the Foglesong Funeral Home
in Mason from 2 to 4 and from 7
to 9 p.m. Wednesday.
Rosary services will be held
A total of 151 calls were
at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the answered by tlle Middleport
funeral home. In lieu of Fire Department during the
flowers, the family has first six months of I972, a dip
requested that friends donate close to once per day, Fire
to their favorite charity.
chief Bob Byer reported to
Middleport Council Monday
evening.
The calls included. Ja~qary,
21;
February, 21; March, 29;
REHEARSAL SET
April,
28; May, 25, and June 'rl.
The Eastern High School
marching band will rehearse Of the total calls answered 24
from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday and were for fires, two being false
Thursday next week at the high alarms, and 125 fire department emergency squad runs
school. All members, including
alternates, must be present, pius two falling in~ 2&lt;:- a
miscellaneous category ·If '
Director Charles Wills said.
In town fires for the six
months included 17, nine
structures, seven brush and
CLUB TO MEET
one miscellaneous, property
The Tuppers Plains Comwitll a loss of $3,4ii5 · on
munity Club will meet at 8
buildings, $1,67~ on contents
Wednesday evening at the
and $25 miscellaneous. Out-()f·
home of Onieta Cole.
town
. fires
totaled
seven, two structures, three
brush and two mutual
PICNIC SET
aid. Loss on buildings totaled
Past Councilors of Theodorus $2,55(). Total losses on all of the
Council,
Daughters
of fires amount to $7,705. Firemen
America, will hold a picnic on spent 'lZI man hours on fire
the Mason Green at 6:30p.m. runs, averaging nine men,per
Thursday.
call.
The 125 emergency runs
Included 64 in town and 61 out
ANOTHER BR(JTHER
of town. Sixteen of the calls
Among those preceding involved motor vehicle acMorgan Powell in death, but cidents. Fire department
omitted from the original vehicles traveled 2,807 ·miles
obituary notice, was a brother, during the first six months.
Michael Powell.

Mrs. McGowan Died on Monday

assistance per pupil com·

. 66 VOLKSWAGEN

Member

Typically, the '1'10 young
people, mostly black and
Puerto Rican girls, in the
Youngs,\own program sponsored by the local Community
Action Council, are scattered
throughout government in
Youngstown.

Lancione Regrets Muskie

pleting an approved driver
education course from $30 to
$50. The new rate is more in
line with the $56 average cost
per student in driver education
last year.
Pupil transportation standards increase the · state
reimbursement from an
average 67 to 85 pet. of a
district's actual costs. The
extra money comes from the
new state income tax.
The new standards also
extend transportation
assistance to all districts
qualifying for school foundations. Many school districts
enrolli ng 40 pet. of Ohio's
·pupils previously were excluded from state transportation subsidies.
The Benjamin Logan Board
of Education was allowed to
submit to voters a bond issue to
raise the estimated $2,403,000
needed to complete the
building project.
The board also granted
several approvals in its
massive realignment of
vocational education districts
to advance career . op~--••••• portunities.
The board also :
- Granted a six-month
extension of a construction
contract for new classroom
facilities at Collinwood, John
Adams, John Hay , John
Marshall, Glenville and West
Tech high schools at Cleveland,
because
of
changing
enrollments' and additional
requests for certain career
education .
- Approved an allocation of
$123,376 for the Tri.County
Joint Vocational School at
Nelsonville and $20,000 for the
Meigs Local Schools to construct additional vocational
education facilities .

Let us look after your money for you.
Enjoy the convenience of Full Service
Banking . . . complete and dependable
facilities fo~ any and every banking
service you'll ever need.

$48,510 for the Gallia - Meigs
C.A.P. to employ 30 persons .
The teenage 117 to 19 years
old) school dropouts enrolled in
the programs work at a variety
of jobs for public or governmental employers and are
motivated to retnrn to school.

WASHINGTON, D. C.- The
U. S. Department of Labor
Tuesday announced the funding with $569,180 of eight Ohio
Neighborhood Youth Corps Out
Of School Programs to provide
jobs for 352 economically
deprived youth. Included is

•

1

Now you Know
The first national political
convention for the pw-pose of
nominating ·a presidential
candidate was held by the Anti·
Masonic party in 183!. II chose
as its candidate William Wirt,
• Mason.

Jeans-Complete Selection ofStyles and Stte,.

Elberfelds In Pomero'

PRESENTS CHECK FOR~ BOND -Front row,l-r,
Jack Carsey, winner of the Ohio Society for the Promotion of
the Bull Frog membership drawing, presents John Reece
and Paul Casci, co~hairman of the Meigs County Cancer
Crusade with a check for the $500 bond. Persons purchasing
membership tickets had to list their favorite charity. Back

row,l-r, are Fred Crow, paat grand croaker and Dale Warner, past grand croaker and treasurer of the Ohio Society of
the Promotion of the Bull Frog. Reece noted that the $500
bond puts the cancer crusade near its $6,500 goal. Donations
are still being accepted and may be sent to the Cancer
Society, Coal Street, Middleport.

•

at y

The longest rubber steelcable-reinforced conveyor belt
in the United States will be
manufactured by the B. F.
Goodrich Co. to haul coal to a
new power company plant at
Cheshire in Gallia County the
company announced today in
Akron.
Edgar T. Gregory, vice
president, marketing, for BFG
Industrial Products Division,
said 20 miles of steel cable
belting will be installed
overland. The system will
cover a distance of 10 miles in
two nights of belting, each
section longer than any other
heavy-duty steel cable belts
now in use in the United States.
The belting, longest ever
·made by BFG, will deliver
2,500 tons of coal per how- to the
2.5 million kilowatt James M.
Gavin power generating plant
now under construction on the
Ohio River, he said. The coal
will come from the new Meigs
Mine to be opened in western
Meigs County by Ohio Power, a

NO. 61

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

tion, will descend 150 feet will be 2,65(),000 pounds. A
overall to complete the 10 mile team of factory belt-splicing
jow-ney from mine to power technicians will connect each
plant, Gregory said .
rollofbeltinginthefieldandon
He said BFG and AEP
the conveyor structw-e, using
engineers worked two years,
portable vulcanizing equipwith advanced computer
ment and special tech~iques
assistance,
to
solve
developed for " endless"
engineering problems
splicing of st~el cable reinpresented by the terrain and
forced belts.
to meet speeillcations set by
Each of the two units will be
AEP.
,
powered by three 1,000 herThe belt is designed to carry sepower motors at the head
eight million tons of coal per pulleys and one 1,000 horyear and more than 100 million sepower motor at the tail
tons over its life expectancy. It pulley . The normaT'tension on
will be 48 inches wide with its the belt, when fully loaded, will
rubber structure. reinforced by be 2,000 pounds per inch width.
2,000 miles of steel cable. Total The belt will move at the rate
weight of the 20 miles of belting of 950 feet per minute .

b~ltingstartingattheminewill

be 41'2 miles long and will make
anetclimbofabout75feet. The
second flight, a 5'h-mile sec-

A 411-year-()ld Ironton man,
Don Phillips, was the victim of
the first fatal accident in
construction of the new $500
million Gen . James M. Gavin
generating plant at Cheshire

enttne

WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1972

Tuesday afternoon.

•

•

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

INews.:"in nri;f~ Bond Issue Will be Explained
By United Press International
MIAMI BEACH - A CONCIUATORY GEORGE S.
McGovern - assw-ed of the Democratic presidential nomination
tonight - appealed to the old masters today for their help in
defeating President Nixon . McGovern had the votes to beat Sen.
Henry M. Jackson of Washington, George Wallace and fow- token
opponents on tonight's first ballot. Sens. Edmund Muskie and
Hubert Hwnphrey both withdrew from the race Tuesday.
McGovern's views prevailed in convention votes which
defeated platform plank proposals favoring legalized abortion,
the rights of homosexuals and calling for far-reaching tax
reforms. And although George Wallace was given a standing
ovation at this first appearance at the convention, he failed to
sway the delegates to defeat busing of school children.
SAN CLEMENTE, CALIF.- WHEN PRESIDENT NIXON
was Interrupted Tuesday at a conference with his chief budget
manager Caspar Weinberger, to be advised Sens. Muskie and
Hw-nphrey had withdrawn from the presidential race, he just
nodded. The action, which left the Democratic nomination to
Ge&lt;lrge McGovern, had be~n expected. The President 's reelection campaign already is geared to a faceoff with McGovern.
Nixon talked by telephone with former Treasury Secretary
John B. Connally, who has just returned to Washington from a
five-week, round-the-world trip.

COLUMBUS-MAY SALES OF Ohio retailers were up 5 pet.
from April after seasonal adjustment and increased 7 pet. from
May, 1971, the Ohio State University Center for Business and
Economic Research reported today .
Retail saies for the first five months of this year were up 4 pet.
over the corresponding period last year, the center said , Lwnber-building materials dealers showed the biggest five-month
gain with an 18 pet . increase. Fw-niture and hardware stores
jumped 11 pet ., and heating-plw-nbing and electrical supplies 12
pet.

SAIGON - SOUTH VIETNAMESE TROOPS killed 300
Communists and knocked out 1$ North Vietnamese tanks in the
first full day of fighting to recapture Quang Tri City, military
spokesmen said today. The spokesmen said there was no
p-ogress by either side in heavy fighting around tbe city, the
capital of South Vietnam's northernmost province that was
captured by the Communists on May I.
A3,500-rnan South Vietnamese force moved on the city from
two directions, meeting heavy enemy resistance. The spokesmen
said at least 36 government troops were killed and 86 others
wounded in II separate battles. The U.S. command said today a
U.S. jet fighter-bomber was shot down in a dogfight near Hanoi
Tuesday.ln another delayed report, it said aU. S. Marine Corps
AS Intruder fighter-bomber was downed last Friday by Com'mtmlst antiaircraft fire 33 miles southwest of Quang Tri City.
The fou_r crewmen from the two planes were listed as missing.

Plans for a series of public
meetings to inform citizens of
the importance or a proposed
2.75 mill bond issue for building
pw-poses in the district were
made Tuesday night by the
'Eastern Local ·School District
Board of Education at the high
school.
. Voters of the district will go
to the polls on Tuesday, Aug. 15
to cast ballots on th e bond
issue. The first public meeting
was set lor 6 p.m. this Monday
at the Riverview School. Other
Informational sessions will be
held at Chester and Tuppers
Plains.
At last night's meeting the
board hired To'll KeUy of
Middleport to se rve as
guidance counselor of the high
school replacing Garry Parsons who has resigned . Kelly
has been associated with the
Meigs Local School District a
nwnber of years.
The board accepted the
resignation of R'obert Ord ,
principal, who has been named
head basketball coach in the
Southern Local District, and
the resignation of Linda Ni tzschte, who has been working in
the reading program at Tuppers Plains and will return to
Ohio University to work on her
master degree . Applications
are being accepted for the
principal's post at the high
school.
The board employed Robert
Shook as a school bus driver
and named a new teacher,
Mark Vennis , as junior high
school football coach. It was
agreed to obtain the driver's
education car for tlle next
school year from the SmithNelson Motor Co . in Pomeroy .
Supply contracts for the next
school year awarded were
baked goods, to Betsy Ross ;

dairy products, Valley Bell ;
fuel oil, City Ice and Fuel;
gasoline , Standard Oil; school
bus insurance, Grange Mutual,
Henry Beaver , ag ent , and
tires, to Dean 's Sohio Service
Station, Coolville.
Th e City l ee and Fuel,
Middleport, was awarded a
contract to convert the coal
furnace at the Tuppers Plains
building to a fuel oil furnace .
Robert Bowen , Meigs Co unty
Superintendent of Schools,
met with the board to discuss
the guidelines for early admission of pupils to kindergarten and the first grade.

The state guidelines were
accepted by tl1e board. Stand•rds for early admission are
being rais ed compared to
previous years .
The board also was advised
that the Meigs County Board of
Education has transferred to
the Meigs Local School District
from the Eastern Local
District two tracts of territory .
It was the consensus that there
is no action the Eastern Board
can take in the matter. Some 15
students are involved in' the
territory.
Mrs. Grace Weber and Mrs.
Eleanor Knight of the River-

view School discussed plans for
a new reading prog ram which
will get underway at Riverview
this fall.
The 1973 budget for the
district, to be submitted to the
county budget commission by
July 20, was approved and will
be in the office of Clerk C. 0.
Newland from 1 to 4 p.m.
Friday for public inspection.
Attending the meeting in
addition to those named above
were Supt. John Riebel and
board members I. 0. McCoy,
Howard Caldwell, Jr.. Oris
Smith alid Roger Epple.

Mason Woman Killed
MASON - Jennifer Roush
Young, 20, Mason, was dead on
arrival at Pleasant Valley
Hospital Tuesday night from
injw-ies suffered in a traffic
accident on 'Route 33 one mile
south of New Hav.en at 8:30
o'clock .
Mrs. Young was a passenger
in a Volkswagen van driven by
her husband, Chester Wallace
Young, 19.
According to the Mason
County Sheriff's report, the
accident occw-red when a car
driven north by George Jason
Ingels, 17, New Haven, ran off
the road and in returning onto
the highway, darted out-()fcontrol across the road into
Young's vehicle causing it to
turnover on its top.
Mason County Coroner Dr.
John Grubb said death was due
to severe head injw-ies. Mrs.
Young was Mason County's
third fatality of 1972. Ingels and
Mr. Young were treated and
'released at Veterans Memorial

Hospital for minor injuries.
Jennifer Roush Young, 20,
was dead on arrival at
Pleasant Valley Hospital
following a two car accident.
She was born Oct. 22, 1951 at
West Colwnbia .
Jennifer Roush Young,
20, is survived by her
husband , Chester Young,

(Judy) Biggs, and Mrs. Jack
(Betty ) Fox, both of Clifton ;
Mrs. Jack (Cecil ) Johnson,
Glendale, W. Va ., and Kathy
Roush, at home; six brothers,
John and Mike, Pt. Pleasant;
Larry, New Haven; Ronnie in
Germany ; Joseph, Colwnbus,
and Timmy, at home; and her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Mason ; her parents, Lawrence John C. Campbell, Gallipolis.
and Lillian Campbell Roush,
Mrs . Young was a member of
Mason; five sisters, Mrs. Gary
!Gloria) Harbow-, Barbow-s- the Mason United Methodist
ville , W. Va.; Mrs. Robert Church, and a graduate of
Wahama High School where
she was a cheerleader.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook Friday through Sunday:
A chance of showers
Friday or
Saturday,
becoming partly cloudy
Sunday. Highs in the 80s,
except from mid 70s to near
80 near Lake Erie. Lows
mostly In the 60s.

p res l•aen
·t
Ralls 195 Feet

•
vT Jn lO
, n

•

Devoted To The Interests OJ The M,eigs-Mwon Area

VOL XXV

subsidiary of American
Electric Powe&lt; Co.
The two-Unit Gavin 'Plant,
named for AEP director
General James M. Gavin, i~
scheduled to begin operating
its first unit in 1974 and its
second in 1975.
BFG, a major supplier of
conveyor belting to other
plants in the extensive AEP
system network, will start
shipping 50,000 pound rolls of
belting from Akron in Sep!ember and complete the order
by June, 1973. The entire 11\mile conveyor system is expee ted to be fully operational
by January , 1974.
The conveyor will run on a
roller-coaster-like route over
hills - crossing a nwnber of
creeks and state and county
roads - from mine to power
plant about 10 miles northeast
of Gallipolis. The first flight of

Funeral services will be held
Friday at 1:30 p.m. at
Foglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev. Clarence McCloud
officiating. Bw-ial will be in
Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Friends may call at the
Foglesong Funeral Home
anytime after 3 p.m. Thw-sday.

Phillips, president of
Painters Union Local 999 of
Ironton, was killed after falling
approximately 195 feet from a
scaffold.
Phillips, an employee of the

First Session
Swimmers Win
Their Patches
First session of Red Cross
swimming cow-ses offered at
the Middieport pool concluded
Satw-day with Richard Nease,
instructor, presenting patches
to the 28 youngsters completing
cow-ses satisfactorily.
Assisting Nease with the
swimming program are Pam
Buck, Steve Walburn, and
Dave Swisher. In the first
session 58 children were
enrolled despite the cool, rainy
weather which prevailed most
of the time. Requirements for
passing each course are
established by the American
Red Cross' swinuning safety
program.
Completing courses
satisfactorily were the
following children:
Beginner IV: Tammy
Johnson , Debbie Woodyard,
Pomeroy; Jackie Zerkle,
Syracuse; Paula Swisher and
Mark Davis, Middleport; and
Bobby Holstein and Teresa
Holstein, Syracuse.
Beginner Ul: Wanda Wigal,
Pansy Thomas, Jo McKinney,
Middleport ; Judy Hall,
Pomeroy; Carla Smith and
David Williamson, Rutland.
Beginner II: Eddie Bishop,
Rutland ; Phyllis Davis,
Jennifer Meadows, Zandra
Vaughan, Shelia ·Powell,
Vangii Hart and Tammy Hart,
Middleport; Susan Zirkle,
Jayne Hoeflich, and Jennifer
Ohlinger, Pomeroy; Teresa
Brogan, Vinton.
Beginner I: Eddie Miller,
Corey McPhail, and Lisa
Smith, Middleport; and David
Lawson, Syracuse.

J. L. Manta Co., a painting
contractor of the plant, was
painting steel beams when the
incident occw-red at 2:40p .m.
The accident is still under
investigation by plant officials.
Phillips was pronounced
dead upon arrival at the Holzer
Medical Center.
Aresident of 2004 South Sixth
St. , Ironton, Mr. Phillips was
born April 15, 1925 at Chapmansville, W. Va ., son of Mrs.
Brookie Rains Phillips of
Chapmansville and the late
George Hilton Phillips.
Additional survivors include
his wife, Dorothy Louise
Nunnary Phillips; two stepsons, Tommy Nun nary at home
and Ron Nunnary, South Point;
a step-&lt;laughter , Mrs. Frances
Phyllis Marie Turner of
Ironton; three brothers, Junior
Phillips of Ashland, Ky., Carl
Phillips of Chapmansville and
Ernest Phillips of Charleston,
and three grandchildren.
The body is at Tracy
Brammer Funeral Home at
Ironton .

lfoads Vacated

By Commission

In Salem Twp.
The Meigs County Commissioners Tuesday adopted a
resolution to vacate certain
roads in Salem Township. A
viewing of the roads was held
at 8:30a.m. and a hearing was
held at 10:30 in which no opposition to the closing of the
roads was heard.
Roads affected are a portion
of township road T-21, all of
township road 20, a portion of
township road 22 and all of
township road T-71.
A hearing was also held on
the proposed 1973 budget which
was adopted by the commissioners to be submitted to
the budget commission .
In other business $400 was
paid to Ray Frank, Racine, Rt.
1, for the loss of a Charolais
calf and to Burnie Ross,
Racine, Rt. 2, $83.45 for the loss
of 76 chickens.
Attending were Gharles R.
Karr, Bob Clark and Warden
Ours, commissioners, and
Martha Chambers, clerk.

I

Boy, Girl Win
Safety Contest
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Ed Cross and Marylu Mills
took first places In the annual
4-H Safety Speaking Contest
Tuesday night at tbe Meigs
Pioneer House.
WIMing second place in the
j!lrls' division was Brenda
Donahue, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Donahue,
Harrisonville. Cash awards of
•10 went to Cross, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Andrew Cross of
Racine Route~. and Miss Mills,
daughter of M':_. and Mrs.
Robert Mills, Route 3,
Pomeroy. Miss Donahu~
received an award of $5.
Judging the contest staged In
conjunction with the Meigs
·County Junior Leaders Club
were Miss Lilcllle Smith arid
Mrs. Bertha Smith, both
retired teachers.
· The two first place winners
will go to Jackson Monday to
cotllpele In the area safety

speaking contest. Winners
from there will go into state
competition. Doris Barnhart
presided at the speaking
contest and made the
presentation .
"Excuses, Excuses" was the
topic of Miss Mills' talk. She
discussed the use of seat belts,
the reasons or "excuses" given
for not wearing them, and
statistics on injw-y prevention
through the use of lap and
shoulder belts .
Cross~ topic was "Safety" In
which he attributed m08t ac·
cidents, especially those on the
farm, to carelessness. He
listed:
Not taking risks, thinking
safety, learning to recognize
potential hazards as keys lo
safety, and knowing the
equipment to be used and
keeping it. In good main·
tenance.
(Continued on page 8)

4&lt;"'

r

\

•

IW

'

\

r:3

:1!
.'

. . .o

~.... F""'
SAFETY SPEAKING CONTEsr WINNEiiS ~~elected last night In competition at the Meigs
POMEROY EMERGENCY SQUADMAN Joe Struble was guest speaker Tuesday night at
the meeting cl. the Meigs County Junior 4-H Leaders Club in Pioneer House. He used "Annie" to
demonstrate mouth-to-mouth and mouth-to-nose resuscitation. Shown here giving it a try is
Edith Woodard of Harrisonville.

Pioneer House we re, left to right, Brenda Donahue of Harrisonville, second in the girls'
division; Ed Cross, Racine, Route 2, first In the boys' division; and Marylu Mills, Pomeroy,
Route 3, first in the girls' division. The three received cash awards from Doris Barnhart, right,
chairman for the 4-H Safety Speaking Contest. The first place winners will compete In area
competition at Jackson Monday.

,,

..'

'

....

~

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="727">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11127">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="53221">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="53220">
              <text>July 11, 1972</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="376">
      <name>cooper</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7891">
      <name>mannion</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5532">
      <name>mcgowan</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
