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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
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•

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;"'

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\

•

IW

'

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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.

,,

..'

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�3;:-,):he £?lily Se~U'.'el, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 12, 1972

Old Joe May be

Fischer
Hoping
REYKJAVIK, ICeland (UP!)
- Caught in a hopele5sly
drawn game, temperamental
•American challenger Bobby
Fischer took a 'chance to bring
IIOille life into his first world
chess championship game.
In that moment, soft-spoken
and mild-mannered Boris
Spassky proved why he is the
world champion in. tpe noblest
of games.
He immediately pounced on
Fischer's bishop - left trapped
after capturing one of the
Russian 's pawns - and the
game turned distin ctly in
Spassky's favor.
Spassky asked for adjournment after 40 moves and
•~ hours play.
·When the two resume the
game - the first in their
$250,000, 24-game world match
- Spassky has a bishop and
three pawns against Fischer's
live pawns. Play resumes at 5
p.m. (I p.m. EDT) .
Most experts assembled here
aeemed to agree that Spassky
has a chance to win, while
Flacher should be happy if he
salvages a draw.
REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI)
- Tl'le progression of moves in

the first game of the world
che.. championship 'match be·
tween Boris Spassky of the
Soviet Union and challenger

Bobby Fischer of th• Uniled
States :
Spusky · (white) Fischer
(bllckl
1. P-04
KT-KB3
2. P-QB4
P-K3

3. KT-KB3
4. KT-QB3
5. P-Kl
6, B-Q3
7. p.p
I. P-QR3
9. KT-Kl
10. BxP (Q84l
11 . PxP (Q85)
12. RxQ
13. P-QKT4
14. B-KT2
15. QR.QBI
16. KT( K2l-Q4
17. KTxKT
11. B-QKT3
19. KTxB(QKTJl
20. RxR
21. K-81
22. K-K2
23. R-QBI
24. BXR
25. KT-RS
26.' K-Q3
27. KT-84
21. 'l&lt;kfxkf
lf. 1&gt;-KTS
lb. P-KT3
31. I&lt;-K2
32. K-83
33. K-KT2
34. PxP
35. KxB
36. P-QR4
37. B-R3
31. B-BS
3f. P-QKT6
40. K-R4

P-Q4
KB-QKTS

o.o

P-Q84
KT-QBJ
B-QR4
OxO(QBSl
8-QKT3
QxQ
BxPIQB41
8-K2
8-Ql

KR-Q1

KTxKT

B-RS
81 R5lx8
RxRichl
R-QB1
K-81

KT-K5
RXR

P-K83
KT-Q3

8-Ql

B-82

BXKT
8XP(KR7)
P-'&lt;R4
p.:,Rs

K-K2
PxP
8xP

K-Q3

K-Q4

K-K5

P-R3
P-84

P-85
Adjourned .
(Symbols : In Brilish-Ameri ·

can usage. each move in a

c:hess game Is recorded using

letters for each chess piece and

numbers for each square on the

board . The squares are num -

bered along the columns (or
flies) and named tor the piece
Initially sitting at the first
square of the file. For example,

hi for Top Job

at20NorthSecond Ave., the counter and table service wlll be
designed with the family in mind. Hours will be from 10 a.m.
to 12 midnight, except SUndays. Osby Martin, owner, said
door prizes will be given away at tlie opening. Employes are
Mrs. lrene Artis and Charles Lewis. The photograph shows a
part of the center including billiards and table tennis tables.
On the left, two young men play checkers.

TilE FORMER MIDDlEPORT POOL ROOM has been
converted into a f.amily recreation center and will mark its
grand opening, Thursday, Friday and Saturday. The new
center, to be known as Ossie's Recreation Room" will feature
dominoes, darts, pickup sticks, pumper book, table tennis,
cards, checkers, billiards and other entertainment. Located

Democrats Grumbling
By STEVE ~EJISTEL
MIAMI BEACH (UP!)-A
conciliatory George S. McGovern-'-&lt;ISSured of the Democratic presidential nomination
tonight by his mastery of the
"new politics"--&lt;~ppealed to
the old masters today for their
help in defeating President
Nixon.
But his unity overtures
collided with the die-hard
opposition of organized labor's
candidate-Sen. Henry M.
Jackson of Washington, who
vowed togo down battling what
he considered McGovern's
Democratic
politics of
disaster.
McGovern had the votes to
beat Jackson and George
Wallace and four token QP·
ponents on tonight 's first ballot
-and everyone here knew it.
So he secluded himself in his
penthouse and concentrated on
re-&lt;l!ltablishing the old Democratic
coalition
with
telephoned appeals to a
smoldering George Meany ,
president of the AFL-ClO; and
Chicago Mayor Richard J.
Daley, miffed by his ouster by
a vote of the convention.
· In anotber move . toward
rea~J,ijg the oil! guard, .
McGovern asked party Chairman Lawrence F . O'Brien to
stay on the job, foregoing the
candidate's privilege of installing his own loyalist in the party
top command.
Old Liners Hard to Get
The old liners were hard to

get.
Louisiana Gov. Edwin· Edwards left the convention,
declaring it would be a waste of
time for him to stay.
''McGovern can't win in
Pennsylvania, " grumbled
delegate Hugh Carcclla,
president of a steelworkers
local in Philadelphia. "He's a
right-to-work son-&lt;Jf-a-bitch .. ."
Gov . Robert W. Scott of
North
Carolina
said

Muskie Helps Unity Move
Vietnam dove;
former
Sen. Edmund Muskie helped Massachusetts Gov. Endicott
McGovern 's unity move with a Peabody; and Stanley Arnold,
warm endorsement Tuesday a New York accountant and
after pulling out of his own business consultant-said they
hopeless race , a victim of would fight it out with
McGovern's mastery of the McGovern's choice, just on
primary system.
principle.
Fails to Sway Delegates
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey
wi thdrew
fir st,
but
McGovern's olive branch did
significantly did not endorse not extend to Wallace, whose
McGovern despite his own dramatic !~-minute apinclination to rid the pearance before the convention
Democrats of their fratricidal from a wheelchair failed to
tendencies.
sway the delegates from their
"The temperature of a convictions on the platform.
number of people is slightly
Some black delegates booed
high,'' a relaxed Humphrey and held up defiant clencbed
told reporters in explaining fists as Wallace called compulwhy he was waiting. "!don't sory busing "asinine," After he
believe you ought to start was carried and wheeled away,
talking to people about going to the delegates by a loud voice
the dance or to the ball while vote decided to retain the party
they've got a fever ." ,
platform's endorsement of
Humphrey and Muskie's busing as a useful tool toward a
withdrawal from the rat-e left desirable end.
George C. Walla ce and
But the McGovern view
Jackson as McGovern's chief prevailed in convention votes
rivals but four other can- which defeated platform plank
didates are to be put in proposals favoring legalij:ed
nomination tonight- Rep . abortion, proclaiming the
Shirley Chisholm of New York; rights of homosexuals, and
Rep. Wilbur D. Mills of calling for tax reform conArkansas; former Sen. Eugene siderably more far-reaching
J. McCarthy of Minnesota and than anything McGovern has
former Gov. Terry Sanford ·of 'hacked.
·
·
North Carolina.
In a platform debate stretchThe vice presidential ing deep into this morning, a
nomination will be made voice vote which was tough to
Thursday at th e conventiOn's measure defeated tax reform
final scheduled session. Three ~oposals offered by lame duck
dec lared vice presidential Sen . Fred R. Harris of
candidates - Sen. Mike Gravel Oklahoma. He advocated the
of Alaska , an outspoken abolishment of all tax
loopholes -including those
popular ones which help
homeowners, borrowers and
the aged¥ well as those which
benefit oil tycoons and Wall
Street investors.

McGovern, "my last choice,"

could carry neither his state
nor the nation.
Scott was one of five
southern governors invited to
breakfast today by McGovern
in his seaside penthouse. None
of the five are avowed
McGovernites. The senator
asked a liberal, wiSconsin Gov.
Patrick J . Lucey, to join them.
Also invited were Govs. John
C. West of South Carolina, Dale
Bumpers of Arkansas, Jimmy
Carter of Georgia and Reubin
Askew of Florida-w hose perforrrumce as keynoter McGovern praised.
All five Southern governors
on the list have been mentioned
by the McGovern camp as
potential running-mates.
On that question, McGovern
kept his own counsel, but his
staff said the senator would
submit only one name to the
convention after he consults
with Edward M. Kennedy and
other party leaders. Kennedy
continued to scorn the vice
presidential nomination.

•

Mother of 14 Takes m
Her First Convention

MIAMI BEACH (UPI)-Corrook on the side .of the king is nelia Frederick is a 47-year-&lt;Jld
numbered : KR3. or King 's
black woman who has borne 14
rook 3.
(The letters and their corre- children and worked most of
sponding pieces are: K- King; her life as a laundress, cook or
(,}-Queen; .8-Bishop ; Kt- maid .
Knlght; R- li!ook ; P-pawn .
"For the first time in my life
(An "x" between letters
Indicates the first piece cap. I feel like something," said
tured 1he second. 0-0 Indicates
castlln~ .
"Ch" Indicates Mrs. Frederick, who arrived in
"check' or that the king 1s Miami Beach on a bus from
threatened with capture.)
Detroit at 4:30a .m. Tuesday,
hoping to get into th e
the third square in front of the

Democratic National Con-

vention.
"I've never had a vacation
TRANSFERS MADE
before-never
even planned lor
COLUMBUS (UP! )
one."
Twenty-nine state workers
But she was barred from the
have beer transferred from
convention
hall because she
other duties in the Department
had
no
credentials.
of Taxation to help speed up
Mrs. Frederick, whose hussales tax refunds on new auto
band
died 11 years ago while
purchases made last year.

working in a steel mill, saved
$:100 from her earnings as a
cook at a Detroit nursing home
to come to Miami Beach.
"l just always wanted to be
near where it was going on,"
she said. "For, years I've been
liste ning to them o,n the
television and the radio\ l can
remember ·listening to them
when l was just a little ~irl.
F;rom Political Family
"I came from a political
family. I got an uncle who was
a co Wlcilman in River ROuge,
Mich ., 12 years ago."
But money comes hard for
Mrs. Frederick, who earns
$2.78 an hour at the nursing
home. Her teen-age children
living at home tried to tali&lt; her
out of coming.

"They said, 'Old tady you
just don't do it like that,"' Mrs.
Frederick related.
But she was determined. She
bought a round-trip ticket from
Detroit to Miami for 1106.45
and rode the bus for nine hours,
arriving before dawn .
She found a hotel room for
$10.40 a night and planned to
stay through Saturday.
.k
Tha1 settled • Mrs. F redenc
thought she could just walk into
the convention halt, like all the
people she had seen on
television.
"They told me I had to be a
delegate or a news media or
something like that," Mrs.
Frederick said. "How do just
folks get into that place?"
And, ironically, Mrs. Frede• rick arrived in Miami Beach

Factions Fend .in Miami
MIAMI BEACH (UP! ) - A
aimmering feud between the
McGovern' and Humphrey fa ctions of the unwieldy 153-member Ohio delegation flared into
the open early today, as McGovern forces attempted to bypass the Buckeye chairman on
a vote on the abortion plank of
the platform.
The chairman., Frank W.
King, said Howar~ P. Fink,
leader of the McGovern delegales, ''made the entire delegallon look Uke a bunch of
rummies in front of the whole

country."
Fink said the matter was all
a mistake and apologized.
But King, presidenl of the
Ohio AFL-C!O and head of 79
delegates pledged to Humplu·ey, said, "This is the second
night he's made Ohio look
foolish, and I'm not going to
stand for it."
King said Fink was responsible for the slow Ohio count on
all roU calls bf· ''Insisting on

.'

counting the votes about 20
times ."

The latest dispute broke out
at 4 a.m. when Fink took South
Dakota's microphone to announce a change in his faction's vote on a plank for liberalized abortion.
King raised a point of order
and inunediately became involve·d in a spat with Chairwoman Yvonne Braithwaite
Burke, who demanded that
Ohio's delegation be polled.
"Madame chairman, a
member of tbe Ohio delegation
used another microphone to
announce a vote and I'm not
~oing to stand for it," King
shouted.
"! call on you to ask the
delegates tO do their business
through the chairman. l was
elected chairman by acclamation, and I have never refused
to dq anything anyone asked

Fink withdrew his request .
"We were standing up for our
rights ," Fink said. "We could
not get to him in time to change
our votes and were afraid the

roll would be completed ... I
aplogized because l didn 't want
to turn the knife any further .
They (Humphrey delegates)
have been through enough
already ."

"Sure he apologized and
apologized, 11 said King,
unleashing a string of unprintable expletives about
Fink . "The horse was out of the
barn by the time he
apologized."
William Dougherty ,
lieutenant governor of South
Dakota and a McGovern
delegate, came over and
apologiied to King , admitting
he had allowed Fink to use his
state's microphone.
me."
"Why did you do a thing Uke
The Ohio delegation retired that? " King asked before
from the floor to be Iiolled. but accepting the apology.

just as her favorite- Hubert H.
Hwnphrey- was anilouncing
his withdrawal from the
contest for the presidential
nomination.
"At home we have a big 'H'
in the window for Hwnphrey,"
she said. "! use to watch him
talk on television and 1 like
what he says. My mother used
to work in his elections."
Mrs. Frederick said she was
particularly impressed with
Humphrey 's
part
in
establishing the Job Corps .
"! had three of my children
go throur'
and it did wonderful fur them," she said.
"My oldest &lt;hughter, who is 23,
is now a typist with an electncal computer; another
daughter is in clerical work;
and my youngest daughter,
who is 19, is a dietary cook at a
convalescent home like me."
She was disappointed at
being barred from convention
hall, but Mrs. Frederick, wilh
10 children still living and 13
grandchildren, was happy she
al least came close.
"Even if it comes I can't get ·
in," she said. "It just feels good
to be near Humphrey."

Tuppers Plains

MIAMI BEACH. (UP!) - thought they could be ' found.
Some members of the Ohio
AJJ a veter;m of five national
deiegatioo to the Democratic conventions, Ferguson hasn't
National Convention planned to · hasn 't much in common with
enter the name of Joseph T. any of his fellow delegates
Ferguson into nomination for here, And he prefers 1t that
President tonight.
way.
"They are maki11g a
"!came bere to enjoy myself
shambles of the thing (con- and vote for Humphrey," he
ventlon) anyway," .tbe Jl().year- said. "They asked me if I
old Ohio auditor ·said. "Might wanted to be on one of those
ss well have some fun out of committees, but l didn't want
11."
that because I knew that was
The 79 delegates who were where the work was at.
COfllmitted to Sen. Hubert H.
AJJ a member of the old poliHwnphrey on the first ballot tical school, he has little use for
bild Ferguson as a nominal the convention reforms
11ec0nd choice. The bottom spawned by Sen. Gecrge Medropped out for the Humphrey Govern, who was conceded the
supporters Tuesday when nomination tonight. _ .
Humphrey removed himself
"This is the worst setup," he
from the race.
said. "It's a terrible messed up
The Ferguson men will need thing. Some of these kinds, you
signatures of 60 delegates from don't even know whether
at least three states. John they're interested in going to
Blum of Cincinnati said he the convention after tbey got
elected. Some of them can't
;:::,:::;:,:::,::::::::::::~::::::::::::::;:::,:-:,:,:,:,:::::::::::::::::: pay their kit. It costs money to
go to these things."
ALL CLEAR
Ferguson first attended a
· T. Allan Wolter, Ironton
Democratic National ConvenDistrict Ranger, said
tion in 1940. In 1944 he was
Tuesday developments
Ohio's favorite son candidate
occurring during the past
for President and cast the state
month have caused some
votes for President Roosevelt
confusion and
misinon the first ballot. He also
formation regarding the
helped promote Harry S. Trufacilities of the Vesuvius
man for vice president over inR~crealion Area of the
cumbent Henry Wallace. He
Wayne National Forest.
also was a delegate in 1960
Ranger Wolter em·
when John F. Kennedy was
phaslzed that these earlier
nominated.
difficulties have been
Ferguson does not conceal
resolved and all facilities
his dislike for McGovern - or
including the Boat Dock and
11
McGregor" as he sometimes
. Big Bend Beach areas are
calls him - his programs and
now open and ready lor
his followers.
public use. Boats and canoes
" ! haven't got anything
are available for rent at the against youth," Ferguson said.
Boat Dock area as in the "We were all young . But l don't
past.
think he ought to have all those
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:,:,:,:;,:- he has. He has a bad bunch of
programs- legalized abortion
and marijuana - and who
GROUND BROKEN
NEW CONCORD, Ohio wants those ."
The aging politican also
(UP!) - Groundbreaking
ceremonies were scheduled snorts at the quotas for
here today for the construction minority groups, women and
of 34 housing units lor elderly youth at the convention .
" I think it's good - for the
persons sponsored by the
Republicans,"
he said.
National Church Residences of
New Concord, a nonprofi t
group. Called Everlreen
Village, the development will
IN SECOND DAY
cost about $439,000.
AKRON (UP[) - 1Astrike by
some 800 sanitation : water and
REEVES APPOINTED
street department workers
ST. LOUIS (UP!)- William moved into its second day
B. Reeves, former project today without a hint of a setmanager for the Cincinnati tleme nt .
Greater Airport, was named
Members of Municipal
director of planning for the St . Employes Local 1360 voted to
Louis Metropolitan Area strike at midnight Monday
Airport Authority.
over a contra ct dispute.

I

:

,

~&lt;&lt;·»~0.&amp;~:~.~~~~~}.:~:::::::::~:~:·:·:::::·:·:·~-:-:-:·:·:::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:······;·;o;·:·;;:::·;,v.;.m&amp;~
:;::
.
.,. ... .... . .............. ................ -"

San Fran
012 000 30il-o 6 6 3·
New York 000 0101100- 1 2 1
Bryant (nJ and Rader;
Koosman , Sadeckl (8) and
Dyer. LP- Koosman (6-A); HR
- McCovey (6th).
(12 innings)
S.D.
000 032 0001100- 5 7 1
Mont
110 001 200 001- 6 142
Kirby, Corkins (7 ), Norman
(7), Ross (9), Schaeffer (9),
Acosta ( 101 and Corrales;
Torrez. Walker (6), Strohmayer
(8), Marshall (10) and Humphrey . WP- Marshall (6-2) . LP
- Acosta {1 -5) . HRs~ Singleton
(6th), Thomas (2ndl. Gaston
(3rd) .
(IS innings)
Atlanta
010 000 300 000 001-5 11 2
St. Lou is
011 IIIII 100 000 1100-4 11 0
Niek ro , Hardin (7), Hoerner
(8), Upshaw (8) , Jarvis (10),
Stone (12) and Williams ;
Santorlnl, Segui 171. Drabowsky
(8), Grzenda (10), Cloninger
,( 12). Palmer (15) and Sim mons. WP- Stone (3-6). LPPalmer (0-1). HR - Aaron
(19th) .

American League

Chicago
000 100 30D- 4 6 0
Cleveland 020 100 1100- 3 9 0
Bahnsen, Gossage (6), Forster (7) and Herrmann; Tidrow, Riddleberger (7). Hennigan (8) and Fosse. WPGossage (2-0) . LP- Tldrow (L
9) HRs- Fosse (lth). Allen
(18th!. Reichardt 14th) , Spezlo
(1stl .
Kan Cily
Bait

~

:=::

;:;:

l:f_.l_.
.

r.,.

Many Came to Arts, Crafts

iij!

Fair Held at Ced.ar Lakes I

::::

rB~v~r: ~~~!~~

MASoN the Mountain
State Art and Craft Falr at Cedar Lakes where U was good
to see a lot of residents of Ohio as well as West Virginians.
We were so btL!y, about all l could do was to say
"hello." The attendance on the first day last year was
1,873 and this year 3,000. The attendance at the fair at the
end of four days last year was 20,799 and this year's was
39,281!
The fair was so well advertised people came from all
the states. Many camped in Cunningham Woods from the
stales of Washington, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Maryland
and Kentucky. One camper from Oklahoma said,"! have
been to a lot of stales in my life but I've never seen
hospitality like this!"
One visitor from Cincinnati, who gets to all craft fairs,
said the Mountain Stale Arts and Crafts Falr was the hest
organized and the crafts superior to any he had seen in the
eastern and mid-west sections of the United States.
The cooperation of the West VIrginia Department of
Commerce, Artists and Craftsmen's Guild, Department of
Agriculture, Division of Vocational- Techuical Education,
University Extension Service, Department of Natural
Resources and lhe craftsmen helped to make this fair
such a success.
People also determine very much the success of a
£air. Praise of a craftsman's work many times means
more than a sale. Sale.s too were high.
At the end of three days, craftsmen had rung up
$89,551.73 in sales, and the concessions took iu $40,719.98.

==:=.

l_:jl_

100 000 000 o- 1 7 3
000 001 000 1- 2 7 0

Drago, 8 u r g

me 1 e r

Wright ( 101 and Klrkpalrick ;
Palmer {12-41 and Oates. LPDrago (7 81 .

Milw
000 000 302- 5 7 3
Minn .
040 000 ooo- 4 9 3
Lockwood, Colborn (2). Linzy
(71 and Rodriguez. Felske 171 ;
Woodson. Granger (7) and
Mitterwald WP- Lin zy (1-1) .
LP- Granger 13·2) . HRs- La ·
houd 15th ). Soderholm (9th).
Texas
J IO 001 ooo- 5 13 1
De troit
121 101 llllx- 6 11 1
Broberg, Lindblad (5), Shel lenback (71 , Pina (8) and King ;
Scherman

(1}.

Seelbach (6) and Freehan. WP
- Seelbach (S-4) . LP- Lindblad
(3-4). HR- Nelson (2nd ), Stan.
ley (9th) .
Bos lon
010 100 011- 4 9 0.
Oakland
000 000 ooo- 0 1 0
Pattin 16-81 and Fisk; Horlen .
Knowles 191 and Duncan . LPHorlen (2-1) HR- Fisk (lith) .
New York
California

June Report
All Middleport Village fund$
as of July •I totaled $187,312.60
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate
reported Monday night when
Middleport Council met in
regula r session .
Receipts and disbursements,
respectively, of ea,ch fund and
tlie balance as of July I include:
General, $4,326.:13, $5,466.10,
$34,835.48; cemetery, $1,751.76,
$592.54, $1,563.35; lire equipment, $70, $103.89, $699.86;
sw il)lmin g pool, $2,441.36,
$1,424.25, $3,693.66; planning
commissio n, no rece ipts,
$):18.47, $832.73; street tnain- ,
tenance, $2,091.47, $2,238.07,
$12 ,726.30; san itary se wer,
$3,936.81, $3,581.44, $22,561.10;
water , $6 ,371.27, $~.61~.4~,
. $23,049.73; water meter deposit
trusts, $225, $200, $6,077.23;
sanitary sewer escrow, $834.04,
·no disbursements, $58,837.82;
genera l bond retirement,
$1,025.68, $61.54, $16,650.69.
Receipts lor the month
totaled $23,073.72 compared to
ex pen ditur es . totaling
$19,423 .75.

Cheshire in Bidwell Has 12-1 Romp
Extra-Frame
Pony Win

'

Timmerman ,

Clerk Makes

(10) ,

006 100 ooo- 1 14 2

0001111100-3 91

Peter son (8 ·10) and Munson :

May. Clark (3 1, Queen (4),
Rose (7). Fisher (9) and
Kusny er. LP- May (2·71. HRCardena s 151hl.
SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMB US (UP!) - The
featured eighth race at Scioto
Downs a $1,400 pace, was won
Tuesday night , by · Avant!, , in
2:03 3-5.
Edgewood Nola was second,
followed by Amorshine. A ~
nightly double combination of
Armbro Hooter and Fire Proof
paid $124.20.
Attendance was 8,953 and the
handle was $331,394.

P • ; 's"AWSX.. bUb bUb bJt b

BY JACK O'BRIAN

OF OPINION, BUT ...
NEW YORK (KFS) - The craftily
Society News
publicized movies "The Damned" and
By Evelyn Brickle&amp;
"Cabaret" offer self-serving claims that
Mrs. Harry Harmon was America is in another decadent period; indeed
taken to O'Bleness Memorial not - the sad folk captured in all their conHospital, Athens, after sui- formist perversions and narcotics -culture still
fering a heart attack at her · are in the vast minority ... Rock music like
home here.
marijuana may not be dangerous separately Recent guests of Mr. and
but it provides the occasion of tragedy ... Rod
Mrs. Kenneth Griffith were
Mr. and Mrs . Ralph Higgins of McKuen is the Lawrence Welk of poetry ... The
art of "cinema" is not depiction of escapist
d
Vienna, W. Va . an son, Mr. inunaturity with ambitions to become male
and Mrs. James· Higgins and
son, Billy, of Houston, Texas, prostitutes (Midnight Cowboy) or dope-peddlers
and Mrs. Michael Anthony of (Easy Rider) but films reflecting beauty,
nobility, great tragedies and not amplication of
Parkersburg, W. Va.
uncommon depravities.
Mr . and Mrs . Richard
Laurel &amp; Hardy in non-distant retrospect
Spencer and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Dinsmore Boyles, Mrs. are being over-praised ... W. C. Fields was a
Bessie Webster and Judy all true clown, starkly and cruelly inspired and
attended the church picnic at worth the O!aplinesque enthusiasm of his
Forked Run Lake Sunday.
current cultists , btit he wasn't a huge ticketMr. and Mrs. Frank Upton of selling fihn star even In his best fihnSilver Ridge, Mr .. and Mrs. performing days ... Jason Robarts can't transKenne th Hager, local, were fer his stage· acting success to movies ... It's a
Sunday evening guests of Mr. tragedy the great days of stage revues can't be
and Mrs. Marvin Walker. Mr. resuscitated; simply because television takes
Walker is ill from food topical situations and ruins them for the stage
with drab and repetitively empty japes.
poisoning.
Mrs. Tom Burroughs had the
We're convinced athletes and entertainers
misfortune to fall at her home should get a generous tax-spread ... We're also
breaking her ankle. She is convinced athletes and actors plumping for
recuperating at home.
politicians didn't hurt the candidates' chances .
Mr . and Mrs. Cla rence very much ... We can't imagine voting for any
Nichols, Jr. and son, Bobby Joe candidate becau~ Arthur Godfrey, Shelley
Nichols, and son, of Louisville, Winfers, Paul Newman or Shirley MacLairie
Ky. visited a couple of days backed him; quite the opposite ... Why not strike
here with his parents, Mr. and a blow for fem~iberation and put on one TV
Mrs. Clarence Nichols. Several show Jane Fonda, Shelley Winters, Margaret
from here attended the sale of lo{ead, Shirley. MacLaine, Bella Abzug, Betty
Mrs. Brooks Summerfield
Friedan, Heather MacRae and Joan Baez; what
Saturday.
a
show to miss! ... Alan King is not a vest-type .
The United Methodist
There is a great difference between "ugly"
Women of the Alfred Church
and
"homely," and Barbra Streisand, of the
met recently with Mrs. Dins·
more Boyles with 10 members latter category, in filrnaat least, is the current
example; the late Broadway manager Rube
and live guests present.
Weekend visitors of Mrs. Bernstein was the all-time example, a genNeisel Weatherman were Mr. tlema~ of legendary homelinesS whose ~agle­
and Mrs. Earl Lehman of features were actually beautiful in reflection of
Delaware, Ohio and Wallis his crust-covered sweet ·personality; and
character ... Would you believe the hard-driving
McDonald of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth wild comicality of Rosalind Russell is a later •
Griffith visited over the Fourth career manifestation? That her early stage
of Jiily with her brother, Mr. (stock) personality was lovely, endearing,
and Mrs. William Cross and strong but vulnerable when a plot called for that
family of Canal Winchester, 0. rare (to most actreaes) effect? It was.

:=~

110 innings)

Voice along Br'Way
IT'S A MATTER

::.:

I

No one has accused the Jule Styne · Bob
Merrill score for "Sugar" of being important
nor even interesting ; but we remember "Two
for the Show," a revue the critic-s all dismissed
as empty of songs; but as time tempoed on, one
of its tunes became th e Jazz Musicians'
National Anthem, "How High the Moon"; so
time may repeat .. . Over the decades we've
owned hundreds, maybe thousands, of recordings by Art Tatum, Johnny Hodges, Eddie
Miller, Bunny Berigan and managed to lose or
give them all away; Tatum's and Hodges' alone
should ~ tonally worth as much as Picasso.
The cheapest, most meretriciotL! nightclub
performers are greeted with "standing
ovations" in this overly suggestible era,
wherein ·a press agent and several friends can
urge an audience to that imperfect tribute ...
Jane Froman's opening at the Copa after dozens
·of operations following her wartime Clipper
crash was one of the very few sincere standing
ovations, with hardly a dry eye in that plush
basement .. . Today any Tom, Steve and Eydie
have cheapened the gesture.
What ever happened to the great poise and,
polish onC!' practiced by comedians? Alan King;
wears vests, drives a Rolls-Royce, proclaims
his Kennedy relationships and tells his joke&amp;
like a mugg ... Bob Hope keeps a touch of sty!&amp;
... Would it surprise the present generation t&amp;
)mow Hope and Jack Benny derived&lt; then'
jaunty, winsome walks and delivery from the:
late Frank Fay, a legendary vaudeville
who went a trifle daft in his declining seasons,
saved for a few years by his superb success in
"Harvey"?
How do you review a girl TV newscasler?
By her voice• Editorial attitude? Chic? Face?
Figure ? Hair ? ... Several TV newsgals all but
camouflage their looks and even their personalities by endlessly donning wigs of wildly
assorted styles; Pia Lindstrom, Ingrid Berg:
man 's daughter, seems to have settied on one
simple hair style finally ... Too many ll)ale
newscasters try to get With It via mod-Bulls,
wil~ wide neckties, carnival-tinted shirts and
teased hairdos which are distracting costumes and not clothes ... Walter Cronkite
remains the giant of TV news, an uncle-figure, •
well-dressed and undistractlngly coiffed.
• Elliott Gould's personality and talent~otally
mystify us; if any is there in the first place ...
The tales of George C. Scott and Barbra
Streisand In their o.ff-actlng moments say a lot
for David Belasco's Insistence on keeping the
private lines of his stars a total mystery ... They
do give glamor a nudge.
•·

star

Bidwell remained unbeaten
with their eighth stra1g hl win
in whipping Vinton 12-1 at
Bidwell Tuesctay night in
Gallia -Meigs Pony League
action .
Ja ck Gardner hurl ed a
brilliant one-hit ler in the fiveinning game, which was called
because of the score. Gardner,
who permitted only a single by
T. Norman in the fourth,
fanned seven and walked five.
Red Ju stus and Mike Justus
learned up on the mound for
Vmton and gave up seven
walks while striking out four .
Leading the way at the plate
for the powerful Bidwell nine

Middleport's B Pony
baseball learn had the first
victory of the season within
reach through seven innings
Tuesday at Middleport Park
but Cheshire pushed across
three runs in the extra eighth
frame to win &amp;-3 and make Jts
record 4-3-1. Middleport 13 is ().
12.
Th e fatal eighth - for
Middleport - produced three
runs on a walk, iil" error, a
doubl e by Jerry Lucas and a
single by Bruce Arnett. Other
Cheshire hitters were Arnett
who added a double and two
other singles, Bias three
singles, Blazer ~ double, and
single, and Tom Lucas, Dave
Wise and Metzner each a hit .
First round action rolled into
For Middlepor t, Lavendar its second night at the Kyger
and Davenport each had two Creek Little League tour singles, Gleason hit two nam ent Tuesday mghl with
doubles and a-single, and Steve Addaville ta king Racine 1&gt;-4 in
the first game, 13idwell nipped
B11chner a single.
Cheshire pitchers fanned 19, the Pomeroy Giants 2-0, and
walked three ; Middleport's Ripley Daniel Boone edged the
fanned 8 and walked 5.
Gallipolis Cubs 8-7 in moe
Cbesh .
200 001 03--6 13 0 innings.
M1dd B
100 200 00-3 8 2
First Game
Pacing the victorious AdMetzner, Lucas ( 4) (WP i
and Bias. Bachner, Gleason daville cl ub was Fraley with
(LP ) ( ~ ) and Gleason, two doubles and a sin gle . Other
Bachner .
big hitters were T. Nibert,
Wes tfall, Taylor, and J. Nibert
all with two hits apiece. Taylor
was the wmning pitcher.
Major League Results
Teaford led Racine at the
By United Pre ss International
National League
plate w1th a single and double
list Gamel
in two trips. D. Sayre was the
Houston
010 001 40D- 6 10 1
Chicago
101 001 011 - 5 9 1 losing hurler.
Second Game
Forsch . Culver 171 . Gladding
(8) and Edwa rds. Hoo ton,
Bidwell 's Casey held the
Phoebus 171. Aker 191 -and
Hundley . WP- Forsch (5-31 . LP Pomeroy Giants to only a
- Hooton (7-8). Hrs- May 117 1. single by Todd Rawlings in the
Will iams (17 1. Wynn 114)
fifth inning in getting the win .
(2nd game&gt;
Houston
020 001 011 - s I I 0 Brian Hamilton hurled a twoChicago
100 111 50x- 9 14 2 hitter in taking the loss.
Wilson, York 171. Gr~lfin 171.
Bidwell, who scored both of
Gibbon (7) and Howard; Hands. their runs in the firth frame ,
Aker (8) and Rudolph . WPHands. 17-61 . LP- Wilson 15-61. was topped at the plate by .
HRs- Williams (18th). Pepitone Plants and Casey each with a
(2nd). Monday 2 (8th &amp; 9th ). single.

coached by Doyle Saunders
was Gardner with two doubles
and a single, Fred Logan, Gene
Welch, Bruce Runyon, and
Gene Payne each with a single
and triple, Jeff Hollenbaugh
two singles, Greg JaJ;~eS a
triple, and Tim Stout a single.
Bidwell still has a game and
a half lead over second-place
Pomeroy and a two-ga me
bulge over Southwestern.
Pomeroy is 7-2 and Southwestern is 6-2. Vinton 's slate is
2-6. This Friday Vinton is at
Middleporl "A" and Bidwell
hosts Middlepor t "B" .
Vinton
OOi 10- 1 I 2
209 lx-12 15 0
Bidwell

Ripley, Bidwell,
Addaville Advance

Los Ang
000 000 Olo-1 50
Third Game
Philo
040 000 oox- 4 4 2
Ripley Daniel Boone 's
Sutton, Mikkelsen ( 7) and . Mullins was hit by a pitch,
Cannizzaro ; Carlton (12-61 and moved around on Moore 's
· Bateman . LP- Sutl on (10.5) .
single, and came home on two
Plltsbrgh 000 000 ooo- 0 7 2 fie lder's choices in the ninth
Clnci
20200001x- 5 81
Moose, Johnson (5). Garber inning to break a 7-7 deadlock.
Ripley had scored one
(7) and Sanguillen ; Billingham
(5-9) and Bench. LP- Moose (S· run
in
the
eighth
5) . HR- Bench (22nd) .
but the Gallipolis Cubs

also came back with one
in their half of the frame.
J . Waybright was the winning pitcher while T. Wall took
the loss.
E. Casto paced Ripley with a
sin gle and double while R.
Taylor had two singles. D.
Wickline had a double and J.
Adkms had a smgle lor the
Cubs' only hils.
In tomght's action, the undefeated Middlepor t Indians
take on the Gallipolis Orioles at
6, the Gallipolis Indians battle
Pt. Pleasant City Ice and Fuel
at 7:15, and the unbeaten
Cheshire
Tigers
play
Harrisonville at 8:30.

The

Dai~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS -MASON AREA
CHESTER L . TANNEHILL .
EJ:et . Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
Cily Editor

M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER

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�3;:-,):he £?lily Se~U'.'el, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 12, 1972

Old Joe May be

Fischer
Hoping
REYKJAVIK, ICeland (UP!)
- Caught in a hopele5sly
drawn game, temperamental
•American challenger Bobby
Fischer took a 'chance to bring
IIOille life into his first world
chess championship game.
In that moment, soft-spoken
and mild-mannered Boris
Spassky proved why he is the
world champion in. tpe noblest
of games.
He immediately pounced on
Fischer's bishop - left trapped
after capturing one of the
Russian 's pawns - and the
game turned distin ctly in
Spassky's favor.
Spassky asked for adjournment after 40 moves and
•~ hours play.
·When the two resume the
game - the first in their
$250,000, 24-game world match
- Spassky has a bishop and
three pawns against Fischer's
live pawns. Play resumes at 5
p.m. (I p.m. EDT) .
Most experts assembled here
aeemed to agree that Spassky
has a chance to win, while
Flacher should be happy if he
salvages a draw.
REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI)
- Tl'le progression of moves in

the first game of the world
che.. championship 'match be·
tween Boris Spassky of the
Soviet Union and challenger

Bobby Fischer of th• Uniled
States :
Spusky · (white) Fischer
(bllckl
1. P-04
KT-KB3
2. P-QB4
P-K3

3. KT-KB3
4. KT-QB3
5. P-Kl
6, B-Q3
7. p.p
I. P-QR3
9. KT-Kl
10. BxP (Q84l
11 . PxP (Q85)
12. RxQ
13. P-QKT4
14. B-KT2
15. QR.QBI
16. KT( K2l-Q4
17. KTxKT
11. B-QKT3
19. KTxB(QKTJl
20. RxR
21. K-81
22. K-K2
23. R-QBI
24. BXR
25. KT-RS
26.' K-Q3
27. KT-84
21. 'l&lt;kfxkf
lf. 1&gt;-KTS
lb. P-KT3
31. I&lt;-K2
32. K-83
33. K-KT2
34. PxP
35. KxB
36. P-QR4
37. B-R3
31. B-BS
3f. P-QKT6
40. K-R4

P-Q4
KB-QKTS

o.o

P-Q84
KT-QBJ
B-QR4
OxO(QBSl
8-QKT3
QxQ
BxPIQB41
8-K2
8-Ql

KR-Q1

KTxKT

B-RS
81 R5lx8
RxRichl
R-QB1
K-81

KT-K5
RXR

P-K83
KT-Q3

8-Ql

B-82

BXKT
8XP(KR7)
P-'&lt;R4
p.:,Rs

K-K2
PxP
8xP

K-Q3

K-Q4

K-K5

P-R3
P-84

P-85
Adjourned .
(Symbols : In Brilish-Ameri ·

can usage. each move in a

c:hess game Is recorded using

letters for each chess piece and

numbers for each square on the

board . The squares are num -

bered along the columns (or
flies) and named tor the piece
Initially sitting at the first
square of the file. For example,

hi for Top Job

at20NorthSecond Ave., the counter and table service wlll be
designed with the family in mind. Hours will be from 10 a.m.
to 12 midnight, except SUndays. Osby Martin, owner, said
door prizes will be given away at tlie opening. Employes are
Mrs. lrene Artis and Charles Lewis. The photograph shows a
part of the center including billiards and table tennis tables.
On the left, two young men play checkers.

TilE FORMER MIDDlEPORT POOL ROOM has been
converted into a f.amily recreation center and will mark its
grand opening, Thursday, Friday and Saturday. The new
center, to be known as Ossie's Recreation Room" will feature
dominoes, darts, pickup sticks, pumper book, table tennis,
cards, checkers, billiards and other entertainment. Located

Democrats Grumbling
By STEVE ~EJISTEL
MIAMI BEACH (UP!)-A
conciliatory George S. McGovern-'-&lt;ISSured of the Democratic presidential nomination
tonight by his mastery of the
"new politics"--&lt;~ppealed to
the old masters today for their
help in defeating President
Nixon.
But his unity overtures
collided with the die-hard
opposition of organized labor's
candidate-Sen. Henry M.
Jackson of Washington, who
vowed togo down battling what
he considered McGovern's
Democratic
politics of
disaster.
McGovern had the votes to
beat Jackson and George
Wallace and four token QP·
ponents on tonight 's first ballot
-and everyone here knew it.
So he secluded himself in his
penthouse and concentrated on
re-&lt;l!ltablishing the old Democratic
coalition
with
telephoned appeals to a
smoldering George Meany ,
president of the AFL-ClO; and
Chicago Mayor Richard J.
Daley, miffed by his ouster by
a vote of the convention.
· In anotber move . toward
rea~J,ijg the oil! guard, .
McGovern asked party Chairman Lawrence F . O'Brien to
stay on the job, foregoing the
candidate's privilege of installing his own loyalist in the party
top command.
Old Liners Hard to Get
The old liners were hard to

get.
Louisiana Gov. Edwin· Edwards left the convention,
declaring it would be a waste of
time for him to stay.
''McGovern can't win in
Pennsylvania, " grumbled
delegate Hugh Carcclla,
president of a steelworkers
local in Philadelphia. "He's a
right-to-work son-&lt;Jf-a-bitch .. ."
Gov . Robert W. Scott of
North
Carolina
said

Muskie Helps Unity Move
Vietnam dove;
former
Sen. Edmund Muskie helped Massachusetts Gov. Endicott
McGovern 's unity move with a Peabody; and Stanley Arnold,
warm endorsement Tuesday a New York accountant and
after pulling out of his own business consultant-said they
hopeless race , a victim of would fight it out with
McGovern's mastery of the McGovern's choice, just on
primary system.
principle.
Fails to Sway Delegates
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey
wi thdrew
fir st,
but
McGovern's olive branch did
significantly did not endorse not extend to Wallace, whose
McGovern despite his own dramatic !~-minute apinclination to rid the pearance before the convention
Democrats of their fratricidal from a wheelchair failed to
tendencies.
sway the delegates from their
"The temperature of a convictions on the platform.
number of people is slightly
Some black delegates booed
high,'' a relaxed Humphrey and held up defiant clencbed
told reporters in explaining fists as Wallace called compulwhy he was waiting. "!don't sory busing "asinine," After he
believe you ought to start was carried and wheeled away,
talking to people about going to the delegates by a loud voice
the dance or to the ball while vote decided to retain the party
they've got a fever ." ,
platform's endorsement of
Humphrey and Muskie's busing as a useful tool toward a
withdrawal from the rat-e left desirable end.
George C. Walla ce and
But the McGovern view
Jackson as McGovern's chief prevailed in convention votes
rivals but four other can- which defeated platform plank
didates are to be put in proposals favoring legalij:ed
nomination tonight- Rep . abortion, proclaiming the
Shirley Chisholm of New York; rights of homosexuals, and
Rep. Wilbur D. Mills of calling for tax reform conArkansas; former Sen. Eugene siderably more far-reaching
J. McCarthy of Minnesota and than anything McGovern has
former Gov. Terry Sanford ·of 'hacked.
·
·
North Carolina.
In a platform debate stretchThe vice presidential ing deep into this morning, a
nomination will be made voice vote which was tough to
Thursday at th e conventiOn's measure defeated tax reform
final scheduled session. Three ~oposals offered by lame duck
dec lared vice presidential Sen . Fred R. Harris of
candidates - Sen. Mike Gravel Oklahoma. He advocated the
of Alaska , an outspoken abolishment of all tax
loopholes -including those
popular ones which help
homeowners, borrowers and
the aged¥ well as those which
benefit oil tycoons and Wall
Street investors.

McGovern, "my last choice,"

could carry neither his state
nor the nation.
Scott was one of five
southern governors invited to
breakfast today by McGovern
in his seaside penthouse. None
of the five are avowed
McGovernites. The senator
asked a liberal, wiSconsin Gov.
Patrick J . Lucey, to join them.
Also invited were Govs. John
C. West of South Carolina, Dale
Bumpers of Arkansas, Jimmy
Carter of Georgia and Reubin
Askew of Florida-w hose perforrrumce as keynoter McGovern praised.
All five Southern governors
on the list have been mentioned
by the McGovern camp as
potential running-mates.
On that question, McGovern
kept his own counsel, but his
staff said the senator would
submit only one name to the
convention after he consults
with Edward M. Kennedy and
other party leaders. Kennedy
continued to scorn the vice
presidential nomination.

•

Mother of 14 Takes m
Her First Convention

MIAMI BEACH (UPI)-Corrook on the side .of the king is nelia Frederick is a 47-year-&lt;Jld
numbered : KR3. or King 's
black woman who has borne 14
rook 3.
(The letters and their corre- children and worked most of
sponding pieces are: K- King; her life as a laundress, cook or
(,}-Queen; .8-Bishop ; Kt- maid .
Knlght; R- li!ook ; P-pawn .
"For the first time in my life
(An "x" between letters
Indicates the first piece cap. I feel like something," said
tured 1he second. 0-0 Indicates
castlln~ .
"Ch" Indicates Mrs. Frederick, who arrived in
"check' or that the king 1s Miami Beach on a bus from
threatened with capture.)
Detroit at 4:30a .m. Tuesday,
hoping to get into th e
the third square in front of the

Democratic National Con-

vention.
"I've never had a vacation
TRANSFERS MADE
before-never
even planned lor
COLUMBUS (UP! )
one."
Twenty-nine state workers
But she was barred from the
have beer transferred from
convention
hall because she
other duties in the Department
had
no
credentials.
of Taxation to help speed up
Mrs. Frederick, whose hussales tax refunds on new auto
band
died 11 years ago while
purchases made last year.

working in a steel mill, saved
$:100 from her earnings as a
cook at a Detroit nursing home
to come to Miami Beach.
"l just always wanted to be
near where it was going on,"
she said. "For, years I've been
liste ning to them o,n the
television and the radio\ l can
remember ·listening to them
when l was just a little ~irl.
F;rom Political Family
"I came from a political
family. I got an uncle who was
a co Wlcilman in River ROuge,
Mich ., 12 years ago."
But money comes hard for
Mrs. Frederick, who earns
$2.78 an hour at the nursing
home. Her teen-age children
living at home tried to tali&lt; her
out of coming.

"They said, 'Old tady you
just don't do it like that,"' Mrs.
Frederick related.
But she was determined. She
bought a round-trip ticket from
Detroit to Miami for 1106.45
and rode the bus for nine hours,
arriving before dawn .
She found a hotel room for
$10.40 a night and planned to
stay through Saturday.
.k
Tha1 settled • Mrs. F redenc
thought she could just walk into
the convention halt, like all the
people she had seen on
television.
"They told me I had to be a
delegate or a news media or
something like that," Mrs.
Frederick said. "How do just
folks get into that place?"
And, ironically, Mrs. Frede• rick arrived in Miami Beach

Factions Fend .in Miami
MIAMI BEACH (UP! ) - A
aimmering feud between the
McGovern' and Humphrey fa ctions of the unwieldy 153-member Ohio delegation flared into
the open early today, as McGovern forces attempted to bypass the Buckeye chairman on
a vote on the abortion plank of
the platform.
The chairman., Frank W.
King, said Howar~ P. Fink,
leader of the McGovern delegales, ''made the entire delegallon look Uke a bunch of
rummies in front of the whole

country."
Fink said the matter was all
a mistake and apologized.
But King, presidenl of the
Ohio AFL-C!O and head of 79
delegates pledged to Humplu·ey, said, "This is the second
night he's made Ohio look
foolish, and I'm not going to
stand for it."
King said Fink was responsible for the slow Ohio count on
all roU calls bf· ''Insisting on

.'

counting the votes about 20
times ."

The latest dispute broke out
at 4 a.m. when Fink took South
Dakota's microphone to announce a change in his faction's vote on a plank for liberalized abortion.
King raised a point of order
and inunediately became involve·d in a spat with Chairwoman Yvonne Braithwaite
Burke, who demanded that
Ohio's delegation be polled.
"Madame chairman, a
member of tbe Ohio delegation
used another microphone to
announce a vote and I'm not
~oing to stand for it," King
shouted.
"! call on you to ask the
delegates tO do their business
through the chairman. l was
elected chairman by acclamation, and I have never refused
to dq anything anyone asked

Fink withdrew his request .
"We were standing up for our
rights ," Fink said. "We could
not get to him in time to change
our votes and were afraid the

roll would be completed ... I
aplogized because l didn 't want
to turn the knife any further .
They (Humphrey delegates)
have been through enough
already ."

"Sure he apologized and
apologized, 11 said King,
unleashing a string of unprintable expletives about
Fink . "The horse was out of the
barn by the time he
apologized."
William Dougherty ,
lieutenant governor of South
Dakota and a McGovern
delegate, came over and
apologiied to King , admitting
he had allowed Fink to use his
state's microphone.
me."
"Why did you do a thing Uke
The Ohio delegation retired that? " King asked before
from the floor to be Iiolled. but accepting the apology.

just as her favorite- Hubert H.
Hwnphrey- was anilouncing
his withdrawal from the
contest for the presidential
nomination.
"At home we have a big 'H'
in the window for Hwnphrey,"
she said. "! use to watch him
talk on television and 1 like
what he says. My mother used
to work in his elections."
Mrs. Frederick said she was
particularly impressed with
Humphrey 's
part
in
establishing the Job Corps .
"! had three of my children
go throur'
and it did wonderful fur them," she said.
"My oldest &lt;hughter, who is 23,
is now a typist with an electncal computer; another
daughter is in clerical work;
and my youngest daughter,
who is 19, is a dietary cook at a
convalescent home like me."
She was disappointed at
being barred from convention
hall, but Mrs. Frederick, wilh
10 children still living and 13
grandchildren, was happy she
al least came close.
"Even if it comes I can't get ·
in," she said. "It just feels good
to be near Humphrey."

Tuppers Plains

MIAMI BEACH. (UP!) - thought they could be ' found.
Some members of the Ohio
AJJ a veter;m of five national
deiegatioo to the Democratic conventions, Ferguson hasn't
National Convention planned to · hasn 't much in common with
enter the name of Joseph T. any of his fellow delegates
Ferguson into nomination for here, And he prefers 1t that
President tonight.
way.
"They are maki11g a
"!came bere to enjoy myself
shambles of the thing (con- and vote for Humphrey," he
ventlon) anyway," .tbe Jl().year- said. "They asked me if I
old Ohio auditor ·said. "Might wanted to be on one of those
ss well have some fun out of committees, but l didn't want
11."
that because I knew that was
The 79 delegates who were where the work was at.
COfllmitted to Sen. Hubert H.
AJJ a member of the old poliHwnphrey on the first ballot tical school, he has little use for
bild Ferguson as a nominal the convention reforms
11ec0nd choice. The bottom spawned by Sen. Gecrge Medropped out for the Humphrey Govern, who was conceded the
supporters Tuesday when nomination tonight. _ .
Humphrey removed himself
"This is the worst setup," he
from the race.
said. "It's a terrible messed up
The Ferguson men will need thing. Some of these kinds, you
signatures of 60 delegates from don't even know whether
at least three states. John they're interested in going to
Blum of Cincinnati said he the convention after tbey got
elected. Some of them can't
;:::,:::;:,:::,::::::::::::~::::::::::::::;:::,:-:,:,:,:,:::::::::::::::::: pay their kit. It costs money to
go to these things."
ALL CLEAR
Ferguson first attended a
· T. Allan Wolter, Ironton
Democratic National ConvenDistrict Ranger, said
tion in 1940. In 1944 he was
Tuesday developments
Ohio's favorite son candidate
occurring during the past
for President and cast the state
month have caused some
votes for President Roosevelt
confusion and
misinon the first ballot. He also
formation regarding the
helped promote Harry S. Trufacilities of the Vesuvius
man for vice president over inR~crealion Area of the
cumbent Henry Wallace. He
Wayne National Forest.
also was a delegate in 1960
Ranger Wolter em·
when John F. Kennedy was
phaslzed that these earlier
nominated.
difficulties have been
Ferguson does not conceal
resolved and all facilities
his dislike for McGovern - or
including the Boat Dock and
11
McGregor" as he sometimes
. Big Bend Beach areas are
calls him - his programs and
now open and ready lor
his followers.
public use. Boats and canoes
" ! haven't got anything
are available for rent at the against youth," Ferguson said.
Boat Dock area as in the "We were all young . But l don't
past.
think he ought to have all those
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:,:,:,:;,:- he has. He has a bad bunch of
programs- legalized abortion
and marijuana - and who
GROUND BROKEN
NEW CONCORD, Ohio wants those ."
The aging politican also
(UP!) - Groundbreaking
ceremonies were scheduled snorts at the quotas for
here today for the construction minority groups, women and
of 34 housing units lor elderly youth at the convention .
" I think it's good - for the
persons sponsored by the
Republicans,"
he said.
National Church Residences of
New Concord, a nonprofi t
group. Called Everlreen
Village, the development will
IN SECOND DAY
cost about $439,000.
AKRON (UP[) - 1Astrike by
some 800 sanitation : water and
REEVES APPOINTED
street department workers
ST. LOUIS (UP!)- William moved into its second day
B. Reeves, former project today without a hint of a setmanager for the Cincinnati tleme nt .
Greater Airport, was named
Members of Municipal
director of planning for the St . Employes Local 1360 voted to
Louis Metropolitan Area strike at midnight Monday
Airport Authority.
over a contra ct dispute.

I

:

,

~&lt;&lt;·»~0.&amp;~:~.~~~~~}.:~:::::::::~:~:·:·:::::·:·:·~-:-:-:·:·:::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:······;·;o;·:·;;:::·;,v.;.m&amp;~
:;::
.
.,. ... .... . .............. ................ -"

San Fran
012 000 30il-o 6 6 3·
New York 000 0101100- 1 2 1
Bryant (nJ and Rader;
Koosman , Sadeckl (8) and
Dyer. LP- Koosman (6-A); HR
- McCovey (6th).
(12 innings)
S.D.
000 032 0001100- 5 7 1
Mont
110 001 200 001- 6 142
Kirby, Corkins (7 ), Norman
(7), Ross (9), Schaeffer (9),
Acosta ( 101 and Corrales;
Torrez. Walker (6), Strohmayer
(8), Marshall (10) and Humphrey . WP- Marshall (6-2) . LP
- Acosta {1 -5) . HRs~ Singleton
(6th), Thomas (2ndl. Gaston
(3rd) .
(IS innings)
Atlanta
010 000 300 000 001-5 11 2
St. Lou is
011 IIIII 100 000 1100-4 11 0
Niek ro , Hardin (7), Hoerner
(8), Upshaw (8) , Jarvis (10),
Stone (12) and Williams ;
Santorlnl, Segui 171. Drabowsky
(8), Grzenda (10), Cloninger
,( 12). Palmer (15) and Sim mons. WP- Stone (3-6). LPPalmer (0-1). HR - Aaron
(19th) .

American League

Chicago
000 100 30D- 4 6 0
Cleveland 020 100 1100- 3 9 0
Bahnsen, Gossage (6), Forster (7) and Herrmann; Tidrow, Riddleberger (7). Hennigan (8) and Fosse. WPGossage (2-0) . LP- Tldrow (L
9) HRs- Fosse (lth). Allen
(18th!. Reichardt 14th) , Spezlo
(1stl .
Kan Cily
Bait

~

:=::

;:;:

l:f_.l_.
.

r.,.

Many Came to Arts, Crafts

iij!

Fair Held at Ced.ar Lakes I

::::

rB~v~r: ~~~!~~

MASoN the Mountain
State Art and Craft Falr at Cedar Lakes where U was good
to see a lot of residents of Ohio as well as West Virginians.
We were so btL!y, about all l could do was to say
"hello." The attendance on the first day last year was
1,873 and this year 3,000. The attendance at the fair at the
end of four days last year was 20,799 and this year's was
39,281!
The fair was so well advertised people came from all
the states. Many camped in Cunningham Woods from the
stales of Washington, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Maryland
and Kentucky. One camper from Oklahoma said,"! have
been to a lot of stales in my life but I've never seen
hospitality like this!"
One visitor from Cincinnati, who gets to all craft fairs,
said the Mountain Stale Arts and Crafts Falr was the hest
organized and the crafts superior to any he had seen in the
eastern and mid-west sections of the United States.
The cooperation of the West VIrginia Department of
Commerce, Artists and Craftsmen's Guild, Department of
Agriculture, Division of Vocational- Techuical Education,
University Extension Service, Department of Natural
Resources and lhe craftsmen helped to make this fair
such a success.
People also determine very much the success of a
£air. Praise of a craftsman's work many times means
more than a sale. Sale.s too were high.
At the end of three days, craftsmen had rung up
$89,551.73 in sales, and the concessions took iu $40,719.98.

==:=.

l_:jl_

100 000 000 o- 1 7 3
000 001 000 1- 2 7 0

Drago, 8 u r g

me 1 e r

Wright ( 101 and Klrkpalrick ;
Palmer {12-41 and Oates. LPDrago (7 81 .

Milw
000 000 302- 5 7 3
Minn .
040 000 ooo- 4 9 3
Lockwood, Colborn (2). Linzy
(71 and Rodriguez. Felske 171 ;
Woodson. Granger (7) and
Mitterwald WP- Lin zy (1-1) .
LP- Granger 13·2) . HRs- La ·
houd 15th ). Soderholm (9th).
Texas
J IO 001 ooo- 5 13 1
De troit
121 101 llllx- 6 11 1
Broberg, Lindblad (5), Shel lenback (71 , Pina (8) and King ;
Scherman

(1}.

Seelbach (6) and Freehan. WP
- Seelbach (S-4) . LP- Lindblad
(3-4). HR- Nelson (2nd ), Stan.
ley (9th) .
Bos lon
010 100 011- 4 9 0.
Oakland
000 000 ooo- 0 1 0
Pattin 16-81 and Fisk; Horlen .
Knowles 191 and Duncan . LPHorlen (2-1) HR- Fisk (lith) .
New York
California

June Report
All Middleport Village fund$
as of July •I totaled $187,312.60
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate
reported Monday night when
Middleport Council met in
regula r session .
Receipts and disbursements,
respectively, of ea,ch fund and
tlie balance as of July I include:
General, $4,326.:13, $5,466.10,
$34,835.48; cemetery, $1,751.76,
$592.54, $1,563.35; lire equipment, $70, $103.89, $699.86;
sw il)lmin g pool, $2,441.36,
$1,424.25, $3,693.66; planning
commissio n, no rece ipts,
$):18.47, $832.73; street tnain- ,
tenance, $2,091.47, $2,238.07,
$12 ,726.30; san itary se wer,
$3,936.81, $3,581.44, $22,561.10;
water , $6 ,371.27, $~.61~.4~,
. $23,049.73; water meter deposit
trusts, $225, $200, $6,077.23;
sanitary sewer escrow, $834.04,
·no disbursements, $58,837.82;
genera l bond retirement,
$1,025.68, $61.54, $16,650.69.
Receipts lor the month
totaled $23,073.72 compared to
ex pen ditur es . totaling
$19,423 .75.

Cheshire in Bidwell Has 12-1 Romp
Extra-Frame
Pony Win

'

Timmerman ,

Clerk Makes

(10) ,

006 100 ooo- 1 14 2

0001111100-3 91

Peter son (8 ·10) and Munson :

May. Clark (3 1, Queen (4),
Rose (7). Fisher (9) and
Kusny er. LP- May (2·71. HRCardena s 151hl.
SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMB US (UP!) - The
featured eighth race at Scioto
Downs a $1,400 pace, was won
Tuesday night , by · Avant!, , in
2:03 3-5.
Edgewood Nola was second,
followed by Amorshine. A ~
nightly double combination of
Armbro Hooter and Fire Proof
paid $124.20.
Attendance was 8,953 and the
handle was $331,394.

P • ; 's"AWSX.. bUb bUb bJt b

BY JACK O'BRIAN

OF OPINION, BUT ...
NEW YORK (KFS) - The craftily
Society News
publicized movies "The Damned" and
By Evelyn Brickle&amp;
"Cabaret" offer self-serving claims that
Mrs. Harry Harmon was America is in another decadent period; indeed
taken to O'Bleness Memorial not - the sad folk captured in all their conHospital, Athens, after sui- formist perversions and narcotics -culture still
fering a heart attack at her · are in the vast minority ... Rock music like
home here.
marijuana may not be dangerous separately Recent guests of Mr. and
but it provides the occasion of tragedy ... Rod
Mrs. Kenneth Griffith were
Mr. and Mrs . Ralph Higgins of McKuen is the Lawrence Welk of poetry ... The
art of "cinema" is not depiction of escapist
d
Vienna, W. Va . an son, Mr. inunaturity with ambitions to become male
and Mrs. James· Higgins and
son, Billy, of Houston, Texas, prostitutes (Midnight Cowboy) or dope-peddlers
and Mrs. Michael Anthony of (Easy Rider) but films reflecting beauty,
nobility, great tragedies and not amplication of
Parkersburg, W. Va.
uncommon depravities.
Mr . and Mrs . Richard
Laurel &amp; Hardy in non-distant retrospect
Spencer and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Dinsmore Boyles, Mrs. are being over-praised ... W. C. Fields was a
Bessie Webster and Judy all true clown, starkly and cruelly inspired and
attended the church picnic at worth the O!aplinesque enthusiasm of his
Forked Run Lake Sunday.
current cultists , btit he wasn't a huge ticketMr. and Mrs. Frank Upton of selling fihn star even In his best fihnSilver Ridge, Mr .. and Mrs. performing days ... Jason Robarts can't transKenne th Hager, local, were fer his stage· acting success to movies ... It's a
Sunday evening guests of Mr. tragedy the great days of stage revues can't be
and Mrs. Marvin Walker. Mr. resuscitated; simply because television takes
Walker is ill from food topical situations and ruins them for the stage
with drab and repetitively empty japes.
poisoning.
Mrs. Tom Burroughs had the
We're convinced athletes and entertainers
misfortune to fall at her home should get a generous tax-spread ... We're also
breaking her ankle. She is convinced athletes and actors plumping for
recuperating at home.
politicians didn't hurt the candidates' chances .
Mr . and Mrs. Cla rence very much ... We can't imagine voting for any
Nichols, Jr. and son, Bobby Joe candidate becau~ Arthur Godfrey, Shelley
Nichols, and son, of Louisville, Winfers, Paul Newman or Shirley MacLairie
Ky. visited a couple of days backed him; quite the opposite ... Why not strike
here with his parents, Mr. and a blow for fem~iberation and put on one TV
Mrs. Clarence Nichols. Several show Jane Fonda, Shelley Winters, Margaret
from here attended the sale of lo{ead, Shirley. MacLaine, Bella Abzug, Betty
Mrs. Brooks Summerfield
Friedan, Heather MacRae and Joan Baez; what
Saturday.
a
show to miss! ... Alan King is not a vest-type .
The United Methodist
There is a great difference between "ugly"
Women of the Alfred Church
and
"homely," and Barbra Streisand, of the
met recently with Mrs. Dins·
more Boyles with 10 members latter category, in filrnaat least, is the current
example; the late Broadway manager Rube
and live guests present.
Weekend visitors of Mrs. Bernstein was the all-time example, a genNeisel Weatherman were Mr. tlema~ of legendary homelinesS whose ~agle­
and Mrs. Earl Lehman of features were actually beautiful in reflection of
Delaware, Ohio and Wallis his crust-covered sweet ·personality; and
character ... Would you believe the hard-driving
McDonald of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth wild comicality of Rosalind Russell is a later •
Griffith visited over the Fourth career manifestation? That her early stage
of Jiily with her brother, Mr. (stock) personality was lovely, endearing,
and Mrs. William Cross and strong but vulnerable when a plot called for that
family of Canal Winchester, 0. rare (to most actreaes) effect? It was.

:=~

110 innings)

Voice along Br'Way
IT'S A MATTER

::.:

I

No one has accused the Jule Styne · Bob
Merrill score for "Sugar" of being important
nor even interesting ; but we remember "Two
for the Show," a revue the critic-s all dismissed
as empty of songs; but as time tempoed on, one
of its tunes became th e Jazz Musicians'
National Anthem, "How High the Moon"; so
time may repeat .. . Over the decades we've
owned hundreds, maybe thousands, of recordings by Art Tatum, Johnny Hodges, Eddie
Miller, Bunny Berigan and managed to lose or
give them all away; Tatum's and Hodges' alone
should ~ tonally worth as much as Picasso.
The cheapest, most meretriciotL! nightclub
performers are greeted with "standing
ovations" in this overly suggestible era,
wherein ·a press agent and several friends can
urge an audience to that imperfect tribute ...
Jane Froman's opening at the Copa after dozens
·of operations following her wartime Clipper
crash was one of the very few sincere standing
ovations, with hardly a dry eye in that plush
basement .. . Today any Tom, Steve and Eydie
have cheapened the gesture.
What ever happened to the great poise and,
polish onC!' practiced by comedians? Alan King;
wears vests, drives a Rolls-Royce, proclaims
his Kennedy relationships and tells his joke&amp;
like a mugg ... Bob Hope keeps a touch of sty!&amp;
... Would it surprise the present generation t&amp;
)mow Hope and Jack Benny derived&lt; then'
jaunty, winsome walks and delivery from the:
late Frank Fay, a legendary vaudeville
who went a trifle daft in his declining seasons,
saved for a few years by his superb success in
"Harvey"?
How do you review a girl TV newscasler?
By her voice• Editorial attitude? Chic? Face?
Figure ? Hair ? ... Several TV newsgals all but
camouflage their looks and even their personalities by endlessly donning wigs of wildly
assorted styles; Pia Lindstrom, Ingrid Berg:
man 's daughter, seems to have settied on one
simple hair style finally ... Too many ll)ale
newscasters try to get With It via mod-Bulls,
wil~ wide neckties, carnival-tinted shirts and
teased hairdos which are distracting costumes and not clothes ... Walter Cronkite
remains the giant of TV news, an uncle-figure, •
well-dressed and undistractlngly coiffed.
• Elliott Gould's personality and talent~otally
mystify us; if any is there in the first place ...
The tales of George C. Scott and Barbra
Streisand In their o.ff-actlng moments say a lot
for David Belasco's Insistence on keeping the
private lines of his stars a total mystery ... They
do give glamor a nudge.
•·

star

Bidwell remained unbeaten
with their eighth stra1g hl win
in whipping Vinton 12-1 at
Bidwell Tuesctay night in
Gallia -Meigs Pony League
action .
Ja ck Gardner hurl ed a
brilliant one-hit ler in the fiveinning game, which was called
because of the score. Gardner,
who permitted only a single by
T. Norman in the fourth,
fanned seven and walked five.
Red Ju stus and Mike Justus
learned up on the mound for
Vmton and gave up seven
walks while striking out four .
Leading the way at the plate
for the powerful Bidwell nine

Middleport's B Pony
baseball learn had the first
victory of the season within
reach through seven innings
Tuesday at Middleport Park
but Cheshire pushed across
three runs in the extra eighth
frame to win &amp;-3 and make Jts
record 4-3-1. Middleport 13 is ().
12.
Th e fatal eighth - for
Middleport - produced three
runs on a walk, iil" error, a
doubl e by Jerry Lucas and a
single by Bruce Arnett. Other
Cheshire hitters were Arnett
who added a double and two
other singles, Bias three
singles, Blazer ~ double, and
single, and Tom Lucas, Dave
Wise and Metzner each a hit .
First round action rolled into
For Middlepor t, Lavendar its second night at the Kyger
and Davenport each had two Creek Little League tour singles, Gleason hit two nam ent Tuesday mghl with
doubles and a-single, and Steve Addaville ta king Racine 1&gt;-4 in
the first game, 13idwell nipped
B11chner a single.
Cheshire pitchers fanned 19, the Pomeroy Giants 2-0, and
walked three ; Middleport's Ripley Daniel Boone edged the
fanned 8 and walked 5.
Gallipolis Cubs 8-7 in moe
Cbesh .
200 001 03--6 13 0 innings.
M1dd B
100 200 00-3 8 2
First Game
Pacing the victorious AdMetzner, Lucas ( 4) (WP i
and Bias. Bachner, Gleason daville cl ub was Fraley with
(LP ) ( ~ ) and Gleason, two doubles and a sin gle . Other
Bachner .
big hitters were T. Nibert,
Wes tfall, Taylor, and J. Nibert
all with two hits apiece. Taylor
was the wmning pitcher.
Major League Results
Teaford led Racine at the
By United Pre ss International
National League
plate w1th a single and double
list Gamel
in two trips. D. Sayre was the
Houston
010 001 40D- 6 10 1
Chicago
101 001 011 - 5 9 1 losing hurler.
Second Game
Forsch . Culver 171 . Gladding
(8) and Edwa rds. Hoo ton,
Bidwell 's Casey held the
Phoebus 171. Aker 191 -and
Hundley . WP- Forsch (5-31 . LP Pomeroy Giants to only a
- Hooton (7-8). Hrs- May 117 1. single by Todd Rawlings in the
Will iams (17 1. Wynn 114)
fifth inning in getting the win .
(2nd game&gt;
Houston
020 001 011 - s I I 0 Brian Hamilton hurled a twoChicago
100 111 50x- 9 14 2 hitter in taking the loss.
Wilson, York 171. Gr~lfin 171.
Bidwell, who scored both of
Gibbon (7) and Howard; Hands. their runs in the firth frame ,
Aker (8) and Rudolph . WPHands. 17-61 . LP- Wilson 15-61. was topped at the plate by .
HRs- Williams (18th). Pepitone Plants and Casey each with a
(2nd). Monday 2 (8th &amp; 9th ). single.

coached by Doyle Saunders
was Gardner with two doubles
and a single, Fred Logan, Gene
Welch, Bruce Runyon, and
Gene Payne each with a single
and triple, Jeff Hollenbaugh
two singles, Greg JaJ;~eS a
triple, and Tim Stout a single.
Bidwell still has a game and
a half lead over second-place
Pomeroy and a two-ga me
bulge over Southwestern.
Pomeroy is 7-2 and Southwestern is 6-2. Vinton 's slate is
2-6. This Friday Vinton is at
Middleporl "A" and Bidwell
hosts Middlepor t "B" .
Vinton
OOi 10- 1 I 2
209 lx-12 15 0
Bidwell

Ripley, Bidwell,
Addaville Advance

Los Ang
000 000 Olo-1 50
Third Game
Philo
040 000 oox- 4 4 2
Ripley Daniel Boone 's
Sutton, Mikkelsen ( 7) and . Mullins was hit by a pitch,
Cannizzaro ; Carlton (12-61 and moved around on Moore 's
· Bateman . LP- Sutl on (10.5) .
single, and came home on two
Plltsbrgh 000 000 ooo- 0 7 2 fie lder's choices in the ninth
Clnci
20200001x- 5 81
Moose, Johnson (5). Garber inning to break a 7-7 deadlock.
Ripley had scored one
(7) and Sanguillen ; Billingham
(5-9) and Bench. LP- Moose (S· run
in
the
eighth
5) . HR- Bench (22nd) .
but the Gallipolis Cubs

also came back with one
in their half of the frame.
J . Waybright was the winning pitcher while T. Wall took
the loss.
E. Casto paced Ripley with a
sin gle and double while R.
Taylor had two singles. D.
Wickline had a double and J.
Adkms had a smgle lor the
Cubs' only hils.
In tomght's action, the undefeated Middlepor t Indians
take on the Gallipolis Orioles at
6, the Gallipolis Indians battle
Pt. Pleasant City Ice and Fuel
at 7:15, and the unbeaten
Cheshire
Tigers
play
Harrisonville at 8:30.

The

Dai~

Sentinel

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4-The DaUy Seriiinel, Ml~dleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 12, 1972 '

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6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., July 12, 1912

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CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
question put a smile on Johnny
Bench's face .
" It's the halfway mark
now," pointed out Pete 'Rose
when he crossed paths with
Bench as the Reds catcher
_headed for the shower room.
"Will you settle for a second
half of the season that matches
the first half ?" asked Pete.
"I'll take it," was Bench's
.unhesitating answer.
Bench rapped out four
straight hits - two singles, a
double and a homer- Tuesday
night as the Cincinnati Reds

knocked off the Pittsburgh
Pirates :;.o behind the steady
pitching of Jack Billingham .
The victory gave the Reds a
l'h game margin over secondplace Houston in the National
League West as they sent
Wayne Simpson against leftbander Luke Walker in tonight's game.
The loss left the Pirates with
a 4\1 game bulge over the secand-place New York Mets in
the East.
Bench's homer was No. 22,
putting him one up on San
Francisco's Dave King. 'The

three runs he drove home
upped his RBI total to 66, also
tops in the league .

Causes Nightmares
So, it's easy to understand
why Bench will he happy if he
could match those ligures the
second half of the season.
"Forty-four homers and 132
RBI's,'' mused Reds manager
SparkY Anderson. "It won't be
easy, but Bench is capable of
getting them."
"I just hope 1 stay healthy
and don't have any serious injury," remarked Bench.

MCKinney ,_S 1-HI•t ShutOUt
•ddl
p
SuhdUes M1 eport Onl•es

.•

·.'

.•'

Pomeroy's Pony Phillies, bases.
behind the brilliant 1-hi! pitIt was Fred Burney, eighth in
ching of righthander Jeff the Philly order, who ~hot a
McKinney - who posted his skimmer into right center
fifth straight shutout - allowing Call to trot home with
defeated the Middleport A the game winning run .
Pony ,club !.j) Tuesday evening
Eli Ebersbach started on the
on the old Pomeroy Jr. High mound for Middleport. He
diamond.
fanned Charlie Marshall,
The victory kept Pomeroy, leading off, then walked Mike
now 7-2, within strikin g Nesselroad and Call. Ault
distance of tt.e Gallia-Meigs I came on to fan Jeff McLeague leaders Bidwell, 8-&lt;J Kinney and get Barry
today after taking Vinton 12-1 Marshall to pop up to
shorts top Rick Stobart.
last evening.
Pomeroy's Fred Burney got
Middleport is sputtering at a
his club's first hit, a double in
3-4 pace.
The Phillies, held in check the second inning with two out
through five and a third innings but Jerry Cremeans fanned.
Pomeroy threatened again in
by Middleport's righthander
Perk Ault, erupted for three the third on an error and
singles in the home half of the Nesselroad 's single but Barry
seventh that plated the tie- Marshall fanned for the third
out.
breaking and winning run .
Again in the fifth Ault was in
Woody Call led off that inning
trouble
when Call doubled with
with a single, Ault fanned Jeff
one
out
but was out at homo; on
McKinney , but Barry Marshall
singled. Ault whiffed Phil a close play trying to score on
Ohlinger for the second out but Jeff McKinney's single to
he hit Greg McKinney to fill the right.

GAS FOR LESS ~
TOP Q'UALITY

..-.·

You Can 't Buy Better So
, WHY PAY MORE?

"Don't even suggest any
such thing·," said Anderson,
shuddering visibly. "Just the
mere· thought is enough to
cause me to have nightmares."
Anderson doesn't foresee too
many idle days for Bench as
long as the Reds are engaged in
a close race with the Astros for
the division title.
"If it's close all the way, then
Johnny is going to take a real
beating physica II y," said
Anderson. "But he's tough. Do
you know after he got hit by

P.IL
•1
ttl S

that foul ball Sunday he tossed
his cookies three different
·
but he stl'II stay.,.
" " ·m the
tunes
game?"
Got Second Wind
Billingham's victory was his
fifth against nine defeats.
Oddly enough , all but one of
Billingham's victories came
after he had layoffs ranging
from nine to 12 days.
But when it was suggested to
· h'lng '"a
· 12Jack that he be pltc
day rotation his quick response
was, "No, No. l wouldn't want

W

by NEIL HERSHBERG
UP! Sports Wrlttr
Steve Carlton is happy with
the script despite a weak cast
of supporting actors.
Carlton recorded his seventh
straight victory Tuesday night
as
the
weak-hitting
Philadelphia Phillies won two
games in a row for the first
time in a month with a 4-1
victory over the Los Angeles
Dod
gers.
Carlton, tied with Gary
Nolan of Cincinnati for the
league lead in victories with 12,

Middleport never got
anything going against the
bespectacled and talented Jeff
McKinney who fanned 13,
.walked nobody and hit nobody.
He had set down eight straight
when rightfielder John Pat
Riley dwnped a Texas leaguer
single into short right with two
out in the third inning . That
raised his major-league
was all. McKinney set down the leading
strikeout total to 182
remaining 13 batters in order with eight strikeouts. It was
through the regulation seven Carlton 's f1'fth stra1'ght cominnings.
plete game.
Ault, in his stint scattered in all but the seventh - eight
hits, fanned 11, walked two ,
and hit two batters .
Middleport 000 000 0-0 1 1
Phillies
000 000 1- 1 6 0
Ebersbach, Ault (LP) ( I) By MARTIN LADER
and Stobart, Magnotta ( 1). J .
UPI Sports Writer
McKinney and Call. Umpire:
Marty Pattin threw only two
plate, G. Nesselroad.
bad pitches all night. The first
cost him peace of mind and the
second cost him a lifetime
dream.
lnternationa I League
_ In the second inning of
Standings
Tuesday night's game at
United Press lflfernational
W. L. Pet. G.B. Oakland, Pattin hit A's third
Charleston 47 32 .595
baseman Sal Bando with a
Louis v ille
45 37 .549 3114
pitch "that just got away."
Tidewa ter
43 40 .519 6
Toledo
40 41 .494 8
With one out in the ninth inRoc hester
40 42 .488 8112 ning, he threw a fastball "that I
Richmond
39 42 .481 9
Syracuse
39 43 .476 91J2 --got up a little too high" and
Peni nsula
33 49 ..402 151f? Reggie Jackson jumped on it
Tuosday's Results
for a single. It was the only hit
Toledo 5 Charleston 4 (lsi, 7
of the game off the Boston
inn i ngs)
Charleston 16 Toledo 1 (2nd , 7 righthander as the Red Sox

lR

whipped Oakland, ~ When it was over, Pattin was
more concerned about Banda
than about his lost glory. "I'm
just glad that Sal's okay," said
the 29-year-old journeyman
pitcher. "I was worried and
shook up for a while. "
"One of my biggest dreams
has been to pitch a no-hitter in
the big leagues," admitted
Pattin, who walked three
batters and struck out seven.
"I guess this is the closest I will

ever come.''
The Chicago White Sox
closed to within 4\1 games of
firstplac e Oakland in the
American League ' West by

Rochester 7 Syracuse 2
Tidewater 2 louisville 1

James Abbott .'ilc Neill
Whistler adopted the butterfl y symbol to sign his natur e paintings_

Bv United Press International
Nationa I League

Pittsburgh
St. lou is
Mon treal

East

w.
w. I. pet. g.b. Detroit
42
48 28 .632
Baltimore
4t
44 33 .57 1 4111
Boston
30
.42 37 .532 7112
New York
36
40 36 .526 8 Cleveland
\J2
34 43 .442

141/1

Milwaukee

I. pel. ~ . b .
34 .553
35 .539 1
36 .500 4
37 .493
43 .427

Tuesday ' s Results ·
Houston 6 Chicago 5, lst
Ch icago 9 Houston s, 2nd
Mont 6 San Diego 5, 12 inns
San Francisco 6 New York 1

4h
1?1f2

30 44 .405 11

Philadelphia 28 51 .354 2l'h
st
West
w. I. pet.
w. I. pet. g.b. Oakland
48 29 .623
Cinc innati
46 31 .597
Chi cago
44 34 .564
Houston
46 34 .575 1'12 Minnesota
38
37 .507
los Angel es 41 38 .5 19 6
Kansas
City
39
38
.506
Atlanla
37 42 .468 10
Cal
ifornia
30
43
.456
San Francisco 36 48 .429 13112 Te)(as
33 45 .423
San Diego
29 50 .367 18
Tuesday's Results

g.b.
41/2

9
9
t3

15lfl

Detro it 6 Texas 5
Chicago 4 Cleveland 3

Ball 2 Kan City l, 10 inns
Boston

~

Thursday's Games
Houston at Chicago

Kan City at Detroit, night
!Only games scheduled )

Piltsburgh at Cinci, night

(Only games scheduled)

Cubs Pull Off
Peewee Upset ·

On th e Ouccn Size

-

.

'259.90

N~l ,or-&gt;111 ; ach~thsNI

SAVE

,,, Sl l !l

$40

On the r uu ~r Tw 1n Sl zeS.,cropcdit
l l"l'pc, , ,, ll~ ·r.,cc e ensemble)

Soc•~P~d · c

I&lt;T'pC• 1.11 12·p•ecc cn&amp;cmtllcl

'119.90

'169.90

!ll

N,li•CinJII, a r:lvtll ind I! S219 go

N.ll!on.lllr adva1 h sed

~I ~159 . 90

.

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And enpy healthy sa~mgs on a healtt1~ nq~hl"s res1.

...

\1~•«'11 ol It"''" Qll•ll!or,m,• '"'"'"" "'
' "~ W01ld1 G•«',l&lt;'llill'f'f" rlf p,jJ ,•

~·:

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992-2635

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. Nlt;HTS

MIDDLEPORT

Most of Nebraska's pheasant population developed
from a b o u t 500 pairs

The Cubs upset the Mustangs
at Middleport Tuesday 13-5 in
Peewee League action.
The; Cubs ' Jeff Wayland
hurled all the way, gave up
eight walks, hit one batter, and
fanned 16. Rod Gleason, Denny
Gleason, Terry Wayland, and
Tim Justus all hurled for the
Mustangs and they allowed 24
walks, hit one batter, and
fanned 15 .
Top hitters for Coach
Milliard Hysell's Cubs were
Kenneth McHaffie with a
single and double, David
Reuter with a double, and J.
Wayland with a single. L:ance
Herman collected two singles
for Coach Jimmy Butcher's
Mustangs while T. Justus had a
double and Randy Murray had
a single .
In other Peewee action, the
Reds remained unbeaten with
an 18-7 win over the Angeh at
Pomeroy. No other details
were available.
_.

I

I

55
60
so
83
89

.304
.302
.299
.294
.291

1

H:~e 2~~n~4

291

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

73 ·

National League : Bench, Cin

'

.

i~ ~~Y~~~~:~~ ~n:ac~lbe~1~
2

Cut From Chuck

American League: Allen, Ch i
the l2th inning to score Bob 18; Cash, Del 16 ; Jackson, Oak
Ba'l1ey w1th
. the wmning
.
.
15 ; Epstein.
Oak 14; Duncan.
run m
Oak
13.
Montreal's victory over San
Runs BaHed In
Diego, 6-5.
National League : Bench, Cln
"I'm pitching more consis- 66; Kingman, SF 58; Stargell,
Pitt 56; Oliver. Pitt 55; Rader.
tently this year and getting my Hou and Colbert, so 54. ·
three pitches (curve, slider,
American League: Allen, Chi GE 14.7 ··cu. ft.
and fastball) over more," 58; Mayberry, KC 46: Oliver,
lb. FREEZER. NO
Carlton said.
~;tel~b;,k ~i, Bando and -top
lo bottom! Jel·freeze
.In the other National League
Pitching
partment with let 'n Easy
game San Francisco defeated
National League: Nolan, Cin ice! 4 cabinet shelvn--1
N
y k
12-2; Carlton, Phil 12-6; Seaver, Bit extra storaae space
. ew or , 6-1.
NY 11 -5; Jenkins, Chi 11 -7; shelf in BOTH doors!
Ron Bryant pitched a two- Blass, Pitt 10-2; Cleveland, St.
hitter and Willie McCavey l .10-~; Sutton, LA 10-5.
NAfi ONAl
SAl(
American League: Lolich, OA~
homered as San Francisco Del 14-6; Perry, Clev 14-7: PRICE:S
downed New York. McCavey Palmer, Bait 12-4; Wood, Chi
th
12-9; four tied with 11 victories.
~~~~~
got e Giants started as he led
T;:::::::::;:::::;~~
0 ff the secon d WI'th h'" s ixth
homer 0 f the season off sta rter
~
d
1
J
K
an oser erry oosman .

CUT FROM
CHUCK

I

e e e e •

3-LB. PKG. .
OR LGR.

,

:.~

e

J, . ._

e e e • . -. ,

•

60

Whole Or
Bone In Quarter

of -Deposit

edging the Cleveland Indians,
4-3, and Detroit remained one
game in front of Baltimore In
the East by beating the Texas
Rangers, !Hi, while the Orioles
were shading the Kansas City
Royals, 2-1, in 10 innings.
Elsewhere, the New York
Yankees heat the California
Angels, 7-3, and the Milwaukee
Brewers tripped the Minnesota
Twins, 5-4 .
Carlton Fisk drove in two of
Boston's runs with his lith
homer and a single as the Red
Sox tagged Joel Horlen with his
first loss after two triumphs.
Jackson's hit carrie Qn a 2-2
count.
The White Sox, traillng 3-1,
rallied for three runs in the
seventh as Rick Reichardt hit a
two-run homer and Ed Spiezio
followed with a solo shot. Ray
Fosse had hit a two-run homer
for Cleveland.

6 percent per year on 2
year· Certificates of
Deposit.
S10,ooo.oo
Minimum .
Interest
payable Quarterly. 90
day interest penalty if
cashed
before
maturity .

Meigs Co. Branch

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GE 11 .6 cu. lt. FREEZER STIRES
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inet temperature! Ad justable lfYIP·
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juice·can shelf! Built·in tumbler ltc:k!

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SAl f

DAY S
PRICl

The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy , Ohio
All

Ac counts

Insured

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Cali~ RIA Pt.&amp;

To

$20,000.00 by F S ll C.

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·Great recreation
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The Goodyear Fly ing Tire Is a fun-filled,
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with a simulated m etal wheel center. It's
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FLAVORS

6

uva
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Cleveland at Texas, night

Atlanta at St. louis. night

On the Ktng S11c S.ltrtpc!! •c
1mper1t11 {l-r.tcc r c ~ ; r ~~:·1 , '

22
39
~7
28
34

Oakland 0

Today's Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDTI
Today's Probable Pitchers
Bos.
t
on
!Curtis 3-21 at Oak IAll Times EDTI
land
!,Hamilton
5-31, 8:30 p.m.
San Francisco (McDowell 8-61
York IStottlemyre 8-10)
at New York (Matlack 9-51. 2 at New
Cal ifornia (Allen 2-51. 11
p.m.
p.m .
"
Houston !Roberts 7-41 at
Milwaukee
(Brett
5-81 at
Chicago IReusc hel 3-11, 2:30 Minnesota (Biyleven -8-10),
8:30
p.m.
p.m.
Pittsburgh (Walker , 3-4) at Te&lt;as IGogolewski 3-7) at
Cincinnati (Simpson 4·3), 8 p.m. Detroit !Slayback 1-31. 9 p.m.
los Angel es (John 7-41 at Chicago (Wood 12-91 at
Philadelph ia (Nash 1-51. 7:30 Cleveland
(Kilkenny 2-1), 7:30
p.m .
p.m.
Atlanta (Schue ler 3-31 at St.
Kansas City !Nelson 3-31 at
lou is (Gibson 8-51. 9 p.m.
Baltimore
!Dobson 10-81. 7:30
San Diego !Caldwell 3-41 at p.m .
Montreal (Stoneman 8-51. 8
Thursday's Games
p.m.
Boston at Minn , night

sso

181
199
268
282
306

New York 7 Californ ia 3

Cinci 5 Pi ttsbsrgh 0 .
Atla 5 St. Loui s 4, 15 inns

$60

Berry. Cal 52
Fisk, Bos 59
May, Chi
Crew,
Min 76
75
Oliver, Cal 77
Mabery, KC

Milw S Minnesota 4

Phila 4 Los Angeles 1

SAVE

~~:-~k ~~ ~; ~ ~ :~~

American League

East

New York
Chi cago

SAVE

52 102
41 107
49 99
47 99
31 85
35 79

INTEREST

(2nd, 7 innings)

538 W. Main
992-9981
Pomeroy , 0 .
CERTir . ED IS GROWING
If you have a Station for lease or sale call us
toll free
1-800-282-1259- Mr . Dozer.

.328
.327
.320
_320
,.318
.315
CimnteA~~rt~.~~ea:u/8 .310
g. ab r. h. pet.
Shblm, KC 63 210 28 69 .329 ~~~~~~l
Pnlela, KC 75 289 45 92 .318

fraz~

Home runs by Rick Monday,
Bl'lly W!'ll!'ams and Joe
Pepitone powered Chicago to a
9-5 nightcap victory over
Houston after the Astros won
the opener, 6-5, with a four-run
rally in the seventh i!Uling.
Williams went 8-for-3 in the
doubleheader. He belted his
17th homer in the opener and
No. 18 in the nightcap, both
with the bases empty .
A wild pitch by Lowell
Palmer with the bases loaded
in the !5th forced home Gil
Garrido with the winning run
arid gave the Braves a 5-4
victory over St. Louis.
Clyde Mashore doubled down
the left field line with one out in

311
327
30'1
30'1
267
251

Red Sox Blank -Oakland, 4-0 On Certificates

inn i ngs)
Peninsula 7 Richmond 0 (1st,
7 Innings)
Peninsula 2 Ri c hmond 0

CERTIFIED GAS STATIONS

wt?ms, Chi 78
Brock, St.L 76
Garr.AtlPit 76
Oliver,
75
Alou, St.l 69
lee, SD
68

s • hf

2R d-

JY.f.•

' any part of that."
Billingham got stronger as
the game went on Tuesday
night. Double plays In each of
the first two innings helped him
out of stickY situations.
He was hoping to go at least
seven or eight innings and then
let reliever Clay Carroll take
over.
"But I seem to have gotten
my second wind and didn't
need any help," said a happy
Sillingham, who retired the
last eight batters he faced. ·

RIZER OIL CO.
E. MAIN ST.

992·2101

POMEROY. 0.

18"

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WIU BE CLOSED THE WEEK OF JULY 17 THRU 24th·

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79

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100

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Borden's American Cheese Slices . . . . . . . . . . . . • ':0:.·69c
Wishbone Deluxe F~nch Dressing . . . . . . . . . . . _ . . ":.· l.'c
Wishbone California Onion Dressing . • . • . . . • . _ ":: 39c
IIIOOl Broth' .. .. .. . .. . •
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Middleport, 0.

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

I,

\

�7-Thl Dally Sontin!fl, Mlddleport-~7. 0 ., July 1%,1972

R d B
B k w •th s·-0 v. t
ByUntte;t.~r::·s~:.~•llonal
~ e s · ounce
ac
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*
6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., July 12, 1912

Motor Logue luders

~

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t..

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~:

~t

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"'
;:
••

F
•

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;".
•

CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
question put a smile on Johnny
Bench's face .
" It's the halfway mark
now," pointed out Pete 'Rose
when he crossed paths with
Bench as the Reds catcher
_headed for the shower room.
"Will you settle for a second
half of the season that matches
the first half ?" asked Pete.
"I'll take it," was Bench's
.unhesitating answer.
Bench rapped out four
straight hits - two singles, a
double and a homer- Tuesday
night as the Cincinnati Reds

knocked off the Pittsburgh
Pirates :;.o behind the steady
pitching of Jack Billingham .
The victory gave the Reds a
l'h game margin over secondplace Houston in the National
League West as they sent
Wayne Simpson against leftbander Luke Walker in tonight's game.
The loss left the Pirates with
a 4\1 game bulge over the secand-place New York Mets in
the East.
Bench's homer was No. 22,
putting him one up on San
Francisco's Dave King. 'The

three runs he drove home
upped his RBI total to 66, also
tops in the league .

Causes Nightmares
So, it's easy to understand
why Bench will he happy if he
could match those ligures the
second half of the season.
"Forty-four homers and 132
RBI's,'' mused Reds manager
SparkY Anderson. "It won't be
easy, but Bench is capable of
getting them."
"I just hope 1 stay healthy
and don't have any serious injury," remarked Bench.

MCKinney ,_S 1-HI•t ShutOUt
•ddl
p
SuhdUes M1 eport Onl•es

.•

·.'

.•'

Pomeroy's Pony Phillies, bases.
behind the brilliant 1-hi! pitIt was Fred Burney, eighth in
ching of righthander Jeff the Philly order, who ~hot a
McKinney - who posted his skimmer into right center
fifth straight shutout - allowing Call to trot home with
defeated the Middleport A the game winning run .
Pony ,club !.j) Tuesday evening
Eli Ebersbach started on the
on the old Pomeroy Jr. High mound for Middleport. He
diamond.
fanned Charlie Marshall,
The victory kept Pomeroy, leading off, then walked Mike
now 7-2, within strikin g Nesselroad and Call. Ault
distance of tt.e Gallia-Meigs I came on to fan Jeff McLeague leaders Bidwell, 8-&lt;J Kinney and get Barry
today after taking Vinton 12-1 Marshall to pop up to
shorts top Rick Stobart.
last evening.
Pomeroy's Fred Burney got
Middleport is sputtering at a
his club's first hit, a double in
3-4 pace.
The Phillies, held in check the second inning with two out
through five and a third innings but Jerry Cremeans fanned.
Pomeroy threatened again in
by Middleport's righthander
Perk Ault, erupted for three the third on an error and
singles in the home half of the Nesselroad 's single but Barry
seventh that plated the tie- Marshall fanned for the third
out.
breaking and winning run .
Again in the fifth Ault was in
Woody Call led off that inning
trouble
when Call doubled with
with a single, Ault fanned Jeff
one
out
but was out at homo; on
McKinney , but Barry Marshall
singled. Ault whiffed Phil a close play trying to score on
Ohlinger for the second out but Jeff McKinney's single to
he hit Greg McKinney to fill the right.

GAS FOR LESS ~
TOP Q'UALITY

..-.·

You Can 't Buy Better So
, WHY PAY MORE?

"Don't even suggest any
such thing·," said Anderson,
shuddering visibly. "Just the
mere· thought is enough to
cause me to have nightmares."
Anderson doesn't foresee too
many idle days for Bench as
long as the Reds are engaged in
a close race with the Astros for
the division title.
"If it's close all the way, then
Johnny is going to take a real
beating physica II y," said
Anderson. "But he's tough. Do
you know after he got hit by

P.IL
•1
ttl S

that foul ball Sunday he tossed
his cookies three different
·
but he stl'II stay.,.
" " ·m the
tunes
game?"
Got Second Wind
Billingham's victory was his
fifth against nine defeats.
Oddly enough , all but one of
Billingham's victories came
after he had layoffs ranging
from nine to 12 days.
But when it was suggested to
· h'lng '"a
· 12Jack that he be pltc
day rotation his quick response
was, "No, No. l wouldn't want

W

by NEIL HERSHBERG
UP! Sports Wrlttr
Steve Carlton is happy with
the script despite a weak cast
of supporting actors.
Carlton recorded his seventh
straight victory Tuesday night
as
the
weak-hitting
Philadelphia Phillies won two
games in a row for the first
time in a month with a 4-1
victory over the Los Angeles
Dod
gers.
Carlton, tied with Gary
Nolan of Cincinnati for the
league lead in victories with 12,

Middleport never got
anything going against the
bespectacled and talented Jeff
McKinney who fanned 13,
.walked nobody and hit nobody.
He had set down eight straight
when rightfielder John Pat
Riley dwnped a Texas leaguer
single into short right with two
out in the third inning . That
raised his major-league
was all. McKinney set down the leading
strikeout total to 182
remaining 13 batters in order with eight strikeouts. It was
through the regulation seven Carlton 's f1'fth stra1'ght cominnings.
plete game.
Ault, in his stint scattered in all but the seventh - eight
hits, fanned 11, walked two ,
and hit two batters .
Middleport 000 000 0-0 1 1
Phillies
000 000 1- 1 6 0
Ebersbach, Ault (LP) ( I) By MARTIN LADER
and Stobart, Magnotta ( 1). J .
UPI Sports Writer
McKinney and Call. Umpire:
Marty Pattin threw only two
plate, G. Nesselroad.
bad pitches all night. The first
cost him peace of mind and the
second cost him a lifetime
dream.
lnternationa I League
_ In the second inning of
Standings
Tuesday night's game at
United Press lflfernational
W. L. Pet. G.B. Oakland, Pattin hit A's third
Charleston 47 32 .595
baseman Sal Bando with a
Louis v ille
45 37 .549 3114
pitch "that just got away."
Tidewa ter
43 40 .519 6
Toledo
40 41 .494 8
With one out in the ninth inRoc hester
40 42 .488 8112 ning, he threw a fastball "that I
Richmond
39 42 .481 9
Syracuse
39 43 .476 91J2 --got up a little too high" and
Peni nsula
33 49 ..402 151f? Reggie Jackson jumped on it
Tuosday's Results
for a single. It was the only hit
Toledo 5 Charleston 4 (lsi, 7
of the game off the Boston
inn i ngs)
Charleston 16 Toledo 1 (2nd , 7 righthander as the Red Sox

lR

whipped Oakland, ~ When it was over, Pattin was
more concerned about Banda
than about his lost glory. "I'm
just glad that Sal's okay," said
the 29-year-old journeyman
pitcher. "I was worried and
shook up for a while. "
"One of my biggest dreams
has been to pitch a no-hitter in
the big leagues," admitted
Pattin, who walked three
batters and struck out seven.
"I guess this is the closest I will

ever come.''
The Chicago White Sox
closed to within 4\1 games of
firstplac e Oakland in the
American League ' West by

Rochester 7 Syracuse 2
Tidewater 2 louisville 1

James Abbott .'ilc Neill
Whistler adopted the butterfl y symbol to sign his natur e paintings_

Bv United Press International
Nationa I League

Pittsburgh
St. lou is
Mon treal

East

w.
w. I. pet. g.b. Detroit
42
48 28 .632
Baltimore
4t
44 33 .57 1 4111
Boston
30
.42 37 .532 7112
New York
36
40 36 .526 8 Cleveland
\J2
34 43 .442

141/1

Milwaukee

I. pel. ~ . b .
34 .553
35 .539 1
36 .500 4
37 .493
43 .427

Tuesday ' s Results ·
Houston 6 Chicago 5, lst
Ch icago 9 Houston s, 2nd
Mont 6 San Diego 5, 12 inns
San Francisco 6 New York 1

4h
1?1f2

30 44 .405 11

Philadelphia 28 51 .354 2l'h
st
West
w. I. pet.
w. I. pet. g.b. Oakland
48 29 .623
Cinc innati
46 31 .597
Chi cago
44 34 .564
Houston
46 34 .575 1'12 Minnesota
38
37 .507
los Angel es 41 38 .5 19 6
Kansas
City
39
38
.506
Atlanla
37 42 .468 10
Cal
ifornia
30
43
.456
San Francisco 36 48 .429 13112 Te)(as
33 45 .423
San Diego
29 50 .367 18
Tuesday's Results

g.b.
41/2

9
9
t3

15lfl

Detro it 6 Texas 5
Chicago 4 Cleveland 3

Ball 2 Kan City l, 10 inns
Boston

~

Thursday's Games
Houston at Chicago

Kan City at Detroit, night
!Only games scheduled )

Piltsburgh at Cinci, night

(Only games scheduled)

Cubs Pull Off
Peewee Upset ·

On th e Ouccn Size

-

.

'259.90

N~l ,or-&gt;111 ; ach~thsNI

SAVE

,,, Sl l !l

$40

On the r uu ~r Tw 1n Sl zeS.,cropcdit
l l"l'pc, , ,, ll~ ·r.,cc e ensemble)

Soc•~P~d · c

I&lt;T'pC• 1.11 12·p•ecc cn&amp;cmtllcl

'119.90

'169.90

!ll

N,li•CinJII, a r:lvtll ind I! S219 go

N.ll!on.lllr adva1 h sed

~I ~159 . 90

.

••

Bemco 's once-a·year Sacropedic lmpcual matlress sale

1S on r1gil! now And that means spec1a1 sa..,,ngs on
ma11ress ol your dreams

t~e

Bemco makes the Sacroped1c lmpenal w1th l1rm Un1lused'
Cons1ruct1on for extra support So you and you r back both

wak e up relreshed

'•

\ '

Stretch out on a Sac10ped1c tmpenal mattress set now.
And enpy healthy sa~mgs on a healtt1~ nq~hl"s res1.

...

\1~•«'11 ol It"''" Qll•ll!or,m,• '"'"'"" "'
' "~ W01ld1 G•«',l&lt;'llill'f'f" rlf p,jJ ,•

~·:

' ''
''
••

."
'

"

\" ..

992-2635

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. Nlt;HTS

MIDDLEPORT

Most of Nebraska's pheasant population developed
from a b o u t 500 pairs

The Cubs upset the Mustangs
at Middleport Tuesday 13-5 in
Peewee League action.
The; Cubs ' Jeff Wayland
hurled all the way, gave up
eight walks, hit one batter, and
fanned 16. Rod Gleason, Denny
Gleason, Terry Wayland, and
Tim Justus all hurled for the
Mustangs and they allowed 24
walks, hit one batter, and
fanned 15 .
Top hitters for Coach
Milliard Hysell's Cubs were
Kenneth McHaffie with a
single and double, David
Reuter with a double, and J.
Wayland with a single. L:ance
Herman collected two singles
for Coach Jimmy Butcher's
Mustangs while T. Justus had a
double and Randy Murray had
a single .
In other Peewee action, the
Reds remained unbeaten with
an 18-7 win over the Angeh at
Pomeroy. No other details
were available.
_.

I

I

55
60
so
83
89

.304
.302
.299
.294
.291

1

H:~e 2~~n~4

291

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

73 ·

National League : Bench, Cin

'

.

i~ ~~Y~~~~:~~ ~n:ac~lbe~1~
2

Cut From Chuck

American League: Allen, Ch i
the l2th inning to score Bob 18; Cash, Del 16 ; Jackson, Oak
Ba'l1ey w1th
. the wmning
.
.
15 ; Epstein.
Oak 14; Duncan.
run m
Oak
13.
Montreal's victory over San
Runs BaHed In
Diego, 6-5.
National League : Bench, Cln
"I'm pitching more consis- 66; Kingman, SF 58; Stargell,
Pitt 56; Oliver. Pitt 55; Rader.
tently this year and getting my Hou and Colbert, so 54. ·
three pitches (curve, slider,
American League: Allen, Chi GE 14.7 ··cu. ft.
and fastball) over more," 58; Mayberry, KC 46: Oliver,
lb. FREEZER. NO
Carlton said.
~;tel~b;,k ~i, Bando and -top
lo bottom! Jel·freeze
.In the other National League
Pitching
partment with let 'n Easy
game San Francisco defeated
National League: Nolan, Cin ice! 4 cabinet shelvn--1
N
y k
12-2; Carlton, Phil 12-6; Seaver, Bit extra storaae space
. ew or , 6-1.
NY 11 -5; Jenkins, Chi 11 -7; shelf in BOTH doors!
Ron Bryant pitched a two- Blass, Pitt 10-2; Cleveland, St.
hitter and Willie McCavey l .10-~; Sutton, LA 10-5.
NAfi ONAl
SAl(
American League: Lolich, OA~
homered as San Francisco Del 14-6; Perry, Clev 14-7: PRICE:S
downed New York. McCavey Palmer, Bait 12-4; Wood, Chi
th
12-9; four tied with 11 victories.
~~~~~
got e Giants started as he led
T;:::::::::;:::::;~~
0 ff the secon d WI'th h'" s ixth
homer 0 f the season off sta rter
~
d
1
J
K
an oser erry oosman .

CUT FROM
CHUCK

I

e e e e •

3-LB. PKG. .
OR LGR.

,

:.~

e

J, . ._

e e e • . -. ,

•

60

Whole Or
Bone In Quarter

of -Deposit

edging the Cleveland Indians,
4-3, and Detroit remained one
game in front of Baltimore In
the East by beating the Texas
Rangers, !Hi, while the Orioles
were shading the Kansas City
Royals, 2-1, in 10 innings.
Elsewhere, the New York
Yankees heat the California
Angels, 7-3, and the Milwaukee
Brewers tripped the Minnesota
Twins, 5-4 .
Carlton Fisk drove in two of
Boston's runs with his lith
homer and a single as the Red
Sox tagged Joel Horlen with his
first loss after two triumphs.
Jackson's hit carrie Qn a 2-2
count.
The White Sox, traillng 3-1,
rallied for three runs in the
seventh as Rick Reichardt hit a
two-run homer and Ed Spiezio
followed with a solo shot. Ray
Fosse had hit a two-run homer
for Cleveland.

6 percent per year on 2
year· Certificates of
Deposit.
S10,ooo.oo
Minimum .
Interest
payable Quarterly. 90
day interest penalty if
cashed
before
maturity .

Meigs Co. Branch

@

B
H•

::.:.8
MOO el C,l. 12DN

GE 11 .6 cu. lt. FREEZER STIRES
UP TO 406 LBS. OF FROZEN FOOD
WITH BOOKSHELF CONVENIEN~. 5
refricerated sur1acesolor unilorm kt b·
inet temperature! Ad justable lfYIP·
erature Control ! 4 door shelves tlus
juice·can shelf! Built·in tumbler ltc:k!

NAT IO NA L
SAl f

DAY S
PRICl

The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy , Ohio
All

Ac counts

Insured

,:,...,.,

Cali~ RIA Pt.&amp;

To

$20,000.00 by F S ll C.

.

~9¢

Lorg•

s~

~

'?eAelleil·

I~

Fa CMt»
l.on9. Green

OUTDOOR FUN FOR A
OR ATWOSOME!

· Slicers

Sibs.

2 2 9¢

$

Large Size
Sungrond

00

for

'

THE GOODYEAR
FLYING TIRE!

Italian Style

·A full 9 inches w1ae.
• Sails up to 100 feet!
·Great recreation
• Play anywhere-at home, at
picnics, at the beach!

The Goodyear Fly ing Tire Is a fun-filled,
·sal l·and·catch toy, made of sturdy plasti c
with a simulated m etal wheel center. It's
gr.eat for a crowd, for teams or man.foman play . You can use it for football type
scrimmages, round -robins .. . Even In the
water . Wherever you play , it' s fun for all
ages!

.,

GET YOUR GOODYEAR FLYING TIRE NOW!

ONLY

FREE

49'

3

With Purchase of Any Size
Goodyear Tire.

FLAVORS

6

uva
..~.s'
cans

ge

lf4-lb. Sticks

Cleveland at Texas, night

Atlanta at St. louis. night

On the Ktng S11c S.ltrtpc!! •c
1mper1t11 {l-r.tcc r c ~ ; r ~~:·1 , '

22
39
~7
28
34

Oakland 0

Today's Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDTI
Today's Probable Pitchers
Bos.
t
on
!Curtis 3-21 at Oak IAll Times EDTI
land
!,Hamilton
5-31, 8:30 p.m.
San Francisco (McDowell 8-61
York IStottlemyre 8-10)
at New York (Matlack 9-51. 2 at New
Cal ifornia (Allen 2-51. 11
p.m.
p.m .
"
Houston !Roberts 7-41 at
Milwaukee
(Brett
5-81 at
Chicago IReusc hel 3-11, 2:30 Minnesota (Biyleven -8-10),
8:30
p.m.
p.m.
Pittsburgh (Walker , 3-4) at Te&lt;as IGogolewski 3-7) at
Cincinnati (Simpson 4·3), 8 p.m. Detroit !Slayback 1-31. 9 p.m.
los Angel es (John 7-41 at Chicago (Wood 12-91 at
Philadelph ia (Nash 1-51. 7:30 Cleveland
(Kilkenny 2-1), 7:30
p.m .
p.m.
Atlanta (Schue ler 3-31 at St.
Kansas City !Nelson 3-31 at
lou is (Gibson 8-51. 9 p.m.
Baltimore
!Dobson 10-81. 7:30
San Diego !Caldwell 3-41 at p.m .
Montreal (Stoneman 8-51. 8
Thursday's Games
p.m.
Boston at Minn , night

sso

181
199
268
282
306

New York 7 Californ ia 3

Cinci 5 Pi ttsbsrgh 0 .
Atla 5 St. Loui s 4, 15 inns

$60

Berry. Cal 52
Fisk, Bos 59
May, Chi
Crew,
Min 76
75
Oliver, Cal 77
Mabery, KC

Milw S Minnesota 4

Phila 4 Los Angeles 1

SAVE

~~:-~k ~~ ~; ~ ~ :~~

American League

East

New York
Chi cago

SAVE

52 102
41 107
49 99
47 99
31 85
35 79

INTEREST

(2nd, 7 innings)

538 W. Main
992-9981
Pomeroy , 0 .
CERTir . ED IS GROWING
If you have a Station for lease or sale call us
toll free
1-800-282-1259- Mr . Dozer.

.328
.327
.320
_320
,.318
.315
CimnteA~~rt~.~~ea:u/8 .310
g. ab r. h. pet.
Shblm, KC 63 210 28 69 .329 ~~~~~~l
Pnlela, KC 75 289 45 92 .318

fraz~

Home runs by Rick Monday,
Bl'lly W!'ll!'ams and Joe
Pepitone powered Chicago to a
9-5 nightcap victory over
Houston after the Astros won
the opener, 6-5, with a four-run
rally in the seventh i!Uling.
Williams went 8-for-3 in the
doubleheader. He belted his
17th homer in the opener and
No. 18 in the nightcap, both
with the bases empty .
A wild pitch by Lowell
Palmer with the bases loaded
in the !5th forced home Gil
Garrido with the winning run
arid gave the Braves a 5-4
victory over St. Louis.
Clyde Mashore doubled down
the left field line with one out in

311
327
30'1
30'1
267
251

Red Sox Blank -Oakland, 4-0 On Certificates

inn i ngs)
Peninsula 7 Richmond 0 (1st,
7 Innings)
Peninsula 2 Ri c hmond 0

CERTIFIED GAS STATIONS

wt?ms, Chi 78
Brock, St.L 76
Garr.AtlPit 76
Oliver,
75
Alou, St.l 69
lee, SD
68

s • hf

2R d-

JY.f.•

' any part of that."
Billingham got stronger as
the game went on Tuesday
night. Double plays In each of
the first two innings helped him
out of stickY situations.
He was hoping to go at least
seven or eight innings and then
let reliever Clay Carroll take
over.
"But I seem to have gotten
my second wind and didn't
need any help," said a happy
Sillingham, who retired the
last eight batters he faced. ·

RIZER OIL CO.
E. MAIN ST.

992·2101

POMEROY. 0.

18"

.,··/,
I
I "'- /

' 17'1
•I

'·t
-,

OUR PARTS AND SERVICE DEPARTMENTS
WIU BE CLOSED THE WEEK OF JULY 17 THRU 24th·

Wnap

Jfs·, giant
roll

79

¢

WITH_THIS COUPON

Good Jhru Saturday, July IS
At All A&amp;P WEO Stores

Alpo Dog Food
15·0L

FOR.
VACATIONS.--------------.
. - --------------)

_KEITH GOBLE -FORD, _INC •
S. 3rd Ave.

992-2196

Clft

~

Calgon

. .pei'Oie

Water Conditioner

lwHtener

~:· 79~

l&gt;kr. oi96C '8 FREE
48

8-o&amp;.
btl.

TABLETS

")--

BuHerin
b~or•l•

Hanover

Bayer ASpirin

IaIads

btlot84C
100

·~·stc

.

.
Crae kers •-. . . • . . . . . . . . • . . . • • • • ,.,.,
Suns h.me Krtspy
,.,, ,...
_
Borden's American Cheese Slices . . . . . . . . . . . . • ':0:.·69c
Wishbone Deluxe F~nch Dressing . . . . . . . . . . . _ . . ":.· l.'c
Wishbone California Onion Dressing . • . • . . . • . _ ":: 39c
IIIOOl Broth' .. .. .. . .. . •
..... 22 c
CoII ege Inn cHic""
• • 1,.,,
ALL
Ch un K.mg D'tnners ..,,.,,.,
..•.. , . . . . · . • . • • , . • ......
.... ......
"'""'
c.arnation Sle!lder .....•......•• •••• . • • , .. ,A,.itc
Ltpton Tea Bags ... ... ...•. , . . . . • . . . • • • • . to · 6~
Anacin ..•.............. .•.... . . • • . . . . . . . "',;,":$1.2_
3
Playtex Deodorant Tampons ·~~Q"'
$1.37
Contadina Tomato Sauce .... ... ..... . . .... •. 13c each

.... .... .. ... ";."

Middleport, 0.

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

I,

\

�.,

'

, lONG BOTTOM - Mattie
Kathryn Bogard ; 76, Long
Bottom, Rt. l, died Tuesday
·evening. Mrs. Bogard was
preceded in death ·by her
parents, Jacob and Anna
~dder Rairden; her h'usband,
Charles Bogard ; one brother,
Danny Rairden, and a sister,
Mary Harkins. She was a
member of the Hazel Community Church.
She is survived by five sons,
Romer Bogard, WarnerRobins , Ga.; Clayton Bogard,
Medina ; Floyd Bogard, Hillsooro, Ohio ; Roy B9gard,
Cardin gton ; Virgil Bogard,
LOng Bottom; one ~tep-son,
Clifford Bogard, Ravenswood;
one brother, S3muel Rairden,
Long Bottom; 13 grandchildren, and several greatgrandchildren . .
liuneral services will be held
Friday at 2 p.m. at Ewing
Chapel with the Rev. Freeland
Norris officiating. Burial will
be in Sand Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 9 a.m. Thursday.

HOSPITAL NEWS
DISCHARGES - July 7Robert Carson, Bessie Henry,
Elizabeth Jones, Achsah
Miller, Hazel Dugan, Craig
Wise, Violette Machir, Greta
Loomis, Geneva Waugh, Doris
Rapp, Michael Shumato ,
Myrtle Daugherty, Sondra
Dennis , Florence Eckers ,

Carolyn Lewis, Carrie Sanford,
Frances Kent, Boyd Bailey,
Addie Binion, Laurie Hager,
Marvin Miller, Alleyne Rees,
Archie Richards, John Stone,
Frederick Wilson, Harold
Marshall, Martha Rose, Sophia
Schneider and Sherry Teaford.
July 8 - Mrs. Richard Rathburn and -son, Wanda Gibson,
Paula Rossiter, Jeffrey Meek,
Rosa Holschuh, Pronia Hall,
James Reynolds, Hazel Reed,
Len Dillon, Nellie Davis, John
Lewis, James Luman, Charles
Shaw, Mrs. Jack Smith and
son, Mary Hudson, Blanche
Hichel, Ada Craig, Mac
Chambers, Nada Wolle and
Mary Shook.
July 9 - Avonelle Ball,
Dorothy Carroll, Mrs. Gary
Collins and daughter, Merrill
jlale, Mrs. Hughie Ogdin and
Infant son ; Brent Saunders,
!{aren Taylor, Goldie Dobbins,
Wilma Tillis, Cloye Bird,
Christine Long, Fred Deel,
Mary Claar and daughter, Sue
Johnston, Thelma Kuhn, Ceola
Peere, John Evans, H~.ene
Oiler, Mrs. Kermit Faught and
daughter, Elizabeth Welch ,
Robert Lee, Matthew Jackson
and J. H. Prang.
BIRTHS
July 7 - Mrs. Orville
Williamson, son; Mrs. James
Melton, daughter; Mrs. Cary
Moran,daughter; Mrs. Eugene
Fisher, daughter, and Mrs.
Clarence E. Lee, daughter.
July 8- Mrs. John Henry
Bartels,son, and Mrs. Da'Vid A.
Fillinger, daughter. July 9Mrs. Keith Henry, son, and
Mrs. Forrest Ousley, daughter .

Six defendants forfeited
bonds to and six others were
fined by Middleport Mayor
John Zerkle. Forfeiting bonds
were Gary Short, 42, Gallipolis,
$200 posted on a charge of
driving while intoxicated and
$50 posted on . a charge of
leaving the scene of an accident; Elmer 0. Graham, 19,

Pomeroy, $50, speeding;
Roscoe Edwards and Ralph T.
Ba.. , no age or address; Eloise
C. Mankin, 48, Pomeroy, John
·E. Carr, no age or address, $30
each, intoxication.
Finedwere Robert E. Ward,
24, Middleport, $50 and costs,
disorderly manner ; James
Harris, 31, Middleport, $tO and
costs, disturbing the peace ;
Tommy Awen, 41, Cleveland,
$5 and costs, improper turn ;
. Eugene Jacks, Rutland,
reckless operation, $25 and
costs; Ronald W. Harrison, 18,
Middleport, speeding, $tO and
costs; Melvin Durst, 42,
Middleport, $15 and cos(s,

Now on Oosing
'

'll
I

Fire Levels
Parkersburg

Stockyard
PARKERSBURG, W. Va.
(UP!) - A late afternoon fire
fed by tons of hay levelled a
stockyard not far from
downtown in this Ohio River
city Tuesday, causing $200,000
damage and killing 15 cattle.
Brought under control within
an hour, the intense heat
blackened three frre trucks,
seared the wall of an adjacent
mattress factory and sent nine
firefighters to the hogpital.
None was admitted following
treatment.
A ladder truck being hurried
away from the flames, be&lt;:ame
entangled with the lines of
another ladder, causing extensive damage .
Heat prostration, burns and
smoke inhalation felled the
firefighters, who faced their
second .major blaze within
eight days. A fire at Universal
Glass Co. at adjoining Vienna
July 3 cause&lt;! an estimated
$500,000 damage.
The· Union Uve Stock Sales
Co. suffered an estimated
$200,000 damage to its twostory frame building and
contents and the loss on the 15
head of cattle was placed at
$3,000 by Joe Corbitt, the
company manager·

intoxication. Assessed costs

oniJ when a charge of assault
and battery was dropped was
Carroll Johnson, Middleport.
Boy,G~

...~

.u.

(Continued from page I)
Miss Donahue spoke on
motorcycle safety and the
oblig~tion of the driver to obey
traffic regulations, to ride
defensively, and to be properly
attired.
Guest speaker for the
meeting was Joseph Struble,
Pomeroy emergency squadman,
who
furthered
the safety theme. Using
a
female
dummy'
"Annie'"
Struble
demonstrated proper
techniques of mou th-IIHllouth
· a n d m0 u t h•t 0 _n 0 s e
resuscitation. He said that in
addition to persons suffering
heart attacks, shock, and in
cases of drowning, many times
alcohol and drug abuse
necessitate the need for
resuscitation.
Struble also discussed ways
· of stemming bleeding,
demonstrallng how to apply
direct pressure over the
wound, and where the pressure
points are to curb the bleeding.
He emphasized that time is the
important thing in most
ISSUES REMINDER
and · recomemergencies
North Gallia High School
Principal Cliff .Wilson today mended a first aid course for
reminded all students in the young people.
In a !riel business meeting
grades nine through 12 in the
presided
over by Cross, it was
North Gallia District who have
not registered for the 1972-73 reported that $103 was taken in
.term, should do so before from the pop stand opera ted at
Monday. The principal's office the Regatta. A report was
is' open between 9 a.m. and 3 given on the bloodmobile
canteen served on June 19 by
p.m.
junior leaders, and a pool party
on June 13lor the exchange 4-H
club members. Plans were
RETURNED HOME
made for a dance to be held
Roxanne McDanie l, later this month.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Refreshments were served
McDaniel, Pomeroy, has been following the meeting.
returned to her home after
being confined to the Lancaster
- Fairfield County Hospital for
HOYT HERE
the past four weeks.
Dr. John Hoyt, president of
the Humane Society of the
United States, will be guest
AWARDED PIN
speaker at the Charter Day
Jack Bechtle was presented dinner of the Meigs County ·
a 25-year pin by his son, Humane Society to be held at
Darrell Bechtle, senior deacon, 7:30 this evening at the Meigs
at Tuesday night's meeting of
Inn.
Middleport Lodge 363, F. and
A.M.
GRANGE TO MEET
Ohio Valley Grange 2612,
Letart Falls, will meet at 8
p.m. Thursday at the hall.
Potluck refreshments will be
served.

2-HOUR
CLEANING

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharges : Lewis Leach,
Hend e rson; Darlene
Uvingstone,Leon; Mrs. James
BOARD TO MEET
Shaull and son, Southside;
The
Southern Local School
Mrs. Norman Benson, son,
Board
will meet at 8 p.m.
Southside; Mrs . Thomas
tJllrE. 2nd"
Pomeroy
Russell, Guysville, 0. ; Mrs . Monday at the high school in
.
Ph~·· 992-5428
Preston E. Love, Point Racine.
Pleasant ; Harry Sparks,
Cottageville; Mrs . Wilma
Blake, Clifton ; Mrs. Clarence
Sayre, MI . Alto ; Mrs .
Raymond Shelines, Gallipolis ;
Mrs. Arl Allen, Rand ; Mrs.
Lucille Walters, Crown City, ·
and Mrs. Loula Shelines.
Births : July 11, twin sons to
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Leonard,
Henderson . One twin weighed 7
pounds and the other twin, 6
The most welcome gift of all is an
pounds .
Accutron by Bulova . So precise is
the Accutron tuning fork
moY"emen
t thai accuracy is
Veterans Memorial Hospital
guaranteed to
ADMITTED - Con nie Mash,
within a minute
Middleport ; Doris Kiser,
a month . •
Racine; Mabel Swan , LangsSee our ful l
ville ; Christi na Holley,
selection of
Minersville ; Steven Lavalley,
Accutron
models now.
Racine, and Gerald Merando,
OU( AND DAY "r"
From $110.
Painesville.
1411 Solid Gold .
U50.
DISCHARGED - John
Moon, Kent Yonkers, Clara
Paulsen, Joy Rife, Tura
Hunter, Mary Cleek, Gene
Thompson, Rhonda Perry .and
Pauline Wolfe.

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

Give the watch with
tuning fork accuracy

Accutron~

by Bulova

JT!Idoy'1 FUNNY wll! pur Sl.llO for
~och orlgi"ol·"f"""Y" 11ted Se11d 9t1gl.
to: Today\ FUNN¥, UOO Wt~t Tllitd
St., Cleveland, Ohio .U Jil

PUBUC WELCOME
The public is cordially invited to tho summer Title I
Family night at 8 p.m. Thursday at the
Pomeroy
Elementary School. · Ligh t
refreshments will be served,
visitors will have an opportunity to meet the staff of
the six weeks summer school,
and to view the materials used
in the program .

Official word of the closing o!-·
the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge lor
repairs beginning at 9 a.m.
Monday, July 24, has been
received from Ohio Department of Highways Division 10
Deputy Director Max· Farley.
Repair work on the bridge
will consist of waterproofing
the existing deck with a poured
rubber coat and then resurfacing with a rubberized sand
asphalt, according to bridge
engineer Larry Coler.
While the bridg~ is closed a
detour will be set up to handle
the traffic across the river.
Traffic will be routed south to
the Silver Memorial Bridge between Kanauga and Henderson.
The Shelly Co. of Thornville
is the contractor on the repair
work, with the reopening
scheduled in seven days.
DIVORCES ASKED
Two suits for divorce have

been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court. Nancy
R. Jeffers, Pomeroy, Rt. 4,
charging gross neglect of duty
and extreme cruelty, filed suit
against Richard K. Jeffers,
Pomeroy, Rt. 4, and Karen S.
Sprouse, Middlepor t, filed
ag ainst John W. Sprouse,
Petersburg, W. Va., charging
gross neglect of duty.

ERROR CORRECTED
Listed as a survivor of Susie
Ann Cooper, seven-week old
daughter of Gar y and Marilyn
Cooper, Middleport, who died
Monday evening at Children's
Hospital, Colwnbus, was a
Marriage License
sister, Tracie Lynn. This was
Jerry Richard Vanlnwagen ,
.in , error . The infant was 24, Middleport, Rf. I and Linda
preceded in death by the sist~ Marie Grindstaff, 20, Racine,
Tracie Lynn .
Rt. I.

MIAMI BEACH {UP!) -Ml- vote early Tuesday, d1!11111nchael G. Pierce, an Ohio Hum· ding lo know how he voted.
phrey delegate, said Tuesday
He said when he told him,
Ohio AFL·CIO President · King, head of the Humphrey
Frank King fired him from his delegation, We!!I into a tirade.
job in a union project after he
''I don't remember the exact
vnted with the McGoverh camp words," Pierce said. "It was
on the question of seating the something
like,
you
California delegation.
doublecrosaing traitor. You'll
Pierce, a :~&amp;-year-old Kent never ddo it again. You're
State University student, said fired."
.
King stunned toward his seat
Pierce said he once worked
in convention hall following the in Frontlash, the AFL-CIO.financed
young
voter
registration drive, and in May
went on the payroll as state
director of the Ohio Yotith Vote
OFF HIGHWAY
A minor accident was in- Project. The project has
vestigated by the Meigs County received money from the
Sheriff's Dept. Monday at II United Auto Workers and had
p.m. at the intersection of US been promised $5,000 from
Route 33 and county road 20 in King, Pierce said.
Salisbury Township. Paul F.. King, however, denied his
Andrews, 66, Long Bottom, Rt. union is associated with · the
1, turned off of 33 onto county
road· 20, came too close to the
edge of the highway, and went
over bank on the right. There
were no injuries and no
damage to the car.
Dale Clonch, 21, Middleport,
and Michael Carrithers, 19,
Cheshire, were hound over to
FITN~ PLAN SET
A physical fitness program the grand jury for petty larfor all interested Meigs High ceny with bond fixed at $1,000
School boys will be held in Judge Robert S. Betz '
Monday, Wednesday and Gallipolis Municipal Court
Friday each week from 6 p.m . Tuesday .
In Judge Betz's Court this
to 7:30pm. beginning Monday.
morning,
eight bonds were
All boys wishing to take part
are to report at 6 Monday forfeited and two defendants
were fined.
evening at the school.
Fined were Joseph Smith, 72,
LOCAL TEMPS
Route I Bidwell, $100 and costs,
The temperature in down- 10 days in county jail, and
town Pomeroy at 1l a.m. license suspended for six
Wednesday was 82 degrees months, driving while intoxicated, and Ford Conley, 22,
under sunny skies.

&amp;
&amp;

OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9;-SUNDAY 1TO 7-PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY,JULY 16,

COURT NEWS
Wellston, $10 and costs, unsafe
vehicle.
Forfeiting bOnds were
Francis W. Rees, 52, Rio
Grande, $23, speeding; Joe.
Douglas Will, 41, Gallipolis $18,
speeding; James . Walker, 35,
Gallipolis, $28, passing without
assured clear distance;
Susanna Sheets, 18, Crown
City, $18, speeding; Paul L.
Haislop, 26, Rio Grande, $76,
overload; Hobart Dillon, 73,
Gallipolis, $18, no brake lights;
Charles Luther McGulne, 30,
Gallipolis, $33, reckl~ss
operation, and Paul Welch, $33,
no safety or bobtail insurance.

Mens

l

.

Mens
DRESS

Boys

SWIM

BOYS
SPORT

Boys

SWIM

TRUNKS

SHIRTS

SHIRTS

KNil

TRUNKS

Sizes

Wh to 17

Ladi·es
WALK

r~~

Sizes

7 to 12

Sizes

8 to 18
::::::_

nation 's

.~ ~

DOLL
P.J.'s

L__ .

LADIES
BATHING
SUITS

GOWNS

TOWELS

·Jlr·
; .

'

:

DRESS SHIRTS
Sizes
14lh to 17

Sizes

!.

.

S-M-L

:

.

Mens

BATHING

SPORT

SUITS

SHIRTS

BODY

XL

INFANTS

SUN SUITS

&lt;
·.

'.

'.

•

S·M·L

Boys
KNIT
SHIRTS
Sizes

Ladies
Polyester
TOPS
Sizes
34 to 38

3 to 6

BEACH
BAGS

MENS

WALK SHORTS
Sizes

SHIRTS

34 to 40

99.9

Girls

LADIES

Sizes

•

BEACH

Sizes 10 to 12

4 to 14

BAKER
FURNITURE

//'"

...

Ladies
WALTZ

S-M·L

Sizes

ALE

-~

MENS

_·-·~··~·

most

$

I

Sizes
4 to 16

·-·-................
....

.Girls
BABY

popular refrigeratorfreezer style and
America's only full-l ine
national brand 3-door
side-b y-side - With
Automatic Ice Maker!
That's not all. Look at
the additional features
on no.&lt;[efrosting model.
The 20.:ku.·ft. 34Jor
Admiral Duplex is more
than a refrigerator, a
free ze r
and
an
automatic ice maker.
It 's a cold saver ! No
matter how often a
customer gets ice, lee
cream or frozen juice
ca ns from th e top
freezer , no cold air
escapes from the main
freezer below . Other
features include ad·
justabl e cantilever
refrigerator shelves, a
lar ge g lid e-ou t
meatkeeper and 4
removable solid
aluminum freezer
shelves.

'

I\

Sizes
S-M-L

GIRLS
TANK TOPS

SHORTS

~

QUANTITIES LAST

PRICES IN.·EFFECT
AT
POINT PLEASANT
STORE ONLY

SliMMER

2 to 10

The

,. .

·.'

any more."
. "Admittedly, I had words
with him," King sald. '"lbe
work he was doing depended on
union support. I told him, how
could he do what he did? His
money would dry up."
Pierce was one of six Ohio
Humphrey delegates who
crossed over to vote with
McGovern supporters oo the
California issue.
"He told' us to.vote our con·
sciences, so I did," said Pl~rce.
"Because I have to live with
myself, not Frank King."

•we will l&lt;l)~lit to this toler1n&lt;:e, If necuurr. GuiUnltl It lor ont rur.

·'

.

Jl'Ojector that he had promised
any money.
"Mike Pierce does not work ,.
.for me, 110 how cOuld I fire '
111m?" he said.
'
Although he denied he luld
fired Pierce, King added, "I
don't count on him for anything

Dudley's ~orist
Senllng : Middleporl
Pomeroy, Gallipolis
Mason Co., W. Vi.

.

S.M.L.

'!

• Baskets
e Sprays
• Vases

.

Delegate·Says King _Fired ·Him

&gt; THE MIDDLE ·FOi:T ON THE BfAUI IFUl OMIO li iVEI 8UWEEN PlfTS8URGH, fiA AND CINCiNNATI, OHIO

Sympathy
Flowers

..

Sizes
S.M.L &amp;·xL

Not
As
Shown

29 to

38

�.,

'

, lONG BOTTOM - Mattie
Kathryn Bogard ; 76, Long
Bottom, Rt. l, died Tuesday
·evening. Mrs. Bogard was
preceded in death ·by her
parents, Jacob and Anna
~dder Rairden; her h'usband,
Charles Bogard ; one brother,
Danny Rairden, and a sister,
Mary Harkins. She was a
member of the Hazel Community Church.
She is survived by five sons,
Romer Bogard, WarnerRobins , Ga.; Clayton Bogard,
Medina ; Floyd Bogard, Hillsooro, Ohio ; Roy B9gard,
Cardin gton ; Virgil Bogard,
LOng Bottom; one ~tep-son,
Clifford Bogard, Ravenswood;
one brother, S3muel Rairden,
Long Bottom; 13 grandchildren, and several greatgrandchildren . .
liuneral services will be held
Friday at 2 p.m. at Ewing
Chapel with the Rev. Freeland
Norris officiating. Burial will
be in Sand Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 9 a.m. Thursday.

HOSPITAL NEWS
DISCHARGES - July 7Robert Carson, Bessie Henry,
Elizabeth Jones, Achsah
Miller, Hazel Dugan, Craig
Wise, Violette Machir, Greta
Loomis, Geneva Waugh, Doris
Rapp, Michael Shumato ,
Myrtle Daugherty, Sondra
Dennis , Florence Eckers ,

Carolyn Lewis, Carrie Sanford,
Frances Kent, Boyd Bailey,
Addie Binion, Laurie Hager,
Marvin Miller, Alleyne Rees,
Archie Richards, John Stone,
Frederick Wilson, Harold
Marshall, Martha Rose, Sophia
Schneider and Sherry Teaford.
July 8 - Mrs. Richard Rathburn and -son, Wanda Gibson,
Paula Rossiter, Jeffrey Meek,
Rosa Holschuh, Pronia Hall,
James Reynolds, Hazel Reed,
Len Dillon, Nellie Davis, John
Lewis, James Luman, Charles
Shaw, Mrs. Jack Smith and
son, Mary Hudson, Blanche
Hichel, Ada Craig, Mac
Chambers, Nada Wolle and
Mary Shook.
July 9 - Avonelle Ball,
Dorothy Carroll, Mrs. Gary
Collins and daughter, Merrill
jlale, Mrs. Hughie Ogdin and
Infant son ; Brent Saunders,
!{aren Taylor, Goldie Dobbins,
Wilma Tillis, Cloye Bird,
Christine Long, Fred Deel,
Mary Claar and daughter, Sue
Johnston, Thelma Kuhn, Ceola
Peere, John Evans, H~.ene
Oiler, Mrs. Kermit Faught and
daughter, Elizabeth Welch ,
Robert Lee, Matthew Jackson
and J. H. Prang.
BIRTHS
July 7 - Mrs. Orville
Williamson, son; Mrs. James
Melton, daughter; Mrs. Cary
Moran,daughter; Mrs. Eugene
Fisher, daughter, and Mrs.
Clarence E. Lee, daughter.
July 8- Mrs. John Henry
Bartels,son, and Mrs. Da'Vid A.
Fillinger, daughter. July 9Mrs. Keith Henry, son, and
Mrs. Forrest Ousley, daughter .

Six defendants forfeited
bonds to and six others were
fined by Middleport Mayor
John Zerkle. Forfeiting bonds
were Gary Short, 42, Gallipolis,
$200 posted on a charge of
driving while intoxicated and
$50 posted on . a charge of
leaving the scene of an accident; Elmer 0. Graham, 19,

Pomeroy, $50, speeding;
Roscoe Edwards and Ralph T.
Ba.. , no age or address; Eloise
C. Mankin, 48, Pomeroy, John
·E. Carr, no age or address, $30
each, intoxication.
Finedwere Robert E. Ward,
24, Middleport, $50 and costs,
disorderly manner ; James
Harris, 31, Middleport, $tO and
costs, disturbing the peace ;
Tommy Awen, 41, Cleveland,
$5 and costs, improper turn ;
. Eugene Jacks, Rutland,
reckless operation, $25 and
costs; Ronald W. Harrison, 18,
Middleport, speeding, $tO and
costs; Melvin Durst, 42,
Middleport, $15 and cos(s,

Now on Oosing
'

'll
I

Fire Levels
Parkersburg

Stockyard
PARKERSBURG, W. Va.
(UP!) - A late afternoon fire
fed by tons of hay levelled a
stockyard not far from
downtown in this Ohio River
city Tuesday, causing $200,000
damage and killing 15 cattle.
Brought under control within
an hour, the intense heat
blackened three frre trucks,
seared the wall of an adjacent
mattress factory and sent nine
firefighters to the hogpital.
None was admitted following
treatment.
A ladder truck being hurried
away from the flames, be&lt;:ame
entangled with the lines of
another ladder, causing extensive damage .
Heat prostration, burns and
smoke inhalation felled the
firefighters, who faced their
second .major blaze within
eight days. A fire at Universal
Glass Co. at adjoining Vienna
July 3 cause&lt;! an estimated
$500,000 damage.
The· Union Uve Stock Sales
Co. suffered an estimated
$200,000 damage to its twostory frame building and
contents and the loss on the 15
head of cattle was placed at
$3,000 by Joe Corbitt, the
company manager·

intoxication. Assessed costs

oniJ when a charge of assault
and battery was dropped was
Carroll Johnson, Middleport.
Boy,G~

...~

.u.

(Continued from page I)
Miss Donahue spoke on
motorcycle safety and the
oblig~tion of the driver to obey
traffic regulations, to ride
defensively, and to be properly
attired.
Guest speaker for the
meeting was Joseph Struble,
Pomeroy emergency squadman,
who
furthered
the safety theme. Using
a
female
dummy'
"Annie'"
Struble
demonstrated proper
techniques of mou th-IIHllouth
· a n d m0 u t h•t 0 _n 0 s e
resuscitation. He said that in
addition to persons suffering
heart attacks, shock, and in
cases of drowning, many times
alcohol and drug abuse
necessitate the need for
resuscitation.
Struble also discussed ways
· of stemming bleeding,
demonstrallng how to apply
direct pressure over the
wound, and where the pressure
points are to curb the bleeding.
He emphasized that time is the
important thing in most
ISSUES REMINDER
and · recomemergencies
North Gallia High School
Principal Cliff .Wilson today mended a first aid course for
reminded all students in the young people.
In a !riel business meeting
grades nine through 12 in the
presided
over by Cross, it was
North Gallia District who have
not registered for the 1972-73 reported that $103 was taken in
.term, should do so before from the pop stand opera ted at
Monday. The principal's office the Regatta. A report was
is' open between 9 a.m. and 3 given on the bloodmobile
canteen served on June 19 by
p.m.
junior leaders, and a pool party
on June 13lor the exchange 4-H
club members. Plans were
RETURNED HOME
made for a dance to be held
Roxanne McDanie l, later this month.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Refreshments were served
McDaniel, Pomeroy, has been following the meeting.
returned to her home after
being confined to the Lancaster
- Fairfield County Hospital for
HOYT HERE
the past four weeks.
Dr. John Hoyt, president of
the Humane Society of the
United States, will be guest
AWARDED PIN
speaker at the Charter Day
Jack Bechtle was presented dinner of the Meigs County ·
a 25-year pin by his son, Humane Society to be held at
Darrell Bechtle, senior deacon, 7:30 this evening at the Meigs
at Tuesday night's meeting of
Inn.
Middleport Lodge 363, F. and
A.M.
GRANGE TO MEET
Ohio Valley Grange 2612,
Letart Falls, will meet at 8
p.m. Thursday at the hall.
Potluck refreshments will be
served.

2-HOUR
CLEANING

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharges : Lewis Leach,
Hend e rson; Darlene
Uvingstone,Leon; Mrs. James
BOARD TO MEET
Shaull and son, Southside;
The
Southern Local School
Mrs. Norman Benson, son,
Board
will meet at 8 p.m.
Southside; Mrs . Thomas
tJllrE. 2nd"
Pomeroy
Russell, Guysville, 0. ; Mrs . Monday at the high school in
.
Ph~·· 992-5428
Preston E. Love, Point Racine.
Pleasant ; Harry Sparks,
Cottageville; Mrs . Wilma
Blake, Clifton ; Mrs. Clarence
Sayre, MI . Alto ; Mrs .
Raymond Shelines, Gallipolis ;
Mrs. Arl Allen, Rand ; Mrs.
Lucille Walters, Crown City, ·
and Mrs. Loula Shelines.
Births : July 11, twin sons to
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Leonard,
Henderson . One twin weighed 7
pounds and the other twin, 6
The most welcome gift of all is an
pounds .
Accutron by Bulova . So precise is
the Accutron tuning fork
moY"emen
t thai accuracy is
Veterans Memorial Hospital
guaranteed to
ADMITTED - Con nie Mash,
within a minute
Middleport ; Doris Kiser,
a month . •
Racine; Mabel Swan , LangsSee our ful l
ville ; Christi na Holley,
selection of
Minersville ; Steven Lavalley,
Accutron
models now.
Racine, and Gerald Merando,
OU( AND DAY "r"
From $110.
Painesville.
1411 Solid Gold .
U50.
DISCHARGED - John
Moon, Kent Yonkers, Clara
Paulsen, Joy Rife, Tura
Hunter, Mary Cleek, Gene
Thompson, Rhonda Perry .and
Pauline Wolfe.

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

Give the watch with
tuning fork accuracy

Accutron~

by Bulova

JT!Idoy'1 FUNNY wll! pur Sl.llO for
~och orlgi"ol·"f"""Y" 11ted Se11d 9t1gl.
to: Today\ FUNN¥, UOO Wt~t Tllitd
St., Cleveland, Ohio .U Jil

PUBUC WELCOME
The public is cordially invited to tho summer Title I
Family night at 8 p.m. Thursday at the
Pomeroy
Elementary School. · Ligh t
refreshments will be served,
visitors will have an opportunity to meet the staff of
the six weeks summer school,
and to view the materials used
in the program .

Official word of the closing o!-·
the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge lor
repairs beginning at 9 a.m.
Monday, July 24, has been
received from Ohio Department of Highways Division 10
Deputy Director Max· Farley.
Repair work on the bridge
will consist of waterproofing
the existing deck with a poured
rubber coat and then resurfacing with a rubberized sand
asphalt, according to bridge
engineer Larry Coler.
While the bridg~ is closed a
detour will be set up to handle
the traffic across the river.
Traffic will be routed south to
the Silver Memorial Bridge between Kanauga and Henderson.
The Shelly Co. of Thornville
is the contractor on the repair
work, with the reopening
scheduled in seven days.
DIVORCES ASKED
Two suits for divorce have

been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court. Nancy
R. Jeffers, Pomeroy, Rt. 4,
charging gross neglect of duty
and extreme cruelty, filed suit
against Richard K. Jeffers,
Pomeroy, Rt. 4, and Karen S.
Sprouse, Middlepor t, filed
ag ainst John W. Sprouse,
Petersburg, W. Va., charging
gross neglect of duty.

ERROR CORRECTED
Listed as a survivor of Susie
Ann Cooper, seven-week old
daughter of Gar y and Marilyn
Cooper, Middleport, who died
Monday evening at Children's
Hospital, Colwnbus, was a
Marriage License
sister, Tracie Lynn. This was
Jerry Richard Vanlnwagen ,
.in , error . The infant was 24, Middleport, Rf. I and Linda
preceded in death by the sist~ Marie Grindstaff, 20, Racine,
Tracie Lynn .
Rt. I.

MIAMI BEACH {UP!) -Ml- vote early Tuesday, d1!11111nchael G. Pierce, an Ohio Hum· ding lo know how he voted.
phrey delegate, said Tuesday
He said when he told him,
Ohio AFL·CIO President · King, head of the Humphrey
Frank King fired him from his delegation, We!!I into a tirade.
job in a union project after he
''I don't remember the exact
vnted with the McGoverh camp words," Pierce said. "It was
on the question of seating the something
like,
you
California delegation.
doublecrosaing traitor. You'll
Pierce, a :~&amp;-year-old Kent never ddo it again. You're
State University student, said fired."
.
King stunned toward his seat
Pierce said he once worked
in convention hall following the in Frontlash, the AFL-CIO.financed
young
voter
registration drive, and in May
went on the payroll as state
director of the Ohio Yotith Vote
OFF HIGHWAY
A minor accident was in- Project. The project has
vestigated by the Meigs County received money from the
Sheriff's Dept. Monday at II United Auto Workers and had
p.m. at the intersection of US been promised $5,000 from
Route 33 and county road 20 in King, Pierce said.
Salisbury Township. Paul F.. King, however, denied his
Andrews, 66, Long Bottom, Rt. union is associated with · the
1, turned off of 33 onto county
road· 20, came too close to the
edge of the highway, and went
over bank on the right. There
were no injuries and no
damage to the car.
Dale Clonch, 21, Middleport,
and Michael Carrithers, 19,
Cheshire, were hound over to
FITN~ PLAN SET
A physical fitness program the grand jury for petty larfor all interested Meigs High ceny with bond fixed at $1,000
School boys will be held in Judge Robert S. Betz '
Monday, Wednesday and Gallipolis Municipal Court
Friday each week from 6 p.m . Tuesday .
In Judge Betz's Court this
to 7:30pm. beginning Monday.
morning,
eight bonds were
All boys wishing to take part
are to report at 6 Monday forfeited and two defendants
were fined.
evening at the school.
Fined were Joseph Smith, 72,
LOCAL TEMPS
Route I Bidwell, $100 and costs,
The temperature in down- 10 days in county jail, and
town Pomeroy at 1l a.m. license suspended for six
Wednesday was 82 degrees months, driving while intoxicated, and Ford Conley, 22,
under sunny skies.

&amp;
&amp;

OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9;-SUNDAY 1TO 7-PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY,JULY 16,

COURT NEWS
Wellston, $10 and costs, unsafe
vehicle.
Forfeiting bOnds were
Francis W. Rees, 52, Rio
Grande, $23, speeding; Joe.
Douglas Will, 41, Gallipolis $18,
speeding; James . Walker, 35,
Gallipolis, $28, passing without
assured clear distance;
Susanna Sheets, 18, Crown
City, $18, speeding; Paul L.
Haislop, 26, Rio Grande, $76,
overload; Hobart Dillon, 73,
Gallipolis, $18, no brake lights;
Charles Luther McGulne, 30,
Gallipolis, $33, reckl~ss
operation, and Paul Welch, $33,
no safety or bobtail insurance.

Mens

l

.

Mens
DRESS

Boys

SWIM

BOYS
SPORT

Boys

SWIM

TRUNKS

SHIRTS

SHIRTS

KNil

TRUNKS

Sizes

Wh to 17

Ladi·es
WALK

r~~

Sizes

7 to 12

Sizes

8 to 18
::::::_

nation 's

.~ ~

DOLL
P.J.'s

L__ .

LADIES
BATHING
SUITS

GOWNS

TOWELS

·Jlr·
; .

'

:

DRESS SHIRTS
Sizes
14lh to 17

Sizes

!.

.

S-M-L

:

.

Mens

BATHING

SPORT

SUITS

SHIRTS

BODY

XL

INFANTS

SUN SUITS

&lt;
·.

'.

'.

•

S·M·L

Boys
KNIT
SHIRTS
Sizes

Ladies
Polyester
TOPS
Sizes
34 to 38

3 to 6

BEACH
BAGS

MENS

WALK SHORTS
Sizes

SHIRTS

34 to 40

99.9

Girls

LADIES

Sizes

•

BEACH

Sizes 10 to 12

4 to 14

BAKER
FURNITURE

//'"

...

Ladies
WALTZ

S-M·L

Sizes

ALE

-~

MENS

_·-·~··~·

most

$

I

Sizes
4 to 16

·-·-................
....

.Girls
BABY

popular refrigeratorfreezer style and
America's only full-l ine
national brand 3-door
side-b y-side - With
Automatic Ice Maker!
That's not all. Look at
the additional features
on no.&lt;[efrosting model.
The 20.:ku.·ft. 34Jor
Admiral Duplex is more
than a refrigerator, a
free ze r
and
an
automatic ice maker.
It 's a cold saver ! No
matter how often a
customer gets ice, lee
cream or frozen juice
ca ns from th e top
freezer , no cold air
escapes from the main
freezer below . Other
features include ad·
justabl e cantilever
refrigerator shelves, a
lar ge g lid e-ou t
meatkeeper and 4
removable solid
aluminum freezer
shelves.

'

I\

Sizes
S-M-L

GIRLS
TANK TOPS

SHORTS

~

QUANTITIES LAST

PRICES IN.·EFFECT
AT
POINT PLEASANT
STORE ONLY

SliMMER

2 to 10

The

,. .

·.'

any more."
. "Admittedly, I had words
with him," King sald. '"lbe
work he was doing depended on
union support. I told him, how
could he do what he did? His
money would dry up."
Pierce was one of six Ohio
Humphrey delegates who
crossed over to vote with
McGovern supporters oo the
California issue.
"He told' us to.vote our con·
sciences, so I did," said Pl~rce.
"Because I have to live with
myself, not Frank King."

•we will l&lt;l)~lit to this toler1n&lt;:e, If necuurr. GuiUnltl It lor ont rur.

·'

.

Jl'Ojector that he had promised
any money.
"Mike Pierce does not work ,.
.for me, 110 how cOuld I fire '
111m?" he said.
'
Although he denied he luld
fired Pierce, King added, "I
don't count on him for anything

Dudley's ~orist
Senllng : Middleporl
Pomeroy, Gallipolis
Mason Co., W. Vi.

.

S.M.L.

'!

• Baskets
e Sprays
• Vases

.

Delegate·Says King _Fired ·Him

&gt; THE MIDDLE ·FOi:T ON THE BfAUI IFUl OMIO li iVEI 8UWEEN PlfTS8URGH, fiA AND CINCiNNATI, OHIO

Sympathy
Flowers

..

Sizes
S.M.L &amp;·xL

Not
As
Shown

29 to

38

�.: ·:· :'
!

&lt;

.

!

.

•

.

•

'

t,

~·

..

...

.

.

.. '

•

.

''

..
'.

.

'

'
'''
'
''

'I

"

'

OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9 -SUNDAY 1TO 7-PRICES IN EFFECT NOW THROUGH SUNDAY,JULY
16,
.
.

~UANTITIES LAST

.

Y1TO 7-PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY,JULY 16~ WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

PRICES IN EFFECT
AT
POINT PLEASANT
STORE ONLY

•

VHT-20

ELEC. BOX FAN
·- ·

CHAMOIS
22 Only

Westley's

DIAMOND HARD
WAX

·PRICES IN EFFECT
'AT
POINT PLEASANT
STORE ONLY

GOLF

3 Gal.

PLASTIC WATER
•
CAN

MOON SEAT

SHOES

Croquet
SET

To Sell

Heck's
Reg.

ICE
BUCKETS

ll.J]

Heck's Reg. 381

I

Heck's Reg. s15.99

Heck's
Reg.
59~ qt.

$10.88

11.99

1

BASEBALL BATS

RACING OIL

Heck's
Reg.

HECK'S
REG.

Heck's
Reg.
11.88

QUAKER STATE

Reg. $1.77

Reg . SLBB

1.26

1

Reg . SL99
1

All

BASEBALL CAPS

1.33

REG

$1. 99

$1 33
•

931

REG .

11.39

REG .

i2.B8

$193

Reg . 53 .77

661

Reg. 57.99

REG.

99c

2.53

1

I

ssoo
BASKETBALL

BACKBOARD &amp;RIM SET
Easy to in sta ll and
durable enough to last.

H-10·55

THIRD HAND PLASTIC

3
Only

HAMPERS

BAG .OPENER

Riding Mower

2 Only To Sell
· HECK'S REG. 10.88
1

MAGAZINE
RACK

POLISHING
CLOTH
1 lb.
Heck's
Reg.
11.18

VASELINE
INTENSIVE
. CARE
BABY
, N •'
I :· ,
OIL

Heck's
Reg.

Heck's
Reg.

AIR

10.88

$10.88

MATTRESS

GELUSIL
,

"-, rr;

No. 5089

' " '' 12 Ol.

,..

I

.'

........ ..

..,. "".

'

~;= ··

.

~c;'c ~i ~

su9

'·· , Gallon
\I

FOAM JUG
HECK'S REG. '1.38

Heck's
Reg.

1.59

1

BAR-B-Q
GRILL

HORSE SHOE
SET

Heck's Reg. s10.99

CAMP
COT
Heck's Reg. s8.99

GIFT SET

I

.

$1.29

$3.88

5.25 Ol.

"' I
,PONDS
\ rnw Uf~,, j

Heck's
Reg.
SlJ4

· VITALIS
To

Heck's Reg.

Heck's
Reg.

$16.99

Reg.

$1.48

AQUA VELVA
SHAVE
CREME
10 Ol.

(
}

' I.

SHOVELS

11 PC. YOUTH

GOLF SET
Heck's
Reg.

$2588

GILLffiE
RIGHT
GUARD
8oz.

88'

$1.34

Sell

BEN PERSON

· Reg.

ARCHERY SET

s2.77

HECK'S REG. 12.77

Heck's Reg.

$29.99

HECK'S REG. 2.99

Heck's · ·

Heck's Reg.

HECK'S REG.

1

HOSE
HECK'S
REG •.

4 On~

15 Ol.
Btl.

OIL CHANGE
KIT

Pistol Grip ~~~

NOZZLE

FOLDING BED

'

•' '

GAS CAN

OLD SPICE

ITEMS AVAILABLE AI All CHARLESION AREA SJOR£&lt;,
.
UNLESS OJ HER WISE NOTED . . .

'

5 GALLON

HECK'S
REG.

•
I

-~

Heck's

Ponds
lemon Facial
CLEANER

FOLDING

~

I Heck's Reg.

Heck's Reg. '339.88

HECK'S REG. 17.99

.

- ---

Will fU Ulf • .111 . . . . ,.

PEAT
MOSS

I

SMOKER

1

.

Replacement
Lawn Mower
BLADES

FOREWAY

No.
1032

GOLF
CART

•

Heck's
Reg.

HECK'S
REG.

ggc

I

· One

Gallon

17.99

1

ALBERTO
BALSAM

GAS
CAN

10 oz.
Reg. &amp;
Ex. Body

·HECK'S ·
REG.

Heck's R~
1
1.24

sug

MEDICINE

CABINET
HECK'S
REG.

$3.48

r.HAISE
· lOUNGE

�' .

'·

l

.' .

· - ··

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

7 ' .

.;. /

'
J

I.

12- The Daily Sentinel. Mlddleoort-Pomerov. 0 .. Julv 12. 1!17'&gt;

'

Heath Church Improvement Project Plan
Purchase of new floor
covering and furniture for the
church social room was
arranged dilring a meeting of
the United Methodist Women
Monday night at the parsonage
o( Heath United Methodist
Church.

Sharing in the cost of the
project .will be the Afternoon
Circle of the church. Mrs. Earl
Knight reported on the carpeting of the parsonage· just
completed and members
viewed the work following the
meeting. Read at the meeting

i8E- ~s.t T"~*:%'' ' "*'*'''f

Otterbein Camp

I

SOCial f Youths Helping
ICalendarlt
.

-~·]ii r:i I

Open House Planned
CUFTON, W.Va.- Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Varian of Clifton,
W. Va., will observe their Golden Wedding anniversary July 14th
but will celebrate it with open house from 1-6 p.m. at their home
on SUnday. They were married in Hartford, W. Va., by the late
Rev. 0. E. Elkins. Mr. Varian is a retired coal miner. The couple
has spent their entire life in Mason County. They have 11 children ·
with one deceased. They are, Charles, Hartford; Lora Anderson,
Clifton; Harry, Clifton; Rose Walton, Georgetown, Ill.; Joanna
Council, umgsville, Ohio; Franklin, Columbus; Laura Clark,
Kirkland, Ill.; Ida Council, Benton, Ky.; Eddie, Clifton ; Carol
June lee, Canal Winchester, and Pearl Jean, deceased .
They have 32 grandchildren and 11 gr eat.grand~hildre n .
They both attend the Church of God in Jesus Name m Ppmt
Pleasant, where Ira Wellman is pastor.

Zirkles Leave
For Florida

SON IS -BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Willis Durst,
Pomeroy, are an nouncing the
birth of their first child, a
seven poWld, six OWlce son,

Sgt. and Mrs . Raymond Shawn Allen, on July 4 at
Zirkle left Tuesday morning Pleasant Vall ey Hospi tal.
for Robins Warner Air Force Maternal gra ndparents are
Base in Florida after spending Mrs. May Mayle of Pomeroy
six days here with their and Albert Balch of Cleveland .
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Paternal grandparents are Mr.
Duckworth and Mrs. Norma and Mrs. Willard Durst, Sr., of
Zirkle.
Pomeroy . Paternal great. On Saturday Mr. and Mrs. grandmother is Mrs. Pauline
Duckworth entertained with a Newton of Hartford . ·
cookout honoring their
daughters, Mrs. Zirkle and
PTO TO MEET
Robin, on their birthday anHARRISONVILLE - A
niversaries. A decorated cake specia l mee ting of th e
was served . Others attending Harrisonville PTO has been
were Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur called for 7:30p.m. on ThursHolter of Akron, Mr. and Mrs. day at the school. Purpose of
William Fred Smith , Sr., the meeting is to make plans
Middleport, and Bobby Duck- for putting in a concrete slab on
worth. On Sunday Mrs. Norma the playground. Parents with
• Zirkle of Pomeroy joined the children in the Harrisonville
Duckworth family lor dinner. school are asked to attend the
meeting if at all possible.
CRmCALLY ILL
Jessie Sansbury, forme•:i of
Middleport, is critically ill in
Abington Memorial Hospital,
Abington, Pa.

Of all back-boned animals.
turtl es live th e longest. One
that was in c a p tivi t y is
know n to have lived 152
years.

'

WEDNESDAY
.REVIVAL, United Faith
Cburch, Pomeroy - Middleport
By-pass, Rev . Worley_ Haley,
~vangelist, Wednesday
through July 23. All singers
welcome, 7:30 each evening.
WHITE ROSE Lodge, 1:30
p.m. Wednesday, American
Legion Hall, Middleport.
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.
FEENEY- Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, 7:30 tonight,
at the Middleport hall.
TUPPERS PLAINS Com munity Club, Wednesday, 8
p.m. at home of Oniela' Cole.
MfDDLEPORT CHILD
Conservation League ·summer
outing for members and their
children at Camden Park,
Huntington. Members are to
meet there at noon.
THURSDAY
POMEROY · MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, annual picnic
Thursday a t th e Ri chard
Chambers' country home.
Steak dinner to be prepared by
Tom Cassell an( his committee. Serving at 6:30p.m. All
Lions invited.
PAST COUNCILORS,
Theodorus Council, Daughters
of America , picnic, 6:30p.m.
on Mason greens.
WORK IN Master Mason
degree when Shade River
Lodge 453 meets at 8 p.m.
Thursday at hall in Chester. All
Master Masons invited.

Young people from Otterbein
Student Camp are conducting a
Bible school at the Middleport
Heath United Methodist
Church each evening this
week.
· In charge of the junior high
group is Jay Gregory with
Cindy Kitzmiller and Shirley
Schwartz in charge of the
fourth, fifth and sixth grade
group ; Amy Fetherland,
grades one through three, and
David Stuckey, of pre-school
children . At the opening
session each evening there is
group singing with the boys of
the student camp providing the
guitar accompaniment.

SATURDAY
ANNUAL PICNIC Meigs
Cp unty Retired Teachers
Association Saturday at 3:30
p.m. at state park on route 33.
Ail newly retired teachers,
wives and husbands are invited. Each attending to bring
covered dish and table service .
SUNDAY
ANNUAL PARISH Picnic of
Sacred Heart Catholic Church,

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr . and Mrs . Richard
Hovatter , Middleport, are
announcing the birth of a
daughter, Heather Ann, six
pounds and Jo ounces, at the
Holzer Medical Center on June
28. Grandparents are Mrs.
Clifford Stumbo, Middleport ;
Clyde Hovatter, Columbus;
and Mrs. Mildred Folden ,
Cuyahoga Falls. Mrs. Sadie
Stun1bo, Sharles, Fla ., and
Mrs. Leora Ford, Clarksburg ,
W.
Va .
ar e
greatgrandmothers. Mr . and Mrs.
Hovatter have two other
children, Dreama, age 14, and
Ricky, IL

Pomeroy , Sunday at 12 noon at
Middleport Municipal Park.
Bring covered d1sh and table
service .
HOMECOMING Sunday, MI.
Moriah Church of God . Picnic
at noon, public invited.
MODERN
WOODMEN
Camp 6335, Middleport, family
picnic Sunday at slate park on
Route 33, on right going north.
Basket dinner at 12 :30 .
Members, families and guests
invited ; prizes for adults and
juniors, junior director Helen
Hart reporl.s. Take own table
service.

was a letter from the district coU]lle in a small town there. ~nter, and have. organized a
officials announcing the name
She said the couple went to health . center where women ·
change fqr the organization Africa .sponsored by a EUB learn to care {or their chlldren.
from Women's Society of Church in Canada and has been Mrs. Moore spoke of the role ol
Christian Service to United .ihere eight years. Their efforts the WSCs in establishing public
Methodist Women.
are aimed at trying to teach the health services in Africa.
Punch and cake were served
"Glorious Minority" was the natives ' good agricultural
by
Mrs. L. W. McComas, Mrs.
tiUe of an arlichi read by Mrs. practices to increase their food
C.
M. Hennesy, Mrs. Alma
Bechtle to open the meeting. supply.' They are ~ making
Mrs. Walter Hayes had efforts to begin secondary Miller , and Mrs. Mary
devotions, using ' prayer, education, have built a youth Rinehart.
scripture and a meditation,
"The ·Kingdom Is Coming."
She also conunented on things
{
for which all should be thankful
and concluded with a prayer
I
"World Culture, World signed a round-robin card for
for missionaries around the
BARBARA RICHARD
Community" was the theme of •Mrs. Doris Adams, a patient at
world.
Barbara
Richard,
the program at a meeting Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The program by Mrs. Nan
Mrs. Julie Norris presented daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Moore, entitled "Church for Monday night of the East
Letart Women's Society of the program .the purpose of Harrr Richard, Long BotOttM:rs/' pertained to Africa
which was to explore the loin, hao accepted emwhich she described as a Christian Service.
Mrs. Marlene Fisher meaning of culture to attempt ployment at the Kut and Kurl
country rich in resources but
presided
at the session opening an op_enness . of _mind to Beauty Shop, Union Ave.,
=nomically poor because of
and began her dulles
the European powers which with scripture from Matthew. • eQlergmg natJOnahsllc pa tTueoday. A graduate of
have drained the resources. Devotions were presented by terns in ll)odern society, and to
Southern High School, Miss
Mrs
Mabel
Shields
.
Members
find
common
threads
that
bmd
Mrs. Moore told of what the
·
mankind in the coming of a Richard graduated In July
Methodist Church is doing in
from the Valley Beauty
world culture.
Africa and gave a resume of
Academy
In Marietta. Mrs.
There
was
group
singing
of
the work of a missionary
'(roman
Ruosell
Is owner of
"How Great Thou Art," and
prayer by Mrs. Nora Pierson.
the Kut and Kurl Shop In
..,.,.,·.:·:o;.-).·:::.;···:·~~~;.······x·:··:;::.~·····
d
i'·
......... .... · · ..........., ·;~
Mrs. Ferne B. Hayman serve
Pomeroy.
::;:
"
refreshments to those named
~ A tour of the' Meigs County and Mrs. Mabel Shields, Mrs .
~:
~ courthouse and the county jail Hazel Fox, Mrs. Focie
!1
:~ was planned for Monday when Hayman , . Mrs. Margaret ·
~::
*:
the Naylor's Run Jets 4-H Club
Th er e are more Here;.;.
:::: met this week at the home of Gloeckner, Mrs. Doris Sayre,
ford
s, commercial and pure· . Mr. and Mrs. Tom Ly?ns. of Mrs . Earl Thoma, advisor.
Mrs. Lucy Donahue, Mrs. Sue
bred,
marketed every year ·
Pontiac, Mich. are vacat10mng
Members of the club also Ann Beegle, Mrs. Mary Roush,
in
th
e
United States than all
here with his parents, Mr. and planned a family picnic fo r and a gues t, Mrs. Goldie oth er beef
bre eds combined.
Mrs. John Lyons.
August and participated in a Shane.
Mrs. John Harper and son, soil demonstration using wood
••••••••••••••••••
Brett, of Vinton, Va. were the and field soil for a study of
re~ent gue~ts of Mr. and Mrs. absorbency. It was noted that
Michael Zirkle and children, projects will be judged on
Pamela Lynn .and Michelle. August g in preparation for the
Mrs. Harper 1s the former exhibit at the Meigs County
Kathy Lacey of Middleport. Fair
Her sister, Mrs. Ruth Ann
AI. a mee ting last week the
Kearns of Ashl~d, Ky., was club members worked on their
the guest of M1ss Lo1s Ann project books. Leaves which
Sauer·
they had galh~red on a field
Recent weekend guests of trip were identified and
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Haptonslall labeled. Mark Norton presided
and Robert Sharp were Mr. at the meetings and the flag
and Mrs. Wayne Sharp and salute was th~ opening. Soft
family, Mr. a~d Mrs . John drinks were served.
Sharp and farruly, Zanesville;
and Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Sharp
and family of Reynoldsburg.
Miss Francie Glaze of
FOUR CHRISTENED
Lancaster was the weekend
Four
children
were
guest of the Michael Zirkle christened Sunday morning at
family.
the Middleport First United
Mr. and Mrs . Wilbur Holter Presbyterian Church by the
have returned to Akron after Rev. Dwight Za vitz. Assistin g
visiting here with Mr. and Mrs. the Rev. Mr. Zavilz with the
Clifford Holter and Mr . and service was Mr. Paul HapMrs . Robert Duckworth.
tonstall, a church elder .
Mrs. Helen Martin and Mr. Crhiste'ned were Pamela Lynn
and Mrs. Frank Shunoaker and Zirkle, daughter of Mr . and
children of Pittsburgh, Pa. are
Mrs. Michael Zirkle; Cynthia
the guests this week of Mr. and Lynn and Walter Edward ,
Mrs. James Criswell . Mr . and children of Mr. and Mrs. EdMrs. Criswell visited over the
war d Crooks; and Bri an
weekend in Morgantown with
MASON, W. VA.
773-5554
Wi lliam Harper, son of Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Custer Mrs..Guy Harper.
and son.

JQr .
•3

soum

Culture .Theme Studiea

4-H Club Will

See Court House

:,.;

M'ddl rt
I ep0
Persona I Notes

lAUAN
MAHOGANY

4x8
SHEET

HOGG · &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.

.,

Beat high cost
Phebe Says: Can and freeze what you can now! of living!!!

, I

5•
Pass
Redble Pass
Pass
Dble Pass
Pass
Opening lead- • 6

Al Sobel was a tournament
director by professio n and
in his prime he was the
greatest. He was not a good
bridge player, but he loved
to play the game and on occasion he rose to peaks of
brilliancy.
Today's hand was se t up
for AI in a midnight game
a f t e r the conclusion of a
tournament. The other players at the table didn 't know
th at Al was looking at 12 top
spades, but almost everyone
else at th e post·10IIfnamen!
party was watch ing to see
.what would happen.
Tljey sa w AI at his best.
Be looked at his 12 spades
and passed without blinking
an eye. He passed twice
more and finally came to life
by doubling six hear ts. West
couldn't wait To redouble. If
he hadn 't, Eas t would have.
In late-night games aft er
tournaments. all slam contracts are redoubled.
North didn 't like the re.
doubl e, but knew better than
to take the sure loss at seven clubs. Anyway , AI just
might have the heart contract set some wa y or other.
When AI ran to six spades ,
Wes t hopped on it with a
roar. AI thought of redou bling, but decided tha t six
. doubled w o u I d be good
enough.
He rulled th e hPort i• arl
and led his four of trumps.
West followed with his three spot and , wh en East showed
out, you could have heard
th ~ r oar !rpm players ang
• kibitzers alike '" the next
county, if n91 the next state.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

''Z~Rn:HXtilM!IIJ
The bidding. has been ;
North
East
Wesl
I "'
Pass
Pass
3 ,.._
Pass
Pass
5 "Pass
Pass
5¥
Pass
You , So uth , hold :

EGGS
dOL

39~

FAMILY SCOTT
5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
"The Store With A Heart,
You, WE LIKE"
Right reserved to limit quantities
We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food Stamps

Prices Effective July 12·19
Monday Thru Friday

9:00 to 7:00

Saturday 9 to 9
CLOSED SUNDAYS

FAIRMONT

Chocolate Milk

-3· Qts. 99e
I

TOILET TISSUE
KRAFT

Laurel Cliff ·
News Notes

SLICED BACON" ..~~~.~~~......................'~:.. 65 e
HAM SALAD... ~~~:.~~?.~................

•1 59
.......'~·.. 89e
lb.

2 lb .

VIRGINIA U.S. NO•.1

cans
for

'·

BY BERTHA PARKER
Due to the Free Methodist
Conference and Campmeeting
at Mansfield, the attendance at
the Free Methdist Church July
9 was 80. Offering was $59.24.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Karr,
Sr. attended a homecoming at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Cl~rence Karr, Millersport
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Walker
spent two weeks with Mrs:
Walker's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Howell, Indiana.
Mr . and Mrs. Harnnon Fox
enjoyed a cookout Sunday at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Earl
ROush , Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Curtis,
daughter, Ka'thy, Iowa, spent&lt;
several daysl with Mr. Curtis'
parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Curtis and rellltlves.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence eurtls
re.turned to·Iowa to gpend the
summer with another son, Mr.
and Mrs. Otho -Curtis and
family.

JAMAICA SHORTS

.·.

CLEARANCE LADIES'

Super Value ! Fa m ous Bobbie
Brooks and Ai teen Sports .
wear . Don ' t mi ss th i s fan tastic
, bar gain fo un d on,ly at STI F·

UMMER FOOTWEAR

FLER 'S.

2

¢

1

~7

OFF
REG .
PRICE

VALUES TO 1899

MEN'S AND BOYS' SIZE

&amp;BOBBY LEN

Va lues to $10.99 in t his gr oup of
lad ies' spri ng an d summer foo t·
wear . famous brands. Good se lec.
tion of siz,es. Smar t styles. Out they
go! Stiff ler 's Shoe Dept.

Th e wa ter 's great and·
so' s th e beach. Men's
s izes S-M· L. Boys ' siz es
8 to 18. Assorted color s
an d sty les .

Hittle littl e dipper s. Take
plunge ... in a swi m sati on fr om
our " water 's fi ne" selection . Ole
and lw o piecer s from Bobbie
Brook s and Robby Len.

OFF
REG.
PRICE

OFF
REG.

I • I • 0 0

2

lb.

Ke g . S2.99 Valu e.
M en' s and Bo y s' $
High and Low Top
T e nni s
Sh oes .
Ameri can made i n
bla ck or wh i te. Shop

STI FF LER ' S..

1!.

Value s to S2 .99 and SJ 99
m en's. short sleeve summer

&gt;porls shirts.
Asst . pla in
patterns.

$}22

5-M· L-XL.
a nd

t a·nc y

Reg . $1.99 men's

sport hals. 5-M· L.
For g olf,

pl ay ,

SCORES OF FANCY PATTERNS
45" COTTON &amp; AVRIL BLENDED

-DRESS PRINTS
Fine quaUty 4f&gt;.inch cotton and avril
blended dress prints in a big choice
of patterns.

c

~

EXTER lOR -INTERIOR
;'

SPRAY
PAINT
so~

/

IN r,uNUTff

FOR ALL PAINTABLE SURFACES

SNEAKERS

a Mlllft C~ . , W, VI ,

0', ..

000 ~L~SS - ORIES

REG.· 5159 VALUE

Sorvtftt&lt; Oolllpotlo,

.

.
LATEX FLA1
1
WALL PAIN

SAJIE AT STIFFLER·'S'•

Mi.sses , ~, 12'12 to 4,
~ren's -$lfzes 8'12 to 12.
'A~erlcan made. Moulded
soles.
·

;;_~

. ..i ,, • .

Yard

Pomeroy, Middleport, o.

.

SPORT
SHIRTS

VALUES TO $100 YARD

Off

(

REG. 12'l AND 1399
MEN'S

wor k . Asst. styles
and colors.

·Dudley's 'florist

"'

$744
PAIR

SPORT
HATS

TENNIS SHOES

Reg . 79c Value . Fully
4~
Lined Plastic Drapes ,
: .
Great for any room in the
PR.
house. Pick some up today.

30%to50%

49~

PAIR

REG. 11.99
MEN'S

REG. 12.99 MENS-BOYS
High and Low

PLASTIC DRAPES

lv, Tod., a II"'

FRESH
PEACHES

.

VALUES TO '1 0 99

SWIM WEAR

SWIMSUITS

ArfificiaJ
' An1nsements

'

'633

Clea rance on ~s· summer
footwear . Va l ues to S8 .q9 .
Famous
br ands .
Wh i te ,
brow n, re d , bl a ck . Smart
styles . Out they go ! We need
th e room . St iffle r ' s Shoe Dept .

TRADE EXPANSION SAL£

BOBBIE BROOKS

-Beautiful .

~":

i.\

!»~\,:

SPORTSWEAR

Values to $2 .99 Ladies double knits
Jamaica Shorts. Sizes 8 to 18. Asst.
colors, smart styles. Stock up no.w.
Plenty of hot weather ahead.

.Misses &amp; Children's M01,1lded Sole ·

POT·A.TOES

WATER ..................:......................
qt.
iar

Shop Stifflers

FAMOUS BRAND
BOBBIE BROOKS
AILEEN

'

can

HAMBURGER DILL SLICES
OR WHOLE DILL PICKLES

VALUES TO 12.99
LADIES' SUMMER

FULLY LINED

¢ BACON ENDS &amp; PIECES ............ 5

(12 rolls)

on~

VALUES TO 117.99

$1 Q00

REG. 79• VALUE

lb.

4:99~

gal

t

hJ SC\'CII .

USDA Choice - U. S. Government Inspected

GRAPE JELLY................ .'.~: . .
FOLGER'S
. 3 lb. $
·COFFEE ........................................
DISTILLED

MISSES
HAlF SIZES

VALUES TO 112.99

du bs. Wh a t do you do now?

PEAS

DOG FOOD .........

~~ • JR. GROUP Ill

\~
"1..\~~

TO $9 .99

$700

&amp;'l

TODAV'S QUESTION
Your partner cont inues to six

'

J0-80 BRAND

SHIRTS.

ssoo
GROUP II

A- Bid fiv e spad es. You a re

LIBBY'S SWEET

4 paKS

GROUP 1 VALUES

SALE!

"''-

SLEEVE

Stiffler's 2nd Floor

·~

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

What do you do now ?

FREEZER&gt;
SUPPLIES
MEDIUM SIZE

2¥

Pass
Pass
Pass
Dble
6•
Pass

~HORT

Handsome sport shirts in a
·wide choice of new fashion
colors and patterns Sizes
!4'2 to 11 and S.M·L·XL.
Fabrics tha t never need
ironing .

Ladi-es' Dress
Clearance

South

.AJ543 .K9763 +void "'QIOl

ECAN
Complete Canning
Supplies Here

East

MAN!

SPORT &amp; DR ESS

SPRING AND SUMMER

• 10

still tr ying to get

rERM PRt :s:s

(DJ

"'Void
None vulnerable
Pass
Pass
4 N.T. Pass
6•
Pass

speelal

9:30 TO 9:00 FRI.·SAT. .

.AKQJ 10 987
ss4 2

North

~eiy

POMEROY, OHIO

•void

We!it

ttt-t

Reg . $1.99 va l ue close ou t
group of lad ies ' summe r
sandals. Med. hee ls and flat .
Ass t. .styles and co lors. St if
fle r 's 'Shoe Dept

NORm
12
• Void
• 432
• 97
"'KJ8 765 4 3
WEST
EAST
•void
.QI086
.AKJ97 5
+KJ52
tAQ86 43
"'AQJ09
•2

LATEX PAINT

.

!SOOO WHITE

Stands up to toughest wear outside - ~ves years of carefree
beauty Inside. Use brush, roller or spray."Dril!! in minutes. Tools
rinse out in lioapy water. White unly.

YOU.R CHOICE-••••

MAIN FLOOR

GAllONS

FOR
1,

�' .

'·

l

.' .

· - ··

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

7 ' .

.;. /

'
J

I.

12- The Daily Sentinel. Mlddleoort-Pomerov. 0 .. Julv 12. 1!17'&gt;

'

Heath Church Improvement Project Plan
Purchase of new floor
covering and furniture for the
church social room was
arranged dilring a meeting of
the United Methodist Women
Monday night at the parsonage
o( Heath United Methodist
Church.

Sharing in the cost of the
project .will be the Afternoon
Circle of the church. Mrs. Earl
Knight reported on the carpeting of the parsonage· just
completed and members
viewed the work following the
meeting. Read at the meeting

i8E- ~s.t T"~*:%'' ' "*'*'''f

Otterbein Camp

I

SOCial f Youths Helping
ICalendarlt
.

-~·]ii r:i I

Open House Planned
CUFTON, W.Va.- Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Varian of Clifton,
W. Va., will observe their Golden Wedding anniversary July 14th
but will celebrate it with open house from 1-6 p.m. at their home
on SUnday. They were married in Hartford, W. Va., by the late
Rev. 0. E. Elkins. Mr. Varian is a retired coal miner. The couple
has spent their entire life in Mason County. They have 11 children ·
with one deceased. They are, Charles, Hartford; Lora Anderson,
Clifton; Harry, Clifton; Rose Walton, Georgetown, Ill.; Joanna
Council, umgsville, Ohio; Franklin, Columbus; Laura Clark,
Kirkland, Ill.; Ida Council, Benton, Ky.; Eddie, Clifton ; Carol
June lee, Canal Winchester, and Pearl Jean, deceased .
They have 32 grandchildren and 11 gr eat.grand~hildre n .
They both attend the Church of God in Jesus Name m Ppmt
Pleasant, where Ira Wellman is pastor.

Zirkles Leave
For Florida

SON IS -BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Willis Durst,
Pomeroy, are an nouncing the
birth of their first child, a
seven poWld, six OWlce son,

Sgt. and Mrs . Raymond Shawn Allen, on July 4 at
Zirkle left Tuesday morning Pleasant Vall ey Hospi tal.
for Robins Warner Air Force Maternal gra ndparents are
Base in Florida after spending Mrs. May Mayle of Pomeroy
six days here with their and Albert Balch of Cleveland .
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Paternal grandparents are Mr.
Duckworth and Mrs. Norma and Mrs. Willard Durst, Sr., of
Zirkle.
Pomeroy . Paternal great. On Saturday Mr. and Mrs. grandmother is Mrs. Pauline
Duckworth entertained with a Newton of Hartford . ·
cookout honoring their
daughters, Mrs. Zirkle and
PTO TO MEET
Robin, on their birthday anHARRISONVILLE - A
niversaries. A decorated cake specia l mee ting of th e
was served . Others attending Harrisonville PTO has been
were Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur called for 7:30p.m. on ThursHolter of Akron, Mr. and Mrs. day at the school. Purpose of
William Fred Smith , Sr., the meeting is to make plans
Middleport, and Bobby Duck- for putting in a concrete slab on
worth. On Sunday Mrs. Norma the playground. Parents with
• Zirkle of Pomeroy joined the children in the Harrisonville
Duckworth family lor dinner. school are asked to attend the
meeting if at all possible.
CRmCALLY ILL
Jessie Sansbury, forme•:i of
Middleport, is critically ill in
Abington Memorial Hospital,
Abington, Pa.

Of all back-boned animals.
turtl es live th e longest. One
that was in c a p tivi t y is
know n to have lived 152
years.

'

WEDNESDAY
.REVIVAL, United Faith
Cburch, Pomeroy - Middleport
By-pass, Rev . Worley_ Haley,
~vangelist, Wednesday
through July 23. All singers
welcome, 7:30 each evening.
WHITE ROSE Lodge, 1:30
p.m. Wednesday, American
Legion Hall, Middleport.
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.
FEENEY- Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, 7:30 tonight,
at the Middleport hall.
TUPPERS PLAINS Com munity Club, Wednesday, 8
p.m. at home of Oniela' Cole.
MfDDLEPORT CHILD
Conservation League ·summer
outing for members and their
children at Camden Park,
Huntington. Members are to
meet there at noon.
THURSDAY
POMEROY · MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, annual picnic
Thursday a t th e Ri chard
Chambers' country home.
Steak dinner to be prepared by
Tom Cassell an( his committee. Serving at 6:30p.m. All
Lions invited.
PAST COUNCILORS,
Theodorus Council, Daughters
of America , picnic, 6:30p.m.
on Mason greens.
WORK IN Master Mason
degree when Shade River
Lodge 453 meets at 8 p.m.
Thursday at hall in Chester. All
Master Masons invited.

Young people from Otterbein
Student Camp are conducting a
Bible school at the Middleport
Heath United Methodist
Church each evening this
week.
· In charge of the junior high
group is Jay Gregory with
Cindy Kitzmiller and Shirley
Schwartz in charge of the
fourth, fifth and sixth grade
group ; Amy Fetherland,
grades one through three, and
David Stuckey, of pre-school
children . At the opening
session each evening there is
group singing with the boys of
the student camp providing the
guitar accompaniment.

SATURDAY
ANNUAL PICNIC Meigs
Cp unty Retired Teachers
Association Saturday at 3:30
p.m. at state park on route 33.
Ail newly retired teachers,
wives and husbands are invited. Each attending to bring
covered dish and table service .
SUNDAY
ANNUAL PARISH Picnic of
Sacred Heart Catholic Church,

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr . and Mrs . Richard
Hovatter , Middleport, are
announcing the birth of a
daughter, Heather Ann, six
pounds and Jo ounces, at the
Holzer Medical Center on June
28. Grandparents are Mrs.
Clifford Stumbo, Middleport ;
Clyde Hovatter, Columbus;
and Mrs. Mildred Folden ,
Cuyahoga Falls. Mrs. Sadie
Stun1bo, Sharles, Fla ., and
Mrs. Leora Ford, Clarksburg ,
W.
Va .
ar e
greatgrandmothers. Mr . and Mrs.
Hovatter have two other
children, Dreama, age 14, and
Ricky, IL

Pomeroy , Sunday at 12 noon at
Middleport Municipal Park.
Bring covered d1sh and table
service .
HOMECOMING Sunday, MI.
Moriah Church of God . Picnic
at noon, public invited.
MODERN
WOODMEN
Camp 6335, Middleport, family
picnic Sunday at slate park on
Route 33, on right going north.
Basket dinner at 12 :30 .
Members, families and guests
invited ; prizes for adults and
juniors, junior director Helen
Hart reporl.s. Take own table
service.

was a letter from the district coU]lle in a small town there. ~nter, and have. organized a
officials announcing the name
She said the couple went to health . center where women ·
change fqr the organization Africa .sponsored by a EUB learn to care {or their chlldren.
from Women's Society of Church in Canada and has been Mrs. Moore spoke of the role ol
Christian Service to United .ihere eight years. Their efforts the WSCs in establishing public
Methodist Women.
are aimed at trying to teach the health services in Africa.
Punch and cake were served
"Glorious Minority" was the natives ' good agricultural
by
Mrs. L. W. McComas, Mrs.
tiUe of an arlichi read by Mrs. practices to increase their food
C.
M. Hennesy, Mrs. Alma
Bechtle to open the meeting. supply.' They are ~ making
Mrs. Walter Hayes had efforts to begin secondary Miller , and Mrs. Mary
devotions, using ' prayer, education, have built a youth Rinehart.
scripture and a meditation,
"The ·Kingdom Is Coming."
She also conunented on things
{
for which all should be thankful
and concluded with a prayer
I
"World Culture, World signed a round-robin card for
for missionaries around the
BARBARA RICHARD
Community" was the theme of •Mrs. Doris Adams, a patient at
world.
Barbara
Richard,
the program at a meeting Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The program by Mrs. Nan
Mrs. Julie Norris presented daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Moore, entitled "Church for Monday night of the East
Letart Women's Society of the program .the purpose of Harrr Richard, Long BotOttM:rs/' pertained to Africa
which was to explore the loin, hao accepted emwhich she described as a Christian Service.
Mrs. Marlene Fisher meaning of culture to attempt ployment at the Kut and Kurl
country rich in resources but
presided
at the session opening an op_enness . of _mind to Beauty Shop, Union Ave.,
=nomically poor because of
and began her dulles
the European powers which with scripture from Matthew. • eQlergmg natJOnahsllc pa tTueoday. A graduate of
have drained the resources. Devotions were presented by terns in ll)odern society, and to
Southern High School, Miss
Mrs
Mabel
Shields
.
Members
find
common
threads
that
bmd
Mrs. Moore told of what the
·
mankind in the coming of a Richard graduated In July
Methodist Church is doing in
from the Valley Beauty
world culture.
Africa and gave a resume of
Academy
In Marietta. Mrs.
There
was
group
singing
of
the work of a missionary
'(roman
Ruosell
Is owner of
"How Great Thou Art," and
prayer by Mrs. Nora Pierson.
the Kut and Kurl Shop In
..,.,.,·.:·:o;.-).·:::.;···:·~~~;.······x·:··:;::.~·····
d
i'·
......... .... · · ..........., ·;~
Mrs. Ferne B. Hayman serve
Pomeroy.
::;:
"
refreshments to those named
~ A tour of the' Meigs County and Mrs. Mabel Shields, Mrs .
~:
~ courthouse and the county jail Hazel Fox, Mrs. Focie
!1
:~ was planned for Monday when Hayman , . Mrs. Margaret ·
~::
*:
the Naylor's Run Jets 4-H Club
Th er e are more Here;.;.
:::: met this week at the home of Gloeckner, Mrs. Doris Sayre,
ford
s, commercial and pure· . Mr. and Mrs. Tom Ly?ns. of Mrs . Earl Thoma, advisor.
Mrs. Lucy Donahue, Mrs. Sue
bred,
marketed every year ·
Pontiac, Mich. are vacat10mng
Members of the club also Ann Beegle, Mrs. Mary Roush,
in
th
e
United States than all
here with his parents, Mr. and planned a family picnic fo r and a gues t, Mrs. Goldie oth er beef
bre eds combined.
Mrs. John Lyons.
August and participated in a Shane.
Mrs. John Harper and son, soil demonstration using wood
••••••••••••••••••
Brett, of Vinton, Va. were the and field soil for a study of
re~ent gue~ts of Mr. and Mrs. absorbency. It was noted that
Michael Zirkle and children, projects will be judged on
Pamela Lynn .and Michelle. August g in preparation for the
Mrs. Harper 1s the former exhibit at the Meigs County
Kathy Lacey of Middleport. Fair
Her sister, Mrs. Ruth Ann
AI. a mee ting last week the
Kearns of Ashl~d, Ky., was club members worked on their
the guest of M1ss Lo1s Ann project books. Leaves which
Sauer·
they had galh~red on a field
Recent weekend guests of trip were identified and
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Haptonslall labeled. Mark Norton presided
and Robert Sharp were Mr. at the meetings and the flag
and Mrs. Wayne Sharp and salute was th~ opening. Soft
family, Mr. a~d Mrs . John drinks were served.
Sharp and farruly, Zanesville;
and Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Sharp
and family of Reynoldsburg.
Miss Francie Glaze of
FOUR CHRISTENED
Lancaster was the weekend
Four
children
were
guest of the Michael Zirkle christened Sunday morning at
family.
the Middleport First United
Mr. and Mrs . Wilbur Holter Presbyterian Church by the
have returned to Akron after Rev. Dwight Za vitz. Assistin g
visiting here with Mr. and Mrs. the Rev. Mr. Zavilz with the
Clifford Holter and Mr . and service was Mr. Paul HapMrs . Robert Duckworth.
tonstall, a church elder .
Mrs. Helen Martin and Mr. Crhiste'ned were Pamela Lynn
and Mrs. Frank Shunoaker and Zirkle, daughter of Mr . and
children of Pittsburgh, Pa. are
Mrs. Michael Zirkle; Cynthia
the guests this week of Mr. and Lynn and Walter Edward ,
Mrs. James Criswell . Mr . and children of Mr. and Mrs. EdMrs. Criswell visited over the
war d Crooks; and Bri an
weekend in Morgantown with
MASON, W. VA.
773-5554
Wi lliam Harper, son of Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Custer Mrs..Guy Harper.
and son.

JQr .
•3

soum

Culture .Theme Studiea

4-H Club Will

See Court House

:,.;

M'ddl rt
I ep0
Persona I Notes

lAUAN
MAHOGANY

4x8
SHEET

HOGG · &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.

.,

Beat high cost
Phebe Says: Can and freeze what you can now! of living!!!

, I

5•
Pass
Redble Pass
Pass
Dble Pass
Pass
Opening lead- • 6

Al Sobel was a tournament
director by professio n and
in his prime he was the
greatest. He was not a good
bridge player, but he loved
to play the game and on occasion he rose to peaks of
brilliancy.
Today's hand was se t up
for AI in a midnight game
a f t e r the conclusion of a
tournament. The other players at the table didn 't know
th at Al was looking at 12 top
spades, but almost everyone
else at th e post·10IIfnamen!
party was watch ing to see
.what would happen.
Tljey sa w AI at his best.
Be looked at his 12 spades
and passed without blinking
an eye. He passed twice
more and finally came to life
by doubling six hear ts. West
couldn't wait To redouble. If
he hadn 't, Eas t would have.
In late-night games aft er
tournaments. all slam contracts are redoubled.
North didn 't like the re.
doubl e, but knew better than
to take the sure loss at seven clubs. Anyway , AI just
might have the heart contract set some wa y or other.
When AI ran to six spades ,
Wes t hopped on it with a
roar. AI thought of redou bling, but decided tha t six
. doubled w o u I d be good
enough.
He rulled th e hPort i• arl
and led his four of trumps.
West followed with his three spot and , wh en East showed
out, you could have heard
th ~ r oar !rpm players ang
• kibitzers alike '" the next
county, if n91 the next state.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

''Z~Rn:HXtilM!IIJ
The bidding. has been ;
North
East
Wesl
I "'
Pass
Pass
3 ,.._
Pass
Pass
5 "Pass
Pass
5¥
Pass
You , So uth , hold :

EGGS
dOL

39~

FAMILY SCOTT
5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
"The Store With A Heart,
You, WE LIKE"
Right reserved to limit quantities
We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food Stamps

Prices Effective July 12·19
Monday Thru Friday

9:00 to 7:00

Saturday 9 to 9
CLOSED SUNDAYS

FAIRMONT

Chocolate Milk

-3· Qts. 99e
I

TOILET TISSUE
KRAFT

Laurel Cliff ·
News Notes

SLICED BACON" ..~~~.~~~......................'~:.. 65 e
HAM SALAD... ~~~:.~~?.~................

•1 59
.......'~·.. 89e
lb.

2 lb .

VIRGINIA U.S. NO•.1

cans
for

'·

BY BERTHA PARKER
Due to the Free Methodist
Conference and Campmeeting
at Mansfield, the attendance at
the Free Methdist Church July
9 was 80. Offering was $59.24.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Karr,
Sr. attended a homecoming at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Cl~rence Karr, Millersport
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Walker
spent two weeks with Mrs:
Walker's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Howell, Indiana.
Mr . and Mrs. Harnnon Fox
enjoyed a cookout Sunday at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Earl
ROush , Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Curtis,
daughter, Ka'thy, Iowa, spent&lt;
several daysl with Mr. Curtis'
parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Curtis and rellltlves.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence eurtls
re.turned to·Iowa to gpend the
summer with another son, Mr.
and Mrs. Otho -Curtis and
family.

JAMAICA SHORTS

.·.

CLEARANCE LADIES'

Super Value ! Fa m ous Bobbie
Brooks and Ai teen Sports .
wear . Don ' t mi ss th i s fan tastic
, bar gain fo un d on,ly at STI F·

UMMER FOOTWEAR

FLER 'S.

2

¢

1

~7

OFF
REG .
PRICE

VALUES TO 1899

MEN'S AND BOYS' SIZE

&amp;BOBBY LEN

Va lues to $10.99 in t his gr oup of
lad ies' spri ng an d summer foo t·
wear . famous brands. Good se lec.
tion of siz,es. Smar t styles. Out they
go! Stiff ler 's Shoe Dept.

Th e wa ter 's great and·
so' s th e beach. Men's
s izes S-M· L. Boys ' siz es
8 to 18. Assorted color s
an d sty les .

Hittle littl e dipper s. Take
plunge ... in a swi m sati on fr om
our " water 's fi ne" selection . Ole
and lw o piecer s from Bobbie
Brook s and Robby Len.

OFF
REG.
PRICE

OFF
REG.

I • I • 0 0

2

lb.

Ke g . S2.99 Valu e.
M en' s and Bo y s' $
High and Low Top
T e nni s
Sh oes .
Ameri can made i n
bla ck or wh i te. Shop

STI FF LER ' S..

1!.

Value s to S2 .99 and SJ 99
m en's. short sleeve summer

&gt;porls shirts.
Asst . pla in
patterns.

$}22

5-M· L-XL.
a nd

t a·nc y

Reg . $1.99 men's

sport hals. 5-M· L.
For g olf,

pl ay ,

SCORES OF FANCY PATTERNS
45" COTTON &amp; AVRIL BLENDED

-DRESS PRINTS
Fine quaUty 4f&gt;.inch cotton and avril
blended dress prints in a big choice
of patterns.

c

~

EXTER lOR -INTERIOR
;'

SPRAY
PAINT
so~

/

IN r,uNUTff

FOR ALL PAINTABLE SURFACES

SNEAKERS

a Mlllft C~ . , W, VI ,

0', ..

000 ~L~SS - ORIES

REG.· 5159 VALUE

Sorvtftt&lt; Oolllpotlo,

.

.
LATEX FLA1
1
WALL PAIN

SAJIE AT STIFFLER·'S'•

Mi.sses , ~, 12'12 to 4,
~ren's -$lfzes 8'12 to 12.
'A~erlcan made. Moulded
soles.
·

;;_~

. ..i ,, • .

Yard

Pomeroy, Middleport, o.

.

SPORT
SHIRTS

VALUES TO $100 YARD

Off

(

REG. 12'l AND 1399
MEN'S

wor k . Asst. styles
and colors.

·Dudley's 'florist

"'

$744
PAIR

SPORT
HATS

TENNIS SHOES

Reg . 79c Value . Fully
4~
Lined Plastic Drapes ,
: .
Great for any room in the
PR.
house. Pick some up today.

30%to50%

49~

PAIR

REG. 11.99
MEN'S

REG. 12.99 MENS-BOYS
High and Low

PLASTIC DRAPES

lv, Tod., a II"'

FRESH
PEACHES

.

VALUES TO '1 0 99

SWIM WEAR

SWIMSUITS

ArfificiaJ
' An1nsements

'

'633

Clea rance on ~s· summer
footwear . Va l ues to S8 .q9 .
Famous
br ands .
Wh i te ,
brow n, re d , bl a ck . Smart
styles . Out they go ! We need
th e room . St iffle r ' s Shoe Dept .

TRADE EXPANSION SAL£

BOBBIE BROOKS

-Beautiful .

~":

i.\

!»~\,:

SPORTSWEAR

Values to $2 .99 Ladies double knits
Jamaica Shorts. Sizes 8 to 18. Asst.
colors, smart styles. Stock up no.w.
Plenty of hot weather ahead.

.Misses &amp; Children's M01,1lded Sole ·

POT·A.TOES

WATER ..................:......................
qt.
iar

Shop Stifflers

FAMOUS BRAND
BOBBIE BROOKS
AILEEN

'

can

HAMBURGER DILL SLICES
OR WHOLE DILL PICKLES

VALUES TO 12.99
LADIES' SUMMER

FULLY LINED

¢ BACON ENDS &amp; PIECES ............ 5

(12 rolls)

on~

VALUES TO 117.99

$1 Q00

REG. 79• VALUE

lb.

4:99~

gal

t

hJ SC\'CII .

USDA Choice - U. S. Government Inspected

GRAPE JELLY................ .'.~: . .
FOLGER'S
. 3 lb. $
·COFFEE ........................................
DISTILLED

MISSES
HAlF SIZES

VALUES TO 112.99

du bs. Wh a t do you do now?

PEAS

DOG FOOD .........

~~ • JR. GROUP Ill

\~
"1..\~~

TO $9 .99

$700

&amp;'l

TODAV'S QUESTION
Your partner cont inues to six

'

J0-80 BRAND

SHIRTS.

ssoo
GROUP II

A- Bid fiv e spad es. You a re

LIBBY'S SWEET

4 paKS

GROUP 1 VALUES

SALE!

"''-

SLEEVE

Stiffler's 2nd Floor

·~

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

What do you do now ?

FREEZER&gt;
SUPPLIES
MEDIUM SIZE

2¥

Pass
Pass
Pass
Dble
6•
Pass

~HORT

Handsome sport shirts in a
·wide choice of new fashion
colors and patterns Sizes
!4'2 to 11 and S.M·L·XL.
Fabrics tha t never need
ironing .

Ladi-es' Dress
Clearance

South

.AJ543 .K9763 +void "'QIOl

ECAN
Complete Canning
Supplies Here

East

MAN!

SPORT &amp; DR ESS

SPRING AND SUMMER

• 10

still tr ying to get

rERM PRt :s:s

(DJ

"'Void
None vulnerable
Pass
Pass
4 N.T. Pass
6•
Pass

speelal

9:30 TO 9:00 FRI.·SAT. .

.AKQJ 10 987
ss4 2

North

~eiy

POMEROY, OHIO

•void

We!it

ttt-t

Reg . $1.99 va l ue close ou t
group of lad ies ' summe r
sandals. Med. hee ls and flat .
Ass t. .styles and co lors. St if
fle r 's 'Shoe Dept

NORm
12
• Void
• 432
• 97
"'KJ8 765 4 3
WEST
EAST
•void
.QI086
.AKJ97 5
+KJ52
tAQ86 43
"'AQJ09
•2

LATEX PAINT

.

!SOOO WHITE

Stands up to toughest wear outside - ~ves years of carefree
beauty Inside. Use brush, roller or spray."Dril!! in minutes. Tools
rinse out in lioapy water. White unly.

YOU.R CHOICE-••••

MAIN FLOOR

GAllONS

FOR
1,

�..•,

- ..

'.

..

-.

BARNEY

14-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., July 12,1972

.. .
.Sentinel

Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Cllfssifieds Get Results!'

. j• •

"

'• •' ',•
•

.

;

WANYAP~

''
••
••

INFORMATION
, DEADt.INES
) P .M Day Before Publication
Monday Deadllne 9 a .m .

""
'.

.''
'

i ' ..·

....

.1·

:f.!'
''

....

"'..

Can.cel latlon - Correc1ions

Z" SIGNS
OF

W i ll be accepted until 9 a .m . for
Day of Publ ic ation
REGULATIONS

IIUALITY

ThJl Publisher reserves the

~

objectional .

mo DODGE POLARA

The

for moi"e than one . incorrect
insertion .

RATES
,'

•
'

'
"
I'

5

12295

v.s

1970 FORD GALAX IE 500

perJ.Word one in sertion
Minimum Charge 75c ·•·

12 cents per word thr ee
· consecutive insertioris .
.
18 cents per 'wo rd si x con .'
seculive insertions. ,
25 Per Cent Discount on pa id
ads and ads paid within 10 days .·

6716.

Each addjtional word 1c .
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge , per
Adver tisement.

manager's license ;

: 8:30a .m.. to 5 : 00,p . m~ Daily ,
8: 30 a.m . to 12 · 00 Noon
Saturday .

?.7-6tc

Helen's
7·9-6tc

11995

i

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iii;;;,;;;,;;;;;.,.
HELP WANTED

BOOKKEEPER
Must Be Able
To Type

OPEN EYES. 1:00 P.t.l.
_,pt.IEROY, OHIO

I

.

·~

•'
•'

.~
'
,.'·.'

.."

.'
.._-;-.··.......
..
'

"

.'

....
'

•"
'"

'.

July 12th.

GRAND OPENING
THURSDAY THRU
SATURDAY

The Angeis are softly guarding
a quiet and silent grave,
For in it lies the one I loved, but
could not save;
I often sit and think of you, and
speak of how you died;
And of the way you looked at
me, as if to say goodbye .
Your weary hours and days of
pa in, Your troubled nights are

''OSSIE'S
RECREATION ROOM"
In Middleport .
- Family Entertainment-

past.

Register for door prizes
given away on Sat.
Wholesome Entertainment
From 10 a.m. to Midnight

And in my heart I know you
have sweet rest at last .
Doris &amp; family

7·12· ltp

Daily Except Sunday

----~-

Also featuring : Short Or.
ders, Counter Service &amp;
Table Service.
Ossie Martin · Charles Lewis
and Mrs. Artis
Loca ted at 20 North Second
Street , formerly M iddleport

Lost

LARGE black and white Collie.
Reward . Herald Osborne, 985·

3915.

7·1Htp

MAN'S billfold between Royal

Pool Room ,

Oak Park and Chester .
Reward if found intact. Call

985·4212 or 992-3793.
"

''' .'
.'

'.

...
•'

·'..
·~

••

.·

SHOOTING Match, Saturday,
7-J2.4tc July 15th at the Racine
Plan ing Mill at 6 p .m. Factory
choke guns only . Assorted
meat. Sponsored by the
Syracuse Fire Dept.

For Sale, Rent or Trade
12 x 63 MOBILE home ; 3 room
furnished apartment; 8 x 38

mobile home; 30 x 50
storeroom; trailer space. Sale
or trade, 4 rooms, bath, nice
level lot ; Sale, good milk cow ;
M 8. G Food Market, 3 mi.

1·12.3tp

------

GUN SHOOT. also rifle mat.
ches, open sites only, Forked

Run Sportsman Club, Sunday,
July 16, 12 noon .
7·12·3tc
south of Middleport on Rt . 7.
1·12-6lp - - - - - ON va cation, July 19th to July

28th . Burkett's Barber Shop.
Middleport .
712 3tc

For Sale or Tracie
10 FT. X 26 in . metal lathe; 24"

.·.

.. '

~

,..,''..
••

...••.
..
.."
••
'

"

'

••

•,.
.,.

..
l".

i'
'

..

I WILL NOT be responsible for

who passed away 2 years ago,

;

1, ' "

Notice

NOTICE

metal shaper; 5 ft . metal
planer ; power hack saw ;
metal bender with many dies ;
will trade above items for
almost anything of value, or
will sell for first reasonable
offer. Robert D. Rife, 711 S.

YARO Sale, Friday all da y,
Main 5treet. Rutland, Charles
Spires residence.

7122tc

CLIFF'S Shoe Repair, .M•d·

3rd Ave ., Middleport, Phone
992.7494.
l· IHtc

dleport. will be open from 9 to

5 p.m. Closed Mondays .

7·12·3tc

any debts co ntracted by
anyone other than myself.
Signe d, John T . Fischer,
Address , Racine, Rl. l.

- - - -- --

"FAMILY" LIFE NOT FOR HER
Dear Helen :
While in California I met a man who is kind, considerate ,
loving, wonderful and 12 years older than me. He lives in a sort of
commune with three other guys and two girls. Will is 32, the rest
of them in their early 20s.
He had led a very rough life: orphaned at three, adopted by a
mean aunt who hated him . He has spent a total of ten years in ·
prison for attempted rape and murder, also theft.
He paid his debt to society with five years in the Army , 30
months 'in Vietnam - and an honorable discharg e.
We fell in love, but one thing blocks our marriage . He wanted
me to live in the commune as a " member of the family," until he
could afford an apartment. I thought I could do it so a week
before our marriage I moved in as a test.
It w~s a nightmare, Helen. These pellp!e live very "free, "
take Sunshine (acid )- two of them are pUBhers; get drunk and
high , swear with every breath, and sleep together any which
way.
Starting the first night, Will spent aimost no time with me he was always "with the group." They wouldn't accept me and I
couldn'taccept them, so !left and moved back to my home state.
Will was furioUB at first and accUBed me of hating his friends,
' -being a snob, elc.
But now he's started writing and begging me to come back.

ACT NOW
oldest
Toy
OLD FASHIONED Tradi ng Oay
every Sunday on th e Bill
Clonch fa rm , approxima lely 'l
miles up Hysel! Run off Rou te
124. Horses, gun s, dogs or
what have you . Come one and

all .

/.H fp
------WHY not try cosmetics that are
truly
di'fferent
and
refreshing? The famous mink
oil base and now we have the
lemon grove. Just think , 14
specials this month, some for
men as well as women. It's

KOSCOT of course. Phone
992.5ll3.
7 9 tfc

DANCE
WHISPERING PINES
NilE CLUB
SATURDAY .
10 'TIL 2

group." I'm afraid he never will. They're the only "family" he's
got. I guess I'm just a midwest "square."
I still love him deeply Should I give it a second try' BEWILDERED
Dear B.:
A midwest "square" and an ex-con swinger-doper have as
little in common as Jane Fonda and John Wayne 1no comparisons intended ).
Consider this : your wonderful guy went to prison (at 17' 1for
crimes of violence; spent over half of his Army years in violent
combat duty; now lives with drug-pushers where violence is just
beneath the surface -and he likes his life! Which MIGHT leave
him permanently "kind, considerate, and loving," but somehow
I doubt it .
Youmadetherightchoice.Don'l weaken! - H.

6th Ave ., Middleport , 0 .

within the next 30 days and
pick them up'&gt; After the
allotted time, machines Will
be disposed of .

7·11 ·3tp
The Church of God , Chester ,
Ohio, 7: 30 p.m. each evening
thru July 16th . Evange li st

Rev. Mark Mun cie of Mt.
Moriah Chur ch of God.
Special singing each evening .
Everybody welcome.

/.JJ .41c

"HEll"

'•

Vacuum

Mobile Homes For Sai~

Phone 992·5641.
/.7-6tc

-- - - 17'1&gt;' CONTINENTAL Travel

50 X 10, 2 bedroom, priced

Trailer , 1971 model. self ·
contained ; awning, mirrors
and hitch ; phone 992·5982.

).9.6tp

- - - - --

7· nttc

for some thing dif erent? Sell
Toys. Playhouse Company is

reasonably,

now hiring for lall. Sell

Starcraft Sales, Rt . 62, N. of

August to December, no
Pt. P,leasant behind Red
deliveries and no collections .
Carpet Inn .
Call Mr s. Barbara Lambert
446-341 1 or Mrs. Margaret
Fortune 949-5414. Earn S &amp; H 1 LARGE size refrigerator .
Green Stamps.
combination ;
4
7·12·1 2tc freezer
wooden windows valances,
36" wide; 1 large si ze
COOK and waitress, apply in
aluminum storm door ; 26"
person, Craw's Steak House.
girl's bike for parts only ;
1·1Htc phone 992·3173 .

~--,--,---:-­

-==========-__,•
r
7-12-ltc

·,Air Conditioners
•Awnings
• Underpinning
Complete mobile home
service plus gigantic
'display of mobile homes
always available at .. .

GERMAN Shepherd puppies;

can be AK .C. registered;
males . $35 ; females, S2S ; also

ladies as parttime Personal
Shoppers . Average $3 per
hour . Flexible hours . Write
·Personal Shopper Depart ·
ment , Box 10 , Watk ins
Products , Inc. , Wi nona ,
Minnesota 55987 .

7-l,0-3tc
__________.:.

WANTED
New Owner For
lovely 3 B. R .•
Home in Middleport

8·15·tfC

FABRIC

INN ,

Polye ster

Doub leknits for less. Hun ·
dreds of Yards . From Tup·
pers Plains, pass school, go 4
miles, turn left onto County
Rd.
50,
sign . · Between
Hockingport and Reedsville ,
turn onlo County Rd. 50 nea r
Eden Church , sign. Phone 378·

6276.

Fully carpeted, built-in oven
and range . All in excellent
condition. Call 9f2-7440 or

stop by at 391 S. Second Ave.
afler S p.m. Mav consider
Rental with Option lo Buy .

).9.6tp

48 ACRE farm,

July Price Buster!

phone 992·6009.

985·3529 .
6·ll ·ffc
FARM - )06·acre ranch type

~

POMEROY
Jack W. Carsey , Mg . ..
Phone 992 ·2181

L~----------_J

4-12-tfc

1·12-6tp

------

Real Estate For Sale

Customers at
hio. No experience

ment . everything new, on
Main highway in Mason , W.

Va . Reynolds Flower Shop up
near drive· in thea ter , phone

773·5147.

1·1Htp

._...c::-::-:c--,----

2 BEDROOM trailer, adults
on ly ; phone 992·5247 .

7·9·20tp

Want~d
WILL DO daytime babysitting

Employment

7.lJ .11tp

3 AND 4 ROoM furnished and
unfurnished

apartments.

Phone 992·5434 .

4-12-tfc ·

7.9.6tc

- - - -W IL L paint ro ofs or houses,
trim and cut trees; clean
a tti cs;
basements : efc.

6·14-JOic

3962.

6·1f.tf c

ONE L d~oom tra iler apart.
ments , ideal for couples .

llO Mechanic

COUNTRY HOME
NEAR POMEROY - One floor. 3 bedrooms. bath, fu r·
NEW
3 bedroom~ . 2 baths. nic:;e kitchen wit h stove and
refrigeralor .freezer . Full .basement with garage. Al l

electric. Less than 525.000.00.
LOT
SYRACUSE - Lev el corner lot with small frame
COMMERCIAL
CHE SHIRE - Business lot with block building on Rf. 7.
BUILDING LOTS
WE have severa l locations. All sizes and prices .

COUNTRY HOME
ON ROUTE 7 - 2 bedrooms, bath, Plains water . Nice
kitchen with stove. Some paneling . 4 acres of land . Only

$9,500.00.
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE

992-3325

GET

An'EITION
We talk to you
like a. ~rscin.

NEW - Total electric apart.
ment, 2 bedroom, walk-In
closets. Large living room.

Chalmers; phone 742 -3656.

bers,
Geraldine

___ __

n .6fp

__:_

4 BEDROOM

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph .
Po;.,eroy

School ; both have bath and a
half ; 4 bedrooms ; bu ilt·in
kitchens and wall ·to .wal l

carpet ; cal l 9853598.
RACINE -

Sept ic tanks installed . George

(Bil lI Pullins. Phone 9'1n478, .
.
4·25·tfC

HARRISO N'S f~ &gt;ervice. open

9 a.m . to 9 p.m .; free pickup
and delivery ; phone 992 ·2522 .
6· 1J.l.f r

·~e~uS"'F'OR: Awnings. sform
doors and windows, cArporfs.
marquees , aluminum si ding

DEMCO Sa tel lit~ CB radio with
0 104 microphone , $200;
phone 992-3364.
_________
1·_
11 -6tp

GOBBLf:!

WINKLE
THERE MU.ST BE:

lOIN DO! .

SEW IN G ~ACHIN.E servJci;

clean, oil, se t tension S~ . 99 .
Specia l El ectro · Grande

Company . Phone 9926517.
5·21 -tfc
DOZER and back liCie wo/1&lt;'. .
ponds and se ptic tank s; B &amp; K
Excavat ing, Phone 992·5367 ,
Di ck Karr , Jr .

5.21 -tf c

608 E. Main St.

Close in, 30 acres , good
drainage. Chester waler,

2966 .

IOE AL for

WHAT A KITCHEN!

town . $28,500.00.
1!.000.00 DOWN
VIEW OF THE RIVER. 3
bedrooms. bath, por ches ,
part basement, metal roof ,
storage build i ng , garage .

56 .900.00 .
BATTLE OF THE
BULGE?

GENERAL TIRE SALES
Middl~port, 0.

GASOIJNE ALLEY

6·15-tfc

This i&gt;
a verw
friend I~

service, all makes . 992·228-4.

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
1

Author ized Singer Sa les and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors . '

- -- - -READY -MIX

"'"'' ~ qentle

as hand 5oap, t-1r Wallet.1
He\; a trick bear!

We was with a 5how .
but there was a

~~i._ mi5under,;tandin'!

bear,

3-2'1· tfc

.Mrs.

Cream!

CONCRETE

delivered right to y.our
projec1 . Fast and easy. Free
estimates . Phone 992 ·328.e .

WCX!LD 'j()u L~ Me IF I
VJ~ Uio!..'-/1 1tXJR 1Af.lt&gt; A

Goeg lel n Ready ·Mix Co .
Middleport, Ohio.
6·30·!1•

CI&lt;ASHIN0~-;-

USED building supplies &amp;
salvage yard; will wreck
houses , bu ild in gs, etc . Covert
&amp; Marlin Wreckage
&amp;

If you are fighting to provide
enough room l or a growing
family ... Here's a place
ideally suited . 4 bedrooms.
lh baths, call for par·
ticular s. $12,800.00 .

Salvage Co .. Laurel Cliff
across

John C. Bacon
Probate Judgt»
of sa id County

f rom

Highland

Chur ch; phone 992·5946.
/.9. J2tc

------

01DELL WHEEL alignment
loca ted at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service .

Wheels
balanced
Ironi cally.
All

~

elec ·
work

guaranteed .
RP&lt;"c:.nn"hl~&gt;
rates. Phone 7~2 · 3232 or
'Xl'l·3213 .
f ·U · TTC

Owner &amp;. Operator .

ACROSS
1. Pine for
5. Strike·

2. 200 milli·

tannia"

3. Certa in
forms of

14. Clin g
r,-;:;:;;-:;:;~;-:~;-;~~:;, 15. Droop
16. Prior to
(prefix)
17. Girl's

·crltt Bradford
5·1·1fc

,..----,----__:_

SEPTIC tan ks clean·ed . Miller
662·3035.

(2 wds.)
4. Eel (Old
Eng. )
5. Partici·

pated
6. Plebe
7. Belgian

18. Small
2·12-Ho

st urgeon

20. Performed
21. Highway
22. Piece of
gossip
23. Erroll
Garner

------~.:.
6·2:.:8 · tfc

LEGAL NOTICE

grams

protest

name

Sanita tion, Stewart. Oh io. Ph

Houses .

'

DOWN

composer

DICK TRACY

Racine. Ohio

Yesterday's Answer
12. Blunt
16. Gamble
19. News·

29. Excite
30. Miss
Moore·
head

section ,
informally

commun e

prison

!are
(3 wds.)
9. Slavishly
submi s-

22. Prong ·
23. " Butterfly"
24. Quaran·

31. Hire
36. Consume
37. Summer
(Fr. )

tine

25. Worsted's

sive

25. Damask,
e.g.
26. Regarding
(2 wds.)
27. Outer

27. Farm
machine

paper

B. Old-tinie

tune

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice Is hereby given that
public hear ings will be con.
tlnued on the proposed budget
for the Meigs Local School
District tor the fls cat .vear 1973
at an adlourned re~u lar session
of the Board ol Education on
Jui,Y 17 ,1912. at 8:00P .M . In the
off 1ce ot th e Superintendent In
the Junior High Building in
Middleport. Ohio.
The proposed budget and
estima te of the cost of operation
for ttle Meigs Local School
District tor 1973 inc lud ing the
cost ·at operating the public
schools ot sa id dislrict for the
fiscal year of 1971 will be
available at that lime.
Meigs Local School District
Board of Education
L . w . M cComas , Clerk
(71 12, It
.

SIDE GLANCES

13. "Rule Bri-

Complete Serv ice

Phone 949·3821

41. Gae lic
I. Gather

tion

'c ALL Guy Ne1gler for Building
LEGAL NOTICE
The Board of Comm iSsioners ,
Me.igs County of Ohio , wil l
receive bids until 9 : 00 o'clock
A .M . the 15th day of Jul v, 1972,
for the purchase of a New Motor
..1
Grader .
With minimum specifications
as follows : ?43 Cu. ln . Diesel
Engine , 135 H.P., Scarif ier,
Power Steering. 13 x 24 Tires
Front &amp; Rear , 10 ply ; Cab,
Lights, Heater, Defroster. Foot
Accelerator . Deceler&amp;tor ,
Flasher Ligh ts, 12 foot Pow er
Shift Moldboard.
Offered as Trade . ln - 440
Adams Motor Grader ,
Bidder to submit detailed
specifications of equipment
ortered .
The Board of Commissioners
reserve the ri(lht to reiect any
or all bids.
By order of the Board of
Commissioners, Meig s Countv ,

salt

breakers

·

' (C 1972 KinR" Featurea Syndica te, Inc .)

40. Chemica l

"10. Mangle
II. Detesla·

s. t2tf c
_D
- .c-.A
- u-c-ti-o-neer
-C-._B_R_Ac_D_F_O_R

l6 l 28 Ill 5. 12, 31

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: SOMETIMES ONE PAYS MOST
FOR THE THINGS ONE GETS FOR NOTHI NG.-A LBERT
EINSTEIN

by THOMAS JOSEPH

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rate&gt;. Ph. 4464782, Gallipolis, John Russell.

bane

coating

TERRY
CHANTRY AHD THe

:;EEM NOT TO f1E
Tlf~AT 10 M'f

28.June
beetle
29. Picking
up of an
option

32. Fatima's
hu sband
. 33. Cereal

"Of ·cOURSE it's art! If It w&amp;rtn't, we could
underttand It!"
·
I'LL 13ET I COUlD CLIMB
"THAT TREE IF SOMEONE

Big Capacity
May fig

Automatics
2 spee.d operation .
Cholr,.e' of water
temps .
Auto.
wate r
level
conlr'ol.
Lint
F111er or Power
Fl'n Agitator .
Perma-Press

Moytag

Halo of Heat
Dryers
Surround clothes
Wllh gentle, even
heat. No hot spots,
no overdrylng .
FIQe Meoh .Lint

GAVE ME A 1300ST...

command
'

''

'

'

(2 wds.)
39. Trevino's
aids

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter 'simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's. etc. Single letters
~po s trophes, the length and fo rmation of the words ore ali
tnts. Each day the code letters are different.

Filter .

We Speclallztln
MAYTAG

RUTLAND FURNITURE R~!::.~~=·t
I

992-7161

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

r ,.. ,,,,••, •• .,,, ....

SEWING MAlHINES. Repa ir :

If your Mrs. likes to cook ,

then her Mr. ought to see thi s
new modernized kitchen . 3
large bedrooms , walk · in
closets , 1'/:z baths. utility
room , full ba sement. greaf
rec. room , I acre ground , in

,_

AU 1Vj'JIUt:'lLt: 1nsurance been
cancel l ed?
Los t
your ·
operator ' s license? Call 992 ·

homesites . S26.800 .00 .

12, 19, it

COMJNG OUT OF
THE TAP!

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

4·5-ttp

CULAND
.REALTY

good roads.

HEY" TESSIE !
ll'ERE'" NO WATeR

sooemws

3-2·tf•

Plus Casslng

N: 2nd Ave.

SNARF'F'. ..

r epresen tative . For lree1
.. estimates , phone Charles
Lisle , Syracuse , V . V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.

10 room house.

lots. Phone 949 -4313.

!-1liiJC!/...

'. .. .'"

and railing . ·A. Jacob, sales

6·2B·l2t c

bath , basement , garage, two

THE'/ ·c"uCKL £! - TH INK THE'/'S GONNA
HAllE A PICNI C. TH F'/ DON'T KNOW
TH E'Y IS TH' PICN IC.'! r ----:.-_..-

BACKHOE AND DOZER work.

phone 992·2360.
TWO hom es for sale; 1 mite
North of Eastern High

1$1

992-2174

home. full

basement, gas furnace, 200ft.
river frontage. Also S room
house with bath, basement,
gaS furnace on adjoining lot.
Sam Arnold, Syracuse, Ohio ;

GOFU5T TO
SHORE IT'S NICE AN '
~HALL;_O::::W:_;--~

Radialor Specialisl

LOTS in Me igs School Districf ;

phone 99H329.

IJ'L ABNER

Nathan Biggs

Withem. 239·0647, GRAND·
STAFF. INC. , REALTOR,
4)f .2J12.
7·9-tfc

2 FOR '1990

Cleland, Racine. Ohio.
J.Mfc

BILLY HAG A FAGf
BALL, SWW BALL,
CURVE AND
PERFECT CONll&lt;OL.

From the largest
Bulldozer RadiqJor to . the
Sma llest Heater Core .

TlRE
MOST ANY
SIZE

LEAGUE

3·31 -tfc

SPECIAL

_.:_-=-_ _..:_ _ _1_·9-6tp
green peppers;

ON YOUK UIIIL

949.4195.

Martha Chambers, Clerk

60 ALL CROP harvester, All is-

All.JLUIC

EDSELJ

•

ki tchen and dining area,
phone 992·1384 or 992-7133.
7-10.6fc

TOMA f1fE'S~cucu m

WMP0/1390

~hone

(7)

For Sale

POLICE

uti lity· room, garage, SlO,OOO ; .

Ohio.

COUNTRY home , close to

HE'S ALREADY
LOOKEI&gt; UPON AS
ANOTHER

RACINE = 6 room hou!e. bath, ·

nace . Nice buitt .in k itchen with cook units, and bar .
Recreat ion room and carport. $17,500.00.

------

------

I DON'T CARE WHAT VOU SAY,
SQME r&gt;AY MV$1&lt;/E WILL BE LOOKt:D
UPON AS ANOTHER liNCOLN

Real Estate For Sol e

1972 .

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

PAST URE. phone 992.6329.
7;11 ;6tp·

J./ .tfc

J

ON 1HE 011-lER HAND, oc::::::j
JOHNNY IG 1HE GRAND$0N
OF 1HE CHIEF !

A PITCHER FOR MY
PAL LlliLE LEAGUE 'TEAM IG
f&lt;!JUGH 1 FR~K.

: 5232 .

'o' E. Main, .PC&gt;tMroy,. Q.: .

LEGAL NOTICE

Contact McClure's
992·5248
or 992·3436.Dai ry lsle . • liiiiliiiiililliiiiiiiiiilililililililililililililililililililililililililililililililil~
I·Htc

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

Open8lu&gt;

farm . 2 barns. plenty .of
LET US SELL YOUR
water , 32 acres ti llable, 20
3 BEDROOM HOME
acres timber , 54 ·feh ce d,
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
rolling acres . Beautiful 4·
REALTOR
bedroom ranch home, all
PHONE m -2259
carpeted and paneled, large
bath and utility room , at ·
tached garage , basement
with forced a i r furnace .
NOTICE OF
Fenced paddock for showing
APPOINTMENT
horses . Sold with all mineral
case No . 20716
r ights . Located 1 m i le out of Estate of Will iam Marion Jones
Rutland on Happy Hollow Deceased .
Rd.. 128,500. Phone 992·3020.
Notice is hereby given that
7·11 -5tc John P. Pickens of Portl and,
Oh io, has been duly appoin ted
Admin istra tor of the Estate of
Will iam
Mar ion
Jon es,
deceased , la te ot Meigs County,
Ohio .
Creditors are requ ir ed to file
ttleir claims with said fidu cia r y
Street
within four months .
Dated this 2Jrd day of June

building . S2500.00 .

1n my home for 1 or 2 children .
Rates reasonable. Can give ---:::---::::=:--:UN FUR Nt SHE 0--· apartment,
r e feren ces. Phone 992· 3960
134 Mulberry Ave., phone 9'l2·
after 5 p.m .

lrucks and low-boy lor hire.

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker

4 ROOM lurni shed new apart·

Wet Pet Shop,

7·12·6t c

HOUSE in Long Bottom , phone

All kinds. all sizes for men .
women, young men . boys
and girls . Hurrv to .

------

6-29.30tp

~

room house ,
Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Hysel l Run ;

PANTS ·&amp; JEANS
SALE!

.

See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992.1525 .
· after 1 p.m. or phone , 992 -

Monday thru Saturday

1·1Htp

Salt Works , E. Main St.,
Pomeroy, Phone 992 -3891 .

9923 134 after 4 p.m.

~

mt I, WU., lO&lt;., l.M. .... IU. tor. Olf•

FINDI~

haul fill dirt, top,soil. Dump

Ho.me· ·&amp; Aull!

BUILDERS
OPPORTUNITY

GET I PAIR FREE

SMA LL 3 room furnished
apartment with bath . Idea l
for one or two working men.
Completely private . Util ities
turnisl1ed . Phone 992·3881 or

. l.

(tl

Pomeroy, Ohio

Buy 2 Pair s and

• For Rent

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

1220 Washington Blvd.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0 .

1960 Mercury Comet, 1100;

MIDDLEPORT

Help Wanted Female
EXTRA INCOME We need

On Most American_'lU..·

see Bob Young on Success
Road near big water tower ;
phone Reedsville 667.3512.

5443.

Dozer &amp; End loader work·, ,
ponds, basement, la~d ·
scaping. We have 2 s1ze
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work ·
done bY . hour or' contract ..-~
Free · Estimates. We also

ss.ss

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

7·12·3tc

Parkview Kennels, Phone 992·

Phone Faye Manley
992 -5592
In
Pomeroy
Phone 992-2156

Wheet Aligmflerit'

Pomeroy

JOWEEIV

EARTH MOVING

reasonable, phone 992-3863 or

992.5844 after 3 p.m.

7·11 -3tp COAL, Lime stone , Ex celsior

REDUCE saf e and fast with
Go8ese Tablet s &amp; E -Vap
"wa ter pi l ls," Nelson Drug.

Chester

~ASii pa id for all mal&lt;.es anD
models of mobile homes .

POODLE poppies. Silver Toy ,

IN

Thunderbird, S875 ; 1970 Ford
Ranger Truck , $2,250; all in
good condition ; cal l 742·3437.

992-2448
Pomeroy, 0 .

phone

985-3379 .

Phooe area code 614-423-9531.
4·13-Hc

huge discount. We service
what we sell. Camp Conley

EX!ERT

88 ACREs. low sio•s:-farmhouse
and other buildings, Over 200
ft. frontage. Must see to
appreciate.
Rosemary

Cleaner complete with attachments, cordwlnder and
paint spray. Used but in like
new condition . Pay $34.45
cas·h or budget plan available .

------

I·Hfc
~1.,.
?6:-:5:-;0:-:L-:0:-:S:-c,-cB:-B.-.,.
1 "'58"'0-:- 196 7

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Phone 949·322 1.

protection . 32 N. 2nd . 992·
3918.
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR. CO.

, n .6tc

arrived - 1973 Starcratt
MOTHERS - Are r,ou looking JUST
Campers - All 1972 units at

sedan, low mileage, exce llent
condition ; phone 992-7024.

Window .
Air Conditioners

machme m ongmal factory
c a r Ion . Zi g . zag to m a ke
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
monograms, and make fancy
designs with just the twist of a
single.dial. Left in lay-away
and never been used. Will sell
for only $47 cash, or credit
terms avai lable . Phone 992-

write "SANTA's PARTIES" 1963 FORD Fairlane 500, v.e, 4
dr ., 1300; DeWalt Rad ial
Avon, Conn. 06001. Tel ephone
contractors saw 12", phone
1 (2031 673-3455 . ALSO
1968 ELCONA. 12 x 55, 2
992.7374.
BOOKING PARTIES.
1·12.6tc' bedroom , complete with
1·2-30ic
underpinning, pri ced very

1971 TOYOTA Corolla, 2 dr.

+++
Dear Helen :
A grade school teacher recently sent this to our local newspaper . It was written by one of her 10.year-&lt;&gt;ld students and gives
a revealing child's eye-view of ihe world:
MY DEFINffiONS FOR ... By Tim Harris
Overpopulation: Too many grown-ups.
Air pollution : Stuff that cmnes out of factories the grown-ups
built.
Water pollution : Other junk thai comes out of factories the
grown-ups built. '
Noi'!" pollution: Rock and roll bands.
Hacial problems : People feeling sorry ior themselves.
Religious problems: Prople disagreeing about what they
believe.
Ecology: People caring about the earth.
l.Dve: People caring about each other.
War : People trying tb own the world .
Vandalism: People defacing signs.
Utlering: People throwing garbage in other people's yards.
Cars: Machines that pollute the air.
·
Tares: The goverrunent's pocket money.
Inflation: Stores charging too much for food.
Tycoon : Arichman who wants to buy the world.
Happiness : Anything you want il to be. - READER

Party Plan in the Country
- our 25th year! Com ·
missions up to 30 pet. Fan ·
tastic Hostess Awards . Call or

Auto Sa!es

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

alten

&amp;

the
Gift

SENTINEL
CARRIERS WANTED

HAVE now in my possession
office machines wQich were
placed in lhe Arthur Ebers .
bach repair shop . Will t he
persons cl aiming same,
please come to the Arthur
Ebersbach res idence at 342 S.

"Have patience," he says, "until we can afford to leave tht!!

Join

RETAIL Sales Clerk, write Box
729· D, c-o Sentinel, Pomeroy,
Oh io, giving experience and
referen ces.
J . l2 ·6tC

Music by :
George Stewart &amp; The
Mavericks
5 Piece Band

Hot Water Healers
Plumbing
Electrical Work

~~---,:-.---­

ELECTROLUX

Group life and hospital insurance provided. Reply to
Box 729· P C·O The Daily
Sentinel, Pomeroy giving
qualifications and wages
expected .

). J0.3tp

A REVIVAL is in progress at

Belen Help Us

We specialize in aJumlnum,
vinyl and steel siding;
fiberglas, brick and Ston·e;
complete line of residential
and commercial ·roofing ;
remodeling,
bu i lding ,
suspended ceilings, interior
and exterior painting ;
complete line of Masonry
work. All work guaranteed to
customer satisfaction. We
are fully insured for your

992-7085 .

5641.

5 DAYS AWEEK

~·

3 Bedroqm home. with
brick (ron!. 1 car
garage,
carpeting .
Priced at ..
ONLY $13,750

Beauty Shop ; phone 992.2890. NEW .1972 z,g_. zag sewing

Pomeroy Motor Co.

OFFICE HOIJ'R$ r.

~

992·1085

have

BEAUTICIAN , mu st

._:B
__:__:u. _s_in
_·__:_ess~
S-er_v_ice
-s- ! ·
71

system. Balar!te $78.69. Use

/ .JJ.Jtc

dleport, phone 992·5844 or 992-

L-TD Coupe, 390 v.a engine, J.speed, automatic, power
steer ing , power brakes, factory ai r . .grey finish. Good
whife·wa ll tire s, ra di o.

&amp; OBITUARY
50 word minimum .

IN MEMORY of Oliver E. Sayre

I

ME' IWTH'FAMBL'IIS
GOIN' OVER TO TWIN
FORKS FER TH' DAV,
GRANNY. AN' 1 WUZ
WONDERIN' IF. ~E'D
KEEP R . EYE ON
TH'HOUSE
FER ME

.our time payment plan . Call

stereo, 4 speaker sound
system, 4 speed aulomatic
changer. Use our budget
lerrn..s. Balance $69.15 . Use
our lime payment plan . Call

BABYSITTER in my home, 1
child, 5 days a week, M id-

11995

1969 FORD

tor

In Memory

sty le, AM.FM radio corn .
bination , ~ speed automatic
changer, 4 speaker sound

~-----­
BEAUTIFUL Walnut finish

Help Wanted

Hard top coupe , v.a eng ine, automatic transmission,
power steering &amp; brakes, white fini sh, black vinyl top.
vinyl interior, white wall tires, lik e new , radio.

CAR.O OF THANKS

''..

Write M. D. Miller. Rt . 4,
Pomeroy . Ohio. Call 99H271.
6·2B.tfc

,

cents

• Sl.SO

OLD Furniture. oak tables,
organs, dishes, clocks, brc;~ss
beds , or complete households.

Factory a ir condi t ioning,
engine , automatic tran s.
m ission, power steering, power brakes, good white side
walls, many more extras . White finish , black viny l roof .
Priced to move!

pub liShllf will not be responsibl e

&lt;For Wan'l Ad Service

Po111eroy
Motor Co•

J.J.6fc

right to e.d it or -reject any ads

deemed

Wameli To Buy

' ' l.f ~.; ; .
ST£REO, Ea~ly American

(~~~~ ~F/IJE ..)
~
v

I'D BE PLUMB
'TICKLED TO,

741-4211

Arnold Grate

•

CRYPTOQUOTES .
JHK

JQ

DSK

YDLXTZEYDK

JQ

DSK

RLYDXDZOK
EKYND

KGJDXJHN .
~utland

XD

XN

1

XN

KNFK TXYEEM

OKKF .- QKEXB

\.

ASKH

QLYHCQZLDKL

�..•,

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-.

BARNEY

14-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., July 12,1972

.. .
.Sentinel

Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Cllfssifieds Get Results!'

. j• •

"

'• •' ',•
•

.

;

WANYAP~

''
••
••

INFORMATION
, DEADt.INES
) P .M Day Before Publication
Monday Deadllne 9 a .m .

""
'.

.''
'

i ' ..·

....

.1·

:f.!'
''

....

"'..

Can.cel latlon - Correc1ions

Z" SIGNS
OF

W i ll be accepted until 9 a .m . for
Day of Publ ic ation
REGULATIONS

IIUALITY

ThJl Publisher reserves the

~

objectional .

mo DODGE POLARA

The

for moi"e than one . incorrect
insertion .

RATES
,'

•
'

'
"
I'

5

12295

v.s

1970 FORD GALAX IE 500

perJ.Word one in sertion
Minimum Charge 75c ·•·

12 cents per word thr ee
· consecutive insertioris .
.
18 cents per 'wo rd si x con .'
seculive insertions. ,
25 Per Cent Discount on pa id
ads and ads paid within 10 days .·

6716.

Each addjtional word 1c .
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge , per
Adver tisement.

manager's license ;

: 8:30a .m.. to 5 : 00,p . m~ Daily ,
8: 30 a.m . to 12 · 00 Noon
Saturday .

?.7-6tc

Helen's
7·9-6tc

11995

i

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iii;;;,;;;,;;;;;.,.
HELP WANTED

BOOKKEEPER
Must Be Able
To Type

OPEN EYES. 1:00 P.t.l.
_,pt.IEROY, OHIO

I

.

·~

•'
•'

.~
'
,.'·.'

.."

.'
.._-;-.··.......
..
'

"

.'

....
'

•"
'"

'.

July 12th.

GRAND OPENING
THURSDAY THRU
SATURDAY

The Angeis are softly guarding
a quiet and silent grave,
For in it lies the one I loved, but
could not save;
I often sit and think of you, and
speak of how you died;
And of the way you looked at
me, as if to say goodbye .
Your weary hours and days of
pa in, Your troubled nights are

''OSSIE'S
RECREATION ROOM"
In Middleport .
- Family Entertainment-

past.

Register for door prizes
given away on Sat.
Wholesome Entertainment
From 10 a.m. to Midnight

And in my heart I know you
have sweet rest at last .
Doris &amp; family

7·12· ltp

Daily Except Sunday

----~-

Also featuring : Short Or.
ders, Counter Service &amp;
Table Service.
Ossie Martin · Charles Lewis
and Mrs. Artis
Loca ted at 20 North Second
Street , formerly M iddleport

Lost

LARGE black and white Collie.
Reward . Herald Osborne, 985·

3915.

7·1Htp

MAN'S billfold between Royal

Pool Room ,

Oak Park and Chester .
Reward if found intact. Call

985·4212 or 992-3793.
"

''' .'
.'

'.

...
•'

·'..
·~

••

.·

SHOOTING Match, Saturday,
7-J2.4tc July 15th at the Racine
Plan ing Mill at 6 p .m. Factory
choke guns only . Assorted
meat. Sponsored by the
Syracuse Fire Dept.

For Sale, Rent or Trade
12 x 63 MOBILE home ; 3 room
furnished apartment; 8 x 38

mobile home; 30 x 50
storeroom; trailer space. Sale
or trade, 4 rooms, bath, nice
level lot ; Sale, good milk cow ;
M 8. G Food Market, 3 mi.

1·12.3tp

------

GUN SHOOT. also rifle mat.
ches, open sites only, Forked

Run Sportsman Club, Sunday,
July 16, 12 noon .
7·12·3tc
south of Middleport on Rt . 7.
1·12-6lp - - - - - ON va cation, July 19th to July

28th . Burkett's Barber Shop.
Middleport .
712 3tc

For Sale or Tracie
10 FT. X 26 in . metal lathe; 24"

.·.

.. '

~

,..,''..
••

...••.
..
.."
••
'

"

'

••

•,.
.,.

..
l".

i'
'

..

I WILL NOT be responsible for

who passed away 2 years ago,

;

1, ' "

Notice

NOTICE

metal shaper; 5 ft . metal
planer ; power hack saw ;
metal bender with many dies ;
will trade above items for
almost anything of value, or
will sell for first reasonable
offer. Robert D. Rife, 711 S.

YARO Sale, Friday all da y,
Main 5treet. Rutland, Charles
Spires residence.

7122tc

CLIFF'S Shoe Repair, .M•d·

3rd Ave ., Middleport, Phone
992.7494.
l· IHtc

dleport. will be open from 9 to

5 p.m. Closed Mondays .

7·12·3tc

any debts co ntracted by
anyone other than myself.
Signe d, John T . Fischer,
Address , Racine, Rl. l.

- - - -- --

"FAMILY" LIFE NOT FOR HER
Dear Helen :
While in California I met a man who is kind, considerate ,
loving, wonderful and 12 years older than me. He lives in a sort of
commune with three other guys and two girls. Will is 32, the rest
of them in their early 20s.
He had led a very rough life: orphaned at three, adopted by a
mean aunt who hated him . He has spent a total of ten years in ·
prison for attempted rape and murder, also theft.
He paid his debt to society with five years in the Army , 30
months 'in Vietnam - and an honorable discharg e.
We fell in love, but one thing blocks our marriage . He wanted
me to live in the commune as a " member of the family," until he
could afford an apartment. I thought I could do it so a week
before our marriage I moved in as a test.
It w~s a nightmare, Helen. These pellp!e live very "free, "
take Sunshine (acid )- two of them are pUBhers; get drunk and
high , swear with every breath, and sleep together any which
way.
Starting the first night, Will spent aimost no time with me he was always "with the group." They wouldn't accept me and I
couldn'taccept them, so !left and moved back to my home state.
Will was furioUB at first and accUBed me of hating his friends,
' -being a snob, elc.
But now he's started writing and begging me to come back.

ACT NOW
oldest
Toy
OLD FASHIONED Tradi ng Oay
every Sunday on th e Bill
Clonch fa rm , approxima lely 'l
miles up Hysel! Run off Rou te
124. Horses, gun s, dogs or
what have you . Come one and

all .

/.H fp
------WHY not try cosmetics that are
truly
di'fferent
and
refreshing? The famous mink
oil base and now we have the
lemon grove. Just think , 14
specials this month, some for
men as well as women. It's

KOSCOT of course. Phone
992.5ll3.
7 9 tfc

DANCE
WHISPERING PINES
NilE CLUB
SATURDAY .
10 'TIL 2

group." I'm afraid he never will. They're the only "family" he's
got. I guess I'm just a midwest "square."
I still love him deeply Should I give it a second try' BEWILDERED
Dear B.:
A midwest "square" and an ex-con swinger-doper have as
little in common as Jane Fonda and John Wayne 1no comparisons intended ).
Consider this : your wonderful guy went to prison (at 17' 1for
crimes of violence; spent over half of his Army years in violent
combat duty; now lives with drug-pushers where violence is just
beneath the surface -and he likes his life! Which MIGHT leave
him permanently "kind, considerate, and loving," but somehow
I doubt it .
Youmadetherightchoice.Don'l weaken! - H.

6th Ave ., Middleport , 0 .

within the next 30 days and
pick them up'&gt; After the
allotted time, machines Will
be disposed of .

7·11 ·3tp
The Church of God , Chester ,
Ohio, 7: 30 p.m. each evening
thru July 16th . Evange li st

Rev. Mark Mun cie of Mt.
Moriah Chur ch of God.
Special singing each evening .
Everybody welcome.

/.JJ .41c

"HEll"

'•

Vacuum

Mobile Homes For Sai~

Phone 992·5641.
/.7-6tc

-- - - 17'1&gt;' CONTINENTAL Travel

50 X 10, 2 bedroom, priced

Trailer , 1971 model. self ·
contained ; awning, mirrors
and hitch ; phone 992·5982.

).9.6tp

- - - - --

7· nttc

for some thing dif erent? Sell
Toys. Playhouse Company is

reasonably,

now hiring for lall. Sell

Starcraft Sales, Rt . 62, N. of

August to December, no
Pt. P,leasant behind Red
deliveries and no collections .
Carpet Inn .
Call Mr s. Barbara Lambert
446-341 1 or Mrs. Margaret
Fortune 949-5414. Earn S &amp; H 1 LARGE size refrigerator .
Green Stamps.
combination ;
4
7·12·1 2tc freezer
wooden windows valances,
36" wide; 1 large si ze
COOK and waitress, apply in
aluminum storm door ; 26"
person, Craw's Steak House.
girl's bike for parts only ;
1·1Htc phone 992·3173 .

~--,--,---:-­

-==========-__,•
r
7-12-ltc

·,Air Conditioners
•Awnings
• Underpinning
Complete mobile home
service plus gigantic
'display of mobile homes
always available at .. .

GERMAN Shepherd puppies;

can be AK .C. registered;
males . $35 ; females, S2S ; also

ladies as parttime Personal
Shoppers . Average $3 per
hour . Flexible hours . Write
·Personal Shopper Depart ·
ment , Box 10 , Watk ins
Products , Inc. , Wi nona ,
Minnesota 55987 .

7-l,0-3tc
__________.:.

WANTED
New Owner For
lovely 3 B. R .•
Home in Middleport

8·15·tfC

FABRIC

INN ,

Polye ster

Doub leknits for less. Hun ·
dreds of Yards . From Tup·
pers Plains, pass school, go 4
miles, turn left onto County
Rd.
50,
sign . · Between
Hockingport and Reedsville ,
turn onlo County Rd. 50 nea r
Eden Church , sign. Phone 378·

6276.

Fully carpeted, built-in oven
and range . All in excellent
condition. Call 9f2-7440 or

stop by at 391 S. Second Ave.
afler S p.m. Mav consider
Rental with Option lo Buy .

).9.6tp

48 ACRE farm,

July Price Buster!

phone 992·6009.

985·3529 .
6·ll ·ffc
FARM - )06·acre ranch type

~

POMEROY
Jack W. Carsey , Mg . ..
Phone 992 ·2181

L~----------_J

4-12-tfc

1·12-6tp

------

Real Estate For Sale

Customers at
hio. No experience

ment . everything new, on
Main highway in Mason , W.

Va . Reynolds Flower Shop up
near drive· in thea ter , phone

773·5147.

1·1Htp

._...c::-::-:c--,----

2 BEDROOM trailer, adults
on ly ; phone 992·5247 .

7·9·20tp

Want~d
WILL DO daytime babysitting

Employment

7.lJ .11tp

3 AND 4 ROoM furnished and
unfurnished

apartments.

Phone 992·5434 .

4-12-tfc ·

7.9.6tc

- - - -W IL L paint ro ofs or houses,
trim and cut trees; clean
a tti cs;
basements : efc.

6·14-JOic

3962.

6·1f.tf c

ONE L d~oom tra iler apart.
ments , ideal for couples .

llO Mechanic

COUNTRY HOME
NEAR POMEROY - One floor. 3 bedrooms. bath, fu r·
NEW
3 bedroom~ . 2 baths. nic:;e kitchen wit h stove and
refrigeralor .freezer . Full .basement with garage. Al l

electric. Less than 525.000.00.
LOT
SYRACUSE - Lev el corner lot with small frame
COMMERCIAL
CHE SHIRE - Business lot with block building on Rf. 7.
BUILDING LOTS
WE have severa l locations. All sizes and prices .

COUNTRY HOME
ON ROUTE 7 - 2 bedrooms, bath, Plains water . Nice
kitchen with stove. Some paneling . 4 acres of land . Only

$9,500.00.
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE

992-3325

GET

An'EITION
We talk to you
like a. ~rscin.

NEW - Total electric apart.
ment, 2 bedroom, walk-In
closets. Large living room.

Chalmers; phone 742 -3656.

bers,
Geraldine

___ __

n .6fp

__:_

4 BEDROOM

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph .
Po;.,eroy

School ; both have bath and a
half ; 4 bedrooms ; bu ilt·in
kitchens and wall ·to .wal l

carpet ; cal l 9853598.
RACINE -

Sept ic tanks installed . George

(Bil lI Pullins. Phone 9'1n478, .
.
4·25·tfC

HARRISO N'S f~ &gt;ervice. open

9 a.m . to 9 p.m .; free pickup
and delivery ; phone 992 ·2522 .
6· 1J.l.f r

·~e~uS"'F'OR: Awnings. sform
doors and windows, cArporfs.
marquees , aluminum si ding

DEMCO Sa tel lit~ CB radio with
0 104 microphone , $200;
phone 992-3364.
_________
1·_
11 -6tp

GOBBLf:!

WINKLE
THERE MU.ST BE:

lOIN DO! .

SEW IN G ~ACHIN.E servJci;

clean, oil, se t tension S~ . 99 .
Specia l El ectro · Grande

Company . Phone 9926517.
5·21 -tfc
DOZER and back liCie wo/1&lt;'. .
ponds and se ptic tank s; B &amp; K
Excavat ing, Phone 992·5367 ,
Di ck Karr , Jr .

5.21 -tf c

608 E. Main St.

Close in, 30 acres , good
drainage. Chester waler,

2966 .

IOE AL for

WHAT A KITCHEN!

town . $28,500.00.
1!.000.00 DOWN
VIEW OF THE RIVER. 3
bedrooms. bath, por ches ,
part basement, metal roof ,
storage build i ng , garage .

56 .900.00 .
BATTLE OF THE
BULGE?

GENERAL TIRE SALES
Middl~port, 0.

GASOIJNE ALLEY

6·15-tfc

This i&gt;
a verw
friend I~

service, all makes . 992·228-4.

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
1

Author ized Singer Sa les and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors . '

- -- - -READY -MIX

"'"'' ~ qentle

as hand 5oap, t-1r Wallet.1
He\; a trick bear!

We was with a 5how .
but there was a

~~i._ mi5under,;tandin'!

bear,

3-2'1· tfc

.Mrs.

Cream!

CONCRETE

delivered right to y.our
projec1 . Fast and easy. Free
estimates . Phone 992 ·328.e .

WCX!LD 'j()u L~ Me IF I
VJ~ Uio!..'-/1 1tXJR 1Af.lt&gt; A

Goeg lel n Ready ·Mix Co .
Middleport, Ohio.
6·30·!1•

CI&lt;ASHIN0~-;-

USED building supplies &amp;
salvage yard; will wreck
houses , bu ild in gs, etc . Covert
&amp; Marlin Wreckage
&amp;

If you are fighting to provide
enough room l or a growing
family ... Here's a place
ideally suited . 4 bedrooms.
lh baths, call for par·
ticular s. $12,800.00 .

Salvage Co .. Laurel Cliff
across

John C. Bacon
Probate Judgt»
of sa id County

f rom

Highland

Chur ch; phone 992·5946.
/.9. J2tc

------

01DELL WHEEL alignment
loca ted at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service .

Wheels
balanced
Ironi cally.
All

~

elec ·
work

guaranteed .
RP&lt;"c:.nn"hl~&gt;
rates. Phone 7~2 · 3232 or
'Xl'l·3213 .
f ·U · TTC

Owner &amp;. Operator .

ACROSS
1. Pine for
5. Strike·

2. 200 milli·

tannia"

3. Certa in
forms of

14. Clin g
r,-;:;:;;-:;:;~;-:~;-;~~:;, 15. Droop
16. Prior to
(prefix)
17. Girl's

·crltt Bradford
5·1·1fc

,..----,----__:_

SEPTIC tan ks clean·ed . Miller
662·3035.

(2 wds.)
4. Eel (Old
Eng. )
5. Partici·

pated
6. Plebe
7. Belgian

18. Small
2·12-Ho

st urgeon

20. Performed
21. Highway
22. Piece of
gossip
23. Erroll
Garner

------~.:.
6·2:.:8 · tfc

LEGAL NOTICE

grams

protest

name

Sanita tion, Stewart. Oh io. Ph

Houses .

'

DOWN

composer

DICK TRACY

Racine. Ohio

Yesterday's Answer
12. Blunt
16. Gamble
19. News·

29. Excite
30. Miss
Moore·
head

section ,
informally

commun e

prison

!are
(3 wds.)
9. Slavishly
submi s-

22. Prong ·
23. " Butterfly"
24. Quaran·

31. Hire
36. Consume
37. Summer
(Fr. )

tine

25. Worsted's

sive

25. Damask,
e.g.
26. Regarding
(2 wds.)
27. Outer

27. Farm
machine

paper

B. Old-tinie

tune

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice Is hereby given that
public hear ings will be con.
tlnued on the proposed budget
for the Meigs Local School
District tor the fls cat .vear 1973
at an adlourned re~u lar session
of the Board ol Education on
Jui,Y 17 ,1912. at 8:00P .M . In the
off 1ce ot th e Superintendent In
the Junior High Building in
Middleport. Ohio.
The proposed budget and
estima te of the cost of operation
for ttle Meigs Local School
District tor 1973 inc lud ing the
cost ·at operating the public
schools ot sa id dislrict for the
fiscal year of 1971 will be
available at that lime.
Meigs Local School District
Board of Education
L . w . M cComas , Clerk
(71 12, It
.

SIDE GLANCES

13. "Rule Bri-

Complete Serv ice

Phone 949·3821

41. Gae lic
I. Gather

tion

'c ALL Guy Ne1gler for Building
LEGAL NOTICE
The Board of Comm iSsioners ,
Me.igs County of Ohio , wil l
receive bids until 9 : 00 o'clock
A .M . the 15th day of Jul v, 1972,
for the purchase of a New Motor
..1
Grader .
With minimum specifications
as follows : ?43 Cu. ln . Diesel
Engine , 135 H.P., Scarif ier,
Power Steering. 13 x 24 Tires
Front &amp; Rear , 10 ply ; Cab,
Lights, Heater, Defroster. Foot
Accelerator . Deceler&amp;tor ,
Flasher Ligh ts, 12 foot Pow er
Shift Moldboard.
Offered as Trade . ln - 440
Adams Motor Grader ,
Bidder to submit detailed
specifications of equipment
ortered .
The Board of Commissioners
reserve the ri(lht to reiect any
or all bids.
By order of the Board of
Commissioners, Meig s Countv ,

salt

breakers

·

' (C 1972 KinR" Featurea Syndica te, Inc .)

40. Chemica l

"10. Mangle
II. Detesla·

s. t2tf c
_D
- .c-.A
- u-c-ti-o-neer
-C-._B_R_Ac_D_F_O_R

l6 l 28 Ill 5. 12, 31

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: SOMETIMES ONE PAYS MOST
FOR THE THINGS ONE GETS FOR NOTHI NG.-A LBERT
EINSTEIN

by THOMAS JOSEPH

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rate&gt;. Ph. 4464782, Gallipolis, John Russell.

bane

coating

TERRY
CHANTRY AHD THe

:;EEM NOT TO f1E
Tlf~AT 10 M'f

28.June
beetle
29. Picking
up of an
option

32. Fatima's
hu sband
. 33. Cereal

"Of ·cOURSE it's art! If It w&amp;rtn't, we could
underttand It!"
·
I'LL 13ET I COUlD CLIMB
"THAT TREE IF SOMEONE

Big Capacity
May fig

Automatics
2 spee.d operation .
Cholr,.e' of water
temps .
Auto.
wate r
level
conlr'ol.
Lint
F111er or Power
Fl'n Agitator .
Perma-Press

Moytag

Halo of Heat
Dryers
Surround clothes
Wllh gentle, even
heat. No hot spots,
no overdrylng .
FIQe Meoh .Lint

GAVE ME A 1300ST...

command
'

''

'

'

(2 wds.)
39. Trevino's
aids

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter 'simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's. etc. Single letters
~po s trophes, the length and fo rmation of the words ore ali
tnts. Each day the code letters are different.

Filter .

We Speclallztln
MAYTAG

RUTLAND FURNITURE R~!::.~~=·t
I

992-7161

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

r ,.. ,,,,••, •• .,,, ....

SEWING MAlHINES. Repa ir :

If your Mrs. likes to cook ,

then her Mr. ought to see thi s
new modernized kitchen . 3
large bedrooms , walk · in
closets , 1'/:z baths. utility
room , full ba sement. greaf
rec. room , I acre ground , in

,_

AU 1Vj'JIUt:'lLt: 1nsurance been
cancel l ed?
Los t
your ·
operator ' s license? Call 992 ·

homesites . S26.800 .00 .

12, 19, it

COMJNG OUT OF
THE TAP!

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

4·5-ttp

CULAND
.REALTY

good roads.

HEY" TESSIE !
ll'ERE'" NO WATeR

sooemws

3-2·tf•

Plus Casslng

N: 2nd Ave.

SNARF'F'. ..

r epresen tative . For lree1
.. estimates , phone Charles
Lisle , Syracuse , V . V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.

10 room house.

lots. Phone 949 -4313.

!-1liiJC!/...

'. .. .'"

and railing . ·A. Jacob, sales

6·2B·l2t c

bath , basement , garage, two

THE'/ ·c"uCKL £! - TH INK THE'/'S GONNA
HAllE A PICNI C. TH F'/ DON'T KNOW
TH E'Y IS TH' PICN IC.'! r ----:.-_..-

BACKHOE AND DOZER work.

phone 992·2360.
TWO hom es for sale; 1 mite
North of Eastern High

1$1

992-2174

home. full

basement, gas furnace, 200ft.
river frontage. Also S room
house with bath, basement,
gaS furnace on adjoining lot.
Sam Arnold, Syracuse, Ohio ;

GOFU5T TO
SHORE IT'S NICE AN '
~HALL;_O::::W:_;--~

Radialor Specialisl

LOTS in Me igs School Districf ;

phone 99H329.

IJ'L ABNER

Nathan Biggs

Withem. 239·0647, GRAND·
STAFF. INC. , REALTOR,
4)f .2J12.
7·9-tfc

2 FOR '1990

Cleland, Racine. Ohio.
J.Mfc

BILLY HAG A FAGf
BALL, SWW BALL,
CURVE AND
PERFECT CONll&lt;OL.

From the largest
Bulldozer RadiqJor to . the
Sma llest Heater Core .

TlRE
MOST ANY
SIZE

LEAGUE

3·31 -tfc

SPECIAL

_.:_-=-_ _..:_ _ _1_·9-6tp
green peppers;

ON YOUK UIIIL

949.4195.

Martha Chambers, Clerk

60 ALL CROP harvester, All is-

All.JLUIC

EDSELJ

•

ki tchen and dining area,
phone 992·1384 or 992-7133.
7-10.6fc

TOMA f1fE'S~cucu m

WMP0/1390

~hone

(7)

For Sale

POLICE

uti lity· room, garage, SlO,OOO ; .

Ohio.

COUNTRY home , close to

HE'S ALREADY
LOOKEI&gt; UPON AS
ANOTHER

RACINE = 6 room hou!e. bath, ·

nace . Nice buitt .in k itchen with cook units, and bar .
Recreat ion room and carport. $17,500.00.

------

------

I DON'T CARE WHAT VOU SAY,
SQME r&gt;AY MV$1&lt;/E WILL BE LOOKt:D
UPON AS ANOTHER liNCOLN

Real Estate For Sol e

1972 .

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

PAST URE. phone 992.6329.
7;11 ;6tp·

J./ .tfc

J

ON 1HE 011-lER HAND, oc::::::j
JOHNNY IG 1HE GRAND$0N
OF 1HE CHIEF !

A PITCHER FOR MY
PAL LlliLE LEAGUE 'TEAM IG
f&lt;!JUGH 1 FR~K.

: 5232 .

'o' E. Main, .PC&gt;tMroy,. Q.: .

LEGAL NOTICE

Contact McClure's
992·5248
or 992·3436.Dai ry lsle . • liiiiliiiiililliiiiiiiiiilililililililililililililililililililililililililililililililil~
I·Htc

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

Open8lu&gt;

farm . 2 barns. plenty .of
LET US SELL YOUR
water , 32 acres ti llable, 20
3 BEDROOM HOME
acres timber , 54 ·feh ce d,
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
rolling acres . Beautiful 4·
REALTOR
bedroom ranch home, all
PHONE m -2259
carpeted and paneled, large
bath and utility room , at ·
tached garage , basement
with forced a i r furnace .
NOTICE OF
Fenced paddock for showing
APPOINTMENT
horses . Sold with all mineral
case No . 20716
r ights . Located 1 m i le out of Estate of Will iam Marion Jones
Rutland on Happy Hollow Deceased .
Rd.. 128,500. Phone 992·3020.
Notice is hereby given that
7·11 -5tc John P. Pickens of Portl and,
Oh io, has been duly appoin ted
Admin istra tor of the Estate of
Will iam
Mar ion
Jon es,
deceased , la te ot Meigs County,
Ohio .
Creditors are requ ir ed to file
ttleir claims with said fidu cia r y
Street
within four months .
Dated this 2Jrd day of June

building . S2500.00 .

1n my home for 1 or 2 children .
Rates reasonable. Can give ---:::---::::=:--:UN FUR Nt SHE 0--· apartment,
r e feren ces. Phone 992· 3960
134 Mulberry Ave., phone 9'l2·
after 5 p.m .

lrucks and low-boy lor hire.

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker

4 ROOM lurni shed new apart·

Wet Pet Shop,

7·12·6t c

HOUSE in Long Bottom , phone

All kinds. all sizes for men .
women, young men . boys
and girls . Hurrv to .

------

6-29.30tp

~

room house ,
Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Hysel l Run ;

PANTS ·&amp; JEANS
SALE!

.

See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992.1525 .
· after 1 p.m. or phone , 992 -

Monday thru Saturday

1·1Htp

Salt Works , E. Main St.,
Pomeroy, Phone 992 -3891 .

9923 134 after 4 p.m.

~

mt I, WU., lO&lt;., l.M. .... IU. tor. Olf•

FINDI~

haul fill dirt, top,soil. Dump

Ho.me· ·&amp; Aull!

BUILDERS
OPPORTUNITY

GET I PAIR FREE

SMA LL 3 room furnished
apartment with bath . Idea l
for one or two working men.
Completely private . Util ities
turnisl1ed . Phone 992·3881 or

. l.

(tl

Pomeroy, Ohio

Buy 2 Pair s and

• For Rent

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

1220 Washington Blvd.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0 .

1960 Mercury Comet, 1100;

MIDDLEPORT

Help Wanted Female
EXTRA INCOME We need

On Most American_'lU..·

see Bob Young on Success
Road near big water tower ;
phone Reedsville 667.3512.

5443.

Dozer &amp; End loader work·, ,
ponds, basement, la~d ·
scaping. We have 2 s1ze
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work ·
done bY . hour or' contract ..-~
Free · Estimates. We also

ss.ss

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

7·12·3tc

Parkview Kennels, Phone 992·

Phone Faye Manley
992 -5592
In
Pomeroy
Phone 992-2156

Wheet Aligmflerit'

Pomeroy

JOWEEIV

EARTH MOVING

reasonable, phone 992-3863 or

992.5844 after 3 p.m.

7·11 -3tp COAL, Lime stone , Ex celsior

REDUCE saf e and fast with
Go8ese Tablet s &amp; E -Vap
"wa ter pi l ls," Nelson Drug.

Chester

~ASii pa id for all mal&lt;.es anD
models of mobile homes .

POODLE poppies. Silver Toy ,

IN

Thunderbird, S875 ; 1970 Ford
Ranger Truck , $2,250; all in
good condition ; cal l 742·3437.

992-2448
Pomeroy, 0 .

phone

985-3379 .

Phooe area code 614-423-9531.
4·13-Hc

huge discount. We service
what we sell. Camp Conley

EX!ERT

88 ACREs. low sio•s:-farmhouse
and other buildings, Over 200
ft. frontage. Must see to
appreciate.
Rosemary

Cleaner complete with attachments, cordwlnder and
paint spray. Used but in like
new condition . Pay $34.45
cas·h or budget plan available .

------

I·Hfc
~1.,.
?6:-:5:-;0:-:L-:0:-:S:-c,-cB:-B.-.,.
1 "'58"'0-:- 196 7

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Phone 949·322 1.

protection . 32 N. 2nd . 992·
3918.
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR. CO.

, n .6tc

arrived - 1973 Starcratt
MOTHERS - Are r,ou looking JUST
Campers - All 1972 units at

sedan, low mileage, exce llent
condition ; phone 992-7024.

Window .
Air Conditioners

machme m ongmal factory
c a r Ion . Zi g . zag to m a ke
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
monograms, and make fancy
designs with just the twist of a
single.dial. Left in lay-away
and never been used. Will sell
for only $47 cash, or credit
terms avai lable . Phone 992-

write "SANTA's PARTIES" 1963 FORD Fairlane 500, v.e, 4
dr ., 1300; DeWalt Rad ial
Avon, Conn. 06001. Tel ephone
contractors saw 12", phone
1 (2031 673-3455 . ALSO
1968 ELCONA. 12 x 55, 2
992.7374.
BOOKING PARTIES.
1·12.6tc' bedroom , complete with
1·2-30ic
underpinning, pri ced very

1971 TOYOTA Corolla, 2 dr.

+++
Dear Helen :
A grade school teacher recently sent this to our local newspaper . It was written by one of her 10.year-&lt;&gt;ld students and gives
a revealing child's eye-view of ihe world:
MY DEFINffiONS FOR ... By Tim Harris
Overpopulation: Too many grown-ups.
Air pollution : Stuff that cmnes out of factories the grown-ups
built.
Water pollution : Other junk thai comes out of factories the
grown-ups built. '
Noi'!" pollution: Rock and roll bands.
Hacial problems : People feeling sorry ior themselves.
Religious problems: Prople disagreeing about what they
believe.
Ecology: People caring about the earth.
l.Dve: People caring about each other.
War : People trying tb own the world .
Vandalism: People defacing signs.
Utlering: People throwing garbage in other people's yards.
Cars: Machines that pollute the air.
·
Tares: The goverrunent's pocket money.
Inflation: Stores charging too much for food.
Tycoon : Arichman who wants to buy the world.
Happiness : Anything you want il to be. - READER

Party Plan in the Country
- our 25th year! Com ·
missions up to 30 pet. Fan ·
tastic Hostess Awards . Call or

Auto Sa!es

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

alten

&amp;

the
Gift

SENTINEL
CARRIERS WANTED

HAVE now in my possession
office machines wQich were
placed in lhe Arthur Ebers .
bach repair shop . Will t he
persons cl aiming same,
please come to the Arthur
Ebersbach res idence at 342 S.

"Have patience," he says, "until we can afford to leave tht!!

Join

RETAIL Sales Clerk, write Box
729· D, c-o Sentinel, Pomeroy,
Oh io, giving experience and
referen ces.
J . l2 ·6tC

Music by :
George Stewart &amp; The
Mavericks
5 Piece Band

Hot Water Healers
Plumbing
Electrical Work

~~---,:-.---­

ELECTROLUX

Group life and hospital insurance provided. Reply to
Box 729· P C·O The Daily
Sentinel, Pomeroy giving
qualifications and wages
expected .

). J0.3tp

A REVIVAL is in progress at

Belen Help Us

We specialize in aJumlnum,
vinyl and steel siding;
fiberglas, brick and Ston·e;
complete line of residential
and commercial ·roofing ;
remodeling,
bu i lding ,
suspended ceilings, interior
and exterior painting ;
complete line of Masonry
work. All work guaranteed to
customer satisfaction. We
are fully insured for your

992-7085 .

5641.

5 DAYS AWEEK

~·

3 Bedroqm home. with
brick (ron!. 1 car
garage,
carpeting .
Priced at ..
ONLY $13,750

Beauty Shop ; phone 992.2890. NEW .1972 z,g_. zag sewing

Pomeroy Motor Co.

OFFICE HOIJ'R$ r.

~

992·1085

have

BEAUTICIAN , mu st

._:B
__:__:u. _s_in
_·__:_ess~
S-er_v_ice
-s- ! ·
71

system. Balar!te $78.69. Use

/ .JJ.Jtc

dleport, phone 992·5844 or 992-

L-TD Coupe, 390 v.a engine, J.speed, automatic, power
steer ing , power brakes, factory ai r . .grey finish. Good
whife·wa ll tire s, ra di o.

&amp; OBITUARY
50 word minimum .

IN MEMORY of Oliver E. Sayre

I

ME' IWTH'FAMBL'IIS
GOIN' OVER TO TWIN
FORKS FER TH' DAV,
GRANNY. AN' 1 WUZ
WONDERIN' IF. ~E'D
KEEP R . EYE ON
TH'HOUSE
FER ME

.our time payment plan . Call

stereo, 4 speaker sound
system, 4 speed aulomatic
changer. Use our budget
lerrn..s. Balance $69.15 . Use
our lime payment plan . Call

BABYSITTER in my home, 1
child, 5 days a week, M id-

11995

1969 FORD

tor

In Memory

sty le, AM.FM radio corn .
bination , ~ speed automatic
changer, 4 speaker sound

~-----­
BEAUTIFUL Walnut finish

Help Wanted

Hard top coupe , v.a eng ine, automatic transmission,
power steering &amp; brakes, white fini sh, black vinyl top.
vinyl interior, white wall tires, lik e new , radio.

CAR.O OF THANKS

''..

Write M. D. Miller. Rt . 4,
Pomeroy . Ohio. Call 99H271.
6·2B.tfc

,

cents

• Sl.SO

OLD Furniture. oak tables,
organs, dishes, clocks, brc;~ss
beds , or complete households.

Factory a ir condi t ioning,
engine , automatic tran s.
m ission, power steering, power brakes, good white side
walls, many more extras . White finish , black viny l roof .
Priced to move!

pub liShllf will not be responsibl e

&lt;For Wan'l Ad Service

Po111eroy
Motor Co•

J.J.6fc

right to e.d it or -reject any ads

deemed

Wameli To Buy

' ' l.f ~.; ; .
ST£REO, Ea~ly American

(~~~~ ~F/IJE ..)
~
v

I'D BE PLUMB
'TICKLED TO,

741-4211

Arnold Grate

•

CRYPTOQUOTES .
JHK

JQ

DSK

YDLXTZEYDK

JQ

DSK

RLYDXDZOK
EKYND

KGJDXJHN .
~utland

XD

XN

1

XN

KNFK TXYEEM

OKKF .- QKEXB

\.

ASKH

QLYHCQZLDKL

�-

.

· ~ ·•oo

,_... '

16- The Daily Sentinel, MlddleP.,rt.Pomeroy, o., Julyl2, 1972

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Thursday

July 12·13
NOT OPEN
Friday &amp; Saturday

July 14-lS
KLUTE

(TechnicolorJ
Jane Fonda

Donald Sutherland
Cartoons

SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

band, Future Homemakers of

MASON DRIVE-I N
'

'

&lt;

l

.V '.

I

Tonight, Thur., Fri.
12 -13-14

Ooubl~

Feature Program
Little Fauss

and BIG HAL5Y
Robert Redlord
Mi chael J. Pollard
IR J

Plus
"LAST MERCENARY"

band in such an enterprise for
the first time, will conduct the
annual tag day for area
.businesses from July 17 to July
22. Tonight,. the , ways and
means committee will meet at
the home of Mrs. Sarah Witte
to stuff letters announcing the
solicitation of funds from area
businesses : Cost for . each
student attending the camp is

t

·,·

•
of the Riggs Royal Ka-Dettes
Twirling Corps and team
which participates in local,
state and out of state competition. She also competes in
individual competition and has

won over 75 trophies and offico of Lady Ass 't. Steward,
medals.
and is a member of Meigs
County Pomona Grange.
She is an active member of Marcia plans to attend a
the Orange Christian Church , beauty college in the fall of
Nfred Grange, holding the 1973.

~lidden

Sale!

Paints

Glidden

· ·

INSIDE
_OUTSIDE PAINTS

Area

News, Notes

attended the funeral of Ralph . Mrs. Jam es Loyd , went to New
Gilpin , a former resident of Albany, Indiana where they
New Haven, ut Wheelersburg, attended the funeral of Mr.
Ohio. Mr. Gilpin died at the Loyd's father , George Loyd.
Mercy Hospital there.
Mr . Gary Stewart, Pt .
Mr. and Mrs. Sherman R. Pleasant, Mrs. Maxine Arnold,
Ford and their daughter and Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Stewart
family , Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mason, visited Mrs. Arky Pills:
Day and sons of Columbus, bury who is ill at her home af
Ohio visited .Cedar Point over Johnstown, Ohio . Mrs. Pillsthe weekend.
bury is a former residen t of Pt.
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Me- Pleasant and the daughter of
Daniel were in Columbus, over Mr. and Mrs. B. 0 . Fox of
the weekend and returned their Johnstown.
grandson, Gregory Loyd, to
Funeral services were held
their home for a visit .. on Tuesday afternoon at the
Gregory 's parents, Mr. and Reese Funeral Home at Niles,
Ohio for Bob Schultz, who
reportedly died on Saturday of
a heart attack. Mr. and Mrs.
Russell of Pomeroy
gone to attend the services and to be with their
daughte r and family. Sur·
vivors include his wile, Betty,
and two children.

'

Work in the area of humane not distant when to own a pet
treatment toward animals is will be a restri cted, licensed
not unlike the ministry in the privilege .
Spaying
and
,,.;. church. Both seek to change neutering of ali pets someday
will be legislated, he thought.
p~ople.
The speaker complimented
~::
Dr. John Hoyt, youthful and
Mrs.
Dorothy
Fisher,
~;: already an ex-Baptist and later
~:\1 Presbyterian ordained president, and Mrs. Jean Will,
and
f:~·: minister, president of the general · chairman,
members
of
the
local
society
Humane Society of the United
;•:: States (HSUS), told 30 guests for its activities which have
, ,!' at the Meigs Inn Wednesday included sponsorship or 'rabies
'•:, evening an excellent start has clinics, a cooperation program
•!; been made by the Meigs with the new dog warden •. ' County Humane Society. Dr. anima l control officer - and a
I •
• · H.oyt spoke on the occasion or pet adoption program.
r;·~ the first annual 1 4 Charter " It is excellent that your
~;; Dinner" of the recently commissioners and other civic
officials have demonstrated
•, • organized non-profit group.
"The real problem is such a cooperative spirit with
~:: changing people/' the speaker your program ," he said.
Mrs . Jean Will, general
'lllid, " to have a feeling for ail
chairman , introduced the
living things."
following
he r
. Drawing frequently from his speaker
more youthful years spent ln welcoming remarks. She inthe Tri-County area while tr od uced the officers and
, attending Rio Grande College, directors, Mr. Dill, the coun~
Dr. Hoyt reminded the society ty's new animal control officer,
Uiat the long range objective of and guests from Parkersburg.
the humane movement is She recommended lhat charter
COlltroi Of the phenomenal members of the society meet
pppulation explosion of dll@s annually at a similar dinner
ahd cats everywhere in the event.
Among the guests were Mr.
n~tion .
"Only tO pet. of the and Mrs. Rupert Knight,
es9mated 10,000 cats and dogs Pomeroy . Mrs. Knight is a first
born very hour in the U. S. cousin of Dr. Hoyt 's mother .
Dr. Hoyt is the son of the
today find homes ," he said .
·'Our people must find a way to Rev. and Mrs. Clermont Hoyt,
reduce the problems that former pastoral couple serving
the First Baptist Church of
r~s uit, he said.
Dr . Hoyt believes the day is Middleport.

Glidden

r..

SPRED LATEX.SEMI-GLOSS ENAMEL

!;.:

SPRED LUSTRE SEMI-GLOSS ENAMEL

r

, Gallons .......... ~ ..... Sale
:r Quarts ................. Sale 'P

1;::

Glidden

SPRED GLOSS AU PURPOSE ENAMEL

ur Gallons .............. Sale r

325 Quart ............. :.. Sale 'l'
111 Pints .............:.... Sale 1•.
131 ~ Pints .............. Sale 89'

Sunday School attendance on
July 9 was 45. The offering was
$19.20.
Worship services were held
at II o'clock with the Rev. Lehman speaking from Philemon
1:1·17 1 ~' Evaluation or .Sin ."
V1cki Ca rr and Timmy
Spencer of Alfred church attended a yo uth meeting at
Tuppers Plains on Thursday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Spencer, Timmy and Danny,
Mr . and Mr s. Dinsmore
Boyles, and Marilyn Robinson
and two daughters of Allred
chw·ch attended the Northeast
Cluster picnic at Forked Run
Lake on Sunday afternoon,
July 9.

SPRm URETHANE R.ORENAMEL
955 Gallons ................Sale .,.

:r Quarts ................ Sale 2"

II
Pants and Jeans For All!
FOR BIG PEOPLE, LITTLE PEOPLE MEN'S, WOMEN'S, YOUNG MEN'S,
BOYS' AND GIRLS' - ALL SIZES

Henderson,
and Mrs
. Clair
Mr. and Mr.
Mrs.
Clarence
Follrod, Mrs. Arthur Spencer,
and Mrs. Brenda Weber attended the fun era l of their
aunt, Lydia Hope, at Jagers
funeral home in Athens,
Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs . Hobart Swartz
and Nina Robinson took their
granddaughter, Vicki Swartz,
back to her home at Marietta,
0., Sunday and visited Mr. and

'

Buy 2 Pairs

.

.

.

·I

'

Spred House Paint ............ Sale .,.
9.20 Gallons

Endurance House Paint ...... Sale .,.
Spred Ruta~e Gel.flo House Paint

j

Sale all

3.15 Quarts

1-~-·-·--~-:::::::~---------~~~;~~~~~~;.__J
Reg . 51.98

Sale! 523.95
20 inch

ELECTRIC FANS
2 Speed - Has safety guard·
· 3 blades balanced for

quietness. Use on floor ,
window or table.

Sale Priced

Get 1 Pair
BIG YANK'S
BEST VALUES

Yes, the choice of the store is on sale and
this is the largest stock of . pants and
jeans in the area.
ALL SIZES-ALL KINDS

Stock consists of mod styles and the
regular conventional models. Plains,
stripes, patch, mod, colors. Come in and
see these July price-smashing -.ralues.

been with Mr. and Mrs. Sid
O'Brien in Columbus, arrived
home last week.
Mrs. Genevieve Guthrie
recently spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost
and family at Sugar Grove, 0 .
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
Wood e spent last Wednesday
evening at the home of Mr . and
Mr s. Clyde Parrish in
Coolville. J'hey met Mrs .
Roena Martin (Mrs. Woode's
aunt) from Westerville, 0., and
her cousins, Rev. and Mrs.
,Orla Bradford and son from
Gary, Ind. there for a visit.
The Alfred United Methodist
Women will hold their next
meeting , Tuesday evening,
July 18, at the home of
Florence Spencer- at Tuppers
Plains. Nellie Parker will be
program leader of the lesson,
"New Machines and the New
Humanity ," Page 154, in
program booklet.

NO-PEST STRIP
INSECTICIDE
Made by Shell . Kills Illes,
mosquitoes, gnats . Hangs

from celllno .

Sale ·Price

Our Special s2.89
30 Quart Size

POMEROY
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr ,
Serving Meigs, Gallia and

Mason Counties
Open Mon ..

sat. Until' p.m .

\

"'United Press International
Two men armed ·.1ith a
bomb, a pistol and a shotgun
commandeered a Nationa l
Airlines passenger jet today,
demanded and received a
$600,000
ransom
and
parachutes, and then forced
another National craft from
Philadelphia to Texas.
The plane, with six crewmen
held' hostage, Wednesday
night , landed at a small
commuter' uirport 50 miles
south of Houston where the
hijackers ordered the pilot to
fly them to the Texas gulf
· c.Qllst.
However, the aircraft blew
out four tires on landing and
oificials said it could not
pOIISibly take off again because
.ot: the airport's
size .
• Authorities also said there

Foam Cooler
CHESTS

Sale

•1.69

t~--------~~~---"1""-------.:;~
See the Complete 5eliction

Rubbermaid Products'
Another big shipment of dependable
popular Rubbermald Housewares In eluding Bath Tub Mats . Dish Pans .
Freezer Containers - Dish Drainers. Sink
Mats · Bath Tub Appliques . Cullery Trays
-.Drainer Trays . Twlntables . Spacemaker
Towel and Wrap Dispensers . Storage Bins

selections now.

.

.

-·

VISffORS HERE - Attending the Meigs Humane
Society Charter Dinner repr~senting tbe Parkersburg
Chapter were, left to right, Larry Wheatley, vice president ;
Janice Sheel.s, and fourth and fifth from right, Mary Armfield and William Simmers. Dr. John Hoyt, center, of

Washington D. C., son of a fonner area minister (the Rev.
Clermont Hoyt of Middleport ), chal.s with the group.
Wheatley presented a $25 check to the local chapter as a
gesture of support to tl1e local program.

•

enttne

THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1972

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PHONE 992·2156

were·no facilities at the airport
to refuel the craft.
About the same lime, a grayhaired man surrendered after
he succeeded in obtaining an
unknown sum of money from
American
Airlines
in
Oklahoma City following the
hijacking of an American 7'll .
'
In the National hijacking, a
Federal
Aviation
Ad·
ministration spokesman said
the flight engineer was thrown
from the plane or escaped ·
when it landed in Freeport,
Tex. He said there were
reports the engineer had been
pi~toi-whipped . One person
was taken to Community
Hospital in nearby Freeport
and airport sources said it
might have been for treatment
of gunshot wounds.

ev ident wherever Democrats
ga thered.
But McGovern kept to his
rented penthouse and kept his
own co unsel. Some of his
associates said he had nar·
rowed the list of poss ibilities to
four. Others insisted 12 to 14
names were still being consi-

dered.
The one man acceptable to
both distrustful Democratic
camps- Edward M. Kennedy,
surviving heir to a dynastysaid a final "no" early this

Reports Given
Reports by James Schmoll
and Jon Bunce of their experiences as dele gates to
Buckeye Boys State at Ash lan d
College in June highlighted a
meeting of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American Legion ,
Wednesday night.
The new commander. James
Rhodes , reported on an Eigh th
District Hospitality Party held
last weekend at Athens by Bob
Waddell, new district commander. Purpose of the party
was to give new post comand adjutants an opportunity to
know eac h other and to know
the new district officers. At·
tending from the Middleport
Post were Commander Roach,
Mr . and Mrs. Gene Bass and
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Roush .
Plans were completed for
local members to attend the
state convention in Cincinnati

July 21·23. Attending will be
Commander Roach, Gene
Bass, First Vice Commander; ·

John F ultz, second vice
commander , and Albert
Roush , fifth divis ion commander of the Eighth Dislrict.
Commander Roach was
named to serve as institutional
representative lor the Middleport Boy Scout Troop
sponsored by the post. Robert
Caruthers, Jr ., will serve as
scoutmaster. Hoach appointed
Bass, chairman , and Marvin
Kelly, Albert Roush and
himse lf to serve on a membership committee for the year
but stressed that membership.
is to be a responsibility of each
posl member.
A report was given on a July
10 meeting of the Games
Commit tee . New rules have
been established and members
will be asked through news
media and by letter to assist
the committee.
Refreshmenls were served
by John Fultz. The next
meeting will be July 26.

morning in a congratulatory
telephone call a few minutes
after McGovern won a restless
convention 's call to leadership.
Party Unity Needed
The n~ed for the party unity
that most felt McGovern must
now cultivate to make the
nomination worth having gave
support to speculation that he
might turn to conservative
Rep . Wilbur D. Mill s of
Arkansas as a vice presidential
choice , despite his earlier vow
to eschew a running-mate
whose views were in·
compatible with his owns.
In a livi ng room crowded
with kinfolk and confidants,
McGovern
watched
his
nomination on television under
the heat and glare of television
lamps recording the moment.
After 18 months, s tart,
mg fr om nowhere, the
candidate or discontent had
won. His eyes shone bright with
emotion. He kissed his sisters
and his nieces arHi shook hands
with the men, then went back
to writing on a yellow pad with
a felt-tip pen the acceptance

speech he will deliver tonight.
But hostility remained from
the old guard . On the convenlion Door , the die.!Jard suppor·
ters of Hubert H. Humphiey
and Edmund S. Muskie cast
their votes for the token candictates or lor Sen. Henry M.
Jackson of Washington, a party
warhorse , rather than go with
the obvious winner.
Remain Unreconciled
Jackson and Alabama Gov.
George C. Wallace remained
unreconciled to the bitter end
to a McGovern candidacy on a
liberal platform- and so did
Wallace 's ant ibusing sup·
porters and Jackson's labor
supporters.
The votes of Illinois
delegates who had oi)Sted and
antagonized Chicago Mayor
Richard J . Daley provided
McGovern 's majority. lliinois
swelled his total to 1,728.35
votes, 219 more th an a

majority~howinghowclose it

might have been had he not
recovered 151 California
delegates taken from him by
the party's Credentials

Committee in an act he bud
decried as foul and evil.
Other delegates came across
afte.r'their votes were no longer
needed, but many did not make
the conciliatory switch,
demonstrating that the wounds
remained raw.
Mills, chairman of the House
Ways and Means Committee,
could reassure the old guard
and the South. He shares few of
McGovern's views, but his ties
are strong to the party's
dise nchanted cong ressio nal
wing.
Without naming them, J&lt;!cGovern adviser Fred Dutton
said 12 to 14 persons remained
on McGovern's veep list.
But freshman Sen. Thomas
F. Eagleton of Missouri said
that the choice, with Kennedy's
refusal, had narrowed down to
three-and that he was among
them. He named the others as
Sen. Abraham A. Ribicoff of
Connecticut and Leon-ard
Woodcock, president of the
United Auto Workers.
The withdrawal of Mills and
former Sen. Eugene J . Me·

Cornina Ware $30.95

PIECE YOUNG MODERN
Famous Cook and Serve Corning Ware 5
piece set consisting of:
1-8 Inch covered Skillet
1-W. quort covered Saucepan
J-t% quart covered Saucepan
2- 2% cup Petite pans with plastic
cov•·&lt;rs
2·-Ptastlc storage Covers
.

Sale $19.88 Comploa
.. Set
n::LC
.

-.1

t--------------..i----Y~ou::_;Sa;:v:e~$~1~1~.0~5~-...
Be Thrifty! Save All of Your Saleslips From

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SAN CLEMENTE, CAUF. - PRESIDENT Nixon Wednesday proposed a $1.7 billion program, calling it the richest
diSaster relief purse ever, to give $5,000 grants and loans at I per
cent interest to victims of tropical storm Agnes. "Confronted
wlih so massive a disaster emergency, our response must al:!o be
ritllssive,". Nixon said. "Conscience demands it; humanity im·
~Is it."
Residents· of six states - New York, Penneyslvanla,
Maryland, VIrginia, West Virginia and Florida - would be
eligible for the disaBter relief, if passed by Congress. More !han
t1iJ persons died, and about 128,000 homes and businesses were
t~~~maged or destroyed, by the massive floods set off by the

IMPROVEMENTS ON AN EXTENSIVE scale began recently at Rock Springs
Fairgrounds in preparation for the annual Meigs County Fair Aug. 15-19. Bill Smith, fair board
member, acting supervisor for the ground clearing and the remodeling, is shown in the
secretary's office which has undergone attractive remodeling with the addition of paneling .
Smith, with Danny Zirkle and Marvin King, fair board members, are responsible for the
remodeling.

•

Crusade Will Open July 19

stDrm.
·, JACKSON, OHIO - TWO DETROfT men wbo previously
hlld escaped from Michigan jalls broke out of tbe Jackson County
jail early today by sawing through bars of a cell and fleeing
thrllllgh the facUlty's kitchen. Tbe escapers were identified as
Dan Rogers, 22, and Robert Brown, t9. They were not believed to
be armed when they escaped, the liheriff'sofficesald.
.;; Authorities in several southern and southwestern Ohio
c;OunUes as well as ·law officers in Mlchlg111 were alerted. The
men were arrested bere March 16 on charges of breaking and
eRtering and grand larceny. Their escape from Michigan was
'dfscovered at that time. Roflers was described as f&gt;.IO and 190
J»unds and Brown, ti-l and 200 pounds.

TEN CENTS

WORK COMPLETED AT CHESTER BOOTH- Workers
this week completed pouring a coocrete slab at the Chester
Volunteer.Fire Department food concession stand located on
the Meigs County Fair Grounds. Shown a:t the site are Gloria
Cross, fair publicity chairman, and Bill Smith, fair board
member. Construction of an additional set of bieachers in tl)e
cattle judging barn is expected to be done this week. Other
work to be completed is repair to roads on .the grounds and
the cutting of weeds.

earthy just hours before the
ballot began Wednesday night,
left only five names in the final
competition at the convention- McGovern, Jackson,
Wallace , former
North
Carolina Gov. Terry Sanford,
another vice presidential
possibility; and Rep. Shirley
Chisholin, achieving her goal
of becoming the first black
woman to be placed in
nomination .
RibicoH placed McGovern's
name in nomination- just as he
had four years ago, in Chicago,
in a speech which drew
derision from Daley.
Discontent with McGovern of
another sort-from the uncom(Contmued on page 12)

Hanoi

Spurns
Nixon

By UDited Preas International

Sturdy constructio n . molded in
aluminum ha.ndle. Tight fitting lid.

and many/ many more. Stop ln. Make &gt;'O.ur

Rarest Honey
The native sourwood, targe t of thousands of bees
when it is in full bloom, pro·
duces the rarest honey.
From its nectar, the bees
make a honey that epiCures
crave and which is rare or
wanting in the usual shops.

Another Skyjack

· MIAMI BEACH (UPI )Arming for November, George
S. McGovern se~ about today
choosing a running-mate acceptable to both the coalition of
discontent which nominated
him for the presidency and the
angry old pros who U1ink he
can't win it.
Vice presidential ambitions
swelled in a dozen hearts while
McGovern pondered his
choice. Whispers and rum ors
and speculation - and clan·
destine campargning - were

manders, first commanders,

Spred Rlr(clle Gel.flo House Paint
Saler'

. .f

•

McGovern Seeks Party Unity

9.95 Gallons

~~~~Gerald
Swartz and family L.,;:~:;:::::~--------:--$~1:5::•:8:8:..,_-.JL_...,._$_:1~.4~9~--...J
Mrs. Mary Carr, who had r

and

RE

9.20 Gallons

VOL XXV NO. 62

·!!

Glidden

I

Devoted To The Interests OJ The Meigs·Mason Area

I :.
t'·

and

',

.... ..) .

•

Hoyt Speaker for
. O.arter Dinner

HOMOGENIZED SPRED SATIN
, .Gallons ................ Sale &amp;'1!5 Quarts.'............... : Sale 21'

..

1

"

Matte Flat Latex Wall Paint

Mason

right are Gary Dill, Meigs County animal control officer;
Jean Will, general chairman; Mrs. Dorothy Fisher,
president, arHi Mrs. Rita Lewis, secreta ry of th e local
chapter. Dr. Hoyt, president of the Human e Society of the
U.S. is a graduate of Rio Grande cvllege.

HOMECOMING FOR HOYT - Dr. John Hoyt, center,
~ told guests at the Charter Dirmer of the Meigs County
Hwnane Society Wednesday evening at the Meigs Inn "It
. gives me a warm feeling to know how much you have ac·
complished already here . It is like a homecoming." Left to
•

Store Hours At Elherfelds Warehouse 0 n Mechanic Street.

MARCIA CARR

~

',;
~

;~
1!I

, r

Fridays and Saturdays 9:30 to 9 At Night. Same
TERESA CARR

• •
• •
'

Elberfelds In Pomeroy Are Open Thursdays 9:30 to 5-

Social .\'otcs

'

.•. '

-

A(fiwl

'

•

Early ~unday Mlxod
July 9,1972
Standings :J
Team
Won Lost
Odd Balls
28
~
Gutler Busters
22 10
DTs
18 1~
Team -No. 1
14 18
Frigid Pinks I
12 20
Allin the Family
2. 30
High Ind. Game - Ed Petrie
225 . Marlene Wilson 175; Dale
Davis 217 . Julia _Boyles 110.
High Series - Larry Ougan
584 . Marlene Wilson 484; thole
Davis 568 . Julia Boyles 481.
$35.
Team High Game - Gutler
Busters '671.
Rainbow Division
Team High Series - Frigid
The 42nd Division of 1he Pinks 666.
AEF in World War I was
made up of National Guard
troops from almost all the
Nevada is the driest state .
s tates of the Union-hence
in
the Union. It has an an·
Jts name of Rainbow Divi·
nual rainfall of 8.8 inches.
SIOn.

Tryouts for the majorette
corps and for the nagbearer
positions of the Meigs High
School marching band. will be
beld at 6:30p.m . Friday at the
high school.
Girls selected for the
positions in the blind will leave
Sunday for Rio Grande where
they will attend camp for the
entire week to receive special
training in routines and
· twirling. Near the end of the
,,month, at least 100 members of
the band will go to Rio Grande
wher_e they will take part in a
week-long band camp.
In preparation for the camp,
the Meigs High School Band
Boosters, attempting to.
finance the participation of the

America, and G.A.A.
She has been a member of
Susie Nesbitt, 13-year oid
the Tuppers Plains Girls 4--H
Club for seven years, Meig~ daughter of .W. E. Nesbitt,
·County Junior Leadership Club Dallas, Texas, and the late
for four years, holds the office Marjorie Hoffman Nesbitt has
of news reporter lor this year, been visiting her great-aunt,
Junior Leaders Bowling Mrs. Helen Stewart and family
League, Meigs County Jr. Fair in Mason and with Mr. and
Board. She attended 4-H Club Mrs. P. H. Werry and family at
Congress at Ohio Slate Minersville, 0.
University in June of this year.
Mrs. Helen Stewart, Ralph
Marcia is an active member Stewart, and Dorothy Russell

1\{ ,,t,,niNHJii!l\

July

Club. Marcia is sponsored by
Best Photo of Coolville.
Teresa will be an eighth
grader this fall at Tuppers
Plains Elementary School.
Teresa is an honor student, and
a member of the Eastern High
School Marching Jr. High
Band.
She has been an active
mell}ber for seven years in the
Tuppers Plains Girls 4--H Club,
Meigs
County
Junior'
Leadership Club, Junior
Leaders Bowling League.
She is active in Alfred
Grange in the office .Df Lecturer, and Meigs County
Pomona Grange. Last year
Teresa won the Juvenile
sewing contest in Meigs County
and her entry was forwarded
on to State level.
She is in the Riggs Royal Ka~
Dettes TWirling Corps and
Team which participates in
local, state and out . of state
competition and has won 65
trophies and medals in individual competition .
·
Marcia will be Senior at
Eastern High School this fall .
She is a member of the high
school marching band, concert

'

. ~-

Tryouts Set For FridAy At Meigs Local.Bowling

·carr Sisters in
Teen Ager Event
TUPPERS PLAINS
Teresa Darlene Carr, t3, and
Marcia Rose Carr, 16 ,
daughters of Mr . and Mrs.
,!;:)larles D. Carr, Tuppers
Plains, will take part in the
Miss Ohio Teenager Pageant to
be held Friday and Saturday at
the Sheraton Dayton Hotel in
Dayton.
Teresa is being sponsored at1
the pageant by Lyons Market,
Tuppers Plains; .. Gaul's
Market, Chester; Burdette
Camper Sales, Coolville, and
the Tuppers Plams Gtrls 4-H

.'

--

'

Plans haye been completed
for the annual outdoor
Evangelistic Crusade July 19
through July 23 at the Southern
High School football stadium in
Racine .
The crusade, sponsored by
the Racine Baptist Church, will
have for its speaker each
evening the Rev . Charles
Norris, pastor of the church.
Song leader will be Duane
Wolfe with. Dennis Manuel as
featured soloist.
In addition there will be

special music featuring the
Duncan Family of Tampa ,
Fla., the Crusade Choir, the
Gospeiaires . of Rutland, the
.Norris Quartet, the Rev. Mr.
Norris and Janice Salser, and
Duane Wolfe and Dennis
Manuel.
No offering will be laken at
the services which will begin at
7:45 each evening. In case of
rain the services Will be held in
the Southern High School
auditorium.
Residents are invited to

bring their lawn chairs to the
meetings or they may sit in
their autos or in the sladiurn. A
nursery will be provided each
evening with adult supervision.
BEGINS MONDAY
RACINE - A physical fit.
ness program for all interested
boys of Southern High School
will be held on Mondays,
Wednesdays and Fridays,
beginning Monday at 6 p. m. at
the high school.

..

PARIS (UP!) - The Viet.
namese Communists today
rejected President Nixon's
latest peace plan as an
"unreasonable and absurd"
ultimatum and said they will
settle lor nothing except acceptance of their own plan.
North Vietnamese negotiator
Xuan Tauy and Madame
Nguyen Thl Binh, the VietCong
foreign minister, turned down
·Nixon's plan and pushed their
own, long-rejected peace
package, when the Vietnam
Conference resumed after a 10.
week suspension.
The Communist delegations'
stand, coupled with a violent
condemnation of U.S. air
strikes in Vietnam, failed to
move tbe conference off dead
center as had been hoped in
Washington.
Taking an unusually harsh
tone, Madame Blnh charged
that President Nixon's eight.
point plan proposed Jan. 25'and
calling for new presidential
elections in South Vietnam,
was aimed merely at maintaining U.S. control of the
country.
"The demand for an immediate ceasefire to come
before an accord dn military
and political questions on
conditions put forward by Mr.
Nixon on May 8 and June 29 is
in fact nothing but an
unreasonable and absurd
ultimatum," she llaid.
She said the ceasefire called
'!or again today by U. S.
negotiator William J. Porter
and Saig9n's Pham Dang Lam
"does not aim at ending the
war, but simply at legalizing
the Nguyen Van Thieu administration and the American
mllltary presence, while
depriving the South Viet- ·
namese people of the
legitimate right to selldefense," Madame .Binh said'.
E;arlier,
the
Saigon
delegation bluntly told the
Communists it will never
accept their plans' for South
Vietnam's political future •

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